Bulletin Daily Paper 03-31-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1

TUESDAY March 31,2015

ALSO IN ATHOME: MAIt',EYOUROI/N REUSABLEMARIt',ET BACt, D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Ashton Eatoneffect?-

ou ars o on

Following in the footsteps of Olympian Ashton Eaton, more

ue

IO

• But it was the 2nd'big cat' killed in Bendin the past 2 months past two months.

The Bulletin

Oregon Department • Recent of Fish and Wildlife sightings officials killed a cougar in Central found Jan. 30 resting in Oregon,A8

The cougar killed Saturday on Pilot Butte was the first

big cat confirmed tobe on the

A glimpse into thepast

— A Texasgrandmother's collection of rare Civil War-era photos is now in the handsof the Library of Congress.A3

Inside

By Dylan J. Darling

Bend landmark in more than a

a tree near SE Polaris

decade. But it was the second to Court and Roosevelt Avenue, be killed in a part of Bend surabout a block west of Kiwanis rounded bydevelopment in the

Park,and a Bend Police officer

darts are designed to bring down a dog, not a cougar, said Lt. Clint Burleigh, a spokesman. The drugdeliveredby the

shot andkilled the

cougar Saturday seen sitting near a trail on Pilot Butte.

They gave the same reason for killing both cougars — public safety. The Bend Police Department has tranquilizer guns, but the

Bill seeks to update

ere In

are taking on thedecathlon and heptathlon.C1

LEGISLATURE

ski area liability lavv

dart could take 15 minutes to take effect. "If it takes that long to tran-

By Taylor W.Anderson

quilize the cougar, then it can createa more dangerous situation in an uncontained area," he said. SeeCougar/A8

of a man paralyzed after hitting a jump in a Mt. Bachelor terrain park said

The Bulletin

SALEM — The mother

a bill that would grant ski

areas immunity from liability in some accidents is toobroad

inslde

and doesn't • Mt. Bachelor take skier lift reopens safety into after chair account falls,B1 Senate

Permission slipsgo

digital —A Bendsoftware startup is helping school districts digitize paperwork.C8

Bill849,

sponsored by five law-

Gathering place rebuilt

— The community of Ashwood reconstructs the grange it lost to a fire three years ago.B1

makers from districts that include resorts on Mount

Hood and Mount Bachelor, would update the conditions that prevent skiers

An occasional series of nighttime photos taken inBendand elsewhere in Central Oregonover the pastyearand using a variety of techniques.

from suing Oregon's 13 ski areas for injuries resulting from what are called "inherent risks of skiing."

Boost yourgarden IIIWhere to go to gain gardening know-how.D1

SeeSki bill /A7

And a Web exclusiveMigrant drownings along the Rio Grandeare onthe rise after an uptick in enforcement. benlbnlletin.corneetrrn

ANALYSIS

EDITOR'SCHOICE

i

Why voters like governors for president

i

Crashpilot's illnessraises concerns

By David Lightman McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — With

their presidential competitors in the Senate silenced by a break until mid-April, the governors eyeing the White House can flex their

over stigma

executive muscles. Last week, for example,

By Ericn Goode

while the Senate spent hours debating and voting on budgetamendments, New Jersey's Chris

New York Times News Service

An intense focus on the role of the co-pilot's mental illness in the Germanwings jetliner crash has raised concerns it risks unfairly stigmatizing millions of people with mental disorders and making it less likely they

Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin

Christie held a town hall

meeting answering voters' questions about state pen-

A Colorful lights from the Old Mill District reflect on the Deschutes River.

sions. Wisconsin's Scott

Walker signed two bills

How it wnslone:Thephotographerusedatripodanda17-35mm/2.8 lenssetto35mm on aNikonD3sDSLRcamera.Theexposurewas set manually at IS0100 with a 20-second shutter speed atf/2.8. A star filter placed onthe front of the lens added flair to the lights that fill

into law.

SeeGovernors/A4

the Old Mill District.

ANALYSIS will seek treatment. That, in

Related

turn, could

• Lubitz was treated for tendency toward suicide,A7

make it

e v en harder to i dentify p eople wo r k ing in high-risk professions who pose a threat to public safety. The co-pilot, Andreas

Will full-day kindergarten be a blow to HeadStart? By Abby Spegman

kindergarten in the fall, Head

Echo Lappin,

The Bulletin

Start programs are worried

a teacher with Neighborlm-

that could mean losingtheir most qualified teachers tobetter-paying jobs. "We haven't figured out how to come against it, because it's going to be huge. How do who among them would take home Cuddle Bear for the night you even address that issue?" and voted on which of the day's said Donna Schnitker, presAfter lunch and stories, the

Lubitz, who is believed to have intentionally crashed

students in Ms. Echo's dass sang a song ("Slippery Fish," a favorite) and counted out 30 jumping jacks. They decided

the plane March 24 in the French Alps, killing himself and 149 other people aboard, would not be the

activities should be recorded

ident of Oregon Head Start

onthe class calendar (making spaceships, by a landslide). It may look like fun and games, but Head Start advocates say these are critical lessons in early literacy and

Association.

first pilot to hide the fact

that he was havingpsychiatric difficulties or that he had received mental health treatment.

The reluctance to come forward means airlines

math, socialinteraction and

and regulators must strike a delicate balance, trying to decrease stigma to encourage pilots to be honest about their prob-

emotional development. Now,

lems, while at the same

time drawing a firm line beyond which pilots are grounded to protect the

public's safety. SeeIllness /A7

as school districts across the

state prepare to roll out full-day

pact's Head Start program, reads a book

ltts

t,u„'

about planets to her students in Bend on Monday

I

morning. Lappin says she likes the Hend Start model. But there's worry

Head Start is the federal pre-

school program for low-income families, helping children get ready for kindergarten and giving them access to medical services and special education screenings before they get to public school. SeeHead Start/A6

TODAY'S WEATHER A few showers High 46, Low24 Page B6

tcq

the program might lose teachers to the full-day

kindergarten program that is rolling out this fall. Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

The Bulletin

INDEX At Home Business Calendar

01-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby C7-8 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 S n B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

AnIndependent

C1 6 06

Q I/i/e use recyc/ed newsprint

Voi. 113, No. 90,

s sections

0

88 267 0 23 29


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

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NATION Ee ORLD

en car enters N Acam us Driveriss ot ea

arm inthe stolen Ford Escape SUV, which was perhaps WASHINGTON The why the driver did not obey two young men who spent orders from NSA officers to the night at a nearby motel stop. They said both young with an older man and stole men were wearing women's his car Monday morning may clothing. not have known exactly where Officials i d e ntified th e they were going. But they sped wounded passenger in the into a special highway exit stolen car as Kevin Fleming, reservedforemployees of the 20, of nearby Baltimore. The National Security Agency. identity of the driver, who was The agency, the country's pronounced dead at the scene, largest and most secretive in- w as not d i sclosed by l a t e telligence organization, is pro- Monday. tected by its own police force G overnment officials i n on a sprawling Maryland Europe and the United States campus and is on permanent have been especially wary alert against intruders. The of terrorist attacks in recent encounter ended with both months, with the Islamic State men shot, one fatally, by agen- and the Yemen branch of cy security personnel, the au- al-Qaida both calling on dev-

more-Washington Parkway. Initial reports suggested the men were shot as they

thorities said. "There's still a lot of inves-

crashed into the police car,

By Scott Shane

New York Times News Service

otees in the West to lash out.

tried to crash the secure entrance. But i n a s t atement Monday afternoon, Jonathan Freed, an NSA spokesman,

describeda more complicated encounter. F reed said t h e

car a p-

proached an NSA gate shortly after 9 a.m. and "the driver failed to obey an NSA police officer's routine instructions for safely exiting the secure campus." After that, the car "accelerated toward an NSA police ve-

hicle blocking the road. NSA police fired at the vehicle when it refused to stop," he said. The tw o

m e n ' s v e h icle

But surely none of the myriad the statement said. One NSA counterterrorism briefings for police officer was injured in f orcement official who w a s the NSA staff had prepared the crash and was taken to a briefed on the episode. "But it security officers for this: two hospital. seems very possible that they men, dressed as women, drivAn FBI spokeswoman, Amy didn't set out to go to NSA." ing up to the NSA employee Thoreson, said at midday, "We Officials said they found checkpoint at Fort Meade, do not believe it is related to cocaine and at least one fire- off Interstate 295, the Balti- terrorism." tigating to do," said a law en-

IRAQI FORCESBATTLE ISLAMIC STATE

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

MEGABUCKS

The numbers drawnMonday nightare:

QaQsQ fa QeQsQ ea The estimated jackpot is now $2 million.

EmiSSiOIIS CraCkdOWh —In a highly anticipated announcement, the United States will offer a roughly 28 percent emissions cut as its contribution to a major global climate treaty nearing the final stages of negotiation, according to people briefed onthe White House's plans. The U.S. plans to announceits commitment today, the informal deadline for nations to submit their contributions to the United Nations. Although the goal of 26percent to 28 percent by 2025 isn't new — President BarackObamafirst unveiled it last year during a trip to Beijing — the U.S. proposal hasdrawn intense interest from the vast majority of countries that haveyet to announce howdeeply they'll pledge to cut greenhousegasemissions as part of the treaty. Nigerian eleCtiallS —In a cliffhanger of an election, early returns Monday night from half the states showedNigerian President Goodluck Jonathan andformer military dictator Muhammadu Buhari almost even. TheU.S.andBritain warned of "disturbing indications" the tally could be subject to political interference. Counting stoppedjust before midnight Mondaywith Jonathan winning nine states andthe tiny Federal Capital Territory to Buhari's nine states. ButBuhari won manymore votes — 8.5 million to Jonathan's 6.48. Another18 states — including Lagos, which hasthe biggest number of voters of any state — still have to send results to the counting center in Abuja, electoral commissioner Attahiru Jegaannounced. Hesaid the count resumestoday.

New 'Daily Show' host —TrevorNoah,a31-year-old comedian

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Indiana deliefS laW —Gov. Mike Pencecalled off public appearances Mondayand sports officials planned an "Indy WelcomesAll" campaign ahead of this weekend's NCAAFinal Four in Indianapolis as lawmakers scrambled to quiet the firestorm over anewlaw that has much of the country portraying Indiana as a state of intolerance. Republican legislative leaders said they areworking on adding language to the religious-objections law to make it clear the measure does not allow discrimination against gays andlesbians. Assigned by Pence last week, the measure prohibits state laws that "substantially burden" a person's ability to follow his or her religious beliefs. The definition of "person" includes religious institutions, businessesand associations.

Silk ROad agell'tS —OnMonday, the U.S.government charged that in the shadows of anundercover investigation of the Silk Road website, a notorious black market site, two federal agents sought to enrich themselves byexploiting the very secrecy that madethe site so difficult for law enforcement to penetrate. Theagents, Carl Mark Force IV, who worked for the DrugEnforcementAdministration, and Shaun Bridges, who workedfor the Secret Service, had resignedamid growing scrutiny, and theywerecharged Mondaywith money laundering and wire fraud. Forcewas also charged with theft of government property and conflict of interest.

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Fighting in Yemen —Saudi-led naval forces imposed ablockade Monday onYemen's ports as coalition airstrikes repelled anadvance on the southern port city of Aden byShiite rebels andforces loyal to a former president, in what appeared to be the most intense day of fighting since theair campaign beganfive daysago. Themoveto block ports appearedaimed at preventing the rebels, known asHouthis, from rearming andcomesafter the coalition achieved full control of the skies andbombed anumber of rebel-held airports. The rebels are supported by Iran, but both Iran andthe Houthis deny Tehran has armed them. Asnight fell, intense explosions could be heardthroughout the rebel-held capital Sanaa,wherewarplanes hadcarried out strikes since theearly morning.

Kharid Mohammed /The Associated press

Iraqi security forces launch arocket against Islamic State extremist positions during clashes inTikrit, Iraq, 80 miles north of Baghdad, onMonday. The Iraqi offensive aimed atdriving the Islamic State group out of Tikrit has beenslowed by booby traps, snipers andsuicide bombers, but it received a powerful boost last weekwhen aU.S.-led coalition began launching airstrikes in support of the operation. Until now, Iraq's beleagueredmilitary — which crumbled in theface of the IS group's lightning advance last summer —has relied on Iranian-backed Shiite militias. Several militias announcedthey would sit out the Tikrit battle once theU.S. strikes began, but fighters wearing mismatched uniforms andwaving the

groups' flags canstill be seen onthe front lines. There on the city's dusty outskirts, Iraqi security forces advanceslowly, keeping aneyeout for roadside bombs and listening for the telltale crackle of sniper fire. Theyholeupinabandonedhousesshreddedby bullet holes, taking shelter from mortar and rocket attacks, sometimes for several hours. At least four suicide bombers tried to ambushone of their positions in southern Tikrit on Monday,but the attack was repelled. The battle for Tikrit, SaddamHussein's hometown, is seen as akeystep toward eventually recapturing Mosul, the country's second-largest city, which lies farther north.

from South Africa whohas contributed to "The Daily Show" a handful of times in recent months, will becomeJonStewart's replacement as host, ComedyCentral announcedMonday. Noahwas chosen alittle more than amonth after Stewart unexpectedly announced hewas leaving "The Daily Show" following 16years as the show's principal voice. NewJersey native Stewart is being replaced bytheson of a black South African mother andwhite Europeanfather. Noah has an international presenceand hosted alate-night talk show in South Africa, "Tonight With Trevor Noah." Odama'S Kenya ViSit —For years, Kenyahas beena political headache for President BarackObamaanda geopolitical headache for the U.S. But now in his seventhyear in office, Obamahasdecided to embrace his heritage byvisiting the land of his father for the first time as president. Obamawill travel to Kenya in July to co-host a forum on entrepreneurship aspart of an effort to support economic development in Africa, the White Houseannounced Monday. In theprocess, the president mayhope to exorcise some of theghosts that have haunted his relationship with his family's homecountry. — From wire reports

— The Associated Piuss

As deadline nears, 'tricky issues' remain in nucleartalks with Iran Iran's deputy foreign minister, by the chief diplomats from Abbas Araqchi, told Iranian France, Britain, Germany, ChiNew York Times News Service and other international news na, Russia and the European LAUSANNE, S w itzerland organizations that Iran had no Union, though Sergey Lavrov, — Negotiators from the U.S., intention of disposing of its nu- the Russian foreign minister, Iran and five other nations clear stockpile by shipping the left on Monday. pushed into the night Monday fuel out of the country, as the The United States' goal is to to try to reach a preliminary U.S. has longpreferred. extend to a year the amount of "The export of stocks of en- time, known as the "breakout" political agreement on limiting Iran's nuclear program. riched uranium is not in our time, that Iran would need to But with today's deadline, program, and we do not intend produce enough bomb-grade it seemed clear that even if sending them abroad," Araq- material for a single nuclear an accord were reached some chi said. weapon. Achieving that objecof the toughest issues would A State Department spokes- tive depends on many factors, remain unresolved until late w oman confirmed that t h e including how much nuclear June. stockpile question remained fuel Iran has on hand and how "We are working late into unresolved while insisting that fast it can produce new fuel. the night and obviously into Iran had not backtracked in reThe country has tens of tomorrow," Secretary of State cent days. "The bottom line is thousands of pounds of uraJohn Kerry said Monday that we don't have agreement nium in various stages of ennight. "There is a little more with the Iranians on the stock- richment, but over the past 18 light there today, but there are pile issue," the spokeswoman, months it has diluted the porstill some tricky issues. Ev- Marie Harf, t old r eporters. tion of its stockpile that was eryone knows the meaning of "This is still one of the out- closest to being usable in a tomorrow." standing issues." weapon. The main points the negotiThe political accord, which U.S. officials, h owever, ators have been grappling with U.S. officials hope will be an- are looking for a longer-term include the pace of lifting U.N. nounced today, is intended to solution. sanctions, restriction on the define the main elements of Outside experts said the resresearch and development of a comprehensive agreement olution of the issue was critical new types of centrifuges, the that it is to be completed by the to the administration's ability length of the agreement and end of June. to make a convincing political even whether it would be deAs the deadline has ap- case that the U.S. and its allies tailed in a public document. proached, Kerry and Moham- would have plenty of warning Yet another dispute was mad Javad Zarif, Iran's foreign time if Iran made a dash for a highlighted Sunday when minister, have been j oined bomb. By Michael R. Gordon and David E. Sanger

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TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Tuesday, March 31,the 90th day of 2015. Thereare 275 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Nuke talkS — Thedeadline arrives for a framework accord in negotiations over Iran's nuclear program.A2

Kennedy Institute opens

— The Edward M.Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate in Boston opens to the public.

DID YOU SEE?

are im seo e

POLL

Americans'

iv i a r eraconcernover

For 40years,Texas grandmother and collectorRobin Stanford has gathered rare stereo photos — two shots of the same scene printed on an oblong card that was designed to be seen in 3-D through a stereo viewer — of war and slavery. The collection is now the property of the Library of Congress.

green issues is declining By Arit John Bloomberg News

HISTORY Highlight:In 2005, Terri Schiavo, 41, died at ahospice in Pinellas Park, Florida, 13 days after her feeding tubewas removed in awrenching rightto-die dispute. In1814,Paris was occupied by a coalition of Russian, Prussian andAustrian forces; the surrender of the French capital forced the abdication of Emperor Napoleon. In1889, French engineerGustave Eiffel unfurled the French tricolor from atop the Eiffel Tower, officially marking its completion. In1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed theEmergency Conservation Work Act, which created theCivilian Conservation Corps. In1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson stunned the country by announcing hewould not seek re-election. In1976,the NewJersey Supreme Court ruled that Karen Ann Quinlan, whowas in a persistent vegetative state, could be disconnected from her respirator. (Quinlan, who remained unconscious, died in1985.j In1986, 167 people diedwhen a Mexicana Airlines 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, North Carolina, when he was hit by a bullet fragment that had been lodged inside a propgun. In1995, Mexican-American singer SelenaQuintanilla-Perez, 23, was shot to death in Corpus Christi, Texas, by the founder of her fan club, Yolanda Saldivar, who wasconvicted of murder andsentenced to life in prison. Tee years age:A damning report by a presidential commission concluded the United States knew "disturbingly little" about nuclear and biological threats from dangerous adversaries. Five years ege:President Barack Obamathrew opena huge swath of EastCoast waters and other protected areas in the Gulf of Mexico andAlaska to oil drilling. A Chechen militant claimed responsibility for deadly attacks on theMoscow subway two daysearlier that claimed 40 lives; the claim came hours after two more suicide bombers struck in the southern Russian province of Dagestan, killing a dozen people. One year age:In a flood of last-minute sign-ups, hundreds of thousands of Americans rushed to apply for health insurance asdeadline dayfor President Barack Obama's overhaul brought long waits and a newspate of website ills. North and South Koreafired hundreds of artillery shells into each other's waters.

BIRTHDAYS Actor William Daniels is 88. Hockey Hall of FamerGordie Howe is 87.Actor Richard Chamberlain is 81. Actress Shirley Jones is 81. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., is 75. Former U.S. Rep.Barney Frank, D-Mass., is 75. Actor Christopher Walken is 72. Comedian GabeKaplan is 71. Former Vice President Al Gore is 67. Author David Eisenhower is 67. Actress RheaPerlman is 67. Actor Ed Marinaro is 65. Rock musician AngusYoung (AC/DC) is 60. Actor Marc McClure is 58. Actor William McNamara is 50. Actor Ewan McGregor is 44. RapperTony Yayo is 37.Actress Kate Micucci is 35. Actress Jessica Szohris 30. — From wire reports

Americans' co n c erns o ver e nvironmental i s -

sues including air a nd water pollution, plant and a nimal e x t i nction a n d

rainforest loss has crept downward since last year,

according to a new poll. Gallup measured how many Americans care "a

great deal" about those issues and found a drop of 5 to 8 percentage points, the

polling organization said last week. That came after an uptick from 2013 to 2014.

"Last year's increased worry proved temporary, e

Robin Stanford collection I Library of Congress via The Washington Post

A stereo photograph of Abraham Lincoln's home inSpringfield, Illinois, draped in mourning after his assassination is amongthe more than 500 images from Robin Stenford's collection.

By Michael E. Ruene

with collecting," she said. "You

The Washington Post

Abraham Lincoln's home in Springfield, Illinois, draped

put your toe in the water, and next thing you know, you're paddling like crazy." She began collecting general images and gradually zeroed

s

in b l ack-and-white m o urn-

i ng cloth,

f o llowing h i s

assassination. African A m erican m oth-

in on views of Texas and the

ers holding their babies, likely

and later became well-known

the first generation born into

as a discerning buyer whom dealers contacted if they had good items.

Civil War. She started small

freedom. A battlefield in the Virginia wilderness a year after the war,

She found the views to be vivid windows into the past. And in 3-D, the photos had

with trees stripped of bark by musket fire. S napshots from

depth and reality.

the era

of the Civil War, they are among hundreds of rare images gathered over four decades by an 87-year-old Texas grandmother. Now, partly through a family tragedy,they are the property of the Library of Congress.

Nikki Kahn 1 The Washington Post

Her late husband "wasn't really interested in" her collec-

At the Library of Congress in Washington, Robin Stanford, 87, of tion, she said. "He was a very Houston, holds a stereograph ceptioned "Portion of Negro burying busy family doctor." But that ground Plantation No. 8" by Osborn end Durbec's Southern Stewas OK, she said.

reoscopic Depot.

Among the images the library purchased are a series shot in Fort Sumter, near

Charleston, South Carolina, after it fell to the rebels in 1861.

The library announced last

week it has acquired more than 500 stunning images from

In one, a Confederate flag flies

r ather than the start o f a trend toward renewed concern about e n v iron-

mental problems," Gallup's Jeffrey Jones wrote. "globC oncern o v er al warming or c l imate change" dropped 2 percentage points over the past year to 32 percent, according to the poll. (Gallup surveyed 1,025 adults over

the phone from March 5-8, and the margin of error is plus or minus 4 percentage points.) One trend that h asn't

changed is declining concern about the environment in the GOP. Between 2000 and 2015, the number

of Republicans who said they worried a great deal about drinking water and air pollution dropped 21 p ercentage points a n d 28 percentage points, respectively. Concern about climate

change among Republicans dropped 16 percentage points during that time. It rose 4 percentage points among Democrats. The poll results come

from a flagpole. Another shot shows crowds

as th e

a United States marked by the

packing the streets and roof-

scourges of war, slavery and assassination.

tops of Philadelphia as Abraham Lincoln's funeral cortege passes. Yet another shows the skeletons of soldiers at the site of the

cus from more immediate concerns (water pollution) to long-term risks (climate change). But despite increased media cover-

the collection of Robin Stan-

ford, of Houston. They depict

And in some cases they show life before the war. One shot

shows South Carolina slaves worshipping in a spartan, plantation church, in what may be the only prewar photograph of

Battle of the Wilderness two

years later. Stanford said most stereo

pictures were taken during

itskind.

Almost all of the images are so-called stereo pictures — two shots of the same scene

Nikki Kahn /The Washington Post

the Civil War with a stereo camera, which had two lenses

printed on an oblong card that the Library of Congress. was designed to be seen in 3-D

about as far apart as a pair of human eyes. Prints were made on light cardboard for use in

through a stereo viewer.

the stereo viewer.

Stanford shows the photo "Rockville Plantation Negro Church" et

e n v ironmental

m ovement shifts it s f o -

age over the last several

years, concern for climate change remains nearly identical to th e p oll's M arch 2 013 a n d 2 0 1 4

results— 32 percent of Americans say they care a great deal about it, and another 23 percent say they care a fair amount.

in-law and help her grandchil- Acollectiontakes root Seventy percent of photogradren finish their education. "I She started collecting in the phy during the Civil War was DOES president of th e C enter for would not have sold any of it if 1970s after she and her hus- shot in 3-D, said Zeller, of the Civil War Photography, es- it hadn't been for that," she said. band bought a farmhouse and photography center. EVERYONE "This was the photograph MUMBLE? pecially the plantation group. She asked that the purchase she wascasting about fordec"These are not postwar ... or price remain private. Zeller orations. One day, she spotted that was a viewing experiafter Union occupation. These said some ofthe pictures are an old stereo viewer with some ence," he said. "It was more Connect Hearing are actual scenes of slavery in probably worth more than pictures at an antique show. than just a k eepsake for a "The whole thing was like family member.... To put your America." $1,000 apiece. FORMERLY The purchase comes as the On Friday, Stanford, wearing 20 bucks, maybe," she said. "I head under the hood of a steLEAQELDHEARINGAIDCENTER countryconcludes its four-year a bluecardigan sweater,black thought this would be fun to reo viewer and sink into the commemoration of the 150th necklace and gold earrings, vis- put in the living room in the details ... "The mind feels its way into anniversary of the 1861-65 war ited the library to show some of farmhouse. It's quaint, and on next month. her pictures. rainy days, it'll be fun. the very depths of the picture," "Of course, I've handled "And you know how it is he said. The library, which received the images in December, has them for years, but now I've got many of them digitized and to wear gloves," she said of the posted online. Eventually, all of protective white coverings the E XPLORE GA LA P A G O S ISLAND S themwillbe. library had her don. & SOUTH AMERICA She said she has mixed feel40years inthemaking ings about parting with the picWITH CELEBRITY CRUISES Stanford's collection is be- tures. "I'm so glad they're here, lieved to indude thousands of because they will be available Celebrity Cruises has perfected the art of images. She said she is not sure for everybody," she said. "On vacations. We invite you to join AAA Travel how large it is. the other hand, I'm going to "It took 40 years, maybe," to miss them." and guest speaker Marilee Syme as we explore gather, she said in a telephone Stanford said she attended this bucket list trip to the Galapagos & South interview last week. "I'm a little Randolph-Macon Woman's America, as well as other exotic destinations. A old lady, so I've had plenty of College, now Randolph Coltime to do it.... I'm lucky." lege, in Lynchburg, Virginia, special booking offer will be available to those S tanford s ai d s h e ha d for a time and has always been who attend. planned to give the pictures to interested in history. her son, John, a professor of She returned to Texas, marAAA Travel astronomy and physics at Con- ried a doctor and began her 20350 Empire Blvd., Suite A5, Bend, OR cordia University Texas in Aus- interest in the Civil War in the vpy@lrI tin. But he died suddenly last late 1950s, when her first son Thursday, April 9 at 6:OopM year at age 53. was a toddler. PLEASE RSVP: 541.383.0069 "This is just a part of the col"I was home all day with lection," Stanford said. "I was him," she said. "I started readgoing to give the entire collec- ing the three-volume 'Lee's KEEP C elebrity Crui s es LIFE tion to my son. (His death) just Lieutenants,'" a famous history GOING'" took the air out of my balloon, of some of the Confederacy's collecting-wise." leading generals. AII events are open to the public and free to "Thatjustgotme rolling," she She said she decided to sell attend, but spaceis limited. Please RSVP. some items tohelp her daughter- SBld. "They're just tremendously significant," said Bob Zeller,

YOUR HEARING PROFEoIONALS

1-888-568-9884


A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

Governors

president than being a mem- well-established law on such ber of Congress," said Drew matters. When Walker agreed Gold, executive director of the to appeal a federal court ruling

Continued from A1 It's action versus rhetoric. And pundits wonder why vot-

Saint Leo Polling Institute in

potential presidents'?

its perils. They're not experts

language," said Dante Scala, associate professor of political science at the University of New Hampshire. They call each other "gentleman" or "gentlelady" or tout the ben-

overturning his state's ban on

Florida. gay marriage,he explained, ers gravitate to governors as Being a governor does have 'Tm obligated ... to support the constitution of the state of

Four of the last six presi- in foreign policy, a potential dents were governors, and the problem if one runs against

Wisconsin." Courts have since upheld the ban. two Republicans who routine- Hillary Clinton, the Democrat2. You're not part of the most ly top 2016 presidential polls ic front-runner and former sec- unpopular Congress in reare Walker and former Flori- retary ofstate. cent history: Gallup approval da Gov. Jeb Bush. Of 16 major Still, if you want to be presi- ratings sank as low as 9 perpossible Republican presiden- dent, put in some serious state cent in the last Congress. In tial candidates, half are cur- capital time. January, they "climbed" to 16 Here's why: rent or former governors. percent. To voters, "being governor 1. You can more easily ex3. You talk like a normal perof astate more closely resem- plain positions on polarizing son: "Members of Congress bles the executive office of issues: You're just following tend to speak in l egislative

5. You make decisions that chanan, a professor of governdirectly affect constituents: ment at the University of Texas Governors in v i rtually all at Austin. states are required to balance budgets. Even if they try to

Fact of life alert: Being more

practical and less worldly can fudge, most states' media and sting. Walker faced trouble efits of "conference commit- watchdog groups track the talking foreign policy in Febtees." Try addressing an east- process so closely that playing ruary, saying that because he ern Iowa factory worker as games is hard. was tough with protesters in "gentlelady." 6. Your results are easier to his state, "I can do the same 4. You're used to wheeling see: Last week, Christie visit- across the world." Former and dealing: Governors have to ed a new outpatient drug treat- Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckapush budgets and bills through ment center. Bobby Jindal, the bee, afiscal conservative, aptheir legislatures. That means governor of Louisiana, helped proved tax increases during endless wheeling, dealing and dedicate a company's new his 11 years in office. compromising. And gover- technologycenter."Governors Still, it helps to have govnors live among their diverse do a lot of things on a smaller erned and stumbled rather constituencies, not inside the scale than presidents are ex- than never to have governed Washington bubble. pected to do," said Bruce Bu- at all.

'I p')

Calvary Chapel Bend

April 5 6:3oam, g:ooam, 1o:45am, 5:o1pm

bendfp.org

sI

I

'I I

541.382.4401 23Q NE g'" St.

ef

I

541.383.5097

presbyterian s

'@/lTpe4 www.ccbend.com Bend

Trinity L'piacopa1 Chureh

i / /

gtr

tt

I

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The Rev. Jed Holdorph, Rector APRIL 2"n

APRIL 3~ 12:00 Noon Stations of the Cross 12:00 Noon — 4:00 pm

P oIffell But t e

Labyrinth Walks 6:30 pm The Good Friday Service at Nativity Lutheran Church

Christian Church SUNRISE WORS SERVICE: 6:00 am Tom's Pondon Wilia sRoad, PorrellBurre Co in ntal Breakfast 7:0 am - 8:30 am

® E R V I C KS

inghe Fello ship Hall

RSHI

60850 Brosterhous Road APRIL 4 T" 8:00 pm

Ser on: God s lans are Bigger Ma k 6 : l - 8 8:30 R r 10:30 a- Worship Center 1:30 am - Historic Chapell Past tn Chris Blair, Trey Hinkle, & Ozzy Osborne

Easter Vigil & Holy Eucharist

8:00 am & 10:15 am Easter Day Holy Eucharist N urseryavailable during services.

13720 SW Highway 126, Powell Butte

541-548-3066 www.powellbuttechurch.com

RACE

LUTHERAN CHURCH AT EAGLE CREST

"Christ is Arisen kom the Graves Dark Prison." Easter services at 10:30 am followed by dessert a nd a Easter egg hunt fo r t h e c h i l d r e n . For more information call Pastor Ruppel at 509-899-5018 7525 Falcon Crest Dr. A c ross from Niblick R, Greene's Restaurant www.gracelcateaglecrest.org

541-923-3390 I

Holy Thursday April 2

Maundy Thursday, April 2: Noon - Holy Eucharist and Stripping of the Altar

7 pm EveningMass ofthe Lord's Supper

Good Friday April 3 12r80 pm Living Stations of the Cross 7 pm Celebration of the Lord's Passion

Holy Saturday April 4 Easter Vigil 8 pm Easter Sunday April 5

Good Friday, April 3: Noon Good Friday Service 7:00 pm Good Friday Service and Stations of the Cross

Easter Sunday,

April 5: 8:30 a.m. Ecumenical Worship 10:15 a.m. Holy Eucharist www.e isco alchurchsisters.or

APRIL 5 T"

St. Thoma s C atholic C h u r c h

I I •

Redmond 1 720 NW 19~ Street

469 NW Wall Street, Bend 541.382.5542 . trinitybend.org

Maundy Thursday 5:30 pm Agape' Meal 6:30 pm Holy Eucharist •

8

Holy Week 8r Easter Services

g~fJ •

Child Care at 10;30 AM Service StudyingGod's %/ord chapter by chapter, verse by verse for the equipping of the saints for the work of the ministry.

ROQR5 Cooley Rd. (off Hwy Ro) For more information call

/'

rst

/I

SERYICE TIMES: Easter Sunrise Service 6:00 AM Sunday 8:30 8 10:30 AM

68825 Brooks Camp Road Sisters 5 4 1 - 549-7087 Fax: 541-549-7087

Masses: 8 and 10 in English Noon Misa en Espanol

c$i'. Cdm~o9$e W~Z yr Qa/koli'c Gdu~k Holy 1hursday Mass of the Lord's Supper •7:00 PM Good Friday Stations of the Cross• 3:00 PM Celebration of the Lord's Passion • 7:00 PM Holy Saturday Easter Vigil 8:30 PM Easter Sunday Mass • 10:00 AM 123 Trinity Way Sisters 541-549-9391 www.stedwardslsters.org

SL Francis of Assisi Cuthotic Church Bend New Church: 2450 NE 27~ Street Historic Church: Corner of Lava & Franklin Ave. HOLY %R U R I D A F • AP r i f 2 s 2 0 1 $ No 7:00 a.m. or 12:15 p.m. Mass

7:00 p.m. New Church (English) 7:00 p.m. Historic Church (Spanish) Both masses will include the foot-washing ceremony with the participation of children

Good PHday • ApHt 3, 201$ No 7:00 a.m. or 12:15 p.m. Mass 12:00 p.m. Seven Last Words of Christ Reflections & Meditations Historic Church 7:00 p.m. Good Friday Service New Church (English) 7:00 p.m. Good Friday Service Historic Church (Spanish)

'

• • I •

Vigil of Easter • Aprif 4, 201$ No 8:00 a.m. or 5:00 p.m. Mass 8:00 p.m. Vigil Mass New Church (Bilingual)

Euster - ApHf S, 201$

II

•I

7:30 a.m. Mass New Church 9:00 a.m. Mass Historic Church 10:00 a.m. Mass New Church 12:30 p.m. Mass New Church (Spanish) No 4:30 p.m. Mass on Easter

s ww~w;r~edmondepc.org •

C


TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A5

Legislation to shieldpolicenamesisvetoed in Arizona By Rick Rojas

officers. But the bill attract-

New York Times News Service

ed the scrutiny of civil rights groups, news organizations in Arizona and even the chiefs of police departments in the state, who worried shielding officers' names would limit transparency, stoke distrust oflaw enforce-

P HOENIX —

Wi t h j u s t

their families, and it's a goal I share," Ducey said in a letter explaining the veto. He added, "Unfortunately, I don't believe this bill in its current form

hours left before a midnight deadlineMonday, Gov. Doug Ducey of Arizona vetoed legisbest achieves the objectives we lation that would have preventshare, and I worry it could reed law enforcement agencies sult in unforeseenproblems." from releasing the names of ment and limit the discretion of Supporters of the bill said offic ers involved in serious or local officials. they were motivated by shootfatal shootings for 60 days. And on Monday, the gov- ings here, but the bill also Proponents of the legislation

going to add distrust or adver- izona, whichboth sent letters to sarial relationships is not the the governor asking for him to

in law enforcement here, between the rank-and-file officers,

way to go,n Roberto Villasenor,

veto the measure.

the president of the association Under the bill, an officer's whoseprofessional organization and chief of the Tucson Police name would be released if he was involved in drafting the leg- Department, sai d M o n day. or shewas arrested or formalislation, and the high-ranking aWhy do I doak it in secrecy ly charged, or gave his or her law enforcement officials. The for 60 days, and now I'm going consent. Proponents argued Arizona Association of Chiefs of to have this story run twice? the law would protect officers Police resisted the legislation be- Sixty days later, we're going to without compromising the public's right to know the facts of a causereleasing off icers'names rehash it again." tapped into broader anxieties in such cases had been at their Other critics include The Ar- case, saying information about that followed the events in Fer- discretion and they did not want izona Republic, the state's larg- the officer — even his or her est newspaper, and the Ameri- disciplinaryrecord—wouldbe guson, Missouri, where the to lose that authority. aTo add another law that's can Civil Liberties Union of Ar- released. officer who fatally shot an un-

ernor said he shared some of

argued it allowed for a cool- those concerns. al know the goal of this legising-off period, easing tensions and helping reduce threats to

armedteenagerfledhishome. The effort has revealed a rift

lation is to protect officers and

ome

MZ. e Jt Highland Baptist Chu ch

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a

T"

veq„.„

, yWBBBB '"'

EASTER. SB1U DAY

Easter Services

SaturdayApril 4

Sunday April 5

11 A.M. to 2 P.ivL

8s 9:30 tSL 11 A.M. SaturdayApril4 -7:00 P.M.

Free for children St families. Interactive

indoor tour, live performances of last days of Jesus S. the resurrection. Free lunch St

APRIL 5th, 8:45 & 10:45am •

r •

BEND SENIOR HIGH

e

h

• •

• •

personalized gift for

3 100 SW Highland Ave. Redmond

hbcredmond.org l 541-548-4161 Hk)C Xayy@kgnigrggmanQtfakCfiurdi

Arise, shine for thy light is come.

lszlait80r97739 18laa541-5363573 IIol Thursda A ril 2nd at

— lsaiah 60:I-

Experience the healing power of Christ at the Christian Science Church.

Easter Vigil Mars 8:OOPM, Holy Redeemer, La Pine 8:OOPM, Holy Trinity, Snnriver

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST

Easter Sunda A ril 5th

Easter Mass

1SS1 NW 1st Street, Bend

»- 3 82-8498

~ 1. bend church ata nazarene

(South of Portland Ave.) christiausciencechurchbend.org

bendnez.org

1270 NE 27th St. Bend, OR 97701

8:OOAM, Holy Trinity, Snnriver 10:OOAM, Holy Redeemer, La Pine 12:30PM,Onr Lady of Snows, Gilchrist 3:30PM, Holy Family, Cbristmas Valley

E v er y o n e a lw ay s w e lco m e

237 NW 9th Street • Redmond, OR www.redmondcc.org • 541-923-3023

541.617.2814 centraloregonbaptistchurch.org

ELCA

Easter Sunday

( Chi l d c a r e p r o v i d e d )

8:00, 9:30 & 11 : 00 a.m.

F R I D A Y S E R V I C E — 7 t 3 o p II 1

Su n d a y

RedmOnd $sn gds, Community Church

Boys & Girls Club 500 NW Wall Street, Bend

Grace First Lutheran Church

F irs t U n it e d M e t h o d i s t C h u r c h 68 o NW B o n d 3 S2- 1 6 7 2

ciam -C o n t e m p o r a r y

at 10r30 am

Easter Irt ' A ri l 4 t h

'

Child care gt parking provided.

Easter

April 5th, 2015 CENTRAL OREGGN BAPTIST CHURCH

7:OOPM, Holy Redeemer, La Pine •

E R

SUNDAY

e ll

Stations o f the Gross in the Ganlen 12:OOPM, LaPine The Lonl 3 Passion

Sunday School is at the same time.

G OO D

Qil

Good Erida A nl 3rd

Sunday Service, 10:00 am

Cottte wovship with t s :

fa I Ks a s r t

7:OOPM,Holy Redeemer,La Pine Adoraaon following Mass 8:OOPM-Midnight, Holy Redeemer, La Pine

E A S T

1•

h

A p r il 5 t h

Child Care Provided IVIaundy Thursday7:00pm Gpod Friday7:00pm Vigil of Easter 'Saturday 7:00 pm

Service with Pr a ise Band

3.o:iqani - E a s t e r E g g H u n t f o r C h i l d r e n Tzam-T r a d i t i o n a l S e r v i c e w i t h Ch a n c e l C h o i r C offee Fel l o w s h i p b e t w e e n s e r v i c e s

J

n

2265 NW Shevlin Park Rd. Bend

541-382-6862

a •

www.gracefirstlutheran.org •

JOIN US EASTER WEEIC at

Zion Lutheran

H erv

C G I I I IIruli i e l i

E VAI I G E L I CA L

C A T H O L i C C H U RC H

We inviteyou to come aiid celebrate the Gospel of jesus,

His mercy,and His holy Presence.

H OLY W B E K

ts

S ER V I C E S ! Maundy Thursday Service - 7:00 pm "Living Tableau" witb Communion Good Friday ServicesNoon gt 7:00 pm

s

h, '4

E AsTER S U N D A Y W ORSHIP T I M E S Festival Worship with Communion 8;30 am 8t 11;00 am Easter Brunch 10;00-10;45 am Children's Egg Hunt 10;00 am Nursery Provided

T he St o n e T h a t C o u l d n ' t H o l d

s

I

•e

Good Friday - The Lord's Passion April 3 at 7:00 pm

S t d y -~ r t

e l

April 4 at 7:00 pm

Sunrise Service at 7:30 am Resurrection Mass at 9:00 am

1113 SW Black Butte Blvd„ Redmond

April 2 at 7:00 pm

Church(ELCA)

Holy Thursday- Mass of the Lord's Su er

EASTER SUNDAY, April 4

5 41-9>3- 7 4 6 6 •

HQLYIlt@KKscIKDULK

Zion Lutheran Pastor Eric Burtness

ga qpa

I

www,zionrdm,com

Servicesheld at the Bend Senior Center .1600 SW Reed Market Road ™Bend, OR http://holycommunionbend.org 541.408.9021


A6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

UPDATE CHICAGO MAYORAL RACE

a m manue reveasaso ersi e

Navajo junkfoodtax elicits mixedfeelings

By JulIe Bosman

By Nigel Duara

New York Times News Service

Los Ange(es Times

CHICAGO —

On a weekday shopping trip to the only real grocerystore for 30 miles, Ann Neagle paused before a bag of Red Delicious apples, $7 for a dozen, plus a

A l d e rman

Scott Waguespack was in a conference room at City Hall in the spring of 2011 for a formal sit-down with this city's

newly elected mayor, Rahm Emanuel. Waguespack attempted some small talk, he

new discount — the Navajo Nation lifted the 5 percent

the store was similar to a typical grocery layout, though processed items such as chicken

nuggets appeared in the meat aisle. Shoppers "go crazy for those hot Cheetos," a grocery derk sald. The store's arrangement and

Just started yelling and swearing. He went so far off the han-

selection concerned community health advocate Denisa Livingston enough that she That's the carrot in the led tribal government officials tribe's attempt to curb ram- on tours to show the dearth of pant obesity, diabetes and healthy inventory. "When people would fly heart disease. Next comes the stick: a 2 percent tax on to other places, they'd bring junk food. back (nonperishable) food That tax, the first of its from Whole Foods or healthy k ind nationwide, will h i t places," Livingston said. "That

said, but Emanuel was not much interested. "He was l i ke, 'Yeah,

salestax on fresh fruitsand vegetables.

yeah, whatever,'" recalled Waguespack, now a chief adversary of the mayor. "Then he said, 'Let me tell you something,' and he went off at me. dle that I almost got up and

one of the most econom-

was their best access to any-

walked out."

ically depressed areas in

thing that wasn't really bad for

Emanuel, in an i nterview, remembered it q u ite differ-

the country, where more than 40 percent of people

them."

ently. "If he's claiming that,

are unemployed.Neagle is

then why didn't he say it when

it happened, or a day afterwards, a week afterwards?" he said. "Four years after the

fact? It never happened." When Emanuel returned here, to his hometown, to run for mayor in 2011, he carried

with him decades of experience as a canny and powerful politician, a former campaign operative, a congressman and

Andrew Nelles/The New York Times

Chicago Mayor RahmEmanuel campaigns at a Salvation Army community center In Chicago thIs month. As the April 7 runoff election wIth Jesus Garcia approaches, some voters say they have soured on hardball tactIcs and the gruffness of Emanuel.

"This is all about proven leadership. He's not running to be the friend. He's running to be the mayor." — Paul Begala, political consultant/commentator and a close frIend of Rahm Emanuel's

a top White House aide who

had learned there were times

knew how to make the wheels of government turn. He also brought his wellknown style: feisty, arrogant, brash, hot-tempered and so in-

during his first term when "I

clined toward profanity that a

should have been doingthe listening, not the talking." "I had to learn, and I've been

honest, and I own my mistakes," he said.

former boss, President Barack Obama, once joked that the loss of part of a middle finger after a meat-slicer accident when Emanuel was a teenager "rendered him practically mute." As Emanuel approaches a

The stories of Emanuel's fiery temperament on display are legion. During a highly publicized teachers' strike in

runoff April 7 — an election

er, Karen Lewis — once using

prompted by his failure to

an unprintable but c oncise

Fiery reputation

sation had ended with Eman-

more serrated edges. On the uel pointing his finger, raising stump and in debates, he has his voice and saying, "You're spoken of the pain endured by gonna respect me!" A spokesmothers who have lost their man for Emanuel said in an children to gun violence in email the meeting had "endthe city. After he drew just 46 ed cordially" and that "after percent of the vote in Febru- respectfully listening to the ary, he recorded a campaign residents, he asked that they ad in which he wore a V-neck respectfully listen to his point sweater, satin what appeared of view." "He got really arrogant to be a living room and acknowledged his faults. after he was elected," said "They say your greatest Tiffany Armstrong, a fourthstrength is also your great- grade South Side public est weakness," Emanuel said, school teacher who voted for his deep-set eyes staring into Emanuel in 2011. Armstrong the camera. "I'm living proof said she would not vote for of that. I can rub people the him again because of what wrong way, or talk when I she considered the abrasive should listen." way he closed 50 schools, a decision she and others say

unfairly affected low-income neighborhoods. "I get the impression from the city's 50 wards and has pushed through a difficult him that we're the children agenda of education and pen- and he's the parent," Armsion reform. strong said. "If he had shown a "People voted for both sides little more empathy, he might of that coin," he said.

But Emanuel also said he

Head Start ContInued fromA1 At NeighborImpact, which runs Head Start in Deschutes

not be so close to losing the election."

in the days after Bill Clinton's

politics being out of step with 1992 presidential v i ctory. an ascendant left, represented Emanuel repeatedly plunged by Emanuel's opponent, Jesus a steak knife into a table while Garcia. shouting the names of Clin"But I think it's a lot his per- ton's enemies and, after each sonality," Daley said. "It is an name, "Dead!" "It's a true story," Begala acquired taste."

A city with an affinity union members and their lead- for big personalities

insult during negotiations, effectively telling her to get lost. facing an uncomfortable fact. (Asked by reporters about the Many Chicagoans say after phrase, Emanuel pointed out four years, they have soured that the meeting ended with a on him because of his hardball hug.) tactics toward unions, his deWhile campaigning this cision to close dozens of public month, Emanuel was conschools and, for some people, fronted by a group of advohis personality. cates about the closings of There are signs, though, the several mental health clinics mayor, bruised by his perfor- during his first term. The admance in theFebruary elec- vocates later said the conver-

In an interview, Emanuel pointed out that in the February election, he won 36 of

be attributed to his centrist

2012, Emanuel feuded with

win more than 50 percentof the vote in February — he is

tion, is trying to smooth his

William Daley, the broth- insisted that the mayor had er and son of former Chicago mellowed since a gathering mayors, said some of Emanu- of campaign aides at a Little el's campaign troubles could Rock, Arkansas, restaurant

said. "I was there. He doesn't do that anymore."

