Bulletin Daily Paper 04-01-15

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1

WEDNESDAY April1,2015

near s ar 6 IS Ill

Pus:Whaewatching

OUTDOORS • D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD BreakfaSt habitS —When it comes to syrup, Americans prefer the fake stuff — even though more maplesyrup is made here thanever before. A3

Budget Double the people, but not from births: has schoos POPULATION FORECAST

preparing

for cuts By Abby Spegman The Bulletin

The Oregon House of Representatives on Tues•

(In 2015:214,547)

s deaths begin to outnumber births in about 15 years, new arrivals will push the combined population of Central Oregon to an estimated 416,764 people by 2065, according to estimates by Portland State University's Population Research

Jacody Ellsdury — The

Center. The Oregon Population Forecast Program released proposed projections Tuesday for 10 counties and their respective cities for review. State lawgives PSU the task of providingpopulation forecasts that local and state government officials, planners and developers use in their projections. The estimates also help determine

urban growthboundaries. Members of the public or government officials may contest the PSU forecasts untilM ay 15.ThefinalforecastsarescheduledforreleaseJune30.

in greater Bend, increasingthe cityby an estimated 127percent over today's population. Men and womenborn

in 2012 when she came

across something startling: a federal epidemiol-

2050

50-YEAR POPULATIONGROWTH

304,012

50-54 in 2065 — will

200,000

figure would likely mean cuts, according to Superintendent Ron Wilkinson.

The district will open a middle school and an elementary school in Bend

2 015 2020

kindergarten, a move districts across the state must make. "I would say that it's not

adequate for us to cover the cost of adding full-day kindergarten and opening our two new schools next year," Wilkinson said, noting most of the district's

budget goes to personnel come from there. See Schools/A5

POPULATIONGROWTHBEGINS TO SLOW 2 02 5 2 0 3 0 2 0 3 5 2 0 4 0 2 0 4 5 2 0 5 0 2 0 5 5 2 0 6 0 2 0 6 5

State DOJ

areprojected to start

NETMIGRATION 9,871 15,864 18,807 19,729 19,777 20,894 20,935 21,850 22,384 22,675 22,942

wi review jai death

outnumberingbirths, a trend that will continue

N AT. INCREASE 1,685 1,1 60 6 06

By Claire Withycombe

MOYING INAND PASSING ON Net migration versus "natural increase," i.e., births and deaths

population increases after 2030, when deaths

-101

-721

-1,168 -1,303 -1,529 -1,663 -1,902 -2,105

The Bulletin

and increase through 2065.

NEGATIVEMEANS MOREPEOPLEARE DYING THAN BEING BORN

berculosis outbreak in the Jacksonville area. Singer promptly began pursuing the story.

• Jefferson County's growth rateshould peak at1.2 percent in 2025and fallgradually to 0.6percentby2045, accordingto the forecast. The population in 2065 will reach an estimated

But when she started

33,779. The average annual birth rate is expected

seeking official comment

to stay flat atbetween 311and 339 for 50 years.

From 2030, all new population growth in Deschutes County is expected to bedue to newarrivals. 35,000 30,000

outbreak, the doors began closing. County health offici alsreferred hertothe

• Crook County's annual growth rate will peak at about 0.7 percent in 2030,whenthe population is projected to be 23,222. By 2065, an

state health department. State officials referred

expected 25,640 will call Crook County home.

her to the federal Centers for Disease Control and

between 2020 and 2040, at 170 to 175 average births annually. PSU predicts that a slow dedine will startin 2045, withthe average birth rate

The annual birth rate is projected to remain flat

2065 33,779

• CROOK

2065 25,640 2025

The death of Edwin

Burl Mays, who died of a methamphetamine 14, will be under review,

25,000

2015

to review the December death of an inmate in the

overdose in the jail Dec.

2015:21,135

20,000

The Oregon Department of Justice has agreed Deschutes County jail.

• JEFFERSON 2015:22,806

about the little-reported

Even though the CDC's

In Bend-La Pine Schools, the state's $7.255 billion

costs and cuts would likely

300,000

2015 170,606

formthe largest age group. • Annual average population growth in Deschutes County will peak at 2.3 percent in

ogist's report about a tu-

Prevention.

2065 357,345

BREAKS

2020 190,734

year — who will be ages

all Deschutes County

perusing a medical journal

DESCHUTESCOUNTY 300,000

between2011and this

The Washington Post

Stacey Singer, a health

400,000

with 194,793 of them

By Paul Farhi

actually are."

and switch to full-day

Portland State University's Oregon Population Forecast Program projects the following population growth, in five-year intervals, starting with the region's largest county:

• Deschutes County about 357,345 people,

reporter for the Palm Beach Post in Florida, was

to see where the priorities

Total population, 2065: DESCHUTES: 357,345 JEFFERSON: 33,779 CROOK: 25,640

How we'll Iet there

in 2065 will be home to

2020and taper offto 1percent in 2065. New arrivals will account for

Boards Association. "We

in the 2015-16 school year

related material:

Journa ists: Obama openness promise is unfufi ed

is not enough to cover the cost of adding full-day kindergarten without making cuts elsewhere. "This plan is a step backwards," said Betsy Miller-Jones, executive director of the Oregon School say education is a priority, but you look to a budget

COUNTY BREAKOOWN

According to the PSU

proposed forecasts and

EDITOR'5CHOICE

local school leaders say it

416,764

By Joseph DitzlereThe Bulletin

advocates sayyoushould be able to see your own. A5

"Aging out" of foster care: Kids used to get the boot whenthey turned18. Not anymore. bentibulletin.com/extras

day passed a two-year, $7.3 billion K-12 budget, but

of the three counties, 50 years from now:

Medical records — Some

And a Wed exclusive-

Projected population

Fish oil —It'sthe mostpopular supplement after vitamins and minerals — but studies show it does little, if any, good.A3

Yankees outfielder and Madras native is back onhis feet. C1

2035

2045

2055

2065

a Justice Department

spokeswoman said Tuesday. Deschutes County District Attorney John

Hummel asked the Oregon 2065:Net migration vs. natural increase • JEFFER SON:382/-113 • CROOK :1,567/-1,420

Department of Justice last

Note: Figuresarecalculatedrn five-year intervals. Source: pSU Oregonpopulation Forecast program

week to investigate Mays' death, seeking an "inde-

reaching 138 annually in 2065.

own expert had written the investigative report,

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

the agency's press office

• For more, visit the Oregon Population Forecast Program website, www.pdx.edu/prc/opfp

David Wray/The Bulletin

pendent review," he said. SeeDeath /A4

declined to let Singer

speak with him. A spokesman told her it was a local matter and sent her back to the state office in

Tallahassee. Through public records requests, Singer eventually was able to piece together the story of a contagion that had caused 13 deaths

and 99 illnesses — the worst the CDC had found

in 20 years. "It's really expensive to fight this hard" for public information, said Singer,

Indiana and the defining divisions inAmerican politics By Dan Balz

sues certainly differentiate Re-

The Washington Post

equality will dominate the 2016 of long-standing tensions in campaign, a country undergoing rapid WASHINGTON — The ANALYSIS the firestorm changes. The dashbetween controversy over Indiana's reover Indiana defenders of religious liberty ligious freedom law highlights is a reminder of the underlying and opponents of discriminathe most fundamental divisions power of values and social istion on the basis of sexual orithat now define American pol- sues to shape political identity. entation highlights the chasm

publicans from Democrats, but the most passionate arguments

itics. For all the recent talk that

foreign policy or income in-

The debate over the Indiana

law is the latest manifestation

within the population. Eco-

nomic and national security is-

now often grow out of the rapid shifts in cultural attitudes and

the dramatic redrawing of the face of an increasingly diverse America. On one side are those who

hail those changes as evidence of progress inbreaking down barriers andproducing amore open society. On the other are

those who are fearful about the impact of those changes on their own freedoms and on the

values of faith and family. SeeIndiana/A4

now an editorial writer at the newspaper, who sus-

pects that officials were slow to respond because news of the outbreak might

have harmed Florida's tourism industry. SeeOpenness/A4

TODAY'S WEATHER Rain or snow High 45, Low23 Psge B6

INDEX Business C5-6 Comics/Puz zles E3-4 Horoscope D 5 outdoors D1-6 C1-4 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B 1-6 Sports Classified Ef - 6 D ear Abby D5 Ob i tuaries B5 TV / Movies D5

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 113, No. 91,

30 pages, 5 sections

Q We use recycled newsprint

': IIIII I o

8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

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8 0 IB OFSB BIl FBIllBll IlllC Bcll' 8 sue," said Marie Harf, a State lay the foundation for a more Department spokeswoman.

By Michael R. Gordon and David E. Sanger

tiate as a first step is intended to

New York Times News Service

detailed accord that would be

But the talks have also been

LAUSANNE, S w itzerland — The United States and its

leshedoutbytheend ofJune. f

burdened by clashing negotiating strategies.

The nations involved in the negotiating partners on Tues- talks with I ran are Britain, day extended their deadline for China, France, Germany, Rusreaching a preliminary accord sia and the United States. with Iran on its nuclear proThere have been signs that

gram until today.

some of the most difficult issues will be deferred for a final

But that one-day extension came with a W h i t e H ouse agreement in three months. warning that the Obama adBut even getting that pre-

ministration was prepared to step back from its diplomat-

hard. The thorny issues have

included disputes over what the initial accord could not be limits would be placed on the reached. development of new types of "I actually would say that if centrifuges to enrich uraniwe're not able to reach a polit- um and the pace for removing ical agreement in the timeline sanctlons. that we've described that we And on Monday theState would walk away from the ne- Department a cknowledged gotiating table," Josh Earnest, the White House spokesman, The Obama administration

Dtseuiesrs

liminary accord has been

ic efforts if it conduded that

said Tuesday. Si sil.AvL

Marathan bembiug trial —Lawyersfor BostonMarathon

The Obama administration

wants to nail down specific limits on Iran's nuclear pro-

gram as soon as possible so that it can better resist moves

in Congress to impose additional sanctions. It also wants any sanctions relief to be gradual to ensure

that it does not come before Iran meets its obligations unAs the day dragged on, however,a European official said that the talks were difficult.

By early evening, the 'IIIesday deadline hadbeen extended. U.S. officials said that no ul-

timatums had been issued. But

position of Iran's large stockpile of nuclear fuel — also re-

with lawmakers set to return in

has approached the talks as a two-phaseprocess.Thepreliminary accord it is trying to nego- Iranians on the stockpile is-

mid-April after a congressional recess, Earnest signaled that there was only so long that the White House was prepared to wait.

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........54f-383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................54f-383-0356

NIGERIA ELECTSA NEW PRESIDENT

DEPARTMENT HEADS HumanResources Traci Donaca .....................

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duced President BarackObama's blueprint for cutting greenhouse gas emissions in the United States by nearly a third over the next decade. Obama'snewblueprint brings together several domestic initiatives that were already in the works, including freezing construction of new coal-fired power plants, increasing the fuel economyof vehicles and plugging methane leaks from oil andgas production. But the plan's reliance onexecutive authority is an acknowledgment that any proposal to pass climate changelegislation would be blocked by the Republican-controlled Congress. LOttery priVatiZatiOn —WhenChris Christie privatized the management of NewJersey's lottery two years ago, hesaid its new overseers would "modernize andmaximize" the games. Instead, alottery once rankedamong the nation's top performers is now lagging for the second straight year, trailing its state incometargets by $64 million seven months into the current fiscal year. Meanwhile, the company running it has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to hire lobbyists and a public relations firm with close ties to the governor.

Egypt armS —Seeking to repair relations with a longtime ally at a time of spreading war in the MiddleEast, President BarackObamaon Tuesday lifted anarms freezeagainst Egypt that he first imposed after the military overthrow of the country's democratically elected government nearly two yearsago. Obamacleared thewayfor the delivery of F-16 aircraft, Harpoon missiles andM1A1Abrams tanks. In atelephone call, Obamaassured President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi of Egypt that he will support the full $1.3 billion in annual military assistance the Cairo government traditionally receives, even asothers seek tocut it.

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Climate Change plan —TheWhite Houseon Tuesdayintro-

Clihteu emellS —The chairman of the Housecommittee investigating the Benghazi attacks askedHillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday to appear for a private interview about her exclusive use of apersonal email account whenshewas secretary of state. Clinton's "email arrangement with herself is highly unusual, if not unprecedented," the committee's chairman, Rep.Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., wrote in aletter to Clinton's lawyer. Theemails were on aserver at her home in Chappaqua, NewYork. Gowdyhad askedClinton to turn over that server to a neutral third party to determine which emails were personal and which were government records.

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CORRECTIONS

Student lOan 'Strike' —Pamela Hunt is so overwhelmed by her $56,000 in student loans for what sheconsiders a worthless criminal justice master's degree that she's joined others on a"debt strike" andrefusingtopaybackthemoney.OnTuesday,shewalkedoutofa meeting with officials from the ConsumerFinancial Protection Bureau and the Education Department sheand other former students from for-profit colleges attended onbehalf of the "Corinthian 100" feeling cautiously optimistic about the burden beingeased. Thegroup's name comes from troubled Corinthian Colleges, Inc., which operated Everest College, HealdCollegeand WyoTechbefore agreeing last summer to sell or close its100-plus campuses. About100 current and former students are refusing to payback their loans, according to the Debt Collective group behind the strike. Theformer students argue that the department should havedone abetter job regulating the schools and informing students that they were under investigation.

der a nuclear accord.

that a key question — the dismained a subject of debate. "The bottom line is that we don't have agreement with the

bomber DzhokharTsarnaevrested their case in his federal death penalty trial Tuesday, aday after they began presenting testimony designed to show his late older brother was themastermind of the 2013 terror attack. Thedefense admitted during opening statements that Tsarnaev participated in the bombings. ButTsarnaev's attorney said he was atroubled19-year-old who had fallen under the influence of his radicalized 26-year-old brother, Tamerlan, who diedafter a shootout with police daysafter the bombings. Prosecutors and Tsarnaev's lawyers will give closing arguments Monday.Thejury is expected to begin deliberations the sameday.

A supporter of opposition candidate Muhammadu Buhari is dressed up in amocking representation of current President Goodluck Jonathan, celebrates an win for his candidate, in Kano, Nigeria, on Tuesday. Amid anger over anIslamic insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives, Nigerians threw out the incumbent and elected a72-year-old former military

dictator Tuesday in ahistoric transfer of power following the nation's most hotly contested election ever. Jonathan concededdefeat to Buhari, paving the way for an unprecedented peaceful transfer of power in Africa's most populous nation — considered a sign of the West African nation's maturing young democracy.

Libya gOVernment —The provisional government set up by the militias controlling the Libyan capital fired its prime minister on Tuesday. His departure removed a potential obstacle to unity talks organized by the United Nations to try to end the fighting that has divided the country. The prime minister, Omar al-Hassi, "is a failure," a spokesman for his government, Jamal Naji Zubia, said Tuesday. A group of14 of al-Hassi's ministers had demanded his exit and threatened to quit if he remained in place, Zubia said. "He is not a decision-maker." — From wire reports

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

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:

4>06<073©O Os(®0 The estimated jackpot is now $25 million.

Lufthansa:Co-pilot disclosedearlier 'severedepression' By DavidMcHughandJoanLowy

questions about how much

does suggest a potential prob-

The Associated Press

Lufthansa and its insurers will

lem with the airline's oversight of this aviator," says Alan Diehl, a former air safety investigator with the NTSB and a

Lufthansa knew that the co-pi-

pay in damages for the passengers who died.

lot of the passenger plane that

It also underlines questions

FRANKFURT, Germany-

crashed in the French Alps last about how thoroughly the week had suffered from an epi- aviation industry and governsode of "severe depression" be-

ment regulators screen pilots

fore he finished his flight training with the German airline. The airline said Tuesday

for psychological problems. German prosecutors say Lubitz received psychotherapy before obtaining his pilot's licenseand thatm edicalrecords

that it has found emails that A ndreas Lubitz sent to t h e Lufthansa flight school in 2009

from that time referred to "sui-

when he resumed his training in Bremen after an interrup-

cidal tendencies." They have given no dates for his treat-

tion of several months.

ment but said visits to doctors

In them, he informed the since then showed no record of school that he had suffered a any suicidal tendencies or ag"previous episode of severe gression against others. depression," which had since They also have found tornsubsided. up sick notes from doctors, The airline said Lubitz sub- including one that would have sequently passed all medical kept Lubitz off work on the checks and that it has provided day of the crash. the documents to prosecutors. The latest disclosure "really It declined to make any further

continue flying on a case-by- pressive episode and the (doccase basis. Alots taking drugs tor's) note was favorable, then such as Prozac, Zoloft, Celexa the FAA would likely clear and Lexapro were allowed to you," he said. Admitting suifly if granted a special medical cidal thoughts would probably former scientist for human certificate. One prerequisite mean a longer period of being performance at th e Federal was the successful treatment grounded, and the pilot's case Aviation Administration. on the medication for at least would probably wind up in the Diehl says the global short- 12 months. hands of the FAA's chief psyage of pilots might be leading Dr. W a r re n S i l b erman, chiatrist in Washington, he to lax hiring standards. Every manager of medical certifica- sald. week, there are nearly 30 new tion for the FAA until the end jets rolling off assembly lines. of 2011, said pilots in the U.S. Each one requires airlines to can fly again even after having hire and train at least 10 to 12 suicidal thoughts. "It really would depend on new pilots. 541-548-2066 "Maybe some ofthese car- what the psychiatrist or psyAdjustablg riers, not just Germanwings, chologist that he saw wrote, Bedsare taking people that they and what his symptoms were," "The minute wouldn't normally take," Diehl Silberman said. says. he declares he is depressed, In the U.S., the Federal Avi- he is grounded. And if he goes ation Administration in 2010 on medication, he's definitely starting allowing some pilots grounded." IIXTTREss who are taking medication for After t reatment, "If you G allery - B e n d mild to moderate depression to were doing better after the de541-3$0-50$4

WILSONSof Redmond

comment.

French authorities say voice recordings indicate Lubitz, 27, locked the other pilot out of

the cockpit and deliberately crashed the Airbus A320 in the French Alps on March 24. All

150 people aboard Flight 9525 from Barcelona to Duesseldorf dled. The disclosure that Lubitz

had told the airline he had sufferedfrom depression before he was hired in September 2013 at Lufthansa's budget arm Germanwings is another

blow to the company's reputation. Lufthansa CEO Carsten Spohr had said that Lubitz

passedalltests and had been pronounced fit to fly. T he r evelation a dd s

to

0

. yofirlrf H pj rI igyg~ g,~I

camps, programs,andactivitiesfor children of allages.

'C®~I~ 5~4<~ 3'®2 ~ @~ ~ To reserve your ad space fn e

Summer Youth Guide f'Dblislfes Friday, APril17 3 15 Adv rlising readlin:. Friday, April, 15

:g'r 'pj~ ;

ATTENTIONCENTRAL OREGON SUMMER CAMPS The Bulletin js in the process of compiling a list of SummerCampsjn Central Oregon. Pleasefill out this form to verify information in order to be COnSidered fOr publiCatiOn in the Summer Youth ACtiVity Guide. Email information to: summercamps@bendbujletjn.com Mgj/ fprm tp. The Bulletin, Attn: Martha ROgerS, PQ. BOX 602P, Bend, OR 97Q2

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Ca m p Host:

mrrrrcocauon: websrte: Phone: Deadline to submit: April 3, 2015

The Bulletin ~


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Wednesday,April1, the 91st day of 2015. Thereare 274 days left in the year.This is April Fools' Day.

HAPPENINGS IF8tl —Nuclear talks go into overtime after negotiators failed to reach anagreement by the Tuesdaydeadline.

HISTORY Highlight:In1945, American forces launched theamphibious invasion of Okinawa during World War II. (U.S. forces succeeded in capturing the Japanese island June22.) In1789, the U.S.Houseof Representatives held its first full meeting in NewYork; Frederick Muhlenberg of Pennsylvania was elected the first House speaker. In1815, Prussian/German statesman Otto von Bismarck was born in Schoenhausen. In1865, during the Civil War, Union forces led byMaj. Gen. Philip Sheridan routed Confederate soldiers under the command of Maj. Gen.George

NUMBERS

mericans vas re er a e ma es ru 0 e uresu Most consumers prefer the name brands, which are mostly corn syrup — probably due to the price.

effect after Jan. 1, 1971.

1.5 "

Actress Jane Powell is 86. Actress Grace LeeWhitney is 85. Actress Debbie Reynolds is 83. Actor Don Hastings is 81. Actress Ali MacGraw is 76. Rhythm-and-blues singer Rudolph Isley is 76. Baseball All-Star Rusty Staub is 71. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito is 65. Singer Susan Boyle is 54. Actor Jose Zuniga is 53. Actress Jessica Collins is 44. Rapper-actor Method Man is 44. Movie directors Albert and Allen Hughes are 43. Political commentator Rachel Maddow is 42. Singer Bijou Phillips is 35. Actor Sam Huntington is 33. — From wire reports

brains, but a small raise for

.

those on the low- or middle-income scale seems to

1.0 a

~

have a disproportionately bigger effect on children's

+I

brain size and scores on

0.5 I•

cognitive tests, according to the study, published on-

~lf

~a 4

0 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

0

2 005 2 010

Neuroscience. "We've known for a long opment, school performance and productivity in

From an online Google Consumer Survey panel of1,000 American adults AUNT JEMIMA

line in the journal Nature time that cognitive devel-

"Which type of pancake syrup do you prefer?"

REAL MAPLESYRUP

c o r relates

with the surface area of children's brains, regardless of genetic ancestry, race and other factors. Not only does Mom and Dad's salary appear to account for variability in surfacearea of children's

• eet'

MRS. BUTTERWORTH'S

adult life can be impacted LOG CABIN

OTHER

11% Source: USDAAgriculturalCensus, Google Consumer Surveys

The Washington Post

by socioeconomic status, but now we're actually seeing it in the brain," said Elizabeth Sowell, a developmental neuroscientist at the Saban Research Institute at Children's Hospital

Los Angeles and lead inBy Christopher Ingraham

asked which they preferred

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON

-

It's

peak sugaring season in

cial stuff — think Aunt Jemima and Mrs. Butterworth's-

BIRTHDAYS

nomic status

Is

ar

States.

people had signed upfor his health care lawandsaid "the debate over repealing this law is over."

A new study suggests that a family's socioeco-

3.5 million gallons

2.0

In1972, the first Major League Baseball players' strike began; it lasted 12 days. In1975,with Khmer Rouge guerrillas closing in, Cambodian President Lon Nol resigned and fled into exile, spending the rest of his life in the United

Obama boasted that 7.1 million

brain?

2.5

much of the Northeast, when

In1984, recording star Marvin Gaye wasshot to death by his father, Marvin GaySr., in Los Angeles, the daybefore his 45th birthday. (The elderGay pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter and received probation.) In1992, the National Hockey League Players' Association went on its first strike, which lasted10 days. Teo yearsego:TheVatican reported that PopeJohn Paul II was near death, his breathing shallow and his heart and kidneys failing. President Bill Clinton's former national security adviser, SandyBerger, pleaded guilty to sneaking classified documents out of the National Archives; hewas later sentenced to two years' probation. Five years ego: RomanCatholic cardinals across Europe used their Holy Thursday sermons to defendPopeBenedict XVI from accusations he'd played a role in covering up sex abuse scandals. Oneyeerego:Mockinghis critics, President Barack

the size and shape of the

3.0

Pickett in the Battle of Five

Forks in Virginia. In1924, Adolf Hitler was sentenced to five years in prison for his role in the BeerHall Putsch in Munich. (Hitler was released in December1924; during his time behind bars, he wrote his autobiographical screed, "Mein Kampf.") In1933, Nazi Germanystaged a daylong national boycott of Jewish-owned businesses. In1954, the United States Air Force Academywas established by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. In1962,the Katherine Anne Porter novel "Ship of Fools," an allegoryabout the rise of Nazism in Germany,was publishedby Little, Brown & Co. In1970, President Richard Nixon signed ameasure banning cigarette advertising on radio and television, to take

ment. But can it also affect

Total U.S. maple syrup production

250 5 0 0 1,000 5,000 10,000

By Geoffrey Mohan Los Angeles Times

the economic pecking order can have a lasting effect on cognitive develop-

Maple syrup production in gallons, 2012

brain? that a person's position in

Where the sap flows 1

buy kids a bigger Research has shown

Real maple syrup can cost five times as much, or more.

0

Can wealth

the country's maple syrup producers tap their trees to collect the sap that flows free-

ly this time of year. It takes about 40 gallons of maple sap — and nothing else — to make one gallon of real maple syrup. By contrast, the artifiis mostly corn syrup. Fake maple syrup resembles real maple syrup about as much as Velveeta resembles a good Camembert. But

when 1,000 Americans were

lecting and reducing all that percent since about 2008. In on their pancakes, the artifi- sap. 2013, the national maple incial brands won out big time. And this process happens d ustry's output wa s w o r th More than 25 percent of re- on a commercial scale only about $132 million. spondents to a Google Con- in the Northeast. Vermont is Some producers are growsumer Survey panel said real the nation's undisputed king, ing creative in their search maple syrup was their top accounting for more than 40 for more revenue. The latest choice. Seventy percent chose percent of the total U.S. out- innovation is a push to sell Aunt Jemima, Mrs. Butter- put of more than 3 million "maple water" — the raw sap, worth's, Log Cabin or Hungry gallons in 2014. Seven of the straight from the tree. ProJack. Another 3 percent chose top 10 maple-producing coun- ducers are marketing it as a something else. ties are in Vermont. There's competitor to coconut water. Here's why: Say you have Looming behind this pref- a surprisingly robust maple erence, of course, is the spec- syrup industry in Ohio, Wis- 40 gallons of maple sap on ter of price. A gallon of Mrs. consin and Michigan, too. hand. You can boil that down B utterworth's w il l s e t y o u (Our annual supply is a frac- to syrup and sell it at retail for back less than $8 at Walmart. tion of the 12 million gallons about $40. Or, you could packA gallon of the real stuff, on churned out in Canada, most- age it in 16-ounce cartons and the other hand, retails for ly in Quebec.) sellthem for$3 each — or a $40 to $60 — owing to the laU.S. maple syrup output yield of $960 in revenue for 40 bor-intensive process of col- has risen by more than 50 gallons.

Fish oil supplement claims not supported by research "There's a major disconnect," gist at the University of Ottawa, Grey said. "The sales are going outlined flaws in much of this Fish oil i s t h e t h ird-most up despite the progressive ac- early research, and he concludwidely used dietary supple- cumulation of trials that show ed that the rate of heart disease ment in the United States, after no effect." among the Inuit was vastly vitamins and minerals, accordIn theory at least, there underestimated. But the halo ing to a recent report from the are good reasons that fish oil effect around fish oils persists. National Institutes of Health. At shouldimprove cardiovascular The case for fish oil was bolleast 10 percent of Americans health. Most fish oil supple- stered by several studies from take fish oil regularly, most be- ments are rich in two omega-3 the 1990s, including an Italian lieving that the omega-3 fatty fatty acids — eicosapentaenoic study that found that heart acids in the supplements will acid (EPA) and docosahexae- a ttack survivors who w e re protect cardiovascular health. noic acid (DHA) — that can treated with a gram of fish oil But there is one big problem: have a blood-thinning effect, daily had a drop in mortality, The vast majority of dinical tri- much like aspirin, that may compared with patients taking als involving fish oil have found reduce the likelihood of clots. vitamin E. no evidence that it lowers the Omega-3scan also reduce inThese findings prompted risk ofheart attack and stroke. flammation, which plays a role groups including the American From 2005 to 2012, at least i n atherosderosis. And t h e Heart Association to endorse two dozen rigorous studies of Food and Drug Administra- fish oil about a decade ago as fish oil were published in lead- tion has approved at least three a way for heart patients to get ing medical journals, most of prescription types of fish oilmore omega-3s intheir diets. "But since then, there has which looked at whether fish Vascepa, Lovaza and a generoil could prevent cardiovascu- ic form — for the treatment of been a spate of studies showlar events in high-risk popula- very high triglycerides, a risk ing no benefit," said Dr. James tions. These were people who factorforheartdisease. Stein, the director of prevenhad ahistory of heartdisease But these properties of ome- tive cardiology at University of or strong risk factors for it, such ga-3 fatty acids have not trans- Wisconsin Hospital and Clinas high cholesterol, hyperten- lated into notable benefits in ics. Among them was a clinical sion or Type 2 diabetes. most large dinical trials. trial of 12,000people, published All but two of these studies Some of the earliest enthusi- in The New England Journal found that compared to a pla- asm forfish oilgoesback to re- of Medicine in 2013, that found cebo, fish oil showed no benefit. search carried out in the 1970s that a gram of fish oil daily did And yet during this time, by Danish scientists Dr. Hans not reduce the rate of death sales of fish oil more than Olaf Bang and Dr. Jorn Dyer- from heart attacks and strokes doubled, not just in the United berg, who determined that Inu- in people with evidence of States but worldwide, said An- its livinginnorthern Greenland atherosclerosis. "I think that the era of fish oil drew Grey, an associate pro- had remarkably low rates of fessor of medicine at the Uni- cardiovasculardisease, which as medication could be considversity of Auckland in New they attributed to an omega-3- ered over now," said the study's Zealand and the author of a rich diet consisting mainly of lead author, Dr. Gianni Tognoni 2014 study on fish oil in JAMA fish, seal and whale blubber. of the Institute for PharmacoInternal Medicine. Dr. George Fodor, a cardiolo- logical Research in Milan.

vestigator of the study.

Still, exactly how parental income might determine brain d evelopment

is uncertain. Many factors come along with income, and each might turn out to

have a role. "Money can buy better education, homes in

areas further away from freeways. It can buy guitar lessons. It can buy af-

ter-school programs. It can buy better health care, better nutrition," Sowell said.

"It's all of those things that money can buy that lead to

more enriched experiences for children in wealthier families."

Momhasalwaysbeensopatient,butnow when I askherquestions she gets angry.

By Anahad O'Connor

New York Times News Service

Call Us with questions about aging and Alzheimer's.

1-855-ORE-ADRC HelpForAlz.org

mr m

A g RC

Aging and Disability Resource Connection ofOREGON

OREGON DEPARTMENT OFHUMAN SERVICES PROGRAM


A4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

Indiana Continued fromA1 The divisions seem almost irreconcilable and m a n ifest

themselvesacross a series of debates, from same-sex mar-

riage and abortion to the science of dimate change to the restriction of gu n

r i ghts to

public displays of the Ten Commandments to the role of religion in public life. From both sides now come charges of the other's intolerance.

ArkailSSS blll —The Arkansas Legislature on Tuesdaypassed its version of a bill described by proponents as areligious freedom law, even asIndiana's political leaders struggled to gain control over a growing backlash that has led to calls to boycott the state because of criticisms that its law could be a vehicle for discrimination against gay couples. The Arkansas bill now goes to the state's Republican governor, Asa Hutchinson, who expressed reservations about anearlier version but more recently said hewould sign the measure if it "reaches mydesk in similar form as to what has beenpassed in 20 other states." OnTuesday afternoon, Doug McMillon, the chief executive of Wal-Mart, the state's largest corporation, said that Hutchinson should veto it. — New YorkTimes NewsService

It's dear where all this is

heading. No one can hold back the demographic trends that will, eventually, make many states majority minority. Public opinion on same-sex marriage has moved faster than almost

anyone could have predicted five years ago, particularly among younger people. As Adlai Stevenson said long ago,

on 'Ittesday with an editorial headlined: "FIX THIS NOW." The editorial called on Pence

didateshave rushed to defend

and Republican lawmakers to enact another law "to prohibit

a license to discriminate. Former Florida governor Jeb Bush said on the "Hugh Hewitt" radio program Mon-

discrimination in employment,

housing, education and public accommodations on the basis of a person's sexual orientation

"There is a New American ev-

or gender identity." ery morning when we wake up. The editorial also directly It is upon us whether we will it addressed Pence, who had deornot." dinedduringanappearanceon The Indiana politicians who ABC's "This Week" program enacted the new Religious on Sunday to answer whether, Freedom and Restoration Act under the new law, it was legal are now caught up trying to ar- to discriminate ~ gays gue a legal case about what the and lesbians. "Governor," the fine print of the measure does or does not allow. But in a much

editorial stated, "Indiana is in

a state of crisis. It is worse than larger sense, they have lost the you seem to understand." debate, which is why Gov. Mike Greg Ballard, the RepubliPence,a Republican, called on can mayor of Indianapolis, has lawmakers Tuesday morning asked lawmakers either to reto act quickly to clarify. But peal the law or do what the InPence said repeatedly that he dianapolisStar recommended. personally opposes discrimi- He told National Public Radio nation against any one and that on Tuesday morning that lawthe new law does not sanction makers in his state are missing "the bigger trend" and must discrimination. C ondemnation ha s b e e n recognize and adapt to the so swift and strong that it has changing tides of history. damaged the state's reputation Pence and his fellow Republiand threatens the state's eco- cans in the Indiana Legislature nomic future. Major companies may find a way out of this criin and out of the state want the sis, though just how they hope law repealed. The Democratic to do that won't be clear until governors of Connecticut and new language appears. Washington have taken steps to prevent state-fundedtravel to Indiana. The Indianapolis Star, which

But the debate over what

theydidalready has become a defining moment in what will be the backdrop of the 2016 long was one of the most con- campaign, and there has been servative editorial pages in the little nuance in taking sides. country, filled its front page Republican presidential can-

Death

u nconscious about a

Continued from A1 Mays was brought into the jail at about 4:45 p.m. Vid-

eo of the incident released to The Bulletin on M a r ch

are," said Deschutes County Sheriff's Capt. Shane Nelson last week. Nelson has been

appointed to succeed Sheriff Larry Blanton when he retires June 30. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com

Associated Press, asked the

He refused to help, she said, telling her, "I've been instruct-

Continued fromA1

Interior Department for fed-

ed not to talk to a reporter ever

"They know that to delay

until after the journalist's

for the records. No dice. "I still

candidates speak on behalf of a conservative base whose mem-

deadline has passed.

bers are worried about the im-

between its business wing and its social and religious conser-

are granted are closely monitored,reporters say, with a press "minder" sitting in. Some agencies require reporters to pose their questions by email, a

vative wing. This creates pres-

tactic that enables officials

sures for candidates to strike a balance, but at this point, the

to carefully craft and vet their replies.

haven't gotten an answer," she Public information professaid recently. sionals say the picture isn't The reaction was more ag- quite as black and white, or gressive when Cappiello be- as bleak, as reporters make gan asking the Agriculture it. They turn the focus back Department fo r i n t erviews on journalists. For one thing, for a story about the environ- they say, many of the reportmental degradation caused by ers they deal with are inexconverting noncrop land into perienced and are tackling cornfields for ethanol produc- complicated subjects on tight tion, another administration deadlines — a formula for initiative. getting things wrong without The agency went on the of- the guidance of a communicafense, telling officials in the tions official who knows his field not to talk to her and her or her agency. co-writer. A public affairs of"Reporters are tweeting, reficial further instructed his porters are blogging, they're colleagues not to provide the on Facebook," said Tom Reynreporters with the names of olds, the associate administrafarmers for interviews, as they tor for public affairs at the Enhad routinely done for other vironmental Protection Agency. "EPA is a very science-oristories. "We just want to have a con- ented agency, and it takes a lot sistent message on the topic," of time to understand the work the official, Jason Johnson, we're doing across the agency. wrote in an email. Cappiello With less-experienced reportfiled another FOIA request for ers, it takes even more time." the directive — and noted the The EPA's communication email's existence in her sto- efforts were the target of a ry about the land-conversion complaint from the Society of policy. Environmental J o u r nalists, "I think the thread here is which criticized the agenthat all of these stories are cy's slow response to media questioning the goals and pol- inquiries after a c hemical icies of the administration," spill fouled the drinking washe said. "All of these have ter around Charleston, West the potential to set off contro- Virginia, last year. It cited the versy." Although government case ofCharleston Gazette repress officials often talk about porter Ken Ward, who waited having " a c o nsistent mes- a week to get an official comsage," Cappiello said, "they ment from the EPA about the never seem to insist on having water's potability amid a crisis 'a truthful message.' I wonder affecting 300,000 people. why." Reynolds, a former Obama Other reporters who cover campaign official, said the the government express sim- agency has "made adjustilar concerns. In a survey of ments" to address the issue, 146 such reporters conducted including adding five people to by the Society of Professional its communications staff. "We Journalists in 2012, 76 percent listened, and we responded," said they had to get approv- he said.

in a diverse country to be both "tolerant of people's lifestyles,"

while allowing "people of faith to exercise theirs." Texas Sen. Ted Cruz praised

Pence for "holding the line" on behalf of conservatives against

the "ongoing attacks upon our personal liberties." Clinton speaks for a generally united Democratic coalition

that isyounger, more diverse and more secular than that of the GOP. It is a coalition em-

pact of the changes underway. But the GOP coalition is fractured on this, with divisions

party's presidential candidates

Interview requests that

are tipping more in the direction of the social conservatives

A tighter lid

rather than the business wing,

porters and public informa-

a decision that could have significant consequences.

tion officers — "hacks and

T ensions between r e -

flacks" in the vernacular — aren't new, of course. Regovernment officials have been willing or able to give. But journalists say the lid has grown tighter under the Obama

a d m inistra-

tion, whose chief executive promised in 2009 to bring "an unprecedented level The frustrations boiled

Lobby case, Indiana properly

ter to

brought the same version that then-state Senator B a rack Obama voted

Obama signed by 38 organizations representing journalists and press-free-

P r esident Barack

for in Illinois

dom advocates. The letter

before our legislature.... Bill

decried "politically driven suppression of news and

Clinton signed

information about federal

The Religious Freedom Restoration Act in 1993. Then-state Senator Barack Obama voted for it when he was in the state

agencies" by spokesmen.

senate of Illinois. The very

control what the public is

"We consider these restrictions a form of cen-

sorship — an attempt to Darron Cummings /The Associated Press

Indiana Gov. Mike Pence claims his state's Religious Freedom Res-

toration Act has "the same language" as bills in other states.

allowed to see and hear," the groups wrote. They asked for "a clear directive" from Obama "telling federal employees they're not only free to

religious exercise isn't currentF reedom R e storation A c t So the practical effect may be ly burdened or burdened in a signed into law in Indiana was minimal. significant manner," said Euthe same as a bill supported Second, an d po t entially nice Rho of the American Civil by then-Illinois Sen. Barack more important, the Indiana Liberties Union, who said the Obama in 1998. law has this section: language was "curious." She "A person whose exercise of said the Texas law, by contrast, Pence used this talking point twice while refusing four religion has been substantially was drafted so that "it cannot times to answer a direct ques- burdened, or is likely to be sub- be used in a way that could tion from host George Steph- stantially burdened, by a viola- jeopardize existing civil rights anopoulos about whether the tion of this chapter may assert laws." law would permit discrimina- the violation or impending vioIn particular, some advotion against gays and lesbians. lation as a claim or defense in a cates of gay rights fear that the As apractical matter, the two judicial or administrative pro- language in the Indiana law laws have similar titles but are ceeding, regardless of whether was crafted because of a New not word for word the same. the state or any other govern- Mexico case in which a ChrisPence's office did not respond mental entity is a party to the tian photographer was fined to a query, but we will assume proceeding." after refusing to photograph a same-sex wedding. The phothat Pence was arguing the By contrast, the Illinois law laws were broadly similar with saysthis: tography company tried to "Ifaperson'sexercise ofreli- raise a RFRA defense, but the the same desired impact. Does he have a case'? gion has been burdened in vio- New Mexico Supreme Court In broad strokes, the Indiana lation of this Act, that person rejected it, on the grounds that and Illinois laws are similar. may assert that violation as a it was aprivate dispute. But there are a couple of differ- daim or defense in a judicial This brings us to final disences, and whether those are proceeding and may obtain tinction — the context in which important can depend on the appropriate relief against a the laws were crafted. We notlegal expertyou consult. government." ed that the Illinois law was not First, there is a section in There are two important dis- especially controversial — but the Indiana that darifies that a tinctions — the language say- the Indiana law has been at"person" can include a partner- ing the government does not tacked as being anti-gay. One ship, company, joint-stock com- need to be a party and the addi- reason is that some advocates pany and other for-profit busi- tion of "likely" to be burdened. of the law have expressly said nesses. This language appears With one exception (Texas), that it would allow businesses to be related to the recent Su- the language regarding the to refuseto support same-sex preme Court ruling in Burwell government not needing to be marriages. v. Hobby Lobby, in which the a party does not appear in any Moreover, Indiana (unlike known as the Dictionary Act.

many other states, including

answer questions from reporters and the public, but actually encouraged to do so. Obama hasn't acted on the suggestion. But his press secretary, Josh Earnest,defended the president's record, noting in a

w ork t o

In f act,

the height of the Ebola out-

break in October, for example, Bryan said his office fielded 1,876 media requests for inter-

The vast majority — 85 percent — agreed with this

views and information, or 85 every business day. Ideally, public information officers should be seen as "partners and advocates" for reporters, not as adversaries,

said John Verrico, president of the National Association of Government Communicators,

a group for government media representatives. "You need to trust that we are getting you

complete and accurate information, and we need to trust

that you are going to use the information we provide properly and in the context it was intended," he said.

are also familiar to journalists m ost f e deral covering smaller communi-

agencies get subpar grades ties, according to another SPJ on one measure of open- survey, conducted last year. ness: their responsiveness Linda Petersen, managing to FOIA requests, which editor of the Valley Journals enable reporters and or- newspapers in the Salt Lake dinary citizens to collect City area, recalled contacting government records. Eight an employee of the parks and of the 15 agencies that get recreation department in subthe most FOIA requests re- urban Riverton, Utah (pop. ceived a D grade for their 40,921), two years ago and compliance, according to asking when the town's annua review this month by the al Easter egg hunt would start. nonprofit Center for EffecTwo agencies — Health and Human Services and

lawmakers rejected anti-dis-

the State Department — re-

crimination

ceived failing grades. When Dina Cappiello,

to the anxiety of gay-rights advocates.

