Bulletin Daily Paper 01-31-14

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75

FRiDAY January31,2014

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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

BEND

THE UPCOMING SESSION

Making laws for a new campus

MOnarChS —Thepopulation of migrating butterflies is at its lowest level since scientists began to keeptrack. A3

By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

Plus: neanderthajs-

The city of Bend plans to update its

There's a little bit of them in all of us, DNAstudies show. A3

Ads in your pocketLocation-based technology targets ads to your cellphone.A5

By Lauren Dake

StOry time — Thelocal library offers more to kids than just reading aloud. D1

Plus:Aging minds — Not slower, just more full? D1

And a WedexclusiveNSA spying shows theperils of apps, from Google PlusandPinterest to CandyCrush. bentibunetin.com/extrns

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Common Core has some states rebranding By Lyndsey Layton The Washington Post

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer

used an executive order to strip the name "Common Core" from the state's new

math and reading standardsforpublicschools. In the Hawkeye State, the

same standards are now called "The Iowa Core."

And in Florida, lawmakers

Iwo parties, two chamders, four agendas

SALEM — Despite the many troubles with the state's health

opposition to the Common

Core State Standards — a set of K-12 educational

guidelines adopted by most of the country — officials in a handful of states are worried that the brand is

alreadytainted. They're keeping the standards but slapping on fresh names theyhope will have greater public appeal. At a recent meeting of the Council of Chief State

Democrats andRepublicans in both chambers of the OregonLegislature have releasedtheir priorities for the legislative session that begins Monday. Here's what each caucuswants to accomplish, according to statements released by party leadership.

not the answer.

cups, when the 2015 expansion of Oregon State University-Cascades Campus brings

•. •plus a governor's ideas

are functional, and we have

more students to southwest Bend.

Senior Code Enforcement Officer

On Thursday, Gov.John Kitzhaber detailed a few of his own goals for the 2014 Legislature: Marijuana: Be readyto discuss regulating it Upuor: Be wary of privatizing sales Columbia River Crossing: "It is an Oregon priority" (and should befor Washington state, too)

of others, 'You're on your own,'" Kitzhaber said. "And to put that

Kitzhaber, who is running for re-election, responded to calls in perspective, 90,000 people is some Republicans have made, more than the entire population including Rep. Dennis Richof Bend, Oregon." ardson, R-Central Point, who is The governor spoke to a running for governor, and Rep. room fullofreporters and ediJason Conger, R-Bend, who is tors on Thursday during the anvying for a seat in the U.S. Sen- nual legislative preview hosted ate, that the state should bail on by The Associated Press. its exchange and look instead to See Salem/A5

James Goff has been researchingthe quality-of-life problems that other college towns encountered and he is starting to

develop new ordinances and programs for Bend to prepare for these issues. "By taking a proactive approach, I think it's going to benefit the community and

it hopefully will put some of the worries J

Senate Democratic leadership's one-page statement, decrying gridlock in Washington, D.C., included these priorities: • Access to higher education; vocational training for family-wage jobs • Preserving $6.85 billion spending level for K-12and preventing more school days from being cut or teachers from being laid off • Economic growth targeted for rural and urban areas • More funding for mental health and senior service programs • A balanced budget • Access to small-business loans • Holding state contractors accountable for their work

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House Democrats grouped their agenda into three broadcategories: education, job creation and "better" government: • Support for adults returning to school • Workforce retention and development programs • Rebuilding aging infrastructure • Raising standards for government contracts • Support for Oregon's "most vulnerable" as well as for emergency responders

Sources:Newsreleases from the Legislature's party leadershipteams, Bulletinreporting, TheAssociated Press

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to rest that we have from the community

The Senate minority, calling out an "out-of-touch" state government, included these specific proposals in its 2014 legislative agenda: • Training for the unemployed; community college curriculum matched to the region's hiring needs • Expansion of the 2 percent tax cut of the last special session to small businesses, sole proprietors andsingle-member LLCs • Scholarships for low-income, special-needs or foster students to attend private schools or to set aside for college • Crop donation tax credit to encourage donations to food banks • Shifting economic development efforts from urban to rural areas •

School Officers, one of the

organizations thathelped create thestandards,former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, a Republican, urged state education lead-

landlords and lawns strewn with beer

usedthem toenroll90,000peoexchange, Gov. John Kitzhaber ple, so shutting down the exdefended it Thursday, saying change today is essentially tellshutting down the exchange is ing those people and thousands

ments and replace it with the cheerier-sounding In the face of growing

potential problems suchas absentee

the federal exchange. "Elements of the exchange

The Bulletin

want to delete"Common Core" from official docu"Next Generation Sunshine State Standards."

laws to prepare for

• Grilled on CoverOregon, Kitzhaber tries to look forward

about OSU-Cascades," Goff said. See Laws /A5

Mexican vigilantes find tacit

approval By Alfredo Corchado Dallas Morning News

NUEVA ITALIA, Mexico — At a heav-

ily fortified checkpoint, one of 600 in

Minority Republicans areadvocating the following proposals: • Redirecting 30 percent of Energy Trust of Oregon funds to makepublic schools moreenergy-efficient • Flexible land use rules in rural areas to attract large employers • Tax credit for college graduates who remain in Oregon, plus extra relief on student loan interest for STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) students • Limiting fraud by requiring a photo ID to usefood stamp cards • Support for employers that provide wellness programs • Task force to review oversight of state IT projects

the area, Leonardo

Quintero demanded that the driver of the Hummer not just

hand over his cellphone but also open his most recent text

messages. The driver, who identified himself as

Fernando Moreno, looked annoyed. Nearby, federal police and soldiers looked on, the only sem-

blance of government authority in this volatile region known as Tierra Caliente.

David Wray/The Bulletin

See Mexico /A4

ers to ditch the "Common Core" name, notingthat it

had become "toxic." "Rebrand it, refocus it, but don't retreat," said Huck-

GOP:Pathto legalstatusforim m igrants,notcitizenship

abee, a supporter of the standards.

The changes are largely superficial, giving new labels to national standards

that are taking hold in dassrooms across the country. But the desire to market

them differently shows how precarious thepush for the Common Core has grown, eventhough the standards were establishedby state

By David Nakamura and Paul Kane

to live and work in the United

er John Boehner, R-Ohio, dis-

States, but they emphasized

The Washington Post

that most would not be offered

on Thursday said for the first

a"special path" to achieve citizenship.

tributed abroad, two-page list of immigration principles to his membership for private discussions. Thedocument represent-

time that they would be open to allowing 11 million immi-

The announcement was made at the GOP retreat in

ed the leadership's first attempt to outline avision ofhowto

grants in the country illegally

Cambridge, Md., where Speak-

addressanoverhaulofborder

House Republican leaders

TODAY'S WEATHER

officials with bipartisan

support and quickly earned widespread approval. See Rebranding /A5

Rain/snow mix <'t, @~

Hi g h 39, Low25

Page B6

control laws, seven months after the Senate approved a sweeping bipartisan plan. The House principles were being closelyparsedbythe

there was a chance at achieving a major immigration deal

White House, congressional

Democratic leaders, was one of

Democrats and advocacy groups to determine whether

cautious optimism. See Immigrants/A5

INDEX All Ages Business Calendar

D1-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby D5 Obituaries B5 C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D5 Sports C1-4 In GO! Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies D5, GO!

The Bulletin AnIndependent

that has eluded lawmakers for

decades. The mood among most interest groups, and key

Q l/i/e use recycled newsprint

Vol. 112, No. 31,

e sections 0

88 267 0 23 2 9

1


A2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

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WASHINGTON — The Jus-

tice Department said Thursday that it would seek the death

penalty against Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the man accused of killing and maiming people with homemade bombs at the Boston Marathon finish line last year.

NEW S R O O M FA X

The decision sets in motion the highest-profile federal

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death penalty case since Tim-

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othy McVeigh was prosecuted and executed for the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. The decision, however, is

not cast in stone. In nearly half of federaldeath penalty cases, prosecutors withdraw the

threat of execution before trial, typically because of a plea deal, according to the Federal Death Penalty Resource Counsel. Prosecutors explained their

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ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337

Michael Rogers asthenewdirector of the National Security Agency on Thursday, President BarackObamachose a recognized expert in the new art of designing cyberweaponsbut someonewith no public track record in addressing the kinds of privacy concerns that haveput the agency under aharsh spotlight. Rogers, nowthe headof Fleet Cyber Command, theNavy's fast-growing cyberunit, will find himself in the public cross hairs in away hehas never beenduring a 33-year military career. Starting with his confirmation hearings, expected to beginas soon as next month, the admiral will be pressed onhow hewould implement a series of reforms that Obama announced two weeksago.

inmara on om in New York Times News Service

ONLINE

sou

New NSA director nominated — In nominatingViceAdm.

decision in an eight-page document filed in federal court in Boston. "Dzhokhar Tsarnaev targeted the Boston Marathon, an iconic event that draws large

crowds of men, women and children to its final stretch,

making it especially suscepti- tigators say they believe conceived and led the attack, was rorism," prosecutorsw rote. killed in a shootout with the Prosecutors said Tsarnaev police. He was 26. Dzhokhar showed no remorse for the at- Tsarnaev, 20, was later caught tack. They also cited the age of hiding inside a boat. one of the victims, 8-year-old No trial date has been set, Martin Richard, in explaining and Tsarnaev has pleaded not why the death penalty was guilty. warranted. His defense team includes Attorney General Eric Hold- Judy Clarke, one of the nation's er, who had the final say on top defense lawyers in death whether toauthorize prosecu- penalty cases. She has repretors to seek the death penalty, sented Theodore Kaczynski, has said that he personally op- the Unabomber, and Zacarias poses capital punishment, but Moussaoui, a Sept. 11, 2001, he has authorized its use many conspirator. times. Kaczynski's case is an exam"The nature of the conduct ple of one in which the attorney at issue and the resultant harm general approved the death compel this decision," Holder penalty and then withdrew it said in a statement released by after reaching aplea deal. the Justice Department. In the Boston case, investiProsecutors say Tsarnaev gatorsbelieve they have overand his older brother, Tamer- whelming evidence against lan, built bombs out of pressure Tsarnaev, including surveilcookers and detonated them 13 lance camera footage that the seconds apart among specta- FBI says shows him slipping tors at the finish line. The ex- a backpack off his shoulder plosions killed three people and and placing it onto the ground injured more than 260. shortly before the explosion. A police officer at Massachu- Law enforcement officials have ble to the act and effects of ter-

setts Institute of Technology

NuClear Cheating — The Air Force said Thursday that it had suspended 92 officers at Malmstrom Air Force Base inMontananearly half of the nuclear launch crew at the base — in acheating scandal. The Air Force secretary said a "climate of fear" that was pervasive in the ballistic missile force might haveencouraged launch officers to share answers to monthly proficiency tests. She said the nation's nuclear arsenal remained safe. For now, the 92 officers who have beensuspendedand decertified are barred from the underground missile capsules from which ICBMsare launched. LOOkingtO free inmateS — The Justice Department wants low-level drug criminals who weresentenced under tough laws from the days of the crack epidemic to ask the president for early release from prison. In an unprecedented move, Deputy Attorney General James Cole onThursday asked defense lawyers to help the government locate prisoners and encourage them to apply for clemency. The clemency drive is part of the Obama administration's effort to undo a disparity that flooded the nation's prison system anddisproportionately affected black men. Ukraill8 III CriSIS —Critical negotiations between the embattled Ukrainian government andopposition leaders were thrown into disarray Thursday whenPresident Viktor Yanukovych went on sick leave, complaining of a respiratory infection. Thenature andtiming of the president's illness raised immediate questions about his true motive for withdrawing from the political fray whennegotiations with the opposition seemed to begaining momentum. Astatement on the president's website said that Yanukovych, 63, wastaking time off because of "respiratory illness accompanied by ahigh temperature." It offered no indication of how long hewas expected to beabsent.

also said that, in interviews

Badweather blame game — Anyonewhohaslistenedto Kasim

was also killed in a subsequent with the FBI, Tsarnaev admanhunt for the brothers. Ta- mitted his involvement in the merlan Tsarnaev, who inves-

Reed, theformer entertainment lawyer whobecameAtlanta's mayor in 2010, knowsthe manwho calls himself a street fighter likes to beforceful when hemakesa point. But as the national face of acity that wasvirtually incapacitated by 2inches of snowandice, Reedhascomeacross more as peevishthan powerful as hehas doneinterview after interview, mostly rejecting criticism of thegovernment's role inAtlanta's vast ice storm gridlock. HowAtlanta fell victim to morethan 24 hours of icy paralysis despite predictions of ararewinter storm is still being analyzed.

attack.

STATE OF THE UNION FOLLOW-UP

DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising JayBrandt.....541-383-0370 Circulation Adam Sears...541-385-5805 Finance HollyWest..........541-383-0321 HumanResources Traci Donaca.....................541-383-0327 Operations James Baisinger...............541-617-7624

Super BOWISeXrillg — New York lawenforcementauthorities cracked down Thursday on aprostitution ring that they said advertised on public access cableTV,took credit cards and used text messages to market "party packs" of cocaine andsex to clients. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said the ganghad been under surveillance for11 months, but authorities decided to act now in the hope of disrupting any parties that might have been in the works for the upcoming Super Bowl weekend. More than half of the 18 suspects charged in the casewere under arrest Thursday.

TALK TO AN EDITOR Business TimDoran.........541-383-0360 Cily Sheila G.Miler ..........541-617-7631 Community Life, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 Editorials RichardCoe.....541-383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....541-383-0366 Sports Bill Bigelow............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff Mccaulou...........541-410-9207

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CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0356.

President BarackObamalooks at acrank shaft Thursday during a tour of General Electric's Waukesha GasEnginesfacility in Waukesha, Wis. Stressing the importance of having job-training programs that work, Obama on Thursday ordered a "soup to nuts" review of federal workforce training initiatives and pledged to copy the most successful ones.

Conviction reinstated for Knox in Italy The Associated Press FLORENCE, Italy — More

and increased her sentence to

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Emphasizing themes from his State of the Union address, Obamacast improved job training as central to his efforts to make it easier for people to moveup into and stay in the middle class. At the factory near Milwaukee, hesigned apresidential memo directing Vice President Joe Biden to leadthe review, andto work with cities, businesses andlabor leaders to better match training to employer needs.

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Friday, Jan. 31,the31st day of 2014. Thereare 334 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS

Just 30 s ecies in reci i oLiS eC IAe inminutes' ? •

Syria talkS — Thepeace negotiations in Genevaare expected to wrap up.A4

ChineSe NeW Year — The year of the horse begins.81

HISTORY Highlight:In1944, during World War II, U.S. forces began a successful invasion of Kwajalein Atoll and other parts of the Japanese-held Marshall Islands. In1606,GuyFawkes,convicted of treason for his part in the "Gunpowder Plot" against the English Parliament and King James I, wasexecuted. In1863, during the Civil War, the First South Carolina Volunteers, an all-black Union regiment composed of former slaves, was mustered into federal service at Beaufort, S.C. In1865,Gen. Robert E. Lee was namedgeneral-in-chief of all the Confederate armies. In1917, during World War I, Germany served notice it was beginning a policy of unrestricted submarine warfare. In1929, revolutionary Leon Trotsky and his family were expelled from the Soviet Union. In1934, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed theGold Reserve Act. In1958, the United States entered the Space Age with its first successful launch of asatellite into orbit, Explorer I. In1961, NASAlaunched Ham the Chimp aboard aMercury-Redstone rocket from Cape Canaveral; Hamwas recovered safely from the Atlantic Ocean following his16~/~-minute suborbital flight. In1971, astronauts Alan Shepard, Edgar Mitchell and Stuart Roosa blasted off aboard Apollo14on a mission to the moon. In1980, QueenJuliana of the Netherlands announcedshe would abdicate on her birthday the following April, to be succeeded byherdaughter, Princess Beatrix. In1990, McDonald's Corp. opened its first fast-food restaurant in Moscow. Ten years ago: Six U.S.-bound flights from England, Scotland and Francewerecanceled because of security concerns. John Elway andBarry Sanders were elected to the ProFootball Hall of Fame ontheir first attempt; they were joined by Bob Brown andCarl Eller. Five years ago:Iraqis passed through security checkpoints and razor-wire cordons to vote in provincial elections considered a crucial test of the nation's stability. A gasoline spill from a crashed truck erupted into flames in Molo, Kenya, killing at least115 people. Bruce SmithandRodWo odsonwere elected to the ProFootball Hall of Fame in their first year of eligibility; they were joined by Bob Hayes, Randall McDaniel, Derrick Thomasand Buffalo owner Ralph Wilson. Oneyear ago:Chuck Hagel emerged from his grueling confirmation hearing before the Senate ArmedServices Committee with solid Democratic support for his nomination to be President Barack Obama's nextdefensesecretary. Agas explosion caused three floors of the headquarters of Mexico's national oil companyPemex tocollapse, killing 37 people. CalebMoore, 25, an innovative freestyle snowmobile rider who'd been hurt in a crash at theWinter X Games in Colorado, died at a hospital in GrandJunction.

BIRTHDAYS Actress Carol Channing is 93. Composer Philip Glass is 77. Beatrix of the Netherlands, the former queen regent, is 76. Actress Jessica Walter is 73. Rock singer Johnny Rotten is 58. Actress Minnie Driver is 44. Actress Portia de Rossi is 41. Actress Kerry Washington is 37. Singer Justin Timberlake is 33. Folk-rock singer-musician Marcus Mumford is 27. — From wire reports

Stem cells

SCIENCE •

The number of migrating monarch butterflies wintering in Mexico has plunged this year to its lowest level since scientists started keeping track. They're starting to worry the migration is coming to an end. By Michael Wines

In a feat experts say is a significant advance for regenerative medicine, scientists have discovered a surprisingly simple method for creating personalized stem cells that doesn't involve human embryos or tinkering

versity of Minnesota who has

New York Times News Service

studiedmonarchs for decades, e x t reme called th e l a t est e s timate

Faltering u n der

weather and vanishmg habitats, the yearly winter migra-

shocking. "This is the third straight

year of steep declines, which I a handful of forested Mexican think is really scary," she said. mountains dwindled precipi- "This phenomenon — both the tously in December, continuing phenomenon of their migrawhat scientists said was an in- tion and the phenomenon of so creasingly alarmmg decline. many individuals doing itThe migrating population that's at risk." hasbecome so small — perhaps Mexico is the southern ter35million, experts guess —that minus of an age-old journey in theprospectsofits rebounding which monardm shuttle back to levels seen even five years and forth between far-flung ago are diminishing. At worst, summertime havens in Canation of monarch butterflies to

scientists said, a

with DNA.

Two studies published Wednesday in the journal Nature describe a novel procedure for "reprogramming" the blood cells of newborn mice by soaking the cells in a mildly acidic solution for 30 minutes. This

near-fatal shock caused the cells to become pluripotent, or capable of growing into anytype of cell inthe body. When thereprogrammed cells were tagged and injected into a developing mouse, they multiplied and grew

m i g ration da and the United States and a

widely called one of the world's single winter home in Mexico's great natural spectades is in Sierra Madremountains. danger of effectivelyvanishing. By some estimates, a billion The Mexican government or more monarchs once made and the World Wildlife Fund the 2,500-mile-plus trip, breedsaid at a n e w s c onference ing and dying along the route Wednesday that the span of north so that their descendants forest inhabited by the over- were actually the ones that

wintering monarchs shrank completed the migration. last month to a bare 1.65 acres The number of surviving — the equivalent of about P/4 butterflies has varied fromyear football fields. Not only was to year, but the decrease in the that a record low, but it was just size of the migration in the last 56 percent of last year's total, decade has been steep and genwhich was itself a record low. erally steady. At their peak in 1996, the The latest drop is best exmonarchs occupied nearly 45 plained by a two-year stretch acres of forest. of bad weather, said Chip TayThe acreage covered by mon- lor, a biologist at the Universiarchs, which has been surveyed ty of Kansas who has studied annually since 1993, is a rough the butterflies for decades. But proxy for the actual number of while good weather may help butterflies that survive the ar- monarchs rebuild their numduous migration to and from bers, their long-term problemthe mountains. the steady shrinking of habitat Karen Oberhauser, a con- along their migratory routeservation biologist at the Uni- poses a far greater danger.

There's a little Neanderthal in us all, new studiesshow By Sandi Doughton

centration o f Ne a n derthal SEATTLE — Neanderthals DNA in chromosome regions may have died out 3 0,000 that influence hair and skin. years ago, but new analyses That means early h umans

from the University of Wash- must have picked up some ington and Harvard confirm valuable traits f r o m i n t erthat genetic traces of the breeding with Neanderthals, stocky cave-dwellers live on such as a tough skin resistant in most of us. to infection or better adapted Working separately, two to the cold. "It's tempting to speculate research teams probed the genomes of nearly 1,700 people that ... these genes were imfrom Europe and east Asia portant in helping humans in the most comprehensive adapt to non-African environsurvey for DNA passed down ments," said Harvard genetifrom Neanderthals who mat- cist David Reich, co-author of ed with early Homo sapiens. the second study, published in Their

r e sults, p u blished Nature. Wednesday, agree with previScientists believe modern

ous estimates that I to 3 per- humans first migrated out of cent of the genome of living Africa about 100,000 years Europeans and Asians came ago, encountering Neanderfrom Neanderthal ancestors. thals who had been living t eam e stimates throughout Eurasia for hun-

that the average person carries at least 300 to 400 Nean-

dreds of thousands of years. The fact that the two closely related species interbred

derthal genes, out of a total of about 25,000. The scientists was revealed when scientists were able to zero in more were able to sequence Neanpreciselythan ever before on derthal DNA extracted from where those ancestral genes fossil bones and compare it are located. " You can t h ink o f

into heart, bone, brain and

other organs. "It was really surprisingto see that such a remarkable transformation could be triggered simply by stimuli from outside of the cell," said

lead study author Haruko Obokata, a b i ochemistry researcher at the RIKEN re-

Thad Allender/ New YorkTimes News Service

The yearly winter migration of monarch butterflies to a handful of forested Mexican mountains dwindled in December, continuing an increasingly alarming decline due to extreme weather and vanishing habitats.

search institute in Japan. T he simplicily of t h e technique, which Obokata and her colleagues dubbed stimulus triggered acquisition of pluripotency, or STAP, caught many experts off-guard. Obokata said researchers had already begun experiments on human cells, but offered no

details.

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scientists found a high con-

The Seattle Times

The UW

By Monte Monn Los Angeles Times

with modern human DNA . it as

finding fossils in the human genome," said University of Pennsylvania evolutionary geneticist Sarah Tishkoff, who was not involved in the

research. "I think it's really a breakthrough." T he approach means i t

could be possible to mine the genomes of living people for DNA from even more

(Neanderthals never lived in Africa, so modern Africans don't carry their genes.) For the new analyses, re-

searchers used statist ical methods to scan genomes collected as part o f

called the 1000 Genomes Project and identify the DNA

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

UPDATE SYRIA

Mexico

U.. rotests ea sin c emica arms e e

Continued from A1

By Rick Gladstone and Nick Cumming-Bruce

SPll t8lkS — As the first round of talks in the latest peace effort, known asGeneva2, prepared to wrap uptoday, there were signs that in small ways, the conference might have achieved one of its aims: to give political cover to those who want a solution but fear angering hard-liners on either side. Both delegations, at the outset of morning talks, stood for a minute of silence to honor the tens of thousands of Syrians who have died in thewar. Syrian citizens said the talks should begiven achance, even on the subject that has deadlocked them: the call to form a transitional government "by mutual consent." The core of the opposition says that means removing President BasharAssad, while the government hassaid it will not negotiate his exit. In a poll taken by aFacebook group for civilian opposition activists called Tahrir Souri, or Syrian Editors, more than half agreed with this description of Geneva 2: "It's better than expected, and maybe we will get something out of it." A rebel fighter reached in northern Syria was less diplomatic. "When I watch themtalking in Geneva, I want to kill them all," he said.

New York Times News Service

The United States sharply criticized Syria on Thursday over delays in the timetable

for eliminating its chemical weapons, accusing the Syrian government of deliberately stallingtheir removal from the country to gain bargaining leverage and — in a new complaint — reneging on a pledge to destroy the 12 facilities that

produced them. The criticisms reflected growing impatience with the President Bashar Assad

of Syria, who renounced his chemical weapons arsenal

and joined the treaty thatbans them three months ago after

— New YorkTimes NewsService

an international uproar over

an Aug. 21 chemical weapons had telephoned his Russian removal operation could ulticounterpart, Sergei Shoigu, mately jeopardize the carefulUnder a Russian-Ameri- on Wednesday requesting ly timed and coordinated mulcan deal that averted a U.S. Moscow's influence with As- tistate removal and destrucsad'sgovernmentto accelerate tion effort." airstrike on Syrian military sites, Assad pledged the entire compliance. Assad and his subordinates arsenal would be destroyed by Jen Psaki, a State Depart- have said the delays in transthe middle of this year. A U.N. ment spokeswoman, said porting the chemicals resultSecurity Council resolution, Secretaryof State John Kerry ed from security concerns unanimously passed on Sept. had telephoned his Russian about insurgent sabotage on 27, was meant to ensure Syr- counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, the routes to the port. They ia's compliance. on Wednesday as well. "This demanded additional equipAssad's government initial- is not rocket science," Psaki ment, induding armored jackly cooperated with an inter- said of the Syrian behavior. ets for shipping containers, national team overseeing the "They're dragging their feet." electronic countermeasures sequestering of the weapons The U.S. frustration was ex- and detectors to thwart roadand destruction of the equip- pressedtwo days afterPresi- sidebombs. "These demands are withment needed to activate them. dent Barack Obama described But the cooperation began to the agreement to eliminate the out merit and display a 'barfalter in adhering to a timeta- arsenal as an unqualified suc- gaining mentality' rather than ble for exporting the roughly cess. "American diplomacy, a security mentality," Mikulak 1,200 tons of chemicals in the backed by the threat of force, said in his statement, posted arsenal for eventual destruc- is why Syria's chemical weap- on the State Department's tion at sea. ons are being eliminated," website. The Syrians missed the first Obama said in his State of the He also expressed U.S. obdeadline on Dec. 31 for remov- Union address. jections to a Syrian proposal al of the most dangerous toxThe most pointed U.S. crit- that the seven hardened airins, and are likely to miss the idsm Thursday came from crafthangars and five undersecond next week, when the the U.S. ambassador to the ground structures used for entire stockpile is supposed Organization for the Prohi- producingthe deadly chemto be safely out of the coun- bition of Chemical Weapons, icals inside Syria remained try. Only two small shipments the group helping the United "inactivated" rather than be have been exported from the Nations oversee the arsenal's destroyed, as specified under port of Latakia. destruction. the treaty banning chemical A multinational flotilla of A mbassador Robert M i weapons. "These proposed measures ships have been waiting to kulak said in a statement he safely transport the rest, and presented at the organization's are readily reversible within a U.S. naval vessel, the Cape executive council meeting that days and clearly do not meet Ray, equipped with technol- since its last meeting, on Jan. the requirement of 'physically ogy to render the chemicals 8, "the effort to remove chem- destroy' as provided for by the harmless, began the voyage ical agent and key precursor conventionandtheprecedents Monday from Virginia to a chemicals from Syriahas seri- for implementing that requiresouthern Italian port where ously languished and stalled." ment," he said. the chemicals are to be transHe said only about 4percent Mikulak said the United ferred into its cargo hold. of the chemicals had been ex- States wanted the roofs of Defense Secretary Chuck ported from Latakia — the the hangars and entries to Hagel, speaking during a visit first public disclosure of how the tunnels collapsed, and to Warsaw, Poland, on Thurs- much remains in the country. wanted "the overall structurday, expressed concern over Mikulak also said Syria's al integrity of the tunnels" the slow progress, and said he "open-ended delaying of the compromised. attack in the country's civil war.

When Quintero tried to look

through the purse of the driver's wife, Moreno threw up his arms and exploded,"Who the

(expletive) areyou?" "I represent the people," Quintero responded as fellow members of the self-defense group from nearby Tancitaro quickly moved in to quell tensions and allow Moreno to continue his journey. The exchange underscores the federal government's predicament as it tries to restore Eduardo Verdugo /The Associated Press file photo security by sending thousands Armed men belonging to the Self-Defense Council of Michoacan of federal forces to patrol the stand guard at a checkpoint Jan. 14 in Antunez, Mexico. area alongside armed citizens such as Quintero. Some ana"In the short term, the Mex- Or perhaps from the federal lysts say the government's tacit recognition of the self-defense ican government's effort to en- government'? groups ultimately undermines force rule of law in Michoacan Some analysts have drawn the authority of the state. No- may take away from President parallels between the develwhere in Latin America have

Pena Nieto's desire to focus

opments in M i choacan and

paramilitaries, vigilantes or self-defense groups built the rule of law, they say.

public attention primarily on economic reforms, but it's vital

those in Colombia, where two decades ago right-wing para-

for the government to deal with

military groups arose to battle

"The fact that the govern-

the violence that Mexicans face leftist rebels. The paramilitary ment had initially opted to sup- in many parts of the country," groups spread terror in the port theself-defense groups said Andrew Selee, executive areas under their control and was the equivalent of foster- vice president and a Mexico went into cocaine production ing anarchy," said Armand specialist at the Woodrow Wil- themselves. Peschard-Sverdrup, senior as-

son Center. "If done right, this

sociate and security expert at the Washington-based Center

renewed attention to public se- farmer and a leader of the ense groups, rejects curity could reduce the homi- self-def cide rate and help strengthen any comparisons to Colombia rule of law." and denies ties to cartels.

for Strategic and International

Studies. "Given the level of integration between organized crime and the social fabric of

"The last thing we want is another cartel operating in Mi-

Rise of the militias

some of these remote commuOnce outlawedby the govnities, the government's ini- ernment, the militias are seen tial decision revealed a lack of as heroes in a territory where thorough understanding on generations have used brute the part of those government force, not laws, to determine decision-makers." outcomes. Scenes similar to

Asensitive time The dicey situation in Michoacan has arisen at a sensitive time for the government

of President Enrique Pena

the one in Nueva Italia is are

repeated up and down a string of 19 communities where homegrown vigilantes have taken control in an effort to

ing sluggish growth, the president highlighted what he calls

kick out the organized crime gang known as the Knights Templar. Historically, Michoacan has

"Mexico's moment" via a series

been in the forefront of revo-

Nieto. With the country show-

of high-profile policy overhauls in 2013, in education, the country's energy and telecommunication industries and politics-

• s

• /

choacan," he said. "This is our whole reason for putting our lives on the line, to clean out

the mess by these criminals so we can go back to work in our plots of land." At the checkpoint in Nueva Italia, Quintero keeps guard amid the banter of his fellow self-defense members and the smell of pot. Quintero owns a plot of land and grows avocados and corn. He started paying the Knights Templar 1,000 pesos — about $75 — a week in extortion fees, hoping the money would buy him freedom from harassment. Instead, he and his two brothers were kidnapped and held for ransom, which was paid by family and friends on both

lutionary movements, from the war of independence to the Christian uprising and now the growth of militias, which moves aimed in part at attract- began last February when loing billions of dollars in foreign cal farmers, tired of paying exinvestment. tortion, having daughters and sides of the border. On Feb. 19, Mexico will host wives abducted and impregOnce released, he headPresident Barack Obama and nated and seeing sons forcibly ed north to California's San Canadian Prime Minister Ste- recruited by the criminals, Joaquin Valley, but work was phen Harper in the city of To- took up arms. scarce. He returned to Miluca, in Pena Nieto's home state Within a few months, the choacan five months ago and of Mexico. The focus willbe the vigilantes were m ounting joined the self-defense group, future of the 20-year-old North large, military-style operations monitoring checkpoints two or American Free Trade Agree- with modern weapons, setting three days a week and workment, or NAFTA. up checkpoints and cordons ing on his plot the rest of the But the situation in Michoac- around towns and raiding time. "We're doing the job that an, analysts say, underscores known ganghangouts. why Mexico still feels like a naThe actions have raised the government should be dotion being built on quicksand, q uestions about who i s f i - ing," he said. "But from birth with weak judicial institutions, nancing the effort. Is the mon- the government has been the a conviction rate of less than 5 ey coming from a rival drug problem, not the solution. percent, and growing frustra- gang known as the Jalisco That's why I came back, and tion among residents, who are New Generation cartel? From that's why many of us are here, taking up arms to find their wealthy f armers a ffected to be part of the solution. This own brand of justice, posing a by extortion fees? From im- is the only way we know how serious challenge to Pena Nieto. migrant groups in the U.S.? to find justice."

Estanislao Beltran, a lime

l


FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

noter uer owa est, ut t istimetar ete at ource one more than 10 million users of its MLB.com At Bat app last

By Nick Wingfieid New York Times News Service

Want to see the Vince Lom-

year, the potential for outreach

bardi Trophy that goes to the Super Bowl winner'? Take a left in 15 feet. Looking to buy

is enormous. Brick-and-mor-

dise?Try the fourth floor of Macy's, straight ahead.

tar stores are quickly warming to the technology, too, thrilled by the prospect of being able to fine-tune marketing messages and gather more data about

The Super Bowl r emains

customer behavior, just as on-

some Super Bowl merchan-

line competitors like Amazon have for years.

the biggest mass-market advertising event in the country. But this year, a new kind of

"The power of this is it re-

advertising — personalized and based on physical location

ally is able to connect the real world, the b r ick-and-mortar world, with the virtual world

down to a matter of feet — will

with a level of granularity that

greet fans in Times Square and MetLife Stadium, where

this weekend's championship game will be played. At both locations, the Na-

Damon Winter/New YorkTimes NewsService

A notification pops up on ascreen in proximity to a nearby beacon, background, a transmitter that detects nearby smartphones.

This year, advertisements —personalized and based on physical

tional Football League has location down to a matter of feet — will greet fans in Times Square sprinkled tiny wireless trans- and MetLife Stadium during the buildup to the Super Bowl. mitters that can send finely

tuned messages to smartphones. It is the boldest test yet for a months-old technology that could change how brands of all sorts market to their

fessor of law at the University of Washington in Seattle. "And

plays alerts even when a user

is not running an app.

hasn't existed before," said

Manish Jha, the NFL's general manager of mobile. Other

loca t ion-tracking

technologies have helped people orient themselves on maps by using the satellite-based GPS and Wi-Fi access points. Those technologies, though, are not as precise as beacons at

detecting auser's location. GPS signals also do not travel well indoors, and beacons, many of whicharebattery-powered and with its version of the technol- use a technology called Bluegike the nearest entry gate) or eral hundred stores and public ogy, which is why most alerts tooth low energy, are cheaper promoting in-store sales (say, areas in the coming months, of this kind are now sent to and easier to install than Wifor your favorite chocolate) including at two dozen Major iPhone users. Bu t s m a r t- Fi antennas. Qualcomm, for in the first wave of establish- League Baseball stadiums and phones running Google's An- instance, makes beacons that ments using it. But already many Macy's and American droid operating system can cost $10 each with batteries that last up to three years. the technology has privacy Eagle Outfitters stores. Apple also be targeted. Once users download a Privacy advocates say they advocates and legal experts has the devices in more than brimming with concern about 250 stores. brand's app and give permis- are concerned that the prothe implications. Smartphone While location-based alerts sion to receive alerts, they can liferation of beacons would and advertisements have long get messages whenever their add considerably to the vast u sers could p otentially b e spammed with a d vertise- been afeatureofsm artphones, phone drifts within range of amounts of data marketers are ments, they say, and a compa- the new technology requires one of these beacons. (7ypical- gathering about consumers. ny that collects the data might less from users. When Ap- ly, users can stop the tracking While apps often indicate in be inclined to sell it. ple updated the software for and the alerts by changing the their terms of service how they "When it rolls out, you will iPhones several months ago, app's settings.) use location data, many people see all this utility for it," said the company incl uded a new For brands like M ajor ignore the fine print of those Ryan Calo, an assistant pro- feature, iBeacons, that d i s- League Baseball, which had agreements. at some point the economic

incentives will come into play and it won't be pretty." customers. For now, the alerts are mostT he t r a nsmitters, o f t en ly limited to practical news called beacons, will be in sev-

Rebranding Continued fromA1 Supporters, including the Obama administration, say the standards emphasize crit-

ical thinking and analytical skills, as opposed to rote learning, and will enable American students to better compete in

the global marketplace. But the wholesale changes in K-12 education that have

come with the standards have provoked araftof critics.O p-

ponents include tea party activists who say the Common Core standards amount

to a federal takeover of local education and progressives who bristle at the emphasis

on testing and the role of the Gates Foundation, which has funded the development and

promotion of the standards. Some academics say the math and reading standards are too

weak; others say they are too demanding, particularly for young students. Across the country, teachers arestruggling to revamp theirlessons; states are hast-

ily working to adopt standardized tests tailored to the Common Core; and parents

are left to wonder about all the changes taking place in the classroom. Now, with new n ames, the idea that the standards

are "common" might not be apparent. "You got a whole bunch of politicians, increasingly cross-pressured between ac-

Laws Continued fromA1 "The biggest issue that I have found is the landlord and tenant issues where the l andlord lives out o f t o w n ,

lives out of state, and is just a hands-off landlord. So one of the big things I'm hoping to develop is a new program that will allow the city of Bend and OSU to collaborate better with

landlords." Goff declined to p r ovide details on the concept at this

point because he did not want to cause concern among land-

lords, but he said "the design of the program will be a great benefit to not only landlords, but to the community."

Goff is also researching a potential change to city code to

require garbage removal service at all rental apartments

and homes. City code already requiresresidents to remove garbagefrom theirproperties every seven days, but they have the option of personally

T hat change has le d t o

a surge in interest among brands. Technology executives say Apple is further along

"(Rebranding is) something that might be politically expedient in the short term. They

might succeed in bamboozling people who are opposed to the idea of nationwide standards by giving them local names.... But I thinkit's skirting around the issue."

Common Core standards are designed to prepare students for careers or college at a time

when many high school graduates lack the necessary skills.

Immigrants

ment, like the Senate plan,

Continued fromA1

border security, new workplace hiring v erification

President Barack Obama, in an interview with CNN

hours before Boehner released the document, said: " I actually think t hat w e

have a good chance of getting immigration reform." "While these standards are certainly not everything we would agree with, they leave a real possibility

included calls for increased rules and changes to the

currentvisa programs for foreign workers and families. On the key question of what to do w it h t h ose

who entered the country illegally or overstayed their visas, the leadership said young people who came as children, a group known as t hat Democrats an d R e - "Dreamers," would be afpublicans ... can in some forded legal status and, poway come together and tentially, citizenship. pass immigration reform," But for the rest of the unsaid Sen. Charles Schumer, documented population, esD-N.Y., an architect of the

timated to number about 10

Senate immigration plan.

million, the document stat-

"It is a long, hard road but

ed that: "There will be no special path to citizenship

the door is open." B ut the debate is l i k ely last for months and is

fraught with peril for both sides as they fight over the specifics of how many immigrants would be able to attain legal status and citizenship.

for individuals who broke our nation's i m m igration laws — that would be unfair

to those immigrants who have played by the rules and harmful to promoting the rule of law." Rather, the GOP leader-

Conservative pundits de- ship proposed that imminounced the House leader- grants would be allowed to ship for raising the oft-po- live and work in the counlarizing issue during an try if they meet a series of election year, while some provisions, including payliberal groups feared Dem- ing taxes, admitting they ocrats might give up a di- broke the law and learning rect route to citizenship for English. The principles also most of the immigrants in e mphasized that t h e i m the country without legal migrants could not attain permission in order to se- legal status until border cure a deal. s ecurity b enchmarks a r e In releasing the princi- reached. ples, Boehner, according to The release of the ima source in the room, told migration principles was his colleagues: "These stan- viewed on Capitol Hill as dards are as far as we are a test by Boehner to gauge willing to go. Nancy Pelosi the appetite of his caucus, said yesterday that for her and conservative pundits caucus, it is a special path and donors to tackle a big, to citizenship or nothing. risky legislative initiative If Democrats insist on that, in an election year in which then we are not going to get Republicans believe they anywhere this year." have a chance to pick up The Senate plan, backed seats in the House. by the W h ite House and GOP leaders signaled House M i nority L e a d- that a vote — or even an er Pelosi, D-Calif., would extended debate over speguarantee that immigrants cific legislation — would would be able to gain per- not come fo r u n t i l l a t er manent legal status, known this year, possibly in the as a green card, in 10 years summer. "It's p r obably and citizenship three years months out," said Rep. Greg later, provided they meet a Walden, R-Ore., chairman series ofrequirements. of the party's campaign The House GOP docu- committee.

Recent studies have found that

as many as40percentoffirsttime undergraduates need at least one remedial course in

— Rebranding expert Christopher Johnson English or math when they arrive at college. In a country with a long tivists who don't want this and us how to do our education tradition of local control over the obvious imperative that system." education, the Common Core we have to improve our public Also this month, South standards are a sharp deparschools," said Andrew Rother- Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, ture. They mark the first time ham, a former Clinton White a Republican who is facing that nearly every state has House aide who f ounded re-election, told a gathering of agreed to a common set of Bellwether Education, a non- Republican women: "We don't skills and knowledge. F orty-five states and t h e profit organization dedicated ever want to educate South to improving education for Carolina children like they ed- District o f C o l umbia h ave low-income students. "The an- ucate California children. We fully adopted the standards, ti-Common Core folks clear- want to educate South Caroli- which are being implemented ly have the momentum right na children on South Carolina in classrooms across the counnow, so politicians are trying standards, not anyone else's try. The Common Core stanto figure out ways to address standards." dards are not a curriculum; the politics of t hi s w i thout Christopher Johnson, a it is up to each state to decide tossing it out the window." branding expert, doubts that what and how to teach. In each case, the new name new names will quell opposiThe goal is for all students is designed to impart a local tion to the Common Core. to possess certain "common" "It's something that might skills by the end of each flavor to the standards. One of the main criticisms of the be politically expedient in the grade, so that a first-grader Common Core is that national short term," said Johnson, who in Maryland will acquire the standards are replacing home- writes the N ame I nspector same skill s as a first-grader grown benchmarks. blog. "They might succeed in in Maine or Montana. New "Here's what we're going bamboozling people who are standardized tests, which all to ensure: These are Floriopposed to the idea of nation- participating states will be da standards," Florida Gov. wide standards by giving them giving by next school year, Rick Scott, a Republican, told local names.... But I think it's are intended to offer a way to a gathering of state GOP of- skirting around the issue." comparestudent performance ficials this month. "They're Sponsored by a group of across state lines so that parnot some national standards; governors and state educa- ents, students and public offithey're going to be Florida tion officials — with the en- cials can better measure how standards. This is our state. dorsement of the federal gov- theirschool systems are perWe're not going to have the ernment and funding from forming relative to the rest of federal government telling the Gates Foundation — the the country.

taking it to the landfill. Goff also be an increase in multisaid he has never responded to unit housing to service OSU a complaint about the buildup students, and these buildings of solid waste at a home where typically provide garbage ser-

A5

bility task force, Goff said he plans to look at patterns of police complaints surrounding Central Oregon Community the tenant or owner had gar- vice, Restine said. College as a means to better bage removal service, which Bend Mayor Pro Tem Jodie understand the impact a rescurrently costs $16 a month for Barram is a member of the idential OSU-Cascades may weekly removal in Bend. Goff Neighborhood Livability Task have on Bend. said he has talked to tenants Force, a subcommittee of the Goff said he is optimistic who, while explaining they OSU-Cascades Campus Ex- that future OSU students will could not pay for garbage ser- pansion Advisory Committee. be attracted to the area bevice, stopped to answer their Barram said reviewing possi- cause of the lifestyle, and Bend smartphones. "It's a matter of ble changes to the city code is might not experience some of prioritizing," Goff said. just one part of learning from the problems that arise in othKevin Restine, generalman- the experiences of other com- er college towns. Still, he said ager of Plus Property Manage- munities where colleges and it is good to be prepared before ment, LLC, said the company universities expanded. issues arise. "The code will have to "My goal is to identify codes requires garbage service at all of its properties, but he does change, absolutely," Barram thatneed to be amended or not favor a city requirement said. "And the public will get adopted and have them in that all renters have the ser- to weigh in on that, like they place and ready to rock and vice. Restine is also president always do when code chang- roll before any student steps of the Central Oregon Rental es come forth. There will be foot on campus," Goff said. Owners Association. public hearings, so I think this "That seems to be the down"For the city to require that process we're in now with the fall for many of these jurisdiconly tenants have trash ser- (Campus Expansion Advisory tions where they didn't take a vice, my first read is that does Committee) is going to inform proactive approach because not feel appropriate for me, which way you go, whether it's the school has been there so though I am for that outcome, a more restrictive code, or an long." just not at the hands of the open approach." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, city," Restine said. There will At a meeting of the livahborrud@bendbulletin.com

Salem

politics will factor heavily in this legislative session.

"Look, let's just talk about Continued fromA1 On Monday, lawmakers w hat th e r e ality i s, " s a id will be back at the state

House Majority Leader Val

Capitol for a 35-day legislative session. Kitzhaber was grilled on why he didn't know about the troubles long before

Hoyle, D-Eugene. "This is February in a year when everybody is running for election." Lawmakers also discussed the controversial Columbia the scheduled launch of River Crossing bridge project, the Cover Oregon website. legislation to expand backThroughout the p r o- ground checks on gun sales cess, Kitzhaber said, he and legalizing recreational was reassured the website marijuana. "I heard the drumbeats would be ready. He knew there were problems but

from Washington and Colo-

was told they were being rado," Kitzhaber said, speakresolved. There was a "dis- ing of legalizing marijuana. connect," he said, coupled "I think it's very likely in the with poor decisions, bad n ot-so-distant future it w i l l communication and likely be legalized in the state of Oregon." He added he believes management issues. But until an ongoing indepen- lawmakers should discuss dent investigation is com- how to regulate marijuana plete, he said, he would not this legislative session. know for sure what exactLawmakers are also exly went wrong. pected to tackle the issue of "I'm accountable for it,"

Kitzhaber said. "It happened on my watch." With further pressing,

he told reporters "this isn't

whether the state should pri-

vatize liquor sales, which the governor said "at first blush,

it doesn't sound like a good idea."

New Jersey" and that he didn't have a clear answer.

Sen. President Peter Court-

accountability measures to

Idake@bendbulletin.com

ney, D-Salem, said he hopes Issues with Cover Or- Oregon lawmakers can keep egon will likely be one of their reputation of being able the topics dominating the to work "through our differshort legislative session. ences" and pass legislation. "We'll see how good we are Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have proposed on Monday," Courtney said. legislation that would add — Reporter: 541-554-1162, large state IT projects. In an earlier panel with legislative leaders, House Republican Leader Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte, said the most dangerous

place in the Capitol currently is "between a Democratic legislator and a mi-

crophone as they rush to denounce Cover Oregon," he said. With t h e No v e mber election looming, it's clear

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Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

BRIEFING

DESCHUTES COUNTY

iscrimina ioncase o ese e •

Still not enough snow at Hoodoo This week's snowstorm didn't deliver enough snow to prompt Hoodoo Ski Areawest of Sisters to open for the season. "At this point, we cannot open," said Daidre Streeter, Hoodoo office manger. "Wegot too much rain." Hoodoo officials still hold out hope for opening this ski season, but Streeter said they don't have atarget date for opening. Depending on the snow, the annual Winter Carnival planned for Feb.Smay be rescheduled. Hoodoo, which originally planned to open the day after Thanksgiving in November, is waiting for 36 inches of snow, according to the ski area's website. As of Thursday afternoon, it had 20 inches. Thursday afternoon, Hoodoo General Manager Matthew McFarland announced in apress release that the ski area would let season pass holders roll their passes over from this season to next.

By Shelby R. King

ment of employees who exercised their right to protected

The Bulletin

Deschutes County and District Attorney Patrick Fla-

speech"and created a "hostile

herty have settled with a former investigator who alleged she was discriminated against and wrongly fired from her job. Sharon Sweet in April filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court

in Eugene, alleging Flaherty "engaged in a pattern and practice of disparate treat-

work environment, which amounted to employment discrimination."

Court documents filed Jan. 13 indicate the parties have come to a settlement agree-

ment. Sweet's Portland-based attorney, Charese Rohny, said settlement documents should

be finalized in the next couple weeks. Rohny declined

to disclose the amount of the

work wasn't "consistently aboveexpectations"andthat

settlement, saying the parties were still in negotiations and

documents had not yet been finalized. The original complaint named the state of Oregon as

she violated personnel rules by not disclosing her involve-

a defendant. The state was

quently married. Deschutes

termination. The trio settled

dismissed from the lawsuit, leaving Flaherty and the

County had also denied with Flaherty in July 2013 Sweet's allegations, saying the for $710,000, though they county's actions surrounding had originally asked for $22 Sweet's termination were not million. discriminatory. — Reporter: 541-383-0376,

county as defendants.

Flaherty had denied the bulk of the lawsuit, saying Sweet was fired because her

This is the second lawsuit

READYING FOR THECHINESE NEW YEAR

SLjn VP

sentenced to prison By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

A federal judge this week sentenced the vice president of a defunct Bend development

company to10yearsin prison and ordered him to pay $13 million in restitution.

Chief U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken on Wednesday sentenced Shannon Egeland,

39, to a 10-year term for bank fraud and conspiracy to commit bank fraud, Aiken's office sald.

Egeland was vice president of Desert Sun Development, a

• r' Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Master JianFengChenleads his Little Tiger students in ajump kick during aclass Thursdayat Chen's OregonTaiChiWushuschool in Bend.Chen,an international GrandChampion, andhis youth andadult students will perform marital arts routines atthe ChineseNewYearCelebration on Saturday atthe Boys andGirls Club inBend.Theevent is scheduled to run from 4:30 to 9p.m. andalso includes live music, aChinese buffet, a silent auction, a lion dance and ChineseNewYeartraditions. Fundsfrom the event areto benefit Education for ChineseOrphans. For moreinformation, visit www.echoinchina.org.

4 Peaks MusicFestival aimsfor bigger crowds 4 Peaks Nusic Festival

Organizers of the 4 Peaks

«4I

Music Festival near Tumalo want to double attendance for

complained about noise from the show.

you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be

those funds for cars, boats

and other personal items. Egeland received a longer prison term than company

ney Scott Bradford said. Egeland was convicted of selling prescription drugs in

T m lo Res. Rd

Grant County in late 2010, according to Bradford, then C le d .

The bluegrass and rootsrock festival's organizers applied for an outdoor mass gathering permit with De-

dance at a 1,000-person limit. The festival is scheduled for June 20 to 22. Since 2010, the event has

operated with abasic event permit on a 20-acre ranch property on Tumalo Reservoir Road west of Ttrmalo.

perjured himself on the stand in that case. In June, he was caught

schutes County earlier this

month, which would let up to 3,000people attend the show at any one time, though organizers said they'll keep atten-

Three crimes Egeland committed after his June 2010 guilty plea led to the tougher sentence, assistant U.S. attor-

Couch Mk. Rd.

this year's event, a move they say could help book bigger

Reader photos

Include as much detail as possible — when and where

2008. Most of the projects nevergotoffthe ground,and prosecutorsalleged Desert Sun employees used some of

handed down last month.

The Bulletin

Well shot!

Submission requirements:

Central Oregon construction projects between 2004 and

year sentence, which Aiken By Elon Glucklich

well with a handful of neighbors who in the past have

Outdoors section. Submityour best work at bendbulletiiLcom /snow2014andwe'll pickthe best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphetesO bendbulletin.cem and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication.

Bend company charged with falsifying loan documents to secure $19 million from financial institutions for a range of

president Tyler Fitzsimons' 7~/2

acts, but one not likely to sit

that will run in the

shing@bendbulletin.com

Desert

mitted a petition to the

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

deputy district attorneys Phil

Duong, Brentley Foster and Jody Vaughan filed suit in April 2011, alleging wrongful

A Bend manhas sub-

Nore briefing, B2

former DA's office employees since he took office. Former

ship with another investigator in the office who she subse-

ment in a romantic relation-

Mirror Pond moasuresuhmittod city of Bend to prohibit city spending on Mirror Pond, unless the spending addresses health issues for trout in the Deschutes River. Foster Fell wants to put a measure on the November election ballot, which would dictate how public funds are used to address ongoing issues with silt build-up in Mirror Pond. According to his petition filed with the city, the measure seeks to provide healthier habitat for native redband trout. The petition is in legal review, and Bendcitizens have until Tuesday to protestthe measure or request a review. After Tuesday,Fell must gather at least 7,048 valid signatures from Bend residents by Aug. 7 for it to qualify for the Nov. 5election.

settled between Flaherty and

The Bulletin file photo

Andy Zeigert i The Bulletin

Blue Turtle Seduction performs at the 2007 installment of the 4 Peaks Music Festival in Bend. Organizers of the festival will meet in February to discuss the possibility of hosting up to1,000 attendees.

The event permit means no more than 500 peoplecan attend throughout the duration of the festival.

A public hearing is scheduled for Feb. 12 — arequired stepbeforea m assgathering

Totland said. Doubling the attendance would let 4 Peaks reach out to more well-known bands and bring in more permit canbe issued. vendors. "We just want to open it up The proposal is about building off a successful event to those things, go a little bigthat's brought acts with a ger, but still within the connationwide reputation to Central Oregon in recent years,

4 Peaks organizer Stacy

text of a nice, family-oriented event," Totland said. SeeMusic/B2

shoplifting $9 worth of goods at aFred Meyer in Deschutes County and charged with second-degree theft. The charges meant Egeland violated the terms of his plea

agreement in the Desert Sun case, Bradford said.

See Sentence/B2

"It just increased his criminal history." — U.S. Attorney Scott Bradford

Signs ofpoisoningdisplayedbypair of pigeonsfound in Bend By Dylan J. Darling

high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

The Buuetin

A pair of pigeons were found possibly poisoned Monday in downtown Bend, according to

C r.

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

an animal rehabilitator.

The first bird was found having seizures near Strictly Or-

Animalrescue To report or bring in an injured animal to High Desert Wildlife Rescueand Rehabilitation in Bend, call 541-2418680.

ganic Coffee Co. on Southwest

The Bulletin

Colorado Avenue early Monday afternoon and the second was

spooked as people approached and by the time it made it to the

Call a reporter

found about an hour later near

rehabilitation center, it was suf-

Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-218e Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine..................541-383-0367 Sunrlver ................541-383-0367 Deschutes.............541-e17-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367

Amity Creek Magnet Schoolon

fering from tremors. While killing pigeons is legal in Oregon, Bonomo said other options could be used to drive away the birds. Both birds were likely poi-

I Submitted by High Desert Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation

Jeanette Bonomo at Desert Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation weighs a pigeon Thursday in Bend. The bird was one of

two found Monday in town likely poisoned by a pesticide.

Broadway Street, said Jeannette Bonomo, one of the founders

of High Desert Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation in Bend. The second bird wasn't

See a video of apigeon showing signs of poisoning atbenclbulletin.com/pigeen

O

soned with a pesticide designed to cause epileptic-like twitching in pest birds that will scare off

their flock, she said. Bonomo used to live in Boulder, Colo., and said she treated many poisoned pigeons there. "Ican recognize thesymptoms very quickly," she said. Bonomo said she helped with an effort to ban the pesticide in Boulder.

SeePigeon/B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

CALIFORNIA NEWS

Music

Park's trouble emblematic of drought

Continued from B1

By Scott Gold

most 2 feet of rain each year;

Los Angeles Times

that fell to 4 I/2 inches in 2013,

in 2010 after not having a show at all the year before.

C ACHUMA L A K E R E C REATION AREA, Calif. When Jeff Bozarth retired af-

obliterating the previous record of 7 inches, set in 1898.

-

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, 62.7

ter20 years as a police officer and signed up as a park ranger here last spring, he knew what to expect and relished every bit of it.

percent of the state has suddenly tumbled into "extreme"

drought conditions. That's up from 27.6 percent at the start of the calendar year — the

Hidden in the folds of the

Central Coast mountains, Cachuma Lake featured the larg-

year that began less than four weeks ago. The agency's new drought map shows a crimson splotch stretching from Orange County in the south

est campground in Santa Bar-

bara County and one of the area's most popular outdoor playgrounds.

to Mendocino County in the north.

Here, Bozarth knew, was

190,000 acre-feet of crystal-

Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times

"We're right in the heart of

line water that splashed into

Santa Barbara County Parks Department Ranger Jeff Bozarth

it," Fayram said.

clay washes and lapped at pri-

stands in a dry bay at Lake Cachuma Jan. 14 in Santa Barbara County, Calif. Last March, the area was filled with water.

Cachuma Lake, which is at 39.7 percent of capacity, has

meval rock formations. There

would be bobcats, wild pigs, migrating grebes who acted

been in trouble before. In 1990

out an e l aborate courtship toe of his boot into the dirt. just empty." dance. Hawks would ride the The dam was finished in 1953, Earlier this m onth, Gov. thermals — plumes of air that built to rein in the water of the Jerry Brown declared an ofjetted up the cliffs and allowed Santa Ynez River, forming a ficial drought emergency, the birds to stay motionless in reservoir — Cachuma Lake urging California residents to the air without rising, without — for a booming stretch of cut water use by 20 percent

falling, without even flapping their wings. "But I didn't expect this," Bozarth said.

Cachuma Lake, the source of drinking water for 200,000 people on the southern coast

of Santa Barbara County, from Goleta to Carpinteria, is disappearing. It is becoming a startling emblem of California's debilitating drought, with little hope that conditions

will improve any time soon. Bozarth walked to the base

of Bradbury Dam, because you can do that sort of thing right now, and stabbed the

Sentence Continued from B1 "It just increased his crim-

California. In years past, the spot

and directing state agencies to launch a conservation camwhere Bozarth wa s s tand- paign and hire extra seasoning was under 30 to 50 feet of al personnel to confront a water. It wasn't all that long heightened risk of wildfires. ago that Cachuma "spilled" It was a formal recognition of — filled to the brim, to the something that had become point where millions of gal- terribly evident: California is lons of clean, fresh water was dry as dust. released through the dam's Not only di d n umerous gates and cast into the sea, places in California suffer a display of surplus that is their driest year on record in laughable today. 2013; it wasn't even close. In That was only three years San Francisco, the driest year ago. was 1917, when 9 inches of Now, said Tom Fayram, rain fell; in 2013, it was about Santa Barbara County's dep- 5 112 inches. San Luis Obispo uty public works director, "it's County typically receives al-

and 1991, water levels were even lower. "We were that close to being out of water,"

Fayram said, holding two fingers a centimeter apart. Back then, some residents were

catching excess shower water

Egeland must self-report to

and builders into their fraud

the law of averages worked. Eventually, the assumption went, it was going to rain — and it did. The "miracle

March" rains of 1991 pulled Cachuma Lake out of a dire state, and then a healthy rain

year in 1992 filled it back up. Now, forecasters don't see

any rain on the horizon. "And we don't need a good rainstorm," Fayram said. "We

need a good rain year. That's not within view right now."

tencing. Partin is scheduled to

be sentenced March 12. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

issuedin2009.

Pigeon

Oregon, there is no ban on pesticide use on pigeons. Domesticpigeons areconsidered non-wildlife, said David Lane, spokesman for the Oregon

aren't native and can be a pest Avitrol did not return a phone doesn't mean they should be

message for comment.

poisoned, Bonomo said. "No species should die this way," she said.

Of the two birds treated by Bonomo, one died and the

On its website, Avitrol, a

life in Salem, so there are no Tulsa, OK., company that protections for the birds.

makes a pesticide aimed at

Pigeons, also known as ridding pest birds, says the rock doves or rock pigeons, animals don't feel any pain are not native to the state. The when affected by their prodbirds were introduced from uct. The company also says Europe to North America in some birds that eat Avitrol the 1600s, according to the will die. The pesticide may on a line, so they'll move in Cornell Lab of Ornithology's be usedfora hostofbirds,inthe wind. website. cluding crows, cowbirds and In Bend, and al l a r ound But just because the birds pigeons. The press office at

other was still on the mend

Thursday. Bonomo said to get the birds to eat the poison, regular bird seed is put out for a coupledays,then isreplaced by seed mixed with the pesticide. How strong the effects

are on the bird depend on how much poison they eat. "The (first) bird must have ingested a lot of it," she said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812; ddarling®bendbulletin.com.

NEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will updateItems Inthe Police Logwhen sucharequestis received.Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal ofchargesoracquittal, must beverifiable. Formoreinformation, call541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported at 12:48 p.m.Jan. 9, Inthe 2600 block of Northeast U.S.Highway20. Theft —Atheft was reported at2:36 p.m.Jan.11, In the3000 block of North U.S. Highway97. Unlawfulentry —Avehicle was

reported enteredat4:31 p.m.Jan.14, in the20400block of Penhollow Lane. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 7:31a.m. Jan.15,Inthe 20400 block of Christmas Ridge. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:44 p.m.Jan.15, inthe100 blockof Northeast BendRiver MallAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 11:37 a.m. Jan. 27,in the 800 blockof Northwest GeorgiaAvenue. Unlawfulentry —Avehicle was reported enteredat12:44 p.m.Jan. 28, in the20500block of BarrowsCourt. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat12:47 p.m. Jan.28, in the 20100block ofPinebrook Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported at2:25 p.m. Jan.28, inthe areaof Northeast Wichita Wayand Northeast Tombstone

Way. Unlawfulentry —Avehicle was reported enteredat 8:35a.m.Jan. 29, in the61600block of Cherrywood Lane. Criminalmischief —Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at11:10a.m. Jan. 29, In the 2100block of Northeast Daggett Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3 p.m. Jan. 29, In the 21100 block of Clairaway Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported enteredat 512 p.m.Jan.29, in the 20600blockofDaisy Lane. Theft —Atheft wasreported andan arrest made at7:50 p.m. Jan.28, inthe 1900 blockof NortheastThird Street. Theft —Atheft wasreported at 12:40 p.m.Jan.10, Inthe300 block of Northeast IsaiahDrive.

of fmm noon to 2 amn as first

proposed. Besides live music acts, Totland said 4 Peaks would the multiday festival includes make changes and keep food vendors and offers over- working with the county to night camping. ease anyconcerns. ''We know how to do a reFestival organizers have worked with the Deschutes ally good job staying within County Sheriff's Office to all the parameters and ordikeep noise to a minimum af- nances," Totland said. "There's ter 10 p.m. But law enforce- never been one issue (at the ment officials told Deschutes festival), medically or in terms County Com m issioners of police activity." Wednesday they get a handThe county has to approve ful of calls from neighbors up- the mass gathering permit if setaboutthe noise each year. organizers can show they'll Since 2007, the festival has meet all the requirements, generated at least 26 noise like noise control at night, complaints from six individu- adequatemedical care and als, according to figures from enough staff to dean the site the Sheriff's Office. Twenty after the show, according to of those calls came from one the county's legal counsel. person. Aneventtimelinesubmitted Those neighbors have got- to the countyshows festival orten letters informing them of ganizers hope to start setting the mass gathering propos- up the festival June 17 and al and the Feb. 12 hearing, plan to have the site deared by Cynthia Smidt, th e c oun- theendof the day June24. ty's associate planner, said — Reporter: 541-617-7820, Wednesday. egluchlich@bendbulletin.com

The difference, Fayram

serve his time.

Department of Fish and Wild-

shouldadd four security officers to the six they proposed

val allowed up to 3,000 peo- in their permit application ple in its first two years, but and have security staff on reduced its size considerably throughout the night instead

said, was that in those days,

were more severe, the addi-

Continued from B1 She said there are more humane options out there for people contending with pigeons. These range from repellents based on grape seed extract to perch deterrents, such as netting, coils and spikes. Scarecrows, particularly plastic owls, hawks or cats, can also be effective if they hang

Founded in 2007, the festi-

in buckets and using it to flush the toilet.

tional charges meant Egeland Egeland and Fitzsimons Egeland's sentencing means had alonger criminal record recruited 11 other Desert Sun just one of the 13 defendants, at the time of sentencing. employees, local loan officers John Partin, still awaits sen-

inal history," Bradford said. prison on May 1. It hasn't been scheme. All pleaded guilty afThough Fitzsimons' charges determined yet where he'll ter federal indictments were

Sheriffs staff told commissioners the festival organimrs

UNEllalZ eOEICR DEPARTSIKIIIT Criminalmischief — Anactof criminal mischief wasreported at4:34a.m. Jan. 29, In theareaof NorthwestHarwood Street. Theft —Atheftwas reported at7:56a.m. Jan. 29, intheareaofEast First Street. DUII —LisaClermont,51, was arrested on suspicion ofdrlving underthe influence of Intoxicantsat610 p.m.Jan.29,Inthe areaof SoutheastLynnBoulevard.

LOCAL BRIEFING Continue d f/om Bt

OSU-Cascadesstudies relationshipswith towns

Joshua Joseph, 24, Melissa Stokes, 26, andCarlos Romero-Pineda, 36, werestopped A meeting of the neighborby a Deschutes County deputy hood livability task force of the on U.S. Highway 97near China OSU-CascadesCampus ExpanHat Road. Dispatchers reportsion and Advisory Committee edly alerted the deputy that the on Thursday featured input from vehicle was associated with a college and city officials from Jan. 21 robbery at Wal-Mart, communities across the country. when suspects are said to have The participants included rep- stolen property and threatened resentatives from the University an employee with pepper spray, of Southern Maine InPortland, then fled. No onewas injured in Western Washington University the incident. and its host city, Bellingham, Joseph andStokes were Northern Arizona University in arrested on suspicion of Flagstaff and anemployee of second-degree theft and secboth Colorado State University ond-degree robbery. During and its host city, Fort Collins. the stop, authorities say they They stressed the needfor discovered Romero-Pinedawas structured and ongoing comin possession of onepound munication between city and university officials. Additionally, of methamphetamine. Hewas arrested on suspicion of tamperthere was anemphasis on the ing with evidence, aswell as on value of student volunteer and internship programs onthe local suspicion of the manufacture, possession and delivery of economy. methamphetamine. Participants also discussed points of tension in the townRidgeview high toraise gown relationship. Topon funds for EmptyBowls everyone's list was the issueof students parking in residential Redmond's Ridgeview High communities. SteveSwanfrom School will host an Empty Bowls Western Washington University fundraiser Feb. 9 from noonto said his school helps payfor a 7 p.m. to support the nonprofit permit parkIng program that Jericho Road. discourages students from parkThe event has beenorgaing in residential areas. Other nized by the school's Keyand challenges discussed werenoise Sparrow clubs, and will feature complaints related to student hotsoup servedinbowlsmade parkIng and largeevents that by Rldgevlew students in Bnan bring in alumni and parents. Manselle's ceramic art class. will keep theceramPolice: Three arrested icParticipants bowls at the end of theevent. in Bendmeth dust The class created about 360 bowls for the occasion. Three people werearrested Tickets can bepurchasedat Wednesday morning after a trafthe door for $10, with all profic stop of two people allegedly involved In a robbery resulted in ceeds going to the transitional the seizure of a pound of meth- housing charIty. amphetamine, according to a For more information about news release from BendPolice the event call 541-504-3600. — Bulletin staff reports Lt. Kurt Koesten

Food, Home & Garden In

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PUBLIC OFFICIALS STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, 0 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary ofState KateBrown,0 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, 0 159Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. N.E Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state.or.Us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral EllenRosenblum, 0 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.Us

• Labor CommissionerBradAvakian 800 N.E.OregonSt., Sulte1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.goviboll

LEGISLATURE Senate • Sen. TedFerrioli, R-District 30 (Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli©state.or.Us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioll • Sen. TlmKnopp,R-Dlstrlct 27 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E.,S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1727 Emall: sen.tlmknopp©state.or.us W eb: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. DougWhitsett, R-District28 (Crook, portion of Deschutesj 900 Court St. N.E.,S-303

Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state.or.Us Web: www.leg.state.or.Us/whitsett

House ef Representatives • Rep. JasonConger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutesj 900 Court St. N.E.,H-477 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger©state.or.Us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. JohnHuffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.Usihuffman • Rep. Mike McLane,R-Dlstrlct 55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E.,H-385 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mlkemclane©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.Us/mclane • Rep. GeneWhisnant, R-District53 (portion of Deschutesj

900 Court St. N.E.,H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhlsnant©state. OI;US

Web: www.leg.state.or.Usiwhisnant

DESCHUTES COUIIITY 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692

• •

County Commission • TammyBaney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney@ co.deschutes.or.Us • Alan Unger, 0-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes. or.Us • Tony DeBone,R-La Pine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email: Tony DeBone@o.deschutes. OI'.US

• • f


FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

REGON

us or -

K •

ri

• Gov. Kitzhaber callsthe project a priority for the state;Sen.Courtney remainsdubious The Associated Press SALEM — The push for a

new Interstate 5 bridge over the Columbia River is headed

toward a collision course in the Oregon Legislature. Gov. John Kitzhaber and

House Speaker Tina Kotek are continuing their aggressive push for the project But Senate President Peter Court-

ney insists that the skeptical Washington Legislature back the project too, not just Gov. Jay Inslee.

"The project is too important for the state not to try and continue the conversation with the information we now have,"

for cost overruns or shortfalls Courtney said. "The state of in tolling revenue. Oregon De- W ashington needs to do i t s partment o f T r a nsportation duty — its state Legislature and officials say they can secure its governor." necessary permission through Courtney declined to say intergovernmental agr e e- whether he would use his auments with Washington, which

wouldn't require legislative approval in Olympia, Wash. "It is legally, it is administraKotek, a Portland Democrat, said Thursday. tively, it is financially, it is opWashington's Senate last erationally doable," Kitzhaber year dedined to take up the said. "I think we need to do it. It project amid strong opposition is an Oregon priority." to plans to use the new bridge But Courtney, a Salem Demto extend Portland's light-rail ocrat, has been vocal in his networkintoVancouver, Wash. opposition to moving forward Advocates in Oregon are push- without support from Washing to move ahead anyway, ington lawmakers. "We have done our duty," with Oregon baring all the risk

Ben nonpro ito ers grants to evelop rone technology PORTLAND — A new Or-

egon nonprofit organization is capitalizing on the state's recently approved commercial drone test ranges to im-

prove the economy and spur drone-related jobs. The Oregon Unmanned Systems Business Enterprise started to solicit proposals on Thursday for matching grants that further unmanned aeri-

es have to apply for special Preference will be given to time-consuming, expensive projects that have the greatest and uncertain permits that benefit to overall economic have barred most drone development in the stateentrepreneurs. especially those that can be The new test ranges will of- used in precision agriculture, fer the first chance to locally search and rescue and foresttest unmanned aerial vehide rymanagement. technology and will likely be The nonprofit was spearopen to almost anyunmanned headed by the Economic Deaircraff-vehide business that velopment for Central Oregon has the right equipment and in Bend and developed with meetsstandards for operator the help of industry experts.

al technologies in the state. qualifications. Based in Bend, the nonprofit The nonprofit wants to help is funded for two years with companies and other entities $822,000in statem oney. develop and test UAVs that T he i n itiative comes a can directly benefit the state

"We looked at the aviation

sector and said UAVs are the most promising thing. And that turned out tobetrue," said

Ruth Lindley, the organization's marketing manager. distribute grants ranging from The Eastern Oregon Re$25,000 to $75,000, though gional Airport will serve as around the country — indud- smaller and larger grant pro- one of the test ranges, and ing ranges in Pendleton, Til- posals will also be considered. Pendleton plans to apply for lamook and Warm Springs. Proposals can include proj- one of the drone grants, Steve The University of Alaska will ects that help existing drone Chrisman, the economic decoordinate drone testing on companies expand, assist velopment coordinator there, ranges in Oregon, Hawaii and companies in winning new sald. Alaska. contracts, or recruit firms to The deadline for submitting Drones' commercial use is do testing in the state or estab- the drone grant applications is still not legal, and business- lishthemselves in Oregon. Feb.28. month after the Federal Avia tion A d m i nistration a n nounced six drone test sites

and its communities. It will

Consumeraward slashedbyjudge The Associated Press

reduction to $1.62 million PORTLAND — A woman er contacted Equifax eight still represented "the highest who won nearly $19 million times between 2009 and 2011 single-digit ratio accepted in a lawsuit against Equifax to correct inaccuracies, in- within constitutional limits" over credit report mistakes cluding erroneous accounts at 9-to-l. "The court c o n cludes saw the award cut to less and collection attempts, as than $2 million by a federal well as an incorrect Social Equifax engaged in reprejudge in Portland. Security number and birth- hensible conduct that caused Judge Anna Brown said day. The Marion County real harm to Miller," Brown W ednesday that s h e r e - woman's lawsuit a lleged wrote. "The amount of the duced the punitive damages the Atlanta-based company punitive-damages award, alto bring the amount more failed to correct the mistakes. though within constitutional in line with the $180,000 in Miller discovered the prob- limits, nevertheless, should compensatory damages. lem when she was denied be enough to deter Equifax The jury was told that Mill-

Attorney Justin B a x ter, creditby a bank in Decemwho represents plaintiff Julie ber 2009.

Miller, said he hasn't decided whether to appeal. "We were expecting a reduction but we are disappointed by the result," he

thority as Senate president to

ensure a bridge-funding bill doesn't reach the Senate floor. He would say only, "I don't think they could show they have 16 votes," the minimum needed for a bill to pass the Senate.

Sen. Diane Rosenbaum of Portland, the No. 2 Democrat, also took a skeptical view. "It's

a bridge between two states, and two states need to step up,"

• 0

Rosenbaum said.

sald.

Rodeo

HOMES PRICED FROM gogTH+EST « cRo s I N o » $459,900-$739,900

2203 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. • Central courtyard • Large greatroom • Master on mainlevel • Bright interior • Priced at0040,900 OIAECTIOAS: West on Shevlin Park Rd., left on NW Crossing Dr., left on NW Lemhi PassDr.

2175 NW Lolo Dr. • Elegant & spacious • Main floor abovestreet • Master on mainlevel • Central courtyard • Priced atg99,900

The Associated Press PORTLAND — Th e Ore-

gon Supreme Court has sent a dustup over an 83-year-old costume from the state's big-

OIASCTIONS: West on Skyliners Rd., right on Mt.Washington Dr., right on NW Lolo Dr.

gest rodeo back down to circuit court. The long-running dispute began in 2000 over a fringed leather skirt and vest worn by rodeo queen Lois McIntyre in

1930. She died in 1964. Her family agreed to display the costume in the Pendleton

Round-Up Hall of Fame. Her family discovered the outfit was missing and in the possession of another former rodeo queen, who refused to give it Up.

The family filed suit in 2007, one year after the statute of limitations ran out on a claim

against a person who has deprived another of personal property. Previous rulings from lower

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The court disagreed Thursday, and said that the statute of limitations didn't start until

FO R SA LE

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courts held that her family ran out of time to sue.

Bend R, Central Oregon

the family knew its property was in another person's controL The court sent the matter

1900 NW Monterey Pines Dr. • Charming cottages • 2 & 3 bedroomplans • High end finishes • Central location • Homes pricedfrom9929,000

back to circuit court to determine the costume's rightful

owner. The lawsuit over the outfit involves two women with close ties to the century-old western extravaganza that draws an estimated 50,000 people to the town for a celebration that

OIAECTIOAS: West on NWNewport

Ave./NWShevlin Park Rd., right on NW PenceLn., left on NWMonterey Pines Dr. Property on right.

includes a four-day rodeo, parades and concert.

The lawsuit was filed by Joan Rice, a daughter-in-law

in compensatory damages. a major credit bureau. EquiBrown's order noted that her fax appealed in December.

-

case back to court

from repeating this type of

a consumer in a case against

PENDLETON

and others similarly situated

Courts have g enerally conduct in the future." been moving toward punitive The jury award in July was damages within a single-dig- one of the largest granted to it ratio of what was awarded

S

.

gealtor of the Year

e in ensi ies

The Associated Press

B3

1472 NW Portland Ave. • Ready for 5.8 kW solar array • Bright southern exposure • Fully remodeled,updated • View of city & Paulinas

of McIntyre who believes the

costumeisworth $25,000. Defendant Mary Rabb has

• Priced at0S09,000 OIAECTIONS: West on NWNewport Ave., right on NW 11th St., left on NW

the outfit. She was the 1968

Pendleton Round-Up queen.

Portland Ave.

19492 Century Dr. • Striking architecture • Master on mainlevel • I 1-ft great roomceiling • On roadto Mt. Bachelor • Priced at9094,900

AROUND THESTATE Investigators: no more bodies on I8llll —Jackson County Sheriff's officers have wrapped up a three-week search Df arural Rogue River farm, where theysaytwo people were killed and dismembered. Theysaythey found no additional bodies. Thesearch concluded Thursday. Investigators dug more than 50 holes and drained apond intheir search for any other possible victims. SusanMonica is accused of killing a handymanandanother unidentified victim. Shehaspleaded not guilty. The Sheriff's Office says Monica's pigs have been euthanizedand removedfrom the property. One former tenant at the ranch claims that Monica not only fed deadsheep to her pigs, but also shot three of his pets andfedthem to the swine. Sheriff's Officers havesaid they found human body parts on the farm. Theyhavenot offered details. Monica is being held without bail in the JacksonCounty Jail.

room sink, a medicine cabinet andcarpeting. The kitchen sink was left behind Dn the floor. Owner Lisa Merritt says it looks like the thieves were carpenters who knewwhat they were doing, because it was donevery cleanly and efficiently. Shesaysnothing was insured and estimates the loss at $15,000.

LOgging dill COnteSted —Environmental

groups are lining up against SerhRonWyden's bill to promote logging on federal forests in Western Oregon to help struggling timber counties. Leaders from 10national environmental groups, including the Sierra Cluband Natural Resources DefenseCouncil, signed a letter urging members of the Senate to oppose the bill. They say its measures to streamline environmental reviews threaten the foundations of laws like theEndangeredSpeciesAct. Leaders of 21 Oregonconservation groups sent a similar letter to Sert Jeff Merkley. Wyden HOuSefar Sale diSmantled — Thieves spokesman Keith Chusays the bill has drawn are said to havestripped a house insouthern opposition from interest groups on both sides Oregon of practically everything but the kitchen of the issue, andthe letters are not surprising in sink while the owners were remodeling it for view of a committee hearing being held on the sale. Thursday, areal estate agent showing the bill next week inWashington, D.C. house in RogueRiver reportedly discovered the burglary, which occurred betweenJaft 16 and ROgue RiVer SuSPiCiauS deViCe — The 18. Takenwere arefrigerator, an electric range, Oregon State Police bombsquad wascalled in a dishwasher, a microwaveoven, kitchen cabto assist with a suspicious device found near inets and countertops, a water heater, abathan apartment complex Thursday in Rogue

DIRECTIONS: From Parkway exit right on Colorado Blvd., left on SW Century Dr., watch for frontageroadon nght.

River. RogueRiver Police Chief KenLewis said a maintenance manat an apartment complex found a 4-foot long PVC pipe that had caps sealed on both ends. Therewas asmall black section in the middle Dfthe pipe. "The maintenance manpicked it Upand it had weight to it," Lewis said. "Without any other explanation and where it's placed, wehaveto call OSPBomb Squad." Lewisaddedthattherehasn'tbeenany construction in the area. Lewis said his office was asked to build a small bunker areawith sandbags so thesquad can"blow the end of it off" at the scene.

19036 Mt. Shasta Dr. • Three Pinesluxury • Master on mainlevel • Large openkitchen • Courtyard & patio • Priced at9014,000 DIRECTIONS: West on Shevlin Park Rd., left on NWPark CommonsDr., left on Mt. Jefferson Pl., right on Mt.ShastaDr.

19121 atiloquin Dr. • Absolutely like new • 4-car garage • Luxurious finishes • Bonus room & office

SOldier'S MedalOf HOnOr—TheMedal of Honor posthumously awarded to anOregon man killed in Vietnam will be displayed at the Baker County Courthouse. ArmySgt. John Noble Holcomb, of Richland, is the only Baker County resident to ever receive the U.S.military's highest decoration. Bill Holcomb brought the Medal DfHonor and his brother's other military honors to the courthouse this week. Board of Commissioners Chairman FredWarner Jr. says the items will be displayed in the courthouse lobby. Holcomb died during a firefight in December1968. Thecitation that accompanied his Medal of Honor said hedemonstrated "indomitable will and courageafter his unit was attacked from three sides." — Fromuiro roports

• Priced at90S0,900 OIAECTIONS: West on NWShevlin Park

Rd., right on NW Park Commons Dr., right on NW Chiloquin Dr.

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once again, lawmakers should step up to the plate. Most of OSU-Cascades currently is housed in the relatively new Cascades Hall on the Central Oregon Community College campus. COCC collects rent from OSU-Cascades, and the latter must get out of its lease with COCC to move to a new site on Northwest 14th Street. Last year, lawmakers awarded COCC $5.26 million in bonds to pay off its mortgage on the building. That accomplished, OSU-Cascades would be outfrom under a substantial rent bill and able to move forward with its own plans. COCC, meanwhile, would take over and refurbish Cascades Hall rather than spend more money toerect a new building. It's aconcept Gov. JohnKitzhaber agreed with during the 2013 session and that he continues to agree with today. There was a glitch, though. The 2013 bill awarded COCC $5.26 million in bonds that required a dollar for dollar match from the community college. Had COCC accepted them, it would have ended up with twice the money it needed to

again. Huffman, who represents Jefferson and a portion of Deschutes counties, serves on the joint Ways and Means Committee. This time, he will ask lawmakers to approve the kind of bonds needed to pay of the COCC mortgage and free OSU-Cascades to go forward with plans to move. Lawmakers should agree to the

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proposal.

OSU-Cascades is critical to the futureofone ofthepoorestsections of the state. All of Eastern Oregon, an area where unemployment rates and poverty levels tend to be above state averages, now only is served by two complete universities — the largely science-based Oregon Institute of Technology in Klamath Falls and Eastern Oregon University in the far northeast corner. A full-service university located where the bulk of the region's students live is a must. Huffman is asking lawmakers to approve a smaller bond — some $3.63 million this time as compared with $5.3 million last year — than before. It will have to compete with othermoney requests,butlawmakaccomplish the mortgage payoff. ers should recognize its value not Now Rep. John Huffman, R-The only to Central Oregon, but to the Dalles, is asking lawmakers to start entire state.

Climate, freedom connected a country has to address those challenges. 've lived in good climate," Freedoms are treated differently J ohn Steinbeck w r ote i n in countries that are inhospitable "Travels with Charley," his and poor, inhospitable and rich, and 1962 chronicle of a t r i p a r ound in countries — both rich and poorAmerica, "and it bores the hell out where the weather is balmy, Van de of me." Vliert argues. Poverty, he says, enA t th e t i m e , S t einbeck w a s courages those living in an inhospitraipsing through New England, table climate to see it as threatening reminiscing about his dull days — to respond with fear and a need in Cuernavaca, Mexico,and other for control, which results in lower warm spots, pondering the need for levels of freedom (think Afghania little cold in a man's life to "give stan, Belarus or Sudan). Given adethe warmth sweetness." This is, of quate resources, however, a climate course,the same Steinbeck who that is too hot or too cold becomes won fame chronicling the lives of not a threat but a challenge to be Oklahoman sharecroppers who conquered with the kind of cregave up everything to reach Califor- ativity and open-mindedness that nia, where "it never gets cold" and encourages high levels of freedom "you can reach out anywhere and (think Canada, Finland or Iceland). pick an orange." These latter countries — poor-

New bill could lessen

alcohol-related deaths nderage drinkers can face a unique dilemma if they have a friend who may be suflering fmm alcohol poisoning: Call 911 and subject themselves and the friend to legal trouble or do nothing and hope the friend will sleep it off and be fine in the

morning. Oregon Rep. M~ Dohe r t y, D-Tigard, is sponsoring a bill in the upcoming legisMve session to provide immunity in such cases from Mnor in Possession charges, accordingto The Oregonian. She was prompted by the story of a California case where a drunkyoung man died after friends startedtotakehimtothe hospitalbut turnedback for fear oflegal consequences. If Doherty's bill becomes law, Oregon would join 17 other states with similar provisions. The immunity would not extend to other more serious crimes, such as drunk driving or

drugcharges. The risk of death from alcohol poisoningis not an abstraction: Ithas k illed at least two un~ drin k ers in Oregon in the last few years, according to the Oregon Health

Authority. This proposal muld help prevent future cases by encouraging friends to do the right thing in seek-

ingmedical help. Jennifer Summers, dmctor of substance abuse prevention at the University of Oregon, said she frequentlyhears from students that they fear getting in trouble if they call for help for a drunk friend. She told The Oregonian she supports Doherty's proposal and appreciatesitsfocuson health and safety. Reps. Andy Olson, R-Albany; Jeff Barker, D-Aloha; and Wally Hicks, R-Grants Pass — all of whom have lawenforcement background — also support the proposal, Doherty said. It's a tricky business to exempt law-breakers Aom consequences, and it should be done sparingly. The well-known problem of underage drinking, especially among college students, shouldn't get a pass. This proposal, however, addresses a specific and narrow medical question. It's a restrained approach that addresses a real problem and deserves positive action from legislators.

Allcla P.Q. Wlttmeyer

d eterminism. The i dea f ound a

Foreign Policy

ready audience in the colonial pe-

The differencebetween how the Pulitzer Prize-winning Steinbeck

ly situated, but blessed with the

experienced the gentle climes of

Mother Nature — tend to be freer

resources to temper the effects of

than their temperate counterparts, family dreamed of California was where daily living involves a minlargelydue to disparate resources. imum of challenges, Van de Vliert So says research by Dutch psychol- concludes, using data from prior ogist Evert Van de Vliert, who also studies and new survey data across argues that how people experience 85 countries. The model, he argues, climate goes on to shape culture. has inter esting consequences when In a recent paper published in global warming is factored in. the journal Behavioral and Brain Milder Februarys in Helsinki or a Sciences, titled "Climato-Econom- balmy Winnipeg winter could have ic Habitats Support Patterns of adverse effects on freedom, Van Human Needs, Stresses and Free- de Vliert says. Meanwhile, poorer doms," Van de Vliert argues that countries in frigid regions might varying levels of freedoms around actually gain freedoms as a result the world — from freedom of the of climate change, as their environpress tofreedom of speech to free- ments become less threatening. dom from discrimination — can be That climate has an impact on explained by looking at the interac- culture isn't a new i dea; Hippotion between the challenges a cli- crates, Ibn Khaldun and Montesmate poses and how much wealth quieu all dabbled in geographical Mexico andhow the desperate Joad

riod, as Western explorers found

explanations of national values and character in longitude and latitude. In the following decades, these the-

ories quickly fell into disrepute in geography departments around the world. But as the potential effects

of climate change loom larger, research on how the environment can affect pretty much everything is experiencinga resurgence. Heavy hitters from scientist Jared Diamond to economist Jeffrey Sachs have waded back into these turbulent waters.

The goal of his theory, Van de Vliert says, is to move beyond a

straightforward story of how climate influences culture: to introduce more variables, like wealth.

For the moment, the theory may raise more questions than it can answer: What do we make of rich but authoritarian countries in what

could easily be considered a challenging climate, like Qatar? Should cold and hot climates be treated differently? (Yes, Van de Vliert saysbut he left it out of this paper, for the

sake of simplicity.) And what about countries where levels of freedom

have experienced wild swings, like Germany'? For now, perhaps the theory is best a blanket for those of us hun-

kering down during long winters. When the thermometer drops into

single digits, just think of how warm freedom is on the inside. And when it comes to visiting paradise,

remember: Nice place to visitwouldn't want to live there. — Alicia PQ. Wittmeyer is an assistant editor at Foreign Policy.

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We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

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Merkley needs to answer for health care problems By Kelth Sime n open letter to Sen. Jeff Merkley: Obamacare was passed in 2010 by Democrats through legislative sleight of hand without a single supporting Republican vote. Moreover, it took special considerations for

A

selected senators to get their vote and

the vote of every Democrat senator. Therefore, every Democrat senator, induding you, must take singular responsibility for its passage. Nancy Pelosi, when House Speaker, famously said, owe have to pass the

site; the fact that more people have had theirhealth care coverage canceled than have obtained new health care

coverage and the arguably illegal administrative changes being made by thepresident.

For your part, there are many questions that need to be answered for your constituents.

• Why, when you were on the Health, Education, Labor and Pen-

sions Committee working on the bill, did you and the Democrats on the

IN MY VIEW

Whatdo you say tothose who are losing their healthcare plans, those whose premiums have significantly increased and those whose lives have been turned upside down?

insure the 15.4 percent (2012 Census

Bureau report) of the country that is uninsured, many that way through choice? There are many free market

alterable fact that Obamacare is basically a vehide for the redistribution of

ways to get this 15.4 percent insured without massive intrusion by the government. • Why did you resist recent Republican efforts to delay implementation of Obamacare with your no votes (which caused the government to shut down) and then cosponsor the Landrieu bill

income. From the New York Times on

to accomplish the same thing? Accord-

the insurance market disruptions driving political attacks this fall."

ing to a Bulletin reporter, you said that forts toward developing a bipartisan absolute inability of the Department "we are seeking partners across the bill to find out what's in it." healthcare reform bill and disregard of Health and Human Services to ad- aisle?" Why are you doing this now? Max Baucus, a major architect of suggestions, such as allowing insur- minister the current program and the Is itbecause Obamacare is in trouble'? Obamacare, stated in a Senate hear- ance to be sold across state lines, in- problems within the IRS? • You were on the Health, Educaing on April 17, 2013, "I just see a huge stituting tort reform and many other • Why do you believe that it was tion, Labor and Pensions Committee train wreck coming down." valid suggestions? necessaryforthe Democrats to pass and should have known what was in Well, the Democrats passed it, and •Obamacareappears to be the in- Obamacare, which takes over one- the bill. What happened to, "If you like we've found out what's in it: we have terim step to a single payer system. sixth of the American economy and your plan you can keep your plan"'? the continuing disastrous roll outDo you favor a single payer health- forces84.6 percent of the people in What do you say to those who are the trai n wreck predicted by Baucus care system? If so, why do you think the country who already have health losing their healthcare plans, those is unfolding before our eyes; the total it would work, considering the multi- insurance to buy insurance plans that whose premiums have significantly lack of Internet security with the web- tude of problems with Obamacare, the most of them do not want in order to increased and those whose lives have committee reject all Republican ef-

been turned upside down? Lost in all in the discussion is the un-

Nov. 23, 2013: redistribution "is particularly toxic at the White House, where

it has been hidden away to make the Affordable Care Act more palatable to the public ... the redistribution of

wealth has always been a central feature of the law and lies at the heart of Moreover, the law is a "one size fits

all" requiring people to buy coverage they don't need and that they would not buy otherwise. The law is funda-

mentally flawed. It can't be made to work, as suggested by the Jan. 17 In My View "ACA meets a political re-

ality." The only solution is to repeal Obamacare and start over using tried and true free market principles.

What sayyou? — Keith Sime lives in Sunriver.


FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

CALIFORNIA NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES

George (Perk) W. Hammons March 26, 1935 - Jan. 19, 2014 George w a s

b o r n th e

youngest of nine children

m Prairie City, Oregon, to George a n d M ayb elle Hammons. George served on the Pendleton Oregon Police D e p a r t m en t fo r eight years and continued his career in la w e n f orcement in Redmond, Oregon for the next 1 5 y e ars, ret iring a s a ser g e an t i n 1985. Fo r t he n e x t 12 years, he owned and operated two restaurants in the Salem area and made his home i n B r o o ks , O r egon until his passing. He is survived by his wife of 59 years, Loretta Hamm ons, hi s chi l dr e n ,

Rhonda Frazier

( B rian),

D onna H o c ke r

( Da v i d ) ,

a nd

Ha mm o n s

David Hammons (Melanie) Ro n a l d

(Carrie), six grandchildren

and f iv e g r e at-grandchildren. He i s a l s o s u rvived b y h is si s t e r s , V i o l e t Y arber, Ru th Ho l me s , N orma F r y , a nd man y nieces and nephews. G eorge loved t h e L o r d , l oved his f a mily an d w a s known fo r h i s u n c ompromising integrity. He will be m issed by a l l w h o l o v e d him. A memorial service w i l l b e held i n h i s h o n o r o n F ebruary 8 , 2 0 14 a t 2 : 0 0 .m. at the Brooks Assemly o f Go d Ch u r c h i n

brooks, Oregon.

Anthony A. 'Tony' Schaffner Feb. 7, 1958- Jan. 28, 2014 'Tony' A nthony A. Schaffner, age 55, of Redmond, passed away January 28, 2014. He was born F ebruary 7 , 1 9 58, i n M c Minnville, OR, to V elma 8 Clem Schaffner. Locally, he h ad worked Culver Schools and th e Tony SchaffnerPlumb

Fierce gas station.

Tony enjoyed cooking,

hunting ,

fi sh i n g

an d

spending time with family.

D uring th e l a s t y e a r h i s brother , Pat an d s ister-in-law, T e r esa h a d t aken T o n y in to th ei r h ome an d s t ayed b y h i s side as caretakers during his illness. H e i s s u r v i ved b y T i m Schaffner and step-daughter, Stacey; siblings, Greg, P at, Ju lie, F r a nk , C a t h y and Pam; both his parents and numerous relatives. A Memorial o f L i f e w i l l be held S aturday, February 1, 2014, at 1:00 p.m., at the barn: directions - off of H wy 12 6 h ea d n o r t h o n 91st Street. Memorial co n t r i b utions can be made to Partners In C are H o s pice, 2 07 5 N E Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701. P lease sig n o u r o n l i n e g uestbook w w w .r ed mondmemorial.com.

Obituarypolicy Death Noticesarefreeandwil be run foroneday,butspecific guidelinesmustbefollowed. Local obituariesarepaidadvertisements submittedbyfamilies orfuneral homes.Theymaybesubmitted byphone,mail, emailorfax. The Bulletinreservesthe righttoedit all submissions.Pleaseinclude contactinformationin allcorrespondence. Forinformation on anyof these servicesorabout theobituarypolicy, contact541-617-7825.

DeariliseL DeathNoticesareaccepteduntilnoon Mondaythrough Fridayfor next-daypublicationand by4:30p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication.Obituariesmust bereceivedby5p.m.MondaythroUgh ThUrsdayfor publicationonthe seconddayaftersubmission,by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sundaypublication, andby9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesdaypublication. Deadlinesfor dlsplayadsvary; pleasecallfordetails. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax:541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O.Box6020 Bend,OR97708

FEATUREDOBITUARY

Rep. Waxman decides he'll forgo a bid for re-election

Milchbergsmuggled

By Michael Doyle

guns, spurring on rebellion inWarsaw

Thursday that

"If I had to do something, I did it. I Irving Milchberg, who as a plucky Jewish street urchin, didn't have time to By Joseph Berger

New York Times News Service

escaped transport to concen-

analyze it."

tration camps three times and sold cigarettes to Nazis

— Irving Mllchberg

in the heart of occupied War-

saw while smuggling guns and food to resistance fighters, died Sunday in Toronto.

said in 2013, trying to explain his daring resourcefulness. "If I had to do something, I did

ard Berman said Thursday, The historic clean-air comcalling Waxman's departure promise, though, wasn't a a "great loss for the country permanent peace treaty, and

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Veteran Rep. Henry Waxman of California announced and California."

it didn't quell all ambition.

h e'll r e t ire

when his term expires, cap- A political animal ping a decadeslong political Berman, who lost his own career in which the Los Anlong-held House seat in a geles Democrat significantly 2012 Democratic primary, shaped national policy, state- had worked closely with wide politics and Capitol Hill Waxman since their d ays tactics.

a t UCLA and U CLA

School in the early 1960s. Praise "Henry will leave behind For many years, they and years, Waxman has helped Berman's brother Michael, a a legacy as an extraordinary expand health care, police behind-the-scenes political public servant and one of the food safety and clean the operator, led what became most accomplished legislanation's air. As a savvy insid- known as the "Waxman-Ber- tors of his or any era," Preser, he helped pioneer fund- man machine."The close ident Barack Obama said raising as a career tool. And allies used fundraising, en- Thursday in a statement. as one of the few surviving dorsements and redistricting, Waxman had previously members of the H ouse of all the tools of the trade. chaired the House Oversight As a nuts-and-bolts con-

Representatives' post-Water-

In Waxman, the nitty-grit-

memoir by a Holocaust sur-

the Jewish ghetto and the out-

vivor, Joseph Ziemian, called "The Cigarette Sellers of

side world and continued to smuggle in food. While they were loading coal for a railway, his uncle, the family's

also a person of high integri"I first ran for office be- ty," said former Fresno, Cacause I believe government lif.-area Congressman John can be a force for good in Krebs, a Democrat who was people's lives," Waxman said elected to the House the same

square was in the heart of a

only other survivor, put him

a barracks for SS t roops,

ing to the Ziemian memoir,

another building was a German gendarmerie and a third building housed Hungarian soldiers collaborating with the Germans. A Gestapo secret police office was nearby. The square itself was bustling and noisy, and much of

smuggled guns to the ghetto in hollowed loaves, twice by spiriting through the sewers. F or several weeks i n April and May 1943, as the

in touch with rebel fighters. nearby YMCA had become Notyet 16, Milchberg, accord-

the racket was contributed

last remnants of the ghetto

were being "liquidated," the fighters, armed with guns, grenades and f i rebombs, staged a quixotic revolt in

by about 14 cigarette sellers, most of whom were or- what became known as the phaned boys and girls hiding Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, their Jewish identities and a milestone of Jewish resissleeping either on the streets, tance.Milchberg, who had

was a political animal, but

Service

in a statement Thursday. "I

Representatives with my conviction intact."

74-year-oldlawmaker said he'd step down when the congressional term expires at the end of the year. Combined with the previously announced impending retirement of fellow 40-year House veteran Rep. George Miller,

the group was switched to another train, he mingled with a

gressional delegation, which is dominated by Democrats. "He has an unequaled record of achievement on so many areas of public policy, particularly health, envi-

crowd of Polish boys selling

ronmental an d

water and escaped. He made it back to War-

issues," his former Los Angeles-area colleague How-

pass as a Polish gentile. "This group of Jewish children, wandering around under the very noses of a thousand poli cemen, gendarmes, Gestapo men and ordinary spies, constituted an unexplained and inexplicable phe-

lif., "set important precedents

and innovated new investigative tools." The president of the Natu-

ral Resources Defense Coun-

while Democratic Sen. Di-

anne Feinstein of his home state called him "among the

Michigan Democrat John Dingell to update the Clean Air Act.

most special people I have ever known." Only four members of the 4 35-member H o use h a v e

served longer than Waxman or Miller, who took their initial oaths of office on Jan. 3,

1975. That day was sunny, The longtime adversaries the temperature was unseahammered out a compro- sonably moderate and the mise on controlling so-called House was abuzz with enermobile source pollutiongy after the influx of dozens emitted from motor vehicles of new Democratic members. and airplanes — with Wax- Waxman, an attorneywho'd man securing tighter tail- served six years in the Calipipe-emission standards that fornia State Assembly, began effectively matched those al- standing out quickly despite ready in place in California. his modest stature.

ture will sap considerable seniority from the state's con-

eyes made it easier for him to

words of its current chairman, Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Ca-

them."

a hard-fought 1989 deal that Waxman finally struck with

D-Calif., Waxman's depar-

but did not actually fight in the uprising, was rounded up

could shoot them on the spot saw's Aryan side, but he badif they discovered they were ly injured his leg while runJewish. The fact that Milch- ning from agendarme. He berg had sandy hair and blue managed to persuade a Pol-

feet to the fire and, in the

cil, Frances Beinecke, said

The pragmatic and the idealistic came together on certain key occasions, as in

half his life in the House, the

vously accommodating Polish families. For a year and a half, Milchberg and the other children hustled, sometimes fighting among themselves over customers, who included not only Poles but also the hundreds of Germans who

R eform

Committee, where he held the Bush administration's

year as Waxman. "I never had the feeling that he was,

Clean air

After serving more than

visited his uncle for Passover

Poniatowacamp. But when

and G overnment

have held this view throughWaxman had been a "stalout my career in Congress. quote, selling out. He had his wart champion" of the enviAnd I will leave the House of principles, and he followed ronment and public health,

in cemeteries or with ner-

and put aboard a train to the

powerful in the House.

gressman for the past 40

gate class of 1974, Waxman ty, and occasional hardball, has a rare ability to b oth coincided with a long track cut a deal and craft a liberal record of serious legislating. "I always thought that he message.

Warsaw district that German authorities had taken over. A

traditionally one of the most

Law

Hewas 86. His deathwas confirmed it. I didn't have time to anaby his son, Howard. lyzeit." Milchberg's i mprobable He took a series of jobs that saga was chronicled in a 1962 allowed him to move between

Three Crosses Square." The

Some 18 years later, Waxman toppled the then-82year-old Dingell to claim the chairmanship of the Energy and Commerce Committee,

c o n sumer The provisions, and others,

"As time went on, he cer-

became the Clean Air Act

tainly became more of a lead-

amendments of 1990.

er," Krebs said.

ish doctor he had known before the war to treat him. He

ran into some youths he had met before, who were now

hanging out with the cigarette sellers of Three Crosses Square and joined the dique. The boys had nicknames like Conky, Hoppy, Toothy and nomenon," Ziemian wrote. Frenchy. Milchberg, who had taken According to Milchberg's the Polish name Henrik Ro- son, surviving meant balzowski but was known by the

ancing "extreme fear and

nickname Bull, was a leader extreme hubris." And indeed, of the group. some boys perished. The boy Born Ignac Milchberg on known as Frenchy was flatSept. 15, 1927, into a War- teredbythe attention of an SS saw housewares merchant's man, thinking that might be family, he saw his fairly an advantage, but for reasons comfortable world begin to they never learned, Frenchy crumble after the Nazi invasion in September 1939, and

the walling off of a Jewish ghetto about six months later. The family was assigned to a room over an abandoned grocery store, and Ignac and his father were sent to work in a

was taken to the Gestapo and

never heard from. Fearing that Frenchy might expose them all, the cigarette sellers scattered and went their own

ways until the Soviet army •

liberated the city. In 1945, Milchberg made

lumberyard outside the ghet- his way to Czechoslovakia, to, sometimes bartering for then Austria, then to a camp food that they would sneak for displaced people in ocback. cupied Germany, where he In 1942, his father, while learned watchmaking, his on the work detail, was killed lifelong occupation. In 1947 by a Gestapo officer who Canada allowed 1,000 chilfound him hiding bread, then dren to immigrate, and he ordered him to run before became one ofthree cigashooting him in the back. Ig- rette sellers who settled there, nac, who had been working while most went to Israel. nearby, managed to slip back He ended up in Niagara into the ghetto to bring food Falls, where he opened his to his mother. When he re- own jewelry and watch busiturned, his father's body had ness. In 1953, he met his wife, alreadybeen taken to a mass Renee, who had survived the grave. war because she was sent One day, he was seized in with an aunt and unde to a the street and taken to the Russian labor camp. She had Umschlagplatz, where Jews come to Niagara Falls as a were put aboard trains to the tourist. In addition to his wife and Treblinka death camp. But during the night he scaled a their son, Milchberg is surfence, fled andreturned tothe vived by a daughter, Anne, ghetto. There he encountered and three grandchildren. In old age, Milchberg an empty apartment. His mother and three sisters had wound up in Toronto, in a neighborhood of survivors been sent to Treblinka. He made it out to the Aryan who met regularly over tea side and joined another work or coffe e in a courtyard and detail, but those workers, too, traded jokes and stories of the were taken at gunpoint to

the Umschlagplatz and put aboard a train. When the train was stalled, Milchberg

war.

In 1993, he took a trip to Po-

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land with his son for the 50th

anniversaryof the Warsaw managed to break the bars of Ghetto Uprising and visited a car window and scramble Treblinka. "He completely broke out, roll into a ditch and flee. "To tell you the truth, I nev- down," his son said. "I'd never er thought much," Milchberg seen him do that before."

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©2013 CNH America LLC.New Holland is a registered trademark of CNHAmsnca LLC.


B6

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided byWSI ©2014.

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Today: Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain and snow.

HIGH

Tonight:

25

FORECAST: 5TATE 46/40

";tatix-~L~C~ >

WEST Mostly with scattered showers is oll 6/2 I/allowa today. Snow level • Pendleton 32/200 w e En terpris near 2,000 feet. 40I25 • Meacham

Umatilla

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40/29

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Crescent • Fort Rock 3504

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Riley

32/19

Frenchglen 38/20

Rome

• 52'

39/15

Paisley

Corvallis • 19 0 Baker City

35/16

Chiloquin 35/21

• Klamath

'drr d

• grookiogd

Yesterday's stateextremes

Jordan Iley

36/1 5

df

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39/25

41/20

36/1 3

Lake yx N 9 40/azx9 xx~

33/18

Juntura

• Burns

Chnstmas Iley • Silver 36/14

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3507

33/13

34/1 5

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40/19

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40n3

La Plne 37/I 3

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Mostly cloudy with a mix of rain and snow showers. EAST Mostly cloudy with tario a chance of snow 39/ overthe mounValee tains.

31/22

xxxxxe. C 0y42/23

CENTRAL

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'x'Cuxxhxx x d xx x x x k x 4 6 1 %%4 3 ansrxx 9 x 99 xN x' • John ' Day 4 4x x x N k

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-

39724 Union

pÃ<2

Fields•

• Lakeview

Falls 37/iii

McDermin

36/22

3421

3604

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

-o a

,gnkncouver >~+ 43/36

• Calga 19/0

Saskatoon 9/-11

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Bismarck

Billings

13/3

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Marco Island, Fla

onto

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28/1

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Fosston, Minn.

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El Centro, Calif.

• 2.83"

27/5

Thunder Bay 7/-17

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Winnipe

' i i Sehttle xxx' 43/35

(in the 48 contiguous states):

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if x 21 rtland 35/23 ton 37/27 ew York 40/32 iladelphia 39/26 ngton, DC. 44/30

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Anchorage 30/19 'D

34/22

OALASKA

72/6ti+

62/ x> Miami 80/72

Sos

Monterrey La Faz 78/58o 79/57 Mazatlan 82/67

Juneau

FRONTS

Partly cloudy.

2

cloudy.

I ' Partly

o

cloudy.

1

5

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

39 24

41 22

38 21

38 18

a"y cloudy.

BENDALMANAC

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....8:08 a.m...... 6:51p.m. Venus......515 a m...... 313 p m. Mars......11:10 pm.....1025 am. Jupiter......2:29 p.m...... 5:53 a.m. Satum......1:44 a.m.....11:39 a.m. Uranus.....9:38 a.m.....10:07 p.m.

Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend High/low.............. 41/27 24 hours endi 4np.m. g *.. 0.00" Remrd high........ 66 in 1971 Month to date.......... 1.22" Remrdlow........ -12 in1957 Averagemonthto date... 1.49" Average high.............. 42 Year tn date............ 1.22" Average low............... 25 Average yearto date..... 1.49" Barometricpressureat4 p.m29.85 Remrd24hours ...OA5in1958 *Melted liquid equivalent

Sunrise today...... 7:24 a.m. MOOnphaSeS Sunsettoday...... 514 Pzm Fjr51 Fug Sunrisetomorrow .. 7;23a.m. Sunsettomorrow... 5:1 6p.m. Moonri isetoday....7:33a.m. Moonsettnday....6:50pm. Fe 6 reh14 Feb. 2 Mar.1

ULTRAVIOLETINDEX

OREGON CITIES

~SKI REPORT

Yesterday F r i day S a turdayThe higher the UV Index number, the greater Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeandskin protection. Index is City Precipitationvaluesare 24-hourtotalsthrough4 pm for solar at noon. Astoria ........ 49/43/0.11 ....46/38/sh.....47/36/pc Baker City 38/1 9/0.01 .....35/18/c.....33/14/pc Brookings 52/41/0.27....50/40/sh.....51/40/pc Burns.......... 43/24/0.00.....36/13/6......38/1 1/s Eugene 52/37/trace....46/31/sh.....46/28/pc Klamath Falls ...40/25/0.00.....37/16/c.....39/16/pc Lakeview....... 45/28/0.00....34/21/pc.....36/16/pc La Pine........ 40/26/0.00....37/1 3/sn.....36/1 4/pc Medford 51/42/trace....48/27/sh.....48/29/pc Newport 48/39/0.03....46/38/sh.... AB/34/pc North Bend.....52/43/0.1 5....48/36/sh.....50/36/pc Ontario 33/27/0.00.....39/25/c.....38/21/pc Pendleton 47/35/0.06.....40/25/c.....37/20/pc Portland 50/42/0.05....45/34/sh.....45/30/pc Prineville 40727/0.00.... 41/22/rs.... A1/21/pc Redmond 43/23/trace.... 40/1 9/rs.... AO/18/pc Roseburg 51/43/0.05....47/33/sh.....49/31/pc Salem 51/39/0.01 ....45/33/sh.... A6/29/pc Sisters......... 43723/0.00.... 39/1 9/rs.....40/1 9/pc The Dages 51/42/trace.....44/30/c.....44/28/pc

MEDIUM HIGH 0

2

4

6

8

10

QOAD CONDITIONS Snow levelandroadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m.yesterday.Key:T.T. = Traction Tires.

Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . . 8 . . . . . . . . 55 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland.................0.0...no report Mt. Bachelor...... . . . . . . . . . . . 6 . . . . . .55-72 Mt. Hood Meadows...... . . . . . 5 . . . . . .52-72 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl...... . . . . . . 3 . . . . . .12-15 Timberline....... . . . . . . . . . . . 6.0.. . . . . . . 66 Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report

Pass Conditions WigamettePass .............0.0......24-36 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at CabbageHill.......... Carry chains or T.Tires Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . .34-37 Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass ...... Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtno California..... 2-4.... . .15-25 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Park City, Utah ....... . . . . . . . . 9 . . . . . . . . 51 Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires Squaw Valley, California........ 6 . . . . . .19-25 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T. Tires Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . . 5 . . . . . .24-28 Hwy. 138 at DiamondLake .... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico....... . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .31-35 Hwy.242 atMcKenzi e Pass........Closed forseason Vail, Colorado....... . . . . . . . . . 5 . . . . . . . . 47 For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weatherPcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-pariial clouds,c-clo uds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn snow,i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

wv w o a a w

Yesterday's extremes

Partly

5

dr.

39 5easjdoerx9 9 9' r>++« X XXX X X X X ' r , h h «d « h X

• I4

• I4

iI

CONDITIONS ++x

•vss

++++

* *** * 4 44do4 ' * * ** * *

.+ da+da+

Cold W arm Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hdio//LW City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene1X......69/35N 00... 78/45/s. 57/30/pc GrandRapids....28/13N05.. 25/16/pc. 25/13/sn RapidCiiy.......36/13/000..29/10/pc... 20/I/c Savann ah.......39/29/0.00...5544/s.68/55/pc Akron ...........28/9N 00 ..35/2$50 ..41/26/rs GreenBay.......27/22/0.20... 9/4/pc ..15/-1/sn Reno...........43/33/017...42/18/c. 38/17/pc Seattle..........47/44N.13 ..43/35/sh. 44/34/pc Albany...........27/1N.OO...35/23/c ..38/30/rs Oreensboro.......35/7/000...48I29/s.52/42/pc Richmond........36/4/0.00...44/26/s. 54/39/pc Sioux Falls........36/5N.10...12/6/pc..16/-5/pc Albuquerque.....67/31N.OO ..Sf/32/pc. 47/28/pc Hamsburg........28/3/000... 37/26/c...42/36/r RgrhesiuNY.....31/7/0.00...34/27/c.36/29/sn Spokane........32/19N 06..32/18/pc. 3117/pc Anchorage......29/2M.OO...30/19/s.. 3I21/s Nartbrd,CT......30/8/0.00...36/24c .. 39/32/c Saoamento......63/50/0.11 ..60/36/pc. 60/36/pc SpringfieldMO.A$25N00..39/33/sh...33/19/i Atlanta ........ AO/13N00... 5539/s. Sf/49/pc Helena..........29/10/006....26/7/c .. 23/7/pc St. Louis........ A7/25N.O.O37/29/sn..3418/rs Tampa..........50/43N18.. 73/60/pc. 77/66/pc AtlanticCity..... 27/-3N.iN ..41/25/pc. 43/41Ipc Ngnolulu........8I6$0.00...81//0/s. 79/7$sh Salt LakeCity....3994N13... 35/21lc. 33/17/pc Tucson..........81/4i/0.00..69/45/pc. 65/41/pc Austin..........65/24/O.IN .. 7460/pc. 75/44/pc Nguslon........58/22/000 ..72/61Ish.. 7457/s SanAntgnio .....68/34N.OO. 75/58/pc. 76/52/pc Tulsa...........51/33/0.00..46/29/sh.38/22/pc Baltimore........29/5/0.00 ..42/29/pc. 45/35/pc Nuntsville........45/6N01 ..51/39/pc.57/41/pc SanDiego...... 62/56/irace..63/50/pc. 63/47/pc Washingtgn,DC.3416/0.00 ..4430/pc. 48/3$pc Billings .........27/12/0.18..26/ti/pc.. 20/7/pc Indianapolis.....33/14000 ..33/3isn...40/17/i SanFrancism... 58/52/irace.. 58/44/pc.58/44/rc Wichita.........51/32N00..33/21/sn.32/1ipc Birmingham......449/0 00 .. 55/41/pc. 61/5ipc Jackson, MS.....50/14000..5N49lpc. 7556/pc SanJose........60/51/010..59/38/pc. 59/3Ipc Yakima........ SN29/trace... 3I24/c. 341 9/pc Bismarck.........16/2N 02 .. 13/3/pc.... 5/ 7/c Jacksonvile......42/32/0.00... 64/SNs. 75/6ish Santare........57/Jt/0.00..47/25/pc.36/19/pc Yuma...........82/540.00..72/49/pc. 7046/pc Boise...........43/34/0.00... 38/24/c.36/19/pc Juneau..........36/28NOO...3422/s.33/21/pc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........30/16/000... 37/27/c.. 40/34/c Kansas City..... A6/33NOO.2518/sn. 27/12/pc BridgeportCT....27/12N00...36/28/c. AO/35lrs Lansing.........25/13N.03.. 28/18/sn. 27/11/sn Amsterdam......37/28/0.00..35/33/pc. 43/37/sh Mecra..........93ll3NOO...88/70l..s 86/69/s Buffalo ..........31/9N 00 ..31/24/sn. 33/26/sn Lasveg as.......73/48N 00..59/4ypc.55/37/pc Athens..........57/41/0.00..6$54/sh. 52/46/sh MeximCity......73/45/0.00...70/49/s. 73/45/pc Burlinginn, VT....25/11N 00... 31/15/c. 33/29/sn lexington.......38/10/000..41/37/pc.53/33/sh Auckl and........72/61/000..768 ysh.70/58/pc Monueal.........23/9N 00 .. 31yt2/sf. 3N28/sn Caribou, ME.....17/1N 00.... 28$c. 25/18/pc Linmln..........41/25/000 25/1 .. 5/sn .. 28/7/pc Baghdad........69/45N00...66/49/c. 65/47/pc Moscow........ 1/-1 5N.OO.... I+c.... 5/-3/c Charleston, SC...3427N.OO... 55/41/s. 65/54/pc Little Rock.......SI22/000 ..55/46/sh.56/32/sh Bangtnk........90//ON.00... 92/71ls.. 93/72/s Nairnbi .........8459N.OO...81/52/s.. 82/52/s Charlotte.........39M.IN... 50/29/s.54/42/pc LosAngeles......62/5$0.00 ..65/48/pc. 63/4i/pc Beijing......... 4623N.00..42/19/pc.. 47/18/s Nassau .........82/72N.OO... 78/71lt. 77/72/pc Chattanooga......41/5/000.. 5I35/pc. 57/43/pc Louisvile........39/12/000..41/38/sh. 52/29/sh Beirut ..........6455N.OO...65/56/c.. 6558/c NewDalhi.......6I52N IN...7458/s. 7459/pc Cheyen ne......A4/2IO.OO....268/c..22/7/pc Madison,W1.....31/23N07... 13/5/pc...1 9/ 1/c Berlin...........25/21N.OO...34I29/c.36/26/pc Osaka..........5M7/015 ..49/35/pc.55/47/sh Chicago.........32/20/0.00 .. 22/18/sn.. 289lsn Memphis....... AE/18/000..5448/sh. 63/33/sh Boggta.........82/50N.OO...73/51lc...745it Oslo............21/18/007..25/22/sn ..28/27/sf Cincinnaii........33/3/0 00 .. 36/31Isn..47/26/rs Miami..........70/61N.11..80/72/sh. 83/72/pc Budapest........3421/0.00.. 2$26/is .. 30/25/c Ottawa ..........21/3N 00.. 2510/sf. 27/23/sn Cleveland.......29/11/0.00 ..33/29/sn..41/24/rs Milwaukae......29/21N02... 16/9/pc.. 255/sn Buenos Aires.....88/68/0.00..94/65/pc...84/73/t Paiis............45/37N.01 ..39/37/pc. 40/32/sh Colorado Springs.53/35/0 01.. 28/16/sn.. 25/9/pc Minneapolis......28/6/0.44.... 7/-3/5...18/-6/c CaboSanLucas ..82/55/0.00 ..81/56/pc. 7856/rx Rio de Janeiro....97/7M.OO...89/72/s .. 90/72/s ColumbiaMO , ..A8/26/OiN..31/21/sn. 27/12/sn Nashvile.........43/6NOO .50/37/pc. 59/37/sh Cairo...........72/54/000...73/51/c .. 74/60/c Rome...........59/54/0 34 .. 54/51lsh. 55/47/sh Columbia SC....41/13N.i , N... 52I33/s. 5545/pc NewOrleans.....5I25N.OO. 62/52/pc. 69/59/pc Calgary...........9/3/011... 19/0/sf... 14/1/s Santiago........88/59/0.00... 87/62/s .. 84/59/s ColumbusGA....42/12NOO...53/39/s. 61/51/sh NewYork.......3N16N00... 4032/c .. 43/38/c Canmn.........87//ONJN... 77/734. 82/73/p SaoPaulo.......91/73N.OO... 86/68/t...85/67/t Columbus 08.....3NB/0.00..33/29/sn..4424/is Newark,NJ......2IIO/000...40/30/c..A2/36/r Dublin..........43/39/0.00..46/34/sh.. 41/35/c Sapporo .......AE/28N.OI..25/18/sn. 23/tf/pc Conmrd, NH..... 2I dy0 00... 35/19/c.35/29/sn Norlglk,VA.......32/$000... 44/3Ns.55/41lpc Edinburgh.......39/36/0.00 .. 35/34/sn.36/35/sh Seoul ...........43/27N 00..44/32/pc.33/20/sh Corpus Christi....69/49/0.00 .. 67/62/sh.. 69/59/s Oklahoma City...57/32/0.00... 43/30/c. 39/24/pc Geneva.........37/30/0.00..37/24/pc. 36/30/sh Shangh ai........64/ 45N.OO..64/54/pc.66/44/pc DallasFtWorth...60/32N 00.. 71/55/pc. 59/36/pc Omaha.........42/22/0.00 ..25/15/sn .. 2IBIpc Harare..........81/64N.23... 73/61Ir...72/61It Singapore.......Bfy73N.00 ..87/74/pc.. 8$73/c Daylnn .........31/11/000.. 32/29/sn. A421/is Orlando.........52/45/0.24 ..74/62/pc. 83/64/sh HongKong......72/59N.O O.70/61Ipc. 71/63/pc Stgckholm.......27/25NOO..30/24/sn ..33/31/sf Denver..........49/33/001 3NJ4/sn. .. 27/1Ipc PalmSprings.....73M0.00 ..70/42/pc. 69/40/pc istanbul.........37/32N.OO .42/38/pc .. 46/44/c Sydne. f.........847IO.OO..85/64/pc.86/67/pc DesMoines..... ABI20/0.00..2NJJ/sn... 26/4/c Peoria..........36/22/001..23/19/sn.. 27$sn Jeiusalem.......61/42N.O O...6451/c.. 67/55/c Taipei...........7%57/000...73/63/s.. 71/63/s Detroit...........25/BN 00 .. 30/24/sn..32/14/rs Philadelphia.....28/1 ON.00... 39/26/c .. 45/35/c Johannesubrg....84/66N.OO. 76/61lsh...73/61It Tel Aviv.........70/45/0.00 .. 70/56/pc.. 745ic Duluth...........20/ON.OO... 5/-9/pc .. 16/4ysf Phoenix.........77/52NOO ..71/48/pc. 68/44/pc Uma ...........82/70N.OO .81/69/pc...79/69/t Tokyo...........63/41N.OO . 52/38/pc .. 47/44/c El Paso..........73/38N.OO . 73/49/pc. 67/42/pc Pitlsburgh........302I0.00 .. 37/31/rs. 4f/29/sh Usbon..........55/45/0.00..60/52/sh. 54/45/pc Toronto..........28/9N.OO .. 28/18/sf ..3423/rs Fairbanks......... 7/-1N.OO... 6/-11/s...10/-7/s Fortand,ME......25/8NOO...35/23/c..37/31/rs Landon.........4387/0.34... 42/41lr. 39/36/pc Vancou ver.......43/39N.OB..43/36/sh..43/37/c Fargo...........14 2N 00... 3/ 7/pc ..3/14/pc Providence.......28/7N.OO...38/27/c.. 40/34/c Madrid.........52I36/0.00..44/41Ish. 43/29/sh Vienna..........32/27N.OO .. 2422/rs.. 31/28/c Flagstaff........49/27N.OO.. 38/2irs .. 37/16/c Raleigh..........38/7/0.00...49/2Is. 55/43/pc Manila..........81/72/0.00..83/75/pc. 82/71/sh Warsaw..........14/7N.OO .1412/pc .. 2?/16/c

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 College hoops, C3 Golf, C3 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

NBA

Two Blazers are All-Star reserves PORTLAND — Trail

Blazers forward LaMarcus Aldridge and guard Damian Lillard have both beennamed reserves for the NBAAllStar game. Aldridge, given his third All-Star nod by a vote of Western Conference coaches, is the 11th Blazer to make multiple All-Star teams and the fifth to be named at least three times. In his seventh NBA season, Aldridge is averaging career highs of 24.3 points, 11.6 rebounds and 2.8assists. Lillard, last season's Rookie of the Year,will be making his first AllStar game appearance. He is averaging 20.6 points, 3.5 rebounds and 5.6 assists. The starters for the Western Conference All-Star teaminclude the Lakers' KobeBryant, OklahomaCity's Kevin Durant, the Clippers' Blake Griffin, Minnesota's Kevin LoveandGolden State's StephenCurry. In addition to Aldridge and Lillard, the reserves include Houston's James Harden and Dwight Howard,

PREP WRESTLING

ava ears u awa or ua win Bulletin staff report Bend High dropped four of

takedown early into the over- point lead, Kasey Beuschlein re- great win for this team," Lartime period to defeat Redmond's corded a fall in 47 seconds, and win said. "We didn't win all the the first six matches on Thurs- Mario Nanato. Austin Palmer followed with a matches we thought we would. "That one really got everyone 10-2 major decision to help the But our guys showed up." day night, yet the Lava Bears only trailed visiting Redmond pumped up," Lava Bears coach Lava Bears escape with a 34Brennan Yates (182 pounds) High by three points. Luke Larwin said. 26 Intermountain Conference and Austin Doescher (120) At 220 pounds, Bend's Juan In the 126-pound matchup, wrestling dual win. logged falls for the Panthers. "That's a huge win for us, a Gregorio used a d ouble-leg with Bend clinging to a threeSeeBears/C4

Inside • Mountain View wrestling takes down Summit 49-21,C4

• Prep Scoreboard,C4

SUPER BOWL XLVIII

WINTER

OLYMPICS

Cod games used to be norm • NFLtitle games were

playedon

frozen fields

Dallas' Dirk Nowitzki,

San Antonio's Tony Parker and theClippers' Chris Paul. The East's starters are Cleveland's Kyrie Irving, Miami's Dwyane Wade, Miami's LeBron James, the Knicks' Carmelo Anthonyand Indiana's PaulGeorge. They will be joinedby Miami's Chris Bosh,Toronto's DeMarDeRozan, Atlanta's PaulMillsap, the Wizards' JohnWall, Brooklyn's JoeJohnson, Indiana's RoyHibbert and Chicago's JoakimNoah. The East team will be coached byIndiana's Frank Vogel, while Oklahoma City's Scott Brooks will lead theWest.