Begala said the importance Chicago does not embrace of the job of mayor would play

blandness in its mayors. Har-

in Emanuel's favor. "This is all

old Washington, who served about proven leadership," he from 1983 to 1987, could be said. "He's not running to be charismatic and funny. Both the friend. He's running to be Richard Daley and his son the mayor." Richard Daley were largerHe added, "It's hard for me than-life figures whose gruff to imagine people not liking and imperious personas could him, but this is one of those give way to sentimentality. jobs where people need to (The younger Daley once respect him more than like sobbed at a news conference him." when describing the misbeOne of the unions that have havior of his teenage son, who endorsed Emanuel began an had thrown an unauthorized ad campaign last week called party at the family's weekend "Rahm Love," in which hospihouse in Michigan that ended tality workers talked about the in a brawl.) things he has done to make But Emanuel does not en- their lives better. "They were two four-lettirely get the benefit of the doubt for his gruffness, in part ter words that don't normally because he spent much of his childhood in Wilmette, an af-

fluent North Shore suburb of Chicago, and because many here suspect that he has ambitions to eventually return to Washington. "Mayor Emanuel took office during unprecedented financial

go together," Karen Kent, the

president of the union, said of the campaign. "Our members talk about him and talk about

Rahm love. They talk about him being atough guy who

and Crook counties, 3- and

4-year-olds attend class four hours a day, four days a week NeighborImpact. "The school she likes the Head Start modfor free at sites in Bend, Red- district has always been a el, engaging families in their mond, Prineville and La Pine. challenge with taking our child's education. Other agencies offer Head staffbecause of the benefits But then there's the money. Start programs in Jefferson and (Public Employees Re- Head Start teachers at NeighCounty. tirement System), and we just borImpact make $15 to $16.50 can't compete with the federal an hour, plus benefits. They Parents meet with staff to develop family goals — ed- dollars we get." work August to June and can ucation for the adults, stable Snow said NeighborImpact file for unemployment in the housing, food security — and reimburses tuition for teach- summer. For a teacher makare connected with services ers and assistant teachers ing $15.50 an hour, that comes to meet those goals. The pro- pursuing early childhood ed- to about $22,000, plus $5,000 gram alsoholds classes for ucation, and every staff mem- in unemployment. parents on things including ber hasa professional develMeanwhile, a report by financial literacy and first aid. opment plan, which means the Confederation of Oregon Federal law requires Head they can earn a degree with School Administrators and Start teachers have at least Head Start and then move Oregon Association of School an associate degree in ear- on. NeighborImpact currently Executives found moving to ly childhood education or a employees 24 teachers and 24 full-day kindergarten staterelated field and that half of assistant teachers, plus cen- wide will mean adding 800 to Head Start teachers nation- ter aides who move among 1,000 teachers. wide have a bachelor's degree. classrooms. The Bend-La Pine and Red"Some of our teachers have Teacher Echo Lappin, 28, is mond districts, the largest in master's (degrees), and those in her third year teaching with Central Oregon, each plan to are the ones I'm worried about NeighborImpact. She has a add about a dozen kindergarlosing," said Kim Snow, as- bachelor's and started on her ten teachers next year, though sociate director of education master's in teaching at Uni- some positions may be filled and quality for Head Start at versity of Oregon. She said by existingpart-time teachers.

of the vast res-

advocate ke y, who shook out

four corn kernels from beneath its wings, saving them. and convenience stores are Navajo society relied on theirprimary grocers. sheep and cattle, as well as For the $7 she could spend corn. Then, in the 1920s and on a dozen apples, Neagle, '30s, the U.S. government be54, could stretch her dol- gan setting limits on livestock, lar further in the prepared explained at the time as a way and processed food aisles: to preserve eroding and over$7 would buy more than 30 grazed soil. boxes of Maruchan Ramen On the reservation, just 7 Noodles or seven frozen percent of residents have a colBanquet Value Meals — one lege degree, significantly afof whichcarried 480 calo- fecting their job prospects. ries and one-third of the daiProponents hope the junk ly dietary recommendations food tax will mark a turning for sodium and fat. point for the nation's largest That equation plays out tribe. Revenue will go into a daily across the country community health fund to pay for college students, the for i n f rastructure i m proveworking poor and those, ments on the reservation and like Neagle, whose access to educational programming. fresh produce is limited. But Livingston said the money a health epidemic among could be spent on farmers marthe Navajo r eservation's kets and vegetable gardens, exervation a food desert — mean gas stations

175,000 residents moved

ercise equipment, community

food cooperatives and youth

Others have told him that to

tough legislative battle, to

health and sports dubs. L egislator Jonathan

the Rev. Walter Turner, a pastor in a Baptist church on the

said he had told Emanuel. "You're right, P a stor,"

"the enforcer.") Emanuel said, according to Paul Begala, a close friend Turner. "I'm going to do what of Emanuel's for decades, I can."

— KIm Snow, associate director of education and quality for Head Start at Neighborlmpact

declared parts

lawmakers here, after a

Friends and colleagues of South Side, gently delivered Emanuel say his brash per- some advice. "It would be helpful to show sonality is part of what makes him good at his job.(During a more tender side," Turner

"Someof our teachers have master's (degrees), and those are the ones I'm worried about losing."

>

guy and takes a tough stance."

crises," said Steve Mayberry, he has to appear a little more a spokesman for the mayor. sensitive. "That does not lend itself to a Sitting around a conference personality contest." table in a church in January,

his time in the Clinton administration, he was known as

The people who live here "Less money for fruits understand the problem. A is nice, but it doesn't even Navajo Nation survey found 74 out," she said. percent of people "For pe o ple on the reservation o n a fixed in- Wh e r i think health probcome, we can't people wOU/d lems are caused a ffol d t h l l l gs by lack of healthy t o get m o r e food. "It's just gotten e xpensive" p/ac e s they'6 She's n o t Qrl ' rIg t) worse and worse," aCQ alone. About 42 I i~ ton s a id. periShage percent of the To understand Navajo Nation, fOOd from how th e N a vajo which extends Wh o /e FOOdS Nation got here, it's into Utah, Ariimportant to underzona and New Or healthy stand its relationMexico l i ves P l a c eS.Thai ship w i th food. below the federN avajo s o cieir QeSg al poverty line. ety was for a time F or~ y m t h e aCCeSS largely agrarian, tribe, a limited an y t h irIg that a fac t r eflected in budget and few rea//y part o f the Navatores to choose Qad f jo creation story: r them. from — the U.S. A starving people Department of — DenIsaLivIngston, Agriculture has unIty heaItII were met by a turworrled.

stood up for them. He's a tough

a n d ed u c ational endear himself to Chicagoans,

'The enforcer'

Healthyfood hard to find

give the junk food tax a try. The tribe hasn't set a date for the tax to go into effect. A tribal tax commission still has to give its final approval, but that step is

viewed as a formality.

Defining junk food N ailing down w hat i s and isn't junk food hasn't

been easy. Tribal council members said soft drink industry lobbyists urged them keep soda and sports drinks out of the legislation.

ers have an Oregon teaching license but do not have a min-

imum degree standard for hiring. B eginning t eachers i n

able items such as frozen

borImpact. In

for reauthorization in2020.

to Snow.

But full-day kindergarten statewide compounds the hiring problem. Schnitker, who runs a Head Start program

in Harney County, said programs acrossthe state are preparing to lose teachers. Unless Head Start offers higher wages, she said, teachers will continue to leave for jobs with school districts. "You can't fault them for that." — Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbulletin.com

alaugh. "I know I wouldhave." But as with his personal life,

food." They define that as Nez said, he knows that reverssweetened beverages and ing years of a poor diet won't snacks high in salt,saturat- happen overnight. "It's a long haul," he said. ed fat and sugar. In practice, that encompasses predict- "But we'll get there."

diet soda, fruit juice, nuts and sugar-free Jell-O. It is up

census data, every new school that opens means new teaching jobs that may lure Head Start teachers away, according

"If they put this tax in front have opposed it," Nez said with

about $38,000. Losing qualified teachers is not a new problem for Neigh-

country, according to recent

unimaginable to him in 2010.

those drinks join a host of foods designated as "mini-

desserts, fried food, potato chips and candy.

C entral Or e-

and runs, two activities almost

of me then, I probably would

Redmond start at $35,000; in Bend-La Pine, they start at

gon, home to the seventh-fastest-growing metro area in the

He started eating chicken,

fish and vegetables, purginghis cabinets of high-fat, high-sugar snacks. Today, he won't give his exact weight, buthe rides abike

They resisted, and now mal-to-no nutritional value Both districts require teach-

Nez

demonstrates the power of healthyeating.Fouryears ago, Nez weighed 300 pounds. His diet was heavy on chips, fast food and soda, things he knew were bad for him but were also easy to get and close at hand.

But the act also targets

"It's not going to do any-

thing except make it more expensive," said P r eston Yazzie, 20. "I'll still buy chips or whatever. But may-

be it'll help some people."

One mile from the Navajo tribal council chambers, at the Arizona-based chain

j ohnsonbro~thers v.com 541-382-6223

I

- -OoTHaue

Your Beal appllanee experte

Bashas'Grocery on tribal land, most of the items at the front of the store and

advertised in the weekly circular would be subject to the newtax.

Racks of canned Vienna sausage and corned beef hash greeted shoppers. Behind them, a veritable taxation bonanza of soda,

induding discount brands such as Fiesta as well as Coke and Pepsi. The rest of

' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwe's'tcrossing.com


TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TODAY'S READ: DESTIGMATIZING ABORTION

Illness

An abortion pill clinic inMaryland promotesits 'spa-like' environment

Continued fromA1

be required by law to reveal about potentially violent pa-

By Sandhya Somashekhar

tients. Such issues are familiar territory in the United States,

A7

Germanwings ce-pilot wasonce treatedforsuicidal tendencies

In Germany, th e c r ash has stirred d ebate about

feel more like a spa than a

lic's attention on the responsi-

medical dinic. But the slick ads set to go up in Metro stations

bilities of therapists who treat the mentally ill.

DUESSELDORF, Germany — Howcould someone once diagnosed with suicidal tendencies get ajob as acommercial pilot, entrusted with the lives of hundreds of people?That's the question being askedafter officials confirmed Mondaythat Germanwings co-pilot Andreas Lubitz received lengthy psychotherapy before receiving his pilot's license. Lufthansa, Germanwings' parent company, declined to say whether it knew of Lubitz's mental health problems. But it said the young pilot had passedall required medical checks since starting work for its subsidiary two years ago. Prosecutors in Duesseldorf, where Lubitz had anapartment, said the psychotherapy occurred over anextended period before he received his pilot's license, andthat medical records referred to "suicidal tendencies." They provided nodates.

across the Washington, D.C.,

After the Newtown mas-

— The Associated Pess

region leave nothing to doubt:

sacre in 2012, several states, including New York and

The Washington Post

health professionals should

where a series of mass shootings, including those in New-

WASHINGTON — With its

natural wood floors and plush upholstery, Carafem aims to

town, Connecticut, and Auro-

ra, Colorado, riveted the pub-

"Abortion. Yeah, we do that."

The dinic, opening this week in Friendship Heights, Maryland, specializes in the abortion pill and will be unique for Sarah L.voisro/The washington post its advertising. Its unabashed Melissa Grant and Christopher Purdy are shown in the temporary approach also reflects a new offices of Carafem, a new clinic in Friendship Heights, Maryland, push to destigmatize the na-

how much doctors and other

that offers the abortion pill in a "spa-like" environment. Grant is

tion's most controversial medi- Carafem's vice president of health services and Purdy is Carafem's cal procedure by talking about president and CEO. it openly and unapologetically. Plagued by political setbacks in recent years, abortion-rights they deeply believe it should be strictly regulate the abortionpill, activists are now seeking to legal," said Lanae Erickson Ha- citing concerns about its safety, normalize abortion, to put a hu- talsky, director of social policy makingit virtuallyimpossible to man face — and in some cases, andpolitics for Third Way. getin some ruralareas. "I was flabbergasted," Purdy even a positive spin — on the Hatalsky praised efforts to "destigmatize"the procedure, said, to find "that it was easier procedure. In Los Angeles County, which she said is attracting a to get an abortion in Ethiogroups recently sent women passionate new crop of young pia compared with the United door-to-door in conservative activists to the movement. The States." neighborhoods to talk about effort to tell personal stories After receiving counseling their abortion experiences in echoes astrategy successful- and some basictests,C arafem the hopes of changing minds. ly employed by the gay-rights clients will take an initial pill at A series of Democratic law- movement, she said, which the clinic. Purdy's team expects makers have publidy acknowl- helped change public opinion to get them in and out quiddy, edged to having undergone the by coaxingpeople to come out within about 60 minutes. They procedure. And new o n line of the doset to their friends, will be sent home with a secprojects solicit personal testi- neighbors and colleagues. ond set of pills to take the next monials, including from womGroups such as Planned day. The second dose induces en who have no regrets about Parenthood are trying to walk the abortion, which resembles terminating their pregnancies. a fine line, appealing to these a miscarriage, typically within At Carafem, staff members young activists while also re- six hours. plan to greet clients with warm maining palatable to the majorBy offering only pharmaceuteas,comfortable robes and a ity of Americans who are con- tical abortions, Purdy says, he matter-of-fact attitude. flicted, a group that Third Way can avoid purchasing expen"We don't want to talk in refers to as"abortion grays." sive surgical equipment and "We still do a lot of work with keep prices low for dients. The hushed tones," said Carafem president Christopher Purdy. people who are less supportive averagepharmaceutical abor"We use the A-word." of abortion, and one way we tion cost about $500 in the UnitThe campaign comes as the need to communicate is in a ed States in 2011, Guttmacher abortion-rights movement is more empathetic framework figures show; Purdy plans to struggling politically. Since that kind of says, 'Look, these charge around $400. 2010,stateshave enacted more are really complicated personal Another striking aspect of than 200 laws restricting the issues,' " Planned Parenthood the project is the design: The procedure and dozens of clin- spokesman Eric Ferrero said. clinic will have wood floors But "we also need to be un- and a natural wood tone on ics have shuttered. Groups on both sides agree that antiabor- apologetic and bold," Ferrero the walls that recalls high-end tion activists have the momen- said, to connect with young salons such as Aveda. Appointtum, with a simpler message people, whom he said have ments, offered evenings and "abortion kills" — and a flocked to the 100-year-old weekends, can be booked ongut-level emotional appeal. organization. Since 2011, the line or via a 24-hour hotline. "It was important for us to Even Americans who sup- number of collegechaptershas port abortion rights are often risen from 70 to 250. try to present an upgraded, aldeeply conflicted about theproPurdy said he got the idea for most spa-like feel," said Melissa cedure. Although a majority of Carafem two years ago, after Grant, vice president of health Americans say abortion should more than a decade with DKT services for the dinic. be available in most cases, polls International, a nonprofit that If the project is successful, show roughly half of those sur- promotes family planning and Purdy says, he hopes to expand veyed also think abortion is HIV prevention in developing his model to other states. "It's fresh, it's modern, it's morally wrong. countri es. Overseas, he said, "Most people in this coun- getting an abortion is often as clean, it's caring," he said. try do not think abortion is a simple as visiting apharmacy. In "That's the brand we're trying good thing on its face, even if America, however, some states to create."

was one reason the Federal laws, broadening the circum- Aviation Administration in stances under which men- 2010 loosened its policy, altal health professionals can lowing them to take certain report a potentially violent antidepressants and still fly patient without fear of legal if the illness was mild. Before repercussions. Under the New the policy changed, some piYork law, they are required to lots received mental health report to local health officials treatment and antidepresthose who are "likely to en- sants from private doctors but gage in conduct that would re- concealed that i n formation sult in serious harm to them- from airlines and regulators, Connecticut, changed their

selves or others."

said doctors familiar with the

But those laws remain con- agency's practices. troversial. And many mental If the rate of antidepressant health experts say the tenden- use in the general population cy to link mass violence and is any indication, many other mental disorders has a nega- pilots may stiII be concealing tive effect, discouraging peo- their use of the medications: ple from seekingtreatment. Government surveys h ave "These kind of stories found that 1 in 10 American reinforce the anxiety, the adults takes an antidepresdoubts, the concerns that peo- sant, but that only a small ple have that 'I have to keep number of pilots are currentmy symptoms concealed at all ly taking the drugs with the costs,' and that doesn't benefit agency's approval, according anyone," said Ron Honberg, to the Air Line Pilots Associadirector of policy and legal af- tion. Any pilot who takes such fairs at the National Alliance medications and continues on Mental Illness. to fly must follow a rigorous There is little question that treatment plan that indudes in the field of aviation, as in regular evaluations and often many other professions, ad- therapy. mitting to having a mental illEven if laws were changed, ness is a diceybusiness. screening proceduresti ght"The stigma is enormous," ened and stigma lessened, said Dr. William Hurt Sledge, people who are bent on suia professor of psychiatry at cide or mass murder might Yale who has consulted for still go undetected. the Federal Aviation AdminisDepression is among the tration, the Air Line Pilots As- most common of mental dissociation and major carriers. orders. About 7 percent of "And of course, none of them American adults have a dewants that to be known, nor pressive illness at any given do they want to confess it or

time, said Dr. Paul Summer-

believe that they have it."

of Medicine. But the vast ma-

jorityof them, he said, "neither commit suicide or pose a risk to others."

And no screening process or psychological test can infallibly detect those who will.

"It's usually extremely dif-

ficult to predict suicide," said

David Clark, a professor of psychiatry at the Medical College of Wisconsin. "There are those patients who are very unguarded and explicit about not only their suicidal

thoughts but how compelling they are. And for every one of those there are those who are

very concealing about what's going through their minds, often with their doctors and

their family members." Much remains unknown about Lubitz's condition and what his motivation might

have been. Prosecutors have said that he had a m ental

health diagnosis and had talked to a psychotherapist about suicidebefore applying for a pilot's license. But the precise diagnosis has not been made public. And although the authorities said antidepressants were found in Lubitz's apartment in Dusseldorf, Germany,

the drugs can be prescribed for a variety of illnesses other

than depression. "The little bit of informa-

tion leaking out right now makes people slap their heads and say, 'Someone should have known,'" Clark said. "But based on the information we have so far, it isn't clear that it was a slam dunk

grad, president of the American Psychiatric Association sequences of being honest and the chairman of psychia- to put the pieces of the puzzle about their mental health try at 'Ittfts University School together." Pilots' fears about the con-

-

SI(I blll Continued fromA1 The bill updates a 1979 law to include terrain parks, avalanches and falling into tree wells as risks that skiers should assume could occur at ski areas, therefore exempting the resorts from liability. Skiers could still sue resorts for incidents resulting from

Bill ill SSIIm —Senate Bill 849adds terrain parks, avalanches and falling into tree wells as risks that are inherent to skiing and would make ski resorts immune from lawsuits stemming from those injuries. Chief sponsors:Sen.Tim Knopp,R-Bend;Rep.KnuteBuehler, R-Bend History:The OregonSupreme Court in December ruled that Myles Bagley could pursue his $21.5 million lawsuit against Mt. Bachelor after he wasparalyzed in aterrain park accident, despite signing a liability waiver. What's next:Heard Monday in Senate Judiciary Committee; both sides will meet and discuss middle ground. Nohearing or timeline scheduled. Online:Readthe bill at https J/elis.leg.state.er.as

gross negligence from the resort and its employees. Lauren Bagley told lawmakers hearing the bill Monday that in the eight years she's spent pursuing her son's lawsuit against Mt. Bachelor, resort and its employees, such coming off of two poor years, she's learned the ski industry as terrainpark features. what's that going to do to their "When a ski area has not business?" Rathbun said. is stubborn to change, and that it would grant too much im- exercised reasonable care in The proposed updates to the munity to Oregon ski areas. the management andopera- state's 1979 Skier Responsibil"I've also learned through tion of the ski area and some- ity Law would define a skier these long years battling one is harmed because of their as someone who uses skis, a through the courts a consis- wrongful conduct, they should snowboard or any other slidtent attitude of the ski indus- be held accountable," Clarke ing device. It also bars skiers try. They're all in denial. It's SBld. from stopping on the hill in always about money," Bagley Industry r e p resentativesan area that creates a hazard sard. who support the bill said after or where they're not visible Myles Bagley, who was in- the hearing skiers should ex- from above. It also says skiers jured after hitting a jump in pect costs to rise starting next must inspect freestyle terrain, 2006 when he was 18, attended season as the industry adjusts including terrain parks, before the hearing but didn't testify. to the Bagley decision. hitting them. "If SB 849 isn't passed, movIn a unanimous decision in Andy Balyeat, an attorney December, the Supreme Court ing into next winter every ski representing Mt. Bachelor in decided the Bagleys could area operator is going to have the Bagley case, said it's reapursue a $21.5 million lawsuit to address the fact that it's sonableto expecttheSupreme againstMt. Bachelor because likely that their insurance pre- Court decision in that case the resort's liability waiver miums and their legal fees are will lead to more lawsuits from was unenforceable. The Su- going to skyrocket," said Dave injured skiers. preme Court said it was the Rathbun, president and generA California man filed suit " common-law duty" for M t . al manager of Mt. Bachelor. in March against Hoodoo Ski Bachelor to inspect its terrain Rathbun said Bachelor ex- Area on Santiam Pass for inpark features to avoid what pects its insurance costs and juries he suffered in a tubing it called unreasonable risks legal fees to "potentially quin- accident two years ago. "We're in uncharted territo its skiers and sent the case tuple" next year and that reback to the Deschutes County sorts pass on added costs to tory," said Balyeat, who also Circuit Court. skiers. He wouldn't say how represents Hoodoo in the case. Kathryn Clarke, an attor- much he expects costs to rise. "This is a new situation for us. "When you look at Willa- So we'll have to let it unfold. ney on the legal team representing Myles Bagley in the mette Pass or Hoodoo (Ski But I think a f air i nference lawsuit, said the bill w ould Area) who haven't been open is that we're going to see inmake resorts immune from and think about them poten- creased claims." claims for potentially hazard- tially seeing their costs go up — Reporter: 406-589-4347, ous conditions created by the two, three, four, five times tanderson@bendbulletin.com

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AS TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

Cougar

Indiana racesto fight a surgeof HIVcases

Cougar count

Continued from A1 about the cougar sighting was about three-quarters of

Before Saturday, there had beenfive cougar sightings — two confirmed — over the past decade at atrio of state parks in Central Oregon.

a mile up the trail when he

T I LOSTATE PARK

The man who called 911

spotted the cougar sitting down about 15 yards north of the trail, according to De-

schutes County 911 records. He reported the cougar at 6:44 p.m. Within five minutes, a Bend Police officer arrived at Pilot Butte, parked at the gate and

By Abby Goodnough

More than 80 people in against his political beliefs, he Scott County have tested pos- also authorized a short-term itive for HIV since December, needle-exchange p r ogram

New York Times News Service

AUSTIN, Ind. — Jeanni McCarty, a nurse and native of this threadbare city of

started walking up the milelong road leading to the top of

SMITH ROCKSTATE PARK • 2007 (confirmed) — Animalpassing through. Left on its own.

the cinder cone, which rises

Source:Oregon State Parks

mostly in the last few weeks.

last week in hopes of stop-

They range in age from 20 to ping transmission of the virus 4,200, hurried up and down 56, and health officials say through contaminated needles.

• 2006 (probable) — Animal passing through. Left on its own. • 2009 (unconfirmed) — Animal passing through. Left on its own. PILOT BUTTESTATE SCENIC VIEWPOINT • 2004 (confirmed) — Animal resting in tree. Left on its own. • 2006 (unconfirmed) — Animal seen standing from a distance by someone outside the park. Rangers couldn't locate.

Main Street i n

S a turday's that almost all of them live in

T he outbreak here w a s

bright sun, handing out stacks Austin, which sits along Interof fliers to any business that state 65 about 80 miles south would take them. They were of Indianapolis, surrounded announcing a hastily planned by rural space. The outbreak, specialty clinic — FREE, they the worst in Indiana's history, emphasized in red — t h at stems largely from the intrawould provide HIV treatment venous use of the prescription to anyone who needed it. painkiller Opana. Quite suddenly, a lot of peoGov. Mike Pence declared ple around here do. And the a public health emergency number keeps growing. in the county Thursday, and

about 500 feet above the surrounding land. According to

detected because Indiana requires newly confirmed cases of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, to be reported to state

health officials. It is jolting not only because national rates of

HIV diagnosis have remained stable or even decreased in recent years, but

b ecause

the virus is a largely urban problem.

the records,the officer report-

ed seeing the cougar at 6:54 p.m. about three-quarters of the way up Pilot Butte, above the water towers. Police made sure the top of

the butte was clear of people, according to the records. At 7:25 p.m., 41 minutes after the

reported sighting, an officer reported to dispatch that the cougar had been killed. Several agencies can respond to a cougar sighting, but when necessary, they will let police handle the call.

A 911 dispatcher checked and found an Oregon State

Low Prices.

Police fish and wildlife trooper was not available, according to the records.

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife was contacted, but agency staff was

not in the area, Michelle Dennehy, ODFW spokeswoman, wrote in an email. The cougar

was a young male, she wrote, weighing 120 pounds. "Police will regularly act in these emergency situations when ODFW is not available," Dennehy wrote.

Oregon State Parks also defers to other agencies when it

comes to wildlife and public safety in a park such as Pilot Butte State Scenic Viewpoint,

~50 ar

which covers 100 acres, said Chris Havel, spokesman for the agency in Salem. He said

mare

t he parks department w i l l contact ODFW or t h e U .S. Department of Agriculture to

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"All they needed to do is put signs up (to warn people to stay out of the area). And

the animal would have gone away."

' •

'

'

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He pointed out that the De-

partment of Fish and Wildlife

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does not have a case on re-

cord of a wild cougar attacking a person in Oregon.

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Pricesin this ad areeffective 6 AM Wednesday,April 1 thru Tuesday,April 7, 201 5(unless otherwise noted) in all Safeway stores in Oregon (except Milton-Freewater) and S.W.Washington storessewing Wahkiakum, Cowlitz, Clark, Skamania and Kliddtat Counties. Itemsoffered for sale arenot available toother dealers or wholesalers. Salesof products containing ephedrine, pseudoephedrine orphenylpropanolamine limitedby law. Quantity rightsreserved.SOMEADVERTISINGITEMSMAY NOT BEAVAILABLE INALLSTORES. Some advertised pricesmaybe even lowerin somestores. OnBuyOne, Get OneFree("BOGO'1 offers, customermustpurchasethe first item toreceivetheseconditem free. BOGO offersare not 1/2pricesales.If onlya single item purchased,theregular price applies. Manufacturers'couponsmaybeusedon purchased itemsonly — not on free items. limit one coupon per purchaseditem. Customer will be responsiblefor tax anddeposits asrequired by law on the purchased and free items.Noliquor salesin excessof 52gallons. No liquor salesfor resale. Uquorsalesat licensed Safewaystoresonly. © 2015 sareway Inc. Availability of itemsmayvary by store. Qnline andIn-store prices, discounts andoffers maydiffer.

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The executive director of Predator Defense, awildlife advocacy group from Eugene, is set to be inBend next month to lead apresentation and the viewing of two movies about human and wildlife conflicts. Brooks Fahyplans to host the event at 6:30 p.m. April 14 at the Downtown Bend Public Library.

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

E vENT

ENDA R

Submit an event: bendbulletin.com/events. Questions? Call 541-383-0351.

TODAY NATURALHISTORYPUB: "WATERMASTER:WATER HISTORY OF THE DESCHUTES": A screening of the documentaryabout the history of water management in the Deschutes Basin and the legacy of Watermaster Bob Main; 5:30 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174. "THE BREAKFASTCLUB:30TH ANNIVERSARYEDITION": A special showing of the pop culture classic featuring the brat pack; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents. com or 844-462-7342. COCKTAILCABARET:Featuring 10 voices of Bend singing selections of musical theatre; 8 p.m.; $10; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend.

WEDNESDAY THE SILENTCOMEDY:The San Diego-based Americana, folk and rock'n' roll band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174. JAKE DANIELSANDANDREW OUELLETTE:Featuring live comedy by Jake Daniels and Andrew Ouellette; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; The Summit Saloon & Stage,125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www. bendcomedy.com or 541-419-0111. C.J. BOYD:The looper performs, with Lore Uprise; 8 p.m.; $3; Reed Pub, 1141 SECentennial St., Bend; 541-312-2800. DEAD WINTERCARPENTERS: The Americana-roots band performs, with Honey Don't; 9 p.m.; $8 plusfees in advance, $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY LAUNCHPARTYFORWORTHY GARDENCLUB:Come meet Worthy

Crash

son County and Evan — in the federal suit were award-

Continued from B1

ed about $1,000 in costs at

About a half an hour lat-

its conclusion, court records

er, according to a transcript of oral arguments held be-

show. The new lawsuit claims

fore a federal magistrate in S eptember, Evan t r ied t o

Evan negligently failed to

stop Scott Kalama's vehicle, knowing it was a high-risk traffic stop. Evan neglected to follow departmental pro-

public safety standards" and Jefferson County's policies. The plaintiffs allege

c edures, according to t h e lawsuit.

vehicle stop alone in a situ-

Five-year-old Grace Kalama, 25-year-old Valerie Suppah and 2 2-year-old Sean Starr died as a result

Submitted photo

541-323-1881.

FRIDAY

SPRING ARTHOP:Stroll downtown Bend and the Old Mill District to enjoy art, wine, music, food and fun as we celebrate our community and the arts; 5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Library, 601 N.W. Wall Street, Bend. "THE 25TH ANNUALPUTNAM performs; 6:30 p.m.;$15-$20 COUNTY SPELLINGBEE": A suggested donation; The Glen at musical comedy about a fictional Newport Hills, 1019 NW Stannium spelling bee set in a geographically Drive, Bend; 541-480-8830. ambiguous Putnam Valley Middle "NFINITYCHAMPIONS LEAGUE School, opening night reception at 2":A showing of 30 of the country's 6:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for students most decorated cheerleading teams and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; in competition; 7 p.m.; $15; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 www.2ndstreettheater.com or SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. 541-312-9626. fathomevents.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Jon Abernathy will present his popular SCOTT PEMBERTON GROUP: The Portland rock, blues and new book"Bend Beer: A History of funk band performs; 7 p.m.; free; Brewing in Central Oregon"; 6:30 McMenamins Old St. Francis p.m.; $5;Paulina Springs Books,252 W Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-0866. School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.comor SALUTE TO BASEBALL: A 541-382-5174. multimedia salute to our national BE CALMHONCHO:The indiepastime through poetry, monologues rockandblues bandperforms; 9 andscenes.;7 p.m .;free,donations encouraged; Cascades Theatre, p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-389-0803.

Evan initiated a high-risk ation that did not demand immediate action; that he

negligently inspected and d etermined

the

cor r e ct

number and age of occuof their injuries in the crash, pants of Scott Kalama's car according to the complaint. or deliberately ignored the L adamere K a l ama, w h o presence of young children; was about 2 years old at the and that he engaged in a time of the incident, was se- high-speed pursuit when no riously injured. direct threat was posed to A lawsuit alleging wrong- Evan's life or to the general ful death and deprivation public. of the plaintiffs' civil rights There is no explanation was first filed in U.S. Dis- given in the lawsuit as to trict Court in 2012, seeking why it would be filed in about $30 million, federal Deschutes County Circuit

California hip-hop artist lamsu will perform 7 p.m. Monday at the Domino Room. For more information, visit www.bendticket.com or call 800-922-8499. Garden Club's horticulturist (and hop grower) and get information aboutupcoming summer events. Hop rhizomes will be also be available for purchase; 5 p.m.; Worthy Brewing Company, 495 NE Bellevue Drive, Bend; www. worthygardenclub.com/events.html or 541-639-4776 ext. 220. SUSAN ANDDANAROBINSON: The Americana string-duo

adhere to "law enforcement

district court records show. In February, a U.S. District

Court when the events took

place in Jefferson County. Under state law, the complaint alleges, Jefferson County was obligated to establish and maintain a properly trained and su-

"ELSA ANDFRED": A showing of the 2014 movie about two neighbors; 7:30 p.m.; free; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library,134 SE ESt., Madras; www. jcld.org or 541-475-3351. SMOKEY BRIGHTS:The Seattle pop band performs, with Modern Kin and The Swing Letters; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

Court judge in Portland dismissed claims of negligence brought under state law due to lack of jurisdiction. Claims of wrongful death under federal law were dismissed with prejudice, meaning they can't be brought forward again. Claims against Tod Henry Kerr, the Warms Springs tribal police officer who was driving the car that hit

ty, the plaintiffs claim. Neither William Ghiorso,

SATURDAY

Scott Kalama's, were dismissed with prejudice in

the attorney for the plaintiffs i n b o t h t h e f e deral

EXHIBITOPENING:"GROWING UP WESTERN": Takesa lookatthe essential roles women andchildren played in providing labor, support and community in the High Desert150 years ago; 10a.m. $12 adults; $10 seniors; $7 youth; free for children 4 and under; The High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. LIVING EASTERADVENTURE: Interactive tour through the last week of Jesus' life and resurrection;

federal court i n February

and circuit court cases, nor

2014, and claims brought against the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs in the original complaint were also dismissed.

J efferson C o unt y

The defendants — Jeffer-

pervised law enforcement

agency. Furthermore, under Oregon law, minimum trainingwas prescribed for policeofficers and sheriff's deputies of Jefferson Coun-

C oun-

sel Alexa Gassner could be reached for comment Monday. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwitftycombe®bendbulletin.com

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate

live performances,gamesand lunch; 11 a.m.; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond; www.hbcredmond.org or 541-548-4161.

• • •

TheB u l letin

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet NEws OF REcoRD reported stolen at 3:10 p.m. March 27, in the 2400 block of NWMarken Street. The Bulletin will update items in the Theft —Atheft was reported and an Police Log whensuch arequest arrest made at 8:33 p.m. March 27, in is received. Any newinformation, the 600 block of NEThird Street. such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:34 p.m. March 28, in the 600 block of information, call 541-633-2117. NW Franklin Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:36 BEND POLICE a.m. March 29, in the 61000 block of DEPARTMENT Chamomile Place. Criminal mischief —Anact of Theft —Atheft was reported at1:38 criminal mischief was reported at1:29 p.m. March18, in the 61500 block of a.m. March 26, in the100 blockof SW American Loop. Century Drive. Burglary —A burglary was reported Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:21 at12:54 p.m. March 24, in the block of p.m. March 28, in the 400 block of NE 21000 Azalia Avenue. Irving Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:13 Unlawful entry —Avehicle was p.m. March 25, in the 300 block of SW reported entered at12:07 p.m. March Century Drive. 26, in the100 block of SW15th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:50 p.m. March 25, in the1100 block of PRINEVILLE NW Rockwood Lane. POLICE Burglary —A burglary was reported DEPARTMENT at 7:53 a.m. March 26, in the 2900 Criminal mischief — An act of block of NEDogwood Drive. criminal mischief was reported at 7:53 Theft —A theft was reported at 4:24 a.m. March 27, in the area of SE Third p.m. March 26, in the 2200 block of Street. SE Velocette Lane. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was Burglary —A burglary was reported reported at 9:02 a.m. March 27, in the at12:37a.m. March27, inthe19800 area of SWTom McCall Road. block of Quail Pine Loop. DUII —Christopher Robert Sams, 37, Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:59 a.m. March 27, in the area of SELynn was arrested on suspicion of driving Boulevard. under the influence of intoxicants at Criminal mischief —Anact of 2:01 a.m. March 27, in the 700 block of SE Centennial Street. criminal mischief was reported at 2:54 p.m. March 27, in the area of NE Theft —A theft was reported at 7:09 Seventh Street. a.m. March 27, in the 61200 block of SW Brookside Loop. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at Theft —A theft was reported at 7:27 a.m. March 27, in the100 block of NW 4:38p.m. March27, intheareaof NW Second Street. Outlook Vista Drive. DUII —Martin Lee Horton, 38, was Theft —A theft was reported at 9:14 arrested on suspicion of driving under a.m. March 27, in the 61200 block of the influence of intoxicants at10:11 SW Brookside Loop. p.m. March27, intheareaof N. Main Theft —A theft was reported at 9:46 Street. a.m. March 27, in the 19400 block of DUII —Martin Lee Horton, 38, was Laurelhurst Way. arrested on suspicion of driving under Theft —A theft was reported at1:18 the influence of intoxicants at 6:50 p.m. March 27, in the19800 block of p.m. March 28, in the area of NE Third Wetland Court. Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:26 p.m. March 28, in the100 block of SE JEFFERSON Roosevelt Avenue. COUNTY SHERIFF'S Theft —A theft was reported at 5:02 p.m. March 28, in the19700 block of OFFICE Baneberry Avenue. Unauthorized use — Avehicle was DUII —Patricia Kay Olson, 55, was

POLICE LOG

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Nicholas Dale Ricks, 35, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:30 p.m. March 27, onU.S.Highway 97 near milepost126. DUII —Robert Dale Mitchell,52, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:58 p.m. March 27, in thearea of Tumalo Road and 78th Street. DUII —Sara JaneCleland, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:13 a.m. March 28, on U.S.Highway 97 near milepost132. DUII —Jake Richard Nolton, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:29 p.m. March 28, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 andYewAvenue. DUII —Rochell Shantel Zamora, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:27 p.m. March 28, on U.S. Highway 97 near milepost132. DUII —Tye Patrick Abbey, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:38 a.m. March 29, in the area of Greenwood AvenueandSeventh Street.

Fridays tn TIt Btttletm

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The Alzheimer's Association Memories in the Making® Art Program Mt. Bachelor announces the first event in its Silver Series, which features interactive cultural outreach

programs designed for members of our community living with memory loss. Memories in the Making® is an opportunity for a creative space in which people with dementia can express themselves through art. When: Every Saturday through April 18, 1 to 3 p.m. Where: COCC Campus Center,Room 116 Due to space restrictions, we require RSVP for this event. Thank you!

RSVP administrator@bendmemorycare.com

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arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:25 p.m. March 23, in the 8300 block of SW Shad Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:24 p.m. March 23, in the 400 block of Fourth Avenue. Robbery —A robbery was reported at 5:26 p.m. March 26, in the areaof Crooked River Ranch. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered with items stolen at 8:20a.m.March 27,inthe 8700block of SW Feather Drive. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at12:51 p.m. March 26, in Cove Palisades State Park. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:23 p.m. March 27, in the 8000 block of SW Sandy Place.

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TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

L l cIIllZe e e B A ama WBS SWee, OVe 0 cIIA • Officials at the Oregon Zoosay an old injury was causing himpain

legislation that defines andbans racial profiling by lawenforcement agencies. Themeasure was introduced in the wakeof widespread protests touched off by theshooting death of an unarmed black teenager by a white police officer in Missouri. A state Housepanel heardtestimony on themeasureMonday. It would also establish a system for people to file profiling-based complaints. Additionally, the bill creates a task force that would propose way a to identify patterns of profiling in law enforcement agencies. The task force would identify methods to correct such patterns. Bill supporters say it's about strengthening trust between lawenforcement officers and local communities. They say previous efforts to define racial profiling died before making their way through the Legislature. Theysay the Missouri shooting death of Michael Brown is helping this year's bill gain traction. an officer has fatally shot a reportedly suicidal man. Spokeswoman Melinda McLaughlin said the shooting in the Bethel neighborhood happened shortly after 5 p.m. Monday. McLaughlin said police had responded to acall about a suicidal person. Neither the dead mannor the officer was immediately identified. No officers were injured. The spokeswomansaid an interagency teamwill investigate the shooting.

P ORTLAND — Or e g on Zoo o f ficials i n P o r t l and

say they have euthanized a 31-year-old elephant known f or h i s e n t husiasm f o r painting. They decided Rama was in too much pain from an old leg injury. was

RaCial PrOfiling —OregonHouselawmakers are considering

Eugene POliCeShOOting —AEugenepolice spokeswomansaid

The Associated Press

Rama

AROUND THE STATE

eu t h a nized

!

Monday. Zoo officials say physical therapy techniques

kl Srist .

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and anti-inflammatory medi-

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cations were no longer working and new modifications did not improve his quality of life. Michael Durham /Oregon Zoo via The Associated Press The elephant suffered a leg Rama, who loved to paint, was euthanized Monday at the Oregon Zoo. Officials at the zoo said an old injury in 1990 when older fe- leg injury compromised his quality of life and physical therapy andmedications were not helping. male elephants pushed the young bull out of the Portland zoo'sherd, a practicenatural- been filled in. Packy, who survives him. ment and loved to paint, crely seen in the wild. Rama fell Rama was a son of th e Zoo o ff icialssayRamahad ating artwork that was disinto a moat, which has since zoo's patriarch e lephant, a n unusually sweet tempera- played in a Portland gallery. !

Fire reSCue —Oregon State Police said a fish and wildlife trooper managed to rescue adisabled 81-year-old woman from aburning house in Eastern Oregon. Lt. Josh Brooks said Mondaythat Baker City-based Trooper BradDuncanwas patrolling Sundayafternoon in the town of Sumpter when hespotted a vehicle on fire with one person trying unsuccessfully to extinguish the flames. Thetrooper learnedanearbyhome wasowned byanelderlywoman who was believed to still be inside. Heand afirefighter went to check as the fire spread to the house. Brooks saysDuncanlocated the womanand her son still inside the homeandwas told she was unable to stand or walk on her own. Assmoke poured in through the door andthe house began to burn, Duncancarried the woman out of the house to safety. Firefighters later put out the blaze. — From wire reports

More truck traffic at southernborder Time's runningout or Vanport survivors The Associated Press

By Casey Parks The Oregonian

PORTLAND — Seventy years after a flood washed it

away, Vanport is having something of a comeback. In February, the Smithso-

nian Magazine published a long piece about the city's disappearance. The Oregon Historical Society's current exhibit features Vanport, too.

)s-v» m .

But many Portlanders still

don't know the history of the 1948 tragedy that wiped Oregon's second-largest city off the map. City memorials are hidden beneath moss and blackOregon schools. A team from Concordia University believes they have an idea that will bring the story of Vanport back to life. Working

58 through the Willamette

Pass. State officials say the weigh as often, therefore you're not stations serve two purposes: moving it via truck. Trucking Keeping overweight trucks is the backbone of the U.S. from damaging the highways economy." and making sure drivers Grant and his seven em- comply with state rules such ployees staff the two High- as thoserequiring adequate supplies don't get restocked

with Beaumont Middle School

students, the Concordia group is creating an interactive app Allan DeLay I The Oregonian file photo and documentary. A boy clings to safety at Entrance Circle during the Vanport flood of Memorial Day1948. Fourteen "But time is running out," people died. C oncordia e d ucation p r o fessor Shawn Daley told the Beaumont students. Few of the mation into one cellphone app.

40,000peoplewho once livedin

FALLS

portation. "They don't have to restockthe store as often, or

berries. The flood isn't taught in

being trucked north to polli-

nate fruit crops in Oregon and S outhern Oregon has a Washington. sign of economic recovery: U.S. 97 is a major northLots more big rigs at the south arteryin Oregon, onthe weigh scales on U.S. High- dry east side of the Cascades. way 97 near the border with For truckers coming north California. from California, it can be a The number of trucks go- fuel-saving way around the ing through the scales just mountains t ha t I n t erstate north of the Californiaborder 5 goes through to the west, took a sharp jump in 2014, said Bob Russell, vice presrising to 238,000. That was a ident of government affairs 25 percentincrease from the for the Oregon Trucking yearbefore. Associations. "When you see a downturn Many of those truckers, if in the economy, trucking is their insurance policies allow one of the first things that them to use two-lane highgets hit," said Phil Grant of the ways, eventually head back Oregon Department of Trans- to I-5 by taking state Highway K LAMATH

In early March, they drove

stopped to talk to the man, who said he had been the greens manager for 28 years. Jesse Goodling told them they could

Vanport remained. out to the land where Vanport In M arch, D aley's team once stood. planned to interview six surviThe federal government find another sign underneath vors. One died just before the chose not to rebuild Vanport af- the flagpole. "Do you have a lot of people interview. Another suffered a ter the flood. Instead, it became heart attack. a construction landfill. The city come out to look'?" Daley asked. "Not too much," Goodling Shipbuilder Henry Kaiser of Portland took it over in 1961. created Vanport in the early Today, the land holds a golf said. "But we find stuff out days of World War II because course and a race track. there all the time when we're

he needed a place where his employees — particularly Af- Without a trace r ican American workers The men trudged toward could live. The area had few the ninth hole. Their boots homes, and real estate bigotry squished against the morning prohibited African Americans dew. Fifteen years ago, Portfrom living in most of Portland. land State workers installed a Kaiser built his new city on a few signs on the golf course to flood plain in less than a year. memorialize the history. FinalIt soon became the most state's ly,Daley and Blanchard found most diverse city. About 15 a sign, outlined in moss. "Who's going to see this expercent of Vanport's residents wereblack. cept guys playing golf?" Daley The city had three fire sta- said. "Look at what this has tions, a movie theater and a li- become." brary. Portland State UniversiThese signs might have ty got its start there as Vanport been useful once, Blanchard Extension Center. said. But technology allows for Daley realized last year something more user-friendly. many of his North Portland Using GIS data and old phoneighbors didn't know any of tographs, Blanchard had crethat history. One of Daley's ated an augmented reality on Concordia graduate students, an app called Junaio. Anyone Matthew Blanchard, confessed with the free app could point a he had grown up across the riv- cellphone toward Vanport and er in Vancouver — the Van in photographs of the old buildVanport — but didn't know the ings would appear, situated history either. right on the plots where they Daley and Blanchard began once stood in real life. researching, but information Blanchard held up his phone. about Vanport is scattered He dicked a marker for the old across the region. The Oregon theater, and a photograph and Historical Society has some blurb came up. photos. Clark County has othDaley and Blanchard reers. Portland State University tracedtheir steps back across keeps its own records, and the the greens toward what used to Vanport Multimedia Project be VictoryAvenue. has its own slice of history. Now, a man teed up. A heron Using money from a Nation- cut across the sky. A Labraal Council of Social Studies dor puppy ran past Daley and grant, Daley and Blanchard Blanchard. began to synthesize the inforDaley a n d Bla nchard

way 97 scales just north of the Oregon Institute of

rest.

If everything is in good orTechnology. der, weighing and checking Right now, scale workers trucks takes about 60 secsay, they're busy with bees onds, Grant said.

her kids set up interviewing stations. "These are people who

lived there for years before this happened. Let's learn about what kind of culture they had.

Let's learn about thepeople, not just the tragedy." Regina Flowers, now 80, passed around photographs from the Vanport school. "This is not in our history

digging irrigation systems, book," said Beaumont student marbles and spoons from Van- Kevin Mealy. port. I have a few in my office." James Thompson, now 83, Daley madea date to docu- rolled out a map and pointed ment Goodling's treasures. out the bar where he once refilled olive and cherry bowls. Forgottenhistory He washed dishes every day A week later, Daley and but Sunday, he told them. Blanchard went to Beaumont The morning of the flood, Middle, where they had sched- Thompson told the students, uledthree Vanport survivors Army Corps members rolled to speak to Kirsten Parrott's out banners saying that levees eighth grade U.S. history dass. would hold the Columbia River Parrott has taught at Beau- back. Thompson was heading mont since 2001, but she only out to stack sandbags when recently learned about Van- the river cut a six-foot hole into port. The curriculum Portland a railroad embankment that Public Schools gives her in- served as a dike. ''We saw this mass of people dudes only a paragraph about it, she said. running down the street and State legislators have urged allthesecars,"Thompson said. middle schools to teach Oregon "You couldn't even move." history. A 2013 bill gave the OrThe students filmed Flowegon Department of Education ers and Thompson with iPads. money to create an Oregon The footage would become part Studies program, but it's still in of the augmented reality. The the early stages, said Markisha videos would play as app users Smith, the director of ODE's eq- scanned the spot where Flowuityunit. ers once played in the band and Oregon school districts cre- Thompson washed dishes. ate their own curricula, so the The octogenarians have state can't force any school to spentmuch of theirlives talking study Vanport, but leaders at about the day the Columbia the state department are inter- River turned their homes into ested in sharing the work Da- what Thompson called "splinley's team puts together. tered wood and rubble." "My kids are tired of me As the survivors pulled out photographs and maps, Parrot talking about it," Flowers told told her students to ask about the dass. lifebefore the flood. This time, she had a rapt "Kids have a tendency to fo- audience. This time, her talk cus on disasters," she said as would live forever.

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GARDENING. Get good at it. Join OSU Master Gardeners for garden events this month Seed Startlng,Tues. April 7, 1 .m., OSU Extension Oflice, Deschutes County Fair er Expo Center; free. Re -cmtine at extension.oregonstate.edu/deschutes/garden-classes. Growlng Vegetables,Tues. April 14, 6-8 p.m., Ridgeview H.S.,4555 SW ElkhornAve,Redmond, in Skybox Room; free.Registration required at extension.oregonstate.edu/deschutes/garden-classes. Sprlng Gardenlng Semlnar,Sat. April 18, 8 a.m;4:30 p.m., Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center. Choose up to 4 of 16 classes; $10 each. Register at gocomgazom/gardening-news.html. Community Garden Openlng,Sat. April 25,9 a.rn.: Hollinshead Park, 1237 NEJones Rd.,Bend; plots$25-535, cash/check only.Spaces limited. Dress for weather and 2-hour work party. 541-548-6088.

Central Oregon

Master Garde er

Associ jon


B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

EDrTO

The Bulletin

s

ru n i e's curren mus e veriia e a s

EcREBNlN& 20IE

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ruth In Site should stick to the facts in its battle with the proposed location of Oregon State Universi-

rg

ty-Cascades' campus. The article by Tyler Leeds in Saturday's Bulletin demonstrated the problems with so many things Truth In Site asserts. The group says OSU-Cascades turned down an offer for 200 free acres at Juniper Ridge. But the evidence for that is paper thin; it's one email from former Bend City Councilor Mark Capell. But other councilors don't remember such an offer. City staffers don'tremember such an offer. Of course, there have been discussions about locating a campus at Juniper Ridge for years. Assistant City Manager Jon Skidmore says only that the city would try to come up with a good deal. That is not 200 acres for free. Then there's the cost figure that Truth In Site had on its website. It saidthe cost of the campus hadmore thantripled to $93million. OSU-Cascadessays thatnumber ismade up.

Mike Walker, a local civil engineer who provided the research for many of the assertions on Truth In Site's website, asked that the $93 million figtnebe removed fromthe website. The artide raised other issues, as welL There are legitimate questions about the proposed location of OSU-Cascades. There are issues of traffic, parking, student housing and room for future expansion. People associated with Truth In Site have played an important role in asking those questions. Some of that input has been thoughtful an d w e ll-researched. Some of it has been exaggeration, shrill or dovaujPt unsupportable. That only bankrupts Truth In Site's credibility. If Truth In Site wants tobe accepted as a legitimate voice of opposition, its currency needs to be facts that it canprove.

U..

