Serving Central Oregon since1903 75
WEPNESPAV February11,2015
/NS5Rw44,
@.kj I ALSO INOUTDOORS: HOWTo MAKEHIKINGA EAMILYAEEAIR, D1
bendbulletin.com
osmera e: anicsamonou,' rane ows'in, TODAY'S READERBOARD
IN SALEM
'Revenge
Bend-La PineSchools
porn' bill before
bOardmeetS —Bend International School pushes for charter status. Plus, a district boundary update.B1
OSU legend dies —Former
Senate
Oregon State football star Bill "Earthquake" Enyart was a bruising runner.C1
By Taylor W.Anderson
Plus: Anepic fight —A
The Bulletin
quarter century later, Buster Douglas reflects on his upset of Mike Tyson.C1
SALEM — Oregon legislators are considering a bill that would make it
a crime for residents to distribute intimate imag-
Islamic State fight-
es and videos of others with the intent to harm or
President to seekformal war power bill from Congress.A2
harass them, which some say is a growing problem today, especially among young people.
And a Web exclusiveCalifornia's Capitol minister aims to keepstate's leaders free from temptation. bendbnuetin.com/extras
With Senate Bill 188, Or-
egon joins 26 other states that have proposed or enacted so-called revenge porn laws, which seek to preventpeople from send-
EDITOR'SCHOICE
ing intimate photos after a
g
relationship ends. Oregon's law would make the crime a mis-
U.S. to
demeanor for first-time offenders and a felony for repeat offenders to distribute the photos, many of
scale back cholesterol warnings
which end up on websites
dedicated to revenge porn and sometimes on social media.
See Revenge/A4 Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
By Peter Whoriskey
A light dusting of snow covers small portions of the Virginia Meissner Sno-park trails Tuesday afternoon.
COLORADO
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — The nation's top nutrition advi-
sory panel has decided to drop its caution about eating cholesterol-laden food, • What this
a move that
means for couldundo alyour diet, most 40 years A4 of government warn-
ings about its consumption. The group's finding that cholesterol in the diet need
no longer be considered a "nutrient of concern" stands in contrast to the
committee's findings five years ago, the last time it convened. During those
• No end in sight for area's warm weather The Bulletin
Promptedbyunseasonably low snowpack, Deschutes National For-
est officials are advising people who normally snow on snowmobiles over Presidents Day weekend to consider oth-
See Cholesterol /A4
ride near Millican east of
the city.
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly cloudy High 58, Low 34 Page B6
"We just don't have the snowpack to handle
the volume of motorized (snowmobile) recreation we get on Presidents Day weekend," Kirk Flannigan, deputy district ranger for the
INDEX Business C5-6 Horoscope 06 Calendar B2 L ocal/State B1-6 Classified E1-6 Obituaries B5 Comics E3-4 Outdoors 01-6 Crosswords E4 Sports C1-4 Dear Abby 06 TV/Movies 06 The Bulletin
An Independent Newspaper
Vol. 113, No. 42,
30 pages, 5 sections
Q I/I/e use recyclenewspri d nt
:I : IIIIIIIIII o
88 267 02329
gaattam Junction .: : Elevation 3,740 ft. SWE* on Feb. 10 .....0 Median SWE .......13.6
Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District of the Deschutes National Forest, said
Monday. See Snow /A5
Hogg Pass
Los Angeles Times
,-<~,s SWE on Feb. 10 .......0 'MedianSWE .......14.9
PUEBLO WEST, Colo. — On the front door of the 20,000-square-footmari-
-
McKenzie
vN ' '
Elevation 4,770 ft. SWE on Feb.10.....5.2 Median SWE ......30.3
-
Irish Taylor Elevation 5,540 ft. SWE on Feb.10.....5.1 Median SWE .......24.4
"And you can guarantee people read it," said Rick Hooper, general manager
ijuana to another state."
ren part of southern Col-
—-n,
Crescenl
a
CascadeSummit
*Snow water equivalent
Elevation 5,430 ft. SWEon Feb.10.......0 Median SWE .........7.6
of the Spot 420 in this bari
Elevation 5,100 ft. SWE on Feb. 10 ...5.8 Median SWE ......20.9
Ochoco Meadows
juana dispensary here is a laminated sign warning every customer: "It is illegal to sell or transport mar-
', ville
Iln
/
Legal pot triggers a border war By Kurtis Lee
'-"': Elevation 4,790 ft.
.
take to Central Oregon
cholesterol" a public health concern. The most current finding was discussed at the group's last meeting.
the issue of "excess dietary
The snow water equivalent, or how much water the snowpack is holding, has hit record lows for this time of year at automated snow gauges around the Deschutes/Crooked River Basin. Data kept by the Natural Resources Conservation Service goes back about three decades for the sites. The basin also saw low snow in early February in1981, 1991, 2003 and 2014.
Record lows fromselected Snotel sites in the Deschutes/Crooked River Basins
By Dylan J. Darling
erforms ofrecreation. Perhaps head out on ahike orhop on a mountainbike. Weigh swapping out a snowmobile ride along Century Drive west of Bend for an all-terrain vehicle
proceedings, as in previous years, the panel deemed
Record-low snow
Chemult
;t
l
orado. "We make it very, very clear that this is the
law here." Whetherpeople obey is an entirely different question, and some neigh-
AREA
Summit lake
boring states don't think a
Elevation 5,610 ft. SWE on Feb. 10...7.3 Median SWE ...... 25.3
O RE G O N
warning sign is effective enough. A border war has broken
Source: Natural Resoutoes Conservation Service
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
out between Colorado, where recreational pot is
Inside
In Friday'sGO!Magazine
• Might Hoodoo and other Oregonski resorts be done for the season?01
legal, and its neighbors, Nebraska and Oklahoma,
• Organizers prepare for awarm, no-snowWinterFest.
where it is not.
See Border /A5
Alabama a state with a long history of defiance By Campbell Robertson and Shaila Dewa
on Facebook and learned
"I support states' rights, scribed Christian conserva-
state where more than a third of the residents are evangelical Protestants, 7 out of 10
Alabama is not unique among states in strongly opposing same-sex marriage,
too," said Guinn, a self-de-
New Yorh Times News Service
that, once again, Chief Justice Roy Moore of the state
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
Supreme Court had defied
On Sundaynight,Blake Guinn, a 21-year-old city councilman in a deeply con-
a federal court in the name
tive who voted for Moore in 2012. "But I just feel like time
oppose same-sex marriageincluding blacks and whites
and it is not alone in bristling under a federal court order
of state sovereignty. Somehow, it did not seem entirely
and time again we pick the wrong and losing battles."
alike — and the state motto is
that goes against a substantial popular majority.
servative suburb here looked
unexpected.
-
Alabama is a conservative
a bellicose "We Dare Defend Our Rights."
See Alabama/A5
A2 T H E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
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Si sil.rva
Dtsouies rr
0 i By Jeremy W. Peters New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON The O bama administration h a s informed lawmakers that the
president will seek a formal authorization to fight the Islamic State that would prohibit
Sami C
ae
strategy for defeating the IsGeorge W. Bush in his cam- lamic State extremist group. paign to strike Iraq after his The White House has tried administration promoted ev- to address concerns by draftidence, since discredited, that ing a resolution that tries to Saddam Hussein's government be both circumscribed and since 2002, when it backed
possessed
u nc o nventional flexible. It would explicitly dis-
weapons. allow extended use of combat the use of "enduring offenThe new requestto conduct forces, lawmakers and aides sive ground forces" and limit m ilitary o p erations w o u ld who are familiar with the plan engagement to three years. repeal Bush's authorization. said Tuesday. That language is The approachoffers what the But it would leave in place the intended as a compromise to White House hopes is a middle broad authority to counter ter- ease concerns of members in way on Capitol Hill for those on rorism that Congress granted both noninterventionist and inthe right and left who remain Bush in 2001 after the Sept. 11 terventionist camps: those who deeply skeptical of its plans to attacks, which many Demo- believethe use of ground forces thwart extremist groups. crats now believe is being in- should be explicitly forbidden, The request, which could terpreted too broadly to justify and those who do not want to come in writing this morning, military actions that were nev- hamstring the commander in would open what is expected er intended. chief's options. to be a monthslong debate over After more than a decade The resolution also requests presidential war powers and of war and 7,000 U.S. military authority to wage battle bethe wisdom of committing to lives lost in Iraq and Afghani- yond the fight against the Isanother unpredictable mission stan, President Barack Obama lamic State to include "associatin the Middle East while the will face doubts not only from ed forces." It would contain no nation is struggling to cope Democrats who want strict- geographic limitations. Both with the consequences of two er limitations set on where he are sticking points for many prolonged wars. can send troops and how long Democrats, who expressed Congress has not voted to his authority will last, but also concern that the president was give a president formal au- from Republicans, who are du- setting the country up for anthority for a military operation bious of the administration's other open-ended conflict.
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A tour guide, in sunglasses andjeans, speaks to French tourists beside the statue of former South African President Nelson Mandelaoutside the former Victor Verster Prison, now known asDrakenstein Correctional Centre, near Franschhoek, South Africa, on Tuesday.
On Feb. 11,1990, Mandela walked free from the prison with his then-wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, with a raised fist after he wasjailed for 27 years by the former South African apartheid government. Today marks the 25th anniversary of Mandela's release from prison. Mandela diedDec. 5,2013.
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MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:
07042O s3Oss O n©® The estimated jackpot is now $74 million.
Brian Williams suspended — NBC announcedTuesday that it is suspending BrianWilliams as"Nightly News" anchor and managing editor for six months without payfor misleading the public about his experiences covering the IraqWar.NBCchief executive SteveBurke said Williams' actions wereinexcusableandjeopardized thetrust he has built with viewers during his decadeasthe network's leadanchor. But he saidWilliams deserved asecond chance.Williams apologized last week for saying hewasin a helicopter that was hit by agrenade while he coveredthe IraqWar in2003. Instead, another helicopter flying ahead ofhis was hit, and someveterans involved in the mission called him out on it.
Stewart leaving 'The Daily Show' — JonStewart, whoturned his biting and free-wheeling humor into anunlikely source of news and analysis for viewers of "TheDaily Show," will leave ashost this year, Comedy CentralsaidTuesday.Hisdeparturewasannouncedby Comedy Central President MicheleGaneless after Stewart, host of the show since1999, brokethe newsto the audience atTuesday's taping in New York. "Through his uniquevoice andvision, 'The Daily Show' has become acultural touchstone for millions of fans andanunparalleled platform for political comedythat will endure for years to come," Ganeless said in astatement. She called Stewart, 52, a"comic genius." She did not specify his departure date orwhat led to hisdecision.
India eleCtiOnS —Lessthan ayear after Narendra Modi won ahistoric victory to becomeIndia's prime minister, a smaller political earthquake struck thecapital Tuesday asModi's governing party lost badly in local elections to ayoungpolitical organization led byananti-corruption crusader. TheAamAadmi Party, or CommonMan Party, won 67of the 70 seats in theDelhi Assembly, far morethan surveys or eventhe most enthusiastic of theparty's supporters had predicted. AamAadmi is led byArvind Kejriwal, a former tax examiner whorose tofame asa campaigner against graft and refashionedhimself into a defender ofthis city's lowest social strata. SplCOX Illllloh —After aborting its second attempt to launch asatellite because ofhigh-level wind shearTuesday, SpaceXhasonemore shot for liftoff this weekthis evening.Strong upper-level winds plagued the skies above the CapeCanaveral Air ForceStation launch complex and did not calmenough beforethelaunchtarget time, forcing SpaceX to scrub theattempt. — From wire reports
With proof of deathnow inhand, friends andfamily honorhostage By Rukmini Callimachi and Eric Schmitt
in a building that had been demolished by Jordanian air-
New York Times News Service
strikes, a claim that the White
For one tortured weekend, All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem Communicationsinc., 1777SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, PO.Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-preparednewscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.
into Syria andIraq in unprecedented numbers tojoin the Islamic Stateor other extremist groups, including at least3,400 from Western nations among 20,000 fromaroundthe world, U.S. intelligenceofficials say in an updatedestimate of atop terrorism concern. Intelligence agencies believe that asmanyas 150Americans havetried andsome havesucceeded in reachingtheSyrian war zone,officials told the HouseHomeland Security Committee intestimony prepared for delivery today. Some of those Americanswerearrested en route, somedied in the area, anda small numberarestill fighting with extremists. Thetestimony and other datawereobtainedTuesdaybyTheAssociatedPress.
the Yemenigovernment collapsed, the leader of the Houthi militants who control Sanaa,thecapital, depicted his movement as eager to share powerwith its rivals and toreachout to the country's traditional allies, including theUnited States andSaudi Arabia — evenasthe U.S. Embassyprepared to shut down. SalehAli al-Sammad,the senior Houthi leader inSanaa, madethe remarks as a newround of United Nations-mediated talks among the Houthis and other major political parties to try to form agovernment entered asecond day.Yemenhas been leaderless sincethe president and his Cabinet resigned Jan. 22, citing Houthi pressureandattacks. Late Tuesday,Jen Psaki, aState Department spokeswoman,saidthat because ofthe "uncertain security situation in Sanaa, wehavesuspended our embassy operation, andour embassy staff has beentemporarily relocated out of Sanaa."
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iSlamiC State fOreign fighterS — Foreign fighters arestreaming
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UkraineViOlehCO —Fighting intensified Tuesday in eastern Ukraine aspro-Russia rebels and Ukrainian troops sought to extend their gains aheadof crucial peacetalks, and the government accused the separatists of shelling atown far behind thefront lines, killing 12 people andwounding scores. Germany,which hasjoined with France to try to broker apeace deal, urged Russiaand Ukraine to compromise and called onthewarring parties to refrain from hostilities that could derail a four-way summit today in Minsk, Belarus. Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenkosaid thetalks were"one of the last" opportunities for ending the fighting, which haskilled more than 5,300 people since April.
the parents of Kayla Mueller refused to believe that their
daughter was dead. From their home in
her blog as a way to encourage her peers to get involved. "It's not that she's so angelic,"
House and Jordan's govern- Day said. "She saw things and did ment said was unfounded. Yet the images sent to her what she could, whatever she family did not completely rule could, however she could."
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P rescott, Arizona, out death in that manner.
they issued an impassioned U.S. officials confirmed that plea to the Islamic State, which the structure was bombed in had held her captive since Au- coalition airstrikes last week. gust 2013, and urged the exThe authorities insisted that tremist organization to contact the building, a weapons storthem privately with proof of age facility, was a legitimate her death. The militants acqui- target and explained that they esced and sent at least three had conducted detailed surveilphotographs of her corpse. lance to make sure that no hosThose photos are among the tages were seen going in or out. few clues about her life and In Arizona, her extended death in captivity, as is a letter family and friends gathered by that she wrote from her cell last the steps of the Yavapai Counyear and that her family made ty courthouse to ponder what publicTuesday. had driven her to such a danTwo people briefed on the gerous place. They and others family's communication with described a deeply committed the Islamic State said that her young woman who refused to parents had received at least avert her eyes from the sufferthree photos. Two showed ing of others. "Kayla has touched the heart Mueller, who was 26, in a black hijab, or Muslim head cover- of the world," said her aunt, ing, that partly obscured her Lori Lyon, speaking on behalf face. Another showed her in of the family. a white burial shroud, which is used in traditional Muslim
"Every time I ran into her on
campus, she was organizing funerals. The images showed something, or talking about bruises on the face, but both a new issue, or else inviting people who reviewed the pho- me to an event. She was so tographs and asked not to be active," said former classmate identified given the sensitivity Leslie Alamer, 28, rattling off of the matter said it remained unclear whether her injuries
the causes Mueller had joined,
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were consistent with being tention to atrocities in Darfur, killed in the rubble of a flat- Sudan. tened building, as the Islamic Kathleen Day, head of the State reported. United Christian ministry at The group said on Twitter Northern Arizona University, last week that Mueller had died remembered how Mueller used
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 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,Feb.11,the 42nd day of 2015. Thereare 323 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS 'SniPer' trial —Thetrial of Chris Kyle's accused killer, EddieRayRouth,isscheduled to begin. Kyle, aNavy SEAL who was killed in 2013 at agun range in Texas, is the subject of box-office hit "American Sniper."A4 POWerdall —The multistate lottery draws for a $485 million jackpot, the third-largest in the game's history.
HISTORY Highlight:In1945, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin signed theYalta Agreement, in which Stalin agreed to declare war against Imperial Japan after NaziGermany's capitulation (in return, the Soviet Union would acquire territories lost to Japan in theRusso-Japanese War). In1812,Massachusetts Gov. Elbridge Gerry signed a redistricting law favoring his Democratic-Republican Party — giving rise to the term "gerrymandering." In1862, the Civil War Battle
of Fort Donelson beganin Tennessee. (Union forces led by Brig. Gen. Ulysses S.Grant captured the fort five days later.) In1963, American author and poet Sylvia Plath was found dead in her London flat, a suicide; she was30. In1972, McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. andLife magazine canceled plans to publish what had turned out to be afake autobiography of reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes. In1976, Margaret Thatcher was elected leader of Britain's opposition Conservative Party. In1989,Rev. Barbara Harris became the first woman consecrated as abishop in the Episcopal Church, in aceremony held in Boston. In1990, South African black activist Nelson Mandelawas freed after 27 years in captivity. In2012,pop singer Whitney Houston, 48, was found dead in a hotel room in Beverly Hills, California. In2013, Pope Benedict XVI announced his resignation during a routine morning meeting of Vatican cardinals. (The 85-year-old pontiff was succeeded byPopeFrancis.) Ten years age:Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld made an unannouncedvisitto Iraq, where heobserved lraqi security forces anddeclared "there's no question progress has been made" in preparing the nation for building a new government. CNNchief news executive EasonJordan quit amid a furor over remarks he had madeabout journalists being targeted by theU.S. military in Iraq. Five years age:Iranian security forces unleashed acrushing sweep against opposition protesters as President Mahmoud Ahmadine jadusedthe 31st anniversary of the Islamic revolution to defy the West. British fashion designer Alexander McQueen,40, wasfound dead in his London home. One yearage:President Barack Dbama, during ajoint White House newsconferencewith French President Francois Hollande,vowedtocomedown like "a ton of bricks" on businesses that violated Iranian sanctions while nuclear negotiations were underway andconceded"enormous frustration" with stalled Syrian peacetalks.
SCIENCE
ee seacoras: ra ie, u o ie Environmental groups and sport fishermen are fighting to protect the fragile ecosystems of deep sea corals off the mid-Atlantic Coast from squid fishing.
Pheromone products produced
from pigs
By James Gorman New York Times News Service
By Rachel Feltman The Washington Post
A council that sets regulations for fishing off the mid-Atlantic Coast will meet today to
Lots of animals have se-
cret chemicals designed to ensnare potential mates.
consider protections for little known and fragile ecosystems ofdeep sea coralsin and around 15 ocean sites. Environmental groups and sport fishermen are pushing for protection of these can-
Humans might have them,
too — but we have no idea what they are or how they work.
These chemicals (called "pheromones") are the sub-
yons and other sites, which run
ject of the latest Reactions
from Block Canyon off New York to Norfolk Canyon off Virginia, from squid fishing. They also are lobbying for other restrictions on fishing in a
video from the American Chemical Society. Here's some science about whyyou shouldn't buy products that boast pheromone boosts.
much broader zone.
Pheromones are chemi-
The squid-fishing industry is opposed to the broader refurther study and more limited
cal cocktails that many animals produce and emit, and they're designed to produce a parti cularunconscious re-
boundaries on four of the canyons, aswell asfurther discus-
action in other members of their own species.
strictions and has proposed
sion on the other canyons.
Humans technically have
Some of the corals could
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration via The New York Times
the organ that other animals
also be affected by oil and Iridogorgia, a type of octocoral, creates large spirals as it grows. Protections are being considered for gas drilling in the Atlantic, af- fragile ecosystems in the mid-Atlantic from fishing in and around15 ocean canyons.
use todetect pheromones, but many scientists argue
ter President Barack Obama said last month that he would
that our vomeronasal organ
open up the region to oil and
and capture new information,
gas leases. However, different
images and video. Peter Auster, a marine biologist who is an emeritus pro-
agencies are involved in that process. The canyons are distributed from New York to Virginia,
fessor at the University of Con-
necticut and a senior research
Fishery Management Council. It is meeting in Raleigh, North
New Jersey commercial fishing businesses, said his group Carolina, and the amendment s upported protecting t h e under discussion would affect corals. "There's no denying that its regulations for mackerel, butterfish and squid fishing. these creatures are extremely The amendment includes a important," he said. complex variety of provisions But he argued that the prothat cover depth, type of fish- posed amendment was not ing and boundaries, but the based on sound evidence. " We don't r e a lly k n o w main items for discussion are
while the drilling leases would scientist at Mystic Aquarium, be granted from Virginia on has studiedthe corals for 30 south, an area that would in- years and said they that had clude Norfolk Canyon, and been found on steep slopes of perhaps part of another. seamounts and in canyons Scientists and fishermen that were cut into the continen- protection of the canyons and have known about the corals talshelf. a set of restrictions for abroad"These are incredible land- erzone. for at least a century. They live hundreds of yards below the scapes," he said. Brad Sewell, a senior lawyer ocean surface and support diBecause the corals grow with the Natural Resources verse communities of life. The slowly, bottom-fishing for Defense Council's oceans proareas attract all sorts of ma- squid and fish could knock gram, said, "If both of these rine animals at different times them over and the commu- protection zones are approved of year, including squid. nities would not recover for and go into effect, it would be Researchers and the fishing many years. The canyons that the largest protected area on industry have steadily learned are being considered for pro- the Atlantic seaboard." more about the corals since the tection are, Auster said, refugSquid fishermen say the re1950s, and particularly in the es for organisms that used to strictions would damage an last decade or so as the Nation- be more widespread. industry that has been respon"The choices are what we do sible and is sustainable. Greg al Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has used sub- with what's left," he added. DiDomenico, the executive dimersibles and remotely operatThe group that makes the rector of Garden State Seafood ed vehidesto probethe depths choices is the Mid-Atlantic Association, which represents
DID YOU HEAR?
DiversifyingMarvel'slineup By Michael Cavna and David Betancourt
on the page (Miles Morales, female Thor et al.) since ed-
The Washington Post
i tor Axel A l onso took t h e
Last summer, two-time National Book A w ard f i n alist
reins. Marvel is introducing a new Avengers team. No, it's
what's down there," he said.
And so he is asking for further study, and his group has recently submitted new proposals. The prospect of a delay disturbs some of the advocates for strong protection, including John McMurray, a sport fish-
erman who is a member of the fisheries counciL
•
a
•
a
little shell left over from an-
cient history, incapable of sending smells straight to our brain stem for uncon-
scious response. It's totally possible that humans have pheromones. But since we don't know
what those pheromones are, it's impossible to sell
them. Instead,when you buy a product that daims pheromones as an ingredient, you're buying the finest in pig-produced chemicals. And despite what many
marketers say, there's no real evidence that humans are sexually swayed by the hormones that get pigs hot andbothered.
The council has been work-
ing on the amendment for almost three years, he said, adding: "We've had multiple comment periods. The public clearly wants these corals protected."
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Gene Luen Yang ("American Born Chinese") gave a rous- not the return of West Coast ing speech at the Library of Avengers — just slightly Congress, letting his fellow more epic. writers know at the National
T he A-Force wil l b e
an
all-female team of Avengers comic-book industry needs to featuring some of the Marvel do more, and give itself more universe's most popular and liberty, to increase character powerful women characters, diversity. including She-Hulk, Dazzler, Book Festival kickoff that the
Months later, the
i n dus-
try is pivoting harder in that direction.
DC Comics announced last week that its universe is "diversifying" with the aim of continuing to "evolve comic storytelling for its next generation of fans."
As part of D C Entertainment's "bold new direction"
Actor Burt Reynolds is 79. Former Florida Gov.Jeb Bushis 62. Actress CareyLowell is 54. Singer Sheryl Crow is 53. Former Alaska Gov.Sarah Palin is 51. Actress Jennifer Aniston is 46. Rock M-C/vocalist Mike Shinoda (Linkin Park) is 38. Singer-actress Brandy is 36. Actor Matthew Lawrence is 35. Rhythm-and-blues singer Kelly Rowland is 34. Singer Aubrey D'Day is 31.Actress Q'orianka Kilcher is 25. Actor Taylor Lautneris 23.
come June, the migrating publisher (buh-bye, New York; hello, Hollywood) announced that Yang himself
a new "cosmically powered heroine named Singularity." N ot too l ong a go, a n
Falls Are Preventable TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 4:00 PM
The opportunity to help reduce falls among older adults has never been better. Today, there are effective fall prevention interventions that can be used in community settings. Fall prevention programs can reduce falls and help older adults live better, longer lives.
A -Force roster e i ther
still
have, or once had, their own ongoing solo titles, so there is a lot of star power to come with this series. The question now is wheth-
er these changes truly move the needle: How will reader-
teams him with artist John Romita Jr.
ship respond? How the Marvel moves will
excited." S tarting June 3, DC w i l l
The Last Man" scenario with
"I feel p r etty n e rvous tie into the forthcoming Seabout it," Yang ("The Shad- cret Wars (launching in May) ow Hero") said, "but also — and whether there is a "Y:
veiled just its latest move as it
to Ensure an Active 8 Independent Lifestyle"
nounced, so an A vengers squad of women isn't such a big surprise.
for Superman — a move that
short time later, Marvel un-
SafetyMan says "Always be Safe
all-"X"-chromosome X-Men franchise t ea m w a s an-
will take over writing duties
have 24 series launching. A
Join us during the next six weeks es we host a lecture series to increase safety awareness on fall prevention, common home injuries and provide solutions to keep you safe!
Medusa, Nico Minoru — and
In other words, the tradiIt stands as testament to tional Big-2 comics publish- Marvel's many popular feers are increasingly seeing male characters, in fact, that the future of their industry t he publisher can d o t h i s lying in making changes that with not one but two team more closely reflect their fan franchises. bases in the present. Many m e mbers o f th e
BIRTHDAYS
— From wire reports
NEED TO KNOW
the male Avengers — is still unclear. But as more female readers say they want diversity, the "Y" of the matter isn't
has embraced more diversity in question.
Avoid Bathroom Dangers TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 4:00 PM
Dangers exist all around your home, and unless safety precautions are in place, you leave yourself in danger. Aside from the kitchen, the bathroom is one of the most dangerous rooms in your home. Recognizing these dangers,and making some common sense decisions, will go a long way in protecting you and your family.
Learn the 411 On Medicare Coverage TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 4:00 PM Medicare is a government-sponsored program that people over the age of 65 and those
who meet their special criteria turn to for their social insurance. This program provides health insurance normally to seniors. Come and learn more about what it covers and what it does not.
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A4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
Bill in Salem — Senate Bill188 would make ita crime for someone to share sexually explicit images with the intent to
harm the subject of the image or video. Sponsors:Recommended by Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum History:Sixteen states have crimes onthe books for so-called revenge porn. Oregon's bill would make it amisdemeanor for first-time offenders and afelony for repeat offenders. What's next:Heard in SenateCommittee on Judiciary on Feb. 10, 2015. Nofollow-up scheduled yet. Online:Readthe bill online athttps://ogs.leg. state.or.ns
Revenge Continued fromA1 Fighting tears w h i le speakingin front of the Senate Committee on Judiciary
IN FOCUS: 'AMERICANSNIPER' TRIAL
Heart reak at resort where Kyle was kille By Dan Lamothe
resort has been publicized in a
The Washington Post
variety of ways over the years.
GLEN ROSE, Texas — As
ment training company he founded, Craft International,
Lodge and Resort's 11,000-
has staged numerous events
acre facility, the tranquility was striking. Birds chirped ally kicked up dust outside the luxury ranch, but there were
there, with c ivilians paying thousands of dollars for marksmanship training. Kyle also frequently brought wounded veterans and friends
few other distractions. It was
there to relax and reflect, ac-
nothing like the mayhem that pervaded here two years ago.
cording to an often-cited 2013 profile of him published in D
T he resort, n estled i n to
Magazine in Dallas. The resort
and a pickup truck occasion-
rolling hills about 90 miles site of the killing of "American Sniper" author and Navy
some emotional turmoil.
The Feb. 2, 2013, killing
panic attacks, depression,
humiliation. It's affected me in almost every area of my life." The bill was filed at the request of Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, whose
office wants Oregon to become the 17th state with a
law onthe books. "These images come up frequently in dynamics that I think we would associate
with domestic violence," said Aaron Knott, the De-
partment of Justice legislative director. "The images, while they may be initially taken consensually, toward the end of a relationship can be used for coercion."
Oregon has strong free speech laws, and Knott said the state needs to make sure
the proposed law is narrow enough that it focuses on the intent to humiliate, harass
or injure the person whose intimate images are made public. Revenge porn laws in Wisconsin, New Jersey, Alaska, Arizona and Illinois
don't consider whether the person intended to harm by distributing the images. The department drafted the narrow rules with input from the American Civil
Liberties Union of Oregon, which is remaining neutral on the bill.
"Our major
a nd Littlefield to
Routh's sister, Laura Blevins, Dan Lamothe/The Washington Post
Rough Creek Lodgeand Resort is shownthis month inGlen Rose,Texas. NavySEALveteran Chris Kyle, the author of "American Sniper," and his friend Chad Littlefield were killed at the resort Feb. 2, 2013.
Continued fromA1 The new view on cholester-
ol in the diet does not reverse warnings about high levels of "bad" cholesterol in the blood, which have been linked to heartdisease.Moreover, some
experts warned that people with particular health problems, such as diabetes, should
continue to avoid cholesterol-rich diets. But the finding, which might offer a measure of relief to breakfast diners who prefer eggs, follows an evolution of thinking among many nutritionists who now believe that for a healthy adult, cholesterol
intake might not significantly affect the level of cholesterol in the blood or increase the risk
of heartdisease.The greater danger, according to this line of thought, lies in foods heavy with trans fats and saturated fats.
The panel laid out the cholesterol decision in December, at its last meeting before it writes a report that will serve as the
basis for the next version of the
w ould be if th e bill w a s
overbroad, and our review of the bill in its current state is that it's pretty narrowly tailored," said Dave Fidan-
que, executive director of ACLU-OR.
Fidanque said Oregon's revenge porn law is more
publication that has broad effects on the American diet. A video of the meeting later post-
ed online, and aperson with directknowledge oftheproceedings said the cholesterol finding would make it to the group's final report, which is due within weeks.
narrow than similar laws in
After Marian Neuhouser, chair of the relevant subcom-
many other states.
mittee, announced the decision
In five other states, the first offense is a f e lony,
to the panel at the December meeting, one panelist appeared
according to a review of criminal statutes from the
to bridle.
16 states with laws on the
books. The issue is also spreadingto socialmedia sites such
"So we're not making a (cholesterol) r e commendation?" panel member Miriam Nelson,
a Tufts University professor, said at the meeting as if trying
as Facebook, Knott said, where the sites are having issues keeping up with the influx of images and taking down the content quickly. Kelsey Wilson, a representative from Facebook, told the panel the company
to absorb the thought. "OK ... Bummer." Members of the panel, called the Dietary Guidelines Adviso-
supports the state-by-state
which are due this year from the Department of Health and
moves to create the criminal penalties. "This bill can and will
ry Committee, said they would not comment until the publication of their report.
The Dietary Guidelines, Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, help
WASHINGTON —The nation's top diet panel has decided to downgrade the alarm about cholesterol in food, and its recommendation will shape thenext version of the federal government's influential "Dietary Guidelines." Hereare somequestions about what this might meanfor you. What did the panel decide? • P • The panel, which shapes the Dietary Guidelines, M. decided that consuming cholesterol-laden foods does not rise to the level of a public health concern. It's important to recognize that this panel is dealing with diet and consuming cholesterol. It is not downgrading the dangers of high levels of cholesterol in the blood.
Q.
this mean I should eat asmanyeggs as I'd like? Q •• Does P . In general, for healthyadults, nutritionists increasM • ingly say that an eggday a is fine. These scientists say that eating cholesterol-laden foods doesn't necessarily lead to higher levels of cholesterol in the blood. In fact, most of the cholesterol in your blood comesnot from what you eat but from what your liver produces. A group from the American Heart Association and theAmerican College ofCardiology that looked at the issue in 2013said there is not enoughevidence of danger to call for limiting cholesterolin diets. But some scientists continue to becautious. One of the leaders of that group, Robert Eckel, said hestill uses egg whites only for his omelets, to steer clear of the cholesterol-rich yolks. And indeed, experts warn that people with other health problems such asdiabetes ought to be more cautious, too. Where does most of the cholesterol in American diets • come from? • Eggs, liver, shrimp and lobster are among the foods with • the highest cholesterol content. But federal figures show that Americans actually get a lot of their cholesterol intake from foodssuchasbeef,burgersand cheesesimplybecausetheyeata lot more of those items.
Q•
Yet even today, after more than a century of scientific in-
quiry, scientists are divided.
ports an amendment to the
facturers advertise their wares
bill that would protect it and
liable for the content. Senators didn't act on the
and oftenserve asthe founda- the United States is out of step tion for reams of diet advice. with other countries, where Some foods that are high in diet guidelines do not single cholesterol — such as liver, lob- out cholesterol. Others support ster and shrimp — might find maintaining a warning. more takers. The forthcoming version of
bill in committee. Gordon
the nation's Dietary Guidelines
photos and videos could be uploaded from being held
Some nutritionists said lift-
ing the cholesterol warning is long overdue, noting that
asked them to pass it this
Complexscience
session.
Walter Willett, chair of the eryfiv e years— isexpected to n utrition department at t h e navigate myriad similar controHarvard School o f P u b l ic versies. Among them: salt, red
"I would saythat I am fortunate enough to have not
had my photos shared on one of those revenge porn websites," Gordon said. "I'm
very fortunate, but it does not make me any less of a vlctnn. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.com
any comment about how much
Shift in thinking
Even as contrary evidence has emerged over the years, the campaign ~ dietarycholesterol has continued. In 1994, r e quired
to report cholesterol values on the nutrition label. In 2010, with the publication of the most
recent "Dietary Guidelines," the expertsagain focused on
— the document is revised ev- the problem of "excess dietary cholesterol."
Health, called the turnaround meat, sugar, saturated fats and on cholest erol a "reasonable the latest darling of food-makmove." ers, Omega-3s. As with choles"There's been a shift of terol, the dietary panel's advice thinking," he said. on these issues will be used by But the change on dietary the federal bureaucrats to draft cholesterol also shows how the the new guidelines. complexity of nutrition science The publication offers Amer-
day. They arrived around 3:15 p.m.,and an employee found Kyle and Littlefield shortly before 5 p.m., police have said. Routh has been charged
studies that had been done, the
Eventually, the idea that cho-
taskforce said,were too broad to single out cholesterol.
lesterol is harmM so perme-
"Looking back at the literature, we just couldn't see the
Yet many have viewed the evidence against cholesterol as
weak, at best. As late as 2013, a task force arranged by the American College of Cardiology andthe American Heart Association looked at the dietary cholesterol studies. The
group found that there was "insufficient evidence" to make a
ated the country's consciousness that marketers advertised
their foods on the basis of "no kind of science that would sup- cholesterol." port dietary restrictions," said Robert Eckel, the co-chair of
other early scientists might
the task force and a medical
What Anitschkov and the not have foreseen is how com-
plicated the science of cholesColorado. terol and heart disease could The current U.S. guidelines turn out: that the body creates professor at the University of
call for restricting cholester-
cholesterol in amounts much
ol intake to 300 milligrams daily. American adult men on average ingest about 340 milligrams of cholesterol a day, accordingto federal figures. That recommended figure of 300 milligrams, Eckel said, is "just one of those things that gets carried forward and carried forward even though the evidence is minimal."
larger than their diet provides;
"We just don't know," he said.
that the body regulates how much is in the blood; and that
there is both "good" and "bad" cholesterol.
Addingtothe complexity, the way people process cholesterol differs. Scientists say some
people — about 25 percentappeartobemorevulnerableto cholesterol-rich diets. "It's turned out to be more
Other major studies have indicated that eating an egg a day does not raise a healthy person's risk of heartdisease, though diabetic patients might be at more risk. "The U.S. is the last country
complicated than anyone could
in the world to set a specific limit on dietary cholesterol," said David Klurfeld, a nutrition scientist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. "Some of it is
late1960s,Rudel came across
scientific inertia."
the cholesterol diet harmed rabbits, it had no effect on white
Subject of manystudies The persistence of the cho-
"It often happens in the histo-
N ow comes the shift o n cholesterol.
food-makers were
The trio were at Rough Creek less than two hours that
Chris meant to us because of with two counts of murder. any impact it could have on the The trial is being held in Stetrial," Skinner said. "We want phenville, a town of less than this process to take place, out 2 0,000, because it i s h o me of respect for Chris and his to the district court of Erath family, and the Littlefields." County, where the shootings Kyle's relationship with the occurred.
lesterol fear might arise, in part, from the plausibility of its danger. As far back as the 19th cenand the lack of definitive re- icans dear instructions — and tury, scientists recognized that search can contribute to confu- sometimes very specific, down- the plaque that clogged arteries sion for Americans who, while to-the-milligram prescriptions. consisted, in part, of cholesterseeking guidance on what to But such precision can mask ol, according to historians. eat, often find themselves afloat sometimes tumultuous debates It would have seemed login conflicting advice. that surround these issues. ical, then, that a diet that is "Almost every single nutrient high in cholesterol would clog Cholesterol has been a fixture in dietary warnings in the imaginable has peer-reviewed arteries. U.S. at least since 1961, when it publications associating it with In 1913, Niokolai Anitschkov appeared in guidelines devel- almost any outcome," John P.A. and his colleagues at the Czar's oped by the American Heart Ioannidis, a professor of med- Military Medicine Institute in Association. Later adopted by icine and statistics at Stanford St. Petersburg decided to try the federalgovernment, such and one of the harshest critics it out in rabbits. The group fed warnings helped shift eating of nutritional science, has writ- cholesterol to rabbits for about habits — per capita egg con- ten. "In this literature of epi- four to eight weeks and saw sumption dropped about 30 demic proportions, how many that the cholesterol diet harmed percent — and harmed egg results are correct?" them. They figured they were farmers. on to somethingbig.
determine the content of school
similar websites where the
concerned that they might somehow influence the legal proceedings. "We don't want to do anything or say anything or have
— The Washington Post
make a difference," Wilson said. Facebook also sup-
lunches, affecthow foodmanu-
The Washington Post to him,
recommendation. Many of the milligrams.)
Shouldhinge I oneggsfor IIreakfast? Here'swhatyouneedtoknow
"Dietary Guidelines," a federal
c o ncern
told police that day that her brother was acting "psychotic" and that "people were sucking his soul," according to a 911 phone recording published by the Dallas Morning News.
ly marksman in U.S. military senting the resort. "It broke everybody's heart," for its hunting, fine dining, history. wedding chapel and corporate The movie — which depicts said Skinner, who is based in conference center. The trial is the moments leading to Kyle's the Dallas area. "Chris was a set to begin today in nearby death but no t t h e k i l l ings great friend to everybody at Stephenville, as the blockbust- themselves — has triggered Rough Creek. His death was a er movie"American Sniper, " weeks of debate about Kyle's huge tragedy." based on Kyle's book by the life as a sniper and the someT hat Sk inner h a s b e en same name, closes in on gross- times unverifiable nature of called upon to speak to meing $300 million in less than his legacy. dia members speaks to the two months. It was directed At Rough Creek, howev- crush of attention the resort by Clint Eastwood and stars er, his death is simply a huge has received in the last two Bradley Cooper as Kyle, cred- source of sadness,said Jim years. Employees at Rough ited by many as the most dead- Skinner, an attorney repre- Creek referred questions from
Cholesterol
d eath a t
Rough Creek and then stole Kyle's Ford pickup truck.
and forthcoming trial thrust a ranch that was best-known
in my life," Gordon said. "It's beentheepicenterofmany
shooting. Routh allegedly shot Kyle
Chad Littlefield, were both shot to death on a gun range by Eddie Ray Routh, a Marine Corps veteran whom Kyle had agreed to try to help through
bright spotlight on a high-end
lot. It cost me a lot of things
he, Littlefield and Routh went
SEAL veteran Chris Kyle. Police say that he and his friend,
don said she was a victim whose images were distributed by a work supervisor. When Gordon tookher case to the Salem Police Department, they told her there
has a variety of gun ranges, including the one on which
southwest of Dallas, was the
on 'Ibesday, Christina Gor-
was nothingthey could do. "That photo of me costs a
The military and law enforce-
the shadows grew long Monday outside the Rough Creek
have known," said Lawrence
Rudel,a professoratthe Wake Forest University School of Medicine.
As a graduate student at the University of Arkansas in the Anitschkov's paper and decided to focus on understanding one of its curiosities. In passing,
the paper noted that although rats. In fact, if Anitschkov had focused on any other animal besides the rabbit, the effects
wouldn't have been so clearrabbits are unusually vulnerable to the high-cholesterol diet.
"The reason for the difference — why does one animal fall apart on the cholesterol diet
— seemed like something that could be figured out," Rudel said. "That was 40 or so years ago. We still don't know what explains the difference."
Some progress In truth, scientists have made
some progress. Rudel and his colleagueshave been able to breed squirrel monkeys that
aremore vulnerabletothecholesterol diet. That and other evidence leads to their belief that
for some people— as for the squirrel monkeys — genetics
ryofsciencethatresearchers... are to blame. obtain results which require us Rudel said that Americans to view scientific questions in a should still be warned about new light," he and a colleague cholesterol. "Eggs are a nearly perfect wrote in their 1913 paper. But it wasn't until the 1940s, food, but cholesterol is a potenwhen heart disease was rising tial bad guy," he said. "Eating in the United States, that the too mucha day won'tharm evdangers of a cholesterol diet eryone, but it will harm some for humans would come more people." sharply into focus. Scientists have estimated Experiments in biology, as that, even without counting the well as other studies that fol- toll from obesity, disease relatlowed the diets of large popula- ed to poor eating habits kills tions, seemed to link high-cho- more than half a million peolesterol diets to heart disease. ple every year. That toll is often Public warnings soon fol- used asan argument for more lowed. In 1961, the American research in nutrition. HeartAssociationrecommendCurrently, the National Ined that people reduce cholester- stitutes of Health spends about ol consumption and eventually $1.5 billion annually on nutriset a limit of 300 milligrams tion research, an amount that a day. (For comparison, the represents about 5percent of its yolk of one egg has about 200 totalbudget.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Alabama
Snow
Continued from A1
Continued from A1 Automated snow gauges along the crest of the Cascades and in the Ochocos are showing record-low snowpack in some spots, breaking
It is, however, the only state
where probate judges who would issue same-sex marriage licenses were instructed
not to comply with a federal courtorder."In term sofwhat's been going on in marriage equality in the past 18 months, this is really the only type of
marks set last winter in some cases, said Melissa Webb, a
snow hydrologist for the Natural Resources Conservation
defiance of its kind," said Sarah
Service in Portland. Recent
Warbelow, the legal director for the Human Rights Campaign.
rainfall in the Cascades has not helped what was already a paltry snowpack. Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin "Certainly warm rain has A snowmobile rider leaves the busy Dutchman Flat Sno-psrk to the ability to wash the snow go riding early Tuesday afternoon. away," Webb said Tuesday. Unless there is significant snowfall soon, the Deschutes quired to park at Mt. Bach- ter making the drive. N ational Forest reports i t elor, but nordic skiers and By the lake, the snowpack might have to close some snowshoers have to pick up ranges from no snow to 6 sno-parks until c o nditions a pass to cross the common inches, he said. improve. corridor.The corridor links The resort is fully operatAlthough snow fell over- the parking lot to ski and ing and fully booked for the night Monday in the Central snowshoe trails. coming Valentine's weekend Oregon Cascades, she said Low snow has put Wan- dinner. the fresh couple of inches of oga out of commission as a While snow flanks the snow in the mountains did place to snowmobile for the highway around the bare secnot change the snowpack sit- past two weeks, Sabo said. tions, Prieve would like to see uation much. There is snow at Kapka Butte some more snow fall soon. "We are all waiting on The low snow has been Sno-park, which opened this particularly evident at sno- winter season between Wan- snow," he said. parks along Century Drive. oga and Dutchman Flat, but Plenty of winter remains, Typically, nordic s k iers, getting to good snow takes a but Webb said the snowpack snowshoers and snowmobile long, bumpy ride. has a big deficit to overcome riders crowd the sno-parks Warm rains have created before being close to normal. this time of year. Due to the mogullike mounds of snow The near forecast and the low snow, most of the activity along the snowmobile trails outlook for the rest of the seahas been focused at higher el- around Kapka, about 500 son donot offer much hope evations, particularly Dutch- mounds per mile. Riding over for middle- to low-elevation man Sno-park close to Mount the bumps is like skipping snow in Central Oregon. Bachelor. over a series of waves. The rest of the week in "It can really beat you and Bend should see high temT he combination of t h e holiday rush of recreation the snowmobile up," Sabo said. peratures around or over 60 (particularly in the form of Last year, there were sim- degrees, said Dennis Hull, a snowmobile riders), low snow ilar poor snow conditions, meteorologist with the Naat other sno-parks and little said Peggy Spieger, executive tional Weather Service in parking available at Dutch- director for the Oregon State Pendleton. He said a ridge of man could make for a hectic Snowmobile Association. high pressure is creating the weekend, Chris Sabo, trails She said she would never springlike highs expected the specialist for the Deschutes have believed that Central remainder of the week. "It looks like (the warm National Forest, said MonOregon would have two years day. The sno-park can hold in a row in which snowmo- weather) should go through a total of about 35 cars and bile riders had to worry about the weekend," he said.
Not the first show of resistance Such brazen and usually futile campaigns are practically
Jeff Haller/The New YorkTimee
Jim Strawser and John Humphrey wait at the probate court in Mobile, Alabama, which on Tuesday for s second day in s row
remained closed rather than issue same-sex marriage licenses. acter. Long after George Wal- The couple said they would wait there as long as it took for local lace's stand ~ int e gration authorities to heed the federal ruling granting ssme-sex couples in the schoolhouse door, to the right to marry in Alabama. hard-wired into the state's char-
which Moore's stance has been
inevitably compared, the state's recordoftaking on thefederal to Montgomery. "I don't want Alabama to government in long-shot battles has continued to set it apart be seen as it was 50 years ago even from i t s c o nservative when a federal law was defied," neighbors. In the 1990s, Gov. he said. "I'm trying to move this Fob James argued that the Bill state forward." of Rights did not apply to states.
you were resisting to the end." He added: "That is this kind of cultural tradition. It is part of
this white Southern mystique — you lost the Civil War but
you went down fighting." Moore has dismissed comIn 2003, Moore was removed Signs of progress parisons between him and figfrom his first term for refusing Alabama hasmoved a long uressuch as Wallace,arguing to take down a 2-ton monument way in 50 years. German, Ko- that his emphatic defense of of the Ten Commandments
rean and Japanese auto plants
state sovereignty should not be
he had installed in the state are part of the landscape, a judicial building. And in 2011, large Airbus jetliner production
stainedbyits misuseinthepast. "From a moral perspective the state Legislature passed a facility is set to open in Mobile I have no hesitancy to argue sweeping immigration enforce- this year, and Birmingham has states' rights," he said in an inment law, much of which was become a destination in the terview Monday. "Indeed Alalater blocked in court for en- highly competitive field of new bama and any other state that croaching on federal turf. Southern cuisine. prohibited racial equality was "It's like our oxygen is deThe monolith of public opin- wrong. And if they prohibited f iance and ou r i d entity i s ion that once characterized the such, what they did was wrong. aggrievement," said D iane white establishment is neither But that is not a disdaimer over McWhorter, an Alabama na- as white nor as monolithic: states' rights." tive and author of the Pulitzer
Rather than the old ways of
Prize-winning book about civil rights-era Birmingham, "Carry
retrenchment, the recent court rulings have sparked a lively
Me Home."
debate here on talk radio, in
While hi s
r ecent actions
might elicit cringes among the economic development crowd and the business community,
While sayingthat Moore and the newspapers and over Face- his views on same-sex marbook. And Alabama, like the riage and federal overreach are side of history," McWhorter nation, has its own divide be- widely echoed across the state. "Two girls and two guys toalso said their losing battles tween culturally diverse cities brought to mind one of the such as this one and more con- gether in a relationship'?" asked icons of Alabama literature, the servative and rural areas. Junior Day, who was a few proto-civil rights lawyer AttiSome see progress in the blocks from the Mobile County Wallace were "on the wrong
cus Finch in "To Kill a Mock-
state's willingness to acknowl-
Courthouse on Tuesday after-
ingbird," who unsuccessfully, edge the past. Last week, a noon. "It needs to be protested. and unpopularly, defended a historical marker honoring Where are the people protestblack man in a small-town trial. Fred Gray, a civil rights lawyer ing this?" Day's friend, who "What they have in common is whose clients induded Rosa declined to give his name, saw their heroism is bound up in the Parks and Martin Luther King it as forced intrusion. "It's not futility of their cause," she said.
