Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1
WEDNESDAY March 4,2015
rnvi ISanIIC riC QQS
l(8 8
OUTDOORS • D1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
LEGISLATURE
Lobbyist predicts carbon bill will pass
Turquoise killifishWhat a fish with a short life span can teach usabout aging in humans.A3
By Tara Bannow
for a cup of coffee. Then to
think about St.
The Bulletin
Prineville for more coffee.
Charles?'" he said. "Everyone
way of rolling out reforms at his health system in South Dakota and his experience
that I talked to
weathering financial storms.
just loved the
The board voted unanimously to make the 48-year-old New
Back when Joe Sluka was still in the running for St. Charles Health System's top
post, he visited Central Oregon so hospital leaders could size him up. While he was here, he did some sizing up of his own. He got up early before his interviews and had breakfast
Playing their way in-
at St. Charles Redmond. Then up to the Madras hospital
"I had a lot of coffee that day," he said with a laugh. Finally, lunch at the flagship Bend campus. At each stop, he simply talked to people: caregivers, food preparers — whoever happened to be around. He didn't tell them why he was there.
For all they knew, he was just a guy passing through. "I just asked, 'What do you
organization. Su l ka That meant a lot to me." That Sluka took the initiative to visit all four hospitals
Jersey native St. Charles'
new chief executive officer. He assumed the role Dec. I, 2014, replacing Jim Diegel, who stepped down at the end
impressed members of St. Charles' board ofdirectors,
By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
of November after holding the position since 2006. SeeCEO/A4
as did his reputation for im-
plementing an innovative
SALEM — An upcom-
ing vote on a bill to change the makeup of fuel in Ore-
gon to cut greenhouse gas emissions and promote a green energy economy will likely be the tightest
Storm hold off Hillsboro to secure a spot in the Class5A boys basketball playoffs.C1
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS
Geneva car show-
Related
Plus: Women inbusiness — A study rates Bendoneof the best places in thecountry for women to run their own businesses.C6
And a Web exclusive-
carbon intensity in Ore-
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Netanyahu makesplea
I
l "pgooo aoo
e~~
Photos by Andy Tucis iThe Bulletin
Chris Boyd, principal of the new Pacific Crest Middle School, is pictured in front of the school's entrance last week.
"Our vote count is a one-vote margin " said
hard work, said Hal Beumel,
Bob Russell, a lobbyist for
the district's project manager, especially when crews at both sites are working on aggressive schedules to be ready for
the Oregon Trucking As-
the fall.
to Brown, who voiced her
support of the bill late last
SE Reed Market Road, the
Officials say the schools will help alleviate Bend's
school is surrounded by empty fields.
crowded elementary and middle schools. They are the two
eYou give it five years, and
largest in a slew of construc-
Republicanssaid they thought there were enough Democrats on the
tion projects covered in the
fence about the bill that
bond voters approved in 2013 — $36.9 million for the middle school and $17.3 million for elementary school. See Schools/A4
they could defeat it and deliver a blow to a policy
Driving up to Bend's newest elementary school, still under construction and set to open in the fall, you may feel as if you're in the middle of nowhere. Tucked behind some industrial buildings off
this will all be filled in with houses," said Tammy Doty, the school's principal. With an ever-growing enrollment, Bend-La Pine
Schools has gotten used to
By Anne Gearan
New schoolsgoiogop
The Washington Post
With an ever-growingenrollment,
WASHINGTONIsraeli Prime Minister
New middleschool
day and head to Gov. Kate Brown's desk.
opening buildings. But opening two schools in one year is
The Bulletin
leverage
gon 10 percent by 2025, will pass its final vote to-
• 2015 openings targeted for Bend's 2 newschools, which airn to easeovercrowding By Abby Spsgman
to audience with limited
Hous e so
• Lawmakers far this vote on session. c lass-action B ua t lawsuit key l obbyand wage i s t battling equality bills, the bill B3 told The Bulletin on Tuesday he believes Senate Bill 324, which would require fuel producers to change fuel blends or buy carbon credits to decrease
At the famed motor show, concerns mount that Silicon Valley's tech giants pose a threat to the auto industry.C6
For Native American tribes, lenders make anethical gamble on high-interest loans. bendbulletin.csm/extras
vote in the
sociation. "It will pass." If Russell's count is
correct the bill will head month.
favored by Democrats in
both chambers and the governor's office. SeeCarbon/A6
. Rd.
Bend-LaPineSchools has gottenused
We crave sweetsbut what's the cost?
to opening buildings. Officials saythese
Benjamin Netanyahu was speaking to any number of audiences Tuesday with his landmark speech to Congress warning against
two schools — Pacific Crest Middle
School in northwestBendanda to-be-named elementary school in
southeast Bend — will helpalleviate the city's crowdedelementary andmiddle schools. They arethetwo largest in a
a "bad deal" with Iran.
slew of construction projects covered in
Most of those listening, however, have only glancing author-
the bondvoters approved in2013.
ANALYSIS ityto stop
iler Ele
the deal or
influence negotiations now nearing a deadline. Neither the wildly supportive Republicans who gave him multiple standing
See more photos of Bend's new schools: bendbulletin.com/newscbsols
New elementaryschool e I p .Rd.
By Patterson Clark The Washington Post
Too much sugar can be detrimental tohealth-
Carli Krueger/The Bulletin
rottingteeth, buildingfat, damagingblood vessels and stressingout the systemthat regulates blood sugar. Some
ovations nor the Demo-
crats who showed up — but didn't always stand up-
people turn to artificial
sweeteners, but those are underincreasingsuspicion
have a direct say.
Nor does a divided Israeli electorate that might not
of creating such metabolic
problems as diabetes and
return Netanyahu to power in two weeks. President Barack Obama, who does have a direct voice in the matter,
obesity. Natural alternatives to sugar sweeteners exist,
but eventheyhave pitfalls if consumedin excess.
didn't like what he heard
We are hard-wired to love sweets. It starts with
from the Israeli prime minister.
the tongue: At the first
"I did have a chance to
bite of a dessert, our taste
afterward, noting that
buds send ajolt of the splendid news to thebrain, which responds by releasing apleasure-causing
he was busy with other
neurotransmitter called
matters at the time of the speech. "And as far as I
dopamine, a cozy chemical reward for scoring what our brain senses as high-caloric food. SeeSweets/A6
take a look at the tran-
script," Obama told reporters at the White House
can tell, there was nothing new."
Capacity at the elementary school being built on the east side of Bend will be 600 students, but it is expected to open for the 2015 school year with closer to 550 students.
Netanyahu's strategy is a bank shot, using congressional support for his hard line on the nuclear deal to
leverage more sanctions on
TODAY'S WEATHER
Iran, which could sink the
negotiations or cause Iran to walk away.
SeeNetanyahu/A5
tf%
Sunny and mild High 51, Low24 Page B6
INDEX Business C5-6 Comics/Puz zles E3-4 Horoscope 0 6 Outdoors D1-6 C1-4 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B 1-6 Sports Classified E 1 - 8Dear Abby D6 Ob i tuaries B5 N'/ Movies D6
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 113, No. e3, 32 pages, 5 sections
Q l/i/e userecyclednewsprint
0
IIIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329
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NATION Ee ORLD
ecuri u e ouse,sanss rin s By Ashley Parker New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON
-
The
fight over funding the Department of Homeland Security,
which began with Republicans thundering about a lawless president abusing power to change immigration policy, ended with a quiet capitulation Ttresday when the House voted
agreedto drop their push for The top three House Republiprovisions that would have cans — Boehner, Rep. Kevin gutted Obama's executive ac- McCarthy of California, the tions on immigration. majority leader, and Rep. Steve "How did we end up with Scalise of Louisiana, the whip kind of a slow demise, you — voted for the bilL mean, even after a very hefty In a closed meeting of Rekind of rhetoric'?" asked Rep. publicans on Tuesday mornJohn Fleming, R-La. "Well, ing, Boehner told members that apparently that's the way it's he was "as outraged and frusdone around here. I don't agree trated as you at the lawless and
to fund the agency and avert a withit." partial shutdown. Rep. Mick Mulvaney, R-S.C., In the end, Speaker John called the outcome "an unmitBoehner was forced to build a igated loss for conservatives." majority on Democratic votes But he, like many other memto pass the bill, 257-167, with bers who voted against the 75 Republicansupporters.But bill, also said that there had although the uprising among been no serious discussion in conservatives burned hot into the conference about trying the week, there was no sugges- to remove Boehner from his tion that Boehner's leadership speakership. was imperiled. Instead, many Boehner's decision, surprisRepublicans expressed a sense ing in its timing, reduced the of resigned relief. potential for the political fallThe bill, which Wesident out that Republicans would Barack Obama will sign, dealt have faced if the department's only with an appropriation for operations were halted in a the department. Republicans way that harmed public safety.
unconstitutional actions of this
president," according to one person who was in the room, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a private session. Boehner added that he thought the decision was "the
right one for this team, and the right one for this country." Boehner's turnabout came
after his leadership team had a humiliating setback Friday, narrowly averting a partial shutdown of the department afterhis more conservati ve members r evolted
ordered thestate's probatejudgesto stopissuing marriage licensesto gay couples, saying a previous federal ruling thatgay-marriage bansviolate the U.S.Constitution does not precludethemfrom following statelaw, which definesmarriage asbetween a manand awoman. Theall-Republican courtsided with theargument offered bytwo conservative organizations when they appealeda decision last month byU.S.District Judge Callie Granade of Mobile, Alabama,who ruled that bothAlabama'sconstitutional andstatutory bansonsame-sex marriagewere unconstitutional. Sixjustices concurred inthe134-pageopinion, whichwasn't signed, but the court's most outspokenopponent of gaymarriage, Chief Justice Roy Moore, recusedhimself. Clintnn Snlnlls —Hillary RodhamClinton'saides sought Tuesday to play downthe significance of herexclusive useof a personal email account for StateDepartment business.But anexamination of records requests sent tothedepartment reveals howthe practice protected a significantamount of hercorrespondencefrom the eyesof investigators and the public. Hadit not beenfor theHouse-led inquiries into Benghazi, it is possible theformer secretary's emails might never havebeenturned over to thedepartment. Clinton's exclusiveuseof personalemail for her government business isunusualfor ahigh-level official, archive experts have said. BOStOn MarathOn dnmbing —DzhokharTsarnaevsat inthe federal courthouseTuesdayinfront of 64 prospective jurors whowerewaiting to see whoamongthem might decidewhether hewould live or die.After an hour, eight men and10 women, most of them holding middle-class jobs and mostappearing to bemiddle-aged, were chosento sit in judgmentof him. Theyinclude arestaurant manager, aself-employedhouse painter, the executiveassistant to amanaging partnerata law firm, anair traffic controller and a manwhowas recentlyfired from his job asan auditor. They areall white, with onemanof Iranian descent. Theyare set to hear opening statementstoday inthe much-anticipated trial of Tsarnaev,who has pleadednot guiltyto 30 counts against himstemming from the explosion of two bombsatthe Boston Marathon finish line in April 2013.
a g ainst
a Republican plan to pass a three-week funding measure.
Dtsouiess
ADMINISTRATION
Alabama gaymarriage —TheAlabamaSupremeCourton Tuesday
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PetlaenStn plead guilty —FormerCIADirector DavidPetraeus, whose careerwasdestroyed byan affair withhis biographer, hasagreed to plead guilty to charges he gaveherclassified material — including information onwarstrategyand identities of covert operatives —while she was working onthe book.Thepleaagreement carries apossible sentence of up to ayear inprisonandrepresents anotherblow tothe reputation of the retired four-star Armygeneral, wholedU.S.forces in IraqandAfghanistan andwasperhapsthe mostadmired military leader of hisgeneration. FerguSOninVeStigatian —Ferguson, Missouri, is one-third white, but the crimestatistics compiled in the city the pasttwo years seemedto suggest only blackpeoplewere breaking the law.Theyaccounted for 85 percent of traffic stops, 90percent of tickets and 93percent of arrests. The racial disparity in thosestatistics was sostarkthat the Justice Department hasconcluded in areport scheduled for releasetoday that there was only oneexplanation: TheFerguson Police Department wasroutinely violating theconstitutional rights of its black residents.
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indecisive aboutwhether toproceedwith acloudy lethal injection drug,at one point saying theyweren't surewhether they checked"this week's or last week's" batch,according to acourt filing. Ultimately, they postponed the scheduledexecution of Kelly ReneeGissendaner late Mondaynight. A day later, theydecided totemporarily halt executions until they could more carefullyanalyzethe pentobarbital, which is supposedto be clear. Thecl oudydrugbolstereddeathpenaltyopponents,whohavebeen vocal in their opposition after threebotchedexecutions in other parts of the country.
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The Villarica volcano erupted nearPucon, Chile, around 3 a.m. Iocal time, according to the National Emergency Office, which issued a red alert and ordered evacuations. Heavysmoke poured from the volcano, and lavasurged down its slopes. The 9,000-foot volcano in Chile's central valley, 400 miles south of Santiago, sits above thesmall city
of Pucon, which has apopulation of about 22,000 people. Chilean authorities had issued anorange alert Monday because of increasedactivity at the volcano. About 3,500 people wereevacuated Tuesday, including tourists, said Interior and Security Minister Rodrigo Penailillo.
NemtSOV funeral —Thefuneral Tuesdayfor Boris Nemtsov, the assassinated critic of theKremlin, drew agloomy bandof politicians and supporters from thefaltering liberal opposition, with mourners grieving that they wereburying not just afriend, butalso their dream for adifferent Russia. Thousands ofMuscovites bearing flowers andredvotive candles lined upearly inthe morning to paytheir final respects to Nemtsov,55, whose bodylay in anopencoffin at the SakharovCenter. Byearly afternoon, hundredsstill cloggedthe sidewalk outside asthe coffin wastransferred to ahearsefor thelong ride tothe pine-covered Troyekurovskoye Cemetery, filled with theblackgranite headstonesfavored bythe city's elite. — From wire reports
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Iraq's solo driveagainst IS reveals tensionswith U.S. By Anne Barnard New York Times News Service
BAGHDAD — Tensions between Iraq and the United States over how to battle the
sault in Iraq's Sunni heartland could inflame the sectarian divide that the Islamic State has
exploited. The operation came against
Islamic State broke into the the backdrop of Iraqi irritaopen Tuesday as Iraqi officials tion with U.S. officials after declared they would fight on they declared that the assault their own timetable with or without U.S. help and as U.S.
against the Islamic State in
to oust Islamic State militants
frustration with what he de-
from Tikrit, the birthplace
scribed as a sluggish U.S. pace and pessimistic U.S. estimates
Hospice.Theword triggers manyresponsesbut onething you should not feel is alone.St. Charles Hospicecan help, in morewaysthan you may realize.Hospice ismuchmorethan medical care inyour home - our dedicatedteamcanalso provideassistance with practical and financial concerns,householdchores,spiritual support andmore.
Mosul, Iraq's second-largest warplanes conspicuously sat city, would begin in April and out the biggest Iraqi counterof- then backpedaled, saying Iraqi fensiveyet amid concerns over forces would not be ready until Iran's prominent role. fall, if then. On Monday,Iraq launched a Ali al-Alaa, a close aide to politically sensitive operation the prime minister, expressed of Saddam Hussein, without
seeking U.S. approval, officials said. Even as Iraq was taking a first step into a bigger battle to oust the group from the
Now available inDeschutesCounty,St. Charles Hospicehas been providingcomfort anddignity for patients - andsupport for Central Oregonfamilies - for 25 years.Aspart of St.Charles Health System,ourwell-trained, compassionatecaregivers can easily provide aseamless continuumof care to patients.
of how long it would take to drive the Islamic State from
Mosul and the western province of Anbar.
You're notalone.Let us help.
"The Americans continue also signaling that its alliance procrastinating about the time northern city of Mosul, it was
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with the United States might be more fraught than officials had let on.
U.S. officials, for their part, voiced unease with the prominent role of Iran and its allied Shiite militias in th e T i k rit operation. Shiite militia lead-
it will take to liberate the coun-
try," he said in an interview. "Iraq will liberate Mosul and Anbar without them."
Progress appeared slow in the push against Tikrit on 'Itresday, with no break-
through in the Iraqi coalition's ers said their fighters made efforts to enter the city. up more than two-thirds of The Tikrit operation is the the pro-government force of Iraqis' first attempt to seize 30,000 and that Iranian spy- the area since last June, when master Maj. Gen. Qassim Su- Islamic State militants masleimani was helping to lead sacred more than 1,000 Iraqi from near the front lines.
Shiite soldiers as they fled a
Alongside them were ad-
nearby military base, Camp visersand troops from Iran's Speicher. Revolutionary Guard Corps, Mohammad al-Turkomani, operating artillery, r ocket a leader in the militias known launchers an d s u r veillance as the "popular mobilization" drones, according to U.S. offi- forces, said that with U.S. parcials, who said that the Iranian forces' participation in the as-
St, CharlesHospice Apromise of comfort.
ticipation in Tikrit, "We would have moved twice as fast."
~
S t . Charles
Hospice 54l-70$-$700 StCharlesHealthCare.org/Hospice 08
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 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, March 4, the 63rd day of 2015. Thereare 302 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS ACA challenge —The Supreme Court begins hearing arguments on whether to invalidate a crucial part of the president's health care law.AS
Boston Marathon
RESEARCH
SCIENCE
Annoying noises:What are at thetop of the list?
ns or-ive is,secres oa in Its life span is all of a few months, but the turquoise killifish ages much like humans do — just at a considerablyfasterpace.A s such,itm akes foran idealsubjectforresearchersofaging.
domding — Thetrial of bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev begins with opening statements.A2
By Karen Barrow
A 2-month-old kinifish, left, shows aging much like that in humans. A 5-month-old kinifish is shown below. Turquoise kinifish last no more than
HISTORY Highlight:In1865, President Abraham Lincoln wasinaugurated for asecondterm of office; with the end oftheCivil War in sight, Lincoln declared, "With malice toward none,with charity for all." In1789,the Constitution of the United States went into effect as the first FederalCongress met in NewYork. (The lawmakers then adjourned for lack of a quorum.) In1791, Vermont becamethe
New York Times News Service
Popcorn mu n ching? Gum chewing? Knuckle cracking? What sound m ost grates o n y o u r
a few months, giving researchers e faster wey of learning more about the mechanics of getting
nerves?
Misophonia is a condition i n
older. Itamar Harel via The New York Times
by Dr. Barron Lerner, we asked readers to share sto-
ries of misophonic suffering, and they responded with a long list of unpleasant noises. A mong the top f i v e
14th state.
In1861, AbrahamLincoln was inaugurated asthe16th president of the UnitedStates. The Confederate States ofAmerica adopted as its flag theoriginal version of theStars andBars. In1913, the "Buffalo nickel" officially went into circulation. In1925, President Calvin Coolidge's inauguration was broadcast live on 21radio stations coast-to-coast. In1930, Coolidge Damin Arizona wasdedicated by its namesake, former President Calvin Coolidge. In1940, Kings CanyonNational Park in California wasestablished.
In1952, Ronald Reaganand Nancy Davisweremarried in San FernandoValley, California. In1964,Teamsters president James Hoffa and three co-defendants werefound guilty by a federal court in Chattanooga, Tennessee, of jury tampering. In1974, the first issue of People magazine,then called People Weekly,waspublished by Time-Life Inc.; on thecover was actress MiaFarrow, then co-starring in "TheGreat Gatsby." In1989, Time Inc.andWarner Communications Inc. announcedplansforahugemedia merger. In1998,the U.S.Supreme Court ruled that sexualharassment at work can beilegal even when the offender andvictim are of the samegender. Ten yearsngo:American troops in Iraq fired on acar carrying just-freed Italian journalist Giuliana Sgrena, killing Nicola Calipari, the intelligence officer who'd helpednegotiate her release andinjuring the reporter. Five yearsngo:A Hollister, California, manwith a history of severe psychiatric problems opened fire at aPentagonsecurity checkpoint; John Patrick Bedell, 36, woundedtwo police officers before being killed by police. Turkey, akeyMuslim ally of the UnitedStates, angrily withdrew its ambassadorafter a congressional committee approved aresolution branding the World War I killing of Armenians a genocide. (Themeasure, however,wasnever taken up bythe 1ttth Congress.) One yearngo:President Barack Obama submitted a$3.9trillion budget for fiscal 2015.U.S. Secretary of State JohnKerry met in Ukrainewith the new government's leaders in ashow of support after Russia's military incursion into theCrimean Peninsula.
BIRTHDAYS Actress PaulaPrentiss is 77. Former TexasGov. Rick Perry is 65. Musician Emilio Estefan is 62. Actress CatherineO'Hara is 61. Actress Patricia Heatonis 57. Actor StevenWeber is 54. Rapper GrandPubais 49. Rock singer EvanDando(Lemonheads) is 48.Gayrights activist Chaz Bono is46. Actor Nick Stabile is 45. Rockmusician Fergal Lawler (TheCranberries) is44.JazzmusicianJason Marsalis is 38. Actress Jessica Heap is 32.Actor Josh Bowman is 27. Actress AndreaBowenis 25. Actress JennaBoyd is 22. — From wire reports
w h i c h c e rtain
sounds cause great distress, sometimes driving a person into bursts of rage or disgust. After an essay on the subject last week
complaints was
k n uckle
cracking, which bothered 8 percent of readers who
responded. In fourth place was the snip snip snip of nail clipping, which caused about 10 percent of our re-
spondents to cringe. In third place: nose snif-
By Carl Zimmer
National Institute on Aging.
New York Times News Service
h a v e told her about the turquoise sought the secrets of aging in killifish. After the species was
The turquoise killifish lives in a fleeting world: the ponds a series of animal models. But that appear only during the none has perfectly mirrored rainy season in East Africa. what happens to humans. As a new pond forms, turMitchell studies mice, which quoise killifish eggs buried in live three to four years. From the mud spring from suspend- them, she has learned how ed animation. The eggs hatch, genes become more or less and in 40 days the fish grow to active in old age, and she has full size, about 2Yz inches. They been able to test drugs that feed, mate and lay eggs. By the make mice live longer. Last time the ponds dry up, the fish year, Mitchell and her colare all dead. leagues showed that a comEven when hobbyists pam- pound called SRT1720 extends per them in aquariums, tur- the life span of mice by 8.8 perquoise killifish survive a few cent on average while improvmonths, making them among ing their health. the shortest-lived vertebrates But even short-lived mice on Earth. So the turquoise kil- can slow down aging research. lifish might not seem the best So some researchers have animal to study to discover the turned to a t i n y n e matode secrets of a long life. worm called Caenorhabditis But researchers are finding elegans, which reaches old age that this tiny fish ages much in a few weeks. Scientists have as we do, only at a much fast- discovered that some genes er pace. "It's a compressed that influence its aging also life span," said Itamar Harel, function in humans. a postdoctoralresearcher at
Stanford University. Harel and Manysimilarities his colleagues recently develWhen Anne Brunet arrived oped a set of tools to investigate
at Stanford University in 2004
the biology of the turquoise killifish. Old people might seem a more logical focus for scientists
as an assistant professor of genetics, she started studying
looking to discover the me-
chanicsofaging,butprogress would be glacial.
both mice and worms. But she
felt something was missing. Although worms grow quickly, they couldn't answer some
"Who has 70 years to study
of her most pressing questions about aging. Since they have
somebody else's aging process?"asked Sarah Mitchell,a
no skeleton, for example, there
postdoctoral researcher at the
But then a graduate student
I nstead, s c ientists
is no way to learn from them whybones getbrittle.
discovered in 1968, scientists found many parallels between its aging and human aging. Old turquoise killifish lose muscle mass, as we do. The
Fewer large companies are run by women than by men named John, a sure indicator that the glass ceiling remains firmly in place in corporate America.
Among chief executives of S&P 1500 firms, for each woman, there are four men named John, Robert, William
or James. We're calling this ratio the Glass Ceiling Index, and an index value above 1
means that Jims, Bobs, Jacks and Bills — combined — outnumber th e
t o ta l n u m ber
of women, including every women's name, from Abby to Zara. Thus we score chief ex-
ecutive officers of large firms as having an index score of 4.0.
Our Glass Ceiling Index is inspired by a recent Ernst
8 Young report, which computed analogous numbers for board directors.That report
yielded an index score of 1.03 for directors, meaning that for every one woman, there were
build caps at the ends of DNA molecules called telomeres. Telomeres, like the plastic
falter. They even get worse at learning things later in life. In 2006, Brunet starting as-
cells divide, their telomeres get
killifish at a new level of detail.
gene so that the fish could no
shorter, and this change probably plays a role in aging. But sembling a team of postdoc- how is still a mystery. toral researchers and graduate Harel and his colleagues students to study turquoise succeeded in alteringthe TERT But a string of setbacks slowed longer make the protein. The them down for years. engineered fish d eveloped A parasitic infection wiped from embryos normally, but out all their fish, for example; as adults they suffered from a after a thorough bleaching of number of defects. the lab, they had to start from
The males became almost
scratch.
entirely infertile, for example, while the females made fewer The reseamh eggs. Their gut linings atroOnce the scientists figured phied,and they made fewer out how to keep the animals kinds of blood cells. happy, Brunet's team got down These results intrigued the to the scientific work. They se- researchers. On one hand, quencedtheentire genome of the changes they observed in the turquoise killifish, identify- the fish were similar to some ing a number of genes known of those in humans as they to influence aging in other age. Yet the fish didn't die any species, including mice and sooner than ones with working humans. TERT genes. Harel then built molecular Brunet was thrilled to have tools the team could use to tin- gotten these kinds of results so ker with the fish's genes. Using quickly from the fish. "It's one a new technique called Crispr, of those moments you live for he createdmolecular scissors in science," she said. She and that could snip out any piece her colleagues published their of killifish DNA and replace it findings last month in the jourwith a different one. nal Cell.
GlassCeilingIndex:Fewerbig companies runbywomen thanbymennamedJohn By Justin Wolfers
tects DNA from wear and tear. It encodes a protein that helps
females stop producing fertile tips at the ends of shoelaces, eggs. Their immune systems keep DNA from fraying. As
IN PERSPECTIVE
New York Times News Service
To test his tools, Harel and his colleagues tinkered with a gene called TERT, which pro-
1.03 Jameses, Roberts, Johns i s a partisan divide in t h e and Williams — combinedGlass Ceiling Index. On the serving on the boards of S&P Republican side of the Sen1500 companies. ate, there are as many men Even as this ratio falls short named John as there are of the score among chief ex- women. Add in the Sen. Robecutives, it remains astonish- erts, Sen. Jameses and Sen. ingly high. It also understates Williams, and they outnumt he impermeability of t h e ber their female colleagues by glass ceiling. After all, most a ratio of 2.17 to 1. The score companies understand that in the House is slightly less an all-male board looks bad, unbalanced, but there are still and so most of them appoint 1.36 Jims-Bobs- Jacks-Bills for at least one woman, although every woman. only a minority bother to apBy contrast, on the Demopoint more than one. Far few- cratic side, women outnumer of these large firms — cur- ber the men with these particrently 1 in 25 — are run by a ular names by quite a margin, woman serving as CEO. and by my count, the Glass We can also use our index Ceiling Index suggests a ratio to compare the permeability of 0.3 to 1 in both the House of the glass ceiling in corpo- and the S enate. Likewise, rate life to that in the political within the executive branch, domain. The United States, President Barack Obama has which has never had a female appointed Secretary (John) president, has had six named Kerry and (Robert) McDonJames,five named John and ald, but they're still outnumfour named William. Thus, bered by six women, yielding even if Hillary Clinton were to an index score of 0.33. (Treabe elected, the Glass Ceiling sury Secretary Jack Lew is a Index would be 15. Jacob, not a John, and so not 'lttrning to Congress, there relevant to this index.)
fling, which drove 17 percent ofour readers to distraction. About 18 percent
can't abide the snap, crackle, pop of gum chewing. And the most unbear-
able sound of all? One in 4 readers cannot abide soup slurping. "I can't stand any eating noises, but meals only last 15 to 20 minutes," Indy
Mom commented on the Well blog. "Being stuck on a long flight next to a sniffer or a gum snapper is a total nightmare." Other readers agreed that
l o c ation m a t t ered
when it came to unpleasant noises.
"I cannot get on public transportation and listen to people snapping their gum or sniffling, snorting or clipping their nails," wrote another reader. "I can't tell
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A4 T H E BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
State in India bans possession and sale of beef
Schools Continued from A1 Doty is splitting her time this year between La Pine El-
ementary School, where she has spent 21 years as a teacher
and now principal, and the tobe-named elementary school, helping establish the school's identity. Capacity will be 600 students, but it will open with closer to 550 students in the
coming school year. On the construction site,
By Neha Thirani Bagri
Doty wears a hard hat decorated with the words "service,"
M UMBAI, India — T h e state that includes Mumbai,
New York Times News Service
"community," "wellness" and "citizenship," which she said will be tenets of the school. She is part of a committee that presented three possible
names to the school board last week: Amelia Earhart, Homestead and Silver Rail the
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
building, Doty pointed out the Tammy Doty is principal of Bend's new elementary school, located on the east side of the city off separate gymnasium and caf- American Lane. eteria, a rarity at the district's
elementaries, where gym class and lunch have to be stag- rooms are organized in wings gered to share a space. around common spaces, and " It's the envy o f
all t he
schools," she said. Here, the gymnasium will be separated from the music room by a folding wall that can be opened for performances.
The school looks every bit the active construction site, but Beumel said it is in t he
homestretch. It will be one of the first public school buildings in Oregon with all LED lights inside and out, he said, and in other ways, too, it is a departurefrom other elemen-
tary schools the district has built in recent years. Miller, Rosland, Ponderosa and oth-
there is a dedicated "STEAM"
Boyd, walking through the front door — or, where the
will work out and learn about
front door will be — which
performance. Boyd moved toBend from
— the STEM subjects (science, leads to the cavernous "famtechnology,engineering and ily room," a cafeteria/performath) plus an "A" for artsm ance space/ lounge area with room with science kits and garage doors that carry you arts supplies. out to a courtyard. Here, classConstruction here is set to rooms are called learning labs wrap up in June to let crews and hallways are collaborafocus on completing Pacific tion centers where students Crest Middle School, sched- can meet in small groups, and uled for completion in August. everywhere you look there are Across town, the scene at iPad charging stations. Pacific Crest off NW SkyOn one side of the familiners Road is just as active. ly room is the media center, Crews here are working six which will house a video redays a week to stay on track, cording studio; down the other and the mild winter has meant hall are the large gymnasium few delays. Walking through and music classrooms. Pacifthe building, you get a rough ic Crest will have an empha-
ers mostly have the same layout, he said — one story on 16 sense of the layout, but there sis on STEM and on critical to 20 acres. are still plywood, gravel and thinking, creativity and culThis is two stories on about buckets, and hoses and con- tural competency, Boyd said. 12 acres, which saved money duit crisscrossing the floor. Core subjects will include art when it came to buying the Large paper mats protect and something called Gateland. Inside, it is compact but what will be polished concrete way to Technology, an engistill feels large. From a sky- floors. This school will be built neering class in which stubridgeoverthe main corridor to house 800 students but will dents will design products and you canseethe media center, open with about 650. build them. Instead of physical "This is the grand entrance education there will be exergymnasium, cafeteria and out the front entrance. Class- here," said Principal Chris cise science,where students
CEO Continued from A1 "That was unique," Board Chairman Dan Schuette said of Sluka's decision to visit the
other hospitals before his interviews. 'Vile're still growing up to be a system, and we're getting much better at it, but just
the aspect that he reached out to the other hospitals made it a
I
big deal."
Similar health systems Sluka's first few months on
the job have been spent getting out and getting to know as many people in Central Oregon's health care community as he can. He regularly travels back and forth between the hospitals and attends staff meetings. But on a recent Wednesday morning, Sluka was in the thick of hospital drama — rac-
ing to attend to an unanticipated inspection. That morning, he had driven his wife and son to the airport well before sunrise for their flight back to South Dakota, where his wife
is staying until the end of summer, after their son graduates
from high school. The family had spent the weekend visiting college campuses for his son, who has his sights set on three
colleges in Oregon. "Hopefully he'll be going to collegesomewhere in Oregon," Sluka said, "but if not, we'll get him off to college wherever he goes. When he's not working, Sluka expects he and his wife will be visiting their son in college
and their daughter, who the couple just learned is expect-
ing her first child. She works in admissions for a hospital in Washington state, about seven
hours from Bend. "I'm sure a lot of our time will be spent being first-time grandparents and figuringthat whole thing out," Sluka said.
Meg Roueeoe/The Bulletin
Joe Sluka, the new CEO of St. Charles Health System, has spent his first few months on the job getting to know as many people in
Central Oregon's health care community as he can.
vital signs and t r ack t heir the Portland area last summer for this job. His wife, Nina Sar-
roub-Boyd, is also a teacher, and the couple have four children, ages 12, 10 and 5-yearold twins. In Portland, the family was
spread across three school districts, and Boyd liked the idea of being together in the BendLa Pine district.
S arroub-Boyd
teac h -
es French at Summit High
School, and two of Boyd's children will attend Pacific Crest.
(He laughed when asked how they feel about having their dad as principal.) From a second-floor classroom that overlooks the fam-
ily room, Boyd said he hopes the school will b e r eady enough for parents and students to tour in late May.
"If you build it, they will come, right?" — Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbulleti n.com
India's financial capital, this
Mumbai's restaurants, and some retailers warned that
week became the first in the
it would cause jobs to be lost
country to ban the possession and sale of beef, imposing fines and up to five years in prison for violations. The ban in the populous
and send the price of other
meats spiraling upward. "This is extremely sad to hear," Glyston Gracias, a chef at Smoke House Deli,
told The Indian Express, a tra, which was passed Mon- daily newspaper. "I will have day,came as an amendment to go to another country." "A lot of our foreign cliento a 1972 law prohibiting the slaughter of cows, which has tele, such as Japanese and been expanded to ban the Europeans, will miss beef slaughter of bulls, bullocks on the menu," he said. "I will and calves. The slaughter of find it difficult to do internawater buffaloes will still be tional cuisine." allowed, subject to permisThe protection of cows is sion from the authorities. a volatile subject in India, The Maharashtra Animal where the animals are rePreservation bill, c hampi- vered by the majority-Hindu oned by right-wing Hindu population. Nearly all of Inorganizations, was passed dia's states have provisions in 1995 but languished for restricting or banning cow two decades under a govern- slaughter. ing coalition between the InThe Bharatiya Janata dian National Congress and Party's election manifesto the Nationalist Congress included promises to work Party. The Hindu national- toward "the protection and ist Bharatiya Janata Party promotion of cow and its won a clear majority in state progeny." elections last October after As India's beef trade is Narendra Modi, the party's largely controlled by Musleader, took office as prime lims, a religious minority minister in May. in the country, the issue The law, which allows a has become a point of confine of 10,000 rupees, about tention between them and $162, took effect Monday Hindus and manifests itself night after approval from as a political dispute during India's president, Pranab elections. Mukherjee. M aharashtra's India is a top exporter of chief minister, Devendra meat from buffaloes, which Fadnavis, gave the president are more common and less
stitute of
Sciences. One year after a rapid imRegional Health had reduced
administrators decided to dole
Much of the work will take
out temporarypaycuts, he said. place in intense, so-called rap"That was not fun, but it was something we needed to do
id improvement events. For 4t/z days, nine people — most-
"Our dream of ban on cow cluding buffalo meat, have slaughter becomes a reality been rising steadily.
G e neral M e dical nization model, in which the
provement event around sepsis,
in the surrounding cities. ReThe methods, which startgional Health's Spearfish hos- ed in manufacturing and were pital is a 40-bed facility, and the popularized by Toyota Motor health system has three other Corp., are designed to find efficritical access hospitals, rural ciencies by reducing waste and hospitals with no more than caregiver frustration and im25 beds. St. Charles Redmond proving quality of care. is a 48-bed acute care hospital, St. Charles has been underand the Madras and Prineville taking smaller lean projects for hospitals are critical access years. A Bulletin article from hospitals. January 2011 said the health The two health systems also system was in the process of rehave struggled with declining cruiting more employees to bereimbursementforthe services come lean facilitators and overtheyprovide, particularly at the see moreprojects.Sluka said rural hospitals, Sluka said. St. Charles has done a good job In the face of significant fi- of practicing lean in various nancial challenges, Regional parts of the system, but his apHealth in recent years has eyed proach would take it to the next a series of cost-cutting mea- level by ingraining it throughsures, including consolidating out the organization. He plans its smaller hospitals and offer- to start rolling it out this month. ing early-retirement opportuniSt. Charles' lean projects ties to longtime employees. The have been isolated to various health system's financial trou- "pockets" within the hospital bles truly began at the height system, Schuette said. "Now, the l ean p athway of therecession in 2009, said Mark Thompson, Regional we're on is a complete cultural Health's chief financial officer. change for the organization," Rather than laying people off, he said.
credit and e x pressed his revered in India than cows. thanks over Twitter. India's exports of beef, in-
But lean held its ground, Reimbursement models of and it's still being used even the past, in which the insurance after Sluka has moved on. The company was given a bill for model's first major success was each service provided, put enaround treatment for sepsis, an tities at odds with each other, inflammatory reaction to infec- Sluka said. "Now we're starting to see tion that can trigger multiple organ failure and death. It's one more alignment," he said."So of the most common causes what's best for th e p atient, of death in hospital intensive which is most important, becare units, striking more than comes what's best for the payer 1 million Americans annually and for the provider." and killing between 28 percent Oregon is further along in and 50 percent of those people that model than other states, — more than the number of induding South Dakota, he prostate cancer, breast cancer said. In fact, one of the things and AIDS deathscombined, that drew Sluka to the state according to the National In- was itscoordinated care orga-
the number of sepsis deaths
among its patients by 15 percent, Sluka said. Rapid improvement events aren't what Altsteil would de-
scribe as "fun," but, he said, "You come out the other end
with really innovative ideas, and it's very, very effective." Lean, which Sluka launched at the end of 2012, has had a
"transformational" effect at Regional Health, Marchiando sald.
"It's difficult because a lot of times you're changing the work that individuals and the team
kota, a measure that ultimately failed. Before W e stern
H e a lth,
Sluka was the chief operating officer of HF Medical Management in Akron, Ohio, a care
management company that worked with physicians and health plans to ensure quality of careand fi nancial return. That role helped him gain an understanding of the physician perspective, he said. He also served as executive director
and chief operating officer for MedPartners, a national physician practice organization that
has since dissolved. Sluka holds a Master of Busi-
state provides money to groups ness Ad~ ati o n d egree to administer Medicaid, or the from Case Western Reserve Oregon Health Plan, in spe- University's Wea t h erhead cific regions. It's a new model Schoolof Management and a for Oregon,one that requires bachelor's degree in business local health care providers to from Richard Stockton College. work together to ensure each If his reputation at Regional is shouldering an appropriate Health — where leaders deportion of the risk involved. scribed him using words such "It's really great to see all the as "integrity" and "honor" providers around the table," is any indication, Sluka's imSluka said. pact on St. Charles won't go Oregon was aggressive in unnoticed. "You'vegotagoodman,"Altexpanding Medicaid to everyone earning up to 138 percent stiel said. "He cares about peoof the federal poverty level, ple, and he's going to make the even using other government hard decisions when it's necassistance programs to de- essary, and he's going to make termine eligibility. Sluka was your systembetter." active in a grassroots effort to — Reporter: 541-383-0304, expand Medicaid in South Datbannow@bendbulletin.com -
may have actually created," he said, "but it really does it in a
fashion that is very respectful and allows them to come up with improvements on their
own. The idea of letting front-line caregiversdetermine changes was originally promoted at St. Charles by Sluka's predecessor,
i
f
i
Diegel, Schuette said. Sluka's
work will extend that philosophy. he said. "The input from the low-
est-paidemployee at St. Charles has got good insight about what that person does and how it fits," Schuette said. "I think culturally it's an extension of
back then," Thompson said. ly caregivers and almost no But evenintoughtimes, Sluka a dministrators — will sit i n egon from Rapid City, South was eexttemely respectful" to a room together and come to what we've been trying to do." Dakota-based Regional Health, everyone affected by the deci- agreement around a problem a nonprofit health system with sions, said Rod Marchiando, di- that needs solving, a goal and Multi-industryexperience more than 40 dinics, induding rector of Regional Health's value a series of metrics that will get Before joining Regional five hospitals, peppering South improvement system them to that goal, Sluka said. Health, Sluka was the execuDakota's Black Hills region. Initially, that tactic was met tive director of the now-defunct There, he served as executive Afocusonlean with skepticism at Regional Western Health, a health insurvice president and chief adSluka's legacy at Region- Health, especially among phy- ance provider for businesses ministrative officer for the past al Health centers around his sicians, said Dr. Terry Altstiel, a that was a subsidiary orgafouryears. He spent atotal of 13 leadership in i mplementing general surgeon and chiefmed- nization of Regional Health. years with the health system, an approach, called lean prac- ical officer for Regional Health It's helpful as a health system induding as the vice president tices, that was first met with Physicians. administrator to have an in"You wonder if it's going to surance background, he said, of managed care. skepticism among providers. Regional Health, while larg- It's designed to put those in the be the flavor of the month," he because he understands reimer than St. Charles, has a sim- trenches providing patient care said. "Something that sounds bursement from the side of the ilar layout. Both have larger, in charge of creating the chang- good, you get started, find out insurer that's providing it and flagship hospitals — Bend and es theywant to see in thehealth it's hard work, and it just goes fromthe side of the hospital that Rapid City — and smaller ones system. by the wayside." dependson thereim bursement. Sluka came to Central Or-
l ess
popular with those who run
western state of Maharash-
Elementary. O n a r ecent tour o f
now," he wrote. The move was far
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
IN FOCUS:AFFORDABLE CAREACT
A5
UPDATE CHAPEL HILL KILLINGS
0 ama a ministrationsaysit hasno plan i Supreme Courtruesagainst eat aw By Michael D. Shear
Also defore the court•••
New Yorh Times News Service
WASHINGTON — As the
Supreme Court prepared to hear arguments today on whether to invalidate a crucial part of the president's health care law, Obama administra-
tion officials said theyhad done nothing to prepare for what could be a catastrophic defeat.
There are no contingency plans in place if the court invalidates the Affordable Care Act subsidies, which 7.5 million
Doug Mills/TheNew YorkTimes
people in 34 states are receiving, Although the Supreme Court is hearing a challenge to the Affordadministration officials said. No able Care Act this term, there are other cases, including one to one is strategizing with gover- the common police practice of warrantless searches of hotel and nors or insurance company ex- motel guest registries. ecutives or lawmakers. There is
no public relations plan to reasstne people who might suddenly talk about the administration's have to pay more for insurance. lack of contingency plans when If the court rejects the sub- they meetbehind closed doors sidies — a decision unlikely Friday for their first conference to arrive until the end of the after hearing arguments. "They are going to think session — health experts said premiums could triple within about whether they buy it, weeks, causing millions of peo- whether they think it's strateple to lose coverage. That could gy," Fisher said. "It's something quickly lead to a collapse of the that a court would traditionally health insurance markets in
at least put into the melting pot
two-thirds of the country. Administration officials in-
of consideration."
Plans, the nation's health insurance trade group. "It would
leave consumers in those states with a more unstable market
and far higher costs," the group argued in thebrief. Soon after the ruling, health care experts said, the White House could work with lawmak-
ers to pass legislation clarifying that the subsidies should be
available everywhere. But that would require the unlikely supsist that any steps they could A challengebased port of Republicans who have take to prepare for the poten- on SemantiCS fiercely opposed the president's tial crisis would be politically The latest legal challenge to law and sought to repeal it. unworkable and
i n effective, the Affordable Care Act was
"It would take a wrecking
and that pursuing them would brought by opponents who ball to a major part of the Afwrongly signal to the justices say that Congress authorized fordable Care Act," Rep. Chris that reasonable solutions ex- subsidies to be issued only Van Hollen, D-Md., said of a ist. The do-nothing strategy is to people who signed up for loss in the court. "It's hard to meant to reinforce for the court coverage in one of 17 state- see how it would be fixed, abwhat White House officials be- run marketplaces, not those sent legislation. And Republilieve: that a loss in the health who signed up through the cans have made it clear they care case would be unavoid- federal HealthCare.gov web- have no interest in fixing it." ably disastrous for millions of site. Government lawyers arExperts said the adminispeople. gue that lawmakers intended trationcould encourage more "If they rule against us, we'll the subsidies to be available states to set up their own insurhave to take a look at what our everywhere. ance marketplaces, which are options are. But I'm not going Obama's advisers continue permitted to provide subsidies. to anticipate that," President to say they are confident that Health experts saidthe adminisBarack Obama said Monday in the law will survive the latest tration could also provide waivan interview with Reuters. "I'm court challenge. But if it does ers, financial assistance or technot going to anticipate bad law." not, within weeks of the ruling nical expertise to help the states, the government would have to
although the process could take
stop sending tax credits to inThe strategy echoes the ad- surancecompanies on behalf ministration's refusal through of the millions who signed up most of 2012 to acknowledge through HealthCare.gov and any planning for the effect of were promised hefty subsidies across-the-board budget cuts to offset the cost of premiums. known as sequestration, insisting that the draconian cuts The potential impact
years to complete. States with a Republican governor or legisla-
would never come to pass.
