Bulletin Daily Paper 04-15-15

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WEDNESDAY April 15, 201 5

$1

INSIDE

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OUTDOORS • D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Oregon inbloom—The

n

: e mon ir or cosin Ql' Wee S

Columbia River Gorge is anexcellent spot for wildflowers.B3

Uo —The university has a new president: the dean of the law school at the University of Chicago.B3

STORY INLOCAL• B1

Land trust buys more propertyon Whychus

n e en en a i n v i es a vo ers o s a e rima By Taylor W.Anderson

The move means thebloc

The Bulletin

Prep sports previewBend High boys hope totake state golf title again.C1

SALEM — The Independent Party of Oregon this week announced it would

Worthy Brewing — The founding brewmaster is leaving the beer-maker.C6

of voters not belonging to any party, which will grow to

primary, whose participation ratesoften are low. It also means the costs

counties incur for running elections will rise, as it did

allow the state's more than 530,000 unaffiliated voters to vote in its first state-funded

more than 800,000 when the state's new automatic voter registration law adds 300,000

voters, might inflate participation in the May 2016 elec-

Party partly opened its primary to unaffiliated voters.

primary next year.

tion. That election will be a

The Independent Party's

in 2012 when the Republican

goal for the next election, says party secretary Sal Per-

By Jasmine Rockow

alta, is to "elect four or five

The Bulletin

people in the center who can hopefully hold the balance of power, if not in this cycle hopefully at some point in the near future."

See Primary/A4

Plus: ln D.C. —AMedicare

IRS FORM

H

Airplane seat swapping, once a gentle sport, turns rough-andtumble. bendbunetin.cem/extras

By Michelle Jamrisko Bloomberg News

habitat, the land contains

minute filings, extensions and potential penalties. If not, relax and read Part I for some nontaxing facts.

and aspen woodlands that provide habitat for mule

This is the first year the Internal Revenue Service has to account for the Affordable

25

2,046 The number of IRSemployees

The percentage of taxpayers — about150 million-

dedicated to theACAin fiscal 2015

who will need to takeextra action related to the ACAwhen filing

Where yourtax dollarshavegonefor the last 50years In1964, the U.S.government took in $616 billion in taxes andspent $646 billion. In 2014, it collected $2.8 trillion in taxes and spent $3.24 trillion. Here's how that moneyhasbeen allocated over time in sevenmajor categories as apercentage of overall spending. 100'I

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 52, Low 24 Page B6

INDEX

VA BENEFITS HEALTH (MEDICARE )

60

INCOME SECURITY

40

SOCIAL SECURITY

20

INTEREST

GOVERN MENT AND OTHER COSTS 1974

Other dates:

Fetieral tax return:Last day to e-file a 2014 incometax return for those who request anextension today.

'Pl

2014

Previousyear returns:Youcan file a return for a previous tax year any time, but you canclaim a refund only within three years of the original tax deadline.

'I

. Arg,

April 15, 2018

vol. 113, No. 105, 30 pages, 5sections

88 267 02329

2004

Dave Peterson, an AARP Tax-Aide, right, looks over a set of documents while helping Bart Hillerbrand file taxes Tuesday morning at the Bend Senior Center.

Oct.15

No deadline

0

1994

significant penalties. Returns must be postmarked or e-filed by midnight.

The Bulletin

:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII

1984

If you don't file your tax returns today, you must file for an extension or face

2014taxamendment: Youcan file an amendedreturn to pay taxes due atanytime, but you generally have adeadline of three years from the original duedate to claim a refund.

Q I/I/e userecycled newsprint

trust, saidthe propertyis generally healthy but "the immediate need is to get old structures out of there and get it planted back to native

vegetation." Nye said the trust expects to spend roughly $75,000 on restoration in the preserve. SeeWhychus/A5

It's never been safer tobea kid in America By Christopher Ingraham The Washington Post

1964

Business C5-6 Horoscope D6 Calendar 82 L ocal/State Bf -6 Classified E1-6 Obituaries B5 Comics E3-4 Outdoors D1-6 Crosswords E4 Sports C1-4 Dear Abby D6 TV/Movies D6 An Independent Newspaper

deer, rocky mountain elk, golden eagles, spotted bats andmany songbirds. Acquisition of the Aspen Hollow Preserve brings the Whychus Canyon Preserve to 988 acres total.

DEFENSE

80

to Commerce Department data that dates to 1992 and

was released Tuesday. SeeDining/A5

exposed diffs and pine

Brad Nye, conservation director for the land

to ditch the brown bags in

favor of doggy bags. Sales at restaurants and bars overtook spending at grocery stores in March for the first time, according

It 's on a halfmile stretch of

If you've waited until today to file your taxes, proceed immediately to Part II for information on last-

WASHINGTON — Pass

the menu, hold the shopping cart. Grocery stores are finding it harder to make headway with shoppers as a surge in spending at restaurants over the past several months signals Americans are more likely

Hollow ~ serve.

On A5

In addition to the creek's salmon and steelhead

EDITOR'SCHOICE

sales

MaP

Meadow Preserve.

Otherfacts:

grocery

The trust recentlybought

the Whychus Canyon Preserve and the Camp Polk

Care Act. Simultaneously, the IRS budget and workforce were cut for this year.

Dining out overtakes

habitat along Whychus Creeknortheast of Sisters.

Whychus Creek, between

H

"doc fix" — and moneyfor timber counties.A2

And a Web exclusive-

in its goal to protect wildlife

58 acres ofland, creating the new Aspen

Nursing homes — payments from Medicare mean they focus on profitable shortterm patients.A6

Deschutes Land Trust

took another step forward

Sources:Taxpayer advocate service, IRS, Chicago TribuneiTNS, Office of Management and Budget, Tax Foundation

7

Imagine being 10years old and being led, along with your 6-year-old sibling, intothe

ANALYSIS backseat of a police cruiser. The police promise to take you home to your parents. It's only three

blocks away, andyou know they are searching foryou frantically. But instead of taking you home, thepolice detainyou there, in the car, for three

hours, without ameal or access to a restroom. The sun sets, night falls. Even-

a

tuallythe cops takeyou to a facility maintained by Child Protective Services, where

you're kept for another several hours. You still haven't had any dinner. You aren't

reunited with your parents until 10:30 p.m., nearly six hours afteryour ordeal began. Your "crime"? Playing without parental supervi-

sion in a park less than a mile from home.

That all happened to the Meitiv children of Maryland, on Sunday, their parents say. Photo:Ryan Brennecke, Graphic: Carli Krueger/The Bulletin

See Safe /A5


A2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

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on Tuesday that its top cleric, a Saudi national who hashad a$5 million bounty on his head, hasbeen killed, allegedly in a drone attack. Al-Qaida said in a statement posted onTwitter that Ibrahim al-Rubaish was killed by adrone late Sunday, along with other, unidentified members of the group. Thestatement did not specify the location of the drone attack. Yemeni officials had no immediate comment on the claim, and theWhite Housedeclined to comment.

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The Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from CapeCanaveral, Florida, on Tuesday. SpaceX launched ashipment of groceries to the International SpaceStation on Tuesday, including the first espresso maker bound for orbit. But the company's third attempt to land the leftover booster on an ocean platform failed. The first-stage booster rocket apparently landed

too hard on the bargeandtipped over. SpaceX chief Elon Muskwants to reuse the rockets rather than discard them in theocean, to reduce launch costs. The companywill try again in June on the next supply run for NASA. "It's not quite clear what happened," said Hans Koenigsmann, aSpaceXvice president. "But certainly it needs more work in the next couple of missions."

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hundreds of girls abducted by Islamic militants from their school in northeastern Nigeria. And while the cry to "Bring BackOurGirls" remains a worldwide cause, the newpresident Tuesday would not repeat his predecessor's failed promise to find them —only that they won't be forgotten. A solemnmarch was held to rememberthe 219 girls still unaccounted for after they wereamong 276 seized from their boarding school in Chibok bygunmenfrom the Boko Haram extremist group. In Nigeria's capital of Abuja, 219girls paraded in the streets, with each carrying a placard bearing the nameof a kidnap victim. "We believe the girls are still alive," said Dr. Allan Manasseh, the brother of missing18-year-old MaryamuWavi.

Yemen drOne Strike —Yemen'sal-Qaida branch announced

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Nigeria adduCtienS — Theyhavebeen goneayear now,the

On Fess s e The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Legisla-

tion permanently overhauling how Medicare pays physicians won approval Tuesday from an atypically united Congress as lawmakers banded together to erase an irritant that has

dogged them foryears. Adding urgency to legisla-

py that two-thirds of the bill's $214 billion, 10-year costs were financed by simply making federal deficits bigger, while liberals wanted added money for children and women's programs. Eager to demonstrate his party's ability to efficiently run the Senate they've controlled since January, Major-

newed county payments buy us time to build support for solutions that address the broader

ity Leader Mitch McConnell,

All eight "no" votes came from Republicans, induding

tors' work, the measure head-

R-Ky., defendedthe measure. "It's another reminder of ed off a 21 percent cut in doctors' Medicare fees that would a new Republican Congress have hit home today, when the that's back to work," he said. government planned to begin "And while no bill will ever be processing physicians' daims perfect, this legislation is a senreflecting that reduction. The sible compromise with wide bibill also provides billions of partisan support." extra dollars for health care Top Democrats also exprograms for children and pressed BUpport. "This is a significant and low-income families, induding additional money for community health centers.

Working into the evening, the Senate approved the measure 92-8 less than three weeks

after the House passed it by a 392-37vote.

"It's a milestone for physicians,and forthe seniors and people with disabilities who rely on Medicare for their health care needs," President Barack Obama said in a written statement after the vote. He

added, "1 will be proud to sign it into law."

Conservatives were unhap-

Ukraine WeapOnS — Warring parties in Ukraine should withdraw heavy weapons —including tanks, armored vehicles, mortars and artillery — to comply with theshakycease-fire that has held in eastern Ukraine sinceFebruary, the Germanforeign minister said Tuesday.The call from the minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, came after talks with his counterparts from France,Russia andUkraine aimedat maintaining the cease-fire agreed to inMinsk, Belarus, onFeb.12. Foreign observers have noted aflare-up in fighting in recent days,particularly aroundtwo hot spots: the village ofShirokino andthe ruined airport of Donetsk.

I caI'e

ix,tim er a ments By Alan Fram

Syria talkS —Staffan de Mistura, the beleagueredU.N.envoy for Syria, will seek to restart negotiations intended to bring anendto a 4-year conflict by holding one-on-onemeetings with representatives of the warring parties andthecountries that support them, a U.N.spokesman said Tuesday.Left unsaid waswhether those talks could involve Iran, perhaps theSyrian government's most vital supporter. Iran wields a great deal of influenceover President BasharAssad of Syria, supplying arms andfighters to help his forces battle rebel groups. Thewar has killed morethan220,000 peopleand uprooted12 million Syrians.

economic issues that plague too

many of our rural areas." The bill marks a tandem ef-

Iran nuClear paCt —Bowing to pressure from Republicans and his own party, President BarackObamaonTuesday relented to a compromise empowering Congress to reject his emerging nuclear pact with Iran. The rareand reluctant agreement between the president and the Republican-led Congress cameafter the White House maintained for weeksthat congressional interference could jeopardize sensitive negotiations with Tehran. But lawmakers refused to back down from their insistence that Congress have formal a role in what could be ahistoric deal to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. TheSenate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously approved the compromise bill shortly after White Housespokesman Josh Earnest conveyedthe president's decision to sign it.

fort by Democrats and Repub-

licans at a time the two parties are far likelier to block each other's initiatives. some of their most conserva-

tive members. Among presidential hopefuls, Sens. Ted

Clintegl in lOWa —Hillary Rodham Clinton declared herself a "champion" for struggling families Tuesday,offering a full-throated embrace of economic andgood-government policies promoted by liberal Democrats at the first formal event of her young presidential campaign. "I think it's fair to say that asyou look across the country, the deck is still stacked in favor of those already at the top," Clinton said during a discussion with students andteachers at a community college in rural lowa. "There's something wrong with that."

Cruz, R-Texas, and Marco Ru-

bio, R-Fla., voted against the bill, whereas Rand Paul, R-Ky., voted for it.

hard-won achievement thatwill

The bill's chief feature was its annulling of a 1997 law aimed at slowing the growth of Medicare that has repeatedly

ensure better quality health

threatened deep cuts in reim-

bursements to physicians and of seniors and children," said led to threats by doctors to stop Sen. Ron Wyden, D-ore. treating the program's benefiWyden also touted the in- ciaries. Congress has blocked dusion in the bill of a two-year 17 reductions since 2003, an extension for timber payments exercise that invites intense under the Secure Rural Schools lobbying and difficult choices progfam. about finding budget savings "This extension ends months that both parties detested. of uncertainty for Oregon's Instead, the measure would r ural c o mmunities, w h o create a new payment system have grappled with on-again, with financial incentives for off-again funding for roads, physicians to bill Medicare paschoolsand first responders," tients for their overall care, not Wyden said in a statement. "Re- individual office visits.

POliCe uSe Of farCe —Dramatic dash-cam video releasedTuesday shows apolice officer in a Tucsonsuburb using his cruiser to ram an armed suspect, sending him flying in the air before thecar smashes into a wall. Themansurvived the Feb.19crash, and prosecutors cleared the officer of wrongdoing. Thevideo wasreleased at a time of heightened tension over theuse offorce by police. Thesuspect, Mario Valencia, 36, facesseveral felony charges, including assault on apolice officer. His attorney hasnot responded to arequest for comment.

care and certainty for millions

Worker asleep in plane's cargo hold — Themisadventure of a baggagehandler whofell asleep in thecargo hold of ajetliner should be a warning for airlines to improvesecurity procedures, safety experts said Tuesday.Theworker banged onthe planefor help shortly after takeoff on Mondayfrom Seattle. Pilots heard the noiseandquickly returned to theairport. Theworker was not injured. TheFederal Aviation Administration was investigating, but fewnewdetails emerged Tuesday about the bizarre incident at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. — Fromwirereports

I found Dad's remote in the fridge again. ...I'm beginning to get worried.

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Obama acts totake Cubaoff terror list New York TimesNewsService TheWhite House announced Tuesday that President Barack Obama intends to remove Cuba

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list after what officials called a

Secretaryof State John Kerry

vana that it would not support terrorism in the future.

from the U.S. government's list to take Cuba off the terrorism of nations that sponsor terrorism, eliminating a major obstade to the restoration of diplomatic relations after decades of hostilities.

The decision to remove Cuba from the list represents a crucial step in Obama's effort to

turn the page on a Cold Warera dispute. It followed a much-anticipat-

ed meeting Saturday between Obama and President Raul

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White House officials said

'Ittesday that Obama had approved a recommendation by

Castro of Cuba on the sideline

of the Summit of the Americas meeting in Panama City, Panama, the first such formal ses-

"rigorous" review of Cuba's record and assurances from Ha-

CIIIIIIUÃIIIS TOOUR

IPQRTIMAIIHQW GIVHLWA YWlhlNER! Congratulations Rick Pickett, winner of our fly fishing

excursion presented by The Bulletin and Slackline Fly Fishing. Rick is going to enjoy a guided tour down the Lower Deschutes fishing for Native Trout and Steelhead.

sion between the leaders of the two countries in more than a

half-century. Formore than30years, Cuba has been on the State Depart-

ment's list of state sponsors of terrorism, a designation shared by Iran, Sudan and Syria. Cuba's place on the list has long snarled its access to financial markets, and, more recent-

ly, the designation emerged as a sticking point in negotiations to reopen embassiesthat have

officially been closed for five decades. Obama ordered areview of

Cuba'sstatus in December,as he and Castro agreed to move toward normal relations.

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 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,April15, the 105th day of 2015. Thereare 260 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS GOOgle —An announcement is expected by theEuropean Union's top antitrust regulator on charges against the company.

PHENOMENON

BIRTHDAYS Country singer RoyClark is 82. Author and politician Jeffrey Archer is 75.Actor Michael Tucci is 69. Columnist Heloise is 64. Actor SamMcMurray is 63. Actress-screenwriter Emma Thompsonis56.Olympic gold, silver andbronze medal swimmer DaraTorres is 48. Rock musician EdO'Brien (Radiohead) is 47.Actor Flex Alexander is 45.Actor LukeEvans is 36. Rockmusician Patrick Carney (TheBlackKeys) is 35. Actor-writer Seth Rogen is33. Actress Emma Watson is 25. — From wire reports

By James Gorman

a'ssu en

Workers seeking a$15-perhour wage will walk out of their jobs in more than 230cities.

Highlight:In1865, President Abraham Lincoln died nine hours after being shot the night before by JohnWilkes Booth at Ford's Theater in Washington; Andrew Johnson became thenation's 17th president. In1715,the YamaseeWar beganasmembers oftheYamasee tribe attacked English settlers in colonial South Carolina. In1850, the city of SanFrancisco was incorporated. In1912, the British luxury liner RMS Titanic foundered in the North Atlantic off Newfoundland more than2~/~hours after hitting an iceberg; 1,514people died, and less than half as many survived. In1945,during World War II, British and Canadian troops liberated the Naziconcentration camp Bergen-Belsen. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who haddied April 12, was buried at the Roosevelt family home in HydePark, New York. In1955, Ray Kroc openedthe first franchised McDonald's restaurant in DesPlaines, lllinois. In1960,a three-day conference to form the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee began atShawUniversity in Raleigh, North Carolina. In1974, members of the Symbionese Liberation Army held up a branch of the Hibernia BankinSanFrancisco;amember of the group wasSLAkidnapping victim Patricia Hearst, who by this time wasgoing by the name "Tania" (Hearst later said she hadbeenforced to participate). In1985, South Africa said it would repeal laws prohibiting sex and marriage between whites and nonwhites. In1986, the United States launched anair raid against Libya in response to the bombing of a discotheque in Berlin on April 5; Libya said 37 people, mostly civilians, were killed. In1989, students in Beijing launched aseries of pro-democracy protests; the demonstrations culminated in a government crackdown at Tiananmen Square. In2013,two bombs packed with nails and other metal shards exploded at the Boston Marathon finish line, killing two women and an8-year-old boy and injuring more than 260. Tea years ago:A Paris hotel fire killed 24 people, manyof them African immigrants. Five years ago: An ash cloud from an Icelandic volcano drifted over northern Europe, causing the largest disruption of flights since the 2001 terror attacks. President Barack Obama, visiting the Kennedy Space Center, predicted his new spaceexploration plans would lead American astronauts to Mars andback in his lifetime. Oaeyear ago:Boko Haram terrorists kidnappedabout 275 girls from a school in northeastern Nigeria.

Clam canceroutbreak is contagious

inc: m

Fast-food strikes-

HISTORY

SCIENCE

ai o in

unknown u n ti l

Infectious cancer cells drifting in the ocean might sound like a dystopian fan-

studied the genes of the cancer cells.

tasy. But scientists say that is

everywhere from auto parts to sunscreen.

"We realized that maybe

clams and infect them. This is the third such cancer known in nature. A devastating facial tumor in Tas-

exactly what is happening-

this was a clone of cells that

in clams.

had spread," said Stephen manian devils spreads by Goff at Columbia University. biting, and a tumor in dogs

For at least 40 years, outbreaks of the clam equiva-

Prices are likely to rise for a metal that's used

ease and how it spread were Cell, reported that the cells A m e r ican must survive long enough and Canadian researchers in seawater to reach other

New York Times News Service

Except for minor differences,

lent of leukemia have been

all the samples had the same

hammering populations of soft-shell clams (Mya arenaria), also called steamers and little necks, along the

DNA. That meant they all

East Coast from Maine to

Michael Metzger at Colum-

spreads by sexual contact. E lizabeth M urchison o f

the University of Cambridge, came from one original case who studies these t r ansof cancer in one clam. missible cancers, said in an Goff and his colleagues, email that she was not that

the Chesapeake, causing de- bia and Carol Reinish and clines in harvest and loss of James Sherry at E n vironjobs. ment Canada, who published But the cause of the dis- their findings in the journal

surprised that a third trans-

missiblecancer had been discovered. But, she added, "I would not have guessed that

it would be clams!"

SCIENCE Q&A

Can a moonhave a moon, too? By C. Claiborne Ray

blymeet the same fate thatbe-

or a moon could capture a

New York Times News Service

falls human-made lunar sat-

passing object, a less likely

Q •• moon to have a natu-

ellites after a certain period: Tidal forces would make its

event. But there is a limited re-

rally occurring moon of its

orbit decay, and it would even-

gion in which a lunar satellite could stay in orbit under

Is it possible for a

own'? Seong Joon Cho / Bloomberg News

Zinc ingots sit stacked at the Public Procurement Service (PPS) warehouse in Gunsan, South Korea, in 2014. Zinc is rebounding as a desirable commodity as mines from Africa to Ireland that have

produced the metal for decades are tapped out. By Joe Deaux andMatt Craze Bloomberg News

$2,850 in 2016. The w orld's

a moon'smoon to be there. r e fined-zinc

Tucked awayinthe remote

supply fell short of demand

limestone plateaus of northern Australia, the owners of a

by 310,000 tons last year, the most since 2005, Internation-

massive zinc mine have begun preparing its transition back to cattle-grazing land. For the m iner, China's

al Lead 8 Zinc Study Group data show. The gap could expand to 1.98 million tons by 2017, Bloomberg Intelligence

MMG Ltd., that hurts because

analysts Kenneth Hoffman and Sean Gilmartin said in a

replacing the tapped-out mine — which is responsible for 4

report last month. percent of the world's zinc outThe supply lag comes after put — with a fresh source of a decadelong boom for metals the metal has proven elusive. demand in China, the world's For commodity investors who

top consumer, spurred miners

have grown accustomed to to dig ore out of the ground the emergence of supply gluts as quickly as possible. At the sparking sell-offs in every- same time, rising costs and a thing from copper to wheat, lack of untapped big deposits it's a boon. meant that producers had a Zinc, unlike t hose other hard time bringing on replaceraw materials, is rebounding, ment supplies as consumption largely because of a growing increased. trend highlighted by the fate of MMG, the Hong Kong-listMMG's mine. From Africa to ed unit of China's biggest Ireland, mines that have pro-

duced themetal for decades are now tapped out. Morgan Stanley estimates that by 2017 more than 1.2 million metric

tons of annual mined supply will be taken out of product ion. That's more than t h e

United States uses in an entire year. "It's all about supply," Clive Burstow, a London-based investment manager at Baring

state-owned metals t r ader, plans to close the Century

mine in Australia by midyear and has failed to identify a replacement.

"We can't find any more zinc of significance, which tells us even more that it's gochelmore, MMG's chief executive officer, said in a March

10 interview on Bloomberg Television. "We're very bullish on zinc."

telephone interview. "It's sim-

mines that producers are be-

ply that thebig mines are coming off stream this year, and there's no big supply to replace it. So we're naturally moving into an increasing deficit

ing driven to increasingly remote locations. Ironbark Zinc, by Glencore and Nyrstar, is exploring a deposit near an

market."

inlet on northern Greenland,

It's so hard to find new

an Australian explorer backed

Tighter supplies are prompt- a coastalarea oficebergs and ing banks including BNP Pa- polar bears, that might conribas and Goldman Sachs to tain 13 billion pounds (5.9 milforecasthigher prices for the lion tons) of lead and zinc. metal, which is used in steel Even as mines shut, slowauto parts, brass plumbing fix- ing growth in China threatens tures and sunscreen. Demand demand, and a stronger dollar exceeded output by the most curbs the appeal of commodiin nine years in 2014 and the

ties as alternative investments,

deficit will almost double next year, according to data from

said Bart Melek, the head of commodity strategy at TD

the International Lead & Zinc

Securities.

Study Group and Bloomberg More than half of global Intelligence. supplies are used to galvanize prices up 7.5 percent over the past 12 months on the London

steel, Morgan Stanley esti-

mates. China accounted for 51 percent of the world's crude-

Metal Exchange, to $2,174.50 a steel production in February, ton. That's the onlygain among according to the latest data the six main metals traded on

from the World Steel Associ-

the exchange. The Bloomberg ation. China steel producers Industrial M etals S ubindex estimate their output will conslumped 15 percent the nine

that circulated around them

Even then, an object in or- early in the history of the bit around a sizable satellite of system. That could happen a sizable planet would proba- elsewhere in the universe,

the influence of a m o on's

gravity rather than becoming subject to the gravity of the more massive planet that held that moon. Such

a region of gravitational influence is called the Hill

sphere, after the American astronomer George William Hill (1838-1914), who first described it.

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet sss• •

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• • Classifieds .b dbN

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Cascade Natural Gas files natural gas increase request in Oregon The purpose of this announcement is to provide Cascade Natural Gas customers with general information about the company's proposals and the effects on its customers. Calculations and statements within this announcement are not binding on the Oregon Public Utility Commission. Cascade Natural Gas filed a natural gas rate increase request with the Oregon Public Utility Commission on March 31, 2015. If approved, it would increase residential customers' monthly bill by an average of $1.88 a month.

ing to be tight," Andrew Mi-

Asset Management, which oversees $44 billion, said in a

The recent rally in zinc left

tually break up or be drawn • It is p ossible, scien- into the parent moon by the • tists say, but no such forceofgravity. submoons are known in our Scientists th i n k t hat solar system, and even in a most of the moons in the faraway system, conditions solarsystem were probably of mass and distance would formed by the consolidahave to be just right to allow tion of disks of dust and gas

tract this year after consump-

months through March and tion peaked and more mills fell 9.7 percent in the past year are shut. "We have some concerns as the Bloomber g Commodity Index of 22 raw materials tum- about demand, and we've seen bled 27percent. a lot less restocking than we'd Prices will rise as high as normally get this time of year," $2,397 by year end, accord- Melek said by telephone from ing to the average estimate Toronto. "There's concern that in a Bloomberg survey of C hina's steel output will b e nine traders and analysts. lower because of a glut of steel, Goldman forecast $2,500 in and that means you're going to 12 months, and BNP Parib- use lessgalvanized product, as predicted an average of w hich means lesszinc."

The main reason for the rate increase request is to recover the cost of the increased investment in natural gas facilities to ensure safe and reliable service. The projected 20 I 5 yearend total gross investment by Cascade for Oregon natural gas operations is $193 million, compared with $4 I million in I988 when the last general rate case was filed. The proposed increase is for $3.6 million annually over current rates, or a 5.11 percent overall increase. Cascade serves about 68,000 customers in 25 Oregon communities. The proposed increase for each rate class, which is based on rate class studies, is: • Residential 3.48 percent • Commercial 5.98 percent • Industrial 6.78 percent Copies of the rate case filing are available for inspection at Cascade's main and district offices. For additional information, the company can be reached at: 8113 W. Grandridge Blvd Kennewick, WA 99336-7166 Phone: 888-522-1130 Additional information about the rate case filing can also be found on the company's website: www.cngc.com. The Oregon Public Utility Commission can be reached at: PO Box 1088 Salem, OR 97308-1088 Phone: 800-522-2404


A4 T H E BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

Parentsandlawmakersfight back Study: Teens still use Facebook as the standardizedtests pile on By Leanne Italie

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Remember those declarations that teens

By Renee Schoof McClatchy Washington Bureau

W ASHINGTON — I f

priate tests," according to Sens. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and i t ' s Patty Murray, D-Wash., chair-

springtime, it must be standardized testingtime in schools

test scores. "There's always been a group of parents that don't like test-

man and ranking member, re- ing," said Michael Petrilli, presispectively, of the Senate Health, dent of the Thomas B. Fordham

across the country. Education, Labor and Pensions Institute, a conservative eduIt's also when the debate Committee. cation research center. "I think That's still down the road. the reason it's been brought to over whether students are inundated with too many tests What's new this year is that a rapid boil lately is because of becomes hot. for the first time most states these teacher evaluations." Experts say testing is up. are using new computer-based Teststhat states require to Parents who want their chil- tests that require more critical measure progress in math and dren to skip the tests say their thinking. reading cover about 20 percent What's not are the com- of teachers, Petrilli said. Many ranks are growing. Lawmakers say they're hearing a loud plaints. Some parents worry states have standardized tests message about too much un- that schools base their lesson in other subjects so that all necessary testing. plans on what the tests focus teachers can be evaluated by The Common Core, a set on. Poor test-takers are at a the results. "It's not just the assessments of tougher classroom stan- disadvantage. Critics say too dards adopted by more than 40 much money is spent on test- that they actually take as part states, has further inflamed the ing. The consequences of fail- of the state assessment procritics. ure can mean dosed schools, gram, it's the constant benchBut new legislation might lost jobs and an impact on stu- marking and practice tests that change the school testing dent progress. take up a significant amount landscape. Education Secretary Arne of students' time," said Scott Congress will debate educa- Duncan, who wants to main- Placek, president of the Texas tion this spring as lawmakers tain the federal role of holding Parents' Educational Rights attempt to rewrite No Child schools accountable for stu- Network, a coalition of parents Left Behind, the law spelling dent growth through annual and lawyers that supports parout the federal role in public tests, nonetheless has said that ents who don't want their chileducation. Passed in 2002, it students, parents and teachers dren to take the tests. mandated annual testing and have a legitimate complaint I n N o rt h C a r olina, t h e attached severe consequences where there's too much testing Governor's Teacher Advisofor schoolswhose test scores or test preparation. ry Committee recommended didn't show enough progress. Under No Child Left Behind, ways to alleviate what it called A bipartisan agreement in schools were required to show the testing burden on the disthe Senate on its update of the "adequate yearly progress" trict level. It also found that the education bill might reduce the or face outside intervention, state had reduced the number pressure to test. It gives states, which could result in school of requiredend-of-course tests not Washington, the job of en- takeovers. from 10 to three in the past five suring that schools are doing Waivers from the law's re- years and had eliminated other good work and deciding what quirements under the Obama staterequiredassessments. to do about those that aren't. a dministration c a m e w i t h Texas and Virginia passed The legislation "should pro- conditions that schools base laws that reduced the number duce fewer and more appro- teacher evaluations partly on of state-required tests.

Fi tin

ome eSSneSS,

1 smart one at a time By Claire Cain Miller New York Times News Service

Holly Leonard has been homeless on and off for years. There was a stint in jail and,

more recently, a period in a women's h omeless s helter,

while herhusband slept intheir car. B ut last month, the t w o

moved into a one-bedroom apartment in San Jose, California, complete with a small

garden. Leonard found it on Craigslist while using her Nexus 5 smartphone — a do-

nation from Google that she got from a San Jose nonprofit called Community Technology Alliance. "People don't put out 'For rent' signs anymore, so the In-

ternet is the best way," Leonard said. "You can't even go get a paper application for a lot of things. You can't get a job unless you get online. "Before I got a free phone, it was like you're almost nonexistent."

The smartphone giveaway program, though small, typifies the way Bay Area tech

companies have started to respond to the glaring homelessness problem right outside their luxurious company campuses: not by donating clothes or serving food, but by using technology. Sometimes, Silicon Valley's belief that tech can solve any

problem — not just ordering cabs and sharing selfies, but also ending h omelessness or poverty — can seem like a stretch. Even Bill Gates, a founder ofMicrosoft,has ar-

Jim Wilson /New YorkTimes NewsService

Allan Baez, right, of the Community Technology Alliance, shows

Ada Camachothe Nexus 5smartphone she had been givenIn San Jose, California. The Community Technology Alliance has ar-

rangedforpeoplesuch asCamacho who are orhavebeen homeless to get smartphones that can help them find basic services. The organization has received1,000 phones provided by Google.

gory, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

much solve or diminish." Twitter is building a $3 million computer lab for low-inIn th e S a n J o s e a r ea, come people, across the street three-quarters of h omeless from its Tenderloin headquarpeople live in unsheltered lo- ters. Zendesk, which makes cations, the highest rate in the businesssoftware, created a country. In December, officials mobile app, LinkSF, for homethere shut down the Jungle, a less people to find things such 68-acre homeless encampment as shelters and soup kitchens. inthe heart of Silicon Valley. Employees from Twitter, YamM eanwhile, the average per- mer and Zynga tutor low-inson in Silicon Valley last year come people in using social earned $116,033, and in San media. Francisco, $104,881, including To distribute the Google supplements such as pensions. phones, Community TechnolThat is compared with $61,489 ogy Alliance works with other in the United States as a whole, nonprofits to find people who according to Joint Venture Sil- would benefit from them and icon Valley, which publishes use them responsibly. an annual report. The median It has given away about 100 home sale price in San Fran- of the 1,000 phones and promcisco is more than $1 million, ised another 350 to various or-

gued against the idea. "PCs are according to Trulia, the real not, in the hierarchy of human estate site. In Palo Alto, it is $2.3 needs, in the first five rungs," million. he said in a 2013 interview. Tech companies have preIn the United States, though, ferred to focus their philanthroInternet access has in many py outside the Bay Area and the ways become like a basic need. United States. But as rents have Without it, it can be difficult dimbed intune with stockpricto find a home, apply for a job, es, and as tech workers have signup for classes, make home- become the subjects of resentless shelter reservations or find ment and harassment, some soup kitchens. And for people companiesare paying more who live on the streets, smartphones are the most efficient way to connect to the Internet.

attention to the people outside their windows.

So although clothing and food are vital, advocates say equipping homeless and low-income people with phones and techni-

ter and Zendesk agreed to a

Companies including Twitcertain number of volunteer hours and cash donations in exchange for tax breaks to open

offices in the gritty Tenderloin Silicon Valley and the sur- district of San Francisco. "These companies are doing rounding areas are a microcosm of national income in- so many projects outside of the equality. Tech companies have U.S., in India, in Africa," said done little to close the gap. Allan Baez, project manager The San Jose metropolitan for Mobile 4 All, the free phone areahas 7,600homeless people, program at Community Techand San Francisco has 6,400, nology Alliance. "But even in placing them among the top 10 their own backyard there are metros nationwide in that cate- issues that technology can very cal skills also makes sense.

ganizations. BetterWorld Wire-

less provides data and phone service for$30to $40am onth. Leonard pays for her phone service byworking with Downtown Streets Team, a nonprofit

that gives people stipends for doing tasks such as picking up trash on highways. Homeless customers get two months to make monthly payments and can keep their phone number even if they cannot afford to pay for a period and lose service. They charge the phones at coffee shops or libraries.

are done with Facebook? Think again. F acebook remains t h e most-used social media site among American teens ages 13 to 17, according to a new study from the Pew Research Center. And, perhaps sur-

prisingly, boys visit the site more often than girls. Aided hugely by smartphones and other mobile devices, 71 percent of teens surveyed said they use Facebook, with the same percentage saying they use more than on e

s o cial n e twork

of seven options they were

use Facebook, 13 percent use distinct pattern in social meGoogle Plus, 13 percent are dia use by socio-economic Instagram users, and 3 per- status. cent use Snapchat. Teens fro m h o useholds The Pew c e nter d i d n't with earnings of less than compare the latest survey to $50,000 are more likely to its previous studies on the u se Facebook the most subject because it switched 49 percentcompared with its national representative 37 percent of teens from sample from telephone in- households with earnings of terviews to an o n line for- $50,000 or more. mat, potentially skewing reAs far as how much time sults when comparisons are is spent on social media, 24 made. percent of teens overall go The latest study points online "almost constantly," to Facebook as a d omi- the study said, with 56 pernant force in teens' online cent saying they go online lives even as I nstagram several times a day and 12 and Snapchat have gained percent reporting once-a-day momentum. use. Facebook was the site Among other sites the they used most frequently, 1,060 teens were asked about

asked about. Half the teens said they

at 41 percent, followed by

also use Instagram and four in 10 said they used Snapchat, according to the study released April 9.

Snapchat at 11 percent. Boys

they use Twitter and Google

are more likely than girls to report they visit Facebook

Plus, 24 percent said they use Vine, and 14 percent said

most often — at 45 percent

Tumblr.

Among 22 percentof teens who use one site, 66 percent

versus 36 percent of girls. Six percent said they use Pew's data also revealed a Twitter most often.

Primary Continued from A1 The party also hopes to have candidates in eight to

10 legislative races and a few statewide races, Peralta said.

are Twitter, Vine and 'Ibm-

Instagram at 20 percent and blr. Thirty-three percent said

also said she believes there is ed to vote in the Republican value to belonging to a party. primary. "I wanted to see if there was In M u ltnomah County, a way toincrease their access postcards were sent to nearto the ballot and do it in a for- ly 95,000 unaffiliated voters mat that was constitutional," letting them know they could Hoyle said. "I will say for the vote in the primary race for record I think the best option secretary of state,treasurwill be for the parties to open er and attorney general. Of up their parties to nonaffiliat- those, nearly 1,900 requested ed voters." primary ballots, and of those, One thing i s b ecoming about 1,100 voted. clearas parties consider new T he same wa s t r u e f o r proposals to expand primary Washington County, said

State law allows Oregon's political parties to open their primary elections to other registered voters. Republicans opened their primary in 1992 and 2012, and Democrats did so access: Costs for counties will in 1998 and 2000. rise. The offer by the IndepenEach ballot sent to unaffilident Party represents an ated voters in the 2012 primaattempt to address a larger ry cost Multnomah County trend in Oregon politics: nearly $22, compared with movement by the state's about $3 on average, accordthree major parties to ing to Multnomah County change their elections pro- Elections Director Tim Scott. "That's d i rectly a t t r ibutcesses to adapt to a growing number of unaffiliated able costs. Basically the cost

Mickie Kawai, elections man-

ager, who noted participation could have been low in part becausethe Republican Party had one candidate in the rac-

es on the primary ballot that year: Knute Buehler, who ran forsecretary ofstate.

The cost of mailing postc ards alone added up t o $89,200 for counties, which voters and party member- of the postcards, cost of print- are charged with administership that has dropped in ing those extra ballots, any ing elections in Oregon. The recent years. costs specifically attributable cost included nearly $4,000 "Each of the three major to those ballots we tracked for Deschutes County, $450 parties are going to need just for curiosity's sake," Scott for Crook County and $375 for to think that through from said. Jefferson County, according to their own point of view," When a major party opens state data. "It does have an impact on said Greg Leo, who acts as its primary, the Oregon Seca spokesman for the Ore- retary of State sends all unaf- county budgets," Scott said. "It gon Republican Party. filiated voters a postcard no- is what it is. We're required to Leo said the question of tifying them of the chance to run elections no matter what opening the Republican vote. Voters must then request happens." primary t o u n affiliated a ballot from the county clerk — Reporter: 406-589-4347, voters would fall to the par- if they decide to vote in the tanderson@bendbulletin.com ty's central committee and primary. new Chairman Bill Currier, who wasn't available for comment.

" At this p o int, th e p l an would be to utilize the same

Rep. Val Hoyle, D-Eugene, proposed a bill that

Green, a Secretary of State

process as before," said Tony

Visit Central Oregon's

HunterDouglas

spokesman. would allow u n affiliated Not every county tracked voters access to major par- costs similarly in 2012, though ty primaries on the condi- they all were on the hook for tion that they register to the the 20centsperpostcard sent party they vote for in the to themore than 446,000 unafprimary. filiated voters statewide, and Hoyle said during her added costs for the additional testimony the bill won't ballots for the relatively few pass in its current form. unaffiliated voters who opt-

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She said House Bill 3500

was meant to start a conversation about the bloc of voters that has no say in

primary elections — when most legislative races in

Oregon are e ffectively decided. Hoyle's bill would have required unaffiliated voters

to join a party in part because a 2000 U.S. Supreme Court decision ruled states

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couldn't force parties to open their primaries. Hoyle

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Tensionsbetween tech com-

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Whychus Continued from A1 In June, the trust will start

removing dilapidated structures on the property. A mobile home from the late 1960s has become a fire and rodent

hazard. Other associated buildings will be removed, but a building that houses a well on the property will stay, Nye sard. In the fall, the trust plans

to begin planting native seeds and opening the property for guided tours. Forestry work to relieve pressure on aspen groves from encroaching juniper and ponderosa pine probably will wait until next year. The Upper Deschutes

Preserving more ofWhychusCreek The Deschutes Land Trust recently bought 58 more acres of land along Whychus Creek near Sisters. The new Aspen Hollow Preserve brings the Whychus Canyon Preserve to 988 acres total. It adds a half-mile of steelhead habitat, ponderosa pine and aspen woodlands, and cliff habitat for raptors and bats.

Alder Springs

30 GRANDPARKNTS

Rimrock Ranch Conservation Easement

that want to hear their grandchildren

JEFFERSON COUNTY OESCHUTES COUNTY

Aspen Hollow Preserve Indian Ford Meadow reserve

Whychns Canyon Preserve Camp Polk Meadow Preserve

~'i 't'l(i '

said the trust may take the group back out to look at the

newly acquired creek habitat. Whychus Creek flows into the Deschutes River near L ake

Billy Chinook. "The bulk of the stream on

Sist s Source: Deschutes Land Trust

Monday. Nye said the sellers in the Aspen Hollow deal asked the trust not to disclose their identity or the cost of the

the property is already providing great habitat for fish," Nye property.