Jr., was unveiled in view of
This often pugnacious insistence on state sovereignty
the Alabama Supreme Court where Moore presides.
moral, and it's not fair to shove
this down the people of Alabama'sthroats,"hesaid. "It l i sts al l t h ese c ases is a point of pride; in 2012, the Both supporters and oppospeakerofthe state'sHouse of against the state of Alabama, nents of same-sex marriage Representatives appointed a all of which the state lost," Gray agree that Moore's efforts Commission on the Protection
said. "The state department of
low snow.
snowshoers may park at the
nearby Mt. Bachelor parking lot, it is not an option for s nowmobile r i ders,
The federal outlook for the
"Obviously, I was wrong because the snow conditions are worse than they were last year," she said lhesday.
While nordic skiers and
D r ew
rest of winter predicts more of the same weather ahead
for Central Oregon, Kathie Dello, deputy director for the
Elk Lake Resort's shuttle,
Oregon Climate Service at Oregon State University in
Jackson, spokesman for the a tracked sport utility vehiski area, said Tuesday. cle, has not been stopped by "People can park in our the dearth of snow, but there parking lot, but there is no are a couple of bare patchway to drive a snowmobile es along the Cascade Lakes from our parking lot to the Highway between Dutchman (snowmobile) trails," he said. and Elk Lake, resort co-ownNo sno-park pass is re- er Pat Prieve said Tuesday af-
Corvallis, said Tuesday. "The rest of w i nter, the
odds are tilted toward itbeing warmer than normal," Dello SBld.
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
to forestall the federal order
of Alabama Values and States tourism is one of the ones who Rights. But it also carries a bur- sponsored theplaque." densome legacy, forcing some state leaders into a delicate Resisting is the point tightrope act. In an interview Losing is part of the point,
would likely be temporary and
with The Associated Press this
however, said Dan Carter, the week, Gov. Robert Bentley said author of a book on Wallace
psychehere in Alabama," said Mark Kennedy, a former state
he disagreed with the federal
Supreme Court justice who is
order but insisted that defiance
married to Wallace's daughter. "It's all about fighting. That's why were so crazy about college football."
called"The Politics of Rage." "George Wallaceknew he was inappropriate, particularly was going to lose, too," he said. aroundtheupcoming anniver- "But for political reasons it was sary of the march from Selma important to emphasize that
trucks.
gain little in the end. But there
is a long-standing tradition here of going down swinging. "We have grownup with that
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Drugs said it had seen more "supreme law of the land," ac"high-potency" marijuana cording to the suit. Continued from A1 arriving from its neighbor. In addition, the suit argues In December, the attorneys Mark Woodward, an agency that Oklahoma and Nebrasgeneral of N ebraska and spokesman, said there had ka will suffer in the long term Oklahoma sued to stop what been about a dozen cases in because of i ncreased costs they say is a steady flow of the past year. from arrests, the seizure of "Whether it's people driv- contraband, the transfer of marijuanaacross the Colorado state line. Kansas is con- ing to Colorado and bringing prisonersand other problems sidering joining as well. it back, or mailing it through associated with marijuana The lawsuit, filed directly the Postal Service, it's getting crossing state lines. to the U.S. Supreme Court, here," he said. "This is mariLegal experts have mostly seeks to strike down Colora- juana with very high concen- scoffed at the suit. do's law legalizing recreation- trations of THC, very strong "This is a very weak claim. al marijuana. It argues that stuff." T heir real beef is w ith t h e Colorado's statute conflicts Some police in C olorado federal government for not with federal drug laws, which agree it's not difficult to get enforcing the federal drug consider marijuana illegal, marijuana across state lines. laws," said Georgetown law "People can buy legal mari- professor Randy B arnett, even in small amounts. "Left unchallenged, I am juana, take it out of its pack- who has argued a marijuana confident Colorado's law will aging, put it in a plastic bag, case before the U.S. Supreme cause long-term harm to Ne- a nd there's no telling if i t 's Court. "It is not up to the braska families," the state's legal or where it came from," statesto sue each other when new attorney general, Repub- said Marc Vasquez, the Erie, the federal government is not lican Doug Peterson, wrote in Colorado, police chief. enforcing the law." an open letter last week. "It Colorado recently launched T he Supreme Court a l is incumbent on Nebraska to a $5.7 million ad campaign to ready has found that states take action." make it clear to everyonehave no duty to enforce federColoradans, however, are especially out-of-state visitors al law. bristling that i t s s t aunchly — exactly what the rules are. Oklahoma Attorney Genconservative neighbors are Taking marijuana out of the eral Scott Pruitt, a Republitrying to impose their will on state is a felony and a federal can, and Nebraska's Peterson the "open-minded voters" of violation. declined to comment for this thiscentriststate. But the success of the cam- story. "They can't force their con- paign is debatable, given the Critics of the lawsuit largevictions onto Coloradans," ease of driving across state ly see it as political grandHooper said. lines. standing by the attorneys Colorado's marijuana law In Denver last fall, the po- general to their conservative was approved by voters in lice and the U.S. Drug En- constituencies. 2012. It allows the sale and possession of up to an ounce
forcement
of marijuana for recreational use for anyone 21 and over
ities that officials said were
with a valid driver's license.
Shortly after the law took effect, the U.S. Justice De-
A dm i n i stration
raided several growing facilproducing marijuana for outof-state sellers. But most dispensaries are
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not partaking in illegal activp artment o u tlined i t s e n - ity, Hooper said. "We follow forcement priorities, saying it the rules, very strictly. Why state to pass its own laws. We "do not feel that atwould not interfere with Col- jeopardize this movement'?" orado's legal pot operations Nebraska and Oklahoma's tempting to u ndermine the but would instead focus on, lawsuit argues that Colorado sovereignty of a neighboring among other things, prevent- cannot pass statutes that con- state using the federal courts, ing marijuana from crossing flict with federal drug laws. e ven if i n advertently, is a state lines. It is a violation of the U.S. wise use of Oklahoma's limOklahoma's B u r eau o f C onstitution, w h ic h m a i n - ited state resources," the letter Narcotics a n d Da n g erous tains that federal law is the sard.
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But even among conservatives, there are complaints.
Last month, a number of GOP legislators, led by Okla-
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TH E BULLETINe WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY11, 2015
BRIEFING OLCChosts listening session Oregon's new recreational marijuana law will be the subject of a "listening session" hosted by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission on Feb. 19 in Bend. Beginning July1, it will be legal for adults 21 and older to possess limited quantities of marijuana for personal use. TheOLCCis overseeing the development of a network of retail marijuana stores, with stores expected to open by late 2016. Next week's listening session will be the seventh of11 scheduled by the OLCCto learn more about what Oregonians think the transition to legalized marijuana and regulation of legal marijuana should look like. The meeting will be from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW
er e ars, no moreWater tanticsamonat osmer a e and sewer LA PINE
By Scott Hammers
lake left in the state regularly
The Bulletin
stocked with the fish.
favor of a landlocked variety. Although the anadromous
rates may increase
predecessors.
Hodgson said due to concerns about introducing dis-
The Oregon Department of ODF W Fisheries Biologist salmon grew large and were Fish & Wildlife is pulling the B r e tt Hodgson said the Atlan- good fighters, they also tended ease to the lake, ODFW has plug on its decadeslong prac- t i c salmon fishery has been to go over the lava dam at the been stuck with the smaller, tice of stocking Hosmer Lake i n decline for about 20 years, end of the lake during high less feisty fish. Every fall, with Atlantic salmon. when ODFW switched water and died when they ODFW biologists have to go Map from stocking Hosmer The roughly 200-acre had nowhere else to go. The to Hosmer Lake and trap lake on the Cascade OO B5 Lake with an anadrolandlockedsalmon have been Atlantic salmon with a net to Lakes Highway has been mous variety — a migra- content to stay in the lake, have new breeding fish at the stocked with Atlantic salmon to r yf ish that travels between Hodgson said, but haven't Wizard Falls hatchery. since 1958 and is now the only saltwater and freshwater — in grown nearly as large as their SeeHosmer /B5
By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
LA PINE — Water and sewer costs in La Pine
could change in July if the city adopts recommendations that would alter the current rate structures.
OUR S'CHOOLS. -.N „+ . ' OUR STUDENTS
Utility users could see their costs go up or down depending on proposed fixed fees and the volume of water they use.
Educa tional news and activities, and local kids and their achievements. School notes andsubmission info, B2
A consulting firm that
conducted a rate study recommended the city in-
i es i s serve u
crease the water rate by 3
o
percent and the sewer rate by 10percent for the next fiscal year. The La Pine City Council will hold a public hearing about the proposed changes at 6p.m. Tuesday. Residents
Rippling River Court, in Bend.
and business owners can
College plans dike loan program Oregon StateUniversity-Cascadeswill launch a pilot bike loanprogram for faculty andstaff next month. Orange cruiser bikes — named Benny,Bernice, Betty andNorman — will be available for travel to nearbymeetings or errands. Theyareeach equipped with alarge basket, fendersandan odometer. During the pilot program, officials will assess the bikes' demand,security and maintenance,as well as the reservation system. Thebikes will be available from 7a.m.to 5 p.m. onweekdays that the campus isopen. The pilot program comes in advanceof OSU-Cascades' planned expansion inwest Bend. Officials say launching it now will give themtime to assess theprogram before bringing to the new campus.
submit comments or provide input at the hearing. A residential home in La
Pine currentlypays a fixed rateof$27.34perm onth for water, which covers up
to 3,600 gallons. Anything more than that volume is $2
per 1,000 gallons. The current rate system for sewer serviceusesdifferentfixed rates for residential and
commercial customers and doesn't charge based on volume.
The city hopes the increases will provide stable revenue for the utilities
and better fund the cost of operations as well as capital projects to improve and
replaceinfrastructure.The water rate hasn't changed in the city since the La Pine Water District established it in2003. The city assumed
management of the water district and the La Pine Special Sewer District in
2012. Sewer rates were last
— Bulletin staff reports
City Manager Rick Allen said the proposed rate change would be significantly higher if the city
Educational Assistant April Martin helps fourth-grader Erik Ochoa flip a pancake, as, from left, Isayanl Roque-Lucas, Diogo Lopez and
Brandon Dowell watch during a cooking lesson in Life Skills class at Bear Creek Elementary last week in Bend.
Deer remains lead to arrest Oregon State Police Fish & Wildlife troopers arrested a LaPineman alleged to haveillegally killed a slew of mature, trophy-class mule deer bucks last fall. A search warrant was executed at the home of Gene Parsons, 37,on Jan.17, which yielded numerous large mule deer antlers, deer meat, firearms andcontrolled substances, according to OSP Lt. JoshBrooks. Parsons wasbooked, according to Brooks, but was no longer in custody at the DeschutesCounty jail Tuesdayafternoon, according to the jail. Charges pertaining to the allegations are pending, Brooks wrote in a Tuesday newsrelease. Additional information developed during the search warrant led troopers to identify another suspect, Lance Cournoyer,44, of Grants Pass, who faces pending charges of being a felon in possession of a firearm and unlawful take of mule deer,according to Brooks. Parsons' parents, Oliver Parsons, 64, and Suzan Parsons, 58, of La Pine, were found in possession of six sets of large mule deerantlers and deer meatand were cited and releasedon suspicion of aiding in a game violation, illegal possession of mule deer and tampering with evidence, Brooks wrote. The investigation is ongoing.
updated in 2010.
Photos by JoeKline I The Bulletin
By Jasmine Rockow "I'm so excited! I'm going to make a pancake for my best
program, designed to teach special needs kids basic skills in addition to academic subjects such as reading, writing,
friend," said Brandon Dowell,
andmath.
a kindergartner at Bear Creek Elementary on Thursday. "I'm goingto make apancake for my daddy." Brandon didn't end up making a pancake for his dad that day, but with a little help,
The term special needs is broad and covers a range of ages and developmental disabilities, including autism and cerebral palsy. Some of the kids in the program are nonverbal and use an iPad to com-
he did make one for himself.
municate; others talk nonstop.
The Bulletin
reduced operation costs in 2012-13 by more than $100,000, according to audited financial statements. The La Pine Public Works Committee ap-
Some can read, some can't. "We always say in Life or syrup, while one of his teachers read "Curious George Skills, 'You're trying to teach Makes Pancakes" to him and yourself out of a job,'" said Alinine of his peers. sha Schmidt, Life Skills teachBrandon is one of Bear er and instigator of the cookCreek's students participating ingprogram at Bear Creek. in the school's new Life Skills See Cooking /B2 He ate it plain, without butter
Martin lends fifth-grader Diego Altamirano a hand as he pours pancake batter.
had not taken over the two utility districts. The city
proved the proposed changes this week. Allen discussed the upcoming City Council public hearing with the committee Tuesday. The proposed rate changes are expected to be more equitable because users will pay according to how much they use instead ofbased primarily on a flat rate. SeeLa Pine/B5 Paid Advertisement
'Pakm<~ Qay;<
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS
Bend International Scheel m akespitchforcharterstatus By Abby Spegman
Living in Bend, it's easy to feel isolated from the rest of the
within a school district. Bend-
world."
school, the Rimrock Expedi-
charter school in Bend made their pitch to the Bend-La Pine
Rupp said the school has 110 students enrolled and
tionary Alternative Learning
Schools Board on Tuesday evening. If approved, Bend
would aim to open with 195 students and nine full-time
though officials are in talks
The Bulletin
Supporters of a proposed
International School would offer K-8 stu-
Map inside • New school boundaries,
dents a Spanish imB2 mersion program and an exchange program with a school in Mexico. The school's director, Meera Rupp, a licensedteacher and school
administrator, said the school would promote multiculturalism and global competency. Bend is a great place to live, she said, "but the one area we
may be lacking is diversity....
KIS<$gj
La Pine sponsors one charter Middle School, or REALMS, to turn that into a district-run
teachers. Students, she magnet middle school. said, would come from Bend-La Pine Schools
and from other districts, private schools
The state pays a certain
amount per charter school student, a lower rate than it pays per student at traditional
and home-schooling families. Target class sizes
public schools.
would be 20 in the elementary
national School received a three-yearfederalgrantfor $700,000 to help the school get
level and 25 in middle school. Organizers are looking for
In the fall, Bend Inter-
locations on the east side of Bend.
started.
In Oregon, charter schools are privately run, publicly funded schools that exist
on the school's charter at its
The board plans to vote meeting March 10. SeeSchools/B2
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
B2
E VENT
ENDA R
7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. MUSEUM 8 ME:Museum is open MBRASCATU:The fusion indieafter hours for children andadults rock band performs; free; 7-10 with physical, cognitive or social disabilities; free; 4-7 p.m.; High Desert p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway97, www.mcmenamins.com or Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org 541-382-5174. or 541-382-4754. AARONLARGET-CAPLAN:The AUTHOR!AUTHOR!: Garth Stein, Colorado Latin guitarist performs; author of "The Art of Racing in $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, the Rain," will speak; $20; 7 p.m.; 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; BendHighSchool,230 NE Sixth www.volcanictheatrepub.com or St.; www.dplfoundation.org, 541-323-1881. suzyo@deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1027. CAROLYN WONDERLAND:The blues singer and guitarist performs; $17 THURSDAY plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E.Main Ave., BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts 541-815-9122. and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; FLY-FISHINGFILM TOUR:A film tour free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend featuring fly-fishing films, to benefit Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; Trout Unlimited, Wild Steelhead 541-317-4847. Coalition, Bonefish Tarpon Trust, Utah Stream AccessCoalition, Stop LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Discuss "This Pebble Mine andmore; $15 plus fees; is the Story of a HappyMarriage" by
TODAY
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Ann Patchett; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 SWDeschutes Ave.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. LIBRARYBOOK CLUB: Discuss"This is the Story of a HappyMarriage" by AnnPatchett;noon;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. DEATH BYCHOCOLATEBUNCO NIGHT:Featuring a night of bunco and desserts, prizes and moreto benefit Soroptimist International of Bend charities; $20; 6-8 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129NW Idaho Ave., Bend; www.sibend.org or 541-389-8940. REMEMBERINGTHE LEGACYOF PETE SEEGER: Featuring a sing-along to honor the first anniversary ofPeteSeeger's death;6:30-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend. AYRONJONESANDTHEWAY:The Seattle rock guitarist performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt.
SCHOOL NOTES COLLEGE NOTES James Reid, of Bend, was named to the fall 2014 dean's list and fall 2014 chancellor's list at the University of Arkansas. Kayanna Heffner, of Bend, was named to the fall 2014 dean's list at Whittier College.
Francis School,700 NW BondSt., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. VIRGINIA RIGGSCHILDREN'S CONCERT:TheCentral Oregon Symphony performs music by Wagner and Delibes, featuring an instrument petting zoo; free; 7 p.m. concert, 6:30 p.m. instrument petting zoo; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www.cosymphony.com or 541-383-6290. ROB LARKIN5 THE WAYWARD ONES:TheLos Angeles roots-rock band performs; 8 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889.
FRIDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.;
541-317-4847. OREGON WINTERFEST:Winter carnival featuring a winewalk, ice throne carvings, live music and
Second-grader Julian Lopez pours syrup onhiopancake during the cooking lesson at Bear Creek Elementary.
Cooking
In November, she asked the
Bear Creek Parent Teacher OrContinued from B1 ganization for support starting "We try to help them become a bonafide Life Skills Cooking moreindependent." program. The PTO awarded S chmidt started th e L i f e Schmidt $400 for the school Skills program three years year, which allowed her to purago and added cooking to the chase a curriculumspecifically program last year. She initially for cooking with special needs cooked with the class once a
students. The curriculum con-
month, finding recipes online sists of visual, easy-to-follow and spending her own money recipes that often focus on on foodand cooking supplies. microwave cooking, Schmidt
Bend-LaPineSchoolDistrict doundaries
Howtosu mit
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
"It's li ke a taco," cried around a table while Martin Facebookpage prompted fam - walked them through each step Isayani. ilies to donate several boxes of of using a pancake mix. They Schmidt passed out place cooking utensils. had a visual recipe to follow, mats and reminded the kids Now Schmidt and Educa- which had a picture of every how to make a place setting tional Assistant April Martin item they would use. After go- for themselves. Second-grader are able to cook with their stu- ing over all the ingredients and Julian Lopez turned his napkin dents every other Thursday. utensils needed, Martin sepa- into a bib, and Clay Thomason, They have made apple pizza, rated the kids into two groups. also in second grade, quickly scrambled eggs, pumpkin dip, Diogo Lopez, a third-grad- followedsuit. "You guys are excellent spaghetti and grilled cheese er, measured one cup of mix sandwiches, Schmidt wrote in into a mixing bowl, using a cooks," Martin said. "I am so an email. In addition to mak- butter knife to scrape off the proudof you today." ing food, students learn proper excess. Fourth-grader Isayani While the students ate their hygiene, kitchen safety and Roque-Lucas measured t he hard-earned meal, Martin read how to set a table and usegood water, and each student took a them a story. "That was a delicious panmanners. turn stirring the batter, pourOn Thursday, the class made ing a pancake onto the electric cake," exdaimed Brandon. pancakes. Ten students sat griddle andflipping it. Claynodded inagreement and
Schools
U.S. SENATE • Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
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U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bendoffice: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400
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licked the maple syrup off his plate.
The meal over, Schmidt helped them clean up. Martin led the kids in a series of
stretches, and they went to recess with the rest of the school
kids. In the future, Schmidt hopes to have her studentscookmeals
anddeliver themto school staff, or have a friend from another class join them once a month. "We're just starting w i th
baby steps,and hopefully we can expand as we get the hang of it," Schmidt said. — Reporter: 541-383-0354, jrockow@bendbulletin.com
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
See a bigger version of the Bend-La Pine Superintendent Ron Wilkinson this week accepted the redrawn school boundaries recommendation for new school boundaries presented to him by the Continued from B1 at bendbulletin.com The school would offer district's boundary review committee. The new boundaries are meant families more options, Rupp to relieve overcrowding at many schools and assign students to a new elementary school and new middle school set to open in the fall. said, citing long waitlists for even tighter. REALMS and the du al-imAlso at Tuesday's meeting, ELEMENTARYBOUNDARIES mersion magnet program the board heard an update // 1 at Bear Creek Elementary on the d i s trict's boundary : Lntfo Ridge School, where equal num- review process. This week, g Empir Ave. Po n derooa bers of Spanish and English Superintendent Ron Wilkinspeakers attend classes to- son approved the boundgetherin both languages. aries proposed by a review High L< akes About 10people, including c ommittee with t w o s m a ll Nefif Pd. parents, organizers and a changes based on communiNew ort Ave. ' Junlper prospective student, spoke in ty feedback. LBucliingham .d cn ,Skyt)n'ersIRd. support of the school. The new boundaries will "This will bring peopleto go into effect in the coming Bear( Bend — parents who want school year. They are meant Mlller, Breek to be sure that their children to alleviate overcrowding at Plne have as broad an exposure many schools and assign stuRldge as possible," said Edie Jones, dentsto an elementary school ¹w ¹ m eNarv chairwoman of the school's and a middle school set to steering committee. open in the coming year. ~ Jeufell + Julie Mc M u llin, an o ther While the boundary reKnoltt R' d l ~lbMeedeuf WE member of t h e c o mmittee, view pr ocess met t h o se said her daughter was 64th goals, Wilkinson s aid, i t MIDDLESCHOOL BOUNDARIES on the waitlist for REALMS also highlights future chaland ended up at Cascade lenges for the district. One Middle School. "I think she is high-density housing de'i EmIpire A e. CSk gVV jiew would be better in a s m a ll velopments in the Ponderschool. I think she would feel osa Elementary School atmore connected," McMullin tendance area, which could sard. drive that school's enrollment Neff Rd~ Board members said they up. And at the high school Pilot Butte supported elements of the level, a large number of stuplan but questioned the en- dents living in the Summit rollment and budget projec- High School attendance area tions and the school's ability go to Bend High School. He v~ to hire teachers for an immer- suggested looking for ways sion program. to better ba lance the h igh tt
$20, $10(youth) or $50,$25
(youth) for three-concert series; 7 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; more; $6-$8 inadvance,$10at www.sistersfolkfestival.org or the door; 5-11 p.m.; TheOld Mill 541-549-4947. District adjacent to Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon "BEAUTYAND THEBEAST": A Drive, Bend; www.oregonwinterfest. performance of the Disney classic com. by Thoroughly Modern Productions; $22.50 plus fees in advance, $18.50 AUTHORPRESENTATION:Garth Stein, author of "A Sudden Light" and for seniors and children12 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High "The Art of Racing in the Rain," will School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, speak; free; 6 p.m.; TheBelfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents. Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod. com or 541-322-3300. com or 541-549-0866. "MARNIE":Showing of the CHILDREN'STHEATERCOMPANY psychological thriller by Alfred DINNERSHOW:Featuring four Hitchcock; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez shows and dinner to benefit the Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 Children's Theater Company; SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or SOLD OUT;6-8:30 p.m.; The 541-475-3351. Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W. Antler Ave., Redmond; BRETT DENNEN: TheCalifornia www.childrenstheatercompany. pop-rockartist performs; SOLD net, childrenstheater©me.com or OUT;8 p.m.,doorsopenat7p.m .; 541-460-3024. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., THE STRAY BIRDS: TheAmericana Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. group from Pennsylvania performs,
said. A post on the Bear Creek
Joe Klime/The Bulletin
with Cahalen Morrison & Eli West;
I
Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-389-4408 STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary of State Kate Brown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer@state. OI;us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneralEllen Rosenblum, D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LaborCommissionerBradAvakian 800 NE OregonSt., Suite 1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
I I
MPHONY
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the committee's recommendation to allow ne xt y ear's
dazzle the audience with Gershwin's Piano Concerto in F, The symphony will also perform pieces by Wagner and Delibes.
Rupp said she is open to will not be provided. starting smaller but t h at — Reporter: 541-617-7837, would make a tight budget aspegman@bendbullet in.com
February 14-16, 2015 Saturday7:30pm, Sunday 2:00pm, Monday 7:30pm
Bend High School Auditorium
www.cosymphony,com
1
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Supported byhwtorey Dental Group
This week, Superintendent Ron Wilkinson
SkV'iiners R
approved the boundaries proposed by a review committee with two small changes based on communityfeedback. The new boundaries go into effect in the coming school year. They are meant to alleviate overcrowding at many schools and assign students to an elementary school and middle school set to open in the coming year.
I
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Bend High ' Koo~tlt3 Rd M ~. source: Bend-La pine schools
of the plan. Can it work and is it sustainable?" said Nori
Kotaro Fukuma
Wilkinson also accepted
Juba, bo a rd co - c hairman, fifth-, eighth-, 11th- and 12thgrade students who wish to remain at their current school er students. "We're not con- for the 2015-16 school year to fident that 195 is what you're do so, though transportation going to start with." to school for those students
I
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schools' enrollment.
who asked if the school's budget could work with few-
HIGH SCHOOLBOUNDARIES I
"I think the concern that the board has is the viability
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
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-
Tickets and memberships are available online at www.cosymphony.com or by calling 541-317-3941.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
c 00 ecl erssee e 8
inra in s romnew es s • The tests based on CommonCorewil still be given,but schoolsmight not berated The Associated Press P ORTLAND
—
The tests, called Smarter Or e g on Balanced, will still be giv-
education leaders say they want a yearlong delay in rating schools based on a new set oftougher tests after the state's teachers union raised objections.
Chief education officer Nancy Goldensaid Monday t hat schools should get
a
one-year reprieve from being ranked by scores on tests based on rigorous academic standards called Common Core, which most states, i ncluding O r egon, h a v e adopted. She reached that c on-
en, and the state will issue a report card w it h th e r e sults. But Oregon won't issue
using the Smarter Balanced test this spring will get federrelation to one another. al permission to forgo ratings Schools whose student for this year if they ask. Saxgrowth and test performance ton said Oregon will send the rate in the top 10 percent get request. the top rating, Level 5, and Previously, Oregon has schools in the bottom 5 percent of performance get the
worst rating, Level 1. a rating for this year that Nine months ago, memcompares schools to one an- bers of the Oregon Education other, according to Golden's Association said the Smartrecommendation. er Balanced tests were too Rating schools based on hard and too many students performance on the unfamil- would feel poorly when they iar tests could harm students, couldn't pass. It c a lled on
used the Oregon Assessment
of Knowledge and Skills, or OAKS, tests. The S m a rter B a l a nced
Golden said. "When students hear that
Saxton to forgo the tests alto-
tests cover what students are supposed to be taught under the Common Core reading, writing and math standards, which Oregon adoptedin 2010. They are considered more demanding than the
gether, but he never seriously
OAKS tests: not exclusively
their school is rated low, it
considered that request. But Saxton says the state
multiple-choice and requiring students to cite evidence
can make them feel they contributed to it," she said.
Golden's recommendation could change by March, but c lusion a f t e r G o v . J o h n Oregon schools chief Rob Kitzhaber ordered a review Saxton said he agrees with it. in response to c o mplaints For more than a d ecade, from the Oregon Education Oregon has rated schools
Association.
test scores. They aren't compared to a set standard but in
based in large part on their
should suspend performance to support their answers. ratings for one year because Last spring, 4 million stuschool and district leaders dents took the Smarter Balhave so many concerns and anced tests to work out probmisconceptions about how a lems. This spring, they will rating system would work. be given in 19 states, includThe Obama administra- ing Oregon, Washington and tion has signaled that states California.
AROUND THE STATE Company abaudouing port — An official with a South Korean shipping companythat is the Port of Portland's largest container carrier confirmed that Hanjin Shipping will be terminating its service with the city. In anemail statement, Hanjin's Mike Radaksaid the reason is simple: Thecompany "can't afford the expense of operating" in Portland. Port spokesmanJosh Thomas said Tuesday that Hanjin notified the port and customers it will withdraw services March 9.Hanjin handles nearly 80 percent of the container volume attheport's Terminal 6. Port officials said Hanjin will continue to userail and truck transportation. Hanjin hashad apresence in Portland since1993, but the companyhasbeenunhappyaboutthepaceofworkamonglongshore workers and announcedits intention to withdraw two years ago. Adult bOOkStOre laWSuit —A manwho filed a lawsuit after he was fired from his job at aPortland-area adult bookstore hasbeen awarded more than$76,000 in damages. Wilford Bearden washired at Fantasyland II in Clackamas inApril 2010, and hewasfired three months later. In his lawsuit, Bearden, 73, contendedFantasyland II allowed a hostile work environment, treated him differently becauseof his sexual orientation and fired him after he complained about sexual harassment. TheOregonian reports that ClackamasCounty Circuit Judge Michael Wetzel recently found that Beardenhad beensubjected to actions that "were reasonably andsubjectively offensive" to Bearden as agay man. Fatal ShOOting arreSt —Tigard Police said a suspect has been arrested in the fatal shooting of a manoutside the home of the victim's former wife. Federal andstate officers in Washington state took 29-year-old Orlando LeePouncey into custody Monday evening at arel ative'shomeinSpanaway,nearTacoma. Pounceyisaccused of murder in the death of 37-year-old Jerry Duy Nguyen ofBeaverton. Police said Nguyenwas at the homeJan. 30 to pick up his child. Tigard Police described Pouncey as friend a of the mother's. They said he lived nearby in the Portland suburb and ranawayafter the shooting. Authorities haven't described amotive for the shooting. Police said Tuesday it hadn't beendetermined when Pounceywould be returned to Oregon. — From wire reports
POINT Meteorologists attribute milky rain EAGLE Licenseehaseverything ready to fallout from Nevadadust storm to grow bemp —except seeds By Kelly House
• Canada, Russia and Australia are possible sourcesfor the hempseeds
The Oregonian
Scientists with the Nation-
al Weather Service believe they've cracked the case of the
cloudy water that fell from the sky throughout inland Oregon and Washington on Friday, a downpourthat prompted a flurry of calls to their office
The Associated Press
and boosting business at area
SALEM — S t at e r e gulators have issued the first
car washes. The agency heard from res-
Callers complained of chalky residue on their windshields
license to grow industrial hemp in Oregon,and the Eagle Point man who got it says he has everything ready to go — except something to plant. Growers will have to im-
and raincoats. Most reports
port seed to grow the state's
w ere concentrated east ofthe
first crop of the practical cousin of marijuana, but it's
idents in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, the Tri-Cities in Washington, and Hermiston, Pendleton and several other cities in Oregon.
Cascades. Meteorologists had doubts
not clear from where.
about initial reports that the
Canada, Russia, Hungary,
whitish residue could have
been ash from a volcano in Joseph Rose/The Oregonian Russia or Mexico. Particles Oregon's milky rain most likely came from a Nevada dust storm, that had traveled that far likely
scientists say.
would have been highly diluted, but the stuff that fell Friday Suspecting they had found ly with the Nevada storms of And if the dust cloud crossed the culprit, they ran some stats Thursday night. the Pacific Ocean to get here, to be sure. The incident coinMeteorologists can't be 100 why hadn't locations toward cided with a 15-hour period percent sure their theory is corthe coast been affected? It had of south winds averaging 46 rect without conducting minertobe somethingcloser to home, mph in the eastern half of Ore- al tests, but "Putting the pieces and more recent. Meteorol- gon and Washington — strong together, it seemed to be the ogists knew high winds had enough to carry dust hundreds most reasonable answer," said whipped across northwest ¹ of miles northward. Steve Bodnar, a meteorologist vada on Thursday night, downTraveling at an average of with the National Weather Sering power lines, causing traffic 40 mph, the dust cloud would vice in Spokane. "The fact that accidents and clouding the air have reached Spokane, Wash- there was a big dust storm in a was dense with particles.
with thick chalky dust similar in shade to the stuff that fell in the Northwest a day later.
ington, in about 12 hours. That times Friday's first
milky rain reports perfect-
desert area with a lot of white
soils kind of narrows it down," he said.
The Legislature legalized growing hemp in 2009, but the state held off writing rules until
the federal government signaled it wouldn't crack down on well-regulated crops. The state Department of Agriculture finished the rules this year and said it was ready to issue licenses, costing $1,500 for three years. The state Department of
A griculture f i nished t h e rules this year and said it
was ready to issue licenses, costing $1,500 for three years. Officials at the agency and at Oregon State University say they are working with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration on the
search and d evelopment projects designated by state governments. The provision was supported by Mitch McConnell,
the U.S. senator from Kentucky who is now majority leader and a proponent of
hemp production. Hemp has a negligible amount of the chemical that
question of getting seed — a causes a high among mariquestion faced last year by juana users. importsources for seeds to two states in the forefront Historically, it was grown grow a crop that has long of efforts to bring hemp into for rope. Advocates say it been outlawed in the Unitcommercial production. could be used in a variety of ed States, with seed imports In Kentucky, the state Ag- products, such as clothing, blocked by federal agents. riculture Department sued food and cosmetics. "We have to import to get to get the U.S. Drug EnforceAs many as 18 states, instarted," the new licensee, ment Administration to re- cluding Oregon, have reEdgar Winters, told the agri- lease seeds imported from moved barriers to produccultural publication Capital Italy. In Colorado, state reg- tion, but starting an industry Press. "We don't want our ulators looked the other way has proved slow-going. farmers to sit around anothas growers obtained seeds Warehousing and p r oer year." on their own. c essing facilities will b e The Legislature legalized Late last year, Kentucky ready to go when an Oregrowing hemp in2009, but officials said they w ere gon crop is harvested in late t he state held off w r i t i ng heartened by a provision in summer, Winters said. "We are in position to do rules until the federal gov- the new federal budget bill ernment signaled it wouldn't that was aimed at keeping 40 tons a day at our processcrack down on well-regulat- federaldrug officials from ing mill," he said. "We've got ed crops. interfering with hemp re- our ducks in a row." Australia and New Zealand are mentioned as possible
1VEwsOF REcoRD in the 300 block of SWSixth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:46 The Bulletin will update items in the a.m.Feb.2,inthe2600blockofSW Police Log whensuch arequest Mariposa Loop. is received. Anynewinformation, Theft —Atheft was reported and an such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more arrestmadeat9:36a.m. Feb.2, inthe 3100 block of S. U.S.Highway97. information, call 541-383-0358. Theft — A theft was reported andan arrest made at10:05 a.m. Feb. 2, in BEND POLICE the area of SWSeventh Street and SW DEPARTMEMT Forest Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at12:56 DUII —SamuelAlfred Myers, 65, was p.m. Feb. 2, in the900 block of NW arrested on suspicion of driving under Poplar Avenue. the influence of intoxicants at 5:59 Theft —A theft was reported at1:54 p.m. Feb. 6, in thearea of SEThird p.m. Feb. 2, in the800block of NW Street and SEWilson Avenue. Fifth Street. DUII —Corrie J. Ortner,42, was Vehicle crash —Anaccident was arrested on suspicion of driving under reported at 3:32 p.m. Feb. 2, in the400 the influence of intoxicants at11:58 block of NWOakTree Lane. p.m. Feb. 7, inthe1400 block of NW Vehicle crash — Anaccident was Wall Street. reported at4:49 p.m. Feb. 2, inthe 300 Theft —Atheft was reported at block of NWOakTree Lane. 7:06p.m. Feb.8, intheareaofSW Vehicle crash —Anaccident was Columbia Street. reported at 5:06 p.m. Feb. 2, in the 1700 block of S. U.S.Highway97. REDMOMD POLICE DUII —DawnChristine Kane, 43, was arrested on suspicion of driving under DEPARTMEMT the influence of intoxicants at 8 p.m. Feb. 2, in the area of SE Evergreen Criminal mischief —Anact of Franklin Street. criminal mischief was reported andan Avenue and SE arrest made at1:56 a.m. Jan. 29, in the Vehicle crash —Anaccident was 900 block of NWMaple Court. reported at 8 p.m.Feb. 2, in theareaof SE EvergreenAvenueand SEFranklin Unlawful entry — Avehicle was Street. reported entered, items stolen andan arrest was madeat12:52 p.m. Jan. 29, Criminal mischief —Anact of
POLICE LOG
criminal mischief was reported at8p.m. Feb.2, intheareaof SE Evergreen Avenue and SEFranklin Street. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 9:01 a.m.Feb.3, in the 300 block of NWGreenwood Avenue. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at1:54 p.m. Feb. 3, in the 2100 block of SWUmatilla Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:23 p.m. Feb. 3, in the700 block of SW Deschutes Avenue. DUII —Patricia Marie Burke, 59, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:38 p.m. Feb. 3, in thearea of Deschutes Market Roadand Pioneer Loop. DUII —Joshua Eli Biddle,38, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:43 p.m.Feb.3,inthe2200 blockofSW 23rd Street. Theft — Atheft was reported andan arrest made at12 p.m. Feb. 4, in the 2000 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:17 p.m. Feb. 4, in the 1800 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:03 p.m. Feb. 4, in the700 block of SW Fifth Street. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 7:59 p.m.Feb. 4, in the 600 block of SW29th Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was
reported entered at 6:59a.m. Feb. 5, in the 2600 block of SWObsidian Avenue. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 7:06 a.m.Feb. 5, in the 500 block of NELarch Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:01 p.m. Feb. 5, in the900 block of SW 13th Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 3:03 p.m. Feb. 5, in the1200 block of NW Upas Avenue. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 4:39 p.m. Feb. 5, in the 1100 block of NWSixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9 a.m. Feb. 6, in the 900 blockof SW23rd Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at3:48 p.m. Feb. 6, in the 1600 block of SWObsidian Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at5:29 p.m. Feb. 6, in the 1700 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at11:30 a.m. Feb. 7,in the 700 block of NWCanal Boulevard. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11:32 a.m. Feb. 7, inthe area of SWSixth Street and SW Highland Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:12 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe area of SWNinth Street and SW Glacier Avenue.
Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:19 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe 300 blockof NW Oak TreeLane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:39 p.m. Feb.8 inthe300blockof NW Oak TreeLane. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:17 p.m. Feb. 8, in the300 block of NW Oak TreeLane.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:17 p.m. Feb. 9, in thearea of E.First Street.
BEND FIRE RUNS Friday 3:48 a.m.— Smoke odor reported, 2650 NE U.S.Highway 20. 6:09a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 65675 Gerking Market Rd. 1:41 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, area of McGillivray Road. 16 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 5:13p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 640 NWPowell Butte Loop 5:56p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 60680 Rocking HorseRd. 40 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 4:28 p.m.— Authorized controlled
burning, 1560 NWElgin Ave. 20 —Medical aid calls.
REDMOMD FIRE RUNS Feb. 2 6:21p.m.— Chimney or flue fire, 149 N. Canal Blvd. 7 —Medical aid calls. Feb. 3 14 —Medical aid calls. Feb. 4 11 —Medical aid calls. Thursday 2:57 a.m.— Building fire, 975 SE First St. 5:41p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 640 NW GreenForest Circle. 11:09 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 285 SW 59th St. 11 —Medical aid calls. Friday 9:41a.m. —Authorized controlled burning, 1250 NE Wilcox Ave. 7 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 9 — Medical aid calls. Sunday 7 —Medical aid calls.
B4
TH E BULLETINP WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
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reasonable proposals to change the way the city regulates the rentals. There may be stricter, annual permitting requirements and land use restrictions that would limit the number of newrentals inan area. Those are good answers to pmtecting the livability of neighborhoods. But what really matters is whathappens at1a.m. Let's assume all the proposals become city policy and there is a vacation rental next door. It is the middle of the night. The vacation renters are partying. They are loud enough to keep the neighbors awake. They don't respond to polite requests to keep it down. What arethe neighbors supposed to do? Call911? I t's not a n e mergency in a Iife-ttueatening way. Neighbors may be reluctant to make that call. And as much as Bend Police might wish it hadenoughoffi cerstohelpneighbors out in these situations, they will often have otherpriorities. The city has had some discussion about a hotline number. Who would
staff it? What authority would they haveto do something? Oneideataskforcemembershave
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discussed is supplying neighbors withthe name and phone number of a person designated by the vacation rental property owner or property manager. It couldbe thatindividual's responsibiiity to cail the rTental property on nights such as these. And if that wasn't enough, to go to the property andtryto resolvethe situation. Owners of vacation rentals do have a vested interest in running responsible businesses. Most may try to screen ciients and ensure renters know the rules. They can't contml, though, what therenters do at1arn. The city needs to ensure that vacation rentals owners know that they will lose their license after a few, documented, bad nights for the neighborsin ayear.Thatgivesvacation rental operators the motivation to protect the neighbors. Without enforcement, much of the task force's effortwillhave gone to waste.
M 1Vickel's Worth
actly what she believes he did. To complicate the picture, Hayes' newly hired criminal defense lawyer argues that her emails should remain secret because she is not a "public body," but a private citizen. Moreover, Kitzhaber's lawyers have told the Oregon Government Ethics Commission that it has no power to investigate Hayes for the same reason. That simply is not good enough. If Hayes does not qualify as a "public body" or "public official," the law is at fault. She certainlyhasbehaved as a public person, giving advice on public policy and availing herself of assistance from public employees, public space and the like. If the law needs clarifying, lawmakers, who have proved this month they can push through legislation with remarkable speed when they chooseto do so,need to get changed. busy and do that clarifying. Hayes Kitzhaber's staff has "clarified" and Kitzhaberdeserve quick resoluwhat he meantwhen he wrote to Rosenblum. He did not mean, Amy tion to this mess. More important, the people of Wojcicki, his spokeswoman, told Willamette Week, that he intended Oregon also need quick resolution. to give the AG's office the power to They deserve to know whether the pursuecriminal charges in thecase. governor's fiancee and perhaps the Without that, she can investigatebut governor himself have broken the apparently not prosecute. Rosen- law, and they deserve to know as blum, meanwhile, argues that's ex- quickly as possible.
Bend politics get absurd
The 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz earned sig-
ter Improvement Project, it appears,
InregardtotheBend Surface Wain my humble opinion, we have the third act of the theater of the absurd. As a ratepayer, I can only see additional costs to my water bill necessitated by not only legal costs in-
nificant space in The Bulletin. I am thrilled to see our hometown paper
celebrate such an important date and continue the most important task of informing all of us of such curred to defend it but also elevated a dark period in the history of the construction costs.
s talled. I commented to my w i f e that it was great that the City of
Redmond wasleading the way and educating people by stating on the plaque how many millions of gallons were being saved. I don't recall seeing waterless urinals anywhere else. I would hope the city will change their mind on this issue. Let's not wait until we're in dire straights like
California has by watching water levels drop for20 years,then waking up one day and say, "Gee, we tion due to climate change through better start rationing and conservhiring (hastily it appears) a local ing water."
world. Though located in the little com-
Deschutes Water Watch's attempt to quantify future resource deple-
munity of Oswiecim, near Krakow in Poland, Auschwitz earned the dubious honor of being the most
contractor to put up the numbers
I never noticed any undue odor,
barbaric and deadly of all Nazi Ger- seems an act of desperation or per- but be that as it may, in my opinion it many concentration camps. I visited haps retribution for losing twice in sends a great message to the people
We deserve answers on ethics and crimes e can't imagine it's much fun being either John K itzhaber o r Cyl v i a Hayes just now. News articles appear almost daily that uncover yet another bit of what appears to be misbehavior, perhaps criminal, on the part of Gov. Kitzhaber's fiancee and perhaps the governor himself, and questions about who did what or knew what when multiply. Oregoniansdeserve to know the answers to those questions, and, in truth, the people at the center of the growing scandal deserve an equally quick resolution. Thus, no matter what it takes, a thorough investigation now is vital. It looked Monday as if that might happen. Kitzhaber asked Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum to look into the matter; she responded she had already begun to do so. Tuesday, the picture seemed to have
Never forget the Holocaust
the place in 2013 with a heavy heart but a determined mind that I want-
district court. The validity of these
finds would need to be replicated
How does a city ask its residents
ed to bear witness to the suffering
by other scientists, preferably out of
to conserve in the future if this wa-
of over a million souls that were tor-
this geographical area. ter conservation goal is removed'? Crag Law Center, a Portland enStd L. Ltnck
tured and murdered in that hell on earth. So many of the structures have
vironmental law firm, patted itself
Bend
time after the new urinals were in-
to conserve their water use.
Bend
on the back for stopping the Bend been kept in their original condition water project. They are a significant and serve to remind us of the careful source for funding the legal action. planning and executing of the archi- If one would like to see groundwaGreat editorial about the importects of the Final Solution. The total ter as the sole source for Bend, then tance ofthe Oregon Law Foundaadherence to such diabolical plan by I'd urge examination of the current tion's Leadership Banks, which pay so many Germans in the '20s, '30s state water resource map. Aquifers a supportive interest rate on lawyer and '40s ought to serve as a mark- are a threatened and endangered trust accounts. Paying a supportive er that evil can surface anywhere species! interest rate is important because I'd also like to express apprecia- the interest goes to the OLF to assist wherefanaticism and ignorance are allowed to prevail. tion for the prior council's attempt with funding organizations that proThe recent attacks in Paris where to coordinate this project with the vide civil legal aid across the state. many Jews were again killed be- county Skyliner Road improvement According to OLF, if all Oregon cause of being Jews, as well as the project. That represents consider- lawyers maintained their trust acrising wave of anti-Semitism in Eu- able savings. Agencies very seldom counts with a Leadership Bank, an rope and the Middle East, are con- get that chance. estimated $700,000 of additional tinued evidence of intolerance in our Margaret Holman interest income would be generatworld. Bend ed annually for legal aid and other The need to tell the story of Ausimportant programs. If they are not chwitz to newer generations is ever Conserve water already doing so, I urge Central Orso important so that the chance of it egon lawyers to maintain their trust happening again is diminished. We have flown out of Redmond accounts at a Leadership Bank. Carlos Wysling several times. I remember the first Josh Newton
Help legalaid
Bend
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P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
When will mnsumers be fed up with data breaches? By Juattn Fox
shouldn't be a worry.
"Sandy" Pentland of the MIT Media
Bloomberg News
Things would be very different, one presumes, if instead of health
Lab helpedget a World Economic Forum project going on "Rethinking
t
t has been almost a week now
since health insurer Anthem dis- insurers, banks and retailers storing closed that hackers had gotten our data for us, we chose personal hold of data on 80 million of its cus- data services to watch over our pritomers. Which just means we're that vate information and represent us much closer to the disclosure of the as wetransacted and interacted. For next giant data hack. those companies, protecting customThis is going to keep happening, er datawould be the very core oftheir obviously. One big reason is that, for business. Sure, there would still be Anthem and lots of other companies data breaches. But competitive forces that possess our most sensitive data, would push the best data protectors protecting it isn't the core of their (and the best data-protection methbusiness. Cleaning up after this mess ods) to the top. is going to be an expensive pain for This vision of how the world of perAnthem, but the attack is unlikely to sonal data ought to work, with indidrive away customers. viduals owning their data and hiring If Anthem got a reputation for be- companies to manage it, has been in ing dramatically worse at protecting the air for a few years now. Blogging customer data than other health in- pioneer Doc Searls, who calls it vensurers, the corporate human-resourc- dor-relationship management, has es people who choose insurers might been trying to drum up support for it start to defect. But as long as it's ap- with a book and the ongoing Projectproximately as bad as the rest, that
VRM at Harvard Law School. Alex
that stands in the way of such data
gathering is an obstacle to be pushed aside or navigated around — and alPersonal Data," which has on occa- though Searls and Pentland both arsion come close to embracing the cus- gue that their approach might eventomer-owns-the-data approach. And tually make people willing to share there has been startup after startup even moredatathan they do now, in aiming to address some aspect of the short term it would interfere with this. What there haven't been, as far as
I can tell, are any big success stories or signs of a real shift in the direction
of putting the customer in charge. Instead, most of the data-related excitement in business circles has revolved
around finding ways to gather, processand monetize ever more information on consumers. This isn't so much about Social
Security numbers, as in the Anthem breach, as it is about data that
"is either passively observed about individuals or computationally inferred about them," in the words of
one recent WEF report. Anything
Providers of health and medical servicescame in second, at 55.1 percent, and government authorities in
third, at 52.9 percent. No other sector cracked 50 percent. At the bottom of the list were mo-
bile-phone operators (43.7 percent), shops and departmentstores (38.9 the business models of Google, Face- percent), companies that provide sobook and scores of other companies, cial-networking services (37.4 perso it's not happening. cent) and online marketers and adIn a QkA with the Harvard Busi- vertisers (29 percent). ness Review in November, Pentland Given the recent hacks at JPMorsaid he was "quite hopeful" that gan Chase and Anthem, one would change would come "because people imagine that trust in banks and are fed up." Are they? health providers is lower now. OverFor yet another WEF report, "The all, the world's consumers appear Internet Trust B u bble," p ollsters to be justifiably suspicious, even fed
asked people in 63 countries in 2012 up. So far, though, it's still an incho"to what extent do you trust the following institutions to protect your
ate, diffuse sort of fed-up-ness. What
personal data'?" Banks and financial
exactly will it take to get us so fed up that we actually, en masse, do some-
institutions scored the highest, with
thing about it?