(They did.) Also in 2012, the no longer be required by the White House and its allies law's individual mandate to have
agree to participate. "There aren't any magic solutions here," said Timothy
said there were no plans for
insurance,because part of the
Stoltzfus Jost, a professor at the
the Supreme Court ruling on a challenge to the health law's individual mandate. (The court upheld the mandate.) In the current health care case, legal experts said the White House was savvy in making clear that the situation was dire. They said the justices regularl y consider the broader
law provides exemptions when Washington and Lee Universiaffordable insurance is not avail- ty School of Law.
Familiar strategy
effect of their decisions and often take into account how the
Most of those people would
able. As a result, all but the sick-
The federal government could also approve the formation of regional insurance mar-
ketplaces, but political leaders in the states would have to
If the court throws out the
est would choose to cancel their subsidies, experts say it is uninsurance, expertspredicted. clear whether Obama, the With healthy people no lon- court or Republicans will be ger choosing to be covered, blamed for the confusion. "A court decision would unexpertssaid, most insurance companies would pull out of leash a giant game of political the markets in t hose states chicken," said Larry Levitt of rather than cover only the the Kaiser Family Foundation, sickest — and most expensive
executive branch or Congress — customers. might respond to a ruling. The result would be a "death Jeffrey Fisher, a law professor spiral," according to the Suat Stanford University, said it preme Court brief filed by was likelythat the justices would America's Health Insurance
Netanyahu
that he can raise the temperature in Congress, which is alContinued fromA1 ready skeptical of the emerging He is also using the backing deal. of Congress to try to burnish The Obama administration his credentials as a fierce de- has repeatedly said that new fender of Israel's rights and im- congressional sanctions would age inadvance oftheM arch 17 spoil the atmosphere for talks, elections. anger allies eager for a deal and His speech was a tour de encourage Iran to balk. force of dire predictions, historU.S. officials have said that ical references and arms con- new sanctions would undertrol arcana. Netanyahu worked mine the bargaining power of in references to Queen Esther, Obama and his chief negotiMoses, Robert Frost and nu- ator, Secretary of State John dear centrifuges, along with Kerry, as they offer a reduction allegations that Iran has hidden in penalties for a rollback of the and dissembled and misled at suspect Iranian program. every turn. The White House has threat"I've come here today to tell ened to veto legislation imposyou we don't have to bet the se- ing any such new sanctions. curity of the world on the hope Seated in the Oval office with that Iran will change for the new Defense Secretary Ashbetter. We don't have to gamble ton Carter, Obama delivered a with our future and with our lengthy point-by-point rebuttal children's future," Netanyahu of Netanyahu's case, his face said."We can insist that restric- growing tighter as he spoke. tionson Iran'snuclearprogram If Netanyahu isn't satisfied not be lifted for as long as Iran with an agreement that caps continues its aggression in the or curbs Iran's program and inregion and in the world." stalls new monitoring and othCongress has no check- er controls, just what, Obama mate over the emerging deal asked, would Netanyahu do but could complicate or delay instead? it — in part because lawmak"On the core issue, which is ers would ultimately have to
ture are likely to refuse.
how do we prevent Iran from
vote on removing some of the obtaining a nudear weapon, sanctions against Iran. The which would make it far more emerging deal will have to ad- dangerous and would give it dress exactly when and how scope for even greater action in sanctions — imposed both by the region, the prime minister Congressand the administra- didn't offer any viable alternation — would be lifted. tives," he said. The Israeli leader is betting The deal among Iran and
a nonprofit organization that
does research on health care. "How that ends up would de-
pend a lot on who is getting the blame for the chaos that would
ONLINE RETAILERS ANO STATETAXES Online merchants wonan important technical victory at the SupremeCourt on Tuesday, empowering them to challenge state salestax reporting requirements in federal court. Rejecting the pleasof two dozenstates, including Idaho, Texas,Mississippi and Washington, the court unanimously sided with online companiesthat favor federal court as theplace to dispute state tax laws. The decision foreshadows future legal fights relating to the taxation of increasingly popular Internet-based sales. MOTEL REGISTRIES The SupremeCourt justices, hearing arguments in a Los Angelescase, sounded preparedTuesdayto revive a city ordinancethat gives the police theauthority to regularly checkmotels' guest registries without search warrants. City officials say these routine police checksare needed to combatsex trafficking, prostitution and drug dealing at low-budget motels. Lastyear, anappeals court struck downthecity's ordinance as aviolation of the Fourth Amendment's ban on unreasonable searches. Scores of cities and the Justice Department joined in support of the city's appealandargued that publicly held business records arenot protected as if they wereprivate papers. Mostofthe justices agreed during comments and questions. "Innkeepers havebeen regulated for centuries," Justice Anthony Kennedy told a lawyer representing the motel owners. Thelaw says "you must keepthe records," and lawenforcement may check toseeif the motel operator is complying, he said. And the records areusually kept"in a public space" in the lobby of themotel, said Justice SamuelAlito. But not all agreed it was an easy case.Justices Elena Kagan andSonia Sotomayor said theyweretroubled by the possibility of a ruling that would givegovernment officials an uncheckedright to demandand inspect the records of anybusiness, whether it is aconstruction site or doctor's office. — Tiibune Washington Bureau
• t • t t
Travis Dove/The New YorkTimes
The VolkswagenJettaofYusor Mohammad Abu-Salha is
parked at the condominiumcomplexwhere she lived, in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on Feb. 11. The motive in the previous day's shootingdeaths of Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha, her husband,Deah Shaddy Barakat,and her sisterRazan Mohammad Abu-Salha remain a mystery.
Rage went beyond a parking dispute ByJonathanM.Katz
instantly around the world on soclal meiha, was that the
New Yorh Times News service
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. shootings were an anti-MusOn the last day of Razan Mo- l i m hate crime.
hammad Abu-Salha's life, it Hic k s' wife, Karen Hagwas too cold to run. gerty Hicks, suggested anothThe 19-year-old North e r motive. The killings, she Carolina State University said at a news conference the sophomore was t r aining n ext day, had nothing to do with a friend for a h alf-marathon i n
with the victims'
Raleigh. But when Hel'e S tf7e her design class fg j rfg. Npbpgy let out after noon
that 'Ibesday, Feb. 10, the wind chill WI 1$dfCf tl6 was30degrees — IDSe tg$hgt painfulforaNort +. I „ Carolinian.
In-
~
,
stead, she hopped day. " into her red Toyota Corolla and set off on the 25 mile
faith but were "related to a l ongst a nding parking dispute that my husband had with
thene i ghbors." But even Kar-
en Hicks' lawyer, Robert Maitland,
acknowledges the parki n g di s pute — Robert Maitland, theory was specuKaren Hicks lationonherpart.
drive to the Chapel Hill condominium
.
lawyer
"Her e 's
the
thing: No b ody knows," he said.
where her newlywed sister, Yusor Moham- "Why did he lose it that parmad Abu-Salha, had recently ticular day?" moved in with her husband, H e d escribed her Feb. 11 Deah Shaddy Barakat.
news conference as an effort
That evening, at 5:11 p.m., to prevent panic. a woman who had just gotten C r a ig Hicks has confessed off the bus near the condo- to murder, said Lt. Joshua minium complex heard gun- Mecimore, spokesman for shots and screams and called the Chapel Hill Police De911. The Chapel Hill police partment. Prosecutors are arrived to find Barakat, 23, seeking the death penalty. dead beside the front door, A m o t ive for the shooting bleeding from the head. m ight never be known. But Yusor Abu-Salha, 21, and
i n t e rviews with more than a
Razan Abu-Salha lay lifeless dozen of the victims' friends in the kitchen. An hour later, and family members, lawtheir neighbor Craig Stephen yers, police officers and othHicks, 46, turned himself in
e r s , make two central points:
to the sheriffs office in Pitts- Before the shootings, the stuboro, 20 miles south. dents took concerted steps to Since then, in the absence appease a menacing neighof hard facts about Hicks' bor, and none were parked motives, two competing nar-
t h a t day in a way that would
ratives have emerged. The have set off an incident infirst, which spread almost volvingtheircars.
Momhasalwaysbeensopatient,butnow when I askherquestions she gets angry.
ensue."
six world powers would curtail a program the West has long suspected is aimed at building weapons but would not completely dismantle it. The Unit-
public on two fronts — with the
ed States and European allies
years on sensitive nuclear work.
arguethatsuch an agreement would be a diplomatic coup because it would bring Iran's program out of the shadows and under a tighterprocess ofU.N.
State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf on Tuesday described a goal of a halt for "double-digit" years. Iran publidy rejected those terms.
verification and monitoring.
Iranians and with Congress. Obama told Reuters on Monday that Iran must agree to
a verifiable halt of at least 10
"Obama's words have been
The crux of that argument is for the U.S. public's consumpthat a smaller, slower and more tion and against the Israeli visible program keeps Israel, prime minister's propaganda the Middle East and the rest of and other hard-liners who are the world safer, while allowing against a nuclear deal with Iran to pursue its stated nuclear
Iran," the semi-official Fars
energy goals. Iran would never News Agency quoted Foreign agree to completely give up a Minister Mohammad Javad nudear fuel capacity its con- Zarif as saying. 'The wording Obama used is siders a point of national pride, U.S. officials have said. unacceptable and threatening," Netanyahu scoffed at that Zarif said. "Iran will continue to notion Tuesday. negotiate but will not accept ex"Iran's nudear program can cessive and illogical demands." be rolled back well beyond the Even as N etanyahu was current proposal by insisting standing before Congress deon abetterdealand keeping up nouncing the nuclear talks, the pressure on a very vulnera- negotiators were meeting in ble regime, especially given the Montreux, Switzerland, workrecent collapse in the price of ing out technical details of the oil," he said. possible deal. "Now, if Iran threatens to Neither gave hints as to how walk away from the tabletalks were progressing, offering and this oftenhappens in a Per- only vague assessments when sian bazaar — call their bluff. reporters shouted questions at They'll be back, because they them as they caught them strollneed the deal a lot more than ing through Montreux during you do. breaks in the talks. ''We'll try, that's why we are Facing a late March deadline for the outlines of a permanent here," Zarif responded. "The deal, the Obama administra- only way to move forward is tion has begun to negotiate in through negotiations."
Call Us with questions about aging and Alzheimer's.
mr m
1-855-ORE-ADRC AORC HelpForAlz.org
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A6
TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
Carbon
t hroughout ou r
Continued from A1 Senate Bill 324 would re-
move a s u nset provision placed on a 2009 bill that aims to chip away at the largest portion of carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel burning in Oregon: emissions from transportation.
Republicans now threaten to derail a transportation
Bill ih SBISm —Senate Bill 324 would allow the state to require fuel suppliers to decreasecarbon intensity for most fuel sold in Oregon by10 percent in adecade. Sponsors: Sen.LeeBeyer,D-Eugene;Sen.MichaelDembrow, D-Portland; Sen. SaraGelser, D-Corvallis; Sen. Chris Edwards, D-Eugene Background:Thestandards are modeled on those in California, which has put its program in placeand studied some of the costs. Republicans say the price of agallon of gas would rise under the program, though researchers say it's difficult to predict by how much. Democrats are working to pass the bill early in the 2015 session. What's next:Set for a Housevote today at11 a.m. before it would head to Gov.KateBrown's desk Online:Readthe bill online at http://bit.ly/1CGllf7
supermajority in both chambers to pass.
s t a te, p u t
people to work and maintain the infrastructure we have,"
low-carbon standards and fast track by Democratic lead- instead provide funding for One Democrat, Rep. Brad ers this session after they tried state universities to study, as Witt, D-Clatskanie, said pub- and failed in 2013 to remove he said, "finding solutions that licly he would vote against the the sunset, which was set to we can apply worldwide so bill. take place at the end of this that we can be doing them in "For the past four years, year. But a defecting vote by India and China." I have been assured by pro- Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-ScapKara Walker, a House Reponents of SB 324 that an ef- poose, killed the bill that publican spokeswoman, said fective and timely means of session. the proposal would take about abating excessive fuel cost inWith a n 1 8 -12 m ajority, half, or $60 million, from a creasescaused by the legisla- Senate Democrats last month fund that currently goes to tion would be developed," Witt passed SB 324 along party The Energy Trust of Oregon, wrote in a statement. "Four lines minus Johnson's support. and give it to universities to years later, that has yet to ocDemocrats have also said study climate change. Kotek said.
flags." vene and suspend the law if ell Butte, told The Bulletin on egon needs to overcome the House Democrats have a prices rise under the program, Friday. blockage and work on the 35-25 majority and can afford which is underway in CaliforSenate Republicans, who transportation package. to lose up to four votes and still nia and British Columbia. "Oregonians need us to put pass the bill. were part of an eight-member Republicans will now plan bipartisan work group study- partisan differences aside Despite Republicans' brand- to offer alternatives to the proing the size and scope of a and come up with a transpor- ing of the bill as a "hidden gram on the House floor. transportation package that tation package that will get gas tax," SB 324 isn't a tax inRep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ontario, legislative leaders say must much-needed projects done crease, which would require a said House Republicans will pass this year, last week announced they were "suspend-
and 19 cents under the pro-
ing" their involvement in the
gram, though other experts say it's difficult to pinpoint
work group. The next day, McLane said
cost increases.
House Republicans would also
the transportation package
cur, which raises several red
the Legislature could recon-
I
stop working with the four Democrats in the group. House Speaker Tina Kotek,
I
I
of the bill that would stall the
The bill was placed on the
package that both sides say is desperately needed. The package would likely raise money through a raised gas tax to pay for maintenance and any building of roads. They say the low-carbon fuel standards will increase the cost of a gallon of gasoline without setting aside money for maintaining existing roads and bridges or building new ones. The Department of Environmental Quality estimates the cost of a gallon of fuel will rise between 4 cents
If SB 324 passes today, "It probably means the end of
present an amended version
I
Bentz said it was inaccu-
rate to say House Republicans "backed out of' the transpor-
tation work group. Instead, he said, he was waiting for an answer for how
D emocrats
would prevent any added costs to fuels in the program. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.com
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NO
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VALUE
I
for 2015," House Republican D-Portland, said in a written Leader Mike McLane, R-Pow-
statement Tuesday that Or-
Sweets
circumference increases fi ve times greater than those who
Continued fromA1
followed a different beverage path — a group that includbenefit people who occasional- ed people who drank sugly encounter sweet foods. For ar-sweetened sodas, although example, when our paleolithic regular soda use was relatively ancestors happened upon ripe infrequent. autumn fruits, ingestion of the But James Hill, director of simple sugar fructose stimu- the University of Colorado's lated their appetites, encour- Anschutz Health and W ellaging them to eat more and ness Center, takes issue with more. This was a boon for both the methodology of that study. vegetation and people: Gorging "The links sometimes found on grapes would lead to great- between low-calorie sweetener seed dispersal for the plants, ers (LCS) and obesity in epiand the eaters' seasonal flood demiology may be explained of fructose into human bodies by the fact that it is those with was converted by their livers obesity who are more likely to into fat, stored energy that choose LCS," Hill wrote in an would help them survive the email: "Epidemiological studies A boon of extra calories can
winter. But take that metabolism
and plug it into a modern, relatively sedentary culture with
I
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cannot determine cause and effect."
constant access to heavily ad- tion, a trade group for makers of soft drinks, Hill spearheaded sorts of troubles emerge: tooth a study of 308 overweight and decay, diabetes, obesity, gout, obese diet-drink consumers fatty liver disease and damage who were placed in a behaviorto the kidneys and the circula- al weight-loss program. Half of tory system. those were told to change their
Clever chemists have attempted to circumvent those
the 9 pounds lost by those who
problems by formulating artifi- drankonly water. "LCSs seem to be doing excial sweeteners, which promise pleasure without peril. More actly what they were designed than 15 percent of Americans to do," Hill wrote in an editoriconsume artiTicial sweeteners al in the American Journal of in thousands of products, ac- Clinical Nutrition: "helping recording to the Yale Journal of duce total energy intake while Biology and Medicine. providing the sweet taste we But the us e o f
a r t i ficial value."
sweetenersseems to coincide Swithers is highly critical with a climb in obesity rates, of Hill's study. One of several notes Susan Swithers, a behav-
issues that she has with the re-
HEAD 8 HORNS
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ue using artificial sweeteners
foods affects food intake. Artificial sweeteners might "breaka basic type oflearned relationship between sweet
in foods. "That study is unfortunately so fundamentally flawed that it's impossible to
tastes and the arrival of calo-
other than that people can lose
ries and sugars in the digestive system," Swithers says. "People who routinely use artificial sweeteners show responses that are dramatically different
weight over the course of three months, which we already
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P
On another front of uneasiness with artificial sweeteners,
a recent study published in the People who ingest simple ta- journal Nature found that three
ble sugar get a boost of glucose synthetic sweeteners — sacchain their blood, which flips a rin (Sweet'n Low), sucralose switch of satiety that curbs the (Splenda) and a s partame appetite. The brain learns this, (Equal) — upset the balance of and the satiety signals start to intestinal flora, causing glucose show up even before the sugar intolerance inmice andin some is absorbed. humans tested.
•
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"Studies in rodents cannot
SE L C O
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CONMIINITT CEEOIT UNION
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SELCO
Presented by
ever, appear to mislead us into necessarily be extrapolated to humans," Hill says. "Also, virabolic derangement," which tually everything affects the prevents satiety signals from intestinal flora." developing."More food has to
what scientists term a "met-
be eaten to feel as satisfied,"
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What about
Swithers says, "even when real natural sweeteners? sugar is eaten." Nevertheless, some people When our unconscious cal- attempt to sidestep potential orie switch becomes confused problems with artificial sweetby noncaloric sweeteners, we eners by turning to natural must rely on conscious effort, alternatives, but even those such as reading food labels, to can cause trouble. For examcurb our intake. ple, sugar alcohols, which are "But we know people have sweet, low-calorie chemicals a difficult t ime w it h t h at," naturally found in fruits, can Swithers says. "Noncaloric produce bloating or laxative ef-
sweeteners can also produce fects if used inlarge doses. "It doesn't r eally m a tter cognitive distortions, l i ke making people overeat be- whether things are 'natural' cause they think what they're or fully synthesized in the lab," Swithers says, "they will doing is healthy." Indeed, several large-scale be problematic. Foods and studies correlate the use of ar- beverages that are sweettificial sweeteners with weight ened,regardlessofthe type of gain. A University of Texas sweetener, should be thought study found that people who of as occasional treats, not as consumed two or more diet things that are consumed on a sodas per day over a period daily basis, much less at every of almost 10 years had waist meal."
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|IualifiedborrowersDnlyllembershiprequirementsapplyRangeDfrates399%-1724%ApRbasedDncreditqualifications, repaymentpeiiod, Rviboatage,laantovalue, automa ticpaymentsandestatementenrollment.Qtherrestrictionsmayapply.Qffersubjecttochangeatanytime,withoutnotice.seesELcofordetails. I
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
BRIEFING Report: Meth caused jail death The man who died at the Deschutes County jail in December died of a methamphetamine overdose, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. The Sheriff's Office received a medical examiner's report Monday showing that 31-year-old Edwin Burl Mays, of Bend, had a high amount of meth in his blood at the time of
Pon proposalto otoci,parks District board will likely be
he'll ask members at their next meeting, March 17, to approve the vision developed by the Mirror Pond Ad Hoc Committee, and he'll ask the
asked at their next meetings
City Council to do the same
to endorse a plan for the replacement of the Mirror Pond dam, partial dredging of the pond and redevelop-
March 18. The vision proposes to
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
The Bend City Council and Bend Park 8 Recreation
ment of a swath of riverfront
property. Park district Executive Director Don Horton told the district's board Tuesday that
paid for by selling or leasing
Knopp, R-Bend, have joined
to private developers land
together to introduce House
along the Deschutes River currently controlled by the
Bill 3283, which would provide $5 million in state lot-
city, the park district and the electric utility.
tery funds for the removal of
Horton said getting the
the dam, dredging and redevelopment of the riverfront.
park district and the council
The bill has not been heard
by replacing the aging PacifiCorp hydroelectric dam and filling in shallow portions of the pond to deter future
to agree to the broad outlines of the vision is a key step toward securing state funding to help pay for the project. State Reps. Knute Buehler,
by a committee, and according to Buehler's chief of
siltation. In part, the work would be
R-Bend, andGene Whisnant, R-Sunriver; and Sen. Tim
address siltation in the pond
his death. An investigation found the meth had been ingested before Mays was taken to the jail. Mays was booked into the jail around 5:40 p.m. Dec. 14 after his arrest on suspicion of interfering with and providing false information to a police officer, menacing, possession of heroin and a parole violation. According to law enforcement officials, Mays started showing signs of medical distress at around 9 p.m. while in the booking area. Although medics from the Bend Fire Department responded and tried to save Mays, he was pronounced dead
OSU-CASCADES
Campus challenger makescase By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Opponents of OSU-Cas-
staff, Jordan Conger, will not
cades' proposed west-side campus have filed their
likely get a full airing until
argument before the Land
near the end of the legislative
Use Board of Appeals, a
session in June or July. SeeMirror Pond/B3
state tribunal that hears
OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS
challenges to local land use decisions. A group of neighbors organized under the name Truth In Site began challenging the university's plansforafour-yearcampus a year ago, arguing the school would snarl traffic and students would hog
on-street parking. Despite the resistance, an independent hearings officer and the Bend City Council both approved the plans, finding they adhered to the city's
development code. Truth In Site appealed the decision to LUBA,
which last week received the formal argument from
thegroup'slawyer, Jeffrey Kleinman. Briefs from the city and OSU-Cascades are due to LUBA by March 25.
A decision is expected by April29. LUBA's review of the
at the jail.
casewas stalled forseveral
According to the Sheriff's Office, methamphetamine is measured by how many milligrams of the drug are in each milliliter of blood using a 0-to-5 chart. Mays' results were greater than 5.
months as Truth In Site
School, police investigate list
plaint a ploy to gain more time to craft its argument.
Bend school officials and police are investigating an incident at Juniper Elementary School involving a list of students created by another student. The 11-year-old fifth-grader reportedly wrote the list of names a few weeks ago and then destroyed it, according to Bend Police Lt. Nicholas Parker. Before it was destroyed, another student saw the list and weeks later told a parent. That parent reported the incident to authorities last week, Parker said. Authorities are now investigating which students' names were on the list and if the fifth-grader who wrote
argued the city of Bend and OSU-Cascades had improperly submitted documents to the tribunal for review. LUBA sided with the city and university last
month, allowing the case to go forward. OSU-Cascades called Truth In Site's comThe argument, mailed to
LUBA on Feb. 25, accuses the city of Bend of failing to follow its own rules re-
lating to master planning and parking. The plan OSU-Cascades submit-
ted and which the city of Bend approved applies to a 10-acre parcel near the SW Chandler Avenue and Century Drive roundabout. However, the uruversity is
evaluating whether to purchase an adjacent 46-acre Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Mountain View High School juniors, from left, Caleb White, 16, Trlana Terwllllger, 17, and Becca Weaver, 17, collaborate on making a butter-cooked salmon dinner during culinary class at Mountain View High School ln Bend on Thursday morning.
By Kailey Flslcaro The Bulletin
It's not every day you hear the designation "best poultry fabrication." But that's what Mountain
Oregon ProStart High School Culinary Championships, a mouthful of a name for a competition that allows
skills needed by restaurant,
students to use their culi-
and Lodging Association, is one of the state's economic
hospitality and food service employers, which, according to The Oregon Restaurant
And Mountain View wasn't alone: Area teams from Bend
High School, Ridgeview High School in Redmond and Crook County High School
the list intended to
View High School's culinary
nary skills and teamwork tocompete forscholarships
harm others, according to Parker. Parents of students involved were initially notified of the incident within 12 hours in accordance with district protocol, said Juniper Principal Dan Wolnick. A school-wide memo was not sent. Authorities would not identify the students involved or say how many names were on the list. Wolnick would not say if students have been removed from school as a result of the investigation. The incident remains under investigation, and police are working with administrators and school psychologists. "We have absolutely no reason to believe the school is in any (danger) or that there are safety concerns, but we continue to monitor the situation," Parker
team was awarded at last
to culinary schools. The
year's Oregon Restaurant and Lodging Association
competition is part of a pro-
Mountain View had hopes to repeat "best poultry
urday's competition at the Spirit Mountain Casino grand
gram that teaches students
fabrication" at this year's
ballroom.
Educational Foundation's
culinary and management
competition, held Saturday.
sald.
Wolnick said safety is the school's top priority and encouraged all students to report to an adult incidents that don't seem right. Nore briefing, BS
cornerstones.
in Prineville visited Grand Ronde to participate in Sat-
SeeCooking/B2
campus could look like. SeeCampus/B5
COCC
1 of thetop officials stepsdown The Bulletin
DAILY HIGHS AND LOWS average temperature: 40.5'(6.2 above normal)
Central Oregon Com-
H mI H K I EB E HEEIEHEHEHEKREHEHKIK3~HH H KH K R K RH K IH H H
4 1 5 6 5 0 4 7 5 1 5 3 4 8 5 2 5 9 ea 5 7 Sa 5 1 5 3 5 2 6 2 5 7 5 1 4 s 51 4 4 6 2 4 9 49 44
45 49 5 6
visions for what a 56-acre
By Abby Spegman
Fedruary2015weather forBend mmHH H
former pumice mine. The school has produced three
munity College's vice president for instruction has resigned after less than
two years on the job. Charles Abasa-Nyarko joined the college in 2013. His last day was Friday, and an emailed announcement was sent to the cam-
pus communityMonday. "It was fairly sudden," said college spokesman Ron Paradis, referring to the resignation, adding he
FREE2IN
was not aware of any isI 2 7 2 7 4 1 3 6 3 8 44 40 3 5 35 36 29 29
33 25 3 2 23 22 22 31 2 6 22 22 18 1 6 26 28 28 32
PRECIPITATION TOTAL: 0.6" Historical average precipitation for the month:1.05"
a mma a m a a m a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a m a a a a NcH + +++ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + «CH
SNOW TOTAL: 0" Historical average snow total for the month: 5.34"
ALMANAC
sues with Abasa-Nyarko's performance. On Tuesday, the college's interim president, Shirley Metcalf, announced Diana Glenn, who retired as dean
of instruction in 2011, had agreed to fill the role on an
Highest temyerature
Lowest temperature
Average high
Average low
Highest recorded temperature for the month:
Lowest recorded temperature for the month:
Monthly average low temperature through the years:
73' on Feb. 24, 1995
-26' on Feb. 9, 1933
Monthly average high temperature through the years:
* Monthly averages calculated from 1928 through 2005, Western Regional Climate Center Soumes: NOAA, Western Regional Climate Center, Bend Public Works Department
45.2'
24' Greg Cross i The Bulletin
interim basis through June. Glenn was a faculty member and dean at COCC for
25 years. Vice president of instruction is one of two vice president positions at COCC
and reports directly to the college president. SeeCOCC /B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
E VENT
ENDA R
306-3017. CAHALEN MORRISON5 COUNTRY HAMMER:TheSeattle country COMMUNITY BOOK band performs, with Hacksaw CONVERSATION:Discuss "Overcoming Our Racism: Journey Tom; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre to Liberation" by Derald Wing Sue; Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; free; 4-6 p.m.; Central Oregon www.volcanictheatrepub.com or Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 541-323-1881. NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc. edu/multicultural or 541-383-7412. THURSDAY NELSON ILLUSIONSSHOW: A performance by four master CENTRAL OREGONSPORTSMEN'S magicians featuring illusions and SHOW:Featuring gear and more more; 6 p.m.;$25plus fees, $15for for outdoor sports enthusiasts of children12 and younger; TheTower all ages; noon; $10, $5 for children Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; ages 6-16, free for children 5 and www.towertheatre.org. younger; Deschutes County Fair and "THE DROPBOX":The story of Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.thesportshows. Lee Jong-rak, a pastor dedicated to embracing and protecting hundreds com/shows/central-oregonor 503-246-8291. of newborn babies abandoned on the Streets of Seoul, South Korea; 7 COMMUNITY RESOURCE FAIR: p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium Featuring health organizations, 16 8 IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse activities, parenting information, Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. food and more; free; 5-8 p.m.; RedmondProficiencyAcademy, REBELUTION:TheCalifornia reggaerock band performs, with Gondwana 2105 W. Antler Ave.; http://www2. redmond.k12.or.us/isc/, hillary and Jeremy Loops; 7 p.m.; $22.50; kirk©rpacademy.org or 541-633Midtown, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., 0311. Bend; www.randompresents.com. BILLY STRINGS 8 DON JULIN: The INCITE:The metal band performs, folk and bluegrass duo perform; with Better Left Unsaid, Spades 7 p.m.; $20; String Theory Music, and Bladesandmore;$5 plusfees 1291 NW Wall St., Bend; www. in advance, $6 at the door; 8 p.m.; stringtheorymusicbend.com/or Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; www.j.mp/incitebend or 541- 541-678-0257.
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli felbendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMt.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY
at Midtown Music Hall in Bend. "THE DROPBOX":Thestory of Lee Jong-rak, a pastor dedicated to embracing and protecting hundreds of newbornbabies abandoned on the Streets of Seoul, South Korea; 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 168 IMAX,680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. "COMEDY OFERRORS": A performance of William Shakespeare's shortest comedy; 7 p.m.; $5, $3 for seniors and students; Crook County High School, 1100 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-416-6900. HOBO NEPHEWS OFUNCLE FRANK:TheAmericana brother duo
performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com. "WHAT EVERHAPPENEDTO BABY JANE?":A play about Jane, her older sister, Blanche, and a suspicious accident; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd St. Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com. "THE WIZARD OFOZ":A performance of the classic musical by the MVHS Music and Drama departments; 7:30 p.m.; $8, free for children six and younger; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th St., Bend; 541-355-4400.
helps spread the heat from the butane burners. With no
FRIDAY
students; Crook County High School, 1100 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-416-6900. THE RUMANDTHESEA: The folk-rock band performs; 7-9 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066. "What Ever Happened to BabyJane": A play about Jane, her older sister, Blanche, and a suspicious accident; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd St. Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com. "THE LANGUAGE ARCHIVE": A playabouta man consumed with preserving and documenting languages who is at a loss for words when it comes to his own life; 7:30
6-12, $3 for grades 5or younger;
Ridgeview High School,4555SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www. ridgeviewhs.seatyourself.biz or 541-504-3600. "COMEDY OFERRORS": A performance of William Shakespeare's shortest comedy;
7 p.m.; $5, $3for seniors and
CENTRAL OREGONSPORTSMEN'S SHOW:Featuring gear and more for outdoor sports enthusiasts of all ages; noon; $10, $5 for children ages 6-16, free for children 5 and younger; Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.thesportshows. com/shows/central-oregon or 503-246-8291. FIRST FRIDAYARTWALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Ann Patchett, author of "The Patron Saint of Liars," will speak; $20; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St.; www. dplfoundation.org or 541-312-1027. HAMLET:A performance of the
p.m.; $20,$16for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.
junior Becca, who explained that being in her second year electricity, the heat extender of the competition made makes the small camp-style project. the process slightly le ss "It was a l i t tl e s tressful intimidating. burnerswork more likea real stove top. being a first-year (partici— Reporter:541-383-0325, Popkin recalls Mountain pant)," said Mountain View kfisicaro@bendbulletin.com View being involved in the championship since its inception 14years ago. SCHOOL NOTES The event is the yearly
Continued from B1 Bend High School took second place in t he c ulin ary competition and w a s
recognized for best overall teamwork. Representatives from Bend
High were 16-year-old junior Kiana Burnham and seniors Megan Berrigan, Heidi Dreyer and Jesse Hindson, all 17, and 18-year-old Matt Huse-
students' involvement in the competition is more like an extracurricular than a class
capstone project for the ca-
reer and technical education food service training pro-
rik. Their ProStart teacher
gram ProStart. Many of the
and Bend High culinary instructor, Molly Ziegler, was
teens enjoy learning the art of cooking, whereas some
Oregon Restaurant & Lodging Association Education Foundation i Submitted photo
Culinary instructor Molly Ziegler stands with her Bend High stuof her students, who had been dent team, from left, Jesse Hindson, Megan Berrigan, Heidi Dreyer, preparing since December. Matt Huserik and Kiana Burnham at the 2015 Oregon ProStart High "The s tudents ar e th e School Culinary Championships. proud tosee the achievement
ones who create and come up with the dishes, it makes it so
classic Shakespeare play bythe Ridgeview theater department; 7 p.m.; $10, $5 for children in grades
Submitted photo
Rebelution, a reggae-rock band fromCalifornia, performs tonight
Cooking
ones who do the creating," said Ziegler in an email. "I'll give my (expertise) when it is needed, but they are the
HOPE NFEAR ART SHOW: Music, visual art and more, headlined by B. Dolan and Rubedo; 8 p.m.; $8; Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329. FAIRY BONES: The Phoenix rock band performs, with Don Quixote; 9p.m. $5 Volcanic Theater 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
just look forward to eating,
Schmitz explained with a laugh. Most students receive
college units for completing the course that are easily
metal Conexshipping container to be used as storage a unitfor the Cloverdale Rural Fire Protection District. He is a student at Sisters HighSchool and a member of theSisters Troop139, Crater LakeCouncil. His parents are Coryand Joni Stengel of Sisters.
MILITARY NOTES Army Pvt. Jack Yaklsgraduated from basic combat training at Fort Jackson in Columbia, SouthCarolina. He is a 2014graduate of Mountain View High School andthe son of Anastasia and Miron Yakis ofBend.
YOUTH NOTES
COLLEGE NOTES
CascadeSchool of Music harp student Klerra Bonnwon the February 2015 Fortissimo Award, which recognizes students at theschool who show exemplary musical talent andeffort. She received anaward certificate, $100 toward private lessonsandgiftsfrom Papa Murphy's andCascade School of Music. She iseligible to win a$1,000 award during CrescendoBendo in May. Her parents areThomas and Karina Bonn of Bend.
transferable to Central Or-
sophomore Hunter Harris, The executive director for 16; Sarah Peasley, 17, senior; the foundation that puts on and juniors Becca Weaver, the event, Wendy Popkin, 17, Triana Terwilliger, 17, and wrote in an email that doing Caleb White, 16. Their three- the work by hand provides a course meal included a salad clear view for judges of which appetizer, an entree of but- teams have put in the time to ter-cooked salmon, couscous cultivate their skills. with vegetables and a cucum"(It) emphasizes the need ber onion relish and for des- for mastery of culinary skills
thereisa realsense ofow nership and pride when they are cooking." Jules Schmitz runs Mountain View's program, buying local groceries whenever she can for the teens to practice sert, a fritter with fruit caviar and creativity v ersus relypreparing gourmet meals and mascarpone whip on top. ing on technology to do the for competition. Schmitz, or To add to the competition's work," Popkin said. "Also (it) "Chef" as her students call challenge, the teams had 60 ensures a level playing field her, explained t ha t c r e at- minutes, no running water or forallschools,regardless of ing the team comes down to electricity and were allowed economicresources." choosing the kids with "good to use only butane burners. Fortunately for M ountain "No ovens, no electrical, so View, a few years back the teamwork skills and good communication skills." they can't use any food pro- school's me tal s h op cl a s s Each school is allowed one cessors," said Schmitz. That made a simple "heat exfive-person team. This year, means anything chopped, tender," a platform that sits Mountain View sent students mixed or stirred was done by over the burners to provide from a variety of grade levels: hand. more cooking space and
Katelyn E. Flowers,of Bend, was egon Community College's named to the2014fall dean's list at Boston University. Cascade Culinary Institute.
And if the collegecredit weren't proof enough t h at
team members take the craft seriously, the time students
put in practicing after school is. Schmitz explained that the
TEEN FEATS Andrew Stengel,of Sisters, has earned the rank ofEagleScout. For his Eagle project, Andreworganized, coordinated andremodeled a retired
How to submit
Story ideas
Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.) Contact: 541-383-0358, youth@bendbulletin.com Mail:P. O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708 Other schoolnotes:College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
School briefs:Items and announcements of general interest. Phone: 541-633-2161
Email: news@bendbulletin.com Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354 Email: mkehoe©bendbulletin.com
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:08 p.m. March1, in the1600 blockof NE Lotus Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at11:24 a.m.Feb.27,in the63400 blockofU.S.Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at11:07 a.m.Feb.26, in the2600 blockofNEU.S.Highway20. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at2:49 p.m. Feb.26, in the 2600 block of NEU.S. Highway 20. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:15 p.m.Feb.27,inthe200blockofNE Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at2:28 p.m. Feb.27, in the 2600 block of NEU.S. Highway 20. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:17 p.m. Feb. 27, in the1000 blockof NW Bond Street. DUII —Ricardo C. Barraza, 54, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:37 p.m. March1, in the area of N.U.S. Highway 97and EmpireAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:40 a.m. March 2, in the 3400 block of N. U.S. Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:22 a.m. March 2, in the 2800 block of NE Rainier Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:27 a.m. March 2, in the 61200block of Brock Lane.
REDMOMD POLICE DEPARTMENT
Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at9:30 a.m. Feb. 20, in the 700 block of NWFifth Street. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 6:56 a.m.Feb.23, in the2800 blockofSW PumiceAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at10:48 a.m. Feb.23, in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. Theft —A theft was reported at11:33 a.m. Feb. 23, in the1600 block of SW Odem MedoRoad. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at5:21 p.m. Feb. 23, in the 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at7:09 a.m. Feb.24, in the 1700 block of SW17th Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:03 a.m.Feb.24,inthe200 blockofNW Larch Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:05 a.m. Feb. 24, in the1900 block of S. U.S. Highway97. Theft —A theft was reported at11:17 a.m. Feb. 24 in the2100 block of W. Antler Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 2:48 p.m. Feb.24, in the area of SWNinth Street and SWBlack Butte Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:22 p.m. Feb. 24, in the1400 block of SW 27th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:15 p.m. Feb.25, in the 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:19 p.m.Feb.25,inthe700blockofSW Deschutes Avenue. Unauthorized use — Avehicle was reported stolen at 4 p.m.Feb.25, in the1800 block of SW23rd Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:17 p.m.Feb.25,inthe300 blockofNW Oak TreeLane. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 5:26 p.m. Feb.25, in the area of SWHighland Avenueand SW Rimrock Way.
Burglary —A burglary was reported at9:22 p.m.Feb.25,inthe2200 block of SW CanalBoulevard. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at1:53 p.m. Feb.26, in the area of SWCanal Boulevard andSW Odem MedoRoad. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at1:02 a.m. Feb.27, in the 2100 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:07 p.m. Feb. 27, in the2100 block of NW Nickernut Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:33 p.m. Feb.27, in the 3100 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:58 a.m. Feb. 28, in the1100 block of NW Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:57 p.m. Feb. 28, in the1700 block of S. U.S. Highway97. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 3:05 p.m. Feb.28, in thearea of SW BlackButteBoulevard and SW Canyon Drive. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at5:34 p.m. Feb.28, in the 2800 block of SWPumice Avenue. DUII —Debra JeanneTomich, 48, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:44 p.m.Feb.28,inthe2400 blockofSW 26th Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 9:15 p.m. Feb. 28, in the1400 block of S. U.S. Highway97. DUII —Melissa Karen McCall, 50, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:01 p.m.Feb.28,inthe300 blockofSW Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:56 a.m. March1, in the 2200 block of SW 33rd Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 8:34 a.m. March1,
Food, Home & Garden In AT HOME
in the 800 block of NELarch Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 9:24 a.m. March1, in the 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at1:14 p.m. March1, in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at4:27 p.m. March1, in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 6:07 p.m. March1, in the area of E.Antler Avenue.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 6:58 p.m. March 2, in the area of NESecond Street.
BEMD FIRE RUNS
TheBulletin
Friday 3:09p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 65650Old BendRedmond Hwy. 15 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 5 — Medical aid calls. Sunday 15 —Medical aid calls.
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SIEMENS
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
rownwi e
i c an i n w erecass-a Ion Un S 0 • Parties losing suits could no longer keep unclaimedfunds, which would be donated
the amount of money they'd receive doesn't justify the effort.
Student SueS SChOOI — A teenager sexually abused bya high school teacher is seeking millions of dollars in alawsuit filed against the school that employedtheteacher. Thecomplaint filed Tuesday on behalf of the19-year-old womanasserts Western Mennonite School administrators hired MatthewYoderdespite a previous accusation of sexual abuseand continued to employ him amidconcerns about his behavior with femalestudents. Yoder,32, was arrested in 2012. He pleaded guilty lastyear to threecounts of sexual abuseandwas sentenced to two years, eight months in prison. The state Department of Corrections said his earliest releasedate is in June2016.
make payouts to charities on behalf of people who weren't actually harmed. And they say it would unfairly change
WOman'S brain tumar — AnOregonwomanhassuedaPortland
Democrats say they want to make surebusinesses don't the rules in the middle of the By Jonathan J. Cooper the measure in a 17-13 vote, get to keep the money they'd game for lawsuits already in The Associated Press with o n e D e m ocrat, S en. owe those people who don't progress. "This bill also would have SALEM — Oregon legisla- Betsy Johnson of Scappoose, c laim their p o rtion o f t h e tive Democrats voted Tues- joining all Republicans in judgment. an impact on a case already "You would think that this adjudicated and sitting on the day to change the way the opposition. state handles class-action The bill goes next to Demo- is a bill that's about lawyers, judge's desk," said Sen. Jeff lawsuits, rejecting objections cratic Gov. Kate Brown, who or legal procedures, and to Kruse, R-Roseburg. "This is from Republicans who insist- is "supportive," said a spokes- me, nothing could be further not the way we do things in ed the bill would damage the woman, Melissa Navas. from the truth," said Sen. Di- Oregon." state's business climate. C lass-action lawsuits i n ane Rosenbaum, D-Portland. The bill is likely to cost BP D emocrats say their b i l l
volve multiple plaintiffs who
"This is a bill that will affect
would prevent companies that break the law from keeping the tainted money. Republicans say it would become far too easy to bring large lawsuits in Oregon. They also say it would unfairly change the rules for a lawsuit already in progress against the oil company BP, potentially costing the company tens of millions of dollars. The state Senate approved
allege they were harmed in the same way by a defendant, usually a corporation. If the company settles the
the lives of real people. Peo- company, tens of millions ple who have been wronged." of dollars in a class-action Under the Democratic bill, lawsuit it lost at trial in Multthe defendant would have to
nomah County Circuit Court.
lawsuit or loses at trial, it is
pay the unclaimed money to-
A jury said BP broke the law
required to make a payout to ward another cause. At least all the people who have been half would have to go toward harmed. legal services for the poor, On large cases, there are and the rest, at the judge's disoften thousands of people cretion, could go to a charity. entitled to a payout who nevRepublicans and business er claim one because they interests contend the bill can't be located or because would require businesses to
when it charged customers a fee to use an ATM card at its Arco and A M -PM gas stations. The company was or-
hospital for $900,000, alleging that abrain tumor sample set asidefor biopsy hasbeenlost, leaving her uncertain about whether thetumor was cancerous. Catherine Stewart is seeking$100,000 ineconomic damages for pastandfuture brain scans and possible surgery and $800,000 in noneconomic damages for emotional distress. She's accusing OregonHealth 8 Science University of medical negligence. The Oregoniannewspaperreports that hospital spokeswomanTamara Hargens-Bradley declined commentabout the lawsuit, filed recently in Multnomah CountyCircuit Court, citing federal privacy laws. Stewart's lawyer, Robert Wagner,saidthe sample wascollected in September 2013, whensurgeons removed abrain tumor. Hesaid his 64-year-old client has undergonebrain scanstwice ayear to determine if the tumor has grown backandwhether doctors will need to perform brain surgery again. It hasnot regrown, butWagnersaid Stewart worries that it might — andthat it might be cancerous.