A

mong bills in Salem affecting agriculture is one that would dramatically l i mit aerial spraying of pesticides in the state. While House Bill 3123 may sound good, as it's currently written it would place an unnecessarily large burden on agriculture in

Moreover, in an industry with narrow profit margins, pesticides are expensive, and no f a rmer worth his salt will use them unless he absolutel y must. He or someone he hires must be licensed, and applicators are required by law to do what theycan to assure the spray does not drift onto nearby land. In Oregon. The measure would ban the fact, Dale Mitchell, who is co-chair of the state's Pesticide Analytical practice of aerial spraying of pesti- Response Center, says the agency cides on crops except in the case of receives relatively few complaints a state-declared emergency. It also about drift each year. would ban spraying on state forest In addition to HB 3123, at least lands under the same conditions. Supporters of such bans say spray- five other bills dealing with the use ing endangers bees and is harmful of pesticides are before the House Committee on A griculture and to human health. Natural Resources. The commitIt's true that improperly applied tee's chairman, Rep. Brad Witt, pesticides, whether they come D-Clatskanie, already has begun from a plane ora handheld gar- meeting regularly with farmers den weed sprayer, can do damage. and others to craft legislation that They are, after all, designed to kill all parties can live with. At the the sorts of bugs that damage ev- same time, he's asked those teserything from hazelnuts to wheat tifying on legislation to focus on to Christmas trees. peer-reviewed science and "best But farmers hardly apply them practices" to promote environmenwilly-nilly, even now. In Oregon tal and economic health, according they're used most often on such to the Capital Press in Salem. crops as dryland wheat east of the The combination — comproCascades, where fields are big and mise and fact-based solutionsterrain makes land-based applica- should serve all Oregonians, intion impractical, or, in Western Or- cluding the general public and the egon, on trees. state's farmers, well.

By Trudy RubIn

remain through this year.

of diplomats, academics, and U.S. officials who know him, Ghani exfghan P resident A s hraf line for a complete withdrawal "re- plained why regional diplomacy is Ghani's trip to Washington mains the end of 2016." Obviously, he key. "The problem fundamentally is last week was so triumphant wants to say he ended the war by the one could almost imagine how his time he leaves office. Yet the deadline not about peace with the Taliban, but troubled country might morph into a threatens to pull the rug out from un- about peace with Pakistan," he said, future success story. der Ghanibeforehe can show results. referringtothe fact that the neighborAt a joint session of Congress Afghan forces are (barely) holding ing country has provided sanctuarand a glittering White House din- the Taliban to a stalemate follow- ies to the Taliban for decades. In the ner, the brilliant World Bank tech- ing the withdrawal of 100,000 U.S. past, Pakistan sought to control Afnocrat and C olumbia University troops. But they will still need U.S. ghanistan via the Taliban as a hedge grad-turned-politician pledged a help with air, intelligence and logis- against its archenemy, India. new era inAfghan-U.S. relations. tics support, as well as financing, But today, said Ghani, with netThe slight but elegant Ghani present- after 2016. And the continued pres- works of terrorists spreading in ed himself as the antidote to prick- ence of those 10,000 U.S. advisers South and CentralAsia andthreatenly former President Hamid Karzai, has symbolic value that transcends ing Pakistan too, "the two states must under whom corruption soared and its military importance. It signals to reach anacceptance of each other to U.S.-Afghan relations soured. the world that the United States is still prevent the region from sinking into Ghani profusely thanked Amer- committed to a stable Afghanistan. chaos." icans for their sacrifices in lives and Conversely, atroop exit would tell the Meantime, said Ghani, a "new cash, which have helped his coun- Taliban — or ISIS — that America ecology of terror" in which terrorist try survive Taliban attacks and re- has lost interest in the country and networks spread rapidly across borbuild. He stressed that Afghanistan there is avacuum to be filled. ders may force Afghanistan's neighmust now shoulder the main burden We saw something similar in Iraq bors to cooperate in fighting jihadis. of securing its future. Standing on when the administration failed to They must join together, he believes, a podium beside Ghani, President leave a 10,000-troop residual force to combat extremism and help staBarack Obama intoned: "With a new beyond 2011 and stopped paying bilize Afghanistan, which occupies government in Afghanistan and with attention. ISIS and Iran filled the critical geography and could become the end of our combat mission, this vacuum. a nexus for gas and oil pipelines and visit is an opportunity to begin a new This bitter lesson should have energygrids. chapter between our two nations." changed Obama's thinking on AfThe saddestaspect ofObama's amSo is it really possible — after all ghanistan, but it hasn't — yet. bivalence is its timing. Ghani's electhe bipartisan support Ghani reIn Afghanistan, the 2016 deadline tion presents new opportunities to ceived — that Obama could blow this has already decreased Taliban inter- stabilize Afghanistan and coincides opportunity for a happy ending in est in negotiating a peace deal with with geopolitical shifts that could ralAfghanistan'? The answer, unbeliev- Ghani. Why talk now when they can ly the region to that cause. American ably, is yes. wait until the last American troops diplomacy could play a critical role. "The United States remains an indisThe White House seems more fo- exit? cused on putting the failed Afghan As important, the deadline un- pensable interlocutor," said Ghani. war behind it than on helping Ghani dercuts U.S. leverage to help Ghani But only if Obama overcomes his stabilize the country. True, Obama persuade his neighbors — including eagerness to turn his back on Afagreed to delay withdrawal of the last Pakistan, Iran, India and China — to ghanistan by the end of 2016. 10,000 U.S. troops, who are training work together for a stable Afghan— Trudy Rubin is a columnist and and assisting Afghan forces. Rather istan. At the U.S. Institute of Peace, editorial board member for the than shrinking by half, the force will where he was welcomed by dozens Philadelphia Inquirer. The PhiladelphiaInquirer

But Obama insisted that the time-

A

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

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Deman ing schools ivest is o ten a By William G. Bowen

sive is the daim that a university is

Special to The Washington Post

obligated to take a stand on any issue of broad social import that individ-

ampaigns urging colleges and

C

universities to

d i v est s tock uals — induding, not infrequently,

holdings are again on the rise, the president of a university acting focused today more often than not on in citizen mode — regard as highly holdings in fossil fuel companies. consequential. Many of the arguments against This is nonsense. To abstain is divestment as a general tactic are by both a legitimate and appropriate acnow well-known. They include prac- tion when the issue is not central to tical ones, such as the difficulty of an institution's educational mission. divesting fully when portfolios con- Universities need to keep control over tain index funds, hedge funds and their agendas and decide for themother complex instruments; concerns selves when it is appropriate to take a about adverse effects on the ability position. An issue such as affirmative of endowments to support education action — which directly affects educaand researchas fully asthey could if tional processes and outcomes — has they were unconstrained; and doubts a very different claim on academia about the effectiveness of divestment than does the conflict between the Isin bringing about changes (which are raelis and the Palestinians. often unspecified) in corporate pracTaking an institutional stand onpotice. In general, I find these objections litical issues of many kinds threatens persuasive, though they need to be the primary educational mission of tested and debated in each situation. the university, which is to be avowedly One argument in favor of divest- open to arguments of every kind and ment that I find entirely unpersua- to avoid giving priority to partisan or

ani,

ut oes not return avor

Salem shouldn't ban

most crop spraying

a ins rien i n

other political viewpoints. The university should be the home of the critic

return as it prudently could.

Third, there is the very real danger — indeed, the home of critics of many that, as Macalester College President different persuasions — not the critic Brian Rosenberg has explained so itself. well, joining the crowd in pushing But my main quarrel with current for an institutional position on issues

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

p o licy day to work on issues of consequence. Well-intentioned but poorly conceived efforts to compel colleges and univer-

sities to fight extramural battles of all kinds can impair efforts to work harder on issues of great social as well as

educational consequence that are at tempt individuals to substitute such the core of the basic educational misat all, to what I regard as the insidious "easy" actions for their responsibili- sion of higher education. moral perils of divestment. There is, ty to act as citizens in pursuing more Such trade-offs receive too littlefirst of all, the sometime hypocrisy of difficult courses of action, including and sometimes no — consideration. seeking institutional "purity" while working tirelessly in the political pro- And there is a slippery slope to be confailing individually to reduce con- cess. Of course, one can do both, but sidered — divesting for one purpose sumption of fossil fuels or, for a faculty one wonders how often that happens. can make it harder for the institution member, to divest one's personal stake Finally, these are times when ed- to resist other calls to use divestment in investment vehicles, including in- ucational institutions need to work as apolitical tactic. dex funds, that contain questionable harder, in my view, to improve edSearching for answers to the quesholdings. ucational outcomes, especially for tion of how to make one's greatest Second, with regard to endow- less-privileged students. A related contribution to the common good is ments, there is the question of an in- obligation is to seek new ways of con- anything but easy, for institutions stitution's obligation, seen as a matter trolling educational costs to address or for individuals. But it should be at of trust, to honor the intent of donors affordability issues that will not be the forefront of our thinking — not an — many ofwhom surel y gave money solved, I suspect, byincreased govern- afterthought. to endow specific activities, such as mental support. At the institutional — William G. Bou en is president emeritus scholarships, believing that the insti- level, there are only so many dollars to of Princeton University and the tution would seek to earn as large a spend, and only so many hours in the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. debates over divestment is that they pay too little attention, if any attention

such as fossil fuels is too easy; it can


TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B5

PUBUCOFFICIAl5

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH 1VOTICES Thomas Malloy, of Terrebonne June 3,1941 - Mar. 30,2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsREDMOND www.autumnfunerals.net 541-504-9485

Services: Memorial Mass: 11:00am Tues. March 31 at St. Thomas Catholic Church, 1720 NW 19th Street, Redmond. Contributions may be made to:

St. Thomas Building Fund or Partners In Care.

David Richard Owen, of Crooked River Ranch June 7, 1947- Mar. 28, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Graveside Service will take place Thursday, April 2, 2015 at 1:00 PM at Terrebonne Pioneer Cemetery, located on Smith Rock Way in Terrebonne, OR. A reception will immediately follow. Contributions may be made to:

David White, Sr. Aug. 26, 1941 - March26, 2015 D avid L e o W h i t e , S r. passed away on March 26, 2015, at his home in Bend, Oregon s u r r o u nde d b y c lose family members. A f t er 26'/2 years, hi s b r a v e battle with r e nal cell c ar cinoma c ancer f i nally came to an end. B orn A u gust 26, 1941 in Earlimart, CA to R uth L o u David Leo Nordman White, Sr. and Clyde David White. At age 8, David's family relocated to M anning, Oregon w h e r e Da v i d attended Manning Element ary a nd Ban ks Hi gh S chool. H e w a s a n a v i d sports fan playing football, b asketball and t r ac k d u r ing high school. W hen his

playing days were over, he

r emained in vo l v e d i n outh sports as a r e f eree o r v a r sit y f o o t b al l a n d basketball and um pire f o r b aseball an d s o f t b all f o r the next 40 years. After High School graduation, D a v i d se r v e d 6 m onths i n th e N at i o n a l G uard. I n t h e s p r i n g o f 1960 David starting his career with Oregon Highw ay D e p a r t ment . He s pent th e n e x t 3 2 y e a r s working in various capacit ies and f i n i shed h i s c a reer as ODOT Safety Man-

ager in Salem, Oregon. Upon retiring from O D OT i n 1993 he started a c o n sulting co m p a ny , D& D Safety Co n s u l tants; he continued to be the Master Trainer for O DO T f l agger t rainers, a s th e Tr a f f i c Control Supervisor Trainer, he wr ote and delivered t r a ining m a t erials f or Ever g r ee n Safe t y Council a nd w as employed by ODOT T-2 as a C ircuit R i d er , w h e r e h e provided safety training to City and C o u nty e m p l oye es until his death. In t h e

capacity of an employee,

c onsultant an d t r a i ner h e w orked f o r O r e g o n D e partment o f Tr a n s p ortation for over 50 years. David l i v e d I i f e t o t h e fullest each and every day. He never me t a s t r a n ger and if you talked with him f or more than a fe w m i n utes you would hear about t he three t h i ng s h e h e l d most dear to his heart; his family, h is w or k an d s ports. D a vi d w a s a m a n of strong faith an d C h r i stian values. He was never one to talk about it, but the way he lived his life spoke v olumes of his daily w a l k with God. D avid w a s p r e ceded i n death by his father, Clyde D avid W h i t e a n d st e p m other, In e s (Caudill) White. D avid is survived by h i s w ife o f 5 4 y e a rs , D o n n a

Jean (Hammond) White, his

m o t h er , Ru t h

( Nordman) A d ams,

Lou

his

son, David Leo W h it e Jr ., daughter, Car la Jean (White) C a i n , g r a n d child ren, Joshua, J o r dan, & Jessica Cain, h i s s i s t ers,

Carolyn (White) Winzer, Laura

( W h i t e ) Ri c k e tt s,

Cheryl ( W h ite)

L a r son,

and brother, Otis Caudill, a nd s e v eral n i e ce s a n d nephews. Celebration of L i f e Service will be held on Thursday, April 2 , 2015 at 1:00 p.m. at Christian Life Cent er, 2 1 720 E . Hw y 20, Bend, OR 97701. Graveside Service will be h eld on M o n d ay, A p ri l 6 , 2015 at 1:00 p.m. at Restl awn F u neral H o m e , 2 0 1 Oak Grove Road NW , Salem, OR 97304. Autumn F u n erals, B e nd was honored to serve th e family . 54 1-3 1 8 -0842 www.autumnfunerals.net

Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org

David Leo White Sr., of Bend Aug. 26, 1941 - Mar. 26, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-31 8-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life at 1;00 PM at Christian Life Center, 21720 Hwy 20, Bend, OR on April 2, 201 5. Graveside service at 1:00 PM on April 6, 2015 at Restlawn Memorial Gardens, Salem, OR.

Ronald L. Marceau, of Bend Mar. 5, 1933 - Mar. 27, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: At his request, no services will be held.

Margaret Elaine Loving, of Redmond Aug. 19, 1920- Mar. 27, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Graveside Service will take place Tuesday, March 31, 201 5 at 1:00 PM at Redmond Memorial Cemetery, located at 3545 S. Canal Boulevard in Redmond, OR.

jewell Rae Berndt Sept. 2, 1946 - Feb. 26, 2015

Graumandirected TV's 'Murder, SheWrote' By David Colker

Grauman said.

Los Angeles Times

G rauman f i nished h i s career with "Murder, She

LOS ANGELES — Walter

Grauman, a prolific television

Wrote," directing more than 50

director whose credits include

episodes.

numerous episodes of hits such as "Murder, She Wrote," "Barnaby Jones," "The Fugitive" and "The Untouchables," died March 20 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 93. He had been battling heart and vascular problems and

Hewas born March 17, 1922, in Milwaukee, where his father

died of natural causes, said his

wife, Peggy. Although Grauman was

owned several movie theaters. (His father's cousin, Sid Grauman, built the Chinese Theatre

in Hollywood.) Walter Grauman attended the University of W isconsin

for a couple of years and then briefly the University of Arizona before enlisting in the

Army during World War II. As directors in the 1950s through a pilot in the Army Air Forces, the mid-1990s, he had no back- he flew more than 50 missions ground in theater or movies in Europe and was awardwhen he got into the business ed the Distinguished Flying during the live TV era. Some- Cross. times, itwas a trial by fire. After the war, he got a sucGrauman was nearly un- cession of short-lived jobs, inflappable as a director, includ- cluding in the publicity departing when dealing with stars. ment at Universal Studios, but When he directedan episode felt that local TV shows were one of the busiest television

U.S. SENATE • Seo. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorneAve., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Seo. RooWyden, D-Ore. 223 DirkseoSenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 W eb: http://wyden.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorneAve., Suite 107 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-330-9142 U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver 2182 RayburnHouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 W eb: http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone:541-389-4408 Fax:541-389-4452 STATE OF OREGON • Gov. Kate Brown, D 160 State Capitol,900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secrehryof State 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1616 Fax:503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer@state. oi;us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral Ellen Roseoblum, D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax:503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor Commissioner BradAvakian 800 NEOregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mailostate.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

of the "Columbo" mysteries in so terrible, he could do better. B orn in S eattle, WA , t o 1990, actor Peter Falk reject- He co-created "Lights, Camt he p a r e nt s o f V ern o n ed Grauman's setup of a shot, era, Action!" atalent showcase/ M ichael Conery an d B a r - insisting that a pair of under- contest for performers, includbara Ann Baldwin. Jewell wa s a w o n d erful wear on an actress be worn in- ing a young Leonard Nimoy, side-out with the tag showing. who did notwin his episode. artist, "I thought it was crazy; what In the late 1980s he created l oved t h e the hell did thathave to dowith the Spotlight Awards, which great outdoors and the story'?" Grauman said. annually give free training to had a pasFalk didn't explain and it students in music, dance and sion for wasn't in the script, but by the acting. Aug. 23, 1926- Mar. 17, 2015 horses. end of the shoot, the underI n addition t o h i s w i f e , Marjorie Lavonne L arkin Jewell's wear turned out to be a clever Grauman's survivors include was born August 23, 1926, to l ife wi t h clue. "That son-of-a-gun had a daughter, a son and four Clarence F r it z H o n an d us was far figured it out in his head," grandchildren. Sadie Helena (Miller) Marjotoo short, rie, and l i ved i n G i l christ Jewell Berndt very much and Bend area since 1973. loved and w i l l b e g r e atly She loved Fishing, metal d etecting, S h o ppin g a n d missed. Jewell is pain free n ow and she is w it h G o d. STATE SENATE Death Notices are freeand going out to eat with family. Deadlines:Death Notices are We love you mama. • Sen. TedFerrioli, R-Dielrict30 Marjorie is survived by her will be run for oneday, but accepted until noon Monday (Jefferson, part of Deschutes) specific guidelines must be through Friday for next-day s ons, Jerry R . L a r k i n o f 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR97301 followed. Local obituaries are Bend, Oregon and Jeffery C. publication and by4:30 p.m. Phone:503-986-1950 Larkin of L a Pine, Oregon; Friday for Sunday publication. paid advertisements submitted 1949- 2015 Email: sen.tedferrioli©state. d aughter, Judith A . T r i p p by families or funeral homes. Obituaries must be received or.us Bill Bu rn i n g h am , of Theymay besubmittedby by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough (Ken) of San Diego, CaliforWeb: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli Or e g on , p as s e d Thursday for publication on • Seo. TimKoopp,R-District27 nia; an d a b r o t h er, J a ck B end, phone, mail, email or fax. The away early in March, 2015. (part of Deschutes) Hons of Kingsley Iowa; four Bulletin reserves the right to the second dayafter subb o r n i n Bo i s e , 900 Court St. NE,S-423 mission, by1 p.m. Friday for grandchildren; a nd f ive B ill wa s edit all submissions. Please Salem, OR 97301 Idaho, o n J u l y 1 3 , 1 9 49, great-grandchildren. include contact information in Sunday publication, and by Phone:503-986-1727 a nd lived most of h i s l i f e Contributions m ay be there, moving about 20 all correspondence. 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday Email: sen.timknopp©state. OI'.Us made to The M acular DeFor information on any of these publication. Deadlines for years ago W eb: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp display ads vary; pleasecall generation Foundation, Inc. to L ake services or about the obituary • Seo. Doug Whitsett, R-Disfrict28 P.O. Box 5 31313, Henderfor details. Tahoe and policy, contact 541-617-7825. (Crook, part ofDeschutes) then t o son, NV 89053 900 Court St. NE,S-303 Bend. Bill Autumn Funerals, Bend, is Salem, OR 97301 was in charge of t h e a r r angePhone:503-986-1728 Phone: 541-617-7825 Mail:Obituaries friendly, Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state. ments. 541-318-0842. P.O. Box6020 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com intelliOI;us Bend, OR97708 Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ g ent, a n d Fax: 541-322-7254 whitsett naturally athletic. Bill Burningham In y outh h e w as particularly g o o d a t Dec. 23, 1946- Mar. 26, 2015 s kiing a n d g o l f i ng , w i n J anit R ut h ( H o ft ) A l e x - ning several awards while ander, 68, of T e r r ebonne, on the Borah High School p assed awa y M a r c h 2 6 , g olf team. Bil l s erved h i s 2015, in Redmond, Oregon. country in the 1st Air Cal+c„,„,'~~ Pre s entedby KirbyNageihout Construction Company Janit w a s bo r n i n El vary Division of the United Centro, S tates A r m y d u r i n g t h e CaliforVietnam W ar . I n a d d ition Saturday, May 2, 2015 I 5:30pm nia on to multiple other a w a r ds, Riverhouse Convention Center Decemhe w as aw ar d e d t he b er 23 , Bronze Star Medal for An evening in support of 1946, to V alor f o r h i s h e r o i c a c children and families Dean and t ions d u r in g b a t t le . B i l l Neva m arried D ebbie D i G i o r fine wine • local artists • craft beer ' o on J a n uary 1 5 , 1 9 8 1 H oft. S h e silent & live auctions • seated dinner attended a ter divorced), and t h ey Highland h ad on e s on , R y a n W i l music by Todd Haaby and Sola Via Janit Alexander High liam. dessert dash by Bend High Culinary Program S chool i n Bill w a s p r e c e de d in National C i ty , C a l i f ornia. d eath b y h i s p ar e n t s , Purchase early bird tfckets for $75 She had a son, Doug NelH arry M u i r a n d M i l d r e d through April 3 at son, on July 30, 1968. They W ilson B u r n i n gham a n d deschuteschildrensfoundatfon.org m oved t o T e r r ebonne i n b y his sister, D i ane M a r or 541-388-3101. 1977. c us. He is survived by h i s Janit worked a variety of son, Ryan, of Portland, his The Ait & Wine Auction is sponsored by: places over the y ears, inb rother, B r e nt , o f B e n d , cluding Cen t - W i s e i n O R, and h i s s i s t er , K a y QNAGELHOUT gRK~~ ~ ~ SEICO Redmond. Most recently, Butler, of Bountiful, Utah. B ill's remains w il l b e i n she worked as a janitor at her beloved church, D ay terred in Bountiful next to gg, s pring C h r i s tia n C e n t er , those of his parents. • A N k a nd at Q u i l t er's A t t i c i n Condolences can be sent smaftsolutions T errebonne. S h e vol u n - to the family care of LakebendbnmRanE teered weekly at the Food view Memorial Park, 1640 B ank at Sm it h Rock Lakeview Drive, Bountiful, / IComm unity Church. She Utah 84010. k" faithfull y ser v e d b oth churches in c o u ntless capacities. J anit loved he r c o m m u n ity, h e r chu r c h , an d 0 spending t i m e w i t h he r The Bulletin iS in the prOCeSS Of COmpiling a liSt Of Summer CampS in p jrggyg~ g,~ I i f amily a n d fr i e n ds . S h e Central Oregon. Pleasefill out this form to verify information in order to enjoyed quilting and sewing. camps, programs,andactivitiesforchildren ofallages. be COnSidered fOr PubliCatiOn in the Summer YOuth ACtiVity Guide. S he wa s p r e c eeded i n death by he r p a r ents and +®~I~ 5~4~~ 3®2 ~ @~ ~ Email information to: summercamps@bendbulletin.com two brothers, Russell and To reserve your ad space in e Mark Hoft. Summer Youth Guide Mgj/ fpp~ tp. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r Puhiishes Friday, APril17 2 16 The Bulletin, Attn: Martha ROgers, Po. BOx6020, Bend, OR97Q2 s on, D o u g (Vanessa), Adv rlising ~eadlin:. many loving cousins, and F riday, April, 1 5 . Cam PHOSt: countless fnends who considered her family. ~itgtocation: Services w i l l b e hel d Thursday, April 2, at noon, website: a t D a y s p r in g Ch r i s t i an Center, 7801 N 7th Street, Phone: Terrebonne. Memorial co n t r i b utions m ay b e m a d e t o B r i g h t Deadline to submit: April 3, 2015 The Bulletin ~ side Animal Center.

Marjorie LaVonne Larkin

Obituary policy

Bill Burningham

Janit Ruth (Hoft) Alexander

H8 N OH-

— gW Q

4g LQ4

. yofgiyH

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;

ATTENTIONCENTRAL OREGON SUMMER CAMPS


B6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,lnc. ©2015

i

'

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH 46'

M

Clouds and sunwith a few showers; cooler

i f '1

ALMANAC

W EDN E SDAY

LOW 24'

u

47'

THU R SDAY ' ' 48'

24'

~r~

An afternoon rain or snow shower in spots

Partly cloudy andcolder

FRIDAY 54

~

23'

i

Yesterday Today Wednesday

Cily Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Abilene 83/51/0.00 83/62/t Akron 53/36/0.02 50/29/sh Albany 46/26/Tr 45/23/c Albuquerque 79/50/Tr 76/49/s Anchorage 49/32/0.00 43/30/s Atlanta 71/50/0.48 72/56/pc Atlantic City 53/35/0.05 48/34/r Austin 80/61/0.00 79/61/c Baltimore 61/35/0.02 61/35/sh Billings 71/46/0.00 78/42/pc Birmingham 75/57/0.57 71/55/1 Bismarck 68/31/0.00 70/44/pc Boise 77/40/0.00 64/34/pc Boston 45/31/Tr 48/29/s Bridgeport, CT 53/33/0.01 45/31/r Buffalo 41/36/0.19 41/25/sf Burlington, VT 42/34/0.01 39/1 9/s Caribou, ME 38/23/0.03 40/1 2/sf Charleston,Sc 70/39/Tr 76/58/pc Charlotte 70/39/0.26 73/50/pc Chattanooga 71/48/0.58 75/49/pc 54 2 • Fort Rock Riley 50/24 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 45/23 Cheyenne 68/35/0.00 72/45/s 4 49/24 43/23 Chicago 61/34/0.06 54/36/pc High: 79 Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 59/37/0.09 68/37/s Jordan V Iley Apr 4 Apr 11 Apr 1a A pr 25 at Rome 54/43 Beaver Siiver Frenchglen 56/40 Cleveland 54/37/0.01 46/29/sh Low: 27' 55/25 Marsh Lake 51/22 ColoradoSprings 73/32/0.00 73/45/s Tonfght'a afty:Waxinggibbous moon near 43/22 at Lakeview 46/22 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 71/38/0.00 72/47/s • Paisley 3/ Jupiter. a Columbia, SC 72/39/0.04 77/56/pc • 59/25 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 76/50/0.41 74/55/c Medfo d 4 7 / 22 Gold ach Rorne 0' Columbus,OH 57/37/0.06 60/32/pc 54/ 61/24 • Kiamath Concord, NH 41/22/Tr 46/23/pc Source: JimTodd,OMSI • Ashl nd • FaRS • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 80/66/0.00 78/67/c Bro ings 53/ 47/21 54/41 49/23 59/25 Dallas 75/58/0.00 80/63/1 Dayton 58/34/0.01 61/36/s 73/34/0.00 77/47/s 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Denver Des Moines 76/36/0.00 72/47/s 2 I~ 4 ~ 5 I 2 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 59/38/0.00 49/32/sn The highertheAccuWsafrer.rxrmIIYIndex number, Astoris 58/51/0.00 53/40/t 53/41/sh L a Grande 72/ 34/0.00 52/34/sh 49/31/pc Portland 67/4 6/0.0056/41/t 55/39/sh Duluth 51/32/0.04 52/30/pc the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protscgun.0-2 Low Baker City 71/27/0.0051/27/sh 48/24/c La Pine 69/27/0.00 43/24/sn 43/23/c Prinevige 70/ 36/0.0049/25/sh43/25/ c El Paso 84/61/0.00 79/57/c 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems. Brookings 54/46/0.00 54/41/pc54/41/pc Medford 7 6 /42/0.00 56/36/pc 56/37/pc Redmond 70/ 3 1/0.0049/24/sh 51/24/c Fairbanks 50/20/0.00 42/1 9/c Bums 73/29/0.00 50/24/sh 49/23/c N e w port 5 4/50 / 0.00 52/40/t 5 1 /40/sh Roseburg 73 / 42/0.00 56/40/t 57/39/pc Fargo 63/31/0.00 62/44/s Eugene 72/40/0.00 55/38/t 57/37/sh N o rth Bend 5 9 / 48/0.00 54/42/t 5 3/41/sh Salem 68/40/0.00 55/39/t 56/36/sh Flagstaff 69/33/0.00 68/37/s Klamath Fags 71/32/0.00 47/21/pc 47/23/pc Ontario 74/32/0.00 61/34/sh 57/31/pc Sisters 70/28/0.00 48/26/sh48/24/ c Grand Rapids 54/34/0.04 51/30/pc G rasses T r ee s Wee ds Lakeview 73/27/0.00 49/23/pc46/24/sf Pendleton 68/41/0.00 55/38/sh 57/36/pc The Dages 7 1 /38/0.00 58/40/pc 59/39/pc Green Bay 56/35/Tr 51/29/pc Greensboro 68/40/0.04 70/46/s Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday W L a r~ yhig h Ab t Harrisburg 55/36/Tr 47/30/r Source: OregonAgergyAssocistss 541-683-1577 Harfford, CT 49/29/Tr 49/29/c Helena 70/39/0.00 66/34/sh Honolulu 83/70/0.00 84/70/sh ~ gs ~ t es ~ 208 ~ 30 6 ~ 40 6 ~ 50 s ~ ag s ~ 7 0 6 ~ a g a ~ 9 0 s ~f cc s ~11 0 s Houston ~ 106 ~ g s 83/61/0.00 83/64/c As of 7 s.m. yesterday Huntsville 70/53/0.64 72/49/t ' Cst sry Indianapolis 61/36/0.00 61/38/s Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL ilx * 43 3 W ni Sasst T@uder asy 4 ay Jackson, MS 79/62/Tr 79/58/c EXTREMES x x a i » C rane Prairie 544 3 7 aa/43 60 38 98% ST/ Jacksonville 78/40/0.00 79/58/t + * YESTERDAY(forthe •

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

SKI REPORT In inches ss of 5 p.m.yesterday

Ski resort New snow Base 0 42-8 7 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 25-55 0 28-4 5 Timberline Lodge Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 39-71 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 51-51 Source: onTheSnow.com

x xt x x

'smarck Br 70/44

Services. Vietnam v eteran

Guthrie, of Redmond, is one of the Choice Program should them. He knew he needed his have covered, Gilley said. "Credit ratings are being ruknee replaced. After waiting statutory change," said 'Ibch- 30 days to see his primary care inedbecause ofthis,"shesaid. schmidt, who works in Bend, physician at the Bend VA dinic Wendy Rudy, veteran and "and then the question that we will have and that we're

vices, many still have to travel morethan 160miles to the Portland VA Medical Center. Dr. James 'Dtchschmidt, the

was one year ago. The surgeon complicated." forgot to put him on the list. "I jumped through all the In some cases, primary care providers at the Bend VA clinic hoops, and yet I can't use my tell veterans they need surgery Choice Card to be put on a list

trying to work through is, so when that changes, how do you implement that? It will be

VA's acting principal deputy under secretary for health, told but don't add them to a wait

Grange

in orderto be referred to a sur-

national service liaison for St.

geon, he finally met with a sur- Charles Health System, told the geon in Portland, who agreed group in Walden's office that it needed to be replaced. That

Hi/Lo/W 85/63/s 52/38/s 42/24/s 77/44/pc 47/30/s 78/58/s 46/37/s 78/62/c 55/34/s 55/34/pc 77/60/1 61/35/pc 54/31/s 42/30/s 45/31/s 41/31/pc 35/21/pc 27/10/pc 77/55/pc 72/48/s 75/52/s 64/29/1 63/52/s 63/46/s 48/39/s 73/35/pc 76/57/s 78/53/s 79/58/1 59/41/s 41/23/s 78/68/c 77/64/1 59/45/s 71/35/1 78/54/pc 51/38/s 60/41/sh 82/59/s 41/1 8/c 71/41/pc 64/34/s 57/46/s 59/49/pc 67/45/s 51/31/s 44/29/s 49/31/pc 84/71/pc 81/66/1 76/58/1 64/49/s 80/61/c 79/58/t

St. Charles has tried on three

50/40/r 65/52/s 72/57/pc 78/56/s

95nas

63/41/sh 67/59/sh 50/37/r 67/50/1 53/40/r 77/59/pc 85/62/s 77/59/s 63/33/s 85/68/pc 47/37/sh 45/34/pc 55/38/r 76/59/1 79/71/pc 57/48/c 63/48/s 74/55/c 82/68/pc 69/53/s 54/40/pc 79/44/s 92/76/pc

46/38/sh 69/55/s 73/57/s 74/56/pc 94/77/sh 58/39/c 66/58/pc 46/34/sb 66/47/c 50/35/sh 80/64/s 86/61/s 74/56/s 49/28/sh 86/71/s 49/41/pc 47/32/c 46/35/c 75/57/c

TgnZ'pc 62/45/s 57/47/sh 76/56/c 82/67/c 81/57/pc 51/44/pc 69/39/s 93/74/s

there would be a travel burden,

tracts withprivate providers. but the VA "remains unwilling '%'e want to be able to pro- to do what is in the best interest list, said Angte Gilley, direc- geon didn't put me on the list," tor of Crook County Veterans he said. vide servicesfor our veterans," of the veteran."

members.

in Portland because the sur-

occasion.

Daisy Thornton, 91, rememThe fire in 2012 is believed Continued from B1 bers attending dances at the to have started from a wood A fter th e bOOm m n i t s grange hall as a child. She also stoveasmembers prepared for course, people returned to celebratedher 25th and 50th the Easter potluck. Residents ranching and decided to form wedding anniversaries at the had to watch the building burn a grange in 1932. Granges building. because the fire protection as"I've stuck around awhile," sociation for the community is were established by ranchers and farmers to advocate for the said Thornton. not certified to fight structure needs of rural communities. Thornton celebrated her 90th fires. Members were able to There were 17 original char- birthday at the site of the for- save the original charter docuter members who signed on to mer grange hall even without m ent, an American fl ag and an initiate the Ash Butte Grange the building. It was the only oldpiano. The potluckwas held Hall, and it quickly grew to 60 place she wanted to be for the outside as the smoke was still

"It'S a Spring Thing".

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Psoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Rsnu Richmond Rochester, NY

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 50/35/0.08 45/36/sh 46/37/sh 73/36/0.00 75/50/s 80/56/pc 56/34/0.01 90/63/0.00 61/42/0.04 79/31/0.00 74/50/0.00 78/57/0.00 63/44/0.01 57/31/0.00 74/51/0.08 80/61/0.00 58/35/0.02 57/36/0.00 70/46/0.03 82/59/0.00

48/28/pc 55/44/s 89/61/s 81/56/s

54/36/Tr 58/36/Tr

46/33/r 47/37/s 47/32/r 47/34/s 67/45/pc 56/41/s 83/61/1 82/63/s 75/49/s 80/47/1 83/61/pc 83/64/pc

59/33/0.11 78/45/0.00 79/34/0.00 78/45/0.00 97/64/0.00 71/34/0.00

57/34/Tr

78/60/1 78/62/1

75/56/pc 75/56/pc 73/43/s 69/51/s 58/32/s 66/52/pc 76/56/1 76/63/1 81/64/s 84/68/s

51/35/pc 59/48/pc 60/41/s 69/45/1 77/45/pc 75/56/pc 81/63/c 81/68/c

95/64/s 93/61/s 65/42/s 69/54/s

52/34/r 52/36/s

95nc/O.O 94/66/s 90/63/s 52/35/0.02 52/29/r 52/36/s 40/30/0.02 46/25/s 41/24/s

48/28/Tr 49/30/pc 44/30/s 66/41/0.16 71/46/s 67/44/s

69/33/0.00 81/40/0.00 68/35/0.05 45/37/0.03 Sacramento 82/50/0.00 St. Louis 72/38/0.00 Salt Lake City 74/40/0.00 San Antonio 78/63/0.00 San Diego 72/60/0.00 Ssn Francisco 64/52/0.00 Ssn Jose 71/51/0.00 Santa re 73/40/0.00 Savannah 71/39/Tr Seattle 64/51/0.00 Sioux Fags 75/29/0.00 Spokane 65/41/0.00 Springfield, Mo 71/32/0.00 Tampa 78/49/0.00 Tucson 93/62/0.00 Tulsa 78/41/0.00 Washington, DC 66/42/0.02 Wichita 77/33/0.00 Yskima 70/38/0.00 Yuma 96/68/0.00 l

69/38/s 64/46/s 76/46/s 80/45/1

80/44/s 63/28/c

67/34/pc 57/36/pc 71/41/pc 63/40/s 40/25/c 41/29/pc 74/47/pc 74/47/s 72/48/s 74/61/s 79/44/pc 54/34/pc 80/64/c 79/65/c 71/61/pc 72/61/pc 68/52/pc 66/52/s 68/47/s 68/47/s 73/40/s 74/36/s 78/60/c 77/58/1 53/43/1 53/40/sh 70/50/s 76/40/1 55/34/1 52/31/c 74/49/pc 74/59/1

79/65/pc 81/66/pc 88/59/s 89/55/s 81/60/1 79/64/s 66/41/sh 60/43/s 82/54/s 84/56/pc 61/35/pc 62/33/pc 95/64/s 91/61/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

104/80/0.00 101/72/s 77/50/0.00 77/51/pc Montreal 39/30/0.28 36/15/s Moscow 34/28/0.19 39/32/sn Nairobi 81/63/0.04 79/61/1 Nassau 75/67/0.00 81/68/pc New Delhi 81/68/0.00 87/68/s Osaka 68/43/0.00 70/55/pc Oslo 41/34/0.18 45/34/pc Ottawa 41/30/0.18 34/14/pc Paris 55/48/0.28 56/42/pc Rio de Janeiro s4n5/o.os 87/75/1 Rome 64/54/0.03 66/49/s Santiago 77/57/0.00 84/52/s Ssu Paulo 77/66/0.06 83/64/1 Sspporo 56/42/0.00 51/40/r Seoul 68/34/0.00 60/47/r Shanghai 64/55/0.19 81/63/pc Singapore 91/79/0.03 89n9/t Stockholm 43/39/0.75 46/33/c Sydney 73/65/0.18 75/66/sh Taipei 84/68/0.00 83/69/1 Tel Aviv 71/56/0.00 69/58/sh Tokyo 68/54/0.00 67/56/s Toronto 45/34/0.00 41/22/c Vancouver 63/48/0.09 53/39/sh Vienna 52/46/0.38 56/40/r Warsaw 50/46/0.26 47/35/r

97/68/s 77/51/pc 34/21/s 40/33/sn 80/60/c 83/70/s 91/69/pc 64/45/sh 47/35/pc 37/24/s 52/44/sh 82/73/pc 67/46/s 85/53/s 79/63/pc 48/34/pc 65/45/c 73/65/c 89/79/t 44/31/c 79/66/pc 84/70/pc 67/56/sh 65/50/sh 44/29/s 51/37/sh 48/37/sh 46/33/r

she said. Vietnam veteran Dick ToU.S. Sen. Ron W yden, biason, who lives in rural DeD-ore., has proposed his own schutes County southeast of fix to the Choice Program. He Bend and has long advocated intTOduCed legiSlatiOn in Jan- for the VA to cover private care, uary that would force the VA said at the meeting that the VA to offeraccess to private care dedined to give him a list of if a veteran lives more than 40 providers contracted to provide miles from a VA medical facil- care under the Choice Program. ity that can provide the neces- The VA also did not provide this sary care. information to The Bulletin. "They've got to be able to Wyden's office said existing legislation allows VA medical show they're doing their job of centers discretion in covering treating veterans respectfully

separate occasions to provide care through a VAprogram but hasn't been able to get an answer from TriWest, the compa- private care if they determine ny theVA hiredto develop con-

Yesterday Today Wednesday

City

i

Amsterdam Athens

o

Some veteransare being sent D e nnis to collection agencies for bills

vides only outpatient services, including primary care and limited specialty care. For surgeries and other specialty ser-

that created the Choice Pro-

9

IhhNIP

O

gram is very clear: It's 40 miles from the nearest VA facility, Continued from B1 induding outpatient clinics like That's especiallyproblematic the one in Bend. "That's going to require a in Central Oregon. Here, most

veterans at the meeting the law

Port 5

uto

48/43/0.43 i x i x i aurss P Boston 64/46/0.02 x x x x 54/ /41 • ao/ D /29 New Auckland 66/60/0.01 M u k ee 49 3 Baghdad 77/63/0.01 I ddtnrhl Che en ines * Bangkok 93/79/0.00 4 4* * ' 72/ 72/47 Beijing 74/49/0.18 0 Salt lake Iiy h h CI S CO 34 Beirut 68/61/0.16 oma lumb s Te/44 68/52 ington Berlin 46/43/0.23 d 77/4 tss V sv Bogota 68/50/0.17 89/5 Kansas City ai. 73/43 Budapest 54/46/0.21 75/50 72/4 Buenos Ai r es 86/57/0.00 • avbvu Chsrl Los Au tev Csbo SsnLucss 88/67/0.00 77/4 0 Pboen x 6 u Cairo 75/62/0.00 Anchorage Albuque us oms • At • 94/64 7 ee Calgary 63/32/0.00 43/3 II 0 76/49 8 72/54 Cancun 82n3/0.00 N aj ingha 7 /61 • Datts El Pav Dublin 52/37/0.26 J so/5 9 57 Edinburgh 48/35/0.62 rtando 8 61 Geneva 59/48/0.75 o.q i Harare 75/59/0.14 Orleans 3/54 Hong Kong 79/71/0.01 Huhutlgb 81/43 ~ @ihuahus 0 ~.f Istanbul 57/50/0.01 84/Ttl 23/47 Mlsmi Monte y Jerusalem 63/48/0.00 sf/sft,- t z . 79/42 Johannesburg 74/57/0.00 ~ v v gv Lima 81/69/0.00 Lisbon 73/50/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 52/41/0.09 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 77/46/0.00 Manila 92/78/0.00

Veterans

veterans live within 40 miles of the Bend VA dinic, which pro-

Billings 78/42

Mostly cloudy, a little rain; chilly

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER

x x 'lg/ sf x x

49' 25'

Partly sunny; snowandice at night

Mostly sunny andchilly

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures aretoday's highs and tonight's lows. EAST:Breezy to ria /4 locally windy and Umatilla Seasid TEMPERATURE Hood 62/39 turning cooler today 53/42 Yesterday Normal Record RiVer Rufus • ermiston with times of clouds High 72 54 77' in 2004 and sunshine; spotty Cannon lington 69/38 Portland Meac am Losti ne 52/43 38' 29' Low S'in 1935 / 1 45/3 • W cos /38 48/31 Enterprtse showers. dl9N, Il • he Dall 5 7 • 48/29 Tillamo • • 55/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Cooler and 52/41 andy • Mc innvill • 58/40 Joseph 4/40 Gove • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" breezy to locally windy nt • upi Condon 3/33 • 55 5 34 Record 0.91" in 1983 today with clouds, Union Lincoln 45/ Month to date (normat) 0.3 9" (0.71 ") some sunshineand Sale 53/43 • pray Granitee Year to date(normal) 1.50 " (3.33") isolated showers. 55/ • 4/33 ' Baker C Newpo 42/24 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 3" • 51/28 5/39 52/40 • Mitch II 51/27 Ca mPSh man R9tI 1\ WEST:Cloudy to partly 48/28 0 OrV R 9 I SUN ANDMOON eu Yach 47/28 • John sunny andcooler 56/39 52/41 • Prineville Day /27 Today Wed. tario today with showers 49/25 • Pa lina 47/30 Sunrise 6:49 a.m. 6 : 4 7 a.m. 6 34 andisolatedthunder- Floren e • EUgelle • Re d Brothers 46 27 Sunset 7:31 p.m. 7: 3 2 p.m. storms. Valee 53/42 23 Su ivere 46/24 Moonrise 4:1 4 p.m. 5:1 1 p.m. 61/32 Nyssa • 4 4/ 3 Ham ton Moonset 4:5 8 a.m. 5:2 7 a.m. La pine J untura 61/ 3 4 Grove Oakridge Co • Burns OREGON EXTREMES F ull La s t New Firs t 56/28 55/38 /36

4S contiguousstates) National high: 103 at Death Valley,CA National low: 17 at Bodie State Park,CA Precipitation: 1.OG" at Muscle Shoals,AL

O

28'

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

Wickiup 198982 99% Crescent Lake 7 5 3 88 S7% Ochoco Reservoir 33380 75vo Prinevige 123052 B3vo River flow St a tion Cu. ft./aec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 147 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 409 Deschutes R.below Bend 943 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1030 Little Deschutes near LaPine 174 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 32 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 357 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 85 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 140 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 5

SATURDAY

and on time," Tobiason said.

"No civilian would put up with what we get. No one would." —Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletirucom

settling. hands. The inside of the new gathering in the past. The gathIn 2014, the concrete foun- building will mostly be open ering includes residents from dation was poured for the new

space for tables and benches.

Madras and

o t her C entral

grange hall. Volunteers also Friend said putting up siding Oregon towns as well as famconstructed the outer walls and on the OutSide WallS is the mOSt ily members who have moved roof. A r etired contractor has

overseen the rebuilding process. Residents hope the outside

important next step.

away but return for the event.

"That's kind of where we are "The kids moved away, right now, getting our siding up but thiS is Still hOme," Said and protecting this wood, be- Friend. "They come back cause we've got all this money and they bring their kids and

of the building will eventually look similar to the original hall. into it and we don't want to see their friends and it's pretty The formerbuilding was once a anythinghappen to it," she said. BBlaZ1Ilg. store and had boarding rooms More than 200 people have —Reporter: 541-617-7820, upstairs for miners and ranch attended the Easter holiday tshorack@bendbulletin.com

...Patio Living soon begins!

)yta/'Qlg,

E

I. Iu)

)~'/

Early Bird Discount

on orders of 2015 Patio Sets

Patio World Z22 SE Reed Market Road - Bend 541-388-0022 PatioWorldBend.coe hhon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Su y10-5 t


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C3 College basketball, C3

NHL, C3 Pre ps, C4 MLB, C5 Motor sports, C5

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK

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AP All-American team selected

This is 'sily

Frank Kaminsky and Jahlil Okafor are as different as stories can be in college basketball. The two, however, have a lot in common —both are in the Final Four and both were the top selections on TheAssociated Press' 2014-15 All-America team. Kaminsky, the 7-foot senior from Wisconsin, was a unanimous choice Monday. Okafor, the 6-11 freshman from Duke, received all but one first-team vote. Notre Damesenior Jerian Grant, Kentucky junior Willie Cauley-Stein and OhioState freshman D'Angelo Russell rounded out the first team. Kaminsky worked his way to the top by improving through four seaInside sons in • A list of college. All-America Okafor team arrived selections, with C2 all the laurels out of high school and immediate talk about leaving for the NBA. Kaminsky, projected as a top pick in the NBA draft, led the Badgers to their second straight Final Four berth, averaging 18.2 points and 8.0 rebounds while shooting 55.3 percent from

season' of conjecture

and hype By Sam Farmer Los Angeles Times

Football is a game of misdirection, bluffing and disguise. That goes double for the

NFL draft, which takes place April 30 to May 2 in Chicago, the first time it has been held

outside New York City since 1965.

Much will change during the next month as teams con-

tinue to evaluate players and as information — and misinPhotos by Joe Kline I rhe Bulletin

Tigard's Spencer Smith runs toward the pit on a pole vault attempt in the decathlon on Saturday at Summit High School.

"It's cool to be

named first team All-American. It's something you dream of as a kid," Kaminsky said. "To finally be able to do so, it's a good thing and it shows how hard I've worked in my career. To be up there with Alando Tucker is a pretty cool thing."

Kaminsky is Wisconsin's second All-America joining Tucker in 2007. He is thesecond unanimous pick in as many years following Doug McDermott of Creighton. Okafor is Duke's 16th first-team All-America and is the BlueDevils' second freshman in as many years, with Jabari Parker being chosen last season. — The Associated Pess

Kelly said at the NFL owners meetings this week. "The NFL

draft hype is the craziest thing in the world. Guys are going to go up, guys are going to go down. (Observers said) Cam

• More young athletes aretaking on thechallengesof the decathlon, heptathlon LEFT: Mountain View's Dantly Wilcox throws a javelin during the decathlon

GRANT

LUCAS

on Saturday ot long ago, he was just a wiry Central Oregon senior competing in relative obscurity. He was a state champion in the 400-meter run and the long jump, a Mountain View star yet only a lightly recruited track and field athlete.

at Summit High School. BELOW: Summit's Camille Weaver

But during that senior season, at a meet in Salem, Dan Steele took notice

during a long jump attempt

of the young man from Central Oregon. Then the University of Oregon decathlon coach, Steele homed in on the athleticism of Ashton Eaton.

in the heptathlon.

Newton couldn't play: 'There's no reason to draft him in the

first round.' All of a sudden, he goes No. 1. It's crazy." The Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who have this year's top pick, say they are comfortable with the thought of selecting

Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston, despite his baggage. Winston is tremendously talented, but has made a string of poor decisions off the field that have observers questioning his maturity and readiness to be the face of a franchise.

SeeHype/C4

leaps toward the sand pit

"We had no idea," Steele recalled in

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

Ducks are a hit with local fans

2008, "he was sitting on this much untapped potential." Eaton's rise as the world's top

decathlete is well-documented. At Oregon, he won three straight NCAA decathlon championships. In 2012, he

set a world record with 9,039 points at the Olympic Trials, then went on to win the gold medal at the London

Games. Which got Dave Turnbull, and other Central Oregon high school track and field coaches, to wonder as Steele had: How many other kids are

By Elon Glucklich The (Eugene) Register-Guard

EUGENE — The weekend

did not start the way Becky Clark had hoped. The 78-year-old Springfield resident, like quite a fewpeo-

out there who possess undiscovered potential?

