Bulletin Daily Paper 02-18-15

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Serving Central Oregon since190375

WEDNESDAY February18,2015

or s reaunc

SkiingToddLake

SPORTS • C1

OUTDOORS • D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

SWEARING-IN IN SALEM

SOUTHEAST BEND

Brown aims to

POrtS SIOWdOWn — Central Oregon businesses arehaving to find ways to copewith the shipping snarls.C6

Stripes for the new two-lane roundabout at Reed Market and 15th aren't due till spring — but driving it now is still doable. Girls dasketdall — Summit trails early but recovers from the slow start for a 51-39 win over Ridgeview.C1

rebuild trust By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

SALEM — Oregon's incoming governor, Kate Brown, plans to call for

Scandal in Israel —You'l never guess howmuchBenjaminNetanyahu spendson takeout.AS

efforts to restore trust in

Secrecy inCuda —The

an ethics

government when she rises to the state's top job after

likely successor to Castro keeps a low profile.A6

scandal that

prompted the resignation of John Kitzhaber.

And a Wed exclusiveCon artists are using jury duty to scare people into handing over large sums of money. benttbulletin.cem/extras

Brown, currently the secretary of state, is being thrust ahead with little

notice. She'll be sworn in today in front of a joint Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Obama's legacy isin the hands ofjudges By David Nakamura and Juliet Eilperin

Cars drive the new two-lane Reed Market roundabout Monday. It's been open since November, but weather delayed the striping between the lanes, so for now, drivers are figuring it out on their own.

By Jasmine Rockow

Inside striping would have

The Bulletin

required the city to close

A lack of lane lines in the two-lane roundabout at SE Reed Market Road and 15th

the roundabout, said Ryan Oster, manager of the Reed

Street in Bend might have some drivers nervous.

ils nAve.

construction begins on the north side of Reed Market.

New reundadeuI -'

The city pays a fee every

Market Road project.

"We will have internal striping that designates lanes

Re

R.

to restore the public's trust

Oster said. There has been one acci-

in government," Brown's office said Tuesday. "And she'll speak to her bipartisan approach to helping Oregon's working families

dent in the roundabout since

make ends meet."

cost and do it all in one shot,"

once we do permanent strip-

in November after delays due to early wintry weather.

ing in the spring," Oster said. Despite unseasonably

The weather also prevent-

warm weather, the city is

ed the city from painting permanent lane striping, so temporary striping was put down on the roundabout's entry and exit points, but not

waiting to paint until other

15th streets is under con-

it opened in November. The Dec. 24one-vehicle accident

construction projects in the

struction. Once concrete is

was caused by inclement

Reed Market Road area are finished, Oster said. The

poured in the spring, Oster said, the city will have the

south side of Reed Market Road between Third and

road and the roundabout

weather, accordingto John Beck, traffic officer withthe city of Bend.

inside the roundabout itself.

permanently striped before

See Roundabout/A4

WASHINGTON — Pres-

deportation. Instead, the

administration abruptly postponed its launch plans after a federal judge in Texas temporarily blocked implementation of the White House initiative.

In a decision late Monday, U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen ruled that

the deferred-deportation program should not move forward while a lawsuit

filed by 26 states challenging it was being decided. Though Hanen did not rule on the constitutional-

ity of Obama's November immigration order, he said there was sufficient merit to warrant a suspension of the new program while the case goes forward.

Navigating anewloundadout The new roundabout at SEReedMarket Road and 15th Street features double lanes of entry and — in all but one case —single exit lanes.

Here's how it works for motorists:

;,'I ~i"

• As you approach the roundabout, choose your lane. If you're going left or straight, stay left. If you're going right, stay right. • Enter the roundabout when your chosen lane is clear. • Always yield to the center lane, as well as to pedestrians and cyclists. • Allow large trucks to use both lanes. • Use your blinker if you need to change lanes. • Use your blinker to exit.

P

Here's how it works for cyclists:

ture. After taking the oath, she'll give a speech that will mark her first public discussion about her goals as governor. "She'll lay out a series of immediate reforms needed

paint, "So to save taxpayers money, we try to bundle the

The roundabout opened

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

session of the state Legisla-

time crews come out to

The Washington Post

ident Barack Obama's new immigration program was supposed to begin accepting applications today from thousands of illegal immigrants hoping for relief from the threat of sudden

B row n

SeeBrown/A4

OREGON LEGISLATURE

Carbon bill advances amid scandal By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin

SALEM — Oregon

~eed Market R

• Decide whether you want to act as a pedestrian or a vehicle. You may walk your bike andusethe crosswalks as a pedestrian would or you may ride, choosing a lane as a vehicle would. If you do, ride defensively, becausemotorists might not see you.

-'jg4ReedMarket Rd )

Republicans lost a battle Tuesday against a bill that seeks to lower greenhouse gas emissions by requiring oil companies to change gas blends or buy credits to offset carbon output, as the bill passed the Senate on a 17-13 vote.

The program is being

The one double-entry, double-exit route

touted as a way to combat

Thenorthboundroute en 15tb Street is the one unlike the others. It features a double entry and double exit, to ensure there's no bottleneck if a train is crossing ReedMarket. If you're entering northbound • • on15th Street, choose the right lane if you'll be turning right onto Reed Market or going straight on15th (as shown onthe sign at left), but choose the left lane if you're going west onto L[FTLli4[ IQjiILli4[ Reed Market or trying to flip back southbound on15th.

the state's biggest portion of greenhouse gas emissions, which accounts for

m ore than 50 percentof Oregon's total emissions, according to data from the U.S. Environmental ProGreg Cross/The Bulletin

tection Agency. SeeCarbon bill/A5

All told, Obama's immigration actions are project-

ed to benefit as many as five million immigrants, many of whom could receive workpermits if they qualified. The effects of Hanen's procedural ruling rippled through Washington and underscored a broader challenge to the president as he seeks to

solidify the legacy of his administration.

Along with immigration, the fate of two of Obama's other signature initiatives

The hottest topic of the 2016campaign: Robots? By Jim Tankersley The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Presi-

dential candidates have been arguing for more than two decades now about whether free trade is hurting middle-class workers. In 2016, they might launch a similar debate about

robots and computers. As campaign demons go, automation might be the new outsourcing. Technological advancements are making it easier for

true in traditional blue-collar

bastions of middle-class work, such as manufacturing, and increasingly in higher-skill white-collar sectors such as accounting. companies to buy software or Experts divide sharply on machines to handle tasks once whether this is good or bad for performed bypeople. That's the U.S. economy. Techno-op-

timists predict big breakWhere almost everyone throughs that create good jobs agrees is that the phenomenon that would be as unimaginable is growing and that helping today as "auto worker" was in already strained middle-class the late1800s.Pessimists fore- workers adjust to it calls for cast an economy where only big policy debates over educaa small slice of workers have

tion, entrepreneurship and the

the skills and education to stay

social safety net. SeeRobots/A5

ahead of the automation wave.

— a landmark health care

law and a series of aggressive executive actions on climate change — now rests in the hands of federal judges. SeeObama/A4

TODAY'S WEATHER

tf%

Warm and sunny High 60, Low 28 Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State E1-8 Dear Abby D6 Ob ituaries

0 6 Outdoors $ B5 TV/Movies

D1 - 6 Gi 4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol 113 No,49,

32 pages, 4 sections

Q l/f/e use recycled newsprint

:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII o 8 8 267 02329


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As

By Andrew E. Kfamer New York Times News Service

ARTEMIVSK, Ukraine A battle for a railroad town

Dtseuies rr

m a n y as

8,0 0 0 On Friday, eight Ukrainian soldiersreportedly escaped up in the city, a rail hub con- on foot through the fields, and necting the capitals of the on Sunday a dozen or so more Ukrainian soldiers are holed

in eastern Ukraine escalat- two rebel regions, Donetsk ed sharply Tuesday, with the and Luhansk. Rebels have Ukrainian army and Rus- reportedly sent text messages sian-backed militants say- to phones in the town, telling ing that their soldiers were the soldiers that they have engaging in pitched street been abandoned and should battles. surrender. By midday, the separatists The Ukrainian governsaid they had captured the ment maintains that the town town, Debaltseve, a separat-

ist news agency reported. The Ukrainian military denied that, saying it was repelling the attacks.

"An intense fight is underway now on the outskirts of Debaltseve," Ukraine's mil-

itary spokesman, Andriy Lysenko, said i n K i ev, t he Ukraine's capital. "There are

engagements near the train station. But our soldiers are

holding their positions, and they have full authority to return fire."

e sil.rva

raine ruce, in con inues

Either way, the fighting in and around Debaltseve threatenedtounravel a ceasefire that took effect Sunday.

StrauSS-Kahn trial —A prosecutor asked a criminal court in Lille, France, onTuesday to drop chargesagainst former International Monetary Fundchief Dominique Strauss-Kahn, saying there wasnot enough evidence to convict him of procuring prostitutes, according to news reports. The caseagainst Strauss-Kahn already appearedto be falling apart, after five of the six plaintiffs retracted their accusations against him Monday, citing a lack of evidence that he intended to break the law. Strauss-Kahn hasconsistently said that he did not know that the women atsex parties heattended wereprostitutes. Prosecutors had accused him of participation in an international sex ring that extended from Lille to Paris andWashington. The prosecutor had earlier suggested that the caseagainst Strauss-Kahn was weak, but he wasoverruled by investigating judges.

made it out in a truck.

On Tuesday, h owever, Ukrainian rocket-launching trucks and tanks were barreling down the resupply road toward the fighting, though the cease-fir e required both sides to withdraw heavy weaponry starting at midnight Monday. was not surrounded before Rebel shelling was hitting the cease-f ire took effectand points up and down the resupthat European monitors of ply road on Tuesday. A shell the truce should insist that the struck a gas pipeline beside separatist forces halt their of- the highway, and it burned fensiveand open a corridorto unabated in a gigantic twirl of evacuate the wounded. orange flame. The main rebel group, the Diplomacy has stalled for Donetsk People's Republic, now on whether the ceasehas said it will not observe the fire applies to Debaltseve and agreementin Debaltseve,say- whether European observers ing that it was encircled be- will be allowed access to monforethe cease-fire began and itor the truce there. that it is therefore now an inBy late Tuesday, a workternal region in their enclave, ing group of Russian and not a section of the front. Ukrainian military officers The only resupply road into had failed to agree on allowDebaltseve is mined, in range ing in the observers from the of rebel artillery and at times Organization for Security and held by pro-Russian infantry. Cooperation in Europe.

Afghan attaCk —FourTaliban suicide bombers disguisedin Afghan police uniforms stormed aheavily fortified provincial Police Headquarters in central Afghanistan onTuesday, killing at least 20 officers and wounding eight others. Thecoordinated attack in Logar province, about 40 miles south of Kabul, came as police officers werefiling into the dining hall for lunch. Becauseof their uniforms, the attackers werewaved past a preliminary checkpoint to aparking lot neartheentrance of the building, said DinMohammedDarwish, a spokesmanfor the provincial governor. One of the bombers then detonated his explosives, while the other threefought their waythrough additional checkpoints and concrete barriers, Darwish said.Although thepolice gunneddowntwo of the attackers, thefourth reachedthe dining hall, where heset off his vest packedwith explosives, claiming the lives of mostly lower-ranking officers. ATalibanspokesmanclaimed responsibility for the attack. PakiStall SIIICida hamh —A Taliban suicide bomber detonated his explosives in acongested neighborhood in Lahore, Pakistan, on Tuesday after failing to breach thesecurity cordon around the police headquarters. The bombkilled at least five and wounded at least 23, officials said. "The target was themain building of police headquarters," said Mushtaq Sukhera, the police chief of Punjab province. A breakaway faction of the Pakistani Taliban called Jamaat-ul-Ahrar claimed responsibility for the attack, which it described as retaliation for army operations in the country's tribal belt. "Today's suicide attack was made inrevenge for our fighters' death in tribal areas," a spokesman, Ehsanullah Ehsan,said, according to Reuters. Derailed traill —A train hauling millions of pounds of crude oil that derailed Mondaywas still burning Tuesday night as oil poured from the wreckage.Residents relied on bottled water that was trucked into town after the utility West Virginia AmericanWater, fearing that oil had beendumped into the KanawhaRiver, closed atreatment plant downstream, in Montgomery,on Monday.Thecompanyreopened the plant Tuesdayafternoon, saying tests had shown"nondetectable levels of the components of crude oil" in the river. Still, aerial photographs appeared to showoil in a nearby creek, andthe utility advised its 2,000 customers in thearea to boil water before using it.

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................541-383-0337 ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541 -383-0356

WATER CRISIS IN SAO PAULO

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WeStminSter dag ShOW — It took 20 minutes for David Merriam, the Best in Showjudge at the Westminster Kennel ClubShow, to give the dog-loving audience atMadison Square Garden abit of a shock. After a devilishly long route to making up his mind — he seemed to enjoy building the suspense — he made the surprising choice of Miss P,a15-inch beagle and thegrandniece of Uno, the first beagle to win the big show, in 2008. Merriam, a retired California trial judge, ignored the crowd's favorite, Swagger, anOld English sheepdog, and two other dogs whowere believed to be likelier winners than the nearly 4-year-old Miss P: aSkyeterrier named Charlie and aPortuguese water dog with the artistic sobriquet of Matisse.

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— From wire reports

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All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS y552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem CommunicationsInc., 1777SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR9770Z Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, PO.Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-preparednewscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

Mauricio Lima/The New York Times

The banks aredry in theAtibainha reservoir, part of the Cantareira water-supply system, which is amajor source for the SaoPaulo area inNazare Paulista, Brazil. Endowed with the Amazonandother mighty rivers, an array of hugedams and one-eighth of the world's fresh water, Brazil is sometimes called the "Saudi Arabia of water," so rich in the coveted resource that some liken it to living above asea of oil. But in Brazil's largest andwealthiest city, a more dystopian situation is unfolding: Thetaps are starting to run dry. As southeast Brazil grapples with its worst drought in nearly a century, a problem worsened bypolluted rivers, deforestation and population growth, the largest reservoir system serving SaoPaulo is near depletion. Many residents are already enduring sporadic

By David D. Kirkpatrick CAIRO

-

T he

mist-backed faction in Libya's civil conflict said Tuesday that it had carried out its first air-

Word of the bombing 'Itresday came as Egypt's foreign minister, Sameh Shoukry,

strike, targeting opponents in

visited the United Nations in

the town of Zintan in an esca-

New York, intending to push for a Security Council measure

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cy and the home of another Islamic State branch.

a more expanded form ofas-

The estimated jackpot is now $100 million.

in Zintan was unclear. But the

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lation of the violence tearing the country apart. to strengthen what he called the "legitimate government of The attack occurred two days after the Islamic State Libya." That government has extremist group released a moved to two towns near the video showing fighters for one border with Egypt because ofit sLibyan branches behead- the conflict has left its Islaing as many as 21 Egyptian mist-backed opponents, who Christians. call themselves Libya Dawn, in In retaliation, Egypt car- control of Tripoli. The Securiried out an airstrike Monday ty Council plans to meet today against a town in eastern Libya and discuss the Libya crisis. that is a hub of Islamist militanShoukry said, "We believe

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water cutoffs, some going dayswithout it. Officials say that drastic rationing may beneeded, with water service provided two days aweek. Behind closed doors, the views aregrimmer. In a meeting recorded secretly and leaked to the local news media, Paulo Massato, a senior official at Sao Paulo's water utility, said that residents might haveto be warned to flee because "there's not enoughwater, there won't be water to bathe, to clean" homes. "We're witnessing an unprecedentedwater crisis in one of the world's great industrial cities," said Marussia Whately, a water specialist at Instituto Socioambiental, a Brazilian environmental group. "Because of environmental degradation and political cowardice, millions of people in SaoPaulo are now wondering whenthe water will run out."

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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Ash Wednesday,Feb.18, the 49th day of 2015.There are 316 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS BuSh POliCieS —Jeb Bush is expected to shedsomelight on his foreign policy views in aspeechtodayattheChicago Council on Global Affairs.

HISTORY Highlight:In1885, Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" was published in the U.S. for the first time (after being published in Britain and Canada). In1546, Martin Luther, leader of the Protestant Reformation in Germany, died in Eisleben. In1564, artist Michelangelo Buonarroti died in Rome, weeks before his 89th birthday. In1861,Jefferson Davis was sworn in as provisional president of the Confederate States of America in Montgomery, Alabama. In1913,Mexican President Francisco I. Madero andVice President Jose Maria Pino Suarez werearrested during a military coup (both were shot to death on Feb.22). In1930, photographic evidence of Pluto (now designated a"dwarf planet") was discovered by ClydeTombaugh at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. In1943, Madame Chiang Kaishek, the wife of the Chinese leader, addressed members of theSenateandthentheHouse, becoming the first Chinesenational to address both houses of the U.S.Congress. In1953,"Bwana Devil," the movie that heralded the 3-D fad of the1950s, had its New

York opening. In1960,the 8th Winter OlympicGames wereopenedin Squaw Valley, California, by Vice President Richard Nixon. In1970, the "Chicago Seven" defendants were found not guilty of conspiring to incite riots at the 1968Democratic national convention; five were convicted of violating the Anti-Riot Act of 1968 (those convictions were later reversed). In1984, Italy and the Vatican signed an accord under which Roman Catholicism ceasedto be the state religion of Italy. In1995, the NAACPreplaced veteran chairman William Gibson with Myrlie Evers-Williams, the widow of slain civil rights leader MedgarEvers. In2001,auto racing star Dale Earnhardt Sr. died in acrash on

CUTTING EDGE

STUDY

om uerai e

CIBB IVI

The increasing availability of devices such as laser cutters and computer-controlled milling machines is making it easier than ever to have a career in making things.

Penguins can barely taste food By Rachel Feltman The Washington Post

By Nick Wingfield

They might look dassy in those little tuxedos, but

New York Times News Service

S EATTLE — T h e d e s k space next to PCs first wel-

it turns out that penguins

are pretty much tasteless. According to a new study in Current Biology, penguins might have lost three of the five basic tastes that humans (and other birds) hold dear. "Penguins eat fish, so you would guess that they need the umami receptor genes, but for some reason

comed paperprinters and later made room for 3-D printers

that could conjure any shape from spools of plastic. Now new devices, includ-

ing laser cutters and computer-controlled milling machines, are coming out of industrial workshops andgetting planted on desktops. The wave of new machines is bringing a new level of precision to people who make physical objects-

~e~

they don't have them," study

author Jianzhi "George" Zhang of the University of

z

from leather wallets to lamps

Michigan said in a state-

ment. Penguins in the study

to circuitboards— as a career orhobby.

lacked receptorsfor detecting umami flavors — that

•WI

It is part of a familiar theme

in tech. Computers help transform expensive, complicated

quintessential savory taste that makes foods full of

machines used by the few and

make them more accessible to the many. The creative typesdesigners, craftsmen, tinkerers — take it fromthere. "Your creativity is no lon-

ger limited by tools," said Dan Shapiro,co-founder and chief

tt

Matthew Ryan Williams/The New YorkTimes

Glowforge plans to sell a desktop laser cutter, capable of making items such as acustom wooden board for the popular Settlers of Catan game, for about $2,000. Whereas 3-D printers are slow and squirt out objects using plastic, desktop laser cutters and milling machines can carve three-dimen-

sional shapes out of wood, aluminum, leather and other materials.

executive of Glowforge, a startup in Seattle's industrial SoDo

ple, largely through so-called maker spaces, open facilities ing a laser cutter. aimed at designers, do-it-yourGlowforge operates out of a self enthusiasts and others, cavernous warehouse, next to which are sometimes housed in a marijuanaprocessingcenter, schools and sometimes privatewhere it has created a proto- ly owned. The machines have type of a desktop laser cutter developed a strong following that it plans to sell for around among jewelry-makers, print$2,000, much cheaper than makers and other artisans, comparable machines. Glow- many of whom havehung shinforge says the device, which gles out on craft sites such as Shapiro calls a 3-D laser print- Etsy. neighborhood that is develop-

er, will come with software that makes it much easier to

In fact,maker spaces re-

port that they are often overoperate than laser cutters usu- whelmed with demand for ally are. their laser cutters and see far Laser cutters have been less use of 3-D printers, which around for decades, used in are slow, more limited in the industrial manufacturing ap- materials they can work with plications to engrave or slice and sometimes fiendishly hard through almost any material to operate. you can think of, including Nadeem Mazen, chiefexsteel, plastic and wood. The ecutive of DangerAwesome, computer-controlled lasers in a maker space in Cambridge, them make precision cuts that

Massachusetts, says his facili-

would be almost unimaginable ty's three laser cutters do 20 to by hand, except by highly 30 times more business than skilled artisans.

his two 3-D printers.

"That laser cutter is going

Over the years, the machines have become a bit smaller and all the time," said Chris DiBomore available to ordinary peo- na, an engineering director at

Google,describing the maker Machine Co. in San Francisco, spaceathis daughter' s school. has created a device, the OtherLasercutters are so fast, he mill, that acts like a reverse 3-D said,itwas easy to produce an

printer.

object, tweak its design and create something new.

Rather than building up a 3-D object by creating layers

DiBona is an

i nvestor in

Glowforge, though Google is not. The startup has raised more than $1 million. Shapiro, who used to work at Google and Microsoft, says

of material, as a 3-D printer

does, the Othermill uses spinning bits to cut away at blocks

of, for example, wood, metal or plastic. The machine, which costs $2,199, weighs about 16 he is determined to make lapounds, so it can be carted ser cutters much more acces- around in a car. It's difficult t o i m a g i ne sible. Good ones typically cost around $10,000, though it's desktop manufacturing tools possible to find cheaper laser becoming true mass-market cutters online from China. products, especially when they Shapiro says they lack ade- are still relatively expensive. quate cutting power and safety How many people will really features. want to buy them to make their To cut costs, Glowforge has own tote bags and iPhone casfound ways to substitute so- es when it's so convenient to phisticated software for expen- shop for them'? sive hardware components. A Shapiro says he believes camera inside the laser-cutting there are plenty of people hunchamber and image processing gry to make more of the things in the cloud will take the place in their lives but who simply of a part called a motion plan- lack the tools. ner that normally determines how the laser cuts material.

Another startup, the Other

MSG so delicious — which you would think would be important for enjoying fish. In fact, penguins lacked receptors for all tastes except salty and sour. "These find1Ilgs are surprIslllg and puz-

zling, and we do not have a good explanation for them," Zhang said. "But we have a few ideas." It's not unusual for birds

to lack taste receptors for sweet foods, but penguins might be unique in their inability to taste bitter and umami flavors.

This might be because of the chilly environment from which all penguins once hailed. The receptors for the

three missing tastes don't work very well in the cold, so it's possible that penguins never really had much use for them inthe firstplace.

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"It's like we're all eating fast

food," he said, "and we've forgotten how to cook."

the last lap at the Daytona 500;

he was49. Ten years ago:Explosions tore through Baghdadand anearby city on the eve ofShiite Muslims' holiest day, killing three dozen people. Five years ago:In Austin, Texas, software engineer A. Joseph Stack III crashed his single-engine plane into a building containing IRSoffices, killing one person besides himself. President Barack Obama personally welcomed the Dalai Lama to the White

House but kept the get-together off camera andlow keyin an attempt to avoid inflaming tensions with China. One year ago:Defiant protesters shouted "Glory to Ukraine!" as burning tents lit up the night sky after thousands of riot police moved against the sprawling protest camp in the center of Kiev. Megan Rice, an84-year-old nun, was sentenced in Knoxville, Tennessee, to nearly three years in prison for breaking into a nuclear weaponscomplex and defacing a bunker holding bomb-grade uranium, a demonstration that exposed serious security flaws at the Y-12 National Security Complex in OakRidge.

BIRTHDAYS Actor George Kennedy is 90. Author Toni Morrison is 84. Singer YokoOno is82. Actress Cybill Shepherd is 65. Actor John Travolta is 61.Game show host VannaWhite is 58. Actor Matt Dillon is 51. Rapper Dr. Dre is 50. Actress Molly Ringwald is 47.Actor Ike Barinholtz is 38. Rock-singer musician Regina Spektor is 35. — From wire reports

DID YOU HEAR?

com ainin onine •

Momhasalwaysbeensopatient,butnow when I askherquestions she gets angry.

ma esus ee so oo By Rachel Feltman The Washington Post

This week I did some really cathartic Twitter ranting. It

was absolutely necessary. "She died as she lived: hat-

ing dc and glaring at subway pole leaners." "Wow look at this 'thin layer

of snow' it's totally reasonable that this has shut the whole

We like to feel supported, and it's in

our nature to enjoy feeling as tf we belong to a unified group, even tf anger ts the only thing we have in common.

city down." But why did complaining about the "snowstorm" (ugh) that kept me from getting ple averting their eyes when home make me feel so much a pregnant woman comes better? Luckily, this week's on and looks for a seat, peoepisode of the NPR podcast ple trimming their nails on a "Invisibilia" has an answer for packed train, and so on. me. But when Pete started tak"Invisibilia" focuses on the ing picturesof the offenders unseen forces that shape our and posting them to an anonlives, and this week's episode ymous account called N train was all about the computers gossip, he felt better. "It was like he had discovthat are changing our brains. One guest hit pretty close ered — thanks to the tiny comto home for me as I trudged puter in his pocket — a kind through the wintry sludge: of release valve for his anger," the founder of a Twitter ac- Miller said. count dedicated to shaming According to University of bad behavior on the New York Wisconsin psychologist Ryan subway. Martin, the key to this ther"It makes my blood pres- apeuticrelease is a sense of sure go right through the validation. In plain terms, we roof," the angry tweeter (who like feeling that the things that went by "Pete") told hosts Alix make us upset are considered Spiegel and Lulu Miller of the upsetting by other people, as frequentmicroaggressions he well. We like to feel supported, had witnessed. You know the and it's in our nature to enjoy kind: guys sitting with their feeling as if we belong to a legs spread too wide, peo- unified group, even if anger

is the only thing we have in common. Unlike complaining oneon-one to a friend, a rant on Facebook or Twitter will re-

sult in an instant amassing of such sentiments — if you have

enough followers, anyway. "When we get angry, our hypothalamus kicks in. We start to sweat. Our heart rate

increases," Martin told Miller and Spiegel. "People get, you know, literally red in the face." Being angry makes us physically uncomfortable, so re-

lieving that anger is physically palpable, too. And nothing does the trick quite like seeing that a dozen of your most distant friends think you're real-

ly, really right to be angry. Unfortunately, rants aren't j us t

Inte r n et h a r mless

therapy. This disconnected ranting can make you a little meaner than you would be in

real life (something Pete found out the hard way as his Twit-

ter following grew). And if you lean too hard into that online

communityyou've found,you might end up ignoring evidence that your group's rants are factually unsound. But when the weather mess-

es with your commute'? I say that's a great reason to hit that Twitter release valve and

enjoy the sweet psychological relief.

Call Us with questions about aging and Alzheimer's.

mr o z .

1-855-ORE-ADRC ABRt; HelpForAlz.org

Aging and Disability ResourceConnection ofoREGON

OREGON DEPARTMENT OFHUMAN SERVICES PROGRAM


A4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

a eno nee e Oi'S 0

- smo in

i

By Sabrina Tavernise New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Doctors

0 Woi'

museum said in a statement

announcing that it would ac-

Tuesday. Three paintings, a Matisse, a Liebermann and a Spitzweg, have been identified as having been looted from Jewish fami-

it. But a study has found that

percent who took the placebo. The study did not follow patients long term, so it was un-

clear whether those who quit smoking had permanently rid themselves of the habit.

tors to have their patients

set a precise quit date before Karsten Moran /The New YorkTimes prescribing medicine such "Sometimes serious addiction needs to be coaxed down the as Chantix, the pills used to stairs one at a time, not thrown off the top floor," a research treat nicotine addiction that were examined in the study.

The idea was that such medi-

director said, and a study has backed him up. Stop-smoking pills were shown effective in smokers who desired to quit but hadn't set a definite date to give up the habit.

cine should not be prescribed for someone who is not seri-

David Abrams, executive

tobacco studies at Universi-

director ofthe Schroeder In- ty College London, who was stitute for Tobacco Research among the study's authors. and Policy Studies, said stud- If such studies were funded ies of nicotine replacement by the government, which therapy, such as patches and sustains a lot of academic regum, had long shown that search, taxpayers would bear attempts to quit gradually the burden for what the comover time are a good way to pany would eventually profit change lifetime habits. The from, he said. current study appears to Still, some researchers not show the same for pills, he involved in the study said the said. topicrequired more work. "Sometimes serious ad- "The approach taken here diction needs to be coaxed is a very reasonable one that down the stairs one at a time, appears to have been sucnot thrown off the top floor," cessful," said Gary Giovino, a said Abrams, who was not in-

professor of health behavior

Obama

tal Protection Agency's right

Continued from A1

Air Act to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from power plants. "The Supreme Court's docket in recent terms looks a

It's a daunting prospect for a president in the final two

years of his tenure who believes he is on the path to leav-

ing a lasting impact on intractable and politically perilous issues, despite an often bitter

to use a provision of the Clean

House vowed to quickly appeal Hanen's ruling. In the meantime, Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson

said Tuesday that his agency would postpone plans to begin accepting applications for the program, which would expand a 2012 program that defers deportations of immi-

grants who came to the United States illegally as children. (The 700,000 people who have already benefited from that program will not be affected by Hanen's ruling.) A second, much larger program designed to protect from deportation the undocument-

ed parents of U.S. citizens and permanent legal residents was not scheduled to begin ac-

cepting applications until late May, and its future remains uncertain.

On health care, the Supreme Court will hear arguments next month in King v.

Burwell, a case that calls into question whether millions of

people who have bought coverage on the federal health e xchanges are e ntitled t o

subsidies. In April, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of

Columbia Circuit, one rung below the Supreme Court, will hear threeconsolidated cases

challenging the Environmen-

ings from one study do not make a fact.We need more

would like to return them to the that a dispute over a will was descendants of their rightful preventing it from taking pos- owners, but that it is legallypresession of the works. vented from doing so until the Matthias Frehner, the direc-

six months and concluded that the more gradual treat-

nounced in November thatthey

the deceased, induding cousins, unless a will is left stating

would accept the 1,600 works

otherwise. Gurlitt had no chil-

left to them by Cornelius Gurlitt, the dealer's son, who died in

dren but did have several cousins, including Werner.

m ent could be effective for as

many as 14 million American smokers. ing will mean for the clinical guidelines, which were set most recently in 2008 by a

panel of experts convened by the Public Health Service, ment of Health and Human

makes the product." Services. The study's authors Smoking is th e l argest said the findings had the pocause of preventable death tential to change practice. "It's a paradigm shift bein the United States, killing more than 480,000 Americans cause instead of only giving a year. The smoking rate has the medication to patients dedined substantially since who have set a q uit d ate, the 1960s, but the pace of de- you are potentially giving cline has slowed in r ecent it to every smoker," said Dr. years, and health experts are Jon Ebbert, one of the autrying to figure out how to get thors,who isa professor of more smokers to quit. medicine at the Mayo Clinic About 1,500 patients at 61 College of Medicine in Minclinics in the United States nesota. "It opens the door to and abroad participated in a much larger population of the study. None were willing smokers that we can treat." to quit immediately, but all Most surprising, he said, said they wanted to smoke

lies. The Kunstmuseum said it

expressed frustration Tuesday

tor of the Kunstmuseum Bern

studies, funded by someone which is part of the Departother than the company that

cept the gift of an art collection amassed by a Nazi-era dealer, including pieces known to have been looted from Jewish families, the Kunstmuseum Bern

The study cited a survey of

was the fact that the rates of quitting for smokers in this study who received the treatment and did not want to quit right away were about the

less and to quit for good within three months. They were randomly assigned to two groups. One got Chantix, the brand name of the drug same as those in previous v arenicline, which i s t a k - studies of patients who wanten twice a day by mouth as ed to quit abruptly.

dispute over the will has been resolved.

Under German law, an estate

in Switzerland, and Christoph

Schaublin, president of the board of directors, had an-

passes directly to a relative of

May at81.

The works were found in But hoursbefore the muse- Gurlitt's M unich a p artment um made that announcement during a routine tax investiin Berlin, Uta Werner, a cousin gation in 2012. For months the of Gurlitt's, filed a petition with find was kept secret, coming to

a Munich court calling his will light only after a German jourinto question and challenging nalist reported on their existhe museum's right to the in- tence. A task force of art histoheritance. Since then, the col- rians paid by the German govlection, which indudes fine oil ernment has been examining paintings by Renoir, Cezanne, their provenance and was to Monet, Manet,Gauguin and work together with the KunstPissarro, has been in legal museum to sort out ownership. limbo. The museum has also set up "The Board of Trustees re- a research team to help darify grets this delay, in particular the history of the works, as well because it will impede the set- as of its own permanent collectlement of restitution cases that tion, once it is able to take poshave already been clarified and session of them.

Brown

The lawyers also said Pinnell's sentence was far harsh-

Continued from A1

er than that of his co-defen-

Brown, like Kitzhaber, is a Democrat.

dant, who was released in 2011after26yearsin prison.