West Coast Products, an oil
COhStrUCtlallWOrkor Ilort — Firefighters said a construction worker who fell 25 feet off a ladderonto concrete wasseriously injured in Gladstone. KPTVreports that fire crews saidthe 67-year-old man was working Tuesday on the LakeOswego-Tigard Water Service Project to extend piping to andfrom the Willamette River. Hereportedly fell onto a newconcrete pad in apit. A large piece of metal thenfell on top of him. GladstoneandClackamasfire crews usedropes to hoist the man out of the pit. Firefighters said hewasconscious andalert when he was taken toOregon Health 8 Science University for treatment.
dered to pay $200 to each of the more than 2 million people estimated to be affected.
It's appealing the verdict.
— From wire reports
House givesgo-ahead on bill to allow workers to discusswages By Sheila V Kumar
sponsor Rep. Shemia Fagan, D-Clackamas. SALEM — House lawmakComparing pay can help ers narrowly passed a bill employees make judgments on Tuesday prohibiting employ- whether they are being treated ers from punishing employ- fairly, Oregon Bureau of Labor ees who ask other employees and Industries Commissioner about what they are paid, part Brad Avakian has said. of a package of bills designed But Fagan said studies show to close the wage gap between women in particular are wary male and female workers. of discussing or inquiring Employees who want to dis- about raises or salaries out of cuss wage information with concern they might be discitheir peers are not protect- plined. "This is a simple and ed from disciplinary action modest first step to making under current law, said bill sure that Oregon women earn The Associated Press
equal pay for equal work," she boot of government on its sard. neck," said Rep. Greg Barreto, Legislators opposed to the R-Cove. proposal argue it could damMore than 15 business assoage the relationship between
employers and employees while sowing seeds of discontent and distrust among
coworkers. Others worried it could impede employers from firing workers for other reasons, who could then retaliate by suing them under the guise of wage protection. "Employersneed to be freed up to do business without the
Senator saystraveler on way home The Associated Press
"This is terrific news for
Police stoppedthetaxi, deter-
Stacey, for her family, and for mined thepackage contained ican traveler detained for all the Oregonians who have methamphetamine and took months in East Timor has been followed Stacey's story and everyone to the station. released by the government of helpedsupportherfrom afar," Addison was released from that Southeast Asia country Merkley said in a statement. jail after a few days but was orand boarded a plane to begin The globe-trotting veterinar- dered to remain in East Timor her trip home, a U.S. senator ian was released from prison in during the investigation. Then, from Oregon said late Monday. East Timor in late December. in October,a prosecutor perStacey Addison, 41, of Port- She was arrested in Septem- suaded a court to rescind Adland, got her passport back as ber after sharing a taxi with a dison's conditional release, part of the start of her return to stranger who asked the driver and she was taken to a womOregon, said Sen.JeffM erkley, to stop so he could pick up a en's prison despite not being D-Ore. package. charged with a crime. PORTLAND — An A mer-
Mirror Pond Continued from B1 O n Tuesday, Horton a c -
knowledged there are stN several questions that need to be addressedbefore the vi-
sion will resemble a plan of action. He said negotiations with PacifiCorp have not led
to an agreement for the utility to relocate its substation near the dam — a key element in
making the area attractive to development — and the city has notdecided how to replace
parking that would be lost by the proposed redevelopment of two public parking lots on NW Brooks Street. As of now, the cost of replacing the dam with a new structure to preserve
currentwater levelsand add a public plazanearthedam powerhouse is estimated at $13 mil-
lion, Horton said, but that figure needs further refinement.
Horton said having the park district and the City Council endorse the vision would send
er Bill Smith and construction
of Portland, which has con-
P a cifi- district leader, said he was not
dam can continueon a "parallel path" while other activities
optimistic a d r edging-only measure would be able to win state funding. Conger said the bill could be changed, and is even likely to Senate. A future version of the bill could prioritize dredging over dam removal, he said, if the goals of the involved par-
land beneath Mirror Pond are
Committee. "We're excited to see the en-
ties shift in that direction.
ergy that's being put forth with this master development op-
the catalyst to start the conversation, but very likely not what
portunity that really could be
ends up passing," Conger said.
In November 2013, develop-
0
'i
•
something wonderful for the city of Bend," Taylor said. "But,
•
Oregon Community Credit Unlon is proud to sponsor a complimentary seminar hosted by the Oregon Community Investment Services Team and LPL Financial. When
Q Where
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
The Riverhouse Convention Center 2850 Rippling River Court, Bend
Lunch Session: 12:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Dinner Session: 5:45 p.m. - 7:15 p.m. Lunch and dinner will be provided
Learn the complexity of the retirement process, the importance of personal circumstances and how avoiding mistakes can be just as important as managing risk in retirement. o IRA rollovers o Withdrawing income Beneficiary planning
To reserve your seat: CAU. 541.382.1778 I E-MAIL Seminars@OregonCommunityCU.org
change, before votes are scheduled in the state House and
"This bill will probably be
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers®bendbulletin.com
lf V
have been in contact with con-
on the project, and he proposed get underway, Taylor said, as that the Ad Hoc Committee could planning for the redeveltake up the job of examining opment project. the unanswered questions in Taylor said the position greater detail. he and Smith have taken Meanwhile, two Bend busi- doesn't mean they're opposed nessmen who have secured the to the larger plan advanced rights to buy the river-bottom by the Mirror Pond Ad Hoc advocating a scaled-back vision that they would like to see move forward before many of the unanswered questions are resolved.
earned. The wage transparency bill is part of a package ciations — including the Asso- addressing recommendations ciated Oregon Industries, the the council made to tackle pay Oregon Bankers Association inequality. and the Oregon State ChamThe other measure addressber of Commerce — signed a ingthewage gap would make letter urging legislators to vote it illegal to pay men and womno on the bill. en different wages for doing A report by the Oregon comparable jobs. That bill is you can't advocate to be paid Council on Civil Rights, an awaiting a vote in a H ouse equally," Avakian said. advisory board a ppointed committee. The bill passed the House by the state's labor commisAvakian testified during a 34-24. It now heads to the Sensioner, found Oregon women public hearing on the bill in ate for consideration.
with that being said, there are
trolled the now-submerged sultants to learn more about the land since before the construc- permitting requirements and tion of the dam that created cost of pursuingtheir preferred Mirror Pond. Smith and Taylor plan of action. He declined to have declined to discuss the disclose cost estimates or othterms of the purchase option er details about what they've agreementon the 23.5 acresof learned from their consultants. river bottom. The views of Smith and Taylor said he and Smith are Taylor on what ought to hapconcerned the renewed focus pen with the pond were not on dam removal and redevel- discussed by the park board opment of riverfront property Tuesday. will shift the focus from what Conger said Thursday that, they perceive as the top priori- as currently written, the Mirties surrounding the pond. ror Pond bill in the Legislature Taylor said he and Smith would not fund adredgingprojwant to see the city and park ect as proposed by Taylor and district first address dredging, Smith separate from the broadthe repair of crumbling rock er proposal for dam removal walls around the edge of the and urban redevelopment. pond and filtration of stormwaLast week, at a m e eting ter outlets that empty into the of the Mirror Pond Ad Hoc pond. Committee, Horton, the park Negotiations w it h
February that some employers continue to discipline employees for talking about their earnings, and this is a serious barrier for equal pay. "It is much harder to find out if you are being paid fairly if you can't talk to your coworkers. And if you can't find out how your pay compares to others who do the same work,
dollar their male counterparts
company head Todd Taylor some practical things that need signed a deal for an option to be done sooner rather than to buy the land under Mirror later." Pond from the McKay family, Taylor said he and Smith
a message to the Legislature Corp over the removal of the that the Bend community is committed to moving ahead
were paid 79 cents for every
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'Securities andsdvisory services offered through LPL Financial and Registered Investment Advisor, member FINRCVSIPC. Insurance products offered through LPL Financial or its licensed affiliates Oregon Community Credit Union end Oregon Community Investment Services ere not registered broker-dealers and are notaffiilated with LPL Financial.
Not NCUA Insured
Not C r e dit Union Guaranteed
May Lose Value
B4
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highest absenteeism rates in the nation. There's less agreement about how to solve the problem. Rep. Betty K omp, D -Woodburn, thinks she has a way. She's introduced House Bill 2657, which would tie state school dollars to school district attendance rates. School districts with high absenteeism rates would see their state dollars dwindle over time. Not surprisingly, Komp already has had considerable pushback about the bill, some of it coming from fellow Democrats on t he House E ducation C o m mittee. School districts, the Oregon Education Association and the Oregon School Boards Association also have made clear their dislike for the measure. Some of the problems districts face are beyond their control. In some communities and cultures, school attendancetakes a backseat to family obligations. That's not good from a student-learning standpoint, but school officials face nearly i nsurmountable hurdles when tryingto overcome a deeply held belief that family comes first. Poverty is also a big contributor to poor attendance, according to the National Center for Chil-
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dren in Poverty. Families that lack stable housing, good health care, adequate diet, reliable transportation and the like have more trouble getting kids to school on time every
•I
day. Also, children with c h ronic health problems, living in poverty or not, are more likely to miss school than kids in robust health. That's not to suggest that all attendance problems are beyond school districts' control. As administrators in the La Pine schools of Bend-La Pine Schools have demonstrated, a concentrated effort on improving attendance pays off. In La Pine, teachers, administratorsandvolunteers have worked together to honor students with good attendance and work with those who are chronically absent to improve the situation. It's a labor-intensive solution, but it is bearing measurable results. Cutting dollars won't improve the situation, neither in Bend nor elsewhere in Oregon. Rather, it
M 1Vickel's Worth
t
use more good-paying jobs.
ee e By Allen Bigelow
t
moved to Redmond in 2013 and found a house that sits on the
Another technology
foul-up
I was appalled at the Feb. 24 ed-
in Bend do not realize how the
Alex Pettit, Oregon's chief in-
itorial comparing the $200 million bond issued to Oregon Health 8
weather has changed over the years. We lived here for a few
formation officer, began his career with state of Oregon in Janu-
S cience University and the M i r -
years back in the early 1970s, left
ary 2014 after a four-year stint as the wasted taxpayer dollars. We cannot fault Pettit for that debacle.
Considering Pettit is Oregon's CIO, he might have been involved with and approvedthe State of Oregon Marine Board activating its new computer system effective March
could make changing the figures more, not less, difficult to achieve. That's hardly productive. Komp's bill should die before it leaves the education committee.
the state's infrastructure in need of major repairs, the need for affordable housing, our own city streets falling apart, and so many more
are many more cloudy days and 2014. The new computer system has much more wind. I used to be able been cause forconcern by the State to count the days with cloudy skies of OregonMarine Board and anyon my two hands. When we came one who has purchased a marine back we found that agood numvessel or equipment since March
urgent issues we need to work on
ber of the days from November to
Then the Oregon Department of Revenue unveiled a surprise. It announced that Facebook would be subject to a taxation called "centralized assessment." It's a way government taxes utilities by taxing intangibles, such as the value of the brand. State Rep. Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte, got the Legislature to pass a fix in 2012. A court case once again raised questions about when centralized assessment could beused. Senate Bill 611 caps its use for some companies. It exempts data centers and some Internet projects, such as the superfast Internet service that Google Fiber has considered for Portland. C ompanies with the heft of Facebook andApple have plenty of options. Data centers might not employ lots of people compared with some other businesses, but they do pay well. There are lots of places in the country that want those jobs. Oregon can be business-friendly and encouragethose kinds ofjobs. Or it can be the kind of state that's full of surprises in its tax policy. Pass the bill.
of the trash that was removed. The
2014, which requires owner title
in this state, the last thing we need April are now overcast. And the
and registration by State of Oregon
to do is use this money for just a
wind has i n creased dramatically. We are both sensitive to windy
Marine Board.
question the local ads that con-
vated March 2014, and has caused
few people's enjoyment. If the people living along Mirror
I purchased a b oat d uring conditions and do not remember the first week of October 2014. I Pond and others want to replace any significant wind when we promptly submitted my application the dam and the other upgrades lived here before. Now it is a part and payment for the boat title and being talked about, then let them of our daily weather, and I have re- registration to the State of Oregon foot the costs. I have lived here 45 placed two flagpole holders on the Marine Board. Now, nearly five years and have enjoyed the pond garage due to wind damage. months later, I have not received eias much as the rest of the resiAs I am writing this, I look out ther my boat's title or registration. dents, but there comes a time when the window and see cloudy skies The response to my telephone inthings might need changing. If with light rain and huge wind quiries has been: "We have a new our residents want this plan to go gusts. Most of us are starting to computer system, that was actiforward I am sure there are other
ways of accomplishing it rather tinue to talk about the 300-plus than taking money that should go days of sunshine each year. It all to the good of the whole state. May- appears to be part of the changbe PacifiCorp could help since the ing weather patterns being expedam is the root cause for the pond riencedaround the globe. When needing dredging, and they ben- was the last time that weather-reefited from selling the power all lated events were not featured on these years. the evening news'? Sandy Green Michael Bowen Bend
major delays with processing and estimate you may receive the title and registration within six months of your application." I ask, "How
many Oregon taxpayer dollars were spent for this new computer
system that is not functioning very well nearly one year later?" Henry McDonnell
Bend
Redmond
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.
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mon 's r Bend Wastewater Treatment Plant, Apollo Construction had something
things we have noticed the most
Oklahoma's CIO. We've all heard of the Cover Oregon disaster and
OK to ask the state for $5 million to keep Mirror Pond intact? With
they called "tidy Friday." They would edge of the Dry Canyon. Hav- get a bunch of workers together on ing been born and raised in Bend, Fridays, and they would police the I never knew that Redmond even job site. I challenge some of the local had a Dry Canyon, much less one homebuilders to do the same. with parks, hiking and biking trails. When I lived in Central Florida, When I retired in 2014, I started do- there were annual cleanups, where ing a lot of hiking in the canyon, volunteers would clean up the beachmostly between the Maple Avenue es or the riverbanks. They would bridge and the Wastewater Treat- make a media event out of it, and ment Plant (WWTP). During my there would be pictures in the newswalks, I noticed that the canyon was paper or on TV the next day of all being trashed; how sad to do that to
Most of us folks living here
ror Pond project. After all, OHSU and spent the next three decades benefits not only Oregon but also in the v a lley r a in, r etired and many outside the state. An expand- came back 10 years ago in search ed cancer research center could of the sunshine. We have found not only benefit the masses but that the Central Oregon weather is also would bring a lot good jobs shockingly different than what we to Oregon. And, anyway, how can experienced 40 years ago. the residents of Bend think it is So how is it different'? The two
Repair state's tax policy f you had a logbook of all the bills passed by this Oregon Legislature, the vertical column labeled "Taxes Cut" is not going to get a lot of entries. Former Gov. John Kitzhaber had, at least, made a push for lower capital gains taxes. That appears dead. But theOregon Senate on Monday did pass an important bill that changes the waytaxes are assessed. It might improve the chances that Apple and Facebook increase their investments in Prineville. Senate Bill 611 is complicated. A bill's summary statement is usually a couple of paragraphs at most. The summary for this bill is nearly a page long. Basically, it describes how data centers and other hightechcompanies could pay property taxes. You might remember back when Facebookbuilt its first data center in Prineville. Itbuiltin Crook County's enterprise zone. Enterprise zones are set up to give taxbreaks to companies in return for good-paying jobs. Crook County certainly could
The weather is changing
Don'task forstate help on Mirror Pond
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: leiters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
an o n t e ane U
IN MY VIEW yon — evenwhen thesewer pipelines were put in. For all I know, they might have historic value!
Another thing that frequently happens in the canyon is people walking their dogs unleashed. There are signs posted at the accesses to the canyon requiringpets to be leashed and for their owners to pick up after them. It is really difficult to know where to clean up after your dog when he is not on a leash. I also wonder, does this cleanup apply to horse owners,
such a beautiful place. I have started Dry Canyon could sure use one of too'? picking up the trash and depositing these cleanups. It became a graveLast, but not least, I want to put it in the garbage cans (much to the yard for numerous cars many years in my two cents about returnable chagrin of the Redmond parks and ago (judging by the rust on the cars bottles and cans. I remember when recreation crews). Either the trash and the fact that there are houses on I was growing up, Oregonians were gets blown into the canyon or it gets the rim above them). It will probably patting themselves on the back when tossed there in the first place. When require a crane to remove them now. the "Bottle Bill" passed and deposits I worked as a construction manager, Having recently moved here, I might were requiredon bottles and cans. we required the contractors to clean not be aware of the local charm of Back then, you could take your botup after themselves. When I briefly these cars since no effort has been tles and cans to the supermarket worked out at the expansion at the made to remove them from the can- checkout stands and they would
Either the trash gets blown into the canyon or tt gets tossed there in the first place. When I worked as a
construction manager, we required the contractors to clean up after themselves. Whent briefly worked out at the expansion at the Bend Wastewater Treatment Plant,
Apollo Construction had something they called "tidy Friday." They would get a bunch of workers together on Fridays, and they would police thejob site. I challenge some of the local homebuilders to do the same. place change in your hand. That window or packing it to an inconvemust have become too unsanitary, so nient, crowded return center to get places like Walmart and Fred Meyer that nickel, what do you think he is opened up returncenters with ma- going to do? All you have to do is look chines that could tell whether your at the shoulders of the local roads to bottle was returnable and return a get your answer. voucher. Now even those are closing, I am proud to be a native Oregoforcing you to take your bottles and nian, and I would like to see the state cans to a central location. The goal return to the beautiful place that it is to reduce litter! If someone has the used to be. choice of tossing five cents out the — Allen Bigelow lives in Redmond.
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeaRter, lnc. ©2015
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Yesterday Today Thursday
City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Abilene 58/37/0.00 49/20/i High 43 48 69' in 1921 Akron 40/12/0.21 34/11/sn 28' 26' Low 6'in 1912 /31 Albany 28n/0.06 41/1 5/c Albuquerque 56/40/Tr 47/20/sh Tigamo • PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Sunny andy • Anchorage 36/30/0.01 39/31/pc 58 27 57/36 Mc innvie • JosePh Atlanta 54/51/0.30 73/56/sh Govee • He PPner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" today; a cold start, n t • u p i Condon 2/21 49 18 Atlantic City 36/21/0.25 45/29/r • 54 Record 0.66" in 1969 than turning milder union Lincoln Austin 59/41/0.03 67/29/r 50/ Month to date (normal) 0.0 0" (0.09") than yesterday this Sale 55/39 Baltimore 33/23/0.13 46/31/r • pmy Granitee Year to date(normal) 1.11 " (2.71 ") afternoon. Clearand 58/3 • 4/18 Billings 20/8/0.10 28/1 7/pc 'Baker G Newpo 47/23 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 9" chilly tonight. Birmingham 65/50/0.29 74/38/r 7/32 55/37 • Mitch 6 47/15 Bismarck 22n/Tr 6/-8/pc C a m p S h m a n R e d WEST:Mostly sunny 51 / 1 6 n O IV R I 6 SUN ANDMOON Boise 46/28/0.00 47/26/s 54/23 • John eu today; a chilly start, Yach 59/34 Boston 30/20/0.00 55/39 • Prineville Day /17 Today Thu. tario Bridgeport, CT 29/10/0.15 44/27/r then a mild afternoon. 40/26/r 53/24 • Pa lina 50 / 1 8 6:38 a.m. 6 : 3 6 a.m. 5 21 Buffalo Clear to partly cloudy Floren e • Eugelle 36/5/0.28 32/8/sf e Re d Brothers 4915 5:57 p.m. 5: 5 8 p.m. tonight. Valee 56/40 Burlington, VT 25/0/0.02 40/10/sf Su ivere 51/24 5:20 p.m. 6: 1 8 p.m. 50/28 Caribou, ME 22/0/0.00 35/9/sn Nyssa • 52/ Ham ton Charleston, SC 64/54/0.00 78/61/c 5:56 a.m. 6 : 2 4 a.m. • La ptne Juntura Grove Oakridge Charlotte 45/40/0.03 76/61/sh • Burns OREGON EXTREMES L ast Ne w Firs t 49/21 60/36 /33 Chattanooga 55/43/0.24 71/36/r • Fort Rock Riley 47/16 YESTERDAY a' Cresce t • 51/18 Cheyenne 15/10/0.04 18/3/s 49/13 53/23 Chicago 34/24/0.13 20/1/pc High: 60' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 50/27/0.89 36/16/sn Jordan V aey Mar 5 Mur 13 Mur 20 M ar 26 at Medford 58/41 Beaver Silver 50/16 Frenchglen 60/35 Cleveland 42/15/0.15 32/9/c Low:16' 44/19 Marsh Lake 49/16 ColoradoSprings 45/23/Tr 16/3/sn Tuuight's ulty:Regulus, the brightest star of 54/21 at Madras Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 45/32/0.06 25/11/sn • Paisley 9/ Lao, is climbing higher into the evening sky. a Columbia, SC 54/51/0.03 81/64/c • 47/19 • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 77/46/0.01 77/62/c Medfo d 5 5 / 20 Gold ach ~ Rome 0' Columbus,OH 41/17/0.45 35/13/sn 59/ 47/17 Klamath Concord, NH 29/5/0.02 44/20/c Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashl nd Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 68/53/0.01 79/37/1 Bro ings 49/16 62/2 54/19 60/41 51/16 47/14 Dallas 52/40/0.06 52/25/i Dayton 44/20/0.24 33/12/sn Denver 39/18/Tr 20/7/sn 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Des Moines 36/28/0.02 21/1/pc S 1~ 4 ~ S I T City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 36/22/0.26 32/8/pc The higherthe AccuWeaffter.rximily Index number, Astoria 57/29/0.00 55/36/s 56/38/pc La Grande 43/27/0.00 49/1 8/s 57/24/ s Portland 56/3 1/0.0059/33/s 59/37/pc Duluth 26/19/0.18 6/-13/pc the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low, Baker City 40/22/0.00 47/15/s 53/22/s La Pine 45/23/0.00 52/23/s 56/27/s Prinevige 43/ 28/0.0053/24/s 56/30/s El Paso 61/52/0.04 57/30/c 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems. Brookings 59/42/0.00 60/41/s 59/42/s Me d ford 60/3 4 /0.00 64/30/s 66/34/s Redmond 45/ 25/0.0054/19/s 58/23/s Fairbanks 21/1/Tr 37/20/sf Bums 42/19/0.00 47/16/s 54/23/s Ne wport 52/3 2 /0.00 55/37/s 57/41/s Roseburg 58/ 3 5/0.0060/35/s 64/39/s Fargo 17/14/0.05 4/-14/pc Eugene 56/26/0.00 57/31/s 60/35/s NorthBend 54/36/0.00 58/38/s 60/40/s Salem 57/28/0.00 58/33/s 60/36/pc Flagstaff 36/28/0.10 39/12/s Klamath Fags 48/16/0.00 54/19/s 58/24/s O n tario 48/33/0.00 51/21/s 55/27/s Sisters 44/29/0.00 55/18/s 59/24/s Grand Rapids 33/22/0.37 20/3/sf For webcameras of ourpasses, goto Lakeview 46/19/0.00 51/16/s 56/20/s Pendleton 44/22/0.00 52/26/s 56/32/pc The Dages 5 3 /39/0.00 58/27/s 62/34/pc Green Bay 28/22/0.19 15/-6/pc www.bendbugetin.com/webcams Greensboro 40/38/Tr 73/50/sh Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly sunnytodaywith Harrisburg 31/17/0.02 40/28/r dry pavement.Mainly clear tonight. Harfford, CT 30/14/0.07 46/23/sh Helena 24/6/Tr 36/18/pc US 20 atSuntiumPass:Goodtravel today Honolulu 82/70/0.08 79/68/sh with dry pavementandsunshine. Cleartonight. ~ 1 08 ~ ga ~ gs ~ 108 ~ 208 ~ 308 ~ 408 ~ 508 ~ 608 ~ 708 ~ 808 ~ 908 ~ 10 0 8 ~ 1 1 0 8 Houston 80/56/0.00 75/40/1 US 26 atGov'tCamp:Goodtravel todaywith Huntsville 63/46/0.23 69/28/r Calge * * * * * * * v * NATIONAL i dry pavementandsunshine. Cleartonight. indianapolis 40/26/0.27 29/10/sn c „~e 8 34/19 * * * ea/8 • i nipeg T n d er ua& * Jackson, MS 76/51/0.04 77/31/r EXTREMES US 26 atOohoooDivide:Mostly sunny today 53/35 * * * * 1/ 5 9 Jacksonville 81/57/0.00 84/60/pc with dry pavement.Goodtravel tonight. YESTERDAY (for the IlRnsmerck isnd'
Yesterday Normal Record
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ROAD CONDITONS
NATIONAL WEATHER
ORE 68 atWigamette Pass:Mostly sunny today; dry pavement.Mostly clear andstaying dry tonight andtomorrow. ORE138 at Diamond Lake: Goodtravel today and tonight with clear skiesanddry pavement.
SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 0 50-5 0 1-1 Hoodoo SkiArea 0 Mt. Ashland 0 27-5 6 0 50-9 5 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 33-74 1-5 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 28-5 0 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA A spen / Snowmass, CO 10 46-8 1 Vail, CO 8 61-6 1 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 3 30-60 Squaw Valley,CA 1 30-5 8 ParkCityMountain,UT 9 65-65 Sun Valley, ID 0 31-6 1 Source: OnTheSnow.com
48 contiguousstates) National high:88 at Marco Island, FL National low: -19' at SaranacLake, NY Precipitation: 0.91" at Cincinnati, OH
• Billings
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Hi/Lo/W 38/1 7/s 17/-4/sf 22/4/c 46/24/s 40/32/sf 57/30/r 33/13/sn 41/25/c 33/8/sn 45/28/pc 39/23/r 36/19/pc 55/30/s 28/12/sn 27/11/sn 15/2/sf 19/-3/c 12/-11/pc 79/38/r 63/27/r 37/23/sn 36/24/s 15/3/s 23/-3/pc 15/-3/s 35/1 7/s 28/1 5/s 75/37/r 62/33/r 20/-5/sn 26/3/c 44/34/c 38/21/s 20/-2/s 38/1 5/s 23/1 7/s 21/4/s 13/8/pc 46/28/s 34/21/c 21/1 6/pc 42/1 4/s 17/7/sf 14/3/s 51/22/i 29/7/sn 26/7/sn 47/28/pc 79/67/pc 43/29/c 34/19/sn 20/-4/pc 34/21/i 84/53/r
45/35/c 60/48/s 77/63/pc 71/47/s
47/37/pc 61/54/pc 78/66/s 69/44/s
42/23/s 64/53/sh 44/33/sh 67/47/r 49/34/pc 81/65/1 79/54/pc 71/52/c 34/1 9/s 85/73/s 47/37/pc 46/37/pc 43/34/sh 76/51/s 69/67/r 50/41/s 54/43/pc 78/54/s 81/69/pc 68/50/s 49/33/pc 61/32/s 91/74/pc
47/26/pc 66/56/s 45/30/pc 69/46/sh 46/33/pc 82/66/s 82/54/s 72/54/s 44/29/pc
Yesterday Today Thursday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 44/28/0.00 42/35/sh 43/33/r 47/33/Tr 30/10/c 33/21/s
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln
34/21/0.28 58/41/0.01 61/27/0.05 38/31/0.00 58/35/0.03 67/48/0.02 63/31/0.12 32/23/0.11 58/42/0.12 83/70/0.00 34/25/0.53 29/18/0.13 64/42/0.07 80/65/0.00 32/22/0.32 32/20/0.28 43/30/Tr 58/36/Tr
23/2/sf 17/3/s 59/40/s 63/43/s
69/44/0.00 39/27/0.11 35/25/0.39 65/47/0.07 Pittsburgh 46/37/0.42 Portland, ME 31/8/0.02 Providence 31/9/0.05 Raleigh 43/36/0.03 Rapid City 18/12/0.05 Reno 47/35/0.00 Richmond 38/28/0.02 Rochester, NY 30/6/0.26 Sacramento 66/40/0.00 St. Louis 48/31/0.01 Salt Lake City 38/30/0.46 San Antonio 60/45/0.13 San Diego 65/52/0.02 San Francisco 64/47/0.00
72/48/s 75/49/s 21/4/c 17n/s
Litlle Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix
52/23/i 33/13/pc 71/50/s 76/52/s
40/19/r 25/3/pc 16/-6/pc 15/2/s 53/23/i
27/10/pc
55/22/r 81/54/r
28/13/c
84n2/s 84n1/pc 18/1/pc 15/6/s 10/-8/pc 14/10/s 55/36/r 42/26/r 27/13/sn 42/27/r 28/13/sn 67/36/sh 38/21/sn
46/31/r 32/12/sn 68/47/s 71/49/s 38/13/sn 19/2/sn 45/25/c 28/4/c
43/25/r 26/10/sn 76/53/sh 55/24/i 19/1/s 43/26/s 53/21/s 59/25/s 63/36/r 38/14/i 34/9/sf 17/2/sf 66/37/s 69/40/s 25/11/sn 24/9/pc
39/23/pc 45/28/s 69/34/r 44/29/c 68/49/s 72/51/s 65/48/s 69/49/s
67/42/s 70/43/s 39/12/sn 42/1 8/s 81/60/pc 81/41/r
53/35/s 55/39/pc 12/-9/pc 28/17/s 44/23/s 48/28/pc 26/10/sn 29/9/s 82/66/s 81/64/pc 61/40/s 66/44/s 29/14/sn 35/17/s 49/34/r 36/13/sn 52/31/0.00 30/11/sn 38/19/s 50/33/Tr 54/23/s 58/29/pc 66/49/0.00 68/47/s 72/49/s
Wichita
Yakima Yuma I
41/18/sn 23/2/sn 30/3/pc 38/22/s
29/16/sn 37/19/s 36/24/Tr 28/4/pc 35/24/s 84/62/0.00 86/66/s 87/62/pc
San Jose 55/39/Tr Santa re 49/30/0.11 Savannah 74/55/0.00 Seattle 51/32/0.00 Sioux Fags 27/24/0.09 Spokane 39/18/0.04 Springfield, Mo 51/33/0.01 Tampa 85/65/0.00 Tucson 63/46/0.04 Tulsa 60/35/0.00 Washington, DC 36/31/0.04
i
/26
45/36/0.18 70/50/0.00 uke 19/1 uffalo 44/ftX Auckland 72/63/0.01 olve 1 /1 Baghdad 75/52/0.00 alew,gork s ol s •> Bangkok 91/81/0.00 <44/atr ~ Salt ta qa 21/1 iy • Beijing 42/26/0.00 q+@ie 39/23 Chics o Beirut 64/57/0.30 20/1 Omah • Den * Berlin 46/34/0.20 • Iti h o' Sa Frenci 20/7 Lasy a s * * * * * Bogota 70/54/0.06 8 * * * * ec e usescuv* S 59/4 Budapest 48/37/0.00 * * * * ffo Yo BuenosAires 77/68/0.12 Los An fes kfdhoeieCj Cabo San Lucas 86/63/0.13 47/3 * 1/80 Cairo 72/57/0.00 Phoen Andiereue Calgary 16/1/0.01 • 68/47 39/31 * * n 4 Cancun 82n5/0.00 4 /49 Dublin 41/32/0.62 Edinburgh 41/32/0.32 '~~~~uf Geneva 54/36/0.03 ' ~ x x 47/30 • ilendo Harare 69/58/0.20 /eb>N Wfb rfeens 8 Hong Kong 75/64/0.30 x c x xxT ~ bfhftuehue r4/84 o ~ . t Istanbul 52/46/0.28 79/ea 71/33 Miemi Jerusalem 59/42/0.00 y 84/Tit,- 'z . x xM 84/44 Johannesburg 76/48/0.00 a Lima 80/69/0.00 Lisbon 64/52/0.00 today's noon positions of weather systems and Shown are precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 48/37/0.00 T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 63/45/Tr Manila 90/72/0.00 28/17
• I
e/.s
59/33
Mostly sunny andmild
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiga Hood 56/24 RiVer Rufus • ermiston /30 lington 54/2'I POTUand 57/32 Meac am Lostine • W co dlefen • Enterpr'
ria
EAST:Plenty of sunshine today; a Seasid cold start, then milder 53/39 than yesterday this Cannon afternoon. 53/40
64' 28'
0
Mild with plenty of sunshine
Partly sunny
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
SUNDAY
28.
2 7'
Sunshine andpatchy clouds
Mainly clear
SATURDAY
I
Mecca Mexico City
95ng/s 96ng/s
Ssno/pc 50/41/c 50/42/c 42/30/c 79/53/s 72/68/r 55/46/c 59/47/s 82/56/s 80/69/pc 65/48/pc 52/38/pc 59/32/s
89n4/s
99n5/0.00 97/73/s 79/53/0.00 79/50/s Montreal 23/1/0.00 34/6/sn Moscow 34/30/0.22 35/31/sn Nairobi 84/54/0.00 88/58/pc Nassau 79/70/0.12 82/72/s New Delhi 70/55/0.02 74/53/pc Osaka 51/34/0.43 51/34/pc Oslo 37/30/0.10 40/23/pc Ottawa 24/0/0.05 32/0/sn Paris 52/37/0.02 47/34/pc Rio de Janeiro gon2/0.00 89/74/pc Rome 64/43/0.00 60/43/1 Santiago 84/52/0.00 84/55/s Sao Paulo 81/63/0.00 83/66/pc Sapporo 39/31/0.09 38/32/sn Seoul 39/26/0.13 36/23/s Shanghai 56/46/0.00 43/39/c Singapore 91/79/0.00 91n5/pc Stockholm 37/34/0.21 39/30/pc Sydney 78/66/0.03 81/68/s Taipei 75/59/0.04 63/59/r Tel Aviv 67/48/0.05 66/54/pc Tokyo 47/43/0.91 61/40/r Toronto 29/9/0.04 31/3/sf Vancouver 46/30/0.00 47/31/s Yienna 48/37/0.02 47/34/sn Warsaw 41/34/0.17 40/29/sn
•
•
I
LOOK FOR IT COMING YOUR WAY In The Bulletin • March 29th In The Redmond Spokesman • April 1st In The Nickel • April 2nd In The Central Oregon Marketplace • March 31st Online at • www.bendbulletin.com Direct Mailed Magazine • March 30th 8c 31st
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N HL, C2 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
NFL
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL:CLASS 5A PLAY-IN ROUND
Another former Duck to Eagles The Philadelphia Eagles haveagreed to trade star running back LeSean McCoy to the Buffalo Bills for linebacker Kiko Alonso, two people familiar with the deal told TheAssociated Press on Tuesday. The deal hasbeen agreed to, but can't be completed until the 2015 leagueseason begins next Tuesday. Alonso will be reunited with Chip Kelly, who coached thelinebacker at his previous job at Oregon. Alonso made an immediate impact in Buffalo after being selected in the second round of the 2013draft. There are currently nine former Ducks on the Eagles'roster. He emerged as atop defensive rookie of the year contender after leading Buffalo with 159 tackles, two fumble recoveries and tying for the team leadwith four interceptions while barely missing a snapin playing all 16 games. Kelly could be gearing up to make arun at another one of his former players. Talkabout Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota coming to the Eagles hasdominated conversations in Philadelphia. TheEagles would have to trade up from No. 20 in the first round of the draft to get Mariota, who is projected to go as high asNo. 1 or2. A blockbuster deal to get Mariota was highly unlik elywhen Roseman was the GMbecause he values draft picks. But with Kelly calling the shots, anything is possible.
Hun Duc s ease ut not satis ie
It~ '~Q~kgQ g$~J~
• With an NCAA tournament spot all but wrapped up,Oregon looksfor more The (Eugene) Register-Guard
EUGENE — Dana Altman delivered
an age-old message when he greeted his team after Oregon beat Stanford on Sunday to complete its first men's basketball sweep in the Bay Area since 1976.
"I told them to be pleased, but not satis-
fied," Altman said after the 73-70 win at Maples Pavilion. "That's a quote from an
old friend of mine. That's where we are at.Be pleasedwith theweekend because you did a great job, but by no means are we satisfied. We can still grow as a Oregon (22-8) has won four straight
down roping; Lisa Lockhart, of Oelrichs, South Dakota, in barrel racing; and Silvano Alves, of Pilar Do Sul, Brazil, in bull riding. Riemer and Price shared the rodeo's top honor, splitting more than $1 million, and Trevor Brazille, of Decatur, Texas,wasthe all-around champion. See complete results in Scoreboard on pageC2. The Bulletin regrets the error.
8tonight TV:ESPNU
games to sit third in the Pac-12 at 12-5
heading into tonight's regular-season finale at Oregon State. The Ducks have
Radio:KICE
clinched a first-round bye in next week's conference tournament and can finish no
940-AM; KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
worse than third in the standings. They
sit half a game back of second-place Utah (22-6, 12-4). "We had a lot of new guys this year, so to continue to get better as the season has gone along has been awesome," freshman guard Casey Benson said. "We have to keep making strides. We know we can
Inside • On Oregon State's senior night, no seniors,C3 • College
continue to get better even though it is late in the season, so we have to continue to work on it."
basketball
roundup,C3
SeeDucks/C3 Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Summit's Max Michalski goes upfor a layup during a Class 5A play-in game Tuesday night against Hillsboro at Summit High School. Michslski hsd15 points in Summit's 69-59 win.
SOCCER
Is MLS onthe verge of a work stoppage? The Washington Post
necessary. As of Tuesday afternoon,
WASHINGTON — Major League Soccercareened
ne i t her side had issued any pub lic statements. However,
By Steven Goff
Danilo Gallinari scores a season-high 26 points, and Denver beats Milwaukee hours after Brian Shaw is fired as coach. NBAroundup, C3
Stinnett, Texas, in tie-
Oregon at Oregon St. When:
team."
NBA Nuggets fire coach, then win
A story headlined "Redmond cowboy 2nd at American" that appeared in Tuesday's Bulletin on pageC1 included incorrect results for the 2015The American rodeo. The only two Central Oregon contestants to reach the preliminary round in any event were Brian Bain, of Powell Butte, and Austin Foss, of Terrebonne, who placed third and fourth, respectively, in the preliminary round of the bareback competition. Event winners were Taylor Price, of Huntsville, Texas, in bareback; Kaleb Driggers, of Albany, Georgia, and Travis Graves, of Jay, Oklahoma, in team roping; K.C.Jones, of Decatur, Texas, in steer wrestling; Wade Sundell, of Coleman, Oklahoma, in saddle bronc; ReeseRiemer, of
Nextup
By Steve Mims
— The Associated Press
CORRECTION
ME N 'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
toward the first work stops o u rces familiar with the page in its 20-season talks said signifhistory Tuesday as FIFSt IIP ican t obstacles the sides in labor stand in the way of negotiations apa deal.
• With win, Summit advances tothe Class 5Aplayoffs
"It seems like
peared to make little
By Grant Lucas
progress toward brokering a new collective bargaining Reai Sait Lake agreement. at portland Three days before
The Bulletin
the season is sched-
On paper, perhaps this should have been a blowout.
uledtobegin,the league and players'
p' ' " " y T>:None
requested ano-
nymity because heisnotpermitted to speak on the
matter. "They have locked in discussions with sh o t down all of the players' federal mediators in Wash- p r oposals on free agency. ington. Tuesday marked It's shocking. The owners the final day of a three-day a r e almost wanting a work session, although talks stoppage."
Summit junior Nick Mason
union remained
understood that heading into Tuesday's Class 5Aplay-in game against visiting Hillsboro. After all, the Storm were ranked No. 2 in the state, the runner-up in the Inter-
mountain Conference with a school-record 18 wins. The
"
the owners are giving up nothing of substance," said one source, who
could continue into today, if
See MLS /C4
Summit's Jack Hurley goes up for a shot over s group of Hillsboro defenders. Hurley finished with18 points and four assists.
Spartans, meanwhile, finished
22nd in the final 5Aboys basketball rankings and sneaked into the postseason by finishing sixth in the Northwest
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: hendhunetln.com/sports
O
Oregon Conference. Mason was well aware of
this, but he and the rest of the Storm endured quite the scare with a 69-59 win to advance to the first round of the state
playoffs. Hillsboro whittled a 12-point third-quarter deficit down to two points with less
than four minutes left in the
fourth quarter. There was worry for Summit, Mason
acknowledged. But, he added, "we just decided to throw it out of our minds, that idea. We
just had to play through it and play our game, no matter what happens." SeeStorm/C4
MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR
Truex perseveres through pain, off to strongstart By George Diaz
Ravensfall in high-scoringplay-in Bulletin staff report PORTLAND — It was the George Mendazona and Isaac
Bonton show Tuesday night.
Inside • Playoff results and schedules from around the state. Prep scoreboard,C4
Mendazona finished with
44 points for Ridgeview, but Bonton's 48 points propelled Parkrose to a 102-86 boys basketball win in a Class 5A
play-in showdown, eliminating the Ravens from the postseason.
"If you were a spectator,"
Ridgeview coach Nathan Covill observed, "it would have been a lot of fun to watch."
Mendazona drained seven 3-pointers to go along with 10 assists for the Ravens (17-8),
Two races into NASCAR's
Sprint Cup season is but a blip on the big screen, but it is good to see one of the good
capping a phenomenal season
guys near the top of
for the Intermountain Confer-
thecharts. Martin Truex Jr. is fifth in points after
ence player of the year. "George has the ability to do a lot of things," Covill said about his junior guard. "He's just a special kid, a special athlete. He's got a knack for
the game.... Tonight, you could see that he wasn't going to quit."
SeeRavens/C4
superpowers Hendrick, Penske an(1 Gibbs.
top-10 finishes at
It i sthe ultimate tribute to perseverance, both
NeXt up
prof essionally and
NASCAR Spr~nt Cupat L >e as
pers ona y
Wh . 1230 P S d ay
T>:Fox
Truex lost his
ride with Michael W~t pRadngafter the 2013 season
when NAPA pulled out in the wake of
race-manipulating KR CO 690-AM, shenanigans at 9 6 .9-FM Rich m ond. Truex drives for Furniture was simply part of Row Racing, a one-man the c o llateral damage in a show competing with public-relations fiasco. shrinking resources against SeeTruex/C4 Daytona and Atlanta
It is the classic underdogstory: Truex
Ra d io:
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
NBAROUNDUP
e ore enior w i no seniors, eavers oo a ea By Jesse Sowa Corvallis Gazette-Times
CORVALLIS — The min-
utes before a
b a sketball
team's final r egular-season
home game are often the time when senior players are recognized for their accomplish-
C3
"This year, not a whole lot of guys have played, but the guys that have played obviously got to know each other just by being on the court so much together. Definitely that will help us move forward." — Olaf Schaftenaar
ments and contributions to
the program. That will not be happen-
ing for the Oregon State men Oregon State has seven "But we're going to have a tonight when they host rival players averaging 20 or more different group next year and we'll have to sort of start over Oregon, because they do not minutes this season. "It's a head start because from square one again." haveany seniorsto celebrate. The Beavers hope the they're already close to the Returning most of your chemistry and camaraderie program," said junior guard players — or all, in Oregon built this season will mean Langston M o r r is-Walker,State's case — can be a big something next year, when who has started all 29 games. positive, Tinkle said, if you coach Wayne Tinkle's first reTinkle said that if his team feel like you have the pieces cruiting class joins the limited can finish the season on a in place to move forward. "With this group, we realrotation that has soldiered positive note and with good through this season. chemistry, it could mean a ly like these guys," the coach "This year, not a whole lot lot toward building for next sald. of guys have played, but the season. But with five true freshmen guys that have played obviTo do that, the Beavers expected to arrive in the sumously got to know each other (17-12, 8-9 Pac-12) will have mer, there are not enough just by being on the court so to reverse a downward slide, spots to keep everyone curmuch together," said junior having lost five of their past rently on the roster. Oregon forward Olaf Schaftenaar. six games. State's walk-ons — w h i ch "Definitely that will help us "Looking on paper that include Redmond High grad move forward." could be big," Tinkle said. Matt Dahlen and Sisters High
Denver Nuggets interim coach Melvin Hunt talks to
his players during the
first quarter Tuesday. The
Nuggets fired Brian Shaw earlier Tues-
grad Bryan Boswell — understood when they joined the
day, and promoted Hunt, who had been
team they were guaranteed
only one year. Though Tinkle says he and his staff will "take a good, hard look" at which players to bring back, including some of those nonscholarship players for what they have brought to the
one of Shaw's assistants. David Zalubowski /The Associated
Press
team. The Beavers have seven
walk-ons, among them junior center Justin Stangel, who was given a one-year scholarship last summer. Stangel has played just 29 minutes this season. " You don't want t o
talk
about it now, but typically
Nuggets fire coach Shaw, thenbeat Bucks
there's always people that
come in and say 'Hey, this might be too much for me, I want to go somewhere where
The Associated Press
ferson had 21 points and 16
DENVER — Danilo Galli-
r e b ounds, Mo Williams added
nari scored a season-high 26 20 points and 13 assists and
I can have a different role,'" Tinkle said. "And those are things you've got to address in the offseason as well. That's why we've always got to have a plan and be recruiting so that we're not ever
points, Kenneth Faried had 14 points and 14 rebounds and Denver beat the Milwau-
stuck without a plan."
