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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 2021)
The BulleTin • Friday, January 15, 2021 B5 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY SATURDAY TONIGHT HIGH 50° LOW 28° Cloudy Mostly cloudy ALMANAC MONDAY 51° 28° 49° 33° Partly cloudy TUESDAY 45° 25° Partly sunny TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 58° 41° 59° in 1986 45° 25° -13° in 1916 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.80" in 1906 Month to date (normal) 0.21" (0.79") Year to date (normal) 0.21" (0.79") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.41" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Sat. Sun 7:37am/4:53pm 7:36am/4:54pm Moon 9:38am/7:48pm 10:06am/8:56pm Mercury 8:35am/6:09pm 8:35am/6:14pm Venus 6:36am/3:29pm 6:37am/3:30pm Mars 11:33am/1:30am 11:30am/1:29am Jupiter 8:13am/5:43pm 8:10am/5:40pm Saturn 8:04am/5:29pm 8:01am/5:25pm Uranus 11:48am/1:41am 11:44am/1:37am First Full Last New Jan 20 Jan 28 Feb 4 Feb 11 Tonight's sky: Due south, the Winter Circle is in good view by around nightfall and fi lls almost an entire quadrant of the sky. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 0 1 1 0 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. ROAD CONDITONS For web cameras of our passes, go to www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Partly to mostly cloudy Friday, then clearing later Friday night. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Morning rain and snow showers, then mostly cloudy later. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Morning rain and snow showers; otherwise, mostly cloudy. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: A shower in places in the morning; otherwise mostly cloudy. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Mostly cloudy Fri- day with a few rain and snow showers. Partial clearing at night. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: A morning shower, then partly to mostly cloudy Friday. SKI REPORT 46° 25° NATIONAL Astoria 52/38 Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 57/40/0.00 52/38/c 51/43/c La Grande 42/27/0.01 42/27/c 41/30/pc Portland 55/38/0.00 53/37/c 50/39/c Baker City 44/24/0.00 37/21/sh 40/26/pc La Pine 53/24/0.00 48/27/c 47/29/c Prineville 55/28/0.00 51/29/c 47/33/pc Brookings 61/44/Tr 56/44/c 56/46/c Medford 59/36/0.00 54/37/c 54/37/c Redmond 58/23/0.00 52/31/c 52/34/c Burns 46/23/0.00 42/20/c 41/24/pc Newport 61/45/0.00 53/41/r 52/43/c Roseburg 60/41/0.00 56/43/r 52/40/c Salem 53/37/0.00 53/38/c 48/40/c Eugene 54/37/0.00 55/40/c 50/40/c North Bend 61/46/0.00 55/44/c 55/44/c Klamath Falls 52/27/0.00 48/28/c 48/28/pc Ontario 46/30/0.00 37/25/c 39/30/s Sisters 51/24/0.00 51/29/c 50/33/c Lakeview 51/23/0.00 49/23/c 48/23/c Pendleton 50/33/0.00 41/31/c 41/31/pc The Dalles 51/33/0.00 51/35/sh 44/36/c Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday NATIONAL WEATHER -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s Base 45-45 47-48 38-48 67-68 76-119 13-42 88-88 36-75 23-35 27-40 36-60 24-27 41-48 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL | OREGON DUCKS No. 10 Oregon falls to No. 11 Arizona, loses 3rd of last 4 BY RYAN THORBURN The (Eugene) Register-Guard The three-time defend- ing Pac-12 champion Ducks clinched the first two titles of their current reign in Tucson, Ariz. There wasn’t much for birthday boy and Oregon coach Kelly Graves to celebrate this time. The No. 10 Oregon women’s basketball team was drubbed 57-41 by No. 11 Arizona on Thursday at McKale Arena. The Ducks (9-3, 7-3 