Decathlon — a 10-event competition that, along with the seven-event

heptathlon, had formerly produced household names in the United State

ple around Lane County these

days, has a growing case of softball fever, and Clark was dismayed by the University of Oregon team's 10-2 loss to rival University of Washington

such as Bruce Jenner and Jackie

Joyner-Kersee — had faded over the years. Along came Eaton, who leapt to the forefront to help the sport return to the limelight. Just take a look at the Summit Decathlon-Heptathlon meet this past

on Saturday.

SeeDucks/C4

weekend, when more than 40 high school athletes tested their mettle at

Nextup

Summit High in one of most mentally

IIConn, Maryland set for Final Four

"It's the silly season," Phil-

adelphia Eagles coach Chip

the field, including 39.5

percentfrom 3-point range. He is one of those big men as comfortable on the perimeter as in the lane, and his outgoing personality has made him a media favorite.

formation — spreads throughout the league.

Oregon at UCLA When:5 p.m. Friday TV:Pac-12

and physically grueling challenges in sports. SeeStars/C4

Women's basketball roundup,C3

Albany Regional

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Dayton

Grit part of education fromschool of hardwood

70

Spokane Regional Tennessee

58 48

By Sally Jenkins

Call it an instinct, or aware-

just the frantic action over the

pale flatlands, the thundering

If you detect something profound in the NCAA tour-

Between watching those wavy-limbed Kentucky kids get pushed in the chest by No-

ness that something manifestly important happens in the

reversals up and down the

nament, there is no need to

NCAA tournament. It's not just entertainment or contriv-

bleached boards by athletes of such wildly divergent shapes

tre Dame, the misfits of Mich-

ance. Sure, the ill-gotten gains

igan State grind their way to the Final Four over Louisville, and the ever-dauntless Ten-

and academic swindles can

and sizes, from the Wildcats' 6-foot-11 human ladder Karl-Anthony Towns to the Spartans' undersized Travis Trice. It's not even the fact that

apologize, because you are right, according to renowned neurobiologist Angela Lee

The Washington Post

CORRECTION A college rugby item headlined "COCC falls in 3rd-place game" that appeared in Monday's Bulletin on page B1misidentified Levi Penter, one of the players who scored a second-half try for COCC. The Bulletin regrets the error.

nessee Lady Vols overcome a 17-point deficit with just six

make the NCAA seem like a perfect demonstration of man's ruin. Still, it's worth it.

What's on display is more

Fellowship "genius grant" recipient who has her own

research lab at the University

John Calipari, with his hedgefunder salary and shelf of

of Pennsylvania, Duckworth studies traits that predict

achievement, and her special focus is on the quality known as "grit."

Seth Wenig i The AssociatedPress

SeeGrit /C4

Michigan State coach Tom Izzo.

minutes left to beat Gonzaga

than bread or circuses, more

and reach the women's re-

thanindulgence,and maybe even worth the $10billion CBS and Turner Sports pay

hair, and Tom Izzo, with that

for the television rights. It's not

bly great teachers.

gional finals, you might have experienced an insight that deserves exploring.

Duckworth. A MacArthur

sideways crack in his face he calls a smile, are demonstra-


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY TENNIS

ATP Tennis, Miami Open SOCCER International friendly, Switzerland vs.United States Euro 2016qualifier, Israelvs. Belgium International friendly, Mexico vs. Paraguay

Time TV/Radio 8 a.m. T e nnis 9a.m. FS1 11:30 a.m. FS1 6 p.m. E SPN2

BASEBALL

MLB preseason, NewYork Yankees at Minnesota MLB preseason, OaklandatLosAngelesAngels College, GeorgiaTechat Georgia MLB preseason, KansasCityatSanDiego

10a.m. 1 p.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB MLB

SEC MLB

BASKETBALL

Men's NIT, Miami vs. Temple NBA, SanAntonio at Miami Men's NIT, OldDominion vs. Stanford NBA, GoldenState at Los Angeles Clippers LACROSSE Women's college, Lehigh at Rutgers

4 p.m. ESPN 5 p.m. TNT 6 p.m. ESPN 7:30 p.m. TNT 4 p.m. B i g Ten

HOCKEY

NHL, Vancouver at Nashville

5 p.m. CSNNW

VOLLEYBALL

Men's college, Hawaii at UCLA

7 p.m.

Pac-12

WEDNESDAY BASEBALL

MLB preseason, St. Louis at NewYork Mets MLB preseason, MilwaukeeatChicagoCubs MLB preseason, ChicagoWhite Sox at Seattle MLB preseason, Pittsburgh at Baltimore

10 a.m.

MLB

1 p.m. 1 p.m. 4 p.m.

MLB Roo t MLB

TENNIS

ATP, Miami Open, men's andwomen's quarters 10 a.m. ESPN2 ATP, Miami Open, men's andwomen's quarters 4 p.m. E SPN2 BASKETBALL

Girls high school, McDonald's All-AmericanGame 3:30 p.m. ESPNU B oys high school, McDonald's All-American Game 6 p.m. E S PN 7 p.m. BlazerNet, NBA, Los AngelesClippers at Portland KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM HOCKEY

NHL, Philadelphia at Pittsburgh NHL, Colorado at SanJose

5 p.m. NBCSN 7:30 p.m. NBCSN

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL Mariners' prospect dies after accident — Seatle Mariners pitching prospect Victor Sanchezdied Saturday night from head injuries he suffered in a boating accident last month, his Venezuelan team announced.TheCaracasLionsissuedastatement saying the 20-year-old player died after being in a coma 42days. Sanchez was swimming onFeb.14whenhewasstruckonthehead by the propeller of a motorboat at a beach in theVenezuelan coastal town of Campano. The right-handed pitcher was 7-6 with a 4.19ERA last season at Double-A Jackson. Hesigned with the Mariners in 2011.

Missing college athlete died onLosAngeles freeway

— A University of California, Berkeley soccer player who disappeared after a weekendparty was killed by acar as he ranacross a Los Angeles freeway, police said Monday.The19-year-old freshman, Eloi Vasquez, died early Saturday oneastbound Interstate10 about a mile from the University of Southern California after he wasseenleaving a fraternity party. A womansaid a manran in front of her and she was unable to avoid hitting him, said Officer Edgar Figueroa, aCHP spokesman. Vasquezwaspronounceddeadatthescene.Hewasnot carrying identification, which set off a missing persons search until the coroner could identify him.

BASKETBALL SOurCe: Mullin to replaCe Lavin at St. JOhn'S — St. John's has decided its basketball future rests with the best of its past. Chris Mullin, St. John's all-time leading scorer andstill the face of its basketball program three decadesafter his career ended, has agreed to coach the RedStorm, a person with knowledge of the discussions toldTheAssociatedPressonMonday.Thepersonspokeoncondition of anonymity becausethere was noformal announcement. Mullin, who led St. John's to the Final Four in1985, has nevercoached at any level. Hereplaces Steve Lavin who agreed to leavelast weekafter five seasons during which the RedStorm reached the NCAATournament twice.

FOOTBALL FOrmer AriZOnaCoaChJim LORuedieS at 89 — JimLaRue, who coached Arizona's football team for eightyears, including an 8-11 season in1961, died. Hewas 89. Theuniversity announced LaRue's death Monday. TheArizona Daily Star reported LaRuedied Sunday night at an assisted living facility. A cause ofdeath wasn't immediately available.

FalCOnSfined, lOSe draft piCk fOr fake nOiSe —TheNFI fined the Atlanta Falcons, stripped the organization of a draft pick and suspended teampresident Rich McKayfrom the league's competition committee beginning April 1 following the team's use of fakenoise at home games. InastatementreleasedMonday,theleagueannounced that the Falcons have beenfined $350,000 and will forfeit their fifthround selection in the 2016draft. If the Falcons have multiple picks in that round, the highest selection will be forfeited. TheNFLnoted the Falcons violated league rules throughout the 2013season and into the 2014 season. Theleague also said the team's former director of event marketing was directly responsible for the violation andwould have beensuspended without pay for the first eight weeks of the 2015 regular season had hestill been with the club.

GOLF StriCker planS return at MaSterS — SteveStricker plansto return from back surgery at the Masters next week. Hehas not played since the HeroWorld Challenge in early December. Hehadsurgery two days before Christmas on abulging disk in his lower back that was causing recurring hip problems. Stricker recently returned from a week in Naples, Florida, to make sure he was fit.

MOTOR SPORTS Former F1driver Montagnysuspendedfor 2 yearsFormer Formula Onedriver Franck Montagny has been handed atwoyear suspension by thesport's governing body after testing positive for a metabolite of cocaine. TheFrenchmanfailed the anti-doping control last November at aFormula Erace in Malaysia and hadbeen provisionally suspended sinceDec.23. — From staffand wire reports

ON DECK Today Baseball :SummitatTheDages,4p.m.;Redmondat HoodRiverValley, 4:30p.m.; Co rokCounty atMazama (DH),2p.m.;Lakeviewat Culver,4 p.m. Soltbag: Wilsonville at MountainView, 4:30p.m.; HermistonatSummit,4p.m.; CrookCountyat Mazama(DH),2p.m.;takeviewatCulver,4p.m. Track andfield: Madras,la Pine,Culverat Culver Invite,TBD Boys lacrosse:SistersatMountainView,6 p.m. Girls lacrosse:Summitat SouthEugene,5p.m.

TENNIS

IN THE BLEACHERS

Professional Miami Opea Men Third Round Kei Nishikori (4),Japan,def. Viktor Troicki (32), Serbia,6-2,6-2. DavidGoffin(16), Belgium,def. JerzyJanowicz, Poland,6-4, 6-3. AlexandrDolgopolov,Ukraine,def.ThomazBellucci, Brazil, 7-5,6-4. NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,def. SteveDarcis, Belgium, 6-0,7-5r MilosRaonic(5), Canada,def.JeremyChardy(31), France,6-1,5-7, 7-6(3). David Ferrer(6), Spain,def. LukasRosol (26), CzechRepublic,6-4, 7-5. Gilles Simon(12), France,def. AlejandroFaga, Colombia6-3, , 6-4. John Isner (22), UnitedStates, def.Grigor Dimitrov (9), Bulgaria7-6 , (2), 6-2.

In the Bleachers 0 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomrcs.com/inthebleachers

Wednesday Baseball: Madrasat Bend, 4:30p.m.; Barlowat Ridgeview,4:30p.m. BoflbalhBendat Madras(DH ), 3:30p.m.; Ridgeview at NorthSalem,4:30p.mc McKay at Summit, 4

p.m. Track and field: Bendat CrookCounty, 3:30p.m.; Ridgeviewat Summit, 2:30p.m.; Mountain Viewat Redmond, TIID Boys lacrosse:BendatNadzitsaga,5:45p.m.; Summit at Ridgeview,5:30p.m. Girls lacrosse: BendatSheldon,5p.m.

Women Fourth Round VenusWiliams(16), UnitedStates, def. Caroline Wozniacki(4),Denmark,6-3, 7-6(1). Carla SuarezNavarro (12), Spain,def. Agnieszka Radwanska (7), Poland,7-5, 0-6,6-4. SerenaWiliams (1), UnitedStates, def. Svetlana Kuznetsoya (24), Russia, 6-2,6-3. KarolinaPliskova(14), CzechRepublic, def. Daria Gavriloya,Russia, 6-3,6-2. SabineLisicki(27),Germany,def. SaraErrani(11), Italy, 6-1,6-2. AndreaPetkovic (9), Germany, def. Ekaterina Makarova(6), Russia,6-1, 7-5. Sloane Stephens,United States, def. Belinda Bencic,Switzerland,6-4, 7-6(5). SimonaHalep(3), Rom ania, def. FlaviaPenneta (15), Italy,6-3,7-5.

Thursday Baseball: BurnsatSisters,3:30p.m. Boys tennis:Madrasat MountainView,4 p.m.; Bend at Sisters,4p.m. Girls tennis:SistersatBend,4 p.m.; MountainViewat Madras,4p.m. Trackandfield: SistersatSweet Home,4p.m. Friday Baseball:MountainViewatWest Linn,4:30p.m.; Ridgeviewvs. HoodRiver Valley at Summit, 5:30 p.m.; Redmond atTheDages,4p.m.;Summitvs.Hood RiverValleyatVinceGennaStadium,3p.m.; LaPine at Lakeview,4:30p.m.; Madrasat Sisters,4:30p.m. Softball:MountainViewatHoodRiverValley,4:30p.m.; Redmond at TheDalles,4p.m.;Summit atMilwaukie, 5p.m.;Madrasat Sisters,4:30 p.m.;LaPineat Lakeview,4:30p.m. Boys golfl Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeview, SummiSi t, sters,CrookCountyatEagle Crest,9a m. Girls golflBend,MountainView,Ridgeview, Sisters, Summiatt EagleCrest Ridge, noon Boys tennis:HenleyatCrookCounty,3p.m. Girls tennis: Bendat Roseburgtournament,9 a.m. Boys lacrosse:Sherwoodat Summit, 6 p.m.;Hermiston atRedm ond, 3 p.m.;Sisters at Ridgeview, 5:30p.m.

"What kind of man are you? If you don't do something about that loudmouth, then I will!!"

Bemifinals Today'sGames Miami(24-12)vs.Temple(26-10), 4 p.m. Stanford(22-13)vs.OldDominion (27-7), 6:30p.m.

AO TimesPDT

Women's college NCAAtournament All TimesPOT

BASEBALL MLB preseason MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL All TimesPOT

Monday'sGames Tampa Bay6,Baltimore6,tie, 10innings St. Louis6,Washington2 Atlanta4,Detroit2 Pitlsburgh16,Philadelphia 4 ChampionshipSeries(Besl-of-3) N.Y.Mets7, Miami1 Monday'sGame Chicago Cubs6,SanFrancisco5 LoyolaofChicago65, Louisiana-Monroe56 Dakland11, Colorado2 Wednesday'sGame Seattle5, LA.Angels3 Loyolaof ChicagoatLa.-Monroe, 5p.m. Cleveland 4,ChicagoWhite Sox1 Friday's Game KansasCiiy11rTexas7 Loyolaof ChicagoatLa.-Monroe,5p.m., if necessary SanDiego6,Cincinnati 3 L.A.Dodgers4,Arizona2 Toronto 7, Houston4 Cogegelnsider.com Tournament Boston14,Minnesota2 AO TimesPDT Today'sGames Bostonvs.TampaBay(ss) atPort Charlotte, Fla., 10:05 Semifinals Today'sGames a.m. Pitlsburghvs.Detroitat Lakeland,Fla.,1005a m. UT-Martin(21-12)at Evansvile (22-12), 4p.m. Miamivs.St.Louisat Jupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. N. Arizona(22-14) vs.NJIT(21-11), 6p.m. N.Y. Yankeesvs.MinnesotaatFort Myers,Fl a.,10:05a.m. N.Y.Metsvs.WashingtonatViera, Fla.,10:05a.m. AP AO-AmericaTeams T ampa B a y( ss) vs. B alt i m ore a t S ar a so t a , F la. ,1005am. Stalislics throughMarch15 Philadelphiavs.TorontoatDunedin, Fla.,10:07a.m. First Team Frank Kaminsky,Wisconsin,7-0,242, senior,Lisle, ChicagoCubsvs.Texas(ss) at Surprise, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. eattlevs.ClevelandatGoodyear,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. 111.,162ppg,60 rpg,27apg,553 fgpct,3953-pt fg S Chicago WhiteSoxvs. LA. Dodgersat Glendale, Ariz., pct,1.6 blocks (65first-teamvotes, 325total points). 1:05p.m. Jahlil Dkafor,Duke,6-11,270,freshman, Chicago, Colorado vs. SanFranciscoat Scottsdale, Ariz.,1:05p.m. 17.7 ppg, 9.0rpg,66.9 fg pct(64, 323). vs.Milwaukeeat Phoenix,1:05p.m. JerianGrant,NotreDame, 6-5, 204,senior, Bow- Cincinnati T exas (ss) rizonaat Scottsdale, Ariz.,110 pm. ie, Md., 16.6ppg,3.0rpg, 6.6apg,1.7steals, 36.6 Oaklandvs.vs.LA A.Angels atTempe, Ariz.,1:10pm. minutes(53,296). ys.Atlantaat Kissimmee,Fla.,3:05p.m. Willie Cauley-Stein,Kentucky,7-0, 240, junior, Houston nDiegoat Peoria, Ariz.,7:05p.m. Dlathe,Kan., 9.3ppg,6.4 rpg, 2.0apg,56.6ft pct KansasCity vs.Sa Wednesday'sGames (45, 265). D'AngeloRussell, OhioState,6-5, 160,freshman, Boston(ss)vs. Minnesotaat Fort Myers, Fla.,10:05a.m. ampaBayvsrN.Y.YankeesatTampa,Fla.,10:05a.m. Louisville,Ky.,19.3ppg,5.6 rpg,5.1apg,41.53-pt fg T Atlanta vs. Philadelphiaat Clearwater,Fla.,10:05a.m. pct,1.6 steals(51,262). Detroi vs. t Houstonat Kissimmee,Fla.,10:05a.m. SecondTeam vs.Boston(ss) atFortMyers, Fla.,10:05a.m. DelonWright, Utah,6-5,190, senior,LosAngeles, Toronto ngton vs. Miamiat Jupiter,Fla.,10:05a.m. 14.9 ppg, 4.9rpg,5.3 apg,52.9fg pct, 63.4ft pct,2.1 Washi St. Loui svs.N.Y.Mets at PortSt. Lucie, Fla., 10:10a.m. steals(15,166). LA. Dodg ers vs.KansasCityatSurprise, Ariz.,1205pm. Karl-AnthonyTowns, Kentucky, 6-11, 250,fresh- LA. Angelvs. s Oaklandat Mesa,Ariz., 12:05p.m. man, Piscataway,N.J.,9.7ppg,6.7rpg,55.4fgpct, Milwaukee vs.ChicagoCubsat Mesa,Ariz.,1:05p.m. 61.4 ftpct,2.4blocks(6,139). SanDiegovs. ChicagoWhite Sox(ss) atGlendale, Ariz., SethTuttle,Northernlowa,6-6, 240, senior,Shef1:05p.m. field, lowa,15.3ppg,6.6rpg, 3.3apg,61.6fg pct, Cleveland vs.SanFranciscoat Scottsdale,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. (3, 139). rizonavs.Cincinnati atGoodyear,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. BobbyPortis, Arkansas,6-11, 242, sophomore, A Chicago W hite Sox (ss)vs. Seattleat Peoria, Ariz., 1:05 Little Rock,Ark., 17.5ppg,6.6 rpg,54.7 fg pct (2, p.m. 102) vs.Coloradoat Scottsdale,Ariz.,1:10p.m. MalcolmBrogdon,Virginia, 6-5, 215,junior, At- Texas Pittsburgh vs.BaltimoreatSarasota, Fla.,4:05p.m. lanta,13.9ppg,3.9 rpg,2.5apg,67.1ft pct(2, 96). ThirdTeam BuddyHield, Oklahoma6-4, , 212,junior, Freeport, College Bahamas,17.5 ppg,5.5rpg,62.2ftpct(3,96). Pac-12 KyleWiltjer,Gonzaga, 6-10, 240,junior, Portland, All TimesPDT Dre., 16.7 ppg,6.0rpg,1.9 apg,53.6fgpct, 46.63-pt fg pct(4, 93). Conference Overall Rakeem Christmas, Syracuse,6-9, 250, senior, W L Pcf W L Pcf Philadelphia17 , 5 ppg,9 1rpg,55 2fgpct,2 5blocks UCLA 6 1 .BBB20 5 .600 (74). Arizona 7 2 .777 22 6 .766 GeorgesNiang, lowaState, 6-6, 230, junior, Californi a 7 2 .777 20 7 .741 Methuen ,Mass.,15.5ppg,5.4rpg,3.5apg,40.23-pt ArizonaSt. 7 2 .777 16 7 .720 fg pct,60.5ft pct(1,51). 4 2 .667 21 7 .750 Kevin Pangos,Gonzaga,6-2,162,senior,Holland OregonSt. 3 3 .500 21 7 .750 Landing,Ontario,11.5ppg,5.0 apg,44.4 3-ptfg pct, SouthernCal Washi n gton 3 6 .333 16 11 .593 63.3 ftpct(1,50). Utah 3 6 .333 9 17 .346 HonorableMention(in alphabetical order) 2 7 .222 17 11 .607 Lawrence Alexander, North DakotaState; Justin Oregon St 1 6 .111 12 14 .462 Anderson,Virginia; RyanArcidiacono, Vilanova; Ron Washington 0 6 .000 10 14 .417 Baker,WichitaState;JalenCannon,St. Francis, Brook- Stanford lyn; KarlCochran,Wofford; KyleCollinsworth, BYU; Today'sGames QuinnCook,Duke(1 first-team vote). Kris Dunn, Providence(1); Perry Ellis, Kansas (1); SanFranciscoatStanford, 5:30p.m. landatOregon,6p.m. RicoGathers,Baylor; MadariousGibbs, TexasSouth- Port gtonSt.atGonzaga,6p.m. ern; AnthonyGill, Virginia; KendallGray,Delaware Washin State;TyGreene, S.C.-Upstate; Dlivier Hanlan,Boston NewMexicoSt.atArizonaSt., 6:30p.m. College (1). Wednesday'sGame MontrezlHarrell, Louisville (1); MartezHarrison, Seattleat Oregon,6 p.m. UMKC;Tyler Harvey,EasternWashington; CoreyHawThursday'sGames kins, UC Davis;TylerHaws,BYU;LaDontaeHenton, Arizona St.at Utah,5 p.m. Providence;DarrunHiliard, Villanova; R.J. Hunter, SouthernCalatArizona, 6p.m. Georgia State. OregonSt.atUCLA, 4p.m. StanleyJohnson, Arizona(1); TyusJones, Duke; WashingtonatStanford, 7 p.m. Tyler Kalinoski, Davidson; Tim Kemp ton, Lehigh; WashingtonSt.atCalifornia, 7 p.m. DavidLaury,lona; DamonLynn, NJIT; DerrickMarks, Friday's Games BoiseState;Jerell Martin, LSU;TJ. Mcconneg,Ar- ArizonaSt.at Utah,5 p.m. izona. SouthernCalatArizona, 6p.m. Mikh McKinney,Sacramento State; Nic Moore, MichiganSt. atOregon, 6p.m. SMU;Justin Moss,Buffalo; SaahNimley, Charles- OregonSt.atUCLA, 7p.m. ton Southern;CameronPayne, MurrayState; Chas- WashingtonatStanford, 7 p.m. son RandleStanford; , Justin Sears,Yale;Kenneth WashingtonSt.atCalifornia, 7p.m. "Speedy "Smith,LouisianaTech. Saturday'sGames Keifer Sykes,GreenBay; MarcusThornton, Wil- SouthernCalatArizona, noon liam &Mary; MeloTrimble, Maryland;FredVanVleet, WashingtonSt.atCalifornia,1 p.m. WichitaState(1); ThomasWalkup,StephenF.Austin; MichiganSt, atOregon,2 p.m. JameelWarney,Stony Brook; DezWells, Maryland; OregonSt.atUCLA, 4p.m. JosephYoung, Oregon(1). ArizonaSt.at Utah,4 p.m. WashingtonatStanford, 4 p.m. College Basketball Invitational AO TimesPDT

MLS MAJOR LEAGUESOCCE

Saturday Baseball: BendatWest Albany(DH), noon;McLoughlin ALBANYREGIONAL at CrookCounty(DH),10a.m.; Culver atGrant Union RegionalChampionship (DH), noon Monday'sGame Softball:WestAlbanyat Bend(DH), noon; Burnsat Uconn91,Dayton70 Culver(DH),noon Boys tennis: Madras, Sisters at MadrasInvitational, SPOKANEREGIONAL TBD Regional Championship Girls tennis: Bendat Roseburgtournament,9 a.m. Monday'sGame Track andfield: LaPineat Junction Ciiy Invitational, 10a.m.;Madras,LaPine, Culver,Gilchrist at Madras Maryland56,Tennessee46 Invite,11a.m. Boyslacrosse:SherwoodatBend,1p.m.;Canbyat FINALFOUR Summit, 2p.m.;Canbyat Mountain View,5 p.m.; Al Tampa,Fla. Hermiston atSisters,1 p.m. National Bemifinals Sunday'sGames N otre Dam e ( 35-2) vs. SouthCarolina (34-2), 3:30p.m. BASKETBALL Uconn(36-1)vs.Maryland(34-2), 5:30p.m. NationalCham pionship Men's college Tuesday,April 7 Semifinalwinners,5:30p.m. NCAAtournament AO TimesPDT National Invitation Tournament AO TimesPDT FINALFOUR At LucasOil Stadium Semifinals Indianapolis Wednesday'sGames National Semilinals UCLA(17-16)atMichigan(20-14), 7p.m. Saturday'sGames Temple(20-16)at West Virginia (22-14), 7p.m. MichiganState(27-11) vs. Duke(33-4), 3:09p.m. Championship Kentucky(36-0)vs.Wisconsin (35-3),5:49p.m. Saturday,April 4 National Championship S emi f i n al wi n ners 3 p.m. Monday,April 6 Semifinalwinners Natioaal Invitational Touraament AO TimesPDT

SOCCER

Polls Baseball AmericaTop25

DURHAM, N.C. —Thetop25teamsin the Base-

ball Americapoll throughMarch29: 1. Vanderbilt 2. Texas A&M 3. LSU 4. Florida 5. Texas Christian 6. CentralFlorida 7. Louisville B. Southern California 9. UCLA 10. FloridaState 11. Arizona State 12. Miami 13. DallasBaptist 14. Rice 15. UCSantaBarbara 16. Virginia 17. Oklahoma State 16. SouthCarolina 19.TexasTech 20. Houston 21. California 22. Nebraska 23. CoastalCarolina 24. Illinois 25.SanDiego

Record Prv

2 2-6 2 2 7-2 3 2 3-5 1 2 3-6 4 2 1-4 5 2 2-7 6 2 1-7 7 2 2-6 6 2 1-5 9 2 2-7 1 0 1 6-7 1 1 2 0-9 1 3 2 2-3 1 5 1 9-11 1 4 1 9-7 1 6 1 6-6 2 0 1 9-6 2 3 1 9-9 1 2 1 6-10 1 6 1 9-9 1 7 2 0-7 2 1 2 1-7 N R 2 0-7 N R 1 9-6 2 5 1 6-9 N R

CollegiateBaseball TUCSON Ari,z. —TheCollegiateBaseball poll with records throughMarch29: Record Pts Prv 1. Texas A&M 27-2 495 1 2. Texas Christian 2 1-4 493 4 3. Vanderbilt 2 2-6 491 3 4. UCLA 21-5 469 5 5. Louisiana St. 23-5 467 2 6. Florida 2 3-6 465 6 7. Louisville 2 1-7 463 1 1 B. Florida St. 22-7 462 7 9. Arizona St. 1 6-7 479 9 10. CentralFlorida 22-7 477 6 11. Oklahoma St. 1 9-6 474 1 2 12. California 2 0-7 470 1 4 13. Arizona 2 2-6 466 2 0 14. Houston 1 9-9 463 1 5 15. SouthernCalifornia 2 2-6 461 1 6 16 Miami Fla 2 0-9 456 1 6 17. U.C.SantaBarbara 1 9-7 456 1 7 16. Oregon St. 2 1-7 454 1 9 19. Nebrask a 2 1-7 450 3 0 20. Virginia 1 6-6 447 2 5 21. Georgia 16-11 445 NR 22. SouthCarolina 1 9-9 444 1 3 23.Texas 1 7-11 441 1 0 24. Iowa 1 7-6 439 N R 25. Illinois 19-6-1 436 22 26. Nevad a 2 3-5 435 2 6 27.SanDiego 1 6-9 433 2 9 26. DallasBaptist 2 2-3 431 N R 29. Missouri 2 0-9 429 2 3 30. CoastalCarolina 2 0-7 427 N R

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times POT

EasternConference AtlanticDivision GP W L OT Pts GF GA

EasternConference NewYork D.C.United NewYorkCity FC 1 OrlandoCit y NewEngland Columbus TorontoFC Chicago Montreal Philadelphia

W 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0

L T Pls GF GA 0 1 7 5 2 1 0 6 2 2 2 5 3 2 1 2 5 4 4 2 1 4 2 6 2 0 3 3 3 2 0 3 4 5 3 0 3 2 5 1 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 3 6

WesternConference

W L T Pts GF GA 0 1 10 6 1 1 0 9 5 4 2 0 6 6 6 0 2 5 5 4 1 2 5 5 4 1 2 5 2 2 2 5 3 4 1 1 4 5 3 0 3 3 0 0 1 3 3 3 4

FC Dallas 3 Vancouver 3 SanJose 2 RealSaltLake 1 Los Angeles 1 Houston 1 S porting KansasCity 1 1 Seattle 1 Colorado 0 Portland 0

Friday's Game

D.C.Unitedat OrlandoClty,4 p.m.

Saturday'sGames TorontoFCat Chicago,noon NewEnglandat Colorado,4 p.m. Los Angeleat s Vancouver, 7p.m. HoustonatSeattle, 7p.m. FC DallasatPortland, 7:30p.m. Sunday'sGames Real SaltLakeatSanJose,2p.m. PhiladelphiaatSporting KansasCity, 4p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague BALTIMOREORIDLES— ReassignedCJ.P.Arencibia tominorleaguecamp. BOSTONREDSDX— PlacedCChristianVazquez on the60-dayDL CHICAGOWHITESOX— ReassignedRHPChris Beck tominorleaguecamp. CLEVEL ANDINDIANS— DptionedDFTyler Holt to Columbus (IL). ReleasedLHPScott Downsfroma minor league contract. KANSASCITYRDYALS — Released 2B Ryan Roberts. NEWYOR KYANKEES— Named Tino Martinez minor league instructor. SEATTLEMARINERS — Released RHP Kevin Correia. NamedChristopher Ellis director of safety and security. National League ARIZONADIAMDNDBACKS — Optioned LHP Matt ReynoldsandRHPs AllenWebster, Yoan Lopez andA.J.SchugeltoReno(PCL).ReassignedDFNick Buss,INFWater IbarraandLHPDanRunzler to minor

league camp. CHICAGO CUBS— Selected the contract of LHP Phil Cokefromlowa(PCL). DptionedINFJavier Baez to lowa. AssignedINFsKris Bryant andAddison Russell to theimi r norleaguecamp. MIAMIMARLINS— Dptioned RH PPreston Claiborne toNewOrleans(PCL). GrantedDFReedJohnson hisunconditionalrelease. MILWAUKEE BREWERS— DptionedRHPBrandon Kinlzler to ColoradoSprings(PCL). ReleasedRHP Chris Perez. NEWYORKMETS— TradedDFMattdenDekkerto Washington for LHPJerry Blevins. ST. LOUIC SARDINALS—Selectedthecontract of RHPCarlosVilanuevafromMemphis (PCL). Placed LHPJaimeGarcia onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to March27.

x-Montreal 77 4 7 22 6 102 203 174 x-TampaBay 77 47 23 7 101 249 201 Detroit 75 40 2 3 1292 220 206 Boston 76 3 6 2 5 1369 201 196 Ottawa 75 37 2 6 12 66 216 203 SAN DIEGO PADRES — Traded LHP Alex Torres Florida 76 35 2 6 15 65 190 207 T oronto 76 2 6 4 2 6 62 196 244 to theN.Y.Metsfor RHPCory Mazzoni andaplayer B uffalo 76 21 4 7 6 50 146 255 to benamed. WASHINGTONNATIDNALS — Traded C Sandy Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Leon toBostonforcash. Agreedtotermswith DFReed onaminorleaguecontract. x-N.Y.Rangers 75 47 21 7 101 226 177 Johnson BASKETB ALL Pittsburgh 7 6 4 2 23 1195 210 190 National Basketball Association N.Y.lslanders 77 45 27 5 95 235 215 MEMPHIS GR IZ Z LIE S — Recalled F-C Jarneg Washington 76 41 25 10 92 223 166 Philadelphia 76 30 29 17 77 196 219 StokesandGRussSmith fromlowa(NBADL). FOOTBA LL Columbus 75 36 35 4 76 207 232 National Football League NewJersey 76 31 33 12 74 166 194 C AROLINA P AN T HER S — SignedRB/KRJordan Carolina 7 5 2 6 36 11 67 174 204 Todman toaone-yearcontract. WesternConference OAKLANDRAIDERS — Re-signedDLC.J.Wilson. Central Oivision WASHINGTONREDSKINS— SignedRBMichael GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Nashvile 77 47 22 6 102 220 166 Hill. HOCKEY St. Louis 76 46 23 7 99 229 190 National HockeyLeague Chicago 76 46 24 6 96 217 176 COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS— AssignedCWilMinnesota 76 44 25 7 95 219 166 Winnipeg 76 39 25 12 90 215 201 liam KarlssontoSpringfield (AHL). MINNES OTA WILD — Agreed to termswith G Dallas 77 37 30 10 64 239 246 n and DZach Palmquist onentry-level Colorado 76 35 29 12 62 206 213 BrodyHoffma contracts. PacificDivision NEW JE R SE YDEVILS— NamedAdam Davischief GP W L OT Pls GF GA x-Anaheim 76 49 22 7 105 227 216 revenue officer.ReassignedLWBenJohnsonto Albany fromOrlando(ECHL). Vancouver 76 44 27 5 93 219 204 (AHL) NEW YORKRANGERS — Reassigned D Chris C algary 77 4 2 2 6 7 91 229 204 S ummers to Harfford(AHL). Los Angeles 76 37 25 14 BB 201 192 PHILADELH PIA FLYERS — Assigned D MaxS anJose 7 6 3 7 3 0 9 63 212 215 Edmonton 76 23 40 13 59 165 255 im Lamarchefrom Lehigh Valley(AHL) to Reading A rizona 77 2 3 4 6 6 54 161 256 (ECHL). x-clinched playoffspot TAMPA BAYLIGHTNING— Recaled DLukeWit-

Monday'sGames TampaBay5,Montreal3 Vancouver 4, St.Louis1 Chicago 4, LosAngeles1 Calgary5,Dallas3 Edmonton 4, Colorado1 Buffalo4, Arizona1 Today'sGames Florida atBoston,4p.m. Carolinaat Washington, 4p.m. NewJerseyatColumbus,4p.m. TampaBayatToronto,4:30p.m. Ottawa atDetroit, 4:30p.m. Vancouver at Nashvile, 5 p.m. N.Y.RangersatWinnipeg, 5p.m. Wednesday'sGames TorontoatBufalo, 4:30p.m. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh,5p.m. Edmontonat Anaheim,7p.m. Coloradoat SanJose,7:30 p.m. Thursday'sGames N.Y.Islandersat Columbus,4p.m. Bostonat Detroit, 4:30p.m. Washington at Montreal, 4:30p.m. Tampa Bayat Ottawa,4:30 p.m. Carolinaat Florida,4:30p.m. N.Y.Rangersat Minnesota, 5 p.m. CalgaryatSt. Louis, 5p.m. Vancouver atChicago,5:30p.m. Edmonto natLosAngeles,7:30p.m.

kowskiandFJonathan Marchessault fromSyracuse (AHL).Reassigned FJonathan Marchessault to Syracuse. COLLEGE ALABAMA —DismissedDLJonathanTaylor from the footbalteam l for adomestic violencearrest. BUTLER— Signedmen' sbasketballcoachChris Holtmannthroughthe2020-21season. GEORG EMASON— Named Dave Paulsenmen's basketballcoach. GEOR GIASTATE—Announced GR.J. Hunter wil entertheNBAdraft. NEBRA SKA — Announced basketball F Walter Pitchford is giving uphis final seasonof eligibility, but will remaiat n Nebraskato finishhis undergraduate degree. NORTHCAROLINA — Announced the resignation of graduateassistant football coachGerald McRath. NORTHWESTERN — Announcedmen'sfreshman basketball G JohnnieVassar wil transfer. OKLAHOMA— SuspendedRBKeithFordindefinitely fromthefootball teamfor academic andteam rulesviolations. PURDUE —Announcedmen'ssophomorebasketball GBrysonScott wil transfer. UTAHSTATE— NamedTim Duryeamen'sbasketballcoach. XAVIER— Announcedmen'ssophomorebasketball GBrandonRandolphwil transfer.


TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

NBA ROUNDUP

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings All TimesPDT

EasternConference z-Atlanta

49

Pct GB 757 640 8'/r 608 11 595 12 554 15 486 20 466 2U/r 446 23 444 23 438 23'/r

W L 60 13 51 24 50 24 49 25 48 25 47 26 45 29 42 32 39 34 38 37 33 41 28 46 26 47 20 53 16 58

Pcf GB

x-Cleyeland x-Chicago y-Toronto x-Washington Milwaukee Miami Boston Brooklyn Indiana Charlotte Detroit Orlando Philadelphia NewYork WesternConference

*

y

W L 56 18 48 27 45 29 44 30 41 33 36 38 34 39 33 41 32 40 32 41 31 42 28 45 22 52 18 57 14 60

rr

z-GoldenState x-Memphis x-Houston x-L.A.Clippers x-Portland SanAntonio Dallas Oklahoma City NewOrleans Phoenix Utah Denver Sacramen to L.A. Lakers Minnesota x-clinchedplayoff spot y-clinched division z-clinched conference

ji

A'

425 24r/r 384 27r/r

297 34 240 38'/r 189 42 822 680 10 676 10'/r 662 11H 658 12 644 13 608 15r/r 568 18'/r 534 21 507 23 446 27t/r

378 32'/r 356 34 274 40 216 44'/r

Monday'sGames

L.A. Lakers113,Philadelphia111,OT Boston116,Chailotte104 Atlanta101,Milwaukee88 Toronto99, Houston 96 Memphis 97,Sacramento83 Utah104,Minnesota84 Portland109,Phoenix86

Today'sGames AtlantaatDetroit, 4:30p.m. IndianaatBrooklyn,4:30p.m. SanAntonioat Miami,5 p.m. GoldenStateatL.A.Clippers,7:30p.m. Wednesday'sGames PhiladelphiaatWashington, 4p.m. SanAntonioat Orlando, 4p.m. Detroit atCharlotte,4p.m. IndianaatBoston, 4:30p.m. Brooklynat NewYork,4:30 p.m. Dallasat OklahomaCity,5 p.m. Sacramentoat Houston, 5p.m. ChicagoatMilwaukee,5 p.m. Torontoat Minnesota, 5 p.m. DenveratUtah,6p.m. L.A. Clippers at Portland, 7p.m. NewOrleansatL.A.Lakers,7:30p.m.

azers ma e ao WI V I 0 over uns The Associated Press fourth quarter after building CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Avery PORTLAND — A playoff a 92-65 lead. Portland led by Bradley had 30 points and spot secured, next up for the as many as 31 points. eight rebounds, and Boston Portland Trail Blazers is the The S u n s h ave lost four beat Charlotte for an imNorthwest Division straight, and while portant Eastern Conference title. NeXt nP they are mathemat- vlctory. The Trail Blazers i cally still i n t h e Raptors 99 , Ro ckets haven't won the diplayoff picture, the 96: TORONTO — D e M a r vision since 2008-09, chances are dwin- D eRozan scored a ca when they shared dling. Phoenix plays reer-high 42 points and tied it with th e D enver six of its last eight his career best with 11 reNuggets. Portland's Los An eies g aGerald m es on the road. bounds, and Toronto earned last outright t i tle Cij ers at Green and its eighth straight home victocame in the 1991-92 p o rtland T.J. Warren came off ry over Houston. season. the bench to score 13 Hawks 101, Bucks 88: AT"I'm not even sure ' P™ poi n ts. Eric Bledsoe LANTA — DeMarre Carroll " y thelasttimeweeven added12intheSuns' scored 23 points and Kyle T>:BlazerNet won a division title," seventh loss by 20 Korver put on quite a shooting All-Star guard Da- Ra die:KBND or m o re points this display in the third quarter, mian L i l lard s a id . 1 1 10-AM, season. carrying Atlanta to the win. "I'm sure it's been 100.1-FM; "We played hard Grizzlies 97, Kings 83: tough having OKC KRCO but they're a good MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Mike around. If any year 690-AM, team," Ble d soe Conley scored 18 points, Jeff there was a great 9 6.9-FM said. "At the end of Green had 16 and Memphis opportunity, it's this the day, that's why snapped a three-game losing year. We just need to keep they'reinthepositionthey're streak. playing, focus on ourselves, in, trying to fight for a high Lakers 113, 76ers 111: and everything will work out seed." PHILADELPHIA — Jordan like it's supposed to." The Blazers also clinched Clarkson made the tiebreakThe Blazers clinched a th e season series against the ing basket with 0.7 seconds playoff berth on Monday S uns for the first time since left in overtime, lifting the night with a 109-86 victory t h e 2010-11 season, winning Los Angeles Lakers past o ver the Phoenix Suns. The 3 - 1 . Philadelphia in a matchup v ictory cut the Blazers' magic

Pho e n i x was

w ith o u t of two of the NBA's worst number for winning the divi- guard Brandon Knight, who teams. sion to two. tweaked his sprained left anJazz104, Timberwolves 84: Lillard scored 19 points k l e i n a 109-97 loss at home MINNEAPOLIS — Gordon and LaMarcus A l dridge t o Oklahoma City on Sunday Hayward scored 22 points,

added 17 points and seven night. rebounds. The Blazers rested all of their starters in the

reserve Trey Burke had 19 and Utah got the road win

A l so on Monday: Celt i cs 116, Hornets 104: over Minnesota.

PORTLAND — The Port-

land Trail Blazers have signed guard Tim Frazier from the NBADevelopmentLeague'sMaineRed Claws for the rest of the season. Frazier, who played atPenn State, recently finished a pair of 10-day contracts with Philadelphia, where he averaged 5.7 points, 3.2 rebounds, 7.2 assists in six games. — The Associated Press

Summaries

Blazers109, Suns86 PHOENIX (86) Marc.Morris5-8 0-011, Mark.Morris5-90-011, Len 3-80-06,Bledsoe5-112-312, Tucker4-92-210, Goodwin2-70-0 4, B.Wright1-4 2-44, Warren6-9 1-1 13,Price1-30-02, Green6-120-013, Bullock 0-50 00, Barron 0 20-00. Totals38-877-1086. PORTLAND (109) Batum6-10 0-0 16, Aldridge6-14 4-4 17,Lopez 4-60-0 8, Lillard 7-143-419, Afflalo 6-11 2-2 16,Mccogum 2-70-04,Kaman6-70-012,Blake 1-3 0-03, D.Wright1-3 0-0 3,Freeland2-5 0-04, Leonard2-30-05, Crabbe1-3 0-02, Gee0-00-00. Totals 44-869-10109. Phoenix 22 27 16 21 — 86 Porllend 31 24 37 17 — 109 3-Point Goal— s Phoenix 3-16 (Mark.Morris 1-2, Green1-3,Marc.Morris1-3,Price0-1, Goodwin 0-1, Bullock0-3, Tucker 0-3), Portland12-27(Batum4-6, Afflalo 2-3, Ligard2-6, Leonard1-1, D.Wiight 1-2, Aldridge1-2,Blake1-3,Crabbe0-1, Mccollum0-3). FouledOut—None. Rebounds—Phoenix 43 (TuckeI 9), Portland52(Kaman, Aldridge7). Assists—Phoenix 18 (Bledsoe 5), Portland26(Lilard 7).Total FoulsPhoenix11,Portland10. Technicals—Bledsoe, Portlanddefensivethree second.A—19,441(19,980).

WOMEN'S NCAA TOURNAMENT

It's eighth straight Final Four for UConn The Associated Press ALBANY, NY. — Getting to the Final Four nev-

er gets old for Geno Auriemma and his UConn Huskies.

Hawks101, Bucks 88

Kaleena Mosq u eda-Lewis scored 27 points

MILWAUKE E(88) Antetokounmpo7-9 4-4 18, llyasova4-13 2-4 12, Pachulia8-101-3 17,Carter-Wiliams1-6 2-2 4, Middleton6-140-012, Bayless4-84-514, Mayo 0-5 2-2 2, Henson 1-6 0-2 2, Plumlee0-0 0-0 0, Ennis 0-00-0 0, O'Bryant3-41-1 7. Totals 34-75 16-23 88. ATLANTA (191) Carroll 9-13 3-5 23, Milsap6-103-415, Horford 8-18 2-218,Teague2-8 2-2 8, Korver4-10 0-011, Antic 2-44-5 8,Bazemore 0-1 0-0 0, Schroder0-2 4-44, Sefolosha4-62-211,Muscala1-40-03, Mack 0-30-00. Totals 36-7920-24191. Milwaukee 20 19 25 24 — 88 25 21 26 29 — 101 Atlanta

to help UConn beat Day-

Lakers113, 76ers111 (OT) LA. LAKERB (113) Johnson 5-162-412, Kelly 5-93-316, Black2-3 2-2 6, Clarkson 9-158-1026, Ellington7-152-220, Sacre3-60-06, Brown7-105-5 22,Hill 2-81-4 6. Totals 40-8223-30113. PHILADELH PIA(111) Covington4-13 1-2 12,Noel 7-185-10 19,Aldemir 3-42-48,Smith8-200-017, Sampson 2-41-2 7, Canaan 4-97-718, RobinsonIII 3-81-48, Thom pson 0 41-21, Robinson 4 75 713, Sims4 90 08. Totals 39-9623-38111. L.A.Lakers 173 4 25 26 11 — 113 Philad elphia 28 22 21 31 9 — 111

Celtics116, Hornets104

Craig Mitcheiidyer/The Associated Press

Portland gu ard Damian Lillard (0) shoots over Phoenix center Alex Len during the first quarter of Monday night's game in Portland. Lillard led the Blszers with 19 points.

BlazerssignG Fraziorforrest ofseason

C3

BDBTDN (116) Turner7-111-1 15,Bass2-43-4 7, TZeger4-9 0-08, Smart5-93-414,Bradley12-233-330,Thomas3-92-210,Crowder4-94-414, Walace2-30-44, Olynyk 5-100-011, Jerebko1-21-1 3.Totals45-89 17-23 116.