Shaw was fired after I tiz seasons with the team at 20-39. Assistant coach Melvin
C h a r lotte won for the third t i m e i n f ourgames. Ki n g s 124, Knicks 86: NEW
kee Bucks 106-95 on Tuesday YORK — Rudy Gay scored night, hours after Bri-
an Shawwasfiredas Nuggets coach.
25 points, DeMarcus
NS X tNP
Cousi ns had 22 and B en McLemore fi nished with 20 as Sac-
ramento handed New York its worst loss of the season.
Hunt was named ' - po«iand at Jazz 93, Grizzlies terimhead coach. 82: MEMPHIS, Te~. L A Clippers Also on Tuesday: — Gordon Hayward Cavaliers 110 , and Derrick F avors Celtics 79: C L EVE- 7 30 t " gh t scored 21 points each, LAND — Cleveland's T>:CSNNW Rudy Gobert added LeBron James scored ESPN 15 points and a ca27 points to move Rale:KRCO reer-best 24 rebounds
TOP 25 ROUNDUP
'
I(entucky survives scare, still perfect
'
into 21st place on the 6 90-AM, 96.9- t o lead Utah to its third
NBA's career scoring FM
straight win.
list with 24,508. Bulls 97, Wizards 92: Hawks 104, Rockets 96: AT- C H I CAGO — N ikola Mirot-
LANTA — JeffTeaguescored ic scored 23points to lead 25 points, Al Horford added short-handed Chicago, which 18 and NBA-leading Atlanta was playing without former rallied from 18 points down to MVP D errick Rose (right win its fifth straight. knee), All-Star Jimmy Butler Hornets 104, Lakers 103: (left elbow), and key reserve CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Al Jef- Taj Gibson (Ieft ankle). I
is
The Associated Press A THENS,
Ga. -
As
Kentucky exhaled after its
NBA SCOREBOARD
first close call in a while, a
Wildcats fan held up a sign t hat said it a l l : "UK. The Unbeatables." Make it 30-0.
Standings
Facing the largest sec-
EasternConference
ond-half deficit of its so-far
main unbeaten heading into have a will to win, they be-
lieve they're going to win, and they made the plays they
L .
-
WesternConference
needed to make," coach John
Calipari said. The Wildcats, improving to 17-0 in the Southeastern Con-
ference, had won their previous five games by an average of 24 points.
Kentucky has survived a few tight finishes along the way, most notably consecutive overtime wins over Mississippi and Texas A8tM at
John Bazemore/TheAssociated Press
Kentucky for ward Karl-Anthony Towns, left, and Georgia forward Marcus Thornton battle for a rebound in the first half Tuesday night in Athens, Georgia. Kentucky won 72-64.
the start of SEC play back in January. Twice this season, we needed to do at any given by as many as 11 points, but point to win the game." both of those deficits were in Georgia hurt its chances by the first half, when they still missing three straight 1-andhad plenty of time to seize 1s late. control. Djurisic topped the BullGeorgia, using its quick- dogs with 18 points, but only ness to offset Kentucky's four came in the second half. huge size advantage, had the Thornton added 14 and KenWildcats on the ropes. Did ny Gaines had 11. "We did some good things, losing cross their minds'? "We were never t h i nksome really good things," the Wildcats have t r ailed
ing about t hat," f reshman
Karl-Anthony Towns said. "We were just thinking what
No. 4 Villanova 76, Creigh- rebounds. N eb. No. 19 North Carolina 81, Ryan Arcidiacono converted Georgia Tech 49: ATLANa three-point play to give TA — Joel Berry had a caVillanova the lead in the final reer-high 15 points. and minute as the Wildcats won Justin Jackson added 13 for their 11th straight game. North Carolina, which has No. 10 Maryland 60, Rutgers won two straight for the first 50: PISCATAWAY, N.J. time since January. Dez Wells scored six straight Georgetown 60, No. 21 ton 72: OMAHA ,
W L 48 12 38 22 38 23 38 24 34 27 32 28 26 33 25 33 25 33 25 34 23 35 23 36 19 42 13 47 12 47
d-Atlanta d-Tororito d-Chicago Cleveland Washington Milwaukee Miami Brooklyn Charlotte Indiana Boston Detroit Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
perfect season, No. 1 Kentucky clamped down defensively, ripped off a 14-0 run and put away pesky Georgia 72-64 on Tuesday night to rethe regular-season finale. "You have kids here who
Cavaliers110, Celtics 79
All TimesPST
-
points after Rutgers tied the
game late in the second half,
Thornton said. "We just didn't
and Maryland won its sixth
play perfect enough to win." Also on Tuesday:
straight game. Wells finished with 20 points and 10
Butler 54: INDIANAPOLIS D'Vauntes Smith-Rive-
ra scored 16 points to lead Georgetown, which has won four of its past five games.
W L 46 12 42 17 41 19 39 19 40 21 40 22 36 23 33 27 32 28 31 30 24 35 21 37 21 39 16 43 13 46
d-Golden State d-Memphis Houston d-Portland LA Clippers Dallas SanAntonio Oklahoma City NewOrleans Phoenix Utah Sacramen to Denver LA. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader
BOSTON (79)
Pct GB 800 633 10 623 10'/r 613 11 557 14'A 533 16 441 21'/t
431 22 431 22
424 22t/r
397 24 390 24'/z 3u 29'/t 217 35 203 35'It
Pct GB 793 712 4'/t
683 6 672 7
656 it/2
645 8
610 10'/z
550 14 533 15 508 16'/r 407 22t/r
362 25 350 26 271 30'/t 220 33'/r
good time. I take everything as a learning experience and Continued from C1 34 in the RPI rankings Mon- try to have fun doing it." Oregon was picked to fin- of 193 points on that trip to day and is considered a No. Despite its inexperience, ish eighth in the Pac-12 this Washington, including 108 10 seed in the latest bracket Oregon has come through year and was in seventh in an overtime loss to Wash- projections by ESPN.com in clutch situations including place with a 2-3 conference ington State. and CBSSports.com as it the win against Stanford, record on Jan. 18 after backThe Ducks have not al- seeks a third straight trip to which featured three senior to-back losses at Washing- lowed more than 70 points the NCAA tournament. starters. After the game was ton State and Washington. d uring t h ei r c u r r ent w i n The Ducks' e ight-man tied 70-70 in the final minute, The Ducks have won 10 of streak, and only league-lead- rotation includes freshman Oregon scored on its final their 12 games since then, ing Arizona has scored more f orwards Jordan Bell a n d two possessions and stopped including four of six on the than 75 against Oregon in its Dillon Brooks and guards the Cardinal on their final road. past 12 games. Benson and Ahmaad Rorie three. "We've gotten better and "We have to continue to along with j u nior-college Oregon is 5-0 in conferI think that's obvious since focus on the defensive end," transfer Dwayne Benjamin, ence games decidedby five our road trip to Washington," Benson said. "If shots are not who are all beginning their points or fewer. "We just want to stay posAltman said. "That was the falling, we have to get stops. first trip through the madturning point because we re- Make teams shoot tough ness of March. itive, lift each other up, and "It's pretty f un," Benson fight until the end," junior alized how poorly we played shots because if you give on defense. Since then we them easy baskets, it fuels said. "I am having a really forward Elgin Cook said. haven't completely fixed it,
but we have gotten better." Oregon gave up a total
them more." Oregon moved up to No.
Kings 124, Knicks 86 SACRAME NTO(124) Gay9-154-5 25,Thompson 2-6 e-e4, cousins 5-10 0-11 22,McLemore 6-12 6-7 20,McCallum 2-7 2-2 6,Wiliams7-12 0-217, Stauskas4-8 6-6 15, Miller0-1 0-0 0,CassPi 6-102-2 14,Hollibs 0-1 0-00, Landry0-11-21. Totals41-8332-37124. NEWYORK(86) Amttndson2-40-04,Early1-62-24, Bargnani1-4 1-2 3, HardawaJr y 2-71-2 7, Galloway2-8 2-2 6, Larkin5-9 2-413,Aldrich 4-6e-e8, Shved4-117-9 15, Thomas 2-92-36, Smith6-101-213, Acy0-52-2 2, Wear1-32-25. Totals 30-8222-30 86. Sacramento 35 3 0 35 24 — 124 New York 19 20 29 18 — 86
Hornets104, Lakers103
Nesday'sGames Charlotte104, LA. Lakers103 Cleveland 00, Boston79 Sacramen to124, NewYork86 Atlarita104,Houston96 Chicag o97,Washington92 Utah 93,Memphis82
Denver106,Milwaukee95 Today'sGames Phoemx atOrlando,4p.m. NewYorkatInderia, 4 p.m. Cleveland atToronto,4:30 p.m. Utah atBoston,4:30p.m. Charlotteat Brooklyn,4:30p.m. Detroit atNewOrleans,5p.m. PhiladelphiaatOklahomaCity, 5 p.m. Memphis atHouston,5p.m. DenveratMinnesota, 5p.m. LA. LakersatMiami, 5p.m. Sacramento atSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Milwaukee atGoldenState, 7:30p.m. PortlandatLA.Clippers, t:30 p.m. Thttrsday's Games Oklahoma City at Chicago, 5p.m. Dallas atPortland, 7:30p.m.
Summaries
Ducks
Turner3-80-06, Bass7-150-015,Zeller2-30-0 4,Smar t0-52-22,Bradl ey3-90-07,Thomas4-13 3-411, Crowder1-52-44, Young2-53-39, Jerebko 2-8 0-0 5,Randolph2-6 0-04, Datome3-7 e-0 7, Wallace 0-10-0 0, Pressey2-3 0-05. Totals 31-88 10-1379. GLEYEULN D(110) James12-233-3 27,Love4-10 2-2 12, Mozgov 5-6 0-0 10, Irving6-104-418, Smith 5-9 e-0 12, Thompson4-4 2-2 10, Shumpert 0-2 0-0 0, Jones 3-6 2-210,Dellavedova0-6 0-00, Harris 2-5e-e 6, Miller 0-1e-e 0, Perkins2-7 1-1 5. Totals 43-89 14-14 110. Boston 16 20 17 26 — 79 Cleveland 29 32 34 15 — 110
Hawks104, Rockets 96 HOUSTON (96) Ariza 4-12 0-0 9, Jones8-u 2-618, Motielurias 5141-214, Beverley39 009, Brewer414 ee 8, Smith6-140-014,Terry8-131-121, Prigion«-30-0 3. Totals 39-904-9 96. ATLANTA (104) Carroll 4-62-2 u, Millsap 6-164-416, Horford 9-14 0-018,Teagtie7-129-1125, Korver2-60-05, Aiitic1-3 0-0 3,Bazemore 0-51-21, Schroder 6-14 2-2 16,Scott4-100-09. Totals39-8618-21104. Hottstott 31 28 22 15 — 96 Atlanta 22 23 27 32 — 104
Jazz 93, Grizzlies 82 UTAH(93)
Hayward9-193-4 21, Favors 8-145-621, Gobert 6-10 3-415,Exum1-5 0-03, Ingles3-50-08, Burke 2-u 004,Millsap0-30-00,Booker2-50-04,Hood 355-5 13,Evans230 04. Totals 3680161993. MEMPHIS (82) Je.ereeri 3-130-0 6,Koufos3-10 0-2 6, Gasol 6-15 5-6 17,Coiiley4-11 3-4 11, Lee7-13 2-2 18,
Leuer0-52-22, Adams6-8 0-013, Calathes3-51-3 7, JaGreen1-200 Z Totals 33-8213-1982. Utah 19 18 27 29 — 93 Memphis 20 18 23 21 — 82
LA. LAKERS (103)
Boozer5-85-615, Kelly1-6 4-4 7,Sacre2-62-2 6, Clarkson9-190-019, Ellington2-82-27, Lin9-16 2-223, Johnson 4-72-210, Davis2-32-36, Hill 5-13 0-010. Totals 39-8619-21103.
CHARLOTTE (104) Kidd-Gilchrist6-110-212,Zeller462-210, Jef-
fersoii 9-193-7 21,M.Wiliams 5-148-920,Hender-
son 8-153-421,Ma.W iliams 3-61-28, Biyombo0-1 0-00, Roberts2-40-04,Stephenson1-23-45, Taylor 1-1 1-1 3. Totals 39-7921-31 104. LA. Lakers 30 20 20 33 — 103 Charlotte 27 23 24 30 — 104
Bulls 97, Wizards 92 WASHINGTO N(92) pierce 6-100016, Nene04 0-00, Gortat6-90 0 12, Wal8-20 l 4-7 21,Beal6-181-1 13,Temple 0-0 0-00, Gooden1-30-02,Porter3-53-411, Sessions 1-66-78,Seraphin3-80-06,R.Butler1-10-03. Totals 35-8414-19 92.
CHICAGO (97)
Duti leavy2-6 0-05,GasolB-u 4-4 20,Noah 4-5 6-1014,Brooks8-23 4-422, Snell 4-12 0-111, Mirotic 6-13 8-u 23, McDermott 0-5e-e 0, Hinrich 0-20-00, Moore1-10-OZTotals33-7822-3097. Washington 22 22 23 25 — 92 Chicago 24 27 23 23 — 97
Nuggets106, Bucks95 MILWAUKEE (95) Antetokounmpo7-10 4-6 19, llyasova9-15 0-0 21, Pachulia0-1e-e0, Carter-Wiliams4-11 2-411, Middl eton6-205-520,Bayless2-82-27,Hensoti4-7 2-5 10, Dudley1-6 0-02, Eiinis 2-60-0 5, plumlee 0-20-00. Totals 35-8615-2295. DENVER (106) Gallinari8-166-626,Chandler5-120-012, Faried 5-10 4-5 14,Lawsort6-122-2 16, Foye3-9 0-0 9, Hickson3-9e-e 6, Nelson4-7 1-19, Barton0-22-5 2, Arthur 45008, Harris 02 000,Green1-21-1 4. Totals 39-8616-20106. Milwaukee 29 22 19 25 — 95 Denver 29 26 21 30 — 106
Leaders ThroughMonday'sGames Scoring
G FG FT PTS AVG Harden, HOU 5 9 4 7 5 492 1597 27.1 Westbrook,OKC 45 406 338 u94 26.5 James,CLE 50 467 292 130 26.2 Davis,NOR 48 443 261 u48 23.9 Curry,GOL 57 472 232 1363 23.9
C4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
MLS
escalating salaries. Teams are, however, constrained by a sal-
Continued from C1 The previous CBA expired
ary cap. One source said the league's Jan. 31, but teams have con- only free-agency proposal inducted preseason as planned. volved players age 32 or older No deadline is in place to reach with 10 years of experience a pact, but without a pathway with the same club. Both sides to a deal, the players seem in- have declined to discuss specifclined to strike. ics of the negotiations. Numerous players from Players have said repeatedaround the league have at- ly that they understand MLS's tended this week's talks. For economics — most teams do
*
m
I
the first time, MLS owners, in-
not turn a profit, and a slow-
duding FC Dallas' Clark Hunt
growth plan has allowed the league to blossom since its
and New England's Jonathan
Kraft, were involved. The regular-season opener is Friday in Carson, California, with the reigning champion Los Angeles Galaxy facing the Chicago Fire. Chicago players are scheduled to fly to Los An-
,I
,
night at RFK Stadium.
Joe Kline/Ttte Bulletin
Summit's Jason Garcia shoots over a Hillsboro defender during a Class 5A play-in game Tuesday night at Summit High School.
boro (10-15) answered. The
sealed Summit's win. "We kind of let our guard Continued from C1 down," Mason conceded. What happened was a 10-2 to three points. And after a "When it got to be a close Summit run to close out the Max Michalski 3-pointer put game, we got to thinking, 'Oh gosh, they could beat contest. Summit ahead 46-34 in the "I think we fi nished like third, Hillsboro responded us.' About halfway through, we can," said Mason, who and clawed back to within we started realizing that this finished with 14 points, 10 two points with 3:45 to play. team is for real. We actually "I think the key thing for have to play." rebounds, four steals and a block."We're a young team. us is having played in a realHurley scored a gameWe only have two seniors on ly tough IMC," Summit coach high 18 points to go along our team. Us juniors and a Jon Fraziersaid. "We haven't with four assists, while Mifew sophomores, we've got to played in a lot of games that chalski added 15 points, six play our roles well, because were blowouts. We're used rebounds and four assists. our two seniors can't fill that to playing in really tight ballFor Hillsboro, Josh Jones whole role." games. I think our kids are scored 15 points, and AnThe Storm seemed poised comfortable in that setting." ton Dean had 12 points, four to break away at times, like The Storm seemed tobe, boards and four assists, and when Jason Garcia drilled as Jack Hurley came right Corey Hindley had 10 points. a 3-pointer late in the sec- back down the floor to hit a A playoff win is a playoff ond quarter to give Summit layup and draw a fouL He win, Frazier said, adding: (19-5) a 32-19 lead. Yet with made the ensuing free throw, "That's a good thing. We get each Summit spurt, H i lls- sparking a 10-2 finish that to play on Friday."
That is when the Storm will host Sandy in a f i r st-
Ravens
steals for the Ravens, while
Spartans closed the first half with a 12-2 run to cut the lead
ing the Broncos (13-12) from the Northwest Oregon Con-
Continued from C1 ference an early advantage. Ridgeview, ranked No. 5 Wilson scored 15 of his 23 in 5A, had prepared for Bon- points in the f i rst quarter, ton, whom Covill described helping Parkrose build a 23as a Division-I caliber player. 14 lead. The sophomore guard was The Broncos' advantage still able to erupt Tuesday, swelled to 15 points at the but it was Chris Wilson giv- half after outscoring Rid-
geview 24-18 in the second. "The game was pretty even after the first four minutes," Covill said. "I think
round contest with a chance to return to the state tournament for the first time since 2010. "You start to f i g ure out
the makeup of our team, and this one — we're very resilient," Frazier said, noting the Storm's two-point overtime win at Mountain View last
Friday. "These kids, they're just tough. Coming down the stretch, the last three or four minutes of the game, I
feel really comfortable with our kids and their abilities to make plays. Our league is so darn tough, I think it prepares us for these kinds of
playoff matchups." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.com.
Justin Alvarez chipped in with 13 points. "My thoughts all y ear
depth caught up with us a little bit.... We just didn't have what it took to kind of fight back." Tanner O'Neal posted 24
were that depth would catch
points, 10 rebounds and four
took its toll on us."
up to us in a number of ways, whether it's foul trouble or
fatigue," Covill said. "Going through our league, it just
PREP SCOREBOARD Boys basketball Class 5A Play-in
Summit 69, Hillsboro 59 Hlllsboro (59) —JoshJones15, Deattt2, Hindley10,Groh7, E.Nelson7,Barr 5,R.Nelson3. Totals 21 10-19 59. Summit (69) — JackHtrley18, Michalski15,N. Masott14,McCormick6,Dermatt 4, Kent4,Garcia3, Baker3, C.MasonZTotals 21 22-3069. Hillsboro 15 16 14 14 — 59 Summit 20 14 20 15 — 69 Three-point goals — Hillsbtio: Hindley 3,Groh2, J. Jones,E.Nelson;Summit: Michalski 3, Garcia, Hurley.
Parkrose 102, Ridgeview 86 Ridget/iew(86)—GeorgeMendazona44,O'Neal 24, Alvarez13,Hampton 3, C. Manselle Z Totals 3110-15 86. Parkrose (102) —IsaacBonton 48, Wilson 23, Mbtiyamba12Hurlic 8, Dace5,Vy 4, EdwardsZ Totals 3914-16102. Ridget/iew
14 18 26 28 — 86
Parkrose 23 24 23 32 — 102 Three-pointgoals —Ridgeview:Mendazona 7, Alvarez 3,O'Neal3, Hampton; Parkrose:Wilson 5, Bonton4, Dace. Class 6A Rottnd1
Nesday's Results No. 1WestLinn 102,No.32 Centennial 54 No. 16Sheldott54, No.17Lincoln 53 No.9LakeOswego46,No.24Westview40 No. 8Southridge52, No.25Tigard51(20T) No. 5SouthSalem69, No. 28Sherwood57 No. 12SouthMedford 74, No.21 McMinnvile 37 No.13SouthEugene65,No.20OregonCity55 No. 4Jefferson75, No.29West Salem63 No. 3Jesuit91,No.30Grant 61 No. 14Clackama s87,No. 19Wilson68 No. u Lakeridge54, No.22west Albany51 No. 6DavidDouglas 68,No.27Beavertott 62 No. 7NorthMedford 63,No.26Barlow49 No. to McNary48, No.23Newberg45 No. 18Tttalatin57, No.15Reynolds54 No. 2CentralCatholic 75,No.3t Aloha50 Round 2 Friday's Games
No.16 Sheldottat No.1West Linn
No.9LakeOswegoatNo.8Southridge No.12 SouthMedford atNo.5 SouthSalem No.13SouthEugeneatNo.4Jeff erson No.14 Clackama sat No.3Jesuit No. u Lakeridgeat No.6DavidDouglas No.10 McNary at No.7North Medford No. 18Tualatin at No.2Central Catholic Class 5A Rottnd1
Friday's Games No. 16Parkroseat No.1MountainView No. 9Corvallis atNo.8 Pendleton No. 12Churchill at No.5Libetty No. 13LaSalle atNo.4Silverton No.14DallesatNo.3Wilsonvile No. u crescent valley atNo.6 springfield No.10CentralatNo.7 MarisI No. 15SandyatNo.2Summit Class 4A Rottnd1
Friday's Games No.16Yam hil-Carltott at No.1 NorthBend No. 9Cascadeat No.8 LaGrande No.12Sistersat No.5Scappoose No. 13ValleyCatholic atNo.4 Marshfield No. 14Seasideat No.3North Valley NO. 11NorthMarion at No.6 Gladstone No. 10MadrasatNo.7Sutherlin No. 15TilamookatNo.2Philomath
ever, want the ability to move
between clubs and a stronger foundation for players who have helped build the longest geles this afternoon, but those continuous top-tier league in plans might be canceled if ne- U.S. soccer history. gotiations remain unsettled. Last season, for example, The same goes for D.C. Unit- about half of Chicago's roster ed's CONCACAF Champions earned $80,000 or less, accordLeague quarterfinal against ing to the players' union. The Costa Rica's Alajuelense to- average MLS salary is about
ai
Storm
1996 launch — and they are
not seeking considerable salary increases. They do, how-
Class 3A State tournament Thttrsday's Games at North BendHS Guarlerliials No. 9Amity vs.No.1 Dayton, t:30 p.m. No. 12SalemAcademyvs. No.4 Creswell, 3:15p.m. No. 6 BlattchetCatholic vs.No.3 DeLaSale North Catholic,6:30p.m. No.7 Nyssavs. No.2 HorizonChristian, Tualatin, 8:15 p.m. Friday's Games at Marshfleld HS,CoosBay Consolationsemifittals, 8a.m., 9:45a.m. Semifittals, 1:45p.m., 6p.m. Saturday'sGames at Matshfield HS,CoosBay Fourth-placegame,10:45 a.m. Third-placegame,3:15p.m. Final, 8:30p.m. Class 2A State tournament Thttrsday's Games at PendletonHS Qttarlerlinals No. 8Burnsvs. No.t Irrigon,1:30p.m. No.5Regisvs.No.4Oakridge,3:15p.m. No. 6Knappavs. No.3Heppner,6:30p.m. No. 1WesternMennonitevs. No.2Toledo,8:15 p.m. Frlday's Games at PendeltonConventionCenter Consolationsemifinals, 9a.m., t0:45 a.m. Semifinals,3:15p.m., 8:15p.m. Saturday'sGames at PendletonConventionCenter Fourth-placegame,tO:45a.m. Third-placegame,3:15 p.m.
Class 4Aplayolfs Rottnd1
Saturday'sGames No.16Bakerat No.1 Stttherlin No. 9Mazamaat No. 8Brookings-Harbor No.12Marshfieldat No.5Gladstone No.13MadrasatNo.4Cascade No.14 Junction Cityat No.3 Valey Catholic No.11Klamath Union atNo.6Seaside No.10Banksat No.7LaGrande No.15Sistersat No.2 Henley
Class 3A State tournament Thttrsday's Games at Marshfleld HS,CoosBay Quattetlinals No.16Rattiervs. No.9St. Mary's,Medford, t:30 p.m. No. 5Amityvs. No.4SalemAcademy,3:15 p.m. No.11PortlandChristianvs. No.3Dayton,630pm. No. 7PortlandAdventist vs.No.2 Vale, 8:15p.m. Friday's Games At North BendHS Consolationsemifinals, 9a.m.,10:45a.m. At Marshfleld HS,CoosBay Semifinals,noon,4:15p.m. Saturday'sGames at Marshfield HS,CoosBay Fourt h-placegame,9a.m. Third-placegame,1:30 p.m. Finals,6:30p.m. Class 2A State tournament Thursday'sGames
at Pettdeltott Convention Center Guarlerlittals No. 8 MyrtlePoint vs.No.1 Western Mennonite, 1:30 p.m. No.5Monroevs.No.4Union,3:t5p.m.
No. 6Burnsvs. No.3Vernonia,6:30p.m. No.10Regisvs.No.2Kennedy,8:15 p.m. Friday's Games at PendletonHS Consolationsemifinals, 9am.,1045 am. at PendletonConventionCenter Semifinals,1;30p.m., 6:30p.m. Saturday'sGames at PendletonConventionCenter Fourt h-placegame,9a.m. Third-placegame,1:30 p.m. Final, 6:30p.m.
Class1A State tournament at BakerHS,Baker City Thttrsday's Games Guarlerliials No.9Adrianvs.No.1Damasctts Christian, 1:30p.m. No. 5 Chiloqttin vs.No. 4Cottdott/Wheeler,3:15 p.m. No.11Elktonvs.No.3CoutttryChristian,630pm. No.7McKenzievs.No.2NorthDouglas,8:15p.m. Frlday's Games Consolationsemifinals, 9am.,1045 am. Semifittals,1:30p.m., 6:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Fourt h-placegame,9a.m. Third-placegame,1:30 p.m. Final, 6:30p.m.
$200,000, but the median is
Five years ago, the last time doser to $100,000. A handful of the league and players nego- elite players account for almost tiated a CBA, MLS headed 50 percent of overall payroll. off a work stoppage with five Asked Monday about the days to spare. However, this league's reluctance to grant time, the players are seeking free agency, United union rep some formoffree agency — a Bobby Boswell said: "They say device that runs up against the philosophically that is not what league's single-entity business the owners bought into. They structure. All players are un- bought into a system of single der contract with the league,
entity and that they make the
not individual clubs, although deals and control the deals, teams haveautonomy in pur- and that is what they want to suing talent and setting offers. continue to do." Unlike other U.S. sports The threat of a work stopleagues, MLS players do not page comes at a time of otherhave the freedom to directly wise growing momentum for negotiate with other teams in-
MLS and American soccer in
side the league when their con- general. tracts expire. They did make Attendance has grown and strides fiveyearsago,agreeing the league added expansion to a two-stage, re-entry draft teams in Orlando and New eachwinterforplayersofacer- York, raising the total to 20. Attain age and experience. lanta and a second Los AngeMLS players out of con- les team will start in 2017, and tract do have the ability to other markets are vying for exleave the league altogether pansion slots. MLS has signed and sign overseas. In many high-profile international stars, cases,though, their previous most notably England's Frank MLS club retains their rights Lampard and Steven Gerrard should they seek to return to and Spain's David Villa, to luthe league. crative contracts, and U.S. naOwners are also concerned tional team players have conthat free agency would lead to tinued migrating to MLS.
Truex
It was no surprise that he
Continued from C1 He managed to find a ride with Furniture Row, replacing
finished in a career-worst 24th place. Fast-forward to 2015. Pollex
wrapped up her final prima-
Kurt Busch after Busch joined ry chemotherapy treatment Stewart-Haas Racing. in January. She and Truex His personal struggles in- celebrated by going out with volve his girlfriend, Sherry Dale Earnhardt Jr. and his girlPollex, who is battling ovarian
friend, Amy Reimann. Pollex
cancer. As she underwent chemotherapy treatment last season after she was diagnosed in August, Truex was given the option to stay home by his boss-
is expected to continue che-
es at Furniture Row Racing.
Truex, too, is feeling quite a bit more chipper.
Team owner Barney Visser told him he understood if Truex
motherapy treatments once a
month for a year; these treatments are less debilitating than the initial ones. "All in all, what can I say?
All the guys at Furniture Row months of the season, reset Racing are doing a great job," emotionally, and be there for Truex said after finishing sixth Sherry. at Atlanta on Sunday. "This He decided to keep on roll- beats where we were last year ing. Mostly because it was at this time by about 30 spots. therapeutic. Excitedabout what everybody "Racing's tough, but when is doing and really pumped to racing is as tough as it was last get the rest of theyear going." The success is also part year, all you can do is continue to work hard and look for- of paying it forward to an ward," Truex said before this owner who stood by him season started. "There were unconditionally "To have somebody like days where it sucked to be at the race track, especially at the that stand behind you and say, end of the seasonwhen she was 'We're here for you and we'll do going through her thing, but whatever it takes,' it means the needed to take off the last three
there was never a time when I didn't want to be there or didn't
world to me," Truex said. "And
feel I shouldbe there."
year to make that up to him."
I'm going to do my best this
Fittal, 8:30p.m.
Class1A State tournament at BakerHS,Baker City Today'sGames attartertinali No. 9Crosshill Christianvs.No.1 HorizonChristian, HoodRiver,t:30 p.m. No. 5 Nixyaawivs. i No. 4HosannaChristian, 3:15 p.m. No. 6SiletzValleyvs. No.3Yottcalla, 6:30p.m. No.10Sherman vs. No.2CountryChristian,815pm. Thursday'sGames Consolationsemifinals, 9a.m., 10:45p.m. Friday's Games Semifinals,3:15p.m., 8:15p.m. Saturday'sGames Fourth-placegame,10:45 a.m. Third-placegame,3:15p.m. Champi onship,8:30p.m.
Girls basketball Class 6A Round 1 Today'sGames No. 32Westviewat No.1 SouthMedford No. 17Centenniaatl No.16Glencoe No. 24Wilsonat No.9West Linn
No. 25Sunset atNo.8Roseburg No. 28SherwoodatNo. 5Jesuit No. 21Canbyat No.12West Albany No. 20Newberg atNo.13Grant No.29LakeOswegoatNo.4SouthSalem No. 30ForestGroveat No.3Beavertott No.19NorthMedford atNo.14Tigard No. 22McNaryatNo.u clackamas No.27WestSalematNo.6Sheldon No. 26Greshamat No. 7St.Mary's No. 23Tualatin atNo.10Central Catholic No.18 LincolnatNo.15 Sotithridge No. 31Roosevelt atNo.2 OregonCity
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C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
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Change: -9.61 (-0.5%)
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Vol. (in mil.) 3,184 1,963 Pvs. Volume 3,316 1,846 Advanced 1 287 9 4 9 Declined 1845 1782 New Highs 127 71 New Lows 25 35
273
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2,000
seasonally adjusted percent change 300thousand
Close: 18 203.37 Change: -65.26 (-0.5%) 17,840" ""' 10 DAYS "
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HIGH LOW CLOSE 18281.95 18136.88 18203.37 DOW Trans. 9102.21 9006.48 9058.36 DOW Util. 587.34 579.80 587.19 NYSE Comp. 11090.77 11012.66 11051.23 NASDAQ 4996.66 4956.07 4979.90 S&P 500 2115.76 2098.26 2107.78 S&P 400 1514.69 1504.60 1509.73 Wilshire 5000 22346.25 22161.59 22255.79 Russell 2000 1238.94 1230.74 1234.76
DOW
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CHG. -85.26 -44.46 +3.99 -51.59 -28.20 -9.61 -7.87 -90.46 -7.86
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%CHG. WK -0.47% T -0.49% T t0.68% T -0.46% T -0.56% -0.45% T -0.52% T -0.40% T -0.63%
MO QTR YTD L L +2.13% -0.89% L -5.00% L +1.96% L L +5.15% L L +2.37% L L +3.94% L L +2.70% L L +2.50%
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F
NorthwestStocks NAME
Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ 71.40 66. 1 6 +. 7 2 +1.1 L L Source: Facteet Avista Corp AVA 29.03 ~ 38.34 33. 5 6 + . 3 9 + 1.2 T T Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 16. 0 4 + . 0 3 +0.2 L L L By the book B arrett Business BB S I 1 8.25 ~ 71.76 38 . 84 -.12 -0.3 L Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 158. 8 3 15 5.57 +1.77 +1.2 L L The Federal Reserve's latest Cascade Bancorp C A C B 4 . 11 ~ 5.82 4.69 -.16 -3.3 T T Beige Book may offer clues on L ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.59 ~ 3 0.3 6 28.66 - .27 -1.0 T how Fed officials will size up the — o Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 56.70 56.39 +. 1 9 +0.3 L L U.S. economy. Costco Wholesale CO ST 110.36 ~ 1 56.8 5 147.37 -.57 -0.4 L T The report, due out today, Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ~ 17.89 1 2. 6 9 -.38 -3.0 T T represents a snapshot of business FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 3 2. 7 3 -.09 -0.3 L L conditions in each of the central Hewlett Packard H PQ 28 . 75 ~ 41.10 3 4.5 7 -.35 -1.0 T T bank's 12 regional bank districts. Intel Corp I NTC 24.30 ~ 37.90 34. 1 0 +. 0 4 +0.1 L L In January's Beige Book, the Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ 14.70 1 4.0 0 -.02 -0.1 L L districts reported modest or Kroger Co K R 4 1 .20 ~ 73.60 6 9. 9 8 -.96 -1.4 T T moderate growth, helped by gains Lattice Semi T LSCC 5.87 ~ 9.19 6.70 -.06 -0.9 T of sales of autos and other LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.83 1 6. 6 1 -.34 -2.0 T T consumer products. But the big MDD Resources MOU 21 . 33 o — 36.0 5 22. 01 + . 2 4 +1.1 T T drop in oil prices was beginning to MentorGraphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 5.4 3 23.79 -.39 -1.6 L L have an impact on Texas and Microsoft Corp MSFT 37.49 ~ 50.05 4 3. 2 8 -.60 -1.4 T L Nike Inc 8 N KE 70.60 ~ 99.76 9 7. 9 7 -.78 -0.8 L L other energy regions. Nordstrom Inc JWN 59.97 — 0 81.78 79 .97 -.71 -0.9 T L Nwst Nat Gas N WN 41.58 ~ 52.57 46.5 7 +. 4 7 +1 .0 T T PaccarInc P CAR 55.34 ~ 71.15 6 4.5 4 -.37 -0.6 L L Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 6 .21 +.18 $ .3.0 L T Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 4 3. 2 3 -.21 -0.5 T T Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 0 9 21 5.72 -1.65 -0.8 T L Schnitzer Steel SCHN 1 5.53 o — 30.0 4 15 . 6 4 -.36 -2.3 T T Sherwin Wms SHW 188.25 ~ 291. 2 7 28 5.93 -4.96 -1.7 L L StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 6 6. 2 8 -.70 -1.0 L L StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 94.8 3 9 4. 0 0 -.23 -0.2 L L DmpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 9.6 0 16.65 -.02 -0.1 L L US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 4 4. 7 5 -.13 -0.3 L L WashingtonFedl WA F O 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 21.25 -.10 -0.5 L L WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 5.96 — o 55.95 55 .45 -.10 -0.2 L L Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7.48 ~ 37.04 3 4.8 1 -.39 -1.1 T T Rough quarler?
L + 10. 7 +5 2 .7 1 617 15 0 .80f T -5.1 +16.4 4 3 8 1 1 1 . 32f T -10.3 -2.4 64587 46 0 .20 L +41. 8 - 43.2 6 2 dd 0. 8 8 L + 19. 7 +2 1 .7 8 583 21 3 .64f T -9.6 - 0.6 1 1 2 7 8 L +1.6 +12 . 3 17 9 1 8 0 . 64a L +26.6 +37 .0 26 3 2 9 0. 6 0 L +4.0 +32 . 2 1 4 51 3 1 1 .42a T -9.4 -23.6 6 1 76 L +1.3 -2.7 75 1 2 3 0 .44f T -13.9 +19.0 13552 13 0 . 64 T -6.0 +41.3 26431 15 0 .96 L +0.7 +8.4 6749 13 0 .26 L +9.0 +70 . 8 6 4 63 2 2 0 . 7 4 T -2.8 -10.7 1530 16 L +0.3 -9.8 1950 dd T -6.3 - 33.8 1184 1 4 0 . 73 L + 8.5 +12 . 7 60 6 1 9 0 . 22f T -6.8 +17.6 30387 17 1 . 24 L +1.9 +27 . 4 3 4 31 2 9 1 . 1 2 L +0.7 +34. 0 77 1 2 1 1. 4 8f T -6.7 +11.8 1 5 1 2 2 1. 8 6 T -5.1 + 1. 4 1 080 17 0.88a T - 25.8 +161.0 278 2 2 L +1.0 +4.4 784 36 1.7 6 T -10.4 - 15.7 647 1 7 0 . 12 T -30.7 -34.0 422 3 6 0. 7 5 L t 8.7 +46. 3 612 3 2 2 . 68f T -5.1 + 3 . 2 1 0 3 1 3 1 . 30f L +14. 6 +3 4 .4 3 440 28 1 . 2 8 T -2.1 -2.8 1654 22 0 . 60 T -0.4 +11.4 4097 1 5 0 . 98 T -4.1 -2.6 38 7 1 4 0 . 52f L $.1.1 +22 . 7 11421 14 1 . 4 0 T -3.0 +2 3.0 3069 26 1 . 1 6
Wall Street forecasts that Abercrombie & Fitch's fourth-quarter earnings and revenue declined versus a year earlier. The teen clothing retailer has DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are uot included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent been struggling to lift sales as dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend tastes and fashion trends change. announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid iu stock, approximatecash value on ex-distrittuticu date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-eud fund - uo P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months. It has stripped its once-prized Abercrombie logo off more products, but the efforts haven't born fruit. Longtime CEO Michael Jeffries abruptly retired in Best Buy shares rose Tuesday after the retailer legal settlements over the price of liquid crystal displays, December. The company reports announced plans to hike its quarterly dividend or LCDs, sold in the United States. its latest financial results today. and give shareholders an additional Best Buy also reported that its net income one-time payment. jumped 77 percent to $519 million, or ANF $23.99 o~ $50 The nation's largest consumer $1.46 per share, for the quarter. electronics retailer said that it will raise Earnings, adjusted for one-time gains 40 and costs, came to $1.46 per share. l'15 its cash dividend 21 percent to 23 30 cents per share. In addition, it plans That topped Wall Street expectations $39.63 to pay shareholders a one-time of $1.36 per share. 20 dividend of 51 cents per share Best Buyshares have climbed Operating culled from the proceeds of some nearly 50 percent in the last 12 months. EPS 4Q '13 4 Q '14 Best Buy (BBY) Tuesday's close:$39.18 T otal return 1- y r 3 -yr* 5-yr* %%d Price-earnings ratio: 25 52-WEEK RANGE Price-earnings ratio: 14
l;:l;"lBest Buy hikes dividend
based on past 12-month results
40
$24
Dividend: $0.80 Div. yield: 3.3% Source: Facteet
AP
AmdFocus
AP
ClearBridge Small Cap Growth is cited by Morningstar for its ability Marhetsummary to produce steady results and Most Active avoid much of the volatility that NAME VOL (Bos) LAST CHG generally comes with small-cap S&P500ETF 967401 211.12 -.87 growth funds. Orexigen BkofAm SiriusXM NStarRlt
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955999 645870 610093 460158 432011 423155 386564 374142 368079
7.64 +1.85 16.04 +.03 4.00 +.04 18.43 -.67 27.28 +.58 3.03 +.07 81.58 -2.42 40.37 -.32 129.36 +.27
LeggMason CBSmalloapGrA m SASMX VALUE
B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME
Orexigen Springleaf GoodrP pfC GoodrP pfO McDrmlnt TSR Inc AgiBcPa Intrexon Sphere3D g Capnia n
L AST C H G %C H G 7 .64 +1 . 8 5 +3 2 .0 5 0.23 t 1 2 .19 +3 2 .0 c40 1 2.25 +2 . 9 5 +3 1 . 7 03 1 1.95 +2 . 6 7 +2 8 . 8 3 .33 +.72 +27 . 6 073 5 .28 +1 . 0 4 +2 4 .5 Mcrhingstar OwnershipZone™ 2 1.21 + 3 . 7 0 +2 1 .1 u Fund target represents weighted 4 8.15 +7 . 9 3 +1 9 . 7 Q 6 .08 +.92 +17 . 8 average of stock holdings 7 .50 +1 . 0 9 +1 7 .0 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings
Losers
CATEGORY Small Growth C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * * * c r -3.88 -25.1 Opower n ElectroRnt -2.60 -20.0 ASSETS $1,380 million -3.87 -1 8.3 Primoris EXP RATIO 1.24% CumMed -.70 -17.5 MANAGER Aram Green -1.85 -16.2 Sunopta SINCE 2007-03-02 RETURNS3-MO +3.7 Foreign Markets YTO +1.2 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +1.4 -48.07 -.98 Paris 4,869.25 3-YR ANNL +16.4 London 6,889.13 -51.51 -.74 5-YR-ANNL +17.5 Frankfurt 11,280.36 -1 30.00 -1.14 Hong Kong24,702.78 -1 84.66 -.74 TOP 5HOLDINGS -.64 Fortinet Inc Mexico 43,600.37 -282.34 Milan 21,987.18 -310.42 -1.39 -11.72 -.06 Medidata SolutionsInc Tokyo 18,81 5.16 Stockholm 1,661.87 -24.77 -1.47 FEI Co -23.40 -.39 Icon PLC Sydney 5,902.90 Zurich 8,954.68 -1 01.01 -1.12 Maximus Inc NAME
L AST 11.59 10.41 17.22 3.31 9.60
' + +.93
1.1178+
U.S. stock indexes fell broadly Tuesday as investors await earnings from the few companies yet to announce results and a jobs report later this week. The Nasdaq fell below 5,000 a day after passing that milestone for the first time since the dot-com era 15 years ago. With no major economic news and few earnings releases, investors were at pains to point to a catalyst for the slump other than jitters that sometimes follow big stock gains. The losses were modest but broad, with eight industry sectors in the Standard and Poor's 500 index falling. Energy stocks rose with the price of oil. F
Close: $16.17 V-0.40 or -2.4% The automaker reported a decline in U.S. sales in February, partly because of weather, and the results fell short of forecasts. $17 16 15
McDermott Int'I
MDR
Close:$3.33L0.72 or 27.6% The offshore drilling platform and services company reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit and revenue results $3.5 3.0 2.5
D J 52-week range
F
$13.28~
D J 52-week range
$18 .12
$2.10~
F $ 8.45
Vol.:37.4m (1.3x avg.) PE: 20.5 Vol.: 24.1m (3.8x avg.) P E: . . . Mkt. Cap:$62.82 b Y i e ld: 3.7% Mkt.Cap:$785.45 m Y i eld: ... BABA Close:$81.58 V-2.42 or -2.9% Regulators in Taiwan asked the Chinese e-commercecompany toexit the country because of alleged investment regulation violations. $120
Best Buy BBY Close:$39.18 %0.55 or 1.4% The electronics retailer will raise its dividend 21 percent, give shareholders an additional one-time payment and cut costs. $40 38 36
100 0
N
D
J
F
D
52-week range 380.03 ~
J
F
52-week range $120.00
Vol.:39.1m (1.8x avg.)
$23.87~
$4 0.03
P E: . . . Vol.:11.8m(1.9x avg.) Yie ld: ... Mkt. Cap:$13.74 b
Mkt. Cap: $202.92 b
PE: 1 3.4 Yi e ld: 1.9%
Orexigen Thera.
OREX JD.Com JD Close:$7.64L1.85 or 32.0% Close:$27.53T-0.62 or -2.2% The maker of obesity and The Chinese e-commerce company weight-loss drugs reported a slight reported a surge in fourth-quarter profit as revenue surged because of revenue on expanded sales, beatsales of the drug Contrave. ing Wall Street expectations. $8 $35 30
25
D
J
F
J J A S O N D J F 52-week range $33. 10
52-week range $3.11~
$3.37
Vol.:95.7m (25.2x avg.) Mkt.Cap:$940.99 m
$13.34~
PE: . Vol.:2 4.2m (4.0x avg.) P E: . . . Yie ld:. Mkt. Cap:$37.5 b Yield: ...
