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IN COUPONS INSIDE
COMMUNITY LIFE• C1
BUSINESS • E1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
e isa ors race or I on
TOday'S read —A ghost town is at the heart of a debate: Which is the best entity to preserve one of California's treasures?A5
Terrar prOSeCutiODS — A key al-Qaida figure's case is seen as a test for how the U.S. handles suspected terrorists.A7
' fg
immigratiun —Monied Mexicans are paying their way into the U.S., arriving legally and thriving, but they're lost in the debate.AS
A tale Of a tent —A woman whobought a tent at Bend's REI store finds herself in the strangest of predicaments.D1
By Lauren Dake The Bulletin
Happy EaSter —Kids dash GDIVer CraSh —A suspected drunken driver rammeda house early Saturday, pinning a man whowas in bed under
SALEM — In a tense exchange between Iamnakers last week, the House Majority Leader signaled the upcoming battle looming in the Legislature: A Democratic plan to raise $275 million in taxes. The Democrats' chief budget writers are aiming to send $6.75 billion to K-12 schools in the next two years. The plan
for more than10,000 eggs.D1 More Easter events,D2
a pickup for two hours. The man was in critical condition Saturday night and was being
And a Wed exclusive-
treated for fractures and pos-
find themselves the targets of cyber harassment.
American filmmakers trying to create a documentary about Tibet
sible internal injuries.D1
bendbulletin.com/extras
hinges, in part, on making changes to the state Public Employees Retirement System and raising taxes. Last week, lawmakers battled over the pension system. Soon, the tax debate will begin in earnest. House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, said her party, which controls both chambers of the Legislature, would likely unveil a tax package in a
EDITOR'5CHOICE
couple of weeks. Democrats said they are still in the early stages of crafting a proposal. Republicans, in the meantime, have already blasted them for not being transparent. What is clear at this point is that the discussion includes capping deductions and targeting individual tax breaks, or likely some combination of the two. SeeSalem/A6
EVALUATIONS
Wounded l(nee site up for sae
Teachers' 'pass rate'
By John Eligon
By Jenny Anderson
New York Times News Service
New York Times News Service
WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. — Ever since American soldiers massacred men, women and children here more than a century ago in the last major bloodshed of the American Indian wars, this haunted patch of rolling hills and ponderosa pines has embodied the combustible relationship between Indians and the United States government. It was here that a group of Indian activists aired their grievances against the government with a forcefultakeoverin 1973 that resulted in protests, a bloody standoff with federal agents and deep divisions among the Indian
Across the country, education reformers and their allies in both partieshave revamped the way teachers are graded, abandoning methods under which nearly everyone was deemed satisf actory,even when students were falling behind. More than half of states now require new teacher evaluation systems. The changes, already under way in some cities and states, are intended to provide meaningful feedback and, critically, to weed out weak performers. And here are some ofthe early results: In Florida, 97 percent of teachers were deemed effective or highly effective in the most recent evaluations. In Tennessee, 98 percent of teachers were judged to be "at expectations." In Michigan, 98 percent of teachers were rated effective or better. Advocates of education reform concedethat such rosy numbers, after many millions of dollars developing the new systems and thousands of hours of training, are worrisome. "It is too soon to say that we're where we started and it's all been for nothing," said Sandi Jacobs, vice president of the National Council on Teacher Quality, a research and policy organization. "But there are some alarm bells going off." The new systems, a central achievement of the reform movement, generally rate teachers on a combination of student progress, including their test scores, and observations by principals or others. The Obama administration has encouraged states to adopt the new methods through grant programs like Race to the Top. The teachers might be rated all above average, like students in Lake Wobegon, for the same reason that the older evaluation methods were con-
oddly high
people. And now the massacre site, which passed into nonIndian hands generations
ago, is up for sale, once again dragging Wounded Knee to the center of the Indian people's bitter struggle against perceived injustice — as well as sowing rifts within the tribe over whether it would be proper, should the tribe get the land, to develop it in a way that brings some money to the destitute region. James Czywczynski of Rapid City is asking $3.9 million for the 40-acre plot he owns here, far more than the $7,000 that the deeply impoverished Oglala Sioux say the land is worth. Czywczynski insists that his price fairly accountsforthe land's sentimental and historical value, an attitude that the people here see as disrespect. "That historical value means something to us, not him," said Garfield Steele, a member of the tribal council who represents Wounded Knee. "We see that greed around here all the time with non-Indians. To me, you can't put a price on the lives that were taken there." Land disputes strike an emotional chord for American Indians, given the United States' long history of neglected promises and broken treaties. The clash over Wounded Knee is raising the moral, legal and social quandaries that have burdened generations of American Indians. SeeSite /A4
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Nicholle Kovach and Andy Gallagher, with the Natural Resources Conservation Service, measure the snowpack near Wanoga SnoPark last week. The snowpack at the site was 68.5 percent of the average for this time of year, while the statewide average is close to 91 percent, according to NRCS.
• But region's water managers expect no immediate changesto irrigation schedules By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
ComingMonday
Snowpack is peaking earlier than it used to at lower elevations in Central Oregon and around the West, says the regional leaderofthe federalagency tasked with tracking snow. Scientists and technicians with the Natural Resources Conservation Service are seeing more and moresites where the snowpack is building up later in the year and melting away earlier, said Michael Strobel, director of National Water & Climate Center for the NRCS in Portland. Those sites include Santiam Junction and Hogg Pass, both west of Sisters, and Irish Taylor, in the Cascades west of Bend.
Snowpackfor water year2013
• Central Oregon irrigation canals are about to flow
The Upper Deschutesand Crooked Riverbasinsnowpackisat89 percent of median andabout 88 percent of peak. Snowpack is at 80 percent of 2012 levels.
"We are seeing it getting w armer earli er,"he said. The shift is a "canary in the coal mine," of climate change, Strobel said. But water managers in Central Oregon say the shift in snowpack hasn't caused any changes in the schedule of irrigation water deliveries, at least not yet. "The impact now is negligible," said Steve Johnson, manager of the Central Oregon Irrigation District, which supplies water to about 45,000 acres of agricultural land. SeeSnow/A7
KEY
March 29
— 2013 20 I2 — 2011 — 20 IO — Median 1981 to 2010
30 inches
20
10
j
00
N
D
J
F
M
A
M
J
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A
S
Note: Water years begin in October Source: Natural Resources Conservation Service AndyZeigert i The Bulletin
sidered lacking. SeeTeachers/A6
TODAY'S WEATHER Chance of rain High 64, Low 38
Page D6
INDEX
The Bulletin
Business/Stocks E1-6 CommunityLife C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 B1-6 Calendar D2 Crosswords 06, G3 Obituaries D4 Sp o rts Classified G 1 - 6L ocal/State D 1- 6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C7
Vol. 110,No. 90, 56 pages,
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White House takes threats
POpe FranCiS' EaSter vigil —Pope Francis celebrated a trimmed-back Easter Vigil service Saturday after having reachedout to Muslims and women during a Holy Week in which he began to put his mark on the Catholic Church. Francis entered into a darkened and silent St. Peter's Basilica at the start of the service, in which the faithful recall the period between Christ's crucifixion on Good Friday and
from North Korea seriously By Darlene Superville
familiar pattern." North Korea's threats are WASHINGTON The seen as part of an effort to White House said Saturday it provoke the new government is taking seriously new threats in Seoul to change its poliby North Korea but also noted cies toward Pyongyang, and Pyongyang's history of "belli- to win diplomatic talks with cose rhetoric." Washington that could get it North Korea warned Seoul more aid. The moves also are on Saturday that the Korean seen as ways to build domestic Peninsula had entered "a state unity as North Korea's young of war." It also threatened to leader, Kim Jong Un, strengthshut down a border factory ens his military credentials. complex that is the last major In recent days, the U.S. flew symbol of c o operation be- a pair of nuclear-capable B-2 tween the Koreas. stealth bombers over an unin"We've seen reports of a habited South Korean island, new and unconstructive state- dropping dummy munitions ment from North Korea. We as part o f a n nual d efense take these threats seriously drills that North Korea views and remain in close contact as rehearsalsfor an invasion. with our South Korean alDefense Secretary Chuck Halies," said Caitlin Hayden, a gel also announced that the spokeswoman for the White U.S. will fortify its defenses House N a t ional S e c u rity against a potential North KoCouncil. "But, we would also rean missile attack on the U.S. note that North Korea has a by adding more than a dozen long history of bellicose rhet- missile interceptors to the 26 oric and threats, and today's already in place at Fort Greely, announcement follows that Alaska. The Associated Press
resurrection on Easter Sunday.TheVatican has said these provisions were in keeping with Francis' aim to not havehis Masses go ontoo
North Korea said in a statement Saturday that it would deal with South Korea according to "wartime regulations" and would retaliate against any provocations by the U.S. and South K o rea w i t hout notice. "Now that the revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK have entered into an actual military action, the inter-Korean relations have naturally entered the state of war," said t he statement, which w a s carried by the official North Korean news agency and referred to the country by it s official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. P rovocations "will not b e limited to a local war, but develop into an all-out war, a nuclear war," the statement said. T he W h it e H o u s e h a s stressedthe U.S. government's capability a n d w i l l i ngness to defend itself and its allies and interests in the region, if necessary.
long. The Easter Vigil service under Benedict XVI would typically run
nearly three hours.
Patients tested for HIV, hepatitis —Hundredsof patients of an Oklahomaoral surgeon accused of unsanitary practices showed up at a health clinic Saturday, looking to find out whether they were exposed to hepatitis or the virus that causes AIDS. Letters began going out Friday to 7,000 patients who had seen Dr. W. Scott Harrington
during the past six years, warning them that poor hygiene at his clinics created a public health hazard. Testing for hepatitis B, hepatitis C and the virus that causes AIDS began at10 a.m. Saturday, but many arrived early and stood through torrential downpours.
Syl'i8ll COIlfllCt —Syrian rebels pushed into a strategic neighborhood in the northern city of Aleppo after days of heavy clashes, seizing control of at least part of the hilltop district and killing a progovernment cleric captured in the fighting, activists and state media
said Saturday. Aleppo, Syria's largest city and a former commercial hub, has been a key battleground in the country's civil war since rebels launched an offensive there in July, seizing several districts before the fighting largely settled into a bloody stalemate.
Egyptian satirist arrested —Egypt's public prosecutor onSaturday ordered the arrest of a popular television satirist on charges that included insulting President Mohammed Morsi and denigrating Islam, a state news agency reported, a move that amplified criticisms that
the Islamist government is moving aggressively to silence its critics and stifle freedom of expression. The satirist, Bassem Youssef, who hostsa widelywatched show modeled on "The Daily Show,"has been
the subject of numerous legal complaints filed by Islamist lawyers and citizens who took umbrage atYoussef's skewering of Egypt's political
DeciiurgsRe
class, including Morsi, his loyalists and the opposition.
CypruS dank aCCOuntS —Large depositors at Cyprus' largest bank may beforced to accept losses of up to 60 percent, far more than initially feared under theEuropeanrescue package tosave the country from bankruptcy, officials said Saturday. Deposits of more than100,000 euros ($128,000) at the Bank ofCyprus would lose 37.5 percent in moneythat would be converted into bank shares, according to a finance ministry decree obtained byTheAssociated Press. In a second raid on theseaccounts, depositors also could lose upto 22.5 percent more, depending onwhat experts determine is needed to prop up the bank's reserves.
KENYA ELECTION DISPUTED
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5 killed iII Nevada CraSh —Five members of a Southern California family were killed Saturday whentheir van was rear-ended by an18-year-old driver who was later arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence, authorities said. The dead were among seven
Human Resources Traci Donaca ......................
family members in the van,authorities said. Theother two were hos-
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pitalized in critical condition. Jean Soriano of California was booked into the Clark County Detention Center, Nevada Highway Patrol
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Trooper Loy Hixson said. Soriano's sport utility vehicle struck the van from behind at about 3 a.m., causing both vehicles to spin out of control and roll near Mesquite, Nev., some 80 miles northeast of Las
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Vegas, investigators said. MaIIdela illneSS —South African officials for the first time Saturday confirmed the seriousness of Nelson Mandela's illness — pneu-
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monia — as the former president prepared to spend a fourth night in
a hospital. Mandela, 94, who has ahistory of respiratory problems, had a pleural effusion, or fluid in or around the lungs, which hadbeen Kenyan police with clubs chase a small group of supporters of presidential candidate Raila Odingaaf-
election of LIhuru Kenyatta as the country's next
drained, according to the president's office. "This has resulted in him now being able to breathe without difficulty. He continues to respond
president, in a verdict on apetition by candidate Raila
to treatment and is comfortable," said a presidential spokesman.
ter they ran down a street smashing shop windows in protest at the verdict of the Supreme Court in Nairobi,
Odinga appealing the election result. The ruling ended an election season that riveted
Kenya, on Saturday.
the nation amid fears of a repeat of the 2007-08 post-
Ben Curtis/The Associated Press
Kenya's Supreme Court on Saturday upheld the
Italiall pOlitlCS —Italy's president on Saturday named10 outside experts — including acentral banker, aconstitutional expert, and
election violence.
the head of Italy's statistics agency — to try to help end the political gridlockthat has prevented the formation of a government more than
a month after inconclusive elections. The10"wise men" will come up
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.orcgonlouery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
4eQss Q tt QzzQ aeQ Q The estimated jackpot is now $40 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
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with proposals over the next week touching on "institutional, socio-
economicandEuropean"measuresinhopeofreachingaconsensus
NEWS Q&A
were murdered by firearms in in 2008 and 9,199 in 2009. In across Italy's bitterly divided political blocs on how tomoveforward, the U.S., according to the FBI, 2010, 38,364 people in the U.S. the president's office said in a statement. President Giorgio Napolitano's decision to look to outsiders came after Pier Luigi Bersani, whom • Are the terms "pontiff," continuing a downward trend committed suicide, an increase "pope" and "papacy" in- since 2006. That year, 10,225 from 36,909the previous year, Napolitano hadtapped to try to form a government, announced Thursterchangeable? What are the were murdered by guns, fol- and about half of them used day he hadfailed to obtain the consensus necessary. correct word usages of each of lowed by 10,129 in 2007, 9,528 firearms. — From wire reports those words? • The word "pontiff" can be • interchanged with pope, according to The Associated PressStylebook, which is used by a majority of media outlets. "Pope" is the formal title, as in I pq Pope Francis, but "pontiff" can be used when referring to the pope. "Papacy" is used when referring to the office and juSW BEND NICE HOM E O N A C R EAGE risdiction of the pope, accord3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1942 sq. ft. built in 2005. 3 bedroom,2 bath home on over an acre. Open Cul-de-sac location. Large backyard, fireplace, ing to the M erriam-Webster floor plan, well kept with oucbuildings, outdoor open kitchen/family room. $240,000 CALL Dictionary. storage buildi ngs, fenced backyard. $89,900. LARRY JACOBS AT 5 4 1-480-2329. MLS: CALL C A NDY YO W A T 541 -410-3193. • How many gun-related 201302263 MLS: 201207387 • deaths are there in the U.S. each year'? Can you break that down by m u rders and sutctdes? . There were 31,328 gun • deaths by homicide, suiIh cide or accident in the U.S. in 'liaIII/'3 2010, Bloomberg News reportII<' iIt,'tII/II!ilillllff II Iyfj4t yi~t:>'. ,as i ed in December, using statistics from the Centers for Disease S TUNN IN G C A S C A D E YIEW S Control and Prevention. The I90ACRE HO RSE PROPERTY... 29 acres with 20 acres of irrigation. 4 bedroom, FBI reported that guns were less chan I mile from city limits. 2160 sq. fc., 2 3 bath home has justbeen completely updated bedroom. 2 bach home. Several outbuildings used to murder 8,874 people and is designer gorgeous. House is 3036 sq. ft. and is situated perfectly on the property for including barn with indoor arena. 3 cax lots, that year, and the American privacyand enjoyment. $725,000 CALL KRIS 120 acres in the Urban Reserve. $ 5 70,000 Foundation for Suicide PrevenWARNER AT 541-480-5365. MLS: 20130202B CALL KRIS WARNER AT 541-480-5365. MLS: tion reported that 19,392 people 20I206667 used guns to commit suicide in It 2010. ue T he total number of g u n deaths in the U.S. stood at 37,666 in 1993, fell to 28,393 in 2000 and isprojected to reach P ANORAMIC CASCAD E 32,929 in 2015. On average, about 85 Americans — 53 of MTN YIEWS which are suicides — are faLuxury 6 b e d room, 4.5 b ath, 6792 U NIQU E I N Y E ST M E N T tally shot daily, according to HALF ACRE LOT O PPORTU N I T Y sq. ft.home situated on 20 acres of Spacious 2 bedroom, 2 bach home with flex/ the article. In 2011, 8,583 people Three 4-plexes on separate tax lots enjoying pristine land. Many upgrades including a office space. This mini estate is complete with large, beautiful park-like area in the center of ic all. Upwardly cransitioning area near wine cellarand game room. $839,900 large shop, hoc tub, fenced dog run and room Do you have a question Old Mill. Priced Separately at $385,000 each. C ALL T A M M Y SE T T LEMIER A T for RV p arking and o t her t o ys. $210,000 CALL TERRY SfqERSAA AT 541-383-1426. CALL BECKY OZRELIC AT 541-480-919 L about nation or world news? 541-4 I 0-6009. MLS: 201201423 MLS:2016301589,201301592,201301587 MLS: 201301638 Submit it to Cox News •
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SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Sunday, March 31, the 90th day of 2013. There are 275 days left in the year.
Today is Easter.
HAPPENINGS EaSter —Christiansaround the world celebrate the culmination of Holy Week.
Cesar ChavezDay — Many Americans will com-
memorate the labor leader and civil rights activist with a day
of service.
HISTORY Highlight:On March 31, 1943, "Oklahoma!," the first musical
play by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, opened on Broadway. In1889, French engineer Gustave Eiffel unfurled the French tricolor from atop the Eiffel Tower, officially marking its completion. In 1913, American financier J.P. Morgan died in Rome at
age 75. In1931, Notre Dame college football coach Knute Rockne, 43, was killed in the crash of a
TWA plane in Bazaar,Kan. In1933, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt signed theEmergency Conservation Work Act, which created the Civilian
Conservation Corps. In1953, Stanley Kubrick's first feature, a war drama titled "Fear and Desire," premiered in New York. In1968, President Lyndon B.
Johnson stunned the country by announcing hewould not seek re-election. In1976, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that Karen Ann Quinlan, who was in a persistent vegetative state, could be disconnected from
her respirator. (Quinlan, who remained unconscious, died in1985.) In1986, 167 people died
CUTTING EDGE
i
i mi
n ir
Technological advances have made it possible for humans to work alongside factory robots without
it the exact velocity," Brooks said. "It sees objects and grabs fear of robot-inflicted injury. The new machines employ sophisticated algorithms to learn about their them, matching its speed to the speed of the object." human coworkers' habits and adjust their behavior accordingly. In short, they know how to cooperate. Baxter is used in m a nufacturing plants and shops of By Anne Eisenberg Andrea Thomaz, an assistant varying sizes. One example New Yorh Times News Service professor ofinteractive com- is the Rodon Group, a plastic Factory robots are usually puting at Georgia Tech. "By injection molding c ompany caged off from h umans on learning the human's role, the in Hatfield, Pa., where Baxter the assembly line lest the marobot can better anticipate ac- packs boxes on the factory chines' powerful steel arms tions and be a better partner, floor. deliver an accidental, boneeven if in the end it will only do Baxter's cameras inspect crunching right hook. one role." what is to be lifted, recognizing But now, gentler industrial The humans on the teams an object from many angles. In robots, designed to work and also improved their teamwork the coming year, Baxter will play well with others, are coms kills, said I l lah R . N o u r - be able to grab objects not only ing out from behind their probakhsh, professor of robotics from above, but also from the tective fences to work shoulat Carnegie Mellon University side, putting them into a millder-to-shoulder with p eople. and author of the book "Robot ing machine, for example, and It's an advance made possible Futures," published this month pressing the "go" button. It will by sophisticated algorithms by MIT Press. "In the future, also be able to connect with and improvements in sensing Rethink Robotics via New York Times News Service this idea of cross-training will other machines, to synchrotechnologies lik e c o mputer Rethink Robotics of Boston has been selling its gentler Baxter turn out to be really important nize tasks. vision. robot since January. as robots start to work shoulBaxter is not the only unThe key to these new roder-to-shoulder with us," he fenced robot on the assembly bots is the ability to respond said. "We are not very good at line. A Danish company, Unimore f l exibly, a n t icipating Technology. Shah once taught the drilling," adding that infor- adopting the point of view of a versal Robots, for example, and adjusting to what humans robots to do tasks the old way: mation to its algorithms, Shah robot. This study showed that sells a one-armed robot for want. That is in contrast to by hitting a button that essen- said. "The robot isn't learn- we can learn, though, with the $33,000 that can also be used earlier generations of robots tiallytoldthem "good," "bad" or ing one optimal way to drill. right signals." without a cage. that often required extensive "neutral" as they did each part Instead it is learning a teamGentle, helpful robots aren't Impressive asthe new roprogramming to change the of a job. Now she has added a mate'spreferences, and how to just being created in labs; they bots are, they will soon have smallest details of their rou- technique called cross-train- cooperate." are also arriving in the mar- even more advanced skills, tine, said Henrik Christensen, ing, in which robots and huWhen t h e cr o ss-trained ketplace. Since January, Re- said Stefan Schaal, a professor director of the robotics promans exchange roles, learning teams resumed their original think Robotics of Boston has of computerscience, neuroscigram at the Georgia Institute a thing or two from each other roles, both robots and people been sending customers its ence andbiomedical engineerof Technology. in the process. did their jobs more efficiently, two-armed robot called Bax- ing at the University of South"Researchers in labs worldIn a recent study, Shah and the study found. The time that ter, which can work uncaged, ern California and a director wide are building robots that a student had human-robot the humans were idle while movingamong people. of the Max Planck Institute for "We are shipping robots ev- Intelligent Systems in Germacan predict what you'll do next teams perform a chore bor- waiting for the robot to finish and be ready to give you the rowed from the assembly line: a task dropped 41 percent and ery day and have a backlog of ny. In the future, robots will be best possible assistance," he The humans placed screws the time that humans and ro- orders of about three months," able to go onto the Internet and said. and the robots did the drill- bots worked simultaneously in- said Rodney Brooks, Rethink's exchange information, leading One of those researchers is ing. Then the teammates ex- creased 71 percent, when com- founder, chairman and chief to vast gains in what they can Julie Shah, an assistant profes- changed jobs and the robots pared with teams working with technology officer. accomplish. "It will take time before we sor in the department of aero- observed the humans drilL robots trained the old way. Baxter, which costs $22,000, "The robot gathers informa"This is a fascinating applinautics and astronautics at can lift objects from a convey- get there," Schaal said, "but it the Massachusetts Institute of tion on how the person does cation of cross-training," said or belt. "You don't have to tell will happen."
when a MexicanaAirlines Boeing 727 crashed in a remote
mountainous region of Mexico. In1993, actor Brandon Lee, 28, was accidentally shot to death during the filming of a movie in Wilmington, N.C., when he was hit by a bullet fragment that had been lodged
inside a prop gun. In 1995, Mexican-American
singer SelenaQuintanillaPerez, 23, was shot to death in Corpus Christi, Texas, by the founder of her fan club,
Yolanda Saldivar, whowas convicted of murder andsentenced to life in prison. In 2005, Terri Schiavo, 41, died at a hospice in Pinellas Park, Fla., 13 days after her feeding
tube was removed in awrenching right-to-die dispute.
Ten yearsago:American forces battled Iraqi defenders in fierce street fighting 50 miles south of Baghdad, pointing
toward a drive onthe capital. Seven Iraqi women and children were killed by U.S. troops at an
Army checkpointwhen their van refused orders to stop. Five yearsago:HUDSecretary Alphonso Jackson announced his resignation amid the wreckage of the national
housing crisis. One yearago:Hundreds of world landmarks from Berlin's
BrandenburgGate tothe Great Wall of China went dark as part of a global effort to highlight cli-
mate change.Carolina Kostner of Italy won the ladies' world figure skating title while Patrick
Chan of Canadacaptured the men's title in Nice, France.
BIRTHDAYS Actor William Daniels is 86. Musician Herb Alpert is 78.
Senate President ProTempore Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., is 73.
Former U.S. Rep.Barney Frank, D-Mass., is 73. Actor
Christopher Walken is 70. Former Vice President Al Gore is 65. Author David Eisenhower
is 65. Actress RheaPerlman is 65. Actor Ed Marinaro is
63. Rock musician Angus Young (AC/DC) is 58.Actor Ewan McGregor is 42. Rapper Tony Yayo is 35. Actress Kate
Micucci is 33. Jazzmusician Christian Scott is 30. Pop
musician Jack Antonoff (fun.j is 29. Actress Jessica Szohr is 28. — From wire reports
STUDY
Adults more likely to text and drive
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than teens By Hayley Tsukayama The Washington Post
Many of the campaigns to stop texting and driving have been aimed a t h y p er-connected teens, but a new survey from ATgrT shows adults are more likely to be driving distracted. Nearly half of adults surveyed, 49 percent, said they text and drive — even though nearly all of them say they know the habit is dangerous. Ninety-eight percent of adult drivers surveyed said they know that distracted driving isn't safe. But the trend actually appears to be on the rise, AT&T said, as six out of 10 drivers said they never texted behind the wheel just three
years ago. The top reasons that adults gave fortheir behavior were that sending a text while driving has become second nature, they feel it makes them more productive and it helps them feel connected. While the survey showed adults were more likely to engage in the bad habit, 43 percent of teens also said they were sending messages while behind the wheel. The survey on teens provided a bit more data on why young people choose to text and drive. One reason is that most text-message users, the survey said, expect a reply within five minutes or less — 48 percent ofteens said they expect aresponse right away once they fire off a text
message. Parents' b ehavior, t e ens said, has a big influence on their own actions. AT&T found that not having a parental rule against texting and driving is among the greatest predictors that a teen will send messages while driving.
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
IN FOCUS:REMEMBERING HISTORY
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Pedestrians pass remains of the Berlin Wall at East Side Gallery in Berlin in 2005. While citizens of Germany's capital were eager to tear down the wall in1989, many now want to protect it.
er in a reservationists t eveo ers ans By Michael Birnbaum
started at the beginning of The Washington Post March but was temporarily BERLIN — T h e w o rkers halted after public protest, has used the early morning dark- galvanized opposition among ness to obscure their secretive a broad range of Berlin resitask: removing pieces of the dents who fret that their city is longest-remaining stretch of forgetting its history and also the Berlin Wall. losing what made it unique When the wall fell in 1989, after 1989. Once upon a time, Berlin's residents were eager artists squatted in crumbling to clear away the hated divider apartment buildings and were as quickly as they could. Now left alone to be creative. Musimany of the people who fought cians turned sprawling former to scrub it from the map are industrial spaces into clubs. scrambling topreserve what But rent has skyrocketed in remains. Recently, they came recentyears. The old squatter up against a developer deter- houses have almost all been mined to build on his property, renovated. Man y r e s idents situated in the former no-man's say Berlin feels more normal land between East and West — and not in a good way. "This wall being torn down Berlin. The conflict comes as Ger- is a symbol of what's happenmany re-evaluates its relation- ing all over now," said Hannes ship to a communist era it once Kutza, 26, a doctoral candicouldn't wait to forget. Berlin's date. "There are huge amounts streets are scattered with me- of people who are interested in morials to Nazi-era atrocities. preserving this place." But until very recently, many T he concrete w all , f i r st here were happy to rid them- erected in 1961, was once the selves of reminders of the post- most visible international symWorld War II period when they bol of the Iron Curtain division were separated by p olitical between the capitalist West systems and an 86-mile rein- and the communist East. forced concrete barrierthat East German a u thorities ringed the western half of the erected it overnight to halt a city. steady stream of defections. At At this m i le-long stretch least D6 people perished, most along the Spree River known of them shot, as they tried to as the East Side Gallery, art- scale it to escape to the West. ists painted exuberant murals Images of jubilant Berliners on the wall in the months af- chipping away at the Wall with ter East and West Berlin were chisels and pickaxes that were reunited. Tourists have long broadcast around the world in flocked hereto see a cheerful November 1989 helped accelmonument to peaceful revolu- erate the downfall of the Soviet tion in a once out-of-the-way Union. area. After reunification, many But as the city has boomed here had mixed feelings about in recent years, developers preserving reminders of divih ave targeted many of t h e sion. Some c o mmunist-era empty spaces that were left monuments, such as the garby World War I I b o mbings gantuan, bronze-colored Paland communist neglect. Last ace of the Republic, the forweek, workers r emoved a mer seat of the East German 25-foot concrete span of the parliament, were torn down landmark wall t o m ake an altogether. Others, such as access road for a planned 13- Checkpoint Charlie, a famous story luxury apartment build- border crossing between East ing directly along the river. and West Berlin, have been The move sparked immediate paved over with touristy food protest. stands. In 2007, another por"There is a wider conscious- tion of the East Side Gallery ness for the wall and its cul- was removed with little protest tural significance," said Axel to create a riverside park. Klausmeier, the director of the Now, though, a recent poll Berlin Wall Foundation. At the by the Forsa Institute found time of reunification "it was that 75 percent of Berliners impossible to imagine thou- want to p reserve the w all. sands of people standing in Many of those opposed to the front of the wall demonstrat- developer's plans fear t h at ing to keep it. Now there is a there will be little left to tell fucompletely different attitude." ture generations what it meant The construction, w h i ch to be divided.
"Ask a 1 2-year-old about East Germany today. They don't know a nything," said Lothar Menkel, 55, an engineer who went to the wall this week to watch yellow Komatsu backhoes move piles of dirt. The fight to keep the wall has some Berliners admitting that their 1989 selves would have been astonished. "We were confronted with the wall everywhere" before it fell, said Gunter Ebeling, 65, a retired railway worker who has lived in the eastern half of Berlin since 1974 and still remembers the precise minute, 11:11 p.m. on Nov. 9, 1989, that he crossed freely into West Berlin for the first time. Now, he said, the wall "should remain." Construction would bring money t o Be r l i n' s c a s hstrapped c it y g o v ernment, leaving some top city officials with m i xed f eelings about fighting too hard against it. The apartment building would go up in a largely barren area between the former East and West Berlin that was restituted to pre-Nazi-era owners in the 1990s. Although temporary
clubs have popped up along the banks ofthe Spree, large swaths of land have remained empty, as d evelopers long deemed the area too unprofitable to build up. The Berlin Wall is a landmarkmonument, meaningthat it is usually protected against demolition and modification, but a loophole in building law gives the developer permission to remove up to 65 feet to build the access road. Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit held last-minute meetings with the developer, Maik Uwe Hinkel, hours after Hinkel's workers moved the portion of the wall, but no final compromise was announced. The controversy has even attracted the attention of David Hasselhoff, the American actor and musician, whose 1989 New Year's Eve performance atop the Berlin Wall left him with an unusual and enduring cultural influence in Germany. This month, he visited Berlin to campaign to save the wall, turning out thousands. "It's a sad day as the bulldozerscame & ripped out the memories of those imprisoned by the Wall and those who died," he said on Twitter last week.
New priv atespace launchset Orlando Sentinel WASHINGTON — On the face of it, the planned midApril launch of a new commercial rocket from Wallops Flight Facility i n V i r g i n ia won't be one for the record books. A number of barriersfor commercialspace companies already have been brokenfor instance, SpaceXhas flown to the International Space Station — and the maiden flight of Antares, a two-stage rocket built by Orbital Sciences of Virginia, is expected to do little more than prove it can put a dummy payload into orbit. But the outcome of the test flight, and the rocket's perfor-
mance going forward, could act as an important indicator of the strength of the emergi ng space economy — a n d whether NASA made the right call in relying on commercial companies to do supply runs to the space station. The Wallops launch also will be closely watched by Florida officials, as success there would bring more proof that the number of rivals to Cape Canaveral in the launch business is growing. As planned, Antares is expected to launch from Wallops from April 17-19 and carry an 8,400-pound weight that mimics the Cygnus spacecraft that Orbital is building to f erry
cargo to the station, possibly as soon as this summer. The spacecraft will be ready by summer, the company says. NASA also is flying three small satellites — each the size of a coffee mug and costing less than $7,000 apiece — to test whether engineers can convert components commonly found in smartphones into a working satellite. Each will orbit for about two weeks — sending back pictures of Earth and status updates about its battery life and temperature — in what NASA officials hope will teach them how to build cheap satellites that could monitor space weather or radiation.
Continued from A1 Should they even have to buy land that they bel ieve wa s s t o len f r o m them'? Should the land be developed or preserved as sacred? Should the tribe, whose people are among the poorest in A m erica, capitalize on w hat h a ppened here'? The massacre on Dec. 29, 1890, was said to have started when a shot rang out as soldiers of the U.S. 7th C a v alr y se a r ched Chief Bi g F o ot's b a nd, which it had arrested and detained here. (Some Ind ians h y pothesize t h at the massacre was retribution for the routing of Gen. G eorge Custer an d h i s troops at Little Bighorn 14 years earlier.) Estimates of the death toll vary from 150 to more than 300, with some of thebodies recovered on the land Czywczynski owns. The land is believed to have gotten into non-Indian hands sometime after a process of allotment began in the late 1800s in which the federal government divided land among the Indians and gave some parcels t o n o n - l ndians. Czywczynski bought the land in 1968, lived there and ran the trading post and museum. He moved away in 1973, after t he violent o c c upation of Wounded Knee by an organization known as the American Indian M ovement left much of the town d estroyed, including t h e trading post and his home. Czywczynski said he had been trying to sell the land to the Oglala Sioux f or about three decades, and he blamed the tribe's internal disorder for his inability to do so. "They never could agree o n anything," h e s a i d . "They either did not have the money; some wanted it, some didn't want it; it was too high, too low. I've come to t h e c o nclusion n ow, at my a ge, I'm 74 years old, I'm going to sell the property." If the tribe does not buy it by May I , C z ywczynski said, he will put it up for auction on th e open market. The Oglala Sioux president, Bryan Brewer, said, "I don't think we should buy something back that we own." He added that he would leave it up to the descendants ofthe massacre to plan a way forward. But that promises to be tricky. There is considerable disagreement over whether the tribe should p rofit f r o m Wou n d ed K nee t h rough, f o r in stance, developing tourist attractions. "Whenever we discuss this Wounded Knee massacre topic, it takes us into
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A round concrete building houses Garry Rowland's one-room visitor center that he built next to the Wounded Knee Massacre site. A clash over the sale of a parcel of land that includes the massacre site is raising the moral, legal and social quandaries that have burdened generations of American Indians. whose gr e a t-grandmother and great-aunt were among the survivors, said she would be open to a n e ducational memorial, but was hesitant about seeing the tribe profit. "How and who should do that is a whole big question," she said. "Ultimately, that's a decision the descendants have to make." But many find that unyieldi ng traditionalism hard t o swallow, given the hardship on the reservation. Shannon County, which encompasses most of Pine Ridge, has the
Lillian Red Star Fire Thunder, 79, is in favor of some development at the Wounded Knee Massacre site. There is considerable disagreement within the tribe over whether the Oglala Sioux should profit from their ancestors' tragedy.
highest percentage of people l iving below poverty in t h e nation at 53.5 percent,according to census data compiled by Social Explorer. Nearly three-quarters ofthe people in the county are either unemployed or not in the work force. Proponents of commercialism at Wounded Knee note that community members already profit at the site, selling crafts to tourists in the area. This frequently leads to turf battles, and some have suggested building a market to bring order to the trade. Garry Rowland, a Wounded Knee native, runs a oneroom visitor center that he built next to the mass grave where most of the massacre victims were buried. Some residents have criticized his center, calling i t u n o fficial a nd accusing him o f p r o fiting on the blood of t heir ancestors. But Rowland said that his great-great-grandfather Chief F ire Lightning o w ned t h e land before the massacre and that his family should decide what should be done. (Hollow Horn disputed that Fire Lightning owned the land or that he was a chief.) "We don't charge admis-
sion to our m useum," said Rowland, who participated in the 1973 takeover, hangs the American flag upside down and proudly wears an FBI cap that he says stands for "fullblooded Indian." "We're just trying to preserve what history took place here. We tell the truth of what happened." Some have advocated for development like a gas station and a general store to save on the roughly 20-minute drive to Pine Ridge for basic amenities. They also say that building a motel would help attract visitors. While she respects the lives lost in the massacre, Lillian Red Star Fire Thunder, a 79year-old Wounded Knee resident, said she disagreed with those who "make it s ound like it's taboo" to develop the land. "That was yesterday; tomorrow is going to be tomorrow," she said. "They should think about the future for the children, the families."
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a deep, deep psychological state because we have to relive the whole horror," said Nathan B l i n dman, 56, one of whose ancestors survived the massacre. "Anything that might indicate that as d escendants we're profiting from our ancestors' tragedy, we can't ever do that." Phyllis Hollow Horn, 56,
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SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S
TODAY'S READ:WHO SHOULD GUARD HISTORY?
By Tom Knudson • The Sacramento Bee
DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK, Calif.— The first sign says: "Private Road — Authorized
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Vehicles Only." A short distance later, at a locked white gate, another reads: "Borax — Do Not Enter."
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Ahead, less than a mile from Death Valley National Park, is one of the most well-preserved historic mining camps in America: Ryan, Calif.
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Here, for select tour groups, scientists and guests, history comes alive. At a o ne-room schoolhouse, you can ring a bell that called students to class 90 years ago. Near the dining hall, you can step into a meat locker and, in the thick wooden walls, smell the slabs of beef that fed miners in the 1920s. In dorm rooms, you can peer throughcracked,tattered window shades that have held back the sun for generations. Outside, you walk by rusty ore carts, wheelbarrows, picks, shovels and other relics. Up a steep hill is a rare treasure: a much-weathered weather vane
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In private hands Many historic mining sites are at risk, too — and that's one reason Preston Chiaro, president of the Death Valley Conservancy, cited in explaining why he believes Ryan should remain private. "The fact that it's been in private hands rather than part of the national park has been one of the things that has helped to preserve it," said Chiaro, Rio Tinto's group leader for innova-
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once photographed by Ansel Adams. Four years ago, all of this nearly became part of Death Valley National Park as a gift from London-based Rio Tinto, the third-largest mining company in the world. But in a s u r prising turnabout, Rio Tinto chose instead to give Ryan to an entity it felt could better care for the site: a fledglingnonprofit — the Death Valley Conservancy — headed by one of the company's own executives. Park visitors who long had dreamed of touring Ryan were dismayed. So, too, were park managers. "I was very disappointed," said J.T. Reynolds, a former Death Valley superintendent who worked with Rio Tinto in 2007 to make Ryan part of the park. "It would have served many people,many organizations and the best interests of historic preservation." What's u nfolding here i s more than a story about the curious fate of a remote mining camp in the hottest, driest corner of America. It is part of a wider debate about how best to protect historic resources across the West in an era of limited and declining governmentresources. Already much has been lost. One example lies inside Death Valley National Park, where someone has chiseled into a rock wall in an attempt to steal Native American petroglyphs, defacing the area forever. In one of the most brazen cases, thieves used p ower saws, ladders and generators last year to steal centuries-old petroglyphs from federal land north of Bishop. Although the rock art has been recovered, no arrests have been made. "It's akin to someone defacing part of the Vatican or damaging an i m portant artistic piece, like the Mona Lisa," said Greg Haverstock, an archaeologist with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management."A few greedy, self-minded individuals destroyed an amazing, finite resource." His budget to monitor and protectsuchsites across750,000 acres ofpublic land is $52,000 — seven cents an acre. "It is just not a lot of money," Haverstock said. "It forces me to seek outsidesources offunding."
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The one-room schoolhouse Ryan, Calif., was last used around1930. Less than a mile from Death Valley National Park, Ryan is one of the most well-preserved historic mining camps in America.
July 2009 email. "Lots of people, including the folks at Rio Tinto, worked a long time to get Ryan to the park service." Since then, the park and Rio Tinto have remained quiet, kindling interest, speculation and numerous requests for information from the conservancy. "If you go to them asking for details, asking for facts — one of my questions is, where is their money actually coming from'? — their response is we don't have the time to deal with you," said Bruce with the Save
Ryangroup. tion and technology. "There is a proven model here. It works. Why wouldyou want to change it?" But private ownership of historic treasures also raises questions: Who will have access? Under what conditions? What will it cost'? How will tax-deductible contributions be spent? "Once a site gets into private hands, there is really no control of it," said Michael Newland, past president of the Society for California Archaeology. "You are at the good graces of the
(owners). Some people are fantastic. Some may not be." As the donation nears completion, some have asked the conservancy tough questions, in vviting, about its budget, management and plans.They have learned little. "I got one reply to four letters saying they have every right to do with this property whatever they want to do and furthermore,they have no time to talk to me," said Steve Bruce, member ofa group called Save Ryan. "As a public charity taking public money, they have a responsibility to respond to the public," Bruce added. "It's very frustrating."
The Ryan story There is one thing on which
allagree:In a region peppered with old mine shafts, shacks
and diggings, Ryan is a remarkable place, an outpost of culture and rustic comfort in a harsh, unforgiving wilderness. I t began humbly, with a cluster of cabins, lean-tos and dugouts at the base of a dark cliff overlooking Death Valley. "A stranger would have been amused to see the heads pop up all over the place like prairie dogs when the warning whistle blew before breakfast," wrote mine manager Harry Gower in a memoir: "50 Years in Death Valley — Memoirs of a Borax Man." But like t h e c actus that cling to canyon walls, Ryan would blossom into something special. Down a n a rrow, winding rail line came the heavy timber, wood stoves, concrete, bed frames, mattresses, wash basins, electrical wire, tools, windows, medical s u pplies and other building blocks of civilization. Ryan was never large — just a few dozen buildings that housed 150 to 200 people, in-
cluding some wives and children. But for a company town — it was owned by Pacific Coast Borax — it was surprisingly well furnished. There was a hospital, schoolhouse, post o ffice, general store, two bunk houses, even a community hall where residents gathered to watch silent movies — a vast improvement from the early d ays w hen miners scraped borax offthe Death Valley floor and hauled it to market in m ule-drawn
wagons. After mining stopped in 1928, Pacific Coast Borax retooled Ryan into a tourist attraction: the Death Valley View Hotel. Visitors rented rooms, played tennis and rode the "baby-gauge" rail with its jawdropping views of the valley. Pacific Coast Borax didn't just promote Ryan, it protected the site with a full-time caretaker, a practice continued by U.S. Borax and Rio Tinto. Though some buildings are deteriorating, others are in great shape. Even the train engine that once carried tourists is kept in working order, though it is no longer used. "It's just like going back in time," said Linda GreeneSmith, former chief of resources management at Death Valley National Park. "This place has really been lovingly cared for.It'sa treasure." Two Pacific Coast Borax executives, Stephen Mather and Horace Albright, even joined the National Park Service. As its first two directors from 1917 to 1933, they called for protection of Death Valley, which was declared a national monument
by President Herbert Hoover in 1933. It became a national park in 1994.
Choosing a caretaker In 2009, a donation of Ryan to the park was close. Rio Tinto officials met with Death Valley officials. Park officials prepared planning documents and a legislative plan for Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. Rio Tinto put together a color fact sheet titled: "Public benefits of the Ryan Camp donation." "Donating Ryan Camp is a natural step in the long partnership between Death Valley and the company who was instrumental in its creation," the fact sheet reads. "With the addition of Ryan Camp ... the complete historic continuum of borax m ining within Death Valley would be preserved." But in 2009, the plan was dropped after Chiaro met with Rio Tinto officials, including its CEO, and persuaded them to donate Ryan to the Death Valley Conservancy. "We believe that the DVC shares our vision to preserve this unique facility," said Rio Tinto's media advisor, David O uthwaite, by e m ai l f r o m London. Asked recently about the decision, Death Valley spokes-
Chiaro said his organization's reticence is rooted in online speculation and criticism from Bruce and others that he feels are ungrounded. "The human reaction when you are being attacked is to defend yourself," Chiaro said. "I suppose we did some of that. That's not maybe our proudest moment. But I think that's a bit of human nature." The real reason for keeping Ryan private, Chiaro said, is that he believes the conservancy can better protect it. "It's not that the park service wouldn't care about the site and treat it with respect," he said. "I don't think they have the vision for it. I don't think they have the money." Reynolds,the former superintendent, disagreed. "The park service is the caretaker of the country's cultural history," he said. "You c ould have ha d a
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Preston Chiero, e board member of the Death Valley Conservancy and a Rio Tinto executive, examines an old photo in the one-room school house in Ryan, Calif.
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world-class historic preservation training program," Reynolds said. "We could have employees in historic and period dress.Itw as endless.Yo u could have that whole area as your classroom." Chiaro said the conservancy has similar goals and plans to work with the park service on ways to achieve them. "We want more people to be able to share in this incredible piece of history that's been preserved at Ryan, but we don't want to damage it," he said. For now, R ya n r e mains closed to the public. And for Kathleen Knowler — whose grandfathers were Harry Gower, the man who helped carve Ryan out of bare rock, and Horace Albright, director of the National Park Service from 1929 to 1933 — that is unfortunate. She recalled visiting Death Valley a few years ago with her daughter, hoping to see Ryan, onlyto discover it was off limits. "It was very disappointing not to be able to get there," said Knowler, a first-grade teacher in Arizona. "That's family history we can't appreciate. It's a really neat little mining town that should be part of the park service."
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31,2013
ContinuedfromA1 Principals, who are often responsible for the personal observation part of the grade, generally are not d etached m anagerial types an d c a n be loath to give teachers low marks. "There's a real culture shift that has to occur, and there's a lot evidence that that hasn't occurredyet," Jacobs said. B ut even the part of t h e grade that was intended to be objective, how s tudents perform o n st a n d ardized tests, has p r oved s quishy. In part, this is because tests have changed so much in recent years — and are changing still, because of the new "Common Core" curriculum standards that m ost states haveadopted — that administrators havebeenunwillingto set the test-score bar too high for teachers. In many states, consecutive "ineffective" ratings are grounds for firing. "We have changed proficiency standards 21 times in thelastsixyears," JackiePons, the schools superintendent for Leon County, Fla., said. In the county, 100 percent of the teachers were rated "highly effective" or"effective." "How can you e v aluate someone in a system when you change your levels all the time?" Pons asked. U ntil r e c ently, F l o r i da teachers were typically observed once a year for about 20 minutes and deemed satisfactory o r u n s atisfactory. Roughly 100 percent of them w ere rated satisfactory i n 2010-11. Florida districts are
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— Grover Whitehurst, director of the Brown Center on Education Policyat the Brookings Institution /arr. lrgl C rlL':'l a"i'
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ContinuedfromA1 But when it comes to specifics, Rep. Jason Conger, RBend, who sits on the House Revenue Committee said, "It's reallyhardtotelL" That's due, in p a rt, said Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, chairwoman o f th e Senate Finance and Revenue Committee,because there are countless options. "We're looking at e verything, except a general tax increase," Burdick said. "No one is talking about a general income tax along the lines of Measures 66 and 67." Those m easures r a i sed both corporate and personal income taxes and were approved byboth voters and the Legislature. Burdick doesn't expect a piecemeal approach. Instead, one bill e ncompassing the $275 million revenue increase will likelybe presented. Democratswillneedasupermajority, whichmeanstwo Republican votes in each chamber, in order to raisetaxes. "What I would like to see is a package that would get moreevenlysplit thanpicking up two Republicans," Burdick said."Iwould like to see atrulybipartisan buy-in." House Republican Leader Mike McLane of Powell Butte said he won't be surprised if Democrats unveil a proposal and it moves quickly, much like Senate Bill 822 that addressed PERS. "The tax increase that the Democraticco-chair's budget called for are not specified, and the Democratic leadership has not stated what they intend to do," McLane said. "So, like everyone else, we're waitingtoseewhat they're goingto do." McLane blasted the Democrats as being opaque in their planning. "If Republicans were in charge of the House, we would a bsolutely have more transparency and publicprocess," he said. B urdick said there is n o e asy s o lution. E a c h ta x break benefits someone's constituents. "There are a lot of proposals. There are a lot of ideas. You have to look at each one carefully ... None of this is easy," she said. Burdick echoed that capping deductions and evaluating what tax breaks could be terminated are very much topics ofconversations.
-
•
'
SarahBethGlickateen/New YorkTimes News Service
Meiissa Fuiimore, second fromleft, the principal at Ruediger Elementary School, in Tallahassee, Fia., observes a fifth-grademusic class. Across the country, educationreformers and their allies inboth parties have revamped thewayteachers are graded, abandoning methods underwhichnearlyeveryonewas deemedsatisfactory, evenwhenstudentswerefalling behind. teachers are no longer rated
simply on "classroom management" and"planning," but ratheron60specificelements,
including "engaging students
in cognitively complex tasks involving hypothesis generation" and"testing and demonstrating value and respect for low expectancy students." One Leon Countyprincipal, Melissa Fullmore of Ruediger Elementary school in Tallahassee, said that had it been solely up to her, one or two of her teachers would have been graded "highly effective," the top category. Three would have been marked"needs imspending $43 million in feder- provement,"onerungup from al Race to the Top grant mon- thebottom,andtherestwould ey on devising andbeginning have fallen under"effective." newmethods. But because Leon County Generally,50percent of the set the test-score bar so low, evaluation is now based on when their marks came out, administrators' observations all but one were highly effecof teachers and 50 percent on tive,andtheotherwascategostudent growth as measured rized as effective. "I wouldn't bytest scores(districts canal- put stock in t h e n umbers," ter that ratio to some extent). Fullmore said. F or th e o b servation p a r t , T he same w a s t r u e a t
Salem
"It would be an unusual profession that at least 5 percent are not deemed ineffective."
M<R.
Teachers
Springwood El em e ntary School nearby."We had three or four teachers that were rated as 'needs improvement' on the observation, but due to changes in the cut scores, they were all bumped up to effective," Dr . C h r i stopher Small, theprincipal, said. Officials in another county, Alachua, set scores relatively high, but when only 78 percent of teachers were deemed highly effective or effective, and when they saw how lenient other d i stricts w ere, they set them much lower; ultimately, 99.4 percent of teachers were rated effective or highly effective. "It's inconsistent, it's unfair and it's unscientific," the superintendent, Dan Boyd, wrote in a letter to The Gainesville Sun criticizinghowthestate's new evaluations had been carried out. KathyHebda, Florida'sdeputy chancellor for educator quality, said: "Directionally, we are off to a good start. But
we have pockets in the state wherewe need attention." Grover Whitehurst, director of the Brown Center on Education Policy at the Brookings Institution, said variations in teacher qualityhadbeenproven to affect student academic growth. If an evaluation system is not finding a wider distribution of effectiveness,"itis flawed," he said. "It would be a n u n usual profession that at least 5 percent are not deemed ineffective," he added. The new evaluation systems have been closelyscrutinized inthe education world bypolicymakers,publications l ike Education Week, a n d foundations that have provided money to help perfect the methods. E ducation r eformers i n sist they help to identify and remove ineffective teachers, while offering more feedback for teachers to improve their practice. But teachers' unions have
fought to make sure evaluationsdonotrelytooheavilyon testing data, contending that the data are prone to errors. (In Florida's first go-round with the new evaluations, for example, some teachers had to be rated based on students intheirschool,butnotin their classrooms, because t here was not enough data for their own students.) The linking o f t e achers' employment, and sometimes their pay, to test scores has alsobeenblamedforsporadic incidents of cheating, and on Friday, 35 Atlanta educators, including the former superintendent, were indicted in a what prosecutors called a widespreadscheme of doctoring students'answers. Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, saidthateven thoughthedatafromthesesystems"was not ready for prime time," it proved what she had long argued: That the majority of teachersareverygood. "Maybe thi s i n f ormation will debunk the myth about badteachers," she said. In Ne w H a v en , C o n n., where the t eachers' union collaborated with the school district in devising the new evaluation system,90 percent of teachers were rated "exemplary," "strong" or "effective," and 2 percent received the l owest r a t ing, "needs improvement." As part o f t h e p r ogram, teachers are warned months ahead of time if they are in danger of receivingthelowest mark; some improved, and some left. Washington, D.C., like New Yorkacenterof education reform, was amongthe first to try new evaluations,
and 0.4 percent received the lowest rating. Three years ago, when the new method began, only 82 percentofteachers were rated as effectiveor highly effective. Two percent were rated ineffective and the rest"minimally effective." Most recently, 89 percent received one of the top two ratings, and only I p e rcent were ineffective, which Scott Thompson, the deputy chief of human capital for teachers for D.C. public schools, said was evidence that the evaluations were making teachers better. "We are seeing improvements in practice," he said, noting that 400 teachers had been fired as a result of the new system, and several hundred had left voluntarily after weakratings. Despite any hiccups, principals and education officials said the new systems had helped them better discern specificteaching weaknesses. Small, from Springwood Elementary School in Florida, said he had m ore detailed feedbackto offerteachers. "I can identify an aspect of their teaching and work on that element versus the catchall frombefore," he said. In Michigan, Dr. Joseph Martineau, executive director for the Bureau of Assessment a nd Accountability i n t h e state Education Department saidthateven withallthe system's flaws, many of which will be corrected under new legislation, the 0.8 percent of teachers deemed ineffective last year translated to nearly 800 teachers who will be in
jeopardyoflosing theirjobs. "There's a possibility, a real
replacing a system under possibility, that students will which 95 percentof teachers were meeting expectations
have a more effective teacher," he said.
"We're looking at everything, except a general tax increase. No one is talking about a general income tax along the lines of Measures 66 and
67 (raising personal/corporate income tax)." — State Sen. Ginny Burdick, 0-Portiand
"You have to look at each one carefully, theimpacts and the politics," she said. The state imposes no limits on i temized deductions, said Paul Warner, a legislative revenue officer. Depending on where deductions are capped, the state could raise a substantial amount of revenue. The average state tax return claims $17,000 in itemized deductions, according to Warner. Capping deductions at $50,000 would raise about $283 million for the 2013-2015 biennium, he said. It would alsomainlyhithigher-income earners and impact relatively few Oregonians. Everytaxcreditalsocomes with a sunset date, and lawmakers this session are set to re-evaluate $49 million worth of tax credits. They could end some credits and move revenue toward the $275 million
goal. For example, the political tax credit, a deduction taxpayers get when they donate to apoliticalcampaign, isprojectedtocost thestate$20million inthe2015-17biennium. O r another, smaller t a x credit is the one taxpayers receive when they donate to the state cultural trust. Ending it would bring in $3.3 million this biennium and $6.7 million thenext. There is also a push to tack on sunset dates to all tax exp enditures, similar t o t a x credits. Depending on where those expiration dates are placed,they could raise revenue this biennium, according to Warner. H igher excise t axes o n items such as cigarettes, beer and wine, are also being considered, Warner said. In the past, lawmakers have hesitated to raise taxes on those items, but now it's a conversation "in the background," Warner said. A handful of b i lls would tackle th e s e nior m e dical tax deduction, which allows seniors, regardless of t heir income, to deduct their medical expenses. The governor has made clear he hopes lawmakers tackle the deduction, expressing concern it mainly benefits high-income seniors.
For the 2 013-15 biennium, it's projected to cost the state $187 million, and continue to increase quickly. "You have two pressures," Warner said. "Aging population and inflation in medical costs." During a committee hearing on PERS, Majority Leader Val Hoyle, D-Eugene, highlightedthebattletakingshape at the Capitol. Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, was blasting the Democrats' changestothepension as cosmetic and notbipartisan. Hoyle shotback. Democrats, she said, believe in"shared sacrifice." "I would invite you and the Senate Republicans to join us in a revenue plan that would be dollar-to-dollar equal to the savings we're asking retirees, teachers, firefighters and police officers to pay," Hoyle said. "So we invite you to join us in that." — Reporter:541-554-1162, ldakeCbendbuiletin.com
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SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A7
LOOKING AHEAD: TERROR PROSECUTIONS
m i
II' I' Ll
n
By Peter Finn
ing. In secure meeting rooms in Washington, senior
somewhat shorter sentences in exchange for valuable cooperation, is to balance and re-balance over time the sometimes competing national security values of disrupting and incapacitating a particular target and gathering intelligence from that target that may help disrupt and incapacitate others."
officials in the Obama administration were wring-
A high-value target
The Washington Post
Aboard the USS Boxer, somewhere in the Indian Ocem, Ahmed Abdulkadir Warsame was sitting across from a team of interrogators, talking and talk-
ing their hands over what to do with him. Some in t h e a d ministrat ion desperately wanted t o prosecute Warsame — a key facilitator between al-Qaida franchises— in federal court. To dothat,though, they needed a "clean team" of FBI agents to come in and read the Somali
But inside the administration, senior lawyers calculated that Warsame could be interrogated for actionable intelligence whilepreparations were under way to bring him to federalcourtin Ne w York forprosecution. For an administration his rights, perhaps jeopardizing that is determined not to add his willingness to keep talking. to the detainee population at The quandary was particularly Guantanamo, the handling of acute because Warsame had the Somali's case has become intelligence on Anwar al-Aw- something of atemplate for othlaki, a U.S. citizen and a senior er terrorismsuspects captured leader in al-Qaida in the Ara- overseas. bian Peninsula. Detainees are firstheldunder "There was a fair amount of the laws of war and questioned debatebecause some of the in- by an interagency team of intel guys didn't want to stop the terrogators, including military, interrogation," said a former intelligence and law enforceadministration official. "0th- ment personnel, without being ers weregetting antsy because advised of their rights. At some they thought the longer you point, the interrogation is halted hold the guy and don't Miran- and — in the parlance of prosdize him, the worse off you are" ecutors — a "clean break" is if prosecutors try him in federal established before a fresh team court. of only FBI agents informs the In late June 2011, after two prisoner of his right to counsel. months of interrogation, the Shortly afterward, the suspect president's national security is put on a plane and flown to a advisers made the call. A team federal district, most often New of FBI agents gave Warsame York,fortriaL a Miranda warning, advising According to the Justice Dehim of his right to remain silent partment,federal prosecutors and his right to counseL "Then since the Sept. 11 attacks have there was a kind of hold-your- secured 67convictions of terbreath moment," the former of- rorists captured overseas; a ficial said. significant number have also Warsame waived his rights been cooperative, providing inand continued to talk. formation to authorities. In the In that instant, the Obama same period, there have been administration may have pre- only seven convictions in the served its ability to use the military commissions at Guanfederal courts to prosecute tanamo Bay. Two of those have high-value terrorists captured been overturned on appeal. overseas. Moreover, in military commissions, unlike federal courts, Getting convictions there is serious doubt about the Warsame was detained in viability of two of the charges April 2011, the same month that most commonly used against Attorney General Eric Holder terrorists — material support Jr. abandoned a criminal ci- and conspiracy — as law-ofvilian trial in New York for war charges in cases in which Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the suspects cannot be tied to a self-proclaimed m a stermind specific act of violence. of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. This month,federal prosecuHoldersent the case back to a torsunsealed court documents military commission at Guan- that show that Warsame, who tanamo Bay. On Capitol Hill, pleaded guilty to nine terrorism Republicans and Democrats charges in December 2011, has were insisting that all terror- continued to cooperate with auistscaptured overseas be sent thorities in the United States, alto the military detention center most certainly with the expecin Cuba. tation that his cooperation will
Snow Continued from A1 Depending on the district in Central Oregon, those deliveries typically start in the first couple weeks of April. Irrigation season in Cent ral Oregon t y pically r u n s from April I to Oct. 31. If the snowpack continues to peak earlier, Johnson said districts may start their deliveries closer to the start of the month. Johnson said the early peak in snowpack hasn't concerned irrigators using water from the Deschutes River yet because of conservation measures they'vetaken in recent years — they're using less water more efficiently. Also, the river receives a boost from an aquifer that maintains an even flow in times of low runoff from the snowpack. April 1 is also significant when it comes to snowpack because the date has long been the general time of year when snowpack is deepest in Oregon. Looking at data for automated snow measuring sites at Santiam Junction, Hogg Pass and Irish Taylor, Strobel said the date that snowpack peaks has come earlier over the past 30 years than it did in the 30 years from 1971 to 2000. The change in when t he snowpack peaks isconsistent with the warming that scientists studying climate in the West have documented, said Kathie Dello, associate director of the Oregon Climate Change Research Institute at Oregon State University in Corvallis. From the start of the 20th century until today, she said,the average temperature in the Pacific Northwest has risen about 1.5 degrees.
Al-Jazeera/The Associated Press
Suiaiman Abu Ghaith is Osama bin Laden's son-in-Iaw and spokesman. Abu Ghaith was captured by the United States earlier this month and has spoken at length with interrogators. lead the government to petition the judge to sentence himto less than life in prison. It could be a while before any sentencing takes place;prosecutors may use him as a witness in other prosecutions. Priya Chaudhry, an attorney for Warsame, said she could not comment on his cooperation. She said she was "work-
ing very hard to keep his family safe," adding that the U.S. government was helping.