By Paul Newberry The Associated Press

NEW YORKFor the first time, the

Super Bowl is being played outdoors in a cold-weather city. It used to be the norm for the Nation-

al Football League's championship game. Just ask 92-yearold Charley Trippi. Long before there was a Super Bowl, the Hall of Famer played in two title

games with the Chicago Cardinalsthe first while wear-

ing sneakers to cope with an icy field, the second in a Philadel-

phia blizzard that made it impossible to even see the yard lines.

NASCAR New Chase format unveiled

"You never re-

CHARLOTTE, N.C.

— Say goodbye to the NASCARera whena driver, fresh off a satisfying top-10 finish, climbs from the carand raves about what agood points day it was. Winning is all that matters under thelatest and most radical changeto the Chasefor theSprint Cup championship. NASCAR's overhauledchampionship format announced Thursday is a16-driver, winner-take-all elimination system designed to reward "the most worthy, battle-tested" driver at the end of the season. The field, expanded from12 to 16 drivers, will be whittled down to a final four through eliminations after every three races of the10race Chase. In the final race, the first of the four to cross the finish line will be crowned Sprint Cup champion. — TheAssociated Press

ally knew if you had a first down,"

By Mark Morical •The Bulletin

l.

• Bend skier's parents reflect on their daughter's career andprepareto cheer her on inSochi

lose closegames

obliged when the 2-year-old told him to "let go," the Olympics were

won an Olympic gold medal as part of the Canadian hockey team

in Athens, Ga.

-

where,interestingly enough, there was snow on the ground from a freak winter storm that paralyzed much of the South. It would not be

at all surprising to have snow flurries at MetLife Stadi-

um on Sunday, when the Denver

Broncos face the Seattle Seahawks, though the forecast

calls for only a moderate chance of

at the Oslo Games in 1952.

precipitation.

Winning a medal at the upcoming Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, might be

expected to climb well above the

a stretchfor Ross, based on this season's

freezing mark in the afternoon, could dip

The temperature,

World Cup results. But the 25-year-old Bend

~

Fol l owthIs

resident has earned a ~ st o ryandall spot in the Games, and our coverage of

back into the 20s af-

ter nightfall. SeeCold /C4

she plans to make the the 2014 Wintei most of it. Olympics online at Photo courtesyJaney Purvis

Janey Purvis, her father RobRoss, and her younger sister Hilary Ross in Hawaii last year.

"Shejust kind of has enthusiasm for everything. I think sI7e can shown she has the talent. She just really needs to Iet tt rip. I think she's holding back a little

to UCLA 70-68,C3

tween his knees, and

Her grandfather Al Purvis had

do great (at the Olympics).She's

Oregon State squeaks past USC76-75 in overtime, while Oregon loses

on skis, placed her be-

already in Laurenne Ross' blood.

Laurenne Ross, left, is pictured with her mother

COLLEGE BASKETBALL Beavs win, Ducks

efore her father put her

Trippi remembered Wednesday when reached at his home

bit becauseshe's on new skis,

"I feel reallY luckY fleatfbufietiLcora/ and honoredto be a pfympiss part of the Olympic team," Ross said in an email this week from Italy, where she was training. "This has always been a dream of mine and I never thought it would actually come true ... but here I am, about to head to

Russia to compete in my first Olympic games! It's pretty surreal. I've worked so hard

to get here, and it's all starting to pay off." SeeRoss/C2

An unidentified New

York Giants player changes from cleats ln to athletic shoes during the1934 NFL

Championship game

and they're not quite dialed in." — Ross' mother Janey Purvis ..

Pro Football Hall of Fame

Mitchell Haaseth/NBC

at the Polo Grounds in New York.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY GOLF

PGA Tour, Phoenix Open EuropeanTour, Dubai 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, Mountain View atRedmond 7 p.m. NBA, Golden State at Utah 7:30 p.m. Women's college, Washington at UCLA 8 p.m.

ESPNU ESPN ESPNU

Pac-12 COTV ESPN

Pac-12

BOXING

Blake Caparello vs. Elvir Muriqi

6 p.m.

ESPN2

HOCKEY

College, Boston University at Massachusetts 4:30 p.m. NBCSN 6 p.m. Root WHL, Tri-City at Edmonton SOCCER Women's friendly,USA vs.Canada 6 p.m. Fox Sports 1 EPL, Newcastle vs. Sunderland 4:45 a.m. N BCSN

SATURDAY SOCCER EPL, Stoke City vs. Manchester United International, USAvs. South Korea A-League, Brisbanevs. Central Coast

Time TV/ Radio 7 a.m. NBC S N 2 p.m. ESP N 2 10 p.m. Fox Sports 2

ON DECK Today Boys basketball: CrookCounty at Bend, 7p.m.; Summit atRidgeview,7 p.mc Mountain Viewat Redmond, 7 p.mc Sisters at CottageGrove,5:45 pm.;JunctionCityat LaPine,545 pmcGladstone at Madras,7p.m. Girls basketball:Ridgeviewat Summ it, 7 p.m.; BendatCrookCount y,7p.m4RedmondatMountain View, 7p.m.; Sistersat CottageGrove,7:15 p.m.; JunctionCityat LaPine, 7:15p.muMadras at Gladstone, 7p.m.; Triadat Trinity Lutheran,4 (r.m. Swlmming: Bend, Mountain View, Summit at Bend City MeetatJuniperSwim8, FitnessCenter, TBD, SistersatSweet Home/Stayton,4 p.m. Nordic skiing:OHSNOat Mt. HoodMeadowsNight Race,Freestyle, TBD Saturday Boys basketball: Gilchrist atNorthLake,5:30 p.m.; Redmond vs. Baker at Prairie CityHighSchool, 7 p.m. Girls baskelbag:Trinity Lutheranat Paisley,5:30 .m.; Gilchrist atNorthLake,2p.m.; Redmond vs. aker atPrairieCity HighSchool,1 p.m. Wrestling: Sisters,LaPine, Madrasat LaPineInvite, TBD;RedmondatMid-VageyClassicTournament at SouthAlbany,10a.m.; MountainViewat Rex Putnam Tournament,9a.m. Alpineskiing:OSSAat Mt. Bachelor, GiantSlalom, Cliffhanger,TBD Nordicsknng:OISRAskate and relay racesat Mt. Bachelor,11:30a.m.

1110AM,100.1 FM

5 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m.

Root ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU NBCSN CSNNW

Root Pac-12 ESPN2 ESPNU

9 p.m.

Root

10 a.m. noon 1 2:30 a.m.

Golf CBS Gol f

HOCKEY

3:30 p.m. N BCSN

Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby Tjior radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER SPaniSh team doyCOttSgame in WagePrOteSt — Racing Santander players boycotted their Copa del Reyquarterfinal against Real Sociedad to protest unpaid wages.Thethird-tier team refused to play Thursdayafter the opening whistle at ElSardinero Stadium because theSpanish club's president, Angel Lavin, and his board did not resign. The international players' union FIFPRO and Spanish union AFE both support the move. — The Associated Press

Ross Continued from C1 The U.S. Alpine Ski Team has yet to decide who will race in which events

at Sochi, but Ross is qualified in super combined, downhill and super-G. Born in Edmonton, Alberta, Ross

got her start in skiing near Calgary when she was just 2. Her father, Rob

Ross, had been a ski racer and was eager to get his three daughters on the slopes at young ages. Rob Ross, who also now lives in Bend, says he remembers Laurenne's introduction to skiing "like it w as

yesterday." eShe was skiing between my legs in this blue suit, and we were going pretty fast," he recalls. "She said, 'Let go! Let go! Let go!' So I let her go and she just went straight down and

crashed in this little ball. She bit her lip, and got all bloody. I picked her up, put her skis back on — you know, after she stopped crying — and we went another 100 yards or so. She

said, 'Let me go! Let me go!' " If Laurenne could recover that quickly from a crash at just 2, her fa-

a-amateur

LooKINC GooD I, Nohl (kM ~

FLAIL YouRARivtc A4 MREAYI AT79EToP eF Y00R, Luk65.

RoryMcllroyt NorthernIreland Edoardo Molinari, Italy Matthew Baldwin,England Stephen Gagacher,Scotland

t

- /' ( r ra P 'I

P /

Sr.jg>L=

NHL

Standings Pacific-12 Conference All times PST Arizona UCLA ArizonaSt. California Washington Colorado Stanford Oregon St. Utah

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

Oregon SouthernCal Washington St. Wednesday'sGames Arizona 60, Stanford 57 Arizona St. 89,California 79(OT) Thursday'sGames UCLA70,Oregon68 OregonSt. 76,USC75 (OTI Saturday sGames Utah atColorado, 11a.m. Arizona St. atStanford,1 p.m. Washington atWashington St., 3p.m. USCatOregon,5 p.m. Arizonaat California, 7:30p.m. Bunday'sGames UCLAatOregonSt.,11:30 a.m.

Standings AN TimesPST W L 21 0 17 4 16 5 14 7 13 8 15 6 13 7 12 8 14 6 14 6 10 11 8 12

Thursday'sSummaries

Oregon St. 76, USC 75, OT SOUTHERN CAL(10-11) Jovanovic2-60-05, Oraby6-91-213, Howard 4-11 7-816,Terrell 2-7 4-48, Wesley 7-17 7-723, Bryan0-00-00, Jacobs1-60-02, Gavrilovic2-40-0 4, Taylor1-10-0 2, Haley1-20-0 2. Totals 26-63 19-21 75. OREGON ST. (12-Bj Moreland2-81-3 5, Brandt6-15 2-414, Cooke 4-72-211,Morris-Walker0-41-21, Nelson8-185-7 24, Barton0-00-00, Duvivier 0-11-21, Gomis2-3 1-2 5, Schaftenaar 0-0 0-00, Reid1-1 0-02, Collier 3-57-1313.Totals26-6228-3678. Halftime —Southern Cal 39-36. EndOf Regulation — Tied 72. 3-Point Goals—Southern Cal 4-17 Wesley2-3, Jovanovic1-2, How ard 1-6, Jacobs0-2, errell 0-4),OregonSt.4-12(Nelson3-6, Cooke1-2, Morris-Walker0-1, Brandt0-3). FouledOut—Oraby. Rebounds —Southern Cal36 (Oraby8), OregonSt. 47 (Moreland 10). Assists—Southern Cal9 (Wesley 3), Oregon St. 9 Moreland3). Total Fouls—Southern Cal25,OregonS. I 16.Techmcal— Oraby.A— 3,774.

UCLA 70,Oregon68 UCLA(17-4)

Anderson1-84-5 6, D.Wear 1-32-2 5, T.Wear 5-8 2-2 12,Adam s 6-10 5-6 19, Poweg5-9 7-817, LaVine1-50-02, B. Alford0-40-00, Parker4-41-2 9.Totals 23-6121-2678. OREGON (14-6) Moser0-2 0-0 0, Carter0-0 0-00, Artis 0-2 0-0 0, Young 6-1110-10 25, Dotson3-90-07, Loyd0-6 2-2 2,Calliste7-133-321, Amardi 5-83-413, Austin 010 00, Cook010 00.Totals21-63181968. Halftime—Oregon 36-32. 3-Point Goals—UCLA 3-12 (Adams 2-3, D. Wear1-2, Poweg0-1, B.Alford 0-2, Anderson 0-2, LaVine0-2), Oregon8-24 (Calliste 4-9, Young3-6, Dotson1-3, Artis 0-1, Moser0-2, Loyd0-3).FouledOut—Parker.Rebounds—UCLA29 (Adams, Powell 6), Oregon24(Dotson6). Assists-

UCLA14 (Andersontgv,Oregon12 (Cagiste, Dotson 3). TotalFouls—UCLA18,Oregon21. A—8,766.

Thursday'sGames East Canisius86,Quinnipiac 74 Marist 75,Monmouth(NJ) 73 MountSt. Mary's87,Fairleigh Dickinson82, OT RobertMorris79,Bryant76 Siena66, Niagara62 St. Francis(Pa.)69, CCSU63

Uconn80,Houston 43 Wagner75,LIUBrooklyn68 South Auburn74,Alabama55 Cent.Arkansas76, McNeeseSt.75 Charlotte62,FAU53 Cincinnati69,Louisville 66 Davidson94,Chattanooga51 E. Kentucky 89,UT-Martin 66 Elon74,W.Carolina 60 Florida62,Mississippi St.51 Georgia Southern 83,The Citadel52 Lips comb88,Jacksonville76 Louisiana-Monroe 72,ArkansasSt. 65 Marshal80, l FIU68 MiddleTennessee84, East Carolina 67 NewOrleans90,SELouisiana85 NichollsSt. 73,Oral Roberts 72,OT North Florida67, N.Kentucky 66 NorthwesternSt. 100,IncarnateWord86 Tennessee St.81,TennesseeTech68 UAB75,OldDominion 66 UNC Greensboro66,AppalachianSt.61 W. Kentucky 77,Texas-Arlington 72

35-35—70 34-36—70 35-35—70 33-37—70 35-35—70 40-34—74 39-35—74 35-3M74

HOCKEY

Men's College

W 8 6 5 5 5 4 4 4 3 2 1 1

31-32—63 32-33—65 35-31—66 33-33—66 32-34-66 36-30—66 33-33—66 33-34—67 32-35—67 34-34—68 34-34-68 35-33—68 35-33—68 33-35—68 33-35—68 35-33—68

DamienMcGrane,Ireland JulienQuesne,France RichardSterne,SouthAfrica SorenHansen,Denmark RobertRock, England JorgeCampilo, Spain Thongchai Jaidee,Thailand SorenKjeldsen,Denmark Paul LawrieScotl , and HennieOtto,SouthAfrica RomainWattel, France TigerWoods,UnitedStates Also JohnDaly,UnitedStates FredCouples,UnitedStates Colin Montgom erie, Scotland MarkO'Meara, United States HenrikStenson,Sweden ErnieEls,SouthAfrica JoseMariaOlazabal, Spain a-JavierBagesteros, Spain

Conference Overall

Men's College,Richmond atTCU 8 a.m. ESPN2 Men's College, Coastal Carolina at Campbell 8 a.m. ESPNU Men's College, OhioState at Wisconsin 9 a.m. ESPN Men's College, GeorgiaTechat WakeForest 9 a.m. Root Men's College, Marquette at St. John's 9:30 a.m.Fox Sports1 Men's College, GeorgeWashington at Dayto n 9:30a.m. NBCSN Men's College, Kentucky at Missouri 10 a.m. CBS Men's College, N.C.State at North Carolina 10 a.m. ESPN2 Men's College, Toledo atOhio 10 a.m. ESPNU Men's College, Baylor at OklahomaState 11 a.m. ESPN Men's College, Utah atColorado 11 a.m. Pac-12 Men's College, GeorgeMason at St. Louis 11:30 a.m. NBCSN Men's College, Clemson atFlorida State noon ESPN2 Men's College, Evansville at Wichita State noon ESPNU Men's College, Michigan St. vs. Georgetown noon Fox Sports1 Men's College,KansasatTexas 1 p.m. ESPN Men's College, ArizonaState at Stanford 1 p.m. Pac-12 Men's College, Pacific at SanDiego 1 p.m. Root Men's College, Drexel atTowson 1:30 p.m. NBCSN Men's College,ArkansasatLSU 2 p.m. ESPNU Women's College, Butler at Xavier 2 p.m. Fox Sports 2 Men's College, Washington atWashington St. 3 p.m. Pac-12 Men's College, Utah State atWyoming 3 p.m. Root Men's College,DukeatSyracuse 3:30 p.m. ESPN Men's College, Wright State at GreenBay 4 p.m. ESPN2 Men's College, Colorado St. at SanDiego St, 4 p.m. ESPNU Men's College, USC at Oregon 5 p.m. Pac-12

College, Wisconsin at Michigan

Dubai OesertClassic Leading Thursday At Majlis Course atDubaiGolf Club Oubai, United ArabEmirates Purse' $2 5 million Yardage:7,318; Par:72 First Round

In the Bleachers O 2001 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck www.gocomrcs.com/rnthebreachers

BASKETBALL

BASKETBALL

Men's College, SanJose St, at New Mexico NBA, Miami at NewYork Men's College, Tennesseeat Alabama Men's College, Central Florida at Louisville Men's College, Pennsylvania at Harvard NBA, Toronto at Portland Men's College,GonzagaatSan Francisco Men's College, Arizona atCalifornia Men's College, St. Mary's at BYU Men's College, UCIrvine at Cal Poly-SLO Men's College, Alaska-Anchorage atWestern Washington GOLF PGA, Phoenix Open PGA, Phoenix Open European PGA,Dubai Desert Classic

European Tour

IN THE BLEACHERS

Boston Tampa Bay Toronto Montreal Ottawa Detroit Florida Buffalo

f-3/

Midwest GrandCanyon76, ChicagoSt.75 IPFW86,Nebraska-Omaha82 Marquette61,Providence50 Michigan75, Purdue66 Milwaukee 68,Wright St. 64 N.DakotaSt.66,SouthDakota63 Nebraska 60,Indiana55 W. Illinois69,IUPUI54 Southwest Lamar59,Houston Baptist 57 SamHoustonSt.78,TexasA&M-CC74 Stephen F.Austin 64,AbileneChristian 48 UALR 80, Louisiana-Lafayette69 UTEP89,LouisianaTech79 UTSA89, Rice76 Utah Valley67,Texas-PanAmerican53 Far West BYU88, Pacific 78 CSUNorthridge93, UCRiverside 89, OT Montana69,S.Utah 61 NewMexicoSt.89,CSBakersfield 86 NorthDakota73, E.Washington 61 OregonSt.76,Southern Cal75,OT PortlandSt.80, N.Colorado57 S. DakotaSt.74,Denver73 Sacramento St. 84,IdahoSt.78 SanDiego61, St.Mary's 43 UC Davis62, CalPoly58 UCSB80, UCIrvine60 UCLA70,Oregon68 WeberSt. 76,N.Arizona67

Women's college East Albany(N.Y.)66, StonyBrook51 Buffalo58,Miami(Ohio) 56 Delaware 74,Northeastern 65 Drexel66,Wiliam8 Mary42 lona 68,Fairfield 55 Manhat tan62,Siena55 Mass. -Lowell65,Binghamton54 Monmouth(N.J.)52,St.Peter's 41 Pittsburgh67, Boston College 65 South AustinPeay86, MurraySt.71 Campbel63, l Longwood54 Cent.Arkansas65, McNeeseSt. 50 Clemson 80,GeorgiaTech79,OT Duke76,Miami75 EastCarolina64, OldDominion63 Florida75,Alabama67 FloridaGulf Coast85, Lipscomb67 Georgia58,Kentucky56 GeorgiaSt.63, SouthAlabama55 High Poin94, t Liberly 89,2OT Jacksonville73,ETSU56 LSU65,MississippiSt. 56 NC State72,Maryland 63 NichogsSt.71, Oral Roberts 60 NorthwesternSt.72, IncarnateWord66 Presbyterian55,UNCAshevile 41 Radford63,Coastal Carolina62 SC-Upstate62,North Florida 51 SELouisiana84,New Orleans55 SouthCarolina99, Mississippi 70 Stetson90, N.Kentucky 66 Syracuse78,North Carolina 73 Tennessee 70,Arkansas60 Texas A&M71, Auburn 54 Virginia64,WakeForest59 Winthrop59,Charleston Southern 48 Midwest Akron82,Toledo62 BowlingGreen78,Ohio 62 Cent.Michigan82, E.Michigan67 GreenBay74,Oakland58 IPFW 81, Nebraska-Omaha71 IUPUI77,W.Illinois 60 MichiganSt. 71,Wisconsin 67 Missouri59,Vanderbilt 54 NorthDakota82, E.Washington 60 Northwestern 58, Indiana52 NotreDam e74, Virginia Tech48 OhioSt.90,lginois 64 PennSt.75, Purdue72 S. DakotaSt.72,Denver 61 SouthDakota83,N.DakotaSt.70 Southwest HoustonBaptist 76,Lamar 66 SamHoustonSt.79,TexasA&M-CC76 Stephen F.Austin 80,AbileneChristian 59

Far West CS Bakersfield86, NewMexico St.63 CalPoly81, UC Davis 72 Gonzaga89,SantaClara37 Grand Canyon84, ChicagoSt.53 IdahoSt. 62,SacramentoSt. 53 N. Arizona 96,Weber St. 87 N. Colorado 77,Portland St.60 Pacific 80,SanDiego70 S. Utah87, MontanaSt. 81 SaintMary's(Cal)75, BYU70 SanFrancisco74, Portland 73 Stanford70,California 64 Texas -PanAmerican64,UtahValley54 UC Irvine77,UCSantaBarbara60

GOLF PGA PhoenixOpen Thursday At TPC Scotlsdale, Stadi um Course Scottsdale, Ariz Purse: $6.2milli on Yardage:7/152; Par: 7 1(35-36) Parlial First Rou nd (a-amateur) Y.E.Yang 34-30—64 BubbaWatson 31-33—64 Pat Perez 34-31—65 KevinStadler 30-35—65 WilliamMcGirt 33-32—65 GregChalmers 33-32—65 Matt Jones 33-32—65 HarrisEnglish 31-34—65 Chris Kirk

HunterMahan Keegan Bradley RyanMoore Tommy Gainey JasonKokrak BrendondeJonge Brendan Steele HidekiMatsuyama BryceMolder James Driscoll Sang-Moon Bae Martin Laird Erik Compton Spencer Levin MichaelPutnam JohnMaginger GrahamDeLaet LeeWestwood PatrickReed GaryWoodland Scott Piercy RusselHenl l ey Webb Simpson Jonathan Byrd JohnPeterson AaronBaddeley DavidHearn JonasBlixt BenCurtis NicolasColsaerts Morgan Hoff mann MartinKaym er lan Poulter Bill Haas BenCrane FredFunk NickWatney BrianGay Vijay Singh RobertGarrigus CharlesHowell III Scott Stallings D.A. Points DanielSummerhays Chris Stroud JasonBohn BrandtSnedeker JohnHuh KevinNa ScottVerplank KenDuke MarkCalcavecchia Chris Smith RickyBarnes NicholasThompson RyoIshikawa Scott Langley VickieFowler

32-33—65 33-33—66 32-34—66 32-34—66 32-34—66 34-32—66 35-31 — 66 34-32—66 32-34—66 33-34—67 34-33—67 35-32—67 35-32—67 32-35—67 33-34—67 31-36—67 33-34—67 33-34—67 34-33—67 35-32—67 33-34—67 34-33—67 34-34—68 35-33—68 35-33—68 33-35—68 34-34—68 32-36—68 33-35—68 34-34—68 31-38—69 35-34—69 33-36—69 34-35—69 35-34—69 36-33—69 31-38—69 34-35—69 32-37—69 35-34—69 36-34—70 33-37—70 35-35—70 33-37—70 35-35—70 35-35—70 34-36—70 33-37—70 32-38—70 35-35—70 34-36—70 34-36—70 36-34—70 33-37—70 33-38—71 35-36—71 34-37—71 35-36—71 36-35—71

EaslernConference AtlanticDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA 53 34 16 3 54 31 18 5 56 29 21 6 54 29 20 5 54 24 20 10 53 23 19 11 54 21 26 7 53 15 30 8

71 160 119 67 160 136 64 164 173 63 135 135 58 155 170 57 135 149 49 132 170 38 104 154

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA P ittsburgh 5 4 3 8 14 2 78 175 129 N.Y.Rangers 55 29 23 3 61 141 139 Columbus 54 27 23 4 58 159 153 Philadelphia 55 26 23 6 58 150 163 C arolina 5 3 2 4 2 0 9 57 134 150 New Jersey 55 23 21 11 57 130 137 Washington 54 24 22 8 56 155 163 N.Y.lslanders 56 21 27 8 50 158 187 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Chicago 56 33 10 13 79 199 156 St. Louis 52 36 11 5 77 180 119 Colorado 53 34 14 5 73 158 141 Minnesota 56 29 21 6 64 137 140 Dallas 54 24 21 9 57 156 160 Nashville 55 24 23 8 56 136 166 Winnipeg 55 25 25 5 55 155 162 Pacilic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA A naheim 5 6 4 0 1 1 5 85 189 137 S anJose 5 5 3 4 15 6 74 166 133 LosAngeles 56 30 20 6 66 134 120 Vancouver 55 27 19 9 63 139 143 Phoenix 54 2 5 1 9 10 60 156 163 C algary 54 2 0 2 7 7 47 128 170 Edmonton 56 18 32 6 42 147 190 Thursday'sGames Montreal4, Boston1 Toronto6, Florida3 Columbus 5,Washington2 Ottaw a5,TampaBay3 NewJersey3, Dallas 2, OT Colorado5, Minnesota4 Calgary4, SanJose1 Buff alo3,Phoenix2 Anaheim 5, Philadelphia3 Pittsburgh 4, LosAngeles1 Today'sGames N.Y.IslandersatN.Y.Rangers,4 p.m. St. Louisat Carolina, 4p.m. Washington at Detroit, 4:30p.m. NewJerseyat Nashvile, 5p.m. Vancou veratWinnipeg,5:30p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L AmericanLeague BALTIMOR EORIOLES— Purchased the contract of18 CarlosDiazfromtheMexico City Reds. Signed 3B Jomar ReyesandassignedhimandDiazto theGulf CoastLeague. CLEVEL ANDINDIANS—Extended theplayer developmentcontract withtheMahoning Valley(NYP) for two seasonsthrough2016. MINNESOTA TWINS — Released LHP Andrew Albers. NEWYOR KYANKEES — Added Kendag Carter, BrandonDuckworth, JoeEspa da, DanGiese and DennisTwombley to the maior league/professional scoutingdepartmen t. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association HOUSTONROCKETS— RecalledGIsaiahCanaan from RiG orandeValley(NBADL). NEW YORKKNICKS—RecalledCCole Aldrich, G Toure'MurryandFJeremyTyler fromErie (NBADL). FOOTBA LL National Football League TENNESSEE TITANS — NamedNickEasonassistantdefensivelinecoach. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague CALGARYFLAMES— AssignedCBlairJonesto Abbotsford(AHL). CAROLINAHURRICANES — Activated G Cam Wardfrominjured reserveandassignedhimto Charlotte(AHL)forconditioning. DALLAS STARS—RecalledFDustin Jeffreyfrom Texas(AHL). MONTR EAL CANADIENS— Recalled FChristian Thomas fromHamilton (AHL). NHL PlayersAssociation NHLPA — Announced the retirementof LWJay Pandolfo. COLLEGE MINOTSTATE— Named Todd Hoffner football coach. NOTRE DAME—PromotedMike Denbrockto offensivecoordinator.

she's on new skis, and they're not ther figured he was onto something. much more connected to the United nextThursday. The family moved from Edmonton to States now. This is our country. Plus, Her family, including sisters Alla- quite dialed in." Klamath Falls when Laurenne was she was in the system here." na, 29, and Hilary, 22, plans to be in Rob Ross also mentions a change 5, attd she began skiing and training with the Bend-based Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation. On winter weekends, the family would

Laurenne was named to the U.S.

Sochi to watch Laurenne race and

Ski Team just after graduating from also take in some men's alpine skiing Klamath Union High School, and she events and figure skating. "We wouldn't iet her go without has now been on the team for sevPurvis says ofLaurezme. "We're drive the 140 miles or so to Bachelor. en years.She made the World Cup us," "It's by far the best program in the Circuit in 2010, and after a few inju- taking all the girls." Northwest," Rob Ross says of MB- ry-plagued seasons she posted a secT he well-rounded Laurenne SEF. "It was a huge contributor to her ond-place finish in a downhill event also an avid rock climber, cyclist, success as well." last season. Her best World Cup plac- yogi, guitarist, pianist and singerLaurenne was involved in a range ings this season are a 17th in down- says she is excited for the opening of other sports, but skiing even- hill, a 20th in super combined (slalom ceremonies on Feb. 7. "I look forward to being a part of tually won out over another love, and super-G), and a 21st in super-G. gymnastics. Laurenne moved to Bend about a larger team, for all winter sports in When she was 15, Laurenne had three years ago, about the same my country to unite and participate another choice to make: race for Can- time herparents moved here.Rob in one event on the world stage," she ada or for the United States? All five is the medical director of communi- said in her email. "The opening cermembers of the family — Laurenne, ty health strategies for St. Charles emonies is where it all starts ... and her parents and her two sistersMedical Group, and Janey Purvis, I really can't wait to be in the middle have dual citizenship. Laurenne's mother and Rob's wife, is of it all!" Rob says it was a relatively easy a family physician at Bend Memorial Her mother callsLauremte a perdecision for Laurenne. Clinic. fectionist in all that she does. "We decidedthe programs in the "She just kind of has enthusiasm After a training camp in Italy, United States are better organized Laurenne will travel to Munich with for everything," Purvis says. "I think and probably better funded," Rob the U.S. Ski Team for Olympic pro- she can do great (at the Olympics). says. "There was a lot of momen- cessing. The team will head to Sochi She's shown she has the talent. She tum. This was at a time when Pica- on 'Itzesday, and Olympic downhill just really needs to let it rip. I think bo (Street) was doing so well. We're training runs are scheduled to start she's holding back a little bit because

in ski brands from last season to this

seasonas requiring some adjustment on his daughter's part. He hopes the Olympics will be a fresh slate for Laurenne. "The biggest thing for her this year is her equipment change," he says. "I think that plays into it. She just needs to pull off a good run. Her skiing, technically, has been good this year." For her part, Laurenne wants to "embraceevery moment in Sochb"

"I am sure it's going to be overwhelming at times, but I especially look forward to racing," she said. "The Olympics is the most prestigious sporting event, so there is absolutely nothing to lose there. I can't

wait to put everything on the line, to not have a grander goal in mind, to be able to ski my fastest and have no

regrets or fear." No fear — just like when she was on the slopes at 2 telling her dad to

"Let go!"

Reporter: 541- 3 83-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com



C4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

NFL

League says concussions down 13 percent By Ken Belson New York Times News Service

The NFL said that the number

of concussions in the league had declined 13 percent this season thanks to improved medical diagnoses, stiffer penalties for striking with a helmet and fewer practices.

The Associated Press

Above, Green Bay's Tom Moore (25) is stopped by Pro Football Hall of

Fame

Above, Chicago Bears fullback

Bronko Nagurski is tackled by New York Giants' Mel Hein during athe 1934 NFL Cham-

s

ular season,players sustained 228 concussions, down from 261

Championship game at

in 2012, when concussions rose 4

Yankee Stadium. At left, Philadelphia's Steve

percent compared with the previous year. Helmet-to-helmet con-

Van Buren (15) plunges

tact caused almost half the con-

over the goal line for a touchdown during the 1948 NFL Champion-

cussions this season, down from 53 percentin 2012.Butmore concussions occurred when players hit their heads against an opposing player's knee or the ground. Jeff Miller, the league's senior vice president for health and safe-

ship game against the

pionship gameat

Chicago Cardinals in a

the Polo Grounds in New York.

driving snowstorm in Philadelphia.

LJR

Cold Continued from C1 Trippi does not understand why the NFL took a chance on its signa-

ture game being marred by inclement weather when the league has

plenty of warm-weather cities and domed stadiums to choose from. "The championship game should be played in a climate that you know is going to be agreeable to put on a good exhibition of football," he said. "Actually, if I was a fan, I wouldn't go to the game with that kind of temperature."

Before the first Super Bowl in 1967, the NFL t i tle game was a matchup between division winners

in late December, hosted by one of the teams. Since most pr o

In the preseason and the reg-

New York's Dick Lynch (22) during the1962 NFL

f r a nchises in

those days were located in the Northeast and Midwest, it was not

at all surprising for the championship to be decided in some especially brutal weather. In fact, it often became the central theme.

Most notably, there was the famous "Sneakers Games" in 1934, when the New York Giants bor-

rowed some basketball shoes from

ty policy, said the current data collection system began in 2011

Trippi said, recalling how the players were a nearby col- f r anchise's only title. slipping and sliding all over the "The only time I played an NFL place. "It was incredible. The offilege, changed out of their cleats in the third quarter, and turned a 13-3 game in tennis shoes was in Chica- cials improvised the whole game. deficit into a 30-13 victogo for our championship No one could see the lines. The ballry at the ice-covered Polo team," Trippi said. "We players just couldn't react like they Grounds. The G i ants got better footing in ten- wanted. I think the fans got cheated would repeat the tactic COuld See nis shoes. You couldn't out of seeing a real championship game." 22 years later, romping t l l e ll<eS Tll e st a n d up in cleats." to another title largely The following year, The Cardinals, who had gone by having better footing t) cfllPlcfYeyS the te a ms met again in 11-1 during the regular season and thantheiropponent. ju St CO u l dn't the ti t l e game, this time led the league with an average of Both title games that yegCt /ll(e at Philadelphia's Shi- more than 391 yards per game, Trippi played in were afbe Park. A full-fledged managed just six first downs and t~eY Mfcif)ted fected by the weather. blizzard struck the city, 131 yards in the horrible conditions. In 1947, C omiskey th l y lk the fBylS du m ping so much snow The Eagles did not fare much betPark in C hicago was g o t Cl)e>te d t hat t h e g rounds crew ter, but a Chicago turnover early in coated with a thin sheet could not remove the the fourth quarter set up the game's of ice when the Cardinals tarp. The players were only score, Steve Van Buren's hosted the Philadelphia Seei ylg cf yeal s umm o ned f r o m th e 5-yard touchdown run. Eagles on a bitterly cold C/7+mplO/7S/7lp l o cker room to help pull The final: Philadelphia 7, Chicaday (Trippi remembers it off the field. go 0. the wind chill being mi- ffsclme By the time the game To this day, Trippi figures the nus-20). Borrowing a p,o F ootbag Hall kicked off, the field was Cardinals were wrongly denied page from the Giants, completely covered by their second straight title. fF Ch I "When two professional teams Trippi traded his cleats T. . snow again, this time Trippi for sneakers and scored by several inches of the play and they can only score seven two touchdowns on a 44w hite stuff. W h a t f o l - points," he said, "that shows you yard run and a 75-yard punt return, l owed barely qualified as football, what a terrible game it was." leading Chicago to a 28-21 victo- m uch less a title game. He hopes there is not a repeat on "It was more of a pushing game," Sunday. ry and what remains the Cardinal

PREP ROUNDUP

I '.

when the league and the NFL Players Association started using

a company named Quintiles. The league has statistics before 2011, but they are not precisely comparable, he said. In theory, better diagnostic tools should have led to more re-

ported concussions, not fewer. But the league said that placing more doctors in the stadium and

in locker rooms on game days helped determine when concussions occurred.

Bears Continued from C1 Justin Vinton and Tucker Pies did the same for Bend at 160 and

170, respectively. "This is a big confidence booster," Larwin said. "Wrestling is so mental. Whenever you square off on the mat, the guy who's wres-

tling confidently, that's who's mot likely going to win.... I think that's definitely what happened

to our kids tonight."

I

Cougarsclosestrong for dualvictory Bulletin staff report Three falls and a win by forfeit in the final four matches allowed Mountain View to run away with a 49-21 Intermoun-

tain Valley League setback despite a double-double perfor4A Special District 2 dual manceby Cassandra Blum, who against the Ravens with 11 pins had 10 points and 13 rebounds. and one win by major decision. Gilchrist could not slow the Red Ridgeview totaled two falls on Tail Hawks' 1-2 scoring punch 12: REDMOND — The Cowboys dominated in their Class

tain Conference wrestling dual the night: Tanner Boatman over of Ashton Petray and Hannah win against visiting Summit on Jared Wheelerat106 and BoomWood, who each scored 17 Thursday night. er Fleming over Aaron Swindel points. With the loss, the GrizP atrick Leiphart pu t t h e at 195. Crook County then put zlies dropped to 0-7 in league Storm on the board first with together 10 straight victories, play, 3-12 overall. a 4-0 win at 132 pounds, but a beginning with Trayton Libolt's BOYS BASKETBALL major decision by Kaleb Wine- pin at113 pounds and cappedby Rogue Valley Adventist 63, barger at 138, a 10-7 victory by Clark Woodward's fall at 182. Gilchrist 40: GILCHRISTJimmy Radaford at 145 — in his GIRLS BASKETBALL The Grizzlies struggled offirst varsity match of the season Mountain View 57, Crook fensively in a Class 1A Moun— and a win by forfeit put the County46:PRINEVILLE — The tain Valley League matchup Cougars in front 13-3. Cougars played a consistent despite 26 points by Trinton Summit's Jacob Thompson game against the Cowgirls in an Koch and fell to 5-2 in league logged a 6-5 win at 160 pounds Intermountain Hybrid contest, play and 12-6 overall. thanks to a late escape, but jumping to a 37-28 lead before SWIMMING Mountain View answered with taking an 11-point victory.'We Redmond drops two: ASHfalls at 170 by Toby Arndt and played really well," Mountain LAND — Ricardo Monroy won 182 by Keenan Springer. View coach Steve Riper said. the boys 100-yard butterfly, After the Storm trimmed the "We had a good, solid, overall Elizabeth Moss took the girls deficit to 25-21 with a 3-0 victory game. It was nice to come back 100 backstroke, but the Panther by Noah Yunker at 195 pounds after losing three and win one." boys and girls fell to Ashland followed by back-to-back wins Hailey Goetz led the Cougars 84-36 and 107-33, respectively, by forfeit, the Cougars recorded (4-11) with 17 points, and Jessie at Southern Oregon Universithree pins — Conner Duhn at 106, Zack Howe at 120, Haden

Kingrey at 126 — in the final four matches to seal a 49-21 vfctory. In other Thursday action: WRESTUNG

Goetz added four points, seven

h a.5j' j%

o

ty. AlecCarter placed second

BEND FB35 p

rebounds and four steals. Crook for the Redmond boys in the 50 County (6-10) was paced by and 100 fteestyles, while Shayne Kimmer Severance's23points. Bidwell added a runner-up finRogue Valley Adventist 46, ish in the 100 breaststroke. For Gilchdst 23: GILCHRIST — The the girls, Brittany Smith was host Grizzlies absorbed their

second in both the 200 individu-

Crook County 69, Ridgeview seventh straight Class 1A Moun- al medley andthe 100 freestyle.

I

)

.I

PREP SCOREBOARD Girls Basketball Intermotfntain Hybrid Mountain View57, CrookCounty46 Mountain ViewI57) —HaileyGoetz17, Platfter 13, Bailey7,Tsourmas5, McClain5,J.Goetz4,Skoog 3, Maxwel2,l Wiliamst. Totals 1814 2457. Crook County (46) — Klmmer Severance23, Malott 9, Smith 8,Ovens5, Bannon1. Totals 13 18-29 46. Moufttainview 2 11 6 8 12 — 57 Crook County 1 71 1 9 9 — 4 6 Three-poingoal t s —Mountain View: Platner 3, H. Goetz,Bailey,Tsourmas, McClaift; CrookCounty:

MalotI,Ove ns.

Class1A MountainValley League RogueValleyAdventist 46, Gilchrist 23 RogueValley (46) —AshtonPetray t7, Hanna Wood17,Scott8, Zamora4. Totals19 6-1346. Gilchrist (23) —CassandraBltim10, Berliftg 6, Lowell 5,BernabeZ Totals 10 3-7 23. Rogue Valley 15 1 2 11 8 — 46 Gilchrist 7 4 6 6 — 23 Three-poingoal t s—RogueValley Adventist: Petray, Wood;Gilchrist: none.

Boys Basketball Class1A MountainValley League RogueValley Adventist 63, Gilchrist 40

RogueValley (63) —CalebAlen 29, J.James,

12, Howgan8, Wachter 8, N.James4. Totals ttot available. Gilchrist I40) —Trifttoft Koch26, Nelson7, Wolf 4, James 2. Totals ttot available. Scores byqtfarler ftotavailable Three-pointgoals—ftot available.

Wrestling Bend 34,Redmond26 At BendHigh 106 —Keegan Shaite, B,wins byforfeit. 113Doubleforfeit. 120—Austin Doescher, R,pins Kade Quinn, B,2:17. 126 — KaseyBebsctleIft, B, Pins ChanceSchwerbel, R,:47. 132 — Austin Palme r, B, def. DaytonWoodward, R, 10-2. 138 — Mitch Willett, R,techfall overNicolai Spring,B,5:30.145 — JohnHickey,R,def. NoahHaines, B,10-6. 152 —JordanChrisIlafIseit, R, def.DacodaCrane, B,9-4. 160 —Justift Vinton, B,PinsHunterSmith, R,3:33.

170 — Tucker Pies, B,pinsBunkerParrish, R,3:3Z 182 —BrennanYates, R,pins CadeFoisset, B,4:21. 195 —Zac hLaCasse,R,def.MichaelHageman,B, 9-3. 220 —JuanGregorio, 8, def. MarioNanato, R, 3-1.285 —DavidO'Connor,B,def. JacobBrauchler,

R, 5-z Mountain View43, Summit21 At Mountain View 106 —ConnerDuhit, MV,pins Qulntln McCoy, S, 1:56.113—ChaunzeLancaster, MV,wins byforfei.t120— ZackHowe,MV,pinsThomasBrown,S, ;56.126 —HadenKingrey,MV,pins ReeceBurri, S, 5:17.132—Patrick Lelphart, S,def. Robert Mlsenel, MV, 4-0.138 — KalebWiftebarger, MV,def.

DItstinRe yes,s, 0-0.145 —JimmyRadaford, Mv, def. JosiahMaleslc,S,10-7.152 — KevinWright, MV,winsbyforfeit. 160—JacobThompson,S,def. TracyPitcher,MV,6-5. 170—TobyAfndt, MV,Pins DustinFolletI, S,:38.182 — Keenan Springer, MV, pins Josh Wittwer, S,3:58. 195—NoahYunker, S, def. SpencerKleift, MV,3-0. 220— TrevorBetcher,

S, wins by forfeit. 285 —JohnMurphy,S,wins by forfeit.

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C5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

+

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

S&P500

N ASDAQ ~ 7 1 70

15,848.61

+

4,123.13

TOdap

1 880

Friday, January 31, 2014

Did increased spending by shoppers during the holiday season help lift MasterCard's fourthquarter revenue? Find out today, when the payments processor reports its latest quarterly results. MasterCard ben-

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Operating EPS

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................. Close: 15,848.61 Change: 109.82 (0.7%) "

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16,000::"

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15,500 .

15,000:" D

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14 500

NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,465 2,053 Pvs. Volume 3,832 2,121 Advanced 2381 1953 Declined 7 32 6 3 0 New Highs 74 81 New Lows 47 20

A

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 15907.53 15733.27 15848.61 +109.82 DOW Trans. 7326.90 7207.20 7302.00 +111.39 DOW Util. 502.71 496.08 502.40 +7.75 NYSE Comp. 10071.23 9995.43 10048.68 +85.76 NASDAQ 4135.84 4094.17 4123.13 +71.70 S&P 500 1798.77 1777.17 1794.19 +1 9.99 S&P 400 1321.37 1305.21 1318.92 +1 8.19 Wilshire 5000 19270.92 18981.64 19218.22 +236.58 Russell 2000 1144.54 1130.35 1139.36 +1 6.91

0

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%CHG. WK MO QTR +0.70% T L »1.55% T L L »1.57% L L »0.86% T »1.77% T »1.13% T L »1.40% T »1.25% T »1.51% T

YTD -4.39% -1.33% +2.41% -3.38% -1.28% -2.93% -1.76% -2.48% -2.09%

NorthwestStocks

32

based on trailing 12 months' results

Dividend: $0.44 Div. yield: 0.6%

Alaska Air Group A LK 45.77 ~ 82.08 77. 8 8 + 1.14+1.5 T L L +6.1 +66 . 4 37 5 1 1 0. 8 0 A VA 25.18 ~ 29.26 28.6 6 +. 3 7 + 1 .3 L L L +1.7 +14. 3 25 3 18 1. 2 2 Source: Facteei Avista Corp Bank ofAmerica BAC 10 . 98 — o 17.42 16 .93 + . 25 +1.5 L L L +8.7 +45 . 4 87848 17 0 . 0 4 Barrett Business B B S I38 . 15 ~ 102.2 0 80. 88 + . 1 1 +0.1 T T T -12.8 +102.1 57 33 0 . 7 2f Boeing Co BA 7 3 .00 ~ 144. 5 7 12 6.53 -3.25 -2.5 T T T -7.3 +78.8 10325 21 2.92f Dolls rule Cascade Bancorp C A C B 4 . 66 ~ 7.18 4.98 -.01 -0.2 L T T -4.8 -28.2 31 5 Toymaker Mattel reports financial ColumbiaBnkg COLB 1 9.56 ~ 2 8.5 6 26.51 +.31+1.2 T T T -3.6 +2 8.9 1 5 0 2 2 0 . 48f results today for the fourth quarter ColumbiaSportswear COLM 47.75 ~ 8 0.0 4 76.31 +2.15 +2.9 L T T -3.1 +4 7.3 8 0 27 1. 0 0 f Wall Street expects that the CostcoWholesale COST 98.95 ~ 1 26 .12112.73 +.50 +0.4 L T T -5.3 + 9 . 7 1 607 2 4 1 . 24 company's earnings and revenue Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 6.33 ~ 18.70 1 5. 7 3 -.32 -2.0 T T T -4.2 +132.9 7 2 cc improved in the OctoberFLIR Systems F LIR 23.00 ~ 34.19 32. 7 7 +. 5 9 +1.8 L L L +8.9 +34 . 0 62 4 2 1 0. 3 6 December quarter, which includes Hewlett Packard HPQ 16 . 03 — o 30.13 29 .25 + . 2 3 +0.8 L L L + 4.5 +79. 5 9 0 58 1 1 0. 5 8 the crucial Christmas holiday Home Federal Bncp IDHOME 10.84 ~ 1 6.03 14. 6 2 + . 1 6 + 1.1 L T T - 1.9 +11.2 35 dd 0 . 2 4 shopping season. Sales during Intel Corp I NTC 20.10 ~ 27.12 24.7 4 +. 0 6 +0 .2 T T T -4.7 +20.2 2431 2 13 0 .90 this period can account for up to Keycorp K EY 9 .14 ~ 14.14 12. 9 7 +. 1 0 +0.8 L T T -3.4 +41.3 11175 13 0 .22 half of the toymakers' annual Kroger Co K R 2 7 .46 ~ 43.85 3 6. 4 2 -.11 -0.3 L T T -7.9 +34.0 3387 1 2 0 . 66 Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 6.07 5.85 ... ... T L L »6.6 +28 . 9 1 1 24 8 4 revenue. Strength in doll brands LA Pacific LPX 14.51 $y — 22. 55 18 . 09 + . 5 4 +3 .1 L T T -2.3 -15.1 2736 11 like Barbie and Monster High MDU 22 .67 — o 31.68 32 .07 + . 62 +2.0 L L L + 5.0 +39 . 5 68 9 4 9 0 . 71f helped drive Mattel's earnings the MDU Resources Mentor Graphics M EN T 1 3.21 ~ 24.31 21. 0 3 +. 1 9 +0.9 T T T - 12.6 +21.9 7 3 4 2 4 0 . 1 8 previous three months. Microsoft Corp MSFT 2 7 .10 ~ 38.98 36. 8 6 + . 2 0 +0.5 L T T -1.5 +34.3 33618 14 1 .12 Nike Inc 8 N KE 53.27 ~ 80.26 73.9 4 + 2 .17 +3.0 L T T -6.0 +3 4.7 5 197 25 0 . 96f NordstromInc J WN 52.16 ~ 63.72 57.3 3 +. 6 3 +1 .1 T T T -7.2 + 4 . 0 1 237 1 5 1 . 20 Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ 46.55 41.4 9 +. 4 1 +1 .0 T T T -3.1 - 7.3 13 3 1 9 1 . 8 4 PaccarInc PCAR 45.81 ~ 60.17 57.4 5 +. 9 1 +1 .6 L T T -2.9 +20.0 2112 19 0.80a Planar Systms PLNR 1.52 ~ 2.93 2.59 +.0 4 + 1 .6 T L L +2.0 +54. 5 46 dd Plum Creek PCL 42.71 o — 54.6 2 43 . 0 2 -.14 -0.3 L T T -7.5 - 8.5 95 6 3 2 1 . 76 Prec Castparts PCP 180.06 ~ 274. 9 6 25 3.66 + . 70 +0.3 T T T - 5.8 +34.9 9 4 2 2 2 0 . 1 2 Safeway Inc S WY 18.97 ~ 36.90 3 0. 8 9 -.40 -1.3 T T T -5.2 +66.1 5423 1 7 0 . 80 Schnitzer Steel SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 3.3 2 26.73 -.50 -1.8 T T T -18.2 - 5.6 38 1 d d 0 . 75 Sherwin Wms SHW 153.94 ~ 198. 4 7 18 3.74 -5.38 -2.8 T L L »0.1 +17 . 1 1 6 00 25 2 . 0 0 StancorpFncl S FG 37.96 ~ 69.11 65. 6 9 + 3.14+5.0 L L T -0.8 +59.6 5 1 8 1 3 1 .10f StarbucksCp S BUX 52.52 ~ 82.50 71.9 1 +. 3 5 +0 .5 T T T -8.3 +30.3 7537 3 0 1 . 04 Triquint Semi T QNT 4.31 ~ 9.05 8.40 +. 1 1 + 1.3 T L L +0.7 +64 . 5 1 681 d d Umpqua Holdings UM P Q 11.45 ~ 1 9.65 1 8. 0 0 -.04 -0.2 T T T -6.0 +46.1 7 0 5 2 0 0.60a US Bancorp U SB 31.99 ~ 41.86 40.1 2 +. 3 6 + 0 .9 ~ L T -0.7 + 2 1.9 8 234 1 3 0 . 9 2 WashingtonFedl WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 4.3 5 22.29 +.29+ 1.3 T T T - 4.3 +27.7 2 0 0 1 5 0 . 40 WellsFargo & Co WF C 3 4.52 — o 46.84 46 .05 + . 4 6 +1 .0 L L L +1.4 +32. 5 12548 12 1 . 2 0 Refining trouble? Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~ 33.24 30. 7 7 +. 2 3 +0.8 L T T -2.5 + 2 . 5 2 771 2 7 0 . 88 As Chevron's oil and gas production has increased, so have its costs and refining woes. DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Rising operating costs and weak annual dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash refining results led to a 6 percent announcement. p — value on ex-distnbution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. drop in earnings for the nation's second-biggest oil company in the It's expensive to ship MM COmpany seasonalork wers,the same third quarter. Wall Street will be ackages at the last minute. $petilgbt as in 2012, but had to add listening for an update on United Parcel Service faced another 30,000, a significant Chevron's finances and refining higher costs to handle a surge of une x pected cost. business when the company holiday shipments that hurt its For all of 2013, UPS earned reports fourth-quarter earnings fourth quarter results. $4.37 billion, or $4.61 per share. today. UPS earned $1.2 billion in the Adjusted for special items, UPS fourth-quarter. It posted net income earned $4.57 per share, compared CVX $116.45 $150 of $1.25 per share, compared with with $4.53 per share in 2012. $117.21 adjusted profit of $1.32 per share a The company expects full-year 2014 adjusted earnings between year earlier. Revenue rose 2.8 120 percent to $14.9 billion, short of Wall $5.05 and $5.30 per share. '13 ,' Street's forecast of $15.2 billion. Analysts forecast earnings of $5.29 90 UPS had planned to hire 55,000 per share. Operating 52-WEEK RANGE EPS United ParCel SerViCe (UPS) T h ursday's close:$95.78 4 Q '12 4 Q ' 13 $79 105 Price-earnings ratio (Based on trailing 12 month results):21 Price-earnings ratio: 10 10-Y R*: 6% Y TD return: -9% 3-Y R*: 14% 5-YR * : 21% A n n . dividend: $2.48 Div. yield: 2.6%

H

Q

g

p

based on trailing 12 months' results

Dividend: $4.00 Div. yield: 3.5% Source: Facteel

AP

Total returns through Jan. 30

AmdFocus

*Annualized

' + +.87

1.3551+

-.0109

StoryStocks Stronger-than-expected profit reports helped stocks to rebound on Thursday, and the Standard 8 Poor's 500 index jumped to its biggest gain in six weeks. The index more than recovered its sharp loss from the prior day, and it trimmed its loss for the year to date. Technology stocks were among the market's leaders after Facebook reported earnings that beat analysts' expectations. A separate report said the economy grew at an annual rate of 3.2 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013. That's a slowdown from the 4.1 percent rate of the third quarter, but economists say it's strong enough to give greater confidence that the economy has turned the corner. UA

Close:$1 04.76 L19.54 or 22.9% Thanks to strong sales of running shoes and winter products, the athletic gear maker's fourth-quarter net income rose 28 percent. $120 100

Blackstone Group

BX

Close:$32.23 L1.30 or 4.2% The private equity firm said that its fourth-quarter profit jumped as the market for initial public offerings improved. $35 30

80

60

N D J 52-week range $4$.$1 ~ $10 $.$$

Volc9.1m (8.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$8.97 b

N D 52-week range $17.$$~

J $$ $.4 1

PE: 75 . 9 Volc14.5m (3.3x avg.) PE: 2 8 .5 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$18.2b Yiel d : 2 .9%

Whirlpool

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

NAME

$98.23

Under Armour

.

DOW

4Q '12 4 Q '13

Price-earnings ratio:

.

17,000 ."

1,700

$79.76

MA

18 120 .

15,680" ""' 10 DAYS"

.

payments processing volume, particularly overseas. Investors will be looking for an update on how 1,600 ' consumer spending trends on MasterCard's payments network are faring so far this year. StocksRecap $100

$19.14

Dow jones industrials

Close: 1,794.19 Change: 19.99 (1.1%)

1,820 "

+ -.39

GOLD ~ $1,242.20 ~

01

S8$P 500

Holiday boost?

1,850:"

10 YRTNOTE ~ 2.69% ~

19 99

1,794.19

Source: FactSet

SelectedMutualFunds

WHR Diageo DEO Close:$132.22 V-9.41 or -6.6% Close:$120ABV-6.60 or -5.2% The appliance maker's fourth-quarThe maker of Johnnie Walker whisky ter net income rose 48 percent, but and Smirnoff vodka reported a drop in sales during the six months ended its adjusted earnings fell short of Wall Street expectations. Dec. 31. $160 $135 150 140

130 125 N

J

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52-week range $104$$ ~

J

D

52-week range $1$$ 0 1

$111.$7 ~

$134 .08

Volc4.7m (5.2x avg.) PE: 13 . 5 Volc1.9m (4.7x avg.) P E: .. . Mkt. Cap:$10.38 b Yie l d: 1.9% Mkt. Cap:$82.96 b Yie l d: 3.1%

Hanesbrands

HBI Facebook FB Close:$72.49L7.42 or 11.4% Close:$61.08 L7.55 or 14.1% The clothing company said its The social me dia company's stock fourth-quarter net income fell 60 per- hit an all-time high after it reported cent, but its results still easily beat stronger-than-expected results for Wall Street expectations. the fourth quarter. $75 $70 60

70

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50 N

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$$$.$4~

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J

52-week range

$74 .$0

D

52-week range $22.$7~

J $ $2.$0

Volc2.5m (3.9x avg.) PE: 1 9 .5 Volc149.9m (2.3x avg.) PE:149.0 Mkt. Cap:$7.21 b Yie l d : 1.7% Mkt. Cap:$114.84 b Yield : ...

Google

GOOG Close:$1,135.39 %28.47 or 2.6% The Internet company said it will sell its Motorola Mobility smartphone business to Lenovo Group for $2.9 billion. $1200

VIA Close:$84.12 %3.03 or 3.7% The owner of Nickelodeon, MTV, Comedy Central and Paramount Pictures said its net income for the first quarter jumped 16 percent. $90 85 80

1100 1000

Viacom

N D 52-week range

$7$0.2$~

VolJ4.5m (2.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$314.19 b

J

N D J 52-week range $1,1$7 $$ $$$.$0~ $$$.20 P E: 28.5 Volc22.6k (1.0x avg.) PE: 1 7 . 3 Yield : ... Mkt. Cap:$4.29 b Yie l d : 1.4%

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

SU

HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.69 percent Thursday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3 -month T-bill . 0 1 .0 4 -0.03 T 6 -month T-bill . 0 5 .0 6 -0.01 52-wk T-bill .09 .09 ... ~ 2-year T-note . 3 4 .32 + 0 .02 T 5-year T-note 1.51 1.50 +0.01 T 10-year T-note 2.69 2.68 +0.01 T 30-year T-bond 3.63 3.62 +0.01 T

BONDS

T T T

T T T T

T T ~

.06 .10 .13

L .27 L .88 L 1.99 T 3.18

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.44 3.42 +0.02 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.91 4.89 +0.02 L T Barclays USAggregate 2.32 2.36 -0.04 T T PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.63 5.60 +0.03 L T RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 4.43 4.48 -0.05 T T YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.72 1.72 .. . T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.09 3.14 -0.05 T T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

L 2.79 T 4.00 L 1 91 . T 5.69 T 3.9 1 L 1.13 T 2.8 2

AP

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmericanFunds BalA m 24.6 3 + .18 1.6 +15.3 +11.8+15.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 56.92 +.17 2.8 +8.5 +8.7+12.5 C A C CpWldGrlA m 44.14 +.26 2.6 +16.4 +9.9+16.3 C C C EurPacGrA m 47.36 +.17 3.5 +11.5 +6.0+14.8 8 8 8 FnlnvA m 50. 4 3 +.57 3.0 +21.3 +13.1+19.1 C C 8 S&P500ETF 989874 179.23 +1.88 GrthAmA m 42.53 +.68 1.1 +26.2 +14.6+19.4 8 8 C BkofAm 878481 16.93 +.25 Fidelity Select Tech d FSPTX IncAmerA m 20.33 +.12 1.5 +12.4 +10.8+15.5 C A A iShEMkts 802379 38.13 +.35 InvCoAmA m 35.88 +.38 2.2 +23.5 +13.2+17.5 8 C 0 PwShs QQQ 590457 86.50 +1.57 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m36.39 +.27 3.1 +17.1 +11.1+18.2 8 8 8 Penney 535618 5.77 -.52 WAMutlnvA m38.39 +.37 2.6 +22.5 +15.2+18.1 8 A 8 US NGas 531660 24.25 -2.48 SPDR Fncl 439262 21.31 +.30 Dodge &Cox Income 13.70 -.61 +1.3 +2 .0 + 4.7 +7.3 A 8 8 Cisco 421298 21.98 +.33 IntlStk 41.35 +.65 -3.9 +15.9 +7.2+18.7 A A A SiriusXM 407341 3.60 + . 01 Stock 164.61+1.69 -2.5 +28.3 +16.1+21.5 A A A Fidelity Contra 94.51 + 1.85 -1.7 +26.7 +15.2+19.6 8 8 C Gainers GrowCo 119 . 71+2.89+0.4 +32.8 +17.7+23.9 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G LowPriStk d 48.61 +.18 -2.9 +24.0 +15.2+22.6 C A 8 Fidelity Spartan 500 l dxAdvtg63.63 +.71 -2.8 +22.0 +14.4+19.3 C 8 8 Accelrys 1 2.57 + 2 . 8 5 +2 9 .3 500ldxlnstl 63 . 63 +.71-2.8 + 21.9 N A N A C Infinera 9 .11 +2 . 0 5 +2 9 .0 «C LiqTech 2 .71 +.60 +28 . 4 $$ FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeC m 2.43+.62 -0.4 +9.6 +8.6+15.1 A A A CSVlnvNG 4 .20 +.91 +27 . 7 IncomeA m 2. 4 0+.61 -0.4 +9.8 +9.1+15.7 A A A GeronCp 5 .35 +1 . 0 2 +2 3 .6 Intl I Oakmark 25.48 -.29 -3.2 +17.2 +10.7+22.6 A A A UnderArmr 104.76 » 19.54 + 2 2 .9 $$$ RisDivA m 18 . 99 +.24 -3.7 +16.2 +11.8+15.5 E 0 E Morningstar OwnershipZone™ Oppenheimer Corcept 3 .73 +.69 +22 . 7 RisDivB m 16 . 98 +.21 -3.8 +15.1 +10.8+14.4 E E E Alexion 1 62.00 + 2 8.27 +2 1 .1 OeFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 16 . 88 +.21 -3.8 +15.3 +11.0+14.6 E E E PranaBio 1 2.38 + 2 . 1 5 +2 1 .0 average of stock holdings SmMidValA m43.31 +.46 -2.3 +26.1 +10.5+19.5 A E E CardiovSys 3 5.03 + 5 . 6 2 +1 9 . 1 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings SmMidValB m36.48 +.39 -2.4 + 25.1 +9.6+18.5 8 E E Losers CATEGORY Technology T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 31.85 +.23 -3.0 +19.2 +12.8+19.1 0 C A NAME LAST CHG %CHG MORNINGSTAR GrowStk 52.13+1.11 -0.8 +32.9 +17.3+22.7 A A A RATING™ * **o o HealthSci 61.78+1.75 +6.9 +50.3 +32.4+29.2 8 A A -1.32 -28.4 KaloBios n 3.33 CSVLgNGs 29.78 -11.50 -27.9 ASSETS $2,231 million Vanguard 500Adml 165.53+1.85 -2.8 +21.9 +14.4+19.3 C 8 8 -6.34 -22.3 Overstk 22.12 500lnv 165.52+1.85 -2.8 +21.8 +14.3+19.2 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 0.81% ITT Ed 29.44 -7.88 -21.1 CapOp 46.88 +.66 +1.5 +34.6 +16.6+22.4 A A A MANAGER Charlie Chai -8.64 -19.7 NeuStar 35.11 Eqlnc 28.77 +.19 -3.3 +18.9 +15.9+19.2 0 A A SINCE 2007-01-04 IntlStkldxAdm 26.94 +.68 -3.8 +7.1 +3.8 NA E E RETURNS 3-MO +8.7 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 29.49 +.39 -1.7 +30.8 +18.2+23.9 A A A YTD +0.5 TgtRe2020 26.77 +.15 -1.3 +11.2 +8.6+14.0 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +30.5 Tgtet2025 15.50 +.10 -1.6 +12.5 +9.2+15.0 8 8 C Paris 4,180.02 +23.04 + . 55 3-YR ANNL +10.7 TotBdAdml 10.69 .. . +1 . 4 0.0 +3.6 +4.8 C 0 E London 6,538.45 -5.83 -.09 5-YR-ANNL +28.4 Totlntl 16.11 +.65 -3.8 +7.0 +3.7+14.0 E E C Frankfurt 9,373.48 +36.75 + . 39 TotStlAdm 45.52 +.54 -2.5 +23.3 +14.7+20.3 8 A A Hong Kong22,035.42 -1 06.19 -.48 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 45.50 +.54 -2.5 +23.1 +14.6+20.2 8 A A Mexico 41,008.30 +318.40 + . 78 Google, Inc. Class A 9.83 Milan 19,411.55 +74.13 + . 38 USGro 28.60 +.42 -2.4 +25.7 +15.4+19.6 C 8 C Yahoo!Inc 4.57 -376.85 -2.45 Tokyo 15,007.06 Welltn 37.50 +.21 -1.2 +14.0 +10.8+14.7 8 A 8 3.82 Stockholm 1,302.83 -7.30 -.56 NAVERCorp Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -52.50 -1.00 Apple Inc 3.18 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,188.10 Zurich 8,204.96 +69.15 + . 85 Facebook Inc Class A 3.07 redemption fee.Source: Morn»nestar.