60.5 percent of respondents answering 5, 6 or 7 on a 7-point trust scale.
— Justin Foxis a columnist
for Bloomberg.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
HosmerLake
Hosmer
BITUARIES
Continued from B1
"We've now had that stock
FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH 1VOTIt ES Rosemarie (Sabus) Braun, of Bend April 2, 1925 - Feb. 8, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Services: Private services will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
St. Charles Hospice Services www.foundation.stcharles healthcare.org
Dora Gryder, of Bend May 16, 1957 - Feb. 7, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will take place on Saturday, February 14, 2015, at 10:00 AM, at New Hope Christian Center, located at 220 Trinity Way in Sisters. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
William Thomas Hollinger, of Bend May 2, 1925 - Feb. 5, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: Memorial Mass Historic St. Francis Catholic Church Franklin 8 Lava Friday, February 13, 2015 12:15 P.M. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701 or The St. Francis Catholic Church Building fund, 2450 N.E. 27th Street, Bend, Oregon 97701.
Janice E. Bean, of Springfield, OR
(Formerly of Prineville) Sept. 9, 1921 - Feb. 10, 2015 Arrangements: Andrews Funeral Home, 1-541-485-6659 Services: No service will be held.
John Marcus Marlowe, II, of Redmond April 27, 1956 - Feb. 2, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Richard Neil McKinley, of Bend Oct. 1, 1943 - Feb. 6, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held.
Historian connecteda U.N. leader,war crimes By Sam Roberts
Times reported on Waldheim's
New York Times News Service
wartime service in the Balkans and his prewar Nazi associ-
Robert Herzstein, a historian
whose prodigious archival re- ations. A few weeks later, the search on behalf of the World World Jewish Congress anJewish Congress helped uncov- nounced Herzstein's findings. er Kurt Waldheim's veiled ties Waldheim said he had never Oct. 10, 1926- Feb. 7, 2015 to Nazi war crimes, died Jan. belonged to any Nazi-affiliat24 ata hospicenear hishome in ed groups, but, in fact, he had Mill City — Dorothy, 88, died Saturday, February 7, Columbia, South Carolina. He joined the National Socialist i n Salem. Sh e w a s b o r n was 75. students' league and later enand raised in B e nd, movThe cause was multiple my- rolled in the Sturmabteilung, ing to Mill City in 1989. eloma, his partner, Faye Flow- the paramilitary Nazi organiD orothy r e c e i ve d h er ers, sald. zation of storm troopers. He b achelor's a n d ma s t e r ' s In 1979, when Waldheim, served under a general who led d egrees fro m O C E , n o w W estern Or e g o n . Sh e then the secretary general of the Germans and their Croat aught e l ementary m u s i c the United Nations, received an tian allies in slaughtering more
Dorothy C. Schatz
for 14 years, retiring from the Sisters' School District. Dorothy was preceded in death by her husband, Alfred Schatz in 1990. She enjoyed music, espec ially p l a y in g t h e c e l l o , k nitting, a rt , s e w in g a n d painting Christmas murals on windows around Bend and murals o f m o u n tains t hat were displayed in th e L ava B u tt e L o o k ou t f o r m any years. Dorothy w a s a member of the Baha'i re-
ligion.
S he is survived b y c h i l dren, Patrick (Jody) Schatz of Bend and Susan (John) D ickinson o f M i l l Cit y ; brother, James Gilliland of Chehalis, WA; four grandchildre n an d f ou r g reat-grandchildren. D o r othy w a s p r e c e de d i n d eath b y her b r ot h e r , Howard; and sisters, Marjorie and C. Jeanne. Graveside service will be W ednesday, February 1 1 , 2015, at 11:00 a.m., at Fairview C e m etery i n M i l l City, followed by a memorial service at 1:00 p.m., at t he B A H A ' I C e n t e r 6 8 0 State St., in Salem. Contributions m a y be made t o D oe r n b e cher's C hildren's H o spital, G e nt iva Hospice, or th e C a n y on Crisis Center o f M i l l C ity. Serving t h e f a m i l y , N orth S a n t ta m Fu n e r a l Service, Stayton.
Laura M. Browns Oct. 21, 1922- Jan. 29, 2015 Laura Marie Browns was born October 21, 1922 to
Henry and Martha (Toline)
Services: No services are planned at this time.
Patricia A. Smith, of Bend
w h er e sh e a l so married h er fi r s t husband, Harold Green. Laura moved w ith h e r children
ly commit what is commonly called a war crime," Herzstein concluded in his book about the investigation. "But this nonguilt
lates" to all German officers.
He also served as an officer with a unit that executed thousands of partisans and noncombatants in Montenegro and
eastern Macedonia and killed Allied commandos who had been takenprisoner.For a tim e
mustnotbe confusedwithinno- he was stationed in Greece, cence. The fact that Waldheim
where more than 60,000 Jews
played a significant role in mil- were deported to death camps. itary units that unquestionably "I never heard or learned anycommitted war crimes makes
thing of this while I was there,"
him at the very least morally complicitinthose crimes."
Waldheim, who was a lieutenant in an intelligence unit,
Robert Edwin Herzstein was
told The Times. But in his book, Herzstein
born Sept. 26, 1940, in Man-
wrote, "It is hard to believe this ambitious young staff officer, whose success had been based resentative in A l bany, New in large part on his ability to York. His mother, Jean, was a keep abreast of what was going homemaker. on, could have failed to notice He attended the McBurney that most of the Jewish comSchool and earned bachelor's, munity of Salonika — nearly master's and doctoraldegrees a third of the city's populafrom New York University. He tion — had been shipped off to hattan. His father, Harold, a
taught at the M assachusetts
Auschwitz."
Institute of Technology and the
Delving into archives in W ashington, London,Belgrade
Carnegie Institute of Technol-
ogy before joining the Univer- and Vienna, Herzstein found sity of South Carolina faculty a long paper trail, including in 1972. He retired as distin-
personal notes of telephone calls to alert German officials
guishedprofessor emeritus of history in 2008. that trains would be needed to His marriage to Daphne deport Italian soldiers in AthNewman Stassin ended in di- ens for forced labor. The notes vorce in 1975.
proved that Waldheim was "an
known for his Nazi-era schol-
to War," "The War That Hitler Won," "Adolf Hitler and the German Trauma" and "Wald-
barred him from entering the United States after determining
that he had "assisted or parheim: The Missing Years," ticipated in" the deportation, which was published in 1988. mistreatment and execution of In reviewing "Waldheim" for civilians and Allied soldiers in World War II.
Also in 1987, a commission appointed by the Austrian gov-
Joseph Toelle, of Burns
J ay (Lynela) G r een o f Bend, OR and Jim (Lori)
Sept. 20, 1984 - Feb. 5, 201 5 Arrangements: LaFollette's Chapel, 1-541-573-2731. Please visit www.lafolletteschapel.com to sign the online
d aughter,
Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: Service information will be announced at a later date.
guestbook. Services: A Memorial Service will be held on Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 2:00 p.m. at the Harney County Fairgrounds Memorial Building. A private family burial will be held on Friday. Contributionsmay be made to:
The Toelle boys college fund, checks can be made out to Autumn Toelle and sent to LaFollette's Chapel, PO Box 488; Burns, Oregon.
Green of Eugene, OR; her
zard, who had written about Waldheim's past in The New
si s t e r ,
Ru th
Cramer; and granddaughter, Teresa Green.
Laura enjoyed spending
time with her family, traveling th e w o r l d , r e a d ing
said that it had found no evidence that he was guilty of war
times obtuse and often trivial."
crimes. But it concluded that he
She said the secretary gener- must have been aware of the al would have most certainly atrocities committed around been aware of Nazi atrocities him and that by doing nothing committed in Russia and the about those crimes, he had faBalkans and concluded, "While
cilitated them. Waldheim main-
Mr. Herzstein is probably right in assuming that Mr. Wald-
tained that he was guiltless and never expressed remorse for
heim took no pleasure in such abominations, nothing in his
his wartime service or for his
president of Austria, Profil, a
cover-up. As a
h i storian, Herzstein
vigorously pressed the government torelease more secret
fileson war crimes suspects but said he maintained "a cer-
tain feeling of detachment" in his research, even though it subjected him to criticism for
leading magazine, published his lackof outrage. "I'll let others draw sweeping details of his wartime past. On March 4, 1986, The New York
and playing cards.
conclusions," he said.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
A private gr aveside memorial wa s h eld W e d nesd ay, February 4 , 2 0 15 a t Deaths of note from around Lane Memorial Gardens in the world: E ugene, O R . M em o r i a l Anne Moody, 74: A civil contributions may be made rights activist whose memoir, t o Partners i n C a r e H o s - "Coming of Age in Mississipp ice, 2075 NE W y at t C t . , pi," chronicledthe deprivations Bend, OR 97701 and injustice she witnessed Autumn Funerals Bend is as a black woman in the Jim handling arrangements.
from redband trout found at Crane Prairie Reservoir.
Hodgson said the Cranebow have been popular at
"They're good fighters, and they're locally adapted
stock in our hatchery system for a couple of decades now without bringing in new genetic material, and they're not as fit as they used to be. They're getting more domestic." — Brett Hodgson, ODFW fisheries biologist
to these waters, so they tend
to grow to a large size," he said. Hosmer Lake will remain
a catch-and-release, fly-fishing only lake despite the changes in ODFW's stocking program. Jerry Hubbard, past presi-
ing the fishing at Hosmer, personally, I support that." Hodgson said the remaining Atlantic salmon at Hosmer Lake will probably be
dent of the Sunriver Anglers
gone within tw o t o
t h r ee
Club, said ODFW's decision years. Because the lake to halt stocking of Atlantic lacks gravel beds suitable Salmon makes sense to him. for spawning, the salmon"We understand (ODFW's) as well as the cutthroat and concerns, particularly their Cranebow trout — are unbudget concerns," Hubbard abletoreproduce atHosmer said. "They're always under Lake. Brook trout in the lake budget restraints and bud- are successfully reproducget reductions. If that's what ing, Hodgson said. they consider the best use of — Reporter: 541-383-0387, their resources for improv-
shammers@bendbulletin.com
La Pine
three-tier system that would
charge based on the volume of water used.
Continued from B1 "There's been some to a
The proposed sewer rate
degree who have been pay- change would also have a ing more than their share fixed rate depending on me... but then there's a group
ter size but would add a vol-
Allen.
ume charge for residential and commercial usage. Allen said the city expects to draft ordinances for the rate changes in the coming
that's been u nderpaying through that system," said The proposed change to water rates would a ttach a fixed fee based on meter
weeks, then present the final
size for residential and com- suggestions in a second pubmercial units. The meter size lic hearing. If adopted, the regulates the flow of water changes would go into effect and requires the city to make July 1. more water available to the user. There would also be a
— Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshoracte@bendbulletin.com
Crow South. Died Feb. 5 at her home in Gloster, Mississippi. Kenji Ekuan, 85: Japanese designer whose instantly recognizable soy sauce bottle became
one Japan's most ubiquitous exports. Died Sundayin Tokyo. — From wire reports
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •
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Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate • • •
TheB u l letin
Pat Miller Leland Pat Niller, 86, died peacefully at his home on February 4, 2015 with his family at his side. No services will be held at Pat's request. Pat was bom on June 10, 1928 in Prineville, OR to Lyle and Nay (NcCullough) Niiier of Paulina. Pat attended schools in Paulina, Naury, and Prineville. He m arried Naida Louise Evans on January 17,1951.Patand Naida hadfour daughtersand were married 64years.Patranched in Paulinaand Powell Butte the rest of his life. He proudly served in the U.S. Army from 1954-56. He had fond memories of his fellow servicemen that he met while serving in Germany. Pat wasa founding member of the Paulina Rodeo Club, a 50+ year member of the Frinevilte Elks Club, anda long-time supporter of the Oregon Cattlemen's Association.
He greatly enjoyed political debates and all politics. He enjoyed watching all sports, especially football, basketball, baseball, and volleybalL Pat was an avid rodeo fan, with saddle bronc riding as his favorite event. Pat leaves his wife, Naida of Paulina; as well as daughters, Dana (Gary Niltin) of Powell Butte, Patti (Mike Sturza) of Paulina, Toni (Jim Lewis) of Frinevilte, and Lisa (Rob NcLean) of Paulina. Grandchildren include Kaki McLean Morehead, Chance Nillin, Ryiee Lewis, Jace Lewis, Kade Nclean, Presley Smith; and four great-grandchildren, Crae Millin, Jaide Campbell, Brymlee Morehead, and Cy Nitlin. He was preceded in death by his parents Lyle and Nay Miller, sister Bette Valley, and son-in-law Nike Sturza.
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must befollowed. Local obituaries are paidadvertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information onany of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
ernment at Waldheim's request
Republic,described the book as "important" but also "at
or story suggests J u d y (Gary) temperament he was affronted by them." Githens of B e nd, OR ; stx g randchildren; 1 0 gr e a t - Waldheim retired as secretary grandchilden; a nd on e general in 1981. Four years latgreat-great-grandson. She er, when he was the right-wing was preceded in death by People's Party's candidate for h er hu sb a n d , K ei th the largely ceremonial post of B rowns;
and the "Cranebow," a rainbow trout variant derived
"We've now had that
Waldheim won his country's
arship in books that included presidency in 1986. The next "Roosevelt and Hitler: Prelude year, the Justice Department
view, the novelist Shirley Haz-
Niswonger-Reynolds
Lake with c utthroat trout
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
lawyer, was Mayor William O'Dwyer's legislative rep-
The New York Times Book Re-
to Spring-
Into the future, ODFW will
focus on stocking Hosmer
stocked in recent years.
f ield, O R Laura Browns ;n ' 1962 She retired from the Lane C o. Housing A u t h ority i n 1 980 and moved w it h h e r husband, Keith Br owns to S unriver, OR . A ft e r h e r h usband's d e a th , L a u r a moved to Bend, OR where s he spent th e r est o f h e r life. Laura is survived by her three sons, Gary ( D o nna) Green of Central City, NE,
Jan. 21, 1929 - Feb. 8, 2015 Arrangements:
Central Oregon Community College.
Oregon where they've been
ed Nations' own war crimes commission. "Kurt Waldheim did not, in fact, order, incite or personal-
Hesmer,i Lake
Health Careers Center at
lies at Kozara, in western Bosnia, in 1942. Waldheim main-
of suspects wanted by the Unit- been handed out "like choco-
Bend
Cascade 4e Lakes Highway
The ODFW has scheduled
other lakes around Central
been there, then said the medal he received for the battle had
Parks Like To
a public meeting for Tuesday in Bend to explain changes to the fish stocking program at Hosmer Lake. The meeting will be at 6:30 p.m. in the
slav partisans and their fami-
was instrumental in discovering that Waldheim was on a list
Three Sisters Wilderness
to collect eggs to raise new Atlantic salmon fingerlings at the hatchery.
than 60,000 suspected Yugo-
Seven years later, Herzstein tained at first that he had never
The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife is discontinuing its nearly six-decade practice of stocking Hosmer Lake with Atlantic salmon.
Last fall, ODFW declined
honorary doctorate at the Uni-
He wrote two biographies accessory toacts of deportaJ ohnson i n O s c eola, N E . of Henry Luce, the Time mag- tion" and other war crimes, the Laura grew up and gradu- azine magnate, but was best professor wrote. a ted from h i g h s c hool i n P olk, NE
in our hatchery system for a couple of decades now without bringing in new genetic material, and they're not as fit as they used to be," he said. "They're getting more domestic."
versity of South Carolina, he was warmly greeted by Herzstein, who taught history there.
B5
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Because education was so important to Pat, memorial contributions may be sent to the Pat Niller Educational Scholarship Fund, in care of Dana Millin, 14221 SW Miller Tyail, Powell Butte, OR 97753. Friends may sendacardw ith ashortstoryorm em orytoN aidaM iller,8023 SE Wolf Creek Rd, Paulina, OR 97751. Juniper Ridge Funeral Home is in charge of these arrangements. 541-362-5606.
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
B6
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
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TODAY
iI
TONIGHT
HIGH 68' I f '
M
ALMANAC
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LOW
Partly cloudy
FRIDAY
62' 36'
34'
Mostly cloudy and mild
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THURSDAY
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SATURDAY
6 1' 34'
TEMPERATURE
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UV INDEX TODAY
ROAD CONDITONS
NATIONAL WEATHER
ORE 66 at Willamette Pass:Notravel problems today;partly sunnyandmild. Partly cloudy and dry tonight. ORE136 at Diamond Lake: Noweatherrelated delaystoday; partly sunny.
SKI REPORT ln inches ss of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort Anthony LakesMtn Hoodoo SkiArea Mt. Ashland
46 contiguousstates) National high:67 at Thermal, CA National low: -11' at Gaylord, Ml Precipitation: 0.74" at Hatteras, NC
New snow Base 3 4 2 2
Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 6 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 11 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 Vail, CO 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 4 Squaw Valley,CA 3 ParkcityMountain,UT 3 Sun Valley, ID 4
49-4 9 1-1 26-5 7 50-9 6
33-73 1-5 26-3 9
*
e
29-54 43-4 3 24-46 16-5 2
49-49
45-7 6
Source: OnThsSnuw.com
69/42
43/29
se /36
Minn 23/
Sunny and mild
Yesterday Today Thursday
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29
TRAVEL WEATHER
City Hi/Lo/Prsc. HiRo/W Abilene 83/50/0.00 60/37/sh High 54 43 66' in 1951 Akron 30/17/0.02 37/23/c 37' 24' -16'in 1933 Low Albany 30/21/0.06 24/ll/pc Albuquerque 68/38/0.00 52/30/c PRECIPITATION Anchorage 26/1 6/0.00 31/22/pc Atlanta 54/38/0.00 62/39/s 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Atlantic City 38/27/0.04 37/25/pc Record 1.53"in 1961 Austin 80/38/0.00 75/44/s Month to date (normal) 0.2 2" (0.42") Baltimore 39/28/0.15 41/26/pc Year to date(normal) 0.47 " (1.95") Billings 50/39/0.01 43/29/pc Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 23" Birmingham 48/35/0.00 62/37/s Bismarck 34/18/0.04 14/-14/c SUN ANDMOON Boise 53/41/0.05 59/36/pc Boston 30/14/0.08 24/14/$f Today Thu. Bridgeport, CT 36/23/Tr 27/12/pc 7:11 a.m. 7: 0 9 a.m. Buffalo 20/15/0.10 31/25/sn 5:29 p.m. 5: 3 0 p.m. Burlington, VT 18/13/0.05 18/13/c 12:19 a.m. 1: 1 9 a.m. Caribou, ME 11/0/Tr 8/-6/pc Charleston, SC 55/49/0.10 58/38/s 10:49 a.m. 1 1:29 a.m. La pjne J untura 56/ 3 4 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 53/44/0.28 56/34/s • Burns OREGON EXTREMES New F i r s t Full 53/33 62/44 /41 Chattanooga 50/36/0.00 60/35/s 61 2 • FortRock Riley 54/27 YESTERDAY Cresce t • BW27 Cheyenne 50/39/0.00 47/27/s 55/27 57/29 Chicago 33/14/0.00 36/8/sf High: 61' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 35/23/Tr 46/19/pc Jordan V gey Feb 11 Feb 16 F eb 26 M a r 6 at Hermiston 60/43 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 60/42 Cleveland 22/17/0.04 37/20/sn Low: 22' 63/35 Marsh Lake 57/33 ColoradoSprings 61/40/0.00 44/26/pc Touight'6 uky:Last quarter moon(7:50 p.m.) at Klamath Falls Po 0 57/28 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 43/22/0.00 41/13/pc • Paisley 60/ means that it's the last one quarter of the a Columbia, SC 55/50/Tr 59/36/s • 67/31 • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 56/39/0.00 65/38/s moon cycle that is visible before it becomes Gold ach 67 1 Medfo d '68/28 Rome 0' Columbus,OH 32/20/0.00 41/23/c 58/ • 2/ 58/30 a new moon. Klamath Concord, HH 36/15/0.03 23/-1/pc Source: JimTodd,OMSI • Ashl nd • Faiis • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 82/47/0.00 75/56/pc Bro ings 62/ 57/26 59/ 58/25 55/26 Dallas 75/45/0.00 67/37/s Dayton 29/1 9/0.00 43/21/c Denver 59/32/0.00 50/30/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Dss Moines 37/24/Tr 32/7/pc 2 1~ 2 ~ Z I 0 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 28/14/Tr 35/14/sn The highertheAccuWsalher.rxrm liy index number, Asturis 54/49/0.37 59/46/c 60/43/sh Ls Grande 52/41/0.05 55/35/c 58/30/c Portland 55/5 0/0.0159/42/c 60/42/c Duluth 24/14/0.25 18/-8/sn the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin protscgun.0-2 Low, Baker City 46/39/Tr 52/30/c 55/28/c Ls Pine 50/28/0.00 57/31/c 61/32/c Prinevig $ 54/2 8/0.0059/33/c 61/39/c El Paso 78/43/0.00 66/39/s 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 56/43/Tr 59/44/s 61/47/pc Medford 5 5 /33/Tr 62/36/s 62/37/pcRedmond 54/ 28/0.0061/32/c 64/34/c -7/-30/0.00 5/-8/c Fairbanks Bums 51/30/Tr 5 4/27/pc 57/27/c Ne wport 54/4 6 /0.25 59/45/c 62/46/c Roseburg 54 / 37/Tr 60/42/pc 63/45/c Fargo 32/22/0.34 9/-13/c Eugene 55/44/0.06 56/41/c 60/43/c NorthBend 55/46/0.01 61/43/pc 63/45/c Salem 56/48/0.35 58/41/c 61/42/c Flagstaff 61/25/0.00 51/28/s Klsmsth Falls 47/22/0.00 57/26/s 59/27/pc Ontari o 56/43/Tr 58/34/pc 57/34/ c Sisters 52/32/0.00 60/31/c 64/32/c Grand Rapids 25/7/0.00 35/11/sn Fcr web camerasof ourpasses, goto Lskevisw 52/25/0.00 58/25/s 61/25/pc Pendleton 57/47/0.03 58/37/c 56/37/c The Dsgss 6 0 / 41/0.07 55/39/c 57/40/c Green Bay 29/8/0.02 32/4/sf www.bendbuuetin.com/webcams Greensboro 49/37/0.41 54/30/pc Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-psrffycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-tbundsrstorms,r-rsin, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-lrsce,Yesterday data ssof 5 p.m. yesterday l-&4 at CabbageHill: Patchyfogthen cloudy to Harrisburg 35/27/Tr 37/25/pc partly sunny,today.Patchyfog tonight. Hsrfford, CT 33/19/Tr 29/5/pc Helena 50/39/0.02 53/34/pc US 20 atSantiamPass:Patchy morningfog; Honolulu 81/68/0.22 80/65/pc otherwise,partly sunnywith no travel problems. ~ 106 ~ g s ~ gs ~ f es ~ 20 6 ~ s g s ~ 4 0 s ~ 5 0 s ~ 6 0 6 ~ 7 0 9 ~ a g s ~ g g s ~f cc s ~T TOs Houston 74/43/0.00 74/48/s US 26 atGov'tCamp: Cloudsand occasional Huntsville 46/36/0.00 58/35/s NATIONAL 19$ sunshinetodaywith drypavement. * ~* ~* Q u e c Indianapolis 36/19/0.00 41/14/pc 6 20 • i nipee *~T uuuruafk++++ + ~* * * 7/2 Jackson, MS 57/35/0.00 67/42/s EXTREMES US 26 atOchocoDivide: Cloudyto partly sun58/47 Jacksonville 60/52/0.00 64/40/s + * * ny today; drypavement. Partly cloudytonight. YESTERDAY (for the slifsx tuffi 9$ Bismarck po~ 6/7
Yesterday Normal Record
57
~F Tq~
Mild with some sunshine
OREGON WEATHER Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST:Patchy fog ria / early; otherwise, mild umatiga Hood I/ 39 today with a mixture Bft/47 RiVer Rufus • ermiston of clouds andsunCannon /40 lington 58/37 Portland Meac am Lost' ine shine. Partly cloudy / 5 /37 tonight. dleton • Enterpri h o 6 w co • CENTRAL:Sunshine Mc innviu 8/41 Goveu Joseph • He ppner Grande • and someclouds n t • u p i Condon 8/35 • 66 55 35 " y " union Lincoln 52/ afternoon patchy Sale 69/47 • pray Graniteu fog possible early in 58/4 • /37 'Baker C Newpo 49/30 the day. • ~® 8/41 59/45 • Mitch il 62/30 Camp Sh man Red n WEST:Patchy morning 67/34 R eu 68/32 • John fog; otherwise, mild Yachats 57/43 • Prineville oay /27 tario today with clouds and 69/33 • Pa lina 66 / 3 4 5 34 occasiona lsunshine. Florene • Eugene o 'Se d B rothers 5531 Valee Partly to mostly cloudy 59/45 Su IVeru 58/34 55/36 tonight. Nyssa • 57/ Ham ton
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
' '
58 32
Mild with times of clouds and sun
Mostly cloudy and mild
SUNDAY
ru fo
Amsterdam Athens
45/39/0.00 1 uovroh P 44/39/0.48 * 41/1 14 uffafo Auckland 72/61/0.00 * *36 wyork .~w dd d Baghdad 75/58/0.00 Mi 1/21 * * Bangkok 88/70/0.00 Cheyenn of mbuv • 36/9 gadefpft Beijing 54/26/0.00 27 . C h i go • 41/ 3 alt Lake C P b Beirut 66/55/1.04 h s h clvCO $36/6 d d d d 3/34 • Den Berlin 43/40/0.02 de/60 ingtons'~~~> sss d d ~ 60/3 uv II Laa V $$ ,xx x x x $ Q Bogota 68/50/0.05 * 72/4 Kansas Cffy Si. u ' 62/23 Budapest 41/34/0.00 * $7/12 46/1 Buenos Ai r es 81/66/0.10 • svhvff Chsrfo *. X X Los An fss Csbo SsnLucss 84/57/0.00 64/2 4 , 4/57 • 4 /32 i~x+i i i Cairo 64/54/0.00 Phoen Afsuuque e Anchorage klshoma Ci • At Calgary 19/7/0.11 • 61/67 31/2 II 0 62/30 6 42/39 Csncun 81/59/0.00 uir fnuhs 6 Psvo 8 /69 Juneau Dublin 39/35/0.00 e 7 * Edinburgh 43/41/0.00 40/37 Dallas Geneva 41/25/0.00 47/37 • rfshdu Harsre 84/59/0.10 w Orleans 4/48 6 42 Hong Kong 64/51/0.00 Honolulu Chihuahua 44/46 o ~ . t Istanbul 38/34/0.45 so/ds 76/41 Mismi Jerusalem 60/44/0.00 Monte y 73/~ 76/56 Johannesburg 86/64/0.13 6 Lima 85/73/0.00 Lisbon 48/44/0.17 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 43/39/0.00 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 46/34/0.00 Manila 87/73/0.00 *
*
+
~
43/31/c 44/37/pc 75/60/pc 73/51/s 92/73/s 47/21/s 56/52/r 42/33/sh 65/47/pc 42/28/c 87/66/s 82/59/s 57/45/pc 22/20/c 81/61/s 44/34/sh 44/33/c 49/34/s 83/60/pc 69/60/pc 37/37/sn 48/37/s 88/60/s 85/71/pc 55/42/sh 44/36/c 49/36/sh 86/73/s
Hi/Lo/W 54/35/pc 24/2/sf 29/0/sn 57/33/s 34/20/sf 45/22/pc 39/18/c 57/33/pc 42/13/c 58/35/c 42/19/s 22/15/pc 56/34/c 26/15/sn 31/10/sn 26/-2/sf 25/1/sf 14/2/c 65/27/s 54/19/pc 37/18/pc 57/35/c 11/5/sf 25/12/sf 21/2/sf 57/36/pc 27/18/s 61/23/s 53/23/s 25/7/sf 23/9/sn 67/44/c 54/33/pc 24/11/$f 64/34/pc 20/14/s 16/1/sf 7/4/pc 60/35/pc 8/-15/c 9/5/pc 54/25/s 15/3/sf 12/1/pc 50/19/pc 39/10/$f 27/8/sn 56/30/c 78/66/pc 63/37/pc 36/19/s 20/8/pc 49/22/s 68/28/s
84n2/pc 57/44/pc 44/40/pc 50/33/sh
87n4/pc
pyiisooi
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 28/17/0.00 40/37/r 45/42/r 50/28/0.00 37/12/pc 29/1 9/s 28/-1/Tr 34/10/sn 12/0/sf 73/54/0.00 72/47/s 72/48/s 32/25/0.03 48/24/s 25/11/pc 41/32/0.00 36/6/pc 29/22/s
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vsgas Lexington Lincoln Liffls Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
51/36/0.00 78/53/0.00 42/28/0.00 29/2/0.04 49/35/0.00 76/62/0.00 Milwaukee 27/21/0.03 Minneapolis 26/22/0.11 Nashville 44/32/Tr New Orleans 63/45/0.00 New YorkCity 40/26/0.02 Newark, NJ 38/25/0.15 Norfolk, VA 38/35/0.37 OklahomaCity 71/39/0.00 Omaha 40/31/0.00 Orlando 65/58/Tr Palm Springs 86/58/0.00 Psoris 33/16/0.00 Philadelphia 42/28/0.05 Phoenix 83/57/0.00 Pittsburgh 32/19/0.02 Portland, ME 30/11/0.23 Providence 32/17/0.02 Raleigh 45/36/0.18 Rapid City 57/30/Tr Rsnu 55/28/0.00 Richmond 38/33/0.72 Rochester, NY 21/16/Tr Sacramento 62/45/0.00 Sl. Louis 44/28/0.00 Salt Lake City 52/39/0.02 Ssn Antonio 80/46/0.00 San Diego 70/53/0.00 Ssn Francisco 64/48/0.00 Ssn Joss 64/44/0.00 Santa re 65/32/0.00 Savannah 60/51/0.09 Seattle 55/50/0.15 Sioux Falls 40/30/0.05 Spokane 47/42/0.00 Springfield, Mo 54/27/0.00 Tampa 64/57/0.00 Tucson 81/49/0.00 Tulsa 63/28/0.00 Washington, DC 40/33/0.02 Wichita 60/30/0.00
6
62/32/pc 46/25/s 86/57/s 88/57/s
52/23/s 28/15/pc 32/4/sf 10/2/pc 58/33/s 38/22/s 73/55/s 75/53/pc
35/9/sf 22/0/c
11/6/sf 12/8/pc
56/29/s 32/16/pc 66/45/s 61/34/s
30/21/pc 32/11/sn 29/19/pc 35/11/sn 37/28/pc 49/22/pc 53/28/pc 47/34/s
34/7/pc 28/21/s 67/42/s 71/38/s
84/58/s 82/56/s 37/11/pc 16/10/pc 38/27/pc 40/15/$1 81/57/s 80/53/s 40/28/pc 29/5/sf 21/2/pc 21/1 2/sn
26/10/c 51/32/s 41/14/pc 60/31/s 47/29/s 32/26/sn
27/12/sn 52/21/pc 53/35/c
66/33/s 50/19/pc 27/-1/sf
70/44/s 73/45/s 46/14/pc 27/1 8/s
53/34/s 58/34/pc 75/49/pc 58/38/pc 83/59/s 81/61/s 66/50/s 69/52/s
69/45/s 74/46/s 48/25/r 54/29/s 61/41/s 65/26/s 58/47/c 58/44/sh 24/1/pc 21/1 7/s 51/38/c 51/36/c 46/18/s 32/21/s 68/47/s 68/40/s 76/55/s 72/50/pc 52/25/pc 42/29/s 45/31/pc 45/1 8/c 47/22/s 41/27/s 62/33/Tr 55/36/c 58/38/c 85/57/0.00 84/59/s 84/58/s
Yskims Yuma i
42/33/sh 48/41/pc 73/60/pc 66/41/s 91/75/pc 42/21/pc 55/51/r 45/32/s 65/48/c 41/25/c 91/60/1 81/58/pc 58/46/pc 47/26/pc 79/59/s 45/38/sb 45/34/pc 50/37/pc 82/60/pc 71/61/s 44/41/r 46/36/pc 84/61/1
Yesterday Today Thursday
City
I
Mecca Mexico City
95/70/0.00 73/42/0.00 Montreal 18/10/0.00 Moscow 21/1/0.10 Nairobi 84/61/0.00 Nassau 75/70/0.26 New Delhi 73/49/0.00 Osaka 46/30/0.00 Oslo 43/34/0.00 Ottawa 23/9/0.14 Paris 43/35/0.00 Rio de Janeiro 97/7 7/0.00 Rome 59/34/0.00 Santiago 88/57/0.00 Ssu Paulo 82/70/0.04 Sspporu 24/17/0.11 Seoul 41/21/0.00 Shanghai 50/27/0.00 Singapore 86/76/0'.00 Stockholm 43/28/0.00 Sydney 80/70/0.09 Taipei 60/51/0.00 Tel Aviv 67/47/0.01 Tokyo 46/30/0.00 Toronto 23/12/0.03 Vancouver 54/46/Tr Vienna 41/34/0.14 Warsaw 37/34/0.05
94/67/s 73/43/s 12/6/pc 34/25/c 87/56/pc 76/63/pc 72/49/pc 51/34/pc 45/36/sh 12/9/sn 44/31/s 94/76/s 57/39/s 89/58/s 8401/r 32/20/pc 41/19/pc 58/38/pc 8705/pc 40/33/pc 82/69/1 67/55/pc 57/48/sh 53/40/s 28/18/sn 53/44/c 41/32/c 37/28/sh
86/61/s 66/42/sh 21/0/sn 36/27/c 88/57/s 76/64/s 73/50/pc 51/33/c 43/35/pc 18/-13/sf 47/36/s 96/78/s 56/41/pc 91/59/s 87/71/1 34/23/sf 35/1 8/s 52/39/pc 88/75/c 38/28/pc 82/70/1 67/54/pc 56/47/r 56/38/s 20/-9/sf 54/46/r 41/31/c 39/27/s
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 College hoops, C3 NHL, C3 Preps, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY11, 2015
FOOTBALL
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE
'Earthquake' Enyart, 67, dies CORVALLIS — Bill
Enyart, an OregonState football legend who after his playing career lived for manyyears in Bend, died Tuesdayafter a battle with cancer. He was 67. Enyart spent his last days at his mother's home in Turner, near Salem. Born in Oklahoma, Enyart spent much of his youth in Oregon — he lived for three years in Hood River and graduated from Medford High School. As a running back atOregon State, he earnedthe nickname "Earthquake" for his pounding running style. Enyart was astar for the Beavers' famous "Giant Killers" of 1967, who that seasonwent 7-2-1 with victories over No. 1 Southern California and No. 2Purdue and a tie with No. 2
,
'"F
• Seattle wants to re-sign himbut , it doesn't know if hewants to comeback By Bob Condotta The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — The biggest question concerning Marshawn Lynch's future with the Seattle Seahawks no longer is whether the team wants himbackin 2015.
That has been settled, with coach Pete Carroll and other team officials saying on multiple occasions in recent weeks that theyhope to sign the runningbackto a new contract, assuring his future with the
team in 2015 andbeyond. The question now is whether Lynch wants to suit up in 2015.
Seattle generalmanager John Schneider confirmed monthslong rumors that Lynch might retire during a Tuesday in-
UCLA.
He was afirst-team All-America selection in 1968 and twice received academic All-America honors. Hewas inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2011, joining former Heisman Trophy winner Terry Baker asthe only Oregon State players to be enshrined. Enyart played professionallyfor the Buffalo Bills and theOakland Raiders; an injury ended his career in1971. During his years in Bend, Enyart was employed by the state of Oregon. He is survived by his mother, Betty Enyart-Harty; children Ben and Eliza; sisters Marcia Shuch and Jodi Hines; and his former wife, JoAnn Grant. Memorial services are pending.
terview on Seattle's ESPN 710.
"Whether or not he wants to play next
year, I can't answer that," Schneider
said. "I don't know if he knows at this
juncture."
Schneider said Lynch "needs to find out where he's at" so the Seahawks can move forward with negotiations on a new contract.
SeeLynch/C3
U.S. skierback toracing, Ryan Brennecke l Ttte Bulletin
Summit's Sarah Reeves (3) attempts a shot over Mountain View's Whitney Siefken (14) during the first quarter Tuesday night at Summit High. Reeves scored 18 points in the Storm's 68-53 win.
New York Times News Service
BEAVER CREEK, Colo.
— In 2011, Sarah Schleper was 32 years old and had
pick up her then 4-year-old son, Lasse, whom she carried thr o u gh the finish line.
Schl e per returned to the Vail area, where her father
been amember of the U.S. has owned a popular and ski team for 16winters, revered ski shop for I"Si"e a stint that included more than 30 years fourOlympicGames, 'Austrla andwhereSchleper
INDEPENDENCE, Mo.
The Royal andAncient Golf Club of St. Andrews, Scotland, announces its first seven female members Thursday, including Swedish great Annika Sorenstam and Britain's Princess Anne,C2
bLlt this time for Mexico By Bill Pennington
2 from Bendplace 2nd at nationais
GOLF R&A accepts 7 female memders
Feh.16to March2: Teams can designate franchise or transition players. March10:All teams must be under the 2015 salary cap; all 2014 player contracts expire; free agency begins. March19: Trading period begins. April 6:Teams with new head coach can begin offseason workouts (April 20 for other teams).
SKIING
BOXING
— Bulletin staffreport
Upcoming NFI. dates
5
— Bulletin staff report
— Two boxers from the Bend-based Deschutes County Rocks Boxing Club finished second this past weekend at the National Silver Gloves Tournament. Jimmy Montebello, 9 years old and 60 pounds, won two bouts before losing in the finals of his ageand weight division in the prestigious event. KevinOchoa Limbeck, 9 years old and 80 pounds, won one bout before falling in the finals of his division. OchoaLimbeck also won the tournament's sportsmanship award for his age division. "It was a big feat to fight for a national championshi p,"said Deschutes County Rocks coach Richard Miller, who traveled with the boxers to Missouri. "It's the best showing our team has hadthere."
ea aws M con irms L nc mi t retire
• Pressure defense fuels Summit's 2nd straight IMC victory
wins team had skied since she seven national chamevent, C4 wa s 2. Once the toppionships and four WorldCup podium ranked junior skier finishes. in the world, Schleper was Schleper decided to retire c o aching and was happy, livand did so in grand style, ing w ith her husband, Federiw earing an elegantdressas co Gaxiola dela Lama, areal she skied her final World Cup estate broker and Mexican r un. She also stopped half-
By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
Since an upset loss at Rid-
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: hendhulletin.com/sports
O
geview nearly two weeks ago,
who posted 18 points, four re-
Sarah Reeves could sense a
two opponents, the latest vic-
change in mentality.
timbeing Mountain View on Tuesdaynight. A swarming pressure de-
Summit was ranked in the top 10 of Class 5A heading into that contest, but Reeves and
the Storm were swept away on the Ravens' court and were
"We always say our defense fuelsouroffense,andwereally take pride in that," said Reeves,
fense limited Mountain View shot attempts and forced a slew of Cougar turnovers at
left watching as Ridgeview players stormed the court in
Summit High, and the No. 10 Storm used two big surges in celebration. the second and third quarters Thatdefeat,Reevesrecalled, to run away from Mountain flipped a switch for Summit, View 68-53 in Intermountain and the Storm have taken their Conference girls basketball newfound energy to their last action.
bounds and three assists. "We were just flying around today, getting deflections everywhere, and that really fueled our transition game. Getting
citi z e n.
way down the racecourse to
See Schleper /C4
BOXING James "Bust-
er" Douglas,
right, hits Mike Tyson with a hard right in the face during their world
those easy buckets helped us
pull away at the start." Summit (6-2 IMC, 13-5 overall) led 6-0 after the first few minutes but did not begin to distance itself from the visiting Cougars until early in the second quarter. SeeStorm/C4
heavyweight title bout at the Tokyo
Dome on Feb. 11, 1990. The Associated Pressfile photo
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL
25 yearslater, Douglas Strong 3rd propelsCougspast Storm looks backon upset Bulletin staff report A strong third quarter allowed Mountain View to
Inside • Lava Bears boys keepPanthers winless in IMC.Prep roundup, C4
rebound from a defeat and put away Summit 69-55 in Intermountain Conference boys basketball action at Summit
High on Tuesday night.
Frazier said. "You can't allow them to get out in the open
court. You can't allow Davis Holly and Albin and (Jordan)
Kurzynowski had 14 points. For the No. 4 Storm (4-4,
14-5), Jack Hurley scored 17 points on 6-of-7 shooting. Cam McCormick chipped in with
The Associated Press
12 points and seven rebounds, and Max Michalski added nine points and five assists.
punches made James "Bust-
Austin Albin hit three of
Vance to get any open looks at
his four 3-pointers in the third quarter, fueling the Cougars
3-pointers. Unfortunately, we
to a 21-10 run that swelled
got some open looks." Top-ranked Mountain
"What we told our kids is basically the playoffs start on Friday for us," said Frazier, whose team dropped to third place in the IMC. "With four
View, which lost at Bend on
schools that are competing
"We knew the game plan going in — you have to con-
Friday, was paced by Holly's 21 points. Albin finished with 20 points for the Cougars (7-1
for three playoff spots, you
tain them," Summit coach Jon
IMC, 17-3 overall), and Kaimi
their lead from four points at the half to 15 points heading into the fourth quarter.
lost our assignments, and they
By Rusty Miller
can't afford to lose now. It's that survive-and-advance mentality."
COLUMBUS, Ohio —An
uppercut and three follow-up
See more photos of Buster Douglas thenand now on TheBulletin's website: hendhulletin.com/sports
O
er" Douglas a household name. And 25 years later, the brief heavyweight champion is still pleased that his knockout of Mike Tyson ranks among the biggest upsets in sports. "Being crowned champion was a dream for me," Douglas said ofhis upsetwin on
awesome." A promising if enigmatic fighter, Douglas was given almost no chance of hanging
Feb. 11, 1990. "To achieve that was the ultimate. It was
star Evander Holyfield.
around long with the unde-
feated heavyweight champion in their title fight in Tokyo. The bout was considered a
tuneup for Tyson before an anticipated match with rising SeeDouglas/C3
C2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY Time TV/Radio 10:30 a.m. Tennis 2 a.m. (Thu.) Tennis
TEiiiilS
ATP, World TennisTournament ATP, World TennisTournament SOCCER England, Chelseavs. Everton
n oon
NBC SN
BASKETBALL
Men's college, PennSt. at Ohio St. Men's college,SyracuseatBostonCollege 4 Men's college, S. Florida atCent. Florida M en's college, Kansas St. at WestVirginia 4 Men's college, Miami atWake Forest Men's college, Georgia atTexasA&M NBA, Miami at Cleveland Men's college, Villanova at Providence Men's college, Indiana atMaryland Men's college, Oregon atSouthern Cal
4 p.m. Bi g Ten p.m. E S PN2 4 p. m . E SPNEWS p .m . ESP N U 4 p.m. Root 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. ESP N 5 p.m. FS1 6 p.m. Bi g Ten 6 p.m. E S PN2,
KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Men's college,MoreheadSt.atE.Kentucky 6 p.m. ESPNU Women's college, W. Washington at St. Martin's 6 p.m. Root M en's college, Tennessee Vanderbilt at 6 p.m . SEC NBA, L.A. Lakers at Portland 7 p.m. BlazerNet, KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
Men's college, OregonSt. at UCLA
7 p.m.
Pa c -12,
NBA, Houston at L.A. Clippers Men's college, W.Oregon at St. Martin's
7:30 p.m. ESPN 8 p.m. Root
KICE 940-AM
HOCKEY NHL, Detroit at Pittsburgh
NHL,WashingtonatSanJose
5 p.m. NB CSN 7:30 p.m. NBCSN
THURSDAY TENNIS
ATP, World TennisTournament ATP, World TennisTournament
ON DECK Thursday Wrestling: Lakeview, Pleasant Hil at LaPine, 5p.m.
10:30 a.m. Tennis 3:30a.m. (Fri.j Tennis
HOCKEY
GOLF
PGA Tour, PebbleBeachNational Pro-Am
NHL
noon
Golf
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
AH TimesPST
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Minnesota at lowa Men's college, Mississippi at Florida Men's college, Tulsa atUConn Men's college, Purdue atRutgers Women's college, Florida St. at North Carolina Women's college, Mississippi St. at Kentucky Men's college, Northeastern at Hofstra NBA, Cleveland atChicago Women's college, lowa atNebraska Men's college, Michigan at lllinois Men's college, St. Mary's at BYU Men's college, SMUat Houston Men's college, Stanford at Utah Men's college, Loyola Marymount at Gonzaga Women's college,ArkansasatTexasA8M Men's college, California at Colorado Men's college, SantaClara atSan Francisco Women's college, UCLA at California
4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m.
Bi g Ten ESP N ES P N2 ES P NU Root
SEC NB CSN TNT
Bi g Ten ESP N ES P N2 ES P NU Pa c -12 Root SEC FS1
ES P NU Pa c -12
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF GOLF PGA TOurCreating Online netwOrk —ThePGATour hopes that a new digital network will help bring it younger fans — those vvho prefer short videos to televised tournaments andfootage of golfers whooping it up whenthey are not characters in hushedvoice network broadcasts. Thesemillennial fans want to watch golf differently than earlier generations whowereweaned onthe feats of Arnold Palmer andJack Nicklaus. Tofind and keepthem, the Tour has begun a joint venture with Bedrocket, a digital entertainment company, to create anonline network called Skratch TV. Thedealwill be announcedtoday.
OLYMPICS Familiar face of Ferrarl leadsRome2024 dld —Former Ferrari president LucaCordero Di Montezemolo will lead Rome's bid for the 2024 Olympics, providing the candidacy with a high-profile figure boasting extensive experience in international sports and business. Montezemolo steppeddown from Ferrari in October after 23 years as president of the Italian car manufacturer, during which its Formula Oneteam hadsome its most successful years. The 67-yearold Montezemolo, vvhodid not attend the announcement, also led the local organizing committee for the1990 World Cup in Italy.
RioOffiCial ViSitS filthy lagOOnnear OlympiC Park —Riode Janeiro's top environmental official saidTuesdayhehopes to restart a stalled project to clean the trash- and raw sewage-filled lagoon system that hugs thesite of the city's future Olympic Park. Thecontractor chosen to dredgethe Jacarepagua lagoon has beenunable to start work on the $250 million project due to a conflict with the state public prosecutors' office. With thestart of the Olympics only18 monthsaway, Andre Correa warnedthat time is running out. "Thelagoon cannot wait any longer, weneedto makeadecision," said Correa, Riostate's environment secretary.el'm ready to greenlight the start of work."