Setting a precedent
future attacks and save lives," RepublicanSens.John McCain of Arizona, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire said in a joint statement after Ghaith's court appearance. "A foreign member of a l-Qaida should never betreatedlike a common criminal and should never hear the words 'you have a right to remain silent.'" Among some CIA officials, the emphasis on prosecutions has seemed to amount to an overcorrection at times."There's a concern that things are tilting the wrong way," said a former senior U.S. intelligence official who would discuss intelligence issues only on the condition of anonymity."Instead of questioning people and trying to get data from them, there is a push to put them in the legal process." Current and former administration officials say criminal prosecutiondoes not preclude intelligence gathering. David Kris, the former head of the Justice Department's national security division, said suspects talk for all kinds of reasons, but "one of the things the government can do in the crimi-
In the wake of Warsame's detention, other h igh-profile cases have followed, including that of Osama bin Laden's sonin-law Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, who was arrested in Jordan last month and proceeded to speak at length with U.S. investigators. European allies have also extradited suspects to the United Stateson the express condition that they be tried in federal court. These include Abu Hamza al-Masri, the radical preacher, who was extradited from Britain in 2012, and al-Qaida veteran Ibrahim Suleiman Adnan Adam Harun, who has been held secretly in New York for months and has been coop- nal justice system, by offering erating with U.S. investigators since before he was extradited from Italy in October. " Rather than make a b i g argument for it, the administration has just brought these cases into the (civilian legal) system," said Karen Greenberg, director of the Center on National Security at Fordham Law School. "And they have I done them with an emphasis gs on getting information and getting it by legal means." Republicans o n Cap i t ol Hill continue to object to such c riminal p r osecutions. T h e administration "risks m issing important opportunities to gather intelligence to prevent
Warsame, who is now 26, had been a high-priority target for capture in the months before April 19, 2011, when the U.S. military picked him and another man up in the Gulf of Aden from a fishing skiff leaving Yemen. The intelligence community identified Warsame as a key liaison between al-Shabab, the al-Qaida affiliate in Somalia, and al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula. Officials in Washington first debated whether Warsame should be moved to Somalia for interrogation, but that was deemed too dangerous. They also discussed whether keeping him on a ship at sea would violate the Geneva Conventions. "The decision was to hold him on a ship but inform the Red Cross because if there was a Geneva Convention concern they would express it," said the former administration official. Warsame was transported to the USS Boxer, an amphibious assault ship with a brig that was in the region. The International Committee of the Red Cross visited the ship shortly after the capture, and the man who was detained with Warsame was let go. "He was a very small fry," the former administration o ff icial said. "Everyone was comfortable with that." Justice Department officials decided to withhold from the interagency team the evidence they had previously assembled against him. Even if a judge threw out evidence secured by the interrogators aboard the
vessel, the pre-existing evidence could still be used. When Warsame was captured, he had a laptop and other electronic media that included letters between the leadership ofal-Shabab andAQAP; dozens of pages of handwritten notes on how to build bombs; and correspondence that detailed why he was sent to Yemen, according to court documents. Warsame began to talk almost immediately. Officials said the Somali, who attended college in Britain, was a sophisticated operator who was fluent in English. He understood how the U.S. legal system worked and "realized that his best chance at a reasonable outcome for himselfwas to cooperate," said the former administration official. After some initial skepticism about the intelligence Warsame was providing,counterterrorism agents grew increasingly confident about its accuracy and its potential use in planning future U.S. operations. According to court documents, investigators corroborated his information with four people who "interacted extensively with Warsame in East Africa." Three of those four witnesses arecooperating defendants in Minnesota who had been members of al-Shabab, and the fourth is in custody overseas and charged with capital crimes. They confirmed Warsame's seniority and the fact that he once"commanded hundreds of al-Shabab fighters," according to court documents. He alsoprovidedinformation about Awlaki, who had become a majortarget for a capture or kill operation after he was tied to an attempt to bring down a commercialaircraft over Detroit. "He was a guy who was in fairly regular contact with Awlaki and talked about his contacts with Awlaki and Awlaki's patterns of life," said the former administration official.
sI
,I
Measuringsnowpack Another month of sparse snowfall has left the Central Oregon mountain snowpack below average for this time of year.
Snowpack in the Deschutes/Crooked River Basin was 89percent of normal, said Nicholle Kovach, Deschutes Basin Engineer for the Natural Resources Conservation Service in Redmond. The
snowpack wasalso below average for the Deschutes/Crooked River Basin at the end ofFebruary.
"We've just had a low precipitation year," she said. "... The re-
centsnowstorms haven'tbeenenoughto increasethesnowpack to average levels." Kovach and another NRCS worker surveyed the snow at three
sites west of Bend onThursday. They found more snowhigher up. The Hungry Flat site at 4,440 feet abovesealevel had no snow, the Tangent site across from Wanoga Sno-Park at 5,400 feet had 29.5inches ofsnow and the New Dutchman site nearDutchman
Flat Sno-Parkat6,320feethad99inches,Kovachsaid.TheTangent site was at 68.5 percent for this time of year, and the New
Dutchman site is at 93 percent of average. The statewide average is 91percent for this time of year, ac-
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cording to the NRCS. While the NRCS maintains an array of automated snow mea-
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manual monthly measurements. Kovach said the Redmond office conducted three surveys this year, at the end of January, February
and now March. Thesnowpack figures from the surveys are then used to create a streamflow forecast, predicting how much water will be flowing into rivers around Central Oregon. — Dylan Oarfing
Warmer average temperatures mean more precipitation falling as rain rather than snow, p a rticularly a r o u nd 5,000feetabove sea level,she said. The earlier shift to spring rain means th e s n owpack starts melting away sooner than expected. "This is one of the biggest impacts we are seeing in the Northwest because of climate change, and we are seeing it now," Dello said. H igher e l evation s n o w boundaries are likely experiencing higher temperatures, but the change isn't switching the snow to rain, said Philip Mote, director of the Oregon
Climate Change Research Institute at OSU in Corvallis. "When you are up at high elevation, it stays so cold all winter that a w a r m s t orm comes through and it is still snowing," he said. Along with the time that the snowpack peaks b ecoming earlier, Mote said, the average snow level around the Pacific Northwest is moving up. He estimates the average freezing level likely has risen about 600 feet since 1900. "And we expect much more in the coming decades," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbuiletin.com
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A public school bus makes a stop in the Highland Homes community north of San Antonio. Many public elementary schools in the area are going bilingual to accommodate the influx of Mexican students moving to the area with their families.
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rrivin ere e a e eae OS By Molly Hennessy-Fiske Los Angeles Times
S AN A N TONIO — T h e Mexican businessmen in RoI P lexes and Burberryties meet on the north side of town, at Cielito Lindo Restaurant, or at new neighboring country clubs. Their wives frequent Neiman M a r cus, T i f f any's and Brooks Brothers at the nearby mall. Their children park Porsches with Mexican license plates in the student lots at Reagan High School. They are part of a wave of legal M exican i m m i grants San Antonio real estate agent Ana Sarabia, who caters to new who have been overlooked in immigrants from Mexico, attends a meeting for business owners at the national debate over how the Sonterra Country Club. to deal with t heir impoverished, illegal compatriots. Propelled north by cartel violence, During the last decade, the they paid thousands of dollars number ofsuch visas issued to to hire attorneys and obtain Mexicans annually skyrocketinvestors' visas for themselves A bipartisan bill could be ed from 686 to 7,601, according and their families (including filed in the Senate as early to the State Department. maids). They have regrouped as next week, followed in The newcomers — n i ckin gated developments in sevrelatively short order by a named "migrantesfresas," or eral Texas cities, where their House bill, also crafted by rich migrants — are conspicugrowing influence has been a bipartisan group, aiming ous even in this largely Latino compared to the i mpact of at a compromise on thekey city. Sociologists compare the "Mexodus" of professionals to well-heeled Cuban refugees issue of citizenship. The who arrived in Miami decades efforts are being applauded the wave of exiles who fled to ago. by President Barack Texas after the Mexican RevoNowhere is th e e vidence Obama,who isusingevery lution in 1910, or wealthy Cum ore striking than i n S a n ounce of his political clout bans who decamped to South Antonio, Texas' second-largto try to get comprehensive Florida after the revolution in est city and a short private-jet reform. 1959. hop from Monterrey, Mexico, Former San Antonio Mayor Obama said the time has where many of the new imand Secretary of Housing and come "to work up the migrants built their wealth. Urban Development Henry political courage to do They have poured into develCisneros, whose grandfather what's required to be done. opments with names like The was exiled to San A ntonio I expect a bill to be put Dominion, Stone Oak and during the Mexican Revoluforward. I expect a debate Sonterra that were cut into tion, calls them a "new diasto begin next month. I want the rocky hills and oak groves pora with the potential to rival to sign that bill into law as north of the Loop 1604 highthe impact Cubans had on soonaspossible,"Obama way that rings the city. Miami." said at a White House More than 50,000 Mexican Harriett Romo, a s o ciolnaturalization ceremony. nationals now l i v e p e rmaogy professor and director In addition to the issue of nently in San Antonio, city ofof the Mexico Center at the eventual citizenship for ficials say, turning an upscale University of Texas at San 11 million undocumented enclave known as "Sonterrey" Antonio, has been studying a immigrants, Congress is into the city's second-fastest dozen Mexican families who expected to address the growing ZIP code. immigrated through investor need for temporary or Real estate agent Ana Saravisas. guest worker programs. "What we're seeing is that bia caters to the new arrivals — Hearst Newspapers finding t hem i m m igrathey move into kind of a new tion lawyers, new s chools, Mexican enclave — it's not a banks and office space — and barrio like you would see on s ees them r e shaping h e r Some had to show American the east side of L.A. or west hometown. investments worth hundreds side of San Antonio. It's an up"I can see it transitioning," of thousands of dollars. Many scale Mexican neighborhood said Sarabia, 45, who lived for moved in a matter of weeks, with parties at the country a time in Mexico City. "This but some said the process club," she said. has always been a bicultural has become more difficult in Romo found that the new city. Parts of it have now be- recent years, wit h t o ugher residents don't mix much with come a new Mexico." screening by U.S. consulates. l ower-income Mexican i m There's Lorena Canales, 40, Costs vary depending on migrants or Mexican Ameriwho moved from Monterrey the type of visa. In some cas- cans, the Tejanos who helped with her two youngest chil- es, it is cheaper than what a build San Antonio. They are dren two and a half years ago smuggler would charge for focused instead on "changing to start a bilingual day care an illegal crossing. Attorney the image of the immigrant," after witnessing a gun battle fees canrange from $1,500 to she said. "They see themselves outside of her local Wal-Mart. $6,500, compared with coyote as having a very different exUriel Arnaiz, 40, relocated payments of$6,000 or more. perience because they come with his wife and 3-year-old Arnaiz's initial visa allowed with official visas and more son from Mexico City four him to stay in the U.S. for up to resources." years ago to open a high-end a year. He was able to renew Writer Sandra Cisneros,a tequila import business after the visa, which is required ev- Chicago native who has lived some ofhis son's friends were ery two years for up to seven in San Antonio for almost 30 kidnapped. years if he wants to stay. His years, said the flow of wealthy Jose Ramos, 55, moved two wife and son were eligible for immigrants " constantly r e years ago from Monterrey to visas for the same time pe- freshing the ties" to Mexico open a restaurant, Vida Mia, riod (children under age 21 has changed the character of after a relative was kidnapped are eligible). While staying in the city, which long had the and killed. the U.S. on those visas, they feel of a small town and now It's not clear whether new were allowed to pursue per- has a population of about 1.4 immigration p olicies being manent residency, or green million. contemplated in Washington cards, which they got in recent San Antonio Mayor Julian would impact this group of months. Castro, a Mexican-American "There's a lot o f r equire- and a rising star of the Demowealthy immigrants, who skip long immigration lines by hir- ments," Arnaiz s aid. "You cratic Party who has traveled ing attorneys in Mexico to ap- need to have a real, sustain- south of the border to recruit ply for business-related visas able project." businesses, said he hopes the at U.S. consulates. The visa for professions list- newcomers stay. "My hope is that they are Most had to prove they were ed in the North American Free either employed by a multina- Trade Agreement is relatively planting firm roots and will tional company, or had a valid quick and cheap to obtain, become American c i t izens business plan an d e n ough some said, with attorney fees a nd fully participate in t he m oney to s t art t h eir o w n . ranging from $1,500 to $3,000. community," he said.
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Scoreboard, B2 NHL, B3 Sports in brief, B2 Prep sports, B3 College basketball, B4 Golf, B2 NBA, B3
MLB, B5
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP TENNIS: SEASON OUTLOOK
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
MLB
Mariners rea ize ro ress is a must in 2013
UCLAhires Alford as new coach LOS ANGELESSteve Alford was hired as the UCLA men's basket-
ball coach onSaturday, spurning NewMexico days after heagreedto a new10-year deal with the
Lobos for achanceto run what he called "the premier basketball program in the country." The Bruins are bring-
ing in someonewho shares the sameIndiana roots as JohnWooden, who led UCLA to a record 10 national championships, including
seven in a row, before retiring in 1975. Alford
By Tim Booth
learned about Wooden
The Associated Press
as a first-grader in Martinsville, Ind., where his father, Sam, coached the high school basketball team at Wooden's alma mater. "Ever since then there was a draw to find out more about him," Alford
SEATTLE — Banking on potential is no longer acceptable in the rebuilding of the Seattle Mariners. General manager Jack Zduriencik knows this. So
does manager Eric Wedge,
said on a teleconference. "I knowmy first steps into Pauley I will really feel that." Alford agreed to a
•4 John Klicker/ For The Bulletin file
Summit junior Lindsey Brodeck seeks a Class 5A singles title this year after finishing as the runner-up in the 2012 season.
seven-year deal worth $18.2 million, with a
yearly salary of $2.6 million and a $200,000
signing bonus, according to UCLA athletic director Dan Guerrero. Alford will be introduced in Westwood on
Tuesday. "This is truly a leap of faith," he said. Guerrero said UCLA reached out to Alford first, not knowing whether he would be interested in the Bruins.
Once he confirmed he was, the details were finalized early Saturday,
Guerrero said. "It was not aneasy decision because was I extremely happy," Alford said. "I was about
as happy as I canbe. "When I kept thinking about things, it still came back to UCLA. You're talking about the premier basketball program in the country. To
have an opportunity like this, they don't come
around every day." Guerrero said Alford is "the perfect fit for
UCLA" because heconnects with a newgeneration of players and brings an up-tempo and team-oriented style of play to Westwood.
• Summit's boys and girls squads areeachseeking another state title in 2013 By Beau Eastes andGrant Lucas The Bulletin
With five state qualifiers back from a year ago, the Summit girls look primed to defend their 2012 Class 5A tennis title. Lindsey Brodeck, the 5A singles runner-up last season, leads a strong junior class for the Storm that includes Haley Younger, a 2012 singles state quarterfinalist, and Morgan DeMeyer, who took fourth in doubles last year with thenpartner Hannah Sheppard. "This is a highly motivated group," Storm coach Ryan Cruz says. "(State) is definitely our (goal) again. We hope we make another good run." Summit also brings back senior Kelsey Collis and junior Kacie Evans, who went
Inside
three all-senior doubles teams that have
• A breakdown of all Central Oregon boys and the potential to represent the Panthers at girls prep tennis teams,B5 state this year. to state as a doubles team last spring. Bend High, which boasts seven seniors this year, including two-time state qualifier Kaylee Tornay, hopes to have a presence at state this year as well. "Summit's still the team to beat," says Lava Bear coach Kevin Collier, whose team took 14th at state in 2012. "But we have a team that wants to compete. We've got girls that may not all be state champs, but they've been on the team for four years (now) and want to see what they can do." Kendall Marshall at No . 1 s i ngles leads Redmond High, which joins Class 5A after placing second at the 6A Central Valley Conference districts in 2012. While no player on the Panthers' roster qualified for state last season, 12th-year Redmond coach Nathan Saito points to
"I think the strength of this season is that there is a lot of seniors with experience, and all of them can beat each other, which makes it a c ompetitive environment on the team," says Saito, who notes that 12 players — half of the Redmond roster — are seniors. "They have to play their best tennis week in and week out." At th e 4 A /3A/2A/IA l evel, Crook County, which placed second at state last season after winning the small-school state crown in 2011, expects to again make a trophy run in 2013 with returning state qualifiers Elsa Harris, Ali Apperson and Annie Frazier. Harris went 1-1 in singles play at state last season, while Apperson and Frazier advanced (with different partners) to the doubles tournament. SeeStorm /B5
as do the young players the Mariners are counting on to be the foundation in their effort to return the franchise to competitiveness. Seattle will begin the 2013 season with expectations. Not expectations to win the AL West or even earn a playoff berth. This is the year Seattle needs to be competitive. Needs to improve the worst offense in baseball. Must prove that making Felix Hernandez one of the highest-paid pitchers in baseball history was a shrewd maneuver and that the surrounding pieces are in place for Seattle's ace to be the centerpiece for baseball revitalization in the Pacific Northwest. That is the task for 2013, with the Mariners acutely aware of the talent on the farm, the moves made to bolster the offense and the changes to its home park that all point toward a team on the verge of returning to success. "I know there are a lot of questions and that's a good thing. But in regard to how we see our future and where we see ourselves at right now, we feel we're in a very,
very good place," Wedge said. See Mariners/B5
Nextup Seattle Mariners at Oakland A's
• When:Monday, 7:07 p.m. • TV:Root Sports
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT
"He's ready for this
Ducks'season cappedby sweet run in NCAAtourney
stage," Guerrero said. — The Associated Press
NBA Blazers fall on
road to Warriors Stephen Curry scores 39 points to lead Golden State over Portland,B3
GOLF
By Anne M. Peterson Duke's Mike Krzyzewski
Louisville's Rick Pitino
21 yearslater, Pitinoand I(rzyzewskimeetagain By Nancy Armour The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Mike Krzyzewski and Rick Pitino
Inside • A roundup of Saturday's regional finals and a breakdown of
today's regionals,B4
are finally doing an encore.
Two tied for lead at HoustonOpen
For the first time since their teams played perhaps the greatest game in the history of the NCAA tournament, Krzyzewski and Pitino will meet today when top-seeded Louisville faces Duke. In the regional finals, no less. Never mind that few of their current players were even born in 1992. Or that Pitino is no longer at Kentucky, having switched sides in the state's civil war after his brief trip to Boston and the NBA ended
Stewart Cink and Bill
badly.
Bill Haas takes a shot on the 15th hole during the third round of the Houston Open Saturday in Humble, Texas.
Haas are co-leaders heading into the final
round,B2
Krzyzewski and Pitino are forever linked by that one game in Philadelphia, immor-
talized by Christian Laettner's improbable shot. "It's one of those moments in time that helped define our sport," Krzyzewski said Saturday. "When I've talked to Rick about it, we realize we were the lucky guys. We had different roles at that time, but we were both lucky to be there." Said Pitino, "It was like being in Carnegie Hall and seeing the best musician or the best singer. Just sitting there in amazement of what they were doing out on the basketball court." See21 years/84
The Associated Press
F or E.J. Singler, oregon's run i n t h e NCAA men's basketball tournament was a sweet waytoend his college career.Sure,he would have liked to play for a title, but the Ducks' surprising success this season made for a satisfying ride. Oregon wrapped up its season with a record of 28-9 after a 77-69 loss to Louisville Friday in the NCAA's round of 16. "It's been awesome to experience it in my last year, and I just soaked it up, had as much fun as possible," Singler said. "A lot of people didn't believe we could make it where we were. Just proud of our guys for just playing so well down the stretch and just battling together to make it as far as we dld. At the start of the season Oregon was picked to finish seventh in the Pac-12. But the Ducks wound up with a share of second place in the league's regular-season standings before defeating UCLA in the conference tournament final to earn an automatic berth in the NCAA tournament. As the No. 12 seed in the Midwest Region, the Ducks beat fifth-seeded Oklahoma State and fourth-seeded St. Louis in San Jose, setting up the game against Louisville in Indianapolis. O regon became the firstNo. 12 seed to advance to the round of 16 since Richmond two
years ago. SeeDucks/B4
Darron Cummings i The Associated Press
Oregon forward E.J. Singler drives with the ball during the first half of Friday night's regional semifinal against Louisville in Indianapolis.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY GOLF 6 a.m.:European tour, Trophy Hassan II, final round, Golf Channel. 10 a.m.: PGATour, Houston
Open, final round, Golf Channel. Noon:PGATour, Houston Open, final round, NBC. TENNIS 8:30 a.m.:Sony Open,men's
HOCKEY 9:30 a.m.: NHL, Chicago at Detroit, NBC. 4:30 p.m.:NHL, Boston at Buffalo, NBCSN.
BOWLING 11:30 a.m.:PBATour, Barbasol Tournament of Champions, ESPN.
BASEBALL 5 p.m.:MLB, TexasatHouston, ESPN.
MONDAY
final, CBS.
3 p.m.:Men's college, Southern Cal at California, Pac-12 Network.
BASKETBALL 9 a.m.: Women'scollege,NCAA tourney, regional sernifinal, Kansas vs. Notre Dame, ESPN.
11:20 a.m.: Men's college, NCAA tourney, regional final,
Michigan vs. Florida, CBS. 11:30 a.m.: Women's college, NCAA tourney, regional sernifinal, Nebraskavs. Duke, ESPN2.
1:30 p.m.:Women's college, NCAA tourney, regional semifinal, Oklahoma vs.
Tennessee,ESPN2. 2 p.m.:Men's college, NCAA tourney, regional final, Dukevs. Louisville, CBS.
4 p.m.: Women's college, NCAA tourney, regional semifinal, Louisville vs. Baylor, ESPN2.
BASEBALL 10 a.m.: M LB,BostonatNew York Yankees, ESPN. 1 p.m.:M LB,San Francisco at
Los Angeles Dodgers, ESPN. 4 p.m.:MLB, Philadelphia at Atlanta, ESPN2. 7 p.m.:MLB, St. Louis at Arizona, ESPN2. 7 p.m.:MLB, Seattle at Oakland, Root Sports.
BASKETBALL 4:30p.m.:Women'scollege, NCAA tourney, regional final, Kentuckyvs. UConn, ESPN. 6 p.m.: NBA, Portland at Utah, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.
6:30p.m.:Women'scollege, NCAA tourney, regional final, Georgiavs. Cal, ESPN.
HOCKEY 4:30 p.m.:NHL, Colorado at Detroit, NBCSN.
ON THE AIR: RADIO TODAY
MONDAY
BASEBALL
BASEBALL 1 p.m.: MLB,SanFranciscoat Los Angeles Dodgers, KICE-AM
5 p.m.: MLB, TexasatHouston, KICE-AM 940.
940.
BASKETBALL 6 p.m.:NBA, Portland at Utah, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690. Listings are the mostaccurate available. The73ulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.
COREBOARD ON DECK Today Equestrian: OregonHigh School Equestrian Teams CentralOregonDistrict meetat Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center inRedmond,8:30a.m. Monday Baseball: Sistersat CotageGrove, 430pm.;LaPine at Junction City,4:30p.m. SoftbaO:CottageGroveatSisters, 4:30 p.m.;Junction City at La Pine,4:30p.m.
Tuesday Baseball: LaSalleat Madras, 4p.m.; CulveratWaldport, 4 30 p m.;Summitat Mazama,4:30p.m. Softball: MountainViewat HoodRiver Valley, TBD; Madrasat LaSale, 4:30p.m.; CulveratWaldport, 4:30 p.m. Boys golf: Redm ond,Ridgeview, CrookCounty, Bend at Ridgeview/CrookCounty Invitationa at Brasada Ranch,noon Boys tennis: Ridgeview atBend,4 p.m.;CrookCounty at MountainView,4 p.mcSummit at Redmond, 4 p.m. Girls tennis: MountainView,Shermanat Crook County,4p.m.;Bendat Ridgeview, 4p.m.;Redmond at Summit4 , p.m.
Thursday BasebalhMadrasat LaSal e,430 p.m Track: CulveratEastLinninLebanon,4 p.mzSisters, CottageGroveat Junction City, 4p.m.; LaPineat SweetHome, 4p.m. Boys tennis: Summiatt Ridgeview, 4p.m.; Mountain View atRedmond,4 p.m.;CrookCounty atBend,4 p.m. Girls tennis: Redmondat Mountain View, 4 p.m.; RidgeviewatSummit, 4p.m.; Bendat CrookCounty, 4 p.m. Friday Baseball: EaglePoint at Ridgeview(DH), 12 p.m.; Elmira atSisters,4.30p.mz Regis at Culver,4:30 p.m.; LaPineatSweetHome,4:30p.m. Softbalh Gladstone at Madras,4:30 p.m.; Sistersat Elmira,4:30p.m.; Regis at Culver, 4:30p.m.; Sweet HomeatLaPine,4:30 p.m. Boys golf: Summit,Redmond, Ridgeview, Mountain View,Sisters,CrookCounty at Panther Inviteat JuniperGolfClubin Redmond, noon Girls golf: Ridgeview, Bend,Mountain View,Summit, CrookCounty,Redmond, Sisters, Madrasat Eagle CrestRidge,noon Track: MountaiVi newatMcKenzieinBlue River,1p.m.; BendatEast County ClassicatMt. HoodCommunity CollegeinGresham,4 p.m.;CrookCounty at Oregon Trail Invitational inVale,2 p.m. Boys tennis:MountainView,Summit, Bend Redmond at Summiint vite,TBD
Saturday Baseball: HoodRiverValley at Bend(DH), 12p.m.; Culver atRiverside(DH), 12p.m.; CrookCounty at
Mazama (DH),11 a.m. Softball: Bendat HoodRiverValley(DH), 12 p.m.; Culver atRiverside(DH), 12p.m.; CrookCounty at Mazama (DH),11 a.m. Track: Summiatt Sandy Invitational, TBA;Culver, Ridgeview, LaPine, MadrasatRedmondSunseeker,11 a.m. Boys tennis: Ridgeview,Sisters, CrookCountyat MadrasInvite, 9 a.m.;Redmond Mountain View, Girls lacrosse: BendUnited at WestSalem, noon; BendUnitedvs.SheldonatWest Salem,4p.m. Sunday Girls lacrosse:BendUnited atSouthSalem,11a.m.
PREP SPORTS
BASEBALL Ducks roll overHuskies
rallied from atwo-goal secondhalf deficit to tie the Colorado Rapids 2-2 on Saturday night in
— A four-run fourth inning al-
CommerceCity, Colo.Johnson
lowed the Oregon baseball team
scored Portland's first goal in the 55th minute. The Timbers (0-1-3)
to pull away from Pac-12foe Washington for a 6-0 shutout of the Huskies on Saturday night
at PK Park in Eugene.Oregon swept the three-gameseries, including a pair of shutouts. Ryon Healy hit three for four at
the plate for Oregon with two RB)s and onerun scored. Connor Hofmann added two hits and two RB(s for the Ducks. Irvin
Cole (5-1) went the distance on the mound for Oregon (22-6, 8-1 conference) en route to the victory as he gave up four hits, one walk and recorded11 strikeouts. The Ducks hit the road next Fri-
have neverwon in Colorado, going 0-3-1 in their matches at the Rapids. Portland continued its
trend of allowing thefirst goal in all four of its garne.
Serena deatS SharaP0Va — Serena Williams broke the
10 gamesandearned hersixth
in Florida. Sharapova completed
Diego Saturday afternoon in the
a career GrandSlam bywinning the FrenchOpenlastyear, but she's now 0-5 in KeyBiscayne finals. After playing nearly flawless tennis for an hour, shebe-
record to 22-4 overall, while San
gan to miss with her serve, and Williams dominated rallies down the stretch.
— Kevin Kolb is getting another
double. Michael Conforto had three hits to pace OSUand Hayes
chance at a fresh start, this time with the quarterback-needy Buf-
and BeauDayeach hadtwo. Oregon State returns homeTuesday
falo Bills. A person familiar with negotiations said the free-agent
sixth-year player agreed to a two-year contract potentially
Santana set for surgery
worth over $12 million with Buffalo on Saturday night. Kolb
— Johan Santana is set for
spent the past two seasons in
another shoulder surgery that he
Arizona, where injuries ham-
hopes will save his career. The New York Mets said Saturday
pered his opportunity to prove himself as a starter.
that their former ace will have
BOXING GOI0Vkin defendS titleS
to miss the entire season for the — GennadyGolovkinofKasecond time in three years. The 34-year-old left-hander didn't
zakhstan stopped Nobuhiro Ishida of Japan in the third
pitch in any exhibition games this spring because of arm
round to successfully defend
weakness, and he threw his last
his WBA and(BO middleweight titles Saturday night in Monaco.
bullpen session in early March
Golovki n'spunching power was
without the team's permission.
evident in the second round as he caught Ishida with two big
rights and an uppercut, cutting
SOCCER Timders tie ColoradoWill Johnson scored two goals, including a penalty kick in the 71st
minute, andthe Portland Timbers
p.m. South championvs.Syracuse(30-9),3or5:30p.m. National Championship Monday,April 8 Semifinalwinners,6pm. National Invitation Tournament AH TimesPDT
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPDT
College Insider.comTournament AO TimesPDT
Semrfmals Saturday, March30 EastCarolina81,Evansville 58 Today, March31 WeberState(29-6) atNoithemlowa(21-14), 5 p.m.
Wom en's college NCAATournament All Times PDT OKLAHOMACITYREGIONAL Regional Semifinals OklahomaCity
Today, March31 Oklahoma (24-10)vs. Tennessee(26-7), I:35p.m. Baylor(34-1)vs.Louisville (26-8),4:05p.m. Tuesday,Apnl 2 Regional Championship Semifinalwinners,6pm SPOKANE REGIONAL Regional Semifinals
Spokane,Wash. Saturday, March3D Georgia61, Stanford59 California73,LSU63 Regional Championship Monday,April 1 Georgia(28-6)vs.California(31-3),6:30p.m. NORFOLKREGIONAL
Regional Semifinals Norfolk, Va. Today, March31 NotreDam e(33-1)vs. Kansas(20-13), 904am. Duke(32-2)vs.Nebraska(25-8),11:32 am. Regional Championship Tuesday,April 2 Semifinalwinners 4pm BRIDGEPORTREGIONAL
Regional Semifinals Bridgeport, Conn. Saturday, March3D Kentucky69, Delaware62 Connecticut76,Maryland50 Regional Championship Monday,April1 Kentucky(30 5)vs. Connecticut (32-4),4:30p.m.
FINAL FOUR At NewOrleansArena New Orleans National Semifinals Sunday,April7 Oklah omaCitychampionvs.Spokanechampion,2:30 or5 p.m. Norfolk championvs. Bridgeport champion,2:30or 5 p.m. National Championship Tuesday, April 9 Semifinalwinners,4.30p.m.
BASEBALL MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL
Spring Training
Saturday'sGames Baltimore7, N.Y.Mets1 Toronto10,Philadelphia4 Tampa Bay3,Detroit 3,tie Boston4,Minnesota2 Houston6,ChicagoCubs3 Texas 5, San Diego2 Milwaukee 5, ChicagoWhite Sox4 Cleveland 9,Cincinnati (ss) I Seattle 4, Colorado3 Cincinnati(ss)9,Arizona0 Oakland4,SanFrancisco3 LA. Angels2, L.A.Dodgers1 Regularseason Today's Game Texas (Harrison 0-0)at Houston(Norris 0-0),5:05 p.m. Monday'sGames BostonatN.Y.Yankees, 10:05a.m. Miami atWashington, 10:05a.m. San DiegoatN.Y.Mets,10:10a.m. ChicagoCubsatPittsburgh,10:35 a.m Coloradoat Milwaukee,11:10 a.m. Detroit atMinnesota,1:10p.m. KansasCity atChicagoWhite Sox,1:10 p.m. L.A. AngelsatCincinnati, I:10 p.m. SanFranciscoatL.A.Dodgers,1.10p.m. PhiladelphiaatAtlanta,4:05p.m. St. LouisatArizona,7:05p.m. Seattle atOakland, 7:05p.m.
College Pac-12 Standings AH TimesPDT
Conference Oregon Oregon State
UCLA California WashingtonState 3 Stanford ArizonaState SouthernCal Arizona Utah Washington
W 8 5 6 5
Overall
3 4 4 3 2
L 1 I 3 4 3 3 5 5 6 7
W 22 22 18 16 16 13 15
2
7
6
L 6 4 6 12 10 9 8
11 16 18 11 12 13
Saturday's Games California15,SouthernCal5 Arizona2, Utah1 UCLA12,ArizonaState10 x-SanDiego13,OregonState3 Washington State8,Stanford5
BillS, Kold reaCh deal
to play Portland. First pitch is slated for 5:35 p.m. PDT.
pitching shoulder. The two-time Cy Young Award winner is likely
FINAL FOUR At The GeorgiaDome Atlanta National Semifinals Saturday, April 6 Midwestchampion vs WichitaState(30-8), 3 or5:30
HOCKEY
Wednesday,April 3 SantaClaraatGeorgeMason,4 p.m. Friday, April 6 x-Santa Claraat George Mason, 4p.m.
WEST REGIONAL
Regional Championship Saturday, March3D WichitaState70, Ohio State66
Oregon 6,Washington0 Monday'sGame California atStanford, 7p.m. Tuesday's Games x-ArizonaStateatWichita State, 4:30 p.m. x-PortlandatOregonState,5:35 p.m. x-Cal StateFuffertonat UCLA,6 p.m. Wednesday'sGame ArizonaStateat Wichita State,4:30p.m. x=nonconference
19
EasternConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pittsburgh 3 6 28 8 0 N ewJersey 35 15 11 9 N .Y.Rangers 34 16 15 3 N .Y.lsanders 35 16 16 3 P hiladelphia 34 14 17 3
PtsGF GA 56 123 84 3 9 88 97 3 5 78 84 3 5 100 112 3 1 90 104
Montreal Boston Ottawa Toronto Buffalo
4 9 107 83 4 6 95 75 4 4 89 76 4 4 112 100 3 2 94 111
Northeast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA 3 4 22 7 3 3 21 8 3 5 19 10 3 6 20 12 3 5 13 16
5 4 6 4 6
Southeast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA W innipeg 3 6 1 8 1 6 2 3 8 89 106 C arolina 33 1 6 1 5 2 3 4 92 97 W ashington 34 16 17 I 3 3 98 96 T ampaBay 34 15 18 1 3 1 110 103 F lorida 36 11 1 9 6 2 8 88 125 Western Conference Central Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Chicago 3 3 2 5 5 3 53 109 73 D etroit 34 17 1 2 5 3 9 90 85 S t. I.ouis 33 1 7 1 4 2 3 6 94 93 N ashville 3 5 1 4 1 4 7 3 5 87 96 C olumbus 35 1 4 14 7 3 5 85 96 Northwest Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA M innesota 34 2 1 11 2 4 4 97 86 V ancouver 35 1 9 10 6 4 4 92 90 E dmonton 3 4 1 4 1 3 7 3 5 87 95 C algary 33 1 3 1 6 4 3 0 93 114 C olorado 3 4 1 2 1 8 4 2 8 84 108 Pacific Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Anaheim 3 4 2 3 7 4 50 106 88 L os Angeles 34 19 12 3 4 1 100 86 S an Jose 3 4 1 7 1 1 6 4 0 85 84 Dallas 3 3 16 14 3 3 5 92 100 P hoenix 35 1 4 1 5 6 3 4 94 101 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. Saturday's Games Washington 4, Bufalo 3, SO Minnesota 4, LosAngeles3, SO San Jose 3, Phoenix2, SO Philadelphia3, Boston1 Pittsburgh2 NYIs anders0 Colorado1,Nashville0, OT Carolina 3, Winnipeg1 Toronto4,Ottawa0 Montreal3, N.YRangers0 Florida 3,NewJersey2,OT Edmonton 4, Vancouver0 Today's Games Chicagoat Detroit, 9:30a.m. Washington atPhiladelphia 3 p.m. Los AngelesatDallas, 3p.m. AnaheimatColumbus, 3p.m. Boston at Buffalo,430 pm Monday'sGames N.Y.IslandersatNewJersey,4p.m. Winnipeg atN.Y.Rangers,4 p.m Carolinaat Montreal, 4:30p.m. Colorado at Detroit, 4:30p.m. St. I.ouisat Minnesota, 5p.m Nashville atChicago,5:30p.m. Anaheim atDalas, 5:30p.m. CalgaryatEdmonton,630pm VancouveratSanJose, 7:30p.m.
GOLF PGA Tour HoustonOpen Saturday At RedstoneGolf Club, TournamentCourse Humble, Texas Purse: $6.2 million Yardage:7,441; Par:72 Thrrd Round StewartCink 71-66-68—205 Bill Haas BenCrane D.A. Points SteveWheatcroft JasonKokrak
BudCauley LouisOosthuizen LeeWestwood Bil y Horschel Keegan Bradley KevinChappeff HenrikStenson AngelCabrera Cameron Tringale BrianDavis GregOwen John Merrick CharleyHoffman DustinJohnson Phil Mickelson
ChezReavie GrahamDeLaet JoshTeater ScottVerplank JohnRoffins D.H.Lee JamesHahn Tim Herron Matt Jones CharlesHow eI II Jeff Overton BrendondeJonge Steven Bowditch Jin Park DanielSummerhays
68-70-67—205 69-70-67—206 64-71-71—206 67-67-72—206 66-69-71—206 68-74-65—207 70-72-65—207 68-72-67—207 68-72-67—207 70-70-67—207 70-70-67—207 69-70-68—207 66-72-69—207 65-73-69—207 67-70-71—208 68-73-68—209 68-72-69—209 68-71-70—209 69-70-70—209 72-71-67—210 72-70-68—210 71-71-68—210 74-67-69—210 72-68-70—210 65-74-71—210 72-71-68—211 74-69-68—211 69-73-69—211 68-73-70—211 69-72-70—211 67-73-71—211 71-68-72—211 73-70-69—212 69-74-69—212 72-71-69—212
KevinStadler BrandtJobe Brendan Steele RobertStreb SteveStricker Scott Stagings Justin Leonard CharlieBeljan Pat Perez Chris Kirk AaronBaddeley NichoiasThompson Chris Stroud CameronPercy RoryMcffroy DavidLynn Kelly Kraft RossFisher DougLaBegeII NickWatney RickyBarnes BobEstes HunterHaas BooWeekey GeorgeCoetzee HenrikNorlander GaryWoodland TroyMatteson HarrisEnglish RussellHenley JordanSpieth WesShort,Jr. Carl Pettersson ChadCampbell JimmyWalker Jerry Kelly
70-73-69—212 69-73-70 212 70-71-71—212 70-71-71—212 73-68-71—212 70-69-73 212 71-72-70—213 71-72-70—213 72-71-70—213 71-70-72—213 70-71-72—213 70-73-71—214 71-72-71—214 73-70-71—214 73-70-71 214 72-70-72—214 70-72-72—214 73-69-72—214 71-71-72 214 71-71-72 —214 73-68-73—214 71-69-74—214 69-71-74—214 70-69-75—214 72-71-72—215 74-68-73—215 72-70-73—215 71-71-73 215 69-74-73—216 72-70-74—216 72-70-74—216 71-70-75 216 74-69-74—217 72-71-74—217 68-71-78—217 71-72-75—218
TENNIS Professional Saturday At TheTennisCenter at CrandonPark Key Biscayne, Fla. Purse: Men,$5.24million (Masters100D); Women,$6.19million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Women Championship SerenaWiliams(1), UnitedStates,def. MariaSharapova (3), Russia4-6, , 6-3,6-0.
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AH TimesPDT
W L T P t sGF GA Montreal 4 1 0 12 6 4 Houston 3 I 0 9 8 4 SportingKansasCity 2 1 2 8 6 3 Columbus 2 1 1 7 7 4 Philadelphia 2 2 0 6 5 6 NewYork I 2 2 5 6 7 TorontoFC 1 2 1 4 5 6 D.C. 1 2 1 4 2 4 NewEngland 1 2 1 4 1 2 Chicago 0 3 I 1 1 9 Western Conference W L T P t sGF GA FC Dallas 4 1 0 12 8 5 ChivasUSA 3 1 I 10 10 7 Los Angeles 2 0 2 8 8 3 RealSaltLake 2 2 1 7 5 5 SanJose 2 2 1 7 4 6 Vancouver 2 2 0 6 5 5 Portland 0 I 3 3 7 8 Colorado 0 3 2 2 4 7 Seattle 0 3 1 1 2 5 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie.
Saturday's Games TorontoFC2, LosAngeles2, tie NewYork2, Philadelphia1 FC Daffas I, NewEngland0 Colorado 2,Portland2,tie Houston 2,SanJose0 SportingKansasCity 2, Montreal 0 RealSaltLake2, Seatle FC1 ChivasUSA2,Vancouver I Friday's Game D.C.UnitedatSporting KansasCity,5:30p.m. Saturday April 6 FC Dallaat s Toronto FCI pm PhiladelphiaatColumbus, 2p.m. RealSaltLakeatColorado, 4:30p.m. Houston at Portland,7:30p.m. Vancouverat SanJose,7:30p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL American League TEXASRANGERS—DptionedRHPCoryBurnsand RHPJoshLinblom toRound Rock(PCL). National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Agreedtotermswith 1B PaulGoldschmidtonafive-year contract. FOOTBALL National Football League MIAMIDOLPHINS—Signed CBBrent Grimesto a one-yearcontract. HOCKEY
National HockeyLeague
NHL—SuspendedTampa Bay F Nate Thompson two games for deliveringanilegal checkto thehead of NewJersey FMatt D'Agostini during aMarch29
game.
BUFFALO SABRES—Traded 0 Jordan Leopold to the St.LouisBluesfor a2013second-rounddraft pick and aconditional2013fifth-round draft pick. CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS— RecalledFJeremyMorin fromRockford (AHL). DALLAS STARS—Recalled F Toby Petersen from
Texas(AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS—Traded D Kent Huskins to Philadelphiafor a conditional 2014seventh-round draft pick. FLORIDA PANTHERS—Returned F Greg Raffo to SanAntonioRampage(AHL). ST. LOUISBLUES Assigned GJakeAllen to Peoria(AHI.). COLLEGE
UCLA —Named Steve Alford men's basketball coach.
FOOTBALL
the inning. Austin Greencapped off the inning with a three-run
surgery Tuesday to repair the re-torn anterior capsule in his
(Best-of-3) (x-if necessary) Monday,April1 GeorgeMason(21-14) atSantaClara(24-11), 7p.m.
MIDWESTREGIONAL
At MadisonSquareGarden
Beavers scored first on a two-run back with six in the bottom half of
SOUTHREGIONAL
Regional Championship Today, March 31 Louisville(32-5)vs Duke(30-5), 205p.m.
BeaVerS lOSe SerieS —The
single by DannyHayes inthe third, but SanDiegoanswered
EASTREGIONAL
Regional Championship Saturday, March30 Syracuse 55,Marquette 39
set a new standard for futility in finals. Williams swept the final
urday by rallying past Sharapova 4-6, 6-3, 6-0 at the SonyOpen
Diego improved to18-10. The
Men's college
Regional Championship Today, March 31 Michigan(29-7)vs. Florida(29-7), 11:20a.m.
series at Arizona State.
finale of a three-gameseries at Fowler Park inSanDiego.The loss pushedOregonState's
BASKETBALL
Key Biscaynewomen's record for most titles, and Maria Sharapova
championship in the event Sat-
dropped a13-3 decision to San
Nonconference McNary10,Summit 2
AH TimesPDT
daywhen theyplayathree-game
Oregon State baseball team
Baseball Saturday's results Les SchwabInvitational At JohnDay Crookcounty 4 1 0 130 4 13 1 9 0 Scio 0 01 030 0 — 4 5 4
NCAATournament
TENNIS
College Basketball Invitational ChampionshipSeries
Wednesday
Basebalh CentralCatholic at MountainView,4:30 p.mz Sisters atSweetHome,4:30 p.m.; Cottage Grove atLaPine,4:30p.m. Softball: SweetHome at Sisters, 4:30p.m.; LaPineat CottageGrove,4:30p.m. Track: GilchristatSummitJV,330p.m. Boys tennis:MadrasatBlanchet,4p.m. Girls tennis: Bianchet atMadras,4 p.m.
Summit Bend atSummit Invite, TBD
SPORTS IN BRIEF
New York Semifinals Tuesday,April 2 BYU(24-11)vs.Baylor (21-14), 4p.m. Maryland(25-12)vs. Iowa(24-12), 630pm.
him under the right eye. The 30-year-old Golovkin improved to 26-0, including 23 KOs, while the 37-year-old Ishida was stopped for the first time. — From wire reports
GOLF ROUNDUP
Cink, Haastied for lead at Houston Open The Associated Press HUMBLE, Texas — S even players within four shots of the lead at the Houston Open have never won on the PGA Tour. Twelve of them still aren't in the Masters. One of them includes a journeyman who had to qualify Monday just to get a tee time at Redstone Golf Club. In a tournament loaded with so many possibilities, one of the big surprises is a major champion. Stewart Cink has not been heard from very much since that summer day at Turnberry in2009 when he beat Tom Watson to win the British Open. His highest finish since then was third, and that was in the four-man field at the PGA Grand Slam of Golf. In 81 starts since becoming a major champion, he has missed the cut 30 percent of the time. He has plunged to No. 272 in the world ranking. Cink finished off another solid round Saturday by saving par from the bunker on the 18th hole for a 4-under 68, giving him a share of the lead with Bill Haas. "Tomorrow is a great learning opportunity for me to get out there and be ner-
vous and perform and try to stay in the moment and let it happen," Cink said. "I can't wait." Indeed, there will be a sense of urgency in this tournament. Haas, the co-leader after 36 holes at Bay Hill last week, made seven birdies over his last 13 holes for a 67 and joined Cink at 11-under 205. Now comes the hard part, 20 players separated by four shots on a course where birdies are available, but the slightest miss can prove costly. "Tomorrow you're going to have to play very well," Haas said. "You can't just hang on and hope everybody else will fall back." Steve Wheatcroft, who only got into this tournament through a Monday qualifier, got off to a good start and fell back with an embarrassing finish. Wheatcroft was tied for the lead when he shanked a shot from the greenside bunker on the 18th, the ball coming outat a 45-degree angle, over the green and almost into the gallery. He made a 15-foot putt to salvage bogey for a 72. Wheatcroft still was only one shot out
D.A. Points (71) and Jason Kokrak (71). "If you don't catch it perfectly, it runs across the green into the water," Wheatcroft said about his bunker shot. "I opened the club face just trying to hit a high soft one and obviously I missed most of the club face." Nine players were only two shots behind, a group that included former British Open champion Louis Oosthuizen (65), former world No. 1 Lee Westwood (67), former PGA champion Keegan Bradley (67) two-time major champion Angel Ca-
brera (69) and Henrik Stenson (68).
In another event on Saturday: German adds to lead in Morocco: AGADIR, Morocco — Germany's Marcel Siem shot a 3-under 69 to extend his lead to four shots after the third round of the European Tour's Hassan II Trophy. The French Open champion had a 15-under 201 total at Golf du Palais Royab He needs a victory today to have a chance to get into the top 50 in the world and earn a spot in the Masters. Finland's Mikko Ilonen, England's David Horsey and Spain's Pablo of the lead, along with Ben Crane (67), Larrazabalwere tied forsecond.
SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
NBA ROUNDUP
B3
NHL ROUNDUP
Warriors, ur rout Trai 8 azers Penguinstake win The Associated Press OAKLAND, Calif. — With another mercurial pe6ormance in what has already been an outstanding season, Stephen Curry helped Golden State inch closer to the postseason. Now it's just a m atter of holding court in the Western Conference for t h e u p start Warriors. Curry scored 39 points and Golden State moved one step closer to ending its five-year playoff drought with a 125-98 victory over the Portland Trail Blazers on Saturday night. It's the 12th time this season Curry has had 30 points or more, and his seven 3-pointers extendedhis single-season franchise record to 236. "It's amazing the clinic he's putting on," Warriors coach Mark Jackson said. "We are witnessing one of the greatest shooters that's ever played this game. He's been great for us all season, but he's on the floor like he's the baddest dude in the building." Curry was definitely that on a night he was paired against Portland's standout r o okie, Damian Lillard. Lillard, who scorched the Warriorsfor a season-high 37 points in January, scored 16 points and tied Curry's' NBA's single-seasonrookie record for 3-pointers, but was nowhere as effective as he was in his first trip back home. The Oakland native shot just four of 11 from the floor and committed three turnovers. Carl Landry had a seasonhigh 25 points and 10 rebounds coming off the bench, while David Lee scored 13 points for the Warriors, who maintained their I'/2-game lead over Houston for sixth place in the Western Conference. Golden State lowered its magic number for clinching a playoff berth to five. Meyers Leonard led Portland with 22 points and 10 rebounds. Playing their second straight game without leading scorer
LaMarcus Aldridge (right ankle), the Blazers trailed by six late in the second quarter, but gave up 60 points in the second
Barnes and Bogut, then later scored on a driving layup and 3-pointer to make it 90-70. Curry hit two more 3s in the fourth quarter,the second of which extended the Warriors' lead to 110-85. In other games on Saturday: M avericks 100, Bulls 9 8 : DALLAS — Dirk Nowitzki hit a 3-pointer with 2.9 seconds left and Dallas rallied to beat
Chicago. Rockets 98, C lippers 81: H OUSTON — J eremy L i n , Chandler Parsons and Francisco Garcia scored 15 points apiece to lead Houston over
Los Angeles.
Ben Margot/The Associated Press
Portland guard Damian Lillard, right, looks to shoot against Golden State's Festus Ezeli (31) during the first half of Saturday night's game in Oakland, Calif.
half. "They made a lot of tough shots, but they also got a lot of easy baskets," Lillard said. "I thought we defended well about half the time. With a guy
who can shoot like (Curry), you can't let him get so many open looks." Lillard had a career night in his first trip back to Oakland as a pro earlier this season and got off to another quick start in his return. He scored seven points, had four assists and made two 3-pointers in the first quarter to tie Curry's NBA rookie single-season record of 166.
That wasn't enough to slow down the Warriors, who shot 72.7 percent in the first quarter and closed on a 12-3 run to take a 36-31 lead. Landryscored Golden State's final four points in the period, then scored the team's first seven in the second quarter to put the Warriors up 43-34. Portland cut the gap to 61-55 with I:07 left before Andrew Bogut scored on a short hook shot and H a r rison B arnes added adunkthat gave Golden State a 65-55 halftime lead. Curry didn't slow down after the break. He made two lob passes for assists on dunks by
T hunder 109, B ucks 9 9 : MILWAUKEE — Kevin Durant scored 30 points, Russell Westbrook had a triple-double, and Oklahoma City beat Milwaukee. Hawks 97, Magic 88: ATLANTA — Ivan Johnson scored a season-high 21 points off the bench, and Devin Harris had 13 of his 17 points in the fourth quarter as Atlanta pulled away to beat Orlando. Grizzlies99, Timberwolves86: MINNEAPOLIS — Marc Gasol scored 21 points and Memphis pulled away in the fourth quarter to beat Minnesota. 76ers100, Bobcats 92: PHILADELPHIA — Jrue Holiday scored 10 straight points down the stretch, Evan Turner finished with 21 and Philadelphia beat Charlotte. Jazz 116, Nets 107: SALT LAKE CITY — Randy Foye scored 26 points, tying a career high with eight 3-pointers, and Utah defeated Brooklyn to keep Deron Williams winless against his f o rmer team. Lakers 103, Kings 98: SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Kobe Bryant scored 19 points and tied a season high with 14 assists despite a nagging left foot injury, and the Los An-
geles Lakers kept pace for the Western Conference's final playoff spot by outlasting Sacramento. Pacers112, Suns104: PHOENIX — Paul George scored 25 points to lead all five Indiana starters in double figures, and the Pacers won their fourth straight.
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT
Eastern Conference z-Miami
x-Indiana x-New York x-Brooklyn x-Atlanta x-Chicago Boston Milwaukee Philadelphia Toronto Washington Detroit Cleveland Orlando Charlotte
W L 57 15 47 27 45 26 42 31 41 33 39 32 38 34 35 37 30 43 27 45 26 46 24 49 22 49 19 55 17 56
Pct GB 792
W 55 54 50 49 49
Pct GB 764 730 2 676 6 662 7 671 6'/z 568 14 548 3 5'/z 514 18 514 18 493 19'/z 452 22'/z 365 29 361 29 342 30'/z 30 33
Western Conference
x-SanAntonio x-oklahoma City x-Denver x-LA. Clippers x-Memphis GoldenState Houston Utah LA. Lakers Dallas Portland Sacramento Minnesota NewOreans Phoenix x-clinchedplayoff spot z-clinched conference
L 17 20 24 25 24
42 32
40 38 38 36 33 27 26 25 23
33 36 36 37 40 47 46 48 51
635 11 634 11'/z 575 15'/2
554 17 549 17'/~ 528 19 486 22 411 27'/z 375 30 361 31 329 33'/z 310 34'/z 257 39 233 40'/z
Saturday'sGames
Dallas100,Chicago98 Atlanta97, Orlando88 Houston98, LA. Clippers81 Memphis 99,Minnesota86 Philadelphia100,Charlotte92 Oklahoma City109, Milwaukee99 Utah 06, Brooklyn107 Indiana112,Phoenix104 LA. Lakers103,Sacramento98 GoldenState125, Portand98
Today's Games
Clevelandat NewOrleans,3 p.m. TorontoatWashington, 3p.m. Detroit atChicago,4p.m. Miami atSanAntonio,4 p m. Boston atNewYork,4:30 p.m.
Monday'sGames Detroit atToronto,4p.m. ClevelandatAtlanta, 4:30pm. OrlandoatHouston, 5p.m. San Antonioat Memphis, 5 p.m.
Bostonat Minnesota,5p.m. Charlotte atMilwaukee,5p.m. PortlandatUtah,6p.m Indianaat LA. Clippers,7:30p.m.
Summaries Saturday's Games
ers 5 92212, Jennings 313 0 0 8, Ellis 3171-2 9 MbahaMoute2-50-05,Udoh4-66-614,Redick 4-12 0-010,Dunleavy0-20-00. Totals 37-981315 99. Oklahoma City 32 2 4 27 26 — 109 Milwaukee 28 18 37 16 — 99
76ers100, Bodcats 92
Warriors125, Blazers 98
Vucevic 8-171-3 17,Udrih8-23 2-3 2II, De.Jones 3-42-3 8,O'Quinn 1-4 0-0 2,Moore 0-5 4-6 4, Nichol son3-53-49,Lamb0-10-00.Totals 34-87 16-27 88. ATLANTA (97) Korver 3-7 1-1 8, Smith 7-14 7-9 21,Petro37 Ij-0 6, Teague 3-14 1-1 7, D.Harris 5-7 5-9 17, Da.Jones0-1 1-2 1, Johnson7-14 7-821, TolliNer 3-81-1 8, Mack 3-60-08, Scott 0-00-00. Totals 34-7823-31 97. Orlando 27 17 16 28 — 88 Atlanta 23 22 22 30 — 97
CHARLOTTE (92) Kidd-Gilchrist 9-0 3-4 21, McRoberts6-133-4 15, Biyombo 4 5 0 0 8, W alker 6144416, HenderPORTLAND (98) Batum2-10 2-2 8, HiI:kson5-8 5-715, Leonard son 8-182-519,Adrien0-12-62 Ja.Pargo5-120-0 11, Gordon 0-20 00. Totals 38-7614-2392. 9-173-322, Lillard 4-0 6-716, Matthews 6-0 4-5 Mavericks100, Bulls 98 PHILADELPHIA (100) 18, Maynor1-73-45, Claver1-31-1 3,Barton0-5 T urner 8-14 5-6 22, TYoung 6-10 3-315, Haw es 0-0 0, Freeland0-5 0-0 0 Babbitt 2-4 0-0 5,Smith CHICAGO (98) 8-122-219, Holiday6-172-614, Wilkins 6-1II 3-5 3-5 0-0 6.Totals 33-86 24-29 98. Deng 10 171-2 25, Boozer11 16 3-7 25, Mo 15, Allen0-01-21, Wright0-43-33, Ivey4 60-011. hammed1-30-02, Hinrich3-93-310,Butler1-82-4 GOLDENSTATE(125) Totals 38-7319-27100. 4, Gibson3-71-27, Robinson9-160-025, Cook0-4 Barnes4-103-311, Lee5-123-413, Bogut5-8031 15 25 21 — 92 0-0 0. Totals 38-80 10-18 98. 210, Curry14-224-439,Thompson1-63-46,Jack Charlotte 22 2 724 27 — 100 1-5 2-2 4,Green0-3 0-0 0, Ezeli 2-20-0 4, Landry Philadelphia DALLAS(100) 9-10 7-8 25Jefferson3-4 0-06, Bazemore3-5 0-0 Marion 5-90-010, NojNitzki14-172-2 35,Brand 1-2 0-02, M.James 2-81-2 5, Mayo1-13 2-2 4, 7. Totals47-87 22-27125. Grizzlies 99, Timderwolves 86 Carter 6-144-617, Collison Portland 31 24 23 20 — 98 3-6 2-2 8, Wright 7 8 3-4 17, Crowder 1-2 0-0 2 Totals 40-79 14-18 Golden State 36 2 9 31 29 — 125 MEMPHIS(99) 3-Point Goal— s Portland 8-23 Nllard 2-3, Mat100. Prince 2-4 0 0 4,Randolph5-11 4 4 14, Gasol thews 2-6, Batum2-8, Leonard 1-1, Babbitt 1-2, 8-12 5-6 21,Conley8-15 0-0 19, Allen3-5 1-47, Chicago Dallas Barton0-1, Maynor0-2), GoldenState 9-20(Curry Bayless0-5 4-6 4, Davis 0-2 3-4 3, Pondexter3-6 7-12, Bazem ore 1-z Thompson 14, Bames0-2). 0-0 7, Arthur6-92-315, Daye2-4 0-05 Wroten0-0 FouledOut—None. Rebounds—Portland 46 (Hick0-0 0, Leuer 0-0 0-00. Totals 37-73 19-27 99. Lakers103, Kings 98 son, Leonard10), GoldenState57 (Landry10). AsMINNESOTA (86) sists — Portland 23(Batum9), GoldenState 22(Jack, Kirilenko 1-3 3-6 5, Williams 6-16 7-12 19, L.A. LAKERS (103) Curry 6).TotalFouls Portland18,GoldenState24. Stiemsma 5-7 2-212, Rubio6-1210-12 23, Ridnour Bryant5-18 9-0 19, Gasol6-0 0-012, Howard A—19,596(19,5961. 3-7 0-0 7,Budinger1-6 0-02, Cunningham2-8 0-0 10-14 4-1024,Nash1-1 Ij-0 2, Meeks5-101-2 14, 4, Johnson 0-00-00, Shved3-31-29, Barea2-50-0 Blake 5 90-0 15,Jamison3-10 3-3 10,Clark 3t 5,Gelabale0-00-0O.Totals29-67 23-34 86. Jazz116, Nets107 0-0 7, Duhon0-1 0-0 0, Morris 0-1 0-0 0. Totals Memphis 23 22 20 34 — 99 38-82 17-26 103. Minnesota 30 20 17 19 — 86 SACRAMENTO (98) BROOKLYN (107) Salmons5-12 0-0 13, Thompson7-10 1-1 15, Wallace 1-3 0-0 2, R.Evans2-5 0-0 4, Lopez 0-16 5-6 27,D.williams6-14 6-721, Bogans1-4 Rockets 98, Clippers 81 Cousins8-20 3-4 19, Thomas3-5 2-3 10, Evans 9-15 3-3 21,Thornton6-15 4-518, Hayes1-5 0-0 0-0 3, Humphries4-8 0-08, Brooks4-101-210, C.Watson8-13 3-422, Batche 5-8 0-010. Totals 2, Patterson0-4 0-0 0, Douglas0-0 0-0 0. Totals L.A. CLIPPERS (81) 42-81 15-19 107. Butler 2-100-05,Griftin 5-112-212, Jordan4-5 39-86 13-16 98. UTAH(116) 25 28 29 21 — 103 0-08, Paul7-153-319 Green2-60-06, Crawford L.A. Lakers Hayward 3-12 2-2 8 Millsap 2-105-8 9, Jeffer- 6-14 2-2 15, Hollins 2-3 2-2 6, Bames 37 20 18 23 — 98 1-5 1-2 4, Sacramento son 10-17 0-3 20, M.Williams6-10 6-6 20, Foye Odom0-1 0-00, Bledsoe1-40-02 Hill1-30-1 2, 9-110-026, Tinsley1-12-24, Favors6-101-213, Wayns 0 12-2 2, Turiaf0-0 0-0 0. Totals 31-78 Pacers 112, Suns104 Ma.Williams 7-90-1 14,Burks1-10-Oz Totals4512-14 81. 81 16-24 116. HOUSTON (98) INDIANA(112) Brooklyn 28 26 20 33 — 107 Parsons6-151-215,Smith3-73-49, Asik6-91George7-14 9-1225, West6-112-214, Hibbert Utah 33 19 31 33 — 116 413, un 4-106-815, Anderson2-83-4 7, Beverley 7-17 6-1020, Hill 4-8 6-715, Stephenson6-123-4 3-7 2-2 9,Motiejunas2-40-04, Delfino4-81-1 11, Garcia 5-102-2 15,Dhlbrecht0-0 0-0 0, Robinson 16, T.Hansbrough1-33-4 5, O.Johnson1-4 1-13, Thunder 109, Bucks99 n2 444 B,Mahinmi3-60-26,Young 0-1 0-00-00,Brooks0-2 Ij-00.Totals 35-80 19-27 Augusti 0-0 0. Totals 37-80 34-46112. 98. OKLAHOMA CITY(109) PHOENIX(104) LA. Clippers 29 2 1 13 18 — 81 Durant10-19 9-10 30, Ibaka78 2-316, Perkins Houston Tucker5-90-011, Mark.MorrisB-122-218, Sco28 27 30 13 — 98 2-4 0-Ij 4, Westbrook6-181II-14 23, Sefolosha1la 3 62-28, Dragic8-133-421,WJohnson4-102-2 3 0-0 3, Martin 6-124-5 17, Collison 5-6 0-0 10, 11, Beasley5-0 0-010, O'Neal4-0 5-513, Dudley 2-7 4-410, Haddadi0-10-0 0, Marshall 0-1 0-00, Brewer0-0 0-00, Fisher1-2 0-Ij 2, Jackson2-3 0-0 Hawks97, Magic 88 4 Totals 40-75 25-32109. Marc.Morris1-1 0-0 zTotaIs 40-8218-19104. MILWAUKEE (99) ORLANDO (88) Indiana 27 30 29 26 — 112 Daniels4-123-412, llyasova12-221-1 29,SandHarkless 6-10 4-8 17, T.Harris 5-18 0-0 11, Phoenix 21 28 27 28 — 104
streak to15 games The Associated Press P ITTSBURGH — D e spite losing their captain, the Pittsburgh Penguins found a way to finish the month unbeaten. Pittsburgh, gearing for a run at the Stanley Cup, welcomed star forward Jarome Iginla to the lineup, but lost Sidney Crosby early in the first period after he was hit in the mouth with a puck. Still, the Penguins managed to overcome the injury to Crosby on Saturday for their 15th straight victory as Matt Cooke and James Neal scored third-period
goals during a 2-0 victory against the New York Islanders. "It's very tough to see that happen to a nybody on the ice, but this is your teammate and Sid's such a great player," Iginla said. "It's a very, very unfortu-
nate play." Tomas Vokoun made 35 saves as Pittsburgh moved within two wins of the NHL record of 17 straight victories set by Mario Lemieux and the 1992-93 Penguins. "The shutout is nice, but preserving t h e w i n n i ng streak is even better," Vokoun said. "It's been great." It might be tough without
off hopes alive with a victory over Southeast Division-lead-
ing Winnipeg.