Fidelity Select Technology has outperformed roughly two thirds Marhetsummary of its sector fund peers since Most Active manager Charlie Chai took the NAME VOL (60s) LAST CHG helm in 2007, but returns are Facebook 1303401 61.08 +7.55 volatile.

FAMILY

Commodities Natural gas plunged a day after hitting its highest settlement price since 2010. It's only the second drop for the price of gas in the last nine days. Crude oil rose, while gold fell.

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the euro, Japanese yen and British pound after a government report said that the U.S.

economy grew at an annual rate of 3.2 percent last quarter.

55Q QD

FUELS

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

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

CLOSE PVS. 98.23 97.36 1.89 1.83 3.22 3.18 5.14 5.56 2.66 2.66

CLOSE PVS. 1242.20 1262.20 19.14 19.53 1382.30 1406.40 3.24 3.27 706.65 710.25

%CH. %YTD -0.2 +0.89 -1.1 + 1.11 + 4.5 -5.88 +21.5 +0.06 -4.4

%CH. %YTD - 1.58 + 3 . 4 +0.15 -1.0 - 1.83 + 0 . 8 -0.32 -5.9 -0.61 -1.5

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.42 1.42 + 0.06 + 5 . 7 Coffee (Ib) 1.20 1.17 + 2.48 + 8 . 4 Corn (bu) 4.34 4.28 + 1.40 + 2 . 7 Cotton (Ib) 0.86 0.86 + 0.56 + 1 . 6 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 358.90 351.50 +2.11 -0.3 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.40 1.38 + 1.23 + 2 . 4 Soybeans (bu) 12.75 12.69 +0.45 -2.9 -8.6 Wheat(bu) 5.54 5.52 +0.36 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6477 -.0090 -.55% 1.5793 Canadian Dollar 1.1 175 +.0015 +.13% 1.0015 USD per Euro 1.3551 -.0109 -.80% 1.3567 JapaneseYen 102.69 + . 6 3 + .61% 9 1 . 20 Mexican Peso 13. 3 728 +.0015 +.01% 12.7268 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4914 +.0072 +.21% 3.7259 Norwegian Krone 6 . 2504 +.0834 +1.33% 5.4774 South African Rand 11.1888 -.0785 -.70% 9.0502 Swedish Krona 6.5 2 4 2 + .0658 +1.01% 6.3497 Swiss Franc .9034 +.0092 +1.02% . 9111 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1383 -.0055 -.48% .9603 Chinese Yuan 6.0605 +.0046 +.08% 6.2253 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7665 +.0024 +.03% 7.7582 Indian Rupee 62.575 +.150 +.24% 53.246 Singapore Dollar 1.2744 -.0020 -.16% 1.2355 South KoreanWon 1079.54 +2.00 +.19% 1087.98 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.34 + . 04 +.13% 2 9.57


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

BRIEFING

COAOIY1IS

DOJ airlinemerger requirementmet Southwest Airlines and JetBlue Airways said on Thursday that

SBBS Fo

they had bought the

takeoff and landing rights at Ronald Reagan National Airport in Washington that the Justice Department required American Airlines and US Airways to sell as a condition of their merger. Southwest said it had secured 54 takeoff and landing slots at Reagan National. Thesewill increase Southwest's service there to 44 daily departures from17. The airline said it would announce destinations and schedules for these new flights later this quarter. It expects to begin flying in the third quarter of

or e area By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

The message Friday from 4/A

— From wire report

(w

University of California-Berkeley junior and integrated biology major Steven Ilko shops for text-

books in Berkeley recently. The cost associated with buying newtexts has prompted a variety of

economy butdon'texpect

attempts to make them more affordable snd accessible.

fireworks. Like the image of a turtle

Kristopher SkinnerI Bay Area News Group

he flashed on-screen as part

o e etext oo 11ces rom tnewa roac es those prices can be steep:

The Oakland Tribune

It costs $88.92 to rent a

espite new technologies and a 2012 California law promising college students relief from soaring textbook costs, students' bookstore spending is higher than ever — now about $1,200 for books and supplies. And a new survey shows that students are responding with a cost-cutting measure that could seriously hurt their grades: they're

used physics textbook from the UC Berkeley campus bookstore and $185 to buy

open-source textbooks for years in his math classes at

it new. Between 2002 and 2012, textbook prices shot up 82

assigning a collection of outof-print books posted online

percent, nearly three times the rate of inflation, in part

D

according to a national reportrecently released by tion of statewide student

REGULARUNLEADED • Fred Meyer Fuelniscount,61535 S. Highway97, Bend.... $3.10 • Space Age,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend........... $3.12 • Ren's Oil,62980 Highway97, Bend.... $3.16 • Chevron,1745N.E. Third St., Bend... $3.30 • Chevron, 1095 S.E. Division St., Bend........... $3.30 • Chevron, 3405 N. Highway97, Bend........... $3.30 • Chevron,61160 S. Highway 97,Bend $3.30 • Chevron,2001 N.E. Highway 20, Bend$3.36 • Texaco,178 S.W. Fourth St.,

Madras......... $3.30 • Safeway,80 N.E. Cedar St., Madras .. $3.32 • Chevron, 398 N.W. Third St.,

Prineville ....... $3.32 • Fred MeyerFuel Center, 944 S.W. Ninth St.,

Redmond....... $3.22 • Chevron, 2005 S. Highway97, Redmond....... $3.30 • Texaco FeedMart, 539 N.W. Sixth St., Red-

mond.......... $3.35 • Chevron, 1501 S.W.Highland Ave., Redmond .. $3.36 • Chevron,1001 Railway, Sisters..... $3.32 DIESEL • Ren's Oil,62980 Highway97, Bend.... $3.79 • Safeway,80 N.E. Cedar St., Madras .. $3.96 The Bulletin

organizations. "I had to borrow from friends sometimes," said

lessen, he said. Without de-

find them," he said.

Forecast and Business Con-

mand, prices should not rise

other online applications often included, according

ference at The Riverhouse

appreciably. "For most places, that's

to the federal Government

As morecollegescreate open-access digital libraries — and develop new, open-

Accountability Office.

source textbooks — that task

by state Sen. President

Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg promised to help by making available faculty-approved online textbooks for 50 popular college courses, starting this academic year. But the

project got off to a late start because of a funding delay,

about $120. "It was tricky, because I was relying on

Some professors use

open-source materials for their courses, but others select books that are reg-

ularly updated, making used copies hard to come by. College bookstores commonly offer rentals, but

Jacob said he has used UC Santa Barbara — often with the authors' consent. But

shouldbecome easier, he sald.

San Jose State's library runs a campaign to encourage thefaculty to use free or low-cost texts. SJSU students

spend an average of $750 per year on books, and 70 percent reported not buying a textbook because of the cost,

according to the campus. The program saved 3,289 students about $90,883 — or

$28 each, on average — in the spring of 2013, the school estimates. A larger initiative at Rice

University in Texas — Open-

uary for the first books to

Stax College — reported last

hit the open-access library

managed by the California

spring it had saved 40,000 students $3.7 million, and that

State University system.

300 institutions had signed

A faculty council charged with finding or developing free materials for UC schools and community college courses — and then urging professors to assign

up foritsfree,peer-reviewed materials for the 2013-14 year.

them — was to hold its first

A Statistics I textbook,

which typically costs $90 used and $150 new, would

Forecasting at California Lutheran University.

Convention Center, Bend.

"It's going to do better than almost everything." However, Watkins de-

scribed wrinkles in the picture. Deschutes County continues to regain jobs lost

what we expect to see," he

said. Bend is different, Watkins said. It belongs to a class

of small cities like Jackson Hole, Wyo., and Santa Fe,

during the recession but at a less-than-bristling pace. The county gained 1,920 jobs in theyearending in November, but remains 6,740 jobs down from its prerecession high,

N.M., that "can do well just

according to Watkins. At that

that enable them to go where

by being great places to be." Bend attracts wealthy

people generally untouched by the recession and retirees with the financial resources

rate, 10 years will pass before they want, he said. Wherevthe county is back at prereer their numbers dominate cession employment levels. the economy, they create In Jefferson and Crook consumption regions, rather counties, Watkins predicts than production regions. "barely perceptible growth." While Bend has a manuMeanwhile, the Deschutes facturing sector, it's mostly County labor force is shrink- a place for consumption. "A ing. Watkins' data shows a successful new Pilates stuloss in October of about 5 dio on Wall Street is more percent of workers from Oc- likely than a new battery tober 2012. manufacturer," he stated in "You've got this case where a report accompanying his you have people leaving, presentation. abandoning the workforce," — Reporter: 541-617-7815, he said. "And yet we're creat-

jditzler@bendbulletin.com

be free for the 120,000 California students who take the

meeting this week. "One of the goals of this project is to get the word out to people that there are good

courseeach semester iftheir

materials available," said Bill

the 20 Million Minds Founda-

Jacob, chairman of the UC system'sAcademic Senate.

tion, which has underwritten some of the new courses.

professors used the Open-

Stax version available now, saidDean Florez,presidentof

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR

DISPATCHES

www.bendchamber.orgl chamber-e vents/whatsbrewing-bends-town-halltbd-2/ WEDNESDAY • BusinessStart-sp Class: 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. • HowIoSelect the Right FranchiseWorkshop: Learn whether franchise ownership is right for you, howto choose afranchise and arrange financing; registration required; free; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. • Typography, Communicatingwith Fonts:Learn how the conscious and unconscious messages received through fonts can influence buying habits and perceptions about your business; registration required; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270.

• The Redmond Chamber of Commerce andCVB has announced its 2013 Business Awards recipients: Citizen of the Year, Linda Gilmore-Hill; Business of the Year,Opportunity Foundation of Central Oregon; President's Choice Award, Bern Theisen with The Printing Post; New Business andProduct Award, Straw Propeller Gourmet Foodsand Tony and Patricia Bartelson;Customer Service of the Year, The Original Pancake House andKenand Betsy Mauch; and Ambassador of theYear, Lara Chanfor Mary Kay. • Deschutes Builder Serviceshas opened in Bend. Thebusiness provides a subscriptionbased website for current and closed newhome andvacant-lot sales. • Dent Instruments has announced a joint development agreement with Setra Systems Inc. Both businesses will collaborate on a series of joint projects concerning energy management.

MONDAY • iPad forBusiness: Discover ways to useiPads to work more efficiently; registration required; $69; 9 a.m.-noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. TrentonAve., Bend; 541-383-7270. • Build Your Website with Dreamweaver:Learn to create awebsite with Dreamweaver; registration required; $89; 1-4 p.m.; COCC Chandler 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 welearned and where are weheaded? Presented by theBend Chamber of Commerce; $15 for members, $20 for nonmembers; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or

but with a Bend twist. Generally, as real estate

because of quizzes and

book last semester that cost

The rental option

for Economic Research and

demand for real estate will

and students will have to wait at least until next Jan-

own."

Ws tkins

Watkins, executive director of the Center

Central Oregon Economic

Caroline O'Callahan, a University of California-Berkeley junior from Redwood City, Calif., who didn't buy a biology text-

lectures and notes of my

(

and 4.8 percent each quarter through 2015. The housing market is contributing to economic growth in Deschutes County, he said. Once again, the local picture reflects the overall recovery,

audience at the sixth annual

Two California laws meant to ease the pain have languished unfunded for nearly a year. The pair of open-access textbook laws

textbook at least once, because it was too expensive,

previous quarter. He forecast more modest growth in the

that approach takes time. "You have to go out and

books on the shelf. Twothirds of college students hadn't bought a required

quarter of 2013, over the county, between 3.1 percent

tion, economic

growth in the coming year will be slow but steady, said

cating non-farm job growth in Deschutes County as high as 10.3 percent in the first

That was the cautious part of his hour-long talk. "Central Oregon is doing better than Oregon (at large), and it's going to do better than Oregon," he told his

A legislative option

surveyed said that they

of his PowerPoint presenta-

shuffle themselves around." Watkins showed data indi-

becomes less attractive to investors, they will make way for other buyers, typically young families starting new households. But as young people burdened with college debt and unable to find work pass on buying a new home,

leaving the costly text-

Research Groups, a coali-

Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA FuelPrice Finder (aaa.opisnet.com):

An open-source option

By Katy Murphy

the Student Public Interest

CentralOregon fuel prices

economist Bill Watkins to

h,

Central Oregon's business community was simple and reserved: Expect continued improvement in the local

2014.

Separately, JetBlue said it had acquired an extra12 round-trip flights from Reagan National. In addition to its winning bid, JetBlue said that American had agreed to the permanent transfer of eight slot pairs that it had been renting since 2010.Each slot pair provides rights for a departure andan arrival. Financial details for the transactions were not disclosed. The sales were required by adeal reached in November with the Justice Department. American and US Airways agreed to sell a total of104 takeoff and landing slots at Reagan National and 34 slots at La Guardia Airport in New York to low-cost carriers.

esda

ing jobs in the long term, apparently not creating jobs for peoplethat are here.Something's causing people to

THURSDAY • OregonEmployer Council CentralOregon BusinessSeminar:Wil cover pre-employment background checks,drug testing, social media investigations, appropriate and inappropriate interview questions andvideo surveillance; registration required byFeb.4; $50 per person; 7:30a.m.; The RiverhouseConvention Center, 2850N.W.Rippling River Court, Bend;541-6883024, denise.a.pollock© state.or.us orwww.oec.orgl. • Holding Employees snd OthersAccountable: Learn to help eachperson on your team dohis or her job well; registration required; $95; 8 a.m.-noon; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • TransitIoning toICD-10: Learn to implement ICD-10 properly for Oct. 1, 2014, when the newcodes for medical diagnosesand inpatient procedures take effect; registration required; $79; 8 a.m.-noon; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.

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

Bill will delayaspike in flood insurancerates By Coral Davenport

what scientists say is one of the

New Yorh Times News Service

many risks of climate change.

WASHINGTON — The

Senate on Thursday passed a bill to delay sharp increases in flood insurance rates for millions of property owners in coastaland fl ood-prone areas.

The bill, cosponsored by Robert Menendez, D-N.J., and

The 2012 law, the Biggert-Waters Act, ended

long-standing federal subsidies for insuring buildings in floodprone coastal areas.Over the

past decade, the cost to taxpayers of insuring those properties has soared, with payouts for

Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., passed damage from Hurricanes Kaby 67-32. It would effectively trina, Irene, Isaac and Sandy gut a 2012 law that had aimed driving the program to $24 to overhaul the nearly bankbillion in debt. rupt National Flood Insurance The aim of the Biggert-WaProgram. ters Act was to shift the Although the effort had financial riskof insuring floodstrongbipartisan support in prone properties to the private the Senate, it has drawn criticism from a broad spectrum of

market from taxpayers. It

outside groups, including fiscal

vatives, who said it would cut

was backedby fiscal conser-

government spending, and by groups, bipartisan research or- environmentalists, who said ganizations andbudget watch- it would accurately reflect the doggroups. true cost of rising sea levels "It will return the program caused by climate change. to a state of insolvency," said But over the past year, milShai Akabas, an analyst at lions of coastal property ownthe Bipartisan Policy Center, a ers were hit with flood insurWashington research group. ance rate increases that sent "General taxpayers will be their premiums soaring up to footingthe rest of the cost." five or 10times the previous The prospects for passage amounts. As their insurance in the Republican-controlled bills soared and their properH ouse remain unclear,butthe tyvalues plummeted, some debate over who will pay for homeowners have begged lawthe nation's rapidly rising costs makers to block or delay the for flood damage highlights Biggert-Waters provisions. conservatives, environmental


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W 50-PILls, D2-3

Parents & Kids, D4 Pets, D4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

O< www.bendbulletin.com/allages

Congress considers 'doc tix'

SPOTLIGHT

Class focuses

on staying calm Local parenting counselor Beth Bellamy is offering a newclass starting Monday aimed at helping parents stay calm and in control. "Staying Calm: Bethe Cool Person-in-Charge Kids Need" is offered through the BendPark & Recreation District for two Mondays, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at Ponderosa Elementary School in Bend. The class will focus on parents learning their triggers and developing the ability to stay calm during stressful parenting challenges. Cost is $50 in-district residents or $60 out-ofdistrict residents. Contact: www.bendparksandrec.org.

20 kids a day injured dyguns A new study from the Yale School of Medicine and published in the journal Pediatrics from the American Academy of Pediatrics found that about 20 children

repeal By Mac McLean The Bulletin

Members of the U.S.

Congress are in a position to fix a major glitch that

has plagued Medicare's physician payment system for the past decade. All

they've got to do now is find the $120 billion needed to make it happen without

hurting the very seniors they want to help. "Every year Congress has had to spend more time and money to pass tempoAndy Tullis/The Bulletin

Redmond Public Library Community Librarian Julie Bower, left, and volunteer Rolann Santos leads kids and parents in a slngalong during the new Mother Goose and More story time. It is one of many new offerings at the Deschutes Public Library system.

rary fixes to this problem,"

U.S. Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., said in a Dec. 12 statement about the sus-

tainable growth rate formula. "Enough is enough.

0 ern- a

... It's time for us to act."

During a push to reduce the federal deficit in the

late 1990s, Congress created the sustainable growth

a day in the U.S.are hospitalized dueto injuries from firearms. About6 percent of these children die from their injuries. This study does not include children who died before being hospitalized. The study involved those younger than 20 who were admitted to the hospital in 2009. Most of the injuries came from assaults. But in children younger than10, 75 percent of the injuries camefrom accidents.

rate formula as a way to tie

M edicare spending to certain economic indicators, such as gross domestic product. The funding mechanism, also called the "doc fix," would increase Medi-

care reimbursement rates to doctors if Medicare's

total spending grew slower than the country's gross domestic product, but re-

duce rates if it grew faster than the GDP.

According to a report by the Congressional Budget Office, the funding mech-

Treasuryreleases

anism's adoption went

Earlier this week, the U.S. Treasury Department released afact sheet explaining how it will set up the small, "starter" retirement savings accounts known as "myRAs" that President Barack Obamahighlighted in his State of the Union Address on Tuesday. These plans will give people who live in households with an income of less than $191,000 ayear a chance to save upto $15,000 for their retirements if they makean initial investment of $25 and commit to having at least $5 contributed to their accounts from every paycheck through a direct deposit set up by their employer. The money in these accounts, which will be set up for participating employers by the end of the year, will earn interest at a rate equal to what federal employees earn on their federal Thrift Savings Plan's Government Securities Investment Fund.Contributions to this fund have seen anaverage annual return rate of 3.61 percent over the past10 years. Once someonehas set up a myRAaccount, they can take it with them from employer to employer. Theycan change or cancel contributions at any time and will be able to draw upon the account's balance tax-free after they

exceeded that of Medicare

smoothlybecause the economic target's growth rate

"myRA" details

spending and doctors saw no reductions in their reimbursement rates. See Doc fix/D3

Courtesy Cheryi Parton Photography

East Bend Public Library Community Librarian Chandra vanEijnsbergen interacts with the puppet Rockle during a recent story time.

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Redmond Public Library Community Librarian Julie Bower reads a book for kids during the new

Mother Goose andMore story time at the library last week.

— From staff reports

mind may

simplybe a fuller one

By Alandra Johnson• The Bulletin

tory times at the library aren't what they used to be, according to Heather McNeil, youth services manager at Deschutes Public Library. She says long gone are the days of a woman with her hair in a bun, glasses on the end of her nose, softly reading a book aloud while children sit quietly at her feet. Stop by a library story time and you may see kids jumping

up and down, singing together, adding and subtracting, learning what amphibians are or playing with Legos.

By Benedict Carey New York Times News Service

People of a certain age (and we know who we are) do not spend much leisure time reviewing the research into cognitive

performance and aging. The story is grim, for one thing: Memory's speed and accuracy begin to slip around age 25 and keep on slipping. The story is familiar, too, for anyone who is older than 50 and, having finally learned to live fully in the moment, discovers it is a senior moment. The

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Brooklyn Nolan, 2, of Redmond, gets ready for

a song with her grandmother and other families at the Mother Goose and More story time at the Redmond Public Library.

While reading aloud is still a ma- goal is to get kids excited about readjor part of many story times at the li- ing and learning and to turn them brary, librarians are also incorporat- into library lovers for life. ing all kinds of other activities. ,science,math In the past year, Deschutes Public More music libraries have been ramping up their Every month,the Downtown Bend offerings to families, including pup- Public Library offers about 24 regupet shows, animal adventures and larprograms forbabies,toddlers and story times geared for children with preschoolers. In February, the library sensory challenges. The librarians will offer an additional eight special are also specifically increasing the programs for kids, several of which amount of science, math and music content contained in each event. The

turn 59~/2.

According to the fact sheet, people will be required to deposit their "myRA" money into a privately managedRoth IRA account if they've exceeded its $15,000 limit or had theaccount for more than 30years.

• Story time at local libraries has evolved throughout the years,expanding to includemorescience, math, music andelementsthat put kids' sensesto work

An aging

are new additions.

SeeStory time/D4

finding that the brain slows with age is one of the strongest in all of

psychology. Over the years, some

scientists have questioned this dotage curve. But these challenges have had an ornery-old-person slant: that the tests were

biased toward the young, for example. Or that older people have learned not to care

Story times Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Emily Rains, 2, center, smiles at her mom Jenni-

fer Rains, both of Redmond, as they play together during Mother Goose and More story time at the Redmond Public Library last week.

Each Friday, TheBulletin's All Ages section offers a detailed list of all story times and youth events offered at local libraries. Seethis week's list on page D4. Find information about more offerings from the Deschutes Public Library system at www.deschuteslibrary.org.

about clearly trivial things, hke memory tests. Or that an older mind

must organize information differently from one attachedtosome 22-year-

old who records his every Ultimate Frisbee move on Instagram. See Mind/D3


D2 THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

-PLUS

Email information for the Activities Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

BUCKET LIST ADVENTURE

ACTIVITIES CALENDAR

Tracing the path of Lewis andClark

TODAY BEND KNIT-UP:$2; 10 a.m.-noon; Rosie Bareis Community Campus, 1010 N.W. 14th St.; 541-728-0050. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;GoldenAgeClub,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.

By Kathy Witt McClatchy-Yribune

Meet road builder and visionary Sam Hill in Portland, town floozies at The

Dalles, and a saloon girl in the Grand Salon as you trace the path of Lewis and Clark

SATURDAY

on theColumbia and Snake Rivers aboard Un-Cruise Ad-

CENTRALOREGON WRITERS GUILD:Featuring a critique workshop by Jami Carpenter; bring sixcopies

* UN-cRutsa

venture's new replica 1900s

sthha~ t

coastal steamer, the S.S. Legacy. Hike up a half dozen or more switchbacks en route to Multnomah Falls, see bald eagles and big horn sheep in Hells Canyon and learn what ultimately became of mem-

uI

i

of openingpagesfor small group

h

critique and sack lunch; $10, opento public, free for members; 9:30 a.m.-2 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop; 541-408-6306 or www.centraloregonwritersguild.com. BACHELORBEAUTS SQUARE DANCECLUB:7-10 p.m.; Pine Forest Grange, 63214 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-306-4897. SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE:West Coast swing dancing for all ages; $5; 8-10 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-3881133 or www.bendseniorcenter.org.

,)' tLI

bers of the Corps of Discov-

ery at the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center.

Along the way, you'll catch yourself imagining the marvels seen by the explorers more than 200 years ago in this land of towering Douglas firs, steep bluffs, rocky

Un-Cruise Adventures via MCT

The 88-guest S.S. Legacy offers Heritage Adventures highlighting Living History programs on

board and ashore.

shorelines and mountain vol-

SUNDAY

canoes, including Mt. Hood, white and inscrutable in the dkstance.

geology — and lots of charac-

BINGO:12:30 p.m.; American LegionPostNo.44,704 S.W .Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;GoldenAgeClub,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. NOTABLESSWING BAND: Featuring blues, Latin, rock'n' roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-728-8743 or www. notablesswingband.com. BEND STORYTELLINGCIRCLE:A group of people telling and listening to stories; visit Facebook for Bend location; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; 541389-1713 or www.facebook.com/ bendstorytellingcircle.

ter re-enactments.

William Clark recorded in

The itinerary sounds busy, but it actually unspools at a "Great joy in camp we are in leisurely pace. The (includview of the Ocian, this great ed) guided shore excursions Pacific Octean which we been are typically planned around So long anxious to See. and lunch aboard the Legacy. Lithe roreing or noise made by quor flows freely (fine wine, the waves brakeing on the premium spirits and microrockey Shores (As I Suppose) brews are included), and not may be heard distinctly." just at the 5:30 cocktail hour. "We want to immerse our Twin hot tubs and yoga or guests further into the his- stretch classes nurture the his journal on Nov. 7, 1806,

tory, n atural e n v ironment impulse to stay relaxed. and local culture," said Jill There's no "dressing for Russell, port captain at Un- dinner," so casual rules in Cruise Adventure. "We want the dress code department

to come away with a larger but gourmet holds court in Kathy Witt / MCT appreciation of how special the Klondike Dining Room. The Art of Fashion French fashion doll collection at Maryhill these places are and with the Cuisine is inventive, and a Museum of Art in Goldendale, Wash., a museum created by Sam same wonder that we go into dish from land and from sea Hill in the 1920s. them with." as well as a vegetarian opTo that end, entertainment, tion are always on the menu: onboard presentations and searedduck breastw i th dried shore tours on Un-Cruise fruit c hutney; manchego Heritage Adventures are de- au gratin sturgeon; creamy signed to keep passengers avocado linguine with red steeped in the theme of the bell peppers and pine nuts. voyage. You'll stroll the pio- And for dessert? Gingerr '* . neer settlement at Fort Walla bread cake with mascarpone Walla Museum, catch a live cream, Chocolate Decadence,

MONDAY THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Double deckpinochle;noon-3 p.m.;Golden Age Club, 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. CRIBBAGE CLUB:Newcomers welcome; 6-8:30 p.m.;ElksLodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-317-9022.

'

raptor show at the Columbia

Gorge Discovery Center and sample wines from Washington's famed Walla Walla Valley.Onboard, there may be a slideshow on the Oregon Trail, stringing Indian beads to fashion a necklace or bracelet, a talk on the region's

TUESDAY LA PINE CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: 8-9a.m.; Gordy's TruckStop, 17045 Whitney Road;541-771-9177. BEND GENEALOGICALSOCIETY'S "FIRSTTUESDAY MENTORING PROGRAM":One-on-one mentoring and research help for beginning genealogists; free, registration requested; 10 a.m.noon; Williamson Hall (behind

Rum Ali Babas.

"Three words," said the

captain.

" Unrushed,

un-

crowded, unbelievable." With a free massage offered to each guest, here's another: unwind. You'll im-

merse yourself in that pursuit as much as anything else.

Un-Cruise Adventures via MCT

Multnomah Falls in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic

Area.

Jake's Diner), Rock Arbor Villa, 2200 Northeast U.S. Highway 20; 541317-9553 or www.orgenweb.org/ deschutes/bend-gs. HIGHNOONERS TOASTMASTERS: Classroom D; noon-1 p.m.; New Hope Evangelical Church, 20080 S.W. Pinebrook Blvd., Bend; 541-382-6804. BEND KNIT-UP:6-8 p.m.; Gossamer The Knitting Place, 1326 N.W. Galveston Avenue; 541-728-0050.

WEDNESDAY BEND CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave.; 541-383-2581. KIWANISCLUB OF REDMOND: Noon-1 p.m.; Juniper Golf Course, 1938 S.W. Elkhorn Ave.; 541-5485935 or www.redmondkiwanis.org. REDMOND AREATOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; Hospice of Redmond, 732 S.W. 23rd St.; 541-508-1026. PRIME TIMETOASTMASTERS: 12:05-1 p.m.; Home Federal Bank, 555 N.W. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6929. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;Golden AgeClub,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.

THURSDAY LEAGUE OFWOMEN VOTERS OF DESCHUTES COUNTY: Update on the Local Food Scene by Erin Foote

Marlowe; freefor program; noon-1 p.m., arrive at11 a.m. if ordering lunch; Black Bear Diner,1465 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-382-2660. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;Golden AgeClub,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. THURSDAYAFTERNOONDANCE: Dance to the Memr'y Makers with lunch provided courtesy of the Council on Aging; free, donations suggested;1-2:30 p.m.,12:30 p.m. lunch; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133 or

www.bendparksandrec.org. COMMUNITY HEALINGNIGHT: Cannedfood drive;5-7 p.m .;TheOld Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-389-1159. BOW WOWBINGO:$1 per bingo card; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Seventh Street Brew House, 855 S.W.Seventh St., Redmond; 541-923-0882 or www. brightsideanimals.org/events/

bow-wow-bingo.

COMMUNICATORS PLUS TOASTMASTERS:6:30-7:45 p.m.; IHOP, 30 N.E. Bend River Mall Drive, Bend; 541-388-6146 ext. 2011.

All thedetails • Seven-night Un-Cruise Heritage Adventures retraces the Lewis & Clark expedition aboard the 88-passenger S.S. Legacy, cruising round trip, Portland, April-May andSeptember-November for 2014-2015. Seven- to 21-night Un-Cruise Heritage Adventures is also offered in Alaska, May-Sept. • New for 2014 are four itineraries sailing out of San Josedel Cabo or Guaymas on 7-or14-day cruises to Mexico's Sea of Cortes aboard the 64-guest yacht, Safari Voyager, which joins the Un-Cruise Adventure fleet in December.This is an inclusive, Luxury Adventure designed to take full advantage of theabundanceof marine life found at this UNESCO World Heritage site. • Online: Un-Cruise Adventures, www.Un-Cruise.com.

ADVENTURE GUIDETO DON'T-MISS MOMENTS • Shoveling down Portland gastro-trash: Make abeeline for the Sideshow food truck for poutine, a junk food delicacy that arrived by way of Quebecand consists of fresh-cut, fried-twice Belgian fries and cheesecurds doused sloppily in gravy — but it's vegetarian gravy at this booth so that makes it OK. • Hiking to the top of Multnomah Falls in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area — or atleast making the attempt. The scenic uphill climb will burn off calories from the Dijon dill cream Coho salmon or other entree servedaboard Legacythe night before. • Arriving by jet boat to eat barbecue atGarden Creek Ranch, owned by the NatureConservancy, in Hells Canyon —the deepest river gorge in North America, plunging more than amile below Oregon's west rim and8,000 feet below the snowcapped HeDevil Peak of Idaho's SevenDevils Mountains. • Marveling at1940s French haute couture (isn't that redundant?) in miniature at the Maryhill Museum of Art in Goldendale, Wash. ADVENTURE GEAR TOTAKE ALONG • The Un-Cruise Heritage Adventures aboard the Legacyare fairly active, with lots of scenic vistas andshore visits. You'll want to go hands-free for the continuous photo ops, butyou'll need your wallet for shop stops. (The Mapping thePacific Coast book of maps, byHenry Wendt and based on theQuivera Collection exhibit at the Columbia River Maritime Museum, is pretty irresistible). • C6 has a newsmall shoulder bag ($110, http://c6life.com), soft but sturdy in canvas, that can beworn cross-body and is just big enough for a digital camera, wallet, water bottle and aniPad or MacBookAir 11-inch in a protected, paddedpocket. http:iic6life.cem via MCT Keep contents safe with azipper closure on the main compartment andorganiz- The C6 shoulder bag. ing panel pocket. In blackand olive, the bag has arugged, utile look and acomfy carry with well-padded, adjustable shoulder strap.

-

~ •

' •


5 0-P L U S

FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

Renovations giveboomersideal features By Barbara Williams The Record (Hachensaclz, N.J)

HACKENSACK, N.J. — Da-

vid Shanks longed for a bigger house. A roomy kitchen was

on the list — he loved to cook and had a hard time whipping up specialties for his wife and two daughters in their old narrowone. But his No. 1 priority was a

It's not so much that the mental faculties of older people are rapidly declining, it's that their databases are fuller, a new study

shower stall in the bathroom large enough for him to maneuver without jamming his elbows against the tiles. "We've always had a small house, including one small

suggests.

bathroom that I shared with

Mind

three women," said Shanks, a retired publishing executive. "I really wanted a shower where I could ~ c h my arms and not knock my elbows every

EisaHaney/The New YorkTimes

Continued from 01 Now comes a new kind of challenge to the evidence of a cognitive decline, from a decidedly digital quarter: data mining, based on theories of information processing. In a paper published in Topics in Cognitive Science, a team of linguistic researchers from the

University.

Carstensen and others have found, too, that with age people become biased in t heir

memory toward words and associations that have a positive connotation — the "age-re-

lated positivity effect," as it is known. This bias very likely applies when olderpeople perform so-calledpaired-associate tests, a common measure

University of Tiibingen in Ger- that involves memorizing ranmany used advanced learning dom word pairs, like ostrich models to search enormous da-

tabases of words and phrases. Sinceeducated olderpeople generally know more words than younger people, simply by virtue of having been

and house. "Given that most cognitive

research asks participants to engage with neutral (and in emotion studies, negative) stimuli, the traditional rearound longer, the experiment search paradigm may put oldsimulates what an older brain er people at a disadvantage," has to do to retrieve a word. Carstensen said by email. And when the researchers inThe new data-mining analcorporated that difference into ysis also raises questions the models, the aging "deficits" about many of the measures largely disappeared. scientists use. Ramscar and "What shocked me, to be his colleagues applied leading honest, is that for the first half learning models to an estimatof the time we were doing this ed pool of words and phrases project, I totally bought into that an educated 70-year-old the idea of age-related cogni- would have seen, and another tive dedine in healthy adults,"

pool suitable for an educated

the lead author, Michael Ram- 20-year-old.Their model acscar, said by email. counted for more than 75 perBut the simulations, he add-

cent of the difference in scores

ed, "fit so well to human data between older and younger that it slowly forced me to en- adults on items in a paired-astertain this idea that I didn't

sociate test, he said.

need to invoke decline at all."

That is to say, the larger the library you have in your head,

Can it be? Digital tools have

confounded predigital genera- the longer it usually takes to tions; now here they are, com- find aparticular word (or pair). ing to the rescue. Or is it that Scientists who study thinkyounger scientists are simply ing and memory often make pretesting excuses they can a broad distinction between use in the future to cover their "fluid" and "crystallized" inown golden-years lapses'? telligence. The former includes In fact, the new study is not short-term memory, like holdlikely to overturn 100 years of ing a phone number in mind; research, cognitive scientists analytical reasoning; and the say. Neuroscientists have some ability to tune out distracreason to believe that neural

processing speed, like many

tions, like ambient conversation. The latter is accumulated

knowledge, vocabulary and anatomical studies suggest expertise. "In essence, what Ramsthat the brain also undergoes subtle structural changes that car's group is arguing is that could affect memory. an increase in c r y stallized Still, the new report will intelligence can account for a very likely add to a growing decrease in fluid intelligence," skepticism about how steep said Zach Hambrick, a psyage-related decline really is. chologist at Michigan State It goes without saying that U niversity. In a v a r i ety o f many people remain disarm- experiments, Hambrick and ingly razor-witted well into Timothy Salthouse of the Unitheir 90s; yet doubts about the versity of Virginia have shown average extent of the decline that crystallized knowledge are rooted not in individual (as measured by New York differences but in study meth- Times crosswords, for examodology. Many studies com- ple) climbs sharply between paring older and younger peo- ages 20 and 50 and then plaple, for instance, did not take teaus, even as the fluid kind into account the effects of pre- (like analytical reasoning) is symptomatic Alzheimer's dis- dropping steadily — by more ease, said Laura Carstensen, than 50 percent between ages a psychologist at Stanford 20-70 in some studies. reflexes, slows over the years;

Docfix

many groups that's been encouraging Congress to come Continued from 01 up with a permanent fix to But that changed in 2002 this problem. when, in the midst of a recesCohen said delaying the sion caused by the dot-com formula's implementation is bubble, the Asian banking not a viable solution to the crisis and the 9-11 terrorist at- problem because it only intacks, doctors experienced a creases the total cuts to reim4.8 percent reduction to their bursement rates that doctors Medicare payments. would see if it were to ever The medical c ommunity take place. responded by asking their According to AARP's Narepresentatives in Congress tional Office, doctors would to delay the implementation see a 26.5 percent cut to their of any reimbursement rate overall Medicare payments reductions tied to the formula if Congress fails to extend for at least one more year. or solve the doc fix situation Members of Congress com- when last month's delay runs plied, delaying the formula's out on March 31. implementation by one year Cohen said such a steep as part of the Consolidated payment cut might convince Appropriations Act of 2003. doctors to stop seeing MediAccording to the Congres- care patients altogether so sional Research Service and they can focus their practices the American Medical Asso- on treating patients who have ciation, the U.S. Congress has private insurance plans that delayed the formula's imple- pay more money. mentation a total of 18 times He said any loss of Medisince then — the most recent care-participating physicians a three-month delay included would have a huge impact on in the Bipartisan Budget Act the more than 636,000 Oregoof 2013. nians who use Medicare now "They've been kicking the and those who will need it in can down the road for a num- the future. Population projecber of years now," said Jerry tions from the Oregon Office Cohen, the state director of of Economic Analysis show A ARP Oregon, one of t h e more than 921,000 Orego-

time I moved." After the girls moved out af-

ter college graduation, Shanks and his wife, Elizabeth, were

I

I- I I

e e

Mitsu Yasukawa/The Record

When their kids moved out, Elizabeth and David Shanks decided to do a whole-house renovation rather than move to a new home that fit their new needs.

done with tuition bills and

their mortgage was paid off. homes in Tenafly before decid- is still attendingcollege, anoth- area just has a lot smoother It's a time when many emp- ing to renovate the three-bed- er married and a third moved run. ty-nesters downsize, or find room colonial where they had back home between coll ege Tony Guerriero, owner of their dream home, or both. lived since 1977. and medical school. The Renovation Co. in Sad"We're of the mind-set that dle Brook, said he's had a few Remodeling specialists in Holding on to the house North Jersey said they are see- when your kids go to college, requests from similar clients But the Shankses are one of ing a steady stream of custom- they don't go away and stay," who decided to stayput. "It's too early to tell if this is the many couples who decide ers who want to renovate and Vandervoot said. "They are always coming what is to come — at this point to keep the houses where they stay in the houses they've lived raised their children, remod- in for decades, houses where back, and now my daughter it's kind of random," Guerrieeling them into their dream they created strong ties to their is married and she may start ro said. "But when people are home. Many have features in neighborhoods. creating more people that will happy with their neighbors "Some dientsare remod- come back to the house." their current houses that they and comfortable with their don't want to give up, and they eling as soon as the kids go town, they don't want to move." finally have the time and mon- away to college — they want Too good to give up In addition to enlarging the ey to spend on such indulgenc- a bigger home so they can Vandervoot said before they dining and living rooms, the es as walk-in dosets, roomy enjoy it when the kids bring started renovating, they also Shankses put in a new kitchen master baths and cozy break- friends home from college or considered moving, but want- and great room. And best of fast nooks. their spouses after they get ed to stay on the east side of all, David Shanks got his spaLike many, the Shankses married," said Mark Cobucci, Ridgewood. They found, how- cious shower. ''We put in a (Iarger) showwanted to remain i n t h eir owner of Dovetail Designs in ever, that most of the houses in hometown — Tenafly — be- Bergenfield, N.J. that section of the village were er with body jets and pebble "One client wanted a bigger the same size as their own stone," said Bob Olson, owner cause, among other things, it provided an easy commute kitchen that looked over the home. Their house also had a of Homes Resources in Ridgefor David Shanks to his job in family room because when lot of qualities they just didn't field Park, who did a lot of the New York City. she was cooking she always want to give up. work in the Shanks home. "Our ties are really in Tena- felt trapped in the kitchen "We live in a flat area on a "Probablyaboutone-quarter fly and we were very content while everyone else gathered cul-de-sac with good transpor- of mycustomers arethosewith to stay where we were," Eliza- in the family room." tation to New York City, where older children who don't want beth Shankssaid."Our friends David Goscinski, owner of my husband works," Vander- to move out of their homes," Olthought we were crazy to do JJED Remodeling in Dumont, voort said. 'We would have son said."But those who do say this at this time of our lives but N.J., said he's had dients re- had to spend a huge amount this is something they've waitwe renovated and put every- quest bedroom renovations or of money to move to a more ed for alltheirlives." thing into the house that we upgrade basements that had expensive neighborhood and Some homeowners who dewanted." been crammed with toys and we found we would have had cide on renovation rather than The Shankses' daughters used for play areas. to sacrifice something that we a purchase try to keep a part didn't want any changes to "Some are putting in home already had." of the old structure that made their childhood home — they theaters or a m a n c a ve," Instead, they expanded their house unique. didn't want their parents mov- Goscinski said. "Others are their kitchen and reconfigured Elizabeth Shanks wanted to ing out of it, nor did they want taking bedrooms and making a good portion of the house's keep a pieceofa stained glass any renovations. them into offices so they don't general layout. window "as a form of transi"They moved into their own have to pay their bills on the "We took some space from tion from the old into the new. places and we were left with kitchen table." our dining room and expand- We put it in a foyer — it's not this tiny kitchen and a shower Peggy Vandervoot and her ed the great room," Vander- on an outside wall, but it looks that gave me bruises," Shanks husband, Mijo Mirkovic, from voort said. "The remainder of like a church window and you said. "They wanted a shrine to Ridgewood, remodeled sever- the dining room became an can also see it from the dining their childhood." al times as their three children office and storage space, and room." "This is our version of nirvaDespite the girls' objections, moved through high school, we made a much larger living the Shankses looked at a few collegeand beyond.One child room and kitchen. The whole na," David Shanks said.

Wait time for a newcard; averagemonthly benefit McClatchy-Tribune News Service I recently applied for a

Q ••replacement Social Se-

curity card, but I might be moving before it arrives in the mail. What should I do if

I move before I get it? • Once we haveverified • all y o u r

SOCIAL SECURITY Q-AND-A

er is $1,294. Social Security contact your local Social Se- benefits are based on earncurity office. ings averaged over most of a not receive your card, please

10 to 14 days to receive your

What's the average replacement Social Security card. • monthly Social SecuriIf you move after applying ty benefit for a retired workfor your new card, notify the er? How is th e r etirement post office of your change of benefit amount calculated'?

Q•

do c u m ents address and the post office

A

• The c u r rent a v erage

and processed your applica- will forward your card to • monthly Social Securition, it takes approximately your new address. If you do ty benefit for a retired work-

nians will be 65 or older, qual- posal that same afternoon, ifying for Medicare, by 2025. while the H ouse Energy That number is expected and Commerce Committee — which counts U.S. Rep. to increase over the coming decades until at least 2050, Greg Walden, R-Hood River, when an estimated 1.3 million among its membership — apOregonians will be 65 or older proved its own proposal in and will make up 23 percent July. of the state's total population. But while al l t h ree proThe continued delays are posals intend to replace the also costing taxpayers mon- sustainable growth rate for-

confident that they want to do this and that it can be done.... The question is how."

" There's a w h ol e l o t o f things in the mix," Scholnick

— Reporter 541-617-7816 mmclean@bendbulletin.com

formula's implementation.

implementation, said Andrew

in either the House or Senate

Scholnick, the senior legisla-

plans, Scholnick said.

" That's m or e

t h a n th e

current cost of r e pealing tive representative at AARP's the SGR," said Baucus, who national office. chairs the S enate Finance According to a recent reCommittee. port from the Congressional Shortly before Baucus is- Budget Office, the Senate's sued his statement, members plan to repeal the sustainable of this committee — which in- growth rate formula would cludes U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, cost the federal government R-Ore. — unanimously ap- $150.4 billion over the next proved a plan to eliminate 10 fiscal years, while the two the sustainable growth rate proposals approved by the formula and replace it with a U.S. House of Representatives new "value-based" payment would cost about $121 billion mechanism that would re- to implement. ward doctors who improved Scholnick said he's worried efficiency while punishing Congress would seek to make those who did not. up some of this cost by raising M embers of t h e H o u s e the premiums Medicare benWays and Means Committee eficiaries have to pay forcersigned off on a similar pro- tain health insurance plans,

— This column was prepared by the Social Security Administration.

nursing facility or certain medical and laboratory tests.

rehabilitative care in a skilled

lion on its attempts to delay the sustainable growth rate

has spent more than $150 bil-

al earnings are first adjusted or "indexed" to account for changes in average wages since the year the earnings were received.

"Everybody seems to be raising their deductibles or requiring co-payments for on board with finding a way home health care services, to replace it," he said. "We're

said. While AARP approves of some ideas, such as a plan that would require drug commula, they fall short when it panies to give Medicare bencomes to explaining how the eficiaries the same prescripfunding mechanisms would tion drug rebates they give to work and how t h e f ederal Medicaid beneficiaries, none government will pay for their of them have been included

ey. In his statement, Baucus said the federal government

worker's lifetime. Your actu-

Given the current inability

of the two parties to come together on a particular issue, Scholnick said it's still up in the air as to whether the fed-

eral government will actually be able to do away with the

sustainable growth rate formula this year or not. The fact this is an election

year — a time when members of Congress may not want to

Beltone

TRIAL of our newest most advanced hearing aids

risk alienating certain con-

stituents by forcing them to bear the cost of the formula's r eplacement —

m a kes t h e

proposal'sfuture even less certain. But Scholnick said at least the will to act is there.

Call Today

'Beltone 541-389-9690


D4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014

PAHENTS + KIOS FAMILY CALENDAR songs;$10;7 p.m., doorsopen6:30

TODAY

p.m.; MountainViewHighSchool, 2755 N.E.27th St., Bend;541-3850470or wwwycco.org.

"ALICEIN WONDERLAND": Bend Experimental Art Theatre produces the play based onthe Lewis Carroll novel; $15, $10 for students; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-4195558 or www.beatonline.org. "KLUNKERZ, AFILM ABOUT MOUNTAINBIKES":A screening of the 2006 documentary about a group of cyclists taking their adventures off -road;$5 inadvance, $7 at the door; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.

SUNDAY MASTER-FLY: A fly-tying competition in the format of popular reality cooking shows; free for spectators, $5 for competitors; 11 a.m.; Fin andFire,1604S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite12, Redmond; 307-680-0652 or www.facebook. com/centraloregonmasterfly. NOTABLES SWINGBAND: Featuring blues, Latin, rock'n' roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-728-8743 or www.notablesswingband.com. "ALICEIN WONDERLAND": Bend Experimental Art Theatre produces the play based on the Lewis Carroll novel; $15, $10 for students; 4 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-419-5558 or www.beatonline.org.

SATURDAY VFW BREAKFAST: A breakfast of biscuits, gravy, eggs, ham or sausage; $8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFW Hall,1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring artsand crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend IndoorSwap Meet,679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. "ALICEIN WONDERLAND": Bend Experimental Art Theatre produces the play based onthe Lewis Carroll novel; $15, $10for students; 2 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend;541-4195558 or www.beatonline.org. DEEP WINTERCOMMUNITY SUPPERANDARTSHOW: A multicourse, gluten-free meal and local art; $30, $10 for children younger than12; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Locavore,1216 N.E. First St., Bend; 541-633-7388 or www.

MONDAY No Family event listings.

TUESDAY TAO — PHOENIXRISING: The traditional Japanese Taiko drummers perform; $32-$45 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.

THURSDAY EUGENEBALLETCOMPANY: The

company performsScheherazade, Bolero and more; $12-$42; 7:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-485-3992, eballet©eugeneballet.org or www. eugeneballet.org.

and library youth events For the week ofJan. 31-Feb 6. Story times arefree unless otherwise noted. $•

2690 N.E U.S.Highway20, Bend;541-318-7242 • ONCE UPON ASTORYTIME: All ages; 11a.m. Friday. f' l l

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19530 AmberMeadowDrive, Bend; 541-388-1188 • STORY TIME: All ages; 11 a.m.Thursday. 'II

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175 S.W.Meadow LakesDrive, Prineville; 541-447-7978 • PRESCHOOL STORYTIME: Ages 3 and older; 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and 11 a.m. Thursday. • WEE READ: Ages 0-3; 10 a.m. Monday and Wednesday. I I

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601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7097 • BABY STEPS: Ages 0-18 months; 11:30a.m. Wednesday and1:30 p.m. Thursday. • TODDLIN' TALES: Ages 18-36 months; 10:15 a.m. and11 a.m. Tuesday and10:15 a.m.Wednesday. • PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5; 10:30 a.m. Friday and1:30 p.m. Tuesday. • ROCKIE TALES PUPPET SHOW: Ages3-5:1:30 p.m.Tuesday. • FAMILY BLOCK PARTY: Lego Universe; all ages; 1 p.m. Saturday. • ANIMALADVENTURES: Ages 3and older with the High Desert Museum; 1 p.m. Wednesday. •

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62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-330-3760 • TODDLIN' TALES:Ages0-3;9:30a.m.W ednesday. • PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5; 9:30a.m. Thursday. • SATURDAY STORIES:All ages; 10 a.m. Saturday. • ANIMALADVENTURES: Ages 3and older with the High Desert Museum; 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. I

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241 S.W.Seventh St., Madras; 541-475-3351 • BABIESAND TODDLERS STORY TIME: 10:10a.m.Tuesday. • PRESCHOOLAND OLDER STORY TIME:Ages3-5;10:30 a.m.and 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. • SPANISHSTORYTIME: All ages; 1 p.m.Wednesday. •

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16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 • FAMILY STORY TIME: All ages; 10:30 a.m. Thursday. • ANIMALADVENTURES: Ages 3and older with the High Desert Museum; 12:30 p.m. Monday. • KNOW FUN.KNOWCATAN: All ages; play Settlers of Catan, Risk and more; 2:30 p.m. Thursday. I

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827 S.W.DeschutesAve.;541-312-1054 • MOTHERGOOSEANDMORE:Ages 0-2; 10:15 a.m. and11 a.m. Thursday. • PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5; 9:45 a.m. and1 p.m. Wednesday. • DIVERSIONFAMILIAR ENESPANOL:Ages 0-5;11 a.m. Wednesday. • ANIMALADVENTURES: Ages 3and older with the High Desert Museum; 10 a.m. Monday. • PAJAMAPARTY:Ages 0-5; 6:45 p.m. Tuesday. •

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110 N. CedarSt.; 541-312-1070 • FAMILYFUN STORY TIME:Ages0-5;10:30 a.m .Thursday. •

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"I'd been reading a lot about Continued from D1 That averages to more than the power of music in terms of one program a day, and while brain development," said Bowthe downtown branch typier. She knew it helped build cally has the most programs, connections within the brain the East Bend and Redmond and also between people. branches are not far behind. During the program, Bower Special programs include sings everything — she sings yoga for kids, an old-fash- her introduction, the instrucioned game day, a Lego party, tions, songs and even sings the animal visits from the High books. From Bower's perspecDesert Museum as well as two tive, the children love it and programs McNeil is particu- the parents,too, seem more larly excited about — Rockie engaged. These events, which Tales Puppet Show, and Music, take place twice a week, last 30 Movement & Stories (or, as she minutes, about twice the time calls it, M&Ms). of a regular story time for that During the puppet shows, age group. which also make appearances Bower says singing doesn't at other area libraries, McNeil make her nervous even though voices a raccoon named Rock- sometimes she sings badly ie, who is having some sort of or forgets the words. She just issue. He may be learning how keeps going. She believes that to share, about new manners part is important as well — to or how to rhyme. Rockie inter- role model for parents that acts with the librarian, other "(mistakes) aren't important puppets and the audience. Mc- to the children." Sometimes Neil keeps the shows light, hu- parents may worry they armorous and silly, with lots of en't good singers or worry chase scenes and singalongs. about their performance when "Kids will relate to a puppet "babies don't care at all," said in a very quick, simple way Bower. that is different than talking to Librarians are also making an adult," said McNeil. a conscious effort to incorM&Ms is another popular porate math and science into new offering, featuring lots all of their story times, at all of songs for the 3-and-older ages.EastBend PublicLibrary crowd. The kids learn songs, Community Librarian Chanplay instruments and dance. dra vanEijnsbergen has made Every month, McNeil says, the an effort to include more adsession is packed. dition and subtraction in her Redmond Public Library story times (often using felt anCommunity Librarian Julie imals on a board). She tries to Bowers started a similar pro- mention "we are doing math." gram in September called She wants to "take the fear out Mother Goose and More for of that word."

Science components include chairs to encourage parents to adding additional information sit with their children. VanEiand vocabulary. Librarians jnsbergen also uses a visual might talk about the differ- schedule with laminated cards ence between amphibians at the front of the room to indiand reptiles, name parts of the cate what will happen during body, explain how a rainbow the program; after each step, is created or talk about bears she removes the card. "They hibernating. know what's going to happen; McNeil hopes that parents there are no surprises. It gives attending the story times will a level of control to them," said take home the lessons and re- vanEijnsbergen. inforce reading, vocabulary So far, she has only done and math concepts introduced one of these story times and atthelibrary. was pleasantly s urprised when eight children showed

Sensorystory time

up, a great start for a brand-

new offering. She said the parents she talked to afterward Bend library, which vanEijns- were pleased. "They were surbergen calls "radically differ- prised we would do this, but ent" from regular story times. were very, very grateful," said The program is geared for vanEijnsbergen. children with sensory processThe East Bend library will ing disorders or those on the continue to offer the sensory autism spectrum, although it story time once a month, with is open to all children. VanEi- the next session planned for jnsbergen heard about the idea Feb. 15. If it's a hit, other librarwhile attending a library con- ies are likely to offer a similar ference and she brought the program. "I'm just going t o t est idea to McNeil, who encouraged it. pilot it f o r a wh i l e," said VanEijnsbergen knew regu- vanEijnsbergen. lar story times could be probShe is excited to offer more lematic for some children. "We programs for all kind of famdo see it. There are definitely ilies. She loves family game kids who come to story time night, when families come in and we see they are strug- andhangout together and play gling," she said. The session games. She also likes Middle is too loud, too busy and too Ground, a regular program for unpredictable. preteens that includes crafts She worked fo r m o n ths and lots of talking. "I figure the more procoming up with a plan, based on other librarians' experi- grams I can do that get peoences. During sensory story ple excited, the better," said time, the room is lighted only vanEijnsbergen. with natural light (no over— Reporter: 541-617-7860, head lighting) and there are no ajohnson@bendbulletin.com On Jan. 18, a brand-new story time debuted at the East

ADOPT ME

EVENTS BEND SPAYANDNEUTER PROJECT WALK-INPREVENTIVE WELLNESS CLINIC: Vaccines, microchips, toenail trims and deworming available; 10 a.m.-1:45 p.m. Saturday; Bend Spay 8 Neuter Project, 910 S.E. Wilson Ave. Suite B-1, Bend; 541-617-1010 or www. bendsnip.org. FOURTH ANNUALDOGGIE COAT DRIVE:Drop off coats, sweaters and bedding for dogs and cats at these locati ons:SubaGuru,Bend Spay 8 Neuter Project, Bend Pet Express (both locations), Bend Veterinary Clinic and Blue Sky Veterinary Clinic; through Feb. 28; 541-617-1010 or www.bendsnip.org. HOPE FOOD BANK:Freefood for up to three pets for one month, must be on government assistance or low-income to qualify; 10 a.m.noon Saturday; Westside Bend Pet Express, 133 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-617-1010. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL OREGON'STHIRD ANNUAL PUP CRAWL:Help raise money for homeless animals by purchasing pint glasses, T-shirts and beer; 4-8 p.m. Feb. 11 atCascade Lakes Brewing Co., Feb. 12 at10 Barrel Brewing Co., Feb. 13 at Deschutes Brewery Public House, Feb.18at Three Creeks Brewing Co., Feb. 19at Crux Fermentation Project, Feb. 20 at Worthy Brewing Co. and Feb. 21 at GoodLife Brewing Co.; 541-3307096 or www.hsco.org.

CLASSES BASIC COMPANIONSHIP:Basic commands and skills; $120; six-

months old; $135; seven-week class, cost includes materials; 6-7 p.m. Mondays; preregister; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869 or www. friendsforlifedogtraining.com. PUPPY LIFESKILLS: $120 for six weeks; 5 p.m. Tuesdays; Desert SageAgility,24035 Dodds Road, Bend; Jan at 541-420-3284 or www.desertsageagility.com. PUPPY KINDERGARTENCLASSES: Training, behavior and socialization classes for puppies10- to16-weeks old; $80; 6:30 p.m. Thursdays; preregister; call for directions; Meredith Gage, 541-318-8459 or www.pawsitiveexperience.com. RALLY OBEDIENCE CLASS: $120 for six weeks; starts Tuesday at11 a.m. with Andrea Martin; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869 or www. friendsforlifedogtraining.com. TREIBBALLCLASS: Urban herding sport involving eight exercise balls, a goal and165-foot field; $120 for six weeks; Saturdays, call for times; Desert Sage Agility, 24035 Dodds Road, Bend;Jan at541-420-3284 or www.desertsageagility.com.

TRAINING, BOARDING ANNE GESER:In-home individual training with positive reinforcement; 541-923-5665. CASCADE ANIMALCONNECTION: Solutions for challenging dog behavior, Tellington TTouch, private lessons; Kathy Cascade at 541-5168978 or kathy©sanedogtraining.

com. DANCIN' WOOFS:Behavioral counseling; 63027 Lower Meadow Drive, Suite D, Bend; Kristin Kerner at 541-312-3766 or www. dancinwoofs.com. DIANN'S HAPPYTAILS: Private training, day care, boarding/board and train; La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht at 541-536-2458 or

diannshappytails©msn.comor www.diannshappytails.com. DOGS LTD 8TRAINING: Leash aggression, training basics, day school; 59860 Cheyenne Road, Bend; Linda West at 541-318-6396 or www.dogsltdtraining.com. FRIENDSFOR LIFE DOG TRAINING: Private basic obedience training

and training for aggression/serious behavior problems; 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869 or www. friendsforlifedogtraining.com. LIN'SSCHOOL FOR DOGS: Behavior training and AKCringready coaching; 63378 Nels Anderson Road, Suite 7, Bend; Lin Neumann at 541-536-1418 or www. linsschoolfordogs.com. OPEN SKYDOG BOARDING: Kennel-free boarding on fenced acreage; walking trail nearby, limited openings; Deb at 541-410-0024 or openskydb@hotmail .com. PAWSITIVE EXPERIENCE:Private training and consulting; Meredith Gage, 541-318-8459 or www. pawsitiveexperience.com. ZIPIDY DODOG:Daycare, boarding, groomingand dog walking;675 N.E Hemlock Ave., Suite112, Redmond; www.zipidydodog.com, 541-526-1822 or zipidydodog@ bendbroadband.com.