Not all inquiries can be ful-

filled in a timely manner, the CDC's Bryan pointed out. At

FOIA failings

and South Bend. The fact that c l auses a dded

latest information."

the time.

House and federal agencies right to know what's going on are farmore accessible and inside a government agency." accountable than ever beMany of the roadblocks fore," Earnest wrote. reporters say they have encountered at the federal level

preme Court case in his re-

are gay rights laws in the cities of Indianapolis, Bloomington

officerbefore speaking to an agency employee; two-thirds said they were prohibited by the agency from interviewing an employee at least some of

d o , t h e W h i t e tion. "It's as if the public has no

Illinois) does not have anti-discrimination laws based on sexual orientation, though there

al from a public information

letter to the groups that, statement: "The public is not among other things, the ad- getting all the information ministration has processed it needsbecause of barriers a record number of Free- agencies are imposing on jourdom of I n formation Act nalists' reporting practices." "It happens all the time," requests, established more protection for whistleblow- said freelance journalist Kathe rs an d p o sted W h i t e ryn Foxhall, a health and sciHouse visitor logs for the ence reporter who has become first time. active in promoting greater ac" While there i s m o r e cess to government informa-

RFRA protected family-owned The Indiana law also does companies from complying not have language on civil with the contraception man- rights — and during debate date inthe Affordable Care Act. over the bill lawmakers voted Pence mentioned the Su- down amendments to make marks, but it's worth noting "This language is unusual that generally such definitions of a "person" are already in and could mean that someone the U.S. Code under what is could file a lawsuit even if their

"I will wait to see what the results of the investigation

e nvironment writer for T h e

over last summer in a let-

clear that the law was not intended to foster discrimination.

investigation is available.

Openness

of openness" to the federal government.

other RFRA.

day that no timeline for its

ca on the rise. The Republican

ment. He said it is important

la st ye a r's Ho bby

Court ruled 5-4 that the federal

Oregon Department of Justice Spokeswoman Katrina Edmunson said Tues-

blematic of the newer Ameri-

inatory but only protects people acting on conscience from being "castigated" by govern-

The Washington Post

Many are asking whether the controversial Religious

will not be the first examination of the incident: The Deschutes County Sheriff's Office and Bend Police De-

Nakahira.

eral data about bird deaths on about anything." is to deny.... They know we wind-energy farms in 2013, Petersen called the desighave tomove on to other she says, she met a stone wall. nated public information offistories," Singer said. The industry-supplied infor- cial and got the starting time. The stories aren't always mation, the agency told her, the buck as consequential or as dra- was "protected" and couldn't Passing matic as a T B outbreak, be releasedbecause it would As for Stacey Singer, the but Singer's experience is harm a private interest. Florida reporter who investishared by virtually every Cappiello suspected a po- gated the TB outbreak, CDC journalist on the govern- litical motive for the depart- s pokesman S c ot t Bry a n ment beat, from the White ment's silence: The Obama said by email that the agenHouse on down. They administration supports the cy turned her away because can recite tales with simdevelopment of wind power, " questions about T B ou t ilar outlines: An agency and release of the data might breaks (or possible TB outspokesman — frequently undercut public support if it breaks) are best addressed by a political appointee — re- showed that wind farms kill the state or local departments jects the reporter's request large numbers of protected of health in the affected areas. for interviews, offers par- species, such as eagles and We routinely refer reporters to tial or nonresponsive re- falcons. state or local officials as they plies or delays responding She filed a FOIA request are best able to speak to the

day that the law isn't discrim-

By Glenn Kessler

same language." — Indiana Gov.Mike Pence, R, on A B C's "This Week," March 29, 2015

The Oregon Department of Justice's investigation

iff's Office Counsel Darryl

Pence and the new law. Hillary Rodham Clinton attacked it as

Is the controversial Indiana law 'the same' as laws elsewhere?

FACT

about 9 p.m.

24 through a public records request shows Mays becoming increasingly agitated in his holding cell as deputies partment initiated a law enapparently ridiculed him forcement investigation imyet observed he might need mediately after Mays' death. medical attention. Investigative materials were A deputy called 911 at turned over to the district about 8:56 p.m., according attorney March 6, according to the video. Mays became to Deschutes County Sher-

porters have always wanted more information than

'After

half

an hour earlier, according to police records. He died

TOUCHMARK SINCH 1980

•3

tive Government.

until recently the national

541382-6447~~2090NEWytrC r ~8 't 101 Bend OR97701 ~bendurology.com

sndUmlo S~


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A5

Campaignfinancecomplaints filed e eain owero against 4 presidential hopefuls ourownme ica recor s By Eric Lichtbiau

New York Times News Service

By Steve Lohr«New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON —

Steven Keating's doctors and medical experts view him as a citizen of the future. A scan ofhis brain eightyears ago revealed a slight abnormality — nothing

Fo r

months, White House hopefuls from both parties have

been raising millions in unlimited contributions at u pscale f u ndraisers f r o m

to worry about, he was told, but worth monitoring.

fundraisers, he said. "These guys aren't just test-

ter and Democracy 21, filed formal complaints with the

Federal Election Commis- ing the waters for president," sion against four undeclared Ryan said. "They're soaking candidates for p r esident: wet." Jeb Bush,Scott Walker and Allie Brandenburger, a Rick Santorum, all Republi- spokeswoman for Bush said: cans; and Martin O'Malley a "We are fully complying with

ward cells, and obtaining a follow-up scan in 2010, which

Manhattan to Palm Springs, Democrat. California — all without ofAmong the prospective ficially declaring themselves White House candidates, candidates and becoming those four have been particusubject to federal caps on larly aggressive in positioning contributions. themselves for a possible bid, Only a few of some 20 Paul Ryan, a lawyer for the would-be presidential can- center, said in an interview.

showed no trouble.

didates have even bothered

But he knew from his research that his abnormality

to set up the "exploratory" federal election law that recommittees that were once quires candidates who are a time-tested way to declare "testing the waters" for the interest in the White House White House to limit individ-

And monitor he did, read-

ing and studying about brain structure, function and way-

was near the brain's olfacto-

ry center. So when he started smelling whiffs of vinegar last summer, he suspected they

might be "smell seizures." He pushed doctors to conduct an MRI, and three weeks

later, surgeons in Boston removed a cancerous tumor the size of a tennis ball from his

Erik Jacobs/New YorkTimes NewsService

brain. At every stage, Keating, a

Steven Keating, a doctoral student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, holds a 3-D-printed model of his cancerous astro-

26-year-old doctoral student at

cytoma brain tumor. Keating's case points to what some medical

the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Media Lab, has pushed and prodded to get his medical information, collecting an estimated 70 gigabytes of his own patient data by now. His case points to what medical experts say could be gained if patients had full and easier access to their medical

experts say could be gained if patients had complete and easier access to their own medical information.

information. Better-informed

patients, they say, are more likely to take better care of themselves, comply with prescriptiondrug regimens and even detect early-warning signals of illness, as Keating did. "Today he is a big exception, but he is also a glimpse of what people will want: more

and more information," said Dr. David Bates, chief innovation officer at Brigham and

the White House.

tomated data handoffs, which are a fixture of Internet tech-

Changingthe system

nology but not health care He knows that what he is technology. pushing goes against convenHalamka is part of an eftion. To a hospital, a patient is a fort to accelerate the adoption revenue-generatingasset,said of open technology standards Ben Shneiderman, a professor in health care, the Argonaut at the University of Maryland Project, which began in Dewho is a health technology ex- cember. It has representatives pert. Hold on to the patient's not only from a few large i nformation, an d y o u a r e medical groups, but also from more likely to keep the patient. leading suppliers of electronic Health software suppliers health records, including Epic, have traditionally sold closed, Cerner and McKesson. proprietary systems, which The Argonaut project, said tend to lock in customers. Claudia Williams, a senior ad"The problem is that you

Women's Hospital.

More providers joining in Some of the most advanced

medical centers are starting to make medical information more available to

administrat ors and research- their technology suppliers ers; and he has been invited to open up their software for au-

p a tients.

Brigham and Women's, where Keating had his surgery, is part of the Partners Health-

Care Group, which now has 5 00,000 patients with W e b access tosome of the information in their health records

including conditions, medications and test results.

Other medical groups are beginning to allow patients online access to the notes tak-

en by physicians about them, in an initiative called OpenNotes. In a yearlong evaluation project at medical groups in three states, more than twothirds of the patients reported

having a better understanding of their health and medical

conditions, adopting healthier habits and taking their medications as prescribed more

regularly. The medical groups with OpenNotes programs include Beth Israel Deaconess Medi-

cal Center in Boston, Geisinger Health System in Pennsyl-

vania, Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, the Mayo

viser for health innovation and

have institutions whose busi- technology policy in the White ness models do not favor shar- House, is a "very hopeful sign" that "incentives are beginning ing information, either with other hospitals or patients," to line up in a powerful way" Shneiderman said. to encourage more openness Yet the economic incentives and sharing of data among for data-sharing, some medi- providers and with patients. cal experts say, are beginning Health information, by its to fall into place. Increasingly, very nature, is personal. So providers will be paid a set even when names and other amount of money for a popu- identifiers are stripped off, lation of patients, an approach sharing personal health data calledaccountablecare,and a more freely w i t h p a t ients, departurefrom fee-for-service health care providers and rereimbursement in which doc- searchers raises thorny pritors and hospitals are paid for vacy issues. Keating says he each test and treatment. is a strong believer in privacy, Accountable care reim- but he personally believes that bursement is a critical ingredi- the benefits outweigh the risks ent in the Obama administra- — and whether to share data tion's health care overhaul. or not should be an individu"The accountable care al's choice and an individual world is based on wellness responsibility. rather than episodic illness," Not everyone, surely, would said Dr. John Halamka, chief be as comfortable as Keatinformation officer at B e th ing is sharing all his mediIsrael Deaconess."In the fee- cal information. But he says for-service world, the incen- he believes that people will tives for data-sharing were not increasingly want access to there. But with accountable their medical data and share care, providers cannot sur- it, especially younger people vive unless they share data," reared on social networks and to help improve care and elim- smartphones. "This is what the next geninate unnecessary tests. The m e dical gr o ups, eration, which lives on data, is Halamka said, will insist that going to want," Keating said.

Yet they

h a v e s k i r t ed

the law in all activities Gov.

Bush is engaging in on the political front. If Gov. Bush engages in any 'testing the waters' activities, they will be paid for appropriately under the law and reported at the re-

quired time." A spokeswoman for Walker, Kirsten Kukowski, did

not respond directly to the groups'charge thathisearly, unofficial campaigning had — and that set off their own ual contributions to $2,700 not complied with federal fundraising restrictions. and subject themselves to election law. She said WalkBut two leading campaign other restrictions, Ryan er has been using his PAC, finance groups charged Tues- charged. Instead, news re- Our American Revival, in day that the spread of these ports show that Bush and "talking to Americans about unofficial campaigns in re- other candidates have used his reform-minded princicent months was not only de- super PACs and other groups ples" and that "if there are ceptive, but also illegal. that can accept unlimited any announcements about The groups, the nonpar- funds to rake in c ontribu- his future, he will do it in actisan Campaign Legal Cen- tions a t $ 1 00,000-a-headcordance with the law."

Schools

State school funding

Continued from A1

The House votedTuesdayto advanceaK-12 budget of$7.255bilion, which falls short ofwhatschooladministrators andRepublicans hadproposedfor the state tospendinthe next biennium.

Redmond School D i s-

trict plans to add two days to the school year that were

$8B

$7875B

cut in years past. Coupled with the cost of full-day kindergarten and planned salary increases, the district will be about $1.5 mil-

$6.9B 6 5 4 3 2 I 0

lion short under the budget

passed Tuesday, according to Kathy Steinert, the district's fiscal director.

Superintendent Michael McIntosh said the district would have to make cuts

elsewhere. "At some point in time

KITZHABER DEMOCRATS SCHOOL REPUBLI CANS AMOUNT ADMINST RATORS APPRO VED

FundingRequests

we have to face the reality,"

he said. "I don't know when that point

Source:Budget documents

GregCross/The Bulletin

c omes, quite

frankly." Part of the challenge two years of the biennium.

funding fluctuated between $5.3 billion in the 2005-07 biennial budget to $5.7 billion in 2009-11 before increasing in 2013 to $6.7 billion. Mill-

The Legislative Revenue

e r-Jones said this wa s t h e

comes from how a district splits state funds over the

Office assumes a 50-50 year to continue investing in split, but districts say that's education to help raise the i mpractical s i nc e c o s ts graduation rate and add days go up in the second year to the school calendar. OSBA thanks to salary increases, says that would h ave t akhigher health care and util- en $7.875 billion; $7.5 billion ity costs and so on. Many would have allowed districts districts also use projec- to maintain the status quo. Intions from the state's De- stead, the figure settled at was partment of Education to $7.255 billion, which includes predict local tax revenue, a last-minute $20 million adwhich differ from those of dition to help students learnthe LRO. Steinert said with ing English and provide free a 49-51 split, Redmond lunch to low-income students. would lose money next Republicans this session year, but with a 50-50 split have lined up with school the LRO's projections show administrators a n d te a chit getting more than this ers unions calling for more schoolyear. money. After Tuesday's vote, The budget would also House Republicans issued a mean cuts for Sisters news release noting the proSchool District, and Jeffer- posal is about 39 percent of son County officials said the state budget, down from 59 they would look at cutting percentin2003-05. positions and dipping into Democrats, mea n w hile, reserve funds to cover the loss.

touted the budget as a $600

The state's education

15 education budget and one

million increase over the 2013-

Clinic, the Cleveland Clinic and the Department of Veter-

that funds full-day kindergarten for the first time. It also

includes a trigger that would send 40 percent of new reve-

nue to schools if the economy shows improvement in the May economic and revenue

forecast. The budget heads to the Senate today. M i l ler- Jones said OSBA will continue to

push for more education funding throughout the session. Some legislators have said they are helping districts by passing the state education

budget earlier than in other years, giving them a firm figure to build their budgets around. Steinert in Redmond

said she could have waited if it meant more money for

schools. "Let's put it this way — it would be (great) if the number was more favorable. Then we would say, 'Yea,' and, 'Thank

you very much,'" she said. "But given that we're unhappy with the number, it doesn't really matter that we have it

now."

— Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbuIIet in.com

A Free Public Service

ans Affairs. By now, nearly 5 million patients in A m erica

have been given online access to their notes.

As an a r ticulate young scientist who had studied his condition, Keating had a big advantage over most patients in obtaining his data. He knew what information to

request, spoke the language of medicine and did not need help. The information he collected included the video of

his 10-hour surgery, dozens of medical images, genetic sequencing data and 300 pages of clinical documents. Much of

Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties

it is on his website, and he has

made his medical data available for research. Still, he said he encountered a medical culture resistant to

sharing data, owing to tradition, business practices and

I

legalconcerns. "The person with the least access to data in the system is the patient," he said. "You can

get it, but the burden is always on the patient. And it is scat-

tered acrossmany different silos of patient data." Since his diagnosis last summer, Keating has become a passionate advocate for giving patients all the medical data they ask for. He has given talks at MIT, where he studies

mechanical engineering; he has met with doctors, hospital

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

BRIEFING Powell Butte woman missing A woman from the Powell Butte area has gone missing, according to the Crook County Sheriff's Office. Shauna Fowler, 27, hasbeenmissingsince about 10 p.m. Thursday. Fowler left some of her personal belongings behind, according to Sheriff's Sgt. Bill Elliott.

Anyone who has seen or heard from Fowler is urged to call the Sheriff's Office at 541-447-6398.

'Bend' business draws complaints A dietary supplement retailer with a purported address in Bend is billing people for products they did not order, according to the Better Business Bureau. The BBBserving Alaska, Oregon and Western Washington says it has received 18 complaints since September against King Comorgnet Enterprises LLC, also doing business as Diet King. The company's website lists a physical address in Bend that does not appear to house the company and another address in NewPort Richey, Florida. Complainants reported being shipped diet pills they did not order from the company and unauthorized charges of $79.95 appearing on their credit cards from King Comorgnet. "This product was shipped to us without any request on our part," one person wrote to the BBB. "When I called to complain, they said that I had ordered it — not true! Never been to their website, never spoke with anyoneat the company previously." The BBBsays it has sent more than 30 letters to the company and tried calling it five times. It has given the company an F,the lowest possible rating. The company's website lists its Bend location as 70 SWCentury Drive, Suite 100-164.

That's the address of the Century Center, which contains multiple businesses, including Volcano Wine & Spirits, Goodlife Brewing and the Volcanic Theatre Pub.

ima ec an esarein oeo waer roe asse By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

All parties involved in a lawsuit over a Bend drinking change will affect how water

— Bulletin staff reports

Source: Central Oregon Landwatch

west of Bend. Central Oregon LandWatch

environmental implications, in particular how climate

the Forest Service and the city, but the litigants appealed to the San Francisco-based

and WaterWatch of Oregon

change might affect the

9th Circuit.

Bend water main

Return flows '

+irj+, to Deschutes River /o

/g~ Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

filed a lawsuit in 2013 to stop the work, arguing the

amount of water available. In December, U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken ruled in favor of

U.S. Forest Service failed to

thoroughly investigate the

In addition to the $24 million for the pipe, another $47.5 million is tied up in the project, a large share of which is funding a new state-of-the-art water treatment facility. See LendWetch IB5

Pl'ovldel

delaysplea 2 weeks • Nicole Johansen faces charges related to injuries to 3-month-old By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin

A Bend day care provider on Tuesday delayed entering a plea on charges of first-degree assault in connection with injuries

to a 3-month-old baby in her care. Nicole Johansen, 41,

appeared in Deschutes County Circuit Court via video from the Deschutes

OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS

County jail, where she has been held since Jan. 30. She was arrested after

wee ont e eac — orscience

Bend Police investigated a report at St. Charles Bend hospital of an infant suf-

fering internal head injuries, according to police. A Deschutes County Circuit

judge set bail at $500,000 in February. Johansen operated Ni-

cole's Day Care in northeast Bend and became

a licensed care provider in 1999, according to the Oregon Office of Child Care. Johansen's provider license was suspended Feb. 2. Johansen was first

scheduled to enter a plea on March 9 to two counts

of first-degree assault and three counts of first-degree criminal mistreat-

ment. Johansen's attorney, Jacques DeKalb, filed a motion on that date re-

questing the initial hearing be postponed. DeKalb said Tuesday afternoon that he had receiveda plea offerfrom the state Monday after-

noon and did not have a chance to review it. Johansen is scheduled to

Andy Tullie/The Bulletin

Bryce Withers, a teacher at Ridgeview High School, did a marine biology fellowship in Baja California in Mexico last month and hopes to incorporate more field research into his classes.

Ridgeview High School in Redmond, spent a week in

"It was the epitome of promonth at a marine biology Withers' group collected fellowship. He was one data on marine life in fessional development.... They P"Otgs of eight teachers from the Gulf of California were teaching us how to be across the country who in Side water s off the UNES- better teachers," Withers said. traveled to Espiritu San- • See C O-pr o tected, uninhab- But there were benefits, too. to Island with Ecology ph o to s ite d island. They had On the boat ride to Espiritu Project International, a f r om his l e ssons and homework Santo, they saw a humpback travel and conservation t r i p, Sg and gave presentations whale and a sea lion colony. nonprofit that hosts on the research. The Later, they snorkeled among students and scientists at sites i d e a was to experience life as the sea lions. "It was kind of scary," Within Mexico, Costa Rica, the a student to learn how to betGalapagos Islands, Belize and ter incorporate field studies in ers said.

Baja California in Mexico last

Yellowstone National Park.

By Abby Spegman The Bulletin

Professional development forteachers often takes place

at a desk, or in a classroom, or at least in a building. In Mexico? While snorkeling? Bryce Withers, a first-year math and science teacher at

the c l assroom.

SeeWithers /B6

NQT-so-wlNTRYwEATHER

reappear to enter a plea April 14. According to the Office of Child Care, Johansen operated as a registered family provider, meaning she could have up to 10 children in her home, two

of whom younger than 24 months. In 2009, the Oregon

Office of Child Care found three infants were in Johansen's care. Johansen

fixed the compliance issue in the presence of licensing staff. An unvalidated complaint from June 2014

stated Johansen spanked children in her care. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@berdbulletirLcom

Redmprld Clty Cpurlcil

SnOWPaCk remainS Slight ol(s spendin on glawyers By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

It took only a second to Tuesday at a snow survey site near Wanoga Sno-Park. There is none. Rather than take snow-

Reader photos

pack measurements, Kurt

Send us your best outdoor photos at beutlbulletiu.cuml readerphutus.Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section.

Moffitt, a soil scientist with

Submission requirements: Include aa much detail aa possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — ae well ae your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot tre altered.

Tumalo Creek Some flow returned tocreek

m oves across theregion,but the groups suing to stop the work are citing a new study of those changes as proof the water project is ill-conceived. The city of Bend is spending $24 million to replace an aging pipe that diverts drinking water from Bridge Creek, a tributary of Tumalo Creek

assess the snow situation

Well shot!

Tumalo Feed Canal

Tumalu Falls

Source spring

water project agree climate

But what about on a beach?

The building's website does not list King Comorgnet as a tenant. A call to the number on thecompany'swebsite was answered by a woman who said her name was "Jen, agent 500." She said she wasn't familiar with King Comorgnet Enterprises and that she was selling "diet garcinia," which she confirmed referred to garcinia cambogia, a dietary supplement commonlymarketedas a weight loss product.

How Bend gets muchof its water

Day care

Snowwaterequivalent

photos of what the site looks

like bare. Normally, 20 to 30 inches

2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 -Median 1981 to 2010

of snow blanket the ground

at the start of April, holding water and holding back the drying out of vegetation that precedeswildfire season in Central Oregon. "Without the snow, we will

have to see what our spring rain will do," Moffitt said.

SeeSnowpackIB2

law specialist, SmithA-

authorized Redmond City

mundsen has billed Red-

Manager Keith Witcosky to purchase aviation fuel tanks

the Chicago-based law firm helping the city with its airport dispute with Butler Aircraft, to up to $350,000

during Tuesday's council meeting.

mond almost $145,000 for consulting and legal fees,

10

Narch 31 0 0

Since last May, when the city first hired the aviation

approved increasing its con-

KEY

20

dation of Redmond Airport Manager Jeff Tripp, who anticipates additional legal fees in the fight about who should provide the airport's aviation services. "Is that going to be enough?" Councilor Tory Allman asked Tripp. "We're trying to give us enough of a cushion," Tripp responded. Councilors in March

tract with SmithAmundsen,

Inches of water stored in snow

the Natural Resources Conservation Service, snapped

$100,000, on the recommen-

The Bulletin

REDMOND — The Redmond City Council

Automated snow sites around the Deschutes/Crooked River Basin are showing less than 5 inches of water held in the snowpack. Theamount is well below the norm.

30 inches

By Beau Eastes

N

D

J

F

M

A

M

Heather Cassaro, Redmond

communications manager, said on Monday. J

J

A

S

Note: Water years begin in October

Source: Natural Resources Conservation Service

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Councilors increased the city's contract with SmithA-

mundsen, which was originally for $50,000 and then

that Tripp estimated would

cost the city $343,624.61. Those tanks became necessary after the city told

Butler it needed to cease providing aviation services by May 26. See Redmond/B3


B2

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

EvxNT

ENm a

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.

Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com, 541-383-0351.

exploring honey bee culture and how to manage a honey beecolony; 9 a.m.; $5 for members, $25 for nonmembers; Partner's in Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend; www. cobeekeeping.org/beeschool.html or541-420-0423. EXHIBIT OPENING:"GROWING UP WESTERN":Takes a look at

TODAY THE SILENTCOMEDY:The San

Diego-basedAmericana,folkand rock'n' roll band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174. C.J. BOYD:The looper performs, with Lore Uprise; 8 p.m.; $3; Reed Pub, 1141 SECentennial St., Bend; 541-312-2800. DEAD WINTERCARPENTERS: The Americana-roots band performs, with Honey Don't; 9

the essential roleswomenand children played in providing labor, support and community in the High Desert150 years ago; 10 a.m. $12 adults; $10 seniors. $7 youth; free for children 4 and younger; The High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754.

p.m.; $8plusfeesinadvance, $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY

Submitted photo by Sonali Sampat

SUSAN ANDDANAROBINSON:The

This Eugene-based quartet of jazz musicians, from left, Torrey Newhart, AdamHarris, AdamCarlson

Americanastring-duo performs;

and Sean Peterson, will perform John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme" live in honor of its 50th anniversary.

6:30 p.m.; $15-$20 suggested donation; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 NW Stannium Drive, Bend; 541-480-8830. "NFINITYCHAMPIONS LEAGUE 2":A showing of 30 of the country's most decorated cheerleading teams in competition; 7 p.m.; $15; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents.com. SCOTT PEMBERTON GROUP: The Portland rock, blues and funk band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. com or 541-382-5174. BE CALMHONCHO:The indierockand blues band performs, with The Human Ottoman; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend;

www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

FRIDAY SPRING ARTHOP:Stroll downtown Bend and the Old Mill District to enjoy art, wine, music, food and fun as we celebrate our community and the arts; 5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend. ALL YOUALL: Electro rock, with Corner Gospel Explosion; 6 p.m.; free; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www. crowsfeetcommons.com or 541-420-6686. "THE 25THANNUALPUTNAM COUNTY SPELLINGBEE": A musical comedy about a fictional

spelling bee set in a geographically ambiguous Putnam Valley Middle School, opening-night reception at 6:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Jon Abernathy will present his popular new book, "Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-0866. SALUTE TO BASEBALL: A multimedia salute to our national

pastime thoughpoetry, monologue andscenes.;7 p.m .;free,donations encouraged; Cascades Theatre,

148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803. "ELSAAND FRED":Ashowing of the 2014 movie about two neighbors; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE ESt., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. SMOKEYBRIGHTS:The Seattle pop band performs, with Modern Kin and The Swing Letters; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

SATURDAY 2015 CENTRALOREGONBEE SCHOOL:A beginner's class

LIVING EASTERADVENTURE: Interactive tour through the last week of Jesus' life and resurrection; live performances, games and lunch;11 a.m.; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond; www.hbcredmond.org or 541-548-4161. "NFINITYCHAMPIONS LEAGUE 2":A showing of 30 of the country's most decorated cheerleading teams in competition; 12:55 p.m.; $15; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com. EASTERBUNNYSWIM AND UNDERWATER EGGHUNT:Bring the family to participate in contests

REDMONDVFWCOMMUNITY RECOGNITIONBANQUET:An appreciation dinner for certain people and organizations who have helped the VFW in its effort to aid and comfort other veterans and their families; 6 p.m.; $10, $5 for children ages 5-12, free for children 5 and younger; Deschutes VFWPost 4108, 1836 Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-548-4108. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jon Abernathy will present his popular new book"Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon."; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Spnngs Books, 422 SW 6thSt.,Redmond; 541-526-1491. SALUTE TO BASEBALL: A multimedia salute to our national pastime though poetry, monologue andscenes.;7 p.m.;free,donations

encouraged;CascadesTheatre,

148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803. FRANK KINGANDALEX ELKIN: Live comedy featuring speaker, comedian and mental health activist Frank King and Alex Elkin; 7 p.m.; $23-$51; The Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-301-9686. "THE 25THANNUALPUTNAM COUNTY SPELLINGBEE": A musical comedy about a fictional spelling bee set in a geographically ambiguous Putnam Valley Middle and win prizes;1 p.m.; free,Cascade School; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for Swim Center drop-in fee; Cascade students and seniors; 2nd Street Swim Center, 465 SW Rimrock Way, Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Redmond; 541-548-7275. Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "A LOVESUPREME"TRIBUTE "LOVE SUPREME":The tribute TOUR:Featuring the tribute quartet; 6 p.m.; $10, $6 for students; quartet plays an after show; 8:30 Mountaing View High School, 2755 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop,1740 NE 27th St., Bend; swinginsticks© NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703. gmail.com.

1VEwsOF REcoRD block of Orion Drive. Burglary —A burglary was reported at1:38 p.m. March 28, in the21000 The Bulletin will update items in the block of Avery Lane. Police Log whensuch arequest Theft —A theft was reported at 7:21 is received. Anynewinformation, p.m. March 28, in the area ofNW such as the dismissal of charges or and NWWall Street. acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Franklin Avenue information, call 541-633-2117. DUII —Zachary Robert Schnip, 34, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants BEND POLICE at10:51 p.m. March 28, in thearea DEPARTMENT of NW BondStreet and NWOregon Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:36 criminal mischief was reported at p.m. March 20, in the 600 block of NE 10:12 a.m. March 29, in the200 block Olney Avenue. of SW Wilson Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:42 criminal mischief was reported at a.m. March 21, in the1800 block of NE 10:17 a.m. March 29, in the500 block Wichita Way. of SW BondStreet. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:36 Criminal mischief —Anact of a.m. March 27, in the61300 block of criminal mischief was reported at U.S. Highway97. 10:23 a.m. March 29, in the400 block Unlawful entry —Avehicle was of SW BondStreet. reported entered at 7:25 a.m.March Criminal mischief —Anact of 27, in the 61200 block of Brookside criminal mischief was reported at Loop. 10:31 a.m. March 29, in the500 block Unlawful entry —Avehicle was of SW Bluff Drive. reported entered at 7:49a.m. March Criminal mischief —Anact of 27, in the 61200 block of Brookside criminal mischief was reported at Loop. 10:32 a.m. March 29, in the500 block Theft —Atheft was reported at12:30 of SW Bluff Drive. p.m. March 27, in the1400 block of Criminal mischief —Anact of NW Portland Avenue. criminal mischief was reported at Unlawful entry —Avehicle was 10:46 a.m. March 29, in thearea of SW reported entered at1:39 p.m. March Bond Street and SW Wilson Avenue. 27, in the 60800 block of Windsor Criminal mischief —Anact of Court. criminal mischief was reported at Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:43 10:59 a.m. March 29, in the500 block p.m. March 27, in the1200 block of SE of SW Hill Street. Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at11:18 Unlawful entry —Avehicle was a.m. March 29, in the19500 block of reported entered at10:30 p.m. March Salmonberry Court. 27, in the100 block of NWGreeley Criminal mischief —Anact of Avenue. criminal mischief was reported at Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:54 11:46 a.m. March 29, in the20000 a.m. March 28, in the600 block of SE block of Alderwood Circle. Third Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at12:32 p.m. March Burglary —A burglary was reported at 9:56 a.m. March 28, in the61300 29, in the19400 block of Hollygrape

POLICE LOG

Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:56 p.m. March 29, in the1200 blockof SE Teakwood Drive. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at1:03 p.m. March 29, in the19500 block of Salmonberry Court. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at1:25 p.m. March 29, in the19400 block of Hollygrape Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:39 p.m. March 29, in the 20300 block of Travelers Place. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:30a.m. March 30, in the1100 block of NW Quiet CanyonStreet. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:04 p.m. March 30, in the19400 block of Hollygrape Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:18 p.m. March 30, in the 61000 block of Snowberry Place. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 6:38 p.m. March 27, in the 300 block of SWScalehouse Court. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:09 p.m. March 28, in the 2500 block of NE Twin Knolls Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:07 p.m. March14, in the 21200 block of U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:24 p.m. March 27, in the2600 block of NE U.S. Highway 20. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at10:34 p.m. March 28, in the 1800 block of NEThird Street.

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 3 p.m.Jan. 12, in the 2900 block of SWCanal Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:48 p.m. March19, in

the in the 300 block of NWGreenwood Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at12 p.m. March 23, in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:14 p.m. March 23, in the 3300 block of SW 34th Street. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen and anarrest made at 3:37p.m. March23,inthe3600 block of SW 21st Place. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 3:22 a.m. March 24, in the 600 block of SEFirst Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:01 p.m. March 24, in the2800 block of SW 49th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:42 p.m. March 24, in the3700 block of SW Xero Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:19 p.m. March 24, in the 300 block of SE Warsaw Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 9:14 p.m. March 24, in the3100 block of SWPeridot Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:50 a.m. March 25, in the2500 block of SW EvergreenAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11:36 a.m. March 25, in the 1500 block of SW22nd Place. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:38 a.m. March 25, in the2400 block of SW Canal Boulevard. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 3:17 p.m. March 25, in the 700block of NW Fourth Street. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at1:07 p.m. March 26, in the area of SWSixth Street and SW Forest Avenue. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 2:20 p.m. March 26, in the 600 block of SWSixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:32 p.m. March 26, in the 800block of SW Rimrock Way.

Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:22 a.m. March 27, inthe1200 block of SW17th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and arrests were madeat 2:51 p.m. March 27, in the 900 block of SW Veterans Way. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:06 p.m. March 28, in the900 block of SW Veterans Way. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:46 p.m. March 28, in the 2900 block of SW Windrow Court. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:31 a.m. March 29, in the600 block of SW Sixth Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:23 p.m. March 29, in thearea ofU.S.Highway97andSW Highland Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and arrests were madeat 4:27 p.m. March 29, inthe300blockof NWOakTree Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:12 p.m. March 29, in the2000 block of S. U.S. Highway97.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMEMT Theft —A theft was reported at 8:26 a.m. March 30, in thearea of S. Main Street. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at10:03 a.m. March 30, in the area of SE Second Street.

BEND FIRE RUNS Friday 2:56p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 225 SE15th St. 6:04p.m. —Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, area of 61185 Billadeau Road. 20 —Medical aid calls. Saturday

9:08a.m. —Authorized controlled burning, 19056 ShoshoneRoad. 10:40 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 19715 JadeCourt. 9:36p.m.—Authorized controlled burning 22837 AbileneCourt 26 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 11:55 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 63380 0.8. Riley Road. 2:24 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 20976 Greenmont Drive. 8:10p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 20151 GlenVista Road. 24 —Medical aid calls.

REDMOND FIRE RUMS March 23 12:18 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 528 NW17th St. 5 —Medical aid calls. March 24 12 —Medical aid calls. March 25 11:33 a.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 1655 SWOdemMedo Road. 7 — Medical aid calls. Thursday 8:20p.m.— Road freight or transport vehicle fire, area of SW Veterans Way. 17 —Medical aid calls. Friday 3:13p.m. —Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 2323 SW58th St. 8 — Medical aid calls. Saturday 18 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 9:26p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 1160 NWNewell Ave. 10 —Medical aid calls.

Food, Home 8 Garden

Snowpack Contlnued from B1 Tuesday'svisit to snow survey sites along Century Drive

"So here we are, where we should be seeing our maximum snow depthsofthe year,and we have 43 inches at Dutchman. It's just kind of

density of snow, according to conservation service data.

directly reliant on rainfall or snowpack, wrote Michael

The depth was not the only thing different near Dutch-

Buettner, water conservation

> • T e Bulletin

program manager for Bend. Still, the city does have west of Bend was the third designated days and hours — Kurt Moffitt, soil scientist with the density was different, too. and last of the year for Moffor when people should be Natural Resources Conservatlon Service "It was pretty fitt and Gabriella Coughlin, l i g ht," watering around their homes, another soil scientist with the Coughlin said. aimed at conserving water. "We do not anticipate imconservationservice.Two of The conservation service the three sites, the one near The survey sites illustrate of year. Typically, the Cen- uses snow data collected plementing any additional Wanoga and anothercloser to the snow story for Central tral Oregon snowpack peaks by scientists such as M o f- w atering r e s trictions t h i s Bend, did not have snow. The Oregon this year: not much April l. fitt and Coughlin to predict year," he wrote. C om p l e m e n t s H o m e I n t e r i o r s "So here we are, where we stream flows this spring and third site, near D u tchman snow at m i d dle elevations — Reporter: 541-617-7812, 541.322.7337 Sno-Park, had snow — about and some snow up higher. should be seeing our maxi- into summer, when the snow ddarit'ttg@bendbuiietin.com w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m "We saw t hat l ast y ear, mum snow depths of the year, melts. Concerned about the 38 percentof normal for this too," Moffitt said. time of year. and we have 43 inches at low snow and expected low Coughlin spent about an Automated s n o w s it e s Dutchman," Moffitt said. "It's stream flows, some counties "Come to Me, a/I you vvholabor and hour measuring the depth around the Deschutes/Crook- just kind of concerning." around the state have asked are heavy laden .... Matthew11:28-30 and weight of snow in 10 e d River B asin s how t h e The snow survey site, just Gov. Kate Brown's office for spots at the Dutchman site. snowpack in dire shape. As north of the base of Mount emergency drought aid. GOOD FRIDAY SERVICE M offitt t hen c r u nched t h e of Monday, the snowpack for Bachelor, typically has about The city of Bend uses sur"Come to the Cross" numbers to find the average the entire basin was at 8 per- 115 inches of snow this time face water and groundwater, Friday, April 3, 7 p.m. depthand water equivalency. cent of normal for this time of year depending on the so the water supply is n o t

concerning."

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man due to the light snowfall this winter and spring. The

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Easter Servfces - Sunday, April 5 "Sonrise" Service 8:30 a.m. at Tumalo Cemetery off Cline Falls Road in Tumalo Followed by Pancake Breakfast at Fellowship Hall Easter Service at 10:30 a.m.

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL f,2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

inancier sen ence 0 rison OI' erau in e er WI OW • Robert Lee I(eys, 66, gets 6 yearsfor persuading thewomanto lend $1.1milion

eBob Keys is still chasing rainbows. Recently,

By Steven Dubois

rescueKeys from failed reales-

The Associated Press

tate deals. The businessman, Bill Kear-

he has been conned by a phony gold deal promoted out of the Republic of Mali in West Africa. Heisin a bad place."