Pac-12) have dropped three of their last four games, all to ranked teams, after shooting 32.6% (15-for- 46) from the field and commit- ting 23 turnovers. Oregon was averaging 83.2 points, 11 turnovers and lead- ing the Pac-12 in field-goal percentage (48.6%) entering the game. “I’m an offensive coach and I don’t think I’ve had a team that looked that undisciplined or scared ever,” said Graves, who turned 58 on Thursday. “Maybe community college. But my community college team could put up 41.” Nyara Sabally led Ore- Pac-12 Continued from B3 Consider: • The 11-year lease on the downtown-San Francisco head- quarters will end up costing the conference $90 million in rent when it expires in 2022. The Pac-12 could have bought a plot of land and built its very own high-rise building for that cost. Maybe even turned the thing into a moneymaker by leasing space to some other entity. • Conference commissioner Larry Scott double dips with his salary, collecting $5.4 mil- lion annually for himself. The big boss should have worked for about half that. Also, he shouldn’t have been whisking around on chartered jets for the last decade or throwing lavish gon with 15 points on 6-for-9 shooting and seven rebounds. The sophomore forward also had six turnovers, a block and a steal in 23 minutes. True freshman forward Syd- ney Parrish was the team’s sec- ond-leading scorer with seven points on 2-for-8 shooting. Oregon only scored five points in the third quarter and 19 points in the second half. The Ducks made their last five shots, including a Tay- lor Chavez 3-pointer, after the game was decided. “We’re too good to have that right now,” Graves said of the sloppy performance. “I just think we play really well as frontrunners, but when things get tough and teams get phys- ical against us we have not shown we can respond.” One bit of positive news was the return of Sedona Prince from a leg injury. The redshirt sophomore forward scored only one point and grabbed five rebounds in 14 minutes. “I’m just glad she got her feet wet,” Graves said. “She hasn’t even practiced. We threw her out there after maybe 10 min- utes of practice.” Rose Bowl parties. Don’t think that the athletic directors in the conference would have liked to split those wasted tens of mil- lions among themselves. • The Pac-12 Network was an ambitious swing. It’s been terrific for women’s basketball, the Olympic sports, and it hired some gifted people out of the gates. It had big ideas. But it now looks as vibrant as Block- buster Video. It became an easy target, too, for Scott, when he was asked by his bosses months ago to keep the expenses down. Instead of addressing the costly office space or his own bloated salary, the commissioner tar- geted the network and fur- loughed or laid off a line of peo- ple who were once sold on the notion that the network was a big part of the Pac-12’s future. Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 59/39/0.00 Akron 46/36/0.01 Albany 34/28/0.00 Albuquerque 56/39/0.00 Anchorage 29/20/0.01 Atlanta 57/30/0.00 Atlantic City 50/28/0.00 Austin 71/34/0.00 Baltimore 55/27/0.00 Billings 39/31/0.00 Birmingham 58/27/0.00 Bismarck 36/32/0.03 Boise 47/28/0.00 Boston 39/31/0.10 Bridgeport, CT 46/33/0.00 Buffalo 39/35/0.00 Burlington, VT 37/33/0.00 Caribou, ME 33/26/Tr Charleston, SC 60/36/0.09 Charlotte 51/37/0.00 Chattanooga 54/27/0.00 Cheyenne 28/21/Tr Chicago 40/32/0.09 Cincinnati 50/29/0.00 Cleveland 46/37/0.01 Colorado Springs 39/29/0.00 Columbia, MO 47/38/0.06 Columbia, SC 58/31/Tr Columbus, GA 60/29/0.00 Columbus, OH 46/33/0.00 Concord, NH 