Submitted photo

Is Georgia onyour mind? Meet Georgia, aWeimaraner/ Rhodesian ridgeback mix. She is aneasy-goingandloyal companionwho isanxious tolearnnew commands and tasks. She is ready for a loving home where shecan bond all daylong. If you would like to visit Georgia or any other pet available for adoption at the Humane Society of the Ochocos, call 541-447-7178 or visit www.humanesocietyochocos. com.

Find It All

Online bendbulletin.com

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686 NW YorkDrive, Sfe.150 Bend,ORi 541-306-3263

week class; 6-7p.m. Tuesdays or

59800S.U.S.Highway97,Bend;www.highdesertmuseum.org;541-382-4754 • UNLESSNOTED,EVENTSINCLUDEDWITH ADMISSION ($1Zadults, $10 ages 65and older, $7ages 5-12, fieeages 4and younger) • WILD WEDNESDAYS:Ages7-12;treasurehunt;12:30p.m.tocloseWednesday. • BACKPACK EXPLORERS:Ages 3-4; explore museum's animal habitat, share stories andsongs;10 to11 a m.Thursday; $15 per child nonmembers, $10perchild members. • TOTALLYTOUCHABLE TALES:Ages2-5;storytelling aboutanimalsand peopleofthe HighDesert;10:30a.m. Tuesday. I

the ideaafter some research.

PETS CALENDAR

STORY TIMES

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ages 0 to 2. She came up with

No Family event listings.

"ALICEIN WONDERLAND": Bend Experimental Art Theatre produces the play based onthe Lewis Carroll novel; $15, $10 for students; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-4195558 or www.beatonline.org. YOUTH CHOIROFCENTRAL OREGON WINTERCONCERT:The Singers' School, Premiereand Debut choirs performinternational folk

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Story time

WEDNESDAY

centraloregonlocavore.org.

•J•

Email information for the Family Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylifelbendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

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56855 Venture Lane;541-312-1080 • FAMILY FUN STORYTIME: Ages 0-5; 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.

Wednesdays; preregister; Dancin' Woofs; Kristin Kerner at 541-3123766 or www.dancinwoofs.com. BEGINNEROBEDIENCE: Basic skills, recall and leash manners; $110$125; 6 p.m. Mondays or Tuesdays; preregister; call for directions; Meredith Gage, 541-318-8459 or www.pawsitiveexperience.com. INTERMEDIATEOBEDIENCE: Off-leash work and recall with distractions; $110; 6 p.m. Wednesdays; preregister; call for directions; Meredith Gage at 541-318-8459 or www. pawsitiveexperience.com. OBEDIENCE CLASSES: Six-week drop-in classes; $99.95; 4 and 5 p.m. Mondays,4and 5p.m. Fridays, noon Saturdays; Petco, 3197 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; Loel Jensen, 541-382-0510. OBEDIENCE FORAGILITY: Six-week class; $120;5 p.m .M ondays;Desert SageAgility,24035 Dodds Road, Bend; Stephanie Morris at 541-6336774 or desertsageagility.com. PUPPY101:Socialization, basic skills and playtime for puppies 8- to 13-weeks old; $85; fourweek class; 6-7 p.m. Thursdays; preregister; Dancin'Woofs; Kristin Kerner at 541-312-3766 or www.

dancinwoofs.com. PUPPY BASICMANNERSCLASS: Social skills for puppies up to 6

~~ ~ ofHope%'

A Rodgers 8 Hammerstein Concert February 8-9, 2014 • Tower Theakri Favorite Classics from: Oklahoma,South Pacifi c,Sound of Music and more! Featuring Bend's finest musical performers plus: ~ The Crook County High School Jazz Choir, Mountain View High Schoat ~ Andante, Men's Chorus of Central Oregon, B.E.A.T. and The Cascade Chorale

s

Tickets available at TowerTheatre.org Tickets rangefrom NO to $75 Cocktail attire suggested

vvvvvv.CASAofCentralOregon.org

Proceeds Benefit:

gp Court Appolnled Spedal Advoahes FOR CHILOEIN


FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014• THE BULLETIN

D5

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

A er7years, Rosieto pay'T e Vie avisit TV SPOTLIGHT

At the time, she chalked her ferent place. Walters is set to In Monday's announceexit up to an inability to reach retire this year, and the show ment, Walters said, "I have "The View" a new deal with ABC, but also is undergoing some growing great affection for Rosie and 10a.m. Feb. 7,ABC indicated her toxic relation- pains. Hasselbeck and her we have remained in contact the conversation ship with Hasselbeck was a frequent sparring partner through the years. I am hapBy Meredith Blake to politics and contributing factor. O'Don- Joy Behar were edged out py to welcome her back to the Los Angeles Times clashed bitterly nell also said she planned to lastyear,reportedly because program. She is always a liveN EW Y O R K — Ros i e with E l i sabeth return occasionally to t he viewers had grown weary ly and engaging guest and a O'Donnell is r eturning to H asse l b e c k show as a correspondent, a of their partisan bickering. part of the show's successful "The View," but this time as a over hot-button possibility that failed to mate- Meanwhile, the addition of history." O'Donnell's decision to reguest. issues, particu- O'Donnell rialize. Instead, she returned Jenny McCarthy has drawn Executive producers Bar- larly the war in to daytime in 2011 with an widespread criticism. It has turn to "The View," if for only bara Walters and Bill Geddie Iraq. Although the show's rat- O WN talk s how t hat w a s also seen increased rati ngs a day, probably has someannounced Monday the for- ings and buzz factor surged yanked after just five months competition from CBS' "The thing to do with her current mer co-host would return to during her tenure on the air, because of low ratings. Talk," which was initially gig on the ABC Family series, "The View" on Feb. 7, mark- O'Donnell left abruptly a Nearly seven years after seen as a flagrant knockoff "The Fosters," about a lesbian ing her first appearance on month before her contract O'Donnell's departure, "The but has since come into its couple with a brood of multiView" is also in a very dif- own. the show since her fiery ten- was up. ethnic foster children. ure as moderatorfrom 2006 to 2007. D uring t h a t ti m e , th e left-leaning comedian steered

This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitable for children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13areincluded, along with R-rated films that may have entertainment or educational value for older children with parental guidance.

Rating:R for sexual content and languagethroughout What it's about:Young New Yorkers hook up and think about coupling up as they grow up. The kid attractor factor:Zac Efron, Imogen Poots, Miles Teller and Michael B. Jordan are the stars. Goodlessons/bad lessons:"Being there for someone, that's all relationships are." Violence: A punch is thrown. Language:Profanity, and lots of it.

Sex:Quite a bit, reasonably explicit, with graphic displays of sex toys. Drugs:Mass quantities of alcohol are consumed. Parents' advisory:Entirely too sex-

ual and alcohol-obsessedfor any-

Rating:PG-13 for sequences of intense fantasy action and violence throughout. What it's about:Dr. Frankenstein's monster lives to the present day, where he gets mixed up with de-

The kid attractor factor:A monster movie with lots of swordplay and monstrous effects.

Goodlessonsibadlessons:"Each of us has ahigher purpose."

Language:Someprofanity Focus Features via The AssociatedPress

Miles Teller, from left, Michael B. Jordan and Zac Efron in a scene from "That Awkward Moment." See the full review in today's GO!

Magazine.

Fami ties ra un er a 'san er

MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • Thee may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. r

Dear Abby: My husband is a would like to think. Children need "Beth." Beth is planning on having hard worker, a good provider and their parents' encouragement and a child through a sperm donor and a good dad. However, he's angry approval, as well as their patience has asked Jeff to be a "father figall the time. It has been this way

ure" once the child is born.

and counseL

for as long as I can remember. He When they are given a constant is aware of it, and always promis- barrage of angry putdowns from

He has doubts about the wisdom of her plan to parent a child

es me that when this or that settles

alone, but he doesn't want to hurt

down, things will get better, but they never

do.

DEAR

a parent, they begin to internalize it. They think such

behavior is normal, which means they

When h e s e es will repeat it in their ABBY something on TV or relationships when reads something in they are older. Or, the paper that upsets they may think they him, he can say really vile and vi- deserve to be treated that way and olent things. Often when he thinks

choose mates who treat them like

things the kids and I do are not Dad did. Kids with low self-esteem good enough, he borders on being also tend to choose friends who are verbally abusive. like themselves, which can cause His friends say I'm a "saint" for even more problems. putting up with him, but lately all I There is something you can feel is tired out and worn down by do besides leave right now. Make it. I have spoken to him about this an appointment for YOURSELF numerous times, and it improves with a licensed psychotherapist for a few days, then it starts all

and take the children with you.

her feelings and is flattered to have been asked to fulfill such an important task. He agreed to do it without discussing it with me. Beth

is very nice, and Jeff's family has embraced me and I don't want to

cause trouble. Jeff and I plan on having several children of our own, and we also

plan to move out of state in the next few years. I am wondering how this commitment will affect that

possibility. — Unsure in the Midwest

Dear Unsure:Agree that before this goes any further, you and Jeff need to talk. Open the discussion by telling him that you're not comfortable and why. Suggest he talk

over. I'm not sure how much longer That way, your husband can foot I can last. the bill while all of you get your to his sister and find out EXACTLY I have asked him to go to coun- heads straight and you make up what she meant when she asked seling, but he hasn't been willing. your mind if you're serious about him to be a father figure. — Ready to Leave leaving. He also needs to tell her he may Dear Ready:Your husband may Dear Abby: I'm engaged to be have spoken too soon when he be a good provider and a hard married soon, and I'm concerned agreed. worker, but I seriously question about a commitment my fian— Write toDear Abby at deambby.com whether he is as good a dad as you ce, "Jeff," made to his older sister or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN HUSTLE(R) 12:15, 3:20, 6:45, 9:50 • AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY (R)1:25,4:40,7:50 • FROZEN(PG) 1:10, 3:50, 6:55, 9:40 • FROZENSINGALONG(PG) 12:30 • GRAVITY IMAX3-D(PG-13)1:35, 4, 7, 9:25 • THEHOBBIT:THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 7:55 • THEHOBBIT:THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG 3-D (PG-13) 3:30 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE(PG-13) 3:10, 6:20, 9:40 • I, FRANKENSTEIN (PG-13) I:45,4:10, 6:35, 9:05 • JACKRYAN: SHADOW RECRUIT(PG-13)12:40,3:40, 7:10, 9:55 • LABORDAY(PG-13) Noon, 3, 6:30, 9:15 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 11:45a.m., 2:45, 6, 9 • THE NUT JOB(PG) I2:10, 4:45, 7:20 • THE NUT JOB3-D (PG)2:30, 9:35 • RIDE ALONG (PG-13) 12:55, 4:30, 7:40, 10:05 • THE SARATOV APPROACH(PG-13) 12:45, 4:25, 7:15, 9:45 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-13) 11:55 a.m., 6:10 • THESECRET LIFEOFWALTER MITTY (PG)11:55 a.m., 6:10 • THATAWKWARD MOMENT (R)1:05,3:55,7:30,10 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)12:25,4:15,8 • Accessibilitydevices areavailable for somemovies. •

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.BondSt., 541-330-8562 • THE BOOK THIEF (PG-13) 6 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 9:15 • After 7p.m.,showsare21and olderonly.Youngerthan 2f may attend screeningsbefore 7p.m. ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. • j

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY, JAN. 31, 2014:This yearyouflip-flop from one stance to another, and it causes

confusion inothers' perceptions. People havealwaysseenyouassteadfast;now thatyou are changing styles, you can expect some strong reactions. You demand a lot from others, and you also have strong expectations financially. If you are single, the person Qars showthe kind you choosetoday of day you'll have might not be your ** * * * D ynamic

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

the present situation, and resist pushing too hard. In fact, the less you push, the more you will receive. You might not be as cautious as you need to bewith your finances. Tonight: Your treat.

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21) *** * You havebeenvery sure ofyourself lately and perhaps too hard on someoneyou care about. Ata certain point, you will need to give up your grievances and

move forward in a positive manner.Tonight: Act as if there will never beanother Friday night.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * Use your instincts in an important conversation. Understand that much more ** * * You'll respond positively to some- isgoingonthan meetstheeye.You havea l o ng-term choi c e. one's efforts to draw you in. Relating close- strong will, and you'll sense what is needed ++++ pos>tive Try not to make any ly happens naturally when you arewith this to end a personal issue. Stress on your ficommitments for person. Rethinka decision, and beaware nanceswillease upsoon enough.Tonight: at least a year; if * Difficult of the consequences. Youare instinctive in Head home. the person still is of interest to you then, your reactions. Tonight: Follow the music. CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) LEO (July23-Aug.22) you know you have awinner. If you are ** * You will experience an unusual urge attached, your partner could be thrown off *** * You are able toseea personal to spend. Much of that desire is being matter differently from how many people by your changing attitude. Explain where fueled by a personal situation. You tend you are coming from more often. PISCES do. You will want to communicate your helps youmakeandspend money. vision more fully than you have in the past. to pick up much more of what is going on than what is being verbalized. Tonight: You A loved one could be rather stern and difARIES (March21-April19) deserve tohavesomefun. ficult. You might want to have along-over** * * You could feel uncomfortable due conversation. Tonight: Time for a talk. AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) about a matter revolving around your ** * * Be aware of your effect on others. household. Youm ighthave pushed someVIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) youarepushedwaybeyond one away. You'll discover that a partner is ** * * Others insist on dominating the Sometimes what you can handle. Think through a energized and finally ready to pitch in. You scene, no matter what is going on. Your problem by getting more feedback. A doinstinctively pick up on others' nonverbal feelings could come out in an oddway or cues. Tonight: TGIF! through spending. Working with someone mestic issue will resolve, given some time and perspective. Tonight: Make it OK tobe else might elicit powerful responses from TAURUS (April 20-May20) a little overindulgent. you. Be aware of this. Tonight: With a fa** * * You could be overwhelmed by everything that is happening. A loved one's vorite person. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) response might not warm the cockles of ** * You might sense achange in the air, LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) your heart. Understand where you are butyou are uncomfortable with change. ** * You might feel as though you are coming from inregardto this person. Relax, and understand that others might carrying a burden alone, but that is not Consider establishing some limits. Tonight: the case. Youwill get a better grasp of a notbeonthesame levelasyou.Do some Celebrate the weekend in style. situation later in the day. In fact, in the next deep thinking before you act. You will few days, you will be gaining an enhanced rejuvenate as the daygoes on. Tonight: All GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * You could question a decision more perspective of several important matters. smiles — it's Friday! than you need to. Recognize your limits in Tonight: Beam inmore of whatyou want. © King Features Syndicate

CANCER (June21-July 22)

9p.m. on 2, 9, "SharkTank" — Are you ready for some money? New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch, who's

also a successful movie pro-

9p m onSHO "BillyJoel A Matter of Trust — The Bridge to Russia" — In August 1987, Billy Joel took his band and his family to what was then still the Soviet Union for an unforgettable performance. This new documentary revisits the trip and all the highs and lows of putting on that landmark show.

mons andangelic gargoyles.

Sex:None. Drugs:None. Parents' advisory:As tame as any PG-13 horror movie you've ever seen, OK for10and older.

Diaries" —The tension between Carrie and Tom (AnnaSophia Robb, Matt Letscher) escalates in the season finale. After Larissa (Freema Agyeman) delivers some news to Carrie, Sebastian (Austin Butler) decides to reveal a secret of his own. Maggie (Katie Findlay) gets a surprise when she turns to Walt (Brendan Dooling) with her suspicions about Pete (Claybourne Elder). Samantha(Lindsey Gort) thinks about leaving the city in "Run to You."

boxer Marlen Esparza.

bodyyounger than16, but if they've Violence:Lots and lots, but very outgrown "High School Musical" little that's bloody.

"I, FRANKENSTEIN"

8 p.m. on(CW), "TheCarrie

ducer, is a guest Shark in this new episode. He and the other Sharks hear pitches for a cookie dough that's meant to be eaten raw, milk that tastes like cereal bowl leftovers, a phone app for hands-free picture taking and an interactive workout technology demonstrated by Olympic

PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVIES "THAT AWKWARDMOMENT"

TV TOOAY

9 p.m. on STARZ, Movie: "After Earth" —Though it flamed out fast at the 2013 summer box office, this sci-fi tale directed and co-written by M. Night Shyamalan ("The Sixth Sense") still could find an audience in fans of Will and Jaden Smith. They also play father and son in the futuristic tale that strands them on a ravaged Earth, in a crash landing that injures Dad and leaves him reliant on his son to cross dangerous territory and signal their location. 10 p.m. on ANPL, "Treehouse Masters" —In this new episode, a nature-loving California woman tells Pete and his crew she s feeling cramped in her home and wants a dwelling 60 feet off the ground in the giant redwoods — preferably one with a view of the ocean. It may be one of their most challenging jobs yet, but they rise — pun intended — to the occasion and build her a tri-level treehouse with all the comforts of home in "Sky High Redwood Retreat." © Zap2it

lESSCNNM

BEST TIRE IAI.IIE PRONIIE c• c

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Aenam, Dishwasher

Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • THE CRASH REEL(no MPAArating) 6:30 • THEGREAT BEAUTY (no MPAA rating)3:30 • 2014OSCAR NOMINATED LIVEACTIONSHORTS (no MPAA rating) 9 I

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I

Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • I, FRANKENSTEIN(PG-13) 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • THE NUTJOB(PG) 3, 5, 7, 9 • SAVINGMR.BANKS (PG-13)4,6:30,9 Sisters Movie House,720Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • 12 YEARSASLAVE(R) 4:30 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 7:15 • JACKRYAN: SHADOW RECRUIT(PG-13)7:45 • LABORDAY(PG-I3) 5:15, 7:45 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 5, 7:30 • NEBRASKA (R) 5:15 Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • I, FRANKENSTEIN(PG-13) 7:20 • I, FRANKENSTEIN 3-D (PG-13) 5:10, 9:25 • JACKRYAN: SHADOW RECRUIT(PG-13)5:15,7:30,9:45 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 4:30, 7, 9:30 • THE NUT JOB(PG)4:40, 6:45, 8:50 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)3:40,7:10

Hbil~bif TV.APPLIANCE

s~a C1ASsIC COVERINGS Also see usfor

Awnings, Solar Screens 8 Custom Draperies

(541) 388-441 8

' •

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • AMERICAN HUSTLE(Upstairs — R) 7:15 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 4, 7 • The upstalrs screening room has limited accessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus •film reviews in today's D GO! Magazine

NQRTHWEsT CROSSING

Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwe's'tcrossing.com


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

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2014 • •

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Golf Equipment

TV, Stereo 8 Video

Misc. Items

Misc. Items

Tools

+

DirectTV 2 Year Sav-

ings Event! Over 140 I A double depth in gra v e channels only $29.99 I terment a month. O nly Di- space with o uter recTV gives you 2 I burial container built YEARS of s a vings in, located in Meadand a FREE Genie owpark area of De- I upgrade! Call I schutes Memorial Gardens, $ 1 000. 1-800-259-5140. I Call 541-389 1821 (PNDC)

Mint condition upgraded senior shafts, head covers &new grips.

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials Drivers: Ping G10 266- Heating and Stoves 13.5 T-Made Super 267- Fuel and Wood fast 12 degree. 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Hybrids: Cobra DWS 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment Head 8 Footboard, 4-5-6 irons; Cleve270- Lost and Found with wood-grain look, land HB 3, 7-8-9 and double size has no P/W; Ping G156 GARAGESALES side rails. Could be iron green dot; 275 - Auction Sales repurposed into a Cleveland XLi S/W 280 - Estate Sales garden bench, or a Ping G15, u nique item. U s e I/I/edges: 281 - Fundraiser Sales gap S/W, lobb. your imagination! 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 951-454-2561 Askinq$75. 284- Sales Southwest Bend 541-419-6408 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 246 288- Sales Southeast Bend Guns, Hunting The Bulletin reserves 290- Sales RedmondArea & Fishing the right to publish all 292 - Sales Other Areas ads from The Bulletin FARM MARKET newspaper onto The 200 Lapua Brass, 165 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery Bulletin Internet web- are loaded, 500 Sisite. erra Match bullets, 316- Irrigation Equipment 500 Federal primers, 325- Hay, Grain and Feed The Bulletin 5 lbs. RL 22 powder, 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies $5500. 541-350-3811 341 - Horses andEquipment 240 345-Livestockand Equipment CASH!! For Guns, Ammo 8 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals Crafts & Hobbies Reloading Supplies. 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 541-408-6900. 358- Farmer's Column AGATE HUNTERS 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing Polishers • Saws Check out the 383- Produce andFood classifieds online

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DISH T V Ret a iler. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 Auto Accident Attorney AN mos.) & High Speed INJURED I N AUTO A C CIDENT? I nternet starting a t $14.95/month (where Call InjuryFone for a available.) SAVE! Ask free case evaluation. About SAME DAY In- Never a cost to you. stallation! CALL Now! Don't wait, call now! 1-800-539-9913. 1-800-308-1563

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Wanted- paying cash 6hp air compressor, 125 for Hi-fi audio & stu- Ib max, 240V, Ilke new, dio equip Mclntosh asking $625. Delivery JBL, Marantz, D y - available. 541-385-9350 naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 Newin box, or nearly new 261 Craftsman Tools: Medical Equipmen • 10" Stationary radial arm saw, Falcon 4-w h eel Model ff315.220100, $375. power scooter with • 10" Stationary table accessories, gently saw w/guide rails, used, in need of model ff315.228590, new battery (order$325. ing info avail.) Call • 6-1/8" Jointer 5 41-389-1821 f o r planer "Professional" details. model ff351.227240,

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BUYING whole-home Satellite Lionel/American Flyer system installed at trains, accessories. NO COST and pro541-408-2191. ramming starting at 1 9.99/mo. FRE E BVyffvG & SE LLING HD/DVR Upgrade to All gold jewelry, silver 262 new callers, SO CALL and gold coins, bars, Commercial/Office NOW rounds, wedding sets, 1-866-984-8515. class rings, sterling sil- Equipment & Fixtures (PNDC) ver, coin collect, vinRepalr 8r Supplles www.bendbuffetin.com watches, dental Restaurant F u rniture. J TV 46" Samsung flat tage Updated daily Bill Fl e ming, Tables, chairs, bar 206 210 screen, 1/2 yr old, w/ gold. stools, misc. from the Magnavox B l u-Ray 541-382-9419. Pets & Supplies Furniture & Appliances Taurus PT 24/7 G2, ld Cinnabar. S a t . 241 .45 cal, $425. player, all for $400 Guaranteed Income For o 0 Feb. 1, 9-4 at North 30-40 Krag, $150. obo. 541-923-8349. B ar stools, 3 oak i n Bicycles & Your Ret i rement. Main Business Com541-610-6019 good cond., $75/all Avoid market risk & Accessories plex, 1210 N. Main St. 541-678-5605 Need to get an get guaranteed in¹8, Prineville. Two Gen 3 Glock 23's, come in retirement! ad in ASAP? Bed frame, beautiful one Gen 3 Glock 27CALL for FREE copy Cali King, solid brass, $500 each. also You can place it of our SAFE MONEY 1000 rds .40 practice $200. 541-508-2250 HAVANESE PUPPIES online at: GUIDE Plus Annuity a mmo; Glock g u n AKC, Dewclaws, UTD 205 light/laser; .40 to 9mm www.bendbuffetin.com Quotes from A-Rated shots/wormer, non-shed, Items for Free Companies! hypoallergenic, $850 ba r rel; 2005 Maverick ML7 conversion 800-908-7035. 541-460-1277. misc. spare parts 8 541 -385-5809 Mountain Bike, 15" (PNDC) Queen bed, box spring d efensive am m o. n frame (small). Full & mattress. You haul. Labradors AKC -4 left! 503-585-5000 256 Whites & yellows, shots, NASCAR TICKETS! 3/1 541-678-5605 suspension, Maverick Travei/Tickets 8 2, 2 seats, Phoenix, wormed, health/ hip guar. s hock, SRAM X O Wanted: Collector seeks 280 People Lookfor Information AZ. Pd $280; sell both 541-536-5385 drivetrain & shifters, 9 high quality fishing items tall, 56" wide, Oak www.welcomelabs.com 76" About Products and speed rear cassette, 8 upscale bamboo fly Advertise VACATION for $140. 541-504-3833 Estate Sales with 2 glass shelves 34-11, Avid Juicy disc rods. Call 541-678-5753, SPECIALS to 3 milServices Every Daythrough Maltese-mix white male on top, 3 cabinets YOUR Carpenter Estate Sale lion P acific N o rth-* REDUCE brakes. Well t aken or 503-351-2746 The Bulletin Classirreds puppy, $450. In Mabelow, 2 pull-out westerners! 29 daily CABLE BILL! Get an 2205 NE Wintergreen c are o f . $950 . shelves lined in veldras, 503-881-8541 Sa t e llite Dr., Bend Fri-Sat, 9-4 newspapers, six All-Digital 206 541-788-6227. 247 vet for silver & other states. 25-word clas- system installed for Sale is in gated comPOMERANIANPUPS accessories. Lighted, Pets & Supplies Sporting Goods sified $540 for a 3-day FREE and program- munity; no entrance tiny male & tiny female Bike, girls pink Magna beautiful & classic - Misc. a d. Ca l l 20" 6 s peed, $75. (916) ming s t arting a t until 8am. Early sign-in 1 black, 1 wolf/sable. design. $500. Adopt a rescued kitten 2 88-6019 o r vis i t $ 24.99/mo. FRE E at front door. Call 541-390-2468 541-420-1921. 541-504-2623 or or cat! Fixed, shots, O'Brien Vortex Gen3 bedroom home 8 www.pnna.com for the HD/DVR upgrade for or 541-383-3995. 541-504-3860 ID chip, tested, more! erators Comp Shredder new callers, SO CALL garage. Very nice furPacific Nor t hwest 242 Rescue at 65480 78th QueenslandHeelers wakeboard, nice! $20. Daily Co n nection. NOW (877)366-4508. niture, decor 8 houseSt., Bend, Thurs/Sat/ Standard & Mini, $150 G ENERATE SOM E Exercise Equipment 541-388-3879 hold items! See de(PNDC) (PNDC) Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. EXCITEMENT in your scriptions & pix at & up. 541-280-1537 www.craftcats.org neighborhood! Plan a Bowflex XLT with Lat www.rightwayranch.wor farmhouseestate garage sale and don't bar, good s h ape, sales.com dpress.com Aussies, Mini AKC to advertise in $195. 541-389-2167 red/blue merles, blue Rodent control special- forget Household, tools, eyes, parents on site. ists (barn cats) seek classified! furniture, vintage. 541-385-5809. 541-598-5314 Thurs & Fri., 8am-4pm. Gazelle Glider work in exchange for SELL IT FAST IN CLASSIFIEDS 15880 Elderberry Elliptical Border Collie/New Zeal- safe shelter, food, Find exactly what Lane, La Pine. and Huntaway pups, great water. W e d e l iver!you are looking for in the Follow yellow signs. dogs, working parents, FREE. 541-389-8420. CLASSIFIEDS $350. 541-546-6171. Look What I Found! Rottweiler pups, $400 for You'll find a little bit of Chihuahua 5 mo. old males; $350 for feNEED TO CANCEL everything in male, needs y ard. males. 541-923-2437 YOUR AD? The Bulletin's daily Low-impact workout Free! Call anytime ex- WANTED Miniature The Bulletin garage and yard sale cept Mon. mornings. for less stress and Classifieds has an poodle puppy. Call section. From clothes 541-389-9977 strain on your body. "After Hours" Line 541-892-0933 or to collectibles, from Folds quickly for 541-891-8791 Call 541-383-2371 housewares to hardCockatiels, lovebirds, easy storage, but we 24 hrs. to cancel ware, classified is parakeets, and finch. Yorkie pups AKC, 2 boys, just don't have room your ad! always the first stop for Breeders and babies 2 girls, potty training, UTD forit. $99 cost-conscious call for availability and shots, health guar., $600 Oak Futoncouch, mat541-419-6408 consumers. And if prices. Everything & up. 541-777-7743 tress w/cover. $100. you're planning your must go including 541-420-4303 own garage or yard cages! 541-279-3578 210 sale, look to the clasewing t a ble, w / 4 Dog crate double door, Furniture & Appliances S drawers. sifieds to bring in the Great cond. 24", new, $24 or best buyers. You won't find $100. 541-213-2333 offer. 541-316-0062 a better place A1 Washers8 Dryers Sofa beautiful Ethan for bargains! $150 ea. Full warDonate deposit bottles/ Allen 8', exc. cond. Call Classifieds: ranty. Free Del. 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Hire a Armoire for sale, ing doors, $475 Cherry/wrought iron German Shepherd Includes up to 40 words oftext, 2" in length, wilh 541-382-6773 professional out Perfect condition, Schwinn stationary exerpups, parents on site. he Bu I I et m bor der, full colorphoto,boldheadlineand price. handmade, cise bike, good cond, serving cenfral oregonsinceeta of The Bulletin's Ready now! $500 ea. • The Bulletin • The CentralOregonNickel Ads Due to family illness solid wood. Antiques wanted: tools, $125. 541-306-3011 54 'f 385 5809 "Call A Service 69"x39"x23.5". we must find homes furniture, marbles,early • Central Oregon Marketplace » bendbulleun.com Some restrictions apply Weslo inversion flex for parents as well. $650. B/W photography, Professional" Only serious inquiries kcaravelliOgmail.com toys, decoys, jewelry. table, like new $100. 'Privatepartymerchandiseonly -excludespetsf livestock,aulos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats,airplanes,andgaragesale categories. Directory today! 541-389-1578 541-420-1921 please. 541-280-2118 •

97 $ 0 2

Antiques 8 Collectibles

Mid-Century Unique

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

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Snow RemovalEquipment

SnOWblOWer Craftsman electric or pull-start, 29" wide, 9HP, 5 forward 2 reverse speeds. $400 cash. 541-815-6319

Snow blower, Yard Machine, used 1 season, 5.5hp, electric/pull start, $200. 541-771-1252

284

Sales Southwest Bend

MOVING SALE

Queen pillow top bed, Broyhill dresser & nite stands, oak desk, Ls hape desk, 4 b a r stools, Sony 38" TV, small a ntique f u rn. ieces, Kenmore HD ront load W/D kitchen items, decor, lots garage items yard & outd oor, p l a nts, co l lectibles, office items, storage cabinets, lots misc! Fri. & Sat., 9-4, numbers Fri., 8 a.m. Take Brookswood to River Rim to 1 9412 Charleswood. Attic Estates & Ap p raisals, 541-350-6822 atticestatesandappraisals.com 2a6 Sales Northeast Bend

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Kearney St. Boutique Closing! Final fourdays, a/i fixtures& furniture are an additional 50% off Starting January 28-31. Firstcome, first serve. 541 -382-81 31

355 NE Kearney


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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Good classified ads tell BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS the essential facts in an Search the area's most interesting Manner. Write comprehensive listing of from the readers view - not classified advertising... the seller's. Convert the real estate to automotive, facts into benefits. Show merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds the reader howthe item will appear every day in the help them in someway. print or on line. This advertising tip Call 541-385-5809 brought toyouby www.bendbulletin.com

Thursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. The Bulletin Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. The Bulletin Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturnight shift and other shifts as needed. Saturday • • • • . 3:00pm Fri. day We currently have openings all nights of the everyone must work Saturday night. Sunday. • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • week, Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. gerrtre CentfalOtegan tfnte tggi

Place aphotoin your private parly ad foronly $15.00per week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER'500in total merchandise

OVER'500in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $16.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 26 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days .................................

icaii for commercial line ad rates)

*ttttust state prices in sd

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at bendbulletin.com any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday. 265

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Building lilaterials

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

17' aluminum plank, max load 250 Ibs, $100. 4x8 lumber rack, like new, $175. 541-383-7603 MADRAS Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at 308 LOW PRICES Farm Equipment 84 SW K St. & Machinery 541-475-9722 Open to the public. 60" Brush hog, good Prineville Habitat condition, $550; and 60" adjustable blade ReStore Building Supply Resale for t ractor, S OLD. 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 541-923-9758 541-447-6934 Open to the public. N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 14' header WANTED: 24" r ound swather, with conditioner, cab concrete st e p ping heat/A/C, 1300 orig. stones. 541-408-0846 hrs. $29,000 obo. 1486 International, cab heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1 000 Call a Pro Pto, 3 sets remotes, Whether you need a nice tractor. $18,000. fence fixed, hedges 541-419-3253 trimmed or a house 325 built, you'll find Hay, Grain & Feed professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Alfalfa Hay 1st, 2nd, 3rd cutting, Hay tests on Service Professional" request. delivery avail. Directory $200 ton. Mitchell, OR 541-385-5809 541-462-3156

Directorof Development, Oregon University Advancement The University of Oregon seeks applications for a r e gional Director of D evelopment position to be located in our Portland, Oregon, White Stagg building offices. Reporting to the Assistant Vice President Oregon Regional Development, the director is responsible for the strategic identification, cultivation, and solicitation of prospects with the capacity to make gifts of $100K or more in the Oregon r egion. Additionally, the director will be expected to build and successfully manage a portfolio of philanthropic partners, as well as work collaboratively with the advancement team, university leaders, faculty, and unit development officers to coordinate donor cultivation and solicitation strategies. This position is f ield-oriented, requiring direct contact with donors and donor prospects. The director will b e r esponsible for meeting f undraising goals as t hey r elate t o t h e strategic needs of the university. This position will involve regular travel (60% of time) to work with gift prospects. University Advancement is c ommitted to providing a fair, equitable, and inclusive work environment. We welcome applications from candidates that will promote and value our culture and exercise teamwork and collaboration when working with diverse groups, donors, volunteer groups, and coworkers.

Search will remain open until filled. Review of First quality Orchard/Tim- applications will begin on Feb. 25, 2014. Salary is commensurate with experience and othy/Blue Grass mixed Fuel & Wood hay, no rain, barn stored, will range from $85-100K. The university an excellent package of employee 1 cord dry, split Juniper, $250/ton.Patterson Ranch offers benefits. $190/cord. Multi-cord Sisters, 541-549-3831 discounts, 8 t/a cords For further information, please see the full 358 available. Immediate position announcement, including minimum delivery! 541-408-6193 Farmers Column and p referred q u alifications, education requirements, and application procedure on Aff year Dependable 10X20 Storage Buildings the UO website at http://hr.uoregon.edu/jobs/. Firewood: Seasoned; for protecting hay, Lodgepoie 1 for $195 firewood, livestock etc. UO is an AA/EO/ADA institution committed or 2 for $365. Cedar, $1496 Installed. to cultural diversity split, del. Bend: 1 for (other sizes available) $175 or 2 for $325. 541-617-1133. 541-420-3484. CCB ¹1 73684 Nurses kfjbuilders@ykwc.net Log truck loads of Lodgepole Firewood, delivered. Call 541-815-4177 /n Care Well over a cord - split seasoned lodgepole, A career with countless rewards. d elivered. $195 . 267

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Employment Opportunities

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ACCOUNTANT

RN

Full-time Staff Accountant needed for Bend location. RV/auto industry a ccounting experience a must. Competitive pay and benefits. Please send resume' to:

Wallowa Memorial Hospital

528 and endbetween 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. All Located in Loans & Mortgages positions we are hiring for work Saturday Enterprise, OR nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we WARNING pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some Part-time 24 Hours The Bulletin recomshifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work conplus. sists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, mends you use cauVariable shifts/days tion when you prostacking product onto p allets, bundling, bcrvhireO mail.com Shift differential cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying emvide personal or apply in person at applies to nights and information to compaployees we offer benefits including life insur63500 N. Hwy 97, weekends. nies offering loans or ance, short-term 8 long-term disability, 401(k), Bend, Oregon CPR/ACLS credit, especially paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is reRequired PALS those asking for adquired prior to employment. Please submit re- Add your web address preferred. vance loan fees or sumes to keldred@bendbulletin.com or comto your ad and readPrior Pre-Op Care, companies from out of plete an application at the front desk. No PACU & scrubbing ers on The Bufietin's state. If you have phone call s please. EOE. experience web site, www.bendconcerns or quesbulletin.com, will be preferred. tions, we suggest you The Bulletin gerving Central Oregon sincefgte Excellent benefit able to click through consult your attorney automatically to your package. or call CONSUMER Visit our website at website. HOTLINE, www.wchcd.org 1-877-877-9392. SeniorProject Nanager Contact Executive Deputy Linda Childers at BANK TURNED YOU Director Oregon State University (OSU) - Cascades in 541-426-5313 DOWN? Private party Bend invites applications for a f u l l-time The C o nfederated EOE will loan on real esT ribes o f Wa r m (1.0 FTE), 12-month, Professional Faculty tate equity. Credit, no Springs, OR , is position as Senior Project Manager. problem good equity seeking an ExecuCall The Bulletin At is all you need. Call tive Deputy Director Duties include, but are not limited to, planning 541-385-58 tgg Oregon Land Mortto oversee the GM's the design and construction of the new & Directors. Report Place Your Ad Or E-Mail gage 541-388-4200. physical facilities of Oregon State University directly to the At: www.bendbulletin.com Cascades' campus. This includes providing LOCALNONEyrWe buy timely, cost e ffective, an d p r ofessional Secretary/Treasurer secured trust deeds & -CEO. B a chelor's services that enhance the i nstructional, note, some hard money degree in Business research, and service goals of the University. The Bulletin loans. Call Pat Kelley Administration or 541-382-3099 ext.13. r elated field. T e n A minimum requirement includes a Bachelor's caution when puryears' experience in or Master's degree in Architecture, Engineerchasing products or I STRUGGLING W I TH ing or Planning. P r eferred qualifications the Tribal Adminisservices from out of • YOUR M O R TGAGE tration inc l uding i the area. Sending and worried about include experience working within higher E nterprises, t h e i r c ash, checks, o r education. The anticipated start date is in foreclosure? Reduce operation Policies & i credit i n f ormation your mortgage & save February, 2014. Procedures, budget • may be subjected to money. Legal loan and stru c ture. I FRAUD. To review additional minimum and preferred modification services. MUST be a t r ibal qualifications, and to apply for this position, I For more i nforma- I Free co n sultation. member. Contact: ' tion about an adver- ' Call Preferred Law please go to http://oregonstate.edu/jobs/ and Jake Suppah/Lynn i tiser, you may call view posting number 0011870. The closing 1-800-335-6592. Davis at date is 2/4/14. the Oregon State (PNDC) 541-553-3232. OSU is an AA/EOE. i Attorney General's Office C o n sumer l 573 Protection hotline at l Business Opportunities Flooring Sales I 1-877-877-9392. Established floorClassified ad is an i ng company i n gThe BulWn g A EASY Independent Contractor Sales WAY TO Redmond, needs We are seeking dynamic individuals. REACH over 3 million licensed subconPacific Northwesterntractor with hardDOES THIS SOUND LIKE yotj? ers. $5 4 0/25-word Looking for your next wood floor laying •OUTGOING & COMPETITIVE c lassified ad i n 2 9 employee? • PERSONABLE & ENTHUSIASTIC experience to help daily newspapers for a Bulletin help •CONSISTENT 8 MOTIVATED install pr e -engi- Place 3-days. Call the Pawanted ad today and neered and solid cific Northwest Daily reach over 60,000 Our winning team of sales 8 promotion flooring in high-end Connection (916) readers each week. 288-6019 or e m a il homes. S a nding professionals are making an average of Your classified ad elizabeth Ocnpa.com experience a plus. $400 - $800 per week doing special will also appear on for more info (PNDC) Pay DOE. events, trade shows, retail & grocery bendbulletin.com Call Doug at which currently store promotions while representing Extreme Value Adver541-410-7659. receives over 1.5 THE BULLETIN newspaper tising! 29 Daily newsmillion page views as an independent contractor papers $540/25-word every month at classified 3-d a ys. no extra cost. Get your NfE OFFER: Reach 3 million PaBulletin Classifieds * * Solid Income Opportunity business cific Northwesterners. Get Results! For more information * Complete Training Program * Call 385-5809 * call (916) 288-6019 or * No Selling Door to Door or place e ROW I N G email: * No Telemarketing Involved * your ad on-line at elizabeth Ocnpa.com * Great Advancement Opportunity * bendbulletin.com for the Pacific Northwith an ad in * Full and Part Time Hours * west Daily ConnecThe Bulletin's tion. (PNDC)

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FOR THE CHANCE OF A LIFETIME, Call Adam Johnson 541-410-5521, TODAY!

Pressroom

Night Supervlsor The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is seeking a night time press supervisor. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family-owned group consisting of 7 newspapers: 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our ideal candidate will manage a small crew of 3 and must have prior press experience. The candidate must be able to learn our equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for our 3t/a tower KBA press. Prior management/leadership experience preferred. I n ad d ition t o our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. Besides a competitive wage, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude, are able to manage people and schedulesand are a team player, we would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great place to live and raise a family, let us hear from you.

"Call A Service Professional" Directory

Media co. seeks Publisher for B2B sales in high end Bend magazine. Residual comm., training provided, autonomy. Send resume to: aflood© bestversionmedia.com (no hyphens) Office A s s istant needed for growing co. in La Pine, OR. Experience in General Office duties including c u s tomer service. Must be proficent in Quickbooks, Excel and Internet Applications. Accounting and shipping experience a plus. Must have a positive attitude, organizational s k i lls and be a team player in a small office atmosphere. Please send resume to:bmyers0057@aol. com or SMI PO Box 1410, La Pine, OR 97739

Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at anelson@wescom a ers.com with yourcomplete resume, r eferences an d s a lary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE. Sales Telephone

• Hospice RN Case Manager- ffuff-timei For newspaper Primary responsibilities include providing delivery, call the day-to-day care to hospice patients in their Circulation Dept. at homes / facilities while being the point person 54'I -385-5800 for the patients case management team. To place an ad, call B2B • Hospice RN Support - (full-time) Support 541-385-5809 prospecting posiRNs primary responsibilities include providing or email tion for important day-to-day care to hospice patients in their claeeifiedObendbulletin.com Registered Nurses 476 professional s e rhomes / facilities. Employment v ices. Ba s e + • HomeHealth RN Case Manager (Full time, The Bulletm gerelngCennal Oregon slnte ete Community Counseling Solutions is commission. Opportunities 4 days/32 hours a week) Primary responsirecruiting for Registered Nurses to work Health and Dental bilities include providing day-to-day care to at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center 270 home health patients in their homes / facilities Insurance after 180 CAUTION: locatedinJohn Day, OR. while being the point person for the patients days. Other benLost & Found Ads published in case managementteam. efits. B end west "Employment OpJuniper Ridge is a S e cure Residential side • Home Health/Hospice RN S upport loca t ion. Found ring, approx. 7th porlunities n include Treatment Facility providing services to (Casuafl Support RNs primary responsibiliof January, SE Bend. employee and indeSales experience a t ies include providing day-to-day care t o individuals with a severe mental illness. Call to identify and pendent positions. plus, but will train health/hospice patients in their homes / 541-318-8087 the right person. Ads for p o sitions home facilities. These positions provide mental health F ax resume t o L ost at east end o f that require a fee or • On-Call CertifiedNurse Assistant (Casuaf nursing care including medication oversight, 541-848-6395. Maple St. bridge area, upfront investment Status) Responsibilities include providing pamedication r e lated t r e atment, f o l low Redmond - pure black must be stated. With tient care in our inpatient facility covering vaphysician's prescriptions and procedures, fixed cat, heavy, 2-3 any independentjob cations. Position is on-call from 7:Oopm to FIND YOUR FUTURE measure and record patient's general y rs. o ld , l e f t e a r opportunity, please 7:30am, as needed. tho r - • Hospice Nursing Supervisor (Full time) p hysical c ondition s uc h as pul s e , HOME INTHE BULLETIN clipped. smallish i nvestigate temperature and respiration to provide daily head, 541-280-4825 oughly. Use extra Primary responsibilities include supervising Your future is justa page caution when apinformation, educate and train staff on away. Whetheryou're looking and directing nursing care and all related LOST KEYS! 1 remote, plying for jobs onmedication administration, and e n sure activities in the Hospice Home Care departforahatoraplacetohangit, 1 Honda key, 2 silver line and never prodocumentation is kept according to policies. ment according to p o licies, procedures, The Bulletin Classified is keys on red/pink caravide personal inforyour best source. biner clip. REWARD philosophy, and objectives of the department mation to any source This position works with the treatment team 541-408-4949 and organization. The Hospice Nursing Every daythousandsof you may not have to promote recovery from mental illness. Supervisor is responsible for day to day and Lost men's w edding researched This position includes telephone consulta- buyers andsellers of goods s upervision of H o spice R N s t aff a n d and services dobusinessin ring, Tungsten & gold, deemed to be repution and crisis intervention in the facility. processes while ensuring quality patient care these pages.They know in Sportsman's Ware- table. Use extreme and outcomes. c aution when r e you can't beatThe Bulletin house, Bend. Sat., Qualified applicants must have a v alid Classified Section for Dec. 14th. Call, RE- s ponding to A N Y Partners In Care offers wages and benefits Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's selection and convenience WARD! 541-408-4531 online employment competitive with the local market including license at the time of hire, hold a valid ad from out-of-state. - every item isjust a phone health/dental/life insurances, disability coverOregon driver's license and pass a criminal call away. We suggest you call age, retirement plan with company match on history background check. Wages depenthe State of Oregon contributions, and paid time off. The Classified Sectionis dent upon education and experience, but Consumer Hotline REMEMBER: If you easy to use. Evety item at 1-503-378-4320 will be between $48,000 to $72,000. have lost an animal, If you are interested, please send a cover i s categorized and every don't forget to check For Equal OpportuExcellent benefit package, including signing letter, employment application and resume cartsgory is indexed onthe bonus. The Humane Society nity Laws contact via email to HR©partnersbend.org or submit section's front page. Oregon Bureau of Bend mail to: Labor & I n dustry, via regular Whether youarelooking for 541-382-3537 Please visit th e O regon Employment Partners In Care, Attn: HR, Civil Rights Division, a home or needa service, Redmond Department or the Community Counseling 2075 NE Wyatt Court, 971-673- 0764. 541-923-0882 your future is inthe pagesof Solutions website for an application or Bend OR 97701 Prtna ttta contact Nina Bisson a t 5 4 1-676-9161, The Bulletin Classified. Please visit our The Bulletin aat-447-rtre; renengCennei eegon since tgte nina.bisson@gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, websithttp//www.partnersbend.org to er Cratt Cata The Bulletin 541-385-5809 download an application. Heppner, OR 97636. Saving CentralOregansinceetg

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FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking lor Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions

Where buyers meet sellers You know what they say about none man's trash". There's a whole pile of "treasure" here!

Classifjeds Thousandsof adsdaily in print andonline. •

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USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

Meet singles right now! No paid o perators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 8 77-955-5505. (PNDC) Nancy, 70720 High Desert Ln. 8 p.m. Dinner, dance and movie? Bring your toothbrush. 541-490- 1836

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Building/Contracting

Handyman

NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY law requires anyone SERVICES. Home & who con t racts for Commercial Repairs, construction work to Carpentry-Painting, be licensed with the Pressure-washing, Construction ContracHoney Do's. On -time tors Board (CCB). An promise. Senior active license Discount. Work guarmeans the contractor anteed. 541-389-3361 is bonded & insured. or 541-771-4463 Verify the contractor's Bonded & Insured CCB l i c ense at CCB¹t Bt 595 www.hirealicensedcontractor.com or call 503-378-4621. Landscaping/Yard Care The Bulletin recommends checking with NOTICE: Oregon Landthe CCB prior to con- scape Contractors Law tracting with anyone. (ORS 671) requires all Some other t rades businesses that adpe r form also req u ire addi- vertise t o tional licenses and Landscape Construction which includes: certifications. p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, Debris Removal water-features, and installation, repair of irJUNK BE GONE rigation systems to be I Haul Away FREE l icensed w it h th e For Salvage. Also Landscape ContracCleanups & Cleanouts tors Board. This 4-digit Mel, 541-389-8107 number is to be inin all adverJust boughtanewboat'? cluded tisements which indithe business has Sell youroldoneinthe cate bond, insurance and classifieds!Askaboutour aworkers compensation for their employSuperSellerrates! ees. For your protec541-385-5809 tion call 503-378-5909 or use our website: Handyman www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status I DO THAT! before contracting with Home/Rental repairs the business. Persons Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape Honest, guaranteed maintenance do not work. CCB¹151573 r equire an LC B l i Dennis 541-317-9768 cense.


THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

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

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB ~d.y,J,~31,2014

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD ~jll sbprtz ACROSS 1 Compliment after a dive 10Wordwith cellar

Out for the count By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

Here's a quick counting puzzle. A bin holds 10 pairs of shoes: five black, five brown. How many shoes must you pull out to be sure you have a pair? Today's declarer needed to count to make four spades. East overtook West's queen of hearts and lcd two more hearts, and South ruffed high and drew trumps. He next led a diamond to the king and returned a diamond, but when East showed out, South had to lose a diamond and a club. Down one.

A NSWER: T h ough t h e c l u b honors aren't carrying their weight, almost everyone would open. Since neither major suit is biddable (and in the prevailing style of f i v e-card majors, hardly any four-card major is biddable),open one diamond. To open in a three-card diamond suit is necessary only with 4-4-3-2 pattern. Never open one club w it h t h at pattern. East dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4AJ84 Q7652

The puzzle answer is 11, and South had to count only a bit higher: to 13. After he ruffs the third heart, he takes the K-A of trumps and leads the king of clubs. East wins and leads a fourth heart. South ruffs, takes the queen of clubs, leads a trump to his hand and ruffs his last club in dummy. After 1 0 t r i cks, declarer and dummy have tbree diamonds. South knows that East held six hearts, thrrx: trumps and three clubs, so one diamond at most. So South takes the ace of diamonds. When East's ten appears, South lets the jack ride. DAILY QUESTION

OK92 4KQ WEST 410 rJI Q

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4KQ965 984 0 AJ8 4109 8 East Sou t h 1 Ivo 14 P ass 2 IS All Pass

West Pass Pass

North 29 4 IS

Youhold: 4A J 8 4 9 7 6 5 2 Openhrgiead 0 K 9 2 4 K Q . You are the dealer. What is your opening call? (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

58 Leader of Uganda's independence movement 36oscarOI' dOOI' nominated film 60Subjectof a landmark 2012 featuring a 152012 billionSupreme Court dentist-turneddollar Facebook decision bounty hunter acquisition 62 Dice 16Dermatologist's 40Homeof Sky Tower, the tallest 63 Final say case free-standing 64Apply 17Things employed structure in to show the 65 Like Albert the Southem passage of time Einstein, Hemisphere a la "Citizen ethnically Kane" 41"UncleTom's Cabin" girl 18Somesaucers DOWN 19Mixed 42 Morse bit 1Add zip to 20'50s-'60ssitcom 43 Contrarian's 2"Holdon ..." nickname abbreviation 3Porton Lake 21Cant Ontario 44 Island where 22 Identifies Artemis was 4 Result of drying 24Small jerk born out, maybe 26Accord 5 Pasta, e.g., 47 Phishing lures informally 27 Brown 49 Disperse 6"TheAfrican refreshers 51Double Or e o Queen" 30Causticsoda, screenwriter chemically 53 Lead-in to type 7Attempt to cure 32 kwo n do 54Two-master 8"Homicidal 33 Gridiron datum: Psycho Jungle Abbr. 57 Sushi fish Cat" duo 9 Bounty letters ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 10E, F and G in I DA HOS AF T E R A L L D.C. ARR ANT T I A M A R I A 11Jennifer of "Bound" NUC LEA REN G IN E E R G 0 OGL E S T R O N G 12QUitea long shot 5 I E NNA A L E E DRJ G R EEN A LG A E 13causefor some blacklisting I KE V A R IG P O T 5 ENT I A L E N E R G Y 14Who's who in publishing? A I R ED D OP E R I F L E RAN G E Z A P 23 Move furtively BAR E C A A RDS GEN ERA EM I R A T MES ST E

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

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29 Brown coat 31 Expressed some delight 3S Perfume holders 36Some Lamaze assistants 37 Drink with a straw 38Haveno help 39Some, in Salamanca

55 Reassuring comment after a fall

45 Parliamentary home 46 Newsman Ray

56Widebreach 48What stress may be good for 59What means the most at the 50"Roastedin end? and fire": Hamlet 60 Beginnings of life 52Guywith a cooking show 61 Bilk

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.

25classgraded on AT8T users: Text NYTX Io 388 to download puzzles, or visit a curve? nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information.

S A Y 26Gather at harvest R A A W 28Whites, informally

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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XboX accessoly 57 Injury sustained before the semis? 60 Two-footer 61 High-muck-amuck 62 Had a taco 63 Makes tender, in away 64'We p lease" 65 Composer Rorem

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5"Twin Peaks" actor Tamblyn 6 Barbecue buttinsky 7 Commerce gp. Collection Of SOngS 55 Use needleS headed by 41 Shock 56 'Othello" schemer Roberto Azevldo 42 like some Lake 57 Brees and Brady: 8 Girdle material

15 Family nickname 16 Prized mushroom 17 Snap of part of one's porffolio? 20 Chocolatey, 9 Letters on some circular cereal faces brand 10 Capital west of 21 Genymanders, Dubai say 11 Big name in doud 22 Medication unit storage 23 Brawl 12 'Well, now ..." 25 Org. With den 13 "Turn to Stone" mothers band 27zone for DDE 18 Exiled 28 Big name in 30Cambodian Across Lon 30 Flats, e.g. 19 Critical 32 What a Canadian 23 One-named band Owes Milanese model annually? 24 Protein producer 36 "Gun Hill Road" 26 Mule kin star Morales 28Alizona 37 Recover landscape 38 Cheap features Valentine'8 Day 29 Sporting, with "ino gift? 30 Desolate 45 Sassy ones 31 Symbolic ring 46 Indian intern in 33 Put in storage "Dilbeft" 1 2 3 4 47 Business card abbr. 14 15 48 Far from draconian 17 18 49 Smartphone 51 Giants lineman Chris 52 "Venerable" Eng. monk

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11

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16

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21

25

22

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32 37

38 3 9

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51 52

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DOWN 1 Unwrap in a hurry 2 Retired professors 3"Funky Cold Medina" rapper

60

81

By Julian Lim (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

01/31/14


THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JANUARY 31 2014 E5

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

)

s

I •

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

s

fe

630

659

Rooms for Rent Nice large room and b ath, W /D , $ 3 2 5 , 541-977-7479

Houses for Rent Sunriver VILLAGE PROPERTIES Sunriver, Three Rivers,

La Pine. Great Selection. Prices range $425 - $2000/mo. View our full inventory online at Village-Properties.com

632

Apt./Multiplex General CHECKYOUR AD

1-866-931-1061 693

Office/Retail Space for Rent

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. eSpellcheckn and

human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Call forSpecials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN,

500 stf. ff. upstairs office on NE side of town, private bath, all util. paid. $500 month plus $500 d eposit. 541-460-4744

882

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motor-

Snowmobiles 1994 Arctic Cat 560

EXT in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-406-6149.

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

2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime,

REDUCED! Eagle Crest Gated -14th Tee Gorgeous Custom Home, 4/3.5, 3208 sq.ft., $476,000 Virginia Dougherty Principal Broker, RE/MAX 541-350-3416 Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbugetin.com

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

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, fish'10 - 3 lines, 7 days ing, drift, canoe, '16 - 3 lines, 14 days house and sail boats. For all other types of (Private Party ads only) watercraft, please go to Class 875.

541-554-0384

Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939

541-365-5809

The Bulletin

Serein Central Ore on since 1903

Garage Sales Garage Sales

Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000or best offer. 541-316-6049

HOFatBo 1996

757

Crook County Homes

'$0o0o

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

$77,000

541-548-4607

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate adver-

SALE - 5 acres Haystack Mountain on SE SHEVLIN RIDGE Slope, near r i ver,17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apgreat sun, hardwood proved plans. More f orest. $20,000 o r details and photos on trade for land in Or- craigslist. $149,900. egon. 701-580-5453 541-389-6614

tising in this newspaper is subject to the Where can you find a F air H ousing A c t helping hand? which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any From contractors to preference, limitation yard care, it's all here or disc r imination in The Bulletin's based on race, color, religion, sex, handi"Call A Service cap, familial status, Professional" Directory marital status or national origin, or an in745 tention to make any such pre f erence, Homes for Sale limitation or discrimination." Familial staNOTICE tus includes children All real estate adverunder the age of 18 tised here in is subliving with parents or ject to th e F ederal legal cus t odians, Fair Housing A c t, pregnant women, and which makes it illegal people securing cus- to advertise any preftody of children under erence, limitation or 16. This newspaper discrimination based will not knowingly ac- on race, color, relicept any advertising gion, sex, handicap, for real estate which is familial status or nain violation of the law. tional origin, or intenO ur r e aders a r e tion to make any such hereby informed that preferences, l i mitaall dwellings adver- tions or discrimination. tised in this newspa- We will not knowingly per are available on accept any advertisan equal opportunity ing for real estate basis. To complain of which is in violation of d iscrimination cal l this law. All persons HUD t o l l-free at are hereby informed 1-800-677-0246. The that all dwellings adtoll free t e lephone veitised are available number for the hear- on an equal opportuing i m paired is nity basis. The Bulle1-800-927-9275. tin Classified

Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K m i l e s, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536. $4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes

,•

Layton 27-ft, 2002

875

ds published in eWa

tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 670. 541-385-5609

The Bulletin 880

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. $95,000 541-460-2019

TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT

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

Fleetwood Bounder, 2000 - Great amenities! 34', special exterior coating, side by side fridge, corner china cabinet, queen bed, tub/shower, 1 large living room slide out, air leveler, warm & cozy interior. Ford V10 Triton 44,000 miles. $25,000 541-318-7473

350hp diesel engine, $125,900. 30,900 miles, new Michelin tires, great cond! Dishwasher, w/d, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150 Tioga 24' ClassC 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. 541-548-5174

V ictory TC 9 2 ci 2002, runs great, 40K mi., Stage 1 Performance Kit, Fleetwood D i scovery n ew tires, r e ar 40' 2003, diesel mow/all brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. torhome options-3 slide outs, 541-771-0665

541-548-5511 JandMHomes.com

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Get your business

865

eRBWING

ATVs

With an ad in The Bulletin's

"Call A Service

Professional" Directory

Honda TRX 350 FE 2006, 4 wheel drive, electric start, electric s hift, n ew tire s , $2500, 541-960-6006.

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

Motorhomes

541-548-5511

LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon

Fleetwood Wilderness ,xa! N.W. Edition 26' 2002, a la • 1 slide, sleeps 6, queen bed, couch, stove/oven, tub/ shower, front e lec. jack, waste tank heat- Arctic Fox 2003 Cold ers, s tabilizers, 2 Weather Model 34 5B, prop. t a nks, no licensed thru 2/15, exlnt smoking/pets, winter- cond. 3 elec slides, solar 10 gal water htr, i zed, g oo d c o n d.panel, awning, (2) 10-gal $8500 OBO 14' propane tanks, 2 batts, 541-447-3425 catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, genJust too many tly used, MANY features! collectibles? Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call Sell them in or text541-325-1956. The Bulletin Classifieds CHECK yOUR AD 541 e385-5809

Keystone Laredo31' Rtf 20 06 with 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Awning. N ayion R V 200 8 , Microwave. sho w er. Sprinter chassis 25'. Outside Slide through Mercedes Benz diesel, a ge, E as y storLi f t . 24,000 miles, pristine $29,000 new; cond., quality throughAsking$18,600 out, rear slide-out w/ 541-447-4805 queen bed, d e luxe captain swivel f ront seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ smokt tt ing. $77,500 or make an offer. 541-382-2430

Watercraft

Serving Central Oregon since1903

ALASKA LAND FOR

Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

$25,000.

541-548-0318

Motorcycles & Accessories

Real Estate Trades

541-383-9313

home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition. (photo aboveis of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

860

20 ACRES! Private, Gated w/Public Lands Close. Well, Septic Feas Done. Easy Access to Airport Shopping, Recreation Powell Butte Virginia Dougherty Principal Broker, RE/MAX 541-350-3416

719

882

Boats & Accessories

850

• Redmond Homes •

SW Bend, walk to DRT and Old Mill. Master on main, pool, hot tub, tennis. Yard m aint. incl. No pets. $2,000. bendriverwild.com

881

beam, great shape! $3600. 54'I-610-3163

656

.00

880

17' Fishrite G u i de Model drift boat, 54"

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

Houses for Rent SW Bend

870

Winnebago Aspect

2009- 32', 3 slide-

Orbit 21' 2007, used only 6 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 toseei 541-318-6919

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

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 scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566

on the first day it runs Recreation by Design to make sure it is cor- 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. rect. eSpellcheckn and Top liwing room, 2 bdrm, human errors do oc- has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, cur. If this happens to entertainment center, your ad, please confireplace, W/D, tact us ASAP so that garden tub/shower, in corrections and any great condition.$36,000 adjustments can be or best offer. Call Peter, made to your ad. 307-221-2422, 541-385-5809 TheBulletin Classified AILL DELIV/R 885

Canopies & Campers

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird

ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

Cabover Conestoga camper, fits 6' bed, stove, heater. Quick sale, $200 541-771-1252 The Bulletin To Subscnbe call 541-365-5600 or go to www.bendbulletin.com e

Call Dick,

541-480-1687.