'

• ~ ~4 .'~~

Watershed Council has helped

the trust in the past, and Nye

A5

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

• r

area to determine their interest in conservation projects. The trust has identified three

V*

additional miles of high-pri-

I

ority restoration and conser-

In 2010, the trust bought 450 vation projects it would like es we might enhance." acres of land along Whychus to complete along Whychus The trust launched its Cam- Creek, and lastSeptember Creek. Nye said t h e t r u st paignforWhychus Creek last it bought another 480 acres will probably pursue "a mix fall. It has raised about one- downstream for about $4 of conservation easements third of its $11 million goal. million, according to Bulletin and purchasing property, deThe money to purchase the archives. The trust also has a pending on what landowners' Aspen Hollow Preserve came conservation easement that objectives are, and what our from land trust members, the prevents development on the objectives are for a particular Oregon Watershed Enhance- 1,100-acre Rimrock R anch, property.... But it's up to landment Board, the Laird Norton through w hich W h ychus owners and what they want F amily Foundation and t h e Creek flows. to do. We work with willing Roundhouse Foundation, acIn the future, the trust plans landowners." cording to a Deschutes Land to keep fundraising and work— Reporter: 541-383-0354, Trust news release issued ing with landowners in the jrockotrtribendbulletin.com said. "But there are some plac-

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are spending more on groceriescompared with a year earContinued from A1 overtake t h e b a b y-boomer lier outstripped those who said An otherwise fairly unregeneration this year. they are spending less by 45 "Millennials view dining out percentage points,according markable retail sales report offered some insight into the as a social event (Le., a chance to a Gallup survey conducted evolution of American eating to connect)," the Restaurant Nov. 10 through Nov. 20. The habits, hinting at a generation- A ssociation advises on i t s share of those baby boomers al shift that already has restau- website. "They tend to favor spending more on "dining out" rants thinking about how to fast food, deli food and pizza was smaller than those who cater to those growing ranks restaurants over coffee shops, said they were purchasing less high-end dining and casual at restaurants and bars, by 10 of millennials. That younger cohort has dining. Their diversity and in- percentage points. been identified as being more terest in new things draw them One caveat with the data willing to spend on "food away to more ethnic r estaurants should ease concerns consumfrom home," according to a too." ers will increasingly rely on November report from MorAt the same t ime, older restaurants for daily meals. gan Stanley. Americans have been express- Retailers such as Wal-Mart The National Restaurant ing less of a willingness to and Costco Wholesale also Association has caught on. spend on dining out while fun- offer grocery items in their The food services trade asso- nelingmore cash toward those stores, yet they're not tallied in ciation, which boasts almost grocery trips. The share of 51- the Commerce Department's 500,000 members, isfocused to 69-year-olds who said they grocery-store category.

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ostensibly to protect them from the dangers of walking home in a wealthy suburb of Washington, D.C., recently rated the "Most Caring Sub-

ParentS' laWSuit —A Washington law firm will file suit and pursue "all legal remedies" to protect the rights of the Maryland parents whose two young children were taken into custody for more than five hours Sundayafter someone reported them as they made their way homeunsupervised from a Silver Spring, Maryland, park, the firm said Tuesday. Danielle and Alexander Meitiv were "rightfully outraged by the irresponsible actions" of Maryland Child Protective Services and Montgomery County police, said attorney Matthew Dowd, of the firm Wiley Rein, in awritten statement. "We must ask ourselves how wereached the point where a parent's biggest fear is that government officials will literally seize our children off the streets as theywalk in our neighborhoods," he said. Dowd was not immediately available for commentTuesday but said through a spokeswomanthat the firm would file the legal action"soon."Hedeclinedto saythroughthespokeswoman whom the suit is being filed against. The firm is representing the family pro bono.

urb in America" by real estate

— The Washington Post

Continued from A1 After a long family road trip, the children went to the neighborhood park with their parents' permission, with strict instructions to be home by 6 p.m. They never made it, because the cops picked them up along the way after receiving a call from someone who saw the siblings walking down the street together. The children were detained

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rates have continued to drop

between the ages of 5 and 14 and children) in 2014, roughtoday, the chances of prema- ly 96 percent were runaways ture death by any means are — kids or adults deliberately roughly I in 10,000, or 0.0001 trying to escape a situation percent. at home. In fact, 0.1 percent But parents typically ar- of missing persons cases en't thinking about disease or were what we'd think of as a general morality when they "stereotypical k i dnapping" — where a complete stranger fret over unattended kidswe're worried about all the tries to abduct somebody and terrible things that could the- carry him off by force. These oretically happen to a child figures comport with a more out on his own. detailed analysis, carried Chief among them is the out by the Justice Departthreat of abduction, or of the ment in 2002, of child-only child simply disappearing abductions. without a trace. Another thing parents worThe FBI has several de- ry about when it comes to cades of data on missing their kids — traffic. If they're persons now, and those num- left to wander on their own bers show that the number outside, won't they run out in of missing person reports front of a car or get hit by an involving minors has been irresponsible driver? In short: at record-low levels in recent almost certainly not.

in recent decades too. Mortality rates have fallen by nearly

years. Overall, the number of these reports have fallen by

adult, or being detained by the cops and family services for nearly six hours'? Fortunately, there is some data to answer that question. The first thing to note is that the overall c hild m o r tality rate in the United States has

never been lower, according to the Centers for D i sease Control. In 1935, for instance,

there were nearly 450 deaths for every 100,000 children

aged I to 4. Today, there are fewer than 30 deaths for every 100,000 kids in that age group — one-fifteenth of the rate 80 years ago. Much of that decline can be attributed to the rise of child-

hood vaccines. But mortality

Data f ro m

t h e Na t i on-

al Highway Traffic Safety

40 percent since 1997. This is A dministration shows t h at more impressive when you between 1993 and 2013, the Trends. consider that the overall U.S. number ofchil d pedestrians Part of t hat decline is a population has risen by 30 struck and killed by cars fell drop in child homicides. As percent over that time period, by more than two-thirds, from of 2008, the homicide rate for meaning that the actual rate more than 800 deaths to fewer kids under the age of 14 stood of missing person reports for than 250. The number of trafat a near-record low 1.5 cas- children has fallen faster than fic-related pedestrian injuries es per 100,000, according to 40 percent. in this age group fell by a simthe Bureau of Justice StatisBut even these numbers ilar percentage over the same tics. And the homicide rate include an awful lot of sce- petmd. for teens ages 14 to 17 plum- narios t ha t y o u w o u l dn't Again these are raw nummeted from 12 homicides per typically worry about when bers, and as the population 100,000 in 1993 to 5.1 in 2008, letting your kid walk to the has grown over that perianother near-record low. park. For instance, among all od, the actual rate has fallen Long story short: For a kid missing persons cases (adults faster. half since 1990, according to

CDC data tabulated by Child

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A6 T H E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

TODAY'S READ: NURSING HOMES

aciities e e amenities, ut uai 0 carecan a By Katie ThomassNew York Times News Service

Promises of "decadent" hot baths on demand, putting greens and gurgling waterfalls to calm the mind: These luxurious touches rarely conjure images

Where the poor and rich really spend their money By Max Ehrenfreund The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Law-

of a stay in a nursing home.

w elfare

r e c ipients u s e

Medicare dollars, nursing

public benefits, suggesting that the poor are buying

homes are turning to amenities

things such as lobster, filet

such as those to lure patients who are leaving a hospital and

mignon, vacations aboard cruise ships and visits to psychics. It's an open question whether the problem these proposals aim to

But in a cutthroat race for

need short-term rehabilitation

after an injury or illness, rather than long-term care at the end oflife. Even as nursing homes are busily investing in luxury living quarters, however, the quality of care is strikingly uneven. And it is clear that many of the

For the first time, the bu-

have doctors on staff. A report released in 2014 by

doesn't have data on lobster and filet mignon, the

Photos byJessica Kourkounis/New YorkTimes News Service

One month after arriving at the Watermark at Logan Square nursan Injured foot In 2012, LoIs Johnson-Hamerman ended up In the

emergency room wIth a severe bedsore that had become dangerthe Department of Health and ously infected. She is now suing the company for negligence. Human Services' Office of the Inspector General found that

22 percent of Medicare patients who stayed in a nursing facilityfor 35 days or less experiencedharm as a resultoftheir

hospital treatment in 2011 be-

essentials such as housing despite their more ex-

rich have relatively more

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travagant budgets in these

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categories. O ne exception w a s

said Dr. Arif Nazir, an associ-

transportation. As a share

ateprofessor of dinicalmedicine at Indiana University

of total spending, the middle class spent the most on getting around. Biking or walking to work is something that the wealthy and

who studies geriatrics. He said

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the destitute do. The mid-

dle class apparently commutes by car. The bureau's

per month

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data show that people with

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the most on auto loans, gas, repairs and car insurance

"(]1 ll' I Jg/Ntfl'A%h4INK ss

Medicaid, the health insurance

program for the poor, for long- group. "I think you're seeing a term residents. much greater linking of qualAt the same time, hospitals ity, and an emphasis on it," he are trying to cut costs by dis- added. charging some patients earlysuch as those who have had hip Promises ofcare replacement or heart surgery, Dr. Lois J ohnson-Hamer-

physician presence," he said. Johnson-Hamerman, 87, is suing Watermark over what

she describes as negligent care.

"At least I'm still here," she said recently at her home. "But where would Ibe if I didn't have man, a retired neonatologist, the fri ends and resources to do said she thought she had done something about it?" h er h omework w h e n s h e C. Jill Hofer, a spokeswoman checked into the Watermark at for Watermark, said that the

Logan Square, a nursing facili- home was committed to proty in Philadelphia. viding quality care and that it has created a bull market in The home had a reputation denied the allegations in the the once-struggling industry as for quality and got high marks lawsuit. investors clamor to snatch up from the federalgovernment. thebill.

The combination of factors

Bull market for short-termhomes to bring in short-term patients. site promised "top-notch health homes with the most potential

Until a recent revision, its web-

Sale prices of nursing homes averaged $76,500 per bed last year — the second consecutive year of record-breaking prices, according to Irving Levin Associates, which analyzes the senior housing market.

care" with amenities induding

The nursing home industry a staff willing to administer a has long argued that it relies "decadent hot bath" at any hour on higherMedicare payments of the day. to offset the rates it receives B ut one month after a r from Medicaid, which usually riving at W a termark f or pays for the care of long-term s hort-term r ehabilitation of

So lucrative are Medicare an injured foot in 2012, Johnpayments that some homes son-Hamerman ended up in have decided not to take low- the emergency room with a seer-paying Medicaid patients at vere bedsore that had become all. dangerously infected. Far The shifting l andscape, from the service she said she some say, marginalizes poor had been promised, she said long-term residents with exten- the workers never gave her a

clear how much the rich or

make very similar choices at the grocery store. The wealthy spend more overall, ofcourse,and less as a share of their total spending. Yet the rich, the poor and the middle class all spend about 19

on fruits and vegetables, about 22 percent on meats

and about 13 percent on

And indeed, even though facilities earned a 2 percent

Othercategoriesoffood also show no variation

overall profit in 2013, they lost

with income. What about that lobster? Fish and sea-

food account for between 3 percent and 4 percent of

the custodial care world," said Anthony Chicotel, a staff law-

residents have moved to assist-

when it

hours, a crucial step in preyer at California Advocates for venting bedsores. Nursing Home Reform. She said she left the facility He says he fields calls atleast only after friends, including once a week from residents doctors and nurses, became who are being evicted because so horrified by her care that their Medicare coverage, which they insisted she be taken to a lasts 100 days, is expiring and hospital. the residents will transition to Geriatric researchers call lower-paying Medicaid insur- this disconnect the "chandeance. "They're being pushed lier effect." Attractive lobbies out, and they don't have any- and enticing amenities do not where to go, really, that can always mean that a home protake care of them," he said. videsgood medical care. Representatives of nursing In reality, said Dr. Steven homes acknowledge the chal- Handler, a geriatrician and lenges are substantial, but they assistant professor at the Uniare optimistic about the prog- versity of Pittsburgh School of ress they are making. Medicine, many nursinghomes "It's uneven, but I think, that are struggling to provide consaid, we're trending in the right sistent, quality care despite direction," said Dr. David Gif- genuine efforts. "The nursing

ed-living facilities and hospitals have sought to discharge

choices at the g rocery store, Americans have so much in common, given the other factors dividing the country along economic lines. Unsurprisingly, the rich spend relatively more of

ford, the senior vice president of

rants and private rooms that

homes are kind of stuck in an

patients earlier. On a typical

day in 2000,about 9percentof residents in an average nursing home were covered by Medicare, according to federal data. By 2014, that had risen to 15

percent. Some companies are now eliminating Medicaid payments entirely by building homes solely for the more lucrative short-term patients. Sante Partners, a developer

in Arizona, recently opened four nursing homes that do

not accept long-term residents. A fifth is to break ground this

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c o mes t o t h eir

t heir money eating o u t

and buyingalcohol,compared with the grocery budget. The poor s till smoke, whereas the affluent have largely given up

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Vour IometownDealer Since lIV FRKE1 YEARPAss!

CENTRAL OREGON'S L AR G E S T

The rich have more to spend on other luxuries, too. Th e r i c hest t e nth

RV INVENTO RY!

spent $2,239 over the year on fees and admissions,

The buildings resemble hotels, with high-quality restau-

likely to sporting events, museums and concerts, and $1,084 on their pets. The poorest group spent $162 on fees and $220 on pets.

s

53,3B6 down,IBOmonths,6.25% APRon approved credit, 720beaconcreditscore orhigher.

the habit.

summer.

quality and regulatory affaim older model that is based on a have kitchenettes. Developers at the American Health Care very small operating margin, say their singular focus allows Association, an industry trade low-staffing model and low them to provide better care.

2015 Springdale260TB

p ercent

of their grocery budget

cus on Medicare patients has intensified as many long-term

did not turn her every few

1 69 per month 51,48sdown,120monihs, 6.25%APRon approved credit, 720beaconcreditscore orhigher.

less of income, Americans

breads and cereals.

But in recent years, that fo-

Sleeps1!

the poor are spending on something relative to the weekly grocery list. The survey provides no evidence that the poor are wasting their money on delicacies. Indeed, the results show that regard-

on Medicare, Medicare, Medi- to respond to her requests to care has pushed out people in have her diaper changed and

full bath or shower, were slow

Stk¹8794 VI4206214

Another way of exam-

ining the data is to compare spending in each category to the household budget for food at home. This comparison makes

residents.

about 2 percent on non-Medicare patients, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, or MedPAC, an agency of Congress.

~~iepuo

relative to overall spending. (The rich still spend more in these categories in absolute terms.)

the grocery budget for all groups — $80 per year for the poor and $222 per year for the wealthiest group. It's comforting t h at

sive medical needs. "This focus

5999 down,120monlhs, 6.25%APRonapproved credit, 720beacon creditscore orhigher.

to spare after covering

cause ofharm experienced in nursing facilities. "These nursing homes were not built for this purpose,"

go home,they need continuing care somewhere. And for older adults, Medicare usually pays

T

I

1 12 per mont h

percentage of their total incomes, which are larger, the rich generally spend less. The result is that the

for example. Not quite ready to

T

~

survey does provide a fascinating level of detail. The rich spend more in almost every category

percent suffered temporary injury. The report estimated that Medicare spent $2.8 billion on

cause Medicare, the health insuranceprogram for older adults, pays84percentmore for short-term patients than nursing homes typically get from

StlaY8620Vi4109392

b ecause they can. A s a

medical care. An additional 11

Competition for these patients has become intense be-

~~10,K'0

and the rich — spend their money.

on nurses and aides and do not ing facility In Philadelphia, below, for short-term rehabilitation of

said.

2015 Salem185RB

data on how the poor -

reau released this data for 10 equally sized classes of U.S. households, sorted by income. While the bureau

cooking is the hardest part," he

)s

tics just helpfully released

lenge of providing the intensive medical care that rehabilitation

many patients leave hospitals with acute medical needs, before infections have been fully treated or as they adjust to new medications. "These patients are leaving the hospital half-cooked, and believe me, the latter part of the

l

solve actually exists, but the Bureau of Labor Statis-

homes are not up to the chalrequires. Many are often short

ARL 201S's MUST BK SORD!

makers in several states are urging limits on how

BEND

R EDM O N D

SALES 8 SERVICE 63500 NE Highway 97

8

SALES R SERVICE 2795 Hwy. 97 (Next to the Dollar Tree and Big 5)

Q 541-548-5254 Prices good through 4/19/15



B2

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R

Featuring concert footage, neverbefore-seen interviews and a look at the band from where it started "THE SECRET":A French film to where it is now; 7 p.m.; $12.50; about the consequences of WWII Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and upon a young boy as hediscovers IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, his family's war secrets, in honor Bend; www.fathomevents.com or of Hol ocaustRemembrance Day;5 844-462-7342. p.m.; free; Wille Hall, Central Oregon "LUCKY STIFF":The Redmond Community College, 2600 NW Proficiency Academy Performing College Way, Bend; 541-383-7235. Arts students will perform Lucky "ONCE UPONAN OPERA": Stiff based on the book, The Man Featuring a performance by the Who Broke the Bankat Monte award-winning UOOpera Ensemble, including material from "Cendrillon" Carlo by Michael Butterworth.; 7 p.m.; $8, $5 for students; and "Rusalka"; 7 p.m.; free, tickets Redmond Proficiency Academy, required; Tower Theatre, 835 NW 657 SWGlacierAve.,Redmond; Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. 541-526-0882. org or 541-317-0700. "THE 25THANNUALPUTNAM FERNANDO: The country pop and COUNTY SPELLINGBEE": A rock band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, musical comedy about a fictional spelling bee set in a geographically 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. ambiguous Putnam Valley Middle School; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for YAMN:The Denver rockand students and seniors; 2nd Street electronic band performs; 9 p.m.; Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., $7 plus fees inadvance, $10at Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 541-312-9626. 70 SW Century Dr, Bend; www. SCOOT HERRINGAND ALEX RIOS: volcanictheatrepub.com or Live comedy with Scoot Herring and 541-323-1881. Alex Rios; 8 p.m.; $5; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson THURSDAY Blvd., Bend; 480-257-6515. "8 DAYS":A film about human SEAN MCBRIDEANDSHAWN trafficking and what can happen in MCBRIDE:Featuring the live eight days; 6:30 p.m.; $12; Regal comedians; 8 p.m.;$8 plusfeesin OldMillStadium168 IMAX,680 advance, $10 at the door; Summit SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; Saloon, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; 541-749-2440. www.tugg.com/events/13556 or 503-951-9623. DARIUS KOSKI:Thefolk artist "RS: ALLDAY,ALLNIGHT": performs with Ryan Davidson and

TODAY

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.

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

JescJackknife;8:30 p.m .;$5 plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. THE CHINUPS:The folk band performs, with Corner Gospel Explosion, and Bravey Don; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

FRIDAY BEND HIGHGARAGE SALE:A garage sale to benefit Bend High's 2015 Safe 8 Sober Graduation Party; 9 a.m.; free; Bend Factory Stores, 60534 Tall Pine Ave., Bend; 541-389-6201. "THE LARAMIEPROJECT": A dramatization of the aftermath of the 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard, who was beaten and abandoned on the outskirts of Laramie, Wyoming; 7 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door, $5 for students; Redmond High School Auditorium, 675 SW Rimrock Way, Redmond; redmondhs.seatyourself.biz or 541-610-6248. "LUCKY STIFF":The Redmond Proficiency Academy Performing Arts students will perform Lucky Stiff based on the book, "The Man Who Broke the Bankat Monte Carlo" by Michael Butterworth.; 7 p.m.; $8, $5 for students; RedmondProficiencyAcademy, 657 SWGlacierAve.,Redmond; 541-526-0882.

"THE 25TH ANNUALPUTNAM COUNTY SPELLINGBEE": A musical comedy about a fictional

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, "THE LARAMIEPROJECT":A 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. dramatization of the aftermath of the mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard, who was beaten and abandoned on the outskirts of Laramie, Wyoming; SATURDAY

spelling beeset in ageographically ambiguous Putnam Valley Middle School; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. SOLO SPEAKSESSIONS-"THE ESSEX":Learn about The Essex, a Nantucket whaling ship that was rammed andsunkbyasperm wh ale in the middle of the Pacific Ocean in 1820, leaving 20 men in three small boats with little food or water; 7:30 p.m.; free; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. solospeak.com/ or 541-389-0803. SHAWN JAMES ATHE SHAPESHIFTERS: Thefive-piece rock band from Arkansas performs, with Woebegone;9 p.m.;$5 plus fees in advance, $8 at the door; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. DEDRIC CLARKANDTHESOCIAL ANIMALS:The rock band from Duluth, Minnesota, performs; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "INSPIRED TO RIDE": A film following cyclists from around the world as they race unsupported in the inaugural year of a 4,233-mile transcontinental race across the United States, to benefit the Central Oregon Trial Alliance; 9 p.m.; $15;

7 p.m.; $10plusfees in advance,

BEND HIGHGARAGE SALE:A garage sale to benefit Bend High's 2015 Safe & Sober Graduation Party; 9 a.m.; free; BendFactory Stores, 60534 Tall Pine Ave., Bend; 541-389-6201. SPRING BOOK SALE: The Friends of the Bend Public Libraries hosts a sale featuring books, CDs, audio books and more; 11 a.m.; free; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 NWWall St., Bend; www.fobl.org or 541-617-7047. COW PIEBINGORAFFLE: Featuring food and more, to benefit the Bend FFA Student Leadership Program; 11 a.m.; $5 for bingo ticket; Troy Field, Bond 8 Louisiana Streets, near McMenamins, Bend;541-419-8401. BELLAACAPELLAHARMONY CHORUS SENDOFF SHOW: The

acapella groupperforms, with UpBeat!, Sound Affaire quartets and Summit High School's Skyliner Jazz Girls; 2 p.m.; $7.50 plus fees in advance, $10atthedoor; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SEReed Market Road, Bend; 541-383-3142. GALA DE ORO: Featuring dinner, a silent auction, live music by Conjunto Alegre and more to benefit the Latino Community Association; 6 p.m.; $50 plus fees in advance, $55 after April 1; Boysand Girls Clubof Bend,500 NW Wall St., Bend; www.bendticket. com or 541-382-4366.

Career day

COLLEGE NOTES

got off at midnight the night before, said hisjob requires talking and li stening and thinking and typing all at once. "I was really grateful I took that keyboarding class in high school."

Alyssa Klnkade,of Bend, was initiated into the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi at Brigham Young University. Kaltlyn Renee Campbelland Andrea Torrey Price,both of Bend, were named to the winter 2015 honor roll at Central Washington University.

Retired lawyer Phil Johnson told students that to prac-

TEEN FEATS

for Deschutes County w h o

tice law you have to study math for the analytical skills

Elizabeth Pendergrass,a junior at Redmond Proficiency Academy, was awarded a $1,500 scholarship from The Center Foundation's Salute to Heroes Scholarship program. Pendergrass is a member of the National Honor Society and RPA Ambassador Cadre Program and volunteered for the American Red Cross. The following local students of

and English to write all those contracts.

one that goes to the stomach, the other to the lungs. "Thing

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Horse trainer Roger Buhrle, of Redmond, right, attempts to startle hls calm 3-year-old quarterhorse

Mac during his horse trainer presentation for students during career day at Elton Gregory Middle School in Redmondon Friday morning.

ambiguous Putnam Valley Middle School; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626.

the Bend Science Station won awards for their science projects at the Northwest Science Expo in Portland:Cole Fuller,sophomore at Bend High School, Best in Category, animal science, $15,000 scholarship to Lewis & Clark College;Tlell Wolf,junior at Bend High School, second place, animal science, $5,000 scholarship to OSU and $10,000 scholarship to University of Portland;Nina Lawler,eighth-grade homeschool student, Best in Category, consumer products testing;Raven Dow-Hygelund, sixth-grade homeschool student, Best in Category, animal science;Luka Perle,eighthgrader at REALMS charter school, second place, engineering;Llnnea Lane,eighth-grader at High Desert Middle School, Excellence in Statistics; andJackson Baker, eighth-grader at Cascades Middle School, Merit in Statistics Certificate.

meleons and guinea pigs When the bell rang and on up to elk and reindeer, a studentsgot up to leave, math

How to submit

Story ideas

buffalo herd and t he c am-

teacher Carl Robbins stopped

el who lives in Sisters. She came with a slideshow of squeal-inducing photos — a dog with bladder stones, a cow's C-section, an abscess

a boy on his way out. "What do you think, you want to be

Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.) Contact: 541-633-2117,youth©bendbulletin.com Mail:P. O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708 Other schoolnotes:College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-633-2117,bulletin©bendbulletin.com

School news:It emsandannouncements of general interest. Phone: 541-383-0354 Email: news@bendbulletin.com Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354 Email: aspegman@bendbulletin.com

removal on

a ho r s e.Then

is, youjust want to make sure they go in the right hole," she

there was the 3 a.m. call for

told students.

porcupine quills stuck in her

Terry has worked on cha-

spelling beeset in ageographically

SCHOOL NOTES

Continued from B1 In a ne arby classroom, Chad Hicks, a 911dispatcher

Justin Fairbanks of NorWest Realty played baseball in college and worked in the gambling industry in Las Vegasbefore starting in real estate in 2007, just as the housing bubble burst. His was a tough-love message: "You're going to fall on your face. At some point you're going to fail at something." Down the hall, CasseeTerry of Redmond Veterinary Clinic was showing off the tubes she uses in surgery,

$12 at the door, $5 for students; Redmond High School Auditorium, 675 SW Rimrock Way, Redmond; redmondhs.seatyourself.biz or 541-610-6248. "LUCKY STIFF":The Redmond Proficiency Academy Performing Arts students will perform Lucky Stiff based on the book, The Man Who Broke the Bankat Monte Carlo by Michael Butterworth.; 7 p.m.; $8, $5 for students; Redmond Proficiency Academy, 657 SWGlacierAve.,Redmond; 541-526-0882. BANFF MOUNTAINFILM FESTIVAL: Featuring short films about the adventure of climbing, mountain expeditions, remote cultures and the world's last great wild places, to benefit REALMS's programs; 7 p.m.; $25 plus fees in advance, $30 at the door; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "THE 25THANNUALPUTNAM COUNTY SPELLINGBEE": A musical comedy about a fictional

t he Great D ane w i t h 5 0 0 mouth.

a vet'?"

Pictures of a calf emerging from its mother still f r e sh, the boy didn't miss a beat.

"No thanks," he said and

headed for the door. — Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbuIIet in.com

Pu.re. &rrod.6 Co.

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will updateitemsinthe Police Log whensucharequest is received.Any new information,suchasthe dismissal of charges oracquittal, must beverifiable. For moreinformation, call541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — Atheft was reported andanarrest madeat3:02 p.m.April12, in the2500 blockof NE U.S.Highway20. Theft —Atheft wasreported at5:46 p.m. April12, intheareaof PinebrookBoulevard and U.S.Highway97. Theft —Atheft wasreported at9:24 p.m. April12, inthe 1700block ofSE BronzewoodAvenue. Theft — Atheft wasreported at11:43 a m. April13, inthe100 blockof SEScott Street. Theft —Atheft wasreported at1:33 p.m. April 13, inthe400 blockof NWDrake Road. Theft —Atheft wasreported at1:43 p.m. April 13, intheareaof NWMinnesota AvenueandNWLavaRoad. Theft —Atheft wasreported at1046a m. April 13, inthe1000 blockof NESavannah Drive.

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — Atheft wasreported andarrests were madeat11:59a m.April 6, inthe300 blockof NWOakTreeLane. Criminalmischief —Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at217 p.m.April 6, in the 200blockof SWPumiceAvenue. Theft — Atheft was reported andan arrest made at 4:33 p.m.April 6, inthe 3100 blockof S.U.S.Highway97. Criminalmischief —Anact of criminal mischiefwasreported at4:33 p.m.April 6, in the 3100blockof S.U.S. Highway97. Criminalmischief —Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at4:39 p.m.April 6, in the 900blockof NWOakPlace.

Theft — Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat4:41 p.m. April 6, in the300 blockof NWOakTreeLane. DUII —DerekEarl Graham,35, was arrested onsuspicion of driving underthe influence ofintoxicantsat8:08 p.m.April 6, in theareaof SWSixth Street andSW ForestAvenue. Vehiclecrash—Anaccidentwas reported at1:43p.m.April 7, inthe3400 blockof SWCanalBoulevard. Burglary — Aburglary wasreported, items stolenandanarrestwas madeat 2:02 p.m.April 7, inthe700 block of NW Fifth Street. DUII —LucasWiliams Skinner, 24,was arrested onsuspicion of driving underthe influence ofintoxicantsat5:26 p.m.April 7, in the 700block of NWFifth Street. Theft — Atheft wasreported at9p.m. April 7, inthe400 block of NWSixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:08 a.m. April 8, inthe3300block of S.U.S. Highway97. Criminalmischief —Anact ofcriminal mischief was reported at 12:15a.m. Apdl 8, inthe700 block of SWEvergreen Avenue. Vehiclecrash—Anaccident was reported at7:54 p.m.April 8, in the 2400 block of S.U.S.Highway97. Theft — Atheft was reported at415a.m. April 9, inthearea ofSWEighth Street and SW BlackButte Boulevard. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 8:11a.m. April 9, in the 1400 blockof SWCascade Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat12:20 p.m. April 9, in the 700 block of NWFifth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at4:45 p.m. April 9, inthe900 block of NWCanal Boulevard. Theft —Atheftwas reported at617 p.m. April 9, inthe3100 block of S.U.S. Highway97. Burglary — Aburglary wasreported at 9:10a.m. April10, inthe1400blockof NW RimrockDrive. Theft — Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat12:54 p.m. April10, in the 3100 blockof S.U.S.Highway97.

Theft —Atheftwas reported at5:32 p.m. April10, inthe1000 blockof NWElm Avenue. Unlawfulentry —Avehicle wasreported entered at8:23 p.m.April10, in the400 block of SW Fifth Street. Unauthorized use—Avehicle was reported stolenat 8:15a.m.April11, in the 2000blockofSW QuartzAvenue. Theft —Atheftwas reported at12:27 p.m.April11, inthe1300blockofSW33rd Street. DUB — Michael DavidDexter,48, was arrested onsuspicion ofdriving underthe influence ofintoxicants at1:32 p.m.April 11, inthe2000blockof S.U.S.Highway97. DUII — JoseGuadalupeGonzalez,40,was arrested onsuspicion ofdriving underthe influence ofintoxicants at10:26p.m.April 11, in the1000blockof NWSixth Street. Vehiclecrash—Anaccidentwas reported at6:57 p.m.April12, in the1700 block ofS.U.S.Highway97.

aj. B~ dU 16 —Medicalaidcalls. April9 9 — Medicalaidcalls. April10 16 —Medicalaidcalls. April11 4 — Medicalaidcalls. Aprll12 12 —Medicalaidcalls.

Bend Redmond

John Day Burns Lakeview

TOUCHMARK SINCE 1980

La Pine 541.382.6447

•3

eA

ro 0

bendurology.com

> ColumbiaBank

0•

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT

gI'SO auar

Criminalmischief — Anactof criminal mischief wasreported at8:27a.m. April 13, in the area ofSEDunhamStreet. Theft — Atheft was reportedandanarrest madeat7:59a.m.April 13,intheareaof NE LoperAvenue.

Be a Superhero for a Foster Child!

OREGOM STATE POLICE DUII —DylanZachary Morley,20, was arrested on suspicion ofdnving underthe influence ofintoxicantsat4:36p.m. April 10, in thearea ofSWAirport WayandMt. Hood Drive.

REDMOND FIRE RUNS April5 10 —Medicalaid calls. Aprill 11 —Medicalaidcalls. April8

Brought toyouby Bend Urology, Columbia Bank, BTL Liners, Albertazzi LawFirm, Horizon Broadcasting, Fleet Feet, and the Bulletin

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Court Appointed Special Advocotes FOR CHILDREH


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

E3

REGON

ea er as awon iSSi e By Jonathan J. Cooper

After an uproar, his replace-

The Associated Press

ment, Gottfredson, persuaded

EUGENE — Michael Schill, dean of the law school at the

lawmakersto create independent governing boards for

University of Chicago, was introduced Tuesday as president of the University of Oregon, becoming the school's fifth leader in six years.

the universities. But once the

board got the power to fire him, it promptly did so. In a statement, Democratic

Gov. Kate Brown called Schill "a highly qualified and accomplished academic leader of the utmost caliber." Schill, 56, has a five-year contract and will b e paid $660,000 a year, with a $1,200

T he president takes t h e

helm amid significant transition at the institution, which was freed last year from the

state university system and is now led by an independent governing board with ambitions for a big endowment and a national profile. "I think Mike Schill can be a

'

monthly car allowance and a free home. He'll have a lifetime Brian Davies/The (Eugene) Register-Guard via The Associated Press

Michael Schill speaks at a newsconference after being introduced

truly transformational leader as the18th president of the University of Oregon inside the Ford for the university," said Chuck Alumni Center on the campus of the University of Oregon in Lillis, chairman of the Board Eugene on Tuesday. Schill is formerly dean of the University of of Trustees. "This is not a per- Chicago Law School. son who's interested in us be-

ing average in anything." Schill will have to contend you will get the best possible im President Scott Coltrane, with diminished state fund-

education,'" Schill told report-

ing for higher education and a ers on the Eugene campus. need to raise money from priBefore starting at the Univate donors. Lillis said Schill's versity of Chicago in 2010, reputation for prodigious fund- Schill was law dean at the raising was a big factor in the University of California, Los decision to hire him. Angeles, for five years. He was A first-generation college previously on the law school student when he enrolled at faculty at the University of Princeton in the 1970s, Schill Pennsylvania, where his resaid he believes public univer- search focused on property sities are the key to opportuni- and realestate law. He earned ty for young people. a law degree from Yale Uni"I won't rest until every fam-

versity in 1984.

ily that has a child says to that Schill's appointment was child, 'You should go to the approved unanimously. He University of Oregon, because begins July 1, replacing inter-

appointment to the law school faculty, where he'll be entitled

to a $450,000-a-year job after he leaves the presidency. Lillis, the board chairman,

said a search committee narrowed the list of candidates to four finalists, who met with the

who took over when Michael

board in Portland. UO has faced scrutiny over

Gottfredson resigned abruptly

its handling of a student's al-

last summer after two years on

legation that she was sexually assaulted by three basketball players. The players were barred from campus, and prosecutorsdeclined to press charges. The woman filed a lawsuit this year saying the school knew one of the players had been suspended from another school over sexual misconduct allegations, delayed punishing the players to help the team and illegally accessed her counseling records.

the job. Coltrane will return to his

previous job as provost. The University of Oregon has faced turmoil in its senior leadership since l ongtime President Dave Frohnmayer stepped down in 2009. Richard Lariviere was fired in 2011 af-

ter lobbying the Legislature for the university's independence from the State Board of Higher

Education, which governed all seven public universities.

AROUND THE STATE Small tnrnndn —A small tornado that touched down Tuesday afternoon in the parking lot of a community college campus briefly lifted two people in aJeep Cherokee into the air, then slammedthe vehicle back down on its tires, witnesses said. Student Josh Hollowell was between classes at LaneCommunity College's main campus in Eugene when he saw the twister touch down, hitting four vehicles in the parking lot. The man inthe Jeeptold Hollowell he and his female companion were unhurt. A short time later they drove off. No onewas hurt, college spokeswomanJoan Aschim said. Both Hollowell and a campus safety officer, Sgt. Lisa Rupp,estimated the Jeepwas lifted about 8 feet off the ground. RanCll SlnplngS —Thejury in the murder trial of a Southern Oregon woman haslistened to a recording of her interview with police, in which she admits shooting two menandacknowledges that her pigs fed on the bodies. SusanMonica went on trial Tuesday in Medford on charges she killed two handymen living on her pig ranch in asmall JacksonCountycommunityanddismemberedthebodies.Themen died in separate years. In opening statements, defense lawyerGarren Pedemonte said Monica shot the first victim in self-defense andthe second as akind of mercy killing. Police searched her pig ranch after Monica was discovered using afood stamps card belonging to one of the victims and found remains of the two men. POrtland ShnntingS —Police responding to reports of gunfire early Tuesday found amandead in aresidential parking lot in northeast Portland. Sgt. Pete Simpsonsaid no arrest has beenmadeand there is no information about a suspect. Thevictim was identified as 24-year-old D'Andre Dickerson. His last known address is in Seattle, and it is not known why hewas in Portland. WOlf deCisinn —State biologists are telling the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission there is enough information to consider taking the gray wolf off the state endangered species list. A draft status review was postedTuesday onthe Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife website with materials for the commission's next meeting. The meeting's agendaincludes a formal staff recommendation that the commission determine there is significant information to start the rule-making process. A final decision is not scheduled until August in Salem, but the commission is to make the first step in the processdeciding whether it has enough information to consider the issuewhen it meets April 24 in Bend. At last count, Oregon had 77wolves descended from animals introduced in Idaho in the1990s. The 76-page status report says they are projected to increase at arate of 7 percent a year,andthe probability of a major drop in population is very low. There is plenty of habitat available on public lands, and wolves continue to expandtheir range, establishing at least one new pack in the western third of the state. — From wire reports

Senate passesbillongunbackgroundchecks By Sheila V Kumar The Associated Press

Oregon law already goes furtherthan federallaw after voters approved an initiative in 2000 requiring background ple with mental illnesses and checks at gun shows. violent criminal records to gain Republican senators spent

expand Oregon's gun control laws failed to make it to a floor

Airport

vote, but last year's election-

Continued from B1 Earlier in the meeting,

the Mountain Skysubdivision, as wel lascustomersbounded by Powers Roadto the north, the Deschutes River tothewest, Baker Road to thesouth andeast to China Hat Roadand U.S.Highway97. Street lights in theareawill also beout. Customers with questions can call Pacific Power at888-221-7070, and outages inother parts of the community during that timeshould be reported to Pacific Power at877508-5088.

• La Pine: 8 a.m.to 4 p.m. May 15-16, SouthwestTransfer Station, 54580 U.S.Highway 97 • Redmond: 8 a.m.to 4p.m. May 15-16, NegusTransfer Station, 2400 NE MapleWay • Sisters: 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.May 15-16, NorthwestTransfer Station, 68200 Fryrear Rd. For more information, visitfirefree.org.

unlicensed sellers online with-

out having to go through a SALEM — L e gislative ef- background check, and that it forts to tighten gun control in would make it harder for peoOregon deared an important

hurdle'11tesday after senators approved a measure designed to expand background checks for mostprivate gun sales. Under the bill, gun buyers and sellers who aren't dosely

related would have to appear in person before a licensed gun dealer who can run a back-

groundcheck, fora fee, through the Oregon State Police. Sellers who don't do the background check face a misdemeanor chargefor afirstoffenseand a felony charge for a second one. Supportersof the measure say it closes a loophole that al-

lows people to buy guns from

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from Bf

The department estimatedthe value of thebuilding at$600,000 and losses of$200,000. Thefire department responds to anaverage of 40 cigarette-related fires eachyear; on Mondaycrews respondedto four such fires, at least one ofwhich also took place atanapartment complex.

Kindergartenregistration OhgOlhg Kindergarten registration for the 2015-16 schoolyearcontinuesthis spring. Children whowill be 5years old on or beforeSept. 1 areeligible to register. Sisters Elementary School will register students beginningat 1:30 p.m. April 24. Toschedule an appointment call 541-549-8521, ext. 4013. Culver Elementary School will register students from 9a.m. to 7 p.m.June 5. In Jefferson County, registration at Metolius Elementary School will be held from11:30a.m. to12:30 p.m. May13 andatWarm Springs K-BAcademyfrom 2to 3:15 p.m. June 3. Registration at MadrasPrimaryhasnotyetbeenscheduled; parents whowant to register at Big Muddy should call theschool. Crook County School District held kindergarten registration last month. Parents whostill need to register their children should contact their local elementary school.

Power will gooff in southBend About 6,400 Pacific Powercustomers on thesouth side of Bend will experience a two-hour power outage Friday. According to anews release, crews will finish anupgrade tothe substation, and as a result the outage will run from about 3a.m. until 5 a.m. Friday. Customers affectedwill include

in which Bloomberg's group, Everytown for Gun Safety, supported gun control — endaccessto a firearm. more than two hours vehe- ed with Democrats increasing "What we will do is take one mently opposing the bill, say- their Senate majority by two step to close a major loophole ing expanding the background seats. which is a floodgate for allow- check system would do little to After the bill passed the Sening these types of transactions curb gun violence while mak- ate, Everytown announced it where people who are not ing criminals of law-abiding will run a six-figure television supposed to have guns have citizens and impeding their and online ad campaign in easy access to guns," said bill constitutional rights. Portland, Eugene and Medford. sponsor Sen. Floyd Prozanski, Oregon has become the lat- The commercials will feature D-Eugene. est battleground for gun con- retired Portland Police Chief The bill now moves to the trol advocates, with a leading Mike Reese and relatives of House, where Democrats hold gun control group, backed by people killed in a mall shoota 32-25 majority. A spokes- billionaire Michael Bloomberg, ing calling for expanded backwoman for Gov. Kate Brown pushing the effort to get all ground checks. has said she supports the con- gun sales to go through a backThe Senate passed the meacept of expanding background ground check. sure 17-13 with Democrat Sen. checks. Two previous proposals to Betsy Johnson voting no.

61050 SE 27th St., 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

May1-2 andMay8-9,Westside Transfer Station, 19755 SW Simpson Ave. •Madras: 8:30a.m.to4:30p.m. May 2-3 andMay9-10, BoxCanyon Transfer Station, 1760 SE Taggart Rd.

• Sunriver: Ba.m. to4 p.m. May 8-9, Sunriver CompostSite, Cottonwood Roadeastof the railroad tracks

— Bulletin staff reports

Johnson Park's playground equipment. Portland's Buell

Recreation Park and Playground Equipment won a councilors awarded K n ife bid of $281,803 for the playRiver Corporation a $13.8 ground equipment itself and million contract for the sec- another for $174,198.75 for ond phase of the runway accessible flooring at the project. Two FAA grants will play site. pay for approximately $17.1 R oss Recreation, a l s o million of the project with a of Portland, was award$1.2 million Connect Oregon ed a contract for $29,285 grant taking care of the rest. for two zip lines and three "This will be at no cost to spring-loaded animal rides. the city," Brass added. And B end's E n tre-Prises The improvements proj- Climbing Walls snagged ect should add another 20 a $26,100.80 contract for a years to the runway and customized climbing wall will keep the airport eligible at the park that will resemfor FAA grants. ble Redmond's iconic Dry Councilors also approved Canyon. a half-million dollars in con— Reporter: 541-617-7829, tracts for upgrading Sam beastes®bendbulletin.com

Xarelto, a blood thlnaer given to patients to prevent blood clots and Itrolres,has beem nnhed to serious bleeding episodes,stro1tes aILd death. If you or I loved oae Iurrered a serious bleeding eveat, strohe or died art:erusing Xarelto, call us at 1-800-THE-EAGLE now. No fees or costs untn your case is settled or woa. we practlce law oaly in Arisoaa, but associate wlth lawyers throughout the U.S.

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Boat inspectionsoffered Saturday TheDeschutesCountySheriff 's Office will offer free boatsafety inspections Saturday. The inspections, from 9a.m. to 3 p.m., will take placeat the Sportsman's Warehouse,63492Hunnell Road, in Bend;BigCountry RV, 2872SW17th Place,inRedmond; and the sheriff's office LaPinesubstation, 51340U.S. Highway97at the south end of LaPine. Marine officers will also beon hand to answerquestions.

