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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $

TUESDAY April 2,2013

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TODAY'S READERBOARD Eyes onthe prIZ8 —The eyeshaveit! See

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By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

who won.B2

Teeny, tiny computer — The device could fit inside a human cell to detect disease and destroy rogue cells.A2

SALEM — Deschutes County commissioners have no intention of taxing cigarettepurchases now, but they are advocating for the ability to levy a tax on tobacco prod-

ucts in the future. "We think it should be a choice for counties, a way to raise revenue if they want to," Deschutes County Commission Chairman Alan Unger said Monday. "We don't plan to. But in the future, who

knows?" Deschutes County has joined other counties across the state, including Multnomah and Lane counties, in advocating for the state to remove a law prohibiting counties from taxing cigarettes

and other tobacco products. This morning, the House Revenue Committee has scheduled a work session on House Bill 2870. The committee could vote to move the bill forward. If the bill passes both cham-

bers, counties could levy taxes on tobacco products. Under the current version of the bill, there would be no limit on how they could tax, but 20 percent of the revenue would help fund public health programs. SeeTobacco /A4

Opening day —TheBryce Harper show in Washington, 35 degrees in Minnesota and new chapters in old rivalries.C1

Candidates for top county job meet public

• Cancer wasundetectable in the blood of 9-year-old Redmond resident AvreyWalker asof last week.While conclusive evidence must wait at least 2weeks, right now ...

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China'S air —A new study puts the loss at 25 million healthy years of life from the population.A5

By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

Five candidates for the Deschutes County administrator position attended a Monday meet-and-greet with commissioners, county

Downslzlng —HowaBend couple dropped their living space to a third of what it was, and feel like they've gained.01

employees

Whatever happenedto

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... The arrestees in the cold

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case slaying of DannySweet? E1

And in national news

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— Connecticut moves toward wider gun law.A2 I

EDITOR'SCHOICE

A key part ofObama health law faces delay By Robert Pear

y

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Unable to meet tight deadlines in the new health care law, the Obama administration is delaying parts of a program intended to provide affordablehealth insurance to small businesses and their employees — a major selling point for the health care legislation. The law calls for a new insurance marketplace specifically for small businesses, starting next year. But in most states, employers will not be able to get what Congress intended: the option to provide workers with a choice of health plans. They will instead be limited to a single plan. This choice option, already available to many big businesses, was supposed to become available to small employers in January 2014. But administration officials said they would delay it to 2015 in the 33 states where the federal government will be running insurance markets known as exchanges. And they will delay the requirement for otherstatesaswe ll. The promise of affordable health insurance for small businesses was portrayed as a major advantage of the new health care law, mentioned often by White House officials and Democratic leaders in Con-

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ABOVE: Avrey Walker, left, and her sister, Maddy, enjoy the view of Philadelphia recently. Aaron Walker said his daughter has felt better than she has in months since an injection of altered cells designed to kill her cancer. AT TOP: Avrey receives an injection of her own immune system cells, altered to fight her cancer, on March 19.

By Heidi Hagemeier The Bulletin

For 9-year-old Avrey Walker ofRedmond, a cancer-free future appears to be within grasp. The Walker family learned Fridayfrom doctors at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia that an experimental treatment to

combat Avrey's leukemia appears to be working. The cancer that has plagued her body since age 4 was undetectable in her blood as of late last week. Conclusive evidence of whether the treatment has succeededisn'texpected for at least another two weeks, when doctors draw a bone

marrow sample. "It's hard to believe that a 20-second injection and 10 days later, she's cancerfree," ecstatic father Aaron Walker said Monday. "After a six-year battle, you know the old saying, if something is too good to be true, it could be. But it's there; it's working. It's pretty

miraculous " Avrey is the seventh child in the world to participate in the clinical trial that targets blood cancers like chronic lymphocytic leukemia,non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and in Avrey's case, acute lymphoblastic leukemia. SeeAvrey/A4

and community members before their formalinterviews today. "Wehave Anderson them set up to meetwith three panels tomorrow for about an hour each," said Commission Barth Chairman Alan Unger. "Two of the panels will be with county staff, the third willbe the oth- Bourey er two commissioners, myself and the recruiter." The County Commission around Jean June2012 hired Greg Prothman of The Prothman Co. to conduct a nationwide can- M a y s didate search. The administrator is the top management pos>t>on >n the county and oversees day-today government operations, including briefing commissioners on most matters that come before the board. The five candidates are Interim Deschutes County Administrator Tom Anderson; Gary Barth, director of business and community servicesforClackamas County; James Bourey, director of corporate development for Elliot Davis LLC in Greenville, S.C.; Robert Jean,interim San Juan, Wash., county manager; and Richard Mays, city manager of Cannon Beach. SeeAdministrator /A4

A freak accident all the more sofor being in basketball By Lenny Bernstein The Washington Post

For 10 excruciating minutes, the national feel-good celebration that is March Madness was halted in its sneakers. Millions watching

TODAY'S WEATHER

gress as they fought oppo-

Sunny

nents of the legislation. SeeInsurance/A4

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High 66, Low 34

Inside • Update on Kevin Ware's condition,C1 two college basketball powersrecoiled from yet another sports injury, one so horrific

that CBS almost immediately stopped showing the replay. On Monday, University of Louisville guard Kevin Ware was shown on Twitter standing with the aid of crutches after surgery on his broken leg.

His injury joined the short list of the most gruesome plays in televised sports history, a fluke of physics all the more bizarre because it did not occur on a football field. Ware simply landed awk-

The Bulletin

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AnIndependent Newspaper

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wardly in front of his team's bench after trying, and failing, to block a three-point shot, snapping the tibia and fibula of his right leg. One broken bone stuckthrough Ware's skin. See Injury/A4

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ban on the sale of high-caNew York Times News Service pacity magazines with more H ARTFORD, C o n n . than 10 bullets. But despite a More than three months afdramatic plea Monday from terthe massacre of 26 people relatives of 11 of the victims at Sandy Hook Elementary killed at Sandy Hook on Dec. School in Newtown, Conn., 14, legislative leaders did not legislative leaders announced include a ban on the ownerMonday thatthey had agreed ship of high-capacity magaon what they called the most zines, although they agreed far-reaching g u n -legislation on new rules requiring their package in the country. registration. The l egislation It would require new state- i n Connecticut, agreed t o issued eligibility certificates after several weeks of negofor the purchase of any rifle, tiations between Democratic shotgun or ammunition; inand Republican leaders in the clude what legislators call the Democratic-controlled G ennation's first dangerous weap- eral Assembly, was hailed by ons offender registry; mangun-control proponents as a date that offenders convicted landmark package and an apof more than 40 weapons of- propriate response to the tragfenses register with the state; edy at Sandy Hook. instate universal background The bill is expected to go checks for the sale of all fire- to both houses of the General arms; and substantially ex- Assembly on Wednesday; paspand the state's existing ban sage seemed assured. Leaders on assault weapons. of both parties said the biparBut it did not include ev- tisanprocess,which was more erything that anti-gun forces protracted than originally exhad asked for. It includes a pected, had been difficult but

should be a model for other states and for Washington. Lawrence Cafero, the Republican H o u s e mi n o r ity leader, said the legislation was drafted with the intent of balancing the rights of hundreds of thousands of gun owners with the public safety needs of the state. Asked how much support it would have among Republicans, he said, "Subs tantial." Asked if i t w o u ld be a majority, he declined to answer. But Robert Crook, a lobbyist for the Coalition of Connecticut Sportsmen, said, "Whatever gun legislation they pass is not going to have an impact on anything that happened at Sandy Hook. The problem there was the individual and the mother." He said he had not seen all the elements of the bill, but took issue with the provisions to add more than 100 new assaultweapons tothose banned by the state.

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years. Syrian COnfliCt —March was the bloodiest month yet in Syria's 2-year-old conflict with more than 6,000 documented deaths, a leading anti-regime activist group said Monday, blaming the increase on heavier shelling and more violent clashes. Rami AbdulRahman, who heads the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the increased toll is likely incomplete because both the Syrian army and the rebel groups fighting the government often underreport their dead in the civil war.

Caraline Kennedy —Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of President John F. Kennedy, is likely to be the next U.S. ambassador to Japan, according to people familiar with the appointment process. The vetting of Kennedy by the White House is almost complete, and anappointment could be announced inthe coming weeks, along with the names of several other choices for important diplomatic posts.

Koron tonSlonS —President Park Geun-hye of South Korea ordered the country's military Monday to deliver a strong and immediate response to any North Korean provocation, the latest turn in a war of words that has become a test of resolve for the relatively unproven leaders in both the North and South."I consider the current North Korean threats very serious," Park told the South's generals."If the North attempts any provocation against our people and country, you must respond strongly at the first contact with them without any political consideration."

Air traVel priCeS —Feisty ad tactics from Florida-based Spirit Airlines won't become a First Amendment testfor the Supreme Court after all. In a case closely watched by the airline industry and free-speech advocates alike, the court declined Monday to hear Spirit's challenge to federal mandates on how prices are advertised. The court's decision effectively upholds Department of Transportation rules opposed by several airlines and civil liber-

Afghan attaCk —An Afghan teenager fatally stabbed an Amer-

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death," prosecutors said Monday in announcing they will seek his execution if he is convicted in the Colorado movie theater attack that killed 12 people. The decision — disclosed in court just days after prosecutors publicly rejected Holmes' offer to plead guilty if they took the death penalty off the table — elevated the already sensational case to a new level and could cause it to drag on for

tarians who are concerned about government controls over commercial speech.

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By mail in DeschutesCounty:

ColorBEIO thontor Shooting —For James Holmes, "justice is

rigid separation of sexes in schools and prohibiting any relations with Israelis, in line with its strictly religious and nationalist ideology, officials said Monday. Critics in Gaza view the law, which mandates separate classes for boys and girls from the age of 9 and bars male staff members from working at girls' schools, as the latest in a series of moves by Hamas meant to impose a more Islamic lifestyle on the people of Gaza.

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his wife were found shot to death in their home, authorities have said little about their investigation or any potential suspects. But suspicion in the slayings shifted Monday to a white supremacist prison gang with a long history of violence and retribution that was also the focus of a December law enforcement bulletin warning that its members might try to attack police or prosecutors.

HamaS eduCatian laW —Hamas, the Islamic group that rules the Gaza Strip, has issued a neweducation law enforcing a more

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Rafiq Maqbool /The Associated Press

A cameraman films the head office of Novartis India Limited on Monday in Mumbai, India. The lndian Supreme Court on Monday rejected drug maker Novartis AG's attempt to patent a new version of a cancer drug Glivec, in a landmark decision that health care activists say ensures poor patients around the world will get continued access to

cheap versions of lifesaving medicines. The debate over global drug pricing is one of

the most contentious issues between developed countries and the developing world. While poorer nations maintain they have a moral obligation to make

cheaper, generic drugs available to their populations — by limiting patents in some cases — the brand name pharmaceutical companies contend the profits they reap are essential to their ability to develop and manufacture innovative medicines. — From wire reports

ican soldier in the neck as he played with children in eastern Afghanistan, officials said Monday, as the U.S. death toll rose sharply last month with an uptick in fighting due to warmer weather. Last week's calculated attack shows that international troops still face myriad dangers even though they are increasingly taking a back seat in operations with Afghan forces ahead of a full withdrawal by the end of 2014.

ArkanSaS Oii Spill —The environmental impacts of an oil spill in central Arkansas began to come into focus Monday as officials said a couple of dead ducks and10 live oily birds were found after an ExxonMobil pipeline ruptured last week. About12,000 barrels of oil and water have been recovered since ExxonMobil's Pegasus

pipeline sprung a leak, spewing oil onto lawns and roadways and nearly fouling a nearby lake. — From wire reports

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:

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TUMALO' :IRRIGATIOI WATER

Suspect in Colorado prisonchief death got oLjt early dLje to apaperwork error By Nicholas Riccardi

used in the March 21 gunbattle was the same one used to shoot DENVER — If it weren't for and kill prisons chief Tom Clea paperwork error, Evan Spen- ments two days earlier. Police cer Ebel would have still been in believe Ebel also was involved prison instead of being suspect- in the death of a Domino's Pized of killing Colorado's prisons za delivery man, Nathan Leon, chief. in Denver. "The court regrets this overJudicial officials on Monday acknowledged that Ebel's previ- sightand extends condolences ous felony conviction had been to the families of Mr. Nathan inaccurately recorded, leading Leon and Mr. Tom Clements," to his release from prison nearly said a statement signed by four years earlier than authori- Charles Barton, chief judge of ties intended. the 11th Judicial District, and In 2008, Ebel pleaded guilty court a d ministrator W a lter in rural Fremont County to as- Blair. Leon's father-in-law told AP saulting a prison officer. In the plea deal, Ebel was to be sen- he had no immediate comment. "There should be more than tenced to up to four additional yearsin prison,to be served af- just a two-sentence apology," ter he completed the eight-year Leon's sister-in-law A m b er sentence that put him behind Lane told The Denver Post. "I bars in 2005, according to a thank somebody for taking acstatement from Colorado's 11th countability for the error, howJudicial District. ever it doesn't bring Nate back." However, the judge did not The court officials vowed to say the sentence was meant to review theirprocedures to enbe "consecutive," or in addition surethe error isn'trepeated. "The Colorado Department to, Ebel's current one. So the court clerk recorded itas one of Corrections values its longto be served "concurrently," or s tanding p a r tnership w i t h at the same time. That's the in- the 11th Judicial District and formation that went to the state the district attorney's office to prisons, the statement said. maintain order at the prisons So on Jan. 28, prisons offiin Canon City.We commend cials saw that Ebel had finished both the 11th Judicial District his court-ordered sentence and and the DOC for reviewing released him. They said they their own internal processes had noway ofknowing the plea and procedures," Gov. John deal was intended to keep Ebel Hickenlooper's spokeswoman behind bars for years longer. Megan Castle said in a written Two months later, Ebel was statement. dead after a shootout with auThe attack that led to the thorities in Texas. The gun he plea deal took place in 2006. The Associated Press

According to prison and court records, Ebel slipped out of his handcuffs while being transferredfrom a celland punched a prison officer in the face. He bloodied the officer's nose and finger, and threatened to kill the officer's family.

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TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Tuesday, April 2, the 92nd day of 2013. There are 273 days left in the year.

RESEARCH

BREAKTHROUGH

HAPPENINGS

Researchersmake

VeneZuela — The country's presidential campaign officially begins, pitting acting President

a computer that fits

Nicolas Maduro against opposition leader Henrique Capriles.

inside a living cell

TOkPO —TheKabukiza, a grand and iconic theater for kabuki fans as well as performers, is set to open after being closed for three years while it was rebuilt.

Detrait —Automakers

explain the behavior of large communities of organisms such as voracious

release vehicle sales numbers for March.

Argentine ants.

HISTORY

By Monte Morin

ate capital as a mobmade up mostly of women, outraged

over food shortages and

rising prices, attacked and looted stores. In 1513, Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon and his expedition landed in present-

day Florida. (Some historians saythe landing actually occurred the next day, on April

3.) In 1792, Congress passed the Coinage Act, which authorized establishment of the U.S. Mint. In1800, Ludwig van Beethoven premiered his Symphony No. 1 in C major, Op. 21, in Vienna. In1860, the first Italian Parliament met at Turin. In 1912, the just-completed RMS Titanic left Belfast to begin its sea trials eight days before the start of its ill-fated

maiden voyage. In 1917, President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress to

declare war against Germany, saying, "The world must be

made safe for democracy." (Congress declared war four days later.) In1932, aviator Charles Lindbergh and John Condon went to a cemetery in The Bronx, N.Y., where Condon turned

over $50,000 to a manin exchange for Lindbergh's kid-

napped son. (The child, who was not returned, was found dead the following month.) In1942, Glenn Miller and his orchestra recorded "American Patrol" at the RCA Victor studios in Hollywood. In1956, the soap operas "As the World Turns" and "The Edge of Night" premiered on CBS-TV. In 1968, the science-fiction film "2001: A Space Odyssey,"

produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick, had its world premiere in Washington, D.C. In 1974, French President Georges Pompidou died in Paris. In 1982, several thousand troops from Argentina seized the disputed Falkland lslands, located in the south Atlantic, from Britain. (Britain seized the islands back the following

June.) Ten years ago: During the Iraq War, American forces

a diplomatic setback when NATO allies rebuffed his pleas to put former Soviet republics Ukraine and Georgia on the path toward membership.

One year ago: A gunman killed seven people at Oikos University, a Christian school

in Oakland, Calif. (Suspected gunman OneGohwas found not mentally fit for trial until

deemed competent.)

BIRTHDAYS Singer Emmylou Harris is 66. Rock musician Dave Robinson

(The Cars) is 60. Country singer Buddy Jewell is 52. Actor Christopher Meloni is 52. Actor Clark Gregg is 51. Actor Michael Fassbender is

36. Singer LeeDewyze (TV:

"American Idol") is 27. Actor Jesse Plemons is 25. — From wire reports

u

LOS ANGELES — Which is smarter:a swarm of brainless mini-robots with c lockwork guts, or a colony of ravenous, half-blind Argentine ants? If you answered mindless robots, you're right — but just barely. Researchers studying the problem-solving abilities of foraging ants enlisted the aid of 10 sugar-cube-sized robots t o determine w h ether t h e real-life insects had to put any thought into deciding which direction they should go when they came to a fork in the road or an obstacle in their path. The answer to that question is important for the understanding of how large communities of organisms interact and coordinate their behavior. The Argentine ant was selected for the study because it's among the world's most successful invasive species. When it gains a foothold in new lands, such as California, Florida, southern Europe, Australia and Southeast Asia, it out-competes local ants and can sever links in the larger food chain. "These guys are a real problem; they've caused alot of trouble," said Simon Garnier, who studies animal behavior at the New Jersey Institute of Technology and was lead author of the study published Thursday in PLOS Computational Biology. The ants, which measure about an eighth of an inch long and have very poor vision, are native to South America. Certain species of ants can travel farther than two football fields to find food, and then tote morsels back to their nest. The paths they take can be extremely complicated, and Argentine ants deposit pheromones along the way to serve as guideposts for their trailing comrades. The behavior of individual foragers can have drastic consequencesforthe entire group. A series of wrong turns by one or several workers can transform an otherwisesuccessful picnic raid into a catastrophe: Wayward ants can accidentally lock their supply network into a closed loop, causing the group to march in a fruitless spiral until they drop fr om exhaustion. Scientists at NJIT and the R esearch Center o n A ni mal Cognition, in Toulouse,

fought their way to within sight of the Baghdad skyline. A bomb blast near a wharf in the southern Philippine city of Davao killed 16.

Five years ago: President George W. Bushsuffered

rector of the Synthetic Biology Engineering Research A team of Stanford Uni- Center, which helped support versity engineers has put the Stanford research. Cona simple computer inside ceptually, it's like electronics, a living cell, where it could in which a transistor controls detect disease, warn of tox- the flow of electrons along a ic threats and, where dan- circuit. ger lurked, self-destruct But biology is the basis for rogue cells. what the team calls a "tranThe achievement, anscriptor," which controls the nounced in Friday's issue flow of an important protein of th e j o u rnal S cience, as it travels along a strand of takes us to a new frontier, DNA. where nature is being proTranscriptors are a biologigrammed to deliver infor- cal version of electrical enmation long-concealed in gineers' "logic gates" — the human bodies. building blocks of digital cir"We're going to be able cuits that send and receive to put c omputers inside signals. any living cell you want," Endy, recruited to Stanford said lead researcher Drew from the Massachusetts InstiEndy of Stanford's School tute of Technology, is a builder of Engineering. "Any place — a civil engineer who started you want a little bit of logic, with boyhood Erector sets a little bit of computation, a and Legos, and later worked little bit of memory — we're on bridge repairprojects for going to be able to do that." Amtrak. The creation completes Now he's building with the 10 years of work to build stuff of life to use it as a techthe biological computer. It nology platform. "Biology is not just a science is the latest step in the new field of synthetic biology of discovery, but also a techwhere — one gene at a time nology for m a king t h ings," — engineers striveto design he said. "We're not going to organisms unlike anything replace the silicon computmade by MotherNature. ers.We're not going to replace These tiny c o mputers your phone or your laptop. But could deliver yes or no an- we're going to get computing swers to virtually any bio- working in places where sililogical question that might con would never work." be posed within a cell. For Last year, the Stanford team instance: Is toxic mercury deliveredtwo other core compresent in our food? Scien- ponents of their computer. The tists could introduce a de- first was a type of rewritable tective "sentinel" organism digital data storage within to f>nd out. D NA. I n formation ca n b e The internal computers stored inside cells by flipping could communicateby en- D NA sequences back a n d gineering cells to change. forth between two p ossible T he "simplest way i s t o orientations to represent and have the cells change their store "0" and "1" that represent one "bit" of computer data. smell or color," Endy said. These cellular computers The other was a mechanism also can count, providing for transmitting genetic data a useful tool when treat- from cell to cell. ing diseases like cancer, in Researchers who learned of which cells divide uncon- the work ahead of publication trollably. Suppose a liver are already using the gates to cell carries a computer that reprogram metabolism, Endy records how many times it sa>d. divides. Once the counter These new biological comhits 500, for example, the puters will be slow, Endy said. "But they'll work i n p l aces cellcould be programmed to die. where we don't have computE ndy's w o r k "clearly ing now." demonstrates the p ower of synthetic biology and could revolutionize how we compute in the future," said University of California, Berkeley, biochemical engineer Jay Keasling, diSan Jose Mercury News

J

Los Angeles Times

Highlight:In 1863, during the Civil War, the Richmond Bread Riot erupted in the Confeder-

By Lisa M. Krieger

And the result'? It turns out that complex thought is not necessary to

The Associated Press file photo

The Argentine ant, drawn here on a computer screen, is one of the world's most successful invasive species, migrating to California, Florida, southern Europe, Australia and Southeast Asia. France, hypothesized that the ants' foraging success was due to a scripted set of instinctive behaviors, and not the result of calculations made by individual ants. Using grant money from the French government, the researchers tested their hunch by setting up a competition between real ants and a squad of micro-robots designed at EPFL, a technical university in L a usanne, Switzerland. In the live-animal experiment, acolony of 500 worker ants wasstarved for a couple of days and then set free in a maze carved into a plastic board. Researchers placed a cotton ball soaked in a sugar solution at the opposite end of the maze and observed as the ants went into a frenzied searchfor food before returning to their nest. The robot experiment took a lot longer to set up and conduct. Each robot comes equipped with two Swatch watch motors and four tiny wheels. The robo-ants communicate with light instead of pheromones, so they sport light sensors instead of antennae. The electronic critters were p rogrammed to m ove r a ndomly, but in the same general direction — just like real ants. The robot ants were r eleasedinto a cardboard maze with infrared light beacons to simulate their nest and their food source. As they wheeled down passageways, an overhead projectorbeamed blue circles onto the pathway behind them, as if they had left a pheromone marker for their buddy robots behind them. When the robotsencountered

a n intersection, they w e r e programmed totake the route that deviated least from their general direction of t r avel. However, if they encountered a blue circle of light, they followed that instead. (The projected light circles gradually faded in intensity, just as real pheromone deposits evaporate and lose strength.) After running the contest between ant and machine many times, their rates of success and overall routes were v ery similar, although t h e robots tended touse shorter routes, the researchers found. Also, when the robots bumbled their way i nt o c losed loops, they were more likely to break free. The research team concluded that "a complex cognitive process is not necessary to explain the ants' behavior." While it might appear that the robots were somewhat more efficient, or "smarter," Garnier said it wasn't exactly a fair comparison. With hundreds of ants in the maze at once, traffic jams would cause the insects to disperse in different directions. "If we had performed th e e x p eriment with 500 robots, we probably would have run into the same problems,"Garnier said. While the study's methods were novel, its c onclusions were "not very s urprising," said Doug Yanega, a senior scientist at the University of California, Riverside's Entomology Research Museum. Computer simulations by animal behaviorist Nigel Franks have provided similar insights into ant behavior, he said.

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Can cataractsgrow back'? vision, the symptoms include glare and difficulty driving at C an c ataracts g r o w night. . back after t hey h ave In cataract surgery,the enbeen removed? tire cataract is removed and "Once a cataract is rean artificial lens is implanted . moved, it cannot grow in its place; the capsule that back," said Dr. Jessica Ciral- held the cataract is left intact sky, an o phthalmologist at t o provide support for t h e N ewYork-Presbyterian H o snew lens. After surgery, papital/Weill C ornell M e dical tients may develop a condiCenter. tion called posterior capsular Blurred vision may develop opacification, which is often after cataract surgery, mimreferred to as a s econdary icking the symptoms of the cataract. "This is a misnomer," Ciraloriginal cataract. This is not a recurrence ofthe cataract sky said. "The cataract has not and is from a condition that is actually grown back." easily treated, said Ciralsky, Instead, she explained, in who is a cornea and cataract about 20 percent of patients, specialist. the capsule that once supportCataracts, w h ic h a f f e ct ed the cataracthas become about 22 million Americans cloudy, or opacified. A simple older than 40, are a clouding of laser procedure done in the the eye's naturally clear crys- office can treat the problem talline lens. Besides blurred effectively.

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

Avrey

Other children and adults who have received the treatment Continued from A1 were hospitalized in intensive Doctors in February drew care units. immune system T-cells from Avrey, however, didn't react Avrey's body. They then ge- as expected, Aaron Walker n etically altered them a n d said. She only experienced fegrew them in a laboratory to ver and headaches for several function as cancer-cell killdays. She never required hosers. On March 19, Avrey re- pital admission. "They're ceived an injection of the new s haking t h e i r cells. heads, saying, 'We haven't Since then it's been a wait- seen this mild a r e action,'" ing game. Doctors expected Aaron Walker said. "But she the altered T-cells to take at is responding well; things are least a week to spread and going as planned." multiply in Avrey's body. In addition, Aaron Walker They were a lso b r acing said, doctors have noted that Avrey's own immune system, themselves for Avrey to fall gravely ill as the T-cells began which had become virtually flushing her body of all its B- nonexistent from chemothercells, the immune system cells apy in the lead-up to the treatthat had become malignant. ment, has rebounded.

"I'll tell you right now," he said, "there's no way that her body would recover those kind of immune cells without her bone marrow beingcleared of cancer." As recently as late February, Avrey required ambulance transport from Bend to Doernbecher Children's Hospital in Portland. She had both influenzaand pneumonia and could barely eat or walk. "She's feeling better than s he has in m o nths, if n o t years," Aaron Walker said. Avrey felt so good Monday that, with the sun peeking out on the East Coast, she and her family planned to go to the zoo. The Walkers will r emain in Philadelphia through at

Injury Continued from A1 "It's a torsional injury," said Craig Bennett, head orthopedic surgeon for University of Maryland athletics, who has seen only two similar injuries in the past decade. "It's a rotational injury, and all the stress gets concentrated on one area." Normally, he said, knee or ankle ligaments would have absorbed thestress of Ware's t wisting leap, tearing if t h e forces were too great, or doing their job and sending him back to the court. But Ware landed in just the wrong way, Bennett believes. The result was an injury that is likely to be remembered as long as the NCAA tournament is played. Another, less likely p ossibility, said Frederick Azar, an orthopedic surgeon and spokesman for t h e A m e r ican Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, isthat Ware had a weak spot in the bone, possibly from a n u n diagnosed stress fracture. Such fract ures can r esult f r o m t h e constant pounding on a basketball player's legs. More rarely, a cyst or benign tumor can create a weakness. But only his doctors would know, Azar said. Ware's injury raised memories of the 1985 play that ended the career of Washington Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann. Theismann's right tibia and f ibula were broken when he was hit by New York Giants linebackers Lawrence Taylor and Harry Carson as a national audience w atching " M o n day N i g h t Football" looked on in h orror. Younger Redskins fans may have been reminded of the unnatural angle of Robert Griffin III's lower right leg as

Tobacco Continued from A1 When considering whether to support the bill, Unger said, the county thought of some of the hard-hit rural timber counties, which are struggling becausefederalsubsidies have dried up. "Look at Curry, Josephine, Lane counties; they need more revenue sources," Unger said. Eric Schmidt, with the Association of Oregon Counties, said the bill would give counties "another tool in the toolbox to fund and provide vital public services." Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend, who sits on the House Revenue Committee, is not supportive of the idea. Conger said the tax would unfairly target the low-income population and force people who are addicted to the products to forego other more im-

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Louisville head coach Rick Pitino and Louisville's Stephan Van Treese talkto injured guard Kevin Ware after his injury Sunday. Ware snapped the tibia and fibula of his right Ieg. he crumpled to the ground with torn knee ligaments in January's playoff loss to the Seattle Seahawks. Ware's i n j ur y m a y be closer to the one sustained in 1989 by Cincinnati Bengals lineman Tim Kr umrie, who broke his tibia in two places and his f i b ula i n a n o ther when he landed awkwardly while trying to make a tackle during Super Bowl XXIII. Krumrie not only refused t o go t o t h e h o spital, h e watched the game from the locker room until paramedics warned that he could go into shock. He was back for the start of the next season and continued his streak of consecutivegames played. Doctors operated on Ware for about two hours Sunday night, the University of Louisville said, setting the bone, inserting a rod made of titanium or stainless steel in Ware's tibia, and closing the wound in his skin. The 36-to-

HouseBill 2870 What it does:Allows counties to levy a tax on sales of cigarettes and othertobacco products. What's next:The bill is scheduled for a work session in the House Revenue committee this

morning. To becomelaw, the proposed legislation would have to pass the

House andSenateand be signed by the governor. portant needs, such as a good diet or access to health care. "I have a lot of concerns about cigarette taxes," he said. His coll eague on the revenue committee, Rep. Vicki Berger, RSalem, said, "Uneven taxation is never a good idea." She pointed out that convenience stores near each other but in different coun-

really comes down to who fits best with the county." Continued from A1 Attendees were asked to A sixth c andidate, Steve fill out comment sheets folW heeler, who r ecently r e - lowing the reception. Prothsigned as Clackamas County man said the commissioners administrator, withdrew his would read them and take candidacy Friday. t heir c omments i nt o c o n During t he r ec e p tion, sideration when n arrowing each candidate was asked to the field to one or more final speak to the group of about candidates. 70 attendees about his prior Following t o d ay's i n t erexperience an d q u a l i f ica- view process the commission tions, explain why he'd like will hold a public meeting to to live in Deschutes County announce which of the five and describe on e p r o fes- candidates will be considered sional decision he'd consider for the position. "I'm confident we will find a failure. "There's a double process a qualified candidate," said that's happening here," Pro- deputy county administrator thman said after each canErik Kropp. didate had spoken. "They're Two candidates were ofalso interviewing us. All five fered the position toward the candidates have the skill set, end of 2012; one withdrew but for this type of position it his candidacy due to family

40-centimeter-long rod (14 to 15 inches) will probably remain in his leg unless it or the screws that hold it in place cause him pain, Azar said. When a bone breaks the skin and is exposed to the air — an "open fracture" — infection is a significant concern and doctors must watch for it closely, experts said Monday. Other possible complications include the bone failing to knit together and damage to nerves and blood vessels. But barring such developments, Azar said, estimates that Ware couldneed a year to recover may be exaggerated. Azar said the basketball player could return in as little as six months. " If t h e c ondition of t h e nerves and the blood vessels are fine, he'll do well," Bennett said. He p redicted that within 18 months, Ware could be playing as well as he had before the injury. Former Louisville running

ties could have drastically different prices on a pack. The state currently levies a $1.18 tax on a cigarette pack. The majority of the money, 87 cents, goes to the Oregon Health Care Plan. Another chunk, 22 cents, goes to the state's general fund, with 6 cents per pack split evenly among cities, counties and transit for low-income people. The remainder goes toward tobaccoprevention programs. Schmidt said it's an important step in giving counties more local control. "Individual counties should be able to make the decision on their own," whether to tax, he said. Crook County Judge Mike McCabe said he hasn't had a chance to consider the prop osed legislation. An d a l though his county is losing about $80,000 from the federal s equestration, he's not w i l d

issues, and the commission was unable to come to terms with the second candidate. "We started this round of recruiting about three months ago," Prothman said. "Last time, they were both qualified but none quite fit. That's why we made two offers." Prothman said he's confident this round of interviews will produce a job offer. "Failing to hire following an offer rarely happens twice with this level of job," he said. The position has been vacant since David Kanner was let go in A u gust 2011. The starting salary i s expected to b e n e g otiated. K a nner earned a salary of just under $ 157,000 at the time of h i s termination. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, shing@bendbulletin.com

least the bone marrow draw, A aron said. They w i l l r e turn monthly for the next six months. Avrey will also need periodic injections of B-cells. The altered T-cells will c ontinually sweep all B-cells from her body, whether they're cancerous or not. But the Walkers are brimming with optimism. While not everyone has responded to the treatment, several remain cancer-free more than a year later. "I want to share our story," Aaron Walker said. "If this could end six years of suffering for other families and kids, that would be phenomenal." — Reporter: 541-617-7828, hhogemeier®bendbulletin.com

back Michael Bush sustained a similar lower-leg injury in 2006 during his senior year and has had a p r o ductive professional career since; Maryland defensive back Nolan Carroll went down with a non-contact bone break in 2009 before playing for the Miami Dolphins. "We fixed him that night, and he played" for the Dolphins th e f o l l owing y e ar, Bennett said. Theismann a nd Bush tweeted their sympathies, and Bush spoke by phone with Ware before acknowledging publicly that he wept at the sight of Ware crumpling. " Sometimes, y o u h av e an event that makes people realize that t h ere's something more important than the tribe, t han t h e c o lors we wear," said Eric Simons, author of the book "The Secret Lives of Sports Fans," out Thursday. "The story of sports fans that is really underappreciated is that we do shut off our red colors and our blue colors" and empathize as human beings. Adding to the shock was the scene of the injury — a basketball court rather than a football field or a boxing ring, Simons said. Reactions to events in sports are very "contextdependent," he said, something that helps explain why violence among fans is more common at soccer matches, where some almost expect it, than at baseball games. "I don't t h in k y o u n e ed much of a psychological explanation" for the reaction to Ware's injury, Simons said. B ut "any t i m e y o u 're n o t primed for it, if you're not expecting this from the context of the event, it does come as a shock to your brain, at a very deep level."

abouttheidea. "We just keep taxing and taxing and taxing," he said. — Reporter, 541-554-1162 Idalze®bendbulletin.com

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ing store in Portland, Ore., said the delay was "a real Continued from A1 mistake." "It will limit the attractiveSupporters of the health c are law s aid t hey w e r e ness of exchanges to small disappointed by the turn of business," Roach said. "We events. would like to see different The delay will " p rolong insurance carriers available and exacerbate health care to each of our 12 employees, costs that are crippling 29 who range in age from 21 million small b u sinesses," to 62. You would have more said Sen. Mary L andrieu, c ompetition, mor e d o w n D-La. a n d cha i r w oman ward pressure on rates, and of t h e S e n ate C o m mit- employees would be more tee on Small Business and likely to get exactly what Entrepreneurship. they wanted." In the weeks leading up to J ohn A r e nsmeyer, t h e passage of the health care c hief executive o f S m a l l legislation in 2010, Landrieu Business Majority, an advoprovidedcrucialsupport for cacy group, said the delay the measure, after secur- of "employee choice" was ing changes to help small "a major letdown for small businesses. business owners and their The administration cited employees." "operational challenges" as "The vastmajority of small a reason for the delay. As employers want their ema result, it said, most small ployees to be able to choose employers buying i nsur- among multiple insurance ance through an exchange carriers," Arensmeyer said. will offer just a single health Small Business Majority plan to their workers next supported Obama's health year. care law. Health insurance availAnd that support was inability and cost are huge valuable to Democrats who concerns for small business- pushed the bill through Cones. They have less bargain- gress. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, ing power than largecom- D-Calif., who w a s H ouse panies and generally pay speaker at the time, cited the higher prices for insurance, group's research as evidence that "small businesses will if they can afford it at all. The 2010 law stipulates benefit from health insurthat each state will have a ance reform." Small Business Health OpHowever, in recent weeks, t ions Program, o r S H O P insurance companies urged exchange, to help employers t he administration to d e compare health plans and lay the "employee choice" enroll their employees. option. "Experience with MassaOne of the most important tasks of the exchange is to chusetts has demonstrated simplify the collection and that employee choice modpayment of monthly premi- els are extremely cumberums. An employer can pay some to establish and opera lump sum to the exchange, ate," Aetna said in a letter which will t hen distribute t o th e a d m inistration i n the money to each insur- December. ance company covering its I nsurers said t h a t t h e employees. administration was p artly The Obama administra- responsible for t h e d e lay tion told employers in 2011 because it did not provide that the small-business ex- detailed guidance or f inal change would "enable you rules for the small-business to offer your employees a exchange until last month. choice of qualified health B usinesses with u p t o plans from severalinsurers, 100 employees will be able much as l arge employers to buy insurance in the excan." In addition, it said, the changes. In 2014 and 2015, exchange would " consoli- states can limit participation date billing so you can offer to businesses with 50 or fewworkers a choice without the er employees. Companies hassle of contracting with with fewer than 25 workers multiple insurers." may be able to obtain tax Exchanges are scheduled credits for up to two years of to start enrolling people on coverage bought through an Oct. 1, for coverage that be- exchange. States can open gins in January. However, the exchanges tolarge emthe administration said the ployers in 2017. A few states running their government an d i n s urers needed "additional time to own exchanges, including prepare for a n e m p loyee California and Connecticut, choice model" of the type said they planned to offer envisioned in the law signed an "employee choice" opthree years ago by Obama. tion next year, though it was D. Michael Roach, who not required by the federal owns a wo m e n's c l oth- government.