Kitzhaber's fiancee, Cyl-

Pinnell and D onald Cor-

Democratic appointees now Congress have made clear outnumber Republican ones that the federal government

nell were convicted of the of using her r elationship 1985 killing of John Ruffner, w ith the g overnor to l a n d who was tied up and died of work for her consulting firm. suffocation. "Mark's case is aperfect State and federal authorities have opened investigations. example of how uneven and Kitzhaber has denied wrong- arbitrary the death penaldoing on both of their parts. ty can be, and underscores With time r unning short the governor's longstanding on Kitzhaber's term, lawyers concerns about such an irrefor a death row inmate re- versible penalty," the lawyers

there by 7 to 4.

newed a request for clemen-

can set priorities in enforc-

Jeffrey Holmstead, a part- ing our immigration laws ner at the law firm Bracewell — which is exactly what the & Guiliani wh o

r epresents president did," White House

several electric utilities, said press secretary Josh Earnest lot like an outline for a stump Democrats shouldn't be so sald. speech for a 2016 (presiden- confident, especially since the Hanen based his temporary tial) candidate. Immigration, more conservativeSupreme injunction on his belief that check. Climate, check. Health Court will have the final say in the administration, in making care, check," Doug Kendall, many of these cases. such a broad change to what president of the ConstitutionOn immigration, Demo- current law " mandates," at al Accountability Center, said crats and Republicans scram- the very least did not comply in an email. "The Court is de- bled 'Iliesday to d etermine with the elaborate rule-makciding just about every major how Hanen's ruling would ing process of the Admin-

relationship with Congress. Now, Obama and his Republican antagonists in Congress face the uncertainty of having their disputes mediated by the third branch of government.In an appearance in question that divides Amerithe Oval Office on Tuesday, cans along ideological lines." Obama said he was confident In addition to the ongoing that he would prevail, telling immigration suit from the 26 reporters: "The law is on our states — 24 of which are led side, and history is on our by GOP governors — House side." Republicans are considering "This is not the first time filing their own suit against where a lower court judge has the administration over its imblocked somethingor attempt- migration actions. "I guess we're getting used ed to block something that ultimately is going to be lawful," to getting sued," former White he added, "and I'm confident House senior counselor John that it is well within my au- Podesta quipped in an interthority" to execute this policy. view last week, just before he The i mmigration f i ght stepped down from his West will likely head next to the Wing role. U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit as the White

at the State University of New York, Buffalo. "But the find-

COPENHAGEN, Denmark

smokers that found about a third of the 42 million smokers in the United States wanted to quit in the next one to

It is unclear what the find-

ous about quitting. In some volved in the study. cases, insurance plans would The study was funded by not pay for the pills if no quit Pfizer, the drug company date had been set. that makes Chantix, a treatBut in a study published ment that costs about $250 in JAMA o n T u esday, re- a month. Federal regulators searchers found that even for require companies to conpatients who wanted to stop duct studies proving the efsmoking eventually, the pills fectiveness of such therapies were effective, opening the and monitor them c losely. way to a much larger popula- The practice is common for tion of patients whom doctors smoking cessation therapies, could potentially treat. said Robert West, director of

um Bern, but the circumstances are beyond its control," the

— Nearly three months after

within six months of starting the pills, compared with 6

ally quitting. Clinical practice guidelines have long advised doc-

endorsed by the Kunstmuse-

New York Times News Service

Almost a third of the pa-

tients who got the drug quit

provetheirchances ofeventu-

By Meiissa Eddy a pill; the other group got a placebo.

typically wait until smokers are ready to quit before prescribing pills to help them do even for those who are not ready to stop smoking immediately, medicine taken over time can substantially im-

Art of Nazi-eradealer in limbo duringdispute

affect a showdown over GOP

demands to make funding for the Department of Homeland Security, which expires next week, contingent on halting Obama's "deferred action" program. The White House has threatened to veto any legislation if it contains language

wrote in a notice to the media.

cy. The lawyers from the fedKitzhaber issued a moratoeralpublic defender's office rium on the death penalty in said Mark Pinnell, 66, has 2011, saying he believes the been weakened by chronic death penalty is immoral and obstructive pulmonary dis- applied inconsistently. Death ease and relies on an inmate penalty opponents are urghelper, a wheelchair, an oxy- ing him to commute the death gen machine and a variety of sentences of all death row inmedications. m atesbeforeheleaves office.

istrative Procedure Act, the nearly 70-year-old stature that

Roundabout

roundabout at Third Street,

governs how federal agencies implement regulations — including its 90-day notices and comment periods. He said the case should

Continued from A1 The roundabout has two

Center. Similar to the Reed Market and SE 15th Street

lanes for traffic heading north

roundabout, it has two lanes

o n 15th Street, which w i l l

with

go forward rather than be thrown out, as the administra-

p r esident's tion has urged. immigration programs. Such Immigration overturning th e

a veto could lead to a partial

via Hayes, has been accused

adv o c ates

charged that Hanen had narrowly "cherry-picked" his rulDHS shutdown. Obama issued his immigra- ing and said they would urge tion orders shortly after the immigrants to keep preparing midterm elections in Novem- their applications. "Our message to our member, saying he could no longer wait on Congress to reform bers and to families who are Affordable Care Act border control laws that have preparingfor deferred action The pending case over the left more than 11 million ille- is: Don't panic. Keep preAffordable Care Act — a law gal immigrants in limbo. An paring," said Debbie Smith, passed in 2010 — shows how effort to pass a comprehensive associategeneral counsel of in the never-ending political immigration reform bill failed the Service Employees Interfight between the parties, even last summer. national Union, which filed a the passage of major legislaBut in his lengthy memo- legal brief in support of the adtion through Congress does randum opinion, Hanen ruled ministration. "We think this is not constitute a permanent that no law gave the adminis- a timeout, a bump in the road." victory, said Jonathan Ober- tration the power "to give 4.3 If opponentsof the preslander, a professor of health million removable aliens what ident's health care, climate policy at the University of the Department of H o me- and immigration policies North Carolina, Chapel Hill. land Security itself labels as prevail in court, it is unclear "It's really incredible they 'legal presence.' In fact, the what Republicans would proattained the unattainable, and law mandates that these ille- pose as replacements. Three now the question is whether gally present individuals be House panels have just begun they can keep it," Oberlander removed." working on alternatives to the said of Democrats. Hanen's decision was a ma- Affordable Care Act, but ReOne seniorSenate Dem- jor, if temporary, defeat for the publicans remain opposed to ocratic aide, who asked for administration, which argued mandatory limits on carbon anonymity in order to dis- that the case should be thrown from power plants and have cuss party strategy, said one out because it was "based on not drafted a comprehensive immigration bill of their own. of thereasons Senate leaders rhetoric, not law." "They're tearing stuff down "This ruling underscores pushed so hard last Congress to seat Obama's nominees what the president has al- without trying to offer any on the D.C. Circuit was beready acknowledged publicly alternative if this thing crashcause "having judges who 22 times: He doesn't have the es," said Simon Rosenberg, may be more sympathetic to authority to take the kinds of founder of N DN , a l i b eral the administration's view is actionshe once referred to as think tank. The administranot an insignificant way of 'ignoring the law' and 'unwise tion, he added, is "confident safeguarding against" legal and unfair,' " Senate Majori- the laws are behind them, but reversals. ty Leader Mitch McConnell, they are aware this is out of Hanen, a George W. Bush R-Ky., said Tuesday. their hands. We don't know appointee, has been critical of The WhiteHouse has said what will happen.... There's a Obama's immigration policies the president's actions were level of chaos that could affect in other cases. based onthe practiceof"pros- the health care system and Last Congress, the Senate ecutorial discretion," which the entire functioning of DHS. confirmed four of O bama's allows law enforcement agen- (Republicans) are not taking nominees to the D .C. Circies with limited resources to responsibility for the chaos they're creating. If they win, cuit, which hears many chal- set priorities. "The Supreme Court and what are they going to do?" lenges to executive actions:

north of the Les Schwab Tire

d e d icated r i g ht-turn

help prevent traffic backlogs pockets. created by trains crossing Temporary stripinghas been Reed Market Road west of the

roundabout, Oster said. When in doubt, Oster said, d rivers s hould

painted inside the roundabout and at entry and exit points. It

will be permanently striped in

t r ea t t h i s the spring, Oster said.

roundabout like a single-lane roundabout and yield to vehicles already inside it. Using a turn signal when leaving a roundabout helps

— Reporter: 541-383-0354, jrockow@bendbulletin.com

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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Robots Continued fromA1 Which is to say, robots, as a

political issue, could be ripening in time to snag a lead role in the economic debate of this

campargn. A new paper from econo-

"We think technology should be considered the greatest gift we have. Wedon't see it as the villain here, but what we keep in mind

is, historically and today, technology doesn't necessarily make society better or worse. It can go either way. It's in our hands." — Erik Brynjolfsson, MIT professor

mists at the Hamilton Project at the Brookings Institution

sums up the tension nicely: "As rapidly advancing computer power and automation technology change the nature of work and the future of the economy,"

Melissa Kearney, Brad Hershbein and David Boddy write, "our nation will face new and

pressingchallenges about how to educate more people for the jobs of the future, how to foster

creation of high-paying jobs and how to support those who

struggle economically during the transition." H amilton will h ost a f o -

rum on the topic Thursday in Washington, featuring a parade of high-profile economists including Larry Summers of Harvard, Laura Tyson of the University of California, Berkeley, David Autor of MIT and John Haltiwanger of the University of Maryland. It will also include the authors

of a best-selling book on the subject, "The Second Machine

Age" — MIT professors Erik Brynjolfsson and A n drew McAfee. In an interview last week,

Brynjolfsson and M c Afee called technology the "biggest single force" behind the eco-

Carbon bill Continued from A1 The Legislature's minority party is trying to tie the bill directly to the state and feder-

al investigations into outgoing Gov. John Kitzhaber and his

fiancee, Cylvia Hayes. The Republicans are threatening to hold up a

t r ansportation

funding bill that both sides agreeisdesperately needed if the emissions bill passes out of

the House. A mong a group leading the front against Senate Bill 324

are House Republican Leader

Netanyahu's 24,000 takeout bill

is causingquite ascandal in Israel By William Booth The Washington Post

J ERUSALEM —

Af t er

nomic trends of the last decade,

free-tradedebates:that work-

threeterms and nine years

which saw historically weak job creation and declining real

ers, and politicians, should

with hi m a s t h eir p r i me minister, Israelis know a lot

make peace with the idea that

some good jobs will go away They said they expect the when technology rendersthem changes over the next decade obsolete. "What I hope doesn't hapto be bigger — but not necessarily worse — for the middle pen," McAfee said, "is that this class. turns into a conversation about "We think t e chnology who can bash technology and shouldbe considered the great- try to m aintain the m iddle est gift we have," Brynjolfsson dass and preserve the econosaid. "We don't see it as the vil- my in amber." lain here, but what we keep in T he problem with that i s mind is, historically and today, that a lot of workers who lost technology doesn't necessarily jobs from automation (or outmake society better or worse. sourcing, for that matter) in It can go either way. It's in our the last decade are still waiting hands." for better jobs to come along. So how could you harness What to do with those workers, j ob-killing t echnology f or particularly older ones, is one good? The two suggest sev- of the most vexing questions eral "basic toolkit" policies, policymakers face. Improved which, it will not surprise you, skill training could be part of sound like things candidates the solution, Brynjolfsson and often praise but rarely make McAfee say. big progress on, including imBut they also suggest, longer proved education, breaking term, that as countries get richdown barriers to creating new er, their safety nets grow. The businesses, investing more in implication is, maybe America infrastruct ure and basic re- will eventually need a bigger search and attracting more one. high-skilled immigrants. That sounds like a whole They also raise an idea that other campaign fight, entirely. might remind you of the big Abigone. household median i ncomes.

SenateBill 324 Senate Bill324, which passed theSenate17-13 onTuesday, would allow the state to require fuel suppliers to decreasecarbon Intensity for most fuel sold in Oregon by10 percent in adecade. Sponsors:Sen. LeeBeyer, D-Eugene;Sen. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland; Sen. SaraGelser, D-Corvallis Background:Thestandards are modeled on those in California, which has put its program in placeand has studied some of the costs. Republicans saythe price of a gallon of gas would rise under the program, though researchers say it's difficult to predict by how much. Democrats are working to pass the bill early in the 2015 session. What's next:Movesto HouseEnergyandEnvironmentCommittee Online:Read the bill online at http://bit.ly/1CGllf7

Mike McLane, of Powell Butte,

and Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend. "There are investigations move quickly in the begin- lative Revenue Office said going on into the clean fuels ning weeks of the legislative there are complexities, such program, who influenced it. session. as changes in technology and I do think that legislation has House Speaker Tina Kotek, future consumer demand, to be put on hold," McLane told D-Portland, said despite the that make forecasting costs reporters Friday. "For good- Republicans' threats, the bill difficult. ness' sakes, if it led to the res- will move swiftly through "The level of the price inignation of our governor, why the House and onto incoming creases are not known to a are the Democrats moving so Gov. Kate Brown's desk. degree that allows for evalu"It will move over here for ation and forecasting of the quickly to pass it?" Knopp on the floor Tues- consideration in Energy and price elasticity or impacts on day handed out a copy of the Environment Committee, and demand," state economist subpoena from U.S. Attorney then hopefully get on our floor Mazen Malik wrote in an estiAmanda Marshall that asks as soon as possible," Kotek mate this month. 11 state agencies and offices said Monday. Democrats point out that for every document related to Republicans seem to have the idea predates Kitzhaber's the low-carbonfuelstandards, channeled their c o llective third term and Hayes' work clean energy and coal. energy into defeating the shaping public policy. "We don't know what the low-carbon bill rather than "The opposition to it in conout-of-state corporations (are) the other two, which moved necting it to the governor is that will benefit from this bill, quickly through the House really manufactured by the we don't know who they are, with relatively little fanfare. opposition (and) the big petrow e don't k now w h o o w n s Other Republicans on Tues- leum folks who don't want this those out-of-state corpora- day asked that the Legislature bill to pass," Kotek said. tions," Knopp said before vot- send the clean fuels question McLane said if the bill passing against the bill. "But we to voters in the form of a ballot es the House, Republicans will do know that there's been a lot measure. That motion failed tie up a transportation bill that said about this." along party lines. Another probably would raise the gas Sen. Be t s y Joh n s on, motion by Senate Republican tax for short-term cash to pay D-Scappoose, joined 12 Re- Leader Ted Ferrioli, R-John for roads and bridges. "We'realso going to see a publicans who voted against Day, also failed, 18-12. the bill after four hours of The Department of Envi- transportation package that debate. ronmental Quality estimates we desperately need go byeD emocrats said t h e b i l l the program could raise the bye. And I don't want that to would force investment into cost of a gallon of gas between happen," McLane said. clean-energy jobs while help- 4 cents and 19 cents by 2025. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, ing cut emissions. But the nonpartisan Legistanderson@bendbulletin.com

;"5 ~ rgj

about Benjamin Netanyahu and his first lady, Sara. Now

they also know how much the couple spend on hair and makeup, maid service and swimming pool water. On Tuesday, the Israeli State Comptroller released

an eagerly awaited report condemning the Netanyahus for "excessive spending" Rina Castelnuovo/The New York Times filephoto at both the prime minister's Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, are official residence at 2 Bal- under scrutiny after an eagerly anticipated report condemned the fourStreetin Jerusalem and couple for "excessive spending" and revealed that they hadspent the couple's private beach- about $24,000 on takeout in 2011. front villa in Caesarea. Want to know how much

the Netanyahus billed the Israeli taxpayer for takeout food in 2011? It was 92,781

described by the news media drapes! as "severe," "dramatic" and As they tour the residence, "embarrassing." Israeli televi- Sara Netanyahu has to yank

shekels, or about $24,000, sion went live with the release open stuck doors. She apol" even though t here w a s of the report — followed five ogizes for the dust and an a chef in the residence," minutes later by rebuttals from arrangement of wilting flowthe c o mptroller n o t ed the prime minister's party. ers on display three weeks disapprovingly. Among the r evelations: aftershe received them from The comptroller's office From 2009 to 20013, average the visiting Japanese prime warned of more investiga- monthly cleaning expenses at minister. tions in the offing — into the chez Netanyahu were 75,400 The piecede resistance of issue of improper bottle re- shekels, or about $20,000. "We the tour is the kitchen, which, cycling by the Netanyahus, see this as much too high," depending whether you are for one. Apparently, the cou- Shapira opined, though he did an averageIsraelivoteror an ple pocketed $1,000 in cash not say what it should cost to average Israeli interior decorefunds paid by stores when clean two homes frequently rator, is either a bit frumpy ... staff returned drink bottles used for official entertaining. or adump. "I am shocked that this is for deposit. The bottles were Also: The Netanyahus hire purchased by the state, the electricians on the weekends, your kitchen!" Galamin dereport noted, and so the re- and even on high holy days clares. He says it reminds funds should have been re- such as Yom Kippur, which him of "a 1960s public health turned to the treasury. costs a fortune. c linic" o r "a Romanian There may also be more to Netanyahu's Likud Party orphanage." come about patio furniture. issued a statement stressing Quick-eyed Israeli reportAccording to the report, there is "absolutely no indi- ers noticed right away that the some teak tables and chairs cation of any assault on the kitchen presented in the video were suspici ously moved public's integrity and certainly is not the Netanyahus' only from the patio at the official no indication of any criminal kitchen. It is the staff kitchen, residence to the patio at the transgressions." they said, the working galley private residence — and On the prime minister's be- where chefs whip up dinner then moved back again. half, Likud blamed an "embit- for guests. There is a modern, The scandal — and that tered former public employee unrevealed kitchen for the is what Israeli commenta- ... Ieading a campaign of slan- couple's use on the second tors are calling it — comes der and defamation" and said floor. one month before March 17 the Israeli news media's "focus This might not have been national elections. Pollsters on irrelevant minutiae" was the ideal optic for the Netanyapredict a tight race between designed to orchestrate a Net- hus, and especially for SaraNetanyahu and his main anyahu defeat. already a controversial figure challenger, Labor Party Yet part of the frenzy is Net- in Israel, lampooned by TV leader Isaac Herzog, whose anyahu's own doing. parody shows as a Jewish Maspending on p izza and In a preemptive strike be- rie Antoinette. grooming are not known. forethe release ofthe report, Her former housekeepers The Netanyahu family's the Netanyahus had the Is- (who are suing the couple) use of state funds between raeli interior designer Moshik have alleged in affidavits that 2009 and 2013 could raise Galamin over to film a walk- she berated them for buying criminal issues, and it cer- through of the official resi- milk in a bag, versus a carton, tainly violates ethical stan- dence, to show the people the and that there were, accorddards, State Comptroller Jo- couple do not live in the lap of ing to the newspaper Haaretz, seph Shapira said Tuesday. luxury but rather must endure "shouting, attacks and unceasMatters are now before the tired carpets, dusty lamps and ing pressure, including conattorney general. the kitchen from hell. flicting instructions." A 15-minute episode was One might think Israelis The Netanyahus called the would be more interested in released via social media on accusations "slanders and candidate positions regard- Sunday by the decorator with lies." ingthreats posed by enemies full participation from the NeTime will tell whether the Iran, Hezbollah and Hamas. tanyahusandtheirpeople. report has an impact. Surveys One would be wrong. It is high camp. When Gal- here suggest Netanyahu is not The 2015 campaign has amin, dressed all in black, verypopular as apersonbut is been notable more for its isn't gushing, he is holding his respected as a prime minister, goofy, spoofy political ads hands to his cheeks in mock even if many Israelis tell pollthan substantive debate (and shriek. Quelle horreur! Dingy sters they are tired of him. speaking of which, there's been no candidate debate). See us for retractable In his front-page commenawnings, exterior solar tary Tuesday in the Israeli daily newspaper Maariv, the screens, shade structures. Sun ehen you wantit, columnist Ben Caspit got the national mood just right shade when you needit. when he a cknowledged, "It is embarrassing even to SH

write about this. But it can't be helped, this is what there is, and it's ours."

The press is going bananas. Leaked copies of the report w er e a l t ernatively

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A6

TH E BULLETINe WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

LOOKING AHEAD: CUBA

i e successor 0 BS FO ee Sci OW FO I e "We've lived many years with a dynasty," said Katrina

By Tracy Wilkinson Los Angeles Times

HAVANA — The man ex-

Morejon, a health worker in

'i l »

pected to run Cuba after Raul her 20s from Havana. "People Castro steps down is nearly are tired of what's happening." 30 years the president's juL eaders of t h e a r my, of nior and is regularly on Face- which Raul Castro is still the book in this Internet-starved supreme commander, control country. several segments of the econHe is considered personable omy and will have to be carebut has been careful to keep a fully cultivated if Diaz-Canel low political profile. is to work well with them. DiMiguel Diaz-Canel's ap- az-Canel was born more than pointment as first vice pres- a year after the Cuban Revoluident is t h e

teaches in New York. "A good

'|t

signal to send to the world

now that things are changing would be to give him a more prominent role."

evl

His real distinction, people say, has been in social media and computertechnology, an area where Cuba lags noto-

A

riously behind the rest of the world. Few Cubans have open access to the Internet, but Diaz-Canel knows it s i m por-

tance to any future growth in business, trade, tourism and

m ost c oncrete tion led by the Castro brothers

signal that a g enerational ousted dictator Fulgencio Bachange of leadership might be tista in 1959. in the works in Cuba, matchRaul Castro is expected in ing a demographic shift that the final years of his govern-

education, analysts say. "The development of infor-

makes the island's population

to development problems" in

one of the youngest in the hemisphere. C astro, 83,

p l ucked D i -

Latin A m erica, D i az-Canel said in th e M exico speech.

economy, allowing a measure of free enterprise and lifting some restrictions on trade and

to his position in 2013 as he

relations with the United States

announcedthathe planned to

change will be the big test. The goals stated by Cuba

"But the digital gap is also a reality among our countries,

travel. Whether it is enough as

Diaz-Canel up as heir appar- and the U.S.after decades of ent, especially after other pos- animosity include elevating siblecandidates were dumped diplomatic representations in when they were secretly re- both countries to full embascorded talking about their sies rather than the limited "inambitions. terests sections." That is still a no-no, and Di-

to the search for new solutions

ment to continue with slow but important reforms in the

az-Canel from relative obscurity and appointed him leave office in 2018. That set

mation technology is essential

Handling the new relation-

az-Canelhas takenpains not to ship will put pressure on whosteal the limelight from Castro everispresident ofCuba.Casor thepresident' s 88-year-old tro has made it clear that better brother, Fidel, the revolution- diplomatic ties with Washingary commander and former ton should not change Cuba's president who has not been domestic, political or economic seen in public in months. system, nor its intolerance of The circumstances mean Di- dissent. az-Canelhas not made much A t 54, Diaz-Canel is t h e of a mark. On an island where freshest face in the highest about 80 percent of the popula- echelons of Cuban power. He tion has never known a presi- recognizes the importance of dent who wasn't named Cas- Cuba joining the Internet age, tro, many Cubans are strug- somewhat against the official gling to figure out who he is. grain, people who know him Many among Cuba's young- say. er generation agree that whoA 1982 graduate of the Marever comes next has a hercu- t a Abreu University of L a s lean task to court the powerful Villas with an electrical engimilitary, restructure the econ- neering degree, Diaz-Canel omy and guide the normaliza- essentially paid his dues, puttion process with the United ting hard, careful work ahead

and between our c ountries Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times via TNS

On the anniversary of the birth of Cuban national hero Jose Marti, ceremonies are held throughout Havana on Jan. 28 in Cuba. Largely absent from public view is Miguel Diaz-Canel, likely successor to President Raul Castro. comer on the Cuban political

landscape. His work on behalf of the state has included teaching at

the university level, running local governments, serving as a minister of education and holding regional Communist Party leadership posts. He was assigned management of what Cuban officials consider major areasof accomplishment

friendly nations such as Vene-

Raul twice more. Communist-controlled me-

dia on the island have started sports and biotechnology. He to run fairly regular articles

by the revolution: education,

also did a stint in Nicaragua,

December.

Princeton receivesits biggest gift, a 300M rare-volumecollection By Susan Snyder

The collection is the only one outside of Europe

The Philadelphia rnquirer

to include all four of the first Bibles, according Monday announced its largest gift in history: a rare book to the university: The 1455 Gutenberg Bible, on

and manuscript collection-

the 1460 Bible (or Mentelin Bible), the 36-line

including the first six printed editions of the Bible — valued at nearly $300 million. The 2,500-volume collection, which includes an origi-

1461 Bible and the 1462 Bible.... An early

nal printing of the Declaration

detente with the U.S. They are

about Diaz-Canel's activities:

must overcome if we want to eliminate social and economic

inequalities." Diaz-Canel is also often praised as a hands-on problem solver, someone who could get things done at the grass-roots

regarded asheroesin Cuba. Diaz-Canel is nowhere to be level and wh o u n derstands seen. the politics of persuasion. He "He is too much in the shad- once defended a gay theater ows of Raul," said Arturo Lo- group against local officials pez Levy, a former Cuban in- who wanted to shut it down, telligence analyst who knew earning respect among some Diaz-Canel in their hometown of Cuba's most marginalized

zuela and Laos. It's always a delicate balancing act, however. In a speech in Mexico in December, he managed to mention both Castros in the first three paragraphs of his comments and then quoted of Santa Clara and who now

representing the Communist his trip to Santiago de Cuba, Party before like-minded San- his visit with workers in Santa dinista leaders. Clara. Much of his personal life But there are no big billhas been kept private. He is boards promoting Diaz-Canel; thought to be married with most such public advertising is children. He is well-liked by still limited to a Castro or, esCubans in the provinces, many pecially, the five Cuban intelliof whom see him as down-to- gence agents who were recentearth and accessible. ly released from jail in the U.S., It appears the Cuban lead- two because they f i nished of the overt a mbition that ership is gradually, gingerly their sentences and three as has felled many an up-and- trying to elevate his profile. part of the deal to jump-start

States that was announced in

P rinceton U n iversity

He has been sent abroad representing Castro, especially to

and other countries, which we

citizens.

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14th-century manuscript of the Magna Carta and Emily Dickinson's recipe for chocolate pudding are included.

of Independence and Beethoven's autographed music sketchbook, has been housed at Princeton's Firestone Li-

row the books and take them partment at that time — and home, she said. The collection is the only

earned his master's in music at

That's when alumnus and

one outside of Europe to in-

Committed to s ocial jus-

Philadelphia native William Scheide moved it there from

clude all four of the first Bi-

brary since 1959.

Columbia University.

tice and a supporter of the bles, according to the universi- NAACP, Scheide also helped Titusville in western Pennsyl- ty: The 1455 Gutenberg Bible, pay for the litigation of Brown vania, the town where he was the 1460 Bible (or Mentelin Bi- v. the Board of Education of reared. ble), the 36-line 1461 Bible and Topeka, the case that desegScheide, a musician, mu- the 1462 Bible. regated U.S. public schools, sicologist, bibliophile a nd Other notable items in the Trainer noted. philanthropist who graduated collection, according to the After hi s m other died, "Shakespeare's Scheide moved the collection from the New Jersey universi- university: ty in 1936, died in November first, second, third and fourth to Princeton and housed it in at 100 and left ownership of folios; significant autograph an addition that replicated the the collection to Princeton. music manuscripts of Bach, original room his father built. The vast trove was started Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert The collection will continue by Scheide's great-grandfa- and Wagner;a lengthy auto- to be accessible to students, ther, William Taylor Scheide, graph speech by Abraham scholars and the public upon who made his fortune in the L incoln from 1 856 o n t h e request, Trainer said. The lioil industry in western Penn- problems of slavery; and Gen. brary has begun digitizing the sylvania and r etired ear- Ulysses S. Grant's original let- collection to make it more acly to pursue his passion of ter and telegram copy books cessible. The Gutenberg Bible book-collecting. from the last weeks of the Civ- already is online. The collection was aug- il War." Princeton president Christomented by his father, John An early 14th-century man- pher Eisgruber called the gift Hinsdale Scheide, and then uscript of the Magna Carta "one of the greatest collections Scheide himself. and Emily Dickinson's reci- of rarebooks and manuscripts "There were three gener- pe for chocolate pudding are in the world today." "I cannot imagine a more ations of S cheides respon- included. sible for building this wonScheide, who began playing marvelous collection to serve derful collection," said Karin piano at 6 and later took up the as the heart of our library," he Trainer, university librarian, organ and oboe, was a Bach said in a statement. "We are "and all of them were very scholar who in 1946 founded grateful for Bill Scheide's evergenerous about sharing the and directed the Bach Aria lasting dedication to Princeton collection." Group, which performed for and his commitment to sharWilliam Taylor Scheide more than three decades. He ing his breathtaking collection and his wife used to allow majored in history at Prince- with scholars and students for neighbors in Titusville to bor- ton — there was no music de- generations to come."

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

BRIEFING Bendmanaccused in fatal fall A Bend man faces a murder charge in Hood River County, where authorities believe he killed a Portland woman who fell to her death on the popular Eagle Creek Trail nearly six years ago. Stephen P.Wagner Nichols, 40, made his first court appearance Friday and is set to appear again March 3, according to Hood River County Circuit Court records. The records show that a grand jury indicted Nichols for murder last April. The indictment accuses him of killing Rhonda Kristen Casto, 23, on March 16, 2009. Going on a tip from Oregon authorities, San Mateo County (California) Sheriff's deputies arrested Nichols on Feb. 2 at the SanFrancisco International Airport, Deputy Rebecca Rosenblatt wrote in an email Tuesday. He was arrested without incident after he cameoff a plane from China and was detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents. He was set to fly to Medford next, Rosenblatt wrote. Oregon authorities picked up Nichols, who was wanted on a felony warrant, on Thursday. He was being held without bail Tuesday afternoon at the Northern Oregon Regional Correctional Facility in The Dalles, according to the jail's website. Nichols had been hiking with Casto the day she died, according to The Oregonian. Casto fell100 feet to her death in March 2009 on the Eagle CreekTrail in the Columbia River Gorge. She fell down a steep section of trail pitted with wire cables and pipe handrails, which help hikers navigate the narrow, slippery terrain, according to The Oregonian. "The trail is very steep and narrow there, and it's been pretty wet and slippery," then Hood River County Sheriff's Deputy Matt English told TheOregonian in 2009. "There was still snow on the ground near the parking lot." — Bulletin staff and Wire rePortS

Burn planned for south ofBend Controlled burning in the Deschutes National Forest might begin today because ofunseasonably warm weather, according to a news release from the Central Oregon Fire Management Service. Fuel specialists plan to burn 400 acres of forest located 40 miles south of Bend, near Hole in the Ground. Smoke might be visible from state Highway 31. Roads will not be closed for the burn. Motorists are advised to slow down and turn on their headlights if smoke drifts onto the road. Firefighters will monitor the burn until all fires are declared out. The area was last burned in 2003. Controlled burns aim to reduce the intensity of any future wildfires by thinning out trees and underbrush. To learn more, visit www.fs.usda.gov/deschutes. SeeBriefing/B5

BEND PARK & RECREATION DISTRICT

oar se Icao By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

The Bend Park & Recreation District waded into affordable

housing issues Tuesday night, weighing the benefits of waivingsome fees charged to developers in order to encourage the

encourage the development of new housing. SDCs are collected by local governments when housing is built, to offset the cost of expanding the

rent at any given time.

road, sewer, water and parks

ment," Long said.

systems to accommodate the growingpopulation.

He said the tight rental market has pushed up rental rates.

construction of housing within

Long said it's not overstating

reach of Bend's lower-income residents.

the case to say Bend is experiencing a housing availability crisis. He said the rentalvacancy rate in Bend is estimated at

The district's board heard a

presentation from Jim Long, the city of Bend's affordable housing manager, on the case for eliminating system development charges, or SDCs, to

"That's everything from the

semi-mansions up on Awbrey Butte, to whatever you can find in the form of a studio apart-

Of Bend residents and families earning 80percent of the area's median incomes, more than

O LlSIA I C ly apartments and other forms of multifamily housing, Long said. He added that a 100-unit

reduced rates — SDCs have

since dimbed to $6,013 per single-family home and $5,651 per

apartment complex proposed by HousingWorks was never built inpart due to steep SDCs, totaling $17,000per unit be-

apartment — was not accom-

tween the city and the park district. Board member Ted Schoenborn recalled how in 2009,

no evidence at all that housing increased, that any number of

panied by a building boom, he sEud. "During that time, there was

units increased," Schoenborn SBld.

half are"rent-burdened," he said, paying more than half of

the district kept the systems charges flat rather than nearly

cannot guarantee increased

0.3percent,an abstractfigure

their income for rent.

untilyou dothe math to figure out what it really represents-

Reducing SDCs could help encourage the construction of affordable housing, particular-

double them as calculations suggestedwas needed to

construction of affordable housing, only make it more likely. See Housing /B5

less than 20units available for

maintain the district's stan-

dard of service. The period of

Long said lowered SDCs

REDMOND CITY COUNCIL

OUR SCHOOLS,OUR STUDENTS

a in connec ions • Online charter schoolhosts Central Oregonstudents for face-to-face lesson

East-side projects get boost By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

REDMOND — The Redmond City Council

made developmenton the city's east side a little more appealing Tuesday night. Councilors gave the go-ahead for city staff to move forward on two different projects that aim to spur development on the

east side of U.S. Highway 97. First, the council ap-

L

proved submission of a funding proposal to Oregon's Department of

Environmental Quality for a $15.5 million east-side sewer interceptor project.

The sewer interceptor project would be built over two phases with a 20- or

e" tsej

30-year loan from the DEQ. Upon completion, the interceptor would provide wastewater services to undeveloped industrial

JoeKline/The Bulletin

From right, brothers Elliot Bemrose, 12, Wyatt Bemrose, 9, and Ned Bemrose, 10, of Madras, look for parts as Henley Birky, 3, watches during a Lego building session for Oregon Connections Academy students at the Redmond Public Library on Thursday.

By Abby Spegman The Bulletin

REDMOND — The girls sat

silent, their eyes fixed on the Legos spread in front of them. Both are new students at Or-

egon Connections Academy, an online K-12 public charter

school. Taylor Halter, 12, of Madras, enrolled at the end of October. Bella Tardie, 13, of

Sunriver, enrolled at thebeginning of November. Both are in seventh grade. And yet, the conversation

Connections special education teacher Tamara Foy started with the school in December after 15 years teaching in traditional brickand-mortar schools. Here, she said, parents are more involved and students get more individualized education. But there isn't that

face-to-face contact with students, and on this day, she said, it was just fun to be around kids.

didn't flow — at first. Connections hosted a field

school hosts occasional events like this for students to meet

trip for its Central Oregon students of all ages and their

other students and forge some

schools, which are privately runbut receive state dollars and are sponsored by local school districts, though they can enroll students outside that

parents last week at the public

of the social bonds they miss out on without daily dassroom

district. Connections, which is the largest online charter

library in Redmond. Over the

life.

school in the state with an

course of two hours, about a dozen students built with

In Oregon, there are about a dozenpublic online charter

enrollment of more than 3,300

Legos and then presented their

creations to the group. The

thisyear, issponsoredby the

zoned land, ideally spurring development. "Typically, development pays for development," Heather Richards, the city's development director, told City Council. "The problem Redmond has right now is we have a lot of acres in industrial land, but they're difficult

small Scio School District

to service with infrastruc-

about 30miles southeast of Salem. Some districts, induding

ture. They're difficult to develop."

Bend-La Pine and Redmond,

also runtheir own online schools. Connections special edu-

cationteacher Tamara Foy started with the school in December after 15 years teaching in traditionalbrick-and-mortar

schools. Here, she said, parents

The east-side intercep-

tor would help move that development along, Richards said.

Councilors also agreed to a complex proposal aimed at establishing a massive tract of land-

are more involved and students

945 acres — south of the Deschutes County Fair 8t

get more individualized educa-

Expo Center as a potential

tion. But there isn't that face-toface contact with students, and

large-scale industrial site,

on this day, she said, it was just

something Richards and John Russell of the De-

fun to be around kids. Foy moved from table to

partment of State Lands told the council the state is

table, talkingtoparents and

severely lacking. The sew-

students. "Tell me your name

er plan for this tract would

again," she said to one girl. SeeConnections/B3

cost $500,000. See Redmond/B5

La PineCity Council movesforward with water andsewerrates By Ted Shorack

changes. "Coming up to this, I was LA PINE — The La Pine scared that we were goingto City Council on Tuesday tenta- have a monster here, and it tively approved water and sew- was going to be a great deal of er rate increases that if adopted a challenge topresent this to would go into effect July 1. the paying public," said Mayor The Bulletin

The city will now draft ordi-

Ken Mulenex. "But the reality

nances describing changes to theratestructuresandfeesand will hold a final vote in April. Councilors voted unanimously for the proposals and

of it (is) I'm absolutely thrilled (about) what we've come up

were impressed with the out-

come of a studythat generated a long-term outlook for the utilities and suggested the rates

with."

"To some folks it's going to

be a stretch, but for the majori-

ty I thinkit's goingto be a relief to see that it's only going up a small amount," said Councilor

Greg Jones.

said when increases were mentioned, she worried the

citywould increase the overall water rate by 3 percent and

Commercial users that currently pay the most in fixed rates could save up to $400per

lower-income population and

the overall sewer rate by 10

month based on the new rate

those on fixed incomes would be hurt and might notbe able

percent for the next fiscalyear based on the rate study. The

structures.

to afford water and sewer ser-

rates would increase each sub-

Councilor Karen Ward

rates and water usage. The

vices. After seeing theproposal sequent fiscal year. explained and detailed, Ward The increases are expected thought differently. to better fund the utilities while "I didn't want to put more also carrymgthe load for imburden on them, and I see this provement projects and infraas a good plan, and I hope they structure needs. do, too," Ward said. The monthly increase to Water and sewer bills for residential water users could customers could go up or down range between $2.90 and $6.76, depending onthe users' fixed according to the rate study.