Dedris durningstops May1 inrural district All outdoor burning will close May1 for the fire season. Because of lowsnowpack, lack of rainfall andwarmweather, all debris, commercial andagricultural burning in areas oftheDeschutes County Rural FireProtection District 2 will be bannedMay1. Backyard fires, including warming fires, campfires andcooking fires, are allowed inthe Bendarea when usedwithin the guidelines of the BendFire Department Burning Regulations. Residents looking for an alternative to debris burning cantake advantage ofFireFreedays in May. Residents cantaketheir yarddebris to be recycled free ofchargeat the following locations: • Bend: 7a.m. to4:30 p.m., May 1-9, except May 3,Knott Landfill,

TIME ToCLEANTHEAREARUG7 Call to arrangeafree pickup. We'll return your clean oriental or area rug in May.


B4

TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

EDj To

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dwin Burl Mays died in the Deschutes County JR in December. There is a state investigation into what hap-

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4AICH I~ INHAT>

pened. But inthe meantime there have been many questions raised about what, if anything, should happen to the jail staff on duty. Should theybe disciplined? Placed on leave'? Fired? No decision should be made r equire hospitalizaiion or require the about the personnel matters until the attention of a health care professionstate completes its investigation. De- al. Nelson told us Mays did not tell schutes County Sheriff Capt. Shane jail staff he was on methamphethamine. But Mays certainly exhibited Nelsonisrightaboutthat. sjgns of Possible methamPhetamine ays, 31, died m a hoiding ceil in the ail Dec 14 of a methamphet There areother issues as well, amineoverdose.Hemighthavedied including whether 911 was called even if he had been taken immediatelytoahospital. Hehadlevelsof meth- quickly enough and whether one amphetamine in his blood greater staff member was mocking Mays' behavior. than 5milligrams per liter. Itdoesn'treallymatterwhat Mays The fact remains, though, that the staff at the jail apparently viohted was allegedto have done or what one policy and might have violated hs Pohce record was. The Sheriffs others, according to a report in Sun Office had hm m its custody, and he ~ ~ ~ blefo r d y'SR8~ b y c l ~ W ey comb,. dM Thej& ~ him. Andwhetherstaff membersvioStaffmembers avenotsupposedto lated policies or not, the preliminary watch television while on duty, unless review is not something we can look it is required as part of their duty. On atwithpride. th night o MR>' eath, staff memto wait for the ~ o ft he invesDetainees are not supposed to be tigation. That's the proper, careful applaced in a temporary holding cell if p roach to what may be some serious they have injuries or illnesses that personneldecisions.

Let's givemorescrutiny to trails throughfarms he disagreements between Oregon's farmers and ranchers and their more urban neighbors are nothing new, and when the chance comes to ease them, the state should take it. Thus lawmakers should approve House Bill 3367, introduced by Albany RepublicanAndy Olson. The bill would make it clear that locating recreational trails in land zoned exdusively for farming should require greater scrutinybefore county approval. Olson should knowjust how contentious such rails-to-trails projects can be. A bike path proposed to run near arail line that connects Albany and Cor vallis was scrapped recently, after 10years of often contentious

city dwellers, that agriculture and urban life are often in conflict. As several of them told the House Committee on Rural Communities, Land Use and Water this month, they worry about the potential for trespassing, complaints about standard agricultural practices such as the application of fertilizer and other problems. If the bill is approved, it will require trail planners to obtain conditional use permits from the counties in which they would be located. Notification will give property owners and others more opportunityto support or oppose trails. Supporters of the bill argue that current law is vague, that some counties require conditional use permits, while others do not. The planning. bill, they say, only makes the curThe problem with the A lba- rent law clear. Opponents fear the ny-Corvallis route was that the pro- permit requirement will kill some posedtrailran along — and some- trails that otherwise mightbe built. times through — adjacent farms. As In the end, though, the bill is the was the case with a similar proposright way to go. Oregonians long al to build a trail in an old railbed ago agreed farmland and the jobs it connecting Corvallis and Monroe, supports are worth saving. HB 3367 farmers and ranchers in the area won't end the practice of placing objected strenuously. HB 3367 is a trails through rural Oregon; it will response to those objections. simply assure that people nearby Farmers know, far better than will have a say in the process.

T

M 1Vickel's Worth The silent majority

Who supports the

Bend has a rich history of its silent majority doing what's best for the After r eading M y Ni c kel's community. For instance, despite Worth for the past few months and the efforts of various vocal minori- talking with various friends and ties over the years, Bend's always professionals from here in Bend, insightful silent majority has stayed I can't help but wonder, are John the course and gifted the communi- Costa and his supporters the only ty with such iconic projects as the re- people who are actually in favor of location of St. Charles, the creation the proposed west-side site? of the Bend Parkway, the developKen Boyer ment of the Old Mill District and the

Bend

location of the Southern Crossing (the Bill Healy Bridge.) Several decades ago the gated

Patriotism comes in

In response to the article in March 31 Bulletin, "Destigmatizing Abortion," an abortion pill clinic in

Maryland promoting a "spa-like" environment. Making abortion a

spa-like experience, really? How is this in a woman's best interest, to deceive? How about the truth

spoken with kindness and love? No matter how much fluff the truth is still the truth — abortion ends a child's life and the effects on the

woman's life are life-changing as

many forms

community of Broken Top was itself

well. How about caring about both? Who will be there with the spa

on the receiving end of an unfriendly Rollo Millette's letter April 8 vocal minority campaign. It seems about patriotism was an impresthat a group of Bend old-timers took sive summary of his family's histoissue with what they perceived to be ry of service to the country in the the anti-Oregon concept that a gate military, until the final paragraph and a fence should define (and pro- where he offers the gratuitous obtect?) a neighborhood. Fortunately servation that he could tell how someone voted by their display of for Broken Top — and for all of usthe concept survived the dissenters the flag. Was he implying that only and Bend opened its arms to the gat- members of one particular polited-communityneighborhood. ical party are patriots? I can asFast forward to today — a pocket sure Mr. Millette that among those of residents, many of whom are from who served our country in uni-

amenities when she takes the second dose of pills at home and her

body aborts her child? What spa treatment will make up for the physical and emotional trauma she

may experience? Who will be there when some day the truth of her loss might be realized and grief has no outlet?

"There is a way that seems right

to a man, but in the end it leads to death," Proverbs 14:12 ... death of a

child, death of relationships, death

Broken Top, have now morphed into

form, those who gave their lives

of adream, loss ofoneself.

the vocal minority themselves, noisily laboring to keep OSU out of their neighborhood. Ah, the sweet irony, had yesterday's silent majority not made the best decision for Bend and for the gated-community supporters,

or returned home with grievous injuries, he will find liberals, democrats, conservatives, indepen-

The article spoke about beingunapologetic and bold. Having experi-

dents, socialists, whites, blacks,

unapologetically and boldly take a stand against it. It was a life-chang-

Jews, Hispanics, Asians, Native Americans, Christians, Rastafarians, atheists, Muslims, Buddhists,

Broken Top would be inKlamath

Falls. And OSU would be welcoming gays and lesbians — the full panstudents this fall to the new campus oply of American society, patriots it so richly deserves. all. Jim Schell William Valenti Bend

enced the truth of abortion, I must ing decision. Praise God there are

after-abortion recovery groups! Regardless of whether abortion is a positive or negative experience, the truth remains — a life is ended.

Missy Nelson

Bend

Redmond

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

ocus on owt o inte rate By Cynthia Engel of the river corridor. Two incredible IN MY VIEW s debates continue regarding parks now flank both sides of the OSU-Cascades' proposed lo- river as a direct result of the bridge's than athoroughfare to get somewhere cation, I'm reminded of simi- construction. A fantastic trail system else. Bike commuting is safer because lar conversations regarding the Bend has expanded along the south can- those passing through are instead Parkway and the Southern Crossing/ yon of the river to connect with the passingaround, leavingbikes to share Bill Healy Bridge a little more than parks. And thousands of people pad- the smaller roads with local traffic. a decade ago. Those conversations dle and float the river, an option few And yet again, the initial concerns were important because they incited considered fun before the bridge's voiced were similar to those we are creative thinking as citizens voiced construction. Traffic has dissipated, hearingtoday regarding OSU-C. concerns over the impact the parkway reducing the flow that would otherWhat is happening today that is difwould have on the future viability of wise still cross over Colorado Avenue. ferent from those past projects? There downtown Bend and over the impact And for those who focus on housing is a concerted effort to stop the projthe Southern Crossing bridge would prices and development, the positive ect at any cost. It's not a conversation have on traffic and the beauty of the financial impact is probably in the about OSU-C and how we can interiver corridor. Both projects obviously hundreds of millions of dollars. And grate it into our city; it's become about went forward, integrating modifica- yet, the initial concerns voiced were win/lose and right/wrong. History is tions shared by engaged citizens. And similar to what we are hearing today valuable because of the lessons we the impact of both projects moving regarding OSU-C. can glean from past endeavors. forward has been extraordinary. The positive impacts of the parkDespite initial concerns, the SouthAs a result of the "controversial" way are similar. Traffic flow in and ern Crossing/Bill Healy Bridge and Southern Crossing/Bill Healy Bridge, around the city is manageable today the parkway have ultimately impactentirelynew areas of Bend have be- because of the free-flowing artery ed the city in positive ways, primarily come significantly more accessible. the parkway created. Downtown is because the focus shifted from stopBased on feedback, the bridge itself vibrant and active because it has be- ping the projects to finding creative was redesigned to reflect the curves come a destination in itself rather solutions.

A

A stand against abortion

campus?

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

— asca es

There isa concerted effort to stop the project at any cost. It's not a conversation about OSU-C and howwe can integrate tt into our city; it's become about win/lose and right/wrong. In the case of OSU-C, I encourage us to learn from these two major projects. Experts in city planning put those projects together. These are people who have made their careers

of it. A decade from now, I am confident we will look back at this debate and

around creating livable, sustainable

our community in positive ways. As such,I encourage concerned citizens

cities. Likewise, experts who study campus and community integration have designed the concept for OSU-C. Again, these are people who have

reflect on how OSU-C is another one of those projects that has impacted to stop backing our entire communi-

ty into a corner by focusing on what won't work and what you don't want.

made theircareers around creating livable, sustainable campus commu-

Stop working from a win/lose or right/ wrong foundation. Instead, get dear

nities. The rest of us are not experts in

about and articulate whatyou do want and share those desires with OSU-C

thoseareas.We are instead experts in what we know is important to us. So

rather than telling the experts how

and its team of campus and community integration experts. Focusing on

not to do their jobs, turn the focus to sharing what we ultimately want for

what we want, versus what we don't,

the community with OSU-C as a part

— Cynthia Engel lives in Bend.

is the only wayto get there.


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Theda Alene Weatherford Daniel James Wambaugh, of Redmond

August 26, 1916 - April 7, 2016

Theda A l e n e W e a t h erford, 98, of D a y ville, died peacefully April 7, 2015 at Valley View A s sisted Living Facility in John Day. A celebrat ion of Theda's life will be held at 2 :00 p . m . Saturday, to: April 18, Partners In Care Hospice at th e 2075 NE Wyatt Court PresbyteBend, Oregon 97701 rian www.partnersbend.org Theda Aiene Church in Weatherford Dayville Robert Louis Bentley, w ith inof Madras t erment i n th e D ay v i l l e Nov. 2, 1931 - Mar. 31, 2015 C emetery, an d a p o t l u c k Arrangements: r eception i n t he ch u r c h Baird Funeral Home of hall. Bend is honored to serve Theda was born t o J ohn the family. 541-382-0903. a nd Ad a S n y de r D a m o n www.bairdmortuaries.com on August 26, 1916 at the Services: D amon f a m il y r a n c h l o Services will be held at a c ated o n D a m o n C r e e k , later date. west of Mt Vernon. Her faContributionsmay be made t her a ls o w a s b o r n a n d to: raised there. Partners In Care, 2075 She graduated from Mt NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Vernon High School at the Oregon 97701, age of 17 on April 25, 1934; www.partnersbend.org s hortly a f t erward h e r f a t her sol d t h e r a n c h a n d Paul W. Estenson, of m oved t he f ami l y to Bend Dayville. Dec. 12, 1941 - Mar. 21, 2015 Theda married Walter O. Arrangements: W eatherford o n J u l y 2 2 , Baird Funeral Home of 1 945 in th e h o m e o f h e r Bend is honored to serve p arents. A y e a r l a ter s h e family. 541-382-0903 g ave bi rt h t o t h e i r o n l y www.bairdmortuaries.com c hild, C a r ey. A f t e r W a l t Services: p assed away i n M a y of 1 989, Theda moved to th e A private urn placement S outh Fork R d . h o use i n will take place at a later Dayville. It wa s t h ere she date. Contributionsmay be made continued t o ten d h er to: flowers and her c ats, and Partners In Care Hospice, h elp f r i e nd s w h e n sh e 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, c ould. S h e d e v e l oped a OR 97701, strong f r i e n d shi p w i th 541-382-5882, members of t h e S e venthwww.partnersbend.org d ay A d v e n t is t Chu r c h , w hich began with her w a t ering t h e fl o w e r s an d making sure the sprinkler Feb. 20,1963- April12, 2015 w as moved s o t h e g r a s s w ould s t a y gr e e n . H e r Joel Jesse Martin, 52, of B end p assed a w a y S u n - 3 0-year r e l ationship w i t h day. H e w as bo r n i n the church and f r i endship Pendleton to Clayton Jesse w ith t h e me m b er s s u s a nd Fer n M i l d r e d ( H o p - tained her over the many years prior to her death. kins) Martin. A s a y ou ng w oma n , H e g re w u p i n Sou t h T heda worked for th e Or America. He h as e gon Telephone Co. i n l ived i n Dayville as a sw itchboard operator and l a ter s erved various '1 pl a ces in as postal clerk for the U.S. Post Office in Dayville for Oregon b ut t he 13 years. She served as p r esident l ast s e v eral years o f t h e D a y v i l l e L i b r a r y he h as B oard an d a l s o w a s t h e b een i n Dayville correspondent for the Blue M o u ntain E a g le Bend. Joel Martin J oel h a d for many years. S urvivors a r e h e r s o n , strong faith in the Lord. He was v er y a c t i v e i n h i s Carey and his fiance, Julia Betz, both of Bend, grandchurch and community. He e n j oyed hu n t i ng, son, Paul of Portland, and h iking, f r shin g a n d o u t - m any c o u sins a n d d e a r friends. door photography. Arrangements are u nder J oel i s s u r v ived b y h i s p arents, J es s a n d Fe r n the care of Driskill M emorial Chapel, 241 S. Canyon Martin; sisters, DD and her husband Jim Harris, Lora- Blvd., John Day, OR 97845. Lee and her husband Jim Neuschwander, Dawn and h er h u sband S t ev e L i n DEATHS c oln, Becky an d h e r h u s b and Blaine A n d ers; a n d ELSEWHERE many nieces and nephews. Graveside service will be 2:00 p.m. Saturday April Deaths of note from around 1 8, 2015, at L e w i s C e m - the world: Milton Delugg, 96: Conductetery. Memorial co n t r i b utions ed the band for Johnny Carmay be made in his name son's "The Tonight Show" and t o th e W a t e r C h u r c h i n was musical director of the Ma-

Joel Jesse Martin

Bend, Oregon.

S weet H o m e Fu ne r a l Chapel is handling the arrangements. www .sweethomefuneral.com

Bulletin staff report The former Bishop of the EpiscopalDiocese of Eastern Oregon hasdied, the diocese announced Monday. Rustin Kimsey, died at his home in The Dalles on Friday. He was 79.

A laska a n d "Navajoland," where Utah, Arizona and New

Mexico meet. Kimsey is survived by his wife, Gretchen Kimsey; children Sean Kimsey, of The Dalles and Bangkok; Megan Jarman, of Seattle; and Born in Bend, Kimsey was Larry Parlin, of Lyons; his elected Bishop of the diocese brother, Lloyd Kimsey, of covering the entire state east Carlsbad, California, and two ofthe Cascade range in 1980. grandchildren. He served in the post until his A public service will be held retirement in 2000. After re- at 8 p.m. April 24 at St. Paul's tirement, Kimsey served brief E piscopal Church in T h e stints as Assisting Bishop in Dalles.

Continued from 61

School, told the board. "You

The board's plan is to move Braman-Smith to principal at

are not only removing a sta-

the Warm Springs K-8 Acad-

also a steadfast friend." Many teachers acknowl-

emy for the 2015-16 school

ble person from our lives but

year when its current prin- edged it was hard to come cipal retires. Braman-Smith forward to speak because of has been principal at Ma- what they consider a "culture dras High School for five of fear" and "bullying" in years and vice principal for the Jefferson County School

where students must show

they are proficient in a set of standards instead of being graded on exams and assignments. At around 5:45 p.m. Tuesday, teachers and supporters met in the Madras High School parking lot before the 6 p.m. board meeting at Buff Intermediate School. Wearing black and carrying signs stating phrases such as "students are stakeholders" and "transparency," they crossed SE Buff Street to the Buff In-

District. McPeak, who has taught in the district for 22 years,

was one of the speakers who highlighted what she believes to be bullying by the board. She said her impression was that the removal of

Braman-Smith was personal: A request by a few families to the board was made to

have Braman-Smithmoved even though, according to McPeak, it was not the ma-

jority opinion of teachers or the community. This idea

was brought up by a number of speakers. "Your job is to set policy,"

termediate School gym for

said McPeak to the board, "to the board meeting. Teresa figure out how to make this a Hancock, a behavior teacher district where the finest edat Buff Intermediate School ucators want to come and to

Julie Jacobson /The Associated Press file photo

Percy Sledge accepts hie award during the Rockand Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in New York in 2005. Sledge, who recorded the claseic1966 soul ballad "When a Man Loves a Woman," died Tuesday. He wae 74.

Sledge's1strecording went to N0.1 on charts

for grades three through five, stay." spoke while she marched. After public c omments, "Look at the turnover in the board took five minutes this district," said Hancock. to collect thoughts, and each "It's horrible."

board member commented.

About 50 people participated in the march, a mix of

Each of the board members and Superintendent Rick

students, parents and faculty at schools in the district. As they walked, supporters of

Molitor thanked the speak-

Braman-Smith chanted her initials: "Reinstate SBS." The board set the first hour

Braman-Smith.

ers and said they were upholding the decision to move One member, board Chairman Stan Sullivan, said he disagreed with the decision

New Yorh Times News Service

... because he

of the meeting aside to hear from the public, limiting each to move Braman-Smith. "I feelitwouldbe detrimenspeaker to five minutes, but ended upextending the com- tal to change the leader," said ment section of the meeting Sullivan. "Having said that, I

Percy Sledge, the R&B singer whose soulful ballad

was not listed as

for 20 minutes to allow more

By Joe Coscarelli

of eternal love and fidelity, "When a Man Loves a Woman," topped the charts in 1966,

died Tuesday in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He was 74. His death was confirmed by Artists International Man-

agement,which represented him. Sledge had liver cancer, for which he underwent surgery in 2014, said Mark Lyman, his agent and manager. Sledge, sometimes called the King of Slow Soul, was a sentimental crooner and one

of the South's first soul stars, having risen to fame from jobs picking cotton and working as a hospital orderly while performing gigs at colleges and clubs on the weekends.

"I was singing every style

of music: the Beatles, Elvis Presley, James Brown, Wilson Pickett, Motown, Sam Cooke, the Platters," Sledge said. " When a M a n L o v e s a

a co-writer,Sledge never received sales royalties for "Whena Man Loves a Woman" in any of its forms. melody, "I hummed it all my life, even when I was picking and chopping cotton in the fields." Still, because he was not

listed as a co-writer, Sledge

" Worst d ecision I ev e r made. But I am not at all bit-

ter," he told Blues and Soul magazine, noting that he was 25 at the time. "It was God's

will for me to give it to them. But if I had my time again, I wouldn't do it. Because of my children." Sledge was born Nov. 25, 1940, in Leighton, Alabama,

a poor farm town, where he developed as a vocalist by singing in the local gospel choir. The music critic Dave Marsh has compared Sledge's weighty, smooth wail to "the South itself, in all its bountiful, contradictory mystery." After he was discovered by

Loves a Woman" had many lives: as an early highlight

Braman-Smith had been suc-

tant principal job at Corvallis

cessful as principal.

High School.

"Students always feel like

they are a priority when they

Core

been that there are not many Wonders, for students models for STEM at the elefrom kindergarten to fifth mentary level. "We want to light that fire in grade, includes a digital component where students kids. We want them so excited

they're going to middle school and asking for those classes ads and a Spanish version. and going to high school and A separate committee is college and asking for those reviewing options for read- classes," she told the board, ing materials for grades adding the school hopes to six through 12. The new align its c urriculum with can read and do assignments on district-issued iP-

materials will be used be-

STEM curriculum in middle

ginning in 2015-16, with teacher training beginning

and high schools to ease that

this summer.

Also at Tuesday's meeting, the board heard an STEM — for science, technology, engineering and math — the focus at Buck-

ingham Elementary School is the second year of the initiative and staff say the goal is to engage students with real-world problems, bringing STEM p rofes-

wanted to, but I couldn't do it."

Billboard chart and earned Bolton a Grammy. Although the song, which ranks 53rd on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 greatest of all

Sledge's survivors include his wife, Rosa Lee Sledge, and 12 children. His admirers in the industry, Lyman added, included Billy Joel, James Taylor, the late Bo Diddley

t ime, is credited to tw o o f

Sledge's early bandmates, and the E Street Band's Stethe bassist Calvin Lewis and ven Van Zandt, who enlisted the organist Andrew Wright, Sledge to perform "When a w ho assisted with

the ar-

Man Loves a Woman" at his

rangement, Sledge said of the wedding in 1982.

Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. 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. Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 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 by 5 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.

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION

DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL PAINT

803 sw Industrial way,Bend, 0R

sionals into the school and taking students out into the

field.

Dale Raymond Larson July 2, 1928 — Aprtl 6, 2015 Dale was born July 2, 1928, in Silverton, Oregon to Walter and MarieiBaller) Larson. He grew up in the Silverton Hills,first the logging camps and then on his parent's farm. He was a logger most of his life.

"I just couldn't keep him

Bolton, which also topped the

aspegman@bendbulleti n.com

on Bend's east side. This

A l a b ama's Mu s c l e album, "The Gospel of Percy Shoals music scene; as a mov- Sledge," was released in 2013. ie soundtrack staple in the The next y ear, Sledge 1980s, as heard in "The Big played his final concert.

out there," Lyman said. "He

transition. — Reporter: 541-617-7837,

update on efforts to make

the 1970s. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2005, and his final

a cover version by Michael

Principal Sunshine Dandurand said one challenge has

Continued from B1

f rom

Chill" and "Platoon"; and in

— Reporter: 541-383-0325, kfisicaro®bendbulletin.com

a Woman" in any of its forms.

ing for Atlantic Records, after a patient at the hospital intro-

his first hit, "When a Man

will support the decision that

people to speak. A variety of this board and the superinstudents, parents and teach- tendent make, regardless of ers, mostly f ro m M a dras what I feel personally." High School, spoke in front Officials began last month of the board. searching for someone to fill Speakers explained they the principal's position at the are frustratedseeing Bra- high school for next school man-Smith removed and year as well as to fill the vice feel confused about why the principal position when Paul decision was made. Speak- Navarra leaves at the end of ers overwhelmingly thought the school year for an assis-

never received sales royalties for "When a Man Loves

Woman" was his first record-

Obituary policy

For information onany of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

talk to her," Ingrid Sanchez, a junior at Madras High

proficiency-based teaching,

duced himtothe record producer Quin Ivy. It reached No. 1 on the pop charts in 1966 and sold more than I million copies, becoming the label's first gold record. (The Recording Industry Association of America began certifying Ivy in 1965 — patients at the records as gold in 1958.) Raw hospital where Sledge worked and lovelorn, the song was " all told h i m , 'You should a response to a woman who make records,'" Lyman said had left him for another man, — Sledge went to the studio in Sledge said. He called its com- nearby Sheffield, Alabama, position a "miracle." an opportunity that left him An album of the same scared and "shaking," he said. name was released that year, But having struck gold and threemore studio records right away, Sledge, whose for Atlantic followed during wide, gap-toothed smile never the 1960s: "Warm and Ten- changed, spent much of the cy's Thanksgiving Day Parade der Soul," "The Percy Sledge next 50 years recording and forthree decades. Died April 6 Way" and "Take Time to performing to i n t ernational at his home in Los Angeles. Know Her." audiences, hitting the charts — From wire reports Although Sledge never with songs such as "I'll Be again reached the heights of Your Everything" well i n to

FormerEpiscopalbishop

Protest

four years before that. She led the school's transition to

Sept. 2, 1925 - April 12, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be announced at a later date. Contributionsmay be made

65

Dale joined the army in 1952 and served in Korea. After the war he returned to the Hills where he met andmarried Dorothy Rossell in

1954. His marriage ended 10 years ago but heis survived by his children, Gretchen iJerry) Bowers of Klamath Falls, Kory iCindy) Larson of Bend; three grandchildren BrandoniAmanda) Larson of Texas, Sara iloshua)Withers of Beaverton, Tiana Bowers of Hillsboro; one great grandchild, Jenny Larson of Texas; twostep grandchildren, Bowen and Chloe of Texas; two sisters, Shirley Wertz of Silverton and Carolyn Hutton of Salem. Dale was preceded in death by hisparents and onesister and two grandchildren.

Daleis also survived by two deeply caring and loyal friends Jane and Larry Langston, of Bend who were of immense help andsupport to him in his final years. Their love and generositytowardsDale was priceless to him and to those of Us who couldn't see him very often. The past four years Dale lived at The SummitAssistedLiving where he was lovinglycared for by the staff and Heart and Home Hospice. Graveside Services will be held Friday April 17, 2015, 11:30 A.M. at Willamette National Cemetery, Portland, Oregon.

Another Graveside Service will be held Saturday,April 25, 2015, at 11:00 A.M. at Willamette National Cemetery. Autumn Funerals entrusted with arrangements.


B6

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,lnc. ©2015

1

i

i

I

'

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH S2. Mostly sunnyandwarmer

l f '1

ALMANAC Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

TEMPERATURE

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

0

LOW

64

24'

31'

7$

ria

RiVer

Rufus

i

61/32

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

Crescent Lake 7 5 5 17 87% Ochoco Reservoir 34613 78vo Prinevige 123169 B3vo River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 258 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 751 107 Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFags 1310 Little Deschutes near LaPine 128 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 33 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 11B Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 206 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 203 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 5

SKI REPORT In inches as of 5 p.m.Yesterday

Ski resort New snow Base 2 47-9 8 Mt. Bachelor Mt. Hood Meadows 0 37-7B 4 28-5 9 Timberline Lodge Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 40-42 Park City Mountain, UT 0 23-23 Source: OnTheSnow.com

4B contiguous states) National high: 100 at Death Valley,CA

58/40

49/

" .

"

. aisma

/35 s

Toronto 8/3

5

M ne /48

Hi/Lo/W 78/57/1 63/50/sh 65/39/pc 59/37/c 44/32/sn 67/56/r 57/49/pc 80/65/1 65/48/pc 58/38/s 75/60/1 63/34/pc 63/40/s 57/41/s 55/42/pc 67/48/pc 64/44/pc 51/37/s 70/60/c 63/54/r 70/56/c 43/29/c 66/47/c 64/50/sh 64/51/sh 49/32/r 74/56/c 67/58/sh 74/59/c 61/49/sh 63/36/s 81/73/c 80/63/1 62/52/sh 49/34/sn 71/53/c 59/49/sh 63/44/c 76/45/pc 47/29/c 68/40/pc 48/25/s 63/45/c 65/45/c 64/52/r 64/46/pc 63/40/pc 60/33/s 83/69/sh 78/68/t 75/58/c 67/53/sh 81/64/1 78/65/1

Amsterdam Athens

63/42/s 66/50/pc 65/52/c 81/61/pc

95n8/pc

85/53/pc 72/60/pc 71/44/s 66/49/1 71/46/s 72/61/t 83/60/s 72/53/s 54/31/s 88/74/s 52/39/sh 53/34/r 77/48/s 76/57/pc 79/68/s 59/48/pc 68/47/s 75/52/s 79/68/pc 65/53/1 75/49/1 65/48/1 91/79/s

57/40/pc 68/53/s 67/53/s 90/60/s 96/80/pc 70/46/s 71/57/pc 58/39/pc 67/51/t 79/51/pc 73/62/pc 83/62/s 75/55/s

64/30/pc

srn5/s

51/39/pc 54/34/pc 69/50/t 73/59/t

sono/s

60/52/pc 57/47/sh 71/44/s 79/67/pc 66/53/c 66/45/pc 64/46/sh 92/79/s

Yesterday Today Thursday

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 46/32/Tr 46/39/r 47/37/r 67/48/0.00 61/49/c 73/55/c 68/35/0.00 65/41/pc 62/48/c 85/68/0.00 68/51/s 74/54/s 58/54/1.22 68/54/c 67/53/sh 72/41/0.00 61/45/c 70/50/1 69/56/0.29 73/58/0.00 65/53/0.38 69/33/0.00 66/56/0.02

62/42/0.00 72/38/0.00 70/64/1.00 76/68/3.35 65/55/0.01 65/57/Tr 77/64/1.64 OklahomaCity 57/54/Tr Omaha 71/43/0.00 Orlando 88/68/0.23 Palm Springs 93/64/0.00 Peoria 68/46/0.00 Philadelphia 63/58/0.09 Phoenix 94/67/0.00 Pittsburgh 63/51/0.07 Portland, ME 70/48/0.04 Providence 67/47/0.01 Raleigh 79/64/0.01 Rapid City 81/36/0.00 Reno 57/34/Tr Richmond 71/62/0.84 Rochester, NY 62/40/0.00 Sacramento 70/42/0.00 St. Louis 69/57/0.00 Salt Lake City 76/59/0.09 San Antonio 78/64/Tr San Diego 71/62/0.00 San Francisco 63/50/Tr San Jose 66/47/Tr Santa re 71/30/0.00 Savannah 85no/Tr' Seattle 53/37/0.26 Sioux Fags 74/31/0.00 Spokane 51/37/0.16 Springfield, MO 67/52/Tr Tampa 86/73/0.00 Tucson 88/64/0.00 Tulsa 64/54/Tr Washington, DC 67/55/0.63 Wichita 69/52/0.01 Yakima 62/31/0.00 Yuma 93/63/0.00 i

73/55/1 81/62/c 82/60/s 84/58/s

71/58/c 71/58/sh 66/41/pc 67/47/c 79/61/1 81/63/c

ssns/0.00 87n5/pc 87n5/pc

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

i

9/29

63/39/0.00 73/46/0.00 • 54/32 * uke gP dbf Auckland 56/50/0.14 * „* „64/33. National low: 16 5 /3 w York Baghdad 77/56/0.00 * * * * .x s oi at Squaw Valley, CA Bangkok 91/75/0.00 es Ltitr ittr Chstienit ' ee/47 Precipitation: 3.90" Beijing 79/47/0.00 4 33 C icag • C o lmb 6 e/4z ~ Beirut 66/55/0.00 at Slideg, LA an anciico Omah 6 43 d d d d d Berlin 59/38/0.00 71/55 Denver • u lle, ~~~a• LasV ss 5 8/30 ~ ~d d d d d Bogota 68/52/0.26 • 71/58 es/5 Ks Cdtt/V.4t Budapest 59/39/0.00 4 dd d 61/49 Buenos Ai r es 79/66/0.00 buquerqu • . V %+O h Los An fes Cabo San Lucas 82/64/0.00 /36 74/e • / Cairo 72/54/0.00 Phoen Anchorage klahoma Ci Calgary 55/30/0.02 • ee/ea 7 47/3 San ie Cancun 86n9/0.00 • nsus Juneau al Ps Dublin 63/50/0.01 77/5 0/5 Edinburgh 55/50/0.15 ck Geneva 72/41/0.00 Housurn '* >< +< k < < < < < ; rlsndo Harare SS/4( + 66/58/0.18 paangv Hong Kong 78/63/0.00 Chihuahua M o rr e y <~ Istanbul 63/48/0.03 83/de 78/45 82/ Mismi Jerusalem 62/44/0.00 er/rs,- 'z . 'e'e'e'eXXXXWWW> Johannesburg 74/55/0.00 Lima 75/67/0.00 Lisbon 73/59/0.07 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 72/43/0.01 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 75/43/0.00 Manila 93/79/0.00 * vr x x x x

Nice with plenty of sunshine

Yesterday Today Thursday

Umatiga

Cily Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W • ermiston Abilene 63/49/Tr 82/59/s High 46 56 83' in 1926 lington BO/31 Portland Akron 62/49/0.11 65/44/pc Meac am Lostl no 25' 30' 13'in 1977 Low / 34 Albany 66/49/Tr 64/34/s • W co 49/26 Enterprise dleten 46/2 he Oaa Albuquerque 73/42/0.00 70/38/pc • • 47/25 Tigamo • • 56/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Sunshine andy • Anchorage 37/24/0.00 47/33/s 61/37 57/38 Mc innvig • Joseph Atlanta 81/66/0.33 72/57/t 5/36 Gove • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" and patchy clouds nt • upi Condon 5/29 Atlantic City 60/54/0.94 61/46/pc • 57 5 25 Record 0.80" in 1937 today; still on th«nnf Mncoin Union Austin 77/62/0.00 81/62/pc 48/ Month to date (normat) 0.1 0" (0.35") side of average,but Sale /42 Baltimore 63/56/0.38 69/42/pc • pmy Granitee Year to date(normal) 1.64 " (3.70") turning milder than 7/35 Billings 80/45/0.00 49/30/sn 'Baker G wpo 44/23 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 26" yesterday. • 56 30 Birmingham 79/67/0.1 1 77/63/1 9/37 • Mitch II 52/21 Bismarck 82/33/0.00 70/42/c Camp Sh man Red WEST:Mostly sunny in 53/26 n orv R ls SUN ANDMOON Boise 52/38/Tr 54/32/s ch 63/26 • John eU thesouthtoday;some /41 58/37 Boston 62/39/pc • Prineville Day 0/22 Today Thu. tario Bridgeport, CT 65/55/0.01 l o w clouds and patchy 68/48/0.00 64/41/pc 54/28 • Pa lina 50 / 2 8 Sunrise 6:23 a.m. 6 : 2 1 a.m. 5 28 Buffalo fog, then mostly sunny Floren e • Eugene 60/38/Tr 58/38/s • Re d Brothers 5 27 Sunset 7:49 p.m. 7: 5 0 p.m. in the north. Valee 58/42 Burlington, VT 65/47/0.15 56/30/s Su iVere 52/24 Moonrise 4 :34 a.m. 5:10 a.m. 58/29 Caribou, ME 55/42/0.05 45/26/pc Nyssa • 51/ 6 Ham ton Charleston, SC 84/69/0.05 75/60/c Moonset 4:2 5 p.m. 5:3 9 p.m. La ptne Grove Oakridge Charlotte 80/66/0.16 63/50/r • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES Co New F i r s t Full Last 57/27 59/34 /35 Chattanooga 81/66/0.39 75/59/1 57 2 • Fort Rock Riley 55/21 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 52/24 Cheyenne 71/35/0.00 48/28/sh d w d 53/20 51/27 Chicago 66/39/0.00 64/43/pc High: G2' Bandon Ro seburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 65/58/Tr 68/53/pc Jordan V gey Apr 1B Apr 25 M ay 3 M a y 11 at Hermiston 58/43 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 61/38 Cleveland 59/45/0.00 59/45/pc Low: 21' 50/22 Marsh Lake 54/27 ColoradoSprings 72/29/0.00 63/31/sh Tonight's otty:Nearly overhead is the 53/24 at Lakeview 53/25 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 69/50/0.00 63/51/c • Paisley 8/ reddish star Regulus of Leothe Lion. Columbia, SC 86/68/0.01 71/55/1 • 54/23 Chiloquin 54/23 Columbus,GA 82/67/0.24 76/62/t Goid ach • 7 MedfO d 56/27 Rome 0' Columbus,OH 61/53/Tr 68/48/pc 53/24 • Klamath Concord, NH 69/53/Tr 63/30/s Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashl nd Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 78/64/0.95 rgnon Rro ings 61/3 56/23 60/ 53/20 51/20 Dallas 60/55/0.05 77/59/pc Dayton 62/50/0.00 67/51/pc Denver 75/40/0.00 58/30/sh 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Des Moines 70/41/0.00 65/47/c 4 I~ 6 ~ 7 I 4 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 63/43/0.00 63/42/pc The highertheAccuWealher.rxrmIY Index number, Astoria 53/40/0.22 55/39/pc62/42/pc La Grande 52/34/0.0252/25/s 62/32/s Portl and 5 4 /40/0.26 58/40/pc 68/45/s Duluth 67/33/0.00 66/42/s the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protedion. 0-2 Low Baker City 48/32/Tr 52/21/s 62/25/s La Pine 41/27/0.01 51/26/s 65/31/s Prinev ige 48/30/0.02 54/28/s 65/32/s El Paso 71/46/0.00 80/58/pc 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems. Brookings 53/38/0.37 60/45/s 67/49/s Me d ford 54/3 9 /0.16 64/37/s 76/43/s Redmond 49/ 24/0.00 54/24/s 66/29/s Fairbanks 45/20/0.00 48/27/c Bums 50/30/Tr 5 5/21/s 66/28/s Ne wport 52/3 7 /0.38 54/38/s 59/44/s Roseburg 52/ 3 9/0.16 61/38/s 72/45/s Fargo 80/31/0.00 74/47/pc Eugene 55/37/0.27 58/35/pc67/40/s North Bend 55/37/0.37 57/43/s 61/48/s Salem 53/37/0.36 58/38/pc 67/42/s Flagstaff 65/30/0.00 55/23/s Klamath Falls 45/27/Tr 56/23/s 66/30/s O n tario 57/40/Tr 58/28/s 67/36/s Sisters 43/30/Trace 54/23/s 66/29/s Grand Rapids 68/34/0.00 65/42/pc G rasses T r ee s Wee ds Lakeview 46/23/0.00 53/20/s 65/26/s Pe ndleton 53/ 3 9/0.04 56/34/s 64/38/s The Dages 5 7 / 47/Tr 6 1 /37/s 7 1/42/s Green Bay 68/34/0.00 63/38/s Greensboro 75/63/0.20 61/47/r Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. Yesterday W L u f~ yhig h Ab t Harrisburg 63/55/0.05 67/40/pc Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577 Harfford, CT 69/49/0.04 67/37/s Helena 62/39/0.01 51/27/c Honolulu 82/70/0.00 83/69/sh ~ g s ~ t g a ~ 2 0a ~ 30e ~ 406 ~ 50a ~e ca ~7 08 ~ a ga ~ 9 06 ~f cca ~ttca Houston ~ 108 ~ga 76/67/0.12 83/66/c As of 7 a.m.yesterday Huntsville 80/68/0.09 77/61/1 Csles i Indianapolis 64/52/0.00 69/53/pc Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL Jackson, MS 74/67/0.03 79/60/1 EXTREMES C rane Prairie 540 4 8 98% Jacksonville 88/67/0.01 83/66/1 (for the Wickiup 200109 100% YESTERDAY un aay

Yesterday Normal Record

~P Tq~

68' 36

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shownistoday's weather.Temperaturesaretoday'shighs and tonight's lows.

Hood

' '

Pleasant with brilliant sunshine

Mostly sunny andmild

OREGON WEATHER EAST:Partly to mostly sunny today; still on Seasid the cool side ofaver55/42 age. Mostly clear and Cannon chilly tonight. 54/45

SUNDAY

65' 33

0

3S.

Pleasant and warmer with plenty of sun

Mainly clear

SATURDAY

57/39/pc 57/44/c 68/48/s 68/49/c 74/60/1 74/56/c 81/69/1 rgnon 68/46/s 57/47/pc 69/45/s 59/45/pc 65/50/c 67/55/c 74/54/pc 74/57/1

62/46/c 70/51/c 87//0/t 87/69/1 86/59/s 86/57/s 70/49/c 74/54/c

69/47/pc 86/58/s 65/44/pc 63/35/s 66/38/pc 64/49/r

64/49/pc 79/58/s 62/48/pc 55/38/s 58/39/s 67/54/c

54/33/sh 53/30/c 59/32/s 67/37/s

69/45/c 69/52/c 58/37/s 69/49/pc 77/49/s 83/48/s 69/57/c 76/59/c

43/33/sf 55/35/pc 81/66/t 80/68/t 77/61/s 83/60/s 71/55/s 75/52/s

76/49/s 64/29/pc 78/64/c 56/41/pc 63/43/c 53/32/s 64/50/c 86n3/t 86/48/s 71/52/c

81/50/s 56/26/c 75/62/c 62/44/pc

67/45/c 59/37/pc 75/56/c

86n3/t 74/47/s

76/60/c 68/50/pc 67/54/pc 70/50/c 72/54/1

62/34/s 70/38/s 82/56/s 81/54/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

95/73/0.00 79/55/0.34 Montreal 61/43/0.02 Moscow 45/43/0.08 Nairobi 81/64/0.05 Nassau 86n4/0'.00 New Delhi 88/71/0.00 Osaka 62/57/0.65 Oslo 45/28/0.09 Ottawa 63/39/0.06 Paris 77/45/0.00 Rio de Janeiro 81/71/0.00 Rome 66/46/0.00 Santiago 75/50/0.00 Sao Paulo 81/63/0.00 Sapporo 62/38/0.05 Seoul 50/45/0.28 Shanghai 64/43/0.03 Singapore 91/81/0.00 Stockholm 46/32/0.09 Sydney 70/58/0.00 Taipei 74/54/0.00 Tel Aviv 69/53/0.00 Tokyo 57/50/1.20 Toronto 63/39/0.00 Vancouver 54/41/0.01 Vienna 63/43/0.00 Warsaw 50/34/0.06

97/71/s 77/52/pc 56/30/s 46/31/pc 80/61/1 85/72/pc

93n3/s

60/51/sh 50/37/sh 55/30/s 79/51/pc 85/74/s 67/48/s 71/47/pc 80/65/1 51/40/r 62/45/pc 72/60/pc

gongn

52/37/pc 77/64/pc 78/63/s 74/56/s

66/52/pc 58/35/s 54/42/c 74/48/s 57/48/sh

grnO/s

79/51/pc 62/43/s 46/32/sh 81/62/t 85/72/s 96/73/pc 68/54/pc 50/37/sh 63/41/c 75/53/c 84/73/s 67/52/pc 67/43/s 77/64/1 51/36/pc 58/43/r 76/52/pc 91/79/t 51/36/pc 82/66/pc 83/67/s 68/57/pc 68/59/pc 58/45/pc 57/42/c 79/50/pc 58/38/pc

OREGON NEWS

as souion OIS Iim erSan Sme ai e By Ingfei Chen New York Times News Service

For the past four years, trawlers on the West Coast have been haul-

ing in vast amounts of pink shrimp, much of it destined for dainty salads and shrimp cocktailsacross the

country. But although these have been boom times for shrimpers, many are uneasy. Along with pink shrimp, their nets often scoop up a threatened smelt called eulachon. Many shrimpers worry that the species' vulnerability could lead to new federal restric-

6

tions on their industry.