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IT'5 IN THE BAG! LUNCHTIME LECTURES AT OSU-CASCADES Explore the range of research and scholarship underway at OSU-Cascades. I I I I n I I I I I n I I I I n I I I I n I I I I n I I I I I I n I I I I I I I I I I n I I I I n I I I I I I n I I I I n I I I I n I I n n I I I I n I I I I n I I I I n I I I I I I I I I I II n nn I I I I I I I I I I I I n I I II I In II I In II I In II I

Fate and luck: A series crossing boundaries Where do ideas come from in art? Art professor Sandy Brooke will discuss her series of works, Fate and Luck,a collection of paintings, collages and encaustics. She'll explore if an artist's inspirational idea changes when the media —oil paint, gouache and wax — changes, or whether the idea can transcend across media types. i4" ~M

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TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

IN FOCUS:POLLUTION

Disproportionate number

in China dying from bad air

Workers demolish the wall of a house near the smoky chimney ofa power plant last month in east Beijing. A study by the Chinese Academy of Environmental Planning has estimated that the cost of environmental degradation in China was about $230 billion in 2010, or nearly 3.5 percent of the nation's gross domestic product.

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By Edward Wong New York Times News Service

BEIJING — O u tdoor ai r pollution contributed to 1.2 million premature deaths in China in 2010, nearly 40 percent of the global total, according to a new summary of data from a scientific study on leading causes of death worldwide. Figured another way, the researchers said, China's toll from pollution was the loss of 25 million healthy years of life from the population. The data on which the analysis is based was first presented in the ambitious 2010 Global Burden o f D i s ease Study, which was published in December in The Lancet, a British medical journal. The authors decidedto break out numbers for specific countries and present the findings at international conferences. The China statistics were offered at a forum in Beijing on Sunday. "We have been rolling out the India- and China-specific numbers, as they speak more directly t o na t i onal l e a ders than regional numbers," said Robert O'Keefe, the vice president of H ealth Effects Institute, a research organization that is helping to present the study. The organization is partly financed by the U.S. Environmental Pro t e ction Agency and the global motor vehicle industry. What t he r es e archers called "ambient particulate m atter pollution" w a s t h e fourth leading risk factor for deaths in China in 2010, behind dietary risks, high blood pressure and smoking. Air pollution ranked seventh on the worldwide list of risk factors, contributing to 3.2 million deaths in 2010. By comparison with China, India, which also has densely

A study released Thursday said the growth rate of disclosure of pollution information in 113 Chinese cities had slowed. The groups doing the study, the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, based in Beijing, and the Natural Resources Defense Coun-

cil, based in Washington, said that "faced with the current situation of severe air, water and soil pollution, we must make changes to p ollution source information disclosure so that information is no longer patchy, out of date and difficult to obtain."

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populated cities grappling with similar levels of pollution, had 620,000 premature deaths in 2010 because of outdoor air pollution, the study found. That was deemed to be the sixth most common killer in South Asia. The study was led by an institute a t t h e U n i v ersity of Washington and several partner universities and institutions, including the World Health Organization. Calculations of premature deaths because of o u tdoor air pollution are p olitically t hreatening in t h e e yes of some Chinese officials. According to news reports, Chinese officials cut out sections of a 2007 report called "Cost of Pollution in C h ina" that discussed premature deaths. The report's authors had concludedthat350,000 to400,000 p eople die p r ematurely i n China each year because of o utdoor ai r p o l lution. T h e study was done by the World Bank in cooperation with the Chinese State Environmental Protection A d m i n i stration, the precursor to the Ministry of Environmental Protection. There have been other estimates of premature deaths because of air pollution. In 2011, the World Health Organization estimated that there were 1.3 million premature deaths in cities worldwide because of outdoor air pollution. Last month, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, based in Paris, warned that "urban air pollution is set to become the top environmental cause of mortality w o rldwide by 2050,ahead of dirty water and lack of sanitation." It estimated that up to 3.6 million people could end up dying prematurely from air pollution each y ear, mostly i n C h ina a n d India. There has been growing outrage in Chinese cities over what many say are untenable levels of air pollution. Cities a cross northern C h ina h i t record levels in January. Because of that, official Chinese newspapers ran f r o nt-page articles on the surge, despite earlier limits on such discussion by propaganda officials. In February, the State Council, China's Cabinet, announced a timeline for the introduction of new fuel standards, but stateowned oil and power companies are known to block or ignore environmental policies to save on costs.

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

BRIEFING

Stove suspected in home fire The Bend Fire Department responded to a fire in a manufactured home in Deschutes River Woods shortly before tt a.m. Monday. When homeowner Randy Pack returned from work Monday

morning, smokewas coming from the home. Firefighters discovered that the blaze began near the woodstove in the dining area, and most of the fire damage was in that part of the

home, according to a press release from the Bend Fire Department. However, there was

smoke and heatdamage throughout. Fire officials believe the cause was likely wood that was placed too close to the stove, and the Fire Department reminds residents to keep all materials that can burn at least three feet from heating equipment, according to the

www.bendbulletin.com/local

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TUMALO TRAIL

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By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

A soft-surface path may be the most viable solution for the proposed Tumalo Trail after the State Historic Preservation Office determined the original route would disturb three archaeological sites in the area. "The path would be between two and four feet wide and made outofpacked aggregate," said Paul Blikstad, senior planner for Deschutes County Community Development. "It would be better than what's there now and would still provide the connectivity between town and the land use area." The Community Develop-

ment department offered four solutions to constructing the trail to avoid historic sites: end the path early, just south of the Highway 20 bridge; reroute the path to an existing gravel road; reroute the path to intersect with O.B. Riley Road; or abandon the idea of paving and build a soft-surface road instead. Blikstad said his office believes the fourth option is the most viable. The Deschutes County Commission in their Monday work session heard from the development department on county options for building the 1.2-mile trail that would link Tumalo with Tumalo

State Park, providing a way for pedestrians and bicyclists to reach the park without having to cross Highway 20. The path would begin at the end of Riverview Avenue, follow the west shore of the Deschutes River and end in Tumalo State Park. The original plan was to build a paved path, but state archaeologists determined the route encroaches on areas of "lithic scatters," Blikstad satd. "Essentially what they found are tools that were used to make other tools," he said. "It's not like they were finding bones and skulls." SeeTrail /B5

worth $80lt', Paved portion

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Tumalo State Park Greg Cross/ The Bulletin

GONE FISHIN'

press release. Pack's cat is missing after the fire. — Bulletin staffreport o

STATE NEWS • Portland 'Carlton Salem

• Portland:A hiker rescued after six days on Mount Hood reflects on her

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experience. • Salem:In an effort to stabilize its finances, the Oregon State Fair may get independent

management. • Carlton:A motorist unhappy with a traffic citation is accused of ramming the patrol car that stopped him. Stories on B3

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Manager quits, gets package

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By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin

The Sisters city manager resigned Monday and will receive more than $80,000 as part of a severance

package. Eileen Stein served as city manager of the 2,000population community for 11 years. According to the separation agreement, Stein's resignation is effective immediately. She received 11 months of severance on Monday, totaling more than $75,500, according to the agreement. She also received more than $5,000 in accrued vacation pay and will continue to receive health insurance for 11 months. In addition, the separation agreement includes a provision that prevents Stein and city staff and councilors from disparaging oneanother or making any statements that could "reasonably be expected to damage the professional or business reputation of the other party." The agreement further requires the city to provide Stein with a letter of reference. The letter includes nine points that highlight her accomplishments during her time as city manager, including her role in creating a downtown urban renewal district, the modernization and expansion of city facilities and creating master plans for various issues within the city. The letter states the City Council highly recommends Stein for new employment, "without reservation." SeeSisters /B5

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Paul Hayes and his son, Logan Hayes, 8, laugh while fishing together Monday afternoon at Pine Nursery Park pond. Logan and his sister, Lily, were visiting Bend from Washington for their spring break. Warm and sunny weather is forecast through Wednesday for the Bend area, with showers expected to arrive late in the week. A comprehensive weather forecast for Central Oregon is on B6.

WHATEVER HAPPENED TOR

Have astoryidea or sudmission? Contactus! The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ................ 541-61 7-Z829 Redmond........541-548-2186 Sisters.............541-548-2186 La Pine ........... 541-383-0367 Sonriver......... 541-383-0367 Deschotes ..... 541-383-0376 Crook ............. 541-383-0367 Jefferson ....... 541-383-0367 Salem..............541-554-1162 D.C..................202-662-7456 Business........ 541-383-0360 Education ...... 541-383-0367 Health ..............541-383-0304 Public lands .....541-617-Z812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects ..........541-617-7831

Boy, 9, hurt when car hits hisbicycle By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

A 9-year-old boy was hit by a car in Deschutes River Woods Monday evening, after theboyrode hisbicycle in front of the car. The boy, who was not wearing a helmet, was taken to St. Charles Bend with unknown injuries, according to a pressre-

lease from the Sheriff's Office. John Christensen, 90, of Bend, was driving a White 2001 Dodge Intrepid south on Cheyenne Road, south of Cinder Butte Road in Deschutes River Woods early Monday evening, according to the Sheriff's Office. In the passenger seat was Gladyce Christensen,83, also ofB end. Both were

wearing their seatbelts. A boy on a bicycle entered the lane in which Christensen was driving, and the boy was hit. Sheriff's deputies, detectives and the Bend Fire Department were dispatched to Deschutes River Woods shortly after5 p.m. Monday. SeeAccidents/B3

Following up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories.To follow the series, visit www.bendbulletin. Ocom/updates.

Charges cllopped

in cold-case homicide

March 2013weatherfor Bend

By Sheila G. Miller

DAILY HIGHS AND LOWS Average temperature: 40.4' (1.7 above normal)

Just 13 months ago, the Oregon State Police made a proud announcement: After 16 years, they'd arrested two people in the cold-case murder of a Prineville man, and a

The Bulletin

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PRECIPITATION TOTAL: 0.81"

Hi s torical average precipitation for the month: 0.82"

SNOW TOTAL:0"

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ALMANAC We have a winner! From the many correct entries in our contest,

one reader hasbeen selected at random. Find out who won a$200 gift certificate at Lifetime Vision and checkyour answers to see which eyes belong to which Central Oregon animal

on page B2.

Highest temperature

Lowest temperature

Highest recorded temperature forthe month:

Lowest recorded temperature for the month: Oo

78' on March 12, 1934

Average high

Average low

Monthly average high temperature through the years:

Monthly average low temperature through the years:

51.0'

26.5'

on March 1, 1960

* Monthly averages calculated from 1928 through 2005, Western Regional Cemate Center Sources: NOAA, Western Regional Cemate Center, Bend Puhhc Works Department

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

in Grant County had indicted the pair on charges of murder and aggravated murder. But today, those charges are dismissed because of an unreliable

Bogan

Colbert

key prosecution witness and a ruling by a Grant

S weet

County judge that one of the defendants could not get a fair trial. The judge also ruled that prosecutors had no legitimate reason to have delayed so long in indicting him. SeeCold case/B6


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

E VENT

Redmond

HomeFederal..

AL E N D A R

EduCBtion FOUNDATION

Bank

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

TODAY

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GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: Featuring a screening of "Genetic Roulette," a documentaryfilm about genetically engineered food; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.

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WEDNESDAY "IT'S IN THEBAG" LECTURE SERIES: Sandy Brooke presents the lecture "Fate and Luck: A Series Crossing Boundaries" about her series of artwork; free; noon-1 p.m.; OSU-Cascades Campus, Cascades Hall, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-322-3100, info©osucasades. edu or www.osucascades.edu/ lunchtime-lectures. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: FRANCESCA DA RIMINI": Starring Eva-Maria Westbroek, Mark Delavan and Marcello Giordani in an encore presentation of Zandonai's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3826347. LIVE MUSIC: Celebrate Mark Ransom's birthday with The Mostest, Hobbs, The JZ Band, Brent Alan, Indian food and more; a benefitfor Ukulelesfor Youth; $10 suggested donation;8 p.m.;The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents. com. M ISS LONELY HEARTS: Thefolkact performs, with Boxcar Stringband; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.facebook.com/ thehornedhand.

THURSDAY THREE TIMESBAD: The San Francisco-based bluegrass act performs, with The Rumand The Sea; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.facebook. com/thehornedhand. LAFA TAYLOR: Electro-hop, with Nix, Prajekt and Over Cover; 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999.

FRIDAY FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and foodin downtown Bend and the

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Claire Folger/Warner Bros. via The Associated Press

A free screening of "Argo, starring Bryan Cranston, left, and Ben Affleck, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, in Madras. To learn more, call 541-475-3351 or go online to www.jcld.org. Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. BLUE RIBBONCAMPAIGN KICKOFF: Kick off the child-abuse prevention campaign, with food, speakers and award presentations; free; 5:15 p.m.; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3835958 or www.kidscenter.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Aaron Nicholson talks about his book, "The State of Determination," with a slide show; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. "PLAY AGAIN": A screening of the 2010 documentaryfilm that investigatesthe consequences of a childhood removed from nature, followed by a Q&Awith producer Meg Merrill; proceeds benefit the Deschutes Children's Forest; $5$10 suggested donation; 7 p.m., doorsopen at6:30 p.m.;The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-383-5592 or www. deschuteschildrensforest.org. "ARGO": A screening of the R-rated 2012 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org. DELANY & PARIS: The Portlandbased folk-comedy act performs, with Derde Verde; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W.Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand.

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TAARKA: The Colorado-based jazzy gypsy-folk band performs; $10; 8 p.m.; The Belfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com.

SATURDAY URBAN AGRICULTURE IN CENTRAL OREGON:Learn about the rewards and challenges of urban food production inthe area; includes lunch; $25-$30, $15-$20 students; 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; OSU-Cascades Campus,Cascades Hall,2600 N.W . College Way, Bend; 541-322-3100 or www.centraloregonfoodpolicy.org. VFW EASTERBUFFET: A breakfast buffet; $8.50; 8:30-11 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. DISCOVERNATUREDAY: Families can track wildlife, explore Tumalo Creek, meet birds of prey, plant treesand playgames;hosted by the Deschutes Children's Forest; free; 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Shevlin Park, 18920 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-383-5592 or www. deschuteschildrensforest.org. CERN PRESENTATION: A lecture byastronomer Bill Logan about the European Organization for Nuclear Research and the Large Hadron Collider; free; 1 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1 080.

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NEWS OF REGORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT DUII — Lyndsey Engstrom, 30, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence

of intoxicants at 2:29 a.m. March 30, in the area of Northeast Holly Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:16 p.m. March 30, in the area of Northeast Juniper Street.

DUII — Steven Dwayne Roe,45, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4 p.m. March 29, in the 8200 block of Southwest Feather Drive in Culver.

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JEFFERSON COUNTy O R E GON STATE SHERIFF'S OFFICE Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 11:33 a.m. March 29, in the area of the Perry South mooring dock at Lake Billy Chinook in Culver.

DUII — Bradley Joseph Steele, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:20 a.m. March 31, in the area of Northeast Greenwood Avenue and Northeast Third Street.

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-"~- EYES ON THE PRIZE

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And the winner is... Kay Ross Lemmon, of Bend, was chosen at random from participants who got all nine answers correct. She wins a $200 gift certificate to Lifetime Vision Care. Thanks to all who submitted an entry. The correct chart appears below.

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1. rabbit

2. trout

3. butterfly

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TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON State fair could get independent managers The Associated Press SALEM — Oregon legislators may tr y a n other strategy to get the state fair on better financial footing. A bill backed by the Senate president, Peter Courtney of Salem, would put the fair and its year-round exposition center under the control of an independent public corporation free of many state reins. The fair itself makes a profit, but t h e e x penses of running its exposition center year round turn the operation into a m o neyloser. The loss is expected to top $7 million in the current two-year budget period, The Salem Statesman Journal reported. The Expo Center hosts e vents such as t h e O r egon A g F e st, g r aduat ions, c o nferences a n d quinceaneras. The fair used to be run by an independent agency. To wean it from tax dollars, the Legislature transferred it to the Parks and Recreation Department, which gets lottery support. F arm groups say t h e department isn't g e ared to enterprises such as the fair, and some events have moved to other venues. Critics said the fair operation would do better if it were freed from state restrictions on contracts, facilities, hiring and benefits. Lisa Van Laanen of the Department of Parks and Recreation said k eeping t he organization as it i s means the talk in the next few years will turn to how to keep the fair alive. " This is k i n d o f t h a t

bridging the gap," she sa>d. Unionized state workers oppose the move, saying it will reduce government accountability. The Service E m ployees International U n ion Local 503 is finalizing an agreement with the state to ensure the 10 people employed to help run the fair will be placed in jobs without displacing other state workers. Courtney leads majority Democrats in the Senate. Twenty years ago, as a House member, he voted against a measure to give the f a i r' s m a n agement more autonomy. T hen, he said, a f a i r marked by glitzy entertainment, fewer display booths and less family entertainment might draw l arger crowds but would abandon the fair's mission of showcasing "Oregon products and Oregon homegrown talent."

Accidents

AROUND THE STATE

MOUNT HOOD RESCUE

os i ernever os er ai By Nigel Duara

State Police say amanunhappy about a speeding ticket

hasbeenaccused oframming a patrol car and leading of-

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The Associated Press

Police chase —Oregon

ficers on a chase in Yamhill County. Authorities say the suspect was slightly wounded Sunday night when one of his pursuers fired at the vehicle. The Oregonian reports the man was cited for doing 85 mph in a 55 mph zone near Carlton. The trooper says he left angry,

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PORTLAND — At the base of a Mount Hood trail, Mary Owen pushed past the warn-

ings of a climbing group and t hen a s n o w boarder w h o begged her to turn around. She had spent most every minute of her life headstrong and confident in herself and God, and she was that way when she brushed off the dangers and pressed forward on the trail. Th e snowboarder would be the last person she would see before plunging 40 feet through a stand of trees on Mount Hood's northwest face and becoming stranded for six days. Monday, while recovering at a Portland hospital from exposure and a gash in her leg, Owen recounted the time that led up to the fall and her rescue. She says she was met almost immediately with pulsing snow drifts that eventually funneled her away from her path. On the mountain, Owen would see 30 feet of visibility one minute and an instant later, nearly none. A deeply religious student at George Fox University in Newberg with plans to become a Bible translator on missionary assignments, Owen said she put her faith in God that she would find her way, despite the warnings. Her plan to go ahead with her trek came a day after her climbing group canceled a p lanned summit o f M o u n t Hood. She approached the mountain f ro m t h e s o uth, the traditional route taken by most climbers, "because I decided I didn't want to get lost," she said with a laugh. She had grown tired of fellow climbers with too many hang-ups — those averse to the cold, the dark or too much snow. When she finally saw the

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and he soon turned aroundand rammed the trooper's car. After

a chase, officers used spike ,s

strips to stop the vehicle and stun guns to subdue the driver. He was identified as 29-yearold Bryan Mitchell of Yamhill. He was treated, released and then arrested and charge with attempted assault, reckless driving, hit and run, and elud-

I

ing police.

Mill City fire —Aformer finance clerk has been sentenced to three years in prison for burning down City Hall in a Linn County town. Prosecutors said the fire in September 2010 was an attempt to cover up evidence of the theft of more than $20,000 from Mill City. The town of about 1,800 opened a new city hall lastyear. A city official said at the sentencing that the fire also created divisiveness and mistrust in the community. The Albany Democrat-Herald reports that Joy Marie Cronin was convicted March1 of arson and sentenced Friday. She was ordered to pay $373 000 in restitution.

Brent Wojahn/The Oregonian via The Associated Press

From her bed in a Portland hospital, Mary Owen, 23, of Newberg, talks about her experience being stranded onMount Hood and her subsequent rescue.

Lost skier found dead on Mount Hood

To Owen, who said she communicates daily with a higher MOUNT HOOD — Authorities have identified a skier found dead power, this was God playing ina creek on Mount Hood as a LasVegas man. the role of stern disciplinarian, The Clackamas County sheriff's office said Monday he was 23because she heard nothing. year-old Russell Tiffany. Not when she pounded out Deputies say Tiffany was with a group of skiers drinking ata a snow cave for herself, not hut Saturday night, but he decided to head down the mountain when she finished the last of alone. her five Nutri-Grain bars, not He got disoriented and called a friend. They made plans to meet when she woke up so cold that up, but he didn't show. she wanted to die. She cowThe sheriff's office says hewas last seen by agroup of campered in a hand-carved snow ers who attempted to direct him to their location, but he didn't cave for much of herordeal arrive. and prayed. The result, she Searchers were notified Sunday morning, and his body was said, was silence. found that night west of the Ski Bowl resort. "God wasn't talking to me," — The Associated Press she said. By Friday, however, she said she saw signs of a search. On mountain peak, she realized lights of another snow park, Saturday,an Oregon National she was on the wrong side of and with them the hope that Guard helicopter spotted a the mountain. From the north- she was closer to civilization. trail that ended near where west face, she couldn't make Then, she slipped. Owen had landed, a trail left the summit and, in an uncharS he knows now th e f a l l by what she now calls "my acteristic act of r esignation, was about 40 feet. She fell mountain angel." turned around. t hrough a s t an d o f t r e e s She takes the experience as — "hit a few of them, appar- a lesson. T he heavy snowfall h ad "I'm not afraid of death. I pushed her from th e s afer ently," — bounced and sufsouth face, she felt herself tak- fered a gash to her leg that in- think that was God saying, 'Hey, you need to be afraid,'" ing the path of least resistance. cluded a splinter inches from She could see, distantly, the her femoral artery. Owen said.

Keizer standoff —Negotiators talked with a Keizer woman for more than two hours Sunday nightand per-

suaded her to safely surrender after threatening to set a house on fire because of a fight with her boyfriend. When they went inside, police and firefight-

ers found gasoline hadbeen poured around the residence but not ignited. The woman was jailed. Charges included attempted arson. The boyfriend had left the home to flag down an officer. — From wirereports

Bill would banseclusion cellsfrom schools By Jonathan J. Cooper

definition and would become

The Associated Press

illegal.

dren calm down without being physically restrained. "I was surprised and embarSALEM — The Oregon SenPortland P ublic S c hools ate voted Monday to make it il- rassed that we even had these has four seclusion rooms at its legal for schools to isolate mis- kinds of facilities" in Oregon Pioneer Special School Probehaving children in so-called schools, said Sen. Lee Beyer, gram for children with special "seclusion cells." D-Springfield. needs. The legislation would outA separate bill, now pendUse of the rooms is strictly law any " freestanding, self- ing in the budget committee, regulated, and the vast macontained" unit that's used to would require the Department jority of uses are for less than isolate students or lock them of Education to more clearly 10 minutes, said Erin Hoover up. It would not ban larger define minimum s t andards Barnett, a spokeswoman for rooms that serve similar purfor rooms used to seclude Portland Public Schools. A staff member must stand outposes, such a s c l assrooms children. used astime-out rooms. Critics say seclusion cells side the door and record the Oregon allows children to are harmful to children and child's behavior every minbe secluded when there's an are sometimesused merely as ute, she said. If motion detecimminent t hreat o f b o d i ly punishment, not to provide a tors can tell that the adult has injury and other ways of con- safe space for children to calm walked away,the room autotrolling the behavior are inef- down. matically unlocks. "They're only used in situfective. It is unclear how many Some special-education ofOregon schoolshave seclusion ficials say seclusion cells are ations where the student is chambers that meet the bill's an important tool to help chil- really struggling and in need

by ground ambulance to St. Charles Bend, Husband said. Continued from B1 In a pressrelease, the OrThe boy's parents arrived at egon State Police described the scene before he was taken Wilcox' injuries as serious but to the hospital, so they were not life-threatening. Wilcox's able to go with him, according condition w a s u n a vailable to the Sheriff's Office. Monday evening because she The Sheriff's Office did not was still i n t h e e mergency release the name of the boy. room. Wilcox was eastbound The incident remains under on U.S. Highway 20 w hen investigation, but the Sheriff's she lost control of the vehicle, Office does not believe alcohol drove off the highway and was a factor in the crash. rolled multiple times, accordThe incident was one of sev- ing to OSP. She was not weareral crashes that kept police ing a seat belt. OSP is continuand sheriff's deputies busy ing to investigate the crash. across D e schutes C o unty Sheriff's deputies, firefighters Monday. and the Oregon Department "There'sa lot of crashes to- o f Transportation also r e day," said Sgt. Bryan Husband sponded to the scene. of the Deschutes County SherFrederick Butte Road iff's Office. The Sheriff's Office also reOn Highway 20 sponded to a couple of vehicle At about 3 p.m., dispatchers crashes on Monday morning. received a report of a single At approximately ll :30 a.m., vehicle crash on U.S. High- deputiesresponded toa report way 20 at Pinehurst Road, just of a single vehicle rollover on north of Tumalo. The driver, Frederick Butte Road, near 57-year-old Muriel Wilcox, of U.S. Highway 20 east of Bend, Palo Alto, Calif., was ejected Husband said. An 18-year-old from her 2003 Toyota 4Run- female driver and 19-year-old ner SUV. A helicopter ambu- male passenger were in a 1990 lance was called to the scene, Ford Mustang, when the car but Wilcox was taken instead rolledover on the gravel road.

Find It All

Online

of some down time and a controlled space where they can calm down," Hoover Barnett sa>d. The sponsor of the legislation, Democratic Rep. Sara Gelser of Corvallis, said she believes Portland's seclusion chambers should be outlawed under her bill.

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Medics respondedto the crash but did not take the driver or passenger to the hospital, Husband said.

OldBend-Redmond Highway The Sheriff's Office also warned drivers to b e c a utious on Old Bend-Redmond Highway north of Bend, after a truck carrying a load of plate glass rolled over and left shards of glass in the area. Sheriff's deputies were called to Old Bend-Redmond Highway near Young Avenue after II a.m. Monday,where there was a report of a truck rollover, according to a press release from the Sheriff's Office. Sgt. Vance Lawrence said the truck driver, Brian Dever, of Bend, was headed north and was negotiating a curve to the left, when the crash occurred. Dever told sheriff' s deputies that he swerved to avoid a deer, then went off the road. Deputies issued Dever a citation for careless driving. "You just don't swerve for a deer carrying a t r uck l oad like that," Lawrence said. Deschutes County Public Works and the Oregon Department o f Transportation also r e -

sponded to the crash. Some shattered glass remains in the area, according to the Sheriff's Office.

FREE Video EarExam • FREE Hearing Test FREE Hearing Aid Demonstration We Bill lnsurances• Workers Compensation• 0% Financing (withapprovedcredit) 541-389-9690 • 141 SE 3rd St. • Bend • (Corner of 3rd & Davis)

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud®bendbulletin.com

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

BRTRT %1OCooL

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

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e oo i ea aid sick leave might be a good idea for Oregon. That's why House Bill 3390 deserves careful scrutiny. But mandating paidsickleave goes too far. HB 3390 proposes new requirements for businesses with six or more employees. It requires those businesses to allow employees to take at least seven days of paid sick leaveperyear.Employees would be able to earn sick leave at the rate of one hour of sick leave for 30 hours worked. Employees could even take the leave if a close family member was seriously sick or injured. The bill includes notification requirements. Employees would be required to notify their employers about sick leave, but they would only be required to provide medical verification from a health care provider after taking three days of leave. The bill would also make it illegal for an employer to retaliate against an employee who properly took paid sick leave. Employees do get sick and no paid sick leave can have important consequences. It could mean employees have to work when seriously ill or take unpaid sick days. Paid sick leave also has consequences. It costs employers money. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics says the cost of paid leave to employers in December 2012 was about 6.9 percent of total compensation. That includes all kinds of paid leave and all kinds of jobs. What it means is that requiring employers to offer more paid leave couldmean they can'tpay asmuch in wages and other benefits, or can't hire as many people.

We were unable to track down statistics for Oregon, but nationwide about 66 percent of employers offer paid sick leave, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. A lot depends on the type of job. About 79 percent of full-time jobs have paid sick leave. Only 25 percent of part-time jobs have paid sick leave. When a legislative panel considers the bill on Wednesday, there should be a few important considerations — as they contemplate mandating the benefit. First, HB 3390's size requirement of only six employees seems far too small. New York City's new requirement essentially starts at 20 employees. Even at that size, it's going to be a problem. It's likely to cost jobs. We don't agree that the benefit should be mandated to include paid sick leave for persons other than the immediate employee. The benefit should also accrue to all part-time employees in the same way many benefits begin — when a employee works more than 20 hours a week. Oregon's economy is fragile, clambering out of a recession. The bill's requirements kick in January 2014. It could help kick the economy back in the wrong direction. Shouldn't this additional cost to business be delayed? It's hard to argue against sensible paid sick leave. But HB 3390 is going to wallop small employers hard as they are struggling.

their owners do. Thus, the Senate Judiciary Committee was told last week, adog would not be allowed to lick the fruit in a grocery store if that store doesn't let people lick the fruit. Animals and their owners who fail to meet that standard could be asked to leave. • Owners whose animals damaged property,say, a hotel room, couldbe charged forthatdamage. • Andbusinesses could not question whether or not an animal owner is disabled, but they could ask what sorts of tasks the animal has been trained to perform. There are good reasons for the proposed changes aside from the ADA. Too many people, in Oregon and elsewhere, have decided that their dogs should be allowed to accompany them everywhere,including places like restaurants and grocery stores. Some go so far as to buy official-looking vests for their pets to keep questions to a minimum. These changeshelpmake clearthe ideathat though Muffymaymakeher ownerhappy, that'snotwhat Oregon's law regarding service animals is all about. In doing so, they make it easier forthe owners ofrealservicedogsto gain access to the world the rest of us take for granted.

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Good changein the works for service animals, owners r egon law i s p r etty l a x where serhnce animals are concerned. It sets relatively few standards about what animals are considered service" animals. That's caused problems for everyone from grocery store owners to the disabled themselves. Now a bill beforethe Oregon Legislature introduced by Sen. Jeff Kruse, R-Roseburg, has introduced a measure that would improve the situation. SB 610 would amend state law regardingservice or assistance animals to bring it into compliance with the federal Americans with DisabilitiesAct. Service animals are animals trained to help people with a disability. Among the changes proposed: • Serhnce animals would be defined as dogs or, in some cases, miniature horses. The list could be expanded, however, at the discretion of the Bureau of Labor and Industries. • Animals in the process of being trained to act as service animals would be allowed in public accommodations and state government sites, just as those already trained would be. That is necessary, lawmakers believe, to give animals exposure to the kinds of real-life situations they will have to handle when they are working. • Animals will have to meet the same behavior standards as

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hen Tony W agner, the Harvard education specialist, describes his job today, he says he's na translator between two hostile tribes" — the education world and the business world, thepeople who teach our kids and the people who give them j obs. Wagner's argument in h i s book "Creating I nnovators: The Making of Young People Who Will Change the World" is that our K-12 and college tracks are not consistently "adding the value and teaching the skills that matter most in the marketplace." This is dangerous at a time when there is increasingly no such thing as a h i g h -wage, m i ddle-skilled job — the thing that sustained the middle class in the past generation. Nowthere is only a high-wage, highskilled job. Every middle-class job today either requires more skill or can be done by more people around the world or is made obsolete faster than ever. Which is why the goal of education, argues Wagner, should not be to make every child "college ready" but "innovation ready" ready to add value to whatever they do. That is a tall task. I tracked Wagner down and asked him toelaborate. "Today," he said via email, nbecause knowledge is available on every Internet-connected device, what you know matters far less than what you can do with what you know. The capacity to innovate and skills like critical thinking, communication and collaboration are far more important than academic knowledge. As one executive told me, 'We can teach new hires the content, and we will have to because it continues to change, but we can't teach them how to think — to ask the right questions — and to take initiative.'" My generation had it easy. We got to "find" a job. But, more than ever, our kids will have to "invent" a job. (Fortunately, in today's world, that's easier and cheaper than ever be-

"Teachers," he said, "need to coach students to performance excellence, and principals must be instructional THOMAS leaders who create the culture of FRIEDMAN collaboration required to innovate. But what gets tested is what gets taught, and so we need 'Accountfore.) Sure, some will find their first ability 2.0.' Al l s t udents should job, but, given the pace of change have digital portfolios to show evitoday, they will have to reinvent, dence of mastery of skills like critire-engineer and reimagine that job cal thinking and communication, much more often than their parents which they build up right through Kif they want to advance in it. 12 and postsecondary.Selective use "Every young person will conof high-quality tests, like the College tinue to need basic knowledge, of and Work Readiness Assessment, is course," Wagner said. RBut they important. Finally, teachers should will need skills an d m o tivation be judged on evidence ofimproveeven more. Of these three education ment in students' work through the goals, motivation is the most critical. year — instead of a score on a bubYoung people who are intrinsically ble test in May. We need lab schools motivated — curious, persistent and where studentsearn a high school willing to take risks — will learn diploma by completing a series of new knowledge and skills continu- skill-based 'merit badges' in things ously. They will be able to find new like entrepreneurship.And schools opportunities or create their own of education where all new teachers — a disposition that will be increas- have 'residencies'with master teachingly important as many traditional ers and petformance standards careers disappear." — not content standards — must So what should be the focus of become thenew normal throughout education reform today? the system." R We teach and test things most Who is doing it right? "Finland is one of the most instudents have no interest in and will never need, and facts that they can novative economies in the world," Google and will forget as soon as he said, nand it is the only country the test is over," said Wagner. RBe- where students leave high school 'innovation-ready.' They learn concause of this, the longer kids are in school, the less motivated they cepts and creativity more than facts, become. Gallup's recent survey and have a choice of many electives showed student engagement going — all with a shorter school day, little from 80 percent in fifth grade to 40 homework and almost no testing. In percent in high school. More than the U.S., 500 K-12 schools affiliated a century ago,we 'reinvented'the with Hewlett Foundation's Deeper one-room schoolhouse and created Learning Initiative and a consorfactory schools for the industrial tium of 100 school districts called economy. Reimagining schools for EdLeader21 are developing new the 21st century must be our highest approaches to teaching 21st-cenpriority. We need to focus more on tury skills. There are also a growing teaching the skill and will to learn number of 'reinvented' colleges like and to make a difference and bring the Olin College of Engineering, the the three most powerful ingredients MIT Media Lab and the 'D-school' of intrinsic motivation into the class- at Stanford where students learn to room: play, passion and purpose." innovate." What does that mean for teachers — Thomas Friedman is a columnist and principals? for The New Yorlz Times.

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Cougar hunting in Oregon nee s to e rethought By Mary Fay

cougarkittens are not mature enough In the March 26, 2013, edition of The and ready to be independent until they Bulletin, it was reported that a pair of are between 11 and 18 months old. cougar kittens, thought to be siblings, Some biologists suggest that maturity were seen prowling a Prineville neigh- and independence occurs at around 14 borhood. They were both months. These two cougars underweight and starving. were obviously orphaned [N My g EW Unfortunately, due to the before they were mature risk and danger they preenough to be successful on sented to the public, these cougar kits their own. were shot and killed by the authorities. Howwere they orphaned? We do not The Oregon Dept. of Fish 8. Wildlife know, but hunting is the most likely cul(ODFW) services commented, RWe prit. Those who study wildlife behavior get concerned when we see cougars postulate that hunting cougars actually repeatedly in daylight in places where increases conflicts with humans. How there are lots of people. That's not typi- can that be? cal cougar behavior." First, it is very difficult to distinguish Accordingto a reportbythe Montana between male and female cougars Fish, Wildlife and Parks Department, at a distance. Since cougar kittens

stay with their mother until they are emancipated at an average age of 14 months, and the adult female usually gets pregnant during that same period of time with her next litter, it is near impossible to kill an adult female cougar without prematurely orphaning kits. In fact, Montana authorities note that 75 percent of adult females might have young at a given time. If the mother cougar is killed, the kittens are left to their own survival devices, without the necessary skills imparted by the adult female. Since these orphaned kits are not mature enough to hunt on their own andhave not learned allthey need to know about being "stealth," it's just a matter of time before they end up in someone's backyard, looking for easy

food. Killing the adult male brings its own set of problems that may eventually lead to conflicts with humans. Adult males establish territory and learn to live there, keeping younger males out of their territory and living unnoticed and with minimal human contact. When the adult male dies, his territory opens, usually to a younger, less-experienced male more likely to engage in riskybehavior. Wildlife biologists who have long studied cougars and their social structure note that indiscriminate hunting and trappingof cougars may increase cougar/human conflicts. It is not a stretch to conclude that ODFW's hunting and trapping polices actually in-

crease the public safety risk. These samebiologists notethatwhen cougars allow themselves to be seen by humans, something is wrong with the cougar, which may be the reason these two cougar kittens were killed. As young orphans, they were unable to feed themselves and not smart enough to avoid contact with humans. When you see or hear of cougars in developed neighborhoods, you can bet thatthe cougars are sub-adults prematurely orphaned and which lack the maturity to be fully independent from their mother. It's time for ODFW to rethink its wildlife management policies that allow hunting and trapping cougars. — Mary Fay lives in Bend.


TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B5

OREGON NEWS

Boy pulled frompool dies

BITUARIES DEATH NOTIGEs R. Andrew 'Andy' Erhardt Barbara Jean Sloan Zanon, of Bend

Oct.2,1947- Mar.30,2013 R. A n d r ew " Andy" E r hardt lost hi s c o urageous b attle w i t h can c e r on March 30, 2013. He was 65 years old. Andy wa s b or n O c t ober 2, 1947, in Glendale, Arizona. After graduating from Seligman Hi h S c[ ool h e enlisted in the United Andy Erhardt N avy. A n d y se r v e d h i s c ountry h o n o rably, f i g h t i ng th e w a r i n V i e t n a m . A fter hi s t ou r o f d u t y i n Vietnam, A n d y a t t e n d ed school at the University of Arizona, where he pl ayed f ootball a n d m a j o r e d i n History. On March 26, 1977, Andy E rhardt m a r r i e d Ca t h i e Bradley of W a l nut C r eek, CA. They moved to Bend, O R in 1 9 78, w h er e t h e y raised their seven children. A ndy w o rk ed f or Wagner's and A l b ertson's until he retired in 2009. He continued to run his small business, which he started with his wife in 2001. A ndy was known fo r h i s gruffness, sense of humor, strong work ethic and tremendous heart. He was a s elfless man, putting o t h ers first. Andy always provided for h i s f a m il y e v en when he had to go without. While working in th e grocery business, Andy would often p u r c hase g r o ceries for those who could not afford them. He was always there to help out. W hen not at w or k A n d y e njoyed the o u t doors. H e always made time to hunt a nd fish w i t h f a m il y a n d f riends. A nd y b e l i eved a bad day of fishing was alw ays better t ha n a g o o d day at work. A ndy l o oked forward t o e v er y f o o tball s eason. H e w a t c h e d a s many games as he could. From high school football to professional football, if i t w a s te l e v i sed, A n d y w ould w a tch i t . H e t r u l y a ppreciated the g am e f o r what i t w a s . H e e n j o y ed listening to J o hnny C a sh, C harlie Da n i e ls , W il l i e N elson, an d M e r l e H a g gard. Andy alw ays apprec iated a g oo d w es t e r n m ovie, e s p e ciall y w i th John W a y n e o r Cl i nt Eastwood. A ndy i s s u r vived by h i s wife of 3 6 y e a rs, C athie; and seven children, Sean ( Patty) E r h ardt o f N a p a vine, WA , D o n ( A n d r e a) G reen of B e nd, OR , C a r l (Dee) Erhardt o f B e a v erton, OR, Shannon Haas of Redmond, OR, Ch r i s (Amanda) Er h a r d t of Redmond, OR, Heidi (Wil liam) Mi ller o f B e nd, OR, and S t a ci e E r h a r d t of Bend, OR. Other survivors include 1 0 g r a n d children and three siblings, Charles Erhardt o f A r i z o na, Jean W isneski o f Te x a s , a n d D orthy H oug a a r d of Florida. I n l i e u o f fl o w e rs , t h e f amily a sk s d o n ations b e m ade in A n d y ' s n am e t o Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd St. Redmond, OR 97756. A private ceremony will b e h e l d t o c e l ebrate the life of Andy Erhardt.

Aug. 15, 1928 - Mar. 27, 2013 Funeral Home: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home. 541-382-2471 Services: Friday, April 12, 2013, at 1:00 p.m. at NiswongerReynolds Funeral Home chapel in Bend, OR, followed by an internment service at the Greenwood Cemetery in Bend. A reception after the services is still being planned. Contributions: Mennonite Village, 5353 Columbus St. SE, Albany, OR 97322

Terry Lee Stanley, Bend Oct. 21, 1948 - Jan. 13, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, 541-382-0903, www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned at this time.

Rachel Manwiller Oct. 28, 1925- March 31, 2013 R achel ( K n o w les) M a n willer, 87, passed away of b reast c a ncer o n E a s t e r S unday, M a r c h 3 1 st , i n Bend, Oregon. R achel was born o n O c t ober 28 , 1 925, i n M e d i c ine L o d ge , K a n s as, t o Fred and O l gi e K n o w l es. When R a c he l w a s f iv e years old the family moved to Walla W a lla, Washington, where they worked at t he Calhoon D a i ry . T h e n they p u r c h ased a f ar m w hich i n c reased i n a c r e age while growing alfalfa, w heat a n d s u g a r b e e t s . S he attended t h e t h r e e r oom V al l e y Ch ap e l School before g r a duating f rom W a l l a W a l l a H i g h S chool i n 19 4 3 . R a c h el t hen a t t e n ded W h i t m a n College. In 1945 Rachel m a r r i ed D onald R . M a n w i l le r i n Salinas, California. He was a B - 2 4 r ad i o op e r a t o r w aiting to ship out t o E n gland. After the war, they l ived i n Washington an d C o l o r ado b e f or e m o v i n g t o B end, O r e go n i n 194 8 , where they remained. R achel w a s an a ct i v e member of th e F i rst B a pt ist Church, l ater m o v i n g to Ea s t m o n t Ch u r c h . Rachel and Don retired in 1983. She loved preparing food, baking an d g a r dening. Rachel and Don t r aveled the country as snowbirds for 26 years. Rachel was proceeded in death by her parents, Fred and Olgie Knowles and her brother, Kenneth Knowles, all of W alla W a l la, Washington. Rachel is survived by her brother, John K n o w les of Walla Walla; her husband, Don of 68 years; her four children, D o n al d J r . of Lostine, Oregon, David of Gresham, O r e g on , an d D ebra and D u an e o f L o s Angeles, California. Rachel is also survived by s even g r andchildren a n d four great-grandchildren. R achel loved her f a m i l y and f r i e nds u n c o nditiona lly. Sh e a l w a y s h a d a positive a t t i t ud e a n d a smile, never c o m p laining and always seeing the best in others. T here w il l b e a p r i v a t e family ceremony.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybesubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.

FEATURED OBITUARY

Brill was apioneer in spacepropulsion By Martin Weil

these new ideas." Yvonne Madelaine Claeys Yvonne Brill, a pioneer in was born Dec. 30, 1924, in a s pacecraft p r opulsion w h o suburb of Winnipeg, in the suspended a promising career Canadian province of Manitoto raise three children and ba, to parents who emigrated then returned to work full time from Belgium and who, she to achieve her greatest engi- once recalled, probably never neering successes, died March finished high school. 27 at a hospital in Princeton, She said she "just sort of didn't really realize that I was N.J. She was 88. She had complications from relatively intelligent until I got breast cancer, said her son, to high school and started to Matthew Brill. get top marks." At a time of debate over Her father, she once said, bewomen's prospects for both lieved that when she finished having a family and reaching her education, she s hould the highest career levels, ac- "open up a small dress shop" counts of Brill's life suggest or similar enterprise. But, she that she managed to "have said, "I just wasn't cut out for it all." She was internation- that." ally respected in her field and A fter g r a duating fr o m spoke openly about the strug- the University of M a nitoba gles she faced in being devoted in mathematics in 1945, she to family and work. went to work for the Douglas As a specialist in the chem- Aircraft Co. in California and istry of propulsion, she made gravitated to the chemistry of vital contributions to the op- propellants. eration of the orbiting space While in the Los Angeles satellites that have become area, she received a master's essential to modern life, plac- d egree in c h emistry f r o m ing the most remote areas of the University of S o uthern the globe in virtually instan- California. taneous communication. She While at a chemistry lecheld a patent for a widely used ture, she met her future huspropulsion system. band, Bill Brill, who held a S he was described by a Ph.D. in chemistry. Later they women's engineering organi- faced a challenge: His job opzation in 1945 as being pos- portunities were in the east, sibly the only woman with hers in the west. a technical job who was inHer decision to follow his volved in rocket propulsion. career, she said, was based on In 2011, President Barack her belief that "good jobs are Obama awarded her the Na- easier to find than good hustional Medal of Technology bands." The saying became and Innovation. In 1987, when part of family lore. scarcely any w o men w e re The couple moved east, members, she was elected e ventually se t t l in g n ea r to the National Academy of Princeton. It was in the year Engineering. after her 1966 return to fullBrill left full-time engineer- time work that she created the ing work i n t h e l ate 1950s hydrazine resistojet, which when pregnant with her first is also known as the electroc hild. She continued to d o thermal hydrazine thruster. consulting work and returned It provides an effective way to the rigors of a demanding of adjusting the positions of career when she joined RCA communications and monitorAstro Electronics in 1966. ing satellites to ensure proper "I really wanted to go back operation. The achievement to work," she said in an inter- required Brill to work many view with the Society of Wom- nights and weekends. en Engineers. Still, she said, it From 1981 to 1 983, she was not easy: "I felt very put worked at NASA headquarupon." tersin Washington as a manBut she accepted the dif- ager in a solid rocket motor ficulties and lack of time for unit. She had also worked in herself because "I was happy London for the International in my job, I liked what I was Maritime Satellite Organizadoing." In addition, she said, tion and was known for foster"I felt that I was making real ing the careers of women in progress. . introducing all technical fields. The Washington Post

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DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Bob Turley, 82: Major League pitcher who won the Cy Young Award in 1958 for helping the New York Yankees to a World Series championship. Turley won 21 games that year and pitched 12 seasons in the majors, finishingwith 101 victories. He later had a successfulcareer in insurance and finance. Died Saturday in Atlanta. Helen Hannah C ampbell, 97: A chaperone for the AllAmerican Girls Professional Baseball League, established in 1943 to k eep b allparks filled while many male players were away at war. Campbell worked for the league's Muskegon Lassies, overseeing the conduct, care and personal lives of th e y oung w omen who played in the league. The

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Continued from B1 After a five-minute executive session at 7 a.m. Monday, the Sisters City Council met in open session. Councilor McKibbon Womack moved to accept Stein's resignation, and the motion passed, 3-2, with Womack, Mayor Brad Boyd and Councilor Wendy Holzman voting in support of the resignation and Councilors Catherine Childress and David Asson voting against it. B oyd declined t o s a y what h a d pre c i pitated Stein's resignation. He instead issued a news release highlighting Stein's work for the city over the past 11 years. "Under Eileen's leadership, the city has transitioned to a more professional organization, facilities have been upgraded and the city ha s m a intained its financial stability," the news release states. After th e s h ort m eeting, Childress asked Boyd about the process for finding a replacement, and whether all five city councilors would be included in that process. Boyd said the five councilors would vote on the replacement, and said the council would discuss the issue at its Thursday meeting. "Is this something where someone has been selected and we don't know about it?" Childress asked Boyd after the meeting.

Trail Continued from B1 In 2012, Deschutes County received a $184,000 Regional Trails Program grant from theOregon Parks and Recreation Department to complete the path. Following the SHPO survey, the Community Development department determined the additional work needed to preserve the integrity of the archaeological sites was cost prohibitive. Blikstad said if the surface of the path is left unpaved, most bicycles,except those with very skinny street tires, would still be able to use it. Local property o w ner Dick Gummuns also spoke during the m eeting, expressing his displeasure at the way Oregon State Parks has maintained the existing

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Boyd said no one had yet been selected, and said he expected to use a member of staff as an interim city manager for about two weeks before bringing someone from the outside in to serve as Sisters' interim city manager. Childress and A sson expressed their concerns about Stein's resignation in an open letter over the weekend, alleging they'd been kept out of the discussion about Stein's employment. On Monday, Childress said Stein would be missed. "I hope we can find someone who is very competent who can fill this gap," she said. "We need someone who has the experience, knowledge, who understands codes and laws ... who is satisfactory to all of the council and is a good administrator." Asson called Stein invaluable to the community, and said staff morale was deteriorating with her departure. He said he worried that without Stein helping coordinate with Oregon Department of Transportation the changes to Cascade Avenue scheduled to begin in spring 2014, the project may affect the town's businesses. And Asson said he believed the process by which Stein's resignation w a s ga r n ered was a likely violation of public meetings law. "Throughout the entire process, Cather>ne (Ch>ldress) and I have not been invited to participate or consulted or whatever," he said. — Reporter:541-617-7831, smi ller®bendbulleti n.com

path. "...(O)ur maintenance costs have gone way up because they'll come and cut down trees or brush and throw it in our ditch," he said. The board said it will continue to hear testimony from Tumalo residents and other stakeholders before deciding what to do with the trail. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, slzingC<bendbulletin.com

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On May l2, The Bulletin will drive headlong into the Central Oregon golf season with Tee to Green, our annual spring golf preview! This highly anticipated product will be packed with information on the courses that make this one of the finest golf destinations in the nation. Tee to Green will reach over 70,000 Bulletin print readers and thousands more online, making it the premier locals guide to golf in Central Oregon — and the best way to reach the local golfer with your marketing message!

FEATURES INCLUDE: • What's new in 2013 • Central Oregon course index • Comprehensive tournament schedule

• Central Oregon junior Golf Association coverage ...and much more! A 2,500 copy over-run will be included with additional copies being distributed to all local courses and advertisers in the preview.

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investigate what caused the death. The boy was not publicly identified. The W i l lamalane Park and Recreation District operates the Splash! at Lively Park pool. It emphasized that the cause of death remains undetermined.

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league inspired the 1992 film "A League of T heir O w n." Campbell served 32 years in the Marine Corps Reserve. Died March 24 in Lake Forest, Calif. Paul Williams, 64: Writer and critic who, as a Swarthmore College freshman f o unded Crawdaddy, an alternative pop music magazine that was one of the first national outlets for serious writing and rock music. The magazine debuted in 1966, 18 months before Rolling Stone. Later, a 1975 Rolling Stone article written by Williams was credited with helping to revive interest in the late science-fiction wr iter P h ilip K. Dick, 11 of whose novels and stories became Hollywood movies. Williams died Wednesday in Encinitas, Calif.

The Associated Press SPRINGFIELD — Police in S p ringfield c o nfirmed that a 12-year-old boy who was pulled from a swimming pool has died at a Portland hospital. The Register-Guard reports that police continue to

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IN THE BACI4 BUSINESS (6 NIARILET NEWS > Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C4

Prep sports, C2 NHL, C4 MLB, C3 College basketball, C4

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

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BASEBALL

PREP SOFTBALL

TENNIS

Bend Elksseek host families The roster for the Bend Elks' 2013 summer collegiate baseball season is beginning to take shape, and officials with the team say host families are still needed

Players30 and older enjoying success

+++ 4 4.v

+ ++ J + + + 4

for many of those players.

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In exchange for hosting andfeeding a Bend Elks player for the sum-

mer baseball season, host families receive a number of benefits, including season tickets in the preferred section at Genna Stadium for all Elks home games. For more information about becoming a host family, go to the "Host Families" page of the Bend Elks' website at bendelks.com, or contact Elks media relations/baseball operations representative Ste-

By Steven Wine The Associated Press

phen Gall at stephen© bendelks.com. — Bulletin staffreport

MEN'SCOLLEGE BASKETBALL

Louisville's Ware resting, walking Kevin Ware is already up and walking, and he's

got a nice souvenir to keep him company until he's cleared to return to Louisville. Cardinals coach Rick Pitino brought the Midwest Regional championship trophy when he visited Ware, who remains hospitalized

after surgery to repair a gruesome fracture in his right leg. "He was real excited

about (the trophy)," Pitino said after visiting

Ware again Monday morning. "I said to him, 'You want me to bring it back or stay with you?' He said, 'It's staying with me.' I said, 'All right, just make sure you don't lose it.' " During a 2-hour sur-

Ryan Brennecke iThe Bulletin

Sisters' Ashley Smith connects with a pitch for a base hit during Monday's game against Cottage Grove in Sisters. The Outlaws picked up a15-0 victory in their Sky-Em League opener.

iSerSO enS ea ue a,

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. — As the highest-ranked American in men's tennis, Sam Querrey watches all of the recent success by players in their 30s and likes what he sees. Men 30 and older made a big splash at the Sony Open last week, including semifinalist Tommy Haas, at 34 the oldest player in the ATP World Tour's top 50, and runner-up David Ferrer, who lost a thrilling final to Andy Murray. Serena Williams, 31, became the oldest women's champion. It is a trend that might continue into the clay-court season that began Monday, and beyond. "I think about it — Haas at 34," Querrey said. "Hey, I'm 25. I really hope that I can go for nine good more years. It gives me more motivation and more hopethat Ican have a nice, long career like those

guys."

S LI SOLl 0 • The Outlaws need just five innings toearn a15-0 rout of the Lions inSky-Em Leagueaction on Monday Bulletin staff report SISTERS — Sisters' scorching start to the softball season continued on Monday as the Outlaws rolled past Cottage Grove 15-0 in five innings. Cassidy Edwards struck out 15 and

8 8

allowed just one hit while the Sisters offense scored 10 runs in the first two innings to help the Outlaws improve to 7-1 overall with a victory in their SkyEm League opener. Boston Moore went two for three with two doubles and six runs batted in to lead a Sisters offense that banged out 13 hits against the overmatched Lions. Ashley Smith added a two-for-three performance with three RBIs and Maddie Edwards contributed two hits and two RBIs for the Outlaws, who have now won seven games in a row.

FOY B

"All but one of our starters play summer ball," Sisters coach Ben Miller said. "You just don't realize how big of a difference that makes." The Outlaws jumped out to a 6-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning and never looked back. RBIs by Smith and Moore sparked Sisters' first at-bat, and with Edwards in the circle, the Outlaws were never threatened. "We've got a lot going with our pitching," Miller said in reference to Edwards, who walked just one batter while earning the win. "That's a huge asset."

The Sony Open included 22 30-something men in the draw, compared with 12 a decade ago. Twenty years ago, only fourmen 30 orolder were in the field. Ferrer, who turns 31 today, and 31-year-old Jurgen Melzer staged the first all-30something men's quarterfinal at Key Biscayne since 2003. Add Haas, and for only the third time since 1990, three men 30 or older reached the quarterfinals of a Masters 1000 event. SeeSuccess/C4

gery Sunday night, doctors reset Ware's broken tibia and inserted a rod into the bone. Because the bone broke through the skin, Pitino said doctors are monitoring Ware to make sure no infection develops. If

there are nocomplications, he should be

released today. The Cardinals plan to leave for the Final Four in Atlanta on Wednesday night, and Pitino said they expect to have Ware with them. Ware is originally from New York City, but he moved to the Atlanta area before high school.

RUGBY

Bendclubto host3 games on Saturday Bulletin staff report The Bend Rugby Club's Roughriders will conclude their league season this Saturday asthe featured game in aBend Rugby tripleheader at High Desert Middle School in southeast Bend. The Roughriders, the club's adult men's team, will face Salem in a Pacific Northwest Rugby Football Union Division III match starting at 1

p.m. Preceding the Roughriders' game will be a match between the Bend Blues, the Bend Rugby Club's high school boys team, and North Clackamas of Portland. That Rugby Oregon Division I contest is set to start at 11:30 a.m. Later Saturday, the Bend

Rugby Club's Lady Roughriders, who play in a women's

fall league, will take on a new Salem team in a social match starting at 2:45 p.m. According to John Chunn,

Bend Rugby Club spokesman, the local organization is always looking for players for all three of its teams. Chunn noted that Saturday's games offer a good opportunity for prospectiveplayers to check out the local teams and see what the sport is all about.

Spectatorsare welcome, and admission is free. Later this month, the Bend club will host the 2013 PNRFU Division III men's championships. That twoday event is set for April 2021 at Skyline Sports Complex in southwest Bend. For more information about the Bend Rugby Club, visit the club's website at

bendrugby.com.

Alan Diaz iThe Associated Press

Serena Williams lifts her trophy after winning the championship of the Sony Open in Key Biscayne, Fla., Saturday.

"He gets to go home,

be with his family and be with us on the bench," Pitino said."He's in very good spirits and anxious to get out of the hospital and get back with the

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Newtown salute

guys." Ware's right leg snapped in the first half of Sunday's Midwest Regional final when he landed awkwardly after trying to contest a 3point shot. The horrific injury devastated his

marks openingday

teammates, andseveral fell to the court crying.

Chane Behanan,Ware's best friend on the team, had to be helped to his feet. But before Ware was wheeled off the court on a stretcher,

he repeatedly urged the Cardinals to "just go win the game." The Cardinals did, beating Duke 85-63 to reach their second straight Final Four. For a related story, seeA1. — The Associated Press

Matt Slccum /The Associated Press

Boston RedSox's Jacoby Ellsbury,ofM adras,runs the bases during Monday's game inNew York. Ellsbury hit three for six with a triple to help Boston take an 8-2 victory.

The Associated Press Josh Hamilton jumped into a cab, headed to Great American Ball Park and got all nostalgic. The Los Angeles Angels newcomer saw Cincinnati fans packed downtown and remembered making his big league debut in the same spot a while ago. "People are lined up in the streets, there'sthe parade,"he said. "It's just an awesome feeling. It never gets old — opening day — especially when you're where you started." All across the majors, baseball was in full swing Monday. Bryce Harper put on quite a show in Washington. The

Inside • Roundup and boxscores from the first day of MLB,C3 20-year-old star hit home runs his first two times up and earned a few "M-V-P!" chants during a 2-0 win over Miami. At Target Field in Minnesota,players and fans bundled up. It was 35 degrees with 17 mph winds as the Twins took on ace Justin Verlander and the AL champion Detroit Tigers, who won 4-2. "It's whoever whines about it the least, I think, who'll have the best chance of winning today," Twins first baseman Justin Morneau said. SeeOpening/C3



TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

Opening

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

who took12 of18 from them a

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Boston 1 0 Baltimore 0 0 TampaBay 0 0 Toronto 0 0 NewYork 0 1 Central Division W L Chicago 1 0 Detroit 1 0 Cleveland 0 0 Kansas City 0 1 Minnesota 0 1 West Division W L Houston 1 0 Los Angeles 1 0 Seattle 1 0 Oakland 0 1 Texas 0 1

Pct GB 1.000 000 000 000

I/2 I/2 I/2

.000 1 Pct GB 1.000 1.000 000

I/2

.000 1 .000 1 Pct GB 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 1 .000 1

Monday'sGames Boston 8,N.y.Yankees2 Detroit 4, Minnesota 2 Chicago WhiteSox1, KansasCity 0 LA. Angels3, Cincinnati1, 13innings Seattle 2,Oakland0

Today's Games Baltimore(Hammel 0-0) at TampaBay (Price 0-0), 12.10 p.m. Cleveland(Masterson0-0) at Toronto(Dickey0-0), 4.07 p.m. Texas(Darvish 0-0) at Houston(Harrell 0-0), 5.10 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 0-0) at Oakland(Parker 0-0), 7.05

p.m.

Wednesday'sGames

KansasCity atChicagoWhite Sox,11.10 a.m. Texasat Houston,11.10a.m. Detroit atMinnesota,1.10p.m. Bostonat N.Y.Yankees,4.05 p.m. ClevelandatToronto,4.07 p.m. BaltimoreatTampaBay,4.10 p.m. L.A. Angelsat Cincinnati, 4.10p.m. Seattle atOakland,7.05p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 1 0 NewYork 1 0 Washington 1 0 Miami 0 1 Philadelphia 0 1 Central Division W L Chicago 1 0 Milwaukee 1 0 Cincinnati 0 1 Pittsburgh 0 1 St. Louis 0 1 West Division W L Arizona 1 0 Los Angeles 1 0 Colorado 0 1 SanDiego 0 1 San Francisco 0 1

KansasCity Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi

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American League champion Tigers beat Minnesota. With the gametime temperature at 35 degrees and the wind blowing at 17 mph, fans had to bundle up. But opening day is always a draw,

Pct GB 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 1 .000 1 Pct GB 1.000 1.000 .000 1 .000 1 .000 1 Pct GB 1.000 1.000 .000 1 .000 1 .000 1

Monday'sGames

Today's Games

Colorado(DeLa Rosa0-0) at Milwaukee(Estrada 00), 5.10p.m. St. Louis (Garcia0-0) at Arizona(Cahill 0-0), 6.40

p.m.

San Francisco(Bumgarner 0-0) atL.A. Dodgers (Ryu 0-0), 7.10p.m. Wednesday'sGames ChicagoCubsat Pittsburgh, 4.05p.m. Miami atWashington, 4.05 p.m. L.A. Angelsat Cincinnati, 4.10p.m. PhiladelphiaatAtlanta, 4.10 p.m. San Diego atN.Y.Mets, 4.10p.m. Coloradoat Milwaukee,5.10p.m. St. Louis atArizona,6.40p.m. San Francisco at L.A.Dodgers, 7.10p.m.

American League Mariners 2, Athletics 0 • OAKLAND, Calif.— Felix Hernandez struck out eight on opening day in his first start since signing a $175 million,

seven-year contract in February, and Seattle beat reigning AL West champion Oakland. King Felix surrendered one walk while pitching 7/a scoreless innings. He didn't allow a hit until John Jaso doubled to left-center with one out in the fourth, only a couple of hours after the pitcher gifted his former backstop with a Rolex watch for catching his perfect game in August against the Rays. Hernandez (1-0) outdueled Brett Anderson while making his sixth

career opening daystartand fifth in a row, retiring the first 10 batters of the game in order. Franklin Gutierrez hit a two-run single in the fifth to break a scoreless tie, and it held up for Hernandez.

as evidenced bythe announced crowd of 38,282, a sellout by Twins guidelines. Minnesota ab r hbi ab r hbi A Jcksncf 5 1 1 0 Hickscf 4 0 0 0 T rHntrrf 5 0 2 0 Mauerc 4 1 2 0 M icarr3b 5 1 0 1 Wlnghlf 5 0 1 0 Fielder1b 4 1 2 1 Mornea1b 4 0 1 0 VMrtnzdh 3 0 0 0 Doumit dh 5 0 1 1 Detroit

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three for six for Boston with a triple, two RBls and a run scored. New york ab r hbi ab r hbi Ellsury cf 6 1 3 2 Gardnr cf 4 0 1 0 V ictornrf 6 0 2 3 Nunezss 4 0 0 0 P edroia2b 6 0 2 1 Cano2b 4 0 1 0 Napog1b 5 0 0 0 Youkgs1b-3b 4 1 1 0 M dlrks3b 4 1 0 0 Wellslf 3100 Sltlmchc 2 2 1 0 BFrncsdh 1 0 0 0 Gomesdh 4 1 2 0 Hafnerph-dh 2 0 1 0 Boston

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ab r hbi ab r hbi F Gtrrzcf 4 0 1 2 Crispcf 3 0 0 0 M Sndrsrf 4 0 0 0 Jasoc 3010 KMorlsdh 4 0 0 0 DNorrsph-c 1 0 0 0 M orself 4 0 1 0 Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 S moak1b 3 0 1 0 Cespdslf 4 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 0 1 0 Lowriess 3 0 0 0 J Montrc 4 0 0 0 Moss1b 4 0 0 0 Ackley2b 3 1 0 0 Dnldsn3b 3 0 0 0 Ryanss 1 1 1 0 S.Smithdh 3 0 2 0 Sogard2b 2 0 0 0 T otals 3 1 2 5 2 Totals 3 00 3 0 Seattle 0 00 020 000 — 2 Oakland 0 00 000 000 — 0 E Sogard (1). DP Oakland 2. LDB—Seattle 6,

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Logan Kelley Chamberlain Eppley WP—Lester2, Eppley. T 3.37. A 49,514(50,291).

National League

Dodgers 4, Giants 0

E R BB SD •LOS ANGELES — Clayton 0 1 8 Kershaw launched his first career 0 1 0 0 0 0 home run to break ascoreless 0 1 0 tie in the eighth inning, then 2 4 0 0 0 0

6 2 3

White Sox1, Royals 0

finished off a four-hitter that led

the Los Angeles Dodgers overSan Francisco. Kershaw struck out seven, walked none and retired World Series MVP Pablo Sandoval on a grounder to end it. The

former Cy Youngwinner began

• CHICAGO — Chris Sale outpitched James Shields, Tyler Flowers homered and the Chicago White Sox beat Kansas City. A

the day as a career.146 batter with only one extra-base hit in 261 at-bats. But he sent the first pitch

dominant performance bySale and Flowers' drive leading off the fifth against Shields were just enough to beat a team that's trying to make a big jump after finishing with a losing record17 of the past 18 seasons. It also gave the White

Sox a rare win over theRoyals,

Lucroy hit a sacrifice fly in the 10th inning to give Milwaukee a victory over Colorado, ruining the first game for new Rockies manager Walt Weiss. Rickie Weeks sparked the winning rally when he stole second after he was hit by a pitch with one out. Adam

San Diego New york ab r hbi ab r hbi

Interleague

Nationals 2, Marlins 0

• WASHINGTON — Bryce Harper homered in his first two at-bats, Stephen Strasburg retired19 batters in a row at one stretch, and defendingNL Eastchampion Ottavino (0-1) then issuedan intentional walkto Ryan Braun and Washingtonopened theseason with a victory over Miami. For lost Aramis Ramirez to another Strasburg (1-0), this marked the walk before Lucroy ended the game with a fly ball to center field. start of what should be his first full season in the majors, with zero pitch or inning limits. The AllColorado Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi Star ace was dominant against a Fowlercf 5 1 3 1 Aokirf 4211 trade-depleted Marlins lineup that Rutledg 2b 5 0 1 0 Weeks 2b 4 2 2 0 features Giancarlo Stanton and C Gnzlzlt 5 2 2 1 Braunlf 4 1 1 1 Tlwtzkss 5 1 2 2 ArRmr3b 4 0 2 2 little else. C uddyrrf 5 0 0 0 Lucroyc 4 0 0 1

Pittsburgh. The right-hander allowed just two hits and walked

one as Chicagowon on opening day for the first time since 2009. Anthony Rizzo hit a two-run homer and Wellington Castillo added an RBI double for the Cubs. Kyuji Fujikawa got a save in his major league debutafter closer Carlos Marmol struggled. Chicago

Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi D edesscf 4 0 0 0 SMartelf 3 0 0 0 Scastross 4 1 2 0 JMcgnlss 0 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 4 1 1 2 GJonesd 4 0 0 0 ASorinlf 4 0 0 0 Mcctchcf 3 1 1 0

S chrhltrf 2 1 1 0 PAlvrz3b 4 0 1 1 Castilloc 4 0 2 1 GSnchz1b 3 0 0 0 E R BBSD V aluen3b 4 0 0 0 JHrrsnpr 0 0 0 0 2 2 7 Lilgrdg2b 3 0 0 0 Walker2b 4 0 1 0 A IGnzlz2b 1 0 0 0 RMartnc 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 Smrdzlp 3 0 0 0 Barmesss 2 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 Marmlp 0 0 0 0 Tabataph-If 1 0 0 0 R ussellp 0 0 0 0 ABmttp 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fuii kwp 0 0 0 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 Snider ph 1 0 0 0 4 4 5 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 T otals 3 3 3 6 3 Totals 3 11 3 1 0 0 0 2 00 001 000 — 3 0 0 1 Chicago P ittsburgh 000 0 0 0 0 0 1 — 1 3 2 2 E — Li l h bndge (1), Jo.Mcoonald(1). LDB Chi0 0 0

Oakland 6. 2B—Jaso(1), S.Smith (1). SB Ryan(1). Seattle IP H R F.HernandezW,1-0 7 2-3 3 0 Furbush 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 Pryor H,1 WghelmsenS,1-1 1 0 0 Oakland AndersonL,0-1 7 4 2 Resop 1 1 0 Blevins 1 0 0 Furbushpitchedto1 batterin the8th. T 2.46. A 36,067(35,067).

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A.J. Pollock was three for four, including a two-run double, and Marin Prado doubled twice with an RBI and two runs scored for the Diamondbacks.

Angels 3, Reds1 (13 innings) • CINCINNATI — Chris lannetta

hita solo homerand a basesloaded single in the 13th inning, powering the Los Angeles Angels to a victory over Cincinnati in the majors' first interleague season opener. The Angels loaded the bases with two outs in the 13th off J.J. Hoover, who walked two and hit Hank Conger, the Angels' final position player. Iannetta worked the count full, fouled off a pair of pitches, then singled to left.

Helton1b 3 0 0 0 AIGnzlz1b 2 0 0 0 Los Angeles Cincinnati Rosarioc 4 0 2 0 CGomzcf 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Miami Washington Nelson3b 4 0 1 0 Segurass 4 0 2 0 T routcf-It 6 0 1 0 Choocf 5120 ab r hbi ab r hbi Chacinp 3 0 1 0 Gallardp 2 0 0 0 Aybarss 6 0 0 0 Philgps2b 5000 P ierrelf 4 0 1 0 Spancf 4 0 1 0 P uiols1b 4 0 0 0 Votto1b 4 0 0 0 E Mccabrera(1), Flonmon(1). DP Minnesota B egslep 0 0 0 0 Figarop 0 0 0 0 C oghlncf 4 0 0 0 Werthrf 4 0 0 0 WLopezp 0 0 0 0 Badnhpp 0 0 0 0 R ominepr-3b1 0 0 0 Ludwcklt 0 0 0 0 S tantonrf 4 0 1 0 Harperlf 4 2 2 2 1. LDB Detroit 8, Minnesota12. 2B—TorHunter Eyongph 1 0 0 0 LSchfrph 1 0 0 0 Hamltnrf 4 1 0 0 Heiseypr-If 3 0 0 0 Polanc3b 3 0 1 0 Zmrmn3b 3 0 0 0 (1), Fielder(1), Mauer(1), Morneau(1), Plouffe(1). B rothrs p 0 0 0 0 Axford p 0 0 0 0 T rumolf-1b 5 0 1 0 Brucerf 5 0 0 0 Brantlyc 3 0 0 0 LaRoch1b 3 0 0 0 SB —Jh.Peralta (1). S—Dirks. Dttavin p 0 0 0 0 KDavis ph 1 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 3 1 0 0 Frazier3b 5 0 1 0 Solano2b 2 0 0 0 Dsmndss 2 0 1 0 Detroit IP H R E R BB SD Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 C allasp3b 4 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 0 0 0 VerlanderW,1-0 5 3 0 0 2 7 Ktchm1b 3 0 0 0 Espinos2b 3 0 0 0 T otals 4 0 4 124 Totals 3 4 5 8 5 MLowep 0 0 0 0 Lecurep 0 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 0 0 WRamsc 2 0 1 0 1 1-3 3 2 2 3 1 SmylyH,1 Colorado 002 010 001 0 — 4 Nolascop 2 0 0 0 Strasrgp 0 0 0 0 Congerph 0 0 0 0 Hannhnph 1 0 0 0 AlburquerqueH,1 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Milwaukee 001 000 030 1 — 5 F rierip 0 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Quallsp 0 0 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 Benoit H,1 Two outswhenwinning runscored. l annettc 6 1 2 3 Hanignc 5 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Dobbsph 1 0 0 0 Lmrdzzph 1 0 0 0 CokeS,1-1 DP Milwaukee1.LDB—Colorado 7, Milwaukee MDunn p 0 0 0 0 RSonn p 0 0 0 0 W eaver p 2 0 0 0 C ueto p 2 0 0 0 Minnesota 7. 2B ArRamirez(1). HR—Fowler (1), C.Gon zalez T otals 2 9 0 3 0 Totals S huck ph 1 0 0 0 Broxtn p 0 0 0 0 2 62 5 2 WorleyL,0-1 6 8 3 3 1 3 (1), Tul o wi t zki (1), Aoki (1). SB Weeks (1). CS R ichrds p 0 0 0 0 Paulph 1 0 0 0 Miami 0 00 000 000 — 0 Fien 1 0 0 0 0 3 (1). SF—Lucroy. S Burnttp 0 0 0 0 Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 Washington 1 0 0 1 0 0 Dgx - 2 Duensing 2-3 1 1 1 2 1 C.Gomez IP H R E R BB SD DP Miami 1, Washington 1. LDB Miami 3, Jepsenp 0 0 0 0 Clztursss 2 0 0 0 Roenicke 11 3 0 0 0 0 1 Colorado 62-3 3 1 1 3 6 Washington4. 2B Stanton(1). HR Harper 2 (2). Chacin Harris ph 1 0 1 0 WP — Smyly, Worley, Roenicke. 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 S Strasburg2. BegsleH,1 SDownsp 0 0 0 0 T—3.28. A 38,282 (39,021). W.LopezBS,1-1 1 4 3 3 0 0 Miami IP H R E R BB SD Bourios cf 2 0 1 0 Brothers 1 1 0 0 0 1 NolascoL,0-1 T otals 4 5 3 6 3 Totals 4 21 3 0 6 3 2 2 2 5 DttavinoL,0-1 2 3- 0 1 1 2 1 Qualls LosAngeles 001 000 000 000 2 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 Red Sox 8,Yankees2 Milwaukee Cincinnati 001 000 000 000 0 1 M.Dunn 1 1 0 0 0 0 Gallardo 5 10 3 3 1 3 Washington E—Puiols (1), Aybar(1), H.Kendrick (1), PhilFigaro 2 1 0 0 0 2 StrasburgW,1-0 7 lips (1). LDB Los Angeles 12, Cincinnati 10. 3 0 0 0 3 • NEW YORK — Jon Lester and Badenhop 1 0 0 0 0 2 ClippardH,1 Choo (1). 3B—Bourios (1). HR—lannetta (1). 1 0 0 0 1 1 2B — Boston got off to a quick start AxfordBS,1-1 1 1 1 1 0 3 R.SorianoS,1-1 1 S H Kendrick,Phillips,Heisey. 0 0 0 0 2 H enderson W , 1 -0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SD after a dreadful 2012 season, T 2.10. A 45,274(41,418). HBP —byDttavino (Weeks). Weaver 6 2 1 1 2 4 giving new manager John Farrell T—3.13. A 45,781 (41,900). Richards 12-3 1 0 0 1 1 S.Burnett 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 a win over the barely recognizable Braves 7, Phillies 5 Jepsen 1 0 0 0 0 2 New York Yankees. Newcomer S.Downs 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cubs 3, Pirates1 Shane Victorino led a revamped M.LoweW,1-0 2 0 0 0 1 3 • ATLANTA — Freddie Freeman Frieri S,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 2 Red Sox lineup with three RBls • PITTSBURGH — Jeff Samardzija drove in three runs with three hits, Cincinnati and rookie Jackie Bradley Jr. Cueto 7 3 1 1 2 9 including the first of three Atlanta struck out nine in eight nearly Broxton 1 0 0 0 0 2 walked three times and scored home runs, and the Braves beat flawless innings and the Chicago Chapman 1 0 0 0 1 2 twice in his big league debut. Lecure 2 1 0 0 2 1 Cole Hamels and Philadelphia. Cubs held on for a victory over HooverL,0-1 2 2 2 2 2 3 Jacoby Ellsbury, of Madras, hit

0)

Oakland

San Francisco Lo s Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi

50 games after testing positive for testosterone.