PORTLAND — The former chief executive of a Portland firm that provided investment services to the wealthy was

— Defense attorney Ronald Hoevet

ney, ended up using the money for a car and other personal ex-

"While he may have at some penses. He, too, was charged in sentenced Tuesday to almost thecasebutdied in November level believed in his own heart six years in prison for defraud- 2013. that she was going to be repaid, ing a widow out of more than Defense attorney R onald he was personally benefiting $1 million. Hoevet, in seeking a sentence from this scheme," the judge The prosecution said in its of less than five years, tried to sald. sentencing memorandum that draw a distinction between the Keys, 66, pleaded guilty last "desperate men will resort to actions of Keys and Kearney. summer to wire fraud, bankdesperate measures," and Rob- Keys deceived Fax to save his ruptcy fraud and money launert Lee Keys was desperate business, Hoevet said. Unlike dering. When it was his turn to when his investments tanked Kearney, he did not intend to speak 111esday, he apologized during the 2008 economic cheat her out of $1.1million. for betraying the widow. Keys "(Keys) did not intend that had been a financial adviser collapse. To help save hisbusiness and she would never get her money to Fax and her late husband, lifestyle, Keys persuaded the back," Hoevet said. a wheat farmer, for three widow, Mary Fax, to lend $1.1 But U.S. District Court Judge decades. million to a businessman from Marco Hernandez said KeIn a letter submitted to the Gulf Breeze, Florida. arney wouldn't have got the judge last week, Keys said KeKeys didn't tell the elderly money without Keys serving as arney had promised to save woman that he was getting a the connection, and Keys got a a condominium project from $150,000 kickback, or that the healthy kickback for making it foreclosurein exchange foran businessman was supposed to happen. immediate loan of $1 million.

"I hid the truth about the loan and the borrower from Mary,"

he wrote. "She made the loan to Kearney because she trusted me, and for no other reason."

Mary Fax died last September after a fall at her farm in

AROUND THE STATE Jail murder plOt —A 49-year-old CoosCounty manconvicted of repeatedly raping a teenager and then plotting to have two witnesses killed faces more than six decades in prison. Kenneth Moore was convicted in 2009 of raping the girl. But the state Court of Appeals ruled that authorities improperly seized a manuscript he was writing in his cell and used it at trial. Moore was convicted a second time Thursday, on six counts. Prosecutor R. Paul Frasier saidthe400-month sentence imposed Tuesdaymatchedtheone thrown out. Between the trials, Moore was accused of trying to have witnesses killed. He wassentenced in February to 32 years. In all, Frasier said, Moore faces 788 months in prison, nearly 66 years. He'll get credit for time served since 2009. Tigard killing —Court records show a 73-year-old man beaten to death at his Tigard home last week was found with his legs bound with rope. The man's 38-year-old son owed his father what the documents describe as a significant amount of money. The son, Nicholas Krochmal Jr. of Lake Oswego, is accused of murder in the death of his father, Nick Krochmal. The medical examiner said the father's head was battered. The younger Krochmal was arrested Friday after surrendering at the Tigard police station. A probable cause affidavit says his hands and arms were injured. He's being held without bail.

The Dalles. She was 90.

The judge ordered Keys to pay $1.1 million restitution to Fax's estate.

Hoevet said in court documents that Keys has no assets,

his wife is divorcing him and old friends have abandoned him. "Bob Keys is still chasing rainbows," Hoevet wrote. "Recently, he has been conned by aphony gold dealpromoted out of the Republic of Mali in West Africa. He is in a bad place."

CatS left behind — A Portland officer said he had to put on his Police Bureau gas mask to enter an apartment where a woman left behind two cats and a mess that included pounds of cat feces. A warrant alleging animal neglect and abandonment was issued for the 56-year-old former tenant, Edna SueBlair. Police believe she took several more animals when she moved out at the end of January. The landlord called it "scary in there." One of the cats, a13-week-old female kitten, has been released from an animal hospital to the county shelter. A hospital report said the kitten recovered from fleas, tapeworms and congestion and has become affectionate. Court records show Blair was acquitted of animal neglect charges filed in 2011. — From wire reports

Corvallis Navyvet recalls atime of MAD,and nukesin Vietnam By Bennett Hall Corvallis Gazette-Times

CORVALLIS — Phillip Hays was a 17-year-old high school student in Hot Springs, Arkansas, during the Cuban missile crisis of October 1962, when

% @III~ - "

the United States andthe Soviet Union stared each other down across the Florida Straits in a

high-stakes game of nuclear chicken. He still remembers the sense of impending doom he felt at the time and an after-school

conversation he had with a girlfriend: "We both agreed that we probably wouldn't live to be 21"

Hays displays a surplus safing plug for a nuclear-armed Talos mis-

Hays was a 23-year-old se-

sile that he kept from his time serving as a nuclear weapons officer

on a U.S. Navy guided missile cruiser.

nior at the University of Ar-

kansas in 1968, when the Vietnam War was raging half a world away. With graduation approaching and his college deferment about to expire, he

enlisted in the Navy. Because he'd studied the effects of radiation on living

Photosby Andy Cripe / Corvallis Gazette-Times

creatures in college, Hays was Phillip Hays of Corvallis, who came of age during the darkest days of the Cold War, went on to serve selected for training as a nu- as a nuclear weapons officer on a Navy guided missile cruiser in Vietnam. clearweapons officer.By 1970, the young man who had grown up during the Cold War with proxies, including the opera- was a conventional weapon, the war. He has no idea how the specter of nudear annihi- tion of mobile radar units track- but there was no shortage of many nukes the Army, Air lation hanging over his head ing U.S. ships and aircraft. For nukes in the theater of opera- Force and Marines might have was in the midst of a shooting Hays, on station in the Gulf of tions. According to Hays, every had or how big the Soviet nuwar in Southeast Asia, where Tonkin aboard the Oklahoma branch of the service had its clear arsenal in the area might he was put in charge of around City, the Soviet radar trucks own stockpile. have been. But he has no doubt "Nudear weapons — this is there were more than enough two dozen nudear warheads were important targets — and aboard the USS Oklahoma he helped take one out with a one of the scary things about nuclear weapons on both sides this — were a status symbol," in Vietnam to have created a City, a Navy guided missile missile strike. "I have a medal for this," he said. "Every commanding holocaust if anyone had gotten cruiser. "It was the flagship of the 7th Hays said. "It was the first suc- officer wanted nukes, and the trigger-happy. "It was called MAD — mutuFleet and in the thick of things cessfulsurface-to-surface mis- more nukes they had out there, over there," Hays said. sile fired in combat in Navy the more status they had." ally assured destruction — and Though the USSR was not history." Hays estimates the Navy it was mad," Hays said. officially involved in the war, Like everyothermissile fired had at l east 100 warheads As a nuclear weapons ofthe Soviets provided lots of sup- by either side in that war, the bobbing around in the Gulf of ficer, Hays had access to port fortheir North Vietnamese one Hays launched that day Tonkin at any one time during classified information about

As Kitzhaber was departing, officials secured electronia The Associated Press

ceeded Kitzhaber, techni-

Jordan put Wells on ad-

SALEM — Ten computers cians from the state Departand four cellphones used by ment of Administrative Ser-

ministrative leave, saying the

aides to former Gov. John

vices swept up the devices

Kitzhaber were seized after federal authorities issued subpoenas in an influence-peddling investigation. The devices were locked

Feb. 19 and Feb. 20 — before the department head at the

A Brown spokeswoman says no other computers

in the state's forensic lab.

Marshall Wells, talked with

time, Michael Jordan, put a

stop to it. A departmental manager,

The Oregonian reports that as Gov. Kate Brown suc-

seizures weren't authorized. have been secured, except

those of departing Kitzhaber staffers. Current s t af f

m e m bers

federal prosecutors and had

have been told to preserve material that might be re-

the devices seized.

sponsive to the subpoena.

Redmond

mishaps involving America's kept secure. "My job was to see to it that arsenal, and although he says there were some alarming ac- it didn't go bang, and I was succidents that could easily have cessful," he said. become catastrophes, the U.S. But that doesn't mean he and USSR never really came didn't consider the possibility close to blowing each other up that he might actuallybe called after those tense days back in upon to push the button — and October 1962. what it would mean if he did. "I doubt it was ever consid"When you're in that posiered," he said. "The Cuban mis- tion, you've got to ask yourself, sile crisis pretty much scared 'What am I going to do if I get everybody." the order to fire one of these Both sides took a step back things?' I probably would have after that, installing a hotline followed orders," Hays said. "I say 'probably.' Would you between Washington and Moscow and instituting a series of or wouldn't you? You never fail-safes intended to prevent know until it happens." any accidental or hasty use of

nuclear weapons. At no time during Hays' service did he ever receive an order to prepare

a warhead for launch, much less fire one. Instead, he spent stored,handled correctly and

Continued from B1 the Redmond city limits. There does seem to be hope Other news that came out for a negotiated solution be- of Tuesday's meeting was tween the p a rties, though. As Butler A i rcraft General Manager Kurt N ewton told councilors at the start of the

that the city has been chosen to partner with the Universi-

meeting, Butler hopes to have a completed aviation-service provider, more commonly know as a fixed-base operator application, to the city within

coming school year. Students and faculty will contribute

was confident the two sides could mend a relationship that

HunterDouglas

much of his time making sure the warheads were properly

of recreational marijuana and how to best regulate it within

the next two weeks. Newton

Visit Central Oregon's

ty of Oregon and its Sustainable Cities Program for the up to 80,000 hours of work

during the 2015-16 academic year to various Redmond city projects. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletin.com

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over the past year has become

increasinglybitter at times. "We're m aking h u g e strides," Newton said.

Councilors also

b r a in-

s

stormed about the legalization

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B4

TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

EDj To

The Bulletin

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on' wea en secon -an ua e re uiremen s

,:( 6

®

regon requires high school students to earn at least

tC7

three credits in a second language, art or career/

"sge

technical education to graduate. Moreover, state uni-

-

versities all have a second-language requirement for admis-

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sion, earned either in high school or community college. Now, a group called Building Excellent Schools Together wants to changethe definition of"second language" to include being able to write computercode.The change,laid out in House Bill 2677, would, according to testimony Rep. Julie Parrish, R-'Ibalatin, gave to the House Committee on Education, help the state modernize its career and technical education requirements. Perhaps, though frankly it's difficult to see how. Meanwhile, the measure and its supporters fail to understand just what a "language" is and what the values of learning a new one might be. The best definition of "language" we've seen recently comes from Sebastian Heiduschke, a professor in Oregon State University's Department of World Languages and Cultures. Language, he told the education committee last week, is "used to communicate information, but also to negotiate meaning, to gather knowledge and to transmit emotion .... (it) uses signs, symbols and gestures together to create meaning

reciprocallybetweenasender and a recipient."

Computercoding language, he noted, allows the human to talk to the machine through signs and symbols, though it clearly lacks emotion, gestures, reciprocity and any element of negotiation. It is, in other words, used to tell a computer what to do, nothingmore. Oregon added second-language requirements for both high school graduation and college admissions in part to help assure that students are prepared to live in a multicultural world. Students learning a second language seldom do soin a vacuum; they learn about other people and cultures, as well. It's difficult to see how computer coding language would advance that purpose. We'll agree with Parrish about one thing, however. Oregon's career/technical education needs updating, thoughthat effort clearlyhas begun. It should continue, no doubt. It shouldn't be used as an excuse to add anonlanguage language to the state's current second-language educational requirements.

M 1Vickel's Worth Paymentsto pumice m ine a isw aste oftaxes

an expensive boondoggle. They could not have picked a more costly location to rehab. Quit

to the owner of a pumice mine the

sponse to them is, "sit down and

again how to run our lives. All of this costs taxpayer money — usually lots of it — but doesn't Smoke and mirrors. The process wasting our tax dollars. solve any real problem. of siting of the new OSU-Cascades Dave Stalker So even if you are offended by campus on Bend's west side just Bend words like "squaw" and the othstinks to high heaven. er, ever-growing list of harmless Here's one example: As reported Too muchsensi terms used, just sit down, shut 'yer tivity in The Bulletin on Saturday, March about words yap and let the adults in this nation 28, "OSU-Cascades doesn't dispute try to right this listing ship. I'm getting tired of r eading everything in the 'did you know' Dennis Douglas entry, including the fact that the about those who are "sensitive" or Bend school is paying $30,000 a month "offended" about a name. My recollege hopes to purchase as part of its expansion.

shut 'yer yap." When I was a boy, the word

The expense is intended to com-

"squaw" was used by actors in the

urday matinees and referred to

What an outrage! As a taxpayer

an Indian wife or an old Indian

I see this as a complete waste of my woman. That some new-ager has tax dollars. I work almost an en- discovered a long-forgotten meantireyear to earn $30,000, and Ms.

here's no good reason to

deny a person who is dying an experimental drug that might give him or her a chance. That's why the Oregon Legislature should pass House Bill 2300. The bill allows doctors to give patients access to experimental drugs or devicesthatdon'thave Food and Drug Administration approval. Itincludes a waiver of liability. Rep. KnuteBuehler,R-Bend,who isa doctor, led efforts to fine tune the bill. Patients can already get access to experimental drugs by going through a program by the FDA. But the FDA's "Compassionate Care" program was a frustrating one for terminal patients and their families. The forms for that program used to take doctors 100hours to fill out, and there are other hassles. The FDA did recently streamline the forms. HB 2300 essentially cuts the FDA out of the equation. It becomes a choice among a patient, a health care provider and a drug or device

manufacturer. A handful of states have "right to try" laws, and others areconsideringthem. There have been concerns raised about "right to try." The drugs or devices have not been fully vetted for safety and effectiveness. The costs to patients may be high. Drug and device manufacturers maynot want to participate. Patients and their families may get false hope. Those aren't reasons to vote against the bill. They are things that healthcareproviders should discuss with patients and their families. "Remember, these people are terminal, and it's their choice to be involved with these drugs," Buehler told The Bulletin recently. "The alternative is not verygood either, and that's really what this is all about, is providingpeople with options." HB 2300 recently passed out of a health care committee in the House. It deserves passage by the Legislature and Gov. Kate Brown's approval.

My views on the editorial from

M arch 19 a bout u n i ons: A s a Tom Mix and Lone Ranger Sat- retired member of I BE W L o cal

pensate the owner for refraining from mining there."

Terminally ill deserve option to bypassFDA

Unionshelp

an equivalent amount right in the

dump, literally. You might as well just stack that money up and set it on fire. I can't help but think that a few fat cats

Now OSU-Cascades proposes removing the tons of material that were dumped and reclaiming the site for campus expansion. What

electrical contractor for nine years — no b enefits, no p ension, no

tive" words.

health care. I then joined the union, where I enjoyed higher wages, health care and apension, plus contract negotiations. For this I paid union

One of the many problems this are lining their bank accounts at country faces are the isolated sniveveryone else's expense in pursu- elers who find a few other ignorant ing the current location of the new and gullible people to climb aboard campus. their hysteria bandwagon and try For a number of years I lived to make their whine a "cause." on 17th and Knoll, just two blocks Any of these causes will grab the from the old demolition dump. It ear of our many solicitous, spineregularly caught fire and was so less politicians eager to make a fraught with problems it was final- name. Then they'll form a "comly deemed unsuitable as even just a mission" to study the matter. Then construction debris dump.

I went to w ork f o r a n o n union

ing doesn't mean that the word

"squaw" or any other like words should somehow be banned or relegated to the ever-growing pile of "politically incorrect" or "insensi-

Becky Johnson is just throwing

150 of Lake County, Illinois, after s erving during World War I I ,

the state will get on board because if it's trivial and they really don't

have todo anything anyway they must be "doing good." Then the feds get involved to tell us once

dues. This led to 40 years as a

construction electrician. Today I enjoy a very good pension and health care.

My local of 100 years never went on strike; it always believed in binding arbitration. Are unions

bad? Of course not. I do agree with Gibson's proposal, which would make it clear that

those wishing not to join a union would have to, as individuals, ne-

gotiate directly with their employers on the merit system. Good luck! Robert Mortensen Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. WrIters are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

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

Challenges of OSU-Cascades site surmountable By Martin Chase am writing in response to Mike Walker's March 8 opinion piece, which offered a subjective and incomplete portrayal of the proposed

grading, slope stability, emergency

OSU-Cascades west-side campus.

borings and test pits. From a civil engineering perspective, I believe thorough due diligence is being conducted for this 46-acre site. To date, there has been enough study of this unique but blighted property to reasonably condude it could be reclaimed into a campus that is aesthetically beautiful and environmentally sustainable and will serve as a vibrant community center.

t

I am a civil engineer who has spent nearly three decades helping clients develop their campus visions, from

institutions such as universities and hospitals to private corporate campus and research facilities. I am proud to

be part of the team that is assessing the 46-acre former pumice mine on SW Chandler Avenue as a potential

home for Oregon State classrooms, residential halls and other facilities that accompany a dynamic university campus. Over the past two years, civil and

geotechnical engineers and landscape, architectural and other expert consultants have been conducting due

diligence and conceptual planning assessments. We are considering such issues as utilities, storm drainage,

IN MY VIEW

and ADA access based on completed

topographic and utilitysurveys as well criteria. It's not unusual for colleges and as a geotechnical assessment and soil stability reports, complete with site

universities to take the lead in trans-

There has been enough study of this unique but blighted property to reasonably conclude tt could be reclaimed into a campus that ts ... beautiful and environmentally

formingproblematiclands into centers sustainable and will serveas a vibrant community center. bringing educational and economic value. Nearly20years ago,theUniversity of Washington, Bothell, campus well as removal of existing industrial and implementation. required vision to site a new campus facilities, significant filling and all new In my view, Bend is best served by that involved one of the largest wet- road, bridge and utility infrastructure, moving ahead with a four-year camland restoration projects on the West not to mention the relocation of Bur- pus that reflects a sense of all that is Coast. Yes, it would have been easier to build on something other than a

lington Northern Santa Fe Railway

tracks. large, dysfunctional wetland. HowevWithout the leadership from the er, today that campus is a nationally Port of Bellingham, city of Bellingham However, there is no question that recognizedsuccess story and studied and the community, this site would there's more to be done. And, yes, by students and scientists alike. languish for decades instead of prothere are challenges. But not insurI am currently working on a master viding a vibrant tax-generating asset mountable challenges as Mr. Walker plan to redevelop an old Georgia Pa- linking the waterfront to Bellingham's suggests. This may seemtobe a daunt- cific paper mill industrial brownfield downtown. ing project from the perspective of a site on the Bellingham, Washington, There are many more examples private developer who needs to turn a waterfront adjacent to the downtown. like this. The common denominator good profit. However, institutions have This 19-acre site including Whatcom to success is a strong vision that is supdifferent metrics of site selection than Waterway requires extensive indus- ported by a community's leaders and simply basic short-term rate of return trial pollutant deanup and capping as followed with sound planning, design

possible for the future. And I believe that is achievable at this site without

insurmountable challenges. Bend is a place of adventure and innovation that takes pride in its sustainable ethic and entrepreneurial ideas.

Community leadership and vision will result in a campus that reflects the best of Bend. — Martin Chase is registered professional engineerln the state of Washington and a principal with KPFF Consulting Engineers in Seattle. That firm did engineering studies on the46-acre siteforO SU-Cascades.


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B5

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTIcES David Alan Marsh Feb.18,1952- March22,2015 Margo Lee Alexander, of Redmond April 22, 1945 - Mar. 29, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond. 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private urn committal service will take place in California at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Alzheimer's Association, 225 N. Michigan, Ave., Fl. 17, Chicago, IL 60601 www.alz.org

Ansel Noble Marshall, of Bend Aug. 1, 1914 - Mar. 15, 2015 Arrangements: Lafollette's Chapel, PO Box 468, Burns, OR 97720. Services: A Celebration of Life for Ansel Marshall will be held Saturday, April 4, at 1:00 p.m., at Whiterock Cowboy Fellowship, 5247 NE 15th Dr., Redmond, OR (2 mi east of Hwy 97, off the O'Neil Hwy). Contributions may be made to:

In lieu of flowers please make a donation in Ansel's memory to the Harney County 4-H, c/o Lafollette's Chapel, PO Box 488, Burns, OR 97720.

Cleone W. 'Toby' Steelhammer

D avid p a ssed a w a y o n Sunday, March 22, 2015 in t he Trauma C are U ni t a t I ntermountai n M edi c a l C enter, Mu r r a y , Uta h . D avid passed away a s a result of i n j u r ies received during an a r me d r o bbery o n M a r c h 18 t h , wh i l e working at a c o nvenience store in Murray. David was born in Bend, O R t o R o n a nd Pe g g y Marsh. He graduated from Bend High School in 1970. A fter g r a duation, D a v i d served a two year mission f or t h e L D S Ch u r c h i n L ong Beach, CA . Dav i d t hen moved t o S al t L a k e City where he continued to live until his death. D avid w a s k n o w n fo r love of hard work. H e was employed at Smith's Food & Drug fo r 2 8 y e ars, and w orked p a rt -time a t L e e Mart in Murray for over 25 y ears. W h i l e wo r ki n g , David was able t o o b t ain his Bachelors degree from B righam Y o u n g Un i v e r sity. David was not a m a t erialistic man. He gave freely t o those ar ound h i m , a l w ays t h i n k in g o f ot h e r s b efore himself. H e w il l b e r emembered fo r h i s e v e r present smile, wry h u m or, a nd twinkling eyes. E v e n t hough David wa s an u n s toppable worker, h e s t i l l h ad time for a n u m ber of hobbies: G e nealogy, can-

n ing, making j am s

and

Inventor of thepet rock was overnight sensation By Margalit Fox

place in time for Christmas

New York Times News Service

tured on "The Tonight Show"

Hula Hoop, and even less explicable.For a mere $3.95, a consumer could buy ... a rock — a plain, ordinary, egg-

and in a b l izzard of newspaper articles. In a m a tter

shaped rock of the kind one

could dig up in almost any backyard. The wonder of

ers of Pet Rocks, the fad that Newsweek later called "one of

the most ridiculously successful marketing schemes ever." Gary Dahl, the man behind that scheme — described variously as a m a rketing genius and a genial mountebank — died March 23 at 78 in Jacksonville, Oregon. A down-at-the-heels advertising copywriter when he hit on the idea, he originally meant it as a joke. But the concept of a "pet" that required no actual

( wife, Wendy) o f

L ong

Beach CA, and Dan Steelhammer (wife, Jill) of Bend OR; an d f i v e g r a n d children, N ic k S t e elhammer, Chelsea St eel h a m m er, Henry Steelhammer, Thomas S t e e l hamme r an d Molly Steelhammer. I n l ie u o f fl o w e rs , t h e family r e quests donations be made to the Opportunity Foundation of Central Oregon, P O Box 430, Redmond, OR 97756. A family service w il l b e held at a Iater date.

For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mailt Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

rocks — more than 2 tonswere sold.

"I had one phone to each

ear," Dahl recalled in a 2011 interview. " I taught my P R

Miriam Bienstock, 92: A co-founder of

"The Forest Service's analysis on climate change was incomplete, but that's, no pun

TumaloCreek above Tumalo Falls during summer and fall

intended, water under the bridge at this point," Boddie

months, and that in the future

said, noting he was elected

there maybe little or no water

after the pipe project was approved by the City Council.

for the city of Bend to divert in warmer months," LandWatch

The Forest Service did not

wrote in a summary of the

return a call for comment.

report. "The study concludes that, 'because of significant

Reducing reliance

impacts of climate change on

Beyond the drinking water

reliance on 'Dimalo Creek

withdrawals from Tumalo

would improve the creek's health. During irrigation sea-

After studying at what is now

project, the City Council and

Creek, from which the city LandWatch agree reducing of Bend gets its surface wa- Tumalo Irrigation District's Creek may not be sustainable if flows over 'Ilimalo Falls are

tobe protected.'" The report, which Land-

Watch commissioned, was completed by Mark Yinger Associates, an environmen-

son, the district can divert

well more than 100 cubic feet per second at a location below Tumalo Falls, which

is used to irrigate more than 8,000 acres. In comparison,

tal consulting firm based in the city's diversion is limited Sisters. A much larger study to 18.2 cubic feet per second, of the Deschutes water basin, andthenew systemwill allow financedby state and federal it to take less when not all that money, is expected in a few water is needed. years. The City Council supports "I guess the city just as- increasing the e fficiency sumes the water will always of the irrigation system by be there because it's there piping stretches of it, which now," Paul Dewey, executive would mean less water is lost director of LandWatch, said intransit. As a result, less wa'Iiiesday. "We did a search

through the city's engineering reports, a stack of papers a couple of feet high, but couldn't find the words 'dimate change' in there."

Report's findings

ter would be needed, which would allow the district to

take its water only from the main flow of the Deschutes River, instead o f ' I i m ialo

Creek, which in the past has run dry due to diversion.

"They have already piped

f o und t h a t some of it so far, and they've higher-elevation tributaries put water back in the creek," will be the most affected by Chudowsky said. "What T he report

they've been doing has ac-

their "own desert wasteland,"

dimate change, as the snow falling in Central Oregon will soon more typically fall as rain. As a result, there will be less snowmelt in the warm-

never matched the success of

er months and less water

Pet Rocks.

flowing. Tumalo Creek is the high-

more pipes out there. Taking advantage of these efficien-

His later inventions, includ-

ing the Original Sand Breeding Kit, which let buyers grow

Dahl's first marriage, to Barbara Eisiminger, ended in divorce, as did his second, to Melinda Aucott. His sur-

vivors include his third wife, the former Marguerite Wood,

who confirmed his death, from

c h r o ni c o b s t ructive

pulmonary disease; a sister, Candace Dahl; two children, C hristine Nunez an d

Eric

Dahl, from his first marriage; a daughter, Samantha Leighton, from his second; a step-

daughter, Vicki Pershing; and seven grandchildren. On the proceeds of Pet

Rocks, Dahl opened a saloon and ran a sailboat brokerage before returning to advertis-

ing. He was the author of "Advertising for Dummies," first published in 2001. Dahl, a resident most re-

cently of Jacksonville, was also vastly proud of having won, in 2000, the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest, which

honors deliberately dreadful prose. (His winning entry began, "The heather-encrusted Headlands, veiled in fog as thick as smoke in a crowded pub, hunched precariously over the moors.") But in the end, it is for the

living," Dahl told The Asso-

i st for Scott Weiland & t h e Wildabouts. Died M o n day,

a day beforethe release of

A t l antic R e- the band's debut album, of

cords who ran the business side of the company in its formative years, helping to lay the groundwork for what became acolossus ofthe recording industry. Died March 21 at

unknown causes in Venice, California. Michael C o hen, 79: Co-founder of the fashion

her home in Manhattan.

Beach, California.

Jeremy Brown, 34: Guitar-

a significant reduction in the volume of the water in

model of what's to come."

ter, the city's planned water

DEATHS ELSEWHERE the world:

"The models indicate that

by midcentury there will be

Spokane, Washington. His mother was a waitress, his father a lumber-mill worker.

require no further instruction. ciated Press in 1988. "SomeIt will remain on the paper un- times I look back and wonder if my life wouldn't have been til you remove it." Pet Rocks hit the market- simpler if I hadn't done it."

Deathsof notefrom around

Continued from B1

was more concerned, saying this year's warm winter and measly snowpack is "a good

the upper portion of Dimalo

Pet Rock that he will be remembered. Though the rock manual on the care, feeding made him wealthy, it also and house training of Pet made him wary, for he was Rocks. besieged ever after by hordes "If,when you remove the of would-be inventors, seekrock from its box it appears ing his advice on the next big to be excited, place it on some thing. "There's a bizarre lunatic old newspapers," the manual read. "The rock will know fringe who feel I owe them a what the paper is for and will

LandWatch

Gary Ross Dahl was born Dec. 18, 1936, in Bottineau, North Dakota, and reared in

Washington State University, Dahl made his way into advertising. Although Pet Rocks were the must-have gift of the 1975 holiday season, they soon went the way of all fads. The idea's very simplicity proved work and no real commitment its undoing: Though Dahl resonated perfectly with the trademarked the name, there self-indulgent '70s, and before was nothing to stop someone long a cultural phenomenon from putting a rock into a box was born. and selling it, and many did. A modern incarnation of Nor did the spate of auxilia"Stone Soup" as stirred by ry businesses that sprang up PT. Barnum, Pet Rocks made around his creation — the ofDahl a millionaire practical- ficial Bicentennial Pet Rock, ly overnight. Though the fad inscribed with an American ran its course long ago, the flag; mail-order college dephrase "pet rock" endures in grees for Pet Rocks ($3 for a the American lexicon, denot- bachelor's, $10 for a Ph.D.)ing (depending on whether bring him any compensation. it is uttered with contempt or In the late '70s, Dahl was admiration) a useless entity or sued by his original investors, a meteoric success. who claimed they had reBut despite the boon Pet ceived too small a share of the Rocks brought him, Dahl profits. A court found in their came to regret the brainstorm favor, and he was obliged to that gave rise to them in the pay a six-figure judgment.

Obituary policy

b ad p u n s , s u n s ets, h e r children a n d g r a n d c h i ld ren, a n d h er Or eg o n Ducks. T oby w a s p r e c eded i n death by her husband; son, John; grandson, Cody; and her br others an d s i s ters. S he is s u r vived b y s o n s , Tracy Steelhammer (w i f e, Jerri) o f S a n Fr a n c i sco, CA, R i c k Ste e l h ammer ( wife, Pam) C r os s L a n es WV, B i ll Stee l h a mmer

of months, some 1.5 million

it was, for a few guy to impersonate me so he frenzied months could also answer my calls." in 1975, m o re Dahl traded his Honda for than 1 m i l l i on a Mercedes and moved into a Dahl consumers did, house with a swimming pool, b ecoming t h e which was larger than his proud if slightly abashed own- cabin had been.

Iellys from th e f r ui t t r e es in his y a rd , p h otography, and just enjoying the great Dec. 31, 1925- Mar. 26, 2015 o utdoors. H e a l s o l o v e d sports, especially NASCAR Cleone W. 'Toby' Steel- and J e f f Go r d o n , th e h ammer d i e d m a r c h 2 6 , D odgers, a n d t he San 2015, at age 89, of natural Francisco 49ers. causes. She passed peaceHis greatest love, though, fully with family present. was for his family, friends, B orn D ec . 3 1 , 1 9 25, i n c hurch, c o - w o rkers, a n d Oakland, customers. H e i s survived CA, t o by h i s t w o dau g h t e r s, Charles Crystal Leavitt of R a ncho H. an d C ordova, CA , K an sa s Elsa Marsh of Springfield, MO, Weber g randchildren M ad e l i n e, West, Addison, and Brayden; his / ., Toby' foster g r an dd a u g hter, g rew u p Makayla; h i s f a t h er, Ron in the Bay Marsh, brother, D an , s i sa rea, e n Cleone 'Toby' r olling a t t ers, Sandra an d S u s an all of B e nd, OR an d s ev- first place. Steelhammer UniverDahl's brainstorm began, eral o t he r a u n ts , u n c les, sity of C a l i f ornia, B e rke- cousins, nieces and nephas many do, in a bar. ley at age 15. S h e t r a n s- ews. H e w a s p r eceded in One night in the mid-'70s, ferred to the University of d eath by hi s mot he r , he was having a drink in Los O regon w h e r e s h e me t Peggy Marsh and nephew, Gatos, the Northern CaliforR ichard A . 'Dick' S t e el- Hunter McAdoo. nia town where he lived for h ammer. Th e y w e d o n A viewing will take place many years. At the time, he August 31, 1947. o n Th ursday, A p r i l 2 n d , The c o u pl e m o v e d t o 2 015, between 6 p m a n d was a freelance copywriter ("That's another word for bePowell Butte and began a 8pm at the LD S Pheasant r anching c a r eer t h a t i n - Brook W a rd , 3 737 S outh ingbroke," he later said), living cluded one of the first mint 5600 West, W es t V a l l ey , in a small cabin as a self-defarms in th e Mu d S p r ings U T, followed by a m e m o - scribed "quasi-dropout." area of Madras; hay grain r ial s e r v ic e o n Fr i d a y , The bar talk turned to pets a nd c attl e o p e r ations i n April 3rd at 3pm. and to the onus of feeding, L incoln, CA , a n d o n t h e A private f amily s ervice walking and cleaning up after McCall Ranch near O'Neil, w ill t ak e p l ace I ater t h i s them. OR. summer i n B en d , OR , His pet, Dahl announced in T hrough t h e y e a r s s h e w here D a vi d w i l l b e i n w orked a s s e c r etary f o r terred. In l i e u o f f l o w ers, a flash of bibulous inspiration, the Redmond Chamber of the family r e quests donacaused him no such trouble. Commerce, a s s e c r etary tions b e m a d e t o th e The reason? for Sam Johnson, and then American H e ar t A s s ocia"I have a pet rock," he w ith D i c k op e r a te d a n tion, one of David's favorexplained. O LCC outlet i n B e n d f o r ite charities. A pet rock, Dahl quickly reseveral years. Sh e helped alized, might just have legs. f ound th e W o m e n's W i l "People are so damn bored, derness Trail Riders group, tired of all their problems," he was involved in t h e e arly told People magazine in 1975. days o f t h e O p p o r t unity "This takes them on a fantasy C enter i n R e d m ond, a n d sang in m an y c h o i rs . I n trip — you might say we've 1974, the couple sold their packaged a sense of humor." P owell B u tt e r a n c h a n d He recruited two colleagues Death Notices are freeand m oved t o B l a c k Bu tt e as investors, visited a buildR anch, and l a ter t o W a l will be run for oneday, but ing supply store and bought t erville, OR , w h er e T o b y specific guidelines must be a load of smooth Mexican w as a c t iv e i n p ai n t i n g followed. Local obituaries beach stones at about a penny c lubs, b o o k cl u b s , g a r are paid advertisements apiece. dening c l u b s , g o l f an d submitted by families or fuhiking clubs. T h e c o u p le The genius was in the packneral homes. Theymay be subsequently mo v e d t o aging.Each Pet Rock came in submitted by phone, mail, S un Lakes, AZ . T o b y r e a cardboard carrying case, email or fax. TheBulletin turned to C e ntral O r egon complete with air holes, tenreserves the right to edit after Dick's passing. derly nestled on a bed of exToby loved art, painting, all submissions. Please celsior. Dahl's droll masterphotography, nature, flowinclude contact information stroke was his accompanying e rs (and e specially w i l d in all correspondence.

flowers), reading, singing,

1975. They were soon fea-

It was a craze to rival the

Bulletin file photo

Paul Dewey, executive director of LandWatch, which has been fighting the Bridge Creek project since 2013.

brand Michael Stars. Died Friday at his home in Manhattan — From wire reports

tually worked to make the

creek more healthy. My philosophy is to stick to what has worked, so that's putting cies is the best approach,

whereas LandWatch's lawbasin, Dewey noted. Land- suit hasn't put any water back Watch believes a better plan in the creek." for the city would be to invest Boddie characterized getmore in its groundwater sys- ting the irrigation district tem, which provides about out of 'Ibmalo Creek as a wlll-wlll. half of Bend's water supply. "It's not just the city who "It'd be expensive but it's est tributary in the Deschutes

will be impacted, it's the irrigation districts, too," Dewey

what the irrigation district

that divert water for agricultural purposes. "I think it

perhaps evenuse some of its

wants, too, andthe city should said, referring to the agencies work to secure funding and

own resources," he added. Dewey said he hopes the to be a global solution, where report will "jump-start" the everyonecomes together.I efforts to pipe the irrigation think this report could help district canals, as the threat of start that." less waterbeing available will Becausethe dimate change offer an incentive to create a study was released Tuesday, more efficient system. makes more sense for there

it is not part of the lawsuit.