Now scientists in Oregon seem to have hit upon an effective and low-

1

x<

cost solution: Light up the nets.

Last July, fisheries biologists Robert Hannah and Stephen Jones of the Oregon Department Of Fish and

Wildlife and Mark Lomeli of the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission chartered a shrimp trawler

for an unusual experiment. The double-rigged boat, the Miss Yvonne, drags two socklike nets a foot or two above the dark sea-

x

gyj p

floor. The r esearchers placed 10 battery-powered green LEDS at the

mouth of one net, tying them to the "footrope" on its bottom side. The other net was unlit.

The crew made one trawling tow, dumped the catch from each net into

C

a divided hopper — and gaped in astonishment. On one side of the hopper, the haul from the unlit net held lots of sil-

very eulachon, flatfishes and other so-called bycatch mixed in among Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife via The New York Times bright pink shrimp. On the other A side-by-side comparison of shrimp catches without and with LEDs on the nets. Scientists in Oregon have hit upon an effective and low-cost solution for averting side, the catch from the LED-lit net

the bycatch of the threatened eulachon smelt: Simply turning on the lights allows the fish to see the approaching net.

was virtually nothing but shrimp. "We couldn't believe what we were looking at," Hannah said. Illu- trawlers were the first shrimp fishminating the net's opening helped ery in the world to be certified susthe eulachon dodge it. "They're tak- tainable by the Marine Stewardship ing advantage of a little more light to Council, in recognition of its strides see escape routes," Jones said. in reducing bycatch. After state regIt is an all-too-rare example of a ulations mandated that trawlers add simple, affordable environmental fix that seems to produce instant bene-

metal "excluder" grates inside their

nets, levels of bycatch plummeted fits. Results of the Oregon research- to around 7.5 percent of the tens of ers' experiment, funded by a grant millions of pounds harvested in the from the National Oceanic and At- industry's annual catch. mospheric Administration, will be The round grate lets shrimp pass published in a fisheries research into the "toe" end Of the net, but dejournal. But already, the news has flects bigger, unwanted fish — inspread quickly through the state's cluding Pacific hake and several shrimping industry. kinds of smelt — through an escape "Within two months, virtually the hole. entire fleet was using these lights," In May 2010, the eulachon populaHannah said.

In 2007, Oregon's pink shrimp

tion from northernmost California

to British Columbia was listed as

a threatened species. The top cul-

prits in its decline include fishery bycatch, dams and water diversions in the rivers where these forage fish

spawn, and climate effects on river habitats and ocean conditions.

NOAA is still considering protective regulations to rebuild the species. The tiny eulachon is the "elephant in the room" for the pink

Hannah said. The illuminated nets could help resolve that problem.

found that the illuminated net cap-

But science is rarely neat, and the

start. The exact placement of the LEDS

than the regular trawl gear but roughly the same amount of shrimp. The lights also significantly decreased bycatch of darkblotched rockfish, other juvenile rockfish and

proved crucial. For the first two

small flatfishes.

days, the researchers tried putting

As the fishery begins this year's season, shrimpers hope their em-

eight-day experiment on the Miss Yvonne in July had a disastrous

the lights around the grate in one shrimp industry, Jones said. Many net. They thought the illumination fishers and processors "haven't re- might aid the smelt in finding the ally realized what could be forced net's escape hole, but for unknown upon their fishery in the way of reasons, more eulachon swam past regulations." the grate into the net — doubling the Even though the net grates have bycatch. been further refined, smelt bycatch Flummoxed, theteam moved the

tured 90 percent fewer eulachon

brace of the new technique will per-

suade NOAA to forgo setting limits on eulachon bycatch. NOAA plans to examine whether

the trawlers' measures to mitigate bycatch are sufficient, said Robert Anderson, the agency's eulachon renumbers off the United States have LEDS to the mouth of the net — and covery coordinator. The illuminated soared in the past three years as the got their eureka moment. net strategy looks "pretty promiseulachon population rebounded, After 42 tows, the researchers ing," he said.


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 P r eps, C4 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C4 MLB, C3 College football, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

NBA

GOLF COMMENTARY PREP GOLF PREVIEW

Batum out for tonight's finale PORTLAND — Port-

land Trail Blazers forward Nicolas Batum has a right knee contusion and will miss tonight's regular-season finale against the Mavericks in Dallas. Batum injured his knee in the secondquarter of Portland's 101-90 loss to OklahomaCity on Monday. X-rays following the gamewere negative, and anMRI on Tuesday ruled out a serious injury. Blazers guard C.J. McCollum sprained his left ankle during the gameagainsttheThunder and will not play against the Mavericks. Chris Kamanalso left the game inOklahoma City with a sore back. Portland All-Star LaMarcus Aldridge, who rested a left foot sprain against the Thunder, was listed as probable for the Dallas game. The Blazers have already clinched the Northwest Division title and the Western Conference's No. 4 seed inthe playoffs.

Ted S. Warren/The Associated Press

A lone tree on the third green is Chambers Bay's

visual signature. The course is in final preparations for the U.S. Open, to be held June15-21 in University Place, Washington.

As ort's e eStuIn

towar t e NOIt WeSt • Chambers Bay isonthe clock for its first major championship

— The Associated Pess

NIVERSITY PLACE, Wash. — Even

Who will the Blazers play?

on a dreary, gray day, Puget Sound giistened off Chambers Bay Golf Course on

Monday. From Grandview Trail, where joggers trotted past, obiivious to the hubbub of activity beiow ~ LARRY — including

Portland is locked in to the No. 4 seed inthe Western Conference playoffs and will begin the playoffs on the road against the No. 5team in the West, which will

the tran that rumbled past at midmorn-

be either Houston, San Antonio or Memphis. In tonight's games, Houston plays Utah, Memphis plays Indiana and San Antonio plays New Orleans. Hereare the scenarios: THE BLAZERSPLAY

Mnjor chnmpionship U $ Open Where:Chambers ever experienced n a U.S. Bay, University Place, Wash. Yet thatus whatiscomWhen: June 15-21 ing, for the first time, in a mere two months. When Def e nding chamJordan Spieth's final putt pio nMartin : dropped into the cup to con- Kaymer won at clude his Masters triumph, Pinehurst No. 2

HOUSTON IF ... • The Spurs and Rockets

NSXt llP

ing — the course could be seen in all its glory. The British-style links setuP makes it unlike anything

• I

both win; OR the

it put Chambers Bay on the

clock, and the energy surge here is palpable. "From now on, it's pedal to the metal," said Danny Sink, the USGA championship director

Rockets and Grizzlies both lose.

THE BLAZERS PLAY

for the 2015 U.S. Open, which tees off here with

MEMPHIS IF ...

practice rounds June 15.

• The

SeeU.S. Open/C2

Spursand Grizzlies both win ANDthe

Rockets lose; ORThe Rockets and Grizzlies both win ANDthe Spurs lose; ORthe Grizzlies win AND theSpurs and Rockets both lose.

SOCCER The most pro-

lific goalscorer in women's international

THE BLAZERSPLAY

soccer

THE SPURS IF ...

history, Abby Wambach is still seeking her first World

• The Rockets win AND '81' "r8 the Spurs and Grizzlies both lose

Cup. Rich Schultz/The Associated Press

Inside • The Los Angeles Clippers blow out Phoenix to clinch a top-three seedin the first round of the playoffs. NBA roundup,C4

t I.

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Bend High senior Jack Klar, top, junior Max McGee, left, and senior Ryan DeCastilhos hope to lead the Lava Bears to their second consecutive Class 5A boys golf state championship.

GOLF Central Oregon golf survey What do you think about golf in Central Oregon? The Bulletin would like to know what golfers think about golfing in Central Oregon. Please take afew minutes to complete our annual survey at www.bendbulletin.com/ golfsurvey. Results will be published in our annual Central Oregon Golf Preview onSunday, May10. — Bulletin staffrepo/t

• The LavaBearshopefor a repeat performancewith a 2nd straight state title, but theyhaveto look out for the Storm By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

eturning three golfers from a program's first boys state championship team should be cause for celebration, right'? Returning the individual Class 5A state

through Summit first." Even with Ryan DeCastiihos, who fin-

Veteran U.S.star W ambach adjusts with age, lineup By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

The obvious is not lost on Abby Wambach:

She's getting older. The prol ificgoalscorerfor the U.S. women's national

ished two strokes behind state champion

team will turn 35 just before the World Cup begins in June.

Kevin Geniza of Crescent Valley in 2014,

Wambach has often said she

even with returning state meet placers Jack Klar and Max McGee, the reigning 5A

considers this her last chance to raise the coveted trophy.

champion Lava Bears have their crosstown

runner-up should set up a favorable path to a foe to subdue — an intracity rival that has second straight crown, shouldn't it? never won the state title but has finished in "To repeat," Bend High coach Rusty Clem- second three times since 2010. ons says matter-of-factly, "you've got to go SeeGolf preview/C4 hlslile • Capsule looks at Central Oregon teams, C4 • Prep roundup,C4

• U.S. coach Jill Ellis

announces World Cup roster,C3

A 14-year national team

career maybe taking its toll on Wambach physically, but she still has the skills and the savvy to be a key contributor. That is something U.S.

coach Jill Ellis has been considering as the team makes its final preparations for the World Cup. For an exhibition match this month against

New Zealand, Ellis used Wambach off the bench. SeeWambach /C3


C2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY Time TV/Radie 10:30 a.m. MLB MLB, Washington at Boston MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat Baltimore 4 p.m. MLB MLB, Seattle at L.A. Dodgers 7 p.m. ESPN2, Root SOCCER Europe, Champions League,Paris Saint-Germain (France) vs. Barcelona (Spain) 11:30 a.m. FS1 Europe, Champions League,Porto (Portugal) vs. Bayern Munich (Germany) 11:30 a.m. FS2 I nt'I friendly, United States vs. Mexico 6 p . m. FS1 BASEBALL

SANO VOLLEYBALL

College, Long BeachSt.atUCLA BASKETBALL

4 p.m. ESPN NBA, Portland at Dallas 5 p.m. CSNNW, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO690-AM , 96.9-FM NBA, Indiana at Memphis 6:30 p.m. ESPN HOCKEY NBA, Charlotte at Toronto

NHL playoffs, N.Y. Islanders at Washington 4 p.m. NHL playoffs, Chicago at Nashville 5:30 p.m. NHL playoffs, Calgary at Vancouver 7 p.m.

USA NBCSN

USA

GOLF

LPGA Tour ,LOTTE Championship

4 p.m.

Golf

SOFTBALL

College, N.C.State at Alabama 4 p.m. College, South Alabama at Mississippi St. 6 p.m. LACROSSE

Women's college,MarylandatJohnsHopkins 5:30p.m. Big Ten TENNIS

ATP, MonteCarlo Rolex Masters

1:30 a.m. (Thu.) Tennis

THURSDAY BASEBALL

MLB, Milwaukee atSt. Louis MLB, Miami at N.Y. Mets

College, TennesseeatKentucky College, Vanderbilt at South Carolina MLB, Arizona atSanFrancisco College, California at UCLA

10:30a.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB MLB

SEC ESPNU MLB

Pac-12

GOLF

PGA Tour, RBCHeritage LPGA Tour ,LOTTE Championship SOCCER Europa League, Wolfsburg (Germany) vs. Napoli (Italy) Europa League,Sevilla (Spain) vs. Zenit St. Petersburg (Russia)

noon 4 p.m.

Golf Golf

noon

FS1

noon

FS2

TENNIS

Women's college, UCLA at Southern Cal Men's college, Southern Cal atUCLA ATP, MonteCarlo Rolex Masters

Pac-12 1 p.m. Pac-12 3 p.m. 1:30 a.m. (Fri.) Tennis

HOCKEY

NHL playoffs, Pittsburgh at N.Y.Rangers NHL playoffs, Detroit at TampaBay NHL playoffs, Minnesota at St. Louis NHL playoffs, Winnipeg at Anaheim

4 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.

NBCSN

CNBC NBCSN CNBC

FOOTBALL

Australia, Collingwood vs. St Kilda

2:30 a.m. (Fri.) FS2

LACROSSE

Women's college, Rutgers at OhioSt.

4 p.m.

Big Ten

5 p.m.

Pac-12

WATER POLO

Women's college, Stanford at California

Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL BeaVerS rained Out —Oregon State's gameagainst Portland in Kaiser on Tuesdaynight vvasrained out. Thegamewill be made up at 6:05 p.m. May18 at VolcanoesStadium.

ON DECK Today Baseball: Summit at Bend,4:30p.m.; Mountain ViewatRidgeview,4:30 p,mcRedmondatHood RiverValley,4p.m.; JunctionCityat Sisters, 4:30 p.m. Boflbalh Summit at Bend,4:30 p.mc Mountain View atRidgeview,5 p.m.; HoodRiver Valleyat Redmond,4:30 p.mcSisters at Junction City, 4;30p.m. Boys golf: LaPineat Widgi Creek,1 p.m. Girls golf: Trinity Lutheran at Cotage GroveInvitational atTokatee,TBA Boys tennis: Blanchet Catholic at Sisters,4p.m. Girls tennis: Blanchet Catholic at Sisters,4 p.m. Track andfield: RedmondatSummit, 3p.m.; Ridgeview at Bend,3 p.m. Boys lacrosse:Sistersat Bend,6 p.m. Girls lacrosse:Summitat Marist, 4 p.m.

IN THE BLEACHERS

PGA Tour In the BleachersOaots Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebreachers

Thursday Baseball: CrookCountyat Gladstone,4;30 p.m.; Estacada at Madras(DH), 2 p.m. Boflbalh Gladstone at CrookCounty (DH), 4 p.m.; Madrasat Estacada,4:30 p.mcSisters at Elmira, 4:30p.m. Boys tennis: Summit atMountainView, 4p.m.; Corbett atMadras,4 p,mcRedmond at Bend, 4 p.mcCascadeat Sisters,4 p.m. Girls tennis: MountainViewat Summit, 4 p.m.; Madrasat Corbett, 4 p.m.; Bendat Redmond, 4 p.m. Boys golf: Mountain View, Ridgeview,Sisters, CrookCountyat Awbrey Glen,noon Girls golf: Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeview,Sisters,Summit at Tokatee, noon Track and field: Sisters atJunction City, 4 p.m.; La Pine at Mountain ValleyLeaguemeet in Glide, 4 p.m.

Friday Baseball: Bendat Summit, 4:30p.m.; Ridgeviewat MountainView,4:30p.m.; Churchill at Redmond (DH), 2:30p.m4Sisters at Sutherlin, 4:30 p.m., Harrisburgat LaPine(DH), 2 p.mcArlington at

Culver(DH),2 p.m. Boflbalh Bend atSumm it, 5 p.mc Ridgeviewat MountainView,5p.mc Sutherlin at Sisters, 4:30 p.m.; Harrisburg at LaPine(DH),2 p.m. Girls tennis: Henleyat Sisters, 3p.m. Track and field: Summitat OregonRelays in Eugene, 3p.m.;Ridgeviewat Apple BlossomInvitational inHoodRiver, 4p.m. Boys lacrosse:Hermistonat Summit, 8 p.m.;Nadzitsagaat Ridgeview,6p.m. Girls lacrosse:Bendat Marist, 6 p.m. Saturday Boflbalh CulveratHeppner/lone(DH),11 a.m. Boys tennis: Ridgeview atSpringfield,11 a m.; Ridgeviewvs. NorthEugeneat Springfield, 3 p.m.; Redmond atNorthEugene,3p.m. Girls tennis: Ridgeviewat Springfield, 11 a.mc Redmond at NorthEugene, 3 p,m.; Sisters, Madras atMadrasInvite, 9a.m. Track and field: Summitat OregonRelays in Eugene, a.m.; 9 RedmondatViking Relaysin Salem, noon; Bend,Mountain Viewat Crater Classic in CentralPoint, 10a.m.;CrookCountyat PrefontaineRotaryInvitational in CoosBay,10:30 a.mc Summ it, Madras,Sisters, LaPine, Culver, Gilchrist at La PineInvitational,10 a.m. Boys lacrosse: Southridgeat Summ it, 7 p.m.; HermistonatRidgeview,5 p.m.; Churchill at Sisters, 1p.m. Girls lacrosse: CrescentValleyat Sisters, noon; West Salem at Sisters, 2 p.mc Southridgeat Summit, 5p.m.

GOLF STATISTICS ThroughApril12 ScoringAverage 1, Jordan Spieth, 69.264. 2, Dustin Johnson, 69.569 .3,HenrikStenson,69.577.4,BubbaWatson, 69.795 .5,RyanPalmer,69.888.6,JimmyWalker, 69.915.7, HarrisEnglish,69.981.8,Webb Simpson, 69 988.9, PaulCasey,70096.10, lanPoulter, 70.100. Driving Distance 1, DustinJohnson,315.1.2, BubbaWatson,310.3. 3,Adam Scott,308.9.4,TonyFinau,308.7.5,Jason Day,308.1.6(tie), CharlieBeljanandBrooksKoepka, 307.5. 8,J.B.Holmes,305.0.9,RyanPalmer,304.4. 10, JasonKokrak,304.1. Driving AccuracyPercentage 1, FrancescoMolinari, 76.75%. 2, DavidToms, 76.67%. 3,StevenAlker,75.73%.4,HeathSlocum, 72.46%. 5,Jim Furyk,72.28%.6,HenrikStenson, 72.10%.7,TimClark,71.78%.8, Colt Knost,71.70%. 9,Justin Hicks,70.47%.10,ChezReavie,70.36%. Greens inRegulation Percentage 1, StewartCink,7336%.2, Henrik Stenson,72 78%. 3,Ji m Herman,72.22%.4,LucasGlover,71.39%.5, Bill Lunde,71.33%.6, JohnsonWagner, 71.30%. 7, Will Wilcox,70.96/v. 8,AdamScott, 70.92%.9 (tie), MichaelPutnamand BenMartin, 70.77%. Birdie Average 1, JimmyWalker,4.68. 2, JordanSpieth, 4.61. 3, JasonDay,4.50. 4, DustinJohnson, 4.38. 5, J.B. Holmes,4.31.6 (tie), PhilMickelsonandTim Clark, 4.21. 8(tie), BubbaWatsonandShawnStefani, 4.17. 10, MattJones,4.11.

DEALS Transactions

"Go shear yourself, Kenny. I missed the free throw. We are skins. Deal with it."

WTA Claro Open Colsanitas Tuesdayat Bogota, Colombia First Round TelianaPereira, Brazil, def. France scaSchiavone (4), Italy,6-1,6-4. DankaKovinic, Montene gro, def. MariaPaulina PerezGarcia, Colombia,6-4, 6-1. Mandy Mineffa, Luxembo urg, def. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Austria, 4-6,7-5, 6-2. SachiaVickery,UnitedStates, def.KristinaKucova, Slovakia,6-0,5-7,6-4. MonicaPuig(2), PuertoRico,def. CindyBurger, Netherlands, 6-2,6-3. IrinaFalconi(8), UnitedStates,def. SoranaCirstea, Romania6-4, , 6-1. Nicole Gibbs,UnitedStates, def. Anastasia Rodionova,Australia,6-3, 7-5. AlexandraPanova, Russia, def. Ajla Tom jlanovic (3), Croatia,6-4,6-1. Yaroslava Shvedova(5), Kazakhstan, def. Maryna Zanevska,Ukraine,6-4,6-7(5), 6-2. MarianaDuque-Marino, Colombia,def. TimeaBabos (7),Hungary, 6-4,6-7 (10),6-3.

BASEBALL

AmericanLeague CLEVELAND INDIANS— DesignatedRHPShaun Marcumfor assignment. Selectedthecontract of C BrettHayesfromColumbus(IL). Agreedto termswith RHPRyanWebb on aminor leaguecontract. HOUSTONASTROS— OptionedRHPAsherWojciechowski to Fresno (PCL). ReinstatedRHPBrad Peacockfromthe15-day DL. BASEBALL KANSASCITYROYALS— PlacedOFAlexRioson the 15-dayDL College NEWYO RKYANKEES—Agreedtotermswith RHP ChrisSmithonaminorleaguecontract. Pac-12 TEXAS RANGERS— Sent RHPKyuji Fujikawato All Times PDT Frisco(TL)forarehab assignment. National League Conference Overall CHICAGO CUBS— Placed INFTommyLaStella W L Pct W L Pcf UCLA 12 3 .800 26 7 .788 on the15-dayDL,retroactive toApril 9. Recalled LHP ArizonaSt. 11 4 .733 23 10 .697 ZacRosscupfromlowa(PCL). LOSANGELESDODGERS— ReleasedRHPRyan SouthernCal 8 4 .667 27 9 .750 California 9 6 .600 22 11 .667 Webb.OptionedINFDarwin Barneyto OklahomaCity Arizona 8 7 .533 23 11 .676 PCL).Selectedthecontract of LHPDavid Hufffrom klahoma City. Oregon St. 6 6 .500 23 11 .676 MIAMIMARLINS—PlacedRHPDavid Phelps on Washington 6 9 .400 20 14 .588 Oregon 4 8 .333 21 16 .568 paternity leave.Recalled RHPJose Urena fromNew Washington St 5 10 .333 18 17 .514 Orleans(PCL). Utah 4 8 .333 12 20 .375 PHILADEL PHIAPHILLIES— AssignedLHPCesar Stanford 2 10 .167 14 20 .412 Jimenez outright to LehighValley (IL).

Tuesday'sGames Southern Cal2, Pepperdine0 Washington 9, Seattle 5 UtahValleyatUtah, ccd. Santa Clara6, Stanford5 UCLA7,CalStateFufferton2 SOCCER OregonSt.vs.Portland ppd.rain Today sGame Portlandat Oregon, 3p.m. MLS Thursday' sGames Sunday MAJORLEAGUESOCCER SanJoseSt.atWashington St., 6p.m. Boys lacrosse:Southridgeat Bend, 1p.m. All Times PDT Californiaat UCLA,7 p.m. Girls lacrosse:SouthridgeatBend,9a.m.; Summit Friday/sGames at Sherwood,11:30 a.m. EasternConference Californiaat UCLA,4 p.m. W L T P t s GF GA Arizona at OregonSt., 5:35p.m. D.C. United 3 1 1 10 5 4 OregonatSouthernCal, 6p.m. New York 2 0 2 8 7 4 Utah at Stanford,6p.m. TENNIS OrlandoCit y 2 2 2 8 6 5 SanJoseSt.atWashington St., 6p.m. NewEngland 2 2 2 8 4 6 ArizonaSt,atWashington, 7p.m. ATP Chicago 2 3 0 6 5 7 Saturday'sGames Columbus 1 2 2 5 5 5 Utah at Stanford, 2p.m. Monte-CarloRolex Masters S an Jose St , at W ashington St., 2p.m. NewYorkcityFC 1 2 2 5 4 4 TuesdayatMonaco SouthernCalatOregon,2p.m. Philadelphia 1 3 2 5 7 10 Firsl Round Arizona at OregonSt., 4:05p.m. orontoFC 1 3 0 3 6 8 GaelMonfils(14), France,def. AndreyKuznetsov, T ArizonaSt,atWashington, 7;30p.m. Montreal 0 2 2 2 2 6 Russia,4-6,6-3,6-4. C alifornia at UCLA,7:30 p.m. WesternConference LucasPouiffe,France,def.Dominic Thiem,Austria, Sunday'sGames W L T P t s GF GA 6-4, 6-4. SanJoseSt,atWashington St., noon ancouver 4 2 1 13 9 7 Juan Monaco,Argentina, def.Jiri Vesely, Czech V Arizona St. at W ashi ngton,1 p.m. FC Dallas 3 2 1 10 7 8 Republic,6-4,6-2. OregonatSouthernCal, 1p.m. Jose 3 3 0 9 7 7 MarcelGranogers, Spain, def. AdrianMannarino, San Utah at Stanford, 1p.m. RealSaltLake 2 0 3 9 6 4 France,6-3r 6-0. Arizona at OregonSt.,1:05 p.m. 9 6 6 Jo-WilfriedTsonga (11), France, def.Jan-Lennard SportingKansasCity 2 1 3 Houston 2 2 2 8 5 3 Struff,Germany,6-4, 6-4. Angele s 2 2 2 8 6 6 TommyRobredo (16), Spain,def. AndreasSeppi, Los Seattle 2 2 1 7 6 4 HOCKEY Italy, 6-3,1-6,6-4. Colorado 1 1 3 6 4 2 JeremyChardy, France, def. DiegoSchwartzman, Portland 1 2 3 6 6 7 Argentina,7-5, 6-2. NHL playoffs GigesSimon(10), France,def. BenjaminBageret, Thursday'sGame NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Monaco, 6-4, 6-2. YorkCity FC,4 p.m. All TimesPDT Grigor Dimitrov(9), Bulgaria,def.FernandoVer- PhiladelphiaatNew Friday's Game dasco,Spain,6-4,4-6r 6-4. York,4p.m. FIRSTROUND Viktor TroickiSerbi , a,def. Martin Klizan,Slovakia, SanJoseatNewSaturday' sGames (Besl-of-7; x-if necessary) 7-6 (5),5-7,6-2. Today' sGames H ouston at D.C. U n i t ed, 4 p. m . BecondRound Ottawa atMontreal,4 p.m. rlandoCityat Columbus,4:30p.m. NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,def. AlbertRamos-Vi- O N .Y. Isl a nders at W a shi n gt o n, 4 p.m. TorontoFCatFCDallas,5:30 p.m. nolas,Spain,6-1,6-4. Chicago at Nashvile, 5:30p.m. eattleat Colorado,6p.m. DavidFerrer(5), Spain, def.Victor EstreffaBurgos, S CalgaryatVancouver, 7p.m. Vancouver at Real Salt Lake,6:30 p.m. Dominican Republic, 6-2,2-0, retired. Thursday'sGames MarinCilic(8),Croatia,def.FlorianMayer, Germa- SportingKansasCity atLosAngeles,7:30p.m. PittsburghatN.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. Bunday'sGames ny, 6-3,3-6,6-3. Detroit atTampaBay,4:30p.m. ewEnglandat Philadelphia, 2p.m. AndreasHaider-Maurer,Austria, def.BernardTom- N Minnesota atSt. Louis, 6:30p.m. PortlandatNewYorkCity FC,4 p.m. ic, Australia,6-7(4), 7-6 (5), 6-4. WinnipegatAnaheim,7:30 p.m.

WASHING TON NATIONALS — Designated LHP XavierCedenofor assignment. Selectedthecontract of RHPRafaelMartin fromSyracuse(IL). SentOFDenard Span toHarrisburg(EL)forarehabassignment. FOOTBA LL National Football League PITTSBURGHSTEELERS — CB Ike Taylorannouncedhisretirement. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague DETROIRE TDWINGS— ReassignedGJakePaterson from Toledo(ECHL)to GrandRapids(AHL). NASHVILLEPREDATORS — Reassigned D Joe Piskulato Milwaukee(AHL). COLLEGE AIR FORC E —Named Chris Gobrechtwom en's basketballcoach. ARKAN SAS— Announced FBobby Portis will entertheNBAdraft. DUKE — Announced FJustise Winslowwil enter the NBA draft. FLORIDA — AnnouncedOTRodJohnsonwillno longerplayfootball dueto aspinal injury. INDIANA— Announcedwomen' sbasketballGTia ElberthastransferredfromMarquete. PITTSB URGH—AnnouncedFDurandJohnsonis leaving themen'sbasketball program. STANFORD— AnnouncedDLBrennanScarlettis transferringfromCalifornia. UNLV— Announcedthe retirement of men'sand women'sswimming anddiving coachJimReitz,effective at theendofJune. WESTERNKENTUCKY — Suspendeditsswimminganddiving programsfor fiveyears.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Bflhd Wstlhd Bonneville 588 1 16 15 The Daffes 939 3 13 6 John Day 550 12 12 7 McNary 2 1 6 1 21 13 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Bflhd Wsghd Bonneville 10,652 2 3 3, 618 1 ,989 The Daffes 4,714 71 151 84 JohnDay 3,394 2 4 224 173 McNary 92 0 3 358 215

FOOTBALL ArmStead, not Mariota, attending draft —While 26 draft-eligible players haveaccepted invitations from the NFLto attend the proceedings later this month, Jameis Winston andMarcus Mariota are not among them.Thetvvo most recent Heisman Trophy winners and highest-profile players in this year's crop haveopted to stay home with their families for the draft, to be heldApril 30 through May 2. The quarterbacks are projected to go at theoutset of the draft. Defensive end Arik Armstead, Mariota's teammate atnational runner-up Oregon, hasagreed to attend. Armstead decided to forego his senior season and is expected to be first-round a selection.

COllege teamS rake in PlayOff mOney — Thanksto the College Football Playoff, bowl gamespaid more than ahalf billion dollars to conferencesandschools last season, the largest payout ever and an increase of almost $200 million from the final season of the Bowl Championship Series. According to anNCAAreport released Tuesday, the 39postseason FBSgames distributed $505.9 million to the participating conferences andschools. The schools spent $100.2 million to take part in bowl games.

NeW CORC NSSionS deal With NCAA PrOPOSed — Thereis a new proposed settlement in a headinjury lawsuit against the NCAA brought by football players and other college athletes. Notice of anew deal came in filings in federal court in Chicago lateTuesday night. It is the second proposal in the case.U.S.District Judge John Leerejected the initial settlement in December.Thecore of the new agreement is the same asthe oneLeerejected. The newonealso would toughen return-to-play rules after a concussion andwould create a$70 million fund to test current and former athletes in contact and non-contact sports for brain trauma. Thenewproposal also seeks to address Lee's criticism. That includes his concern therevvasa lack of clarity about how athletes in what aredesignated as non-contact sports could benefit if they suffer concussions.

BOXING Mayweather: Fight will be wOrth the mOney — FloydMayweather Jr. saysfans will have to decidefor themselves whether it's worth $99.95 to pay towatch his fight with Manny Pacquiao at home. Personally, though, hebelieves the richest fight in boxing history will be must-see TV."Fromthe matchup it seemslike anexciting fight," Mayweather saidTuesday."When I mentally picture the fight, to me it looks like it's going to beavery exciting fight." Even if it isn't the so-called Fight of the Century, hesaid, it will likely go downasoneof the biggest fights ever. "I can't really sayit's hype becausethis is real life," Mayweather said. "You've gottvvofuture hall of famers in a megafight." — From staffand wire reports

U.S. Open

in prime time, another stroke of good fortune — will be blown Continued from C1 away by our Pacific Northwest Sink has been embedded grandeur. "The word-of-mouth is going at Chambers Bay since Oct. 1, 2012, immersed in the complex to be like 'Oh, my God, did you business of preparingamunici- see Chambers Bay last night? pal course for the nation's most You've got to watch it,n' Sink prestigious golf event. sald. Now they are in the closing They envisioned how some stretch, finalizing construction of the more spectacular holes of thevarious structures need- are going to play on television ed to stage a U.S. Open. They — No. 15, with the visual power are preparing to implement the of the lone fir tree behind it. Or painstaking logistics required 16 and 17, both playing parallel fortheegress andingress of the to the Sound, the photogenic expected 235,000 attendees. nature enhanced even more by But Sink and Chambers Bay the inevitable image of a train general manager Matt Allen, going right by. both of whom I visited MonThat is a sight they welcome, day, also allowed themselves by the way, both as a harkena luxurious moment or two to ing back to the game's Scotdream ahead. To ponder how tish roots and a reminder of marvelous it is going to be the perverse nature of playing when their baby is unveiled to here. Allen knows there will the world. be times when golfers back off "I can't think o f a n other their shot to let the train pass, place forthe U.S. Openthatwill which they believe will just add have this type of visuals." Allen to the endearing quirkiness of said. "Pebble Beach is pretty Chambers Bay. "It's what the everyday golfer spectacular, but given the absence of treesMkdthe ability to feels here," Sink said. get elevated shots at just about But these are the best golfers any point in time, you're al- in the world converging on the ways going to have that water South Sound and bringing a in view, if you want it." slew of compelling story lines The USGA believes this has with them. Spieth's emerging the potential to be the high- brilliance. Tiger Woods' onest rated U.S. Open telecast in going attempt to regain his history, based on numerous throne. Phil Mickleson's ferfactors. Fox will be presenting vent desire to complete a career its first golf tournament and no grand slam. doubt promoting it commensuNot to mention local favorrately. The current story lines ite Ryan Moore, from nearby in golf are rich with drama. Tacoma, the charismatic Rory And Sink imagines that the fan McIlroy, the enigmatic Sergio on the East Coast — watching Garcia, and any number of

other well-known players who could emerge from the pack. That concept of presenting the course as it plays the other 51 weeks of the year — minus the invariably diabolical USGA layout — is big for the event organizers. Which is why they are openly hoping not for four days of bright sunshine, but rather the full gamut of weath-

them in action. Their ultimate Chambers

er variance that Seattleites all

heard of." It's a pretty thought befitting a potentially spectacular layout. Allen says the course, with its unique fescue grass, is

know and love, from sun to wind to mist — minus a fullblown rainstorm, of course. aWe want the best players in

Bay daydream brings them to Sunday's final round, 18th hole, the tournament hanging in the

balanceasanynumber ofplayers converge down the stretch. "Someone may make an ea-

gle if we play 18 as a par 5 on Sunday," Sink said. "An eagle to win the U.S. Open is un-

the world to feel the same way just where they want it, helped as the schoolteacher from Stei- along by a milder-than-norlacoom that comes out here to mal winter. The public will play," Sink said. "That's cool for be allowed to keep playing Chambers Bay until Memorial Also cool is the thought of weekend, when they'll shut it the versatility of the course as it down and put on the finishing relates to yardage, tee locations touches. and angles into the hole. In the next few m onths, The folks in charge of such they expect drop-in visits from things are "over the moon ex- many of the world's best playcited," Sink said, about the op- ers to familiarize themselves tiorfs available to them, based with the course. That process on the weather conditions and will no doubt heat up before their imagination. But if it does and after the World Match Play rain, Chambers Bay will bene- Championships in San Franfit from being what Sink calls cisco on April 29 through May the best-draining golf course in 3. the country.

In the meantime, it is time

Par canbe changed on 1and for the U.S. Open organizers 18, depending on the wind and to hunker down for the detail other factors. It might be possi- work, educate fans (they exble to have three or four driv- pect more first-time attendees able par 4s, the accomplish- than any U.S. Open ever) and ment of which will lead to roars

wait for the world to come to

from the gallerythe organizers them. aWe're excited to be the epiare genuinely curious about. How far will the noise of 40,000 center of golf for the next few people carry after a killer drive months," Allen said. or gorgeous putt? You can't test — Larry Stone is a columnist those things; you have to see

for the Seattle Times.


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL catandings

QUICK START, POOR FINISH

All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Oivision

Boston Tampa Bay Baltimore Toronto NewYork Kansas City Detroit Chicago Cleveland Minnesota Oakland

Texas Houston Los Angeles Seattle

W 6 5 4 4 3

L 2 3 4 4 5

Pct GB .750 .625 I .500 2 .500 2 .375 3

7 7 3 2 I

0 1 4 5 6

1.000 .875 r/r .429 4 .286 5 .143 6

5 4 3 3 3

4 5 5 5 5

Pd GB .556 .444 I .375 1'/r .375 1'/r .375 1'/r

Central Division W L

West Division W L

pm GB

Tuesday'sGames

SL-: Mark J. Terriii / rhe Associated Press

Seattle's Robinson Cano hits a two-run home run off Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher David Huff during the first inning Tuesday in Los Angeles. The Mariners lost 6-5.

Interleague

NATIONALLEAGUE

East Division

Atlanta NewYork Philadelphia Miami Washington Cincinnati Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee

Colorado LosAngeles SanDiego Arizona SanFrancisco

W 6 5 3 2 2

L 2 3 5 6 6

Pct GB .750 .625 I .375 3 .250 4 .250 4

5 4 3 3 2

3 3 3 5 5

Pct GB .625 .571 '/r .500 I .375 2 .286 2r/r

6 5 5 4 3

2 3 4 4 6

Central Division W L

West Division W L

Pct GB .750 .625 I .556 fr/r

.500 2

333 3r/r

Tuesday'sGames Boston 8, Washington7 Detroit 2,Pittsburgh0 Miami 8, Atlanta2 N.Y.Mets6, Philadelphia5 Cincinnati3, ChicagoCubs2 San Diego 5,Arizona1 L.A. Dodgers 6,Seattle5 Colorado 4, SanFrancisco1 Today'sGames Miami(Haren0-0) atAtlanta (Stults 0-0), 9:10a.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez0-1) at Boston (Miley 0-0), 10:35a.m. Detroit(Simon1-0)atPitsburgh(Liriano 0-0),4:05p.m. Philadelphia(Wigiams0-0) atN.Y.Mets(Niese0-0),

4:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Marquis0-0) at ChicagoCubs(TWood 0-1), 5:05 p.m. Milwaukee (W.Peralta 0-0) at St. Louis(Lynn0-1), 5:15 p.m. Arizona (C.Anderson0-0)at San Diego(Morrow0-0), 6:10 p.m. Seattle (TWalker0-1) at L.A.Dodgers(B.Anderson 0-0), 7;10 p.m. Colorado(Matzek0-0) at SanFrancisco (Lincecum 0-0), 7:15 p.m. Thursday'sGames Milwaukee atSt.Louis,10:45 a.m. PhiladelphiaatWashington, 4:05p.m. Miami atN.Y.Mets,4:10 p.m. Arizona at SanFrancisco, 7:15p.m.

Leaders AMERICANLEAGUE

BATTING —Jlglesias, Detroit,.480; Micabrera,Detroit, .471;Bogaerts, Boston,.433; AJones,Baltimore, .429;KMorales,KansasCity,.414;SPerez,Kansas City,.414;Cain,KansasCity,.407. RBI —AJones, Baltimore, 11;Micabrera,Detroit, 9; JMartinez, Detroit,9; SPerez,KansasCity,9; Betts, Boston,8; Cain,Kansas City, 8;Cruz,Seatle, 8;Kinsler, Detroit, 8;Rios,Kansas City, 8. HOME RUNS—Cruz, Seattle,5; AJones,Baltimore, 4; JMartinez,Detroit, 4; Ackley,Seattle, 3; Freese, Los Angeles,3;Pedroia,Boston,3; SPerez,KansasCity,3; HRamirez, Boston, 3;Teixeira, NewYork,3. STRIKE OUTS—Kazmir, Oakland, 18; Kluber, Cleveland,17;Sabathia, NewYork, 15; Pineda, New York, 15; MiGonzalez,Baltimore, 15; AnSanch ez, Detroit, 15; BuchholzBoston, , 12; Shoemaker, Los Angeles,12;Gallardo,Texas,12. SAVES —GHolland, KansasCity, 3; Boxberger, Tampa Bay, 3;Soria, Detroit, 3; Street, LosAngeles,3; Mcastro,Toronto,2; Robertson, Chicago,2; AMiler, New York,2; Britton, Baltimore,2; Rodney, Seattle, 2. NATIONALLEAGUE BATTING —AGonzalez, Los Angeles, .548; LeMahieu,Colorado, .516; Lind, Milwaukee,.417; Dickerson,Colorado,.406;Aoki, SanFrancisco,.405; Inciarte,Arizona,.393;Voto, Cincinnati,.375. RBI —Dickerson,Colorado,10; Frazier, Cincinnati, 9; Votto, Cincinnati, 9; AGon zalez, LosAngeles, 8; Guerrero,LosAngeles,8; 7tied at7. HOMERUNS— AGonzalez,LosAngeles,5;PAlvarez, Pittsburgh,3;Frazier,Cincinnati,3; Votto,Cincinnati,3;17 tied at 2. STRIKE OUTS—Mccarthy, Los Angeles, 19; Harvey,NewYork,17; Scherzer, Washington,16; Cashner, San Diego,15;Shields,SanDiego,15; Burnett,Pittsburgh,15;Kershaw,LosAngeles,14; Cole,Pittsburgh, 14; Cueto, Cincinnati,14.

Wambach Continued from C1 Wambach says she would like to start because she is a competitor, but she will em-

brace whatever role she is given. "I think that in order to win

a World Cup we all have to give up a little bit of our own selves to be able to do that,

and I think checking your ego at the door is probably one of the biggest and important keys to winning a world championship," Wambach

Dodgers 6, Mariners 6 LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles' Howie Kendrick hit a game-winning two-run single in the bottom of the ninth inning against Seattle closer FernandoRodney. Nelson Cruz homered for the fourth straight game.

HOUSTON — Rooki eKendall Gravemanallowed four hits for his first major leaguewin, and four relievers completed the shutout for Oakland. Billy Butler hadan RBI double in the sixth inning that gavehim theAL'sonlynine-game hitting streak.

BALTIMORE — Miguel Gonzalez struck out a career-high 10 to lead Baltimore. CCSabathia allowed four runs and sevenhits, and although he is18-7 against the Orioles, the left-hander is 0-5 with a 5.48 ERA inhis past sevenstarts at CamdenYards.

SAN FRANCISCO — Colorado third basemanNolan Arenado made a sensational falling catch over the tarp in foul territory, and theRockiesmovedto 5-0onthe road to start a seasonfor the first time in franchise history.