Denorfirf 3 1 1 0 Cowgillcf-If 5 2 2 4 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 5 1 2 1 Thtchrp 0 0 0 0 DWrght3b 4 1 1 1 St. Louis Arizona Evcarrss 2 0 0 0 I.Davis1b 5 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi A lonso1b 4 1 1 1 Byrdrf 5 12 2 J aycf 4 0 1 0 GParrarf 5 1 4 0 Q uentinlf 2 0 1 1 Dudalf 2000 M crpnt3b 4 1 1 0 Prado3b 5 2 2 1 Kotsayph-lf 1 0 0 0 Niwnhspr-cf 1 0 0 0 H ollidylf 4 0 1 1 A.Hill2b 4 0 2 0 G yorko2b-3b4 0 1 0 Buckc 422 1 C raig 1b 4 0 0 0 MM ntr c 3 1 1 1 Hundlyc 4 0 0 0 RTeiadss 4 2 2 1 Beltranrf 3 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 3 1 1 0 Scasglp 0 0 0 0 M aybincf 4 0 0 0 Niesep 2 1 2 1 A ffeldtp 0 0 0 0 Y Molinc 3 1 1 0 Kubellf 4 1 2 1 R ansm3b 2 0 0 0 Lyonp 0000 A riasph 1 0 0 0 Bassp 0 0 0 0 Vldspnph 1 1 0 0 Descals2b 3 0 1 1 Pollockcf 4 0 3 2 Kozmass 2 0 0 0 Pnngtnss 4 0 0 0 T otals 3 0 0 4 0 Totals 3 04 7 3 Guzmnph 1 0 0 0Atchisnp 0 0 0 0 Wnwrgp 2 0 0 0 Kenndyp 3 0 0 0 S an Francisco 000 000 000 — 0 Brachp 0 0 0 0 Ricep 0 0 0 0 Salasp 0 0 0 0 DHrndzp 0 0 0 0 4 HR — Flowers (1). SB A.Escobar (1), Hosmer(1), Los Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 04x V enalerf 1 0 0 0 LDB — Sa n Franci s co 3, Los Angel e s 7. 2B Rzpczyp 0 0 0 0 Hinskeph 1 0 0 0 Rios (1). Volquezp 1 0 0 0 —Kershaw (1). Amarst2b 2 0 0 0 W ggntnph 1 0 0 0 Zteglerp 0 0 0 0 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SD C.crawford (1), M.Ellis (1). HR CS — Pagan(1), C.crawford(1). Shields L,0-1 6 8 1 1 0 6 Totals 3 1 2 4 2 Totals 3 8111311 J .Kellyp 0 0 0 0 H R ER BB SD S an Diego Crow 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Francisco I P 001 0 0 1 0 00 — 2 Totals 3 0 2 5 2 Totals 3 66 155 M.cain 6 4 0 0 1 8 New york St. Louis 1 00 000 100 — 2 K.Herrera 1 0 0 0 1 2 022 300 40x — 11 K ontos L,0-1 1 3 3 3 0 0 Arizona 000 310 20x 6 Chicago E Ransom(1), R.Telada (1). LDB San Diego6, E—Descalso (1). DP St. Louis 1, Arizona 1. 0 0 1 1 1 0 NewYork8. 2B—Gyorko (1), Cowggl (1), R.Te SaleW,1-0 72-3 7 0 0 1 7 S.casgla i a da Affeldt 1 0 0 0 1 1 (1). HR St. Louis 2,Arizona8. 2B M.carpenter(1), N.Jones 0 0 0 0 1 0 —Alonso (1), Cowggl(1). SB—D.Wright 2 LDB Holliday (1), YMogna(1), G.Parra 3(3), Prado2 ThorntonH,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Los Angeles (2). S —Ev.Cabrera. K ershaw W ,1-0 9 4 0 0 0 7 (2), Kubel (1), Pollock(1). CS—G.Parra (1). SF ReedS,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 1 San Diego IP H R E R BB SD Kontospitchedto 3baters inthe 8th. M.Montero. N.Jonespitchedto1 batter inthe8th. VolquezL,0-1 3 6 6 6 3 4 SCasglapitchedto1 batter inthe8th. St. Louis IP H R E R BB SD WP —N.Jones. Bass 3 3 1 1 0 3 HBP by Affeldt(Ad.Gonzalez), byM.cain (M.Ellis). Brach 11 4 3 0 6 T 2.38. A 39,012(40,615). 2-3 4 4 4 1 1 WainwnghtL,0-1 6 WP S.casilla, Kershaw . Salas 0 3 2 2 0 0 Thayer 1 0 0 0 1 2 T 2.25. A — 53,138 (56,000). Rzepczynski 1 0 0 0 1 1 Thatcher 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 J Kelly 1 1 0 0 0 1 New york Tigers 4, Twins 2 Arizona NieseW,1-0 62-3 4 2 2 2 4 Brewers 5, Rockies 4 K ennedy W , 1 -0 7 5 2 2 1 8 Lyon 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 D.Hemandez 1 0 0 0 0 2 Atchison 1 0 0 0 0 0 • MINNEAPOLIS — Justin (10 innings) Ztegler 1 0 0 0 0 0 Rice 1 0 0 0 0 2 Verlander's five shutout innings Salaspitchedto3 baters inthe7th. Volquezpitchedto 2 baters inthe4th. T 2.46. A 48,033 (48,633). HBP—byNiese(EvCabrera). WP Bass, Thayer. at frosty Target Field held up • MILWAUKEE — Jonathan T—3.01. A 41,053 (41,922).

for Detroit, and the defending

Washington 2, Miami0 N.y. Mets11,SanDiego 2 Chicago Cubs3, Pittsburgh1 Milwaukee 5,Colorado 4,10 innings L A. Angels3, Cincinnati1, 13innings L.A. Dodgers 4,SanFrancisco 0 Atlanta 7,Philadelphia5 Arizona6,St. Louis2

Seattle

Drysdale in 1965.

yearago.

All Times PDT

Dan Ugglaand Justin Upton, making his Braves debut, also homered for Atlanta, which led National League teams with 49

from last season. Philadelphia Atlanta ab r hbi ab r hbi Reverecf 4 1 1 0 Smmnsss 4 1 1 0 Rollinsss 5 0 1 0 Heywrdrf 3 1 0 0 utley2b 5 2 3 3 J.uptonlf 4 1 1 1 Howard1b 5 0 0 1 Fremn1b 4 1 3 3 Myong3b 2 0 0 0 Buptoncf 4 0 0 0 Brownlf 3 0 1 0 uggla2b 3 2 1 1 Mayrry rf 4 1 1 0 CJhnsn 3b 3 1 2 0 K ratzc 4 0 1 1 Lairdc 4 0 2 1 Hamelsp 2 1 1 0 THudsnp 2 0 0 0 F rndsnph 1 0 1 0 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 Durbinp 0 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 H orstp 0 0 0 0 DFlhrtp 0 0 0 0 L.Nixph 1 0 0 0 Waldenp 0 0 0 0 Aumontp 0 0 0 0 R.Penaph 1 0 0 0 K imrelp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 5 105 Totals 3 37 106 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 1 2 0 110 — 5 Atlanta 211 012 Dgx 7 DP — Philadelphia 1, Atlanta 1. LDB Philadelphia 8, Atlanta5. 2B Mayberry (1), Simmons(1),

Leaders ThroughTuesdaynight AMERICANLEAGUE BATTING Cruz,Texas,.667, Maxwell, Houston, 667, Peralta,Detroit,.667, Rios,Chicago,.667, Iglesias, Boston,.600,10tiedat.500. RUNS Bradley,Boston,2, Maxwel, Houston,2, SaltalamacchiaBoston, , 2,26tied at1. RBI Ankiel, Houston,3,lannetta, LosAngeles, 3; Victortno,Boston, 3,Cervelli, NewYork, 2, Ellsbury, Boston, 2,Gutierrez,Seattle,2, Maxwell, Houston,2. HITS Ellsbury, Boston, 3, lglesias, Boston, 3, 18 tied at2.

DOUBLESFielder, Detroit, 1, Hunter,Detroit, 1, Jaso,Oakland,1, Mauer,Minnesota,1, Morneau, Minnesota, 1,Plouffe,Minnesota, 1, Saltalamacchia, Boston 1 Smith,oakland,1,Youkgis,NewYork,1. TRIPLES Maxwell, Houston, 2, Bourios, Los Angeles, 1,Ellsbury,Boston, 1. HOMERUNS Ankiel, Houston,1, Flowers,Chicago,1, lannetta,LosAngeles,1. STOLENBASES —Escobar, KansasCity,1, Hosmer, Kansas City, 1, Peralta, Detroit,1, Rios, Chicago, 1, Ryan,Seattle,1. PITCHING Sale, Chicago,1-0, Lester, Boston, 1-0, Lowe,LosAngeles, 1-0, Norris, Houston,1-0; Verlander, Detroit, 1-0, Hemandez,Seattle, 1-0, 5 tied at 0. STRIKEDUTS Harrison, Texas, 9, Hernandez, Seattle, 8,Sale, Chicago,7, Verlander,Detroit, 7, Lester, Boston,7, Anderson,Oakland,6, Shields, Kansas City, 6. SAVES —Frieri, LosAngeles,1, Bedard,Houston, 1, Wghelmsen,Seattle, 1, Coke, Detroit, 1, Reed, Chicago,1.

cago 5,Pittsburgh6. 2B Castillo 2 (2), Mccutchen (1). HR Rizzo(1).SB S.castro(1), Schierholtz(1), Mccutchen (1). —utley Chicago IP H R E R BB SD C.Johnson(1), Laird(1). 3B—utley (1). HR SamardziiaW,1-0 8 2 0 0 1 9 (1), J.upton(1), Freeman(1), uggla(1). SB Revere NATIONALLEAGUE (1) MarmolH,1 1-3 1 1 1 1 1 BATTING —Parra, Arizona, .800, Freeman,AtIP H R ER BB SD Russell H,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia l a nta,.750, Pol l o ck,Arizona,.750, Ellis, LosAngeles, 5 7 5 5 1 5 FuiikawaS,1-1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 HamelsL,0-1 .667, Johnson,Atlanta,.667, Fowler, Colorado,.600; Durbin 0 2 2 2 1 0 Pittsburgh utley Philadelphia,.600. 2 1 0 0 0 2 A.BurnettL,0-1 5 2 - 3 6 3 3 1 10 Horst RUNS Aoki, Milwaukee, 2, Buck,NewYork, 2, 1 0 0 0 1 1 Ju.Wtlson 11-3 0 0 0 0 2 Aumont Cowgill, New York, 2, Gonzalez,Colorado, 2, Harper, J.Hughes 1 0 0 0 0 1 Atlanta W ashi n gton, 2, Prado, Ari z ona, 2, Teiada, NewYork, 4 13 6 3 3 3 3 Melancon 1 0 0 0 0 2 T.Hudson 12 - 3 1 0 0 1 1 2, uggla, Atlanta, 2, utley, Philadelphia, 2,Weeks, HBP —byMarmol (Mccutchen), byA.Bumett (Schi- AvilanW,1-0 Milwaukee,2. O'Flaherty 1 1 1 1 0 0 erholtz). RBI Cowggl, Newyork, 4, Freeman, Atlanta, WaldenH,1 1 2 1 1 0 1 T—2.59. A 39,078 (38,362). KimbrelS,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 3, utley, Philadelphia, 3,Byrd, NewYork, 2, Harper, Washington, 2, Pollock, Arizona, 2, Ramirez,MilDurbin pitchedto 3baters in the6th. waukee,2, Rizzo, Chicago,2, TulowitzknColorado, WP — Walden2. 2 Mets11, Padres 2 T 2.56. A 51,456(49,586). HITS Parra, Arizona,4, Fowler, Colorado, 3, Freeman,Atlanta, 3, Pollock,Arizona,3, utley, Phga•NEW YORK — JonathonNiese delphia 3 25tied at2. Diamondbacks 6,Cardinals 2 DOUBLES Parra,Arizona,3, Castillo, Chicago, stepped nicely into his new role 2, Prado,Arizona,2, 18tiedat 1. as No. 1 starter for the Mets, and • PHOENIX — lan Kennedy struck TRIPLES —utley,Philadelphia 1. HOME RUNS —Harper, Washington, 2, 12 tied Collin Cowgill capped asuccessful out eight in seven strong innings

and Arizona used 15 hits to beat St. Louis in its season opener.

the center-field wall, triggering a standing ovation and prolonged roar from the sellout crowd of 53,000. Kershaw became the first pitcher in the majors to homer on

place of injured JohanSantana, Niese enjoyed abig afternoon

opening day since JoeMagrane

slugger ChaseHeadley (broken thumb) and catcher Yasmani

on five hits with one walk. St. Louis' Adam Wainwright (0-1) went six innings, giving up four runs, three earned, on 11 hits. He struck out six with no walks. Arizona's Gerardo Parra matched his career best with four hits, three of them doubles. Rookie

of St. Louis in 1988, and the first Dodgers pitcher to do it since Don

WP — Weaver. T 4.45. A 43,168(42,319).

in spring training. Hamels (0-1) struggled in his first opening day start. He gave up five runs on seven hits, including the three homers, with five strikeouts and one walk in five innings. The three homers allowed matched his high

New York debut with a grand slam in a rout of San Diego. Handed the opening day assignment in

from George Kontos (0-1) over

HBP by Weaver (Choo), by Hoover (Conger).

with both his arm and bat. He breezed into the seventh inning againsta Padres lineup missing Grandal, suspended for the first

Kennedy (1-0) allowed two runs

at1. STOLENBASES Wright, NewYork, 2, Castro, Chicago,1, Mccutchen,Pittsburgh,1, Revere,Phgadelphia, 1, Schierholtz,Chicago, 1,Weeks,Mgwau-

kee, 1. PITCHING Kennedy,Arizona,1-0, Henderson, Milwaukee,1-0,Avilan,Atlanta,1-0, Strasburg,Washington, 1-0,Samardziia, Chicago,1-0, Kershaw,Los Angeles,1-0, Niese,NewYork, 1-0. STRIKEDUTS Burnett, Pittsburgh, 10,Cueto, Cincinnati, 9, Samardziia, Chicago, 9, Kennedy, Arizona, 8, Cain, SanFrancisco, 8, Kershaw,Los Angeles, 7,Wainwright, St. Louis, 6, Chacin,Colorado, 6. SAVES —Fuiikawa, Chicago, 1, Soriano,Washington, 1,Kimbrel, Atlanta,1.

Continued from C1 The slugger's remedy for the cold? "Put hot sauce all over and throw some long sleeves on and some long johns and go out there and run around and enjoy it," he joked. The hot chocolate line was 12 to 15 people deep at the ballpark while the beer vendors w er e g e nerally talking among themselves. "It's opening Day. You can't not come," said fan Ripley Peterson, dressed in six layers for the chill. "I love baseball, I love the Twins. Opening day is a special thing. Unless it's like a blizzard,I'm going to be here." The 2013 season officially opened Sunday night when the Houston Astros beat Texas. Most every other team was i n a c t ion M o nday. From old rivalries on the coasts — Red Sox-Yankees in New York, Giants-Dodgers in Los Angeles — there was plentyto celebrate with a dozen games. "The three big holidays — Thanksgiving, Christmas and o pening d ay," LA co-owner Stan Kasten said, watching the stands at Dodger Stadium fill up before the game against World S eries c h ampion San Francisco. A few minutes later, a stadium camera swung to Vin Scully's booth, where he's starting his 64th season, and the revered broadcaster pronounced: "It's time for Dodger baseball." Dodgers co-owner Magic Johnson was standing on the mound before the game when manager Don M attingly came out a n d signaled for a reliever. In came Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax wearing his No. 32 vintage jersey, and the ol' left-hander threw out the first ball to former Dodgers ace Orel Hershiser. The Dodgers' c urrent lefty ace, Clayton Kershaw, had a memorable opening performance, launching his first career home run to break a scoreless tie in the eighth inning before finishing off a four-hitter in a 4-0 win. H e became th e f i r s t pitcher to throw a shutout and hit ahome run in an opener since Bob Lemon for Cleveland in 1953, according to STATS. "What a n awe s ome feeling," s ai d K e r shaw, who charged around the bases accompanied by a prolonged roar from the sellout crowd of 53,000. "I probably wasn't feeling my feet hitting the ground." There was a lot more to remember and honor, too. Players, managers, coaches, umpires and everyone else i n u n i f orm wore patches in tribute to those killed last December in the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. At Yankee Stadium, the names of the 20 children and six educators who died scrolled on the video board in center field during a moment of silence. The honor guard included members of Newtown p olice and firefighters. Nationals general mana ger Mike Rizzo had a patch attached to a lapel on his pinstriped charcoal suit. It has the seal of Newtown, a picture of a black ribbon and 26 little black stars, each representing a victim of that shooting. "It's so we don't forget about the people in Newtown," Rizzo said, tapping the patch with his hand. "It honors them and keeps them in our thoughts." At Citi Field in New York, the Mets h onored hundreds of Hurricane Sandy responders and volunteers in a pregame ceremony. A large orange heart with a blue NY logo was placed in center field and storm volunteers wearing white shirts lined up around it in the shape of home plate. B efore A t l a nta's 7 - 5 win over Philadelphia, the Braves brought out some of theirpast starsforpregame ceremonies. Dale Murphy was the honorary captain, newly r e t i re d C h i p per Jones threw out the first pitch — firing a strike to Brian McCann — and Phil Niekro was handed a microphone and yelled "Play ball! "


C4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

NBA ROUNDUP

Cal beats Georgia, earns trip to FinalFour AP names

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Portland Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard (0) drives to the basket as Utah Jazz's Al Jefferson (25) and Randy Foye defend during Monday night's game in Salt Lake City.

Blazers no match or Jazz The Associated Press SALT LAKE CITY — The Utah Jazz looked like a team on the verge of collapse 10 days

Wesley Matthews led Portland with 23 points. Rookie standout D amian L i l lard added 17 points, including three 3-pointers to ago. break theNBA's single-season rookie record Now they've won a season-best five straight (166). He finished seven of 16 overall and three to move a half-game ahead of the idle Los An- of seven beyond the arc, with five assists and geles Lakers for the eighth Western Confer- five rebounds. "It's an honor to be able to do that," Lillard ence playoffspot. "Look at the Baltimore Ravens," Jazz big said. "But I wish I would have done it in a win. man Al Jefferson said of the Super Bowl It's bittersweet." champs. "They started to play well right at the Lillard, the No. 6 overall pick in the June right time. We're clicking at the right time. We draft, had averaged 24.3 points in three previhave seven more games to go." ous games against Utah this season. And he Jefferson scored 24 points, Mo Williams hit was enjoying a homecoming of sorts, having six 3-pointers and the Jazz (39-36) beat the played just 40 miles north of Salt Lake City at Portland Trail Blazers 112-102 Monday night. Weber State. "We're a team that's playing like we want to But Williams made sure the rookie couldn't be in the playoffs," Jefferson added. match him. It helps that Utah is knocking down 3s, In Portland on Friday, Williams scored 26 opening things up inside even more for its big of his 28 points in the second half. He was men. three of three from beyond the arc in the third Randy Foye did the damage in Saturday's Monday as Utah pulled away. win over Brooklyn, going eight of nine from In othergames on Monday: beyond the arc. Grizzlies 92, Spurs 90: MEMPHIS, Tenn. On Monday, it was Williams' turn. — Mike Conley drove for a layup with 0.6 He made aseason-high six ofseven 3-point- seconds left, and Memphis rallied to beat San ers and finished with 20 points as six Jazz Antonio for its third straight victory. players scored in double figures. Rockets 111, Magic 103: HOUSTON — Omer In the last two games, the Jazz have made Asik matched his career high with 22 points 19 3-pointers. and grabbed 18 rebounds, and Houston beat W illiams said h e i s j u s t b e ing m o r e Orlando withoutJames Harden and Chandler aggressive. Parsons. "I'm just playing," said Williams, who also Timberwolves 110, Celtics 100: MINNEhad nine assists in pushing the up-tempo APOLIS — Nikola Pekovic bruised and batgame. "I'm not even thinking about it. Let tered the overmatched Boston front line for 29 the plays happen. Let my natural ability take points to lead Minnesota. over." Bucks 131, Bobcats 102: MILWAUKEE The Blazers were within 79-72 after Eric — Larry Sanders had a career-high 24 points Maynor's 3-pointer with 2:02 left in the third and 13rebounds inMilwaukee's highest-scorbefore Williams hit his fifth and sixth 3-point- ing total in more than four years. ers to give Utah an 87-74 lead going into the H awks 102, Cavaliers 94: ATLANTA fourth. The Jazz opened the fourth on a 10-4 Devin Harrisscored a season-high 25 points run, and never looked back. and Josh Smith nearly added a triple-double Utah led by as many as 19 points, outscor- as Atlanta improved its chances of securing ing Portland 52-28 in the paint. home-court advantage in the first round of Jefferson, fresh off Western Conference the playoffs. Pistons 108, Raptors 98: TORONTO — Greg player of the week honors, did much of the damage. Monroe scored 24 points, Jose Calderon had He made 12 of 21 shots, had 10 rebounds, 19 points and nine assists against his former two steals, two blocks and two assists. Paul team, and Detroit snapped a three-game losMillsap added 16 points on seven-of-11 shoot- ing streak by beating Toronto. ing, and Derrick Favors had 18 points and Pacers 109, Clippers 106: LOS ANGELES — Roy Hibbert had 26 points and 10 rebounds seven rebounds for the Jazz. The win was Utah's second in four days before fouling out, Paul George added 23 over the Blazers (33-41), losers of five consecu- points and 10 assists, and Indiana barely tive and still without leading scorer LaMarcus completed a sweep of its four-game road trip Aldridge because of a sprained ankle. with a victory over the Los Angeles Clippers.

NHL ROUNDUP

Blackhawks beat Predators The Associated Press CHICAGO Chicago coach Joel Quenneville's unusual choice for the shootout paid off against Nashville on Monday. Defenseman Michal Rozsival scored in the fifth round of thetiebreaker afterJonathan Toews also connected in the shootout, and the Blackhawks pulled out a 3-2 win over the Predators. Rozsival, who hasn't scored a goal this season, beat Pekka Rinne with a high backhand shot in his first career shootout attempt. " I was kind of l ucky i n practices for shootouts," Rozsival said. "I guess it's good to see the coach put trust in me." Rozsival skated straight down the slot, went to his b ackhand, then l i f ted t h e p uck o ve r R i n n e's r i g ht shoulder. "That's the one move that I have," Rozsival said. "I've been kind of lucky in practice, so I went with it. It's nice to contribute offensively, even though it's during the shootout like this." C hicago's Patrick K a n e scored his team-leading 19th

goal and r o okie B r andon Saad scored in r e gulation to help the Blackhawks win their second straight. Kane has points in 10 of his past 11 games, posting seven goals and nine assists during the span. The Blackhawks played again without two of t heir top forwards,Marian Hossa and Patrick Sharp, who are out with upper-body injuries. Hossa missed his sixth game and Sharp sat out his 11th. And Chicago center Dave Bolland, along with Nashville left wing Gabriel Bourque, l eft M onday's game w i t h injuries. Also on Monday: D ucks 4, Stars 0: D A L LAS — Viktor Fasth made 26 saves for his third shutout of the season, and Bobby Ryan had a goal and an assist to lead Anaheim over reeling Dallas. Canadiens 4, Hurricanes 1: MONTREAL — Carey Price made 18 saves in his 300th NHL game to lead Montreal over Carolina. Blues 4, Wild 1: ST. PAUL, Minn. — Jaden Schwartz and Andy McDonald each had a goal and an assist, Brian El-

liott stepped in and made 19 saves, and St. Louis snapped a three-game losing streak with a win over Minnesota. Red Wings 3, Avalanche 2: DETROIT — Damien Brunner ended his 15-game scoring drought and Jimmy Howard made a late save to help Detroit hold off Colorado. Rangers 4, Jets 2: NEW YORK — De r e k S t epan scored twice, including the go-ahead goal in the third period, to lead New York over

Winnipeg. Islanders 3, Devils 1: NEWARK, N.J. — Frans Nielsen set up two early goals, Evgeni Nabokov made 24 saves and New York continued its playoff push with a victory over New Jersey. Sharks 3, Canucks 2: SAN JOSE, Calif. — Joe Thornton had a goal and an assist during a second-period scoring flurry and San Jose beat Vancouver for its fifth straight victory. O ilers 4, Flames 1: ED MONTON, Alberta — Justin Schultz had a goal and two assists and Edmonton continued its drive for a playoff spot by winning its fourth in a row.

The Associated Press SPOKANE, Wash. — Layshia Clarendon moved directly to the front, the first to get herhands on the regional championship trophy. Rightfully so, after getting California somewhere they've never gone before: the Final Four.

"(Layshia) is the glue," Cal's Afure Jemerigbe said. "She's always poised. She is always there." Clarendon scored 17 of her 25 points in the second half and overtime, and Calif ornia rallied f rom d o w n 10 with less than 7 minutes left to beat Georgia 65-62 in the Spokane Regional final and advance to the national semifinals for the first time in school history. Clarendon and the secondseeded Golden Bearsbecame the first team from the western U.S. other than Stanford to reach the Final Four since Long Beach State in 1988. They did it with a gritty rally down the stretch and big shots by Clarendon, Jemerigbe and Talia Caldwell. During that 25-year span, eight different programs in the West have reached the regional finals. But whether it was Long Beach State, Washington, USC, UCLA, Colorado, Ut ah, A r i z ona State or Gonzaga, they all came up one game short — sometimes at the hands of Stanford — of advancing. California, and s econdyear coach Lindsay Gottlieb, finally broke the string. Gottlieb threw her arms in the air when Shacobia Barbee's desperation half-court shot at the buzzer bounced off the backboard and wore a huge grin throughout the postgame celebration. "I knew this was possible. I believed more in this group than anyone ever and this is still better than my wildest dreams," Gottlieb said. "So many thing go into it and then you have to get a little lucky and then things have to go right, so I'm really conscious of this is special." C alifornia ( 3 2-3) w a s the selection of P r esident Obama when he filled out his NCAA women's tournament bracket.The Golden

Success Continued from C1 "It has been quite interesting," said Murray, 25. "Guys are reaching their peak later in their careers. The average age at the top 100 has increased by a few years since I first came on the tour." Bjorn Borg retired at 25. Boris Becker was done playing full time at 28. Patrick Rafter quit at 28, and Marat Safin and Gustavo Kuerten walked away at 29. Andy Roddick retiredlastyear shortly after turning 30. But the style of play has changed, with trips to the net much more infrequent than in the past. Top players can win

by hugging the baseline. "A lot of the guys that used to play serve and volley had a lot of problems with their backs and their knees and hips, and finished when they were 28 or 29 years old," Murray said. "And now guys are probably training better. There are better tr aining m ethods, and people probably understand how to recover from matches better and are learning new things all the time about how the body works." Many former No. 1 women retired before 30 as well, including Monica Seles, Justine Henin, Martina Hingis, Kim Clijsters and Jennifer Capriati. The No. 1-ranked Williams joked last week about buying a Rolls-Royce in response to a midlife crisis when she turned 30. But she might be more dominant than ever, and her conditioning seems at a peak for the challenges of clay. Two other 30-somethings are ranked in the women's top 15 — Li Na and Roberta Vinci, a latebloomer ranked a career-high No. 13 at age 30. As tennistakes on a more mature look, teen sensations are becoming less common. On the men's side, Becker was a two-time Wimbledon champion before he turned 20. Mats Wilander won his first ma-

All-America hoops team

WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT Bears proved him right. But that wasn't the motivation of this relaxed, fun group that danced on the court and cut down the nets and for at least this season taken the mantle of being the best out West. "Beignets. We have been joking about that the whole t ime," C l a r endon sa i d . " We're going to New O r leans and we're going to get beignets." Jemerigbe finished with 14 and Caldwell added 10, with six coming in the final 3 :30 of regulation and i n overtime. Barbeeled Georgia with 14 points and 10 rebounds. "I don't think the words can even explain right now. D isappointed, h urt," s a i d Georgia's Jasmine James, who had 11 points before fouling out. "To have something that y o u've a lways wanted to be able to do, just be so close, and to end up getting outworked for it, it hurts." It didn't look like another game awaited the Golden Bears, not t r a iling 4 9-39 with 6:46 left after Barbee hit a pair of free throws. The Bears got back into the game by halftime overcoming a horrible shooting start, but each run early in the second half was rebuffed by the Lady Bulldogs. Cal missed 18 of its first 19 shots to start the game. Also on Monday: BRIDGEPORT REGIONAL Connecticut 83, Kentucky 53: BRIDGEPORT, Conn. Breanna Stewart scored 21 points and Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis added 17 to help top-seed Connecticut rout Kentucky and advance to a record sixth straight Final Four. The Huskies will face either Notre Dame or Duke in the national semifinals on Sunday in New Orleans. The Irish and Blue Devils play tonight. UConn broke a tie with Stanford (2008-12), LSU (2004-08), and i tself (2000-04) by reaching the Final Four again.

By Jim O'Connell The Associated Press

D oug M c Dermott m a d e Creighton history last season when he was selected as the school's first player on the AP All-America team. Now he's done it again. The 6-foot-8 junior forward, the second-leading scorerin Division I, was a repeat selection Monday, the 51st player to earn thehonor in consecutive seasons. "It's pretty crazy. I couldn't expect to have as good a year as I did," said McDermott, who averaged 23.1 points and 7.5 rebounds while shooting 56.1 percent from the f ield and 49.7 percent from 3-point range. Trey Burke of Michigan and Otto Porter Jr. of Georgetown tied as the leading vote-getters for first team, while Victor Oladipo of Indiana and Kelly Olynyk of Gonzaga were the other players selected. Burke and Porter both received 62 first-team votes and 319 points from the same 65member national media panel that selects the weekly Top 25. Voting was on a 5-3-1 basis and was completedbefore the NCAA tournament. Oladipo got 58 f i rst-team votes and306 points.McDermott had 44 first-team votes and 279 points, one more than O lynyk's total p o ints. T h e Gonzaga junior got 47 firstteam votes. Burke averaged 19.2 points, 3.1 rebounds and 6.7 assists and shot 40.1 percent on 3point attempts. Porter's stat l in e i s 1 6 .3 points and 7.4 rebounds per game while shooting 42.7 percent from behind the 3-point line. O ladipo a v e raged 1 3 . 6 points, 6.4 rebounds and 2.2 steals while shooting 59.9 percent from the field and 44.3 percent on 3s. Olynyk, a nat>ve of Canada, averaged 17.5 points and 7.2 rebounds while shooting 65.2 percent from the field. For a complete listing of AP AII-Amerians, see Scoreboard, C2.

-

is No. 14 this week, the highest hehas been ranked in five years. The German said he and other 30-somethings on the tour know how to take care of Again, Querrey sees changes theirbodies and are properly in the style of play as a factor. conditioned. "Compared to 20 years ago, "I think what it comes down I think guys can hit the ball to is the older you get, you bigger now," he said. "A man would assume you get wiser," can just overpower and blow he said. "Now with nutrition away an 18-year-old boy. I and everything you can do, think 20 years ago with the the right training, the trainers rackets and the way people that you have, it just helps you played, guys couldn't justblow mentally. "You just know what works through an 18- or 19-yearold. Guys weren't big power for you best. You might do a guys. You couldn't hit the ball lot of lifting; you might do a through playersas much, so it lot of c ardiovascular workallowed some of the younger out. You try to figure out what players to feel their way into helps you the best if you want the game. to keep on riding it for as long "Nowadays I f e e l t h a t 's as you can." tougher to do. There is a bigger difference between the way a bigger, stronger man plays compared to an 18- or 19-year-old." H aas, who t u rn s 3 5 o n r, ssdlr ra<' rylalKal Wednesday, is a muscular 6 psi>l' i, gar feet 2 and 190 pounds. And he ssas" jor title at 17, Borg at 18, Pete Sampras at 19. But the most recent teenage men's Grand Slam champion was a 19-year-old Rafael Nadal at the 2005 French Open.

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C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

14,572.85

3,239.17

Toda+

O To look up individual stocks, go tobendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseea recap in Sunday's Businesssection.

S&P 500

+

+ -28.35

1,600

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Auto sales

1,560 .

Automakers issue their report card today on how U.S. sales of cars and trucks fared in March. Auto sales rose 4 percent to an annualized rate of 15.4 million in February, the fourth consecutive month with a rate above 15 million. Auto sales have continue to climb even as Americans have faced rising gas prices and lower take-home pay this year due to an increase in Social Security payroll taxes.