CHARLO TTE(194) Taylor 2-6 0-0 5,Ma.Wigiams4-6 1-1 10,Jefferson6-10 0-012,Walker 9-20 8-928, Henderson 7-152-217,Maxiel 3-50-06, Hairston1-40-02, M. Williams 6-175-519, Biyombo2-21-25, Roberts0-0 0-0 0. Totals40-85 17-19 194. Boston 26 39 29 31 — 116 Charlotte 24 29 25 35 — 104

Leaders

Through Monday Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Westbrook,OKC 59 537 483 1626 27.6 Harden,HOU 73 582 640 1988 27.2 James,CLE 64 587 357 1644 25.7 Davis,NOR 59 567 320 1455 24.7 Cousins,SAC 56 467 411 1347 24.1 Curry,GOL 71 575 284 1681 23.7 Aldridge,POR 65 606 282 1527 23.5 Irving,CLE 70 546 295 1530 21.9 Griffin, LAC 59 502 276 1288 21.8 Wade,MIA 54 452 249 1178 21.8 Grizzlies 97, Kings 83 Thompson, GOL 68 533 202 1477 21.7 Lillard, POR 73 521 319 1535 21.0 SACRAM ENTO(83) Gay, SAC 67 499 324 1399 20.9 Gay10-182 224,Thompson2 80 04, Evans3 4 58 379 351 1170 20.2 1-2 7, Mccallum4-9 4-712, McLemore 3-91-1 8, Butler,CHI A 71 463 354 1393 19.6 Stauskas1-31-2 4,Casspi3-60-07, Miler 0-40-0 Hayward,UT D eRozan, T O R 53 348 319 1035 19.5 0, Williams4-14 2-4 10,Hogins0-00-0 0, Landry Vucevic,ORL 66 561 152 1276 19.3 3-61-2 7,Wear0-00-00. Totals 33-81 12-2083. Ellis, DAL 73 552 211 1396 19.1 MEMPHIS (97) 74 514 245 1393 18.8 Je.Green 6-11 2-316, Randolph5-125-615, Gasol Paul, LAC Gasol, CHI 70 512 263 1299 18.6 4-110-08,Conley6-144-618, Lee5-100-010, KouFie Id Goal Percente ge fos3-62-28,Carter3-80-09,JaGreen1-20-02, Udrih 3-60-07, Calathes2-30-04.Tofals38-8313-1797. FG FGA PCT 340 478 .711 Sacramento 20 2 3 21 19 — 83 Jordan,LAC A.Johnson,TOR 285 497 .573 Memphis 24 32 19 22 — 97 Valanciunas,TOR 333 587 .567 Mozgov,CLE 285 512 .557 Jazz104, Timberwolves 84 Goitat,WAS 383 689 .556 Zeller,BOS 300 550 .545 UTAH(104) Davis,NOR 567 1049 .541 Hayward7-156-622, Booker7-112-217, Gobert Favors,UTA 451 847 .532 4-7 7-915, Exum1-60-0 3,Hood3-50-0 7, Burke Hoiford,ATL 461 874 .527 8-17 1-1 19,Johnson3-9 0-0 6, Ingles 3-4 0-08, Vucevic,ORL 561 1067 .526 Evans 2 40 04, Milsap1-30 03, Cooley010 00, Rebounds Cotton0-00-00. Totals39-8216-18104. G OFF DEF TDT AVG MINNESOT A(84) Jordan,LAC 74 357 740 1097 14.8 Wiggins5-15 7-917, Payne0-7 0-0 0, Hamilton rummond,DEr 73 390 584 974 13.3 3-6 5-5 11,Brown3-7 0-0 7, Lavine7-19 6-7 21, D Cousins,SAC 56 175 519 694 12.4 Budinger5-112-414, Hummel 3-9 2-29,Bennett 2-2 Gasol,CHI 70 193 635 828 11.8 0-06. Totals28-7622-2784. Chandl e r, DA L 68 271 504 775 11.4 Ufah 25 25 31 23 — 194 Vucevic,ORL 66 215 521 736 11.2 Minnesota 18 22 17 27 — 84 Randolph,MEM 64 206 474 680 10.6 Davis,NOR 59 153 462 615 10.4 Monroe,DET 64 216 451 667 10.4 Raptors 99, Rockets 96 Aldridge,POR 65 162 511 673 10.4 Assists HOUSTON (96) G AST AVG Ariza 5-152-415, Smith3-142-4 8, Dorsey3-3 74 749 10.1 1-2 7,Terry3-50-08, Harden9-2210-1231, Capela Paul, LAC 4-5 0-3 8, Prigioni 1-1 1-1 3,Brewer6-16 1-4 13, Wall, WAS 74 725 9.8 N.Johnson1-31-1 3. Totals 35-8418-31 96. Lawson,DEN 69 665 9.6 TORONTO(99) Westbrook,OKC 59 509 8.6 Ross2-60-05, AJohnson4-70-08, Valanciunas5-9 Rondo,DAL 61 487 8.0 5-5 15,Vasquaz1-10 0-0 3, DeRozan14-27 12-17 42, Curry,GOL 71 560 7.9 Patterson2-42-2 7,Wiliams 5-90-013, J.Johnson2-6 James,CLE 64 466 7.3 2-36, Hansbrough 0-00-00. Totals 35-7821-2799. Teague,ATL 66 466 7.1 Houston 27 25 24 29 — 96 Harden,HOU 73 510 7.0 Toronto 27 21 26 25 — 99 Lowry,TOR 66 454 6.9

ton 91-70 on Monday night to advance to the national

semifinals for an eighth straight season. "I love going to the Final Four. I don't care how many times it is, what the

total number is. I love it for the fact that some of my

players have never been there," Auriemma said. "When you get a chance to go, you feel like you did something pretty significant. We did it over and

over again. Some kids don't get to go once." Now the Huskies stand

two wins away from a third straight n ational

c h am-

pionship. They a ccomplished that same feat from 2002-04. Unlike the

f i rst t h r ee

games of the tournament when UConn won by an

average of nearly 48 points, the Huskies got all they could handle from the sev-

enth-seeded Flyers, who

weren't intimidated by the top seed for the game's first 20 minutes.

"When we're challenged,

s ometimes t h at's

w h en

we're at our best, and that's what we talked about in the locker room and I couldn't

be prouder of them and happier for them ... especially tonight against a great, great team," Auriemma said. "Boy, I'm glad we don't have to play them again." Trailing at the half for the first time in two seasons, UConn scored the

first nine points of the second half during a 15-3 run to take a 58-47 lead with

13:56 left. A little more than a min-

ute later, Mosqueda-Lewis hit her fifth 3-pointer of the game,giving her393 in her career to break the NCAA

recordfor3s.Thatmade it 62-49.

Also on Monday: Maryland 58, Tennessee 48: SPOKANE, Wash. — Lexie Brown scored 13 of her 15 points in the sec-

ond half, Brionna Jones added 14 points and nine rebounds an d

t o p -seed-

ed Maryland advanced to its second straight Final Four with a win over

Tennessee in the Spokane Regional final. Brown hit three 3-pointers in the sec-

ond half as the Terrapins (34-2) overcame their lowest-scoring first half of the

season to knock out Tennessee from the NCAAs for the second straight year.

NHL ROUNDUP

Canucksstart road trip strong with victory over Blues The Associated Press

home, has one win in its past

ST. LOUIS — As usual, the six games overall, and reV ancouver C a nucks w e r e mained one point shy of a sevstrong on the road. The St. enth 100-point season.

"We gave up so m any Louis Blues didn't put up much of a fight. chances and so many breakRadim Vrbata had a goal aways and odd-man rushes, and assist, and Eddie Lack it's ugly to look at," Michalek made 23 saves as the Canucks said. "That's no way to play, opened a four-game trip with a especially this time of the 4-1 victory over the struggling season." Blues on Monday night. They Forward T.J. Oshie, who will look for a repeat Tuesday returned from a one-game abagainst the Predators. sence due to the flu, thought "We rise to th e occasion players might be thinking too against those good teams," much. "Maybe it looks like a lack said Nick Bonino, who got the go-ahead goal in the second of urgencyor a lack ofeffort," period. "We've done it all year Oshie said. "I'm not sure what and it's going to need to hap- it looks like from up top, but pen again." guys aren't really sticking Zbynek Michalek scored for with their gut and going with the Blues, who never led and

their first instinct."

marsson scored 1:04 apart in the second period, and Chicascored for Vancouver, which go beat Los Angeles. strengthened its hold on secFlames 5, Stars 3:DALLAS ond place in the Pacific Divi- — Jiri Hudler, Raphael Diaz sion, two days after squan- and Johnny Gaudreau scored dering a lead at home against within a span of 6:49 of the Dallas in an overtime loss. second period, and Calgary "There are less distractions held on to beat Dallas. on the road, you don't have the Oilers 4, Avalanche 1:DENfamily and kids," Bonino said. VER — Defenseman Justin "So that definitely plays into it, Schultz broke a second-peribut it's been a pretty good road od tie, and Richard Bachman year for us so far." stopped 29 shots, helping Also on Monday: Edmonton snap a five-game, Lightning 5, Canadiens 3: road-losing streak by topping 31. S hawn

Ma t t h ia s als o

MONTREAL — Tampa Bay

goalie Ben Bishop had two assists, Vladislav Namestnikov scored two goals, and the Lightning clinched an Eastern Conference playoff berth with a win over Montreal.

missed a chance to clinch a Bonino scored just 31 secBlackhawks 4, Kings1:CHIplayoff spot with a victory. St. onds after the Blues tied it on CAGO — Defensemen DunLouis has lost two straight at Michalek's first goal since Jan. can Keith and Niklas Hjal-

Colorado.

Sabres 4,

C oyotes 1:

G LENDALE, A r i z .

— An-

drej Meszaros scored two goals for the second straight game, and Buffaloended a five-game losing streak by beating Arizona in a matchup between the NHL's worst two teams.

Chris Lee/St. Louis Post-Dispactch

Vancouver center ShawnMatthias, center, and right wing Linden Vey celebrate after Matthias scored in the second period of Mon-

day night's game.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

Ducks

Doubles teamspropel Redmond Bulletin staff report

3), 3-6, 10-8, while Noah Fitz-

PINE — Madras erupted for

REDMOND — R e dmond simmons, of Redmond, beat nine runs in the seventh inning clinched victory on the douSimon Sangha 6-2, 5-7, 10-3. to cement a victory against

bles courts Monday, winning three of four matches while splitting four singles matches with Madras to earn a narrow 5-3 win in boys tennis.

Colton Goss of Madras pre-

La Pine. La Pine (3-4 overall, 0-0 league) led by two at the of Redmond, in two sets, 6-4, end of the second inning and 7-6 (7-5), while Redmond's were only down one through Dakota Schmidt earned the six. Madras (3-3, 0-0) was led Ebin Maddox and Brennan most commanding win of the by Bryce Rehwinkel who had Biondi pulled out a close vic- day with a 6-3, 6-1 victory over three hits on the night, accutory over Jeremy Burgos and Matt Marcotte. mulating a home run, a triple, a JesusEgoavilofMadras, 7-6, Also on Monday: single and an RBI. Tyler Lock7-6, to make the difference in ey also had three hits for the the close afternoon dual meet- Girls tennis White Buffaloes while Ethan ing. Redmond's Brennan BionMadras 6, Redmond 2:MA- Short threw five innings, walkdi and Sam Husband got into DRAS — The Panthers and ing two and striking out three. trouble in their first set against White Buffaloes split Mon- The Hawks were led by Ben Saul Jimenez and Dean Cul- day's singles matches with Plant, who managed two hits pus but won the next set 6-2 both sides winning two apiece, and an RBI, and Tyler Ashto force a third set tiebreaker, but the Madras doubles tan- craft, who added another RBI. which they won 10-2. Panthers dems rolled, winning all four La Pine pitcher Jacob FarnBlaine Biondi and T.J. Smith matches. Redmond's Marita sworth struck out sevenbatters cruisedto victory over Joseph Gonzalezand JessicaToledo in five innings, also allowing Calica and J ered P ichette, gaveSophieGemelas and Jen- five hits and three runs. winning 6-4, 6-0. ni Young a run for their money, O bie E r iz a a n d Om a r winning the first set 6-4 before Softball Dominguez, o f Mad r as, the Madras duo won the next Madras 12, La Pine 2: LA dropped their first set, 6-1, but two sets 6-2, 6-1. Redmond's PINE — T h e W h ite Buffabounced back to win the next Jessica Brunot clinched one of loes started strong and nev6-2 before earning the White the more resounding victories er looked back, defeating La Buffaloes' sole doubles point of the evening, beating Jessica Pine (3-5 overall, 0-0 league) by winning the tiebreaker 10-7. Gonzalez 6-1, 6-1 at the No. 1 in five innings. Shelby MauThe tight competition car- singles position. Kali Davis ritson led the way for Madras ried over to the singles match- beat Tifany Figeroa, of Ma- (4-3, 0-0) with three hits. Maues, with two of four requiring dras, 5-6 (7-1) 6-2, 10-3 to claim ritson started the day off with a third set tiebreaker to deter-

Redmond's second point.

a three-run home run in the

Baseball

first inning, followed by a second inning grand slam and a single in the fourth inning.

mine the victor. Jacob Rudd eventually won out over Jonah

Gutierrez, of Redmond, 7-6 (7-

vailed over Tanner Gilchrest,

Madras 12, La Pine 2: LA

Nonconterence

Brambila,R,6-2,6-0; DaniSchmaltz/TyraThomas, M, def. NicoleHalkola/AsheleeGreen, R,6-0,6-3.

Boys tennis

Madras 6, Redmond2 At Madras Singles —JessicaBrunot, R,def. JessicaGonzalez, M,6-1, 6-1;JasminMercado,M, def. Becca Develter,R,6-4, 6-0;Kali Davis, R,def. TifanyFigeroa, M, 6-5 (7-1),2-6,10-3(third settie-breaker); Rosita Santellane, M,def. NicoleGarcia, R,6-4,6-0. Doubles— SophieGemelas/JenniYoung,M, def. MaritaGonzalez/Jessica Toledo, R,4-6, 6-2, 6-1; StephanieOlivera/MelissaOlivera, M, def. Jordan Holmes /MakennaLeighty,R,6-2,6-1;JazminIke-Lopez/JessacaAlavez, M, def. Mallory Hansen/Yaneli

Nonconference Redmond 5, Madras3 At Redmond

Singles — NoahFilzsimmons, R,def. Simon Sangha, M, 62,5-7,103 (third settiebreaker);Jacob Rudd, M, def. JonaGutierrez, R, 7-6(7-3), 3-6,10-8 (third set tiebreaker);DakotaSchmidt, R, def. Matt Marcotte, M,6-3, 6-1; ColtonGoss, M,def. Tanner Gilchrist, R, 6-4, t-6 (t-5). Doubles —BlaineBiondi/TJ. Smith, R,def.Joseph Calica/JeredPichette, M,6-4, 6-0; ObieEriza/Omar Doming uez,M,detKyleHyte/StephenKoutsopoulos,R,

1-6, 6-2,10-2(third settiebreaker); ConnerLennie/Ebin Maddox, R,def.JesusEgoavil/JeremyBurgos,M,7-6, 7-6; BrennanBiondi/SamHusband, R, SaulJimenez/ Dean Culpus, M,6-0,4-6, 12-10(thirdsettiebreaker).

Baseball Madras La Pine

Nonleaguegame

002 100 9 — 12 11 4 110 000 0 — 2 4 3

Softball Madras La Pine

Nonleaguegame (5 innings)

341 04 — 12 NANA 010 01 — 2 NA NA

Stars

mit sophomore Camille Weaver, who not only

Continued from C1 "I think it's growing incrementally. I don't

just a few days earlier but learned the ins and outs of three field events she had never com-

think it's an explosion of interest. But there's

peted in before. She did not intend to take the

was persuaded by Turnbull to enter the meet

more kids now talking about it than there ever meet tooseriously.So Weaver messed around have been," says Turnbull, the longtime Storm and piled up a winning total of 4,005 points — a coach who took over the unique multi-event record for the young Summit multi-events procompetition after it had been hosted by Sweet gram, and just 195 points off the national-qualHome High School since 1980. "Ashton has al- ifying mark. lowed us to take a different viewpoint towards Weaver never considered herself a multithe kids. Instead of saying, 'You are a hurdler' event athlete. Sure, she was a hurdler and a or 'You'rea 400-meter runner,'let's test your long- and triple-jumper. But the performance athleticism and see what kind of athlete you she puttogether over the weekend opened a are. The beauty of the heptathlons and the de- window to a potentiallybright future. cathlons is they test that."

Also, they help coaches — and potentially college recruiters — discover hidden gems. After all, Turnbull notes, Central Oregon

"It was more laid-back than I thought it would be," Weaver says. "Maybe next time, I'll take it

more serious. Maybe that will change things." About that window.

"With these high school kids, their window has become a hot spot for track and field multievent talent. Not long after Eaton gained world- to the world is literally looking out of a 3-by-5(wide fame at the Olympics, another Mountain foot) window," Turnbull says. "This opportunity View grad, Mitch Modin, began his career as broadens their horizons. That window's getting a decathlete at Oregon. Last season, Summit's a little bit bigger. Maybe now they're looking Miranda Brown placed a respectable 13th at through a sliding glass door, looking at the opthe New Balance Nationals Outdoor heptathlon portunities as athletes in the realm of track and championships in North Carolina. field to go out and do something and make your Because the Oregon School Activities As- mark." sociation does not sanction the heptathlon or As a high school athlete at Mountain View decathlon for the high school track and field in the 1980s, Turnbull himself was multitalentseason, however, there are few opportunities ed. Fora few years, he held the state record in for coaches — or even prep athletes themselves the high jump at more than 7 feet. He recalls — to identify multi-event capabilities. marks of 24 feet in the long jump and 48 feet in Enter Al Tarpenning, who helped jump-start the triple jump while posting a time of 10.8 secthe annual Sweet Home Decathlon/Heptathlon onds in the 100-meter dash. Perhaps he could in the early 1980s. And upon the resignation have thrived as a respectable decathlete. That last fall of longtime Sweet Home coach Billy is, had an opportunity arose. Yet another reaSnow, who was unsure the event would con- son why the Summit coach wanted to continue tinue when he stepped away, enter the Summit this long-standing multi-event competition. "If I Heptathlon-Decathlon helmed by Turnbull, knew there was a decathlon in Bend, Oregon," who jumped fast at the opportunity to continue he says, "I wouldhave been here in a heartbeat." the meet. The popularity of heptathlons and decath"I was as quick as I could be," 'Ibrnbull re- lons is continuing to rise, 'Ihrnbull notes. Weavcalls. "Once I found out that it may not be go- er has noticed. So has Wilcox. Not only do these ing, I thought that would be a huge disservice to events allow athletes to uncover an unidentified ... well, the number of kids (more than 40) who talent, they also offer athletes an extra chance came out (to the Summit competition)." to train in the events they specialize in during Among them were a few Central Oregon the regular season, to get more reps. These multi-event first-timers, including yet another competitions also help train those athletes menMountain View athlete who had never heard of tally, as Wilcox points out. In his decathlon, the decathlon until Eaton. Funny, considering Wilcox needed to quickly move on, forget about Eaton had never heard of the decathlon until his performance — incredible or inadequateSteele, the UO decathlon coach, suggested it to in the previous event and move on. That's the the former Cougar. approach he will take into each sprint race. "Ashton Eaton and Mitch (Modin) kind of Weaver and Wilcox — as well as Summit's motivated me, just them being Mountain View Claire Christensen, who was second in the grads," says Dantly Wilcox, a Mountain View Summit heptathlon meet, and the Storm's Misenior who placed fifth at the Summit meet randa Brown, to name a few — are among the with 5,740 points — a qualifying mark for this rising crop of multi-event talents in Central summer's New Balance Nationals Outdoor. "To

Oregon. They are the gems that these rare

see the success they had ... we're not similar

heptathlons and decathlons have dug up from the dunes. They did more than put their athlet-

athletes but we have similar qualities."

Turnbull points to Wilcox as a prime example icism, stamina and mental fortitude to the test of a decathlete simply needing an opportunity this past weekend. They faced failure. And they to flourish. As Turnbull puts it: "There's a kid who really could be a decathlete, but without

stared it down. "I don't know what we have in this culture

an opportunity to experience that, he'll proba- right now (but) we have a real fear of failure," Turnbull says. "Well an opportunity like a hepmaybe he could be a great one. tathlon or a decathlon, you're going to face fail"I personally believe," the coach continues, ure. I think the more we can get kids to face fail"that if there's an opportunity for us to host ure, the better they're going to be, the stronger something like this, I don't care if 10 kids show athletes they're going to be. I just want more opup. If it's good for those 10 kids, we're going to portunities. If we can offer more opportunities, we're going to discover talent." do it." Competing in her first heptathlon was Sum- — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.com.

bly never envision himself as a decathlete. And

Continued from C1 Sunday offered a shot at redemption. As the spotlight around UO's No. 2 softball team has grown, fans have come out to the uni-

team, the Fillies, hoping they could pick up some of the Duckplayers' skills and get the feel of a big-time softball atmosphere. "These guys are seventh- and eighth-graders," Busby said, gesturing at her players, Alli

versity's historic Howe Field in bigger numbers Gresser,Leticia Dunsmore and Skyler Stout. "I'm showing them what it's like to play on a and with more enthusiasm. Waiting for Howe Field's gates to open Sun- college stage." day, nearly two hours before the first pitch in Skyler said she was excited to watch Hawthe rubber match ofa three-game series~ kins pitch. "But we're here for team bonding," Washington, Clark and other Duck fans made she added. a point to show up early for seats near home At the front of the line for seats Sunday was plate. Russ Rivera, who had a good reason not to ''We won the first game and they managed mind waiting. The Redding, California, resito take one, so this is payback," said Clark, who dent is Hawkins' grandfather, and he has gotattended Friday's victorybut missed Saturday's ten used to road trips up and down Interstate 5 loss. "I hope we score 20 runs." to watch her pitch. "We're pretty proud. We come to almost evShe had to settle for 15, as the Ducks pummeled the Huskies with a record eight home ery game," said Rivera, who was with several runs in front of a capacity crowd of 1,400 fans. family members. Then he added thoughtfully, A big reason for the Ducks' success is pitch- "There's lots of things I should be doing around ing star Cheridan Hawkins, a junior who has the house." mowed down just about every hitter she has Oregon fans had plenty to cheer, chant and faced this season, including in Friday's and stomp about Sunday. Most of the fun came in Sunday's wins. the third inning, when the Ducks belted five Butmany fans have grown into die-hards, in- home runs, including two by junior Hailey creasingly able to recite biographical informa- Decker. "Look at that one go!" UO sophomore Brention about the players up and down the roster. "Pride of Ohio!" aman in the left-fieldbleach- dan McCaffrey yelled at no one in particular as ers shouted when freshman Jenna LilleyDecker's second home run sailed overthecenieldfence. from North Canton, Ohio — blasted a home run ter-f for Oregon in the first inning. The Ducks won 15-6 in just five inningsHowe Field's bleachers were packed Sunday the game ended early because of a rule that with families, young children, senior citizens stops the game if one team leads by eight or and, notably, young girls in softball gear from more runs after five or more innings — and schoolsand club teams across Lane County took the rivalry series against Washington two and the southern Willamette Valley. games to one. "All of us hope to play forthe Ducks one day," Leaving Howe Field, McCaffrey said he is said Tatum Hughes, an eighth-grade softball confident that this softball team is even better player from Coburg who came out Sunday with than the one that qualified for the World Series Monroe High School freshman Madison Meza a year ago. "They're definitely one of the most talented and a few other friends. ''We all play softball," Meza said, shortly be- teams in the country," he said. "It's cool to see forethegame started. students, and even more just regular people Coach Shawna Busby brought three play- from the community, comingout to the games."

Hype

PREP SCOREBOARD Girls tennis

ers from her Thurston-area middle school club

job." Beckham, Mike Evans,SamThenagain,themobileMar- my Watkins, Kelvin BenjaContinued from C1 iota does not necessarily fit the min and John Brown. "Receiver is a little bit of a Still, there is a general be- type of offenses Whisenhunt lief that he will be the No. 1 has run in the past, and Met- crapshoot in the first round," pick, and Oregon's Marcus tenberger showed some prom- Baltimore Ravens coach Mariota could go second to ise last season. So there is a lot John Harbaugh said. "It turns Tennessee — even though of conjecture that the Titans out, it's a crapshoot in evthis is not considered a strong will use the second pick on ery round. A lot of receivers, quarterback class. Five times USC defensive lineman Leon- they've been seventh-round since the NFL-AFL merger in ard Williams. picks, f i fth-round p i cks, 1970 have quarterbacks been Even more speculation has third-round picks and they've selected 1-2 in the draft. the Eagles trading up from turned out to be Hall of FameT hat happened i n 1 9 71 the 20th spot to somewhere type players. Then you've got with Jim Plunkett and Archie near the top of the draft to first-round picks that have Manning, 1993 with D r ew land Mariota, whom Kelly never really done anything." Bledsoe and Rick Mirer, 1998 coached at Oregon. Kelly has L ike q u arterbacks, t h e with Peyton Manning and called him "the most talented talent judges making these Ryan Leaf, and 2012 with An- kid I coached in college." draft decisions are under drew Luck and Robert GrifAsked this week what he constant pressure. fin III. In 1999, the first three might give up to move into Kelly, for one, is especially picks were quarterbacks: position to get Mariota, Kel- mindful of how much the EaTim Couch, Donovan Mcly said he did not want to gles might have to give up to Nabb and Akili Smith. get into hypotheticals. He achieve what they want toThe Titans, who drafted LSU quarterback Zach Met-

laughed off all the chatter.

"You've got nothing to

tenberger in the sixth round talk about on sports radio a year ago, are taking a hard right now, so let's talk about look at M ariota, said new trades," he said. coach Ken Whisenhunt. This year's draft class is "I've gone to his workout particularly deep at running and worked him out and was back, with a good chance very impressed with him," that two of them — Georgia's Whisenhunt said of Mariota, Todd Gurley and Wisconsin's who won the 2014 Heisman Melvin Gordon — go in the Trophy after Winston won it opening round. a year earlier. "We spent an This also figures to be a hour and a half with him in deep year for receivers, althe classroom, then went out though not as robust as the on the field and worked out 2014 class, which produced with him. He did a really nice s tandouts such a s O d e l l

whatever that is. "I want to build through

the draft," he said. "So if you gut yoursel fforoneyear and one guy, philosophically I don't think that's the right thing to do." Of course, philosophies evolve. "There are exceptions to

every philosophy," he said. "People used to think the world was flat, philosophically. Until that guy took the boat and just kept going and didn't fall off the edge, right?"

Grit

liberate practice" along with growth mindset.

Continued from C1 It's not just a descriptive term the way

the determination to not just work hard, but to work at the things you are least good at.

Researchersdefine "deliberate practice" as

Duckworth understands and employs it. "Grit is the tendency to sustain interest

"Grit enables you to be in an uncomfortable place for a good part of your day and get up

in and effort toward very long-term goals,"

the next day and do it all over again," Duck-

Duckworth writes.

worth has said.

She has developed a measurement for it by studying a range of achievers from West Point cadets, to National Spelling Bee winners, to

Coaches and athletes already know all

this; they are "paragons of grit," Duckworth says. They simply do not explain it in scien-

the Seattle Seahawks, and is at work on a tific terms. But NCAA schools would do well book about it. Her work shows that it is a more to articulate it, because if there is an underimportant factor in success than talent, IQ or lying illness that leads to academic fraud, it privilege. is the false idea that athletes are uninspired In 2013, Seahawks coach Pete Carroll saw a Tedtalk presentation by Duckworth, who is a

students who cannot learn and who have no

Harvard- and Oxford-educated psychologist, and became fasci nated.They began a series

students on campus is better equipped with

of conversations that helped Carroll refine

what the Seahawks look for in players. Early

value other than financial. In fact, no set of grit, growth mindsets, and the habits of deliberate practice. Every team on display in the NCAAs this

week has showed hallmarks of grit. The 5-foot-1 0 Trice worked four years in the face scoring the answers to a dozen queries, she of physical shortcomings and repeated failure rated people on a scale of 1 to 5. (I got a 4.3). to become a star point guard. Every talented What Duckworth did not know was wheth- right-hander in the tournament was born with er grit could be taught as well as measured. a weak left hand but has worked to make both Carroll assured her that it could be: Coaches hands equaL Michigan State's 27-11 record indo it all the time. He offered up the Seahawks cluded eight games decided in overtime. The as a kind of laboratory for her. Duckworth Spartans seem impervious to setbacks, or will be visiting them in May. psychological insecurity. Just listen to Izzo's Duckworth is deeply interested in how to account of his paint-peeling roar in the locker teach grit, because she did a stint as a public room when his team trailed Louisville. "I asked them if they'd become prettyboys," school math teacher in New York. At the heart of it is the ability to respond to failure or ad- Izzo said. "I asked them if the stage was too versity, rather than give up. big for them." "There are a lot of fragile gifted and talentLast summer, Izzo appeared at an ESPN ed kids who don't know how to fail," Duck- symposium on NCAA academic issues. Rathworth told Educational Leadership in a 2013 er than spout vague pieties, Izzo, whose playinterview. "They don't know how to struggle, ershave graduated atan 81percent rate over and they don't have a lot of practice with it." his career, argued that coaches are far more Contrary to popular perception, basic insightful teachers than they are given credit abilities and intelligence are not fixed traits. for. "I am an educator; my degree's in educaDuckworth's fellow researcher Carol Dweck tion," Izzo said. "... I'm a professor in my own of Stanford University has shown that people right too; I'm a teacher in my own right too." with a "growth mindset," who explore their The perception that athletes skate, and that brain plasticity, succeed more. Duckworth, what coaches teach is irrelevant, "helps widen using Dweck's work, is developing interven- the gap between academics and athletics, and tions to teach students what is known as "de- to be honest it disappoints me thoroughly." in her research career, Duckworth developed a questionnaire to turn grit into a metric: by


TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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C6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

MOTOR SPORTS

n ians au in wa t rou cam By Tom Withers The Associated Press

By Jenna Fryer ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. There was a time when the -

ing manager Terry Francona with water balloons, mocking pitcherTrevor Bauer for giving up three consecutive home runs or parking rookie

edge toJuan Pablo Montoya was evident everywhere he went. His arrogance was on display as he walked through the paddock, his confidencein aracecarclear

' a-'Ia CIII I I ,

I

with every fearless move he

made. But when the success stopped, the great JPM was

infielderJose Ramirez's car on the infield dirt, the Indi-

ans are leading the majors in hijinks. It's a training camp for caInp. The fun under the sun in

Goodyear, Arizona, peaked

usually stands at shortstop. After noticing the car sitting

H e dances around t h e

The Associated Press

jokes. Whether it's bombard-

the practice field only to find his BMW parked where he

swagger back,but also showssoft side

C LEVELAND — T h e I n -

dians are pitching, hitting, bunting and doing everything else they need to work on for the upcoming season at spring training. And they are laughing every step of the way. No team seems be enjoying itself as much as Cleveland, once only the butt of

last week when Ramirez took

Montoya has

Dan Mendlik/The Cleveland Indians

Workers maintain the field as rookie infielder Jose Ramirez's car is parked on the infield dirt, at the Cleveland Indians practice facility in Goodyear, Arizona. After noticing the car sitting too far from the curb, infielder Mike Aviles orchestrated the prank, which involved getting Ramirez's keys and driving it onto a practice field.

question, finding ways to address everything but the personal growth he has had since he showed up in 1999 as a brash 23-year-old who ripped off seven wins, won the CART championship and followed it up the next season with a

d ominating

victory in the Indianapolis 500. I

"Maybe a l i t tle, but d o n't k n o w," M o ntoya

no longer the intimidating squirmed when asked if he force he had once been. His has changed at all. "I've never been a big beabrupt departure from Formula One, followed by seven liever in what people say subpar seasons in NASCAR, about me. As long as I feel made hi m ju s t a n o t her I'm doing a really good job, driver in a crowded field of I'm driving the wheels off the also-rans. Then he got a chance at

car,the people Idrive for are

a do-over.Offered a job to

happy, that's all that really matters. Do I pay maybe a

return to o pen-wheel rac-

little more attention to the

ing with Roger Penske, fans? Yeah, I would say I do. Montoya's career was given When you're out there (on

too far from the curb, infielder during an exhibition start. The The Indians are not afraid prank, which involved getting following day, Francona had to poke fun at themselves. Ramirez's keys and driving it a police officer come to the On Monday, the team reteam's morning meeting with leased a funny video in which onto a practice field. The Indians wanted to teach three baseballs to deliver to several current players, Frana lesson to R a mirez, who Bauer. cona, general manager Chris "I just w anted t o r e turn Antonetti and a singing Carseems to follow his own rules when it comes to parking eti- these three baseballs that los Santana, read some negquette. They just placed it be- disrupted traffic on Estrella ative comments directed at

pitch in the "Major League"

the fresh start he so badly

the track), I'm still the same,

movies, about a

needed.

if you want to call it (jerk),

tween the first- and third-base

this season. The forecast was

Mike Aviles orchestrated the

Parkway at 2:20 p.m., 2:21 p.m.

them on Twitter. The "Mean

lines. "Hey, he parks anywhere so you might as well park it in a comfortable spot," Aviles said. "When you park it any-

and 2:22 p.m. on Tuesday," the Tweets" bit has been used by officertold Bauer as players late-night talk show host Jimin the clubhouse howled with my Kimmel, and the Indians laughter. seemed to relish the chance to Bauer, too, took it in stride, respond. where, what's the difference posting a photo of the souveAlso making an appearbetween the field and the nirs on Twitter. ance on the video was long"I think Trevor loved it," said timeBrewers broadcaster Bob parking lot?" Earlier this month, Fran- Francona, who understands Uecker, who played Harry cona had some fun at the ex- the importance of keeping his Doyle, the whiskey-swilling pense of Bauer, who gave up players relaxed and loose. "I play-by-play announcer who home runs to three straight hope we don't do that every coined the phrase "Juuust a Chicago Cubs p r ospects five days, but it was good." bit outside" to describe a wild

f i c tionally

hapless Indians team. "C'mon, Cleveland," Uecker said."Give them a chance." Last week, Sports Illustrat-

ed picked the Indians, who have not won the World Series since 1948, to take it all greeted with the usual skep-

ticism by Clevelanders, who were quick to point out that SI also tabbed the Indians in 1987

and the team lost 101 games. On the magazine's cover, Cy Young Award winner Corey Kluber is smiling and outfielder Michael Brantley is crack-

ing up at something funny. Ajinx'? The Indians are too busy

laughing to care.

This 'player to benamedlater' is worst-kept secret By Barry Svriuga The Washington Post

PEORIA, Ar iz. — Turns

out life in baseball purgatory looks a lot like life in baseball paradise. Surrounding Trea Turner last week: a blue sky,

the sprawling Arizona mountains, a pristine field below his barely scuffed spikes, a new blue-and-white cap on his head and the name of a major league team - "Padres" written neatly in script across his chest. Perfect. -

For now, in March, he is one

of them here, fitting right in as he took ground balls on a half field with Mitch Morales

and Diego Goris, slinging his left arm over Fernando Perez, Padres all, prospects all. His

that he can join the Nationals. fielding work completed, he O ver the c ourse of a n y flipped a ball over his head baseball season, there will be toward the center of the dia- trades major and minor, each mond, yelled "Thanks!" to the helping shape an organizacoach who had pounded out tion to varying degrees, each those grounders, taking care completely exploding the lives of him and his development, of the players involved. Such and ran off to hit. deals part of the sport, which "You can't let somebody is atbase a business, and fans else kind of take your joy pay attention to how each will away from you," Turner said help or hurt their team now later. "You got to have fun. and in the future. They are anThat's how I've approached alyzed as transactions, comeach and every day. Obvious- modity swapping. The human ly, some days have been a lit- fallout is a secondary considtle bit tougher than others, but eration, if a consideration at I've been trying to have fun." all. No one in baseball has But when this deal went been in Turner's position, now down Dec. 17, Turner's agent, or ever. He is here with the Jeff Berry of CAA Sports, Padres even though he has expressed his extreme disalready been traded to the pleasure with the situation on W ashington N ationals, t h e Turner's behalf. At the time, "player to be named later" in he told FoxSports.com, "In this the three-team deal that sent case, the plan to 'trust us' is outfielder Steven Souza Jr. not enough when it comes to from Washington to Tampa a player's well-being and caBay and outfielder Wil Myers reer," said there would be an from Tampa Bay toSan Di- "undoubtedly negative impact ego back in December. Except on Trea 'IIIrner," and added Turner will not be named later. that approving the trade was He has been named already. "unethical." Not officially, because neither That was immediately afclub can say as much, but it is ter the deal went down, back one of the worst-kept secrets when Turner tweeted, "Well in the game. this day got a whole lot more So this is baseball purgato- interesting ..." By March, with ry, playing for one team that is the season ready to unfold, the not really his. But the organi- rhetoric had died down. Berry zation that will be his home? declined comment on the sit-

Coast Conference, and he ar-

"It's out of my control,"

Turner is in Peoria, Arizona, rather than Viera, Florida, is

I think you go through expe- mains to be seen. riences in life to learn. Maybe Montoya will prac"I think he got probably a tice some give and t a ke. pretty big wake-up call when Maybe he will only take. he moved to the other side, Power, who led 75 laps t o NASCAR, and he w a s Sunday only to lose the lead just one more, right? Then to Montoya during pit stops, when he came back here, he tried once to regain the lead was a little bit of a different from his teammate. Montoya person." closed the door, the two cars Montoya does not speak made contact, and Power's poorly of his time in NA- front wing was damaged. SCAR. He notes he is the It was just racing, Power only driver in Chip Ganassi later shrugged, and downRacing history to qualify for played any potential drama the championship playoffs, developing with Montoya. "Juan has been known to and he thinks his struggles

on-base percentage, stole 57

bases — and was caught four times. "Fastest kid I've ever seen,"

ed Myers, and Preller had no ties to Turner, who was draftthe Nationals, according to

MLB could not prevent it,

so it didn't. The entire episode might cause the rule to be changed when the next round

of collective bargaining talks begin.

between the Padres' camp in Peoria and the White Sox's

facility in Glendale. "But Trea knows how to handle adversi-

said Carlos Rodon, Turner's ty. He's always been good with classmate at N.C. State and the it. He's always had a good attiWolfpack's lefty ace who was tude. He'll take it with a grain taken third in last year's draft of salt, still get better and de— 10 spots ahead of Turner velop himself." — by the Chicago White Sox. By all accounts, though, the "Fastest. Kid. I've. Ever. Seen." So when he settled in at

Padres — for whom he batted .323 with an . 854 on-base-

He hit .342 over his three col-

part in the development. They

shortstop the following year, plus-slugging percentage at he became a true prospect. two different levels of Class A His range was exceptional. last summer — are doing their lege seasons. He could run the bases. As with any pickedapart potential draft choice, there were questi ons raised before the draft — about his

arm strength, his potential at the plate, his relatively skinny

invited Turner to major league camp. Now over on the minor league side, he is getting all the at-bats he needs this spring, and he will have a job

against Montoya during

in a stock car had more to

dealings with each other re-

be a tough teammate. You

do with an underperforming

hear rumors," Power said. "But he's pretty honest. He'll tell you straight up. I don't think he beats around the his move to IndyCar last sea- bush, tries to play games or son with Team Penske was a anything. I've enjoyed workstruggle, and his inability to ing with him. I've learned get any comfort level on the stuff off of him. He's a very road or streetcourses left tough competitor, tough him embarrassed at times. racer. "You know if he's behind B ut when i t c o mes t o talking about himself, about you or you're racing with any diff erencesthere may be him, he's very difficult to in him emotionally, Montoya keep behind. So, yeah, you organization than with his talent level. And he freely admits that

appears uncomfortable.

know, that's him, right?"

in their system — somewhere

— when camp breaks. "They've treated me just even though he was named the like one of their players," 'Ihrner said. "It's been awesome." best shortstop in the country. "Scouts or whoever rate his No one baking in the sun arm, they don't give him much on the back fields at the Peocredit," Rodon said. "I've seen ria Sports Complex was in6-foot-l, 175-pound frame-

it. I've played catch with him.

It's firm. He picks the ball great at short, and he could always hit, and his speed's always there. He's got a lot of tools." Nationals scouts realized

uation — which remains odd.

in the trade!"

to overhaul the roster, want-

"In his best interest, it's hard rived to find the shortstop position occupied by slick-field- to see it as being good, to be ing incumbent Chris Diaz. So at a standstill," said Rodon, as a freshman, he slid over to who has lived with 'DIrner third base, hit .336 with a .432 this spring in a home midway

this last spring, when they As Turner spoke to a report- were preparing their own Turner said. er last week, Padres minor draft board. But they had the Given the w a y M a j or league coaches yelled, in good 19th selection, and they were League Baseball's rules are fun, "Tell him, 'I'd rather stay certain Turner would be gone written, this was out of every- with the Padres! I've found my by then. In the offseason, Souone's control. The only reason home here! Get somebody else za,coming offan exceptional He knows no one.

But that was Juan back then.

not be dealt yet. The "later" would not be for six months.

ed by the previous regime. So

not until June 13 of this season

on wheels.

Turner, who technically could

bit tougher than others, but I've been trying to

date that prohibits the trading what I'm told." of draft picks until a year afWhich fits his upbringing. ter they sign. A week after he Growing up in West Palm became the 13th pick in the Beach, Florida, Turner was ofdraft — June 13 — he signed fered scholarships by Florida for a $2.9-million bonus that Atlantic, essentially his homehas coaches and teammates town school, and by N orth with the Padres jokingly call- Carolina State. He took the lating him "Cha-ching." So it is ter offer to play in the Atlantic

done. Tony Kanaan, who raced

sources, checked with Major League Baseball to see if they could get pitching prospect Joe Ross and a player to be named later — in this case,

The Padres, with new general manager A.J. Preller itching

Major league player TreaTurner

whatever you want to call it,

IndyCar season opener Sun- it's good." day through the streets of St. This hybrid version of the Petersburg, it was clear that old Montoya is exactly what the old Montoya was backIndyCar needs right now. but with a twist. He's got his Hugely popular in Latin old swagger back, his drive America, Montoya boasts and determination are at lev- one of the biggest Twitter els he has not had in years, followings of any driver in but that callousness he used an American racing series. to carry everywhere has He is beloved by fans in his softened. native Colombia, loathed As fans crowded the fence by others who believe he is near victory lane on Sunday nothing but an on-track bulchanting his name, waving ly and an off-track prima Colombian flags, desperate- donna. ly trying to get close to their Montoya is the driver who hero, Montoya stopped what can move the needle. he was doing to sign autoGive him agood car and graphs and pose for pictures. a strong team, and his confiThat is a common courte- dence will soar. It is evident sy for most top drivers, but when he struts into a room not something a younger that Montoya once again beMontoya likely would have lieves he is the baddest thing Alas, it is early in this second season with Penske, his first stint in A merican and he now finds himself open wheel, does not think on a powerhouse lineup that Montoya has ever changed includes reigning IndyCar his personality. But age and champion Will Power, threethree children may have time Indianapolis 500 winsoftened Montoya a bit. ner Helio Castroneves and "We all grow up. We have newcomer Simon Pagenaud. k ids. I t h in k w e k i n d o f After one weekend, it sure change a little bit in a way," looks as if all four Penske Kanaan said. "Seeing Juan drivers will compete against celebrating with the fans each other for the champithe way he did (Sunday), I onship this season. How that can assure you that wouldn't plays out in team meetings, have happened 15 years ago. on the race track, and in

"Youcan't let somebody else kind of take yourjoy away from you.You got to have fun. That's how I've approached each and every day. Obviously,some days have been a little have fun."

Now, after his win in the

Class AAA season, was their

volved in the decision to deal Turner — and then keep him

for six months anyway. They are baseball people, and after 'Iilrner took his hacks in

the cage — taking an outside pitch to right field, turning on something inside to pull it over

the fence in left — they understand what they have in him, and what will leave on June

13, a year after he signed.

"He's not just a prospect,"

said Pat Murphy, the Padres' Class AAA manager who

"It's not my decision," Turn- most movable commodity. oversaw drills last week. "He's because of an obscure man- er yelled back. "I'm just doing The Rays needed some power. a winning player."

ChrisO'Meara/The Associated Press

Juan Pablo Montoya celebrates after winning the IndyCar Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg on Sunday in St. Petersburg, Florida.


C7 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

+

17,976.31

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

NASDAQ 4,947.44

+253.55

S&P 500 2,086.24

Todap Eye on consumers

2 080 .

Economists anticipate that a

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gauge of U.S. consumers' confidence edged lower in March. The Conference Board's index on consumers' confidence, due cut today, is expected to be 95.0. The February reading was 96.4 percent. A reading of 90 or better reflects a healthy economy. The readings in February and January held at the highest level since before the last recession officially started in December 2007.

Consumer confidence

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2,080:"

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17,000

1,920 ':.

16,500:"

1,840 '

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StocksRecap NYSE NASD

98 4 est.

$16.66

Close: 17,976.31 Change: 263.65 (1 5%) 17,560" " 10 DAYS "

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Vol. (in mil.) 2,853 1,720 Pvs. Volume 2,930 1,622 Advanced 2331 1852 Declined 8 13 8 7 4 New Highs 1 53 1 0 8 New Lows 16 48

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 18008.64 17727.48 17976.31 +263.65 DOW Trans. 8802.69 8711.73 8788.06 +87.72 DOW Util. 589.94 580.57 588.14 +7.63 NYSE Comp. 11009.01 1091 9.05 10989.16 +114.02 NASDAQ 4948.46 4921.12 4947.44 +56.22 S&P 500 2088.97 2064.11 2086.24 +25.22 S&P 400 1531.81 1511.07 1529.74 +21.23 Wilshire 5000 22138.93 21846.79 22114.56 +267.77 Russell 2000 1258.24 1246.69 1257.80 +1 7.39

DOW

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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD t1.49% +0.86% -3.85% t1.01% t1.31% L -4.84% t1.05% L +1.38% t1.15% L +4.46% t1.22% +1.33% t1.41% L L +5.32% t1.23% L +2.05% t1.40% L L +4.41%

NAME

Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ Avista Corp AVA 29.91 ~ Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ Home price monitor B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ New monthlydata on U.S. home BA 116.32 ~ values should provide insight into Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp C A C B4 .11 ~ potential trends for home sales ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.59— o this spring. Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — o Americans are listing fewer CostcoWholesale CO ST 110.36— o homes for sale, pushing up prices C raft Brew Alliance BREW 10.07 rt and keepingmany houses cut of FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ reach for would-be buyers. Did the HewlettPackard H PQ 31. 03 o — trend continue in January? Find Intel Corp I NTC 25.62 ~ out today, when Standard 8 Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ Poor's releases its latest Kroger Co K R 4 3 .33 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 ~ S8 P/Case-Shiller index of home LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ prices. MDU Resources MDU 20 . 01 o — Mentor Graphics ME N T 18.25 trMicrosoft Corp MSFT 38.51 ~ Nike Inc B NKE 70.60 ~ Nordstrom Inc J WN 59.97 ~ Nwst Nat Gas N WN 41.81 ~ PaccarInc P CAR 55.34 ~ Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ Schnitzer Steel SCH N 1 5.20 o — Sherwin Wms SHW 188.25 — o Stancorp Fncl SFG 57.77 ~ Starbucks Cp SBUX 67.93 ~ umpqua Holdi ngs UM P Q 14.70 ~ 1 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 ~ 5 Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7.48 ~

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Business barometer The Institute for Supply Management releases its Chicago business barometer index today. Footnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current Economists expect that the index, Dividend annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend a gauge of business activity, announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid ia stock, approximate cash rebounded in March to 51.4 after value on ex-distrittutica date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-ead fund - ao P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. sliding to 45.8 the previous month. The February reading was the lowest level since July 2009. An index reading above 50 indicates economic FortuneBrands Home & Securit y announced Monday Lock security products, said that the deal will strengthen activity is growing. Readings below its cabinet offering and expand its market area. 50 indicate the economy is contract- that it will buy cabinet maker Norcraft Companies for about $600 million. The Deerfield, lllinois-based company will launch a ing. The homeproductscompany willpay $25.50 pershare tender offer for all outstanding Norcraft shares in about Chicago business barometer for Norcraft, a 14.7 percent 15 days and expects the seasonally adjusted premium to the company's deal to close in the 70 closing price on Friday. second quarter. Fortune Brands, whose Fortune shares 64.5 products include jumped 6 percent 60.7 58.8 MasterBrand cabinets, Monday following the a $9 • Moen faucets and Master announcement. 55 est.

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694932 513875 503189 488289 474387 461444 354905 351151 342902

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L AST 2.20 3.83 10.51 30.00 13.71

SE Rv Intrexon

Close: $34.28V-0.99 or -2.8% The Justice Department is investigating the company over allegations that its pest control unit caused fumigant-related injuries. $40 30 20

J A S O N D J F M 52-week range $17.D5~ $3 6.95

Vol.:1.9m (2.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $4.61 b

XON

Close:$46.30 L3.30 or 7.7% The biotechnology company said it signed a collaboration and licensing deal with Merck KGaAfor potential cancer therapies. $60 40

J F 52-week range

M

$13.13~

$ 5D.98

PE: 9 0.2 Vol.:4.3m (2.7x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt. Cap: $4.86 b

P E: .. . Yield: ...

DYN Norcraft Companies N CF T Close:$30.88%2.69 or 9.2% Close:$25.67L2.77 or 12.1% The energy company received final Fortune Brands Home 8 Security is regulatory approval to complete its buying the kitchen and bathroom cabinet maker for about $600 milbuyout of multiple Duke Energy plants in several states. lion in an all-cash deal. $32 $30 30 28

25 20 J

F

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52-week range $24.58~

$3 6.57

Vol.:6.1m ( 3.6x avg.) P Mkt. Cap:$3.84 b

F

M

52-week range

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$13.09 Vcl.:1.5m (23.8x avg.)

$25.75

P E: . . . Yield: ...

Mkt. Cap:$444.4 m

Auspex Pharma.

ASPX Horizon Pharma HZNP Close:$1 00.36 L29.45 or 41.5% Close:$25.78 L3.97 or 18.2% Teva Pharmaceuticals Industries is The drug developer is buying Hypebuying the development-stage biorion Therapeutics for $1.1 billion, technology company for about $3.2 adding two genetic disorder drugs billion in a cash deal. to its portfolio. $150 $30 100

50 0

20

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52-week range $14.75 Vol.:8.7m (19.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.19 b

F

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52-week range $100.86 $7.85 P E: . . . Vol.:13.8m (4.9x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap: $3.06 b

Catamaran

CTRX Close:$59.83%11.61 or 23.8% The nation's largest health insurer, UnitedHealth Group, will buy the pharmacy benefits manager for more than $12 billion. $60

$25.95 P E: . . . Yield: ...

BioDelivery Sciences B DSI Close: $10.51V-3.38 or -24.3% The drug developer said its potential treatment for pain related to diabetic neuropathy did nct meet its main goal in a key study. $16 14

55 50

12

J F 52-week range

$36.98 Vol.:41.4m (17.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$12.41 b

M

J F 52-week range

$60.24 $6.71 ~ PE : 39.2 Vol.:6.6m (7.4x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$549.73 m

M $ 18.48

P E: .. . Yield : ...

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 1.95 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

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

. 0 3 .0 3 . 1 2 .12

52-wk T-bill

.24

...