Qoo

Fleefwood Wilderness2000 model, 28', 1 slide, good condition, with awning and A/C, $7500. 541-383-8270

908

Aircraft, Parts

& Service

Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com 1/3 interestin Columbia 400, $150,000 (located O Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, I $400/mo. 541-948-2963

Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34'

fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 16' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide & out. 27" TV dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5~/~ years.. No pets, no smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527.

1/3 interest i n

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

Laredo 2009 30'

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

outs, Leather interior, Power s e at, Look at: locks, win d ows, Bendhomes.com Aluminum wheels. for Complete Listings of 17e Flat Screen, s o u nd, Area Real Estate for Sale satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Surround etc. 32,000 m i les. camera, Queen bed, Looking for your Wintered in h eated Foam mattress, Awnext employee? shop. $84,900 O.B.O. ning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Place a Bulletin help 541-447-8664 Air leveling, Moon wanted ad today and roof, no smoking or reach over 60,000 p ets. L ik e n e w , readers each week. $74,900 Your classified ad 541-460-6900 will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently reG ulfstream S u n ceives over 1.5 milsport 30' Class A lion page views ev1986 new f r idge, ery month at no TV, solar panel, new extra cost. Bulletin refrigerator, wheelClassifieds Get Rechair l ift. 4 0 00W Winnebago Suncruiser34' sults! Call 385-5609 2004, 35K, loaded, too g enerator, G o o d or place your ad condition! $12,500 much to list, ext'd warr. on-line at thru 2014, $49,900 Denobo 541-447-5504 bendbulletin.com nis, 541-589-3243

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

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

1974 Bellanca 1730A

$28,000

2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, hangared, 1 owner 2 slides, AC, recliners, walk-around queen bed, for 35 years. $60K. sliding glass door closet, In Madras, new tub & 10-gal water heater, good tires. Brand call 541-475-6302 new 20' screen room available. Super clean, 1 Dramatic Price Reducowner, n o n-srnoker.tion Executive Hangar $13,499. 541-447-7968 at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great visibility for aviation business. 541-948-2126 or MONTANA 3565 2008, email 1jetjockoq.com exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Hangarfor sale at Arctic insulation, all Redmond Airport - not options $35,000 obo. a T Hangar -$39,000. 541-419-3301

541-420-3250

541-420-0626

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*Ad runs until it sells or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)

Item Priced at: • Under $500 • $500 to $999 • $1000 to $2499 • $2500 and over

FOR AOLITRf At

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Your Total Ad Cost onl: $29 $39 $49 $59

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• Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000 potential customers. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to OVer 30,000 hOuSehOldS.

• Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 15,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous Listing online, with photo, on bendbulletin.com

Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories.


E6 FRIDAY JANUARY31 2014 • THE BULLETIN

•fj

I

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

• •

975

975

975

975

975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

I •

BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

AUTOS8tTRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

908

932

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

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. Audi A4 2001 1.8T 4 dr rebuilt trans, newer Find It in clutch, brakes, mani- The Bulletin Classifieds! fold, etc. High-perfor541-385-5809 mance. Extras, rec eipts, exc . m p g . 935 $6300 obo Sport Utility Vehicles 541-390-6004

Chevy Tahoe 2001, 5.3L V8, leather, air, heated Plymouth B a rracuda seats, fully loaded, 120K, Save money. Learn 1966, original car! 300 $7500 obo. 541-460-0494 to fly or build hours hp, 360 V8, centerwith your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o lines, 541-593-2597 Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184. Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989, auto, high miles, runs good. $1700. Rolls Royce 1992 Sil541-633-6662 ver Spur II, excellent! Midnight Blue exterior, Ford Explorer XLT Parchment leather inte- 2012, drk blue, 11,500 rior, 15-inch chrome RR mi. ¹A37009 $31,988 wheels, Alpine Sirius DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS Superhavvknavigation system, Only 1 Share 77,200 miles, dealerAvailable 541-598-3750 ship maintained, alEconomical flying www.aaaoregonautoways garaged. New, in your own source.com about $250,000; sell IFR equipped —.ja.g! $19,500. 541-480-3348 Cessna 172/180 HP for only $13,500! New 933 Garmin Touchscreen Pickups avionics center stack! Exceptionally clean! Hangared at BDN. Kia Sportage 1996 4x4, Call 541-728-0773 full power, hitch, rack, air, set up for towing, runs 916 1966 Ford F250 reat, 4 extra snow tires. 3200. 541-728-1265 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, Trucks & P/S, straight body, Heavy Equipment runs good. $2000.

CLASSIC 541-410-8749

Ford 3/4 ton 1978 Lariat Ed. w/ canopy, 89k Lincoln rig. m i les, o r i g . Peterbilt 359 p otable o Aviator, 2004 water truck, 1 990, owner. exc. c o nd. Light tan/gray metal3200 gal. tank, 5hp $2500, 541-350-3696. lic, all wheel drive, pump, 4-3" h oses, V8 engine, heated camlocks, $ 25,000. leather seats, 3rd 541-820-3724 a row seat, 131K FIND IT! miles, very well maintained. BtIV fTI F250 Camper Spe$7777. SELL IT! Ford 1966, AT w/limited 541-389-9829 The BulletinClassifieds cial slip rear end. A few issues but runs good. Full 929 steel rack w/drs. $1950 Automotive Wanted firm, cash. 541-420-0156 DONATE YOUR CARFAST FREE TOWING. 24 hr. Response Tax D eduction. UNITED BR E AST CANCER FOUNDATION. Providing Free M ammograms & Breast Cancer Info. 888-592-7581.

(PNDC) 931

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories 14" Multi-fit rims, 5-lug pattern, $60. 541-279-8908

clean, loaded, Ford Supercab 1992, Super running boards, brown/tan color with luxury & towing m atching full s i z e packages. Up top c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 pod, 43,000 miles, over drive, 135K mi., $45,000. full bench rear seat, 541-593-9116 slide rear w i ndow, bucket seats, power seats w/lumbar, pw, HD receiver 8 trailer brakes, good t ires. Good cond i tion. $4900. 541-389-5341 fphoto for illustration only)

932

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

Buick Skylark 1972 Please see Bend Craigslist for details and more photos. $19,900. 541-323-1898

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

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480. 935

Sport Utility Vehicles

Price Reduced! Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K

orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out.$7500 obo. 541-480-3179

L'"'" " "

Subaru Forester 2.5X Premium 2010, 4 Cyl., auto, AWD, panorama roof, privacy glass, roof rack, alloy wheels, Vin¹751051 $19,988

®

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I

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Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds Chev Malibu LT 2012, leather, 6,638 miles.

541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com

Corvette 1979 I've owned it 25

years. Never damaged or abused. $12,900.

Dave, 541-350-4077

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010

Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.

s u a ARU.

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, fphoto for illustration only) all original, Subaru Forester XT very low mileage, Limited 2007, 4 Cyl., in premium condition. auto, AWD, leather, $19,900. moon rof, p r ivacy 702-249-2567 glass, roof rack, alloy (car is in Bend) wheels. Vin¹710326 $15,488

© s un mu 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

$17,988

Jaguar XJ8 2004 4-dr (longer style) sedan, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. silver, black leather, 4.2L 877-266-3821 V8, AT, AC, fully loaded Dlr ¹0354 tA ton 1971, Only GMC + moonroof. Runs great, $10,500! Original low BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K reliable, always garaged, 940 mile, exceptional, 3rd miles, premium pack116K miles; 30 mpg hwy. Vans owner. 760-985-4016 age, heated lumbar Front/side airbags, supported seats, pannon-smoker. $7900. oramic moo n roof, 541-350-9938 Honda Odyssey Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe1999.Very good non headlights, tan 8 cond. Runs well, black leather interior, n ew front & re a r Two sets of tires on rims - summer and brakes 0 76K miles, GMC Sierra 1977 short one owner, all records, winter. $2500. bed, exlnt o r iginal very clean, $16,900. 541-593-2312 541-388-4360 Lincoln LS 2001 4door cond., runs & drives or 541-977-7588 great. V8, new paint sport sedan, plus set of snow tires. $6000. and tires. $4750 obo. 975 541-504-1050 541-317-0324. Automobiles

OBO. 541-480-8231

1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol

fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1781

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

from Whychus Creek in Sec. 17 , T 1 5S, R10E, W.M. for irrigat ion in Sec. 8. T he applicant proposes to move the point of diWritten, fac s imile, version downstream hand-delivered, oral, approx. 1.25 miles to and electronic com- Sec. 9, T15S, R10E, m ents will b e a c - W.M. The Water Rec epted. Writ t e n sources Department comments must be proposes to approve submitted to the Re- the transfer, based on sponsible Off i c ial, the requirements of Ranger Slater Turner, ORS Chapter 540 and The Crooked River at the Ochoco Na- OAR 690-380-5000. National Grassland is tional Forest address. proposing to approve Comments submitted Any person may file, the issuance of two via fax should be sent jointly or severally, a 541- 4 16-6695. protest or s t anding special use permits to (SUP) for new special C omments can b e statement within 30 filed electronically at: days after the l ast uses on the Grassdate of n e wspaper land. The first (Mon- comments-pacificpublication of this noroe H y dr o LLC northwest-ochoco©fs .fed.us. El e c tronic tice, 01/27/14. C a l l H ydro-electric S U P ( 503) 986-0807 t o would authorize a new comments must be submitted as part of obtain additional inlow-head small hydropower facility on the e-mail message or formation or a protest as an attachment in form. If no protests the western side of the North Unit Irriga- plain text (.txt), Mi- are filed, the Departcrosoft Word (.doc), ment will issue a final tion District's M a in Canal at the drop near rich text format (.rff), order consistent with the intersection of the or portable document the preliminary deterMain Canal and Mon- format (.pdf). E-mails mination. adroe Lane. The sec- submitted t o LEGAL NOTICE ond (Pacific Corp dresses other than the Notice of Public Sale P ower Line S U P) one listed above, or in Summit Self Storage, would authorize a new formats other t h an located at 720 SE 9th power line, 60' long those listed, or con- Street, B en d OR taining viruses, will be with a width of 10' 97702, will conduct a rejected. The office buried 3' deep and p ublic sale o f t h e new meter box. Both hours for those sub- contents of the storh a n d-deliv- age units to satisfy project areas are lo- mitting cated in T. 13 S., R. ered comments are u npaid rents a n d 8:00 am - 4:30 pm 12 E., sec. 12. charges as alMonday through Fri- other l owed under O R S day, excluding holiDescriptions of proSaturday Or a l c o m- 87.685-693, posed actions and d ays. February 15th, 2014 ments m u s t be other information are at 10:00am. Sale shall available for review at provided at the Rebe for the following the Ochoco National sponsible Official's of- units: Tanisha Phillips, Forest/Crooked River fice during normal 015; Christine National G r assland b usiness hours i n Padgett, 035; Melissa office in P r ineville, person or via t ele- Yetter, 100. Call ofat fice for description of Oregon, or on the In- phone ternet at 541-416-6500. unit contents. http://data.ecosystem541-385-4761. It is the responsibility management.org/neLEGAL NOTICE paweb/pro!ect ltst.php of persons providing Public Auction comments to submit ?forest= 110607. A d A Public Auction will ditional i n f ormation them by the close of be held on Saturday regarding these ac- the comment period. M arch 1, 2 0 1 4 a t tions can be obtained LEGAL NOTICE 10:00 a.m. at Old Mill from H e idi S c o tt, Notice of Permit Self Storage, 150 SW Ochoco National For- Amendment T-11688 Industrial Way, Bend, est, 3160 NE Third Oregon 97702. (Unit Street, Prineville, OR T-11688 f i le d by ¹325, Werner). 97754, or vi a t ele- David Roth, P.O. Box phone at 358, Christmas ValLEGAL NOTICE 541-416-6500. Public Auction ley, OR 97658, proPublic Auction to be poses a change in This comment period points of appropria- held o n S a t urday, is being provided pur- tion u nder P e rmit February 8th, 2014 at 11:30am at A-1 Westsuant to the March 19, G-16987. The permit 2012, judicial ruling in allows the use of 10.7 side Storage 317 SW Sequoia Fore s t- cubic foot per second Columbia St., Bend, Keeper v. Tidwell (or- from 6 wells within Oregon 97702. (Unit der issued by the U. Sects. 4 and10, T22 D-199 Daniel VickerS. District Court for R 20 E, W.M. for ir- m an, U n i t L- 2 8 6 the Eastern District of S, rigation in Sects. 3, 4, Shawn Ryan, U n it California in Case Civ. 9, and 10, T 22 S, R D-184 Tim Dodd, Unit No. CV F 11-679 LJO 20 E, W.M. The apE-063 Lance BurIng). DLB) and is b eing plicant proposes to LEGAL NOTICE conducted s i multa- move the points of Public Auction neously w i t h the appropriation of two Public to be scoping period for this wells to within Sec.4, held oAuction n S a t urday, proposed action. The T 22 S, R 20 E, W.M. February 8th, 2014 at opportunity to com- The W a te r Repm at All Star ment ends 30 days sources Department 1:00 Storage, 13 6 SW following the date of has concluded that Century Drive, Bend, publication of the le- the proposed permit Oregon 97702. (Unit gal notice in The Bui- amendment appears ¹0416 Shawn Ryan 8 lefin, Bend, Oregon. to be consistent with Unit ¹1001 Shawnna This decision is sub- the requirements of M. Turner). ject to appeal pursu- O RS 537.211. T h e ant to Forest Service last date of newspaLEGAL NOTICE regulations at 36 CFR per publication is FebWolf Fuels and 215. Appeals must ruary 7, 2014. Vegetation meet the content reManagement Project LEGAL NOTICE DEIS quirements of 36 CFR 215.14. Only individu- Notice of Preliminary Ochoco National als or organizations Determination for Forest, Paulina Ranger who submitted com- Water Right Transfer District ments or expressed T-11686 45-daycomment period a n interest i n t h e p roject during t h e T-11686 filed by Pine The Draft E nvironcomment period may Meadow Ranch, PO mental Impact Stateappeal. C o mments Box 696, Sisters, OR ment (DEIS) for the s ubmitted ano n y - 97759, proposes a Wolf Fuels and Vegm ously will be a c - point o f di v ersion etation Management cepted and consid- change under Certifi- P roject ha s be e n ered; however, those cate 75141. The right completed. To meet who o n l y su b m it allows the use of 0.44 vegetative managea nonymous c o m - cubic foot per second ment objectives, the

LEGAL NOTICE Monroe Hydro, LLC. 612- FERC Exempt Hydro-Electric Special Use Permit Pacific Corp - 643Power Line Special Use Permit USDA - Forest Service Crooked River National Grassland JeffersonCounty, OR 30-day Comment Period -

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Corvette Coupe

®

I

© s um au

Jeep CJ5 1979, Original owner, 87k miles, only 3k on new 258 long block. Clutch package, Warn hubs. Excellent runner, very dependable. Northman Btrft' plow, Warn 6000¹ winch. $7900 or best reasonable offer. 541-549-6970 or 541-815-8105.

© s un mu

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with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, fphoto for illustrstion only) all original, Subaru Tribeca 2009, very low mileage, AM General Hummer H6, 3.6 Liter, auto, in premium condition. H1 1996; $ 48,500; AWD, roof rack, pri$19,900. pics at ebay or email vacy g l ass, a l l oy 702-249-2567 bmartin029©aol.com wheels. Vin ¹405069 (car is in Bend)

Chevy Suburban 1500 LT 2009 5.3L V8 Flex fuel. 4wd Heavy Duty tow pkg., Cargo Racks, running boards, leather interior, power locks, XM satellite, OnStar multi-disc MP3, Bluetooth. Summer and new studded tires. 81,000 highway miles. $25,000

J

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Garaged since new.

Range Rover HSE, 2011

541-382-4144

Antique & Classic Autos

Subaru Legacy 2. 5 i f photo for illustration onlyl lphoto tor illustration only) V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 Premium 2012, 6 4 Subaru Outback 2.5i Subaru Outback 3.0XT AWD, sunroof, lux/winter XT Wagon 20 0 5, LL B ea n E d i tionpkgs new tires more! C yl, a u to , AW D , power seat, a l l oy leather, dual moon 2006, AWD, leather, $7775 obo.541-330-5818 roofs, rear s poiler, wheels. m oon r o of , al l o y alloy wheels. wheels, Lo aded. V!n ¹040619 Looking for your Vin ¹365464 Vin ¹203053 $17,988 next employee? $12,488 $19,988 Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and © s u a ARU. S UBA RU, reach over 60,000 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. eusmuoataaD aorr 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. readers each week. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Your classified ad 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 will also appear on Dlr ¹0354 Just bought a new boat? bendbulletin.com Sell your old one in the which currently reclassifieds! Ask about our ceives over 1.5 milSuper Seller rates! Toyota Celica lion page views 541-385-5809 Buick CX2005 Convertibfe 1993 every month at silver, 61,000 miles, Subaru Legacy 3.0 R no extra cost. Bullegood condition. Exlphoto ior illustration onlyl Ltd. 2008, 32k mi, tin Classif!eds cellent care. $7,000 Olds 98 Regency 1990 ¹210048 $2 0 ,988 Subaru Outback 3.0 Get Results! Call OBO, 541-419-9669. exc. shape, runs as 2005, H6, 3.0 Liter, 385-5809 or place new, one owner 20 auto, AWD, m o on your ad on-line at mpg in town. New roof, leather, alloy Cadillac Deville bendbulletin.com battery, stud snow G T 2200 4 c yl, 5 wheels. Vin ¹203121 DHS 2000. Most 541-598-3750 tires $2000. speed, a/c, pw, pdl, $18,488 options, exc. cond. www.aaaoregonauto541-389-9377 nicest c o n vertible 93,000 mi.. New Say "goodbuy" source.com ® s u a aau around in this price tires. $6,500. to that unused range, new t i res, 541-233-8944. Porsche Carrera 911 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. wheels, clutch, timitem by placing it in 2003 convertible with 877-266-3821 ing belt, plugs, etc. hardtop. 50K miles, Dlr ¹0354 111K mi., remark- The Bulletin Classifieds new factory Porsche C HECKYOUR AD able cond. i nside motor 6 mos ago with Please check your ad 18 mo factory warand out. Fun car to 541-385-5809 fphoto for illustration only) on the first day it runs ranty remaininq. d rive, Must S E E ! Subaru Legacy 3.0 R to make sure it is cor$37,500. $5995. R edmond. Limited 2008, 6 Cyl., 541-322-6928 rect. Sometimes in541-504-1993 I The Bulletin recoml auto, AWD, leather, s tructions over t h e mends extra caution 8 m oon r o of , re a r lphoto iorillustration only) phone are misunderwhen p u r chasing • spoiler, alloy wheels. Subaru Outback 3.0 R stood and an error Vin ¹207281 f products or services VDC Wagon 2005, can occur in your ad. from out of the area. $23,988 H6, 3.0 Liter, auto, If this happens to your f S ending c ash , AWD, leather, dual ad, please contact us © s u a aau checks, or credit in- q moon roofs roof rack the first day your ad formation may be I alloy whee l s.Vin appears and we will Iphoto for lllustration only) 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 ¹349337 [ subject toFRAUD. be happy to fix it as Subaru lmpreza 2.5i For more informaVolkswagen Dlr ¹0354 $19,488 s oon as w e c a n . 201 1, 4 C yl., auto, f tion about an adverTouareg 2004 Deadlines are: Week- AWD, running lights, ® s u e aau tiser, you may call 8UBARUoraaa.coa Meticulously maindays 12:00 noon for n ice w heels. V i n Take care of next day, Sat. 11:00 ¹507659 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. tained. Very clean I the Oregon Statel your investments Attorney General's s inside and out. V6. a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 877-266-3821 $16,488 Office C o nsumer I Recently serviced12:00 for Monday. If with the help from Dlr ¹0354 f Protection hotline at 60 point inspection we can assist you, © s UsraARUorrrMD.ooa B ARU The Bulletin's 1-877-877-9392. please call us: TURN THE PAGE sheet.$6,800.00 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. "Call A Service Call 541-480-0097 541-385-5809 For More Ads 877-266-3821 The Bulletin Classified Serving Central Oregon sincertar Professional" Directory The Bulletin Dlr ¹0354 Advertise your car! Add A Picture!

L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles

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

Ne e d to sell a

Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers

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

ments will not have standing to appeal the subsequent decision under 36 CFR Part 215.

p roposed action i n this DEIS i n cludes commercial thinning of conifer stands on 4 ,706 acres, n o ncommercial thinning o n 988 a cres, r emoval of juniper on 481 acres, hardwood enhancement on 75.5 acres, underburning on 5,000 acres, 1 miles of stream restoration, 5 headcut rep airs, 2.0 miles of road closure and 2.7 miles of road decommissioning. The proposed action includes c onstruction of 1 . 8 miles of new temporary roads, reestablishing 18 miles of temporary roads on existing disturbance, and expanding the Six Corners Mat e r ial S ource by up to 3 acres t o sup p ort project activities. All t emporary road s would be closed and hydrologically stabilized following completion of project activities. The project area is located in the Wolf and North Wolf Creek subwatersheds, approximately 50 miles east of Prineville, Oregon. Chapter 2 of the EIS includes a description of the activities proposed for each alternative. Alternative 3 has been identified as the preferred alternative. The preferred alternative includes commercial thinning of conifer stands on 4,706 acres (including commercial t hinning o f tre e s greater than 21"dbh

on 384 acres), non-

The business hours for those submitting hand-delivered comments are 8:00 am to 4:30 p m Mo n day through Friday, excluding holidays. Oral comments can also be provided at my office during n ormal b usiness hours i n person or via telep hone a t (541) 416-6500.Comments submitted vi a fa x s hould be s ent t o (541) 416- 6 695. C omments can b e filed electronically at: comments-pacificnorthwest-ochoco©fs .fed.us. El e ctronic comments must be submitted as part of the e-mail message or as an attachment in plain text (.txt), Microsoft Word (.doc), rich text format (.rff), or portable document format (.pdf). E-mails submitted t o addresses other than the one listed above, or in formats other t h an those listed or containing viruses, will be rejected.

For further informat ion, c o ntact m e , Paulina Distr i ct Ranger Sandra Henning or Jeff Marszal, P roject Leader, a t 3160 NE Third Street, Prineville, OR, 97754 at (541 ) 416-6500. PUBLIC NOTICE Wellness & Education Board of Central Oregon 2014 Strategic Planning Session

DATE:February 7, 2014.

TIME:8:30 a.m. Behavioral Health; 1 p.m. - Education. LOCATION:Advantage Dental - Training Room, 442 SW Umatilla A v enue, Redmond, OR 97756. PURPOSE:Board members will discuss priorities for tri-County b e havioral health matters and CCO contract renewal in morning session and tri-County h e a l th and education matters i n a f t ernoon session. For additional i n formation, please contact the WEBCO office at acres t o su p port (541) 923 9698 or project activities. All email WEBCO.calt emporary roa d s endar@WEBCOwould be closed and hub.org. Additional hydrologically stabi- items may be dislized following cussed that a rise completion of project t oo late to be i nactivities. The project cluded as part of area is located in the this notice. AssisWolf and North Wolf t ance t o han d iCreek subwatersheds, capped individuals approximately 50 is provided with admiles east of Prinev- vance notice. ille, Oregon. Chapter 2 of the EIS includes Get your a description of the activities proposed for business each alternative. commercial thinning on 988 a cres, removal of juniper on 481 acres, hardwood enhancement on 90 acres, underburning on 5,000 acres, 2.2 miles of stream restoration, 6 headcut repairs, 7.8 miles of road closure and 2.7 miles of road decommissioning. The preferred alternative includes construction of 1.8 miles of new temporary roads, reestablishing 17.6 miles of temporary roads on existing disturbance, and expanding the Six Corners Mat e rial S ource by up to 3

The DEIS is available on the internet at: http://data.ecosystemmanagement.org/nepaweb/nepa pro!ect exp.php? project=4194 6

sRBWING With an ad in The Bulletin's

C omments can b e "Call A Service mailed or hand delivered to the Paulina Professional" Ranger District, 3160 NE T h ir d St r e et, Directory Prineville, OR 97754.


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Milestones Engagement, Wedding, Civil Union and Anniversary Forms for The Bulletin's Milestones Section, with guidelines for getting your important announcement published. Pages 5-9.

Wedding Countdowns Staying Organized is Easy with our Countdown to a Perfect Wedding, Pages 12-13, 16-19, 25-27, 30-31.

10 Wedding Dress SilhouettesWedding dresses come in a number of silhouettes.Choose the one that'srightforyou.

20 Wedding & Reception Sites:Central Oregon offers a number of great locations for your wedding day.

14 Wedding Day Photography:Don't underestimate the importanceofphotography on yourspecialday.

28 Save the Date: Choose your wedding date carefully to avoid seasonal or time-sensitive complications.

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o Intimate,

beautiful settings that

create a warm atmosphere for your event.

ASPENHALL Located in Shevlin Park, this hall features afull kitchen and lodge-like feel with a stone fireplace, exposed wood beams and a full patio that opens to a lovely natural setting.

HOLLINSHEADBARN (shown above)This historic renovated homestead is surrounded by park space and features two levels and outdoor patios.

MARCOULIEREVENTROOM This large roomhasa maple floor perfect for dancing, natural lighting and a catering kitchen. Up to 250 guest capacity.

RIVERBENDCOMMUNITY ROOM Largemeeting spaceby Riverbend Park with vaulted ceilings and access to outdoor plaza.

PARK PAVILIONS For large andsmall groups, thesecovered spaces with seating are located within numerous parks.

For more information on park and facility rentals visit www.bendparksandrec.org Bend Park@ or call (541) 389-7275. Recreation

4 • BOOK OF LOVE 2014• The Bulletin


Reeves — Akerberg Maggie RmvesandJakeAkerberg, both of Bend,planto marry Peb. 12, at AspenHall in Beiul The future bride is the daughter of Darren and Tammie Reeves of Bend. She is a 1998 graduate of Mountain View High School and a 2002 graduate of Oregon State University. She works for the Sequoia National 1999graduate of Oregon State Park as a forestrytechnician. The future gmom isthe sonof Univemity. He works for the Sequoia National Park ss a senior John and Saliy Akerberg of Chesire. He is a1994graduate of firefighter with the Arrowhead Jutuzlon City High Schooland a Hotshots.

lPeddings lgauthiersidgener Erin Gauthier and Robat Scherzer were mamed June26 inBend. The bride is the daughter of Lvana Gauthier of Bend and the late Michael Gautbier. She is a1996graduateofM ountm'n View High School and a 2000 graduate of the University of Oregon, where she received a bachelor' s degree in English She works as an independent

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for f urninue and whae he studied jourThe gcoom isthe son of Oregon, and communications. Richard and JudyScherzer. He nalism The couple spenttheir honeyis a 1996graduate of Mountain home decorcompanies.

on the Pacific Coast. View High School and a 2000 moon graduate of the University of Theyhave settled inPortland.

Anniversary Davis Bd and Phyllis (Schossow) Davis of Bendranutly celebratal their 50th wahlhg ~ .A private bustrip toWinnersCasino washeldwithabanquetluncheon. The couple was marrial Dec. 25, 1954, in Bend.They havefour children, Earl of Vernonia, Eddie of Mahm, Betsy Johnson of Salem andlnutlsDavis of Salem; and ll grandchildnm. M r. Davi sworked forMountain Peddler Sporting Goodsunfil his ent in 1992. Mrs. Davis workal for Chinook Water Chalets until her retirement in 1992. The couple hsslived in Central Oregon for60years.

To ensure the timely publication of wedding announcements, The Bulletin requests that notices and photos be submitted within one month after the celebration has occurred. Announcements submitted six months or more after the event will not be accepted. Milestones need to be submitted by noon each Wednesday to run on the following Sunday. Please send quality, original photos only. Digital photos may be e-mailed to m i lestones@ bendbulletin.com. We may reject photosbecause ofpoor quality. Photos will be returned within one month by mail, provided a proper return address is given, or they may be picked up directly at The Bulletin. You must call before you come byto pickup a photo. Anniversary, wedding and engagement noticesneed to be submitted on the appropriate form

provided by The Bulletin, with complete information on names, educational backgrounds and occupations of the couple. Typewritten responses are preferred. The announcement should show that the couple has strong ties to Central Oregon. For anniversaries, the couple must currently live in the area. For weddings and engagements, the couple must live — or havegraduated from a high school — in Central Oregon, or a parent must live in the area. Extra copies of The Book of Love weddingsupplement may be picked up at The Bulletin, 1777 SW Chandler Ave., or send a stamped, s elf-addressed envelope t o : Weddings, The Bulletin, P.O. Box 6020, Bend 97708. Some announcementsmay be held due to space limitations.

Historic Lodge & Cabins Beautiful Meandering Stream Tall Pine Trees Peaceful Co-Existence With Nature A Must See.

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n a ement Type or write legibly (unreadable forms will be rejected ) and return to:

The Bulletin, 1777 S,W. Chandler Ave,, Bend, OR 97702 (P.O, Box 6020, Bend 97708)

Fax: 541-385-5804 Phone: 541-382-1811 Please give full names. Please clearly label photograph with corresponding names. Provide ONLY requested information as additional details will not be used. Do not use abbreviations.

Name

Preferredhonorific(Mr., Miss., Mrs., Ms.)

Address

Email address:

Parents' name Parents' town ofresidence Schools attended and yeargraduated High School College Major W here employed and occupation

Name

Preferred honorific(Mr., Miss., Mrs., Ms,)

Address

Email address:

Parents' name

Parents' town of residence Schools attended and yeargraduated High School College Major W here employed and occupation

Ceremony date PLACE

CITY

STATE

Signature

Return Photo To: Name: Address: City/st ate/zip:

6 • BOOK OF LOVE 201'I• The Bulletin

Telephone (required) NOTE: Thereis nocharge for ceremonyphotos or announcements. Please send quality, original photos.Digital photosmaybe e-mailed to milestones® bendbulletin.com.Photoswil be returned within amonthafter publication. FOR H NUSTBERECEIVED NO LATERTHANTHREEHONTHSBEFORETHECERENONT.


arria e * Marriage must have taken place in state where it is legally recognized. Type or write legibly (unreadable forms will be rejected) and retum to:

The Bulletin, 1777 S.W, Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702 (P,O. Box 6020, Bend 97708) Fax: 541-385-5804 Phone: 541-382-1811 Please give full names. Please clearly label photograph with corresponding names. Provide ONLY requested information as additional details will not be used. Do not use abbreviations,

Maiden name ofbride Occupation Schools attended and yeargraduated High School College Major Names/town of residence ofbride's parents Name of bridegroom Occupation Schools attended and yeargraduated High School College Major Names/town ofbridegroom's parents

Wedding held DATE

PLACE

CITY

STATE

W here and when reception held Post-ceremony trip/honeymoon Where couple will settle Email Address Signature

Return Photo To: Name: Address: City/state/zip:

Telephone (required) MOTE: Thereisnochargeforceremonyphotosorannouncements.Pleasesend quality, original photos.Digital photosmaybee-mailed to milestones®bendbulletin.com.Photoswill be returnedwithin a monthafter publication. FORMS SUBMITTEDSIX MOMTMSORMOREAFTERCEREMOMTWILLMOTBEACCEPTED. The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 7


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* Civil union must have taken place in state where it is legally recognized. Type or write legibly (unreadable forms will be rejected) and retum to:

The Bulletin, 1777 S.W, Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702 (P,O. Box 6020, Bend 97708) Fax: 541-385-5804 Phone: 541-382-1811 Please give full names. Please clearly label photograph with corresponding names. Provide ONLY requested information as additional details will not be used. Do not use abbreviations,

Preferred honorific(Mr., Miss, Mrs., Ms.)

Name of partner Occupation Schools attended and yeargraduated High School College Major Names/townofresidence ofparents

Name of partner

Preferred honorific(Mr., Miss, Mrs., Ms,)

Occupation Schools attended and yeargraduated High School College Major Names/townofresidence ofparents

Ceremony held DATE

PLACE

CITY

STATE

W here and when reception held Post-ceremony trip/honeymoon Where couple will settle Email Address: Signature

Return Photo To: Name: Address: City/state/zip:

8 • BOOK OF LOVE 201'I• The Bulletin

Telephone (required) MOTE: Thereisnochargeforceremonyphotosorannouncements.Pleasesend quality, original photos.Digital photosmaybee-mailed to milestones®bendbulletin.com.Photoswill be returnedwithin a monthafter publication. FORMS SUBMITTEDSIX MOMTMSORMOREAFTERCEREMOMTWILLMOTBEACCEPTED.


nniversar Type or write legibly (unreadable forms will be rejected) and return to:

The Bulletin, 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702 (P.O. Box 6020, Bend 97708)

Fax: 541-385-5804 Phone: 541-382-1811 Pleasegive full names. Please clearly label photograph with corresponding names. Provide ONLY requested information as additional details will not be used. Do not useabbreviations.

Anniversary year (25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60 and above only) Name of couple (include wife's first name and maiden name) Town Present or most recent employer

(Husband)

(Wife) (Husband)

If retired, give dates

(Wife) Dateand placeofwedding Any unusual or interesting detail Names (give first and last names)and address (cities and states) of children (list spouses in parenthesis, if desired):

No. of grandchildren

Great-grandchi ldren

Date, time and place of reception or other celebration (if any) Hosted by Indicate if open invitation No. of years in Central Oregon Membership and interesting personal background Husband

Wife

Email Address Signature

Return Photo To: Name: Address: City/st ate/zip:

Telephone (required) NOTE: Thereisnochargeforceremonyphotosorannouncements.Plmsesend quality, originalphotos.Digital photosmaybee-mailed to milestones®bendbuHetin. com. Photos wil be retumedwithin amonth after publication. FO RNSSHOULDBE RECEI VEDNO LATERTHANONENONTHAFTERTHEANNIVERSARTANDRECEPTION. The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 9


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Wedding Dress by Netro Bditorial, for The Bulletin Few wardrobe decisions are scrutinized as much asa bride-to-be's choice of wedding gown. Finding the perfect gown that flatters the future bride's figure while stunning her guests and soonto-be husband is a labor of love for many brides. The Bridal Association of America estimates a bride-to-be will spend between $1,500 and $2,000 total on her gown, veil and accessories. Brides often spend months, if not years, shoping for the right gown. Finding the right gown means having an understanding of what silhouettes are available and what flatters certain body types. After all, you want to look like the best version of yourself when getting married. Here is a look of some of the common types of gown silhouettes and why choosing this shape might be right for you.

Ballgown A ballgown dress is truly a classic style, evoking images of fairy tale princesses. With a fitted bodice and full skirt that flairs at the waist, this silhouette is usually good for all body types. Because the full skirt, typically poofed-up by crinoline and hiding the hips and thighs, women with a pear shape might gravitate toward this style. The ballgown style may not be ideal for petite women, as the skirt may overwhelm their figures.

A-line 4 >

10 • BOOK OF LOVE 2014• The Bulletin

Another silhouette very forgiving or appropriate for many body types is the A-line gown. A-line cut dresses should be the go-to style for anyone looking to minimize perceived flaws. The cut of the dress will fit to the waist and gradually fan out from the hips to form the outline of an uppercase "A."


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t When in doubt, A-line gowns are classic and sensible and a favorite among brides.

to hide areas around the hips and thighs. This is another good choice for a wide array of figures.

Trumpet

Tea length

Women who prefer something a little more form-fitting may select a trumpet silhouette. This dress is fitted through the body and then the gown flares out at mid-thigh level. Women with taught stomachs and hourglass figures can benefit from this style gown, but those who do not want anything tight in the hips and thighs will want to select something else.

Brides who do not want a gown that reaches the floor can opt for a tea length dress, on which the skirt generally falls between theankle and the knee.

Mermaid A bit more fitted than the trumpet, this silhouette is close to the body from the chest down to the knee. The skirt then flares out slightly by the knee. Tall, thin women generally look best in this type of gown.

Modified A-line A balance between a traditional A-line and a more fitted gown, the modified A-line does not flare out as much. But it does flare out enough from the waist

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Sheath Lean brides who want simplicity in their gowns can opt for a sheath silhouette. The narrow shape of the gown from the neckline to the hem will definitely accentuatethe body shape. Therefore, women who are shy may want to select a different option. Petite women who may be overwhelmed by more fabric can usually wear a sheath gown with success. Although a bride may have a wedding gown style in mind, it is a good idea to try on a number of different silhouettes to find the one that is most flattering. Bridal salon employees are usually wellversed in matching body type to a gown and can prove invaluable when selecting a dress.

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W E D D IN G A T T E N D A N T S QChoose your wedding attendants CIDecide on bridesmaids' dresses.

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Matron of honor Duties

Phone

CHOOSE YOUR WEDDING DATE. IF YOU PLAN TO BE MARRIED IN A CHURCH OR TEMPLE, CLEAR THE DATE AND TIME WITH YOUR CLERGY. Date

Bridesmaids Name

Phone

Duties

Flower girl(s) Best Man Duties

Phone

Location Ushers (one for every 50 guests)

Time Contact Ring bearer Cost

Officiant Notes

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12 • BOOK OF LOVE 2014• The Bulletin


makers. Get written estimates of their costs. Keep track of your discussions and their bids.

Shoes Color

QSet your budget. T'ake time for a heartto-heart talk with your fiance about

Size

the budget and style of your wedding, reception and wedding-related parties, and who pays for what.

Cost

CIAnnounce your engagement inlocal n ewspapers. See page 4 fo r T h e Bulletin's Mi lestones guidelines, followed by an engagement form on Page 5.

Select your wedding gown, shoes and accessories.

CIEnlist help. Consider hiring a bridal consultant. If your budget won't stretch that far, don't despair. Enlist relatives and close friends to assist you in specific tasks — selecting a dress, interviewing caterers, etc. — especially in areas where you feel you need support.

Expected arrival

GLOVES: Color Size Expected arrival

Gown style/name

Cost

Store name

JEWELRY:

Phone

Necklace

Consultant' s name

Earrings

Dress size

Color

Hair accessories

Headpiece/veil

Other

Fitting date

LINGERIE:

Final pickup dat

Slip

Deposit amoun CICompose your guest list. Let out-oftown guests know your wedding is in the worksso they can make travelplans.

ACCESSORIES:

Hosiery

Balance du

Bra/bustier

Total cost

Garter

CIReserve your reception site. CIDetermine the theme or mood you'd like to establish with the food, table settings, flowers and entertainment at your reception. Qlnterview caterers, musicians, florists, photographers, videographers and cake

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14 • BOOK OF LOVE 2014• The Bulletin


by Netro BChtorial, for The Bulletin Limousines, gowns and flowers are each important components of a couple's wedding day. But few aspects of a wedding are as important as photography. Thanks to the popularity of social media, some couples may overlook the importance of hiring a professional photographer for their weddings. Although there is something to be said for candid images captured on phones and personal cameras, the pictures a couple will cherish and look back on for decades are best supplied by a professional photographer. Even if you will be hiring a videographer and having photos snapped by loving friends and family, professional wedding photography is an ideal way to immortalize this special day. Most couples say "I do" with the hopes of staying together forever, giving them only one chance to capture the magic of the wedding day on film. Leaving photos to chance by hiring an amateur photographer may be something couples regret down the road. Professional photographers use highquality equipment that will produce much betterresultsthan photos snapped on the average digital camera. Plus, the photographer has experience with posing, placement of arms and legs, head tilting, and lighting, each

of which ensures that the photos come out looking as good as possible. While a friend may not notice an eyesore in the rear of a photo composition when taking a picture, a professional may notice something that will stand out and make adjustments. Furthermore, professional photographers tend to have an eye for interesting angles to capture images that may be overlooked. Rather than a

series of portraits at one level, he or she may climb high for aerial shots or lie on the floor for a different perspective. The results may be unique vantage points that set your wedding photos apart from those of the masses. Price alone should not dictate which photographer to hire. Although wedding budgets are often stretched, skimping on a pho-

tography allotment may result in subpar results. That doesn't mean you need to hire the most expensive photographer, but couples should realize the value of experience and professional equipment, both of which tend to come at a premium price. Do not expect to pay package prices that would be offered at department or discount stores. Many photographers are artists who take their work very seriously. A photographer will be spending all day with you capturing hundreds of photos. Each image will then need to be reviewed, repositioned and potentially enhanced or retouched. This time-consuming attention to detail is often what dictates the higher costs of a very good photographer. Keep in mind that photographers are unique individuals and not all the visions and styles of particular artists will meld with your own perception of how you want the wedding to look. Expressing your expectations and comparing your goals with the portfolios of photographers will help you find the best fit. Do not feel shy about asking for testimonials from past customers or talking to couples you know who have recently gotten married and asking for a recommendation. While couples are making wedding day magic, photographers are behind the scenes capturing all of the memories couples can relive for years and years to come.

Photos by: MonicaBell

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The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 15


onths Be fore Your Wedding

EDDING TDO

0

Choose your florist. Before contacting your florist, know your colors and styles of your gown and the bridesmaids' gowns. Look through floral guides, sketch ideas, and cut out pictures of flowers to show your florist. Set up an initial consultation with your florist to discuss specific ideas that fit both your personal style and budget. Plan a second appointment to review

Select your wedding invitations. Don't forget to purchase personal stationery for the thank-you notes you'll need to write.

recommendations and budgets.

FLORIST CHECKLIST

CI Choose your musician(s).

Florist Contact

CI Book your photographer and/or videographer.

Printer Name

Phone

CI Decide on your color scheme.

Phone

CEREMONY:

Contact

Number of arrangements

CI Shop for wedding rings with your fiance.

ITEM

QUANTITY PRICE

Bouquets:

Invitations

Bride Bridesmaids

Responses

Boutonnieres

T hank-you notes

CI Decide on your honeymoon destination. Work with a travel agent to book your travel and accommodations.

RECEPTION:

Programs

Number of arrangements

Stationery

Total Cost

Other:

Choose your caterer. Make sure to ask the following questions of all candidates: • What type of food items do you recommend for my budget and the number of guests?

chairs and service pieces?

• Do you have a contract?

• How much time will you

• When will you provide the

need to set up?

final per-person cost?

• W hat type ofservice,sit-

• Can we go over the table locations an setting arrangementsahead oftim e?

• What is the payment policy?

down orbuffet,would be best? • What is the cost per person? • Do you provide linens? Is there an additional fee?

• Do you supplyglasses,plates

Tullis Photo

and silverware? Is there an additional charge?

• Do you handle the cleanup? • Will you personally handle

• Do you handle all rental equipment, such astables,

and attend my reception? If not, who will?

16 • BOOK OF LOVE 2014• The Bulletin

• W hen is the depositdue? • What is your refund or cancellation policy • Are gratuities already figured in the total price?


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Select your baker, order the cake.

Now's the time to make reservations for tables, chairs, tents, canopies,place settings,etc.Consult an wedding and event

Bakery

coordinator to discussneeds forboth yourwedding day and rehearsal dinner.

Contact Phone

Event Rental Equipment Contact

Cost

Phone

Cake Flavor/Colors

Appointment Time/Date

Filling Flavor Icing Flavor/Colors

eautiful mountain views,( outstanding cuisine and a staff who cares! We understand that this is the most important day of starting your new life together. Let us customize your rehearsal dinner, ceremony and reception to help you create some beautiful memories. Ask for Gail or Kellg at 541-31 7-2885 Restaurant is open to the public

Wf'

Awbrey Glen Golf Club

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The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 17


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ituated in an area of unmatched natural beauty and mountain scenery, Black Butte Ranch has been a preferred Central Oregon wedding destination for over 40 years. Our stunning backdrop, abundant amenities, farm-to-table catering, custom accommodations, spectacular ceremony site and attentive staff ensure that your extraordinary day is everything you imagined.

877.21$.5$16 i BLACKBUTTERANCH.COM i 7 MI L ES WEST OF SISTERS ON HWY 20

18 • BOOK OF LOVE 2014• The Bulletin


Jj/Iontbs Be fore Your Wedding

0

EDDING TDO

CIArrange hotel accommodations for members of the wedding party who live out of town. Reserve a block of rooms for other out-of-town guests, and let them know the rooms are available. Remember to ask for any group discounts or special packages. QRegister for gifts at one or more bridal-gift registries. Keep the registry focused. Special items that will last a lifetime are best. Also, register in a department store that is convenientlylocated to most guests, orone with a computer link to other stores. Effectively communicate registry information to family, friends and business associates. QHelp both mothers to coordinate and shop for their wedding-day attire. Skirts can come in all lengths, from floor-skimming to above the knee and dress mirrors the fashionforward look of ready-to-wear. A favorable silhouette: Easy crepe jackets with soft, fluid skirts in contrasting fabric. CIPlan a rehearsal dinner for members of your wedding party, your family and out-of-town guests.Reserve the location. CIChoose readings for your wedding and write your wedding vows.

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CIReserve your wedding-day transportation and anyother wedding-day rentalneeds. CIMake appointments for gown fittings. CICheck the requirements for a marriage license.

Select music for your ceremony and reception.

CIMake surecontracts and arrangements are complete with all of your service prowders.

RECEPTION: Band/DJ Contact Phone

CEREMONY:

Number of musicians

Organist

Number of breaks

Soloist Choir

Arrival time

Instrumentalists

Hours of play

Prelude

Total Cost

Processional

Balance

Recessional Postlude

SONG REQUESTS:

Deposit

Bride & groom dance

Balance

Bridal party dance

Notes

Bride and father dance Others

The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 19


ue

in 6 rec e tionsites

BEND ASPEN HALL, SHEVLIN PARK Bend Park & Recreation District (541) 389-7275

HOLLINSHEAD BARN 1235 NE Jones (541) 389-7275 Bend Park & Recreation District www.bendparksandrec.org

AWBREY GLEN GOLF CLUB (541) 317-2885 2500 NW Awbrey Glen Drive www.awbreyglen.com From the beautiful mountain and golf course views to our creative cuisine and friendly, professional staff, Awbrey Glen is prepared to dazzle you and your guests in every way possible. We look forward to working closely with you and welcomethe opportunity to assist you in making your wedding dreams come true. BEND GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB 61045 Country Club Drive (541) 382-3261 BROKEN TOP CLUB 62000 Broken Top Drive (541) 383-8200 DESCHUTES BREWERY MOUNTAIN ROOM 901 SW Simpson Blvd. (541) 312-6946 ELK LAKE RESORT PO. Box 698, Bend 97709 (541) 480-7378 THE HIGH DESERT MUSEUM 59800 S. Highway 97 (541) 382-4754

This historic barn is an ideal location and justminutes from downtown Bend.The renovated barn has gorgeous hardwood interior and two levels to accommodate your guests. The barn is surrounded by park space and outdoor patios for the small, intimate weddings. K&K GARDEN VIEW ESTATE 24885 Dodds Rd. (541) 382-8530

MCMENAMINS-OLD ST. FRANCIS SCHOOL (541) 330-8567 700 NW Bond St. www.mcmenamins.com McMenamins - Old St. Francis School offers indoor and outdoor settings for weddings, receptions and rehearsal dinners. Lodging and full catering is available on site. MOUNT BACHELOR VILLAGE RESORT 19717 Mount Bachelor Drive (541) 389-5900 OREGON NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY 875 SW Simpson Avenue (541) 312-4309 THE OXFORD HOTEL 10 NW Minnesota Ave. (877) 440-8436

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4 MARCOULIER EVENT ROOM (541) 388-1133 1600 SE Reed Market Road www.bendparksandrec.org This large room has abundant natural light, maple hardwood f)oors and high ceilings. An adjacent commercial kitchen and patio doorsleading to a landscaped patio and natural area make this a functional and attractive location for receptions, dances and events.

PILOT BUTTE EVENTS CENTER 1034 NE 11th St. (541) 61 7-7877 PRONGHORN 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. (541) 693-5300 THE RIVERHOUSE RESORT 2850 NW Rippling Ct. (541) 389-3111 ROCK SPRINGS RANCH 64201 Tyler Rd. (541) 382-1957 SEVENTH MOUNTAIN RESORT 18575 SW Century Drive (541) 382-8711

Many ceremony locations, including area churches, book up fast during peak wedding seasons. Tiy to call at least six monthsin advance. Some other things to keepin mind:Isthe overall ambiance ofthe facility formal orinformal? Isthe facility large enough to accommodate yourguest list andisit handicap assessable? Does the cost meetyour budget? Can you bring in your own caterer? If not, does the food quality meet your standards?

20 • BOOK OF LOVE 2014• The Bulletin


SHILO INN SUITES HOTEL 3105 O.B. Riley Road (541) 389-9600

ASPEN lAKES GOLF COURSE & LODGE 16900 Aspen Lakes Dr. (541) 549-1984

EAGLE CREST RESORT 1522 Cline Falls Hwy (866) 751-4552

TETHEROW 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd. (541) 388-2582

FIVEPINE LODGE 1021 Desperado Trail (541) 549-5900

JUNIPER GOLF COURSE 1938 Flkhorn Ave. (541) 548-8198, ext. 54

TOWER THEATRE 835 NW Wall Street (541) 317-0700

HOUSE ON METOLIUS Camp Sherman (541) 595-6620

RIVER RUN EVENT CENTER 1730 Blue Heron Dr. (541) 504-4501

SUNRIVER SUNRIVER RESORT Great Hall (541) 593-4605

PRINEVILLE WIDGI CREEK GOLF CLUB

LAKE CREEK LODGE

(541) 382-4449 18707 SW Century Drive www.wtd g ccom

(800) 797-6331 Camp Sherman www.lakecreeklodge.com

With its beautiful surroundings, quiet atmosphereand outstanding service, Widgi Creek is quickly becoming a favorite location for wedding and banquets for all occasions. Our experienced staff will make sure your every need is attended to so you can take pleasure in the pristine backdrops Widgi Creek has to offer. Widgi Creek hasindoorand outdoor venue options to choosefrom and isable to accommodate functions of various sizes.

LakeCreek Lodge invitesyou to share the celebration of your marriage in historic and charming Camp Sherman. Our property offers an inviting location for outdoor ceremonies, receptions and rehearsal dinners. As well, our professional catering staff recognizes the importance of your wedding day, helping to produce great memories.

SISTERS AREA

THE LODGE AT SUTTLE LAKE 13300 W Hwy 20 (541) 595-2628 LONG HOLLOW RANCH 71105 Holmes Rd. (541) 923-1901

REDMOND AREA

MEADOW LAKES RESTAURANT 300 SW Meadow Lakes Dr. (541) 447-7640

TERREBONNE

DDRANCH (541) 548-1432 3836 NESmith Rock Way ddranch.net Breathtaking panoramic views of Smith Rock surround your wedding event with a western flair at the familyowned ranch.

BLACK BUTTE RANCH (541) 595-1267 www.blackbutteranch.com Specializes in catering to intimate weddings and receptions in one of the most spectacular outdoor settings in Central Oregon. ALDER CREEK RANCH Address (541) 549-301 9

DESCHUTES COUNTY FAIR AND EXPO CENTER (541) 548-2711 expo.deschutes.org

MORESITES onPage 22

The Three Sisters Conference Center boasts three halls surrounded by10 breakouts and canaccommodate 300 to 900. The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 21


TERREBONNE(Cont.j

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FAITH, HOPE & CHARITY VINEYARDS

(541) 383-2345 - 1314 NW Galveston (541) 678-5057 - 1155 SW Division St. www.idascupcakecafe.com

(541) 350-5384 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive www.faithhopeandchari tyevents.com The Epitome of Beauty fk Romance — At Faith, Hope and CharityVineyards,we want you to have the day you have always dreamed of. From our breathtaking views of Smith Rock and The Three Sisters, to our gently Rowing waterfall and pond, and themeticulouslytended landscape, we delight in providing an experience that won't soon be forgotten by you or your guests.

Voted "Best Desert in Central Oregon 2013" — Make your wedding a little sweeterwith cupcakes from Ida's Cupcake Cafe, featuring 100-plus flavor combinations, including gluten- and dairyfree. Ida's offers endless possibilities for celebrating your special day. Talkwith local chambers of commerce, parks andrec departments, the Central Oregon Visitors Association

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Consider these tips for choosing the right location for your wedding reception.

r by Netro Editorial, for Ibe Bulletin

Don't Downplay Decor

One of the biggest decisions a couple will make when planning a wedding is where to host the reception. In making this decision, couples must consider a variety of factors when looking for the right banquet hall to host their reception. After all, a wedding is a celebration, and the banquet hall or reception area is where the couple and their guests will let their hair down and hopefully enjoy a festive and memorable night. The following are a few tips for couples looking to find the ideal banquet hall or location to host their wedding reception.

Ask Around. Word-of-mouth is a great way to find the right banquet hall. Ask friends or family members who got hitched in the same town where your ceremony will be if they can recommend a reception site.

A banquet hall with an attractive decor is not only aesthetically appealing but can appeal to a couple's finances as well. Such a hall likely won't need any additional decorations, while a banquet hall that's unadorned and lacks embellishments will, and those decorations can dip into a couple's overall wedding budget.

Prioritize Privacy. Few couples would be open to strangers having easy access to their wedding reception. When shopping for a banquet hall, look for one that gives you and your guests all the privacy you need. The reception area is where couples can expect to spend most of their time on their wedding day, so couples should exercise their due diligence to ensure they find an inviting and festive facility.

Consider Size Some couples prefer an intimate affair with relatively few guests, while others will desire a large wedding party with lots of guests. Couples can find a banquet hall that's capable of catering to small or large wedding parties, but find one that fits your party specifically.

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The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 23


Stop by the store for a FREE consultation or call us for a in-home appointment. We can help you expand on your existing colors and design.

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Months Be fore Your Wedding

0

EDDING T DO

Give the caterer and other food suppliers an estimate of the number of guests you expect. Caterer Contact Phone

Stott Shots Photography

Number of guests

Costs per person Total Cost Deposit

Qcarefully prepare directions, including simply drawn maps, to help guide guests to the wedding and reception. For guests who will travel a long distance to your wedding, consider assembling an information package on fun things to do and see in your area. QShop for gifts for your bridesmaids. Offer to help your fiance select gifts for

Menu

his attendants.

QBegin addressing invitations and announcements. Select a special stamp at the post office. Invitations should go in the mail six to eight weeks before your big day.

Qcheck with bridesmaids to make sure they have their gowns and are getting them adjusted. CISelect your "going away" outfit and special items for your trousseau. CIMake a date with your photographer for any formal portraits you desire. CIMake an appointment to have your hair done just before your portrait session and again the day or so before your wedding. Consider including your bridesmaids in a "day of beauty" before your wedding, with manicures, hair styling, massages and makeup session.

Ensure all reservations are set for honeymoon travel. Resort/Hotel Days reserved Phone Cost p

1~

Flights Arrival Time

Departure Time

Flight ¹

Day(s)

The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 25


Months Be fore Your Weddin

EDDING 0 TDO Plan your rehearsal

dinner and a brunch or fun activity for out-oftown guests to enjoy on

the day following your wedding.

Visitor Centers: Central Oregon Visitors Association, 661 SW Powerhouse Dr., Bend, 800-800-8334, www.visitcentraloregon.com Visit Bend, 750 NW Lava Rd., ¹160, Bend, 541-382-8048, 877-245-8484, www.visitbend.org

QHave wedding portraits taken. Clsend bridal portrait and wedding announcement to newspapers for publication.

a 26 • BOOK OF LOVE 2014• The Bulletin

OFinalize the music selections that will be played during your wedding ceremony. QMeet with musicians who will provide entertainment during your reception-and orchestrate precisely what you want and when you want it played. Don't be shy to voice your preferences, down to the volume,

favorite songs you'd like to hear, or even songs you don't want played. QPurchase special accessories for your wedding-day attire. QPlan a luncheon for your bridesmaids. QFinalize honeymoon plans. If you're travelingoverseas, check again that your passportsare current and that you have any necessary visas. QGather necessary birth or baptismal certificates you may need for your-wedding license.


Make appointments for a hairdresser, makeup artist and manicurist. Hairdresser: Phone Appointment Cost

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Mail your wedding invitations and

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How Sweet It Is! Gluten-Free 8 Dairy-Free Options Available

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Cutting Cakes Starting at $36 1314 NW Galveston • 541.383.2345 1155 SW Division St. Sweet A7 • 541.678.5057

www.idascupcakecafe.com Like us on Facebook! The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 27


the by Netro Editorial, for The Bulletiu

Season

Many couples find themselves bombarded with questions the moment they become engaged, and perhaps no questions is more common than, "When is the wedding?" Although a number of couples would prefer to bask in the excitement of their engagement, some couples feel pressured to rush into picking a wedding date. Choosing a wedding date without giving it much consideration may make things more difficult down the road. Rather than jumping head first into any decisions, couples should give thought to any and all dates and decide if there are certain times of the year they want to tie the knot or avoid.

When thinking about potential wedding dates, it helps to have a place to start. Some couples find it helpful to start with a particular season and then narrow it down from there. Decide if you prefer the lush greenery of summer or the amazing color spectrum of an autumn afternoon. Perhaps you envision arriving at the ceremony with a snow-packed landscape amid twinkling holiday lights? Think about the season when you feel most happy and then determine if that time of year is doable.

Valentine's Day can be popular for weddings, but couples can expect stiff competition for venues due to that popularity.

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Month Certain months may seem perfect, but not for busy professionals or those with limited vacation time at their disposal. For example, early spring may not be good for accountants tallying year-end numbers.

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Choose your wedding date carefully in order to avoid seasonal or time-sensitive complications as the ceremony approaches. Teachers may feel most comfortable tying the knot in the summer when they already have days off. If you run a pool business or a lawn maintenance company, then the summer might not be so good. Keep these factors in mind.

a holiday may mean competing for vendors and reception spaces. Prices on everything from food to flowers to airline tickets could be higher as vendors cash in on customer demand.

Holidays

It's less expensive for couples to get married on Fridays and Sundays than Saturday afternoons or evenings. Couples may think that the money saved will be well worth it, but they also should think about how this decision may affect their guests. A Friday wedding requires people to take off from work orschool.Sunday weddings may be slightly more convenient, but those who have toget back to work on Monday may be tired from late-night festivities. Couples should anticipate some guests not making it to their weddings when those weddings are not on Saturdays.

Some people would like to tie their wedding day to a particular holiday. Valentine's Day is popular for weddings thanks to the romantic sentiments synonymous with the holiday, while some couples prefer Halloween or Christmas weddings. Holiday weddings can be exciting, but they also produce significant obstacles that couples who choose to get married during other times of year don't have to worry about. Guests may not want to travel or spend time away from their families to attend a holiday wedding. Having a wedding during

Day of the week

Religious constraints Couples having religious ceremonies should consult with their houses of worship as to which dates are acceptable. Some will not have weddingson days of religious observation. It is wise to consult with a church, synagogue or mosque before booking any other components of the wedding so that you are certain your chosen day is acceptable.

Any available dates Your weddingdate may be dictated by your caterer or wedding hall. If you have a particular venue in mind, you may be limited by their availability. This is a concession you will need to make if your heart is set on this particular location. Planning a wedding can be exciting. But the ball cannot get rolling until couples first choose the day they will tie the knot.

P UT M O T H E R N A T U R E O N Y O U R G U E S T L IST A N D CR E A T E T H E W E D D I N G O F Y O U R D R E A M S ... The DD Ranch is a beautiful ranch nestled adjacent to scenic Smith Rock area. Come visit and experience thegrandeur of CentralOregon's countryside. Smith Rock and acres of farmland, gardens and countryside surround the DD Ranch. The perfect venue for a country wedding with a touch of elegance. c

Raising Healthy Stock To Feed Healthy FamiTies wwar.ddranch.net 541-548-1432

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The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 29


onth Before Your Wedding

0

EDDING TDO

Meet with your photographer to specify the formal shots you want taken of the bridal party, as well as specific, candid shots you'd like taken during the reception. CIGet your wedding license.

dates and times of flower deliveries.

CIHave a final fitting of your gown and make sure your attendants have theirs. CICheck thatyour menu selections and service plans are locked in place with the caterer.

aPurchase a special book to keep track of wedding gifts as they arrive. CIKeep writing those thank-you notes on a daily basis! CICheck with your florist to confirm

CIReview your wedding-day transportationplans and make sure drivers are clear about addresses, times and number of passengers. CIMake name or address changes official on documents, including driver's license, Social Security forms and financial accounts. Fill out change-of-address forms at the post office. CIReview the video plans with your

videographer. Stott Shots Photography

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30 • BOOK OF LOVE 2014• The Bulletin

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Weeks Be fore Your Wedding

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ONE WEEK BEFORE YOUR WEDDING • Make final checks with all your vendors: officiant, musicians, florist,

TWO WEEKS BEFORE YOUR WEDDING

photographer, videographer, limousine or other transportation provider, caterers and baker.

CIKeep writingthose thank-you notes for wedding gifts! QPick up your wedding rings. Make sure any special engraving appears

precisely as you wished. CIBegin packing for your honeymoon.

CI Officiant

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0 Videographer CI Ask a friend or family member to arrange for wedding gifts that may be brought to your reception to be delivered to your home or another safe spot.

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THE DAY BEFORE YOUR WEDDING Take time to relax and enjoy a massage, manicureand pedicure. Traditionally, this is the day for your rehearsal ceremony and rehearsal dinner. Have fun! Turn in early for a good night's sleep.