Dewey, however, extended an Working together invitation to the city to meet in Improving the health of mediation as an alternative to the stretch affected by the irgoing forward with the law- rigation district has been the suit. Dewey said he has not focus of the Deschutes Rivheard from the city, but Coun- er Conservancy, according cilor Sally Russell said she is to its executive director, Tod "putting together the pieces" Heisler. He said finding a way to enter mediation. to get the irrigation district "I'm looking very carefully off the creek could dramatiat some possibility that would cally improve its health, but work for b oth L andWatch that such an undertaking will and the city, but I'm not inde- require the city and irrigapendent; I have to work with the other councilors," she said

tion district to work togeth-

ful, but I have a fair amount

interests.

when it benefits LandWatch

look at the basin." Heisler said t h e s t u dy

er, as well as organizations Tuesday. "We have to be care- representing environmental

of buy-in and alignment from In regard to LandWatch's my colleagues and staff. report, Heisler noted a much We're going to talk soon." larger study of the entire Reactions to the report's basin is getting underway, main takeaway were mixed, backed by $1.5 million in fedwith some councilors exeral and state funding. "My question to Paul is, pressing concern and others dismissing it as a ploy. are we going to have dueling "I think Paul Dewey's argu- science, or are they going to ments can be suited to what- align?" Heisler said. "This ever project he's tryingto stop study is a pretty big deal. It that week," Councilor Casey has all the best data and cliRoats said in an email. mate models and s urface "There's a certain attitude hydrology and groundwater of using facts and figures models. It will be a complete and ignoring them when it's not beneficial for them,"

should offer a guide to those Councilor Victor Chudowsky managing water as the imsald. pacts of dimate change beRussell said she also is come more severe. "I'm hoping Paul's report skeptical, saying she couldn't foresee the stretch of Tuma- becomes a credible sub-relo Creek above 'Dimalo Falls port, and we're not debating dryingup too much, given the about what to expect," Heisler number of small creeks run- sald. ning into it. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, Councilor Nathan Boddie tleeds@bendbulletirt.com


0

B6 T H E BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided byACCHWeather, lnc. ©2015

i

1

i

'

I

TODAY

ii

TONIGHT

HIGH 45'

ALMANAC

LOW 23'

s

A rain or snowshowerthis afternoon

l f ' 1

THURSDAY ' ' 49'

'~

A shower in spots early, then a flurry

FRIDAY

"'"

24'

~

SATURDAY

52'

48'

44'

2 6'

25'

23'

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

TEMPERATURE

EAST:Variable cloudiness with a few Seasid showers aroundin 52/42 northern areas, mainly Cannon in the afternoon. 52/43

/4

ria

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatilla Hood 60/34 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

i

Yesterday

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 86/64/0.00 High 4e 54 75' in 1923 lington 58/34 Portland Akron 58/40/0.01 Meac am Losti ne 37' 29' 14'in 1953 Low /3 Albany 46/34/0.00 • W co 5 36 dl eQ n4 4/ 2 44/ 2 6 Enterprise • he Dall 5 • 42/25 Albuquerque 78/49/0.00 Tigamo • 55 / PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Mainly andy• Anchorage 44/28/0.00 57/39 52/40 Mc innvill Joseph Atlanta 76/47/Tr 5/39 Goveo nt • u pi • He p pner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.04" cloudy and cool with Condoli 0/31 25 • 5 Atlantic City 52/33/0.41 Cam 49 30 Record 0.45" in 1936 scattered showers, Lincoln union Austin 79/65/0.00 45/ Month to date (normal) 0.4 3" (0.73") mainly in the afterSale 52/42 Baltimore 68/38/0.05 • pmy Graniteo Year to date(normal) 1.54 " (3.35") noon hours. 54/3 • 2/31 Billings 76/51/0.00 'Baker G Newpo 37/23 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 9" • 50 27 Birmingham 81/49/0.10 6/36 51/40 • Mitch II 46/24 Bismarck 76/27/0.00 C a m P S h m a u R e d WEST: Cloudyand 46/2 7 1\ O1V R S I SUN ANDMOON Boise 68/51/0.00 46/27 • John eu cool with a few show">4< 57/37 Boston 49/37/0.00 • Prineville Day 24 Today Thu. tario Bridgeport, CT 45/35/0.09 ers around, partiularly 48/25 • P a lina 4 4 / 2 8 Sunrise 6:47 a.m. 6 : 4 6 a.m. 5 30 Buffalo 42/26/0.00 in northern areas. F l oren e • Eugene 47/2 • Be d B rothem 4426 Sunset 7:32 p.m. 7: 3 3 p.m. Valeo 53/41 Burlington, YT 41/30/Tr Su iffero 45/23 Moonrise 5:1 1 p.m. 6:0 9 p.m. 55/30 Caribou, ME 36/29/Tr Nyssa • 4 3 / 2 • l.a pine Ham ton e Charleston, SC 80/49/0.00 Moonset 5:2 7 a.m. 5:5 5 a.m. 4 Juntura Grove Oakridge Co Charlotte 77/35/0.00 • Burns OREGON EXTREMES Full La st New First 50/25 55/37 /35 Chattanooga 80/40/0.00 54 9 • Fort Rock Riley 47/23 YESTERDAY 4' Cresce t Cheyenne 73/36/0.00 45/24 43/21 Chicago 58/39/0.00 High: 71' Bandon Roseburg • Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 69/42/0.00 Jordan V aey A prd A p r 11 A p r ta A p r 2 5 at Ontario 54/41 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 56/38 Cleveland 52/38/0.08 Low: 30' 45/23 Marsh Lake 46/24 ColoradoSprings 74/37/0.00 Toufght's ufty:Jupiter high abovethe 43/21 at Sisters 45/21 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 76/48/0.00 • Paisley 4/ southern horizon, within constellation of a Columbia, SC 81/40/0.00 • 50/25 Chiloquin 47/23 Columbus,GA 80/49/0.00 Medfo d Cancer. Gold ach Rome 0' Columbus,OH 65/45/0.00 54/ 50/25 • Klamath Concord, NH 48/26/0.00 Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields• • Ashl nd F a l l s • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 80/65/0.00 Bro ings 49/25 53/3 47/21 55/ 46/24 48/23 Dallas 83/63/0.00 Dayton 64/47/0.00 Denver 77/38/0.00 10 a.m. Noon 2 p .m. 4 p .m. Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Des Moines 77/42/0.00 S 1~5 ~ S I S City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 48/35/0.21 The highertheAccuWeaffrer.rxrm IIY Index number, Astoria 55/44/0.09 54/41/t 55/42/pc La Grande 57/43/0.00 49/30/pc51/25/pc Portland 57/4 7/0.2056/40/t 57/39/pc Duluth 56/30/0.01 the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low, Baker City 55/36/0.0246/24/pc 50/19/s La Pine 43/36/0.00 43/22/pc 48/23/s Prinevige 49/ 40/0.0448/25/pc 48/21/s El Paso 84/62/Tr 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 56/46/0.48 55/40/pc 57/40/s M e dford 58/4 8 /0.12 57/35/pc 62/33/s Redmond 52 / 38/Tr 48/22/pc 52/21/s Fairbanks 36/20/0.00 Bums 54/33/Tr 4 7/23/pc 50/20/s Ne wport 54/4 5 /0.34 51/40/t 5 1/39/pc Roseburg 56 / 46/0.28 56/38/t 61/36/s Fargo 64/30/0.00 Eugene 55/45/0.07 55/36/t 58/34/pc NorthBend 55/45/0.23 53/40/t 55/41/s Salem 55/45/0.21 54/37/t 57/36/pc Flagstaff 68/34/0.00 Klamath Fags 50/32/0.01 47/21/pc 51/20/s O n tario 71/43/0.0055/30/pc 57/27/s Sisters 49/30/0.07 47/23/pc 51/21/s Grand Rapids 52/36/0.19 G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Lakeview 52/36/0.00 46/24/si49/18/s Pendleton 57/44/Tr 55/35/pc 57/35/s The Dages 6 1 /49/Tr 57/39/pc 60/36/ s Green Bay 58/32/0.17 Greensboro 74/38/0.00 Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday W L a r~ yhig h Ab t Harrisburg 52/33/0.05 Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577 Harfford, CT 51/32/0.02 Helena 75/37/0.00 84/70/0.14 ~ os ~ t ea ~ 20 a ~ s g s ~ 4 0 6 ~ 5 0 a ~ e c a ~ 7 0 6 ~ a o a ~ 9 0 6 ~ 1 00a ~ t t e a Honolulu ~ 1 06 ~ o a Houston 83/64/0.00 As ol 7 a.m.yesterday Huntsville 77/45/Tr ~ oet Rrnstr, v Indianapolis 63/47/0.00 Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity NATIONAL Que c 49/26 34%x x x r uay 28/1 Jackson, MS 83/60/0.00 EXTREMES + yJ C rane Prairie 545 3 5 99% v ~ 53/41 Jacksonville 81/55/0.00 Wickiup 19B9B2 99% YESTERDAY(for the srrraa uismsrc Port 7/ah'„~ 4S contiguous states) i ' Crescent Lake 7 5 4 05 S7% 41/34 4 5 sa/40 d • Billings Ochoco Reservoir 33472 Tevo National high: 104 Amsterdam 50/43/0.81 uoh 5 5/33 p Boston , ~d Athens 70/54/0.15 Prineville 12357 Bvo at Death Valley,CA • 52/30 uke d1/3 /30 I uffslo Auckland 72/58/0.00 River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./aec. National low: 16 5 /4 w York Baghdad 79/55/0.00 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 147 at Newberry, Ml 9/39 Bangkok 97/81/0.00 4 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 37B Precipitation: 1.27" iladelphis Beijing 58/54/0.07 C icsg Des Moi • Sstt Lake 4/38 Beirut 66/58/0.02 Deschutes R.below Bend 943 at Gadsden AL sh s hclvco 6 41/2 Omst r e /51 55/35 Berlin 52/33/0.43 de/52 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1010 . Denver u tt s eo Las V ss Bogota 70/48/0.15 Little Deschutes near LaPine 170 69/36 81/5 Mnsss Crty St. u ' 71/53 Budapest 55/37/0.15 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 33 s Angeles 82/ed Buenos Ai r es 79/57/0.00 7 e • svhvll Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 324 Cabo San Lucas 88/63/0.00 v. v. + % v. 75/5 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 122 Cairo 79/59/0.00 Phoen 71/ Aochorsue Atbuque ue k l aboaraei + a j • Calgary 64/37/0.00 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 135 • OO/Sa 47/3 h o 76/46 a Cancun 8193/0.00 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 5 uneau ul Ps Dublin 46/41/0.08 3/6 Edinburgh 45/41/0.14 47/37 Geneva 59/52/0.22 Harare 77/60/0.30 4• In inches as ol 5 p.m.yesterday w Orleans 1/ey Hong Kong 80/72/0.00 Chihuahus 81/ea Ski resort New snow Base Istanbul 59/52/0.07 84/72 92/48 Mismi Jerusalem 64/47/0.06 0 40-9 9 Monte y Mt. Bachelor aa/se- 'Z . ae/59 Johannesburg 73/55/0.04 M t. Hood Meadows 0 23-B O o Lima 78/68/0.00 3 2B-4 5 Timberline Lodge Lisbon 68/52/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. A spen / Snowmass, CO 0 Se-7 0 London 55/48/0.04 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front Park City Mountain, UT 0 50-50 79/46/0.00 Manila 92/77/0.00 Source: OnTheSnow.com

Yesterday Normal Record

Mostly cloudy, acouple of showers; chilly

Rather cloudy andchilly with rain

Partly sunny

Mostly sunny andchilly

SUNDAY

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

0

SKI REPORT

O-,

Today Thursday HiRo/W 84/64/c 57/41/s 43/25/pc 76/46/pc 47/30/s 79/60/s 49/37/s 78/63/1 56/37/s 55/33/pc 78/60/1 61/34/pc 52/30/s 43/30/pc 45/33/pc 44/33/pc 37/22/pc 29/11/pc 74/53/pc 71/48/s 76/54/s 61/27/1 67/51/s 68/48/s 54/43/pc 71/36/pc 77/59/s 76/51/s 80/58/1 63/43/s 41/23/pc 79/69/1 79/64/1 65/47/s 69/35/1 79/54/pc 58/41/s 59/44/sh 83/60/s 44/1 7/c 72/41/pc 64/34/s 61/47/s 56/50/pc 67/46/s 53/33/s 46/29/pc 47/28/pc

Hi/Lo/W 92/63/pc 70/49/1 60/48/c 72/37/s 46/29/s 74/60/1 57/47/s 85/64/pc 68/57/s 49/30/sh 75/61/pc 47/23/c 55/30/s 50/45/pc 52/46/pc 64/45/1 53/42/c 38/30/pc 77/62/s 72/60/pc 75/59/1 36/21/sn 64/42/t 72/58/t 69/47/1 49/26/sh 70/48/1 79/62/pc 78/56/pc 72/53/t 51/43/sh 82/70/pc 86/67/pc 71/51/1 39/22/r 70/40/pc 68/44/1 58/26/pc 83/53/s 41/18/c 49/20/c 57/22/s 62/37/t 64/34/1 70/60/s 67/55/pc 56/48/pc 47/28/sh e4/72/pc 85/71/c 81/67/1 83/69/pc 78/59/c 74/60/1 68/50/s 71/52/t 79/63/1 82/64/pc 79/58/t 78/59/pc 48/35/sh 62/48/s 72/58/pc 80/58/s 96/7 7/s 57/41/pc 68/58/pc 44/35/sb 68/50/c 47/31/r 86/68/s 87/62/s 80/61/pc 42/26/pc 85/71/s 53/43/c 49/39/c 46/41/r 78/54/s 79/73/pc 54/45/pc 64/54/pc 77/57/c 81/67/pc 78/58/pc 51/46/sh 72/43/s 93/73/s

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 44/38/0.19 47/37/sh 45/33/r 77/46/0.00 82/56/pc 67/40/1 49/34/0.29 60/46/s 66/39/1 89/65/0.00 81/57/s 72/50/s 74/42/0.00 67/48/s 72/59/1 79/33/0.00 85/45/1 67/33/pc

Litlle Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

84/57/0.02 73/57/0.00 75/45/0.00 62/36/Tr 80/53/0.00 81/62/0.00

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

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

79/63/1 80/65/1 75/56/pc 79/57/s 71/53/s 75/62/1 67/52/pc 65/35/1 79/62/1 77/65/t 84/68/s 8391/s 51/38/Tr 58/49/pc 62/36/1 65/32/0.00 72/46/t 62/31/s 82/39/0.00 75/56/pc 74/62/t 82/61/0.00 81/68/c 83/69/pc 47/40/0.14 49/37/pc 60/52/s 47/38/0.17 50/35/pc 62/52/pc 71/37/0.00 54/40/s 67/57/s 86/54/0.00 84/64/pc 83/55/1 77/36/0.00 83/48/t 67/35/pc 84/58/0.00 85/64/pc 84/64/pc 96/63/0.00 91/62/s 86/60/s 70/49/0.00 73/55/s 69/45/1 59/37/0.06 54/38/s 65/54/s 95/68/0.00 90/62/s 84/59/s 60/39/Tr 57/39/s 71/55/1 48/34/0.00 41/25/pc 45/40/c 49/32/0.02 47/29/pc 53/44/pc 74/35/0.00 66/42/s 72/59/s 81/35/0.00 61/31/c 52/22/pc 70/54/0.00 56/34/pc 55/30/s

Rapid City Reno Richmond 79/36/Tr Rochester, NY 41/27/0.00 Sacramento 76/49/0.00 St. Louis 77/51/0.00 Salt Lake City 78/48/0.00 San Antonio 77/67/Tr San Diego 68/61/0.00 San Francisco 65/55/0.00 San Jose 68/50/0.00 Santa Fe 76/38/0.00 Savannah 82/48/0.00 Seattle 55/46/0.10 Sioux Fags 75/33/0.00 Spokane 55/46/Tr Springfield, MO 77/45/0.00 Tampa 79/66/0.00 Tucson 90/61/0.00 Tulsa 85/60/0.00 Washington, DC 73/44/0.01 Wichita 84/44/0.00 Yakima 62/42/0.00 Yuma 95/65/0.00 i

47/38/sh 69/54/s 73/57/s 75/55/sh 95/78/pc 58/38/c 67/58/sh 44/34/sh 67/47/1 50/35/pc 81/64/s 86/61/s 74/57/s 48/26/sh 86/73/s 50/45/r 47/32/c 47/35/c 75/55/r 79/72/s 63/46/s 57/46/sh 78/56/c 82/67/pc 79/58/s 51/46/r 70/40/s 92/75/s

Yesterday Today Thursday

City

4

63/41/s 72/59/s 43/31/pc 64/47/c 73/48/s 74/43/s 76/59/s 73/54/1

55/35/pc 52/32/c 79/66/t 86/67/pc 72/62/pc 73/60/pc 66/52/s 69/50/s

67/47/s 72/45/s 72/37/s 70/27/s 75/56/pc 53/41/1 77/40/1 52/30/pc 76/60/1

77/60/pc 54/42/pc

63/29/s 52/34/s 72/56/1

81/66/pc 85/67/s 88/55/s 86/51/s 80/65/1 80/56/1 60/44/s 72/61/s 85/58/c 70/44/pc

60/32/pc 62/33/s 90/62/s 85/61/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

103/75/0.00 97/68/s 78/50/0.00 76/49/pc Montreal 36/23/0.00 35/25/s Moscow 34/27/0.44 37/32/sn Nairobi 82/63/0.00 78/61/t Nassau 79/63/0.00 82/69/s New Delhi 88/68/0.00 89/69/pc Osaka 72/46/0.04 65/46/sh Oslo 45/23/0.00 48/36/pc Ottawa 36/23/0.01 37/25/s Paris 57/50/0.16 52/45/c Rio de Janeiro 88ns/0.00 82/72/pc Rome 66/48/0.00 66/45/s Santiago 84/52/0.00 86/54/s Sao Paulo 84/68/0.00 78/62/pc Sapporo 50/39/0.20 47/36/pc Seoul 61/41/0.28 65/45/pc Shanghai 84/62/0.05 75/62/c Singapore 90/79/0.32 89P9/t Stockholm 45/32/0.03 45/32/c Sydney 73/65/0.08 79/66/sh Taipei 87/70/0.02 86/70/pc Tel Aviv 72/54/0.02 67/56/sh Tokyo 70/52/0.02 64/49/sh Toronto 45/27/0.00 44/32/s Vancouver 52/45/0.23 52/38/1 Vienna 63/38/0.50 47/36/sh Warsaw 43/41/0.36 45/33/r

100/71/s 77/52/pc 49/39/sn 43/31/c 80/62/t 83/71/s 93/69/s 68/53/pc 48/34/pc 52/36/r 55/45/r 80/71/r 63/46/s 84/52/s 76/61/pc 52/39/pc 66/44/r 84/60/pc 90/Tgn 46/33/c 82/64/sh 85/70/pc 69/61/s 60/54/s 62/38/t 53/41/sh 46/34/sh 45/32/sh

A ~flVl>TY ' OIQX wu, r

Submitted photos

Bryce Withers, a teacher at Ridgeview High School In Redmond,

A guide to Central Oregon and out-of-area camps, programs, and activities for children of all ages.

spent a week in Baja California in Mexico last month at a marine biology fellowship.

Withers Continued from B1 The group camped on the beach and had lessons in an outdoor classroom — a tent, a whiteboard and buckets filled

Publishes Friday, April 17, 2015

with field guides. Then it was into the water, collecting data for a research institute that p artners with

EPI. The group counted and measured sea stars and parasitic snails that attach to them.

Advertising Deadline: Friday, April 3, 2015

The sea stars eat algae and keep the coral healthy, which benefits the fish and invertebrates that live on the coral. Increased human activity seems

Withers' group counted and measured sea stars and par-

Call 54 1 - 3 8 2 - 1 81 1

to increase the number of these asitic snails that attach to the SnailS, but it is unClear Why. sea stars.

To reserve your ad space in the Summer Youth Guide. r

The group also counted 0th-

er marineinvertebrates— sea anemones, sea urchins and sea cucumbers — and mea-

do data collection. He said he

Gulf of California. The area,

dents to other EPI campuses.

aquarium of the world.

v ironment. That same k i d ,

Now back in Redmond, Withers said he hopes to in-

you get them outdoors and actually doing something, they might shine," he said.

also hopes to start an ecology sured water conditions in the club and maybe even take stu"You take a kid who might once a hot spot for pearl diving, is often referred to as the not thrive in a classroom en-

corporatemore field research i nto hi s c l asses. The t r i p

showed him that anyone can

—Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbufleti n.com

ScHooL NoTEs YOUTH NOTES Cascade School ofMusic piano student Lilia Morais has won the March 2015 Fortissimo Award, which recognizes students at theschoolwho show exemplary musical talent and effort.

She received an award certificate, $100 toward private lessons and gifts from Papa Murphy's and Cascade School of Music. She is eligible to win a $1,000 award during Crescendo Bendo in May. Her parents are Lara and Odilon Morais of Bend.

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •

••

TheB u lletin

s

• •

i

Q

o~

Pr

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903


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

College basketball, C3 NHL, C3 Preps, C4

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

AP picks women's All-America team Connecticut's Breanna Stewart and Notre Dame's Jewell Loyd are unanimous selections for the 2014-15 AP

women's All-America team. South Carolina junior Tiffany Mitchell, Baylor sophomore NinaDavis and Minnesota sophomore AmandaZahui B join the two juniors to round out the team announced Tuesday. Named asthird-team All-Americans wereOregon State junior Ruth Hamblin and Oregon junior Jillian Alleyne. This Inside is only • A list of All- the Americans, second C2 time since the AP started honoring All-Americans in 1996 there were noseniors on the team. There has been aunanimous choice for eightstraight years now, with Stewart also earning that distinction last season. Stewart, Loyd and Mitchell helped their teams reach theFinal Four. Davis guided the Lady Bears to the regional finals before losing to Notre Dame. Zahui B. Ied Minnesota to the NCAATournament for the first time since 2009.

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

PREP SOFTBALL

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

innin crus es ou ars Trice • Mountain Viewsufferstough 19-3lossto Wilsonvile

keeps things in

Inside

Bulletin staff report It was not the snow that caused prob-

lems for Mountain View on Tuesday. It was the top of the fifth inning. It was

Wilsonville's bats. The visiting Wildcats finally got afterCougars pitcherJensen Logan in the fifth, piling up 14 runs in the frame on their way to a 19-3 nonconference softball win in five innings. Mountain View (3-4 overall) committed four errors in the top of the fifth,

• Redmond baseball pulls away to beat Hood River Valley,C4 • Prep scoreboard,C4 scoring two runs in both the second and fourth innings, however, Wilsonville allbut sealed the win with that huge fifth inning.

contro

Logan was 2-for-3 at the plate for

Mountain View and drove in a run. Hannah Wicklund also logged an RBI

and Wilsonville capitalized with an av-

for the home team.

alanche of runs that sent the Cougs to their fourth loss in the past five games. The Cougars evened things up with

The Cougars visit Hood River Valley on Friday before beginning Intermountain Conference play Monday at Redmond High.

a run in the bottom of the first. After

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Mountain View's Maddie Leighton catches a throw and tries to tag out Wllsonvllle's Katie

Enbody at third base during Tuesday's game in

By Bill Pennington

Bend.

New York Times News Service

SYRACUSE, N.Y.There were 10 seconds left in the tense NCAA

tournament East Regional final Sunday when the basketball unexpectedly ricocheted into the hands

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

of Michigan State's senior

an ees S U s a s es rea n ow • Coming off an injury, the Madras star hopes to be in Monday'sseasonhome opener againstToronto

— The Associated Press

SKIING Freestylers medal at junior worlds VALMALENCO, Italy

in2014 Games played: 149 (Career total 864) At bats:575 (3,487) Runs:71 (574) Hits:156 (1,021) Doubles:27 (182) Triples:5 (36) Home runs:16(81) RBls:70 (384) Walks:49 (269) StrlkeoIts:93 (504) Stolen bases:39 (280) Batting average:.271(.293) On hase percentage: .328 (.347). Sluggingpercentage: .419 (.435)

thought to himself that the

ball was precisely where he wanted it to be. The Spartans had a four-point lead

in a frenzied overtime. Trice stood absolutely still, the picture of poise

and a statue of self-control. Michigan State's opponent, Louisville, had to foul

Trice, who made the two free throws that sealed the Spartans'76-70victory.

Michigan State heads to the Final Four on the back

By Erik Boland

not a starter until this sea-

Yankee Stadium against the Toronto Blue

Jays. "I'm ready now," Ellsbury said.

son and whose career was nearlyderailed by a mysterious brain infection. He

also had a litany of injuries in recent seasons, including a debilitating concussion. For most of his college years, hardship dogged Trice off the court. Little

wonder, finally getting his chance, he appears so composed and peaceful on the court. See Trice /C4

The 31-year-old Madras native started in

center and played five innings Tuesday, going 2-for-5 with a run batted in, batting once an inning against Philadelphia Phillies minor leaguers. "Felt good getting out there," Ellsbury said. "Five ABs, five innings of defense. Tested a

little bit of everything; a ball in the gap, got on base. It was a good day." Speaking to reporters in Fort Myers, Florida, before the Yankees' game against the Twins, manager Joe Girardi indicated Ellsbury wouldbe back in the lineup today against Tampa. SeeEllsbury/C4

— MajorLeagueBaseball

/n

II Nell Redmond i The AssociatedPress

Travis Trice and Michigan

— Bulletin staff report

State will take on Duke in the Final Four on Saturday.

GOLF

Nextup

Bulletin seeks tournamentinfo

— Bulletin staff repoit

Trice knew just what to

do. He would do nothing. On the Michigan State bench, coach Tom Izzo

Newsdoy

light swings last week, injured center fielder Jacoby Ellsbury said he was "pretty confident" he would be in the New York Yankees' opening-day lineup. After five at-bats in a minor league game Tuesday, Ellsbury, who has not playedin aspring game sinceMarch 15 becauseofan obliquemuscleinjury,offered no qualifiers regarding Monday's opener at

Ellsdury

guard Travis Trice.

of a small, skinny guard who was barely recruited out of high school, who was

TAMPA, Fla. — After taking some

— Two freestyle skiers from Bend claimed medals Monday at the 2015 FIS Junior World Ski Championships. Jake Mageau, of Bend, finished in second place in the men's halfpipe competition. Anna Gorham, also of Bend, took third in the women's halfpipe event. In the men's halfpipe skiing competition, Mageau, 17,landeda corked 900 on his first trick in the snowy and slow halfpipe to secure the silver medal behind New Zealand's BeauJames Wells. In the women's halfpipe, Gorham, 15, linked back-to-back 540s for a bronze medal — just one point shy of second-place finisher Valeria Demidova of Russia, and seven points shy of gold medalist Molly Summerhayes of Great Britain.

The Bulletin's sports department is seeking 2015 golf tournament information to be published May10 in our annual Central Oregon Golf Preview. The submission deadline is Monday, April 27. Thetournament calendar is for golf events to be held in Central Oregon during 2015 and should include date and time of the event, tournament format, host golf course, costand what is included, and contact information. To submit a golf calender item, senddetails to the Bulletin by email at sports©bendbulletin. com or centraloregongolfguy©gmail.com. For more information, call 541-383-0359.

• Michigan State's point guard helps Spartans advance

Men's Final Four: Michigan State vs. Duke(3:09 p.m.), W isconsin vs.Kentucky (8:49 p.m.) When:Saturday

New York Yankees center fielder Jacoby Ellsbury. Kathy Willens/The AssociatedPress

TV:TBS

, GOLF: LPGATOUR "

'

->, YoungsterKo rolling toward history By Doug Ferguson

top 10 in her past 10 starts on the

The Associated Press

LPGA Tour, including two victories. She has broken par in 28 con-

The pressure from playing in the first major championship of the year is clearly getting to Lydia Ko. Lydia Ko Wong Maye-E I The Associated Press

The 17-year-old sensation already is the youngest golfer, male or female, to be ranked No. 1. She has finished in the

secutive rounds, one short of the

record set by Annika Sorenstam in 2004. As Ko made her way around

Mission Hills for her first practice round at the ANA Inspiration, swing coach David Leadbetter

heard a peculiar sound from his teenage pupil. She was humming a children's

song. "The wheels on the train go 'roundand'round,"Leadbettersaid

Tuesday, laughing at the latest indication that Ko is not bothered by much in life or in golf. The song she chose was not lost on him, either. The train keeps chugging along, all the parts moving in beautiful

rhythm, no evidence that it is about to jump the tracks. SeeKo/C4

Nextup LPGA Tour: ANA

Inspiration When:Thursday-Sunday TV:Golf (9 a.m. Thursday)



WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Oregon opens spring practice looking at Bs The Associated Press

pects i n clude

Mari o t a opted to declare for graduated to transfer to anoth-

will be without receiver Devon

EUGENE — Even though heralded transfer Vernon Ad-

Taylor Alie and Ty Griffin, and the NFL draft with a year of el- er school without having to sit redshirt freshman Morgan i g ibility remaining after a his- out a season. Adams is set to Mahalak and f reshtoric season with the graduate in May. "As a first day, our effort man Travis Jonsen, NI X t llP Ducks . He won the

Allen because of an ACL inju-

ams has yet to join the Oregon football team, the Ducks

opened spring practice with several candidates looking to succeed Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Marcus

s o phomores

who went by Travis

school's first Heisman and set a Pac-12 Con-

Waller in high school and is already enrolled at Oregon.

ference record with

Jonsen,

a

58 total touchdowns

du-

Hill and Ifo Ekpre-Olomu and

safety Erick Dargan.

ers

arrioIS Overta e LOS ANGELES — S t e-

phen Curry scored 27 points, Klay Thompson added 25 and the Golden State War-

riors held off the Los Angeles Clippers 110-106 Tuesday night for their 10th consecutive victory.

a

17-point lead and had their

seven-game winning streak snapped. Blake G r i ff in scored 40 points, Chris Paul

added 27 and J.J. Redick 14. Paul's layup drew the Clippers to 106-104 with 12 sec-

onds left, but he was called for a b ackcourt violation while taking an inbounds pass from DeAndre Jordan with 9 seconds left.

T hompson and C u r r y combined on four straight free throws to close out the win for the Pacific Division

~

E

lost four in a row at Staples Center, where the crowd cre-

ated a playoff atmosphere. They booed to drown out the chants of "MVP" for Curry

by the many Warriors fans. Neither team led by more

Danny Moloshok/TheAssociatedPress

Los Angeles Clippers' Matt Barnes, right, drives to the basket past Golden State's Andre Iguodaia during the first half of Tues-

the fourth quarter. The Warriors were ahead daynight' sgame in Los Angeles. 103-100 when Jordan g ot

fouled. He made the first and caught a break with a lane vi- to 106-102.

season-high fourth straight

olation on the second. Jordan

vlctory.

Redick missed a 3-pointer

called for a foul on A ndre

and Paul missed a 3 and anSpurs 95, Heat 81:MIAMI otherjumper beforehislayup — Kawhi L eonard scored got the Clippers within two 22 points and Tony Parker with 12 seconds to go. added 16 in his 1,000th NBA Also on Tuesday: game, leading San Antonio to Nets 111, Pacers 106:NEW the road win over Miami.

Iguodala, who had already put up a 3-pointer before

YORK — Brook Lopez had 24 points and 11 rebounds,

Pistons105, Hawks 95:AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — An-

Barnes got to him in front of

and Brooklyn reclaimed sole possession of eighth place in the Eastern Conference by beating Indiana for its

dre Drummond had 22 points and 13 rebounds, powering

made all three free throws, extending the Warriors' lead

Psi GB 747 640 8 608 10i/2

595 11'A 554 14'/2 486 19'/2

459 21'A 452 22 446 22'/2

432 23'/a 425 24 392 26'/2

297 33'/~ 240 38

Pst GB 824 680 Ioi/z

676 u

658 12i/2 653 12i/z

649 13 608 16 568 19 534 21'/z 507 23'/2

446 28 378 33 356 34'A 274 40'/~ 216 45

Detroit to the victory over Atlanta.

SanAntonio95,Miami81 GoldenState110, LA.Clippers106 Today'sGames PhiladelphiaatWashington,4 p.m. SanAntonioat Orlando, 4p.m. Detroitat Charlotte,4p.m. Indiana atBoston 4:30p.m. Brooklynat NewYork,4:30 pJs. Dallas atOklahomaCity,5 p.m. Sacrame ntoaI Houston,5p.m. ChicagoatMilwaukee,5 p.m. Torontoat Minnesota,5 p.m. DenveratUtah,6p.m. LA. Chppers at Portland, 7p.m. NewOrleansatLA.Lakers,7:30p.m. Thursday'sGames Miami atCleveland,5 p.m. HoustonatDalas, 5:30p.m. Phoenixat GoldenState,7:30 p.m.

Summaries

pistons105, Hawks95 ATLANTA I95) Carroll5-70-110,Milsap1-72-34,Horford8-10 0-016, Teague 4-7 0-0 9, Korver4-7 0-1 11,Mack 6-9 0-012,Antic0-7 0-00, Sefolosha7-143-319, Bazemore 26 005, Muscala2 92 26, Daye1-1 00 3.Totals 40-847-10 95. DETROIT (105) Butler 3-60-0 7,Tolliver 4-92-213, Drumm ond 8-0 6-11 22,Jackson5-9 0-0 12, caldwell-pope 7-I61-1 18,Meeks1-60-0 2, Dinwiddie 0-00-00, Williams0-42-22, Anthony2-21-1 5, Prince4-90-0 9, Lucas III 7-110-015.Totals 41-8312-17105. Atlanta 28 22 22 23 — 95 Detroit 33 19 24 29 — 105

By Doug Feinberg The Associated Press

The women's Final Four

will have a familiar feel to it with three of last year's

teams back in the national semifinals. U Conn, N o tr e

Dame

and Maryland all return to the Final Four while South Carolina is making its first

appearance. It's the third time in the history of the Final Four

that all four of the top seeds made it this far. "That's the way it is in

Carolina are there. That's the way it is in our game. The best teams go to the Fi-

SANANTONIOI95) Leonard 8-135-6 22, Duncan5-10 2-212, Splitter 3-6 1-2 7,Parker7-122-2 16, Green1-30-1 3, Ginobili 1-4 0-0 2, Diaw5-120-0 u, Mills 0-0 0-0 0,Baynes0-00-00,Joseph2-53-47,Belinelli2-6 0-0 6, Bonner 2-2 0-06, Wiliams1-1 0-0 3. Totals 37-7413-1795.

MIAMI(81)

Ennis 2-7 2-2 7,Walker 1-30-0 2, Anderses2-8 0-0 4, G.Dragic6-146-6 19, Wade6-20 2-2 15, Chalmers 4-70-010, Whiteside5-70-010, Johnson 3-72-28, Beasley3-60-06, Z.Dragic0-00-00.Totals32-7912-12 81. Sas Antonio 19 2 8 24 24 — 95 Miami 20 22 18 21 — 81

nal Four every year." The Huskies will be trying for their third straight

national championship and 10th overall which would move Geno Auriemma into a tie with vaunted UCLA men's coach John Wooden for the most all-time.

UConn will face Maryland and Notre Dame faces

South Carolina on Sunday

Nets111, Pacers106

189 41'/2

Detroit105,Atlanta95 Brooklyn111,Indiana106

Ig

David Lee added 17 points for the Warriors, who had

the Clippers' bench. Iguodala

W L 56 19

z-Atlanta

Tuesday'sGames

champions.

took advantage and hit that one, too, leaving the Clippers trailing by one. Then the Clippers got unlucky. Matt Barnes was

Eastern Conference x-Cleveland 48 27 x-Chicago 45 29 y-Toronto 44 30 x-Washington 41 33 Milwaukee 36 38 Miami 34 40 Brooklyn 33 40 6oston 33 41 Indiana 32 42 Charlotte 31 42 Detroit 29 45 Orlando 22 52 Philadelphia 18 57 NewYork 14 60 Western Conference W L z-GoldenState 61 13 x-Memphis 51 24 x-Houston 50 24 x-Portland 48 25 x-LA. Clippers 49 26 SanAntonio 48 26 Dallas 45 29 Oklahoma City 42 32 NewOrleans 39 34 Phoenix 38 37 Utah 33 41 Denver 28 46 Sacramen to 26 47 LA. Lakers 20 53 Minnesota 16 58 x-clinched playoffspot y-clincheddivision z-clinched conference

The Associated Press

than three points for much of

AllTimesPDT

Four top seeds in Final Four

I'm not one bit surprised Notre Dame an d S outh

Spurs 95, Heat81

Standings

WOMEN'S NCAA TOURNAMENT

women's basketball," UConn coach Geno Auriemma said. "The absolute best teams get to the Final Four.

NBA SCOREBOARD

NBA ROUNDUP

T he Clippers blew

receiver Darren Carrington,

who faces suspension because cellent — I think across the of a failed drug test that kept country you're gonna find 100 him out of the national chamor however many guys that pionship game, which Oregon say that," Helfrich said. "We lost to Ohio State. "Mentally I was a little nertalk every single day about 'Better.' If we can continue to vous, running around for the improve on all the things we first time, but after a couple of talk about after practice and drills, in my head I was fine. during practice, we'll be in Physically it was more about good shape." getting in shape and getting This spring, Oregon will see my breathing back," Addison the return of receiver Bralon said. Addison, who missed all of Charles Nelson, a s p ecial-teams standout as a freshlast season after tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in man last season who would his left knee during spring turn into a key receiver with practice. Offensive tackle Ty- five touchdowns, is moving to ler Johnstone is also coming defensive back following the back after a torn ACL last fall. graduation of corners Troy and our a t titude were ex-

while guiding Oregon al-threat quarterback Qre pn $ rin to the national chamta's backup last season, led the who has been com- Game p ionship game i n quarterback group that went p~r~d to form~r Ore college football's first through drills Tuesday for the gon star Dennis Dix- Wh ' 1 1 playoffs. y first of 15 practices ahead of on, passed for 1,797 Lockie is the only the annual spring game on yards and 12 touchy one in t h e g r oup May2. downs while also run- TV:Pac-12 with experience; he Coach Mark Helfrich al- ning for 815 yards and c ompleted 21 of h i s lowed reporters to watch the 13 scores as a senior at Ser- 27 passes for 207 yards and a opening 10 minutes of the vite High School in Southern touchdownlastseason. workout, which later had to California. Meanwhile, the Ducks are be moved inside because of Helfrich said the quarter- w aiting on Adams, an FCS the threat of lightning. Mar- b ack situation would shake A l l - A merican at Eas t e r n iota was among those who out over the spring and sum- Washington, who announced watched the Ducks practice in mer, joking that he did not h e will come to Oregon for his helmets but no pads. see maintaining a "five-way" f inal year of eligibility. NCAA Addison's return this seaOther quarterback pros- competition. rules allow players who have son is key for the Ducks, who Mariota. Junior Jeff Lockie, Mario-

ry he sustained on the opening kickoff of the Rose Bowl, and

C3

in Tampa, Florida. South Carolina is the Fi-

INDIANA (106)

S.Hill 3-7 0-0 9,West4-106-714, Hibbert3-0 1-1 7, G.Hill10-174-5 28,Miles 0-0 0-00, Stuckey 1-8 1-2 4,Mahinmi1-1 0-02, Scola4-10 5-5 13, Rudez 5-60-012,Allen2-70-04,Watson4-53-413. Totals 37-8220-24106. BROOK LYN(111)

Johnson6-13 6-621, Young4-0 0-0 8, Lopez 0-172-224,Wiliams462-311, Brown3-82-410, Anderson 7-113-320,Jack4-u 5-613, plumlee1-2 2-44, Clark 0-1 0-00, Bogdanovic 0-00-00. Totals 40-80 22-28111. Indiana 15 39 25 27 — 106 Brooklyn 33 24 27 27 — 111

Warriors 110, Clipqers 106 GOLDEN STATE(110) H.Barses0-71-21, Lee8-121-217, Bogut3-5 0-1 6,Curry8-15r-r 27, Thompson8-21 6-725, Iguodala0-36-9 6, Ezeli 3-30-06, Livingston0-32-2 2, Barbosa 3-60-0 7, Speights5-93-413, McAdoo 0-1 0-00. Totals38-8526-34110. LA. CLIPPERS (106) M.Barnes 3-90-08, Griffin16-258-840,Jordan1-5 3-65, Paul7-1712-12 27,Redick 4-125-514,Rivers 3-60-27, Davis0-30-00, Hawe s0-1 0-00,Jones 0-0 0 00, Turkogl240 u 05.Totals36-8228 33106. Golden State 18 28 36 28 — 110 LA. Clippers 30 2 3 35 18 — 106

nal Four newcomer, making its first appearance in the n ational

s emifinals.

Coach Dawn Staley became the second person to both play and coach in the Final Four joining Baylor's Kim Mulkey. "We are not just going to show up and just be happy to be there," Staley said. "This particular regional final game isn't the destination game for what we set out to do this season.

"So, you know, I think

this was a statement game

because we are going towe punched our ticket into the Final Four, and now it's time to maybe check

off some things that we've

Leaders

wanted to do, which is win

ThroughMonday Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Westbrook,OKC 59 537 483 1626 27.6 Harden,HOU 73 582 640 1988 27.2 James,CLE 64 587 357 1644 25.7 Davis,NOR 59 567 320 1455 24.7 Cousins,SAC 56 467 40 1347 24.1 71 575 284 1681 23.7 Curry,GOL Aldridge,POR 65 606 282 1527 23.5 Irving,CLE 70 546 295 1530 2t9 59 502 276 1288 21.8 Griffin, LAC Wade,MIA 54 452 249 078 21.8 Thompson, GOL 68 533 202 1477 21.7 Lillard POR 73 521 319 1535 2tO Gay,SAC 67 499 324 1399 20.9 Butler,CHI 58 379 351 070 20.2 Hayward,UT A 71 463 354 1393 19.6

the national championship." Here are some oth-

Rebosnds G OFF OEF TOT AVG Jordan,LAC 74 357 740 1097 14.8 Drummond,DET 73 390 584 974 13.3 Cousins, SAC 56 175 519 694 12.4 Gasol,CHI 70 193 635 828 0.8 Chandler,DAL 68 271 504 715 0.4 Vscevic,ORL 66 215 521 736 11.2 Randolph,MEM 64 206 474 680 10.6 Davis,NOR 59 153 462 615 10.4 Monroe,DET 64 216 451 667 10.4 Aldridge,POR 65 162 50 673 10.4

two. That run ended when

er things to look for this weekend:

Welcome back The Southeastern Conf erence had one o f t h e most d ominant s t r etch-

es in women's basketball sending at least one team to the Final Four from 1982-

2008 in every season but Tennessee celebrated its second straight national championship in Tampa, Florida, in 2008. The conference, which only missed having teams in that run in 1992 and 2001, had not had

a team back since South Carolina made it this year.

We're goingstreaking! UConn has made it to a

NHL ROUNDUP

record eight straight Final

Canucksneed shootout to overtake Predators

time. The only other teams to accomplish five straight

The Associated Press

which lost its second straight

Washington beat Carolina.

NASHVILLE, Tenn.— Nick at home. Th e P r edators Bonino and Radim Vrbata pulled within two points of scored in the shootout, and NHL-leading Anaheim.

the Vancouver Canucks beat the Predators 5-4 Tuesday night to avoid being swept by Nashville. The Canucks padded their lead to four points over Cal-

gary for second place in the Pacific Division with their second win in two nights. They did it by killing off a five-minute major penalty that carried into overtime.