Nutrisystem
NTRI Close: $19.34X2.19 or 12.8% The weight-loss company reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit, but its revenue results fell short of forecasts. $20
Cumulus Media
CMLS Close:$3.31 V-0.70 or -17.5% The radio station owner and operator reported a fourth-quarter profit, but the financial results fell short of expectations. $4.5
19
4.0
18
3.5
D J F 52-week range $13.78 ~ $20 .28
Vol.:2.1m (6.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$556.45 m
3.0
D J 52-week range
$2.88~
Yi eld: 3.6%
F $ 7.21 PE : 27.6 ield : ...
PE:3 6 . 5 Vol.:15.1m (12.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$766.45 m Y
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.12 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-big . 0 1 6-month T-big . 0 7
. 01 . 07
... ...
52-wk T-bill
.19
+0 . 0 7 L
.26
L
2-year T-note . 6 8 .67 + 0 .01 L 5-year T-note 1.61 1.60 +0.01 L 10-year T-note 2.12 2.08 +0.04 L 30-year T-bond 2.72 2.68 +0.04 L
BONDS
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 25 . 30 -.68+2.2 +11.0 +13.1+12.3 A A A CaplncBuA m 61.10 -.20 +2.6 +9.3 +10.4 +9.7 A A A Crude oil rose CpWldGrlA m 48.62 -.26 +4.2 +8.1 +13.5+10.6 8 6 C by nearly $1 per EurPacGrA m 49.79 -.22 +5.6 +3.7 +9.4 +7.5 C 6 C barrel, its third FnlnvA m 54. 1 1 - .17 +3.9 +13.8 +16.7+14.2 C C C gain in the last GrthAmA m 44.70 -.16 +4.7 +12.0 +18.1+14.5 D 6 D five days. The IncAmerA m 22.11 -.BB +2.5 +9.9 +12.1+11.6 8 A A price of natural InvooAmA m 38.68 -.20 +2.7 +14.2 +17.3+14.0 C 6 C gas also ticked NewPerspA m38.20 -.12 +5.3 +8.6 +14.2+11.8 8 A 8 higher, rising for WAMutlnvA m41.82 -.15 +2.1 +13.6 +16.7+15.4 8 8 A the second time Dodge &Cox Income 13.88 -.61 +0.7 + 3 .7 +3.8 +5.0 C 6 B in the last IntlStk 43.94 -.19 +4.3 + 5.2 +12.2 +9.1 A A A Stock 182.55 -.56 +0.9 +11.4 +20.0+15.4 D A A seven days. Fidelity Contra 101. 8 7 - . 52 +5.0 +12.5 +17.3+15.9 C C B ContraK 101 . 81 -.52+5.0 +12.6 +17.5+16.1 C 8 B LowPriStk d 51.52 -.30 +2.5 +10.3 +16.4+15.4 D D C Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 74.84 -.34 +2.7 +16.5 +17.9+15.9 A 8 A FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.46 ... +2.4 +3.5 +9.2 +9.3 D A A IncomeA m 2. 4 3 . .. +2 . 5 + 4 . 1 + 9.7 +9.8 D A A Oakmark Intl I 24.79 -.20 +6.2 + 1 .2 +13.0+10.9 C A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 35 -.13+1.8 +13.0 +14.2+13.5 D E D RisDivB m 17 . 98 -.11+1.6 +12.2 +13.2+12.5 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 85 -.11+1.7 +12.2 +13.3+12.7 D E E SmMidValA m50.24 -.20 +3.1 +13.0 +16.9+13.4 B D E SmMidValB m42.21 -.17 +3.0 +12.1 +16.0+12.5 B D E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.1 7 - . 10 +1.1 +10.0 +15.1+13.4 E D C Exchange GrowStk 55.6 5 - . 21 +7.1 +13.5 +19.0+17.7 C A A The dollar HealthSci 75.6 7 - . 44+11.3+31.4 +37.1+29.2 A A A dipped Newlncome 9. 6 3 - .61+0.9 + 4 .4 + 2.8 +4.3 B C D modestly Vanguard 500Adml 195.68 89 +2.7 +16.5 +17.9+15.9 A 6 A against the 500lnv 195.64 89 +2.7 +16.4 +17.8+15.7 A 6 8 Japanese yen Capop 55.66 38 +4.4 +16.7 +24.5+16.5 8 A 8 and Canadian Eqlnc 31.66 13 +1.4 +14.0 +16.4+16.1 8 C A dollar but held IntlStkldxAdm 27.33 15 +5.1 +2.3 +6.7 NA 8 D relatively StratgcEq 33.66 12 +4.6 +15.1 +21.3+19.1 A A A steady against TgtRe2020 29.18 69 +2.5 +8.8 +10.1+10.0 A A A the euro and TgtRe2035 18.40 68 +3.1 +10.2 +12.7+11.8 A 8 8 British pound. Tgtet2025 16.98 66 +2.7 +9.3 +10.9+10.6 A 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.90 61 +0.7 +4.2 +2.5 +4.1 B D D Totlntl 16.34 69 +5.1 +2.3 +6.6 +5.8 8 D D TotStlAdm 53.17 23 +3.0 +15.1 +18.0+16.1 C 8 A TotStldx 53.14 23 +3.0 +14.9 +17.8+15.9 C 8 A USGro 31.66 15 +5.9 +16.3 +18.6+16.6 8 A 8 FAMILY
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)
.04 .07 .10
L
L
L L L L
L .30 L 1.46 T 2.60 T 3.56
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.59 2.56 +0.03 L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.28 4.27 +0.01 L Barclays USAggregate 2.20 2.12 +0.08 L PRIME FED Barclays US (B a sed on past 12-month results) Dtv yteld •1 9% D l v t dend $0 76 High Yield 5.88 5.88 .. . T RATE FUNDS MoodysAAACorpldx 3.70 3.64+0.06 *annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.92 1.84 +0.08 L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.01 2.93 +0.08 L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualpunds
PCT 2.83 2.4 2.17 Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.11 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 2.1 redemption fee.Source: Mornunastar.
-.0010
StoryStocks
Alibaba
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
'14 i '15
$50.52
Ford Motor
"
16,000
+ -.15
$16.26
Dow Jones industrials
........................ Close: 2,107.76
2,080' " ""'10 DAYS
ADP Employment Survey
250
.
""." "" "" " "" ""
18,320"
SstP 500
Wednesday, March 4, 20t5
GOLD ~ $1,204.00 ~
10-YR T-NOTE 2.12%
2,107.78
L T T L T T L T L L L L
L L
3.35 4.78 2.28 5.14 4.32 1.70 3.00
CLOSE PVS. 50.52 49.59 1.48 1.46 1.94 1.89 2.71 2.70 1.95 1.90
%CH. %YTD +1.88 -5.2 -9.3 +0.14 + 2.77 + 5 . 0 -6.1 +0.52 +2.77 +35.9
CLOSE PVS. 1204.00 1207.70 16.26 16.41 1189.60 1189.90 2.67 2.71 831.15 830.30
%CH. %YTD - 0.31 + 1 . 7 - 0.91 + 4 . 5 -0.03 -1.6 -1.38 -5.8 + 0.10 + 4 . 1
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -8.8 1.51 1.53 -1.56 Coffee (Ib) 1.26 1.35 -6.55 -24.2 -3.8 Corn (bu) 3.82 3.79 +0.86 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.65 - 1.39 + 5 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 294.40 299.50 -1.70 -11.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.16 1.25 -6.95 -16.9 Soybeans (bu) 10.09 10.11 -0.25 -1.0 Wheat(bu) 5.09 5.08 +0.15 -13.7 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5366 +.0001 +.01% 1.6659 Canadian Dollar 1.2 4 87 -.0053 -.42% 1.1082 USD per Euro 1.1178 -.0010 -.09% 1.3734 -.46 -.38% 101.43 JapaneseYen 119.69 Mexican Peso 14. 9930 -.0202 -.13% 13.3287 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9756 -.0232 -.58% 3.4898 Norwegian Krone 7 . 7135 +.0126 +.16% 6.0480 South African Rand 11.7624 -.0145 -.12% 10.9030 Swedish Krona 8.2 7 72 -.0634 -.77% 6.4776 Swiss Franc .9611 +.0015 +.16% . 8 834 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2784 -.0087 -.68% 1.1199 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2785 +.0046 +.07% 6.1464 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7548 -.0005 -.01% 7.7620 Indian Rupee 61.782 -.088 -.14% 62.045 Singapore Dollar 1.3628 -.0027 -.20% 1.2711 South KoreanWon 1 098.04 4 . 93 -.45% 1072.43 -.09 -.29% 30.33 Taiwan Dollar 31.33
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
BRIEFING Bend car builder to appear onTV Bend custom-car builder TheA-TeamRacing LLCwill be among those featured Sundayin a TVshow thatfollows a 2014 car-building competition at theSpecialty Equipment MarketAssociation annual show. A-Teamowner Gordon Aram entered a1978 Ford Mustang II heand his crew built from the tires up into the builders competition, the subject of "SEMA: Battle of the
Builders." Thecar took two years and$250,000 to build, he said. It placed in the top10 out of more than125 entries. The hourlong special follows three judgesas they narrow the field of 100 car builders to10. It's scheduled to air at 8 p.m. on theVelocity channel, which onBendBroadband is channel 553. — Bulletin staff report
en: o.
i n o me- rice ro
By Joseph Ditzler
County, ranked eighth on that
The Bulletin
list out of 276 metro areas
The Bend area dropped to 10th place nationally in
in both the second and third
December on the list of metro
Houseprices haveclim bed 28.51 percent in the Bend-Red- over year, prices were up 4.9
areas with the greatest annual increases in home prices, according to the Federal Hous-
ing Finance Agency. Housing prices grew by 11.25 percent in the area
from thefourth quarter2013 to the same period in 2014, according to an FHFA report
released Thursday. The Bend-Redmond Metropolitan Statistical Area, which
comprises all of Deschutes
quarters of 2014.
group reported. Overall, house prices in the U.S. rose 1.4 percent in the last three months of 2014, according to the FHFA. Year
Deschutes County added
Columbia ranked No. 1 with
• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.cem/bizcal
a 12.53 percent increase. Ver-
mont occupied the bottom, with a 2.03 percent decline
Department. In August, the
in house prices, the FHFA
mond area over five years,
percent.
according to the report. In Bend, the median price of single-family home increased in January to $322,000 after a seasonal dip to $290,000 in
"The key drivers of appreciation over the last few years
median price of a single-family home in Bend reached $325,000, according to Bea-
reported. The Merced, Cahfornra,
— low inventories of homes
con. Afterward, the pace of
available for sale and improvement in labor marketslikely played a role in driving up prices duringthe quarter,"
home sales in Bend slowed,
crease in house prices year over year of any metro area
accordingtothe same report.
in the nation at 14.84 percent.
Redmond experienced a simi-
The Macon, Georgia, MSA
lar trend. Prices increased in all but
occupied the bottom position with a 1.40 percent decline, the FHFA reported. — Reporter: 541-617-7815,
December, according to a Feb-
ruary report by the Beacon Appraisal Group. The median price in Redmond reached $218,000 in January, up from $189,000 the month before, the
FHFA Principal Economist Andrew Leventis stated in a
news release accompanying
two states, according to the FHFA report. Oregon ranked
the report.
11th in 2014 with a 6.74 per-
enevaau o H Ow, anxie iicon a e
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • SCORE free business workshop:Maximizing your marketing investment; free, registration required; 5:307:30 p.m.; DowntownBend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7080 orwww. scorecentraloregon.org. • Business Startup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class anddecide if running a business is for you; $29; registration required; 6-8 p.m.;COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW TrentonAve., Bend; 541-383-7290 or www. cocc.edu/sbdc • Project Management Fundamentals:Master the concepts needed toinitiate, plan, execute, monitor, control and closeanysize and type of project; class runs through May6; $225; registration required; 6-8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270 orwww. cocc.edu/continuinged THURSDAY • Coaching —Giving Ik ReceivingFeedback:Finetune important coaching and feedbackskills. Part of the Essential Leadership Series; $95; registration required; 8 a.m.-noon; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend;541-3837270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • FacebeekStrategy & Analytics ferBusiness: Learn to integrate Facebook into the marketing mixand discuss use ofFacebook analytics. Class runs through March12; $89, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270 orwww. cocc.edu/continuinged. • BeginningInDesign for Macintosh:Learn to use thedesignand layout program tocreate different documents, from single-pageads and fliers to multipagecolor publications. Class runs through March19; $99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus,2030 SE CollegeLoop,Redmond; 541-383-7270 orwww. cocc.edu/continuinged. • Video Editingwith Premier Elements:Learn basic editing skills, remove unwanted portions, add music, titles andmore. Class runs throughMarch 19; $99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.;Central Oregon Community College, Redmondcampus, 2030 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. FRIDAY • ConstructionContractors Board TestPreparation: Two-day coursethat satisfies the educational requirement to takethe test to become alicensed contractor in Oregon;$359, registration required; 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus,2030 SE CollegeLoop,Redmond; 541-383-7290, ccb@cocc. edu or www.cocc.edu/ccb.
cent gain. The District of
more than 3,000 jobs in 2014, the strongest gains in employment si nce 2006,according to the Oregon Employment
The new
McLaren 675 LT is
presented at the Geneva International Motor Showon
Tuesday, where European automak-
ers showcased
J I
their
STUDY
Bend is a
good place for women to own a business By Stephen Hamway The Bulletin
Bend is the one of the best places in the country for women to own their own
businesses, according to a recent study put together by the personal finance web-
many at the high end of the
enoughbusinesses to qualify for the study.
market.
NerdWallet looked at statistics from the 2013 U.S.
and latest models-
& KWL 7
jditzler@bendbulletin.com
site NerdWallet. The Bend-Redmond Metropolitan Statistical Area ranked 20th out of the 289 metropolitan areas that had
concepts
8
MSA saw the greatest in-
Laurent Cipriani i The Associated
Press
Census Bureau American Community Survey to determine eight factors that the website used to measure the success of wom-
en-ownedbusinesses and the overall business climate in each MSA.
By Jack Ewing New York Times News Service
GENEVA — Dieter Zetsche, the chief executive of Daimler,
began a meeting with reporters at the Geneva International
Motor Show on Tuesday by half-jokingly asking them not to spend more than half the
allotted time talking about Apple. It was an indication of how
much Silicon Valley has set its sights on the car industry and how companies such as Apple and Google have intruded on what could reasonably have been expectedto be on e ofthe
most cheerful industry gatherings in years. Passenger car sales in the
European Union have risen for 17 consecutive months, a sign that the industry is
emerging from abrutal slump. Cheaper gasoline has made driving more attractive, and
the decline of the euro against
'Ultra-high luXury' CarS —Looking to capitalize on the highly profitable trend of building track-only supercars, Aston Martin used the 2015Geneva International Motor Show to unveil the Vulcan. The front-engine, rear-wheel-drive Vulcan is madeentirely of carbon fiber and packs amassive 7.0-liter, V-12engine that makes more than 800 horsepower (exact power andperformance figures will be announced later). "A sports car for true sports car lovers, I believe theAston Martin Vulcan — andthe unique ownership program that sits behind it — sets a whole newstandard in the ultra-high luxury supercar class," Andy Palmer,Aston's CEO,said ahead of the debut. The Vulcan joins McLaren's P1GTR(also a Genevadebut) and Ferrari's FXX K — track cars as rare asthey areexpensive. Aston will build 24 of them, with a price tag of about $2.3 million each. For that money, buyers get the powerful engine mentioned above plus carbon ceramic disc brakes, asix-speed sequential gearbox, variable traction control and a fully adjustable suspension. Buyers can order the car in anycolor they like. They also get adetailed driver training program and car support at tracks around theworld, as well as seat time in other Aston Martins as buyers presumably work up thecourage to flog $2.3 million worth of machinery around aracetrack. Such programs give the makers of exotic autos additional testing opportunities as they usethecars and drivers as guinea pigs for features andtechnologies that might trickle down into their more common roadcars. — Los Angeles Times
the dollar and other major
currencies hasmade iteasier forEuropean manufacturers to compete in foreign markets. But there is also palpable nervousness among automak-
Zetsche and other auto
nated network of suppliers.
was good that Silicon Valley was showing an interest in the car business. "The convergence of auto-
which comprises all of De-
mobile technology with the tech world is a huge opportunity," he said during a meeting with a small group of reporters. Systems that take over much of the driving provide a new selling point and can improve safety.
schutes County, are owned
"I see it as only positive,"
Zetsche said. But, he added, "It's clear that new technol-
the second-highestpercentage of businesses with two
or more employees. The average was 12 percent, according to Sreeker Jasthi,
the author of the study.
The risk for automakers is that these technology shifts
Bend are generally able to growmore thanbusinesses
will provide openings for new
in other areas," Jasthi said.
competitors to steal a share of
Bend also ranked sixth in the number of total busi-
sales. The sector does not want to follow in the footsteps of PC makers, which have been
relegated to becoming mere platforms on which software
nesses per capita, with 13.3
businesses per 100people. This matched the larger trend ofsuccess forsmaller
developers run their wares.
metropolitan areas. Five of
Carmakers in Geneva said they did not rule out the
the list's top 20 metropolitan areas for women-owned
possibility that new compet-
businesses had more than 1 million people.
itors could emerge, and they acknowledged that some al-
nologies used to propel cars are in flux, even if electric cars
phone and a car. Cars take sevenyears or more to develop and bring to market, compared with 18months or so for a new
account for a sliver of the auto market. Software is playing an increasing role in helping
displace the established car
drivers navigate and avoid accidents. Within a few years,
itors seriously," Norbert Re-
smartphone. A vast amount
of engineering expertise is required to design a car that
cars will most likelybe able to drive themselves, at least
BMW, said. He continued: "Apple is a
in standard situations such as
very strongbrand," but, he
er upstarts could try to build
is safe as well as pleasant to drive. Auto manufacturing
entire vehicles.
also requires atightly coordi-
driving on highways. Zetsche said he thought it
said, "We know how cars are built."
by Silicon Valley. Apple and Google are using their domination of smartphone operating systems to take over car dashboards, elbowing aside the carmakers'proprietary systems. Someday, they or oth-
more than two employees. The Bend area tied for
"It shows that women-owned businesses in
between making a smart-
ers that the car industry could be next in line for disruption
by women, and 18.7 percent of thosebusinesses have
ogies can have a destructive quality."
executives here were quick to point out the huge differences
But it is clear that the tech-
More than 26percent of the businesses in the Bend-Redmond MSA,
"In general, I think we're
ready had, such as the electric
seeingplaces that are
carmaker Tesla. But they were skeptical that anyone would
smaller be more conducive
brands anytime soon. "We always take competithofer, the chief executive of
tobusiness growth," Jasthi sard. Bend was the highest-ranked MSA in Oregon. The others that made the list and their rankings are Portland,34, Eugene,61,
Medford, 95,and Salem, 184. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulletin.com
BANKRUPTCIES Chapter7 Filed Feb. 24 • Kelly K. Huskey, 2233 SW 29th St., Redmond • Wilbur T. and Jennifer L.Smith,P.O.Box 2608, La Pine • Isaiah L. Haywood, 20015 McClellan Road, Bend
• Karen D. Allen, P.O.Box 6112, Bend Filed Feb. 25 • Jennifer B. McCarthy, 61364 Franke Lane, Bend • Monica L. Leon, P.O. Box1285, La Pine Filed Feb. 26 • Diane E. Copeland, P.O.
Box1277, Prineville • James E. and Marsha B. Skogsbergh, 53107 Bridge Drive, La Pine • Beverly S. Bowers, 400 East A St., No. 8, Burns • Leonard T. Haaby, 60445 Zuni Road, Bend • Bradley L. Durr, 989 NE Snowberry St., Prineville
Filed Feb. 27 • Bryan C. S. Meeker, 61310 Parrell Road, No. 28, Bend • Nicholas J. Haleyand Heidi N. Ribble-Haley, 20064 Beth Ave. No. 1, Bend • Michael A. Johnson II and Samantha L.
Johnson,1930 NELotus Drive, No. D52, Bend • Mark S. Capps, P.O.Box 2339,Bend • Leroy A. Kissee Jr., 123Antler St. No. 2, Redmond • Ronald R. Koker, 12333 U.S. Highway 26 No. 43, Prineville
• Leslie L. Stewart, 49 SE Craven Road, Bend • Kevin Eby, 3005 NE Canoe Court Apt. 2, Bend • Trevor A. and Angela M. Coates, 56250 TreeDuck Road, Bend • James A. and Kris M. Brown, 20548 Gloucester Lane, Bend
Filed March 2 • Manuel R. Molina Jr., 2730 NE Ninth St., Redmond • Terri L. Wall, 719 SE Second St., Unit A, Bend • Robert L. and Cynthia K. Wall, 20781 St. George Court, Bend
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing Report, D5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
O< www.bendbuiietin.com/outdoors
Dedicated skiers go Uphill for powdel
SNOW REPORT For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts, seeE6
BRIEFING Hiker to talk about trail trip Long-distancehiker ShaneVonSchiempwil give a presentation at 7 p.m. March11about his trekalong the800-miie Oregon DesertTrail. The talkwill takeplace at the OregonNatural DesertAssociation's Bend
By Brett French The Billings (Mont.) Gazette
The sunrises and views are beautiful, the sweat production substantial.
Butforasm allcadreof hard-core skiers, there's no
Photos by Andy Tullis I The Bulletin
office, located at 50 NW
Bond Street,Suite 4.The event is free.Doorswill open at6:30p.m. Lastsummer,Von Schiemp, ofPortland, becameoneof thefirst to complete thenewOregon DesertTrail, a project of
' l!.'!'
i (! l' l! .
better way to start the day then by hrkmg 2t/z mdes
features a pedal
up Red Lodge Mountain ski area while gaining
assist with more power without the throttle from Bend Electric Bikes.
,',i,',
'
' "
A new electric mountain bike that
,'s I
2,400 vertical feet. Most
are climbing early in the morning, before the lifts start operation, to be the first to make turns in fresh powder snow. "I'm always on the quest to find some untracked
ONDA that winds from
outside Bend through Hart MountainNational AntelopeRefuge,Steens Mountain Wildernessand the OwyheeCanyoniands, to nearlythe Idahoborder. The journeytook Von Schiemp throughredrock canyons,overhigh alpine landscapesand across sagebrushplains. He will sharehis 34 days on thetrail, through what remains awild, largely undiscoveredpart of Oregon. Space is limited for the presentation. Registration is available at oregondeserttraii. eventbrite.com. Formore information, visit www. onda.org.
turns," said Paul Otsu, 32,
who works in the ski hill's marketing department. Last year, Otsu and a
friend trekked up the hill 52 days in a row, often stepping into their skis at 5:30
in the morning. Uphill skiing at resorts has become more popular across the United States in
0-
recent years thanks to the
increasinglybetter gear built for what's known as alpine touring: lighter skis, bindings that allow skiers to free their heel for the uphill climb and then lock it down
to ski, and lightweightboots that allow flex at the ankle
for ciimbing and the ability to stiffen for skiing. When Red Lodge busi-
Redmond tohost outdoors show
nessman Jim Smedsrud
The Central Oregon Sportsmen's Showwil take placeThursday through Sundayat the DeschutesCounty Fair8 Expo Center inRedmond. The showoffersa chance for outdoors enthusiasts to discover cutting-edgesporting and outdoor equipment, learn exciting andinnovative techniquesand meet the industry's most renownedexperts. Hoursare noonto 8 p.m. ThursdayandFriday, 10 a.m. to 8p.m. Saturday, and10a.m. to 4p.m. Sunday. Admission is $10for adults and $5for ages6 to16; free to children 5 and younger. For more information, visit www.thesportshows. com/shows/ central-oregon/.
he was doing it on telemark
— Bulletin steffepo/ts
TRAIL UPDATE With ChrisSabo Despite themuchweicomed snowfall lastweekend, splendor inthe snow was short-lived.Thesnow thatfell was iowdensity, dryand fluffy, andpretty much vaporizedunderthe Central Oregonsun. DutchmanFiatcontinues to bethe onlyfunctionai sno-parkfor snowmobiies, andasfar as sno-parks inthe Cascade range, Dutchmanisthe onlyone withreasonable snowaccess. Access tosnowmobile trails aroundEikLake Resort is marginal. Bythe weekend,however,there couldbe lots ofbarepavement. Visitors shouldcall the resortahead oftime (541-480-7378) toget updated conditions. WanogaSnowmobile, Wanoga Sno-piay,Meissner, Edison,Skyiiner, Upper ThreeCreeksLake, Ten Mile,SixMile and Crescent Lake/Junction sno-parks have inadequate snowconditions with 60 percentto100 percent bareground. SeeTrails /D5
started hiking up Red Lodge Mountain in 1987, gear — bindings where the heel is always free. Now 62, he's thinking he might finally switch to the newer alpine touring gear. Smedsrud said he began hiking the mountain as a way to extend the ski sea-
son — traveling uphill before the lifts opened in the early winter and after they
closed in the spring. Back in the '80s, Smeds-
terling McCord approached the steep hill on the full-
rud said he had the mountain pretty much to himself
suspension mountain bike, surely about to slow down.
along with a few other locals. Now, he'll sometimes
But then something strange happened.
see eight to 10 fellow climbers on the two to three
He seemed to gain speed, not lose it, as the bike easily took him to
mornings a week that he ventures out before work. "I'm starting to think it's
thetop ofthegrade on thepaved road.
crowded," he joked. Jeff Schmidt, mountain
McCord was riding a Haibike Exduro FS RX, one of
severalmodels ofpedal-assist electric mountain bikes that have hit the U.S. market
MARK
a throttle is that the ped-
of power." Bend Electric Bikes has a
MORICAL
al-assist incorporates torque
few models of pedal-assist
sensors to calculate when the rider needs some extra power.
mountain bikes that range in pricefrom $3,000 to $5,000.
electric bikes and those with
in just the past year.
"It knows when to kick
Expensive, to be sure, but the
assist offers some help. "It wants to feel a little bit
in from torque sensors,"
price is similar to some topend nonelectric mountain
of torque, and then it will
McCord says. "It's calculat-
bikes. Most of the pedal-as-
without having to use a throt-
kick in a little bit, unless
tle — without even having
you're going over 20 miles an hour," says McCord, owner of
ing three things: speed of the wheel, pressure on the
sist mountain bikes weigh 45 to 50 pounds, according to Sterling, where as regular mountain bikes typically weigh 25 to 35 pounds. See Electric/D2
Although electric bikes are
nothing new, the pedal assist allows riders motorized help to think about it. The bike seems to almost think for
them. Once the rider is struggling up a hill, the electric
Bend Electric Bikes.
The fundamental difference between pedal-assist
cranks and speed on the
cranks. It's taking those three variables and then spitting out a given amount
o ur ame'S ie wi a e I wasn't raised on venison,
but I had a doctor prescribe it GARY for me when I was a teenager. "Gary, you'll do better if you eat wild game," the doctor said. Try taking that prescription to a pharmacy. wanted to like it because our My first mule deer I took grocery bill (perceived) was with an arrow. The second greatly reduced by a surplus fell to a bolt-action 243. We of neatly wrapped, horhad both in mone-free, butcher-papered HUNTING the freezer at packages stenciled with fancy the same time, words such as backstrap, tenand I noticed a difference in derloin and flank steak. taste between the one that Our daughters grew up
~5
LE WI S
manager, said there was some grumbling by a few skiers this year when the ski area enacted restrictions on climbers — now
posted on the ski area's website. Under the new guidelines, no uphill travel is allowed on days when the ski patrol is performing avalanche control or when groomers are especially busy, out of safety concerns.
See Powder/D2
i S aSe
because they were particularly favored friends. We learned the better we
took care of meat in the field, the better it tasted at home.
Our palates grew more refined. This hit me again last October when I picked up our freshly butchered meat and thawed the first steaks. This
buck had eaten garbanzo beans for most of its life. It
had to be the best mule deer meat I have ever tasted. It cut like beef but went wild on the
ate mountain browse and the
on deer, and when we were
tongue. I found myself eating
other that subsisted on sage, ceanothus and bitterbrush.
lucky, they feasted on elk. Pronghorn antelope were
it without salt or marinade, just to savor the conversion of
Deer meat turned out to
our favorite. When there was
Central Oregon minerals and
be an acquired taste. If I was going to hunt it, I was going
the meat of a Wyoming ante-
Deschutes basin waters to le-
lope doe in the freezer, if we
to eat it and like it. My wife
shared it with guests, it was
gumes, to pure, lean, protein. SeeGame/D5
'i
Gary Lewis /For The Bulletin
Two young San Juan Island blacktaiis. These diminutive deer make a living on wild roses, blackberries and kelp. Note the seaweed
hanging from the antlers.
D2 THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
•
•
Submit your best work at Q beottbolletio.com/reatterphotos. 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 Oregon outdoors. 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.
/il
.g i
P~
~t " . .
l
'r
b
y y
s
r
ICE PAINTING ON THE METOLIUS While on a walk along the Metolius River at Camp Sherman, Byron Dudley captured this beautiful ice formation.
Powder
(after the ski area had closed), to learn some backcountry by noon the hill was getting skills," he said. "I can climb it shredded." in about an hour."
Continued from D1 "I think we've reached
The U.S. Ski Mountaineerlinks to policies for some ski
the Beartooth Mountains to
resorts. Red Lodge's uphill skiing
reach the Cooke City area-
hasn't reached the level of pop-
and variety of backcountry skiing and s nowmobiling. That's a full-day trip, though, and also requires a snowmobile for transport. So having Red Lodge Mountain practically out the back door is a good way to stay fit in prepa-
ularity seen in Whitefish, aleas, such as Moonlight though Otsu said he has seen Basin and Big Sky Resort, more and more Billings skiers allow no uphill skiers. making the trip in the eight Bridger Bowl allows up- years he's been climbing. hillers only outside of its For him, he said the hill was regular season of opera- a good introduction to backtion. Whitefish Mountain, country skiing t echniques Some Montana ski ar-
in northwestern Montana, has two designated routes
without the added fear of set-
ting off avalanches — a major concern for backcountry ski-
and allows use all day. "They have a lot of peo-
ers and a common cause of
winter skier fatalities. "It was a nice safety net
ple who skin there," Smeds-
rud said, referring to the skinlike material attached to skis so they can be used Andy Tuas/The Bulletin
Sterling McCord, owner of Bend Electric Bikes, rides a new electric mountain bike that features a
Continued from D1 He adds that these electric
"It's a really smooth ramp-
rider can adjust the amount of
up, so it's not a burnout ma-
power. Levels of pedal assist include eco, tour, sport and turbo. A rider might be just fine on the flats in eco or tour settings, but a steep hill could require a ramp up to sport or turbo. The more power riders use, the less range they will
chine," McCord says of the Haibike. "It's just a nice, el-
pedal-assist mountain bikes have been popular for many years in Europe, but they arrived in this country only re-
egant, sophisticated bike. It
cently because manufacturers
bicycle." The Haibike features a
were unsure about the U.S.
definitely helps people stay in the spirit of human-powered augmented. This is still a
t h o s e l e ngthier
excursions. "It's really great exercise, because it works your upper and lower body," Smedsrud said. "The bonus is you can ski down.
••
TheBul l e tm Itaaaazaer.
Bosch motor on the middle
that it is a motorized vehicle, and therefore it is prohibited on most of the singletrack
use them for commuting but like the mountain-bike frame
wrist. I think that's great."
geometry.
trails in Central Oregon and
O ther electric b i kes a r e
al-assist mountain bikes will help introduce more outdoor
•
. •
McCord b elieves p ed-
made for road, commuting enthusiasts to the sport of McCord notes the endless and/or cargo. mountain biking. He also sees "It's technical down there," their technology as a way for miles of dirt roads and ATV trails on which the bikes can McCord says of the electric less-fit cyclists to keep pace be ridden in our area. motor technology. " It is i n - with more advanced cyclists. "Does it get more people on McCord describes the ped- spiring when you open up al-assist mountain bikes as any electric motor how simple bikes more often and is that "mellow and l o w-impact." they are, though, when you a good thing'? Yes." McCord The Haibike reaches only 19.7 compare them to any internal says. "People at different levmph as its top speed, but other combustion or a steam." els could ride together more such bikes, such as the Focus The Haibike and others like frequently." Thron Impulse Speed, reach it include buttons near the — Reporter: 541-383-0318, 28 mph. handlebars with which the mmoricalibendbulletin.com throughout the country. But
ration fo r
get on the battery.
"If you just ask for a little partofthe frame. Bosch sells bit of boost, you can go a reCord says. "Those frames are its motor, battery and console ally long ways," McCord exmade specifically for that. I to leading bike manufactur- plains. "If you ask for a whole think it was essentially just ers. On some electric bikes, bunch, you go less (before the the bean counters saying the the motors are located on the battery dies). You've got to be market's not there. And then, hub, rather than on the frame. helping a little bit on a bike finally, it's like, OK, the marMcCord says he has sold like this. You'll be using your ket's there. And they dove in." about 20 pedal-assist moun- core and all those balance A downside to the ped- tain bikes, most of those with things, but you also have to a l-assist mountain b ik e i s the hub motor, to cyclists who move your feet, not just your market for them. "It's a big investment," Mc-
known for its heavy snowfall
Arts 5 Entertainment
to climb uphill without sliding back. "When it snowed 6 to 8 inches in early May
pedal assist.
Electric
Since then, he's expanded
ing Association's website has outside of Red Lodge Mouna page listing uphill policies or tain, often traveling around
a happy medium withour folks," Schmidt said. "It's gone really smoothly, everyone understands," Otsu agreed. "We're just psyched they still allow it."
'Half.PriceOllsrends March SSsswsbsite for promocodesand restrictions.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
Bam Nort west a o er a en, wate By Brian J. Cantwell• The Seattle Times
SEATTLEolks in snow-buried Boston might have taken to heart Punxsutawney Phil's Groundhog Day prediction of six more weeks of winter. In the Pacific Northwest? We say "groundhog, t
shmoundhog."
C
/„ss
It's hard to believe it's not spring outside. With 5 percent of the usual snowpack in the Olympic
Steve Ringman/The Seattle Times
Mountains this winter, along with light snowpack
Hamamelis mollis, commonly
almost everywhere else, it's tempting to head for
called Chinese witch hazel, grows at the Witt Winter Gar-
den as part of the Washington
the hills.
Park Arboretum in Seattle.
If you're equipped and ex- lands and look for early buds perienced for it, go. Enjoy. But and uncurling ferns in this if a walk in the park is more pocket of unexpected nature your speed, don't be fooledjust east of bustling downit's still winter up there. Many town Bellevue. Don't miss the people bagged the peak of Ravine Experience, a '/s-mile Mount Pilchuck last week- nature trail crossing a deep end — a rare experience in ravine via a 150-foot suspenFebruary — but it was still icy sion bridge. Plenty of spring and snowy up top, and some birds here, too; bring your field climbers wore sneakers. If guide. 12001 Main St., Bellevyou're caught unprepared, the ue; Free; bellevuebotanical.org nights are very long and very • Kruckeberg Botanic Garcold. den: Look for early blooms But you can find early-sea- (wild currant coming on son surprises without going quickly) while you pick out high: native Northwest plants for your garden (many plants are Garden walks for sale) at this shaded and • Washington Park Arbore- woodsy four-acre reserve in tum: The Witt Winter Garden has its expected witch hazel
• Franklin Falls: Snuggled up beneath the Interstate 90 freeway just a slushb all's-throw w est
time of year. Not this March.
It's pretty much snow-free, and after several consecutive
years of trail work (thank you, WTA volunteers), the trail is in very good condition, safe for young and old. This is the South fork of the Snoqualmie River, falling about 135 feet in three tiers, though only the final 70-foot cataract can be seen from the trail. Alpen-
tal's melting-snow loss is the waterfall-lover's gain. It's just
Shoreline. Now a city park, it's
the collection of retired Uniand camellias in bloom among versity of Washington botany the arboretum's 230 acres edg- professor Arthur Kruckeberg ing Lake Washington just east and his late wife, Maureen, of the Montlake District. "But we a lso have early
2miles, round-trip, with 400
feet of upward climb. Northwest Forest Pass required; I.usa.gov/1L9Zrdy
botanists and horticulturists who spent more than 50 years
A daffodil drive
buds of azalea and rhododen- adding to the gardens surdrons, and some hellebores rounding their home. 20312 that are early," says facilities
15th Ave. NW, Shoreline. Free;
of Sno-
qualmie Pass, this hike is usually a snowshoe trip this
The Skagit Valley is known Mike Siegel /The Seattle Times
for trumpeter swans that visit
Visitors check out the middle falls at Wallace Falls State Park, near Gold Bar, Washington. A 2.9-mile trail in winter, and you'll likely see
coordinator Bryan Pilking- kruckeberg.org passes nine falls on the Wallace River. ton. "And I also had a report of buds on the flowering cher- Waterfall hikes ries. Of course, we're all really High freezing levels mean Woody Trail takes you past a wa.gov/289/Wallace-Falls. worried about what happens early snowmelt, and that fu- total of nine falls as the Wal• Murhut Falls: It was Washwhen winter comes back and riously fuels waterfalls all lace River drops 800 feet in ington Trails Association's these things are caught out." al ound us. less than a half-mile. The hike Hike of the Week recently (Go soon.) • Wallace Falls: At the heart takes you through old-growth because it's an easy, relative2300 Arboretum Drive E., of a 4,735-acre state park near coniferous forests, and if you ly unknown hike to a pretty Seattle; Free; depts.washing- Gold Bar, this is one of the stop at the Lower and Mid- Olympic Peninsula falls. The ton.edu/uwbg/gardens/wpa. Puget Sound region's water- dle Falls viewpoints (making nearby Duckabush River was shtml fall medalists, with an excel- for a shorter outing), the ele- floodinghomes near Brinnon • Bellevue Botanical Gar- lent trail to get you there. vation gain isn't prohibitive two weeks ago, so the gush den: Roam through 53 acres The most visible is an im- for the Sunday hiker. 14503 factor in the area likely reof cultivated garden, restored pressive 265-foot w aterfall, Wallace Falls Road, Gold Bar; mains high. woodlands and natural wet- but the 2.9-mile (one-way) Discover Pass required; parks. The destination is a 130-foot
hundredsin area farm fields. Get a bliss fix when the big white birds stretch their long
plunging waterfall reached in necks and wings to fly over just less a mile, with a climb you while serenading Mount of only 250 feet to reach the Baker with t h eir s i gnature tiered falls at 1,050-feet ele- haunting honk. vation. Take Grandma and And there's a bonus this the kids; just hold small or year: the start of blooming infirm hands during the final daffodil fields. Car stop, photo stretch of trail, which has a op. drop-off on one side. As warm The sun was coaxing the weather progresses, watch for first flowers to open when I pink-flowering wild rhodies. drove through last week. No pass required; See l.usa. For the bloom map, see tugov/1hk6wbN lips.com/bloommap.
Aw oenewwor awaits 6 aciervisitors uring winter mont s By Erin Madison
turn into destinations for recre-
Plan your trip:
Great Falls(Mont.) Tribune
ationsists instead. Hiking trails G LACIER N ATI O N A L also offer great snowshoeing PARK, Mont. — When visit- and skiing opportunities. ing Glacier National Park in Winter can be a great time
Glacier's website gives some ideas for where to snowshoe or cross-country ski. Visit nps.gov/glac/ planyourvisit/crosscountryskiing.htm Visitors are also encouraged to call the park for the latest snow conditions and other information. 406-
the dead of winter, it's hard to
to see wildlife in the parks or believe it's the same area that's to spot their tracks. usually bustling with tourists Park intern Rachel Zott leads in the summer. snowshoe hikes on the week-
Traffic jams are replaced
ends and works with school
s n ow-covered r o ads. groups during the week. She Camera-toting tourists are often sees beavers during the
with
sparse, and the stores and
hike, as well as ducks. "We always see golden eyes summer crowds are boarded and buffleheads," she said. up and drifted in. Not a single Recently a group saw an othotel in the park is open. ter eating a fish. Glacier, however, never closCarr almost always sees es, and those willing to ven- tracks, including those of lynx ture into the park in the winter and mountain lion, on her Glawill find an experience com- cier outings. pletely different from a sumOnce, she spotted a wolf
888-7800
restaurants that attract the
mer visit.
"If you haven't been to Gla-
cier in the winter, you're miss-
The entrance fee in thewinter is reduced to $15. that covers safety and what to
expect when camping in the winter.
Backcountry camping at-
really in solitude, and it's just gorgeous."
cier in the winter.
the same numbers as in the
"There's snowshoeing and summer. "They don't fill up by any cross-country skiing throughout the park," Germann said. means," Germann said of the Nearly all the roads inside two open campgrounds. Glacier dose in the winter and Backcountry camping is
weather changes so rapidly." Visitors who aren't camping also need to be prepared for changing weather. "Come prepared," Germann satd. Food, water, extra layers
and good footwear are all important.
Visitors also need to be aware of avalanche danger in the park. A winter trip to Glacier requires more planning than a summer trip. It also requires a little more self-sufficiency, since services are very limited.
tracts skiers and ice climbers,
Struggling
dangers, but in t h e w i nter-
to hear?
time there's a lot more to think about," he said.
Camping
For the truly hardy, campCarr r a r ely s e e s o t h er ing is an option in Glacier in groups, and when she does, the winter. they're usually not headed to Auto camping is available at the same place as her group. the Apgar Picnic Area and St. "That's the beauty of going Mary Campground. "It's p r i mitive camping," up there versus going to a (ski) resort," she said. Germann said. Carr likes to cross-country There's no running water ski and backcountry ski in or otherservices atthe campGlacier. She also occasionally grounds in the winter. Howsnowshoes there. ever, camping in the winter is Snowshoeing and skiing free, and people do take adare popular activities in Gla- vantage of it, although not in
weather. In th e w i nter, the
However, it can be an inas well as people who really credible experience. don't know what they're getIt is a spectacular winter ting themselves into, McKeon wonderland," Germann said. "It is just beautiful. The stillsard. McKeon often talks people ness is inspiring." out of camping in the winter when it's clear they are inexperienced. A winter camping trip is no small undertaking. "In thesummer there are
near Marias Pass. "That was just wild," she sald.
ing out because it's so special," Her ski group came upon park spokeswoman Denise a goat kill with wolf tracks Germann said. around it and continued farApril Carr of Shelby visits ther before stopping for lunch. Glacier almost every weekend After they got their skis off, year round. they heard a strange noise. Glacier, of course, is spec- Looking behind them, they tacular any time of year, but saw a howling wolf. "He was just loud and big," there's something special about winter. Carr said. "We got our skis on "My favorite time is winter," really quickly and took off." Carr said. "You're out there
"You just don't have the
luxury of daylight and time," McKeon said. "On every permit, I put a warning for severe
Camping in the summer is much more forgiving. In the Matt Volz/The Associated Press
Call for your
winter, if you get wet or cold,
Glacier National Park never closes, and those willing to venture
it can be a very dangerous
into the park in the winter will find an experience completely different from a summer visit.
situation
HEARINGTEST. also free in th e w i nter, al-
though a permit is required. Brian McKeon, supervisor of Glacier's backcountry permit office, estimates that Gla-
cier issues about 40 permits each winter. In the summer, they issue several thousand.
On theweekend, you might be sharing the million-acre park with one other camping group. Campers can apply for winter camping permits up to seven days in advance. " We can d o
it o ver the
"If you went during the phone," McKeon said. week, you'd probably be the only person in the backcoun- Safety first try in the whole park," McKePermit applicants are reon sBld. quired to watch a video online
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
UrDOORS CYCLING CENTRAL OREGON500+ BICYCLE RIDE:June 3-7; five days of classic Central Oregon road rides; 100-mile and 100-kilometer ride options each day; rides include Mt. Bachelor loop, Crooked River Canyon, East Lake, Smith Rock and McKenzie Pass; one day is $75 and all five days is $325; a benefit for the MBSEF cycling program; to register, visit www.mbsef.org and search under the "events" tab.
EQUESTRIAN SPRING TUNEUPCLINIC: At Pilato Ranch, 70955 Holmes 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; 541-9615727;kathyebarnes@gmail.com; truhorsemanship.com.
FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASS CLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.;
E1VD
meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeach month at6 p.m.; 50 SW Bond St., Bend, Suite 4; 541-306-4509, deschutestu@ hotmail.com; www.deschutes. tu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:A group of fly-anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesdayofeach month; location TBA; 541-306-4509 or
bendcastingclub©gmail.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERS CLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic8 Recreation Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m.;meets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org. DETROITLAKE FISHING DERBY: May15-17at Detroit Lake; 6a.m. to 4 p.m. each day; $15 for adults, $8 for children; adult grand prize is a
Email events at least 10 days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.
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 CENTRAL OREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION:MeetsW ednesdays at 6:30 p.m.; next meetings are March4,11,18,25; VFWHall, Redmond; 541-447-2804 or facebook.com at RMEFCentral
BEND CHAPTEROREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATIONANNUAL BANQUET:March 21, at the Riverhouse Convention Center in Bend; doors open at 4 p.m., dinner at 5:30 p.m.; dinner packages range from $45 to $250; includes raffles, games, and auctions to benefit local wildlife habitat projects and youth education events; 541-3306218; www.ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OF THE OREGONHUNTERS ASSOCIATION:7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTER OF THEOREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION:7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFW Hall.
MISCELLANEOUS
THE BENDCHAPTER OF THE OREGONHUNTERS ASSOCIATION:7 p.m.; meets the secondWednesday ofeach month; KingBuffet,Bend;ohabend.webs.
2015 CENTRALOREGON SPORTSMEN'S SHOW:M arch5-8 at the Deschutes County Fair8 Expo Center in Redmond; discover cutting-edge sporting and outdoor equipment, learn exciting and innovative techniques, and meet the industry's most renowned experts; $10 for adults and $5 for ages 6 to 16; www.thesportshows.
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com/shows/cen tral-oregon/.
Oregon.
SHOOTING HIGH DESERTFRIENDS OF NRA:Meets every Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at Strawhat Pizza in Redmond through April1; annual fundraising banquet will be March 28 at the Riverhouse Convention Center; like us on Facebookat High Desert Friends of NRA for more information. COSSA KIDS: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; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy action shooting club; second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-3188199,www.pinemountainposse. 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.hrp-sass. com.
SNOW SPORTS MOONLIGHT BSTARLIGHT SNOWSHOETOURS: March 6, 13, 7 p.m.; snowshoe by the light of the moon; $70; Wanderlust Tours, 61535 S. Hwy 97, Suite13, Bend; www.visitbend.com. FULL MOON XCSKI:March 7; moonlight cross-country ski outing at Meissner or Swampy sno-parks; depart from Pine Mountain at 7:30 p.m.; bring food, water, headlamp and a few dollars for grooming donation box; www. pinemountainsports.com. JOHN CRAIG SKI TOUR:March 7; Oregon Nordic Club hosts this 6.6-mile nordic trek from the east gate of the McKenzie Pass to the Dee Wright Observatory at the pass summit; a noncompetitive groomed ski tour; new.onc.org/ event/john-craig-ski-tour/. GREAT NORDEENXCSKI AND FAT BIKE RACE:March14,7:30a.m.; the13th Annual Great Nordeen XC Ski and Fat Bike Race at Mt. Bachelor; www.visitbend.com.
Washingtonman huntswil li e with hi en cameras By Tom Paulu Longview (Washd Daily News
The woods are Cliff Wheeler's photography studio, and the animals that live there are
his unassuming subjects. Over theyears, Wheeler has set out hidden cameras
and recorded thousands of images of wildlife: deer, elk, bear, cougar, beaver, mink, eaglesand other species. The animalsin some of his photos
Pj+, C~
t
*
' t%
are so well-posed that it looks
as if hecrouched in a blind to get a perfectly framed shot. Other photos show just the
heador rear le gs ofa critter trotting by. Most of the animals appear oblivious to the
camera, though one bear stuck its nose into the camera for what looked like a selfie.
A lifelong hobby Wheeler, who just turned
71, hasbeen getting surreptitious photosof animals in the woods since he was a teenag-
er. He and his brothers used to rig a mousetrap to astring that would release the shutter
on a Kodak Brownie camera. Of course,it would get only one shot. These days, he uses
Roger Werth/Longview(Wash.) Daily News
customized digital cameras Using motion sensors, Cliff Wheeler sets up cameras in the woods near Toutle River in Washington. with motion sensors. Despite years of perfecting hls hobby.Wheeler manytimes comes up empty-handed. Wheeler grew up in the Toutle, Washington, area and worked inthe woods for Wey- take a break from trail cam- riverbank. "This is an otter his territory. "Once in a while erhaeuser for y e a rs be fore era photography last fall be- landing here,"he said. "They I see a few cameras in the moving to a job at the com- cause Weyerhaeuser leased come up and play."A pile woods," he said. "I'll leave pany's Longview, Washing- the land he uses to a group of of scat attested to the otter them a n o t e: 'You should ton, mill. He is intimately ac- hunters. visits. put your camera in a better "I was hoping to get an ot- place.'" quainted with the network of Passing a creek, he said, "I logging roads,valleys, ridges have apicture of a mink here." ter or something crossing the Years of walking thewoods and marshes in th e b a c k- He led the way off the logging trail," he said, though none and recording animals with woods near his Tower Road road and down a mossy glen obliged. his cameras havehelped him home. toward the Toutle River. "It's Continuing his tour, Wheel- enhancehis understanding of "This is like my backyard," so beautiful out here.... In er mentioned, "There's an ea- wildlife. "When I first started, there he said. summer, it's so p eacefuL I glenest in that tree over there. One recent day, Wheeler couldjust walk this all day." The eagle usedto follow me." weren't many bears on this hiked in to check four cam-
eras he had set out several No guarantees weeks earlier near the south Wheeler checked a camside of the Toutle River. He
doesn't mind the walking, despite knee replacement sur-
gery a few years ago. "I feel pretty good,"he said. It takes about an hour of
hiking past a closed gate to reach Wheeler's cameras. With their black or ca mou-
flaged cases, they would be easy to miss them if youdidn't know their locations. " We can't pu t t h e m o n
the roads because someone would steal a camera,"
Wheeler said. He also had to
side of t he ri v er," he s aid.
insidethe camera body so the
checkedhad recorded an an-
Now there are, which he can tell from photos and observing scat. "Bears eat a lot of fawns," he said. "I go through their droppings and find a lot
Cyber-Shots can take photos
imal, or at least part of one.
"I got the back end of a deer," en, mossy-covered log a few he said. "If they're going fast, feet from the riverbank. He you're going to miss them.... I opened the waterproof cam- washoping for a bird. "Thepercentage of pictures era case and inspected the Sony Cybershot point-and- you get that are usable is low," shoot. "No animals," he said. he said. "It's just hit and miss." Another riverside camera He previously got a nice was pointed at a beaver den. "I have pictures of the pups photo at that lo cation o f a two-point buck deer looking coming out ofthere last year," over its shoulder, seemingly he said. This time it captured posing."That's what you look an adult beaver and a deer for," he said. nose. "If a deer comesthrough, A few hundred yards upstream, he pa used b y t h e they know it's there," he said. "They know if anything is different."
"An elk will lick on it and bump it," he added. "You can fool them for the first shot.
That's the one that looks naturaL" O n th e
herons in here — and ducks,"
he said. One time, acouple of hikers spottedhiscameras, stopped and waved to the lens. In addition to h is ro u tes
close to home, Wheeler has alsosetcam erasnear Castle Lake.
eras stay hidden andcharged.
reflex cameras, such as the Canon Rebel or Nikon D100. He favors the Canon because its shutter is qu ieter. With
instantaneously. Outdoors stores sell many
larger external battery packs,
models of trail cameras with built-in motion sensors, but
for months, though Wheel-
of hooves." He rarely sees a
Wheeler said he gets better
long to see if he'd gotten a
bear during his walks in the
quality with his customized sharp shot of an inquisitive
those camera can be left out er wouldn't want to wait that
ones. furry critter. He sets the camera for "I'll set them up for mink maximum image quality and and otter," he said. said, even before he checks the film speedsetting (known his cameras. The lack of deer as ASA or ISO) to 400. He and elk is aclue that a big car- also turns the flash on (the nivoreis nearby. flash doesn't seem to bother "I usually get a picture of animals as much as thenoise TOUCHMARK SlNCE 1980 the cougars coming though of the shutter, he said). here in spring to mate," he Wheelermakes sure that said. It's a few hundred yards the viewer on the camera from where people live on back is turned off so it doesn't Tower Road. drain the battery. Though he di d n 't g e t After everything is set up any decent photos that day, on a tree or stump, "Then you Wheelerwasn't complaining. have toremember to turn the "I just like being out in the camera on," he said. woods and studying the aniWheeler fi x es a pla s tic •3 mals," he said. plate overthe waterproof case This time of year, Wheeler to provide better protection uses point-and-shoot Sony from the rain. See us for retractable Cyber-Shot digital cameras, Sometimes he cov e rs awnings, exterior solar which have fixedlenses.With the ca se w i t h mo s s fo r screens, shade structures. no zoom, the lens fits better camouflage. Sun I/I/hen you wantit, inside a waterproof container. Before leaving the camera, shade ehen Jouneedit. His Cyb e r-Shots a re he holds up another camera 4.1-megapixel ca meras, a in front of it and takes a quick relatively low number these photo to get an estimation of days. But, Wheeler said, "The the field of coverage. lighting is the most importHe leaves the cameras out a O >N DEMA N D woods, however.
"If a cougar comesthrough, I'll know immediately," he
•
h ike b ack o ut,
Wheeler passeda seriesof ponds. "There's a lot of blue
Cliff Wheeler goes through numerous steps to make sure his cam-
usesphone cordstowirethem directly to the shutter circuit
The third camera Wheeler
era he had pointed at a fall-
Roger Werth i Longview (Wash.) Daily News
Courtesy Cliff Wheeler
ABOVE IMAGES: Two examples of shots Cliff Wheeler was able to capture through his hidden camera.
A snapshot of wildlife
ISI I Q
ant thing," not the number of
pixels.
Few other people share Wheeler buys motion senWheeler's hobby, at least in sors from Radio Shack and
V CI
few weeks at a time. In the summer, when the weather is b e tter, Wheeler
541-389-9983
also rigs larger single-lens
www.shadeondemand.com
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Petition oo to en rt
Pu etSoun orca By Erlc Barker The (Lewiston, Ida.) Tribune
time feeding. Noise and
prey sampling and the reli n t erference atively high abundance of
Another group is taking
from recreational, commer-
Columbia
aim at the lower Snake River dams, this time as a vehi-
cial and military crafts can also change the feeding be-
salmon, it is likely that the
cle torecover southern resi- havior of t h e w h a les and dent killer whales that spend make them malnourished. "The three main t h reats much of the year in Washington's Puget Sound. are probably working toMembers of t h e S o u t h- gether to cause the problem," ern Resident Ki ller W h a le Barre said.
an important food source for the southern resident kill-
Chinook Salmon I n i t iative are pushing a petition that
calls for breaching the dams, something that salmon advocates have long desired. According to the petition posted on change.org, "chinook salmon runs originating in the Columbia/Snake River watershed are the singular most i mportant food
Hope for change Those pushing the breaching initiative say removing the dams would dramatically
boost Snake River spring chinook and doing that would provide more food for killer whales, which would go a long way to addressing all three threats.
R i v e r ch i n o ok
Columbia River salmon are er whales. Exactly how im-
portant, however, is not yet known."
Increasing chinook abundance off the coast is likely to benefit the w h ales. But scientists, Hanson said, don't
know the degree to which rising salmon numbers will benefit whales. That is because
many other predators, such as seals and sea lions, also feed on chinook.
"The benefits from increases in salmon may therefore
"The southern resident kill- be distributed across many er whales are starving," said other s almon p r edators, Sharon Grace of Friday Har- with only marginal specific agree breaching the dams bor and coordinator for the returns to the southern reswould greatly benefit threatSouthern Killer Whale Chi- ident population," he said. "Investigating which salmon ened and endangered Snake nook Salmon Initiative. River salmon and steelhead. Scientists have established recovery actions will have But the federal government the whales are often in poor the greatest specific benefit chose instead to invest in fish shape from lack of f ood. to southern r esident k i ller passage improvements at the During the summer months whales is a high priority area dams and a mix o f h abitat ,when they frequent the Puget for future research." source for the killer whales' survivaL" Most f i sheries scientists
restoration, hatchery reform
m a nagement the San Juan Islands and
Deborah Giles, science adviser for the Southern Resi-
a n d c o m m ercial Vancouver Island, they feed
dent Killer Whale Chinook
and t ighter of sport
fishing.
A species threatened The Puget Sound popu-
Sound area and seas around
primarily on chinook from the Fraser River in Canada.
Salmon Initiative, is certain
During the winter months,
whales would have no trouble exploiting an increase in
they travel up and down the
Snake River chinook abun-
of prey, the accumulation of toxic chemicals in their bod-
dance that would follow dam C a lifornia, breaching. "They are highly efficient where scientists believe they also feed on chinook. But predators," she said. "The they don't have good infor- fact that there is more fish
ies and
mation on w hich stocks of
lation of killer whales, also
West Coast between British
known as orcas, face three Columbia and distinct threats: a shortage i n t erference fr om
boat traffic and noise. All of
chinook the whales target or
the threats are intertwined, said Lynne Barre, a marine
how important fish from the
out there means there is more
fish for the whales. They can fend for themselves. They are Snake and Columbia rivers apex predators." biologist with the protective are to the whales. Giles is also confident that resources division of the NaB rad Hanson, a m a r i n e the work Hanson and others t ional Oceanic and A t m o - biologist with NOAA Fisher- are doing will close the data spheric Administration Fish- ies, is working to learn more gaps regarding the imporeries in Seattle. about the diet of killer whales tance of Snake River salmon When whales don't have when they spend time off the to orcas. "I think ultimately that is enough to eat, they rely on West Coast, or what he calls the fat reserves in their blub- the outer coast. He is on a exactly what the data is going ber. But that is the same place research ship following the to show, there is no doubt in toxic chemicals are stored, whales off the coast of Or- my mind," she said. "I don't such as the now banned in- egon and Washington and think there is doubt in anysecticide DDT, PCBs found picking up both remnants of body's mind. It's clear to evin industrial coolants and salmon the whales feed on eryone who researches these lubricants and PBDEs found and fecal samples. By analyz- guys that the Columbia River in flame retardants. Whales ing the DNA from the sam- chinook are very, very imacquire the toxins as they eat ples, the research team can portant, and knowing what fish, which in turn acquire d etermine the origin of t h e the runs in the Snake River the chemicals when they feed salmon. used to be, it's almost by deon other fish and organisms Lat month, the whales were fault that it has to be an imlower in the food chain. When those fat r eserves
near the mouth of the Colum-
portant river."
bia, and Hanson responded
are tapped because of food
to questions via email from
Grace said the group has collected about 10,500 sig-
shortages, the chemicals enter the blood stream of the
his ship. "Based on
whales andcan make them ill. Whales suffering from toxins have a more difficult
natures on the petition and
i n f ormation plans on collecting many about where portions of the more before presenting it to population spend their time members of Congress and on the outer coast, limited President Barack Obama.
D5
FISHING REPORT ANTELOPEFLATRESERVOIR: USFS road 17 is passable leading to the reservoir. The reservoir isn't full but there is enough water to launch a boat from the ramp. The water is very dirty, and fishing has been slow. CRESCENTLAKE:Opento fishing all year. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM:The flows have been maintained at around 80 cfs for a few days now. Fishing for trout and whitefish has been fair. Trout might be getting to spawn with the warmer than usual 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. CULTUSLAKE:Opento fishing all year. DAVIS LAKE:Opento fishing all year. With the recent warm weather, Davis Lake is accessible. Low water has affected boat ramp access. Restricted to flyfishing only with barbless hooks. FALL RIVER:Angers 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 flyfishing only with barbless hooks. HOOD RIVER:Bright winter steelhead are entering the lower Hood. Anglers should watch for good flows after high water events. Fishing will continue to get better as winter progresses. HOSMERLAKE:Vehicle access to lakeclosed via Cascade Lakes Highway. Lake might be frozen during colder weather patterns. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK: Opportunities for rainbow and brown trout in the upper Deschutes and Crooked River arms are good. The Metolius Arm opened to fishing on Sunday. 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 be good this year.
FLY-TYING CORNER
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Martin's Monster, tied by Qulntln McCoy.
A few years ago atCampbell Lake, I tied on adragonfly nymph. It was an afternoon whenthe adults were onthe water in swarms. Although the trout would take the dry, they really went for the nymph, and it has becomeone of my favorite flies to fish. Darrel Martin created Martin's Monster for days like that. Usea floating line or a slow-sink "slime" line and run fluorocarbon a tippet. The trout might strike to stun the bugthen comebackaround to grab it. It often pays to ignore the first bump andset the hook on the second. Tie Martin's Monster with brown thread on aNo.6-8 long shankhook.Putaslightbendintheshank.Forthebody,usewoven chenille (a blend of olives or other combos). For the legs, use two bunches of knotted rooster pheasant fibers. Tie in black bead chain for the eyesandfinish with a dubbed head. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin 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:Vehicle access to lakeclosedviaCascade Lakes Highway. Open to fishing all year. Lake might be frozen during colder weather patterns. METOLIUS RIVER:Anglers report fair 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:Open to fishing all year. With the recent warm weather, North Twin is accessible. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCODAM: Angling is restricted
Anglers areremindedthere are
Trails Contlnued from D1 The higher-elevationtrails for backcountry skiers are indecent to good, springlike conditions, likely through theweekend. The biggest concern this week for area trails is the freezeand thaw cycle creating very muddy conditions on mid- andlower-elevation summertrails. Until last weekend, most summertrails were dry and firm, but thewarmer temperatures andmelting snow have set themback.
People areurged to avoid using muddytrails as this canseverely damage thetrail tread and create ruts. Don't go aroundthe mud, making the trail wider anddamaging vegetation. Summer trails farther east of town and aroundthe Redmond and Sisters areadid not receive as much precipitation andshould be in better condition. Theseinclude trails at Maston Butte, Smith Rock, Peterson Ridge,Black Butte and the BadlandsWilderness. The North Millican Trail System should be ingood condition, but
to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day with an 8-inch minimum length. Trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead and must be released unharmed. OCHOCO RESERVOIR:Fishing has been good for trout that average14 to16 inches. The water level is high enough that the boat ramp is usable. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR:Fishing for trout has been slow. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Open all year to angling. Two trout per day, 8 inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to juvenile anglers 17-years-old and younger. SUTTLE LAKE:Opento fishing all
year. TAYLOR LAKE(WASCO COUNTY): The lake has been stocked, and there should be a good opportunity to catch a limit of trout.
be advised it might havesomeareas open tomotorized vehicles. The road toandfrom Tumalo Falls is closed toall access until further notice while crews install a pipeline. Hikersandbikers who want to get to andfrom Tumalo Falls must usethe Tumalo Creek Trail out of Skyliner Sno-park or the MrazekandFarewell trails out of Shevlin Park, but only if trail conditions permit (not excessively muddy). Beadvised the footbridge on theTumalo Creek Trail is underrepair. Detoursigns are posted.
Game Continued from D1 B y contrast, we h ave a Washington mule deer in the freezer, too. This buck was
1
Q@ RI
L
taken in drought conditions on wheat fields on the edge of the Palouse. It was eating clo-
r s sIFaa I s a i s a
Ben 's est e at c u
ver in a field of triticale when I made the stalk on it. With a
diet of winter wheat, rye, some clover and not enough water, the buck's meat was tame with hints of rye. Serve it next to a
bitterbrush buck and there'd be no doubt which one was on
the fork. A few years ago, I met up with a young buck way out in the sagebrush. Expecting the sharp tang of sage and
offers more for members...
GaryLewis/ For The Bulletin
A mule deer living well In summer on forest forbs and browse.
Purshia tridentata, instead, I
tasted alfalfa — a ranch buck. When I looked at the map, I figured it out. That buck
then we ate the mule deer.
had been pushed off private ground when the guys in hunter orange showed up. Miles away on public land, up there on the shoulder of the ridge, I'd spotted him.
blacktail varies from habitat to habitat. With the profusion
The diet of a
C olumbia
of browse and forbs in Western Oregon and Washington, a deer might eat poison oak buds, blackberries, rose hips,
research. Best of all, we like axis deer.These spotted ungulates
with the lyrical, swept-back three-point antlers come to
us from the Orient by way of Hawaii. I can't speak to the axis transplanted to Texas, but
the candied grasses, melons other plants — browses, forbs, and macadamias of Molokai, went down wrapped in bacon grasses, mosses and seeds. Maui and Lanai put a flavor with notes of alfalfa and sug- The meat is milder than mule in the meat that is mild, wild gestions of sage. Other times deer and a better place to start and sweet. We serve it with it went in a m a rinade. Our for the person who wants to pineapple, and it finds its way favorite marinade is made of learn to love venison. into free-form marinades and Bragg's Amino Acids, balsamSitka blacktail deer is better alongside mango salsas. It ic vinegar, olive oil, beef broth, still. Up in the islands of the goes away way too fast. garlic and salt and pepper. Queen Charlottes, on Prince of The old doctor was right. Once after a trip to South Wales and on Kodiak, the deer Two years ago, I ran into him Carolina I shipped two coolers eat mild browse, get rains off at a sportsman's show. I asked home full of acorn-fed white- the Pacific and spend winters about his health. He said tail deer. There had been a on and off the beaches where he was still taking his own good crop of acorns that year, they make a living on kelp. advice. and the deer were picky. They Seaweed. To me, this is the — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV" and ate the mast of particular trees finest deer meat indigenous to and ignored the bitter acorns our continent. authorof"JohnNosler— Going on the ground around others. I haven't eaten San Juan Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's The meat was sweet, tender Island blacktails, but I hope Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon"and other and nutty. In those years, a to one day, and I expect them That deer we cut to halfinch steaks. Sometimes it
deer would last us about two months. We ate the whitetails,
wildflowers and d ozens of
to be just as good as Sitka
blacktails. It requires more
titles. Contact Gary at www. GaryLewisoutdoors.com.
more weekly youth and family activities in addition to... 4 pools, Pilates, 25 yoga classes aweek, over 40 cardto/strength group exercise classes a week, cycling, cardio, tennis, basketball, racquetball, private women's only fitness center, and exceptional service from Bend's Best Professionals.
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
ason saacs oun is aceasana or TV SPOTLIGHT
for."
is —peoplewho are amazing-
"Dign
10 p.m. Thursdays, USA
ly honest to me and share their
The father of two girls, 12
hopes and fears, I respect that and I get totry that on screen."
and 8,Isaacs says that nurtur-
ing his family has moved to the top of his obsessions. The most wasn't easy, though Isaacs difficult thing in his life now managed to make a living at is managing it all. "Trying to But getting that on screen
By Luaine Lee Tribune News Service
BEVERLY H I L LS, C a lif. — A suit from Savile Row, a briefcasefullofbriefs,a mem-
bership in a posh, private club were never enough for actor Ja-
it. He found himself deep into
find great work with interest-
alcohol and drugs until he couldn't keep calm and carry on. "I ground to a halt," he says while shaking his head.
ing people, be a good dad, be a good husband, plan for the future but live for the present — all the things that everyone
"It was either change some-
son Isaacs.
He studied law for three years and had an older brother who was a lawyer, but he gave it all up — for what'? "I'm running across the rooftops in Jerusalem and fighting and having sex with Anne Heche and crying and watching the collision of different sects of Christianity, and I'm engaging with passion and faith and history — and find me a lawyer that does that on a Monday morning," he says in a noisy coffee bar. Isaacs is doing all that for his role in "Dig," an international thriller making its premiere
Ronen Akerman / USA Network via Tribune News Service
Jason Issscs as Peter Connelly and Alison Sudol as Emma Wilson
find themselves uncovering anancient conspiracy in Jerusalem in USA Network's series "Dig,n making its premiere Thursday.
drunk when he stumbled into trying to drink my way into the his first audition. place. I had somewhere to go "I went to university and was where we started telling stories surrounded where everybody about ourselves, and we had sounded like Hugh Grant and this instant intimacy." Elizabeth Hurley. I was born in It wasn't so much the per-
on USA Network on Thurs- Liverpool, and that was not the day. Isaacs plays an FBI agent world I grew up in." investigating the murder of a He felt out of place. "About a young archeologist only to dis- week into university I was badcover an ancient and invidious ly drunk, as we all were trying conspiracy. to fit in, and I saw a sign saying, The star, who's best-known 'Can you do a northern accent.' "I went into this room, and I
forming that he loved, but the
camaraderiehe felt there,he says. "It was more just being in a room with people and having these incredibly honest discussions. That hasn't ended for me. I still find the research ev-
as the villainous Lucius Malfoy from the "Harry Potter" mov-
was so drunk I was completely
erybit as interesting as the performance. The doors that open
ies,also from projects such as
uninhibited, and I was cast in
to you as an actor — whether
go besidesstudents'rooms and
hospice nurses, or whatever it
"Awake," "Case Histories" and "The Patriot," didn't i ntend to be an actor. In fact, he was
a play. So I had somewhere to it's a policeman or shadowing go every night, somewhere to politicians or drug dealers or
else struggles with in modern thing or die. I was just not able life," he says. "Try not to live in the past to function anymore. I was always working, but the in- or the future but try to plan tellect was dead. And Emma, sensibly. I'm terrible at all of my wife, saw that — because I it. I'm a terrible human being was very good at hiding things. and hopelessly dysfunctional, And I'm in one of those few but the place I'm really happy professions — acting, music, and comfortable is on the set. I don't know what the others When I get to be and deconare — where you can be com- struct and reconstruct another pletely out of your head all the human being and their dilemtime and nobody cares. If you mas, then I'm in my comfort produce the goods, it's fine. zone," he says. "It's a bit like sports. I'm a "Iwasworkingverysuccessfully allthetime.Ijust couldn't crazy, crazy obsessive tennis function anymore. I had to player — doesn't mean I'm change. Also, if I was going to good, but I'm crazy about it. have a family, something had The reason I love it is if you're to change. I was just not going not right there, in the moment, quick enough." when the ball's coming and He says it wasn't his wife you're not focused on it, forget who cured him. "Nobody who it. You might as well go home. evergets soberorclean doesit You get to do that in acting. for another person," he says. That might be one of the things "If they do, we're lost. It I love about it. You get to be doesn't happen. From my lim- right there inside a person's ited experience, I'm no expert, head with all their thoughts nobody does it for anybody and feelings and hopes, and I else. She saw something in me can put mine on hold. It's when that I certainly didn't see in I switch me back on that life myself, that was worth waiting gets difficult."
Hus an 'ssecrettextin iscovere
MOVIE TIMESTOQAY • There may tte an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • iitovie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby: Iwas recently told by
But if he isn't, then for your own a friend that my husband had sent sake, get counseling on your own her texts of an inappropriate and because you may need to talk to sexual nature. My husband didn't someone who isn't emotionally in-
you, Mom, and I know I should
deny that he sent them and refused to tell me what he sent.
volved in your turmoil. It will make
wants to know why, all you have
you stronger. Dear Abby:Every time my new
to do is tell her you know she loves you, but you think what she's doing
This woman is envious of my husband and jealous of our rela- wife and I visit my mom or she tionship. She often visits us, my mother comments about how scratches my back, she'd love to have a rubs my arm, rests DEP,R man like mine, etc. her hand on my inMy concern is, he ner thigh, tickles me, admits he texted her, hugs me or touches but I d o n' t u n derme any chance she stand why. My intuition tells me she gets. I don't reciprocate or validate
Aggy
have mentioned this before, but when you do that, it makes me un-
comfortable, so please stop." If she
is excessive.
Dear Abby:We go out to eat occasionally with another couple I'll call Jack and Jill. Most restaurants
aroundhereofferfreerefillson soft drinks or self-serve. Jack will order water (free) to drink while Jill orders a soda. They then take their empty glasses and refill them with
told me the truth, but I want to trust
the touching, but I don't discourage
my husband. Now I'm suspicious. I always
it, either. She has been this way for They see nothing wrong with the so long that I've just gotten used practice. We think it's stealing, and
a colorless soft drink.
want to check his phone and an-
to it. I never noticed how creepy
we are embarrassed. What are your
alyze every aspect of our life and it was until my wife mentioned marriage. I feel this has put a huge something. wedge between us, and I no lonThe problem is, how do I address ger feel the same love and passion this with my mother? I don't want for him. Please help. What do I do to throw my wife under the bus as now? Is my marriage over? the reason for the discussion, but I — Suspicious fn Michigan am not sure how believable it will Dear Suspici ous: Your marriage be if I suddenly say after 30-plus
thoughts, and how should we react when this is done in front of us'? Latelywe have been making excuses to avoid going out with them.
might not be over, but it could be
years that it bothers me. I want the
Have you spoken to them about it'?
in jeopardy. Considering what has message that I feel she should stop been going on, you have every right touching me at every opportunity to be concerned. to come from me. How do I have Marriage counseling might help this conversation? What can I say? — No Means No you and your husband get back on track if he's willing to go with you. Dear No Means No:Say, "I love
If you have,then because their behavior makes you uncomfortable, you are justified in not going out
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015:Thisyearyou often experience highs and lows with your sense of security and overall well-being. You'll stabilize come fall, when you finally will feel as if you haveevolved to a point of comfort. At that point, you'll enter a new life and luck cycle. The firstyear is one of the luckiest. If you are single, ask yourself what type of person 8tsfs show ths kfsd you want to relate of tfsy yos'8 hsvs to. Know that you ** * * * D ynamic have an excellent ** * * p ositive chance to manifest ** * Average tha t desire. If you ** So-so are attached, the two of you will opt * Difficult forachangein lifestyle that could affectyour relationship and your home. This change will be positive. VIRGO can be very critical.
ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * Avoid a controlling person at all costs — you will be a lot happier if you do. Trust your inner voice. You might surprise some of your friends with a sudden change. Tryto see pasttheobvious,and allowyour innate creativity to emerge. Tonight: Celebrate the moment.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * Set aside some personal time for
yourself by signing upfor ayogaclass or participating in a different type of relaxing activity. You are only human, andyou need downtime. Someoneseems to tighten the valve where you might expect money to flow. Tonight: Be alittle naughty.
— Eating With Cheapskates Dear E.W.C.:I agree that it's steal-
ing. Jack and Jill are taking something to which they are not entitled.
with them. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
that is not always comfortable. A friend could surprise you with an unexpected revelation. Check out an offer, but be realistic. Tonight: Out till the wee hours.
CANCER (Juns21-July 22) ** * * You might not be sure about an associat e orlovedonewho seems todemand total control. You know that cannot
happen.Yourimagination will carry you past a problem to the right solution. Avoid power plays involving money. Tonight: Follow the music.
LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * * You might need tomore be observant of a situation that you view asbeing changeable. Perhaps one of the reasons you are drawn to this matter is that you like the constant chaos — it keepsyour life exciting. Learn to let go of your needfor control. Tonight: Make ityour treat.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You might notice a change in your self-confidence. Youseem to have difficulty letting someone elseassume that he orshe is right. You will defythis person and perhaps create a difficult situation for others, unintentionally. Tonight: The world is your oyster.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22)
** * Youmight want to step backand observe others' behavior. Express your caring in a waythat someone else can GEMINI (May21-June20) receive before you makeyour exit. Try not ** * * Use the morning for any heartfelt to get involved in a conflict. You could feel matters. The rest of the day, you might as if someone is pushing you. Tonight: Not want to do some thinking abouta situation to be found.
** * * Defer to a friend, especially if you see a difficult situation emerging. Whether you completely agree with this person is not important right now; you will be able to discuss your feelings at a later point. Be careful with your funds. Tonight: Where
people are. SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You could be questioning which way to go with a difficult but necessary person in your life. You might be able to come up with a better solution than this person, but don't count on him or her agreeing with you. Tonight: Do not try to control another person.
GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * * Tap into your creativity, and walk away from a need to control situations. You will be happier if others agree on a solution because they want to and not becausetheyfeltcoerced byyou.Know that this could result in some insecurity. Tonight: Choose afavorite stressbuster.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Fsb.18) ** * * * You might decide that it is a good idea to pursue adifferent course from the one you currently are on. Use your diplomacy skills to let someone know where an idea could use sometightening. Tonight: Vanish to a favorite spot with a favorite person.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Others will be determined to take the lead. Let them, and you will be able to go off and indulge in some fun activities with a friend. Remember that you don't always need to be at the center of everything that occurs. Tonight: Let others make the first move. © King Features Syndicate
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3284 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 8:45, 9:50 • BIRDMAN(R)12:05, 3:05, 6:10, 9:20 • THE DROP 80X:DON'TTHROW THEM AWAY. BRING THEM HERE (no MPAArating) 7 • THE DUFF(PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:15, 6:20, 9:15 • FIFTY SHADESOFGREY (R) noon, 3, 7,10 • FOCUS(R) 12:30, 3:15, 6:30, 9:05 • FOCUS IMAX(R) 1:15, 4, 7:25, 10:20 • HOT TUBTIME MACHINE2 (R) 12:45, 3:20, 7:35, 10:40 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-l3) 2:55, 6:40, 9:25 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-l3) 12:25, 6:55 • JUPITERASCENDING 3-D(PG-l3)3:40,9:50 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)1,3:55,7:30, 10:25 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) 1:10, 4:15, 7:45, 10:05 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)12:35, 3:50, 7:10, 10:10 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:45a.m. • THE SPONGE808 MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:55 a.m. • THE SPONGE808 MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER 3-D (PG) 2:55,6,9 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 12:15, 3:10, 6:15, 9:10 • THETHEORYOFEVERYTHING (PG-13) 12:10, 3:30, 6:50,9:55 • WHIPLASH(R)12:20, 3:35, IO:30 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. r
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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m.on 2,9,"The Middle" — Jerry Van Dyke returns as Frankie's (Patricia Heaton) father in the new episode "Flirting With Disaster," seeking Mike's (Neil Flynn) help in avoiding losing his driver's license. Frankie comes to regret possibly having gotten a bit too friendly with Axl's (Charlie McDermott) friend (guest star Matthew Atkinson), especially after she talks about it. Sue (Eden Sher) isn't pleased to have to bring Brick (Atticus Shaffer) to a science-fiction convention. 8 p.m. on CW, "Arrow"Laurel (Katie Cassidy) might be on a dangerous path in trying to
assume Sara's place,andArsenal and Diggle (Colton Haynes, David Ramsey) caution her against possibly getting hurtor worse — in "Midnight City." Staying out of trouble isn't easy for her though, when Brick
(guest star Vinnie Jones) stages a mass kidnapping of local politicians. Felicity (Emily Bett Rickards) is surprised by Ray's (Brandon Routh) willingness to help fight Brick.
9 p.m. on 6, "Criminal Minds" —Series co-star Thomas Gibson turns director again with the new episode "Lockdown," which puts his character Hotch and the other members of the BAUon the search for the killers of two guards at a Texasmaximum-security prison. They look within the facility for the suspect ... or suspects, since they come to believe there could be more than one. William Ragsdale ("Justified") guest stars. Joe Mantegna, Shemar Moore and Jennifer Love Hewitt also star. 10 p.m. on USA, "Suits" — In the season finale, "Not Just a Pretty Face," after Sean Cahill
(guest star Neal McDonough) fails to link his corrupt boss to shady tycoon Charles Forstman (guest star Eric Roberts), Harvey (Gabriel Macht) revisits his own uneasy past to put Forstman and disgraced former U.S. Attorney Eric Woodall (Zeljko
Ivanek) away.Elsewhere,
Donna (Sarah Rafferty) helps Louis (Rick Hoffman), and Mike and Rachel (Patrick J. Adams, Meghan Markle) confront their different roles. Gina Torres also stars. © Zap2it
Qec(~
WINDOW TREATS Ttt1 SW10th • Redmond • (541) NS-8616 www,redmondwindawtreats,com
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THEH088IT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 5:30 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PG) 2:30 • THE WEDDINGRINGER(R) 9:15 • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian. t
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • The "Spaghetti liVestem" will screen at 630 p.m. (doors open at 6 p.m) andincludes anall-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I
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2 Locationsin Bend Main Center 2150NEStudioRd,Ssite10 NWX 2863 NorthwestCrossingDr,suiteio
541-389-9252 sylvanlbendbroadband.com
ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • FOCUS (R)4:45, 7 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)6:30 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) 4:30, 6:30 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)4:15, 7:05 • THE SPONGE808 MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4
EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • FOCUS (R)6:30 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG- l3) 4:15 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)6 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 4: I5 • THETHEORY OF EVERYTHING (PG-13)6 • WHIPLASH(R) 6:30 i ) ~ i
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • BIRDMAN(R) 6:50 • FIFTYSHADES OF GREY (R)4:I0,7 • FOCUS (R)4:50, 7:10 • HOTTUBTIMEMACHINE2(R) 7: I5 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)4 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) 5:20, 7:25 • THE SPONGE808 MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:50 •
C om p l e m e n t s
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n r s h o m e . c o m
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Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt.,541-416-1014 • FOCUS (R)6:15 • MCFARLAND,USA(Upstairs — PG) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
EPIT
S ECT I O Pl Blemtshed pmdncts that work llne.
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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Nhtch us grow arNtchantte! 541-se2-e223 johnsonbrottrerstv.com
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Marlin lever-action .357 $475. Old Mari caution when pur- carbine, lin leyer-action .32 chasing products or • special rifle, $550. services from out of I 541-420-4183 ~ the area. Sending ~ ' cash, checks, o r ' Smith & Wesson i credit i n f ormation M&P15-22 with may be subjected to 4x16x44 BSA Cats i FRAUD. For more information about an t Eye scope, Fieldline Tactical carrying advertiser, you may I t call t h e Ore g ont case. Excellent condition, was used in ' State Atto r ney ' National Finals i General's O f f i ce Rodeo for target Consumer Protec- • competition. Comes tion h o t line a t i with original sights i 1-877-877-9392. and 25-round magazine. $850 obo. t TheBulletin t
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Serving Cenrrai Oregon sincetgm
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Antiques & Collectibles
541-410-0841
Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items & upscale fly rods. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746
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Chainsaw-carved Momma and Baby Bear. Momma is over 5-ft tall; baby is 23" tall. May consider selling separately; both $850. Can be seen in Prineville. Call 541-447-7820
Get your business
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2nd annual indoor ga- 73 If new, $5,500; 246 rage sale at Eagle NowReducedto $980! Guns, Hunting Crest Resort, a por541-312-2393 tion of proceeds do& Fishing nated to Ronald Mc- D ESK: 5 5n high, 2 9 " Donald House. Sat. wide, 19 n deep, $75. Bend local pays CASH!! March 7, 10-3, Eagle 541-382-3487 for firearms & ammo. Crest Con v ention 541-526-0617 Center, 1522 C line For Sale 2 chairs. Falls Rd, Redmond. CASH!! An oversized dark For Guns, Ammo & brown recliner for Reloading Supplies Mar. 7th-8th, 9-3 p.m. $85; and a small 541-408-6900. gray Stress-Less reHouse and contents must go! Bowflex, ex- cliner with foot stool, ercise machine, fur- like new. $450. IOI IT IlliS'tllS niture, dishes, odds & 541-350-0381 ends. 2115 NE 6th St. please call between 8&8 only. DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SOM E SELL TURN THE PAGE G ENERATE FOR $500 OR EXCITEMENT in your For More Ads LESS? neighborhood! Plan a The Bulletin Non-commercial garage sale and don't advertisers may forget to advertise in place an ad classified! 541-385-5809. with our 292 "QUICK CASH Sales Other Areas Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded SPECIAL" glass doors & mirror 1 week3lines 12 Large Sale in S ilver at back, 3 cupboards oi' Lake! Moving, every- below. Exc. c o nd. ea eks ea! ~ thing must go! Guns, $400. 541-318-8797 Ad must ammo, reloading supinclude price of plies, knives, antiques in ieiiamoigaoo n~ of all kinds including Sleep Comfort Twin or less, or multiple XL adjustable bed antique ammo, sewitems whosetotal with vibrator, with or ing machine, 1930s does not exceed without mattress 8 bulk Chevron oil tank, $500. foundation, clean, early 1900s kids toys, needs new air pump. and other household Call Classifieds at $400 cash goods this weekend, 541-385-5809 541-382-7072 or F ri. thru Sun. 9 - 5 , www.bendbulletin.com 541-410-5165 follow signs.
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NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, BarkTurfSoil.com 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has PROMPT DELIVERY been limited to mod541N89-9663 els which have been certified by the Or316 egon Department of For newspaper Irrigation Equipment Environmental Qualdelivery, call the ity (DEQ) and the fedDept. at FOR SALE eral E n v ironmental Circulation Tumalo Irrigation Protection A g e n cy To541-385-5800 place an ad, call Water (EPA) as having met 541-385-5809 $5,000/acre smoke emission stanor email Call 541-419-4440 dards. A cer t ified classified@bendbulletin.com w oodstove may b e 325 identified by its certifi- The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincetgte cation label, which is Hay, Grain 8 Feed permanently attached to the stove. The BulPrompt Delivery First Quality, 2nd cutting letin will not know- Rock, Sand & Gravel grass hay, no rain, ingly accept advertis- Multiple Colors, Sizes barn stored, $225/ton. ing for the sale of Instant Landscaping Co. Call 541-549-3831 541-389-9663 uncertified Patterson Ranch, Sisters woodstoves. 270 Premium orchard grass, Lost & Found barn stored no rain, 267 1st 8 2nd cutting. Del. Fuel & Wood Found: 1 (one) ring on avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 1/28/15, area of Mary or 541-948-7010. Rose Place & Watt Way. WHEN BUYING Please call 541-848-1657 Quality orchard mixed FIREWOOD... to identify. grass hay, $190-$235 To avoid fraud, ton, small bales. Deliv. Found stamp collection avail.541-280-7781 The Bulletin book in Sunriver area. betwn Bend/Redmond recommends payCall Sunriver police to ment for Firewood identify. 541-593-3911 Wheat Straw for Sale. only upon delivery Also, weaner pigs. and inspection. 541-546-617'I • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' REMEMBER: If you • Receipts should have lost an animal, Lookfng for your include name, don't forget to check next employee? phone, price and The Humane Society Place a Bulletin kind of wood Bend help wanted ad purchased. 541-382-3537 • Firewood ads today and Redmond MUST include reach over 541-923-0882 species & cost per 60,000 readers Madras cord to better serve each week. 541-475-6889 our customers. Your classified ad Prineville will also 541-447-7178 The Bulletin appear on or Craft Cats Servrng Cendef Oregonsince ela bendbuuetin.com 541-389-8420.
with an ad in Antiques Wanted: 255 The Bulletin's Tools, furniture, marbles, Computers sports equipment, beer "Call A Service cans, pre-'40s B/W phoProfessional" tography. 541-389-1578 T HE B U LLETIN r e quires computer adDirectory The Bulletin reserves vertisers with multiple the right to publish all ad schedules or those 262 ads from The Bulletin selling multiple sysCommercial/Office newspaper onto The tems/ software, to disBulletin Internet web- close the name of the Equipment & Fixtures site. business or the term "dealer" in their ads. The Bulletin Private party advertisServing Central Oregon sincetgte ers are defined as those who sell one 242 computer. Exercise Equipment What are you 5-drawer Hon Power Plate machine, Industries looking for? exercises for musclecommercial file strengthening, stretching, You'll find it in cabinet, Add A Picture! massage & relaxation, 43" wide, 66" high. Reach thousands of readers! 2 dark blue swivel/rocker $500. 541-504-3869 The Bulletin Classifieds Originally $1000; Call 541-385-5809 arm chairs, exc cond, asking$450. The Bulletin Classiueds $20 / pair. 541-548-6642 245 541-948-1824 541-385-5809 Labrador mix, chocolate A1 Washers8 Dryers Golf Equipment male, free to good home. Full warranty, FREE 257 265 541-977-7439 after 2pm delivery! Also, used CHECKYOUR AD Musical Instruments Good classified adstell Building Materials All year Dependable washers/dryers wanted. Malemute/Husky pups, the essential facts in an 541-280-7355 Firewood: Seasoned; blue-eyed males. Can 2006 Breedlove SC22 Cedar siding 5" T8G interesting Manner. Write Lodgepole, split, del, send photos. $500 & w/Fishman p/u; 1964 43x20', 63x1 6', 10x12' B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 from the readers view -not up. 541-977-6150. Gretsch Classic; practice $750. 541-306-0677 or 2 cords for $365. the seller's. Convert the amp. 541-647-1510 Multi-cord discounts! facts into benefits. Show La Pine Habitat on the first day it runs Drum Kits:Specializing 541-420-3484. the reader howthe item will to make sure it isn cor- in High Qualtty New & RESTORE help them insomeway. Building Supply Resale rect. nSpellcheck and Used Drum Sets! This Look at: human errors do ocQuality at Armoire Kevin, 541-420-2323 advertising tip LOW PRICES Bendhomes.com cur. If this happens to Upright DresserThe Drum Shop brought to you by your ad, please con52684 Hwy 97 for Complete Listings of Custom quality, excel541-536-3234 tact us ASAP so that lent condition, crafted Area Real Estate for Sale The Bulletin For Sale: corrections and any Open to the public . SeNlngCnrnal Oregon sllne tge walnut 8 swirly walnut Piano Technician adjustments can be burl, 2 upper shelves, 2 tools & supplies, made to your ad. cedar-lined drawers plus 290 with rolls of piano 541 -385-5809 3 other drawers (2 partiSales Redmond Area tioned for socks). Size: The Bulletin Classified string, $725. nH x36 eWx16 e D.