CI Wrap gifts for bridal attendants and have them ready for the rehearsal dinner.

CI Purchase travelers' checks and reconfirm honeymoon travel and hotel plans. 0 See thatchecks are written and ready to be handed out to vendors at theagreed-upon time. CI Inform your caterer of the final number of guests. Confirm that out-of-town guests are set with proper hotel accommodations, transportation and wedding-day directions.

YOUR WEDDING DAY Allow plenty of time for dressing, makeup and hair styling.

lf you plan on photography before the ceremony, allow ample time soyou're not rushed. Relax, and remember: This isyour special day, the result of all your careful planning. Now it's time to enjoy. Take a deep breath. Refuse to let any glitch get to you. Savor every moment of this sacred day. Letyourjoy and happiness shine through. Best wishes!

The Bulletin • BOOK OF LOVE 2014 • 31


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Infonnation ~ 542-548-2722 ~ Roxiat@descbutes.org ~ u~w.e~o . d escbutes.org


YOUR WEEKLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT EVERY FRIDAY IN THE BULLETIN JANUARY 31, 2014

MUSIC: The Weather Machine visits Sisters, PAGE 3

MOVIES: 'Labor Day' and two others open, PAGE25

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'Scheherazade,' 'Bolero' and more at BendHigh School, PAGE12


PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE

C ONTAC T

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

in ez

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EDITOR

Cover design by Althea Borck/The Bulletin; submitted photo by Jon Christopher Meyers

Ben Salmon, 541-383-0377 bsalmonObendbulletin.com

REPORTERS Beau Eastes, 541-383-0305 beastes@bendbulletin.com David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasperObendbulletin.com Megan Kehoe, 541-383-0354 mkehoe@bendbulletin.com Karen Koppel, 541-383-0351 kkoppel@bendbulletin.com Jenny Wasson, 541-383-0350 jwasson@bendbulletin.com

MUSIC • 3

DESIGNER Althea Borck, 541-383-0331 aborckObendbulletin.com

SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: events@bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life LLS. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702

GOING OUT • 8

ADVERTISING 541 -382-1811

Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. e

• The Weather Machine brings its indiefolk-rock to The Belfry in Sisters • Feedback sees (and likes!) two very different shows in Bend • Third Street Pub hosts Portland cellopunk band Absent Minds • Wake up with Morning Ritual • Toad the Wet Sprocket at the Tower • Doo-wop groups on tap Saturday

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• Amy Speace visits The Belfry • Elektrapod, Mostest begin runs • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more

MUSIC RELEASES • 9

RESTAURANTS • 20

• Against Me!, A Great Big World and more

• A review of Wild Rose Thai restaurant • News from the local dining scene

DRIMKS • 10

OUT OF TOWN • 22

• Super Bowl beer faceoff • Worthy celebrates first anniversary • Broken Top Bottle Shop turns 2 • Zwickelmania set for Feb. 15

• Portland brings out the jazz • A guide to out of town events

ARTS • 12 • COVER STORY: Eugene Ballet Company in Bend with "Scheherazade" • Surrealist artist Alfred A. Dolezal displays MOVIES • 25 work at Eagle Crest • "Labor Day," "That Awkward Moment" • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits and "The Saratov Approach" open in Central Oregon CALEMDAR • 16 • "The Fifth Estate,""Last Vegas," • A week full of Central Oregon events "Rush," "Cloudy with a Chanceof Meatballs 2" and "JackassPresents: Bad PLANMIMG AHEAD • 18 Grandpa" are out on Blu-ray and DVD • A listing of upcoming events • Brief reviews of movies showing in • Talks and classes listing Central Oregon

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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 3

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

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Courtesy Kai Hayashi

The Weather Machine is, from left, Corey Kintzi, Colin Robson, Matthew Cartmill, Slater Smith, Jack Martin and Tanner Smith.

• Portland folk-rockers TheWeather Machine visit Sistersfor a show at TheBelfry tonight

frustrating because it meant I got to get lost a lot," he said. "Which

move to the East Coast. Ultimately,

is part of the adventure, but also

The song "is a reflection on this

some days you wish that it wasn't

part of the adventure." By Ben Salmon The Bulletin

w

guess. But it'd be wrong. "I had a map booklet. I didn't

hen a 24-year-old guy de- have a smartphone at the time, cides to take a two-month so I didn't have any kind of GPS," trip around Oregon in the said Slater Smith, frontman of The summer of 2013 to play the same Weather Machine, a Portland insong in 185 different state parks die-folk-rock band that will play and film each performance, what's The Belfry in Sisters tonight (see "If

Smith's epic trek — which lasted from late June into September

he decided to stayin his home state. place that I've lived my whole life," he said. "I also just wanted to write a song about Oregon because I felt like it needed one."

— can be seen in short, fast-movRather than write about pine ing chunks in the new video for trees and rivers, like so many Ore"Back 0'er Oregon," a beautiful, gon-songwritersbeforehim, hedes low-burning song from T h e cidedto write abouthis experience. Weather Machine's 2013 self-titled debut album.

"I just made it a song about re-

flecting on home," he said, "and the first thing you'd think he'd take yougo"). Smith wrote the song as a stu- instead of using the word home, I "I just had a map to work with, dent at Willamette University in used the word Oregon." withhim? A smartphone would be a good which was kinda fun and kinda Salem, while contemplating a Continued Page 5

Ifyou go What:The Weather Machine, with There Is No Mountain When:8 tonight Cost:$10 plus fees in advance at www.bendticket. com, $12 at the door Where:The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters Contact:www.belfryevents .com or 541-815-9122


music

PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

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Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Guitarist Bill Frisell, right, performs with his band mates Greg Leisz, from left, Tony Scherr and Kenny Wollesen at the Tower Theatre.

• 2 very different acts visited Bend on Tuesday and both wereenjoyable in their own way

ing me of one of those dancing guitar lines taking FEEDBACIC BY fountains, turns arcing past one another. BEN SALMON When they moved quicklyand silently — except for the hum i ' n July of 2008, I reveled in the invaded Volcanic Theatre Pub. 4 of the guitars — into a bluesier opportunity to see two very, I k n e w Bl a c k witch P u d number, I figured Frisell would very different kinds of shows ding was going to be loud and What we got was an impres- use the next between-song break in one night: Shock-rocker Alice gnarly. I was less sure of what sive, nuanced tour through the to step to the single mic on the Cooper's arena-sized spectacle to expect from Frisell's "Gui- rock 'n' roll of the mid-20th cen- stage and tell u s w hat t h ey'd at the Deschutes County fair, tar in the Space Age" program, tury that occasionally rose to a played. and, after a quick trip down the which he and his band — bass- low rumble, but mostly floated But he didn't. In fact, he never highway, indie-rock m ewler ist Tony Scherr, drummer Ken- around the Tower with g r ace, identified any of the songs being Conor Oberst's more understat- ny Wollesen and Greg Leisz on like a neon feather caught in a performed. Henever even talked show at the Domino Room. electric and pedal-steel guitars nostalgic breeze. ed exceptfor at the end of the Tuesday night brought a simi- — developed just last weekend in I was late, actually, and by the first set and at the beginning of lar contrast to Bend as virtuoso San Francisco. (When I spoke to time I walked in, the band was the encore. Instead, Frisell spent guitarist Bill Frisell played the Frisell for last week's GO! Mag- settling into the Beach Boys' "In most of the night turned away Tower Theatre and stoner/doom azine, even he wasn't sure what My Room," with the interplay be- from the audience and toward metal band Blackwitch Pudding to expect.) tween Frisell and Leisz remind- the other three players, their eyes

t

locked on each other as they felt

their way through these songs. They seemed to almost exist inside a bubble. It was like look-

ing at a living museum piece. Or watching a super-talented band

practice without knowing you're there. That's not t o

sa y i t w a s n't

great, because it was. It just wasn't exactly lively, though the quartet did show off its muscles here and there, most notably on

Link Wray's earth-moving surfrock classic "Rumble" and The Astronauts' "Baja," a j aunty,

reverberant surf-pop song that was probably my favorite of the evening. Continued next page


THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

musie

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 5

Feedback From previous page After an intermission, a syrupy

ST. VINCENT DE PAUL BEND PRESENTS

version of The Kinks' "Tired of Wait-

50/50 RAFFLE, DOOR PRIZES, LIVE AUCTION

ing for You" kicked off the second set, with Frisell showcasing the song's gorgeous melody on guitar. There was another bluesy jam and a surfrock song that I recognized but just

HAVE A HEART FOR BEND

can't place, and then the band did its sublime take on Jimi Hendrix's

A Beytefit for ow,r Bend, Neighbors in, tteed,

"Wind Cries Mary." The original is so great, it's impossible to improve onit, but Frisell and company at least did the song justice. After another break, the band en-

~III iif

cored with the Beach Boys "Surfer

Local Craft Brews & Wine Tasting Dancing to Bend's own "Out of the Blue" Suffet Dinner presented by Chef Ed Chilcutt

Girl" interwoven with The Ventures'

amazing, galloping "Telstar," but not before Frisell cracked wise about his Ben SalmonI The Bulletin sore arm. "I don't know how those Space Wizard and Lizard Wizard of Blackwitch Pudding perform at Volcanic youngsters played these songs," the Theatre Pub in Bend. longtime jazzman said. That mayhave been true,buthe sure did make it look easy. As the controlling the light show, so that left tunefully gruff singing to whitelights came on, I heard a bunch of a trio to bang out some of the heavi- noise howls. It was, frankly, glorious, people in the crowd offer dazzling est music to come through Bend in a at least if loud and heavy music is mini-reviews to their friends on the while. Theband played several songs something you're into. It's something I'm into, so I stood way out the door. from its fine 2013 album "Taste the Over at Volcanic Theatre Pub, Pudding," stopping every six or eight up close and soaked it in. Blackwitch there was a decidedly different minutes to tell jokes or growl about Pudding may not have been the best scene. To be clear: Blackwitch Pud- beer in their wizard voices. band in Bend on Tuesday night, but ding is a Portland band that plays For about a n ho u r , t h o ugh, they sure were a ton of fun. And sludgy stoner-rock and psychedelic Blackwitch Pudding blasted what I Frisell and friends weren't quite a doom metal while wearing wizard thought was a pretty good crowd for ton of fun, but they were definitely robes and swilling beer. It's all very a cold, rainy weeknight with wave the best band in town. Each put a tongue-in-cheek ... well, except the after wave of raunchy, rumbling met- grin on my face for entirely different riffs. al,anchored bythechest-cavingbass reasons. There were four ' w i zards" on

of Lizard Wizard. All three members

stage, but I'm pretty sure one was took turns on vocals, ranging from

Weather Machine From Page 3 While recording "The Weather Machine" a year or so ago at band member Colin Robson's Kiwanda

Sound Recordings studio in Pacific City, Smith got the idea to make a

video for "Back 0'er Oregon" that showed him playing the tune in all of Oregon's incorporated cities. A quest for funding led him away from that idea and to the state park

system, which he figured would provide a cinematic backdrop for the video. "I borrowed my mom's Honda

Element and I traded her for my '87 Bronco because it would just break down all the time," he said. "I didn't have a lot of time to plan. I

just gathered up whatever camping gear I could find or borrow. I didn't even look at it, I just threw it in the

car and just got on the road and filmed this thing." The video is five and a half minutes long. In it, you see images of Smith flash by, surrounded by riv-

ers and lakes, mountains and can-

Ownerof Big Ed's Breads i

Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd.

$35 per person All proceeds support emergencyfood for Tickets may bepurchasedOnline at www.stvincentdepaulbend.org morethan 500 Bend households surviving in poverty eachmonth Or at the door! • *Mus t be 21 or older to attend this event'~ ~

It takes Smith's singer-songwrit• st

alt-rock: White Stripes, The Killers,

7 "Warriors Don't Cry"

M odest Mouse, etc.

clouds roll in above. Most of the

The result is a collection of songs

8-9 Rogers 8 Hammerstein Concert

that are sharp and introspective, chair, but each of his band mates but never lacking for momentum. appear in the clip at least once. They compare favorably to one of Strangers dance through here and Smith's biggest influences, the Idathere, as well. ho songwriter Josh Ritter. "The idea for me was to take The video debuted on Soul Pancake, a popular website founded by those two things and smash 'em to"The Office" star Rainn Wilson. To gether, the sort of alt-rock aesthetic date, it has more than 54,000 views and this lyrical singer-songwriter on YouTube. thing," Smith said last week after "Oregon's got a big backyard, returning from Pacific City, where and I've never reallyventured he was working on The Weather around it much," Smith said. "It was Machine's next release. "It's hard to figure out what we're amazing. I wouldn't trade it for the world. I have this whole context for gonna sound like a couple albums from now because we're always this place that I grew up in that I didn't have before." trying to figure out what new noisThe Weather Machine's album, es we can make." time, it's Smith solo on a folding

— Reporter: 541-383-0377, bsalmon@bendbulletin.com

l

I

FEBRUAR Y

Greenwood Avenue in Bend from the top of Pilot Butte, as ominous

listen.

I

— Reporter: 541-383-0377, bsalmon@bendbulletin.com

yons and more. Sometimes he's er style — something he honed as wearing a T-shirt, other times a a student in Sisters High School's Americana Project program coat. There's sunshine and sunsets; and filters it through the full band, at 2:14, you get a nice view down which brings out his love of '00s

released last April, is a wonderful

11-12 Fly Fishing Films 14 High Desert Chamber Music 15 "Thomas Paine" 16 Carlos NunezNEIN 18 Gizmo Guys 21-22 Mountain Films 26 Mark Russell r

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musie

PAGE 6 + GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

I

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• Supporting many of your favorite non-profits

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By Ben Salmon The Bulletin

bsent Minds is a punk band, but you'd have to forgive folks for wondering exactly what this band does when they see a cello case coming out of the tour van.

A

Indeed, the Portland-based quartet

— which will play in Bend Saturday night (see "If you go") — does classic '90s-inspired pop-punk, but also incorporates the elegant sound of the Isaac Hayden's cello. The result is punk with an unexpected texture.

Hayden's band mates are guitarist Joel Hixon, drummer DJ Woods and bassist Davey Death Ray, though not

for long; Hayden's leaving the band

r- M O'D

Ifyou go What:Absent Minds, with Tuck 8 Roll When:9 p.m. Saturday Cost:Free Where:Third Street Pub, 314S.E. Third St., Bend Contact: ww w.facebook.com/absentmindspdx or 541-306-3017 Day amongst others. GO!: Is there any sort of theme to

your new album "The Misery of Correcting Past Mistakes"? DDR: We didn't necessarily set out

to have a theme for the record, but this GO! Magazine caught up with Dav- particular batch of Joel's songs do tie ey DeathRay and asked him about together in a big way ... In the lyrics that and more. Here's our interview. I see themes of a lost generation tryGO!: How'd Absent Minds form? ing to find its place in the world while Davey Death Ray: Joel started the each individual is also trying to build band with Isaac after they met while and maintain a strong personal idengoing to college in Portland in 2007 tity. It's all pretty uplifting, though, ... the cello has been there since the which I hope people find charming. band's inception. GO!:So Isaac is leaving the band? after the Bend show.

Ilsl • II • > • I jjlj l l l l l

GO!: Do other bands, promoters

DDR:After six years, Isaac has de-

or venues give you guys funny looks, cided topursue other endeavors. We like they don't expect the cello to are going to look for a replacement

• >

0

I

(indie-roots-pop),Crow's

a thoughtful gift • Convenient before or after the mountain

I

Feb. 7 —VagabondOpera (steampunk cabaret),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.com. Feb. 7 —TheCabinProject

*'

• Fair trade coffee makes

I

work within the songs'? Or are most

cellist, but in the meantime the three

folks pretty open to it? DDR: Sometimes the sound guy

of us are going to work on an EP as well as a couple split 7-inch releases.

is put off on how exactly to make it

ON SALE EDIDAY

I OAnn

GO!: Are you concerned about

work, but we have it figured out and losing that distinctive quality of the bring everything we need to a show. band's sound? Most people seem interested in seeing DDR:W e havehad a couplepracticwhat role the cello has in the band. es as a three-piece and it wasn't nearGO!:What bands do you think most ly as bare sounding as I had expected. influence Absent Minds' songs'?

It is a bummer to lose such a melod-

DDR: Joel and I share quite a few ic, game-changing instrument, but favorites such as the Descendents and we're looking forward to seeing how

' 0

• •

NOFX, but we all have subtle differences in taste. On the road we've been listening to Paint It Black, DC Fallout, Off With Their Heads, and Saves the

this next chapter will help shape the

band's music.

— Reporter: 541-383-0377, bsalmon@bendbulletin.com

Feet Commons, Bend, www. crowsfeetcommons.com. Feb. 12 —RoseWindows (psych), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Feb. 12 —Patrimony (blues), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.com. Feb. 14 —Vibesquad (electronic music),Domino Room, Bend, www.facebook.com/ slipmatscience. Feb. 14 —Dirty DozenBrass Band (N'awlins jazz),Oregon Winterfest, Old Mill District, Bend, www.oregonwinterfest.com. Feb. 14 —TonySmiley(looprock), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.

com.

Feb. 15 —Jack Martin and The Houseband(explosive folk),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.

com. Feb.15 —Menomena(indie rock),Oregon Winterfest, Old Mill District, Bend, www. oregonwinterfest.com. Feb.16 —Rehab(Southern rock-rap),Domino Room, Bend, www.bendticket.com. Feb. 16 —Carlos Nunez(Celtic), Tower Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.org. Feb. 21 —SasspariNa (rootsrock), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub. com. Feb. 21 —DJBarisone (electronic music),Dojo, Bend, www.dojobend.com. Feb.21 —SuzyBogguss(popfolk),The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.com. Feb. 21-22 —Mary StaNings Quartet Oazz),The Oxford Hotel, Bend, www.jazzattheoxford.com. Feb.22 — SasspariUa(rootsrock),The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.com. Feb. 23 —Diego's Umbrella

(pirate-polka),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.com. Feb. 28 —Nicoluminous (electronic music),The Astro Lounge, Bend, www.facebook. com/slipmatscience. March1 —Arsonists GetAUThe Girls(metal),Pakit Liquidators, Bend.


musie

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 7

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Wake up with Morning Ritual Listening to "The Clear Blue Pearl," the new album from Morning Ritual, is kind

of like going to church. The songs are mostly built around perfectly nuanced keyboard playing courtes y Ben

IJI

If you were, say, anywhere from in high school through college and into young adulthood in the '90s and you listened to pop music, MTV

or the radio, Toad's big hits were probably part of the soundtrack of your life. We're talking "All I W ant," "Walk On the Ocean," "Fall Down,"

D a r wish, a P o r t - "Something's Always Wrong"

land-based pianist with an adventurous spirit who is best known for his work in jazz. The vocals are rich and re-

and "Come Down," all fine

launched into a new stratosphere with "Little Darlin',"

houettes" and "The Stroll,"

of the era, you'll want to find

among others. The Tokens your way to the Tower Thethree- to five-minute exam- their 1957 blockbuster. turned their versions of "La atre on Saturday evening. ples of easygoing, catchy, Do each of these groups Bamba," "In the Midnight The Tokens and The Diafolksy pop-rock colored with have other things on their Hour" and "Don't Worry mnond; 730 p.m. Saturday, verberant, thanks to Darwish varying shades of light and resumes'? Of course they do. Baby" into hits, and also pro- doors open6:30 p.m.; $40-$50 and his collaborators, Kate- dark. You don't get to tour five de- duced records like The Chif- plus fees, available through lyn and Laurie Shook, aka Truth be told, those tunes cades after your biggest song fons' "He's So Fine" and "One the venue; Tower Theatre, twin-sister folk act the Shook have aged better than a lot of without following it up with Fine Day." 835 N.W. Wa ll St . , B e nd; Twins. At times they collective- their contemporaries. They're something. The Diamonds Point is: If you like the vo- www.towertheatre.org or ly sound like a choir; more of- no "Hey Jealousy," but what also scored hits with "Why cal groups of the 1950s and 541-317-0700. — Ben Salmon ten they have a sort of smooth, ls? Do Fools Fall in Love," "Sil- '60s and the biggest songs Don't stay stuck in the past, throwback jazz-pop vibe. And "Pearl" is slow-paced though, because Toad isn't. and gorgeous, almost rever- When the band hits the Towi ential in tone. It tells a story er Theatre on Wednesday, of a man and woman who they'll be playing their hits,

set out to find the "clear blue

pearl" after drought wreaks havoc on their land, and you'll

but also songs from a new album "New Constellation,"

their first collection of new

just have to listen to the whole thing at www.morningrituaL

material in more than a de-

rest of the story.

gotten this far in this brief,

cade. It sounds like Toad the bandcamp.com to hear the Wet Sprocket, and if you've On Saturday, Morning Rit- then that's a good thing. ual will play The Belfry in SisToad the Wet Sprocket; 730 ters. They're going to sound p.m. Wednesday, doors open great in that old space. Local 6:30 p.m.; $34-$39 plus fees, folk-pop s i nger-songwriter available through the venue; Anastacia will open the show.

T~

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Tower Theatre, 835N.W. Wall

Morning Ritual, with Anasta- St., Bend; www.towertheatre cia; 7 p.m. Saturday; $10 plus .org or 541-317-0700. fees in advance at www.bend ticket.com, $12 at the door;

The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; ww w . belfryevents .com or 541-815-9122.

Toad the Wet Sprocket at the Tower

Doo-wop groups on tap Saturday

4

One song. S ometimes, that's al l

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it

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takes. Saturday night at the Tower Theatre, two groups that know the power of one

Ah, Toad the Wet Sprocket. song — The Tokens and The Diamonds — will get togethpopulation, this Santa Bar- er for a night of doo-wop and bara, Calif., band instantly classic rock 'n' roll. For a certain segment of the evokes memories of a very

The Tokens are best known

specific time — a time likely for their hit recording of "The simpler and more carefree, Lion Sleeps Tonight" in 1961. and certainly younger. And The Diamonds' career

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T Ower T h e a t r e

835 NW Wall St., Bend, OR 97701

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PAGE 8 + GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at H bendbulletin.comlevents.

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TODAY JAZCRU:Jazz; 5-8 p.m.; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 N.W. Lower Bridge Way, Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. SECONDANNIVERSARYPARTY: Featuring live music by soulgrass band Tone Red (5 p.m.) and funk-rockers The Sweatband (7:30 p.m.); Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www.btbsbend.com. KIM KELLEYANDDAVEEHLE:Acoustic soul and folk; 6 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588 or www. bendblacksmith.com. LOS RATONES: Indierock;6 p.m.; Jackson's Corner, 845 N.W. Delaware Ave., Bend; 541-647-2198. PAUL EDDY: Twang-pop; 6 p.m.; Wild Rose, 150 N.W.Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-382-0441. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and pop; 7-10 p.m.; Tumalo FeedCo., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. MUCKRACKERS: Bluegrass; 7-9 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541728-0095 or www.riverrimcoffeehouse. com. RENO HOLLER:Pop;7 p.m.;Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; 7:30 p.m.; Kelly D's, 1012 S.E. Cleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. JUNIPER ANDGIN: Folk-rock and Americana, with Second Son; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-

8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com. RUCKUS:Rock; 8 p.m.; Checkers Pub,329 S.W. SixthSt.,Redmond; 541-548-3731. THE WEATHERMACHINE: The Portland folk-rock band performs, with There Is No Mountain; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. (Pg. 3) THE C.O.B.:Country; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. ELEKTRAPOD: Funk, soul and rock; 9 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; 541-389-2558 or www.bluepinebar.com. NECKTIEKILLER:Ska;9 p.m .;Third Street Pub, 314 S.E. Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017. WHISKEY MYERS: TheTexascountry

band performs; $6plusfees; 9p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www.maverickscountrybar.com. DJ HARLO: 10 p.m .;Dojo,852 N.W . Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www.dojobend.com.

SATURDAY SECONDANNIVERSARY PARTY: Featuring music by DJ Byrne (5 and 8 p.m.) and funk-jam band Upstate Trio, funk-jam (6 p.m.); Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W.Pence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www. btbsbend.com. MAI AND DAVE: Acoustic Americana; 6 p.m.; Scanlon's, 61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend; 541-382-8769.

• AMY SPEACE VISITS THEBELFRY On AmySpeace's2013album "How to Sleepin a Stormy Boat," there is asong called "The Sea and the Shore" that pairs the Nashville, Tenn., singer-songwriter with rising folk singer John Fullbright in a duet. It's an achingly gorgeous tune that showcases both artists' compelling voices aswell as Speace's natural knack for a simple, memorable melody. But most of all, it is a masterfully told story of lost love, perhaps nosurprise from a celebrated songstress who started out as aShakespearean actress years ago. On Thursday, Speacewill stop in Sisters for a show atTheBelfry, where shewon't have Fullbright around, but shewill be joined by New York City folkie KennyWhite. Details below.

• ELEKTRAPOD,MOSTEST BEGIN RUNS There are acouple of residencies starting this week that are worth mentioning, both featuring popular

Bend bands. Tonight begins a five-week run of Friday (well, one Saturday onFeb.15) shows at Blue Pine Kitchen for Elektrapod, a sextet led by guitarist GabeJohnson and keyboardistBradJones.Expecta blazing blend of funk, rockand electro-pop. And on Monday night, Dojo will host the first of four straight Mostest Mondays with local jam-pop group The Mostest. Each will have aspecial guest: Monday's is Travis Ehrenstrom, Feb.10's is Julianne Southwell, Feb.17'sisHobbsMagaretandFeb.24 isGabe Johnson. Details below. • PUNK AND METAL ATBIG T'S Big T's in Redmond is hosting a tasty gathering of local punk 'n' metal bandsSaturday night: The Beerslayers, the Hooligans, Lampand Rutabaga. Because if Big T's doesn't do this, who will? Third Street Pub, but that's about it. Details below.

LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and pop; Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W.Century 7-10 p.m.; Tumalo FeedCo., 64619 U.S. Dr., Bend; 541-389-2558 or www. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. bluepinebar.com. MORNING RITUAL:The Portland Americana band performs; $10 plus fees SUNDAY in advance, $12 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; NO EVENTSLISTED. The Belfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.

com. (Pg. 7) THE TOKENSAND THE DIAMONDS:

Classic popanddoo-wop; $40-$50 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.,doorsopen at6:30 p.m .; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.

org. (Pg. 7) PARLOUR:Roots and folk; 7 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing 8 Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com. RENO HOLLER:Pop;7 p.m.;Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. ABSENT MINDS:Punk rock from Portland, with Tuck 8 Roll; free; 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 S.E. Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017. (Pg. 6) RUCKUS:Rock; 8 p.m.; Checkers Pub,329 S.W. SixthSt.,Redmond; 541-548-3731. THE BEERSLAYERS:Metal and punk rock, with the High Desert Hooligans, Lamp andRutabaga;$3;8 p.m .;BigT's, 413 S.W. Glacier Ave., Redmond; 541504-3864 or www.reverbnation.com/ venue/bigts. SLICKSIDE DOWN: 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889 or www. northsidebarfun.com. WORLD'S FINEST:The Portland funkjam band performs; free; 9 p.m.; Blue

MOMDAY OPEN MIC:6-8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. OPEN MIC: 7 p.m.,signups at6:30 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. THE MOSTEST: Thejam-pop band performs, with special guest Travis Ehrenstrom; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www.dojobend.com.

TUESDAY LISA DAEANDTHEROBERTLEE TRIO:Jazz standards; 5-7:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889 or www. northsidebarfun.com. LEROY NEWPORT'SBANJO JAM: Bluegrass; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095.

WEDNESDAY MICHAELLEWIS MARTINEZ: Singersongwriter; 5:30 p.m.; Flatbread CommunityOven,375 S.W .Powerhouse Drive, Suite130, Bend; 541-728-0600. OPEN MIC:7-9 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow

— Ben Salmon

Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095. TUMBLEWEEDPEEPSHOW:Soulful roots and bluegrass; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. TOAD THE WETSPROCKET:The California folk-pop band performs; $34$39 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at6:30p.m.;TowerTheatre,835 N.W . Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. (Pg. 7)

THURSDAY TOM ANDHEATHER:Pop; 5-8 p.m.; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 N.W. Lower Bridge Way, Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. HILSTAND COFFEY: Chamber-folk;6-8 p.m.; The Lot, 745 N.W.Columbia St., Bend; 541-610-4969. AN EVENINGWITH AMY SPEACE AND KENNY WHITE: FolkandAmeri cana music; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. BROKENDOWNGUITARS: Rock 'n' soul; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.FrancisSchool,700 N.W .Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.

mcmenamins.com. OPEN MIC:8 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. LADIESNIGHT WITH MC MYSTIC:9 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. • SUBMITAN EVENT by em ail ingevents@ bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Include date, venue, time and cost.


60! MAGAZINE• PAGE 9

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

musie reviews Spotlight:Against Me!

A Great Big World "IS THERE ANYBODY OUT THERE?" Epic Records

Consideringhowunexpected A Great Big World's breakthrough success with the wrenching ballad "Say Something" has been, it man. Reconvening his longtime "Scratch" Perry, helped give birth seems only fitting that the duo's debut "Is There Anybody Out

quartet, Wilson again shines with

both at NYU, shot to the top of the

tin and Wood, Medeski's talents

to remix culture.

"Summer Dub" samples the phrase "I painted..." and loops it among psychedelic atmospherics, reverb-drenched flute and percus-

some unexpected help in keyThere'?" is filled with even more boardist John Medeski. surprises. Often lumped into some jamIan Axel and Chad Vaccarino, band ghetto for his ventures with who teamed up when they were the avant-funk trio Medeski Mar-

Courtesy Ryan Russell

sion. At one point the track nearly consumes itself with echoes of

pop charts after they memora- have long been harder to pigeon- echoes. bly performed "Say Something" hole, including a contemplative As a stand-alone entity, "Have with Christina Aguilera on "The solo record in 2013. Here, he's a Fun ..." is a mesmerizing, and Voice," the raw breakup song be- precisely moving part on an al- utterly strange, listen. Though comingeven more poignant asa bum that should be mandatory hardly essential for anyone but

Against Me! members Inge Johansson, from left, James Bowman, Laura

duet between Axel and Aguilera.

Jane Grace and Atom Willard recently released their sixth album, "Trans-

However, those lookingto place jazz-curious Phish-heads alike. the subgenre. — Chris Barton, Los Angeles Times — Randall Roberts, A Great Big World into a small,

gender Dysphoria Blues."

a coustic balladeer box will b e "TRANSGENDER DYSPHORIA Total Treble Records

Everything and nothing has changed on the new Against Me! album, the Florida group's sixth. The band still traffics in full-throttle

tle track, which opens the album with "Your tells are so obvious/

BLUES"

Shoulders too broad for a girV Keeps you reminded/ Helps you to remember where you come

from." Grace and fellow guitarist

a n d f u l l - throated James Bowman still share anthe-

punk rock, deploying buzz-saw mic riffs inspired by the Clash, guitars and shout-along choruses Billy Bragg, and NOFX (whose for overt sociopolitical purposes.

bassist sits in on a few tracks), but

But on "Transgender Dysphoria Blues," the quartet has a new

there's a bit more of the Thermals

r hythm section and, i n

and Gaslight Anthem here. The s o m e guitars have more gloss than grit,

ways, a new leader: the former Tom Gabel is now Laura Jane Grace, and most songs address

her transformation in explicit, often profane language. The vocals are still a gravelly bark, especially on the terrific ti-

while the lyrics are unvarnished (and often unprintable). This fascinating, brief album flags a bit in its second half, but it's provocative throughout. — Steve Klinge, The Philadetphialnquirer

shocked by how eclectic"Is There Anybody Out There?" is musically and lyrically. How it all fits together is probably a mystery to everyone but A Great Big World, but they approach it with such passion and joyfulness on "Is There Anyone Out There?" thatyou endup going along for the wild ride and enjoyingit. — Glenn Gamboa, Newsday

Matt Wilson Quartet + John Medeski "GATHERING CALL" Palmetto Records You can't talk about drummer Matt Wilson without talking

listening for traditionalists and

Los Angeles Times

Bill Callahan

Young the Giant

"HAVE FUN WITH GOD" Drag City Records

"Cough Syrup" and "My Body"

inations of "Dream River" songs

California band froze for a bit. "Mind Over Matter" is their

in 2010, unusual anthems that connected with huge audiences. When it came time to follow up

the successful debut, though, the

that have been stripped of much of their structure to create something else altogether. The practice was common in 1970s reggae, when artists such

post-writer's-block effort, and it feels oddly unsure and con-

about swing, that pulse of jazz

The most influential producers,

than 250 recordings as a side- most notably King Tubby and Lee

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the rock world with its smashes

is a remix record that reimagines each of the eight tracks as though channeled through Kingston, Jamaica. This is Bill Callahan in dub: bass-heavy, echoed exam-

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Young the Giant surprised

daimed"Dream River," Bill Callahan's new "Have Fun With God"

that's been his specialty on more

AlTRACTIONS!

THE BULLE TIN

"MIND OVER MATTER" Fueled by Ramen

A companion to last year's ac-

fined. There's clearly some worry they're trying to shake off, esas Burning Spear and Peter Tosh pecially in the single "It's About offered both studio recordings Time," where they discuss paand "versi ons" ofthe same song. ralysis and lurch into Incubus

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hardcore fans, it's a solid stab at

115

territory. — Glenn Gamboa, Newsday

CALL YOUR BULLETIN SALES REPRESENTATIVE FOR DEADLINES AND 2014 RATES

541-382-1811

The Bulletin


PAGE 10 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

rinks heads up Zwickelmania event set for February 0

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Greg Cross/The Bulletin

We celebrate craft beer culture every month here in Central Oregon, but in February you can do so and call it Zwickelmania! The free, sixth annual eventhosted by the Oregon Brewers Guild — will happen in more than 67 breweries throughout Oregon on Feb. 15 from11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Participating locations will offer a variety of events, including beer tastings, special releases, brewery tours and more. Local breweries participating so far include10 Barrel, Bend Brewing Co., Crux Fermentation Project, Deschutes, GoodLife, McMenamins, Riverbend, Silver Moon and Worthy. The guild will provide free shuttl ebusesinBend,Eugene and Portland to transport folks from brewery to brewery. For more info, visit oregoncraft beer.org/events/zwickelmania.

Broken TopBottle Shop celebrates 2nd birthday

By Beau Eastes

setters in the microbrewing phe-

The Bulletin

nomenon, while Odell Brewing (also out of Fort Collins) and Elysian Brewing (Seattle) are making

unday's Super Bowl is full of interestingsubplots.

S

The

N F L' s t o p -ranked some of the most innovative brews

offense matching up against the league's No. 1 defense. Peyton Manning vs. Richard Sherman. Thefirst Super Bowltobeplayed outdoors in coldweather. The num-

on the market today.

ber of Lit'I Smokies I will consume

up of some of our favorite Washington and Colorado beers! • Ten Fidy Imperial Stout, Oskar Blues Brewery (Lyons, Colo.)

duringthecourseofthegame. And of course, this is the best Microbrew Bowl in Super Bowl

So in celebration of the top mi-

crobrew Super Bowl we can hope for until the resurrection of the Portland Breakers, here's a round-

history. Named after its 10.5 percent alWashington (158 breweries) cohol content, this monster stout is and Colorado (151) are leaders in just the thing for a Super Bowl in the craft brew world as well as the New Jerseyin February. Chocolate NFL; the two states are home to malt combined with actual chocthe second- and third-most micro-

olate and coffee make this one of

breweries in the country, trailing the tastiest imperial stouts in the only California's 316. (Oregon, ac- West. • Law of Nature Pale Ale, Everycording to the Brewers Association's most recent numbers, has 140 body's Brewing (White Salmon, craft breweries, the fourth-highest Wash.) total in the U.S.) On the opposite end of the specNew Belgium Brewing in Fort trum than an imperial stout, EveryCollins, Colo., and Redhook out of body'spale ale is crisp and dean the Seattle both were early trend- but with plenty of hop. It's a good

Want towatchtheSuper Bowl live onadigscreen? Here are a few local options: • Tin Pnn TheaterandSporkareteaming up for a special Super Bowl screening. Theevent features All-You-Can-Eat Spork (including spicy fried chicken, hoisin ribs and chilaquiles) during the game.Cost is $15 inadvance, $20 at the door. Space atTin Pan is very limited, so reserve aspot at either business. 2:30 p.m. 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, Bend. • Volcanic Theatre Pnh will project the game onits16-foot screen. The event includes prizes, contests, gamesandfood catered by Lil Bit of Texas. 3:30 p.m. (doors open at 2p.m.) Free. 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend. • McMennminsOldSt. FrancisSchool continues its NFLviewing parties with the ultimate finale of the season. McMenamins' full menu of food, ales, wines andspirits will be available for purchase. 3:20 p.m. (doors open at2p.m.)Free.700N.W.Bond St.,Bend. — Jenny Wasson

halftime beer to get you going for the second half. • Split Shot Stout, Elysian Brewery (Seattle) An espresso milk stout using Portland's Stumptown coffee and a bit of sweetened milk, Split Shot

combines just about everything great in the Pacific Northwest into one beer. A nice dessert brew.

• Easy Street Wheat, Odell Brewing (Fort Collins, Colo.) A consistent medalist at t h e Great Amercian Beer Festival, this

unfiltered wheat beer goes down especially easy during the summer ... or Central Oregon's weirdly warmwinter. — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbulletin.com

Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe (1740 N.W.Pence Lane, Bend) will celebrate its second anniversary with live music, specials and more tonight and Saturday. The "brew hub" opened in February of 2012 andoffers more than 450 varieties of beer, cider, mead, sake, kombuchaand nonalcoholic beverages, according to its website. "Our customers, employees and community are the best part about the Bottle Shop," said co-owner Diana Fischetti. "Sharing BTBS with our brew hub community is very rewarding." The live music lineup looks like this:

TONIGHT 5 p.m.— Tone Red (whiskey-inspired soul tunes) 7:30 p.m.— The Sweatband (groovy funk-rock) SATURDAY

5 and 8 p.m.— DJ Byrne (dance music) 6 p.m.— Upstate Trio (funky jam band) Contact: www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. — Bulletin staff


drinks

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 1

event spotlight

what's happening?

Worthy marks 1st birthday hard to believe that ayear hasalready passed since !t'sWorthy Brewing Co. first opened its doors on Bend's east side.

And while its getting tougher andtougher these days for a new brewery to make animpact on the ever-growing and expanding Central Oregon craft beer scene, it's undeniable that Worthy has donejust that. In its first year, the brewery can already boast a killer IPA, agrowing line of innovative craft beers, a hopsgreenhouseand abar that's more interesting than most, having beenconstructed from wood used in the OregonState Hospital in Salem (formerly known as the Oregon State InsaneAsylum). Not to mention, Worthy's "beer campus" is located in apart of Bend that's been largely untapped by local brewpubs. In other words, Worthy's madewavesthis past year, and the brewery will celebrate its first anniversary with a variety of specials andevents almost every day next week to mark the milestone. On Tuesday, the pubwill host a tapping of its inaugural brew, the GoTime Pale (GTX), with pints costing $2.40 that day. Wednesdaywill feature flight and appetizer pairing specials, while Thursday will feature all-day $3 pint specials.

: f i~

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Andy Tullis I The Bulletin file photo

Patrons visit Worthy Brewing for lunch last year.

Next Friday, Feb. 7,Worthy will host a Firkin Friday event, where the brewery will serve aFirkin of GTX. The brewery's official one-year anniversary bash will take place Feb. 8.Festivities will begin at 5 p.m.and will feature live music from KCFlynn, Amanda Sarles and GBots & the Journeymen. Lawngameswill also be in full swing at the event. Admission to the party will be free. Happy birthday, Worthy! — Megan Kehoe

BEND'S NEWEST CROWLER FILL I L OVE J O V ' E

M AR EET

O H

TODAY SECONDANNIVERSARY PARTY: Live music by Tone Redand The Sweatband; free; 5 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-7280703 or www.btbsbend.com. BEER TASTING:Tastings from Eugene's Ninkasi Brewing; free; 5-7 p.m.; Platypus Pub, 1203 N.E. Third St. (downstairs), Bend; www.platypuspubbend.com; 541-323-3282. SATURDAY SECONDANNIVERSARY PARTY: Live music by DJ Byrne and Upstate Trio; free; 5 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www.btbsbend.

com. THURSDAY BEER TASTING:Tastings of Sierra Nevada brews from Chico, Calif.; free; 6-8 p.m.; Platypus Pub, 1203

FEB. 7

CRAB FEEDBEERDINNER: Four courses of crab paired with Chainbreaker White IPA, Saison, Deschutes River Ale and Black Butte Porter; $80 including gratuity, reservations requested; 6-10 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery Mountain Room, 901 S.W. Simpson Ave., Bend; 541-385-8606 or www. deschutesbrewery.com. FEB. S FIRST ANNIVERSARYPARTY: Featuring live music, birthday specials and more; free; 5 p.m.; Worthy Brewing Company, 495 N.E. Bellevue Drive, Bend; 541639-4776 or www.worthybrewing.

com. • 8UBMfTANEVENTby emailing drfnkse bendbulletin.com. Deadline is10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0377.

lawmIIliIBNW meIBeer • Over 600 Wines • Local Domestic S. Imported Beers • Over 1200 Spirits, Premium Cigars

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541-388-1188 ~ www.celovejoys.com

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N.E. Third St. (downstairs), Bend; www.platypuspubbend.com; 541-323-3282.

WINE, BREWS 81SPIRITS 155 SW CenturyDrive, Ste. 100,Bend

541-390-432 JI

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ILocated insideWest BendLiquor Store)

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475 SW Powerhouse Drive 541-9994999 • www.anthonys.com

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regs gri'll wwwgregsgrill.com 395 5W PowerhouseDrive

541-382-2200

• SEASONALS • GROWLERS

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• MENUS & UPCOMING EYENTS

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our over all the latest brew news at www.bendbulletin.com/drinks


PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

Courtesy Eugene Ballet Co.

Eugene Ballet Company dancers perform as a harem in "Scheherazade,n one of several other ballets on stage Thursday at Bend High School.

• Eugene BalleCompany t brings 'lots of different works' to Bend High By David Jasper

Pimble said. "During 'The Nut-

The Bulletin

cracker'season, we tour at least

O

n Thursday, Eugene Ballet 14 cities and do 24 to 30 perforCompany will bring all 21 mances. We're a busy company." of its dancers, plus crew,

Since its 1978 founding, the

Spaight among America's most talented young choreographers. His "Scheherazade" debuted at

What:EugeneBalletCompany When:7:30 p.m. Thursday Where:Bend High School, 260

the Oregon Ballet Theater in 1990 at the Keller Auditorium in Port-

N.E. Sixth St., Bend

back toBend High School for an evening featuring four ballets, including "Scheherazade" (see "If you go").

company has performed in 32 states and journeyed internationally to perform in Canada, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, India, Jor-

land. Previous Bend visits include

It's a lot of work to transport cast, crew and sets over the pass

dan, Syria, Tunisia and Taiwan,

folk tales of "One Thousand and

according to eugegenballet.org. "Scheherhazade" features the for just one performance, but the company is used to nimbly bal- choreography of Dennis Spaight, ancing travel and dancing, said the beloved Oregon choreograToni Pimble, co-founder of the pher who died in 1993. In a 1980 ballet company. national competition, ballet icon "We do quite a bit of touring,"

M ikhail

B a r y shnikov n a m ed

Ifyou go

performances of " Swan L ake" and "Romeo & Juliet."

Cost: $12-$42 Contact:541-485-3992 or www.eugeneballet.org

de" in 1888.

costumes are actually very beautiful. It's a lot of eye candy, and

very dramatic." " Scheherazade" clocks in a t about 45 minutes and gets top bill-

of music," said Pimble. "It's very beautiful."

ing in the program, but the evening actually opens with Melissa Nolen's "Idyll for Eight," which theformer company member choreographed for the Eugene Ballet

"Scheherazade" premiered as

in 2006. The ballet is set to Czech

Taking inspiration from the One Nights," in which Scheherazadeenthralled hermurderous husband with a nightly story, Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov wrote the symphonic suite "Scheheraza-

"There's a Golden Slave and

a Sultan, and of course, a harem with all of these beautiful women in it — which luckily we have," she said, laughing. "The sets and the

a ballet by the Ballets Russes in

composer Leos Janacek's "Idyll"

Paris in 1910, "at which point it created a sensation just because it

for string orchestra, also written in 1888.

It was "his most famous piece was so exotic," Pimble said.

Continued next page


THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

arts

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13

If yougo What:The Art of Alfred A. Dolezal When:Ongoing Where:7525 Falcon Crest Drive, EagleCrest Resort, Redmond Cost:Free; prices of works varies Contact:541-989-3510

• New gallery in Redmond features oils by Austrian-born painter Alfred A. Dolezal

way we're all woven together

By David Jasper

that makes up our existence.'" Dolezal said that the in-

couplemoved lastyear after The Bulletin living in Virginia for 23 years. REDMONDDolezal's works are loaded ou could accuse Alfred with symbolism and fantastic A. Dolezal of living his imagery, pyramids, serpents life on "cruise control" and human figures. Each of — the phrasehe uses to sum the more than 250 works he up a life lived passively — but has painted aims to tell a story, you'd be wrong. inspired by history, scientific Born in Vienna, Austria, t heories, mythology, past-life in 1940, Dolezal recently told regression, physics and more. GO! Magazine that he For example, "The has sought answers to Searcher" depicts a ca~o - ' life's big mysteries since noeist emerging from ~ r ' fog, paddling toward he was a young child. .' His intellectual curioslight illuminating the ~' ity and lifelong search rocksahead. "The man sees the for answers about the Do l ezal meaning and nature of reflection of light, and existence led him to surrealis- (heads) towards the light," said ticpainting. Dolezal. "For me, the light is Dolezal was in his early o ur human body, because it's 20s when he began painting, a mirade machine." Partially

Y

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.

Submitted photo

"The Evolution of the Human Experience" showcases Alfred A. Dolezal's surrealistic style.

on a large staircase positioned between the two ships.

As he did with many of the paintings on hand, Dolezal explained the fascinating true story behind it: In 1898, American author Morgan Robert-

son published a novel called "Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan," the story of a suppos-

edly unsinkable ship that hits an iceberg in the North At-

CMI ci O

conclusions.

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t o m a k e p e o-

their lives and claim that they

world is made of, and when had lived a lie." you get to that higher level, Or lived a life on cruise you see it from a bird's eye control, in other words. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, point of view. It's not good or bad. It's just a tapestry; it's the djasper@bendbulletin.corn

lantic and sinks, just as the

and to date he has completed i l l u minated by the light is a

Titanic would 14 years later. It would seem to presage the

more than 250 paintings. Last pyramid and, even farther in

construction, and destruction,

of the Titanic years before the large gallery he and his wife, as he put it. ocean liner was even planned. Patti, opened in December in Als o i n the gallery hangs "Warnings can serve as Eagle Crest, a resort commu- "The Creation of a Reality," guideposts along out paths if nity near Redmond, where the which depicts two large ships. we recognize and heed them,"

II

I

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week, Dolezal led a tour of the t h e distance, a "crystal city,"

From previous page

"It's a 24-minute piece, very

lyrical, with lots of complex partnering," said P i mble. "There's no storyline. It's just

"It's a very interesting performance in that it's notjust the one headliner, 'Scheherazade,' but

(also) lots of different works on the program..."

— Toni Pimble, co-founder, Eugene Ballet Company simple dance." The second ballet on the program is "Two's Company," movement of Anton Dvorak's Speaking of the program as a piecePimble choreographed "American" for string quartet, a whole, Pimble said, "I know for the New York City Ballet's Dvorak wrote it while living in thereare a lotof dance fans in first Diamond Project perfor- the U.S., and it contains a blues Bend, and so we really want to mance series in 1992. influence that makes it"an ide- encourage them to attend the "The concept behind it was al 'love lost' theme," as Pimble's performance." "It's a very i nteresting to have more choreographers artistic director notes put it. present works for New York Pimble also choreographed performance in that it's not City Ballet, so I was very the last piece before intermis- just the one headliner, 'Schelucky to be invited to choreo- sion, "Bolero," written by Mau- herazade,' but (also) lots of graph a work ... for that very rice Ravel in 1928. different works on the pro"We've done a number of gram, which I think for a first Diamond Project," Pimble said. different versions, and this is lot of dance fans is always The nine-minute work for my version," she said. "It's just interesting." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, three dancers — two men and very passionate, and the full a woman — is set to the second company is in the ballet." djasper@bendbulletin.com

KAREN BANDY DESIGN JEWELER 25 NW MINNESOTA AVE. ¹5 • 541-388-0155

www.karenbandy.com SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING & GALLERY 834 NW BROOKS ST. • 541-382-5884

www.sageframlng-gallery.com PAUL SCOTT GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST. • 541-330-6000

www.paulscottflneart.com RED CHAIR GALLERY 103 NW OREGON AVE. • 541-306-3176

www.redchairgafferybend.com MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST. • 541-388-2107

www.mockingbird-gallery.com

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is to make people think and let them draw their own

ple think. We don't want to Dolezal writes of the painting convert them. Freedom of in a booklet for collectors of thought: I would (emphasize) his oil paintings and prints. that with all the paintings," "All of these are just ob- Dolezal said. "I enjoyed that s ervations," said hi s w i f e. freedom myself when I grew "Alfred's purpose is not to up. What I want to avoid is judge anybody. It's just to say, people to come to the end of 'These are the colors that our

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" We tr y One is called the Titanic, the other Titan. Two men stand

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arts

PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZINE

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ART E KH I B I T S

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landscapes by Kim Elton and fiber art by Beverly Adler; through today; 916 N.W. Sall St., Bend; 541-323-3277. CIRCLE OF FRIENDS ART& ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: ACADEMY:Featuring mixed media, Featuring the artwork of 30 furniture, jewelry and more; 19889 local artists; 57100 Beaver Eighth St., Tumalo; 541-706-9025. Drive, Building 19; www. DON TERRAARTWORKS: artistsgallerysunriver.com or Featuring more than 200 artists; 541-593-4382. 222 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541THE ART OFALFREDA. DOLEZAL: 549-1299 or www.donterra.com. Featuring oil paintings by the DOWNTOWN BEND PUBLIC Austrian artist; Eagle Crest LIBRARY:Featuring "Gratitude," Resort, 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, a themed exhibit in various wallRedmond; 434-989-3510 or www. hanging media; through March 3; alfreddolezal.com. 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-9846. ATELIER 6000:Featuring FRANKLIN CROSSING:"Deep "Darkness Into Light," an exhibit Space," featuring paintings by Ann exploring mythology, ritual and Bullwinkel and Bill Logan; through astronomy associated with the today;550 N.W. FranklinAve.,Bend; winter solstice; through today; 389 541-382-9398. S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite120, GHIGLIERI GALLERY: Featuring Bend; www.atelier6000.org or original Western-themed and 541-330-8759. African-inspired paintings and BEND CITYHALL:"Reflections sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 on Mirror Pond — Past, Present, W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.artFuture," featuring multimedia lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. artwork; through early March; 710 HOP N BEANPIZZERIA: Featuring N.W. Wall St.; 541-388-5505 or landscape art by Larry Goodman; rchristie©bendoregon.gov. 523 E. U.S. Highway 20, Sisters; 541-719-1295. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN exhibit of photographs by Diane WAREHOUSE:Featuring works Reed, Ric Ergenbrightand John by Jil lHaney-Neal;Tuesdaysand Vito; 1024 N.W. Bond St., Bend; Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., 541-382-8004. Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery. com or 541-617-6078. CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth JOHN PAULDESIGNS: Featuring Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; custom jewelry and signature series www.canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or with unique pieces; 1006 N.W. Bond 541-549-0366. St., Bend;www.johnpauldesigns. com or 541-318-5645. CHOCOLATEELEMENT:Featuring glass ornaments by Teri Shamilan, JUDI'SARTGALLERY: Featuring

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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

SAGE CUSTOM FRAMINGAND GALLERY:Featuring mixed media by Ron Raasch; through today; 834 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. SISTERSAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. MainAve.; 541-549-0251. SISTERSARTWORKS: "Junkyard Journey," junkyard inspired quilts by the Journey art quilt group; through Feb. 28; 204 W. Adams Ave.;www.sistersartworks.com or 541-420-9695. SISTERS GALLERY& FRAME SHOP:Featuring landscape

photography byGary Albertson; 252 W. Hood Ave.; www.garyalbertson.com or 541-549-9552. SISTERS PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring the Friends of the Sisters Library Annual Art Exhibit and Sale; through Feb. 26;110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070. ST.CHARLES REDMOND: "Heali ng Through Art" by the High Desert Art League; through March 31; 1253 N.W. Canal Boulevard; 541-548-8131. SUNRIVERAREAPUBLIC Courtesy Dorothy Eberhardt Photography LIBRARY:"Jewels of Nature," Painted boxes by Vanessa Julian will be displayed at Red Chair featuring the work of photographer Gallery as part of the "Celebration of Color" exhibit through today. Michael Jensen and jewelry artist Teresa Bowerman; through today; 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. works by Judi Meusborn PATAGONIA OBEND:Featuring SUNRIVERLODGE BETTY GRAY Williamson; 336 N.E. Hemlock St., photography by Mike Putnam; GALLERY:Featuring oil landscapes Suite13, Redmond; 360-325-6230. 1000 N.W. Wall St., Suite 140; from the Joyce Clark estate in the 541-382-6694. KAREN BANDYDESIGNJEWELER: upper gallery and oil landscapes by Featuring custom jewelry and RED CHAIRGALLERY:"Celebration Joanne Donaca and Janice Druian in paintings by Karen Bandy; through of Color," featuring woven fiberwork the lower gallery; through March 7; today;25 N.W. MinnesotaAve., by Stephanie Stanley, paintings 17600 Center Drive; 541-382-9398. Suite 5, Bend; www.karenbandy. and painted boxes by Vanessa TOWNSHEND'SBENDTEAHOUSE: com or 541-388-0155. Julian and paintings and jewelry "Breath of Life" artwork by Karen Z. by Jacqueline Newbold; through LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Ellis; through today; 835 N.W. Bond today; 103 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; St., Bend; 541-312-2001 or www. Featuring fiber art by Lori and www.redchairgallerybend.com or Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 S.W. townshendstea.com. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend; 541-306-3176. TUMALOART CO.: "Winter Salon," www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com or REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: featuring small fine artworks by 541-330-0840. "Photography 2014," works by gallery artists; through today; 450 MOCKINGBIRDGALLERY: six Central Oregon photographers S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, "Sacred Beauty," featuring bronze through Feb. 14; "A Tapestry of Bend; www.tumaloartco.com or sculptures by Sally Kimp; through Wilderness and Landscape," 541-385-9144. today; 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; photography by Cory O'Neill in VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIO www.mockingbird-gallery.com or the silent reading room, through AND GALLERY:Featuring glass 541-388-2107. today; 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; art, photography, painting, metal 541-312-1050. MOSAIC MEDICAL:Featuring sculptur eand more;222 W .Hood mixed-media collage paintings St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www. ROTUNDAGALLERY:"American by Rosalyn Kliot; 910 S. U.S. vistabonitaglass.com. Women," featuring Lindsay S. Highway 97, Suite 101, Madras; Morgan's depictions ofexperiences WERNER HOME STUDIO& 541-475-7800. with American women; through GALLERY:Featuring painting, THE OXFORD HOTEL: Featuring Feb. 28; Robert L. Barber Library, sculpture and more by Jerry Werner fine art prints by Ann Bullwinkel; Central Oregon Community College; and other regional artists; 65665 through today; 10 N.W. Minnesota 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; 93rd St., Bend; call 541-815-9800 Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. 541-383-7564. for directions.

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Find It All Onlinebendbulletjn.com TheBulletin


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

$469,000 j Rlver Front Condo, DowntownBend • Openfloor plan • Fresh paint • Granite counters • Two balconies • Detachedgarage

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$799,900 j 69173 Bay Drive

$599,900 j TuscanyStyle In Bradetich Park

• Wonderfulretreatatthe endof the road • Openkitchen, dining area,large living room &deck • Large barn/shop I storagesheds 541410.1200 BILL KAMMERER, BROKER541 388.0404

$339,000 j Historic Ranch On 9Acres, Bend • 3-4 bed, 2bath, 1959SF • 36X26 3bayshopbuilding • 24X25equipmentcarport • Completelyfencedwith corals • BordersGLM,MLS¹ 201306096 54'1 410.8557 DAVE DISNEY, BROKER541 388.0404

$449,500jSlngle Level,Huge Shop • 1920SF home on.72AC lot •2500SFshop/garage/studio ~High endfinishes • Paverentrance&patios • In town,nearshopping &medical

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$400,000 j 18 Modoc, Sunriver • 3 mastersuites • Extensiveremodelin 2011 • 1902 SF owneroccupied or vacation rental • Close toall Sunriver hastooffer 541.410.8084 SUSAN PITARRO, BROKER541.388.0404

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$159,000 j Move In Ready •ConvenientSouthwestRedmond location • Recently refurbished;newsinks, counters, lights, flooring,sprinklers • 1279 SF, 3 bed, 2 bath 54'I415 9446 JANELLE CHRISTENSEN,BROKER541 923.4663

Enjoy The Beautiful Bouhler BrooksCommunity Time toenjoylife &comeenjoy BoulderBrookswell maintained community. Ifyouwantto travel or just sit 8 enjoythe beautiful Central Oregon sunsetscomecheckusout. 541 410.8084 SUSAN PITARRO, BROKER541.388.0404

$829,000 j Shevlin RidgeStunner • R.D. building &design • New construction • 3553 SF&42X16RVgarage • 3 bed (2fug) & 2.5bath •Bonusroom plusofice 541 480.0448 JOHN TAYLOR, BROKER541.388.0404

$329,900 Mountain Views

•2590SFstunningloghomeon 1.67AC • Large openliving areasgreat for entertaining • Beautiful expansive decking & hottub area • Newer roof, heatpump &furnace • RV parking space with electrical hookups

•2bed,2bath,fullyfurnished • 5weeksperyear, fractional • DeschutesRiver& Easterly views • Enjoy Eagle Crest Amenities all year

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$177,999 j Northwest Redmond • 3 bed, 2 bath1418SF • New carpet&large kitchenisland • Separatedmaster suite • 36X14gatedRVparking • Close toparksandschools 54'1.4'10 7434 CHERYL TANLER, BROKER54'1 923.4663

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PAGE 16 + GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRID

Oregon Public Broadcasting documentary about one of the country's costliest Indian wars; free; 6 p.m.; High Desert Museum, "ALICE INWONDERLAND": Bend 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382Experimental Art Theatre produces the play 4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. based on the Lewis Carroll novel; $15, $10 for DEEP WINTERCOMMUNITY SUPPER AND students; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 ART SHOW:A multi-course gluten free meal N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-419-5558 and local art; $30, $10 for children younger or www.beatonline.org. than12; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Locavore, "KLUNKERZ:A FILM ABOUT MOUNTAIN 1216 N.E. First St., Bend; 541-633-7388 or BIKES":A screening of the 2006 documentary www.centraloregonlocavore.org. about a group of cyclists taking their HAVE AHEARTFORBEND: Featuring a beer adventures off-road; $5 in advance, $7 at the and wine tasting, buffet dinner, live music door; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. and dancing, live auction, raffle and more; Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. proceeds benefit the food bank at St. Vincent volcanictheatrepub.com. (Story, Page28) de Paul; $35, $5 raffle tickets; 6-10 p.m.; Elks "ANGELSTREET": A suspenseful play about Lodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road; 541a man slowly driving his gentle, devoted wife 389-6643 or www.stvincentdepaulbend.org. to the brink of insanity; $19, $15 seniors, $12 JOE FONTENOT: The stand-up comedian students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, performs; $10; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-38970 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 0803 or www.cascadestheatrical.org. or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. "PICASSO AT THE LAPIN AGILE":A play MORNINGRITUAL: The Portland Americana about Albert Einstein and Pablo Picasso band performs, with Anastacia; $10 plus fees in meeting at a bar called the Lapin Agile; $19, advance, $12 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; TheBelfry, $16 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. www.belfryevents.com. (Story, Page7) YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON THE WEATHER MACHINE: The Portland WINTER CONCERT: The Singers'School, folk-rock band performs, with There Is No Premiere and Debut choirs perform Mountain; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., international folk songs; $10; 7 p.m., doors Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents. open 6:30 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-385-0470 or com. (Story, Page3)

TODAY

WHISKEY MYERS:The Texas country band performs; $6 plus fees; 9 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com.

SATURDAY Feb.1 VFW BREAKFAST:A breakfast of biscuits, gravy, eggs, ham or sausage; $8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. "FIRST SPEAK":Participants in a personal storytelling workshop present their stories; free; 1-2:30 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-647-2233 or www. thenatureofwords.org. "ALICE INWONDERLAND": Bend Experimental Art Theatre produces the play based on the Lewis Carroll novel; $15, $10 for students; 2and 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-4195558 or www.beatonline.org. "THE MODOC WAR": A screening of the

www.ycco.org.

"ANGELSTREET":7:30 p.m .atGreenwood Playhouse; see Today's listing for details. "PICASSOATTHE LAPIN AGILE":7:30 p.m. at 2nd Street Theater; see Today's listing for details. THE TOKENSAND THE DIAMONDS: The

two doo-wop groupsperform; $40-$50 plus fees;7:30 p.m.,doorsopenat6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. (Story,

Page 7) ABSENT MINDS:Punk rock from Portland, with Tuck & Roll; free; 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 S.E. Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017.