Maple Leafs 3, Lightning 1: TORONTO — Nazem Kadri

Vancouver led 4-3 after scoring twice in the first six min-

utes of the third period before Fisher tied it with a power-play goal at 14:57. The Predators got another man advantage when both Burrows and K evin Bieksa

were ejected, and Burrows was given a major penalty for hitting forward Paul

berg in the shootout. Alexandre Burrows had a

goal and an assist for Vancouver. Chris Higgins, Linden Vey and Jannik Hansen scored a goal each, and Bonino had two

Vancouver has started its

left as Boston rallied to beat Florida.

Dame coach Muffet McGraw said. "Each year, we feel like maybe this will be our year, but I think (we're) definitely celebrating this whole week of what we accomplished all year long

Kreiderscored with 3:46 left in the third period, and Henrik Lundqvist and the New

York Rangers rallied to beat Winnipeg. Senators 2, RedWings1: DEMark Humphrey 1 TheAssociated Press

final road trip in style, build-

Vancouver left wing Chris Higgins, right, congratulates goalie

ing off a 4-1 win at St. Louis

Eddie Lack (31) after beating Nashville 5-4 in a shootout Tuesday night in Nashville, Tennessee.

on Monday. Canucks coach Willie Desjardins started Lack for the second straight game, assists. trying to give his club a tightCapitals 4 , Hu rricanesing that mark for the sixth Mike Fisher, Cody Fran- er grip on its position in the 2: WA S H I N GTON time and tying a team record son, Taylor Beck and Viktor standings. Alex Ovechkin scored hi s wi t h t h e 472nd of his career, Stalberg scored for Nashville, Also on Tuesday: NHL-leading50thgoal,reach- and added an assist to help

nals are Connecticut (200004), LSU (2004-08) and Stanford (2008-12). While UConn has won four titles in that span, including the past two, Notre

Rangers 3, Jets 2: WIN-

Eddie Lack stopped all four regulation. Nashville shots in overtime, Lack stopped shot after shot then turned away attempts by to get the Canucks to overtime, Mike Santorelli and Filip Fors- and he finished with 34 saves.

trips to the national semifi-

had a goal and assist, and Toronto played the role of spoiler in a win over playoff-bound Tampa Bay. Bruins 3, Panthers 2:BOSTON — Milan Lucic scored the tiebreaking goal with 1:09

N IPEG, Manitoba — C h r is

Gaustad high with 3:54 left in

Fours while Notre Dame is back for the fifth straight

TROIT — Mark Stone scored the final goal in the shootout, and Ottawa beat Detroit.

Blue Jackets 3, Devils 2: COLUMBUS, Ohio —

Dame is still looking for its first championship during this run.

"We have been there a number of times and not been able to finish," Notre

because only one team is

going to win."

Tip-ins The four teams have com-

binedto go 139-7this season for a .952 winning percent-

J ack

age.... It's the first time since

Johnson's backhander 56 seconds into overtime helped Co-

2003 that four different conferenceswillbe represented

lumbus top New Jersey and extend its winning streak to

in the Final Four.... Four No.

seven.

Four in 1989 and 2012.

1 seeds also made the Final


C4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

Ko Continued from C1 More t ha n

a n e f f i c ient

swing is a clear mind that makes Leadbetter forget she is still 17.

Three-run double leadsRedmondover HRV

Ko has such an even temperament that w hen L eadbetter saw her Monday morn-

ing for a practice round, the first thing Ko told him was how great it was that Cristie Kerr won the Kia Classic

the day before. In the final e vent before the f i rst m a -

jor of the year, Kerr and Ko were tied for the lead midway through the back nine when Ko stopped making birdie putts. She did not mention that part.

"Most players would be complaining about how they should have holed a couple of more putts," Leadbetter said. "She's different.Every other player I've known or have observed has this in-

tensity. She's intense, but she

also has a humble side. She doesn't lose her head. I told her, 'You can't be this calm. Go throw a ball in the pond.'" That is what led Leadbetter

to jokingly say, "We sent her to anger management school so she could learn how to get angry." Then again, there has not been much to get under Ko's skin. She has yet to miss the cut

Bulletin staff report wanted it bad." HOOD RIVER — Playing against Also on1besday: the Class 5A runner-up from last season, Redmond High put together one Baseball of itsmore impressive performances

of the season on Tuesday. Josh McElroy led off the top of the eighth inning with a single before ChanceSchwerbelcame in as apinch

S ummit 7, The Dalies 3: T H E DALLES — Summit battled the el-

as an amateur, and she won Ko is a combined 90 under par during her streak of under-par rounds that dates to

the final round of the Lorena Ochoa Invitational. Sorenstam was 100 under when she

ran off 29 straight rounds under par. That streak included two majors, and that is what

Ko is lacking. T his week

is her next

chance. "That's really what she's missing at the moment," So-

renstam said, pausing to remind herself of Ko's age. "At that young age, you would think she'd be missing a lot more, but she's certainly

and one run. Keeton Breitbach closed

out the contest with three innings pitched and limited Hood River Valley to just one hit.

"What I like is the game was getting a little chippy between Hood River and us,and we kind of calmed down and settled in," Taylor said. "Everyone was engaged in the game and just

Boys golf Mondayresult CrookCountyat Tri-Valley Tournament MeriwetherNational Golf Club,Hillsboro Par 72 Team scores —CrookCounty 361, Estacada 399, Molalla421,Gladstone 425,Corbett476. Medalist — Mayson Tibbs, CrookCounty, 3944 — 83. Crook County (361) — MaysonTibbs3944— 83,Cabe Goehring 44-45— 89,DanielEgo 49-45 — 94,TaranOugh,51-43— 94,JoshWiechert

Lakeview Culver

Continued from C1

tent in every area. I think the strongest part is between her

All along the Yankees maintained that the injury was not severe but took

— six as a pro. She was runner-up at the Evian Masters in 2013 as an amateur and finished third in the LPGA

Championship last year. She has not cracked the top 25 in two starts at Mission Hills.

Lexi Thompson is the defending champion after winning a duel against Michelle Wie. Both are power players. Mission Hills tends to

favor the long hitter, though Leadbetter was pleased to see the rough up at Mission H ills, which w o ul d p u t a

slightly greater premium on accuracy. Ko has added a draw to her repertoire, and Leadbetter said she hits it about 15 yards

longer. She doesn't do anything exceptional, she just does ev-

erything very well. And what makes her play older than her age is her mind. "Her great strength is she doesn't have any real weakn esses," L e adbetter

s aid.

"When she gets into the heat of things, she goes on autopilot. Things don't bother her."

Without a major, or piling up more wins at an alarming rate, it will be difficult for Ko

to stay at No. 1 because of the math involved in the ranking formula. At the moment, she

is helped in the ranking by not having played as many tournaments as the other top

players. But it is not as if Ko came

along at the right time during a lull at the top of women's golf. Inbee Park, who has won four of the last 10 ma-

jors, is No. 2 in the world. Stacy Lewis, the LPGA Tour

player of the year last season, is No. 3. "For her to continue, you

need to have the hunger," Sorenstam said. "The hunger to stay at the top, the hunger

to keep on working, and the motivation to grind, and all the players are looking at you and trying to find flaws in your game or for you as a person and trying to pull you down. For now, the wheels keep going around and around.

and Fiona Dolan each scored three times.

Track and field White Buffaloes shine at invite: CULVER — Kalan Wolfe won the 200 and 400, Cera Clay took the shot put

and discus, and Madras topped the girls standings with 88 points at the Culver Invite. Andrea Retano was

second in the 1,500 for Culver, which was third with 28 points, while La

Pine was highlighted by a 1-2-3 finish in the javelin by Chloe Sicora, Annie Hrbek and KaylieSimmons. Fredy pitched into the fifth inning for Cul- victory. Culver pitcher Josi Harrison Povis Ruiz won the long jump and ver, striking out four and allowing struck out seven batters and issued triple jump for the Madras boys, who two earned runs. The Bulldogs made two walks but gave up 17 hits. Harri- racked up 113 points to win the boys good contact with the ball, according son, however, scored two runs for the competition. Corey Sledge placed to Culver coach Nick Viggiano, but Bulldogs, as did teammates Elly Bau- first in both the 110 hurdles and pole they could not find the gaps. tista and Cheryl Aldred. vault for third-place Culver, and

Softball

Ethan Matthews logged La Pine's top

Girls lacrosse

Summit 10, Hermiston 9: Molly

finish with a second-place showing in

Summit 22, South Eugene 4: EU- the pole vault.

Nonconference 010 1 101 — 4 6 1

Track and field

Culver Invite Boys Team scores — Madras03, south wasco Softball County62,Culver38, LaPine7. Top threeplacers Class 5A 1,500 —1, Tyler Anderson,u, 5:13.06. 2, Sonconference BenjaminEllis, IIII, 5:13.93. 3, GenesisLucei, u, (5 innings) 5:23.15.3,000 —1, Benjamin Ellis, M, u:19.61. wilsoaville 1 2 0 2(14) — 19 14 12, IsraelTapia, u, 11:23.88.3, carlosReyes, c, Mountain View 10002 — 37 7 12:00.7z100 —1, Loreto Morelli, SWC,11.89. 2, TravisHayes,swc, 1z56. 3, FernBadilo, c, 57-57—114. Nonconference 12.60.400 — 1, Loreto Morelli, SWC,51.58. (6 innings) 2, Travis Hayes,SWC,59.36. 3, Jevin Smith, IIII, Lakeview 251226— 18 17 7 1:Ot.53.110h — 1, CoreySledge, C,19.05. 2, Culver 420001 — 7 3 6 David Pla,u,20.87.3,BrodyMyers,SWC,21.57. Baseball 800 — 1, Carlos Reyes,C, 2:20.45. 2, Tyler Nonconference Class 5A Anderson, u, 2;31.43. 3, GiovanniAguilar, u, (8 innings) 2:41.79.200 —1, Miklo Hernandez,u, 25.97. sonconference Hermiston 20003220 — 9 10 2 I8 innings) 2, Fern Badillo, C, 26.24. 3,Tristan Gillis, SWC, Redmond 00 0 16003 — 4 4 3 Summit 00006211 — 10 12 7 26.35.300h —1, Brody Myers, SWC,51.86. Hood RiverValley 000001 00 — 1 3 3 1,600relay— 1,SouthWascoCounty,3:58.26.

and she's just very consis-

into the majors, although Ko has played only 10 of them

Summit, Kyra Hajovsky logged three goals and four assists, and Julia Stites

PREP SCOREBOARD

Ellsbury

does so well under pressure. So that's what it takes to be No. 1." It still has not translated

for the Storm, who trailed 5-0 until

Summit's six-run fifth inning, highlighted by Aubrey Clemans' two-run cold temperatures mixed with wind single. Keylee Floyd's RBI single in and rain en route to a nonconference the bottom of the seventh forced exrunner. Later, with two outs, Colton win. The Storm used timley hits and tra innings, setting up Wasserman's Slavey belted a bases-loaded double, capitalized on errors and walks to late-game heroics. Freshman Hailey helping the Panthers seal a 4-1 non- hold off the Riverhawks on their home Nelson totaled nine strikeouts in the league baseball victory over Hood field. The Storm (7-0-1) were led by circle in Summit's nonleague win. River Valley. Alex Bailey and Noah Yunker, each of Crook County 11-17, Mazama 8-18: "It's huge. Bit confidence-booster," whom had two RBIs. KLAMATH FALLS — The Cowgirls Redmond coach Doug Taylor said, Lakeview 4, Cuiver 1: CULVER split a nonconference doubleheader to noting a rain delay midway through — The Bulldogs scored a run in the move their record to 5-4 overall. the game. "(Panthers starting pitcher) bottom of the fifth inning due to an Lakeview 18, Cuiver 7: CULVERDaulton Graham just picked up where errant throw, but it was not enough as The Bulldogs led 4-2 after a blustery he left off and did well." Culverdropped the nonleague match- first inning, but a 20-minute delay beGraham finished the day with five up. Mack Little had both hits for the cause of hail interrupted Culver's flow innings pitched, allowing just two hits Bulldogs (3-5), and Adam Knepp as the Honkers rallied for a six-inning

done a lot.... I watch her play

ears. She just has this composure about her which she

GENE — Lauren Gallivan recorded six goals and three assists, and the Storm improved to 2-0 on the season with a convincing road win. Kalie McGrew had four goals and an assist for

ements from start to finish, fighting

in her 48 events on the LPGA Tour. That includes 15 starts two of them, both at the Canadian Women's Open.

Wasserman's walk-off double sent pinch runner Shelby Boudreau home to lead Summit (4-2) to an extra-inning victory. Wasserman was 3-for-4

000 010 0 — 1 2 3

in the sense they didn't want me feel-

2, Madras,4;23.46. C, 15.07.400 — 1, KalanWolfe, M,I;14.0Z 2, HJ —1, BrentSullivan, M,6-0. Discus—1, TatumHahn,SWC,1:18.40. 3, StormySpino, M, ZephaniahPhilips, M, 111-8. 2, Ellis Rager,SWC, 1:19.70.100h— 1, Ally Muhleman,SWC, 18.93. 102-1. 3,HaydenManu, M, 95-6. PV— I, Corey 2, MayraRenteria, M,2z00. 3, chloe sicora, Lp, Sledge, C, 14-0. 2, EthanMathews, LP, 11-0. 3, 23.34.800 —1, TatumHahn, SWC,3:05.79. 2, AidenGoodwin,M, 10-0. Shot— 1, Ellis Rager, Laish aAlvarez,u,3:13.37.3,JaymeBomeke,M, swc,42-z2,zephaniahphillips,M,38-z5.3,sky- 3:50.1z200 —1, KalanWolfe, M,31.10. 2, Hanler Anderson,SWC , 36-8. Javelin — 1, Harrison nahDechampl ain,u,3z85.3,NetaysiaHobson, Manu,M,05-z 2, skylerAnderson,swc, 01-z 3, C, 3314.300h —1,Ally Muhleman, SWC,5826. Eli Rumba rger, C,110-7. TJ—1, FredyPovis Ruiz, 2, MayraRenteria , M,1:08.97.3, DaniraPerez,M, u, 38-6. 2,BenjaminEllis, u, 34-6. LI — 1, Fredy 1:20. 30.1,600relay— 1,SouthWascoCounty, Povis RuizM,18-6.2, , CoreySledge, C,17-8.5.3, 5:23.90. BradyPattenaude,M,17-0. HJ — 1, MariahStacona,M, 4-10. 2, Hannah Lewis, C,4-8.3,NetaysiaHobson,C,4-4.Discus Girls Team score s — Madras 88,South Wasco —1, CeraClay,IIII, 84-8. 2,CatylynnDuff,C, 78-t 3, MayaHoaglin, M,61-9. PV—1, Ally Muhleman, County50,Culver28, LaPine 27. SWC,7-0. Shot— 1, CeraClay, u, 25-7. 2, AlTop threeplacers smith, u, 24-3.3, MayaHoaglin, u, 24-1. 400-meter relay — 1, Madras, 1:00.76. iceanne 1,500— 1, AndreaRetano, C, 6:06.23. 2, Par- Javelin —1, ChloeSicora, LP,66-6. 2, AnnieHrb ek, L P , 62-0.3,KaylieSimmons,LP,60-6.LJ— 1, is McCartney,SWC,7:11.083, TyshaHulse, LP, 7:27.07.100 — 1, AnaPopchock, SWC,15.00. AnaPopchock,SWC,14-4.2,Mari ahStacona,M, 2, LaishaAlvarez,M, 15.05. 3, NetaysiaHobson, 14-0. 3,MayaHoaglin, u, 9-9.

Sox.

ing it during my activity," Ellsbury said. "So let's take it each day, let's not

base percentagewith 16 homers and 70 RBIs. One concern after Ellsbury signed a seven-year, $153-million

Everything that occurred Tuesday only reinforced to Ellsbury what he

push it, let's make sure when you do

deal with the Yankees before the 2014

felt from the time he went down on

come back we know it's ready to go. things slowly with Ellsbury. The for- And we knew that coming into today

season was his injury history, but the March 15: that the injury was not seoutfielder played in a team-high 149 rious and opening day was never in mer Oregon State standout started I wouldn't have any issues, but until games last season. He missed the fi- peril. "I thought from the get-go, from swinging a bat early last week and you do it ... they did a good job of get- nal 10 games of the regular season progressed to tee-and-toss drills and ting me back pretty quick." with a right hamstring strain but en- my conversations with them, that this indoor batting practice before finally Ellsbury's importance to the Yantered camp feeling, as most players was kind of the day we were shooting heading outdoors over the weekend. kees,of course,cannot be overstat- say at that time of year, 100 percent. for to get back into game action and It has been more than a week since ed. He was one of the few consistent Ellsbury is entering his ninth sea- we nailed it," Ellsbury said. "Everyhe has felt the injury. offensive performers on the club last son in the big leagues; his first seven thing went as well as it could have "That's why we took it like we did season, hitting .271 with a .328 on- seasons were with the Boston Red today."

Trice

"Easy. Relax."

vin Clark Jr . m i ssed two

ed Dawson and Trice. For months after, Trice's family

A brain i nfection caused electric." Trice teammate goes back by a parasite was eventualIn the NCAA tournament, many seasons. "That wasn't like him," JuContinued from C1 ly suspected. Slowly, Travis Trice has averaged 19.7 points "Travis has always had prepared to give his team a Trice recovered. a game, an increase from his lie Trice said. "But I was kind "That changed him; it made regular-season average of 15 of happy to see it. I was sayt hat c o o l d e m eanor i n pep talk. "But Travis was t elling ing, 'Let it go, baby.'" him live in the moment," Ju- per game. games," said his mother, Julie, in the minutes after the guys that we're going lie Trice said. "It made him Asked to explain Trice's As he lay on the court, Sunday's victory. "He's the to be OK," Izzo said. "So I realize that tomorrow is not jump in p r oduction, Izzo T rice wa s a b solutely s t i l l one who is trying to calm didn't say anything." promised and neither is the grinned and said, "The big- again. "I was trying to hold it in," down everyone around him. Said the Spartans' Bran- next game." ger the game, the more often I don't know how he does den Dawson: "Travis said Healthy again, Travis Trice you want the ball in Travis' he said later. "But at that mothat. I couldn't do that." to us: 'Hey, this is our eighth had time to work out and get hands." ment, you think of everything Travis Trice, 22, shrugged overtime game this season. stronger. When his two free throws you've been through. I'm glad "He got up to maybe 175 dropped with 10 seconds left that I did cry now. Sunday when asked how We've got this. We're going "It isn't my style. But it felt he came to his tranquil to win.' We believed Travis." pounds," Izzo said laughing. Sunday for his 16th and 17th The 6-foot-6 Dawson may "But this past summer, he re- points, Trice allowed himself good. deportment. "I've always felt like that be most responsible for ally advanced a lot physical- a small smile. was part of my job as the Trice's ending up at Michi- ly. And I think he got more But when the game ended, Where Buyers point guard," he said. "And gan State. Big-time basket- confident, too. Travis has al- he suddenly collapsed to the And Sellers Meet truthfully, in my head, I am ball coaches flocked to re- ways had a high basketball floor. 1000's Of Ads Every Day "That's the first time I've trying to stay calm and be cruit Dawson at his summer IQ, but this season, I saw Trasure I'm thinking straight." AAU games. While there, vis develop in new ways. The ever seen Travis cry," said Classifiefjs T rice's measured a p - a few, but not many, also last six weeks, he's just been D awson, whose time a s a proach to the game was ev- noticed Trice, a 150-pound ident at least three different point guard who was not yet times in the regional final. 6 feet tall. When his teammate MarIzzo decided he want2015

free throws at the end of regulation, shots that might have clinched the v ictory

for Michigan State, it was Trice who went to Clark at the next whistle — with the

game still much in doubt.

Later, in the huddle before the overtime period, Izzo

often heard that Travis was given a scholarship to help lure Dawson to Michigan State. When Trice averaged fewer than five minutes a game in his first two sea-

"I told

h i m t h a t t h o se sons as a Spartan, it might misses weren't going to lose have seemed like more than us thegame," Trice said."I just a theory. told him he was going to get Izzo said he was waiting

another big rebound or another chance to help us win.

for Trice to get a little bigger and stronger — plus there We needed him now so we were a few talented guards could win." playing ahead of him. But At the midpoint of the Trice was having trouble overtime period, the Spar- adding bulk because of fretans were running a little quent physical or medical r agged, hurrying t o i n - setbacks. bound the basketball and Trice had turf toe, infectjumpy in t heir offensive ed blisters on his feet, pulled sets. They were understand- muscles, strained ligaments ably feeling the stress of a and a concussion. Then game played on national in 2012, he began to lose television and before 24,404 weight. He developed dark spectators — the majority circles under his eyes. "They ran every kind of of whom were standing and yelling. test trying to figure out what Trice gathered his team- was wrong with him," Julie mates at th e f r ee-throw Trice said. "It was scary, escircle. pecially when they said they "Slow down," he said. were doing a spinal tap."

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54~-383-5958


C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

+

O» Tc look upindividual stocks, gc tcbendbugetin.ccm/business.Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

+

4,900.89

1.93%

2,067.89

TOdap Auto sales

2 080 .

The auto industry has benefited this year from strong demand, despite snowstorms and other roadblocks. Most automakers reported gains in February, when freezing temperatures, disruptions at West Coast ports and rising gas prices took a bite out of U.S. auto sales. Analysts anticipate that lost sales were made up in March as the weather warmed. March auto sales are due out today.

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... Close: 2,067.89 Change: -16.35 (-0.9%)

2,160 " 2,080 "

18,500"

+ -1.70

$1,183.10

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Change: -200.19 (-1 1%) '

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17,000

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StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,275 1,735 Pvs. Volume 2,853 1,720 Advanced 1284 1086 Declined 1843 1639 New Highs 121 82 New Lows 31 42

F

N

D

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17965.37 17773.02 17776.12 -200.19 DOW Trans. 8776.82 8712.22 8741.41 -46.65 DOW Util. 591.27 583.56 587.08 -1.06 NYSE Comp. 10955.34 10890.80 10899.19 -89.97 NASDAQ 4940.87 4899.31 4900.89 -46.55 S&P 500 2084.05 2067.04 2067.89 -1 8.35 -5.71 S&P 400 1528.18 1519.39 1524.03 Wilshire 5000 22114.56 21930.80 21947.91 -166.65 -5.03 Russell 2000 1255.30 1248.91 1252.77

DOW

J

YTD -0.26% -4.36% -5.02% +0.55% +3.48% +0.44% +4.93% +1.28% +3.99%

%CHG. WK MO QTR -1.11% V -0.53% V -0.18% V -0.82% V -0.94% V L -0.88% V -0.37% V L L -0.75% V L -0.40% V L L

NorthwestStocks NAME

GODaddygoes public Web hostingcompany GoDaddy is expected to make its market debut as apublic company today. The company, known for its racy Super Bowl commercials, hopes to raise as much as $418 million in an initial public offering. GoDaddy, which has posted losses the last three years, expects to list its stock on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol D

GDDY. D

StoryStocks The stock market fell Tuesday as investors sold industrial and health care stocks after big gains a day earlier. Despite the losses, the Standard & Poor's 500 index held on for its ninth straight quarter of gains. The market has only had three other stretches that long since the end of the Second World War. All 10 sectors in the S&P 500 dropped. Health care stocks fell the most, and utilities fell the least. Energy stocks dropped with the price of oil as nuclear talks between six world powers and Iran progressed. A resolution could lead to more lranian crude being sold on the global market in the coming months. CBG Teck Resources TCK Close:$38.71 L2.30 or 6.3% Close:$13.73V-1.54 or -10.1% The commercial real estate services Copper mining company Antofocompany is buying Johnson Ccngasta said it is nct in discussions trols' global workplace solutions with the fellow copper miner about a business for $1.48 billion. potential merger. $40 $20 35

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$25.84~

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Source: FactSet

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AP

Amana Growth Investor can't invest in companies that get MarhetSummary more than 5 percent of their Most Active revenue from prohibited goods NAME VOL (Bgs) LAST CHG or activities, such as alcohol, S&P500ETF 1009311 206.43 -1.82 tobacco or gambling. BkofAm

CSVLgCrde Apple Inc s iShEMkts GenElec Microsoft Intel MktVGold Penney

596775 501396 400301 373172 336338 332095 308188 304559 304319

15.39 -.13 2.20 -.14 124.43 -1.94 40.13 -.09 24.81 -.31 40.66 -.31 31.27 -.19 18.24 -.23 8.41 + .58

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AMAGX B L EN D GR OWTH

Gainers NAME

GtBasScin HK Tv GtBasSc un CorMed wt Navios pfG ChiCache QC Hldgs DehaierMd Orthofix If E-CDang

LAST 3.90 9.57 13.40 6.34 26.50 11.87 2.19 3.10 35.89 9.55

NAME

LAST

CHG +1.46 +1.97 +2.65 +1.21 +4.90 +1.95 +.31 +.40 +4.58 +1.17

%CHG + 59.8 + 25.9 5765 + 2 4.7 53 + 2 3.6 + 22.7 573 + 19.7 Moruingstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 6.5 e Fund target represents weighted + 1 4.8 Q + 14.6 average of stock holdings + 14.0 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings

Losers

CATEGORY Large Growth MORNINGSTAR

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CHG %CHG -.68 -21.7 -.47 -18.7 -.67 -15.3 -.52 -15.2 -5.49 -14.9

Paris London Frankfurt 11,966.17 Hong Kong24,900.89 Mexico 43,724.78 Milan 23,157.12 Tokyo 19,206.99 Stockholm 1,667.73 Sydney 5,861.90 Zurich 9,128.98

-119.84

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Scott Klimo 2012-09-14 +1.6 +1.6 +12.0 +12.3 +11.4

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Movado Group MOV Close:$28.52 %2.89 or 11.3% The luxury watch maker reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit and raised its quarterly dividend by 10 percent. $30 25

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52-week range 838.67~

$70.92

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Synta Pharma.

SNTA Close:$1.94 V-0.39 or -16.7% The biotechnology company priced a public offering of22 million shares of common stock below the prior day's closing price. $3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5

F

52-week range

K raft Foods Group

KRF T

Close:$87.12 V-3.50 or -3.9% The food and beverage company is ending its partnership with a dietitians group over criticism regarding the "Kids Eat Right" logo. $100 80

60 J

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52-week range $7.85~

$4.97

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$53.33~

$9D.67

Vol.:20.9m (3.4x avg.) PE: 50.0 Mkt. Cap:$51.23 b Yie l d: 2.5%

Charter Comm.

CHTR Orthofix International OF IX Close:$1 93.11 L9.72 or 5.3% Close:$35.89%4.58 or 14.6% The cable operator is buying Bright The medical device maker swung to House Networks in a deal that a fiscal third-quarter profit and enwould create the second-largest ca- tered an 18-mcnth option agreeble operator in the U.S. ment to buy eNeura. $200 $40 35 30

180 160

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SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

and the impact of the strong dollar. The Paramus, New Jersey, company has already been weighed down by the dollar and it has been trimming its costs. Movado expects full-year earnings to The yield on the 10-year Treasury come in between $2 and $2.10 per share, fell to 1.92 perwith revenue in the range of $590 million cent Tuesday. to $600 million. The company Yields affect also approved a 10 percent rates on mortincrease its quarterly cash gages and other dividend to 11 cents. consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK Mo QTR AGO

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

. 0 2 .0 3 -0.01 L L . 1 3 .12 + 0 .01 L L

5 2-wk T-bill

.26

.24

2-year T-note . 5 6 .5 8 5-year T-note 1.37 1.40 10-year T-note 1.93 1.95 30-year T-bond 2.54 2.55

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5-yr*

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 24 . 75 -.13+0.8 +8.1 +11.9+11.4 8 A A CaplncBuA m 59.45 -.52 +0.6 +5.2 +9.4 +8.8 A A A The price of CpWldGrlA m 47.14 -.52 +2.7 +5.1 +12.6 +9.6 C 8 C crude oil fell a EurPacGrA m 49.91 -.49 +5.9 +2.5 +9.6 +6.7 8 8 C third straight FnlnvA m 52. 1 3 - .44 +1.6 +10.3 +15.2+12.8 C C C day and settled GrthAmA m 44.12 -.42 +3.4 +11.9 +16.7+13.3 D 8 D below $46 per IncAmerA m 21.62 -.14 +1.0 +6.6 +11.2+10.7 C A A barrel for the InvCoAmA m 36.88 -.35 +0.6 +10.2 +15.8+12.7 C 8 D first time in a NewPerspA m37.98 -.39 +4.7 +7.8 +13.3+11.0 A A B week. Natural WAMutlnvA m40.86 -.37 +0.2 +9.4 +15.4+14.1 8 8 A gas was virtualDodge &Cox Income 13.8 6 + .62 +1.3 + 4.4 + 4.1 +5.0 D 8 8 ly flat, while IntlStk 43.93 - . 3 3 +4.3 + 1 .6 +12.3 +8.0 A A A Stock 176.5 5 -1.24 -1.2 +6 .5 +18.2+13.8 D A A gold dipped Fidelity Contra 100. 9 6 - .95 +4.1 +13.5 +15.6+14.9 C C 8 modestly. ContraK 100 . 91 -.95+4.1 +13.6 +15.8+15.0 C 8 8 LowPriStk d 51.14 -.37 +1.8 + 7 .4 +15.2+14.2 D D C Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 73.54 -.64 +0.9 +12.7 +16.1+14.4 8 8 A FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeC m 2.41 -.61+0.3 -0.2 +8.3 +8.3 E A A IncomeA m 2. 3 9 - .61+0.8 + 0 .8 + 8.9 +8.9 E A A Oakmark Intl I 24.86 -.28 +6.5 0 . 0+ 13.0 +9.7 8 A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 91 -.19 -0.2 +9 .6 +12.4+12.1 D E D RisDivB m 17 . 60 -.17 -0.4 +8 .8 +11.5+11.1 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 48 -.16 -0.3 +8 .9 +11.6+11.2 D E E SmMidValAm 50.65 -.23 +2.8 +10.0+16.4+12.4 8 C E SmMidValB m42.67 -.19 +2.6 + 9.2 +15.5+11.5 C D E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.3 5 - . 1 8 -1.0 +4 .7 +13.3+11.7 E D D Exchange GrowStk 55.6 9 - . 61 +6.0 +16.8 +17.0+16.2 A A A The dollar was HealthSci 77.5 1 -1.14+ 14.0 +41.9 +36.6+28.9 8 8 A mixed against Newlncome 9. 6 9 +.62+ 1.9 + 5.5 + 3.3 +4.4 8 C C other currencies. Vanguard 500Adml 190 .711.67 +0.9 +12.7 +16.1+14.4 8 8 A It rose against 500lnv 1 90. 7 1 1.67 +0.9 +12.6 +15.9+14.3 8 8 8 the euro but fell CapOp 5 4.97 -.51 +4.2 +17.7 +23.4+15.7 A A A modestly Eqlnc 30.99 -.27 -0.1 +8.7 +14.8+14.8 C C A against the IntlStkldxAdm 26.98 -.28 +4.1 -1.1 +6.6 NA C D British pound, StratgcEq 33. 8 4 -.20 +5.2 +14.3 +20.8+18.2 A A A Canadian dollar TgtRe2020 29 . 68-.14 +2.2 +7.5 +9.6 +9.3 A A A and Japanese TgtRe2035 18 . 26-.12 +2.4 +7.9 +11.9+10.8 A 8 8 yen. Tgtet2025 16. 9 0 -.69 +2.2 +7.7 +10.4 +9.8 A 8 8 TotBdAdml x 10.98 +.61 +1.6 +5.6 +3.0 +4.3 8 D D Totlntl 16.13 -.17 +4.0 -1.1 +6.5 +4.8 C D D TotStlAdm 52 . 2 8-.41 +1.8 +12.3 +16.4+14.8 8 8 A TotStldx 5 2.26 -.41 +1.8 +12.2 +16.2+14.6 8 8 A USGro 3 1.25 -.30 +4.5 +17.3 +17.0+15.3 A A B FAMILY

PCT 4.15 4.1 4.06 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 3.32 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeasdeither a sales or 3.24 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.

h5Q HS

FUELS

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

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

.03 .06 .1 1

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 2.42 2.43 -0.01 L W BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.22 4.22 ... L W Price-earningsratio:15 Barclays USAggregate 2.10 2.09 +0.01 L W PRIME FED Barcl (B a sed on past 12-month results) Drv yreld •1 4% p t v t dend • $0 40 aysUS HighYield 6.20 6.22 -0.02 W L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.55 3.53 +0.02 L W *annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.66 1.70 -0.04 w 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2.95 2.94 +0.01 L W 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualpunds

Tuesday's close:$28.52 T

52-WEEK RANGE

S

;

$7D.45~

M

P E: 26.7 Vol.:11.6m (2.5x avg.) PE: 2 1 .9 Yield:... Mkt.Cap:$7.78 b Yield: 5.8%

PNX Close:$49.99 V-6.08 or -10.8% The life insurance company swung to a loss for both the fourth-quarter and full year on restatement expenses and interest rates. $70

$ 77678~

Movado shares jumped 11 percent Tuesday after the luxury watch maker reported a stronger-than-expected fourth-quarter profit. seasonally adjusted percent change The company earned $10.1 1.5 million, or 40 cents per share, for the most recent period. That's well above the 20 1.2% 0.8 cents per share that analysts were anticipating. 0.6 Its revenue increased 1 percent to $133.9 million. est Movado said it plans to raise prices and 0.6 - 1,1 f l a t 0.0 streamline its operations to offset slow growth ahead

-1.2

$38 .99

Vol.:5.7m (3.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$12.89b

J F 52-week range DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 8 -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, rs regular rate. j —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.

J F 52-week range

52-week range

Spotlight on consbuction Economists anticipate that spending on residential and commercial construction held steady in February. The latest report from the Commerce Department, due out today, follows a 1.1 percent decline in overall construction in January, when unusually severe weather in many parts of the country likely held back spending Did the trend ease in February? Construction spending

15

Phoenix Cos.

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

Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ Avista Corp A VA 29.91 ~ Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Cascade Bancorp CA C B 4 . 1 1 $y ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.59— o Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — e Costco Wholesale CO ST 110.36 ~ 1 Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 r$ FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ Hewlett Packard HPQ 31. 03 e — Intel Corp I NTC 25.62 ~ Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ Kroger Co K R 4 3 .33 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 ~ LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ MDU Resources MOU 20 . 01 o — Mentor Graphics MEN T 18.25 r-r Microsoft Corp MSFT 38.51 ~ Nike Inc B NKE 70.60 ~ Nordstrom Inc J WN 59.97 ~ Nwst Nat Gas N WN 41.81 ~ PaccarInc PCAR 55.34 $y — Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ Schnitzer Steel SCHN 1 5 .20 o — Sherwin Wms SHW 188.25 — o StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ WashingtonFedl WA F O 19.52 ~ 2 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 ~ 5 Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7.48 ~

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CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -0.1 1183.10 1184.80 -0.14 16.58 16.66 - 0.46 + 6 . 5 -5.5 1142.60 1116.90 +2.30 2.75 2.79 -1.45 -3.2 735.00 728.70 +0.86 -7.9

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -2.6 1.61 1.63 -0.73 Coffee (Ib) 1.33 1.32 +0.42 -20.2 -5.2 Corn (bu) 3.76 3.95 -4.63 Cotton (Ib) 0.63 0.63 + 0.93 + 4 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 278.20 279.30 -0.39 -16.0 -17.8 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.15 1.15 Soybeans (bu) 9.73 9.68 +0.57 -4.5 Wheat(bu) 5.12 5.30 -3.49 -13.2 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.4845 +.0030 +.20% 1.6673 Canadian Dollar 1.2 6 58 -.0026 -.21% 1.1047 USD per Euro 1.0742 -.0081 -.75% 1.3775 -.21 -.18% 103.22 JapaneseYen 119.95 Mexican Peso 15. 2520 -.0047 -.03% 13.0536 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9793 +.0136 +.34% 3.4873 Norwegian Krone 8 . 0576 +.0361 +.45% 5.9868 South African Rand 12.1348 -.0031 -.03% 10.5284 Swedish Krona 8.6 2 5 8 + .0297 +.34% 6.4714 Swiss Franc .9723 +.0047 +.48% . 8 840 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.3136 +.0068 +.52% 1.0784 Chinese Yuan 6.1975 -.0134 -.22% 6.2169 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7530 -.0025 -.03% 7.7566 Indian Rupee 62.320 -.220 -.35% 60.025 Singapore Dollar 1.3724 -.0041 -.30% 1.2581 South KoreanWon 1108.99 +1.33 +.12% 1062.28 -.05 -.16% 3 0.44 Taiwan Dollar 31.25


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

BRIEFING GoDaddy raises $440 million Nearly four years ago, GoDaddywas an Internet registration company with a history of risque advertising. Now, as it prepares for new life on thepublic stock markets, the company is eager to let everyone knowthat it does a lot more than register website addressesand does not relyon racy commercials with scantily clad spokeswomen, either. That new vision of GoDaddyappeared to resonate with investors. The company raised$440 million after pricing its initial public offering at $20 a sharelate Tuesday, above its expected range of$17to$19ashare,according to aperson close to the transaction. At that price, the companyhas a market value ofjust more than $3billion. A representative for GoDaddywas not immediately available to comment. When it begins trading on the NewYork Stock Exchangetoday, under the ticker symbol GDDY,GoDaddywill not only be in public investors' hands for the first time but will also seekto demonstrat ehow much it has evolved. Executives have described the IPOas less an occasion to raise moneythan an opportunity to rebrand the company.Among its changes: Though GoDaddy remains based in Scottsdale, Arizona, it has expanded its presence in more traditional technology hubs, such as Silicon Valley and Cambridge, Massachusetts. Internet site registration remains GoDaddy's biggest source of revenue, accounting for just more thanhalf its sales last year. According to the prospectus, the company oversees59 million domains, or about 21 percent of those worldwide. — From wire reports

ew are o olce ro ucts rom mazonnow w iem oa o u FBB C IC BWB

By Mike Isaac New York Times News Service

-~

Chapter7 Filed March24 • Gerald D. Adams, 8051 SW Yahooskin Drive, Powell Butte • David D. Dobson, 136 North Milwaukee, Unit 6, Hines • Tara M. Lavelle, 3380 SWFourth St., Redmond Filed March25 • Noah M. Lachmann, 54765 Robin Lane,Bend Filed March26 • Matthew D. Tapia, 2824 NEPurcell Blvd., Bend • Kyle L. Doescher, 122 SE Cessna, Bend • Jason R. Heffner, 21222 Darby Court, Bend • Carole A. Giroux, 64800 Hunnell Road, Bend Filed March27 • Timothy W. Taggart, 2944 NEDeborah Court, Bend • Davie D. Crockett, 305 E. Metolius St., Culver Filed March30 • Trish Fain, 20624 Foxborough Lane,Bend • Stephanie R. Brooks, P.O. Box1375, Bend • David P. Speddon, 1607 SESkylark Drive, Bend • James A. Stanphill, 60220 Cinder Butte Road, Bend • Anne M. Clark, 1357 SW17th St., Redmond • Chanda M. Trujillo, 1365 SW 17th St., Redmond Filed March31 • Warren 0. Wilson, 244 SW Rimrock Way,Apt. 6, Redmond • Janis L. Sabatula, 114 SE11th St., Madras Chapter13 Filed March26 • Brenda L. Brewer, 17161 WoodDuck Court, Bend

Amazon hasbuilta boom-

Dash is that the coffee pot will

ing business of making it easy to buy things online. It has a patented one-click ordering mechanism. It offers subscription-style services. And

orderbeans, coffee filters and

Tuesday, Amazon unveiled a

a water filter — and be able to measure the use of all three and order each one separately

when needed. Initially, the program will

pilot program that allows customers to order items with the push of one physical button. But what is perhaps more important than the button is the underlying technology, which is not just about letting people order things easily, but also largely about letting them reorder things easily. The program, Amazon

include a few device makers

The Market of Choice grocery store under construction in Bendwill resemble the chain's flagship

Dash, is a partnership with a

store, seen here,on West 29th Avenue in Eugene.

handfulofconsumerbrands

so-called Internet of Things. In short: The more connected

Submitted photo

such as Bounty, Gillette and

Tide— made by companies that offer "important things you always run low on," such as paper towels and razor blades. Press a button on a small, pill-shaped device con-

By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

The new Market of Choice

coming to Bend next year will provide as many as 180 jobs, the company CEO said Monday. Hiring should commence

machine when you are running low on detergent. You might forget to reorder detergent later, when you're not staring at the spin cycle.

button stuck to your washing

Managers have yet to be named, although the prospect of working in Bend is spurring interest within the company, Wright said. "We haven't got that far

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Construction crews continued to work Tuesday on the site between NW Arizona and NW Colorado avenues west of the Bend Parkway.