.24

L

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2-year T-note . 5 8 .6 0 -0.02 L 5-year T-note 1.40 1.44 -0.04 L 10-year T-note 1.95 1.97 -0.02 L 30-year T-bond 2.55 2.54 +0.01 L

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NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 2.43 2.41+0.02 L W W 3 .35 BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.22 4.22 ... L W W 4.74

Barclays USAggregate 2.09 2.14 -0.05 ptv y t e id 1 2 $%

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w w 2.37 L W 5.28 M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.53 3.61 -0.08 w w w 4. 2 9 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.70 1.71 -0.01 L W W 1. 9 0 Barclays US Corp 2.94 2.99 -0.05 L W 3.07

PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 6.22 6.24 -0.02 W RATE FUNDS

YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 24 . 88 +.19+1.3 +9.3 +12.1+11.5 8 A A CaplncBuA m 59.97 +.28 +1.5 +6.7 +9.7 +9.0 A A A The price of CpWldGrlA m 47.66 +.35 +3.8 +7.2 +13.0 +9.8 C 6 C gold fell $15 EurPacGrA m 50.40 +.30 +6.9 +4.2 +9.9 +7.1 8 6 C per ounce, its FnlnvA m 5 2 .57+.56 +2.5 +12.0 +15.5+13.0 C C C second straight GrthAmA m 44.54 +.43 +4.4 +14.0 +17.1+13.5 D 6 D drop and its IncAmerA m 21.76 +.14 +1.6 +7.9 +11.4+10.8 C A A largest in more InvCoAmA m 37.23 +.38 +1.5 +12.2 +16.2+12.9 C 6 C than three NewPerspA m38.37 +.31 +5.8 +9.6 +13.7+11.2 8 A 8 weeks. Crude WAMutlnvA m41.23 +.48 +1.1 +11.2 +15.7+14.2 8 6 A oil dipped modDodge &Cox Income 13.84 +.81 +1.1 + 4 .3 + 4.0 +5.0 D 6 8 estly, while natIntlStk 4 4.26 +.26 +5.1 + 3.1 +12.6 +8.3 8 A A Stock 177.79+2.84 -0.5 +8 .2 +18.5+13.9D A A ural gas was Fidelity Contra 101. 9 1+1.82+5.0 +15.3 +16.0+15.1 C 6 8 close to flat. ContraK 101 . 86+1.83+5.1 +15.5 +16.1+15.2 C 6 8 LowPriStk d 51.51 +.39 +2.5 + 9 .0 +15.5+14.3 D D C Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 74.18 +.90 +1.8 +14.6 +16.4+14.5 B 6 A FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.42 +.81+0.7 +0.6 +8.4 +8.4 E A A IncomeA m 2. 4 0 +.82+1.3 + 1.6 + 9.1 +9.0 E A A Oakmark Intl I 25.14 +.82 +7.7 + 1 .6 +13.4+10.1 8 A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 10 +.24+0.8 +11.7 +12.8+12.3 D E D RisDivB m 17 . 77 +.21+0.6 +10.9 +11.8+11.3 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 64 +.21+0.6 +10.9 +11.9+11.4 D E E SmMidValAm 50.28 +.62 +3.3 +12.0+16.6+12.5 8 C E SmMidValB m42.26 +.51 +3.1 +11.1 +15.6+11.6 C D E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.5 3 + .43 -0.5 +6 .0 +13.5+11.7 E D D Exchange GrowStk 55.7 0 + .50 +7.2 +19.1 +17.5+16.4 A A A The dollar rose HealthSci 78.6 5+1.80+ 15.7 +46.8 +37.2+29.2 8 6 A against the euro Newlncome 9. 6 7 ... +1 .5 + 5 .1 + 3.2 +4.4 C C D and other major Vanguard 500Adml 192.38+2.34 +1.8 +14.6 +16.4+14.6 8 6 A currencies. 500lnv 192.38+2.34 +1.8 +14.4 +16.3+14.4 8 6 8 It climbed back CapOp 55.48 +.41 +5.2 +20.7 +23.8+15.9 A A A above the 120 Eqlnc 31.26 +.39 +0.8 +10.5 +15.2+14.9 8 C A yen level and is IntlStkldxAdm 27.26 +.11 +5.2 + 07 +70 N A C D once again StratgcEq 34.84 +.41 +5.8 +16.7 +21.0+18.2 A A A up for the year TgtRe2020 29.22 +.18 +2.7 +8.6 +9.8 +9.3 A A A against the TgtRe2035 18.38 +.15 +3.0 +9.5 +12.1+10.9 A 6 8 Japanese Tgtet2025 16.99 +.11 +2.8 +8.9 +10.5 +9.9 A 6 8 currency. TotBdAdml 10.97 +1.5 +5.5 +3.0 +4.3 8 D D Totlntl 16.30 +.87 +5.1 +0.6 +6.9 +5.1 C D D TotStlAdm 52.69 +.65 +2.6 +14.3 +16.7+14.9 8 6 A TotStldx 52.67 +.65 +2.6 +14.1 +16.5+14.7 8 6 A USGro 31.55 +.32 +5.5 +19.4 +17.4+15.4 A A B FAMILY

CATEGORY Mid-Cap Blend C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * *** r r Can-Fite -3.34 -60.3 AdamisPh -1.56 -28.9 ASSETS $1,463 million -3.38 -24.3 BioDlvry If EXP RATIO 1.18% IRSA Prop -7.50 -20.0 MANAGER Matthew Goetzinger -3.23 -19.1 CypressEn SINCE 2009-01-30 RETURNS3-MO +1.9 Foreign Markets YTD +2.8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +9.2 Paris 5,083.52 +49.46 + . 98 3-YR ANNL +13.1 London 6,891.43 +36.41 + . 53 5-YR-ANNL +13.2 Frankfurt 12,086.01 +217.68 +1.83 Hong Kong24,855.12 +368.92 +1.51 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 43,922.83 +284.86 + . 65 Broadridge Financial Solutions 4.1 2 Milan 23,260.57 +276.34 +1.20 4.02 Tokyo 19,411.40 +1 25.77 + . 65 Genpact Ltd 3.73 Stockholm 1,687.18 +24.62 +1.48 H.B. Fuller Company Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -72.60 -1.23 Patterson Companies Inc 3.44 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,81 6.30 Zurich 9,202.18 +118.66 +1.31 Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc 3.44 redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar. NAME

-.0075

Stocksjumped Monday, as investors welcomed encouraging economic data and the latest batch of corporate deal news. Expectations that any increase in the Federal Reserve's key interest rate this year will be gradual also helped lift the market. The Commerce Department said consumer spending edged up in February following two straight monthly declines. The report also showed consumers' incomes rose, a development that could mean higher spending in coming months. A gauge of future home sales surged to its highest level since June 2013. All 10 sectors of the Standard & Poor's index gained. Energy stocks rose the most, telecommunications companies the least.

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Tuesday, March 31, 2015

91

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FUELS

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

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

CLOSE PVS. 48.68 48.87 1.53 1.49 1.73 1.73 2.64 2.59 1.80 1.80

CLOSE PVS. 1184.80 1199.80 16.66 17.05 1116.90 1143.60 2.79 2.78 728.70 740.65

%CH. %YTD -0.39 -8.6 -6.0 +0.07 +0.21 -6.3 -8.5 +0.19 +0.14 +25.5 %CH. %YTD - 1.25 + 0 . 1 - 2.32 + 7 . 0 -2.33 -7.6 +0.45 -1.8 -1.62 -8.7

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -1.9 1.63 1.63 -0.07 Coffee (Ib) 1.32 1.38 -4.23 -20.6 -0.6 Corn (bu) 3.95 3.91 +0.90 Cotton (Ib) 0.63 0.64 - 1.62 + 3 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 279.30 282.60 -1.17 -15.6 -17.8 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.15 1.15 Soybeans (bu) 9.68 9.67 +0.05 -5.1 Wheat(bu) 5.30 5.08 +4.43 -10.1 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.4815 -.0058 -.39% 1.6645 Canadian Dollar 1.2 684 +.0084 +.66% 1.1055 USD per Euro 1.0823 -.0076 -.70% 1.3751 JapaneseYen 120.16 +1.06 +.88% 102.79 Mexican Peso 15. 2 567 +.0644 +.42% 13.0820 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9657 -.0003 -.01% 3.5012 Norwegian Krone 8 . 0215 +.0658 +.82% 6.0086 South African Rand 12.1379 +.0935 +.77% 10.5886 Swedish Krona 8.5 9 6 1 + .0253 +.29% 6.5015 Swiss Franc .9676 +.0068 +.70% . 8 868 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.3068 +.0175 +1.34% 1.0810 Chinese Yuan 6.2109 -.0073 -.12% 6.2122 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7555 +.001 2 +.02% 7.7584 Indian Rupee 62.540 -.006 -.01% 59.895 Singapore Dollar 1.3765 +.0074 +.54% 1.2587 South KoreanWon 1107.66 +3.12 +.28% 1067.21 Taiwan Dollar 31.30 + . 1 0 + .32% 3 0 .47


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

DEEDS Deschutes County • Margaret L. Gregory, trustee for the Margaret L. Gregory Revocable Living Trust, andKenneth D. Stevens, trustee for the Kenneth D.StevensTrust and the Patricia A.Stevens Trust, and Deanna Alacano, trustee for the Louieand DeannaAlacano Trust, to Larry and TheresaKing, Bend Park, Lots 9012, Block 78, $576,000 • Timothy K. andSherri L. O'Reilley to Charlesand Janet Meulink, Holliday Park, SecondAddition, Lot 1, Block3, $237,000 JoseJ. and LauranJ.Torres to Jon W.and Kathryn R. Fiero, trustees of theJon and Kathryn FieroTrust, Fairhaven, Phase10, Lot 30, $285,000 • Larry L Wilson to Pilcher Properties LLC,WagonTrail North, First Addition, Lot 3, Block 5, $185,000 • Dennis P.andTina M.Jonesto Michael G. and Debbie J.Burk, Northpointe, Phase3, Lot 83, $259,900 • Richard E. andBuffy L. Bromleyto Veronica L and Matthew P.Kunitzer, Partition Plat1992-2, Parcel 2, $555,000 • New 500 BondLLCto Pacific NW BendLLC, Partition Plat 2014-11, Parcel1, $1,635,000 • Nancy K. Caryto the Oregon Housingand Community Services Department andthe State of Oregon, ForkedHorn Estates, Lot 2, Block1, $179,017 • John M. FarleyandJudy L. Schuster to Robert W.and E. StephanieFries, Ridge at Eagle Crest43, Lot13, $340,000 • Christopher A. Barcaand Jean-Clare Plebani, trustees of the Brenda H.Barca Trust, to Christopher S. andColleen M.McKeage, Arrowhead, Phases1-4, Lot 35, $206,000 • Tara E.Casperto Vicki R. Reynolds, AspenGlen Townhomes,Stage1, Lot5, $175,000 • Sage Builders LLCto John M. FarleyandJudy L. Schuster, Ridge atEagle Crest 58, Lot 23, $399,900 • West CoastTrust Co. Inc., trustee of theMartinson Family GSTExempt Trust, to FernandoandMelissa Gottlieb, AwbreyButte Homesites, Phase18, Lot 24, Block11, $499,000 • SFI CascadeHighlands LLC to Gregand Stephanie Knecht, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot 77, $215,000 • Kimberly M. Sulipeck, personal representative of the estate of Marilyn Marsha Obers, to Rodney C. Miller, Mountain Peaks, Phase 2, Lot35, $295,000 • Robert K. andDarcie A. Flath, trustees of theRobert and Darcie FlathFamily Trust, to DuaneandJeanna Buxton, Partition Plat199441, Parcel1, $300,000 • Joyce K. Strickland to William D.andLisa K. Holloway, Mountain Pines P.U.D., Phase2, Lot111, $625,000 • Ryan A. andSuzanne E. Young to Shane and Angel Moffitt, Lea Estates, Lot5, $275,000 •Michael Yablonsky and Karla Lorentson toW. Patrick McDermott and Tajah L. Neubo,River Canyon EstatesNo. 3,Lot 223, $355,000 • Fannie Mae,also known as the FederalNational Mortgage Association, to Tara E.Casper,27th Street Addition, Lot13, $206,400 • Georgia V.Cornell, trustee of the Georgia V.Cornell RevocableTrust, to Gregory D. and Jennifer J. Powell, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 6, Lot 299, $500,000 • Katherine A. Waxto Matthew N.Simmons and Rachael A.Ream,Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase2, Lot1, Block4, $655,000 • Alexander S. Macmilan III, trustee of theMacMillan Family Trust, to LazyAce LLC, Township16, Range 12, Section 7,$350,000 • Barbara M. Carrington to Ira D. andCheryl M. Bullock, PineTree Meadows, Phase2, Lot 48, $169,500 • Scott Wyman to Darren M.W. andKristin J. Gyford, Township17, Range13, Section 27,$535,000 • Eric D. andSharon K. Schrenk, trustees of the Schrenk Joint Trust, to Charles F.and Kathleen S. Conrad, trustees of the Conrad Family Living Trust, Lazy River South, Lot 70, Block 3, $825,000 • Colleen Vidal, who acquired title asColleen Marie Smith, to Tasha Huskey, ObsidianEstates No. 3, Lot125, $167,000 • Cynthiaand Gerald Currence toSeth B. Isenberg, trustee of the Steven B. Isenbergand

a 's

EXECUTIVE FILE What:Education Framework What it does:Sells software that digitizes paperwork, among other things, to school

ia

districts

as i

Pictured:Jim Onstad, W president of Education Framework Where:19774Clarion Avenue, Bend Phone:877-978-1583 Wohsite:www.education framework.com

ans By Ben Sisario ~

I

New York Times News Service

1~

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

As Jay Z sees it, there is a dear solution to the prob-

ream inin e ermission s i

lems facing musicians inthe stteaming age. They should band together — behind him, of course. On Monday, Jay Z, the rap star and entertainment mogul,

announced his plans for Tidal, a subscription stteaming service he recentlybought for $56 million. Facing competition from Spotify, Google and other companies that will soon in-

By Stephen Hamways The Bulletin

dude Apple, Tidalwillbe fashioned as a home for high-fideli-

Near the end of 2013, Jim Onstad and his wife, Katie, were looking for their next idea for a new company. Onstad's experience as a father of two daughters in public elementary school provided the outlet. "We dealwith education every day as parents," Jim Onstad said. "And we wanted to be able to do

ourpart to make sure our kids were learningin a safe, secure, private environment." Fromthere, the software startup Education Framework was born. Onstad's company offers several

services, buthe said the overarching goal was simple: to streamline the parental consent process for

to view which parents have sent in their forms.

"Basically allthe processingthat

would need to be done for these

paper forms is done automatically," Onstad said. Onstad said EdPrivacy features

a list of websites and applications beingused in classrooms and rates each one according to a privacy quality score, which pulls from privacypolicies and terms of agree-

schools while makingthe whole experience as transparent as possible. As a parent, Onstad had dealt with the hassle of getting permission slips and other paperwork home and signed. And whenhe

ment. From there, apps are rated on a scale of one to five stars, with

reached out to a local school district for a beta test, he found that school

parency for parents, Onstad said that EdPrivacy also reduces lia-

administrators were looking for

bility for schools and districts. For

ways to make parental consent eas-

apps that receivepoor scores on privacy, the software also provides

ier as well, particularlyregarding technologyusage in classrooms. "For school districts, it's a matter

of having to process hundreds, if not thousands, of forms," Onstad

detailed breakdowns about what personal information the app does

and doesn't collect thatparents and administrators can view. In addition to increasing trans-

a summary of what precautions the district wouldhave to take to avoid

running afoul of the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, a 1998

federal lawthat determines what and probably not the best way to do information canbe collected for things." children under 13. Education Framework offers After spending most of last year three distinctprograms: EdCondeveloping the software, Onstad sent, which digitizes paperpermis- said, he is ready to start promoting sion slips; EdPrivacy, which rates it. Onstad presented Education applications beingused in dassFramework on Thursday to the aurooms ontheirprivacystandards; dience at Economic Development and EdApproval, which digitizes for Central Oregon's Pub Talk. The vacation requests and other paper- software is not currently being work for teachers and administraused in any districts, except as a tors. Onstad said EdConsent and betatest, but he is intalks to bring EdPrivacy canbebundledthrough it to as many as 30 or 40 districts a program called EdProtect. by2017. "Whenever we demo this softFor EdConsent, the application canbuild new forms or convert ex- ware, we get a reaction like, 'Oh isting files into the system and send yeah, you've reallyidentified a them via email directly to parents, need,"' Onstad said. "So right now, we're trying to transition those who can signthe form electronically on multiple platforms. Onstad comments into value that we can said the system allows parents to bringto schools." view a list of completed andpend— Reporter: 541-617-7818, ing forms, while administrators get shamway@bendbuffetin.com said. "It's inefficient and clunky

Beverly IsenbergRevocable Trust, SummerCreek, Phase 1, Lot13, $195,000 • Arbor Builders LLC toMark Thibertand Jasmine I. Low, Partition Plat 2013-13,Parcel 1, $475,000 • Edgar A. andPatrice M. Westphalto TerenceC. Blackburn, South Meadow Homesite Section, First Addition, Lot 76, $165,000 • Jerry and MaryA. Boddum to JS Contracting Inc., Township17, Range12, Section11, $265,000 • Richard F. andEileen K. Sanders to Michael A.and Julie D. Steward,trustees for the StewardFamily Revocable Living Trust, Junipine Acres, Lot 7, $525,000 • Curtiss L. Feltnerto George J. Cocores Jr., Deschutes, Lot 4, Block 7,$229,900 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Alex N. and Diana C. Short, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 85, $289,000 • Ken and CarolVandomelen and Dixon andLinda Ingalls to Steven W.and NancyS. Mackey, Township 22,Range 9, Section 9, $151,900 • Structure DevelopmentNW LLC to Stephen H. Warden,

NorthWest Crossing, Phases 20-22, Lot 856, $492,000 • John P. andVirginia D. Belza to James E.and Barbara Brown-Quinn, trustees of the Quinn-Brown FamilyTrust, Ridge atEagleCrest19, Lot 67, $200,000 • Donald A. Ferraluolo to James E.and Barbara Brown-Quinn, trustees of the Quinn-Brown FamilyTrust, Ridge atEagleCrest19, Lot 67, $200,000 • Matthew andNicole Olts to NancyL.Watson,Mountain Pines P.U.D.,Phase4-5, Lot 61, $296,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to James F.Hulvat, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot100, $257,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to James W.andAnne L. Southam, AwbreyWoods, Phase1, Lot 9, $357,500 • Bernard J. andAimeeJ. LaCasse toRichard W.and Joanna R.Hughey, Hollow Pine Estates, Phase1, Lot9, $300,000 •Rosaand GiacomoM. Somenzi to Bernard J.and Aimee J. LaCasse,Hollow Pine Estates, Phase5, Lot 95, $390,000

the softQ •• With ware existing

in the cloud, have you heard anyconcerns from parents orteachers? • In terms of • the system residing on the cloud, there are questions about that. But

we've partnered with Microsoft Azure services, which is over-the-top secure, to the point that it's certified for federal data.

Q •• Arethere any features thatyou anticipate adding to the software in the next five years? • There's been • some talk about adding a language translator, for the Spanish-speaking population. Also the ability for districts to create form templates, like a field trip template that every teacher in the district could use.

ty audio and exdusive content.

But perhaps the most notable part of Jay Z's strategy is that a majority of the company willbe owned by artists. The move may bring financial benefits for those involved, but

it is also powerfully symbolic in a business where musicians

have seldom had direct control over how their work is consumed. "This is aplatformthat's

owned by artists," Jay Z said in an interview as he prepared last week forthe news conference announcingthe service. The plan was unveiled Monday at abriefbut highly choreographed news conference inManhattan, where Jay

Z stood alongside more than a dozen musicians identified as Tidal's owners. They included Rihanna, Kanye West, Madonna, Nicki Minaj, Jack White, Alicia Keys, country singer Jason Aldean, French dance duo Daft Punk (in signature robot costumes), members ofArcade Fire, and Beyonce, Jay Z's wife. The stars stood side-by-side and signed an unspecified "dedaration." Jay Z's plan is the latest entry in an escalating battle

over streaming music, which has become the industry's fast-

est-growing revenue source but has also drawn criticism for its economic model. Major record

labels, as well as artists like Taylor Swift, have also openly challenged the so-called freemium model advocated by Spotify, which offers free access to music as a way to lure custom-

ers to paying subscriptions. Tidal, which makes millions of songs and thousands of high-definition videos available in 31 countries, will have no free version. Instead, it will

have two subscription tiers definedby audio quality: $10 a month for a compressed format

(the standard on most digital outlets) and $20 for CD-quality streams.

BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Word fer Beginners: Introduction to Microsoft Word. Learn to navigate menus, get help feature, type andedit text and save andopen adocument. Prerequisites: Computers for Beginners; free; registration required; 10:30 a.m.-noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7085 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. • SCORE free business counseling:Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.SCORECentralOregon.org. WEDNESDAY • Business Startup:Atwohour class to decide if running a business is for you. 11 a.m.; $29; registration required; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. • Introduction to Visio: Learn fundamental skills while creating several types of basic diagrams

including workflows, flowcharts, organizational charts, directional maps, network and floor plans; registration required; class runs through June 3; Wednesdays; $360; 12:45 p.m.-3:05 p.m., Central Oregon Community College BendCampus,2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/continuinged. • SCORE free business workshop:Operations management and structure; final monthly workshop; registration required; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www.scorecentraloregon.org. THURSDAY • Conversationswith funders: Learn how cultural nonprofits may apply for more than $4.7 million in grant funds this year; 10 a.m. Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; http://bit.ly/f Hz7aiw. • HiDECApril Event, Transfermingyoucompany's culture:A session that combines real-life examples, stories, and solutions for various challenges around company

culture; $55 members; $95 nonmembers, registration required; 8:30-11:30 a.m.; BendPark & Recreation District Office, 799 SW Columbia St.; 541-388-3236 or jessi@edcoinfo.com. • Managing Diversity in the Workplace — Part of the Leadership Series; develop strategies to capitalize on diversity as an asset in your work group. Registration required; $95; 8 a.m.-noon; COCCBendCampus, 2600 NW College Way, Bend;541383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. FRIDAY • HousingSolutions Showcase: Learn about urban, dense, sustainable solutions to our housing affordability issues with Bend 2030 and theAmerican Institute of Architects; 5 p.m. St. Clair Place, 920 BondSt., Bend; http:I/bend2030.org/ announcing-housing-solutionsshowcase/or 541-420-8603. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal

BRIEFING Powdr Corp. buys event organizer Powdr, the parent companybehindMt. Bachelor ski area,has acquired HumanMovement Management, HMM, anevent production companythat produces foot races, festivals, triathlons andother outdoor events, Powdr announced recently. Based in Louisville, Colorado, HMM produces large-scale participatory events suchas the Dirty Girl Mud Run, the Rocky Mountain Triathlon andTheDenver Oktoberfest. "We are uniquely positioned at Powdrto integrate world-class facilities with innovative programming," Wade Martin, president of Powdr Enterprises, of Park City, Utah, saidin a news release."Weare really excited to seewhat we can dotogether." In addition to Mt. Bachelor, Powdroperates sevenother mountain resorts: Copper Mountain Resort in Summit County, Colorado; Killington Resort and Pico Mountain in Killington, Vermont; andBoreal Resortand SodaSprings Resort in DonnerSummit, California; Gorgoza Park in ParkCity, Utah; and LasVegasSki 8 Snowboard Resort in Nevada.

Firm to handle pot licenses The Oregon Liquor Control Commission has selected aKansas firm to handle applications for recreational marijuana business licenses, the agency announced Monday. NIC USAInc. also operates the E-Government program for the Oregon Department of Administrative Services, which provides similar licensing services for other state agencies and a uniform appearance for all state websites, among other services. "Under the agreement, NIC USA,Inc. will build a secure online application that will be used by recreational marijuana licenseapplicants to apply for a new license, renewan existing one, pay license fees by credit card, pay marijuana taxes in accordance with new law, and update license information," according to an OLCCnews release. The NICagreement will cost the state

$80,000 annually, with no up-front costs, according to the OLCC.

Tax refunds for Oregonians Oregon taxpayers left $14.2 million in refunds unclaimed for 2011by not filing federal tax returns, according to the IRS.

About17,500 taxpayers could collect a refund by filing a return for that year. Thelawallows three years to claim a refund if one isowed,according to an IRSnews release. Thewindow to apply for a 2011refund closes April15. About half of the potential refunds areworth about $600 each. "People could be missing out on asubstantial refund, especially students or part-time workers," IRSCommissioner John Koskinen stated in anews release. Tax forms andinstructions areavailable online at the IRS.gov Forms andPublications page, or bycalling 800-829-3676. — Bulletin staffreports


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D4 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

FOOD

Himalayan pinksalt

Kala namak Aslightly sulfuric salt

A popular salt mined in Pakistan

from India

Ryan Brennecks/The Bulletin

Thishomemade market bag filled with produce and other items from the store is

easy to make.

HawaiianAlaea seasalt

Fusiontoasted

Smoked salishsalt

OIIIOII

Salts can besmoked to add flavor to food.

A flavored salt

This salt's iron content makes it red.

Make it: A reusable bag that's easy tosew By Linda Turner Gnepentrog For The Bulletin

Kosher flake salt

Seasalt Can be ground fine or coarse

Coarse crystals make kosher salt a favorite of cooks everywhere.

Do you have a twinge of guilt when the checkout clerk asks the inevitable question, "paHOME pe r or plastic?" Because, alas, you left the reusable bags in the car again. In some areas ofthecountry, reusable shopping bags are the only wayto go, as other options are banned. So why not make a tote

as pretty as anybag you'd want to carry and keep it in the front seat, not only for

• Kosher, sea or Himalayan?White, black or red? Youroptions are plentiful with this kitchen staple

groceryhauling, but for other shoppingtasks as well'?

ByLindaTurner Griepentrog aFor The Bulletin

as it's sturdy, wears well, washes easily and is simple

Canvas is ideal for totes

to sew. If you're serious

e eat it every day, whether knowingly or hidden in almost every common food. But what is salt, really'? We're all familiar with the white sprinkles coming out of the shaker, but did you know that there are many

about using your bags, pick a fashion print in a dark color, so that dirt doesn't

show. This roomy carry-all is 15 inches wide, 16 inches

types of salt, and not all are white? There's tan, pink, black, red, gray and even green salt.

tall and 4 inches deep, so

loadit up! Salt, a crystalline blend

in a salt grinder. Unlike its

of sodium and chloride, can

be derived from sea water or from the earth (through salt mining), and it is the only "rock" that humans eat. Depending on how it's pro-

.. h ~

g

i

finercousins,coarsesaltis more resistant to moisture and

What you'll need

doesn't cake duringstorage.

decorator canvas

It's ideal for making salt crusts

onmeats and addingfreshground flavor to other foods. When grinding salt, be sure that the grinder has ceramic or plastic blades, as

cessed, flakes and crystals

can be very fine up to nugget size. Salts vary not only by

• '/s-yard, 54-inch-wide • I/s yard 1'/4-inch-wide

webbing (handles) • 5 yards double-fold bias tape

• Matching thread • Ruler

the size of the granules and

salt can corrode metal grind-

• Pins

color, but also by their texture and flavors. Flavor is

ing blades.

• Scissors • Sewing machine

Fleur de sel

influenced by how the salt is

processed andtheminerals

Sometimes known as the

"caviar of salts," this is a

contained within. Some salt types have min-

premium salt, both in avail-

erals added to them, such as iodine, and others have anti-caking agents to keep the crystals from clumping

SaltWorks, www.seasalt.com / Submitted photos

Salt comes in a widevariety of colors, depending on its mineral content.

together. Check the label

before purchasing if you're looking for a purer variety. Here's a look at some common salts you might want to

add to your kitchen arsenal, according to SaltWorks,

a Woodinville, Washington-based salt company, and other salt experts.

Black salts Also known as kala na-

range from brown to black. Other black salts come from

flavoring.

mak, this salt is mined in

Hawaii and contain small

Coarse/grinder salt

India and has a slightly sulfuric flavor. Its coloring can

amounts of charcoal, which creates the color and unique

Large chunky crystals of coarsesaltareidealforuse

Getting started 1. From the canvas, cut two 20-inch squares for the

ability and in price. True fleurde selcomes from a specific region in France and is harvested and processed by hand using only wooden

bag. 2. On each of the two

tools and traditional Celtic

length in half to make two

methods. Because the harvest is weather dependent,

handles.

lower bag corners, cut out

a 2-inch square. 3. Cut the webbing

one batch can be produced

Sewingthetote

per year. It goes without saying that the cost reflects

gether, sew the tote sides

the handwork involved in the

and bottom seams using

process.

a /-inch seam allowance. Press the seams open. SeeBags/D5

SeeSalt /D2

1. With right sides to-

Chances aboundtogaingardeningknowl edge,.„, ..., .„„., By Liz Douville

t

For The Bulletin

Fewgardeners areever

CENTRALOREGON COMMUNITYCOLLEGE:

completely satisfied with

their gardens. There is always something that needs

• www.cocc.edu/continuinged or 541-383-7270 CENTRALOREGON MASTER GARDENER

improvement ora chore we

wished we

GARDEN wouldhave done. I admire

ASSOCIATION(FREE

people who keep detailed garden records. I'm probably with the majority in keeping sketchy notes. Unfortunately, that leads to utter confusion

CLASSESANDSPRING

SEMINAR): • www.goCOMGA.com or call the OSUExtension office at 541-548-6088

when seed catalogs arrive and

you are in the "I-want-it-all" mindset, conveniently forgetting the unsuccessful experiences from last year.

Resources

Andy Tullis /The Bulletin file photo

this summer for our veggies

Amy Neilson, of Bend, waters vegetables in her lot at the Hollinshead Community Garden in Bend in September. The community

and fruit due to the winter's crazy weather?

a deep breath, conjure up the good, bad and the ugly from last year and make plans for the coming season. Educational opportunities

garden is one location of upcominggarden education classes.

From the class schedules and calendars I have received,

abound for those with a devel-

in need of some refresher information. And sometimes we

This is a good time to take

oping interest in gardening or

I decided to count up and see

the seasonal gardeners looking for new areas to explore or

just need a shove to get back with it. Have you stopped to think that we may be paying considerably higher prices

what is out there for the year (see "Resources" for more information). SeeClasses/D4

Verde:Green salsa can bejust about anything you want it to be:

Salsa Verde,D3

Mushroommeals aplenty: With a little bit of work on the

weekend, mushroom confit can provide recipe inspiration all week long: Mushroom g Confit, Pan-Roasted Chicken with Mushroom Confit, Mushroom Confit ComteTart, D2 Fool QSA:Grilled lamb that's fit for Easter lunch,D3 Fool fight:How to make scrambled eggs —the right way,03 Recipe Finder:Chocolate Chip Layer Cakeis perfect for any special occasion,D3


D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

FOOD Sait

us roomconi ee Son ivin

Continued from 01

Gourmet salts Cooks around th e w o rld

embracethe use of gourmet salts in their food preparation, and you'll find salts of all sorts that fit the bill to impart

unique flavors. Salts can be smoked to add superb flavor

to meat or fish, they can be combined with other spices and flavorings, including chili, lime, lemon or even chocolate, and they can be custom blend-

By Cathy Barrow When it's time to make

dinner, I enjoy the conceptualizing, I love the cooking and, when I have time, I luxuriate in the chopping and knife work as a slow, then there are those nights when makingdinner seems a lmost

unique flavor combinations.

because the recipe itself is difficult or the ingredients challenging to source, but because time is short and the prep work seems

This light pink salt is harvested from Pakistan, which houses the second-largest salt mine in the world. It contains

Makes 4 servings This tart is one of the best reasons to keep puff pastry in the freezerat all times. With mushroom confit already in your pantry, the tart can be assembled in minutes. A shared tart, a crisp, acidic salad and a split of champagnemakethe perfect weekend lunch for two. Or serve as an individual, elegant first course, or cut into small squaresfor passing asone-bite hors d'oeuvres.

pleasant meditation. And

ed with onions, garlic, etc., for

Himalayan pink salt

Mushroom Confit Comte Tart

Special to The Washington Post

i m p ossible, n o t

2 oz pancetta, cut into sm dice

(optional) 1 Igegg yolk

insurmountable.

trace amounts of iron oxide,

That's where mushroom confit comes into play. With

which gives it the characteris-

a little bit of weekend work,

tic color, adding interest when it tops food. Containing lower

this jar of umami sits in the refri gerator, ready for recipe inspiration all week long. Use the preserved photosby Deb undsey/For The washington post mushrooms for quick pasta Here you poach the fungi delicately in a lightly flavored olive oil, preserving a mess of mushrooms all sauces or pizza toppings, or at once. tuck them under the skin of a chicken for pan roasting. Mushroom Confit Meaty and satisfying, the mushrooms are waiting Makes 1 pint clean glass pint jar and an instant-read thermometer. to be dashed across a puff You'll need a pastrytart, studdedthrough Use the velvety, meaty mushrooms in pizza, tacos andbreadpudding; added to astir-fry; tucked into an omelet. bread pudding, rolled up in A mix of mushrooms works aswell as asingle batch of cremini or button mushrooms.

amounts of sodium than other

types, the flavor is slightly different from traditional salt versions. This salt in its coarse form

works well in salt grinders.

Kosher Coarse white crystals make kosher salt a favorite of cooks everywhere, as it's easy to "add

a pinch" when you can hold the individual crystals in your fingertips. The crystals dissolve quickly, imparting their flavor to everything from meat to popcorn. Use kosher salt on

soft pretzels and around the rim of margarita glasses. The salt itself isn't kosher-

the name derives from the fact that it is used in curing meat, a step in the koshering process.

Picklingsalt Used for brining things such as pickles, sauerkraut or poultry, fine-grain pickling is more concentrated than coarser salts,

so lessis needed compared to other salt types. It is the purest of salts, as there is no iodine or

anti-caking agents added to it. Why? These can make pickles an unappetizing color.

Popcornsalt Ground very finely to adhere topopcorn kernels,this family favorite can also be combined with other flavor-

ings such as powdered butter, cheddarcheese,dilloronion.

Rocksalt Mined from the earth, rock salt is not often used for flavor-

ing food, though some varieties can be consumed. These large chunky crystals are used in an ice cream maker to help the dessertfreeze quickly, or they can be sprinkled on an icy driveway to help with melting for safertrekking. Because it has minerals and other impuri-

ties init, rocksalt is often agray color. It's sold in supermarkets and also at hardware stores.

Seasalt Sea salt, as its name implies,

is from the ocean, gathered off coastlines worldwide. Typically, sea salt is processed with

sun drying and not refined, so therearetrace mineralspresent in the finished product.

Crystal sizes can vary from fine to coarse, and the size of the crystals affects how quick-

ly the salt dissolves in liquid. Depending on the where the salt comes from and how it's

processed, it may not always be white. Mineral content also

changes color. For example, Hawaiian seasaltcan bered or pink due to the iron content. Sea salt is also available in

flaked form, much of it produced off England's Essex coastlineand marketed under

a popular brand name Maldon. Because the finishing process involves using sun and wind to evaporate the water, flaked sea salt offers a more briny flavor than that of its crystalline

cousins, andtheflakesaresoft, making them dissolve rapidly.

a taco or spooned into an omelet. Mushroom confit is

1~/ Ibs mushrooms(see note)

a great place to start almost anything in the kitchen.

1 tsp kosher salt /2 to 1 C neutral olive oil or

the average kitchen and used

daily by most people to add or enhance flav ors. Usually from mines, this type of salt is

refined, meaning it's stripped of inherent minerals during processing. Artificial iodine is sprayedoverthe crystalstoproduce the commonly available iodized salt mass marketed by

Morton and other brand leaders. Table salt is also available in a noniodized form, so read la-

bels carefully whenpurchasing. — Reporter: gwizdesigns@aoLcorn

grapeseed oil, or more as

1 T BS fresh thyme leaves

needed 2 TBS minced shallot

"Confit" derives from the

French verb for "preserve,"

Make ahead:Keepthe mushrooms entirely submerged in oil, and use them oneat a time or all at once; when they're all gone, keep the oil, which is good for sautes. Both the mushrooms and oil, refrigerated in an airtight refersto a slow,low poach container, will keep for 2 weeks. in fat or oil (or sugar syrup, Clean the mushrooms by wiping them with a damp paper towel. If the stem is edible, simply trim the ends; in the case of fruits). It takes otherwise, separate the caps from the stems. Reserve the stems to make amushroom broth (see note, below) time and some manage- or discard. ment. A confit should never If the caps are unblemished and beautiful, plan to confit them whole; otherwise, cut the caps into /~-inch and as a DIY technique it

get hotter than 200 degrees

dlce.

Flour, for the worksurface 1 (8-oz) 9-to-10-inch-square frozen puff pastry sheet, defrosted 2 tsp Dijon-style mustard 2 TBS creme fraiche

3 oz Comte cheese, grated 1 half-pint Mushroom Confit

(see accompanying recipe) Kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper 2 TBS finely chopped parsley, for garnish Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. If you're using the pancetta, line a plate with paper towels. Cookthe pancetta in a small, dry skillet over medium heat until crisp. Transfer to the paper-towel-lined plate. Whisk the egg yolk and water together in a small bowl. Lightly flour the counter; quickly roll out the puff pastry on the floured surface, just to smooth any folds or cracks. Place on the parchment. Trim off and reserve a /~-inchwide strip from each of the 4 sides. Brush the top border of the square tart shell with the egg wash, then place 1 strip on each side of the pastry square, on top of the egg wash (to build up the edges). Prick the bottom of the tart shell with a fork. Brush the entire pastry with the egg wash. Bake until golden brown, about 15 minutes. Remove the tart from the oven; reduce the oven temperature to 350 degrees. Stir together the mustard and the creme fraiche in acup, then use a small offset knife to spread the mixture across the base ofthetart. Sprinkle the grated cheese evenly across the mustard mixture, then arrange the confited mushrooms so they cover the cheese. If using, top with the crisped pancetta. Liberally salt and pepper the entire tart; slip it back into the oven and bake for 10 to 15minutes, until the cheese is bubbling. Sprinkle with the parsley before serving.

or you risk its becoming a Place the mushroom, gill sides up, on abaking sheet. Sprinkle with the salt. Set aside to dry-brine for 30 mindeep-fry. Confits have no utes. (If diced, sprinkle with the salt and skip the 30-minute rest.) crispy edges; they are soft Heat /~ inch of the oil in a straight-sided, heavy skillet large enough to hold the mushrooms in a single layer, and gentle. Confit tech- over medium heat. Oncethe oil shimmers, add the shallot; cook for several minutes, until translucent. Add the niques may be applied to all thyme and the mushrooms, gill sides up. Reduce the heat to medium-low; cook for 15 minutes, turning the sorts of foods, from garlic mushrooms over halfway through. doves to duck legs, sweet Add enough oil so the mushrooms are fully submerged; cook gently until the oil registers170 degrees onan onions to pork rillettes. instant-read thermometer, about 20 minutes. Remove from the heat. Don't underestimate how Cool the mushrooms in the oil. Packthe mushrooms in the cleanglass jar, gently layering each one inthe jar, the process changes the tex- then covering with oil; continue layering andadding oil until all the mushrooms havebeenpacked in the Iar. Run tureof foodorhowthe flavor a chopstick or a plastic knife along the inside of the jar to releaseanyair bubbles. intensifies. The oil softens Make sure the mushrooms arecompletely submerged in the oil, then cover and refrigerate until ready to use the structure, but somehow (for up to 2 weeks). the food is neither oily nor Note:To make amushroom broth, coarsely chop the mushroom stems, then steep them in hot water to cover mushy, but velvety and rich. for 2 hours. Strain through cheesecloth or acoffee filter, and usethe resulting intense mushroom broth in soups Total submersion is the or sauces. Or simply sip it, garnished with fresh chives. — From cookbookauthor CathyBarrow key to maintaining preservation. As long as the food is completely covered by the Pan-Roasted Chicken with Mushroom Confit liquid, it will keep for quite some time. Many confits Makes 4servings may be canned, and others If you have time, first brine the chicken bycombining it with 1 teaspoon of must be kept refrigerated. salt and 2cups of buttermilk in a largezip-top bag. Sealandrefrigerate overFruit confits are shelf sta- night or up to 24hours. Pat dry beforecooking. (Discard the brine.) bleforayearifprocessed in a waterbath canner. Duck 2 tsp kosher salt 2 TBS unsalted butter confit, pork rillettes and tuna 8 bone-in, skin-on chicken 2 Ig yellow onions, cut in half and cured in oil keep for up to two thighs or 4chicken leg then into thinhalf-moons years if jarred and pressure quarters(brined if desired) 3 cloves garlic, smashed canned, but require three 8 TBS Mushroom Confit 8 tsp freshly groundblackpepper months to curebefore eating. (made with chopped /4 C flat-leaf parsley, chopped — From cookbookauthor CathyBarrow As a starter project, mushcremini mushrooms;see 1 C dry white wine room confit is ready to eat accompanying recipe) 1 C tomato puree immediately and keeps for V C flour 1 C homemade orno-salt-added twoweeksintherefrigerator. 2TBS olive oil chicken broth A few quick minutes of SUN FoREsT preparation is all it takes to Season the chickenall over with1 teaspoon of the salt. (Omit this step if CoNSTRUcTION confitamessof mushrooms. the chicken hasbeenbrined; seeheadnote.) If they are beautiful fungi, Arrangethe chicken pieces, skinside up,on arimmed bakingsheet. Runtwo the caps unblemished, con- fingers underthe skin of each pieceto makea pocket; tuck in1 tablespoonof fit them whole. If they are the mushroomconfit for eachthigh or 2 tablespoons for eachlegquarter. Pat DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL 2 locations inBend a little worse for wear, not down sothe confit is evenly distributed underthe skin. PAINT Main Center so beautiful, or the munSpread the flour on aplate. Heatthe oil andbutter in a large, straight-sid2150IIEStudioRd,SuiteIO 803 SWIndustrial Way, Bend, OR dane but delicious cremini ed skillet over medium heat. Once the butter is foamy, carefully lift the NWX or button mushrooms, a chicken pieces, taking care not to dislodge the mushrooms, andcoat both 2863Nortwhest CrossingDr suite 11O few quick pulses in the food sides in the flour, shaking off anyexcess. Discard anyremaining flour. 541-389-9252 processor will do a perfect Arrange the chicken pieces in the skillet; cook, undisturbed, for about sylvan@bendbroadband.com rough chop for a heavenly 6 minutes or until browned, thencarefully turn them over andcook for 3 to mushroom concoction that 4 minutes on the second side. Transfer to a plate. (The chicken will not be confits quiddy, leaving it cooked through; if your skillet is not large enough to accommodate even ready to spoon over toast, browning, work intwo batches.) stir through a quinoa risotto Pour off about 3 tablespoons offat from the skillet; there should beabout or stuff inside ravioli. 3 tablespoons of fat left in the skillet. (If using leg quarters, pour off about 6 When the day was a tablespoons of fat.) Addthe onions andgarlic. Stir well to coat, then addthe Lawu 4 Landseape Madntenauee doozy, forgetthezen ofprep remaining teaspoon ofsalt, the pepperandthe parsley; cook until the onions work. Grab a jar of mush- are translucentandsoft, about 6 minutes. room confit, make a quick Discard the garlic. Stir in the wine, increase the heat to medium-high; pan roast or a tasty tart, and once the mixture comes to a boil, cook for about 5 minutes or until it has reembraceyour meditative mo- duced by half. Stir in the tomato pureeand broth to form a rich sauce;once ment with a big glass of wine it starts to bubble at theedges, return the chicken pieces to the skillet, skin ,Serving, and puppy vtdeos mstead. side up, nestling them in thesauce. Reducethe heat to medium-low; cover ", Central Oregon — Barrow is the author of and cook for about 25 minutes or until the chicken is tender and cooked "Mrs. Wheelbarrow s Practical through. Servehot. ':.for Over

e J..

Pantry: Recipes and Techniques for Year-Round Preserving,"

Table salt This type of salt is found in

1 TBS water

eott

— From cookbookauthor CathyBarrow

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TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D

ChocolateChipLayer Cake

D3

OW 0 mix u SaSa ver e

is fit for aspecialoccasion

By Amy Scattergood By Julie Rothman The Baltimore Sun

Madeline Meushaw of Bal-

timore was in search of a good recipe for a chocolate chip layer cake made from scratch.

She haslostherrecipe forthe cake and was hoping a reader would be able to help her out.

Somewhat surprisingly, I did not receive any recipes from readers, but there are

many excellent ones for the classic cake available both

Los Angeles Times

RECIPE FINDER Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Balti-

more, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.

Of the myriad dishes that sound better in languages other than English — tonkot-

su for pig broth, xiaolongbao for soup dumplings — you might want to add salsa verde. Because green sauce, although plain and serviceable, sounds about as appetizing as a bowl of your kid's kindergarten paint. Call it what you like, salsa verde can be one of the most

in cookbooks and online. I

versatile and lovely sauces in

particularly liked the chocolate chip layer cake recipe I er with the delectable frosting came across by Reeni Pisano you will have an impressive of New York City on her blog, looking and delicious layer Cinnamon-Spice & E very- cake perfectfor any special thing Nice. She said that her occasion. recipe was adapted from a

any cook's repertoire. It's easy, as you just throw a bunch of green stuff in a food processor (or a blender, or a mortar and pestle). It's seaKirk McKoy/Los Angeles Times/TNS sonally adjustable; the green Salsa verde can include just about anything you want — even things that aren't green, like garlic. stuf f can be whatever you

cake recipe in the cookbook

find at the farmers market-

Requests

"Tate's Bake Shop: Baking For Linda Wilson of Columbia, Friends" by Kathleen King. Maryland, is hoping to find This cake batter is made the recipe for the yellow layer with two eggs, two yolks, cake with strawberry butterbrown sugar (no white sugar) cream icing that was sold at and buttermilk, i n gredients the bakery in the now-closed that give the cake an incred-

Hutzler's department store

ible rich flavor and beautiful

in the Westview Shopping Center. She recalls that she the recipe calls for mini choc- ordered one for her daughter's olate chips. As Pisano says, 1st birthday, now 43 years "It's imperative that you use ago. mini chocolate chips. The big Sue Rinker of B a ltimore ones will sink, even if you coat is searchingfor a recipe for them with f l our, too heavy something she made many even for this batter. This cake years ago when her children works because the batter is were young called "pizza in a thick enough to hold up those tunneL" lightweight, little chips." At the time it was not a big Her recipe makes a very hit with her family, so she did texture. The other key is that

generous amount of batter. Pi-

not keep the recipe. But her

sano advises baking the cake son, who is now 40, has often in two springform pans so talked about this dinner. Rinkyou don't have to worry about er would like to surprise him them overflowing. If you don't with it if she can locate the have springform pans, she recipe or something close to it. suggests using three or four The dish had traditional pizza regular cake pans to make a ingredients inside some kind multila yered cake, or use can of dough or crust. She has a always use the extra batter to

vague memory that the crust

make cupcakes. Regardless may have been made with of the number of layers you crescent rolls or Pillsbury bisend up with, when put togeth- cuit dough.

Chocolate Chip Layer Cake Makes 1 9-inch cake Softened butter and flour for

the pans

1'/s C (9 oz) miniature chocolate

2 tsp baking powder

FROSTING: /s C light heavy cream /2 C butter, softened i/4 tsp salt /s C unsweetened cocoa powder, sifted 1 tsp vanilla extract

brown sugar 16 TBS (~/ Ib) unsalted butter,at

room temperature

Salsa Verde Makes bout1i/2cups

2 cloves garlic

1 bunch cilantro, large stems

'/4 tsp kosher salt Zest and juice of 2 limes

removed

5 oz raw spinach leaves

Put the garlic, salt, lime zestandjuice into afood processor, and process until the garlic is chopped up. Add the cilantro, greens and olive oil, and process until smooth. Add water as needed to achieve the consistency of sauce. Note:Raw jalapeno can be addedfor extra heat. Lemons can be substituted for the limes, parsley can be it with or without tomatillos, substituted for the cilantro (or use acombination), and one or a combination of other tender greens (such as garlic, onions and, of course, baby chard, kale, arugula or other herbs) can be substituted for the spinach. chiles. In the Middle East or Africa, you might throw cardamom, caraway and chil- Historically,salsa verde has been many things ment — a salad in a cup. Not es in with your parsley and to many people. In general, it's defined as a unlike gremolata or pistou, it's good spooned onto grilled cilantro and call it zhoug. In Germany, you might add sauce of herbs, some sort of acid (vinegar, meat, fish and chicken, or into eggs and serve the stuff with citrus), olive oil (or mayonnaise) and perhaps soups. Stir plenty of it into a schnitzel. Goethe apparently big bowl of brown rice or a put it on everything, or at least dairy. Youcan add anchovies and capers somewhat smaller bowl of rior make it with or without tomatillos, garlic, his mother said he did. cotta. Dip your bread into it, If parsley or cilantro is your onions and, of course, chiles. or useit as a sauce fortacos baseline, add or substitute a or savory crepes. Since it's handful of mint or basil or spun herbs and spinach, you chervil. Instead of spinach, blender or experiment with fondness for, well, flavor. can useitforan easy dose of use a bunch of arugula or even the spectrum of your favorAnd then there are all the greenery if you're too busy (reraw kale. (Just make sure that ite chiles (if not a slice of ja- spices in your cabinet that can ally?) to make an actual salad. the greens you use are fresh lapeno, then a few serranos torque up the sauce even furJust keep your new jar of and tender and that you've or Fresno chiles). When you ther. Throw in some ground salsaverde in the refrigerapulled off any thick stems.) add citrus (use a splash of ci- Sichuan peppercorns, or add tor and not in your car — as Maybe (please) think of it as der vinegar if you're bereft some minced fresh ginger. many of us do with hot sauce — since its charm, and much an alternative to juicing. of fresh lemons or limes), the As for what exactly to do You can also get more cre- zest adds another level of with a Mason jar of this stuff of its flavor, is contingent ative and throw some fresh flavor that you can move up when you're done, think of it upon freshness. It's green, afkaffir lime leaves into the or down depending on your as a dipping sauce, a condi- ter all, for a reason.