(Story, Page6) WORLD'S FINEST:The Portland funk-jam band performs; free; 9 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W.Century Dr., Bend; 541-389-2558 or www.bluepinebar.com.

SUNDAY Feb. 2 MASTER-FLY:A fly-tying competition in the format of popular reality cooking shows; free for spectators, $5 for competitors; 11 a.m.; Fin and Fire,1604S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 12, Redmond; 307-680-0652 or www.

facebook.com/centraloregonmasterfly. NOTABLESSWING BAND:Featuring

blues, Latin, rock 'n' roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-728-8743 or www. notablesswingband.com. "ALICEIN WONDERLAND": 4 p.m.at Summit High School; see Today's listing for details.

MONDAY Feb. 3 "AMERICANVIOLET": A screening of the film about a single mother's struggles to prove her innocence; free; noon-2 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7412.

TUESDAY Feb.4 "AMERICANVIOLET": A screening of the film about a single mother's struggles to prove her innocence; free; 5-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend;541-383-7412. GREENTEAM MOVIENIGHT:A screening of the documentary"The Island President" about the president of the Maldive Islands fighting global warming; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. TAO — PHOENIXRISING:Thetraditional Japanese Taiko drummers perform; $32-$45 plusfees;7:30 p.m.,doors openat6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.

WEDNESDAY Feb. 5 TOAD THE WETSPROCKET:The California folk-pop band performs; $34-$39 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org. (Story, Page7)

THURSDAY Feb.6 AN EVENINGWITH AMY SPEACE AND KENNY WHITE:Folk and Americana music; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. EUGENEBALLET COMPANY: Thecom pany performs Scheherazade, Bolero and more; $12$42; 7:30 p.m.; BendHigh School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-485-3992, eballet©eugeneballet. org orwww.eugeneballet.org. (Story, Page12) • SUBMIT ANEVENTat www.bendbulletin.com/submitinfo or email events©bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0351.


LIVE MUSIC 5 MORE See Going Out on Page 8 for what's happening at local night spots.

DON'T MISS ... t

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'ANGEL STREET' TODAY & SATURDAY It's the last weekend to learn how to

drivesomeone mad! Thesuspenseful play gives it up at Greenwood Play-

house. Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo

TAO — PHOENIX RISING TUESDAY March over to the Tower Theatre to find your beat of a different drum. Japanese drummers perform. Submitted photo

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TOKENS & DIAMONDS SATURDAY Bom-bom-bomshang-a-lang-a-lang. The doo-wop groups perform at the Tower Theatre. Sumitted photo

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MASTER-FLY

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SUNDAY Contestants are the master chefs of their fly creations. Thinkstock


PAGE 18 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

planning ahea FEB. 7-13 FEB. 7-8 — THESOLOSPEAK SESSIONS:LOVE & HATE:Local storytellers perform, with special guests; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-

0803 or www.solospeak.com.

FEB. 7-8 — SUNRIVERCHILL OUT: Featuring a skating party, dummy downhill, K-9 keg pull, musher madness, glowshoe trek, prizes, entertainment

and more; freefor spectators,

registration prices vary per event; 7 p.m.Feb.7,10a.m.Feb.8;TheVillage at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; 541585-5000 or www.sunriversharc.com/ sunriver-chill-out. FEB.8-9— SOMETHING WONDERFUL:THE RODGERS AND HAMMERSTEINCONCERT:Featuring

musical performers andchoral groups from aroundCentral Oregon; proceeds benefit Court Appointed Special Advocates of Central Oregon; $30-$75 plusfees;7:30 p.m.,doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. FEB.8,12— "THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: RUSALKA": Starring Renee Fleming in a soulful fairy-tale opera, with Piotr Beczala as the prince; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 childr en;9:55 a.m .Feb.8,6:30 p.m.Feb. 12; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. FEB. 7 — FIRSTFRIDAYGALLERY WALK:Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine andfoodindowntown Bend andtheOld Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. FEB.7— "WARRIORS DON'T CRY": A one-woman show about racism, bullying and the power of language; contains racially charged language; $10,

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Submitted photo

The Russian folk band Trio Voronezh will perform twice at Ridgeview High School in Redmond on Feb. 9.

$5 children12 andyounger, plusfees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. FEB.7— "CHASING ICE":A screening of the 2012 documentary (PG-13) about National Geographic photographer James Balog capturing the changing glaciers across the Arctic; free, refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org. FEB. 7 — ANGELINE'8 BIRTHDAY BASH:Vagabond Operaand Baby Gramps perform, with Bend Circus Center; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 8-11 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com.

FEB.8 — BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET AND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. FEB. 8 — DADDYDAUGHTERDANCE: A Mardi Gras-themed dance for fathers or father figures and daughters; $32 per couple, $10 per additional guest, registration requested; 6-9 p.m.; RidgeviewHigh School,4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-310-8582 or www.redmondrotary.org. FEB. 8 — FRIENDS OF MUSIC'S "FOR THELOVE OF MUSIC": Concertrock violinist Aaron Meyer performs,

with the Summit High School band, orchestra and choir; silent auction and raffle; proceeds benefit Summit High School music programs; $15 in advance, $20 at the door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-815-5333 or www.friendsofmusic-

shs.org. FEB. 8 — AARONCRAWFORD:The Seattle country artist performs; $3 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com. FEB.9 — TRIO VORONEZH: The

Russian folk bandperforms; $60, $25 for students younger than 18; 2 and

6:30 p.m., doors open 45 minutes prior to show; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-3507222, redmondcca@hotmail.com or

www.redmondcca.org.

FEB. 9 — HOUSECONCERTS IN THE GLEN:The Eugene Americana singersongwriter Beth Wood performs, with Los Ratones; bring dish or beverage to share; $10-$15, reservation requested; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m. for potluck; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 N.W. Stannium Drive, Bend; 541480-8830 or ja©prep-profiles.com. FEB. 9 — WILL DURST:The political satirist performs "Boomeraging: From LSD to OMG"; $15 in advance, $17 at the door; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7

p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. FEB. 12 — ROSE WINDOWS: The Seattle psych-rock band peforms; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. FEB. 13 — "BYE BYEBIRDIE": A presentation of the1960 musical featuring choreography by Michelle Mejaski; dress in your1950s best; $12.50 for reserved seats, $10 at the door; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3600 or linda.nye©redmond. k12.or.us.


planning ahead

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

FEB. 14-20

Talks 8classes

FEB. 14-16 — OREGON WINTERFEST:Winter carnival featuring a marketplace, live music, ice and snowsculptures and rnore; $6-$8 in advance, $10 onevent day; 5-10 p.m. Feb.14, 11a.m.-10 p.rn. Feb.15, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Feb.16; Old Mill District, 661 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131 or www.

ALTEREDBOOKART: Learn different techniques to create an altered art book; $90, supply list; 10 a.rn.-3 p.rn. Saturday; Atelier 6000, 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend;541-330-8759 or www.atelier6000.

music, dinnerandadancelesson; proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal Center; $50, $10for music and dancingonly;4:30 p.m ,,7p.m.

music anddancing;Maverick's Country Bar & Grili, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. brightsideanimals.org/events/

yee-paw.

FEB. 14 — SUNRIVERMUSIC FESTIVAL'SVALENTINE'S DAY CONCERT &DINNER: TheSalem Big Band perforrns love songs, with dinnerand dancing; $80; 6 p.rn.; Sunriver Resort Great l-lall,17600 Center Drive; 541-593-9310 or www. sunrivermusic.org. FEB. 14 — "LOVE LETTERS": CascadesTheatricalCompany presents the A.R.Gurney play about love andfriendship between childhood friends; $19, $15for seniors ages 60andolder, $12 for students; 7:30 p.rn.; Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. FEB.14 — HIGHDESERTCHAMBER MUSIC SERIES: A Valentine's Day concert featuring Catgut Trio; $42, $15 students and children 18and younger; 8 p.rn., doors open at7 p.rn.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Waii

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BEGINNING ACRYLICS:Learn how to paint in acrylic with Carol Picknell; $25 per session; 1:30-4 p.m. Sunday; SageBrushers Gallery, 117 S.W. Roosevelt Ave., Bend; 360-8805088 or ninepick9@yahoo.com. LUNCH &LEARN: LearnaboutChim psInc. with Shayla Scott; free, bring your own lunch, dessert and coffee provided; noon-1 p.m. Wednesday; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133 or www.

oregonwinterfest.com. FEB. 14-15, 20 — "BYEBYE BIRDIE":Apresentation of the1960 musical featuring choreography by Michelle Mejaski; dress in your '50s best; $12.50 for reserved seats, $10at thedoor;7p m. Feb.14,2and7p m. Feb. 15, 7 p.m.Feb.20; Ridgeview HighSchool,4555 S.W .ElkhornAve., Redmond; 541-504-3600 or linda. nye©redmond.k12.or.us. FEB. 14-15 — "THECANTERVILLE GHOST":Thecornedic play by Oscar Wilde about a ghost living in anold mansion in England; $8, $5 students andseniors;7p m. Feb.14,2and 7 p.m. Feb. 15;Summit High School, 2855 N.W.Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-322-3300. FEB. 14 —YEEPAW!: A country western Valentine's dancewith live

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19

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bendseniorcenter.org. AARP SMART ORIVERCOURSE: Learn safe strategies that can reduce the likelihood of a crash and more; $15 for AARP members

per class, $20 for non-members per class, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Thursday; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-585-3114. LNTERNATIONAL STANDARDSTYLE: Learn how to slow waltz on Thursdays from Feb. 6-20; $49 (in district); 7-8 p.m. Thursday; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E.

St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. highdesettchamberrnusic.com. FEB. 15-16 —CHEMULTSLED DOG RACES: The20th year includes

sprints, skijor andpeeweeraces; free, butasno-park pass is required; 8:30 a.rn.; Walt Haring Sno-Park, a half rnile north of Chemultand a half mile west of U.S. Highway 97 on Miller Lake Road;www.sleddogchemult. Ol'g.

Ryan BrenneckeI The Bulletin file photo

Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133 or www. bendseniorcenter.org. SQUAREDANCELESSONS:Learn howto square dance with caller andteacher Ron Bliven; $5,

Food. Home Sc Garden Every Tuesday In ATHOME TheBulletin

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first lesson free; 7-9p.m. Thursday; PineForest Grange, 63214 N.E.BoydAcres Road, Bend; 541-517-8589 orwww.centraloregoncouncil.org/ area-clubs/bachelor-beauts.

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Marla O'DonneB, sanctuary director, feeds Calamity Jane pieces of watermelon at Chimps Inc. in 2013. Leam about theorganization at the Lunch & Leam at Bend Senior Center.

FEB. 15-17 — CENTRALOREGDN SYMPHONY WINTERCONCERT: Featuring violinist Lindsay Deutsch and music of Rossini, Tchaikovsky and more; free, buta ticket is required, donations accepted; 7:30 p.m. Feb. 15, 2 p.m. Feb.16, 7:30 p.m. Feb. 17; BendHigh School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-317-3941,

FEB. 16 — CARLOSNUNEZ: The Celtic virtuoso from Spain performs; $22-$37 plus fees; 7:30 p.rn., doors open 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.

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PAGE 20 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

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Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

Wild Rose Northern Thai Eats in downtown Bend features the hearty and less well known food of northern Thailand.

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• Wild Rosein Bendoffers hearty dishestypical of the ChiangMai region

WildRose NorthernThaiEats

By John Gottberg Anderson

Location:150 N.W.Oregon Ave., Bend Hnurs:11 a.m.to 9 p.m. Sundayto Thursday, 11a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday Price range:Lunch $5 to $8; dinner starters $8 and$9, main dishes $8 to $16 Credit cards:American Express, MasterCard, Visa Kids' menu: Yes Vegetarianmenu:Wide range of options Alcoholic deverages:Fully licensed Outdoorseating: No

For The Bulletin

he new Wild Rose restaurant in downtown Bend has become one of my favorite local eateries since it opened three

T

months ago. Wild Rose is not just another Thai restaurant. It serves the cui-

sine of northern Thailand rather than the better-known food

of metropolitan Bangkok. They are as diff erent as the Tuscan and Sicilian cuisines of Italy, for

instance, or the Cantonese and Mandarin styles of China. Chef-owner Paul Itti is a native

of Chiang Mai in northern Thailand, and he draws upon longtime family recipes in crafting such authentic dishes as gai oso (game hen steamed in yellow curry) and tummakeuah (roasted green chile with grilled eggplant). Patrons

in Port Townsend, Wash. There, his restaurant Khu L ar b ( " lit-

was relatively unknown in Thailand before World War II — nor

Itti's decision to move to the

tle rose") achieved area-wide acclaim. Today it is in the able

hands of his daughter, Rosie, who also helped with the design of Bend's Wild Rose — including won't find pad thai on the menuthe placing of fresh roses on each that now-popular rice-noodle dish table. drier climate of Central Oregon will they be offered chopsticks, coincided with that of his nephew which are not typically used by and wife, Krit and Bua Karoon Thais. Dangruenrat, who came from Before moving to Bend last New York to open Pure Kitchen year with his wife and co-chef, on Franklin Avenue last spring. Ampawan, Itti lived for 20 years Continued next page

Reservations:No Contact:www.wildrosethai.com or 541-382-0441

Scorecard Overall:AFool:A. Northern Thai recipes are hearty and healthy, with an edge new to Central Oregon. Service:B+. Friendly and eagerto please, but easily overwhelmed by large dining parties. Atmosphere:B.Spacious and rustic in appearance, with someshared tables for common dining. Value:A-. Prices are moderate at all times, but the best deal is a$7 "pinto lunch."


restaurants

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

From previous page Originally, Itti said, he considered establishing a noodle house in Bend. Instead, he was motivated by the success of Pok Pok, a wildly popu-

The khao soi at Wild Rose Northern Thai Eats.

lar southeast Portland "street Thai"

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 21

FRiEE SANDr WIC H

*

restaurant inspired by the northern Thai travels of its owner-chef, Andy Ricker. "I can do that!" Itti said to himself. And he has.

To be shared In his cookbook, "Pok Pok," Ricker describes northern Thai cuisine

as feat uring a "generous use ofdried spices, frequent appearance of fresh turmeric, and prevalent bitterness

SANDIIr

NEXT WEEK: NORTHSIDEBAR & GRlll

from leaves (and) shoots.... Cooks tend to use tamarind instead of lime

(and) fermented soy beans ... rather than fish sauce and shrimp paste." The resulting dishes, intended to

be shared amongtwo or more diners,

For readers' ratings of more than150Central Oregon restaurants, visit H benddulietin.cem/restnurnnts.

are somewhat heartier than those to

which Thai food-loving Americans are usually exposed. Sticky jasmine rice, traditionally eaten with the fingers, isserved with fresh vegetables and dipped into fresh chili pastes (nam prik) and sauces. Curries are

Itti's delicious "secret recipe" concoc-

tion indudes straw mushrooms, lemongrass, kaffir lime leaves, cilantro and galangal (ginger). We had it with small chunks of silky tofu. Larb mueng ($8). Differing in fla-

When we arrived too late one night pork chop ($14) in place of the game hen. Lightly breaded and pan fried in perfection, topped with a drizzle of coconutcream and served with an unusual medley of vegetables: broccoli, greenbeans, spinach, asparagus and pumpkin.

Keeping it spicy The spice levelsofdishesarerated from 1 to 5, but that may be misleading. Although I lived in Southeast

induding beef brisket, pork ribs and spicy sausage, have a distinctly different appeal that the lighter slices

onion and cilantro in its spice blend.

standard in southern Thai cooking.

It was served with wedges and leaves The atmosphere at Wild Rose re- of iceberg lettuce, but these were not inforces the family orientation of the as suitable for wrapping the minced food service.Occupying the Oregon meat as cabbage leaves (promised on Avenue space that previously was the menu) would have been. Common Table, Wild Rose has a Som tum ($8). Wild Rose's shredspacious floor plan with tables posi- ded green-papaya salad is tossed in tioned around its periphery and in the a sweet-and-sour dressing with peaheartofthe room. They are covered nuts, green beans, tomato wedges, with colorful plastic cloths that lend a thick-cut cucumber, fresh chilies and festive touch to an otherwise nonde-

lime. I like it with a side of sticky rice.

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cuisine. And when the meal was over,

we both appreciated a bowl of black sticky-rice pudding, finished with coconut milk, to take the edge off.

Regular pattons who are enrolled in Wild Rose's "pinto lunch" program can keep their spice-level preference onrecordattherestaurant. Mimicking a Thai traditionbywhich families support Buddhist sanghas (communities of monks), members receiveathree-tier tin carrier — in essence, a lunchbox

script chamber. Avocado with prawn ($14) was a Patmns are greeted at a small host blackboard special one night. Snow~d a n d ushered to their tables. But pea pods dominated the stir-fry, those tables can fill quiddy. Even at 6 which featured a mildly sweet mushp.m., guests may be forced to wait for room sauce that blended well with seating, ignored as we were at a poor- a half-dozen plump prawns, green ly stocked side bar with empty boxes beans, chopped onions and slices of stacked beneath. Because a youp of avocado. The dish normally includes

— in which a set lunch is offered for

more than two dozen youth singers

short rib on jasmine rice. For a lover of

bell peppers, but these were withheld

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a mild curry sauce, it was cooked to

Asiaforseveralyears and am used vor from southern Thai larb, this to spicy food, I still find Wild Rose's piquant ground-pork salad couples "3 stars" to be very spicy. My comchilies and fried garlic with green panion can barely eat the "2-star"

boiled rather than fried; red meats,

TOGO'5

to partake, Itti offered a marinated

dailytakeout. Availablefrom 11 a.m.to 3pm., it costs $7 and varies daily. My last pinto featured a red-cur-

ry soup with chicken, pumpkin and spinach; a serving of eggnoodles with cilantro and chilies; and two pieces of

tamarmd-marinated, grilled boneless

had arrived at once for dinner, it was at my companion's request. Thai food, it's agreatmiddaymeal. hard to get so much as aglass of water. Kow pad boo ($16) is a fried-rice — Reporter: janderson@bendbulfetin.com No doubt, that experience was an dish highlightedbybigpieces of fresh exception, as the staff was clearly Dungeness crab meat. Asparagus, overwhelmed. At other times, I've egg, green onions, tomato and cilan- SMALL BITE found the serving team to be delight- tro also went into the mix. fully friendly and eager to please. Gai oso ($14) is one of Itti's specials, The Lifeline Taphouse is celea wholegame hen marinated and brating two months in business Dinner fare steamed for two hours in a yellow as a downtown Redmond sports Here's what I've recently sampled curry broth heavy with lemongrass. bar. Featuring 30 taps with beers at Wild Rose over two meals with a It is stuffed with a blend of herbs and from all over Oregon, the pub has dining companion. For the record, spices, including chilies, lime leaves, a unique menu with such items as we liked each of the eight dishes we galangal, garlic and cilantro, then a p o r k-and-artichoke s a ndwich tried, although I was more partial to served with fresh basil leaves and ($7.99) and a beet-and-walnut salad the som tum than my companion, cut open and mixed upon serving. It's ($10.49). Open 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunand she liked the kow pad boo better more than enough for two. day to Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. than I did. Only a limited number of game Thursdayto Saturday.249NW. Sixth Grandfather's tom kha ($5 and hens — normally not more than St., Redmond; 541-526-1401, www $10). A signature coconut-milk soup, 10 — are prepared in advance. .thelifelinetaphouse.com.

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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAzlNE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."

ort an

COMCERTS Jan. 31 —Classic AlbumsLive performsAbbey Road:The Beatles' legendary final recording recreated live on stage, note for note; Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Jan. 31 —The Devil Makes Three, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT

Jan. 31 — Zappa Plays Zappa, *

estiva • Event will mark 75th anniversary of Blue NoteRecordsjazz label By Jenny Wasson The Bulletin

T

ake a look at Blue Note Records' legendary

catalog and you can trace the history of jazz, from swing and boogie woogie to bebop to

fusion and avant-garde. The label's artists include

some of the biggest names in jazz, including Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Herbie Hancock and Ornette Coleman. In February, the Portland Jazz Festival will hon-

or the label's 75th anniversary with four concerts in a series called "Blue Note ® 75." The festival runs Feb. 20 to March 2 at various venues throughout Portland. Blue NoteRecords was founded in 1939 by German

immigrant and jazz aficionado Alfred Lion. Since then, it has established itself as "the most respected jazz label in the world," according to its website, and

is still "home to some of the most prominent stars and cutting-edge innovators in jazz today." In Portland, "Blue Note @ 75" will feature perfor-

mances by Elaine Elias (Feb. 20, and sold out), Brian Blade & the Fellowship Band (Feb. 20), Dave Frishberg and Bob Dorough (Feb. 23) and Bobby Watson & Horizon (March 1). Founded in 2003, the Portland Jazz Festival is "ded-

icated to preserving America's indigenous art form by presenting internationally recognized jazz masters alongside local jazz musicians," according to a news release. Other festival highlights include a rare appearance by piano icon and National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master Ahmad Jamal (Feb. 21), the return of Es-

peranza Spalding with the Oregon Spring Quartet (Feb. 23)and a performance by Jazz atLincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis (Feb. 28) Ticket prices vary depending on the event. Tickets are selling quiddy with several shows already sold out. For a full schedule and ticket prices, visit www

.portlandjazzfestival.org or call 503-228-5299. Members of Bend's Jazz atthe Oxford receive a 10 percent discount on all Portland Jazz Festival tickets. — Reporter: 541-383-0350, jwasson@bendbulletin.com

I

Roseland Theater, Portland; TW Feb. 1 —international Championship of Collegiate ACappella,Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb.1 —Legends of the Celtic Harp, Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www. stclairevents.com or 541-535-3562. Feb. 1 —MAMD,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 4 —Excision, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Feb. 4 —Mayer Hawthorne, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Feb. 4 —ThePianoGuys, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 6 —Toad the Wet Sprocket, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 7 —Bill Evans, Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www.stclairevents. com or 541-535-3562. Feb. 7 —Ken Peplowski — Bix & Hoagy,The Shedd Institute, www. theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 7 —The WoodBrothers, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Feb. 8 —BozScaggs, Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 8 —White Lies, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb.10 —Falling in Reverse, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Feb. 13, 16 —"Give Me a Song:The Magic of Jule Styne":Emerald City Jazz Kings; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 14 —"Love on BourbonSt.": Featuring Karl Denson's Tiny Universe; Historic Ashland Armory, Ashland; www.curiousconspiracy.com. Feb.14 —The Presidents of the United States of America,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb.15 —AmosLee/Black Prairie, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW Feb.15 —Holly Near with emma's revolution and JohnBucchino, Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www.

stclairevents.com or 541-535-3562. Feb. 15 —Karmin, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb. 16 —AmosLee/Black Prairie, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 17 —HotTuna/David Lindley, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW Feb. 17 —Sweet Honey in the Rock, Newmark Theatre, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Feb.18 — HotTuna/DavidLindley, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 18 —JohnButler Trio, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Feb. 19 —AniDiFranco, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 19 —Pixies, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; SOLDOUT; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 20 —Fireworks Ensemble American Tapestry,Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Feb. 20 —SunKil Moon, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 20-March 2 —Portland Jazz Festival,Various locations in Portland; www.pdxjazz.com. Feb. 21 —DJsiah, Rootdown, Caleb & Sol, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Feb. 22 —David Wilcox, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 22 — The EnglishBeat,Wo nder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Feb. 23 —Sharon Corr, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Feb. 23 —Tobylac, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Feb. 25 —Walk Dff The Earth, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Feb. 26 —Chris Thile & Mike Marshall, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 27— The MusicalBox,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 28 — CiboM atto,Wo nder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Feb. 28 —Datsik, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb. 28 —Willy Porter, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF March1 —B.B. King,Elsinore Theatre, Salem; TW* March 1 —Nicole Atkins, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 2 —Pat Metheny Unity Group, Newmark Theatre, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. March 2 —Skinny Puppy,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF*


out of town

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014 March 3 —Dr. Dog, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* March 5 —Russian Circles, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 6 —John Gorka, Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www. stclairevents.com or 541-535-3562. March 6 —Martin Sexton, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF March 6 —Tool, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. March 7 —Tool, Matthew Knight Arena, Eugene; SOLDOUT;www. matthewknightarena.com or 800-932-3668. March7— Umphrey'sM cGee, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT March 9 —G-Eazy, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March12 —Lake Street Dive, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 14 —Galactic, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT March14 —Vocaldente, Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org or 541-779-3000. March16 —Shpongle, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW*

LECTURES 8c COMEDY Feb. 4 —Isabel Allende, Newmark Theatre, Portland; www.portland5. com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 6 —Jerry Seinfeld, Hult Center, Eugene; SOLDOUT;www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 14 —Drew Carey, Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org or 541-779-3000. March 9 —lewis Black, Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org or 541-779-3000. March 23 —Maz Jobrani, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF March26 — JeffDunham, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter. com or 877-789-7673.

Feb. 14-15 —"A Storm large Valentine":Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Feb. 20 —"Rite of Spring": Featuring music by Debussy, Prokofievand Stravinsky; EugeneSymphony; HultCenter, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 22-24 —"Cohen Plays Rachmaninoff":Featuring music by Debussy, Haydn and Rachmaninoff; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Feb.28— JazzatLincolnCenter Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343.

THEATER 5 DAMCE Through Feb. 2 —Fertile Ground Festival:Featuring more than 75 new acts of creation in theater, dance and multidisciplinary arts; Portland; www.fertilegroundpdx.

org.

Through Feb. 8 —"Tribes": New play by Nina Raine; Oregon Contemporary Theatre; The Lord/ Leebrick Playhouse, Eugene;

Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org or 541-779-3000.

*Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www .ticketswest.com or 800992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticket

fly.com or 877-435-9849 CT:CascadeTickets, www .cascadetickets.com or 800-514-3849 EXTENDED;www.octheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Through Feb. 9 —"Chinglish": Broadwayhitcomedy by David Henry Hwang ("M. Butterfly," "Golden Child"); Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through Feb. 16 —"Charlotte's Web":Oregon Children's Theatre; Newmark Theatre, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Through March 2 —"The Monster-Builder":World premiere; a diabolical comedic treatise on modern architecture by Amy Freed; Artists Repertory Theatre; Alder Stage, Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. Feb. 1 —Feet Don't Fail Me ftow Rhythmic Circus:Group mixes beat-boxing, jazz/funk tunes and blazing footwork; Craterian

Feb. 5 —TAO —Phoenix Rising:Featuring the art of JapaneseTaiko drumming; Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Feb. 6-15 —BodyVox-2, BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; www. bodyvox.com or 503-229-0627. Feb. 7-9 —"Tales From the Floating World":Featuring live music by Portland Taiko and koto player Mitsuki Dazai; Ballet Fantastique; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000.

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www.radioreduxusa.comor 541-206-3283. Feb. 15-16 —"Scheherazade and Bolero":Featuring choreography by Dennis Spaight and Toni Pimble; Eugene Ballet Company; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter. org or 541-682-5000.

Continued next page Iig

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Beethoven;OregonSymphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343.

Feb. 1-March 16 —"Bo-itita": Play by Elizabeth Heffron follows a mother and daughter's journey through a working-class America of dwindling resources, and the lengths they must go to stay together; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700.

Feb. 8 — "'TilDeath Do Us Part: Late Rite Catechism 3": Interactive comedy; Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Feb. 12-March 2 —"The Glass Menagerie":American classic by Tennessee Williams; Portland Actors Conservatory; Firehouse Theatre, Portland; www.actorsconservatory.com or 503-274-1717. Feb. 13 —The TenTenors: Performing a collection of Broadway's greatest hits; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 14-16 —"Radio Daze": Fred Crafts' Radio Redux; Wildish Theater, Springfield;

ACE THE NEXT REPORTCARD WITH SYLVAN

SYMPHOMY 5 OPERA Jan. 31, Feb, 2, 6, 8 —"Lucia Di Lammermoor":Tragic opera by Gaetano Donizetti; Portland Opera; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www. ortlandopera.org or 866-739-6737. Feb. 9-10 —"Beethoven's Symphony ito. 7":Featuring music by Lutosl awski,Schumann and

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23

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PAGE 24 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

From previous pago

C om p l e m e n t s H o m e I n t e r i o r s

Feb. 22-March 1 —"Reveal": Featuring choreography by Christopher Stowell, James Kudelka, Christopher Wheeldon and Nicolo Fonte; Oregon Ballet Theatre; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.obt.org or 888-922-5538. Feb. 22-March 23 —"A Small Fire": Play by Adam Bockfollows John and Emily Bridges, a long-married couple whose happy, middleclass lives are upended when Emily falls victim to a mysterious disease; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Feb. 26 —Ailey H, Hult Center, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000.

EXHIBITS

Designing the ~ ~

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a ro un d y o u . C omp l e m e n t s H o m e I n t e r i o r s 70 SW Centuty Dn Suite 145 Bend, OR 97702 541.322.7337 www.complcmentshome.com

NoRTHWEsT iCRO SSING Bend's most coveted, award-winning neighborhood. Family life centers around the home, from lazy days by the fireplace to family and friends enjoying an outdoor barbecue. Inviting homes, pedestrian-friendly avenues and a buoyant sense of community make this a very special place. Come see why.

Through Feb. 8 —"Quality is Contagious: John Economakiand Bridge CityTool Works":The company's products, sketches and tools from the past 30 years will be on view; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www. museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through Feb. 9 —Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Transatlanticism" (through Feb. 9), "Art of the Athlete II" (through Feb. 9), "Traditional and Contemporary Korean Art from the Mattielli & JSMA Collections" (through March 2), and "Ave Maria: Marian Devotional Works from Eastern and Western Christendom" (through Aug.10); Eugene; jsma.uoregon.edu or 541-346-3027. ThroughFeb.22— Salem ArtAssociation: The following exhibits will be on display: "Curios & Curiosities: Interpreting the Natural and Cultural Worlds," "Rivers: New Work by Sara Swanberg" and "Cameron Kaseberg: Rental-Sales Program Featured Artist"; Bush Barn Art Center, Salem; www. salemart.org or 503-581-2228. Through March 16 —Portland Art Museum: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Dusk Through Dawn: Photography at the Edges of Daylight" (through March 16) and "Masterworks/Portland: 'Three Studies of Lucian Freud' by Francis Bacon" (through March 30); Portland; www. portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. Through April 19 —"This Is Not A Silent Movie: Four Contemporary Alaska Native Artists": Centered around four acclaimed Alaska Native artists whose groundbreaking contemporary works question institutional methods of identifying Native heritage; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through April 27 —"Cycle City: A Spin on Bikes":Exhibit features "The Bike Shop," "Splashguard, ""Tandem Sketch,""Bike

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PDX" and "Pedal Power"; Portland Children's Museum, Portland; www.portlandcm.org or 503-223-6500. Feb. 1-May 4 —"Tony Hawk j Rad Science":Set in a realistic skate park scene, the exhibition's highly interactive elements introduce visitors to physics principles including gravity, force, velocity, acceleration, inertia and balance; Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Feb.7-March 29 — "BDTH/AND:selected works from Chris Baskin and Dan Schmitt,"Eutectic Gallery, Portland; www. eutecticgallery.com or 503-974-6518. Feb. 15-May11 —"Venice: The Golden Age of Art and Music":The exhibit features paintings by Tintoretto, Bassano, Piazzetta, Ricci, Tiepolo, Guardi, Longhi and Canaletto as well as prints, drawings, illuminated manuscripts, original period instruments and early music texts; Portland Art Museum, Portland; www.portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. Feb. 17 —Free Admission Day, Portland Japanese Garden, Portland; www. japanesegarden.com or 503-223-1321. Feb. 26-March 3 —Hina Matsuri, the Doll Festival:Featuring a display of Hina Ningyo special dolls representing the imperial family; Portland Japanese Garden, Portland; www. japanesegarden.com or 503-223-1321.

MISCELLANY Feb. 6-22 —Portland International Film Festival,Whitsell Auditorium, Portland Art Museum, Portland; www.nwfilm.org or 503-221-1156. Feb. 7-8 —THIRSTFest 2014: A wine, beer and spirits festival supporting the LGBTQ community; Tiffany Center, Portland; www. thirstfest.com. Feb. 8 —Fly Fishing Film Tour,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 8 —Professional Bull Riders, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Feb. 14-16 —Agate & Mineral Show, Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Feb. 15-16 —Monster Jam, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Feb. 16 —JohnDayCitizen's Cross Country SkiRace,Diamond Lake Resort, Diamond Lake; southernonc.tripod.com/id6.html. Feb. 20-23 —FisherPoets Gathering, Astoria; www.fisherpoets.org. Feb.20-24 — Newport Seafood andW ine Festival,Rogue Ale Brewery, Newport; www. seafoodandwine.com or 800-262-7844. Feb. 21 —Harlem Globetrotters, Matthew Knight Arena, Eugene; www. matthewkinghtarena.com or 800-932-3668. Feb. 22 —Harlem Globetrotters, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673.

Feb. 27— ChampionsSeriesTennis: Featuring Andre Agassi, Pete Sampras, John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors and Jim Courier; Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673.


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 25

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

movies

Dale Robinette/Paramount Pictures/The Associated Press

Kate Winslet, front, stars as Adele, Josh Brolin stars as Frank and Gattlin Griffith stars as Henry in "Labor Day."

iv in • The melodramaandstory line havea few hard-to-believemoments, but film still resonates t's the pie scene. If you buy into the baking sequence in "Labor Day," if you think Josh Brolin and Kate Winslet are doing something of peach-pie equivalence to the potteryscene in "Ghost," you're

t

RICHARD ROEPER

young man named Henry (voiced by Tobey Maguire), looking back on a life-defining weekend when he was just 13. (Young Henry is played by Gattlin Griffith, who is

probably ready to head for the

up to the task of sharing scenes

exits.

with two great grown-up film stars.)

"Labor Day" is one of those films sure to divide audiences and

"Labor Day" 111 minutes PG-13, for thematic material, brief violence andsexuality

Kate Winslet is Henry's mother,

Adele, who is nearly suffocating under the weight of a constant and paralyzing depression that hooked on a story that requires a I was captivated from the openwas brought about by a family fairly serious leap of faith. ing sequence and found myself Based on Joyce Maynard's nov- tragedy. Henry's father (Clark If you're rolling your eyes when immersed in the first film of 2014 el and set in 1987, "Labor Day" Gregg), who was once deeply in they get to the pie scene, you're that truly resonated with me. is told from the viewpoint of a love with Adele but was unable to critics. Either you go with the al-

most dreamlike, sometimes logic-defying scenario, or you don't.

cope with her seemingly endless sadness,leftand remarried,staying in the small New Hampshire town where everybody seems to know everybody's business. Dad keeps trying to get Henry to move in with him and the new

family, but Henry wouldn't dream of abandoning his mother. He is her only reason for getting out of bed in the morning. That Adele doesn't seem to realize she's steal-

ing Henry's youth by requiring his constantpresence in the house tells us how far gone she is. Continued next page


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PAGE 26 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

This 'Frankenstein' has a monster that just won't shut up A

aron Eckhart bears a distressing resemblance

to the not late/not great Christopher Lambert in "I, Fran-

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ROGER MOORE

kenstein," a graphic novel movie goof on the man-made monster.

Gaunt, scowling, covered in scars and sporting fingerless gloves, a tattered hoodie and biker boots,

this "I" is an avenging brawler, sort of "Blade" in a blender, with "Underworld" and "Highlander" elements tossed in. Rejected by his creator, we meet the Big Guy in a striking, Gothic past in which he avenges himself on Dr. Frankenstein. And just as he's burying the guy, demons and then gargoyles show up to fight over the corpse — his corpse. Why would they want this creation "of a dozen used parts from eight different corpses," this living thing without a soul'? The demon legions and their boss (Bill Nighy) have in mind some sort of demon reanimation project, a factory — DemonWorks SKG.

"I, Frankenstein" 93 minutes PG-13, for sequences of intense fantasy action and violence throughout This film was releasedJan. 24. Ben King / Lionsgate /The Associated Press

cial-effects extravaganzas, with demons "descended" (killed) into disintegrating piles of hot coals and gargoyles getting "ascended" (killed) in beams of Rapture light straight out of "This is the End."

The whole affair goes straight

Aaron Eckhart and Yvonne Strahovski star in "I, Frankenstein."

The gargoyles spend the rest of the movie explaining who they are, what the demons are, how their world works and how much they love explaining things.

cent or whatever he would have learned to speak for the modern

have like one."

Sounds like a job for ... Christopher Lambert.

to hell about four minutes in. The

idea of a seemingly immortal monster, wandering the forests of central Europe, shedding the archaic English or German ac-

keep the makeup stitches from popping, to maintain a straight face when Leonore intones, "You're only a monster if you be-

who they are, what the demons are, how their world works and

how much they love explaining things. Most of

who presides over modern-day

Mel Brooks had a lot of fun efforts to replicate the late Dr. with this story, once upon a time. Frankenstein's r ean i m ation And another, straight version of

work — pretty enough to be a

t h i s e n dless story "companion" toAdam, an ac-

the Mary Shelley story is due in theaters shortly. The humorless,

And the Godly gargoyles, led by Leonore (Miranda Otto),

vernacular, is abandoned for non-stop battles and endless, tedious pages of exposition. "Adam," as the monster is

takes place in a modern-ish EveryCity, where Adam stomps the aim to stop them. Their battles, darkened streets, an angry monoften around the Gothic cathester pawn looking for another drals where the gargoyles sit in n amed, mentions a bi t o f h i s demon or gargoyle to fix. Y vonne Strahovski (of T V ' s stony silence watching over an past. Then the gargoyles spend unsuspecting humanity, are spe- the rest of the movie explaining "Dexter") is the fetching doctor

tress given nothing to play, just a generic and chatty Frankenstein wardrobe. It's great seeing Otto served up here makes you wonall these years after "Lord of the der if the good doctor, in all his Rings," and Nighy does his usual patching-together of parts, didn't well-dressed villain thing, only forget the brains. — Roger Moore is a film critic for less so. Eckhart? His only job is to McClatchy-Tribune News Service.

From previous page

from a recently sustained injury

when you got your information from the nightly news and the next day's newspaper, and police were posting "Wanted" fliers on front-yard trees, it's a different story.) In lesser hands, "Labor Day" couldhave played like an adap-

About once a month, Adele doesn't help his cause.)

squelches her agoraphobia just It is no great spoiler to reveal long enough to drive Henry to the Frank is a wanted man. This is

bor Day weekend scenes, Frank

seems like a candidate for Best Possible Stepdad Ever. He tunes up the car, he fixes things around the house, he gives Henry some baseball pointers, he cooks terrific

local mall so they can stock up on

what "Labor Day" is about. Over

food and other supplies. Henry escapes his mother's tether just

the course of a sun-dappled holiday weekend, as the police engage meals and he even teaches Adele in a furious manhunt for the fugi- how tobake an amazingpie. tive they consider to be extremely But every now and again reality

far enough to wander into anoth-

er section of the store — and that leads to a chance encounter with a man who says he'd like Henry's help.

dangerous and the local news stations warn everyone to be on the

comes knocking, sometimes liter-

ally, and Frank shifts into survival lookout, Frank hides out at Adele's mode. That man is Frank Chambers. ramshackle house, becoming an (The recent period piece is such In the first of many sequenc- instant father figure to H enry a great device for storytelling. If es that will stretch plausibility, while rekindling feelings in Adele "Labor Day" were set in 2014, in Adele and Henry wind up giving she thought were long dead. a world of GPS and the Internet a ride to Frank, who speaks like In perfectly doled-out flash- and texting and modern tracking a gentleman in polite, measured back snippets, we learn the cir- technology, Frank probably never tones but gives off a menacing cumstances of the crime of which makes it to Adele's house before vibe. (That Frank is seeping blood Frank was convicted.In the La- he's caught. In the mid-1980s,

tation of a Nicholas Sparks novel, what with the dark secrets and

the us-against-the-world love affair. But

w r i ter/director Jason

Reitman ("Thank You for Smoking," "Juno," "Up in the Air") is too skilled a filmmaker to let the senti-

ment overpower the story. There's just enough edge here to keep us guessing about Frank and his true motivations.

Josh Brolin gives one of his best

performances as Frank. We believe this guy is capable of shocking violence — but we also believe he just might be a wronged man with sincere intentions. Kate Winslet hits some great

notes as Adele. We wouldn't buy the premise of a well-adjusted woman falling so hard and so quickly for a fugitive, no matter how dashing — but someone in Adele's fragile state just might risk everything for a chance at happiness. "Labor Day" is an admittedly strange hybrid. Rarely have I seen such outrageous plot points executed with such lovely grace. — Richard Roeper is a film critic for The Chicago Sun-Times.


movies

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27

an 8 ~ 'That Awkward Moment' is an unfunny messof bad dialogue that's really not worth repeating

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wkward? More like painful. If you are planning on

seeing "That Awkward Moment" and you'd rather I not cite

specific examples in my opening arguments against you making that choice, please skip the next

few paragraphs — or perhaps you can return to this review after the fact. Nowthen.

One running joke in "That Awkward Moment" involves a char-

acter who always defecates in his friend's bathroom and always denies doing so before adinitting he's

done it again. Another running joke involves a sociaIIy awkward boss who always announces his arrival on the scene by saying, "Hi, it's Fred," as if he's on the telephone.

These gags are not funny the first time. Repetition doesn't help. No doubt we'll experience worse movies than this in 2014. But the bar has been lowered. "That A w k w ar d Mo m e nt"

strives to straddle the line between breezy, bromantic com-

edy and "Hangover"-esque guy humor, It fails miserably on both

Nicole RivelliI Focus Features/The Associated Press

Miles Teller, left, Michael B. Jordan and Zac Efron star in the cornedy "That Awkward Illlomnen."

counts. This is Filler Lite — a not particularly offensive but utter-

ly unmemorable film starring a number of talented, charismatic

actors who apparently signed on for this film between more interesting projects. Zac Efron plays Jason, a confirmedbachelorwho keeps a "roster" of regular sex partners but

is committed to never making a commitment. (Like just about every other relationship concept in this film, the "roster" thing is ex-

plained, and then explained again, for those in the audience who nod-

ded off the first time.} Jason sails through Manhattan in stylish clothes, flashing his killer grin and spouting his dubious, naive views about relationships. Even when Jason claims to be cold or sad

or confused, he looks like he's on a modeling shoot. Not once does he coine across as an actual guy liv-

ing an actuallife.

RlCHARD ROEPER

"Ihat Awkward Maatant" 94 minutes R, for sexual content and languagethroughout Jason still hangs out with his two best f riends from college:

by a woman he didn't even know that you should see this movie he was dating, the three bache- anyway), but the scene in queslors make a vow: They're going to tion is triggered by Jason misintear up the town and bed down as terpreting an invitation that was many women as possible without as clear as day. getting seriouslyinvolved with any But even though Jason makes of them. a huge, insanely stupid mistake And they say today's young pro- based on that m i sunderstandfessionals don't have a vision for ing, once he realizes his error, all thefuture. (Later the vow is referred to as "The Bet," I still don't know what

he has to do is turn around and

the stakes were.)

idiot and also erodes our empathy for him.

In addition to a vowlwager that

After Mikey is separated from his wife and Jason gets dumped

HAD tobe a dream sequence. Itwasn't,

Not to give too much away (not

eye. But she's stuck with an inconsistent character. (It must have been a real challenge for Poots to

race through Ellie's explanation for why there was an envelope of cash, sex books and boxes of con-

doms in her apartment the night Jason met her. Don't ask) No matter which character is

leave — but instead he proceeds, speaking, we can almost see the which makes him seem like an dialogue balloons above their

The most intriguing and attrachas no stated expiration date and Mikey (Michael B. Jordan), a doc- has no real purpose other than tive character in "That Awkward tor who keeps saying he "checked to fuel the rest of the inovie, writ- Moment" i s M a ckenzie Davis' all the boxes," i.e., he excelled in er-directo r Tom Gormican serves Chelsea, who, for reasons never school, got a great job and married up a number of other eye-rolling explained, serves as Daniel's plathe right girl, and Daniel (Miles moments, induding one scene that tonic wingman, but harbors roTeller), a constant cutup always rings so horribly false, I kept think- mantic feelings for the goof. Teller on the prowl for his next one-night ing it had to be a dream sequence, it and Davis have true chemistry. stand.

smart girlwho catches Jason's

Toobad this wasn't their movie, British actress Imogen Poots

adds some spark as Ellie, a quirky,

heads as they recite lines that rare-

ly sound spontaneous or authentic. Almost nothing in this film feels

genuine. The end-creditsblooper reel for "That Awkward Moment" in-

dudes the obligatory line flubs, cast members cracking up and alternate punch lines. Looks like the cutting-room floor wasn't any funnier than the final product. — Richard Roeper is a film critic for The Chicago Surt-Times.


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PAGE 28 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

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Julia Roberts embraces Meryl Streep in the drama "August: Osage County."

O N LO C A L S CREEN S

111 WAYS

TO DISCOVER CENTRAL OREGON NEEDAN IDEA FOR HOW TO SPENOVOOR FREE TIMEVTHISQUIDEHAS 111IDEAS.

WHEN TO LOOK POR IT: PUBUSHING TWQ HllTIONSA VEAR • Spring/Summer: April Fall/Winter: October (Dates to be announced)

Presenting the area's most comprehensive guide to places, events and activities to keep you entertained throughout the year. The Bulletin's 111 Ways to Discover Central Oregon is one of the most comprehensive visitor's guide in the Tri-county area. This colorful, information-packed magazine can be found at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce and other key points of interest including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors throughout the year.

Here's what's showing onCentral Oregon movie screens. For showtimes, see listings on Page 31.

Reviews byRichard Roeper or RogerMoore, unlessotherwise noted.

HEADS UP 2014 Oscar Nominated Live Action ShortsThe Tin PanTheater is screening the five films nominated for BestShort Film — LiveAction at this year's AcademyAwards. Thefilms include "Aquel NoEraYo (That Wasn't Me)," "Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just Before Losing Everything)," "Helium," "Pitaako MunKaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to TakeCareof Everything?)" and "TheVoorman Problem." Thefilms screen at 9 p.m.today and Saturday and 6p.m. Monday,Tuesday and Thursday at TinPanTheater in Bend. Cost is $6. (no MPAArating) "Frozen Singaleng" — For alimited time, Disney is releasing aspecial singalong version of "Frozen." The film is nominated for Best Animated Feature Film andBest Original Song at this year's AcademyAwards. Thespecial edition screens 12:30 p.m. throughout the weekat RegalOld Mill Stadium16 & IMAX inBend. Cost is $8. 102 minutes. (PG) "Klunkerz: A Film About Mountain Bikes" — Long before themountain bikeenteredour global consciousness, the cycling enthusiasts of Marin County, Calif. rode modified pre-WWII bicycles downthe slopes of Mount Tamalpais. They developed their bikes through rigorous fieldtesting, often risking life and limb to doso. Using archival footage, still photographs andinterviews, "Klunkerz" tells the story of the earliest days of

the sport from thosewho werethere. Thefilm screens at 7tonight at the Volcanic Theatre Pubin Bend. Cost is $7 atthe door. (no MPAArating) — Synopsis from film's website

WHAT'S NEW "Labor Day" — A depressedsingle mom (Kate Winslet) falls hard for a wantedman (Josh Brolin) in JasonReitman's adaptation of aJoyce Maynard novel. Either you gowith the almost dreamlike, sometimes logic-defying scenario, or you don't. I was captivated from the opening sequence. Rating: Threeand a half stars. 111 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "The Saratov Approach" — TwoMormon missionaries in Russia fight for survival after being kidnapped, beatenandheld for ransom in this film based ontrue events in1998. With Corbin Allred, Maclain Nelson and Nikita Bogolyubov. Written and directed byGarrett Batty. A review of this film was unavailable. 107 minutes. (PG-13) —LosAngeles Times "That Awkward Moment" — "That Awkward Moment" strives to straddle the line between breezy, bromanticcomedyand "Hangover"esque guy humor. It fails miserably on both counts. Talented, charismatic actors including Zac Efron andMichael B.Jordan star in a not particularly offensive but utterly unmemorable film. Rating: One and a half stars. 94 minutes. (R) — Roeper

STILL SHOWING "12 Years a Slave" — "12Years aSlave" is a film about great bravery, featuring someof the bravest performancesyou'll ever havethe privilege to witness. Chiwetel Ejiofor stars as a free man in NewYork state in the1840s, who is kidnapped andshipped to the South, where he is beaten, given anewname and forced into slavery.

Continued next page


THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

movies

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 29

From previous page Unflinchingly directed by Steve McQueen, "12Years aSlave" is what we talk about when wetalk about greatness in film. With Michael Fassbender, Benedict Cumberbatch and Paul Giamatti. Rating: Four stars. 134 minutes.(R) — Roeper "American Hustle" — Thebest time I've had atthe movies this year. Christian Bale gives atranscendent performance asa conman who falls hard for hard-time gal Amy Adams. Director David O.Russell and his "Silver Linings Playbook" stars Bradley CooperandJennifer Lawrence went right backto work together on this wild tale about con artists helping the FBI on asting. Theyshouldmake10 more movies together. Rating: Four stars. 138 minutes.(R) — Roeper "August: OsageCounty" — The dialogue is sometimes sosharp we wince, and theacting by anensemble of world-class actors led byMeryl Streep, Julia Roberts, EwanMcGregor and Chris Cooper is for the most part superb. But this adaptation of Tracy Letts' play ultimately is sour, loud and draining. Nearly everyone in this story would be the most horrific person at your average dinner party. Rating: Two stars. 119minutes. (R) — Roeper "The Book Thief" — "The Book Thief" is a wondrous, richly textured, sometimes heartbreakingly effective movie about goodGermans in World War II, including a remarkable little girl and the couple whotook her in while sheltering a teenageJewish boy in their basement. Geoffrey Rush and Emily Watson deserveOscar consideration for their lovely, layered performances. One of the year's best movies. Rating: Four stars. 131 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "The Crash Reel" — A documentary about the American snowboarder Kevin Pearce, his traumatic injury in 2009 and his long road to recovery. Directed by LucyWalker. A review of this film was unavailable. 107 minutes. (no MPAArating) — Los Angeles Times "Dallas Buyers Club" — Matthew McConaughey playsRonW oodroof, agrimy,shady,homophobic, substance-abusing horndog in1985 Texas who learns he's HIV-positive and procures unapprovedmeans of treatment. McConaughey's masterful job of portraying oneof the more deeply flawedanti-heroes in recent screen history reminds us whyhebecame a moviestarin the first place. Westart out loathing this guy and learn to love him. Jared Leto disappears into the role of a transgender drug addict andJennifer Garner is Ron's empathetic doctor. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars.117 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Frozen" — When a queenwith icy powers (voice of Idina Menzel) accidentally freezes her kingdom, she runs awayand herintrepid sister (Kristen Bell) goes to find her. Sure to delight children andcaptivate adults, Disney's musical "Frozen" is the instantfavorite for the animated feature Oscar, anddeservedly so. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars.102 minutes.(PG) —Roeper "Gravity" — An accident sets two astronauts, a veteran (George Clooney) and arookie (Sandra

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George Ciooney, front, and Sandra Bullock are left floating in space after an accident in "Gravity." Bullock), adrift in space. Both a stunning visual treat andan unforgettable thrill ride, director Alfonso Cuaron'samazingspace adventure evokes"Alien" and "2001: A SpaceOdyssey." During some harrowing sequences, you'll have to remind yourself to breathe. This film is available locally in IMAX3-D. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 91 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "The Great Beauty" — You're in Rome, at the kind of partyyou've only everimagined.Theyoung and gorgeous mix with aging aristocrats on aterrace overlooking the Coliseum. Thesearethe sort of people whocanmakeline dancing look sophisticated, which is what they're doing when awhite-haired gentleman steps out of formation and turns to you. Theaction slows down as he gazes, lights a cigarette and muses in voice-over about the things a great writer notices. So begins "The Great Beauty," a film more ravishingly Fellini-esque thanmany of Federico Fellini's own movies. Director Paolo Sorrentino doesn't simply mimic the master's style and preoccupations, which anyone could do, but conjures the kind of emotions that made"La DolceVita," "81/2" and others endure. Hecollects scenes of superficial extravagance and eccentricity, then finds the deeper yearnings they conceal. Rating: Three and a half stars. 142 minutes. (no MPAA rating) — JohnDeFore,TheWashingtonPost "The Hebbit: The Desolation ef Smaug" — There's far less fussing about in this moviethan in its precursor "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey," andalthough "Smaug" moves at afaster pace, it still feels overlong. At least this leg of the quest features giant spiders and a hot elf. Can't miss with that. Martin Freeman, lan McKellenand Richard Armitage return to star, and Peter Jackson's 3-D visuals are as breathtaking asever. This film is available locallyh in 3-D. Rating: Three stars.161 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper

"The Hunger Games:Catching Fire" — The proceedings in this sequel go over the top, but the actors — Jennifer Lawrence,Woody Harrelson, newcomer Philip Seymour Hoffman — aremajor talents taking their roles seriously. This is aworthy sequel to the original and fitting a setup to the finale of the series. Even with all the wondrous special effects and futuristic touches, at heart this is the story of a girl thrust (against her wishes) into the forefront of a revolution. Rating: Threeanda half stars. 146 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "I, Frankenstein" — Aaron Eckhart bears a distressing resemblance to the not late/not great Christopher Lambert in "I, Frankenstein," a graphic novel movie goof on the man-mademonster. Gaunt, scowling, covered in scars and sporting fingerless gloves, a tattered hoodie and biker boots, this "I" is an avenging brawler, sort of "Blade" in a blender, with "Underworld" and "Highlander" elements tossed in. Rejected by his creator, we meet the Big Guy in astriking, Gothic past in which heavenges himself on Dr. Frankenstein. And just as he's burying theguy,demonsandthen gargoyles show up to fight over the corpse — his corpse. Thewhole affair goes straight to hell about four minutes in.

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PAGE 30 e GOI MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

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Order tickets on-line atwww.echoinchina.org Adult: $15 Senior: $12 Student: $12 Fatnilyt $40

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Courtesy Disney

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WaltDisney,played byTom Hanks,shows Disneyland to "Mary Poppins" author P.L.Travers,played by Emma Thompson, in "Saving Mr. Banks." From previous page

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The idea of aseemingly immortal monster, wandering the forests of central Europe, shedding the archaic English or German accent or whatever hewould have learned to speak for the modern vernacular, is abandoned for non-stop battles and endless, tedious pages of exposition. Mel Brooks had a lot of fun with this story, once upon atime. And another, straight version of the Mary Shelley story is due in theaters shortly. The humorless, generic and chatty Frankenstein served up heremakes you wonder if the good doctor, in all his patching-together of parts, didn't forget the brains. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Onestar. 93 minutes. (PG-13) —Moore "Jack Ryan: ShadowRecruit" — Chris Pine is at best OK indirector Kenneth Branagh's well-made but sometimes thuddingly ridiculousthriller, which often plays like an American version of a JamesBond movie, complete with over-the-top villains. Firstrate stunts, but a boilerplate script. Rating: Two and ahalf stars. 105 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "Last Vegas" —There's virtually nothing subtle or surprising about this story of old guys at a LasVegas bachelor party, and yet one can't but smile throughout, watching MichaelDouglas, Robert De Niro, Morgan Freeman, Kevin Kline andMary Steenburgen — AcademyAward winners all — breeze their way through anobvious but lovely and funny adventure. Rating: Three stars. 104 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "Lone Survivor" — This re-creation of a 2005 Navy SEALmission builds to one ofthe most realistic, shocking, gruesomeanddevastating depictions of warever put onfilm. Instead of going for the big-picture perspective, director Peter Berg focuses on the unflinching bravery of soldiers executing their mission andlooking out for oneanother. Mark Wahlberg stars, with Taylor Kitsch, Emile Hirsch, BenFoster and Eric Bana.Rating: Threestars.121 minutes. (R) — Roeper

"Nebraska" —What a joy it is to watch Bruce Dern playing such amiserable SOBin the best role of his long career. WoodyGrant is a crabby, boozy, sometimes delusional old guy on a road trip with his son (Will Forte) to collect a sweepstakes prize. Alexander Payne's latest film is a modernAmerican classic about the dynamic between afather from the generation that didn't speak about its feelings and agrown son who's still trying to get his father to explain himself. Stark, beautiful and memorable. Rating: Four stars. 115 minutes.(R) — Roeper "The NutJob" —Ifyou're going to make cartoons about critters, the late Chuck "Looney Toons" Jones used to preach, build them around the animal's chief concernsurvival. Bugs BunnyandDaffy Duckare always avoiding the shotgun andthe stew pot. Wile E.Coyote is desperate for a dinner of road runner. That principle pays off in "The Nut Job," a surprisingly simple, funny and often cute slapstick comedy about a squirrel planning a nut heist so that he'll have enough food to last through winter. The sight gags have amarvelous thunder-clap suddenness to them.Yeah,we canseethe squirrel smackedagainst the windshield stuff coming. But animated movies live and die on their pace, and this one clips along. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Twoand a half stars. 85 minutes.(PG) —Moore "RideAlong"— W e'veseenhundredsof variations on the mismatched buddy-cop movie, andfew have beenasuninspiredand depressingly dreadful as this one. Kevin Hart, who can befall-down funny at times, at least gets points for infusing boundless energy into his role as apint-sized video game enthusiast riding around with the snarl-andgrowl cop (Ice Cube)whose sister he wants to marry. Rating: Oneand ahalf stars.100 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "Saving Mr. Banks" — EmmaThompson is a perfect choice to play prissy P.L.Travers, who wrote the Mary Poppinsbooksand resists the efforts of Walt Disney (Tom Hanks) to give the magical nanny the

Hollywood musical treatment. A lovingly rendered, sweet film, set in a stylized and gorgeous rendition of 1961 LosAngeles. Rating: Three stars. 125 minutes.(PG-12) — Roeper "The Secret Life ofWalter Mitty" — The latest adaptation of JamesThurber's short story about an imaginative daydreamer is an ambitious and sometimes effective, but wildly uneven adventure that plays like one extended ego trip for director and star Ben Stiller. He goesfor big, predictable, easy and obvious too often here. Rating: Twostars. 125 minutes.(PG) — Roeper "Walking With Dinosaurs" —The BBC series "Walking With Dinosaurs" gets a kid-friendly big-screen treatment, complete with cutesy story and dino-poop jokes, in "Walking With Dinosaurs 3-D." Aimed squarely at that dino-crazy demographic (ages 7 to12), it pumps a few IQpoints into a kid film genre sorely in need of them. "Walking" takes care to ID eachnew dinosaur species introduced, including factoids about what they ate andany special skills they might have had. It's downright educational. Just don't tell your kids that. The story they package all this in might be too childish for anybody over12, but the research behind it and effort to pass that knowledge on to young dinosaur fans make "Walking With Dinosaurs 3-D" as at home in the classroom as it is in theaters. Rating: Two and ahalf stars. 86 minutes. (PG) — Moore "The Wolf ofWall Street" — Martin Scorsese directs the story of an amoral Wall Street hustler (the ever-charismatic Leonardo DiCaprio) — a user, ataker, a ratand a scoundrel. Though the little bleep sometimes wears out his welcome, westick around to see if he gets his comeuppanceand to marvel at Scorsese's continuing mastery. Jonah Hill overdoes it as DiCaprio's right-hand man, and Matthew McConaughey is mesmerizing as his first mentor. Rating: Threeand a half stars. 180 minutes.(R) — Roeper


movies

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JAN 31, 2014

M OVI E

T I M E S • For the meekfoJan.31

• There may bean additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

The Associated Press

Chris Hemsworth stars as Formula One driver James Hunt in "Rush."

N EW O N D V D 8a BLU-RAY The following movies were released the week ofJan. 28.

"The Fifth Estate" —Benedict Cumberbatch shines asthe mercurial Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, playing him assomeonewho'sso disconnected from normal human politeness heseems borderline autistic. Neither hagiography nor character assassination, "The Fifth Estate" unfolds at a sometimes feverish pace, capturing that mad rush of adrenaline felt by thosewho post breaking newsonline andraising fascinating, complex questions about the evolving nature of journalism. DVD Extras: One featurette and trailers and tv spots; Blu-ray Extras: Two additional featurettes. Rating: Three stars.124 minutes. (R) — Roeper "Last Vegas" —There's virtually nothing subtle or surprising about this story of old guys at aLasVegas bachelor party, andyet one can't but smile throughout, watching Michael Douglas, Robert DeNiro, Morgan Freeman,Kevin Klineand Mary Steenburgen —Academy Award winners all — breezetheir way through an obvious but lovely and funny adventure. DVDand Blu-ray Extras: Three featurettes andaudio commentary. Rating: Threestars.104 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "Rush" —"Rush" ranks amongthe best movies about auto racing ever made, featuring great performances from Daniel Bruhl asdetail-obsessed Formula Onedriver Niki Lauda and Chris Hemsworth as his cocky rival, JamesHunt.Even ifyoudon'tknow Formula Onefrom the Soap Box Derby, RonHoward's "Rush," like all great sports movies, is foremost about getting to knowandunderstand the characters. DVDExtras: Featurette and deleted scenes; Blu-ray Extras: Eight additional featurettes. Rating: Four stars. 123 minutes. (R) — Roeper

Also available:

"Cloudy with a Chanceof Meatballs 2" and "Jackass Presents: BadGrandpa"

Next week:

"About Time," "BaggageClaim," "Dallas Buyers Club," "EscapePlan," "Free Birds" and "Romeo & Juliet"

I

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 31

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