In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck www.gocomrcs.com/inthebleachers
Friday Boysbasketball:RidgeviewatBend,7p.mcSummit at Redm ond, 7 p.m.; Sistersat JunctionCity, 7:15 p.mcMadrasat Gladstone,7 p.m.; Crook CountyatMolala, 7 p.m.; LaPineatPleasantHil, 7:30 p.m.;CulveratStanfield, 6 p.m.; Gilchrist at CentralChristian,7:30p.m. Girls basketball: Bend atRidgeview,7p.m.; Redmond at Summ it, 7p.m.;Sisters atJunctionCity, 5:45p.m.; GladstoneatMadras,7p.m.; MolagaatCrookCounty, 7p.m.; La PineatPleasantHil,6p.m.; Culverat Stanfield, 4:30 p.m.;Gilchrist atCentral Christian,6p.m.; TrinityLutheranat DamascusChristian,6p.m. Swimming: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit at Intermountain Conference championshipsatJuniper Swim8 FitnessCenter, TBD;Sistersat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3 championships inAlbany,10 a.m.; Madrasat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships inMadras,TBD Wrestling:Bend, Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit at Class5ASpecial District 4 championshipsinHoodRiver,TBD;CrookCounty, Madrasat Class4ASpecial District1 championships inTigamook,TBD; Sistersat Class4A,Special District 2championships inTurner, TBD
Saturday Boys basketball: Culverat Heppner 530pmcTriad at CentralChristian, 5p.m.; Paisleyat Gilchrist, 4:30p.m. Girls basketball:HeppneratCulver 230pm4Triad at CentralChristian,330 pmcButte Fals atTrinity Lutheran,5:30p.m.; Paisley atGilchrist, 3 p.m. Swimming: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit at Intermountain Conference championshipsatJuniper Swim8 FitnessCenter, TBD;Sistersat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3 championships inAlbany,10 a.m.; Madrasat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships inMadras,TBD Wrestling:Bend, Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summitat Class 5ASpecial District 4 championshipsinHoodRiver,TBD;CrookCounty, Madrasat Class4ASpecial District 1 championships inTigamook,TBD; Sistersat Class4A,Special District 2championshipsin Turner, TBD
TampaBay Montreal Detroit Boston Florida Ottawa Toronto Buffalo
EasternConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA 56 34 16 6 74 181 148 53 35 15 3 73 143 118 52 31 12 54 28 19 52 24 17 52 21 22 55 23 28 55 16 36
9 7 11 9 4 3
71 155 130 63 142 136 59 133 147 51 141 145 50 157 170 35 103 191
Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.y.lslanders 54 35 18 1 71 170 151 Pittsburgh 53 3 0 15 8 68 151 134 N.Y.Rangers 52 31 16 5 67 157 127 Washington 54 28 16 10 66 157 135 Philadelphia 54 23 22 9 55 146 157 NewJersey 54 21 24 9 51 122 148 Columbus 52 23 26 3 49 135 161 Carolina 5 2 1 9 26 7 45 116 139
Nashvile St. Louis Chicago Winnipeg Minnesota Dallas Colorado Anaheim Calgary SanJose Vancouver Los Angeles Arizona Edmonton
WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA 54 36 12 6 54 35 15 4 54 33 18 3 56 28 18 10 53 26 20 7 54 25 21 8 54 22 21 11
78 164 129 74 170 133 69 163 124 66 154 146 59 145 145 58 172 175 55 137 152
54 30 21 3 55 28 20 7 52 29 20 3 53 23 18 12 55 20 28 7 55 15 31 9
63 156 137 63 154 153 61 143 136 58 144 144 47 126 180 39 125 181
Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA 55 34 14 7 75 164 154
Tuesday'sGames Dallas5,Boston 3 Ottawa 2, Buffalof N.Y.Islanders3, Edmonton2 N.Y.Rangers5,Toronto4 Montreal2, Philadelphia1, OT Florida 6,Anaheim2 St. Louis2,Arizona1 Nashv ille3,TampaBay2,OT Winnipeg2, Minnesota1, OT Today'sGames Detroit atPittsburgh,5 p.m. Vancouver atChicago,5 p.m. Washin gtonatSanJose,7:30p.m. Thursday'sGames TorontoatN.Y.Islanders, 4p.m. Anaheim at Carolina,4 p.m. Edmonton at Montreal, 4:30p.m. PittsburghatOttawa,4:30 p.m. St. LouisatTampaBay,4:30p.m. Winnipegat Nashvile, 5 p.m. Floridaat Minnesota,5 p.m. N.Y.RangersatColorado,6 p.m. Calgar yatLosAngeles,7:30p.m.
SKIING Alpine World SkiChampionships Tuesday atVail, Colo. National Team Event First Round Austriadef. Argentina,4-0 Norwaydef.Slovenia, 3-1 France def.RussianFederation, 3-1 Switzerland def. Croatia,2-2 UnitedStatesdef. Finland,3-1 Sweden def. CzechRepublic,4-1 Canada def. Germany, 2-2 Italy def.Britain, 3-1 Guartarlinals Austriadef. Norway,3-1 Switzerland def. France,3-1 Sweden def. UnitedStates, 3-1 Canada def. Italy, 3-1 Semifinals Austriadef.Swilzerland, 3-1 Canada def. Sweden,2-2 Big Final Austriadef.Canada,3-1 Small Final Sweden def. Switzerland, 3-1
MIDWEST Akron61,KentSt.52 BowlingGreen65,W.Michigan49 Cent.Michigan68, Ohio 57 Dayton51,Saint Louis44
IN THE BLEACHERS (l~ z/r(
E. Michigan83,Miami (Ohio) 69 Evansville73,Missouri St.66 MichiganSt.68 Northwestern44 Milwau kee84,Oakland67 N. Illinois75,Ball St.63 Wisconsin65,Nebraska55 Xavier64,Marquette 44 SOUTHWE ST Incarnate Word 73,Nicholls St.64 Kansas73, TexasTech51 FARWES T ColoradoSt.70, NewMexico 59 UNLV 73, FresnoSt.61 UtahSt.75,Nevada62
Wo m e n's college USATodayTop26 coaches poll Record Pls Pvs 23-1 80 0 2
1. Uconn(32) 2. SouthCarolina 3. Baylor 4. NotreDame 5. Maryland 6. Tennesse e
"Hey, hey, hey! Play fair or don't play at all!!"
TENNIS
BASEBALL
ATP World Tour
MLB
World TennisTournament Tuesday atRotterdam, Netherlands First Round VasekPospisil, Canada,def. PhilippKohlschreiber, Germany,6-4,6-2. JeremyChardy, France,def. Julien Benne teau, France,3-3,retired. GigesSimon(8), France, def.JoaoSousa, Portugal, 5-7r6-3,6-2. SergiyStakhovsky,Ukraine,def.Marcel Granogers, Spain,6-2,7-6(7). Milos Raonic(2), Canada,def. AndreyKuznetsov, Russia,6-7(5), 6-1,7-5. TomasBerdych(3), CzechRepublic, def.Tobias Kamke,Germany, 6-1, 7-5. GaelMonfils, France,def. EdouardRoger-Vasselin, France,6-3,6-2.
MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL
Remainingfree agents (q-did not accept $16.3 million qualifying offer from formerteam) AMERICANLEAGUE BALTIMORE(2) — Johan Santana,Ihp; Joe Saunders, Ihp. BOSTON (1) —RyanDempster, rhp. CHICAGO (2) — PaulKonerko,1b;Matt Lindstrom,rhp. CLEVEL AND(1) —JasonGiambi,1b. DETROIT(2) — JobaCham berlain, rhp; Phil Coke,Ihp. HOUSTON (2) —MattAlbers,rhp; JoseVeras,rhp. KANSAS CITY(3) — Raul Ibanez, of; q-James Shields,rhp;JoshWigingham, of. LOS ANG ELES (8) — Sean Burnett, Ihp;John Brasil Open McDonald ,ss;JoeThatcher,Ihp. Tuesdayat SaoPaulo MINNESOT A(1) —JaredBurton, rhp. First Round NEW YORK(2) — RichHill, Ihp;DerekJeter, ss. Facundo Bagnis, Argentina,def. Federico Delbonis, SEATTLE (2) —JoeBeimel, Ihp;ChrisYoung, rhp. Argentina,6-3,2-6,6-4. TORONTO (1) —DustinMcGowan, rhp. DiegoSchwartzman, Argentina, def.PaoloLorenzi, NATIONALLEAGUE Italy, 7-5,6-4. ATLANTA (1) —RyanDoumit, c. Thiemo deBakker,Netherlands,def.JuanMonaco, COLORAD (1) O — Franklin Morales,Ihp. Argentina,6-7(5), 7-6(4), 6-4. LOSANGELES (4) — JoshBeckett, rhp; Kev in Joao Souza,Brazil, def. Pablo CarrenoBusta, Correia,rhp;Roberto Hernandez,rhp;JameyWright, rhp. Spain,6-2,7-6(6). MIAMI (2) — RafaelFurcal, ss;ReedJohnson, of. DusanLajovic, Serbia, def.PabloAndujar, Spain, MILWAUKE E(3) —Lyle Overbay,1b; Francisco 3-6,6-3, 6-2. Rodri g uez, rhp; Ri c kieWeeks,2b. SantiagoGiraldo(6), Colombia, def. Kimmer CopNEW YORK(1) — BobbyAbreu, of. pejans,Belgium,7-5, 7-6(4). PHILADEL PHIA(1) — MikeAdams, rhp. Fernando Verdasco(7), Spain, def.MaximoGonzaST. LOUIS (1) — MarkEllis, 2b. lez, Argentina,6-2,6-3. Martin Klizan(8), Slovakia, def.ThomazBellucci, WASHING TON(2) — Scott Hairston,of; Rafael Brazil, 5-7,6-3,7-5. Soriano,rhp. CarlosBerlocq,Argentina, def.GuidoPega,Argentina, 6-4,7-6(4).
BASKETBALL
MemphisOpen TuesdayatMemphis,Tenn. First Round Ivo Karlovic(5), Croatia,def. LukasLacko,Slovakia, 7-6(7),6-3. Bernard Tomic, Australia, def.lgor Sijsling,Netherlands,4-6,6-3,6-2. RyanHarrison,UnitedStates, def. MalekJaziri, Tunisia,7-6(3)r7-6(1). Austin Krajicek, United States, def. Mikhail KukushkinKa , zakhstan,6-2, 6-7(3), 7-6(8). Denis Kudla, UnitedStates, def. Thanasi Kokkinakis,Australia,6-3, 6-4. SamGroth, Australia, def.Yen-hsunLu, Taiwan, 6-4,6-3.
SamQuerrey, United States, def. Benjamin Becker (7),Germany,4-6,6-2,6-1. SteveJohnson(6), UnitedStates, def. Dudi Sela, Israel,6-3,6-3.
Men's college Pac-12 AU TimesPST
Conference
W L Pct. A rizona 8 2 .80 0 Utah 8 2 .800 O regon 7 4 .63 6 O regon St. 7 4 . 6 36 S tanford 7 4 .63 6 UCLA 6 5 .545 C alifornia 5 6 .4 5 5 C olorado 4 6 .4 00 A rizona St. 4 6 . 4 00 Washington St. 4 7 .363 Washington 3 8 . 2 73 Southern Cal 1 10 .091
Overall W L Pct. 20 3 .870 18 4 .818
17 7 .708 16 7 .696 16 7 .696 14 10 .583 15 9 .625 11 11 .500 12 11 .522 10 13 .435 14 9 .609 9 14 .391
WTA
Today'sGames OregonatSouthern Cal, 6p.m. DiamondGames OregonSt. atUCLA, 7p.m. Tuesday at Antwerp, Belgium Tbursday'sGames First Round FrancescaSchiavone, Italy, def.KlaraKoukalova, Stanfordat Utah,6p.m. CzechRepublic, 6-3,6-1. Californiaat Colorado, 6p.m. AnnikaBeck,Germany, def. Karin Knapp,Italy, Friday's Games 6-3,6-1. Arizonaat Washington, 6p.m. Alison VanUytvanck,Belgium, def. Magdalena ArizonaSt.atWashington St.,8 p.m. Rybarikova, Slovakia,6-2,6-3. Saturday'sGames AlizeCornet(7), France,def. BelindaBencic, SwitOregonat UCLA,noon zerland,1-6,6-2, 7-5. OregonSt. atSouthernCal, 2 p.m. BarboraZahlavovaStrycova, CzechRepublic, def. Sunday'sGames Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium,6-2, 6-2. Stanfordat Colorado,1p.m. MonaBarthel, Germany, def. Klaaitje Liebens,BelArizonaSt.atWashington,2:30 p.m. gium,6-2, 6-0. Arizona at Washington St.,3:30 p.m. Californiaat Utah,5:30p.m. PatlayaWomen'sOpen Tuesday atPattaya, Thailand Tuasday'sGames First Round TOP 26 PengShuai (1), China, def. Alla Kudryavtseva, No.1Kentucky71, LSU 69 Russia,6-3,6-2. N o. 5 Wi s consi n 65, N aska55 Lin Zhu,China,def. ShaharPeer,Israel, 7-6(5), No. 8Kansas73,Texasebr Tech51 6-1. o.10NotreDame60,Clemson58 DuanYing-ying, China,def. ChanYung-jan, Tai- N No. 24Arkansas101, Auburn87 wan,7-6(4), 7-5. EAST MisakiDoi,Japan,def.TamarineTanasugarn, ThaiAlbany(N.Y)62,Binghamton46 land,7-6(2),6-0. Drexel53,Towson49 Ajla TomljanovicCroati , a,def.ElizavetaKulichkova, Georgetown 86, Seton Hall 67 Russia,6-3,7-6(4). lona 72,Fairfield 57 ZhangShuai(8), China,def. DonnaVekic, Croatia, JamesMadison67,Delaware54 6-2,6-0. ord70,OT MarinaErakovic, NewZealand, def. LaksikaKum- NewHampshire76,Harff Templ75, e Cincinnati 59 khum,Thailand,6-2,6-2. T oled o 9 2 , B u ff a l o 8 8 KurumiNara(4), Japan,def. NichaLertpitaksinchai, Thailand,6-2,6-1. ZhengSaisai, China,def. Xu Yi-Fan,China,6-4, 6-2.
DanielaHantuchova, Slovakia, def. ZarinaDiyas (3), Kazak hstan, 1-6,6-3,6-1. JarmilaGa jdosova(6), Australia,def. MisaEguchi, Japan,6-3,7-6 (1). Yuliya Beygelzimer,Ukraine, def. Kimiko DateKrumm,Japan,5-7,7-6(6), 6-2.
SOUTH Alabama 55, Mississippi St. 51 Arkansas 101,Auburn 87 EastCarolina64, Memphis 53 Kentucky71, LSU69 Liberty73,Campbell 60 Notre Dame60,Clemson58 SE Louisiana 83,Cent. Arkansas58 SouthCarolina65, Missouri60
22-1 75 7 22-1 74 1 23-2 68 5 21-2 67 1 20-3 64 3 22-2 60 1 20-3 56 1 21-2 533 1 8-5 499 18-6 44 0 21-3 424 19-4 39 5 19-5 38 7 23- 3 347 1 8-6 333 1 8-5 251 21-0 22 9 1 7-7 171 17-6 14 8
1 3 4 5 6 8 7.FloridaSt. 9 8. Louisville 9. Oregon St. 7 10. Kentucky 12 11. Duke 15 12. ArizonaSt. 10 13. Iowa 17 14. North Carolina 11 15. MississippiSt. 19 16. Texas A&M 13 17. Rutgers 22 18. Princeton 20 14 19. Stanford 18 20. Nebraska 21. George Washington 21-2 145 2 3 1 7-7 143 2 5 22. Syracuse 15-7 10 3 16 23. Texas 24. SetonHal 2 1-3 100 2 4 25. SouthFlorida 1 9-4 6 4
Others receiving votes: JamesMadison 51, Georgia37, Chattanooga28, DePaul 24, California 21, UALR10, Florida Gulf Coast10, Northwes tern 10,Gonzaga8,LSU8,Oklahoma7,Washington6,St. John's 5,W.Kentucky4.
Tuesday'sGames
TOP 25 No. 5Maryland80,No.18Rutgers69 No. 25SouthFlorida72, SMU51 EAST Rider54,St. Peter's 49 WestVirginia59,Kansas56 SOUTH Campbel56 l UNCAshevile 51 Gardner-Webb 62, Charleston Southern 56 Maryland 80, Rutgers69 Presbyterian78,Coastal Carolina 56 Radford55,Longwood45 Tulane66,UCF55 Winthrop91,HighPoint 74 MIDWEST EastCarolina78,Cincinnati 53 OhioSt.77,Michigan73 SOUTHWE ST SouthFlorida72, SMU51 Tulsa75,Temple 67
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
COMMISSI ONER' S OFFICE— Suspended N.Y. MetsRHPTim Peterson80games for aviolation of the Minor LeagueDrug Prevention andTreatment Program. AmewcanLeague BALTIMOR E ORIOLES — Agreedto termswith LHP MarkHendrickson and OF NolanReimoldon minor league contracts. LOSANGELESANGELS—Agreed to termswith OFMattJoyceonaone-yearcontract. National League PHILADELP HIA PHILLIES— AssignedLHPCesar Jimenez outright to LehighValey(IL). WASHING TONNATIONALS—Assigned RHPEric Fornatarooutrightto Syracuse(IL). BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS—TradedF/CAdreianPayneto Minnesotaforaprotectedfuturefirst-round draft pick. CHARLOTTE HORNETS — Traded G GaryNeal and asecond-rounddraft pickto MinnesotaforGsMo WilliamsandTroyDaniels. MEMPHISGR IZZLIES — Recaled F/CJarneg StokesandGRussSmith fromi lowa(NBADL). Women'sNational Basketball Association WNBA PLAYERSUNION—NamedEvie Goldstein director ofoperations. FOOTBALL
National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS—NamedKeith Carter assistant offensiveline coach,Matt LaFleurquarterbacks coach,DougMallory defensiveassistant/linebackers coach, MarquandManuelsecondarycoach/seniordefensiveassistant,MikeMcDaniel offensiveassistant, Chris Morgan offensive linecoach, JeffUlbrich linebackerscoachandChad Walker defensive assistant/ defensive backs. NEWYORKJETS— SignedCBCurtisBrown. WASHINGTONREDSKINS — Si gned OL Tyler LarsenandTyNsekhe. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague MINNES OTA WILD— Placed LWs Ryan Carter and Jason Zuckeroninjured reserve. Recaleed DStu BickelandFBrett Suter fromlowa(AHL). NASHVILL EPREDATORS— RecalledDAnthony BitettoandFViktor StalbergfromMilwaukee(AHL). WASHINGTONCAPITALS— Recalled D Steven OleksyfromHershey(AHL). SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer D.C.UNITE D—Signed MMichaelFarfan. FC DALLAS — SignedMFabian Castillo to afiveyearcontract. L.A. GAL AXY—SignedMRyoFuji. SEATTLE SOUNDERS—Signed DAndresCorrea. COLLEGE ALABAMA— SuspendedRBTyrenJonesindefinitely. FLORIDA —NamedKerry Dixon0receiverscoach. OHIOSTATE—NamedTonyAlford assistant head coach foroff ense/runningbacks. RUTGER S — Announced theresignation of offensive coordinator Ralph Friedgen,whowil becom e specialassistantto theheadcoach. Promoted wide receiverscoachBen McDanielsto offensivecoordinator. Named Phil Galianospecial teamsandtight ends coach. ReassignedtightendscoachAnthonyCampanile towidereceiverscoach. UALR —AnnouncedGDeVonteSmith hasleft the men'sbasketball program.
FOOTBALL Sherman WOn't haVeSurgery OnelbOW— Seattle Seahavvks cornerback Richard Shermanwill not have surgery on his injured left elbow andwill let the ligament damageheal on its own. Sherman injured his left elbow on the first play of the fourth quarter in the NFC championship gameagainst Green Bay He playedthe Super Bowl without a brace onhis elbow, but it initially appeared that Sherman would needTommyJohn surgery to repair the damage.
GOLF
BASEBALL
By Karen Crouse
Royal andAncient Golf Clubselects 7female members LPGA touring pro who in Suggs, 91, is an ll-time ma- 1995 became the first Af riThe Royal a n d A n c ient jor champion and a founding can-American woman Class A Golf Club of St. Andrews an- member of the LPGA. Segard, member of the PGA of Amerinounced Tuesday that seven 93, is a native of France who ca. In 1979, Powell became the women had accepted honorary won 14 i nternational titles, first female head professional memberships to the organiza- including the British Ladies' at a golf course in Britain, at tion, which voted last Septem- Amateur in 1950. Silvermere, near London. ber to end its all-male policy. Robertson, 78, is a Scot who Davies, 51, is a four-time maLed by Annika Sorenstam, won the British Ladies Ama- jor champion from Britain and a 10-time major winner, the teur in 1981 and the Scottish a former No. 1 player. She was women range in age from 44 Ladies Close Amateur Cham- the first non-American to top to 93. pionship seven times and was a the LPGA money list, won the Joining Sorenstam are Lou- part of the first Britain and Ire- Ladies European Tour Order of ise Suggs, Lally Segard, Belle land team to win a Curtis Cup Merit a record seven times and Robertson, Renee Powell, in the United States, in 1986. will be inducted this year into
Sorenstam,44,is a former No. 1 player from Sweden who won 89 events around the
Dame Laura Davies and Prin-
out."
cess Anne of Britain.
New York Times News Service
ChicagoLLWSchampionship team underinvestigation
— Citing "new information," Little League International officials met Tuesday to discuss whether last summer's Little LeagueWorld Series national championship team from Chicago's South Sideadded top suburban players in violation of residency rules. SpokesmanBrian McClintock said the organization's charter committee wasmeeting to discuss "possible resolutions" regarding the Jackie RobinsonWest team and that a final decision would likely be madethis week. Hedeclined to say if the teammight lose its title. Late last year, the organization said it was confident that there were noviolations of residency regulations after investigating allegations made by an official from a suburban Chicago league that some of Jackie Robinson West's players live in suburbs with already-established Little Leagueteams. It said it would investigate if necessary. — From wire reports
P owell, 68, i s
a fo r m er the World Golf Hall of Fame.
world. Princess Anne, the 64-year-
old daughter of Queen Elizabeth II, is the only member of the group with no golf background, though her father, Prince Philip, and her brother Prince Andrew also belong to the club. A quotation often attributed to Princess Anne is
critical of golf: "Golf seems to be an arduous way to go for a walk. I prefer to take the dogs
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
NHL ROUNDUP
C3
NBA ROUNDUP
HockeyinVegasnotyetadonedeal Harden scores40 as The Associated Press LAS V E GA S
—
NHL
Commissioner Gary Bettman spent the better part of Tuesday touring an arena under construction on the Las
Vegas Strip, shilling for season ticket sales, and posing for pictures with showgirls and the man who wants to
bring the first major professional sports franchise to this gambling city. Then he insisted the NHL
has barely given the issue of expansion a second thought. "We're not in the expan-
sion process, and I need to keep making that clear," Bettman said, throwing just a bit
of coldwater on a ceremony kicking off season ticket sales for a team that does not
yet exist. While Bettman was careful not to commit the NHL
to Las Vegas, his presence at prospective owner Bill Fo-
ley's kickoff campaign was surely noted far beyond the Las Vegas Strip. Foley and others seemed confident that
once the goal of 10,000 sea-
son ticket sales is realized, it won't be long before the NHL comes forward with an expansion franchise for the city.
"I have no promises to make today," Bettman said.
Stars 5, Bruins 3: BOSTON — Jamie Benn scored
"I do wish Bill and the people twice, and Trevor Daley had of Las Vegas good luck in this the second of Dallas' two "We have the arena and venture and we will be inter- short-handed goals. we have strong ownership," ested in seeing the results." Rangers 5, Maple Leafs 4: Foley said. "Now it's our job The mayor of Seattle also TORONTO — Mats Zuccato convince the NHL that Las recently met separately with relloscored his second goal Vegas is ready for hockey." Bettman and NBA Commis- of the game with 5:56 left, Foley, a billionaire busi- sioner Adam Silver to ex - snapping a tie and sending nessman, is teaming with for- press support for teams if a New York past skidding Tomer Sacramento Kings own- new arena is built in the area. ronto, which has lost 12 of its ers Joe and Gavin Maloof In Tuesday's games: past 13 games. to try and land a NHL team Canadiens 2, Flyers 1: Panthers 6, Ducks 2:SUNfor an arena being built by MONTREAL — David De- RISE, Fla. — Roberto Luongo MGM Grand on the Las Ve- sharnais scored at 3:27 of made 31 saves, and six differgas Strip. The arena, which overtime as Montreal extend- ent players scored for Florida. will seat 17,500 for hockey, is ed its winning streak to three Blues 2, Coyotes 1: ST. scheduled to be completed by games. LOUIS — D m i t ri j J a skin the spring of 2016. Predators 3, L i ghtningscored the go-ahead goal While the NH L h a s not 2: N A S HVILLE, Tenn. for the second time in four committed t o ex p a n ding James Neal scored at 4:27 of games for St. Louis. beyond its 30 teams, the overtime for Nashville, which Senators 2, Sabres 1:BUFleague's board of governors has won three straight and FALO, N.Y. Milan Michalek agreed earlier to Foley's tick- five of six. broke a tie at 12:15 of the third et sales plan to explore the I slanders 3, O ilers 2 : period, and Robin Lehner Las Vegas market further. UNIONDALE, N.Y. — Casey made 35saves forOttawa. Bettman said h e a t tended Cizikas snapped a third-peJets 2, Wild1: WINNIPEG, the ticket sales kickoff event riod tie with 4:37 left for New Manitoba — Dustin Byfugat the MGM Grand as part of York, which has won eight lien scored on a breakaway the plan to see whether there straight home games against at 4:00 of overtime, and Winis a market for hockey in the E dmonton dating back t o nipeg ended Minnesota's sixcity. 1999. game winning streak. -
Rocketscool down Suns The Associated Press
Memphis, which has won 14
PHOENIX — James Harden scored 20 of his 40 points in the f ourth q uarter, an d
o f its past 16 games. Bull s 1 04, Kings 86:CHIC A G O — Pau Gasol had 26
Houston pulled away to beat points and 16 rebounds for Phoenix 127-118 on
his 13th straight dou-
Tuesday night. NSXt UP Josh Smith added
ble- d ouble, Tony Snell had a career-high 24
20 for th e R ockets, who trailed 89-88 at
points an d
the end of the third quarter after Phoenix
rallied from an early L A L k 18-point deficit. at Portland Eric Bledsoe scored
.' 32, one shy of his "g career high, for the Suns, who enter the T>:8)azerNet All-Star break losers Radio: of five of their last six. KRCO 690-AM, A lso on Tuesday:
96. 9 -F M
Grizzlies 95, Nets 86: MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Zach Randolph had 1 9
Douglas ference todiscuss the dates
d-Atlanta d-Toronto d-Chica9o
. %C
and terms of the 7yson-Holyfield showdown. Douglas took
I
note.
Douglas was a terrific athlete — he played small-college basketball — but was conrecord as a professional. The
son of club fighter Bill "Dynamite" Douglas, he had shown glimpses of promise but had also displayed a lack of heart and discipline at other times. But roughly three weeks before the opening bell with 7)rson, the person who believed in him the most, his
mother, Lula Pearl, died.
~ig t]t(
811 673 7'/r 623 10 623 10 604 11 558 13'Ir 431 20 423 20'lr 404 21r/z 396 22 380 22'/r 377 23 291 28 226 31 192 32'/r
Pct GB 820 750 3 692 6 673 7 648 8 642 8'lr 635 9 537 14 519 15 519 15 377 22'Ir 365 23 353 23'Ir 250 29 212 31
Reminded this week that
and its bane, a street-tough
for years. Meanwhile, Douglas is content to live a quiet life in a large home near a farming village 25 miles from his Ohio hometown of Columbus. He quickly lost the heavyweight title to Holyfield in
October 1990 in Las Vegas. His cut of his lone defense,
estimated at $7 million after taxes, set him up for a comfortable existence.
Douglas is past struggles with weight and blood sugar, saying he now "could go a few rounds" at the age of 54. He has thrown himself into
raising his four sons with his wife, Bertha. He spends five days a week coaching young boxers at a local recreation
center and prides himself on how well they are doing. All these years later, he says it was no fluke.
Detroit106,Charlotte78 Houston127,Phoenix 08 Chicago104,Sacramento 86 Memphis 95,Brooklyn86 Denver106,LA.Lakers96
Today'sGames NewYorkat Orlando,4 p.m. Washington atToronto, 4:30p.m. SanAntonioatDetroit, 4:30p.m. AtlantaatBoston 4 30pm Indiana at NewOrleans, 5p.m. MemphisatOklahomaCity, 5 p.m. Sacramento atMilwaukee,5 p.m. GoldenStateat Minnesota 5p.m. Miami at Cleveland 5pm Utah atDallas,5:30p.m. LA. Lakers at Portland, 7p.m. Houstonat LA.Clippers,7:30p.m. Thursday'sGame ClevelandatChicago,5p.m.
summer that the Seahawks that th e S eahawks d i dn't might release him before the want to renegotiate Lynch's Continued from C1 2015 season. contract last summer beSchneider confirmed the But as Lynch embarked on cause he did not want to set a team would re-do Lynch's one of his better years in help- precedent. contract if he returns in 2015, ing lead the Seahawks to anIf they had, he said, then saying "he knows if he's back other Super Bowl — his aver- "everybody would be standhe's not going to be playing at age of 4.7 yards per carry was ing outside my office looking the same number he's sched- the second-bestof his career for a new contract whenever uled to make." — it became evident that the they wanted ... so he knows Schneider did not go into Seahawks wanted him back that. But he also knows he's specifics of what the team for at least another season. a huge part of what we are might be offering Lynch. He Team officials, though, doing. He's just extremely is scheduledto make a base know Lynch would want a important to what we have of $5 million in 2015 with a new deal to return. He held going on here and moving roster bonus of $2 million out of training camp for eight forward and th e d ecisions and a salary-cap hit of $8.5 days last summer before re- that we make throughout this million, with $1.5 million in porting after the team made offseason." dead money in what is the fi- some concessions to guaranBut now the question is nalseason ofa four-year deal tee an additional $1.5 million whether Lynch wants to play. Lynch's agent, Doug Hensigned in 2012. in 2014. With the knowledge Lynch has a high cap num- that the team might consider drickson, told Th e S eattle ber in 2015, turns 29 in April releasing him after the 2014 Times on Tuesday only that and runs with a particularly season, Lynch wanted more he wouldhave "no comment" punishing style. All of that up-front money. on Schneider's statements. helped fuel speculation last Schneider said Tuesday Lynch has not spoken about
96: L OS A NG E L E S
Ty Lawson had s eason-highs of 3 2 po i n ts and 16 assists as Den-
HOUSTON (127) Ariza 4-90-010, Motiejunas5-9 2-212, Oorsey 1-4 0-2 2,Beverley6-15 0-015, Harden13-231114 40, Smith8-152-3 20, Papanikolaou3-4 0-08, Terry 2-4 0-0 6, Brewer6-121-214. Totals 48-95 18-23127. PHOENIX (118) Tucker 7-15 0-0 17, Mark.Morris 6-13 3-4 16, Plumlee2-41-2 5, Bledsoe9-1912-1332, G.Ora9ic 7-11 3-420,Wright2-3 0-04, Thomas4-10 4-514, Marc.Morris1-81-2 3,Green3-4 0-07. Totals 4187 24-30118. Houston 41 29 18 39 — 127 Phoenix 23 38 28 29 — 118
Grizzlies 95, Nets 86 BROOK LYN(86) Johnson5-131-1 11,Garnett 1-30-0 2, Plumlee
6-10 3-315,Jack6-110-012, Anderson5-9 3-415, Lopez5-142-212, Wiliams4-91-210, Bo9danovic
1-51-23,Jefferson0-00-00, Jordan2-52-36, Morris 0-1 0-0 0, Brown0-1 0-00. Totals35-81 13-17 86. MEMPHIS (98) Je.Green 3-94-611, Randolph9-170-019, Gasol 4-9 6-814, Conley1-8 0-0 2,Lee6-101-1 15, Udrih 5-92-213, Allen5-51-212, Calathes0-11-2 1, Koufos3-112-48, Leuer0-20-00. Totals 36-81 17-26 98. Brooklyn 15 25 22 24 — 86 Memphis 32 20 23 20 — 98
Bolls104, Kings86
Noggets106, Lakers 96
Summaries
Pistons106, Hornets 78 DETROIT (106) Sin9ler2-64-48,Monroe9-155-823,Drummond 7-14 0-014, Augustin5-147-718, Caldwell-Pope 2-6 0-0 5,Jerebko0-1 0-0 0, Meeks4-810-1018, Tolliver6-111-116,LucasIII 0-30-00, Anthony0-2 0 00, Datome 2 30 04, Dinwiddie0 00 00. Totals 37-83 27-30108. CHARLO TTE(78) Taylor5-80-012, Zeller3-82-28, Jefferson6-14 1-2 13,Roberts1-6 1-2 3, Henderson 5-135-6 17, Stephenson 0-10-00, Ma.Wiliams1-60-03, Maxiel 1-6 0-0 2,Hairston6-160-0 16, Vonleh1-32-2 4. Totals 29-8111-1478. Oetroit 26 28 29 23 — 106 Charlotle 27 19 14 18 — 78
DENVER (108) Chandler6-130-013,Faried1-50-1 2, Nurkic3-3 0-0 6, Lawson12-207-832,Afflalo 3-80-06, Arthur 6-10 3-415, Hickson 5-7 3-613, Foye5-7 0-012, Gallinari1-5 2-2 4,McGee1-1 1-2 3. Totals 43-79 18-23108. LA. tAKERS (98) Kelly1-7 3-4 6,Black1-21-43, Sacre2-40-24, Clarkson3-110-07, Ellington8-130-018, Davis 3-7 0-06, Johnson 4-84-412, Boozer8-155-821, Young 4132 312, Lin 351-27. Totals 37 8818 2796. Denver 24 21 26 35 — 108 LA. Lakers 29 19 23 25 — 96
Leaders ThroughMonday'sGames
Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Harden,HOU 5 1 4 2 5 415 1402 27.5 James,CLE 43 394 260 1118 26.0 Westbrook, OKC 38 339 268 983 25.9 Davis,NOR 46 436 256 1129 24.5 Anthony,NYK 40 3 5 8 189 966 24.2 Cousins,SAC 3 8 3 2 0 266 907 23.9 Aldrid9e,POR 4 6 4 29 207 1090 23.7
"When I was itty-bitty and
I first put on a pair of gloves when I was 10 years old, that
was the beginning," he said. "I just felt I could do anything. It was just a belief. I believed in myself and that I had the ability to do that. It's something
that my mother instilled in me at a very young age: You can do whatever you want."
COLLEGE BASKETBALLROUNDUP
No. 1 I(entuckysurvives LSU to remainunbeaten NeXt UP
The Associated Press
Lyncb
its third straight loss. Nu g gets 106, Lakers
SACRAM ENTO(86) Gay10-183-5 24,Thompson3-51-2 7, Cousins 5-15 5-1015,Sessions 1-6 1-23, McLemore 5-10 0-011, Evans1-21-23, McCallum 5-91-211, Casspi252-4 6,Landry3-40-06,Hollins0-0 0-00, Stauskas 0-10-00. Totals35-7514-2788. CHICAGO (1 04) Dunleavy2-50-05,Gasol11-154426, Noah1-4 0 02, Rose10-172-323,Butler2-81-25, Snell9-11 2-2 24, Brooks 2-4 0-04, Gibson3-83-3 9, Mirotic 1-5 0-03, Moore0-0 0-0 0, McDermott1-21-1 3, Bairstow0-1 0-0 0, Mohammed 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-8018-15104. Sacramento 28 2 3 15 22 — 86 Chicago 30 27 27 20 — 104
Tuesday'sGames
no one had thought he had a Paul Vernon/The Associated Prese chance against Tyson, Doug- Former heavyweight boxing championJames "Buster" Douglas pauses during aclass Tuesday at las hesitated before saying: Thompson Recreation Center in Columbus, Ohio. Today is the 25th anniversary of Douglas'1990 "Yeah, but she did." defeat of then-champion MikeTyson inToyko. Thetwo boxers havemet each other only oncesince. Tyson was boxing's hope kid who stepped into the John Johnson in his corner, Then in the 10th, he rocked ring in simple black trunks, came out inspired. He held the world. "I finished him up with a black shoes and a sheared- his own in the early rounds, off T-shirt. His temperament holding off the shorter Tyson's combination," Douglas said. "I was erratic at best. He could charge with his left jab. hit him with four terrific shots. be emotional when he spoke Late in the eighth round, He wasn't able to get up." of his late mentor and friend, Douglas went down. King, seeing a gigantic payCus D'Amato, or he could also "I was kind of, like, admir- day floa ting away, appealed be raw, brutal and crude. ing my work: Looking at him, the outcome but, days later, all Inthe ring, he was a force of taking my time to look at ev- of the major boxing organizanature, always striding closer, erything that was going on tions recognized Douglas as always hurling punches, nev- and paying more attention to the champion. "This m akes C i nderella eryielding. how he was reacting to the He was 37-0 with 33 knock- punches instead of continu- look like a sad story, what outs heading into the fight. ing to fight," Douglas recalled. Buster Douglas has done here Las Vegas oddsmakers made "He ended up catching me tonight," HBO boxing analyst him a 42-1 favorite to do his with a good shot. When I got Larry Merchant said after the wrecking-ball thing against up off the ground, I knew I fight. Douglas. had to get back on focus, on Through a spokesman, TyThey were not alone. Ed point, with what I was doing." son declined to speak with Schuyler, a boxing writer for King and Tyson would lat- The Associated Press about The Associated Press, was er claim that Douglas did not the fight. stopped at customs on hi s get up in the mandatory 10 The two boxers have met way into Japan. The customs seconds as the round came each other only once since. "We only crossed paths officer asked Schuyler how to an end. But by the official's long he would be working in count, he was standing and in once, and that was a fewyears Japan. control of his faculties at the back down i n C i n cinnati," "About 90 seconds," Schuy- count of eight. Douglas said. "There wasn't "I knew where I was the ler deadpanned. much conversation. It's not Just before the opening bell, whole time," he said. "I could like we sat down and talked someone in the crowd shout- have got up at six, but I had a about it and (became) friends, ed to Douglas to win it for his couple of seconds and I took anything like that. He was mother. mytime." still kind of short (with me). So The 6-foot-4 Douglas, with After the fighters returned I didn't push it any further." Tyson's life, in and out of the J.D. McCauley, his trainer and to their corners, Douglas uncle, along with manager dominated the ninth round. ring, has grabbed headlines
Washington Cleveland Milwaukee Miami Charlotte Brooklyn Detroit Boston Indiana Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
Pct GB
W L 43 10 35 17 33 20 33 20 32 21 29 23 22 29 22 30 21 31 21 32 19 31 20 33 16 39 12 41 10 42
WesternConference W L d-Golden State 41 9 d-Memphis 39 13 Houston 36 16 d-Portland 35 17 Dallas 35 19 LA, Clippers 34 19 SanAntonio 33 19 Phoenix 29 25 NewOrleans 27 25 Oklahoma City 27 25 Denver 20 33 Utah 19 33 Sacramen to 18 33 LA. Lakers 13 39 Minnesota 11 41 d-divisionleader
sidered less than committed to boxing despite a 29-4-1
tin added 18 and DetroithandedCharlotte
Rockets127, Suf)s118
EasternConference
In fact, the day before 7)r-
rebounds,D.J.Augus-
NBA SCOREBOARD AH TimesPST
son fought Douglas, promoter Don King called a news con-
78: CHA R L O TTE, N.C. — Greg Monroe had 23 points and 12
points and Marc Gasol added ver snapped a six-game losing 14 points and 11 rebounds for streak.
Standings
Continued from C1
D e r r i ck
Rose added 23 for Chicago. Pistons 106, Hornets
BATON ROUGE, La. Willie Cauley-Stein scored 15
his future (or much of anything else, for that matter). Asked again about wanting a decision quickly, Schneider said: "You would hope. Sure, you would hope. But like I said, this is a taxing thing on these guys. We've played a lot of football these last two
years. It may not happen overnight." Ideally, the t eam w o uld
like an answer by the time the free-agent signing period begins March 10 in case it is
Oregon at Southern Cal points, and top-ranked Kentucky stayed unbeaten with When:6 tonight another tough road win, 71-
TV:ESPN2
69 over LSU when the Tigers Radio:KBND missed a 3-pointer that could 1110-AM, 100.1-FM have won it at the buzzer Tues-
day night. Oregon St. atUCLA Devin Booker added 14 and When:7 tonight Aaron Harrison had 13 for the Wildcats (24-0), who can tie TV:Pac-12 a schoolrecord for the best Rodio: start to a season by winning at
KICE 940-AM
back, and definitely by the
home Saturday against South Carolina. the 26th straight season. Also on Tuesday: No. 10 Notre Dame 60, ClemNo. 5 Wisconsin 65, Nebras- son 58: CLEMSON, S.C. ka 55: LINCOLN, Neb. Jerian Grant scored 22 points,
NFL draft, which is April 30
Sam Dekker matched his ca-
to May2. Lynch's backups, Robert
reer high with 21 points, and tying and go-ahead baskets
Turbin and Christine Michael, are due to return in 2015. But
straight game. No. 24 Arkansas101, Auburn No. 8 Kansas 73, Texas 87: AUBURN, Ala. — Bobby Tech 51: LUBBOCK, Texas Portis scored 22 points and — Wayne Selden Jr. scored Michael Qualls had 19 to lead 16 points, and Kansas (20-4) Arkansas in a game with 54 reached the 20-win mark for fouls and four technicals.
in the market for a running
if the Seahawks know Lynch is not returning they undoubt-
edly would want to add depth and competition at tailback.
Wisconsin won it s
and Demetrius Jackson hit the
s eventh for Notre Dame.
C4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
PREP ROUNDUP
Schleper
Bears boys pull away from Panthers Bulletin staff report
in the third. Mario Mora came
off the bench to score 18 points team strugglingto make head- — including four 3-pointersway in the loaded Intermoun- for the Lava Bears (5-3 IMC, tain Conference at least made 11-8 overall), who won their it close'Ibesday night. fifth straight. The Panthers hit a dozen Redmond (0-8 IMC, 3-17 3-pointers to stay in the game, overall) is left still searching but Class 5A eighth-ranked f or its first IMC win of t h e Bend rode a 34-point perfor- season. "It's just been top-10 team mance by Jacob Parsons to an 81-68 boys basketball win at after top-10 team after topRedmond High. 10 team," said Corbett of the "Parsons was just a stud schedule his team has faced in tonight," Redmond coach Jon conference play. "But the kids Corbett said. "We did a really are playing hard, working good job on J.J. (Spitler) and hard in practice. They're still Christian (Johnson), their playing hard for each other." two scorers, but they found Also on Tuesday: REDMOND — A Redmond
Jacob on penetrations and he
did a great job getting to the basket."
Boysbasketball Gladstone 56, Crook Coun-
Spitler, who made eight ty 34: PRINEVILLE — The 3-pointers en route to 30 points No. 4 Gladiators' size and agin Bend's 70-31 rout of Red- gressiveness allowed them to mond last month, managed outscore the Cowboys 19-6 in just six points this time. John- the fourth quarter en route to a son finished with 11. Tri-Valley Conference victory. Three Panthers — Cody Kohlter Kee posted a gameMoss, Brandon Benson and high 15 points for Crook CounNick Aamodt — nailed four ty (4-2 TVC, 10-11 overall). 3-pointers apiece and finished Madras 56, Estecade 38: with 20, 18 and 13 points, re- MADRAS — Jered Pichette s pectively. Moss h i t t h r e e scored 16 points to lead Ma3-pointers and Aamodt made d ras past E s tacada i n a two in the first quarter to ac- Tri-Valley Conference game. count for al l o f R edmond's The White Buffaloes (6-1 TVC, points in the period, which 16-5 overall) used an 11-point ended with the Lava Bears on top 17-15. When these two teams met
run to take a 27-16 halftime
on Jan. 23 at Bend High, the
SWEET HOME — Tysen Gill
lead. Sisters 45, Sweet Home 32:
improving to 5-7 in league play ley Conference win. Kimmer and 10-12 overall.
Girlsbasketball Bend 73, Redmond 15: Allison Parker led 11 Lava Bears scorers with 16 points, and
Storm
for our posts and our guards," Summit coach Ryan Cruz Continued from C1 said. "Once they fully underIn that period, Morgan Hag- stand that, they'll really apprefors posted five straight points ciate it more because it's just during a 13-0 Storm run that going to open up more lanes provided the home team with for us." a comfortable25-9 advantage. Hagfors chipped in with 11 Another scoring burst came points and six rebounds for in the third period, as Sum- Summit, and Naegeleaddmit raced out with 15 straight ed nine points. Sarah Heinly points to open the second half, totaled seven points, three capped by a Conner Naege- boards and three assistsfor le field goal to put the Storm the Storm, who boasted 10 ahead 47-21.
scorers in their fourth win in
Those two post players, the last five games. Hagfors and Naegele, gave Hailey Goetz poured in a Summit an inside punch that game-high 19 points for the opened up the floor for the rest Cougars. Kylee Reinwald had of the Storm. 15 points and four rebounds, "That's what we really want but Mountain View (2-6, 5-15) to establish is an inside-out was held without a field goal game, to really open up things in the first four minutes in
Stacona scored 16 points and
Schleper's longtime Ameri-
more than we think it can."
can teammate Resi Stiegler. "I had retired, but I nev-
cently, Schleper turned the
Schleper, who has always been afree spiritand a freethinker in the ski commu-
nity, had a novel plan. She
Glide 33, La Pine 28: GLIDE — McKenna Boen had a double-double with 22 points and
would return to elite ski rac-
11 rebounds, but La Pine fell in
member is Hubertis von Hohenlohe, 56, a Mexican na-
ing as a member of the Mexican team, whose best known
a Mountain Valley Conference
tive who is a descendant of a dethroned European royal family. Schleper received her
closebut were unable to over-
12: REDMOND —
Sky-EmLeague Standings Sisters 45, SweetHome32 IntermountainConference Team Conference O v erall Sisters (45) —TysenGil 14,Schaab9. Moore M ountaiVine w 7-1 17-3 7, Larson 6, Harrer 4,Greaney3, L.Gil Z Totals 14 5-3 0-8 Bend 15-25 45. Summit 4-4 14-5 Sweet Home(32) —Hunter Jute14, Adams7, Ridgeview 4-4 13-6 Redmond 0-8 3-17 Mitten 4,Carpenter1, Tow1.Totals 11 10-1732. Sisters 8 13 10 14 — 45 S weetHome 8 4 9 11 — 3 2 T hree-poi n t goal s — Si s ters: Moore,Harrer; Sweet Class 5A Home;Jutte2,Adams. IntermountainConference
A b i gail
mit and Ridgeview atop the
Hannay's 11 points highlightIMC standings. Chantel Dan- ed the night for the Tigers in nis and Emily Joyce each post- the Mountain Valley League ed five points for Redmond (0- setback. The loss put Central 8,2-17). Christian at 0-12 in MVL play Sisters 53, Sweet Home 21: and 1-14 overall. SWEET HOME — S i s ters Trinity Lutheran 54, North jumped out to a 14-4 lead af- Lake 32: Four players scored ter the first quarter and never in double digits for the sixthlooked back in the Outlaws' ranked Saints of Bend, who Sky-Em League win. Olivia outscored the Cowgirls 18-2 in Stewart had the hot hand for the third quarter before sealthe Outlaws (4-3 Sky-Em, 9-11 ing a Mountain Valley League overall), hitting three 3-point- win. Katie Murphy paced ers to finish with a team-high Trinity Lutheran (12-1 MVL, 27 points. Ashley Smith added 21-2 overall) with 14 points, 10 points for Sisters. while Erin Cowan and Emily Gladstone 61, Crook Coun- Eidler each added 12 points. ty 33: GLADSTONE — The Mariah Murphy posted 10
Mountain View 69, Summit 55
Class1A MountainValley League
But this is no ceremoni-
Mountain View (69) —DavisHolly21, Albin 20, Kurzyno wski14, Haugen6,Vance4,VanTassell 2, vansisez Totals 294-769. Summit (55) —JackHurley17, McCormick12, Michalski 9,Kent7, N. Mason4, Garcia 2, C.Mason 2, Baker z Totals1815-22 55. Mountain View 1 0 24 21 14 — 69 Summit 14 16 10 15 — 55 Three-poingoal t s— MountainView: Albin 4,Holly 3; SummitMi : chalski3, Kent.