The current system assigns a fixed rate of $27.34 a month

for water in each residential home. The fee covers 3,600

gallons. Anything more is $2 per 1,000 gallons. Commercial userspay the same fixed rate

multiplied depending onhow many toilets they have or, for restaurants, how many seats

theyhave. SeeWater/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

E VENT TODAY "IOLANTA/BLUEBEARD'SCASTLE": Featuring the double bill broadcast of Tchaikovsky's lolanta/Bartok's Bluebeard' sCastle;6:30p.m .;$24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fandango.com. "TELLIT ON THEMOUNTAIN": A screening of the film about six hikers on the Pacific Crest Trail; $3 suggested donation;6:45 p.m .;The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend; www.envirocenter.org or 541-389-0785. 18TH ANNUALCOFFEEHOUSE: Featuring an art gallery, art demonstrations, live entertainment from Sisters High School music programs, creation stations, silent auction and student art to benefit arts programs and scholarships; $5; 7-9 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road;www. outlawnet.com or 541-549-4045. THEBLACKBERRYBUSHES:The Americana-roots band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School,700NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.

ENDA R

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMt.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

PROFESSOR GALL: ThePortland folk/jazz band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

four Ironman Triathletes; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. mcmenamins.com or541-382-5174.

THURSDAY

BEND BREWINGCOMPANY20TH ANNIVERSARY: Featuring live music by Tone Red,Popcorn Trio andThe Miners, beer, prizes andmore; Bend Brewing Company,1019 NWBrooks St.; www.bendbrewingco.com or 541-383-1599.

BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Discuss "This Is the Story of a HappyMarriage" by Ann Patchett; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/lapine or 541-312-1090. "GO IN PEACE!":A showing of the film about veterans and their health needs, followed bya discussion with the film's producer and director, Karen van Vuuren; free; 6-8 p.m.; St. Charles BendCenter for Health and Learning, 2500 NENeff Road; www.stcharleshealthcare.org or 541-382-4321. BLUE LOTUS:The Eugene rock'n' roll band performs; free; 7 p.m.;

Heidi Ross / Submitted photo

The novel "This Is the Story of a HappyMarriage" by AnnPatchett will be discussed at the La Pine Public Library on Thursday. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. "THE PILLOWMAN":A play about a writer who is questioned about his stories and possible connection to recent murders; $15, $12for seniors and students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. CAGE:Theunderground rapper

performs, with Sadistikand DJ Oliver Klozzoff; $10, plusfees in advance; 8 p.m .;Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend;www. bendticket.com or 541-408-4329. ROSE'S PAWN SHOP: The Los Angeles roots-rock band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "WHAT ITTAKES": Afilm about

www.crowsfeetcommons.com or 541-728-0066. SLAID CLEAVES: TheAustin, Texas,

folksinger performs;$18plus fees in advance, $23 at the door; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E.Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. "BEAUTYAND THEBEAST": A

performance ofthe Disneyclassic

by Thoroughly Modern Productions; $22.50 plus fees in advance, $18.50 for seniors and children12 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod. and crafts, collectibles, antiques, com or 541-322-3300. children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend "SAVINGMR. BANKS": Showing of the film about the making of the Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. Disney movie "Mary Poppins"; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, AUTHORPRESENTATION:Featuring three Oregon authors: Bing Bingham, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or author of "Shaped by the Land," Shelley Houston, author of "A Father's 541-475-3351. Child," and Janet Storton, author of "THE PILLOWMAN":Aplay about "The Grass That Suffers"; $5; 6 p.m.; a writer who is questioned about his Paulina Springs Books, 422 SW Sixth stories and possible connection to St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. recent murders; $15, $12for seniors THE HELIOSEQUENCE: ThePortland and students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades indie-rock duo performs, with Pluto Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., The Planet; free; 6 p.m.; Crow's Feet Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or Commons,875 NW BrooksSt.,Bend; 541-389-0803.

1VEWSOF RECORD criminal mischief was reported at11:16 a.m. Feb.15, in the800 block of NW Federal Street. The Bulletin will update items in the Criminal mischief —Anact of Police Log whensuch a request criminal mischief was reported at 2:01 is received. Anynewinformation, p.m. Feb.15, in the2000 blockof NW such asthe dismissal of charges or Glassow Drive. acquittal, must beverifiable. For more Theft —A theft was reported at 3:11 information, call 541-383-0358. p.m. Feb.15, inthe1300blockof NE Noe Street. BEND POLICE Unlawful entry —Avehicle was DEPARTMEMT reported entered at3:43 p.m. Feb. 15, in the 2400block of NWCrossing Unlawful entry — Avehicle was Drive. reported entered at11:09 a.m.Feb.6, Theft —A theft was reported at 3:56 in the100 block of NEFranklin Avenue. p.m. Feb.15, in the 500blockof NW Theft —A theft was reported at 2:52 Flagline Drive. p.m. Feb. 8, inthe area of NWColumbia Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:18 Street and NWMilwaukeeAvenue. p.m. Feb.15, in the 600blockof SE Theft —A theft was reported at 5:45 Glengarry Place. p.m. Feb.11, inthe 800 block of NW Theft —Atheft was reported at Brooks Street. 8:40 p.m. Feb.15, in thearea of NW Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was Hartford Avenue. reported stolen at 9:51p.m. Feb.11,in Burglary —A burglary was reported the 20600 block of White DoveLane. at9:37 p.m. Feb.15, in the62900 block DUII —Michael RyanGraham, 31,was of O.B. Riley Road. arrested on suspicion of driving under Theft —A theft was reported at 8:22 the influence of intoxicants at 2:26 a.m. a.m. Feb. 16, inthe1200 block of NW Feb. 12, in theareaof N. U.S. Highway Stannium Road. 97 and RobalRoad. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:19 Unlawful entry —Avehicle was p.m. Feb.14, in the3100 blockof N. reported entered at8:15a.m. Feb.12, U.S. Highway97. in the 20600 block of Songbird Lane. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported stolen at10:46 a.m.Feb. reported entered at9:09 a.m. Feb. 14, in the1600 block of NWPortland 12, in the 63200 block of Stonewood Avenue. Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:27 Theft —A theft was reported at 9:58 p.m. Feb.12, in the800 blockof SE a.m. Feb.12, in the2700 blockof NE Business Way. 27th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:23 Unlawful entry —Avehicle was p.m. Feb.13, inthe400blockofNE reported entered andarrests were Kearney Avenue. madeat10:46a.m. Feb.12, in the400 Theft —A theft was reported at 8:59 block of NE Third Street. p.m. Feb.15, in the1700 blockof SE Theft —A theft was reported at 9:44 Tempest Drive. p.m. Feb.12, in the200 blockof Saint Unlawful entry —Avehicle was Helens Place. reported entered at12:32 p.m.Feb. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:59 4, in the 600 block of SECentennial p.m. Feb.13, in the area of SEMcKinley Street. Avenue and SE Fourth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:01 REDMOND POLICE p.m. Feb.13, in the1500 block of NE Neff Road. DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported at11:09 Theft —Atheft was reported andan p.m. Feb.13, intheareaof NE27th arrest made at4:30 Dec.28, in the Street. 3100 block of S.U.S.Highway97. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:47 Theft —Thefts were reported and p.m. Feb.14, in the63400 blockof N. arrests were madeat 4:39 p.m. Feb.8, U.S. Highway97. in the 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:32 Criminal mischief —Anact of a.m. Feb.11, in the400 blockof SE criminal mischief was reported andan Third Street. arrest made at8:16 a.m. Feb. 9, inthe Theft —Atheft was reported at11:08 1300 block of N.U.S.Highway 97. a.m. Feb.11, in the62600 blockof Theft —A theft was reported at 3:16 Hawkview Road. p.m. Feb. 9, inthe 600 block of SW Theft —Atheft was reported at10:58 Sixth Street. a.m. Feb. 12, inthe 2000 block of NE Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was Redbay Lane. reported stolen and an arrest was Unlawful entry —Avehicle was made at11:46 p.m.Feb. 9, inthe 500 reported entered at12:16 p.m.Feb.12, block of E.Antler Avenue. in the 2200 block of NEU.S. Highway Vehicle crash — Anaccident was 20. reported at 8:55 a.m.Feb. 10, inthe Criminal mischief —Anact of of NWFourth Street and NW criminal mischief was reported at 4:55 area Larch Avenue. p.m. Feb.13, in theareaof NWBond Theft —Atheft was reported and an Street and NWLouisiana Avenue. madeat5:23 p.m. Feb.10, in the Burglary —Aburglary was reported at arrest 4:42 a.m. Feb.14, in the1400 block of 700 block of NWFifth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of NW CumberlandAvenue. criminal mischief was reported andan Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:08 arrest made at9:50 p.m. Feb.10, inthe 1300 block of SW16th Street. a.m. Feb.15, in the2500blockof NE Unlawful entry —Avehicle was U.S. Highway20. reported entered, items stolen and an Theft —Atheft was reported at12:55 arrest made at5:44 a.m. Feb.11, inthe p.m. Feb.11, in the900 blockof NW 1000 block of SWCascadeAvenue. Galveston Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was madeat12:52 p.m. Feb.11, in reported stolen at7:59a.m. Feb.12, in arrest the1800 block of N. U.S.Highway 97. the100 block of NW Skyliner Summit Criminal mischief —Anact of Loop. criminal mischief was reported at Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat3:08 p.m. Feb.14, in the 12:53 p.m. Feb.11, in the900blockof SW VeteransWay. 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was Theft —A theft was reported at 7:56 reported at1:32 p.m. Feb.11, in the p.m. Feb.14, in the20100 blockof area of S. U.S.Highway 97and SW Pinebrook Boulevard. Ddem MedoRoad. Theft —Atheft was reported andan DUII —Lance AaronDurbin,18, was arrest madeat8:41 p.m. Feb.14, in the arrested on suspicion of driving under 600 block of NE Third Street. the influence of intoxicants at11:23 Theft —Atheft was reported andan p.m. Feb.11, in thearea of N. U.S. arrest madeat9:02 p.m. Feb.14, in Highway97andSW GlacierAvenue. the area of NE Fourth Street and NE DUII —Jacob Tyrel Blair, 23, was Franklin Avenue. arrested on suspicion of driving under Theft —Atheft was reported at10:12 the influence of intoxicants at 2:50 a.m. a.m. Feb.15, in the1500 block of NW Feb. 12, in thearea of SW35th Street MilwaukeeAvenue. and SWObsidian Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:18 Criminal mischief —Anact of a.m. Feb. 15, inthe areaof NWSteidl criminal mischief was reported at 2:16 Road and NW Portland Avenue. p.m. Feb.12, inthe area of NEFifth Criminal mischief —Anact of Street and NEQuince Lane.

POLICE LOG

Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at5:08 p.m. Feb.12, in the 300blockofNW OakTree Lane. Unauthorizeduse — Avehicle was reported stolen and anarrest was made at 3:18a.m. Feb.13, in the area of NE17th Street and NEHemlock Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:48 a.m. Feb.13, in the 700blockof SW Deschutes Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at1:40 p.m. Feb.13, in the 600blockof SW Sixth Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 2:52 p.m. Feb.13, in the1700 blockof SW 16th Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at3:03 p.m. Feb.13, in the area of NW19th Street andNW Hemlock Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:51 p.m. Feb.13, in the 3100blockof S. U.S. Highway97. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at4:40 p.m. Feb.13, inthe 1200 block of SW28th Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at5:22 p.m. Feb. 13, in the 200 block of SEFranklin Street. DUII —Michael Austin Alvarez, 21, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:29a.m. Feb.14, in thearea of NW Ninth Streetand NW Dogwood Avenue. DUII —ToddDouglas Poling, 42, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:12a.m. Feb.14, in the 800blockof E. State Highway126. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 8a.m. Feb.14, in the1200 block of NEFifth Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at10:20 a.m.Feb.14, in the 2600 block of SW Glacier Place. Theft —Atheftwas reportedat10:49 a.m. Feb.14, in the 200block of SW Ninth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:19 p.m. Feb.14, in the 600 block of SE EvergreenAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:06 p.m. Feb.14, inthe400blockof NW Oak TreeLane. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 7:18p.m. Feb. 14, inthe 3300blockofSW QuartzAvenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:49 p.m. Feb.14, in the1500 block of NE Third Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest madeat11:24 p.m.Feb.14, in the1200 block of NWCanal Boulevard. DUII —Dylan JamesHilsendager, 19, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:36a.m. Feb.15, onU.S. Highway97 near milepost133. DUII —Anthony PaulAnderson, 33, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:40 a.m. Feb.15, onU.S.Highway 97 near milepost119. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 3:40a.m. Feb.15, onU.S. Highway 97near milepost119. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:13 a.m. Feb.15, inthe 2500 block of E. State Highway126. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:19 p.m. Feb.15, in the1000 blockof SW Deschutes Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:27 p.m. Feb.15, in the1400 block of SW Juniper Avenue.

3:33 p.m. Feb.15, in theareaof NE Holly Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:12 p.m. Feb.16, in thearea of SEFourth Street.

JEFFERSON COUMTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Theft —A theft was reported at 3:56 p.m. Feb. 9, in the800 block of NW First Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11:34 a.m.Feb. 10, inthe 300 block of E. DStreet. Theft —A theft was reported at10:46 a.m. Feb.11, in the800blockof Wilson Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:30 p.m. Feb.14, inthe 400 block of NE Meadowlark Lane.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Kathleen Virginia Aldorisio, 62,

BEND FIRE RUNS Feb.11 2:53 a.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 751 SEDouglas St. 3:48p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 64855 Glacier ViewDr. 5:06p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 21245 StevensRd. 5:30p.m.— Unauthorized burning, area of Knott Road. 23 —Medical aid calls. Thursday 5:55p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 18837 ChoctawRd. 8:53p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 20710 Bowery Ln.

9:20p.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, area of NWJuniper Street. 18 —Medical aid calls.

REDMOND FIRE

RUNS Feb. 9 12 —Medical aid calls. Feb.10 12 —Medical aid calls. Feb.11 4:17p.m. —Confined cooking fire, 1515 NWFirAve. 8 —Medical aid calls. Feb.12 10 —Medical aid calls. Feb.13 5:31p.m.—Authorized controlled burning, 3766 SW Quincy Ln. 12 —Medical aid calls. Feb.14 16 —Medical aid calls. Feb.15 7 —Medical aid calls.

LewyBodyDementia: IVhatEvegoneNeedstoKnow This special multi-part series is designed to help care providers recognize, andappreciate, the unique features of Lewy Body Dementia (LBD).Nowthe third most common type of dementia, LBDwas 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.

When:February 18'" Time: 8:00pm Where:St. Charles Medical Center

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 3:01 p.m.Feb.13, inthe area of SELynn Boulevard. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reportedstolenat6:11 p.m. Feb.13, in the area of NWHarwood Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at11:17 a.m. Feb.14, in thearea of NEJuniper Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 2:05 p.m.Feb.14, in the area of NE Combs Flat Road. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported enteredanditems stolen at

was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:49 p.m. Feb.13, in thearea of U.S. Highway 97andKnott Road. DUII —Zackary Xavier Williams, 31, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:07 p.m. Feb.14, onU.S. Highway20 near milepost100.

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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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REGON

ix? e ul ? e ace?- s a n

oun er oreview

in e or The Associated Press M EDFORD — T h e v i a duct thatcarries Interstate 5

through Medford in Southern Oregon is more than half a mile long and vulnerable to an earthquake. But making it

AROUND THE STATE Oregnn Studant dlas — Afemale University of Oregonstudent who was amember of the school's acrobatics and tumbling team died Tuesdayafternoon. A university spokeswomansaid LaneCounty health officials are investigating to determine whether thedeath might be linked to arecent outbreak of acontagious bacterial infection. The university's athletics department identified the student asfreshman Lauren Jones.Acrobatics and tumbling coachChelseaShawcalled the death "a terrible andsudden loss for our whole Oregon community." Jones graduated from Southwest DekalbHighSchool in Lithonia, Georgia, in 2014.The(Eugene) Register-Guard reports that university spokeswomanJulie Brown said LaneCounty Public Health officials are investigating to determine whether thedeath is linked to themeningococcemia outbreak, which hassickenedthree students. Shesaid test results could come assoon as today.

secure would be a difficult en-

Man punollas Illmsalf —LaneCounty authorities said asuspect

gineering and traffic problem that could require hundreds of

brought in for questioning later punchedhimself in the faceandthen signed anassault complaint against detectives. But unfortunately for the suspect, a video recorder wasrunning in aholding room where he had been left after questioning. Thesheriff's department said Tuesday the footage shows33-year-old Aleksander RobinTomaszewski hitting himself, leaving two blackeyes. Investigators said hetold them he hoped filing a complaint would get him released.Authorities said the Lucerne, California, manwas brought in for questioning Jan. 9 on an unrelated casethat is under investigation. Hewas charged with initiating a false report andattempted coercion, and hewasfound guilty last week. Hewassentenced to 20 days in jail and fined $500.

millions of dollars to solve.

The 3,222-foot span has been criticized almost from the day it was built in 1962.

It created a concrete divide between east and west Medford, and it sits uncomfortably

dose to a stream, Bear Creek, and the downtown. The viaduct could collapse

in a big earthquake, the (Medford) Mail Tribune reports.

Man aCCuSed Of aeOn —A manaccused of setting fires at his suburban Portland home in aneffort to drive tenants out after a rent dispute has beenarraigned in Circuit Court. The Oregonian reports that 31-year-old David Gillette wasarrested Friday, accused of first-degree arson. Hewasarraigned Tuesday in Portland. According to reports from Greshamand Portland fire officials, the man isaccused of setting numerous fires to the side of his home inwhat wasdescribed asan attempt to evict tenants. Court papers say a deputy found the man ina garage with a blowtorch. The second floor was filled with smoke, but no one wasinjured. Gillette was being held on$250,000 bail.

The interstate is the trans-

portation spine of the West Coast. Spokesman Gary Leaming of the Oregon Department of Transportation calls the viaduct "one of the most critical

bridges in Oregon." The loss of the viaduct in a major earthquake could block interstate traffic and create significant economic damage in

MOtOrCyCliSt in CritiCal COnditinn —A73-year-old Salem motorcyclist is reported in critical condition after a traffic accident that threw him from abridge into the Willamette River. Police said William Chamberland Jr.was trying to changelanes on the Marion Street bridge Mondaywhen his motorcycle collided with avan. The bike hit the barrier on theside ofthe bridge, andChamberland was thrown in thewater. Aboater retrieved him from the water, and hewas taken to SalemHospital. The police described his injuries as potentially life-threatening, and ahospital spokesman said Tuesdaythat Chamberland was listed in critical condition. Police told the (Salem)Statesman Journal they haven't finished their investigation.

Jackson County because traf-

fic and resources likely would be diverted. In case of an earthquake,

the state would rely on U.S. 97 on theeastsideofthe Cascade Range, on the assumption that

many bridges along Interstate 5 on the west side of the mountains would crumble. Highway 97 hasfewer major bridgesand is farther from the expected

— From wire reports

Find It All Online

source of an earthquake off the

Oregon Coast. The viaduct's future is head-

}

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ed for a review, with the help

of $4 million from the Oregon Transportation Commission.

bendbulletin.com

The review could take several

years to complete. The transportation agency recently hired a Portland engineering company to start the

TheBulletin

The viaduct that carries Interstate 5 through Medford in Southern Oregon is more than half a mile long and vulnerable to an earthquake. But making it secure is a difficult engineering and traffic problem build or replace the bridge and that could require hundreds of millions of dollars to solve.

rerouting the freeway. Other options include bringing that

through Medford to take some the viaduct will remain where of the load off th e v iaduct. it is, likely beefed up to withAbout 40 percent of the traffic stand amajor quake. "We're stuck with it," Medis local residents going across

part of Interstate 5 to grade

town.

tunneling under Medford to

level or creating parallel routes

HunterDouglas See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!

Jamie Lusch/The (Medford) Mail Tribune via The Associated Press file photo

work. Kittelson and Associates Inc. will look whether to re-

study adding lanes. It's supposed to look at a range of possibilities from

Visit Central Oregon's

But city officials expect that

ther rebuild it or bring it down to grade." Leaming said the earthquake measurescould include ford City C o uncil m ember wrapping the vertical pillars in Daniel Bunn said. "We can ei- steel.

M]LG/LZINE

at Whittier College in Whittier,

Joe Klime/The Bulletin

JetHovey,8,ofBend,assembles Legos during a Lego building session for Oregon Connections Academystudents at the Redmond Public Library on Thursday.

Connections

many siblings her children are hardly lonely. Still, they volunContinued from B1 teer at a local food bank and Cindy Hovey, of B end, library and attend local field brought her two kids, 8-year- trips, including this one. old Jet and 12-year-old Gabriel,

"At these events, some of our

to the Legos field trip. They've known only online school, and Hovey said she likes having them at home and being involved in their education.

older kids have met their best friends," she said. Today she brought her three youngest-

COVERINGS 1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com

TheBulletin

ScHooL 50TEs Tlmothy Gorman,of Bend, was named to the fall 2014 dean's list at the U.S. Military Academy West Point. He Is a graduate of Mountaln Vlew Hlgh School and the son of Steveand Susan Gorman ofBend. Kayanna Heffner,of Bend, was named to the fall 2014 dean's list

• RetractableAwnings • Exterior Solar Screens • Patio ShadeStructures

s~a CMSSIC

COLLEGE NOTES

See us alsofor:

Weekly Arts Sc Entertainment In

California. Nathan Moore,of Bend, was named to the fall 2014 dean's list at the Virginia Military Institute. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Moore. Jack Widmer, ofBend,was named to the fall 2014 dean's list at Creighton Unlverslty In Omaha, Nebraska.

How to submit

Contact: 541-383-0358, bulle-

Teenfeats:Kidsrecognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.)

Story ideas

• •

i )

Dad keeps forgetting how to get home ...Mom is beginning to get worried.

tin@bendbulletin.com

Contact: 541-383-0358,

School briefs:Items and announcements of general interest. Phone: 541-633-2161

Email: news@bendbulletin. com Student profiles:Know of a

youth©bendbulletin.com Mail:P. O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708

kid with a

Other schoolnotes: College compelling story? announcements, military gradPhone: 541-383-0354 uations or training completions, reunion announcements. Email: mkehoe©bendbulletin. com

Elliot, 12, Ned, 10, and Wyatt, 9, each carting a tub filled with

But she said she worried they Legos. The plastic bricks are would miss out on the socializ- big at the Bemrose house. "It's ing that comes with school, that school, and then Legos," she they wouldn't make friends.

SBld.

Instead she signed them up for On the other side of the Little League and martial arts room, Bella and Taylor discovlessons. ered they have some classes in "Itwas a concern at first," she common. They talkedabout sald. Anita Bemrose, of Madras,

the transition to online school,

graduated from Connections

movie. Bella said the last time she was around peers was at her

III

compared the Lego houses is a mother of eight with six they were both building, dished enrolled in Connections. (One on the latest "Hunger Games" and another transferred from Connections to Central Ore-

gon Community College.) Be- birthday party a few weeks fore that, she home-schooled ago. "It's nice to be around people her children. Bemrose said she wasn't worried about the lack my own age," she said. of socializing — she was home— Reporter: 541-617-7837, schooled as a child, and with so

aspegman@bendbullet in.com

Call us with questions about aging andAlzheimer's

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1-855-ORE-ADRG 'I I ~

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HelpForAlz.org

Aging and Disability Resource Connection of OREGON

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he search is on for the new superintendent of BendLa Pine Schools. Want to know who is on the shortlist? Good luck. The district is not expected to release the names of the six to eight semifinalists. That secrecy, the argument goes, is a good thing. We don't agree. First, let's look at how the district is conducting its process. The candidates willbe narrowed down. The plan is to interview the six to eight semifinalists behind closed doors. The candidates will then be narrowed down againto two or three. They will be i nterviewed some more behind closed doors. But their names will be released. There will also be two public forums — one in Bend and a second in La Pine — for the public to ask questions of the two to three finalists. The secrecy in the early stages, the argument goes,helps ensure the district gets good candidates. Candidates are said to worry it could create problems in their current jobs if it were publicly known that they are thinking about leaving. They would be discouraged

from applying. It is also argued that districts

and local governments across the country do searches this way. They don't disclose the candidates until the final round, or they only disdose the finalist. The consulting firm that is helping the district conduct the search does notpromise candidates anonymity but tells them the "names of applicants will be held in strict confidence whenever possible." But for the public, it's important to know how the list of candidates was narrowed as much as it is to know more about the final candidates. The public can know something aboutwho was picked and who was excluded. The media and the public can do some research of their own and evaluate the quality of the applicants. And if it's OK to release the names of finalists, why is it somehow not OK to release the names of the few additional semifinalists? The district should not let how other districts do it decide how Bend-La Pine does it. It needs to find waysto open up the process, not succumb to the arguments that secrecy is the best policy.

How to hunt cougars is a statewide decision

T

wenty years ago, Oregonians voted to ban the hunting of cougars and bears with the aid of dogs. They did so because a majority believed the practice created an unfair match between hunter and prey. The vote was relatively close — fewer than 45,000 votes separated the sides. Some huntershave been trying to lift the ban ever since, and they're doing so again this year. They should be allowed to fail. Four measures — Senate bills 126 and 453 and House bills 2050 and 2181 — would effectively turn the decision-making about hunting with dogs over to the state's counties. One bill in each house would give counties the right to hold elections repealing the ban inside their borders, whetherbyinitiative petition or referral by the county commission. The otherwould exempt the county from state statutes regarding the banif voters approvedthe repeal. That sounds good, at least on the surface. If the measures became law, Oregon would likely see rural counties approve the use of dogs in cougar hunting and urban ones re-

ject the idea. But statewide management of the largest cats in Oregon requires statewide, not c ounty-by-county regulation. The Department of Fish and Wildlife has done that well, growing the cougar population to nearly 6,000 after its near disappearance in the 1960s. Oregon's voters have twice said they do not want dogs used to hunt cougars. After the original initiative was approved in 1994, a measure to repeal it was on the ballot in 1996 and lost bynearly200,000votes. The

fiyum could change, we suppose, if a repeal were on the statewide ballot again, but that seems unlikely. Voter-approvedchanges to state law are not cast in stone, to be sure. Conditions change and so do citizens' views on everything from hunting to the use of marijuana. As the views change, laws should be allowed to change, as well.

But legal change generally should follow changes in attitude, not precede them. Unless there's evidence that most Oregonians now embracethe idea ofusing dogs to huntcougars,the ban should remain in place.

Mariota's oot a success ins ires e ow'nice u s' IN MY VIEW

By Valerie McCready

t

t's been said that Marcus Mariota is too nice. He seems to be an

that I can be inspired by. As Marcus Mariota went through the 2014 foot-

anomaly in the sport of football: a polite and respectful guy who does everything right and is incredibly nice. Oh, and we can't forget

ball season, I watched with great anticipation and awe. Yes, the football was outstanding, but I was in-

that he is a freak of nature when it comes to his talent for football. But

terested in other things, too. I silent-

even with his mind-blowing stats and skills, people still can't seem to

about him, curious if his "niceness" might hinder his success. I cut out

get around the fact that the guy is so nice. His politeness is inspiring to

a photo from the newspaper with a quote from him, reading, "There's

me, not because I want to be more

no reason to be angry or impolite."

ly followed news stories and articles

like him, but because I already am like him.

I seconded that mantra and glued

the newspaper clipping to my notebook,feeling a sense of camaraderie for my fellow polite human being. As I watched the Heisman Trophy award ceremony (and cried, but who didn't?), I thought to myself

I, too, have been labeled as "polite," "nice" and "sweet." That's

who I am, that is my personality, and that is my nature deep at my

core. Marcus Mariota inspires me to maintain my politeness and still seek success.He is a hero for allof

that this hero of the football field For some, Marcus Mariota winning

to think that if Marcus Mariota can

kind. Unfortunately, what comes

the Heisman Trophy shows that nice

win the Heisman while maintaining

The Associated Press file photo

with those descriptors also comes guys don't always finish last.

his nice and polite persona, what

the idea that such people can't reach

can I achieve with my similar persona? As Marcus finished his time at Oregon, I prepare to graduate from college. As he moves on into the wide and perhaps foreboding world

the pinnacle of success — we are too busy getting stepped all over to get awards, including the Heisman Troup and achieve. We are too quick to phy. All of this was done while he say, "Here, you go ahead," to ever never once strayed from who he is get ahead ourselves. The mindset as a person. Those of us polite peothat "nice guys finish last" may plewho were told we had to change have stunted us before, but now we to achieve success should look no have a new standard to aspire to. further than the standout former Marcus Mariota has achieved Oregon quarterback as a model for success in his world as a stu- what is possible. dent-athlete, creating records in He isthe hero for every self-dehis conference and in college foot- scribed polite person out there, and ball, and winning many prestigious though I may not share his profi-

of President Barack Obama's vague

references to "violent extremists" uncoupled from the fundamentalist Islam to which said throat-cutting ex-

tremists pledge allegiance — scarcely stands up to scrutiny. It is empty talk.

freedom of the press, freedom of

blasphemy, sexual freedom — in short,core characteristics of democ-

racies seen by the would-be rebuilders of the Caliphate as signs of Western debasement. Do not provoke them with car-

toons of the Prophet Muhammad, some say, show respect for Islam,

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

at wa r

port for Israel (seen as the latest iterdrid and the Tube and a bus bombed ation of Western imperialism in the in London, Western journalists be- Levant); its wars graq); its brutality, headed, the staff of Charlie Heb(Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib); its killdo slaughtered and Jews killed in ing of civilians (drones); its oil-drivFrance and Belgium and now Den- en hypocrisy (a jihadi-funding Saudi mark. This is not the work of a "dark ally). ideology" but of jihadi terror. For the second, it is rather the abOn the right of Europe's political ject failure of the Arab world, its spectrum, anger is rising against Is- blocked societies where dictators lam, against marginalized Muslim face off against political Islam, its we have seen trains blown up in Ma-

the peaceful faith of some 1.6 billion people. But what, pray, was the "prov- communities, who in turn feel disocation" of Dan Uzan, the Jewish se- criminated against and misreprecurity guard outside the Copenhagen sented, with cause. Several thousand between Islam and the West, when synagogue? young European Muslims troop off to in all the above-mentioned countries I slam i s a re l i g ion t h a t h a s join the Islamic State. Europe's Jews tens of millions of Muslims, with spawned multifaceted political move- are on edge, with cause. Israel calls m uch carnage as evidence, believe ments whose goal is power. Islam, as them home. In the United States, the contrary. such, is fair game for commentators, three Muslim students were killed The Danish filmmaker Finn Norcaricaturists and cartoonists, whose this month by a gunman in a possible gaard was killed a little more than a inclination to mock the depredations hate crimedenounced by Obama as decadeafteranother movie director, of theocracy and political Islam's "brutal and outrageous." A tide of reTheo van Gogh, was slain in Am- cynical uses of the Prophet cannot be taliatory menace rises. sterdam for making a film critical cowed by fear. Who or what is to blame'? There

Across a wide swath of territory, in of Islam's treatment of women. The Iraq, in Syria, in Afghanistan, in Pa- Islamists' war is against freedom of

— Valerie McCready lives in Bend.

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

or is at war, or near-war, with the Muslim world, in a failed bid to eradicate a metastasizing Islamist movement of murderous hatred toward Western civilization.

ideology." This statement — with its echoes

about an inspiring quarterback who has given this polite girl a little hope for great success that may come my way, too.

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

kistan, in Yemen, the West has been expression, freedom of conscience,

freedom of the individual and a dark

go off into an equally uncertain job market and potential future in grad school. All the while, I am thinking

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

New York Times News Service

my and Freedom of Expression" and a Danish Jew guarding a synagogue were shot dead in CopenTo call this movement, whose most hagen, Helle Thorning-schmidt, the potent recent manifestation is the Isprime minister of Denmark, uttered lamic State, a "dark ideology" is like a familiar trope: "We are not in the calling Nazism a reaction to German middle of a battle between Islam and humiliation in World War I: true but the West. It's not a battle between wholly inadequate. There is little Muslims and non-Muslims. It's a point in Western politicians rehearsbattle between values based on the ing lines about there being no battle

of the National Football League, I

Letters policy

By Roger Cohen

A

is becoming a hero for all the nice people out there. It brings me hope

us who have ever been told we are nice, polite, gentle, good-natured or

I saman t e W estareun ou t e fter a Danish movie director at a seminar on"Art, Blasphe-

ciency for football, I share his personality traits, and that is something

repression, its feeble institutions, its

sectarianism precluding the practice of participatory citizenship, its wild conspiracy theories, its inability to

provide jobs or hope for its youth, that gives the Islamic State its appeal.

I find the second view more persuasive. The rise of the Islamic State, and Obama's new war, are a direct re-

sult of the failure of the Arab Spring, which had seemed to offer a path out of the deadlocked, jihadi-spawning

are two schools. For the first, it is the

societies of the Arab world. — Roger Cohen is a columnist

al-Qaida attacked America on 9/11, West that is to blame through its sup-

for The New Yorlt Times.

Over themore than 13 years since


WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

BITS

B5

Redmond

Endicott said about the two

Continued from 61

plans to make city's east side

The overall plan for the DSL site — the Department of State

more attractive to development.

site, which offers dose access to

"It really shows Redmond is

"It's huge," Mayor George

"We're really positioning ourLands owns most of the landselves for the next fewyears." "These are critical backwould be to complete designs that would attract alarge indus- bones to development," Richtrial operation to the area. The ards added after the meeting.

DEATH NOTICES Bette Lee O'Let, of Bend

Highway97andarailroad spur, beingproactive." would be the largest industrial — Reporter: 541-617-7829,

Aug. 31, 1925 - Feb. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Family services will be held this Summer. Contributions may be made

site in Central Oregon.

to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Elaine Thompson /The Associated Press

Taylor Wilkinson, right, and Karissa Courtney, both Seattle Pacific University students with

the afternoon off, share a hammock overlooking the Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains beyond Tuesday in Seattle. Temperatures hit record highs a day earlier, including 59 at SeaTac Airport, in parts of Washington and Oregon as one of the mildest winters continues in the Northwest.

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact

Northwest enjoyswarm days By Manuel Valdes The Associated Press

SEATTLE — Flowers are

blossoming. Bees are buzzing. The sky is blue. Sunsets have been stunning. Temperatures have crept north of 60 degrees, and joggers are going shirtless. This isn't a typical February in the Pacific Northwest. While the N ortheast is

541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

buried under snow, the opposite corner of the country has

been hosting the opposite of the winter weather spectrum. The Northwesthas had

arecord-breaking winter,but for warm temperatures. R ecords highs w e r e logged Monday and Tuesday in parts of Washington and Oregon as one of the mildest winters continues in the Northwest.

On Tuesday, meteorologistsreported record highs of 61 degrees at Sea-Tac Airport, 63 in Hoquiam, 59 in

Phone: 541-617-7825

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

Airport, 60 in Olympia, 62 in drierwinters and wetter falls. Hoquiam and 62 in VancouAlthough this year, Cook ver. In Oregon, record highs s aid, El N in o w ent f r om were 61 in Portland, 62 in weak to neutral. Hillsboro and 66 in Salem. Still, the effect is felt Forecasters said the high throughout the region. pressure ridge responsible At a garden store in Seatfor the summerlike weather tle, foot traffic of eager garm ight weaken enough by to- deners has come early this day for clouds and a chance year. "Usually this time of the of drizzle. The high pressure is expected to rebuild over year in Seattle it's dreary the weekend and into next and drizzly; we're pretty week. slow. But we've definitely "Typically when there is been seeing a lot more inspia big ridge over the West ration in gardeners. Veggies Coast, it happens when there are growing in the ground is a big trough over the East early. We're seeing plums Coast. So when they get their and cherries are already bad weather, often we get the in full bloom," said James good weather," said Kirby Raebel, a landscape designer Cook, a meteorologist for the who works at the Magnolia weather service. Garden Center. That's good news for Mild temperatures have meant headaches for skiers Raebel's job, but as a passionand snowboarders. Near- ate skier, he is bummed by

northwest Oregon, McMinn-

That's a result of El Nino,

enough snow.

ville hit a record for the day the weather phenomenon of 66 degrees. that warms the equatorial On Monday, the National waters of the Pacific Ocean. Weather Service reported Usually when El Nino is record highs of 59 at Sea-Tac around, the Northwest gets

©~s

gC

a 1935 ciassic with Clark Gable and Charles Laughton, came back to play a powerful role in her life decades later.