FOOD Q&A

chips (Ghirardelli if possible)

2 tsp espresso powder, optional 4 C confectioner's sugar, sifted

Preheat oven to350 degreeswith an ovenrack in thecenter. Butter and flour the sides of two 9-by-3-inch round cake orspringform pans or three 8-by-2-inch round pansand line the bottoms with parchment paper. FOR THE CAKE:

In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Measure the buttermilk with a glass measuring cup and add the vanilla to it. In a large mixing bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer, beat the brown sugar and butter together on medium speedfor 4 minutes. Add the eggs and yolks one at atime, beating well after each addition. On low speed, add the flour mixture in thirds, alternating with buttermilk in two equal additions. Beat until smooth after each addition and scrape down the sides of the bowl afew times. Gently fold in the chocolate chips. Divide the batter among the prepared pansand smooth out the tops. I scoop up the batter with a 1-cup measure to get them aseven aspossible. (If using regular cake pans, don't overfill them. Use excess to make cupcakesand place a baking sheetonyourbottom rackto catch any drips.) Bake until wooden toothpick in centers of cakes comes out clean, about 38-40 minutes for the 9-inch pans and 30-34 minutes for the 8-inch size. Cool on wire racks for 10-15minutes, then run abutter knife around the edges and turn out from the pans, or removethe rings if using springform pans. Turn cakes right side upand cool completely on wire racks. FOR THE FROSTING:

In a small saucepan, heat the cream over medium heat until it starts to bubble around theedges. Removefrom heat andallow to cool slightly. In a medium mixing bowl on medium speed, beat the butter, salt, cocoa powder, vanilla, espresso powder,i/s cup of the warm creamand half the sugar until smooth. Gradually add the remaining sugar, beating on medium speed until smooth and fluffy — about 5-6 minutes. If the frosting seemstoo thick to spread, beat in the remaining cream ateaspoon at a time until you reach a spreadable consistency. Frost the cakeright away. — FromCinnamonSpiceandEverythingNice.com;adapted from "Tate'sBakeShop: Baking forFri ends"by KathleenKing

Grilled lambin a rush, perfect for Easterlunch The Washington Post We answer questions on-

line about all things food. Here is an edited excerpt. (Recipes whose names are capitalized can be found on the Recipe Finder at washingtonpost.com/recipes.)

ever, I really need a larger

Brussels Sprouts. But any-

skillet — 12 inches — and

thing that roasts them at high heat with lots of room for air

cast iron would be too heavy for my arthritic hands to handle. What would be the next best substitute'?

A luminum i s v ery • lightweight, but it can I'd like to have the fam- also be reactive. (It can affect • ily over for an Easter the taste of acidic foods and lunch on Sunday. What is a can darken sauces.) Have good recipe for lamb on the you seenLodge'sgreatline of grill for about eight people? seasoned steel'? I have one of I'm looking for something those — smaller than 12 inchthat's traditional — g a rlic, es, though — and it's definiterosemary, etc. — but that ly lighter than cast iron. You

Q

can be made in less than two

hours. I can marinate the night before, but nothing too labor-intensive. Also, if you

A

might check them out. — Joe Yonan Do you have sources

Q

have a favorite rice pilaf rec• for good green coffee ipe that would go well with beans? the lamb, that would be a

plus.

A Jim Shahin's Grilled

• B utterflied H erb e d Lamb is a winner! With pi-

laf, there are so many ways to go. Just to change things up, checkout Green Wheat Pilaf; our classic Rice Pilaf

A from my f avorite source:

I roast my own beans • at home, and I get them

Sweet Maria's in California.

They source really well, and store their beans beautifully, and give you lots of tips on what levels to roast various varieties

with apricots; Rice Pilaf With

Chickpeas and Lemon; or Couscous and Wild Rice Pilaf

— J.Y.

Tampa Bay (F/a.) Times

In this series we acknowledge there's just something about certain foods or ways

of preparing dishes that people can be simply insufferable about. There is no debate; this

is how it should be done. We're going to put ourselves out there and declare how certain

things should be done — and releasethe hounds of debate. Feel free to tell our w r iters

how woefully misinformed they are.

The proper way

circulation would work well. — J.Y.

Q

lazy and do it directly in the When I was growing up, Dad pan, because you won't get the made the scrambled eggs in same blendedtexture.Then, our house, and he had a partic- add a splash of milk, generous ular way of doing it that result- sprinklings of salt and pepper ed in a creamy, pillowy, salty (no other seasonings allowed!) breakfast every time. I've since and, to the pan, a pat of butter. adopted his method, though Turn the burner on medium with a tad less butter and salt. heat (verging on the medi(No wonder they don't ever um-low side) and pour the taste quite as good as Dad's.) eggs in when the butter starts His eggs are consistently to melt slightly. g never make on point thanks to a couple eggs in anything other than a of tricks. First, scramble the nonstick frying pan; the cleaneggs in a bowl before pouring up is simply too annoying them into the pan. Don't be otherwise.)

(not allowed in the organic program), the farmer can treat her and then use her in the

conventional dairy when she has recovered. The USDA or-

ganic certification is closely My neighborhood su- monitored, and you can have • permarket is Safeway, confidence in it.

Q

— Tamar Haspel

and it have its own in-house

line of organic products. I've bought a lot of different

items, but I always wonder if the "organic" you get from a big industrial chain really meets the same standards for "organic" that you get with small, all-organic food companies. A friend told me I should be suspicious of any

I gave up red meat for

Q •Lent, and, to my sur-

prise, my boyfriend decided to join me even though he has no religious reason to do so. That said, he's missing the beef already. What's your best beef stand-in that is not a

mushroom or eggplant? A few things you can ganic and nonorganic prod• try: Cheese and Egg ucts (e.g., dairy milk) because "Meatballs" in Tomato Sauce it would be hard and expen- (this carnivore would be hapsive to maintain facilities for py with them any day); Pasboth. I have no assuranceta With Pistachios; Creamy though I'm paying extra for Vegetable and Cashew Nut it — that a can of chickpeas Curry. is really organic when there's — B. S.B. a nonorganic version, also Safeway brand, right next to brand that makes both or-

A

it on the shelf. If it says it's certified

A

• organic, it has to meet r e cently b o ught USDA standards. That's true with dried cherries. • Kalettes and want to of large and small, house You might like Herbed know how to cook them to brands and name brands. 'Orzotto' With Manouri for make more flavorful. Your friend isn't quite corI 'd give thes e rect, particularly about milk. Spring, too. — Bonnie S. Benwick • kale-Brussels sprouts Many producers maintain hybrids the same treatment both organic and convenI love cooking with cast you use for your favorite tional milk facilities because, • iron, and also with my Brussels sprouts recipes. if an organic cow gets an inLe Creuset cookware. How- Mine are the Tamari Roasted fection and needs antibiotics I

I

I

I

716 SW 1ttII St. Redmond 541.923.4732

A

Food fight: Theproperwayto makescrambled eggs By Michelle Stark

N C olive oil /s C water, more if needed

2 Ig eggs plus 2 Igeggyolks, at room temperature

3/s C unbleached all-purpose flour 1 tsp baking soda 1 tspsalt 2 C buttermilk 1 TBS pure vanilla extract 2 C firmly packed light or dark

or languishing in your refrigerator. And you can tailor it to what you feel like cooking. Historically, salsa verde has been many things to many people. In general, it's defined as a sauce of herbs, some sort of acid (vinegar, citrus), olive oil (or mayonnaise) and perhaps dairy. You can add anchovies and capers or make

This next part i s c rucial.

TOUCSlecs H1980 MARK

WINDOW TREATS 7%1 SW 10th • Redmond• (541) 5484616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com

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~

Keep stirring the eggs around and around the pan as they

I /Il/hI'llu~g l tt/'it'i/ii',

cook, never letting them settle in one place or stick to the

bottom of the pan. Turn off the burner when the eggs are still a tad runny, ensuring they don't overcook. There's nothing worse than crusty, hardened bits that form in the pan making their way into your finished eggs. Or is there'? — Michelle Stark can be scolded at mstark@tampabay. com or yelled at on Twitter at @mstari'z17.

"Early 8ird SPennl" ,','.(p,~ li'i„'('ii@„', ..",," Extra biscovnt oe 2015 orders for Spring Delivery


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

H OME ck

A RDEN

Step up your staircase game By Barbara Ballinger Chicago Tribune

An entry hall offers a home

its interior curb appeal. And while the front door, foyer di-

mensions, flooring, furnishings and colors can combine to provide a gracious welcome, the staircase is key in making a statement.

ASK MARTHA

a in s in astere s, removin stains an more "

Yet too often it's among

a home's last-decorated features. "So many clients say we

How do I get a shiny •finish on dyed Easter eggs.

have to get to it, but put it

off until stage two," says suburban New York designer Lori Elder Dyner, who writes a blog, Return to Home

Keep stuff organized but a bit more concealed with a mudroom

Interiors.

equivalent tucked under the opened stairs.

One reason may be that deciding what to do gets complicated. Do you want to go all wood, or wood treads and painted risers, or all painted? Do you want to match lower

Marinna Collelo. But don't

storage cubbies, which California Closets says is a growing trend. Many designers and ar-

go too dark, warns Grubb, who considers dark espresso passe. The guiding principle: consistency. "The hallway stairs should

architect Elissa Morgante of

A •• eggs. Then, make a

Do you want to go all wood, or wood treads and painted risers, or all painted? Do you want to match lower and upper hallway floors, or do something different?

interior stair wall, or build in

your home's style, budget and amount of traffic guide you. "We're definitely i n fluenced by the architecture and client's style," says Chicago

— Ashley Barnas, Newark, Delaware F irst, blow out t h e

California Closets / Submitted photo /TNS

and upper hallway floors, or do something different? If you prefer carpet, do you want fully carpeted stairs or with a steel cable railing. just the central section with 3. Oak and walnut hold runner, now considered the up better than pine, and mefresher look but more expen- dium to darker stains show sive. How about the banister less dirt than lighter hues, as and spindles? Stain or paint well as expand space visualboth if wood? Finally, should ly, says New York Decoratyou paint or wallpaper the ing Den Interiors designer

chitects recommend letting

-MARTHA STEWART

foam board, forming a grid of pins that you can rest the eggs on. Dye the eggs as desired and let them dry on the pinboard, then spray them with an

enamel finish (such as

trend that works as a neutral,

sprayable gloss enamel, $7, Michaels.com) in a

but go with darker choices if you allow shoes beyond the front door, Dyner says. Don't go with the very darkest that show more soil, but try for a

7 on a scale of 10, says Phil Liss of Peerless Imported Rugs in Chicago. To find the right color and pattern, test samples at home. And make a carpet work with choices in

adjoining spaces, says Nader Bolour, owner of New York carpet company Doris Leslie Blau. 7. Painting treads and ris-

4. Dyner thinks that home-

ers or a faux runner in a bold

Morgante-Wilson Architects. owners with young children But a stairway can also be an and dogs should add a runopportunity to bring light into ner. "I learned the hard way, a home's center with cleresto- slipping with my infant in my ry or skylight at the top. Here arms, and having my toddler are 10 steps to guide you: slip only minutes after I did," 1. If the stairway doesn't she says. The r unner also work — isn't visually grace- deadens noise and looks best ful or was constructed poor- with 3 to 5 inches of wood or ly — consider replacing it if other flooring on either side. you can afford to, says Los To save funds, Dyner used a Angeles designer Christo- narrow banding and stopped pher GrubbofArch-Interiors the runner at the lip of her upGroup. His goal is for home- stairs stairs. Others may preowners to enjoy the view fer wider bands, maybe with from downstairs looking up a contrasting material l i k e as well as upstairs looking leather. down. 5. Go with top-quality car2. If you desire a contem- peting, which often means porary look, think about a 100 percent wool. "It holds floating stair, especially with- up well with foot traffic, esin an open space. Architect pecially if you allow shoes on Chris Berg of Berg & Moss stairs," Dyner says. Wool is

Stick flathead pins i n to

6. For carpet color, the gray-beige family is a hot

of surrounding floors and not a separate space," says Chicago designer Michael Del Pero.

be treated as a continuation

pinboard for drying them.

M artha S t ewart

C r afts

well-ventilated area. Let

them dry on the pinboard for 10 minutes, then repeat spraying. Y ou can try t h i s p r o-

cess on a variety of eggs, as we did here. The eggs' natural patterns and hues

produce differenteffects when they are dyedplus, the range of sizes will add interest to your holiday display. Look for Bryan Gardner/Martha Stewart Living a range of colors and sizes Look for specialty eggs at farm stands, or order them (glazed or at local farm stands and unglazed) from Martha Stewart American Made vendor Naked specialty food stores. Eggs,atebay.com/american-made/naked-eggs.

color can be whimsical, but beware that results may look casual, says Janet B ertin, with Decorating Den Interi-

t h e b e st Q •• Wwayhattoi sremove wa-

ors, Alexandria, Virginia.

from clothing'? — Katie Burtzlaff,

8 . Another hot

t r end i s

lacquering a banister black and painting spindles semigloss white. If risers are also painted, they can be the same white, though experts disagree whether to go flat or glossy. 9. For more storage, open the area underneath stairs

and outfit with cubicles, says Ginny Snook

S c ott, c h i ef

design officer, C alifornia Closets. 10. If painting the interi-

or stair wall, use a premium, scrubbable paint since the area can get dirty, says Architects in B eacon, New also the most crush-resistant Jernigan. York, did so in a Tribeca loft fiberand softeston barefeet," Most important, love your with old-growth salvaged says California designer S.A. choices. Stair design costswood, which was sanded and "Sam" Jernigan of Renais- materials and labor — can stained, left bare and paired sance Design Consultations. add up steeply.

t er-based-paint

st ai n s

Santa Monica, California

A

ucational focus of the Central

• Jim Fields, owner of Fields

stain, remove the garment and rinse it i m m ediate-

helps deA •• Composting crease the amount of

ly in warm water before

trash in landfills and can

p utting i t

Don't put the garment in the dryer until the stain is completely gone, as the heat will set it.

If a water-based splatter has dried before you

notice it, you should rely on professionals, says Lorraine Muir, director of tex-

it.

garden? She'll offer plans to create the later. • Holly Shafer, Whistle Stop

I want to start comQ •• posting. What are

Not these:

fabric without damaging

some things I can (and cannot) compost?

er for your garden. The essentials of composting are green and brown materials and water. Carbon-providing brown materials include dead leaves, branches and twigs. Green ones, which supply nitrogen, include grass clippings, vegetable waste, fruit scraps and coffee grounds. Water provides moisture to

• Cooking oil and butter

• Fish bone scan create odor problems, which attract pests.

• Black-walnut-tree leaves and twigs release a toxic chemical called juglon that will compromise a compost pile.

assist in b r eakdown. Here

are a few dos and don'ts that

— Questions of general interest can be emailed to mslletters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.cont.

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate

— Zach Stone,

Arlington, Virginia

• • •

TheB u l letin

harvest. Not only are all the afore-

mentioned dasses available, but you can also garden on the radio.Central Oregon Master

Gardeners have been producing radio segments on gardening topics since 2013 on KPOV 88.9-FM, the locally support-

s-

ed community radio station. The four-minute spots called

"Gardening: Get Good at It"

air between 9 and 9:30 a.m. 'IIIesdays on the local news

program"The Point." I counted 37 spots of information on air

between now and December. The broadcasttranscripts are

scheduled at the Home 8 Gar-

-

So if you've been screened, please talk about your experience. And encourage others to get screened too.

www. TheCancer YouCanPrevent.org

den Show, plus others that may

bendbroadband.com

Most people get screened because they're encouraged by someone they know and trust.

Tallied up, that comes to a total of 79 opportunities to learn gardening information. Add in the dasses that will be

Screening can prevent colorectal cancer or catch the ¹2 cancer killer early when it's highly treatable.

KPOVbar.

be developed on an as needed the afternoon, so you have to & Smith i n B u r n s s h ares basis, and you will have close pick and choose, which is the knowledge on growing cut to 100 chances to absorb and hard part. Local speakers and flowers for bouquets. share gardening information. I speakersfrom outofthe area • R yan Snead will talk u s think that is pretty impressive. are well known in their profes- through pest management and — Reporter: douville@ controls in the greenhouse.

staples.

• OSU staff experts will im-

stemons, native plants and

sion or field of interest.

• Add wine corks, except

part their knowledge: Amy Jo Detweiler on pruning, Toni Stephan on composting and Glenda Hyde on freezing your

based event.

Looking at the class sched- cold-hardy cactus. ule, you'll feel like you need to • Linda Stephenson, L&S clone yourself. Eight 90-min- Gardens in La Pine, knows ute sessions are scheduled what's hardy and what's not. in the morning and eight in • Brenda Smith from Smith

c o mpost

sprlng.

Farms, will share experience of also archived on the Central his 26 years as an organic veg- Oregon Master Gardener Asetable grower in Bend. sociation website under the information on growing pen-

into pieces, then them.

i n t h e w a s h . provide an organic fertiliz-

in rocks or do we have a rock

Oregon Master Gardener Association, offering 16 classes in a one-day event plus approximately 30 vendors in the garden market. This is a fee-

• David Stetson will share

• Cut natural-fiber cloth-

ing(including wool and silk)

• Tea bags can be added, but make sure to remove any

stain-removal agents and tools needed to clean the

annuals, plus i n t roductions to new varieties available this

Compost these:

effects when they

job. As soon as you see a

• Eileen Obermiller, landscape architect, will help to settle the question: Do we garden

offer advice on color spots of

m a r t h astewart.com/

composting.

plastic ones, to the pile.

A dry cleaner has the

Farm & Flowers owner, will

go t o

make this a do-it-yourself

services at the Drycleaning 8t: Laundry Institute.

Classes

might surprise you; for more,

• While o il- b ased- are dyed — plus, the • paint stains are best left to professional dry range of sizes will add cleaners, a quick reaction interest to your holiday to water-based paints can display.

tile testing and research

If you are puzzled over your irrigation system, there's a Continued from 01 class for you. You are encourTwo Sp a nish-languageaged to bring pictures or prodclasses on growing vegeta- ucts that you have questions bles were held earlier this about. month, one in Bend and onein Rose Marie Nichols McGee Redmond. from Nichols Garden NursSeven Community Educa- ery in Albany will share her tion gardening-related class- knowledge on seed saving. es are scheduled at Central Nichols will also have a venOregon Community College dor booth. betweenApriland early June. With the increased interClass sizes are limited, so reg- est in fruit trees, Ross Penister early. hallegon, of Oregon State The Oregon State Universi- University, will focus on the ty Extension Service and OSU care and maintenance of fruit Master Gardeners offer17 trees being grown in the High classes split between the OSU Desert. E xtension campus i n R e dPlant pollination is a topic mond, Hollinshead Commu- we should know more about. nity Garden in Bend and the Steve Edwards will d iscuss NorthWest Crossing Commu- how to develop your garden to nity Garden in Bend. Classes attract pollinators. arefreeand open tothepublic. Other issues of concern that will be addressed are invasive Spring seminar plants on public and private The schedule and registra- lands and p ermaculture in tion packet for the 26th annual Central Oregon. Master Gardener Spring Seminar on April 18 in Redmond Experts aplenty (registration closes April ll) I am not a name dropper is full of fantastic classes. The by nature, but this time it's Spring Seminar is a major ed- warranted:

The eggs' natural patterns and hues produce different

i'3 t

SIFCharles

Authority

A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded campaign

HEALTH SYSTKM


TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Bags

D5

edge, encasing the handle out and gently poke out the ends. corners. 6. Press the tote upper er. Turn the tote right side

Continued from 01 2. Bind each seam allow-

4. Pin-mark the tote center

edge under 1'/z inches form-

ance with bias tape to encase at the upper edge. Position ing the hem. Pin the handles the raw edges. each webbing handle end 3/z in place to keep them per3. To box the corners, fold inchesfrom the center upper pendicular to the upper edge. the tote lower corners so that edge marking and baste in 7. Stitch around the tote /4 the side seam is exactly on place, matching raw edges. inch and 1 inch from the uptop of the bottom seam. Sew Be careful not to twist the per folded edge, keeping the across each corner and bind handles. handles in place. the seam allowances togeth5. Bind the tote upper — Reporter: gwizdesigns@aol.com

y nf Kerry Ann Mendez / Submitted photo /TNS

Kerry Ann Mendez downsized her NewYork garden by replacing two-thirds of the existing garden with sod. The plants in the remaining garden, above, were chosen for four-season interest.

p

C

'The Right-SizeFlower Garden' helps gardenerscultivate time

z

By Kari Richardson Chicago Tribune

ky trrP

Life became different the

Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

An easy homemademarket bag full of produce and other items fromthe store.

instant Kerry Ann Mendez's

husband broke his neck in a 2011 accident. Topping the list of changes: a full-time job with benefits for Mendez and a new role helping her husband with his physical challenges. Somewhere further down the list was the yard. Before r

the accident, Mendez had

elaborate gardens surrounding her upper New York state property, which she enjoyed caring for immensely. But with the new demands on her

s ' 'pprJ.'

t

,u

The inside seams are finished for a stronger and

The squarebottom ofa homemade shopping bag.

time, and without her hus-

longer lasting market bag.

band to help, she found the job overwhelming. "It was

d one, discussion

over, no more procrastinating," said Mendez, by profession a garden consultant, designer, writer and lecturer who had already begun to think about scaling back as she grew older. She promptly Kerry Ann Mendez / Submitted photo /TNS set about retooling her garden A bubbling fountain provides water interest in Kerry Ann Mendez's to be more in sync with the garden. It replaced a labor-intensive pond. family's new lifestyle. The process planted the

'Right-size' solutions

seeds for a new book. Mendez figuredthere were others — whether due to advancing

age, health or lifestyle issues, or changing interests — who needed to prune back their

gardening hobby and could benefit from her advice. "The Right-Size Flower Garden: Simplify Your Outdoor Space with Smart Design Solutions and Plant Choices"

KERRY Ar/N Msrrozz

St. Lynn's Press/Submitted photo/TNS

(St. Lynn's Press) is a guide for "The Right-Size Flower Gargarden enthusiasts and "plan- den" by Kerry Ann Mendez. The taholics" who find they have cover shows the newgarden more than they can handle she planted at her Maine in their landscapes. The cul- condo. prit, typically, is overplanting, choosing the wrong plantsor simply the advance of time. ing closets or paring down "People sometimes need possessions. reminders that (gardening) is But just as people somedoable and that it's supposed times resist getting rid of to be a joy," Mendez said. "If clothes they don't wear or things are not in balance with toys they no longer play with, what your c u rrent l i festyle so, too, it goes in the garden. or interestsare, then we need Subtraction can be unnatural to take the reins and start de- for gardening enthusiasts, accluttering. We need to choose knowledges Mendez. Plants, plants that work with us and after all, are living things. not against us." But she frequently reminds her readers that, while living, Plant selection "plants are not children or Since plant selection is a

pets."

One of Kerry Ann Mendez's strategies for timestrapped gardeners from her book, "The Right-Size Flower Garden," is to focus on plants with attractive foliage instead of shorter-lived blooms. "Leaves provide such extraordinary color and texture that flowers become secondary," Mendez writes. Some examples: • Coral bells (Heuchera), zones 3-9 •Siberian bugloss (Brunnera), zones 3-8 • Ornamental grasses and sedges, zones3-10 • Lungwort (Pulmonaria), zones 2-9 • Yucca, zones 4-10 they sometimes balk at retooling outdoor areas, she said.

'Start small' Mendez advises starting with spaces that are viewed or enjoyed most often, consid-

"We have poured blood, critical aspect of getting gardens back in balance, Mendez sweat and tears into these devotes a large chunk of the gardens over the years," she book to the topic — desirable said. "Some of these plants and not-so-desirable plants were gifts. But for many of us are called out. there comes a tipping point. She suggests supersized pe- We have the luxury of saying, rennials, such as joe-pye weed 'This doesn't work for me. It (Eupatorium pu r p ureum), doesn't bring me joy.'" goat's beard (Aruncus dioicus) Once people decide to declutand larger varieties of hos- ter, they may also want ideas ta to use instead of shrubs to for uses for former gardens fill in large gaps — the fringe (seeding with grass and creatbenefit for gardeners in cold- ing a new hardscape are two er climates is that they won't suggestions), thebooknotes. need to be overwintered. She Mendez points out that her also includes lists of shrubs advice can also help budding that rarely need pruning, tidy plant enthusiasts, young couevergreens, d r o ught-toler- ples or time-pressed new par-

ering the back and front yards equally. Front yards provide curb appeal, but backyards are often for the owners' private enjoyment — and just as

ant perennials and deer- and r abbit-resistant plants. T h e

Mendez never would h ave

ents just getting started in the

soil — in short, anyone who plants she wants the time-con- buys a house with a yard that

important.

"Start small," she said. "You can always make gardens bigger as time and budget allow." Today, Mendez's husband's health is improving, although he is no longer able to work in the garden. After "right-sizing" their New York yard, the couple decided to sell their

home. Last year they moved to a condominium in Maine to be

closer to family. Though, a few years ago,

guessed she'd be living in a condo, she has embraced the strained t o a v o i d i n c lude overwhelms them. change with front-porch con"People have this miscon- tainer gardening and a comthose with shabby foliage, a tendency to be overly aggres- ception that they have to em- plete overhaul of the outdoor sive or short-lived plants, for b race everything t ha t t h e spaces surrounding her corexample. former homeowner did in the ner unit. A photograph of her yard," she said. "This book new condo's exterior provided A decluttering manual applies equally to people who the cover shot for the book. "I've created something in Using the "3 Rs" as her created a situation and those guide — remain,revamp or who inherited one." balance with my lifestyle and remove — Mendez's book is Whil e homeow n ers available time, and I'm geta sort of decluttering manual wouldn't think t w ice about ting more joy from it now than for the outdoors, the garden- remodeling a dated kitchen or ever," she said. "I found my ing equivalent of organiz- gutting an unattractive bath, love again."

3 early-springgardeningtips The Washington Post be started now — i n doors, A few things to do as under lights — for planting March wraps up: outside later. Whether you • If y o u 're p l a nting prefer interesting heirloom shrubs or trees this sprmg, varieties or highly productive put them m the ground and robust hybrids, seed startsooner rather than later. ing gives the gardener access You want to get them over to hundreds of varieties not transplant shock before the available as transplants this heat arrives. After water- spring. Resolve to try three vaing them thoroughly, give rieties in 2015 that you haven't them a light mulch and re- grown before. sist the urge to keep water• Woody vines and rose ingthem. bowers that need pruning • Tomato seeds should should be cut back and se-

cured inadvance of bird-nest-

ing season. Go easy — excessive pruning may greatly reduce spring f l owering. Vines can be secured to their host structures by tethering

stems to wires strung tightly between mounted hooks or eyes.

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

'Bi Time'awea s otata sur come TV SPOTLIGHT

actions of the central triangle

"Big Time in Hollywood, FL"

serve only to highlight the more understated yet sharply

Wednesdays, Comedy Central

comedic performances of the

By Mary McNamara

supporting cast. As indulgent parents come

Los Angeles Times

quietly to the end of their teth-

Created by Alex Anfanger and Dan Schimpf, whose

er, Baker and Tobolowsky understand that the main ingredient of absurdity is believability. Which is to say humanity; as with horror, extreme humor works only if you recognize actual people at the center of the insanity.

online series "Next Time on

Lonny" was "discovered" by Ben Stiller, Comedy Central's new series, "Big Time in Hollywood, FL," chronidesthelives of two online filmmakers longing to be discovered by some-

Baker can do more with a

blank stare under a scrunchie than Anfanger can do with

one like Ben Stiller.

The fictional Jack (AnI a 15-minute rant, while Tofanger) and Ben (Lenny Jacobson) are also thirtysomebolowsky's s t age-perfected thingbrothers whose parents, singsong makes everyword he played by Kathy Baker and utters a punch line. Stephen Tobolowsky, think it's Gooding is also fabulous time they stopped remaking Jesse Grant / Comedy Central via The Washington Post as a version of himself (and old movies in the garage and From left to right, Alex Anfanger,Cuba Gooding Jr.and LennyJacobson in"BigTimein Hollywood,FL." looking good in a leopard-skin move out on their own. thong) as is Michael Madsen, In protest, Jack and Ben, who appears as a sweaty, bourwith the aid of their uncom- netic nonsequitur absurdity of and generally more interesting overfamiliar and trite, and nei- bon-swilling PI for far too little fortably dimwitted friend Del Vine videos — a dinosaur hand to think about than watch. ther Anfanger nor Jacobson time. Stiller too puts in a few (Jon Bass), launch a childish puppet, say, screaming for coNot always, though. There knows how to transcend this. amusing minutes in the pilot. deception that quickly leads caine — with the structure of are moments when "Big Time Anfanger, whose KeeneThere i s a n un d eniable to death, mayhem, a larcenous dramatic television, "Big Time" in Hollywood, FL" is very eyed face fills the screen with teen-boy appeal to "Big Time stint in rehab with Cuba Good- also aspires to social commen- funny,indeed, and enough of alarming regularity, seems to in Hollywood,FL," and, more ing Jr. and far too many nods tary. It swings at as many so- them to form a bread crumb think if he screams a lot his important, it pushes at anothto old Ben Stiller movies, espe- cial pinatas as it can think of, trail through the forest. But the character will become funny, er side of television's increascially"Tropic Thunder." (Stiller induding Hollywood's fasci- forest can be pretty tough go- the way repeated profanity in ingly elastic envelope (it's a is also an executive producer nation with itself, boomerang ing when the trouble with your thoseVinevideosdo;Jacobson half-hour long, so it must be a of the series.) kids, helicopter parents, the show lies with the leads. appears to have similar faith comedy). Comedy Central is billing casual violence of television, Jack and Ben are, of course, in his ability to look confused. But when your show is best "Big Time," which premiered even the essential narcissism of nowhere near as talented and Both are convinced that the when its focus is not on the this week, as its "first serial- storytelling itself. fascinating as they think they hideous exploitation of Del will main players, you may need ized comedy." That's accurate, All with a kind of self-con- are; that's part of the joke. Un- seem less hideous in the gener- something more than a tommy though, in these days of genre scious irony that makes "Big fortunately, it's also true in the al absurdity of the context. gun loaded with pop culture fluidity, meaningless. Time in Hollywood, FL" so larger sense — the man-child None of this is true, unfor- references and the courage to Attempting to wed the fre- meta, it's practically post-meta slacker-ar tiste character is tunately. For the most part, the let it rip.

Wie ee se onationasecret

MOVIE TIMESTODAY

Dear Abby:My husband and I were chatting recently and the subject of sperm donation came up. He surprised me by saying he's vehemently against it, and then compared it to selling your body as in

out into the world not knowing

prostitution. He also mentioned he

sperm donation and infertility is-

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 1:20,4:25, 7:35, 10:35 • THEBREAKFAST CLUB 30TifANNIVERSARY (no MPAA rating) 7:30 • CHAPPIE(R) 6:30, 9:45 • CINDERELLA (PG)11:50 a.m., 12:45, 2:45, 3:40, 6, 8:55 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 12:15, 1, 3:15,6:30,7,9:15 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT3-D (PG-13) 3:55,10 • THEDIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT IMAX3-D (PG13) 12:45,4,7:10,9:55 • OO YOUBELIEVE?(PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:40, 6:10 • FOCUS(R) I:10 • GET HARD(R) 11:45 a.m., 12:30, 2:15, 3, 4:45, 6:45, 7:45, 9:30, 10:15 • THE GUNMAN (R) 3:45 • HOME(PG)noon, 2:30, 4:50, 7:15, 9 • HOME3-O(PG)11:30a.m.,2,4:30,6:55,9:25 • IT FOLLOWS (R) 1:30, 4:15, 6:50, 9:20 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRETSERVICE (R)12:50,3:50, 7:20, 10:05 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)12:55, 4:05, 7:05, 10: I0 • RUN ALLNIGHT(R) 9:40 • THESECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 11:55 a.m., 3:05, 6:05, 9:05 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f

thinks it's disgusting because any kids we would p o t entially DFP,R have might end up dating their half-siblings. We let the issue drop, but Abby, I have a secret. In my early 20s, I participated in an egg donation program to support couples who were unable to

about their half-siblings? — Fertile Myrtle Dear Myrtle: The time to have

session. We do not live together. Aidensays he's certainhe wants to

spend his life with me. My problem is, I don't want to marry him. I am a

spoken up was when your husband professional, and Aiden is a tradesaired his feelings on the subject of m an with no money. Eventhough he kisses the ground I walk on, I don't

sues. You did a won- think I'd be happy in the long term derful thing and with with him and would always wonder good reason. Your if I could have done better. husband should be On the other hand, I am almost made aware of that,

30 and want children. It seems that

with no apologies. nice guys who want to commit are If you do decide to in short supply. Should I settle for start a family, considering that there Aiden? Breaking up with him, as are half-siblings out there, it would I did a few months ago for a couple be wise to advise your children to of weeks, would crush him. But he have genetic testing done with their has little social life and no hobbies get pregnant on their own. At the prospective spouses. (Because there — justme. time, I didn't think much about it. I are diseases caused by recessive — Contemplating didn't want kids — and I doubt if I in Alberta, Canada genes, it's a good idea anyway) ever will — so I figured it was my However, unless you are sure Dear Contemplating:Nice guys contribution to the gene pool with- that you want to bring a child into who want to commitmaybein short out having to raise little humans this world, you shouldn't become a supply, but please do THIS nice guy myself. parent. a favor and end the relationship beI never told my husband about it Dear Abby: I am 29 and on the fore you hurt him any more than becauseithappened before we met. fenceabout what to do.M y 32-year- you already have. Tradesmen can I do know that some of my eggs old boyfriend of a year and a half, be good providers, husbands and "Aiden," proposed while we were in fathers, and Aiden has much to offer were successfully transplanted. Should I tell my husband about Europe last month. Aiden is a sweet a woman who can appreciate him my donations or keep quiet? We guy who would do anything for me. fully. Clearly, that's not you, so let don't have kids but are talking I waffled and said I had to think himgo. about trying in the near future. about it. He bought a lovely engage— Write toDearAbbyatdearabbycom Would it be wrong for them to go ment ring that he still has in his pos- or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 6 • WILD (R)9:30 • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegal guardi'en. f

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015:This yearnoone will question your efficiency or your strong drive. Ideas inspire you. Youenjoy a good

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

brainstormingsession. Youcanbecritical and snippy when you're in a badmood. Your ability to detach will be tested, as you often seem to betoo involved in the here and now to seethe big picture. If you are

single, romance Qers show fhe idnd could enter your life of doyyou'8 hotre from outofthe blue ** * * * Q ynamic sometime before ** * * Positive Se ptember. This

working on a project where you won't want to be bothered. Don't swallow your anger;

instead, considerexpressingyourfeelings. Tonight: Settle in for a cozy evening.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

** * * Speak your mind. If you encounter a financial snafu, don't hesitate to backtrack and seewhere it has come from. in the afternoon might be *** Average pe r son could proveConversations filled with a lot of information. A discussion ** So-so to be veryspecialio you in the long run. will allow you to seethe other side of an * Difficult If you are attached, issue. Tonight: Meet up with a pal. the two of you LEO (July23-Aug.22) might disagree aboutvacations and where ** * Someone who has beenlaid-back to go, but you are great at home, all nestled is likely to do a sudden reversal. You might in and sharing a favorite pastime. VIRGO be dealing with someone youbarely recoghas a cold side. nize, as he or shecould be unusually upset. Getting communication flowing could be ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * Use the first half of the day for any nearly impossible at the moment. Tonight: Vanish. matter that needs acreative solution. By the second half of the day, you will be in the VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) mood to complete a project that has been ** * You might be out of sorts in the on the back burner. Your energy should be morning, but by midafternoon, you'll feel focused on your long-term financial needs. more like your old self. A discussion with Tonight: Be more fun-loving. a partner or close associate will flow more TAURUS (April 20-May20) easily. A one-on-one talk will bring results ** * * * You suddenly might have an that please you. Tonight: Be your friendly energy boost. Choose howyou want to self. direct this vitality. Perhaps you'll want to LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) play with a child or loved one. Know that ** * * A last-minute detail could slow this drive isn't likely to go away for a while. you down. A talk on an individual level is Express your feelings in such away that likely to ease some of the tension. You they can be heard. Tonight: As you like it. might note how unpredictable an associate GEMINI (May21-June20) has been andcontinues to be. You can ** * * Reach out to a key person in your count onsomesurprises from this person! life in the morning. Later on, you could be Tonight: Get someextra R and R.

SCORPIO (OCT.23-NOV. 21) ** * You can continue to take the lead, if you so desire. An afternoon meeting will bring results that make you feel as though the effort was worth it. A loved one might let you know that it is time to spend some quality time together. Tonight: Where your friends are.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) ** * * You might be letting go as much as you can. You are likely to encounter an obstacle with someone you mustanswer to. You could find this person to be fussy and difficult at the present moment. Do what you must. Tonight: In the limelight.

CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * You will be tired of pushing so hardio achieve the results you want. A partner has been very supportive, yet you might decide to go on your own with a particular idea. You could be wondering what is going on in someone else's mind. Tonight: Look beyondthe obvious.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * * Y ou deal well with others. You'll be able to open up to the intricacies

of someoneelse's thought process. Your listening skills seem to be improving as well, as you're able to read between the lines. Avoid untested assumptions. Tonight: The only answer is "yes."

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * Work on a project in the morning, and you'll be noticed in the afternoon. You might find that you are surrounded by people you never dreamt you would be in the same room with. Toss yourself in the middle of a conversation. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion. © King Features Syndicate

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Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • MR. TURNER (R) 4:15 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 7:30 I

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CINDERELLA (PG)4, 6:30 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 4:15, 7:05 • GET HARD(R)4:45, 7 • HOME (PG)4:30, 6:45 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CINDERELLA(PG)6:30 • THEDIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT (PG-I3)6:30 • HOME (PG)6:30 • THESECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG)6 Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CINDERELLA (PG)4:30, 6:50 • THEDIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13)4:35, 7:10 • GETHARD(R) 5,7.20 • THE GUNMAN (R) 4:50, 7:25 • HOME (PG)7 • HOME 3-O(PG)4:40 •

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 6 p.m. on NGC,"Building Wild" — As the title of the new episode "Treehouse Cabin" suggests it finds Paulie andTuffy with just five days io realize their Vermont client's childhood dream: acabin getaway high up in amaple tree. He also wants the structure to be versatile enough to function as both a mancave and a honeymoon retreat when heand his new fiancee tie the knot. 8 p.m. on 2, 9, "FreshOffthe Boat" —"Entourage" alum Rex Lee guest stars as Jessica's (Consiance Wu) beau from their college days in the newepisode "Blind Spot." His visit doesn't seem to concern Louis (Randall Park), vexing Jessica... but her husband is aware of something about the old flame that she apparently isn't. Eddie (Hudson Yang) doesn't want to participate in a school science fair in the worst way. RayWise ("Twin Peaks") also guest stars. 8 p.m. on10, "Hell's Kitchen" — It's not dismissive to say the new epi sode "14 ChefsCompete" is cheesy, since the main ingredieni the competitors have to

use is ... guesswhat?Lasagna, calzonesandenchiladas are

included in the fare required by a team challenge, with the winners getting an oceanexcursion. Probably needless to say, the losers get something quite different, heightening emotions as Gordon Ramsay oversees adinner service later.

9 p.m. on6, "TheDovekeepers" — The miniseries format makes a broadcast-network return with this drama based onAlice Hoffman's best-seller, executive-producedbyMarkBurnettand Roma Downey and concluding Wednesday. "NCIS" alum Cote dePablo, Rachel Brosnahan ("Manhattan") and Kathryn Prescott play several women caught up in the battle between Jews andRomansat Masada in 70 C.E. 10 p.m.onHIST,"Gangland Undercover" —With Falco's

(DamonRunyan)mission almost over, Agent Koz (Ari Cohen) urges him to lay low until the bust goes down, but that proves impossible when Schizo (Paulino Nunes) orders him to orchestrate a big drug deal in the season finale, "Endgame." Elsewhere, Darko and Stash (lan Matthews, James Cade) lean onFalco to defect and start cooking meth for a rival

chapter, whileSuzanna(Melanie Scrofano) walks out on him for good.

© Zap2it

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Don't s etr/rfor anyone brrt a p/srtir surgeonfor Coo/rru/t eng

www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006

Pure. &mzt.6 I"o.

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Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • CINDERELLA (Upstairs — PG) 6:30 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

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

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 •

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Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all volunteer, non-profit, cat rescue trailer: Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 E & Petco in R edmond; Whoodle Pups, 10 donate at Smith Sign, weeks, 1st shots, de1515 NE 2nd, Bend; 202 wormed. Hypoallergenic or CRAFT in Tumalo. Want to Buy or Rent Can pick up l arge /no shed, 4 males left O $1000 ea. Health 389-8420. Wanted: $Cash paid for amounts, guarantee. 541-410-1581 Grandmas old/newer jew- www.craftcats.org elry. Top $ paid for gold/ Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, silver. I buy by the es1F, adorable, UDT tate/load. Honest Artist shots, health guar., pix, Elizabeth, 541-633-7006. $500/up. 541-777-7743 210 Find exactly what you are looking for in the Golden Retrievers, AKC Furniture & Appliances English Creams, 6 M's, CLASSIFIEDS all certified, taking $500 deposits, ready Wanted- paying cash 4/20. 541-815-8456 for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. Mclntosh, Lab Pups AKC, black & J BL, Marantz, D y- yellow, Master Hunter (2) 90-inch Couches naco, Heathkit, San- sired, performance pediCane bamboo with sui, Carver, NAD, etc. ree, OFA cert hips & el- silk upholstery,$1000 ows, 541-771-2330 Call 541-261-1 808 www.kinnamanretrievers.com each, obo. WANTED: used set of Purebred Lab p u ps, encyclopedias. champ bloodlines. 458-205-1175 7F, 1M, blacks & yellows. Avail. in May. Want to buy SunSetter Come meet your new Mahogany Media awning accessories. companion! S i sters Armoire,2 drawers, 2 541-408-0846 (503) 459-1580 shelves,$500 obo. 619-884-4785(Bend) 206 Queensfand Heelers Pets & Supplies Standard & Mini, $150 & up. 541-280-1537 A1 Washersa Dryers Full warranty, FREE The Bulletin recom- www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com delivery! Also, used mends extra caution washers/dryers wanted. when purc has541-260-7355 ing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit inf ormation may be subjected to fraud. SAINT BERNARDS For more i nforma- Brandy & Bruno's beau- Dick Idol 2-pc armoire, tion about an adver- tiful full-mask puppieselk design, $700. tiser, you may call 2 fem. left! Born Jan. 11; the O regon State ready now (photo taken Attorney General's 2/27). Dew claws reOffice C o n sumer moved, 1st shots. $500. For appointment, call Protection hotline at

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Adopt a rescued cat or kitten! Altered, vaccinated, ID chip, tested, more! CRAFT, 65480 78th, Bend, Sat./Sun., 1-5pm. 541-389-8420 www.craftcats.org

Canary Males. Yellow or white. 3O $45 each. Excellent singers. 541-548-7947.

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9 7 7 0 2

N ew in b o xes, J o e Namath outdoor infra- COW MANURE - aged, S&W model 640 r evolver, $500. Glock red grill with folding 150 cu.ft. truckload 21C GEN 3, $ 500. table 8 case. Retails d elivered, $15 0 . Taurus 1911, $350. over $500; 1st $200 541-420-6235 R ock R i ve r Ar m takes it. 310-916-6716 AR15, $800. DPMS WHEN YOU SEE THIS For newspaper 316 AR10 AP4, $ 1000. delivery, call the Dillon 550B + reloadCirculation Dept. at Irrigation Equipment ing comp.,IMR 4895 541-385-5800 orePixatBendtjIjletin.com To place an ad, call powder.541-280-3363 M FOR SALE On a classified ad 541-385-5809 Tumalo Irrigation Wanted: Collector seeks go to or email Water high quality fishing items www.bendbulletin.com classified@bendbulletin.com $4,500 per acre & upscale fly rods. to view additional Call 541-419-4440 541-678-5753, or The Bulletin photos of the item. Serving CenrrelOregonsince rgas 503-351-2746 325

on the first day it runs to make sure it isn core rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be 541-504-6435 made to your ad. 541-385-5809 263 Refrigerator 251 The Bulletin Classified Neuton CE5.2 mower, Hay, Grain & Feed Frigidaire brand Tools Hot Tubs & Spas battery powered, 14" Men's Callaway woods, new side-by-side good cond., $ 100. First Quality, 2nd cutting 3-13, $25 ea. Ladies with icemaker. JET DUST COLLECgrass hay, no rain, 2005 S ilver TOR with extra parts. 541-408-2535 C allaway woo d s , Marquis Paid $1200 barn stored, $225/ton. 3-13, $25 ea. Ladies Anniv. Hot Tub, gray Rarely used. $300. Call The Bulletin At selling for $850. Call 541-549-3831 black, 6-8 person Call Brad for details. Taylor Made Miscela and 541-385-5809 Patterson Ranch, Sisters 541-410-5956 full set, $75. seating, new circuit 541 480-7032 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail board. Delivery avail541-382-6664 Orchard grass hay n able, $2500. POWERMATIC 10 At: www.bendbulletin.com clean, barn stored, no 541-815-2505 246 The Bulletin t ablesaw. 5 H P , 3 weeds, no rain, 75¹ 270 recommends extra ' phase. 30 " f e n ce Guns, Hunting bales, $250 ton. 255 Lost & Found $600. Call Brad for I caution when pur541-416-0106 & Fishing Computers chasing products or, details. 541 480-7032 Lost: 3/29, 8 yrs old fe- Premium orchard grass, services from out of I 12-ga. shotguns: Win T HE B U LLETIN r e - S nowblowerS e a r s male Blue H eeler, barn stored no rain, the area. Sending If 3)odel 59 w / c hokes, quires computer ad- C raftsman, $15 0 . near Deschutes Mar- 1st 8 2nd cutting. Del. cash, checks, or $300. Win Model 12 Dewith multiple 541-330-8774 ket Rd. and Dale Rd. avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 I credit i n f ormation luxe Field $500. FN Bel- vertisers schedules or those Chipped an has collar or 541-948-7010. may be subjected to ium SxS deluxe wood ad 265 selling multiple sysw/ tag s . Call I FRAUD. For more 800 541-548-3408 tems/ software, to disBuilding Materials 541-480-7622 information about an c TURN THE PAGE advertiser, you may I AR15 scope mount rail, close the name of the Lost: Grandma's hearFor More Ads business or the term Bend Habitat e call the O r e gon e new, $25. 44 rds .44 S8 "dealer" in their ads. ing aid, St. Francis RESTORE The Bulletin ' State Atto r ney ' W special, 246 grain, Church E, side, Sat., 3 boxes (f 00 ct ea.) Private party advertis- Building Supply Resale 3/21. 541-382-0114 I General's O f f i ce $20. Ballistic tip bullets ers are defined as 541-312-6709 Wheat Straw for Sale. Consumer Protec- • Nosler reloading), .338 200 those who sell one 224 NE Thurston Ave. Also, weaner pigs. tion h o t line a t I (for qrain, $2 0 0 all. computer. Open to the public. 541-546-617'I i 1-877-877-9392. 208-255-2407 Sisters Habitat ReStore REMEMBER: If you 267 I TheBulletin I Bend local pays CASH!! Musical Instruments Building Supply Resale have lost an animal, Looking for your Servrng Cenrrei Oregon since t903 for firearms & ammo. don't forget to check Quality items. next employee? 541-526-0617 The Humane Society LOW PRICES! Place a Bulletin Drum Kits: Specializing Bend 212 150 N. Fir. B rowning Citori 1 2 g in High Qualfty New & help wanted ad 541-382-3537 541-549-1621 Antiques & over-under shotgun. Used Drum Sets! today and Redmond Open to the public. Invector plus chokes. In Kevin, 541-420-2323 Collectibles reach over 541-923-0882 great condition. $850. The Drum Shop 60,000 readers 266 Madras Call 503-320-3008 Antiques Wanted: 541-475-6889 each week. Heating & Stoves Tools, furniture, marbles, For Sale: Prineville Your classified ad CASH!! sports equipment, beer Piano Technician 541-447-7178 For Guns, Ammo & will also NOTICE TO cans, pre-'40s B/W photools 8 supplies, Reloading Supplies. or Craft Cats appear on ADVERTISER tography. 541-389-1578 with rolls of piano 541-408-6900. 541-389-8420. bendbuffeti n.com Since September 29, string, $725. which currently Bill Clinton g rowing Christiansen Arms 300 1991, advertising for 266 Call 971-219-9122 used woodstoves has receives over nose wrist watch. New RUM, L H, VX 3 in Redmond been limited to mod- Sales Northeast Bend 1.5 million page $65. 541-318-6368 Leopold Scope 4x14, els which have been views every B &C Reticle. N ew China cabinet, o a k; $5500, asking $3300. certified by the O rmonth at no ** FREE ** trunk; 2 chairs, oak, 541-815-2505. egon Department of extra cost. upholstery no arms; Environmental Qual- Garage Sale Kit PLAYER PIANO Bulletin small drop front desk, Electric ity (DEQ) and the fed- Place an ad in The Classifieds oak; redwood burl eral E n v ironmental Bulletin for your gawith bench and Get Results! table 4xt/9'x3t/9'; round Protection A g ency rage sale and resome scrolls. Call 541-385-5809 end table; bookcase (EPA) as having met ceive a Garage Sale $1100. Call Deryl DO YOU HAVE or place your ad mahogany. Must See! smoke emission stan- Kit FREE! 541-536-7505 SOMETHING TO on-line at 541-388-3532 dards. A cer t ified SELL bendbuffeti n.com KIT INCLUDES: woodstove may be FOR $500 OR 260 Garage Sale Signs Old Gas Pumps /Soda identified by its certifi- •• 4 LESS? $2.00 Off Coupon To Vending Machines Misc.ltems cation label, which is 341 Non-commercial WANTED! Will pav cash. Toward Your permanently attached Use advertisers may Kyle, 541-504-f 050 Next Ad Horses & Equipment Buying Diamonds to the stove. The Bul• 10 Tips For "Garage place an ad letin will not k now- Sale Success!" /Gofd for Cash The Bulletin reserves with our Black ba y Mo r gan ingly accept advertisSaxon's Fine Jewelers the right to publish all "QUICK CASH mare, flashy, 13-yr-old ing for the sale of 541-389-6655 ads from The Bulletin SPECIAL" show, trail 8 harness, uncertified PICK UP YOUR newspaper onto The 1 week 3 lines 12 i ntermediate rid e r , Check out the woodstoves. GARAGE SALE KIT at OI' Bulletin Internet webgranddaughter in colclassifieds online 1777 SW Chandler site. ~ee eke e t l lege. $500 best offer or 267 www.bendbuffatin.com Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Ad must trade. 541-546-7909 Fuel & Wood Updated daily The Bulletin include price of

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Hammock Free-Standing. Metal frame and fabric in excellent c o ndition. See Bend craigslist ¹4937976588 for pix, details. $95.