>7

room for public use, Wright sard. Bend has about 20 gro-

yet," he said. "We actually have a number of people vying for that position." Eugene-based Market of Choice bills itself as a place where shoppers will find a range of products, from con-

cery stores and markets

ventional to organic. Part of the business model

Brookswood Market. Lauren Johnson, co-own-

includes stocking shelves

er of Newport Avenue

with local products, from

Market, said business plans adjust whenever a new play-

artisanal breads to craft beer, Wright said. That creproducers to supply the Bend store.

Fran lin ve

already, from chains such as Safeway with more than one location, to independent

grocers with a single store, such as Newport Avenue

I' 0

er entersthe market, and "Our customers shop with two to four other retailers, in

B Industrial Av .

A'

Market and C.E. Lovejoy's

she expects to compete with Market of Choice.

ates possibilities for local

TEND

?

Amazon's move is import-

ant, if not a bit outrageous. Afterseeing single-purpose hardware built just for order-

I

r enwo ~ve

Site ot Narket ot Choice GregCross/The Bulletin

ing more toilet paper, some people on Twitter wondered if Amazon Dash was an early

April Fools' Day prank. (Amazon confirmed it is a real product.) Buried in Amazon's release documentation is a description of the Dash Replenishment

chain, the Bend store will not include a community

world's largest data-driven

retailers, collecting huge amounts of information on the things we buy and how often we buy them. If Amazon's connected devices service takes off, it

couldprovidethe company with much more data on the

the online retail and manufac-

ners are limited, but the com-

pany said the service will be publicly available in the fall.

"Basically, the studies

came up pretty darn good given the state of the economy," Wright said. "Things have changed and improved quite a bit."

Choice chain, which began in the 1970s as a single

Library, 601 NWWall St.; 541-617-7080 or www. scorecentraloregon.org. THURSDAY • Conversations with funders:Learn how cultural nonprofits may apply for more than $4.7 million in grant funds this year; 10 a.m. Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; http://bit. ly/1Hz7aiw. • HiDEC April event, Transformingyour company's culture: A session that combines real-life examples, stories and solutions for various challenges around company culture; $55 members; $95 nonmembers, registration required; 8:30-11:30 a.m.; Bend Park & Recreation District Office, 799 SW Columbia St.; 541-3883236 or jessi©edcoinfo. com. • Managing Diversity in the Workplace-Part of the Leadership Series; develop strategies to capitalize on diversity

Similarly, while Amazon would most likely not make money on device sales from partner manufacturers, it could see increased demand through automated ordering. There is another added benefit. Amazon is one of the

as Market of Choice, Wright

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

as an asset in your work group. Registration required; $95; 8 a.m.noon; COCCBend Campus, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. FRIDAY • Housing Solutions Showcase:Learn about urban, dense, sustainable solutions to our housing affordability issues with Bend 2030 and the American Institute of Architects; 5 p.m. St. Clair Place, 920 Bond St., Bend;http://bend2030. org/announcing-housingsolutions-showcase/or 54 I-420-8603. TUESDAY • SCOREfree business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs;check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library,

seem large. For now, the part-

Charter to acquire Bright Housefor 108 By Emily Steel and DavidGelles New York Times News Service

es our scale and solidifies New Charterasthesecond-largest

The wave of consolidation reshaping the media industry continued Tuesday when Charter Communications announced a $10.4 billion deal for Bright House Networks, now the sixth-largest cable

cable operator in the U.S."

601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. • Aquila Tax-Free Trust of OregonOutreach Meeting:Economist John Mitchell and fund manager Chris Johns will discuss Oregon economic and investment outlook for the state and the Aquila Tax-Free Trust of Oregon.; 10 a.m. free; Hilton Garden Inn, Broken TopRoom, 425 SW Bluff Drive, Bend; http://bit.ly/1CSh8wc or 800-437-1020.

operator in the U.S.

pensivemergers and acquisitions. Already this year, more than $843 billion in deals have been announced, according to

WEDNESDAY •COBEN Meeting: "Delivering Effective 8 Engaging Group Presentations"; 11:30 a.m.$19forannual membership dues; registration requested; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd., Bend; www. meetup.com/COBEN12/ events/221135475/ or 54 I-728-3875.

heft in negotiations with tele-

BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Business Startup: A two-hour class to decide if running a business is for you. 11 a.m.; $29; registration required; COCCChandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. • Introduction to Visio: Learn fundamental skills while creating several types of basic diagrams including workflows, flowcharts, organizational charts, directional maps, network and floor plans; registration required; class runs through June 3; Wednesdays; $360; 12:453:05 p.m., Central Oregon Community College Bend Campus, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • SCOREfree business workshop:Operations management and structure; final monthly workshop; registration required; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public

and music from Amazon.

mainstream. Still, Amazon's ambitions

sociation. Independent grocers, meaning privately held or family-owned businesses,

A Bend location adds a

forcustomers to orderm ore things such as books, movies

with further acquisitions and in 2002 rebranded itself

a two-tiered cafe with out-

10th store to the Market of

instead pushes it as a portal

es have yet to catch on in the

coffeepot thatcan reorder

association.

This is classic Amazon business strategy. The company

running low on detergent and automatically order a new box for you from Amazon. Quirky,

He said the company is overdue in Bend, where it bought the property in May 2011 for $1.2 million. Market studies the company performed during the Great Recession showed promise, even then, he said.

take-away meals. Unlike larger stores in the

from Amazon instead.

that detects when you are

accept that."

Oregon, according to the

devices there are hooked up to DRS, the more people might avoid their local grocery store and order their everyday items

is invite-only at the moment, and Internet-connected devic-

turing startup, will sell a smart

operate 64 stores in Eastern

nected smart devices, the

soon offer a washing machine Thriftway in Cottage Grove. The company grew in 1998

of Amazon's test partners, will

sard.

side seating along with a wine bar and a growler-fill station, according to the company.Market ofChoice alsoemploys chefs to create

the proliferation of intercon-

types of things we regularly shop for. from Amazon directly into Of course, all this is a long household devices. way from coming to fruition, For example, Whirlpool, one if it ever does. Amazon Dash

terms offood,"she said."We

to the National Grocers As-

of at least some of Amazon's retail operations will rely on

Service, or DRS, a way to build reordering products

great partners in Central Oregon to help supplement some things," he said. "We'll be sending our buyers over to the area about six months before we open." The new store will include

Independent grocers in Eastern Oregon generate $384 million in sales and create 1,925 jobs, according

velopers, a bet that the future

some projects ,such assales of its Kindle Fire tablet, but

Rick Wright said. Construc-

Arizona avenues, west of the Bend Parkway.

But Amazon's description servesasa callto arm sforde-

makes little to no money on

simpleto pressa Tide-branded

tion of the 34,000-squarefoot store, a $17 million job, is underway on a site between NW Colorado and

products.

bottle of laundry detergent on your doorstep two days later. Amazon's theory is that it is

about eight months before

that plan to build the replenishment service into their

nected to Wi-Fi and receive a

the store opening, expected to be in summer 2016, CEO

"We'll have to find some

BANKRUPTCIES

C II I

beans from Amazon before you run out. The idea with

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

The deal ultimately would create the second-largest cable operator in the country

Charter's bid for Bright House is the latest multibillion-dollar deal this year, as big corporations in industries including technology, media and health care carry out ex-

behind Comcast, controlling about 10 million video subscribers. It is part of a longheld strategyby Charter, backed by John Malone's Lib-

Thomson Reuters. That is the most in the first quarter of any

erty Media, to build a stronger pace with vast technical

than $80 billion merger of Kraft and Heinz, Abbvie's acquisition of Pharmacyclics and Valeant's agreed takeover

changes and provide more

of Salix Pharmaceuticals.

national player that can fend off new and old rivals, keep

vision groups over escalating programming costs.

year since 2007. Other major deals announced include the more

The brisk activity advances a boom in mergers and acquisitions that began last year,

"Bright House Networks provides Charter with import-

as companies dusted off old consolidation plans, the stock

ant operating, financial and

markets surged, and debt re-

mained cheap. By announcing this deal gic flexibility," said Thomas Rutledge, Charter's chief exec- before regulators have utive. "Bright House has built decided on the proposed outstanding cable systems in Comcast-Time Warner Cable

tax benefits, as well as strate-

attractive markets that are either complete or contiguous with the New Charter foot-

merger, Charter executives

are expressing their vote of confidence that the deal will

print. This acquisition enhanc- not be blocked.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D3 Fishing Report, D4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors

Coasta hike offers vast views for whae watching

WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6

BRIEFING Chalnbreaker race scheduled The Chainbreaker mountain bikeracewill be back for its19th yearwith a new coursefor 2015, according to theBend EnduranceAcademy.The long-running racetakes place in theSkyline Forest just outside ofBend. Much of the oldrace course sawsignificant damage from lastyear's Two Bulls Fireandthe ensuing salvagelogging. Despite this setbackand losing some oftheoriginal course, theMother's Day weekendtradition of the Chainbreakermountain bike racewill continue Saturday,May9. This year's Chainbreaker will run acourse that minimizesdust, rides on existing singletrack and makesonebig loop, according to theBend EnduranceAcademy. Registration for the Chainbreaker isopenand can be foundat: athletepath.com/ch ainbreak-

By Zach urness The (Salem) Statesman Journal

TILLAMOOK — One

of the fun parts in having children is discovering the ways they reflect you, not just in eye color or the shape of their noses, but in the ways they interact with the world.

My daughter, Lucy, is a tiny ball of lunatic energy. At just a few months, she

was rolling around our living room. At 5 months,

she's crawling all over the house, seeking out Photos courtesy Alastair Humphreys via The New York Times

Alastair Humphreys' friend Ben Saunders heads for Greenland's ice cap to test equipment for a planned Antarctica expedition. Hum-

phreys has traversed southern India, rowed across the Atlantic Ocean andtrekked1,000 miles across the Arabian Peninsula's Empty Quarter, but it was a series of miniexpeditions in his homeland that earned Humphreys the title of a National Geographic Adventurer of the Year in 2012.

caffeinated impatience that hasn't allowed much time

for sitting still. This is all a very long way of explaining why we — and probably Lucy — have never had much interest in whale watching

TRAIL UPDATE

on the Oregon Coast. It would be grand to spot

With ChrisSabo

The majority of trail users are using summer trails. Low-elevation summer trails are in fair to good condition and midelevation summer trails are in fair to spring-thaw condition. Please avoid using muddy trails as this can damage trail tread and nearby vegetation. There is limited trail clearing in progress along summertrails. Expect to find anoccasional downedtree, and use caution whengoing over or aroundthem. Higher-elevation wilderness trails will likely get as much asonefoot of snowthi sweek.Mid-and lower-elevation wilderness trails will likely get1 to 3 inches ofsnow. Be advised that access to TumaloFalls from the Farewell Trail and Tumalo CreekTrail will be closed within the next few weeks asthe construction of water lines progresses toward the falls. Signs will be posted onceaccess from those trails is closed. All seasonal road closures remain in effect until further notice.

This has been amusing for my wife, Robyn, who during the past five years has endured my very simiery river, canyon, trail and mountain in Oregon with a

For more information, email info@BendEnduranceAcademy.org.

at all.

dwellmg hke a miniature Starship Enterprise.

lar tendency to explore ev-

er/2015-05-09.

Despite recent cold temperatures andsnow in the forecast, winter recreation is starting to wrap up quickly. Snowmobiles are nowprohibited from accessing snow out of Dutchman Sno-park. One option remains for snowmobiles to access snow in the flats — to offload at the Y in front of the Highway 46 closure gate and park nearby, or offload snowmobiles at the Y and park vehicles and trailers in Dutchman Sno-park. Trail 7 on the north end of the flats andTrail 8 around ToddLakeare showing bare spots. Colder temperatures and any newsnow will improve those conditions slightly. Oncetemperatures warmagain, it could be amatter of days until snow on the flats is not accessible

brave new corners of our

nature's gigantic creature swimming past, no doubt, but the practice of driving to overlooks and staring at the ocean has always seemed a little slow, even

boring. That's why we were excited to spend time combin-

ing whale watching with hiking at Cape Lookout, home to one of the best

• RenOWned WOrld traVeler diSCO VerSthe VirtueS OfminieXPeditionS in hiShOmeland

trails and viewpoints on the Oregon Coast. It was a chance toadd movement to

an activity primarily about observation. The hike is 4.8 miles

By Diane Daniel«New York Times News Service

round-trip and mostly flat, though the trail is muddy and rocky in places and bestdescribed asmoderat e

lastair Humphreys adventure-hopped for a decade, starting with a four-

in difficulty. Boots are a better choice than tennis

year round-the-world bicycle trip

shoes. The upside is that the

after college. From there, the British author,

massive headland takes you two miles into the ocean, providing views

blogger and motivational speaker traversed

closer to where the mi-

southern India, rowed across the Atlantic Ocean

grating gray whales can be spotted as they make

and trekked 1,000 miles across the Arabian Peninsula's Empty Quarter. But it was a series of miniexpeditions in his

"The Cape Lookout hike

tive-shifting bursts of travel

of the recently published "Microadventures: Local

closer to home, inspiring followers to pitch a tent in nearby woods, explore their city by moonlight or hold a family slumber party in the backyard. Humphreys, 38, talked about how people can

Discoveries for Great Es-

capes," has been preaching the gospel of short, perspec-

homeland that earned him the title of a National

Geographic Adventurer of the Year in 2012. Since then, Humphreys, author

their way north to feeding grounds off Alaska.

Alastair Humphreys. What led you to down-

• size from global adQ ventures to regional ones?

A

Originally, I set myself • on a course ofbeing a quintessential heroic British

mal people," while I was "the

is awesome because it puts you out where the whales

adventurer." But I'm a normal

are," said Travis Korbe, a

person, too, and I wanted

state park ranger with the Cape Lookout Manage-

them to see they could go on

thing for quite a fewyears. But a couple of things hap-

their own adventures. Also, I have a wife and two young children, and I couldn't go off for months at a time. To stop myself from going stir-crazy,

benefit from outdoor es-

pened. During the motivation-

I came up with adventures

capes. Following are edited

al talks I give, the audience would call themselves "nor-

closer to home. See Microadventure/D2

excerpts.

explorer and did that sort of

ment unit. "There have

been times when I've been out with visitors at the end of the cape and have been

able to look down and see the entire whale as they surface for air."

See Cape Lookout/D2

Year-roun a es ostam eo ortunities We stopped at Diamond

Lake on Friday. High in the Cascades, itoften takesafourwheel drive to

FISHING power off the

GARY

~5

LE WI S

highway into the parking lot in March. Not

this year. Most years, the ice doesn't come off the lake until the end

of April and even into May. It felt like June on Diamond.

Greg Gulbrandsen, Dave Jones and I brought spinning rods. Weplanned to fish abit

ofbites on the first pass and a hookup on the second pass, and then we motored across the lake to the western shore. Lunski, who owns Detroit Lake Marina, was at Diamond Lake with his brother-in-law,

t

Instead of ice fishing shacks and anglers huddled around Dave West, to sample the trout ragged holes with little tip-up fishing before the season kickrods, there were about a dozen off on his home water. Don't hold off buying that boats on the lake. The depth finder showed a fishing license this year. Even water temperature of 44 de-

though the traditional trout

grees, a bit cold for rainbows,

opener is April 25, there are

but not too cold. We drifted with the wind

a number of waters that are

open year-round, and they are Lunski in the marina store, and and let ourbaits runthrough 15 already kicking out limits of he offered us a boat ride. We feet of water, trying to keep out rainbows. were underway in20 minutes. of the weeds. We had a couple SeeTrout/D4 from the bank, but I spied Scott

a

Gary Lewis / For The Bulletin

Dave Jones got an early start on the trout fishing at Diamond Lake, wind-drifting for rainbows on a Friday in late March.


D2 THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

Submit your best work at Q beatlballetin.cem/reatlerphetes. Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Also contribute to our other categories, including good photos of the great Central Oregonoutdoors. Submission requirements:Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

e

..'Sy~e "+'.t(L

CRANE PRAIRIE RESERVOIR

Gary Patton showcases the beautiful views offered from Crane Prairie Reservoir.

Cape Lookout

expectations.

To the south, Haystack Rock, Cascade Head and even Cape

Continued from D1 Cape Lookout was one of the 25 sites of the Whale Watching Spoken Here program, w h er e v o l unteers helped visitors spot whales

Foulweather near N e w port were visible. In the west, the

vastexpanse ofocean rolled35 to 40 miles to the horizon.

We took Lucy out of her Tula with the hope of her spot-

from March 21 to March 28.

Whales should still be migrating past for the next few

ting her first whale. No such

weeks. In the 2014 Whale Watch

Jim Border, one of the whale watch volunteers, helped us

luck.

Week, 104 whales were spot-

scan the ocean. He told tan-

ted from Cape Lookout, the third-highest total o n t he coast.

talizing s tories o f

Upon arrival, we packed Lucy into a front carrier called a Tula — it's a bit like carrying your baby in a kangaroo pouch — and prepared to head

one in attendance. Still, we saw no spouts.

"People will be out here for hours looking for whales, and sure enough, as soon as they leave, we'll see a spout," Bor-

out. We hiked the first half-mile

der said with a chuckle.

with ranger Korbe, who told us about the cape's geology, history, ecology and some tips for whale watching.

Eventually we put Lucy down on a blanket. She busied herself crawling around the cape, exploring the vegetation, and even made friends with a chipmunk. Robyn and I alternated between watching our daughter

Cape Lookout was formed from the Columbia River Ba-

salt flows that erupted from fissures in Eastern Oregon 15

million to 17 million years ago. The massive lava flood traveled 400 miles from the vents and fanned out on the north

coast, creating the islands and headlands along the ocean that include Cape Lookout. On the cape, the forest is dense with large Sitka spruce and hemlock, which surprised me considering the high winds that slam the cape during storms.

Zach Umess/The (Salem) Statesman Journal

With expansive coastal views, the vantage point from Cape Trail at Cape Lookout State Park on the Oregon Coast offers great opportunities for whale sightings.

and the ocean. After a little more than an

hour, my trademark genetics started to kick in. Lucy started

J ust down th e

t r a il, w e

reached an opening in the forest and stopped at our first potential whale-watching spot.

the full horizon and look for

a spout," Korbe said. "Gray

whales can spout 10 to 15 feet in the air, and it's the telltale

Conditions were perfect, with a sign. calm ocean and views that extended almost 30 miles south.

"First we have people scan

loved that walk. Microadventure lutely My original idea was to try

Continued fromD1 to do the most epic things I Your first microadven- possibly could without going • ture in 2 0 11 was relQ atively difficult, but y ou've

wh a l es

breaching just below the cape, putting on a show for every-

far, but I found that "epic" lim-

"You'll see the spout slowly tracking north every four to

five minutes up the coastline."

The trail weaved between

deep forest and views high above the ocean, as blooming white trilliums added color to

the canvas. The final half-mile was

ries through in other areas. I'd at the opportunity. After 5 like to help others experience that.

p.m., you have 16 hours that

ple who pour out their hearts

of town, sleep outside some-

are all yours. So you can ride I hear from quite a few peo- your bike or take the train out

ited people from participating in the idea. The key is getting Y eah, th e f i r s t w a s beyond the excuses. If you • when I decided to walk can't climb a mountain, climb a lap of the M25 motorway, a hill.

getting designs on crawling near the cliff's edge, and my legs got twitchy. made "ohhh" noises as the And so we turned around ocean breeze swept across her and headed home without seecheeks. We reached the cape's ing a whale, but we still had end and the main lookout in fun hiking and learning about about 90 minutes of hiking the whales that are out there, and found a view beyond our somewhere.

No spouts were seen, so we spectacular, as the trail folcontinued on. lows the cape's edge. Lucy

to me, dads and lads bonding, where and come back to work overworkedcity types sleep- maybe a bit rumpled but feeling on a hill. Sleeping on a hill ing great. won't change your life, but it can be a tiny step toward Does a microadventure the 120-mile r oad a r ound making the changes. • always include sleeping What's behind the deLondon. I live quite near it, on the ground'? and while it seems rather bor• sire to inspire others'? One of y our c atchNo, you can take your I'm not a brave, adrening, I started to get curious • phrases is "a 5-to-9 • entire mattress from the about where it went. It was • aline type, but expe- adventure." What does that bed into the garden. It's about also a metaphor for finding ditions have done so much mean'? being outside, ideally under pockets of beauty wherever for my life. Just waking up A lot o f p eople use the stars. I'm trying to remove you are, one of the things I on a hilltop makes me feel so • working from 9 to 5 as as many barriers as possible, love about adventure. I abso- much happier, and that car- an obstacle. But instead, look but the one thing I'm not will-

ing to compromise on is you and seeing what other people have to be out overnight. are doing becomes inspiring. You've gathered quite

Do you see any differ-

• a following through so- Q • e nces b e tween B r i t Q cial media. What stories have ish and American would-be

scaled back. Why?

adventurers shared?

A

A • great is that local mi- A croadventures groups have ry more about the legality

Q

A

Q

Q

A

microadventurers?

One thing that's been

One challenge is that • Americans tend to wor-

started to pop up. People post

of things like sleeping on a hill, or the presence of rattlesnakes and people with guns.

all sorts of trips. One guy in New York wrote about following the Hudson River by bike all the way to Manhat-

But Americans perhaps even

more than Brits need to get out of the office because they work so many hours. Plus, hashtag (¹ microadventure) America has so much empty makes it look a little cooler, space and beauty.

tan. I didn't invent bike rides or sleeping out, but I think the


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

UrDOORS

E 1VD

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click "Add Event" 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylifeibendbulletin.com,541-383-0318.

DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the BEND BIKESWAP: April 10-11 chapter is up to; meets on the first at Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW W ednesday ofeach month at6 Harmon Blvd.; buy and sell bikes p.m.;50 SW Bond St.,Bend,Suite and accessories; proceeds benefit 4; 541-306-4509, deschutestu© both the Mt. Bachelor Sports 5727;kathyebarnes©gmail.com; hotmail.com; www.deschutes. Education and the Bend Endurance truhorsemanship.com. tu.org. Academy; email rmcglon@gmail. BEND CASTINGCLUB:A group of com. FISHING fly-anglers from around Central CENTRAL OREGON 500+ Oregon who are trying to improve BICYCLERIDE:June 3-7;fivedays BEND FLYFISHING FESTIVAL: their casting technique; 6-8 of classic Central Oregon road Bend Casting Club will host a festival p.m.; club meets on the fourth rides; 100-mile and 100-kilometer celebrating fly-fishing on April18, Wednesdayofeachmont h; ride options each day; rides from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at Tumalo location TBA; 541-306-4509 or include Mt. Bachelor loop, Creek Kayak and Canoe in Bend; bendcastingclub@gmail.com. Crooked River Canyon, East Lake, admission is free and the festival THE SUNRIVERANGLERS Smith Rock and McKenzie Pass; is open to the public; the purpose CLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third of the festival is to showcase the one day is $75 and all five days Thursday of each month; Sunriver fly-fishing lifestyle to the broader is $325; a benefit for the MBSEF Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation cycling program; to register, visit community at a unique riverside Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. venue; contact Gabe Parr at www.mbsef.org and search under THE CENTRALOREGON the "events" tab. bendcastingclub©gmail.com. FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m .;meets CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: on the third Wednesday of each New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; EQUESTRIAN month; Bend Senior Center; www. meets on the first Tuesday of each coflyfishers.org. SPRING TUNEUPCLINIC: At month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; Pilato Ranch, 70955 Holmes www.cobc.us. DETROITLAKE FISHING DERBY:

CYCLING

D3

Road, Sisters; May 9-10, 9 a.m. to noon and1 to 4 p.m. each day; $300 for two full days; local horse trainer Clint Surplus will teach a two-day clinic to include ground work in the mornings and mounted work in the afternoons; 541-961-

May15-17 at Detroit Lake; 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day; $15 for adults, $8 for children; adult grand prize is a Smokercraft boat and trailer; girls and boys grand prizes are bicycles; registration will buy three full days of fishing fun with an awards ceremony on the last day; 503931-1885; DLRABA©hotmail.com; www.detroitlakeoregon.org.

HIKING DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Led by skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds, and take in spring wildflowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.

HUNTING CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION:Meets W ednesdays at 6:30 p.m.; next meetings are April 1, 8; VFW Hall, Redmond; 541-447-

2804 or facebook.com atRMEF Central Oregon. CENTRAL OREGON CHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATIONANNUAL BIG GAME BANQUETAND AUCTION: Saturday, April11, at 4:30 p.m. at the Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center; for more information and reservations, contact Tom Jacobson at 541-383-8513 or email jacobson65©hotmail.com. THE BENDCHAPTER OF THE OREGONHUNTERS ASSOCIATION:7 p.m.; meets the secondWednesday ofeach month; KingBuffet,Bend;ohabend.webs. com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029.

SHOOTING COSSAKIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10;10a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www.

pinemount ainposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.

THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.

hrp-sass.com.

an uanlsan o ersaccessiean scenic ies By Brian J. Cantwell •The Seattle Times

FRIDAY HARBOR, Wash. -

isiting the San Juan Islands got a whole lot easier in January. Washington State Ferries now lets you make a reservation for the ferry you want to catch. I tested that recently with a hassle-free weekend getaway to Friday Harbor. It was beautiful and sunny, and I took to the hiking trails. My prediction: more island visits by more people. With that in mind, here are five good hikes to keep you busy on San Juan Island: South BeachTrail Start at the San Juan Island National Historical Park visi-

Mount Rainier ona clear day. Continue down to a

dis-

tant parking area to access the island's longest public

tor center (nps.gov/sajh),where you can pick up a trail map. beach, South Beach, where the Don't miss the eagle nest atop steamer Julia unloaded naval a nearby Douglas fir; rang- guns from the USS Massachuers setup a spotting scope on setts back in the day. weekends. A new experience Or follow a more direct for me and friends:watching shoreward path and intercept eaglesmate in a tree right over the loop trail for a s h o rter our heads. (It involved a lot walk that skirts rocky beaches of squawking and flapping, piled high with drift logs, tesand someone suggestedthey timony to the wicked winter saw acigarettebeing sm oked storm surge that can wallop afterward.) this shore. Follow a gravel lane east As you return west, take a past old fruit trees, officers' side trip down to little Grandquarters and a picket-fenced ma's Cove — one of the isparade groundto Robert's Re- land'sbest patches of sandoubt,a well-preserved earth- dy beach — and then cli mb work fortification designed through the 1850s site of the by Second Lt. Henry Robert Hudson's Bay C o mpany's (who later in his career wrote BelleVue Sheep Farm, back to "Robert'sRules of Order"). Sit- the visitor center. uated at the hill's high point, Distance: 2.8 miles for full it offered defenders sweeping loop.Easy tomoderate. views in every direction. Find a path angling down- Mount FinlaysonTrail Here's a good sequel for a hill in the direction of distant CattlePoint Lighthouse. You'll subsequent visit. It of fers a pass numerous glacial errat- top-of-the-world overlook of

Photos by Brian J. Cantwell/The Seattle Times

Vlsltors hike South Beach at American Camp. Thls beach Is home to one of the reglon's last natural prairies wlth buttercups and blue

camas lilies. along Cattle Point Road, at a

left turnoff signedfor "Jakle's Lagoon." One sign points to a nature trail, leading into woods; irl-

stead, follow the trail signed for Mount Finlayson, which

was named for a founder of Victoria, B.C. (glimpsed from the ridge). The path rises gradually, at first paralleling the road. Salty air with hints of fir sap

fills your head.Wind-twisted firs are on your left, and to the

right, the full Olympic range, the broad Strait and that sea of prairie grass. On a series of seven gentle switchbacksbordered by splitrail fences, you accomplish much of your uphilling to the ridge's290-foot summit. Look

Hikers traverse the ridgetopon San Juan Island's Mount Flnlayson Trail, with Cattle Point at right in the distance.

along the ridge. Look up for soaring eagles and listen for croaking ravens.At 1.3 miles, a path leads left and downdown to the east to seewhere ward, the Lagoon Loop. Take ics — the point was the snout the American Camp prairie, the road almost meets the this for a total loop of 2.9 of an ice-age glacier —as you a closer look at the pictur- bank's eroding edge; plansare miles. Or,as I did, retrace your cross oneof the region's last esque lighthouse and a side to relocate the road to a high- steps to an intersection with remaining natural prairies, loop through forest to a salty er benchofland toescape the the aforementioned nature garlanded in spring with but- lagoon. forcesof wind and tide for an- trail, 0.3-mile from the trailtercups and blue camas lilies.

The trailhead is a 5-minute Eye-popping views include drive beyond the visitor center

other century.

The trail runs flat and easy

land in the middle. The only sound is of squawking sea birds. Distance:1.7-mile loop. Easy.

Young Hill Trail

The flat trail runs through A bald eagle's roost In a treetop abovethe visitor center at American Camp in SanJuan Island National Historical Park. With more than125 breeding pairs, the San Juan Islands host the highestconcentratlon of bald eagles In the Lower 48 states.

topped by the words "Afterglow Vista." Ahead is a circle of Doric

columns ringing a stone table whose stone chairs contain

you won't regret the 1.1 miles

the cremated remains of vari-

ous McMillins. Oneof the columns isbroken as a reminder that "death breaks the column

of any man'slife." It's an eerie and peaceful place. Distance: About a half-mile

round-trip.Easy.

johnsonbro1ti ~ers v.com 541-382-6223

I

= -OoTHalRe

Your Beal appllanee experte

mausoleum for the McMillin

itary buildings, including a family, original builders of the whitewashed blockhouse at village of Roche Harbor, now water's edge, beneath a flag- a resort at the island's north pole from which the Union end (rocheharbor.com). Jackfliesin summer. Park at the resort and pick Cross meadows and old orchard to the Bell Point trail, known as the easiest hike on the island.

woods to a set of iron gates

If you're upfor a climb from the English Campparking lot,

to the grand view from atop head, and follow that through 650-footYoung HilL thewoods to Jakle's Lagoon, a The high,rocky balds among lonely spot except for gaggles Garryoaks m ake agreatplace of waterfowl. for a picnic as you look down Follow the nature trail back on Haro Strait, separating San to the trailhead. Juan andVancouverislands. Distance: 2.9 miles for full Of historical interest is a loop. Moderate. short side t r a il to E n g l ish Camp's tiny cemetery, where Bell Point Trail weathered headstones memoThe other half of the histor- rialize the Pig War's few caical park is English Camp, 15 sualties(nonefrom shots fired miles to the northwest, where in anger), including a young British troops occupied peace- man "accidentally shot by his ful GarrisonBay. brother." The two places could hardDistance: 2.2 miles roundly be more different. While trip. Moderate to difficult. Americans shivered in the wind, the Brits found one of Afterglow Vista Trail the most protected, tree-lined Another hear t -tugging anchorages onthe island. clearing inthe woods is AfterFrom the parking lot, wan- glow Vista, site of the family der past a few restored mil-

tery, then emerges on a gravel road that continues through

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION

up a trail map at the Hotel de

Haro,or just walk up to the air strip and follow Tangney Memorial Drive as it curves away from the resort. Within a few

pretty madronas, cedars and hundred feet watch for a trail junipers with lots of glimpses sign on the right. of sailboats anchored in the A 10-minute walk threads bay and hobbit-sized Guss Is- through an old wooded ceme-

DEsIGN I BUILD I REMQDEL PAINT

eoa sw Industrial way, Bend, 0R


D4 T H E BULLETIN

0

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015

FISHING REPORT ANTELOPE FLATRESERVOIR: USFS road17 is passable leading to the reservoir. The reservoir isn't completely full but there is enough water to launch a boat from the ramp. The water is very dirty, and fishing has been slow. BEND PINE NURSERY: The pond will be stocked with rainbow trout this week. Limit is two fish per day, 8-inch minimum length. CRESCENT LAKE: Open to fishing all year. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMAN DAM: The flows have been maintained at around 80 cfs for a few days now. Fishing for trout and whitefish has been fair. Trout may be getting to spawn with the warmer weather, so please be mindful of where you are wading so as to not trample any redds. Anglers are reminded that trout over 20-inches are considered steelhead and must be released unharmed. CULTUS LAKE: Open to fishing all year. DAVIS LAKE: Open to fishing all year. Anglers report fair fishing for rainbow trout and largemouth bass. Davis Lake is accessible, but low water has impacted boat-ramp access. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. ELK LAKE: The southern portion of Cascade Lakes Highwayis open upto Elk Lake. FALL RIVER: Anglers report fair fishing near the hatchery and the tubes. Fall River downstream of the falls is closed to fishing. Fishing upstream of the falls is open all year. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. HOOD RIVER: Bright winter steelhead are entering the lower Hood, and fishing has been good. Anglers should watch for good flows after highwater events. Good numbers of winter steelhead should continue into late April. The 2015 spring chinook season on the Hood River opens April15 and will close June 30. HOSMER LAKE: Anglers report good fishing with all four species of fish being caught. The southern portion of Cascade Lakes Highway is open up to Elk Lake. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK: Opportunities for rainbow and brown trout in the Upper

Photos by Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin

Ryan Brennecke hooked this rainbow on a pheasant tail nymph.

Trout Continued from D1 Because this looks like a

year we're going to be low on water, it makes sense to start

early. Some good bets for rainbows are Diamond Lake, Detroit Lake, Haystack Reservoir and Lake Simtustus. Each one

can be fished as well from the bank as from a boat. Try to time trips for a good bite. Optimum conditions for fast fishing include a rising barometer and incremen-

tal increases in the water temperature. O n Di amond

L a ke, w e

fished until a bit after noon. Lunski stood in the bow and cast a Shasta Tackle HD UV

From left to right, Dave West, Scott Lunski, Greg Gulbrandsen and

Silver Tiger spoon tipped

last Friday in March.

DaveJonesenjoysummerlikeweatheron Diamond Lake onthe

with a bit of worm. A trout slammed thelure and cleared

the water several times before

For faster limits, target

Lunski swung it into the boat. The bite is on at Diamond,

p lanted t r ou t

good for anglers with trolling gear. With th e g ood f i shing

w i t h sm a l l

rainbow-pattern Rapalas or and it will only be getting bet- frog-pattern fly-rod Flatfish.

weather we've enjoyed this

year, I've put in a few hours with dough baits, salmon eggs on several different days and temperature from time to time. or nightcrawlers. had two days in a row where Expect the bite to i m prove Haystack Reservoir, located I caught no fish. I call that with each one-degree bump in between Terrebonne and Ma- research, but it all paid off temperature. dras, is a good early-season early this week with a trip to Any day with a bit of cloud fishery, and the reports have another little lake that would cover can improve an angler's been good, both for rainbows usually be iced in at this time chances earlier in the season. and bass that have an early of year. It wasn't, and the fish And if there is a bit of a wind start on the growing season. and bugs were active in the chop, even better. Expect the fishing to improve warming water. Detroit Lake is due for vis- with hatchery supplementaThis is one of those years its from the stocking trucks tion in mid-ApriL where the procrastinator is in the second week of April, The fishing at Simtustus going to miss out on the best and that will add to last year's usually lags behind other fishing. The bite is on. holdovers. lakes and reservoirs because — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV"and Lunski says he sees the new it takes longer to warm that hatchery fish close to the sur- deep and narrow channel. But author of "John Nosler — Going face. The holdovers stack deep- the water is already warming Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's er in the water column, and the there. Plan for the third week Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon" and other biggest fish of all, the big rain- of April. There are good bank bows and the landlocked chi- angling spots in various places titles. Contact Lewis at www. nook salmon, run deepest. on the reservoir, and it is also GaryLewisoutdoors.com. ter as the water warms. Take a thermometer and check the

Bank anglers will do better

FLY-TYING CORNER

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Beadhead Cased Caddis, tied by Chris Smith.

If you were to pump aDeschutes rainbow's stomach in August or September, youwould likely find caddis — adults, emergers, larvaandcasedlarva.Thebugsareonthemoveand,often,easy pickings. Weoften use emergers and larvae patterns, but the cased caddis, weoverlook. Trout don't overlook them. Tyer Chris Smith alerted me tothis pattern, which he found in an Autumn 2011 issue of FlyTyer. It is a good pattern to use with a strike indicator, in September, whenfish are deep inthe water column. To tie this one, start with a No.8-12 3Xlong straight eye hook and fluorescent green thread. Slide at/It-inch black bead on tothe hook and dub atiny ball of black dubbing midway up the bend of the hook. Slide the beaddown to the bend to rest on the dubbing ball. Dub the rest of the bendabovethe beadand ashort section of the shank with caddis greendubbing. Makethe legs with two turns of black saddle hackle. Build a base ofleadwire, then cover the lead with a layer of thread. Usethe discarded case of an October caddis larvae (gather them inSeptember and October). Coat the wire basewith a product such as GearAid's Seam Grip, and slide some into the case.Slide the case over the hook sothat it pushes the hackle forward. Finish by coating the caddis casewith a layer of clear Aquaseal. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin Deschutes and Crooked River arms are good. The Metolius Arm is open to fishing. Fishing licenses from both the State of Oregon and the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs are needed to fish in the Metolius Arm. Opportunities for bull trout are expected to

good fishing during the warmer part of the day. Metolius River upstream of Allingham Bridge closed to fishing until May 23. Metolius River downstream of Allingham Bridge open all year. Special regulations in effect for this section. NORTH TWIN: Anglers report good fishing. Open to fishing all

be good this year. Anglers are reminded there are small numbers of spring chinook and summer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Please release these fish unharmed. LITTLE LAVA LAKE: Anglers report fair fishing with reports of good-sized trout being caught. The southern portion of Cascade Lakes Highwayisopen up to Elk Lake. METOLIUS RIVER: Anglers report

year.

OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Fishing has been good for trout that average 14 to16 inches. The water level is high enough that the boat ramp is usable. PINE HOLLOWRESERVOIR: The reservoir has been stocked, and good fishing has been reported. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR: Fishing for trout has been slow.

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

or' u an er'sar

ar wor TV SPOTLIGHT

sergeant, and he worked very hard and ... we didn't grow up with loads of money or anyin a bubble of delusion. That's thing like that, but they always how I'm getting through all worked very hard to give us the rejections.' whatever we needed." "But then you begin to wonBeing No. 4 of five kids, she der, are you really deluding says, she was always vying yourselfbecause so manypeo- for attention. "But also it genple come here with the dream erates a lot of independence ... to work? But I knewthat I was so you're very self-sufficient it. So what does that mean?' When I f i rst moved here I thought, 'Oh, that's fine. I'm

"Outlander" 9 p.m. Saturdays, Starz

By Luaine Lee Tribune News Service

P ASADENA,

C a lif.