I"

gg i

with Brando, Movita's husband, The Associated Press file photo playing the mutiny's leader, Marion Brando, his wife, actress Movita Castaneda, left, and acFletcher Christian. Nineteen- tress Debbie Reynolds, right, arrive for the West Coast premiere of year-old Tarita Teri'ipaia played "Mutiny on the Bounty" at the Hollywood Egyptian Theater in Los Angeles on Nov. 15, 1962.

alsobecameloversoff-screen.

as 1921. Movita told writer Michael Taub that MGM inflated

her age. At the time, she said, she was 14 — not 19, as the

FEATUREDOBITUARY the first film in which Fred As-

Movita met Brando on amov-

taire and Ginger Rogers danced ie set in the early 1950s. They together. did not publiciy disciose their In the 1930s, Movita apmarriage until he was asked peared in a number of films, about it in court a year later. including "Paradise Isle," "The He and his former wife, actress Hurricane" and "Captain Ca- Anna Khashi, were at each lamity." In a romance followed other's throats over visitation by gossip columnists, she mar- and ali mony problems when he ried Irish prizefighter Jack droppedthebombshell. Doyle in 1939. Their civil cereHe also revealed that he and mony took place in Ensenada, Movitahad a son named SerMexico, because he had been gio. Known as Miko, hebecame ordered out of the U.S. for ille- an aide and longtime confidant gally entering it. of Michael Jackson's. The couDoyle, a tenor known as "the ple later had a daughter named Irish thrush," performed with Rebecca. For a time, the two owned a

forherbyMGM executiveswho London nightclub called the thought it sounded Polynesian. Swizzle Stick. As a girl, she developed a They were "as popular as talent for singing and dancing, Burton and Taylor were later on and she performed with a Mex-

who cheated on her and became abusive. They divorcedin

singer in "Flying Down to Rio," 1944.

studio ciaimed on government documents. Movita at European cabarets. Movita was a name coined

Suspect inrodbery wore walkingcast A man wearing awalking cast robbed theCollegeWayChevron in Bend early Tuesday,according to Bend Police. Officers responded tothe gas station at1400 NWCollegeWay shortly after 3 a.m.Employeestold polic eamasked manwhokepthis right hand insidethepocket of his black hoodedsweatshirt demanded money, according to anewsrelease

Housing

way will be happy, and those who had the other way won't," said Allen. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorachibendbulletin.com

— Bulletin staffreports

noweth said that although an SDC exemption might be more of a Band-Aid than a long-term

Continued from B1 "I can't tell you it will create solution, he could be open to a more," Long said. "I can tell temporary reduction in SDCs you it won't create less." to see if it has any effect on the Board Chairman Dan Fish- city's housing market. kin said the district already Bend City Manager Eric does a lot to benefit low-income King briefly addressed the Bend residents, he said, listing board. King said the City

"It'sbeen a terrible, terrible

Cook cautioned, though,

that last year, the region also had a mild winter at the

beginning. "The weather can make up for shortfalls," he said.

Center and scholarships to off-

Council would like to continue tions with the park district but

set fees for district recreation needs to get a better idea of programs. Boosting affordable how receptive the district is to housing is not the district's the proposal. mandate, he said. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, Board member Craig Cheshammers@bendbuiletin.com

Joseph Harold Toelle

Growing up in Hamey CountyJoe loved to spend time on his grandparettt's ranch, often playing with his brother attd cousins. He also helped build fences, movecows, and whatever else hecould to help his grandparents. He particularly looked forward to brattdings attd always strived to be asgoodat roping as his Grandpa Don. Other area ranchers often invitedJoe to their brandittgs asgood ropers are always in demand. He also loved hunting attd was always looking for new opportunities. He was planning a hunting trip to Alaska with his good friend Brian that was to occur in the summer of2015. Joe enjoyed playing football in High School and watching both collegeattd professional games. He was aloyal fan to both Oregon State and the Kansas City Chiefs despite some unfortunately rough years. In 2000Joe was chosento play basketball in England with Northwest Basketball Camps. He worked several jobs to pay his way and make it happen. Joealways liked to earn his own way. He wasalways willing to help others and rarely asked for help himself. Joe never sweated the small stuff and wasmost comfortable in a pair of wranglers.

married one of the mutineers. The film was remade in 1962,

April 12, 1916, according to her family, but some sources list it

Continuedfiom Bt

and volume consumed. "Those who have had it one

Joseph Harold Toelle was born September 20,1984 ln Burns, Oregon to John and Connie Toelle, Less than fourteen months laterJoe was joined by brother John Robert (J.R.) Toelle, and the two would become extraordinary best friends,

films, "Mutiny on the Bounty,"

in different accounts. It was

from the BendPolice Department. Officers set up aperimeter around the store andhada police dog search thearea. Thesuspect was not found. In addition to thesweatshirt, the thief was wearing blackpants, black gloves, onewhite tennis shoe anda black soft walking cast onhis right foot, according to thenewsrelease. He's believed to bebetween5 feet, 9 inches and 5feet,11 inches tall and about 25 to 30years old. The BendPolice Department asks anyonewith information about the case tocall 541-693-6911.

alsobe basedonthem etersize

September 20, 1984 - February 5, 2015

Her death Thursday came aftershe was hospitalized fora neck injury, said Barbara Sternig, a family friend. One of Castaneda's first

Born to Mexican parents on

LOCAL BRIEFING

to those meter sizes. The new sewer rate would

Joe Toelle passedaway suddenly ol unknown natural causes on Thursday, February 5, 2015 at the age of 30, in Burns, Oregon. He leavesbehind his wife, Autumn, and two young sons, Cody and Wade. He will be missed by all who knew him.

believed to be 98.

a train crossing the border into Nogales, Arizona, Maria Luisa Castaneda grew up in Los Angeles. Her actual birth date varies

then charge based on volume

dies for the Bend Senior Center discussions of possible system and Juniper Swim & Fitness development charges reduc-

him, has died in a Los Angeles rehabilitation center. She was

orful life.

on the system. The city would

would pay primarily based on usage instead of fixed fees. "This is really a fairer system that you're paying for what you use," City Manager Rick Allen said. "There are going to be people who are mad at the council and those who will be happy." The new system would have a fixed fee based on meter

the district's operations subsi-

shut down. There hasn't been

who married Marlon Brando in 1960 and had two children with

vorced in 1972. It was another wrenchingbut intriguing twist in Movita's col-

to city officials, because users

meters that are larger and therefore are more of a burden

good, at least, in half of my life," he said.

Bellingham and 65 in Quillayute, Washington, while in

LOS ANGELES — Movita

After Movita and Brando

provide more water flow for

snow year. It's rough, but it's

Castaneda, a movie actress

split, Teri'ipaia became Brando's third wife. They were di-

Continued from 61 The proposed change would be more equita ble,according

this winter's weather.

Los Angeres Times

his Tahitian lover — andthe two

size for residential and commercial units. The city has to

Washington have partly closed their operations or

By Steve Chawkins

beautiful Tahitian maiden who

Water

ly all ski resorts in western

Actresswho wasBrando's 2ndwife

Castaneda, who was known as Movita, had a small role as a

beastes@bendbulletin.com

or David and Victoria Beckham

In 1968, Movita won an annulment from Brando in Santa Monica Superior Court,

prompting the Los Angeles Times to declare that the "eightyear marriage ... has ended as it began: mysteriously."

ican duo known as Rosita and are today," the Irish IndepenIn addition to Miko, RebecMoreno. In 1933, she was spot- dent, a Dublin newspaper, said ca and four grandchildren, ted by RKO producer Pandro in2008. Movita's survivors include her Berman, who signed her as a But Doyle was an alcoholic 102-year-old sister, Petra.

Joe graduated with honors from Burns Union High School ln Z003, Following graduation Joe got hired as a seasonal wildland firefighter with the BLM, He spent many summers working with the fire crew to help put himself through college. He hadmany friends there and he really enjoyed the comradery they shared, In the spring of 2004 Joe started attending Oregon Institute of Technology in Klamath Falls, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering Technology in the spring of2009, He returned to Burns for one more summer as a firefighter before he began working as an engineering technician at the BLM ln Burns, While his college training only provided a basefor the type of work he would be doing with the BLM, he jumped in with both feet and quickly learned how to do the job, and do it welL He became amuch respected engineer within both the Burns District BLM and the state.

In spring2004 Joe met the love of his life, Autumn Richardson, at a wedding in Bend. During their several years of a long-distance romance, the couple would talk every night, except on rare occasions whenJoe was on a fire attd was unable to call. When they were together,Joe, always the gentleman, made it a habit to always open doors for her. On February 14,2009 Joe proposedattd was accepted, they were married in Burns on September 5, 2009. They made their home just outside of Burns and Joealways had at least one project going on. If he was unsure about how to do something he would research it until he was confident he could do it. Joe excelled at construction, woodworking, roping, hunting, working on trucks, remodeling and many other things, often working on these projects with his wife. He made many improvements to the family's house, turning it into the home of their dreams and making it ready for their family. He had looked forward to rebuilding an old Chevrolet truck with his sons when they were older. He would always give150%and loved to see his ideas turn into reality. On February17, 2012 the couple welcomed their first son into their home, Cody Donald Toelle, From that momentJoe was adevoted and loving father who cherished his family. He loved to spend time playing with Cody, No matter whatJoe had going on, he always tried to be home in time to put Coriy in his pajamas, give him his milk, tuck him in, and read him his bedtime stories,

Just when Joedid not think he could be any happier or more proud of his family, on January 23, 2015Joe and Autumn welcomed their second son into the world, Wade Allen Toelle. Joe told many people that he had never been happier and it was clear how much he loved andadored his family. During the two weeks Joespent with Wade, he loved nothing more than to just hold and look at him. He couldn't wait until Wade wasold enough that he could make him smile and laugh. The last few weeks of his life were spent doing little but loving attd showing off his family. Joe is survived by his wife Autumn; and sons, Codt (3) and Wade (2 weeks); his parents, John Toelle of Burns, and Connie and Jim Karns of Chehalis, WAI his brother, J.R.; grandparents, Don Toelle of Burns and Liz Moles of John Dat; uncles and aunts, Dave and Toni, Leigh, Carol, Bob, David, Donald, and numerous cousins, extended family members, and friends. He was preceded ln death by his grandmother, Shirley Toelle; and grandfathers, David and Raymond Moles. Joe was anamazing husband, father, son, brother, grandson, and friend. He lived his life with no regrets attd will always be loved and remembered. Contributions in Joe Toelle's memory can bemadeto Autumn Toelle to help ensure Coriy attd Wadehave all the opportunities Joe wanted for them. Contributions can besent in care ot LaFollette's Chapel, PO. Box488, Burns, OR97720. You can sign the on-line guestbook at www.latolietteschapeL com.


B6

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

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

i

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i

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TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 60'

ALMANAC

"'"

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

55' 27'

48' 24'

Partl ysunnyand mild

Timesofcloudsandsun

LOW 28'

Nice and warmwith plenty of sunshine

I f ' I

THURSDAY

Mainly clear

44

Sunny to partly cloudy

TEMPERATURE

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Yesterday Today Thursday

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 54/30/0.00 64/37/s 72/50/s /38 High 50 45 89' in 1930 lington 57/34 Portland Akron 19/-5/0.00 17/0/sf 5/-13/sf Meac am Losti ne 54/47 23' 24' Low 2'in 1956 / 5 /37 Albany 21/2/0.00 25/11/sf 13/-4/sf 1 • /2 8/31 • • i • E nterpri he Dall Albuquerque 52/24/0.00 62/32/s 68/37/s PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Sunshine Bed/44 N andy • ee 56/32 Anchorage 44/35/Tr 36/23/pc 33/23/pc 58/37 M innvill Joseph Atlanta 38/29/0.12 42/17/pc 32/18/s 5/40 Gove nt • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" and a few clouds • upi Condon 8/35 Atlantic City 26/12/0.25 31/17/sf 21/8/pc Cam • 57 58 31 Record 0.40" in 2004 today with anunion Lincoln Austin 54/35/0.00 65/36/s 71/53/s 52/ Month to date (normal) 0.2 2" (0.69") other warm afternoon. 55/46 Sale Baltimore 27/13/0.28 30/9/sf 17/2/pc pmy Granitee Year to date(normal) 0.47 " (2.22") Patchy clouds tonight. N 58/4 • >® Billings 38/21/0.07 52/38/c 57/34/pc ' Newpo a 'Baker G 57/30 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 18" • Bo 34 Birmingham 36/24/0.11 41/16/pc 36/19/s 7/41 55/44 • Mitch ll 57/25 Bismarck 12/-2/Tr 7/-13/s 19/13/sf Camp Sh man Red WEST:PartlY sunny Yachms 80/31 n R SUN ANDMOON Boise 52/29/0.00 58/33/s 58/33/pc 59/29 • John eu in the north today; 57/42 Boston 23/10/0.02 9/sf 26/6/$f • Prineville Day 8/27 Today Thu. tario Bridgeport, CT 26/11/0.05 28/1 mostly sunny in the 28/17/sf 22/4/sf 81/33 • Pa lina 61 / 3 0 7:01 a.m. 6: 5 9 a.m. 5 32 Buffalo 10/-4/0.00 17/-3/sf 5/-8/sf south. A shower in the Floren e • Eugelle e Re d Brothers 59 29 5:38 p.m. 5: 4 0 p.m. n orth late tonight. Valee Burlington, VT 14/-16/0.00 22/9/sf 15/0/sn 58 / 4 5 Su iVere 80/28 8:34 a.m. 7: 1 2 a.m. 57/34 Caribou, ME 13/-7/0.00 19/4/sf 21/9/sn Nyssa • BO/ Ham on C e Charleston, SC 55/43/0.33 54/23/s 37/18/s 5:48 p.m. 7 : 0 5 p.m. La Pine J untura 57/ 3 0 Grove Oakridge Co Charlotte 34/23/0.56 38/11/$f 25/4/s • Burns OREGON EXTREMES First Fu l l Last 57/32 58/39 /39 Chattanooga 34/21/0.06 35/9/sf 27/12/pc 56 2 • Fort Rock Riley 60/26 YESTERDAY Cresce t Cheyenne 29/16/0.01 45/31/s 55/32/pc d w d 81/24 80/30 Chicago 19/15/Tr 10/-6/pc 5/-8/s High: eg' Bandon Roseburg 24/-7/0.01 17/-5/sn 9/-6/pc • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati Jordan V gey Feb 18 Feb 25 M a r 5 M a r 13 at Medford 58/44 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 59/43 Cleveland 19/-8/0.00 16/0/sf 5/-10/sf Low:15' 55/35 Marsh Lake 81/32 ColoradoSprings 30/11/Tr 43/28/s 59/33/s Tuuight's ulty:ClydeTombaughdiscovers 81/27 at Rome 83/27 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 34/16/0.03 14/1/pc 22/1 2/pc • Paisley 7/ dwarf planet Pluto in 1930. a Columbia, SC 39/33/0.70 49/18/pc 35/1 6/s • 61/31 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 42/33/0.67 49/22/s 41/22/s Medfo d 6 2 / 29 Gold ach Rorne 0' Columbus,OH 19/-4/Tr 17/1/sf 8/-8/c 57/ e~ 82/28 Klamath Concord, NH 35/2/0.00 27/12/sf 24/3/sn Source: JimTodd,OMSI • Ashl nd • Fags • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 57/39/0.07 67/47/s 74/59/pc Bro ings 64/ 62/28 58/ 83/27 60/26 Dallas 54/28/0.05 59/32/s 65/51/s Dayton 22/-3/Tr 16/0/sf 9/-3/pc Denver 34/1 8/Tr 47/30/s 59/29/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Des Moines 24/14/0.01 12/0/s 14/6/sf 2 I~ 3 ~ Z I T City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 21/-2/Tr 19/-3/sf 9/-10/sf Detroit The highertheAccuWeaffrer.rxrmiiv index number, Astoria 65/37/0.00 55/44/pc54/43/c La Grande 55/21/0.00 58/31/s 56/34/s Portland 63/4 4/0.0056/41/pc 54/39/c -1/-16/c 4/-10/s Duluth 4/-9/Tr the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protscgon.0-2 Low, Baker City 51/18/0.00 57/25/s 56/27/pc L a Pine 61/18/0.0059/28/s 54/26/pc Prinevige 52/ 2 1/0.0061/33/s 54/30/pc El Paso 60/36/0.00 69/40/s 75/49/pc 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 53/45/Tr 5 8/44/pc 61/44/pc M edford 69/3 4/0.00 64/36/s 60/32/s Redmond 51/ 2 1/0.0061/27/s 55/26/pc Fairbanks 34/10/0.00 20/5/pc 22/6/pc Bums 53/22/0.00 60/26/s 57/27/pc N ewport 59/4 8/0.00 55/44/pc 54/41/c Roseburg 64 / 40/0.00 59/43/s 56/40/pc Fargo -1/-18/pc 5/0/s 3/-9/Tr Eugene 62/32/0.00 57/40/s 56/37/pc NorthBend 57/45/0.00 56/43/pc 57/42/pc Salem 65/36/0.00 58/40/pc56/39/ pc Flagstaff 57/21/0.00 64/27/s 65/30/pc Klamath Fags 61/24/0.00 62/28/s 58/25/s O n tario 53/23/0.00 59/32/s 59/35/pc Sisters 50/1 9/0.00 62/27/s 55/27/pc Grand Rapids 20/7/0.04 14/-4/sf 7/-12/sf For webcameras of ourpasses, goto Lakeview 63/21/0.00 63/27/s 60/25/s Pendleton 52/27/0.00 55/35/s 52/37/c The Dages 5 8 /29/0.00 58/37/pc 56/38/ c 7/-10/c 4/-15/s Green Bay 14/4/Tr www.bendbulletin.com/webcams Greensboro 37/16/0.36 35/5/sf 18/1/s Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Mild today with abunHarrisburg 25/7/Tr 29/10/$f 16/0/sf dantsunshine.Tonight:patchyclouds. Harfford, CT 23/8/Tr 28/13/pc 20/0/$f Helena 45/21/0.00 53/35/s 55/33/pc US20at SantiamPass:Niceandwarm today Honolulu 82/68/0.00 83/69/s 82/70/pc with plenty of sunshine.Mainly clear tonight. ~ t ee ~ 208 ~ 308 ~ 408 ~ 50 8 ~ ece ~7 0 8 ~ 808 ~ 908 ~ 100 8 ~ 11 0 8 ~ 108 ~ 0 8 ~ 08 Houston 54/35/0.02 65/37/s 66/56/pc US 28 atGov'tCamp:Partly sunny and mild + Huntsville 31/21/0.01 35/10/c 29/17/pc c igs NATIONAL i today. Mostly cloudytonight. ; ;; ~ indianapolis 26/1/0.02 13/-2/sf 9/-4/s Jackson, MS 38/24/0.00 50/21/s 46/27/pc EXTREMES US 28 atOchocoDivide:Mild today with Jacksonville 64/61/0.61 57/29/s 46/24/s plenty of sun.Partly cloudytonight. YESTERDAY (for the

Yesterday Normal Record

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln

Litlle Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

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

OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix

Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY

UV INDEX TODAY

Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa re Savannah Seattle Sioux Fags Spokane Springfield, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington,Dc

ROAD CONDITONS

NATIONAL WEATHER

SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday

48 contiguous states) National high Ge at Death Valley,CA National low: -80' at SaranacLake, NY Precipitation:f.10" at Jacksonville, NC

54/41

• Billings

Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 0 49-4 9 1-1 Hoodoo SkiArea 0 Mt. Ashland 0 21-5 2 0 47-9 0 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 31-71 1-5 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 28-3 9 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 4 30-53 Vail, CO 3 49-4 9 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 28-48 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-4 2 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 50-50 Sun Valley, ID 0 38-8 8

5 2/38

Amsterdam Athens

p 30/1

Source: OnTheSnow.com

I

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Wichita

Yakima Yuma i

Bisms 7/.1 3

46/32/0.12 48/45/0.24 Auckland 71/59/0.00 Baghdad 64/43/0.00 Che n Bangkok 91/75/0.00 Beijing 52/33/0.00 * J Beirut 63/54/1.08 an sncfsco S s l i Lakeity 10/4r Omah m' v • Den 57/35 . * * * * * * d d d d Berlin 43/27/0.00 4/50 Si. uis vs d d d d 47/3 + Las V ss Bogota 72/37/Tr d d d d d * au/8 73/4 Kansas Qty Budapest 37/28/0.00 19/5 hte „*„ ed d d d d d Buenos Aires 88/66/0.00 Los An fes querque Cabo San Lucas 79/58/0.00 * * 1 1 , 5/se 4 2 • L' Cairo 64/48/0.00 \ $ Anchorage klshoma Ci Ai Calgary 32/19/0.08 4 ~ *: 36/2 n o Ph oenix 42/1 d d d d d d d d Cancun 84/63/0.00 d d d d d d d d d /54 0/53 inning sm Juneau 51 Ps d d d d d d d d d Dublin 46/32/0.00 1/fe 9/ Edinburgh 46/35/0.01 45/38 d d d d d d d Dallas 4 4 4 4 4 7 Geneva 39/34/0.00 4 d d d d d d d v 59/32 oa • rlsnu d d d d d d Harare 73/58/0.00 Q worieens 4 B i Os 4 4 4 4 4 • 5/37 Hong Kong 74/65/0.00 Honolulu Chihuahua 59/36 n nd d d d d Istanbul 37/36/0.58 83/49 72/39 Jerusalem 53/41/0.02 Monte YO 42/44 Johannesburg 75/53/0.00 ) A A A A A AX Lima 84/73/0.00 Lisbon 59/46/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 48/37/0.00 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 54/41/0.16 Manila 88/73/0.00 uofs • 58/3

45/34/pc 42/36/pc 76/61/s 70/48/s 92/77/t 50/24/s 60/49/sh

43/32/pc 70/49/c 41/23/pc 84/60/1 84/58/s

62/45/pc 48/32/pc 80/61/pc 52/41/c 51/43/r 43/31/s 78/56/pc 72/64/s 36/33/sn 49/38/sh 83/60/s 82/71/pc 59/44/s 49/39/pc 50/34/pc 87/75/c

45/37/s 49/37/s 75/62/s 69/45/s 91/78/sh 46/29/pc 52/43/r 45/32/pc 69/47/pc 42/26/pc 74/56/c 85/60/s 54/47/pc 50/31/pc 74/60/s 47/33/sh 47/35/sh 49/32/s 80/55/pc 71/64/pc 40/36/c 42/34/sh 86/62/s 82/70/pc 61/47/s 48/42/r 54/35/s 86/74/pc

Yesterday Today Thursday

City

ORE 58 atWigamette Pass:Mild todaywith plenty of sun.Partly cloudytonight. Partly sunny andstill mild tomorrow. ORE 138atDiamond Lake:Mostly sunny today. Partly cloudytonight. Partly sunny

Mostly sunny

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatilla Hood 57/35 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

EAST:Sunnyto partly cloudy today with a Seasid mild afternoon. Partly 54/46 cloudy tonight. Cannon

0

22.

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

SUNDAY

8

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 44/36/0.46 45/38/r 43/34/sn 30/16/0.02 19/5/s 23/13/pc 21/4/0.01 14/-8/sf 6/-16/sf 67/50/0.00 73/49/s 77/51/pc 21/1/Tr 19/-6/sn 7/-9/pc 25/17/0.01 24/4/s 24/13/c 38/20/0.00 42/16/s 39/21/pc 71/59/0.00 75/56/pc 74/56/pc 26/0/Tr 20/-2/sn 12/-10/pc 18/10/Tr 5/-10/pc 4/-14/s 32/16/0.00 35/11/pc 30/21/pc 83/64/0.00 69/46/pc 62/42/s 18/13/0.02 9/-4/pc 4/-5/s 10/0/Tr 4/-9/pc 8/-2/s 28/14/Tr 27/-1/sn 21/10/pc 47/34/0.12 59/36/s 54/41/s 27/15/0.14 32/16/$f 21/4/sf 29/13/0.10 30/14/sf 21/3/sf 29/19/0.28 33/14/pc 20/8/pc 52/22/0.02 46/23/s 58/37/s 25/16/0.01 19/4/s 23/14/pc 80/59/0.40 61/37/pc 54/32/s 81/54/0.00 85/58/s 88/59/pc 25/17/0.00 10/-1/pc 10/0/s 28/13/0.26 31/14/sf 21/4/sf 77/55/0.00 80/53/s 83/56/s 20/2/0.04 21/2/sf 7/-7/sf 21/0/0.00 27/17/sn 28/8/sn 22/11/0.05 30/14/pc 25/2/sf 35/19/0.44 36/9/sf 19/2/s 21/6/0.07 30/16/c 44/24/pc 66/31/0.00 69/36/s 68/35/pc 32/17/0.49 36/11/sf 21/-1/pc 17/-10/0.00 21/4/sf 8/-6/sf 65/50/0.00 66/45/s 67/46/pc 35/10/Tr 16/-1/pc 18/10/s 49/26/0.00 57/35/s 62/38/s 56/37/0.02 64/41/s 71/56/s 66/61/0.00 68/56/pc 69/57/pc 59/53/0.00 64/50/pc 65/50/pc 59/54/0.00 67/46/pc 69/46/pc 46/19/0.00 57/27/s 64/31/s 60/50/0.23 56/25/s 41/21/s 61/40/0.00 55/46/pc 54/43/c 16/9/Tr 9/-5/s 17/1 2/$1 50/25/0.00 49/30/pc 46/31/c 35/3/0.00 22/4/s 31/17/pc 72/63/0.77 60/42/pc 54/34/s 73/50/0.00 77/47/s 82/52/pc 47/16/0.00 36/18/pc 46/30/s 31/17/0.26 34/15/sf 21/4/pc 47/19/Tr 36/18/pc 41/23/s 58/27/0.00 56/31/pc 57/31/c 81/58/0.00 83/56/s 85/58/pc

I

Mecca Mexico City

95/73/0.00 74/55/0.00 21/-9/0.00 Montreal Moscow 30/9/0.00 Nairobi 82/61/0.38 Nassau 82/68/0.03 New Delhi 81/63/0.00 Osaka 51/40/0.06 Oslo 34/28/0.25 Ottawa 9/-13/0.00 Paris 45/37/0.06 Rio de Janeiro 91/77/0.35 Rome 66/46/0.00 Santiago 90/57/0.00 Sao Paulo 79/68/0.45 Sapporo 40/30/0.00 Seoul 40/31/0.02 Shanghai 57/39/0.00 Singapore gom/0.00 Stockholm 34/31/0.00 Sydney 83/71/0.06 Taipei 70/64/0.00 Tel Aviv 64/45/0.07 Tokyo 45/41/0.39 Toronto 16/3/0.00 Vancouver 48/18/0.00 Yienna 39/30/0.00 Warsaw 37/21/0.00

94/70/s 75/45/s 15/9/sf 27/22/sf 84/60/pc 77/57/sh 80/59/1 48/36/pc 48/44/r 18/0/sf 45/31/pc 92/79/c 56/38/s 83/51/s 77/70/t 37/24/c 43/25/pc 52/36/s 88P5/t 41/38/sn 83/72/pc 68/59/pc 61/49/sh 43/41/r 18/-6/sf 51/41/pc 40/29/pc 40/31/pc

90/63/s 75/46/pc 14/1/sn 31/26/pc 84/59/pc 69/56/s 81/61/pc 47/35/pc 48/40/c 6/-10/pc 47/38/pc 94/78/c 54/37/s 81/54/pc 79/70/c 36/22/c 45/25/s 49/41/pc 86/75/t 46/37/pc 81/71/sh 66/60/pc 55/45/sh 51/38/pc 6/-9/pc 51/40/sh 45/30/pc 42/29/c

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NBA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 College basketball, C3 NHL, C2 Preps, C4 NFL, C3 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

TELEVISION

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Root back with BendBroadband

rane ein ,

Live televised coverage of the Seattle Mariners and the Portland Timbers is about to return to the Bendarea. BendBroadbandand Root Sports announced Tuesday anagreement through which the regional sports network will relaunch to BendBroadband customers on March1. BendBroadband previously carried

e aea • Former Bend Highplayer BeauWalker follows RileyfromOregon St.to Nebraska

Root Sports until the in late 2012.

i

In addition to the

®

Mariners and theTimbers, the Root Sports lineup includes live telecasts of the Seattle Sounders andGonzaga University sports, along with coverage of Big Sky Conferenceand Mountain West Conference events.

iIL )gg

I II L

— Bulletin staff report

HOCKEY

Kentnckystays undefeated

graduate assistant for Wa lker the Oregon State footcoach for the Beaver ball program, has followed offensive line, and he says he head coach Mike Riley to will hold that same job with serveasa graduateassistant the Cornhuskers. at Nebraska. He movedtoLincoln on A former star quarterback Jan. 5, about a month after at Bend High School, Walk- Riley's stunning announceer, 25, has been in Lincoln, ment that he would be leavNebraska, for about a month ing Oregon State to accept and a half now. the head coaching job at "It is (flat), but it's not bad," Nebraska after a 12-season Walker says of Nebraska. second tenure (and a total of "It's actually really nice. 14 seasons) in Corvallis. Definitely you miss your SeeWalker/C3

world championships in

RuSSia and anOther Olymshe captured four BERKELEY, Calif. — Mis- pics after

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Summit's Conner Naegele puts up ashot inthe lane during Tuesday night's gameSummit HighSchool.

• A slow start doesn't keepSummit from overtaking Ridgeview By Victoria Jacobsen The Bulletin

sy Franklin is downright giddy about her two seasons swimming in , college for California, , even if it meant the

delay of big-money endorsement deals that will come in a matter of months as she turns

"

-

gold medals in her Olympic debut at the 2012 London Games while just .

'

utes of its 51-39 win over Rid-

geview on Tuesday night.

in Berkeley with the Pac-12

Nothing looked easy for Summit in the opening min-

-'

.;

i Fra n klin

pro and gears up for the 2016 Rio Olympics. Franklin will soon wrap up her sophomore season

17 years old. No w a couple of months shy of turning 20, Franklin insists she w o uld not change

her swimmingpath and would choose again to spend two years at Cal — and she is not ruling out

sti c k ing around campus to tr a i n alongside a talented list

Conference meet and NCAA of Olympians from not only championships, then quickly the U.S. but a handful of oth-

As the visiting Ravens

jumped to a 10-point lead in the first quarter, the Storm

turn her attention toward training for this summer's

left some of their shots short.

er co u n t ries as well. SeeFranklin /C4

Others were knocked away by a stifling Ridgeview defense. Even layup attempts clanged

FOOTBALL

Summit coachRyan Cruz called a timeout after five

minutes of lackluster play, but Hosanna Wilder answered with a dagger of a jump shot to increase the Ravens lead to

The No.1 Wildcats beat Tennessee66-48, C3

12-2. "We really wanted to come out with more intensity and

CORRECTION

competitiveness in the beginning of the game, and we did that," Ridgeview coach Randi

(Editors note: Foilowingis a repeat ofa correction thatappeared in Tuesday's Bulletin. itis revised toinclude all three yearsin which Crook County's Ryan

student assistant and

The Associated Press

off the rim.

BASKETBALL

Last season, Walk-

er — the son of longtime Bend High coach Craig Walker, who is now retired — was a graduate assistant

By Janie McCauley

to establish the mark

COLLEGE

do so.

Olympian Franklin nears collegiate farewell with Cal

EDMONTON,Alberta — A group of sore, exhausted but happy players in the Edmonton area haveset an unofficial record for the world's longest hockey game. About 40 skaters played for 250 straight hours through a mix of weather and injuries at a rink outside the city

— The Associated Press

little bit, and I'm excited to

SWIMMING

Players set record for longest game

the event has beenheld, with the previous record of 246 hours, 2 minutes set in southern Alberta three years ago. Judges from Guinness World Records will review footage of the game before the 10 days of competition can officially enter the books. The players raised more than $800,000 for the Alberta Cancer Foundation.

same time, it's my opportunity to spread the wings a

he was going to pass up this opportunity. Walker, who spent seven seasons as a

The network will be part of the cable company's Essentials and Preferred packages. BendBroadband subscribers will find Root Sports on channel 20 (channel 620 HD).

This is the fifth time

family and stuff, but at the

The Bulletin

Beau Walker admits that he misses the mountains. But there was no way

two companies were unable to agree to terms

Monday afternoon.

By Mark Morical

Summit's Megan Cornett, right, and Ridgeview's Darien Epps go af-

ter a loose ball duringTuesday night's game at Summit High School.

Inside • Madras girls basketball lock up home play-in game,C4 Summit's Sarah Heinly

Teammate Sarah Reeves followed up with a field goal,

s

tmsss'

$•

tRS

etfs @ tisttt%'

and Megan Cornett knocked in a 3-point shot to close out

etS

0

the quarter and put the Storm

Davis said. "We had a hard

then cut down the lane and

on track for the eventual In-

loss on Friday (against Bend),

dropped in a layup to give the Storm their second basket of the night. It looked, well, easy.

termountain Conference girls basketball win. SeeStorm/C4

and I think we knew we could play a little bit better than that."

•:)

Smith yiras a state wres-

tiing champion. Theaulietin regrets the error) A story headlined "Cowboys send20 wrestlers to state championships" that appeared in Sunday's Bulletin on pageD4 contained incorrect information about Crook County wrestling. Collbran Meeker will look to become thesecond Cowboy to win three individual state championships, joining Ryan Smith, who wasnot included in anOregon School Activities Association archive listing of three-time state champions but won titles in 2005, 2006 and 2007.

Mel Evans i The Associated Press

A college football player runs near a large screen displaying data from monitors attached to each player at TEST Parisi Football Academy in Martinsville, New Jersey.

PREP BOYS BASKETBALL

Michalski's 32points sparksStorm Bulletin staff report REDMOND — Max Michalski made four

3-pointers in the first quarter on his way to a game-high 32 points as Summit defeated Ridgeview 83-66Tuesday night in Intermountain Conference boys basketball action at Ridgeview High School. The win puts Class 5A fourth-ranked Summit (6-4 IMC, 16-5 overall) alone in second place in the IMC with the postseason fast approaching.

"It's a big win for our program," said Summit coach Jon Frazier. "With the way the league is shaping up, every win at this point is huge."

The Storm outscored the No. 5 Ravens 28-

New technologyaids players preparing for NFL combine

14 in the third quarter and made 21 of 33 free throws in the game. Michalski was 12 of 16

By Rob Maaddi

players for this week's NFL

from the line and finished with six 3-pointers.

The Associated Press

combine.

"He gets it going sometimes, and he was just locked in from the get-go," Frazier said of Michalski. "He really sparked us early on." Jack Hurley added 14points and seven assists for Summit, and Cam McCormick finished with 14 points and eight rebounds.

Carson Manselle paced Ridgeview (5-5, 14-7) with 19 points, and George Mendazona added 15 points.

MARTINSVILLE, N.J.

— The big-screen television hanging on the wall at TEST Football Academy has various colors, numbers and other data flashing across the screen, all vital information for the trainers

preparing a group of college

Science and technology have become a big part of sports in recent years.