Avalanche 1 , Pre d ators 0: DENVER — Tyson Barrie scored at 50 seconds of overtime and Colorado beat Nashville. Flyers 3, Bruins 1: PHILADELPHIA — M i k e K n uble and Matt Read scored, Ilya Bryzgalov made 33 saves and Philadelphia snapped a fourgame losing streak with a victory over Boston. Maple Leafs 4, Senators 0: OTTAWA — N a zem K adri had a hat trick, James Reimer made 31 saves and Toronto won its third straight game and extended its point streak to eight games. Capitals 4, Sabres 3: BUFFALO, N.Y. — Alex Ovechkin scored once in regulation and again in a shootout to help Washington rally for the win and take sole possession of 11th place, a point ahead of Buffalo in the tightly contested Eastern Conference standings.
Canadiens 3, Rangers 0:
MONTREAL Michael Ryder and Tomas Plekanec scored in the first period and Carey Price made 34 saves as Montreal moved three points ahead of Boston for first place in the Northeast Division. Panthers 3, Devils 2: SUNCrosby. RISE, Fla. — Dmitry Kulikov Coach Dan Bylsma said s cored his first goal of t h e Crosby lost several teeth season at I:43 of overtime and and needed oral surgery. Florida won its second straight He did not know if Crosby at home for the first time this would miss additional time season. and wasn't sure if the injury Wild 4, Kings 3: ST. PAUL, Minn. — Mikko Koivu scored affected his jaw. "I just know he had some in a shootout to give Minnesoissues with his teeth," Byls- ta a victory over Los Angeles. ma said. "Just from the re- Koivu also had two assists in regulation. Matt Cullen also play I know that." Crosby, with 1 5 g oals had a goal, and Zach Parise and 56 points, has enjoyed had a goal and an assist for a resurgence this season, Minnesota, which b o unced leading Tampa Bay's Ste- back after having its sevenven Stamkos by 10 points in game win streak ended a night earlier in Dallas. the NHL scoring race. Another head injury for Oilers 4, Canucks 0: EDCrosby, however, has to MONTON, Alberta — Taylor Hall had a hat trick and Edconcern the Penguins. Crosby has missed con- monton scored early and often siderable time the past two to make it three victories in a years because of concus- row for the first time this seasions. He w a s s i delined son, cruising past Vancouver. the final 41 games in 2011 Sharks 3, Coyotes 2: SAN and the Stanley Cup play- JOSE, Calif. — Logan Couoffs, and skipped most of ture scored the lone goal in the the 2012 regular season as shootout to lead San Jose to its fourth straight win, beating symptoms lingered. "I think every time that Phoenix. Marc-Edouard Vlasic type of thing happens to a celebrated his 26th birthday by player you think about it," scoring the game-tying goal Bylsma said. with five minutes left in the Crosby skated off the ice third period. with a towel covering his mouth after a slap shot by teammate Brooks O r pik deflected off a stick and hit the NHL scoring leader in the face. Crosby, who immediately fell to the ice and tossed his stick in the air, did not return. Also on Saturday: Hurricanes 3, Jets1: WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Justin Peters made 34 saves to
help Carolina keep its play-
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PREP BASEBALL
Cowboysroll to invitational victory Bulletin staff report JOHN DAY — B r a n don Alexander and Stetson Hall each had four hits in a 19-hit Crook County attack Saturday as the Cowboys routed Scio 13-4 on the final day of
the Les Schwab Invitational baseball tournament. Alexander's hits included a solo home run in the second inning. Cole Ovens also homered for Crook County, a bases-empty shot that high-
lighted a f o u r-run seventh inning. Joe Saenz added three hits for the winners, who played errorless ball in improving to 3-4 for the season with their first win in three games at the
Les Schwab event. StarterJared Wheeler was the winning pitcher for the C owboys, working f ive i n nings. Troy Benton pitched two scoreless innings to finish off a combined five-hitter.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT
Ducks
21 years
Continued from B1 "It has been great," said another UO senior, Arsalan Kazemi, who transferred from Rice to Oregon for his final season. "This is the most fun I've
Continued from 61 K rzyzewski and P i tino a r e two of the finest coaches of their generation, with five NCAA titles and 1,618 victories between them. Yet for all of their success, and for as good a friends as they a re, K r zyzewski a n d P i t i n o rarely face each other.
had playing college basketbalL And it was just great, just practicing and, I mean, I didn't want it to stop, but it's sad that it's over now. But it was great, and it was a great feeling knowing that only 16 teams out there are
When Louisville (32-5) and
still playing."
In spite of the modest pres eason expectations of t h e team, the Ducks got off to an 18-2 start and climbed as high as No. 10inthe AP poll. It was their highest ranking since 2007. The team struggled some after losing freshman point guard Dominic Artis to a foot injury in January. Even after Artis returned, Oregon suffered disappointing losses in its final two games, at Colorado and Utah, which cost the team the league's regular-season title. The losses also dropped the Ducks out of the national rankings. But Oregon rebounded in the conference tournament. Johnathan Loyd, who stepped in when Artis went down with his injury, came off the bench to score a season-high 19 points and Oregon defeated UCLA 78-69 in the title game. Oregon's trip to the tournament was its first since 2008, when the Ducks lost to Mississippi State in the first round. Oregon wo n t h e n a t i onal c hampionship once, i n t h e tournament's first year, 1939. The Ducks were the lowest seeded of the five Pac-12 teams that made the t ournament. They advanced the furthest. Oregon put up a fight against top-seeded Louisville (32-5) but fell short in the end. After the Cardinals went up 66-48 with 9:01 left, the Ducks made six straight field goals to close to 70-64. But Kevin Ware scored on a layup and Chane Behanan threw down a monstrous dunk to put the game out of reach. "I'm very proud of the team," Oregon coach Dana Altman said. "Outstanding group of guys to work with. Showed a lot of character, bouncing back from a disappointing end to our season, and they showed that same character all year, o vercoming obstacles w i t h injuries." The Ducks have steadily improved in each of Altman's three seasons as coach. Inheriting a team that went 16-16 in its final season under coach Ernie Kent, Altman guided Oregon to a 21-18 finish and the College Basketball Invitational tournament title in his first season. The next year, the Ducks were 24-10 and went to the NIT, losing in the quarterfinals to conference rival Washington. The Ducks will look a lot different next season. While they still have promising freshmen in Artis and Damyean Dotson, they lose Singler, Kazemi, Carlos Emory and Tony Woods. Singler went to Twitter for
his final goodbye. "I loved putting that OREGON jersey on each 5 every
game. I will miss playing for the Ducks and representing the state of Oregon! Love you all," he wrote.
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Mark J. Terrill/TheAssociatedPress
Wichita State players celebrate their 70-66 win over Ohio State in the West Regional final on Saturday in Los Angeles. Ohio State guard Aaron Craft (4) walks off.
a nane s o
o r i Ci a
• The No. 9 Shockers are headed to theFinal Four after beating OhioState
seeded ninth or higher to reach the Final Four since seeding began in 1979, but the second in three years following 11th-seeded VCU's improbable run in 2011. "Last year we were watching all this The Associated Press on television," said Cleanthony Early, LOS ANGELES — Wichita State who scored 12 points. "Now I'm lookis headed to the Final Four, and these ing at a hat that says 'Final Four AtShockers should be no surprise to lanta' with my team on it. It's crazy. I anybody. still can't believe we're here. You try Not after the way they held off to expect it, but you expect a lot of mighty Ohio State in the West Region- things that don't happen. This really al final. happened." M alcolm A r m stead s c ored 1 4 Wichita State roared to a 20-point points, Fred Van Vleet bounced in lead with 11 minutes to play after Ohio a big basket with a minute left, and State played an awful first half, but Laninth-seeded Wichita State earned its Quinton Ross scored 15 of his 19 points first trip to the Final Four since 1965 after halftime, leading a ferocious rally with a 70-66 victory over the Buckeyes that got the Buckeyes within three on Saturday. points in the final minutes. Van Vleet scored 12 points as the B ut after Tekele Cotton hit a 3 S hockers (30-8) f ollowed u p l a s t pointer with 2:20 left, VanVleet scored week's win over top-ranked Gonzaga on a shot that bounced all over the with a nail-biting victory over the sec- rim before dropping. Ron Baker and ond-seeded Buckeyes (29-8), whose 11- Cotton hit last-minute free throws to game winning streak ended one game secure the second Final Four trip in short of their second straight Final Wichita State's history. Four. The Shockers are also the kings of Wichita State is just the fifth team Kansas, reaching the national semifi-
nals after the powerful Jayhawks and Kansas State both went down. "We're happy, but I'm still shocked," said Carl Hall, the glasses-wearing big man who scored eight points and led the Shockers'strong defensive effort. "We've got a team full of fighters. I brought them all together near the end and said, 'No matter what happens, I love y'all.' We had to fight so hard. We've got each other's backs, and it's hard to beat a team that's got five guys who work together like us." Deshaun Thomas scored 21 points after missing nine of his first 12 shots for Ohio State, which made just 24 percent of its first-half shots. In another game on Saturday: EAST REGIONAL Syracuse 55, Marquette 39: WASHINGTON — Using its trapping, shotchallenging 2-3 zone defense to perfect effect,No. 4-seeded Syracuse shut down No. 3 Marquette in the East Regional final, reaching the Final Four for the first time in a decade. Syracuse wasled by senior forward James Southerland's 16 points. Marquette (26-9) hadn't scored fewer than 47 points this season.
MatChuPSfOrtaday'S NCAA tOurnament gameS Regionalfinals;alltimesPDT SOUTH REGION
seeded Florida Gulf Coastand gotenough
At Arlington, Texas
scoring from Mike Rosario (15 points). The straight. Duke pulled away from Michigan
No. 4 Michiganvs. No. 3Florida,
Gators scored 16 points off of 20 Eagles'
11:20 a.m. on CBS The Wolverines did the impossible Friday, rallying from 10 down with fewer than three minutes remaining to knock out
turnovers. TheWolverines beat a Kansas
top-seeded Kansas in overtime, andTrey
MIDWEST REGION At lndianapolis
team that leads the nation in field-goal percentage defense, and it will face another great defensive team in Florida.
Burke was the hero, scoring all 23 of his points after halftime. The 28-footer with four seconds left in regulation stands as one of the biggest shots in the program's history. The other star was freshman forward Mitch McGary, who got most of
2:05 p.m. onGBS The only regional that has its top two
Southeastern Conference champion Florida
The Cardinals held off pesky Oregon on Friday with guard Russ Smith, despite
No. 2 Duke vs. No. 1 Louisville,
seeds playing for a Final Four berth, and
acasecan be madethesearethetop his 25 points and 14 rebounds against Ku's two teams remaining in the tournament. Jeff Withey. Now comes another big test. used a rugged defense to cool off15th-
struggling with a virus, scoring 31. Big
East champion Louisville has won 13 State with Seth Curry scoring 29. The Blue Devils also made 24 of 26 free throws. Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski meets Louisville's Rick Pitino in a game for the first time in the NCAA tournament since 1992, when Pitino coached Kentucky and the Blue Devils won on Christian Laettner's last-second shot in the East Regional final. Recent history is more pertinent. Duke beat Louisville in November, 76-71, in the title game of the Battle 4 Atlantis in the Bahamas. Quinton Cook was the tournament's MVP. The Cards played that game without shot-
blocking specialist Gorgui Dieng, who was nursing a wrist injury. — McClatchy-Tribune NewsService
WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT
Stanford stunned byGeorgia in round of 16 The Associated Press SPOKANE, Wash. — Andy Landers looked down at the stat sheet on the table in front of him. The numbers were almost exactly what the longtime Georgia coach anticipated. Yes, even the final score: Georgia 61, Stanford 59. Jasmine Hassell scored six of her 13 points in the final 3 minutes and fourth-seeded Georgia beat top-seeded Stanford 61-59 on Saturday night to reach the NCAA women's regional finals for the first time since 2004. Georgia overcame three major scoring droughts, including falling behind 9-0, to oust the No. 1 seed from the Spokane Regional and end Stanford's hopes of reaching the Final Four for the sixth straight year. Jasmine James led Georgia (28-6) with 16 points, including a pair of free throws with 23.5 seconds left that gave the Lady Bulldogs a 60-56 lead. It's the 11th trip to the regional finals in Landers' long tenure at Georgia. "As we came down the stretch, our players, I think figured out that they could make some plays and really did a nice job," Landers said. "I think the thing that's so good about the comeback and going ahead is that each one of those five players did something that was really significant as we did that. And they did something really significant on each end of the floor."
Chiney Ogwumike led Stanford (33-3) with 26 points, but was held to eight points in the second half. She also had 12 rebounds. Tiaria Griffin scored 13 points, and Shacobia Barbee added nine as the Lady Bulldogs turned in another superb defensive effort to stymie Stanford and ruin any hopes of a Pac-12 showdown with No. 2 seed California in the regional final. Georgia will play for a trip to the Final Four on Monday night against the second-seeded Golden Bears. Georgia has not made the Final Four since 1999.Georgia reached the round of 16 in 2005-07 and 2010-11, only to get ousted at that stage each time, including a 73-36 loss to Stanford in 2010. Saturday night wasn't so much about getting even with the Cardinal, as it was about getting Georgia back to where it believes it belongs. "To finally make the next step and go to the Elite 8 and now to be going into another game to try to compete to go to the Final Four is definitely back to where Georgia basketball needs to be, trying to compete for a national championship," James said. Also on Saturday: SPOKANE REGIONAL California 73, LSU 63:SPOKANE, Wash. — Layshia Clarendon scored 19 points to lead California a victory over LSU, sending the Bears to the round of eight for the first time in program history. Gennifer Brandon had 17 points and 13 rebounds, and Brittany Boyd added 14 points for
second-seeded Cal (31-3), which will play Georgia in the Spokane Regional final on Monday night. Theresa Plaisance had 15 points and 12 rebounds for sixth-seeded LSU (22-12). The Lady Tigers were in the game until a scoring drought late in the second half ended their chances. They were seeking their first berth in the round of eight since 2008. BRIDGEPORT REGIONAL Connecticut 76, Maryland 50: BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — Breanna Stewartand Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis each scored 17 points, leading top-seeded Connecticut over Maryland in the Bridgeport regional semifinals. Stewart got help from fellow freshmen Moriah Jefferson, 10 points, and Morgan Tuck, eight points, in sending the top-seeded Huskies (32-4) to their eighth straight NCAA regional final. Kentucky 69, Delaware 62:BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — Jennifer O'Neill scored 19 points and A'dia Mathies added 16 to help Kentucky hold off Delaware in the Bridgeport regional semifinals, bringing to an end the stellar career of Elena Delle Donne. It's the second straight season that Kentucky (30-5) has advanced to the regional final. The Wildcats, w ho alreadyhave a school record forvictories,lost to UConn last season by 15 points. Delle Donne had 33 points for Delaware (32-4) and finished her career as the fifth all-time leading scorer in NCAA history.
Duke (30-5) played in the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament in N o vember — Duke won — it was the first time Krzyzewski and Pitino had played each other since 1992. Today's game will be their third meeting ever. "That's why we got them in t he conference. Got t o s t a r t doing this a l i t tl e bi t m o r e," Krzyzewski joked, referring to Louisville's upcoming move to the ACC. B ut a l most n o t hing c o u l d top that first meeting between them. T he B lu e D e v i ls, l e d b y Laettner and Grant Hill, were defending national champions in 1992. Kentucky was on the rise again after two years on probation. When they met in the old Spectrum for the East Region finals, it was a showdown of the Nos. I and 2 seeds, a game worthy of a national championship. "It was such a high-scoring game with so much perfection in the way players passed and shot the ball. That's what made it stand the test of t i me," Pitino said. "It was a game where two coaches could sit back and watch great players perform at the highest level." After coming from 10 points down in r egulation, Kentucky a ppeared to h a v e t h e g a m e won when Sean Woods made a running bank shot in the lane with 2.5 seconds left in overtime. Duke called a timeout and g ave the ball to Grant Hill t o inbound. The Wildcats knew the ball was going to Laettner, a 6-foot11 center who had made a buzzer-beater against Connecticut in the regional finals two years earlier. But without Jamal Mashburn — had fouled out — Pitino pulled John Pelphrey and Deron F eldhaus aside a n d w a r n e d them not to foul. "I said, ' Whatever you d o , don't foul him. He hasn't missed a shot,' " Pitino r ecalled. "I shouldn't have done that. That was the mistake I made. I should have said, 'Whatever you do, bat down the ball. I don't care what the contact is, go for the basketball.' "You saw my guys freeze a little bit." A s anyone wh o h a s e v e r watched the NCAA tournament in the past 21 years knows, Hill threw a strike from the far baseline and found Laettner at the foul line with his back to the basket. Laettner f aked r i g ht, spun to his left and his 15-footer hit nothing but net as the buzzer sounded. "I don't think you can realize the significance at that time," Krzyzewski said. "I will always remember the stark difference i n emotion. Because, right i n
front of me, (Kentucky's) Richie Farmer collapsed.Isee our guys jump and I see him fall. And really, I was more taken by Richie. I understood by looking at him ... just how tough that was." It was agonizing for the first 24 hours, Pitino said. But when he popped atape of the game in the next day, he saw it in a different light. "I just sat b ack a n d s a i d, 'Darn, that was some hell of a basketball game,' " he said. "I got the guys together and I said, 'Man, that was a great game.' Really was a great game, especially playing without Mash." Duke would go on to win its second straight t i t le, beating Michigan in the final. Kentucky would complete its revival four years later when the Wildcats beat Syracuse for t heir s ixth NCAA title and first since 1978. But it is that game that everyone remembers, and the years have done nothing to diminish it. Clips of the play are on repeat throughout the tournament each y ear. And as th e N CA A c e lebrates 75years of March Madness this year, the Laettner play has been among the highlights. "I do think about it often," Pitino said. "Not from a revenge standpoint, but as a great game that I was happy to be part of. "To me, it's one of the best losses I've ever had," he said. "A
bad loss is where your guys play terrible, you don't play. It was
a great loss because my guys played almost a perfect game and we just had the wrong ending for us. But it was one of the greatest basketball games ever played because it was so highpowered with great play. One great play after another. That was fun to be part of."
SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
New AL West foes Astros,
Tennis, at aglance A look at Central Oregon teams competing in tennis this spring:
BOYS CLASS 5A Bend LavaBears Head coach:Grant Ludwick (sixth season)
GIRLS CLASS 5A Bend LavaBears Head coach:Kevin Collier (16th season)
2012 finish:Fourth at Class 5A Special District1
2012 finish:14th at Class 5A state tournament Outlook:Seven seniors, including two-time state qualifier Kaylee Tornay, expect to lead Bend.
tournament Outlook:Cameron Tulare andCasey Collier, whether playing as adoubles team or assingles players, could advance to state. Mountain ViewCougars Head coach:BradSoto (firstyear) 2012 finish:Fourth at Class 5A state tournament
Mountain ViewCougars Head coach:ShaneTherrian (first season) 2012 finish:Advanced one player to Class 5A state tournament but did not place as a team Outlook:Senior captains Jasmine Coplin and
Outlook:TheCougars' lineup will be madeup entirely of seniors, with a goal of placing at least
Courtney Horrell lead anexperienced Cougars
third at districts.
RedmondPanthers Head coach:Nathan Saito (12th season)
RedmondPanthers Head coach:Jim Ferguson (sixth season) 2012 finish:Did not advance any players to the
Class 6A state tournament
squadthatboasts good depth.
2012 finish:Advanced two players to the Class 6A state tournament but did not place as a team Outlook:The senior-heavy Panthers look to
Outlook:The Panthers' Nathan Powell is expected to be one of the better singles players in the Intermountain Conference. Summit Storm
capitalize on experience to make upfor a lack of
Head coach:Josh Cordell (12th season)
2012 finish:Won Class 5A state tournament
2012 finish:Won Class 5A state title Outlook:Despite losing a two-time individual state champion in Paxton Deuel, the Storm are deep enough to be favored to win their fourth state title in five years.
Outlook:Strong junior class has Storm as 5A
CLASS 4A/3A/2A/1A Crook CountyCowdoys Head coach:Michael Boyd (first season)
2012 finish:Second at Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state
2012 finish:Advanced two players to Class
4A/3A/2A/1A state tourney but did not place asa team
Outlook:Cowboys are rebuilding after their only two state qualifiers from 2012 graduated. Madras White Buffaloes
Head coach:Margaret Kincaid (seventh season) 2012 finish:Did not advance anyplayers to the class 4A/3A/2A/1A state tourney
Outlook:Singles player Alexsis Penaloza andthe doubles team ofCalebFreshour andEliceo Garcia look to lead the Buffs in 2012.
Ridgeview Head coach:Todd Neville (first season) 2012 finish:First-year program
Outlook:Ravensdoubles team of Colin Ronhaar and Gabriel Paynehasthe most experience on a young team. Sisters Outlaws Head coach:Bim Gander(first season) 2012 finish:Advanced one player to Class 4A/3A/ 2A/1A state tourney but did not place as a team Outlook:Junior Paul Fullhart looks to again qualify for state after advancing in singles play in 2012.
Storm Continued from B1 The Cowgirls could face considerable competition from Central Oregon rival Ridgeview, which in its first year has several players who saw varsity time at crosstown Redmond High last season. Though Ridgeview is kicking off its inauguralseason,inexperience does not define the Ravens' roster. Five players from last season's Redmond High squad make the transition to the new school, led by Ridgeview's top two singles players in Caitlin Carr and Sally Claridge. And with strong doubles players Claire Wright, Courtney Wellette and Rhian Sage, Ravens coach Tim Miller expects his program to push opponents to their limits. "Those kidsare my core group," Miller says, "so they will be my leaders, and I expect a lot out of them." Sisters High also brings back two players with state experience in seniors Paige Tosello and Shelbi Thompson. The two went 0-1 at state as a doubles pair in 2012. The depth of Summit's boys team knows no bounds. Despite losing a two-time individual state champion in Paxton Deuel, the Storm boys are eyeing their fourth Class 5A state title in five years. Sophomore singles player Chandler Oliveira, who placed third at state a year ago, is back, as is senior Scott Parr, who with then-partner Lionel Hess was the 2012 5A state doubles
runners-up.
"We're loaded," admits Storm coach Josh Cordell. "It's pretty amazing. We lost more than we've ever lost (to graduation) — points at state, leaders, kids that have played varsity for a long time.... But (this year) we've got five elite players and then we're about 20 deep on guys that could play varsity." Junior Liam Hall falls into that elite category, according to Cordell, after taking fourth at state in doubles play last spring with his brother Bo, who graduated. Among the other top players for Summit are Parker Nichols, a senior who made it to the singles consolation final at state in 2012, and junior William Dalquist, whose doubles team lost in the district quarterfinal last year to the eventual state champs. "Our first goal is to win state as a team," says Cordell, who has been Summit's coach ever since the school opened in 2001. "Everything else falls under that — individual goals, where kids play in the lineup, who plays doubles together ... and these kids have really bought into that. "We've got a team rule," Cordell adds. "You can ask me anything you want, suggest anything you want, but you have to finish the question with, 'But I'll do what's best for the team.' " Bend High's boys hope to land at least one state-qualifying berth from the district tournament. Lava Bear coach Grant Ludwick points to the doubles team of Cameron Tulare and Casey Collier, returners who missed out on state by one win last year. "We'd love to win all our dual matches and win district as a team, but we know that's not realistic with Summit being a powerhouse,"
BS
depth that they have had in the past. Summit Storm
Head coach:RyanCruz(second season)
favorites again in 2013.
CLASS 4A/3A/2A/1A Crook CountyCowgirls Head coach:Lloyd Rodgers (12th season) tournament Outlook:Cowgirls should contend for a trophy at
state with singles player ElsaHarris and doubles players Ali Apperson and Annie Frazier all back after advancing to state in 2012.
Rangers open2013season Nextup
By Kristie Rieken
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — The Houston Astros will make it official tonight when they face the Texas Rangers: They are an American League team — after 50 years in the NL. Houston ha s b a seball's lowest payroll and is coming off consecutive 100-loss seasons. Things won't get any easier in the powerful A L West, though. The Astros are optimistic they'll b e m uch better than they were last season. Most everyone else figures it will b e d i fficult for t h is team to avoid becoming the first team to lose at least 106 games in three straight seasons since the expansion Mets did it from 1962-65. Tonight 28-year-old Bud Norris, Houston's highestpaid player with a $3 million salary, will become the team's fourth opening day starter in f our years. He's looking to bounce back from a tough season where he went 7-13. In the major league's first regular-season game, he'll
prepared." After trading away most MLB season opener: of their veterans over the last Texas Rangers at Houston Astros couple of years to restock a • When:Today, 5 p.m. once-depleted farm system, • TV:ESPN • Radio:KICE-AM 940
face Texas left-hander and All-Star Matt Harrison, who went 18-11 in 2012 and signed a five-year contract worth $55 million in the offseason. A long w i t h t h e i r n e w league, there are plenty of other changes for the A stros this year. They've got a first-year manager in former Washington third base c oach Bo Porter, and wi l l don new u n i forms w h ich bring back the orange color associated with better times in Houston. Porter said h e i g n ores what outsiders have to say about his team. "That's not hard for me because when I look in the mirror I see a winner," Porter said. "No one can make me have a different perception of myself because I know the effort I'm going to put into making sure our team is
some in baseball have suggested the Astros are trying to lose. Owner Jim Crane, who enters his second year with the team, brushed off that notion. "That's totally wrong and we would never do that," he said. Texas is still expected to contend in the AL West despite the loss of several key players, most notably 2010 AL M V P J o s h H a m ilton. Also gone arecatcher Mike Napoli and infielder Michael
Young. The Rangers and Astros have traditionally played a home and home series each season, so facing each other is nothing new. But this year these teams, separated by about 250 miles, will meet 19 times. "They're close and it's a natural rivalry, and we hope to build that up and make it a good tradition for the state of Texas," Crane said.
Madras White Buffaloes Head coach:DaveJordan (fifth season) 2012 finish:Did not advance any players to state
Outlook:Madras returns its top doubles team from a year ago, Kaitlyn Carter and Ivette Ruiz, who won the consolation bracket at the 2012 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 2 district meet.
Ridgeview Ravens Head coach:Tim Miller 2012 finish:First-year program Outlook:The Ravens expect to be competitive at the 4A/3A/2A/1A level with several players having
6A varsity experience last year at RedmondHigh. Sisters Outlaws
Head coach:Marti Dale (seventh season) 2012 finish:Advanced four players to state
tournament but did not place as a team Outlook: PaigeToselloand ShelbiThompson hope to reach state again after qualifying as doubles partners in 2012.
"We'd love to win all our dual matches and win district as a team, but we know that's not realistic with Summit being a
powerhouse. Thegoal for us is to find that lineup that gets us a doublesteam and maybe a singles
(player) to state." — Bend boys coach Grant Ludwick
says Ludwick, who is being assisted by former Mountain View head coach Alex Bick this season. "The goal for us is to find that lineup that gets us a doubles team and maybe a singles
(player) to state." At Redmond, Zach Powell leads a group of seven seniors that Panthers coach Jim Ferguson believescould challenge for the second or third spot in the competitive Special District 1. Fortunately for Ferguson, Redmond has a veteran list of players whom he describes as "top tlogs. "They've been with me a long time," Ferguson says. "They know my expectations. They're willing to work hard for it. I think they're willing to put the time in." Mountain View is coming off a fourth-place finish at state but will be without Matt Larraneta and Matt VanHemelryck, who graduated after winning the 2012 5A doubles state title. Still, Cougars coach Brad Soto says his lineup will be full of seniors — led by the No. 1 doubles team of Blake Miller and Bryce Tipton — with aspirations of finishing in the top three at districts. In 4A/3A/2A/1A, Sisters junior Paul Fullhart highlights the area's small-school tennis storylines. A year after making his state debut, Fullhart looks to make some noise in the state singles tournament this season. The Outlaws' No. 1 doubles duo of Devan Calvin and Evan Rickards could also make a state tourney run. Madras brings back several players with varsity experience. Jordan Gemelas and Eliceo Garcia advanced to the quarterfinal round of last year's Class 4A/3A/2A/IA Special District 2 doubles tournament, and Alexsis Penaloza and Carlos Garcia both played varsity singles in 2012. Crook County and Ridgeview are both fielding fairly young teams this spring and hope to build a foundation for seasons to come. Guiding a first-year program, Ravens coach Todd Neville says his first goal is to instill mental toughness into his players. With Caleb Maxwell tabbed as the No. 1 singles player and a potential state qualifier, and with the doubles tandems of Colin Ronhaar and Gabe Payne as well as Chase Bennett and Brandon Huff, Neville sees a competitive drive within his program. "Quite frankly, I'd be happy and tickled if we qualified anyone to state," Neville says. "But I just simply want to see what we can get this year and build that mental and physical ability for next year, where kids will really see a leap in their competitiveness and ability to win matches."
Mariners
sive pursuit of offense and the signing of Hernandez to the richest contract for a pitcher in baseball history at the time. The Mariners failed to lure Josh Hamilton to Seattle, but Zduriencik quickly responded by trading for Kendrys Morales and Michael Morse to give the Mariners a set of middle-of-the-order power hitters they have sorely lacked. While the leadoff spot remains unsettled going into the season, the arrival of Morales and Morse will put hitters in more natural spots in the order. Justin Smoak and Jesus Montero no longer have to be cleanup hitters. Dustin Ackley can bat in the bottom of the order and Kyle Seager can slot into the No. 2 hole coming off a breakout season with 20 homers and 86 RBIs. Couple the offensive upgrades withshorter porches at home — the fencesat Safeco Field moving in from 4 to 17 feet in places — and a dynam-
Continued from B1 "I get questions often in regard to the timetable of us being a championship team. The only thing I can tell you is we'll be better, we'll continue to get better. That's what happened the last couple years. And a t some p oint i n ti m e sooner than later, we will be a championship team,"
Wedge added. It's been a dozen years now since the Mariners last reached the postseason in 2001. They have just four
winning seasons during the span and a fan base that was once among the best in baseball has eroded to where even Safeco Field — one of the gems in the game — isn't much of a draw anymore. T hat's just one of t h e reasons why winning is so important in 2013. Seattle chose the right path in trying to correct the past problems of the franchise when Zduriencik arrived and the emphasis was placed on restocking the farm system to develop continued success from within. But the situation is far different n ow . P r o gress must be seen. Prospects must start developing into c onsistent p l ayers a n d no longer see their future based around potentiaL "What we wanted to do, and we have accomplished, was to continue to let these kids grow, continue to keep this system where it's at, but augment it with middle of the lineup hitters as well as experience," Zduriencik said. "That's where it's at." Seattle was among the busierteams lastoffseason, staying in the national conversation with its aggres-
ic power surge during spring training that was hard not to notice, and it seems likely Seattle's offense should be drastically better. "This is where I pretty much started out. This is where it all started for me. There are ties here. I love this city. I think the
fans are amazing," said Morse, who came up in Seattle's farm system beforeblossoming in Washington. "Teams like this and cities like this you want to have a good team and you want them to win. With the whole trade I felt like this was a great opportunity to go over there and help the team be a championship ballclub." The pitching staff begins with Hernandez and his new $175 million contract that includes a no-trade clause that will keep him i n a S e attle uniform through the 2019 season. Beyond Hernandez and a bullpen led by closer Tom Wilhelmsen and some dynamic young arms, there are questions. Hisashi Iwakuma and Joe Saunders will hold down two spots in the rotation, but the final tw o s t arter r oles could be in flux for the early part of the season with Blake Beavan and rising prospect Brandon Maurer likely getting the initial nods. Seattle h as quality arms down o n the farm in Taijuan Walker, James Paxton an d D a n ny Hultzen, but they won't be ready for the majors until later in the summer. "I believe in this team and I know we're going to win," Hernandez said.
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
SPOTLIGHT
Pet food bank seeks donations The BendSpayand Neuter Project and Bend Pet Express are currently seeking cat and dog food donations for their new HOPE (Help Our Pets Eat) Pet Food
Bank. The food bank will be
open to qualified clients the first Saturday of each month. The first event is scheduled from
h
10a.m. to noon April 6 at the Westside Bend
Pet Express. In order to qualify, clients must be re-
ceiving some form of government assistance and show proof of
• After falling into disrepair, PetersenRockGarden is being restored
this or be within the
income guidelines for Deschutes Housing
Built in the mid-1930s, Petersen
organizers. Clients do
attraction featuring rock-, gem-
REDMOND — Owen Evans picked up a weathered, 60-year-old postcard
not need to bring their pets to the food bankto
he found under several bags of trash that were being loaded into a truck
receive assistance. Donations of cat
heading for the dump.
and dog food canbe dropped off at both Spay and Neuter Project. Businesses interested in collecting food
and hosting a donation box should contact the
Bend Spayand Neuter Project. Contact: 541-6171010.
Redmondschools fundraiser ontap Stars in the Sagebrush, celebrating pro-
Though a party of peafowl
grams, individuals and initiative that have made
an impact on education intheRedmond School District, will be at 6 p.m.
April12 at EagleCrest Resort's River Run Event Center, 1730 Blue
Heron Drive, Redmond. Stars in the Sagebrush raises funds and
awareness for Redmond School District's community schools. The
rfI'I'
event will feature food
t '"',IIl,a
:t
still greets visitors when they pull up to Petersen Rock Garden, a longtime roadside attraction located near Redmond, the current state of some of its signature features is afar cry from what's depicted on the postcard. Those pictures do not show a crack that runs down the center of the Statue of Liberty's "God Bless America" sign, a strand of yellow security tape that's been hanging from one of
Owen Evans pauses while giving a tour of the grounds at the Petersen Rock Garden near Redmond. Evans and others are working to clean up, restore,
and re-open the garden. its Swan Pond bridges since a contractor damaged it last year, or the missing pieces of stone on the Independence
Hall that have either fallen off or were snatched away by vandals and thieves. Evans said these signs of decay arethe result ofyears of lagging maintenance and repairs. He said the rock garden, which has a special place in his heart and those of many other volunteers, was almost lost during this period and he has committed himself to restoring its attractions to the pristine conditions depicted on the postcard. "We've been very busy." Evans said as he worked on the rock garden's improvement project just 10 weeks before it will open to the public for the first time after a five-month closure. But even with the progress that's been made in restoring of the garden, Evans added, there's a lot more work left to be done and he sees it "as a lifelong project." SeePetersen/C3
H(5;ig~
that drew tens of thousands of
visitors to Central Oregoneach year. But over the past fewyears, was named one of thestate's most endangered historic places in 2011. Here's an overview of
preservation efforts: VOLUNTEERS In January, the rock garden closed to the public so volunteers could clean the property and perform some much-neededmaintenance work to the attractions buildings and monuments. People interested in helping with this project should meet at the
rock garden from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturdays and from noon to 4 p.m. on Sundays. Call Owen Wilsonat503-334-8087.
HISTORIC REGISTER The rock garden isbeing nominated for a spot on the National Register of Historic Places. This designation
will make it eligible for federal historic preservation tax credits
and grant programs. MANAGEMENT Volunteers hope to create a nonprofit gemological society that will educate the public
about Central Oregon's rocks and minerals. It will also be responsible for maintaining
the rock garden's monuments, decorations and buildings.
J
sic by Lindy Gravelle and
and glass-covered statues, monuments and model buildings
it has fallen into disrepair and
Captured against the backdrop of a clear blue Central Oregon sky, the Statue of Liberty Rasmus Petersen carved from a single piece of red sandstone glistened in the postcard picture. Obsidian stones attached to a 12-foottall scale replica Petersen built of Philadelphia's Independence Hall were just as brilliant in the postcard as the blue and green eyes that dotted oneof his petpeacock's unfurled tails.
Bend Pet Express locations and at the Bend
a silent and live auction. Tickets are $45. Contact: www. redmond.k12.or.us.
Rock Garden is aroadside
By Mac McLean •The Bulletin
Works, according to the
and drink, a celebration of the honorees, live mu-
Restorationefforts
UPCOMING EVENTS • Estate sale — April 26-28 /~j +
Diabetes walk registration open
J
While cleaning out the rock garden's auxiliary buildings, volunteers found dishes,
1
decorations and other memorabilia the Petersen family
Registration is under way for the Central
owned. They plan to sell these items during a three-day estate
Oregon Walk to Cure
sale conducted by Attic Estates
Diabetes in Bend. The 2.4-mile walk will
and Appraisals of Redmond.
take placeApril13 start-
Money raised from this event, which will take place from 9 a.m. to4 p.m. each day, willbe used to convert the Petersen home into
qf
ing from Riverbend Park,
along the Deschutes River Trail. Check-in
a museum featuring its original
starts at10 a.m., and the walk begins at11 a.m.
furniture and decorations.
• Openingweekend — May24-26
The cost to participate is a donation. Team and individual registra-
tion is available online. The event, presented bythe Juvinile Diabetes
Photos by Joe Kline /The Bulletin
The old amphitheater and museum at the Petersen Rock Garden near Redmond.
Research Foundation Central OregonCouncil, will raise money to help find a cure, fund research and build awareness for Type1 diabetes, an aut oimmune disease
After hosting a special volunteer appreciation celebration on Friday, May 24, the rock garden plans to be opentothe public Ma y 25-26 from 9a.m. to dusk. Source: Owen Evans
affecting roughly 3 mil-
lion Americans. Contact: www.walk. jdrf.org or 541-6431995.
Gontact us with your ideas Have a story idea or event submission? Contact us!
• Community events:
Email event information to events@bendbul-
letin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351. • Story ideas: Email
communitylife©bendbulletin.com. — From staff reports
Albania's once-forbidden alpine peaks By Tim Neville New York Times News Service
The seasons were changing fast, and the warmth I'd taken for granted had vanished as night mustered in the hills. I gatheredthe blanket around my neck and listened to the dogs barking below. It was now long past midnight, with only a few hours until the morning call to prayer. Peter Grubb, the owner of an Idaho-based outfitter called ROW Adventures, sat in the corner flipping through maps under the lone working light bulb. We were in Room
305 of Hotel Rosi, a bright yellow block of a building in Gusinje, a predominately Muslim community in the former Yugoslav republic of Montenegro. South of here, a rocky trail climbed steadily into a vampiric maw of limestone peaks. Tomorrow we would follow that trail and slip virtually unnoticed into Albania. That would have been among the stupidest things you could do had it been the 1980s, when Albania was the North Korea of Europe. From World War II until his death in
1985, the Communist leader Enver Hoxha hammered Albania into an oppressive hermit state. He extirpated dissent, outlawed religion and lowered the age for executions to 11. The "Great Teacher" hermetically sealed the borders and distanced himself from other Communists. "We have fought empty-bellied and barefooted but have never kowtowed to anybody!" he once howled at Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet leader. Hoxha's final heart attack and the eventual collapse of Communism hailed the
beginning of the end of Albania's isolation, and in recent years the once-tense border region separating Albania, Montenegro and Kosovo has become the kind of place you'd want to visit. Aid money, remittances and relative stability have helped create a middle class, and tourism in the region is beginning to boom. Guides take groups kayaking under stone bridges in Montenegro, hiking around Albanian archaeological sites and even skiing in Kosovo. SeeAlps/C4
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Chad Case/ New York Times News Service
New signs point the way on a hiking trail in Albania. Tourism in the formerly Communist region is beginning to boom.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3'I, 2013
M j QESTONE ~
Formsfor engagemeni wedding anniversary orbirtitday announcementsareavaiiabieat TheBugetin i777SW ChandierAve.,Bend or by emailing milestones@bendbulletin.com. Forms andphotos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.
ENGAGEMENTS
De Santis —Mensik
an attorney for Davis Wright Tremaine LLP in Seattle. The future groom is the son of Al Mensik, of Omak, Wash., and Susan Weeks, of Spokane, Wash. He is a 2001 graduate of Tonasket High School, a 2007 graduate of Eastern Washington University, where he studied history, and a 2011 graduate of the University of Washington School of Law. He served in the Marine Corps from 20012005. He works as an attorney for Witherspoon Kelley, P.S. in Spokane, Wash.
Amy De Santis, of Seattle, and Matthew Mensik, of Spokane, Wash., plan to marry Oct. 19 at Lake Union Cafe in Seattle. T he future b r ide i s t h e daughter Pierre De Santis, of Bend, and the late Laureen De Santis.She is a 2002 graduate of Bend High School, a 2006 graduate of Washington State University, where she studied history, and a 2011 graduate of the University of Washington School of Law. She works as
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Christie Myers and Todd Cox
Myers —Cox
Willamette Valley Bank. T he future groom i s t h e son of Doug and Rhonda, of Bend, and Tammy and Craig Tomlinson, of A gu a D u lce, Calif. He is a 2001 graduate of Bend High School and a 2007 graduate of the University of Houston, where he studied economics.He works in direct sales for BendBroadband.
Christie Myers and Todd Cox, both of Bend, plan to marry Aug. 3 at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. The futurebride is the daughter of David and Kathy Myers, of Bend. She is a 2002 graduate of Bend High School. She works as a loan coordinator for
ANN I V ERSARIES
cy
s
C
I
Kathleen and William DeForrest
DeForrest
(and Becky), of Sandy, Nathan,
William a nd K at h l een (Nichols) DeForrest, of Bend, will celebrate their 35th wedding anniversary with a trip to the Oregon Coast in April. The couple were married at the Pantano Christian Church on April 1, 1978, in Tucson, Ariz. They havethree children,Brian
of Bend, and Cory (and Kristen), of Boise, Idaho; and three grandchildren.Mr. DeForrest works for The Home Depot. Mrs. DeForrest works for Deschutes County 911. The couple are members of Real Life Christian Church in Bend. They have lived in Central Oregon for 14 years.
y sggs
Dale and Terree Putman
Putman
Livermore, Calif.; and f our grandchildren. Dale and Terree (Aldred) Mr. Putman worked for the Putman, of Bend, w il l c el- U.S. Forest Service until his ebrate their 40th wedding an- retirement in 2007. Mrs. Putniversary with a C a ribbean man worked for Lava Ridge cruise. Elementary School until her T he c ouple w e r e m a r - retirement in 2012. The couple ried April 14, 1973, in Lake enjoy spending time with famTahoe, Nev. They have two ily and traveling. children, Trace (and Kate), of They have lived in Central Mesa, Ariz., and Daren, of Oregon for 37 years.
one a e oremarria e, a i oucan' is ara e and there's this sheepishness about bringing up the money When Joe, 64, a computer issue," he said. professional in M a ssachuChristine, 39, a lawyer in setts, married for the first Alabama, did not broach the time, he was 31 and very in subject when her boyfriend love. of four years proposed. "In "She was attracted to me retrospect, if we'd go out for because I had structure; I a nice dinner, I somehow alwas attractedto her because ways ended up paying, but I she was a lot of fun," Joe honestly never thought about it," she said. "He swept me off said. He had noticed some fi- my feet." nancial red flags while they As soon as th e c ouple were dating: She always car- moved in together and joined ried a credit card balance their bank accounts, it quickand liked buying expensive ly became clear that money gifts for people. Still, he said, was going to be a problem. he wasn't fazed: "I never Christine's fiance was out of thought about it, because it work, but he wouldn't stop wasn't my problem." spending. "He would rack A fter th e y marr i e d , up overdraft fees and started t hough, h i s n e w w if e ' s dipping into my savings," she spending h a bits b e came said. Joe's problem. When business slowed at "She could drain a check- her practice, the situation ing account in no time," he became dire. "Things got recalled. Joe describes him- really bad, really scary," she self as an avid saver, and his recalled. Christine e nded and his wife's financial dif- up cashing out her 401(k) to ferences became the cause cover their bills. "When I told of bad f ights. "I couldn't him,'I can'tbelieveI didthis. s tand being broke all t h e You just don't cash in your time and really struggling retirement,' he said, 'Why to pay the bills, and she are you trying to make me didn't like the restriction of feel guilty?' His attitude was, me saying we can't afford 'If you have money, you use it sss this," he said. 'We kind of drove each other into corDanielle, 26, a store manners. She became more ir- ager in New York state, said responsible and I became she also ignored red flags more rigid." Joe and his wife when she began dating her divorced after three years, boyfriend. "He would allargely because of financial ways get calls from his sisdifferences. ter and they would argue Research shows that mon- about money, but I d i dn't ey is the No. I reason couples think much of it," she said. fight and a main reason mar- It turned out that Danielle's riages split up. In spite of boyfriend had lost his job, that, most couples do not talk was living in a f o reclosed about money before they home and was so behind on marry, says Terri Orbuch of car payments, he was in danthe University of Michigan's ger of repossession. Institute for Social Research. Daniellebegantappingher Orbuch has been tracking credit to cover his car pay373 marriedcouples formore ments and the cost of a forethan 26 years. "In our soci- closure lawyer. She bought ety, money is a really taboo him suits for job interviews. subject, almost like sex," she "I'm almost $20,000 in debt said. "In fact, I think money because of all that," she said. is even more taboo, because In spite of those troubles, these days friends talk about Danielle moved in with her sex, but we d on't usually boyfriend and wa s r eady know how much our friends to marry him. "I just kept make." thinking, 'He's made these As a result, said Orbuch, mistakes in the past, but I'm we tend to avoid the issue un- here now, I can fix it,'" she til a problem comes up and, said. "'We're building a fualthough marriage is one of ture together.'" the most important financial Romance vs. practicality decisions many people will ever make, most go into it In spite of the enormous blind. role money plays in marriage,Torrent said he rarely 'Didn't think muchabout it' saw people hesitate to comLair Torrent, a family and mit or marry because of ficouples therapist based in nancial concerns. "There's a New York, said his single cli- lot of talk about this being a ents often seemed ashamed deal-breaker, but I don't ever to bring up f inancial consee it," he said. cerns about the people they Part of the reason for that were dating. disconnect may be that we "Our popular culture puts are hard-wired t o i g n ore it out there that it should be p ractical concerns in t h e all puppy dogs and ice cream, throes of romance, said ArBy StaceyVanek Smith
New Yorh Times News Service
thur Aron, a social psychologist at Stony Brook University, who has been researching romantic love for more than 40 years. Aron has studied MRIs taken of people's brains while they look at pictures of their beloved. "The dopamine r ewards center is activated," he said. "It's the same part of y our brain that's activated when you take cocaine. Like cocaine, romantic love is enormously focusing of attention. You want it, and you want it more than anything, and everything else can go by the wayside." Aron said romantic love usually wore off in one to four years. R omantically i n duced f i nancial trauma, though, tends to stick. Of the 373 couples Orbuch has tracked, nearly half have split up. The majority of those who divorced who are
in happy relationships keep their finances separate. "In their marriages, money was such a hot-button issue, they think if they keep it separate, their new relationship won't have as much conflict," Orbuch said.
ry," she said. "I think of a relationship more as a partnership. You're creating a little f amily b u siness and b o t h partners have to take a role in it." Christine said when she went on dates now, she tried to notice little things: whether he paid,how much he tipped. "The hope is, I don't start requiring a tax r eturn before I go for coffee,"she said,
laughing. D anielle, the N e w Y o r k store manager, said she now made a complete assessment. ul look at their car, the condition of the clothes they're wearing," she said. "I know it sounds superficial, but credit is important. Credit affects me having that white picket fence and the 2.5 kids everyb ody dreams about. If y ou don't have credit, you can't have that dream." S ince breaking u p w i t h her boyfriend, Danielle has moved back in with her parents so she can focus on paying down her debt.
Starting off on the right foot
It is possible to learn from f inancial h e artbreak, s a i d Joe,the computer professionCommitments al in Massachusetts. Before O ther p eople p r efer t o he married a second time, screen for financial compat- he and hisfiancee discussed ibility. The dating site Credit finances in depth, he said. scoredating.com incl u d es She was in debt and declared credit scores in members' pro- bankruptcy to clear it before files. The owner, Niem Green, they married. "I didn't want said most of his members, a to start off on the wrong foot majority of them male, had and she understood that," he been hurt financially in previ- sa>d. ous relationships. "They know That vigilance paid off. Joe if they can find someone with said his wife was very finana good credit score, that's a c ially compatible with h i m seriousperson they can build and described that as "t he a future with," he said. Green, floor" of t h eir r elationship. who worked as a credit analyst "She and I never have a credit underwriting mortgage loans, card balance," he said. BWe said a financial commitment have retirement money and is very similar to a personal we're not tempted to spend it." Joe said that made him commitment. "If you sign a loan agree- feel secure and allowed him ment for four years,you're to loosen up and enjoy his saying you're going to be in money. a relationship with this bank J oe stil l w o n d ers w h y and you're going to make this money proved to be such an payment every month," he insurmountable obstacle in said. "If they can't keep their his first m a rriage. "I look financial commitment, what back and wonder why things makes you think they're go- didn't work out," he said, "being to keep their commitment cause the best times of my life to you?" were with her." C hristine, the l awyer i n Alabama, said she would be slow to commit again, and she said the way a man handled money would be a top priority. "Romantic love is a luxu-
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The Bulletin MILESTONE G UI
BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend
Delivered at St. Charles Redmond
lanand JessicaSwihart, a girl, Tessa Kathleen Swihart, 8 pounds, 14 ounces, March 21. Kurt andBrendaHopfer, aboy, Anderson Martin Hopfer, 9 pounds, 9 ounces, March 23. Karissa Fronk,a boy, Mason Brody Fronk,7 pounds,3 ounces, March 13. Jimmy BurkhartandHeather Boynton,aboy, Charles James Burkhart, 6 pounds, 11ounces, March 24. Hans andShalonSieg, a boy, Easton William LeeSieg, 6 pounds, 7 ounces, March14. Zaneand Melody Myers, a boy, Barrett Thomas Myers, 7 pounds, 4 ounces, February 21.
Dane AldermanandAmber Pykkonen,a girl, Breanna Rose Alderman, 7pounds,IO ounces, March 22. Devon andBrianna Perry, a boy, Bentley JamesHanson, 7pounds, March 23. Jon Johnson and Lisa BakerAlton,a girl, Emma RaeJohnson, 6 pounds, 6 ounces, March 22. StevenAnthonyBrant andNicole Serna,agirl, VerukaAvery SernaBrant,8 pounds,11 ounces,March19. Andrew andSarah Velasquez, a girl, Lucy Madison RaeVelasquez, 6 pounds, 14 ounces, March19. Jose andKimberly Reyes, a girl, Molly Mae Ariel Reyes, 7 pounds, 10 ounces, March 2.
lOOk far IISeVery SIIIllay iil TheBulletin
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SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN C 3
Petersen Continued from C1
The garden Before he wa s 2 5 y e ars old, Rasmus Petersen moved from his native Denmark to Central Oregon and set up a 256-acre farm between Bend and Redmond where he and
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his family grew alfalfa, potatoes, wheat, and oats. He developed a fascination with the region'snatural resources and in the mid-1930s, started gathering whatever rocks and minerals he could find within an 85-mile radius of his adopted home, according to the Deshutes County H i storical Society. Petersen cut many of these stones into small pieces and, starting with a planter, affixed them to concrete sculptures along with bits of shells and glass. He soon built models of historic buildings such as Independence Hall, a palace from Norse mythology and the U.S. Capitol building. "He u sed obsidian a n d shells in a fascinating way," Evans said as he walked by some of t h e r o c k-covered bridges, monuments, fountains and s tatues Petersen built. "He said putting these things together was a lot easier than farming." By the late 1940s, Petersen's collection of rock structures had grown so large that it took up fouracres ofhishomestead. He decided to open this "rock garden" up to any visitor who was willing to leave a small donation at t h e p r o perty's front gate. More than 100,000 visitors from all parts of the world stopped at the rock garden during its first 15 years, according to th e D eschutes County Historical Society. Evans said the rock garden saw this success during a "magical time" that followed World War II, when Americans, happy their soldiers had returned home and eager to visit far-off places, did so via the country's newly-constructed interstate and h i ghway system. It was a magical time for Petersen too, Evans said, because it gave him a chance to show off the monuments, buildings and bridges he built to praise the adopted country that gave him a chance to succeed. "(Rasmus Petersen) loved this country" Evans said. "and (building the rock garden) was
his way of giving back."
The decline Katie Kirk first made her first visit to the rock garden when her parents took her there in 1954, just two years after Petersen died. The longtime Redmond resident has been back to the rock garden almost 100 times since that first visit. "This is my favorite place on Earth," Kirk said while cleaning out the rock garden's cafeteriaon a volunteer work day. "It is just incredible." But Kirk also remembers some of the more recent visits she made to the rock garden and how she often had to bite her tongue while showing her friend some of the monuments that had fallen into disrepair and were a shadow of what she remembered asa child. "We would bring people out here," she said, "and I'd try not to say, 'Oh, I wish you could have seen it before.'" Evans said the rock garden started running into problems when Petersen's granddaught er, Sue Caward, an d h e r now-estranged husband took over its ownership and operations about a decade ago. Distractedby a series ofpersonal conflicts, they struggled to keep up with the attraction's
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Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Sue Caward, owner of Petersen Rock Garden and granddaughter of founder Rasmus Petersen, looks through old letters in the cafe at the garden during a day of volunteer cleanup around the property.
the rock garden going) over the years," Caward said as she looked back on Evans' offer to help. "So I figured why not try this out. It's just a matter of strapping on your seatbelt and hanging on for the ride." W aiting t o t o uch t h e sculptures until a professional can evaluate them, the rock garden's volunteers have been working toward this goal d u ring its five-month closure by cleaning out its auxiliary buildings and conducting a detailed assessment of Petersen's legacy and the amount of w o r k t h e y'll need to do in order to bring t his treasure back to i t s original state. Their future plans include forming a nonprofit gemological society t h at will manage the rock garden and its surrounding property, convert the Petersen family home i nto a museum detailing what Central Oregon was like when he moved here a century ago, and rekindle an Miniature rock houses on the grounds of the Petersen Rock almost forgotten interest Garden near Redmond. The garden has fallen into disrepair, but in the rocks and gems he volunteers are working to restore it. found in this area and used in his artwork. " I've f ound m y li f e 's maintenance,and there were quickly became one of her work," said Kirk, who came a few years when the donation family's lifelong friends. But to therock garden to make box at the attraction's front rather than stay in Central Or- Petersen's work beautiful gate was their only source of egon as she had, Evans wan- again but is staying to preincome, Evans and Caward dered around the East Coast serve his legacy. sa>d. and traveled the world. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, Records from the Deschutes After joining the U.S. MammcleanC<bendbulletin.com County Assessor's office show rine Corps in the early 1980s, things had become so bad that Evans became a member of after three years of missed Marine Band San Diego and payments the couple owed played woodwind instruments more than $9,000 in b a ck at hundreds of military cerproperty taxes — an amount emonies held in the Southwest Caward has since paid — on a United States. He graduated piece of property that had an from the University of Washassessed value of $152,000. ington with a degree in anI T ourists who v i sited t h e thropology in 1992. rock garden complained about After college, Evans' life its condition on travel websites took another turn when he II and vowed never t o c o me started studying B uddhism back. The Historic Preserva- about 14 years ago and betion League of Oregon added came a Theravadan monk. the rock garden to its list of This journey took Evans Oregon's Most E ndangered acrossparts of Southeast Asia Places in 2011 and publicly and Europe as he practiced raised fears Petersen's legacy meditation with several Budwould be lost forever unless dhist masters. It also exposed something changed. him to historic preservation "The Garden has suffered work as he took on assignfrom years of vandalism and ments helping the monks imdeterioration due to climate prove Buddhist temples that and deferred maintenance," had suffered from considerthe league wrote in a report able damage and neglect in describing the rock garden's the harsh jungles of Southstatus. "Although the will and east Asia. Owens didn't think the interest are present, the he'd use these skills when he Rock Garden needs major came back to Central Oregon maintenance, a business plan to work on his sister's ostrich and a publicity campaign to farm last year, but then he visensure stewardship and funds ited Petersen Rock Garden and are available to overcome van- found himself in the middle of dalism, theft, and condition a new lifelong project. "I thought everything was 0 issues." going hunky-dory, but t h at Will and interest wasn't the case," Evans said, Evans also remembers the recalling h i s i mp r essions rock garden from its prime. During the 1970s, he grew , 'IH up a few miles from the roadSOLUTION TO side attraction and often visTODAY'S SUDOKU ited there on his bike. He went to school with Caward and
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EXPRESS HIMSELF JUMBLE IS ON C6
By Josh Noel Chicago Tribune
"I believe thatin our
By the time you read this, I hope t o h av e c ompleted something as absurd as it is ambitious: climbing M ount Kilimanjaro. I have invested considerable time and expense to accomplish this goal, which will involve flying for almost a full day from my nearly zero-elevation urban home to eastern Africa, where I will spend four days attached to a backpack and trudging toward the mountain's 19,000-foot summit, Africa's highest. There I will gasp the thinnest air I've ever breathedintemperatures that hopefully — I r e p eat, hopefully — will be in the 20s. Which leads to a q u e stion: Why am I d oing this'? Wouldn'ta beach be more relaxing? A visit to old friends in Portland, Ore.'? Wouldn't those be cheaper and, frankly, more fun? Yes and yes. But I am climbing Kilimanjarowith the help of porters who will make life much easier — for a simple reason that no other kind of travel can touch. I realized it as soon as I c ommitted. Once a l l t h a t money was paid and the task lay ahead, the trip became part of me like few others. Fear and excitement had me lifting weights, eating and drinking a l i ttle better and climbing the 12 stories of my apartment building again and again. An all-inclusive resort can be a w o nderful break from life's daily anxieties, but does it offer much more than the relaxation of the moment? Anticipation is an i mportant component of any travel, but a 19,000-foot mountain 8,000 miles away offers anticipation I haven't felt in travel in so long that I forgot what it was like. I'm not just excited; I have a mission. That made the Kilimanjaro trip start paying for itself immediately. Before leaving, I explained the sensation to Josh Kling, owner and operator of Kling Mountain G u i d es (klingmountainguides.com) in Durango, Colo., who would be
hard-wiring isa deep neecf for this 'in the moment' sensation. It's why people often talk about the most
challenging, frightening or life-threatening experiences as their most memorable. We need intensity, and we
need a connection to the wild world." — Maria Coffey, adventure travel author
miliar, he said. " You're prepping for t h i s huge exam," Kling said. "You could almost say it's pass-fail, and there's no way to cheat. I get vicarious pleasure in
helping people go somewhere
they might never go if I hadn't pushed them along. I see it a lot." Maria Coffey, author of several books about adventure travel and co-owner of Hidden Places Travel (hiddenplaces. net), a b o utique adventure travel company, said pushing ourselves in travel "is a link back toour ancient ancestors. "I believe that in our hardwiring is a deep need for this 'in the moment' sensation," she said by email. "It's why people often talk about the most challenging, frightening or life-threatening experiences as their most memorable. We need intensity, and we need a connection to the wild world." That said, such travel obviously isn't for everyone. But it doesn't need to be. "You don't have to be an extreme outdoor athlete to experience this — it's about opening yourself to the wild world, and you can do that on all sorts of different levels," Coffey said. Travel, simply, is what we make it: relaxation, exploration, visiting A un t P h y llis leading our group of seven up — or pushing ourselves to unthe mountain. It sounded fa- known heights.