Central Christian 47, Paisley 37 paisley (37) —camdenJones12,a Jones10, Cooper7, Wampler4, Lee3, Blair t Totals152-737. Central Christian(47) —CalebReynolds 27, Biever8, chinait 6, poole2,Hannay2, Roberts z Totals 20 5-1047. Paisley 5 4 13 15 — 37 Central Christian 11 8 13 15 — 47
Three-pointgoals— Paisley;C. Jones4, Cooper; CentralChristian:C.Reynolds 2.
Bend 81, Redmond68 Bend (81) —JacobParsons34, Mora18,Johnson11,spitler 6,willy 6,wallace4,Gieberz Totals 3015-21 81. Redmond(68) — CodyMoss20, Benson18, Aamodt13,Powell 6, Wilingham6,Winters 3, Cable z Totals 264-568. Bend 17 23 21 20 — 81 Redmond 15 19 15 19 — 68 Three -pointgoals— 6end:Mora4,Johnson2;Redmond:Aamodt4, Moss4, Benson4. Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference
gladstone 56, grook (;oiInty 34 Gladstone(56) —JusticeFridell13, Thom pson 8, Williams 8, Smith 7, Brown6, McNabb6, Bradford 5,Fox3. Totals238-1156. Crook County (34) —KohlterKee15,Bartels 7, Harper4, Kessi3, Jones3, Hernandez 2. Totals 11 9-18 34. Gladstone 5 17 15 19 — 56 C rookCounty 8 5 15 6 — 3 4 Three-pointgoals— Gladstone:Wiliams, Bradford; CrookCounty: Kee2, Jones.
Madras 56, Estacada38 Estacada(38) —AndyAvantsu, Kelly8,smith 6, Kirchhofer 5, S.Blankenship 4, W.Blankenship 2, Stamm Z Totals173-6 38. Madras I56) —JeredPichette 16, Sullivan 10, Lindgren 9, Rauschenburg7, Rehwinkel 6, Bryant4, Wolfe 4. Totals 22 9-1756. Estacada 8 8 12 10 — 38 Madras 12 15 16 13 — 56 Three-pointgoals—Estacada:Avants; Madras:Lindgren 2,Pichette.
Girls basketball
Summit (68) —SarahReeves18, Mo.Hagfors 11, Naegele9, Heinly 7, Cornett6, Jones6, Huntsman 5,Loftus2, Ma.Hagfors 2, sheltonz Totals 23 21-33 68.
Mountai nView 9 12 10 22 — 53 Summit 17 15 19 17 — 68 Three-pointgoals —MountainView:Reinwald 3, Goelz3, Bailey;Summit: Reeves.
Bend 73, Redmond15 Redmond(15) —Chantel Dannis 5, Emily Joyce 5, Fast2, Edwards 2, Hendricks1. Totals 5 5-915. Bend (73) —Allison Parker16, S. Jackson14, Evert11, Roath10, Scott 6, Petrie 4,Kinkade4, A. Jackson3, Wheeler 2, Fettig 2, Robinson1. Totals 31 11-17 73. 2 7 2 4 — 15 Redmond Bend 16 23 19 15 — 73 Three-pointgoals—none.
"There was a part of her
got talent and passion for the
tian on Friday. Kendra Mur-
South Korea.
phy led North Lake (9-5, 11-11) with 18 points.
Sisters (53) — Olivia Stewart27, Smith10, Horner8, Arruda4, Hudson4.Totals 216-8 53. Sweet Home(21) —JordanMiler12, Tow4, porter 3,StockmanZTotals 9 3-4 21. Sisters 14 8 16 15 — 53 Sweet Home 4 2 7 8 — 21 Three-pointgoals — Sisters:Stewart3, Horner 2; SweetHome: none.
Norlh Lake(32) —KendraMurphy18, Baker6, J. Stockton4, R.Wilson2, M.Wilson1, Nelson1. Totals13 6-1232. Trinity LutheranI54) — Katie Murphy14, Eidler 12, Cowan12,M.Murphy10, Sample 2, Clitt 2, MartimzTotals245-1254. North Lake 8 6 2 1 6 — 32 Trinity Lutheran 1 2 15 18 9 — 54 Three-poingoal t s—North Lake:none; Trinity Lutheran: Eidler.
from Mexico here in the Vail
"I'm doing this for the pas- valley." sion of the sport and to inFor now, Schleper has had spire others," Schleper said. to resume racing at a far low"I know I'm not going to win, er level of competition than but I want to prove that peo- she knew earlier. "It's been like going back ple my age and girls in general can push the limit. It's to high school," she said, about longevity. The guys do laughing. ll it Schleper said she had been Bode Miller just competed distributing small Mexican in the world championships flags to her friends in the Vail at 37, albeit in a high-speed community who expect to atrace, the super-G. Racers in tend Thursday's race. the giant slalom do not reach
"I know they'll have Amer-
the same speeds, although they are moving fast enough to risk injury. Schleper is not unaware of the risks. She has had multiple crashes, a broken leg, major reconstructive knee surgery and other physical
ican flags in one hand, but
setbacks in her career.
and sombreros."
I've told them that when I cross the finish line to wave the Mexican flag in their oth-
er hand," Schleper said."People have been really open to that. Some have told me
they're going to wear capes
Hirscher leadsAustria to teamgold VAIL, Colo.— Sometime soon, Austrian skier Eva-Maria Brem wants to seethe team event included in the Olympics as a medal competition. Of course shedoes: Her country is always on the podium. Marcel Hirscher helped top-seededAustria hold off Canada and defend its gold medal in the teamevent at the world championships on Tuesday.TheAustrians won the final 3-1 over Canada, which wasseededNo.10. Sweden earned the bronze medal bybeating Switzerland. Austria has nowwon three golds and two silvers since the event becamepart of worlds in 2005. The only time the first country of skiing didn't win a medalwas 2009 — whenthe event was canceled. The International Ski Federation is trying to get the discipline included as amedal event in the Olympics. International Olympic Committee President ThomasBachrecently hinted there may be"some good news in thenext couple of months" in regard to the event being added to theOlympic program.
Class1A MountainValley League
Trinity Lutheran54, NorthLake32
— The Associated Press
Gladstone 61,Crook County 33
WK'RK OPKN!
Crook County I33) — Kimmer Severance12, Thomas 9,Bannon5,Morgan3,Malott2,Thompson Rhinehart 2. Totals127-8 33. GladstoneI61) —Molly Webster19, Simac12, Hollingsworth8, Mott6, Campos5, Kuhn 2, Sharp 2, Entramba saguas 2, Campbel 2, Delepierre2, Fox1. Totals 23 9-1261. C rookcounty 13 5 6 9 — 3 3 Gladstone 20 15 21 5 — 61 Three-poingoal t s— CrookCounty: Severance,Bannon; Gladstone:Webster3,Simac2,Campos.
Madras 57, Estacada42
Standings Madras (57) — LeahSuppah20, Stacona16, IntermountainConference Adam s 6,wolfe2, sloan z Totals 22 4-8 Team Conlerence O v erall Harry11, 57. 6-2 14-5 Summit Estacada (42) — M.Thompson14, Hunt11, 6-2 Ridgeview 12-8 Kiser 5,Hunter 4,Johnson4, Alves2, Burkez Totals 6-2 Bend 12-8 16 7-8 42. M ountaiVine w 2-6 5-15 Madras 13 14 11 19 — 57 0-8 2-17 Redmond Estacada 5 13 6 18 — 42 Three-pointgoals — Madras:Suppah6, Harry 2, Class 5A Stacona; Estacada:Hunt 2, Kiser. IntermountainConference Class 3A Mountain ValleyConference Summit 68, Mountain View 53 Mountain View(53) — HaileyGoetz19, Reinwald15, Bailey6,VanderZwiep4,Hughes3,Skoog 2, Maxwel2,l Misener1, Dolium1.Totals1712-20 53.
likely to come off in a hard fall. Top ski racers typically ratchet their bindings to the highest setting so they can barrel through icy, bumpy conditions without worrying about their skis popping off at high speed. It also means the skis might stay on during a tumbling crash, which can behazardous. "I wanted my skis to come off if I fell," Schleper said. Schleper's husband not only supports his w ife's comeback, he has enjoyed watching the effect it has had on her.
top-ranked Damascus Chris-
points for the Saints, who visit
Sisters 53, SweetHome21
Tri-Valley Conference
which makes them m o re
al or farewell appearance. sport and they're moving to Schleper is recruiting oth- Vail," Schleper said. "I think er Mexicans to take up ski we could help build a piperacing, hoping to establish a line for the sport. There's Colorado training base for no training for ski racing in the Mexican team, and plans Mexico, but my goal would to keep racing until at least be to build a boardinghouse the 2018 Winter Olympics in for young, promising racers
each of the first three quarters. better, because it's going to "Concentration, knowing pay off next year." assignments and stuff — we For the second straight don'treally have any mar- game, the Storm overpowgin for error to make up for ered a crosstown foe (they that," Cougars coach Steve defeated Bend High 58-35 last Riper said, noting the strain Tuesday). As a result, they Summit's scoring balance find themselves tied with Ridplaced on the Mountain View geview and Bend atop the defense. Intermountain C o nference "I've stressed with the girls standings with four games left that it d oesn't matter what in the regular season. "It's finally all coming toour record is, it doesn't matter what the score is, we're going gether," said Reeves, echoing to scratch and fight and keep her coach's sentiment. "It just playing until they tell us we really shows that all the work can't play anymore this sea- that we're putting in is paying son," Riper added. "That's our off with everybody scoring. motto. For us, it's just about It's the time to peak right now, improvement — for a lot of and it feels really good that our young kids, improving for we're finally getting there." next year.... We're just going — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@ to keep playing, keep getting bendbulletin.com.
Class 4A Sky-EmLeague
spring settings on her bindings down a few notches,
that went away when she reM exican c i t izenship l a s t tired from the World Cup," spring, giving her dual cit- Gaxiola said. "It's nice to see izenship. In May, interna- the racer I know return. It is tional ski officials cleared her at her fullest. "It's also the beginning Schleperto representMexi co instead of the U.S. of hercareer as a m entor of On Thursday, Schleper, a new nation," he added. "I one week before her 36th think there's a lot she can do birthday, will compete in the and a lot of people she can giant slalom of the alpine inspire — the young and upworld ski c hampionships and-coming racers." wearing a mariachi-themed Schleper has taken two speed suit. She still figures to young female racers from be cheered on by her home- Mexico City under her wing. "They're 11 and 14, they've town crowd.
PREP SCOREBOARD Boys basketball
That said, in training re-
World Cup circuit in 2011.
tain Conference win. Sophia come late free throws from the Jackson had 14 points for the Wildcats. Bears (6-2 IMC, 12-8 overall), Paisley 29, Central Christian who move into a tie with Sum-
correctly — tai chi, yoga, Pilates — and eat right, the human body can do so much
In fact, Schleper had been
Bend outscored the visiting matchup. The Hawks (6-6 Panthers 16-2 in the first quar- MVC, 14-8 overall) kept things ter en route to an Intermoun-
In 2013, they had a second child, Resi, named for
plotting a comeback — with a twist — since she left the
Mountain Valley League con- Lynden Harry added 11 for test. Jacob Biever added eight the White Buffaloes (6-1 TVC, points for the Tigers (2-8 MVL, 13-8 overall), who notched 4-13 overall). their fifth consecutive win.
scored 14 points to lead Sisters start. This one, however, was to a Sky-Em Leaguevictory. a battle throughout, as Red- Connor Schaab added nine mond rallied to within three points for the Outlaws (6-1 points midway through the Sky-Em, 13-6 overall). Cowgirls outrebounded the fourth quarter before Bend La Pine 74, Glide 44: GLIDE Gladiators 33-29, but Gladpulled away at the finish. — The Hawks picked up their stone outscored Crook County Parsons scored 10 points in third Mountain Valley Con- 36-11 in the second and third the second quarter and again ference win in four games, quarters to pick up the Tri-ValB ears dominated from t h e
Madras 57, Esteceda 42: ES-
TACADA — Leah Suppah's time in four games. Reynolds, game-high 20 points included who hit two 3-point baskets, six 3-point baskets, leading scored nine points in the first Madras to the Tri-Valley Conquarter as Central Christian ference road victory. Mariah charged to an 11-5 lead in the
Continued from C1
er really let it go completely," Schleper said last week, sitting in her hilltop home surrounded by a sprawling grove of aspen trees."In m y mind, I never really gave up ski racing."
Severance led Crook County
Central Christian 47, Pais- (1-6 TVC, 5-15 overall) with 12 points and six rebounds.
Iey 37: REDMOND — Caleb Reynolds scored 27 points as the Tigers won for the third
"It is never safe," she said. "But I feel like if you train
Glide 33, La Pine28 La Pine (28) — McK enna Boen 22, Pierce4,
Mickell ZTotals12 3-1028. Glide (33) —Kali Vickery12, HayleyLivingston 12, Marlow 3, Kaul2, Stone2, MoyersZ Totals 10 13-24 33. La Pine 5 7 3 1 3 — 28 Glide 5 8 7 1 3 — 33 Three-pointgoals—LaPine:Boen; Glide:none.
Class1A Mountain ValleyLeague
BEND GOLF 86COUNTRY CLUB P RESEA SON P R O M O T I O N P RIVATE18H OLE GOLF COURSE- T E M V I S S WIMMING - A T H L E TI C - D I N I N G Golf memberships starting at only $295 per month! Promotion ends March 31st — -Don't miss out! Learn more about membership at Bend's finest private club.
Paisley 29, Central Christian12 Paisley (29) — LizzieHyde9, OL ' eary1, Vickerman 6,Basurto 4, Colahan3.Totals123-729. Central Christian (12) — Abigail I annay 11, Tinnell1. Totals 36-1612. Paisley 9 8 7 5 — 29 CenkalChristian 3 3 0 6 — 12 Three-pointgoals— Paisley:Vickerman2; Central Christian:none.
541-382-3261
end
bendgolfdub.com
Golf R Country Club
"Classic golf, warm friendships, since 1925"
All mnebm sujbect to board aPProvul.
61045 Cousxtry Club Drive, Bend Oregon
www.beixdgoltclub.com
b e ndgolt ®bendgoliclub.com
C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY11, 2015
+'
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S&PBOO
NASDAQ ~ +61.64
17,868.76
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
4,787.65
TOdap
Ssrp 500
Wednesday, February 1 1, 201 5
2 020.
Whole Foods'sales growth has slowed as traditional supermarkets and big-box retailers muscle into the organic food category. The organic and natural grocery chain is taking steps to more sharply define what sets it apart. The company has been pushing lower-priced store brands, introduced a system that ranks the quality of produce and is offering one-hour delivery in several major markets. Is the strategy paying off? Find out today, when Whole Foods reports its fiscal first-quarter earnings. VVFM $53.03 $60
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StocksRecap NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 3,551 1,734 Pvs. Volume 3,449 1,607 Advanced 1783 1672 Declined 1354 1064 New Highs 89 53 New Lows 32 40
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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17890.34 17729.24 17868.76 +139.55 DOW Trans. 8930.19 8813.99 891 6.62 +75.99 DOW Util. 621.40 607.71 620.63 +1 2.86 NYSE Comp. 10924.65 10811.27 1091 5.14 +88.55 NASDAQ 4793.27 4737.12 4787.65 +61.64 S&P 500 2070.86 2048.62 2068.59 +21.85 S&P 400 1481.80 1465.60 1480.59 +11.13 Wilshire 5000 21836.58 21602.52 21813.97 +211.45 Russell 2000 1205.12 1190.27 1203.18 +7.35
DOW
Operating EPS
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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD t0.79% L L L +0.26% -2.44% t0.86% L t2.12% L +0.41% t0.82% L L L +0.70% +1.30% L L L +1.09% +1.07% L L L +0.47% +0.76% L L L +1.94% +0.98% L L L +0.67% +0.61% L L L -0.13%
NorthwestStocks 1Q '14 1 Q '15
based on past 12-month results
Dividend: $0.52 Div. yield:1.0% Source: Facteet
Budget monitor The Treasury Department issues a report today on how much m oney Uncle Sam took in and paid out last month. The December report showed that the federal government's receipts and outlays translated into a surplus of $1.9 billion for the month. Economists anticipate that there was a shortfall of $3 billion last month.
Treasury budget not seasonally adjusted, in billions
$100 50 est -3
-50 -57
-100 -122
S
0
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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
NAME
Price-earnings ratio: 34
-150 129 A
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18,000"
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'14 i '15 Source: Facteet
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank ofAmerica Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp ColumbiaBnkg ColumbiaSportswear CostcoWholesale Craft Brew Alliance FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard Intel Corp Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Microsoft Corp M Nike Inc 8 Nordstrom Inc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarInc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Schnitzer Steel Sherwin Wms StancorpFncl StarbucksCp Umpqua Holdi ngs US Bancorp WashingtonFedl WellsFargo & Co Weyerhaeuser
A LK 37.71 ~ A VA 28.19 ~
71.40 38.34
65. 3 7 + 1.86+2.9 V 35.4 2 +. 5 8 +1 .7 L
L V
BAC 14 . 37 ~ BBS I 1 8 .25 ~ BA 116.32 ~ C A C B 4 . 11 ~ COLB 2 3.59 ~ 3 COLM 34.25 ~ 4 CO ST 110.36 ~ 1 BR EW 10.07 ~ F LIR 28.32 ~ HPQ 2 8 .64 ~ 4
18.21 16. 42 + . 07 +0.4 w w 71.76 3 7. 9 0 -.23 -0.6 L L 148. 8 9 14 8.04 + . 46 +0.3 ~ L 5.82 4.70 -.06 -1.3 T L 0.3 6 27.44 +.13 $-0.5 W L W 5.8 7 42.88 - .03 -0.1 W W 56 .85148.22 +.68 +0.5 V L 17.89 1 2. 8 6 -.19 -1.6 T L 37.42 3 3. 2 8 -.32 -1.0 V L 1.1 0 37.89 +.25+0.7 W W W
I NTC 24.06 ~ K EY 1155 ~ K R 3 5 .98 ~ LSCC 5.93 0 — L PX 12.46 ~ MDU 21 . 33 o —
37.90 33.7 0 +. 7 7 +2 .3 L W 14 70 1 398 + 10 + 0 7 V L 71.91 71. 6 9 +. 8 4 +1.2 L 91 .9 5.96 +.0 1 + 0 .2 V V 18.88 1 6. 4 0 -.09 -0.5 V L 36.0 5 22. 04 + . 1 9 +0.9 L V 24.34 24 .39 + . 32 +1.3 L L 50. 05 42.60 +.24+0.6 L W V 99.76 92.7 5 + 1.58 +1.7 L W 80.54 79 .26 + . 74 +0.9 L L 52. 5 7 48 .70 +.86 +1.8 W W 71.1 5 63. 1 6 ... ... L W 9.17 6.69 -.05 -0.7 V W 45.45 44 .83 + . 4 7 +1 .1 L L 275. 0 9 28 1.51 -.01 ... w w 30.0 4 17 . 1 8 -.41 -2.3 L V 28 0.79280.06 +5.67 +2.1 W L 71.80 66. 9 2 +. 4 3 +0.6 ~ L 89.7 7 91. 1 8 + 2.36+2.7 L L 9.6 0 16.54 +.06+ 0.4 V L V 46.10 44.5 2 +. 3 5 +0 .8 L L 4.5 3 20.86 +.09+0.4 V L 5.9 5 54.57 +.36+ 0.7 L L W 37.04 35.2 2 +. 3 7 +1 .1 L W
MEN T 18.25 — o S F T 36.29 ~ N KE 70.60 ~ JWN 57.30 — NWN 40.30 ~ PCAR 55.34 ~ P LNR 1.93 ~ PCL 38.70 — PCP 186.17 ~
$50.02
0
0
SCHN 1 6.25 o — SHW 180.82 — o S FG 57.77 ~ SBUX 67.93 ~ UM P Q 14.70 ~ 1 U SB 38.10 ~ WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 WF C 4 5.22 ~ 5 W Y 2 7.48 ~
+
Close:$42.40%1.17 or 2.8% The beverage company reported better-than-expected quarterly profit on lower costs and higher prices for sodas in North America. $46 44
Financial analysts anticipate that Tesla Motors' revenue rose sharply in the fourth quarter DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 9 -Amount declaredcr paid in last 12 months. f - Current versus a year earlier. annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent The electric car maker, due to dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash report quarterly financial results value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. today, has enjoyed strong sales growth in recent quarters. It set a record for deliveries of its Model S sedan in the third quarter. Investors will be listening for an update on Tesla's deliveries in the RetailMeNot shares took a ride Tuesday after the Cempany mi llion, versus $67.5 million market forecasts. online coupon company beat fourth-quarter RetailMeNot said it is investing in its sales Spotiight October-December quarter. expectations but gave a dismal outlook. organization and mobile The company earned 43 cents products, which will improve its per share on an adjusted basis in its growth in the second half of I I / / most recent quarter -11 cents the year. better than analysts had forecast. The company also said it But it forecast revenue between may buy back up to $100 million $275 million and $285 million for the year, well below the of its own stock over the next 24 months. $305.3 million that analysts were anticipating. It expects Shares fell in early trading and recovered later in the first-quarter revenue between $57 million and $60 day, closing down 0.5 percent.
RetailMeNot profit beats
52-WEEK RANGE
$13
+
uesd a y's close: $15.40 Price-earnings ratio:31
49
(Based on trailing 12 month results)
Price change SALE*
YT D 6-M O 1 -Y R -9.9 -62.7 5.3%
*began trading in July 201 3 Source: FactSet
AP
AmdFocus
(i()24
SelectedMutualpunds
Qose:$137.24&f 8.08 or 15.2% The construction materials maker reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter financial results, partly citing economic growth. $140 120
42
N
D J 52-week range
$38.89~
F
$45.DD
00
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D J 52-week range
$103.D9 ~
F $ 138 .09
Vol.:31.7m (2.1x avg.) PE: 23.6 Mkt. Cap:$185.72b Yi eld:2.9%
Vol.:3.9m (4.9x avg.) P E: 57.9 Mkt. Cap:$9.23 b Yie l d: 1.2%
General Motors
Coupons.com
GM Close:$37.52%1.52 or 4.2% A former member of the U.S. auto task force wants to join the automaker's board and proposed an $8 billion stock buyback. $40
L + 9.4 +64 . 8 1 9 51 1 5 0 .80f L +0.2 +27. 7 40 0 11 1. 3 2f w -8.2 -2.1 81413 47 0 . 20 L +38.3 - 40.4 169 d d 0 . 88 L + 13. 9 +1 8 .5 3 674 20 3 .64f 35 T -9.4 + 6.0 79 4 78 -0.6 +1 1.4 1 5 3 1 8 0 .64a N D J F W -5.5 +1 6.0 3 5 0 2 5 0 . 60f 52-week range L + 4. 6 + 35.0 1640 31 1.42a $28.82 ~ $38 .15 T -9.6 - 15.7 11 5 7 5 Vol.:32.3m (2.1x avg.) PE : 5 5 .2 L + 3.0 +10 . 7 89 1 2 4 0 . 44f Mkt. Cap:$60.42 b Yie l d: 3.2% -5.6 +3 1.6 6820 14 0 . 6 4 V -7.1 +39.8 19665 14 0 .96 Yelp YELP L +0 6 +10 9 713 7 1 3 0 26 Close: $44.66L2.49 or 5.9% L +11.6 +97 .2 3 175 22 0 . 7 4 The online reviews company bought V -13.5 -12.6 2273 15 the online food ordering service V -1.0 -3.1 4134 dd Eat24 for about $134 million and V -6.2 -30.8 1522 14 0 .73f boosted its revenue outlook. L +11. 3 +2 2 .9 42 3 2 1 0. 2 0 $60 -8.3 +1 9.0 28997 17 1 . 2 4 V -3.5 +26.8 3788 28 1.12f 50 V -0.2 + 3 5.8 9 8 6 2 1 1. 3 2 W -2.4 + 2 2.6 9 2 22 1.8 6 N D J F V -7.1 +9 . 9 1 7 97 1 7 0 .88a 52-week range V - 20.1 +190.5 458 2 4 $42.40~ $101.75 L +4.8 +8.1 989 38 1.7 6 Vol.:11.2m (3.9x avg.) PE:2233.0 w -16.3 - 22.5 783 1 6 0 . 12 Mkt. Cap:$2.79 b Yield:... V -23.8 - 27.4 62 0 4 0 0 . 7 5 L $-6. 5 +5 1 .5 63 9 3 1 2. 2 0 RetailMeNot SALE V -4.2 + 7 . 0 1 3 1 1 3 1 . 30f Close: $15.40 V-0.07 or -0.5% L +11. 1 +2 1 .5 6 106 28 1 . 2 8 The online coupon site reported -2.8 - 1.4 76 1 2 2 0 . 6 0 slight revenue growth in the V -1.0 +12.8 5925 14 0 . 98 fourth-quarter but expects revenue V -5.8 -3.0 23 0 1 3 0 .52f to drop in the first quarter. $18 -0.5 +22.6 11781 13 1 .40 V - 1.9 +20.0 2285 2 6 1 . 16 16
Betler sales?
RetailMeNOt (SALE) T
+
1.1312
StoryStocks
14
/
EURO
2' 64
Stocks posted solid gains Tuesday as investors assessed the latest corporate earnings releases. Coca-Cola helped the market after posting strong quarterly results. Also, in Europe, tensions regarding Greece's repayment of its debt eased slightly as investors believed a resolution would be reached. The top finance officials of the Eurozone will meet Wednesday for an emergency meeting regarding Greece. The energy sector was the only decliner among the 10 sectors of the Standard & Poor's 500 index to decline. The drop came as the International Energy Agency said that the rebound in the price of oil in recent days "will be comparatively limited in scope." Coca-Cola KO Martin Marietta MLM
Change: 139.55 (0.6%)
17,000" ""' 10 DAYS "
1,920 " 1,840
CRUDEOIL
$16.86
17 480 .............................. Close: 17,866.76
17,500" 2,000 "
+
SILVER
-920
Dow jones industrials
..................... Close: 2,068.59 Change: 21.65 (1.1%)
Strategy working?
40
GOLD ~ $123160 ~
10 YR T NOTE 2.00% ~
2,068.59
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$13.29 ~
COUP Close: $10.75 V-3.76 or -25.9% The digital coupon company reported worse-than-expected fourth-quarter financial results and provided a weak fiscal outlook. $40 30 20 M AM J
J A S O ND J
52-week range $9.24 ~
$32.67
Vol.:13.8m (20.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$859.4 m
PE: . .. Yield: ...
Qualcomm
QCOM Close:$70.26 L3.15 or 4.7% China fined the chipmaker $975 million as part of an ongoing series of anti-monopoly penalties aimed at foreign companies. $80 70
60
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52-week range $82.28 ~
$81.97
Vol.:35.8m (3.0x avg.) PE: 14.8 Mkt. Cap:$115.9b Yie l d: 2.4%
Blue Nile NILE Close:$28.12 V-3.30 or -10.5% The online jewelry seller reported worse-than-expected fourth-quarter financial results and provided a weak fiscal outlook. $40 35 30
F
N
$48 .73
$23.10~
D J 52-week range
Vol.:6.2m (7.1x avg.)
PE:2 5 . 3 Vol.:767.3k (5.6x avg.)
Mkt. Cap: $832.63 m
Yie ld: ... Mkt. Cap:$333.11 m
F
$3 7.50 PE 36.1 : Yield : ...
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HIS
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK Mo QTR AGO
3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 1 .01 ... . 0 6 .0 7 -0.01 W
5 2-wk T-bill
.23
V
.06 .10 .11
L
V L
L L
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other loans.
2 -year T-note . 6 6 .66 ... L 5 -year T-note 1.51 1.5 1 ... L 10-year T-note 2.00 1.98 +0.02 L 30-year T-bond 2.58 2.56 +0.02 L
L L L L
L .31 T 1.49 W 2.6 7 W 3.65
Commodities
FUELS
The price of oil sunk more than 5 percent after the International Energy Agency forecast increasing supplies. In other commodities trading, gold, silver and copper fell. Soybeans rose.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
BONDS
.23
...
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.44 2.39 +0.05 L L W 3.4 5 BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.22 4.19+0.03 L L W 4.89 Barclays USAggregate 2.13 2.12 +0.01 L L W 2.3 1 PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 6.23 6.20 +0.03 W W L 5.59 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.52 3.52 ... L L W 4.50 YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.81 1.77 +0.04 L L W 1.7 3 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2.98 2.97 +0.01 L L W 3.0 8 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
AP
Lord Abbett Mid Cap Stocks' managementteam has taken MarhetSummary shape since early 2013, and Most Active Morningstar says they have NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG reduced the number of stocks to S&P500ETF 876650 206.81 +2.18 focus on their best ideas.
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmericanFunds AmBalA m 24 . 96 +.14+0.8 +11.5 +13.2+12.7 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.58 +.37 +1.7 +11.1 +10.8+10.1 A A A CpWldGrlA m 47.82 +.38 +2.0 +8.6 +13.8+11.1 8 8 C EurPacGrA m 48.88 +.35 +2.0 +2.2 +9.3 +7.7 C C C FnlnvA m 52. 8 0 +.45+1.0 +13.0 +16.5+14.8 D C C BkofAm 814132 16.42 +.07 GrthAmA m 43.26 +.42 +1.4 +11.5 +17.6+14.9 D 8 D Apple Inc s 589370 122.02 +2.30 Lord Abbett MidCpStcA m L A VLX IncAmerA m 21.90 +.15 +1.5 +11.1 +12.3+12.2 A A A Pfizer 575705 34.15 +1.08 InvCoAmA m 37.37 +.38 +0.8 +15.5 +17.5+14.6 C 8 D VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH Petrobras 506282 6.23 -.49 NewPerspA m36.83 +.36 +1.5 +7.1 +13.8+12.2 C A 8 MicronT 431991 31.09 +2.74 WAMutlnvA m41.14 +.36 +0.5 +14.6 +16.8+15.9 C 8 A iShEMkts 428988 39.66 -.10 CSVLgCrde 409121 3.38 -.50 Dodge &Cox Income 13.86 -.82 +0.6 + 4.5 +4.0 +5.1 C A 8 CSVLgNGs 364853 2.72 + .23 IntlStk 42.87 +.17 +1.3 +4 .6+12.4 +9.5 A A A Qualcom 347393 70.26 +3.15 Stock 179.45+1.45 -0.8 +12.4 +19.9+16.1 D A A Fidelity Contra 98.37 + 1.11+1.4 +11.9 +17.1+16.3 D C 8 Gainers ContraK 98.3 1 + 1.11+1.4 +12.1 +17.2+16.4 C 8 8 NAME L AST C H G %C H G LowPriStk d 50.28 +.30 +0.1 +11.4 +16.1+16.1 D D C Fideli S artan 500l d xAdvtg 73.34 +.78 +0.7 +17.3 +17.9+16.5 A 8 A FinjanH 2 .65 +.62 +30 . 5 AntheraP h 3 .25 +.65 +25 . 0 oFrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.44 ... +1.2 +4.8 +9.3 +9.8 C A A 40 AmkorTch 8 .80 +1 . 7 5 +2 4 . 8 03 IncomeA m 2. 4 2+.81 +1.7 + 5 .8 + 9.9+10.4 C A A Amrep 4 .80 +.90 +23 . 1 Oakmark Intl I 23.76 +.14 +1.8 -1.8 +12.9+11.1 E A A SilvrSpNet 8 .48 +1 . 2 5 +1 7 .3 co Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 93 +.21 -0.3 +14.2 +14.0+14.0 D E D Aeropostl 3 .08 +.44 +16 . 7 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 17 . 82 +.19 -0.4 +13.4 +13.0+13.0 D E E Exelixis 2 .19 +.30 +15 . 9 RisDivC m 17 . 49 +.18 -0.4 +13.4 +13.2+13.1 D E E e Fund target represents weighted Pfenex n 8 .00 +1 . 1 0 +1 5 . 9 Q SmMidValA m49.21 +.37 +1.0 +15.5 +16.5+14.3 8 D E MartMM 137.24 + 18.08 + 1 5 .2 average of stock holdings SmMidValB m41.37 +.32 +0.9 +14.7 +15.5+13.4 8 D E Qualys 4 6.94 + 6 . 0 9 +1 4 .9 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.88 + .25 +0.2 +11.2 +15.3+14.2 E D C Losers CATEGORY Mid-Cap Blend GrowStk 53.3 7 + .70 +2.7 +12.2 +18.7+18.0 C A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 71.4 2 +1.19+5.0 +29.7 +35.2+29.1 A A A RATING™ * * N N N Newlncome 9. 8 5 - .82+ 1.0 + 5 .1 + 3.0 +4.5 8 C C -3.76 -25.9 Coupons n 10.75 ReconTech 2.30 -.62 -21.2 ASSETS $1,271 million Vanguard 500Adml 191.15+2.83 +0.7 +17.3 +18.0+16.5 A 8 A -.97 -16.2 Wstptlnn g 5.01 500lnv 191.12+2.82 +0.6 +17.1 +17.8+16.4 8 8 A EXP RATIO 1.23% AmiraNatF 8.50 -1.45 -14.6 CapOp 53.31 +.84 +1.1 +17.8 +23.2+17.2 A A A MANAGER Noah Petrucci -1.07 -13.8 CathGn wt 6.68 Eqlnc 31.30 +.28 +0.3 +15.7 +16.7+16.9 8 C A SINCE 201 3-10-01 IntlStkldxAdm 26.57 +.13 +2.2 +1.4 +6.7 NA 8 D RETURNS 3-MO +2.9 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 32.91 +.25 +2.3 +18.3 +20.9+20.3 A A A YTD +0.9 TgtRe2020 28.78 +.13 +1.1 +9.4 +10.1+10.5 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +15.6 TgtRe2035 18.85 +.12 +1.2 +10.7 +12.7+12.4 A 8 8 Paris 4,695.65 +44.57 + . 96 3-YR ANNL +15.8 Tgtet2025 16.72 +.89 +1.1 +9.9 +11.0+11.2 A A B London 6,829.12 -8.03 -.12 5-YR-ANNL +15.9 TotBdAdml 10.94 -.82 +0.9 +5.1 +2.7 +4.3 8 D D Frankfurt 10,753.83 +90.32 + . 85 Totlntl 15.89 +.88 +2.2 +1.4 +6.7 +6.2 8 D D Hong Kong24,528.10 + 7.10 + . 03 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT -A1 Harfford Financial Services Group Inc 2.44 TotStlAdm 52.83 +.52 +0.8 +16.2 +17.8+16.8 8 8 A Mexico 42,635.19 -1 75.10 Milan 20,725.63 +358.99 +1.76 TotStldx 52.80 +.52 +0.8 +16.0 +17.7+16.7 C 8 A 2.16 -.33 XL Group PLC Tokyo 17,652.68 -59.25 USGro 30.37 +.38 +1.5 +15.4 +18.1+16.9 8 8 8 1.97 Stockholm 1,602.74 + 11.34 + . 7 1 International PaperCo Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -12.70 -.22 Invesco Ltd 1.91 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales cr Sydney 5,757.40 Zurich 8,620.42 -11.72 -.14 Fidelity National Information Services Inc redemption fee.Source: Mcrningstar. FAMILY
Foreign Exchange The ICE U.S. Dollar index-
which measures the dollar against a basket of key currencies that includes the euro, Japanese yen and Bnttsh
pound, among others — edged higher.
h5Q HS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -6.1 50.02 52.86 -5.37 1.46 1.45 -0.21 -10.3 1.83 1.87 -2.15 -0.8 -7.3 2.68 2.60 +3.08 1.55 1.58 - 1.64 + 8 . 2
CLOSE PVS. 1231.60 1240.80 16.86 17.05 1207.30 1220.40 2.56 2.60 766.00 779.95
%CH. %YTD - 0.74 + 4 . 0 - 1.16 + 8 . 3 -1.07 -0.1 -1.40 -9.7 -1.79 -4.1
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -4.0 1.59 1.58 +0.41 Coffee (Ib) 1.59 1.68 -4.89 -4.3 -2.3 Corn (bu) 3.88 3.91 -0.83 Cotton (Ib) 0.63 0.62 + 0.34 + 3 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 317.80 320.80 -0.94 -4.0 -3.0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.36 1.41 -3.45 Soybeans (bu) 9.69 9.79 -0.97 -4.9 Wheat(bu) 5.22 5.30 -1.51 -11.5 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5252 +.0022 +.14% 1.6405 Canadian Dollar 1.2 601 +.0149 +1.18% 1.1047 USD per Euro 1.1312 -.0024 -.21% 1.3641 JapaneseYen 119.44 +1.03 +.86% 102.21 Mexican Peso 14. 9 670 +.1575 +1.05% 13.3153 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8714 -.0062 -.16% 3.5213 Norwegian Krone 7 . 5842 -.0258 -.34% 6.1364 South African Rand 11.6913 +.1185 +1.01% 11.1345 Swedish Krona 8.3 1 69 -.0449 -.54% 6.4820 Swiss Franc .9264 +.0053 +.57% . 8 971 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2873 +.0075 +.58% 1.1181 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2443 -.0030 -.05% 6.0601 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7543 +.0007 +.01% 7.7573 Indian Rupee 62.294 +.208 +.33% 62.475 Singapore Dollar 1.3550 +.001 5 +.11% 1.2707 South KoreanWon 1100.20 +3.75 +.34% 1072.00 -.01 -.03% 3 0.37 Taiwan Dollar 31.59
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY11, 2015
BRIEFING Home prices upin Bend, Redmond Home prices inBend and Redmondstarted the year with a leap,according to a report released Monday. In Bend, themedian price for a single-family home last monthwas $322,000, an11 percent increase overDecember's mediananda21 percent increaseover the median price inJanuary 2014, according to a report from theBeacon Appraisal Group. Bend recorded120 single-family homesales last month, 48fewer than in December,but 19 more than inJanuary
usinesssuccesses urn o ian
2014. — Bulletin staff reports
BANKRUPTCIES Chapterl Filed Feb. 3 • Jason R. Burieigh, RO. Box 7184, Bend Filed Fsb. 4 • Erinn M. Meyer, 1596 NW Baltimore, Bend • Christopher E and Chariene M. Robinson, 19909 CedarLane, Bend • Antonio Rico, P.O.Box 393, Cuiver Filed Feb. 5 • Jeremy M. and Andrea M. Gandy,1900 NEBearCreek Road Apt.136, Bend • Valerie Best, 53274 Riverview Drive, La Pine Filed Feb. 6 • Harlan E. andJeanne M. Hankins, 1900 NWMadras Highway Unit5, Prineville • Gary S. Goiightly, 789 NE Savannah Drive, Bend • Julio and Meiissa Osorio, 1385 SW27th St., Redmond • Michael S. Turpin, 3058 NE Weddeii St. Apt1, Bend • James R. Boston Jr. and Alicia R. Boston 744SW Cedar Hills Drive, Madras Filed Feb. 9 • John M. and Coiette R. Bouc, 1600 SW35th St., Redmond • Christopher L. and Haley L Nielsen, PO.Box513, Terrebonne • Robert T. and Shannon E Sicocan, 2002 SWCanyon Drive Apt.5, Redmond Chapter13 Filed Fsb. 9 • Robert J. and Christy L. Mays, 61125Brosterhous Road, Bend • Todd E. andBarbara J. Sikes, 1335 NE Watson Drive, Bend
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Practical Finance: Opportunity Knocks seminar on what financial statements can tell you aboutyour business; $35 for Opportunity Knocks members, $45 nonmnemees;11:30-1 p.m. Double Tree byHilton Hotel, 300 NWFranklin Ave., Bend; 541-318-4650 or www.opp-knocks.org. • ManagingYour Business Social Media Presence: Two-session course will cover strategies that help balance workload while keeping in touch with clients via social media; $79; registration required; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edul continuinged. • Farm TransitionSeminar Series:Jump-start the transfer of your farm to the next generation or another successor; $325 registration per family; 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; OSU Extension Service, 3893
mi
a en rei cen er UI
By Joseph Difzler The Bulletin
FedEx is looking at a site in northeast Bend to possibly
build a 69,000-square-foot distribution facility, according to plans filed with the city of Bend.
PossihleFedEx distridutioncenter FedEx submits tentative plan for Bend distribution center.
f/)'P
Possible site
A developer bidding on the project, Denver-based MVG
Development Group, met with Bend CommunityDevelop-
2014.
In Redmond, the median price for a single-family home was $218,000, about 15 percent higher than December's medianand about 38 percent higher than the medianprice in January 2014,according to The BeaconReport. Thirty-five homessold in Redmondlast month, 10 fewer than inDecember but equal tothe number sold inJanuary
e
ment planners Thursday to
Jeffrey and Jacqui Morby, here at their home in Pittsburgh, started the Cure Alzheimer's Fund with
discuss the site and potential concerns. The proposed facility would occupy 11.5 acres between Brinson Boulevard and Sockeye Place, according to a preliminary site plan. In Bend, FedEx operates a retail print and ship center
several other families. The fund hasgiven morethan $27 million to Alzheimer's research.
downtown on NW Oregon
double-trailer trucks coming
Avenue, a package shipping
to and from the site primarily
office on Jamison Street and a freight terminal on NE First Street.
from U.S. Highway 97 via the Empire Avenue interchange and Boyd Acres Road. No contract has been signed to develop the site, which is owned, according
-.B' Rebecca Droke / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette viaTNS
By Joyce Gannon Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
PITTSBURGH — As a
banker, Jeffrey Morby soared to the top — with jobs run-
ninginternational operations for the Bank of Boston and
"Each of them had very,very successfulhighpowered careers in business. They did more due diligence and research in getting this started than you can imagine." — Max King, president and chief executive of the Pittsburgh Foundation
later for Mellon Bank, then
based in Pittsburgh and from which he retired as vice chairman in 1996.
But the demands of his fulltime career didn't leave time
it progresses and how drugs ing for a way to channel some can treat it. to publish a book he wrote in of their private family founOther accomplishments to the 1980s about a scientific dation's assets into "an area date that fund officials contopic that's fascinated him for of concentration that was sider to be significant include much of his life: the workings meaningful to human kind," development of a Web-based of the human brain. said Morby. Alzheimer gene database and Although he never pubThrough his interest in the findings that show Alzheilished that book, he's delving brain, he in 2004 met Rudolph mer's is likely an autoimmune deep into one of the most Tanzi,a professor ofneuroldisease triggeredby innate widespread and devastating ogy at Harvard and director immunity in humans. brain diseases in the world as of the genetics and aging The fund has a staff of co-founder and chairman of research unit at Massachuthree full-time employees and the Cure Alzheimer's Fund. setts General Hospital. From five part-timers who work out He, his wife and several other their discussions, Morby of offices in the Boston area. families launched the charity concluded, "Alzheimer's was Instead of the traditional in 2004 with $1 million, and decimating the world and scientific peer-review process, in 10 years it has sunk more there was no money to fund" Morby said, Cure Alzheimer's than $27 million into research the research. scientific advisoryboard that aims to prevent or reAlzheimer's affects about reviews proposals and projverse the disease. 5 millionpeople inthe U.S. ects that come directly from Donors' money goes direct- and has no cure. Although it's researchers. Approval can ly into cutting-edge research hardto trackthe total amount sometimes be accomplished that a scientificteam is conof money being spent on in a matter of aweeks. "We can get done in a ducting at Harvard and about research worldwide, the ¹ fund, the couple were search-
25 other institutions. People
tional Institutes of Health in
month what can take two
familiar with the fund say it's unique as a philanthropy be-
Bethesda, Maryland, allocat-
cause its founders and board
for Alzheimer's research in its
years for other foundations," he said. Max King, president and
members pay for all overhead and operating expenses.
2014-15 budget, and the Chica-
chief executive of the Pitts-
go-based Alzheimer's Association said it has spent $335
burgh Foundation, credits the fund's rapid growth and research accomplishments to the Morbys' distinctive approach. "Each of themhad very, very successful high-powered careers in business. They did m ore due diligence andresearch in getting this started than you can imagine. They are both such deep thinkers. They both got extraordinary
"That's unusual, because
most organizations don't have that kind of dedicated founder that cares so much,"
ed an estimated $566 million
million on more than 2,000
research projects since 1982. Tanzi is now Cure Alzhei-
said Carolyn Duronio, an atmer Fund's lead researcher torney who helped Morby and and was a lead scientist on his wife, Jacqueline, a retired a project that Morby touts venture investor, set up the as among the fund's most fund. "Both of them are really, significant breakthroughs. really dedicated to this cause."
In "Alzheimer's in a Dish,"
The nonprofit has raised $48.3 million since its inception, including $11 million raised in 2014.
Tanzi and a colleague grew human brain cells in a gel in apetri dish and gave the cells
Before they started the
scientists could observe how
SW Airport Way,Redmond; 800-859-7609 or www.bit. ly/familyag. • Small Business ManagementProgram: Nine-month businesscoaching program combines one-on-one advising, class content and networking; runs until December; $999 per year; 2-5 p.m.; Aspen Alley Mall, 51470U.S. Highway 97, LaPine;541383-7290, sbdc©cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/sbdcl sbmn. • COBENMonthly Meeting: Linkedln101: creating an online presence on the largest professional network;free; registration requested; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; East BendPublic Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 503-805-6524, lynn©i-thrive-now.comor www.meetup.com/coben12. SATURDAY • ReducingYour RisklI Determining Production Cost:Analyze annual productioncostsand associated benchmarks; $10/farm; RSVP online or cali; 9-11:30 a.m.; COCC Technology Education
genes for the disease so the
Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541447-6228 or www.agbiz. eventbrite.com. TUESDAY • Visit Bendboardmeeting: Open to the public; free, RSVP byemnai; 8a.m.; Bend Visitor Center, 750 NW Lava Road; 541-382-8048, valerie©visitbend.com or www.visitbend.com. •BeginningQuickBooks Pro2014:Learn to set up new customer and vendor accounts, create invoices, recordsales and enter payments; continues Thursday, Feb.19; $89, registration required; 9 a.m.-noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • SCOREfree business counseling:Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWali St.; www.SCORECentral0regon. org.
The companydeclined to comment on its plans in Bend,
including whether any of its facilities would potentially consolidate. "FedEx Ground continuously evaluates opportunities that can enhance our ability
to serveourcustomers,but, as a matter of policy, we don't have further information on
specific proposals under consideration," Nikki Mendicino,
FedEx communications coordinator in Memphis, Tennes-
Bu ler Market Greg Cross/The Bulletin
to Deschutes County online
property records, by Arthur Pozzi. FedEx is interested in
11 acres of the 25-acre property, to which the county assigned a market value of $1.8 million.
FedEx is not alone in considering an upgrade to its Bend facility. Package shipping company UPS Inc. is renovating its
to see street improvements in
the area if the project goes forward, said city Senior Planner
ter at 2470 NE Second St. to the renovated warehouse.
The site is zoned for industrial use. The city would like
Gary North of R&H ConA traffic study by Kittelson struction Co., Bend, said the & Associates, of Bend, estimat- renovations are on schedule to ed the facility would generate, be complete by mid-May. UPS Aaron Henson.
at most, 124 new trips, 64 in
spokeswoman Jessica Scrace,
and 60 out, during weekday
of Seattle, on Tuesday said the Second Street package pickup office will probably not move to Boyd Acres Road this year.
afternoon peak hours. Henson
said the city asked for a study of morning peak-hour traffic. The additional traffic would
consist of employees and
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Bud Light will unveil 'Mixxtail' beverages By Lisa Brown St. Louis Post-Dispatch
ST. LOUIS — Bud Light's first new line extension since 2012, Mixxtail, will
results in their business ca-
reers and translated that to philanthropy."
The cocktail-inspired Bud Light Mixxtail will come in
Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541-3837290or www.cocc.edu/ sbdc. FEB. 20 • Grant Writing for Nonprofits:Learn to select grant opportunities for nonprofits and write successful applications; $89; registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270or www. cocc.edu/continuinged. FEB. 23 • MS Project Basics:Learn to manage tasks, timeiines and resources. Work with tracking and reporting features to accurately monitor your projects and prepare professional estimates. Class runs through March 2; $159, registration required; 8:3011:30 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW Coll egeWay ,Bend;541383-7270 or www.cocc.edul continuinged. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizral
CI
rss
warehouse on Boyd Acres Road near Brinson Boulevard. The plan includes moving the customer package pickup cen-
see, wrote in an email Friday.
begin sales at U.S. retailers Monday.