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S8$P 500

14 640

Close: 1,562.17

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Change: -7.02 (-0.4%) 10 DAYS

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13,500

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StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 2,694 1,439 Pvs. Volume 3,183 1,537 Advanced 9 53 66 0 Declined 2082 1 7 66 New Highs 2 50 13 9 New Lows 27 32

GOLD $1,600.00 ~

10 YR T NOTE 1.83%

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-5.69 -93.03 -0.81 + 0 .71 -28.35 -7.02 -11.41 -91.19 -12.75

-0.04% -1.49% -0.16% +0.01% -0.87% -0.45% -0.99% -0.55% -1.34%

YTD $-1 1 .21 % +16.12% +12.03% +7.87% $.7.27% $9.53% +11.94% +10.08% +10.53%

Alaska Air Group ALK 31.29 — 0 64.55 63.60 -.36 -0.6 V 4 V $.47 . 6 + 77.3 67 6 1 5 Spicier quarter? Avista Corp AVA 22.78 28.05 27.37 -.03 -0.1 V 4 V $13 5 $.12.I 3 5 0 21 1.22f BAC 6 . 72 12.94 12.15 -.03 -0.2 V 4 V +4 7 +25.3 82287 47 0.04 Higher prices and growing demand Bank of America Barrett Business BBSI 18.88 53.27 51.53 1.13 -2.1 V 4 V $35 3 +167.8 7 3 27 0.52 in Africa and other emerging Boeing Co BA 6 6 . 82 — 0 8684 85.25 -.60 -0.7 V 4 V $13. . 1 +17 9 2854 1 7 1.941 markets helped lift earnings for Cascade Bancorp CACB 4.23 7.18 6.62 -.14 -2.1 +58 +17.2 4 51 McCormick last year. Cascade Cp CASC 42.86 — 0 6545 64.98 $.1.1 +19.4 16 1.40 Investors find out today whether Columbia Sportswear COLM 45.37 59.94 57.07 -.81 -1.4 V 4 V +7 0 +24.5 8 8 20 0.88 the spice-maker's sales trends COST 81.98 — 0 107 06 105.81 -.30 -0.3 V 4 V $7 2 + 26.0 98 2 2 4 1.10a held up in the December-February Costco Wholesale Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 8.92 7.26 -.18 -2.4 V 4 V +12 0 +55 17 56 quarter. Wall Street also will have FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 27.16 25.80 -.21 -0.8 V Y V +15. 6 + 3 7 91 1 1 8 0.28 itseye on McCormick's expenses. Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 25.40 23.31 -.53 -2.2 V 4 V +63 6 +3.3 25097 dd 0.581 The company discl osed in January Home Federal BncpID HOME 8.67 14.00 12.71 -.09 -0.7 $.2 3 +25.2 2 4 98 0.24a that it faced a higher tax rate and Intel Corp INTC 19.23 29.27 21.43 -.41 -1.9 V 4 V $3 9 -18.3 31592 10 0.90 retirement benefit costs, though it Keycorp K EY 6 . 80 10.19 9.82 -.14 -1.4 V 4 V +16 6 +19.8 9106 11 0.20 noted that the increases would not Kroger Co KR 2 0 .98 — 0 33,28 32.54 -.60 -1.8 V 4 V $25 1 $ -39.2 5047 1 2 0.60 impede its long-term growth. Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 6.60 5.29 -.17 -3.0 +32.6 - 14.9 96 1 d d LA Pacific L PX 7 . 8 1 22.55 20.82 -.78 -3.6 V V V +7 8 $ .1 21.8 2253 cc MDU Resources MOU 19.59 — 0 2500 24.81 -.18 -0.7 +16.8 +14.5 520 0.69 Mentor Graphics MENT 12.85 18.11 17.41 -.64 -3.5 V 4 V $2 3 + 18 9 95 4 1 5 0.18 Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 32.89 28.61 +.01 $.7.1 -8.5 28584 16 0.92 Nike Inc B NKE 42.55 60.25 58.26 -.75 -1.3 V 4 V $12 9 + 11.5 3465 2 3 0.84 Nordstrom Inc JWN 46.27 58.44 54.45 -.78 -1.4 V 4 V +1 8 +3.0 1417 15 1.201 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.01 50.80 43.52 -.30 -0.7 -1.5 + 0 8 1 2 1 2 0 1.82 OfficeMax Inc OMX 4.10 14.92 11.43 -.18 -1.6 V Y V $.17 . 1 + 95.8 1499 2 0.08 Paccar Inc PCAR 35.21 — 0 5138 49.91 -.65 -1.3 +10.4 + 11.9 1038 1 6 0.80a Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 2.43 1.99 +.11 +5.9 $392 -21.7 3 2 dd Plum Creek PCL 35.43 — 0 5228 51.78 -.42 -0.8 V 4 V +16 7 + 29.3 94 8 4 1 1.68 Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 196.00 186.77 2.85 -1.5 -1.4 + 9 4 54 3 2 0 0.12 Safeway Inc SWY 14.73 — 0 2654 25.70 -.65 -2.5 V 4 V $42 1 $ .34.1 3822 11 0.70 Schnitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 41.55 26.10 -.57 -2.1 -13.9 - 31.8 41 8 3 8 0.75 Sherwin Wms SHW 107.29 — 0 17 2 41167.57 1.32 -0.8 V 4 V +8 9 + 57.4 61 1 2 6 2.001 Stancorp Fncl SFG 28.74 — o 4302 42.58 -.18 -0.4 V 4 V +16. 1 + 5.6 20 9 1 4 0.93f Starbucks Cp SBUX 43.04 62.00 56.87 -.08 -0.1 V 4 V +6 0 + 3.0 3471 3 1 0.84 Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30 6.92 4.85 -.21 -4.2 +04 -26.5 2516 dd Umpqua Holdings UMPQ 11.17 13.88 12.80 -.46 -3.5 V 4 V +8 6 - 0.8 80 4 1 4 0.40f Spotlight on manufacturing US Bancorp USB 28.58 35.46 33.99 +.06 +0.2 +64 +9.1 6536 12 0.78 A steep drop in volatile commercial Washington Fedl WAFD 14.30 18.42 17.31 -.19 -1.1 V Y V +2 6 + 4.9 18 5 1 3 0.361 aircraft and defense orders led to a Wells Fargo 8 Co WFC 29.80 38.20 36.93 -.06 -0.2 V 4 V +8 0 +10.0 10594 1 1 1.001 West Coast BcpOR WCBO 18.05 — 0 2469 24.28 +9.6 +24.6 21 0.20 decline in U.S. factory orders in Weyerhaeuser WY 1 8.60 — 0 31.74 31.33 -.05 -0.2 +12.6 +45.4 3100 44 0.68 January. Oividend Footnotes:a - Extra dMdends were pauu but are not mcluded b - Annual rate plus stock c - uqu>dating dividend e - Amount declared or paid in last12 monthsf - Current But economists anticipate the annualrate,whichwas mcreased bym ostrecentdM dendannouncement u Sum of de>dends Cud after stockspht, no regular rate ] - Sum of dMdends paid tws year Most recent Commerce Department will report de>dend wasom>tted or deferred k - Declared or Cud tws year, a cumulatee esue wuh Wv>dends marrears m - Current annual rate, wmchwas decreased bymost recent dividend announcement p - Imual de>dend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shownr - Declared or pa>d mprecedmg 12 months plus stock de>dend t - Pa>d m stock, approx>mate cash today that demand for factory valueon exeustabuuon date PE Footnotes:q - Stock >s a closed-end tund-no p/E rauo shown cc- p/E exceeds 99dd -Loss m last12 months goods bounced back in February. Orders for so-called core capital goods, which include equipment and computers, jumped 7.2 percent in January from DecemAmerican Greetings plans to go private, courtesy of T ha t ' s a 13 percent premium to American ber, which signals businesses are the Weiss family. Greetings Corp.'s closing price before the deal was more confident in the economy. The greeting-card and gift seller said Monday that a n n ounced. Its stock rose sharply Monday. The it has agreed to be taken private for Weiss family initially offered to buy the . > Factory orders about $602 million in cash. The @ Cleveland company in September at a Seasonally adjusted monthly :,, pri c e that's nearly 6 percent below the group behind the deal is led by the wpercent change Weissfamily, including Chairman „ g . newproposal. !

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American Greetings also owns Carlton Cards, Recycled Paper Greetings and Pa p y rus.

52-wEEK RANGE

Dividend:$0.60 Price-earnings ratio Yield: 3. 3 % (tralling 12 months):lost money

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 21.64 -.06 +6.5 +11.9 +10.9 +60 A A A 12.8 9 + .01 +0.1 +4.5 + 5.8+ 45 D 0 E 55.13 $ 54 $ I 1.9 $ 9 0 + 33 A A C 39.35 -.07 +6.2 +13.8 +7.6 + 16 A 0 C 42.21 -.17 $ 2.4 $ -8.7 $ 4 .2 + 03 C 0 A FnlnvA m 43.9 5 - . 2 5 +8.1 +13.5 +10.4 + 38 8 0 C GrthAmA m 37. 09 -.20 +8.0 +13.6 +9.8 + 38 A 0 D IncAme!A m 19 . 06 -.03 +6.5 +13.1 +10.8 + 56 A A 8 InvCoAmA m 32 .67 -.15 +8.8 +13.2 +9.6 + 39 8 0 C NewperspA m 33.05 -.15 +5.7 +12.3 +8.8 + 37 8 B 8 WAMutlnvA m 33.93 -.10 $9.3 $.14.1 $.12.5 + 45 C A 8 Dodge & Cox Inco m e 13.84 +.01 + 0 .6 + 5 . 5 + 6 .1 +7.1 C 0 8 IntlStk 35.81 -.09 + 3 .4 + 1 1.0 + 4.4 +0.3 8 B A 134.86 -.78 + 11.1 +19.7 +11.1 +3.7 A B C Stock Fidelity Contra 83.45 -.47 + 8 .6 + 9 . 8 +12.2 +5.7 8 A 8 GrowCo 100.2 5 - . 89 + 7 . 5 +5 . 2 +13.2 +7.2 D A A LowPriStk d 43 . 30 -.30 + 9 .6 + 14.0 +12.7 +7.9 C C 8 Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg 55 . 59 -.25+ 10.1 +13.4 +12.2 +5.0 8 A 8 FrankTemp-Franklinlncome A m 2.3 1 - .02 +5 .6 + 13.8 +10.7 +6.7 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 18.9 8 - .10 + 9 .4 + 10.2 +10.8 +4.0 E 0 C RisDivB m 17.2 0 - .08 + 9 .1 +9 . 2 + 9 .8 +3.0 E 0 D RisDivC m 17.1 1 - .09 + 9 .2 + 9 . 4 +10.0 +3.2 E 0 D SmMidValA m 36.59 -.26 +12.9 +13.7 +8.6 +1.7 D E E SmMidValB m 30.84 -.22 +12.7 +12.7 +7.7 +0.9 E E E PIMCO TotRetA m 11.2 5 +.01 + 0 .6 + 7 . 6 + 6 .5 +7.4 A B A T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 29.13 -.15 + 10.6 +16.6 +11.3 +4.6 A B 8 GrowStk 40.45 - . 2 5 + 7 . 1 +6 . 9 +12.0 +6.2 C A 8 HealthSci 47.3 9 -. 06 +15.0 +28.6 +21.3+15.2 A A A Newlncome 9.80 + .01 + 0 .1 + 5 . 0 + 5 .7 +6.2 C 0 C Vanguard 500Adml 143.97 -.64 +10.1 +13.4 +12.2 +5.0 8 A 8 500lnv 143.97 -.64 +10.1 $I 3.3 $-1 2.1 $4.9 8 A 8 CapOp 38.80 -.26 $15.4 +22.7 +10.5 +6.4 A 0 A Eqlnc 26.65 -.05 +11.0 +16.3 +15.0 +6.2 8 A A GNMAAdml 10.87 +.02 +0.3 $-2.3 $5.2 $5.7 C A A STGradeAd 10.80 -.01 +0.4 +3.4 +3.4 +4.0 8 8 8 StratgcEq 24.18 -.22 $12.7 +17.4 +15.0 +6.4 8 A C Tgtet2025 14.35 -.06 +5.6 +9.6 +8.9 +4.4 8 8 A TotBdAdml 11.01 +.01 0.0 +3.9 +5.6 +5.6 D 0 D Totlntl 15.25 -.14 +2.0 $-7.7 $3.5 - 1.3 D 0 8 TotStlAdm 39.19 -.21 +10.4 $I 3.8 $-1 2.5 $5.7 8 A A TotStldx 39.18 -.21 +10.4 $I 3.7 $-1 2.4 $5.6 8 A A USGro 23.17 -.14 +9.0 $-9.2 $-11.3 $5.8 8 8 8 Welltn 35.93 -.08 +6.8 +11.8 +9.9 +6.1 A A A

The manager of this highly rated FAMILY FUND fund, Dean Tenerelli, doesn't believe that the eurozone countries American Funds BalA m Most Active BondA m have yet hit an economic bottom. CaplncBuA m NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG He has positioned the fund CpWldGrlA m S&P500ETF 879938 156.05 —.62 cautiously, with few bank stocks. EurpacG!A m 12.15 —.03 15.11 + . 66 T Rowe Price EurStock d PRE SX 93.16 -1.27 9.38 —.60 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH 42.31 —.46 cu —.07 20.83 «C $$ 20.32 + . 07 12.90 —.25 $e ca 21.43 —.41 «C

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NAME OFC Glbl Unipixel BIP GCrb S&W wtA OaqoNE rs

NAME Paris

London

CATEGORY Europe Stock C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * ** * o -3.60 -21.6 -5.64 -18.4 ASSETS $859 million -1.28 -18.0 EXP RATIO 1.00% —.47 -14.2 MANAGER Dean Tenerelli —.93 -13.4 SINCE 2005-10-10 RETURNS3-MO +4.6 Foreign Markets YTO +4.6 LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR $ 129 L AST 13.04 25.01 5.85 2.83 6.00

3-YR ANNL +7.6 5-YR-ANNL +0.5

641.16

Frankfurt

Hong Kong 22,299.63 Mexico 43,933.27 Milan Tokyo 12,135.02 Stockholm 1,201.19 Sydney 4,979.87 Zurich

-165.19 -143.83

AM Close:$18.05 A1.95 or 12.1% The greeting card and gift seller has agreed to be taken private for about $602 million in a move led by some of its top executives. $20

—.73 TOP 5HOLDINGS —.33 Royal Dutch Shell PLC Class 8

-162.89 -1.32 Novartis AG + 6.70 + . 5 6 GlaxoSmithKline PLC -27.18 —.54 Anheuser-Busch Inbev SA Wirecard AG

-.0019

18

GameStop

GME Close:$2976%1.79or 6.4% A Janney analyst reiterated a "Buy" rating on the video game retailer's stock after the company posted positive fourth-quarter results. $30 25

16-

F J 52-week range $12.$$ ~

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F J 52-week range

$1$J11

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$15,$2 ~

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Vol.:15.6m (33.9x avg.) P E: . . . Vol.:7.0m (2.1x avg.) P E: .. . Mkt. Cap:$519.5 m Yie l d: 3 .3% Mkt. Cap:$3.61 b Yiel d : 3 .7% PC Close:$6.71 %-0.62 or -8.5% The electronics company's American depositary shares will be voluntarily delisted from the New York Stock Exchange this month. $10

Molson Coors

TAP

Close:$51.90 %2.97 or 6.1% A Goldman Sachsanalystboosted her rating on the beer maker's stock to a "Buy," citing improved North American beer volumes. $55 50

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52-week range $$.2$

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Hess

HES Close:$73.54 %1.93 or 2.7% The energy company said it's selling its Samara-Nafta division in Russia to QAQ Lukoil, a Russian oil company, for $1.8 billion. $80 70

Tesla Motors

TSLA Close: $43.93 %6.04 or 15.9% The electric car maker said that it sold more of its Model S sedans than expected and it will post a firstquarter net profit. $45 40

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P E: . . . Yield: ...

eBay

EBAY Aegion AEGN Close:$55.71 %1.49 or 2.7% Close:$22.23 V-0.92 or -4.0% The online retailer's stock rose as in- A Wedbush analystdowngraded the vestors reacted to analysts' optimispipeline repair company's stock after tic reports about the company and the company said its first-quarter earnings would miss expectations. its digital payment service. $60 $26 55

24

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J F 52-week range $14.49 ~ Vol.:485.5k(1.7xavg.) Mkt. Cap:$863.12 m

M $2$.10 PE: 1 6 .7 Yield : ...

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 1.83 percent Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

. 07 .07 . 1 0 .10 .12 .12

2-year T-note . 24 . 2 5 5-year T-note . 7 6 .78 10-year T-note 1.83 1.85 30-year T-bond 3.07 3.11

BONDS

... ... ... -0 01 -0.02 -0.02 -0.04

X -

V V V V

Commodities Worries about weaker demand knocked down the price of copper. Crude oil fell for the first time in six trading days, and the wholesale price of gasoline fell for a second straight day.

Foreign Exchange The dollar weakened against the

Japanese yen after a report showed that U.S. manufacturing growth slowed during March more than economists expected.

h5Q QG

FUELS

CLOSE

Crude Oil (bbl) 97.07 Ethanol (gal) 2.36 Heating Oil (gal) 3.07 Natural Gas (mm btu) 4.01 Unleaded Gas(gal) 3.10 METALS

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

Y V V -

V V

4 V V

.05 .13 .16

T L L L

.34 1 .02 2.16 3.27

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.79 2.81 -0.02 V B ond Buyer Muni Idx 4.14 4.15 -0.01 V $ 13~ ~ ~ ~ 18 B arclays USAggregate 1.86 1.85 +0.01 V PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.67 5.67 1 - Ypu23% 3-Y R*: -2% 1 0- YR*: 6% Total return YTD:8% Market value $597 million ... V RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 3.90 3.87 +0.03 V AP total returns through April 1 *annualized SOURCE: Factset YEST 3 .25 . 1 3 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.04 1.04 ... V 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2 . 7 6 2.76 ... V 1 YR AGO3.25 .13 FundFocus SelectedMutualFunds

American Greetings(AM) Monday's close:$18.05

Marketsummary

BkofAm RschMotn iShR2K MicronT iShEMkts Cisco Baripyix rs FordM Intel

1.2804+

StoryStocks

Panasonic

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

'

+ -.16 '

Amer. Greetings

NorthwestStocks NAME

$97.07

Stocks fell Monday after a report showed that manufacturing growth slowed more than economists expected during March. It's the first slowdown for manufacturing growth since November, and the disappointing report pulled down shares of industrial companies and producers of raw materials. They had the biggest percentage losses of the 10 sectors that make up the Standard 8 Poor's 500 index. Stocks had been higher in the first half hour of trading, but the report's release sent indexes lower. It was the first day of trading for the S8 P 500 index since it reached a record closing high on Thursday, eclipsing its prior peak set in October 2007.

.

C LOSE 14572.85 6162.30 507.59 9 107.76 3239.17 1562.17 1142.27 16507.07 938.79

14605.72 14531.48 DOW DOW Trans. 6264.44 6147.68 DOW Util. 508.56 506.22 NYSE Comp. 9107.76 9038.62 NASDAQ 3270.23 3230.57 S&P 500 1570.57 1558.47 S&P 400 1153.67 1138.33 Wilshire 5000 16609.60 16465.97 Russell 2000 951.60 934.84

-.38

Dow Jones industrials

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1 2 500

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$27.91

> A L V L L A

2.7 9 4.6 3 2.2 1 7.19 3.99 1.18 3.38

PVS. %CH. %YTD 97.23 - 0.16 + 5 .7 2.45 +7.8 2.92 + 0.74 + 0 . 8 4.02 -0.22 + 19.8 3.11 -0.29 + 10.3

CLOSE PVS. 1600.00 1594.80 27.91 28.29 1596.40 1571.20 3.37 3.40 782.80 767.10 CLOSE

V A L V L V A

PVS.

Cattle (Ib) 1.29 1.29 Coffee (Ib) 1.38 1.37 Corn (bu) 6.42 6.95 Cotton (Ib) 0.87 0.88 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 385.80 391.20 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.34 1.35 Soybeans (bu) 13.91 14.05 Wheat(bu) 6.64 6.88

%CH. %YTD -4.5 +0.33 -1.34 -7.5 + 1.60 + 3 . 8 -0.81 -7.5 +2.05 +11.4 %CH. %YTD -0.12 -0.9 +0.91 -3.8 -7.62 -8.0 -1.21 + 16.3 - 1.38 + 3 .2 -0.89 + 15.4 -1.00 -2.0 -3.45 -14.7

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USO per British Pound 1.5193 —.0003 —.02% 1.5998 Canadian Dollar 1.01 7 4 + .0001 +.01% . 9 9 73 USO per Euro 1.2804 —.0019 —.15% 1.3334 —.00 —.00% 82.86 Japanese Yen 94.22 Mexican Peso 12.3 445 + .031 8 +.26% 12.8097 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6460 +.0008 +.02% 3.7074 Norwegian Krone 5.8521 +.0052 +.09% 5.6944 South African Rand 9.2362 +.0032 +.03% 7.6533 Swedish Krona 6.5233 +.0015 +.02% 6.6168 Swiss Franc .9503 +.0016 +.17% .9029 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9603 Chinese Yuan 6.2109 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7629 Indian Rupee 54.286 Singapore Dollar 1.2411 South Korean Won 1114.49 Taiwan Dollar 29.87

+ .0001 +.01% .9 6 51 —.0046 —.07% 6.2995 —.0004 —.01% 7.7639 —.004 —.01% 50.876 —.0000 —.00% 1.2563 $.1.92 $-.I 7% 1132.20 + .02 +.07% 2 9 .51


THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/business

BRIEFING

Futura acquires AmeriTitle Futura Title & Escrow Corp., based in Boise, Idaho, has acquired Bend-based AmeriTitle, the companies

announced Monday. The AmeriTitle name and brand is expected to remain on its 42 offices in Oregon, Washington and Idaho, according to

a news release. AmeriTitle will also retain its

employees.

Streaming TV service upheld i

EXECUTIVE FILE What:Skrubz Medical & Supply LLC What it does:Sells scrubs and Dansko footwear for the medical industry. Also provides outpatient phlebotomy services Pictured:Renee Milichichi, owner of Skrubz Medical & Supply Where:636 N.W. Sixth St., Suite C, Redmond

0 ::i Ig

I% %,

ORuit( R Nk

Employees:Two Phone:541-526-5674 Wedsite:http://skrubzmedical.

New York Times News Service 5

AmeriTitle was

formerly owned by Klamath Falls door and window maker JeldWen and offers title, escrow and 1031 property

.h Joe Kline/The Bulletin

exchange services. — Bulletin staff reports

Gorrection In a story headlined "Vets launch ventures,"

which appearedSunday, March 31, on Page E1, the name of Owen Sutton's event-listing busi-

By Rachael Rees • The Bulletin

industry in Central Oregon, Renee Milichichi kept

reported incorrectly. The Bulletin regrets the error.

hearing the same complaint: There are few local places to

buy scrubs.

Deschutes County • Long Term Bend Investors LLC to Lands Bend LLC,South Deerfield Park. Lots7-9,13and14, 36 and 44, $420,000 • Andrew G. andBarbara J. Davis, trustees for Andrew Garth Davis and Barbara J. Davis Family Living Trust, to Clifford L. and Jeryl L. Kunkel, BrokenTop, Phase 2L, Lot 230, $385,000 • Stev H. Ominski and Mary J. Finnegan to Kristina C.

Guerrero andBrandonJ. Sylvester, Conifer Acres, Lots 3 and 4, $165,000 • James C. McDermott IV to Ward L. Hinrichs, Rocky Point, Phases1 and 2, Lot 6, $415,000 • David D. and Kelli J. Shanks and Michael H.and Delores M. Quick toTanner and Michelle Eastlick, Monticello Estates, Phase 1, Lot 24, $199,000 • Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation to David A. and Julie D. Miller, Glaze MeadowHomesite Section, FirstAddition, Lot 70, $367,500 • Mark A. Francis, trustee for Francis1999 Trust, to Glenda C.Mackie, Northwest Townsite COS Second Addition to Bend, Lots 9 and 10, Block 24, $180,000 • William and Sylvia A. Petrich to Duane R.Packer, Township 16, Range11, Section 14, $625,000 • Scott D. and Angela J. Boelman to Louis J. Kennedy IVand Merry H. Kennedy, Misty Meadows, Lot 7, $355,000 • Southwest Property Group LLCto Donald P.and Janis C. Martin, Township 15, Range11, Section 31, $354,900 • Yelas Developments Inc. to Niall W. Boggsand Kayley T. Mendenhall, Marken Heights, Lot11, $401,867 • Karoma Properties LLC to Rimrock lnvestments LLC, Ni-Lah-sha, Phases2and 3, Lot 88, $158,900 • Richard J. and Deborah M. DeMarco to Dan Roberts and Alyson Redman, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase30,Lot 8, $249,000 • COCC Foundation Property LLC toKevin J. and Debra L. Kenny, trustees for KennyFamily Trust, Pilot Butte Park, Phase 5, Lot 4, $400,000 • Jason A. Mendell to Eric M. and Kelly A. Vecchi, Tamarack Park, Lot18, Block 3, $158,000 • Fannie Mae akaFederal National Mortgage Association to Christine Restivo, ReedMarket East Second, Lot11, Block 2, $209,900 • Northwest Loan Servicing Inc. to Joseph andKimberly Hosang, Roaring Springs, Lot 7, $199,000 • Justin E. Dudenhoeferto Rebecca Rozar,Oakview, Phase 9, Lot13, $198,000 • Peter and Mary Shannon to Frank G.and DenaM. Schindler, Ridge atEagle Crest 55, Lot 71, $212,500

. want to start the

Over the past dozen years working in the medical

ness, SceneGuru, was

DEEDS

• What made you

In November, after surviving an intestinal tumor that caused an internal shutdown of her organs, Milichichi decided to pursue a longtime goal — opening Skrubz Medical & Supply on Northwest Sixth Street in Redmond. "The purpose of Skrubz is to give back to the medical community," she said. "I wanted to give people who work in the industry supplies and clothing at affordable prices, and that's what I did." She saidmost ofhe rcoworkers orderedscrubs online,which led to problems. "When (the uniform) got here, it wouldn't fit," she said. "It wasn't what we thought, or we would have to pay more than we thought

for shipping." Milichichi, a certified medical assistant and phlebotomist, worked for St. Charles until she resigned in October to focus on Skrubz. While she was excited about opening her retail store, she said, two weeksbefore itopened she realized what she would be losing

company? I've hadthe . ideaforSkrubz for the pastnineyears. After dealingwith health problems,having19 surgeriesandaneardeath experiencein 2011, I madeavow to God that ifhe spared my life, I wouldgive backto mycommunity and start thebusiness. • Where doyou . seethecompanyin the nextfive years? • Inawaybig. gerfacility. I'm almost feelingovercrowdednow. Iwasexpecting to be where I'm atayear later, notthree months later.Eventually, I'd like tocontinue doing what I'mdoing now, but havespace for other entrepreneurs to start the businessof their dreams,too.

A•

— interaction with her patients. That's when she decided to also open her own blood-drawing station. "You cancome intomy lab and order your own blood test without a doctor's order," Milichichi said, "and pay at the time of service with credit card or cash." She said the customer is in control of his or her own blood work, which helps people who do not have insurance and need regular blood tests to monitor health conditions. She said customers can read the results themselves or take them to their primary physician. She seesabout 50-70 patients a week, and said the number keeps growing as word spreads. Through grants and local support, she said, she was able to cover all the overhead costs of her company. "I own everything in the store. I don't owe any debt," she said. "Your dreams can come true, you just have to search it out and go for them."

Q

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees®bendbulletin.com

NEW YORK — A federal appeals court in New York on Monday upheld a ruling in favor of Aereo, the startup Internet service that streams broadcast stations without compensation, setting the stage for a full-blown trial between Aereo and major media companies. In a 2-1 ruling, the Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit found that Aereo's streams of TV shows to individual subscribers did not constitute "publicperformances," and thus the broadcasters' copyright infringement lawsuits against the service "are not likely to prevail on the merits." The appeals court affirmed an earlier district court decision that denied the broadcastersa preliminary injunction against Aereo. The broadcasters, including CBS Corp., Comcast, News Corp. and the Walt Disney Co., filed two suits against Aereo more than a year ago, weeks before the service was made available to residents of New York City last March. They asserted that the service was illegal. But courts have now ruled against them on two occasions, giving momentum to Aereo as it tries to expand to other major metropolitan areas.

Corporate executives seek taxcuts Bloomberg News

By Martha Mendoza The Associated Press

CUPERTINO, Calif. — Apple's ring-shaped, gleaming "Spaceship Headquarters" will include a world-class auditorium and an orchard for engineers to wander. Google's new Bay View campus will feature walkways angledto force accidental encounters. Facebook, while putting final touches on a Disneyinspired campus including a Main Street with a barbecue shack, sushi house and bike shop, is already planning an even larger new campus. More than ever before, Silicon Valley firms want their workers at work. Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer has gone so far as to ban working from home, and many more offer prodigious incentives for coming in to the offi ce,such as free meals, massages and gyms. This spring, as the tech industry is soaring out of the G reat Recession, plans are in the works for a flurry of mas-

• Pearson Creek LLCto Randal S.Collins, South Heights Addition, Lot 5, Block 25,CascadeView Estates, Phase 7,Lot61, $195,000 • William E. andChrista M. Summers toToddA.and Amy M. Berger,Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase26, Lot 5, Block 26, $715,000 • Kilmer, Voorheesand Laurick P.C. to Community

sive, perk-laden headquarters. New Silicon Valley headquarters or expansions are under way at most of the area's major firms, including eBay, Intel, LinkedIn, Microsoft, Netflix, Nvidia and Oracle. Many will be huge: Apple Inc.'s 176-acre campus will be one of the world's largest workplaces. Critics say that while some w orkplace perks and benefits are a good thing, the large, multibillion dollar corporate headquarters are colossal wastes of money that snub the pioneering technology these firms actually create. "Companies led by older management tend to be very controlling, but when I look at people in the 20s or 30s, they're totally capable of working on their own and being productive," said Kevin Wheeler, whose Future of Talent Institute researches and consults on human resources for Silicon Valleybusinesses. Companies say extraordinary campuses are necessary to recruit and retain top talent

West BankN.A., Desert Rise Industrial Park, Phase 1, Lot 2, $3,654,000 • Mark A. andKaren I. Corson to Jeffrey B.and Erin B.Woods,Terrango Glen East, Phase1, Lot10, $284,500 • Larryand Lucy Parks to Phillippe C.Freeman, Sun CloudEstates, Lot2, $470,000

and to spark innovation and creativity. And there are business benefits and financial results for companies that keep their workers happy. The publicly traded 100 Best Companies To Work For in America consistently outperform major stock indices and have more qualified job applicants and higher productivity, according to the San Francisco-based Great Placeto Work Institute. Wheeler says the megacomplexes being built today will be hard to staff 10 years from now,however, and that the next era will see smaller workplaces where employees are responsible for meeting goals and objectives, with flexible office hours. "When you look at how some of these companies operate, they're in effect, sweat shops.... They want 80, 90, 100 hours of work. In order to even make that tolerable, of course you haveto off erhaircutsand food and places to sleep or else people would have to go home," he said.

• Mary J. and Betty Huser, trusteesfor Mary Jean Huser Trust, to JamesJ. Edelson andPhoebeY. Shulman-Edelson, trustees for Edelson-ShulmanLiving Trust, Bluebird Estates, Lot 9, $209,900 • Steven L. andKendra Hass to Jeffrey E. and Suzanne M.Hall, Renaissance atShevlin Park, Lot 6, $465,000

• Wayne L. andShirley J. Montgomeryto LuckesC. and JereneWebb,Greens at Redmond,Phase3A, Lot 202, $ l59,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Kirstin Heggand Curtis Dawn, Newport Landing, Lot 33, $358,125 • Gentry L. andTalea Ceniga to Jordan S.and Kimberly E. Roerig, QuailCrossing, Phase1, Lot 7,$337,000

Bank's logos soon, according to a newsre-

lease. West CoastBank,

based in LakeOswego, has no branches in Central Oregon. It closed its two Bend branches in 2011. Columbia Bank has five Central Oregon

branches. The acquisition will give Columbia total assets of more than $7 billion and 157

branches in 38 counties in Washington and

Oregon.

Sushi restaurant plans opening Juno, a newSushi restaurant, expects to open in mid-May in the Century Village

Shopping Center on Southwest Century Drive, south of Southwest Simpson Avenue, Fratzke Commercial Real Estate Advisors an-

nounced Monday. Michi Nakanishi, the restaurant owner, has

14 years experience as a sushi chef in Bend and

in Japan, according to a news release. — Bulletin staff reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR

By Richard Rubin

Tech firms building in perks to keep employees at work

Columbia State Bank, based in Tacoma, Wash., completed its acquisition of West Coast Bank on Monday, West Coast Bank branches will begin sporting Columbia State

By Brian Stelter

com

W est Goast Bank now Golumbia

the companies announced.

N.Y

Ot:0

BRIEFING

WASHINGTON — Top executives from 18 large companies, including FedEx Corp., CVS Caremark Corp. and Boeing Co., are trying to keep up pressure on Congress to cut corporate tax rates. The executives sent a letter to congressional leaders Monday, urgingactionon the one-year anniversaryofJapan's rate cut, which left the United States and its 35 percent statutory corporate tax rate as the highest in the industrialized world. "We standready tosupport your efforts to make the U.S. more competitive," wrote the group."We know that some choices may be difficult and understand that base-broadeners, such as eliminating tax expenditures, may be necessary to achieve the significant reduction in the statutory rate that is required for the U.S. to better compete globally." Offering up tax breaks for elimination is easier for companies that don't benefit from m any of them and don'thave subsidiaries in low-tax foreign jurisdictions. CVS, for example, reports no foreign income. The lackof agreement on how to offset the cost of a corporate rate cut — along with political differences over broader fiscal questions — have prevented lawmakers from turninga general agreement on revenue-neutral corporate tax rate reduction into specific law.

• Stephen R. and Janet M. Campbell to George Viglotti, trustee for George Viglotti Trust, ThreePines P.U.D., Phase 5,Lot 38, $626,000 • Dennis F. and Laura J. Olson to RichardT. Trammel, Replat of aPart of Original Plat of Bitterbrush Subdivision, Lots 3and 4, Block1, $336,500 • Wells Fargo BankN.A.

to Jason L.andVictoria L. Curr Johnson, Ridgewater 2 P.U.D., Lot 25, $296,000 • Karen R. Albrich, trustee for Karen R.Albrich RevocableTrust, to Bruce D.and Bernadette 0. Payne, trustees for1998 Bruce Dillon Payneand Bernadette OlivasPayne RevocableTrust, Awbrey Village, Phase 5,Lot151, $535,000

TODAY • Network Of Entrepreneurial Women gathering: An evening of networking, with wine and appetizers; free; 5-7 p.m.; Rescue Consignment, 910 N.W. Harriman St., Bend; 541-233-6271, amanda. albrich©gmail.com or www.networkwomen.org. WEDNESDAY • Financial skills workshop: Learn about financial planning and money management, hosted by HomeSource of Neighborlmpact; registration required; free; 5:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-3236567, homesource@ neighborimpact.org or www.neighborimpact.org. • Irrigated pasture and grazing management: A class focusing on pasture production and grazing animals on an irrigated pasture to optimize production; free; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon lrrigation DistrictOffice 1055SW Lake Court, Redmond; 541-548-6047. SATURDAY • Community Associations Institute-Central Oregon Regional Council board of dtrectors boot camp: CAI-CORC seminar about board memberduties; CAICORCprovideseducational opportunitiesthroughout theyear for homeowner associations volunteers and managers; registration required, includesbreakfast and lunch; $40,$35 members; 8:15 a.mr3 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10N.W. Minnesota Ave.,Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. caioregon.org.

For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbullett'n.comrbizcal

• Janice Groshong and David L. Cronenpersonal representative for the estate of lla Cronento Melanie Lupien,Township 16, Range12, Section 8, $275,000 • Wayne K. Riley,trustee for Wayne K.Riley Revocable Trust B,to Korena andGlenFarris, Edgecliff, Lots16 and17, Block1, $347,000


IN THE BACI4 ADVICE (6 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 » www.bendbulletin.com/athome ©~

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

GARDEN

HOME

• Community gardensoffer fruits, veggies with a sideof camaraderie

//'

!

y

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Rhonde and Michael Reeves and their dog Finlay relax on the front porch of their 970-square-foot west-side Bend cottage.

CommunityGardensin Bend

Seeing the upside of downsizing Butler Market Rd

HOLLINSHEAD COMMUNITY GARDEN 1235 N.E. JonesRd. CC C/> CD

C)

Kt

NORTHWE ST CROSSING GARDEN

Newport Ave.

US

Corner of N.W. Clearwater Dr. and N.W. Crossing Dr

Neff Rd.

C/3 C3) LLI

GreenwoodAve.

Fr nklin ve.

Skyliners Rd.

KANSASAVENUE LEARNING CENTER 16 N.W. KansasAve.

• Couple has 'morebecausewe haveless' Editor's note:The At Home section features a profile of a local home each month. To suggest a home, email athome@bendbulletin.com.

See additional photos

on The Bulletin's website: O bendbuneti n.com/athometour

By Penny Nakamura For The Bulletin

Kicking back on their wicker furniture on the front porch is one of the many things Michael and Rhonde Reeves embrace intheir new downsized cottage — a one-bedroom, one-and-a-halfbath home on Bend's west side. "We actually have more because wehave less," said Mi chael. "You see, when you have less, you actually have more time for the more important things in your life." Michael Reeves would know, because he literally wrote the book on it — the e-book "The Insidious Lies of More: The Courageous Path to Simplicity." The ideaforthebook came to Michael when he and his wife decided to downsize to this 970-square-foot, cute-

FRANKLIN'S CORNER GARDEN

as-a-button yellow cottage. Rhonde made the initial push to downsize. "I had this ah-ha moment when I had cancer and prolonged health issues. It forces you to take stock of where your

energy and money is going," said Rhonde. "You look around and decide what's really importanttoyou, and my ah-ha moment made me realize I could chose a different lifestyle." With a smaller home, the couple has more time to do the activities they really love. "Because this is such a small home, we canwakeup on Saturdays, do a thorough cleaning in a fraction of the time of a larger home, and then we have all this free time. For example, last Saturday morning, because we had all our chores done so early, we went skiing," said Rhonde. See Downsizing/D4

FOOD

Corner of Eighth Street and Franklin Ave.