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from a visit he made to the rock garden last summer. It was one of the first trips he'd made there since his childhood. Evans said his sister's o strich far m w a s w h a t brought him back to Central Oregon but the rock garden is what convinced him to stay. He took on the role of being the rock garden's official development director this past January, and as part of this volunteer leadership position he has committed himself to helping Caward restore her property to its former glory and come up with a way Petersen's legacy can continue into the future. "My mom and I tried just about everything (to keep
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REMODELING DESIGN & OUTDOOR LIVING SHOW OO~
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PubliShing Date: Tuesday, August 20
ONE-STOP SHOPPING FOR HOMEOWNERSLOOKING FOR INSPIRATION The Central Qregon Builders Association (COBA) presents the Remodeling Design 8 Outdoor Living Show just in time for autumn and winter home improvements. This guide features information about the vendors at the show, and is a handy resource for finding local home improvement experts and products for the home throughout the year.
THE NATURE OF WORDS
NOV
THEGUIDETO CENTRAL OREGON'S PREMIER LITERARYEVENT
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The Nature of Words annual literary festival celebrates the literary arts in Central Oregon during a multi-day event each autumn. The event features authors, seminars, workshops and c o ntests. Throughout the year, The Nature of Words, as an organization, supports creative writing through outreach programs for both students and adults in Central Oregon. The Nature of Words guide is distributed to all Bulletin readers as well as those who attend the annual literary event. PudliShing Date: Friday, October 25 •
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C4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 Travelers hike from Theth to the village of Valbona in Albania. The area is so rugged that the Ottoman Turks, who were Muslims, were unable to control the region as they did most of the Balkans for 500 years. As a result, both Theth and Valbona are still Catholic.
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Photos by Chad Case / New York Times News Service
Hikers descend from Gusinje, Montenegro to Theth, Albania. Hiking the forbidding mountains and steep valleys of the once-tense border region separating Albania, Montenegro and Kosovo is one way to appreciate its inestimable beauty.
Alps
scream for thousands of feet into an unimpeachable sky. Farmhouses gatherlike asters in valleys. Wolves and lynxes pad through landscapes
Earlier that day I had met the Texans at the airport in Continued from C1 Podgorica, M ont e negro's New hotels are pumping pint-size capital. Rainey Rogfresh life into stale Commuers, a former amateur boxing nist hangouts, even if the wa- soaked in green. champion, was the youngest ter isn't always hot. in the group at 49. Richard Putting the 'A'in adventure Dill, a retired pharmacy fran"If you want luxury, sorry, go to Paris or New York," Kela T here would b e n o r e a l chise mogul whom everyone Qendro, a 33-year-old Alba- roughing it, since locals have called Dick, was the oldest at nian working for a small tour- turned ancestral homes into 73. Mark David, a real estate ism company, told me later. rustic i nn s o f f ering b e ds, investor, had rallied the guys "You come heretosee the real homemade cheeses, meats around the hike. stuff. The shepherd. The old and brandy. Even wandering It was dark when we arwoman picking pomegran- across remote, unmanned bor- rived in Gusinje, but the mornates. You go up to villagers ders is now legal, thanks to a ing dawned bright and warm. and they will invite you inside new permit system introduced Mount Rosi, the hotel's 8,274their home for the joy of meet- last summer. Grubb needed foot-high namesake, rose to ing you." only some roll-with-it travel- the southeast, while the 8,838Grubb, who runs about sev- ers willing to be his guinea foot-high pyramid of Mount en trips a year to Croatia, had pigs before offering the trip for Jezerca lorded over the south. long been fascinated with this real. Seven gregarious Texans Around9a.m. Enes Dreskovless-developed region of the and I signed up. ic, the newly minted director of Balkans. About a year ago he Now, sitting in t h e h otel the Prokletije National Park, learned of an intriguing new room, Grubb put down t he one of the three border parks, way to explore it — on foot. map and sighed. He seemed roared up in a hunter-orange The Peaks of the Balkans restless. We were about to Pinzgauer, a military transport Trail, a project coordinated by head deep into the Albanian vehicle, to take us to the trailthe German Agency for Inter- A lps, better known a s t h e head. The bench seats in the national Cooperation and in- cursed mountains, some of back were too small for all of volving dozens of other groups Europe's most glaciated peaks us, so I stood on the rear bum(including women's associa- after the Swiss Alps and the per and clung to the roll bars tions, tourism offices and en- highest summits of the Dinar- as we bounced down country vironmental nongovernmen- ic Alps. The whole trail could lanes. Women in headscarves tal organizations), formally be hiked in about 10 days, but snapped upright from t heir opened last year as a 120-mile we had just five to do parts fields to watch us, while Rainey trek designed to foster tourism of it. Even so, there were big hurled Blow Pops to children and teamwork among histori- days and taxing climbs ahead. who stared from the side of cally quarrelsome neighbors. We would be among the first the road. A gentleman in a pinThe path literally links Mus- U.S.-outfitted groups to wanstripe vest steered a horse cart lim, Catholic and Orthodox der into the maw, and in these groaning with firewood. enclaves, as well as Slavs and parts, the order of things is We were alone when we numerous A l banian t r i b es more mystery than fact. ground to a halt in the Ropoja"This could be more cutting- na Valley, a fairy-tale scoop of in three adjoining national parks, each showcasing the edge than I thought," Grubb swaying pines and scalloped border region's inestimable said, and he switched off the ridges that even the Pinzgauer beauty. Towering rock walls light. could not penetrate. The trail
began in earnest here. An Albanian from Theth, our goal 12 miles away, had supposedly left the village at 3 a.m. with
horses to carry our luggage, but there was no sign of him. "Well, welcome to the 'A' in adventure travel," Grubb said, scratching his red beard. He proposed the only logical Plan B: to stuff what we needed into our daypacks and rendezvous with our bags two days later. The Texans seemed less annoyed than antsy to get romping through the magnificent landscape. "Let's repack and get after it," boomed Paul Pogue, a pilot.
To Valbona That night, fatigue sloughed off my body into a p ile of warm blankets and I awoke to the prickly scent of roasting peppers. After a breakfast
Descent into Theth sut
Rocks as white as marble complained under our boots as we marched toward a broad m eadow in th e m idst of a beech forest. A griffon vulture performed lazy 8's overhead. Shards of silvery-gray limestone shot into the sky like missiles. Of all the images I'd had of the region, none were as beautiful as this. "Amazing, isn't it?" Mark marveled. By early afternoon we had crested the Peja Pass, a treeless scab of rock and wind with an elevation of about 5,000 feet. Ghostly stone barracks stood guard with tattered burlap billowing in the window frames. Inside I found a pair of size 9 dress shoes and rooms reeking of ungulates. Dome-shape bunkers with m achine gun slits and roofs splintered like blooming o n i on s f o r t i fied the high points. Fearing an invasion from all directions, Hoxha had built an estimated 700,000 of these death pods around a country smaller than Maryland. "Welcome to Albania," bellowed our 28-year-old Montenegrin guide, Semir Kardovic,
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The 2,60 0 -vertical-foot climb to the pass had been difficult but the 4,000-verticalfoot descent into Theth was brutaL Down and down we plummeted along a series of knee-smashing s w itchbacks into an enormous glacial valley. By dusk, pointy houses with orange light seeping from the doorways winked through
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bade farewell as we shouldered our packs and stomped off toward the village of Val-
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of eggs, curds and jam, Polia
mimicking gunfire.
A guesthouse near the town of Plav, Montenegro.
bona, about 8t/2 miles east. We passed astone chapel set in a pasture. The area is so rugged that the Ottoman Turks, who were Muslims, were unable to control the region as they did most of the Balkans for 500 years. As a result, both Theth and Valbona are still Catholic. Mount Arapit, a 7,274-foot peak with a southern face as sheer as Half Dome at Yosemite, seemed to size me up as I crossed a wooden bridge and began to climb through maple, ash and hornbeams. It was not yet 10 a.m. but already muggy. Less than two miles in I collapsed.
the forest. We made our way toward one, a medieval-looking guesthouse with s quat windows and stone walls. "Good evening," said the keeper, Pavlin Polia, greeting us. He was in his early 30s, tall with midnight hair and a Roman nose. His Kosovan wife, Vlora, fetched some glasses while his brother, Nardi, shook our hands. We did our best to ignore his black eye. "Fight," Nardi shamefully explained.
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SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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State department
can help in apinch "you might want to get the hell out, and this is the fastest way Here's some perspective to do it." We also post these on how drastically our trav- messages on our website, app, el habits have changed in re- Twitter feed and on individual cent years: In 1989, 7 million embassy websites. Americans had passports, Even when a situation deteaccording to the State De- riorates, as in Egypt during the partment. Today 113 million Arab Spring, commercial travdo. Gone, too, are days when el goes on for a long time. And Americans stuck a l most if it does break down, we'll arexclusively to the London- range charter travel to get U.S. Paris-Rome circuit, s a id citizens out, but you'll have to Brenda Sprague, the State pay for that. Department's deputy assisSay you're going to a tant secretaryfor passport services. . place like London. Is it " That gives them t h e necessary to register with the p otential to get i n m o r e embassy there? trouble," she said. "But now • Yes, because situations they're better able to keep in • change quickly. If you touch with us, and we with were in Britain the day the them." subways were bombed a few Below are edited excerpts years ago, you'd be interested from a conversation with in knowing what that meant for Sprague on what help the you. State Department can offer And often the emergency you abroad. that arises is particular to you, like a family member dying or • Say you're thinking falling sick. Your family may • of going to a country be intimidated by the language off the tourism grid. What's barrier, or the person who had your first step'? your contact abroad is the one . Determine w h ether who's sick. If you register, we . it's a good time to go. know how to get in touch with Look at the country-specific you. information on travel.state. gov. For every country, it What if y o u get sick givesyou assessments ofits • abroad? stability, crime, road condi. Before your trip, get travel tions andtourism infrastruc. insurance that provides ture as well i n formation coverage for medical emeron visa requirements and gencies. You're not covered by embassies. We issue travel your host country's medical warnings for countries that programs, nor are you covered have serious, ongoing prob- by Medicare. Sometimes your lems like terrorist attacks health insurance in the U.S. or very high crime. Travel will compensate you after the alerts are issued for short- fact, but hospitals abroad want term situations, like "there's money upfront, and costs can an HINl flu outbreak here," be exorbitant. Under special ciror "a hurricane is expected cumstances, we can give you a here." They're very objec- loan for an evacuation flight, but tive assessments of possible you'll have to repay it. A mederisks for U.S. travelers. Take vac can easily reach $100,000. all of it to heart. We also have links for
By Emily Brennan
New Yorh Times News Service
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A shepherd near the town of Plav, Montenegro, the largest town in a district of about 13,100 people.
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From previous page We had gained 800 vertical feet. Only 3,000 more to go. There had been debate the night before about how many horses tobring in case someone needed a ride. The men seemed too tough to admit to wanting any, but the Day 1 damage was clear. Rainey had pulled a hamstring. Dick had taken a tumble. In the end, Grubb hired one extra horse, which was f ortunate when Richard Abernathy, a 60-yearold lawyer, began to hint that his heart was acting funny. "I'm fine," he countered. "Richard, get on the horse!" Paul barked, and Richard reluctantly climbed into the saddle atop a small, flea-bitten gray. He wasn't riding for long,
Q.
Chad Case/ New YorkTimes News Service
A guesthouse in Theth, Albania, was opened in 2009 by Pavlin Polia. Like many Albanians, Polia had fled the country as soon as he could. He returned to his family home in Theth a decade later and converted it into a guesthouse.
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GETTING THERE The Peaks of the Balkans Trail has trailheads
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along Lake Skadar, about a half-hour out of the city. Expect at least a two-hour drive to a trail head near
Gusinje. Pristina, Kosovo,
though.
Ayoung nation Soon the trail fell some 2,500 feet into a broad alluvial basin. A van waited for us at the start of a rocky road that joined an asphalt street poured only a few weeks earlier. The effect was rattling. New Coloradostyle lodges with exposed timber beams seemed to be going up everywhere. "A lot of locals are moving back to the area, which is very encouraging," Antonia Young, a British research fellow who has worked for more than a decade to create an international peace park in the region, told me later. "The danger now is that tourism gets too big before they can cope with it." Kol Gjoni Jubani had seen it all change so fast. He met us in the courtyard of his guesthouse, a concrete chalet built in 2005 nextto a destroyed stone hut in which he had been born more than 50 years ago. Jubani looked like a Balkan cowboy with jeans and a glorious Sam Elliott mustache. His son, Ardit, 19, showed me upstairs to a room with five beds; I claimed the one with a Disney blanket in the corner. "What do you think of Albania'?" Ardit asked me after a dinner of chicken, lamb and
spicy peppers. "For such an old place, something about it feels refreshingly new," I replied. "Maybe that's because it is new," Ardit laughed. "We are
still growing up." To be sure, Albania has had some wobbly moments on its new capitalist legs. In 1997 Albanians lost $1.2 billion of their life savings in pyramid schemes that sparked a rebellion against the government and resulted in about 2,000 deaths. A2012 report by Transparency International ranked corruption there on par with Niger, where soldiers in 2011 were arrested for plotting to murder the president, who had recently begun investigations into corruption. Even tourism, which has nearly tripled in six years from about 1 million foreign tourists to 2.7 million in 2012, according to Albanian figures,has been unable to escape certain prejudices. "Albania is a great place to score plenty of illegal narcotics — a 'must have' for any Albanian holiday!" commented an anonymous reader of a June 11, 2012, Southeast European Times article about the country's booming tourism trade. Another commented that Albanians t h emselves w ould
is the closest city to a trail head west of Peja — about
A horse carries luggage to the village of Valbona in Albania.
66 miles — but the smog makes it a less pleasing place to get your bearings.
rather flee to Greece or Italy than stick around.
that led to a one-lift ski area calledBoga, an Albanian area in Kosovo that had been levChange of plans eled in the 1999 war with Ser"You cannot have an image bia and then rapidly rebuilt. We problem if that problem is real," spent the night in new A-frame said Ilir Mati, who in 1992 sold cabins at the base, and I discovhis Fiat, one of the first private ered that in winter it cost just 1 cars allowed in the country, to euro to ride the lift. On the last buy a fax machine and start an day we climbed 7,880-foot Hajadventure tourism company la peak and wandered along called Outdoor Albania. its long, narrow summit ridge, Mati was at the guesthouse where I put one foot in Kosovo with clients, and I sat up late and the other in Montenegro. I chatting with him in French. could see the plains of Serbia "You know, you were once far to the east and the Sharr my enemy," he said, tugging Mountains framing Macedoon a cigarette. "My friends nia to the south. The cursed thought I was crazy to leave range rose to the west, looking the military and go into tour- no less formidable than it had ism. But I had a dream that one from Gusinje. day I would be sitting around a We spent our last night as a table like this talking to people group in Dubrovnik, Croatia, like you." which we reached after a long The discussion continued the bus ride from Rozaje, Montenenext morning when our plan to gro. The old city was gorgeous hike from Valbona back into — shiny ramparts against a Montenegro was altered. shimmering sea — but there After two days, the trek was was nothing to discover. The too much for our group — 16 streets were too polished, the hours at least — and the trail menus too refined. I turned on had been washed out. So in- the faucet in my hotel room stead we drove to a spot just and flinched when the water above the village of Cerem, came out hot. where we loaded our luggage All told w e h adn't hiked onto fresh horses and headed more than 35 miles, but the out for an easy two-mile strolL Peaks of the Balkans Trail isn't Along the way we passed the about distance so much as inremains of an Opel Frontera teraction, and with that one that only a few months ago had bus ride I'd crossed the most struck a land mine. obvious border of the trip, the "Don't worry," Semir said, one between travelerand tourdemonstrating a wry sense of ist. Despite wandering through humor. "It was an anti-tank a place of such hardship, the mine, so you have to be really trail had introduced me to a heavy to trigger it." rare part of Europe where the We leapt over a ditch and very idea of walking freely belanded back in M ontenegro, tween worlds is still a gift as and soon the Pinzgauer arsweet and momentous as your rived. A white Land Rover with first soft drink. A whole new "Policija" emblazoned on the Europe, a gracious and wild side accompanied it. I quietly one, hadpresented itself,and panicked, hoping the new per- to experience it I just needed to mit system was truly in place. lace up my boots. The officer showed zero — Tim Neville, who livesin Bend, interest in our paperwork. Inwrites frequently about the stead, Inspector Gutichad come outdoors. to offer us a more comfortable ride into the town of Plav, the largest town in a d istrict of about 13,100 people, which felt like a thrumming metropolis Redmond, Oregon after Albania. We sat in a cafe with Wi-Fi, bought chips and chocolateand explored an old stone tower where families once targeted in ancient blood feuds could better defend themselves at night.
Crossing borders We still had two days on the trail, and both of them blew by. On Day 4 we hiked six miles from huts outside Plav to a road
Getting to trailheads in
Albania (Theth or Valbona) from Tirana, the capital,
can be long andcomplicated,andyou'llmisssome of the most spectacular hiking into those villages. Connecting flights land in
Podgorica (airport code TGD) from Paris, Zurich, Frankfurt, London and
Rome, among other European cities. GETTINGAROUND Hiring a guide is not obligatory but highly
I~giiTl)YMiAL' 1)11081'.C'L'
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specific groups like older
•
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also arrange pack horses, accommodations and air-
travelers, LGBT Americans, students, disabled travelers. And be honest about your own abilities. For the novice traveler, with no knowledge of the language or contacts, I would not suggest biking across the Sahara.
port transfers, and assist with permit applications, which need to be submitted at least15 days before the hike begins. The Peaks of the Balkans website
You've d e l iberated TORONTO L NIAGRA FAI.LS . and decided to go. JULY 10-14 j $t,t18ppdo Now what should you do? Air is not included! • R egister for S m a r t RENO - LAKE TAHOE • Traveler E nrollment JULY 23-26 j $279 ppdo
(peaksofthebalkans. com) lists guides who
website. You tell us w ho
recommended, as trails, although mostly marked,
can still confuse, and many locals speak minimal English. Guides can
have been trained by the German Alpine Club and
provides information on where to find maps, how to contact guesthouses
and apply for permits, and what to expect on the trail
each day. OUTFITTER ROW Adventures of Idaho is offering two
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Sara Essex Bradley/ New York Times News Service
Shrimp boats are docked in Apalachicola, Fla. The Florida Panhandle isn't typically thought of as a culinary destination, but beyond the tourist grid lie seafood delights and more.
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
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I should've k n ow n t h i s would happen: oyster withdrawaL More than 24 hours had passed since my last dozen. My stomach was making fearsome noises, and my mind was starting to slip. Was that a giant bottle of cocktail sauce in the distance? No, merely a water tower. Perhaps these car seat cushions were edible'? I arrived at Nick's Seafood Restaurant, a culinary miracle tucked away in th e Florida Panhandle, just in time — a half-hour before closing. Frantically, I requested two dozen oysters and a beer. Moments later, I was slurping away madly, a moony grin on my face. I was going to make it. The Florida Panhandleprobably isn't the place that comes to mind when you think of culinary transcendence. In fact, gastronomically speaking, the region — sometimes referred to as the "Redneck Riviera" — is generally dismissed out of hand, despite its proximity to the Gulf of Mexico and, to a lesser degree, to the rich culinary traditions of the South. The Panhandle — roughly 200 miles between the Alabama border to the west and Apalachee Bay ( o r w h a t 's called the Big Bend, where the coastline curves south toward Tampa) to the east — is a landscape known mostly for white sand beaches and blindingly turquoise surf. Drunk on a dizzying combination of gin and sea air, sun-red vacationers stumble idly along, mainlining crab balls at tourist traps like Fudpucker's and finding Jimmy Buffett suddenly tolerable. But beyond the tourist grid lies a much gentler, far more appetizing Panhandle, largely thanks to a few old-line Florida seafood joints, beloved by a sensible, discerning local fan base. Reaching these places can require a bit of driving and navigational resolve, but your palate will thank you for it. Those drives yield treasures: The Redneck Rivieraincludes some of the most stunning and untrammeled beachside expanses in America. Vast sugary carpetsof beaches stretch into the horizon, uncrowded even in the thick of summer. With nine aquatic preserves, 36 state parks and two major wildlife refuges, much of the coastline east of the town of Destin remains undeveloped.
At Up the Creek Raw Bar in Apalachicola, Fla., oyster options include "Moscow" style (topped with sour cream and caviar) and M Mignionette" (minced shallots, habanero and white balsamic). anywhere to stake a vacation claim, unless your thing is tattoo parlors, T-shirt emporiums and a pastel-stucco surf shop that recalls the gaudiness and grandeur of Graceland. But one big selling point remains: Destin happens to sit across Choctawhatchee Bay from the town o f F reeport, home to Nick's and its wonderful oysters. Aside from the flat-screen TV behind the bar, it feels permanently trapped in 1963, the year Frank and Hattie Nick opened it on the site of an old fish camp. There's a worn, laminate horseshoe bar and wood-paneled walls mounted with fish and u ngulates. Shrimp dinners are $15.95, blue crab claws $11.95 per half-pound, and for $10.95, M a Fat Hattie Special" that will likely wind up on RMan v. Food." But oysters are the cornerstone. Plump, briny and magnificent, they came on a plastic cafeteria tray, laid out like a checkerboard, and are $10 a dozen (recently bumped
tially Bavarian creams stuffed with Key lime filling) and also, if we're being totally honest, an apple fritter.
Back to business That evening, I arrived at Cape San Blas. The Cape connects the mainland to St. Joseph Peninsula, a 15-mile-long strip of white beach that knifes up the Gulf like a scythe blade. The next day, at the Indian Pass Raw Bar, which began as a country store in 1903, two dozen oysters, a half-pound of steamed shrimpand fourbeers (yes, four — I know, tough assignment) cost me $30.92. The oysters also come steamed or baked, and the beer is selfserve, both from the tap and the cooler — you just tell them how many you had when they
ring you up.
Eighteen m i le s e a s t i s Apalachicola, an u n spoiled fishing town of roughly 2,300 people and at least five topshelf oyster joints. At Up the Creek Raw B ar , o v erlookup from $7). ing the Apalachicola River, About 90 percent of Florida the chef Brett Gormley has oysters hail from Apalachicola thought long and hard about Bay, which historically has oysters. In addition to the unbeen home to some of the most adorned st andard, o y sters p roductive grounds i n t h e came "Moscow" style (topped country. But years of drought with sour cream and caviar) and overharvesting have dev- and "M ignionette" (minced astated the stock, and until it shallots, habanero and white recovers, places like Nick's balsamic). A mere half-dozen have had to rely on oysters of each, and perhaps the best from other Gulf states, mainly Key lime pie north of SarasoTexas. ta, were plenty. "These are a close second For all practical purposes, to Apalachicola oysters," Don Spring Creek, located within P haneuf, the b a rman a n d the St. Marks National Wildshucker at Nick's, assured me life Refuge, near the town of as he sucked down a few. "I Crawfordville, is the southern couldeatfive dozen, easy." terminus of th e Panhandle. I showed exceptional reSpring Creek Restaurant, an straint by only eating two doz- old seafood haunt with a minien, and a plate of fried green malist nautical vibe, deals in tomatoes, a bowl of excellent local dishes like oyster stew, On a mission for oysters gumbo and two howitzers of stuffed shrimp and the specialThough my midwinter road beer. ty: fried mullet or catfish with trip had a culinary focus, I soft-shell crab, shrimp, oyschose a route that promoted Tasty diversions ters, deviled crab and grouper a mple swimming and r a nThe next day, an attempted (and sides), for $39. The house dom, screeching pullovers visit to a Nick's tourist outpost version of tomato pie (cheese to ogle alligators and shortin Blue Mountain Beach, about and tomatoes baked in a pie billed dowitchers and giant 20 miles south, was thwarted; crust and topped with grilled 500-year-old saw palmettos; to it was closed for the season. shrimp) p a i red t e r r ifically hike and nap in the dunes; and Fortunately, just down the road with three fried quail, fries and to see whether the bear-cross- was Sally's by the Sea Store. At hush puppies. ing signs on the highways ever first glance, Sally's appeared Before returning west, I proved prophetic. My course to be little more than a gas sta- explored the wildlife refuge, took me roughly from Destin tion with decades-old bottles established in 1931 as a habion U.S. 98 (the "Emerald Coast of Coppertone on the shelves. tat for migratory birds. At the Parkway") to 30A and south But the charred barrel smoker end of the main road, I climbed to Grayton Beach, then down out front said otherwise. On an observation platform and through Port St. Joe, around Fridays, Sally's does a proper watched some godwits root the horn to Apalachicola and barbecue, slow-smoking hogs around in a salt marsh. As I up along St. George Sound in the traditional style. Plate was leaving, I finally caught to the leafy hamlet of Spring lunches of r ibs an d p u lled sight of an alligator, my first of Creek. pork, I happily discovered, usu- the trip, maybe eight feet long. Destin, located at the west- ally last until Monday. I had the He'd beenthere the whole time, ern tip of East Pass penin- pulled pork sandwich — subtly sunning himself in the saw sula, bills itself as the "World's smoky and sweet — with fries grass, and I'd almost missed Luckiest F i shing V i l l age." and coleslaw, for $7.99. him. Then, as quickly as he'd That might have been true At the Donut Hole, in Santa appeared, he plopped into the once. Today it's the region's Rosa Beach, I packed in two water — galumph! — and was most overvisited city and not Key lime pie doughnuts (essen- gone for good.
SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C7
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
iven's swa er is re oo e or TV SPOTLIGHT
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By Margy Rochlin
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tor. How would you describe him? • I think he lived in these • heavy dualities. He was a total risk junkie. He loved to gamble. He loved to be out at night. His wife was his world and his mother was his world and his family. At the same time, he was susceptible to his own demons.
talk about "Speedwas nothing preA •• There Q •• Let's the-Plow." As someone meditated. It just was an
raised in the theater, did you f eel betrayed by y our o w n Jeremy Piven is best known community? as the venal, tantrum-throwing • No. I think once a stage superagent Ari Gold on HBO's • actor, always a stage achit comedy "Entourage"; as an tor. I'm from a theater family. I alumnus of the Piven Theater am what I am. You really can't Workshop in Chicago, founded control the rest of it. You can by his parents, Joyce and Bytry. You can rail against the rne Piven; and as the center universefor being misunderIt's easy to spot some stood, but I don't know how of a highly publicized 2009 breach-of-contract dispute af. similarities bet w e en healthy that is. ter helefta Broadway producHarry and Ari Gold. To you, tion of "Speed-the-Plow" two how are they different'? How soon did you know months early, citing exhaustion New York Times News Service file photo . Ari ruled with an iron • that "Mr. Selfridge" was and mercury poisoning. (Piven Jeremy Piven stars "Mr. Self. fist and through intimi- foryou? won in arbitration.) ridge," part of PBS' "Masterdation. He was always furi• As I was reading the pilot Now he adds a new entry to piece Classic" series. ous. The amount of props that • script, I was thinking, "If I'm lucky, this is mine." his dossier: On Sunday he reI broke! turns to television in the starHarry made sure he made ring role in "Mr. Selfridge," small metal table, "I'm creating c ontact w it h e v eryone h e Did that happen with "Entourage" as well? p art o f P B S ' "Masterpiece a cafe in the shade." w orked with an d l e t t h em Classic" series. In this eightHere are excerpts from the know they were special. He • I was such a fan of "The part fact-based British period dlscusslon: was a master of the high road. • S opranos." I 'd wat c h drama, Piven p lays H a r ry He played as if he had nothing (James) Gandolfini and Edie • You've said that you in- to lose, and they just fell into Selfridge, the larger-than-life Falco and think: "That's like American businessman who • stantly related to Harry line. watching two people in the last uprooted his family to London Selfridgebecause you're both two weeks of a Broadway run. in 1908 to open the opulent and from the Windy City. What's How does a Br i t i sh They're so present and stuntrailblazing department store an essential Chicagoan trait? • set compare to one in ning." This is going to sound "Kumbayah," but I almost feel Selfridges. There's a certain swag- Hollywood? Recently, on a warm after• ger. Yes, it's the Midwest, • Everyone is wildly pre- like I willed a role on an HBO noon, Piven arrived at a Los but it's the cultural hub of the • pared. They have this show to happen. Through my Angeles coffee shop, wearing Midwest. In my opinion, it has great saying about"Just getting love of "Downton Abbey" and a jauntily tilted newsboy cap, some of the best live theater in on with it," and they do — with- e verything British, I m i g ht large eyeglasses and unlaced the world. It's just a hard-work- out any victory laps. They've have willed this to happen. combat b o ots. C o n cerned ing, gritty city, and Harry made come from the stage as well. That might sound ethereal, so about the noise level, he strode his bones there. There'd be times when I'm in I apologize. to a back deck, deserted except a corner warming up my voice for a small hillock of spare furIn the series, Selfridge or doing something silly. No D id yo u a l s o t h i n k , "What a perfect way to niture. "In the spirit of Harry • comes off as a vision- one gave me a second look. It Selfridge," he explained as he ary, a familyman, a Casanova was just "I'm a freak in a freak expand people's notion of what disentangled two chairs and a and a compulsive manipula- kingdom." I loved it. I can do"'? rr I',i
New York Times News Service
Q•
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personality that matches up with a salesman. I'm the guy who likes to observe. But, yeah, I guess all those years of auditioning and having to walk into that room and do it, possibly.
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Momis a wi t ustonec i
• You know what I l o ve • about this country? One of the first things they do is list your age. It's Jeremy Piven,then my age. That's the whole story: My name andthen the age. . The reason I b r ought . it up is:l~Were you looking for a role that reflects your place in life? Isn't Harry the firstreal grown-up you've ever
played? Heis,andhehastotake A ..charge. He goes over to London and kind of achieves the impossible. To pull off what he did, you have to be this real pioneer — and he was a complete and utter maverick in everysense of the word. Yet at the same time, there was something very playful and childlike about him.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 andIMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after presstime. I
Dear Abby: I have a relative who is very ill. She's not expected to survive. She has a I-year-old daughter, "Whitney," and a husband who isn't particularly interested in parenting once his wife is gone. My husband and I have a 3-yearold, and my husband would like to have DEAR more children. I love ABBY this relative and the little girl, but I'm not interested in raising another child. I'm fine with just one. My husband feels we have the love and r esources to p r ovide Whitney with a good life. I respect the fact that he feels this way, but I work full time. I am also in my mid40s and already feel overwhelmed being the parent of one child. I enjoy my current lifestyle and being able to travel some. Although we will be fine financially, our lifestyle would be greatly impaired. My husband says I'm selfish for not wanting to share my good fortune. He may be right, but I feel that if I'm talked into taking her, I'll be unhappy and resentful. Please advise. — Only Wants One Dear Only Wants One: Children
need love and attention from the adults who parent them. While your husband has that to o ffer Whitney,you do not. Because you would be unhappy and resentful if your husband talks you into adopting her, it would be better for you AND Whitney if someone who really wants a child, and is capable of providing the love and support a child needs, took her. Dear Abby: I am retired from teaching high school biology after 39 years. The last year I taught, some of my students said I was the "youngest" teacher on the faculty — not chronologically, but in the way I talked to them. I treated them as important, as equals. Being around high school students all those years kept me young. Since my retirement, I can no longer do the thing I loved best: teach biology. However, I am keeping my commitment to staying young. Last summer I bicycled 500 miles across Kansas. I do nine hours of dance exercise and aerobics a week, paint with oils, do photography and am starting to relearn the guitar. I may
TV TODAY
be inthe early stages ofParkinson's disease, so I want to do everything I didn't get to do when I was younger while I still can. I think too many people are busy being old. Most of my former classmates and friends have died. Many younger people can't do what I do. Some of them tell me I should "act my age" and "learn to be old." But
what I'm doing keeps me young, and if I look silly doing it, so be it. I feel more fit now than when I was 21. If I die in an aerobics class it will be a lot better than doing it slumped in a chair. What are your thoughts on this? — Living Well fn Wichita Dear Living Well: As long as you
are living a full life and enjoying what you're doing, you should ignore those "helpful" individuals who tell you to "act your age" and "learn to be old." It has been awhile since I have read such nonsense. You have been blessed with health, vitality and an inquiring mind. Life is too short to waste a second of it. When you're old and infirm you will know it, so don't let anyone rush you. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • ADMISSION!PG-13! 12:20, 3:55, 7:30, 10:05 • THE CALL (R) 10:55 a.m., 4:45, 7:50, 10:25 • THE CROODS (PG) 10:25 a.m., 1, 3:45, 6:35, 9:10 • THE CROODS 3-D (PG)10:40 a.m., 1:15, 4:15, 6:50, 9:25 • G.l. JOE:RETALIATION(PG-13) 10:30 a.m., 1:10, 4:35, 4:10, 7:05, 9:45 • G.l. JOE:RETALIATIONIMAX !PG-13) 10:45 a.m., 1:25, 4:15, 7:15, 10 • G.l. JOE:RETALIATION3-D (PG-13) 10:35 a.m.,1:20, 4:05, 7, 9:50 • THE HOST (PG-13) 10:30 a.m., 12:45, 3:50, 6:55, 9:55 • IDENTITY THIEF !Rj 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6:05, 9:50 • THE INCREDIBLE BURTINONDERSTONE!PG- I3j 1:20, 4:25, 7:40, 10:15 • JACKTHE GIANT SLAYER (PG-I3)3:20,9:40 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER3-D (PG-13) Noon, 6:40 • LIFE OF PI(PG)12:10 • LIF E OF PI3-D (PG)3:10, 6:05, 9 • OLYMPUSHASFALLEN(R) 12:30, I:45,3:30,7: IO, IO:10 • 01THE GREAT AND POWERFUL !PG)121I5,3:25,6:45, 9:45 • 01THE GREAT AND POWERFUL 3-D!PG)10:20 a.m., 1:30, 4:30, 7:25, 10:15 • SPRINGBREAKERS(Rj 10:50 a.m., 1:40, 7:45, 10:20 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. '
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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • DJANGOUNCHAINED!R) 4 • EMPEROR !PG-13j 1:15, 4:15, 6:45 • QUARTET !PG-13! 1, 3:15, 6:15 • SIDE EFFECTS (R) 12:15, 7:15 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 12:45, 3:30, 6:30 • STOKER (R) 12:30, 3:45, 7 • WESTOF MEMPHIS (R)Noon,3,6 I
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013:This yearyou
YOURHOROSCOPE
encounter many crosscurrents, no matter By Jacquefine Bigar whatyou are doing or with whom you are having a discussion. Your ability to see many sides of an issue will help others, do a reversal and decide thatyou are but at first, it could right. Follow through on what you feel is Starsshowthe kind be confusing for important. Tonight: Have abarbecue. of dayyou'llhave t h emto understand CANCER (June 21-July22) ** * * * D ynamic where you are ** * * You speak your mind and expect ** * * P ositive co m ing from. If others to respond. People seem to be ** * A verage youare single, very busy with Easter plans, whether they ** So-so you could meet involve making an Easter dinner or looking * Difficult someone quite for Easter eggs. Avoid a dispute with a key exotic who gives family member. Walk to reduce tension. you a case of the butterflies. If you are Tonight: Get into the moment. attached, the two of you benefit from LEO (July23-Aug. 22) taking a special, long-desired vacation ** * * * E xpress your playfulness together. SAGITTARIUShelps you see the with children. Though they might not be big picture. ready to learn the religious symbolism ARIES(March 21-April19) associated with Easter, they can and will ** * * * M ake a point to attend the Easter parade with your friends and family. enjoy an Easter-egg hunt. You might have to take another lookat plans or do Get into all the fun and games that pertain something differently. Tonight: Make it to the holiday. Opportunities surround easy. the unexpected. Tension builds with an VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) authority figure or a parent during the ** * Pressure builds, and you have to evening. Tonight: Put on a great piece of deal with a personal matter before you music. even get involved with today's celebrations. TAURUS (April 20-May20) You might wonder what might be the best ** * * * D eal with a partner on a oneway to proceed. Takecare of your internal on-one level. Though this person might tension by eliminating it as best as you can. be moody, you will enjoy spending the Tonight: Happy athome. day together. News from a distance could LIBRA(Sept. 23-Oct.22) causeyouto questionwhatyoushould do Reach out to family and friends with your plans. Go with the flow. Tonight: ** * * in the morning. Have along-overdue Add more spice to the mix. chat with your neighbors. Pitch in and GEMINI (May 21-June20) help wherever you can. You could feel ** * * O t hers come forward and overburdened by present activities. Stop express their feelings. You might wonder and smell the roses. Get into an Easter-egg which way to go with a loved one. Youwill hunt. Tonight: Return calls. get feedback; however, this person might
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * M oney spent on last-minute items could be adding up. Beaware of your expenditures, and try to keep to your budget. Try to avoid a misunderstanding, and clarify what is happening before it becomesaproblem. Squeeze in some exercise. Tonight: Have fun.
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • DJANGOUNCHAINED !R)9 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 6 • After 7 p.m., shows are21and older only. Younger than21 mayattend screenings before7 pm. if accompanied bya legalguardian.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271
** * * * Y o ur upbeat mood is contagious. You will enjoy watching the kids look for eggs from the Easter bunny. You'll really get into the Easter mood with an invitation to partake in Easter dinner. Make time for a special person in your life. Tonight: Close to perfect.
• ALL TOGETHER (no MPAArating) 3 • A PLACEATTHETABLE !PG) 5
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * Make sure that the superficial appearance of a situation has nothing to do with what is really going on. You might not want to spend too much on this issue. Use care with your finances if you want to bypassa problem.Tonight:Happyto be home.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.1B) ** * * * Y ou do what you do naturally. Join your friends for a celebration. Any excuse will work, but the fact that it is Easter is a plus. A loved one demonstrates his or her caring, which touches you deeply. Let this person know how you feel. Tonight: All fun and games.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20j ** * Tension might be high, as you want to please a parent, an older relative and/or an elderly friend. Give up judging yourself so much, and your natural ways will come out. You can bequite charming and authentic when you open yourself up. Tonight: In the limelight. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
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5 p.m. on ESPN, "MLBBaseball" — The first pitch of the 2013 regular season is thrown tonight at Minute Maid Park as the Houston Astros host their cross-state rivals,the Texas Rangers. It's the first season of American League ball for the Astros after moving from the National LeagueCentral to the AL West. Each league now has 15 teams, five in each division, with the result being interleague games played throughout the season. 7 p.m. onH D, "It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown" — The 1974 animated classic is as much a part of Easter as fake grass and chocolate bunnies. The "Peanuts" gang eagerly anticipates the holiday and tries to color eggs without adult supervision. The results are disastrous, but Snoopy — uh, the Easter Beagle — comes to the rescue. The special is followed by another seasonal favorite — baseball season, that is — that hasn't been on network television since 1982: "Charlie Brown's AII-Stars." B p.m. on HIST, "The Bible" — The ambitious series wraps up with "Passion," which covers Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection, the fates of his disciples as they spread his message, the conversion of Paul, and the revelation of the second coming of Christ. Portuguese actor Diogo Morgano plays Jesus. 9 p.m. onfj, "Masterpiece Classic" —Jeremy Piven stars as the upstart American who taught the English how to shop in "Mr. Selfridge," a true-life period drama from writer Andrew Davies ("Pride and Prejudice"). Piven plays Harry Gordon Selfridge, father of the renowned London department store bearing his name, which opened to astonishment and some disdain in1909. Also starring in the series are ZoeTapper and Frances O'Connor. 9 p.m.on HBO,"Game of Thrones" — As Season 3 opens, the Lannisters maintain their hold on King's Landing, though stirrings in the North threaten to alter the balance of power. Robb Stark !Richard Madden), king in the North, faces a major calamity as he tries to build on his victories. A massive army of wildlings led by Mance Rayder !Ciaran Hinds) marches for the Wall. Daenerys Targaryen !Emilia Clarke), reunited with her dragons, attempts to raise an army in her quest for the Iron Throne. ©Zap2rt
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I -548-8777 • THE CROODS!PG)11:15a.m., 1:30, 3:45, 6:15, 8:30 • G.l. JOE:RETALIATION(PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 • OLYMPUSHASFALLEN! Rj 11a.m., 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • OZTHE GREAT AND POWERFUL !PGj10:30a.m.,1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:30
Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CHASINGICE!PG) 2:15 • THE CROODS (PG) 1:45, 4, 6 • THE HOST (PG-13) 2, 4:30, 7 • OLYMPUSHASFALLEN(R) 2, 4:30, 7 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 4, 6:30 i /
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Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • THE CROODS (PG) 12:10, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10 • G.I. JOE:RETALIATION3-D (PG-I3) 12:20, 5, 7:20 • G.I. JOE:RETALIATION(PG-13) 2:40 • THE HOST (PG-13) 1:35, 4:10, 6:45 • OLYMPUSHASFALLEN(R) 1:20, 4, 6:40 • 01THE GREAT AND POWERFUL !PG)1:10,4:05,7 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014 • THECROODS (UPSTAIRS — PG)Noon,2:30,5,7:10 • G.l. JOE:RETALIATION(PG-13) 1, 4, 7 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.
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C8
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 20'I3
ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL
QUEsTIQN: I found a lump in my breast? What do I do? ANswER: If you find a lump in your breast contact your primary care physician or OB/GYN, who will order tests such as a mammogram, an ultrasound or a biopsy. )anaNt When the resultsare received the course VanAmburg, of treatment is discussed and you may be referred to a Surgeon. You should choose a physician specializing in breast care, who can educate you on the many options and treatments available to you. If you have breast cancer you have a choice in the speciali sts you see.The treatment of breast cancer is advancing and changing continuously so choose physicians who are well educated, interested in breast cancer and compassionate to your individual situation. Ideally your surgeon will develop a treatment plan in conjunction with the St. Charles Breast Cancer Center and you. You should thoroughly understand your options before proceeding with definitive treatment. YOUR HEALTH • YOUR CHOICE • OUR EXPERTISE
J ana M . V a n A m b u r g M D , F A C S Member of the American Society of Breast Surgeons V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e Surger y
C a r e ar
2275 NE Doctors Dr., Bend OR 97701 541-323-2790 Offices in Bend & Redmond
Q UESTloN: I am 47 years old and t w o
months ago I skipped my period, and last week I had hot flashes for three days last month. Otherwise my periods are normal. Is menopause starting? ANswER:In the late to mid-forties, it is not unusual for women to be gin to have M.D. changes in their cycles. By that I mean, their cycle begin to vary month to month. Sometimes longer, sometimes shorter. Flow can also vary. Other symptoms such as hot flashes, moodiness, fatigue, anxiety, and sleeplessness can come and go. Although true menopauseiswhen there are no periods for one year, many women find the most challenging time the years of transition before periods actually completely stop. A lifestyle approach during the Pre-Menopause years has proven success in minimizing these troublesome symptoms, and can often lead to overall better health, both physically and mentally. Mary Huntsman,
Lifestyle Medicine
QUEsTloN: What is pulpitis? ANswER: We'll start with the 'pulp' part of that word. The pulp is the most vital part of the tooth, containing the blood vessels, connective tissue and nerves that keep the tooth alive. It is protected in what's called the pulp chamber by a layer of material Dr. Carlo called dentin and by the hard enamel shell Arredondo, of the tooth. DDS When the pulp gets infected and inflamed as a result of bacteria penetrating through a cavity, the condition is called pulpitis. You'll recognize the condition by the long, throbbing ache it causes. The most common symptom of pulpitis is increased sensitivity in the tooth to any stimuli, like cold or hot, and touch. When decay has reached only the dentin, you'll have short, stabbing pain. Pulpitis can range from mild to severe. Depending on the severity of the infection, it's possible to reverse pulpitis. This would involve relatively conservative treatment like cleaning out decay and filling the cavity. But in cases where the pulpitis has developed as to be irreversible, the patient will most likely require root canal therapy, which involves removing the pulp. Ask your dentist for ways to keep your teeth safe from conditions like pulpitis.
D r. Dondo D e n t a l E x c e l l e n c e D r. Carlo A r r e d o n d o , D D S
QDoNDO DENTAL EXCELLENCE
660 NE 3rd Street, Suite 3, Bend, OR 97701 541-241-1299 www.DrDondoBend.com
QUEsTloN: Everyone is t a l king a bout bioidentical hormones these days. Can you tell me what these are?
ANswER: Yes. Bioidentical hormones are hormonal preparations that are identical to one or more hormone that is naturally made in your body. T hese hormones are prescribed by a licensed practitioner and can come in many forms like creams physician gels, troches and capsules. There is a misconception that you can only get bioidentical hormones from a compounding pharmacy. Conventional pharmacies also carry some like Prometrium (progesterone) and estradiol (Estrace and Vivelle are common brands). However, bioidentical testosterone can only be provided by a compounding pharmacy. DHEA is available over the counter, but I generally advise testing and evaluation before initiating this on your own. T h e main reason most practitioners use compounding pharmacies is for the ability to custom tailor each hormone regimen with greater specificity for each patient and to minimize the number ofprescriptions needed.
h ealthy + n a t u r a l
M ary H u n t s m a n M D
QUEsTIDN:Is 52 too old for breast augmentation? I have always been a barely B ( t hank goodness for Victoria Secret) and want to be a full C. A"am Ang"M.D.
ANSWER:Age iS juSt a number and
52 is far from old! Physiological age is more important than chronological age. In other words, if you are 52 or 25 your age is less important than your health and wellness in determining if you are a good candidate for any surgical procedure. If yo u h ave realistic expectations then a Breast Augmentation would certainly be an option if you are healthy. Size and shape can be tailored to give you the results you are trying to achieve. A consultation with a board certified plastic surgeon would determine if the procedure is right for you.
A dam A n g e l e s , M . D . B end Pl a s t i c S u r g e r y M edica l D i r e c t o r , S t. Cha r le s W o u n d 8 O s t o m y C a r e C e n t e r
541-389-9750 www.bendnaturopath.com
QUESTtoN: I am unhappy with how my neck is aging and sagging, But I don't want plastic surgery. Is there an alternative? A NswER: More and m or e me n a n d women a r e c h o o sing a l t e rnative p rocedures t o p l a stic s u rgery f o r Dr. Elizabeth iVtcEnigptf ND I O Oktrtg y e a rS y O u n g er. W h e t h e r t he choice is m ade f ro m a p u r e l y financial viewpoint, or the desire for a healthier, m ore n a t u ra l l o o k , a l t e r native m e t h od s a r e definitely growing in p o p ularity. Alternative face and neck liftscan save more than 50%-75% of the costs involved with plastic surgery, the average cost for neck lifts being $1,500. Adding to the savings, the health r i sk s i n v olved w i t h p l a stic s u rgery, anesthesia and recoverytime, are the main factors in clients choosing alternate procedures. Face and neck lifts can be p e rformed w i t hout anesthesia, cosmetic injections, and without"down time". One procedure performed in lessthan an hour gives results that can last for years. B e f ore and after photos can be seen on our website.
Infocus
eye care
l da Alul, M . D . I nfocus Ey e C a r e 2450 NE Mary Rose Pl, Ste 110 • Bend 541-318-8388 www.infocus-eyecare.com
QUESTioN:Whatis the best overall exercise for the average person? ANswER: KISS: Keep it simple (and fun) sweetheart! The easiest way to get some exercise is to put on some quality walking shoes and go for a walk. You can walk in your neighborhood,on one of the many easy Bend trails or inside one of the big stores in town. PT GCFP You can start parking at the farthest end of the parking lot for every errand you run, or even just getting up from your desk more often throughout the day to walk up and down the hallway. Walking burns up to 100 calories for every 30 minutes. This 30 minutes does not have to be all at once. It can be a dozen little parking-lot walks, 10-minute walks 3 times per day, or a full 30 minute walk. To get your heart rate up and ideal circulatory benefits, it's best to do the full 30 minutes at one time. Walking also exercises important muscles in your calves, thighs, and buttocks. Walking with proper posture helps tone your stomach and strengthen your back. To get started set a simple weekly goal, call a friend, or join a walking group. You may even want to check out our new Walk Yourself Well class being olTered through Bend Park and Recreation District, starting October. Remember, keep it simple, fun, and doable. Put yourself on your schedule and start walking today!
A llison S u r a n , P T G C F P 404 NE Penn Ave, Bend, OR 541-318-7041 www.Heaiing Bridge.com
QUEsTIDN:I had permanent makeup done years ago and the color is much lighter now. Are permanent cosmetics really permanent? ANswER: T e chnically, pe r m anent makeup procedures are considered Susan Gruber, p ermanent b e cause t h e c o lor is Certified Permanent t h e u p per r eticular cosmetic professional implanted into part of the dermal layer of the skin. Less technically this is one of the under layers of the skin which is protected and cannot be washed off... even with surgical scrub! However, as with any tattoo, fading can and often does occur particularly on your face. Therefore it does require periodic maintenance, color enhancing or color refreshing. Just like hair color, bleached teeth or even house paint, pigment in the skin may fade with time and especially sun exposure. If this is a concern to you... Please call for a FREE consultation so we discuss your permanent make up concerns.
P erma n e n t M a k e u p B y Susan , C P C P
2460 NE Neff Rd., Suite B• Bend 541-749-2282 www.bendprs.com, drangetes©bendprs.com
m
~~ Aealing 9ridge
H olistic W o m e n s H e a l t h c a r e 541-31 2-4426 LifestyleMedc e nt ralOR.com
ANswER: The sagging of skin and fatty tissue of the upper eyelids is a progressive process that is quite common as we age. The treatment of the condition is a blepharoplasty where the excess skin and fat is removed in a simple 40 minute procedure that is done as an outpatient. What most people do not know is that the blepharoplasty can be covered by insurance if the drooping lids start to affect the peripheral vision. Your eye doctor should be able to tell you if you would benefit from this procedure.
family practice m e d i c ine
of Central Oregon PC
31 NW GreeleyAve., Bend, OR 97701
Ida Alul,
QUEsTION:As he has gotten older, my husband's upper eyelids have become so droopy that I think it is affecting his vision. He says the surgery is just cosmetic. Is there anything that can be done about this?
371 SW Upper Terrance Dr. Ste ¹2, Bend, OR 97702 541-31 7-4894 www.enhancementcenterspa.com
1265 NW Wall Street• Bend 541-383-3387 www.permanentmakeupbysusan.com
Calendar, D2 Obituaries, D4
Weather, D6
©
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
ruc i s ouse, innin man
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LILYRAFF
McCAULOU
shaggy dog story
p
eople go camping to get away
from it alL But when Sandra Taylor and her husband, Walter Thompson, bought a tent from Bend's REI store, in December, they instead became tangled in a misguided fraud investigation. Taylor joined REI's cooperative to get a discount on the tent, and was also awarded a $20 "member bonus card" toward a future purchase. What happened next is an accountant's equivalent of a whodunit. And, as tax day approaches, this shaggy dog tale contains a bitter lesson for bargain hunters. Taylor was laid off from her job as anurse lastyear. The La Pine woman collected unemployment until she received a letter in the mail this month. Her benefits had been terminated, the letter said, and she was under investigation for fraud. In one of her weekly claims filed in D ecember, she'd apparently failed to disclose $20 she'd earned from REI. The problem was, Taylor hadn't worked for REI, she'd simply bought a tent there. So how, exactly, did a $20 gift card launch an investigation? "In Oregon,you can actually work and earn up to one-third of your
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
A Culver resident spent two hours pinned under a pickup early Saturday aftera suspected drunken driver crashed into his house. According to the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office, Charles John Wilda Jr., 46, was in bed at 8238 S.W. Feather Drive shortly before 2:30 a.m. when a truck driven by Steven Dwayne Roe, 45, of Culver, came crashing through the side of his house. The initial i nvestigation suggests Roe passed out while driving west on Southwest Iris Lane, ran the stop sign at Southwest Feather Drive and crashed directly into Wilda's residence. Sheriff Jim Adkins said there were no skidmarks or other indication that Roe had attempted to slow or stop before striking the house, and he had no recollection of the events immediately prior to the crash. SeeCrash /D2
• Mount Hood:Missing hiker is found alive
after nearly a weekin the snow.
• Threatened species: Federal biologists investigate threat to fishers from
poison used in illegal marijuana grows. • Salem:TheOregon Legislature could alter ban on Native
American mascots. Jefferson County Sheriff via The Associated Press
A deputy investigates the scene where a motorist, suspected of driving drunk, drove into a house in Culver on Saturday, trapping the resident under the truck for nearly two hours. The Jefferson County Sheriff's office said the resident, who was in bed, suffered fractures and possible internal injuries, He was in critical condition.
Stories on D3, D5
EYES ON THE PRIZE
FOR THE
reader contest On Page B2in Saturday's edition, we challenged readers to identify the eyes of
nine animals in Central Oregon — ahorse, dog, falcon, chicken,
h I
weekly (unemployment) benefit
lr
rabbit, trout, butterfly,
I
porcupine andcat. To
amount without losing any ben-
enter the EYES ONTHE
efits," says Craig Spivey, a spokesman for the Oregon Employment Department. Spivey couldn't comment on Taylor's case. But his general explanation of Oregon's unemployment policies suggests that even if Taylor had worked at REI, a $20 paycheck is unlikely to have stopped her benefits. Because REIisheadquartered in Seattle, however, paperwork filed by thecompany may have implied that Taylor was in Washington in December. To receiveunemployment, an Oregonian must file a weekly claim. Three major factors determine eligibility, according to Spivey. "Are you out of work through no fault of your own? Are you actively seeking work? And then, are you available to work if a job becomes available?" he says. "If a person is out of state, then they are not available for work in Oregon." But why would REI have reported the $20 in the first place? In one offer found online last week, customers who refer a friend to open an REI credit card issued by US Bank will receive a $20 REI gift card. In fine print, US Bank warns that it may report this $20 to the IRS. Tom Sayeg,a tax attorney atKarnopp Peterson in Bend, says the IRS has been unclear on how companies should report these types of customer incentives. "The safer approach would be for the corporation to issue a 1099," Sayeg says,describing a federal form used to notify the IRS of payments such as interest on a savings account. There's no penalty for over-reporting, he says, but a company could incur expensive fines if the IRS finds that it failed to report something it should have. Still, Sayeg says he's surprised that a 1099 would have made the Oregon Employment Department believe that Taylor had set foot in Washington. "That's a little bit odd," he says. "The 1099s are typically going to come from the corporate office. So if you get 1099s, they come from all over." After some digging around, Megan Behrbaum, a spokeswoman for REI, found that's not what happened here. Instead, Taylor's gift card was erroneously reported as an hour w orked because, itturns out,she'd once worked for REI many years ago. When she joined the co-op in December, her name and a previous addresswas entered into the system and a clerical error resulted in a misfiling to the IRS. Behrbaum says this was a onetime fluke. Confused? Don't ask the IRS to help. Two IRS spokesmen declined to comment, even to help clarify which gift cards or perks are considered taxable. SeeGift card/D5
STATE NEWS
Mount Hood Salem
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Ericka Dublin, left, and Jayln Tolliver, right, 5-year-olds of Redmond, run toward a field of plastic eggs filled with candy at the start of the 5-6 age group at the Redmond Community Easter Egg Hunt on Saturday morning at Sam Johnson Park in Redmond.
• HundredS OfkidSCOlleCtthOuSandSOfeggSin Redmond'SSamJOhnSOn Park By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
REDMONDor all the time and effort that goes in to putting on Central
Oregon's biggest Easter egg hunt, it's over nearly as quickly as it
begins. Hundreds of local children spent no more than five minutes scooping up more than 10,000 eggs Saturday morning at Redmond's Sam Johnson Park, hauling away the handiwork
of severalcity employees who spent their lunch breaks in recent days packing donated candy into colorful
plastic eggs. Heather Richards, Redmond's director of c ommunity development and creator of the city's egg hunt, said the event has grown by leaps and bounds since she organized the first one in 2009. Today, it's the largest event of its kind in Central Oregon. "I came to town five years ago, I said,'Where's the Easter egg hunt?'"
Richards recalled. "'Well, we need one.' And here we are." Strictly speaking, Redmond had three egg hunts on Saturday, with kids of differentages separated to minimize the chaos. Kids 2 and under could be accompanied by a parent, while 3- and 4-year olds and 5- and 6-year-olds were on their own, left to race across the grass at top speed and pounce on any egg not yet snatched Up.
SeeEggs/D2
Carload ofpotatoessent to flood victims in 1913 archived copies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARS AGO For the week ending March 30, 1913
Month's work on sewer big While the report on sewer progress has not been compiled and presented to the council yet, general results are more or less tabulated and both in amount and construction accomplished and in its cost the activity of the last 30 days seems tohave been most satisfactory. The payroll for the month has been about $4,500. More rock has been moved in 30 days than during the entire time space the work commenced. During March, 1,009 yards of rock were excavated while up to April I, 995 yards were handled. Seven manholes have been installed by Hilliard, Jullinsen & Gibb. "The manhole work is some of the best Ihave ever seen," said Engineer
Koon in commenting on this feature of the work. The trench in the alley between Bond and Wall streets is now about to grade, and may be said to be three-fourths completed. Pipe has been laid and the work finished in the alley west of Wall from about behind the Pilot Butte Inn to about the rear of the Bean building. Much work has been accomplished out of town.
Bend car for stricken Ohio The call for relief for the flood sufferersin Ohio has been responded to at Bend with marked liberality. Tomorrow, a carload of Irish potatoes will be forwarded by the Bend lodge of Odd Fellows to Dayton, and individuals have also made donations of potatoes, flour, carrots, clothing and other supplies which will be sent in the same car. The lodge will send about 23 tons of potatoes, or 460 sacks of 100 pounds each. Figuring a half pound as enough potatoes for a meal for one person, this car will give 72,000 people one meal or 24,000 peoplethree meals. The price
The Bulletin Submissions: • Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.o. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletinioom
• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news@bendbtflletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
YESTERDAY
Compiledby Don Hoinessfrom
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submission? Contactus!
paid for the vegetable was 40 cents a hundred, or $8.
75 YEARS AGO For the week ending March 30, 1938
Dancing cow isstar of operetta Blunderbuss, the ogre, so realisticthat youngsters in the audience screamed, climbed down a huge beanstalk in the high school gymnasium last night as young Kenwood school entertainers brought their Operetta "The Magic Beanstalk" to a close, but it was not the ogre, but Juliana the wise cow that won major applause and attention. Juliana did not come down the beanstalk, but she walked on to the stage under her own power, switched her tail and winked at t h e a u dience. Margaret Runge and Dorothy Smith provided the "power" for Juliana, a white and black cow of the contented variety which surprised the large audience by doing a tap dance. SeeYesterday/D5
• School news andnotes: Email news items and notices of general interest to news©bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens' academicachievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details on theObituaries page inside. Contact 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com
• Community events: Email event information to communitylife@bend bulletin com or click on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Details: Thecalendarappears inside this section. Contact: 541-383-0351
• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: Details: TheMilestones page publishes Sundayin Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0358
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
E VENT
AL E N D A R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
based folk-comedy act performs, with Derde Verde; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand. TAARKA:The Colorado-based jazzy gypsy-folk band performs; $10; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com.
TODAY FORT ROCKGRANGE EASTER BREAKFAST:A meal of ham, eggs, pancakes, hash browns and coffee; $6, $3 ages 10 and younger; 7:15 a.m.; Fort Rock Grange,64651 Fort Rock Road; 541-576-2289. ELKS LODGEEASTER EGG HUNT: Ages 12 and younger hunt for eggs; free; 9 a.m.; Juniper Park, 741 N.E. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-389-7438. EASTER MYSTERY TOUR: Takea tour that explores Easter mysteries, and search for eggs at stops; free; 9:30-10 a.m.; Trinity Lutheran Church & School,2550 N.E. Butler Market Road, Bend; 541-382-1832. EASTER EGGHUNT FOR DOGS: Leashed and well-behaved dogs search for eggs filled with dog treats, with gifts and prizes; free; 3-3:30p.m.;Eastside Bend Pet Express, 420 N.E. Windy Knolls Drive; 541-389-4620. VFW EASTERDINNER: A dinner of bakedham, scalloped potatoesand more; reservations requested; $10, $5 ages10 and younger, free ages three and younger; 4 p.m.; VFWHall, 1836S.W.VeteransWay, Redmond; 541-923-8591. BROTHERS COMATOSE:The California-based Americana folk act performs; $10; 8 p.m.; The Belfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com.
MONDAY BOOK DISCUSSION: Discuss "The Snow Child" by Eowyn Ivey; part of "A Novel Idea .. ReadTogether"; free;1 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541388-1133 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. BRING OUTYOUR DEAD! AN ILLUSTRATEDHISTORY OF PLAGUE:A presentation by Mark Eberle on the historical and medical story of the plague; free; 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-330-4640. BOOK DISCUSSION: Discuss "The Snow Child" by Eowyn Ivey; part of "A Novel Idea .. ReadTogether"; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Books & Music, Sunriver Village Building 25C; 541-593-2525 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. BLACKBEASTREVIVAL: Heavy rockfrom Bellingham, Wash., with Sifted; $5; 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-
SATURDAY
Submitted photo
The Colorado-based jazzy gypsy-fold band Taarka performs Friday at The Belfry in Sisters. 6999 or www.liquidclub.net.
TUESDAY GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: Featuring a screening of "Genetic Roulette," a documentary film about genetically engineered food; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.
WEDNESDAY "IT'S IN THEBAG" LECTURE SERIES:Sandy Brooke presents the lecture "Fate and Luck: A Series Crossing Boundaries" about her series of artwork; free; noon-1 p.m.; OSU-Cascades Campus, Cascades Hall, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-322-3100, info@osucasades. edu or www.osucascades.edu/ lunchtime-lectures. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: FRANCESCA DARIMINI": Starring Eva-Maria Westbroek, Mark Delavan and Marcello Giordani in an encore presentation of Zandonai's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted live inhigh definition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541-382-6347.