One of the latest examples is a heart-rate monitor that TEST Sports Club trainers

use to take tracking workouts to another level.

SeeCombine/C3


C2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY TENNis ATP, RioOpen ATP, Delray BeachOpen ATP, RioOpen ATP, Delray BeachOpen WTA, Dubai TennisChampionship

Time T V /Radio 7 a.m. Ten n is 11:30 a.m. Tennis 1 p.m. Ten nis 5 p.m. Ten n is 2 a.m.(Sat.j Tennis

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCARSprint Cup, Daytona 500 practice SOCCER Europe, Champions League, Schalke 04 vs. RealMadrid

11 a.m.

FS2

1 1:30 a.m. F S 1

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Wisconsin at PennSt. Men's college, Louisville at Syracuse Men's college, Xavier at Cincinnati Men's college, EastCarolina at Tulsa Men's college, Virginia Tech atMiami Men's college, Vanderbilt at Florida Men's college, Northwestern at Minnesota Men's college, North Carolina at Duke Men's college, UCLAat Arizona St. Men's college, lowa St. at OklahomaSt. Men's college, Missouri at Arkansas Women's college, Stanford at California Men's college, Utah State atSanJose State Men's college, Colorado at Oregon

4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m.

Bi g Ten ESP N ES P N2 ES P NU Root SEC Bi g Ten ESP N ES P N2 ES P NU SEC Pa c -12 Root

ES P NU

HOCKEY

NHL, Detroit Red atChicago NHL, Los Angeles atColorado

4:30 p.m. NBCSN 7 p.m. NB CSN

GOLF

LPGATour, Australian Open

8 p.m.

Golf

THURSDAY AUTO RACiNG

NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Daytona 500, practice NASCAR,Truck Series, Daytona, practice NASCAR,Truck Series, Daytona, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Duel at Daytona SOCCER Europa League,BSCYoung Boys vs Everton Europa League, Liverpool vs Besiktas GOLF PGA Tour, Northern Trust Open

9 a.m. FS1 1 0:30 a.m. F S 1 1 2:30 p.m. F S 1 4 p.m. FS1 10a.m. noon

FS2 FS2

Today Girls basketball: ColumbiaBasin Conferenceplayoffs, Culverat Stanfield, 6p.m.

2 p.m.

Golf

Men's college, Saint Joseph's at Dayton 3 p.m. Men's college, Nebraska atMaryland 4 p.m. Men's college, Purdue at Indiana 4 p.m. Men's college, Temple atSouthern Methodist 4 p.m. Men's college, Central Florida at Tulane 4 p.m. Women's college, Notre Dame at Georgia Tech 4 p.m. Women's college, Vanderbilt at Florida 4 p.m. Men's college, Rutgers at lowa 5 p.m. 5 p.m. NBA, Dallas at OklahomaCity Women's college, Maryland at Wisconsin 6 p.m. Men's college, Connecticut at Memphis 6 p.m. Men's college, Mississippi at Mississippi State 6 p.m. Men's college, USC at Arizona 6 p.m. Men's college,Alaska-Fairbanks at NWNazarene 6 p.m. Women's college, South Carolina at Arkansas 6 p.m. Men's college,SanDiegoatBYU 7 p.m. NBA, SanAntonio at Los Angeles Clippers 7:30 p.m Men's college, Utah atOregonState 8 p.m. Men's college, Gonzagaat Pacific 8 p.m.

ESPN ESPN2 ESPNN

Root SEC ESPNU TNT

Big Ten ESPN ESPN2

Pac-12 Root SEC ESPNU TNT

Pac-12 Root

HOCKEY

4 p.m.

NB CSN

5 p.m.

Tennis

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER YOuth SOCCer,Cheerleading in RedmOnd —Kids in pre-K through fourth grade cannowsign up for the six-week spring soccer league sponsored by theRedmondArea Park and Recreation District. The seasonwill run from April 4 to May 9, and all games will be played at the HighDesert Sports Complex onSaturdays. The park district's soccer cheerleading program, open to kids in first to sixth grade, will run concurrently. The registration deadline for both programs is this Saturday, andmore information is available at www. raprd.org.

SOFTBALL DuCkSSweeP dOubleheader — TheNo.2rankedOregonsoftball team maintained its perfect record with a doubleheadersweepof Houston on Tuesdayafternoon in Houston. The Duckswon thefirst game 2-0 behind strong pitching from Geri AnnGlasco and Cheridan Hawkins. Oregon thenscored three runs in the first inning of the second game enroute to a10-5 victory. Oregon's 8-0 start to the season is one win awayfrom matching the best start in school history (9-0, 1989).

In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

TBD Girls basketball: Culver at ColumbiaBasin Conferencetournament at Pendleton Convention Center, TBD

Friday Boys basketball: Bend atSummit, 7p.m.;Mountain Viewat Ridgeview,yp.m.;Sistersat Sutherlin,y:15 p.m.; Madras at Corbett, 7 p.m.; CrookCountyat Estacada, 7 p.mc Creswell at LaPine, 7:30p.m.; Culver atColumbiaBasin Conferencetournament at Pendleton Convention Center,TBD Girls basketball:Summ it atBend, 7p.m.; Ridgeview at Mountain View,7 p.m.; Sistersat Sutherlin, 5:45 p.m.;Corbettat Madras,7p,mcEstacada at Crook County, 7 p.m.; Creswell at LaPine, 6p.m.; Culver at Columbia Basin Conferencetournament atPendletonConvention Center, TBD;Trinity Lutheranvs. TBD inMountainValey LeagueplayoffsinKlamath Falls, 2p.m. Swimming: Class5A,4A/3A/2A/1Astate championships at Mt. HoodCommunity Collegein Gresham Wrestling: La Pine at Class3ASpecial District 3 championshipsinRogueRiver,TBD Nordic skiing: OISR Astatefreestyle andrelayraces at Mt.Bach elor,12:30 p.m. Equeslrian: OHSET Central District meet at Deschute sCountyfairgrounds,Redmond,8:30a.m. Saturday Boys basketball: Culver at ColumbiaBasin Conferencetournament at Pendleton Convention Center, TBD Girls basketball: Culver at ColumbiaBasin Conferencetournament at Pendleton Convention Center, TBD;Trinity Lutheranvs. TBDin Mountain Valley League playoffs inKlamathFalls, 5:30p.m. Swimming:Class 5A,4A/3A/2A/1Astate championships at Mt. HoodCommunity Collegein Gresham Wrestling: La Pine at Class 3ASpecial District 3 championships in Rogue River, TBD;Culver, Gilchrist atClass2A/1A Special District 3championshipsin Mil City,TBD Alpine skiing: OSSA at Mt. Bachelor, Slalom, 10 a.m. Nordicskiing:OISRAstateclassic racesatMt. Bachelor,10a.m. Equestrian: OHSE T Central District meet at Deschute sCountyfairgrounds,Redmond,8:30a.m.

Sunday

Equestrian:OHSETCentral District meet at De schute sCountyfairgrounds,Redmond,8:30a.m.

BASKETBALL NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPST

d-Atlanta d-Toronto d-Chicago Washington Cleveland Milwaukee Charlotte Miami Brooklyn Boston Detroit Indiana Orlando Philadelphia NewYork

W L 43 11 36 17 34 20 33 21 33 22 30 23 22 30 22 30 21 31 20 31 21 33 21 33 17 39 12 41 10 43

Pct GB 796

W L 42 9 39 14 36 17 36 17 36 19 35 19 34 19 29 25 28 25 27 26 20 33 19 34 18 34 13 40 11 42

Pct GB

WesternConference

d-GoldenState d-Memphis d-Portland Houston Dallas L.A. Clippers SanAntonio Phoenix Oklahoma City NewOrleans Denver Utah

Sacrame nto L.A. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader

T/IRILLo r)/l(Tf(j

/gfNYo IEEIjt

679 6'/~ 630 9 611 10 600 10'/z 566 12t/r

423 20 423 20 404 21 392 2ft/t 389 22

389 22 304 27 226 30'/z 189 32t/r

824 736 679 679 655

4 7 7 8

648 Bt/t

642 9 537 14t/t

528 15 509 16 377 23 358 24 346 24t/t

245 30 208 32

Thursday'sGames DallasatOklahomaCity, 5p.m. SanAntonioat L.A.Clippers,7:30p.m. Friday's Games NewOrleansatOrlando,4p.m. Indianaat Philadelphia,4 p.m. Miami atNe wYork,4;30 p.m. TorontoatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Chicago at Detroit, 4:30p.m. Cleveland atWashington,5 p.m. PhoenixatMinnesota,5p.m. Denverat Milwaukee,5:30p.m. HoustonatDallas, 5:30p.m. PortlandatUtah,6p.m. Bostonat Sacramento, 7 p.m. BrooklynatL.A.Lakers, 7:30p.m. SanAntonioatGoldenState, 7:30p.m.

Curry,GO L Aldridge,POR Griffin, LAC Thompson, GOL Irving,CLE Liffard,PO R Bosh,MIA Butler,CHI Gay,SAC

40 358 189 966 24.2 40 334 281 950 23.8 51 418 206 1203 23.6 47 435 213 1108 23.6 51 448 245 1149 22.5 50 397 155 1104 22.1 52 407 201 1128 21.7 53 383 242 1138 21.5 44 343 179 928 21.1 49 322 302 998 20.4 48 338 231 955 19.9

ATP

+

Rio Opea Tuesday atRio deJaneiro First Round FabioFognini(4), Italy, def.Jiri Vesely,CzechRepublic,1-6,7-6(7), 6-1. PabloAndujar,Spain, def.PaoloLorenzi, Italy, 3-6, BlazRola,Slovenia,def. Leonardo Mayer (5), Argentina,4-6,7-6(3), 4-1,retired. JoaoSouza,Brazil, def.FacundoArguego, Argentina, 6-2,6-1. JuanMonaco,Argentina, def. SantiagoGiraldo(7), Colombia6-3, , 3-0,retired. FedericoDelbonis, Argentina,def. DiegoSchwarlzman,Argentina, 6-7(8), 7-6(6), 2-1,retired. Martin Klizan(8), Slovakia, def. DusanLajovic, Serbia,6-4,0-6, 6-4. PabloCue vas(6), Uruguay,def. NicolasAlmagro, Spain,4-6, 6-3,6-4. DavidFerrer(2), Spain,def.DanielGimeno-Traver, Spain,6-4,6-3.

— ~)g'

Men's college

HOCKEY

Pac-12 All Times PST

Conference

W L Pct Arizona 10 2 . 8 33 Utah 10 2 .833 O regon 8 5 .61 5 UCLA 8 5 .615 O regon St. 7 6 . 5 38 S tanford 7 6 .5 3 8 C alifornia 6 7 .4 6 2 A rizona St. 5 7 .4 1 7 C olorado 5 7 .4 1 7 Washington St. 5 8 .385 Washington 3 1 0 .231 Southern Cal 2 11 .154

NHL Overall W L Pct 22 3 .880 20 4 .833 18 8 .692 16 10 .615 16 9 .640 16 9 .640 16 10 .615 13 12 .520

12 12 .500 11 14 .440 14 11 .560 10 15 .400

Today'sGames ColoradoatOregon,8 p.m. Thursday'sGames SouthernCalatArizona, 6p.m. Utah atOregonSt., 8 p.m. Saturday'sGames CaliforniaatStanford,3:30p.m. UCLAat Arizona,6p.m. ColoradoatOregonSt., 8 p.m. Sunday'sGames Utah atOregon,noon WashingtonatWashington St., 5:30p.m. SouthernCalatArizonaSt., 5:30p.m.

Tuesday'sGames

TOP 25 No. 1Kentucky66,Tennessee48 No.10NotreDame88, WakeForest 75 No. 13WichitaState84, Southern llinois 62 No.170klahoma 71,Texas 69 No. 20Baylor 54,TexasTech49 No. 25Virginia Commonwealth 74,Saint Louis54 EAST

Caldwel94, l Concordia (N.Y) 60 Georgetown 79,St.John's 57 Harlford55, UMBC52 Old Westbury80, NYMaritime 67 Salve Regina58,W.NewEngland56 StonyBrook59,Albany(NY)56 SOUTH Alabama 79, Auburn68 Kentucky66, Tennessee48 Longwood 78,Liberty72 SouthCarolina64, Georgia58 SouthFlorida69, Houston 67 VCU74,Saint Louis54 MIDWEST Carthage 83, llinois Tech50 Evansville61,Drake52 MichiganSt. 80,Michigan67 NotreDam e88, WakeForest 75 SouthDakota84,AvIla 60 WichitaSt.84, S.Illinois 62 SOUTHWE ST Ark.-PineBluff74,Alcorn St.70 Baylor54,TexasTech49 Oklahoma71,Texas69 TexasA&M68,LSU62 FARWEST CS Northridge89, Bethesda61 SanDiegoSt.63,NewMexico46 Wyoming64,Nevada58

Leaders ThroughSunday's Games Wo m e n's college Scoring Tuesday'sGames G FG FT PTS AVG TOP 26 Harden,HOU 53 441 429 1451 27.4 No.1 Connecti c ut85,Houston26 James,CLE 45 412 271 1167 25.9 Westbrook,OKC 39 343 283 1007 25.8 Minnesota93,No.13lowa80 Davis,NOR 46 436 256 1129 24.5 No. 19Rutgers80, fflinois 56 Anthony,NYK Cousins,SAC

Rio Open Tuesday atRio deJaneiro First Round BeatrizHaddadMaia, Brazil, def. MariaIrigoyen, Argentina,6-1,6-1. VeronicaCepedaRoyg,Paraguay,def.PaulaCristina Goncalves,Brazil, 6-2, 7-5. Julia Glushko,Israel, def.AndreeaMitu, Romania, 6-7(5), 6-3,6-4. BethanieMatek-Sands, UnitedStates, def. Danka Kovinic,Montenegro,6-4,6-3. DinahPfizenm aier, Germany, def. EstrellaCabeza CandelaSp , ain,6-7(5), 6-4,6-4. RobertaVinci(3),ltaly, def.LucieHradecka,Czech Republic,7-6(4), 6-3. PaulaOrmaechea, Argentina, def. SaraSorribes Tormo,Spain,6-4,6-4. Sara Errani(1), Italy,def. TelianaPereira, Brazil, 6-3, 6-3.

6-0, 6-3.

UCLAat ArlzonaSt., 6 p.m.

EasternConference

ESPNU

Big Ten

IN THE BLEACHERS

Thursday Boys basketball: Culver at ColumbiaBasin Conferencetournament at Pendleton Convention Center,

NBA

BASKETBALL

NHL, Columbus at Pittsburgh TENNis ATP, Delray BeachOpen, early round

ON DECK

Rutgers80 fflinois 56 Temple69,Tulane58

EAST

Uconn85,Houston26 SOUTH Campbel72, l Gardner-Webb62 CoastalCarolina65, Charleston Southern51 High Poin57, t UNCAshevile 54 Liberty65,Longwood60 Winthrop66,Radford 45 Rebounds MIDWEST G OFF OEFTOT AVG E. Michigan54,Miami (Ohio) 51 Jordan,LAC 54 249 496 745 13.8 lowaSt.84,Oklahoma76,OT Drummond,DET 54 266 427 693 12.8 Minnesota93,lowa80 Cousins,SAC 40 121 377 498 12.5 OhioSt.92,Purdue60 Gasol,CHI 51 151 468 619 12.1 SOUTHWE ST Randolph,MEM 44 170 357 527 12.0 Ark.-PineBluff 51,Alcorn St.49 Chandler,DAL 52 209 407 616 11.8 TCU73,Kansas67

NATIONAL HOCKEYLEAGUE All TimesPST

Montreal Tampa Bay Detroit Boston Florida Ottawa Toronto Buffalo

EasternConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 56 37 15 4 59 35 18 6 55 31 14 10 56 28 20 8 56 25 19 12 55 22 23 10 58 23 30 5 57 16 37 4

78 150 123 76 191 159 72 160 141 64 147 145 62 138 155 54 155 158 51 162 178 36 105 195

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.y.lslanders 58 38 19 1 77 188 163 Nry.Rangers 55 34 16 5 73 174 136 P ittsburgh 5 7 3 2 16 9 73 162 144 Washington 58 31 17 10 72 171 146 Philadelphia 57 24 23 10 58 153 167 Columbus 55 25 27 3 53 147 172 NewJersey 57 22 26 9 53 126 155 C arolina 5 6 2 0 2 9 7 47 127 154 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 57 39 12 6 84 175 132 St. Louis 57 37 16 4 78 179 141 Chicago 57 35 18 4 74 172 131 Winnipeg 59 30 19 10 70 165 157 Minnesota 56 28 21 7 63 155 152 Dallas 57 27 22 8 62 179 180 Colorado 57 24 22 11 59 149 161 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA A naheim 5 7 3 5 15 7 77 169 160 Vancouver 56 32 21 3 67 158 147 C algary 5 7 3 2 2 2 3 67 166 147 S anJose 5 9 2 9 22 8 66 165 170 Los Angeles 56 26 18 12 64 155 150 A rizona 58 2 0 3 1 7 47 131 194 Edmonton 58 1 6 32 1042 135 196 Tuesday'sGames NewJersey2,Buff alo1,SO Columbus 5, Philadelphia2 Washington 3, Pittsburgh1 N.Y.Islanders4, Carolina1 Florida 3, Toronto2 Dallas 4, St. Louis1 Nashville 5,SanJose1 Today'sGames MontrealatOtawa 4 pm Detroit atChicago,4:30p.m. Minnesotaat Calgary, 6:30p.m. Los AngelesatColorado,7 p.m. Bosto natEdmonton,7p.m. Tampa Bayat Anaheim,7p.m.

TENNIS

Oelray BeachOpen Tuesday atDelray Beach,Fla. Firsl Round Steve Johnson(7), UnitedStates, def. Mikhail KukushkinKa , zakhstan,6-3, 4-1, retired. BernardTomic, Australia, def. MalekJaziri, Tunisia, 6-3, 6-3. AndreyRublev,Russia, def. DudiSela,Israel, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3. Viktor Troicki (8), Serbiadef. , StephaneRobert, France,6-7(3), 7-5,6-1. AlejandroGonzalez, Colombia, def. SamQuerrey (6), UnitedStates,3-6,2-1, retired. ThanasiKokkinakis,Australia, def.Filip Krajinovic, Serbia,6-2,6-3. AdrianMannarino (5), France,def. Eric Quigley, UnitedStates,6-4,6-4. Tim Smyczek,United States, def. StefamKozlov, UnitedStates,7-5,6-2. YoshihitoNishioka,Japan,def.lgor Sijsling,Netherlands,7-5,6-1. DonaldYoung,United States,def.lvan Dodig, Croatia, 7-5,7-5. Yen-hsunLu,Taiwan,def. SamGroth, Australia, 6-7(6)r 7-6 (5),6-4. KevinAnderson(1), SouthAfrica, def.John-Patrick Smith,Australia,6-3,6-3. MarinkoMatosevic, Australia,def.JohnIsner (2), UnitedStates,6-4,6-4. Open13 TuesdayatMarseille, France Firsl Round DominicThiem,Austria, def.JoaoSousa, Portugal, 7-6 (6),6-4. JeremyChardy,France,def.DavidGuez,France, 4-6, 6-3,6-2. AndreyKuznetsov,Russia,def.AndreyGolubev, Kazakhstan, 3-6,6-4, 6-2. Jan-LennardStruff, Germany, def. NicolasMahut, France,6-1,6-7(6), 7-6(1). VasekPospisil, Can ada,def. RobinHaase, Netherlands,4-6, 6-3,6-4. Benoit Paire, France,def. Paul-Henri Mathieu, France,6-4,retired. Gael Monfils (7), France,def. AlexanderZverev, Germany,6-1,7-6(12).

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague BALTIMOR E ORIOLES — Agreedto termswith INF Jayson Nix ona minor leaguecontract. Nam ed SeanBerryhitting coachof Norfolk (IL); AlanMils pitchingcoach,KeithBodie hitting coachof Bowie (EL);OrlandoGomezmanager, Paco Figueroahitting coachandChris Pooletrainer of Frederick(Carolina); HowieClark hitting coachof Delmarva (SAL); Luis Pujolsmanager, BrianGuzmantrainerandKevin Clark strengthandconditioning coachof Aberdeen(NYP); andMattMeruffomanager oftheGCLOrioles. National League MIAMIMARLINS—Agreedtotermswith OFReed Johnsononaminor leaguecontract. PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES— Promoted Michael Stiles toexecutivevicepresidentand chief operating officer. FOOTBA LL National Football League BUFFALO BILLS—Released LBKeith Rivers.

WTA Dubai DutyFreeChampioaships Tuesday Dubai, UnitedArabEmirates SecondRound AgnieszkaRadwanska (5), Poland, def. Caroline Garcia,France,6-3, 2-6, 6-3. GarbineMuguruza,Spain, def. JelenaJankovic (12),Serbia,6-3, 6-1. CarlaSuarezNavarro (13), Spain,def. Camila Giorgi,ltaly,6-3,6-4. Alize Cornet(15),France,def. CaglaBuyukakcay, Turkey, 6-2, 6-4. Ana Ivanovic(4), Serbia,def. SabineLisicki, Germany,6-0, 6-3. ZarinaDiyas,Kazakhstan,def.Andrea Petkovic(9), Germany, 7-5,6-3. LucieSafarova(11), CzechRepublic, def. Casey Dellacqua, Australia, 6-7(6), 7-6(4), 7-5. Karolina Pliskova (17), CzechRepublic, def. BarboraZahlavovaStrycova, CzechRepublic, 6-4,

CAROLIN APANTHERS— ReleasedSThomasDeCoud.Re-signedOLChris Scottto aone-yearcontract. CLEVELANDBROWNS — Named KevinO'Connell

quarterbacks coach. DALLASCOWBOYS — SignedG Ronald Leary and OT Darrion Weems. DETROILION T S— Named Joe Marcianospecial teamscoordinator.

GREENBA Y PACKERS— Released TEBrandon Bosti ckandWRKevmDorsey. KANSASCITYCHIEFS — Released WR Donnie Avery.WaivedWRA.J.Jenkins. NEW YORKGIANTS — Re-signed WR Kevin Ogletree. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NEWJERSEYDEVILS— ActivatedFStephenGionta off injured reserve. COLLEGE BIGTEN CONFERENCE— Issuedapublicreprimandof PennState men's basketball coachPatrick Chambers andfined Penn State$10,000for violating 6-2. the sportsman ship policy following Saturday's game CarolineWozniacki(3), Denmark, def.SamStosur, againstMaryland. E AST C A RO LINA— NamedBradDavisrungame Australia,4-6,6-1, 7-5. AngeliqueKerber(7), Germany, def. Svetlana coordinatorandoffensiveline coach. MONTANA STATE— NamedJodyOwensassistant Kuznetsova, Russia, 7-6(9),6-4. EkaterinaMakarova(6), Russia, def. KaterynaKo- linebackerscoachandDaniel Joneswomen'sassistant volleybal l coach. zlova,Ukraine,6-3, 6-3. Tsvetana Pironkova,Bulgaria,def. PengShuai(16), NEWMEXICO—NamedAl Simmonscornerbacks China,3-6, 6-4, 7-6(5). coach.Promoted Clay Davieto tight endscoach. FlaviaPennetta(10),ltaly,def. WangQiang,China, SOUTHCAROLINA— SuspendedsophomoreF 6-3, 7-5. DemetriusHenryandfreshmanGShamiek Sheppard PetraKvitova(2), CzechRepublic, def. ElinaSvito- from themen'sbasketball teamfor theremainder of lina, Ukraine, 2-6, 6-3,6-2. the regularseasonfor conduct detrimental to the SimonaHalep(1), Rom ania, def. DanielaHan- team. UTAH—Named Lewis Powegtight endscoach. tuchova, Slovakia, 6-2,6-0.

NHL ROUNDUP

BASEBALL A-RodmakeS Vague aPOIOgy — Alex Rodriguez hasissueda handwritten apology "for the mistakes that led to my suspension" but has turned down NewYork's offer to use YankeeStadium for a news conference and hasfailed to detail any specifics about his use of performance-enhancing drugs. The five-paragraph statement issued Tuesday, three days before the team opens spring training, was addressed "to the fans." Rodriguez says "I regret that my actions made the situation worse than it needed to be" and "I'm ready to put this chapter behind meand play someball." The 39-year-old, a three-time AL MVP, was suspended last season for violations of baseball's drug agreement and labor contract. An arbitrator found "clear and convincing evidence" Rodriguez used three banned substances and twice tried to obstruct the baseball's drug investigation. ZitO g OtRAliRg 'tO A'S Oll miROgIORQIIO IORI — Left-hander Barry Zito is returning to the OaklandAthletics with a minor league contract that includes aninvitation to major leaguespring training, two people with knowledge of theagreement said Tuesday. The people, speaking on condition of anonymity becausethe A's hadn't announced the signing, said Zito would receive a $1 million, one-year contract if added to the 40-man roster. — From wire reports

Ovechkin leadsCapitals over Penguins The Associated Press

more than four minutes remaining to lift the Washington Capitals to a testy 3-1 win

Tenn. — Pekka Rinne made a season-high 42 saves and Nashville extended its winning streak to a season-best six straight games by beating San Jose. 29 shots but allowed a pair of power-play Stars 4, Blues 1: ST. LOUIS — Jamie goals, including Ward's during a 5-on-3 Benn had his first career hat trick and

over the Pittsburgh Pengktins on Tuesday

with 4:13 to play.

third-place Pertguins in the crowded MetA l e x Ov e chkin ropolitan Division. scored his NHL-leading 37th goal and Steve Downie scored his 10th goal of assisted on Joel Ward's winner with just the season for Pittsburgh. Fleury stopped PITTSBURGH —

Kari Lehtonen was stingy irt net again for

night. Also on Tuesday: Dallas in a rout of St. Louis. Ovechkin beat Marc-Andre Fleu- Blue Jackets 5, Flyers 2: PHILADELDevils 2, Sabres 1: NEWARK, N.J. ry on a breakaway in the first period. PHIA — Matt Calvert scored two goals, Scott Gomez and Jacob Josefson scored The three-time MVP then helped set up including the winner midway through in the shootout, and Cory Schneider deWard's first career goal against the Pen- the third period, to lift Columbus over nied both Buffalo attempts as New Jersey guins as Washington improved to 3-0 Philadelphia. snapped a four-game losing streak. against Pittsburgh. John Carlson added a Islanders 4, Hurricanes 1: RALEIGH, Panthers 3, Maple Leafs 2: TORONshort-handed, empty-net goal with ll sec- N.C. — Backup goalie Chad Johnson TO — Nick Bjugstad scored the go-ahead onds remaining. m ade 37 saves and four players scored to goal on a power play early in the second Braden Holtby made 30 saves for the lead the New York Islanders. period and Florida defeated struggling Capitals, who pulled within a point of the Predators 5, Sharks 1: NASHVILLE, Toronto. -


WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN C 3

NFL

Walker

NBA

Continued from C1 Walker says he w as as surprised as anybody when Riley was named

All in, or sit out: teams decideas trade deadlinenears

head coach of the Corn-

huskers after Oregon State finished 5-7 last season. "It was definitely a shock, but it's a good opportunity and I'm really looking forward to i t ," Walker says. "There was a little bit of uncertainty, I guess, for a couple of days." W alker did no t

By Brian Mehoney The Associated Press

k now

NEW YORK — The East was a two-team race at last

if he would be a part of Riley's staff at Nebraska until he got a phone call from N e braska's d i r ec-

he thought would win it.

When the Indiana Pacers acquired Evan Turner from rebuilding Philadelphia, they hoped it would provide the scoring punch to beat out

announcement.

"It was an easy decision," Walker says. Walker has been busy helping Nebraska coaches with recruiting and with

son will

Gregory Payan/The Associated Press

Fresh off a Super Bowl loss, Seattle coach Pete Carroll will begin evaluating talent at the NFL combine starting today.

i n clude editing

game and practice film, signaling play calls from the sidelines, and scouting opposing defenses. He will continue to work

under longtime OSU offensive line coach Mike Cavanaugh, who is now with Nebraska in the same role. "A lot of it is going to be kind of similar," Walker says. "But it 's obvi-

By Bob Condotte

ously a ne w

The Seattle Times

c o nference

(the Big Ten) and a new environment."

Riley replaced Bo Pelini, who was fired in November after seven seasons with the Cornhusk-

ers, who finished 9-4 last season.

Walker is adjusting to the move to the Big Ten Conference and a bigger city (Lincoln's population is nearly 270,000; Corvallis' is about 55,000). Nebraska football is known for having one of the most passionate and loyal fan bases in the country.

Nebraska's

M e m ori-

al Stadium holds 87,000,

nearly twice the capacity of Oregon State'sReser Stadium (45,000). Nebraska boasts an ongoing NCAA record of 340 consecutive sellouts, dating

back to 1962. "The facilities are really nice here," Walker says. "They're really nice at Oregon State, too, but these ones are pretty big. The stadium's obviously big, you can tell that just by the amount of seats that are

inside of it." Walker, who is working toward a master's in edu-

cation, says his long-term goal is to become a college football head coach. His move to Nebraska, he believes, is just another step

in that process. "Obviously, I've got a

long road to do that, but

I'm just trying to get my foot in the door," he says. "I'm really looking forward to the opportunity and looking forward to get working with this group. I'm just very thankful, and blessed." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com

earlier this season. Denver's

year's trade deadline, and rocky season should have Larry Bird made the move contenders calling to inquire

tor of football operations a few days after Riley's

offensive preparation for spring practice. He says his duties during the sea-

on the $98.5 million contract he signed in 2012, but was close to moving Brook Lopez

m in

U Llf

And the Seahawks likely will get at least three picks as compensation for free agents lost

INDIANAPOLIS — Late in the season, but before the ill-fated final play that will forever

last year (those will be announced at the NFL

define it, Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll

But the Seahawks in the Schneider/Carroll regime have rarely stood pat with their own

could not help but take a peek into the future.

"There is a lot of optimism for the future because of the youth of our team and the continuity that we think we're developing by re-signing our guys and keeping it together as best as we can," Carroll said. "It's a lot of excitement about down the road and what's next

leaguemeetings March 22-25). picks, often trading down to acquire morelast year, Seattle used three trades to turn six picks into nine.

They will arrive here simply trying to get the best gauge of the talent wherever they end up picking. Many wonder if the Seahawks might look

and a big draft class coming up, and the competition that would generate will only make us to take a running back, given the uncertainty better." surrounding the future of Marshawn Lynch. One of the more significant steps toward Schneider said in two radio interviews last putting together that big draft class — the Se- week that the team does not know if Lynch will ahawks should have at least 10 picks — comes play in 2015. here this week at the annual NFL combine. The team surely hopes that decision will be Beginning today and lasting through Mon- made by the time of the draft, and that obviousday, 323 prospective draftees will be examined ly would dictate how the Seahawks proceed. by all 32 teams, both physically (such as runRegardless of what Lynch does, some around ning 40-yard dashes and bench-pressing 225 the league will not be surprised if Seattle looks pounds as many times as they can) and mental- to take a tailback, because it appears to be a ly (each team is allowed to interview 60 players good draft for that position. Good enough that for 15 minutes, and players will take the famed

Wonderlic Test). Just how much the combine means when the NFL draft is held (April 30-May 2) is an annual debate. Teams already have spent months scouting players — the Seahawks also have put together a preliminary draft board — and can look at players later, either at their own training facility or atpro days atthe prospect's schooL

some think a tailback or two could be taken in the first round for the first time since 2012. NFL Network draft analyst Mike Mayock mentioned running back f irst when asked

aboutthe Seahawks on Monday and named Georgia's Todd Gurley as a player who might be there at pick No. 31.

Gurley, though, is coming off a knee injury (torn anterior cruciate ligament), and his health will make him one of the more scrutinized play-

Less in doubt is that symbolically, the com- ers here and at workouts leading to the draft. bine serves as an unofficial kickoff to draft sea- Wisconsin's Melvin Gordon is another running son and as such, the turning of the page from back considered as a possible first-round pick. one season to the next. Mayock, though, says teams should have That is a moment that cannot come soon their pick of running backs, saying it is "a parenough for the Seahawks, who arrive roughly ticularly deep draft" for that position and that 2Vz weeks removed from as tough of a loss as as many as eight could be taken in the first any team has suffered. three rounds. Seattle general manager John Schneider Mayock said it is also considered be a good (Thursday) and Carroll (Friday) are scheduled draft for receivers, another spot where the Seto meet the media here, where they undoubted- ahawks could have some needs despite using ly will be asked to again relive the painful final two of their top four picks at that position a year ago — Paul Richardson in the second round moments of Super Bowl XLIX. But their main task is to make the tweaks to

and Kevin Norwood in the fourth.

the rosternecessary to keep the Seahawks ata Richardson suffered an ACL injury in a playSuper Bowl level. off game against Carolina, and his status for Seattle has each of its own picks in the first the beginning of next season is uncertain. The five rounds, as well as the seventh — it traded trade of Harvin also thinned the depth. its sixth to Indianapolis for cornerback Marcus In his radio interviews last week, Schneider Burley. It also will get either a fourth- or a sixth- called it "a cool draft" and one that appears to round pick back as part of the Percy Harvin have some balance. trade (a fourth if Harvin is on New York's roster He will get an even better feel for that this March 19, a sixth if he is released before then). week.

Combine Continued from C1

"It's remarkable," said Kevin Dunn, the CEO and owner. "This shows the actu-

al work. Science shows the end result. It tracks every minute of every workout in

NFL organizations put varying emphasis on a player's combine results depending on a team's draft philosophy and needs.For some players,combine performance is a deal breaker. For others, it opens up new opportunities. "The heart monitor definitely helps me out just by looking at the number of calo-

the facility." Players wear a strap around their chest ries I burn so I know how much I have to and the plastic monitor picks up the im- take in to maintain my weight," said Harpulses from the heart. It measures heart dy, a walk-on at East Carolina who set the rate, performance percentage, calories career catchesrecord for bowl subdiviburned and more. sion history. As a player's heart rate goes up, the corLSU fullback Connor Neighbors was responding color tile on the screen chang- not sure what to expect when he first

Players at the combine are tested

practice positional drills. While heart-rate monitors are new to

TEST this year, other technological advances have helped along the way. The Coach's Eye video app takes high-definition pictures and allows train-

trainers and the individual athletes. "We set goals each day based on how long workouts are, how intense workouts are, and we can pinpoint if we need to back

down frame by frame. "It's such an incredible coaching tool, covery to diet to how hard you're working, and that alone sets the schedule for when especially having it on the field because you rest," Neighbors said. immediate feedback is much more efJoe Flacco, Patrick Peterson, Dema- fective, especially visually," Dunn said. rio Davis and other NFL stars have also "You can do a rep, see what it feels like trained at TEST. Last year, LSU quarter- and then watch it because what might feel back Zach Mettenbergerspent several right isn't actually right. "Combine training is all predetermined weeks here following reconstructive knee surgery. drills so it's literally doing the same steps. Trainers helped Mettenberger return to It's the first time they're doing something the field for his pro day just four months predetermined because football is so chaafter repairing his left ACL. Mettenberg- otic and random. "But 40yards here is the same as 40 er was drafted by Tennessee in the sixth round and started six games. yards in Indy and 40 yards on their pro "We called him Wolverine because of day. The Coach's Eye app helps us teach how fast he recovered," Dunn said. "He the guys exactly what to do and when and was in here every day at 7:30 a.m. and not just by telling them, but letting them worked hard till 5 p.m." feel it and seeing what it looks like."

down on volume of their workout if they're

overworked or sleep deprived," Dunn said. "We used to guesstimate how many

calories they were burning. Now I can run a report on my laptop and list these guys and it will tell me everything." Four of the 22 players who worked out with Dunn and director Geir Gudmundsen at TEST are i n I n dianapolis this

week. They are: wide receiver Justin Hardy (East Carolina) and offensive linemen Austin Shepherd (Alabama), Laurence Gibson (Virginia Tech) and Mark Glowinski (West Virginia). Other players are preparing for their pro day.

changing teams — none has

Now the Pacers are try-

at the deadline since Utah

ing to get in the postseason, two games out of eighth place and seeking a spark that could sling-shot them past others down the bottom of the playoff ladder. Bird promises to beasaggressive

surprisingly sent Williams to the Nets on the eve of the

If not, he said, he'll wait until the summer. That's what every NBA team has to decide in the

Boston in

ers to watch in slow motion and break it

2011 one. Teams more likely trade at this point to clear

cap space for the summer, which is why the New York Knicks could seek a deal for as when his team was on top. Jose Calderon after already "We're always looking to shipping out guards J.R. improve the team and obvi- Smith and Iman Shumpert. ously there's a lot of improveCleveland acquired them ment that needs to be done," and, along with g etting the Pacers'president said re- Timofey Mozgov from Dencently. "So we'll look around ver in a separate deal, perthe league and talk to a lot haps proved the best moves of different people and see for this season were already what's out there and hopeful- made. ly we can do something that Dallas acted quickly to makes us better." acquire Rajon Rondo from

next couple of days. The trade deadline is T hursday af ternoon, a n d with many teams in conten-

tion, the question is whether

D e cember, not

long before Memphis capitalized on the Celtics' youth movement to deal for Jeff Green.