Versati e vinaigrettes aren't ust for saads By Jan Roberts-Dominguez For The Bulletin

Reed Market Rd.

In classic French cuisine, there was a time when the appearance of even a trace amount of fat on the surface of a sauce meant that the sauce had broken — the result of a careless or inept chef. However, these days, our views of what makes a sauce a sauce have changed. Thanks to a merging of cuisinesand because sometimes diners are simply looking for healthier alternatives to rich sauces, we now have all sorts of creative and tasty saucing options and zesty counterpoints to a lovely smoked chop or grilled breast of chicken. And so, a new genre of sauces has emerged. Unannounced and unheralded as a movement with a catchy name, so far they've been

NATIVITY COMMUNITY GARDEN 60850 Brosterhous Rd.

Knott Rd.

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Vinaigrette dressing is quick and easy to make. categorized into separate realms as chutneys, salsas, vinaigrettes, pestos, stock and vinegar reductions, juices and infused oils. SeeVinaigrette /D2

TODAY'S RECIPES A freshnewtake onsauces: Greg Cross/The Bulletin

By Marielle Gallagher The Bulletin

ongtime Bendgardener Ellen Glenn sees the benefits of community gardening all the time from her plot inthe Hollinshead Community Garden in northeast Bend. New gardeners and experienced gardeners work side by side conversing and sharing tips about planting and growingcrops.No matter where

in Central Oregon you reside, there is likely a community garden nearby (see list of community gardens in Bend and beyond on Page D5). For Glenn, she rents a plot partly because of deerthatmeander through her yard all the time. Others join community gardens because they don't have the space for a garden or they're looking for a place to learn from other gardeners or share a sense of camaraderie about growing food.

"I really enjoy talking about gardens withother gardeners," said Glenn. "There are some really experiencedgardeners atHol linshead — some that have been gardening almost since the garden started — and they have been so helpful to me. And then we always have new gardeners that are new to the area and new to gardening,and helping other people garden has been really fun." SeeCommunity/D5

+

Add a dash of excitement to meat, fish or poultry with Hot Tomato Vinaigrette, Roasted Garlic Vinaigrette, RosemaryApple Vinaigrette and Tomato Vinaigrette,D2

ft: What goes with those vinaigrettes? A: These recipes for beef tenderloin, baked halibut, filet of pork and grilled chicken,D2 Comfort food whiteout:White Macaroni and Cheese proves that paledoesn'thaveto m ean bland,D5

Recipe Finder:Brown Sugar Pie, whydo youtaste so good? D2


D2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

Fooo

Next week: Quick, healthy meals for busy families

Vinaigrette

Tenderloin of Beef

Continued from D1 Compared t o t r a d itional mainstays like the rich and regal browns and whites, the hollandaise or the bearnaise, this new group brings a greater range of color, flavor and texture to the table. And when viewed in this new light — as one dynamic family — they represent the shift in A merican food philosophies toward h ealthier, fresher and more eclectic cuisine. O ne of m y f a v orites i n this realm of sauces is the vinaigrette. In one manner, it has become popular to serve the components of the vinaigrette — oil and vinegar — separately on the plate. In Mediterranean cuisines, it's a particularly popular method for presenting condiments. In fact, one of my favorite appetizers within this genre was perfected by Napa Valley chef Michael Chiarello, and is, quite simply, puddles of balsamic vinegarreduction and basil oil served with slices of fresh mozzarella and summer tomatoes. Within the vinaigrettes-as-

with Arugula, Cherry Tomatoes

for a hard-to-find

Vinaigrette

recipe or can answer a request,

"company dish." For a more reasonable price, consider a less expensive cut of meat. 1 (4- to 4'/2-Ib) tenderloin of beef Salt and pepper FOR THE VINAIGRETTE: 3 heads of garlic, unpeeled 2 tsp Dijon mustard '/4 C red-wine vinegar '/4 C balsamic vinegar 1 /2 C olive oil

Joe Kline i The Bulletin

sauces arena, chefs have taken to pureeing the vinaigrettes with other ingredients, such as fresh tomatoes or fire-roasted peppers, to stabilize the sauce and smooth out the flavor. The Hot Tomato Vinaigrette

recipe that follows is an excellent example of just that style. So the next time you reach for that bottle of homemade vinaigrette, contemplate its potential for enhancing dishes beyond your nightly tossed-

green salad. It's a fabulous way to bring a little more zoom into the kitchen. — Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a Corvallisfood writer, coolzbooh author and artist. Contact: janrdC<proaxis.com.

6 C arugula, washed and thoroughly dried (use a salad spinner if you have one) 3 C vine-ripened red cherry tomatoes, halved 3 C vine-ripened yellow cherry tomatoes Remove the beeffrom the refrigerator 30 minutes before grilling to allow the meat to reach room tem-

perature (for even grilling). Season the meat with saltand pepper, then grill the beef over hot coals, turning once and grilling to desired

degree of doneness (140 degrees

Hot Tomato Vinaigrette

Baked Halibut with Hot Tomato Vinaigrette

Makes about 2 cups. This vinaigrette is wonderful with grilled, poached or steamed fish or shellfish. It uses hot tomato coulis (chopped tomatoes lightly sauted in oil) as the emulsifier and is given extra flavor and complexity with a reduced broth. The vinaigrette is then combined with what is known as a "beurre fondu," also known as emulsified butter, for a rich and slightly thickened experience.

Makes 6 servings. As I mentioned, the Hot Tomato Vinaigrette is absolutely wonderful as a sauce in any number of grilled fish and meat dishes, as well as baked and poached fish preparations. Grilling is pretty straightforward, but I thought you'd appreciate a walk-through on how to produce a tasty baked halibut dish. So take a lookatthis recipe and see whatyou think. 1 recipe Hot Tomato Vinaigrette

'/4 C finely chopped shallot 1 clove garlic, peeled, crushed and chopped 5 TBS extra-virgin olive oil 2 C broth (either vegetable or chicken) 4 ripe Roma-style tomatoes, seeded and chopped

(see recipe)

1 fresh thyme sprig 2 TBS lemon juice 1 TBS water 4TBS butter 2 TBS balsamic vinegar 2 TBS red wine vinegar Salt and pepper to taste

4 kalamata or other brine-cured large black olives, pitted and chopped fine 2 TBS finely chopped shallots 2 TBS minced fresh parsley leaves

In a pan, saute the shallotand garlic in1 tablespoon of the olive oil over medium-low heat. Add the broth and simmer until the liquid has been reduced tot/2cup (tip: to determine what level the broth will be at when it has reduced tot/2 cup, first fill the pan with t/2cup of water, then stick a chopstick or knife into the liquid and mark the level it reaches on the chopstick or knife). Add the tomatoes and sprig of fresh thyme and cook until the liquid from the tomatoes has mostly reduced and thickens a bit. Meanwhile, prepare the "beurre fondu" by heating the lemon juice and water then whisking in the butter. Scrape the tomato broth mixture into a blender. Add the balsamic vinegar and the red wine vinegar and blend briefly, just to puree the tomatoes. Scrape the mixture into a small bowl, then whisk in the "beurre fondu" and remaining 4 tablespoons of olive oil. Adjust the seasonings by adding additional vinegar, olive oil or a bit of butter, as well as salt and pepper to taste.

Prepare the Hot Tomato Vinaigrette and set aside in a small pot. You will reheat it right before serving. Preheat oven to 425 degrees and butter a baking dish just large enough to hold the fillets in one layer. Sprinkle the olives, shallots, parsley and thyme evenly over the bottom of the dish and arrange the fillets on top, seasoning them with saltand pepper. Add the stock and white wine, then cover the fillets with a buttered

for medium-rare), which will take approximately 20 to 25 minutes. Remove from grill and let the beef

cool (for about 25 minutes) before slicing and serving. The tenderloin may be grilled up to 2 days ahead and refrigerated until ready to serve. To prepare the vinaigrette: Cut the top '/4-inch off of each head of garlic (the stem end, not the root

end) and wrap the heads together in a large square of foil. Roast the garlic in a 350-degree oven for 40 to 50 minutes, or until very soft when pressed on the side. Unwrap the garlic heads and let cool thoroughly for easier handling. Squeeze the roasted garlic bulbs

from each head.

Add the garlic to a blender or food processor and blend together with the mustard, vinegars, salt and pepper. With motor running, add oil in a very thin stream and blend until the mixture is creamy piece of wax or parchment paper. and slightly thickened. This vinaiBake fish on the middle rack in the oven for 10 to 15 minutes (depend- grettemay be made 4 days ahead ing on thickness of fillets; figure on about 10 minutes per inch of thick- and chilled in a tightly sealed jar. ness) or just until cooked through. To serve, slice the tenderloin Transfer the fillets to a large warm platter and keep warm. Pour the thin. Arrange the beef slices decocooking liquid (with all the goodies) into the pot with the Hot Tomato Vin- ratively on plates, with the aruaigrette, whisk and warm. gula and tomatoes, then serve with Serve the fish, garnished with additional thyme sprigs and the sauce. spoonfuls of the vinaigrette.

Filet of Pork with Rosemary-Apple Vinaigrette

Grilled Chicken with Tomato Ginger Vinaigrette

Makes 6 generous servings.

Makes 4 servings.

2 (1- to 1'/2-Ib) pork tenderloins 2 TBS vegetable oil 1 TBS Dijon mustard 1 /2 tsp salt /2 C Rosemary-Apple Vinaigrette /2 tsp freshly ground black (for the marinade; see recipe) pepper

Additional Rosemary-Apple Vinaigrette (NOT used in the marinade)

Using a sharp knife, trim all fat and silver skin from the tenderloins and set aside. In a medium bowl, combine the mustard, vinaigrette and vegetable oil and whisk to combine. Transfer contents to a resealable plastic bag and add the tenderloins. Turn the tenderloins so that they are evenly coated with the marinade, then seal the bag, trying to remove as much air as possible. Refrigerate for at least 45 minutes (or

up to 24 hours) before proceeding.

4 boneless,skinless chicken breasts /3 C olive oil 6 garlic cloves, chopped fine '/4 C fresh lemon juice 2 TBS finely grated, peeled, fresh gingerroot 1 /2 TBS soy sauce

1 TBS coriander seeds, crushed 2 tsp Dijon mustard 1 tsp dried hot red pepper flakes Salt and pepper to taste Tomato Ginger Vinaigrette (see recipe)

Prepare the marinade: In a large jar with a tight-fitting lid, combine the

(Food safety note: Discard the marinade; Do NOT use it as a sauce over the cooked meat.) To cook, either select the stove-top/oven option, or the grill option. Stove-top/oven option: Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Heat a large ovenproof saute pan or skillet over high heat. When hot, add the tenderloins and brown on all sides, turning occasionally to ensure even cooking, about 6 minutes. Transfer the pan to the oven and cook until the tenderloins are me-

Where BuyerS And SellerS Meet • Cth »"r a ~ •

2 tsp minced fresh thyme leaves 3 (10- to 12-oz) pieces of halibut fillet, cut in half diagonally '/4 C stock (either fish, vegetable or chicken stock) 2 TBS dry white wine Fresh thyme leaves for garnish

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IndePendence. A fully-planned future. Whatever your goals,

olive oil, garlic, lemon juice, gingerroot, soy sauce, coriander seeds, Dijon

mustard and red pepper flakes. Shake to combine the ingredients; add salt and pepper to taste. Pour the marinade into a resealable plastic bag; add the chicken breasts and marinate for 3 to 6 hours in the refrigerator. Preheat the grill. Grill the chicken on an oiled rack set to 5 to 6 inches over glowing coals or gas element, turning once to evenly brown both diumto medium-wel orl,registers sides. Transfer the chicken to a platter and serve with the Tomato Ginger 140to150degreesonameatther- Vinaigrette. mometer, about 8 to 10 minutes. Remove the meat from the oven and allow to rest for 5 minutes beTomato Ginger Vinaigrette fore serving. Grill option: Preheat grill. Place Makes about 2 cups. tenderloins on rack and grill over medium-high heat, turning every /2 Ib of Roma-style tomatoes (2 1 Ig garlic clove, finely minced 4 minutes or so until all sides are average-sized) seeded and 2 TBS balsamic vinegar browned and the tenderloins are chopped 2 TBS red wine vinegar '/2 tsp salt cooked to desired stage of done- 2 tsp finely grated, peeled, '/4 tsp freshly ground black pepper ness (total cooking time: about 15 fresh gingerroot to 18 minutes). Remove meat from 2 TBS double strength chicken /2 C extra-virgin olive oil the grill and allow to rest for 5 minbroth (such as Campbell's) Salt and pepper to taste

utes before serving. Slice the meat intot/2-inchthick slices on the diagonal and serve grette that never came in contact with the raw pork.

In a blender, blend together the tomatoes, gingerroot, chicken broth, garlic clove, balsamic vinegar, red wine vinegar, salt and pepper. With motor running, add oil in a stream; blend until emulsified (the mixture will appear creamy and slightly thick). Vinaigrette may be made 1 day ahead and chilled, covered. Bring the vinaigrette to room temperature and whisk before serving. — Recipe adaptedfrom Emeril Lagasse

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Rosemary-Apple Vinaigrette

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1 /2 tsp Dijon mustard 1 tsp soy sauce '/2 tsp salt 1 TBS green onions /2 C vegetable oil

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2 TBS minced shallots 2TBS plus 1 tsp sugar 1/2 tsp chopped fresh rosemary '/4 tsp freshly groundblack pepper 1 TBS green onion (white portion)

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write Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email

baltsunrecipefinder© gmail.com. Names must

accompany recipesfor them to be published.

Old-timey brown sugar pie is sure to please By Julie Rothman The Baltimore Sun

Linda Settles, of Havre de Grace,Md., was looking for a recipe for brown sugar pie that duplicated the one her grandmother used to make. Jeannie Armstrong, of Dayton, Md., found a recipe for the pie in a cookbook she bought at an antique store years ago. It was first published in 1915 and revised in 1944. I tested the recipe that she kindly sent in and found that it needed a little tweaking. When I made itjust as it was written, the flavor was very good but the pie was very thin. I located a similar recipe on the food blog circlebk itchenrecipes.com a n d gave that one a try, with better results. This one too is a very old recipe and, as typical of many old-time recipes, it is quite simple to make and would be easy to put together with things most people have on hand in their pantry. This homey pie is reminiscent of a pecan pie, without the pecans. It is slightly less rich and not as dense as most pecan pies but with a wonderful texture and caramel flavor. It's best served warm, and with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or dollop of real whipped cream on top it makes for old-fashioned comfort food at its very best.

Requests Dorothy Miller, of Towson, Md., is looking for a recipe for Oriental fruitcake. She saysit is made with fresh pineapple, freshly grated coconut, coconut milk, black walnuts and golden raisins. Mary Mossman of Baltimore, is looking for a recipe f or pumpkin s oup w i t h dumplings like the one her mother used tomake. She saidhergrandmother came from Poland and taught her mother Polish cooking and this was something she used to make. Sadly, her mother did not pass down the recipe.

Brown Sugar Pie Makes one 9-inch pie. 2 C firmly packed brown sugar 2 eggs, lightly beaten 2 tsp pure vanilla extract 4 heaping TBS flour 6 TBS milk or half and half 4 TBS melted butter 1 disk pie dough (homemade or storebought) Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Combine all the ingre-

dients (except the pie dough)

Makes about1s/4 cups of a creamy dressing. L:.e

1(4-oz) tart apple(such as a Granny Smith), cored, peeled and cut into '/4-inch thick slices '/4 C apple cider vinegar, plus 2TBS

If you are looking

and Roasted Garlic

This is not an inexpensive dish, since the hunk of beef is not a cheap cut. But it is a wonderful

In the realm of sauces, vinaigrettes represent the shift in American food philosophies toward healthier, fresher and more eclectic cuisine. Use these ingredients to make Hot Tomato Vinaigrette.

RECIPE FINDER

Combine the apples, cider vinegar, shallots, sugar, rosemary and black pepper in a skillet and bring to a simmer. Reduce the heat to low, cover and simmer until the apples are tender, about 6 minutes. Remove from the heat and transfer to a blender or food processor. Add the green onions, mustard, soy sauce and salt, and puree on high speed. With the motor running, add the oil in athin stream and process until emulsified (the mixture will appear thick, with a consistency similar to mayonnaise, only looser). Remove from the blender and refrigerate in an airtight container until ready to use.

in a bowl and mix on medium speed for two minutes. Roll out the dough, press into a 9-inch pie plate and trim

off any excess dough around the edges. Pour the brown sugar mixture into the pie shell and bake for 35 to 40 minutes, or until crust is lightly browned and the filling has set. Remove from oven and let cool slightly

before serving.


TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

When you redeem up to 1,000 Fuel Points"

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Offer good at Fred Meyer Fuel Centers 8 participating Shell Stations. Visit fredmeyer.com/fuel for details. *Offer available for a limited time at all Fred Meyer Fuel Centers and participating Shell Stations Restrictions apply Fuel Discounts limited to a maximum of 35 gallons on 1 vehicle, subject to fraud prevention limits on the amount of purchase. Fuel redemption offer cannot be combined with any other discounts. Not vajid where prohibited by law. Only purchases of eligible items made at Fred Meyer using your Fred Meyer Rewards' Card or Fred Meyer Rewards~ Visa~ are ekgible for Fuel Points. Accumulation of Fuel Points excludes fuel, tobacco, postage stamps, lottery tickets, Western Union, money orders, transit passes, fees, game licenses, phone activation, sales tax, Ticketmaster, any purchases prohibited by law and the following gift cards: Fred Meyer, Kroger, MasterCard', Visa~, American Express~, Green Dot and financial variable load gift cards. All trademarks are property of their respective owners.

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

H OME 4

A R DEN

Next week: Adding Fido or Fluffy to your portrait gallery

Downsizing Continued from D1 It's important to note that the couple downsized in steps. They once owned a l a rger 2,700-square-foot home when their daughters lived at home. Once the children moved out, the Reeves went down to a 1,700-square-foot home in the N orthWest Crossing neighborhood. "We thought we had downsized a lot when we moved into t ha t 1 , 700-square-foot home," said Rhonde. Michael said they still rented a storage unit. "Even though our garage was very large in NorthWest Crossing, we w er e r enting this 5-by-10-foot storage unit for $69 a month. That's $750 a year for stuff that we rarely used," said Michael. "For my book, I started to r esearch storage units, and in the last 35 years the self-storage industry has been one of the fastest-growing sectors in the American commercial r e al estate industry, making $22 billion annually. In the U.S., it covers 78square miles ofstorage units. That's more than three times the size of Manhattan Island." Eventually, the Reeveses got rid of the storage unit, which meant getting rid of what they had stored. Then they had to parse down again what they had in their home to fit in this cottage, which is nearly half the size. " It was m uch h a rder t o parse it all down a second time for this final move into this house. And it's work; it's not easy at all," said Rhonde. "I had to think of it like I was packing for a v acation and you're only allowed to take one suitcase, so what do you p ack? You o nl y p a c k t h e things that really have a lot of meaning to you." The couple is very intentional about what they bring into their home. "I call it the 80-20 rule. That means only 80 percent of the value in your life will come from 20 percent of things you own. How much time are you wasting on that worthless 80 percent?"asked Michael. Though tiny, the cottage has not suffered any diminished

design or styling, largely due to Rhonde's creative and artistic touches. From the front porch,we enter the living room. A large bay window with a custommade bench covered with decorative pillows includes storage cabinetsunderneath. This provides not only style, but also a place to hide the stereo. The tiny cottage has ample southern-facing windows that Michael saysprovide passive solar heat and plenty of natural lighting. Above one of the sofas is a favorite piece of art — a paint-

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Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

The living room in Rhonde and Michael Reeves' cottage, left, has ample southern-facing windows that provide passive solar heat and plenty of natural lighting. The dining area, above, has built-in seating and — surprisingly — enough room to have a dinner party for eight if the couple brings in some seats from their porch.

With storage space at a premium in the Reeveses' tiny cottage on Bend's west side, it's important to keep everything organized. The desk abovewas refurbished by Rhonde Reeves and neatly holds many of her arts and craft supplies. Upstairs is a double bonus room — a small office area, right, and a guest bedroom — another feature of the cottage that appealed to the couple when they were looking to downsize.

ing by Michael's mother. "When you downsize and you get rid of stuff, you don't have to get rid of everything. You can still keep the things that mean most to you, like my mother's painting," said Michael. "But I realized I had b een carrying a r ound m y track and field medals during our 35 years of marriage and some of those medals I won when I was in junior high. I didn't need those. Why do we hang onto those things?" S eparating the l ivin g room and dining room is a small, light g r een a r moire t hat R h o nde f o u n d an d refurbished. "I love to repurpose things. So many things in our home have been repurposed," said Rhonde. "This armoire serves as ourpantry since our kitch-

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before resorting to some kind of coating. I don't know what I'd do A commercial pet stain and without Joe Ponessa, the Rut- odor-removal product would gers professoremeritus who, be a f i rs t c h oice. Another time after time, for as long as worthwhile alternative would I have been writing this col- be to coverthe stained areas umn, has stepped in to bail me with activated charcoal, availout of my ignorance. able atpet stores and perhaps This time, it's about cat pharmacies. urine, an issue that a reader This is a treated charcoal asked about a f e w w e e ks with legendary ability to abback. sorb chemicals and o d ors, Cat urine is an especially functioning like a c hemical difficult contaminant to deal magnet. This would be spread with, especially if it's a long- on the affected areas and reterm problem, he says. newed every couple of days. While Ponessa is not sure He would try this for a week anything would fully elimi- or two. nate odors from l o ng-term Activated charcoal is used staining, there are a couple of in fishtank filtration systems, easy things he suggests trying as well as in air purifiers, and The Philadelphia Inquirer

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can't completely stand upright in this gabled roof area, it's a perfect play area and guestroom forgrandchildren. Where th e r o o fline s lants downwards toward the floor, Rhonde has designed and hung curtains that allow her additional storage space for her sewing projects. Near the half door of the attic space, Rhonde has her sewing machine set up for her designing projects. "We do have friends that have kept their large family home for the one or two times their kids may come to visit. But you really have to wonder, how many guest bedrooms do you needforthose occasional visits?" said Michael. "With a smaller home, we have a smaller carbon footprint. It requires less housework and upkeep and it r equires you to live more intentionally because you can't buy t hings impulsively. Everything in a smaller home has a place and use. We're much happier in this home. It's actually liberatingto have less,because we do have so much more." — Reporter: pnalzamuraC< bendbulletin.com

HOME Q&A

By Alan J. Heavens

Photo Courtesy of Mind To Sight Web Design

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her grandchildren and write on a space that i s u sually unused. Rhonde points to the window, where she has h u ng an old scarf as a w i n d ow treatment. "Repurposing is often using a fresh eye and finding a new way to use things," said Rhonde. A few steps from this bathroom is the brightly lit master bedroom. Michael opens the door from the bedroom and walks out onto the little deck, which has just enough room for two chairs and a small table. It's these added touches to the cottage that sold the Reeveses on this home. Just past the kitchen area is a small staircase and a double bonus room. This was another feature of this cottage that appealed to the Reeveses. Ascending the stairs, we see another office space filled with natural light in a lofted area. The other bonus room is off this loft office, where an attic space has been finished and serves as a guest bedroom. A queen-sizemattress lies on the carpeted floor of the attic space and, while one

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all of your free time taking Read all IThelnsidious care of your stuff, ask yourif it's worth it. Your things gQpgt jt Lies of e Mor self should also be something you Michael use daily or weekly." Reeves' Down a small hall, there's a book,"The tiny office space with a builtInsidious in desk that looks out toward Liesof a small green space. In the More: TheCourageous corner where the ceiling line Path to Simplicity slopes slightly, Rhonde has a is available as afree comfortable settee, where she download this month on likes to lounge and read. Anamazon.com. other small desk refurbished by Rhonde neatly holds many of herartsand craftsupplies. "When you have asmaller en is so small, and the top of it serves as a buffet." home, you have to be orgaT he b r ight y e l low d i n - nized, and everything has a ing area has built-in seating place, and this saves time bearound a table and, though cause you aren't constantly it's small, the couple say they searching f o r som e thing, can still hold a dinner party which wastes a lot of time, for eight by bringing in some too," said Rhonde. seatsfrom theirporch. Across the small hall is the To the left of the living room full-size bathroom. Rhonde is the small but very function- points out her silver baby cup al kitchen, where shiny pots on the sink counter that she and pans are hanging over the decided to keep for sentimensink. Every piece in the tight tal reasons. Now it serves a kitchen must have a purpose. purpose as a stylish holder for "When you're downsizing, her makeup brushes. you have to ask yourself, 'Do The medicine cabinet was you own your stuff or does it painted with magnetic paint own you?'" said Michael. "If and then chalkboard paint so you find y ourself spending Rhonde could attach photos of

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that it was leaking until it was too late. I have tried to remove the spots from the slate but have not had much luck. I have tried white vinegar, toothpaste, and furniture wax. Do you have any other sugsays. gestions on how to get rid of By the way, "the ultimate these unsightly spots? resourcefor products to deal What I saw online, at with severe stains and odors is . eHow,isthis: a mortuary supply company," Combine half a cup of vinPonessa adds. egar, half a cup of lemon juice, As always, thanks. and half a cup of baking soda in a bowl. This should form a I have a black-slate-top paste. If necessary, add a little . endtable that I have had water or more baking soda for more than 25years. Last to make a thick paste. Apply year, my g r a nddaughter-in- paste to the stains, lay a damp law placed a large pumpkin cloth over it, and leave it for up on the table. We did not realize to 20 minutes. Scrub. is prescribedfor and fed to some poisoning patients because of its ability to take up certain types of poison from the stomach. "I'm not sure how effective this would be, but it's cheap and easy enough to do," he

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TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Community Continued from D1 The H ollinshead g arden has a mentor program so each gardenerispaired with a Master Gardener through the Oregon State University Extension Service. Glenn says that gardening in a shared space has made all the difference in terms of g r owing better vegetables. Growing up, Glenn learned to plant carrot seeds from her mother, but her memory of it turned out to be wrong. "My mom just dug a little row and put the seeds in and patted it down, so that's what I 've been doing. But I w a s planting them too deep. Her hands knew how deep to plant things and she learned it from her mom," said Glenn. Community gardening also facilitates the sharing of gard ening information to n e w generations. "I think that 100 years ago we would've been living next to ou r b i o logical f a m ilies and having that information passed from g eneration to generation, but people move so much these days that people need other kinds of mentors ... they need their gardening buddies, and I get that at the community gardens," said Glenn. At t h e K a n sas A v enue Learning Garden, students from Amity C reek M agnet School and the Boys 8. Girls Clubs of Central Oregon learn about growing food. In addition to gardening at her Hollinshead plot, Glenn h elps teach the students about gardening and cooking and beneficial insects in the garden. Last year, she plucked a carrot from the ground for a group of fourth-graders and one of them asked "Is that a carrot?"Even though kids eat carrots all the time, seeing one with its bushy green top was a new concept. "These kids are making the seed-to-plant-to-food connection ... I think that's one of the joys of working in a community garden. You can pass that enthusiasm and a taste for success on to a younger generation," said Glenn.

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Where doesyour gardengrow? This list of community gardens is based on information we could verify and is ever-changing. Check with the local extension office for up-to-date information.

NATIVITY COMMUNITY GARDEN 60850 Brosterhous Road, Bend Piot information:90 plots that are 5 by 5 feet

Cost:$15 deposit, or $20 if the gardener usesgarden-supplied seeds Watering:Automatic irrigation system

To reserve, contact:Hailee Newman, 541-619-9388, or Richard Berg, 541-598-6029

Franklin Avenue, Bend Piot information:Currently in construction with completion expected in mid-May. Plan includes 24 plotsthatare10 by 10 feet.

Cost:Tobedecided To reserve,contact:Cheryl Howard, 541-388-5579

KANSASAVENUELEARNING GARDEN 16 N.W. Kansas Ave, Bend Piot information: Three plots thatare3 by 6feetto4by8feet.

Because it's a learninggarden, there are children in the garden during school.

Cost:$25

NORTHWEST CROSSING

Watering: On-site irrigation

Northwest Clearwater and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend Piot information:59 raised beds thatare12 by4feet. To renta plot, you must be present on April 27 at 9:30 a.m. Reservations are first come, first served. Those who rented a plot lastyear have first right of refusal.

To reserve, contact: Denise

Cost:$30, $5 discountfor seniors and low-income families Watering:Automatic irrigation system

Rowcroft, 541-385-6908, ext. 14

or email: denise©envirocenter. OI'g

METOLIUSCOMMUNITY GARDEN Fifth Streetand Adams Avenue, Metolius Piot information:No plots. One

shared gardenspace.

To reserve, contact:Louise

Watering: Irrigation Cost:Free to participate and harvest. Most gardeners

Gaston,541-318-5759,orJohn Coltmon, 541-678-5949

with tilling, weeding and other

HOLLINSHEADCOMMUNITY GARDEN

volunteer onceweekto a help garden maintenance. Toreserve,contact:DebMulkey 541-546-6109, or Metolius Friends Community Church, 541546-4974

Central Oregon Community GardeningManual: http:I/centraloregonfood

Cost:$25 for small, $35 for large

Watering:Water provided for

Watering:Automatic irrigation system

hose andwatering cans Cost:Free To reserve, contact:BethAnn

Resources policy.org/projects-2/ community-gardens/ Gardening information from Oregon State University Extension Service: http://extension.oregon state.edu/gardening/

than a hundred chickens — a melange oftypes and breeds that ar e r e ally i n t eresting to look at and fascinating to study. backyard c h i cke n The eggs, too, are varied in c oop is an obtain- s i z eand color, and because a ble i n t r oduction t h efeed is carefully designed t o farm life — and nothing f o r maximum, healthy producb eats a homegrown egg. t i o nall year long, they all have P resident Lyndon B. John- b r i l iant yellow yolks, thick s on raised Silkie bantams. w h ites and hard shells. Prince Charles raised WelI raise chickens for the eggs, s ummers and light Sus- b u tI also like that they allow s exes, among others. Clark m e to practice animal husGable andCarole Lombard, ban dry on a modest, manageR obert F r ost, P r esident a b l eand relatively inexpensive Thomas Jefferson, and scale. Barbra Streisand all raised M any others are now dischickens. covering the joys W hat i s i t of raising b ackit about chickens y ard poult r y , appe»s about chickens which has led to t o so many of t / an increase in napea/s us so intensely tional m agazine, thatwewant to tp S o m any of n ewspaper a n d b~i~g them into uS SOin tensely television c o vero ur ac yar s' age. Every time I want b uild them a t read s o m ething comfortable t O b r i n g them about a new breed and safe coop, intp pur oranundiscovered a nd wo r r y t radition, I fin d ? about their we]- ba c k Y ards. myself wanting to fare in all types learn more, and to of weather? Is acquire more and i t their beauty? Is it their mo re different breeds. clucking and crowing? Is it To keep my hens laying t heir eggs, which enhance a l l winter long — and they o ur daily meals and enrich d o — I make sure they get our baking? fresh greens an d k i t chenA nd what is it about hens, v e g etable scraps every single t heir roosters and t h ei r da y. (I bring them home from e ggs that has contributed o u r company's test kitchens s o much to our everyday i n New York City and from s ayings and remains such m y daughter's prolific home a significant part of ou r ki t chen.) I hang cabbages on f olklore? Is it the common l a r ge overhead hooks for the c onundrum that p u zzles h e ns to peck at instead of their a ll of us: "Which came first, c o opmates. the chicken or the egg?" I have discovered great hoO r is it that so many great m e o pathic remedies for chicko rators and writers have e n swith head colds, sore feet r eferred to chickens? Mark a n dother ailments, and I use T wain is the author of "Put r e dheat lamps in their house allyour eggs in one basket dur ing subfreezing weather, — and watch that basket," t o k eep them warm and toprea nd in "As You Like It," v e nt their water from freezing. Each year I read the new Shakespeare wrote, "Truly t hou art damn'd; like an po uItry catalogs, order 40 or i ll-roasted egg, all on one s o birds from hatcheries (such s>de. as M urray McMurray HatchC hickens play a s t ar - er y in Webster City, Iowa), and r ing role in our vocabulary, r e i nv igorate the f l ock w i t h a s well: Birds of a feather y o ung blood. And each year, s tick together; scarce as a s the older hens and cockhen's teeth; don't c ount erels outlive their service, we y our ch i c kens be f or e ha ve a coq au vin or a fricasthey'rehatched; fussy old see dinner. hen; cocksure; henpecked; The joys of farming come C hicken Little; the early no t just from the production b ird gets the w orm; n o of delicious, safe, wholesome spring chicken — the list f o o ds, but from knowing that the animals that provide us goes on. I started raising chickens w i t h the food are treated with a fter visiting a commercial r e s pect and care, and are give gg-laying farm in Massa- e n t he properenvironment in c husetts. I was so disturbed w h i ch to thrive. by what I saw — the cruel, Questions of general interest i nhumane conditions o f can be emailed to mslletters@ the facility — that I vowed marthastewart.com. For more to always have my own information on this column, visit

To reserve, contact:PatKolling, 541 9777661, or Chris Miao, 541 383 3905

WILLOWCREEKCOMMUNITY GARDEN Southeast11th and C streets, Madras Piot information:15plots that range in size from 4-by-8-foot raised beds to 20-by-20-foot in-

ground plots.

Beamer, 541-460-4023

FRANKLIN'SCORNERGARDEN

PRINEVILLEPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Northeast Eighth Streetand

1771 N.W. Madras Hwy.,

Prineville Piot mformation:30 plots that range in size from 20 by15 feet to 30 by 40 feet. Watering:Irrigation

Cost:$30 Toreserve,contact:Kim Kambak, 541-771-1923

REDMONDCOMMUNITY ORGANICGARDEN 724S.W.14th St.,Redmond Piot information:32 plots that are 4 by14 feet

Watering:Watering is doneby House ofHope Cost:$25, free to low-income families

To reserve,contact:Darlene Woods, 541-390-1594

SISTERSCOMMUNITY GARDEN 15860 Barclay Drive, Sisters Piot information:40 plots that range in size from 4 by18feet to 4 by 20 feet Watering: Overhead sprinkler system on half, hose bibs on the other half

Cost:$35 small; $50 large To reserve, contact: Kathie Mangum, 541-848-7681 or Marvin Benson, 541-610-9022

WARM SPRINGS COMMUNITY GARDEN 1233 Veterans St.,

Warm Springs Piot information:Onegarden with 20-by-20-foot plots Watering: Field sprinklers

Cost:Free To reserve, contact: Edmund Francis, 541-553-2460

ST. ALBAN'SEPISCOPAL CHURCH COMMUNITY GARDEN 3277 N.W. 10thSt.,Redmond Piot information:12 plots that are10 by 20 feet Watering: Elevated sprinkler system on a timer

Cost:Free Toreserve,contact:DonScott, 541-504-7744, or the church, 541-548-4212

n raiseo aecom or oo By Melissa Clark

With mascarpone, brie and Parmigiano-Reggiano, White Macaroni and Cheese is anything but bland.

husband freely admits to having the palate of a 5-year-old; It's one of the first things she usually reads menus onpeople mention when t h ey line before they go out to see if learn I h a v e a 4 - y ear-old there'ssomething her spouse daughter. "Dahlia must be an will eat adventurous eater," they say. Then there's my f o r m er The assumption is that beneighbor, who once admitted cause I have penchant for anthat she was so embarrassed chovies, pungent cheese and Andrew Scrivani by her limited palate that she New York Times spicy regional cuisines, my made sure all her dates took News Service daughter must, too. But she her to Italian restaurants so doesn't. And adventurous isn't that it wouldn't look odd if really the word I'd use to deshe ordered only fettuccine scribe her eating habits. Picky pizza, hot dogs and almond sandwiches,the sauteed mus- Alfredo. would be more accurate. butter and jelly sandwiches, tard greens, curried lentils Not that there's anything This is despite my best ef- all things I've come to see as and roasted eggplant. At this w rong w it h f e t tuccine A l forts at eating a varied, spicy, metaphorical "white f oods," point, I would be ecstatic if fredo, or the wider universe g reen-vegetable-heavy d i e t uncomplicated and familiar as Dahlia consented to s o up, of white food. There is a lot to when I was pregnant, with they are. which she has rejected as an love about soft bread, sweet hopes of influencing my child's And just as a hot dog can be entire category. puddings, creamy mashed potaste buds in utero. Instead, a "white food," pale cod fillets, I know Dahlia's narrow (or tatoes and buttery noodles, all Dahlia arrived a staunch lover endive, cauliflower and squid shall we say, still-maturing) of whichare appealing. These of white food. It began, as it al- are not. Dahlia would be no palate puts her in good com- foods speak to the child in all ways does, with rivers of milk more likely to eat squid than pany. Children who eat solely of us, no matter how many and has since settled into any- she would beets, which is to white food abound. rarefied tastes our p a lates thing carb-heavy, creamy and say highly unlikely. And while most children have acquired. unchallenging, preferably anMeanwhile, I've e n dured outgrow t h e i r whi t e -food So before the last of winter's chored by pasta, bread or rice. hearing my friends and col- phase, others do not. They cold has passed, or colotful I t's not t hat e very m o r - leagues list the exotic morsels carry it with them into adult- spring produce arrives,let's sel Dahlia eats is white. She their preschool darlings eat: hood, forever reaching for pay tribute to all that is good makes exceptions for plain the raw oysters and sardine the baked potato. My friend's about white food. New York Times News Service

coop, with enough egg-laying hens to provide me and my family with fresh, nutritious, organic eggs on a year-round basis. As my needs evolved, I enlarged the chicken yards and built more coops. I now have four that house more

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6 oz brie, rind removed and cheese cut into chunks 4 oz cream cheese, softened and cubed

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'/4 tsp black pepper '/4 tsp finely grated nutmeg

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Heat oven to 375 degrees. Butter a 2-quart gratin dish. Bring a large er eggs, mascarpone and Parmigiano-Reggiano. Stir egg mixture into pot of heavily salted water to a boil. Cook pasta to al dente; drain well. pasta. Season with pepperand nutmeg. Transfer hot pasta to a large bowl and toss immediately with brie and Turn pasta into prepared pan. Bake until golden brown and bubbling, cream cheese until melted and smooth. In a separate bowl, whisk togeth- about 30 minutes. Serve immediately.