FEB. 19 • City Club ofCentral Oregon:Benefit Companies — Oregon's new lawfor socialentrepreneurs; $20 members, $35 nonmembers; registration required by Monday; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, Center for Health8 Learning, 2500 NENeff Road; 541-633-7163, info© cityclubco.comor www. cityclubco.org. • Bloggingfor Business & Beyond:Howto set up a Wordpress.com biog, integrate it with other social media, engage your audience andother bioggers and create original content on the fly;class runs through March5; $75, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW CollegeWay,Bend; 541383-7270or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • Business StartupClass: Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you; $29, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College Technology Education
C/0
"It's a combination of cocktail flavors that
we know consumers love, with the
three flavors: Long Island
smoothness of Bud Light. We'vedone a lot of market testing
Iced Tea, Firewalker and Hur-
to find the flavors
ricane, Anheuser-Busch said Tuesday. The company confirmed the line extension in
November but hadn't released the launch date. "It's a combination of cock-
cocktail drinkers are interested in. — Mallika Monteiro, Bud Light
Extensions marketing director
tail flavors that we know consumers love, with the smoothness of Bud Light," Bud Light alcohol by volume, are packExtensions' marketing direc- aged in 11.5-ounce aluminum tor Mallika Monteiro told the Post-Dispatch. "We've done
a lot of market testing to find the flavors cocktail drinkers are interested in."
The Hurricane and Long Island Iced Tea beverages are well-known flavors, and Firewalker is a red hot cinnamon apple flavor that's a "hot trend" now, Monteiro said.
bottles, 16-ounce cans and
25-ounce cans. A similar offering by A-B InBev is available in Argentina under the brand name Quilmes. In 2012, Bud Light unveiled
Bud Light Platinum and
Anheuser-Busch will soon begin a marketing campaign
Lime-A-Rita as line extensions of the best-selling beer in the U.S. St. Louis-headquartered Anheuser-Busch has since
for Bud Light Mixxtail that
expanded the 'Rita lineup to
includes TV, print and online advertising. The target
Straw-Ber-Rita, Mang-0-Rita and Raz-Ber-Rita, in addition
market for Bud Light Mixx-
to seasonal offerings. A new
tail beverages are drinkers
summer seasonal, Lemon-Ade-Rita, will make its de-
"mostly in their 20s who like to entertain at home," Mon-
teiro said. The Mixxtail flavored malt
beverages, with 8 percent
but this year, Monteiro said. The four year-round 'Ritas
are the top-selling flavored malt beverages in the U.S.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing Report, D5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY11, 2015
O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors
Making hiking a family affair
SNOW REPORT For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts, seeB6
BRIEFING Ice criterium scheduled The annual Ice Criterium is scheduled for Feb. 21 at WanogaSnopark west of Bend. The event, hosted by Cog Wild Mountain Bike Tours and a fundraiser for the Central Oregon Trail Alliance, includes cyclists racing on a short circuit course in snow and ice. Registration is at 5:30 p.m., and the race starts at 7 p.m. Participants can race on any kind of bike they wish. Bikes raced in past ice criteriums include road bikes, cyclocross bikes, mountain bikes, unicycles, push bikes, fatbikes and town bikes. A donation of $10 is suggested to enter the race.
By Zach Umess The (Salem) Statesman Journal
Once upona time, going for a hike was a simple activity. Toss a few snacks,
water and appropriate gear into a backpack, lace up your hiking boots, and you're ready to roll. That all changes once you have children. Between diapers, changing pad, spit-up rag, food, toys, carrier, clothes
(and a few million other items you'd never even considered), it can feel as though you're outfitting
"s<
a small army rather than Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Puddles form around a chairlift during a rainy Saturday at Hoodoo Ski Area outside Sisters.
a tinyhuman being.And that's without even considering your child's mood. Taken together, it can
be difficult for parents, especially new parents, to get out on the trail. But a
group called Hike It Baby, which recently opened a
— Bulletin staff report
branch in Salem, is en-
couraging new parents to get outdoors by offering a supportive atmosphere on organized weekly hikes. A
TRAIL UPDATE With ChrisSabo President's Day weekend is typically one of the busiest times for winter trail use, but unfortunately things in the Cascades are far from ideal. Although higher elevations received up to 6 inches of snow Friday night, the following rain washed most of those gains away. The forecast over the next few days is calling for sunny, springlike weather with temperatures in the 40s and 50s as high as 6,000 feet. Access to snow may be limited to Dutchman Flat by the
weekend. Conditions at Kapka Butte Snopark are becoming very marginal for snow access, and it's highly likely the main trail from Kapka to Dutchman will have up to one-half a mile of bare ground by the weekend and hundreds of moguls. The snowmobile trail from Elk Lake to Dutchman Flat has as much as 2 miles of bare pavement. For nonmotorized winter activities, there will be some snow around the perimeter of Kapka for snowshoeing and general snow play. Nordic skiing trails out of Kapka are in fair to poor condition. Parking at Dutchman Flat is very limited and people may get cited for parking in the no parking zones or parking on the highway. Meissner, Wanoga, Skyliner, 6 mile, 10 mile, Three Creeks Lake, Crescent, Crescent Junction and Ray Benson sno-parks all have very inadequate snow, and some are completely bare. Swampy Sno-park will be in poor condition by the weekend. Some trail areas are reporting a moderate number of downed trees on trails from the recent windstorm, so visitors should be aware and use caution. Overall, people are encouraged to find nonwinter trail recreation at this time. Summer trails are drying up and in good condition and have been picking up a lot of the recreation traffic. SeeTrails /D5
collection of 118 people are
part of the Salem group, and during the last two weekends, they've had hikes at the Croisan Trail
• Hoodoo and other Oregon skiareasare wondering if theymight be done for theseason
system in South Salem and Kezier Rapids Park.
ick Geraths has owned a season pass to Hoodoo Ski Area each of the past 45
Stdresorts inOregon
years.
(NINE OFTHE13 SKI
He has seen some weak winters at the resort near Sisters — but he has never seen anything like this.
in a row," says Geraths, a
57-year-old Sisters resident. Now nearing the heart
in elevation on Santiam Pass.
After opening Dec. 31 and remaining open for the first two
and allowed it to open on New Year's Eve, but with a combination of rain and unsea-
sonably warm weather ever
weekends of 2015, Hoodoo
since, the snow base is pretty much nonexistent — just 4
has been closed since Jan. 12
inches as of Tuesday. (Hoodoo
due to lack of snow. Last winter, Hoodoo did not open until
received 2 inches of snow on
Feb. 8, and it was open for a few weeks, again for lack of snow.
The 2013-14 season was Hoodoo's third-shortest in its 76-yearhistory,butthis sea-
son could be shorter. One snowstorm brought 26 inches of snowto the ski area
HOODOO Location: Santiam Pass,west of Sisters Status: Closed Location: 20 miles west of Bend Status: Openwith 50 inches of snow at the base
MARK MORICAL
of winter in mid-February,
there is precious little snow at Hoodoo, located at 4,668 feet
ARE CLOSE D)
MT. BACHELO R
"This isn't new, but it's kind
of weird having it two years
AREAS IN THESTATE
MondaynightandTuesday morning.) But the ski area needs 3
feet of snow to be able to effectively groom the slopes and reopen to skiers and
snowboarders, according to Hoodoo general manager Matthew McFarland.
WILLAMETTEPASS Location: Off state Highway 58, southwest of Bend Status: Closed ANTHONYLAKES Location: Northeast Oregon near North Powder Status: Openwith a 49-inch base MOUNT ASHLAND Location: Southern Oregon, west of Ashland Status: Closed SIO BOWL Location: Mount Hood
SeeLack of snow/D2
Status: Closed MEADOWS Location: Mount Hood Status: Openwith a 32-inch base TIMBERLINE Location: Mount Hood Status: Openwith a 48-inch base
COOPER SPUR Location: Mount Hood Status: Closed SUMMIT SIOAREA Location: Mount Hood Status: Closed
FERGUSONRIDGE Location: Northeast Oregon nearJoseph Status: Closed
SPOUTSPRINGS SKI RESORT Location: Northeast Oregon near Elgin Status: Closed WARNERCANYONSKI AREA Location: Southern Oregon near Lakeview Status: Closed
"There's so much to consider when you're hiking with young children, and the great thing is that other parents understand and are supportive, while other people, even your friends, might not be as understanding," said Bob Reinhardt, a Salem parent of a 1- and 3-year-old. "We really want to get our
children to experience the outdoors, and it's really helpful to do that with a
community of parents facing the same challenges." The co-leader of the Salem group is Amy Snook Rockwell, 39, who is the
mother of 2-year-old Marshall. Rockwell liked the idea of hiking with other parents. "Once you have kids, you have to learn to hike at a different pace, in
a different style, than you did before," Rockwell said. Right now, the group brings together a combination of children aged from a few months to 3 year
olds (one pregnant woman even joined on the Croisan hike). "My goal is to get enough people involved that we could have dif-
ferent styles of hikes, one for babies in strollers or carriers, and one for older
kids who might want to spend some time running around themselves," Rock-
well said. SeeHiking /D4
Do ou noww ere our iesarema e? man's widow or a well-known
I used to laugh at the signs that advertise hand-tied flies, but now I see them in a differ-
GARY LEWIS
ent light. There are close to 100,000 cataloged fly patterns in existenceand more beingcreated counter there are even more, every day. There the flies with subtle variations FISH NG I is no machine — tungsten instead of brass, that could be rubberlegsinstead ofhackle programmed to learn the hun- — that the owner keeps for his dreds of tying techniques and more sophisticated clients. blend the thousands of materiWho tied that Parachute als that fly-tiers use. Adams or that Rubber-Legged Hare's Ear? Walk into the fly-fishing section of a sporting goods It could have been a local store, or stroll into a fly shop, schoolteacher, a teenager tryand the central focus is a ing to make a few extra bucks deck of hundreds of fly pator an underemployed fishing terns that imitate most of the guide. Those bugs could come fish food sources. Under the from the desk of a fly-fisher-
author. They might be tied in Kenya or Thailand. Most people don't ask and don't care. They want a fly the fish will bite.
The fly is the magic. It is at the point of the leader. It is the
difference between success and failure. But it is also a commodity. And some people will buy only the least expensive pattern. What's the difference?
There are varying degrees of quality in a fly pattern. Some are built with materials
that last, and others disinte-
Gary Lewis /For The Bulletin
grate after a couple of times
A brown trout from a small stream in Chilean Patagonia. The fly
fishing.
was a smallbeadhead nymph, tied in Kenya and purchased ata shop in Bend.
SeeFlies /D5
D2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
•
•
Submit your best work at Q bendbulletin.cem/readerphofes. 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.
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FORT ROCK Interesting skies contribute to the striking landscape at Fort Rock captured by Bill Brandt.
Lack of snow Continued from D1
"We're not even close, but
our plan is to open," McFarland says. "If we get 3 feet of snow, we'll gladly open back up. There's still another couple months of skiing left if we get snow. You could have one storm be enough. And we're ready. So if we get one big storm tomorrow, we could be grooming it and open a cou-
"But Bachelor never does. This enthusiasts who are currently about that come mid-March." year, Bachelor is hurting for looking for a place to ski or Geraths holds a season pass snow. It's really weird." snowboard. "The truth is, if you want to Mt. Bachelor ski area as well, Still, Geraths says he recalls and that is where he — and seasons at Hoodoo during to ski, go to Mt. Bachelor," he
ny Lakes, located near North Powder in the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest, is a 247mile drive from Bend. McFarland und e r stands
want refunds, and we will talk
this, so Hoodoo is allowing
which the resort boasted a
its season-pass holders to roll
many other skiers and snowboardersfrom around the state
ter last season as welL
But even Bachelor, which has a
rather than the new normal.
"This has happened before
in the '80s and the '70s at Hoodoo," McFarland notes. "It's
O<XKCSM'
Northwest." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com
T~3KER
'
'-
Your once-a-year backstagepass to tourOregon's breweries.
once a decade, but twice in a they've seen this before, but never twice in a row."
most snow of anywhere in the
WVlCkelmBIllB '
something you expect maybe row like this is a little crazy. All the old-timers are saying
They've got the best and the
states. "Mt. Bachelor has the
snowbaseofmore than 20feet. theirpasses over to next sea- who cannot go elsewhereMcFarland says this is likely son, which the ski area did af- have been skiing this winter. just a "weird couple of years"
"We understand the cus- base elevation of 5,700 feet and tomer comes first, and we do summit of9,065 feet,reported what we have to do to take just a 50-inch snow base on care of them," McFarland Tuesday, although the mounple days after that. It's not far says. "If they bought a pass tain received 19 inches of new away. It's not a slow process for something that didn't hap- snow in the past seven days. once the snow comes back." pen, we can't hold that against Typically this deep into winter Or IF the snow comes back. them. Anybody who wants Bachelor will have well more Hoodoo is not alone in its to roll their pass, we'll roll than 100 inches of snow. "Hoodoo typically has some struggles to open its slopes it again. We don't mind dothis winter. Many other ski ar- ing that. Some people might low snow years," Geraths says. eas in Oregon remain closed due to lack of snow. (See information box on Dl.) Hoodoo typically opens by
best snow around right now.
•
Saturday, February 14 11am to 4pm
McFarland is open and honest with his advice to snow
•
•
A Free Public Service
mid-December and closes in mid-April. If there is still no
snow by mid-March, McFarland says, Hoodoo might not reopen at all this season. "If we're not open for spring break, there's no reason to be
open for April, even if we get a storm or two," he says. "At that point it becomes kind of just a waste. Plus, what's the
likelihood that employees are going to be standing around wanting to work by then'? "We work on a seasonal staff, so we've got 100-odd
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
people who were wishing they were working. The reality is they need to eat. Unemploy-
ment (insurance) only goes so far, so I would guess that they are all after any other job."
McFarland says that most of Hoodoo's loyal customers have been understanding. Gerathssays he feels bad for the ski area and its employees.
I
I
I
I
"There's a whole bunch of
employees there who aren't getting paychecks," Geraths says. "I don't know how long they can take a hit like that." For now, McFarland says,
Hoodoo season passes are being honored at Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort i n
n o r t h-
east Oregon. Anthony Lakes, at 7,100 feet, reported a base depth of 49 inches on Tuesday. The problem is that Antho-
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
Air orce wintersurviva ross ow owit's one By Rich LanderseThe (Spokane, Wash.) Spokesman Review .
'I
PRIEST LAKE, Idaho-
+ tQ~W g [)'. „'tl/ @ . g . . ,„, 4!'q~g;
he winter survival clinic conjured up visions from Jack London's classic short story, "To
weather. Students learned that mak-
Build a Fire", as students labored to create
ing a fire with wet wood can be incredibly difficult without
life-saving warmth near the damp, snowy shores
1
a
' -
viable tinder.
'!r'
"After this session, you may
of Priest Lake.
never hit the trail without a container of cotton balls coat-
S.,!
"Take the extra time to set
yourself up for success," the
used throughout Bonner County, expects to be called into ac-
Fairchild Air Force Base sur-
tion about 10times ayear.
vival instructor said. "Cover your working area
"It takes us about a half an hour t o m o b ilize," Nielsen
said. "We run any conditions keep rain and snow off... day or night. But almost all "Start with a split log or oth- of our missions are at night. er platform to keep tinder and Mom doesn't call the sheriff wood off damp ground... until Daddy's not home and "Don't light your tinder until it's dark outside. "Most of our missions are you've collected or cut a pile of wood in different thickness f or snowmobilers, and w e — pencil size, thumb size and have an elite team of expert bigger..." riders that lead that group. We Like so m any s urvival also have 37 people qualified skills, the steps are fairly sim- in ropes rescue to go in and ple, but the consequences of rescue aclimber. When you missing one can be the differ- need that expertise, there's no with a t arp o r
ed with Vaseline," an instructor said. "Some people think it's the
substitute for it."
"Fire-building is something Some of the 200 volunteers everyone should practice," in PLSR are trained in rescusaid Sgt. Joseph Cain. ing hapless people who break The outdoors-savvy mem- through the ice on a lake. bers of the Priest Lake Search Some are equipped with ATVs and Rescue are no exception. and power boats while others More than 80 Priest Lake are geared up with kayaks Search and Rescue volunteers and backpacks to come to the and officers from state Fish aid of lost or injured people on
Vaseline that burns, but it's the
o
.~iiI.
w h atever to
ence in life and death.
ing through things, and then prioritizing. "Survival can be as simple as having an extra set of dry clothes and remembering to put them on." The training focused on ways to n eutralize nasty
cotton fibers. The petroleum
jelly just prolongs the flame like paraffin in a candle."
'f
I'
He pinched the cotton ball numerous times to pull out Photosby RichLanders/The (Spokane, Wash.)Spokesman Review
tufts of coated fiber until it ac-
Jimmy and Leah Driver of Bonners Ferry practice fire-building techniques during a survival training course for the Priest Lake Search and Rescue volunteers at Priest Lake, Idaho.
cumulated at least five times
grandmother, Karen Ding-
light it" with a match, lighter,
erson — all of w hom were
flint or other source, he said.
camping out in the snow.
more surfacearea than the original cotton ball. "Make it hairy and fibrous before you Fire starter was the differ-
"Trevor put out the word b efore Christmas, and h i s
ence between a flame and no flame in the damp conditions
gifts were gear he needed to take this course," Dingerson
for many of the students.
They all shared notes on selecting the best knife for sur-
said. "It's good to know he has
this training when he heads out snowmobiling with his
vival situations. One woman
pointed out that she carries temporary fillings in her first
A
father."
PLSR is a nonprofit group that works for t h e s heriff, Nielsen said. Members use
aid kit after a miserable expe/
rience on camping trip. "I really like these aluminum or titanium canteen cups
trol and county sheriff's agen-
land or water. "We've rescued a lot of ski-
their own gear and raise money for group essentials such as Ammi Midstokke of Sandpoint, Idaho, left, practices setting up a command center and radios. litter for a helicopter rescue. In September 2014, Midstokke was Priest Lake State Parks do- strapped into the same sort of litter and flown to safety after she
cies assembled at Priest Lake S tate Park recently for t w o
ers and snowboarders who go out of bounds from Sch-
nates facilities for the weekend winter training.
something you can put on a fire to melt snow or boil water.
days of winter rescue and survival training. "Everybody here is volunteering their time," including
weitzer and get lost," Nielsen
and Game, federal Border Pa-
the instructors from the U.S.
Air Force's Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape school, said M ik e
N i e lsen, P L SR
commander. "It's all about being ready to go beyond roads to help someone in an emergency." Better cell phone coverage in recent years has boosted
selfrescues by friends orfamilies, cutting down on official calls for search and rescues,
Nielsen said. Nevertheless, PLSR, which is
"The counties could never said. "There have been so afford these kinds of groups many, we know where they're if volunteers didn't provide likely to be. We send a group their own gear and support," in at the bottom and wait for he said. "We get no tax dollars. them to come out to us." Our budget is based solely on what people, organizations All different ages and businesses give us." PLSR volunteers range in A new $60,000 radio sysage from 12to 78. Some are tem with GPS t r ansmitters fit enough to climb the highest was purchased largely from peaks in the Selkirks. 0thfundraisers organized over ers are trained in setting up several years by Priest Lake command posts and logistics businesses. "This system links into support. Trevor Low, an eighth-grad- other systems and allows the er from Priest River, was attending the winter survival training with his mother and
command post to monitor the
location and movements of each rescuer as they move in
was injured while hiking near Chimney Rock, Idaho.
that are big enough to slip over a Nalgene bottle for packing," Cain said. sYou should have Plastic doesn't work too well
be devoted to learning skills
the field," Nielsen said.
boiled down under five needs
The basics
over a fire." Jimmy Driver of Bonners
of survival: treating injury,
Ferry was taking the course But high-tech gear is no sub- personal protection such as with his wife, Leah. They both stitute for f i rst-aid training, fire and shelter, signaling, sus- joined PLSR four years ago. "We do a lot of winter campsurvival skills, a knife and in- tenance and recovery. "Each situation is different, ing, so there's nothing so far sight into improvisation. "This winter survival train-
and you must prioritize the
ing is actually a motivator for needs," Cain said. "Of course, an injury may people to join PLSR," Nielsen said. "Fairchild provides 15 ex- need to be stabilized first. Shelperts from the survival school. ter and fire may take a higher The Air Force instructors are priority than food. You might premier. They're the cream of regret not stomping out a sigthe cream among U.S. forces." nal first thing if a plane flies by Standing in the snow with while you're making a shelter. "The biggest mistake is his group of eight students, Sgt. Cain said their day would not stepping back and think-
that I'd call real new to us," he
said early in the session. "But the survival school instructors are real cool, and they break it
down into easy-to-remember steps. It's really useful stuff." Said Sgt. Cain: "The main point to remember in an emer-
gency situation — don't just die. Look around. Tap your will to survive."
Atou wintertre orani tatasout eastAas aca in By Abby Lowell
a solid blanket of snow and
The Juneau (Alaslza) Empire
frost, and ice lined the creek,
water in winter. Morning came late with the
the trail remained a part of the landscape that could never be ignored. There was always something to step over, or around, or a sheet of ice to b lanketed the area. It w a s navigate, ever so slowly. It dethen, if only for a moment, manded all a hiker's attention we were glad we brought our and was as treacherous in pulk, a low-slung toboggan winter as it can be in summer that skiers or dogs can pull. after a hard downpour. Winter had settled in southWhen we spotted the lake,
sun rising around 9 a.m. Long crystalsofhoarfrost covered
JUNEAU, Alaska — There
was a collective sigh of relief as our group reached the Peterson Lake Trail parking lot. A few inches of crusty snow
east Alaska. As frequent sum-
all surfaces. As light hit the
lake and landscape, everyone's spirits seemed to brighten with the day.
It wasn't long before breakfast came and went, gear was packed and the cabin swept
clean. We groaned under the weight of our packs (one of which carried a 30-pound 3-year-old) and set off crunching down the traiL
the sun was just setting on the
mer visitors to the area's pub- horizon. One half-mile later, lic-usecabins,we had decided we were stomping our boots to book a stay at the recently
off on the porch at Peterson
remodeled Peterson Lake Cabin.
Lake Cabin. If we'd learned anything
The cabin is located at the
on the hike up it was that ice
end of a 4.5-mile-long trail that cleats are a requirement on has seen upgrades in recent this trail in winter. No quesyears. Getting there means
tion. Rubber boots or similar
following a gentle uphill grade w ater resistant footwear i s that follows a historic horse
ideal. Snowshoes? Not a bad
tramway once used to access idea, especially if a snowstorm a mining claim in the area. blows in unexpectedly. A sled? The Peterson family ran the Not going to happen. Our pulk mining operation in that wa- ended up strapped to the back tershed (which bears their of a backpack at about mile 2. name) from the late 1800s to The cabin is a cozy, brighter the mid-1900s. version of a typical USFS cabOn this day, our party of in design. During the remodel five included two children, one in 2011, the dingy inside was 6 and the other 3, my husband replaced withyellow cedar, the and my father, who was vis- porch was rebuilt and made iting from Oregon. Our plan ADA accessible, the dock imwas to stay one night, and proved (in the summer this the weather (it was clear and cabin is accessible by float crisp) appeared to be in our plane) and a vault toilet was favor. installed. We joked that the toiAbout three minutes down let structure was just about as the trail, our optimism faded. spacious as the cabin; it's high The snow had ended just a few class for a wilderness latrine. steps in and the pulk now gratThe interior of the cabed like a plow on bare ground as it bumped down the gravel-lined pathway. After about a mile, the trail
improvements ended and a section of twisted roots, frozen mud holes and craggy rocks began. A good pair of ice cleats was
It took us 30 minutes less to hike out than in due to the
rough going of the traiL But it's an easy grade that could
be easily navigated by an amateur hiker; the 6-year-old in Abby Lowell/The Juneau (Alaska) Empfrce our group hiked on his own Peterson Lake Cabin near Juneau, Alaska. The winter of 2014-15 is not one that has brought large both ways. amounts of snowfall to southeast Alaska, but even so, winter outings require attention in areas where On our way out, we passed summer outi ngs do noL a medium-sized group heading in. One man had a pair of hockey skates dangling off his in boasts a small amount of top of the wood stove. our temperaterainforest,ob- pack. Depending on the time cabinet space, a prep counter As temperatures plummet- taining water proved to be an of year and the conditions, and two sets of bunks with a ed outside in the clear night, unexpected challenge; it was ice skating could be an option lower portion that doubles as the interior of the cabin quick- winter, after all. We brought a at this site. A word of caution, bench seating for the table in lybecame cozy and saunalike. water filtration unit but, due to however: Choose to skate at between. There's both a pro- Our evening consisted of typ- the cold, preferred to boil our the cabin-end of the lake; at pane heater and a wood stove. ical cabin antics: a rousing water clean. Behind the cabin the outflow to Peterson Creek, The pilot light in the heater is game of Bananagrams, dinner a little stream still flowed, and the water picks up velocity almost always lit (it was when prep (there's a metal plate on some spots in the ice were thin and is less likely to be stable. we arrived, anyway, and there top ofthepropane heater per- enough that we could pound Like any good outing into are instructions in case it's fect for keeping foods warm, through to expose a small hole the wilderness, we celebrated not), which makes the task or for drying damp gloves), from which to fill water bot- as we reached the parking lot. of warming up a frigid cabin storytelling and — our fam- tles and containers. It's easy to And, with a few good lessons a whole lot easier. Our other ily's personal favorite — a imagine that at other locations learned — bring ice cleats and option was firing up a pile of quick review of the cabin log around the Tongass National more water and leave the pulk soggy wood, which at the time and any area maps. Forest, melting snow and ice at home — we vowed to come happened to be frozen to the Unlike most of the year in is the only way to obtain extra back again soon.
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for the lone sled-puller, life became just downright hard. One hour turned into three
and the short daylight of winter began to fade. Although the forest was now draped in
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D4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
UrDOORS CYCLING 2015 ICE CRITERIUM:A short circuit race on the snow/ice; Feb. 21 at Wanoga Sno-park; registration at 5:30 p.m., race at 7 p.m.; $10 suggested donation; bikes in the past include and are not restricted to road bikes, cross bikes, mountain bikes, unicycles, push bikes, fat bikes and town bikes; 541-7280066; elementexercise©gmail.
com; crowsfeetcommons.com/
event/2015-ice-crit-2-0. CENTRAL OREGON 500+ BICYCLERIDE:June 3-7;fivedays 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.
E1VD
2072; outings©coflyfishers.org; www.coflyfishers.org. CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greetand discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeachm onth at6 p.m .; 50SW Bond St., Bend, Suite4; 541306-4509, deschutestu©hotmail. com; www.deschutes.tu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:Agroup of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541306-4509 or bendcastingclub© gmail.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www.
sunriveranglers.org.
EQUESTRIAN SPRING TUNEUP CLINIC: At Pilato Ranch, 70955 Holmes Road, Sisters; May10-11,9a.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 FLY-FISHINGSEMINAR: Featuring world-renowned angler and conservationist Craig Mathews, of West Yellowstone, Montana; Feb. 21-22 at the Riverhouse Convention Center in Bend; hosted by the Central Oregon Flyfishers and the Sunriver Anglers; price is $85 by today, and $95 after today; 541-549-
THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m .;meets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.
HIKING DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Ledby skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds, and take in spring wildflowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.
HUNTING CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION: Meets Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m.; next meetings are Feb.18, March 4; VFWHall, Redmond; 541447-2804orfacebook.com atRMEF
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.
BIRD WATCH
Cute, intrusive GrayJays Scientific name:Perisoreus canadensis Characteristics:Stocky birds that average 11.5 inches long. Theyhavedark gray backs and light gray undersides, a white faceand forehead, partial white neck collar, and a mostly dark head.Their stout bill is black. Their wings are various shades of gray. Range:Found throughout the northern U.S. andCanada,andintheOregonandW ashington CascadeMountains into northern California, and the Rocky Mountains. Breeding:These birds maynest in late winter when conditions are still cold and snowy. A strong nest of twigs is lined with feathers and fur for insulation. The femalelays upto five eggs and incubates themfor18to19 days. The young fledgearound 3weeks old. Habitat:Occurs in coniferous or mixed coniferous-deciduous woodlands in the northernU.S.andCanada,and inthemountains in the West. Food:Theseopportunistic jays will feed upon anything from seeds to small mamCentral Oregon. THE BENDCHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meetsthesecondWednesday of each month; King Buffet, Bend; ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.
MISCELLANEOUS 2015 CENTRALOREGON
mals. They maycache food in tree crevices andhaveearnedtheirnickname, "camp robbers," with their bold behavior. Seeds, berries, nuts, insects, carrion and small mammalsand babybirdsmay beconsumed. Bird facts:In Central Oregon, these birds are found throughout the year at higher elevations, often descending into campgrounds or visiting backcountry skiers or snowshoers for food scraps. Theywill boldly swoop in toswipepeanutsorpeckonasandwich, quickly losing their "cute" appearance.They use their saliva to glue food to tree branches or trunks abovethe snowline for future consumption. During really cold spells, these birds can fluff up their feathers to envelope their legs andfeet to stay warm, andthey have feathers that cover their nostrils. These jays make avariety of calls from harsh chatters to whistles and will imitate the calls of their predators to either confuse anylurking predator or warn awayother birds. Their species name means "ofCanada, "where the bird was first recorded for science; these
SPORTSMEN'SSHOW: March5-8 at the Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center in Redmond; discover cutting-edge sporting and outdoor
equipment, learnexciting and
innovative techniques, and meet the industry's most renowned experts; $10 for adults and $5 for ages 6 to 16; www.thesportshows.com/
shows/central-oregon/. INDIAN FORDCREEK RESTORATION:Feb. 19 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Environmental Center in Bend, 16 NWKansas Ave.; an overview of the Indian Ford Creek Restoration Project near Sisters, including Calliope Crossing, a wellknown birding location that is within the project area; 503-789-2452; jon.g.putnam©bendbroadband.
The Bend Bulletin file photo
A gray jay soars over a frozen ToddLake in this file photo.
birds were onceknown asCanadajays or "Whiskey jacks." A group of jays is knownas a "scold" or "party." Current viewing:Mt. Bachelor ski area parking area, ToddLake, Bandit Springs, Wanoga Sno-parkand other high elevation sites in the region. — Damian Faganis a volunteer with theEast CascadesAudubon Society. Hecan bereachedat damian.fagan©hotmail.com. Sources: Oregon Department of Wildlife Resources, www. allaboutbirds.org and "The Audubon Society Encyclopedia of North American Birds" by John Terres.
com; www.ecaudubon.org.
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 NRAfor more information. COSSAKIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each childis $10;10 a.m.; third Saturday of each
month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www.
pinemount ainposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.
hrp-sass.com.
Hiking Continued from D1
e
Sheadded that although the last two h i kes have been within Salem-Kezier city limits, in the future,
j$~4'.,;~pp'gyyy' ItI's, '
she'd like to add hikes to places a bit farther away. "We're starting very local and then branching out," she said.
P
g Irff 3
Hike
It
Bab y
/
w as
launched a year and a half ago in Portland by Shanti Hodges, a new parent who, like Rockwell, was looking for a more social hiking experience. Problem was,
many of her friends wanted to do bigger hikes she wasn't ready for. At a par-
enting group, she invited a few "new mamas" to join her on a short hike.
"I was attending these groups for moms, which were great but were all inside, and since it was Mark Boster/Los Angeles Times/TNS
Cross-country bicyclists pedal through Death Valley National Park on their way to Beatty, Nevada, in
December.
A uste i ecan't ee
t e reamo t eroa Los Angeles Times
DEATH V A L L E Y NA T IONAL PARK — B y t h e
time I met Woifgang Steffens, he had already spent about two years on the road. Since
leaving his home in Finland, he had covered big chunks of Europe and Africa on a BMW
motorcycle with a s idecar. Road name: Silver Wolf. In other words, Steffens, 49,
had seen a lot and survived plenty of scrapes. Now he was in the outback area of Death
Valley known as the Racetrack, tiptoeing from rock to rock with a camera.
Salem Hike It Baby outing at the Croisan Trail system in south Salem.
plicity. Each branch publish- was over) until they started es a calendar online and has with Hike It Baby," Hodges a private Facebook group. It's said. "And that's the goal, to wanted to go for a hike the free, you don't have to RSVP show people the benefit of next day, and we went to in advance, and anyone can getting young children into Forest Park (in Portland). show up. nature as soon as possible. It "I saw how cool it was The only caveats are a zero really makes a difference." the way the mamas sup- tolerance for discussion about ported each other, the way race, religion, sexual orientathose with more experi- tion, politics, socio-economic ence would show others status or personal child-rearhow to use the carriers ing choices.The group also 541-548-2066 and things like that." endorses Leave No Trace ethAdjustablc From those humble be- ics (even packing out diapers). Beds ginnings, Hike It Baby has Beyond that, it's all about exploded into something parental collaboration and of a national phenomena. the benefits of getting chilSpurred on by social me- dren in nature. "What's really cool is how dia, Hike It Baby branchIjV&TRESS es are in 70 cities,inciud- many moms and dads have G allery - B e n d ing Hutchenson, Kansas, said they were suffering(feelNashville, Tennessee, Bir- ing like their adventure life 541-3$0-50$4 mingham, Alabama and Washington D.C. (to name a few). There are branches in Oregon in Bend, Portland, Sa lem, Eu g ene, Denture Et Implant Center Corvallis and Pendleton. A whopping nine branchJa es opened in 10 days last The Luxury of Personalized Care week. Part of the appeal, along summer, I wanted to get
cs
By Christopher Reynolds
Courtesy Amy Rockwell
Kristi Neznanski carries her daughter, Hazel, in a pack during a
Steffens said, "unless we run out of money."
We unloaded his b i ke, nudged it closer to the edge of With the three dogs bounc- the road, put his gear in our ing along in the sidecar, they Jeep and took him to his wife had covered 30 countries and dogs at the FurnaceCreek in Europe and Africa, then campsite. By the time Steffens shipped the bikes to North thanked us once more and America. Here, they'd been waved goodbye, it was fully happily surprised by Ameri- dark. The more Boster and I can hospitality — "people in- imagined the time and money vite you to their house!" — and it would take to get them rollsaddened by the loss of their ing again, the sadder we got. eldest dog. Hertta, a 14-yearBut apparently you can't old poodlemix, died in the Pa- keep a vegan biker down, escific Northwest. pecially one with mechanical Now they were headed to aptitude and friends in Las Latin America. Because his Vegas. wife didn't like the look o f By the next afternoon, a Death Valley's back roads, V egas friend wit h a t r u c k Steffens had a day to explore was towing the Silver Wolf
"I've always wanted to go to Death Valley," he said. "And on his own. The sun was sinkI read that there was a cool ing, and it was time to drive rock thing here." out. We said ourgoodbyes. Before taking to the road, But an hour later, photograSteffens worked as an elec- pher Mark Boster and I found tricai engineer. Since August S teffens by the side of t h e 2012, he and his wife, Ilta, and road, mournfully perched on their dogs have been slowly his idle bike. The rocky route circling theworld on two mo- had cracked its front fork and torcycles (and sidecar), having partly collapsedits frame. He adventures, promoting vegan- couldn't steer, 13 miles from ism and biogging (www.sau- the nearest blacktop. "Luckily," Steffens told us, erkraut-tofuwurst.com). In short, they are vegan bik- "there was no ditch." Otherer bloggers. Their plan is to wise, he was very quiet. "Devspend five years on the road, astated," he said later.
to civilization. Within about a week, Steffens told me later
by email, the bike and sidecar were rolling again. They
out," Hodges said. "I asked a few of the moms if they
%ILSONSsf Redmond
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spent New Year's Eve at Lake
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Patrolling America'slargest ski hill is ademanding profession
D5
FLY-TYING CORNER
By Brett French The BtlItngs (Mont.) Gazette
BIG SKY RESORT, Mont.
— At the top of 11,166-foot Lone Mountain, before many
city commuters had arrived at work, Alex Bergeron tentatively eased out from the cramped
confines of a cold steel tram tower to dangle from the lift's cable — 20 feet above a steep,
*
snowy, rocky cliff. "I just don't want to break
my sunglasses," he joked before lowering himself. About 20 of his fellow ski patroll ers, gathered around the tram platform during this Courtesy The Billings (Mont.) Gazette evacuation drill, hollered out Ski patrollers atop Big Sky Resort's Lone Mountain take part in a gibes. recent tram evacuation drill. Although the climbing har.*
ness that held Bergeron aloft
— along with the gear attach- ner at her supervisor's house, ing him to the ski lift cable and two patrollers played their — had been checked and re- instruments at her wedding
two minutes later they are dead," Cooper said. "Then there are others who look real-
away view down the chasm of Big Couloir was enough to make the brawny patroller hesitate before committing. Increasing a feeling of being perched atop the edge of the world, by scanning the horizon Bergeron could look down on the tops of multiple mountain ranges. Lone Moun-
"It's really a tight group of people," said Cooper, 28, from
ly bad" and a week later they are flying home. Cooper is fairly matter-of-
Buck Hill, Minnesota.
fact about the inherent risks
tain stands high above the sur-
now directs the patrol's medi-
formed CPR on two friends
rounding sea of snowy crags.
cal program year-round. "I love Big Sky. It's a beautiful place," he said. Carolyn Wilson, 26, from Anchorage, Alaska, is one
and helped to recover one buddy who died in an avalanche.
checked, the 1,000-foot drop-
Workday
while another officiated.
"My favorite part of the job is the people," agreed patroller Steve Emerson, 54.
He grew up in Bozeman and quit his family's manufac-
of the sport. She said she has always known that there is a
possibility that she could die in an avalanche or after suf-
point has been driven home by come a full-time patroller. He the fact that Cooper has per-
These are some of the rea-
It's her third year, although
and year-round. "We practice everything an
she worked on the adjoining Moonlight Basin ski slopes as a lift operator for two years prior. eran at Montana's and AmeriWhile running the lifts, she ca's largest ski area. made friends with some of the Each weekday, about 50 pa- ski patrollers. "I liked the idea of skiing trollers cruise the 5,800 acres of terrainspread out across for work," she said. "And the four mountains in the Madi- explosives work sounded cool, son Range south of Bozeman. too." Each weekend — as visitation So now she's in the apprenincreasesfrom about 2,700 to tice blaster program, which
service, Emerson said, 24/7 ambulance service practices,"
he said. That practice starts in November before the mountain
opens for the ski season. That's when Emerson, with the help of Bozeman doctors,
conducts four days of intensive medical refresher training.
Multitasking
The ability to endure freezing cold days, piercing winds and long hours spent with feet clamped in ski boots doesn't seem like awant ad manypeople would respond to, yet those patrollers on staff at Big Sky
Coordinating events such as the medical training is Frounsafely handle the explosive felker's main job at Big Sky charges used to release av- Resort. Known by the nickalanches from the ski area's name Frounie since he was steep,rockyridges. in the third grade, he has the A t the other end o f t h e job of organizing the annual age spectrum is Jon Ueland, tram rescue scenario — even known as Yunce to his fellow though the patrol has never patrollers. At the age of 58, had to perform such a task in Ueland has been working as a real life. He also helps orgaski patroller since 1979. nize the blaster school, ava"I did this every winter and lanche drills and on-hill work smokejumped in the summer, such as lift evacuations. "That's what a lot of this job so they were good complimentary jobs," he said. "And I is — training," he said. like to be outside skiing." When he doesn't have training scheduled, though, FrounMedical training felker is a "floater" — filling in For many of the patrollers, across the mountain as needs their bond is forged under arise. Sometimes the chores some difficult, stressful emer- are as simple as picking up gency situations. As Emerson rocks from the trail, fixing noted, the ski hill is a big area rope lines or marking trail with big responsibilities. hazards with bamboo poles. One of the ski patrol's main The ski patrol even gives toresponsibilities is responding boggan rides — called courto injuries — everything from tesy rides — downhill to unthe common knee injuries for harmed skiers and boarders skiers to shoulder and ankle who feel they've gotten in over afflictions that collapse snow- their heads on a difficult run. "I like how I d on't know boarders. The worst cases
voice an intense attraction to
are the multisystem traumas
what the next moment is go-
their work, as well as a special bond to their co-workers. For seven-year pro patroller Kristin Cooper that means that she ate Thanksgiving din-
suffered by skiers or boarders who fall a long way or strike something. "Some people,you think they are going to be fine and
ing to bring," Frounfelker said.
3,800 — another 10 to 20 patrollers are added.
When scheduling, Dixon is drawing from a group of 105 professional ski patrollers and 140 volunteers who spread out to "flythe cross," a reference to the white crosses on their
red jackets. During a typical day ski patrollers will comb the mountain for injured ski-
ers and snowboarders, provide information to v i sitors
as on-mountain ambassadors and, before the lifts open, make sure the ski area is free
of avalanche danger. "There's a lot more to it than
providing Band-Aids," said Jason Frounfelker, 39, the patrol's training director and a 17-year patrol veteran.
Hiring on
— Gary Lewis, For The Bulletin
turing business in 2007 to be-
sons Big Sky Resort has a licensed emergency medical
"It's probably one of the l argest ski patrols in t h e world," said Bob Dixon, ski patrol director and a 34-year vet-
The Moustique family of dry flies comefrom Switzerland's Jura mountains, which form the watersheds of the Rhineandthe Rhonerivers. This one, the Moustique1, represents the tIny pale mayflies found in the region. Carry a few of these (in the smallest sizes youcantie) in a dry-fly box for those blessed instants when whitish-yellow mayflies hatch out in that last hour of evening. Tie this Moustique with brown thread on aNo.14-18 dry-fly hook. For the tail, use medium-blue dun hackle fibers. Tie the bodywith yellow silk floss. For the wings, usetwo blue dun hackle tips. The hackle is a feather from aduck's green preen gland, trImmed to size.
fering trauma from a fall. That
So began another day of work for Big Sky Resort's large and multitalented ski pa- of the newer pro patrollers. trol team.
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Moustique 1, tied by Quintin McCoy.
t eaches patrollers ho w
to
"You can be sitting there eat-
ing your burrito one minute and the next thing you're saving someone's life."
FIsHING REPoRT CRESCENTLAKE:Opento fishing all year. Late winter and spring is a good time to target lake trout. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM:Fishing has been fair. Keep aneye onthe flows as the recent rains may affect the outflow from Bowman Dam. Anglers are reminded that trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead and must
HOSMERLAKE:ODFWwill conduct a public meeting Tuesday on the COCC campusIn Bend todiscuss future fIsh management In Hosmer Lake. Contact Brett Hodgson at 541388-6009 for more information. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK: Opportunities for rainbow and brown trout in the Upper Deschutes and Crooked River arms are good. The Metolius Arm is closed until March1. Anglers are reminded
be releasedunharmed.
there aresmall numbers of spring
CULTUS LAKE:Opento fishing all year. DAVIS LAKE:Open to fishing all year. Restricted to fly-fIshIng only with barbless hooks. FALL RIVER:Anglers report faIr fIshIng near the hatchery. Fall River downstream of the falls is closed to fishing. Fishing upstream of the falls is open all year. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. HOOD RIVER:Bright winter steelhead are entering the lower Hood. Anglers should watch for good flows after high water events. Fishing will continue to get better as winter progresses.
chinook and summer steelhead In Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Please release these fish unharmed. LAKE SIMTUSTUS:Norecent reports. As a reminder, the lake is now open all year. LITTLE LAVA LAKE:Opento fishing all year. METOLIUS RIVER:Anglers report good fishing during warmer days. Metolius River upstream of Allingham Bridge is closed to fishing until May 23. Metolius River downstream of Allingham Bridge is open all year. Special regulations in effect for this section. NORTH TWIN:Open to fishing all
Trails Continued from 01 Peterson Ridge, Deschutes River, Phil's and Horse Butte and Horse Ridge trails are all in good condition. The Badlands Wilderness Trails are in good condition but only open to hIking and horses; no bikes. Even though theweather feels like spring, people are reminded it is still winter. Weather can changeabruptly, and daylight hours are limited so be prepared whenventuring
year. With the recent warm weather North Twin is accessible, and fishing for rainbow trout should be good. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCODAM: Angling is restricted 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. OCHOCORESERVOIR: Trout fishing has been good. The water level Is high enough that the boat ramp is
usable. PINEHOLLOW RESERVOIR: No recent reports. Ice on the lake will limit access. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Open all year to angling. Two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to anglers 17 and
younger. SUTTLE LAKE:Open to 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.
Find It All Online
bendbulletin.com All at blowout prices! limited uentises I
I
I
716 SW11th St. Redmond 541.923.4732
HNisoN TV.APPLIANCE
Out.
f~is S UHD A Y Flies
the first day, even if you could keep up.
Continued from 01
In Vietnam, Thailand, Kenya and China, there are facto-
I've spent time with Jesse
Riding, the son of fly manufacturerand designer Rainy Riding, who has 850 original fly patterns to her credit. Over the years, the company has worked with factories in several countries to bring their p atterns t o
ries of workers that will produce those flies at a wage that peoplemay never see a trout in their whole lives. It is easy to imagine how such a system could be exp loitive, and maybe it i s ,
m a r k et. W h a t
they've found, Riding says, is that some people are better at
in some factories, in some
countries. A few importers are least-cost providers that
it than others. And the com-
pany has consolidated and invested in the factories and in towns and the individuals who
skimp on materials and cheat Gary Lewis/For The Bulletin
produce their creations. A rainbow trout plucked from a stream in Chilean Patagonia by an So the fly-fisherman drift- angler from North America. Chances are, the fly in the trout's lip ing a golden stone on a current was tied in Thailand. seam on the Lower Deschutes
their workers. How could we know? Coffey's vision is to elevate the conversation, to link
the trout or steelhead fly, in the mind of the angler, to the tier who created it.
Coffey, through the vehicle
River has formed an unlike-
ly partnership with a person the latest wave in coffee is the he or she has never met: the Fair Trade movement. fly-tier who crafted that fly on Coffey has launched a coma vise in a well-lit factory in pany called Fair Flies (www. Vietnam. And together they fairflies.com), and he is float-
JULIA
works for them. And those
We do not want to think that
by our complicity people are hurt while we drink good coffee. Or eat good chocolate. Or catch good rainbows. dance a rainbow or put that fly ing the idea to the industry Because of labor law, wagin the branches of a willow. with a subscription model. es and practices in the United A few months ago, I got a Currently he offers both a States, flies cannot be tied in call from Jeff Coffey, who used Trout Fly s ubscription and large-scalecommercial operato live in Bend and now makes a Salmon and Steelhead Fly tions in our country with any his home in the Portland sub- subscription. hope of profit. Imagine if you urb of Mi lwaukie. With his We want to know, Coffey were given the task of producdistinctive last name, he often explained, that the workers ing 12 to 20 Schroeder's Hopuses the coffee industry as a who produce the product we pers an hour for eight hours model for business ideas, and consume are not exploited. a day for 30 days. You'd quit
of Fair Flies, plans to work
with groups that rescue women from human trafficking, to provide training and a place to live and build dignity into lives in other countries. And the catalyst is a bit of
fur and feather on a hook. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV" and attthor of "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www.GaryLewisoutdoors.com.
Julianne Moore How Lucky Am I?
Around the Table Let the Gumbo Roll
Money Saving too much or too little?
D6
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
rommar ia ar s os ow usiness TV SPOTLIGHT By Luaine Lee
I
Tribune News Service
PASADENA, Calif. — Don't
let the honey-blond hair, heart-
jjj
dertealdressfoolyou.Actress Katheryn Winnick is deadly. A champion in th e m artial
arts, she says the blond hair and heart-shaped face deceived opponents. "I have a really strong back kick," she says, seated in a velveteen chair, her hands folded on her lap. "It was my signature move w hen I w o uld get i nto t h e
ring and compete nationally. I would get into the room with these guys, and I remember my instructor told me long ago, your very first move out of the gate should be your strongest. They're intimidating, and they think I'm a girl. I remember throwing them a
strong, back-piercing kick it's called, right in the gut. And that kind of shocked them."