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www.rightwayranch.wor Wanted- paying cash dpress.com for Hi-fi audio & stu- Aussie/Mini puppy Blue Merle male, 7 wks, dio equip. Mclntosh, $320 cash. J BL, Marantz, D y541-678-7599 naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Donate deposit bottles/ Call 541-261-1808 cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for WANTEDwood dressferal cat spay/neuter. SAINT BERNARDS ers; dead washers. T railer a t Jak e ' s Brandy & Bruno's 6 541-420-5640 Diner, Hwy 2 0 E; beautifuf full-mask pup208 Petco in Redmond; pies, 1 male, 3 females, donate M-F at Smith born Jan. 11; ready for Pets & Supplies Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, adoption 3/8 (photo taken 2/27). Dew claws reBend; or CRAFT in moved, 1st shots. $500. The Bulletin recomTumalo. Can pick up For appointment, call mends extra caution large amts, 389-8420. 541-548-3520 when purc h as- www.craftcats.org ing products or serHusky champion vices from out of the Donate deposit bottles/ Siberian cans to iocal all vol., bloodline Stud Service. area. Sending cash, Call 541-977-7019 non-profit rescue, for checks, or credit inferal cat spay/neuter. Yorkie AKC tiny pups, 2 formation may be T railer a t Jak e ' s subjected to fraud. 1 M, 12 wks old, UTD Diner, Hwy 2 0 E; Fs, For more informashots, health guar, pics. Petco in R edmond; $1100. 541-777-7743 tion about an adverdonate M-F at Smith tiser, you may call Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Yorkie mix, 8 wks, beauthe O r egon State Bend; or CRAFT in tiful, shots & dewormed, Attorney General's Can pick up $300. 541-977-0035 Office C o n sumer Tumalo. large amts, 389-8420. Protection hotline at www.craftcats.org 210 1-877-877-9392. Furniture & Appliances Advertise your car!
Sales Northeast Bend
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Parson Russell Terriers, www.craftcats.org AKC, show/pet/agility, Adopt a rescued cat or 10 wks. 360-914-0366 Want to Buy or Rent kitten! Altered, vaccinated, ID chip, tested, POODLE or POMAPOO Wanted: $Cash paid for more! CRAFT, 65480 puppies, toy. Stud also vintage costume jew- 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 541-475-3889 eliy. Top dollar paid for 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 Gold/Silver.l buy by the www.craftcats.org QueenslandHeelers Estate, Honest Artist Standard 8 Mini, $150
3 male Dachshunds 2 fawn, 1 black & tan. $300 each. Ready 3/26. 541-447-0113 Just bought a new boat? Sell our old one in the classiIieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
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Serving Central Oregon since tgta
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1-5.
The Bulletin
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Adopt a rescued cat or kitten! Altered, vaccinated, ID chip, tested, more! CRAFT, 65480 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun,
Elizabeth,541-633-7006
S W . Q hhagd l e
which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbuuetfn.com
Call 971-219-9122
in Redmond
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Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, 1977, excellent cond, only played senior year in college, $1000 obo.AND
260
Buyfng Dlamonds /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655
BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. SE LLING
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King Trombone,1941 HN White, 7-1/2" bell, $500, obo. 541-388-2045 or 541-280-1912 eves Misc. Items
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The Bulletin
Item Priced af: Your Total Ad Coston • Under $500 $21t'i • $500 to $999...................................................................$39 • $1000 to $2499.............................................................. $49 • $2500 and over............................................................... $59 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.
All gold jewelry, silver Serving Central Oregon since rgts Yourad will a/so appear in: and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, he Bulletin • he Central Oregon Nickel Ads class rings, sterling sil- 541-385-5809 • endbulleiin.com ver, coin collect, vin• Central Oregon Marketplace Some restrictions app/y tage watches, dental gold. Bill Fl e ming, *Privots party merchandise only excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, RVs, motorcyclss, boats, airplanes, ond garage sale categories. 541-382-9419.
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E2 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •
Starting at 3 lines
Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
(call for commercial line ad rates)
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
*Illlust 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. 341
454
Horses 8 Equipment
Looking for Employment
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Woman willing to errands for the elderly Accounting Assistant Add your web address for s light f e e in to your ad and readBend/Redmond. McMenamins ers on The Bullefin's 541-280-0892 Old St. Francis web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be NOyy HIRING 3-horse Silverado able to click through 2001 29'xs' 5th wheel McMenamins h i storic automatically to your trailer. Deluxe show476 Old St. Francis hotel website. man/semi living property located in Employment quarters, lots of exdowntown Bend, is Opportunities tras. Beautiful condinow hiring a PT tion. $21,900. OBO ( 20-25 hours p e r Call a Pro 541-420-3277 week) Accounting As- Whether you need a CAUTION: sistant. Qualified apAds published in fence fixed, hedges plicants must h ave "Employment Op358 porfuniffes" include previous related expe- trimmed or a house Farmers Column r ience an d en j oy employee and indebuilt, you'll find working in a b usy, 10X20 Storage Buildings pendent positions. professional help in customer service oriAds for p o sitions for protecting hay, ented e n vironment. The Bulletin's "Call a that require a fee or firewood, livestock etc. Please apply online Service Professional" upfront investment $1616 Installed. O www. m cmemust be stated. With (other sizes available) Directory namins.com. Please, 541-617-1133. any independentjob 541-385-5809 no phone calls to indiopportunity, please CCB ¹173684 vidual loca t ions. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net i nvestigate tho r E.O.E. oughly. Use extra caution when ap375 plying for jobs onDigital Advertising Sales Manager Meat & Animal Processing line and never provide personal inforThe Bulletin is seeking a goal-oriented 1/2 Beef, all natural, no mation to any source Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive hormones or antibiotics, you may not have online advertising revenue growth. This po$3.50/lb., cut& wrapped. researched and sition will manage the department's digital 541-480-2200 deemed to be repuprojects, and will: table. Use extreme caution when r eStudy the local market and make recommens ponding to A N Y •dations on best opportunities for online revonline employment c t enue growth. ad from out-of-state. • Work in collaboration with department manWe suggest you call agement in the ongoing training and coaching the State of Oregon of Bulletin advertising salespeople. Consumer Hotline • Contribute to building local digital revenue by at 1-503-378-4320 regularly going on joint sales calls with adverFor Equal Opportutising staff. nity Laws c ontact • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to enOregon Bureau of that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, Labor 8 I n d ustry, sure 421 and customer reporting functions are perCivil Rights Division, formed in a timely and accurate fashion. Schools & Training 971-673- 0764. • Assist in the development of online and advertising packages and attendant HTR Truck School The Bulletin cross/sell sales collateral. REDMOND CAMPUS 541-385-5809 Our Grads Gef Jobs! Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at 1-888<38-2235 WWW.HTR.EDU least 3 years' experience and a proven track record of success in selling multi-platform or digital advertising to major accounts and agencies. Management experience a plus, with the ideal candidate being able to demonstrate a history of success in implementing inThe Bulletin is seeking a resourceful and novative ideas and developing the skills level self-motivated full-time employee to assist a of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug large staff and write daily clerical reports. This free workplace and pre-employment drug person should like working in a fast-paced entesting is required. vironment and be able to meet tight deadlines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial expePlease email your resume to: rience preferred. jbrandt©bendbulletin.com No phone calls please. Organization, flexibility, and a high level of computer proficiency are essential. A solid knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typserving central oregon since19ra ing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer Ability to work for long periods doing detail-oriented work is necessary. This person must understand the importance of accuracy and Executive Dlrector thoroughness in all duties. BrightSide Animal Center
•.
• 8,
Newsroom Assistant
The Bulletin
Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office experience preferred. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring. To apply, please send a resume and any writing samples to: nolson Obendbulletin.com. No phone inquiries please.
The Bulletin
seeks key leader. Ideal candidate has history of success in fundraising, donor development, managing staff, volunteers; excellent communication, problem-solving, management and analysis skills; loves animals, sugports our high-save mission; experience in animal welfare. Willing to work evenings or weekends when needed. Societ of nimal Welfare Administrators cert a pIus. Salary DOE. Visit brightsideanimals.org/executive-director for details. Submit letter of interest and resume to brightsideboard@gmail.com .
Serving Central Oregon since r903
General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (1 1:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
The Bulletin
servinacentral oregon since 19IB
Pressman
The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with experience in the Printing industry. Two years of prior web press experience is beneficial, but training can be provided. At The Bulletin you can put your skills to work and make our products and services jump off the page! In addition to printing our 7-day a week newspaper, we also print a variety of other products for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 t/a tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman must become knowledgeable and familiar working with. We put a premium on dependability, timeliness, having a positive attitude and being a team player. We offer a competitive compensation plan and career growth opportunities. This position primarily works nights, with a 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. If you are interested in fostering your talent as a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourage you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, at anelson@wescom a ers.com with your resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug testing is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is a drug free work place and EOE.
The Bulletin
Serving Cenrral Oregonsince 1903
Accounting
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tls BNWIIB
Inventory Accounting Analyst Les Schwab is looking for an I nventory Accounting to w o r k c l osely with S t ore management to identify and analyze variances within their inventory and gross margin results. The Inventory Accounting Analyst performs month-end financial close duties including account reconciliations and journal entries and p r epares monthly inventory reports. Th i s p o s ition a lso p r ovides assistance to store personnel on their daily responsibilities; posting/receiving purchase orders, maintaining store inventory, and analyzing and correcting certain system transactions.
Employment Opportunities
Banking
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We are excited to announce an available position for a full-time teller in Bend, Oregon.
Salary Range: $11.00 - $18.00 First Community Credit Union is an equal opportunity employer of protected Veterans and individuals with disabilities. For more details please apply online: www.myfirstccu.org.
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Qualifications: • Ability to both work independently and contribute to overall team performance • Demonstrated proficiency with Microsoft Excel • Prior accounting coursework or experience Dental Assistantavail Preferred: for our general den• Four-year degree in accounting, finance, tistry office in Bend, business administration or equivalent Must have a • Experience using large-scale accounting/ERP OR. working knowledge of systems clinical chair side as• Experience working in teams that sisting. Call Jeniffer at implemented new accounting systems 541-241-1299. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash bonus. Please go to www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls please.
Employment Opportunities
528
SUBWAY - BEND
Loans & Mortgages
CREW LEADER 62929 N HWY 97 Mainly Day Shift
Seeking experienced, dependable employee who has good customer service skills. Hours mainly Mon.-Fri. 7:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m./ flexibility a plus. Crew leaders help supervise staff and perform all crew duties. Hourly rate can be as high as $12/hr. Complete & submit an application at the restaurant before 10:00 a.m. or after 2:00 p.m.
WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.
TELEFUNDRAISING BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party Tele-funding for will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no •Meals On Wheels problem, good equity •Defeat Diabetes is all you need. Call Foundation Oregon Land Mort•Veterans (OPVA) gage 541-388-4200. People Lookfor Information Seniors and a/I About Products and others welcome. Services Every Daythrough The avlletin Classifieds Nlon-Thur. 4:30- 8:30 p.m. LOCAL MONEY:Webuy $9.25/hour. secured trust deeds & note,some hard money Call 541-382-8672 loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13.
Looking for someone to assist the public with their placement of classified ads, either over the phone or in person at the Bulletin office in downtown Bend.
East Casc a des Mforkforce Investment Board Transition Project Manager Provide T e chnical Assistance and management of the activities related to the creation of the newly formed East C ascades W o r kThe Bulletin force In v estment Board serving a 10 caution when purc ounty region i n chasing products or I Central Oregon. Enservices from out of • sure the timeline, le- I the area. Sending gal requirements of c ash, checks, o r WIOA, policies and I credit i n f ormation processes are ad- • may be subjected to dressed. I n s t ate I FRAUD. travel and excellent For more informa- I communication skills tion about an adver- • required. G o to I tiser, you may call Apt JMultiplex General http://www.tocowa.org the Oregon State CHECK YOUR AD u nder About T O - I Attorney General's COWA for more info. Office C o n sumer s Protection hotline at l I 1-877-877-9392. EMPLOYMENT LTh Bullet HIGH SCHOOL on the first day it runs JUNIORS ONLY to make sure it is corIf you're a junior in hiqh rect. "Spellcheck" and school, you can join Wildland Firehuman errors do octhe National Guard Cooper Contracting cur. If this happens to t hrough t h e Sp l i t has limited openyour ad, please conTraining Option and ings for exp. timber tact us ASAP so that be back from Basic fallers, engine corrections and any Combat Training in bosses and squad time for your senior bosses for the 2015 adjustments can be ear. Next year, you'll fire season. Not enmade to your ad. e back in time for 541-385-5809 try level positions. The Bulletin college. Joining the Classified be q ualified, Guard will open many Must we will be hiring endoors for yo u w ith try level firefighters BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS benefits like college soon. Please wait for Search the area's most tuition assistance and ad. Call Sean at comprehensive listing of excellent tra i ning. 5 41-948-7010 f o r classified advertising... Plus, it's one of the real estate to automotive, best part-time jobs more info. merchandise to sporting ou can have while in goods. Bulletin Classifieds igh school. appear every day in the The 2015 Split Training Oarage Sales print or on line. Option season ends Call 541-385-5809 April 30. Applicants Garage Sales www.bendbulletin.com must be 17 years old and have p a rental Garage Sales The Bulletin consent prior to obFind them taining a contractual obligation. E l igibility in r estrictions app l y . AptJMultiplex NE Bendl The Bulletin Contact your l o cal National Guard RepClassifieds Call for Specials! resentative and s eLimited numbers avail. cure your future now. 541-385-5809 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. SSG Jason Bain W/D hookups, patios (541) 325-1027 or decks. Ore on uard.com Looking for your next MOUNTAIN GLEN, employee? 541-383-9313 Place a Bulletin help RESTAURANT Professionally wanted ad today and managed by Norris 8 reach over 60,000 Stevens, Inc. readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on Have an item to bendbulletin.com sell quick? which currently If it's under Pastini Pastaria receives over 1.5 in theOld Mill District is million page views '500 you can place it in hiring talented every month at The Bulletin no extra cost. Line Cooks to join the team. Bulletin Classifieds Classifieds for: Get Results! Apply online at Call 385-5809 '10 -3 lines, 7 days www. astini.com/careers or place '16 - 3 lines, 14 days or stop by between your ad on-line at 2pm-4pm daily. bendbulletin.com (Private Party ads only)
Essential: Positive attitude, strong service/ team orientation, and problem solving skills. Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, performance-based customer call center environment and have accurate typing, phone skills and computer entry experience. Strong communication skills and the ability to multi-task is a must.
Call54I 3855809teprOmOteyeurterriCe• AdVertiSefOr28daySStOrtingdttl4I Ittatrrrat~ag trrtrt arrtrar s rarrrrtrtat
Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.
Human Resources Assistant The Bulletin is looking for a Human Resources Assistant. HR duties will include all areas of pre-employment drug testing, preparing paperwork for newly hired employees, orientation; benefit enrollment and helping employees keep t heir p ersonnel and b enefit information current. Maintains personnel files and records for the purpose of providing up-to-date reference and audit trail compliance. Assist with payroll processing as the back-up to the Payroll Manager. Provides advice to employees on matters in designated human resources areas. Establish and maintain favorable working relationships within all WesCom departments to assist in effectively achieving department objectives, while responding to requests for reports, records and information in a professional and timely manner. Review, input and audit data in HRIS to support employee actions such as promotions, transfers, hires and terminations while maintaining the highest level of data integrity. Other duties include, processing paperwork for unemploymentand worker's compensation as well as FMLA and other state qualifying leaves of absence. Fill in as a backup person for the Reception desk when necessary. Minimum two years human resources experience (payroll and benefits knowledge preferred) in a support capacity. General knowledge of applicable state and federal laws. California experience a plus. Working knowledge of HRIS/Payroll systems. Strong computer skills with the ability to proficiently use Word and Excel. Strong attention to detail. Strong interpersonal skills. Must be able to maintain highest degree of confidentiality, discretion and tact. For qualifying employees we offer benefits including life insurance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE/Drug Free workplace
If interested please submit resume and salary expectations to hrresumesCi! wescom a ers.com No phonecalls please.
The Bulletin
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Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for Z~oe~ gnalup construction work to be licensed with the L'acargg ttr e r<o. Construction ContracFull Service tors Board (CCB). An Landscape active license means the contractor Management is bonded & insured. Verify the contractor's Spring Clean Up CCB l i c ense at •Leaves www.hirealicensed•Cones contractor.com •Needles or call 503-378-4621. • Debris Hauling The Bulletin recommends checking with Weed Free Bark the CCB prior to con& FlowerBeds tracting with anyone. Some other t rades Lawn Renovation also req u ire addi- Dethatching tional licenses and Aeration Overseed certifications. Compost Top Dressing Where can you find a Landscape helping hand? Maintenance From contractors to Full or Partial Service •Mowing ~Edging yard care, it's all here •Pruning .Weeding in The Bulletin's Water Management "Call A Service Fertilizer included Professional" Directory
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NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o p e r form Landscape Construction which includes: p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be l icensed w it h th e Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers c ompensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing lan d scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i cense.
AerateI Thatching
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THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MAR 4, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
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TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, MAR 4, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'shortz
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B wedn~day,Ma~h4,2015
What might have been
ACROSS 1With 38- and
-shek 46-Across, 1966 34 Knaves 4 Seasons hit 35 Producer of many parts 7 Popular game? 37 M ad as h e n 10With38- and 50-Across, 1967 38See 1-, 10-, 21Beatles hit and 26-Across 13Enthusiastic 39 Harem rooms 14Scope 40 Sawbucks 162011 animated 43 Not learned musical 45 Summer hours on the Atl. coast 17Having come home after 46 See 1-Across curfew 48 IJ.K. neighbor 18"Goon, git!" 49 f ac t o 20 Percolate 50 See 10-Across 21With 38- and atty.'8 65-Across, 1977 55 Future exam Billy Joel hit 59 Phony 23 " Tu," 1974 60 Each pop hit 62 Deadlock 25 "Promoting decent work for 63Colorakin to all" agcy. turquoise 26With38- and 64 Iran- a f fa ir 67-Across, 1970 Sly & the Family 65 See 21-Across Stone hit 66 Be nosy
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency My f o r mer c o l league Richard Oshlag sent me today's deal from the S wiss Teams at th e A C B L F a l l Championships. South's on e - heart ove r c all, vulnerable, wouldn't have occurred to me. West's three diamonds was p reemptive. N o rt h t h o u ght h i s partner had something and bid game. West led the jack of clubs, and South took the ace. Given that West had great length in diamonds plus three spades, declarer might have gone right in t r umps: king, then low to his jack. He could draw East's queen, take the ace of diamonds and lead dummy's ten of clubs.
b id one spade and he t r ies tw o diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: A return to two hearts would suggest a hand without much promise and would not guarantee three-card heart support. You might h old a m i n i mum h and s uch a s A K 3 2, Q 7, 6 5, K 9 7 6 3. Jump to three hearts to confirm strong support and a hand that looks eminently suitable for play at hearts. East dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 4i J76 4
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4A 10 10TH TRICK If East won, he could cash two spades, but then any lead — a club or
a third high spade — would give
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
declarer a 10th trick. But wait: If East AJ2 A K97 6 3 doesn't take the king of clubs (!), South fails. He still loses two spades SOUTH 4583 and a diamond, and since he has two club losers and dummy has only one Q AJ94 3 trump left, he also loses a club. 0 Q6 None of that happened, Oshlag 4Q854 r elates. Declarer went w r ong i n E ast Sou t h West Nort h trumps and wound up down two. 14 1 9 ( l) 30 4Q All Pass DAILY QUESTION
Youhold: 4A K Q 1 0
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FOR AV I KI L EDE
MA L A T E I MA N R DEN ME R I T S EL I 5 A SUC HSW AL E 0 SP E CEN SUS AL I E N B I N JA LOT AG ETH BE
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0 7 A K 9 7 6 3 . Y o u openoneclub, your partner responds one heart, you ( C ) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
67 See 26-Across
31 China'5 Chiang
DU M B C H I 0v A L HO N NJA R O OWL N O I S E 00 I SD I DE R O T E ME R CL I P B C E E E T 5 0 R R Ow LAY L EA V E E S E T T E R BUR EAU 5U R RA S H MES M ON R O E AR O NE I L L DS N OD D E D
1
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PUZZLE BY GARY CEE
32 Classic violinmaker 33 "Hedda Gabler" playwright
52 Dueler'5 sword
43 Bring formal charges against 44 Its govs. have included Mario and Andrew Cuomo 47"6 R ms V u " (1972 play) 48 When repeated, reply to "Who wants dessert?" 50 Silent screen vamp Naldi 51Arab chief
36Givinga pat on the back, say 38 Pay stub initialism 41 Type not susceptible to compromise 42 Simple ragtime dance
53 Shakespearean king 54 Air France hub 56 Rogen of "The Interview"
57 Real estate unit 58 Inflatable dinghy conoaln 61 Polynesian dish
Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.
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56 Pooch in whodunits 58 Award-winning comic book writer Jeph 59 A d d itions 6 1 Pointed end 6 2 S outh-of-theborder uncle
ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: D 0 G M A S
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03/04/I 5
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY MARCH 4 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 648
Houses for Rent General
870
Redmond Homes
B o a ts & Accessories
Bayllner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590.
Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help All real estate adver- wanted ad today and tising in this newspareach over 60,000 per is subject to the readers each week. F air H o using A c t Your classified ad which makes it illegal will also appear on 541-548-0345. to a d vertise "any bendbulletin.com preference, limitation which currently re875 or disc r imination ceives over based on race, color, Watercraft 1.5 million page religion, sex, handiviews every month cap, familial status, at no extra cost. marital status or naBulletin Classifieds tional origin, or an inGet Results! tention to make any Call 385-5809 or such pre f erence, place your ad on-line L limitation or discrimiat 16' Cata Raft nation." Familial stabendbulletin.com tus includes children 2 Ouffitter oars, 2 Cataract oars, 3 NRS under the age of 18 771 8" Ouffitter blades and living with parents or lots of gear, all ine legal cus t odians, Lots "very good to exc. pregnant women, and people securing cus- Awbrey Butte .48 acre condition plus custom tody of children under camp/river tables and lot withCascade Mtn. 18. This newspaper views,3275 NW Horibags, more!. $2,700 will not knowingly aczon Dr. $249,900. 541 318 1322. cept any advertising Call 714-510-7388 Additional information for real estate which is and photos on in violation of the law. Call The Bulletin At request, too! 541 -385-5809 O ur r e aders a r e Ads published in aWa hereby informed that Place Your Ad Or E-Mail all dwellings adver- At: www.bendbulletin.com tercraft" include: Kay ks, rafts and motor tised in this newspazed personal per are available on 775 atercrafts. Fo an equal opportunity Manufactured/ 'boats" please se basis. To complain of Mobile Homes lass 870. d iscrimination ca l l HUD t o l l-free at 541-385-5809 List your Home 1-800-877-0246. The toll f ree t e lephone JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers number for the hearGet Top Dollar ing i m p aired is Financing Available. 880 1-800-927-9275. 541-548-5511 Motorhomes PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
880
885
932
935
Motorhomes
Canopies & Campers
Antique & Classic Autos
Sport Utility Vehicles
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
Adventurer2013 86 FB truck camper, $19,800. 2205 dry weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 deep cycle batteries, LED lights, full size q ueen bed. n i c e floorplan. Also available 2010 Chevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 360-774-2747 No text messages!
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
1965 Mustang 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
Subaru Forester 1998 170k miles., red, two sets tires, daughter moved to Sweden needs $. Clean, no pets. Dependable car. $4200. 541-647-0657
ToyotaHighlander
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MUST complete and LEGAL NOTICE CIRCUIT C O U RT, submit the C ontact Form STATE OF OREGON, Information Redmond: provided o n the DESCHUTES 541-548-5254 website, or c o ntact COUNTY, P r o bate D epartment. In t h e the Department of W a st e by Matter of the Estate Solid 2008 Sport, 3rd row, of: AL V I S JOE telephone lots more! ¹024803 Need to get an ad CARDER, Decedent. ( 541-317-3163), t o $19,977 contact No. 15-PB-0009. NO- provide in ASAP? TICE T O IN T E R- information, to receive ROBBERSON follow-up documents ESTED PERSONS/ co ~ ~tcmmm RV PACKAGE-2006 ENTITIES. ORS (addenda, Fax it ts 541-322-7253 c larifications, e t c ) . Monaco Monarch, 31 ', 113.155. NOTICE IS 541-312-3986 Ford V10, 28,900 miles, The Bulletin Classifieds F ailure t o rov i d e HEREBY GIVEN that www.robberson.com auto-level, 2 slides, the undersigned was contact information to Dlr ¹0205. Price queen bed & hide-a-bed appointed P ersonal t he De artment o f Mercedes 380SL 1982 good thru 03/31/15 sofa, 4k gen, conv miRepresentative of the Solid Waste will result Roadster, black on black, crowave, 2 TV's, tow bidder above-entitled estate in soft 8 hard top, excellent o package,$66,000. on January 28, 2015. dis ualification. Onl condition, always ga- Tribeca 2009 AyyD OPTION - 2003 Jeep r e-bid meet in All p e r sons/entities raged. 155 K m i les, Wranglertow car, 84K having claims against attendees and those $11,500. 541-549-6407 l • miles, hard & soft top, 5 the t he estate are r e - noti in speed manual,$1 1,000 quired t o pr e sent De artment of Solid 541-815-6319 we b site them, with vouchers Waste o f attached, to the un- access to the ro'ect lans and Tioga 24' Class C dersigned Personal This is a nice one! wil l R epresentative a t : s ecifications Bought new in 2000, 908 Vin¹401035 receive fol l ow-u currently under 21K P.O. Box 667, Red$12,977 Aircraft, Parts miles, exc. shape, mond, Oregon 97756, documents addenda 1950 Mercury new tires, profes& Service ROBBERSON within four (4) months c~ta tttcaec c etc . sionally winterized 4-dr Sedan after the date of first I I a cccII ~ It mm m t every year, cut-off Ground-up publication of this no- A pre-bid meeting will switch to b a ttery, restoration, beautiful! tice, or the claims may be held at 10:00 a.m. 541-312-3986 plus new RV baton Wednesday March Ca/Ifor details. www.robberson.com be barred. All perteries. Oven, hot a t the sons whose rights 18, 2 01 5 $35,500 Dlr ¹0205. Good thru Nrerr water heater 8 air or best offer. 3/31/1 5 may he affected by Department of Solid cond., seldom used; the probate proceed- Waste Office which is just add water and 541-892-3789 ings may obtain addi- located at 61050 SE 1/3interestin B3Ce9 &MtLD 975 i t s ready t o g o ' tional information from 27th Street, B end, Columbia 400, $22000 obo Sen Automobiles t he records of t h e Oregon. All bidders lRe ©nlh Financing available. ous inquines only court, the Personal are encouraged to Stored in T e rreb$125,000 attend. Representative, onne. 541-548-5174 (located O Bend) and/or the attorneys 541-286-3333 for the personal rep- Bids shall be made on 2007 Winnebago I resentative. Fred Ko- the forms furnished by Outlook Class "C" County, 31', clean, nonwolowski, PC. Dated the V W CONV. 1 9 78 ® -h!F and first published: incorporating all consmoking exc. condi732 $8999 -1600cc, fuel AS mm Buick LeSabre 2005 850 February 25, 2 0 15. tract documents, intion. More info injected, classic 1978 Commercia!/Investment custom, exc. cond., Personal Representa- cluding a Bid Bond or Snowmobiles 541<47-9268 Volkswagen Converttires 40%, 3800 Series Properties for Sale tive, Karen K. Brown. Cashier's Check for ible. Cobalt blue with II 3.8 V-6, 69,300 mi., Attorney for Personal the minimum amount Ready to makememories! a black convertible 2nd owner. $7700 obo 1/3 interest in wellTop-selling Winnebago Representative: Fred o f 10% of th e B i d top, cream colored HIGH PROFILE 541-430-7400 or 31 J, original owners, non- equipped IFR Beech Bo- interior & black dash. Kowolowski, PC, Price, addressed and LOCATION IN 541-815-8487 smokers, garaged, only nanza A36, new 10-550/ This little beauty runs mailed or delivered to OSB¹: 74179, 1323 DOWNTOWN prop, located KBDN. 18,800 miles, auto-levelSW 15th Street, P.O. Deschutes C o u nty and looks great and REDMOND I ing jacks, (2) slides, up- $65,000. 541-419-9510 turns heads wherever Department of Solid Box 667, Redmond, oncord 00 This commercial www.N4972M.com graded queen bed, bunk 4-place enclosed Inter24' Mercedes Benz it goes. Mi: 131,902. Oregon 97756-0154, W aste, 61050 S E building offers exbeds, micro, (3) TVs, state snowmobile trailer Prism, 2015 Model G, Phone 541-504-8399 PH: (541) 923-7531 27th Street, B e nd, HANGAR FOR SALE. cellent exposure w/ RockyMountain pkg, Mercedes Diesel engine, sleeps 10! Lots of storFAX: (541) 923-7537, Oregon 97702 in a 30x40 end unit T along desirable NW $8500. 541-379-3530 age, maintained, very 18+ mpg, auto trans, env e lope EMAIL: hir e dgun- sealed hanger in Prineville. 6th Street. clean!Only $67,995!Ex933 fully loaded with plainly marked cryptomonkeys.org. Dry walled, insulated, Currently housing YAMAHA 700 2000 tended warranty and/or fidouble-expando, "Southwest Transfer Pickups and painted. $23,500. 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 nancing avail to qualified The Redmond and only 5200 miles. Station Trailer Bay A Lot of car for LEGAL NOTICE Tom, 541.768.5546 Spokesman newsPolaris Fusion 9 0 0, buyers!541-388-7179 Perfect condition and B i n St o rage Chevrolet Silverado Deschutes County, $6,977! only 788 mi., new mirpaper offices, the only$92K. The Bulletin 2006 diesel, 113K miles, Vin¹133699 Oregon Department of Improvements 881 2,748 sq. ft. space is rors, covers, custom Call 541-526-1201 ext'd cab, long bed, Project" and the name Solid Waste To Subscribe call skis, n e w rid e -on or see at: perfect for Travel Trailers excellent condition, ROBBERSON and address of the PART I-INVITATION 541-385-5800 or go to r ide-off t r ailer w i t h 3404 Dogwood Ave., owner/user. Two $19,000. 541-548-4667 bidder. cI a cc ca ~ IM RO R TO BID spare, + much more. in Redmond. www.bendbulletin.com private offices and Southwest Transfer $ 6,995. Call for d e Dutchman Denali generous open 541-312-3986 No b i d wi l l be Station Trailer Bay tails. 541-420-6215 32' 2011 travel Chev Silverado spaces. Three www.robberson.com considered by and Bin Storage trailer. 2 slides Evparking places in Dlr ¹0205. Good thru Improvements Project Deschutes C o u nty 860 erything goes, all back+ street park3/31/1 5 unless t he bid Motorcycles & Accessories kitchen ware, linens ing. $259,000. Sealed bids will be re- contains a statement etc. Hitch, sway by the bidder that the Dodge SRT-4 2 0 05. ceived at the D es- p rovisions of O R S bars, water & sewer Call Graham Dent Allegro 32' 2007, like Save money. Learn Mopar Stage 3 sus- chutes County De- 279C.600 — 279C.870 hoses. List price 541-383-2444 artment o f So l i d new, only 12,600 miles. to fly or build hours 2005 crew cab great pension, Stage 1 en- p $34,500 - asking COMPASS W aste, 6 1050 S E are to be complied Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 with your own airlooking! Vin¹972932 gine. 88,000 mi. New $26,800 Loaded. Commercial Each bid must transmission, dual exc raft. 1968 A e r o Turbo. $6500. Phone 27th Street, B e nd, with. $19,977 haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- Must see to appreciOregon 97702, until contain a statement Commander, 4 seat, 541 420 2239 ate. Redmond, OR. as to w h ether the eling system, 5kw gen, but not a fter, 2:00 738 150 HP, low time, 541-604-5993 ROBBERSON power mirrors w/defrost, p.m. o n T u esday, bidder is a r esident Harley Davidson full panel. $21,000 Multiplexes for Sale ctaaece~ ~emm m 2 slide-outs with awHonda Accord 2005 bidder, as defined in March 24, 2015; at 2001 FXSTD, twin obo. Contact Paul at rear c a mera, which time all bids for ORS 279A . 120. 541-447-5184. cam 88, fuel injected, nings, 541-312-3986 the abo v e-entitled V endors shall u se Vance & Hines short trailer hitch, driyer door www.robberson.com shot exhaust, Stage I w/power window, cruise, public works project recyclable products to T-Hangar for rent Dlr ¹0205. Price with Vance & Hines exhaust brake, central will be publ i cly the maximum extent at Bend airport. good thru 03/31/15 vac, satellite sys. Asking fuel management o pened and r e ad economically feasible Call 541-382-8998. $67,500. 503-781-8812 system, custom parts, aloud. Bidders must in the performance of Heartland P rowler extra seat. Gorgeous and submit a F irst Tier the contract work set 916 DUPLEX by owner SE $10,500 OBO. 2012, 29PRKS, 33', C A L L W Priced to se/I! Subcontractor Disclo- forth in this document. Bend. 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath Trucks & Call Today like new, 2 slides-liv¹018628 $1 1,977 TODAYW sure Statement Form. ea., 14yrs old. Great 541-516-8684 i ng area & la r ge Heavy Equipment be Chevy Pickup 1978, The S u b contractor Bidders s h al l cond. $219,900 .karencloset. Large enough ROBBERSON Disclosure Statement prequalified with the long bed, 4x4, frame michellen Ohotmail.com. to live in, but easy to c tacaca~ ~tem m m up restoration. 500 may be submitted in State of Oregon in 541-815- 7707 tow! 15' power awCadillac en g i ne, the sealed bid prior to accordance with ORS Fleetwood D i scovery 745 power hitch & fresh R4 transmis541-312-3986 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, 279C.430 — 279C.450 40' 2003, diesel, w/all ning, stabilizers, full s i ze www.robberson.com March 24, 2015 or in and Desc h utes sion w/overdrive, low Homes for Sale options - 3 slide outs, queen bed, l a rge Code Dlr ¹0205. Price a separate sealed en- County mi., no rust, custom satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, shower, porcelain sink marked 12.52.0020. The interior and carpet, good thru 03/31/15 velope NOTICE Ford F550 1999 Harley Dyna Wide Glide etc., 34,000 m iles. & toilet. "FIRST TIER S UBprequalification clasn ew wheels a n d All real estate adverWintered in h eated 7.3 Diesel Truck 2003 custom paint, $26,500. 541-999-2571 CONTRACTOR DIS- sification required for tires, You must see tised here in is subshop. $78,995 obo. 2-Door extras, 13,000 orig CLOSURE S T ATE- this project is "REINit! $25,000 invested. ject to th e F ederal miles, like new, health 541-447-8664 Pegasus 27' 2005 FQS, 1.5 ton crane 8 MENT-SOUTHWEST Bridges and $12,000 OBO. Fair Housing A c t, 14' slide, lots of extras & welder, forces sale. Sacrifice The 541-536-3889 or TRANSFER TRAILER Structures." ICI which makes it illegal lots of storage in and out. 227,000 miles $10,000 obo. BAY A ND BIN successful b i d ders 541-420-6215. Pantry next to frig. Alto advertise any prefNew tires, radiator, 541-633-7856. IMand s u bcontractors STORAGE ways stored in heated erence, limitation or water pump, glow PROVEMENTS providing labor shall discrimination based plug relay. 935 ~ara~e when not in use. P ROJECT prior t o maintain a qualified 15, 50. 541-526-1361 on race, color, reli- HDFatBo 1996 Asking $17,900 1995. auto., 4 cyl 4:00 p.m. on Tuesday, drug testing program Sport Utility Vehicles gion, sex, handicap, 541-480-1868 2.2L, dark blue March 24, 2015 at the for the duration of the familial status or naFour Winds 32' RV contract. Bidders shall Vin061167$5,977 above location. tional origin, or inten2010 CONSIGNMENTS be registered with the tion to make any such Triton V-10 with WANTED S aid work is to b e Construction ROBBERSON preferences, l i mita13,000 miles. Large We Do The Work ... performed a t the Contractor's B oard. cI a cc ca ~ IM RO R tions or discrimination. slide, Sleeps 7. Lots You Keep The Cash! and Southwest Transfer Contractors We will not knowingly Completely of storage. 5000lb On-site credit 541-312-3986 Station (54580 High- subcontractors need accept any advertisRebuilt/Customized hitch. Like new. approval team, www.robberson.com BMW X3 35i 2010 way 97) and on High- not be licensed under 2012/2013 Award ing for real estate $51,900 web site presence. M.F. 230 DIESEL Dlr ¹0205. Price way 97 in Deschutes ORS 468A.720. Exc cond., 65K which is in violation of Winner 541-325-6813 We Take Trade-Ins! good thru 03/31/1 5 CASE 200 GAS miles w/100K mile County, Oregon and this law. All persons Showroom Cond. Deschutes C o u nty FORD 2N GAS shall include: Contransferable warare hereby informed Many Extras BIG COUNTRY RV struction of a trailer may reject any bid not BEND 541-362-8038 ranty. Very clean; Low Miles. that all dwellings adBend: 541-330-2495 in compliance with all bay structure adjoinloaded - cold Ni n A l i m 2 7 vertised are available $15,000 Redmond: ing the existing three prescribed b i d ding weather pkg, pre541-548-4807 925 on an equal opportu541-548-5254 and bays an d pe r for- procedures mium pkg 8 technity basis. The BulleUtility Trailers mance of such addi- r equirements, an d nology pkg. Keyless tin Classified 870 tional and incidental may reject for good access, sunroof, 882 F latbed t r ailer w i t h navigation, satellite work as specified in cause any or all bids Boats & Accessories Frelghtllner 1994 Fifth Wheels ramps, 7000 lb. cathe plans and specifi- upon a f i nding of radio, extra snow Tick, Tock Custom pacity, 26' long, 8'6 e Looks & runs great! c ations. Th e e s t i - Deschutes County it is tires. (Car top carwide, ideal for hauling Motorhome Vin¹ 178487 mated c o nstruction in the public interest Tick, Tock... rier not included.) hay, materials, cars, Will haul small SUV $6,977 to do so. The protest cost is $230,000. $22,500. ...don't let time get exc. cond. $2800. or toys, and pull a period f or this 541-915-9170 541-420-3788 trailer! Powered by ROBBERSON Plans, specifications procurement is seven away. Hire a 8.3 Cummins with 6 c tacaca~ ~tem m m and other bid docu- (7) calendar days. professional out 931 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 speed Allison auto ments may be inKeystone Everest 5th Isuzu Rodeo 2001, trans, 2nd o wner. Automotive Parts, 541-312-3986 Timm Schimke, of The Bulletin's Wakeboard Boat spected at the DesWheel, 2004 V6, 102K Mi. $6000. www.robberson.com Very nice! $53,000. chutes County Director of Solid Waste I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, "Call A Service Model 323P - 3 slides, Service 8 Accessories Scott 541-390-8681 541-350-4077 Dlr ¹0205. Good thru tons of extras, low hrs. Department of Solid rear island-kitchen, Professional" 3/31/1 5 Full wakeboard tower, PUBLISHED: Waste website fireplace, 2 TV's, Studded snow t i r es THE BEND BULLETIN: light bars, Polk audio (http://www.desDirectory today! CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner 235/70R16 on 17" rim, speakers throughout, chutes.org/solidwaste/ Wednesday, w/surround sound, A/C, good cond. $ 3 00. Mercury Mariner completely wired for March 4, 2015 and page/projects ) or 747 custom bed, ceiling fan, 541-312-7042 amps/subwoofers, unW/D ready, many extras. obtained from Des- Monday, March 9, 2015 Southwest Bend Homes derwater lights, fish 932 New awning & tires. chutes County De- DAILY JOURNAL OF finder, 2 batteries cusExcellent condition. COMMERCE: p artment o f So l i d Antique 8 Open Sat, 3/7, 1-4 p.m. tom black paint job. Friday, March 6, 2015 $19,750.More pics Waste HOLIDAY RAMBLER Broken Top Townhome! $12,500 541-815-2523 Classic Autos available. 541-923-6408 (541-317-3163), and Wednesday, VACATIONER 2003 19425 Ironwood Circle 2010. Only 56k mi.. VOLVO XC90 2007 March 9, 2015 61050 SE 27th Street, 8.1L V6 Gas, 340 hp, 2003 2-story, 2310 sf. Vin ¹J20929 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, workhorse, Allison 1000 Bend, Oregon 97702, Enjoy 3 private suites Laredo 31' 2006, 16,977 power everything, for a fee of $50.00, LEGAL NOTICE 5 speed trans., 39K, w/own bath, library, of5th wheel, fully S/C grey on grey, leather which is not refund- Deutsche Bank NaNEW TIRES, 2 slides, fice, Irg private wood ROBBERSON y one slide-out. heated lumbar seats, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS able. If bidder prefers tional Trust Company, deck. Comfy, quiet, Llaaeell ~ ~ 3rd row seat, moonbrakes, steel cage cock- Awning. Like new, to have plans and as Trustee for First convenient! Sam Rawlroof, new tires, alhardly used. pit, washer/dryer, firespecifications mailed, Franklin M o r tgage ins, Broker, Rim Rock 541-312-3986 ways garaged, all A Private Collection Must sell $20,000 lace, mw/conv. oven, Trust bidder must include Loan Investments, www.robberson.com maintenance up to 2007 Bennlngton 1956 Ford pickup ree standing dinette, or take over payan additional $5.00 2006-FF16, 541-620-4242 Dlr ¹0205. Good thru date, excellent cond. 1932 DeSoto 2dr was $121,060 new; now, Pontoon Boat ments. Call with t h e re q uest Asset-Backed Certifi3/31/1 5 A STEAL AT$13,900. 1930 Ford A Coupe 2275 GL, 150hp $35,900. 541-536-1008 749 541-410-5649 Should exp e dited cates, Series 541-223-2218 1929 Ford A Coupe Honda VTEC, less handling be desired, 2006-FF16, Plaintiff/s, Southeast Bend Homes 1923 Ford T Run. than 110 hours, Federal Express or v. Marcos Rodriguez; Want to impress the Mountaineer 1999 All good to excellent. original owner, lots Reese 20,000-lb 5th equivalent service will Ana Yeli Rodriguez; relatives? Remodel VMf BUG 1971 Inside heated shop of extras; Tenneswheel receiver hitch, $5'l9,000 By Owner: be utilized on a colMortgage Electronic your home with the $400 obo. 541-610-3119 BEND 541-382-8038 see tandem axle Fabulous SE home lect on delivery basis. Registration Systems, trailer. Excellent help of a professional on manicured parkInquiries pertaining to Inc.; First Franklin, a condition, $23,500 this project shall be Division of National l ike .58 a c re. 4 from The Bulletin's RV 503-646-1804 d irected t o Cha d City Bank; State of B drm, 2. 5 B a t h, "Call A Service CONSIGNMENTS Master Main, 3 car Centola, Operations Oregon; Occupants of WANTED Professional" Directory 4x4 and ready for Manager at garage all h a rd(541) the premises, DefenWe Do the Work, Fully restored Ads published in the fun! Vin ¹J28963 322-7172 or d ant/s. Case N o . : wood and tile acYou Keep the Cash! Vin ¹359402 "Boats" classification Bargain Corral cents, AC, Gas, RV chadc@deschutes.or 1 4CV0261FC. N O On-site credit include: Speed, fish$7,998 price $4,998 Buick Electra 225 TICE OF SALE UNPad, Electric Dog g. approval team, ing, drift, canoe, fence and so much 1964 Classic cruiser DER WRIT OF EXweb site presence. ROBBERSON y ROBBERSON house and sail boats. with rare 445HP V8. IMPORTANT: ECUTION - REAL more. Call ( 541) We Take Trade-Ins! LI a C ecII ~ I M RDR cI a cc ca ~ IM RO R For all other types of 420-1777 for your Runs good, needs Prospective bidders PROPERTY. Notice is watercraft, please go interior work, 168K downloading/accessin hereby given that the private s h o wing. BIG COUNTRY RV 541-312-3986 541-312-3986 to Class 875. View JAYCO 1993 27' miles. $9,995. website-posted Deschutes C o u nty at g Bend: 541-330-2495 www.robberson.com www.robberson.com 541-385-5809 50k miles, excellent Donated to Equine www.21030kellerct. project plans, Sheriff's Office will, on Redmond: Dlr ¹0205. Good thru Dlr ¹0205. Good com condition. $9300 obo. Outreach. Call Gary s pecifications an d Tuesday, May 5, 2015 541-548-5254 3/31/1 5 thru 03/31/1 5 541-573-7131 541-460-6130 other bid documents at 10:00 AM, in the aeretng Central Oregon ticce t903
he Bulletin
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The Bulletin
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
5 ~~-
E6 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, May
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.oregonsheriffs.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE JPMorgan C hase Bank, National Association, successor by merger to C hase Home F i nance LLC, its successors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. James A . Dejon AKA J . Kimo Dejon; Karen Moser-Dejon FKA Karen Jane Moser; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0084. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION
main lobby of the Des chutes Coun t y 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 62920 Clyde Lane, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of S ale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County 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 DLJ Mort g age
Capital, Inc., Plaint iff/s, v. M ar k S . Hall; Diena K. Hall; Oregon Affordable Housing Assistance Corporation; Occupants of the property, D e fendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0888. 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 7, 2015 at 10:00 AM,
in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, sell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for c ash o r cashier's check, the
real property com-
m only known a s 3258 SW P umice Pl, Redmond, Oregon 97756. 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 f unds. 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
14, 2015 at 10:00
AM, in t h e m a in 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 17890 Mockingbird Lane, Bend, O regon 97707. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to review bid d e r'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. 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 Federal N a t ional Mortgage Association, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Jennifer Shea A KA J e nnifer L . Shea AKA Jennifer Yeatman FKA Jenn ifer M asl; R a y K lein I n c. , D B A Professional Credit Service; Occupants of the premises; and the Real Property located at 6 3 743 Scenic Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0205. 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 Tuesday, May 19, 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 63743 Scenic Drive, B end, Oreg o n 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 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 upon 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
Federal Nat i onal Mortgage Association, its successors and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Joseph M. D avies; Stacey M. D a vies; Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.; and al l o t her Persons or P a rties unknown clai ming any right, title, lien, or int erest in t h e R e a l Property c ommonly known as 6415 SW Jaguar Avenue, Redmond, O R 9 7 7 56, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 1 4 CV0106FC. N OTICE OF S A L E U NDER WRIT O F Need help fixing stuff? EXECUTION - REAL Call A Service Professional PROPERTY. Notice is find the help you need. hereby given that the www.bendbulletin.com Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on LEGAL NOTICE Tuesday, May 5, 2015 JPMorgan C h ase at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the De- Bank, National Ass chutes Coun t y sociation, succesSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 sor in interest by W. Highway 20, Bend, purchase from the Oregon, sell, at public Federal Deposit Insurance Corporao ral auction to t h e tion as receiver of h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's Washington Mutual check, the real prop- Bank Association, erty commonly known its successors in as 6415 SW Jaguar interest and/or asAvenue, R e dmond, signs, Plaintiff/s, v. Oregon 97756. Con- Kae A. Meier aka Kae An n M e i er; ditions of Sale: Potential bidders must Carol Osgood; Eqarrive 15 minutes prior uable Ascent Finanto the auction to allow cial LLC; and Occuof the the Deschutes County pants Sheriff's Office to re- premises, D efendant/s. Case No.: view bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency 13CV1083FC. NOSAL E and/or cashier's T ICE O F checks made payable UNDER WRIT OF to Deschutes County EXECUTION Sheriff's Office will be REAL PROPERTY. accepted. P ayment Notice i s h e r eby must be made in full given that the DesCoun t y immediately upon the c hutes close of the sale. For Sheriff's Office will, more information on on Tuesday, May 5, this s al e g o to: 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of www.oregonsheriffs.c the Desc h utes om/sales.htm County Sheriff's OfLEGAL NOTICE fice, 6 3 33 3 W. Federal N a t ional Highway 20, Bend, Mortgage AssociaO regon, sell, a t tion ("FNMA"), its public oral auction to the highest bidsuccessors in interest and/or assigns, d er, for c ash o r Plaintiff/s, v. Paul R. cashier's check, the Stickel; Vandevert real property comm only known as Acres Association; Beneficial O regon 3430 SW Reindeer Inc.; Atlantic Credit Ave, Redmond, Or& Finance Inc.; Ocegon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Pocupants of the prem ises; th e R e a l tential bidders must Property located at arrive 15 minutes 17890 Mockingbird prior to the auction to allow the DesL ane, Bend, O r egon 97707, Defenc hutes Coun t y dant/s. Case No.: S heriff's Office to 14CV0354FC. NOreview bid d e r's T ICE O F SAL E funds. Only U . S. UNDER WRIT OF c urrency an d / or EXECUTION cashier's c h e cks REAL PROPERTY. made payable to Notice is h e reby Deschutes County
REAL PROPERTY.
Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, May 7, 2015 at 10:00 AM,
in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, sell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for c ash o r cashier's check, the real property comm only known a s 2895 Nor t heast Hidden Brook Place, B end, Ore g o n 97701. C onditions 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 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 upon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h i s sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE N ationstar Mo r t gage LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Terry L. Johnston aka Terry J ohnston; O c c upants of the property, D e fendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0229FC. NOT ICE O F SAL 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, April 30, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Off i 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 12430 NW Chinook Drive, Terrebonne, O regon 977 6 0 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior to t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to 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 N ationstar Mo r t gage LLC, its successors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Joann L. Overbay; Whitney Overbay; Robert J. Overbay; Sterling Jewelers Inc. DBA Kay Jewelers; Quick Collect, Inc.; and Occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0364FC. 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 Thursday, May 14, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Off i 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 63294 Eas t view D rive, Bend, O regon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes
may be examined at Sheriff's Office will 1758, Eugene, OR the following loca97440-1758, orthey be accepted. Paytions: may be barred. All ment must be made p ersons who s e •City of Redmond En- in full immediately gineering D i v ision, upon the close of rights may be af243 NE A ntler Avfected by these prothe sale. For more enue, Redmond, Or- information on this ceedings may obegon. tain additional sale go to: www.or.www.ciplist.com information from the egonsheriff s.com/sa records of the court, les.htm T he R e quest f o r the personal repreLEGAL NOTICE Qualifications Packsentative, or his atage will be posted to The following units torney, Robert A. will be sold at Pubwww.ciplist.com. Smejkal, whose adA u c tion on P roposers are r e - lic d ress i s lis t e d quired to sign up and Thursday, M a r ch above, and whose access the RFQ so- 19, 2015 at 12 p.m. telephone number is l icitation thro u gh at Northwest Self (541) 345-3330. www.ciplist.com. (It's Storage, 100 SE 3rd LEGAL NOTICE B e nd , OR free) Select Oregon, St., Ocwen Loan Servic- then scroll down to 97702. Unit¹ D268ing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Patricia Blair, Unit¹ LEGAL NOTICE Deschutes C o u nty Buckley Morgan I I; C163 Forrest NOTICE OF PUBLIC and click on Browse Leanna M. Morgan; Cities, t he n s c r oll Dodge, Unit¹ C102AUCTION Persons or P a rties down to R e dmond A manda Dzi a k , WRIGHT MINI Unknown c l a iming a nd click o n C i t y Unit¹ B1 8 - J e ff STORAGE any right, title, lien, or Projects, then click on Erickson, Unit¹ B25 interest in the prop- the Project of interest - Ann Marie Jenkins, The contents of the Unit¹ C169 - Susan following storage units erty described in the under the Title and her e in, follow directions for Padgett, Unit¹ D298 will be auctioned to complaint collect unpaid stor- D efendant/s. C a s e download. Copies of - Julianne Wagner. age fees on Saturday, No.: 12CV0004. NO- the Request for QualiLEGAL NOTICE TICE OF SALE UN- f ications an d M arch 14, 2015 a t a n y T RUSTEE'S N O DER WRIT OF EX10:00 a.m. other related docuOF SALE TS ECUTION - REAL ments will be posted TICE No.: 01 9 5 55-OR PROPERTY. Notice is here. Consultants WRIGHT MINI No.: hereby given that the who plan to propose *Loan STORAGE ** * * * 891 6 ReferDeschutes C o u nty on this project are re1835 S. HIGHWAY 97 ence is made to that Sheriff's Office will, on quired to register for certain trust deed REDMOND, OR 97756 T hursday, May 7 , (541 ) 548-2138 an a c count on 2015 at 10:00 AM, in www.ciplist.com to be (the "Deed of Trust") the main lobby of the included m the Plan executed by LAUUNIT ¹'s: M. Deschutes C o u nty Holder's list and to re- RANNA ¹33 Miller, Kayla Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 ceive email updates of RITCHIE A MAR¹40 Dallas, Jeannie RIED PERSON, as W. Highway 20, Bend, any addenda or revi- Grantor, ¹73 Miller, Kayla to W ells Oregon, sell, at public sions t o ¹A25 Krueqer, Jamie t h e bid Fargo Financial Na¹A45 Black, Ray & Debbie o ral auction to t h e documents. The int ional B ank, a s ¹A67 Rogers, Brandon h ighest bidder, f o r formation contained in favor of cash o r ca s hier's o n t his s i t e m a y Trustee, ¹B48 Murray, Adrina Fargo Bank, ¹B60 Keller, Samantha check, the real prop- change over time and Wells NA, as Beneficiary, erty commonly known without notice to bid- dated ¹E65 Fischer, Jenn 5 / 2 6/2004, as 51244 Diane Road, ders or registered us¹E69 Fischer, Jenn recorded 6/23/2004, La P i ne, O r egon ers. W hile effort is ¹E81 Major, Craig 97739. Conditions of made to keep infor- as Instrument No. in the LEGAL NOTICE Sale: Potential bid- mation current and 2004-36981, NOTICE OF SEIZURE ders must arrive 15 accurate and to notify Official Records of Deschutes County, FOR CIVIL minutes prior to the registered users of Oregon, which covFORFEITURE TO ALL auction to allow the any changes to the ers the following dePOTENTIAL Deschutes C o u nty bid documents, it is CLAIMANTS AND TO Sheriff's Office to re- the responsibility of scribed real prope rty s i tuated i n ALL UNKNOWN view bidder's funds. bidder to regis- Deschutes County, PERSONS READ THIS Only U.S. currency each ter with Oregon: THE EAST CAREFULLY and/or cashier's and HALF O F THE checks made payable www.ciplist.com check this website E AST HALF O F If you have any inter- to Deschutes County to a D a i l y b a sis THE SOUTH HALF est in t h e s e ized Sheriff's Office will be on the close of OF THE SOUTHproperty d e scribed accepted. P ayment through bids for any appli- EAST Q UARTER below, you must claim must be made in full addenda or up- OF THE NORTHthat interest or you will immediately upon the cable WEST Q UARTER automatically lose that close of the sale. For dates. OF SECTION 31, interest. If you do not more information on No Proposal will be TOWNSHIP 15 file a claim for the this s al e g o to: c onsidered from a property, the property www.oregonsheriffs.c Consultant to whom a SOUTH, RANGE 11 EAST O F THE may be forfeited even om/sales.htm RFQ form has not WILLAMETTE MEif you are not conbeen issued by the LEGAL NOTICE RIDIAN, DESvicted of any crime. Planet Home Lending City of Redmond to CHUTES COUNTY, To claim an interest, registered proposers L LC, Plaintiff/s, v . AP N : you must file a written Quinten S Hargraves; from www.ciplist.com. O REGON. 130904 / claim with the forfeiThe Estate of Mary E 1511310000702 ture counsel named four (4) copies Commonly known below, The w r itten Hargraves, Deceased; Send the Proposal to the as: 17400 S TAR claim must be signed Unknown Heirs and of City Recorder's THISTLE LN. by you, sworn to un- Devisees of Mary E dress listed belowadby BEND, OR der penalty of perjury Hargraves, Deceased; and Persons or Par4:00 pm March 31, 97701-9173The curbefore a notary public, 2015 . Cl early mark ties unknown claimrent beneficiary is: and state: (a) Your outside envelope Wells Fargo Bank, true name; (b) The ing any right, title, lien, the address at which you o r i nterest i n th e "RFQ: "Ci o f Red- N.A. Both the benMaterials In- e ficiary an d th e will a c cept f u t ure property described in mond trustee have elected m ailings from t h e the complaint herein, s ection Services" to sell the court and f orfeiture D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 1 3 C V1443FC. Attn: Kelly Morse, above-described counsel; and (3) A N OTICE OF S A LE City Recorder real property to sats tatement that y o u have an interest in the U NDER WRIT O F 716 SW Evergreen Ave. isfy the obligations EXECUTION REAL Redmond, OR 97756 secured by the seized property. Your Deed of Trust and deadline for filing the PROPERTY. Notice is Direct all other notice has been reclaim document with hereby given that the questions or corded pursuant to forfeiture co u nsel Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on inquiries to: ORS 86.752(3). The n amed below is 21 default for which the days from the last day Thursday, April 3 0, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in Steve Wilson, foreclosure is made of publication of this Projects Manager the main lobby of the is the grantor's failnotice. Where to file a Deschutes C o u nty City of Redmond ure to pay w hen claim and for more Engineering due, the following i nformation: D a i na Sheriff's Office, 63333 Department sums: D e linquent Vitolins, Crook County W. Highway 20, Bend, Telephone: Payments: Dates: District Attorney Of- Oregon, sell, at public (541) 504-2002 11/1 5/2010-1/15/20 fice, 300 N E T h ird o ral auction to t he Email: 15. Total: Street, Prineville, OR h ighest bidder, f o r steve.wilson@ci.redmond.or.us cash o r ca s hier's $ 10,903.42. Late 97754. check, the real propCharges: $ 39.76. Notice of reasons for erty commonly known Beneficiary AdForfeiture: The propPUBLISH: vances: 81,160.00. erty described below as 53795 4th Street, Bend Bulletin O r egon Foreclosure F ees was seized for forfei- La P i ne, Wednesday, and Exp e nses: ture because it: (1) 97739. Conditions of March 4, 2015 $757.50. Total ReConstitutes the pro- Sale: Potential bidquired to Reinstate: ceeds of the violation ders must arrive 15 $12,860.68. TOTAL Find It in of, solicitation to vio- minutes prior to the auction to allow the TO late, attempt to vio- Deschutes C o u nty The Bulletin Classifleds! REQUIRED PAYOFF: late, or conspiracy to 541-385-5809 Sheriff's Office to re$71,01 1.48. By reaviolates, the criminal view bidder's funds. son of the default, laws of the State of LEGAL NOTICE the beneficiary has Oregon regarding the Only U.S. currency cashier's The Bank of New declared all obligamanufacture, distribu- and/or made payable York Mellon Trust tions secured by the tion, or possession of checks to Deschutes County C ompany, N.A . Deed of Trust imcontrolled substances Sheriff's Office will be F/K/A The Bank of mediately due and (ORS Chapter475); accepted. Payment New Yor k T r u st payable, including: and/or (2) Was used must be made in full Company, N.A., as the principal sum of or intended for use in $59, t 60.00 tocommitting or f acili- immediately upon the Trustee for Chase gether with interest tating the violation of, close of the sale. For Mortgage Finance thereon at the rate solicitation to violate, more information on Corporation go to: Multi-Class M o r t- of 3.99 % per anattempt to violate, or this s al e www.oregonsheriffs.c age Pass-Through num, from conspiracy to violate om/sales.htm ertificates Series 1 0/1 5/2010 un t i l the criminal laws of 2 007-S3, its s u cpaid, plus all acthe State of Oregon LEGAL NOTICE cessors in interest crued late charges, regarding the manuPublic Auction ass i gns, and al l t r u stee's facture, distribution or The following units and/or fees, f o reclosure possession of con- will be sold at Public Plaintiff/s, v. Jeffrey costs, and any sums trolled su b stances Auction on Thursday L. Behrens; Colleen E. Behrens; and a dvanced by t h e (ORS Chapter 475). M arch 19, 2015 a t beneficiary pursu2:00 p.m. at Old Mill O ccupants of t h e ant to the terms and D efenIN THE MATTER OF: Self Storage, 150 SW premises, dant/s. Case No.: c onditions of t h e (1) $4,700.00 in US Industrial Way, Bend, 14CV0779FC. NOD eed o f Tru s t Currency, Case No O R 9 7 7 02 . Uni t SAL E W hereof, not i c e 1 4-396334 sei z e d ¹202-Sophia Aquarius T ICE O F hereby is given that January 5, 2015 from & unit ¹ 325-Patricia UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION the und e rsigned Bradford Martson and Haeffelin. REAL PROPERTY. t rustee, CLE A R Angela Lindgren. LEGAL NOTICE Notice i s h e r eby RECON CO R P ., LEGAL NOTICE Request for given that the Deswhose address is N OTICE T O IN Qualifications (RFQ) c hutes Coun t y 621 SW M o rrison TERESTED PERSheriff's Office will, Street, Suite 425, SONS: Probate proT his Request f o r on Tuesday, May Portland, OR 97205, will on 6 / 30/2015, c eedings i n th e Qualifications by the 19, 2015 at 10:00 Estate of Ann Marie City o f Re d mond A M, in t h e m a i n at the hour of 11:00 Mombert, deceased, ("City") for materials lobby of the DesAM, standard time, are now pending in testing on a regular c hutes Coun t y as established by the Circuit Court for basis during construc- Sheriff's Off i c e, ORS 187.110, AT Deschutes County, tion phases of streets, 63333 W. Highway THE BOND Oregon, Case No. s ewer, water a n d 20, Bend, Oregon, STREET EN15PB0015. Bradly other City o f R e d- sell, at public oral T RANCE S T E PS L . Mombert h a s mond an d Pu b l ic auction to the highT O T H E DES been appointed as works projects. The est bidder, for cash CHUTES COUNTY City i nvites s t ate- or cashier's check, COURTHOUSE, personal representative of Decedent. ments of q u alifica- the real p roperty 1 164 N W B O N D All persons having tions from p r ofes- commonly known as S T., B END, O R claims against the sional mate r ials 5 9837 Calg a ry 97701, sell at public Estate are required testing firms ("firm") in L oop, Bend, O r auction to the highto present them, in order to establish a egon 97702. Condiest bidder for cash provider of such test- tions of Sale: Pothe interest in the due form, within four m onths after t h e ing services on call to tential bidders must above-described date of first publicathe City of Redmond arrive 15 minutes real property which tion of this Notice. construction inspec- prior to the auction the grantor had or tion program. to allow the DesThe date of f i rst had power to conpublication of t h is c hutes Coun t y vey at the time it Notice is February The project shall be Sheriff's Office t o executed the Deed 25, 2015. C laims referred to as "Mate- review bid d e r's of Trust, together shall be presented r ials Testin S e r - funds. Only U . S. with an y i n terest to the personal repv ices to the Ci o f c urrency an d / or which the grantor or resentative at t his cashier's c h e cks his successors in Redmond" address: c/o Robert made payable to interest a c q uired A. Smejkal, PO Box Contract Documents Deschutes County after the execution prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to 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
of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing o b l igations thereby secured and the costs and ex-
penses of sale, including a r easonable charge by the
t rustee. Notice i s further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right to have the f oreclosure pr o ceeding dismissed and the Deed of Trust reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than the portion of principal that would not then be due had no default occurred), together w ith t h e cos t s , trustee's and attorneys' fees, and curing any o t her default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering t h e per f ormance 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 1/2015 C LEAR RE C O N CORP 621 SW Morrison Street, Suite 425 Portland, OR 97205 858-750-7600. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-14-636189-NH
Reference is made to t hat c e rtain d e e d made by, B ONNIE SPATRISANO as Grantor t o W E S TERN TITLE AND ESCROW, as trustee, in favor of NEW CENT URY M O R T G A G E CORPORATION, as
B eneficiary, d a ted 7/26/2004, recorded 7/30/2004, in official r ecords o f DES CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. and/or as fee/file/instrument/microfilm/reception number 2004-45552 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and S t ate, to-wit: APN: 171233 BC 01400 171233 BC 01400 LOT 9, BLOCK 18, CENTER ADDITION TO BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY,
O REGON. C om monly known as: 374 NE KEARNEY AVE, BEND, OR 97701 The undersigned hereby certifies that based upon business records there are no k nown written a s signments of the trust deed by the trustee or by the beneficiary and no appointments of a successor tr u s tee have been made, except as recorded in t he records of t h e 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 St a 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 the 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 t h e fo l lowing sums: De l i nquent Payments: Payment I nformation Fro m 9/1/2010 Thr o ugh 1/1/2015 Total Payments
$89 , 368.24 Late Charges From 9/1/2010 Thr o ugh 1/1/2015 Total Late Charges $ 2 ,200.33 Beneficiary's Advances, Costs, And Expenses Total Advances: $0.00 TOTAL FORE C LOSURE COST: $ 4,380.00 TO T A L REQUIRED TO REINSTATE: $1 03,407.23 TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $254,346.25 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 payab
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Legal Notices
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" "beneficiary" and include their respective successors i n interest, if a n y. 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 W ashington. If a n y irregularities are discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, the trustee will rescind the sale, return th e b u yer's m oney an d tak e f urther a c tion a s necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only t o a r e turn of t h e m onies paid to t h e Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have n o fur t h er recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the B eneficiary'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 c ase this l etter i s intended to exercise the n o t e ho l ders right's against the real p roperty only. A s required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may b e submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. W ithout limiting the trustee's disclaimer of r epresentations or warranties, O r egon l aw r e quires t h e trustee to state in this n otice t ha t so m e 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 toxic. Prospective purchasers of residential p r operty 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 PR O PERTY H AVE CERT A I N PROTECTIONS
AFFORDED TO THEM UNDER ORS 86.782 AND POSSIBLY U NDER FEDERAL LAW. ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE OF S ALE, AND INCORPORATED HEREIN, IS A NOTICE TO T ENANTS THAT SETS FORTH SOME OF THE PROTECTIONS THAT ARE A VAILABLE TO A T ENANT O F THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY A ND WHICH SETS FORTH CE R TAIN REQUIREMENTS THAT M U S T BE COMPLIED WITH BY A NY T E NANT IN ORDER TO OBTAIN THE AFF O R DED P ROTECTION, A S REQUIRED UNDER ORS 86.771. Q UALITY MAY B E C ONSIDERED A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO C OLLECT A D E BT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE U SED FO R T H A T PURPOSE. TS No: OR-14-636189-NH Dated: 1/27/1 5 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as Trustee Signature By: Nina Her n andez, Assistant S ecretary Trustee's Mai l i ng Address: Quality Loan Service C o rp . of Washington C/0 Quality Loan Service Corporation 411 Ivy Street San Diego, CA 92101 T rus t ee's Physical Ad d r ess: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 108 1st Ave South, Suite 202, S e attle, WA 98104 Toll Free: (866) 925- 0 2 41 A-4508836 02/1 8/2015, 02/25/2015, 03/04/2015, 03/1 1/2015 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-14-644294-NH Reference is made to t hat c e rtain d e e d made by, SHARON L. D ILLARD, A M A RRIED WOM AN, AS H ER S OL E AN D SEPARATE PROP-
described real prop- POSSIBLY UNDER bidder's funds. Only erty which the grantor FEDERAL LAW. ATU.S. currency had or had power to T ACHED TO T H I S and/or ca s hier's convey at the time of NOTICE OF S ALE, checks made paythe execution by him AND INC O RPO- able to Deschutes of the said trust deed, RATED HEREIN, IS A County Sheriff's Oftogether with any in- N OTICE T O T E N - f ice will b e a c terest w h i c h the ANTS THAT S ETS cepted. P a yment grantor or his succes- F ORTH SOME O F must be made in full sors in interest ac- THE PROTECTIONS immediately upon quired after the ex- THAT AR E A V AIL- t he close o f t h e ecution of said trust ABLE TO A TENANT sale. For more indeed, to satisfy the OF THE SUBJECT f ormation on t h is foregoing obligations REAL P R O PERTY sale go to: www.orthereby secured and AND WHICH SETS egonsheri ff s.com/sa t he costs an d e x - FORTH CE R T AIN les.htm penses of sale, inREQUIREMENTS LEGAL NOTICE cluding a reasonable THAT M U S T BE US Bank National charge by the trustee. COMPLIED WITH BY Association, Notice is further given ANY T E NANT IN T rustee for B easar t hat a n y per s on ORDER TO OBTAIN S tearns Asse t named i n S e c tion THE AFF O R DED Backed Securities 86.778 of Oregon Re- P ROTECTION, A S Trust 2004-AC7 Asvised Statutes has the REQUIRED UNDER set-Backed Certifiright to have the fore- ORS 86.771. QUAL- c ates, s closure p r oceeding ITY MAY BE CON- 2004-AC7, itsSerie sucd ismissed and t h e S IDERED A D E B T cessors in interest trust deed reinstated COLLECTOR AT- and/or ass i gns, by payment to t he TEMPTING TO COL- Plaintiff/s, v. David beneficiary of the en- LECT A DEBT AND A. Collins aka David tire amount then due ANY INFORMATION Allen Collins; Jan(other than such por- OBTAINED WILL BE ette M. Collins aka tion of said principal USED FOR T H AT Janette Marie Colas would not then be P URPOSE. TS N o : lins; The Greens at due had no default OR-14-644294-NH Owner's occurred), t o gether Dated: 1/27/15 Qual- Redmond Association, I n c .; w ith t he cost s , ity Loan Service Cor- JPMorgan C hase trustee's and poration of Washing- Bank, NA; O ccubased upon business attorney's fees and ton, a s Tru s tee pants of th e p rerecords there are no curing any other de- Signature By: N i na mises; and the Real k nown written a s fault complained of in Hernandez, Assistant located at signments of the trust the Notice of Default Secretary T rustee's Property 4460 So u t hwest deed by the trustee or by tendering the per- Mailing Add r ess: T revino Cour t , by the beneficiary and formance r e q uired Quality Loan Service Redmond, Oregon no appointments of a under the obligation or Corp. of Washington 97756, Defendant/s. successor tr u s tee trust deed, at any time C /0 Q u ality L o a n Case No.: have been made, ex- pdor to five days be- Service Corporation 14CV0221FC. NOcept as recorded in fore the date last set 411 Ivy Street San T ICE O F SA L E t he records of t h e for sale. Other than as D iego, C A 92 1 0 1 WRIT OF county or counties in shown of record, nei- Trustee's Ph y sical UNDER EXECUTION which the above de- ther the beneficiary Address: Quality Loan REAL PROPERTY. scribed real property nor the trustee has Service C o rp. o f Notice is h e reby is situated. Further, no any actual notice of Washington 108 1st given that the Desaction has been insti- any person having or Ave South, Suite 202, c hutes Cou n t y tuted to recover the claiming to have any Seattle, WA 9 8 104 Sheriff's Office will, d ebt, or a n y p a r t lien upon or interest in Toll F r e e: (866) on Tuesday, May thereof, now remain- the r e a l pr o perty 925-0241 A-4508815 12, 2015 at 10:00 ing secured by the hereinabove de- 02/1 8/2015, AM, in t h e m a in trust deed, or, if such scribed subsequentto 02/25/2015, lobby of the Desaction has been insti- t he interest o f t h e 03/04/2015, c hutes Cou n t y tuted, such action has trustee in the t rust 03/1 1/2015 S heriff's Offi c e , been dismissed ex- deed, or of any sucLEGAL NOTICE 63333 W. Highway cept as permitted by cessor in interest to Umpqua Bank, as 20, Bend, Oregon, ORS 86.752(7). Both grantor or of any les- successor in intersell, at public oral the beneficiary and see or other person in est by merger to auction to the hight he t r ustee h a v e possession of or oc- Sterling S a v ings est bidder, for cash elected to sell the said cupying the property, Bank, Plaintiff/s, v. or cashier's check, real property to sat- e xcept: Name a nd Allen L. Lowery, an the real p roperty isfy the o bligations Last Known Address individual; Evonne commonly known as secured by said trust and Nature of Right, K. Lowery, an indi4460 So u t hwest deed and notice has Lien o r Int e rest vidual; and All OcT revino Cour t , been recorded pursu- SHARON D ILLARD cupants of the Real Redmond, Oregon a nt to Sect i o n 171 SE WINDANCE P roperty a s de 97756. Conditions 86.752(3) of Oregon CT BEND, OR 97702 scribed in the comof Sale: P otential Revised St a t utes. Original Borrower For plaint herein, Debidders must arrive There is a default by Sale Information Call: fendant/s. Case No.: 15 minutes prior to grantor or other per- 714-730-2727 or LoNOthe auction to allow son owing an obliga- gin to: www.service- T14CV0499FC. ICE O F SAL E the Desc h utes tion, performance of linkasap.com In con- UNDER WRIT OF County Sheriff's Ofwhich is secured by struing this notice, the EXECUTION f ice to rev i e w the trust deed, or by singular includes the REAL PROPERTY. funds. Only the successor in in- p lural, t h e wor d Notice is h e reby bidder's U.S. currency terest, with respect to "grantor" includes any given that the Desand/or cas h ier's provisions the r ein successor in interest c hutes Cou n t y checks made paywhich authorize sale to this grantor as well Sheriff's Office will, able to Deschutes in the event of such as any other person on Thursday, May 7, County Sheriff's Ofprovision. The default owing an obligation, 2015 at 10:00 AM, f ice will b e ac for which foreclosure the performance of in the main lobby of cepted. P a yment is made is grantor's which is secured by the Desc h utes must be made in full failure to pay when the trust deed, and County Sheriff's Ofimmediately upon due th e f o l lowing the words "trustee" fice, 6 3 33 3 W. t he close o f t h e sums: Del i nquent and "beneficiary" inHighway 20, Bend, sale. For more inPayments: Payment clude their respective O regon, sell, a t f ormation on t h is I nformation Fro m successors in interest, public oral auction sale go to: www.or5/1/2009 Thr o ugh if any. Pursuant to the highest bidegonsheriff s.com/sa 1/1/2015 Total PayOregon Law, this sale to les.htm er, for c ash o r ments $9 4 ,446.68 will not be deemed fi- d cashier's check, the Late Charges From nal until the Trustee's real property com5/1/2009 Thr o ugh deed has been isonly known a s Find exactly what 1/1/2015 Total Late sued by Quality Loan m 16905 Cagle Road, C harges $47. 3 3 Service Corporation of La Pine, O regon you are looking for in the Beneficiary's Ad- Washington. If any ir- 97739. Conditions CLASSIFIEDS vances, Costs, And regularities are disof Sale: P o tential Expenses Total Adc overed w ithin 1 0 bidders must arrive vances: $0.00 TO- days of the date of LEGAL NOTICE 15 minutes prior to TAL FORE C LO- this sale, the trustee the U.S. Bank National auction to allow SURE COST: will rescind the sale, the as Desc h utes Association, $ 4,743.00 TOT A L return th e b u y er's County Sheriff's Trustee, successor OfREQUIRED TO RE- money and take fur- f ice to in in t e rest to revi e w INSTATE: ther action as neces- bidder's funds. W achovia B a nk, Only $114,498.24 TOTAL sary. If the sale is set U.S. N.A., as Trustee for currency REQUIRED TO aside for any reason, and/or ca s h ier's Park Place SecuriPAYOFF: including i f the checks made payties, Inc., $422,577.98 By rea- Trustee is unable to Asset-Backed able to Deschutes son of the default, the convey title, the Pur- County Sheriff's OfPass-Through Cerbeneficiary has de- chaser at th e s a le f ice will b e a c t ificates, Ser i e s clared all sums owing shall be entitled only cepted. P a yment 2004-WWF1, its on the obligation se- t o a r e turn of t h e must be made in full successors in intercured by th e t rust monies paid to t he est and/or assigns, mmediately u p on deed immediately due Trustee. This shall be ti he Plaintiff/s, v. David close o f t h e and payable, those the Purchaser's sole sale. For more inL. Johnson; Kathy L. sums being the fol- and exclusive remedy. f ormation on t h i s Johnson; Cascade lowing, to- wit: The in- The purchaser shall sale go to: www.orLane, LLC; Capital stallments of principal have no further reOne Bank (USA), egonsheriff s.com/sa and interest which be- course against the N.A.; Occupants of came due on Trustor, the Trustee, les.htm the premises; and LEGAL NOTICE 5/1/2009, and all sub- the Beneficiary, the the Real Property US Bank National sequent installments Beneficiary's Agent, located at 1 6 021 Association as of principal and inter- or the Beneficiary's Cascade Lane, La est through the date Attorney. If you have Trustee for RASC P ine, Oreg o n of this Notice, plus previously been dis- 2007-KS3, its suc97739, Defendant/s. amounts that are due charged thr o u gh cessors and/or asCase No.: for late charges, de- bankruptcy, you may signs, Plaintiff/s, v. 14CV0368FC. NOlinquent pro p erty have been released of Daniel O. S i m o- T ICE O F SAL E neau; Kelly K. Sitaxes, insurance pre- personal liability for UNDER WRIT OF miums, ad v a nces t his loan i n w h i ch moneau; State of EXECUTION O regon; an d a l l made on senior liens, case this letter is inREAL PROPERTY. taxes and/or insur- tended to exercise the other Persons or Notice is h e reby ance, trustee's fees, note holders right's Parties U n k nown given that the Desand any attorney fees against the real prop- claiming any right, c hutes Cou n t y and court costs aris- erty only. As required title, lien, or interest Sheriff's Office will, ing from or associ- b y law, y o u a r e in the Real Property on Tuesday, May ated with the benefi- hereby notified that a commonly known as 2015 at 10:00 Nor t hwest 12, ciaries e ff orts to negative credit report 2374 AM, in t h e m a in Quinn Creek Loop, protect and preserve r eflecting o n y o u r lobby of the Desi ts security, al l o f credit record may be Bend OR 9 7 701, c hutes Cou n t y which must be paid as submitted to a credit Defendant/s. Case S heriff's Of fi c e , No.: 13C V 0505. 63333 W. Highway a condition of rein- report agency if you statement, including fail to fulfill the terms NOTICE OF SALE 20, Bend, Oregon, all sums that shall ac- of your credit obliga- UNDER WRIT OF sell, at public oral crue through r ein- tions. Without limiting EXECUTION auction to the highREAL PROPERTY. statement or pay-off. t he t r ustee's d i s est bidder, for cash Notice is h e reby Nothing in this notice claimer of representaor cashier's check, shall be construed as tions or w arranties, given that the Desthe real p roperty Coun t y a waiver of any fees Oregon law requires c hutes commonly known as owing to the Benefi- the trustee to state in Sheriff's Office will, 16021 Cas c ade ciary under the Deed this notice that some on Thursday, May 7, Lane, La Pine, Orof Trust pursuant to residential p r operty 2015 at 10:00 AM, egon 97739. Condithe terms of the loan sold at a trustee's sale in the main lobby of tions of Sale: Pothe Desc h utes documents. Whereof, may have been used tential bidders must notice hereby is given in manufacturing County Sheriff's Ofarrive 15 m inutes fice, 6 3 33 3 W. that Quality Loan Ser- methamphetamines, prior to the auction vice Corporation of the chemical compo- Highway 20, Bend, to allow the DesO regon, sell, a t Washington, the un- nents of which are c hutes Cou n t y dersigned trustee will known to be t oxic. public oral auction S heriff's Office t o on 6/12/2015 at the Prospective purchas- to the highest bidreview bid d er's hour of 1 1:00 am, ers o f res i dential d er, for c as h o r f unds. Only U . S. cashier's check, the Standard of Time, as property should be currency an d / or real property comestablished by sec- aware of this potencashier's c h e cks tion 187.110, Oregon tial danger before de- m only known a s payable to Nor t hwest made Revised Statues, At ciding to place a bid 2374 Deschutes County the front entrance of for this property at the Quinn Creek Loop, Sheriff's Office will B end, Ore g o n be accepted. Paythe Courthouse, 1164 trustee's sale. NON.W. Bond S t reet, TICE TO TENANTS: 97701. Conditions ment must be made of Sale: P o tential in full immediately B end, O R 97 7 0 1 T ENANTS OF T H E bidders must arrive County o f DES - SUBJECT REAL upon the close of 15 minutes prior to C HUTES, State o f P ROPERTY H A VE the sale. For more Oregon, sell at public CERTAIN PROTEC- the auction to allow on this Desc h utes information auction to the highest TIONS A F FORDED the sale go to: www.orbidder for cash the TO THEM U NDER County Sheriff's Ofegonsheriff s.com/sa revi e w interest in the said O RS 8 6.782 A N D f ice to les.htm ERTY as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE and E SCROW CO., a s trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYS T EMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR CENTRAL PACIFIC M ORTGAGE C O M PANY, A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, dated 8/23/2006, recorded 8/30/2006, in official r ecords o f DES CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. and/or as fee/file/instrument/microfilm/reception number 2006-59599 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and State, to-wit: APN: 185708 181203BB03728 LOT 26, WINDANCE ESTATES, PHASE 11, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 171 SE WINDANCE CT, BEND, OR 97702 The und e rsigned hereby certifies that
LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for the certific ateholders of t h e LXS 2005-7N Trust Fund, also shown of record as Lehman XS Trust Mort g a ge Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-7N, Plaintiff/s, v. Michael J. Quinn; Kerenia N. Quinn; Allianceone R e ceivables Management Inc; Occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 1 4CV0660FC. N O TICE 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 1 4 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's Office,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e highest bidder, f or cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 16497 C assidy Drive, La Pine, Oregon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i dders m u s t arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County 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
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, N.A. a s T r u stee F /B/0 holders of S tructured A s s e t Mortgage I n vestm ents II Inc. , Structured A s s et Mortgage I n v estm ents I I Tru s t 2 007-AR4, M o rtage Pass-Through ertificates, Series 2007-AR4, Plaintiff/s, v. Gonzalo Morales; O ccupants of t h e property, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13C V 0242. NOTICE OF SALE 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 Thursday, May 14, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in 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 652 N W Po w ell Butte Loop, Bend, O regon 977 0 1 . 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
LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank, National Association, successor trustee to Bank of America, N.A. as successor t o L a S alle be accepted. Paymust be made Bank, N.A. as trustee ment for the Merrill Lynch in full immediately upon the close of First Franklin Mortgage Loan T r ust, the sale. For more Mortgage Loan information on this Asset-Backed Certifi- sale go to: www.orcates, Series egonsherlffs.com/sa 2007-H1, Plaintiff/s, v. les.htm Juan Zendejas; Lake LEGAL NOTICE Park Estates Prop- Wells Fargo Bank, erty Owners Associa- N.A., its successors tion; Occupants of the in interest and/or premises, assigns, Plamtiff/s, D efendant/s. C a se v. Ruth E. Harpole No.: 1 4 C V0812FC. aka Ruth E l aine NOTICE OF S A LE Harpole; Steven L. U NDER WRIT O F Harpole aka Steve EXECUTION - REAL Harpole; Deschutes PROPERTY. Notice is County; Columbia hereby given that the Collection Service Deschutes C o u nty Inc.; Ray Klein, Inc.; Sheriff's Office will, on U nited States o f T uesday, May 1 9 , America; and Occu2015 at 10:00 AM, in pants of the p rethe main lobby of the mises, Defendant/s. Deschutes C o unty Case No.: Sheriff 's Office,63333 13CV0557. NOW. Highway 20, Bend, T ICE O F SAL E Oregon, sell, at public UNDER WRIT OF oral auction to t he EXECUTION h ighest bidder, f o r REAL PROPERTY. cash o r ca s hier's Notice i s h e r eby check, the real prop- given that the Deserty commonly known c hutes Coun t y as 3775 NE Zamia Sheriff's Office will, Avenue, R edmond, on Tuesday, May 5, Oregon 97756. Con- 2015 at 10:00 AM, ditions of Sale: Poin the main lobby of tential bidders must the Desc h utes arrive 15 minutes prior County Sheriff's Ofto the auction to allow fice, 6 3 33 3 W. the Deschutes County Highway 20, Bend, Sheriff's Office to re- O regon, sell, a t view bidder's funds. public oral auction Only U.S. currency to the highest bidand/or cashier's d er, for c ash o r checks made payable cashier's check, the to Deschutes County real property comSheriff's Office will be m only known as accepted. Payment 51366 Evans Way, must be made in full La Pine, Oregon immediately upon the 97739. C onditions close of the sale. For of Sale: P o tential more information on bidders must arrive this s al e go to: 15 minutes prior to www.oregonsheriffs.c the auction to allow om/sales.htm the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only LEGAL NOTICE currency U.S. Bank Trust, N.A., U.S. ca s h ier's as Trustee for LSF8 and/or Master Participation checks made payable to Deschutes Trust, Plaintiff/s, v. Sheriff's OfA rlen B . Mom b ; County Peggy E. Ketteman; f ice will b e a c Oregon A ff o rdable cepted. P a yment Housing Assistance must be made in full u p on Corporation; State of timmediately he close o f t h e Oregon, other Per- sale. For more insons or Parties, in- f ormation on t h is cluding O c cupants, sale go to: www.orUnknown c l a iming egonsherlffs.com/sa any right, title, lien, or les.htm interest in the property described in the LEGAL NOTICE complaint her e in, Wells Fargo Bank, D efendant/s. C a se NA, Plaintiff/s, v. Jose No.: 1 3 C V1520FC. A. Pinto Gonzalez; NOTICE OF S A LE Beatriz Pinto; State U NDER WRIT O F Accident I n surance EXECUTION - REAL Fund (SAIF) CorporaPROPERTY. Notice is tion; and Does 1-2, hereby given that the being all occupants or Deschutes C o u nty other persons or parSheriff's Office will, on ties claiming any right, T uesday, May 1 2 , title, lien, or interest in 2015 at 10:00 AM, in t he p r operty d e the main lobby of the scribed in the ComDeschutes C o unty plaint herein and loSheriff 's Office,63333 cated at 6297 1 W. Highway 20, Bend, Mimosa Drive, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public OR 97701, Defenoral auction to t he d ant/s. Case N o .: h ighest bidder, f o r 13CV0647. NOTICE cash o r ca s hier's OF SALE U N DER check, the real prop- WRIT OF E X ECUerty commonly known TION - REAL PROPas 60471 Pima Road, ERTY. N o t ic e is Bend, Oregon 97702. hereby given that the Conditions of S a le: Deschutes C o u nty Potential bidders must Sheriff's Office will, on arrive 15 minutes prior T uesday, May 1 2 , to the auction to allow 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the Deschutes County the main lobby of the Sheriff's Office to re- Deschutes C o u nty view bidder's funds. Sheriff's Office, 63333 Only U.S. currency W. Highway 20, Bend, and/or cashier's Oregon, sell, at public checks made payable
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 62971 M i mosa Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701. 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 Wells Fargo Bank, National A s sociation as Trustee for the Structured Asset Mortgage Inv estments I I I n c . Bear Stearns Mortgage Funding Trust 2 007-AR4 Mor t gage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2007-AR4, Plaintiff/s, v. Nicole P atterson; O c c upants of the property, D efendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0039. 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 5, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, sell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for cash o r cashier's check, the real property comm only known a s 19767 Buck Canyon Road, Bend, O regon 977 0 2 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior to t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to 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 Wells Fargo Bank, National A s sociation as Trustee for S tructured A s s e t Mortgage I n vestm ents II Inc. , Greenpoint M o r tgage Funding Trust 2 005-AR4, M o rtgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-AR4, Plaintiff/s, v. Mark P alardy; Dori s Palardy; H a y den Square Owners Ass ociation; O c c upants of the Property, D efendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0887. 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 Thursday, May 14, 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 r operty commonly known as 1917 SW Canyon Drive, 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 bidd e r'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. 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 Wells Fargo Bank, National A ssociation as Trustee for S tructured A s s e t Mortgage I n vestm ents II Inc. , G reenpoint M o r tgage Funding Trust 2 006-AR3, M o rtgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-AR3, through their loan servicing
agent J P Morgan Chase Bank, National Association, Plaintiff/s, v. Mary Poppenheimer-Han son; Noel Hanson AKA Noel E dwin Hanson II ; M o r tgage El e c troni
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To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.