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06

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

A D V IGE 4 ENTERTAINM E N T TV TODAY

ewne or aime a mi ennias TV SPOTLIGHT

"We are dedicated to creating lasting sustainable change through the power of storytelling," says Pivot president Evan Shapiro.

By Frazier Moore The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Pivot is the name of a TV channel aimed at 15-to-34-year-olds who want to change the world. In the process, they could help Pivot change the television business. Announced last December, the new venture was officially unveiled last week at a news conferencedisclosing program and distribution details as well as its name and Aug. 1 sign-on date. It initially will be available in more than 40 million homes. Pivot is a division of Participant Media, founded in 2004 by entrepreneur-philanthropist Jeff Skoll, who helped mastermind eBay. Since then, Participant has produced more than 40 fiction and nonfiction films (with seven Academy Award wins and 35 nominations) that include "The Help," "Charlie Wilson's War," "Food, Inc.," "An InconvenientTruth"andSteven Spielberg's recent "Lincoln." The company is dedicated "to creating lasting sustainable change through the power of storytelling," said Pivot president Evan Shapiro, "and now we're bringing that to TV. "The mandate of Pivot is entertainment that inspires social change and our target is millennials, but other than that we are a general entertainment network with all types of con-

Participant Pictures via The Associated Press

tent: drama, comedy, talk and documentaries,"said Shapiro, who before joining Participant served as president of IFC and Sundance Channel, and executive-produced such documentaries and series as "This Film Is Not Yet Rated" and the Peabody Award-winning "Brick City" and "Portlandia." Pivot will program around the clock (no long infomercials

Canadian sitcom focused on a Muslim community in a fictional Saskatchewan prairie town. "It has never been seen in the United States because the word 'mosque' is in the title," Shapiro satd. Pivot plans 300 hours of new programming its first year. New series will include an audience-collaborated variety show produced and hosted by padding fringe periods). Docu- Joseph Gordon-Levitt, a talkmentaries will fill much of the reality show with Meghan Mcschedule, including those from Cain (daughter of former presithe Participant library, film fes- dential candidate Sen. John Mctivals and world premieres. Cain), and, from writer Craig Acquired series include "Fri- Pearce("MoulinRouge" andthe day Night Lights," the inspirupcoming "The Great Gatsby"), ing high school football drama, a fanciful drama titled "Will," and "Farscape," a cult classic about a young, as-yet-unprovpreviously aired on the Sci-Fi en William Shakespeare that Channel about a diverse group mashes up his era with modern of passengers of a space ves- times (and is billed as a blend sel forced to work together to of "Deadwood," "8 Mile" and "Shakespeare in Love"). survive. "Jersey Strong" is a docuPivot also will introduce its viewers to "Little Mosque on seriesfrom the producers of the Prairie," a l ong-running "Brick City" that focuses on

two unconventional families in Newark, N.J. — a man and woman raising children and mentoring young people who themselvesare members oftw o rival gangs, and two women in a same-sex relationship who run a law firm. Each night the network will air "TakePart Live," a talk show whose topics will be chosen earlier in the day by viewers going online to TakePart.com, Participant Media's social action hub. Pivot is entering into a programing and marketing relationship with Rolling Stone magazine,and willco-produce 10 documentaries with Univision, which will air each film in Spanish while Pivot airs the film in English. A slogan of Pivot is "It's Your Turn," which addresses the 27 million-member audience segment the network has dubbed "passionate millennials." Not only is the new network gearing its programs to this group, it's also tailoring its distribution strategy to how they consume media, Shapiro said. Reports are rampant that younger audiences are shunning traditional TV in favor of YouTube videos on the Internet, and that they are "cutting the cord" of cableprogramming as a moneysaving move or because they deem TV an outmoded way to watch. Pivot's research has found otherwise. "There is no such thing as

Womanwantsto keepluxuriant locks Dear Abby: My hair falls nearly to nating your lovely locks. It would my waist, and I go to great lengths be neither defensive nor snobby to to maintain it and keep it free of split smile and reply: "We all must decide ends. Many of my friends, both male for ourselves how we will support and female, have grown out their the charities that are important to hair over the years and donated it to us. I have chosen to donate in other cancer charities. While I think it's a ways." beautiful act of selfDear Abby: I have 4 lessness, I have never been with my b oyfelt the calling to dofriend, "Keoni," for DEAR nate my hair. five years. We have a ABBY I h av e r e cently healthy relationship. been criticized for However, when we wanting to keep my go out to the grocery long hair for myself and have been store, the doctor's office or the mall, called selfish and a hypocrite. Abby, women constantly question his ethcancer runs in my family. I donate nicity, which is Hawaiian. Then, money and volunteer for my local without fail, they'll proceed to tell Relay for Life everyyear. When I ex- him (andme) how handsome, beauplain this to my "attackers" — some tiful or gorgeous he is. of them good friends — they look Keoni does nothing to make me the other way and say I'm "horrible" feel less than pretty myself, but these because I won't cut my hair and give frequent comments from strangers it to those in need. have started to make me feel inseI cut my hair very short 10 years cure about my own appearance. ago and regretted it. Now I'm feel- How do I accept these compliments ing pressured to do it again. How without resentment? do Iget my message across to these — Keoni's Girlfriend in Florida people without sounding defensive D ear Girlfriend: What may b e orsnobby? upsetting you is that these women — Rapunzel fn Michigan ask your boyfriend inappropriate Dear Rapunzel: I think I detect questions and appear to be coming a twinge of jealousy in the "good on to him. Face it, your boyfriend friends" who imply you are being is exotic. If you were in Hawaii, he selfish or hypocritical for not do- wouldn't be exotic — YOU might

be. The next time this happens and someone raves about his good looks, remember that Keoni's with you, not her. But if she's pushy, "suggest" she move to Hawaii and get "lei-ed." Dear Abby: Are hugs the new handshake? I a m e n c ountering more people who, instead of shaking hands when they see you (or say goodbye), want to hug. I understand it if you are close friends, but frequently it's a business acquaintance. The two most recent examples were when I went to meet with my mother's minister to arrange her funeral. I had never met the man, but he wantedto hug upon meeting me. Yesterday, I saw a new eye doctor. As I was leaving, I put out my hand to shake his. He said, "Oh, I like to hug!" When I stepped back and told him, "I'm not a huggy person," he seemed offended. Any suggestions? — Standoffish Sue Dear Sue: The minister may have thought that having just lost your mother,you could have used the hug. Many people welcome that kind of comfort. Personally, I agree that the eye doctor's behavior was presumptuous. If you continue to patronize him, my recommendation is to stand out of reach. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or PO. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

8 p.m. on(CW), "Hart of Dixie" — After George's (Scott Porter) parents discover he's dating Tansy (Mircea Monroe), his mom hatches a plan to force him and Zoe (Rachel Bilson) to face their feelings for each other. Lemon (Jaime King) gets a shock of her own when she learns the identity of Brick's (Tim Matheson) love interest. Lavon (Cress Williams) resolves to unmaskthe British stranger who's stolen Annabeth's (Kaitlyn Black) heart in "Islands in the Stream."

a cord-cutter," Shapiro said. "They al l h a v e b r oadband — and it's bringing them everything they want, including video.So we decided to reframe the conversation." Pivot has identified two main groups within its prospective audience: cable TV subscribers who w atch " t elevision" across multiple platforms, and viewers who subscribeonly to broadband. Pivot will accommodate both

9:31 p.m. onH E3, "The New Normal" — Bryan and David's (Andrew Rannells, Justin Bartha) wedding day arrives with its share of roadblocks on the way to the altar — this is a sitcom wedding, after all — but the happy couple are determined to tie the knot before their baby arrives. Apparently, however, someone forgot to let the baby know. Georgia King also stars in the season finale, "The Big Day."

groups.

"It's the first channel that's available both through traditional pay-television bundling, and via yourbroadband provider as a stand-alone (service)," he said. For an extra monthly fee (described as less than the cost of a cup of diner coffee) through the Pivot app on any device, "subscribers will be able to take this channel, both live streaming and on-demand, withyou wherever you go in the world." Online features will include a "Take Action" button to access information about social issues touched on in each program, customized to the viewer's locale and interests. Shapiro believes this dual source could be a game-changer for the TV industry, making a "television" channel available to any viewer regardless of the chosen delivery device. Pivot could be the first of many "a la carte" broadband channels offered tosubscribers weary of paying for whole tiers of cableTV networks.

10 p.m. on TBS,"Cougar Town" — Jules (Courteney Cox) and the gang share their innermost thoughts via "Breakfast Club"-style voice-overs in this new episode. Grayson (Josh Hopkins) reads some unfavorable reviews on Yelp and is crushed. Jules' attempt to prove she's not a goody-two-shoes works a little too well in "The Criminal Kind." Busy Philipps and lan Gomez also star. 10:01 p.m. onH E), "Body of Proof" — Well, they do both end in "-bies." While he and Megan (Dana Delany) are investigatinga savage murder,Tommy (Mark Valley) is bitten by the victim's neighbor, who turns out tohaverabies.W hen someone else dies of the disease — apparently without being bitten — some of Megan'scolleagues think they might be dealing not with rabies but with zombies. Luke Perry guest stars as the new health commissioner in the new episode "Skin and Bones."

MOVIE TIMESTQDAY • There may bean additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

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APRIL 2, 2013: Thisyearyoubecome

as a result of morefrequent conversations like this. Allowfor some spacebetweenyou. Tonight: Dinner for two.

** * * L isten to news that is forthcoming, but realize that youhaveatendency to make situations more serious thanthey needto be. You could discover howwrong you are in a discussion. Youmightfeel sillythat you made such aquick judgment. Tonight: Catch up on afriend's news.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

aformidable opponent, andyou'll be determined to make your mark. Youmight not like criticismyou get, butyou wisely will use itfor your betterment. Youoften surprise others Stars show the kind with your decisions of day you'll have and actions. If you ** * * * D ynamic are single, many ** * * P ositive p e ople will come ** * Average tow ard you. You ** So-so might prefer to * Difficult date ratherthan commit, and that is your call to make. If youareattached, your sweetie might havedifficultyadjusting to the newyou. Don't worry — this person will get intothe moment with you soonenough. CAPRICORN canbeunusually stern. ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * You expect a lotfrom yourself — andthat'sgood,becauseothersdo,too. A boss still could be unusually controlling, and he orshem ightbeheadinginanew direction. Realizethat this person could be changing right in front of you. Tonight: Burn the midnight oil.

YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * Defer to others, as they will be demanding theattention, andyou'll want to let them haveit. Usethe extrafree timeto do somethin gyou havebeenpostponing.A boss or a parent could surprise youwith his or heractions. Gowiththeflow. Tonight: Go with afriend's suggestion.

** * * Your finances will become maj aor conversation, andyou might not besure whatyour choices are.Giveyourself some timetothinkthrough adecision. Afamily member could surpriseyou with his or her reaction. Tonight: Balanceyour checkbook first, then decide.

LEO (July 23-Aug.22)

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)

** * * * You could be surprisedan by unexpected communication. Knowthat your initial reaction could beoff. Taketime to regroup. Your perception about achange in your daily life can't evenbegin to touch what will happen. Worry less. Stay in themoment. Tonight: Make it early.

** * * * You beam, and others seem to respond. Theproblem atthis point is that you are unpredictable. Yourdesires could changefrom onedaytothe next. Others mightfind it difficult to bethe recipients of your varying whims andmoods.Tonight: W hatever knocksyour socksoff .

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18)

** * * * Y our creativity gets pushed tothe forefrontafteryou hear someunexpected news. Youcould wonder what might be best TAURUS (April20-May20) to ** * * Detach in order to getthefull story. do under the circumstances. Yourfinal idea will bethe bestand most rewarding The less said andthe moreyou observe, the option. You will know whenyou hit upon it. moreyou will learn. You also mightwant Tonight: Paint the town red. totake a walk in other people's shoesif LIBRA (Sept.23-Dct. 22) you still do not understand their reactions. ** * Tension builds in anunprecedented Curb a bout of sarcasm.Tonight: Letyour manner because of a domestic situation. imagination roam. You could bequestioning which wayto go GEMINI (May21-June20) with this matter. Donothing until you are ** * * An associate demands your absolutely sure. Listen toyour inner voice. attention and insights. Youmight be Choose astressbuster for a break. Tonight: shocked at thequestionsthis person asks. Greetthe moment positively. Your impression of him or hermight change

** * You might not be revealing thewhole story, as you understand alot more than others giveyou creditfor. You might act in a most unexpected manner. Be more lively and upbeat. Don't allow someone topressure you. Tonight: Notto befound.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * L isten to what is being shared. Your perspective might bemuch different than you realize. Recognizethat others do not perceive asituation in the samewayyou do. Lighten upwhendealing with afriend. A meeting reveals newideas. Tonight: Where the action is. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate

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Welcome to The Outpost! The Outpost is a Oregon retailer. We specialize in providing a fun shopping experience for our customers, with a lot of interesting and unique items. Wehave toys, clothing, crafts, swords, tools, leather goods, household supplies,and an assortment of tobacco products, all at great prices!

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Old Mill District - Next to REI 375 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, OR 97702

Chem~ry Drier. Cleaner. Henltlrier.'

How clean is your tile? Dirt and grime begin to absorb into the pores of grout. Over time, the grout coloring becomes uneven which makes the entire floor look worn and dirty. Call Chem-Dry today and let our professional technicians extract the dirt and grime from your tile and stone surfaces. Our process also seals your tile and grout to resist mold, mildew and dirt.

Don't forget, we also clean carpet, area rugs & upholstery too!

(541) 749-1060

www.Pastini.com

Chem-Dry of Central Oregon 54 I -388-7374 • Residential & Commercial

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Serving Deschutes, Crook di Jefferson Counties • Independently Owned dI Operated

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ON PAGES 3R4 COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Cla ssifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013

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contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Includeyour name, phone number and address

: Monday - Friday : 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

: Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

Place, cancel or extend an ad

T ~h e ~

C h a n d l e r ~ A v e . ~ • B e n d + 0 r~

B u I I ~ ~t i n :~ 1 7~7 ~ 7 ~ S . W .

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202 - Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar &Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets andSupplies 210 - Furniture &Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 - Antiques &Collectibles 215 - Coins &Stamps 240 - Crafts andHobbies 241 - Bicycles andAccessories 242 - ExerciseEquipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246 Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247 - SportingGoods- Misc. 248- Health andBeautyItems 249 - Art, Jewelry andFurs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo and Video 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical lnstruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260 - Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263 - Tools

: Monday- Friday 7:30a.m. -5 p.m.

264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265- Building Materials 266- Heating andStoves 267 - Fuel andWood 268- Trees, Plants &Flowers 269- GardeningSupplies & Equipment 270 - Lost andFound GARAGE SALES 275 - AuctionSales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282 - Sales NorthwestBend 284- Sales SouthwestBend 286- Sales NortheastBend 288- Sales SoutheastBend 290 - Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales OtherAreas FARM MARKET 308- Farm EquipmentandMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain andFeed 333- Poultry, Rabbits andSupplies 341 - Horsesand Equipment 345 Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/ExoticAnimals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat andAnimal Processing 383 - Produceand Food

g o n ~

208

246

255

266

270

Pets & Supplies

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Computers

Heating & Stoves

Lost & Found

Yorkies! 7 wks, 1 male, 2 females, tails docked & dewclaws, $600. Can deliver. Call 541-792-0375 210

Furniture & Appliances A1 Washers & Dryers $150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355

China cabinet, beautiful white solid wood with tempered glass doors & sides, glass shelves, mirrored inner back, 2 drawers below, 68" high x 40" wide x 18" deep. $350. 541-548-2849 GENERATE SOME excitement in your neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809.

La-Z-Boy Big Man chair, swivel rocker recliner, brown c l oth, $150. 541-382-6310 after 3pm

200 rds .40 Winchester white box. Jacketed Hollow Points JHP. Not ball. 180 Grain. Personal Defense ammo. $160./200rds 9mm Federal Champion 115 gr. FMJ $110. David 415-606-0547 240 r d s of .308 m atch-grade, NIB , $200. 541-647-8931 260 rds of Wolf .223 ammo, Nl B, $ 2 00. 541-647-8931 (4) 30-rnd AR-15 alumin um m a gs , NlB , $1 00. 541-647-8931 Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

(4) 30-rnd AR-15 pro-mags, NIB, $100. 541-647-8931

T HE

B U L LETIN r e -

quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are d efined as t hose who sell o ne computer.

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory

541 -385-5809 260

Misc. Items

Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655

F ound assortment o f tools on Barr Rd., north Since September 29, of Tumalo. 360-610-5443 1991 advertising for used woodstoves has Found Toyota key, off China Hat Rd. Call to been limited to modidentify: 541-948-3624 els which have been c ertified by th e O r - Found women's s u negon Department of glasses, Nordeen x-counEnvironmental Qual- try trail 3/23. 541-290-1220 ity (DEQ) and the federal En v i ronmental REMEMBER: Ifyou Protection Ag e n cy have lost an animal, (EPA) as having met don't forget to check smoke emission stanThe Humane Society dards. A cer t i fied in Bend 541-382-3537 w oodstove may b e Redmond, identified by its certifi541-923-0882 cation label, which is Prineville permanently attached 541-447-71 78; to the stove. The BulOR Craft Cats, letin will no t k now541-389-8420. ingly accept advertisi ng for the sale of REWARD! Alive or reuncertified mains. Lost 16-yr-old male mini Doxie black woodstoves. & silver, green collar and tags. Hearing and s ight not g o od. I n • Fu e l & Wood Peterson's Rock Gard en ar e a , 3/2 6 . 541-389-8782 WHEN BUYING

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER

FIREWOOD...

286

To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft.

Loveseat, plum color, 5 00 rds o f R e m . 2 2 exc. cond., only 6 mo. short factory ammo, BUYING Lionel/American Flyer pd. $ 4 00 , as k i ng $60. 541-647-8931 trains, accessories. $325. 541-382-2046, 208 541-408-2191. 7.62x54mm ammo, 440 Pets & Supplies rounds per tin, $180. BUYING & SE L LING 4' x 4' x 8' Tempur-Pedic set 0 • Receipts should 3 tins avail. Call Canary Males Labrador, black male, 7 with brushed nickel Lance 541-388-8503. All gold jewelry, silver include name, bed; Cal-King; exand gold coins, bars, phone, price and 5 O $45-$55 each. yrs, great family dog, healthy, loves cats. Free cellent condition; AR15, .223 Bushmaster, rounds, wedding sets, kind of wood pur(541) 548-7947. to good h ome o nly. like new, 2-30 rd mags, class rings, sterling sil- chased. $700.00 CATS: male, 3 yrs, inde- 541-536-7960 $1650 obo 503-250-0118 ver, coin collect, vin541-548-3774; • Firewood ads pendent but loving; feBend local pays CASH!! tage watches, dental male, 6 yrs, indoor only, Labradors, AKC: black 8 gold. Bill Fle m ing, MUST include spefor all firearms & cies and cost per shy but affectionate. Free choc; 1st shots, athletic 541-382-9419. Bulletin ammo. 541-526-0617 cord to better serve to good homes only. parents, $350-450. Ready The recommends e x t ra IWant to Buy or Rent 541-536-7960 our customers. 3/23. 541-410-9000 Bushmaster AR-15 223 FAST TREES, Potted ~ • p. — I cal. + Red Dot scope Grow 6-10 feet yearly! Dachs. AKC mini pups Wanted: $Cash paid for Labradors:AKC yellow lab chasing products or v $1,499. Brand new in $16-$22 delivered. Semmg Centrat Oregan | nce l903 vintage costume jew- www.bendweenies.com pups, CH lines, parents services from out of I box. 541-279-1843 www.fasttrees.com All colors. 541-508-4558 the area. Sending l elry. Top dollar paid for on site. 541-420-9474 I or 509-447-4181 CASH!! cash, c hecks, o r • Gold/Silver. I buy by the Donate deposit bottles/ dry, split Juniper, Estate, Honest Artist cans to local all volun- Miniature Pinscher AKC I credit i n f o rmation For Guns, Ammo 8 Metal garden arbor, $75. 1 cord $190/cord. Multi-cord Reloading Supplies. Wicker chair, $25, 8 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 teer, non-profit rescue, to puppies, red males only. may be subjected to 541-408-6900. settee, $45. Bow front discounts, 8 y2 cords help w/cat spay/neuter Champion b l o odlines,I FRAUD. For more WANTED: Tobacco available. Immediate vet bills. Cans for Cats vaccinated & w o rmed. information about an g (glass) curio cabinet delivery! 541-408-6193 pipes - Briars and iT MISSTHIS trailer at Bend Pet Ex- $400. Call 541-480-0896 DON w/light, $95. B aker's advertiser, you may l smoking accessories. press, 420 N E W indy rack, $75. 541-389-5408 I call t h e Or e g on / WANTED: RAZORSAH Year Dependable Knolls thru 4 /8; t h en Poodle pupsAKC toys State Att or n ey ' Gillette, Gem, Schick, Ray's Food, Sisters thru Loving, cuddly compan Just bought a new boat? Firewood: Seasoned DO YOU HAVE I General's O f f i c e Sell your old one in the etc. Shaving mugs Lodgepole, Split, Del. 4/29. Donate Mon-Fri © ions. 541-475-3889 SOMETHING TO Consumer P rotec- • classifieds! Ask about our Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 and accessories. Smith Signs, 1515 NE SELL t ion ho t l in e at I Super Seller rates! Fair prices paid. for $335. Cash, Check 2nd; or at CRAFT, Tu- Queenstand Heelers I 1-877-877-9392. FOR $500 OR Call 541-390-7029 541-385-5809 or Credit Card OK. any time. standard & mini,$150 & LESS? between 10 am-3 pm. malo u p. 541-280-1 537 541-420-3484. 5 41-389-8420; Inf o : Non-commercial Sauna, 2-person infrawww.rightwayranch.wor www.craftcats.org advertisers may red, hardly used, ste- Seasoned Juniper$150/ dpress.com place an ad reo, light, must see. cord rounds; $170/ Pets & Supplies DO YOU HAVE with our $900. 541-389-2919. cord split. Delivered in Rodent control experts SOMETHING TO "QUICK CASH Central OR, since (barn cats) seek work Antiques & SELL Wanted- pa ying cash SPECIAL" The Bulletin recomin exchange for safe 1970! Call eves, FOR $500 OR Collectibles for Hi-fi audio & stumends extra caution 541-420-4379 shelter, basic c a re. LESS? OI' dio equip. Mclntosh, when purch a sFixed, shots. Will deNon-commercial 2 k 2 0! J BL, M a rantz, D y ~ ing products or serliver! 541-389-8420. advertisers may naco, Heathkit, SanAd must vices from out of the place an ad with include price of sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Gardening Supplies area. Sending cash, Shih Tzu awesome pup oui' Dgvlirv Call 541-261-1808 it f $5 0 0 • & E q uipment checks, or credit inpies, 1st shots, wormed "QUICK CASH Visit our HUGE or less, or multiple f ormation may b e $400. 541-977-4686 WHEN YOU SEE THIS SPECIAL" home decor items whose total 20 assorted gardening subjected to f raud. consignment store. tools, plus self-propelled does not exceed For more i nforma- 1 week 3 lines 12 ~ 2 k 20 ! New items mower, sell separately $500. tion about an adverAd must include arrive daily! or all, $250. E-mail tiser, you may call sgin©bendbroadband.com price of single item 930 SE Textron, Call Classifieds at the O r egon State On a classified ad or call 541-516-8646 of $500 or less, or Bend 541-318-1501 541-385-5809 Attorney General's go to multiple items www.redeuxbend.com www.bendbulletin.com Office Co n s umer www.bendbulletin.com S ponsor needed f o r whose total does Protection hotline at to view additional BarkTurfSoil.com s weet little J enny 8 not exceed $500. 1-877-877-9392. The Bulletin reserves DPMS AR-15 M4 .556 photos of the item. Spencer, a b a ndoned rifle w/2 30-rd mags, NIB, the right to publish all with badly injured eyes. Call Classifieds at PROMPT D E LIVERY 263 One of Jenny's eyes had ads from The Bulletin $1250. 541-647-8931 541-385-5809 541-389-9663 newspaper onto The Tools to be removed 8 she has Rare Guns: Calico M100 www.bendbulletin.com little vision in the other. Bulletin Internet web- .22LR w/100-rnd helical Adopt a nice CRAFT cat after surgery.) site. drum, $750 obo. S&W 2 chainsaws, Homelite from Tumalo sanctuary, German Shepherds, AKC (Photo For newspaper Her brother Spencer also Model 624 .44 cal stain- Model 150 $125; & Pet Smart, o r P e tco! www.sherman-ranch.us had to have an eye redelivery, call the less w/original box, $700 Stihl 032 AV , $ 2 50 Fixed, shots, ID c hip, 541-281-6829 Circulation Dept. at moved but has good viobo. Ruger Super Black- obo. 541-475-2057 tested, more! Sanctuary 541-385-5800 in the other. Vet hawk .44 mag stainl ess, open Sat. 1-5 (CLOSED Hounds, started, 1 fe- sion To place an ad, call 10'/2" barrel w /scope, ervices are no t d o 265 Easter Sun.), other days male (2.5 yrs); 1 male snated Golf Equipment • $850 obo. 541-848-8602 541-385-5809 8 this was a big (2.5 yrs); 1 male (16 Building Materials by appt. 65480 78th, or email expense for a small nonBend. 54 1 -389-8420. mo.); house b roke, profit. Can you help by Remington Wingmaster classified@bendbulletin.com Golf Membership $250ea. 541-447-1323 Photos, map, more at Model 8 7 0L W 20 Bend Habitat Brasada Ranch,long sponsoring one of them? www.craftcats.org & like L ab mix female 1 y r . auge shotgun, $500. RESTORE term lease. Are you able to offer a Sen«ng Centrat Oregon ince l903 us on Facebook. all Eric Building Supply Resale FREE to good home safe forever home for 541-408-0014 541-639-7740 for Quality at LOW one or both? Cat ResA pet sitter in NE Bend, 541-420-5602, Joe. pictures/details. PRICES SUPER TOP SOIL warm and loving home Lab Pups AKC, black cue, Adoption & Foster 740 NE 1st www.hershe souandbark.com Wanted: Collector with no cages, $25 day. 8 y e llow, Mas t e r Team, 5 4 1 -389-8420, Guns, Hunting 541-312-6709 Screened, soil & comPO Box 6 441, B end seeks high quality Linda at 541-647-7308 Hunter sired, perfor- 97708; & Fishing Open to the public. post mi x ed , no PayPal & more fishing items. mance pedigree, OFA rocks/clods. High huB order C o llie p u p s cert hips & e l bows, thru www.craftcats.org. Call 541-678-5753, or Sisters Habitat ReStore mus level, exc. f or 100 rds of .45 acp holThanks 8 bless you! w orking parents, 4 Call 541-771-2330 503-351-2746 low points, NIB, $75. Building Supply Resale flower beds, l awns, males, $150 e a ch. www.kinnamanretrievers.com Winchester desirable Quality items. straight gardens, Yorkie, 8 wks, purebred 541-647-8931 541-382-2300. model 70 Pre 64 300 LOW PRICES! s creened to p s o il. Labradoodles - Mini 8 male, 1st shots/dewmode l 150 N. Fir. Bark. Clean fill. DeBoxer X English Bulldog med size, several colors orming, mom 8 dad on 100 rds of 9mm Rem- W IN a nd 541-504-2662 site. $400. K r istina, ington ammo, N I B, 100-284. Call 541-549-1621 liver/you haul. pups, CK C re g 'd. www.alpen-ridge.com 541-408-3211 541-420-8689 Open to the public. 541-548-3949. $800. 541-325-3376 $50. 541-647-8931

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The Bulletin

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Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE ** Garage Sale Klt

Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and r eceive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT I NCLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2 00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad

• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

Hay Grain & Feed 1st quality grass hay, 70- Ib bales, barn stored, $250/ton. Also big bales! Patterson Ranch, Sisters, 541-549-3831 People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through The Bulletin Clessiiteds

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 bendbuHetin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbuHetin.com 358

PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

The Bulletin

Farmers Column Rafter L F Ranch & Farm Svcs. - Custom Haying 8 Field Work Call Lee Fischer, 541-410-4495

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Show Your Stuff. Sell Your Stuff. In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.

CircleThis •

GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, We are three adorable loving puppies lookingfor acaring home. Please call right away. $500.

HoviMi: FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough VB engine will get the job done on the ranch!

$ Price Lowered $ QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need.Roomto grow in your own little paradise! Call now.

Add

Attention-Getting Graphics For an addifional '3 per week '10 for 4 weeks

Clas's'ifjeds To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or call 385-5809


E2 TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIEDe 541-385-5809 476

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

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

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

Monday • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •5:00 pm FrI • Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •Noon Mons

a

Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon TuesR Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Fri d a y . . . . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. •. . . . . . . 3:0 0 pm Fri. Saturday • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Sunday. • • • • Starting at 3 lines

Place a photoin your private party ad for only $f5.00 perweek.

*UNDER '500 in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days ................................. 7 days ................................. 1 4 days ............................... 28 days ...............................

4 lines for 4 days..................................

(caii for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

*Must state prices in ad

C® Xl

486

Independent Positions Delivery Earn extra m oney d elivering the D e x Directory i n t he Bend/Redmond area. Must over the age of 18 years, have a valid driver's license, your own vehicle and proof of insurance. We pay per book, per stop, b lended r ate. P l ease c a l l

..... $18.50 ..... $24.00 ......$33.50 ......$61.50

425-736-7927

The Bulletin Oendnunerin.com is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if 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 anyadvertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday.

.JQI:-.':>,Qfg +I;, jIli~ljfl.Can be found on these pages :

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opporlunities 486 - Independent Positions

40rj0rj

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Morlgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opporlunities

476

products or I I chasing services from out of • l the area. Sending l c ash, c hecks, o r

421

Schools & Training

readers on The Bulletin' s web site will be able to click through automatically to your site.

Oregon Medical Train- Chief Engineers Just too many ing PCS — Phlebotomy OPB Seeks Chief Encollectibles? classes begin May 6, gineers excited about 2013. Registration now the possibilities of the * P :~ evolving broadcast inSell them in medicaltrainin .com dustry an d h e lpingThe Bulletin Classifieds 541-343-3100 OPB m a i ntain a statewide b r oadcast 476

presence. There are two positions available, one located in M edford and one in La Grande. These are full-time, salaried, exempt, regular status p ositions with b e n efits. For more information and i n structions on how to apply, to: go http://www.opb.org/insideopb/careers/jobs/.

Employment Opportunities CAUTION READERS:

Ads published in "Employment Opportunit ies" i n c lude em ployee and i ndependent pos i tions. Ads for positions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job Dental Insurance opportunity, p l e ase & Collections investigate thorFull-time position oughly. with attractive Use extra caution when

applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme caution when r esponding to A N Y online e m p loyment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity L aws: Oregon B u reau of L a bor 8 I ndustry, C i vi l Rights Division, 971-673-0764

If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Classified Department The Bulletin 541-385-5809

The Bulletin Find exactly what you are looking for in the C LASSIFI E D S

HOTLINE,

FRAUD.

LI 'he Bttlletttt

benefits package. Fun, family-like team. Musthave dental experience with work references to apply; Dentrix helpful. Fax resume to 541-475-6159 (Madras). DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day!

541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:

541-385-5809

Resort Activities person needed at The Pines at Sunriver. 541-593-2160.

Service Technicians Central Oregon RV dealership seeks ser-

vice technicians. Must be customer service oriented and have RV 8 camper experience. Competitive pay and benefits. Please send resume' to bcrvhire O gmail.com

or apply in person at 63500 N. Hwy 97, Bend, Oregon. Special Education Teacher

J

I

gage 541-388-4200.

2 bdrm, 1 bath,

$530 8 $540 w/lease. Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS.

(541 ) 383-3152

Cascade Rental Management. Co.

682- Farms, Ranches andAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705- Real Estate Services 713- Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos & Townhomesfor Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747- Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast Bend Homes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms and Ranches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 745

773

Homes for Sale

Acreages

NOTICE

(440) Dryland Acres

X'Drj0~

775

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46 500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor

® Call Today ®

L ake County ESD i s now accepting applications for a Special Education T e a cher. We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery Applicants must have or qualify for Oregon routes in: licensure as a Teacher with Handicapped Learner EnMust be available 7 days a week, early morndorsement. This is a ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle.

* Terrebonne *

part-time (.5 FTE) position with a s a lary range $ 1 6 ,565 $29,716 DOE, partial benefits. Posi t i on closes 4/30/13. Submit application online at www.edzapp.com include application, resume & cover letter

Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or apply via email at

online ©bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

i

Advertising Account Executive

BEING SPENT?