LIVE MUSIC:Celebrate Mark Ransom's birthday with The Mostest, Hobbs, The JZBand, Brent Alan, Indian food and more; a benefit for Ukuleles for Youth; $10 suggested donation; 8 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. MISS LONELYHEARTS: Thefolkact performs, with Boxcar Stringband; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.facebook.com/ thehornedhand.
THURSDAY THREE TIMESBAD:The San Francisco-based bluegrass act performs, with The RumandThe Sea; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.facebook. com/thehornedhand. LAFA TAYLOR:Electro-hop, with Nix, Prajekt and Over Cover; 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999.
FRIDAY FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and
PUBLIC OFFICIALS For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.
LEGISLATURE Senate • Sea. Ted Ferrioli, R-District 30 (includesJefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sea. Tim Knopp,R-District 27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sea. DougWhitsett, R-District 28 (includes Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett
House • Rep. Jason Conger, R-Distrlct 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 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, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mlke McLane, R-Distrlct55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whisttattt, R-District53 (portion of DeschutesCounty) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone:541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
County Commission
Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes.or.us • Tony DeBone,R-La Pine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email: Tony DeBone@co.deschutes.or.us
CROOK COUNTY 300 N.E. Third St., Prineville, OR 97754 Phone:541-447-6555 Fax:541-416-3891
Email: administration@co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us
•CrookCountyJudge MlkeMcCabe Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe@co.crook.or.us
County Court • Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren@co.crook.or.us
66 S.E. D St., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us
County Commission
Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney@co.deschutes .Qr.us • Alan Uager, D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569
• Mlke Ahern, JohnHatfield, Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner@co.jefferson
at atime. "It was nice, because most Continued from 01 of them were under her dress," The r e l atively l e i surely she said. "You just move her, pace of the 2 and under group and set her down, and there worked well for Jennifer Gas- they are." pard and her daughter, Ava A veteran of several egg Marie Buffa. Gaspard said hunts, Jennifer Donovan-Dubwhile she'd dressed 10-month- lin served as coach for her 5old Ava Marie in a long dress year-old daughter, Ericka Dubprimarily for getting her photo lin. Get a good start, Donovantaken with the Easter Bunny, Dublin advised, and run to the the dress helped mother and center of the field before pick-
daughter cordon off a few eggs ing up any eggs. From there,
Continued from 01 "Apparently his statement was he just woke up inside the house," Adkins said. Roe was arrested on suspicion of DUII, second-degree assault, reckless driving and second-degree criminal mischief. According to the sheriff's office, Roe's blood-alcohol level was measured at 0.13 at 6:34 a.m, 05 above Oregon's
legal limit to drive. Wilda suffered fractures to his lower legs and possible internal i njuries, according to the sheriff's office. Adkins said paramedics arriving at the scene attended to Wilda, i ncluding i nserting a n I V , while he was still pinned beneath the truck. W ilda was t a ken t o S t . Charles Bend by helicopter, and was listed in critical condition as of 7 p.m. Saturday.
April 7 NOTABLES SWINGBAND:The big bandplaysswing music;$5;2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-330-5728 or www.notablesswingband.com. PAPADOSIO:The North Carolinabased progressive folk-rock band performs, with The Acorn Project; $10 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 54I788-2989orwww.bendticket.com.
TUESDAY April 9 BOOK DISCUSSION:Discuss "The Snow Child" by Eowyn Ivey; part of "A Novel Idea .. Read Together"; free; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. BEYOND COAL:Learn how exports of coal to Asia through Northwest communities would jeopardize air, water, snowpack and climate; hosted by the Sierra Club; free; 7 p.m.,6:30 p.m.gathering;The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave.,Bend;541-389-0785. NATURAL HISTORYPUB: Jeff Russell and Lee Reynaud discuss "Sustainable Agriculture and Wildlife Conservation on Private Land: A Case Study in Conservation and Economics; registration requested; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp.
The Kemple Memorial Children's Dental Clinic Has Moved! The Kemple Clinic is now located in our new facility on the West Side of Bend at the Rosie Bareis Community Campus, 1029 NW 14th Street, Bend, OR 97701 The Kemple Memorial Children's Dental Clinic is a non-profit organization dedicated toimproving the health and well-being of childrenin Central Oregon by facilitating preventative, educational and dental treatment services for children whose families cannot access basic dental care. The Kemple Clinic advocates for a/I children needing timely, high-quality dental care. WE WANT TO PUBLICLY ACKNOWLEDGE & THANK THE BUSINESSES & INDIVIDUALS WHO DONATED THEIR TIME, PRODUCTS & SERVICES TO ASSIST US IN OUR CLINIC RENOVATION AND RELOCATION. MANY ALSO HELPED START OUR EFFORTS FOR CHILDREN'S DENTAL SCREENING PROGRAMS AND ANNUAL SMILE CAMPAIGN, WHICH BEGINS IN MAY.
THANKYOUFORCONTINCING TO8IVE KIDSASNIII.E!!
.OI.US
work outward in a circle. Ericka complied, breaking into a sprint at the sound of the airhorn. Back on the sidelines moments later — the oldest children cleared the field of eggs in well under a minute — Ericka showed off her basket of eggs, and her mother smiled. "Told you it worked," Donovan-Dublin said. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersCbendbufleti n.com
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The damage left the house "very unstable," Adkins said in an email, and firefighters used airbags to stabilize the s tructure while working t o remove the victim and the vehicle. The house is believed to be a total loss. Roe is scheduled to be arraigned in Jefferson County Circuit C ourt on Mon d a y morning. — Reporter:541-383-0387, shammersCbendbufieti n.com
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foodindowntown Bend and the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. BLUE RIBBONCAMPAIGN KICKOFF:Kick off the child-abuse prevention campaign, with food, speakers and award presentations; free; 5:15 p.m.; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3835958 or www.kidscenter.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Aaron Nicholson talks about his book, "The State of Determination," with a slide show; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. "PLAY AGAIN":A screening of the 2010 documentary film that investigates the consequences of a childhood removed from nature, followed by a Q&A with producer Meg Merrill; proceeds benefit the Deschutes Children's Forest; $5$10 suggested donation; 7 p.m., doorsopen at6:30 p.m.;TheOld Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-383-5592 or www. deschuteschildrensforest.org. "ARGO":A screening of the R-rated 2012 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. jcld.org. DELANY 8 PARIS:The Portland-
URBAN AGRICULTUREIN CENTRAL OREGON:Learn about the rewards and challenges of urban food production in the area; includes lunch; $25-$30, $15-$20 students; 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; OSU-Cascades Campus, CascadesHall,2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-322-3100 or www. centraloregonfoodpolicy.org. VFW EASTERBUFFET:A breakfast buffet; $8.50; 8:30-11 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. DISCOVERNATUREDAY: Families can track wildlife, explore Tumalo Creek, meet birds of prey, plant treesand play games; hosted by the Deschutes Children's Forest; free; 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Shevlin Park,18920 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-383-5592 or www. deschuteschildrensforest.org. CERN PRESENTATION:A lecture by astronomer Bill Logan about the European Organization for Nuclear Research and the Large Hadron Collider; free; 1 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. TEDX BEND:Featuring over 10 people presenting local and international perspectives to inspire and spark conversations; registration recommended; SOLD OUT; 1 p.m., doors open at12:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive; www. tedxbend.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Aaron Nicholson talks about his book, "The State of Determination," with a slide show; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. AVREY WALKERBENEFIT DINNER AND AUCTION:With live music by Matt Borden and Leif James; Texas Hold'em at noon; tickets available at Coyote Ranch and John TuckElementary;$45 in advance, $55 at the door; 6 p.m.; Coyote Ranch,1368 S. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; 541-548-7700.
LUCREZIO:The Chicago-based acoustic soul act performs; free; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane,Suite 1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or /www. btbsbend.com. TRIAGE:The comedy improvisational troupe performs; $5; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www.cascadestheatrical.org. THE MCCOYTYLER BAND:The California-based folk act performs, with Jack Dwyer and The Bad Liars $5. 8 p m. The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand.
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SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
MOUNT HOOD
issin i eris oun aive •
•
Traill DOOrOpoll — ThePortland-area regional transit agency says corrosion on switches inside the door of a light rail train probably caused
the door to stayopenduring aFeb.15trip along Interstate 84.TheOregonian reports that TriMet officials said Friday they plan to change equipment and maintenance schedules. They'll also remind operators to watch
a ernear awee insnow
door indicators andmakesure all doorsclose before leavingstations. A passenger posted avideo onYouTubeof atrain speeding alongthe 1-84
The Associated Press
Springfield Spying CaSe —Police have seized more than100
PORTLAND — An Oregon National G u ar d h e l icopter crew on Saturday spotted a hiker who had been missing on Mount Hood for about a week, and flew her to a Portland hospital for treatment, the Clackamas County Sheriff's Office said. Mary Owen, 23, was found shortly after 10 a.m. on Sandy Glacier, at an elevation of about 4,600 feet. The college student had frostbite and possibly a fractured ankle, sheriff's spokesman Marcus Mendoza said. Owen's m o t her, f a t h er, brotherand roommate learned the good news as soon as they arrived a t t h e T i m b erline
Lodge parking lot, The Orego-
with his daughter on March 22, and she told him she was going to climb the mountain the next day with a group that — Bruce Owen, father included a man she had met on the North Sister in Central Oregon last year. It appears When days p assed and the plans for a group climb fell Owen didn'tcome back, one through because there were of her roommates called her no reports of any other missfather to ask if he had heard ing people on the mountain. from her. Bruce Owen conBruce Owen said it wouldn't tacted police. b e out of character for hi s M ary Owen's SU V w a s daughter to suddenly decide to f ound late Thursday in t h e do something on her own. parking lo t a t Ti m b erline Owen said his daughter, a Lodge, the sheriff's office said. senior planning a career in Deputies said it appeared to Bible translation, has never have beenthere for some time, done any technical climbing, and Mary Owen's backpack but is an experienced backwas inside. packer who previously hiked Bruce Owen, in an i nter- the length of the Pacific Crest view Friday, said he spoke Trail from Mexico to Canada.
"We're completely relieved. We were concerned becauseshe had been out so long."
nian reported. "We're completely relieved," her father, Bruce Owen, told the newspaper. "We were concerned because she had been out so long." Owen is a senior at George Fox University in N ewberg, about 70 miles west of Mount Hood. She was on springbreak and had not been in contact with friends or relatives since Sunday, when she emailed a friend to say she was going for a hike and planned to return late Sunday or Monday.
corridor with a door open. No one was hurt, but the video showed many
startled passengers.Agencysafety andsecurity executive HarrySaporta says, "It's safe to say that this is a rare occurrence."
items from the home of a Springfield man accused of using a hidden
video camera to spy on a young girl whose family lives next door to him. The Register-Guard newspaper reports that investigators collected the items Thursday while serving a search warrant at the home of Dana Bishop. Police arrested the 63-year-old man earlier
this month and said they subsequently seized his camerasystem and several letters that mentioned the victim. The retired Air Force
veteran faces 45 misdemeanor charges alleging he invadedthe girl's privacy. Bishop is being held without bail in the Springfield jail. HOWard Prairie ReSOrt —The Mt. Ashland Association and JacksonCountyhavereachedafour-yearmanagementagreement that will allow the Howard Prairie Resort to open as usual next month. The Mail Tribune reports that the county took over the resort
east of Ashland in February after the former owner fell behind in lease payments and taxes. In a deal announced late Friday, the Mt. Ashland Association will run the restaurant and store while the county will
operate the campground andthe marina. The nonprofit association has operated the Mt. Ashland Ski Area since1992 and already runs a similar restaurant at the ski area. Its operating season runs nearly
opposite of Howard Prairie's, which centers around the trout-fishing season of mid-April through October.
e sas i mai.iuana ar en oisonist reattos ecies By Jeff Barnard
Rat poison is spread
The Associated Press
GRANTS PASS — For the first time, federal biologists are assessing whether illegal marijuana gardens in the back woods of the West could lead to the extinction of a wild animal. The object of their attention is the fisher, a small but fierce forest predator related to the weasel. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife S ervice is interested in r a t poisons used at the thousands of illegal pot plantations that overlap the fisher's range on national parks, national forests and Indian reservations. Though only a handful of fisher deaths in California have been blamed directly on the poisons,nearly 80 percent of those examined in one study were found with the poisons in their systems. Scientists think fishersget poisoned from eating rats that eat the poisons, which ar e s p r ead a r ound young marijuana plants and i rrigation systems b y t h e pound. "We absolutely do have to evaluate the marijuana threat," said J. Scott Yaeger, a wildlife biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Yreka, Calif., who leads the team of scientists doing the Endangered SpeciesAct review. "We need to make that link, or if the information can be discredited, we would do so in this evaluation. My gut feeling is, though, we are going to find a strong link." Based on their evaluation of existing r e search, Fish and Wildlife is due to decide whether to list West Coast fishersas a threatened or en-
dangered species by the end of September 2014. T he f i sher i s co m m o n across Canada and the Northeast U.S., but not in the West, where fur trapping, logging and the spread of people into the dense forests where it lives have caused numbers to plummet. Biologists estimate 3,000 to 5,000 remain in California, Oregon and Washington. They make up what is known as a distinct population segment, which qualifies for protection, though healthy p opulations exist elsewhere. Up to 3,000 still live in the Klamath Mountains overlapping th e O r egon-California border. Studies by the Hoopa Valley Tribe have found female numbers rising, but not males, said t r ibal b i ologist Mark Higley. About 300 are in the southern Sierra Nevada in California, from Yosemite National Park south. A U.S. Forest Service study found their numbers stable. Smaller populations were introduced on th e O l ympic Peninsula i n Was h i ngton and the southern Cascades of
Oregon. The fisher wa s f o rmally classified in 2004 as a candi-
around a marijuana plant on an illegal plantation in Northern Calfornia in this undated photo. Photo courtesy Integral Ecology Research Center via The Associated Press
relocated. Gabrielsaid researchers in his study looked for rat poisons around remote cabins
and campgrounds, power The Associated Press file photo
A female fisher explores her environment at the Northwest Trek wildlife park near Eatonville, Wash., in April 1998. Federal biologists reviewing whether to put the West Coast population of fishers on the endangered species list are, for the first time under the Endangered Species Act, considering the threats from outlaw marijuana plantations. Recent research has shown fishers dying from rat poison, and scientists think it is coming from backwoods pot plantations. date species, likely worthy of in its s leep," said Gabriel. fishers from Northern Califorprotection. After conservation "We brought it in and found a nia had died from rat poison. groups sued, Fish and Wildlife massive amount of bleeding All the dead fishers were agreed to a timetable for evalu- throughout all the cavities." found because they carried ating 250 species. The fisher's Tissue tests showed large GPS tracking collars that sent turn comes just as evidence amounts of poisons known out a death alarm. "It would not be farfetched has been building of poison- as secondary anticoagulant ings from pot plantations. rodenticides, the compounds to think t hat n onmonitored The National M a r ijuana u sed i n com m ercial r a t fishersare also being exposed Initiative, part of the war on poisons. and poisoned as well," Gabriel drugs, has provided researchNecropsies determined that said. ers with maps of pot busts in of the 46 dead fishers carrying Yaeger said r a t p o i sons Northern California and Yorat poison, four of them died have also been found in fishsemite showing they overlap from the chemicals. After the ers in Washington, but it is not the range of poisoned fishers, study concluded, research- known if they picked it up in said director Tommy LaNier. ers determined that two more British Columbia before being He has briefed White House Drug Czar Gil Kerlikowske. LaNier said since the 1990s, when California and Oregon legalized medical marijuana, the bulk of the backwoods pot gardens are planted by growers from Mexico, though there is little evidence of a connection to the big drug cartels. Law enforcement has been Are you between the ages of 18 and 75? weeding them out, but only If the answer is yes, you may be eligible to about 2 percent get cleaned participate in a clinical research trial looking at up, leaving thousands of backwoods toxic waste dumps. whether an investigational medication is safe and The initiative is w o rking effective for people whose rheumatoid arthritis with Mourad Gabriel, a doc(RA) is not responding to existing treatments. toral candidate at the University of California at Davis VetYou may be able to participate if you: erinary GeneticsLaboratory • are between the ages of 18 and 75 and president of the Integral • have been diagnosed with RA Ecology Research Center in • have active RA (a flare-upj, with more than five Blue Lake, Calif., who was tender and five swollen joints lead author on a study published last year that estab• have active RA, despite receiving previous lished fishers were getting treatment with an anti-TNF-a therapy poisoned. The study f ound • are currently taking methotrexate prescribed 46 of 58dead fishers sampled by your doctor. from thesouthern Sierras and Northern California — 79 perThe clinicaltrial will last 15'/2 months. During the first 12 months, cent — carried one or more there will be weekly visits with a team of experienced doctors of the rat poisons, including and nurseswho will assessyour symptoms, monitor your health, and provide advice on future treatment options.Trial-related a female that passed it on to assessmentsand trial medication will be provided at no cost. her babies through her milk. The first was found in 2009 on the Sierra National Forest just south of Yosemite. Bend Memorial Clinic ~c. ca II 541.322.3656 "It just looked like it died
DOES RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS AFFECT YOUR LIFE?
pole rights-of-way, and private timber plantations. The only places they found them — as much as 90 pounds at one site — were illegal marijuana
gardens. An EPA assessment says the poisons have also been found in endangered San Joaquin kit foxes, mountain lions,
bobcats, owls, hawks, eagles, crows, squirrels, raccoons and deer. "If this continues, I don't think this will be the only species" considered for protection due to illegal pot plantations, Gabriel said.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
BITUARIES
I
Kathryn Garrison Madarus
April 25, 1945 - March 24, 2013
iiov. 23, 1953 - Mar. 22, 2013
Grammywinning
Kathryn Garrison L onna Fary B r a mhall o f Madarus, 59, passed away Bend, died Sunday, March M arch 2 2 , 2 0 1 3 a t St . 24, 2013. Lonna was born i n Medford, OR, on A p r i l C harles in R e dmond, Or egon, after fighting a long, 25, 1945. She lived in Forhard battle with cancer. est Grove K athryn w a s b o r n i n and Grants Riddle, P ass, O r By Ben Sisario ,g~ » ~ s , b ef o r e egon t o New York Times News Service moving to Dean and Phil Ramone, a prolific reAshland, Violet where she cord producer and engineer Garrison. attended who worked with some of She Ashland the biggest stars of the last 50 l » gr adu High years, including Ray Charles, ated from School Frank Sinatra, Paul Simon, r Derl Rene Stovall, of Lonna Fay South Euand Billy Joel and Barbra StreiBramhall gene High Madras Southern S chool i n sand, died Saturday in ManKathryn Jan. 25, 1956 - Mar. 25, 2013 Oregon College. 1 971 a n d Madarus hattan. He was 79. Though it Born Lonna Fay Walker, Arrangements: worked in was widely reported that he o ne of h e r p r o u dest m o Bel-Air Funeral Home, the manufacturing i n d u s- was 72, public records and m ents was when she w a s Madras, OR try most of he r l i fe. M ost l egally adopted by her f a h is fam i l y 541-475-2241 r ecently s h e w as emther, Dick Baize. FFATUREP confirm that p loyed a t F u e l S a f e o f Services: Lonna met her h u sband, Redmond as an i n ventory Tuesday, at 1:00 p.m., at pg~TUARy he was born D on, while b oth w er e a t Jan. 5, 1934. Corner Stone Baptist tending Southern O r egon specialist. His death was K athryn i s s u r v i ved b y Church, Madras, OR. C ollege, an d t h e y w e r e her husband of 1 3 y e ars, confirmed by hi s son M atmarried July 16, 1968. thew. He did not immediately A fter w o r k i n g f o r th e Dennis Madarus of T errePaul L. 'Dr. Pablo' release a cause, but Ramone A shland P u b l i c L i b r a r y bonne, Oregon; her mother and step-father, Violet and Heidtke, of Bend a nd Ashland S chool D i s was reported to have been adDec. 31, 1942 - Mar. 21, 2013 trict, L o n n a an d D on R ichard Stivahtis o f G r e - mitted to a Manhattan hospital sham, Oregon; her brother, moved to Dallas, OR. They Arrangements: in late February for treatment Lowell "Rusty" Garrison of also lived in Tillamook beDeschutes Memorial of an aortic aneurysm. T ucson, Arizona; and h e r f ore m o v in g t o B e n d i n Chapel, 541-382-5592 In his 2007 memoir, "Makb eloved p ets, H a n k a n d 1979. Lonna worked for a www.deschutesmemorial ing Records: the Scenes BeChester. Her father, Dean, number o f b u s i nesses in chapel.com hind the Music," written with Bend, r e t i r in g a f t e r 25 predeceased her. Services: K athryn en j o y e d g ar - Charles L. Granata, Ramone years with Suterra, LLC A celebration of Paul's life dening, arts and crafts and definedthe role ofrecord proLonna was a history buff will be held this summer. was an excellent cook. She ducer as being roughly equivand avid r eader. she parContributions may be made ticularly e n j o ye d s c i ence loved living in Central Oralent to that of a movie directo: fiction and ha d a n u m b er e gon where sh e m e t t h e tor, creating and managing Shepherd's House, love o f h e r l i f e , D e n n i s. of favorite books, as w ell an environment in which to P.O. Box 5484, as movies an d t e l evision She was a kind and gentle Bend, Oregon 97708, coax the best work out of his person who will be deeply science fi ction p r o g r ams. www.myshepherdshouse. performers. m issed by a l l w h o k n e w She enjoyed camping and org; or to Mt. Bachelor "But, unlike a director (who her. RVing w it h h e r h u sband, Rotary Club's World Dennis would like to spe- is visible, and often a celebrity D on, an d t h e y a l s o e n Community Service Fund, cially thank the staff at the in his own right), the record joyed trips to England and P.O. Box 848, Redmond St. Charles Hos- producer toils in anonymity," F rance. L o nn a a n d D o n Bend, OR 97709. s tarted square and r o u n d p ital; D r . Ca l o m in i a n d he wrote. dancing in t h e 1 990s and staff at the Redmond CanHe was atrusted craftsman e njoyed t r aveling a r o u nd c er C e n t er ; a n d Ci n d y and confidant in the indusM cLean i n r a d i o logy f o r Oregon and the Northwest, try who was also one of the d ancing w i t h f r i e n ds, a s the compassion and dedihandful of producers widely w ell as w o r k in g o n , a n d cation they provided her at known to the public. He won s upporting, d a n c e fe s t i - the end of her life. Sept. 2, 1915- March 27, 2013 P rivate services w il l b e 14 Grammy Awards, including vals. held at a l a ter d ate. Conproducer of the year and three Lonna is survived by her Katharine E. Bennett was d olences may b e s en t t o for album of the year. husband, Donald of B end; born September 2, 1915, in denkitty@q.com her mother, D o nna B a ize Wheeling, W. V i r g i nia, to p arents, C h arles H . a n d and brother, Richard Baize of Ashland; two nieces and Jennie G. (Terrill) Salade. S he m a r r i e d K en n e t h two n e p h ews. S h e w a s r eceded in d eath b y h e r C arlisle Bennett M a y 2 9 , ather, Dick Baize. 1935. Death Notices are free and will Deadlines:Death Notices L onna's life w i l l b e c e l She is survived by three be run for one day, but specific are accepted until noon e brated w it h a p i e p a r t y sons, Stewart Carlisle and guidelines must be followed. Monday through Friday for p otluck ( s h e r e a l l y en w ife, L u c i ll e B e n n ett o f next-day publication and by Local obituaries are paid B end, W i l l i a m K en n e t h j oyed p i e ) o n A p r i l 17 , advertisements submitted by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday 2 013, from 7 t o 9 p . m . a t and wife, Roberta Bennett families or funeral homes. and Monday publication. of Yuma, AZ, and Charles the P in e F o r est G r a n ge, They maybesubmitted by phone, Obituaries must be received 6 3214 B oy d A c r e s R d . , E dward Bennett o f B e n d ; mail, email or fax. by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough two g r a n dsons, T i m o t hy Bend. Memorial c o ntribuThe Bulletin reserves the right Thursday for publication on the tions m a y b e ma d e to Carlisle and w i f e , S abina to edit all submissions. Please second day after submission, Bennett o f B e n d , R u ssell Partners In C are Hospice, include contact information by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or 2075 NE W y att C t., Bend S tewart Bennett of W h i t e in all correspondence. Monday publication, and by Salmon, W A ; an d on e OR 97701, or to the AmeriFor information on any of these 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday g reat-grandson, Jer i m e can Cancer Society. services or about the obituary publication. Deadlines for Niswonger Reynolds FuCarlisle and w i f e , M a n dy policy, contact 541-617-7825. display ads vary; please call neral Home handled the arBennett of Bend. for details. S he w a s pr e c e ded i n rangements. 5 4 1 -382-2471 P lease s i g n t he on li n e death by her p arents, one g uestbook at w ww .n i s sister, and her husband. Phone: 541-617-7825 Mail:Obituaries A t he r r e q uest, n o s e r - wonger-reynolds.com Email: obits@bendbulletin.com P.O. Box 6020 v ices will be held. M e m o Fax: 541-322-7254 Bend, OR 97708 r ial contributions ar e a p preciated to th e Fi r s t United Methodist Church, 6 80 N W B on d Str e e t , Bend, OR 97701. N iswonger-Reynolds F u neral Home is in charge of ,R a arrangements. • • Cl aSSif IedS
prOdLlcer
July 22, 1931 - Mar. 26, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond. 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Graveside service will be held at 2:00 p.m., Thurs., April 4, 2013, at Redmond Memorial Cemetery, 3545 S. Canal Blvd., Redmond, OR
Phil Ramone
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Katharine E. Salade Bennett
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Leonard Martin Mathisen August 25, 1915- March 23, 2013 Leonard Martin Mathisen, 97, of Lake Oswego passed peacefully in his sleep on March 23, 2013, after a brief illness. He was born in Portland, Oregon, on August 25, 1915, to Leonard A. and Inez Mathisen who nurtured his love of fishing and classical music. He lived in Hillsdale with his parents and sister, June Mathisen Campbell, and graduated from Lincoln High School in 1933. Following a year at Northwestern College of Law, he proudly spent15 months with the Civilian Conservation Corps in Remote, Oregon. Len ultimately received a degree in Fish Biology from the newly created department of Fish & Game Management at Oregon State College in 1939. He went to work full time for the Oregon Game Commission iOGC) in1940, researching the remote lakes of the Deschutes National Forest and falling in love with Central Oregon. He was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1941, initially assigned to a horse battalion and then transferred to Officer Candidate School. He served throughout WWII, finally as a battalion liaison officer with Patton's army. Len married llene England of Multnomah on June 15, 1942. Upon his return io OGC in 1946, Len was assigned to Reedspori to do research on the Umpqua River. In 1950 he became the first Central Regional Supervisor for OGC ilater Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife) in Bend. He loved his work, and especially all the great people he was associated with. He particularly liked getting oui in the field, whether checking hunters and anglers on opening weekend, or going out ai 2 a.m. for "electro-shock" fish surveys. He also enjoyed the many opportunities for fishing, hunting, camping, and skiing with his family. After retiring in 1983, Len continued to share his expertise in water resources by serving on local boards and commissions, including the Upper Deschutes Watershed Council and BLM Advisory Committee, and as a member of WaterWatch. He remained active, including driving through Norway and England, but his favorite activity was salmon fishing on the Willamette and Columbia with his family and friends. Len and llene remained in Bend until 2008 when they moved to The Stafford Retirement Community, closer to family and friends. Len will be profoundly missed and remembered for his honesty, integrity, curiosity, energy, humor, and his personal frugality combined with extraordinary kindness and generosity. He is survived by his wife of 70 years, llene, and their children, Suzanne iDickj P>land, Dav>d iGa>lj Mathisen, Diana iTom) Partin, Marilyn iGregj Sullivan, and Richard iKathrynj Mathisen; and by seven grandchildren, Christi Partin Medlyn, Nick Partin, Kaia Partin, Whitney Mathisen, Landree Mathisen, Laura Mathisen Campbell and Anne Mathisen Decker. There will be a private family gathering in lieu of a service. Remembrances may be sent to WaterWatch of Oregon, 213 SWAsh St., Suite 208, Portland, Oregon 97204.
L INDsAY STEYENs, BEND OREGQ N J ANUARY 31, 1 9 2 9
- M A RCH 15 , 2 0 1 3
Lindsay passed away peacefully on March 15, 2013, surroundeJ by his family and loved ones.
e@yr6ce ek grise~ ePruri ~on Dec. 2, 1920 - Feb. II, 2013
Myrtice (Jones) Mo r r ison be l o ved m o t h er, grandmother andgreat-grandmother passed away into the arms of her Lord Jesus, on Monday February II, 2013. She was born December 2, 1920 in Hazel Green, Oregon to Ferd W. Jones and Adah LathamJones. She attended school in Gates and Kerby, Oregon, graduating from Kerby High School in 1939, and attended Oregon State College. While working to earn money for college, she met Fritz M. Morrison. He graduated from Oregon State College in 1941 with a degree in forestry, and they married on September 6, 1941. Myrtice's life as a L.S. Forest Service wife took her to national forests and ranger districts in Oregon, Washington, and Idaho, as well to Washington D.C. Twenty-eight moves during his career, ending up in Boise where Fritz retired. She was very supportive of his career, was involved in church and community life, and raised their three children effortlessly. She enjoyed gardening, gourmet cooking, sewing, golf and exploring the outdoors, and could identify wild flowers in all the places they lived. They moved to Bend, in 1978, to be closer to family members. A dedicated hiker, Myrtice led a Bend Parks and Recreation hiking group from 1982 until 1992. Fritz died in 1985, and Myrtice remained in Bend where they lived in Orion Estates. She loved to wheel her golf clubs to the Orion Golf course for a good round ofgolf, ending with dinner in her favorite restaurant, Orion Greens. For the past 5 years she lived happily in Bend Villa Retirement Home.
Myrtice continued hiking plus traveling with the World Foresters. After Parks & Rec. changed their program her friends wanted her to continue to lead them. There were around twenty devoted hil<ers trekking with Myrtice for many years, every week, year around. She always spoke highly of her "Hiking" friends and the wonderful times they spent together hiking, eating and parties.
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Lindsay wasborn in Albany, New York, the son of Frederick Bliss Stevens andJanet LinJsay Stevens. He traced his Father's ancestry toGovernor William Bradford, who cameover on the Mayflower and was governor of the new colony in Plymouth, MA in 1620; and his mother to the LindsayClan oIScotland.
He enjoyed Camp Timanous on Panther PonJ in Maine during the summers as a child. Lindsay attended CorneII University; however he didn't feel that he wss contribuung enough as aNaval Reservist, so he ioineJ the United States Marine Corps in 1951, He fought in Korea antI was honorably discharged in 1952. He then moveJ to Pasadena, California where in 1953 he met and married the love oi his life, Jane Pratt Stevens.
Lindsay pursueJ abusiness Jegreeand graduateJ from LtCLA in I960. He andlane lived in Southern CaliEornia For22 yearsraising their four children. By this time, Lindsay hadopened his first bookkeeping business, Lindsay Stevens ManagementServices.
He anJ ]ane wanteJ a quieter life so in October 1982 they moveJ the family ro Bend, Oregon where he opened a small business management company on 6th street in RedmonrI. Four years later, in I986, LinJsay beganworking as an Instructor/ Counselor with the Small Business Management Center at Central Oregon Community College. While there he served two years as the Presirlent of the Northwest Association of Small Business Management Instructors and authored a book titled "Choices and Changes, Chronicles of Growing Small Businesses in the Northwest."
Lindsay retired from Central Oregon Community College in 1996 antI promptly started his own consulting business, Cascade Management Consulting. Throughout his career in Central Oregon, Lindsay hasworke Jwith many Central Oregon business owners and is admired and respected by many for the contributions and impact that he hasmade to their businesses.
He never coultI completely give up working For anJ helping small business owners in Central Oregon, andcontinued until his Jeath. Lindsay received multiple awards for his leadership and commitment throughout the community and was Community Business Mentor of the Year in 2008.
Myrtice was a devout member of the First Presbyterian Church in Bend. She prided herself of havingher name on a brick when the Church was remodeled.
Lindsay believed in volunteering anJ giving back to his community. He volunteered For the Girl Scouts, anJ was a troop leader for aB three ofhis daughters; he worked many a long weekend in firework standsraising Funds for PeeWeeFootbaII and Little LeagueBasebalL For tenyears hehelpeJ Janeorganize acarnival to benefit the Carl Harvey School Forthe Disabled in California. Once in Bend, he volunteered For the RedCross, was recently asked to return to Opportunity Knocks as a facilitator, and was on the Board oi Directors for CORII Central Oregon Resource for Independent Living (now Abilitree) forZ5 yearswherehisJaughterLindaworks.
Myrtice was preceded in death by her husband; her parents; sister, Phyllis Nealy of Grants Pass, OR; and infant brother and sister.
Lindsay issurvivedby his four children: Jic Combs (Mike) of SparksNV; Debbie Martorsno anJ Linda Stevens of BenrI, OR; and David Stevens of Poulsbo, WA. He wasvery proud ofhis five grandchildren: Heather Combs (22); Anthony Martorano
She is survived by her brother, Wendall (jessie) Jones, Damascus, OR; 2 sisters, Dena (Al) Goupil of Nampa, ID, and Doris Bickel of Athens, GA; 2 sons, Fritz L. (Marilyn) of Fort Rock, Monte C. of Bend; and daughter, Elaine L. Clark (Thomas) of Wenatchee, WA; five grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews.
II9); Corey Martorano (17); Asher Stevens(6); and Brehlie Stevens(5); anJ numerous niecesand nephews. He is preceded in death by his beloved wiFe,Jane Pran Stevens.
Committal service will be held April 20, 2013, I:00 PM, in Greenwood Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, pleasemakedonations to United Cerebral Palsy, 305 NE 102nd Ave„Suke 100, Portland, OR 97220, www.ucporwa.org;orLeukemia h LymphomaSociety 13I I MamaroneckAve., Suite 3I0, White Plains, NY 10608, www.IIs.org.
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Donations can be made in Myrtice's name to High Desert Museum, Bend Parks R R ec. or a charity of yourchoice. Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com
A Celebration of Life will be helJ at First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE 9th, Bend on Saturday April 13, 2013, at I 00 pm. A reception will follow at the home otDebbie Martorano at 6I258 Kwinnum Dr., BenrI, OR 97702.
SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
OREGON NEWS
Gift card
e isa urecou a ermasco an The Associated Press SALEM — The state Board of Education's decision to ban Native A m erican m a scots is less than a year old, but attempts are already being made to weaken it. The board last May gave O regon schools until J u l y 2017 to comply or risk losing state funding. The rule, one of the nation's strongest, requires 15 high schools, mostly in small towns, to erase Native American logos from uniforms, sports fields, trophy casesand other items. Schools identified as t he Braves, Indians and Chieftains also must adopt new nicknames. Schools called
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lic opinion was more evenly s plit. Legislators have r e sponded with a trio of bills. Senate Bill 215 and House Bill 3397 would let schools keep their mascots if they get permission from a n e a rby tribe. Senate Bill 501, meanw hile, w o ul d p r event t h e education board from withholding money because of the mascot issue. — Art McConville, of Pendleton, At a p u blic hearing this Umatilla tribe member week, supporters of SB 215 said giving Oregon tribes a say in whether schools keep the Warriors are allowed to their mascots is a reasonable retain their nickname if they compromise. alter their mascot. Reyn Leno, tribal council Though the board's vote chairman for the Confederwas nearly unanimous, pub- ated Tribes of Grand Ronde,
"When we have these names out there, they become common and people take it for granted that it's OK with everybody. It's not OK with everybody."
said he is m ore concerned about how tribal history is being taught in schools than in the mascot debate. "High schools do not adopt derogatory figures and slogans; they adopt admirable and inspirational figures," he said. Others testified that while leaders ofsome of Oregon's largest tribes may not object to the mascots, the Native A merican population as a whole is deeply divided on the issue. "When we h av e t h e se names out there, they become common and people take it for granted that it's OK with everybody. It's not OK with
everybody," said Art McConville, a Pendleton resident and member of the Umatilla tribe. Sen. Mark H ass, D-Beaverton, who chairs the Senate Education and Workforce Development Com m i t tee, said the differing opinions among N a tive A m e r icans leave many Oregonians feeling "a little bit f l ummoxed about what the right thing (to
do) is." Afterthe hearing, Hass said he's unsure if the bills will advance out of his committee. "It's difficult," he told The Register-Guard. "I think we'll let the issue breathe for a couple of weeks."
Heat ins ector aseeon Name of new bar offensive to some ermistonmo ieven ors The Associated Press
By Natalie Wheeler
fail grade. Failure means a visEast Oregonian it from Ney within two weeks. HERMISTON — Umatilla Failure again means the venCounty health inspector Me- dor isout ofbusiness. lissa Ney walks around the If all is running smoothly, small space inside Sharon's Ney makes two unannounced Dutch Oven, a mobile food visits to the 44 mobile vendors vendor open Fridays and Sat- in Umatilla and Morrow counurdays in H e r miston's Ace ties each year, more if there Hardware parking lot. are complaints, re-inspections "Half of it is checking that or a c hange in o w nership. everything is in order, but half Some seasonal vendors, such of it is a conversation," Ney as those at the county fair, are said. "I can't be there when visited once a year. they close up at 10 o'clock at But that's not nearly all. Ney night, so we talk through their does inspections for every process." public entity — hotels, pools, Mobile vendors have been restaurants and more. Her list given the spotlight in Hermis- of places to get to each year ton of late, as the city searches tops 400. out reasonable restrictions for The department of public the vendors. health is also on the lookout T he county a l ready h a s for a part-time health inspechealth codes that mobile ven- tor to ease the load on Ney. dors are supposed to comply Public health administrator with. The mobile vendors in Genni Lehnert-Beers said that Umatilla and Morrow coun- addition is all the budget can ties are subject to the same handle right now. food sanitation rules dictated Nookie's Restaurant owner by the Oregon Health Author- Mitch Myers has been followity as restaurants. ing the practices of mobile However, u n lik e r e stau- vendors for eight years. rants, which are given a 0-100 Myers said the public health score available on the Uma- department would be overburtilla County P ublic H ealth dened even with the part-time Department's website, mobile inspector, and it's letting movendors are given a pass or bile vendor health regulations
take the hit. He said in addition to not paying taxes, the majority of the vendors have multiple offenses, from cooking raw meat in their vehicles, to leaving meat in p ortable coolers, to setting propane tanks on the ground. " The reality of i t i s t h ey leave them alone and they screw with us," Myers said of the mobilevendors compared to the brick-and-mortar businesses in the area. "We don't need more new laws, we don't any new committees or any other subcommittees. We just need to enforce the laws we already have." Ney shakes her head. She said even with her busy days, she gives full inspections to all her vendors on schedule. She admits, though, that violations can slip by in between her unannounced visits. "I get a snapshot of what happens," Ney said. "What people tell me is what I know." According to Lehnert-Beers, the goal is to work with the vendorstomeet health codes. "We try really hard with any of our establishments that if they're not at a level that is up to par, we try to get them there," she said.
M t. ANGEL — A ci t y known for its annual Oktobetfest is not happy with the name ofitsnewestbar — The Drunken German. In a letter to the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, Mt. Angel Mayor Andrew Otte says the name is offensive to some and reflects poorly on the city's Bavarian heritage. Bar owner David Borchers told the Salem States-
man Journal he picked the name because it reflects his personality, and the name e licited laughter when h e suggested it. He says he's as German as it gets, and doesn't consider the name an insult. B ut C o u ncilman P e t e Wall says the Chamber of Commerce and others have worked hard to make Oktoberfest a family festival, and the name does not send a
good message.
Medford looking at property for Roguecollege parking The Associated Press MEDFORD — The Medford Urban Renewal Agency board is negotiating to buy a 1.3-acre property that would be converted into a parking lot for Rogue Community College students. Councilman J o h n Mi chaels attends the community college. He told the Mail Tribune newspaper that the lack of parking is a hot is-
sue on campus, and a new lot would be welcomed by students. Deputy City Manager Bill Hoke says the precise number of spaces that could fit on the property has yet to be determined, but it might be 100. The Jackson County Assessor calculates the r eal market value of the property at $873,500.
Continued from 01 S ayeg says that to b e safe, anyone who receives a 1099 should report the amount, however small, on their i n c ome t a xes. That means that a sweet deal — $50 free when you open a checking account, for example — could end up costing you later. "But at the end of the d ay, the change i n t a x would probably be so small that the IRS wouldn't even bother," Sayeg adds. As for Taylor, she says she's confident this mistake will be sorted out in her favor. Of course, she and her husband, Thomp-
son, spent days making frantic phone calls, writing letters and meeting with the Oregon Employment Department to make sure her benefits were reinstated and the fraud investigation dropped. Nobody wants rampant abuse of u n employment insurance, s o pe r h aps this case could be seen as reassuring in t h eory. In reality, it's sobering to think of what it's costing taxpayers. As Thompson, put it: "To be investigated for fraud because ofa $20 gift card is insane." — Lily Raff McCaulou is a columnist for The Bulletin. 541-617-7836, lraff~bendbulletin.com
You'reinvited tojoin us at a Novartis MS Education Link Event Hear Sydney Piel'Cey MD
share information about
multiplesclerosis(MS), learn about a prescription treatment option, and connect with people in your community living with MS. 4/11/1 3 at6:45PM The Oxford Hotel
Yesterday
10 Northwest Minnesota Avenue
growing navy, all ready for "rapid and implacable war". He predicted an i ncrease in the p opulation of s o me 7,000,000 in the next 10 years and assured the people, "We are ready. We may sleep with peaceful dreams." " The b est d e fense," h e declared, " is to b e o n t h e offensive."
ers in the eight years was over their town a going-over this joined in the spirit by donata million dollars. Friday and Saturday as part ing trash bags and coupons Bend, OR 97701 Continued from 01 Logs and lumber used in of the Great Oregon Spring at local fast-food restaurants Nearly 200 youngsters took the stockade were provided Clean-Up. and the use of a truck and a Tell or bnng afnend! part in the operetta, acclaimed by Brooks-Scanlon Inc. The People of all ages will gath- 30-foot trailer. one ofthe best presented here Forest Service and Deschutes er trash bags in hand, to rid Accessible to people in many seasons. Assisting County assisted in building the landscape of ugly litter. "We're really excited about with disabilities. in the production were the roads into the location. Weekly Arts & Kenwood chorus and the KenA Bend wood dealer, Lyle this y ear's c l eanup," said Entertainment Light meal served. wood melody band. Villagers, Sabin, has the contract to re- Dawn Palmer, cleanup coorMAGAZBIE pirates, village dancers and move the fort and clean up the dinator. "We have between Parking will even the "beans" appeared area. 350 and 400 people signed up in f ul l c o s tume, p erformLast summer, a fire starting so far. be validated. 50 YEARS AGO ing against specially made at an angler's camp swept up Palmer said that in addi541-548-2066 backgrounds. For the week ending from a bend in the Deschutes tion to 50 teams of four to five Space is limited. Lester Miller had the role of March 30, 1963 and virtually enveloped the people and several school Adjustable Jack, and Mary Fairchild was stockade. teams and Boy Scouts, Girl Please RSVP Bedscast ashis mother. The ogre Fort Benham finally That f i r e , wh i c h was Scouts, Brownies and senby calling was portrayed by Jack Duff. surrenders — to time stopped just short of the stock- ior citizen groups, the Bend 1-866-682-7491 Appearing as Gypsy Ann, Fort Benham on the Des- ade, blackened adjacent hills, M etro Recreation District is I Thelma Wick was presented chutes, under s iege m a ny virtually ruining the site for sending out crews to clean (t) NOVART15 in a dance number that won a times in the movies is finally movie making at least for a up the parks. MN'TRESS fine round of applause. surrendering — to time. number of years. The Bend cleanup began in Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation G allery- B e n d Diminutive Philip M oore, It is to be demolished. Through the y ears, Fort 1983 when Harry Lonsdale, East Hanover, New Jersey 07936-1080 ©2013 Novan>s 1/13 T x M G-1234308 with a d agger between his The replica of a f r o ntier Benham has been visited by president of Bend Research 541-330-5084 teeth, had the role of Captain stockade is to be razed bemany tourists, attracted by na- Inc., and his employees rolled Kidd and carried out his part cause its toppling timbers con- tional publicity in connection up theirsleeves and cleaned like a veteran trouper. stitute a hazard to visitors. with the production of the var- up the area around the comThe young actors and acThe movie fort was conious movies at the stockade. pany. Lonsdale then became tresses from Kenwood mod- structed in 1955 by Byrna ProFort Benham got its name the sponsor and founder of ernized the old fairy story in ductions, Inc., of Hollywood, from nearby Benham Falls. the local effort. a number of places. The oper- Calif., and the Bend Chamber The falls were named for Since then, the number of etta opened on an English vil- of Commerce. It was erected J.R. Benham, who homestead- volunteers and the amount lage green,then inthe second on U.S. Forest Service land ed in the area in 1885. of debris removed has grown Plans aslow as $24.99/mo. act theplayers were shown at under a special use permit. considerably. As a cost-saving alternative to dental insurance, our "Cleanup participants will a village fair. The chamber has been un25 YEARS AGO membership plans include periodic cleanings, regular It was in the final act that der U.S. Forest Service presbe given a special waiver to the magic beanstalk suddenly sureforsome time todo someFor the week ending use the dump free of charge," and emergency exams, X-rays. 15% discount on all grew skyward. Jack c a me thing about the stockade, beMarch 30, 1988 Palmer said. other services. All with the latest technology. down the beanstalk with a cause of the increasing hazard She also said people are beBend to get 'scrub down' real chicken, which obligingly from rotting timbers. ing urged to spruce up their produced two golden eggs. Fort Benham was first used, B end residents will t u r n yards. Newest technology. Superior quality M embers o f Ken w o o d in 1955, in filming parts of out in the hundreds to give Local businesses also have Omnicam eliminates impressions. school a ssisted w i t h t he "The Indian Fighter", in which production. Kirk Douglas, a major stockBatteries ~ Crystal ~ Bands holder in Byrna Productions, Mussolini boasts of Italy's was the star. Working with arms in defiant challenge to Douglas was Elsa Martinelli Treating People Not just Teeth Europe and Lon Chaney, Jr. Premier Benito Mussolini T he stockade wa s a l s o warned the world today that used by Disney Productions Italy is ready for war by land, in filming "Tonka," in which sea and air. Sal Mineo was one of the top In a defiant challenge to a actors. Parts of "Oregon Pasrestless Europe, he told the sage" were also filmed at the senate and the Italian people Deschutes Fort, which also that 9,000,000 Italians can be was used by Richard Boone thrown into the army if war for some of the Palladin series. 503-887-4241 comes; that Italy has the most Estimated cost of the stockade 230 SE 3Third steet • Suite 100• Bend 541-504-5707 p owerful s u b marine f l e et was $30,000. DanielMitchell, Owner in the world; one of the best Estimated dollars left in the Stem & Crowns ~ Movements aviation forces and a steadily community by movie produc-
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.
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O 'ALA S K A
CONDITIONS
FRONTS Cold
ge Partly cloudy with a slight chance of showers
cloudy.
Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers.
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
63 36
67 35
64 37
60 35
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrise today...... 648 a.m. MOOn phaSeS Sunsettoday...... 7 32 P.m.
I.ast
hl ew Fi rst Full
Sunset tomorrow... 7:33 p.m. Moonrise today........none Moonsettoday 932am April2 Aprillo Aprll18 Apnl 25
PLANET WATCH
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:57 a.m...... 5:03 p.m. Venus......6:56 a.m...... 7:35 p.m. Mars.......6:58 a.m...... 7:49 p.m. Jupiter......932 a.m.....12 43 a.m. Satum......9:42 p.m...... 8:13 a.m. Uranus.....6:44 a.m...... 7:10 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 68/32 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high........77 m 2004 Month to date..........0.47" Recordlow.......... 8in1936 Average monthtodate... 0.71" Average high.............. 54 Year to date............ 2.27" Average low .............. 29 Average year to date..... 3.33" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.09 Record 24 hours ...0.91 in1983 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
OREGON CITIES Yesterday Sunday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
S K IREPORT
M onday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
for solar at noon.
Astoria ........70/41/0.00....65/47/pc.....55/46/pc Baker City......66/24/0.00....70/38/pc.....68/37/pc Brookings......66/52/0.00....57/47/sh.....60/45/pc llurns..........69/26/0.00....64/33/sh.....63/31/pc Eugene........72/39/0.00....64/46/sh......64/43/c Klamath Falls .. 73/32/000 ...57/35/sh.....58/34/sh Lakeview.......72/34/0.00 ...55/37/sh.....55/33/sh La Pine.........71l27/NA....66/35/sh.....62/30/pc Medford.......80/42/0.00....59/46/sh.....66/44/pc Newport.......72/43/0.00.....60/45/c......56/43/c North Bend......70/43/NA....57/47/sh.....58/44/pc Ontario........72/36/0.00....73/44/pc.....73/44/pc Pendleton......70/38/0.00.....72/45/s......73/43/s Portland .......77/43/0.00....71/49/pc.....65/46/pc Prinevige.......69/34/0.00....72/39/sh.....68/35/pc Redmond.......71/30/0.00....67/38/pc.....69/34/pc Roseburg.......77/45/0.00....62/48/sh.....66/47/pc Salem ....... 75/41/0 00 .68/45/pc ...65/43/pc Sisters.........71/32/0.00....68/33/sh.....65/33/pc The Dages......75/39/0 00.....72/46/s......72/44/s
Snow accumulation in inches
LOW MEDIU 0
2
5
4
Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 65 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 74 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .67-113 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . .108-135 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . 108 Mt. HoodSkiBowl...........0.0......58-67 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . 154
H I GH 6
8
10
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing cpnditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires.
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .32-85
Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires
Aspen, Colorado..... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . .42-48 Mammoth Mtn., California..... 0.0... . .72-1 75 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .54-67 Squaw Valley, California..... . .0.0.. . . . . .8-92
Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
extremes
ge
Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-56 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .57 70 Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . . 1 .. . . . . . . 48 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to thelatest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,cclouds, h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn-snow,i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-iog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
Medford • 24o Baker City
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Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
x Christmas Valley
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89/36
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CENTRAL Showers in the south, with bright sun in the north.
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• 87/44 Condon ee/43
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71/44 D a ges 71/48 Arlington zz/48 73/47 • oWasco Sndy a h e ir / 4
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UmatiHa
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BEND ALMANAC
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W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......88/56/0 00...78/58/t. 80/42/pc Grandiapids....56/24/0.00..47/27/sh. 38/25/sn RapidCity.......59/37/002...44/20/c. 37/21/pc Savannah.......77/47/0.00... 76/57/t...75/58/1 Akron ..........54/29/000..54/31/sh..40/25/rs GreenBay.......44/29/0.03...44/21/c. 32/19/pc Reno...........73/39/0.00..59/39/sh. 62/39/sh Seattle..........68/42/0.00...70/48/s. 66/47/pc Albany..........55/27/000..53/39/sh. 51/31/sh Greensboro......65/40/0.00...66/50/t. 71/43/pc Richmond.......6403/0.00... 64/47/t. 71/39/pc SiouxFalls.......61/43/0 00.. 42/18/rs. 32/I 6/pc Albuquerque.....72/43/000..76/47/pc. 71/43/pc Harnsburg.......58/28/000..55/40/sh. 55/32/pc Rochester, NY....53/28/0.00 .. 53/34/sh.37/26/pc Spokane........63/36/0.00... 66/39/s .. 68/41/s Anchorage ......41/28/0 00...40/25/c. 41/23/pc Hartford,CT.....58/34/0.00..58/41/pc. 56/27/sh Sacramento......74/50/000 ..68/51/sh.72/50/sh Springfield, MO ..65/50/0.15..66/37/pc ..39/25/rs Atlanta .........73/52/004...71/55/t...73/50/t Helena..........60/33/000..57/32/pc.59/34/pc St. Louis.........55/41/012..63/35/pc .. 41/26/c Tampa..........76/53/0.00 ..79/63/pc. 80/64/pc Atlantic City.....58/32/0 00..52/44/sh. 64/34/pc Honolulu........82/69/0 05..78/62/pc..77/64/s Salt Lake City....67/43/0 00 .. 70/47/pc. 59/39/sh Tucson..........85/60/0.00..84/56/pc.. 82/53/s Austin..........85/64/000...82/64/t. 84/54/pc Houston ........79/63/0 00...80/63/t.80/61/pc SanAntonio.....85/64/0.00... 83/66/t. 86/57/pc Tulsa ...........75/54/0.29..77/40/pc.. 43/32/c Baltimore .......60/34/001 ..57/43/sh. 63/37/pc Huntsville.......69/47/0.52... 69/53/t. 70/39/pc SanDiego.......68/59/000... 65/5ic. 63/57/pc Washington, DC..61/41/0.00..59/46/sh. 66/39/pc Billings.........61/41/000...50/23/c. 43/24/pc lndianapolis.....59/32/0 00... 56/33/c.. 39/25/c SanFrancisco... 64/52/trace..62/48/sh. 62/47/sh Wichita .........76/51/0.47..72/39/pc.41/27/sh Birmingham.....70/49/018... 72/54/1.73/47/pc Jackson, MS.... 73/51/0.00. 75/58/t. 76/46/pc SanJose........72/54/000..66/48/sh 67/47/sh Yakima .........72/35/0 00 7Il41/s..72/44/s Bismarck........54/26/000 ..30/13/pc. 31/12/pc Jacksonvile......77/41/000..81/57/pc...77/60/t SantaFe........72/35/000..62/42/pc.62/38/pc Yuma...........90/67/0.00 ..87/57/pc.. 85/59/s Boise...........68/40/000...72/42/s.70/41/pc Juneau..........40/34/031..45/33/pc.42/31/sh INTERNATIONAL Boston..........54/40/0.00 ..58/43/pc. 57/33/sh KansasCity......66/49/0.00 ..66/33/pc .. 39/24/c Bndgeport,CT....55/36/0.00..52/41/pc. 56/31/sh Lansing.........55/24/0.00 ..48/26/sh. 39/23/sn Amsterdam......41/28/000.. 40/25/c 43/28/s Mecca..........99/79/000 . 99/81/s. 102/81/s Buffalo.........49/29/000 ..54/33/sh. 36/27/pc LasVegas.......84/62/0 00..80/60/pc. 77/59/pc Athens..........68/48/0 00 .. 67/51/pc. 67/55/pc Mexico City .....82/50/000 81/54/pc 84/50/pc Burlington, VT....51/28/000 ..55/39/pc..50/22/rs Lexington.......61/29/0 00 ..61/38/pc...48/27/r Auckland........73/63/0.00 .. 75/59/sh.. 75/57/c Montreal........46/27/000.. 50/41/sh. 41/I9/sh Caribou,ME.....46/22/000...48/31/s..44/23/rs Lincoln..........68/50/0 88...60/27/c .. 40/23/c Baghdad........82/60/0.00 ..89/67/pc.. 92/72/s Moscow........34/12/0.02... 35/22/c. 34/33/sh Charleston, SC...75/51/000... 76/56/t...74/57/t Little Rock.......59/54/059 ..72/53/pc.. 63/38/c Bangkok........99/84/0.00 ..100/81/s. 101/82/s Nairobi.........77/61/0.00... 75/60/t...77/61/t Charlotte........65/45/032... 69/49/t.73/47/pc LosAngeles......64/55/0.00...63/53/c. 65/53/pc Beiyng..........52/34/0 00 .. 51/40/pc.. 55/44/s Nassau.........73/64/0.00 ..75/67/pc. 77/71/sh Chattanooga.....65/4$/0.18 ..70/50/pc. 71/42/pc Louisvile........62/34/0.00..63/40/pc.. 47/29/c Beirut..........75/59/000... 81/67/c.82/58/pc New Delhi.......84/61/000...93/70/s .. 96/70/s Cheyenne.......49/30/005...59/28/s. 33/26/sn Madison Vvl.....52/34/000...46/22/c. 35/21/pc Berlin...........36/30/0 00... 35/28/c.. 34/21/c Osaka..........63/45/0.00 58/52/pc. .. 63/43/sh Chicago.........59/28/000...53/30/c. 39/26/pc Memphis....... 59/52/0.41 . 72/50/pc.. 63/37/c Bogota.........68/52/0.00... 70/48/t...66/48/t Oslo............37/16/0.00 37/26/pc. .. 32/21/pc Cincinnati.......61/29/000...59/37/c. 43/24/pc Miami..........76/59/0.00 ..81/68/pc. 83/69/pc Budapest........45/32/0.00... 59/32/r ..37/33/c Ottawa.........46/27/0.0050/32/sh...32/1 .. 4/r Cleveland.......56/26/000 ..52/33/sh. 38/27/pc Milwaukee......57/28/0.00...47/27/c. 35/24/pc Buenos Aires.....82/63/0.00... 77/63/t...73/65/t Paris............43/32/0.00...45/27lc.48/28/pc ColoradoSpnngs.68/37/000..63/35/pc. 42/29/pc Mrnneapolrs.....56/40/0.19 ..38/21/pc. 31/19/pc CaboSanLucas ..91/72/000... 95/72/c.93/68/pc Rio de Janeiro....84/70/000... 80/70/t. 81/71/pc Columbia,MO...51/45/029 ..63/34/pc..39/24/rs Nashville........60/46/004 ..67/44/pc .. 60/36/c Cairo...........82/59/0.00..95/67/pc.. 87/59/s Rome...........61/55/0.00..59/51/sh. 58/51/sh Columbia,SC....73/53/0.00... 71/54/t...74/52/t New Orleans.....76/55/0.00... 77/62/t...77/62/t Calgary.........50/32/0 00 .. 47/28/pc.. 46/41/s Santiago........72/50/0.00..74/55/pc.. 72/60/s Columbus, GA...76/54/000... 76/59/t...76/52/t New York.......59/40/0 00..56/43/sh. 59/33/sh Cancun.........81/63/0 00 .. 85/73/pc. 83/75/sh SaoPaulo.......79/63/0.00...76/62/t...77/65/1 Columbus OH....57/29/000 ..56/35/sh. 42/25/sn Newark Nl......61/38/0 00..56/43/sh. 60/33/pc Dublin..........41/34/0 00.. 40/33/pc. 44/33/pc Sapporo ........36/34/0.00..37/23/pc.39/23/pc Concord,NH.....55/29/000 ..56/38/pc. 56/26/sh Norfolk VA......61/36/0 00..67/52/sh. 70/44/pc Edinburgh.......41/25/0 00.. 38/26/pc. 41/30/pc Seoul...........50/32/0.00..57/41/pc. 49/47/pc Corpus Christi....87/66/0.00... 77/66/t. 76/70/pc Oklahoma City...81/53/0.00 ..72/43/pc...46/34/t Geneva.........4807/0.49 .. 41/28/rs. 44/34/pc Shanghai........64/46/0.00..57/48/pc. 58/42/pc DallasFtWonh...77/53/096...75/57/t. 76/44/pc Omaha.........68/48/016...56/25/c .. 39/23/c Harare..........81/55/0.11... 77/54/t...77/56/t Singapore.......91/79/0.00..90/80/pc.89/79/pc Dayton .........57/29/000...56/34/c.41/24/sn Orlando.........80/46/0.00..83/62/pc. 84/62/pc Hong Kong......72/66/2.23..79/71/sh. 78/72/sh Stockholm.......37/23/0.00..37/22/pc.. 33/23/s Denver..........66/36/0.00 ..68/35/pc. 41/28/pc PalmSprings.....91/69/0.00. 83/55/pc 81/57/pc Istanbul.........66/45/002 ..71/58/pc.64/52/sh Sydney..........77/59/0.00...77/64/c. 77/61/sh DesMoines......61/47/013... 56/26/c. 37/22/pc Peoria..........57/33/000... 56/29/c. 40/23/pc lerusalem.......75/59/000 ..85/66/pc.78/54/pc Taipei...........72/61/000..69/65/sh. 72/64/sh Detroit..........57/32/000..50/30/sh. 39/26/pc Philadelphia.....59/35/000.. 56/44/sh. 62/36/sh Johannesburg....84/71/0.00..71/53/pc.71/58/pc TelAviv.........81/52/0.00..91/67/pc. 84/57/pc Duluth..........53/37/043...33/14/c. 27/10/pc Phoenix.........87/67/0.00..88/61/pc.. 83/58/s Lima ...........75/66/0.00..76/69/pc.76/69/pc Tokyo...........54/46/0.00..63/48/sh.56/48/sh El Paso..........83/51/000...83/54/s .. 84/55/s Pittsburgh.......55/26/0 00 .. 54/34/sh. 38/25/pc Lisbon..........64/55/0 0065/53/sh 60/51lsh Toronto.........52/28/0 00 50/27/sh..34/23/si Fairbanks.........32/0/000 .. 40/13/si.. 36/14/c Portland,ME.....56/32/0.00..50/38/pc. 56/28/sh London .........41/32/000..45/31/pc.. 43/28/c Vancouver.......57/41/0.00...69/43/s. 65/48/pc Fargo...........40/29/000...22/7/pc.. 25/5/pc Providence......59/41/000..55/43/pc. 57/34/sh Madrid .........63/52/0.04... 53/46/r. 59/38/sh Vienna..........41/34/0.00.. 39/29/rs. 35/25/pc Flagstaff........60/31/000 ..61/29/pc.56/28/pc Raleigh.........66/38/000... 6751/t. 70/45/pc Manila..........91/81/000..91/77/pc. 93/76/pc Warsaw.........36/25/0.02..36/31/sn..33/22/si
SPRING COLORS INWASHINGTON
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Leilani Quintanilla, 15 months, from Bremerton, Wash., picks up a plastic Easter egg at the Eagles egg hunt Saturday at Forest Rldge Park In Bremerton. The American Legion 149 and Bremerton Eagles 192 annual hunt had 6,000 candyfilled eggs, and a few special ones filled with coins.