San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi B lckmncf 4 0 I 0 Aokilf 3010 ab r hbi ab r hbi C Gnzl z rf 4 0 I 0 Panik2b 4 0 0 0 Fuldcf 4 1 2 0 Altuve2b 5 0 I 0 T lwtzkss 4 0 I 0 Pagancf 4 I 30 Canhalf 3 0 0 0 Springrrf 4 0 0 0 M ornea 1b 4 0 0 0 Belt 1b 3 000 Gentrylf 0 0 0 0 Lowriess 3 0 I 0 Arenad 3b 3 I I 0 GBlanc rf 4 0 1 0 Z obrist2b 2 1 0 I Gattisdh 4 0 I 0 Dickrsnlf 4 3 3 I MDuffy3b 2 0 11 BButlerdh 4 1 I I Valuen3b 3 0 2 0 Hundlyc 4 0 I 0 HSnchzc 3 0 0 0 I .Davis1b 4 0 I 0 Carter1b 4 0 I 0 LeMahi2b 2 0I I Poseyph-c I 0 0 0 V ogtc 3 0 I I J castroc 3 0 I 0 Brgmnp I 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 4 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 3 1 0 0 CIRsmslf 3 0 0 0 Obergp 0 0 0 0 THudsnp 2 0 0 0 R eddckrf 4 0 2 I Mrsnckcf 4 0 I 0 H wknsp 0 0 0 0 Ariasph I 0 0 0 Semienss 4 0 0 0 Ynoaph I 0 0 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 4 7 4 Totals 3 3 0 8 0 Fridrchp 0 0 0 0 Casillap 0 0 0 0 Oakland 1 00 002 001 — 4 B etncrtp 0 0 0 0 Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Houston OOO OOO OOO — 0 Rosarioph I 0 0 1 Maxwgph I 0 0 0 DP— Oakland 2,Houston2.LOB— Oakland 5, Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 Houston11.28—Fuld2(4), B.Butler (3). SB—Lawrie T otals 32 4 9 3 Totals 3 2I 6 1 (1). SF —Zobrist. Beltran(3), Tei x ei r a(2), C. Y oun g (2). 38 — Jos eph(I). IP H R E R BBSO C olorado 020 1 0 0 001 — 4 H R — A .Jone s (4). SF — E .ca br era, A .Jone s. Oakland San Francisco 000 000 010 — I IP H R E R BBSO DP — San Francisco 1. LOB—Colorado 6, San Graveman W,I-I 5 1-3 4 0 0 4 3 O'Flaherty H,2 1 2 - 3 10 0 0 3 New York Francisco9. 28—Tulowitzki (7), Arenado(5). 3BSabathiaL,0-2 7 7 4 4 I 7 Dickerson OteroH,I 2-3 2 0 0 0 I (I). SB—Aoki(2). CS—Arenado (I). SCh.Marti n I 0 0 0 0 2 AbadH,I 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 LeMahi eu,Bergman.SF— M.Duff y. Baltimore Clippard I 1 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Mi.GonzalezW,I-I 7 4 I I I 10 Colorado HousIOII H,I 2-3 2 2 I 0 0 PeacockL,0-1 5 5 3 3 2 3 G ausman 4 4 0 0 2 4 11 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Bergman Thatcher 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 BrittonS,2-2 ObergW,1-0 1 I 0 0 0 1 Neshek I 2-3 0 0 0 0 3 WP—Sabathia, Mi.Gonzalez. HawkinsH,I 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:29.A—19,283 (45,971). Deduno I 1 1 I 0 I FriedrichH,2 1 0 0 0 1 0 Peacockpitchedto 2battersin the6th. BetancourtH,1 1 I I I 1 0 HBP —byGraveman (Lowrie), byDeduno(Lawrie), by OttavinoS,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 3 National League Peacock(Vogt). San Francisco T—2:58. A—I8,935(41,574). T.Hudson L,O-I 7 8 3 3 0 4 Mets 6, Phillies 5 Machi 1 0 0 0 1 0 Casilla 2-3 I I I 1 1 White Sox 4, lndians1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 NEW YORK — Matt Harvey, com- Lopez HBP—byT.Hudson(Blackmon). WP—T.Hudson. CLEVELAND— Cleveland pitcher ing off of TommyJohn surgery, T—3:09. A—41,051(41,915).

Red Sox 8, Nationals 7 BOSTON—Two errors by Washington pitcher BlakeTreinen allowed Boston to erase two-run, a seventh-inning deficit.

Houston

Carlos Carrasco wasstruck in the face by Melky Cabrera's first-inning line drive andcarted off the field. The Indians, who lost their fourth straight, said X-rays of Carrasco, the club's No. 2starter, were negative and hewas being treated at a local for a bruised jaw. Chicago's JoseQuintana improved to 4-0 in10 starts against the Indians.

Colorado

New York Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi Ellsurycf 4 1 1 0 Ecarerss 2 1 I I Headly3b 4 1 1 0 Machd3b 4 0 I 0 Beltranrf 4 0 1 1 A.Jonescf 3 1 I 2 TeixeirIb 4 0 1 1 PearceIb 4 0 0 0 BMccnc 4 0 0 0 DYongrf 4 1 2 0 G Jonesdh 3 0 0 0 Loughlf 0 0 0 0 G.Petitph I 0 0 0 C.Davisdh 3 0 0 0 CYounglf 4 0 1 0 Schoop2b 3 0 0 0 Drew2b 2 0 0 0 Josephc 3 1 2 I ARdrgzph I 0 0 0 DeAzalf-rf 3 0 0 0 Gregrsss 3 1 1 0 Totals 34 3 6 2 Totals 2 9 4 7 4 N ew York OO O 001 020 — 8 B altimore 101 IO O I gx — 4 E—Sabathia (I), Gregorius(I), DeAza (I). DPNewYork2. LOB —NewYork 5, Baltimore4. 28-

won his first home start in almost 20 months, andLucasDudahita three-run double to leadNewYork. Philadelphia New York ab r hbi ab r hbi O Herrrcf 5 0 0 0 Grndrsrf 4 2 2 0 Galvi sss 4 0 0 0 DWrght3b 5 0 2 0 Utley2b 3 2 3 3 Reckerpr-3b 0 0 0 0 H owardIb 3 0 0 0 DudaIb 4 1 2 3 R uizc 4 0 0 0 Cuddyrlf I 0 I I Asche3b 3 1 1 1 Niwnhspr-If 3 0 0 0 Sizemrrf 3 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 3 1 I I Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 dArnadc 5 0 2 I M cGwnp 0 0 0 0 Lagarscf 4 1 I 0 Rufph I 0 0 0 Floresss 2 1 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Harveyp 2 0 0 0 R everelf 4 1 1 0 Teiadaph I 0 I 0 Buchnnp I 0 1 0 Carlylep 0 0 0 0 Francrrf 2 1 1 1 Mayrry ph I 0 0 0 Glmrtn p 0 0 0 0 RMontrp 0 0 0 0 F amilip 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 5 7 5 Totals 3 5 6 126 Philadelphia 1 0 1 I OO 011 — 5 New York 130 0 1 0 1 0x — 6 E—d'Arnaud (I). DP—Philadelphia 1. LOBPhiladelphia 6, New York 12. 28—Buchanan (I),

Reds 3, Cnbs2 CHICAGO —Anthony DeSclafani threw seven scoreless innings to earn his first win for Cincinnati, which snappedathree-game losing streak.

Washington Boston ab r hbi ab r hbi Y Escor3b 5 0 2 0 Bettscf 5 0 I 2 Werthlf 4 I 0 0 Pedroia2b 4 I 3 I H arperrf 5 I I 0 Ortizdh 5 0 I 0 ZmrmnIb 3 I 0 0 HRmrzlf-3b 5 2 I 0 CRonsndh 5 II I Sandovl3b 2 0 0 0 W Ramsc 4 0 0 I Victornrf 0 I 0 0 D smndss 4 I 3 2 NapoliIb 4 2 I 0 E spinos2b 2 2 I 0 Navarf-If 3 0 I I MTaylrcf 4 0 2 3 Craigph-If 0 I 0 0 H anignc 4 0 I I H oltss 4 I 2 I Totals 3 6 7 107 Totals 3 6 8 116 Washington OIO 060 OOO — 7 Boston 022 100 3gx — 8

Cincinnati

I)

2015 U.S.WorldCuproster Goalkeepers:Ashlyn Harris (Washington), Alyssa Naeher (Boston), Hope Solo (Seattle) Defenders:Lori Chalupny (Chicago), Whitney Engen(Western New York), Julie Johnston (Chicago), MeghanKlingenberg (Houston), Ali Krieger (Washington), Kelley O'Hara (Sky Blue), Christie Rampone (Sky Blue), BeckySauerbrunn (KansasCity) Midfielders:ShannonBoxx(Chicago), Morgan Brian (Houston), Tobin Heath(Portland), Lauren Holiday (Kansas City), Carli Lloyd (Houston), HeatherO'Reilly (KansasCity), Megan Rapinoe (Seattle) Forwards:Sydney Leroux (Western NewYork), Alex Morgan (Portland), Christen Press (Chicago), AmyRodriguez (Kansas City), Abby Wambach(no club)

ing all-time international goal but I think it's going to be im- scorer with 178. She was the 2012 FIFA Women's World

Player of the Year. She also a bond and a chemistry that has two Olympic gold medals, is unwavering and something and memorably scored on a we can hold on to throughout headeroffa corner kick for a 2-1 victory over Brazil in the the World Cup." Wambach is soccer'slead-

Rockies 4, Giants1

Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi B Hmltncf 4 I I 0 Fowlercf 4 0 1 0 VottoIb 3 0 2 I Rizzo1b 4 0 1 0 F razier3b 4 I 0 0 Solerrf 3 0 1 0 Chicago Cleveland Phillips2b 2 I I 0 Coghlnlf-2b 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Schmkr 2b 2 0 0 0 Scastro ss 3 0 1 0 Seattle Los Angeles E atoncf 4 1 2 0 Bourncf 4 0 0 0 B rucerf 4 0 I I MMntrc 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi M ecarrlf 4 1 I 0 Aviles3b 3 0 I 0 Byrdlf 4 0 I I A lcantr2b 2 0 0 0 Weekslf 4 0 2 I Rollinsss 5 2 2 0 AbreuIb 4 1 I I Kipnis2b 4 0 0 0 Pena c 3 0 0 0 Szczur ph-If 0 I 0 0 A ckleyph-If I 0 0 0 Crwfrdlf 5 I 2 0 LaRochdh 3 0 II CSantnIb 3 0 0 0 Cozart ss 4 0 I 0 Arrieta p 2 0 0 0 AJcksncf 5 I I 0 AGnzlzIb 4 0 2 1 AGarcirf 4 1 I I Sandslf 4 I I 0 DeSclfnp 3 0 0 0 Rosscpp 0 0 0 0 Cano2b 5 I 2 2 HKndrc2b 4 0 2 2 A IRmrz ss 3 0 0 0 Moss rf 4 000 Greggp 0 0 0 0 Castilloph I I 1 2 N.cruzrf 3 2 I I Grandlc 3 0 0 0 Gillaspi3b 3 0 0 0 Raburn dh 3 0 I I C ingrnp 0 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 S eager3b 4 0 2 0 Ethierrf 4 I 1 1 GBckh3b 1 0 0 0 DvMrpph 1 0 0 0 Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 D.Rossph I 0 0 0 Zuninoc 5 0 0 0 Uribe3b 4 0 0 0 Flowrsc 4 0 2 I RPerezc 2 0 0 0 JHerrr3b 2 0 0 0 BMillerss 3 0 0 0 YGarcip 0 0 0 0 Bonifac2b 3 0 0 0 JRmrzss 3 0 0 0 E — D e sm o nd( 6), T r eine n 2( 2), M as ter s on(I). DP Oltph-3b 2 0 0 0 B lmqstfb 3 I 2 I Pedrsncf 3 I 1 0 Washington1. LOB—Washington 7, Boston 8. 28T otals 3 3 4 8 4 Totals 3 1I 3 I D uda 2 (3), d' A rnaud (1), T eiada (1). HR — U tle y 2 (2), Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 31 2 5 2 Iwakmp 2 0 0 0 Huffp I 000 Chicago 200 110 OOO — 4 Desmond (3), Betts(2). 38—M.Taylor(I). HR —Pedroia Asche(I), Francoeur(2), Dan.Murphy(1). SB—Utley Cincinnati 000 8 0 0 OOO — 8 C Smithp 0 0 0 0 Guerrrph I I 1 2 Clevel and OO O 100 OOO — 1 (3). SB — M .T a ylo r ( 2), B e tl s (3). CS — D e s m o n d(I). ( I), D.Wri g ht(2). S— uchan a n. Chicago 000 000 020 — 2 Ruggi nph 0 0 0 0 Nicasiop I 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO E—AI.Ramirez (2), Giffaspie(3). DP—Chicago IP H R E R BBSO DP — Cincinnati1. LOB —Cincinnati 5, Chicago7. S.Smit hph I 0 0 0 Howegp 0 0 0 0 1. LOB —Chicago 4, Cleveland6. 28—Eaton (2), Philadelphia Washington 28 — V ot t o (2), Coz art (3). HR —Castilo (1). SB—B. F urushp 0 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 Raburn (2). HR — Abr eu (2). SB — J.R a m irez (3). 51-3 10 5 5 0 5 Strasburg Buchanan L,0-2 52-3 9 5 5 2 3 Hamilton(8), Fowler (2). Medinap 0 0 0 0 JuTrnrph-3b I 0 1 0 CS — A.Garcia (1). Diekman 13 0 0 0 I I S tammen H,2 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO Rodney p 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO McGowan I 2 I I I I H,2 2 3- 0 2 0 0 0 Cincinnati Totals 36 5 105 Totals 3 6 6 126 Thornton TreinenL,0-1BS,2-2 I 2-3 I I 0 0 0 Chicago DeFratus I 1 0 0 I 2 DeSclafaniW,1-0 7 Seattle 300 110 OOO — 5 2 0 0 2 5 QuintanaW,1-0 6 3 1 0 2 6 New York L os Angeles 00 1 201 002 — 6 Boston 2-3 I 2 2 1 1 GreggH,2 Da.JenningsH,2 I 0 0 0 I 2 HarveyW,2-0 6 Masterson 42-3 8 7 7 3 4 5 3 3 0 8 One outwhenwinning runscored. CingraniH,1 1 3- I 0 0 1 1 Duke H,2 I 0 0 0 0 3 CarlyleH,I Ogando 11-3 I 0 0 0 2 I 0 0 0 0 I E—C.Smith(1). DP—Seattle1. LOB —Seattle10, S,3-3 1 I 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 3 GilmartinH,I 1-3 1 I I 0 0 Chapman 1-0 11 - 3 0 0 0 0 2 RobertsonS,2-2 I Los Angele9. s 28—Cano(3), Rollins (3),A.Gonzalez MuiicaW, Chicago H,2 2-3 I 0 0 0 1 Cleveland R.MonteroH,1 2 - 3 0 0 0 I I 5). HR —Cano (1), N.cruz(5), Ethier(I), Guerrero TUazawa A rrieta L,I-I 62-3 7 3 3 1 5 2 2 2 0 0 FamiliaS,3-3 eharaS,1-1 I 0 0 0 0 2 CarrascoL,1-1 0 I 1 I I 0 2 2). CS —Pederson(1). S—Iwakuma. 11-3 0 0 0 1 2 Rosscup McAllister 32-3 4 1 I I I HBP — by B u ch ana n (Fl o res, Cuddyer), by Harvey H BP — b y Th orn ton (V i c tori n o), by St r asburg (S and oIP H R E R BBSO Strop 1 0 0 0 0 1 I 1-3 1 1 I 0 2 val), byTreinen(Craig), byMasterson(Werth, Espino- Hagadone (Galvis,Utley). Seattle T—2:45. A—27,525(40,929). Swarzak 2 1 0 0 0 2 T—3:12.A—39,489 (41,922). —Tazawa.Balk—Masterson. Iwakuma 5 6 4 4 3 5 sa). WP A.Adams 2 0 0 0 I 0 C.SmithH,2 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—3:23.A—35,258 (37,673). Carrasco pitchedto2batters inthe1st. padres 5, DiarnonbacCk S Furbush 0 2 0 0 0 0 Marlins 8, Braves 2 WP — McAffister 2. PB—Flowers. MedinaH,1 2 I 0 0 0 1 American League T — 3: 0 1. A — I0,642 (42, 4 87). RodneyL,1-1BS,1-3 1-3 3 2 2 1 0 SAN DIEGO — San Diego's OdriATLANTA —Miami's Giancarlo Los Angeles samer Despai gne pitched seven Huff 4 7 4 4 1 2 Stanton broke out of a slump with Rays 3, Blne Jays2 Rangers 8, Angels 2 Nicasio 2 I I I 3 4 strong innings, keeping Arizona three hits and four RBls. Stanton, 2-3 2 0 0 0 2 Howell TORONTO — DesmondJennings who signed a record13-year, $325 offbalance with an array of pitchTexas —Texas' 11-3 0 0 0 0 2 ARLINGTON, Hatcher YGarciaW2-0 1 0 0 0 0 2 Robinson Chirinos had a hit a tiebreaking sacrifice fly in the million contract in November, caes from various arm angles. He Iwakuma pitchedto I batterin the6th. eighth, helping TampaBayto its reer-high five RBls with a home struck out three and atonepoint entered the gamehitting just.130 Furbushpitchedto 2battersin the7th. HBP—byHuff(Bloomquist). PB—Grandal. fourth straight win. Reliever Steve with three RBls. run and double. retired 10 straight batters. He T—3:40. A—43,115(56,000). Geltz earned his first major league was starting for the first time this Los Angeles Texas Miami Atlanta win. season in place of the injured lan ab r h bi ab r hbi Tigers 2, Pirates 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi A ybarss 4 0 I 0 Odor2b 4 I I I Kennedy. DGordn2b 4 2 2 1 YongJrcf 400 0 Tampa Bay Toronto Fthrstnss 1 0 0 0 Morlnddh 3 0 I I ISuzukilf 4 2 1 0 Cagasp2b 4 0 0 0 PITTSBURGH — Shane Greene ab r hbi ab r hbi Troutcf 4 0 I 0 Beltre3b 5 0 0 0 Stantonrf 3 2 3 4 Markksrf 4 0 2 0 Arizona San Diego uyerff 2 0 I 0 Reyesss 5 0 I I allowed just three hits and helped Butera1b 0 0 0 0 FielderIb 4 0 2 0 G P rado3b 4 0 1 1 FremnIb 4 1 I I ab r hbi ab r hbi Kiermrph-cf 2 0 I 0 Pompycf 4 0 I 0 Puiols1b 1 0 0 0 Rosales1b 0 0 0 0 MorseIb 4 0 2 1 Przynsc 4 1 2 I Detroit rebound from its first loss. E Navrrrf 1 I I 0 Choorf 4 0 I 0 SouzJrrf 5 2 3 I Bautistrf 3 0 0 0 Ozunacf 3 0 0 1 CJhnsn3b 3 0 0 0 P ollockcf 3 0 0 0 Myerscf 4 I 1 0 Owings2b 4 0 0 0 Solarte2b 3010 J oycelf 4 0 I 0 Smlnsklf 0 0 0 0 Acarerdh 5 0 0 0 Encrnc1b 4 0 0 0 Sltlmchc 5 0 0 0 KJhnsnlf 4 0 0 0 G ldsch1b 4 0 I 0 Kemprf 4 2 2 1 Detroit Pittsburgh Longori3b 1 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 4 I 2 0 Freese3b 4 0 0 0 Andrusss 4 2 2 I Hchvrrss 5 1 2 0 ASmnsss 4 0 0 0 Perltlf 3 I 0 0 Uptonlf 3 2 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi D Jnngscf-If 2 1 0 I DNavrrdh 3 I I 0 C rondh 4 0 0 I Peguerlf-rf 2 I I 0 K oehlerp 2 0 0 0 Cahillp 0 0 0 0 D Trumorf 4 0 I I DeNrrsc 4 0 1 1 RDaviscf 4 0 2 I JHrrsn3b 4 0 1 0 Forsy th2b 3 0 I 0 RuMrt nc 4 0 0 0 l annettc 3 I 2 0 LMartncf 3 2 I 0 A Ramsp 0 0 0 0 Marmnp 2 0 I 0 Lamb3b 3 0 I 0 Alonso1b 3 0 1 1 K insler2b 5 0 I I Polanclf 4 0 0 0 R iveraIb 4 0 0 0 Pigarlf 4 0 2 I Cowgigrf-cf 4 0 I 0 Chirinsc 4 2 2 5 Bakerph 0 1 0 0 Cunniffp 0 0 0 0 Gswschc 2 0 0 0 Mdlrks3b 4 0 1 0 Micarr1b 5 0 I 0 Mcctchcf 3 0 0 0 T Bckhss 3 0 0 I Travis2b 4 0 I 0 Giavtg2b 2 0 0 I Morrisp 0 0 0 0 Petersnph I 0 I 0 Ahmedss 3 0 0 0 Amarstss 4 0 0 0 JMrtnzrf 4 0 I 0 NWalkr2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 7 2 Totals 3 3 8 118 B Wilsnc 4 0 I 0 Urenap 0 0 0 0 McKrhp 0 0 0 0 Hllcksnp 2 0 0 0 Despgnp 3 0 0 0 C espdslf 3 0 I 0 Hartrf 3000 Totals 3 1 3 7 3 Totals 3 52 8 2 LosAngeles OOO OOO 110 — 2 JGomsph I 0 I 0 D elgadp 0 0 0 0 Benoitp 0 0 0 0 Cstllns3b 4 0 I 0 Scahigp 0 0 0 0 TampaBay 110 OOO 010 — 3 Texas 130 004 Ogx — 8 Totals 3 4 8 118 Totals 3 5 2 8 2 Inciartph 0 0 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Romine3b 0 0 0 0 PAlvrzIb 3 0 1 0 OOO 200 OOO — 2 E—Beltre (I). DP—Los Angeles 1, Texas 1. Toronto Miami 8 01 101 020 — 8 Chafinp 0 0 0 0 Avilac 3 I 0 0 Cervegic 3 0 1 0 LOB E—Ru.Martin (I). LOB—Tampa Bay9, Toronto8. Atlanta —LosAngeles8, Texas7. 28—Trout (2), Cowgil OOO 200 000 — 2 3 25 8 4 Jlglesis ss 3 I 2 0 Mercerss 3 0 0 0 Guyer(2), Reyes (3). HR—SouzaJr. (I). SBE—Saltalamacchia(2). DP—Atlanta1. LOB—Mi- Totals 28 I 3 I Totals (1), Odor(3),Peguero(3), Chirinos(I). HR—Andrus 28 — 000 100 OOO — I Greene p 3 0 0 0 Burnett p 2 0 0 0 (2), SouzaJr.(2), De.Jennings(4), Forsythe(I). (1), Chirinos (1). SB—Odor(1), Andrus(1), L.Martin Guyer ami 9,Atlanta8.28—Stanton(2), Morse(2), Hecha- Arizona 300 0 1 0 1 0x — 6 VMrtnzph I 0 0 0 Caminrp 0 0 0 0 CS — De.Jennings (I). SF—De.Jennings,TBeckham. varria (2),Markakis(I). HR—Freeman (2), Pierzynski San Diego (1) SF—Gra voteffa E—Middlebrooks (I). DP—San Diego 3. LOBS oriap 0 0 0 0 Lamborf I 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO 2). SB IP H R E R BBSD —D.Gordon2 (6), Stanton(2), YoungJr. (2). Arizona 4, SanDiego6. 28—Trumbo (I), Lamb(3), Totals 3 5 2 9 2 Totals 2 90 3 0 Los Angeles TampaBay oehler.SF—D.Gordon, Prado. Detroit 0 00 000 101 — 2 32-3 5 2 2 I 2 RucinskiL,0-1 2 2 - 3 6 4 4 4 0 Andriese IP H R E R BBSO Myers (4), De.Norris(3), Middlebrooks(2). 38Kemp(2). HR—Upton(2). Pittsburgh 0 0 0 0 0 0 OOO — 0 J.Alvarez 21-3 3 4 4 0 3 Yates 2 3 0 0 0 2 Miami IP H R E R BBSO DP — Detroit 1. LOB—Detroit 10, Pittsburgh2. Morin 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 KoehlerW,1-1 I 0 0 0 0 1 GeltzW,1-0 5 1 - 3 62 2 2 3 28 — Cespedes(4), J.lglesias(2). SB—J.lglesias(3). Salas I 2 0 0 0 1 BalfourH,I I 0 0 0 0 0 A.Ramos H,I 12 - 3 1 0 0 0 2 Arizona HellicksonL,0-2 62-3 7 5 5 3 6 IP H R E R BBSO Pestano I 0 0 0 1 1 Jepsen S,1-1 I 0 0 0 0 0 Morris I 0 0 0 0 I 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Detroit Texas Toronto Urena I 1 0 0 0 0 Delgado Chafin 1 I 0 0 0 1 GreeneW,2-0 8 3 0 0 0 3 N.MartinezW2-0 7 5 I 0 3 1 Da.Norris 5 2 2 2 3 4 Atlanta SoriaS,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 0 Klein I 2 I 1 0 1 Hendriks I 2-3 1 0 0 I 3 Cahill L,0-1 21-3 5 4 4 3 2 San Diego Pittsburgh Kela I 0 0 0 0 0 M.castroL,0-1 I 1-3 2 1 0 I 2 Marimon 4 4 2 2 I 3 DespaigneW,1-0 7 2 I I 2 3 BurnettL,O-I 62 - 3 7 I I 2 8 J.Alvarezpitchedto 4batters in the6th. Hynes I 2 0 0 0 2 Cunniff 2-3 0 0 0 I 2 Benoit 1 0 0 0 1 1 HBP—by J.Al v arez (Peguero), by N.Marti n ez Caminero 2 I I I 1 1 HBP—by Andriese (Bautista), by Da.Norris (De.Jen- McKirahan 2 2 2 2 I I Thayer 1 I 0 0 0 0 Scahig 1-3 I 0 0 1 1 (Giavotella).WP —Rucinski 2,J.Alvarez,Klein. nings). PB —Ru.Martin. HBP —byCahig (Morse). HBP—byDespaigne(D.Peralta). WP —Delgado. T—2:50. A—31,755(38,362). T—2:57.A—21,805(48,114). T—3:06. A—I7,264(49,282). T—3:00.A—15,765 (49,586). T—2:31. A—20,102(41,164).

said. eWe have some stars,

portant that no matter who is on the field that we've created

Orioles 4, Yankees3

Oakland

Boston 8, Washington7 Detroit 2,Pittsburgh0 Baltimore 4, N.Y.Yankees3 Tampa Bay3,Toronto2 Chicago WhiteSox4, Cleveland1 Texas 8, L.A.Angels2 Oakland 4, Houston0 LA. Dodgers 6,Seatle 5

Today'sGames ChicagoWhite Sox(Danks0-1) at Cleveland(Bauer 1-0), 9:10a.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez0-1) at Boston (Miley 0-0), 10:35a.m. L.A. Angels(Santiago 0-1) at Texas (Ranaudo 0-0), I:05a.m. Detroit(Simon1-0)atPitsburgh(Liriano 0-0),405 pm. N.Y.Yankees(Eovaldi 0-0) atBaltimore(B.Norris 0-1), 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (E.Ramirez0-0) at Toronto (Buehrle 1-0), 4:07 p.m. Kansas City(volquez1-0)at Minnesota(Gibson0-1), 5:10 p.m. Oakland(Pomeranz1-0) at Houston(McHugh 1-0), 5;10 p.m. Seattle (TWalker0-1) at L.A.Dodgers(B.Anderson 0-0), 7:10 p.m. Thursday'sGames Kansas CityatMinnesota,1:10 p.m. TampaBayatToronto,7:07p.m.

Athletics 4, Astros 0

2004 Athens Games.

Wambach grabbed head-

eration by the NWSL owners

lines recently when she decided to sit out the season with

and coaches has helped us ensure we are preparing for

her club team, the Western

the World Cup in the best way

New York Flash, to prepare

possible."

she said. Wambach also said she is not ready for retirement just

yet and that she hopes to play in the 2016 Rio Olympics, for the World Cup. A fter Wa m b ach's an- but right now she really isn't Some suggested that al- nouncement, the Flash traded looking much past the World lowing Wambach to forgo her rights to the Seattle Reign Cup. The United States has the NWSL season amounted for fellow national team play- won the tournament twice, to preferential treatment by er Sydney Leroux. Wambach but not since 1999. "I feel like I'm coming U.S. Soccer, which allocates said she was surprised by the the national team players to move, which brings her closer along," Wambach said. "I feel the women's league and pays to her home in Portland. like I haven't been my very "The fact that they would best playing self over the past their salaries. "Abby made a personal trade for me knowing that year and a half, for different decision to do what she feels I wasn't going to play, that reasons. I think as you grow is best for her to be mentally meant a lot. I think I'm going older you have figure out the She has already played in and physically prepared for to head to Seattle a few days a best way to utilize not only three World Cups. the World Cup," Ellis said in a week, get some time with the your body but your skill. PlayEllis named her final roster statement. Reign, get some individual ing on turf makes it a little "The NWSL provides a sessions with Laura (Harvey), more difficult b ecause it's for Canada on Tttesday, and Wambach is not the oldest b eneficial environment f o r their coach, and stay sharp more of a grind, so to speak. player on the team. Defender our players, but her situation that way. For me, fitness is But I do know that come June Christie Rampone, a veteran is unique and I understand always an evolution, but I'm I'll be my fittest and hopefulof four World Cups, will turn and respect her thought pro- going to be 100 percent ready ly be playing my very best 40 in June. cess. The support and coop- when the World Cup starts," soccer."


C4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

NBA ROUNDUP

Beavers WR Mullaney catching on to new offense Clippers win "He's one of the leaders of our group and it feels like that the CORVALLIS — R i c hard receiving corps is back to full Mullaney and his fellow Ore- strength. He's out here makgon State wide receivers had ing plays and that makes us By Kevin Hampton

Corvallis Gazette-Times

what offensive coordinator

Dave Baldwin called their best practice of the spring Tuesday. Baldwin said the Beavers ran crisp routes and were effective against the coverage. The improvement probably wasn't due to the return of

Mullaney after spring break, but having the rising senior back on the field has had an impact.

"It's always great to have Mullaney back," fellow wide receiver Victor Bolden said.

Golf preview Continued from C1 "I would say that you've got two really good high school teams here in Bend, between Bend and Summit, for the 5A," says Clemons, now in his 15th season with Bend. "To repeat, it's going to take us to play our A-plus-

plus game against the talent that Summit has right now, I think."

Why'? Perhaps because the Storm return three golfers from last season's state

runners-up, including Jack Loberg, who tied for seventh. Or perhaps it is because, aside from Summit's top two players — Loberg and transfer Cooper Donahue-

the Storm boast four quality golfers for their final three spots: Max Higlin (tied for 13th at the 2014 state tour-

ney), Cole Chrisman (tied for 37th) and brothers Ben and Eric Wasserman. Historically,

Summi t

coach Andy Heinly says, the Storm lineup has run deep. But this year's squad is loaded. "I've got about as strong a group of guys as we've ever had at Summit, and they're

playing extremely well right now," says Heinly. "I felt like we were going to be as strong as we've ever been. I think they've got everything that it takes to win

the whole thing." Still, Bend is the defending champ. But even with the ar-

senal at his disposal, chasing a second straight state crown

is not something Clemons discusses with hi s L a va Bears.

"You can't think about what happens a month from now," Clemons says. "What these guys are doing is looking at the results from yesterday, 'OK, what do I have to

work on today to get better for (the next event). These guys are really savvy about their own games, and they k now what t he y n eed t o work on."

It is nearly inevitable a C entral Oregon team w i l l win the title at Emerald Val-

ley Golf Course in Creswell come May 19, the final day of the 5A state tournament. But not s i nce Bend's A n drew Vijarro in 2008 has a

is, he can do that and he's got

"So it just was in a sling

those mental capabilities, so

for a while and then it took a

erywhere, you're l ooking for the sign, look for where he's going to help us." while just to get the strength you have to line up. That's The elbow injury that end- back, but it feels really good," probably been the biggest ed his season was still both- he said. "Just getting the adjustment." that much better." ering Mullaney at the start of strength back, that was the On Tuesday,Mullaney and Mullaney caught 52 passes spring practice, so he sat out biggest thing." his teammates showed flashin 2013 but had just 18 recep- the first two weeks. Baldwin said Mullaney was es of their potential within the "I just wanted to get the el- a little slow physically and spread. tions in six games last season. "I feel like we've come a When he was healthy, Mul- bow back into it because I felt mentally in trying to catch up laney showed his good hands that it was still a little weak, with his teammates. Like all long way," Mullaney said. and precise routerunning so I wanted to give it a couple the Beavers offensive players, "Being out in the beginning along with a knack for mak- two weeks and then the two Mullaney had to adjust to the and having to watch and having acrobatic grabs. weeks for finals and spring fast tempo of the spread of- ing those early struggles was "A sure-handed receiver break," Mullaney said. "So fense brought in under new hard for me personally bethat does everything right and those four weeks just to get head coach Gary Andersen. cause I felt like I couldn't realthat's what we need," Baldwin back into it." "For me personally, just be- ly contribute. Being back and said. "We need a guy that can Mullaney had a radial head cause you're not going into the being with the guys has been play every position and be a fracture of his elbow, but did huddle every single time and a lot of fun and I feel we've guy that you could slide in at not have surgery. He said it is you've got to really be aware," been growing every single the Y, the Z, the T. Whatever it 100 percent now. he said. "You're looking ev- day."

Prep golfat aglance BOYS

CLASS 4A

CLASS5A

CROOKCOUNTY

BEND Coach:Rusty Clemons (15th season) 2014:Won state championship

Coach:Zach Lampert (7th season) 2014:3rd at Greater Oregon Leaguetournament Outlook:Mayson Tibbs returns for the Cowboys as anexperienced sophomore

Outlook:Coming off their first state title in

program history, the LavaBears return seniors Ryan DeCastilhos, runner-up at thestate tournament last season, andJack Klar, who tied for11th. Also backand gearing up for a state champIonship push is junior MaxMcGee, who tied for 24th at last year's state meet. MOUHTAliIi VIEW Coach:Lucas Taroli (9th season) 2014:4th at Class 5A Special District1 tour-

nament Outlook:Senior Mason Krieger returns after placing 14th at districts last season. The Cougars havetheIr sIghts set on qualifying for the state tournament as ateam with Krieger, senior Taylor Smith, sophomore Payton Cole and freshmanColeRupert leading the way. REDMOND Coach:TamBronkey (3rd season) 2014:5th at 5A SD1 tournament

Outlook:ThePanthers have not fielded a representative at the state championships since 2012, but looking to snapthat skid is Jordan Christiansen, who returns after competing at the district meet last season. RIDGEVIEW Coach:RonBuerger (3rd season) 2014: W onGreaterOregonLeaguechampionship; 3rd at Class 4Astate tournament Outlook:TheRavens graduated their top state placer in JamesSeeley, whotied for ninth. But RidgeviewbringsbackJacobKinzer,Johnny Spinelli and LukeBuerger, all of whom competed at the state tournament last season. SUMMIT Coach:Andy Heinly (2nd season) 2014: W on5A SD1 championship;3rdat5A state tournament Outlook:Pacedby Jack Loberg, who tied for seventh at last season's state meet, the Storm return three of their five state qualifiers from a year ago asthey take aim at the program's first team title.

title. "But don't forget the returning s t at e c h ampion

from Crescent Valley (Kevin Geniza) is coming back, too. He was just a sophomore last

nament; sixth at Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state

after tying for 25th at the state tournament

last season. Also backfor Crook County is junior CabeGoehring, who, like Tibbs, has his eyes set on atrip to state.

tournament Outlook:A yearafter placing high at the state meet, the Ravensjump to Class5A. All five participants from last season's state tourney teamare backfor Ridgeview, including junior Tianna Brown, who placed 15th overall, and senior Raelyn Lambert, who was 17th.

SISTERS Coach:Bill Mitchell (4th season) 2014: 5thatSky-Em LeagUetournament Outlook:Steen Johnson, KadeOwenand Devin Robillard all return, and freshman Austin Lake expects to have a breakout year. CLASS 3A/2A/1A LA PINE Coach:KentWieber (3rd season, 2nd tenure) 2014: 4thatSky-Em Leaguetournament Outlook:Ayear after tying for 32nd at the 4A state tournament, senior Isiah Dolan aims for a stronger finish at the 3A/2A/1A level.

SUMMIT Coach:Jerry Hackenbruck (8th season) 2014:Won Class 5Astate championship Outlook:Madison Odiorne looks to become Oregon's first four-time OSAA state champion, and theStorm bring back four of their five state qualifiers from a yearago, giving Summit enough firepower to bring home a seventh straight state crown.

Coach:Sarah Crofcheck (1st season) 2014:Won Class 4A/3A/2A/1A SD5 tour-

GIRLS

CLASS5A

SISTERS

BEND Coach:Lowell Norby (6th season) 2014:2nd at 5A SD1tournament; 2nd at state tournament Outlook:Holly Froelich and MaddyMode, both of whom finished in the top15 at last season's state championships, lead a group of four returners as theLavaBears look to chasedown perennial state champion Summit. MOUNTAINVIEW Coach:Brett Harding (1st season)

Coach:Bill Mitchell (4th season)

2014:3rd at 5A SD1 tournament

Outlook:Shelby Tiller and Ellen Nopp each finished in the top10 of the district

tournament last seasonandare primed to challenge for state qualification.

2014:Did not field complete team

Outlook:TheOutlaws graduated Codie Lagao, Sisters' lone state qualifier last season, from the 2014squad. But returning is Emily Christen, who aims for lower scores, Mitchell says, as hershort game improves. TRINITY LUTHERAN Coach:Mike Polk (4th season) 2014:3rd at Class 4A/3A/2A/1A SD5 tour-

nament Outlook:Senior Victoria Sample, a threetime state qualifier who has improved her fInish at the final tourney eachseason, took 12th at the 4A/3A/2A/1A tourney last year. The Saints also boast Mariah Murphy, an improving sophomore.

"(Summit) had three girls in the 70s at MeadowLakes (last week) and the other girl was at81. How do you beat that?" — Bend coach Lowell Norby

Mr. Steady Eddie emotional-

ly and his scores are right up local golfer won the individ- there, is Max." ual state championship. The The Summit girls have

could break 300. ... They O d iorne, had three girls in the 70s at

for 15th.

who looks to become the Meadow Lakes (last week) state's first four-time winner and the other girl was at 81. of any gender in any classi- How do you beat that?" fication, Summit is poised to At the 2014 state tourna-

"We're feeling really good about things," Norby says. "It's just going to be tough because obviously Sum-

continue that run.

mit's the cream of the crop

ment, five Storm golfers fin-

Meeuwsen and Jessi John-

No. 1 singles match in three son defeated Brooke Finley sets, 6-2, 2-6, 10-4, over Siena and Eleni Harrington, 7-6, Ginsburg to help lead Bend 4-6, 12-10. High to a 6-2 defeat of SumAlso on Tuesday: mit in a Class 5A Special

8-2 overall). The Storm had 11 different players score. Mountain View 14, Redmond 2: REDMOND — The

Panthers got a goal each from Brady Gruver and Cameron Robison in the

District 1 girls tennis match

Boys lacrosse

Tuesday at Bend High.

Summit 16, Nedzitsege feat. Redmond coach Dustin 0: BURNS — Four players Williams said hi s t eam scored two goals apiece to lookedmuch improved."We lead the Storm to the victory played much better," Wilat Burns High. A.J. Weich- liams said. "We played very man, Zach Sundborg, Char- well defensively." Mountain lie Stuermer and Sean Kent View improved to 1-3 in the each scored twice, while We- HDC and 4-6 overall, while ichman and Sundborg added Redmond fell to 0-5. Mountwo assists each for Summit tain View did not report any (4-0High Desert Conference, statistics.

three of the doubles matches required three sets. In No. 1 doubles, Bend's

Ruby Ladkin and Lauren Handley defeated Sonja Kinney and Sabryna Adrianson 5-7, 6-3, 10-3. The No. 2 double matches also went three

at any level of the state.... But I t h i n k c onsistently, we're in a

p o sition where

we should battle Pendleton and Hermiston for second, third and fourth at the state tournament." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.com.

PREP SCOREBOARD

sets, as Bend High's Sydney

The Lava Bears swept the doubles matches, though

state meet, including Holly and Maddy Mode,who tied

Lava Bearstop Storm ingirls tennis the

turn for the Lava Bears after competing at l ast season's

winner M a dison

PREP ROUNDUP

S ierra Winch wo n

Do not count out Bend,

however, as four golfers re-

time defending individual

"They're special. They re- ished in the top 15 — the only Lava Bears and the Storm won the past six 5A s tate ally are," says Bend coach program to boast such a feat. both have strong contenders championships — the longest Lowell Norby, whose teams Four of them are back this to break that streak. streak in OSAA girls histo- have taken second at state season, including runner-up "I would say Las Vegas ry. And of the past nine titles in two of the past three sea- Alyssa Kerry, Rachel Drgaso ddsmakers would put i t awarded, the Storm have ac- sons. "They're a team on any tin and Sarah Heinly. "They'rea special team," pretty good," Clemons says counted for eight — tied for given course, on any given of the chances of a Central the most OSAA state crowns day, they're one of those rare Norby lauds. "We're a solid Oregon golfer taking the by a girls team. Led by three- high school girls (teams) that team, but they're a special

Bulletin staff reports

team.And they have been for a long time."