How Do You ttNOW? TURN TO YOUR trtEWSPAPEF'S

EOE / Drug Free Workplace

~~~>~ Jump Into Spring!

++++++++++++++++++

The Bulletin

or drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; No phone inquiries please.

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

Operate Your Own Business

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads T he Bullet i n

Email your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Jay Brandt, Advertising Director jbrandt@bendbulletin.com

1000 NE Butler Mkt Rd. 541-598-4877

All real estate adver- 5 miles east of Ashtised here in is subwood on G r osner ject to t h e F e deral R d. S p ring an d F air H o using A c t , pond. Good for seawhich makes it illegal sonal grazing, hunt541-504-0837 to advertise any pref- ing/recreation. erence, limitation or 650 $330,000 firm. As is. discrimination based No agents. Houses for Rent on race, color, reli- 541-205-3788, NE Bend gion, sex, handicap, 541-823-2397, familial status or na- dobalesOmsn.com A very sharp looking tional origin, or inten2000 sq.ft. 3 B drm/ tion to make any such 2bath home, gas FP 8 preferences, l i m ita- Call The Bulletin At 541 -385-5809 furnace, tile floors 8 tions or discrimination. carpet, open l i ving We will not knowingly Place Your Ad Or E-Mail k itchen, dining. N o accept any advertis- At: www.bendbulletin.com smoking/no pets. Call ing for r ea l e state 541-388-2250, or which is in violation of 541-81 5-7099. this law All persons CHECK YOUR AD are hereby informed Please check your ad that all dwellings ad- on the first day it runs vertised are available to make sure it is coron an equal opportu- rect. Sometimes innity basis. The Bulle- s tructions ove r t h e tin Classified phone are misunderstood and a n e r ror 749 can occur in your ad. Southeast Bend Homes If this happens to your ad, please contact us 20688 White Cliff Circle. the first day your ad 4 Bdrm, 2 bath home appears and we will 705 FSBO, . 46 a c r e, be happy to fix it as Real Estate Services single level, w/ office, s oon a s w e can . laundry room, paved Deadlines are: WeekBoise, ID Real Estate driveway, h a rdwood days 11:00 noon for For relocation info, f loors, w h it e vi n y l next day, Sat. 11:00 call Mike Conklin, fence. $260 , 000. a.m. for Sunday and 208-941-8458 OBO. 541-317-5012. Monday. Silvercreek Realty 541-385-5809 Check out the Thank you! classifieds online USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! The Bulletin Classified

The Bulletin

Home cleaning crew member need weekdays only, no weekends, eves or h o lidays. 541-815-0015

The position includes a competitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential.

636 LOCAL MONEyrWe buy secured trust deeds 8 Apt./Multiplex NW Bend note,some hard money tNtNtN.bendbtttfetin.com loans. Call Pat Kelley Small studios close to liBULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Door-to-door selling with Updated daily 541-382-3099 ext.13. brary, all util. paid. Search the area's most fast results! It's the easiest $550 mo.w/ $525 dep. 750 comprehensive listing of way in the world to sell. $495 mo.w/$470 dep Redmond Homes TiCk, TOCk classified advertising... No pets/ no smoking. The Bulletin Classified real estate to automotive, 541-330- 9769 or TiCk, TOCk... 541-480-7870 541-385-5809 merchandise to sporting Looking for your next emp/oyee? goods. Bulletin Classifieds ...don't let time get Place a Bulletin help appear every day in the away. Hire a Crest Butte Apartments wanted ad today and print or on line. 1 695 Purcell Blvd., Bend, Oregon professional out reach over 60,000 Now accepting applications for the wait list of a Call 541-385-5809 readers each week. of The Bulletin's federally s u b sidized A f f ordable F a m ily Your classified ad www.bendbulletin.com "Call A Service Housing project. Crest Butte is a b eautiful will also appear on property, less t han 3 y e a r s r e modeled, Professional" bendbulletin.com offering 1 and 2 bedroom units to those who servrngcentral oregcs rrnre rse which currently reDirectory today! income qualify. Close to St. Charles and ceives over medical/dental providers, as well as daycare 1.5 million page and schools. On-site laundry facilities and new views every month Independent Contractor playground available. at no extra cost. Please contact site manager for further detail. Bulletin Classifieds Project phone ¹: (541) 389-9107 Get Results! * Supplement Your Income* TTY. 1 (800) 735-2900 Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line "This institute is an equal at opportunity provider." EGUAIHOUSING bendbulletin.com

www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of media sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate.

ct

Clean, quiet 1bdrm with pvt patio. No smoking or pets. $530+ deposit.

l credit i n f ormation l l may be subjected to

I 1-877-877-9392.

I

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

R edmond, i s no w accepting a p p lica642 tions for their waiting l ist of 1 8 2 B d r m Apt./Multiplex Redmond apts. Rent based on income. I n come Country Living! Upstairs duplex, small kitchenrestrictions apply. ette, 1 bdrm, den, outCall 541.548.7282 side deck. 17735 NW TDD 1.800.735.2900 Lone Pine Rd., Terrebonne. $500 per mo.

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

r.=.-"-,.—.a

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - Roommate Wanted 627 616 - Want To Rent Vacation Rentals 627 Vacation Rentals& Exchanges & Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 5-star Gold C r own! 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent Exc. 2 bdrm, Sunri632 - Apt./Multiplex General ver, next to amuse634- Apt./Multiplex NEBend ment p ar k A v a il. 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 4/4-11 & 4 / 1 1-18. 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 541-433-2901 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 630 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished Rooms for Rent 648 - Houses for Rent General Studios & Kitchenettes 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro 8 fridge. 652- Houses for Rent NWBend Utils & l i nens. New 654- Houses for Rent SEBend owners. $145-$165/wk 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 541-382-1885 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 632 660- Houses for Rent La Pine Apt./Multiplex General 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters Redmond Rental 663- Houses for Rent Madras Assistance Available! 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent Ridgemont 675 - RV Parking Apartments 2210 SW 19th Street, 676 Mo bile/Mfd.Space

634

528

Employment Opportunities

00rj0rj

Loans & Mortgages

l 1-877-877-9392. For more i nforma476 476 I tion about an adver- l BANK TURNED YOU Employment Employment l tiser, you may call l DOWN? Private party Opportunities Opportunities will loan on real esthe Oregon S tate l Attorney General's l tate equity. Credit, no Remember.... Caregiver Office C o n sumer x problem, good equity Prineville Senior care A dd your we b a d - I Protection hotline at l is all you need. Call h ome l o oking f o r dress to your ad and Oregon Land M ortCaregiver for multiple s hifts, p a rt-time t o full-time. Pass criminal background check. 541-447-5773.

v

Employment Opportunities

PUBLIC NOTICES FOR ANSWERS...

The Bulletin

Vou havc a nghr ro know how state ar local governments spend your hard-earned tax dollars — snd it's your rcsponsrbrtrry ro find oor. That's where newspapers come m. Every day, your ncwspapcr pubhshcs thrs and other rmportsnt inrormarron m rherr pohiic notices section. Informarron about pro/ecrs and scrvrccs that you

pay for. Rcsd the public nnuces m your local newspaper-

IT'S HOW YOU t<NOW.

N

Newspaper Association of America

Call 54 I-385-5809 to promote your service• Advertise for 28 days starting ot 'l40 Irhrs speoolpackagersnorararloble anourwebsrre/

Building/Contracting

Janitorial Services

La n d scapingNard Care LandscapingNard Care

NOTICE: Oregon state Integrity Office Cleaning N OTICE: OREGON Nelson law req u ires any-Honest services tailored to Landscape ContracLandscaping & one who co n t racts your needs! Licensed & tors Law (ORS 671) Maintenance for construction work Insured, Free Estimates. r equires a l l bus i Serving Central to be licensed with the Call Nikki, 541-41 9-6601 nesses that advertise Oregon Since 2003 C onstruction Con t o p e r form L a n d- Residental/Commercial tractors Board (CCB). LandscapingNard Care scape C o n struction A n active lice n s e which includes: Sprinkler means the contractor p lanting, decks , Activation/Repair i s bonded an d i n fences, arbors, Back Flow Testing s ured. Ver i f y t h e w ater-features, a n d Zeof',tz gaa8/ip contractor's CCB installation, repair of Maintenance c ense t hrough t h e irrigation systems to • Thatch & Aerate Zarc«drt/ e /,',. be licensed with the •Spring Clean up CCB Cons u m er More Than Service Website Landscape Contrac- •Weekly Mowing Peace 01 Mind www.hireaiicensedcontractor. t ors B o a rd . Thi s & Edging com 4-digit number is to be • Bi-Monthly & Monthly or call 503-378-4621. Spring Clean Up included in all adver- Maintenance The Bulletin recom•Leaves tisements which indi- • Bark, Rock, Etc. mends checking with •Cones cate the business has the CCB prior to con• Needles Landsca in a bond, insurance and ~ tracting with anyone. •Debris Hauling workers c o mpensa- •Landscape Some other t r ades Construction tion for their employalso req u ire addi- Weed free Bark ees. For your protec- • Water Feature t ional licenses a n d & flower beds tion call 503-378-5909 Installation/Maint. certifications. or use our website: •Pavers Lawn Renovation www.lcb.state.or.us to •Renovations Debris Removal Aeration - Dethatching check license status • Irrigations Installation Overseed before con t racting Senior Discounts JUNK BE GONE Compost with t h e bu s iness. Bonded & Insured I Haul Away FREE Top Dressing Persons doing land541-815-4458 For Salvage. Also scape m a intenance LCB¹8759 Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Landscape do not require a LCB Mel, 541-389-6107 license. Maintenance Need to get an Full or Partial Service Excavating ad in ASAP? •Mowing ~Edging FIND YOUR FUTURE •Pruning ~Weeding You can place it Levi's Concrete & Dirt Sprinkler Adjustments HOME IN THE BULLETIN online at: Works - for all your dirt & Yourfutureisjust apageaway. excavation needs. Conwww.bendbulletin.com Fertilizer included W hether you' r e l o oki n g for a ha t or crete, Driveway Grading, with monthly program Augering. ccb¹ 194077 aplacetohangit, TheBulletin 541-385-5809 541-639-5282 Classifiedisyourbestsource. Weekly, monthly or one time service. Everydaythousandsofbuyersand SPRING CLEAN-UPI Handyman Aeration/Dethatching sellersof goodsandservicesdo Weekly/one-time service EXPERIENCED I DO THAT! business inthesepages.They avail. Bonded, insured. Home/Rental repairs Commercial knowyoucan't beatTheBuletin Free Estimates! Small jobs to remodels & Residential COLLINS Lawn Maint. ClassifiedSectionfor selection Honest, guaranteed Ca// 541 -480-971 4 work. CCB¹151573 and conven ience- everyitemis Senior Discounts Dennis 541-317-9768 just aphonecall away. ALLEN REINSCH 541-390-1466 Yard maintenance 8 ERIC REEVE HANDY The ClassifiedSectionis easy Same Day Response SERVICES. Home & clean-up, thatching, to use.Everyitemis categorized plugging & much more! Commercial Repairs, category is indexedon Call 541-536-1 294 Carpentry-Painting, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! and every the section'sfrontpage. Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On-time Door-to-door selling with Whetheryouarelookingfor ahome Painting/Wall Covering I promise. Senior fast results! It's the easiest or needaservice, yourfutureis in • Interior/Exterior Painting Discount. Work guar- way in the world to sell. • Deck Refinishing the pages ofTheBulletin Classfied. anteed. 541-389-3361 • Handvman Services or 541-771-4463 The Bulletin Classified CC8¹16391 4 Bonded & Insured The Bullettn Sage Home Maintenance 541-385-5809 CCB¹181595 Call 541-508-0673



To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 0 541-385-5809

E4 TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD """.' „

Apri12,2013 DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Tuesday,

ACROSS

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

Cy the Cynic says that two wrongs don't make a right, but they may make a good excuse. Today's North-South landed at a hair-raising 3NT. West led the six of spades, and East took the king and returned the jack. South recalled that East had bid spades, so he put up the queen and went down two when the defense ran the spades. "I could play low on the second spade," South said, "but if East had held the A-K, I'd never get over it."

and he bids one spade. What do you say? A NSWER: T h i s p r o blem i s awkward. Partner may have as many as 18 points, and game is possible. To pass would be timid, but no bid is attractive. I might raise to two spades with A Q 6, K 8 7 3, 6 4, 8 6 5 2, but not with the actual hand. Bid INT, which does not promise club strength. An option is a return to two diamonds. South dealer N-S vulnerable

INDISCREET

run,D per Bruce

Springsteen (1975) as Spanish king zo Grabbed a chair za Take captive zz Tennessee z4 Where "the nights are stronger than moonshine," per America (1972) zs Before, to Kipling

NORTH 45 9

Two wrongs were committed, not counting the postmortem. North's bid of 3NT was indiscreet; North should have bid three clubs, showing a good distributional hand. Then N o rthSouth could have played at clubs. At 3NT South should withhold his

9 A 10 9 0 AK Q J 1 0 AQJ43 WEST 45 A86 9 KQ7 3 C 642 4865

queen of spades. To make game, South needs East to have the king of clubs. But East's jump in spades was preemptive,and ifhe had A-K-J of spades plus a side king, his hand w ould have been to o s t rong t o preempt. If South ducks the second spade, blocking the suit, h e m a kes an South overtrick. Pass Pass 2 NT

DAILY QUESTION

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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 Io download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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By Jeffrey Wechsfer (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

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04/02/1 3


THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013 E5

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

Motorhomes

T r a vel Trailers •

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

932

933

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

PM ti, grffl

L

Snowmobiles ( 2) 2000

A rctic C a t

Z L580's EFI with n e w covers, electric start w/ reverse, low miles, both excellent; with new 2009

Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007,Gen, 2003 Fleetwood Discovery 40' diesel mo- fuel station, exc cond. Diamond Reo Dump torhome w/all sleeps 8, black/gray Truck 19 7 4, 12 - 14 interior, u s e d 3X, options-3 slide outs, yard box, runs good, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, $19,999 firm. $6900, 541-548-6812 541-389-9188 etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. Forklift, Hyster H 3 0E Wintered i n h e a ted LPG, good condition, shop. $89,900 O.B.O. 607 hrs, $2000 OBO. 541-447-8664 Fifth Wheels • 541-389-7596

Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, drive off/on w/double tilt, lots of accys. Selling due to m e dical r e asons. $8000 all. 541-536-8130 • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, $1400. • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000. • Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in 8 out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179

1

PRIS RFOV NO/

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t on dually, 4 s p d . trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.

G R X AT

R U Y T

BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles AndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercrafl 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fiflh Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890 - RVs for Rent

AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks andHeavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique andClassic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sporl Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

RAM 2500 HD '03 hemi, 32' Fleetwood Fiesta 2003, no slide-out, GMC 1966, too many 2WD, 135K, auto, CC, Hyster H25E, runs Triton engine, all extras to list, reduced to am/fm/cd. $7000 obro. Vans Automobiles Automobiles well, 2982 Hours, amenities, 1 owner, $7500 obo. Serious buy- 541-680-9965 /390-1285 Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 $3500, call perfect, only 17K miles, ers only. 541-536-0123 by Carriage, 4 slides, 541-749-0724 $22,000 firm! 96 Ford Windstar & inverter, satellite sys, Titan 2 0 0 7 4x4 541-504-3253 Need help fixing stuff? 2000 Nissan Quest fireplace, 2 flat screen Off-Road, beautiful Call A ServiceProfessional both 7-passenger TVs. $54,950 inside and out, meFour Winds Class find the help you need. vans, 160K miles, 541-480-3923 tallic black/charcoal A 32' H u r ricane www.bendbulletin.com low prices, $1200 8 leather, loaded, 69k 2007. CAN'T BEAT Cougar ¹295 RL 2 9', $2900, and worth Chrysler Sebring 2004 Nissan Sentra 2012 mi $ 1 9 995 obo THIS! Look before 2005, exclnt cond., 2 every cent! 84k, beautiful dark gray/ Full warranty, 35mpg, • 541-410-6183. ~l ~ you buy, b e low slides, A/C, $17,500. Peterbilt 359 p o table 8 860 541-318-9999 brown, tan leather int., 520 per tank, all power. market value! Size water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, $5995 541-350-5373 $13,500. 541-788-0427 Motorcycles & Accessories 8 m i leage D OES 541-385-0593 for pix. 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 935 matter! 12,500 mi, pump, 4-3" h o ses, Pontiac Bonneville, 2005, Chevy Astro B MW K100 L T 1 9 8 7 all amenities, Ford camlocks, $25,000. white with black leather Sport Utility Vehicles Cargo Van 2001, 52k m iles, b r onze, V10, I t hr, c h e rry, 541-820-3724 intenor, new tires, $4500. GMC f~ ton 1971, Only pw, pdl, great cond., extra windshield, slides, like new! New 541-941-1249 $19,700! Original low business car, well trailer hitch, b attery low price, $54,900. mile, e xceptional, 3rd maint'd, regular oil charger, full luggage 541-548-521 6 Utility Trailers • owner. 951-699-7171 Porsche Carrera 911 changes, $4500. hard bags, manuals Laredo 2009 30' with 2 Little Red Corvette1996 2003 convertible with Please call and paperwork. Alslides, TV, A/C, table Light equipment trailer, RV Tow car 2004 hardtop. 50K miles, conv. 350 auto. 541-633-5149 ways garaged. $3200. Honda Civic Si set up 8 c h a irs, s a t ellite, 3 axle, 8'x21' tilt bed. new factory Porsche 132K, 26-34 mpg. Don, 541-504-5989 for flat towing with Arctic p kg., p o wer $3500. 541-489-6150. Chevrolet Blazer LT $12,500 541-923-1781 motor 6 mos ago with awning, Exc. cond! base plate and tow 18 mo factory war$28,000. 541-419-3301 for info. $3800 OBO • A utom o biles ranty remaining. Take care of brake, 35k mi, new Automotive Parts, • Jeep Comanche, 1990, 541 -480-0781 tires, great cond. $37,500. your investments 541-322-6928 $12,000. Service & Accessories onginal owner, 1 67K, with the help from 541-288-1808 4WD, 5-spd, tags good till 9/2015, $3900 obo. Pickup tool box, The Bulletin's 541-633-7761 Toyota Camryst full size, $100. Ci,l "Call A Service Ford Focus 2012 SE Call 541-241-0772 1984, SOLD; Excellent cond. 12k Professional" Directory MONTANA 3585 2008, TIRES set of 4 mounted BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. 1985 SOLD; mi., silver, $16,500 exc. cond., 3 slides, on rims + extra rim. Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, o wner, e xc . c o n d. 1986 parts car obo 541-306-3662. king bed, Irg LR, 4 5% h wy trea d , most options, new tires, 101k miles, new tires, Harley Heritage only one left! $500 Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. Arctic insulation, all 159K miles, $3750. Call loaded, sunroof. Softail, 2003 225/60R16, $400 obo FORD FUSION 2008 Call for details, 28K miles, 2 slides, Duoptions $35,000. 541-233-8944 541-489-6150 $8,300. 541-706-1897 v ery e x c . con d . $5,000+ in extras, 541-548-6592 ramax diesel, 1 owner, 541-420-3250 $2000 paint job, Mercedes 450SL, 1977, 62,500 mi. $10,750. excellent cond, $94,500. ~ OO 30K mi. 1 owner, 113K, w ell-maintained, Call 541-647-6410 Nuyya 297LK Hi t chMOrePIXaitII!IIIII!!lletin.CO m For more information 541-546-6920 Antique & a raged, b ot h t o p s . Toyota Camry XLE Hiker 2007, 3 slides, please call 2004. Ieather, moon, 11,900. 541-389-7596 Classic Autos 32' touring coach, left 541-385-8090 Wouldn't you really 69k mi. ¹155631. kitchen, rear lounge, like to drive a Buick? or 209-605-5537 $13,495. 541-598-3750 many extras, beautiful Bob has two 75,000 ia c ond. inside & o u t , Honda CRV 2004, mile Buicks, priced $32,900 OBO, Prinev$9,995. fair, $2,000-$6000. 1921 Model T Call 541-610-6150 or see 541-447-5502 days Oregon R emember, t h e se Ford Taurus wagon 2004, Monaco Dynasty 2004, ille. http://bend.craigslist.org & 541-447-1641 eves. Delivery Truck AutnSnurce loaded, 3 slides, diecars get 30mpg hwy! very nice, pwr everything, /cto/3676208637.html Oldsmobile Alero 2004, Restored & Runs 120K FWD good tires aaaoregonautosource.com 541-318-9999 sel, Reduced - n ow classic 4-dr in showroom $4900 obo. 541-815-9939 $9000. The Bulletin Harley Limited 103 2011, $119,000, 5 4 1-923condition, leather, chrome Advertise your car! 541-389-8963 many extras, stage 1 8 air 8572 or 541-749-0037 wheels, 1 owner, low To Subscribe call Add A Picture! cushion seat. 18,123 mi, Reach thousands of readers! miles. $7500. 541-385-5800 or go to RV Catl 541-385-5809 $21,990. 541-306-0289 541-382-2452 www.bendbulletin.com CONSIGNMENTS The Bulletin Classifieds P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h WANTED Buick Invicta1959! PROJECT CARS: Chevy Toyota Corolla 2004, We Do The Work ... wheel, 1 s l ide, AC, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 2 door hardtop, 99.9% Hyundai Sonata 2007 auto., loaded, 204k You Keep The Cash! TV,full awning, excelChevy Coupe 1950 complete in & out. GLS, 64,700 mi, excel= - f miles. orig. owner, non On-site credit lent shape, $23,900. rolling chassis's $1750 $16,000. lent cond, good tires, smoker, exc. c o nd. Chevy C-20 Pickup ea., Chevy 4d r 1 949, approval team, 541-350-8629 541-504-3253 non-smoker, new tags, $6500 Prin e ville 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; complete car, $ 1949; web site presence. $9500. 541-280-7352 HD Fat Boy 1996 503-358-8241 auto 4-spd, 396, model Cadillac Series 61 1950, We Take Trade-Ins! Jeep Patriot 2 0 08 Buick LeSabre 1996. Completely customized CST /all options, orig. 2 dr. hard top, complete Free Advertising. Good condition 60k mi., single Volkswagen Jetta 2.5, Must see and hear to owner, $19,950, w /spare f r on t cl i p ., 4x4, BIG COUNTRY RV owner, 5-spd, 30 mpg, 121,000 miles. SUY IT! 2006, great shape, silver, appreciate. 2012 541-923-6049 $3950, 541-382-7391 Bend: 541-330-2495 c Non-smoker new tires, exc. cond. Award Winner. 17,000 SEL t tyi 65 K miles, asking $9100. Redmond: obo. 541-548-4807 $11,900 541-604-0862 $2600 OBO. Say "goodbuy" 933 The Bulletin Classifieds 541 5041'421 541-548-5254 541-954-5193. Pilgrim Int e rnational HD Screaming Eagle Pickups to that unused 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, Lincoln Town Car 2002, WHEN YOU SEE THIS Toyota 4Ru n n er Electra Glide 2005, Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 signature series, pearl item by placing it in 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , 103" motor, two tone ~Oo Fall price $ 2 1,865. white ext., ta n i n t ., G MC Sierra S L T 4WD, V6, 5 speed, candy teal, new tires, The Bulletin Classifieds 541-312-4466 59K mi., 22-25 mpg., M OrePiXatBendbuletilI,COm 2006 - 1500 Crew t ow pkg., p lus 4 23K miles, CD player spotless. Never damOn a classified ad Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. studs tires on rims, Chevy Malibu 2009 hydraulic clutch, exaged, new topline incond., 82 k m i l es, go to 43k miles, loaded, RV 5 41 -385-5 8 0 9 r uns g reat. W a s cellent condition. t erstate battery, a l www.bendbulletin.com $19,900. $ 5500, no w o n l y studs on nms/ CONSIGNMENTS Highest offer takes it. Southwind 35.5' Triton, ways garaged. $7200. to view additional 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du541-408-0763 Asking $12,900. WANTED $4000.541-659-1416 541-480-8080. Chevy 1955 PROJECT 541-923-8868 pont UV coat, 7500 mi. photos of the item. 541-610-6834. We Do The Work ... car. 2 door wgn, 350 Bought new at You Keep The Cash! small block w/Weiand $132,913; On-site credit dual quad tunnel ram ATVs asking $91,000. approval team, with 450 Holleys. T-10 Call 503-982-4745 web site presence. 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, We Take Trade-Ins! Weld Prostar wheels, = . • Il ' ~ Free Advertising. extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. BIG COUNTRY RV 541-389-7669. Bend: 541-330-2495

WOW!

G

Redmond:

j 541-548-5254 Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, only 34K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd Space for rent: 30 amp warr. thru 2014, $54,900 +water, sewer, gravel Dennis, 541-589-3243 lot. $350 mo. Tumalo Chevy Wagon 1957, area. 541-419-5060 881 IBoats & Accessories 4-dr., complete, Travel Trailers $7,000 OBO, trades. Please call 541-389-6998 0 tl 0 14' 1982 Valco River Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe Sled, 70 h p., Fish1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Finder. Older boat but auto. trans, ps, air, price includes trailer, frame on rebuild, re3 wheels and tires. All Flagstaff 30' 2006, with painted original blue, for $1 5 00 ! Cal l slide, custom interior, original blue interior, 541-416-8811 like n ew , S a crifice, original hub caps, exc. $17,500. 541-598-7546 chrome, asking $9000 or make offer. 541-385-9350 Yamaha Banshee 2001 custom built 350 motor race-ready, lots of extras $4999/obo 541-647-8931

'00

18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 L Volvo Penta, 270HP, Fleetwood 31' W ildern ess Gl 1 9 99 , 1 2 ' low hrs., must see, $15,000, 541-330-3939 slide, 2 4 ' awn i ng, queen bed, FSC, out- 1/3 interest in Columbia side shower, E-Z lift 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, s tabilizer hitch, l i k e 400, $150,000 located 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 @ Sunriver. H o urly new, been stored. hp Bowrider w/depth rental rate (based upon $10,950. 541-419-5060 approval) $775. Also: finder, radio/CD player, rod holders, full can- P ioneer 2 3 ' 19 0 F Q S21 hangar avail. for vas, EZ Loader trailer, le a s e @ 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. sale, o r exclnt cond, $13,000. $15/day or $325/mo. 541-548-1096 707-484-3518 (Bend) 541-948-2963

Chrysler SD 4-Door 1930, CD S R o yal Standard, S-cylinder, body is good, needs some r e s toration, runs, taking bids, 541-383-3888, 541-81 5-331 8

FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, door panels w/flowers 8 hummingbirds, white soft top & hard top. Just reduced to 1 /3 interest i n w e l l 541-317-9319 equipped IFR Beech Bo- $3,750. or 541-647-8483 nanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located K BDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510

Prowler 2009 Extreme E dition. Model 2 7 0 RL, 2 slides, opposing in living area, ent. center, sep. bedroom, 2 ne w e x tr a t i res, / l/l l / l l /II I I hitch, bars, sway bar included. P r o -Pack, anti-theft. Good cond, 'til c lean. Req . n FordGalaxie 500 1963, 4/20/1 5. $19 , 900. 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 541-390-1122 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 1996 Seaswirl 20.1 skslra@msn.com 1/5th interest in 1973 radio (orig),541 -419-4989 Cuddy, 5.0 Volvo, exc cond., full canvas, one Cessna 150 LLC RV owner, $6500 OBO. 150hp conversion, low CONSIGNMENTS 541-410-0755 time on air frame and WANTED engine, hangared in We Do The Work ... Bend. Excellent perYou Keep The Cash! iormance & affordOn-site credit Ford Model A 1930, able flying! $6,500. approval team, 20.5' Seaswirl SpySports Coupe. 541-382-6752 web site presence. der 1989 H.O. 302, R umble seat, H & H We Take Trade-Ins! 285 hrs., exc. cond., r ebuilt engine. W i l l Executive Hangar Free Advertising. stored indoors for at Bend Airport (KBDN) cruise at 55mph. Must BIG COUNTRY RV life $11,900 OBO. 60' wide x 50 ' d eep, see to believe. AbsoBend: 541-330-2495 w/55' wide x 17' high bi- lutely stunning condi541-379-3530 Redmond: fold dr. Natural gas heat, tion! $17,500 541-548-5254 offc, bathroom. Adjacent 541-410-0818 21' Crownline 215 hp to Frontage Rd; great in/outboard e n g i ne visibility for aviation busi- Ford Mustang Coupe 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin ness. Financing avail- 1966, original owner, sleeps 2/ 3 p e ople, V8, automatic, great able. 541-948-2126 or portable toilet, e x c. shape, $9000 OBO. email 1jetjock©q.com cond. Asking $8,000. 530-515-8199 OBO. 541-388-8339 P iper A r cher 1 9 8 0, Springdale 2005 27', 4' based in Madras, alFord Ranchero slide in dining/living area, ways hangared since 1979 sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 new. New annual, auto with 351 Cleveland obo. 541-408-3811 pilot, IFR, one piece modified engine. windshield. Fastest ArLook at: Body is in cher around. 1750 toexcellent condition, Bendhomes.com Boat loader, elec. for tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. $2500 obo. for Complete Listings of pickup canopy, extras, 541-475-6947, ask for 541-420-4677 Area Real Estate for Sale Rob Berg. $450, 541-548-3711 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g r eat cond, well maintained, $9995 obo. 541-350-7755

eee

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

by you, sworn to unwithin four (4) months Reissuance of each der penalty of perjury after the date of first existing permit is for a before a notary public, publication to the un- ten year term and is and state: (a) Your dersigned or they may an administrative actrue name; (b) The be barred. Additional tion only. The existplace. A n y p erson address at which you i nformation may b e ing uses are located may appear at t his will a c c ept fu t u re o btained f ro m th e on lands managed by meeting and discuss m ailings f ro m th e court records, the un- t he Deschutes N a R. Dye, D e ceased. t he p roposed p r o- court and f o rfeiture dersigned or the attional Forest. c ounsel; and (3) A torney. Date first pub- The existing uses are Case No. 13PB0028 grams with the Buds tatement that y o u lished: April 2, 2013. NOTICE TO INTER- get Committee. c onsistent with t h e have an interest in the Marsha J. Venable ESTED P E RSONS. Deschutes N a t ional LEGAL NOTICE seized property. Your Personal NOTICE IS HEREBY Forest Land and ReNOTICE OF PUBLIC deadline for filing the Representative G IVEN that the u n source Management HEARING claim document with c/o Edward P. Fitch dersigned has been Plan, as amended. f orfeiture coun s e l Attorney at Law appointed P e rsonal Pursuant t o This preliminary deciORS n amed below is 2 1 Bryant Emerson & R epresentative. Al l sion memo is subject 77.250, n o tice i s days from the last day Fitch, LLP persons having claims 4hereby to notice, comment, given that a of publication of this PO Box 457 against the Estate are and appeal pursuant public hearing will be required to p r esent held to receive from notice. Where to file Redmond OR 97756 to 36 CFR 215. The a claim and for more them, with vouchers preliminary d ecision any interested perLEGAL NOTICE i nformation: Dai n a attached, to the unm emo will h av e a sons suggestions, adTOINTERESTED Vitolins, Crook County dersigned P e rsonal v ice, objections o r 30-day comment pePERSONS District Attorney OfR epresentative, c / o n od. T h e 30- d a y remonstrance's to the fice, 300 N E T h i rd Stephen M c Dermott Thomas J. Sayeg at period will budget for has been appointed comment Street, Prineville, OR Karnopp Pe t e rsen proposed begin on the date of the Central Oregon 97754. Personal RepresentaLLP, 1201 NW Wall publication of this leForest Protection Dis- Notice of reasons for tive of the estate of S treet, S u it e 3 0 0 , trict. A hearing will be Forfeiture: The prop- Nancy Mc D e rmott, gal n otice i n t he Bend, Oregon 97701, held on Tuesday, April newspaper of record. erty described below deceased, by the Cir- Only those individuwithin f ou r m o nths 2 3, 2 0 13, a t 1: 3 0 was seized for forfeicuit Court, State of after the date of first Oregon, D e schutes als who submit timely P.M., at the Prineville ture because it: (1) publication of this noUnit, 350 1 E 3rd Constitutes the p roC ounty, Case N o . comments will be actice, or the claims may Street, Prineville, OR. ceeds of the violation 13PB0019. A l l p e r- cepted as appellants. b e barred. A l l p e r of the tentasons having claims Your comments will of, solicitation to viosons whose r i ghts Copies t ive budget may be against the estate are be reviewed and adlate, attempt to viomay be affected by dressed i n a Reinspected during norlate, or conspiracy to required to p r esent sponse to Comments the proceedings may mal working hours. them, with vouchers violates, the criminal obtain additional insection in the final deensure the broadattached, to the unlaws of the State of f ormation from t h e To cision memos. Subest range of services Oregon regarding the dersigned attorney for mit your Reissuance records of the court, individuals with dismanufacture, distribu- Personal Representa- of Expired S pecial the Personal Repre- to sentative or the attor- abilities, persons with tion, or possession of tive at 250 NW Frank- U se Permits c o mr e q uiring substances lin Avenue, Suite 402, ments t o neys for the Personal disabilities So m mer special arrangements controlled Oregon 97701, Representative, who (ORS Chapter 475); Bend, should contact and/or (2) Was used within f ou r m o nths Moore, Project Mana re K a rnopp P e - 541-447-5658 at least ager, Post Office Box after t h e d a t e of or intended for use in tersen LLP, 1201 NW 249, Sisters, Oregon two working days in March 19, 2013, the committing or f a ciliWall Street, Suite 300, advance. (541) first publication of this 9 7759; F A X tating the violation of, Bend, Oregon 97701E-ma i l notice, or the claims 5 49-7746. solicitation to violate, 1 957. D ATE D a n d OREGON may be barred. Addi- comments should be attempt to violate, or first published April 2, to DEPARTMENT OF tional information may sent conspiracy to violate 2013. Francis M. Dye, comments-pacificbe obtained from the FORESTRY the criminal laws of Personal Representanorthwest-deschutesDOUG DECKER, the State of Oregon records of the court, sisters ©fs.fed.us. tive. STATE FORESTER regarding the manu- the Personal Repre- Those submitting sentative, or the lawfacture, distribution or LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE electronic comments yer for the Personal p ossession of c o n Notice of Budget must do so only to the NOTICE OF SEIZURE trolled sub s tances Representative, Patri- e-mail address listed Committee Meeting FOR CIVIL cia Heatherman. Pa(ORS Chapter 475). FORFEITURE TO ALL above, must put the tricia Hea t herman, IN THE MATTER OF: A public meeting of POTENTIAL specific project name 250 NW Franklin AvU.S. Currency in the the Budget Commit- CLAIMANTS AND TO in the subject line, and amount of $3,747.00, e nue, S u it e 402 , must either s u bmit tee of the High Desert ALL UNKNOWN Bend, OR 97701. Case No . 1 3 0225 Education Ser v i ce PERSONS READ THIS comments as part of seized 2/11/1 3 from the e-mail message or District, De s c hutes CAREFULLY LEGAL NOTICE Shannon Smith and USDA - Forest Service as an attachment only County, State of OrMelissa Becerra. egon, will be held at If you have any interDeschutes National in one of the following 145 SE Salmon Avest i n t h e se i z ed Forest t hree f o rmats: M i enue., Suite A, Redproperty d e s cribed LEGAL NOTICE Sisters Ranger District crosoft Word, rich text below, you must claim The undersigned has Reissuance of Expired format (rtf), or Adobe mond, Oregon. T he m eeting w i l l t ak e that interest or you will been appointed perSpecial Use Permits Portable D o c ument Format (pdf). For furplace on the 16th day automatically lose that sonal representative Preliminary Decision of April, 2013 at 5:30 interest. If you do not of the Estate of JimMemo ther information about P.M. The purpose of f ile a c laim for t h e mie Ray Venable Dethe comment process the meeting is to reproperty, the property ceased, by the Des- On March 29 , 2 0 13, or a copy of the prec eive t h e bud g e t may be forfeited even chutes County Circuit District Ranger Kristie liminary deci s ion message. A copy of if you are not con- Court of the State of L. Miller signed a pre- memos, please conthe budget document victed of any crime. O regon, deci s ion tact Michael Keown, prob a te liminary may be inspected or To claim an interest, number 1 3 P B0027. memo to authorize the Environmental Coorobtained on or after reissuance of multiple d inator, Sist e r s you must file a written All persons h aving April 17th at 145 SE claim with the forfei- c laims against t h e expired special use Ranger District, Post Office Box 249, SisSalmon Ave., R e d- ture counsel named estate are required to permits for uses lomond, Oregon 97756 below, Th e w r i tten present the same with cated o n Na t i onal ters, Oregon 97759 between the hours of claim must be signed vouchers Forest System land. proper (541) 549-7735. LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C U IT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DES C H UTES PROBATE DEPARTMENT. Estate of Lee

8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. This is a public meeting where deliberation of the Budget Committee will t ake


To PLAGE AN AD GALL CLAsslFIED i

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2013: flt fl fjLflNCE:Presenting our 2013 calendar at a glance with all of our scheduled specialty publications. You'll also receive grocery inserts every Tuesday; our arts and entertainment section, GO! Magazine, every Friday; and look for a wide variety of shopping inserts every Saturday and Sunday. You'll also enjoy the national magazine, PARADE, which highlights the world of entertainment, games and comics every Sunday. •

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*

2013:SPECIALPUBLICATIONSBVMO NTII

*PUBLICA TIONDATESARESUBJECTTO CHANGE.

January

March (cont.)

May (cont.)

July

August (cont.)

November

• 9 Book of Love • 12 Picture Your Home • 31 Ageless

• 29 Sisters Magazine

• 13 High Desert PULSE • U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle • 18 Ageless • 24 Sisters Magazine

• 13 Picture Your Home Cascade Cycling Classic • U Magazine • 17 Tour of Homes™ • 24 Deschutes County Fair Guide • 27 Ageless

• 23 Sisters Magazine • 28 Redmond Magazine

• • • • •

February • • • •

6 Baby Book 9 Picture Your Home 11 High Desert PULSE 16 U Magazine

March • • • •

2 Central Oregon Living 4 C.O. Sportsmen's Show 9 Picture Your Home 16 Ageless

April • • • • •

6 U Magazine 12 Summer Youth Directory 13 Picture Your Home 17 Redmond Magazine 27 Home and Garden Show Guide • (TBA) 110 Ways to Discover Central Oregon

June

• 1 U Magazine 5 Deschutes County Fair Premium Book • 8 Picture Your Home • 12 Graduation 2013 May • 19 Redmond Magazine • 11 Picture Your Home • 12 Central Oregon Golf Preview • 28 Sisters Magazine • 29 Central Oregon Living

August 9 Bend Brewfest Guide • 10 Picture Your Home • 12 High Desert PULSE 14 School Directory • 20 Remodeling, Design If Outdoor Living Show™

September • 7 U Magazine • 14 Picture Your Home • 21 Ageless

October • • • • •

5 Central Oregon Living 12 Picture Your Home 19 U Magazine 25 The Nature of Words (TBA) 110 Ways to Discover Central Oregon

9 Picture Your Home 11 High Desert PULSE 13 Redmond Magazine 15 Sisters Magazine 16 Ageless

December • 7 Central Oregon Living • 14 Picture Your Home • 25 ConnectIons

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