When Caitriona Balfe headed to Los Angeles to become an

actress, she had spent 10 years as an international high fash-

a hard worker and that I had

in that sense. I left home at 17,

ion model. She had left home at 18, answering an invitation

something to bring to charac- went to college. After a year, I ters, and that it was something

moved to Paris, then lived in

to Paris to shimmy down the runway. But her dream was to be an actress, and modeling proved an impediment. "You pick up a lot of bad habits in the modeling world in comparison to acting," she says in a noisy restaurant, the sound reverberating off the etched glass

I loved to do. So I didn't have any desirefor huge fame or

Japan,Germany, Italy,France, and you have to rely on yourself a lot." Unmarried, she says she'd like to have a family someday. "I think it puts things in perspective and keeps you grounded. My sisters manage it, and they're both an inspira-

anything like that. I just want-

ed to be a working actor. I'm really glad it worked out." Part of the reason it worked

walls.

Ed MillerI Sony Pictures

"Modeling is all about the 'poised' look. Everything you

Caitriona (pronounced Katrina) Balfe plays a combat nurse whois

do has to look a certain way.

which returns for a newseason Saturday.

thrust back into the18th century in Starz's popular "Outlander,"

Whereas in acting you can't care about what you look like.

It's all about what you feel or what your intention is, or what the other person's intention is. You have to throw all that

self-awareness out the window. I worked really hard, and thank God it paid off."

It paid off in a

massive

way when she was cast as the t i m e-traveling c o mbat

nurse who is thrust back to 18th-century Scotland in the Starz smash hit, "Outlander,"

returning for a new season Saturday.

But Balfe was sweating over Angeles, she played a dead casting calls for two years woman with no dialogue in before she snagged any kind J.J. Abrams' "Super 8." Evof acting job. "I was lucky. erything seemed rosy for a Obviously from modeling I'd brief moment of time. But just saved quite a bit, so in that before "Outlander," Balfe was sense, I was very lucky. I could unemployed for a seemingly come here and I didn't have to hopeless stretch of time. "That was really hard bewait tables or any of that. But straightaway I took classes cause you'd get close on a few and spent a year and a half things, so that carrot's always just taking classes and just dangling," she said, sighing. "You'd think, 'I'm getting working on my craft and sort of learning." close so I must be doing someIn her first acting job in Los thing right, but I'm not getting

out is because the Irish Balfe (who pronounces her first name "Katrina") is stubborn. "Everyone in my family are tion to me. They're very suchard workers, and we're all cessful career women. My one quite strong-willed," says Bal- sister is a manager of human fe, who is wearing a gathered relations in Hong Kong. The skirt and a black blouse with other one is a quality manager ruffles down the placket. at a pharmaceuticals compa"I think those are good ny in Dublin." qualities as long as you keep Balfe, 38, won't say whether them in check. My dad's prob- she has a boyfriend or not but ably more stubborn than my insists she doesn't date actors. mom, but my mom raised five

"I haven't, and I won't. I have

children. And by the time my little brother was 5 or 6, my

tors, but I think two people in

parents became foster par-

a relationship who have this

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. I

Dear Readers:In honor of April Fools' Day, I'll share a couple of offbeat letters I've received from

nament. I know you get lots of Dear Abby:When does an exletters about bad relationships, so tramarital affair actually start? Is

readers who have attempted to

good one.

I thought I'd let you hear about a

it when the two parties involved do the mattress mambo, their first

pull my proverbial leg. Enjoy! — Gator Girl in Florida kiss, or is it sooner? Dear Abby:I'm writing to brag Dear Gator Girl: That's a good — Clueless Wife in Canada about my boyfriend. He's a semi- one, all right. You may have Dear Clueless:A love affair inp rofessional a l l i thought you smelled volves more than having sex. An gator wrestler and perfume, but I smell extramarital affair begins as soon super brave. It's a a rat. Be glad your as a man or woman starts sneakDEP,R t ough job, and i t boyfriend d o esn't ing around and lying to his or her t akes hi m a w ay wrestle c o u gars, mate. f rom h om e a l o t .

It's also a very dangerous job. He often comes home lipstick. with bite marks all over his neck

and shoulders, and scratches on his back. Want to know something weird

b ecause

I

hear

Dear Abby: Please settle an ar-

they wear indelible

gument my ex-husband and I still have.Over the course ofourmarDear Abby: A teacher at our riage, we had problems. One night high school took some time off to we had a nasty spat, after which he get a breast augmentation. Before moved out and never returned. He she left, she told the class she was

claims I should have asked him to

about alligators'? Their natural odor smells a lot like perfume. When my beau gets back from a tournament, he often reeks of it. The first time I smelled it on him,

having her tonsils out. When she move back in. My response has alreturned to the classroom with a ways been that he chose to leave, so

I was worried. But after he ex-

plained it to me, it made perfect

think about this? — George in South Carolina

sense. (Just another one of life's

Dear George:I think that unless

coincidences, I guess.) We're so happy together. We have four beautiful children, and

he promises we'll get married soon — right after the next tour-

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR WEDNESDAY,APRIL 1, 2015: This year you will be forced to deal with quite a few issues in your daily life. Per-

larger chest, one of the students

This person could

8tarsshowtheging be of slgnlflcance of dayyou'Ilhave to your llfe. If you ** * * * D ynamic are attached, the ** * * Positive two of you might need to recon*** Average ** So-so struct your life together. Learn to * Difficult

share moreoften

and avoid being critical. Accept your partner as he or she is. VIRGO is drawn to you.

ARIES (March21-April19) ** * You easily could be irked by everything you have to do, including the challenges that are presented by others. Listen to where people are coming from, as their thinking might not be in line with yours. Know that this is likely the source of the problem. Tonight: Early to bed.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * W here others lose their temper, your creativity finds a solution. Recognize that an off-the-wall comment is not directed at you. Detach and look at the big picture. Perhaps you will want to make some changes to avoid this type of nonsense. Tonight: Midweek break!

GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * Tension seems to build in your immediate surroundings. You could be making a judgment about what your role is in a certain situation and what

Illinois

Dear Wondering:In my opinion, you and your ex-husband should her students pay more attention to stop arguing because after your what she's teaching and less to her divorce became final, the queschest, they may be earning double tion became moot. D's.

And now... back to work:

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

hapsyouhavefocusedononespecific area of your life and are slacking in other areas. You will see what this lack of attention has caused, though you will be able to change directions if need be. If you are single, you are likely to attract someone who is fun before September.

I shouldn't have had to beg him to

cracked, "Nice tonsils!" Of course, come back. Your opinion,please? the class roared. What do you — Wondering in Crystal Lake,

you "should" do. Take a break from this

scenario before youmakeany decisions.

— Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

dear to you. To your surprise, a meeting could prove to be very informative. Use others' criticism to strengthen your perceptions and actions. Tonight: Where your friends are.

** * * You could be in a position where you must deal with a boss or an CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * Try not to let a judgment come older relative. You probably won't be able to get away from the situation, and out when dealing with several different people. The less judgmental you are, the your choices might be limited. Why not more information you will gain. Perhaps just step up to the plate and clear up the your conclusion will be different as a issue now? Tonight: Out late. result. Reach out for more information. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Tonight: Hang out with friends. ** * * Be willing to reach out to a games that surround you could interfere with your interactions. Be more open to what is happening. Do not lose sight of whatyouwant.You can'tchange people, butyou can take good care of yourself. Tonight: Your treat.

lovedonewhosewisdom youvalue. You are able to listen to someone who is not involved in a discussion much better than someone who is actively involved. Curb a tendency to be overly controlling. Tonight: Follow the music.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb. 18) *** * No one can denythe impor-

** * * Your awareness of someone else's expectations could make you feel uncomfortable at times. You might want to share your discomfort, but can't find the right time. Your creativity will emerge as you seek answers. Avoid taking any risks. Tonight: You call the shots.

tance of a particular relationship in your life. In some way, the unconventional nature of the bond plays into its very existence. It would be wise not to follow a hunch with a purchase or an investment right now. Tonight: Relish a meal with a favorite person.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * You might decide to move forward with a key project or at least test the waters. You could be off on some of your judgments about how others are receiving this project. Take a step back and be more observant. You need to see the big picture. Tonight: Not to be found.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * Z ero in on what you want and expect from a situation that is near and

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) *** * Someone whomyou believed to be a friend might turn out to be otherwise. You could be taken aback and forced to review who your real friends are. Be sure to look at your relevance to them. Though you might be upset, this review will be beneficial. Tonight: Stretch your wings. © King Features Syndicate

8 p.m.on 5,8,"The Mysteries of Laura" —Kathie Lee Gifford normally inhabits NBC's

weekday lineup, as aco-anchor

of the fourth hour of "Today," but she makes her way into the network's prime time lineup as a guest star in the new episode "The Mystery of the Sunken Sailor." She plays a psychiatrist who consults on the case of a

slain seaman,which coincides with Laura's (Debra Messing) birthday — an occasion Laura doesn't want to acknowledge, in the worst way. Josh Lucas and Laz Alonso also star. 8 p.m. on10, "American Idol" —The stages of this season's competition are getting ever more critical, as the episode title "Top 8 Perform" confirms. By the end of the two hours, it'll be down to the top seven, since someone will be sent home. Harry Connick Jr., Jennifer Lopez and Keith Urban are sure to be careful in their judging, knowing what it means to the hopefuls ... and also knowing how it could impact the voting by viewers. Ryan Seacrest is (of course) the host.

gp.m.on5,8,"Laws Order:

I I

I

Special Victims Unit" —Rob Morrow ("Northern Exposure,"

"Numb3rs") guest stars as

a television personality who interviews a college student (guest star Ally loannides) about her alleged frat-house rape in the new episode "Devastating Story." The segment's telecast has a variety of resuits, from general awareness of campus assaults to a trial that pits the purported victim

against those shehasaccused.

"Today's" Jenna Wolfe appears as herself. Mariska Hargitay and Ice-T star. © Zap2it

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LEO (July 23-Aug.22) *** * Your awareness of someof the

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7:15 p.m. on TCM, Movie: "Zorba the Greek" —Three Academy Awards, including one for black-and-white cinematography, went to this stunning 1964 film adaptation of Nikos Kazantzakis' novel about an earthy Greek laborer (Anthony Quinn) who teaches a staid British heir (Alan Bates) to loosen up and enjoy life. Quinn lost the best actor Oscar to Rex Harrison ("My Fair Lady") but won the role of his life. The drama also stars Irene Papas and Lila Kedrova, who won the best supporting actress Oscar.

friendswho are fantasti c ac-

ents. There's always been so up-and-down career, for me it many kids in our house. I have wouldn't work. That's not to a fosterbrother and sisterwho take away from lovely actor came to us when they were 1 men. "Being handsome is fine, and 2, and they're now 26 and 27. Both my parents are hard but don't marry somebody workers," she adds. who has to make money off "My father was a police their handsomeness."

ee ratin rave ator wrester

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • CINDERELLA (Llpstairs — PG) 6:30 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

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Horses & Equipment

a

Lost: 3/29, 8 yrs old feFor Sale: WHEN BUYING male Blue H eeler, 3) 12-ga. shotguns: Win Piano Technician near Deschutes MarFIREWOOD... odel 5 9 w / c hokes, tools & supplies, i caution when pur- $300. ket Rd. and Dale Rd. Win Model 12 DeTo avoid fraud, chasing products or I luxe Field, with rolls of piano Chipped an has collar FN BelThe Bulletin services from out of I ium SxS, $500. string, $725. w/ tag s . Call deluxe wood, Call 971-219-9122 recommends pay~ the area. Sending ~ 800. 541-548-3408 541-480-7622 ment for Firewood ' cash, checks, o r ' in Redmond 316 only upon delivery i credit i n f ormation AR-15 $500; 2 2 LR Irrigation Equipment and inspection. may be subjected to ammo, $30 per brick. 260 • A cord is 128 cu. ft. AR-15 ammo $300 i FRAUD. For more 4' x 4' x 8' REMEMBER: If you FOR SALE Misc. Items information about an t per thousand; IMR Tumalo Irrigation • Receipts should have lost an animal, advertiser, you may I 4895 powder; WIN Water don't forget to check ga. include name, BUYING f call t h e Ore g onf Super-X 1 2 $4,500 per acre The Humane Society phone, price and ' State Atto r ney ' semi-auto s h otgun, Lionel/American Flyer Bend Call 541-419-4440 kind of wood $350. Glenfield Martrains, accessories. i General's O f fi ce 541-382-3537 541-408-2191. purchased. Consumer Protec- • lin 22lr exc., $150. 325 • Firewood ads Redmond tion h o t line a t i 541-280-3363 541-923-0882 Hay, Grain & Feed BUY/HG 8c SE LLIHG MUST include i 1-877-877-9392. AR15 scope mount rail, All gold jewelry, silver Madras species & cost per new, $25; 3boxes 541-475-6889 First Quality green grass and gold coins, bars, cord to better serve > Sen TheBulletin > (100 ct ea.) Nosler ing CentralOregon since fgga hay, no rain, barn stored, rounds, wedding sets, Prineville our customers. Ballistic tip bullets (for class rings, sterling sil541-447-7178 $250/ton. reloading), .338 200 ver, coin collect, vinCall 541-549-3831 212 or Craft Cats Bulletin grain, $60 ea or $175 tage watches, dental The tenrtng Central Oragon srnceIgtg Patterson Ranch, Sisters 541-389-8420. Antiques & all! 208-255-2407 gold. Bill Fl e ming, Premium orchard grass, Collectibles 541-382-9419. Bend local pays CASH!! Alf Year Dependable 262 barn stored no rain, for firearms 8 ammo. Firewood: Seasoned; Sales Northwest Bend 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. Antiques Wanted: 541-526-0617 Lodgepole, split, del, Need to get an avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 Tools, furniture, marbles, B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 Garage Sale! Volunteer or 541-948-7010. ad in ASAP? sports equipment, beer B rowning Citori 1 2 g or 2 cords for $365. Connect Benefits. cans, pre-'40s B/W pho- over-under shotgun. You can place it Straw for Sale. Multi-cord discountsl tography. 541-389-1578 Invector plus chokes. In Tables, housewares, Wheat 541-420-3484. Also, weaner pigs. online at: books, lots more! great condition. $850. Bill Clinton g rowing Call 503-320-3008 541-546-6171 Rain/shine, Sat. 4/4, www.bendbulletin.com 269 nose wrist watch. New 9-3, 119 NW Drake Rd. $65. 541-318-6368 CASH!! Gardening Supplies Looking for your 541-3B5-5B09 For Guns, Ammo & & Equipment Three family garage next employee? Need help fixing stuff? Reloading Supplies. sale - Saturday only. Place a Bulletin Call A Service Professional 541-408-6900. April 4th, 8-1. 2 9 12 help wanted ad find the help you need. BarkTurfSoil.com NW Wild M eadow today and www.bendbulletin.com IOÃ RI% RI$ Drive. reach over PROMPT DELIVERY China cabinet, o a k; 60,000 readers 542-389-9663 trunk; 2 chairs, oak, 266 each week. DO YOU HAVE upholstery no arms; Sales Northeast Bend Your classified ad SOMETHING TO COW MANURE aged, small drop front desk, will also SELL 150 cu.ft. truckload oak; redwood burl FOR $500 OR appear on delivered, $150 . ** FREE ** table 4xt/g'x3t/g'; round Chainsaw-carved LESS? bendbuuetin.com 541-420-6235 end table; bookcase Momma and Baby Non-commercial which currently Garage Sale Kit mahogany.Must See! Bear. Momma is Have Tiller Will Travel Place an ad in The advertisers may receives over 541-388-3532 over 5-ft tall; baby is Redmond/ Terrebonne place an ad Bulletin for your ga1.5 million page 23" tall. May conGet your spring tilling Old Gas Pumps /Soda with our rage sale and reviews every sider selling sepadone, call Dennis, Vending Machines "QUICK CASH ceive a Garage Sale month at no rately; both $850. 541-420-6524. WANTEDI Will pav cash. SPECIAL" Kit FREE! extra cost. Can be seen in Kyle, 541-504-f 050 1 week3!ines 12 Prineville. Bulletin or' For newspaper KIT INCLUDES: The Bulletin reserves Call 541-447-7820 Classifieds aweaks to! delivery, call the • 4 Garage Sale Signs ~ the right to publish all Get Results! • $2.00 Off Coupon To Ad must Circulation Dept. at ads from The Bulletin Call 541-385-5809 Use Toward Your include price of 541-385-5800 newspaper onto The 263 Next Ad or place your ad in ia item oi $50o n~ To place an ad, call Bulletin Internet webTools • 10 Tips For "Garage on-line at or less, or multiple 541-385-5809 site. Sale Success!" bendbuuetin.com items whosetotal or email JET DUST COLLEC- classifiedeibendbulletin.com does not exceed The Bulletin TOR with extra parts. SenengCentral Oragonsince tgga $500. 333 PICK UP YOUR Bulletin GARAGE Rarely used. $300. The tenrtng Central Oragon srnceIgtg SALE KIT at 216 Call Brad for details. Poultry, Rabbits, Call Classifieds at 1777 SW Chandler 541 480-7032 • C oins & Stamps 541-385-5809 & Supplies Prompt Delivery Ave., Bend, OR 97702 www.bendbulletin.com n Rock, Sand & Gravel POWERMATIC 10 Private collector buying pet Lion Head Multiple Colors, Sizes The Bulletin Free postagestamp albums & LOP tags for big game t ablesaw. 5 H P , 3 Instant Serr ng Central orernn s nce tget buck, w/ large hutch. Landscaping Co. collections, world-wide hunting; access in Con- phase. 30 " f e n ce 541-546-7909 541-389-9663 $600. Call Brad for and U.S. 573-286-4343 don, OR. 541-384-5381 (local, cell phone). details. 541 480-7032 Wanted: Collector seeks 242 Se a r s high quality fishing items S nowblowerExercise Equipment 8 upscale fly rods. C raftsman, $15 0 . 541-678-5753, or 541-330-8774 503-351-2746 Elliptical, Air Strider E60 Health Rider, $250. 265 251 541-504-1993 Building Materials Hot Tubs & Spas The Bulletin recommends extra '

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I SAINT BERNARDS Brandy 8 Bruno's beautiful full-mask puppies2 fem. left! Born Jan. 11; ready now (photo taken 2/27). Dew claws removed, 1st shots. $500. For appointment, call 541-5484520

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregonsince tgttt

Adopt a rescued cat or kitten! Altered, vaccinated, ID chip, tested, more! CRAFT, 65480 Dick Idol 2-pc armoire, 78th, Bend, Sat./Sun., elk design, $700. 1-5pm. 541-389-8420 www.craftcats.org

Canary Males. "Putt" Putnam auto-

graphed giclee printof rodeo clown,$600. Rocking S custom book case, $75.Cash only, you pick up, near Fossil, OR.541-468-2269 Furniture ... couch, love seat,coff ee table, end table and lamp, all oak or trimmed in oak. You haul. $500. Call 541-389-3890 after 4:00 p.m.

G ENERATE SOM E EXCITEMENT in your neighborhood! Plan a

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Refrigerator Frigidaire brand new side-by-side with icemaker. Paid $1200

selling for $850. 541-410-5956

Black ba y Mo r gan mare, flashy, 13-yr-old show, trail 8 harness, i ntermediate rid e r , granddaughter in college. $500 best offer or trade. 541-546-7909

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Deluxe showman 3-horse trailer Silverado 2001 29'x8' 5th wheel with semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277

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Power Plate machine Vibrational exercises for musclestrengthening, stretching, massage 8 relaxation, $500. 541-504-3869

~00 421

Schools & Training IITR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our GradsGet Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.IITR.EDtj

Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com 454

Looking for Employment Woman willing to do errands for the elderly for s l ight f e e in Bend/Redmond. 541-280-0892

Get your business

e ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

La Pine Habitat Marquis 2005 S i lver RESTORE Anniv. Hot Tub, gray Building Supply Resale and black, 6-8 person Quality at seating, new circuit LOW PRICES board. Delivery avail52684 Hwy 97 able, $2000. 541-536-3234 541-815-2505 Open to the public . 255

245 garage sale and don't forget to advertise in • G olf Equipment classified! 541-385-5809. CHECKYOUR AD

www.kinnamanretrievers.com

9 7a •

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc hasing products or services from out of the (2) 90-inch Couches area. Sending cash, Cane bamboo with checks, or credit insilk upholstery,$1000 f ormation may be each,obo. subjected to fraud. For more i nformation about an advertiser, you may call the O regon State Attorney General's Mahogany Media Office C o n sumer Armoire,2 drawers, 2 Protection hotline at shelves,$500 obo. 1-877-877-9392. 619-6644765(Bend)

Lab Pups AKC,black & yellow, Master Hunter sired, performance pediree, OFA cert hips 8 elows, 541-771-2330

g < ~

Furniture & Appliances

210

Golden Retrievers, AKC English Creams, 6 M's, all certified, taking $500 deposits, ready 4/20. 541-815-8456

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Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

$1900+. 541-281-6829

• B e gd ~ o 270

206

German Shepherds www.sherman-ranch.us

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267

Pets & Supplies

Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all volunteer, non-profit, cat rescue trailer: Jake's D iner, Hwy 20 E 8 Petco in Redmond; donate at Smith Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; or CRAFT in Tumalo. Can pick up l arge amounts, 389-8420. www.craftcats.org

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257

541-408-0846

541-548-7947.

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Elizabeth, 541-633-7006. Toy American Eskimo, 3yrs old, F, shots, miWanted- paying cash crochip, AKC, spayed, for Hi-fi audio & stu- $500. 541-408-1616 dio equip. Mclntosh, J BL, Marantz, D y- Wheaten Terrier female naco, Heathkit, San- purebred, 9 wks, soft nosui, Carver, NAD, etc. shed coat, tail docked, Call 541-261-1808 dewclaws, shots, doggy trained. Family pet Want to buy ADT yard door s igns. Please c a ll only! $875. 541-447-8970 541-408-0846 Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, 1F, adorable, UDT Want to buy SunSetter shots, health guar., pix, awning accessories. $500/up. 541-777-7743

Yellow or white. 3O $45 each. Excellent singers.

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210

09 Want to Buy or Rent

s

206 g

202

1 7 7g

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. nSpellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

your ad, please con-

Computers T HE B ULLETIN 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 defined as those who sell one computer.

Good classified adstell tact us ASAP so that Purebred Lab p u ps, the essential facts in an corrections and any interesting Manner.Write champ bloodlines. adjustments can be 7F, 1M, blacks & yel- from the readers view -not made to your ad. the seller's. Convert the lows. Avail. in May. 541-365-5809 Come meet your new facts into benefits. Show The Bulletin Classified companion! S i sters the reader howthe item will Men's Callaway woods, (503) 459-1580 help them in someway. 3-13, $25 ea. Ladies This C allaway woo d s , Queensland Heelers advertising tip Standard & Mini, $150 3-13, $25 ea. Ladies brought to you by & up. 541-280-1537 Taylor Made Miscela www.rightwayranch.wor full set, $75. The Bulletin Sen 'ng Cenl alOregonsince ttta dpress.com 541-382-6664

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin 257

Musical Instruments

Drum Kits:Specializing in High Quahty New & Used Drum Sets! Kevin, 541-420-2323 The Drum Shop

266

Heating & Stoves NOTICE TO

ADVERTISER

Since September 29, 1991, advertising for

used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been certified by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g e ncy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves.

Buy 8 Sell Safely In TheBulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every attempt to ensure that products sold in our classifieds are from a valid source.

Call 541-385-5809 toplaceyour adtoday.

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E2 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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

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

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place aphoto in your private party ad foronly$15.00per week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 in total merchandise

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

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

icall for commercial line ad rates)

*illiust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based 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 moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 476

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p portunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. 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 c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline

Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bu//etin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

Caregivers w anted t o

our

LUMBER YARD join

caring

Yard Positionforklift experience desired.Valid drivers license. Call or apply in person: Hoyt's - Sisters, 541-549-8141

memory car e c ommunity. A l l shifts a v ailable. Must be reliable. Also needed part t ime c hef. F o r more inf o r ma- Maintenance tion, or a ny Whispering questions, Winds please call Retirement 541-385-4717 is seeking a full-time maintenance tech. Must have some basic electrical, plumbing, carpentry and painting experience. $12.50/hr plus benefits. Apply in pers on at 2 92 0 N E Conners Ave., Bend., Pre-employment drug test required.

C abinetmaker. H i g hDrivers Class A, Class B end custom s h op drivers, Lumpers looking for e x peri- n eeded.&No e x p. enced hands. Seek- necessary, will train ing self starter with the right p erson. good people and time Must be able to lift management skills. 50 Ibs or more. Must Shop and field work. b e able t o p a ss Min 5 years experi- background check ence, par t icularly p r e-employcustom and frame- and at 1-503-378-4320 Plumber Journeymen drug screenless cabinetry. Pay ment For Equal OpportuNeeded for new coning. Bring resume to DOE. 541-330-3960 nity Laws contact struction. Start immediPrestige Moving & Oregon Bureau of ately! Good pay/benefits Storage, 1006 SW Labor & I n dustry, Caregiver Emkay Dr., Bend. Call Gary, 541-410-1655 Civil Rights Division, Prineville Senior care Contact Bryan or 971-673- 0764. home looking for full- Bill. 541-383-3362. Take care of time Caregiver. Must The Bulletin your investments pass criminal backHousekeepers wanted. with the help from 541-385-5809 ground check. Full time opening. ApCall 541-362-5137 The Bulletin's ply in person, at The Pines at S u nriver. "Call A Service 541-593-2160. Circulation Professional" Directory The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for a District Representative to join our Single Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour Digital Advertising Sales Manager per week position. Overall focus is the representation, sales and presentation of The BulleThe Bulletin is seeking a goal-oriented tin newspaper. These apply to news rack locaDigital Advertising Sales Manager to drive tions, hotels, special events and news dealer online advertising revenue growth. This pooutlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a sition will manage the department's digital company vehicle to service a defined district, projects, and will: ensuring newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, managing newspaper counts for • Study the local market and make recommenthe district, building relationships with our curdations on best opportunities for online revrent news dealer locations and growing those enue growth. locations with new outlets. Position requires • Work in collaboration with department mantotal ownership of and accountability of all agement in the ongoing training and coaching single copy elements within that district. Work of Bulletin advertising salespeople. schedule will be Thursday through Monday • Contribute to building local digital revenue by w ith Tuesday and Wednesday off. Requires regularly going on joint sales calls with advergood communication skills, a strong attention tising staff. to detail, the ability to lift 45 pounds, flexibility • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to enof motion and the ability to multi task. Essensure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, tial: Positive attitude, strong service/team oriand customer reporting functions are perentation, sales and problem solving skills. formed in a timely and accurate fashion. Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. • Assist in the development of online and Send resume to: mewingObendbulletin.com cross/sell advertising packages and attendant Applications are available at the front desk. sales collateral. 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 No phone inquiries please. Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at least 3 years' experience and a proven track gerrring Central Oregon since1903 record of success in selling multi-plafform or digital advertising to major accounts and Pre-employment drug testing required. agencies. Management experience a plus, EOE/Drug Free Workplace with the ideal candidate being able to demonstrate a history of success in implementing inACCOUNTING novative ideas and developing the skills level Staff Accountant of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace and pre-employment drug The Staff Accountant is responsible for maintain- testing is required. ing multiple aspects of the general ledger to ensure accurate and timely reporting. This posiPlease email your resume to: tion will be responsible for the preparation of jbrandt©bendbulletin.com monthly financials, journal entries, balance No phone calls please. sheet reconciliations, bank reconciliations and month end accruals. Serving Central Oregon since sgcg We seek a motivated individual that will bring a fresh perspective to our systems and proceThe Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer dures. An ideal candidate will learn current procedures, while taking a proactive approach to find efficiencies, as well as assist the CFO with General financial analysis. The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturThe position requires a detail-oriented individual day night shift and other shifts as needed. We with strong general accounting, organizational, currently have openings all nights of the week. communication, and time management skills. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts We seek a positive individual that enjoys work- start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and ing in a fast-paced team environment in beauti- end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoful Bend, OR. sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Essential job functions & responsibilities • General ledger maintenance: detailed under- are short l11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of standing of each account and proper posting loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack• Month end accruals, journal entries, bank and ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup balance sheet reconciliations and other tasks. For qualifying employees we • Fixed Asset additions, disposals & depreciation offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, • Cost reporting and forecasting short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Experience & skills • General ledger accounting required • 4-year degree in Accounting Please submit a completed application atten• Advanced Excel and data entry skills tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available • Experience with SBS Financial Systems a plus at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chan• Newspaper experience preferred dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin To apply, please submit both a cover letter and Eldred via email (keldredObendbulletin.com). resume to hwright@wescompapers.com or by No phone calls please. Only completed applimail to Western Communications, attn: Heidi cations will be considered for this position. No Wright,PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE. Western Communications, lnc. is a drug free workplace The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincergng and EOE. Pre-employment drug testing is required.

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

648

Loans & Mortgages LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.

Houses for Rent General

Bsdl 5aRmRs Vm ©nljII

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t I the area. Sending which makes it illegal 732 c ash, checks, o r to a d vertise "any I credit i n f ormation preference, limitation Commercial/Investment I may be subjected to or disc r imination Properties for Sale FRAUD. based on race, color, For more informareligion, sex, handition about an adverHIGH PROFILE Please apply cap familial status I tiser, you may call in person: mantal status or naLOCATION IN the Oregon State DOWNTOWN Madras Truck Stop tional origin, or an inI Attorney General's & Cafe, tention to make any REDMOND 630 e Office C o n s umer e 992 SW Hwy 97, such pre f erence, Rooms for Rent l Protection hotline atl Madras, OR. limitation or discrimiI 1-877-877-9392. Familial staMaster bdrm w / own nation." shower, $595. View tus includes children RN - I NFECTION LThe Bulletin g under the age of 18 property in Cloverdale CONTROL/ living with parents or 541-420-9801 EMPLOYEE legal cus t odians, This commercial HEALTH/ pregnant women, and building offers exWildland Fire ngoodbuy" Say OUTPATIENT people securing cuscellent exposure FightersTHERAPY tody of children under along desirable NW to that unused Cooper Contracting 18. This newspaper 6th Street. is now hiring entry item by placing it in will not knowingly acWallowa Memorial Currently housing level fire f ighters. cept any advertising The Redmond Hospital (No exp. needed). The Bulletin Classifieds for real estate which is Spokesman newsMust be least 18 yrs in violation of the law. paper offices, the Located in of age. Starting pay 541-385-5809 O ur r e aders a r e 2,748 sq. ft. space is Enterprise, OR $10.10/hr., plu s hereby informed that perfect for owner/ $4.02/hr. hazardous all dwellings adveruser. Two private pay on the first 40 Room for rent in Redin this newspaoffices and generBSN Preferred hrs. Call S h awn mond, $525, incl utibties. tised per are available on Current ous open spaces. 541-948-7010 to No smoking. Call Jim, an equal opportunity Three parking BLS/ACLS/TNCC/ 541-419-4513 schedule and interbasis. To complain of CPR Required places in back+ view or f o r m o re d iscrimination ca l l street parking. Oncology info. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS HUD t o l l-free at Experience $259,000. Search the area's most 1-800-877-0246. The Preferred Graham Dent comprehensive listing of toll f ree t e lephone Call Chemo Cert. within 541-383-2444 Looking for your next classified advertising... number for the hear2 mos. of hire employee? real estate to automotive, ing i m p aired is COMPASS,~ „.„, Min. 10 yrs. Place a Bulletin help merchandise to sporting 1-800-927-9275. Experience in Acute Seeergeelng Nlvrneeeeee wanted ad today and goods. Bulletin Classifieds Care Preferred reach over 60,000 appear every day in the readers each week. Just too many print or on line. Visit our website at Your classified ad 745 collectibles? Call 541-385-5809 www.wchcd.org will also appear on Homes for Sale www.bendbulletin.com or Contact bendbulletin.com Linda Childers at Sell them in which currently The Bulletin The Bulletin 541-426-5313 NOTICE gernngCennelOregon srnrerggg Classifieds receives over 1.5 EOE All real estate advermillion page views tised here in is subevery month at 632 541 -385-5809 ject to th e F ederal no extra cost. Find exactly what Apt JMultiplex General Fair Housing A c t, Bulletin Classifieds you are looking for in the which makes it illegal Get Results! 687 CHECK YOUR AD to advertise any prefCLASSIFIEDS Call 385-5809 Commercial for erence, limitation or or place discrimination based Rent/Lease SALES your ad on-line at on race, color, reliFreight Broker/ bendbulletin.com gion, sex, handicap, Logistics Manager 4700 sq. ft. shop and familial status or na2500 sq. ft. office on A well-established 3PL tional origin, or intencompany is seeking on the first day it runs 1.53 acres for lease tion to make any such to make sure it is cor- in NW Bend, quiet qualified candidates RZmIDBI preferences, l i mitafor this f a st-paced rect. nSpellcheckn and area, excellent con® Rl@ilIN tions or discrimination. human errors do ocstruction, perfect for transportation s ales We will not knowingly cur. If this happens to electronic assembly position. Responsibiliaccept any advertisyour ad, please conplant. Lots of parkties include developing for r eal e state ing. Was auto shop. ing new and existing tact us ASAP so that which is in violation of corrections and any Call 702-526-0353. business to arranging this law. All persons Shop can be leased for the transportation adjustments can be are hereby informed made to your ad. separate from office of customers' freight that all dwellings ad541-385-5809 shipments. This posispace. 526 vertised are available tion offers unlimited Loans & Mortgages The Bulletin Classified on an equal opportucommission-based innity basis. The Bullecome for a committed 634 TiCk, TOCk WARNING tin Classified individual with a pas- The Bulletin recomApt./llllultiplex NE Bend sion to succeed. Tick, Tock... mends you use cauTo apply please call Call for Specials! tion when you pro...don't let time get Bend WorkSource at Limited numbers avail. vide personal Northeast Bend Homesj 5 41-388-6070 a n d information away. Hire a 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. to compareference J L ID W/D hookups, patios professional out nies offering loans or Big .20 acre lot, 3/2.5, 1330418. or decks. credit, especially of The Bulletin's 1692 sq.ft., RV parkMOUNTAIN GLEN, those asking for adi ng, m t n vie w s , "Call A Service TELEFUNDRAISING 541-383-9313 vance loan fees or $259,900. P r incipal Professionally companies from out of Professional" B roker © J o h n L Tele-funding for managed by Norris & state. If you have Scott, 541-480-3393. Directory today! Stevens, Inc. concerns or ques•Meals On Wheels tions, we suggest you •Defeat Diabetes consultyour attorney Foundation or call CONSUMER •Veterans (OPVA) HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392. Seeking experienced: • Line Cook • Waitress and • Malntenance (experiencea plus, but notrequiredj

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chasing products or I services from out of e

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Seniors and aii others welcome. Mon-Thur. 4:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. $9.25/hour.

BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real es- Call54I3855809teprOmOteyaurterriCe• AdVertiSefOr28daySStOrting dt tl4I ftfasfreratfrgrteg isrggrrrgrtexeenegrgefefaf tate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Oregon Land MortCall 541-382-8672 gage 541-388-4200. NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all Accounting Zdded guaP/tI construction work to businesses that adbe licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Zacv< giv e /, . Construction ContracLandscape ConstrucFull Service tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Landscape active license p lanting, deck s , means the contractor Management fences, arbors, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inInventory Accounting Analyst Verify the contractor's Spring Clean Up stallation, repair of irCCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be •Leaves Les Schwab is l ooking for a n I nventory www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e •Cones Accounting Analyst to work closely with store contractor.com Landscape Contrac•Needles management t o id e ntify a n d a n a lyze or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit • Debris Hauling variances within their inventory and gross The Bulletin recomnumber is to be inmargin results. T h e I nventory Accounting mends checking with cluded in all adverWeed Free Bark Analyst performs month-end financial close the CCB prior to contisements which indi& Flower Beds duties including account reconciliations and tracting with anyone. cate the business has journal entries an d p r epares monthly Some other t rades Lawn Renovation a bond, insurance and inventory reports. This position also provides also req u ire addi- Aeration - Dethatching workers c ompensaassistance to store personnel on their daily tional licenses and tion for their employOverseed ees. For your protecresponsibilities such a s p o sting/receiving certifications. Compost purchase orders, maintaining store inventory, tion call 503-378-5909 Top Dressing or use our website: and analyzing and correcting certain system Computer/Cabling Install www.lcbistate.or.us to transactions. Landscape check license status Computer training, set Maintenance before contracting with Qualifications: up & repair from the the business. Persons • Ability to both work independently and or Partial Service comfort of your own Full doing lan d scape • Mowing eEdging contribute to overall team performance home. Dirk (541) 647maintenance do not • Pruning .Weeding • Demonstrated proficiency with Microsoft 1341 or 619-997-8291 r equire an LC B l i Water Management Excel cense. • Prior accounting coursework or experience Debris Removal Fertilizer included Preferred: • Four-year degree in accounting, finance, with monthly program Aerate / Thatching Weekly Service and JUNK BE GONE business administration or equivalent Spring Clean-ups! • Experience using large-scale accounting/ERP I Haul Away FREE Weekly,monthly Freeestimates! For Salvage. Also systems or one time service. COLLINS Lawn Maint. • Experience working in teams that Cleanups & Cleanouts Call 541-480-9714 implemented new accounting systems Mel, 541-389-8107 Managlng Central Oregon CPR LANDSCAPING Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Landscapes Courier Service Weekly maintenance, customer service, with over 450 stores and Slnce 2006 cleanups. Lawn re7,000 employees in the western United States. pairs. Quality at an We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, We will distribute Senior Discounts a ffordable pric e . retirement and cash bonus. Please go to locally in C.O. 541-390-1 466 978-413-2487 www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls or do line hauls Same Day Response please. between C.O. and abovealllawnssrvice.com PDX area. (541) 383-1997 Les Schwab is proud to be an Looking for loads for FREE our 26' Freightliner equal opportunity employer. De-thatching Box truck (26,000 Aeration, Fertilizer GVW) with 4K l ift Serving Central On Weekly Service! ate. Lic. & Bonded. Oregon Since 2003 ontact Bill at Residental/Commercial The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with expeHave an item to wsdahl © bendrience in the Printing industry. Two years of broadband.com. Sprinkler sell quick? prior web press experience is beneficial, but atrtretde Ces Activation/Repair If it's under /e~ training can be provided. At The Bulletin you Ge Back Flow Testing can put your skills to work and make our '500 you can place it in products and services jump off the page! In Maintenance The Bulletin addition to printing our 7-day a week newspaoThatch & Aerate per, we also print a variety of other products • Spring Clean up Classifieds for: for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 eWeekly Mowing t/a tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman & Edging '10- 3 lines, 7 days Domestic Services must become knowledgeable and familiar •Bi-Monthly & Monthly '16 - 3 lines, 14 days working with. Maintenance Hovana House We put a premium on dependability, timeli•Bark, Rock, Etc. (Private Party ads only) Cleaning Services ness, having a positive attitude and being a team player. We offer a competitive compen- For 15 yrs we've per~Lendeoe in formed housekeeping •Landscape sation plan and career growth opportunities. Painting/Wall Covering services according to Construction This position primarily works nights, with a the wishes of our cli10-hour shift, 4 days per week. eWater Feature KC WHITE ents. We offer profes- Installation/Maint. If you are interested in fostering your talent as PAINTING LLC sional cleaning, post • Pavers a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourInterior and Exterior construction cleaning •Renovations age you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, Family-owned and office cleaning. •Irrigations Installation Residential & Commercial Pressroom Manager, at 541-728-1800 anelson@wescom a ers.com 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts Senior Discounts 5-vear warranties with your resume, references and salary hisBonded & Insured SPRING SPECIAL! tory/requirements. No phone calls please. Handyman 541-815-4458 Call 541-420-7846 Drug testing is required prior to employment. LCB¹8759 CCB ¹204918 The Bulletin is a drug free work place and I DO THAT! EOE. Home/Rental repairs FIND IT! Small jobs to remodels Find It in SUY IT! The Bulletin Honest, guaranteed gerrmg Central Oregon srnre 1903 The Bulletin Classifieds! SELL IT! work. CCB¹151573 541-385-5809 Dennis 541-317-9768 The Bulletin Classifieds

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TH E BULLETINoWEDNESDAY, APR 1, 2015

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

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB wedn~day ,AP~I1,2015

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'shortz

Helping out By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Another month had ended, and when I saw Unlucky Louie heading my way in the club lounge, I knew what to expect. "Can you help me out?" Louie asked plaintively. "Sure," I sighed. "Which way did you come in?" "I need a loan," he growled. If Louie improved his technique, h e wouldn't lose so much in h i s money games and wouldn't need loans. As declarer at today's slam, Louie took dummy's ace of clubs and informed North that they had missed a grand slam.

diamond, your partner bids o ne spade, you raise to three spades and he tries four hearts. What do you say? ANSWER: If your partner wanted to settle for game, he would have bid it. His four hearts shows a controlprobably the ace — and slam interest. Though you have minimum highcard values for your bidding, you h ave g oo d c o n trols a n d ca n cooperate. Bid five spades or cue-bid five clubs. South dealer N-S vulnerable

DAILY QUESTION

21 1,000

kilogrammes

22 Midwest capital ¹1

28Takeon 29 Many radio songs after Thanksgiving 30Think up 32 Where to find some very sick individuals, for short 33 U.F.O. shape 37 Midwest capital

NORTH 4 3K76 2 9 102

LAST TRUMP North groaned — understandably since Louie went down at six spades. He next cashed the A-Q of trumps. When West discarded, Louie tried the A-K of hearts. East ruffed and led his last trump, and Louie wound up down three. Louie's poor technique cost a bundle. To guard against a 4-1 heart break, Louie takes one high trump, then leads the ace and a low heart. If West wins and leads another club, Louie wins, leads a trump to his hand, ruffs a heart with the king of trumps, draws trumps and runs the hearts.