37/23/0.00 Corpus Christi 80/39/0.00 Dallas 64/36/0.00 Dayton 48/33/0.00 Denver 38/30/0.00 Des Moines 38/33/0.08 Detroit 43/34/Tr Duluth 33/24/0.03 El Paso 69/28/0.00 Fairbanks -1/-13/0.00 Fargo 36/34/0.13 Flagstaff 55/20/Tr Grand Rapids 41/29/0.02 Green Bay 39/19/Tr Greensboro 54/36/0.00 Harrisburg 51/32/0.00 Hartford, CT 38/30/0.02 Helena 39/30/0.00 Honolulu 82/70/0.09 Houston 71/39/0.00 Huntsville 56/27/0.00 Indianapolis 46/31/0.00 Jackson, MS 65/32/0.00 Jacksonville 61/35/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 56/30/s 40/29/sn 38/35/pc 51/28/s 31/23/c 52/33/pc 51/42/pc 61/33/s 50/37/c 46/35/pc 52/33/pc 29/16/c 39/27/c 42/38/pc 42/40/pc 43/34/c 38/32/c 31/17/c 61/37/r 50/32/pc 50/34/pc 41/29/s 38/30/sf 40/30/c 40/30/sn 44/26/s 34/29/sn 53/33/c 56/34/pc 40/29/c 39/32/c 65/33/s 55/33/s 39/30/sn 45/29/s 34/23/sn 39/27/sn 34/22/sn 60/30/s 7/-6/pc 26/16/sn 55/23/s 37/30/sf 36/33/sf 47/31/sh 47/37/c 41/36/c 39/30/pc 83/71/pc 61/35/s 49/32/pc 38/28/sf 53/33/s 65/38/c Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 38/30/pc 52/45/sh 76/63/s 68/43/pc 89/70/pc 38/11/pc 64/56/t 32/24/sf 69/47/sh 33/21/sf 78/71/c 84/59/s 66/51/s 41/25/pc 81/62/t 46/43/c 38/32/pc 41/26/c 76/61/t 67/59/pc 42/34/r 54/41/pc 77/58/t 76/69/c 58/40/s 40/32/pc 46/23/s 84/75/sh Saturday Hi/Lo/W 60/34/s 36/31/sf 40/32/c 53/28/pc 32/27/sf 43/29/pc 50/35/c 63/34/s 46/32/c 44/28/pc 45/30/s 38/26/c 41/28/s 49/35/r 48/34/r 37/32/sf 38/32/sn 31/29/sn 52/30/s 46/28/pc 41/31/pc 37/22/c 38/28/c 36/31/c 36/32/sf 44/20/c 34/26/c 47/28/s 48/28/s 36/31/sf 44/32/r 67/46/s 56/39/s 35/31/c 42/21/c 28/23/c 37/31/c 27/18/c 63/31/pc 4/-4/pc 22/18/c 50/19/s 37/31/sn 35/25/c 43/28/pc 44/33/c 47/32/r 40/27/pc 83/68/pc 61/34/s 41/30/pc 34/29/c 50/32/s 56/30/s City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 42/37/0.33 47/43/0.01 41/30/0.04 68/42/0.00 53/30/0.00 44/40/Tr 61/36/0.00 83/50/0.00 54/33/0.00 35/25/0.05 56/41/0.00 70/59/0.49 39/29/0.02 35/30/0.18 58/30/0.00 71/38/0.00 49/38/0.00 50/33/0.00 55/35/0.00 54/33/0.00 39/35/0.09 64/48/Tr 89/50/0.00 41/31/0.09 52/30/0.00 72/42/0.00 45/34/Tr 37/25/0.00 45/32/Tr 55/41/0.00 38/32/Tr 59/28/0.00 57/32/0.00 39/33/0.00 58/41/0.00 49/38/0.11 43/23/0.00 74/35/0.00 81/48/0.00 67/50/0.00 71/45/0.00 53/33/0.00 60/36/0.02 58/39/0.00 37/34/0.33 38/27/0.00 47/37/0.08 68/51/0.01 74/39/0.00 56/38/0.00 56/31/0.00 53/37/0.00 50/31/0.00 81/49/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 43/39/r 33/26/sn 37/27/sf 68/46/s 42/30/pc 32/23/sn 47/31/s 87/58/s 43/32/pc 34/28/sf 47/32/pc 74/62/c 37/31/sf 36/24/sn 47/33/pc 60/40/s 46/43/c 46/43/c 57/42/pc 47/26/pc 30/23/sn 73/49/pc 87/57/s 35/28/sf 51/41/pc 76/46/s 43/28/sn 38/34/pc 43/37/c 55/34/r 37/20/pc 62/30/pc 54/35/sh 43/33/sh 64/43/pc 37/32/sn 44/27/pc 61/35/s 83/52/s 63/50/pc 69/46/pc 47/23/s 60/37/sh 52/38/c 30/21/sn 36/29/i 34/26/sn 70/55/pc 74/42/s 46/28/pc 51/38/pc 42/25/pc 45/27/c 79/47/s Saturday Hi/Lo/W 43/38/r 37/26/c 35/30/sf 70/43/s 36/31/sf 37/26/pc 47/31/s 85/56/s 38/32/c 34/25/c 45/31/s 72/50/c 38/29/sf 28/19/c 40/34/c 56/36/s 48/35/r 48/33/r 50/35/pc 49/34/pc 32/25/c 62/39/s 86/54/s 35/25/sf 46/33/c 76/45/s 35/30/sf 43/32/r 50/33/r 46/29/pc 42/25/c 55/30/s 46/32/pc 36/31/sf 67/40/pc 37/30/sf 41/25/pc 65/39/s 82/52/s 62/49/pc 69/44/pc 49/21/pc 53/30/s 47/42/c 29/25/c 38/32/c 37/25/pc 63/48/s 76/42/s 46/32/pc 45/33/c 45/29/pc 41/32/pc 82/49/s 87/65/0.00 75/45/0.02 36/32/0.08 7/5/0.52 79/57/0.00 77/70/0.07 65/44/0.00 55/32/0.00 21/15/0.11 32/30/0.02 52/46/0.29 84/75/0.01 57/34/0.00 86/54/0.00 81/70/0.32 34/25/0.06 45/19/0.00 64/42/0.00 82/73/0.00 