For Golden State and Atlanta, the current NBA lead-

ers, their winning moves maybe came long ago.

that makes them more con-

The Warriors got Andrew

servative or cautious. Help could be found in

Bogut from Milwaukee at the 2012 deadline to provide some muscle in the rugged

the hours before the NBA returns from i t s A l l - Star West. Five months later, the

break. But some will be hes- Hawks acquired Kyle Korver itant to tinker with so little from Chicago,and he could time left in the season. The be headed for the best perimTurner deal, in which Indi- eter-shooting season in NBA ana traded popular veteran history. "When I got traded to AtDanny Granger, certainly didn't help its locker room lanta I was coming from chemistry. Chicago and I wasn't really Plus, teams can plug holes all that excited about it, to by simply opening their wal- be honest with you. But all lets, without costing any the people that Danny Ferry assets. kept on bringing in, they've Houston signed J o sh been not just good basketSmith after he was waived ball people, but good people," by Detroit, Amare Stou- Korver said. "When I was a free agent d emire is h eaded t o t h e Mavericks once he clears two summers ago, I chose waivers, and other veterans to comeback.We had some could be bought out and be- opportunities to go to some come free agents after the teams that a l ready w e re deadline. more established and could One of the most intriguing win, but I just really believed moves could involve Ray Al- in what Atlanta was building len, who will have contend- and what they were doing. ing suitors if he opts to play I could see my role in it and after sitting out all season. I just wanted to be a part of The teams most motivated to deal might be the dis-

that. I never thought that it would come together this

appointing ones. Brooklyn probably can't find a taker for Deron Williams with all

quickly." That's the lightning in a bottle every team is hoping

his injuries and dollars left

to catch.

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

No. 1 Kentuckycontinues to cruise, beatsTennessee KNOXVILLE, Tenn. Kentucky understands that its brand name often brings

wore a heart monitor.

rate, but it helps with everything from re-

is now in Boston.

The Associated Press

es from yellow to blue to red or whatever. All the information is stored and sent to

"I just assumed it monitored your heart

summer. Don't count on top stars

dash,bench press,broad jump, vertical jump, shuttle run and three-cone drill. If they do not prepare, they will be at a disadvantage. their most important job interview. They focus on improving measurables and

The right move can help someone surge t h rough spring. The w r ong o ne could mean an early start on

Miami and reach the NBA Finals. It didn't, and Turner

for six measurable drills: the 40-yard

Athletes at TEST train six days per week for six to eight weeks to be ready for

a bout A r ro n A ff l a lo, T y Lawson or Wilson Chandler.

out the best efforts from opponents. The top-ranked Wildcats

Kentucky (13-0 SEC) took a fewpunches'Ibesdaybefore deliveringthe knockoutblow. The Wildcats won despite shooting 5 of 22 from 3-point range and allowing the much-smaller Volun-

have answered that chal-

teers to match them 34-all in

lenge well enough to put to- rebounds. gether the best start in the Also on Tuesday: program's storied history. No. 10 Notre Dame 88, D evin B ooker h a d 1 8 Wake Forest 75: S OUTH

points and seven rebounds BEND, Ind. — Jerian Grant Tuesday night as Kentucky had 24 points and 10 assists picked up its defense in the

to lead Notre Dame over

second half and pulled away Wake Forest. for a 66-48 victory over TenNo. 17 Oklahoma 71, Texas nessee. Kentucky is 26-0 for

69: NORMAN, Okla. — Jor-

the first time, though the

dan Woodard scored 11 of

Wildcats finished the 1953- his 13 points in the second 54 season with a 25-0 mark. half, and Oklahoma rallied "It's l ik e t h a t w h e ther for a win over Texas. you're the best of Kentucky No. 20 Bayior 54, Texas or you're the worst of Ken- Tech 49: LUBBOCK, Texas tucky," Wildcats 7-footer — Taurean Prince scored 18

Willie Cauley-Stein said. "They're still trying to beat Kentucky, so you have to come out ready to play with

of his 22 points in the first half, and Baylor held off Texas Tech. No. 25 VCU 74, Saint Lou-

them. If not, then they get

is 54: RICHMOND, Va.

-

beer muscles and they think Treveon Graham scored they can play with you. You 16 points and VCU used a have tocome out ready to 23-5 run spanning halftime swing. Otherwise you're go- to takecommand and beat ing to get hit in the mouth."

Saint Louis.


C4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

Summit's Sarah Reeves drives to the basket past Ridgeview

White Buffs claimNo. 2 inTri-Valley

defenders during Tues-

• Madras will host a play-in game oncethe seasonconcludes Bulletin staff report

Em League win over Elmira. Nina Horner added 12 points

and six rebounds. Madras 51, Molalla 28: MA-

picked up its sixth Tri-Valley for the Outlaws, who improved Conference girls basketball to 5-4 in league play and 10-12 win in the past seven games ovemll. Sisters' entire roster and secured the No. 2 spot in contributed during the game, the league standings with a 41- keeping the tempo in its favor. 28 victory at Molalla on Tues- The Outlaws have won three of day night. their last four games heading With the w in, the W h ite into the final game of the reguBuffaloes earned at least a lar season on Friday. home game in the Class 4A La Pine 49, Harrisburg 39: play-in round as they head LA PINE — McKenna Boen into their regular-season fina- scored 23 points to lead the le against visiting Corbett on Hawks over the Eagles in Friday. a Mountain Valley ConferMariah Stacona posted a ence game. Alexis Roes addgame-high 14 points for Ma- ed 10 points for La Pine (7-7 dras (7-2 TVC, 14-9 overall), MVC, 15-9 overall), and Ashwhich was outrebounded by ley Pierce finished with five

DRAS — The White Buffaloes

MOLALLA

-

Madras

the Indians but t urned the

points, 12 rebounds and six

ball over just 10 times in the steals. The Hawks held Harcontest. Kaliyah Iverson, Hai- risburg to just five points in ley Sloan and Lynden Harry the fourth quarter. each scoredsix pointsforthe Buffs.

Also on 1Iresday:

Girls basketball Mountain View 38, Redmond 37: REDMOND — The Cou-

gars held on with a defensive stand in the final seconds of the

game at Summit High School. '~1]

secured a second-place seed out of the Tri-Valley Conference

Joe Kline I The Bulletin

\

A9( r

with a win over visiting Molalla The Indians were within 10

points early in the fourth quarter, but Madms (7-2 TVC, 17-6

=li

overall) sparked a late 7-0 run to cement a win in their last

goi'L4

home game of the regular season. Jered Pichette led the way for the White Buffaloes with 15 points and seven steals, while

Devon Wolfe added nine points and seven rebounds. Sisters 48, Elmira 30: SISTERS — The Outlaws held the

Falcons to just two points in the first quarter and held on

for the Sky-Em League victory. Keegan Greaney led Sisters with 11 points, and Hayes

Moore added nine points. The Outlaws (7-2 Sky-Em, 14-7 MountainView72, Redmond overall) are tied for second 48: The host Cougars jumped place in league play with one to a 20-7 first-quarter lead and game remaining before the never looked back, securing playoffs. an Intermountain Conference Harrisburg 68, La P ine contest for the top-ranked 47: LA PINE — I a n J ohnteam in Class 5A. Davis Hol- son poured in 21 points to go ly recorded a game-high 22 along with 10 rebounds, but points to go along with four the Hawks fell to the No. 9 assists for M o untain V i ew Eagles in Mountain Valley (8-1 IMC, 18-3 overall), while Conference action. Anthony Ments Haugen and Austin Heal had eight points for La Albin each chipped in with Pine, which slipped to 5-9 in 12 points. For Redmond (0-10, league play and 10-14 overalL 3-19), Cody Moss led the way Tyress Turnsplent posted sev-

Boysbasketball

game, securing the Intermountain Conference win. Redmond (0-10 IMC, 2-19 overall) missed alast-second shot after a Mountain View defender tipped a pass headed for the lane. Ryann Van der Zwiep led 10 Mountain View (3-6, 6-15) scorers with nine points, helping the Cou- with 12 points, and Nick Aagarssnap a three-game losing modt and Brandon Benson streak. Redmond's Chantel scored nine points apiece. Dannis led all scorers with 15. Crook County 60, Corbett Corbett 44, Crook County 3 3: PRINEVILLE — E l e v41: CORBETT — Michaeline en playersscored to lead the Malott's 3-point attempt at the Cowboys to a Tri-Valley Conbuzzer was off the mark, al- ference victory and secure lowing Corbett to escape with the No. 3 spot in the league a Tri-Valley Conference victo- standings. Crook C ounty ry. Kimmer Severance scored (6-3 TVC, 12-11 overall) will 17 points for the Cowgirls (2-7 host a league playoff game TVC, 6-16 overall), Chelsea next Tuesday, against either Thomas had six points and 13 Estacada or Molalla, for the rebounds, and Baylee Bannon right to advance to the Class logged six boards to go along 4A play-in round. Blake Barwith two points. tels posted 13 points and four Sisters 50, Elmira 38: SIS- steals for the Cowboys, Seth TERS — Olivia Stewart paved

day night's

Storm

mit) is an excellent driving team, so they're going to get

tracity battle with two teams

Continued from C1 some of those, even if you're "Mentally it's a big confi- playing great defense bedence boost. We had some cause they're very good." nice looks early that we just Reeves and Cornett led

they know is on the line, and

didn't finish, and that kind

of star ted us,"Cruz said."W e knew it was on the line. This

for the Hawks, who were outscored 25-9 in the third

was a big week for us, and our girls responded really well after getting down early

quarter.

on."

en boards and three blocks

North Lake 63, Prospect 42:

The lead changed hands

T he l o s s e n de d R i d ( 8 -2 geview's chances of ending IMC, 16-5 overall) with 13 the season atop the IMC, but points apiece, while Conner Davis said her team remains

Naegele and Morgan Hagfors added nine and eight points, respectively. Summit now sits alone atop the Class 5A Intermoun-

optimistic about their post-

t ain Conference with

we have assumed we were going to make it into some

five times over the next two

phy (14 points, 10 rebounds) and Jubal Pierson (12 points, 10 rebounds) each logged a

quarters, but Ridgeview (6-4 games remaining in the regIMC, 12-10 overall), which ular season. Bend High, at 7-2 remains the last team to beat in IMC play, is close on SumSummit and would have tied mit's heels with three games the Storm in the Intermoun- left on its schedule, setting up tain Conference standings a crucial crosstown contest with a win, never retook con- when the two teams square trol of the game. off at Bend on Friday night. "Fatigue played a factor "Friday will tell us where in that," Davis explained. things end up," Cruz said. "We have a couple of girls "We're still in a boat where who were specific matchups we could finish out first or against a couple of their girls, second. We're just going and we tried to keep those to approach it like another matchups fresh. And (Sum- game. It's going to be an in-

boys in their Mountain Valley League playoff win. The victory advances North Lake to a

Friday matchup against Triad in Klamath Falls. Nathan Gilbert had 15 points for the Cow-

boys (13-9), Cameron McCord posted 12 points, eight boards

Kessi had 11 points, five steals

and seven steals, and Daniel

the way for Sisters, leading all and four assists, and Kohlter scorers with 13 points in a Sky- Kee finished with 10 points

Libolt chipped in with eight points and nine rebounds.

it'll be a good, competitive game."

ninth-ranked Summit

SILVER LAKE — Ethan Mur-

double-double for the Cow-

who are fighting for what

two

season chances.

"These last two games were pretty big games, but I think that, based on our play, kind of postseason, whether

it be a play-in or a playoff," Davis said. "The last two

games were big in terms of trying to win the IMC and get into the (playoffs) automatically, but all along we've known we're probably going to be playing in the postseason. And so (the Ravens have) using game experiences and practices for that." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, vjacobsen@bendbulletin.com

PREP SCOREBOARD Boys basketball

C.Manselle3,Mendazona.

Standings Class 4A IntermountainConference Tri-valley conference Team Conference O v erall M ountaiVine w 8-1 18-3 60, Corbett 33 Summit 6-4 16-5 Crook County u-g Bend 5-4 Corbetl (33) — DevinWeien 12, Woodward 7, Ridgeview 5-5 14-7 0-10 3-19 Graff 6, Davis 3,Delafield 3,Gilbert 2. Totals 11 Redmond 7-16 33. Crook County (60) —BlakeBartels 13,Kessi Class SA 11, Kee10,Harper7, Kilthau 6, Miler 4, Lapsley2, IntermountainConference Herna ndez2,Ambriz2,Jones2,Chaney1.Totals24

9, Harrer 6,Larson4, Johnson4, Schaab 4, Gil 2, Gladde n2,Ta.Head2,Ty.HeadzTotals1614-18. Elmira 2 10 5 13 — 30 Sisters 6 14 14 14 — 48 Three-poingoal t s—amira; Pedder; Sisters; Greaney, Moore. Class3A MountainValley Conterence

Harrisburg 68, La Pine47

9,Hughes8,Goetz5,Siefken4,Weber3,Maxwell2, Misener2, Reimwald 2, Skoog2, Bailey1. Totals14 9-15 38. Redmond (37) — ChantelDannis15, Hamilton 11, Edwards 7,Joyce2, Fast 2. Totals15 5-10 37. Mountai nView 15 6 8 9 — 38 Redmond 1311 6 7 — 3 7 Three-pointgoals — MountainView: Weber; Redmond:Ham ilton z

Summit 51, Ridgeview 39

Harrisburg (68) —TelJones22, Baker14, NouRidgeview (39) —HosannaWilder13, Whitney sen 11,Headings 8, H.Knox6, Jelden3, J. Knox2, 6,S.Wilcox6,Epps6,Ross4,McFetridge2,Wood60. Mountain View 72, Redmond48 11-23 Totals 28 6-9 68. wardzToIals182-639. Corbetl 9 6 8 1 0 — 33 Perry 2. La Pine(47) —lanJohnson21, Heal 8, Brown Summit (51)—SarahReeves13,MeganCornett Crookcounly 8 21 1 3 18 — 60 Redmond(48)— Cody Moss12,Aamodt9, Three-poingoal 7, Kentner 6, Par ker 2, Tur n spl e nty 2, Boen 1. Tot a l s 13, Naegele9, Mo.Hagfors 8, Heinly 6, Loftus2. Tot s— Corbett: Graff2, Weien, Davis; Benson9, Wilingham4, McDonald 3, Burroughs3, 1417-3047. tals1912-26 51. CrookCounty: Kee. winters 2, powell 2,Troutman2, Kitchimz Totals Harrisburg 21 12 25 10 — 68 Ridgeview 14 7 12 6 — 39 19 4-9 48. La Pine 12 15 9 11 — 47 Summit 9 15 17 10 — 51 Mountain View(72) —Davis Holy 22,Haugen Madras 51, Molalla 28 Three-poingoal t s— Harrisburg: Baker2, Jones2, Three-point goals — Ridgeview:Epps; Summ it: 12, Albin12, Wilcox8, Kurzynowski 7, Vansise5, Headings2;LaPine:Heal, Johnson. Cornett. Vanrassell 5, Larson1.Totals 21 22-3372. Molalla (28) —CodyDunton 8, KurtPotter 8, Gengler6, Burke2, salley 2,wolfez Totals 123-8 Redmond 7 7 18 16 — 48 Class 4A Girls basketball 28. Mountai nView 20 14 20 18 — 72 Tri-Valley Conference Madras (51) —JeredPichete15, Wolfe9, YeThree-pointgoals—Redmond: Benson 3, Aamodt, Standings McDonald ,Moss;MountainView:Holly4,Haugen ahquo 9,Rehwinkel 6, Sullivan4, Bryant2, Goodwin IntermountainConference 2, Albim z 2, LeRiche 2, Rauschenburg2. Totals 208-1451. Team Conference O v erall Corbett 44, CrookCounty 41 Molalla 7 5 6 1 0 — 28 Summit 8-2 16-5 Crook County (41) — Kimme r Severance17, Madras 13 10 11 17 — 51 Bend 7-2 13-8 Summit 83, Ridgeview 66 t7,Thomas6,Morgan5,Thompson4,Bannon Three-pointgoals—Molala: Potter;Madras:Pichette Ridgeview 6-4 12-10 Malot 2. Totals18 3-841. 2,Yeahquo. M ountaiVine w 3-6 6-15 Summit (83) —MaxMichalski 32,McCormick Corbetl (44) — RhileyFritz 19,Detherage14, Redmond 0-10 2-19 14, Hurley14,Mason10, Kent 6,C.Mason6,Herman Sergent 5, Herge4, Fort 2. Totals 195-9 44. Sky-EmLeague 1. Totals 2821-33 83. Class 5A Ridgeview(66) —CarsonManselle19, MendaIntermountainConference zona15,O'Neal13,Alvarez12,Albright 5, Hamptonz Sisters 48, Elmira 30 Totals 2412-17. Summit 24 15 28 16 — 83 Elmira (30) — DrewPedder 9,Younce6,Wilson Mountain View 38, Redmond 37 Ridgeview 16 21 14 15 — 66 5,Brockman4,Meyer4,FinderzTotals109-1630. Three-poingoal t s—Summit: Michalski6; Ridgeview: Sisters (48) — KeeganGreaney 11, Moore Mountain View (38) — Ryann Vander Zwiep

Franklin

One thing is certain: "I don't care if it takes me 20

Continued from C1

years, I will get my degree "It's awesome. You're liter- from Cal." ally surrounded by greatness She is enjoying every min-

CrookCounty

11 1 1 8 11 — 41 13 13 6 12 — 44 Three-poingoal t s—CrookCounty: Malott 2; Corbett: Sergent

corbes

Madras 41, Molalla 28 Madras (41) —MariahStacona14, Iverson6, Sloan 6, Harry 6, Suppah5,Wolfe 2, Adams2. Totals 176-8 41. Molalla (28) — Amanda Clarizio 7, Bring6, Rieskamp 5, Elliott 4, Schultz 3, Thrower2, Marr1. Totals 10 4-5 28. Madras 6 15 11 9 — 41 Molalla 6 7 7 8 — 28 Three-pointgoal— s Madras:Suppah;Molala; Elliott, Rieskamp, Schultz, Clarizio.

Sky-EmLeague

Sisters 50, Elmira 38 Elmira (38) —AlexOlsenu, stone8, Blunt5, Jensen 5, Webber 5, Anderson4. Totals 12 14-21 38. Sisters (50) — OliviaStewart13, Horner12, Moore 9,Hudson8,Bachmeier5,Mann3.Totals14 18-33 50. Elmira 8 9 10 11 — 38 Sislers 10 10 13 17 — 50 Three-poingoal t s— Elmira; none;Sisters; Horner2, Moore,Stewart.

Class3A Mountain ValleyConference

La Pine 49, Harrisburg 39 Harrisburg (39) — ErinnAllen 21,Briggs12, Thompson 6.Totals15 5-739. La Pine(49)—McKennaBoen23,Roes,10,Pierce 5, Mickel5,conklin4, Ramirezz Totals 216-11. Harrisburg 8 10 16 5 — 39 La Pine 14 7 17 11 — 49 Three-poingoal t s — Harrisburg:Allen 4; La Pine: Mickel.

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION

DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL PAINT

803 sw Industrial way, Bend, 0R

WK'RK OPKN!

same decision 100 times over

again. This way I'll really be able to start my job and start my career."

Franklin learned in a hurry ute with her G olden Bears after winning four gold medpool," Franklin said Ilresday. teammates until it is time to als and a bronze in London "It's so incredible being in that take the next step. That means that the attention would be kind of environment to moti- dressing up for hip-hop dance relentless — "life-rattling," as vate you and push you." classes, or taking Pilates and she describes it. every time you come to the

Franklin found her niche in spinning as part of McKeevBerkeley despite a high-profile er'straining program to have existence that meant she was athletes mix things up to avoid regularly recognized around getting bored with countless campus. hours in the pool. Still, Franklin and coach Once Franklin turns pro, Teri McKeever believe the the pressure will be far more process went as smoothly as intense. She spoke of saving possible. money for her future. "I'll be able to accept money, They refer to this as Franklin's "new normal." have sponsorships, endorse"She's never going to be the ment deals, whereas before underdog again," McKeever I wasn't able to accept any said. "What makes her excep- kind of prize money," she said. tional is the desire to be the "This way this will be able to best." Yet Franklin will wait until

kind of start my professional

career having gone through her coll ege season is done to an Olympics already not bemake any big decisions about ing able to accept any money what is next, such as hiring in order to stay eligible and an agent or picking where her compete in college. It's been home training base will be. so fun, and I would make the

"Oh my gosh, yeah, absolutely I never would have ex-

pected to be in that position," she said of the attention and

frenzy that followed her success. "I've always wanted to be

BEND GOLF 86 COUNTRY CLUB P RESEA SON P R O M O T I O N

an Olympic gold medalist but I never thought it would be at

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less transition into the next

Learn more about membership at Bend's finest private club.

17" After next month's NCAAs, with McKeever to map out a

phase of her already-decorated swimming career. "The main thing is to encourage her to do whatever

gives her the greatest confidence," McKeever said. "Obvi-

ously, we've got an incredible situation here."

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b e ndgolr ®bendgoliclub.com


C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

+

NASDAQ

+28.23

18,047.58

4,899.27

+

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection. S&P 500 2,100.34

5 43

Todap

18,080"

S8$P 500

Wednesday, February 1S,2015

Fed watch

2 060.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

............ Close: 2,100.34

Minutes from the Federal 2,000' " ""'10 DAYS Reserve's most recent meeting 2,160 " could offer new insight on Fed officials' policy discussions. The central bank is due to 2,080 " release today the minutes from a two-day meeting of its policymak- 2,000 " ers last month. At the Jan. 27-28 meeting, the panel reaffirmed that 1,920 " it would be "patient" in raising its key short-term interest rate from 1,840. "A. .:.""S. ".:."".p near zero.Many economists have forecast a rate hike no earlier than June. StocksRecap

Vol. (in mil.) 3,277 1,711 Pvs. Volume 3,439 1,876 Advanced 1370 1524 Declined 1797 1196 New Highs 1 57 1 3 5 New Lows 13 25

17,500"

N

D

J

F

.

"

Waste Management

"

1 6 000 A '

6

HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. 18052.01 17951.41 18047.58 +28.23 DOW Trans. 9060.42 9013.53 9045.06 +11.00 DOW Util. 599.80 588.63 593.37 -0.46 NYSE Comp. 11070.07 11001.03 11054.46 +11.78 NASDAQ 4901.89 4880.64 4899.27 + 5 .43 S&P 500 2101.30 2089.82 2100.34 + 3 .35 -0.09 S&P 400 1505.44 1496.87 1502.69 Wilshire 5000 22164.79 22047.53 22152.31 +31.50 Russell 2000 1227.18 1221.04 1225.01 + 1 .88

DOW

%CHG. +0.16% +0.12% -0.08% +0.11% +0.11% +0.16% -0.01% +0.14% +0.15%

WK MO L L

L L

L L L L L L

L L L L L L

Construction of new U.S. homes ended 2014 at the highest level since the peak of the housing boom nine years ago. Builders broke ground on new condos and single-family homes at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.09 million in December. Economists anticipate that pace didn't hold last month, however. They expectthe Commerce Department will report today that new home construction slowed in January. Housing starts seasonally adjusted annual rate

1.1million

1.09

1,09 1.07 1 .04

03

1.0 963

0.9

A

6

P

N

D j: J '14 i j'15

Source: Facteet

Vipshop Holdings

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L NAME TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV L +4.1 +59 . 0 1 187 14 0 .80f Alaska Air Group A LK 39.12 ~ 71.40 6 2. 2 3 -.33 -0.5 v w Avista Corp A VA 29.03 ~ 38.34 3 3. 7 3 -.22 -0.6 V V V -4.6 +18.9 3 6 0 1 1 1 . 32f Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 16. 6 3 + . 0 2 +0.1 L L W -7.0 -0.1 82669 48 0 .20 B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ 71.76 40 . 0 0 + . 2 2 +0.6 L L L +46. 0 - 35.1 110 d d 0 . 88 Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 149. 8 4 14 9.92 + . 19 +0.1 L L L + 15. 3 +1 8 .0 3 408 20 3 .64f Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .11 ~ 5.82 4.86 -.04 -0.8 T L T -6.4 - 0.2 13 9 8 1 ColumbiaBokg COLB 2 3.59 ~ 3 0.3 6 28.21 +.36 $-1.3 L L L +2. 2 + 12.7 237 19 0.64a Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — e 5 1.95 54.54 +3.04 +5.9 L L L +22. 5 +3 4.3 1 523 2 8 0 . 60 Costco Wholesale CO S T 110.36 ~ 1 56.8 5 14 7.53 + . 43 $.0.3 L L L + 4.1 +32 . 6 1 4 87 3 1 1 .42a Craft Brew Alliance BREW 10.07 ~ 17.89 12. 0 8 +. 1 4 +1.2 L L W -9.4 -24.0 4 1 76 FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 3 2. 5 0 -.51 -1.5 V L L + 0.6 +7.9 12 0 5 2 3 0 . 44f HewlettP ackard H PQ 28. 75 ~ 41.10 3 8.5 3 - .03 -0.1 W W W -4.0 + 3 1.4 7 405 1 5 0. 6 4 Intel Corp I NTC 24.30 ~ 37.90 34.7 4 +. 3 8 +1 .1 L W V -4.3 +42.8 18738 15 0 .96 Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ 14.70 14.1 5 +. 0 4 + 0 .3 L L L +1.8 +11. 5 7 1 92 1 4 0. 2 6 Kroger Co K R 3 7 .24 ~ 72.90 73. 2 5 +. 3 9 +0.5 L L L +14. 1 +9 8 .3 3 352 23 0 . 7 4 Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 0 — 9.19 6.03 -.07 -1.1 V V V -12.5 -17.2 1089 15 $-5.1 LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.88 1 7. 4 1 -.03 -0.2 V L L -3.5 231 3 dd MDU Resources MOU 21 . 33 o — 36.0 5 21. 68 + . 1 1 +0.5 L V V -7.7 -33.9 1635 14 0 . 73 — o Mentor Graphics M E NT 18.25 24.67 24 .67 + . 09 +0.4 L L L +12. 5 +2 0 .9 49 1 2 1 0. 2 0 Microsoft Corp M SFT 3 7 .19 ~ 50.05 43. 5 8 +. 0 2 ... ~ W V -6.2 +19.7 31046 18 1 . 24 Nike Ioc B N KE 70.60 ~ 99.76 9 1. 8 6 -.16 -0.2 V W V -4.5 +24.3 3637 2 7 1 . 12 Nordstrom Ioc JWN 57.75 — 0 80.54 78 .90 -.51 -0.6 V L V -0.6 +3 7.9 1 475 21 1 . 48f Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.41 ~ 52.5 7 4 7. 1 3 -.47 -1.0 V W V - 5.6 +17.0 74 22 1. 8 6 PaccarIoc P CAR 55.34 ~ 71.15 64.4 6 +. 2 4 +0 .4 L V -5.2 +10.5 1069 17 0.88a Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 6.44 -.19 -2.9 V W V - 23.1 +187.0 430 2 3 Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 4 3. 0 0 -.76 -1.7 T W L + 0. 5 +7. 1 20 1 5 3 6 1. 7 6 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 0 9 20 5.64 + . 10 . .. ~ L V -14.6 - 22.1 744 1 6 0 . 12 Schoitzer Steel SCH N 16.25 o — 30. 0 4 1 6 . 75 -.44 -2.6 V V V -25.8 - 31.4 366 3 9 0 . 75 Sherwin Wms SHW 188.25 — o 28 5.51286.10 +1.10 +0.4 L L L +8.8 +50 . 8 50 3 3 2 2. 2 0 StaocorpFocl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 6 7. 0 7 -.42 -0.6 V L V -4.0 + 5 . 2 1 6 7 1 3 1 . 30f Starbucks Cp SBUX 67.93 ~ 91.9 9 92. 0 3 +. 4 5 +0.5 L L L +12. 2 +2 4 .2 2 956 28 1 . 2 8 umpquaHoldings UMPQ 14.70 ~ 19. 60 16.91 +.09 +0.5 L L V - 0.6 + 1 . 5 7 9 1 2 2 0 . 6 0 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 45. 0 7 ... ... L L $.0.3 +14 . 3 4 9 1 4 15 0 . 9 8 WashingtonFedl WA F O 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 21.21 +.08+0.4 L L V -4.2 -0.8 27 1 1 4 0 . 52f WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 5.25 — o 55.95 55 .37 + . 04 +0 .1 L L L $.1.0 +23 . 4 11387 14 1 . 4 0

Weyerhaeuser

W Y 2 7.48

~

37.04

3 5.0 1

-.51 -1.4 V

V

V

- 2.5 +20.2 3532 2 6

1 . 16

Spotlight on Duke Duke Energy reports fourth-quarter financial results today. Wall Street predicts the largest U.S. electric utility will deliver lower earnings for the quarter than a year earlier. Duke Energy has been beefing up investment in renewable energy projects. Earlier this month, it acquired a majority stake in REC Solar, noting plans to invest up to $225 million in commercial solar projects developed by REC over the next several years. DUK

$90

$79.39

$74.96

79

'14 68

Operating EPS

DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 8 -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. 1 -Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no 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 not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. 1 - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-disbieution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.

Starwood's shares rose 3 percent Tuesday after the hotel and resort operator said that its CEO, Frits van Paasschen, has resigned. No reason was given for the sudden departure, but the company said it was by mutual agreement. Company leaders said there was no disagreement over strategy but the move was made to better execute a growth plan. The Stamford, Connecticut-based hotel company has been led by van Paasschensince September 2007. Lastw eek,Starwood announced plans to spin off its timeshare business as a separate company, although Starwood says this is unrelated. The operator of Westin, Sheraton, W, St. Regis and other hotel brands says board member Adam Aron will serve as interim CEO until a permanent replacement is found. Van Paasschen will remain with Starwood as a consultant to help with the transition.

Starwood shares up on CEO departure Starwood (HOT) T

4Q '13 4 Q '14

uesda y 's close: $80.64 T

86

$69

based on past 12-month results

Dividend: $3.18 Div. yield:4.0% Source: Facteet

ota lreturn

(B a sed on past 12-month results)

Dlv yleld • 1 9% *annualized

AP

AmdFocus

SelectedMutualpunds

AP

25 20

210.11 127.83 3.82 16.11 11.92 20.57 25.17 7.10 29.31

+.33 +.75 +.11 -.19 -.01 -.69 +.02 + . 12 -.12

T Rowe Price NewAmGro P RWAX VALUE

B L EN D GR OWTH

Gainers NAME

Capnia n RosettaGn VisnChina SemierSc n EaglePhm Novogen h Enzymotec TileShop NiskaGsSt Sphere3D g

LAST 2.43 4.80 16.70 5.80 26.10 3.45 6.90 10.35 2.00 4.16

CHG +.66 +1.15 +3.80 +1.26 +5.12 +.66 +1.22 +1.78 +.32 +.64

Losers

%CHG + 3 7.3 + 3 1.5 5L 45 + 2 9.5 53 + 2 7.8 + 24.4 643 + 2 3.7 MomingstarOwnershipZone™ + 2 1.4 e Fund target represents weighted + 2 0.8 Q + 1 9.0 average of stock holdings + 1 8.2 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings

CATEGORY Large Growth C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * * * c r -9.24 -65.5 -1.29 -33.0 ASSETS $3,718 million -1.26 -22.9 EXP RATIO 0.81% -.53 -19.4 MANAGER Daniel Martino -4.39 -18.7 SINCE 2013-05-13 RETURNS3-MO +5.8 Foreign Markets YTO +5.3 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +13.7 Paris 4,753.99 +2.04 + . 04 3-YR ANNL +17.9 London 6,898.13 +41.08 + . 60 5-YR-ANNL +16.6 -.25 Frankfurt 10,895.62 -27.61 Hong Kong24,784.88 + 58.35 + . 24 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 43,251.79 +292.23 + . 68 Apple Inc Milan 21,266.25 +1 00.41 +.47 -.10 Amazon.com Inc Tokyo 17,987.09 -17.68 Stockholm 1,630.99 -13.30 -.81 Visa Inc Class A -27.20 -A7 Google Inc Class C Sydney 5,822.30 Zurich 8,747.83 +35.14 + . 40 Baidu Inc ADR NAME

L AST VascuBio n 4.87 SignalGn n 2.62 ChAdvCns 4.24 SupercndT 2.20 Hollysys 19.06

Restaurant Brands Int'I QSR Close: $42.12L3.38 or 8.7% The fast-food restaurant operator created by the merger of Tim Hortons and Burger King reported strong quarterly sales. $45 40

N

D J 52-week range

$34.86~

F $4 2.98

Vol.:2.6m (2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $8.51 b

P E: .. . Yield: ...

Shake Shack

SHAK Close:$39.05 V-1.64 or -4.0% The burger chain, which went public last month, said it plans to open restaurants in Japan as it expands overseas. $50 45 40

N

D

J

F

N

52-week range $10.72 Vol.:20.7m (3.4x avg.)

D

J

F

52-week range $25.18

P E: . . Yield:..

Mkt. Cap:$14.34 b

838.64~

$46.23

Vol.:694.9k (4.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$441.58 m

P E:8 . 7 Yield : ...

Goodyear Tire & Rubber GT Celsus Therapeutics Close:$26.62L0.71 or 2.7% The tire company reported a sharp jump in fourth-quarter profit, beating Wall Street expectations.

$30

C L TX

Close:$1.15 Y-5.02 or -81.4% The biotechnology company said its potential treatment for the skin disorder atopic dermatitis failed to meet a key study goal. $10

25

N

D

J

F

N

52-week range $48.87~

D

J

F

52-week range $28.98

$4.95~

$8.00

Vol.:9.2m (2.4x avg.) P E: 13.9 Vol.:5.7m (52.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$7.31 b Yie l d: 0.9% Mkt. Cap: $6.4 m

Vasco Data Security

P E: . . . Yield: ...