Froelich, who tied for 13th,

almost unflappable, who is

High Desert Conference de-

The Associated Press PHOENIX — Chris Paul's

22 points, i ncluding six 3-pointers, led the Los Angeles Clippers to a 112-101 win

over the injury-depleted Phoenix Suns in the Clippers' final game before the NBA playoffs. The Clippers clinched a topthree seed in the West with the win. They can finish with the

No. 2 seed if San Antonio and Houston lose their final games tonight. DeAndre Jordan had 13 points and 14 rebounds, setting the Clippers' single-season record for rebounds. Also on Tuesday: Pecers 99, Wizerds 95: INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana won

in double overtime to keep its playoff hopes aliveThe Pacers will make a fifth straight playoff appearance if they win at Memphis or if Brooklyn loses to Orlando tonight. Celtics 95, Raptors 93: BOSTON — Jae Crowder hit

an off-balance fall-away shot from deep on the right wing with 0.8 seconds left that se-

cured the seventh seed in the Eastern Conference for

Nextup Portland at Dallas When:5 p.m. todayTV:CSNNW Radie:KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM;

KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM

CLASS 4A/3A/2A/1A CROOKCOUNTY nament; 9th at state tournament Outlook:Maddie Kasberger and Michaela McGrew return for the Cowgirls after placing at the small school state championships last season.

year. That's a really good kid. But I'll tell you, don't look past just about anyone on Summit's team.... I wouldn't put it past Jack Klar. And our most consistent kid, who is

RIDGEVIEW Coach:Vicki Sime (3rd season) 2014:2nd at Class 4A/3A/2A/1A SD5tour-

to clinch a top-3 seed

Boys tennis

Girls tennis

Class5A Special Dislrict1 Summit8,Bend0 At Summit Singles —Chandler Oliveira, S,def.SeanHebert, B, 6-0,6-1;CarterQuigley, S,dIf. NickCampbel, B, 6-0, 6-0; JoshMaitre, S, def. MilesHem r an, B, 6-4, 6-1; PeterRutherford,S,def.JasperLadkin,8, 6-1,6-0. Doubles — LoganHausler/Daniel Pino, S, det Zach Hite/AaronBanquer-Glenn, B, 6-1, 6-1; Hudson Mickel/Thomas Wimberly, S, def. MaxFarrens/ Will Ainsworth,B, 6-2, 6-1; AndrewIones/Jona thon Wimberly, S, def.MichaelMartin/Will Churchill, B, 6-1, 7-5;Toma sTodd/JesseDeMeyer, S,def. Jesse Hindson/Krishan Chopra, B,6-0,6-1.

Class 5A Special Diseict1 Bend6,Sum mit2 At BendHigh Singles —SierraWinch,B, def. SienaGinsburg, S,6-2,2-6,10-4;AutumnLayden,S,def. JesseVezo, B, 63,6 3.KylaCollier B,def.LucianaPabonBuais, S,6-1, 6-1. DanielAx e ten,S,det GracePerkins, B,7-5, 7-6. Doubles — RubyLadkin/LaurenHandley,B,det Sonja Kinney/SabrynaAdrianson,S,5-7,6-3,10-3; Sydney MeeuINssen/JessiJohnson,B,def.BrookeFinley/EleniHarrington,S,7-6,4-6,12-10. MariluMorris/ JansaSchaum loeffel, B, def.AmandaHines/Allison Taylor, S,6-2, 1-6, 10-7.AlexisBenitez/Katie Reed, B, det Megan vanHiltan/MeganL'Etoi, s, 6-2,1-6, u-9.

Nonconference Ridgeview 7, Mountain View1 At Ridgeview Singles — BrettBlundell, R,def.GrantMiler, MV, 6-1, 6-0; MatthewAllen, R, det Austin Pfeifer, Mv,6-2,6-4;MylesPardue,R,def.BenWenndorf, MV,6-3,6-0;Dalton Lewis,R,def.KaedenWodke, MV, 6-0,6-2. Doubles —Brooks Larrenta/DerekMiler, MV, def. Tomm yWright/John Wright, R,6-1, 7-5;Ammon Johnson/Elraden Allen, R, det TyeLeahy/Adi Wolfenden, Mv,6-3, 6-7 (11j, 10-8;TysonNevile/Westley Carter, R,def. ZachHeiden/Ward Nikolaus, MV,6-2, 6-4; Tim Schneider/JaredSaxton,R,def.ConnorDavenpor t/BradyBeck,MV,6-2,6-t

Nonconierence Ridgeview 6,MountainView2 At Mountain View Singles —RileyHanks, RID,det HannahSchiffman,MV,6-0,6-0; CaitlimCarr, RID,det OliviaWebb, MV,6-1,6-1; KyleeReinwald, MV,def. SelenaLaFontaine, RID,7-6(11), 6-0;JasmineDavalos, MV,def. MarieCarr,RID,6-3, 5-7(6). Doubles — Sierra Cassaro/ChloeGoodwin, RID, def. ChloJo e hnson/WhitneyWeber, MV,6-4, 6-2; Heidi Ronhaar/Sava nnahKing, RID,det AngieVasquez/ AlexiOverland,MV,6-1,6-1; CarlyCampbell/Jasmine Pina,RID,def. ChristineVelhurai/Celine Kuang, MV, 7-5, 6-1; MistyTavarez/CiaraPinkerton, RID,def. Jamie McCool/FaithHolm,MV,3-6, 6-3(3).

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings All TimesPDT

EaslernConference z-Atlanta y-Cleveland x-Chicago y-Toronto x-Washington x-Milwaukee x-Boston Indiana Brooklyn Miami Charlotte Detroit Orlando Philadelphia NewYork

W L 60 21 52 29 49 32 48 33 46 35 41 40 39 42 38 43 37 36 45 33 48 31 50 25 56 18 63 17 64

Pct GB

W L 66 15 56 26 55 26 51 30 55 26 54 27 49 32 44 37 44 37 39 43 38 43 30 51 28 53 21 60 16 65

Pct GB 815

WesternConference

z-Golden State x-LA. Clippers x-SanAntonio y-Portland x-Houston x-Memphis x-Dallas NewOrleans Oklahoma City Phoenix Utah Denver Sacramen to LA. Lakers Minnesota x-clinched playoffspot y clmched d>v>s>on z-clinchedconference

741 642 8 605 11 593 12 568 14 506 19 481 21 469 22 457 23 444 24 407 27 383 29 309 35 222 42 210 43

683 1IP/2

679 11 630 15 679 0 667 12 605 17 543 22 543 22

476 2P/2

469 28 370 36 346 38 259 45 198 50

Tuesday'sGames Boston95,Toronto93 Indi ana99,Washington95,20T LA. Clippers02, Phoenix101 Today'sGames Charlotteat Toronto, 4 pJs. SanAntonioat NewOrleans,5 pss. Atlantaat Chicago, 5p.m. Utah atHouston, 5 p.m. Portlandat Dalas,5 p.m. BostonatMilwaukee,5 p.m. Oklahoma City atMinnesota,5 pss. Miami atPhiladelphia,5 p.m. Washmgtonat Cleveland, 5 p.m. OrlandoatBrooklyn, 5p.m. Detroit atNewYork, 5p.m. IndianaatMemphis,6:30 p.m. DenveratGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Sacra mentoatLA.Lakers,7:30p.m.

Summaries

Pacers 99, Wizards 95(20T) WASHINGTO N(95) Pierce0-2 0-00, Gooden2-8 2-2 6, Gortat 8-13 3-419, Wall 7-232-316, Beal 7-24 3-419, Porter 4-10 0-010,Humphries3-8 0-06, Butler 2-40-06, Seraphin2-5 2-2 6, Sessions2-72-2 7, Bynum0-0 0-00. Totals37-10414-1795. INDIANA (99) S.Hill 3-6 0-1 7,West6-11 3-415, Hibbert3-10 0-06, G.Hill11-250-024,Miles9-223-425,George 4-10 0-1 10,Mahinmi1-3 0-0 2, Stuckey3-11 4-5 10,Scola0-20-20,Sloan0-20-00,Allen0-30-00. Totals 40-10510-1799. Washington 16 25 18 22 4 10 — 95 Indiana 1 6 17 23 254 14 — 99

Celtlcs 95, Raptors 93 TORONTO (93)

Ross5-130-012, Hansbrough0-1 0-00, Valanciunas4-8 2-410, Lowry6-202-416, Vasquez4-7 0-011,Wiliams3-1310-016, Patterson4-70-1 10, A.Johnson 4-5 0-0 8,J.Johnson5-6 0-010. Totals 35-80 14-2093.

BOSTON (95) Turner7-140-014, Bass4-u 5 513, zeller 5-u

2-212, Smart4-120-09,Bradley5-113-314, Thomas 4-130-011,Olynyk1-40-03, Crowder4-91-1 9,

Jerebko 2-5 0-0 4, Datome0-2 0-0 0, Sullinger 1-4 2-2 4,Pressey1-30-22. Totals 38-9913-15 95. Toronto 26 27 17 23 — 93 Boston 19 27 27 22 — 95

Clippers 112, Suns101 L.A. CLIPPERS (112) Barnes1-7 I-2 3, Griffin 8-14 4-420, Jordan

6-71-3 13, Paul8-170-0 22, Redick4-11 2-2 12, Crawford4-12 0-0 10, Turkoglu 1-4 3-5 6, Davis 1-3 0-0 2,Hawes5-7 2-2 13,Hudson4-5 0-0 u, Hamil ton0-00-00,Jones0-00-00.Totals42-87 13-18 112.

PHOENIX (101)

Tucker6-10 3-5 17,Warren5-12 0-0 10,Mark. Morris 7-130-014, Bledsoe4-142-410, Goodwin 6-11 4-718, Green6-100-016, Barron3-61-2 9, McNeal242-27.Totals39-8012-20101. L.A. Clippers 32 3 7 22 21 — 112 Phoenix 26 17 27 31 — 101


C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

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O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

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HIGH LOW CLOSE 18075.60 17905.48 18036.70 DOW Trans. 8708.67 8585.60 8697.79 DOW Util. 589.38 584.60 587.76 NYSE Comp. 11117.03 11045.31 11108.07 NASDAQ 4996.82 4952.01 4977.29 S&P 500 2098.62 2083.24 2095.84 S&P 400 1532.25 1520.81 1531.06 Wilshire 5000 22244.89 22087.16 22218.83 Russell 2000 1267.97 1258.53 1265.35

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Vol.:488.9k (2.1x avg.) PE: 1 7.0 Vol.:8.7m (4.1x avg.) PE:15.8 Mkt. Cap:$741.84 m Yi eld: 1.9% Mkt.Cap:$32.82 b Yield: 2.3%

MGM Resorts

MGM Close:$21.76 V-0.24 or -1.1% The casino operator urged shareholders to ignore an investment firm's proposal to turn MGM into a real estate investment trust. $24 22

Solazyme

SZYM Close:$3.95L0.74 or 23.1% The bioproductscompany signed a deal with Flotek Industries to sell the biodegradable drilling fluid additive Flocapso

$4

20

J

F

M

A

J

52-week range $77.26~

F

M

A

52-week range $2 7.64

Vol.:10.0m (0.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$10.69b

P E: . . Yield:..

$2.99~

$12.44

Vol.:6.5m (7.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$316.23 m

P E: .. . Yield : ...

Fastenal

FAST Zillow Z Close:$41.80%1.77 or 4.4% Close:$91.657-1.29 or -1.4% The maker of industrial and conThe online real estate company fistruction fasteners reported betnalized its buyout of rival Trulia and ter-than-expected first-quarter profit, set a weaker-than-expected 2015 fibut revenue fell short. nancial outlook. $50 $140 45

120

40

100

F M 52-week range

Vol.:9.6m (2.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$12.35 b

A

J

$5 1.99

$91.97~

F M 52-week range

A $ 164 .96

PE:2 5 . 2 Vol.:12.0m (5.7x avg.) Yi e ld:2.7% Mkt. Cap: $4.69 b

P E: . . . Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 1.90 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

5-yr*

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

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

. 0 1 .0 1 . 0 9 .09

52-wk T-bill

.21

.21

... ...

v

w

.0 3

W V ~ T

L L

.04 .09

2-year T-note . 5 2 .5 3 -0.01 5-year T-note 1.34 1.37 -0.03 L 1 0-year T-note 1.93 1.93 ... L 30-year T-bond 2.54 2.57 -0.03 L

BONDS

YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities Marhetsummary American Funds AmBalA m 25 . 91 +.94+1.8 +10.9 +13.1+11.2 8 A A Most Active CaplncBuA m 60.84 +.23 +3.0 +8.2 +10.8 +8.9 A A A The price of CpWldGrlA m 48.42 +.95 +5.4 +9.6 +14.9 +9.4 C 6 C crude oil rose NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG EurPacGrA m 51.70 +.92 +9.7 +8.1 +12.0 +6.8 8 6 C by more than AlcatelLuc 715918 4.93 + . 58 FnlnvA m 53. 1 0 +.97+3.5 +15.2 +16.9+12.5 C C C $1 per barrel to BkofAm 713932 15.82 +.02 GrthAmA m 44.88 +.94 +5.2 +17.6 +18.4+13.0 0 A 0 settle above S&P500ETF 674078 209.49 +.40 Vanguard MidCap Growth (VMGRX) IncAmerA m 21.94 +.96 +2.5 +9.4 +12.4+10.6 C A A $53 for the first Petrobras 656574 8.22 +.22 InvCoAmA m 37.57 +.96 +2.5 +14.5 +17.6+12.4 C 6 C time in a week. NokiaCp 639646 7.96 -.34 VALU BLE N D GR OWTH NewPerspA m38.79 +.94 +6.9 +13.1 +15.1+10.8 8 8 8 The price of CSVLgCrde 592242 2.91 + . 14 $3WAMutlnvA m41.36 +.12 +1.4 +13.1 +16.8+13.8 8 C A natural gas GenElec 541346 27.73 +.10 69 B iPVixST 350654 22.47 -.19 Dodge & Cox Income 13.92 +.92 +1.7 + 4 .3 + 4.1 +5.0 0 6 B 6a rose for the first Vale SA pf 345693 5.15 + .35 $2IntlStk 45.47 .. . + 8.0 + 5.7 +15.8 +8.1 B A A 9C Vale SA 341438 6.13 + .26 Stock 180.92 +.20 +1.3 +12.1 +20.7+13.5 C A A time in five Fidelity Contra 101. 7 1 - . 19 +4.8 +18.8 +16.4+14.3 C C B days, and gold $3Gainers 63 ContraK 101 . 66 -.19+4.8 +18.9 +16.6+14.4 C C B fell. NAME L AST C H G %C H G m LowPriStk d 52.21 +.99 + 3.9 +12.2 +17.1+13.7 0 0 B Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 73.98 +.12 +2.4 +16.8 +17.6+13.9 B 8 A DoverSad 8 .35 +3 . 3 5 +6 7 .0 58.com 67.87 $ -17.04 + 3 3 .5 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 44 +.91+1.9 + 1.5 + 9.5 +8.2 E A A Novogen h 7 .24 +1 . 6 1 +2 8 .6 69 IncomeA m 2. 4 2 +.91+2.5 + 2 .0 +10.2 +8.8 E A A Solazyme 3 .95 +.74 +23 . 1 Oakmark Intl I 25.31 +.91 +8.4 + 2.5+15.9 +9.5 0 A A BioLifeSol 2 .32 +.41 +21 . 5 673 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 12 +.92+0.9 +14.8 +13.9+11.6 C E 0 Innsuites 2 .75 +.44 +19 . 0 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 17 . 78 +.91+ 0.6 +13.9 +12.9+10.6 0 E E BldrFstSrc 1 3.59 +2 . 0 2 +1 7 . 5 RisDivC m 17 . 65 +.91+ 0.7 +13.9 +13.0+10.7 0 E E HeatBiolog 7 .18 +1 . 0 6 +1 7 . 3 Oe Fund target represents weighted SmMidValA m50.44 +.98 +3.6 +14.7 +18.0+11.5 B C E Voltari h 7 .93 +1 . 1 4 +1 6 .8 average of stock holdings SmMidValB m42.39 +.97 +3.4 +13.9 +17.1+10.6 C 0 E WooriBk n 2 9.86 + 4 . 2 6 +1 6 .6 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.90 + .11 +0.6 + 8 .5 +15.2+11.0 E 0 0 Exchange Losers GrowStk 56.9 1 - . 98 +7.8 +23.9 +18.1+15.8 A A A The dollar sank CATEGORY:MID-CAP GROWTH NAME LAST CHG %CHG HealthSci 79.2 4 - . 94+16.5+56.3 +39.2+29.1 B 8 A against the euro, Newlncome 9. 7 2 +.92+2.1 + 5.2 + 3.2 +4.4 B C C Japanese yen -1.24 -23.8 BIORNINGSTAR OversShB n 3.98 Tantech n 13.25 -1.75 -11.7 BATING~ ***cc Vanguard 500Adml 193.41 +.32 +2.4 +16.8 +17.7+13.9 8 6 A and other -.37 -11.6 StreamHlth 2.81 500lnv 193.40 +.31 +2.3 +16.7 +17.5+13.8 8 6 8 currencies after ASSETS $1,376 million ATRM Hld 3.01 -.33 -9.9 CapOp 55.41 -.14 +5.1 +24.4 +25.3+15.0 A A A the International EXPRATIO .89% -.54 -9.7 EKodk wtA 5.05 Eqlnc 31.51 +.11 +1.6 +12.1 +16.5+14.4 C C A Monetary Fund MIB.INIT.INVES T. $2,500 IntlStkldxAdm 28.13 +.17 +8.5 +3.6 +9.5 NA C 0 trimmed its PERCEN T L O A D N/L Foreign Markets StratgcEq 34.10 -.92 +6.0 +19.2 +22.3+17.1 A A A forecast for U.S. HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 29.50 +.96 +3.7 +10.1 +10.8 +9.0 A A A economic NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2035 18.60 +.95 +4.3 +11.6 +13.5+10.4 8 8 8 growth this year Return/Rank -36.06 -.69 Paris 5,21 8.06 Tgtet2025 17.17 +.94 +3.9 +10.6 +11.7 +9.5 A 8 8 and next. London 7,075.26 +10.96 + . 16 YEAR-TO-DATE -0.1 TotBdAdml 11.91 +.92 +2.0 +5.3 +2.9 +4.4 B 0 0 -.90 Frankfurt 12,227.60 -111.13 1-YEAR +16.2/8 Totlntl 16.82 +.10 +8.5 +3.5 +9.5 +5.0 C 0 0 Hong Kong27,561.49 -454.85 -1.62 3-YEAR +21.2/A TotStlAdm 52.97 +.97 +3.1 +16.8 +18.0+14.2 8 8 A Mexico 45,004.52 +9.96 + . 02 5-YEAR +10.7/E Milan 23,752.91 -256.00 -1.07 TotStldx 52.95 +.97 +3.1 +16.7 +17.8+14.0 8 8 A Tokyo 19,908.68 +3.22 + . 02 3and5-yearretsics aressnsaazed. USGro 31.73 +.91 +6.1 +23.6 +18.2+14.8 A A B Stockholm 1,701.39 + 1.03 + . 06 Rank: Fund's letter gradecomparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -11.90 -.20 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in Sydney 5,91 6.20 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Zurich 9,41 5.62 -14.63 -.16 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Morningsian FAMILY

h5Q HS

T T T V

W .35 W 1.61 L 2.65 L 3.49

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.41 2.44 -0.03 L W L 3.29 BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.23 4.23 ... L W L 4.64 Barcl aysUSAggregate 2.05 2.08 -0.03 L W W 2.29

PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.94 5.96 -0.02 w RATE FUNDS Source: FactSet

A

110

$39.46~

in January, the sports apparel company scrapped that timeline and announced a 10-year extension of its sponsorship deal. Spieth is the first golfer to be outfitted head-to-toe in Under Armour gear. Analyst Sam Poser of Sterne Agee maintains a 9Buy 9 rating and wrote in a note to clients that he believes Spieth's victory will "propel the brand to a whole new level."

JPM

Close:$63.04L0.97 or 1.6% The financial company reported an 11 percent boost in first-quarter income partly on trading revenue, beating expectations, $65 60

$52.97~ $ 63.6 1 $4.96 P E: 7. 2 Vol.:33.7m (2.0x avg.) PE: 11.9 Yield: ... Mkt.Cap:$234.09 b Yield:2.5%

30

-7.7 - 17.0 57 9 1 6 V - 0.5 + 6 . 7 1 531 d d L -3.8 - 31.7 64 2 1 5 0 . 7 3 L + 12. 2 +2 3 .2 3 3 1 2 0 0 . 22f L -10.3 +9 . 5 23689 17 1 . 2 4 V +3.5 +40 . 8 2 3 69 28 1 . 1 2 V -0.3 +3 4.7 8 6 7 2 1 1. 4 8f L -3.6 +13.2 7 4 2 2 1.8 6 L -7.0 +0 . 9 1 3 07 1 7 0 .88a L -22.3 +229.5 9 4 23 T -0.2 + 9. 4 59 2 3 6 1. 7 6 L -10.3 -13.1 1435 17 0 . 12 V -31.2 - 42.2 61 7 d d 0 . 7 5 L + 10. 3 +5 4 .9 5 0 9 3 2 2 . 68f L -0.6 +16.7 1 8 0 1 4 1 . 30f L +17. 7 +4 6 .2 5 868 29 0 . 6 4 L +2.0 +1.5 14 1 0 2 3 0. 6 0 V -3.2 +11.3 7490 14 0 . 98 V -1.7 ... 248 14 0 . 5 2f W -1.1 +16.5 28262 13 1 .40 V - 10.9 +20.1 4270 2 4 1 . 16

'::""" In record territory

JPMorgan Chase

A

ETH Close:$25.64 V-0.85 or -3.2% The furniture retailer expects flat third-quarter sales and weaker third-quarter profit due to costs to refresh design centers. $35

L -11.6 + 1.2 71393 45 0 . 20 V +54.5 - 20.7 5 8 dd 0. 8 8 L +17. 9 +2 8 .1 2 759 21 3 .64f L -7.1 -0.8 8 9 80 L +5.4 +13 . 3 11 3 1 9 0 . 64a W +35. 7 +5 6 . 6 300 31 0 .60 V +5.5 +38 . 7 1 522 29 1 .42a

DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, bui are notincluded. b -Annual rate pius stock. 6 -Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, ns regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate noi known, yield noi shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. i - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-disuieution date.pEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no p/E ratio shown. cc —p/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.

1 Q' 1 5

based on trailing 12-month results

F M 52-week range

Vol.:82.5m (9.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$13.9b

J

Shares of Under Armour are trading in record territory and may be poised to move higher following Jordan Spieth's victory in the Masters golf tournament. On Sunday, the 21-year-old became the second-youngestchampion in the history of the Masters. But Under '15 Armour had seen his potential far earlier. The companysigned Spieth to a 4-year deal in 2013, just as he was embarking on his pro career. And then

+.0089

1.0658

55

Ethan Allen

Spotlight Dn Netllix

280

$5

52-WK RANGE e CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV v +4.6 +41 . 5 1 165 14 0 .80f A LK 40.69 ~ 71.40 6 2. 5 3 -.80 -1.3 v w

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp A VA 30.35 ~ Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ Barrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Cascade Bancorp C A C B4 . 11 $y High flyer? ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.59— o Delta Air Lines reports quarterly Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — e financial results today. Costco Wholesale CO S T 111.45 ~ 1 The nation's third-biggest C raft Brew Alliance BREW 10.07 r$ airline has benefited from strong FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ revenue growth. Its fuel costs HewlettP ackard H PQ 31. 00 ~ have also declined sharply as the Intel Corp I NTC 25.74 ~ slide in crude oil prices has deep- Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ K R 4 3 .79 ~ ened. Wall Street analysts antici- Kroger Co LSCC 5.87 ~ pate that Delta's first-quarter earn- Lattice Semi L PX 12.46 ~ ings and revenue improved versus LA Pacific MDU Resources M DU 20 . 01 ~ the same period last year. Mentor Graphics MENT 18.25 ~ DAL $43.08 Microsoft Corp MSFT 38.51 ~ $52 Nike Inc B NKE 71.10 ~ 32.52 Nordstrom Inc J WN 59.97 ~ 41 Nwst Nat Gas N WN 41.81 ~ PaccarInc PCAR 55.34 r$— '15 Planar Systms P LNR 1.95 ~ 30 Plum Creek PCL 38.70 r$— Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ Operating Schnitzer Steel SCHN 1 5 .06 o — EPS 1 Q '14 t Q ' 15 Sherwin Wms SHW 188.25 — o StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ Price-earnings ratio: 55 Starbucks Cp SBUX 33.97 ~ based on trailing 12-month results DmpquaHoldings UMPQ 14.70 ~ Dividend: $0.36 Div. yield: 0.8% US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~

ALU

Close:$4.93%0.58 or 13.3% Nokia said it is in advanced talks to buy the ailing French telecommunications company, but there is no certainty of the outcome.

NorthwestStocks

p ll l l aiaa%,

+

+1.38 '

StoryStocks

"

18,000"

"

+

The stockmarket managed a slightgain on Tuesday as energy companies followed the price of crude oil higher. Major indexes spent most of the day wavering between small gains and losses, as investors digested a batch of earnings reports. Shares of JPMorgan Chase rose after the bank turned in higher first-quarter earnings, while shares of Wells Fargo sank after its earnings declined. Chevron led the 30 stocks in the Dow Jones industrial average up. Seven of the 10 industry groups in the Standard & Poor's 500 index made gains, with energy companies leading the way. Information technology stocks fared the worst.

'

"

$53.29

Dow jones industrials Close: 18,036.70

'

17,560" "' 10 DAYS "

17,500" 2,000 "

+ -.13

GOLD ~ $1,192.80

10-YR T-NOTE 1.93% •

Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.52 3.53 -0.01 L Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.65 1.68 -0.03 L Barclays US Corp 2.89 2.90 -0.01 L

FUELS

w W W W

w L L W

5.09 4 2. 1 1 8. 1 2. 9 8

CLOSE PVS. 53.29 51.91 1.56 1.55 1.80 1.78 2.53 2.51 1.84 1.80

%CH. %YTD + 2.66 + 0 . 0 -3.9 +1.03 -2.4 +0.76 -12.4

CLOSE PVS. Gold (oz) 1192.80 1199.30 Silver (oz) 16.15 16.28 Platinum (oz) 1153.70 1153.50 Copper (Ib) 2.72 2.74 Palladium (oz) 762.20 771.10 AGRICULTURE CLOSE PVS. Cattle (Ib) 1.60 1.59 Coffee (Ib) 1.35 1.34 Corn (bu) 3.74 3.71 Cotton (Ib) 0.65 0.65 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 250.60 259.60 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.1 1 1.10 Soybeans (bu) 9.60 9.49 Wheat(bu) 4.97 5.02

%CH. %YTD - 0.54 + 0 . 8 - 0.79 + 3 . 8 -4.6 +0.02 -0.64 -4.2 -1.15 -4.5

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

+1.74 +27.9

%CH. %YTD +0.49 +0.64 +0.81 - 0.68 -3.47 +1.46 +1.21 -1.05

-3.7 -1 9.2 -5.9 + 7 .3 -24.3 -20.6 -5.8 -1 5.7 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.4781 +.0106 +.72% 1.6727 Canadian Dollar 1.2 4 91 -.0106 -.85% 1.0964 USD per Euro 1.0658 +.0089 +.84% 1.3823 -.68 -.57% 101.71 JapaneseYen 119.39 Mexican Peso 15. 2600 -.1040 -.68% 13.0394 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9612 -.0372 -.94% 3.4682 Norwegian Krone 7 . 9471 -.1482 -1.86% 5.9672 South African Rand 12.0168 -.1168 -.97% 10.5093 Swedish Krona 8.7 6 42 -.0549 -.63% 6.5606 Swiss Franc .9728 -.0049 -.50% . 8 797 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.3106 -.0075 -.57% 1.0623 Chinese Yuan 6.2130 .0013 -.02% 6.2190 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7520 +.0018 +.02% 7.7534 Indian Rupee 62.301 -.114 -.18% 60.200 Singapore Dollar 1.3598 .0120 -.88% 1.2529 South KoreanWon 1091.59 -10.70 -.98% 1039.00 Taiwan Dollar 31.23 .10 -.32% 3 0.21


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

BRIEFING

a ese s e mon su ivisi on

Area homeprices back onthe rise Median homeprices in BendandRedmond increased inMarchafter a winterlullin sales, according to areport releasedTuesday. In Bend, themedian price for asingle-family home last monthwas $327,000, a10percent increase fromFebruary's median and a21 percent increaseoverthe median price in March2014, according to areport from the BeaconAppraisal Group, of Redmond. Bend recorded172 single-family homesales last month, 52morethan the previous monthand 17 more than inMarch

Bulletin staff report The State Land Board ap-

according to the Land Board

Helmholtz Way and south of

to solicit proposals on the best

agenda. Within 18 months,

SW Yew Avenue, about a halfmile north of Ridgeview High School. Forked Horn Butte sits

way to sell the property and held a community meeting in December in Redmond. In the end, the state decided

on a west-facing slope with

to accepttwo types ofoffers:

unobstructed views of the

full cash or phased purchase. Two cash offers were

proved the sale Tuesday of a 36-acre Redmond subdivision

Palmer will get the remaining

with 63 ready-to-build lots to a

undeveloped bare land. The entire 36 acres was valued at $2.75 million in 2009, according to the Land Board information. The state took ownership of Forked Horn Butte in a property exchange with Giustina Resources, a

Bend homebuildingcompany. Underthedeal,Palmer Homes will pay $3.33 million in phases over 18 months for the Forked Horn Butte development, which the state

acquired in a 2009property exchange.

lots and 19 additional acres of

Cascades, according to a state description. It has paved streets, sidewalks, streetlights

and prepared home lots on 17 acres.

private timberland owner

Palmer, builders of Bend

housing developments including Foxborough, Braebern and

basedinEugene. Giustina received 620 acres of forestland in Lane County,

and the state got the subdivision, which is east of SW

Stonehaven, gets half of the

developed lots immediately,

The Department of State

Lands began exploring a sale of the subdivision in June. But after getting two widely different appraisals on the property's value, the state decided

2014.

In Redmond,the median price for asingle-family homewas$212,000, about 3 percenthigher than February's median price andabout18 percent higher thanthe median price inMarch 2014, according toTheBeacon Report. Fifty-five homessold in Redmondlast month, two more than inFebruary and 14morethan in March 2014.

ilew retirement protectionrules Federal regulators Tuesday proposedrules to provide moreconsumer protection for retirement savings, requiring a broader groupof investment professionals to act in their customers' best interest whendealing with their retirement money. The financial services industry can bea minefield for ordinary investors, who oftencannot tell whether their advisers are putting the investors' interests first; the legal term for this is fiduciary duty. Therulesare part of the Obamaadministration's mission tosupport the middle class. The proposedrules would eliminatesome of the loopholesthat allow brokers to avoidacting as fiduciaries whenproviding advice onretirement moneyheldinside accounts such as401(kj s and inindividual retirementaccounts, which hold roughly$7trillion, as estimated bythe Federal Reserve. The newrules would update theEmployeeRetirement IncomeSecurity Act, or ERISA,which was written in1975, when many retirees reliedon pensions anddidnot have to worry aboutmanaging the bulk oftheir retirement savings. Investors areparticularly vulnerablewhen they roll over thesavings theyhaveaccumulated in their 401(k)-type retirement accounts into individual retirement accounts. — Staffand witereports

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed April 7 • Carlos M. Mondragon, 21255 E. U.S.Hlghway 20 No. 34, Bend •TlmothyJ.Deman,5245 NW FrankWay,Redmond • Devin R. Ozment, 2627 NW CedarAve., Redmond Filed April 9 • Darin B. Wittboldt, 20915 Royal OakCircle, Bend • Aaron D. Skinner and Diane L. Sklnner, 2660 NE U.S. Hlghway20, Sulte 610-83, Bend • Kevin B. Carder, 2408 NE Desert Willow Court, Bend • Deborah S. Lancaster, 2078 NW1 ItI1 St., Redmond Filed April 10 • Paul R. Haynes, P.O.Box 1527, Redmond • Jonnle S. Haynes, P.O. Box1527, Redmond

.=sIY

I

submitted, one at the 2009

appraised value and the other at $2.21 million, according to

Redmond landsale The State Land Board agreed Tuesdayto sella Redmond subdivision to Palmer Homes of Bend

Forketi Horn Butte subtiivision

the Land Board information.

Two other phased-purchase offers were also received. One

CI

was at a lower price, and the

E

othercalled foraseven-year purchase timeline, according Greg Cross iThe Bulletin

to the information.

Brewmasterleaving Worthy Brewing

gr

t 1*

By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

I

Chad Kennedyhanded over the reins Monday as

t<8aa l =

n'

brewmaster at Worthy

Brewing Co., in Bend, to his colleague and head brewer Dustin Kellner. Michael Searsi Milwaukee Journal Sentinel via Tribune News Service

Kennedy,42, said he parted ways amicably from

In the U.S., cashier is the No. 3most in-demand occupation, according to U.S. Labor Department data,

the east-side Bend brewery

but like most job openings these days, the position is a low-paying one.

he helped create, one that grew in twoyears into the 12th-largest brewery in Oregon, accordingto in-state sales reported in January to the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. Worthy sold nearly 8,000taxablebarrels of beer in Oregon in 2014, according to the OLCC. The

OS 0

0 enin s

in • .areow- a in By John Schmid

middle-skill occupations that

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

often pay family-supporting wages. "Workers in many types of middle-rank positions — such as skilled production-line workers andpeople in clerical or administrative jobs — have

MILWAUKEE — In a post-recession world where

many once-familiar occupations continue to automate, move offshore or disappear outright, one of the most basic questions remains: Who's hiring? It turns out the vastpre-

ponderance of job openings these days consists of low-skill,

hourly wage work with high turnover. The current slate of "help

products in Washington and Idaho, British Columbia, Hafor Worthy since November

2012, created Prefunk Pale

llldex.

tricky, but once the plane is at altitude, autopilot takes over.

The Labor Department's rankings of job openings don't

Ale, which Worthy released

Monday as the replacement beer for Worthy Pale Ale, Kennedy said. "He's a talentedbrewer in

his own right," said Worthy CEO Chris Hodge. "That part of the business will go unchanged."

had to migrate into jobs as

attract much attentionbecause

"There's alot of growth going on, but it got to a point,

food-service workers, home health-care aides, child-care employees and security guards," accordingto a study by David Autor, economics

the agency doesn't include

my gut instinct said it's time

them in its Bureau of Labor

for a change," he said.

Statistics database, where postings often trigger wild

professor at the Massachusetts

Instead, the Labor Department hosts its in-demand jobs on a

as ahomebrewer, said the more time with his daughters, expansion of craftbrewingis ages 9 and 11, who live with hard to believe. The Portland their mother in Portland. Business Journal in March Kennedy saidheput 60,000 reported Worthy, which miles on his Honda Pilot in opened in February 2013, as three years drivingbetween the fastest-growingbrewery Portland and his home in in Oregon with in-state sales Bend. He said he's moving to 177percent greater last year Portland and has no immethanthe previousyear. "If you were to talkto any diate plans, buthe expects to find new employment soon. manufacturing business, and "When it comes down to ask, 'What do you think of it, family comes first," said 150 or 200 percent growth, Lindsay Landgraf, Worthy's year over year?' They'd look digital marketing manager. atyou likeyou were crazy," "We're going to miss him." Kennedy said.

Institute of Technology. Autor describes this concen-

swings in world stock markets.

skill jobs as the"polarization"

What's remarkable about the rankings is how deeply the

aides, janitors, those who stock store shelves and the likes of

of the U.S. labor market.

low-wage sector — once seen

High-skill, high-pay workers, who are essential in a

Of the top 10"Occupations with the Most Openings," nine fall into government-designated wage categories of "very low" and"low," according to

tech-driven economy, have a

data from the U.S. Department

of the economy has broadened outward like a pyramid with a disproportionatelywide base. The statistical snapshots

tom-rung openings casts a light on an epidemictransformation

to Portland to be closer to his children.

Kennedy said he reached apoint where, like a ship at sea or passenger plane, the organization takes care of itself. Takeoff and landing are

and waiters, personal care

The proliferation ofbot-

leaving Worthy andmoving

waii and Vermont.

tration of Americans into low-

of Labor.

master Chad Kennedy, seen here in April 2013, will be

tion of where jobs canbe found, particularly compared with the armies of analysts who react furiously to everybackward-looking unemployment

wanted" ads overwhelmingly involves cashiers, waitresses

Hardee's and Taco Bell.

brewery also distributes its

Bulletin file photo

Worthy Brewing Co. Brew-

website called CareerOneStop.

as temporary and transitional — has entrenched itself in the

world of work. growingshare of opportunities, According to the Labor his research shows. In a trend Department, the No. 1 employ-

that gathered pace in the 1980s and '90s, however, the low end

within the national economy,

of the most in-demand jobs, however, aren't well-known.

onethathasbeen accompanied by a long-term contraction of

Surprisingly fewexperts study the perenniallypractical ques-

ment opportunity in the U.S. is

for retail salespeople. 7ypical retail work requires "less than high school" education. Retail jobs do not always pay well, but there are plenty ofthem:Nearly 200,000 open up on average each year in the U.S.

Kennedy, who got his start

He said he wanted to spend

Kellner, Worthy's new brewmaster, followed Ken-

nedy to Worthy from Laurelwood Brewing Co., in Portland, where Kennedy was headbrewer from2006until

Nonetheless, at some point

in craftbrewing,"There has to be attrition," he said.

"There's only so many spots on the grocery story shelves." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletirt.com

2011. Kellner, who's worked Paid Advertisement

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at the library desk onthe second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Llbrary, 601 NW Wall St.; www.SCOREC entral0regon. org. AFRIL23 • Adblte —Experiential Marketing: Discuss the essentials of successful experiential marketlng campaignsand provide strategies, tactics and examples fromsmall and large companies;11:30 a.m.; St. CharlesHospital ConferenceRooms,2500 NE Neff Road,Bend;http:// adfedco.org; 541-385-1992. • Central Oregon Business Expo:Afull day of networking designed to growyour business; lunch presentation, 11:45 a.m.-1 p.m., $16per person and RSVP requlred;after1 p.m., attendance isfree; DeschutesCounty Falr& Expo Center,3800 SW Airport Way,Redmond; www.cobuslnessexpo.com or 541-923-5191. • For the complete calendar, plck up Sunday'sBulletin or vlsltbendbulletin.com/bizcal

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D2 THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

Submit your best work at Q bendbulletin.com/rsaderphotos. 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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A GREAT DAY FOR A RUN

Doug Warren captures a beautiful moment on arecent Saturday morning run.

the late season. But the recent snowfall has

For now, though, winter continues its late-season grip

shapethroughthe freeze-thaw process, Lomax explains.

"It's best right when it goes dramatically improved conditions and might buy some time from the freeze to the thaw," to help Bachelor stay open un- Lomax says. "That's when til Memorial Day w eekend,

which is the goal, according to Lomax. This season, though, that

seems somewhat unlikelyeven after our April "winter." "It's always weather-and

business-dependent," Lomax says of the ski area's closing date each season. "This (recent snow) changes the surface conditions back to nice winter snow, and it eliminates

on the mountain, arriving un-

fashionably late — though still

absolutely welcome — to the the surface gets really soft. party. A nd then w hen i t w a r m s — Reporter: 541-383-0318, up during the day, it kind of mmorical@bendbulletin.com smooths it out. It's all tem-

p erature-dependent. Yo u could ski a bowl and have it be firm and crunchy, and a half an hour later it could have warmed up enough (for corn snow)."

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures. Sun whenyou wantit, shade whenyou needit.

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any melt period that we would have had, had it been hot. It Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Matt Gadow, of Bend, slashes a frontside powder turn while enjoying the powder snowboarding with friends through the bowl at Mount Bachelor ski area last week.

Spring

Bachelor received 158 inches

Continued from D1 For some smaller ski hills,

In 2000-01, the mountain got

That's why the lower parts of of snow, according to Lomax. the whole mountain are very thin in the woods, and we have

186 inches. Bachelor averages to be very careful out there 462 inches of snow per season, right now." according to its website. A few inches of snow usualPass ski area to the south, the A lthough Bachelor h as ly does not sufficiently cover season never really even ex- about 4 feet of snow at its base, rocks, trees and branches that isted. Hoodoo was open for a the resortreported 98 inches were exposed before the snowfew days in early January, and of snow at midmountain, from fall. Therefore, we see signs at Willamette never opened at about 7,300 feet in elevation to Bachelor noting "early-season all. the summit (9,065 feet). conditions" in what is actually "The summit actually benBachelor benefits from its higher elevation, so the mea- efitedfrom a couple of those ger snow year has not drasti- heavy rainfall events that we cally affected its operations. had in D e cember," Lomax Although snowfall in April says. "It snowed at the summit, is not that rare at Bachelor, it and that's why the skiing from is rare that the month should the summit has actually been offer some of the best snow of so good all winter. That's the the season. The resort report- one bright side of a dry winsuch as Hoodoo Ski Area on Santiam Pass or Willamette

ed 3 more inches of new snow

opportunities."

Bachelor's director of moun-

running during a ski season

tain operations. "On a normal basis, if you look at long term, we're usually adding to our base depth until about April 15, and then it starts going the other way. So maybe this is

such as this one. But at its lowest elevation, about 5,700 feet at the bottom of the Northwest

541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com

higher rate than we are now."

B achelor will b egin i t s spring hours on Monday (9 a.m. to 2 p.m.) and will limit its operating chairlifts to Pine Marten, Skyliner and Summit. Although the mountain remains in full winter mode this

week, those spring days of "corn" snow might not be too

far away. After several warm days, the snow crystals will re-

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snowpackis quite thin, according to Lomax. (Northwest was

It just seems backward coming not operatedmuch thisseason off a very warm March and a due to a motor failure in Februwarm and dry February, and a ary, and a new motor will be warm and dry January." installed in the fall, according Bachelor reported a snow to www.mtbachelor.com.) "There's very, very low snow depth of 48 inches at its base (6,300 feet) on Tuesday, and below about 7,000 feet on the it hasreceived 205 inches of west side," Lomax says. "This snowfall at its base since Oct. year the snow level was very 1. That is one of the lowest critical between 5,800 and amounts in recent years, but 6,600 feet. We had a lot of rain this season will not be THE lowest. In the 1976-77 season,

really prolongs everything for us. March was extremely warm, and had conditions stayed warm like that, we would have melted at a much

ter — there is a lot of summit

'Itresday. "I'd say it feels unusual this yearjustbecause ofhow warm March was and how dry February was," says Tom Lomax,

more normal than abnormal.