Too lifany Unique Items tolist!
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50%OFF RETAILPMORE GO TO FACEBOOK FOR OFFERS EPCOUPOHS 61383$.Hey97$uiteA (betf/Jyeenl4'endy'S & CaSCadeGarden Center) HOllR$2 Tuesday- saturday 10 to 6 0 58-106- 0 7 7 9
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U.S. BANK POLE PEDAL PADDLE THEGUIDETOTHELARGEST SINGLE SPORTINGEVENTIN CENTRAL OREGON. The Pole Pedal Paddle is a tradition in Bend that serves as a fundraiser for Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEFj. MBSEF is the leading nonprofit sports training organization dedicated to promoting positive core values to the Central Oregon youth community. The guide includes the schedule of events, descriptions of the race legs, course maps, and highlights of this signature event.
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CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC THEGUIDETOTHESTAGESAND COURSESOFTHELONGEST STANDINGCYCLINGSTAGERACEIN AMERICA. The Cascade Cycling Classic is a six-day event with a long list of American cycling stars among its past winners. Staged in Bend,The Cascade Cycling Classic serves as a fundraiser for the Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEFj. This guide provides information on race stages and locations.
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© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
Smart
cars go mobile
Andrew Quilty New YorkTimes News Service
Sara Horowitz, executive director of the Freelancers Union, at its headquarters in Brooklyn, N.Y. "We want people to have meaningful independence," she said of its more than200,000 members.
Going it a one, together • Freelancers union tackles concernsof independentworkers
• Vehicles get smarter with apps, wirelessoptions
• Small Business Development Centerat COCC,Partnership to End Poverty offers free, discountedclassesfor veteranswho want to start their own business By RachaelRees e The Bulletin
hen Frank Klejmont returned from serving in Vietnam, he wasn't greeted with open arms. "I remember walking across a college campus when I got back. I had a fatigue jacket on and I wanted to see about getting into school. I was limping because I had gotten blown up when I was over there and some girl said, 'Oh wow, are you a vet'? ... Did you get hurt in Vietnam?' ... She goes,r You deserved it.'" But today it's different.
By Steven Greenhouse New York Times News Service
Soon after landing a job at a New York law firm
nearly 20 years ago, Sara Horowitz was shocked to discover that it planned to treat her not as an employee but as an independent contractor. "I saw right away that something wasn't kosher," Horowitz recalls. Her status meant no health coverage, no pension plan, no paid vacation — nothing but a paycheck. She realized that she was part of a trend in which U.S. employers relied increasingly on independent contractors, temporary workers, contract employees andfreelancers to cut costs. Somewhat bewildered, somewhat angry, she and two other young lawyers who were also hired as independentcontractors jokingly formed what they called the "Transient Workers Union," with the facetious motto "The union makes us not so weak." Horowitz's grandfather was a vice president of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, and her father was a labor lawyer. So it was perhaps not surprisingthat she responded to her rising outrage by deciding to organize a union. What she organized, however, was a newfangled version. The Freelancers Union, with its oxymoronic name, is a motley collection of workers in the fast-evolv-
ingfreelance economywhether lawyers, software developers, graphic artists, accountants, consultants, nannies, writers, editors, website designers or sellers on Etsy. SeeUnion/E3
The attitude toward veterans is not like it was during the Vietnam War, Klejmont said. And the Veterans' Entrepreneur Program through Central Oregon Community College is one sign that people are recognizing the sacrificesveterans are making, he sald. The program, run under the auspices of the Small Business Development Center at COCC and funded through the Partnership to End Poverty, is offering free and discounted classes to veterans who want to start or are in the early stages of their business.
Klejmont said s om e r e t urning veterans have found the jobs they left are no longer available and are struggling to find employment. One remedy may be starting their own company. In 2012, the national unemployment ratefor veterans 20 and older was 7 percent and 9.2 percent within Oregon, according to th e O regon Employment Department. This compares to 7.5 percent nationally and 8.3 in Oregon for nonveterans. D arin Darl i n gton , emp l o y ment specialist for Central Oregon
Veterans Outreach, said the organization believes the percentage of unemployed veterans in Central Oregon is even higher, but said that local data hasn't been collected. Finding a job is challenging for both veterans and non veterans in the current economic climate, Darlington said. But it's especially difficult for those recentlydischarged veterans
who are bringing home baggage such as post traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury or p hysical disabilities. SeeVeterans /E2
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AndyTulhs/Tne Bulletin
Jose Balcazar and Maureen Quinn, of the Veterans' Entrepreneurship Program through the Small Business Development Center at Central Oregon Community College, meet with Owen Sutton, a Desert Storm veteran, to help him launch his business.
Additionalclasses Classes are underway for the second series of the
seven two-hour sessions in Bend, Madras, Prineville and
Veterans' Entrepreneurship
Redmond. The next is set for April 17 in Bend. It is free.
Program. One class, "How to Start a Business," will be taught in
"Launch YourBusiness," "Howto Develop aBusiness
Plan" and "Impacting Your Profit" are scheduled between May and June.Theyare avail-
starts in February, will have a re-
able at a discount for veterans.
register, call Central Oregon Community College at
Ayearlong small business management course,which
duced price for veterans, aswell. For more information or to 541-383-7290.
By Troy Wolverton San Jose Mercury News
Traditionally, consumers have largely selected cars onthe basis ofsize, color, power and price. But increasingly two new factors are influencing their choice: The kind of wireless connection it has and the kinds of mobile applications it runs. Noting the wide popularity of smartphones and the apps that run on them, carmakers are moving to make their vehicles more connected and smarter. Some drivers already are able to access a few of the apps they enjoy on their smartphones, such as Pandora or Yelp. Soon, automakers plan to tap cars' wireless connections, sensors and built-in computers to allow drivers to connect to an even wider variety of apps and to offer drivers and their passengers information such as precise, real-time traffic and weather alerts, along with improved safety features. "I call the car the ultimate mobile device," said Thilo Koslowski, vice president of the automotive practice at Gartner, a technologyresearch firm. "We're just at the beginning of seeing how that device platform will become important and significant in its own right." This year, about half of all cars sold in the United States will include support for apps, either running them directly on their entertainment consoles or by allowing consumers to use those consoles to interact with apps on their smartphones, according to Juniper Research. By 2017, Juniper, a wireless industry research firm, believes that nearly all cars sold will be "app connected" in one of these two ways. Smartphone toting consumers are already interacting with apps in their cars, using them to get directions, listen to music or send text messages. Carmakers and industry analysts increasingly assume that these consumers want to be able to more easily interact with those apps or similar ones while driving. SeeSmart cars/E2
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A sound attachment • Stapler loyalty continues into the digital age By Phyllis Korkki New York Times News Service
Do you have a stapler? If you do, maybe it's a little dusty in this age of PDFs. Or maybe it's been missing for a while,aftersomeone borrowed it and never brought it back. Or maybe you've affixed your name to your stapler with a piece of tape, so your co-workers know: You take this stapler, you die. Even as data moves to computers and the cloud, staplers continue to help people keep it together. On the computer, we can file copies in folders and send messages to mailboxes. We can cut, copy and paste text and files. But which computer activity is similar to stapling? Sure, there's the paper-clip icon that attaches documents to email. But noth-
ing, really, comes close to the satisfying ka-chunk of a stapler: It's a sound that means work is getting done. Paper receipts are supposed to be on their way out, but they continue to flutter their way through restaurants, storesand doctors'offices. Staplers are there, attaching the receipt to the business card, the return receipt to the original receipt, the merchant copy to the bill, the receipt to the takeout bag. If you have a stapler, the odds are fairly good that it was made by Swingline. Other companies, including StanleyBostitch along with OfficeMax and Staples, also make staplers, but Swingline, now owned by Acco Brands, has long been the market leader. SeeStapler/E5
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E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
Veterans
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 daysbeforepublication date to business@bendbulletin.com or click on"Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
TODAY FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507.
MONDAY AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church of God, 51491 Morson St., La Pine; 541-536-6237. BICYCLEPEDESTRIAN ADVISORY COMMITTEE:Free; 4-6 p.m.; Redmond City Hall, 716 S.W. Evergreen Ave.; 541-923-7710. FREETAXPREPARATIONSERVICES: United Waywill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who needassistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 4-7 p.m.; M .A.LynchElementary School, 1314 S.W.KalamaAve., Redmond; 54 l-389-6507.
TUESDAY CITYCOUNCIL MEETING OR WORK SESSION:Free; 6:45 a.m.; Redmond City Council chambers, 777 S.W. Deschutes Ave. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. MASTERGMAILTO MAXIMIZE PRODUCTIVITY:Online webinar; learn strategies and solutions to boost productivity and efficiency with not only Gmail, but also Google tasks, contacts and calendar; hosted by SIMPLIFY; registration required; $45; 10-11 a.m.; CampSherman; 503260-8714 or info@simplifynw.com. KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: 10:30 a.m.-noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7080. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. NETWORK OFENTREPRENEURIAL WOMEN GATHERING: An evening of networking, with wine and appetizers; free; 5-7 p.m.; Rescue Consignment, 910 N.W. Harriman St., Bend; 541-233-6271, amanda. albrich©gmail.com or www. networkwomen.org. SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCORE business counselors will be available every Tuesday for free oneon-one small business counseling; no appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www. scorecentraloregon.org. KNOW EXCELFOR BEGINNERS: Learn basics of this spreadsheet program and create a simple address book; 6-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. PLANNINGCOMMISSION: Free;
6:30-9 p.m.; Redmond City Hall, 716 S.W. Evergreen Ave.; 541-923-7710.
WEDNESDAY FINANCIALSKILLS WORKSHOP: Learn about financial planning and money management, hosted by HomeSource of Neighborlmpact; registration required; free; 5:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-323-6567, homesource© neighborimpact.org or www. neighborimpact.org. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789. AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER PERMIT TRAINING:Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining.com. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507. COMPUTERS FORBEGINNERS: 10:30 a.m.-noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 54 I-536-05 l5. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 4-7 p.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary School, 1314 S.W. Kalama Ave., Redmond; 54 I-389-6507. IRRIGATEDPASTUREAND GRAZING MANAGEMENT: Aclass focusing on pasture production and grazing animals on an irrigated pasture to optimize production; free; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Irrigation District Office, 1055 S.W. Lake Court,Redmond;541-548-6047.
THURSDAY AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREETAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church of God, 51491 Morson St., La Pine; 541-536-6237. AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs Family Resource Center, 1144 Warm Springs St.;
541-553-1626. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: 2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.
FRIDAY AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs Family Resource Center,1144 Warm Springs St.; 541-553-1626. KNOW EXCELFOR BEGINNERS: Learn the basics of the Excel spreadsheet program; free; 10:30a.m.;Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. CENTRALOREGONREAL ESTATEINVESTMENTCLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile©windermere.com. KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: Demonstration on accessing, downloading and transferring library digital books to eReaders; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 54 I-312-1050. COROA ANNUAL MEETING: Guest speaker Representative Jason Conger; dinner and election of officers; registration required by April 1; $44 for members and $60 for nonmembers; 5:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-382-7727.
SATURDAY BOARD OFDIRECTORS BOOT CAMP:CAI-CORCseminar about board member duties; CAI-CORC provides educational opportunities throughout the year for Homeowner Associations volunteers and managers; registration required, includes breakfast and lunch; $40, $35 members; 8:15 a.m.3 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel,10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-3828436 or www.caioregon.org. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Prineville COIC Office, 2321 N.E. Third St.; 541-447-3260. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507.
Continued from E1 "Those issues don't necessarily make it harder for them to obtain a job, but they may make it more difficult for them to adapt and maintain that job," Darlington said. "That hypervigilance you have to have to survive the war zone doesn't translate well into the civilian world. You are always on alert all the time ... When you're home your thought is, 'I can just turn that off,' but it's much much easier said than done." Nick Lynch returned from Iraq in 2010 and just got a job with Home Depot last week. While educational and employment resourcesare available for veterans through the military, he said it can be difficult for them to take advantage of the tools they are given when they first get home. "When we return from a deployment we go to these classes and are given so much information. You get pamphlets and handouts," he said. "But nobody's frame of mind is really there when they return. They're still shrugging off last week's event. They aren't even p rocessing what's going t o happen a week from then." But as veterans readjust to civilian life, Lynch said they are often ready to participate in programs like the Veterans' Entrepreneur Program. He said he would consider go-
ing through the course in the future. Jose Balcazar, the veterans business advisor for the program, said he served in the army for seven years and understands the d i f ficulties post-service. "Being in the military myself, you get a lot of training, but it's really hard when you come back to translate that into a job," he said. "When you are used to everything one way ... it can be difficult to adapt to working with employees and employers. A lot of the time, it is just easier to start your own business." But, he said, veterans often need help getting started. " We help them w it h t h e transition and the r esearch and everything they need ... Help them get their business plan ready and fill out applications for financing," he said. "A lot of people have a good idea of a business they want to start, but not everybody has a financial picture of how the business is going to run." Maureen Quinn, business advisor for the Small Business Development Center at Central Oregon Community College, said the Veterans' Entrepreneur Program p r ovides veterans with short-term, handson entrepreneurial education and one-on-one mentoring for their specific company.. Quinn said she's been teaching the curriculum for two of
the five classes in the program — How to Start a Business and Launch Your Businessfor about eight years, but said this is the first time it's being taught with an emphasis on helping veterans. I n the first series of t h e program, about 15 veterans participated, according to the Small Business Development Center. The second series is underway with classes scheduled through August at branch COCC campuses. Owen Sutton, a De s ert Storm veteran, said the curriculum prepared him to create his online event listing company calledSeeingGuru. He plans to be up and running in two months. "There is a structure and a bit of a formula to it," Sutton said. "There are very concrete steps and focal points as part of the journeytowards launching your business." Klejmont, who s t arted a health coaching business, Living Healthy Now, six months ago, said the program helped him develop a business plan, as well as how to target his audience and make financial plans and spreadsheets. "Here's an opportunity for a veteran to take his skills and start a business that he may have been dreaming about while o v erseas," K l ejmont sa>d. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulfetin.com
Smart cars
Calif., resident. Connected and smart cars Continued from E1 could offer automakers other And there are growing safe- benefits besides brand loyalty ty concerns about distracted and vehicle sales. Built-in wiredrivers focusing on their rela- less connections could allow tively tiny smartphone screens them to offer add-on services, instead of on the road ahead. such as real-time parking in"Car companies arerealiz- formation. An d a u tomakers ing that people are extremely could eventually harvest data wedded to their smartphones. collected from connected cars They don't want to put them to do things like keep track of down," said Tom M u tchler, mechanical problems or to sell senior automotive engineer at to data collectors. "Automakers see this opporConsumer Reports. "If a car company can providethe in- tunity for connected car techformation you want on your nology to net them some bendashboard screen, they're go- efits in many different ways," ing to make buyers happy." said Mark Boyadjis, a senior Consumers and car review- analyst in research firm IHS's ers are already judging cars automotive group."Automakers in part on their entertainment can learn a lot about consumers console systems and app op- and a lot about their vehicles." tions. Ford, for example, saw its ratings from J.D. Power and Consumer Reports fall in recent years thanks to numerous problems with its Sync system, which offers navigation, entertainment and, in some case, ac-
But automakers are still trying to figure out the best way to make cars smarter and more connected.In some cases,they are building wireless connections into their cars and offering apps that run directly on the vehicles' entertainment consoles. In other cases, they rely on the wireless connections and apps built into drivers' smartphones. Both approaches have their shortcomings. Because consumers replace cars far less frequently than phones, builtin systemscan quickly become obsolete. Meanwhile, systems that rely on drivers' phones can't connect to an Internet radio stationor emergency services if drivers forget to bring them or forget to charge them.
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cess to apps. In a statement, Ford said it has worked to address the problems through software updates, and despite them, some 74 percent of new Ford owners say they would recommend the Sync system to friends. Sync is "helping us attract new customers and sellcars and trucks," the company said in the statement. Mark Hull, a product manager at L inkedIn, said that the technology built into the entertainment console of his new Lexus RX 450h was a key consideration in his decision to purchasethe vehicle.The sportutility vehicle allows access to smartphone apps such as Pandora and Facebook; offers realtime sports, weather and traffic information, and includes a built-in navigation system. "I looked at o t h er cars, but I've always liked Lexus' technology better than other brands," said Hull, a San Jose,
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DEEDS Deschutes County Janand Barbara J. Caplenerto Wallace E. Smith Jr. andCarol A. Schatz, Glaze Meadow Homesite Section, Eleventh Addition, Lot 349, $235,000 AnthonyE.and Heather A. Doorn to David K. andWilda G.Waggoner, River Terrace, Lot 5, Block13, $286,075 DaleH. and Kathleen R. Martin to ThomasD.and DeniseA.Holznagel, Poplar Park, Lot 22, $305,000 NorthWestCrossing Condominium Development LLC toNancyT.Hodge, NorthWest Crossing Condominium, Lot 4, $166,000 PaulS. andVanessa L. Bakerto Tiffany S. Ward, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 3, Lot13, Block4, $440,000 JohnL. Ralston personal representative for the Estate of Marianne LynchRalston toJohn B. and Dorothy E.Gilbert, GlazeMeadow Homesite Lo ,ts26and105,$625,000 RobertTurner to Carolyn J. McKinney and Paul Holstege, RiverRimP.U.D., Phase 10, Lot 448, $365,900 ColumbiaState Bankto P. Kent Mortimore, Mill Quarter Arizona Phase, Lot 9, $405,875 COCC Foundation Property LLC to River Wild LLC,Deschutes, Lots1 and 2, Block 8, $524,635 HannahL. Micheletti trustee for
Virginia M. Neff Living Trust to Daniel J. and Wendy R.Evans, Skyline Subdivision, Lot 8, $240,000 MichaelM. and Robert C. Steiner to Michele McKayand BryantRobey, Partition Plat 2000-63, Parcel 1, $340,000 Parsons Construction Inc. to Eric J. and Dawn E.Bader,CranePrairie Estates, Lot 8, Block 1, $225,000 DennisMurphyto Samuel J., Kathryn I. and Jerem J.Anger, Views at Oaktree, Phase 2, Lot 21, $172,500 Michael0. and SarahP.Roberts to Julie Bennett, HaydenView, Phase3, Lot 124, $169,175 QuintinP.and Danna Kingto Jamie D. Conklin andSonia S.Thakur, River Canyon Estates, Lot 64, $379,000 MichaelM. and Elaine M. Barsotti to David W.andPeggyA. Lovegren, Ridge at Eagle Crest 54, Lot 60, $155,000 Kenand Elin Bullmann to Alan M. and Miranda A.Smoke,Timber Creek2, Phase 2, Lot 22, $185,000 Richard andStacyRunyanto Robert L. Farrell trustee for Robert L. Farrell Trust, Selken, Lot 6, Block 2,$240,000 RandallM. andLorna K. Bremtrustees for Brem FamilyTrust to Rebeccaand Matthew Trojan, MeadowVillage, Lot 8, Block 15, $258,865 RonnieR.and Sharron A. Louthan
trustees for Louthan Living Trust to Reid andJennifer Sanford and Terry J. PaulsenakaTerri D. FellePaulsen, Ridge atEagle Crest14, Lot 96, $192,500 RobertG.and Kristin M. Carrico to Darren C.and Julie A. Noteboom and Randall S. andKathryn R. Wolfe, River Village 3, Lot 21,Block 19, $550,000 Thomas E.and Jo E.Dehart to Roland L.White, Cascade View Estates, Phase 4,Lot164, $235,000 RexD.and DonnaM.Anderson trustees for RexAnderson Family Trust to Shirley A. Lindberg, Ridge at Eagle Crest, Phase 7,Lot 65, $165,000 EFKRProperties 3 LLCto Thu Doan, DeerPointe Village Phase3, Lot 3, $185,000 Gaetano J. andAbigail Jauregui to Deana D.andTimothy W. Tucker, Sun Meadow, Lot18, $235,000 JamesandJacey Talavsto Stewart S. and Cynthia D.Fields, River Canyon Estates No. 3,Lot 214, $299,900 ClydeandVeronica Hamstreet to Carla R.Clisetrustee for Carlas R. Clise Property Trust, Bridge Creek Village atBrokenTop,Lot 8, $362,000
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SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Union Continued from E1 Today, t h e Fr e e lancers Union is one of the nation's fastest-growing labor o r gan izations, with m o r e t h a n 200,000 members, more than half of t hem i n N e w Y o rk state. Horowitz, who has never lacked audacity, says she expects to expand the organization to I m i l lion members within three years. For some perspective, the United Automobile Workers union has 380,000 members. Of course, while hundreds of thousands of auto jobs have disappeared, the country is awash in freelancers and other independent workers. Studies by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Government Accountability Office show that there are more than 20 million of them.
Many companies, including The New York Times, employ these workers.
Power in numbers The F r eelancers U n i on, which is based in Brooklyn, doesn't bargain with employers, but it does address what is by far these workers' No. I concern, by providing them with affordable health insurance. Its h ealth i n surance company covers 23,000 workers in New York state and has $105 million in a n nual revenue. Impressed by that success, the Obama administration r ecently a w a rded Horowitz's group $340 million in low-interest loans to establish cooperatives in New York, New Jersey and Oregon that will provide health coverage tofreelancers and tens of thousands of other workers. Having health insurance makes it far easier to be a part of what Horowitz calls the "gigeconomy," but many freelancers would prefernot to participate in that economy at all. They would rather have
together to set up social-purpose institutions to serve their mutual needs. That, she says, would be far better than relying on corporations and private investors who might have different priorities, not to mention a desire for substantial profits. Horowitz has seen how the post-New Deal model of em-
E3
In this new mutualism, she sees another, largely unrecognized benefitfor freelancers,
those supposedly pajama-clad
workers who often spend their days toiling at home alone. fttfltl ~ "People feel mentally and physically better when they R1 feel connected to each other," she said. "What we're doing brings people together without ployers providing health in- them losing any individual assurance, pensions and other pects of themselves." At times,she has been acbenefits is breaking down. More and more workers, and cused of arrogance, and that not just f r e elancers, have perhaps stems from her often been left to fend for them- speaking with self-certainty. selves in dealing with sick"What I'm good at is intuness, accidents and old age. ition," she says. "I have a sense One result, she says, is that of what's going to work and many workers feel trapped, what's not going to work." hesitant to change jobs or In discussing her family's labor legacy, Horowitz noted start a business for fear of losing health i nsurance or that her daughter was born other benefits. on the birthday of Samuel Photos by Andrew Quilty/ New York Times News Service "We want people tohave Gompers — the father of the Freelance Union employees, from left: Gillian Sewake, Caitlin Pearce, Katy Reitz, Dan Lavoie and Amy meaningful i n dependence," modern U.S. labor movement. Chester, working on a spreadsheet at headquarters. The union and the insurance company together Horowitz s aid. "And t h at Horowitz sees him, too, as a employ a staff of 80 people. means freeing them of this in- role model. security to give them the abil"If G ompers w er e a l i ve ity to take risks because some- today," she said, "he'd be tryfeeling mellow from the week- body has your back. That's i ng to f igure out w hat t h e y' l er ow~ end'? Shouldn't the d octors what this is about. That's what next models are for today's have achecklistwhen they see the new mutualism is." workers." patients? Why can't freelancers who shun junk food and alcohol pay lower premiums'? COLDWELL BANKER Can the Freelancers Union
MORRIS REAL ESTATE
build affordable housing for
Stethoscopes hang on the wall in the staff room of the Freelancers Union's 6,000-square-foot health clinic in New York. The Freelancers Union, one of the nation's fastest-growing labor organizations, seeks to make health insurance and other benefits more affordable for independent workers. "It reminds me of the old
guilds" — the precursors of
m odern-day l a bo r un i o n s "that focused on workers' individual autonomy, trying to regular jobs, but companies build their own careers, with will often hire them only as the backing of a c o l lective independent cont r a ctors. organization to assist them," Companies find these work- said JaniceFine, a professor ers less painful to dismiss and of employment relations at generally less costly because Rutgers University. "Sara is they rarely receive severance terrific at adapting old ideas to pay or benefits such as health help today's workforce." insurance or paid vacations. "There are some freelancers Addressing health needs for whom this is great — they On a recent rainy mornlove the flexibility," Horowitz ing, a half-dozen members of said. "And there are some free- the Freelancers Union met in lancers for whom this is the a large yoga and meditation studio. The studio was inside a worst thing in the world." While being an independent 6,000-square-foot health clinic worker allows certain advan- in downtown Brooklyn that tages — you can go to yoga the union opened for its memclass or on v acation when- bers in November. It is in a ever you want — it also means century-old loft building, with bright lights and blond-wood e conomic vulnerability. A n internal Freelancers Union floors, its walls covered with survey found that 58 percent the FreelancersUnion's postof the group's members earn ers featuring its logo of buzzless than $50,000 a year from ing bees around a hive. freelancing and that 29 perThe freelancers were there cent earn less than $25,000. to talk with Horowitz about The survey also found that 12 how the clinic was doing and percent of members, many of how it c ould b e i m proved. them college graduates in their They seemed to like a lot: the 30s and 40s, received food on-site nutritionist and acustamps duringthe recession. puncturist; the fact that they "In today's economy, there's rarely had to wait more than a huge chunk of the middle 10 minutes to see a doctor; and class that's b eing p u shed that they could consult a docdown into the working class tor from home using Skype and working poor," Horowitz if necessary. They also liked said,"and freelancers are the that there were no co-pays. first group that's happening Using the clinic is free for to." Historically, through the those have signed up with the power of collective bargain- F reelancers I n surance C o . ing, labor unions helped re- premiums range from $225 verse that equation, enabling to $603 amonth — 40 percent many unskilled workers to less than i n d ividual p l ans earn middle-class incomes. availablein New York, accordBut as traditional labor unions ing to a comparison by the have steadily declined in size union. "It's nice to have one place and power, groups like the Freelancers Union, the New where I can focus on health York Taxi Workers Alliance care," Dani Simons, a commuand Domestic Workers United nications and strategic consulhave stepped up, trying to give tant, said at the meeting, "incollective voice and power to stead of having to go one place often-marginalizedworkers. to see this doctor and another Some u n io n ol d - timers place for that doctor." argue that th e F r eelancers The clinic has an unusual Union is more like an asso- team approach. There are two ciation than a union and will full-time doctors and eight not be able to achieve truly "health coaches," who serve as significant gains for workers. liaisons between patient and Its members don't pay union doctor. Horowitz says this fodues, which means that join- cus on primary care will save ing requires no sacrifice, and money over time. By tracking the FreelancersUnion doesn't members who have special negotiate contracts with em- diets or are taking medicaployers orrepresent freelanc- tions, for example, the health ers when they have grievanc- coaches can help patients stay es. (Under the National Labor healthy and avoid costly hosRelations Act, freelancers are pital stays for failing to follow considered independent con- a treatment plan. tractors, not employees, and "If we were a for-profit inemployers thus have no obli- surance company, we would gation to bargain with them, not be able t o p r ovide all even when they form a union.) these s e rvices," H o r owitz Horowitz, 50 and a Brook- says. "We're able to steer the lyn native, insists that h er profits back into serving the organization is indeed a la- freelancers." bor union because, like other About 2,200 of the insurunions, it is a large, influen- ance company's policyholdtial, self-supporting organiza- e rs have signed up for t h e tion of workers that pushes clinic, while the other 21,000, to advance their interests, al- much like members of other though its members work for insurance plans, see doctors numerous employers in many through a network, Empire industries. Blue Cross, with which the -
Freelancers Union contracts. When Horowitz started the union, her main concern was thehere-today, gone-tomorrow insecurity of f reelance jobs. But after listening to many freelancers, she changed her mind. "I saw that their overwhelming concern was the lack of health insurance, even though I hadn't seen that as a major issue," she said. To create the Freelancers Insurance Co., Horowitz needed to persuade investors to put up $17 million. The Rockefeller Foundation and others gave $7 million in grants, and other foundations joined in, agreeing to lend the rest at 3 percent interest. "She saw that labor unions basically haven't i n novated for severalgenerations, and in the meantime the world has changed and there were tremendous needs that weren't being met," says Bill Drayton, founder of Ashoka, a nonprofit foundation that invests in social entrepreneurs. The health insurance profits that don't go toward repaying lenders go into a reserve to strengthen the company's finances, although some profits will eventuallybe recycled into running the daily operations of the Freelancers Union and future projects, like a planned health clinic i n M a nhattan. The union gets $2 million a year from application and enrollment fees its members pay to get discounted life, dental and disability insurance that the union arranges through an outside insurer. T ogether, the u n ion a n d its health i n surance company have a staff of 80, and Horowitzreceives a salary of $272,000 for her dual role as head of the union and the insurance company. She notes proudly t ha t w h i l e h e alth i nsurance p r emiums r o s e by 5 percent, on average, for Americansthisyear,the Freelancers Insurance Co. is not raising premiums at all for its
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Rachel Lemas, Broker Coldwell Banker Morris Real Estate 541-383-4359 • 541-896-1263 Web: Rachel@Bendproperty.com
Cl
MORRIS REAL ESTATE
486 SW Bluff Dr,, Bend, OR97702 541-382-4123 www,bettdproperty,com
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ings when people are already
When not helping clients buy or sell homes, she can most often be found attending her children's sporting events. If there is any more free time, Rachel likes to run, play soccer, read, and spend time with her wonderful family. Rachel earned a business economics degree from the University of California at Santa Barbara (Go Gauchos!).
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'Meaningful independence'
for Horowitz. Why schedule yoga classes on Monday morn-
Rachel hasbeen working and playing in Central Oregon for 20 years. She is a dedicated real estate professional whom clients can trust and depend on. Rachel strives to provide her clients with the best customer service possible focusing on her accessibility, knowledge of the current market, integrity, and perseverance. Rachel has an extensive sales background. From opening up the first ever snowboard shop in Sunriver, to the sale of multiple retail stores in the years after, Rachel feels right at home with any size transaction. She is a problem solver who gets the job done, combining business experience, tenacity, and old fashioned hard work to keep things running smoothly.
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suggestions, large and small,
Rachel Lemas
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policyholders. While the union is praised for helping to deliver health and other benefits to its members, some employment experts question whether it can make real headway in raising incomes of independent workers. "All the self-help they do seems good and creative," said Gordon Lafer, a professor of labor relations at the University of Oregon. "The question is: Can they get any leverage to get a fair shake from employers, to get companies to give a fair share of their profits to freelancers? They may need to be more creative to do that." The freelancersassembled inthe yoga studio had plenty of
Welcomes
financially s q ueezed f r e elancers? Horowitz, her hands folded, listened. On the wall in front of H orowitz's desk is a dusty, decades-old photo of Sidney Hillman. The head of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America from 1914 to 1946, Hillman is the model for an idea Horowitz is talking about a lot these days, something she calls "the new mutualism." Hillman was an influential adviser to Franklin D. Roosevelt and spent much of his life translating his mutualist vision into reality. He built low-cost housing and a health clinic for garment workers as well as a union-owned bank and insurance company. "How did Sidney Hillman know to do housing and insurance?" asked Horowitz, who has a degree in labor relations from Cornell University. "He just listened to people and helped solve their problems." Horowitz's new mutualism is based on a simple premise: Freelancers should band
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U.S. BANK POLE PEDAL PADDLE THEGUIDETOTHELARGEST SINGLE SPORTINGEVENTIN CENTRAL OREGON. The Pole Pedal Paddle is a tradition in Bend that serves as a fundraiser for Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEF). MBSEF is the leading nonprofit sports training organization dedicated to promoting positive core values to the Central Oregon youth community. The guide includes the schedule of events, descriptions of the race legs, course maps, and highlights of this signature event.
CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC THEGUIDETOTHESTAGESAND COURSESOFTHELONGEST STANDING CYCLINGSTAGERACEIN AMERICA . The Cascade Cycling Classic is a six-day event with a long list of American cycling stars among its past winners. Staged in Bend, the Cascade Cycling Classic serves as a fundraiser for the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEF). This guide provides information on race stages and locations.
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Publishing Date: Wednesday, Saturday, July 13
SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Stapler
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Continued from E1 Acco, based in suburban Chicago, sounds like the perfect name for a faceless conglomeratefrom the era of"The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit." But it actually has a sterling office products pedigree — it is short for the American Clip Co., a manufacturer of paper clips founded by Fred. Kline of Queens at the turn of the 20th century. Queens was once the center of the paper-fastening universe. In 1925, it was where Jack Linsky founded the Parrot Speed Fastener Co., later renamed Swingline. For years, the vivid red sign of his Swingline factory wa s a b e acon to Queens residents as they drove across the Queensboro Bridge from Manhattan. Stapling devices have existed since at the least the French court of Louis XV. But before Linsky's time, staples generally had to b e l aboriously loaded, one by one, into the rear of the stapler. Linsky helped revolutionize stapling by creating an easy way to fill the devices under a horizontal cap. He found an adhesive that could attach staples in rows so that they stayed together in a metal magazine until they were pushed out and bent individually to grip their paper
quarry. S wingline p r o m ised t o make office work easy. In a newspaper ad from the 1940s, a young woman — presumably a secretary — loads a stapler and says: "Now we're in the groove, boss! That Swingline Stapler loads quicker, works slickerbecause of its open, trouble-free channel." But Linsky wasn't satisfied to serve only the office market, so he helped increase demand for staplers by emphasizing their handiness in other tasks, like tacking shelf paper, fastening paper around sandwiches andeven constructing party hats. ("Swingline does the darnedest things!" another ad boasted.) He also expanded the business by making specialized staplers for carpeting, roofing and auto upholstery. In 1970, Linsky sold Swingline to A m erican Brands, and in the next decade Swingline merged with Acco. Amid the manufacturing crisis of the 1990s, American Brands
O T E I T 'TISO POST
OFFICE MANAGERS KNOW,,
collectors edition 747 stapler. The company bills it "as the star of any office space." Staplers come in a range of colors, shapes and sizes and can vary in their staple capacity and in the number of sheets they can puncture. The ideal stapler is a perfect melding of heft and lightness that can accommodate either in-the-air or on-the-desk fastening. Staplers are still such a fact of everyday life that we've lost sight of what a triumph of manufacturing they are. They can bend metal — no batteries or electricity required. They are similar to guns in that they contain magazines meant to be filled with metal objects that you load and release. "The engineering of a stapler is not fully appreciated," said Mike Parrish, director of product development for Acco Brands. Under the cap of a stapler,a pusher connected to a springforces the row of staplesforward. A specialblade drives the first staple through a slot at the front of the magazine. A metal square with indentations at the edge of the open part of the base, called the anvil, helps bend the staple so it can grip the paper. The bottom of the completed staple is known as the clinch, and the top is the crown. Without just the right alignment in the stapler, and the p roper adhesive level a n d tensile strength in the row of staples, this delicate operation could go awry. You could end
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A1946 ad in The Saturday Evening Post offers another touch of Swingline's past. closed the Swingline factory in Queens and moved its manufacturing to Mexico; nearly 500 New York workers lost their jobs, and the Swingline sign came down. Now most staplers are made in Asia. Swingline m ad e L i n s ky very rich. He and his wife, Belle, were p h i lanthropists and art collectors who once owned one of the largest collections of Faberge eggs in America. Jack died in 1980, and in 1982 Belle donated a collection of the couple's European art, then worth $60 million, to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. S taplers generally d o n 't rise to the level of prized coll ectibles, which i s w h y a Swingline's role as an object of obsession was so funny in the 1999 cult comedy "Office
stapler, not only cherished but central to the plot of "Office Space," was a brilliant product placement move. In fact, Swingline had no hand in the storyline. It had long stopped making that type of red stapler, and a black Swingline was painted red by the filmmakers. At first, Swingline executives weren't sure they liked being associated with such a dark parody of corporate life. But in 2002, recognizing the value of its pop-culture star turn, it released its Rio Red I
A Swingline stapler is designed to be "a fusion of form and function," said Chris Cunningham, global design director for Acco. The design of a •
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In the film, a m u mbling, superwide-eyed cha r a cter named Milton becomes desperate after his red Swingline stapler is taken away during a frenzy of cost-cutting and downsizing at a soulless IT company. You might assume that this
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to be a fashion company before anything else," Nicolau said. The stylish staplers sold by Poppin look much different from the utilitarian ones Linsky once made but some things haven't changed. The staplers still have a magazine, a spring, a pusher and an anvil, and they still make a satisfying metallic sound when you press down on them, signaling that work has been done.
to sign up for a FREE care pacl(age. Care Packages sent monthly to our local, tri-county deployed service members or anyone with a Central Oregon connection.
maybe a bloody finger).
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blue (aqua and "pool") and lime green."We consider ourselves
Go to: www.carlngfortroops.com
or an incomplete clinch (and
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out there in the shape of a stiletto heel. Swingline has yet to produce a stiletto stapler, but it recently introduced a line of fashion staplers with bright colors and decorations. On the whole, though, staplers have been "drab and dreary," maintained Randy N i colau, the chief executive of Poppin, a new e-commerce company that aims to turn products like staplers, notebooks, pens, pen cups, trays and c alculators into jewelry for your desk. Poppin's open-plan office is bright with the colors of its coordinated products, including white, black, yellow, orange, red, pink, purple, two shades of
Send a Message of Support to Your Deployed Friend or Loved One
up with a jam (as with a gun),
Space."
FRIDAY CLOSE
traditional model is meant to look streamlined, he added, and so robust and durable that even if the whole building burned down, one senses that the stapler would still be there. Industrywide, sales of desktop and h and-held staplers (nonelectric) totaled $80.3 million in 2012, up 3 percent from the previous year, according to NPD, the market research firm. Salesof office products in general rose after a decline amid the recession. Time is a big threat to the stapler industry, and to office products in general. More people who grew up with staplers are going to retire and die. And the younger generation just isn't as attached to staplers, said Lora Morsovillo, president of office supplies for NPD. But there's hope, she said, if stapler makers look at their products as decorative objects. "The growth is coming from uniqueness and personalization," especially in home offices, she said. She puts staplers in thesame general category as tape dispensers, and, she noted,there's a tape dispenser
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Construction spending Feb. est. 1% Jan. -2.1% IC'FM manufaCturing indeX
March est. 54• Feb. 54.2
Factory orders Feb. est. 1.8% Jan. -1.5% ConAgra Foods earnings 3Q est. $0.56 • Year ago $0.51 ISM services index March est. 56 • Feb. 56 Consumer credit Feb. est. $16b Jan. $16.2b Nonfarm payrolls March est. 200k • Feb. 236k Trade deficit Feb. est. $45b Jan. $44.4b Unemployment rate March est. 7.7% • Feb. 7.7% ource: Fact et
W I LSHIRE 5000 16,598.26 ~
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s8 P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100
Hong Kong Hangseng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Nikkei 225
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA Buenos Aires Merval Mexico City Bolsa
sao paolo Bovespa Toronto s&p/Tsx
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-0.18% +4.45% +6.76% +2.1 7% -1.45%
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 20'I3
UNDAY DRIVER
Buick stakes claim in Munchkinland New tiremustmatch By Cheryl Jensen WARREN, N.H. Bu t c kt s image is so ingrained in the national consciousness that the name has become shorthand for a U.S. road barge with ample proportions. That moose, someone might say, "is as big as a Buick." But since Buick survived the brand massacre that accompanied General Motors' bankruptcy and
By Brad Bergholdt
a quarter-inch in c i r cumference, or 2/32-inch tread W hen a tire on m y wear. This is about three . 2009 Subaru Forester revolutions per mile. was ruined, I tried to get it Mixing tire models, even replaced under a h a z ard of the same brand and size, warranty. First the service- could result in a differing cirman told me I needed to re- cumference. TireRack.com place two tires because the lists, as available from manvehicle is all-wheel drive and ufacturers,revolutions per he couldn't replace just one. mile for many tire brands/ Then they told me they had models. Try comparing your to replace all four. I think existing tire model to the one it was because they didn't purchased. If the revolutions have the same type. What per mile is plus/minus 3, you is the harm in replacing one should be OK. I'm assuming tire that had less than 700 all existing tires had only miles? They didn't have the 700 miles wear, with practiexact same model of tire, but cally no loss of rubber. it was the same manufacIf specs are unavailable turer, size and speed rating. I for your tires, find a straight, didn't want to leave the store secluded roadway and mark with a $700 bill and three al- each properly inflated tire at most brand-new spare tires, the twelve o'clock position so I bought the one tire and with chalk or a piece of tape. mounted it on the rear pas- Drive 0.1 mile and recheck senger side. position, then 0 . 2 m i l es. • It's true your Forester's You'll quickly get some data • four tires need to be to project any differences in virtually identical in rolling revolutions per mile. It's a good idea for allcircumference to avoid excessively wearing or damag- w heel-drive vehicle o w n ing certain all-wheel-drive ers to include their full size components. spare with each tire rotation Tire size, tread wear and service so it r e mains the r olling d e f lection, w h i ch same size as its siblings. is affected by t r ead ty pe M aintaining proper t i r e and inflation pressure, de- inflation pressure is a l so termine how many revolu- important. — Bergholdt teaches automotive tions per mile each tire will make. Subaru recommends technology. Email questions to keeping all four tires within under-the-hood@earthlinh.net. McClatchy-Tribune News Service
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— living on even as Hum m e r , Pontiac and Saturn were laid to rest — the division and its products have slimmed down
III
and shaped up. And with its new Encore, Buick is bravely venturing into barely charted terrain at the small end of the utility market, where the mini-Buick, along with the BMW Xl and Mini Countryman, is b lazing an upscale trail that other brands will soon follow w ith t h eir own small-scale, yet upscale, crossovers. What's as small as this diminutive new Buick'? Among crossovers, not much. In overall length, the 2013 Encore is the shortest Buick since the Model 34 runabout of 1912; at 168.5 inches long, the Encore is about 10 inches shorter than a Honda CR-V and 8 inches less than a BMW Xl. Despite the Encore's diminutive size, Buick marketers envision a big opportunity in an emerging market category. They expect annual U.S. sales of s u bmidsize c r ossovers, including luxury models, to reach 360,000 by 2015. Fuel economy is a big part of the sales pitch. The frontdriveEncore has a federal rating of 25 mpg in the city and 33 on the highway. The allwheel-drive version is rated at 23 city and 30 highway. Still, several compact crossovers that are somewhat larger and heavier manage to get comparable fuel economy ratings. And somewhat surprisingly, the midsize Subaru Outback, a much larger and heavier car, has a similar mileage rating (24 city/30 highway/26 combined). Th e O u t back's price range is also similar. The Encore i s e njoyable enough to d r ive, especially given the challenges to ride comfort posed by a relatively short wheelbase and tall body. On smooth pavement, there is no issue, but on rough patches occupantsare sometimes subjected to a fair amount of up-
General Motors via The New York Times
The 2013 Buick Encore Is a dlmlnutlve crossover that offers big-car amenities, and It generally rldes comfortably for a vehicle with such tidy dimensions. But it seems incongruous, in what's supposed to be a premium product, to adjust the front seatbacks with a manual lever rather than a power control. Buick calls the Encore a five-passenger vehicle, b ut five people could ride comfortably only if those in the rear are tiny or the trip is short. Of course, the Encore is really intended for young couples and forempty-nesters,not for family use. There is 18.8 cubic feet of space behind the second row of seats, enough for weekly shopping trips or four medium suitcases. You can flip the
2013 Buick Encore
back seatbacks down to open up a cargo area of 48.4 cubic feet. Lowering the rear seats flat has u nintended consequences, however. The folded seatbacksforce the front seats so far forward that I had to sit uncomfortablynear the steering wheel — an d u n safely close to the air bag. The Encore is a bold move from a brand once known for cautious conservatism, and for now it has a niche mostly to itself. As the competition grows, the Buick's relatively high price and comparatively unimpressive mileage may work against it.
Base price:$24,950 As tested: $32,425 Type: Submidsize
A
crossover with front-wheeland all-wheel-drive options
Engine: 1.4-liter Ecotec four-cylinder rated at 138 horsepower and 148
pound-feet of torque. This turbocharged motor
is mated to a six-speed automatic transmission. Mileage: 23-25 mpg city,
30-33 mpg highway
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and-down jiggling. The electric power steering is something Buick can brag about; it is tight on center, linear and predictable in the turns. Like most electric steering systems, however, it doesn't convey much road feel to the driver. With its tidy dimensions, the Encore changes direction quickly and demonstrates Buick's newfound commitment to making cars that are satisfying — even if not downright sporty — to drive. The transmission is smart about choosing the correct gear. Climbing a steep twolane road between here and the Kinsman Notch, it selected one gear and held it. A tall sixth gear lets the Encore cruiseat 65 mph at a fairly relaxed engine speed of 2,300 rpm. The Encore continues to follow Buick's philosophy of no noise is good noise. It is surprisingly hushed inside the cozy wagon, helped in part by Buick's first application of active noise cancellation, which counters unwanted ambient sounds by producing "antinoise" sound waves. The Encore stuffs a lot into a very short, fairly tall package, and it borrows a few styling cues from the big LaCrosse sedan and Enclave SUV. Still, the proportions could be described as awkward. T he pint-size interior i s handsome and plush, at least in the leather-trimmed Premium version that I tested. Still, even with the driver and passenger sitting almost elbow to elbow, the cabin seems open and airy: Headroom is ample, the windows are deep and the windshield is raked forward. The front seats were comfortable for a three-hour stretch, even for a 6-foot-4 passenger.
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Redeeming Fuel Points at a Fred Meyer Fuel Center Shopping at Freddy's with your Rewards Card piles up your Fuel Points (more details inside). Once you earn 100 or more Fuel Points in a calendar month, you may redeem
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Plus, you'll receive an additional discount per gallon when you scan andpay with a Fred Meyer Rewards' Visa'.**
How long are your Fuel Points valid? Fuel Points earned in a calendar month rnust be redeemed by the end of the following month, and they cannot be combined with Fuel Points earned in another month.
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pel'
gallon when you redeem up to 1,000 Fuel Points'
At Fred Meyer Fuel Centers, you can use all your Fuel Points
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uI VO Ii O F F at participating Shell Stations, too!* Redeeming your Fuel Points at Shell
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you earn 100 or more Fuel Points in a calendar month, you may redeem them for 1 discounted fuel purchase at a participating Shell Station (limited to 1 vehicle and a
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INSIDE: BOOICSW Editorials, F2
Commentary, F3 O» www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
" ~IJ JOHN COSTA J •
Changes in The Bulletin he first thing I want readers to understand is that two very popular items in the Saturday newspaper will remain in the Satur-
T
day newspaper. I want to emphasize this point because we are about to make some changes in the Saturday and Monday editions of The Bulletin. The Sudoku puzzle in the Saturday TV book will move to the Saturday Classified section. The TV Crossword puzzle will remain in the TV book. Let me explain what we are up to. In December, we consolidated some sectionsand features of The Bulletin. Frankly, it was done to help the newspaper and its parent company weather the continuing stress of a weak economy. Bottom line: We took out roughly 10 percent of the 300 or so pages we were publishing each week in The Bulletin. The Bulletin remains a very substantial community newspaper, a realityrecognized by our readers. In fact, there were very few complaints about the changes, balanced by a substantial number of compliments for the reorganization and redesign that made the newspaper easier to read. But among the readers' complaints, two areas were most often cited. One was the elimination of some TV grids. The other was the reduction in the size of the Monday Bulletin from four sections to two. We understood completely the complaints. After all, we had built these sections and found it painful ourselves to reduce them. But in the consistent and unforgiving calculus of newspaper finance, there are two major controllable
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By Rebecca Skloot The New York Times
Scientists recently sequenced the genome of cells taken without consent from a woman named
costs — paper and people. What you don't reduce from one you will have to find in the other, and we wanted to keep our staff as strong as we could. Because of that, we shrank the TV book. Some of the content moved into the daily newspaper, but the weekday, daytime grids were substantially reduced. In trying, to the best of our current ability, to be responsive to our readers, we have come up with a plan to enhance those grids in the TV book. I quickly add that we do not today have the wherewithal to completely restore the grids. But they will be expanded and substantially improved very soon. That gets me back to Sudoku. In theargot ofnewspaper presentation, it is a space eater. Moving it to the Classified section each Saturday contributes to our ability to improve the grids in the TV book. Aside from the TV book, cutting two sections out of the Monday newspaper was the most radical step we took. Again, it is not something we wanted to do. We had to. However, what we have decided to do is add back more pages to that edition. As with TV grids, we do not have the wherewithal now to completely restore the Monday newspaper, but the planned additional pages represent anearly 20 percent increase in the bulk of the current edition. We are still working out the details, but the general plan includes creating an expanded Sports section, featuring Community Sports, Tee toGreen golfcoverage, state and national results. Monday is the perfect day for an expanded sports section, giving us the space to wrap up all the major weekend activities, as well as forecasting the week ahead. The hard news A-section, with local, state, national and international news, will also expand. We are hopeful that we will be able to provide this to you in the next couple of weeks, but whenever it begins, it represents our commitment to you. — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcostaC<bendbulletin.com
•
Henrietta Lacks. She was a black tobacco farmer and mother of five, and though she died in 1951, her cells, code-named HeLa, live on. They were used to help develop our most important vaccinesand cancer medications, in vitro fertilization, gene mapping,cloning.Now they may finally help create laws to protect her family's privacy — and yours. The family has been through a lot with HeLa: They didn't t
learn of the cells until 20 years
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after Lacks' death, when scientists began using her children in research without their knowledge. Later their medical records were released to the news
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consent. Because I wrote a book about Henrietta Lacks and her family, my inbox exploded when news of the genome broke. People wanted to know: Did scientists get the family's permission to publish her genetic information? The answer is no. See Lacks /F5
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s thousands of newly insured patients seek treatment under the Affordable Care Act, will they be able to find a doctor to see them? The problem will be particularly acute in states like Oregon with large, sparsely populated areas and uneven distribution of providers. At the same time, the cost of a medical education and the crushing debt of graduates limits the number of relatively low-paid primary care medical practitioners. Oregon Health & Science University is asking the Legislature to provide nearly $5 million over the next two years to pay tuition and fees for 40 students each year, who would promise to work after graduation in the state's underserved or rural communities. In making the case for its Scholars for a Healthy Oregon Initiative, OHSU notes that nearly 400,000 people in Oregon are expected to be newly eligible for health insurance nextyear,butthere'sno comparable surge in the number of doctors, nurses and others to care for them. And with average debt levels ranging from nearly$45,000 for nursesto closeto $200,000 fordoctors and dentists, graduates are less likely to choose lower paying primary care, and even less likely to work in even lower paying rural communities. In 2010, only 10 percent of Oregon's doctors practiced in rural areas, OHSU reported, where 37 percent of the state's population lives. The plan, presented in Senate
The Affordable Care Act will increase the need for medical professionals
nearly everywhere. Bill 2, would require successful applicants to work in a designated area for the same number of years as their training, plus one. If they failed to do so, they would be required to reimburse the program plus a penalty. Although we favor the idea behind this program, we do have two concerns. First, the proposal says that preference will be given to applicants who are Oregonians, first generation students, come from a rural university and/or "represent a diverse or rural background." That's because "research shows that students who are from a rural or underserved area are six times more likely to want to return to that area." Legislators need to carefully examine the justification for this preferential treatment and be sure it's valid. Also, legislators should assure themselves that OHSU is moving to increase the number of its graduates, not just get taxpayers to pay for some of them. The Affordable Care Act will increase the need for medical professionals nearly everywhere.
Pass the growler bill
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hen State R ep. P aul Holvey, D-Eugene, got up to advocate for his growler bill before the Oregon House voted,nobody challenged him. Nobody voted against it. The Oregon House passed the bill as should the Oregon Senate. Growlers are refillable containers that customers can bring into stores and fill up with beer. It can be a cheaper and less wasteful way for beer lovers to enjoy their favorite beverages. It alsocan make iteasierforbrewers to offer variety, small brewers to compete and customers to sample those choices. But undercurrent Oregon law, the use of growlers is primarily for beer. Wine and hard cider growler sales are mostly not permittedthe exception being sales of wine at a winery. Holvey's bill, House Bill 2443, allows wine and cider growler sales at the same sorts of places that beer growler sales take place.
The same sort of reasonable limits would still apply. The growler containers can't be larger than two gallons. They must be securely covered. The seller must also have the appropriate l icense. That could includegrocery stores and restaurants. O regon wouldn't b e d o i ng something r evolutionary c o mpared with other states. It would be catching up. Kara Olmo, who is the owner of Wooldridge Creek Vineyard and Winery in Grants Pass, made clear the bottle-saving and cost-saving benefits of the bill during her testimony before a Senate committee. She said a keg holds about 39 bottles of wine, according to The Oregonian. Her wine sells for $26 a bottle. In a growler, she charges
$18. Consumers want this option. The producers and retailers want them to have it. The Oregon Senate should grant it.
C7 8
It's time for the 'Indepatriots' By MIke McGrew
of essential but d i fficult actions America must take. Such a party would be unlikely to win, because its platform of "shortterm pain for America's gain" would be unpopular. However, it could shape a more honestdiscussion ofAmerica' s needs andthe sacrifices necessary to successfully addressthem. But what should this new party be called? The Macmiiian Dictionary defines "patriot" as: "someone who has strong feelings of love, respect and duty toward their country." While not easily inspired by political rhetoric, I remember being patriotically moved as a youngster by John F. Kennedy's exhortation, "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country." 1 feel similarly about how we must all pitch in now to correct America'scurrent course. Therefore,I suggest we call ourselves "Indepatriots," to reflect both our autonomy from special interests (corporations, unions, even the AARP) and the patriotism motivating us. We wouldn't view government as either "the enemy" or "the answer" but as an instrument to help us move our country forward together. As Friedman and Mandelbaum propose, we'd view education — especially in the STEM disciplines of science,technology, engineering and math — as our top economic and national security priority. We'd emphasize the historical importance of a strong infrastructure and basic research investments to our economic strength. But we'dalso underscore the reality that both decreased spending in most areas and increased taxes on most Americansare needed to balance the budget. Thus, Social Security adjustments, defense cuts and
The Ba(timore Sun
re we capable of restoring American values and ending the governmental logjam created by Democrats and Republicans alike?Do we have the moxie and patriotism necessary to address the increasing challenges facing America today? Thesequesterstruggle again suggests we can't — at least under current circumstances. But maybe, with a new political party, we can. Thomas Friedman and Michael Mandelbaum's new b o ok, "That Used to Be Us," describes America's regressionsince the Cold War ended and outlines our critical challenges posed by globalization, the information technology revolution, out-ofcontrol debt, rising energy consumption and climate change. They rightly claim that we must boldlyaddress each to recover the strength we have lost but submit that to do so, we need the integrity, united sacrifice and long-term thinking that characterizedAmerica's approach toward the Great Depression, fascism and communism. Today's challenges, they write, are just as menacing but even harder to confront, thanks to their incremental impact and our political paralysis and eroding U.S. values. I've voted for p oliticians from both parties but have contributed to neither. 1 am a nominal Democrat but cannot be pinned down as either wholly conservative or liberal. Messrs. Friedman and Mandelbaum think moderates like me from both parties must rise up as the "radical center" to change today's political conversation and force a candid dialogue about America's harsh realities.They suggest the need fora new political party to advance an agenda
health care reductions would be part of our platform. Can you see why we won't get elected? lndepatriots would support jobcreating small businesses trying to stay afloat and establish incentives for them to improve infrastructure, retrofit buildings and develop alternative power. We'd welcome immigrants who would better themselves and energizeour society,companies and universities. We'd unashamedly promote taxes reflecting carbon's true environmental costto decrease our demand, stimulate renewable energy development, and free us from foreign oil dependence. And, just as America developed successful World War 11 conservation and 1960s anti-littering campaigns, we'd actively promote studying, saving, volunteering, exercising, eating right, working honestly, conserving and collaborating to take better care of ourselves and our country — patriotic undertak-
ings all. lndepatriots would also promote service as a responsibility of all citizens to foster national solidarity, restore values and contribute to critical American defense, educational and socialinterests. While lndepatriots would argue for the shared sacrifice and delayed gratification needed to t r ansform America back to what it used to be, we would also endorse any helpful, honest compromise that moves our country forward. Could we dare discuss the really hard truths about what is necessary to bring America back? And are there any bright, charismatic leaders with impeccable values willing to get this party started and find out? — Mike McGrew is a school psychologist from Carroll County, Md. He wrote this for the Baltimore Sun.
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Honoring a revered slain civil rights leader and a gospel song By Bob RaySanders
Mahalia Jackson would sing it for him on the campus of Morehouse Colpril 4 will mark the 45th anlege at a memorial following King's funiversary of M a r tin L u ther neral at his beloved Ebenezer Baptist King Jr.'s death, an event that Church in Atlanta. shocked the nation when the civil That song, one of my mother's farights leader was felled by an assas- vorites — and one I can't hear without sin's bullet. becoming teary-eyed — has been a Moments before the single shot rang staple in the black church almost from out,King had leaned over the balcony the day it was written more than eight of Memphis' Lorraine Motel and made decades ago by Thomas A. Dorsey, "the father of gospel music." lts 80th what would be his final request to Ben Branch, director of the Operation anniversary was marked this month Breadbasket Orchestra and Choir. with a special program at the Univer"Ben, make sure you play 'Precious sity of Michigan Dearborn. Lord, Take My Hand' for me tonight," Many people believe it is much older he said. "Play it real pretty." than that, comparable to "Amazing Branch didn't play the song (offi- Grace," and with an equally moving cially named, "Take My Hand, Pre- back story. I've seen movies set in the 1800s cious Lord") that night for King or the packed crowd waiting to hear him at w here someone singsthose stirring a rally in support of the city's striking lyrics, and I always cringe because sanitation workers. I know Dorsey, a blues pianist who Fort Worth Star-Telegram
penned some of gospel's most memorable tunes, wrote "Precious Lord" in 1932. In the d ocumentary fi lm "Say Amen, Somebody," Dorsey talked about the tragedy that led to the soulstirring words that have been sung by some of the world's greatest talents, including Aretha Franklin at Mahalia's funeral; Leontyne Price at President Lyndon Johnson's state funeral; Elvis Presley; Merle Haggard; and Tennessee Ernie Ford. Dorsey was in St. Louis organizing anotherchoirwhen he received a telegram about his pregnant wife home in Chicago. "1 almost fell out,n he said. nlt said, 'Hurry home. Your wife just died.'" He rushed home to find what he couldn't believe: His wife, Nettie, had died giving birth to a boy. "The baby was still alive, but in the
next two days the baby died," Dorsey said. "And what should I do then and there?" For days, he was lost in his grief, calling on God to try to understand what hadhappened tohim.Then came those now-famous words: "Precious Lord, take my hand "Lead me on, let me stand "Iamtired,famweak, Iamworn..." Many people become emotional just hearing the introduction to the song, or when an instrumental version is played by the likes of two Fort Worth virtuosos — saxophonist Vernard Johnson or organist Mark Davis. Dorsey wrotescores of songs that would become gospel hits, such as "It's a Highway to Heaven," "Old Ship of Zion," "The Lord Will Make a Way Somehow," "God Be with You,n "I Got Heaven in My View" and "Everyday Will be Sunday."