ACROSS 1PBrtof "rico" or "roja" 8 Lives in a cell? 14Like the praying mantis, anatomically [weird, but true] 16Goofs 17Guaranteed to succeed 18Covets 19Bit of smoke

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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org.

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17

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I N C U B A T O R

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3

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7

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11

12

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36

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18 19

22 2 3

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25

20

21

26

27

29

30

31

32

33

38

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6 Be overwhelmed

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5 Suffix with arbor

7 Terminate a contract... or extend it

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

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PUZZLE BY MICHAEL SHTEYMAN

33 Game of motor 39 Jack'5 love in "Titanic" precision that, strangely enough, 43 Eggnog is often played ingredient while inebriated

54 Las Vegas-toAustin dir. 56V.I.P.on the Hill: Abbr.

44Catch 34 Playground retort 46 "Get lost!"

57 Singing syllable

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26 L eave t h e PI'OS

27 Black suit

31 Symbol on the flag de Argentina

35 Women's tennis garment

Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

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equipment

By Daniel Nierenberg O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

67

04/01/15


THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY APRIL 1 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 750

Redmond Homes

Looking for yournext emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

880

870

Bo a ts & Accessories

17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-815-2523 FISH!

757

Crook County Homes

2006 Smokercraft Near new hospital in Sunchaser 8'x20' Prineville, bank model pontoon boat, owned 4 bdr, 2 bath 75HP Mercury and home with gas fireelectric trolling moplace and hardwood full canvas and f loors on a la r g e tor,many extras. fenced lot. Too new Stored inside for MLS! Pam Lester, $19,900 Princ. Broker, Cen541-350-5425 tury 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338 762

Moto r homes

Frefghtlfner 1994 Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6

speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077

PINNACLE 1990 30', clean. Rear walk-around bed. No smokers, no mildew, no leaks. $8500. 541-306-7268

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

Homes with Acreage

Redmond: Powell Butte FSBO, 3 541-548-5254 bdrm/2 bath, 1 800 sq.ft., 4 . 7 fe n c ed acres, Cascade view, shop, fu l RV hookups, $369,000. 2007 Bennington 541-419-2753 Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp 775 Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, Manufactured/ RV PACKAGE-2006 original owner, lots Mobile Homes Monaco Monarch, 31 ', of extras; TennesFord V10, 28,900 rniles, see tandem axle auto-level, 2 slides, List your Home trailer. Excellent queen bed & hide-a-bed JandNfHomes.com condition, $23,500 sofa, 4kgen, conv miWe Have Buyers 503-646-1804 crowave, 2 TV's, tow Get Top Dollar package,$66,000. Financing Available. OPTION - 2003 Jeep 541-548-5511 Ads published in the Wranglertow car, 84K "Boats" classification miles, hard & soft top, 5 include: Speed, fish- speed manual,$1 1,000 ing, drift, canoe, 541-815-6319 house and sail boats. For all other types of Tioga 24' ClassC watercraft, please go Bought new in 2000, to Class 875. currently under 21K 541-385-5809 miles, exc. shape, new tires, profesServing Central Oregonsince 1903 sionally winterized every year, cut-off 850 Bayliner 185 2006 switch to b a ttery, Snowmobiles open bow. 2nd owner plus new RV bat— low engine hrs. teries. Oven, h ot — fuel injected V6 water heater & air — Radio & Tower. cond., seldom used; Great family boat just add water and i t's ready t o g o ! Priced to sell. $22,000 obo. Seri$11,590. ous inquiries, only. 541-548-0345. 4-place enclosed InterStored in T e rrebstate snowmobile trailer onne. 541-548-5174 875 w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 541-379-3530 Watercraft YAMAHA 700 2000 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Polaris Fusion 900, only 788 mi., new mirrors, covers, custom skis, n e w rid e -on Ready to makememories! r ide-off t r ailer w i t h Cata Raft Top-selling Winnebago spare, + much more. 2 16' 31J, original owners, nonOutfitter oars, 2 $ 6,995. Call for d e Cataract oars, 3 NRS smokers, garaged, only tails. 541-420-6215 8" Ouffitter blades and 18,800 miles, auto-levell ots of gear, all in ing jacks, (2) slides, up860 "very good to exc." graded queen bed, bunk Motorcycles & Accessories condition plus custom beds, micro, (3) TVs, camp/river tables and sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very bags, more!. $2,700 clean!Only $67,995! Ex541 318 1322. tended and/or fiAdditional information nancingwarranty avail to qualified and photos on buyers! 541-388-7179 request, too!

The Bulletin

Harley Dyna Wide Glide 2003 custom paint, extras, 13,000 orig miles, like new, health forces sale. Sacrifice $10,000 obo. 541-633-7856.

HD Fat Bo 1996

ds published in "Wa tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Serv>ngCenfral Oregon since 1903

880

Motorhomes

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award

Winner Showroom Cond. Many Extras Low Miles. $15,000 541-546-4807

HD Fat Boy 2002

24' Mercedes Benz Prism, 2015 Model G, Mercedes Diesel engine, 18+ mpg, auto trans, fully loaded with double-expando, and only 5200 miles. Perfect condition only$92K. Call 541-526-1201 or see at: 3404 Dogwood Ave., in Redmond.

881

908

933

975

Travel Trailers

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Pickups

Automobiles

CAL LW

oncorde 00

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 882

Fifth Wheels

CHECKyOUR AD

865

ATVs

Polaris Sportsman 2010 850XP EPS,

fully loaded, $6950. 541-316-0210

Qwp +W~

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

A Lot of car for

$6,977!

Vin¹133699

ROBBERSON I I N c 0 L II ~

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 4/30/1 5

F ord Ranger X L T 1997, 4x4, 5 spd., 4 cyl, tow pkg, runs great, $4700. 541-385-4790.

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8996.

Total luxury and AWD. ¹616046 $12,998

935

Sport Utility Vehicles

ROBBERSON u seoLr~

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 04/30/15

BMW X3 35i 2010

Exc cond., 65K

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here

miles w/100K mile

in The Bulletin's

"Call A Service Professional" Directory Toyota Camry Hybrid X LE 2 0 12 , onl y 1 2,500 mi., all o p tions. Below KBB at $21,900. 541-788-1653

Automotive Parts, Service& Accessories

(4) 17" dress mags for

Nissan '07 Titan truck, $100 each. 541-815-0686

Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, Goodyear GW3 Ultra Grip snow tires (4), rear island-kitchen, 235/50R18, 1300 fireplace, 2 TV's, miles. Pd $850, sell CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, $400. 541-382-2463 custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. MBZ winter wheels 8 tire set: 4 MSW New awning & tires. wheels (AMG design) Excellent condition. w/Michelin X-ice, used $19,750.More pics 1 season, cost $2200; available. 541-923-6408 sell $1100. 541-382-6664 Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C 932 one slide-out. Antique 8 Awning. Like new, Classic Autos hardly used.

Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649

2000- Runs and looks good! Vin ¹166631 $4,998.

CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

2004, inspected, even comes with a warranty! VIN ¹210482 $8,998. ROBBERSON

ROBBERSON y LIIICOLII ~

~

541-312-3986

I I N c 0 L II ~

www.robberson.com

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 4/30/15

Mercury Mariner iI

2010. Only 56k mi.. Vin ¹J20929 16,977 ROBBERSON i

A Private Collection 1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop BEND 541-382-8038

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,

power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900.

~

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 4/30/1 5

541-223-2218

Mountaineer 1999

Garage Sales

la,.

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

Garage Sales Garage Sales

541-546-5254 885

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

881

Travel Trailers

Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR.

Adventurer 2013 86 FB truck camper, $18,800. 2205 dry weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 deep cycle batteries, LED lights, full size queen bed. n i ce floorplan. Also available 2010 C hevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 360-774-2747 No text messages!

o

541-604-5993

fun! Vin ¹J28963

Buick Electra 225 1964Classic cruiser with rare 401CI V8. Runs good, needs interior work, 168K miles. $7,995. Donated to Equine Outreach. Call Gary 541-460-6130

Bargain Corral price$4,998 ROBBERSON i LINCOLII ~

Tent Trailer Rockwood 2 012 12' b ox , 2 7 ' open, 1.9 c.u. 3-way fridge, furnace. 48" front ATV rack; 15" Mud Rover tires HD w/spare. Dry weight 2275. Extras. $10,500 541-536-3045

VW BUG 1971

Suzuki SX4 2011

Fully restored Vin ¹359402

1965 Mustang

$5,977

Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition. $12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

ROBBERSON

4x4 with great gas mileage ¹301851 $11,977

I I N c 0 L II ~

LIIICOLII ~

~

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 4/30/1 5

People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin ClassiNeds

Looklng for your next employee?

in ASAP?

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

Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, Fax It te 541-322-7253 soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 155K m i les,The Bulletin Classifieds $11,500.541-549-6407 ToyotaRA V4 2003

VW CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-382-0023

cleanest in town, seriously, ¹066315 only$9,998 ROBBERSON l lllCOLN~

I IKI RIR I

541-312%986

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 4/30/1 5

IM RO R

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 4/30/15

ROBBERSON i

Need to get an ad

940

Pickups

Vans

Chev Silverado

VyyRouton 2010

I

i i i i

Well equipped, and well cared for. VIN

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat,

ROBBERSON

ROBBERSON i

LlllcoLN ~

LINcoLII ~

150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 4/30/1 5

$19,977 II IR K R

¹407682.$15,998 I M RDR

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 04/30/15

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE Deutsche Bank National Trust Company formerly known as Bankers Trust Company of C a lifornia, N.A., as Trustee for Long Beach M ortg age L oa n T r u st 2001-3, Plaintiff/s, v. Randal L. Hermanns; Nancy E. Hermanns; Vandevert Acres Homeowners Association a/k/a Vandevert Acres South Homeowners Association; PRA III LLC, other Persons or Parties, including Occupants, unknown claimingany right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 12CV1103. NOTICE OF SALE U N DER WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, May 1 9 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 1 7 87 8 D i p per Lane, Bend, Oregon 97707. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Federal N a t ional Mortgage Association, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Robert L. Laughlin; Susan Laughlin; Greyhawk Condominium Owners Association; Ranch at the Canyons Assoc iation, Inc.; a n d O ccupants of t h e premises, D e fendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0255FC. AMENDED NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, May 26, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 1439 Northwest Jun iper Street ¹ 6 , B end, Oreg o n 97701. Conditions of Sale: P otential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e ac cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately u pon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm

LEGAL NOTICE Federal N a t ional Mortgage Association ("FNMA"), its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Walter M. Stone; Denise Stone aka Denise Ann Stone; BCGL D evelopers L L C ; I The Bulletin recoml Tree mends extra caution i Oak Assowhen p u r chasing I Homeowners' c iation, Inc.; a n d i products or services O ccupants of t h e from out of the area. premises, D e feni S ending c ash , Case No.: checks, or credit in- q dant/s. NOformation may be I 14CV0099FC. T ICE O F SA L E i subject toFRAUD. UNDER WRIT OF For more informaEXECUTION i tion about an adver- REAL PROPERTY. tiser, you may call Notice is h e reby I the Oregon Statel given that the Desg Attorney General's g c hutes Cou n t y > Office C onsumer I Sheriff's Office will, i Protection hotline at on Tuesday, June 2, 1-877-877-9392. 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of servingcentral oregon sinceee the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, Want to impress the O regon, s ell, a t relatives? Remodel public oral auction your home with the to the highest bidhelp of a professional d er, for cash o r from The Bulletin's cashier's check, the real property com"Call A Service m only known a s Professional" Directory 2276 NE T u cson

I

933

2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932

541-447-5164.

541-385-5809

~

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 4/30/1 5

I- ~4

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

IM RO R

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 04/30/15

LINCOLII ~

RV

Canopies & Campers Winnebago Outlook 2007 Class "C"31', clean, non- smoking exc. cond.$49,900 541-447-9268

maaa a

541-312-3986

925

Utility Trailers

4x4 and ready for

I

IM RO R

Mercury Milan2007

What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold Covered utility trailer. Call a Pro weather pkg, pre4'x8'. Street legal. mium pkg & techWhether you need a Spare tire. $450. nology pkg. Keyless fence fixed, hedges obo. 541-260-0514 access, sunroof, trimmed or a house F latbed t r ailer w i t h navigation, satellite radio, extra snow built, you'll find ramps, 7000 lb. catires. (Car top carpacity, 26' long, 6'6" professional help in rier not included.) wide, ideal for hauling The Bulletin's "Call a $22,500. hay, materials, cars, 541-915-9170 Service Professional" exc. cond. $2800. 541-420-3788 Directory 541-385-5809 931 Dodge Durango

541-548-5254

Four Winds 32' 2010 Triton V-10 with 13,000 miles. Large slide, Sleeps 7. Lots of storage. 5000lb hitch. Like new. $51,900 541-325-6813

Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available,$13,000. Call 541-706-1780

Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.

541-385-5809

908 (e~ 14,000 orig. miles. Aircraft, Parts Exc. cond. Vance 8 Hines exhaust, 5 & Service spoke HD rims. DeHeartland P r owler tachable luggage rack 2012, 29PRKS, 33', with back rest. Many like new, 2 slides-livother extras. Must i ng area 8 la r g e see to appreciate. closet. Large enough Allegro 32' 2007, like $10,500. located in to live in, but easy to new, only 12,600 miles. Crooked River Ranch. tow! 15' power awCall 530-957-1665 Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 ning, power hitch & 1/3interestin transmission, dual ex- stabilizers, full s ize haust. Loaded! Auto-levColumbia 400, The Bulletin's eling system, 5kw gen, queen bed, l a r ge Financing available. "Call A Service power mirrors w/defrost, shower, porcelain sink $125,000 Professional" Directory 2 slide-outs with aw- 8 toilet. (located O Bend) is all about meeting nings, rear c a mera,$26,500. 541-999-2571 541-288-3333 trailer hitch, driyer door your needs. w/power window, cruise, PriceReduced! $14,500. exhaust brake, central Fleetwood Pegasus 27' Call on one of the satellite sys. Asking FQS, 14' slide, lots professionals today! vac, $67,500. 503-781-8812 2005 of extras and plenty of storage inside & out. Pantry next to frig. Always stored in heated 1/3 interest in wellgarage. Dry weight 5273 equipped IFR Beech Bo541-526-1361 nanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. Honda CB250 $65,000. 541-419-9510 Nighthawk, 2008, very Fleetwood D i scovery RV www. N4972M.com good cond, $1800. 3300 40' 2003, diesel, w/all CONSIGNMENTS miles. Call 541-610-3609 options - 3 slide outs, HANGAR FOR SALE. WANTED satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, We Do The Work ... 30x40 end unit T Large men's Gerbing etc., 34,000 m iles. You Keep The Cash! hanger in Prineville. heated jacket l iner Wintered in h eated On-site credit Dry walled, insulated and gloves, $ 150, shop. $78,995 obo. approval team, and painted. $23,500 Woman's m e d i um 541-447-8664 web site presence. Tom, 541.788.5546 ortex H D j a c ket, We Take Trade-Ins! 100. HD tour bag,

$150. 541-388-5031

TODAYW

iTb.au~m i

Way, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full i mmediately u p on t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Green Tree Servicing LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. James L. J o rg ensen; Lois M . Jorgensen; M o rtgage El e c tronic R egistration S y s tems, Inc.; Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.; Occupants of the property, Defendant/s. Case No.: 'I 2CV1165. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.

Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, May 21, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 1 635 N W L e w is Street, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Green Tree Servicing LLC, its successors i n in t e rest and/or ass i gns, P laintiff/s, v. V e r non A. Yeager aka Vernon Alan Yeager; Stacey A. Yeager aka Stacey Ann Yeager; Occupants of the premises; and the Real Property located at 5 2252 Stea r ns Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0353FC. NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, May 21, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a i n lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 5 2252 Stea r n s Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE JPMorgan C hase Bank, National Association, successor in interest by purchase from the Federal Deposit Insurance C orporation as receiver of Washington Mutual Bank, its successors i n int e rest and/or ass i gns, P laintiff/s, v . U n known Heirs of Eunice J . La n don; Timothy Landon as Personal R e p resentative for Eunice J. Landon; Timothy L andon; Terr y Landon; J e r e my Landon; T a m my


E6 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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

1000

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

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Skovborg; State of Oregon; Occupants of the premises; and the Real Property located at 1238-40 Southwest 16th Street, R edmond, OR 97756, Defendant/s. Case No.:

the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's

checks made pay-

1 4CV0620FC. N O - Deschutes C o unty TICE OF SALE UNSheriff's Office to reDER WRIT OF EX- view bidder's funds. ECUTION REAL Only U.S. currency PROPERTY. Notice is and/or cashier's hereby given that the checks made payable

Deschutes C o unty able to Deschutes Sheriff's Office will, on County Sheriff's OfT hursday, May 2 1, 13CV0850. NOf ice will b e ac 2015 at 10:00 AM, in T ICE O F SAL E cepted. P a yment the main lobby of the UNDER WRIT OF must be made in full Deschutes C o u nty EXECUTION immediately upon Sheriff 's Office,63333 REAL PROPERTY. t he close o f t h e W. Highway 20, Bend, Notice is h e reby sale. For more inOregon, sell, at public given that the Desf ormation on t h i s o ral auction to t h e c hutes Cou n t y sale go to: www.orhighest bidder, f or Sheriff's Office will, egonsheriff s.com/sa cash o r ca s hier's on Thursday, May les.htm check, the real prop28, 2015 at 10:00 erty commonly known LEGAL NOTICE A M, in t h e m a in as 61517 Davis Lake N ationstar Mor t lobby of the DesLoop, Bend, Oregon LLC, c hutes Cou n t y gage 97702. Conditions of Plaintiff/s, v. Brandi S heriff's Of fi c e , Sale: Potential bidMcClennen, Jacob 63333 W. Highway ders must arrive 15 McClennen; Occu20, Bend, Oregon, minutes prior to the pants of the propsell, at public oral auction to allow the erty, D e fendant/s. auction to the highDeschutes C o u nty Case No.: est bidder, for cash Sheriff's Office to re13CV0904. NOor cashier's check, view bidder's funds. T ICE O F SAL E the real p roperty UNDER WRIT OF Only U.S. currency commonly known as and/or cashier's EXECUTION 1238-40 Southwest checks made payable REAL PROPERTY. 16th Street, RedNotice is h e reby to Deschutes County m ond, Ore g o n given that the DesSheriff's Office will be 97756. C onditions c hutes Cou n t y accepted. P ayment of Sale: P o tential Sheriff's Office will, must be made in full bidders must arrive immediately upon the on Tuesday, May 15 minutes prior to close of the sale. For 26, 2015 at 10:00 the auction to allow more information on AM, in t h e m a in the Desc h utes lobby of the Desthis s al e g o to: County Sheriff's Ofc hutes Cou n t y www.oregonsheriffs.c f ice to rev i e w S heriff's om/sales.htm Of fi c e , bidder's funds. Only 63333 W. Highway LEGAL NOTICE U.S. currency Bend, Oregon, NOTICE OF SEIZURE and/or ca s h ier's 20, FOR CIVIL sell, at public oral checks made payauction to the highFORFEITURE TO ALL able to Deschutes est bidder, for cash POTENTIAL County Sheriff's Ofor cashier's check, CLAIMANTS AND TO f ice will b e ac the real p roperty ALL UNKNOWN cepted. P a yment commonly known as PERSONS READ THIS must be made in full 2003 S W 29th CAREFULLY immediately u pon Street, R e dmond, t he close o f t h e O regon 977 5 6 . If you have any intersale. For more inConditions of Sale: est i n t h e s e i zed f ormation on t h i s Potential b i d ders property d e scribed sale go to: www.ormust arrive 15 minbelow, you must claim egonsheriff s.com/sa u tes prior to t h e that interest or you will les.htm auction to allow the automatically lose that Deschutes County interest. If you do not LEGAL NOTICE S heriff's Office to file a claim for the J PMorgan Cha s e review d er's property, the property Bank, National Asso- funds. Onlybid U . S. may be forfeited even ciation, Plaintiff/s, v. an d / or if you are not conJohn Ballard, Son and currency c h e cks victed of any crime. as Cons t ructive cashier's payable to To claim an interest, Trustee of the Estate made County you must file a written of Teresa M. Ballard; Deschutes Sheriff's Office will claim with the forfeiRichard R o t bergs, be accepted. Payture counsel named Son and as Construc- ment must be made below, The w r itten t ive Trustee of t h e full immediately claim must be signed Estate of Persijs Her- in the close of by you, sworn to unbert Rotbergs; Robert upon sale. For more der penalty of perjury Rotbergs; Gary Rot- the on this before a notary public, bergs; Ginger Rot- information go to: www.orand state: (a) Your bergs; Cecilia Keiser; sale egonsheriff s. com/sa true name; (b) The U nknown Heirs o f les.htm address at which you Teresa M. Ballard and will a ccept f u ture LEGAL NOTICE Persijs Herbert Rotm ailings f ro m t h e Mo r t bergs; Selco Commu- N ationstar court and forfeiture nity Credit Union; Or- gage LLC, its succounsel; and (3) A egon Water cessors in interest tatement that y o u Wonderland Property and/or ass i gns, shave an interest in the Owners Association, Plaintiff/s, v. Robert seized property. Your Unit II, I nc., Other W. Dyer, Jr. aka deadline for filing the Will i a m Persons or P arties, R obert claim document with including Occupants, Dyer, J r . ; The cou n sel R e d - forfeiture unknown clai ming any G reens a t named below is 21 right, title, lien, or in- mond Owners Asdays from the last day terest in the property sociation, Inc.; JPof publication of this Cha s e described in the com- M organ notice. Where to file a plaint herein, Defen- Bank, National Asclaim and for more dant/s. Case N o .: sociation, succesi nformation: D a i na 1 3CV1062FC. N O - sor in interest by Vitolins, Crook County TICE OF SALE UN- purchase from the District Attorney OfFederal Deposit InDER WRIT OF EXfice, 300 N E T hird ECUTION - REAL surance CorporaStreet, Prineville, OR PROPERTY. Notice is tion as receiver of 97754. hereby given that the Washington Mutual of reasons for W a s hington Notice Deschutes C o u nty f/k/a Forfeiture: The propSheriff's Office will, on Mutual Bank, FA; erty described T hursday, May 2 8 , State of O regon; was seized for below forfei2015 at 10:00 AM, in O ccupants of t h e ture because it: (1) the main lobby of the premises; and the Constitutes the proDeschutes C o unty Real Property loceeds of the violation Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 cated a t 4120 of, solicitation to vioW. Highway 20, Bend, Southwest Tommy late, attempt to vioOregon, sell, at public Armour Lane, Redor conspiracy to o ral auction to t he m ond, Ore g o n late, violates, the criminal h ighest bidder, f o r 97756, Defendant/s. laws of the State of No.: cash o r ca s hier's Case Oregon regarding the check, the real prop- 14CV0380FC. NOmanufacture, distribuerty commonly known T ICE O F SA L E tion, or possession of as 17288 Harlequin UNDER WRIT OF controlled substances Drive, Bend, Oregon EXECUTION (ORS C hapter475); REAL PROPERTY. 97707. Conditions of (2) Was used Sale: Potential bid- Notice is h e reby and/or or intended for use in ders must arrive 15 given that the Descommitting or faciliminutes prior to the c hutes Coun t y tating the violation of, auction to allow the Sheriff's Office will, solicitation to violate, Deschutes C o unty on Thursday, May attempt to violate, or Sheriff's Office to re- 28, 2015 at 10:00 to violate view bidder's funds. A M, in t h e m a i n conspiracy the criminal laws of Only U.S. currency lobby of the Desthe State of Oregon Coun t y and/or cashier's c hutes the manuOf fi c e , regarding checks made payable S heriff's facture, distribution or to Deschutes County 63333 W. Highway possession of c o nSheriff's Office will be 20, Bend, Oregon, trolled su b stances accepted. Payment sell, at public oral (ORS Chapter 475). must be made in full auction to the highimmediately upon the est bidder, for cash IN THE MATTER OF: close of the sale. For or cashier's check, more information on the real p roperty (1) $7,330.00 in US this s al e go to: commonly known as Currency, Case No www.oregonsheriffs.c 4120 SW T ommy 15-50868 seized FebArmour Lane, Redom/sales.htm 24, 2015 from m ond, Ore g o n ruary Antonio Rico LEGAL NOTICE 97756. Conditions JPMorgan Chase of Sale: P o tential Sanchez. Bank, National Asbidders must arrive sociation, its suc15 minutes prior to LEGAL NOTICE cessors in interest the auction to allow Ocwen Loan Servicand/or as s igns, the Desc h utes ing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Plaintiff/s, v. Diane County Sheriff's OfCraig Howell; Kelly E. Vanwert; a nd f ice to rev i e w Howell; and Persons O ccupants of t h e bidder's funds. Only or Parties unknown U.S. claiming any r i ght, premises, D efencurrency dant/s. Case No.: and/or ca s h ier's title, lien, or interest in 13CV0257. NOchecks made payt he p r operty d e T ICE O F SAL E able to Deschutes scribed in the comUNDER WRIT OF County Sheriff's Ofplaint herein, DefenEXECUTION f ice will b e a c d ant/s. Case N o . : REAL PROPERTY. cepted. P a yment 1 3CV1009FC. N O Notice i s h e r eby must be made in full TICE OF SALE UNi mmediately u p on DER WRIT OF EXgiven that the Desc hutes Coun t y t he close o f t h e ECUTION - REAL Sheriff's Office will, sale. For more inPROPERTY. Notice is on Tuesday, May f ormation on t h is hereby given that the 19, 2015 at 10:00 sale go to: www.orDeschutes C o unty A M, in t h e m a i n egonsheriff s.com/sa Sheriff's Office will, on lobby of the Desles.htm T uesday, May 2 6 , c hutes Coun t y 2015 at 10:00 AM, in S heriff's Of fi c e , LEGAL NOTICE the main lobby of the 63333 W. Highway Nationstar Mortgage Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's Office,63333 20, Bend, Oregon, L LC, Plaintiff/s, v . sell, at public oral Steven K. Brown; The W. Highway 20, Bend, Parks Homeowners Oregon, sell, at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash Association; U n ited o ral auction to t h e or cashier's check, States of A m erica; highest bidder, f or the real p roperty and all other Persons cash o r ca s hier's or Parties unknown check, the real propcommonly known as 2024 Sou t hwest claiming any r i ght, erty commonly known 23rd Street, Redtitle, lien, or interest in as 1 6795 B r enda m ond, Ore g o n the R ea l P r operty Drive, Bend, Oregon 97756. Conditions commonly known as 97707. Conditions of of Sale: P o tential 6 1517 Davis L a k e Sale: Potential bidbidders must arrive Loop, B e nd, OR ders must arrive 15 15 minutes prior to 97702, Defendant/s. minutes prior to the No.: the auction to allow Case auction to allow the

to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE O neWest Ba n k , FSB, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Elmer E. Jeseritz; Eloise D. Jeseritz; U nited States o f America; State of Oregon; and Occupants of the p remises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0244FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, May 26, 2015 at 10:00

A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p r operty commonly known as 837 Southwest 26th Court, R e dmond, O regon 977 5 6 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h ecks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will

be accepted. Pay-

ment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE The following units will be sold at Public A u c tion on Thursday, April 16, 2015 at 12 p.m. at Northwest Self Storage, 100 SE 3rd St., B e nd , OR 97702. Unit¹ D281Kevin Knippel, Unit¹ B83 - Tony Lynner, U nit¹ C15 4 H amilton Pate , Unit¹ B93 - Michael Ray Perry, Unit¹ C177 - Justin Taft, Unit¹ C179 - Thomas Townsend. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-14-645523-NH Reference is made to t hat c e rtain d e e d made by, FREDDY W HOLMAN JR., AND SARA HOLMAN, AS TENANTS BY T HE ENTIRETY as Grantor t o F I D ELITY N A TIONAL TITLE I NS URANCE COM PANY, A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE E LECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYS T EMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR ENC ORE CREDI T CORP, as B e neficiary, dated 10/1 6/2006, recorded 10/26/2006, in official r ecords o f DES CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. and/or as fee/file/instrument/microfilm/reception number 2006-71520 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and State, to-wit: APN: 119487 181203DC03300 LOT 3, BLOCK 4, REED M ARKET EAST , FIRST A D D ITION, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 21051 J UN I PERHAVEN AVE, BEND, OR 97702 The undersigned hereby certifies that based upon business rec o rds there are no known written assignments of the trust deed by the trustee or by the beneficiary and no appointments of a successor trustee have been made, except as recorded i n the records of the county or counties in which the above described real property is situated. Further, no action has been instituted to recover the d ebt, or a n y p a r t thereof, now remaining secured by the trust deed, or, if such action has been instituted, such action has been dismissed except as permitted by ORS 86.752(7). Both the beneficiary and t he t r ustee h a v e

elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the o bligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursua nt to Sect i o n 86.752(3) of Oregon Revised Sta t utes. There is a default by grantor or other person owing an obligation, performance of which is secured by the trust deed, or by the successor in interest, with respect to provisions th e r ein which authorize sale in the event of such provision. The default for which foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due th e f o l lowing sums: Del i nquent Payments: Payment Information From 12/1/2009 T h rough 2/1/2015 Total Payments $ 103,623.48 Late Charges From 12/1/2009 T h rough 2/1/2015 Total Late Charges $2 2 1.10 Beneficiary's Advances, Costs, And Expenses Escrow Advances $ 2 4,836.07 Total Adva n ces: $24,836.07 T O TAL FORECLOSURE COST: $4, 9 35.50 TOTAL R E QUIRED TO REI N STATE: $125,579.67 TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $364,636.82 By reason of the default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by t h e t r ust deed immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to- wit: The installments of principal and interest which became d ue on 1 2/1/2009, an d a l l subsequent i n stallments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent p roperty taxes, insurance premiums, ad v ances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries e f forts t o protect and preserve i ts security, all o f which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will o n 7/8/2015 at t h e hour of 1 1:00 am, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond S t reet, B end, O R 977 0 1 C ounty o f DES C HUTES. State o f Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest w h i c h the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs an d e x penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that a n y per s on named i n S e c tion 86.778 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure p r oceeding d ismissed and t h e trust deed reinstated by payment to t he beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), t o gether w ith t he cost s , trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance r e q uired under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. Other than as shown of record, neither the beneficiary nor the trustee has any actual notice of any person having or claiming to have any lien upon or interest in the r e a l pr o perty hereinabove described subsequent to t he interest o f t h e trustee in th e t rust deed, or of any suc-

cessor in interest to grantor or of any lessee or other person in possession of or occupying the property, except: Name a nd Last Known Address and Nature of Right, Lien or Interest For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.servicelinkasap.com In construing this notice, the singular includes the p lural, t h e wor d "grantor" includes any successor in interest to this grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If any irregularities are disc overed within 1 0 days of the date of this sale, the trustee will rescind the sale, return th e b u y er's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at th e s a le shall be entitled only t o a r e turn of t h e monies paid to t he Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged thr o u gh bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan i n w h ich case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. As required b y law, y o u a r e hereby notified that a negative credit report r eflecting on y o u r credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Without limiting t he t r ustee's d i s claimer of representations or w a rranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in this notice that some residential p r operty sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to be t oxic. Prospective purchasers o f res i dential property should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at the trustee's sale. NOTICE TO TENANTS: TENANTS OF THE SUBJECT REAL P ROPERTY H A V E CERTAIN PROTECTIONS AFFORDED

LEGAL NOTICE T RUSTEE'S N O TICE OF SALE TS No.: 00 8 8 23-OR No.: * ** * * * 3731 R e f erence is made to that certain trust deed

(the "Deed of Trust") executed by LARRY L. WESTLING AND KATHY L. WESTLING, HUS-

BAND AND WIFE, as Grantor, to REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES C O RPORATION, as Trustee, in favor of H SBC MORT GAGE SERVICES INC., as Beneficiary, dated 1 2/27/2005, recorded 1/6/2006, as Instrument No. 2006-00896, in the Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, which covers the following described real prope rty s i tuated i n Deschutes County, Oregon: LOT TEN (10), BLOCK FOUR (4) OF TALL PINES, FIRST A D DITION SUBDIVISION, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. APN: 139956 Commonly known as: 1 6 154 LOST LN. LA PINE, OR 97739 The current beneficiary is: LPP M ORTGAGE LTD. Both the bene ficiary an d th e trustee have elected to sell the above-described real property to satisfy the obligations secured b y the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to ORS 86.752(3). The default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's failure to pay w hen due, the following sums: D e linquent Payments: Dates: 03/01/1 3 thru 0 2/01/1 5. No. 2 4 . Amount $1,214.31. Total: $29,143.44. Beneficiary Advances: $1,876.72. Foreclosure F ees and Exp e nses: $ 0.00. Total R e quired to Reinstate: $31,020.16. TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $ 175,213.11. By reason of the default, th e b e neficiary has declared all obligations secured by the Deed of Trust i mmediately due and payable, including: the p rincipal su m o f $147,794.79 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.85 % per annum, from 2/1/2013 until paid, plus all accrued late c harges, and a l l trustee's fees, foreclosure costs, and any s u m s ad vanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Deed of Trust Whereof, n otice hereby i s given that the undersigned trustee, C LEAR RE C O N CORP., whose add ress is 62 1 S W Morrison S t r eet, TO THEM U N DER Suite 425, Portland, OR 97205, will on O RS 8 6.782 A N D POSSIBLY U NDER 6 /30/2015, at t h e FEDERAL LAW. AT- hour of 11:00 AM, T ACHED TO T H I S standard time, as NOTICE OF S ALE, established by ORS AND INCO R PO- 1 87.110, AT T H E ST R E ET RATED HEREIN, IS A BOND N OTICE T O T E N - ENTRANCE STEPS T O T H E DES ANTS THAT S ETS CHUTES COUNTY F ORTH SOME O F THE PROTECTIONS COURTHOUSE, THAT AR E A V AIL- 1 164 N W B O N D ABLE TO A TENANT S T., B END, O R OF THE S UBJECT 97701, sell at public REAL P R OPERTY auction to the highAND WHICH SETS est bidder for cash FORTH CE R TAIN the interest in the above-described REQUIREMENTS THAT M US T BE real property which COMPLIED WITH BY the grantor had or ANY T E NANT IN had power to conORDER TO OBTAIN vey at the time it THE AFF O RDED executed the Deed P ROTECTION, A S of Trust, together REQUIRED UNDER with an y i n terest ORS 86.771. QUAL- which the grantor or ITY MAY BE CON- his successors in a c q uired S IDERED A D E B T interest COLLECTOR AT- after the execution TEMPTING TO COL- of the Deed of Trust, LECT A DEBT AND to satisfy the foreo b l igations ANY INFORMATION going OBTAINED WILL BE thereby secured and the costs and exU SED FO R T H A T penses of sale, inPURPOSE. TS N o: cluding a r easonOR-14-645523-NH Dated: 2/24/15 Qual- able charge by the ity Loan Service Cor- t rustee. Notice i s poration of Washing- further given that ton, as Trus t ee any person named in ORS 86.778 has Signature By: Nina Hernandez, Assistant the right to have the pr o Secretary T rustee's f oreclosure Mailing Addr e ss: ceeding dismissed Quality Loan Service and the Deed of Corp. of Washington Trust reinstated by C/0 Q u ality L o an payment to the benService Corporation eficiary of the entire 411 Ivy Street San amount then d ue D iego, C A 921 0 1 (other than the porTrustee's P h y sical tion of principal that Address: Quality Loan would not then be S ervice Corp. o f due had no default occurred), together Washington 108 1st Ave South, Suite 202, w ith t h e cos t s , and Seattle, WA 9 8 104 trustee's Toll F r ee: (866) attorneys' fees, and curing any o t her 925-0241 A-4513303 default complained 03/25/2015, of in the Notice of 04/01/2015, Default by tender04/08/2015, ing t h e per f or04/15/2015 mance required und er the D eed o f Trust at any time not

later than five days before the date last set for sale. Witho ut l i miting t h e trustee's disclaimer of r epresentations or warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in this notice that some re s i dential property sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of w hich a re known to b e toxic. P r ospective purchasers of residential pr o perty should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at the t rustee's sale. I n construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the f eminine and t h e neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Deed of Trust, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in i nterest, i f any . Dated: 2 / 1 2/2015 C LEAR RE C O N CORP 621 SW Morrison Street, Suite 425 Portland, OR 97205 858-750-7600 LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, successor Trustee to Bank of America, N.A. as successor t o L a s alle Bank, N . A . , as Trustee fo r M e rrill Lynch First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust, Mortgage Loan Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2007-3, Plaintiff/s, v. Aurelio Garcia; Moises Rojas Chavez; Guadalupe Garcia Garcia; Mortgage Electronic Registration Sys t ems, Inc.; Bank of America, N.A., successor to First Franklin Corp., a n OP . S U B . o f MLB&T CO., F S B; Cascade View Homeowners Association; Occupants o f the premises, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 1 4 CV0659FC. N OTICE OF S A L E U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, May 2 6 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 20067 Mt. Faith Place, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, Plaintiff/s, v. Joshua R. Griffin; et al, Defendant/s. Case No.: 1 4CV0202FC.

NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T hursday, May 2 8 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 6 1 20 7 Tr a v is Road, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm

LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. James R. Gilbert, Jr.; U.S


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