V DS i Kandi Tech. Group

Close:$27.97%0.11 or 0.4% The internet security company reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter financial results and an encouraging fiscal outlook. $35

KNDI

Close:$14.02%1.71 or13.9% The Securities and Exchange Commission concluded its investigation of the vehicle maker with no intended further actions. $16 14

30 25

12

D J 52-week range

$7.49~ Vol.:17.3m (14.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.11 b

F

N

D J 52-week range

$3 1.84 $4339 ~ PE : 65.1 Vol.:3.7m (4.2x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$648.78 m

F $ 22 49

P E: .. . Yield : ...

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.14 percent Tuesday. The yield affects rates on mortgages and other loans.

3 -yr*

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

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

. 0 1 .01 ... . 0 7 .06 + 0 .01 L L

52-wk T-bill

.22

+0 . 0 1 V

L

L

2-year T-note . 6 7 .64 + 0 .03 L 5-year T-note 1.63 1.55 +0.08 L 10-year T-note 2.14 2.05 +0.09 L 30-year T-bond 2.73 2.65 +0.08 L

L L L L

L .32 L 1.53 W 2.7 3 W 3.70

BONDS

.21

.01 .07 .10

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

5-yr*

T. Rowe Price New America Growth's manager is approaching FAMILY Marhetsummary American Funds his second anniversary, and his Most Active strong start has helped the fund NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG earn Morningstar's bronze analyst BkofAm 826685 16.63 +.02 rating. S&P500ETF 648544 Apple Inc s 602061 CSVLgCrde 447599 FordM 435931 iShJapan 417154 MktVGold 374978 GenElec 350394 Petrobras 336564 Cisco 336125

+.0062

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.61 2.48 +0.13 L L W 3 4. 7 BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.24 4.24 ... L L W 4 .89 Barclays USAggregate 2.16 2.14 +0.02 L L W 2.3 3 p l v ldend$1• 50 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.17 6.18 -0.01 W W L 5.4 8 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.67 3.64 +0.03 L L W 4.4 9 Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.91 1.82 +0.09 L L L 1.76 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.00 2.98 +0.02 L L W 3.0 7 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

1- y r

Price-earnings ratio: 23

52-WEEK RANGE

Price-earnings ratio: 23

VIPS Close:$25.11 %3.31 or 15.2% The China-based online discount retailer reported mixed fourth-quarter financial results and gave a positive revenue outlook. $30

N

Company Spotlight

WM

Close:$53.94%2.65 or 5.2% J F The garbage and recycling hauler posted a profit from the sale of its waste-to-energy business, and QTR YTD plans to buy back $1 billion in stock. L +1 .26% $54 -1.04% 52 V -4.00% +1.99% 50 +3.45% L +2 .01% N D J F +3.46% 52-week range L +2 .23% $40.35~ $54 .49 L +1 .69% Vol.:5.3m (2.3x avg.) PE: 234.5 Mkt. Cap:$24.7b Yiel d : 2.8%

NorthwestStocks

Housing barometer

+

1.1411

StoryStocks

1ODA Y S

'' p

' + +.75

A late bounce pushed the stock market to another record high on Tuesday. Major indexes headed lower at the opening of trading as traders kept an eye on negotiations between Greece and its international creditors. Indexes languished for much of the day until reports emerged that Greece was likely to ask for an extension of its loan agreement. American Express led the 30 big companies in the Dow Jones industrial average up, while health-care stocks led five of 10 industry groups in the Standard & Poor's 500 index to modest gains. The price of crude oil climbed, helping oil and gas stocks finish slightly higher.

17,000 "

16,500"

$53.53

Dow jones industrials

"

18,000"

"

$16.36

Close: 18,047.58 Change: 28.23 (0.2%)

17,360

18,500"

"

NYSE NASD

.

17,720 "

Change: 3.35 (0.2%)

+ -.92

GOLD ~ $1,208.10

10 YR T NOTE 2.14% ~

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities AmBalA m 25 . 17 -.01+1.7 +10.9 +13.2+12.5 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.95 +.03 +2.3 +9.5 +10.7 +9.9 A A A The price of oil CpWldGrlA m 47.69 +.04 +3.5 +7.3 +13.6+10.9 8 8 C rose as invesEurPacGrA m 48.72 +.11 +3.4 +1.3 +9.0 +7.5 C C C tors focused on FnlnvA m 53. 5 6 +.08+2.9 +12.9 +16.6+14.5 D C C the threat to GrthAmA m 44.06 +3.2 +11.4 +17.7+14.6 D 8 D production in IncAmerA m 22.09 +.01 +2.4 +9.9 +12.3+12.0 8 A A the Middle East InvCoAmA m 37.95 +.04 +2.3 +14.7 +17.5+14.3 C 8 D amid escalating NewPerspA m37.34 +.04 +2.9 +6.5 +13.8+11.8 C 8 8 fighting in LibWAMutlnvA m 41.71 +.10 +1.9 +13.9 +16.9+15.6 8 8 A ya. Gold, silver Dodge &Cox Income 13.84 -.03 +0.4 +4 .2 +4.0 +5.1 C A B and copper fell. IntlStk 43.58 +.10 +3.5 + 4.0 +12.2 +9.4 A A A Stock 162.94 +.47 +1.1 +12.1 +19.8+15.9 D A A Wheat, corn Fidelity Contra 100. 1 0 +.33+3.2 +11.5 +17.3+16.0 D C B and soybeans ContraK 100 . 04 +.33+3.2 +11.6 +17.4+16.1 D 8 B all rose. LowPriStk d 51.15 +.05 +1.8 +11.3 +15.8+15.8 D D C Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 74.52 +.13 +2.3 +16.5 +18.0+16.2 A 8 A FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC m 2.46 ... +2.0 +4.0 +9.4 +9.6 D A A IncomeA m 2. 4 4+.01 +2.5 + 5 .0 +10.1+10.3 C A A Oakmark Intl I 24.45 +.07 +4.8 -0.9 +13.0+11.3 D A A Oppeaheimer RisDivA m 20 . 32 +.07+1.7 +14.0 +14.2+13.7 D E D RisDivB m 17 . 95 +.05+1.5 +13.0 +13.2+12.7 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 83 +.06+1.5 +13.1 +13.4+12.9 D E E SmMidValA m50.15 +.09 +2.9 +14.7 +16.4+13.9 B C E SmMidValB m42.15 +.08 +2.8 +13.8 +15.4+13.0 B D E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.2 1 - . 01 +1.3 +10.0 +15.1+13.8 E D C Exchange GrowStk 54. 3 5 +.07 +4.6 +12.1 +18.9+17.6 C A A The dollar HealthSci 73.0 3 +.46 +7.4 +29.9 +35.9+28.9 A A A weakened Newlncome 9. 6 1 - .03+0.6 + 4 .8 + 2.9 +4.4 B C C against the euro. Vanguard 500Adml 194.25 +.34 +2.3 +16.6 +18.0+16.2 A 8 A It was little 500lnv 194.21 +.33 +2.3 +16.4 +17.9+16.1 8 8 8 changed against CapOp 54.20 +.21 +2.8 +16.7 +23.5+16.8 A A B the pound and Eqlnc 31.73 +.06 +1.7 +14.6 +16.7+16,5 8 C A rose against the IntlStkldxAdm 27.10 +.06 +4.2 +1.0 +6.7 NA 8 D Japanese yen. StratgcEq 33.40 +3.8 +16.9 +20.8+19.6 A A A The ICE U.S. TgtRe2020 29.03 -.01 +2.0 +8.8 +10.1+10.2 A A A Dollar index was TgtRe2035 18.30 +.02 +2.6 +10.0 +12.6+12.1 A 8 8 little changed. Tgtet2025 16.89 +2.2 +9.2 +10.9+10.9 A 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.88 -.04 +0.4 +4.7 +2.5 +4.2 B D D Totlntl 16.20 +.04 +4.2 +0.9 +6.6 +6.1 8 D D TotStlAdm 52.89 +.09 +2.5 +15.4 +17.9+16.4 8 8 A TotStldx 52.86 +.08 +2.5 +15.2 +17.7+16.3 C 8 A USGro 31.02 +.05 +3.7 +15.3 +18.3+16.5 8 8 8

PCT 3.76 3.73 3.19 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 3.03 fee. 1 - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 2.14 redemption fee.Source: Morningstas

h5Q HS

FUELS

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

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

CLOSE PVS. 53.53 52.78 1.46 1.45 1.98 1.97 2.76 2.80 1.59 1.63

%CH. %YTD + 1.42 + 0 . 5 +0.21 -1 0.4 + 0.30 + 7 . 1 -1.60 -4.5 -2.22 +1 0.8

CLOSE PVS. 1208.10 1226.50 16.36 17.28 1177.00 1207.50 2.59 2.61 783.55 794.75

%CH. %YTD - 1.50 + 2 . 0 - 5.30 + 5 . 1 -2.53 -2.6 -0.73 -8.6 -1.41 -1.9

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -4.3 1.59 1.60 -0.87 Coffee (Ib) 1.56 1.63 -4.63 -6.6 -1.9 Corn (bu) 3.90 3.87 +0.58 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.63 + 1.75 + 5 . 9 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 306.30 312.20 -1.89 -7.5 -1.7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.38 1.38 +0.04 Soybeans (bu) 10.08 9.90 +1.74 -1.1 -9.3 Wheat(bu) 5.35 5.33 +0.33 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5357 -.0001 -.01% 1.6701 Canadian Dollar 1.2 3 86 -.0074 -.60% 1.0963 USD per Euro 1.1411 +.0062 +.54% 1.3705 JapaneseYen 119.29 + . 8 5 + .71% 1 01.94 Mexican Peso 14. 9015 -.0163 -.11% 13.1942 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8614 -.0194 -.50% 3.5097 Norwegian Krone 7 . 5208 -.0489 -.65% 6.0764 South African Rand 11.6726 +.0159 +.14% 10.8223 Swedish Krona 8.3 2 13 -.0915 -1.10% 6.4524 Swiss Franc .9368 +.0048 +.51% . 8 919 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2796 -.0073 -.57% 1.1076 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2536 +.001 8 +.03% 6.0643 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7587 +.0002 +.00% 7.7553 Indian Rupee 62.088 -.122 -.20% 61.855 Singapore Dollar 1.3567 -.0002 -.01% 1.2588 South KoreanWon 1108.65 +7.91 +.71% 1059.99 Taiwan Dollar 3 1.61 + . 1 7 +.54% 3 0.21


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

BRIEFING l.ego gets labeled as the top brand Sorry, Ferrari. In its annual ranking of the world's most powerful brands, a British consulting firm has crowned Lego master brand builder. Lego, which has been making its plastic building sets since 1949, scored highest in Brand Finance's "brand strength" index, which measures factors such as familiarity, loyalty, promotion, staff satisfaction and corporate reputation to determine brand power. The wide acclaim of "The Lego Movie" helped propel Lego from a well-loved toy brand to the top spot, Brand Finance said. Also: "In a tech-saturated world, parents approve of the backto-basics creativity it encourages and have a lingering nostalgia for the brand long after their own childhoods," the firm said in a release. Denmark-based Lego unseats Italian carmaker Ferrari, which dropped to ninth place. After several years without a Formula One title and strategic changes in its road car division to relax production caps to boost revenue, potentially at the expense of exclusivity, Ferrari's "sheen of glory from its 1990s golden era is beginning to wear thin," Brand Finance said. Apple, meanwhile, was declared the world's "most valuable brand" for the fourth straight year. Thecategory combines brand strength with the company's financial data to determine commercial value. Brand Finance put Apple's brand value at $128 billion. — From wire reports

By Stephen Hamway

The marketing blitz includ-

The Bulletin

ed promotions for Bend Ale

The early results of Visit Bend's winter advertising cam-

paign are in, and it has brought a record amount of trafficto the tourism promotion agency's website, according to CEO Doug La Placa. "Everything is trending in a very aggressively positive direction," La Placa said. After a year in which room-

Chapterl Filed Feb. 10 • Tony R. Wergin, 215 SE J St., Madras Filed Feb. 11 • Rasheed i. Perry, 1001 NW Birch Lane,Madras • Lilly R. Woods, 1030 N. DiamondAve.,Apt.1, Burns • Laura L Post, 215 NE Seventh St., PrIneville • Michelle R. Lawson, P.O. Box 219, Madras • Robert F. Hand and Lynnda M. Williams-Hand, 2716 NEEighth Lane, Redmond Filed Feb. 12 • Craig A. Wallace, 1841 SW Canal Blvd.,Redmond • Scot A. and AnneE. Mandich, 69330 Deer Ridge Lane,Sisters • Mark A. Hanson, 19982 Mahogany St., Bend Filed Feb. 13 • Edward G. Creasy,19226 Cherokee Road,Bend • Beverly L. BaraschSullens, 19754 Clarion Ave., Bend • Roxanne L Nolan,59757 CheyenneRoad,Bend • Robert W. andJulie J. Beamer, 3020 SWPeridot Ave., Redmond • Zeyla A. Brandt, 20503 Brentwood Ave., Unit1, Bend Filed Feb. 15 • Murl C. and Mary F.Holm, P.O. Box3500 PMB152, Sisters • Jessie E Williams, 2320 SW Timber Ave., Redmond Filed Feb. 17 • Corey C. Osuna and Kristin L. Garza, 60105 Hopi Road, Bend Chapter13 Filed Feb. 12 • Christopher M. Sampson, P.O. Box1221, Prineville Filed Feb. 16 • Todd J. Wakefield, 969 SW Crestview Ave., Prineville

it began in earnest Jan. 1, Nate Wyeth, Visit Bend's market-

ing director, told the agency's board Tuesday. Wyeth said the campaign covered all of Oregon, Seattle, southwestern Washington and part of the

Boise area. La Placa said the campaign has consisted of nearly 2,000 television commercials, 1,000

exciting stuff I've seen in my career," La Placa said. The promotion seems to

have succeeded in that regard. Wyeth said during the meeting that traffic to visitbend.com

Placa said."But what I like to

from viewers who clicked on the ads accompanying videos. "Just to put this into perspective, from January 1st through

see is these metrics ebbing and

February 13th, we've had 140,000 visits to our website," La Placa said. "Over the entire

direction."

200,000magazine inserts and

website," La Placa said.

its most expensive advertising

is mainly directed atbringing viewers to the website.

The data also showed that m ore of thosepageviews were coming from the areas in

website, from amarketing geek which there was advertising,

Northwest.

"We have this entire collec-

tion of tourism metrics, and not one is the tell-all, be-all," La

form, has led to 16,000 visits

radio spots and more than

"What we're seeing on the

attle and San Francisco.

turned on with the advertising,

in Bend in each of the past 12 months, Visit Bend launched campaign to date to lure visitors from other parts of the

year of 2007, we had 240,000 Portland, the two largest met- visits to our website." ropolitan areas targeted by the With the marketing camcampaign, produced increases paign set to finish at the end in web traffic to visitbend.com of March, La Placa said Visit of 72 percent and 75 percent, Bend is budgeting for another respectively. round of campaigns for next Online advertising was an winter, which would target SeWyeth added. Seattle and

was up around 56percent over the same period last year, and important part of the equation unique visits have increased by as well, Wyeth said. Working almost 55 percent. with YouTube TrueView, the "When the switch was Web giant's advertising platthe switch also turned on with more eyeballs coming to our

tax collection records were set

WEST COAST PORTSSLOWDOWN

an in a n

e iv e r in

• Stand on Liquid hasn't been affected byWest Coast port dispute, but others have

flowing together. And right now, we are seeing all of our metrics flow in a really positive — Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulletin.com

Arbitrator focus of port talks By Justin Prltchard The Associated Press

By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

LOS ANGELES-

Central Oregon are coping with delays, paying more

The labor-management standoff that is disrupting billions of dollars of in-

to reroute their deliveries

ternational trade at West

or switching to aircarriers

Coast seaports now centers on the future of one man

Some business owners in

thanks to a work slowdown at West Coast ports from San

Diego to Seattle. But others said they avoided the shipping snarl by lucky timing or by stockpiling merchandise months ago

who resolves workplace ~

disputes at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

a

After nine months of

bargaining for a new contract and weeks of partial

I

for unrelated reasons. "We have inventory that

port shutdowns, dockwork-

will get us through the end of April," said Jim Miller, sales and marketing director for stand-up paddleboard

ers and their employers disagree on whether they should change the system for arbitrating allegations of work slowdowns, dis-

maker Stand on Liquid, in

crimination and other

Bend. "But we're in a crunch if things get held up through

conflicts. More specifically, their

late April."

quarrel is focused on the

U.S. Labor Secretary

man who since 2002 has

Thomas Perez flew Tuesday

to San Francisco to help resolve the contract dispute. Dockworkers also returned

BANKRUPTCIES

Trail month in November, but

perspective, is some of the most

to the job Tuesday after being locked out over the holiday weekend. Employers wanted to avoid paying overtime to workers whom managers accuse of intentional slow-

downs, according to The Associated Press. The labor dispute has

led to delays in shipments of Oregon pears, reduced sales of Oregon potatoes and

increasedcostsforonion growers, according to Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, who on Thursday called for a swift resolution to the standoff.

The shipping slowdown, which began when the dockworkers' contract expired in

Andy Tullis1rhe Bulletin

The labor dispute at West Coast ports has not hurt Stand on Liquid, the Bend stand-up paddleboard maker, says Jim Miller, the sales and marketing director. The company has its boards made in China and shipped to the U.S.

Three people with knowledge of the contract

talks say negotiators for the dockworkers' union want er Chez Brungraber said she rerouted three pallets of merchandise that left Shanghai

on Monday to New Jersey, where she has an employee and a warehouse waiting to receive the shipment.

Brungraber said delivery

paid about $10,000 extra to air freight some materials that would have come by sea,

Christopher Dent, owner and company president, wrote in an emailMonday. Some deliverie sfrom Europe were delayed as im-

weeks," he said. Les Schwab Tire Centers,

headquartered in Bend, also stockpiled enough tires to supply demand for the foreseeable future, said company spokesman Dale Thompson. In Sisters, women's shoe

is delayed two weeks; she

porters rerouting shipments

wholesaler Y Knot Branded

doesn't know what she'll pay to ship her goods to the East

through East Coast ports

just placed its second order

caused backlogs there, too, he

Coast via the Panama CanaL

wrote. Some customers were supplied late or with partial

for shoes designed here but made in China, said Kelly

Gobi Gear sells a stuff sack for adventure travelers that

Brungraber designed. "I'm out of inventory, and I can't make any money if I don't have product," she said. But, "I'm not at all upset

July, means delays and added about it.... I'm taking it in costs for Bend small business stride." Gobi Gear Inc. Like many Dent Instruments Inc., other businesses, large and m aker of electronicdevices small, in Central Oregon, that measure and regulate Gobi Gear relies on a factory power and energy use, is in China to make a product feeling the pinch. The comdesigned and sold here. Own- pany since November has

deliveries, as a result, he said. "If the slowdown contin-

ues," he wrote, "our transportation costs will keep going Up.

CEO Scott Allan of Hydro

Beall, a business partner.

She and Wendy Weems, her sister and business partner, gathered those orders at

trade shows in mid-December. Delivery takes about six weeks — long enough, Beall

select grant opportunities for nonprofits and write successful applications; $89; registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond;541-3837270 or www.cocc.edul continuinged • Selling Techniquesfor Small Businesses:A SCORE tolearn how to approach customers with opening questions, qualify a customer, handle objections andclose a sale. Practice the techniques in the secondhalf of the workshop; free, 5:30-8 p.m.; Warm Springs Reservation, 1236 Scouts Drive,Warm Springs; 541-553-3148. MONDAY • MS ProjectBasics:Learn tomanage tasks, timelines and resources. Workwith tracking and reporting features to accurately monitor your projects andprepare

arbitrator David Miller out,

while the association representing employers will not support changes that

would allow his immediate removal.

The people insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the negotiations

publicly. Union negotiators believe Miller favors employers in disputes, — for example, claims that workers are intentionally slowing down cargo movement. In a letter to members last week, the union's president wrote

Flask said the Bend firm

said, for the labor dispute to

has enough of its insulated flasks to meet retailer de-

conclude before the shoes

that negotiators for employers were unwilling to budge

arrive.

because their side benefits

mand through the summer.

He said the company stocked up ahead of the Chinese New Year, which begins Thursday.

"We lucked out," she said Monday. "That's all it came down to." — Reporter: 541-617-7815,

"Factories shut down for two

jditzler@bendbulletin.com

professional estimates. Class runs through March 2;$159, registration required; 8:3011:30 a.m.;Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeWay,Bend;541383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • Intermediate Photoshop: Master the maskingand compositing and learnhowto isolate objects in your photos using PhotoshopCS5.5. Class runs through March 2;$99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend;541-383-7270 or www.cocc. edu/continuinged. • IntermediateQuickBooks Pro 2014:Use QuickBooks for payroll,inventory, job costing, budgets and financial statements. Class runs through March 9;$99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend;541-383-7270 or

www.cocc. edu/continuinged. TUESDAY,FEB.24 • SCORE free business counseling:Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferenceswith local entrepreneurs; check in atthe library desk onthe second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. • Grant WritingSeminar: Four-day seminar on finding funding, writing proposals, creating winning budgetsand bidding on federal grants; $150, for1 day, to.00$575, for four days;.00 registration required;8:00a.m. -4p.m. Hilton GardenInn, 425 SW Southwest Bluff Drive. Contact: www.lesathomas. com. WEDNESDAY,FEB.25 • Online Marketingwith Facebook: UseFacebook to market and advertise

from the current system. Miller told The Associated Press he is aware that he

has become the focal point of the closed-door talks but

is unsure why. He figures that in the hundreds of

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR THURSDAY • Blogging for Business 5 Beyond:Howto set up a WordPress.com blog, integrate it with other social media, engage your audience and other bloggers andcreate original content onthe fly; class runsthrough March5; $75, registration required; 6-8p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeWay,Bend;541383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • BusinessStartup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class anddecide if running abusiness is for you; $29, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College Technology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. FRIDAY • Grant Writingfor Nonprofits:Learnto

arbitrated grievances in Southern California.

decisions he has issued, he your business; must have a Facebookaccount. Class runs through March 4;$79, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; COCC—Crook County Open Campus, 510 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc. edu/continuinged. THURSDAY,FEB.26 • Pub Talk:Economic Development for Central Oregon's February event features LaurenWallaceof Wallace Tech/Law;Jennifer Clifton, co-founder of Lava Love; Garrett Loveall, founder of July Nineand Julia Junkin, founder of Juju; $20EDCO members, $30 nonmembers, registration required;5-7:30 p.m.; McMenaminsOldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; 541-388-3236, ereilly@edcoinfo.com orwww. edcoinfo.com/events. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal

upset someone who is now getting back at him. "I'm bewildered as anybody else on the outside looking in," Miller said. U.S. Labor Secretary Thomas Perez entered the

standoffTuesdayin San Francisco, where he settled

into his new mission of forging a contract. Perez does not have legal author-

ity to force an agreement, but outsiders hope he can coax one that would end

the protracted troubles. Spokesmen for the International Longshore and

Warehouse Union and the Pacific Maritime Association, which represents ship-

ping lines that carry cargo and port terminal operators that handle it once ships

dock,declined comment, citing a media blackout.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fly-tying Corner, D5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors

Useful insight for kokanee fishing

SNOW REPORT For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts, seeB6

BRIEFING OHA to hold annual banquet The Ochoco Chapter of the Oregon Hunters Association will host its 24th annual banquet and auction Saturday at the Carey Foster Hall at Prineville's Crook County Fairgrounds. Ticket packages for singles and couples range from $45 to $130 and include dinners, drink coupons and avariety of door prizes and raffle tickets. Banquet tickets for youth ages 12 and younger are $15. In addition to dinner, a variety of outdoor gear, artwork, gifts and other items will be auc-

By Allen Thomas The (Vancouver Wash.) Columbian

ARIEL, Wash. — Guide Cameron Black says he still has plenty to learn about kokanee fishing at Merwin Reservoir, but he

does often put a couple of dozen a day of the tasty landlocked

FISHING

"I wouldn't call it the

Bible of kokanee fishing, but it's what works for

me," said Black, a Woodland resident and operator

of Gone Catchin' Guide Service.

tioned and raffled with

the proceeds used to fund local wildlife habitat projects and youth education events. Typical OHAOchoco Chapter projects include planting forage for big game, fencing springs and aspen groves, creating new water sources for upland game birds, and staging youth hunter and outdoor education programs and events. For more informa-

He often fishes with five

rods at time, depending on the number of clients. Photos by Mark Morical/The Bulletin

Ski tracks and a snowshoe trail circle Todd Lake, with Mount Bachelor in the back-

ground.

experimentation and onthe-water testing.

Black offered his adanglers in a January seminar at Bob's Sporting Goods in Longview. Here's a condensed version of what he told a standing-room turnout:

• Rods — A Lamiglas CG70DR has been his preferred rod,but he's tried a

Lamiglas XCC 762 UL GH and is switching.

TRAIL UPDATE

• Reels — A line-counter

reel is a must, although many line-counter reels are a bit beefy for kokanee gear. Several low-profile line-counter reels are com-

With ChrisSabo

SeeTrails /D5

By using a different lure on each rod, it allows for

vice to Merwin kokanee

tion, call 541-447-5029. — Bulletin staff report

Winter trail conditions continue to deteriorate, as snow is becoming more and more challenging to access. Snowmobile riding out of Kapka Butte Sno-park is not recommended due to inadequate snow and lots of bare ground on the main trail. Conditions out of Kapka are marginal for snowshoers and ligh-duty skiers. The only access to snow for snowmobiles is out of Dutchman Flat. However, the trails have lots of moguls and are rough and bumpy. Because Dutchman is the only "somewhat" functioning park, it gets very crowded, and people are encouraged to explore summer trail alternatives. There may be limited access for snowshoeing out of Swampy, Kapka and Vista Butte sno-parks. Trails around Elk Lake are becoming more marginal, and snowmobilers there are forced to ride on bare pavement. With warm temperatures, it's very likely those trails will becomeimpassableto snowmobiles by the weekend. Elk Lake Resort may be closed on various weekdays. Visitors should call the resort ahead of time (541480-7378) to get current access conditions and hours of operation. All seasonal highway and forest road closures remain in effect. Summer trails are a great option for biking, hiking and horseback riding. Horse Butte, Deschutes River and Phil's, Peterson Ridge, Black Butte and Metolius River trails are all in good condition. The BLM Maston Trail system south of Eagle Crest is also a good alternative.

sockeye

in his boat during the finicky winter and early-spring months.

• A cross-country skitrip from Mount Bachelorto ToddLakeoffers a peaceful escape

ing on to the market, he

added. • Line — Black prefers monofilament, because

kokanee are known for having a soft mouth. Max-

MOUNT BACHELOR-

MARK MORICAL

ust five minutes into

ima Ultragreen in the 10-

or 12-pound strength are his staples. • Dodgers — Sling Blades, Arrow Flash and Simon Kokanee dodgers are his top choices. Sling Blades can be dif-

a cross-country ski trip last week, I found myself completely alone.

ficult to adjust, he said.

No skiers, no snowboarders, no snowmobilers, no

"If you get one that's working really well, it's going to be a killer for you," Black said. Arrow Flash dodgers

snowshoers, no chairlift lines — no fuss. I had started from the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center with the intent

no pressure to make conversation with strangers on the chairlifts...

are made by Poulsen Cas-

cade Tackle. "Generally there's no tuning involved with those. They come right out of the package," he said. "They have a nice wide range of speeds that they perform well at."

of skiing to Todd Lake, circling the no chairlifts. lake, then returning. As I get older, I find myself seekThe calm and quiet of the woods ing these sorts of outdoor pursuits just a quarter of a mile from the — searching less for thrills and nordiccentermade me realize one more for solitude. Maybe that's of the advantages to choosing a day how many of us evolve as we get on the flats over a day on the slopes

— you can get away from it all. Even if you encounter other nordic skiers, chances are they will pass you or you will pass them and you'll find yourself alone once again. No constant crowds,

older. I don't know.

The days of shredding powder

• Lures — He's mostly

on my snowboard are far from

over, but on this day I just needed some time to myself in the "snowy" high country of Central Oregon. SeeTodd Lake /D2

Cross-country skiers move along the Todd Lake Trail with Broken Top in the distance.

a spinners and hoochies angler. If limited to one lure, it would be an orange hoochie, Black said. SeeKokanee/D3

nro now or unere uCa ioneaSSeS away, it doubled back.

To most kids, history starts

the day they are born. Everything before might as well be Stone Age. When I met 14-year-old

GARY LEWIS

Lauren Gehrmann, I told her

aboutmeeting her dad when we both were

HUNTING in the second grade. Then I was immediately sorry I said anything. I became Old Guy. But I was the Old Guy who had extended an invitation to

my old friend and his daughter, to take them on a quail hunt in Eastern Oregon, so I

ahead to wild flushes, and we bagged a few, but Lauren always seemed to be out of position. At the end of the morning,

Lauren forgot all about the

bird and began to stalk the rabbit. When it came into the open again, she fired. Then she calle dforherdad,and the two of them walked up on her first rabbit.

The next day they cooked Lauren's quarry in a crock pot with potatoes, carrots, on-

we knocked down a rooster pheasant and began the long

ions, olive oil and rosemary.

walk back to the trucks, our tired pudelpointer trotting

tion is about. Old Guys (and ladies) passing on the hunting

alongside. When we flushed

tradition in the classroom and in the field.

a quail, we tried to get the

was OK.

dogback on it. Then we saw a

There's nothing easy about hunting wild quail and pheasant. Webashedthrough brambles, we sashayed through shoulder-high sagebrush, we pushed birds

cottontail. Fixated on the quail, the

dog seemed to ignore its scent, and the rabbit flashed in and out of sight at the edge of cover. Instead of running

That's what hunter educa-

Here in our state, a typical firearm safety and hunter

ethics course consists of six classroom sessions and a fieldday.Classes are offered in the spring. SeeHunting courses/D5

Gary Lewis i For The Bulletin

Lauren Gehrmann and her dad, Grant, at a fence crossing on a hunt near Hermiston. With several hunting classes approaching, it's a wise time for children and adults to learn safety and

technique.


D2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 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 Oregonoutdoors. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

IH

we

e

P+

/~ lstr

jII

MARION FALLS Nate Wyeth captures the beauty and power of the rarely seen Marion Falls.

floating paradise into a place The ski tracks were paralfor skiers and snowshoers to leled by a snowshoe trail, and

and I completed the 6-mile

Bachelor. I will be there later this sea-

round trip in about five hours, son — once winter, we can gated entrance to Todd lake, I taking my time for photos and hope, arrives in earnest. But passed a large group of snow- rest. on this day, some time in the shoers headed to the lake. Across the parking lot from winter woods alone was the The ski back to the nordic the nordic center, skiers and priority.

take in the winter wonder of

when I arrived back at the

the Central Oregon portion of the Cascade Range. The area also offers op-

portunities for backcountry downhill skiers and snowb oarders. T od d

but nothing too demanding,

center included a bit more uphill than the ski into the lake,

L a k e is

s nowboarders p a cked

the

— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com

slopes and the chairlifts of Mt.

rimmed by a relatively small but steep ridge on its west and north sides. Backcountry en-

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate

thusiasts like to skin up and then ski or snowboard down these slopes.

Remaining on th e f l ats down by the lake last week, I continued to follow the tracks

M4-

around the entire lake, making for a level, mellow ski.

••

TheBulletin

Mark Morical/The Bulletin

BrokenTop rises in the distance above snowy Todd Lake.

ToddLake

ing or snowboarding. The trail,

w h ich i n clud-

Continued from D1 ed only a few challenging A long but relatively easy hills, skirted some creeks cross-country ski t o T odd that flowed freely during this Lake and back was just the ticket.

warm winter of l ittle snow.

I parked in the Mt. Bachelor parking lot and grabbed a freecommon corridor pass from an employee inside the

as this, at well above 6,000 feet in elevation, the route

n ordic center. T h ese f r e e

long cross-country ski trek. Eventually I made my way

passes allow skiers to use the corridor to get from the nordic center to the ski trails

on the north side of Cascade Lakes Highway. Trails on the south side of the highway are part of the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center and require a trail pass (a daily pass is $17 for adults).

But even during a winter such from Bachelor to Todd Lake h olds sufficient snow for a beyond the trees and found

myself in an open meadow on the approach to Todd Lake. After a short climb up a hill, I

arrived at the lake. Steam rose from the snow

covering the lake as Broken Top dominated the horizon to

C~

'

K=-:

the north. I noticed some ski

The common corridor took me to the snow-covered high-

tracks along the east side of the lake and decided to follow

way, where I encountered

them.

a couple of skiers and a fatbike rider. But after I turned

After a quarter of a mile or so, I glanced back to see

onto the Todd Lake Trail, I was basically all alone until I reached the lake. Along the way, I skied in

Mount

+

IV

g

in

g4

/

-e

B a chelor t o w ering

behind me as the sun broke through the high clouds on the unseasonably warm day. I well-formed c l assic t r a cks shed some layers and sucked that helped me stay in control down water from my hydrathrough the crusty snow. The tion pack as I approached the temperature rose well into the lake's north end. 50s, making the snow condiIn the winter, Todd Lake tionsbetterfor cross-country transforms from its summerskiing than for downhill ski- time draw as a fishing and

c

Cr. v noF BEND I I

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I

I

I • I

I

'

I

s

I


WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

Acuriosi o r curin swee st rou

B ozeman

By Eric Dietrich • The Bozeman (Mont.) Daily Chronicle

BOZEMAN, Mont.ozeman's hottest up-and-coming winter sport, it turns out, doesn't have anything to do with mountains. Instead, it's curling — perhaps best-known for its

I

presence in the Winter Olympics, and perhaps best described for the uninitiated as a cross between shuffleboard, hockey and bowling. Obscure even a few years face, sliding a 42-lb granite ago, the sport is seeing dra- stone toward a 12-foot target matic growth i n B ozeman's painted on the ice at the far recreation scene. The city's end of the sheet. league, in its second year, As the stone skims across filled rosters for 16 teams in the ice sheet, two brooma matter of days this winter, equipped "sweepers"franti said Holly Crane, the city's cally brush the ice in its path, h assistant recreation manager. strategically adjusting friction That's twice as many teams as to fine-tune its trajectory. If the during the inaugural season. thrower has applied a gentle "Doubling in size in one sea- spin to the stone, it will also son — it's pretty impressive," gradually curlover the course Crane said, adding that it's far of its travel, providing the momore typical for league sports tionthat gives the sport both its like kickball to see gradual name and much of its strategy. growthoverseveralyears. The fourth teammate, the Photos by Adrian Sanchez-Gonzalez/The Bozeman (Mont.) Daily Chronicle C urling, she s aid, h as "skip," or captain, directs the Curling enthusiasts participate in a curling clinic hosted by the "exploded." action — providing the lead Bozeman Parks and Recreation Department in Bozeman, Montana.

h

~4

4

"It's a team sport, but it's a

very polite and civilized team sport," said Bruce Richards, a volunteer who helped get the city's league started. "There aren't even any ref-

with a target to shoot for and

Participants learn the basics of the game and help raise interest in

erees," he added, noting it's also traditional for the team that wins a match to buy the losers a round of drinks. I was one of 30 Bozemanites

relaying instructions to the the sport. sweeps. Although we didn't have time to play a complete game at Saturday's clinic, I'm that would be less noticeable told this latter duty typically with something like hockey involves a significant amount become a slightly bigger deal of shouting. when you're agonizing over Olympic-level p r e cision, the finer details of a stone's i t turned out, wasn't in t he trajectory. cards for me on my first go The tennis court the city

who took part in a recent

on the ice. My early attempts

parks and recreation clinic,

at launching a stone forward ended me splayed across the

hoping to get in on the action. That Saturday morning,

ice, with the stone skidding to

curling league Tuesday and Thursday nights. They start by flooding the tennis courts in Southside Park off College Street to, weather-permitting, build up a new layer of ice, she said, then painstakingly rink in Southside Park is built shave off high spots before on, Crane explained after the polishing the ice sheet with fact, is designed with a slight something akin to a "huge slant so it drains in warmer dust mop." months. Especially given a Just beforeplay, a sort of late start to the rec depart- hand-held sprinkler is used ment's annual rink-building, to spreaddropletsofwateron forced by this year's warm the ice surface, which freeze December, that means the ice on contact to create "pebsurface is something less than bling," which makes it easier competitive grade. for stonesto skim across the

a stop somewhere around the learning the sport's basics on ice sheet's halfway mark. an ice rink adapted from a tenI started to get a feel for nis court in Southside Park as things with a bit of practice, temperatureshovered a few though — and after an indegrees below freezing. structor pointed out I needed The gist of the game is this: to account for the ice rink's The lead, one of a curling slight tilt as I aimed. As far as I'm concerned, it's team's four members, pushes That's the thing about curl- part of the charm. off from a f o otrest embed- ing on outdoor ice instead of Crane added that recreded in the ice at one end of a an indoor rink, it t urns out ation staff spend hours prep100-odd-footlong playing sur- — bumps and irregularities ping the ice used for the city we spent an hour-and-a-half

\

match. " If i t

I '.' '44

It's something that can be s n ows... w e s t a r t played evenings during the

all over again," Crane said. week, he said, and in contrast "We're fighting a g ainst to higher-impact sports such nature."

as soccer or hockey, curlers

lenge is taking changing ice

Richards, a longtime curler can remain competitive as in his native Michigan before they age.

conditions into account as the

he moved to Montana, says the

sheet. Part of the sport's chal-

pebblesmelt or are scraped down over the course of a

"It's easy to get started," he

sport is a perfect fit for Boze- said, "but you never get tired man's winter recreation scene. of it."