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In honor of Earfh Day, check out 50 nifty eco-friendly things Americans are doing.


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

a eawa ont ewi

D3

o w er si eo t e or e

By Zack Urnesse The (Salem) Statesman Journal

hey are nature's fireworks display, but instead of exploding in the air, they come up

through the ground. Blooms of wildflowers that arrive with spring provide a great reason to get outdoors, and few places in the Pacific Northwest offer a better showcase than the eastern side of the Columbia t tet rs

River Gorge.

.lji

Entire hillsides transform into fields of gold

during peak blooms, turning already great hikes into memorable, once-in-a-lifetime experiences. For this Top 5 feature, we're focusing on the best easy wildflower hikes of the Gorge. These are lower-elevation spots that generally peak in late March, April and May. (The bloom is a few weeks ahead this year due to the warm winter). I visited all five recently and found, for the most part, all to be in beautiful shape. Photos byZack Urness/The (Salem) Statesman Journal

Groves of camas and views of Mount Hood highlight the hike at Catherine Creek area on the Washington side of the Columbia River

My suggestion before set- 3.5 miles round-trip, heading Gorge. through a park, following a site OregonWildflowers.org. creek, passing a waterfall The creator, Greg Lief, has and ending on a plateau with Memaloose Hills a map showing the hikes beautiful Gorge views. Truth be told, the top three in bloom (or not in bloom), Peak wildflower season is wildflower hikes starting along with trip reports, pic- normally mid- to late April here really stood out above tures and helpful directions (but it's early this year). The the others. They were all and links. ubiquitous balsamroot is the s pectacular in t h eir o w n The drive from Bend is 2.5 star of the show, but the hike way, and ranking them was hours, so a multiday adven- also features b uttercups, a challenge. All three are ture makes sense. blue-eyed mary and others. must-hikes. If you're camping, a good Directions: From Interstate It wouldn't be quite right to bet is Memaloose State Park 84 near Hood River, take Exit call Memaloose Hills a secret (Oregon) or Columbia Hills 69 toward Mosier. Head south — it appears in a book and a State Park (Washington). If off the exit and head into the handful of websites — but it's you'd rather stay in a hotel, town of Mosier. Park at the still unmarked and less travconsider Hood River, Mosier, totem pole in town or at a eled than most w i l dflower White Salmon or The Dallas. gravel pullout. The trailhead hotspots in the Gorge. For breakfast, I recommend is on the south side of HisThe trail begins at MemaEgg River Cafe in Hood Riv- toric Highway 30, just over loose Viewpoint, just across er. For a celebratory brew and the historic bridge. You'll the highway. It's unmarked pizza, my favorite is Double see a bench just after cross- throughout but easy to follow Mountain Brewery. ing the bridge and a trail. a total of 2.2 miles and 629 This list is about easy, This is the beginning of the feet to the top of Marsh Hill. family-friendly hikes, which hike. Coordinates: 45.684774, Balsamroot blankets the enis why you won't see excel- -121.393734 tire hillside at the top with a lent but more challenging touch of lupine, and views exwildflower hikes such as Rowena Crest tend to Mount Hood. Dog Mountain or Cape Horn Two hikes begin at this The trail winds through (they won't bloom until later, p opular viewpoint on t h e oak savanna w h ere o t her anyway). H istoric C o l u mbi a Ri v e r wildflowers stand out, includHighway. ing blue-eyed mary, gold star, Mosier Twin Tunnels The easier of the two tralarkspur and many others. T his beautiful r o ut e o n verses the flat Rowena Crest Apparentlythere are longer ting out is to check the web-

the Historic Columbia Riv-

in the Tom McCall Nature

Columbia Hills State Park Entire hillsides are trans-

ta Loop and 8 Mile Alternate

Directions (Crawford Ranch Trailhead, Upper): From I-84

formed into fields of gold during the height of wildflower season at this state park on the Washington side of the Gorge,

for 2 to 3 miles. These were

near The Dalles, take Exit

in full bloom during my trip, so thick with b alsamroot

87 and turn left on Highway 197 and the Columbia River on a bridge. Drive 3 miles to

ows on trails such as the Vis-

and lupine that the air was

perfumed. Access into this paradise Later in the season, as the requires a Discovery Pass for bloom moves up the moun$10 per day or $30 per year tain, you can hike uphill to(one can be bought at the ward Stacker Butte from the trailhead). Camping is possi- same trailhead. ble as well. A final option is to begin To enjoy this epic display at the lowest trailhead, the of wildflowers in April and Crawford O a k Tr a i l head, May, there are two options. and hike uphill past a nice just across from The Dalles.

The easiest is to start at the

waterfall and into the wildflowers. This is steeper, and

upper trailhead, near the original Crawford Ranch on there weren't many wildflowDalles Mountain Road at a er blooms until you reached paved trailhead. the meadows, but it's hard to From here, you can hike complain when the views are the spectacular lower mead- this good.

state Highway 14 and turn

right. Go half a mile and turn left up Dalles Mountain Road. Continue 3.7 miles on

the gravel road, passing the Crawford Ranch, to a well-

signed trailhead and parking area. Coordinates: 45.6801, -121.088467.

Directions (Crawford Oak Trailhead, Lower): Instead of turning onto Dalles Mountain Road, continue on High-

way 14 to milepost 87.2 and turn left into a large trailhead and parking area. Coordinates: 45.6571, -121.087783.

options, but I didn't hike them.

er Highway between Hood Preserve i n a l an d s cape Directions: From I-84 near River and Mosier is closed to carved by ancient lava flows H ood River, take E xi t 6 9 vehicle traffic and probably andfloods. and continue on the Historbest known as a bike route. Dogs are not allowed on ic Columbia River Highway But it also works for hik- this 2.5-mile out-and-back 30 east through the town of ing, and th e w ell-graded hike, and there isn't any shade Mosier. In a little more than 3 pavement makes nice con- at the trailhead, so leave Fido ditions for those exploring at home for this trek. with a stroller, who can turn The views are almost nonaround whenever the mood stop from the beginning of

miles, stop at the Memaloose

Viewpoint. The trail begins just across the road. Coordinates: 45.693433, -121.350767.

strikes. Beginning from Mark O.

this hike, and in April and May, balsamroot and lupine Catherine Creek Hatfield West Trailhead just are the highlight. Excellent Of all the hikes on the list, outside Hood River, the route views down onto the Colum- this one is my favorite. is 4.7 miles one-way to Mosier bia can be had at viewpoints The Catherine Creek area and known as the Twin Tun- along the trail. on the Washington side of If you'reseeking a more the Gorge is spectacular in nels segment. The trail transitions from l ush w est-side challenging hike, the trail so many ways. The towering forest to more east-side prai-

to Tom McCall Point leaves

rie, where wildflowers begin

from the same trailhead and yons, old homesteads, views

basalt formations and can-

to show up in abundance. The views of the Columbia

shoots uphill 1,070 feet on a

of Mount Hood and the smell

left onto Old Columbia River

hike of 5 miles round-trip (the of ponderosa make me want trail is currently closed at the to stay for days rather than 0.6-mile mark for reconstruc- hours. tion, but might reopen soon). The Arch Rock Loop is the Balsamroot and lupine also best easy hike here and rehighlight this trail, along with quires a bit of navigation. The desert parsley. And the view loop is 2.1 miles with 481 feet of Mount Adams and Hood at of climb.

Drive and continue to Mark Hatfield Trailhead. Coordinates: 45.7036, -121.488

the top are memorable. Directions: From I-84 near H ood River, take E xi t 6 9

and the blooms of wildflowers are outstanding. Directions: From Interstate 5 at Hood River, take Exit 64

for Mount Hood Highway and continue into town. Turn

Mosier Plateau This hike is on the steep

end of "easy," but it's very p retty, and the fact that it starts within the wonderful

town of Mosier is a bonus. The Mosier Plateau Trail

climbs 600 feet and travels

F rom th e t r a i lhead, th e route follows a combination

into Mosier and continue on

of trails and closed roads past a rock arch, a bubbling

the Historic Columbia Riv-

creek, an old homestead and

er Highway 30 east through the town. In 6.6 miles, you

epic views of the canyon and

will see the Rowena Crest

more types of w i ldflower than you can count.

Viewpoint parking area on your right. Both trails start here. Coordinates: 45.68259, -121.30065.

M ount H o od ,

LewyBodyDementia:WhatEveryoneNeedstoKnow This special multi-part video series is designed to help care providers recognize, andappreciate, the unique features Of Lewy BodyDementia (LBD).Nowthe third most common type of dementia, LBD was originally thought Of as simply a combination Of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. It is

now viewed as aseparate entity with a specific symptom profile, different progression pattern, and presenting special care and treatment challenges. Gaininsight that will help you understand

this unique form of dementia and allow you to be a better care partner.

a l on g w i t h

T he best time to h ike i s

March to May. Right now, the bloom is excellent, with camas lilies, balsamroot, lu-

When:Thursday, April 18'" Time: 8:00pm Where:St. Charles Medical Center

pine, prairie stars and many others. Directions: From I-84 in Hood River, take Exit 64, and drive north across the Hood r1ft.,' ~ r 1

River Bridge ($1 toll for passenger cars). Turn right onto Washington Highway 14 and drive east for 5.8 miles. Turn left at Rowland Lake onto

County Road 1230 (Old Highway No. 8), which follows

I

'

I

LSt lls sllow poll Ilow.

the north end of the lake. In

1.3 miles, a large and wellmarked trailhead arrives on I

A hike up the unmarked trail at Memaloose Viewpoint takesvisitors among thick wildflower blooms at the top of Marsh Hill.

both sides of the road. The hike starts on the left trail-

head (a paved trail down to the Columbia is on the right). Coordinates: 45. 7 10483, -121.362067.

MT

A C H ELO R MEM ORY CARE RESIDENCE

57 5 4 1 - 3 1 8 - 3 3 2 2

5 4 1 - 3 8 5 -8 5 0 0


D4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

UTDOORS CYCLING CENTRAL OREGON500+ BICYCLE RIDE:June 3-7; five days of classic Central Oregon road rides; 100-mile and 100-kilometer ride options each day; rides include Mt. Bachelor loop, Crooked River Canyon, East Lake, Smith Rock and McKenzie Pass; one day is $75 and all five days is $325; a benefit for the MBSEF cycling program; to register, visit www.mbsef.org and search under the "events" tab.

EQUESTRIAN SPRING TUNEUPCLINIC: At Pilato Ranch, 70955 Holmes Road, Sisters; May 9-10, 9 a.m. to noon and1 to 4 p.m. each day; $300 for two full days; local horse

E ND

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

Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com,541-383-0318.

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.

www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeach month at6 p.m.;50 SW Bond St.,Bend,Suite FISHING 4; 541-306-4509, deschutestu@ hotmail.com; www.deschutes. BEND FLYFISHING FESTIVAL: tu.org. Bend Casting Club will host a festival BEND CASTINGCLUB:A group of celebrating fly-fishing on April18, fly-anglers from around Central from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at Tumalo Oregon who are trying to improve Creek Kayak and Canoe in Bend; their casting technique; 6-8 admission is free and the festival p.m.; club meets on the fourth is open to the public; the purpose Wednesdayofeachmont h; of the festival is to showcase the location TBA; 541-306-4509 or fly-fishing lifestyle to the broader bendcastingclub©gmail.com. community at a unique riverside venue; contact Gabe Parr at THE SUNRIVERANGLERS CLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third bendcastingclub©gmail.com. Thursday of each month; Sunriver CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; THE CENTRALOREGON

FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m.;meets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org. DETROITLAKE FISHING DERBY: May15-17 at Detroit Lake; 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day; $15 for adults, $8 for children; adult grand prize is a Smokercraft boat and trailer; girls

and boys grandprizes arebicycles; registration will buy three full days of fishing fun with an awards ceremony on the last day; 503931-1885; DLRABA©hotmail.com; www.detroitlakeoregon.org.

HIKING DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Led by skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds and take in spring wildflowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www.

deschuteslandtrust.org/events.

HUNTING THE BENDCHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;m eetsthesecond W ednesday ofeach month;King Buffet, Bend;ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.

SHOOTING COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided;

parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy action shooting club; second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-3188199,www.pinemountainposse. com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass. com.

Mi weat erma s iceu tur e untin season "I wouldn't disagree with the fact that mild conditions

By Erlc Barker The (Lewiston, IdaJ Tribune

may start birds in breeding ac-

Perhaps you heard this sort of speculation in the past sev-

I

eral weeks — the mild winter and early spring will lead turkeys to breed ahead of schedule, which could make things tough when the gobbler season opens today.

tivity a little early, but I would

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argue that makes hunting a little better," he said. On a typical opening day, big toms often have corralled a harem of hens that they keep

vj

er

j *

tabs on. He said it can be near-

ly impossible to get those gobblers to come to a call. They might be willing to gobble after a hunter imitates the sound of a willing hen. But getting them

Indeed, the Inland Northwest has basked in unseason-

ably warm temperatures of late, and many eager hunters

~tA'

have reported seeing toms

. .

' .

.vl.

-' j'j' j,",l"

strutting and gobbling in the glorious sunshine. But two wildlife biologists said the pleasant weather isn't likely to put the clamps on turkey hunting and it might even make it better.

to leave the hens they have for

one they don't is difficult. "They are not going to leave

",, k4k-

a number of hens to investi-

Paul Wik, district wildlife

biologist for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife at Clarkston, said the mea-

ger snowpack, combined with an early thaw, has allowed turkeys to disperse much sooner than normal. That means they

won't be bunched up in low-elevation areas that tend to be

dominated by private land. "They are very well distributed," he said. "There are a lot of turkeys that winter on private land that have moved to

public land."

steve Hanks/ The (Lewiston, Ida.) Tribune

A small flock of turkeys eats Its way across a pasture outslde of Kooskla.

gateand come find you,"Koehler said. When breeding is well underway by the opening of the season, many hens will have already started to nest, and still randy toms are more likely to come in hot to hunters'

biologist for the Idaho De- large, large groups on private are either still blocked with years with normal winters, partment of Fish and Game, ground and consequently they snow or too muddy for vehicles. "That is certainly not the turkeysbegin breeding before agreed with Wik's assessment are much more difficult to the April 15 opening of the that hunters will find turkeys access." case when you don't have general spring turkey hunting in moreplaces because ofthe Even when they move to snow to contend with. It's a lot season. warm weather and early snow higher ground in years with easier to get places," he said. "There is a lot of breeding in melt. heavier snow loads, Koehler But Koehler said even if "Some years when you have said, that can make it difficult birds breed earlier in lowearly April," he said. "I've seen them strutting in mid-March." more snow on the opener, they for hunters to find them, be- snow years, that can be a boon Dave Koehler, a w i l d life are still really congregated in cause mountain roads often to hunters. He also noted that even in

vation rain or getting too cold in the wind-exposed areas.

kane. Bloomsday made its debut in 1977 and has been hard to miss, with the field peaking at 61,298 runners in 1996. "I entered the second one and have been doing it ever since," Eddy said. Don Kardong, a former

"The temperature was below freezing on both rims," he said. "I was constantly hiking through mud and puddles or fresh snow and ice. No one else was hiking the north side of the canyon." Olympic m arathon r u n ner After burning 6,000 caloand Bloomsday f ounder, ries, according to his heart marveled at Eddy's Grand monitor, Eddy ended his or- Canyon trek from personal deal in the dark at 24 hours. experience. "That was an hour later than

I expected, so I wasn't surprised that Mary Kay had called the rangers," he said. That was another reminder that adventurers must know their li mits. "Rangers said

I •• I

they couldn't do anything in '

the dark and would look for me in daylight if I hadn't returned," he said. "If I'd have b een incapacitated for a n y

'::i ~

calls. "It's easier to call toms a couple of weeks into the sea-

son than it is on opening day for that very reason," he said. "That is my opinion based on my observations." "I would expect a pretty good season," he said. "All appearancesare that the birds are atleast stable inthe region."

of the night with all the cliffs and drop-offs into oblivion, I would lie down and die. "I was ready for the effort involved in that thing, but I

have a bit of a fear of heights and that really caught me by surprise. I guess that's not a

factor for Eddy. He's climbed Everest. But my God, he was doing this at night and alone." Eddy said he's just taking life in stride. "My overall goal is to slow Kardong ran R2R2R in ll hours during the early 1990s, down the rate of aging," he when he was nearly 30 years said."There'salotofresearch younger than Eddy is and that shows the benefits of regstill in top marathon running ular exercise. "It's gratifying to be able to form. "It was one of the most dif- do things people half my age ficult things I've ever done, would have trouble doing. "If nothing else, I hope I'm and my run was in the daylight," Kardong said. showing people they don't "If somebody put me in the have to spend their latter Grand Canyon in the middle years in a rocking chair."

reason in the cold-wet conditions, there would have been little c hance o f

Lr

s u r v i ving

through the night. "It would have been more

Courtesy Dawes Eddy enjoyable in better weather, Dawes Eddy poses at the North Col during hls sprlng 2013attempt to cllmb Mount Everest. At 66, he was but the trip fulfilled a goal." the oldest American to climb Everest, until two days later, when a 67-year-old completed the climb as well. Eddy said he's never considered himself a n a t h lete

or been on a sports team. 11 hours of steady hiking. The At 5-foot-6, he weighs 130 ly doses, several trails that rock formations and scenery pounds — about 3 p ounds Continued from D1 plunge from the South Rim to were fabulous, but the weath- less than he weighed in 1961 " I mostly stayed i n o u r the Colorado River. er was not. when he graduated from high "But I've always wanted to "I wore Gore-Tex tops and schooL (Grand Canyon) hotel room "I always hiked a lot, but while he wa s g one and see the North Rim," Dawes bottoms to block the rain and watched th e s i g n o u t side sard. wind. Underneath I wore up to I never really did any runsway back and forth in the He started from the South four layers of polypropylene." ning until I heard of Bloomsblizzard," Mary Kay said. Rim in the dark on the South He had to adjust his cloth- day," he said, referring to the "I didn't want to wait for Kaibab Trail at 10 p.m. so he ing and pace to avoid sweat- annual May running event better weather," Dawes said, could drop into the bowels ing too much in the lower ele- through the streets of Spoapparently forgetting that of thecanyon by headlamp

Grand Canyon

hiked, in more normal dai-

they are both r etired. "We

and see the North Rim in the

had scheduled days to be with

daytime.

relatives, and I took advan-

tage of the nicer day to hike

"The moon was pretty close to full, and I could kind of see

with my wife."

it through the clouds and pre-

The Eddys' love the Grand cipitation," he said. "I made the North Rim in C anyon region an d h a d

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

FISHING REPORT ANTELOPEFLATRESERVOIR: Access to the reservoir is good. The reservoir isn't completely full but there is enough water to launch a boat from the ramp. The water is very dirty, and fishing has been slow. BEND PINENURSERY: Limit is two fish per day, 8-inch minimum length. CRESCENTLAKE:Opento fishing all year. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM:The flows have been increased to irrigation level. Fishing for trout and whitefish was good before the increase in flow. Trout are actively spawning, so please be mindful of where you are wading Courtesy Crimson Trace

Assembly workers build rail masters on the production floor at the Crimson Trace plant in Wilsonville.

Wilsonville Continued from D1 Nate Hoke, director of customer service, said, "We help bad guys make informed decisions." I toured the Crimson Trace f acility w i t h

s e veral w r i t -

ers and photographers from around the country. Mike Faw and Kent Thomas welcomed

our group in a conference room. The occasion was the pre-

miere of the movie "Fast and Furious 7." Crimson Trace, T homas

e x p lained, o f t e n

works with Hollywood to provide lasers for guns used in movies and TV, but the con-

tracts require that Crimson Trace lasers are only for good guys. On the factory floor, we met Scott Vandecevering who

walked us to a workbench where we would each assemble a Rail Master Pro CMR205,

rail-mount laser/light combo. Under the watchful eye of CTC's top trainer, we em-

ployedprecision torque screwdrivers to put the units together, assembled the mounting

Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin

Bryan Hendricks, of Little Rock, Arkansas, powers into a hard

hardware and sighted them left turn in an Indy car retrofitted for a simulator immersive racing with tiny Allen wrenches.

experience at the new World of Speed Museum in Wilsonville.

Lest you worry you might buy a Rail Master assembled by an outdoors writer, we took like this in your rearview mirour own lasers home. Steve ror once, and then you saw its Gaspar, a gun writer from taillights. Ridgefield, Washington, wantThe World of Speed is as ed mine and I wanted his, so much about the future as it is we exchanged lasers for our about the past. This summer, own personal modern sport- they'll offer workshops to ing rifles. school kids in the arts of fabCrimson Trace has a two- rication, high-octane fuel and lane range inside a converted burned rubber. They fired a container. For our shooting big block Hemi for us and let us pleasure, they made ready a breathe that good old exhaust. 38-Special revolver,a 380-calWhen you go to the World iber Glock, a Bmm Smith & of Speed, don't miss the Wesson M8 P and a Glock 34. simulators. One thingyou can count on To get into the NASCAR about gun writers is they will vehicle, you sit on the door shoot up all the ammo when frame, grab a bar on the roof someone else is paying for it, and slide inside through the especially when the lights are window. There was a lope to out. After the empty brass was

piled around our ankles, we drove a block and a half to the new World of Speed Museum. Remember big block V-8s, pony cars, T-bucket Fords, funny cars and long straightaways? Just look behind you. The first car you see is a Shelby F350, all original, with 3,200 miles on the odometer. You might have seen a car

The other car was a 1995 Lola-Mercedes Benz T 9500 Indy Car that ran at Portland

International Raceway on the

so as to not trampleany redds.

Anglers are reminded that trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead and must be released unharmed. CULTUS LAKE:Opento fishing all year. DAVIS LAKE:Open to fishing all year. Lake is accessible but low water has impacted boat-ramp access. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. ELK LAKE:Thesouthern portion of Cascade Lakes Highway is open up to Elk Lake. FALL RIVER:Fall River will be stocked with rainbow trout this week. 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. HAYSTACKRESERVOIR: Scheduled to be stocked with 7,700 legal-sized rainbow trout this week. HOOD RIVER:Bright winter steelhead are entering the lower Hood, and fishing has been good. Anglers should watch for good flows after high-water events. Good numbers of winter steelhead should continue into late April. The 2015 spring chinook season on the Hood River opens today and will close on June 30. HOSMERLAKE:Anglers report good fishing with reports of large fish being caught. The southern portion of Cascade Lakes Highway is open to Elk Lake. Lake might be frozen during colder weather. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK:Fishing

has beengood lately, especially for kokanee. Opportunities for

FLY-TYING CORNER

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Psycho Prince, courtesy Fly & Field Outfitters.

When the sun lingers long on thewater andthe light penetrates through the water column, the bugsbegin to move. And whenthe bugs move, the trout begin to feed inearnest. It's all happening right now. Here's a bug, thePsycho Prince, that shimmers in thewater and could imitate a small stonefly or a mayfly caught in the current. Headed to theDeschutes or Fall River or the KenoReachof the Upper Klamath? Fish this one onits own or in tandem with a large, heavy stonefly nymph. In faster currents, set the strike indicator at two to three times thedepth. To tie the Psycho Prince, start with a No.14-16 nymphhook. Slide a small bead upagainst the eye of the hook. Usepurple biots for the tail. Wrap the bodywith purple Lightning Duband rib with fine copper wire. Tie in awing of clipped yellow Lite Brite and two white biots. Finish with a dubbedcollar behind the bead. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin bull trout are expected to be good thisyear. Anglers are reminded

there aresmall numbers of spring chinook and summer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Please release these fish unharmed. LITTLE LAVA LAKE:The southern portion of Cascade Lakes Highway is open to Elk Lake. Lake might be frozen during colder weather. METOLIUS RIVER:Metolius River upstream of Allingham Bridge closed to fishing until May 23. Metolius River downstream of Allingham Bridge open all year. Special regulations in effect for this section. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day with an 8-inch minimum length. Trout over 20

should be in prespawn mode right now. PINE HOLLOWRESERVOIR:The reservoir has been stocked, and good fishing has been reported. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR: Fishing for trout has been slow. The warmwater fish should be in prespawn mode right now. ROCK CREEK RESERVOIR: The reservoir has been stocked and should offer good fishing this

spring. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Shevlin Pond will be stocked with rainbow trout this week. Open to fishing all year. Limit is two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to anglers17years old

and younger. SUTTLE LAKE:Open to fishing all

inches areconsideredsteelhead and

year.

must be released unharmed. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Fishing has been good for trout that average 14 to16 inches. The warmwater fish

TAYLOR LAKE(WASCO COUNTY): The lake has been stocked, and there should be a good opportunity to catch a limit of trout.

same track we "mowed lawn" in that Porsche. It was a bit

hard to fit my shoulders in the cockpit, but soon I was on the track and then off it, in the vir-

tual grass. I don't have a future in Indy cars. In the evening, we worked our way through crowded

. SM Q L I C H

n no t o i ; s

backstreets to a private showing of "Fast and Furious 7." This is not a movie review, but they used up more rounds

than half a dozen gun writers could shoot in an hour and destroyed more cars than we did on the NASCAR and Indy

the motor, real or imagined,

and for a moment I suspended tracks. And good guys, with my disbelief and put the ped- guns and lasers, in American-made muscle cars, saved al down. I was at Daytona, in Johnny Benson Jr.'s 1998 Ford the free world one more time. Taurus, headed out of the pits, — Gary Lewis is the host of

'7llllJE OiKWFO. • QE 80OKS$0O D 7HK ~O7

"Frontier Unlimited TV"and author of "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," "ABear Hunter's Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www. GaryLewisoutdoors.com.

out onto the straightaway, toward the first banked turn.

They call it an immersive experience, and it was. I would

have stayed in that seat for two hours if there hadn't been a line behind me.

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D6

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

nna rie nows ow o ou enu TV SPOTLIGHT

She's determined now, but hell-bent on making it in show business. She always thought of acting as a hobby. She was 13 when she was cast in her first role, as the daughter of

By Luaine Lee Tribune News Service

PASADENA, Calif. — Ac-

easier. I also think you've got Palin. In one of their scenes something to reach deep down from England's "G.B.H." she inside, because all you have to had to chase a naked Palin do is think of them. You know down a hill. "I couldn't stop if anything happened to them laughing," she says. you wouldn't have a life. I

tian in her black pantsuit. The

gold key hangs heavy around her small neck. She seems the kind of woman who'd haunt

the petite section of ladies'

She was determined to be

wear. But Friel is one tough cook-

a barrister (Iawyer). But she kept getting cast in a variety

ie. She proves that in her role as the Special Forces sergeant

of roles. "When I was 13, we had a tutor on the set. Then I

All that sinew didn't come

easily. A 6-footer accidentally tripped over her when she was tied, hands and knees,

and kneeling for a scene. She paid for that episode with a crunched ankle. Her cornea

was damaged when a stone flew into her eye, and she dislocated her shoulder from tak-

ing a fall more than 22 times.

"I'm called the queen of ailments. I don't know what

would've happened if I hadn't been in shape," she says with a laugh. Those who remember her as the girly Chuck from "Pushing Daisies" will be surprised by her powerhouse performance in the show that is filming in

Marrakesh, Morocco, and airs Sundays. As soon as she was cast,

dow because that's your primary focus. It makes the job

"Monty Python" star Michael

tress Anna Friel looks Lillipu-

Odyssey."

ing somebody else other than yourself, any kind of self-obsessiveness or lack of perspective just goes out of the win-

Friel wasn't the kind of actress

"American Odyssey" 10 p.m. Sundays,NBC

stranded in jihadists' territory in NBC's thriller, "American

says. "When you're protect-

Six months ago, Friel experienced a loss that left her sadder but wiser. "My brother is a doctor, and his fiancee is also

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t

Dear Abby:I'm writing to warn for the results. If you suspect (or as many other young women as I know) he's seeing someone else, can about the dangers of unpro- always use protection and insist tected sex. I thought I had met the he be tested regularly. man of my dreams. I knew from All three of us could have saved the beginning he had a girlfriend our hearts, our bodies and a lot of

among the least of them. If a man

in his hometown, but he assured

Dear Abby:I recently bought a new cellphone and was assigned a number by the company that sold

turmoil if we hadn't been so trust-

me he was breaking it off, so I didn't think twice about starting a relationship. Well, she moved

doesn't protect his partner, then it's up to her to protect herself-

both from pregnancy and from sexually transmitted diseases, which are rampant.

ing. This has left a lasting impression, and now we wonder it to me. I have been receiving calls DEP,R whether we will be and messages for the person who ABBY able to trust another had the number before it was givhere and found out man again. en to me. While the number of the — Awaiting the person calling or texting comes about us. He swore to me that there was no one else Results up, I do not know the numbers of besides her and me . W e h a ve Dear Awaiting:Your "boyfriend" all my friends and associates, so now discovered a third girl — his was dishonest and irresponsible. I have been accepting the calls or roommate — with whom he was You can't be blamed for feeling texts. involved. bitter. Now might be a good time At first, I would let the caller or Abby, he used no protection to re-evaluate whether premarital texter know that the person he/she with any of us. He swore to us all sex is worth the headache and the was trying to reach no longer had that he always used it and was

heartache.

regularly tested for STDs. Anoth-

this number. However, it takes up

That said, I can't help but wonder er lie. how you intended to avoid infection Now hi s f o rmer g i rlfriend if you and the man of your dreams thinks she might have picked up were havingunprotected sex. an STD from him,and we allhave Please take this sad experience to be tested to ensure we don't as a wake-up call, and schedule have one. an appointment with your doctor I now k now y o u c an't t r u st to discuss all of the consequences anything you're being told unless that can result from unprotected there's proof. Go with the guy to sex in the 21st century. There are get tested and demand to be there many — and an inability to trust is

my expensive minutes to make those replies. Am I under any ob-

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNES-

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

DAY, APRIL15, 2015:This yearyou might opt to head in a different direction. You often overthink situations and replay certain scenarios time after time. At least when you make adecision, you know that you are sure. Your intuition will guide you; however, use care should you decide to take financial risks. You will have a tendency to overspend. If you are single, you are in a period 8tars showthe kisd where you could of day yos'8 hatrs meet Mr. or Ms. ** * * * D ynamic Right. If you are ** * * Positive at t ached, the two ** * Average of y o u often like ** So-so spending time * Difficult alone as a couple. These periods are an excellent time to bond on a deeper level. PISCESmakes an excellent healer for you.

ARIES (March21-April 19) *** Your words dodrawa response from someone you care about. Go within and acknowledge your feelings. Be aware of what is happening between the two of you. People might seem a little off later in the day, and someone is likely to change his or her tune. Tonight: Not to be found.

ligation to contact these folks, or

can I just ignore their contacts? — Polite in Pennsylvania Dear Polite: No rule of etiquette

"compels" you to respond to these callers and texters, so consider yourself off the hook. — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

YOURHOROSCOPE

** * * Relate to a loved one directly. Others seekyou out, and you could feel a By Jacqueline Bigar bit uptight. You might want to be responsiveto everyone,butyou need to besesponsibility to carry them out also could lective with your time. You will approach fall into your lap. Are you ready to be even a situation very differently as a result. busier? Tonight: A must appearance. Tonight: Go with someone's suggestion.

CANGER (June21-July 22) ** * * One-on-one relating touches otherson am uchdeeperlevel.Evenw hen dealing with associates you barely know,

a direct gazeinto someone'seyeswil show that person that you're interested in what he or she has to say. Try to tame your mind! Tonight: Be near good music.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You could find yourself in a situation thatyou would prefer not to be in. A matter involving your domestic life demands a lot of attention. You could feel pushedand become testy.Say "no"rather than put yourself in a tizzy. Tonight: Observe a tendency to close down.

LEO (July 23-Aug.22)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) A partner demands your atten- ** * * I nitiate a conversation with

** * * tion. You easily can fulfill this person's

request, as long asyou can concentrate. You might want to carefully assess your work schedule. If you're feeling pressured, just take a walk. Fresh air does wonders. Tonight: Count on being in

demand. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * * Others will notice that you seem a bit spacy and might see you in a new light. A friend will tap into your mindset and encourage you to continue in this TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * B e more forthright when deal- vein of thinking. Allow your imagination to soar, and you will be amazed by what ing with others, and you will get a differcomes up.Tonight: Say"yes." ent reaction. You also could get a better understanding of what is happening LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) around you. Accept additional responsi** * * You'll get a lot done quickly, bility, as you will want to be in control of a as a partner might be demanding your project. Tonight: Find your friends. time. Though you will want to go your own way, if you are smart, you will make GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * You cannot stay in the world of time for this person. In the long run, it could prevent a crisis that results in a your imagination forever. It's important to take a stand and express your different time-consuming issue. Tonight: Listen to thoughts and ideas. Be aware that the re- a suggestion.

someone who does not listen well. Try to cut the judgments about this person. Be more open and forthrightabout where you are coming from. Ask questions. Return calls, as you'll need to hear from a key person. Tonight: Be more serious.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * * H owyou see a money matter might be quite different from how someone else sees it. You will be able to gain more understanding if you can tap into his or her thinking. Sometimes the issue is the same, even if the approach is different. Tonight: Let someone else treat.

PISCES (Fsh.19-March20) ** * * * P eople gravitate toward you and make the impossible possible. Some-

8p.m.on2,9,"The Middle" — Frankie and Mike (Patricia Heaton, Neil Flynn) aren't thrilled about the attitudes displayed by their sons in the new episode "Food Courting." Axl (Charlie McDermott) has no interest in returning home for a chore while he's marking his 21st birthday, and Brick (Atticus Shaffer) also doesn't behave to his parents' liking. Sue (Eden Sher) has to decide whether to stay loyal to her current work manager when she's pursued by another.

wouldn't survive."

left school to go to the College a doctor. And she was expectof Nuns (Holy Cross College.) ing my first niece or nephew. It was one of the best schools ... And I was called, 'The baby's coming.' and a wonderful, wonderful "She asked me to be her college and again, another wonderful drama t eacher. birthing partner. And the baby Courtesy NBC Then I got a job (acting) that was born dead. I watched that Anna Friel plays Odelle Ballard, a Special Forces sergeant who is meant I had to leave school. devastate my brother. It was stranded behind enemy lines, in NBC's "American Odyssey," airing I thought I'd go back and fin- 18 hours in the labor room. Sundays. ish my education and become You just can't equate — bea barrister. Then I just kept cause birth and death don't go working — my hobby is now together. And when you see the work began. "They sent a I said, 'I ha-a-a-a-te this!' And myjob." your sibling, whom you love so Marine to my house, a soldier, he'd just go, 'Yep. Do it a bit The mother of a 9-year- dearly, and you're helpless and every day. We started walking longer.' When you start to un- old, Gracie, with actor David can do nothing, and there's no a little bit every day and Pi- derstand what these soldiers Thewlis, Friel says, "David reasoning to that. There's no lates three times a week. And go through, particularly a Ma- and I are not together but justification. I've always been lucky that "I think that just jolted me. rine," she pauses, kicking off we live across the road. And my frame is (resilient). They hershoes. when I'm away he comes and They were getting married "Woken up at 2 in the morn- stays in my house, and he just after that. She's Vietnamese, said, 'We have to get you very strong.' ing, made to run for 10 miles, brought Gracie to Marrakesh. and her family flew in from "They had me running in going into icy, freezing water. It's an unconventional scenar- Vietnam. So we had the birth, the rain for 5 miles. I would What they put up with is so io that works incredibly con- the death, the funeral and the run 1mile and be out ofbreath. admirable. They are the real ventionally," she says. wedding all in three weeks. But he'd get me through that heroes. They're so strong and Becoming a mother at 29 It makes you realize how imboundary and go, 'C'mon!' No disciplined. And I wouldn't let filled her with an inner depth portant family is, and how she'd never imagined, she very precious this life is." sympathy, no empathy at all. it beat me."

e im ortance 0 rotection

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 1: I5, 6:45 • CINDERELLA (PG)12:35, 3:40, 6:30, 9:20 • DANNY COLLINS(R) noon, 3, 6:25, 9:15 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:10, 9 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT3-D (PG-13)1, 3:55, 7:05, 10 • FURIOUS 7(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:45, 3:10, 4:05, 6:30, 7:20, 9:45, 10:25 • FURIOUS 7IMAX(PG-13) 12:20, 3:30, 7, 10:15 • GET HARD(R) 12:30, 2:55, 5:30, 8, 10:35 • HOME(PG)12:10, 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:40 • HOME3-D(PG)11:35a.m.,2,4:30,6:55,9:25 • IT FOLLOWS (R) 4:15, 10:10 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)12:50,3:45, 7:20, 10:20 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 3:05, 7:15, 10:30 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG) I2:55,3:50,7:05,IO:05 • THESECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 1:05, 4:10, 7, 9:55 • WOMAN INGOLD(PG-13) 1:25, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

8 p.m.on 5,8,"The Mysteries of Laura" —A big reunion is in store — in multiple ways — as guest star Eric McCormack reteams with his "Will 8 Grace" partner Debra Messing in "The Mystery of the Exsanguinated Ex." He plays Laura's (Messing) former fiance, the prime suspect in an attack on a former beauty queen. Laura tries to deal with her residual feelings for him while attempting to determine whether he's innocent. Josh Lucas, Laz Alonso and Max Jenkins also star. 8 p.m. on10, "American Idol" — If it's mid-April, you know the field of hopefuls is being winnowed down big time en route to next month's choice of this season's "Idol." The new, two-hour episode "Top Six Perform" indicates the number of contesants remaining, with the selection

process for judgesHarry Connick Jr., Jennifer Lopezand Keith Urban — and, likely, for viewers as well — demanding that much more reasoning. Ryan Seacrest is the host. 8p.m. onFAM, "Young8 Hungry" —In the new episode "Young 8 Old," Gabi (Emily Osment) decides to take a break from worrying about her bumpy relationship with Josh (Jonathan Sadowski) in favor of doing something nice for Elliott (Rex Lee), who is turning 40. Alas, her efforts to ensure that Elliott has a perfect birthday party only

winds up causingproblemsfor him. Kym Whitley also stars.

10 p.m. on FX, "The Americans" —In the new episode "I Am Abassin Zadran," Martha (Alison Wright) plays host to an unexpected guest, while Philip and Elizabeth (Matthew Rhys, Keri Russell) must work a formidableMujahideencommander.

Back onthe Jennings homefront, a rebellious Paige (Holly Taylor) picks this inconvenient time to act out. O Zap2it

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • CHAPPIE(R) 6 • FIFTY SHADESOFGREY (R) 9 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 2:30 • Younger than 2t may attend aiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.

C om p l e m e n t s

w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m

WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271

~e<"'6

• LEVIATHAN(R) 5:30 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 3:15 • WHAT WEDOIN THESHADOWS(no MPAArating) 8:30 I

I

\

I

Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SW OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777

SINce

158TREss

G allery-Be n d

• FURIOUS 7(PG-13) 4:30, 6:45, 7:30 • GETHARD(R)7 • HOME (PG)4:30 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 4:15, 7:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CINDERELLA (PG)6:30 • FURIOUS 7(PG-13) 6 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 6 • WOMAN INGOLD(PG-13) 6:15 i )

i

541-330-5084

ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications

t

Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • FURIOUS 7(PG-13) 4:10, 7:10 • GETHARD(R) 5,7:20 • HOME (PG)4:40, 7 • LEGENDSFROMTHESKY(no MPAArating) 5:25, 7:30 • THELONGEST RIDE(PG-13)4,6:50 •

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • FURIOUS 7(Upstairs — PG-13) 6:15 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

EVERGREEN

In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

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one whomyou've wanted to havea conversation with suddenly might become available. You could see some closing down or withdrawal if this person is not ready. Tonight: Dream it up. © King Features Syndicate

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

jbbend.com 541-382-6223

J0HNsoN BR0THERs A P P L I A N C E S



E2 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 476

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

Employment Opportunities

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •

Starting at 3 lines

Place a photo inyourprivate party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER'500 in total merchandise

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

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opporlunifies" include employee and independent positions. Ads fo r p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra c aution when a p plying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division, 97'I -673- 0764.