27/24/0.32 92/72/0.10 72/46/0.00 64/57/1.28 57/39/0.00 41/32/0.00 48/36/0.00 34/31/0.07 30/29/0.22 84/67/pc 70/51/pc 33/29/pc 4/3/pc 80/58/s 78/69/sh 66/43/pc 59/39/s 18/13/s 34/29/c 37/29/pc 85/76/t 50/35/pc 87/55/pc 80/67/t 32/27/c 50/16/c 66/37/pc 85/76/c 20/17/c 83/64/pc 77/60/s 66/46/t 48/42/c 39/32/r 48/39/s 33/25/sf 24/13/sf 84/69/pc 70/49/t 35/32/sn 7/-3/sf 80/60/t 77/62/c 66/45/pc 58/35/sh 19/12/s 33/28/sn 35/34/r 86/75/pc 48/27/pc 85/56/pc 81/69/t 33/12/sn 29/11/s 46/33/c 85/77/c 27/19/pc 75/61/s 67/53/sh 65/50/s 66/42/s 37/30/sf 46/40/c 27/22/sf 27/1/sf INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 91° at Camarillo, CA National low: -19° at Daniel, WY Precipitation: 0.32" at Marshall, MN T-storms Cloudy TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla Seaside Hood 42/27 52/36 River Rufus Hermiston Cannon Beach 42/28 48/31 Arlington Hillsboro Portland 51/35 Meacham Lostine 53/37 54/35 53/37 39/23 Wasco 47/33 43/28 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Partly to Tillamook 42/28 48/30 41/31 Sandy 51/35 McMinnville 54/36 mostly cloudy Friday Joseph Heppner La Grande 51/39 Maupin Government 53/37 with a light shower or 42/27 39/23 Camp 49/29 Condon 39/28 Union Lincoln City two in the afternoon. 44/29 49/34 40/27 Salem 53/40 Spray Clearing Friday night. Granite Warm Springs 53/38 Madras 46/30 Albany 36/16 Newport Baker City 48/30 51/30 Mitchell 53/41 55/40 37/21 WEST: Morning rain in Camp Sherman 48/27 Redmond Corvallis John Unity the Northwest Friday, Yachats 51/29 52/31 55/40 Day Prineville 39/17 while the Southwest is 53/41 Ontario Sisters 51/29 Paulina 44/24 37/25 mostly cloudy. Clear- Florence Eugene 51/29 44/24 Brothers Bend Vale ing Friday night. 55/42 55/40 47/27 Sunriver 50/28 35/23 Nyssa 49/27 Hampton Cottage La Pine 36/23 Juntura Oakridge Grove 48/27 46/26 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 40/23 54/37 56/42 Fort Rock 55/43 Riley 42/20 YESTERDAY Crescent 49/26 44/18 High: 62° 48/26 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Florence Beaver Frenchglen Silver 55/43 56/43 48/26 44/24 Low: 18° Marsh Lake 48/25 Port Orford 47/24 50/26 at Rome Grants Burns Junction Paisley 57/45 Pass 46/21 Chiloquin 48/22 58/41 Rome Medford 50/25 Gold Beach 54/37 46/22 59/46 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 50/26 54/37 48/28 46/24 56/44 49/23 -10s 44° 26° Intervals of clouds and sunshine Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. EAST: Morning sun- shine, then becoming partly to mostly cloudy Friday afternoon. Clearing Friday night. THURSDAY 45° 28° Intervals of clouds and sunshine Mostly sunny In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Anthony Lakes Mtn 0 Hoodoo Ski Area 0 Mt. Ashland 0 Mt. Bachelor 0 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 Willamette Pass 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 Squaw Valley, CA 0 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Sun Valley, ID 2 WEDNESDAY OREGON WEATHER Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low SUNDAY Aari McDonald scored 16 points to lead the Wildcats (9- 2, 7-2), who snapped their 10- game losing streak to Oregon. Arizona, which was only 34.6% from the field (18-for- 52), finished with 26 points off turnovers. “We defended well enough to win this game,” Graves lamented. The Ducks trailed 14-2 at the first media timeout after start- ing 1-for-7 from the field and committing four turnovers. Oregon committed a sea- son-high 23 turnovers overall. True freshmen forwards Kylee Watson and Angela Dugalic missed open layups during an 11-0 