But his signature piece will always be "Precious Lord," the one that has been translated into almost 40 languages and will live long after him. Dorsey died in 1993 at age 93. The second verse was M ama's favorite: "When my way grows drear "Precious Lord linger near "When my life is almost gone "Hear my cry, hear my call "Hold my hand lestI fall "Take my hand precious Lord, lead me home" This coming week, I will be thinking a lot about Martin Luther King Jr. and what he meant to America and to me personally. But 1'll also be thinking of Thomas A. Dorsey and all the gifts he left us. — BobRay Sanders is a columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
on' ring up Iraq — and expect to end up in an argument. Conservatives are no different from liberals in rehashing the unpopular war, which has become a sort of whipping boy for all our subsequent problems. The Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan recently enumerated countless pathologies that followed Iraq. Yet to examine her list is to learn just how misinformed we have become inour anguish over the intervention. Noonan writes of Republicans: "It Praq] ruined the party's hard-earned reputation for foreign-affairs probity. They started a war and didn't win it." We can argue over whether the result of the war was worth the cost. But by January 2009, the enemy was defeated. There was a consensual government in Iraq, there were few monthly American casualties, and there was a plan to leave a small constabulary force to ensure stability and the sanctity of Iraqi borders and airspace. Noonan adds that, "It muddied up the meaning of conservatism and bloodied up its reputation," citing as proof the preferable and prudent foreign policy of Ronald Reagan. But Reagan had his own foreign policy problems. Do we remember Iran-Contra, when some in the Reagan administration recklessly and illegally facilitated the sale of weapons to a terrorist Iranian government — a crime that stained conservative credence on anti-terrorism for years to come'?
a me ever i n
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of any two-term administration in the By 2005, when Noonan gave up nation's history. on Iraq, millions of Iraqis and Kurds At most, Iraq contributed to 25 per- were still very much invested in the cent of that aggregate debt. The vast U.S. effort to replace Saddam Husexpansion in the size of the federal sein's regime with something better. government and domestic spending Tens of thousands of Americans were That libertarians, paleo-cons, neo- levelsnot only eroded "respect forRe- fighting and dying for that shared cons and the Republican establish- publican economic stewardship" but goaL ment all argued over Iraq was natural discredited the Bush tax cuts, which, We can perhaps admire either — in the manner that the often "mud- we seem to have forgotten, resulted those who were consistently against died" party split over interventions in more, not less, aggregate federal the war when it was at first unpopular, in Korea, Vietnam, the Balkans and revenue. or those who kept their support when Libya. Noonan thinks Iraq "killed what it was even more unpopular. But how Noonan believes that Iraq "ended remained of the Washington Repub- does political convenience — in a war the Republican political ascendance lican establishment." But George W. that hinged on the enemy destroying that had begun in 1980." Hardly. Bill Bush was always seen more as an our morale — translate into courage Clinton did that in 1992, when he de- evangelical Texas heretic — his war or wisdom? feated once-popular incumbent Re- opposed by most of his father's estabHad we given up on the war in publican George H W. Bush, then was lishment Cabinet and, eventually, the 2005, there would not be a viable re-elected for a second term. Al Gore Colin Powell moderate wing of the Kurdistan today or any chance of a won thepopular vote over George W. party. stable Iraq government. The reputaBush in 2000. Instead, what killed off the blue- tion of the American military would In truth, there is rarely either a blood establishment (if it is indeed have been shredded. For a power Republican or Democratic long-term dead) and spawned the Tea Party was with global responsibilities, losing ascendance, mandate or much of largelydisagreement on issues such an unpopular war is even worse than anything — other than the natural as federal spending, debt and deficits, fighting one. challenge and response of politics. the size of government, entitlements, There were plenty of m i stakes Iraq became unpopular and was help- guns, abortion and illegal immigra- made after the impressive threeing Democrats by 2006. Yet the spec- tion — in which grassroots populists week removal of Hussein — the ter of Obamacare in 2010 — and its argued that Republicans had become failure to re-employ disbanded Iraqi reality in 2014 — may foster an even not much different from Democrats. soldiers, the mistreatment of prismore influential swing back in public Noonan finishes by stating that oners at Abu Ghraib, the tenure of opinion. when she withdrew her support for poor military leaders such as Gen. Did Iraq alone really undermine the Iraq War in 2005, she was "wrong- Ricardo Sanchez. Yet the 2007 surge "respect for Republican economic er than some at the start, righter than orchestrated by Gen. David Petraeus stewardship," as Noonan suggests? some at the end." to save Iraq was not one of them. The war may have cost $1 trillion over The now-common confession of alIn short, blaming everything on a decade.Yet from 2001 to 2008,a Re- ways opposing "some" is tantamount Iraq is just as bad as blaming nothpublican president (with help from to tagging along with the majority ing on it. a Republican-majority Congress for who supported the war — only to flip — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist six years), ran up $4 trillion in debt along with the majority when it did and historian at the Hoover Institution, — at that time the largest borrowing not. Stanford University.
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON
How to create the world's largest tax haven By Ramesh Ponnuru Bloomberg News
t's just far-fetched to believe that Congress would lower corporate rates at the expense ofsmall business," says Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif. That, in a nutshell, is why corporate-tax rates are unlikely to fall, even though there is a bipartisan consensus that they're too high. Nunes may, however,have the beginning of a solution. The U.S. corporate-tax rate is higher than that of any other developed country. We have kept it at 35 percent even as other countries have reduced theirs. Republicans, unsurprisingly, want to cut the rate; most of them think 25 percent is the right target. President Barack Obama has suggested that eliminating loopholes would enable a reduction to 28 percent. A lower rate would lead to more investment, and thus higher wages, in the United States. But most businesses, especially small ones, don't pay corporate taxes. They file under the individual income-tax code, partly because it treats investment better than the corporate code does. These businesseshave no stake in seeing the corporate-tax rate fall — especially since their own taxes just rose at the start of the year, when the Bush tax cuts on high earners expired. Both the White House and Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio are willing to tackle corporate-tax reform in isolation from the rest of the tax
code. Many members of Congress will balk, however, at enacting a 25 percent corporate-tax rate just after letting rates on a lot of small businesses rise to 39.6 percent (and even higher in practice, once some features of the tax code are accounted for). Portman is isolated in his party on this issue. Reforming the entire code, individual and corporate alike, doesn't hold much promise, either. There is no bipartisan agreement that the top individual rate should fall. Nor is there any agreement onwhich tax breaks to eliminate or reduce to pay for lower individual rates. So the two most obviouspaths fora corporaterate reduction — a reform of the corporate code, or of the whole tax code — appear to be blocked. That's where Nunes comes in. He suggests a new approach: a "business consumption tax" that treats all businessesthe same, whatever their organizational form. Instead of taxing their income, it taxes their cashflow — income minus expenses,except for interest payments. That way, businesses would no longer write off their investments according to a complicated depreciation schedule. Investments would be tax-free. Both U.S. and foreign companies would have more reason to invest here, Nunes says. "This would make the U.S. the largest tax haven in human history." I've run across two objections to Nunes' idea. The first is that it is sim-
2
III 0
ply too ambitious to be politically viable: If Congress is having trouble reforming the corporate tax, goes the argument, it won't be able to digest an entirely new approach to taxing business income. What this objection ignores is that the moderately ambitious proposals all face obstacles that are probablyinsuperable — obstacles this proposal avoids. The second objection is that Nunes' proposal would cost the federal government a lot of revenue. A Joint Committee on Taxation estimate of the proposal's budget impact would make it possible to evaluate this claim, but it sounds plausible. If it turns out to be expensive, though, the concept can still work: The taxrate would just have to be higher than the 25 percent that Nunes has tentatively put forward. Even if the rate were left at the 35 percent that currently applies to corporations, the shift to the new tax
would still be a boon for the economy. The statutory rate would be higher than that of other countries, but the number that matters — the effective tax rate on investments — would be a very competitive zero, thanks to companies' ability to write off their costs immediately. Eliminating the deduction for interest, meanwhile, would end a destabilizing distortion in the economy: the federal tax code's preference for corporate financing via debt rather than equity. That preference also gives an advantage to established firms that have greater borrowing capacity than startups. If Congress still finds the Nunes proposal too ambitious to contemplate, it could undertake reform on a much smaller scale. Leave tax rates alone, keep the separate schedules for different types of companies, and just make a trade: Companies would get immediate write-offs on investments and in return lose the interest deduction. That trade would probably leave the government's revenue at roughly the same level. It would certainly be simpler than most other proposals to reform business taxation. And it would encourage more investment and less debt. Twothings have to happenfor these ideasto have a chance. More people in Washington must realize that the conventional approaches to these issues aren't going to work. And they will have to start listening to Nunes. — Ramesh Ponnuru is a columnist for Bloomberg News.
Tricare is a bloated but untouchable program By Charles Lane The Washington Post
he U.S. government's fiscal predicament has many causes. But if you had to reduce them to one sentence, it might go like this: "Congressresponds tothe short-term demands of particular groups, not the long-term needs of the nation as a whole." Case in point: the seemingly unstoppable growth of medical benefits for former military personnel under Tricare, the Defense Department's health program. This mushrooming expense is a major reason that Pentagon health care spending rose from $19 billion in fiscal 2001 to $52.8 billion in fiscal 2012. The latter figure represented nearly 10 percent of that year's defense
budget. President Obama has tried repeatedly to rein in this category of spending, on the very sound theory that resources are finite and that dollars spent on retiree health care cannot be spent equipping and training the active-duty armed forces for war — the Pentagon's primary mission. Military health care's traditional role was to serve active-duty troops and their families, at no out-of-pocket
cost. Tricare still does this, except for small prescription co-payments. This makes sense as an incentive to sign up for service and its attendant sacrifices. Since 2000, however, Congress has repeatedlyexpanded the access of former military personnel to Tricare. By 2010, the eligible population had increased from 6.8 million a decade earlier to 9.7 million — nearly 85 percent of whom were not active-duty servicepersonnel, according to an excellent May 2012 Armed Forces Journal article by Brittany Gregerson of the Institute for Defense Analyses. Obama's reforms have been rebuffed every time, by Democrats and by supposedly fiscally conservative, pro-defense Republicans. The expansion of Tricare dates to the post-Cold War base closings in the 1990s. Some military hospitals were shut in the process, and retirees who had been allowed to use them on a space-available basis protested that Congress owed them a substitute. Some even claimed that recruiters had offered them free health care for life when they enlisted and that Congresswas welshing on thispurported contract. The courts correctly rejected this
legally, and factually, spurious claim — but it fared better in the political sphere. In 1996, Congress allowed military retirees ages 37 to 64 and their family members to join Tricare for an annual contribution that averaged 27 percent of total health care costs for a family of three. That contribution, however, did not increase with inflation. As a result, Tricare's real cost to workingage beneficiaries dropped 41 percent between 1997 and 2010, Gregerson found. Not surprisingly, working-age retirees and their families began leav-
ing employer-paid plans and signing up for Tricare. Congress did allow a modest increase incosts for working-age retirees to take effect last year and indexed that cost increase to inflation. But thosecostsare stillfar less than what an average civilian would pay. Once former military personnel turn 65, they are eligible for Medicare, like everyone else. But in 2002, Congressgave them "Tricare forLife" — essentially, a free Medigap plan. Roughly 2 million people take advantage of this perk, at a projected cost to taxpayers of $9.7 billion in the current fiscal year, according to the Congres-
sional Budget ONce. Obama's 2013 budget plan would have saved $12.8 billion over five years by gradually increasing the annual enrollment fees of Tricare's working-age retirees, with discounts for lower-income participants, and then indexing the fees to the rate of national growth in health spending. Congress would have none of itthen or, apparently, now. Neither the recently adopted Senate budget plan forfiscal2014,drafted by Democrats, nor the supposedly "austere" Ryan budget passed by the Republican House, touched Tricare. Hell hath no fury likea veterans'lobby scorned, as senators and representatives of both parties know. So do I! In anticipation of a lot of hate mail, I would note that I respect and honor America's veterans. They should be well provided for, including reasonable health benefits. But no one — not even a veteran — is entitled to taxpayer support regardless of competing public needs. In the case of Tricare, this is what the veterans' lobbies have demanded of Congress, and what Congress has given them. — Charles Lane is a member of The Washington Post's editorial board.
THOMAS FRIEDMAN
Questions to answer
about Syria here are mounting reports that the United States is getting more deeply involved in supporting the Syrian rebels trying to topple President Bashar Assad. There isa strong argument foreveryone doing more to end the Syrian civil war before the Syrian state totally collapses and before its sectarian venom and refugeesfurther destabilizeLebanon, Iraq and Jordan. But I hope thatbefore President Barack Obama gets more deeply involved in Syria, he gets satisfactory answers to the following questions: The uprising against Assad began on March 15, 2011. His downfall has been predictedevery month since. Why has he been able to hold on so long? Russian and Iranian military aid certainly helps but so does the support he still enjoys in key communities. Assad's Alawite minority sect, which has been ruling since 1970 and constitutes 12 percent of Syria's 22 million population, believes that either they rule or they die at the hands of the country's Sunni Muslim major-
ity (74 percent). The Syrian Christians, who are 10 percent,and some secular Sunni Muslims, particularly m e rchants, have also thrown in their lot with Assad, because they believe that either he rules or chaos does. None of them believe the rebels can or will build a stable, secular, multisectarian democracy in Assad's wake. Why do we think they are wrong? What are Qatar'sand Saudi Arabia's goals? Are we to believe that these two archrival Wahhabi fund amentalist monarchies, the t w o main funders and arms suppliers of the Syrian uprising, are really both interested in creating a multisectarian, multiparty democracy in Syria, which they would not tolerate in their own countries? Syria's rebels fall into three groups: those democratswho want tobe free to be citizens in a country where everyone has the same rights; those who want tobe free to be more Islamic; and those who want to be free to be more sectarian — to see Syria's Sunni majority oust the ruling Alawite minority. Who can reassure the Syrian Alawites or Christians that they will have a place in a post-Assad Syria, if the rebels can't get along with one another? The Lebanese civil war burned for 14 years. It was finally settled with the 1989 Taif peace accord, based on the principle "no victor, no vanquished." It allowed Lebanon's Christian minority to be "overrepresented" to reassure them that their interests would be protected in a future Lebanon. Although the Christians made up probably 35 percent of the population, they were given a 50-50 split with Lebanese Muslims in the Parliament. One cannot expect Syria's Sunni majority, tens of thousands of whom have been slaughtered by Assad, to reach out overnight to the Alawites. In time, though, can we expect the rebels to guarantee a future for Alawites and Christians in Syria, which is the only way the state can remain intact? Or are we fine with the Alawites carving out their own homeland in Syria, the Sunnis taking the rest and the Christians moving to Canada'? The lesson of Iraq, Egypt, Tunisia and Libya is that the sooner you reestablish security, the more people are ready to think and act like citizens rather than sects or tribes. After Assad falls, who will mediate between the communities and militias insideSyria to bring order? Do we really believe that a post-Assad Syria, which doesn't seem to have a Nelson Mandela, will be able on its own to build a multisectarian government to rule the whole country without a well-armed, boots-on-the-ground international force, blessed by the U.N. or Arab League, to act as a referee? And who in the Milky Way Galaxy wants that job'? My bottom line: We know what kind of Syria we'd like to see emerge, and we have agood idea of the terrible costs of not achieving that and the war continuing. But I don't see a consensusinside Syria — or even inside the opposition — for the kind of multisectarian, democratic Syria to which we aspire. This is the problem from hell. Sometimes thenecessary and desirable are impossible, which is why I commend the president on his caution, up to now. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.
F4 © www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013
Triken is a scary fantasy world
PHOTOGRAPHS AND POEMS
"Forged in Death" by Jim Melvin (Bell Bridge,
By Gina Webb
260 pgs., $14.95) "Chained by Fear" by Jim Melvin (Bell Bridge,
262 pgs., $14.95) By Ann Allen The Charlotte Observer
We have a masterful new fantasy writer on the scene: Jim Melvin's series, "The Death Wizard Chronicles," creates the world of Triken, where the e v il , d emonspawned Invictus r eigns over a tainted city and plots to take over the world. Two of six novels have come out so far. "Forged in Death" introduces the desert king Torg, who collects power by venturing through the portals of death with the aid of deep meditation — thus becoming a Death Wizard. Melvin drawsimaginative visions of this place beyond death, but his description of how Torg gets there has at least as much appeal. As our culture becomes increasingly enamored of mindfulness meditation, finding a character who has mastered these techniques feels very timely. And Melvin shows his literary mastery as he weaves elements of potential and transformation; his tale dances among literal shape shifters and more subtle powers of mind. Things are not what they seem. Torg faces plenty of challenges, starting with how to escape an enchanted pitimbued with evil magicwhere Invictus has trapped him. He gets support from his desert followers, whose fighting skills make them n early invincible. And a mighty dragon, in the employ of Invictus but seeking wisdom from Torg, attempts to aid him, too. But his foes have powers of their own, especially th e c o r rupted snow giant Mala, who leads Invictus' armies. The fate of Triken remains at risk as Torg's small fellowship moves into Book Three. "Shadowed by Demons" will be out by early summer.
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks thebestsellers for week ending March 24. Hardcover fiction
1. "Six Years" by Harlan Coben (Dutton) 2."The Storyteller" by Jodi Picoult (Atria) 3. "Alex Cross, Run" byJames Patterson iLittle, Brown) 4."Gone Girl" by GillianFlynn (Crown) 5. "The Striker" by Cussler/Scott (Putnam) 6. "A Week inWinter" by Maeve Binchy (Knopf) 7. "Calculated in Death" by J.D. Robb (Putnamj 8. "A Story of Godand All of Us" by Mark Burnett (FaithWords) 9. "The Chance" by Karen Kingsbury (Howard Books) 10. "DamascusCountdown" by Joel C. Rosenberg (Tyndale) Hardcover nonfiction
1. "Lean ln" by Sheryl Sandberg (Knopf) 2. "Life Code" by Dr. Phil McGraw (Bird Street Books) 3. "The FastDiet" by Michael Mosley iAtria) 4."Pati entsCome Second" by Spiegelman/Berrett (An lnc. Original) 5. "Firsthand" by RyanandJosh Shook (WaterBrook) 6. "Killing Kennedy" by Bill O'Reilly (Henry Holt) 7. "Shred: TheRevolutionary Diet" by lan K. Smith, M.D. (St. Martin's) 8. "The DuckCommander Family" by Willie tt Korie Robertson (Howard Books) 9. "I Declare" by Joel Osteen (FaithWords) 10. "Salt Sugar Fat" by Michael Moss iRandom House) — McClatchy-Trtttune NewsService
an a wri er in s a newmuse or is oe The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
ATLANTA — Atlanta poet Collin Kelley was at a London gallery in 2010, taking in a retrospective o f p h o tographer S ally Mann, when h e w a s gobsmacked by something in the Virginia-born artist's otherworldly, black-and-white images. He saw eerie parallels to his own work — the poetry he'd set aside years earlier to focus on writing fiction. He had a collection of poems that had been "kind of floating around" since 2008, enough for a book. He'd given it a couple of titles, combined different poems, changed the sequencing. "But it just never jelled like I wanted it to," he says. Unable to shuffle the parts into place, he put it on the back burner and went on to other things. He signed a contract to write a trilogy of novels about murder and international intrigue for Vanilla Heart Publishing, and dove from one straight into the next. Kelley is a familiar face in Atlanta's literary scene. He won a 2007 Georgia Author of the Year award, along with co-editor Kodac Harrison, for "Java Monkey Speaks: An Anthology." And last year his novel, "Remain in Light," was a finalist for the Townsend Prize. He sits on the board of Poetry Atlanta and on the advisory council for Georgia Center for the Book, where he curates and hostsa regular poetry series. He's co-director of the Atlanta Queer Literary Festival, and he's a frequent presenter at poetry readings around town, across the country and in the U.K. It was during one of those trips as a guest lecturer that Kelley heard about the Mann exhibit, which i ncluded her iconic photographs of her children, Civil War battlefields and the BodyFarm, a research facility at the University of Tennessee where human bodies are allowed to decompose in the open air for the sake of science. Inspired, Kelley came home and wrote "Render," an homage to Mann's imagery and process. "As I was writing that poem and the stanzas that catalog her body of work, something kind of clicked in my head, and I was like, You know what'? I've kind of written about all of this stuff, in a way. And so I went back and started looking at the poems again." He discovered some unexpected coincidences. "There'sa reference to Sally Mann that I'd totally forgotten about, in my poem 'Tuscumbia, Alabama.' And then there was the referenceto the Body Farm in the Knoxville poem that I'd written, and several references to visiting Civil War battlefields when I was a kid with my parents." The parallels suggested a structure, the idea of "a book of photographs in poetry." With that as a framework, Kelley found his "entry point." In April, Sibling R ivalry Press will publish Kelley's second full-length book of poetry, "Render."
Real world andpoetry Like Mann's photographs, Kelley'spoems concentrate on family,adolescence and pieces of the Southern landscape. Kelley's shutter opens to moments when the real world interrupts the ideal, when — with a "sharp crack of bones" — suburban dreams break apart. His flash reveals the hidden junctures of coming of age and coming out, sexual arrivals and revelations, the secretdeliverance found in pop culture and its r ich
iconography. And like Mann's often mysteriouslandscapes,the poems leave as much unsaid as they reveal. In " K noxville: Summer, 1982," Kelley juxtaposes the disappointing wonders of a World's Fair with a family's un-
' g~io +3~
Phil Skinner / Atlanta Journal-Constitution /McClatchy-Tribune News Service
Poet Coiiin Keiiey of Atlanta is publishing a new book, "Render," in April. The poetry collection is focused on the photography of Sally Mann.
the director of the M.F A.
listening to the Peter Gabriel song "Mercy Street," which takes its title from Sexton's last book, "45 Mercy St.," published posthumously. Suicidal, confessional, bipolar Sexton became Kelley's "touchstone," but he continued to read widely, both classic and contemporary poetry — Edna St. Vincent M i llay, Shakespeare's sonnets, Walt Whitman, Rilke — searching for his own voice. After his f irst poem was published in 1993, another decade would pass as he worked through his many influences. "I didn't want to just write more Anne Sexton poems," he says with a wry laugh. "You can't top Anne Sexton." In the meantime, Kelley established a career in journalism, starting out at the Fayetteville Sun at age 16, moving on to the Marietta Daily Journal and ending up at Atlanta Intown, where he is managmg editor.
program at McNeeseState
A'tiny little speck'
Poetrydooks to consider "HummingdirdSleep: Poems, 2009-2011"by
Coleman Barks (University of Georgia, $16.95) — New poemsfr om theTennessee poet who, when not translating Rumi, writes
of lightning bugs, celery hearts and heavy rain.
"Avoid Disaster"by Jenny Sadre-Orafai (Dancing Girl Press, $7) — Theassistant professor of English at Kennesaw State University,
Sadre-Orafai("WeedOver Flower," "What HerHair Says About Her") is the Atlanta regional editor for
Coldfront magazine. "Sympathetic Magic" by Amy Fieury (Southern iiiinois University Press,
$15.95) — Fieury ("BeautifulTrouble"), University in Lake Charles, Louisiana, writes of
everyday life in America's heartland.
"Black Crow Dress" by Roxane Beth Johnson
(Aiice JamesBooks, $15.95j — Philip Levine Prize-winnerJohnson
("Jubilee")gives voice to the slave experience through mostly prose
poems via the perspectives of three enslavedwomen, their owner and his family.
If anyone were giving out awards for good stewardship of the literary community, Kelley would get a few. His name frequently is attached to poetry events throughout the city, including several taking place in April, deemed National Poetry Month by the Academy of American Poets. "I feel like if I'm going to do it, I want to help other people do it, too," he says. "I want to go out and hear good poetry. And I want to provide opportunities for people who are doing it. If you want to be heard, you have to listen." Musician and spoken word artist Kodac Harrison, who hosts a weekly spoken word event atJava Monkey in Decatur, calls Kelley "one of the hardest workers" in the Atlanta literary community and credits him for attracting new voices to the poetry scene. William Starr, executive director ofGeorgia Center for the Book, agrees, calling Kelley a "supportive and encouraging spirit." But to Kelley, it's just another day in the life of a poet. "Poetry is still the tiniest of the smallest little niche of American literature, it's this tiny little speck in the spectrum," he says. "You're not going to make a living off poetry. So you do it for the love. You do it for the art. Which is a cliche, but it's true. There's a
certain future and a teen's shifting sexuality: "That night I dream ... a Magic 8 Ball in my hand I shake it hard, but the same message always floats to the surface: better not tell you now" Kelley's voice — brash, tender, angry, nostalgic, sexy — is one that now understands and even welcomes the "imperfections and subtle debris" of life. It's a voice well equipped to fight a host of demons — of reaching back to rescue his younger self from "the coming storm" he writes about in many of his poems. But he didn't find it overnight. When Kelley first started writing poetry in high school, he says, "I felt like I was kind of mimicking Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath, who were two of my favorites." The budding poet discovered Sexton in 1 986 while calling."
FOX NeWS'Ai eS IS OCUSO By Juiie Hinds
Times Magazine who divides his time between New York DETROIT — When author and Tel Aviv. Zev Chafets started working But i n h i s h o m etown, on "Roger Ailes: Off Cam- Chafets is best known for era," he had a frank conver- "Devil's Night," which drew sation with th e mega-suc- the ire of city leaders and locessful creator and CEO of cal residents for its descripFox News. t ion of the Motor City as "I said to him, 'Look, I'm America's first Third World relatively not stupid, but I city. have no doubt you're much Remembering the uproar smarter than I am. So I want the book stirred here, the to play this with you with the University of Michigan gradcards face up. I'm going to be uate says critics of "Devil's straight with you. I'm going Night," including then-Mayor to establish the ground rules Coleman Young, didn't read going in and I'm not going to its contents. He recounts a surprise you. And I hope that phone call to Young in the you're not going to surprise hospital shortly before the me,'" says Chafets, author of Detroit legend's death. They the controversial 1990 book had a f r i endly c onversa"Devil's Night an d O t h er tion, during which the outTrue Tales of Detroit," dur- spoken politician told him, "Zev, I never even read that ing a recent interview. "And that's the way we (profanity)." played it. It was clear to him W ith h i s ne w boo k , that he did not have editorial Chafets says the most surcontrol over the book. It was prising thing he discovered clear to him that I was going about Ailes was the gap beto write what I saw." tween how he is perceived The new book, which hit and what he's really like. storeslastw eek,has been get- The combativemedia executing attention, largely thanks tive can be a forgiving boss to the love-it-or-hate-it nature and he has built friendships of Fox News and the gos- across political and philosipy morsels posted in early sophical lines. March on the Vanity Fair Ailes befriended MSNBC's website. A flurry of online Rachel Maddow at a White items noted that Ailes called House Christmas party and President Barack O b ama contributed a blurb to her "lazy," Vice President Joe book on American military Biden "dumb as an ashtray" power. "His j o u rnalistic b a ckand former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich "a sore ground i s man i p ulating loser," among other things. journalists," Chafets says. B ut Chafets, wh o h a d "All through his political caAiles' cooperation and was reer, starting with Nixon, he granted access to his family, saw journalists in the raw. friends and Fox News col- He figured out what makes leagues, puts his cards face journalists jump. He figured up for readers, too. He states out what makes journalists in the introduction that this flinch. He figured out what book isn't a formal biogra- makes journalists hungry. He phy. Rather, he writes, "It figured out what makes jouris a record of almost a year nalists purr like a cat. He's an spent watching Roger Ailes expert. He also figured out what's hypocritical in Ameriin action." Tackling a subject who, de- can journalism and where pending on your perspective, the real interests lie. He dehas eitherbrought fairness veloped a very strong cyniand balance to cable news or cism about the pretensions of built a veritable mouthpiece American journalism." for the GOP, wasn't daunting In short, Edward R. Murto Chafets, who's no stranger row may be on permanent to controversy. spin cycle in his grave at the Born and raised in Pon- ratings victories that Ailes tiac, Mich., Chafets moved has enjoyed. But Fox News to Israel more than four de- continues to b e d i visively cades ago and worked for fascinating. Who'll be most the Israeli government. He interested in reading what became an author and jour- makes Ailes tick: friends or nalist and has written many foes? "I would say it would be books, fiction and nonfiction, including 2010's "Rush Lim- my Aunt Betty, because it's baugh: An Army o f O ne." dedicated to her," Chafets He's a f ormer New Y o rk jokes. "She hates Fox News, Daily News columnist and a by the way. She falls into the contributor to the New York foes category." Detroit Free Press
TEE
t'REEN P R E V I E W
2 0 1 3
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SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
FS
Di Kin Art ur ever tru exist? 'Angelopolis' builds • A British professor,after much research on masterful world into the DarkAges, debunksthe legends "Angelopoks" "Worlds of Arthur: Facts and Fictions of the Dark Ages"
by GuyHalsall (Oxford University Press, 384 pgs., $34.95) By Tish Wells McClatchy Newspapers
The myth of King Arthur, his queen, Guinevere, and the knights of the Round Table is too ingrained in our collect ive psyche to b e overthrown by mere facts questioning his very existence. But British a cademic Professor Guy Halsall tries anyway. He h a s wr i t t en an excellent book in "Worlds of A r thur"
he wrote the book. A history teacher at the universities in London and York and a war gamer, he was reading "the latest populist Arthurian history" which other reviews said offered "a plausible, scholarly case. It didn't, and this annoyed me." So he buckled down to find out what scientists and academics really "know" about the period. Using •
-
$~ci[[ goVVP Lacks
Continued from F1 Imagine if someone secretly sent samples of your DNAto one of many companies that promise to tell you what your genes say about you. That report would list
the good news (you'll probably live to be 100) and the
not-so-good news (you'll
By Candace Chaney
m ost likely d evelop A l zheimer's, bipolar disorder
Lexington Herald-Leader
and maybe alcoholism).
LEXINGTON, Ky. — More than 100 pages into her first attempt at a novel, Holly Goddard Jones realized it was a failure. "I pretty unhappily decided to scrap it," says Jones, 33, an assistant professor of English at University of North Carolina at Greensboro. "I had invested a lot of time into it, and I was really disappointed." But when one of her students submitted a story about a boy who went missing in the forest, Jones began recollecting about her own childhood in Russellville, Ky., particularly her fascination with the wooded areas between the town's workingclass subdivisions. "I would go ride my bike and go into these little wooded areas, and I thought they seemed kindof wild andexciting," Jones says. "I was kind of scared and I thought maybe something bad would happen like in a horror movie, like I would stumble upon a dead body." That is exactly what happens in the opening chapter of Jones' debut novel, "The Next Time You See Me " ( T ouchstone,
Now imagine they posted your genetic information o nline, with y ou r n a m e on it. Some people might not mind. But I assure you, many do: Genetic information can be stigmatizing, and while it's illegal for employersor health insurance providers to d iscriminate based on that information, this is not true for life insurance, disability coverage or long-term care. "That i s p r i vate f amily information," said Jeri Lacks-Whye, Lacks' granddaughter. "It shouldn't have been published without our consent." Some scientists agree: Jonathan Eisen, a genomics researcher at the University of California, Davis, tweeted, "A bit stunned that the people publishing the HeLa genome appear to not have g otten consent from t h e
$24.99). The novel has been wellreceived since its release last month. The New York Times called it "impressive" and said Jones "has a precise eye and empathyto burn, bringing each of her many characters to wellrounded life." Gillian Flynn, author of the blockbuster bestseller "Gone Girl," called it "an astoundingly good novel simply mesmerizing." Like Jones' 2009 book of short stories, "Girl Trouble," "The Next Time You See Me" takes place in the fictional town of Roma, Ky., not so secretly modeled afterplaces such as Russellville. Set in 1993 — before the 24hour news cycle and the Internet — "The Next Time You See Me" revolves around the mystery of a missing woman and exploresthe surprising ways different townspeople are connected to her. The book shares some elements of t h e c r i me-solving mystery genre, but it also is a multinarrative literary portrait of the inner lives of ordinary folks — folks Jones grew up with, folks you might meet in a small-town grocery store or gas station. Jones' empathetic embrace of thedarker side ofhercharacters — along with her intimate familiarity with th e r eal-life counterpart to the book's setting — allows her to critique social injustices including racism, gender inequality and classism, undercurrents woven throughout the book.
king, 320pgs., $27.95) By Carole E. Barrowman Milwauhee Journal Sentinel
Shine Ltd. FremantteMedia/McCiatchy-Tribune News Service
archaeology, forensics The finale of the British TV show "Merlin," about King Arthur and
and extensive literary research, i n c luding the migration plans of the Anglo Saxons and Pictish cemeteries, he thin-slices the legend of Arthur into aiP using a r chaeology, steak tartar. " Worlds o f A r manuscripts and migration patterns to prove that thur" is broken into six parts, Arthur never existed; and if he some which are entertaining " The Antimatter of A r did, he didn't resemble any of the legends, pseudo-histories, thur: Reassessing the Written romantic fantasies, scholarly Sources" — and others which works and a thousand years of are harder to read through, publicity that have grown up such as "Beyond brooches and around the legendary British Borchs: Rethinking Early Mewarrior. dieval British Archeology." Halsall understands this. He takes aim at popular meHis unusually readable schol- dia, such as the movie "King a rly tome starts w it h w h y Arthur" with it s S armatian
upbringing fodder for debut novel
by Danielle Trussoni (Vi-
his knights, is out in May 2013. The show, much like many other cultural references, highlights the constant popularity of the King Arthur myth. (from the Balkans) influence, and other books in a chapter named "Red Herrings and Old Chestnuts." His feeling is t hat " most modern p o p ulist p s e udohistorical theories about the historical Arthur seems to require you to have had a skinfull of alcohol or other mindenhancing substance in order to believe them." So, after exhaustively taking readers through the evidence, hecomes to this conclusion: The legendary King
Arthur never existed. This won't mean anything to those who enjoy A r thurian legends. For example, the fourth season of the U.K. show "Merlin" on Syfy r e cently drew more than 1.5 million viewers, a very good number for a cable channel. The series finale has been held until May. In late May comes the big kahuna of Arthurian publishing: an unfinished work by J.R.R. Tolkien called "The Fall of Arthur." It's bound to be a best-seller.
"This latest HeLa situation really shows us that our policy is
of HeLa's contributions to society, and they don't want to stop HeLa research. But they do want to learn about the HeLa genome — how it can be used forthe good of science while still protecting the family's privacy — so they can decide whether to consent to its publication. And they want researchers to a cknowledge that HeLa cells are not anonymous and should be treated accordingly. A fter h earing f r o m t h e Lacks family, the European team apologized, revised the news release and quietly took the data offline. (At least 15 people had a l ready d ownloaded it.) They also pointed to other databases that had published portions of Henrietta Lacks' genetic data (also without consent). They hope to talk with the Lacks family to determine how to handle the HeLa genome while working toward creating international standards for handling these issues. The publication of the HeLa genome without consent isn't an example ofa few researchers making a m i stake. The whole system allowed it. Everyone involved followed standard practices. They presented theirresearch at conferences and ina peer-reviewed journal. No one raised questions about consent. In the three years since my book about HeLa was published, the Lacks family and I have spoken to audiences by the thousands about these issues. Public response is overwhelmingly consistent and in line with several studies: The public supports the science and wants to help it move forward. But that support is dependent on consent and trust.
lagging years and maybe decades behind the science. It's time to catch up." — Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health
an email can do it. No one knows what we may someday learn about Lacks'great-grandchildren from her genome, but we know this: The view we have today of genomes is like a world map, but Google Street View is coming very soon. Scientifically spea k i ng, that's good news. There's a lot
of hope for using technology like this for affordable "personalized medicine." But legally and ethically speaking, we're not ready for it. As Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, says: "This latest HeLa situation really shows us that
our policy is lagging years and maybe decades behind the science. It's time to catch up." The regulations governing this sort of research were written in the 1970s, long before anyone imagined what you could learn from a bit of DNA. They are largely based on the now outdated belief that if samples are
family."
"anonymized" (i.e., your name
Another said this was going to further damage public trust in science. A few argued that the cells had changed somuch overtime, they couldn't accurately tell us anything about Lacks (to which a geneticist replied, "Your claim is so w rong that I don't know where to start"). Several noted that consent wasn't required to publish the HeLa genome (true). But overall, the scientific community was surprisingly silent on the issue. On its own, the HeLa genome doesn't say anything specific about Lacks: It's a string of billions of letters that detail the genetic information that makes up a HeLa cell, which is useful for science. A news release from the E uropean Molecular Biology Laboratory, where the HeLa genome was sequenced, said, "We cannot infer anything about Henrietta Lacks' genome, or ofher descendants, from the data generated in this study." But that's not true. And a few s cientists decided to prove it. One uploaded HeLa's genome to a public website called S NPedia, a Wikipedia-like site for translating genetic information. Minutes later, it produced a report full of personal information about Henrietta Lacks, and her family. (The scientist kept that r eport c o n fidential, sharing it only with me.) Until recently, few people had the ability to process raw genome data like this. Now anyone who can send
is removed),there's no need to get consent before using them in research. The problem, says Yaniv Erlich, a fellow at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, is t h a t a n onymity vanishes when it comes to DNA: "People don't realize it's impossible to hide genetic information once it's out there." He and his colleagues recently proved that it's possible to use online public databases to find the identities of people whose anonymous DNA samples had been sequenced and published online. Yet researchers aren't required to tell you that there is no guarantee that a genome, once sequenced, will stay private or anonymous. More than a year and a half ago, the NIH and several government organizations proposed changingcurrent regulations to require consent for tissue research, genome sequencing and sharing private data. The proposal generated public comment butnothing changed, and science continues to move forward with speed, potential and outdated regulation. The Lackses' experiences over the last 60 years foretold nearly every major ethical issue raised by research on human tissues and genetic material. Now they're raising a new round of ethical questions for science:Though their consent
is not (yet) required for publishing private genetic information from HeLa, should it be'? Should we require consent before anyone's genome is sequenced and published? And what control should gene-sharing family members have? The Lacks family is proud
— Rebecca Skloot is the author of "The immortal Life of Henriet ta Lacks."
ifr~<9,
John Milton, th e 1 7thcentury writer and poet, is perhaps most responsible f or giving Satan and h i s rebel angels celebrity status. In "Paradise Lost," Milton imagines the fallen angels as "all monstrous, all pro-
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digious things," presenting them as the heroes of his epic work e x plaining humanity's fall from grace and justifying "the ways of God to man." From the novels in Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials series to films like "The Matrix," M i l ton's m a sterp iece continues t o i n f l u ence literature and popular culture. In D a n ielle T r u ssoni's
"Angelology" (2011), she bril-
is and was possible. The myth of the Titans, the story of O r pheus, the deeds of Noah and his sons, the creation story in Genesis and the apocryphal ruminations in the Book of Enoch (a noncanonical text once considered sacred) all play a role in smart suspenseful
ways.
The heroes at the center of "Angelopolis" are Verlaine, a handsome Ducati-riding angels, the Nephilim (angel scholar and member of an / human hybrids), as princi- elite sect of angel hunters pal players in human history. who has "the r emarkable She introduces an ancient ability to see the angels" in society o f A ng e lologists, plain sight and the "physical who have existed for a long stamina to capture them," as "there were giants on the and Evangeline, a stunning earth," and whose mission is Nephilim, w it h " i m mense to destroy the Nephilim's do- a nd luminous w i ngs" o f "deep purple shot through minion over humanity. This first novel also intro- with veins of silver" who duces readers to the char- can appear as human and acters and the mythology whose DNA may be the geof Trussoni's divine super- netic weapon for the coming natural world (the complex battle between humans and hierarchy of angels and their angels. stunning evolution). In her I found the world of this latest book, "Angelopolis," novel fascinating, especially she ramps up the action to t he alternative history o f thriller levels. Russia and the Romanovs From Paris to St. Peters- woven into the plot, includburg, from the hidden trea- ing the secret symbolism of sures of Russia's Hermitage Faberge eggs; motivations Museum to the abominations of Rasputin, the "holy man" locked in a subterranean Si- who had a demonic "influberian prison, Trussoni's plot ence on the tsar"; and apocasweeps readers breathlessly lyptic prints of Renaissance across Europe. She has cre- artist Albrecht Durer. ated such a seductive alterBut most of al l I l o v ed native history that it easily Trussoni's more subtle puts anything Dan Brown theme that to create a city of has imagined to shame. angels, a heaven on earth, Skillfully layering signifi- depends on "the Nephilim cant myths from before the descended from angels and Common Era into the narra- women." I'm not sure how tive, Trussoni makes it hard Milton would have felt about not to believe that anything that, but I'm fine with it. liantly re-imagines the descendants of Milton's rebel
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Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Crafts 8 Hobbies
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Musical Instruments
Lab mix female 1 yr. NEED TO CANCEL Rockhound Equipment Fiddle/violin Stand, FREE to good home 8 supplies. Saw, grind, F S-Browning YOUR AD? Cam o New Folds Flat $30. 541-420-5602, Joe. The Bulletin sand & polish. Lor- BPS 12g pump shot541-330-9070 tone 8 Highland Park ITEMS FORSALE 264-Snow RemovalEquipment Classifieds has an un, excellent shape, Lab Pups AKC, black "After Hours" Line Bend. 541 280-5574 201 - NewToday 265 - Building Materials 550. Baikal MP153 & yellow, Mas t e r Call 541-383-2371 Misc. Items 202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves semi-auto 12g shotHunter sired, perfor- S ponsor needed f o r 24 hrs. to cancel 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood mance pedigree, OFA s weet little Jenny 8 un, excellent shape, 9-pc quilted full/queen Bicycles & your ad! cert hips & e lbows, Spencer, 350. 503-440-1333. 204- Santa's Gift Basket 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers a b andoned bedspread, floral pattern, Call 541-771-2330 Accessories In Sisters. 205- Free ltems with badly injured eyes. Refrigerator,Frigidaire 26 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment www.kinnamanretrievers.ccm $45. 541-678-5605 One of Jenny's eyes had cf sidexside, water & ice, 208- Pets and Supplies 270 - Lost and Found M en's 26" Huffy bike, Kel-Tec PMR-30. New Advertise V A CATION Labradoodfes - Mini 8 to be removed 8 she has $175 obo 541-923-8006 210- Furniture & Appliances in box. $995 OBO. $100. GARAGESALES SPECIALS to 3 m i lmed size, several colors little vision in the other. 211 - Children's Items Call 541-475-6892 Tea tables (2), light oak, 541-678-5605 541-504-2662 275 Auction Sales (Photo after surgery.) lion P acific N o rth212 - Antiques & Collectibles after 2 p.m. $20/pair. www.alpen-ridge.com Her brother Spencer also westerners! 30 daily 280 - Estate Sales 215- Coins & Stamps Call 541-678-5605 had to have an eye resix 281 - Fundraiser Sales Labrador, black male, 7 moved but has good viLeupold VX-II scope, newspapers, 240- Crafts and Hobbies Ski Equipment states. 25-word clas3 x9x40, l i k e ne w , yrs, great family dog, 282Sales Northwest Bend 241 - Bicycles and Accessories in the other. Vet Tempur-Pedic set sified $525 for a 3-day healthy, loves cats. Free sion 284- Sales Southwest Bend s ervices are not d o - with brushed nickel Ski B oots, T e cnica, $200. 541-647-8931 242 - Exercise Equipment a d. Cal l (916) to good h ome o n ly. nated & this was a big 286- Sales Northeast Bend brand new, size 30.0, Remington Winqmaster 2 88-6019 o r 243 - Ski Equipment bed; Cal-King; exvis i t 541-536-7960 expense for a small non$195. 541-306-1324 cellent condition; 244 - Snowboards 288- Sales Southeast Bend Model 8 7 0L W 20 www.pnna.com/advert Labradors, AKC: black 8 profit. Can you help by $700.00 auge shotgun, $500. ising pndc.cfm for the 290- Sales RedmondArea 245 - Golf Equipment choc; 1st shots, athletic sponsoring one of them? 541-548-3774; all Eric Pacific Nor t h west 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 292- Sales Other Areas parents, $350-450. Ready Are you able to offer a Golf Equipment 541-639-7740 for Daily Con n ection. 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. safe forever home for 3/23. 541-410-9000 FARM MARKET pictures/details. (PNDC) springs, good 248- Health and Beauty Items 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery Miniature Pinscher AKC one or both? Cat Res- Twin box Golf Membership cond, $35. cue, Adoption 8 Foster 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs Brasada Ranch,long Triple K leather shoul- Bedazzle hi-qual. glass 316 - Irrigation Equipment puppies, red males only. 541-420-2220 Team, 5 4 1 -389-8420, der holster, for 1911. bead set, new w/xtras, 251 - Hot TubsandSpas term lease. Champion b l oodlines, PO Box 6 441, B end 325- Hay, Grain and Feed Dbl. mag pouch. $135 $25. 541-548-6642 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 541-408-0014 Washer, Roper, heavy vaccinated & wormed. 97708; PayPal 8 more 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies new, take $75 cash. duty extra large capacity, 255 - Computers $400. Call 541-480-0896 thru www.craftcats.org. Boots, 2 pair new men's 341 - Horses and Equipment 541-480-5203 $150. 541-388-1484 256- Photography Thanks 8 bless you! Hytest, sz 9i/e EE 8 9i/eE, 345Li ve s t o ck and E qui pment Guns, Hunting 257- Musical Instruments Walther P22 semi-auto $50 ea. 541-678-5605 Yorkie, 8 wks, purebred The Bulletin 347 Llamas/Exotic Animals 258 - Travel/Tickets & Fishing .22, like new, w/2-10 Brass fireplace tool set, P eople g i ving p e t s male, 1st shots/dew- recommends extra 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers rd mags, case and 259- Memberships orming, mom 8 dad on I ca uo s e away are advised to $12. 358Farmer's Column p 1 00 rds of am m o . 260- Misc. Items site. $400. K r istina, 541-678-5605 be selective about the 200 rds .40 Winchasing products or • 375- Meat and Animal Processing $320 541-604-0862 261 - MedicalEquipment new owners. For the 541-408-3211 from out of I chester white box. 383 - Produce andFood Buying Diamonds 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. protection of the ani- Yorkies! 7 wks, 1 male, 2 y services WANTED! Cash paid the area. Sending y Jacketed Hollow /Gold for Cash mal, a personal visit to females, tails docked & ' cash, 263- Tools Points JHP. Not ball. for old cartridge col- Saxon's checks, or Fine Jewelers the home is recom- dewclaws, $600. Can de- l credit i n f o rmation 180 Grain. Personal lections. 208 541-389-6655 mended. liver. Call 541-792-0375 Defense ammo. 541-280-6175/ may be subjected to Pets 8 Supplies $160./ 200rds 9mm BUYING For more The Bulletin People Look for Information l FRAUD. Servtng central oreqon srnce a03 Wanted: Collector Lionel/American Flyer 0 information about an s Federal Champion About Products and Adopt a nice CRAFT cat Donate deposit bottles/ 115 gr. FMJ $110. seeks high quality trains, accessories. you may from Tumalo sanctuary, cans to local all volun- Pet barrier for car, blksteel Services Every Day through advertiser, fishing items. 541-408-2191. call t h e Or e gon / David 415-606-0547 to fit most cars, TheBulletin Classifieds Pet Smart, or P etco!teer, non-profit rescue, to adjusts Call 541-678-5753, or State Attor ney ' 503-351-2746 BUYING & S E LLING Fixed, shots, ID chip, help w/cat spay/neuter $30. 541-504-8399 l General's O f fi ce AR15, .223 Bushmaster, 210 tested, more! Sanctuary vet bills. Cans for Cats BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS gold jewelry, silver Consumer P rotec- • like new, 2-30 rd mags, Winchester desirable Alland open Sat. 1-5 (CLOSED trailer at Bend Pet Exgold coins, bars, Furniture & Appliances t ion ho t l in e at I $1650 obo 503-250-0118 model 70 Pre 64 300 Easter Sun.), other days press, 420 NE Windy Search the area's most rounds, wedding sets, by appt. 65480 78th, Knolls thru 4/8; t hen comprehensive listing of 60" glass-top patio ped- l 1-877-877-9392. Bend local pays CASH!! W IN a n d mod e l class rings, sterling silBend. 54 1 -389-8420.Ray's Food, Sisters thru classified advertising... estal table w/chairs & umfor all firearms & 100-284. Call ver, coin collect, vinPhotos, map, more at 4/29. Donate Mon-Fri O real estate to automotive, brella, heavy good quality, tage watches, dental ammo. 541-526-0617 541-420-8689 merchandise to sporting gold. Bill Fl e ming, Want to Buy or Rent www.craftcats.org 8 like Smith Signs, 1515 NE $75. 541-312-2951 Bushmaster AR-15 223 us on Facebook. goods. Bulletin Classifieds 541-382-9419. 2nd; or at CRAFT, Tu212 appear every day in the cal. + Red Dot scope malo any time. WANTED: Tobacco A1 Washers&Dryers Sporting Goods DISH Network. Starting Info : print or on line. $1,499. Brand new in pipes - Briars and Boxer X English Bulldog 5 41-389-8420; Antiques & $150 ea. Full warat $19.99/month (for - Misc. box. 541-279-1843 smoking accessories. pups, CK C r e g 'd.www.craftcats.org Call 541-385-5809 ranty. Free Del. Also Collectibles 1 2 mos ) & Hi g h WANTED: RAZORS$800. 541-325-3376 www.bendbulletin.com wanted, used W/D's CASH!! New set of 4 "Old Mill Speed Internet startGillette, Gem, Schick, DO YOU HAVE 541-280-7355 Antique barber chair, For Guns, Ammo & District" Silipints, $32. ing at $14.95/month etc. Shaving mugs The Bulletin SOMETHING TO Canary Males Reloading Supplies. ServtngCentral Oregon s>nce i903 $150. (where ava i lable.) 541-318-5732 and accessories. SELL 5 © $45-$55 each. 541-408-6900. China cabinet, beautiful S AVE! As k A b o ut 541-420-2220 Fair prices paid. Pet door, Ruff Weather, white solid wood with FOR $500 OR (541)548-7947. SAME DAY InstallaCall 541-390-7029 medium sz, 7a/4'" x 13" tempered glass doors & Antique Hutch - 6'x3' 100 LESS? ion! C A L L No w ! DOM'TMISS THIS between 10 am-3 pm. TV, Stereo & Video5 t1-866-947-7995. Non-commercial high, $40. 541-548-5516 sides, glass shelves, mir- yrs +, $200 OBO. For CATS: male, 3 yrs, indeadvertisers may pendent but loving; fePoodle pups AKCtoys. rored inner back, 2 draw- info, 541-388-5696 (PNDC) SAVE on Cable TV-Inplace an ad with below, 68" high x 40" male, 6 yrs, indoor only, Loving, cuddly compan- ers DO YOU HAVE ternet-Digital Phoneoui' Crystal c o r dial/sherry wide x 18" deep. $350. EdenPURE® Portable shy but affectionate. Free ions. 541-475-3889 SOMETHING TO glasses (4) $35 . Satellite. You've Got I Pe ts 8 Supplies to good homes only. "QUICK CASH 541-548-2849 Infrared Heaters. Join SELL 541-330-9070 A C hoice! O ptions the 3 million beating 541-536-7960 SPECIAL" Queensland Heelers DRYERFOR $500 OR from ALL major ser- the cold and winter standard 8 mini,$150 8 1 week 3 lines 1 2 Kenmore heavy duty, LESS? The Bulletin recomvice providers. Call us heating bills. SAVE up. 541-280-1537 o 2~ e eks 2 0 ! Where can you find a $50. 541-388-1484 Non-commercial mends extra caution www.rightwayranch.wor to learn more! CALL $229 Ad must include on our when purc h asadvertisers may helping hand? Today. 888-757-5943. EdenPURE® Model dpress.com /t Ccnc!IZn < ccncePt price of single item GENERATE SOME exDeVlix~ place an ad ing products or ser(PNDC) citement i n your From contractors to of $500 or less, or 750. C A L L NOW Rodent control experts Visit our HUGE with our vices from out of the multiple items while supplies last! yard care, it's all here (barn cats) seek work neighborhood! Plan a home decor "QUICK CASH area. Sending cash, 1-866-906-6902. whose total does garage sale and don't in exchange for safe consignment store. checks, or credit inSPECIAL" in The Bulletin's not exceed $500. Computers • (PNDC) shelter, basic c a re. forget to advertise in New items 1 week3lines 12 f ormation may b e "Call A Service Fixed, shots. Will de- classified! OI' arrive daily! subjected to fraud. FAST TREES, Potted Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809. T HE B U LLETIN r e liver! 541-389-8420. 930 SE Textron, For more i nforma- Professional" Directory ~2 e e k s 2 0 ! Grow 6-10 feet yearly! 541-385-5809 quires computer adAd must tion about an adver$16-$22 delivered. Schnauzer mi n i atureLa-Z-Boy Big Man chair, Bend 541-318-1501 www.bendbulietin.com vertisers with multiple www.fasttrees.com include price of tiser, you may call AKC puppies, ready to swivel rocker recliner, www.redeuxbend.com Dachs. AKC mini pups ad schedules or those b rown c l oth, $1 5 0 . sl e t e o f $500 the O r egon State www.bendweenies.com or 509-447-4181 go, $500. 541-416-0941 ~ selling multiple sys541-382-6310 after 3pm The Bulletin reserves or less, or multiple Attorney General's All colors. 541-508-4558 German Shepherds, AKC tems/ software, to disGENERATE SOME www.sherman-ranch.us Shih Tzu awesome pup- Loveseat, plum color, the right to publish all Office Co n s umer items whosetotal close the name of the pies, 1st shots, wormed, EXCITEMENT 541-281-6829 does not exceed Protection hotline at Diamond Dog Food exc. cond., only 6 mo. ads from The Bulletin business or the term $400. 541-977-4686 IN YOUR 1-877-877-9392. $500. newspaper onto The Lamb 8 Rice "dealer" in their ads. a s k ing Hounds, started, 1 fe- Just bought a new boat? pd. $ 4 00 , NEIGBORHOOD. 40 lbs. - $26.99 Bulletin Internet web$325. 541-382-2046, Private party advertismale (2.5 yrs); 1 male Plan a garage sale and Call Classifieds at The Bulletin Sell your old one in the site. Quarry Ave. Hay & ers are defined as Serving Central Oregon since 1903 don't forget to adver(2.5 yrs); 1 male (16 classifieds! Ask about our Loveseat-rocker, 541-385-5809 Feed. 541-923-2400 who sell one mo.); house broke, tise in classified! Super Seller rates! earth tones, $35 The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com those www.quarryfeed.com computer. $250ea. 541-447-1323 Seming Central Oregon stnce 1903 541-385-5809. 541-385-5809 541-678-5605
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 SUNDAY MARCH 31 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T HE N E W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D YOU'LL KNOW IT WHEN YOU SEE IT By Dan Schoenhoiz / Edited by Will Shortz
Across
5 8 Oranges and lemon s
I Map symbol
59 Cry wit h a f i s t pu mp
5 Tolstoy and O ' N e i l l heroines
60 1994 fil m based on a n "S.N.L." s k i t
1 0 Origi nal st ate of t h e
61 Porto(capital of Benin)
u niverse, in m y t h
16 Haul off
116 A n s w e r t o 6 7 Across, per Emerson
18 Some November p araders, for s h o r t
122 Iona College
25 1804 symphony that
athlete
6 6 What's no t h in g b u t problems?
1 24 Whoopi' s r ol e i n "The Color Purple"
20 Vessel opener
67 Classic question a nswered six t i m e s i n this puz z l e
1 25 Rock and Ro l l Hall-o f - F a m er James
70 Camera shop item, informally
126 Office nos.
74 Certain feed
128 What darners darn
77 Rustbucket
129 Like many h ighlighter col o r s
24 Answer to 6 7 -
Across, per John F.
78 Stiff dr i nk, maybe
Kennedy
30 Pull (in ) 31 Real estate abbr. 3 2 Answer to 6 7 Across, per Yeats
38 River of Phoenix
127 Pulls in
88 Answer to 67-
2 Mediter r anean salad w ith bu l gur w h e at , chopped tomatoes
and parsley
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6 Advanced degree? 7" say more?"
55 Director Wenders
69 Mimics
56 Greek vowel
71 Fancy tie
9 Undiluted
5 7 W.W. II t r a n spor t : Abbr.
10 Davis's domain:
62 Compete
Dragons co.
8 Hospital procedure, for short
Abbr.
Nietzsche
12 Composer Previn
113 On
1 3 Like most B l u e t o o t h headsets
114 Property encumbrance
14 As easy as pie, say
15 As easy as
115 Courses
97 Certain Ukrainian 99 Caril lo n so und
1 09 Word on mail f r o m Spain
72 Christiansen who founded Lego
8 4 Reach, with " a t "
100 Challenge
1 10 Angler's l i n e
86 Tellico Dam agcy.
101 Big shock
73 What a di spensary
87 Pfizer competitor
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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday .. . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .
Starting at 3 lines "UNDER'500in total merchandise
... 5:00 pm Fri ... . Noon Mon Noon Tues .. . Noon Wed ... Noon Thurs ... 11:00 am Fri ... 3:00 pm Fri ... 5:00 pm Fri
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OVER'500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50
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A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since t903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
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PLEASE NOTE; Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if 3 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 onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday. 260
I
Misc . Items
Misc. Items
Fuel & Wood
•
269
270
Gardening Supplies 8 Equipment
Lost & Found
286
•
Auc t i on Sales
Sales Northeast Bend
Vision cookware, 8 Bend Habitat All Year Dependable Found Toyota key, off Consigned Farm CARD DEBT NOW! piece set, $35. RESTORE China Hat Rd. Call to Machinery & ** FREE ** Firewood: Seasoned 541-678-5605 For newspaper Cut payments by up Building Supply Resale Lodgepole, Split, Del. identify: 541-948-3624 Equipment Auction Garage Sale Kit to half. Stop creditors Quality at LOW Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 delivery, call the Sat & Sun Place an ad in The from calling. Wanted- paying cash PRICES for$335. Cash, Check Circulation Dept. at April 6 8 7, 2013 Bulletin for your gaCall a Pro 866-775-9621. 740 NE 1st or Credit Card OK. 541-385-5800 at 9:00 am sharp! for Hi-fi audio 8 sturage sale and re541-312-6709 541-420-3484. Whether you need a (PNDC) To place an ad, call Woodburn dio equip. Mclntosh, ceive a Garage Sale Open to the public. 541-385-5809 Auction Yard, BL, Marantz, D y fence fixed, hedges Kit FREE! Where can you find a Highspeed Internet EV- Jnaco, or email /2 mile south of Heathkit, Santrimmed or a house ERYWHERE By Sat- sui, Carver, NAD, etc. claeeifiedobendisulletin.com helping hand? Woodburn, OR KIT INCLUDES: ellite! Speeds up to built, you'll find on HWY 99 E • 4 Garage Sale Signs From contractors to 12mbps! (200x faster Call 541-261-1BOB More info at • $2.00 Off Coupon To Servme Central Qregan vnre l903 professional help in than dial-up.) Starting yard care, it's all here www.woodburnaucUse Toward Your 263 The Bulletin's "Call a at $49.95/mo. CALL in The Bulletin's Next Ad tion.com WHEN BUYING NOW 8 G O F A ST! Tools Prompt Delivery • 10 Tips For "Garage Service Professional" "Call A Service FIREWOOD... 1-888-718-2162. Rock, Sand 8 Gravel Sale Success!" Directory Professional" Directory (PNDC) Ryobi drill press 10", To avoid fraud, Multiple Colors, Sizes 541-385-5809 Landscaping Co. 10 " Craftsman The Bulletin Seasoned Juniper$150/ Instant Estate Sales Leather org a nizer, $75; • 541-389-9663 PICK UP YOUR Radial arm saw with recommends paycord rounds; $170/ 3-ring binder 8 inserts, cabinet, $150; Router GARAGE SALE KIT at ment for Firewood Found women's s uncord split. Delivered in $20. 54t-330-9070 Look What I Found! 1777 SW Chandler table and misc. bits, only upon delivery Sodium grow lights, glasses, Nordeen x-coun- You'll find a little bit of Central OR, since Ave., Bend, OR 97702 3 O $55each. and inspection. try trail 3/23. 54t -290-1220 Metal garden arbor, $75. $100. 10" table saw 1970! Call eves, everything in 541-408-5118 1 V2 HP with 1 HP dust • A cord is 128 cu. It. Wicker chair, $25, 8 541-420-4379 The Bulletin's daily 4' x 4' x 8' R EMEMBER: If you settee, $45. Bow front collector, $150; Delta garage and yard sale 269 4" belt and 6 " d i sc have lost an animal, • Receipts should SUPER TOP SOIL (glass) curio cabinet section. From clothes www.herehe eoilandbark.com don't forget to check w/light, $95. B aker's sander, $50; 10" Delta include name, Gardening Supplies to collectibles, from Screened, soil 8 comThe Humane Society rack, $75. 54t -389-5408 bandsaw and stand + phone, price and & Equipment housewares to hard- BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS post m i x ed , no in Bend 541-382-3537 extra blade, $100; 16" kind of wood purware, classified is rocks/clods. High huSauna, 2-person infra- Toro Electric s now chased. Redmond, 20 assorted gardening mus level, exc. f or always the first stop for Search the area's most red, hardly used, ste- blower 1 yr. old, $150. • Firewood ads 541-923-0882 comprehensive listing of tools, plus self-propelled flower beds, lawns, cost-conscious reo, light, must see. Call between 8 a.m. MUST include spePrineville, mower, sell separately gardens, classified advertising... consumers. And if straight $900. 541-389-2919. 541-447-7178; and 8 p . m . R a lph, cies and cost per orall, $250. E-mail you're planning your real estate to automotive, s creened to p s o i l. OR Craft Cats, 541-382-7773. cord to better serve sgin@bendbroadband.com The Bulletin Offers own garage or yard merchandise to sporting Bark. Clean fill. De541-389-8420. our customers. or call 541-516-8646 Free Private Party Ads sale, look to the clas- goods. Bulletin Classifieds liver/you haul. Two starter tool k its, • 3 lines - 3 days sifieds to bring in the Garden Shelf, s/4 circular, 541-548-3949. REWARD! Alive or re$15 and $20. • Private Party Only 3 folding shelves, green, mains. Lost 16-yr-old buyers. You won't find appear every day in the Serving Central Oregon since rsea 541 -548-6642. print or on line. • Total of items advermale mini Doxie black a better place $49. 541-330-9070 270 tised must equal $200 & silver, green collar for bargains! Call 541-385-5809 Have Gravel, will Travel! Lost & Found 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Cinders, topsoil, fill mateor Less Check out the and tags. Hearing and Call Classifieds: www.bendbuiietin.com $190/cord. Multi-cord FOR DETAILS or to s ight not g o od. I n 541-385-5809 or classifieds online rial, etc. Excavation & Found assortment of t/z cords PLACE AN AD, discounts, & Peterson's Rock Garemail www.bendbuttetin.com septic systems. Abbas tools on Barr Rd., north available. Immediate Call 541-385-5809 a r e a , 3/2 6 . classified@bendbulletin.com Construction cce¹7884O of Tumalo. 360-61 0-5443 d en sernag Ceatrsl Oregon snce f903 Updated daily delivery! 541-408-6193 541-389-8782 Fax 541-385-5802 C818541-548-6812 GET FREE OF CREDIT
The Bulletin
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ow ou r
u . e
o ur
Hay, Grain & Feed
1st quality grass hay, 70- Ib bales, barn stored, $250/ tom Also big bales! Patterson Ranch, Sisters, 541-549-3831 Horses & Equipment COLT STARTING We build solid foundations. Check us out.