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1-877-877-9392.

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541-548-3520

"Putt" Putnam autographed giclee printof rodeo clown,$600. Rocking S custom book case, $75.Cash only, you pick up, near Fossil, OR.541-468-2269

Standard poodle, AKC female, 8 mo., microchip, shots, moving. Furniture ... couch, love seat, coffee $495, 541-241-4409 table, end table and Wheaten Terrier female lamp, all oak or purebred, 9 wks, soft no- trimmed in oak. You shed coat, tail docked, haul. $500. Call dewclaws, shots, doggy 541-389-3890 after door trained. Family pet 4:00 p.m. only! $875. 541-447-8970

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ServingCentralOregon since r9te

215

Coins & Stamps

n~nle iem oi Ssoo or less, or multiple items whosetotal does not exceed $500.

Private collector buying postagestamp albums 8 Call Classifieds at collections, world-wide 541-385-5809 and U.S. 573-286-4343 www.bendbulletin.com (local, cell phone). Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809 242

Exercise Equipment Power Plate machine Vibrational exercises for musclestrengthening, stretching, massage & relaxation, $500. 541-504-3869

BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.

Serving Cenrrer Oregon srncer903

FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN

BUYING & SE LLING The Bulletin All gold jewelry, silver recommends payand gold coins, bars, ment for Firewood rounds, wedding sets, only upon delivery class rings, sterling siland inspection. ver, coin collect, vin- • A cord is 128 cu. ft. tage watches, dental 4' x 4' x 8' gold. Bill Fl e ming, • Receipts should 541-382-9419. include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

LOP tags for big game hunting; access in Condon, OR. 541-384-5381 M1 Garand 30-06 1944 re-furb exc., $800. Springfield 1903-A3, $ 300. REM 870 12 ga. shotgun, $250. WIN super-X 12 ga. semi-auto s h otgun, $350. Glenfield Marlin 22lr exc., $200. 541-280-3363 R emington 700 3 0 0 RUM cerakoted 2 stocks leupold mounts $900 / Remington 870 Express sy n t hetic s tock $300 / 100 r ounds Nosler 3 00 RUM brass new $150 541-280-9457

The Bulletin

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,

Chainsaw-carved Momma and Baby Bear. Momma is over 5-ft tall; baby is 23" tall. May consider selling separately; both $850. Can be seen in Prineville. Call 541-447-7820

Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. Evefy day thousandsof buyers andsellers ofgoods and services dobusinessln these pages.Theyknow you can't beatTheBulletin Classified Section for selection andconvenience - every item isjust a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy to use.Everyitem is categorizedandevery The Bulletin ServingCender Oregonsince rgae cartegofy is indexed onthe section's front page. Whether youare lookingfor All year Dependable Firewood: Seasoned; a home orneeda service, Lodgepole, split, del, your future is inthepagesof B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 The Bulletin Classified. or 2 cords for $365. Multi-cord discounts! 541-420-3484.

The Bulletin Semng CenfrelOregon s>melees

Deluxe showman 3-horse trailer Silverado 2001 29'x8' 5th wheel with semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277

GarageSales

GarageSales

GarageSales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!

541-385-5809


E2 TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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

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

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • • • • • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

•... . . . .

Starting at 3 lines

Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Speclal

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

*llllust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based oo the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.

/ 0 0 421

Schools 8 Training IirR Truck School

REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs!

1-888<38-2235 WWW.DTR.EDU 454

Looking for Employment Woman willing to do errands for the elderly for s l ight f e e in Bend/Redmond. 541-280-0892

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Maintenance

Whispering Winds Retirement

is seeking a full-time maintenance tech. Must have some basic electrical, plumbing, carpentry and painting experience. $12.50/hr plus benefits. Apply in pers on at 2 92 0 N E Conners Ave., Bend., Pre-employment drug test required.

Manufacture Tech 8 Sales Executive osition available. end, OR manufacturing company has two full time job opportunities available. P ay is DO E a n d qualifications. Pre-employment & subsequent random F AA DO T dru g screening required. Please visit www.preciseflight.co m/job-opportunities for full details and to submit a resume.

Lookat:

Plumber, Journeymen N e ededne for w construction. Start immedifOr COmplete LiStingS of ately! Good pay/benefits

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to AreaRealEstatefor Sale yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's ACCOUNTING "Call A Service Staff Accountant Professional" Directory The Staff Accountant is responsible for maintaining multiple aspects of the general ledger to en476 sure accurate and timely reporting. This posiEmployment tion will be responsible for the preparation of Opportunities monthly financials, journal entries, balance sheet reconciliations, bank reconciliations and month end accruals. CAUTION: seek a motivated individual that will bring a Ads published in We fresh perspective to our systems and proce"Employment O p dures. An ideal candidate will learn current proporlunities" in clude cedures, while taking a proactive approach to employee and indefind efficiencies, as well as assist the CFO with pendent positions. financial analysis. Ads for p o sitions The position requires a detail-oriented individual that require a fee or with strong general accounting, organizational, upfront investment communication, and time management skills. must be stated. With We seek a positive individual that enjoys workany independentjob ing in a fast-paced team environment in beautiopportunity, please ful Bend, OR. i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra Essential job functions & responsibilities caution when ap- • General ledger maintenance: detailed underplying for jobs onstanding of each account and proper posting line and never pro- • Month end accruals, journal entries, bank and vide personal inforbalance sheet reconciliations mation to any source • Fixed Asset additions, disposals & depreciation you may not have • Cost reporting and forecasting researched and deemed to be repu- Experience & skills table. Use extreme • General ledger accounting required c aution when r e - • 4-year degree in Accounting s ponding to A N Y • Advanced Excel and data entry skills online employment • Experience with SBS Financial Systems a plus ad from out-of-state. • Newspaper experience preferred We suggest you call the State of Oregon To apply, please submit both a cover letter and Consumer Hotline resume to hwright@wescompapers.com or by at 1-503-378-4320 mail to Western Communications, attn: Heidi For Equal OpportuWright, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. nity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Western Communications, Labor & I n dustry, inc. is a drug free workplace Civil Rights Division, and EOE.Pre-employment 971-673- 0764. drug testing is required. 541-385-5809

Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletfn's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Caregiver Prineville Senior care home looking for fulltime Caregiver. Must pass criminal background check. Call 541-362-5137

Caregivers w anted t o

our

join

caring

memory ca re c ommunity. A l l shifts a v ailable. Must be reliable. Also needed part t ime c hef. F o r more inf o r mation, or any questions, call please 541-385-4717 LUMBER YARD Yard Positionforklift experience desired.Valid drivers license. Call or apply in person: Hoyt's - Sisters, 541-549-8141

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

r.=.-"-,.— .a

SALES

Freight Broker/ Logistics Manager A well-established 3PL company is seeking chasing products or I qualified candidates services from out of a for t his f a st-pacedI the area. Sending transportation sales c ash, checks, o r position. Responsibili- I credit i n f ormation ties include develop- I may be subjected to ing new and existing FRAUD. business to arranging For more informafor the transportation tion about an adverof customers' freight I tiser, you may call shipments. This posi- the Oregon State tion offers unlimited I Attorney General's commission-based in- a Office C o n s umer a come for a committed l Protection hotline atl individual with a pas- I 1-877-877-9392. sion to succeed. To apply please call LThe Bulletin g Bend WorkSource at

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RESTAURANT

Seeking experienced: • Line Cook • Waitress and • Maintenance (experiencea plus, bul not required)

Please apply in person: Illladras Truck Stop & Cafe, 992 SW Hwy 97, Madras, OR.

541-388-6070

and

reference J L

ID

1330418.

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Sales We are looking for experienced Sales professional to J oin Cent r a l Oregon's largest new car d e aler Subaru of Bend. O ffering 401 k , profit shar i ng, medical plan, split s hifts, and p a id training. P l ease apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. TELEFUNDRAISING

Tele-funding for •Meals On Wheels •Defeat Diabetes Foundation •Veterans (OPVA) Seniors and a/l others welcome. Mon-Thur. 4:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. $9.25/hour. Call 541-382-8672 The Bulletin is your

Employment Marketplace Call

BendhomeS.COm

The Bulletin

476

3 :00pm Fri.

• • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri •

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

476

y collectibles?

5 41- 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 to advertise.

Sell them in

The Bulletin Classifieds

541.385-5809

www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

Digital Advertising Sales Manager The Bulletin is seeking a goal-oriented Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive online advertising revenue growth. This position will manage the department's digital projects, and will:

Call a Prc Whether you need a fencefixed,hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

:l Qfy J~;QJI)t ~

~

Can be found on these pages:

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions 476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

INildland Fire Fighters-

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Cooper Contracting is now hiring entry level fire f i ghters. (No exp. needed). Must be least 18 yrs of age. Starting pay $10.10/hr., plu s $4.02/hr. hazardous pay on the first 40 hrs. Cal l S h awn 541-948-7010 to schedule and interview or fo r m ore info.

General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldredObendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

The Bulletin

Serwng cenrratoregon since 1903

Pressman The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with experience in the Printing industry. Two years of prior web press experience is beneficial, but training can be provided. At The Bulletin you can put your skills to work and make our products and services jump off the page! In addition to printing our 7-day a week newspaper, we also print a variety of other products for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 t/a tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman must become knowledgeable and familiar working with. We put a premium on dependability, timeliness, having a positive attitude and being a team player. We offer a competitive compensation plan and career growth opportunities. This position primarily works nights, with a 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. If you are interested in fostering your talent as a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourage you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, at anelson©wescom a ers.com with your resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug testing is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is a drug free work place and EOE.

The Bulletin sening central oregon sincefse

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526

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,

Wherebuyers meet sellers.

1-877-877-9392.

BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

Your Future Is Here. Whether you're looking for a home or need a service, your future is in these pages.

Clas~s ™ theds Thousands of adsdaily in printandonline. •

LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.

USE THECLASSIFIEDS!

Door-lo-doorsellingwith fast results! It's the easiest way in the world Io sell.

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The BulletinClassified 541-385-5809

Circulation The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for a District Representative to join our Single Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour per week position. Overall focus is the representation, sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, special events and news dealer outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a company vehicle to service a defined district, ensuring newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, managing newspaper counts for the district, building relationships with our current news dealer locations and growing those locations with new outlets. Position requires total ownership of and accountability of all single copy elements within that district. Work schedule will be Thursday through Monday with Tuesday and Wednesday off. Requires good communication skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong service/team orientation, sales and problem solving skills. Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. Send resume to: mewingObendbulletin.com Applications are available at the front desk. 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 No phone inquiries please.

The Bulletin serving cenfrar oregon sincer903

Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE/Drug Free Workplace

• Study the local market and make recommendations on best opportunities for online revenue growth. • Work in collaboration with department manI • agement in the ongoing training and coaching of Bulletin advertising salespeople. • Contribute to building local digital revenue by regularly going on joint sales calls with advertising staff. Coll 54I-3855809to promote your service• Advertise for 28 doys starting at t l40 Irtris speciapackag l eir notsvoilobieonour wetate) • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to ensure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, and customer reporting functions are perBuilding/Contracting D o m estic Services L a ndscapingNard Care LandscapingNard Care formed in a timely and accurate fashion. • Assist in the development of online and cross/sell advertising packages and attendant NOTICE: Oregon state Hovana House Aerate / Thatching sales collateral. law requires anyone Cleaning Services Weekly Service and who con t racts forFor 15 yrs we've perSpring Clean-ups! construction work to Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at formed housekeeping Free estimates! Serving Central be licensed with the services according to least 3 years' experience and a proven track COLLINS Lawn Maint. Oregon Since 2003 Construction Contracthe wishes of our clirecord of success in selling multi-platform or Ca/l 541-480-9714 tors Board (CCB). An ents. We offer profes- Residental/Commercial digital advertising to major accounts and CPR LANDSCAPING license sional cleaning, post agencies. Management experience aplus, active Sprinkler Weekly m aintenance, means the contractor construction cleaning with the ideal candidate being able to demonActivation/Repair cleanups. Lawn reis bonded & insured. and office cleaning. strate a history of success in implementing inBack Flow Testing pairs. Quality at an Verify the contractor's 541-728-1800 novative ideas and developing the skills level a ffordable pri c e . CCB l i c ense at of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug Maintenance 978-413-2487 www.hirealicensedfree workplace and pre-employment drug ~Thatch & Aerate Handyman contractor.com testing is required. aboveanlawnsarvice.com • Spring Clean up or call 503-378-4621. ~Weekly Mowing (541) 383-1997 I DO THAT! The Bulletin recomPlease email your resume to: & Edging FREE mends checking with Home/Rental repairs •Bi-Monthly De-thatching jbrandt@bendbulletin.com & Monthly the CCB prior to con- Small jobs to remodels Maintenance No phone calls please. Aeration, Fertilizer tracting with anyone. Honest, guaranteed On Weekly Service! work. CCB¹151573 •Bark, Rock, Etc. Some other t rades also re q uire addi-Dennis 541-317-9768 servingcentral oregon sincersle ~Landsca in PeopleLookforInformation tional licenses and •Landscape The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer certifications. Accounting Construction AboutProductsand Landscapin~ard Care ~Water Feature Computer/Cabling Install S ervi cesEveryDaythrough Installation/Maint. • Pavers Computer training, eet The8ulletinClassitiels up & repair from the ZnnedQaft/ieP •Renovations •Irrigations Installation comfort of your own Painting/Wall Covering 84atr<dCt u /arr. home.Dirk (541) 647Senior Discounts Inventory Accounting Analyst 1341 or 619-997-8291 Full Service Bonded & Insured KC WHITE Landscape 541-815-4458 PAINTING LLC Debris Removal Les Schwab is looking for a n I nventory LCB¹8759 Interior and Exterior Management Accounting Analyst to work closely with store Family-owned In print and online with management t o id e ntify a n d a n a lyze JUNK BE GONE bought a new boat? Residential 8 Commercial Spring CleanUp Just Sell your old one in the 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts variances within their inventory and gross I Haul Away FREE The Bulletin's Classifieds •Leaves classifieds! Ask about our margin results. Th e Inventory Accounting For Salvage. Also 5-vear warranties •Cones Super Seller rates! Analyst performs month-end financial close SPRING SPECIAL! Cleanups & Cleanouts • Needles 541-385-5809 duties including account reconciliations and Call 541-420-7646 Mel, 541-389-8107 •Debris Hauling CCB ¹20491 8 journal e ntries a n d pr e pares m o nthly NOTICE: Oregon Landinventory reports. This position also provides USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! scape Contractors Law Weed Free Bark assistance to store personnel on their daily FIND YOUR FUTURE & Flower Beds (ORS 671) requires all responsibilities such a s p o sting/receiving Door-to-door selling with HOME INTHE BULLETIN businesses that adpurchase orders, maintaining store inventory, fast results! It's the easiest Lawn Renovation vertise t o pe r form Your future is just apage and analyzing and correcting certain system way in the world to sell. Aeration - Dethatching Landscape Construc- away. Whetheryou're looking transactions. tion which includes: for a hat Overseed or aplace to hangit, The Bulletin Classified l anting, deck s , Compost The Bulletin Classified is Qualifications: ences, arbors, 541485-5809 Top Dressing GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,we • Ability to both work independently and your best source. water-features, and incontribute to overall team performance are three adorable, loving puppies stallation, repair of irEvery daythousandsof Landscape • Demonstrated proficiency with Microsoft Courier Service looking for a caring home. Please rigation systems to be buyers andsellers of goods Excel Maintenance l icensed w it h th e and services do call right away. $500 business in • Prior accounting coursework or experience Full or Partial Service Landscape Contrac- these pages.Theyknow We will distribute Preferred: •Mowing ~Edging tors Board. This 4-digit you can't beatTheBulletin locally in C.O. • Four-year degree in accounting, finance, •Pruning ~Weeding number is to be inClassified Section for or do line hauls business administration or equivalent Water Management cluded in all adver- selection andconvenience between C.O. and • Experience using large-scale accounting/ERP tisements which indiitem isjust a phone PDX area. systems Fertilizer included cate the business has -every call away. *Special private party rates apply to merchandiseand Looking for loads for with • Experience working in teams that monthly program a bond,insurance and automotive categories. our 26' Freightliner implemented new accounting systems workers compensaThe Classified Section is Box truck (26,000 tion for their employeasy to use.Every item Weekly,monthly GVW) with 4K l i ft ees. For your protecLes Schwab has a reputation of excellent i s categorized and every or one time service. ate. Lic. & Bonded. customer service, with over 450 stores and tion call 503-378-5909 cartegoiy is indexed onthe ontact Bill at or use our website: 7,000 employees in the western United States. section's front page. Managing wsdahlIbendwww.bendbutletin.com www.lcb.state.or.us to We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, broadband.com. Central Oregon Whether youare lookingfor check license status retirement and cash bonus. Please go to To place your photo ad,visit us online at Landscapes atrtrslde Cpa before contracting with a home orneeda service, www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls Gos e~ Since 2006 w snnv.bendbulletIn .c o m the business. Persons your future is inthepagesof please. or call with questions, doing lan d scape The Bulletin Classified. Senior Discounts maintenance do not Les Schwab is proud to be an 5 41 -3 8 5 5 8 N 541-390-1466 r equire an L C B The Bulletin equal opportunity employer. seMng centraloregonsince r9|s Same Day Response cense.

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAR 31, 2015

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

NEW YQRK TIME5 CRQ55WQRD wiii shortz

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B maesday,March31,2015

More geese than wise

33 Best possible 35Shade 36 Shades of Grey? 6 "Gomer Pyle, 4035, minimally, for a IJ.S. president 10Laugh loudly 41Onerunning the 14Knight's weapon show 15March Madness 42 Silent approvals Ofg. 43Onechasing 16Anthony'sformer after chicks? partner in radio 44 D ha b i 17Provide (with) 45Admit,with "up" 18Frontiersman for Boone, familiarly 47 Overlook an Oscar ACROSS 1 Fashion designer Bill

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "The silver Swan, who, living, had no Note, when Death approached, unlocked her silent throat. Leaning her breast against the reedy shore, thus sang her first and last, and sang no more. Farewell all joys! 0 death, come close mine eyes! More Geesethan Swans now live, more Fools than Wise." A hand with 7-4-1-1 shape is called a "swan." (Imagine a long neck, a body and two legs.) Today's South held a fat, one-legged swan, and the result in the deal was just as freakish. South openedone diamond. When West preempted, North tried 3NT, and South reacted with a wild leap to slx dlamonds. SPADE SUIT South's bid had one edge: It hid his spades from the defense. South won the first heart, drew trumps and led the jack of spades from dummy. He was safe if spades broke 2-2 and had no hope if East held K-Q-10. But if West had a singleton honor ... East was a goose. He covered with the queen, and a loud crash ensued. So South lost only a spade to East's ten and made his slam. 9 A K 6

19Stepon a ladder 20 Shades of Grey? 23 Resembling a quiche 24 River that flows from the Bernese Alps 25 Disney deer 26 Cpl., e.g. 270n vacation, say 30 Rab bit

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Opening lead — 9 Q

<> J 6 4 Q 10 7 2. Your partner opens one diamond. The next player

(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Findfive gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

nomination, say 48 Singer in prison, maybe 52 Shades of Grey? 56 Big movie screen format 57 End in 58 Copenhageners, e.g. 59 It smells a lot 60 b en e

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

SOUTH 4 kA976 4

Pass 6

DAILY QUESTION Youhold: 45 J 8 5 3

bids two hearts (preemptive). What do you say? ANSWER: Ma k e a ne g a tive double to show values plus four cards in spades. An option (especially if you don't play negative doubles!) is a bid of 2 NT, promising about 11 points, balanced. Since you have weak spades and two heart stoppers, it's unclear that you would want to play at spades even if partner has four. East dealer N-S vulnerable

LA W P OL Y U U T O T T OM A T I MS CT N O UR G R A R I E R I L L T OL O M S HU AD T A S VA D E I 8 I U DS I M

OR HO Y P 0 E U R

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61lt may be skipped on a trip to a lake 62'13 or '14, now 63 Long hike 64 Some R.S.V.P's

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DOWN 1 "@¹$!"cover-up 20ne of the Hawaiian islands 3 Tennis's Agassi 4 Room where pots and pans are stored 5 Welcomes at the dooi 6 Inappropriate, as influence 7Make a PDF of, in a way 8 Element between chromium and iron on the periodic table 9 Advice to someone who's drunk and about to leave 10Thoroughbred, e.g. 11Magnum 12 Madeira or merlot 13 Parts of relays 21 Some Jamaican music 22 On (killing it) 27 "Not that!" 28ElmerJ. of toondom 29Admit, with "up"

NO. 0224

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PUZZLE BY ELIZABETH A. LONG

30 Ho-hum 31 The Incredible Hulk's feeling when he's green 32 Biblical garden 33 Place for a preemie 34 Syllable repeated after "fiddle" 37 Guess attire 38Ableto walk 39 Be creative

50 Destructive 2011 East Coast hurricane

450ne way to get meds, for short

46 Smelling of trees and earth, say 51 Pluralizers 47 Health teacher's after a topic, informally 52 Cry successful insult 48 What Teller of 53Anothername for Penn Ik Teller won't do Cupid

onstage 54 Cape Canaveral 49 Jay Garage org. (car enthusiast's website) 55Tiny bug

Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

DENNIS THE MENACE

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55 Unscramble these four Jumbles, 9ne letter IO eaCh Square, to form four ordinary words.

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9 Chastain of

women's soccer 10 Guided 11 City NW of Orlando 12 Unoriginal 13Thread dispenser 18 Ex-Disney CEO Michael 22 Printer cartridge Bld contents 40 Woodlands man26 Iraqi port goat 28 Neighborhood 41 Campus URL 30 FDR's last vice suffix president 42 Serious 31 Western defense 43 Old Russian ruler QP. 44 *One given to 32 Actress Hagen flights of fancy 33 IHOP condiment 46 Short-lived 34 Ice cream maker Egypt-Syr. alliance 48 Drunkard 49 *Hidden explosives activator 54 Overthrow 59 Farm female 60 " o' your throats":

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64 Figuratively,

PEORA

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Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS

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Joseph

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: T I P S Y

O O CU A T L O A N B P I A S K I S E L

L E O N A O N S E T R D L C A R A N A T A G C R O S O R A N 0 K E Y S T Y L E N M A D A L A R M J 0 L L Y R O G E OP A L I B E X N A T C H O R C A R T O O E M O S T E P S S Y N xwordeditorliaol.com 5

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By Jerry Edelstein ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

03/31/15


THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 31 2015 E5

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

)

s

I •

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./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- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

fe

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 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land 634

.00

s

634

748

860

875

880

BMP Mc88

Northeast Bend Homes

Motorcycles & Accessories

Watercraft

Motorhomes

~o ~ [ ] g

Big .20 acre lot, 3/2.5, 1692 sq.ft., RV parki ng, m t n v ie w s , $259,900. P rincipal B roker O J o h n L Scott, 541-480-3393.

Large men's Gerbing heated jacket l iner and gloves, $ 150, Woman's m e d i um ortex H D ja c ket, 100. HD tour bag, $150. 541-388-5031

QoP o

750 732

Commercia!/Investment Properties for Sale HIGH PROFILE LOCATION IN DOWNTOWN REDMOND

This commercial building offers excellent exposure along desirable NW 6th Street. Currently housing The Redmond Spokesman newspaper offices, the 2,748 sq. ft. space is perfect for owner/ user. Two private offices and generous open spaces. Three parking places in back+ street parking.

$259,000.

AptJMultiplex NE Bend AptiMultiplex NE Bend

Call Graham Dent 541-383-2444

PUBLISHER'S Call for Specials! NOTICE Limited numbers avail. All real estate adver1, 2 and 3 bdrms.

COIVI PASS,~„„ aevlgetlaaVaeraecceee

Redmond Homes Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 762

Homes with Acreage

850

865

Snowmobiles

ATVs .'! "g&

4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer Polaris Sportsman 2010 850XP EPS, w/ RockyMountain pkg, fully loaded, $6950. $8500. 541-379-3530 541-318-0210 YAMAHA 700 2000 870 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Polaris Fusion 9 0 0, Boats & Accessories only 788 mi., new mirrors, covers, custom skis, n e w rid e -on r ide-off t r ailer w i t h spare, + much more. $ 6,995. Call for d e tails 541-420-6215 860

II!otorcycles & Accessories

Powell Butte FSBO, 3 b drm/2 bath, 1 8 00 sq.ft., 4 . 7 fe n ced acres, Cascade view, shop, fu l RV hookups, $369,000. Harley Dyna Wide Glide 541-419-2753 2003 custom paint, extras, 13,000 orig Want to impress the miles, like new, health forces sale. Sacrifice relatives? Remodel $10,000 obo. your home with the 541-633-7856. help of a professional from The Bulletin's HDFatBo 1996 "Call A Service Professional" Directory

17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $1 2,500 541-815-2523

tising in this newspa- W/D hookups, patios per is subject to the or decks. 745 F air H ousing A c t N!OUNTAIN GLEN, Homes for Sale which makes it illegal 541 -363-9313 630 to a d vertise "any Professionally 2007 Bennington preference, limitation managed by Norris & NOTICE Rooms for Rent Pontoon Boat 775 or disc r imination Stevens, Inc. All real estate adver2275 GL, 150hp tised here in is subMaster bdrm w / own based on race, color, Manufactured/ Honda VTEC, less ject to the Federal shower, $595. View religion, sex, handithan 110 hours, Mobile Homes F air Housing A c t , property in Cloverdale, cap, familial status, Completely original owner, lots Commercial for marital status or na541-420-9801 which makes it illegal Rebuilt/Customized of extras; TennesRent/Lease List Your Home tional origin, or an into advertise any pref- Jandd/fHomes.com 2012/2013 Award see tandem axle Room for rent in Redtention to make any erence, limitation or Winner trailer. Excellent We Have Buyers mond, $525, incl utilities. such 4700 sq. ft. shop and pre f erence, discrimination based Showroom Cond. Get Top Dollar condition, $23,500 No smoking. Call Jim, 2500 sq. ft. office on limitation or discrimion race, color, reliMany Extras 503-646-1 804 541-419-4513 Available. nation." Familial sta- 1.53 acres for lease ion, sex, handicap, Financing Low Miles. 541-548-5511 tus includes children in NW Bend, quiet amilial status or na632 $15,000 area, excellent conds published in the the age of 18 tional origin, or inten541-548-4807 Apt./II!lultiplex General under FIND YOUR FUTURE "Boats" classification living with parents or struction, perfect for tion to make any such HOME INTHE BULLETIN include: Speed, fishlegal cus t odians, electronic assembly preferences, l i mitaCHECK YOURAD Lots of parktions or discrimination. Your future is just apage ing, drift, canoe, pregnant women, and plant. ing. Was auto shop. house and sail boats. people securing cusWe will not knowingly away. Whetheryou're looking Call 702-526-0353. tody of children under For all other types of accept any advertis- for a hat or aplace to hangit, watercraft, please go 18. This newspaper Shop can be leased ing for real estate The Bulletin Classified is separate from office will not knowingly acwhich is in violation of to Class 675. your best source. 541-385-5809 cept any advertising space. this law. All persons HD Fat Boy 2002 Every day thousands of on the first day it runs for real estate which is are hereby informed 14,000 orig. miles. to make sure it isn cor- in violation of the law. that all dwellings ad- buyers andsellers ofgoods Exc. cond. Vance & Sell an Item rect. eSpellcheck and O ur r e aders a r e vertised are available and services dobusinessin Hines exhaust, 5 human errors do ocBayliner 185 2006 hereby informed that on an equal opportu- these pages.Theyknow spoke HD rims. Decur. If this happens to all dwellings adveropen bow. 2nd owner nity basis. The Bulle- you can't beatTheBulletin tachable luggage rack Classified Section for — low engine hrs. your ad, please contised in this newspatin Classified with back rest. Many selection andconvenience — fuel injected V6 tact us ASAP so that per are available on other extras. Must every item is j u st a phone corrections and any — Radio & Tower. an equal opportunity BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS see to appreciate. call away. adjustments can be basis. To complain of Great family boat If it's under $500 Search the area's most $10,500. located m made to your ad. Priced to sell. d iscrimination cal l The Classified Section is comprehensive listing of Crooked River Ranch. 541-385-5809 HUD t o l l-free a t you can place it in $11,590. easy to use. Every i t em classified advertising... Call 530-957-1865 The Bulletin Classified 1-800-877-0246. The 541-548-0345. is categorizedandevery real estate to automotive, The Bulletin toll free t e lephone merchandise to sporting cartegory is indexed onthe n number for the hearWhat are you Say egoodbuy Classifieds for: ssction's front page. goods. Bulletin Classifieds ing i m paired is appear every day in the Whether youarelooking for looking for? to that unused 1-800-927-9275. print or on line. a home orneeda service, $10 - 3 lines, 7 days item by placing it in You'll find it in Call 541-385-5809 your future is inthepagesof Need help fixing stuff'? The Bulletin Classifieds Call The Bulletin Classified. The Bulletin Classifieds Honda CB250 A Service Professional $1 6 • 3 lines, 14 days www.bendbulletin.com Nighthawk, 2008, very find the help you need. The Bulletin good cond, $1800. 3300 (Private Party adsonly) The Bulletin miles. 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com Sensng Cenlrel Oregonsrnce teea Seneng Central Oregon sincetaes 541-385-5809 Call 541-610-3609

I

he Bulletin

FAST!

ie

16' Cata Raft

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

880

Motorhomes

~I

,g t tgt e Ie

24' Mercedes Benz Prism, 2015 Model G, Mercedes Diesel engine, 18+ mpg, auto trans, fully loaded with double-expando, and only 5200 miles. Perfect condition only$92K. Call 541-526-1201 or see at: 3404 Dogwood Ave., in Redmond.

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

Allegro 32' 2007, hke new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driver door w/power window, cruise, exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Asking $67,500. 503-781-8812

4 «f'vette

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convection micro, er ceramic tile washer/dryer,

butlt-In

ScrlPtion and intereSting

flOOr, TV, DVD, Sate IB

facts for $99I Lookhow

faCe COun

dsh ls, air leueling, passand a through storagetray, king SiZe bed- All tor Only

$149,000 541-000-000

muChfufl a glrj COuld

Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months

Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome

Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077 PINNACLE 1990 30', clean.

Rear walk-around bed. No smokers, no mildew, no leaks. $8500. 541-306-7268

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

541-548-5254

• a~ -

RV PACKAGE-2006 Monaco Monarch, 31', Ford V10, 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides, bed & hide-a-bed Fleetwood D i scovery queen 4k gen, conv mi40' 2003, diesel, w/all sofa, crowave, 2 TV's, tow options - 3 slide outs, package, $66,000. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, OPTION - 2003 Jeep etc., 34,000 m iles. Wrangler tow car, 84K Wintered in h eated miles, hard & soft top, 5 shop. $78,995 obo. speed manual,$1 1,000 541-447-8664 541-815-6319

Convertfb(e

y f s 4-dr tndQ

with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Serving Central Oregon since 190

Coupe, 350,auto with ~32 miles, gets 26-24 +Pg.Add lots morede-

ea

e ROW I N G

The Bulletin

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Get your business

ds published in eWa-

'Little Red Cof vette"

oAo 20osr - L~ 'j'lg SUT-

slide, Sleeps 7. Lots of storage. 5000lb hitch. Like new. $51,900 541-325-6813

541 318 1322. Additional information and photos on request, too!

onaco Dyna

2010 Triton V-10 with 13,000 miles. Large

lots of gear, all inn "very good to exc. condition plus custom camp/river tables and bags, more!. $2,700

ae • •

Four Winds 32'

2 Ouffitter oars, 2 Cataract oars, 3 NRS 8" Outfitter blades and

havein a sweet car likethis! $12,500 547 -000-000

(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809 * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


E6 TUESDAY MARCH 31 2015 • THE BULLETIN I

• 8 ~ I

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

• •

I

906

932

933

935

940

975

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Vans

Automobiles

8/fercury Mariner

Vyy Routon2010

CALLCb •

TODAYW

BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorbomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

880

682

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

Tioga 24' Class C Bought new in 2000, currently under 21K miles, exc. shape, new tires, professionally winterized every year, cut-off switch to b a ttery, plus new RV batt eries. Oven, h o t water heater & air cond., seldom used; just add water and i t's ready t o g o ! $22,000 obo. Serious inquiries, only. Stored in T errebonne. 541-548-5174

, i~

0 0

00

Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,

hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED

We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

541-546-5254

Winnebago Outlook n 2007 Class "C 31', clean, non- smoking exc. cond.$49,900 541-447-9266

Utility Trailers

908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

885

Adventurer 2013 66 FB truck camper, $18,800. 2205 dIY weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 deep cycle batteries, LED lights, full size q ueen bed. n i c e floorplan. Also available 2010 Chevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 360-774-2747 No text messages!

Travel Trailers

FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT!

The Bulletin Classifieds

Heartland P r owler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-liv-

elr&

1/3interest in

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

3125,000

(located O Bend) 541-286-3333

GW3 Ultra equipped IFR Beech Bo- Goodyear nanza A36, new 10-550/ Grip snow tires (4), 235/50R18, 1300 prop, located KBDN. miles. Pd $850, sell $65,000. 541-419-9510 $400. 541-382-2463 www.N4972M.com MBZ winter wheels & tire set: 4 MSW Need to get an ad wheels (AMG design) w/Michelin X-ice, used in ASAP? 1 season, cost $2200; sell $1100. Fax it to 541-322-7253 541-382-6664 932

Antique & Classic Autos

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville.

A Private Collection

1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop BEND 541-382-8038

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1966 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, Advertise your car! full panel. $21,000 Add A Picture! obo. Contact Paul at Reach thousands of readers! 541-447-5184. Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classiffeds

And sell it locally. ', gg

I'

e

Tent Trailer Rockwood 2 012 12' b ox , 2 7 ' open, 1.9 c.u. 3-way fridge, furnace. 48"n front ATV rack; 15 Mud Rover tires HD w/spare. Dry weight 2275. Extras. $10,500 541-536-3045

top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-362-0023

ranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg 8 technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170

933

VyyBUG 1971

Fully restored Vin ¹359402

$5,977 A Lot of car for

ROBBERSON

$6,977!

~

Vin¹133699 ~

Mercury Milan2007

Iaaae e

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 03/31/1 5

nsa oa

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

541-312-3986

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4x4 with great gas mileage ¹301651 $11,977 ROBBERSON oc ~

nsn emesse

541-312-3986

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/15

WHEN YOU SEE THIS

goag

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

Looking for your next employee?

AWD. ¹616046 $12,998

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 ROBBERSON readers each week. cllse ehn ~ IM See Your classified ad will also appear on 541-312-3986 bendbulletin.com www.robberson.com which currently reDlr ¹0205. Price ceives over 1 5 milgood thru 03/31/15 lion page views every month at Toyota Camry Hybrid no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds X LE 2 0 1 2 , onl y Get Results! Call 1 2,500 mi., all o p 385-5809 or place tions. Below KBB at your ad on-line at $21,900. bendbulletin.com 541-788-1653

r----

The Bulletin recoml

Toyota RAV42003

$19,977

cleanest in town, seriously, ¹086315 only $9,998

2004, inspected, even comes with a warranty! VIN ¹210482 $8,998.

ROBBERSON

ROBBERSON

ROBBERSON

ROBBERSON

c llleehn ~

crneecn~

cI ls ee hn ~

~

maaa a

541-312-3986

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15

l enl n m e

541-312%986 www.robbersonicom Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15

m a aa

541-312-3986

ROBBERSON

2000- Runs and looks good! Vin ¹166631 $4,998.

2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932

sse e ensn

541-312-3986

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

IM See

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 3/31/1 5

extra caution 8 I mends when p u r chasing • l products or servicesl from out of the area. l S ending c ash ,l a checks, or credit in-

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

l tion about an adver-l tiser, you may call

I the Oregon Statel General's e I Attorney I Office C o nsumer I Protection hotline atl 1-877-677-9392. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregonsince 1903

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

phone number are: Jack Louis Hankins, 1026 Moon Gulch R d., Kellogg, I D 83837, (208) 512-4168. A copy of the Summons and Complaint/Motion can be obtained by contacting either the Clerk of the Court or the other party. If you wish legal assistance, you should immediately retain an attorney to adv ise you i n t h i s matter. Date: 3-19-2015. S h o shone County District Court. By: Maria A nson, Dep u t y Clerk. The last date o f p ublication i s

P ursuant t o OR S 477.250, n o t ice i s hereby given that a public hearing will be held to receive from any interested persons suggestions, advice, objections or remonstrance's to the proposed budget for the Central Oregon Forest Protection District. A hearing will be held on Tuesday, April 1 4, 2015, a t

1 00 P.M., at the Prineville Unit, 3501 E 3rd Street, Prineville, OR. Copies of the tentative budget may be inspected during normal working hours. To ensure the broadest range of services to individuals with disabilities, persons with disabilities requiring special arrangements should contact 541-447-5658 at least two working days in advance.

DOUG DECKER, STATE FORESTER LEGAL NOTICE SUMMONS By Publication. TO: Angela K. Hankins (Neim-

eyer). You h ave been sued by the

List one Item* in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in P RINT and ON -LIN E

at bendbulletin.com

plaintiff, in the District Court and for Shoshone County, I daho, Case N o . CV-2015-109. The nature of the claim against you is for Divorce. Any time after 20 days following the last publication o f this Summons, the court may enter a judgement against you without further notice, unless prior to that time you have filed a written re-

sponse in the proper

human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

975

oncord 00

ROBBERSON

BMW X3 35i 2010 Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable war-

Pickups

OREGON DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY

CHECKYOUR AD

rect. nSpellcheckn and

maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

Automobiles

price $4,998 I I n eceII ~

ways garaged, all

II IR K R

541-312-3966 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15

Time to declutter? Need someextra cash?

541-548-5254

on the first day it runs to make sure it is cor-

cslseecn ~

Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.786.5546

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

882 Fifth Wheels

Iaaae e

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

Suzuki SX4 2011 V W CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible

Dodge Durango

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

I I n eceII ~

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-

Well equipped, and well cared for. VIN ¹407682.$15s998 ROBBERSON

2010. Only 56k mi.. Vin ¹J20929 16,977 ROBBERSON

Total luxury and

541-615-0686

1/3 interest in well-

tow! 15' power awning, power hitch 8 stabilizers, full s i ze queen bed, l a rge shower, porcelain sink & toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition. $12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

h

(4) 17n dress mags for Nissan '07 Titan truck,

ing area & l a r ge closet. Large enough to live in, but easy to

Pe~asus 27' 2005 FQS, 14 slide, lots of extras and plenty of storage inside & out. Pantry next to frig. Always stored in heated garage when not in use. $15,750. 541-526-1361

1965 Mustang

=.

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory F ord Ranger X L T is all about meeting 1997, 4x4, 5 spd., 4 cyl, your needs. tow pkg, runs great, Call on one of the $4700. 541-385-4790. professionals today! Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an Mountaineer 1999 interesting Manner. Wdite from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them insomeway. This 4x4 and ready for advertising tip fun! Vin ¹J28963 brought toyou by Bargain Corral

Covered utility trailer. 4'x8'. Street legal. Spare tire. $450. obo. 541-280-0514 F latbed t r ailer w i t h ramps, 7000 lb. ca-n pacity, 26' long, 8'6 wide, ideal for hauling The Bulletin hay, materials, cars, Mercedes 380SL 1982 SerrineCernret is cgonsinceSerir exc.cond. $2600. Roadster, black on black, 541-420-3768 soft & hard top, excellent 935 condition, always ga931 raged. 1 55 K m i l es, Sport Utility Vehicles $11,500. 541-549-6407 Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

The Bulletin Classifieds

Canopies & Campers

681

541-604-5993

925

Buick Electra 225 1964Classic cruiser with rare 401CI V8. Runs good, needs interior work, 166K miles. $7,995. Donated to Equine Outreach. Call Gary 541-480-6130

$100 each.

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR.

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998.

o

Ig-

Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. $19,750.More pics available.541-923-6408

Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago 31J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995!Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers!541-388-7179

Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. Oneshare available,$13,000. Call 541-706-1780

Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.

h-n W. ~

BSSl 1C S To receive your FREECLASSIFIEDAD, call 541-385-5809or visit

TheBulletinofficeat:1777SWChandler Ave. (Orj Bend's west side) *Offer allowsfor 3 linesof text only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Mustbeanindividual itemunder $200.00 and price oi individual itemmust beincluded in the ad.Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limii 1 adper itemper 30days io besold.

form, including the case number, and paid any required filing fee to the Clerk o f th e C o urt a t (mailing a d dress and telephone number of the court) 700 Bank St., Ste. 300, Wallace, ID 83873, (206) 752-1266 and

served a copy of your response on the o t her p a rty, whose mailing add ress an d t e l e-

course against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's INSURANCE), AND Attorney. If you have A LSO FAILED T O previously been disPAY PRO P ERTY closure proceeding charged thr o u gh T AXES PRIOR T O d ismissed and t h e bankruptcy, you may THE DELINQUENCY trust deed reinstated have been released of DATE IN VIOLATION b y payment to t he personal liability for OF THE TERMS OF beneficiary of the en- this loan i n w h ich BORROWER(S)' tire amount then due case this letter is inH OME EQUI T Y (if applicable) and tended to exercise the CONVERSION curing any other de- note holders right's M ORTGAGE A ND , fault complained of in against the real propAS A RESULT, THE the Notice of Default erty only. As required ABOVE-REFERby tendering the per- b y law, y o u a r e ENCED SUMS WERE formance r e q uired hereby notified that a ADVANCED ON under the obligation or negative credit report BORROWER(S) BE- trust deed, at any time r eflecting on y o u r HALF TO MAINTAIN prior to the sale date. credit record may be INSURANCE ON THE For Sale Information submitted to a credit PROPERTY AND TO Call: 714-573-1965 or report agency if you April 14, 2015. PAY PRO P E RTY Login to: www.priori- fail to fulfill the terms LEGAL NOTICE TAXES By this rea- typosting.com. In con- of your credit obligaTRUSTEE'S NOTICE son of said default the struing this notice, the tions. Without limiting S ALE T . S . No. : beneficiary has de- masculine gender in- t he t r ustee's d i s OR-14-642100-NH clared all obligations cludes the feminine claimer of representaOrder No.: secured by said deed and the neuter, the tions or w a rranties, 140235841-OR-MSO of trust immediately singular includes plu- Oregon law requires N OTICE OF S A L E due and payable, said ral, the word "grantor" the trustee to state in Reference is made to sums being the folincludes any succes- this notice that some t hat c e rtain d e e d lowing, to wit: The sor in interest to the residential p r operty made by JAMES P. sum of $94,061.39 to- grantor as well as any sold at a trustee's sale HAMPTON AND gether with i nterest other persons owing may have been used VERAM. HAMPTON, thereon at the rate of a n o b ligation, t h e in manufacturing A S TENANTS B Y 1.1100 per annum; performance of which methamphetamines, THE ENTIRETY as plus all trustee's fees, is secured by said the chemical compoGrantor to NORTH- foreclosure costs and trust deed, the words nents of which are WEST TRU S T EE any sums advanced "trustee" and known to be t oxic. SERVICES, INC., as by th e b e neficiary 'beneficiary" include Prospective purchastrustee, in favor of pursuant to the terms their respective suc- ers o f re s i dential BANK OF AMERICA, of said deed of trust. cessors in interest, if property should be N.A., A N A T IONAL Whereof, notice any. Pursuant to Or- aware of this potenBANKING ASSOCIA- hereby is given that egon Law, this sale tial danger before deTION, as Beneficiary, Quality Loan Service will not be deemed ciding to place a bid dated 12/3/2007, re- Corporation of Wash- [mal un t i l the for this property at the corded 12/10/2007, in ington, th e u n der- Trustee's deed has trustee's sale. official records of DE- signed trustee will on been issued by Qual- Q UALITY MAY B E SCHUTES C o unty, 7/9/2015 at the hour ity Loan Service Cor- C ONSIDERED A Oregon, in book / reel of 1:00 pm, Standard poration of Washing- DEBT COLLECTOR / volume number fee / of Time, as e stab- ton. If there are any ATTEMPTING TO file / instrument / mi- lished b y se c t ion irregularities are dis- C OLLECT A D E BT crofile / re c e ption 167.110, Oregon Re- c overed within 1 0 AND ANY INFORMAO BT A INED number 2007-63334 vised Statutes at At days of the date of TION covering the following the front entrance to t his sale, t hat t h e WILL BE USED FOR described real prop- the Deschutes County trustee will rescind the THAT PURPOSE. TS erty situated in said Courthouse, 1164 NW sale, r e t ur n the No: County and State, to Bond St., Bend, OR buyer's money and OR-14-642100-NH wit: APN: 140753 LOT 97701 County of Des- take further action as Dated: 2-25-15 Qual8 IN BLOCK 5 OF chutes, State of Ornecessary. If there are ity Loan Service CorFOREST VIEW, DE- egon, sell at public any irregularities dis- poration of Washingas Trus t e e SCHUTES COUNTY, auction to the highest c overed within 1 0 t on OREGON Commonly bidder for cash the days of the date of Signature By: Nina k nown as : 52 7 5 7 interest in the s aid this sale, the trustee Hernandez, Assistant SUNRISE BLVD., LA described real prop- will rescind the sale, Secretary T rustee's b u yer's Mailing Add r e ss: P INE, O R 977 3 9 erty which the grantor return th e Both the beneficiary had or had power to money and take fur- Quality Loan Service and the trustee have convey at the time of ther action as neces- Corp. of Washington elected to sell the said the execution by him sary. If the sale is set C/0 Q u ality L o an real property to sat- of the said trust deed, aside for any reason, Service Corporation isfy the o b ligations together with any in- including if the 411 Ivy Street San secured by said trust terest w h ic h the Trustee is unable to D iego, C A 921 0 1 deed and notice has grantor or his succes- convey title, the Pur- Trustee's P h y sical Address: Quality Loan been recorded pursu- sors in interest ac- chaser at the sale a nt to Sect i o n quired after the exshall be entitled only S ervice Corp. o f 86.735(3) of Oregon ecution of said trust t o a r e turn of t h e Washington 108 1st Revised Statutes: the deed, to satisfy the m onies paid to t h e Ave South, Suite 202 default for which the foregoing obligations Trustee. This shall be Seattle, WA 9 8 104 foreclosure is made is thereby secured and the Purchaser's sole Toll F r ee: (866) the grantors: BOR- t he costs and e x - and exclusive remedy. 925-0241 P 1 134182 ROWER(S) FAILED penses of sale, in- The purchaser shall 3 /1 0, 3/1 7, 3 / 2 4 , TO MAINTAIN HAZ- cluding a reasonable have no further re03/31/2015 ARD IN S URANCE ON THE PROPERTY (AND/OR FAILED TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE PROOF OF

charge by the trustee. Notice is further given t hat a n y per s on named in S e ction 86.778 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the fore-


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