run by Arizona. Parrish ended an Oregon scoring drought of 6:05 with two free throws and banked in a 3-pointer for the visitors’ first field goal in 7:26 to make the score 18-7. A 3-pointer by Trinity Bap- tiste, who finished with 14 points, with seven seconds left in the first quarter extended the Wildcats’ lead to 22-7. The Ducks were 2-for-12 from the field and committed six turnovers in the first quarter. The SEC and Big Ten pro- grams haven’t accidentally risen to the top of college football. Each of them has had a stagger- ing financial advantage over the Pac-12 members. In the last six years, for example, the average SEC athletic department has re- ceived $65 million more from its conference than the average Pac-12 program. That’s not just because of more lucrative media rights deals, but also because the SEC headquarters costs far less in rent than the Pac-12 headquarters and the commis- sioner, Greg Sankey, doesn’t command a ransom. He’s pass- ing the dollars to his members. $65 million over the last six years?!?! You could hire and retain better with money like that. Also, increase the recruiting Sabally scored Oregon’s first six points in the second quarter and assisted on a 3-pointer by Jaz Shelley that cut the deficit to 26-18 with 5:20 remaining in the half. McDonald scored eight points down the second-quar- ter stretch, including a layup with three seconds left, to give Arizona a 36-22 advantage at the intermission. Graves was hit with a tech- nical in the final minute after Oregon’s first-half turnover total climbed to 13. The Wild- cats scored 16 points off the miscues. “We lost our composure, including the coach, there at the end,” Graves said. “That (technical) was more to fire my team up than (directed) at the officials.” Oregon’s game Sunday at Arizona State has been post- poned due to the Sun Devils’ COVID-19 issues. The Ducks are scheduled to host No. 25 Washington State on Jan. 22. “If we play like this, we’re not going to win another game all year,” Graves said. “That’s the honest truth.” footprint. Also, provide better nutrition, training, and ameni- ties for athletes. You could pay for opponents to come to your stadium instead of playing on the road, too. There isn’t a Pac-12 univer- sity that wouldn’t salivate today at the notion of investing the bulk of that $65 million back into football and men’s bas- ketball, where it could reap a greater financial benefit. Texas stole a prized special teams coordinator from Ala- bama Thursday. The lucky guy will make $1 million a year to do the job. Meanwhile, at Ore- gon, Bobby Williams will do the same job for $350,000. And at Washington, Bob Gregory will do it for $575,000 a year. And we wonder why the Pac-12 is left out. 37/34/0.00 55/46/0.03 75/64/0.00 68/52/0.04 86/63/0.00 41/24/0.00 62/57/0.81 35/31/0.02 70/39/0.00 36/30/0.19 81/66/0.00 81/57/0.00 68/57/0.00 36/28/0.00 79/70/0.10 46/44/0.16 37/34/0.23 43/36/0.55 75/61/0.59 68/51/0.00 43/39/0.05 54/48/0.31 75/59/0.35 76/67/0.00 55/44/0.00 43/42/1.34 37/14/0.00 88/75/0.00 34/30/r 48/38/sh 77/63/pc 69/45/s 90/71/pc 34/11/pc 64/57/t 30/23/pc 70/46/c 30/21/pc 78/62/t 83/60/s 67/51/s 37/24/pc 78/60/pc 47/36/sh 46/35/r 34/29/pc 82/61/t 69/57/s 43/36/sh 53/42/s 77/57/t 77/69/c 56/39/s 44/37/r 50/23/s 83/74/c Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw C LASSIFIEDS The Bulletin Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com General Merchandise 213 Furniture & Appliances Stay in your home longer with an American Standard Walk-In Bathtub. 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