No one was more shocked t han
W i n n ick w h e n s h e
used the discipline of her back-piercingkick to become an actress.
She began martial arts in her native Canada when she was 7. She earned her first
black belt at 13, and by the time she was 16 she owned her own martial arts studio in To-
ronto. "I was getting a degree in kinesiology and thought I was going to be in the martial
lessons."
movies, I did student films. I've done a lot of stuff I wouldn't dare to watch now, but just to
time to feel comfortable as an actress. "It's in the last six
It has taken Winnick a long
get the experience and just to learn and get comfortable with the sets and lights and people and dialogue. It's a constant struggle. I feel I have so much to learn." she says.
I
shaped face and off-the-shoul-
erything. I did creepy horror
years that I've actually accepted that this is what I love
to do, and I'm not going away. This is my career. Since then, I started changing my team. I'm working with great agents and choosing projects that are
When the role of Lagertha
in the History Channel's "Vi- more of a smarter move than kings," arrived, Winnick says necessarily for the sake of she knew she was meant to working to put food on the taplayit. ble and a roof over your head "When I read the script and — just changing my way of found out that Michael Hirst working on a career vs. a job." is involved in writing every She thinks she inherited her single episode and I would be drive and focus from her fama shield maiden and a warrior ily. "I come from a very loving and a young mother and deal- Ukrainian family. They've aling with the struggles of being ways instilled in me that hard a woman in that time period, I work will pay off. No one's gojust knew I had to do it." She'll ing to give you anything. You Tribune News Service be back in Lagertha's home- can't rely on your looks. You Katheryn Winnick plays a warrior and an earl in the History Chanspun wool and animal skins can't rely on who you know. nel's "Vikings," returning Feb. 19. when the series returns Feb. You need to work hard. With 19. the martial arts discipline of While she was confident in training four hours a day or arts or at least in the fitness in- and kind of open up and fig- the ring, Winnick felt alien on training for c ompetition or dustry," she says. ure out what makes me tick. the set. She remembers act- tournaments, you really have "But when you train at such Because of my martial arts ing as Jennifer Jason Leigh's to have strong perseverance, a high level, especially since history and my experience, I personal trainer on David and you need to have dedicaI'd been training since I was 7 had a hard time connecting or Cronenberg's film, "eXistenZ." tion," she says. years old, it's a different type opening up. So for me it was a "It was the first time I'd ever Winnick says she has wantof training. I grew up in a male personal challenge to take act- walked on a set.... I remember ed to quit a million times. "You field where I wasn't allowed to ing classes." walking on set, and I was mes- second-guess yourself all the show emotions if I got hurt or Winnick, 37, always reveled merized by the sets and how time but when you're connectpunched in the face. And you in personal challenges. She amazing everything was. I ed, and when you have good kind of have to just suck it up was running three martial arts was like a kid in a candy store. material, it feels so good and and do it. So I started teaching studios in Canada, commut- I remember I couldn't afford that high, that being in the martial arts on movie sets be- ing between Toronto and New my first head shot, so I ended zone — you don't always get fore I was an actress. York trying to be an actress. up getting a set photographer it. You get it maybe three times "And I started acting class"I remember at the begin- to shoot me in the field, and in a year if you're lucky — that is es to discover really who I am ning of my career I just did ev- return I gave her martial arts the drive that keeps me going."
Wi e wary torepair roken marriage
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l
Dear Abby:I have been married for 25 years. My husband, "Frank," and I have four children. Over the years our relat ionship became rocky — almost toxic. Frank is an alcoholic, verbally abusive and a manipulator. (I admit I'm no angel, either.) Eight months ago, I had an affair with DEP,R
I'm scared, but a little piece of me wants to see if it's true. I have heard stories about how men can't change, that it will be worse if I
go home and I'll be in a sort of jail and have no freedom. Please help
me. — In Pain fn Illfnois
takes me out to dinner, he always expects sex afterward. I am OK
with it because he's a nice guy. But he never says "thank you" when we're done. Other than his manners, he's great, and I'm happy we're together. Am I being petty and overly sensitive? My first husband never
Dear in Pain: If "a thanked me either or appreciated little piece" of you me, so I guess it's a sore spot. I dated before I was w ants t o r eu n i t e How should I approach this married, a n d we with your husband, without jeopardizing everything got caught. Frank then level with your else? planteda tape recorder in my car, lover. Your marriage might not — Hesitant to Speak Up hacked my phone and read my be able to be repaired. However, Dear Hesitant: Sex is not suptexts on his phone. He threw me if you're willing to try, under- posed to be "payment" because out of the house, my belongings stand it will take hard work on someone picks up a dinner check. placed in black garbage bags. the part of both you and Frank, If that's what is happening with My boyfriend has divorced his AND the help of a m arriage you and your boyfriend, it is bewife, moved hereand has made a counselor — IF Frank can main- ing approached with the wrong
Aggy
life and a future for us. He has sac-
tain his sobriety.
rificed a lot for me, and I feel bad You say you are worried you that I'm thinking about going back will lose your freedom if you go to Frank. I m iss my home and back. It is important you recogfamily. nize that trust takes a long time to Frank begs me to return every be rebuilt, that the attempt at recday. He claims he has stopped onciliation is a gamble and whethdrinking and changed his ways. er yourmarriage can survive the He wants us to go to counseling
and promises to be a better husband if I give him another chance.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR WEDNESDAY,FEB. 11, 2015: This
mess the two of you have made of it isn't assured.
Dear Abby:When my boyfriend
A person is not expected to thank a partner for having sex, unless the sex
w a s u n usually
spectacular. Because you feel otherwise, tell your boyfriend what your needs are — and if he agrees to thank you, return the compliment by thanking HIM. — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
dy (guest star CaseyBurke), wants him to kiss her on Valentine's Day. Elsewhere, Darrin (guest star John Gammon) asks Frankie and Mike (Patricia Heaton, Neil Flynn) for help with a scavenger hunt he's
planning for Sue(Eden Sher), while Axl (Charlie McDermott) doubts his girlfriend's (guest star Gia Mantegna) request that he not give her a Valentine's gift. 8 p.m.on 5,"The Mysteries of Laura" —Laura (Debra Messing) and her team find themselves exploring the raucous drag world of New York as they investigate the murder of a female impersonator in the new episode "The Mystery of the Popped Pugilist." Their preconceptions are turned on their heads when they discover the victim was a member of an underground fight club. On a personal note, Laura's wild night on the town with an old pal (guest star Kelly Rutherford, "Gossip Girl") leads to a surprise encounter. Josh Lucas also stars. 8 p.m. on CW, "Arrow" —Reunited with his friends, Oliver (Stephen Amell) struggles to adjust to the dramatic changes in Team Arrow during his
absence in thenewepisode
"Canaries." While he is used to calling the shots, he is forced to acknowledge that the team dynamics have shifted, leading to some tension in the ranks. When archvillain Vertigo (guest star Peter Stormare) reappears,
Laurel (Katie Cassidy) defies Oliver's orders and hits the streets as the Black Canary.
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 11a.m., 12:15, 2:15,3:45, 6:15, 7:20, 9, 9:40 • AMOST VIOLENT YEAR (R)6:10,9:50 • BLACK OR WHITE(R) 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6, 9:25 • BLACKSEA(R) 12:45, 3:55, 6:40, 10:20 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 3:10, 6:50,10:10 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 11:15a.m., 2:05, 6:25, 9:05 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) 12:50, 3:50 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 3:30, 7:30 • JUPITERASCENDING3-0 (PG-13) 12:30, 9:45 • JUPITERASCENDINGIMAX3-0 (PG-13)3, 10 • THE LOFT(R) 10:35 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:35 a.m., 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:30 • PROJECTALMANAC (PG-13)11:40a.m.,2:25,5,7:45, 10:25 • SEVENTHSON(PG-13) 3:15, 6:30 • SEVENTHSON3-D (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 10:05 • SEVENTHSON IMAX 3-D (PG-13)noon,7 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:30 a.m.,12:05, 2:45, 6:45, 9:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUTOF WATER 3-0 (PG) 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:35 • STRANGEMAGIC(PG) 1, 3:40 • THE WEDDING RINGER(R) 7:50, 10:30 • WILD(R) 11:10a.m., 2:20, 6:20 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •
Sp.m. on2,9, "The Middle" — In the new episode "Valentine's Day Vl," Brick (Atticus Shaffer) gets nervous when he hears through the grapevine that his kooky girlfriend, Cin-
9:01 p.m. on10, "Empire" — A new episode called "Out, Damned Spot" finds Vernon (Malik Yoba) trapped in the middle of a sticky situation, while Jamal's (Jussie Smollett) career ascension may take its toll on some of his relationships. Worse, a mystery woman (guest star Raven-Symone) from the Lyon family's past has re-emerged with a big surprise in store. Taraji P. Henson, Bryshere Gray and Trai Byers also star. Courtney Love and Derek Luke also guest star. O Zep2it
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • BIG HER06 (PG)2:15 • THE GAMBLER (R) 9:30 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) 5:30 • Younger than 2t may attend aiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.
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well. Tonight: All smiles.
YOURHOROSCOPE
year you will be more aware of your proBy Jacqueline Bigar fessional status and community role than in past years. You also will be willing to spendmore money onyourpersonalim- right back in the other person's face. Your
age. Othersaredrawn toyou, sometimes
fuse is short, andyouknowwhen you've
for superficial reasons, which has more to do with them than with you. If you are single, a romantic tie is likely to enter your path this year. Don't worry — you'll know when you Starsshowthnkind have met this Perof day you I have son; there will be ** * * * D ynamic no question in your ** * * p ositive mind. If you are attached, remember ** * Average that a relationship ** So-so is a two-way street. * Difficult You could opt to make a major purchase together, or make a change in your lifestyle. This period will be exciting. SCORPIO can befar too pushy for your taste.
had enough. Before you take action, make sure that it really will serve you. An authority figure could push you hard. Tonight: Say "yes" to an older friend.
matter could emergeand causepressure
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You could see a situation differently from how others see it. Tap into your intuition, and you'll see an opportunity emerge. You'll be fortunate to have the help of a partner when you hit an obstacle. Let this person know how much he or she is appreciated. Tonight: Hang out.
LEO (July 23-Aug.22)
** * Anchor in, and know what you want or expect from a domestic matter. You could be quite tired and drained from recent events. A change in your schedule ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You'll have an opportunity to tap will be most beneficial in allowing you into your creativity. A problem surround- more flexibility. Tonight: Opt for some quiet time at home. ing communication and a day-to-day
to build. Focus your energy on a partnership, and that will ease your anxiety. Tonight: Chat over dinner.
attitude.
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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
** * * Express what is on your mind. Your ingenuity will emerge when dealing with achild or loved one. You seemto revitalize yourself through this interaction. TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * Defer to a partner or friend. You Tune in to your sixth sense and discover its power. A partner could be touchy. Tomight not think that this person undernight: Accept an offer. standswhatyou want,butyou do know that he or she will find the best path to LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) reachingagoal.Youcould bepushing ** * * You might want to restrain yourothers more than you realize. Go for a self from going overboard. You could be walk, if need be. Tonight: Just don't be processing a personal matter that is near alone. and dear to you. An emotional connection GEMINI (May 21-June20) between you and a supportive friend will ** * You might want to throw an offer grab your attention. Use your energy
SCORPIO (oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * You might feel as if you're unstoppable, on a certain level. Others will
be observing your responses todifferent situations. Examine what is happening with a key project. You might think you know, but verify just to be sure. Tonight: Use your imagination well!
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * Maintain a low profile, and be more of an observer and listener in various situations. You might be somewhat combative or difficult toward someone with whom you work closely. Understand how much frustration you seem to be swallowing. Tonight: At home.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * M aintain your focus, and you will succeed in accomplishing exactly what you want. You could feel as if someone is stepping on your turf. There are many ways to handle this issue, so consider whatyou want from this bond before taking action. Tonight: Zero in on what you want.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * Many people feel that you are driven, and in many ways you are. Be careful with spending, as you could be eying an expensive purchase for a loved one. You might decide to go ahead with it anyway, but take note of how this will affect your budget. Tonight: In the moment.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * You are emotional in general, but you also have a strong intuitive side that encourages your creativity. This combination will emerge today, and it will allow you to move through a situation with ease. Tonight: Think "vacation plans." © King Features Syndicate
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • The "Spaghetti Westem" will screen at 630 p.m. (doors open at 6 p m) andincludes anaii youcaneatspaghetti dinner. I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 4, 7:05 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) 4: I5, 6:45 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-I3) 4:20, 6:55 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4,6:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 3:15, 6 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 6:15 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 6:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 3:30, 5:45 • THETHEORY OF EVERYTHING (PG-13)3:45 r)~r
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 3:45, 6:40 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 4:05, 6:50 • PROJECTALMANAC(PG-13) 5:05, 7:30 • SEVENTHSON(PG-13) 7 • SEVENTHSON3-D (PG-13) 4:45 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:50, 7:10 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • AMERICAN SNIPER(Upstairs — R) 6:30 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
Visit Central Oregon's
HunterDouglas See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
See us alsofor: • RetractableAwnings • Exterior SolarScreens • Patio ShadeStructures
s®aCMSSIC COVERINGS 1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com ••
g )
•
ON PAGES 3R4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com To place an ad call 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 246
210
Furniture & Appliances
Gun s , Hunting & Fishing
262
476
476
476
Commercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Glock 34 Gen4, $650; Ruger LC9, $ 3 00; 541-771-3222
Want to Buy or Rent
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Siiver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006
WANTEDwood dressers; dead washers. 541-420-5640
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory 208
Pets & Supplies
r-„-...-„,.-a
Armoire Upright Dresser-
202
I Largest 3-Day I
5-drawer Hon Industries commercial file cabinet, 43" wide, 66" high. Originally $1000; asking $450.
Custom quality, excelGUN & KNIFE lent condition, crafted SHOW walnut & swirly walnut I Februap 13-14-151 burl, 2 upper shelves, 2 Portland Expo cedar-lined drawers plus Center 3 other drawers (2 partiFri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, tioned for socks). Size: Sun.10-4 73"H x 36"W x 16" D. If 541-948-1824 1-5 exit ¹306B new, $5,500; Admission $10 selling for$1275. 263 I 1- 8 00-659-3440 I 541-312-2393 I CollectorsWest.com~ Tools Custom-built futon, opens into queen bed, excellent condition, $200. For Sale: Smith & Wesson 541-390-8237 Piano Technician M&P15-22 with tools & supplies, 4x1 6x44 BSA Cats with rolls of piano Eye scope, Fieldline string, $725. Tactical carrying Call 971-219-9122 case. Excellent conin Redmond dition, was used in National Finals Rodeo for target Ladder 10' stainless fiDrexel competition. Comes berglass $125 + 5 gal. Woodbridge with original sights buckets 971-219-9122 pecan coffee table and 25-round magaand two pecan end 265 zine. $850 obo. tables. End tables 541-410-0841 Building Materials
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Irrigation Equipment FOR SALE Tumalo Irrigation Water $5,000/acre Call 541-419-4440 325
Hay, Grain & Feed
Accounting/Audit H ampton In n & Suites Bend is accepting applications for Night Auditor. The shift available is Thurs., Fri. and Sat. nights, 10 p.m. to 8 a.m. Ex p erience p referred but w i l l train the right person. Please apply in person to 730 SW Columbia St . or e mail resume t o matt.blackburn © hilt on.com."
1st Quality, 2nd cutting grass hay, no rain, Add your web address barn stored, $225/ton. to your ad and readCall 541-549-3831 ers onThe Bulletin's Patterson Ranch, Sisters web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be Premium orchard grass, able to click through barn stored no rain, automatically to your 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. website. avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 or 541-948-7010. Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the Wheat Straw for Sale. classifieds! Ask about our Also, weaner pigs. Super Seller rates! 541-546-6171 541-385-5809
The Bulletin recomLooking for your mends extra caution next employee? when purc h as- have pull-out shelf. Place a Bulletin MADRAS Habitat $300 set. ing products or serWanted: Collector seeks help wanted ad RESTORE 503-317-9668 vices from out of the high quality fishing items today and area. Sending cash, & upscale fly rods. Call Building Supply Resale reach over Quality at 541-678-5753, or checks, or credit in- Fridge 22 cf SxS w/ LOW PRICES 60,000 readers 503-351-2746 formation may be icemaker, white, $200 84 SW K St. each week. subjected to fraud. obo. 541-408-0846 Win. Mdl 12 (1959) 20 541-475-9722 Your classified ad For more informaimmac., 28" full ga. Open to the public. SOM E will also tion about an adver- G ENERATE tiser, you may call EXCITEMENT in your choke, field mdl $750. appear on 267 Win. Mdl 12 (1955) 12 neighborhood! Plan a the O r egon State bendbulletin.com Fuel & Wood Attorney General's garage sale and don't ga. immac., 30" full which currently Office C o n sumer forget to advertise in choke field mdl SOLD! receives over 7mm Rem. mag Protection hotline at classified! 1.5 million page HVA action. improved WHEN BUYING 1-877-877-9392. 541-385-5809. views every M auser 9 8 M o n te FIREWOOD... month at no Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded Carlo stock, Leupold The Bulletin To avoid fraud, Sening Central Oregonslnce 1%8 extra cost. glass doors & mirror 4x scope $600. Win. The Bulletin at back, 3 cupboards mdl 43 - .218B (1952) Bulletin recommends paybelow. Exc. c o nd. Ciaasifieds Adopt a rescued cat or Weaver 2.5X scope ment for Firewood $400. 541-3'I 8-8797 kitten! Altered, vacci$550. Win. Mdl75Get Results! upon delivery nated, ID chip, tested, Refrigerator -white 22 .22 LR (1942) Exc. only Call 541-385-5809 and inspection. more! CRAFT, 65480 cu. ft. Maytag, French cond., Weaver 2.5x • A or place your ad is 128 cu. ft. 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, s cope $750. W i n. 4' cord on-line at door with icemaker x 4' x 8' 1-5. 54 1 -389-8420 and Pre-64 Mdl 70 "feathbendbulletin.com bottom freezer, • Receipts should www.craftcats.org only 2 years old, and erweight" .243, (1955) include name, E xc., Bushnell 3 x has been stored for 341 phone, price and scope, SOLD! 1944 most of that time. kind of wood Horses & Equipment Mauser Mdl 98K-44, Paid $1500,asking purchased. $1000. 541-923-7360. Military rifle w/sling, • Firewood ads good cond., SOLD. MUST include VariX11 scope •; • 8, Comfort Twin Leupold species & cost per Chihuahua mix, tiny, cute! Sleep 3x9, $175. Call Bob, XL adjustable bed cord to better serve 541-419-5126. 1st shots, dewormed, with vibrator, with or our customers. $250. 541-771-0956 without mattress & 255 foundation, clean, Chihuahua Toy pups, 3-horse Silverado The Bulle6n 2001 Computers ServlnyCeneal Oregon slnceSta cute 9 wks, 2 shots, needs new air pump. • 29'x8' 5th wheel $400 cash $150. 541-977-7766 trailer. Deluxe showT HE B ULLETIN r e 541482-7072 or man/semi living Donate deposit bottles/ quires computer adTURN THE PAGE 541-410-5165 quarters, lots of excans to local all vol., vertisers with multiple For More Ads tras. Beautiful condinon-profit rescue, for ad schedules or those tion. $21,900. OBO The Bulletin feral cat spay/neuter. The Bulletin selling multiple sys541-420-3277 T railer a t Jak e ' s recommends extra tems/ software, to disD iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; I c autio n e pu close the name of the Allyear Dependable Circle Y mens saddle Petco in R edmond; chasing products or • business or the term Firewood: Seasoned; leather saddle bags, donate M-F at Smith services from out of I "dealer" in their ads. Lodgepole, split, del, all related tack, $500. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, the area. Sending tI Private party advertis- B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 541-385-6021 Bend; or CRAFT in cash, checks, or or 2 cords for $365. ers are defined as Tumalo. Can pick up I credit i n f ormation those who sell one Multi-cord discounts! Check out the large amts, 389-8420. may be subjected to 541-420-3484. classifieds online computer. www.craftcats.org I FRAUD. For more www.bendbaftetin.com 269 257 information about an g Updated daily Gardening Supplies advertiser, you may I Musical Instruments 358 I c all t h e Oregon / & Equipment State Attor ney ' Farmers Column
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Banking
) first communit 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. CARPENTER Wanted Experienced in residential work, La Pine / Sunriver area. Fax resume to: 541-536-1815:
Construction Superintendent
Looking for a great opportunity to join a well-established regional residential home builder in the Bend/ Redmond area? Do you have experience overseeing all aspects of residential construction? If you answered yes to these questions, we want to talk to youl For more information about this opportunity and application instructions, please see our Craigslist-Bend job ad ¹4877715482.
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Consumer Protec- • French Bulldog AKC pup- tion h o t line at I pies, great Valentine's I 1-877-877-9392. gift! $2000. 541-279-3588 chrisandcyndi I yahoo.com t TheBulletin t Se~vmg Central Oregonsrnce 1903 German Shepherds www.sherman-ranch.us 212
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$1900+. 541-281-6829
Antiques & Collectibles
Old Gas Pumps/Soda Vending Machines WANTED! Will pay cash. Kyle, 541-504-1050 HAVANESE PUPS, AKC non-shedding, The Bulletin reserves hypo-allergenic, great the right to publish all family pets, UTD shots/ ads from The Bulletin wormer. $850. newspaper onto The 541-460-1277 Bulletin Internet webKoi pond, 1200 gallons, site. 10' x 5' x 4' deep. Liner, Bulletin 2 filters, 2 UV l ights, The ump & fish food. $400. Serving Central Oregonsince SN ics avail. 541-515-4799 241 Bicycles & A KC LA B 3 bla c k Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, Lost: male English Bullmales, 8 wks, dew Accessories dog Feb. 1. Much loved, 1977, excellent cond, claws, shots, wormed. only played senior year in 1-yr old, has black collar $500. 541-410-3635 skulls. NE Bend off college, $1000 obo.AND with Deschutes Mkt Rd. Labrador pups,black, Reward! 541-848-1448 born 1/17, $400/ea. $200 dep. ready in 4 weeks. 1 Chocolate N EW Illlarin A r AKC male left, $800. REMEIIIIBER:If you 541-408-8880 genta Nev er ridhave lost an animal, den 2010 m o del King Trombone,1941 Malemute/Husky pups, Shimano 105 thrudon't forget to check HN White, 7-1/2" bell, blue eyes 3 females, o ut. 6 0 6 1 al u m . $500, obo. 541-388-2045 The Humane Society 5 males. Can send triple- butted Hydro Bend or 541-280-1912 eves photos. $500 & u p. Edge Road main 541-382-3537 541-977-6150. frame with carbon Redmond 260 s eat-stay and E 4 • 541-923-0882 POODLE or POMAPOO Ililisc. Items anti-flex chain-stay. Madras puppies, toy. Adorable! Fits 5'8"- 6'1" $750 541-475-6889 541-475-3889 Btryfng Dlamonds ($825 if you want PD Prineville /Gold for Cash 5 700 B l ac k S h i Queensland Heelers 541-447-7178 Saxon's Fine Jewelers mano 105 pedals) Standard & Mini, $150 or Craft Cats 541-389-6655 541-480-2483 & up. 541-280-1537 541-389-8420. www.rightwayranch.wor BUYING 286 dpress.com 242 Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. Sales Northeast Bend Shih-Tzu Dogs 3-yr old Exercise Equipment 541-408-2191. Male $400, Female Puppy ready Feb 10 Pilates machine w/re- BUYING & S ELLING bounder, 2 D V D s,All gold jewelry, silver ** FREE ** $500. 541-589-4948 Sale Klt blossomhut©gmail.com $150. 541-504-5982 and gold coins, bars, Garage an ad in The rounc/s, wedding sets, Place Sibenan Husky-Wolf 246 Bulletin for your gaclass rings, sterling sil- rage sale and pups! 2 adorable females, reGuns, Hunting ver, coin collect, vin$400 each. 541-977-7019 & Fishing tage watches, dental ceive a Garage Sale Wheaten Terrier, puregofd. Bill Fl e ming, Kit FREE! bred, soft no-shed coat, Bend local pays CASH!! 541-382-9419. KIT INCLUDES: tail docked, dewclaws, for firearms & ammo. • 4 Garage Sale Signs shots. 12-wk f emale, Wanted- paying cash 541-526-0617 • $2.00 Off Coupon To crate & d o ggy door for Hi-fi audio & stuUse Toward Your CASH!! trained. Family pet only! dio equip. Mclntosh, Next Ad For Guns, Ammo & $875.541 -447-8970 JBL, Marantz, Dy• 10 Tips For "Garage Reloading Supplies. naco, Heathkit, SanSale Success!" 210 541-408-6900. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Furniture 8 Appliances C olt 4 5 m o d e l 8 0 Call 541-261-1808 Commander, t otally PICK UP YOUR 261 GARAGE SALE KIT at customized, A c curA1 Washers&Dryers rails tritium s ights, • Medical Equipment 1777 SW Chandler $150 ea. Full warAve., Bend, OR 97702 Parkerized fr a m e, ranty. Free Del. Also much more. In box fire Pride Go-Go Ultra X wanted, used W/D's The Bulletin twice, mint, $ 1000. 3-wheeled scooter, like 541-280-7355 serviny Ccnrrai Oregon since re03 503-888-2101 new, $425. 541-318-0567 7
Bend Park &i
Reereation 10X20 Storage Buildings for protecting hay, Is Accepting firewood, livestock etc. PROMPT DELIVERY Applications For: $1616 Installed. 542-389-9663 (other sizes available) • Administrative 1981 Yamaha 541-617-1133. Analyst/Recreation Console Piano CCB ¹173684 • Lifeguard For newspaper with bench, kfjbuilders@ykwc.net • Swim Instructor delivery, call the 1 owner, rich tone, • Night Custodian Circulation Dept. at Good classified adstell excellent condition, Recreation 541-385-5800 currently tuned the essential facts in an • Outdoor Supervisor To place an ad, call by Jana. interesting Manner. Write • Therapeutic 541-385-5809 from the readers view -not Recreation Specialist or email $1200obo. the seller's. Convert the • Fitness Instructor classified@bendbulletin.com 541-389-1966 facts into benefits. Show For completejob the reader howthe item will ServlnyCeneal Oregon slnceSta Drum Kits:Specializing announcements help them insomeway. in High Quahty New & or to apply go to This PromptDelivery Used Drum Sets! bendparksandrec.org advertising tip Rock, Sand & Gravel Kevin, 541-420-2323 brought to you by Multiple Colors, Sizes The Drum Shop Equal Opportunity Instant Landscaping Co. Employer The Bulletin ServingCent al Owgandnce ISB 541-389-9663 Maintenance 270 Whispering Lost & Found
BarkTurfsoil.com
The Bulle6n
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Mental Health The Bulletin Associate Community Councaution when purseling Solutions has chasing products or t an opening for a services from out of 528 part-time, weekend I the area. Sending Qualified Me n t al c ash, checks, o r Loans & Mortgages Health A s s ociate I credit i n f ormation (QMHA) at our Juni- • may be subjected to WARNING per Ridge A cute I FRAUD. The Bulletin recomCare Center located For more informa- t mends you use cauin John Day, OR. tion about an adver- • tion when you proS tarting wage i s I tiser, you may call vide personal $11.15-$16.73/hour the Oregon State information to compaDOE. For more in- I Attorney General's nies offering loans or formation g o to Office C o n sumer g credit, especially www.worksourceoProtection hotline at I those asking for adregon.org, Job List- I 1-877-877-9392. vance loan fees or ing ID ¹ 1 3 14562. companies from out of Download an appli- LTh Bullet state. If you have cation at www.comconcerns or quesmunitycounselingtions, we suggest you solutions.org or Looking for your next consult your attorney contact Human Reemployee? or call CONSUMER sources at Place a Bulletin help HOTLINE, (541)676-9161. Powanted ad today and 1-877-877-9392. sition is open until reach over 60,000 BANK TURNED YOU filled. EOE. readers each week. DOWN? Private party Your classified ad will loan on real eswill also appear on tate equity. Credit, no bendbulletin.com problem, good equity which currently is all you need. Call What are you receives over 1.5 Oregon Land Mortmillion page views looking for? gage 541-388-4200. every month at You'll find it in no extra cost. LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trust deeds & Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classifieds note, some hard money Get Results! loans. Call Pat Kellev Call 385-5809 541-382-3099 ext.13. or place 541-385-5809 your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
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Mill Workers EXPERIENCED FINGERJOINT AND LAMINATION PRODUCTION
We are seeking experienced Operators, Feeders, Graders and Stackers in our Fingerjoint and Lamination plants. If you have a g o o d w ork history and attendance record, please come and apply with us. Starting pay is commensurate with experience $10.50 to $15.00 or more. Medical, dental, vision, and life insurance, after 60 days. Vacation after 6 months. Profit sharing also. We are a family owned wood remanufacturer in business for over 50 years. Learn more aboutour company and the products we make at www.brightwood.com. Please apply in person at our main office located in the Madras Industrial Park.
Bright Wood Corp. 335 NW Hess St. Madras, OR97741 Must pass pre-employment drug screen. Tax
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Tax Senior Professional
.00 AptiMultiplex Generalj CHECKYOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that
corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily Month-to-month lease, check it out! Call 541-233-9914 Apt JMultiplex NE Bend j
Call for Specials! Established in 1952, Les Schwab isn't your Limited numbers avail. regular tire store. We are a growing company 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. with a strong reputation of excellent customer W/D hookups, patios service and over 450 stores and 7,000 or decks. employees in the western United States. We MOUNTAIN GLEN, a re currently s eeking a Se n io r T a x 541-383-9313 Professional in our headquarters in Bend, Professionally Oregon. T h i s i s a s e nior level position managed by Norris & reporting to the Director of Tax and working Stevens, Inc. extensively with outside service providers.
The primary responsibilities of this role RV Parking include the following: • Manage the tax reporting and tax compliance Complete RV hook-up function for multiple corporations and partnernear trails & shops in ships Bend. Winter rates! • Develop and implement corporate tax Call 541-408-0846 for strategy more info. • Prepare the tax provision for audited Advertise your car! financial statements Add A Picture! • Prepare quarterly estimated taxes Reach thousands of readers! • Research complex tax matters Call 541-385-5809 • Respond to IRS and state/local tax audits The Sulletin Classiffeds
To be successfulin this role, the Senior Tax Professional must havethe following: Btdl R@R(jRs • Bachelor's Degree and CPA ~o • At least 5-7 years of experience in public or private accounting • Strong income tax compliance and consulting experience, primarily in the corporate area with some partnership tax experience • Understanding of multistate tax planning and 0 O Winds compliance, especially in the western United Retirement States 732 is seeking a full-time and a par t -time • Strong verbal and written communication Commercial/Investment skills maintenance tech. Properties for Sale • Extensive experience with Microsoft Excel W ages starts a t • Experience with ERP implementation would $ 11.50/hr. Mus t be beneficial have some basic HIGH PROFILE electrical, plumbing, 421 LOCATION IN Les Schwab offers a competitive salary and a carpentry and DOWNTOWN Schools & Training full comprehensive benefit package including painting experience. REDMOND health, life, d e ntal, v i sion, e x ceptional Apply in person at This commercial HTR Truck School retirement plan, paid vacation and holidays. 2920 NE C onners building offers exREDMOND CAMPUS Please go to www.lesschwab.com to apply. Bend., Ave., cellent exposure Our Grads Get Jobs! No phone calls please. Pre-employment along desirable NW 1-888-438-2235 drug test required. 6th Street. WWW.11TR.EDIj Les Schwab is proud to be an Currently housing equal opportunity employer. The Redmond Maintenance Spokesman newspaper offices, the General 2,748 sq. ft. space is The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturperfect for day night shift and other shifts as needed. We owner/user. Two currently have openings all nights of the week. private offices and Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts generous open start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and spaces. Three end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoMaintenance Supervisor parking places in sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. back+ street parkpay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a Responsible fo r a l l Pr o duction C enter Starting ing. $259,000. minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts (Retread Plant) machinery and equipment, short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of maintenance a n d rep a ir . Su p ervises are Call Graham Dent loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackmaintenance and storeroom staff and works 541-383-2444 ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup with management to troubleshoot and resolve COMPASS other tasks. For qualifying employees we issues, including nights and w eekends. and Commercial offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, Requires High School Diploma or GED along & long-term disability, 401(k), paid with two y ears' experience in g eneral short-term vacation and sick time. Drug test is required maintenance and the ability to recognize Multiplexes for Sale j electrical, p l u mbing a n d mec h anical prior to employment. malfunctions or equipment failures. Formal Please submit a completed application attenWest side 10 units training in related field is a plus. Requires Kevin Eldred. Applications are available near old Mill, owner experience managing crew a n d s t rong tion at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chancarry for qualified maintenance background. dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be principals only. obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Broker, 541-480-9947 Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Eldred via email (keldredObendbulletin.com). customer service and over 400 stores in the No phone calls please. Only completed appli771 western United States. We offer competitive cations will be considered for this position. No Lots pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash resumes will be accepted. Drug test is rebonus.Please go to www.lesschwab.com to quired prior to employment. EOE. Awbrey Butte .48 acre apply. No phone calls please. lot withCascade Mtn. The Bulletin views, 3275 NW HoriLes Schwab is proud to be an Serving CentralOregon since 19IB zon Dr. $289,900. equal opportunity employer. Call 714-510-7388
00
II Lt¹1¹N
E2 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541 a385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • ..5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • ••. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N oon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • . 5:00pm Fri. Placea photoin your private party ad for only $15.00par week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER'500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
lcall for commercial line ad rates)
*illiust state prices in ad
882
908
933
935
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
a
Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound,A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. $18,900.More pics available.541-923-6408 Laredo 2006 31'
Fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8
A ero
Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at
Ford 2004 F-250 XLT 4x4 Extended Cab 94K miles, excellent
cond, many extras. $10,900.
Subaru Forester 1998 170k miles., red, two sets tires, daughter moved to Sweden needs $. Clean, no pets. Dependable car. $4200. 541-647-0657
Toyota Highlander
Call 541-233-3281
916
Trucks & Heavy Equipment Super cab 1995, 4.9L V6 Vin¹A90118
$8,977
m1
ROBBERSON I I N0 c LI ~
2008 Sport, 3rd row, and lots more! Vin¹024803 $19,977 ROBBERSON ~
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541-312-3986
Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5
maas a
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price
good thru
02/28/2015
975
Automobiles BMyy 330c2003
925
Utility Trailers
Ford F350 2002
Price Reduced!
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 bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
MX
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. 775
870
880
881
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
List your Home JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available. 541-548-5511
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-815-2523
Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 m iles. Wintered in h eated shop. $79,995 obo. 541-447-8664
2007 Jayco Jay Flight 29 FBS with slide out & awning - Turn-key ready to use, less than 50 total days used by current owner. Never smoked in, no indoor pets, excellent cond., very clean. Lots of bonus features; many have never been used. Asking $16,500. C a l l Lisa, 541-420-0794 for more info / more photos.
850
Snowmobiles 2000 Yamaha 700 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Polaris Fusion 9 00, only 788 mi., new mirrors, covers, custom skis, n e w rid e -on 2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat r ide-off t r ailer w i t h 2275 GL, 150llp spare, + much more. Honda VTEC, less $ 6,995. Call for d e tails. 541-420-6215 than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition,$23,500 503-646-1804 4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer Bayliner 185 2006 w/ RockyMountain pkg, open bow. 2nd owner $8500. 541-379-3530 — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 860 — Radio & Tower. Motorcycles & Accessories Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345. 880
Motorhomes
Harley Davidson 883 Sportster
1998, 20,200 miles, exc. cond.,
Will haul small SLIV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077
HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp,
workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEI/I/ TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008
.Rh
Harley Davidson 2001 FXSTD, twin
cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shotexhaust, StageI with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684
Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome
-~ ~ ,
•
,
-
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REDUCED! 2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking$54K. Pll. 541-447-9268
-'- • • itga
$3,500.
JAYCO 1993 27' 50k miles, excellent condition. $9300 obo. 541-573-7131 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
541-548-2872.
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 24' Mercedes Benz Redmond: Prism, 2015 Model G, 541-548-5254 Mercedes Diesel engine, 18+ mpg, auto trans, fully loaded with Want to impress the double-expando, and only 5200 miles. relatives? Remodel Harley Dyna Wide Glide Perfect condition your home with the 2003 custom paint, only$92K. help of a professional extras, 13,000 orig Call 541-526-1201 from The Bulletin's miles, like new, health or see at: "Call A Service forces sale. Sacrifice 3404 Dogwood Ave., in Redmond. $10,000 obo. Professional" Directory 541-633-7856.
Harle Fat Bo 2002
Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with aw-
RV PACKAGE-2006 Monaco Monarch, 31 ', 14k orig. miles.. ExFord V10, 28,900 rniles, cellent cond. Vance & auto-level, 2 slides, Hines exhaust, 5 queen bed & hide-a-bed spoke HD rims, wind sofa, 4k gen, conv mivest, 12" rise handle crowave, 2 TV's, tow bars, detachable lug- nings, rear c amera, package,$66,000. gage rack w/ back trai(er hitch, driyer door OPTION - 2003 Jeep rest, hwy pegs & many w/power window, cruise, Wranglertow car, 84K chrome accents. Must exhaust brake, central miles, hard & soft top, 5 see to appreciate! vac, satellite sys. Asking speed manual,$1 1,000 $10,500. In CRRarea $67,500. 503-781-8812 541-815-6319 call 530-957-1865
HD Fat Bo 1996
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Cond. Many Extras Low Miles. $15,000 541-548-4807
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $21,995.
541-383-3503
Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago 31J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers! 541-388-7179
Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR. 541-604-5993
Open Road 36' 2005 model is like new w/3 slides!! King bed, hide-a-bed, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $19,500 541-419-0566 Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale RV
CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
885
Canopies & Campers 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!
CargoMate tr a i ler 8'x12' with large rear door and extra side door, additional hauling rack on top, very good condition. $3800. Call Stan ffto see 541-420-1916 F latbed t r ailer
w ith ramps, 7000 lb. capacity, 26' long, 8'6" wide, ideal for hauling hay, materials, cars, exc. cond. $2800. 541-420-3788
h
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-
ways garaged, all
Ford F250 XLT
541-447-5184.
M.F. 230 DIESEL CASE 200 GAS FORD 2N GAS BEND 541-382-8038
975
Auto m obiles
7.3 Powerstroke 4x4 ¹A90623. $12,977 ROBBERSON ~maaaa
o. ~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 2/28/1 5
GMC 1974 ugly but reliable! 95% tread on siped tires. $695.
Convertible, seasonal special Vin¹U96242
$7,977 ROBBERSON o llcoLN ~
mmm a
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/15
People Lookfor Information About Products and Services EveryDaythrough The Bulletin ClassiBeds
932
541-480-0527
Antique & Classic Autos
Buick LeSabre 2005 super clean, senior owned, always garaged. 74,000 miles.
935
360-774-2747
Sport Utility Vehicles
No text messages!
$7,000.
maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
Looking for your next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbuiietin.com Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
I The Bulletin recoml
extra caution l I mends when p u rchasing I I products or servicesI from out of the area. I S ending c ash ,I or credit in- g I checks, formation may be I
I subject toFRAUD. For more informaI tion about an advertiser, you may call
I
I the Oregon State l
General's l I Attorney Office C o nsumer I I Protection hotline atI 1-877-877-9392.
im-BW.r I serrrhgcemal oregoll slllm tgls
1950 Mercury 4-dr Sedan Ground-up restoration, beautiful! Call for details. $35,500 or best offer.
541-892-3789
BMW X3 35i 2010
Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500.
Dodge Neon Sport, 2-dr 1995, 2.0L 4-cyl DOHC, 5-spd, AC, 91,500 mi,exc mpg. Cash only, $1800. Clean title. 541-480-7671
Focus SEL2012
MI Rljioo!SN
OOQ 1000
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE Bank of The Cascades, an Oregon state-chartered $12,977 541-915-9170 commercial b ank, A Private Collection ROBBERSON Plaintiff/s, v. Sunri1956 Ford pickup ver Vacations Recammm 1932 DeSoto 2dr Ford Esc~a2005 ~ ~ reation Association, 1930 Ford A Coupe L.L.C., an Oregon 541-312-3986 1929 Ford A Coupe Dlr ¹0205. Price limited liability com1923 Ford T Run. good thru 02/28/1 5 p any, L a rry W . All good to excellent. Browning, an indiInside heated shop vidual, Resort ReBEND 541-382-8038 a lty, Inc., an O r HondaAccord 2005 4x4 ready for egon c o rporation, adventure! ¹D11893. Richard S. Hadley, Bargain Corral an indiv i dual, / priced © $5,977 Mountain R e s ort Gem Top Outfltter Properties, Inc., an ROBBERSON Heartland P r owler Canopy for 8' bed Oregon corporation, I I N0 c LI ~ maas a 2012, 29PRKS, 33', truck(presently on 97 Mark G. Halvorsen, Gorgeousand like new, 2 slides-liv- Dodgej. Double doors an individual, Vil541-312-3986 Priced to se/i! 1965 Mustang i ng area & la r ge in rear. Lined inside. lage Properties LLC, Vin ¹¹018626 Dlr ¹0205 Price Hard top, closet. Large enough Opening window on an Oregon limited 11.977 6-cylinder, auto trans, good thru 02/28/1 5 to live in, but easy to one side; sliding liability c o mpany, power brakes, power tow! 15' power awwindow on the other. ROBBERSON Edward R. Willard steering, garaged, ning, power hitch & Boat rack on top. an individual, SunGMC 2004 Yukon o llcDLN ~ maass well maintained, stabilizers, full s i ze $650obo. ray Vacation Rent4x4, silver, 5.3L, 120K engine runs strong. queen bed, l a r ge in Redmond, OR als, Inc., an Oregon miles, mud & snow tires, 74K mi., qreat condi541-312-3986 shower, porcelain sink Call 541-548-7154 corporation, Defen1 owner, well maintained, tion.$12,500. Dlr ¹0205. Price & toilet. dant/s. Case No.: $7850. Must see! good thru 02/28/1 5 $26,500. 541-999-2571 Lance Camper 1995, 14CV0577FC. NO541-389-3316 541-598-7940 T ICE O F SA L E 10.9, on e o w n er, UNDER WRIT OF electric jacks, awning, Mountaineer 2004 EXECUTION Fantastic fan, winter REAL PROPERTY. Tjlil~ package, Honda 1000 Notice is h e reby enerator, exc. shape given that the Des7500. 541-410-9851 c hutes Coun t y Keystone Laredo 31' Sheriff's Office will, Mercedes 380SL 1982 on Wed n esday, RV 2006 w ith 1 2 ' o 1995. auto., 4 cyl 4x4, lots of room! Roadster, black on black, slide-out. Sleeps 6, February 25, 2015 2.2L, dark blue Vin¹J21627. soft & hard top, excellent at 10:00 AM, in the queen walk-around Vin061167 condition, always gaOnly $7,977 bed w/storage undermain lobby of the raged. 1 55 K m i l es, $5,977 neath. Tub & shower. Deschutes County $11,500. 541-549-6407 2 swivel rockers. TV. S heriff's Of fi c e , ROBBERSON ROBBERSON Air cond. Gas stove & 63333 W. Highway I I N0 c LI ~ maas a ammm refrigerator/freezer. ~ ~ 20, Bend, Oregon, Microwave. Awning. sell, at public oral 541-312-3986 541-312-3986 Outside sho w er. auction to the highDlr ¹0205. Price 908 Dlr ¹0205. Price Slide-through s t orest bidder, for cash good thru 2/28/1 5 good thru 02/28/15 Aircraft, Parts a ge. E a s y Lif t . or cashier's check, $29,000 new; Ask& Service the real p roperty V W CONV. 1 9 78 ing $13,600 commonly known as $8999 -1600cc, fuel 541-447-4805 18135 Cottonwood injected, classic 1978 Road, Sunriver, OrVolkswagen Convertegon 97707. Condiible. Cobalt blue with RV a black convertible tions of Sale: Poagrer ' tential bidders must CONSIGNMENTS top, cream colored WANTED interior & black dash. arrive 15 minutes Call 54 I -385-5809 This little beauty runs prior to the auction We Do The Work ... 1/3 interestin to r o m ot e o u r service and looks great and You Keep The Cash! to allow the DesColumbia 400, turns heads wherever On-site credit c hutes Coun t y Financing available. it goes. Mi: 131,902. approval team, Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care S heriff's Office t o $125,000 Phone 541-504-8399 review bid d er's web site presence. (located @ Bend) We Take Trade-Ins! NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land- funds. Only L I.S. 541-288-3333 an d / or law requires anyone scape Contractors Law c urrency 933 BIG COUNTRY RV who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all cashier's c h e cks Pickups Bend: 541-330-2495 construction work to businesses that ad- made payable to Redmond: be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Deschutes County 541-548-5254 Construction ContracLandscape Construc- Sheriff's Office will Chev Silverado tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: be accepted. Payactive license l anting, deck s , ment must be made 882 means the contractor ences, arbors, in full immediately Fifth Wheels 1/3 interest in wellis bonded & insured. water-features, and in- upon the close of equipped IFR Beech BoVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir- the sale. For more nanza A36, new 10-550/ CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be information on this www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the sale go to: www.orprop, located KBDN. 2005 crew cab great $65,000. 541-419-9510 contractor.com Landscape Contrac- egonsheriff s.com/sa looking! Vin¹972932 www.N4972M.com or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit les.htm $19,977 The Bulletin recom- number is to be inmends checking with cluded in all adverLEGAL NOTICE ROBBERSON ~ Alpenlite 28 ft. the CCB prior to con- tisements which indi- CitiMortgage, Inc., its ammm tracting with anyone. cate the business has 1987,New stove, successors in interest ~ ~ fridge. Good furSome other t rades a bond,insurance and and/or assigns, Plain541-312-3986 also req u ire addi- workers compensa- tiff/s, v. Carl Howe nace, AC. Stereo, Dlr ¹0205. Price tional licenses and tion for their employ- aka Carl Taylor Howe; DVD player. Queen good thru 02/28/15 certifications. ees. For your protec- John N. Howe; Jodi A. bed WITH bedding. Fl this beautiful 182 tion call 503-378-5909 H owe; Stacie A n n 20 ft. awning. One owner last 25 or use our website: Stonehocker; Rachel Good shape. $4500 years, always hanDebris Removal www.lcbistate.or.us to K. Busch; CitiBank, 541-977-5587 CALL Cb gared, rigorously check license status N.A., successor in inTODAYW maintained, no damJUNK BE GONE before contracting with terest t o C i t yBank Chevy Pickup 1978, age history. the business. Persons South Dakota, N.A., long bed, 4x4, frame I Haul Away FREE Sensibly priced at Get your doing land scape For Salvage. Also D efendant/s. C a se up restoration. 500 maintenance do not $44,500. business No.: 13CV0575. NOCadillac eng i ne, Cleanups & Cleanouts require an LCB Call Don Wilfong for Mel, 541-389-8107 TICE OF SALE UNfresh R4 transmismore information cense. DER WRIT OF EXsion w/overdrive, low 541-389-1456 or c :ROWIN G ECUTION - REAL mi., no rust, custom wilfong.d@gmail.com Handyman PROPERTY. Notice is interior and carpet, hereby given that the with an ad in n ew wheels a n d I DO THAT! Get on thefist now for HANGAR FOR SALE. Deschutes C o u nty tires, You must see The Bulletin's Home/Rental repairs 30x40 end unit T Weekly Serviceand Sheriff's Office will, on it! $25,000 invested. Small "Call A Service jobs to remodels hanger in Prineville. Spring Clean-ups! T hursday, April 3 0, OBO. Dry walled, insulated, $12,000 Honest, guaranteed Free estimates! 2015 at 10:00 AM, in Professional" 541-536-3889 or work. CCB¹151573 COLLINS Lawn Maint. and painted. $23,500 the main lobby of the 541-420-6215. Directory Dennis 541-317-9768 Ca// 541-480-9714 Tom, 541.788.5546 Deschutes C o unty •
•
ALMOST PERFECT! Vin ¹151095
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEB 11, 2015
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TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, FEB 11, 2015
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLABBIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'shortz
C L U B w ednesday, Febm~y 11,2015
Perfect defense
When this puzzle is done, the circled let-ters, reading frorn top to bottom, will spell something that belongs in the center square.