870

Bnj aRnlh

• H o mes for Sale

Boats & Accessories

NOTICE

632

AptiMultiplex General CHECK YOUR 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

All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal 'l9' Bayliner 1998, I/O, to advertise any prefgreat shape, call for 850 erence, limitation or info. $8500. In Bend discrimination based Snowmobiles 661-644-0384. on race, color, reliion, sex, handicap, Good classified adstell amilial status or nathe essential facts in an tional origin, or inteninteresting Manner.Write tion to make any such from the readers view -not preferences, l i mitathe seller's. Convert the tions or discrimination. We will not knowingly 4-place enclosed Inter- facts into benefits. Show accept any advertis- state snowmobile trailer the reader howthe item will ing for real estate w/ RockyMountain pkg, help them in someway. This which is in violation of $8500. 541-379-3530 this law. All persons advertising tip are hereby informed 860 brought toyou by that all dwellings ad- Motorcycles & Accessories The Bulletin vertised are available remng cenl al 0~n since rrte on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified FUN & FISH! 748

Northeast Bend Homes

634 Harley Dyna Wide Glide .20 acre lot, 3/2.5, 2003 custom paint, AptiMultiplex NE Bend Big 1692 sq.ft., RV park*tlllust state prices in ad extras, 13,000 orig i ng, m t n vie w s , miles, like new, health 2006 Smokercraft Call for Specials! Garage Sale Special P r incipal Sunchaser820 forces sale. Sacrifice Limited numbers avail. $259,900. 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 lcall for commercial line ad rates) B roker @ J o h n L $10,000 obo. model pontoon boat, 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Scott, 541-480-3393. 541-633-7856. 75HP Mercury and W/D hookups, patios electric trolling moor decks. tor, full canvas and A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: fyfOUNTAIN GLEN, Redmond Homes many extras. The Bulletin 541-383-9313 Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Stored inside Professionally 2300 sq. ft. 4 bdrm, 3 BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) 541-385-5809 $19,900 managed by Norris 8 bath home, on quiet 541-350-5425 Stevens, Inc. REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well neighborhood cul-desac, $289,900. c all as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin HD Fat Boy 2002 INildland Fire Ads published in the 541-639-3209 or 14,000 orig. miles. bendbulletimcom "Boats" classification reserves the right to reject any ad at 541-548-5302 for appt. FightersBsdl 5@Be9s Exc.cond. Vance & include: Speed, fishany time. is located at: Cooper Contracting Hines exhaust, 5 Need help fixing stuff? ing, drift, canoe, IRF ©Klb is now hiring entry spoke HD rims. De1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Call A Service Professional house and sail boats. level fire f i ghters. tachable luggage rack find the help you need. For all other types of Bend, Oregon 97702 (No exp. needed). with back rest. Many www.bendbulletin.com watercraft, please go Must be least 18 yrs other extras. Must to Class 875. of age. Starting pay see to appreciate. 541-385-5809 PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction $ 10.10/hr., plu s Looking for your next $10 500. located in is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right $4.02/hr. hazardous emp/oyee? Crooked River Ranch. to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these pay on the first 40 Place a Bulletin help serv>ng central oregon sinre 1903 Call 530-957-1865 732 newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party hrs. Call S h awn wanted ad today and Commercial/Investment Bayliner 185 2006 Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 541-948-7010 to reach over 60,000 open bow. 2nd owner schedule and interProperties for Sale readers each week. — low engine hrs. view or fo r m ore Your classified ad 476 476 476 476 — fuel injected V6 info. will also appear on Employment Employment Employment Employment HIGH PROFILE — Radio & Tower. bendbulletin.com LOCATION IN Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities Great family boat which currently reDOWNTOWN TURN THE PAGE Priced to sell. ceives over Honda CB250 REDMOND 1.5 million page Nighthawk, 2008, very $11,590. For More Ads Teacher for Youth The Bulletin Purchasing/ OFFICE HELP 541-548-0345. good cond, $1800. 3300 views every month C hallenge Pro The Bulletin in La Pine small ofReceiving miles. Call 541-610-3609 at no extra cost. caution when purg ram located 9 fice. Full or Part time I 875 Position Bulletin Classifieds chasing products or I M-F. Customer sermiles east of Bend. Get Results! Watercraft services from out of a Looking for your next vice, Quickbooks, M ust be a ble t o Bright Wood CorpoCall 385-5809 or employee? l Excel, Web, and teach mult i ple l the area. Sending ration is looking to fill place your ad on-line ds published in "Wa c ash, checks, o r Place a Bulletin help phone experience a This commercial a pu r chasing/re- subjects. Oregon l credit i n f ormation wanted ad today and at tercraft include: Kay ea must. Job includes building offers excertification ceiving position at bendbulletin.com aks, rafts and motor reach over 60,000 l may be subjected to l A/P,A/R as well as cellent exposure our h e a dquarters needed. Must be Ized personal FRAUD. readers each week. Yamaha V-Star 250cc help in pulling and along desirable NW site in Madras. This creative and work watercrafts. Fo 762 For more informaI Your classified ad 2011, 3278 mi., exc. shipping orders. Im6th Street. position requires the "boats" please se well within a team. tion about an adver- • will also appear on Homes with Acreage cond. $4700 OBO. l mediate hire! Email Currently housing following skills and Class 870. For app l ication l tiser, you may call bendbulletin.com Dan 541-550-0171. l resume to The Redmond experience. G o od 541-385-5809 packet and i nfo. the Oregon State which currently Powell Butte FSBO, 3 bmyers0057©aol.co Spokesman newscomputer, t y p ing call Cascade Edu- l Attorney General's receives over 1.5 bdrm/2 bath, 1 8 00 870 m paper offices, the and 10 key skills; cational Services, Office C o n sumer s million page views sq.ft., 4 . 7 fe n c ed Boats & Accessories servmg renfav oregon since r903 2,748 sq. ft. space is experience u s ing 541-771-5616. Protection hotline at l every month at acres, Cascade view, perfect for owner/ Excel, W o r d a nd no extra cost. Operations Manager for ERP, good in math, I 1-877-877-9392. s hop, full RV 15' boat 1971 Tri-Hull 880 user. Two private Crown Villa RV Re- know how to p ay Bulletin Classifieds hookups, $369,000. fiberglas, Fishfinder, Look at: offices and generMotorhomes LThe Bulleting Get Results! sort in Bend. At least attention to details 541-419-2753 Bendhomes.com ous open spaces. 45 hp Evinrude motor 2 years experience in and the a bility to Call 385-5809 for Complete Listings of Three parking walk-thru, full cover, or place hospitality manage- trouble shoot and Area Real Estate for Sale places in back+ trailer, spare tire, variment with positive at- solve your ad on-line at Manufactured/ street parking. pro b lems. ous vests, and anbendbulletin.com titude and good lead- Prior Mobile Homes e x p erience Delivery $259,000. chor. $1200 or best ership skills. Contact driving a forklift and offer. 541-408-3811 Call Graham Dent Larry 541-617-1999 or cargo van is a must List Your Home 486 541-383-2444 larrykine © aol.com JandNHomes.com 24' Mercedes Benz or the ability to learn We Have Buyers $upplement Your Income Independent Positions C OMI ASS,~ „ u , Prism, 2015 ModelG, this quickly. Position Get Top Dollar Mercedes Diesel engine, r equires a val i d Call a Pro Sales Help Wanted: Nerlgstlnatbutaacesm Financing Available. 18+ mpg, auto trans, driver's license. You E nergetic kios k Whether you need a 541-548-5511 fully loaded with must be able to work Now taking bids for an Independent Consales person needed double-expando, fence fixed, hedges as a team member tract Hauler to deliver bundles of newspaimmediately for the Get your 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 and only 5200 miles. and work with our trimmed or a house pers from Bend to Medford, Oregon on a TiCk, TOCk C entral Ore g o n Perfect condition Wakeboard Boat business internal and exterweekly basis. Must have own vehicle with only$92K. built, you'll find area. Secured locaI/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, nal suppliers. Must Tick, Tock... license and insurance and the capability to Call 541-526-1201 tions, high commistons of extras, low hrs. professional help in take and pass a or see at: haul up to 6000 lbs. Candidates must be Full wakeboard tower, sions paid weekly! e ROW I N G ...don't let time get pre-employment The Bulletin's "Call a 3404 Dogwood Ave., able to lift up to 50 lbs. Selected candidate light bars, Polk audio For more informadrug test. W e are away. Hire a in Redmond. speakers throughout, Service Professional" will be independently contracted. an equal opportut ion, p lease c a l l with an ad in completely wired for professional out To apply or for more info contact Directory nity empl o yer. Howard at The Bulletin's amps/subwoofers, un• 5 Tony Giglio Starting wage DOE. J 541-279-0982. You of The Bulletin's I 541-385-5809 derwater lights, fish "Call A Service t i lio©bendbulletin.com Apply in the Personc an a l s o em a i l "Call A Service finder, 2 batteries cusnel Department at: tcoles©yourneighProfessional" tom black paint job. Thank you St. Jude & Professional" Plumber, Journeymen borhoodpublications. $12,500 541-815-2523 Directory Sacred H e ar t of Needed for new conBright Wood Directory today! com for more inforJesus. j.d. struction. Start immediCorp. mation. ately! Good pay/benefits The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with expe335 NYV Hess St. Call Gary, 541-410-1655 Madras, OR97741 rience in the Printing industry. Two years of prior web press experience is beneficial, but I • RmljLfal training can be provided. At The Bulletin you Processor -Operator Iron Triangle LLC in Roofers Wanted can put your skills to work and make our IKjIXK@ ® Uj products and services jump off the page! In J ohn Day, OR , i s Call River Roofing, looking for a procesaddition to printing our 7-day a week newspaCall54I-3855809 to promoteyour service • Advertise for 28 daysstarting at t I40 Irha speciaaorkagei l r notovoilobletn ourwebsite) 541-383-3569 per, we also print a variety of other products sor. Must have some or applyin person ar for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 experience preferred, 697 SE Gfenwood tA tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman but will train. Drug Drive, in Bend. testing required. Call must become knowledgeable and familiar Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care LandscapingNard Care LandscapingNard Care working with. f or a p plication a t Check out the 528 541-575-2102, or We put a premium on dependability, timeliNOTICE: Oregon state CPR Property classifieds online ness, having a positive attitude and being a email Loans & Mortgages law requires anyone Maintenance lindairontriangleO www.bendbulletin.com team player. We offer a competitive compenwho con t racts for Landscaping sation plan and career growth opportunities. Zd ped Qaa/ry centurytel.net WARNING construction work to Updated daily & Painting This position primarily works nights, with a Serving Central The Bulletin recombe licensed with the tr'aau4 gtfr e r<a. CCB¹204254 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. Oregon Since 2003 Midstate Electric Cooperative Inc., with headmends you use cau- Construction Contrac• Spring clean ups Full Service Residental/Commercial If you are interested in fostering your talent as tion when you protors Board (CCB). An quarters in La Pine, Oregon, (30 miles south of • Aeration/de-thatching a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourLandscape active license Bend, Oregon) is a rural electric cooperative vide personal • Lawn repairs Sprinkler age you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, serving portions of four counties covering 5600 information to compa- means the contractor Management Activation/Repair • Weekly maintenance Pressroom Manager, at square miles with over 18,000 meters. The utilnies offering loans or is bonded & insured. Back Flow Testing • Bark mulch anelson@wescom a ers.com Verify the contractor's Spring CleanUp ity seeks qualified applicants for the following credit, especially Call 978-413-2487 with your resume, references and salary hisCCB l i c ense at position: those asking for ad•Leaves Maintenance tory/requirements. No phone calls please. www.hirealicensedAerate / Thatching vance loan fees or •Cones eThatch & Aerate EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT/ HUMAN RESOURCES Drug testing is required prior to employment. Weekly Service and companies from out of contractor.com •Needles • Spring Clean up or call 503-378-4621. This position provides confidential administrative The Bulletin is a drug free work place and Spring Clean-ups! state. If you have •Debris Hauling ~Weekly Mowing The Bulletin recomEOE. Free estimates! support for the General Manager, Board of Diconcerns or ques& Edging COLLINS Lawn Maint. rectors and Management team. Duties include tions, we suggest you mends checking with Weed Free Bark • Bi-Monthly & Monthly the CCB prior to conThe Bulletin Ca/i 541-480-9714 administrative support work, correspondence consult your attorney tracting with anyone. & Flower Beds Serving Cenrral Oregonsince 1903 Maintenance and communications. Assists in policy developor call CONSUMER •Bark, Rock, Etc. Some other t rades Painting/Wall Covering ment and job descriptions, including knowledge HOTLINE, Lawn Renovation also req u ire addi-Aeration of legal hiring issues, interview processes and 1-877-877-9392. Dethatching Landsca in ~ tional licenses and KC WHITE employee orientation. Coordinates employee General Overseed •Landscape PAINTING LLC programs including wellness, EAP, drug testing, BANK TURNED YOU certifications. Compost Construction Interior and Exterior DOWN? Private party DOT CDL requirements, hearing testing, backTop Dressing ~Water Feature Family-owned ground checks and coordination of notaries. Rewill loan on real es- Computer/Cabling Install Installation/Maint. Residential & Commercial tate equity. Credit, no sponsible for all travel and training for coopera• Pavers Landscape * 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts GRAND OPENINGI tive employees and directors, as well as problem, good equity * Great Supplemental Income!! •Renovations / 5-vear warranties Maintenance is all you need. Call 50% offall computer meeting planning. Responsible for the record Installation SPRING SPECIALI 541-233-8447 Full or Partial Service ••Irrigations retention program and file/contract mainteIThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I Oregon Land Mort- services! Synthetic Turf • Mowing ~Edging Call 541-420-7846 www.thecomputernance. Coordinates monthly board meetings, in- • day night shift and other shifts as needed. We• gage 541-388-4200. CCB ¹20491 8 sourceredmond.com •Pruning ~Weeding cluding agenda and materials, and acts as re- • currently have openings all nights of the week.• Senior Discounts Water Management Bonded & Insured All About Painting cording secretary for all meetings. Keeps master / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts LOCAL MONEY:Webuy secured trustdeeds 8 Debris Removal 541-815-4458 Exterior, interior, files of policy manual, and training records for all start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Fertilizer included note, some hard money LCB¹8759 deck seal, light maint. employees and directors. Assists in preparation / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoloans. Call Pat Kellev with monthly program JUNK BE GONE Free Estimates. of the yearly administration department budget. • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• 541-382-3099 ext.18. I Haul Away FREE CCB ¹148373 Accuracy/correct grammar expected in all corre- I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI NOTICE: Oregon LandWeekly, monthly 541-420-6729 spondence. Maintaining confidentiality is an ab- I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI For Salvage. Also scape Contractors Law FIND YOUR FUTURE Cleanups & Cleanouts or ane time service. 10% Off exterior or solute requirement. • are short (t t:30 - t:30). The work consists of• (ORS 671) requires all interior job booked. Qualified applicants must have an Associate's HOME INTHE BULLETIN Mel, 541-389-8107 businesses that ad/ loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackManaging Degree or equivalent and a minimum of four vertise t o pe r form ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and Your future is just a page Central Oregon years of office experience in an administrative / other tasks. Domestic Services Landscape Construc- Personal Services away. Whetheryou're looking support position or office management position. Landscapes tion which includes: for a hat or a pl a ce to hang i t , Familiarity with legal interviewing/hiring issues is IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl p lanting, deck s , Hovana House Since 2006 At Your Service The Bulletin Classified is desirable. Must be proficient in Microsoft prod- I including life insurance, short-term & long-term Cleaning Services fences, arbors, Errands & Notary your best source. ucts, and working knowledge of all office maSenior Discounts water-features, and indisability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. For 15 yrs we've perin line so you stallation, repair of ir- I stand chines. Possession of or ability to obtain Orformed housekeeping Every daythousandsof 541-390-1466 don't need to. egon Notary certification. Valid Oregon driver's ~ Please submit a completed application services according to Same Day Response rigation systems to be buyers andsellers ofgoods errandsandnotary© the wishes of our clil icensed w it h th e license is required. attention Kevin Eldred. and services dobusinessin gmail.com Landscape ContracMust demonstrate strong initiative, a commitment ents. We offer profesthese pages.Theyknow Applications are available at The Bulletin 541-815-1371 tors Board. This 4-digit sional cleaning, post to member service and the ability to meet deadSell an Item front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or you can't beatTheBulletin construction cleaning number is to be inlines. Good communications and people skills, Classified Section for an electronic application may be obtained cluded in all adverand office cleaning. involved in the community, proactive, creative, Ranch Services upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via selection andconvenience tisements which indi541-728-1800 well-organized, neat, self-starter, highly moti- every item isjust a phone email (keldredIbendbulletin.com). cate the business has vated and able to work under high demand situcall away. Small Farm & a bond,insurance and Handyman ations. Qualifications must include good attitude No phone calls please. Ranch Services. workers compensa- Forsberg The Classified Section is and problem-solving behavior. Regular, predictIf it's under $500 Land & Mgt. tion for their employeasy to use.Everyitem I DO THAT! able attendance is expected. This is a * No resumes will be accepted * LLC¹ 109245894 ees. For your proteci s categorized and every you can place it in Home/Rental repairs Salary/Exempt position. tion call 503-378-5909 Vaughn 509-398-6968 cartegoiy is indexed onthe Small jobs to remodels The Bulletin Drug test is required prior to employment. or use our website: SUBNffTCOVER LETTER WITH RESUNfES TO: section's front page. Honest, guaranteed EOE. Human Resources www.lcb.state.or.us to USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Classifieds for: work. CCB¹151573 Whether you are l o oking for check license status Door-to-door selling with Midstate Electric Cooperative, Inc. Dennis 541-317-9768 a home orneeda service, before contracting with fast results! It's the easiest P 0 Box 127, La Pine OR 97739 $10 3 lines, 7 days The Bulletin your future is inthepagesof Just bought a new boat? Fax No. 541-536-1423 the business. Persons servtng central oregon srnce r903 The Bulletin Classified. E-Mai/rsmiesen©mldsfafee/ecfr/c.coo doing lan d scape way in the world to sell. Sell your old one in the $16 • 3 lines, 14 days maintenance do not classifieds! Ask about our NO TELEPHONE CALLS WILL BE ACCEPTED. The Bulletin Classified require an L CB Super Seller rates! The Bulletin (Private Party ads only) 541-385-5809 seneng centraloregonsince raa Position closes May 7, 2015. EEOE. 541-385-5809 cense.

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THE BULLETIN

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will Shprtz

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B wedn~day,Ap~i15,2015

Millard's brilliancy By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Cy the Cynic straggled into the lounge from his penny game. "I don't believe what I just saw," Cy told me. "The man is not only out in left field, he's out there with a catcher's mitt on." Millard Pringle is a quiet little man w ho gets l ost i n t h e m a z e o f defensive "rules." "I played 3NT," Cy told me, "and West led the jack of spades. Millard was East and got his rules mixed up, as usual. 'Third hand high' was no help — both of his spades were high ones — so he 'covered an honor'. He played the queen."

doubles, you bid three clubs and he cue-bids three diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: Your ju mp-response showed 10 to 12 points and invited

game. (If your suit had been a major, you would have committed to game.) Partner's three diamonds may be based on club support, a diamond control and slam interest, but for the m oment, yo u m u s t s h o w y o u r diamond stopper. Bid 3NT. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 43 652

DISCARD "I had to take the king," the Cynic went on. "I didn't know who had the ace. When I led a heart to dummy and returned the queen of clubs, West ducked. On the next club, MillerdI hope he never tells me why he did it — discarded his ace of spades. So when West got in, he ran his spades." "If Millard takes the ace of spades and returns the queen," I observed, " you p l a y l o w a n d ma k e a n overtrick." "He's a few kernels short of a full ear," Cy grumbled.

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Openinglead — 43 J (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

58Cryfrom a whiny child 61" that" Washington:: : San 65 Dark wine Francisco 67 Aid provider 42Tailgate dish since 1864 ... or a hint to this 43 It goes from puzzle'8 shaded Carndonagh to squares Skibbereen 69 Wandering 44 Symbol on Captain 70 Providers of pilot America's shield programs 45 It might have a 71 Give the green stirring part light 47Wordwith flour 72 Shakespearean or milk character who says "We are 48 Like some ships such stuff as at harbor dreams are 50 Half of a candy made on"

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PUZZLE BY DAVID STEINBERG

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Research Center 57 Unseen "Cheers" wife 59 Finish (up) 60Onewho's succeeding 62 Stood 63 exp edence 64 It's a gas up north 66 Kind of preacher 68 "Hawaii Five-0" network

power source, informally

Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

DENNIS THE MENACE

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I was just going 2 miles. We've been driving for 4 hours!

It's not the destinatlon ' that's important, it's the journey ... I

Avoid cab drivers who are into spiritual self-help books

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(Anoworo tomorrow)

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star's submissions

57 Mineral used in water softening 59 Dr. Seuss' "If the Circus" 60 Not even close to an agreement ...

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TOXIC M E R ELY KE R N EL Yeotoda 8 ~ Ju mbles:It CHAOS Answer. wao finally payday and the new employee got 8 — REALITY CHECK

50 Cry to a prima donna 51 Dog- : f olded at the corner 52 Spare 53 Pickle herb 54 Albany-to-Buffalo canal 55 W a ter carrier 56 S p i rited style

18

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genre 64 Continuously 65 Creepy look 66 Smallville family 67 Zilch

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04/15/15



E6 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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

1000

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

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Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE J PMorgan Ch a s e Bank, National Association, Plaintiff/s, v. John Ballard, Son and as Cons t ructive Trustee of the Estate of Teresa M. Ballard; Richard Ro t bergs, Son and as Construct ive Trustee of t h e Estate of Persijs Herbert Rotbergs; Robert Rotbergs; Gary Rotbergs; Ginger Rotbergs; Cecilia Keiser; U nknown Heirs o f Teresa M. Ballard and Persijs Herbert Rotbergs; Selco Community Credit Union; Oregon Water Wonderland Property Owners Association, Unit II, I nc., Other Persons or Parties, including Occupants, unknown clai ming any right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 1 3CV1062FC. N O TICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office will, on T hursday, May 2 8 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 17288 Harlequin Drive, Bend, Oregon 97707. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE

JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, successor in interest by purchase from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as receiver of Washington Mutual Bank, its s uccessors i n in t e rest and/or ass i gns, P laintiff/s, v . U n known Heirs of Eunice J . La n don; Timothy Landon as Personal R e presentative for Eunice J. Landon; Timothy L andon; Terr y Landon; J e r emy L andon; Ta m m y Skovborg; State of Oregon; Occupants of the premises; and the Real Property located at 1238-40 Southwest 16th

Street, R edmond, OR 97756, Defendant/s. Case No.:

13CV0850. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.

Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, May

LEGAL NOTICE N ationstar Mo r t gage LLC, its successors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Robert W. Dyer, Jr. aka R obert Will i a m Dyer, J r . ; The G reens a t R edmond Owners Association, Inc.; JPM organ Cha s e Bank, National Association, successor in interest by purchase from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as receiver of Washington Mutual f/k/a W a s hington Mutual Bank, F A ; State of O regon; O ccupants of t h e premises; and the Real Property located a t 4120 Southwest Tommy Armour Lane, Redm ond, Ore g o n 97756, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0380FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, May 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 4120 SW T o mmy Armour Lane, Redm ond, Ore g o n 97756. Conditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full i mmediately u p on t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE N ationstar Mor t gage LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Brandi McClennen, Jacob McClennen; Occupants of the property, D efendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0904. NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, May 26, 2015 at 10:00 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 2003 S W 29th Street, R e dmond, O regon 977 5 6 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior to t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff'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.or-

28, 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 1238-40 Southwest 16th Street, Redm ond, Ore g o n 97756. C onditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow ff s.com/sa the Desc h utes egonsheri les.htm County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w LEGAL NOTICE bidder's funds. Only NOTICE OF SEIZURE U.S. currency FOR CIVIL and/or ca s h ier's FORFEITURE TO ALL checks made payPOTENTIAL able to Deschutes CLAIMANTS AND TO County Sheriff's OfALL UNKNOWN f ice will b e ac - PERSONS READ THIS cepted. P a yment CAREFULLY must be made in full immediately u pon If you have any intert he close o f t h e est i n t h e s e i zed sale. For more inproperty d e s cribed f ormation on t h i s below, you must claim sale go to: www.orthat interest or you will egonsheriff s.com/sa automatically lose that les.htm interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property Get your may be forfeited even if you are not conbusiness victed of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forieiture counsel named below, The w r itten claim must be signed With an ad in by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, The Bulletin'8 and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The "Call A Service address at which you will a c cept f u ture Professional" m ailings f ro m t h e court and forfeiture counsel; and (3) A Directory s tatement that y o u

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course against the ure to pay w hen LEGAL NOTICE Trustor, the Trustee, due, the following U.S. Bank National the Beneficiary, the sums: D e linquent Association, Beneficiary's Agent, Payments: Dates: Plaintiff/s, v. Joshua or the Beneficiary's 03/01/13 thru R. Griffin; et al, DeAttorney. If you have 0 2/01/1 5. No. 2 4 . fendant/s. Case No.: previously been dis- Amount $1,214.31. 1 4CV0202FC. N O charged thr o u gh Total: $29,143.44. TICE OF SALE UNbankruptcy, you may Beneficiary AdDER WRIT OF EXhave been released of vances: $1,876.72. ECUTION - REAL personal liability for Foreclosure F ees PROPERTY. Notice is this loan i n w h ich and Exp e nses: hereby given that the case this letter is in- $ 0.00. Total R e Deschutes C o u nty tended to exercise the quired to Reinstate: Sheriff's Office will, on note holders right's $31,020.16. TOTAL T hursday, May 2 8 , against the real prop- REQUIRED TO 2015 at 10:00 AM, in erty only. As required PAYOFF: the main lobby of the b y law, y o u a r e $ 175,213.11. B y Deschutes C o u nty hereby notified that a reason of the deSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 negative credit report fault, th e b e nefi- W. Highway 20, Bend, r eflecting o n y o u r ciary has declared Oregon, sell, at public credit record may be all obligations seo ral auction to t h e submitted to a credit cured by the Deed h ighest bidder, f o r report agency if you of Trust i mmedi- cash o r ca s hier's 373-'I 774. fail to fulfill the terms ately due and paycheck, the real propof your credit obliga- able, including: the erty commonly known tions. Without limiting p rincipal su m o f as 6 1 20 7 Tr a v is The Bulletin is your t he t r ustee's d i s - $147,794.79 toRoad, Bend, Oregon claimer of representagether with interest 97702. Conditions of Employment tions or w arranties, thereon at the rate Sale: Potential bidOregon law requires of 5.85 % per anders must arrive 15 Marketplace the trustee to state in num, from 2/1/2013 minutes prior to the this notice that some until paid, plus all auction to allow the Call and/or (2) Was used residential p roperty accrued late Deschutes C o u nty or intended for use in sold at a trustee's sale c harges, and a l l Sheriff's Office to recommitting or facili- 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 may have been used trustee's fees, foreview bidder's funds. tating the violation of, in manufacturing closure costs, and Only U.S. currency solicitation to violate, to advertise. methamphetamines, a ny s um s ad and/or cashier's attempt to violate, or the chemical compo- vanced by the benchecks made payable conspiracy to violate www.bendbulletin.com nents of which are eficiary pursuant to to Deschutes County the criminal laws of known to b e t o xic. the terms and conSheriff's Office will be the State of Oregon Prospective purchas- ditions of the Deed accepted. P ayment regarding the manuers o f res i dential of Trust Whereof, must be made in full facture, distribution or ServingCentral Om gonsince fRB property should be n otice hereby i s immediately upon the possession of conaware of this poten- given that the unclose of the sale. For trolled su b stances o n 7/8/2015 at t h e tial danger before de- dersigned trustee, more information on (ORS Chapter 475). LEGAL NOTICE hour of 1 1:00 am, ciding to place a bid C LEAR RE C O N this s al e go to: TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Standard of Time, as for this property at the CORP., whose adwww.oregonsheriffs.c IN THE MATTER OF: OF SALE T.S. No.: established by sec- trustee's sale. N Od ress is 62 1 S W om/sales.htm S t r eet, OR-14-645523-NH tion 187.110, Oregon TICE TO TENANTS: Morrison (1) $7,330.00 in US Reference is made to Revised Statues, At T ENANTS OF T H E Suite 425, Portland, LEGAL NOTICE Currency, Case No t hat c e rtain d e e d the front entrance of SUBJECT REAL OR 97205, will on U.S. Bank National 15-50868 seized Feb- made by, FREDDY W the Courthouse, 1164 P ROPERTY H A VE 6 /30/2015, at t h e Association, succesruary 24, 2015 from HOLMAN JR., AND N.W. Bond S t reet, CERTAIN PROTEC- hour of 11:00 AM, sor Trustee to Bank of Antonio Rico SARA HOLMAN, AS B end, O R America, N.A. as suc977 0 1 TIONS A F FORDED standard time, as Sanchez. cessor t o La s alle T ENANTS BY T H E County o f DES - TO THEM UNDER established by ORS ENTIRETY as Grantor C HUTES. State o f O RS 8 6.782 A N D 1 87.110, AT T H E Bank, N . A . , as LEGAL NOTICE ST R E ET Trustee fo r M e r rill o F I D ELITY N A - Oregon, sell at public POSSIBLY U NDER B OND P ennymac L o a n tTIONAL TITLE I Nauction to the highest FEDERAL LAW. ATENTRANCE STEPS Lynch First Franklin Services, LLC, its TACHED TO T H IS T O T H E DES Mortgage Loan Trust, S URANCE COM - bidder for cash the successors in interA interest in the said NOTICE OF SALE, CHUTES COUNTY Mortgage Loan PANY, est and/or assigns, INCO R PO- COURTHOUSE, CALIFORNIA CORdescribed real prop- AND Asset-Backed CertifiPlaintiff/s, v. Charles PORATION, as erty which the grantor RATED HEREIN, IS A 1 164 NW B O N D cates, Series 2007-3, Crisp; N o r thwest trustee, N OTICE TO T E N - S T., B END, O R Plaintiff/s, v. Aurelio in favor of had or had power to Community Credit MORTGAGE E LEC- convey at the time of ANTS THAT SETS 97701, sell at public Garcia; Moises Rojas Union; and Occuauction to the highChavez; Guadalupe TRONIC REGISTRA- the execution by him F ORTH SOME O F pants of the p reTION SYS T EMS, of the said trust deed, THE PROTECTIONS est bidder for cash Garcia Garcia; Mortmises, Defendant/s. THAT ARE AVAILthe interest in the INC., ("MERS") AS together with any ingage Electronic RegCase No.: NOMINEE FOR ENABLE TO A TENANT above-described istration Sy s tems, terest w h ic h the 14CV0834FC. NOOF THE S UBJECT real property which C ORE CREDI T grantor or his succesInc.; Bank of America, T ICE O F SAL E REAL P R O PERTY the grantor had or N.A., successor to CORP, as B e nefi- sors in interest acUNDER WRIT OF AND WHICH SETS had power to conFirst Frankim Corp., ciary, dated quired after the exEXECUTION a n OP . S U B . o f 10/1 6/2006, recorded ecution of said trust FORTH C E R TAIN vey at the time it REAL PROPERTY. REQUIREMENTS executed the Deed M LB&T CO., F S B; in official deed, to satisfy the Notice i s h e r eby 10/26/2006, r ecords o f DES - foregoing obligations THAT M U S T BE of Trust, together Cascade View Homegiven that the DesCOMPLIED WITH BY with any i n terest owners Assoaation; CHUTES County, Or- thereby secured and c hutes Coun t y egon in book/reel/volA NY T ENANT I N which the grantor or O ccupants of th e the costs and exSheriff's Office will, ume No. and/or as penses of sale, in- ORDER TO OBTAIN his successors in premises, on Tuesday, June 9, fee/file/instrument/micluding a reasonable THE AFF O RDED interest a c q uired D efendant/s. C a s e 2015 at 10:00 AM, after the execution No.: 1 4 C V0659FC. crofilm/reception charge by the trustee. P ROTECTION, A S in the main lobby of N OTICE OF S A L E 2006-71520 Notice is further given REQUIRED UNDER of the Deed of Trust, the Desc h utes number U NDER WRIT O F covering the following that a n y per s on ORS 86.771. QUAL- to satisfy the foreCounty Sheriff's Ofdescribed real prop- named i n S e c tion ITY MAY BE CON- going o b l igations EXECUTION - REAL fice, 6 3 33 3 W. SIDERED A D E BT thereby secured and PROPERTY. Notice is erty situated in said 86.778 of Oregon ReHighway 20, Bend, hereby given that the County, and State, vised Statutes has the C OLLECTOR A T - the costs and exO regon, sell, a t Deschutes C o u nty to-wit: APN: 119487 right to have the fore- TEMPTING TO COL- penses of sale, inpublic oral auction 181203DC03300 LOT closure p r oceeding LECT A DEBT AND cluding a r easonSheriff's Office will, on to the highest bidT uesday, May 2 6 , 3, BLOCK 4, REED d ismissed and t h e ANY INFORMATION able charge by the d er, for c ash o r M ARKET EAST , trust deed reinstated OBTAINED WILL BE t rustee. Notice i s 2015 at 10:00 AM, in cashier's check, the U SED FO R T H A T further given that the main lobby of the FIRST A D D ITION, b y payment to t h e real property comDESCHUTES beneficiary of the en- PURPOSE. TS N o: any person named Deschutes C o u nty m only known a s OR-14-645523-NH in ORS 86.778 has Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 COUNTY, OREGON. tire amount then due 16137 Alpine Drive, Dated: 2/24/15 Qualthe right to have the W. Highway 20, Bend, Commonly known as: (other than such porLa Pine, Oregon pr o Oregon, sell, at public 21051 J UNI P ER- tion of said principal ity Loan Service Cor- f oreclosure 97739. C o nditions AVE, BEND, as would not then be poration of Washing- ceeding dismissed o ral auction to t h e of Sale: P o tential HAVEN h ighest bidder, f o r OR 97702 The under- due had no default ton, a s Tru s t ee and the Deed of bidders must arrive cash o r ca s hier's signed hereby certi- occurred), t ogether Signature By: Nina Trust reinstated by 15 minutes prior to check, the real propfies that based upon w ith the cost s , Hernandez, Assistant payment to the benthe auction to allow business rec o rds trustee's and Secretary T rustee's eficiary of the entire erty commonly known the Desc h utes there Add r ess: amount then d ue as 20067 Mt. Faith are no known attorney's fees and Mailing County Sheriff's Ofwritten assignments of curing any other deQuality Loan Service (other than the porPlace, Bend, Oregon f ice to rev i e w the trust deed by the fault complained of in Corp. of Washington tion of principal that 97702. Conditions of bidder's funds. Only trustee or by the ben- the Notice of Default C/0 Q u ality L o an would not then be Sale: Potential bidU.S. currency ders must arrive 15 tendering the per- Service Corporation due had no default and/or ca s h ier's eficiary and no ap- by minutes prior to the pointments of a suc- formance r e quired 411 Ivy Street San occurred), together checks made pay92 1 0 1 w ith t h e cos t s , cessor trustee have under the obligation or D iego, C A auction to allow the able to Deschutes been made, except as trust deed, at any time Trustee's Ph y sical trustee's and Deschutes C o u nty County Sheriff's OfAddress: Quality Loan attorneys' fees, and Sheriff's Office to rerecorded i n the prior to five days bef ice will b e ac fore the date last set Service C o rp . o f curing any o t her view bidder's funds. of the county cepted. P a yment records Only U.S. currency or counties in which for sale. Other than as Washington 108 1st default complained must be made in full the above described shown of record, nei- Ave South, Suite 202, of in the Notice of and/or cashier's immediately upon checks made payable real property is situ- ther the beneficiary Seattle, WA 9 8 104 Default by tendert he close o f t h e ated. Further, no ac- nor the trustee has Toll F r ee: (866) ing t h e per f or- to Deschutes County sale. For more in925-0241 A-4513303 mance required unSheriff's Office will be tion has been insti- any actual notice of f ormation on t h i s tuted to recover the any person having or 03/25/2015, d er the D eed o f accepted. P ayment sale go to: www.or04/01/2015, Trust at any time not must be made in full d ebt, or a n y p a r t claiming to have any egonsheriff s.com/sa thereof, now remainlien upon or interest in 04/08/2015, later than five days immediately upon the les.htm before the date last ing secured by the the r ea l pr o perty 04/1 5/2015 close of the sale. For LEGAL NOTICE trust deed, or, if such hereinabove deset for sale. Withmore information on o ut l i miting t h e this s al e go to: Request For action has been insti- scribed subsequent to LEGAL NOTICE trustee's disclaimer www.oregonsheriffs.c Proposal tuted, such action has t he interest of t h e T RUSTEE'S N O of r epresentations ¹ DHS-3970-15 been dismissed ex- trustee in t h e t r ust TICE OF SALE TS om/sales.htm The purpose of this cept as permitted by deed, or of any suc- No.: 00 8 8 23-OR or warranties, Oregon law requires courtesy notice is to ORS 86.752(7). Both cessor in interest to No.: Have an item to announce an opthe beneficiary and grantor or of any les- * *** * * 3731 R e f er- the trustee to state in this notice that sell quick? portunity to submit a t he t r ustee h a v e see or other person in ence is made to that Proposal with the elected to sell the said possession of or oc- certain trust deed some re s i dential If it's under property sold at a Department of Hureal property to sat- cupying the property, (the "Deed of Trust") '500you can place it in trustee's sale may man Serv i ces isfy the o bligations except: Name and executed by LARRY have been used in secured by said trust Last Known Address L. WESTLING AND (DHS), Office of VoThe Bulletin cational Rehabilitadeed and notice has and Nature of Right, KATHY L. manufacturing Classifieds for: methamphetamines, tion. been recorded pursu- Lien or Interest For WESTLING, HUSDHS/VR is seeking a nt to Sect i o n Sale Information Call: BAND AND WIFE, the chemical components of w hich '10 -3 lines, 7 days Innovative 86.752(3) of Oregon 714-730-2727 or Lo- as Grantor, to REsolution-based ProRevised Sta t utes. gin to: www.service- GIONAL TRUSTEE a re known to b e '16- 3 lines, 14 days toxic. P r ospective posals from qualiThere is a default by linkasap.com In con- SERVICES C O Rfied individuals or as purchasers of resi- (Private Party ads only) grantor or other per- struing this notice, the PORATION, dential pr o perty firms. Services unson owing an obliga- singular includes the Trustee, in favor of der the Request for MORT should be aware of LEGAL NOTICE tion, performance of p lural, t h e wor d H SBC "grantor" includes any this potential danProposal (RFP) will which is secured by GAGE SERVICES Wells Fargo Bank, include p r oviding the trust deed, or by successor in interest INC., as Beneficiary, ger before deciding NA, also known as to place a bid for Vocational Goal Exthe successor in into this grantor as well dated 1 2/27/2005, Wachovia Mortgage terest, with respect to as any other person recorded 1/6/2006, this property at the Corporation and ploration (VGE) sert rustee's sale. I n vices, to help eliprovisions th e r ein owing an obligation, as Instrument No. Wachovia Mortgage construing this nogible Vo c ational which authorize sale the performance of 2006-00896, in the FSB, a d ivision of tice, the masculine Rehabilitation (VR) in the event of such which is secured by Official Records of Wells Fargo B ank, Deschutes County, gender includes the participants deprovision. The default the trust deed, and NA, formerly known "trustee" f eminine and t h e v elop clear e m for which foreclosure the words Oregon, which covas Wachovia Mortand "beneficiary" iners the following deneuter, the singular ployment goals for is made is grantor's gage, FSB, formerly includes plural, the obtaining or mainfailure to pay when clude their respective scribed real propknown as World Savword "grantor" intaining employment. due th e fo l lowing successors in interest, e rty s i tuated i n i ngs B a nk , F S B , cludes any succesS ervices wil l b e sums: Del i nquent if any. Pursuant to Deschutes County, Plaintiff/s, v. Michael Payments: Payment Oregon Law, this sale Oregon: LOT TEN sor in interest to the A. Marsden; Beverly p erformed in t h e grantor as well as B end an d R e d - Information Fro m will not be deemed fi- (10), BLOCK FOUR K. Marsden; City of mond areas in the 12/1/2009 T h rough nal until the Trustee's (4) OF TALL PINES, any other persons Redmond; C a p ital owing an obligation, state of Oregon. 2/1/2015 Total Pay- deed has been isFIRST A D DITION One Bank USA N.A.; If interested in this ments $ 103,623.48 sued by Quality Loan SUBDIVISION, DEthe performance of and Does 1-2, being which is secured by opportunity, the Late Charges From Service Corporation of SCHUTES all Occupants or other R FP number i s 12/1/2009 T h rough Washington. If any ir- COUNTY, ORthe Deed of Trust, Persons or P a rties the words "trustee" DHS-3970-15, and 2/1/2015 Total Late regularities are disEGON. APN: claiming any r i ght, and 'beneficiary" intitle, lien, or interest in can be view and Charges $22 1 .10 c overed within 1 0 139956 Commonly d ownload via t h e Beneficiary's Ad- days of the date of known as: 1 6 154 clude their respect he p r operty d e Oregon P r ocure- vances, Costs, And this sale, the trustee LOST LN. LA PINE, tive successors in scribed in the Comi nterest, i f any . ment I n f ormation Expenses Escrow Ad- will rescind the sale, OR 97739 The curplaint herein and loNetwork (ORPIN) return th e b u yer's rent beneficiary is: Dated: 2 / 1 2/2015 vances $ 2 4,836.07 c ated at 2177 1 C LEAR RE C O N at: Total Adva n ces: money and take furL PP M O R T G AG E Obsidian Ave n ue, http://orpin.oregon.g CORP 621 SW Mor$24,836.07 T O TAL ther action as neces- LTD. Both the benBend, O R 97 7 0 2, rison Street, Suite ov/open.dll/welFORECLOSURE sary. If the sale is set e ficiary an d th e D efendant/s. C a s e 425 Portland, OR No.: 13CV0728. NOcome? Ianguage=En COST: $4, 9 35.50 aside for any reason, trustee have elected 97205 In order to downTOTAL R E QUIRED including if the to sell the TICE OF SALE UN858-750-7600 load the RFP, interTO REI N STATE: Trustee is unable to above-described DER WRIT OF EXested parties must $125,579.67 TOTAL convey title, the Pur- real property to satECUTION - REAL first register with REQUIRED TO chaser at the sale isfy the obligations USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! PROPERTY. Notice is ORPIN (using the PAYOFF: shall be entitled only secured b y the hereby given that the above link) and "exDoor-to-door selling with Deschutes C o u nty $364,636.82 By rea- t o a r e turn of t h e Deed of Trust and p ress/indicate a n son of the default, the m onies paid to t h e notice has been re- fast results! It's the easiest Sheriff's Office will, on i nterest" i n RF P beneficiary has de- Trustee. This shall be corded pursuant to T uesday, June 2 , way in the world to sell. DHS-3970-15. The clared all sums owing the Purchaser's sole ORS 86.752(3). The 2015 at 10:00 AM, in RFP will be posted on the obligation se- and exclusive remedy. default for which the the main lobby of the The Bulletin Classified to ORPIN for apcured by t h e t r ust The purchaser shall foreclosure is made Deschutes C o u nty 541-385-5809 have no further reis the grantor's failSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 proximately 21 caldeed immediately due have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture cou n sel named below is 21 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more i nformation: D a i na Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 N E T hird Street, Prineville, OR 97754. Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) Constitutes the proceeds of the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled substances (ORS C hapter475);

endar days, starting a round April 1 4 , 2015. DHS will not mail or o t herwise send copies of the R FP or an y a d d enda directly t o interested parties. The RFP must be viewed and downloaded via ORPIN. ORPIN offers online help with registration and other ORPIN navigations. To obtain ORPIN help, click on the help desk link "? Help for OPRIN" located at the bottom left of the s creen. Ple a s e contact the OPRIN h elp email or b y calling (503)

The Bulletin

and payable, those sums being the following, to- wit: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 1 2/1/2009, and a l l subsequent i n s tallments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent p roperty taxes, insurance premiums, ad v a nces made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries e ff orts to protect and preserve i ts security, al l o f which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will

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 21771 Obsidian Avenue, Bend, Oregon 97702. 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 aymen


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