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Ratter L F Ranch & Farm Svcs.- Custom Haying 8 Field Work Call Lee Fischer,
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c a l I 5 4 1-3 8 5 -5 8 0 9
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY MARCH 31 2013 G3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER S C A B B E D
T A B O U L I
A R B O E D T H T A E M D A E L L T S P A T H A B E E L F AM I U S S T H A R J E A A E L X T S
A S T R I N G E N T
N N A S T E N T H E G R D IO S I 0 N T G A S P V O L T E V E R N O W H A T I O H T R E H A N D E D I T U N R O P E A R U S M I M E A R A R N S
C H A O S U N N E A T D E R R E 0 F R E A I L A R C A N A A G A I N T R E V O E X I S A R T E A P G E T M P E R V E E S A R A S C R T A S K L I E N S T R E S C E L I H O L E
S I M I L E
A C T B A R O C R A N R M I T Y T R A C EWO T F A T S Y E R A Z O O O U B L R R I E S E A D U G G E F L I F O U T E T A R E T T N E O
Employment Opportunities
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
573
Employment Opportunities
R iM X S S
8 Dm5iem
Busine ss Opportunities WARNING The Bulletin
recommends that you Chief Engineers Home cleaning crew Service Technicians Trades - CNC Machininvestigate every OPB Seeks Chief En- member need weekist Programmer, in Central Oregon RV phase of investment gineers excited about days only, no week- dealership seeks ser- Belgrade, Montana. opportunities, e s peE S the p o ssibilities of the ends, eves o r h oli- vice technicians. Must Expenence required c ially t h os e fr o m evolving broadcast in- days. 541-815-0015 be customer service wage D.O.E. ImmediV out-of-state or offered dustry and h e lping oriented and have RV ate opening. $20-$35/ Maintenance by a p erson doing E E O PB m a i ntain a P-T, for residential facil- & camper experience. hour with b e nefits. 514 business out of a lostatewide broadcast ity. Repair and main Competitive pay and Please call Insurance cal motel or hotel. In4 06-388-2200 or presence. There are benefits. Please send E K on gr o unds, vestment of f e rings two positions avail- work email to R S SAVE $$$ on AUTO and bldg. Prior resume' must be r e gistered able, one located in equip., bcrvhire I gmail.com employmentoonlyexp i n in s t itutional INSURANCE from the with the Oregon DeW I E S Medford and one in longrange.com or apply in person at maint. preferred. m ajor names y o u partment of Finance. La Grande. These are www.rimrocktrailsats.org 63500 N. Hwy 97, (PNDC) I A T know and trust. No We suggest you confull-time, salaried, exBend, Oregon. forms. No hassle. No sult your attorney or Where can you find a M empt, regular status BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS obligation. Call call CON S UMER E M positions with b e n- Search the area's most helping hand? READY F O R MY Special Education U D D HOTLINE, efits. For more infor- comprehensive listing of Teacher From contractors to QUOTE now! CALL 1-503-378-4320, mation and i nstruc- classified advertising... A N I A D 1-888-706-8256. 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. tions on how to apply, real estate to automotive, L ake County ESD is yard care, it's all here (PNDC) S I S R to: merchandise to sporting go in The Bulletin's now accepting appliA Classified ad is an http://www.opb.org/in- goods. Bulletin Classifieds cations for a Special I K "Call A Service 528 EASY W AY TO sideopb/careers/jobs/. appear every day in the Education T eacher. REACH over 3 million Professional" Directory F P O H E D 0 Loans 8 Mortgages print or on line. Applicants must have Pacific Northwesternor qualify for Oregon E P O Call 541-385-5809 ers. $5 2 5 /25-word Dental Insurance WARNING Looking for your next licensure as a c lassified ad i n 3 0 www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin recomW A P R & Collections employee? Teacher with Handidaily newspapers for S mends you use cauFull-time position capped Learner En- Place a Bulletin help 3-days. Call the PaA L O S tion when you proSennng Central Oregont nre 19IB wanted ad today and with attractive dorsement. This is a cific Northwest Daily vide personal reach over 60,000 G S E benefits package. part-time (.5 FTE) poMedical /Endoscopy (916) information to compa- Connection N A readers each week. sition with a s a lary Fun, family-like E E S Nurse nies offering loans or 2 88-6019 o r e m a il Your classified ad range $ 1 6 ,565 elizabethOcnpa.com team. Musthave credit, especially will also appear on DOE, partial for more info (PNDC) dental experience BE'NDSURGenr $29,716 those asking for adPUZZLE IS ON PAGE GZ bendbulletin.com benefits. Pos i t ion C • F. • N • T ia g C vance loan fees or with work referwhich currently closes 4/30/13. InkeCeee'IkehekeCeetkee companies from out of Where can you find a receives over 1.5 ences to apply; Submit application Full-Time, 4 - 1 0 hr. state. If you have helping hand? million page views Dentrix helpful. online at shifts, Mon.-Fri. Appliconcerns or quesevery month at www.edzapp.com From contractors to cant must have Endotions, we suggest you no extra cost. Fax resume to scopy exp e rience include application, consult your attorney yard care, it's all here Can be found on these pages : Bulletin Classifieds 541-475-61 59 preferably in an ASC resume 8 cover letter or call CONSUMER in The Bulletin's Get Results! setting. Propofol seHOTLINE, (Madras). Call 385-5809 "Call A Service EMPLOYMENT FINANCEAND BUSINESS dation a plus, but not 1-877-877-9392. or place 410 - Private Instruction 507- Real Estate Contracts required. Job offers Professional" Directory your ad on-line at 421 - Schools andTraining 514 - Insurance e xcellent bene f i t BANK TURNED YOU bendbulletin.com DO YOU NEED package. I n terested DOWN? Pnvate party Extreme Value Adver454- Looking for Employment 528 - Loans andMortgages A GREAT persons should email chasing products or I will loan on real es- tising! 30 Daily news470 - Domestic& In-Home Positions 543- Stocks andBonds services from out of I 486 EMPLOYEE resume to: tate equity. Credit, no papers $525/25-word 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 558 - Business Investments ) the area. Sending jobs@bendsurgery.com RIGHT NOW? problem, good equity classified 3-d a y s. 486 - IndependentPositions 573- BusinessOpportunities c ash, c hecks, o r Independent Positions Call The Bulletin is all you need. Call Reach 3 million PaMENTAL HEALTH ) credit i n f ormation before 11 a.m. and Oregon Land M ort- cific Northwesterners. THE CHILD CENTER i may be subjected to Delivery 476 476 get an ad in to pubgage 541-388-4200. For more information A Circle of Care for FRAUD. Earn extra money Employment Employment lish the next day! call (916) 288-6019 or Children and Families For more i nformadelivering the D ex 541-385-5809. LOCAL MONEY:We buy email: Opportunities Opportunities A treatment program for tion about an adverDirectory i n the VIEW the secured trust deeds 8 elizabethOcnpa.com emotionally/behaviorally i tiser, you may call Bend/Redmond area. note,some hard money for the Pacific NorthClassifieds at: ALCOHOL & DRUG disturbed children and the Oregon State Must over the age of loans. Call Pat Kellev west Daily ConnecCAUTION READERS: Residential Counselors www.bendbulletin.com t heir families has a n I Attorney General's 18 years, have a 541-382-3099 ext.19. opening for: tion. (PNDC) Mature individuals to valid driver's license, Office Co n s umer g Ads published in eEm- work in drug and alProgram Supervisor Protection hotline at I your own vehicle and Fabricator/Welderployment Opportuni- cohol resi d ential /Therapist proof of insurance. Independent Contractor t ies" i n c lude e m - treatment for t eens. Madras manufacturer. Minimum qualifications: i 1-877-877-9392. We pay per book, Excellent welding skills 421 ployee and Nights & weekends. Master's degree plus two ie Bpllctip per stop, b lended i T l required; ability to in- years of p ost-masters Schools & Training i ndependent po s i Apply at: r ate. P lease c a l l drawings w/ * Supplement Your Income* in psychology, sotions. Ads for posi- www.rimrocktrailsats.org terpret 425-736-7927 standard welding sym- work cial work o r r e l ated A IRLINES ARE H I R- tions that require a fee Bike Mechanic bols; must be highly mental h ealth f i elds. ING - Train for hands or upfront investment Must have accurate. Call Demonstrated compeon Aviation Mainte- must be stated. With Needed. 541-475-4239 for app. tence in leadership, proprevious bike s hop nance Career. FAA any independent job 8 job description. exp. Send resume to Supervisorg ram p l anning a n d approved p r ogram. opportunity, p l ease infoo4sro.com. evaluation, p e r sonnel Redmond Public Library Financial aid if quali- investigate thorFiscal/Personnel supervision and manfied - Housing avail- oughly. Call The Bulletin At Assistant agement. Salary ranqe: able. Call Aviation In541-385-5809 Exciting opportunity in Redmond! Culver School District $ 33,523-37,003 plu s stitute of Use extra caution when Place Your Ad Or E-Mail is see k in g a v ery g e nerous e m Maintenance. Supervisoris key leader of cohesive applying for jobs onAs- ployee benefits package. 1-877-804-5293. line and never pro- At: www.bendbulletin.com Fiscal/Personnel E-mail resume to sistant providing acteam providing progressive services. (PNDC) vide personal infor- Caregiver ii h te counting and personSupervisorneeds proven effectiveATTEND CO L L EGE mation to any source Prineville Senior care thechildcenter.or nel related functions, ONLINE 100%. you may not have re- h ome l o oking f o r experience preferred. ness with diverse customer service searched and deemed Ranch / Farm Team, We are looking for independent conCaregiver for multiple Please visit our website *Medical, *Business, situations and successful leadership to be reputable. Use in Eastern Oregon *Criminal Jus t i ce, s hifts, p a rt-time t o www.culver.k12.or.us tractors to service home delivery extreme caution when Seeking 2-person team full-time. Pass or call 541-546-2541 *Hospitality, *Web. and management skills. Deadline: routes in: for hard labor job opr esponding to A N Y Job placement assis- online e m p loyment criminal background for further details. z:oo on Thursday, April 4. e rating a rem o t e check. 541-447-5773. tance. Comp u ter ranch, dealing with available. F i n ancial ad from out-of-state. Must be available 7 days a week, early morncattle, wheat farming Aid if qual i fied. ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle. and large garden. No http://www.deschuteslibrary.org/ We suggest you call SCHEV a u thorized. the State of Oregon smoking, drug use, Call 866- 6 8 8-7078 drinking or c r iminal employment.asp for more details, Consumer Hotline at Please call 541.385.5800 or www.CenturaOnline.c application, and supplemental 1-503-378-4320 history; we will check. 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or om (PNDC) Central Oregon Community College Must have lived and questionnaire. Or call (g4t) 3tz-toz5 o p enings l i sted b e l ow. G o to apply vja email at For Equal Opportunity has worked in the country https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply Call a Pro online O bendbulletin.com and understand that forassistance. EOE L aws: Oregon B uonline. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, reau of Labor & Inranch life is a 24/7 job Whether you need a 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; for both m e mbers. dustry, C i vil Rights fence fixed, hedges (541)383-7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Division, Nearest drug store is Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. trimmed or a house 971-673-0764 100 miles away and COCC is an AA/EO employer. neighbors are few. At D SSC I I U T E S P U B L I C built, you'll find least one team memIf you have any quesprofessional help in ADA Transport Driver / tions, concerns or ber must have experiNurseManager: GroundsSpecialist (Part Time) The Bulletin's "Call a ence with cattle and comments, contact: Endoscopy andPain Responsible for dual-function role that ing rowing crops, i n Service Professional" Classified Department volves driving the ADA shuttle van and percluding operating and The Bulletin Be®SURGERv Directory forming general grounds duties. 30hr/wk on a 541-385-5809 repairing machinery. C • F. • N • T • 6 • g C 12-month contract $10.15-$12.08/hr. Closes 541-385-5809 The other m ember hhe Cae ' ikete loeCoehkte April 1. should love to garden Job Summary:We are looking for a strong Oregon Medical TrainThe Bulletin gxEs o and plan to plant and Oc leader to fill the Nurse Manager role for the ing PCS — Phlebotomy Shuttle Driver (Part Time) harvest a large garEndoscopy and Pain departments. This posiclasses begin May 6, Responsible for driving the campus shuttle on z DESCHUTES COUNTY den and can some, Find exactly what tion requires an individual capable of provid2013. Registration now a fixed route, responsible for keeping interior and separately have ing direct oversight of Endoscopy and Pain you are looking for in the of vehicle clean, maintain daily passenger log, P CAREER OPPORTUNITIES c omputer skills t o while managing 14-18 FTE's. The position remedicaltrainin .com a nd assist shuttle riders. 30hr/wk on a CLASSIFIEDS prepare and s ubmit 541-343-3100 ports directly to the Clinical Director. Duties 9-month contract $10.15-$12.08/hr. Closes weekly reports of daily BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, Older will include, but not be limited to, performance April 1. activities and r anch Adult. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN evaluations and performance management as General conditions. Su b m it well as new staff orientation. This position is a CROOK COUNTY detailed resumes, in- UNTIL FILLED. member of multiple committees. Temporary Instructor of EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES cluding work history ForestResources Technology with dates, education, COMMUNITY JUSTICESPECIALIST I, Juvenile Qualifications: Must be able to demonstrate Provide instruction in the Forest Resources Crook Countyl Wellness 8 Education Board skills, goals, three refstrong leadership and communication skills. Technology Program in both classroom and of Central Oregon Community Justice Division. Full-time erences with phone Must be a licensed RN in the state of Oregon, laboratory environments. Master's req. + 3-yr. Executive Administrative Assistant numbers. T w o-peror able to obtain licensure upon hire. 3-5 years field exp. Start Fall Term September 2013. position. Deadline: SUNDAY, 04/07/13. $31,979- $32,945 DOE son team applications of Endoscopy experience, preferably in an Closes April 1. Full time wl benefits only, please. ASC setting. The ideal candidate will have CUSTODIAL SUPERVISOR (Njght Crew), Closes: April 12, 2013 at 5r00 p.m. Email resume to: management experience within an ASC setAssistant Professor f,of History rm33307736©gmail.com Property 8 Facilities Dept. Full-time position. ting. Provide instruction in World History from the Position Overview: Under the supervision of origins of civilizations in the Middle East, the Executive Director, the Executive AdminisDeadline: TUESDAY, 04/02/13. Position details:This is a full time exempt poMediterranean area, Africa, China, Indian sub- Remember.... trative Assistant directs the daily operations of sition; Monday through Friday. Competitive A dd your we b a d - DEVELOPMENTAL the W EBCO, a n d p r o vides s e cretarial continent and the Americas to the end of the DISABILITIES SPECIALIST I, salary, benefit package, retirement and bonus 20th century; including Western Civilization dress to your ad and services for WEBCO staff. Experience in Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position. plan. Position closesApril 1 7, 2013. sequence. Master's req. + 2-yr. teaching coloffice management required, with secretarial readers on The lege level History. Start Fall Term September training in word processing preferred. Bulletin' s web site Deadline: MONDAY, 04/08/13. Email resume to jobs@bendsurgery.com 2013. Closes April 8. will be able to click Applications and full job description can be through automatically FINANGE DIREGTOR 8 TREASURER,full-time Assistant Professor I, found at www.co.crook.or.us. Please apply at to your site. of Automotive Technology the Crook County Treasurer's/Tax Office at position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. Resort Provide instruction in automotive technology 200 NE 2 n d S t . , P r ineville, OR 9 7 754; Activities person for students in Master Automotive Tech Cert 541-447-6554. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER or needed at and Automotive Management AAS. Offer The Pines at Sunriver. NURSE PRACTITIOMER,Adult Jail. Full-time training to business and industry on-campus j iv 541-593-2160. and offcampus workshops and creditcourse e Kla-MO- YaCaSinO position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED offerings. Associates degree req. + 10-yr. Resort 34333 Hwy 97 N. current upper-level diagnostic/electrical exp. in WITH FIRSTREVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON Find Your automotive technology. Start Fall Term SepChiloquin, OR MONDAY, 04/15/13. Seasonal Dream tember 2013. Closes April 22. Job at RESERVE DEPUTY SHERIFF,Sherjff's Office. Sunriver Resort! Immediate Need for Part Time Recruiting for the following positions: Instructorsin: Business,Water Distribution On-call positions.Deadline: THIS IS ANONSystems, Culinary,College-Level Writing, DIRECTOR - FINANCE GOING REGRUITMENT. Nursing, Anthropology, Spanish,
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Operate Your Own Business
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Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor
® Call Today ®
* Terrebonne *
The Bulletin
! L I BPA P Y
(Reports to General Manager) • BA/MS Finance, Accounting, related (req) • 5 yrs. Mgmt. exp. in Fin, Actng, Ops (req) • CPA, CMA, Public Actng exp. (preferred) • 5 yrs. Casino or auditing exp. (preferred) • Salary DOQ with benefits upon eligibility
PLAYER DEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR Responsible for identifying and developing premium, new & repeat player business. • HS / GED (Required) • Advance Degree (Preferred) • 3+ Yrs Related Casino/Gaming (Preferred) • Strong customer service history (Required) • Advanced computer applications skills (Required)
Please visit www.klamoyacasino.com for more information to or to download an application or contact HR at 541.783.7529
ACCOUNTANT
Established CPA firm in Klamath Falls, OR is seeking a CPA with 3-8 years' experience in public accounting. The successful candidate shall have a strong technical background in tax and financial accounting, as well as excellent communication skills. The applicant should be able to work both independently and as a team player. Candidate should have experience preparing & reviewing complex individual, corporate, and partnership returns. Responsibilities will also include tax planning, business consulting and accounting services. We a r e a p r o fessional family-like team and offer a competitive salary and a complete fringe benefit package. Please send cover letter and resume to: risaksonO iscoc as.com
and Speech
Looking for t alented individuals to t e ach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our Web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $500 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
The Bulletin Advertising Account Executive The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of media sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate. The position includes a competitive compensationpackage including benefits,and rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Email your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Jay Brandt, Advertising Director jbrandt@bendbulletin.com or drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mailto PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; No phone inquiries please. EOE / Drug Free Workplace
SUNRIVER
COMING SOON ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST - CLINICAL Come visit our INFORMATION SYSTEMS ANALYST Job Fair, April 3rd 3:00 —7roo PM ASSESSMENT TECHNICIANI Great Hall, MEDICAL DIRECTOR Sunriver Resort PERSONNEL DIRECTOR S unriver Reso r t offers c o mpetitive PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE 11 R ESO R T
A DESIINAIIO N
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compensation, a fun work e n vironment, unique resort benefits, flexible scheduling, 401(k), excellent training, d evelopment, a n d more! ~A
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seasonal ositions are available: • Front deskagents • Cooks • Servers • Housekeepers • Golf service
agents • Concierge staff • Groundskeepers • Stewards • Event Concierge • Hosts • Valet attendants • Recreationaides Apply online before the job fair at
sunriverresortjobs.com
DESGHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACGEPTS APPLICATIONSONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT
The Earned Income Tax Credit.
You may have earned it. Why not claim it? If you're working hard just to make
OUR WEBSITEAT www.deschutes.org/jods.
ends meet and have one or more
All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the
children living with you, you may qualify for the EITC. Think of it as a reward for doing one of life's most beautiful, most important and most loving jobs. Visit our Web site or
recruitment has closed and applications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are
sent vja email only. If you need assistance, please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541 ) 617-4722.
Deschutes County provides reasonable a ccommodations f o r per s ons wi t h disabilities. This material will be furnished in alternative format if needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
ask your tax preparer jf you qualify. Because when itcomes to
getting more for your family, consider it done. A message from the Internal Revenue Service.
www.Irs.gov/eItc ~
The I n t e r n a l
gg/) Revenue service
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G4 SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2013 • THE BULLETIN 773
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
i,llf'iNÃ Where buyers meet sellers Whether you're looking for a hat or a place to hang it, your future is just
Gambling Too Much? Meet singles right now! a page away. Free, confidential help No paid o perators, is available statewide. just real people like Call 1-877-MY-LIMIT you. Browse greetto talk to a c e rtified ings, exchange mescounselor 24/7 or visit sages and connect 1877mylimit.org to live. Try it free. Call Thousands of ada daily chat live with a coun- now: 8 7 7-955-5505. in print and online. selor. We are not here (PNDC) to judge. We are here to help. You can get ' x •~ your life back.
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Rental Alternatives
Single Male, 61, employed, seeks caretaker living arrangement. 54'-389-3639. 627
Vacation Rentals & Exchanges 5-star Gold C rown! Exc. 2 bdrm, Sunriver, next to amusement par k A v a il. 4/4-11 & 4 / 1 1-18. 541-433-2901 630
Rooms for Rent Studios 8 Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro 8 fridge. Utils & l inens. New owners. $145-$165/wk 541-382-1885 634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend S GREATWINTER S
DEAL! 2 bdrm, 1 bath, $530 & $540 w/lease. Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS.
(541) 383-3152
Cascade Rental Management. Co.
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Call for Specials!
Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 & 3 bdrms w/d hookups, patios or decks. Mountain Glen 541-383-9313
Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
Into q-/r• .,V ((' Jump Sp r i nq! Call54I-3855809topromoteraurservice 'Advertisefar 28daysstarting at I4)!lbsspeceltrctagrisnerrelaue wourwebrre!
Building/Contracting
2 bdrm, 1 bath, $530 8 $540 w/lease. Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS.
Boats & Accessories
Watercraft
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Travel Trailers
(440) Dryland Acres 5 miles east of Ashwood o n G r osner R d. S p ring a n d pond. Good for seaE sonal grazing, hunt- 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Sea Kayaks - His & Fleetwood 31' W ildering/recreation. Volvo Penta, 270HP, Hers, Eddyline Wind n ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' 705 $330,000 firm. As is. low hrs., must see, Dancers,17', fiberglass slide, 2 4 ' aw n ing, Real Estate Services No agents. $15,000, 541-330-3939 boats, all equip incl., queen bed, FSC, out541-205-3788, paddles, personal flo- side shower, E-Z lift Boise, ID Real Estate 541-823-2397, tation devices,dry bags, stabilizer hitch, l i ke 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, For relocation info, spray skirts,roof rack w/ new, been stored. dobales © msn.com 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 call Mike Conklin, towers 8 cradles. Re- $10,950. 541-419-5060 hp Bowrider w/depth 208-941-8458 duced price $1100/boat finder, radio/CD player, Silvercreek Realty P ioneer 2 3 ' 19 0 F Q F irm. 541-504-8557. rod holders, full canCHECK YOUR AD 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. vas, EZ Loader trailer, Please check your ad 745 541-548-1096 on the first day it runs exclnt cond, $13,000. Motorhomes • Homes for Sale to make sure it is cor- 707-484-3518 (Bend) rect. Sometimes ins tructions over t h e Easter Greetings phone are misunderFrom Everyone at stood and a n e r ror The Garner can occurin your ad. Group If this happens to your Prowler 2009 Extreme +jp Real Estate LLC ad, please contact us E dition. Model 2 7 0 2003 Fleetwood Disthe first day your ad 18'Maxum skiboat 2000 RL, 2 slides, opposcovery 40' diesel moOffice Closed Sun. appears and we will inboard motor, g reat torhome ing in living area, ent. w/all 541-383-4360 be happy to fix it as cond, well maintained, options-3 slide outs, center, sep. bedroom, $9995obo. 541-350-7755 s oon as w e c a n . satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, 2 new e x tra t i res, Deadlines are: Weeketc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. hitch, bars, sway bar days 11:00 noon for Wintered i n h e ated included. P r o-Pack, next day, Sat. 11:00 shop. $89,900 O.B.O. anti-theft. Good cond, a.m. for Sunday and 'til c lean. Req . 541-447-8664 Monday. 4/20/15. $19, 9 00. 541 -385-5809 541-390-1122 Thank you! skslra@msn.com 1996 Seaswirl 20.1 The Bulletin Classified Cuddy, 5.0 Volvo, exc 32' Fleetwood Fiesta cond., full canvas, one RV 2003, no slide-out, www.thegarnergroup.tom CONSIGNMENTS owner, $6500 OBO. 775 Triton engine, all 541 -41 0-0755 WANTED amenities, 1 owner, Manufactured/ perfect, only 17K miles, We Do The Work ... NOTICE: Mobile Homes You Keep The Cash! $22,000 firm! All real estate adver541-504-3253 On-site credit tised here in is sub- FACTOR Y SPECIAL approval team, ject to t h e F e deral New Home, 3 bdrm, 20.5' Seaswirl Spyweb site presence. Four Winds Class F air H o using A c t , $46,500 finished der 1989 H.O. 302, A 32' H u r ricane We Take Trade-Ins! which makes it illegal on your site 285 hrs., exc. cond., Free Advertising. 2007. CAN'T BEAT to advertise any prefJ and M Homes stored indoors for THISt Look before BIG COUNTRY RV erence, limitation or 541-548-5511 life $11,900 OBO. you buy, b e low Bend: 541-330-2495 discrimination based 541-379-3530 Redmond: market value! Size on race, color, reli- Suntree Village ¹127 541-548-5254 8 mileage DOES gion, sex, handicap, Priced to sell $32,900 21' Crownline 215 hp matter! 12,500 mi, familial status or na- Charming exc. c ond. in/outboard e n g i ne all amenities, Ford RV Solar Sale! 100 watt tional origin, or inten- 3B/2B, 1322 sf, new V10, Ithr, c h erry, panel ki t in s talled tion to make any such ext/int paint, Pergo in 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin slides, like new! New $749. Mobile S olar preferences, l i m ita- kitchen, Irg. front yard sleeps 2/3 p e ople, low price, $54,900. portable toilet, exc. Pros, 541-977-5366 tions or discrimination. w/deck. A must see! cond. Asking $8,000. 541-548-5216 We will not knowingly Call Lynda W a lsh, broker, 541-410-1359 OBO. 541-388-8339 accept any advertisRV Tow car 2004 ing for r ea l e s tate Prudential NW Proper- Ads published in the Honda Civic Si set up which is in violation of ties Iwalsh.prunw.com "Boats" classification for flat towing with this law. All persons Look at: include: Speed, fishbase plate and tow are hereby informed ing, drift, canoe, Bendhomes.com brake, 35k mi, new that all dwellings adSpringdale 2005 27', 4' house and sail boats. tires, great cond. vertised are available for Complete Listings of slide in dining/living area, For all other types of $12,000. on an equal opportu- Area Real Estate for Sale sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 atercraft, please see 541-288-1808 nity basis. The Bulleobo. 541-408-3811 Class 875. tin Classified 541-385-5809
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FOR SALE
Serrmg Cenrrai Oregon eece 1903
When buying a home, 83% of Central Oregonians turn to
Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. Weekend Warrior Toy 28K miles, 2 slides, Du- Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, ramax diesel, 1 owner, fuel station, exc cond. The Bulletin excellent cond, $94,500. sleeps 8, black/gray 541-546-6920 i nterior, u se d 3X , 850 Boat loader, elec. for $19,999 firm. Call 541-385-5809 to Snowmobiles pickup canopy, extras, 541-389-9188 place your $450, 541-548-3711 Real Estate ad. ( 2) 2000 A rctic C a t Looking for your Z L580's EFI with n e w 746 next employee? covers, electric start w/ Northwest Bend Homes reverse, low miles, both Place a Bulletin help Monaco Dynasty 2004, wanted ad today and excellent; with new 2009 our sp e c ial loaded, 3 slides, dieTrac-Pac 2-place trailer, with reach over 60,000 rates for selling your I New Homes sel, Reduced - now readers each week. drive off/on w/double tilt, ~ boat or watercraft! Under lots of accys. Selling due $119,000, 5 4 1-923- Your classified ad Construction to m e dical r e asons. 8572 or 541-749-0037 will also appear on f Place an ad in The $8000 all. 541-536-8130 in NorthWest bendbulletin.com B ulletin w it h ou r which currently reCrossing RV • Yamaha 750 1999 / 3-month package ceives over 1.5 milCall for Information CONSIGNMENTS Mountain Max, $1400. ~ which includes: lion page views evWANTED The Garner • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 ery month at no We Do The Work ... Group EXT, $1000. I *4 lines of text and ~ You extra cost. Bulletin Keep The Cash! 541-383-4360 • Zieman 4-place a photo or up to 10 Classifieds Get ReOn-site credit trailer, SOLD! J lines with no photo. sults! Call 385-5809 approval team, All in good condition. *Free online ad at or place your ad web site presence. Located in La Pine. I bendbulletin.com on-line at We Take Trade-Ins! Call 541-408-6149. *Free pick up into bendbulletin.com Free Advertising. ~ The Central Oregon ~ BIG COUNTRY RV 860 Bend: 541-330-2495 Motorcycles & Accessories / Nickel ads. Redmond: Fifth Wheels I Rates start at $46. I 541-548-5254
J a n itorial Services L a ndscaping/Yard Care (541) 383-3152 Cascade Rental NOTICE: Oregon state Integrity Office Cleaning N OTICE: ORE G ON Management. Co. law req u ires any-Honest services tailored to Landscape Contracone who co n t racts your needs! Licensed & tors Law (ORS 671) 636 for construction work Insured, Free Estimates. r equires a l l bu s i - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend to be licensed with the Call Nikki, 541-419-6601 nesses that advertise C onstruction Con t o p e rform L a n d- Small studios close to litractors Board (CCB). scape C o nstruction brary, all util. paid. A n active lice n se Landscaping/Yard Care which includes: $550 mo.w/ $525 dep. means the contractor p lanting, decks , $495 mo.w/$470 dep i s bonded an d i n fences, arbors, No pets/ no smoking. w ater-features, a n d s ured. Ve r ify t h e 541-330- 9769 or contractor's CCB installation, repair of 541-480-7870 c ense through t h e irrigation systems to Z~r/td zQualrff CCB Cons u m er l'au«drt/ t. r',. be licensed with the 642 Website Landscape Contrac- Apt./Multiplex Redmond www.hirealioenseocontractor. More ThanService t ors B o a rd . Th i s com Peace of Mind 4-digit number is to be Country Living! Upstairs or call 503-378-4621. included in all adversmall kitchenThe Bulletin recom- Spring Clean Up tisements which indi- duplex, ette, 1 bdrm, den, outmends checking with •Leaves cate the business has side deck. 17735 NW the CCB prior to con•Cones a bond,insurance and Lone Pine Rd., Terrebtracting with anyone. •Needles workers c ompensa- onne. $500 per mo. Some other t r ades •Debris Hauling tion for their employ- 541-504-0837 also req u ire addiees. For your protectional licenses and Weed free Bark tion call 503-378-5909 648 certifications. 8 flower beds or use our website: B MW K100 L T 1 9 8 7 Houses for www.lcb.state.or.us to 52k miles, b r onze, Call for details! Debris Removal Rent General www.thegarnergroup.tom 541-385-5809 check license status Lawn Renovation extra windshield, Aeration - Dethatching before con t racting trailer hitch, battery n tl o P U BLI SHER'S with t h e bu s iness. Overseed charger, full luggage LThe Bulleting 749 NOTICE Persons doing landCompost hard bags, manuals scape m aintenance All real estate adver- Southeast Bend Homes and paperwork. AlTop Dressing tising in this newspado not require a LCB garaged. $3200. GENERATE SOME ex- Southwind 35.5' Triton, Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 per is subject to the 20688 White Cliff Circle. ways license. Don, 541-504-5989 citement in your neig- 2008,V10, 2 slides, Duby Carriage, 4 slides, Landscape F air H o using A c t 4 Bdrm, 2 bath home borhood. Plan a ga- pont UV coat, 7500 mi. inverter, satellite sys, Maintenance Will Haul Away which makes it illegal FSBO, . 46 a c r e , CRAMPED FOR rage sale and don't fireplace, 2 flat screen Full or Partial Service Bought new at Catt a Pro to a d vertise "any single level, w/ office, CASH? uttnBFREE forget to advertise in TVs. $54,950 • Mowing eEdging $132,913; preference, limitation laundry room, paved Use classified to sell Whether you need a classified! 385-5809. 541-480-3923 •Pruning Weeding asking $91,000. For Salvage v' or disc r imination driveway, hardwood those items you no fence fixed, hedges Sprinkler Adjustments Call 503-982-4745 based on race, color, f loors, w h it e v i n y l longer need. CHECK YOUR AD Any Location rervtng central oregon zrnce 1903 trimmed or a house religion, sex, handi- fence. $260 , 000. Call 541-385-5809 ,.«1Removal Fertilizer included cap, familial status, OBO. 541-317-5012. built, you'll find Also Cteanups with monthly program Summer Boat marital status or najee Cteanouts' < professional help in tional origin, or an inMoorage TURN THE PAGE Weekly, monthly The Bulletin's "Call a tention to make any Harley Heritage at Lake Billy Chinook! For More Ads or one time service. Service Professional" such pre f erence, Softail, 2003 Limited slips available. Winnebago Suncruiser34' Pl h Bl y d The Bulletin limitation or discrimi$5,000+ in extras 2004, only 34K, loaded, on the first day it runs Call Cove Palisades Directory EXPERIENCED nation." Familial sta$2000 paint job, too much to list, ext'd Resort 541-546-9999 541-385-5809 Commercial tus includes children 30K mi. 1 owner, warr. thru 2014, $54,900 to make sure it is cor750 rect. Sometimes inI Exca v a ting under the age of 18 For more information Dennis, 541-589-3243 & Residential Redmond Homes structions over the living with parents or please call phone are misWatercraft 541-385-8090 Free Estimates legal cust o dians, • Levi's Concrete & or 209-605-5537 Travel Trailers • understood and an erro Senior Discounts pregnant women, and Looking for your next Dirt Works can occur in your ad. Ads published in "Wapeople securing cus541-390-1466 emp/oyee? tercraft" include: KayIf this happens to your tody of children under Place a Bulletin help Same Day Response Residential/ ad, please contact us aks, rafts and motor18. This newspaper wanted ad today and Commercial Ized personal the first day your ad will not knowingly acreach over 60,000 General Contractor watercrafts. For appears and we will cept any advertising readers each week. For ALLyour dirt & a "boats" please see be happy to fix it BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS for real estate which is Your classified ad excavation needs as soon as we can. — ProvidingClass 870. Search the area's most in violation of the law. • Small jobs for homewill also appear on Harley Limited 103 2011, If we can assist you, Flagstaff 30' 2006, with comprehensive listing of owners, by job or by O ur r e aders a r e Yard Maintenance bendbulletin.com many extras, stage 1 & air 541-385-5809 please call us: skde, custom interior, classified advertising... hr. the hour hereby informed that which currently recushion seat. 18,123 mi, & Clean-up, 541-385-5809 like new, S a crifice, • Augering real estate to automotive, all dwellings adverceives over $21,990. 541-306-0289 The Bulletin Classifie Thatching, Plugging $17,500. 541-598-7546 • Concrete merchandise to sporting tised in this newspa1.5 million page • Custom Pads goods. Bulletin Classifieds per are available on & much more! views every month • Driveway gradingappear every day in the an equal opportunity ' r at no extra cost. get rid of pot holes & print or on line. ContactAllen basis. To complain of Bulletin Classifieds smooth out your drive! discrimination cal l Call 541-385-5809 Get Results! Call 541-639-5282 HUD t o l l-free at www.bendbugetin.com Call 385-5809 or CCB¹t 94077 1-800-877-0246. The place your ad on-line HD Fat Boy 1996 The Bulletin toll f re e t e l ephone at Completely customized ren eg central oregonr nce e03 number for the hearbendbulletin.com Handyman Must see and hear to COLLINS ing im p aired is appreciate. 2012 1-800-927-9275. Award Winner. 17,000 762 I DO THAT! obo. 541-548-4807 Rented your Homes with Acreage Call Now to Schedule Property? HD Screaming Eagle i Spring Cleanup The Bulletin Classifieds Very nice recently upElectra Glide 2005, a e and Aerate/Thatch, has an dated 8 remodeled 2800 103" motor, two tone Weekly or one time ggk+4 ~Qh "After Hours" Line. sq ft. farm home on 40 candy teal, new tires, Grounds Keeping Service acres with Cascade Mtn 23K miles, CD player, Call 541-383-2371 views. Flood irrigated, 24 Hours to • Mowing • Kdging hydraulic clutch, exHandyman/Remodeling landscaped, 2 ponds, set«I. cellent condition. • Hedge Trimming SERVING CENTRAL OREGON Residential/Commercial up for horses 8/or cattle. Highest offer takes it. Since 2003 • Pruning ' Weedeating Greenhouse, horse barn, 650 541-480-8080. Small Jr>be lo Residential & Commercial • Fertilizing • Hauling I hay barn 8 shop. Powell ''I Errri re Rr>r>m Remrrdels Houses for Rent • De-thatching Butte area. By owner, 865 LAMlSCAPING Garage Orgrrnizanrrn t FREE ESTIMATES NE Bend $569,000. 541-416-0941 ATVs I n Landscape Construction Homelnapecnon Repairs 541-480-9714 «r water Feature grraliry, Horresr Work BONDED & INSURED A very sharp looking 771 Inatallation/Maint. 2000 sq.ft. 3 B drm/ Lots Dennis 541.317.9768 «r pavera 2bath home, gas FP & orar t atsra Br»rr/edi'arrarrd Painting/Wall Covering furnace, tile floors & 4 Renovations carpet, open l i ving «r Irrigationa Installation Custom Home The Bulletin'5 Service k itchen, dining. N o Lots For Sale ERIC REEVE Sprinkler smoking/no pets. Call on Awbrey Butte Yamaha Banshee 2001, Directory reaches over Activation/Repair 541-388-2250, or I~- HANm ~~ custom built 350 motor, Cascade Views 60,000 people each 541-81 5-7099. Back Flow Testing race-ready, lots of extras, SERVICES day, for a fraction of $4999/obo 541-647-8931 The Garner Group MAIN'f ENANCE 659 the cost of advertising Au Home & 541-383-4360 European 870 «r Thatch & Aerate Houses for Rent Commercial Repairs in the Yellow Pages. Boats 8 Accessories «r Spring Clean up Carpentry-Painting Professional Sunriver
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541-536-1294
MARTIN JAMES
Honey Do's. Small or large jobs, no problem. Senior Discount Au work guaranteed.
541-389-3361 541-771-4463 Bonded - Insured CCB¹149468
tr. Weekly Mowing & Edging n Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance «r Bark, Rock, Etc.
Senior Discounts Bonded and Insured
541-815-4458 Lce¹ s759
Painter Repaint
Specialist! Oregon License rr186147 LLC
543 -81 5-2888
Call 541-385-5809
VILLAGE PROPERTIES
Sunriver, Three Rivers, La Pine. Great Selection. Prices range $425 - $2000/mo. View our full inventory online at Village-Properties.com 1-866-931-1061
live.local
garner. www.thegaroergroup.com
14' 1982 Valco River Sled, 70 h p., FishFinder. Older boat but price includes trailer, 3 wheels and tires. All for $1 5 00 ! Cal l 541-416-8811
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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 31 2013 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 •
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BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - MotorcyclesAndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890- RVsfor Rent
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Pickups
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975
Vans
Automobiles
Cougar ¹295 RL 2 9', 2005, exclnt cond., 2 slides, A/C, $19,500. 541-385-0593 for pix.
AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts andService 916- Trucks andHeavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique andClassic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Hyundai Sonata GLS 2012, Well equipped, low miles.
maint'd, regular oil changes, $4500. Please call 541-633-5149
$15,988
The Bulletin To Subscribe call
~©~SUBARU.
541-385-5800 or go to
Vin ¹321163.
BUBMIUOPBEND COM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
G K E AT
5 EMEB-: R MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides,
I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1
U T X
Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call 541-749-0724
king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000. 541-420-3250
Ford Model A 1930, Sports Coupe. R umble seat, H & H rebuilt engine. W i ll cruise at 55mph. Must see to believe. Absolutely stunning condi- RAM 2500 HD '03 hemi tion! $17,500 2WD, 135K, auto, CC 541-410-0818 am/fm/cd. $7000 obro Ford Mustang Coupe 541-680-9965 /390-1285 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great Titan 2 0 0 7 4x4 shape, $9000 OBO. Off-Road, beautiful 530-515-8199 inside and out, me tanic black/charcoal Ford Ranchero leather, loaded, 69k 1979 mi., $19,995 obo. with 351 Cleveland 541-410-6183. modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, 935 $2500 obo. Sport Utility Vehicles 541 -420-4677
NuWa 29 7LK H i t chHiker 2007, 3 slides, 32' touring coach, left Peterbilt 359 p o table kitchen, rear lounge, water t ruck, 1 9 90, 5hp many extras, beautiful 3200 gal. tank, 8 hoses, cond. inside & o ut, p ump, 4 - 3 $ 2 5,000. $32,900 OBO, Prinev- camlocks, ille. 541-447-5502 days 541-820-3724 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 & 541-447-1641 eves.
t
Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awning, excel-
lent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629
Utility Trailers Light equipment trailer, 3 axle, 8'x21' tilt bed. $3500. 541-489-6150. 929
Automotive Wanted DONATE YOUR CARFast Free Towing 24
1966, too many hr. Response - Tax GMC Deduction U N I T EDextras to list, reduced to BREAST C A N C ER$7500 obo. Serious buyFOUNDATION P r o- ers only. 541-536-0123 I • viding Free Mammo• I grams & Breast CanIn t e rnational cer Info 888-785-9788 •
Pilgrim
2005, 36' 5th Wheel, Model¹M-349 RLDS-5
Fall price
(PNDC)
$ 2 1,865.
541-312-4466 RV
CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
931
GMC tNgton 1971, Only Automotive Parts, $19,700! Original low Service & Accessories mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171 Ford explorer wheels, (4), $140. Like new. 541-480-3923
area. 541-419-5060
/ Canopies & Campers Camper tie-downs TorkLift turnbuckles $110.
I
Vin ¹142655. $9,988
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1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
Aircraft, Parts & Service
rggggr
professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809
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©
BUBBRUOPBRND COM
ESR
I 4 9 th ANNUAL
• Ap ril5,68 7 ,2 013 I 7a.m. -7p.m. Fri. 8 7a.m. - 5 p.m. Sat. 1000s Of Vendors! Collector cars and parts for sale
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Vin ¹186346. $7988
@®S UBA R U . 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821
WOW! Chevy Malibu 2009
L '"" : J
Serprng Central 0 egons nre 1983
I The Bulletin recoml
mends extra caution I I when I p u rchasing I products or servicesI from out of the area. I S ending c ash ,I checks, or credit inI formation may be I
I subject toFRAUD. For more informaI tion about an advertiser, you may call
I
I the Oregon State I
Attorney General's I C o n sumer Toyota Corolla 2004, Office hotline at a uto l o aded 2 0 4 k I Protection miles. orig. owner, non 1-877-877-9392. smoker, exc. c ond. $6500 Prin e vine Sewing Centrai Oregonsrnre 1903
I
I I
The Bulletin
503-358-8241
PB
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Mazda MPV LX 2003 47k miles. ¹368141 $9,495
Oregon
LEGAL NOTICE IN THE C I RCUIT COURT FOR THE STATE O F O RE GON FOR T H E COUNTY OF DESC HUTES. I n th e Matter of the Estate of MARIA R O SA I SELA TELL E Z
MACIEL, Deceased. Case No. 13PB0004. NOTICE T O I N T ERESTED PERSONS. NOTICE IS H EREBY GI V E N t hat t h e und e r signed has b e en appointed personal r epresentative. A l l p ersons hav i n g claims against the estate are required to p resent t h em, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned personal representative at 12200 East S. 1 st
Ave., Denver, CO 80239 within four (4) m onths after t h e date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the p roceedings m a y obtain ad d i tional information from the records of the Court, the personal representative, o r t he lawyers for the personal r e presentative, Luciano Victor Tellez. Dated and first published on March 17, 2013. By L uciano Vict o r Tellez, Per s onal Representative. P ersonal R e r e sentative: Luciano Victor Tenez, 12200 East S. 1s t A v e., Denver, CO 80239. L aw er f o r P e r sonal Re resentative: J ennif e r Coughlin, OSB NW
jlcObrotherslaw.com
84k, beautiful dark gray/ brown, tan leather int., $5995 541-350-5373
=-1
1000
R iverside Blv d . , Bend, OR 9 7 701, (541) 382-5885, F: (541) 38 2 - 3328,
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BUBBRUOPBBNU COM
I
FIND IT! BUY IT! 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 SELL IT! Dlr ¹0354 The Bulletin Classifieds
0 65781, 97 4
ee
Jeep Wr angler 4 . 0 Sport 1999, Hard top, running boards, preLittle Red Corvette1996 mium sound. $1000sin door conv. 350 auto. prizes by: Vin ¹432663. 132K, 26-34 mpg. JO H NNY LAW I $9,988 $12,500 541-923-1781 MOTORS S UB A R U .
Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe 1967, 44 0 e n g ine,I auto. trans, ps, air, 503-678-1823 1 /3 interest i n w e l l - frame on rebuild, repdxswap@aol.com equipped IFR Beech Bo- painted original blue, Tickets avail. at nanza A36, new 10-550/ original blue interior, the gate prop, located KBDN. original hub caps, exc. See: The 'TREIT & $65,000. 541-419-9510 chrome, asking $9000 DAVENPORT"or make offer. BONNEVILLE 541-385-9350 STREAMLINER-
J
Call for details, 541-548-6592
1000
M $11,900 541-604-0862 Chrysler Sebring 2004
I
L'"" '" "
Vin ¹322715. $15,988
Legal Notices
4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Oldsmobile Alero 2004, Weld Prostar wheels, classic 4-dr in showroom Jeep Patriot 2 0 08 extra rolling chassis + condition, leather, chrome 4x4, 60k mi., single extras. $6500 for all. wheels, 1 owner, low owner, 5-spd, 30 mpg, 541-389-7669. miles. $7500. new tires, exc. cond. PORTLAND SWAP MEET
I The Bulletin I
The Bulletin
Buick LeSabre 1996. Good condition, 121,000 miles. Non-smoker
541-610-6834.
a
r-..;„;..;,.a
BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
541-504-3253
43k miles, loaded, studs on rims/ Asking $12,900.
541-382-2452
Hyundai Sonata GLS 2012 well equipped low miles.
Pontiac Bonneville, 2005, white with black leather Lincoln Town Car 2002, interior, new tires, $4500. signature series, pearl 541-941-1249 white ext., ta n i n t., 59K mi., 22-25 mpg., Porsche Carrera 911 spotless. Never dam- 2003 convertible with aged, new topline in- hardtop. 50K miles, t erstate battery, a l new factory Porsche ways garaged. $7200. motor 6 mos ago with 541-923-8868 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928 Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad toToyota Camrysi dayl 1964, SOLD; Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! 1985 SOLD; for private party 1966 parts car advertisers only one left! $500
On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
complete in & out. $16,000.
Chevy impala LS 2007, power window, power locks, CD.
..;='X«.era- aj $2H3,488 Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, an orig. Turbo 44; Mercedes 450SL, 1977, S UB A R U . auto 4-spd, 396, model 113K, w ell-maintained, CST /an options, orig. a raged, b ot h to p s . 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. owner, $19,950, 877-266-3821 11,900. 541-389-7596 541-923-6049 Dlr ¹0354
541-389-6998
Cessna 150 LLC
2 door hardtop, 99.9 8%
©+ S U BARU.
e
1/3 interest in Columbia j'.f' ~ 400, $150,000 located © Sunriver. H o urly rental rate (based upon approval) $775. Also: S21 hangar avail. for sale, o r le a s e @ Wagon 1957, $15/day or $325/mo. Chevy 4-dr., complete, 541-948-2963 $7,000 OBO, trades Please call
1/5th interest in 1973
Buick Invicta1959!
http://bend.craigslist.org /cto/3676208637.html
Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Reach thousands of readers!
877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
BUBBRUOPBEND Cess
Nc
Honda CRV 2004, $9,995. Call 541-610-6150 or see
built, you'0 find
$13,500. 541-788-0427
BUBBRUOPBEND COM
4@ f SUB A R U .
+©S U B ARU.
Vin ¹534426.
Q~ tj
Wouldn't you really like to drive a Buick? Bob has two 75,000 mile Buicks, priced fair, $2,000-$6000. Remember, t h e se cars get 30mpg hwy! 541-318-9999
BUBBRUOl BRND COM
0 4
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CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions over t h e phone are misunderstood and a n e r ror can occur in your ad. If this happens to your Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, ad, please contact us most options, new tires, the first day your ad 159K miles, $3750. Call appears and we will 541-233-8944 be happy to fix it as s oon a s w e ca n . Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, Dodge Durango Lim- please call us: ited 2004, Leather, 541-385-5809 power Wind o ws, The Bulletin Classified power locks, tilt moon roof.
i~ ~
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house
S UBA R U .
Nissan Sentra 2012 Full warranty, 35mpg, 520 per tank, an power.
$2600 OBO.
Honda Ridgeline RTL 2008, 4x4, moonroof, leather, tow pkg. •
C,SMPE
541-954-5193.
ia 1
541-633-7761
932
541-536-9534.
8 D
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4j@ SUBARU.
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BUBBRUOPBRND COM
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Hyundai Elantra Lim- Kia F orte K oup S X ited Sedan 2012, 1 2010, Wheels, tires, owner, loaded. tint, hot. Vin ¹271938. Vin¹193257 $19488 $16,988
Hyundai Sonata 2007 BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. GLS, 64,700 mi,excelo wner, e xc . c o n d .lent cond, good tires, 101k miles, new tires, non-smoker, new tags, loaded, sunroof. $9500. 541-280-7352 $8,300. 541-706-1897
TIRES set of 4 mounted 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Chevy Av e o LS on rims + extra rim. 877-266-3821 2007, auto, tilt, MP, 4 5% h w y tre a d , Jeep Comanche, 1990, Dlr ¹0354 225/60R16, $400 obo original owner, 167K, Vin ¹05538. 541-489-6150 4WD, 5-spd, tags good $6988 till 9/2015, $3900 obo. Antique & Classic Autos
Space for rent: 30 amp +water, sewer, gravel lot. $350 mo. Tumalo
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877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
975
Automobiles
Automo b iles WHEN YOU SEE THIS
Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbunetin.com 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. The Bulletin Classifieds
Blazer LT engine, power every- Chevrolet 2000 -130k miles, Call thing, new paint, 54K for info. $3800 OBO original m i les, runs 541-480-0781 great, excellent condition in & out. Asking ~v% ll~ $8,500. 541-480-3179
925
IRILI'l~-.'-
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Automobiles •
MINk i1
gipnh0
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Diamond Reo Dump Truck 1974, 12 -14 yard box, runs good, $6900, 541-548-6812 Laredo 2009 30' with 2 slides, TV, A/C, table Forklift, Hyster H30E & c h airs, s a tellite, LPG, good condition, Arctic pkg., p o wer 607 hrs, $2000 OBO. awning, Exc. cond! 541-389-7596 $28,000. 541-419-3301
Au t o mobiles
Chevy Astro Cargo Van 2001, pw, pdl, great cond., business car, well
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916
Fifth Wheels
975
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LEGAL NOTICE
IN TH E
C I R CUIT
COURT FOR THE STATE O F O REGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES, G MA C M O RTG AGE, L LC , i t s successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. FRED A. BARBER; MEL-
Le g al Notices
Legal Notices •
real property: LOT THREE (3), BLOCK TWENTY-FIVE (25), TALL PINES FIFTH A DDITION, D E S CHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. Comm only known a s : 15935 Wo o d chip Lane, La Pine, Oregon 97739. NOTICE TO D EFENDANTS: READ
win a u tomatically. To "appear" you m ust file with t he court a legal paper called a "motion" or U
T HESE PA P E RS CAREFULLY! A
l awsuit has b e e n started against you in th e a b o ve-entitled c o u r t by GMAC M o rtgage, LLC, plaintiff. Plaintiff's claims are stated in the written complaint, a copy of which was filed with the a b ove-entitled C ourt. You mus t "appear" in this case or the other side will win a u tomatically. To "appear" you must file with t he court a legal document caned a Pmotion" or "answer." The "motion" or Uanswer
U
(or "reply")
must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publ i cation s pecified her e i n along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service on t h e plaintiff's a t t orney or, if t h e p l aintiff does not have an a ttorney, proof o f service on the plaintiff. If you have any questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Ref e rral S ervice online a t www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metrop olitan a rea) o r toll-free elsewhere
in Oregon at (800)
452-7636. This
summons is issued pursuant to ORCP 7. R C O LE G A L, P.C., Michael Botthof, OSB ¹113337,
mbotthof@rcolegal. com, Attorneys for P laintiff, 51 1 S W 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205,
P: (503) 977-7840, F: (503) 977-7963.
ISSA R. BARBER;
O CCUPANTS O F THE P R E MISES; A ND TH E R E A L
PROPERTY LOCATED AT 1 5935 WOO D CHIP LANE, LA PINE, OREGON 97739, Defendants. Case No. Fiat 500 Pop H atch- 1 2CV0811. S U M back 2012, po wer MONS BY PUBLIw indows, powe r C ATION. TO T H E doors, blue t ooth, DEFENDANT: premium wheels. FRED A. BARBER: Vin ¹125141. In the name of the $13,988 State of O r egon,
Chrysler SD 4-Door AutoSource 1930, CD S R oyal PROJECT CARS: Chevy 541-598-3750 Standard, s-cylinder, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 aaaoregonautosource.com body is good, needs Chevy Coupe 1950 4@S UBARU. some r e s toration, rolling chassis's $1750 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. runs, taking bids, 4Ru n n er ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Toyota 877-266-3821 541-383-3888, complete car, $ 1949; 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , Dlr ¹0354 541-815-3318 Cadillac Series 61 1950, 4WD, V6, 5 speed, 2 dr. hard top, complete t ow pkg., plus 4 w/spare f r on t cl i p ., studs tires on rims, $3950, 541-382-7391 r uns great. W a s $ 5500, now o n l y
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you are hereby re150hp conversion, low quired to a p pear time on air frame and a nd a nswer t h e engine, hangared in complaint filed Bend. Excellent peragainst you in the formance & affordabove-entitled Court abie flying! $6,500. a nd cause on o r 541-382-6752 before the expiration of 30 days from Executive Hangar the date of the first $4000.541-659-1416 at Bend Airport (KBDN) p ublication of t h is Pickups 60' wide x 50' deep, summons. The date Ford Focus 2012 SE w/55' wide x 17' high bi- r of first publication in Excellent cond. 12k fold dr. Natural gas heat, FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, this matter is March Vans offc, bathroom. Adjacent door panels w/flowers mi., silver, $16,500 10, 2013. If you fail to Frontage Rd; great obo 541-306-3662. & hummingbirds, timely to appear and visibility for aviation busiwhite soft top & hard 96 Ford Windstar 8 FORD FUSION 2008 answer, plaintiff will ness. Financing availtop. Just reduced to 2000 Nissan Quest, v ery e x c . con d . apply to the able. 541-948-2126 or $3,750. 541-317-9319 both 7-passenger 62,500 mi. $10,750. above-entitled court Ford 250 XLT 1990, email 1jetjock@q.com or 541-647-8483 6 yd. dump bed, vans, 160K miles, Call 541-647-6410 for the relief prayed low prices, $1200 & Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, 139k, Auto, $4500. for in its complaint. based in Madras, al541-410-9997 $2900, and worth This is a ju d icial every cent! ways hangared since foreclosure o f a new. New annual, auto 541-318-9999 d eed of t r us t i n G MC Sierra S L T pilot, IFR, one piece which the p l aintiff 2006 - 1 500 Crew windshield. Fastest Arr equests that t h e Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. Need help fixing stuff? cher around. 1750 to- Ford Galaxie 500 1963, cond., 82 k m i les, Call A Service Professional Ford Taurus wagon 2004, plaintiff be allowed tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, very nice, pwr everything, to foreclose your $19,900. find the help you need. 120K, FWD, good tires, interest in the f o l541-475-6947, ask for 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & 541-408-0763 www.bendbulletin.com $4900 obo. 541-815-9939 lowing Rob Berg. radio (orig),541 -419-4989 d e s c ribed
"answer." The mo-
tion" or "answer" (or "reply") m ust b e given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publlcatlon spe c i fied herein along w ith the required filing fee. I t must be in
p roper form a n d have proof of service on the plaintiff's a ttorney or, if t h e p laintiff does n o t have an a ttorney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may call t he Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Ref e rral Service at (503) 684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. The r el ief sought in t h e C omplaint i s th e f oreclosure of t h e property located at 15997 Fir Road, La Pine, O R 9 7 7 39. Date of First Public ation: March 1 0 , 2013. McCarthy 8 Holthus, LLP, Erica Day, OSB¹ 113653, 9 20 SW 3 r d A v enue, First F loor, Portland, OR 97204, Phone: (877) 369-6122,
Ext .
3370, Fax: ( 5 03) 694-1460, edayO mccarthyholthus.com, Of Attorneys for Plaintiff. LEGAL NOTICE
IN TH E
C I R CUIT
C OURT OF T H E STATE O F ORE GON FOR T H E COUNTY OF DESCHUTES, THE BANK O F NEW YORK MEL L ON F /K/A TH E
BANK
OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE HOLDERS OF T HE
CERTI F I-
C ATES, FIRS T HORIZON MORTGAGE PASST HROUGH C E R TIFICATES SERIES FHA MS 2005-AA7, BY FIRST H O R IZON
HOME LOANS, A DIVISION OF FIRST T E N NESS EE
B A N K NA -
LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E C I RCUIT C OURT OF T H E STATE O F ORE GON FOR T H E COUNTY OF DESCHUTES, NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff, vs. THE UN K NOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF ROBERT L. SEAVEY; MARLOWE K. SEAVEY; O CCUPANTS O F
TIONAL ASSOCIAT ION, MAS T E R SERVICER, IN ITS CAPACITY AS AGENT FOR THE TRUSTEE UNDER THE POO L I NG
Defendants. Case
SHARON MCM ORRIS; B R I C E MCMORRIS;
THE
No.:
P R O PERTY,
12C V 1 149.
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. To: The Unknown Heirs a nd Devisees o f Robert L. Seavey. You are hereby required t o a p pear a nd d e fend t h e C omplaint file d against you in the above entitled cause within thirty
(30) days from the date of service of thissummons upon you, and in case of your failure to do so, for want t h ereof, Plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. NOTICE TO D E FENDANT: READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY! You m ust "appear" in this case or the other side will
AND S E R VICING AGREEMENT,
through its loan serv icing agent N A T IONSTAR MO R T -
GAGE LLC, Plaintiff, vs. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF
E *TRADE
BA N K ;
O CCUPANTS O F THE P R OPERTY, Defendants. Case No.:
12C V 1 111.
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. To: Heirs and Devisees of Sharon McMorris. You are hereby required t o a p pear a nd d e fend t h e C omplaint file d against you in the above entitled cause within thirty
(30) days from the date of service of thissummons upon you, and in case of your failure to do so, for want t h ereof, Plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. NOTICE TO
D E FENDANT:
Legal Notices READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY! You m ust "appear" in this case or the other side will win a u tomatically. To "appear" you m ust file with t he
court a legal paper caned a "motion" or "answer." The Umotion" or "answer" (or "reply") m ust b e given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication sp e c ified herein along w ith the required filing fee. I t must be in p roper form a n d have proof of service on the plaintiff's a ttorney or, if t h e p laintiff does n o t have an a ttorney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may call t he Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Ref e rral Service at ( 5 0 3) 684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. The rel ief sought in t h e C omplaint i s th e f oreclosure of t h e property located at 19086 Baker Road, Bend, OR 9 7 702. Date of First Public ation: March 1 7 , 2013. McCarthy & Holthus, LLP, Russell Whittaker, OSB ¹ 115540, 920
SW
369-6122,
Ext.
3rd Avenue, First Floor, Portland, OR 97204, Phone: (877)
3370, Fax: ( 5 03) 6 94-1460, rwh i t takerOmccarthyholthus.com, Of Attorneys for Plaintiff. Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's an here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory PUBLIC NOTICE The Bend Park 8 Recreation District Board of Directors will meet in a work session and regular busi n ess meeting on Tuesday, April 2, 2013, at the D istrict Office, 7 9 9 SW Columbia, Bend, O regon. The w o r k session will begin at 5:30 p .m . A g enda i tems include a r e view of th e C apital I mprovement Pl a n and a discussion regarding a p roposed Park & Facility Naming Policy. The board will meet in executive session immediately f ollowing th e w o r k session pursuant to
ORS 192.660(2)(h) for the purpose of discussing real property transactions. The board will conduct a regular busi n ess meeting beginning at 7:00 p.m., to consider contract awards for M iller's Land i n g structures, P o n derosa Park playground and site furnishings, and umpire services. The board will also consider approval of R esolution No. 3 5 2 authorizing issuance of General Obligation Bonds, and Resolution No. 353 authorizing the district to
apply for a Renewable Energy Develo pment grant. T h e April 2, 2013 agenda and meeting report a re posted on t h e district's website: www.bendparksandrec.org. For m o re information call 541-389-7275.
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
G6 SUNDAY MARCH 31 2013 • THE BULLETiN
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