By FRANK STEWART
ACROSS 1 Blubber 4 Smartphone relative, for short 7 Allergysufferer's concern 13Maze runner? 15Item used by 13-Across to navigate the 22-Across 16Visibly upset ... or happy 17Slangy word of I'eN'et 18Pink-colored, to Pedro 19Org. for seniors 21Late TV newsman Garrick 22 Home of the [circled letters] 25-like 28 Registered workers? 29 Poli-
Tribune Content Agency
I c ontinue a s e r ies o n s u i t preference signals. The idea: When neither "attitude" nor "count" can be a r easonable i n t erpretation o f partner's signal, a strikingly high or low card may call attention to a highranking or low-ranking suit. Today's East-West were a worldc lass pair. N o rth's d ouble w a s questionable and induced South to sacrifice against West's four hearts. South had only four top losers, but the defense was perfect. When West led the king of hearts, East followed with a sit-up-and-take-notice queen. West understood: East was begging for a shift t o t h e h i gher-ranking remaining side suit. So West led the ace of diamonds and next the three, his lowest diamond, to show interest in clubs. ACE OF CLUBS
raises to three diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: Your partner has about 10 points with at l east four-card diamond support.You may have a slam if he has prime values and good trumps. Bid four clubs to paint a picture of your shape. If partner has a f itting hand such as Q 6 5 3 , 4 , K Q 9 4 2 , K 8 5, h e w i l l b i d aggressively. West dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4 AK 6 3
9 J82 0 K J9 2 4106 WEST 41 4 9 A K 763 0 A6 5 3
EAST 45 J92
9 Q1094 08
East ruffed and returned a club to 4 A Q 7 4J943 2 t he queen. H e r u ffed t h e n e x t diamond, led a club to West's ace and SOUTH ruffed the fourth diamond for down 4Q 1 08 7 5 four. 95 East-West could have taken 12 0 Q1074 tricks at four hearts for plus 680, but 4K85 scoring plus 1,100 on defense was rather better. West Nor t h East South 19 Dbl 3g 34 DAILY QUESTION 49 Pass Pass 44 Dbl AII P a ss Youhold: 43 4 9 A K 7 6 3 0 A65 3 4 A Q 7. Y o u o penone Opening lead — 9 K heart, your partner responds one spade, you bid two diamonds and he (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
BOT T L E OH I O A N ONT OUR POS TDO HE L ATB A R BAR N A I PA D M TE N N S DA8 GEN I US REA LTO ARM TR P I E ET HES DA
P A G E D
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22 27
32
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35
34
6
38
37
Vegas 4 Soup veggie 5 Resistant to wear and tear 6 Analyzed 7 Sports dept. 8 "Give me a 9Tell it to the judge 10 Dante's "Inferno" 11Constructed 12Old TV's "Queen for 14Circus balancer 17 Like some punk rockers' hair 20 Basics of education, colloquially 23 End of Arthur Miller's "The Crucible," e.g. 24 Intel org. 25 Where (a happening place) 26Weaponused to slay the [circled letters] 27 Catches word of 29 Earthquake 30 Home of the [circled letters] 31Key 33 IJ.K. record label 35 San
8
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63Ayoid,as the [circled letters] 64 Daughter of 48-Across who helped 13-Across
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AM ME Y0 C W L0 AL P RDO I NT CAL EVE YA R F 0D 0N TA
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65 Plan so that maybe one can 66 White House advisory grp. 67 Motor oil choice
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
Seeking 8 friendly duplicate bridge? Findfive gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
32 Like some breaking news, nowadays 34Goeson and on 37"Me, too" 38 Sharon of Israel 39Announcement at an airport 42Worker with a beret, maybe 44 QB's goals 45 First-timer 47 Began a relationship 4SRuler of 30-Down 51 Spatter catcher 545:2, e.g. 55 "My bad!" 59 Front(some washing
1
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39
40
44
45 48
51
52
41
42
43
46
47 50
49
53
54
56
60
59
62
61
63
64
65
66
67
PUZZLE BYGREG JOHNSON
36 Hosp. scan
5688, e.g., familiarly
43 Some salon workers 46 Iraq war subj. 48 Big name in the film industry 41 They stick together in the 49 Bumbling playroom 50 Japanese noodles 42 Third-largest French-speaking 51 Quaffs in pints city in the world 52 Sit (for) hint: it's in Ivory oast] 53 Campaign
40 Many a girl's middle name
57Give up, at least for now 58Ooze 60
Spe edwagon
62 Constantly twirling a lock of hair, e.g.
For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX Io 388 Io download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nylimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nylimes.com/leaming/xwords.
DENNIS THE MENACE
SUDOKU
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LOS ANGELESTIMES CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis
SAFE HAVENS
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ACROSS 1 Audio problem 4 Finish paying a bill, perhaps Glass
4 Big name in chips
15 Ethically
indifferent
5 Texter's "Unbelievable!"
16 Adidas rival 17 *Motown
6 Icky stuff
Records founder
©2015 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved
E-mail:bholbrook1@gmailCom
httP://Www.safehaVen300miC.Com
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21 Oceanic reflux 23 Jessica of "Dark Angel" 24 *Cubs
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43 Send to the
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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
to fOrm fOur Ordinary WOrdS.
52 *"That'll Be the
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(AnsWers tamOrrOW) I Jumbl98: RELIC E V O K E FACA DE RIT U A L I AnSwer: If you thaught the Center of the Earth w8888 hot 68 the surface of the sun, you'd be - "CORE-EC7'
locale: Abbr. 59 "It's finally clear to me" 60 Accustom 61 Sushi Option 62 *Longtime "60 Minutes" closer 66 Follow, or follower 67 LiSten to, aS a PodCBSt
68 Bearded beast 69 Suburban street liners 70 Physical jerks 71 Blather
4
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6
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9
10
17
18
A C E B O O K
L O S S E S
I R O M I T N A P A O H M D R O P N I N E A S E R 02/11/15
11
12
13
35
36
37
57
58
19
20
21
23
24
31
29 33
39
34 40
41
42
45
44
47
22
26
32
3B
52 5 3
25
28
27
30
U T O
P E R A T I C
16
14
briefly 50 Windpipe, e.g.
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square,
40 Professor 'iggins mat c hes 41 Sydney is its 58 L i ght a fire cap. under 44 Toughti mes 6 0 Charged atoms 48 Writer Rand 63 G e nes material 64 "I'm listening" 49 Young pigs 51 Latin word on a 6 5 Grand Canyon cornerstone viewing spot
V E I L A N D P A T D P E N I B S T E L during the 22 Abbr. in ancient seventh-inning dates A S S O stretch 24 Mata P 0 I N T A N 27 Mental grasp 25 Words before T I M L O A D 29 Mccain Or and after "is still" R A N I P R I in "As Time Goes MCCaskill: Abbr. 30 Tummy muscles By l\ A N I N P E 32 Circular gasket 26 Time extension? SO V I E T 34 Time at the inn 28 Garage service H B O D R A G 38 Shad eggs 30 Storied vessel E A R D U B A 39 Biblical trio ... and 31 Flapper'8 wrap a homophonic 33 Google AppS D R E Y E A R hint to the component xwordeditor@aol.com
answers to starred clues
I
PotSdam 53 Same as always
analyst
Bobby 8 Sound system control ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: 9 Spacecraft datacollection passes E B B E D H A W K E O F F 10 Lounging robes
broadcaster 11 To have, in Le known for singing Havre along with "Take 12 Lavin or Blair Me Out to the 13 Swabby's chum Ball Game" 18 Gather
e
52 Please, in
in America"
3 *"The [52-Across] 36 Knockthe socks 54 Jeans material Story" Oscar off 55 Come clean 37 Still 57 Place for nominee
10 Controlled 14 Radio host
19 Baptismal basin 20 Spanish royalty
35 *"Football Night
DOWN
1 Heavenly scales 2 Spinning
49
49
54
46 51
50
56
55
59
60
61
62
66
67
68
69
70
71
By Peter A. Collins ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
63
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02/11/15
THE BULLETIN oWEDNESDAY FEBRUARY11 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIEDâ&#x20AC;˘ 541-385-5809
1000
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 19805 W etland Court, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE CitiMortgage, Inc., its Successors a n d/or Assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Bill G. Chaney aka Bill C haney ak a B i l ly C haney ak a Bi l l y Gene Chaney aka Billie Chaney, Individually; B i l l G. Chaney as Trustee of the Billy G. Chaney R evocable Liv i n g Trust dated August 11, 2009; E lizabeth
Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 16345 Dyke Road, La P ine, O r egon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Federal N a t ional Mortgage Association, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. William R. Berberick AKA Russ Berberick AKA William Russell Berberick; Tamela J. Berberick AKA Tamela Jane Berberick; Cit i bank South Dakota NA; Capital One Bank USA NA; C h ase Bank USA NA; Occupants of the Prem ises; th e R e a l Property Located at 15588 Bur g ess Road, La Pine OR 97739, Defendant/s. Case No.: t 3CV0684. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, April
Chaney aka E l izabeth Eileen Chaney; Louise A. Chaney as Trustee of the Billy G. Chaney R e vocable Living Trust d a ted August 11, 2009; Occupants of the premises, and the Real Property located at 17676 Penny Court, La P i ne , O r e gon 97739, Defendant/s. Case No.: 1 3CV1159FC. 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 28, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in t h e m a in Thursday, April 16, lobby of the Des2015 at 10:00 AM, in Coun t y the main lobby of the cShutes Of fi c e , Deschutes C o u nty heriff's 63333 W. Highway Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, 20, Bend, Oregon, at public oral Oregon, sell, at public sell, auction to the higho ral auction to t h e est bidder, for cash h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's or cashier's check, real p roperty check, the real prop- the erty commonly known commonly known as 15588 Bur g ess as 1 7 676 P e n ny Court, La Pine, Or- Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739. Condi- egon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Poten- tions of Sale: Pobidders must t ial b i dders m u s t tential arrive 15 minutes prior arrive 15 minutes to the auction to the auction to allow prior the Deschutes County to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Sheriff's Office to bid d e r's Only U.S. currency review and/or cashier's funds. Only U . S. an d / or checks made payable c urrency to Deschutes County cashier's c h e cks payable to Sheriff's Office will be made accepted. P ayment Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will must be made in full be accepted. Payimmediately upon the must be made close of the sale. For ment more information on in full immediately the close of this s al e g o to: upon the sale. For more www.oregonsheriffs.c information on this om/sales.htm sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa LEGAL NOTICE les.htm Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for FFMLT Trust 2006 - FF4, People Lookfor Information Mortgage About Products and Pass-Through Certifi- Services EveryDaythrough cates, Series 2006-FF4, Plaintiff/s, The Bvlletin Classiffeds v. Jackie V erlanic; Occupants o f th e LEGAL NOTICE premises, N a t ional D efendant!s. C a s e Federal Mortgage AssociaNo.: 1 4 C V0468FC. N OTICE OF S A LE tion ("FNMA"), its U NDER WRIT O F successors in interEXECUTION - REAL est and/or assigns, PROPERTY. Notice is Plaintiff/s, v. G r ehereby given that the gory A. Nigg; SydDeschutes C o u nty ney Sinclair; SadOw n e rs Sheriff's Office will, on dleback T uesday, April 2 8 , Association, I n c .; 2015 at 10:00 AM, in Porffolio Recovery the main lobby of the A ssociates, L L C ; Deschutes C o unty Dawnene G. Sexton; and Occupants Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, of th e p r emises, Oregon, sell, at public Defendant/s. Case o ral auction to t he No.: 13CV1028FC. NOTICE OF SALE h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's UNDER WRIT OF check, the real prop- EXECUTION erty commonly known REAL PROPERTY. as 62946 Nasu Park Notice is h e reby Loop, Bend, Oregon given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bid- Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, April ders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the 9, 2015 a t 1 0 : 00 auction to allow the AM, in t h e m a in Deschutes C o unty lobby of the DesCou n t y Sheriff's Office to re- c hutes Of fi c e , view bidder's funds. S heriff's Only U.S. currency 63333 W. Highway and/or cashier's 20, Bend, Oregon, checks made payable sell, at public oral to Deschutes County auction to the highSheriff's Office will be est bidder, for cash accepted. Payment or cashier's check, must be made in full the real p roperty immediately upon the commonly known as close of the sale. For 19083 Saddleback more information on L ane, Bend, O r this s al e go to: egon 97701. Condiwww.oregonsheriffs.c tions of Sale: Potential bidders must om/sales.htm arrive 15 m inutes LEGAL NOTICE prior to the auction Elizon Master Partici- to allow the Despation Trust I, U.S. c hutes Cou n t y Bank Trust National S heriff's Office to Association, as Owner review bid d er's Trustee, Plaintiff/s, v. f unds. Only U . S. John A. Hildebrandt; currency an d / or and Lisa Hildebrandt, cashier's c h e cks D efendant/s. C a s e made payable to No.: 13CV0905. NO- Deschutes County TICE OF SALE UNSheriff's Office will DER WRIT OF EX- be accepted. PayECUTION - REAL ment must be made PROPERTY. Notice is in full immediately hereby given that the upon the close of Deschutes C o unty the sale. For more Sheriff's Office will, on information on this Thursday, April 16, sale go to: www.or2015 at 10:00 AM, in egonsheriff s.com/sa the main lobby of the les.htm
LEGAL NOTICE Federal Nat i onal Mortgage Association ("FNMA"), Plaintiff/s, v. John W. Cooper; Lisa D. Cooper; Robert Allen Taylor Co., other Persons or Parties, including Occuunknown pants, claiming any r i ght, title, lien, or interest in t he p r operty d e scribed in the complaint herein, Defendant/s. Case N o .: 13CV0720. NOTICE OF SALE U NDER WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, April 23, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff 's Office,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known a s 10290 NW O a k Lane, Redmond, Oregon 97756. 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. 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 Federal N a t ional Mortgage Association " FNMA", i t s successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Sean E. Jove aka Sean Edward Jove ; Priscilla R. Jove aka Priscilla Richardson Jove; Stonehedge On The Rim Association, Inc.; JPMorgan Chase Bank, National A s sociation, Successor in i nterest b y pur c hase f ro m t h e Federal Deposit In-
surance Corpora-
Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: 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. 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 Federal N a t ional Mortgage Association tFNMA), its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Harold G. Rogers; Occupants of the p remises of 576 Centennial Street, Bend, Oregon; and Occupants of the p remises at 578 Centennial Street, Bend, Oregon, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV1084FC. 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, April 16, 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 Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 576 & 578 Centennial Street, Bend, Oregon 97702-0000. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office to 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
tion as Receiver for Washington Mutual Bank; Occupants of the premises; and the Real property l ocated a t 22 4 2 Southwest Metolius Avenue, Redmond, OR 97756, DefenLEGAL NOTICE dant/s. Case No.: Federal N a t ional 13CV0539. NOMortgage AssociaT ICE O F SAL E tion, its successors UNDER WRIT OF in interest and/or EXECUTION assigns, Plaintiff/s, REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby v. David L. Dunlap; Dynamic Strategies, given that the DesInc.; an d O c c uc hutes Coun t y pants of the preSheriff's Office will, mises, Defendant/s. on Thursday, April Case No.: 9, 2015 a t 1 0 : 00 13CV0589. NOA M, in t h e m a in T ICE O F SA L E lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION Sheriff's Off i c e, REAL PROPERTY. 63333 W. Highway Notice is h e reby 20, Bend, Oregon, given that the Dessell, at public oral c hutes Cou n t y auction to the highSheriff's Office will, est bidder, for cash on Thursday, April or cashier's check, the real p roperty 16, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in commonly known as lobby of the Des2242 SW Metolius c hutes Cou n t y Avenue, Redmond, S heriff's Of fi c e , O regon 977 5 6 . 63333 W. Highway Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral must arrive 15 minauction to the highu tes prior to t h e est bidder, for cash auction to allow the or cashier's check, Deschutes County the real p roperty Sheriff's Office to review bid d er's commonly known as 6655 Northeast 41st funds. Only U . S. currency an d / or Street, R e dmond, 977 5 6 . cashier's c h e cks O regon Conditions of Sale: made payable to Potential b i d ders Deschutes County must arrive 15 minSheriff's Office will u tes prior to the be accepted. Payauction to allow the ment must be made Deschutes County in full immediately Sheriff's Office to upon the close of review bid d er's the sale. For more f unds. Only U . S. information on this currency an d / or sale go to: www.orcashier's c h e cks egonsheriff s.com/sa made payable to les.htm Deschutes County LEGAL NOTICE Sheriff's Office will Federal Nati o nal be accepted. PayMortgage Association, ment must be made Plaintiff/s, v. James in full immediately Lodahl; Barbara D. upon the close of Lodahl; Mid Oregon the sale. For more Federal Credit Union; information on this Target National Bank; sale go to: www.orAmerican E x press egonsheriff s.com/sa Bank, FSB; and all les.htm other Persons or Parties unknown claimLEGAL NOTICE ing any right, title, lien, Green Tree Servicing or interest in the Real L LC, P laintiff/s, v . Property commonly Jennifer Stoner; and known as 2500 NE Persons or P arties Wintergreen D r ive, unknown clai ming any Bend, O R 97 7 0 1, right, title, lien, or inD efendant/s. C a s e terest in the property No.: 1 3 C V1191FC. described in the comN OTICE OF S A L E plaint herein, DefenU NDER WRIT O F d ant/s. Case N o . : EXECUTION - REAL 1 4CV0326FC. N O PROPERTY. Notice is TICE OF SALE UNhereby given that the DER WRIT OF EXDeschutes C o u nty ECUTION - REAL Sheriff's Office will, on PROPERTY. Notice is T uesday, April 1 4 , hereby given that the 2015 at 10:00 AM, in Deschutes C o unty the main lobby of the Sheriff's Office will, on Deschutes C o u nty Monday, April 6, 2015 Sheriff 's Office,63333 at 10:00 AM, in the W. Highway 20, Bend, main lobby of the DeOregon, sell, at public s chutes Coun t y o ral auction to t h e Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 h ighest bidder, f o r W. Highway 20, Bend, cash o r ca s hier's Oregon, sell, at public check, the real prop- o ral auction to t h e erty commonly known highest bidder, f or as 2500 NE Wintercash o r ca s hier's green Drive, Bend, check, the real prop-
erty commonly known as 52370 Dorrance M eadow Road, L a Pine, Oregon 97739. 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
cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known a s 2423 S W 2 4 t h Street, Redmond, Oregon 97756. 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
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 LEGAL NOTICE upon the close of Nationstar Mortgage the sale. For more LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. RiLEGAL NOTICE information on this chard Travis Cross; N ationstar Mo r t - sale go to: www.orLisa D. Whited; and gage LLC, egonsheriff s.com/sa Persons or P a rties Plaintiff/s, v. Angela les.htm unknown clai ming any L. Rekow; M ortright, title, lien, or in- gage LEGAL NOTICE Ele c tronic terest in the property Registration S y sNOTICE OF SEIZURE described in the com- tems, Inc.; NorthFOR CIVIL plaint herein, Defen- west Mor t gage FORFEITURE TO ALL d ant/s. Case N o . : Group, Inc.; OccuPOTENTIAL 1 4CV0152FC. N O - pants of the propCLAIMANTS AND TO TICE OF SALE UN- erty, D e fendant/s. ALL UNKNOWN DER WRIT OF EX- Case No.: PERSONS READ THIS ECUTION - REAL 14CV0333FC. NOCAREFULLY PROPERTY. Notice is T ICE O F SAL E hereby given that the UNDER WRIT OF If you have any interDeschutes C o u nty EXECUTION est i n t h e s e i zed Sheriff's Office will, on REAL PROPERTY. property d e scribed T hursday, April 2 , Notice is h e reby below, you must claim 2015 at 10:00 AM, in given that the Desthat interest or you will the main lobby of the c hutes Cou n t y automatically lose that Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, interest. If you do not Sheriff's Office, 63333 on Monday, April 6, file a claim for the W. Highway 20, Bend, 2015 at 10:00 AM, property, the property Oregon, sell, at public in the main lobby of may be forfeited even o ral auction to t h e the Desc h utes if you are not conh ighest bidder, f o r County Sheriff's Ofvicted of any crime. cash o r ca s hier's fice, 6 3 33 3 W. To claim an interest, check, the real prop- Highway 20, Bend, you must file a written erty commonly known O regon, sell, a t claim with the forfeias 1 6 149 A m ber public oral auction ture counsel named Lane, La Pine, Orto the highest bidbelow, The w r itten egon 97739. Condi- d er, for c ash o r claim must be signed tions of Sale: Poten- cashier's check, the by you, sworn to unt ial b i dders m u st real property comder penalty of perjury arrive 15 minutes prior m only known a s before a notary public, to the auction to allow 63591 Boyd Acres and state: (a) Your the Deschutes County R oad, Bend, O r true name; (b) The Sheriff's Office to re- egon 97701. Condiaddress at which you view bidder's funds. tions of Sale: Powill a c cept f u t ure Only U.S. currency tential bidders must m ailings from t h e and/or cashier's arrive 15 m inutes court and f orfeiture checks made payable prior to the auction counsel; and (3) A to Deschutes County to allow the Dess tatement that y o u Sheriff's Office will be c hutes Cou n t y have an interest in the accepted. P ayment Sheriff's Office t o seized property. Your must be made in full review bid d er's deadline for filing the immediately upon the f unds. Only U . S . claim document with close of the sale. For currency an d / or forfeiture cou n sel more information on cashier's c h e cks n amed below is 2 1 this s al e g o to: made payable to days from the last day www.oregonsheriffs.c Deschutes County of publication of this om/sales.htm Sheriff's Office will notice. Where to file a be accepted. Payclaim and for more LEGAL NOTICE ment must be made i nformation: D a i na N ationstar Mor t in full immediately Vitolins, Crook County gage, LLC, upon the close of District Attorney OfPlaintiff/s, v. Ross the sale. For more fice, 300 N E T h ird Miller and Connie information on this Street, Prineville, OR M iller; John a n d sale go to: www.or97754. Jane D o es , I egonsheriff s.com/sa Notice of reasons for through V, O ccu- les.htm Forfeiture: The proppants of the subject erty described below Real Property, and LEGAL NOTICE was seized for forfeiAll Other Persons or N ationstar Mo r t - ture because it: (t) Parties U n known, gage LLC, its sucConstitutes the proclaiming any right, cessors in interest ceeds of the violation title, interest, lien or and/or ass i gns, of, solicitation to vioestate in the propPlaintiff/s, v. Scott late, attempt to vioe rty h e rein d e R . Schmitz, a k a late, or conspiracy to scribed, Scott Schmitz; Cyviolates, the criminal Defendant/s. Case press Financial Relaws of the State of No.: 13CV1249FC. coveries LLC; Oregon regarding the NOTICE OF SALE Capital One Bank manufacture, distribuUNDER WRIT OF (USA), NA; and Oction, or possession of EXECUTION cupants of the precontrolled substances REAL PROPERTY. mises, Defendant/s. (ORS C hapter475); Notice i s h e r eby Case No.: and/or (2) Was used given that the Des14CV0298FC. NOor intended for use in c hutes Coun t y T ICE O F SAL E committing or f aciliSheriff's Office will, UNDER WRIT OF tating the violation of, on Thursday, April EXECUTION solicitation to violate, 30, 2015 at 10:00 REAL PROPERTY. attempt to violate, or A M, in t h e m a i n Notice i s h e r eby conspiracy to violate lobby of the Desgiven that the Desthe criminal laws of c hutes Coun t y c hutes Coun t y the State of Oregon S heriff's Offi c e , Sheriff's Office will, regarding the manu63333 W. Highway on Thursday, April facture, distribution or 20, Bend, Oregon, 2, 2015 a t 1 0 : 00 possession of consell, at public oral A M, in t h e m a in trolled su b stances auction to the highlobby of the Des(ORS Chapter 475). est bidder, for cash c hutes Coun t y or cashier's check, S heriff's Of fi c e , IN THE MATTER OF: the real p roperty 63333 W. Highway (t) $4,700.00 in US commonly known as 20, Bend, Oregon, Currency, Case No 52437 Lost Pondesell, at public oral 1 4-396334 sei z e d rosa Road, La Pine, auction to the highJanuary 5, 2015 from O regon 977 3 9 . est bidder, for cash Bradford Martson and Conditions of Sale: or cashier's check, Angela Lindgren. Potential b i d ders the real p roperty must arrive 15 mincommonly known as LEGAL NOTICE u tes prior t o t h e 303 Northwest Fir NOTICE OF auction to allow the Avenue, Redmond, SUPPLEMENTAL Deschutes County O regon 977 5 6 . BUDGET ADOPTION S heriff's Office t o Conditions of Sale: review bid d e r's Potential b i d ders A supplemental budfunds. Only U . S. must arrive 15 minget will be discussed c urrency an d / or u tes prior t o t h e and adopted for the cashier's c h e cks auction to allow the f iscal year July 1 , made payable to Deschutes County 2014 to June 30, 2015 Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to for the City of RedSheriff's Office will review bid d e r's mond, State of O rbe accepted. Payfunds. Only U . S. egon. The meeting ment must be made c urrency an d / or will take place on the in full immediately cashier's c h ecks 24th day of February upon the close of made payable to at 6:30 pm at Redthe sale. For more Deschutes County mond Council Chaminformation on this Sheriff's Office will bers. The purpose of sale go to: www.orbe accepted. Paythe meeting is to disegonsheriff s.com/sa ment must be made cuss and adopt the les.htm in full immediately r esolution fo r th e upon the close of supplemental budget. LEGAL NOTICE the sale. For more A copy of the suppleNationstar Mortgage, information on this mental budget may be L LC, Plaintiff/s, v . sale go to: www.orinspected or obtained David Su t h erland; egonsheriff s.com/sa on or after February Patricia S a mpson; les.htm 11th, 2015. Mid Oregon Federal C redit Union; E q - LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE uable Ascent Finan- N ationstar Mo r t Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, its succial, LLC; Discover gage LLC, Bank; and C a valry Plaintiff/s, v. Terry L. cessors and/or asPortfolio Ser v ices Johnston aka Terry signs, Plaintiff/s, v. LLC, Assignee Cav- J ohnston; O c c u - Lee E . B o njorni; alry Investments, As- pants of the propCynthia G. Bonjorni; signee HSBC Bank erty, D e fendant/s. Midland F u nding, Nevada, N.A., Defen- Case No.: LLC; and all other d ant/s. Case N o . : 14CV0229FC. NOPersons or Parties 1 4CV0236FC. N O - T ICE O F SAL E unknown claiming TICE OF SALE UNUNDER WRIT OF any right, title, lien, DER WRIT OF EXEXECUTION o r interest in t h e ECUTION - REAL REAL PROPERTY. Real Property comPROPERTY. Notice is Notice is h e reby m only known a s hereby given that the given that the Des17376 Golden Eye Deschutes C o u nty c hutes Cou n t y D rive, Bend, O R Sheriff's Office will, on Sheriff's Office will, 97707, Defendant/s. No.: T uesday, April 2 1 , on Thursday, April Case 2015 at 10:00 AM, in 30, 2015 at 10:00 13CV0924. NOthe main lobby of the A M, in t h e m a in T ICE O F SA L E Deschutes C o u nty lobby of the DesUNDER WRIT OF Sheriff's Office, 63333 c hutes Cou n t y EXECUTION W. Highway 20, Bend, S heriff's Of fi c e , REAL PROPERTY. Oregon, sell, at public 63333 W. Highway Notice is h e reby o ral auction to t h e 20, Bend, Oregon, given that the Desh ighest bidder, f o r sell, at public oral c hutes Cou n t y
Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, April 23, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 17376 Golden Eye D rive, Bend, O r egon 97707. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Michael E. B urdick; Nancy C . B u r dick; Persons or P a rties unknown clai ming any right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o .: 12CV0214. NOTICE OF SALE U NDER WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, April 2 1 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known a s 6 1 13 8 Ge a r y Drive, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Michael E. B urdick; Nancy C . B u r dick; Persons or P a rties Unknown C l aiming any right, title, lien, or interest in the prop erty described in the complaint her e i n, D efendant!s. C a s e No.: 12CV0214. NO-
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 uesday, April 2 1 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known a s 2 0 13 4 H a w es Lane, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Denise L. S tauffer; National City Bank; and Persons or Parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, o r i nterest i n th e property described in the complaint herein, D efendant!s. C a se No.: 12CV1240. NO-
TICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff
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tional Association, as Trustee for Cert ificateholders o f Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities I LLC, Asset-Backed Certificates, Series
2007-AR4, Plaintiff/s, v. Sheryl L. Simpson; Fredrick L. S i mp-
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 61885 S o m erset D rive, Bend, O r egon 97702. 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 P ennyMac L o a n Services, LLC, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. G r eory A. Skinner aka regory Adam Skinner; L or i L. Skinner; Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as nominee for G MAC M o rtage, LLC; National redit A d j usters; Cavalry P o r ffolio Services; and Occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV1051FC. 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, April 28, 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 3387 Nor t h east Sandalwood Drive, B end, Ore g 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 revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full i mmediately u p on t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm
and to consider any suggestions Bidders wish to make. Any statements made by the College's representatives at the visit will not be considered binding upon the Coll ege u nless c o nfirmed by written adThe dendum. conference is held for the benefit of the bidders. For the project, lump sum bi d w i l l be received on f o r ms p rovided i n th e s e specifications. Bidding d o cuments for the work are those prepared by A-TECH/NORTHWES T , INC., 2 501
NW
Gerke Road, Prineville, OR 97754. Prime Bidder/General Contractors may purchase sets for the cost of reproduction a nd delivery f r om C entral Oreg o n Builders E x change (COBE), located at 1902 NE 4th Street Bend, O R 97 7 0 1, plansonfile.com. Contractors s h o uld r egister o n C O B E website to b e s e nt addenda. Bidding D ocuments will be available for examination d u ring the bidding period at the following Builders Exchanges and Plan Centers: D aily J o urnal o f Commerce Plan C enter, 92 1 S . W . Washington St., Suite 2 10, Portland, O R 97205
Eugene
Bui l der's
Exchange, 2460 W.
11th Avenue, Eugene, OR 97402
C entral Oreg o n Builders Association,
1 051 NE 4 t h S t . , Bend, OR 97701
Salem C ontractor's Exchange, 2256 Judson Street S.E., Salem, OR 97302
Oregon C o ntractor
Plan Center, 14625 S E 8 2 n d Dri v e , Clackamas, OR 97015 No bid will considered
unless fully completed in manner provided in the Bid form provided in these specifications and accompanied by certified check or bid b ond executed i n f avor of O w ner i n amount not less than ten (10) percent of total amount of bid. Said certified check or Bid Bond shall be forfeited as fixed and liquidated damages should bidder neglect or refuse to enter into Contract and provide s uitable bon d f o r faithful performance of W ork in even t Contract is awarded to him. T he C ollege m a y reject any bid not in c ompliance with a l l prescribed pub l ic contract procedures and requirements and may reject for good cause all bids upon a finding of the agency that it is in the public interest to do so. The College reserves the right to waive any and all minor informalities or clerical errors as d escribed i n O A R
LEGAL NOTICE Sealed bids for construction of the Central Oregon Community College No GRANDVIEW HALL 137-049-0350. RE-ROOF PROJECT bidder may withdraw his bid after the hour will be received by R ICH BREC K E , set for opening until after a lapse of thirty CONSTRUCTION PROJECT MAN- (30) days from the bid opening. This project AGER, at the CAMPUS CENTER is subject to prevailing B UILDING, CON - w age laws and i s O r egon STRUCTION OF- subject t o Sta t utes F ICE, ROOM 1 0 3, Revised 2600 N W C o l lege (ORS) 279C.800-870 Way, B e nd , OR dealing with payment 97701 until 10:00am of prevailing wages. b i d wi l l be local time, MARCH 4, No or 2015 and then pub- received licly opened and read c onsidered by th e aloud. Bids received College unless the bid after thus time will not contains a statement by the b idder that be accepted. O RS 279C.838 o r Briefly, the Work is 279C.840 w i l l be described as follows: Removal of all exist- complied with. This project is subject to ing roofing down to 279C. 3 7 0 the structural deck in- O RS with cluding existing mem- dealing brane, insulation, pea disclosure of first-tier gravel, all incidentals, subcontractors, givi n g scuppers, d e f ined 2 79A.120 equipment etc.; re- preference to resident 27 9 A .125 moval o f ex i sting bidders, metal coping system; giving preference to ma t e rials inspection and prepa- recycled 279A.110 ration of existing wood and in deck system; clean discrimination and prepare deck; subcontracting. mechanically attach Central Oregon 1" p olyisocyanurate insulation and ~/~" high Community College density c o verboard Matthew J. McCoy, Vice President for (DensDeck prime or Administration approved equ a l); crickets; fully adhere PUBLICATION AND DATES: 60-mil TPO single-ply Bend Bulletin, membrane system inBend, OR cluding all incidentals; Daily Journal of new perimeter metal, Commerce, clad m e t a l and Portland, OR counter-flashings, etc. to complete the speci- First Advertisement fied warrantable sys- FEBRUARY 11, 2015 Mandatory Site Walk tem and achieve a Class A fire Rated FEBRUARY 18, 2015 10:00am System. A MAND A TORY pre-bid c o nference LEGAL NOTICE and project site-visit Springleaf Financial will b e he l d on Services, Inc., f o rWEDNESDAY, FEBmerly k n own as RUARY 18, 2015, at American General Fi10:00am at the project nancial Services, Inc., location: GR A N D- d/b/a American GenVIEW HALL East En- eral Finalcial S ertrance, 2 60 0 NW vices (DE), I n c., College Way, Bend, Plaintiff/s, v. Robert D. OR 97701. The pur- M onette; Janice R. R o m aine pose will be to an- Monette; swer any questions Village Homeowners bidders may have, re- Association; O c c uview the scope of pants of the premises, D efendant/s. C a s e work, tour the site,
No.: 1 4 C V0147FC. the Real P r operty N OTICE OF S A L E commonly known as U NDER WRIT O F 2055 Southwest 34th EXECUTION - REAL St., Redmond, OR PROPERTY. Notice is 97756, Defendant/s. hereby given that the Case No.: Deschutes C o unty 1 3CV1118FC. N O Sheriff's Office will, on TICE OF SALE UNTuesday, March 31, DER WRIT OF EX2015 at 10:00 AM, in ECUTION - REAL the main lobby of the PROPERTY. Notice is Deschutes C o u nty hereby given that the Sheriff 's Office,63333 Deschutes C o unty W. Highway 20, Bend, Sheriff's Office will, on
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 61005 Sugarbush Lane, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE
Thursday, April 16,
2015 at 10:00 AM, in
the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e highest bidder, f or cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known a s 2055 S W 3 4 t h Street, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i dders m u st 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: w ww.oregonsheff ff s.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank, National Association, Plaintiff/s, v. Lawrence Peters; and Persons or P a rties unknown clai ming any right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 13CV0219. NOTICE OF SALE U N DER WRIT OF E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o tice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, April 2 1 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e highest bidder, f or cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known a s 1565 N E B e a r Creek Road, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: 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
SROF 2013-83 REO I LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Cori Lowery, Ronald Lowery, and Persons or Parties Unk n own claiming any r i ght, title, lien, or interest in t he p r operty d e scribed in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 13CV0749. NOTICE OF SALE U NDER WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o tice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T hursday, April 2 , 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 2444 NE Desert Willow Court, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: 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 U.S. Bank NA, Succ essor Trustee t o Bank of America, NA, Successor in interest to LaSalle Bank NA, as Trustee, on behalf of the holders of the Need help fixing stuff? Washington M utual Call A Service Professional Mortgage Pass-Through Certifi- find the help you need. cates, WMALT Series www.bendbulletin.com 2006-AR6, Plaintiff/s, v. Travis Yamada, LEGAL NOTICE other Persons or Par- U.S. Bank National ties, including Occu- Association, as pants, unknown Trustee for MASTR claiming any r ight, A djustable Rat e title, lien, or interest in M ortgage Tru s t t he p r operty d e - 2 006-0A1, Mor t scribed in the com- gage Pass-Through plaint herein, Defen- Certificates, Series dant/s. Case N o .: 206-0A1, Plaintiff/s, 1 3CV1020FC. N O - v. Lisa K. Wachs; TICE OF SALE UN- David T. W a chs; DER WRIT OF EXSelco C ommunity ECUTION - REAL Credit Union; and PROPERTY. Notice is Persons or Parties hereby given that the unknown claiming Deschutes C o u nty any right, title, lien Sheriff's Office will, on o r interest in t h e Thursday, April 23, property described 2015 at 10:00 AM, in herein, Defendant/s. the main lobby of the Case No.: Deschutes C o u nty 13CV0143. NOSheriff's Office, 63333 T ICE O F SAL E W. Highway 20, Bend, UNDER WRIT OF Oregon, sell, at public EXECUTION oral auction to t he REAL PROPERTY. h ighest bidder, f o r Notice is h e reby cash o r ca s hier's given that the Descheck, the real prop- c hutes Cou n t y erty commonly known Sheriff's Office will, a s 2443 N W 2 n d on Thursday, April Street, Bend, Oregon 23, 2015 at 10:00 97701. Conditions of A M, in t h e m a in Sale: Potential bidlobby of the Desders must arrive 15 c hutes Cou n t y minutes prior to the S heriff's Of fi c e , auction to allow the 63333 W. Highway Deschutes C o u nty 20, Bend, Oregon, Sheriff's Office to resell, at public oral view bidder's funds. auction to the highOnly U.S. currency est bidder, for cash and/or cashier's or cashier's check, checks made payable the real p roperty to Deschutes County commonly known as Sheriff's Office will be 19175 Tumalo Resaccepted. Payment ervoir Road, Bend, must be made in full O regon 977 0 1 . immediately upon the Conditions of Sale: close of the sale. For Potential b i d ders more information on must arrive 15 minthis s al e go to: u tes prior to t h e www.oregonsheriffs.c auction to allow the om/sales.htm Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to LEGAL NOTICE review bid d er's U.S. Bank National f unds. Only U . S. Association, as currency an d / or Trustee for Citigroup cashier's c h e cks Mortgage Loan Trust made payable to Inc., A s set-Backed Deschutes County Pass-Through Certifi- Sheriff's Office will cates, Series be accepted. Pay2 005-WF1, its s u c- ment must be made cessors and/or asin full immediately signs, Plaintiff/s, v. upon the close of Lauralee A. M a nn; the sale. For more and all other Persons information on this or Parties unknown sale go to: www.orclaiming any r i ght, egonsheriff s.com/sa title, lien, or interest in les.htm
LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee fo r the holders of the First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust 2 006-FF12 M o r t gage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-FF12, through their loan servicing agent Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc., Plaintiff/s, v. Tyson S. Rearden; Mortgage Ele c tronic R egistration S y s tems, Inc.; United States of America (Internal Revenue Service); State of Oregon Department of Revenue; Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as Trustee for the holders of the First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust 2 006-FFA, Mo r t age Pass-Through ertificates, Series 2 006-FFA; Firs t Franklin a division of National City Bank of IN.; Occupants of the property, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0520. 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 Tuesday, April 28, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 52442 Wes t l ey Loop, LaPine, Oregon 97739. 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 U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for R esidential Asset Securities C orporation, Home Equity Mortgage Asset-Backed Pass-Through Cert ificates, Ser i e s 2007-KS2, its suc-
cessors and/or as-
signs, Plaintiff/s, v. Steven D. Derrickson; Connie Derrickson; Whitney M. Hewitt; Lyon Financial Services, Inc. dba The Manifest Group; Wells Fargo B ank, N .A ; U . S . Bank, National Association; Cascade Credit Consulting, Inc.; and all Persons or Parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, or interest in the Real Property commonly k nown a s 27 4 1 Northwest L y n ch Lane, R e d mond, OR 97756, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV1075FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, April 14, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 2741 N W L y n ch Lane, R e d mond, O regon 977 5 6 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h 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 U.S. Bank, National Association, as Trustee, successor in interest to Bank of America, National Association as Trustee as successor by merger to LaSalle Bank Na-
son; The Ridge at Eagle Crest Owners Association; Oc2005-HE9, cupants of the propPlaintiff/s, v. John B erty, D efendant/s. Mockus a/k/a John Case No.: Bryan Mockus, indi13CV0080. NOvidually, an d as T ICE O F SAL E C o-Trustee of t h e UNDER WRIT OF Nancy G. and John EXECUTION B. Revocable Living REAL PROPERTY. Trust A g r eement Notice i s h e r eby dated May 13, 2010, given that the DesNancy Mockus a/k/a c hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, Nancy G. Mockus, individually, and as on Thursday, April C o-Trustee of t h e 9, 2015 a t 1 0 : 00 Nancy G. and John A M, in t h e m a in B. Revocable Living lobby of the DesTrust A g r eement c hutes Coun t y dated May 13, 2010; S heriff's Of fi c e , the Nancy G. and 63333 W. Highway John B. Revocable 20, Bend, Oregon, Living Trust Agreesell, at public oral ment dated May 13, auction to the high2010; AAMES est bidder, for cash Funding Corporaor cashier's check, tion, DBA AAMES the real p roperty Home Loan; Mortcommonly known as gage Ele c tronic 543 Goshawk Drive, Registration S y sRedmond, Oregon tems Inc.; State of 97756. C onditions Oregon; C itibank, of Sale: P o tential National A s sociabidders must arrive tion d/b/a Citibank, 15 minutes prior to N.A.; A d a m G. the auction to allow Mockus; Occupants the Desc h utes of the property, DeCounty Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w fendant/s. Case No.: 12CV0940. NObidder's funds. Only T ICE O F SA L E U.S. currency UNDER WRIT OF and/or ca s h ier's EXECUTION checks made payREAL PROPERTY. able to Deschutes Notice is h e reby County Sheriff's Ofgiven that the Desf ice will b e ac c hutes Cou n t y cepted. P a yment Sheriff's Office will, must be made in full on Thursday, April immediately u p on 9, 2015 a t 1 0 00 t he close o f t h e A M, in t h e m a in sale. For more inlobby of the Desf ormation on t h i s c hutes Cou n t y sale go to: www.orS heriff's Of fi c e , egonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, LEGAL NOTICE sell, at public oral Wells Fargo Bank, auction to the highNA, its successors est bidder, for cash in interest and/or or cashier's check, Plaintiff/s, the real p roperty assigns, v. Albert Vanderhocommonly known as even; Ros a nna 19011 Baker Road, Vanderhoeven; B end, Oreg o n Bank of A merica, 97702. Conditions successor by of Sale: P o tential N.A., merger t o BAC bidders must arrive Home Loans Ser15 minutes prior to vicing, L P fka the auction to allow Home the Desc h utes Countrywide Loans S e rvicing, County Sheriff's OfLP; River Canyon f ice to revi e w Estates bidder's funds. Only Homeowners' AssoU.S. currency c iation I nc . a n d and/or ca s hier's O ccupants of t h e checks made paypremises, D e fenable to Deschutes dant/s. Case No.: County Sheriff's Of13CV0754. NOf ice will b e a c ICE O F SAL E cepted. P a yment TUNDER WRIT OF must be made in full EXECUTION immediately u pon REAL PROPERTY. t he close of t h e Notice i s h e r eby sale. For more ingiven that the Desf ormation on t h is c hutes Coun t y sale go to: www.orSheriff's Office will, egonsheriffs.com/sa on Monday, April 6, les.htm 2015 at 10:00 AM, LEGAL NOTICE in the main lobby of Wells Fargo Bank, the Desc h utes N.A. as Trustee for County Sheriff's OfWAMU M o rtgage fice, 6 3 33 3 W. Pass Through CerHighway 20, Bend, t ificates Ser i e s O regon, sell, a t 2006-PR3, its sucpublic oral auction cessors in interest to the highest bidand/or ass i gns, d er, for c ash o r Plaintiff/s, v. Darryl cashier's check, the E . Spencer a k a real property comDarryl Spencer, inm only known a s dividually; Darryl E. 19795 Dry Canyon Spencer as Trustee Avenue, Bend, Orof t h e Sp e ncer egon 97702. CondiF amily Trust o f tions of Sale: PoJanuary 3, 2 0 02; tential bidders must Janet E. Spencer arrive 15 minutes aka Janet Spencer, prior to the auction individually; Janet E. to allow the DesSpencer as Trustee c hutes Coun t y of t h e Sp e ncer Sheriff's Office to F amily T r ust o f review bid d e r's January 3, 2 0 02; funds. Only U . S. and Occupants of c urrency an d / or the premises, Decashier's c h ecks fendant/s. Case No.: made payable to 13CV1145FC. NODeschutes County T ICE O F SA L E Sheriff's Office will UNDER WRIT OF be accepted. PayEXECUTION ment must be made REAL PROPERTY. in full immediately Notice is h e reby upon the close of given that the Desthe sale. For more c hutes Cou n t y information on this Sheriff's Office will, sale go to: www.oron Tuesday, April egonsheriff s.com/sa 28, 2015 at 10:00 les.htm A M, in t h e m a i n LEGAL NOTICE lobby of the DesWells Fargo Bank, c hutes Coun t y its successors Sheriff's Off i c e, N.A., in interest and/or 63333 W. Highway assigns, Plaintiff/s, 20, Bend, Oregon, v. Dan i e l A. sell, at public oral Mancino; Haley Ball, auction to the higha s Affiant o f t h e est bidder, for cash Estate of Holly C. or cashier's check, Mancino; Haley Ball, the real p roperty Individually; Nichocommonly known as las D. Mancino, as 215 Sout h west of the Estate M aricopa Dr i v e, Affiant of Holly C. Mancino; B end, Ore g o n Nicholas D. 97702. Conditions Mancino, Individuof Sale: P o tential a lly; State of O r bidders must arrive egon; and Occu15 minutes prior to pant of the the auction to allow premises, D e fenthe Desc h utes dant/s. Case No.: County Sheriff's Of14CV0497FC. NOf ice to revi e w T ICE O F SAL E bidder's funds. Only UNDER WRIT OF U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. checks made payNotice is h e reby able to Deschutes given that the DesCounty Sheriff's Ofc hutes Coun t y f ice will b e a c Sheriff's Office will, cepted. P a yment on Thursday, April must be made in full 2, 2015 a t 1 0 :00 i mmediately u p on A M, in t h e m a in t he close o f t h e lobby of the Dessale. For more inc hutes Coun t y f ormation on t h is S heriff's Off i c e, sale go to: www.or63333 W. Highway egonsheriff s.com/sa 20, Bend, Oregon, les.htm sell, at public oral LEGAL NOTICE auction to the highWells Fargo Bank, est bidder, for cash NA, as Trustee, on or cashier's check, behalf of the holdthe real p roperty ers o f S t ructured commonly known as Asset Mortgage In1536 S W 34th vestments II, Inc., Street, R e dmond, Bear Sterns MortO regon 977 5 6 . Conditions of Sale: gage Funding, Trust 2 007-AR4, Mo r t Potential b i d ders age Pass Through must arrive 15 minertificates, Series u tes prior to 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 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, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Ro n al d L. Boughton Jr.; Maria J . Boughton a ka Maria Jesus Flores; O regon Wate r Wonderland Property Owners Association, Unit II, Inc.; and Occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0315FC. NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby grven that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, April 21, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a i n lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 56045 Black Duck R oad, Bend, O regon 97707-2101. 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 S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Robert L. Palen a ka Robert L e e Palen; Denise A. Palen aka Denise A nn P a len; T a l l Pines Road Organization; Bank of the
Cascades; Occu-
pants of th e p remises; and the Real Property located at 53246 S o u theast Woodstock D r ive, La Pine, O regon 97739, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV1002FC. 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 Thursday, April 9, 2015 a t 1 0 : 00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 53246 S o u theast Woodstock D r ive, La Pine, O regon 97739. Conditions of Sale: P otential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e ac cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately u pon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Unknown Heirs of Susan K. Haugen; Rae Veit - Hollibaugh; Spencer Veit aka Spencer Haugen Veit; Ben Veit aka Benjamin Russ ell V e it ; W e l l s Fargo Bank, N.A.; State of O r egon; O ccupants of t h e premises; and the Real Property located at 2729 N ortheast O c ker D rive, Bend, O r egon 97701, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0365FC. 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 Monday, April 6, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Of-