Kokanee Continued from D1 In h i s

h o o chies, B l ack

wants the trailing hook behind the skirt material.

"This little guy hanging back completely exposed from the lure is what I believe you want. When you troll by them, those dodgers call them into look, and then they see

t II

that hoochie or spinnner or

whatever you are using, then there's that little dangling

I

piece of white corn. I think

that's just the final part for them to hit.... These are agStevan Lake /The (Vancouver, Wash.) Columbian gressive little buggers and Fishing guide Cameron Black, from Woodland, Washington, catchI want to give them a target es kokenee with clients at Merwin Reservoir in Washington. back there to grab."

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JACII(IETS Ii PANTS

• Hooks — Dropshot hooks

If he's using a lead sinker, April 1 and 20 feet on May 1. This year, water temperasnaps. tures are above average and Ten-pound m o nofilament the kokanee might start going said Black. He prefers sizes No. 2 or is not off-putting to kokanee deep earlier, he added. No. 4, and whether they are and doesn't break as easily as He said his trolling speed 4- to 6-pound mono. red or black does not matter. is normally 1 to 1.4 mph, with "I've never seen any rea- 1.2 to 1.3 mph being best most "When it comes to using a regular Octopus hook or a son to fish anything less than often. dropshot hook, I don't think 10-pound monofilament." Early in the year, it might I'll ever use an Octopus hook Snubbers are not neces- be necessary to have a lot of again. I think it has some- sary, but if you use them, line out — perhaps 120 to 180 thing to do with the steepness place them right behind the feet behind the boat, he said. "When you are targeting of the bend or the way the line sinker. Snubbers will dampen is presented on the eye." the action of a dodger if tied fish early in the year, you will • Bait — Green Giant white too close, he said. probably not be seeing fish • Technique — Black is on your depth finder due to corn is his choice of baits. He also likes to take a can not a believer in making "S" the fact those fish are 5 to 10 of Chicken of the Sea chunk turns, which cause the lines feet down, and when that boat light tuna and drain some of on one side of the curve to goes over them, they're going the juice and a bit of the tuna drop and the lines on the out- to be pushing off to the sides." mush into a ziplock bag, then side to rise. Black uses downriggers "I throttle up or down to get once the water gets into the soak the corn. Black said he's experi- that action, and it applies to 56- to 60-degree range. He ofmented wit h t h e d i ff erent all the lures, not just those on ten fishes his downriggers at dyed corns on the market but one side of the boat." 40 to 60 feet. thinks the white corn works H e also t r olls w i t h t h e He doesn't fish for kokanee best. wind, or against it, but not much during the heat of sumIf he's not getting strikes, sideways, which is more like- mer as he switches to guiding he changes his trolling speed, ly to result in tangled lines. for salmon and steelhead in depth or lure color before Fishing the right depth is summer and fall. worrying about scent. the key to catching kokanee Merwin Reservoir can be " Usually scent i s no t in Merwin. challenging because the ko"You can have the best lure, kanee schools move a lot. the first thing I'm going to "This year, fish have been switch. It's important, but not best dodger, best presentaeverything." tion, but if you can't get it in scattered all over, hard to find Black also likes a single front of the fish, you're not go- and not in same place two corn kernel per hook. Addi- ing to catch them. You might days in a row. We'll spend two tional kernels can dampen as well be fishing in a swim- hours of looking for 30 minthe action of the hoochie. ming pool." utes of catching." • Rigging — His main line The right depth is a combiBut the fish also have been comes to a pair of duo snaps. nation of water temperature a nice size considering it's Then he has 3 to 4 feet of and light intensity, he said. winter. 1 0-pound monofilament t o "If the growth season is And although it varies from the dodger followed by 8 to 12 day to day, if the light is in- starting right now, they're goinches of 10-pound monofila- tense, try fishing about 10 feet ing to be huge by summer," he ment to the hoochie. deep on March 1, 15 feet on sard. (also called splitshot hooks) are much superior to the traditional Octopus style hook,

I

it is attached between the duo

HEL'METS e-i'lOIQILE~ S iS P'OilE~S • gir.OIVE II

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D4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

UTDOORS

E1VD

work in the mornings and mounted work in the afternoons; 541-961-

CYCLING 2015 ICE CRITERIUM:A short circuit race on the snow/ice; Feb. 21 at Wanoga Sno-park; registration at 5:30 p.m., race at 7 p.m.; $10 suggested donation; bikes in the past include and are not restricted to road bikes, cross bikes, mountain bikes, unicycles, push bikes, fat bikes and town bikes; 541-728-

0066; elementexercise©gmail. com; crowsfeetcommons.com/ event/2015-ice-crit-2-0. CENTRAL OREGON 500+ BICYCLERIDE:June 3-7;fivedays of classic Central Oregon road rides; 100-mile and 100-kilometer ride options each day; rides include Mt. Bachelor loop, Crooked River Canyon, East Lake, Smith Rock and McKenzie Pass; one day is $75 and all five days is $325; a benefit for the MBSEF cycling program; to register, visit www.mbsef.org and search under the "events" tab.

EQUESTRIAN SPRING TUNEUP CLINIC: At Pilato Ranch, 70955 Holmes Road, Sisters; May10-11,9a.m. to noon and1 to 4 p.m. each day; $300 for two full days; local horse trainer Clint Surplus will teach a two-day clinic to include ground

Email events at least 10 days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.

truhorsemanship.com.

306-4509orbendcastingclub@ gmail.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of

FISHING

Aquatic & Recreation Center; www.

5727;kathyebarnes©gmail.com;

FLY-FISHING SEMINAR: Featuring world-renowned angler and conservationist Craig Mathews, of West Yellowstone, Montana; Feb. 21-22 at the Riverhouse Convention Center in Bend; hosted by the Central Oregon Flyfishers and the Sunriver Anglers; price is $95; 541549-2072; outings©coflyfishers. org; www.coflyfishers.org. CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond;

www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeach month at6 p.m.; 50 SW Bond St., Bend, Suite 4; 541-306-4509, deschutestu© hotmail.com; www.deschutes. tu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:Agroup of fly anglers from around Central

Oregonwhoaretrying to improve

their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541-

each month;Sunriver Homeowners sunriveranglers.org.

THECENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m.;m eets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.

HIKING DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Ledbyskilled 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 CENTRALOREGON CHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION: M eetsW ednesdaysat 6:30 p.m.; next meetings are Feb.18, March 4; VFWHall, Redmond; 541447-2804orfacebook.com atRMEF Central Oregon. THE BENDCHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meetsthesecond Wednesday

ofeachmonth; King Buffet, Bend; ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCOCHAPTER OF THE 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.

MISCELLANEOUS 2015 CENTRALOREGON SPORTSMEN'SSHOW: March5-8 at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond; discover cutting-edge sporting and outdoor equipment, learn exciting and innovative techniques, and meet the industry's most renowned experts; $10 for adults and $5 for ages 6 to 16; www.thesportshows.com/ shows/central-oregon/. INDIAN FORDCREEK RESTORATION:Feb.19 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Environmental Center in Bend, 16 NWKansas Ave.; an overview of the Indian Ford Creek Restoration Project near Sisters including Calliope Crossing, a wellknown birding location that is within the project area; 503-789-2452; jon.g.putnam©bendbroadband. com; www.ecaudubon.org.

SHOOTING

SNOW SPORTS

HIGH DESERTFRIENDS OF NRA:Meets every Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at Strawhat Pizza in Redmond through April1; annual fundraising banquet will be March 28, at the Riverhouse Convention Center; like us on Facebookat High Desert Friends of NRAfor more information. COSSAKIDS:Coaches are onhand 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

SHOES,BREWS, AND VIEWS, SNOWSHOE TOUR:March4, 11, 1:30 p.m.; snowshoe off trail to enjoy a gorgeous view of the CascadeMountainsofOregon;$70; Wanderlust Tours, 61535 S. Highway 97, Suite13, Bend;wwwvisitbend.com. MOONLIGHT 8( STARLIGHT SNOWSHOE TOURS:March6,13, 7 p.m.; snowshoe by the light of the moon; $70; Wanderlust Tours, 61535 S. Highway 97, Suite13, Bend; www.visitbend.com. FULL MOON XCSKI:M arch 7; moonlight cross-country ski outing at Meissner or Swampy snoparks; depart from Pine Mountain at 7:30 p.m.; bring food, water, headlamp and a few dollars for grooming donation box; www. pinemountainsports.com. JOHN CRAIGSKITOUR: March 7; Oregon Nordic Club hosts this 6.6-mile nordic trek from the east gate of the McKenzie Pass to the Dee Wright Observatory at the pass summit; a noncompetitive groomed ski tour; new.onc.org/event/ john-craig-ski-tour/. GREATNORDEENXCSKI ANDFAT BIKE RACE:March14, 7:30 a.m.; the 13th Annual Great Nordeen XC Ski and Fat Bike Race at Mt. Bachelor; www.visitbend.com.

Sports Association range,milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINEMOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy actionshootingclub;second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www.

pinemount ainposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboyaction 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.

Bioo ists ommentrarestur eon'ss awnin run By Brett French

the age of sexual maturityalthough they mature later

State University and federal researchers showed pallid lar-

than wild fish. But biologists

vae that drifted into Fort Peck

River were able to remotely lids will have the stimulus to

Reservoirfr om the Missouri River diedwhen they settled to

The Biuings (Mont.) Gazette

Last June, fisheries biologists on the lower Yellowstone

don't know if the hatchery pal-

witness an extremely unusual spawn since they started life event. in artificial conditions,Backes Knowing that the Yellow- Sald. stone River flows would be Until the pallid sturgeon

the bottom of the lake, where

high andtherefore conducive populations are revived and to encouraging native fish to thrive — right now they num-

therehas been no documented successful wild pallid sturgeon

move upstream to spawn, they

reproduction on

there was little oxygen. Since Fort Peck and Garrison dams were built on t he Mi ssouri,

ber about 125 — the fish will

placed radio telemetry base remain on the endangered stationsalong the river. species list with special proWhat t hey r ec o rded i s tections. Pallid sturgeon were historic.

listed in 1990.

The biologist s aw a r a dio-tagged femalepallid stur- Ona tear geon ripe with eggs swim up Driven by an ancient urge a side channel to go around to spawn, the femalepallid las Intake Diversion Dam.

less than a 10 percent chance that the larvae would survive

before reaching the reservoir dead zone. "Getting them to the Powder

Junemoved 76 milesupstream

"Lo and behold, we hit the holy grail," said Mike Backes, fisheries manager for Fish, Wildlife and Parks in Miles City. The basestations record the

before taking a left turn into the Powder River and continued up that stream another

Courtesy James Woodcock

Montana Fish, Wlldllfe and Parks employees release a pallid sturgeon after taking blood samples In 2014.

A tagged female pallid sturgeonwas documented making aspawning run upthe Powder Riverlast June.

20 miles. There she stayed for about two weeks. "To go up a little tributary Then the femalemoved. "Sheworked her way down like that is amazing," Backes

fish's tag number and the signal strength so the biologist sald. can determine the fish's direcAt the beginning of last tion, and the time of day. June, the Powder was flowing at about 4,000 cubic feet Racing time per second before dropping Biologists are hoping that to 1,000cfs by the end of the if pallid sturgeon can swim month. In comparison,the

and we thought, OK, here we

go," Backes said. He and fellow fisheries biologists working in the region had seen similar pallid sturgeon behavior below Intake Dam. The female drifts down-

stream, joins the males and spawns. "So it looked like something ing wild fish might success- cfs in June. Without dams to fully reproduce beforethey die restrict it, t he Po wder Riv- similar was stacking up in the of old age. The majority of the er flows much like it did 100 Powder River,"he said. wild fish are about 60. It canbe years agoin the spring — with 10 yearsbetween when female high turbidity that hasproven Party's over pallidsspawn. to be an attractant to fish like The next day at 3 a.m., all Hatchery pallid sturgeon pallid sturgeon. three males left the river, folhave been raised and released Possibly detecting the fe- lowed shortly by the female. in the Yellowstone and Mis- male's pregnant condition The males bolted all the way souri rivers beginning in 1998 from hormones released in the back downstream,even swimto ensure the f ish s urvives water, four radio-tagged males ming over the turbulent water after all of the old wild fish followed upstream, three of of Intake Dam. The female die.The oldest of those hatch- them stopping 3 miles up the movedonly a couple of miles ery-raisedfi sh are reaching Powder River and w a i ting. downstream and hung out for around obstructions such as Intake Dam, the few remain-

around Intake Dam does give

said. "Instantly, we went to lar-

val sampling for seven days at the mouth of the Powder, and we were successful at catching

a bunch of larvae. But they're still at the lab to determine

Yellowstone was running at

what they are."

60,000 cfs dropping to 40,000

If the larvae arepallid sturgeon, scientists can take the genetic data and determine the

mother and father of the fish, since biologists have thatinformation on file. But the Powder

River isalso known to contain shovelnosesturgeon, which in the larval form are indistin-

guishable frompallid larvae. "We've been an xiously awaitingthose results," Backes

said.

Backes hope that an Army Corps of Engineers project to build a bypasschannel near area of the Missouri-Yellow- the dam might work. stone confluence where the In the future, if passageover water isdeeper and slower and or around irrigation dams thereare plenty ofplaces for above Intake Dam on the Yelthe slow-moving,bottom-feed- lowstone River could be built — providing even more room ing fish to lounge. for the big fish to roam and No cure-all spawn — maybe their larvae If the larvae were pallid would have a chance to stay sturgeon, itwould be the high- alive before dying in Lake est documented successful Sakakawea. U n f o rtunately, hatch of a nativepallid on the such scenarios might not play Yellowstone River — almost out until long after Backesis 170 miles above North Dako- gone, so for now he'srelishing ta's Lake Sakakawea. That this one small victory. "It was an amazing occurdistance above the reservoir is important because pallid stur- rence we were able to docugeonlarvae drift an estimated ment," he said. 12 to 13 daysbefore holding. A recentstudy by Montana

Eventually, all of the adult

pallid sturgeon swam down-

Weekly Arts & Entertainment M~m lg

TheBulletin

Winthrop caters to cross-country crow WINTHROP, Wash. — This is unlike any ski t own I ' ve

ever visited. Sure,its main drag is lined with r e staurants of

the Methow Valley. This resort t o wn i s f i r s t and foremost a no rdic skiing destination. The Methow

Valley hasmore than 200 ki-

lometers — or 120miles — of e v e r y groomed cross-country trails

Valley also have massive al-

Sadie nor I was disappointed

pine ski a r eas that a ttract

during our f i rst visit th ere.

thousands of do w nhillers. We only touched a fraction While it would be unfair to of the trail system but found call nordic skiing an after- an impressivevariety of skithought at those two destina- ing opportunities. We did the tions, it isn't the main attrac- classic diagonal stride along

sort, coffee joints, brewpubs, and lays claim to being the tion as it is in the Methow. outdoor gear stores and bou- largest groomed nordic trail Being a cros s-country tiques that sell a wide variety system in the nation. It's not skiing destination gives the of itemstailored to an upscale an unchallenged claim. Royal town a distinct feel. The talk crowd. Gorge in the Sierra Nevada around t he bar at t h e O l d It boasts ample lodgingboasts atrail system of near- School House Brewery cenrustic cabins, cute bed-and- ly identical size, and the trail ters around a good day of breakfasts, standard hotels system in and around Sun aerobic skate-skiing on fresh and at least one five-star lodge. Valley in Idaho'sWood River corduroy, or classic striding in Skiers strolling downtown Valley isn't far behind at 115 set tracks, rather than busting make that distinctive clomp kilometers. through moguls and shred"I think it's fair to say we as the impact from their boots ding deep powder. reverberates on wooden side- are right up there, with the Sitting on the east flank of walks. But you have to listen a terrain we have, with Royal the North Cascades,the vallittle more carefully to hear it. Gorge and Sun Valley, and ley gets generous amounts of These folks aren't wearing we groom all of our trail sys- snow, and its cold temperathe bulky, hard plastic boots tem almost every night," said tures makefrequent groomthat help alpine skiers carve Danica Ready of Methow ing possible. That is an extra tight turns down steep runs. Trails, the nonprofit organi- plus this year as manyregionAlthough there is a small, zation that overseesthe trail al nordic trail systems have one-chairlift ski area outside system, which stretches from struggled with low snow. of nearby Twisp, you won't Winthrop to beyond Mazama With all of t hat in mi n d , find a glitzy alpine resort at the base of the North Cas- my wife and I headedto the boasting thousands of feet of cadesHighway. Methow for a three-day ski vertical drop anywhere near But Royal Gorge and Sun trip la st we e kend. Neither

Backes said. But the fact that the pal-

four days. stream, over the top of Intake "We picked her up, and she Dam. For the rest of the year, had droppedher eggs," Backes the fishtend to hang out in the

••

The Lewiston (fdaho) Tribune

isn't necessarily a cure-all," lid sturgeon found their way

IhSlde

By Erlc Barker

th e ri v e rs

abovethe dams. A previousstudy has shown that evenif pallid sturgeon can getaround Intake Dam, there's

the Methow

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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

T e tiresome tria s an trium O

D5

FISHING REPORT THE OREGON DEPARTMENT OFFISH AND WILDLIFE'S WEEKLY FISHING REPORT WAS NOT UPDATED BY PRESS TIME.FOR MORE INFORMATION AND AN UPDATED REPORT FOR CENTRAL OREGON, VISIT WWW. DFW.STATE.OR.US/RR/CENTRAL/.

FLY-TYING CORNER

By Brett French The Billings (Mont.) Gazette

Larry Webster came in to The Billings Gazette office re-

cently with my work already done for me. Webster, an avid sportsman

who lives on a small ranchnear Roberts, Montana, brought in one of my Outdoor pages with his goose hunting photos taped over the top of the newspaper, accompanied by a two-page,

I

neatly handwritten tale titled

"Life in a goose blind," with Steffen. "What's life like in a goose blind? It all starts with coffee

yl'

t

Larry Tom Webster and Bruce

r

Courtesy The Billings (Mont.) Gazette

t

Goose decoysline afield in the morning light."Hunting isalways

at 5 a.m., checking the weath- supposed to be fun," a veteran waterfowl hunter says. er and waking up the dog, a red phased-yellow Labrador named Honz or Hon Z. Owner retire inside the blind for hot was 4 months old. Larry Tom Webster of Roberts, coffee and a short wait until Longtime Gazette readers is ready for another morning in legal shooting time. The wait mightremember previous stoa goose blind with son-in-law is enjoyable while sitting on ries about Webster. He has a Bruce Steffen of Red Lodge, padded swivel seats drinking safari-themed man cave he Montana." hot coffee. With the arrival of built on to his Roberts home, It was the last week of the shooting time, two Remington decorated with trophies that he goose season when Webster autoloader shotguns are load- and his wife, Phyllis, shot on an dropped by still wearing his ed with 3-inch No. 1 steel loads. African hunting trip. He used camouflage jacket. He seemed Ammo is always the choice of to manage the Painted Horse a bit wistful about his hunts hunters. Usually for geese No. Ranch beforeretiring and deending, wanting to hang on to 1, BBs or No. 2 loads are most voting a good share of his newthe memories with his tale. popular to use. We prefer Kent ly free time to outdoor activities "You're always glad when No. 1s in 3-inch size." as well as volunteering with the the season is overbecause your The duo had no trouble find- local Ducks Unlimited chapter. body is worn down," he confid- ing geese this year, although he He estimated he had been ed. "But two days later you're said the larger mallard ducks hunting waterfowl about 25 wishing you could hunt." from up north blew through in years. "The Chevy Suburban is a hurry during one of the win"Enjoy your hunt, enjoy a loaded the night before with 50 ter's cold snaps. good hunting dog and hunt "The geese were flying in safe. Remember, booze and to 110 goose decoys, a shovel and a day pack. Bruce arrives huge groups, which really bullets don't mix. Hunting is alat 5:30, puts his gun and gear makes it hard to bring them in," ways supposedto be fun." in and off we go for a morning he said. People sometimes ask me of goose hunting. Arriving at Fooling lots of eyes is much where I get ideas for stories. one of our blinds in the dark the more difficult than fooling a The traditional answers are chore of setting up 100 decoys few. from attending meetings, readbegins under the lights of the W ebster said he appreciated ing artides, being especially vehicle." that Fish, Wildlife and Parks alert for story ideas when peoWebster said he tries to hunt split the goose season this year, ple talk and from folks like about everythird day of the wa- allowing waterfowlers in the Webster who walk in the door, terfowl season. area to hunt later into the year call on the phone or email me. "If you hit it every day, you'll than typical after a weeklong Webster declined to give his blow them out of there," he ex- dosure. age, a tight smile creasing his "Now ready and loaded up, face under a neatly trimmed plained. "We don't even hunt evenings. That's when they we watch Honz's ears; he hears mustache, preferring instead to come in to rest." the geesecoming long before talk about goose hunting. "It's a good sport," he said. They have a variety of goose we do. When he cocks his head blinds they use at a number and ears to one side, we know "It's a hard sport, setting up deof scatteredproperties where geese are coming. When the coys under the car headlights, they've gained permission to shooting begins, Honz goes out high winds, cold days, and you hunt. a small 12-inch hole in the bot- have to get up early. "The whole barn is full of tom of the blind to retrieve fall"It really tires you out." 'em," Webster said. Reminiscing about the hunts en birds. Some times five birds His photos show he and Stef- will tumble to the ground." with buddies, looking at photos fen know their stuff. The back There's nothing quite like from successful outings and of the Suburban is loaded with watching a well-trained hunt- recalling memorable shots or a limit of 10 Canada geese from ing dog. Webster brims with your dog's incredible retrievone January hunt. pride when he talks about als makes all of the hard work "Yep, we've been getting Honz, a British Lab that he pur- fade and only the good times limits," he said, as if that were chased from the Bobby Stewart remain bright. The remindagiven. Kennels in Oxford, Mississip- er of the hard work will come "Anybody that wants them, pi. Honz is 5t/~ years old, in the again next season when new we give a lot away. And we like prime ofhis hunting career. But memories are forged in the 'em, too." Webster said Honz was a nat- bone-cracking cold, wind and "With decoys in place, they ural, retrieving ducks when he snow.

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Ryan Brenneoke/The Bulletin

Copper Nymph, tied by Quintin McCoy. When the waters warm early in the season — we're talking April and May — the trout begin to feed in a bfg way. There is lfttle surface actfvity, but the bugs are stfrring. Mayflies, stoneflies, midges and caddis are on the move. That's when to employ a two- or even a three-fly rig. A number of presentations can work — tenkara, indicator or Czech-nymph — but the key is to deaddrfft the bugs.

One of the bugs on the string could be aCopper Nymph. With a minimalist hackle, a flo-green tag and a bright head, this bug could represent any one of several trout foods. Smaller is better in early spring. Tie the Copper Nymph with fluorescent red thread on aNo. 8-16 grub hook. For the tag, use fluorescent green. Wrap the body with fine copper wire. Finish with a brown partridge hackle. — Gary Leyyis, For TheBulletin

Trails

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

Continued from 01 Although snowpack is low, wilderness areatrails on the Deschutes National Forest, including Mount Jefferson to Thielsen andthe ThreeSisters trails, are not recommended yet. Hfkers wfll encounter a snow-line at about 5,000 to 5,600 feet.

'

• • C l aSSifIt:dS

Gvouy Fitness Puncbcard Speciat 5 Classesefov $25 GOOdfOr all EVen,if1,g GIOt4,P Flttt,eSS CtaSSeS

are the same. A child Hunting courses kids who is a good reader with an

student. In Deschutes County, classes in Bend start March

Continued from 01 Right now, there are 39 spaces open for the sessions at Bend High School.

ability to focus can pass the

9, and Redmond classes

author of "John Nosfer — Going

class at the age of 10. Other kids might want to wait until

start March 17. Visit the Or-

Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www

Those who do not intend

egon Department of Fish and

the age of 12. R un b y

Wildlife website at www.dfw. v o l u nteers, t h e state.or.us for class listings

for their child to hunt should class' course fee is $10 per

and dates in Oregon counties.

— Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV"and

GaryLewisoutdoors.com.

Mon. 4:30 Bodypump ( 5:45 Spin Tues. 4:30 Insanity ( 5:45 Bodypump Wed. 4:30 R.C.R. ( 5:45 Pilates ( 7 Bodypump Thurs. 4:30 PiYO ~5:45 Yoga Cornfgtete schedi4te @ bertddac.corrt

The BEIVD

consider hunter e ducation,

because every child will be exposed to guns at some point.

Sa f et y

edu c a tion

teachesrespect for firearms and archery equipment that can keep them and others

safe. Other programs, such as those sponsored by 4-H Clubs and COSSA Kids (www.oregonshooting.com), t e a ch proper technique and instill the discipline of practice.

Fin It All

bendbulletin.com

quired in many states. In Oregon, there is no min-

imum age for hunting. If a child completes the Hunter

Education course, he can hunt rabbits, squirrels, coyotes and birds. To hunt big game, a hunter must be at

least 12 years old, with the exception that kids enrolled in the Mentored Youth Hunt-

er Program can hunt alongside a licensed adult. The MYHP allows youth

between the ages of 9 and 13 to hunt while closely su-

Brought to you by the Bend Chamber

hunters.

anywhere otherthan on fam-

ily land. The course load and the tests are not easy. No tw o

*Not valid for daytime or weekend classes

These women devote their time to serve as leaders, volunteers and mentors. Each and every one of these women should receive an award for their commitments to making our community abetter place and our companies stronger. On March 11, four will be recognized at the Bend Chamber's inaugural Women of the Year Awards, held at the 'Ibwer Theatre in Bend. We are accepting nominations in four categories: Woman of the Year, Young Woman of the Year, Community Hero and Young Community Hero. To learn more and fill out your nominations visit bendchamber.org, under the events tab, or call 541-382-3221.Join us for an elegant evening of celebrating Central Oregon women, brought to you by the Bend Chamber and US Bank.

Deadline for nomina|:ions is February 20

O utside o f t h e M Y H P , H unter Education i s m a n -

datory for anyone under the age of 18 who intends to hunt

550 NW Franklin Ave, Suite 328 ~ 541-323-2322

is filled with amazing women.

education certificate is re-

may be carried between the

ATHLETIC CLUB

Our Central Oregon community

Adults should consider taking the class as welL A hunter

pervised by a licensed adult. Only one firearm or bow

n l ine

The Send IodioGm

ggbank.

TheB ulletinZOlO medta 8!RK. +4.,


D6

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Wor insa espavesway orstru in actor

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m.on 6,8,"The Mysteries

TV SPOTLIGHT

with Bette Midler that kicked hisnameu ptheli st.

By Luaine Lee

being a dentist, so it reinforced that I was doing the right thing by doingwhat made me happy — being an actor." His divorce from his first wife also changed him, he says. "It humbled me to take the biggest decision in your life and completely blow it," he sighs. "We never should've gotten married. I've nothing

of Laura" —Laura's (Debra

ried to f i tness trainer Erin

Messing) latest murder investigation takes her into a female escort operation in the new episode "The Mystery of the Alluring Au Pair." She has other concerns, both personaland professional, since she and Jake (Josh Lucas) come under the scrutiny of a detective (new cast

James Denton decided to be-

And when he finally crawled under the sink with a pipewrench as the sexy plumber on "Desperate Housewives," Den-

come an actor, the world lost

ton made the headlines.

a desperatesalesman. Denton had spent five years working on commission hawking ads for newspapers, radio and television. He was used to walking into a room cold and selling the owners of a mom-and-pop store on ads they probably

On Feb. 28, he'll parlay that coup into another as he co-

nel's new series, "Good Witch," based on its string of movies bad to say about her, but it was starring Catherine Bell. He a horrible choice, very painful, says it has marked the most painful for the families." fun he has had on a series. Denton, 52, is happily mar-

specifically to look into their dealings with each other. Laz Alonsoand Max Jenkins also star.

couldn't afford.

This time he was hired without the dreaded audition. Be-

8 p.m. on 6, "The Mentalist" — The series ends its seven-season run with back-to-back episodes, "Brown Shag Carpet" and "White Orchids." First, Jane

Tribune News Service

PASADENA, Calif. — When

stars on the Hallmark Chan-

The problem was that Denton hated it. "Then I'd go home and worry they were going to Tribune News Service lose their money. I felt so horri- James Denton plays Catherine Bell's annoying neighbor in the ble," he says. "I was just not cut Hallmark Channel's new series, "Good Witch," based on a string of out for it. I was too soft." successful movies. But acting for a living was beyond his comprehension. "I never even saw a play until I almost 30 and single and were dazedbyhis decision. But was out of college. I grew up in thought, 'What if I got paid to Denton found that his dues as a a really small town outside of act? That would be great!' and salesman paid dividends when Nashville, and there just wasn't lost my mind, turned in my no- he began to audition. "I took all any theater," he says, seated on tice, and my parents thought I those auditions as a sales call. a wrought-iron chair in a hotel was crazy. I moved to Chicago I would go in, just like I'd been patio. where it's a lot easier to work, doing for years, and I think it "I was a salesman — tie, more affordable, lots of theater gave me an edge. Most actors briefcase-guy selling advertis- and where it's low pay or no would admit they are nervous ing — and somebody talked pay during auditions. But it didn't me into doing a community That first year he earned bother me a bit. My skin was theater play, and I just loved it a whopping $11,000. "And I thick from being rejected in and got decent reviews, and was starving. I was basically sales forever. It was hard to somebody saw me in that and bouncing from girlfriend to hurt my feelings." asked me to do another one. girlfriend trying to find a place After Denton moved to Los And before I knew it, I'd been to live. Not the best idea. I was Angeles, he snagged a dizzyin four or five little plays and so happy because I hated sales ing list of guest spots on shows never even had to audition. so much," he says. including "Jag," "The PretendThat was my big hobby." His dad, a dentist, and his er" and "The West Wing." But Soon he began to take his m om, who w orked for t h e it was a third lead in Carl Reinpastime seriously. " I w a s Baptist Sunday School Board, er's movie "That Old Feeling"

O'Brien. They have two children, a boy, 11, and a girl, 9. He says when his son was born, he finally understood uncon-

cause he had filled in for Terry Bradshaw as host of the Hero

Dog Awards show on Hallmark, he was spotted by an

ditional love. "I can honestly

say I didn't cry when my folks as Bell's irritating neighbor, died. We were really tight, but who might become less "an- I didn't grow up with criers. I noying" as time goes by. didn't know how to cry. "Now I cry at the flippin' The heady success of "Desperate Housewives" hasn't 'Lion King,'kids'movies, songs. compromised the boy from I cry watching anything. That Goodlettsville, Tennessee. In to me is fascinating, what that fact, he and his family have taps into in you. I was afraid moved back to his wife's home- that I wouldn't love my children land in Minnesota. the way you hear. I didn't know D enton still d r ives h i s if I had that capacity. I just nev1966 Ford pickup and says he er felt that before.... I mean, like learned a powerful life lesson that (he snaps fingers) it just when his dad died suddenly of changed everything. It takes a heart attack at 62. the focus off yourself and puts "It sort of forced me to be- it on somebody else. You bring executive and hired on the spot

come the nucleus of the family. I've got a brother and sister.

them home from the hospital

That had a big impact; you're just cruising along in life. It put a hardship on my mom, who'd never had to work. That made

let us take him home? What if we kill him?'We looked at each

and you say, 'They're going to other like, 'I can't believe they just let us walk out of there with this kid.' "

me re-evaluate. And he hated

Co ea ue's texts su est interest

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

Dear Abby: My husband is a

doesn't stop.

hood kids constantly use my steep

out of town. I'm a professional

Dear Abby:Is it OK for a man to talk on his cellphone at the uri-

with a responsible job that limits

nal in a public restroom, or for a

driveway to ride their bicycles, tricycles and scooters without asking permission.

my ability to travel. I needed to borrow his phone

woman to talk on the phone while using the toilet in one of the stalls? Also,please remind everyone to wash their hands a fter u s in g th e

rude, because in my opinion, they are trespassing? Not only could I be held responsible if one of them gets hurt on my property, but they

handsome executive who works

recently and noticed that one of

his colleagues has been texting him after hours. She asks if he has traveled safely, tells him she

DEP,R

ABBY

restroom. — Russell in Richland, Wash.

Am I right in thinking this is

also are extremely loud and do

this while my children are trying to nap. They have been asked to

much she e njoys working with him — all with ro-

Dear Russell:I can stop, and I have threatened to talk think of few things to their parents, even though I more unpleasant than conversing don't know where they live. What

mantic emoticons. I'm concerned

with someone with the sound of

m isses h im ,

how

"running water" (or worse) in the background and toilets flushing. work-based r elationship. She's Why anyone would do this is bemarried with kids. How should I yond me. It's very rude. approach this? And, while I can remind peo— Worried Wife in Kentucky ple about hand-washing until the Dear Worried Wife: Because cows come home, I'll suggest inthere have been more than one of stead that men and women who that the flattery and emoticons indicate she wants more than a

these flirtatious, unbusinesslike

use public restrooms not touch

communications, assume that the door handle without a paper your husband hasn't discouraged towel — when available — firmly them. Confront him. Tell him you in hand. feel what she's doing is a threat to Dear Abby:I grewup in the '90s your marriage, and you want it in a neighborhood where the kids stopped. But before you do, make respected their neighbors. I now copies of the texts so you can con- live in a different state and, obvifront the woman with them if she ously, a different era. Neighbor-

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, FEB.18,2015:Thisyearyou

YOURHOROSCOPE

express extra determination and endurBy Jacqueline Bigar ance.Once you decideto do something, you are more than likely to arrive at that completely before the matter becomes goal. You express ingenuity and a willingness to work with others. Know that volatile. Stay on top of someone who when you make a resolution, it is likely to might be acting a bit irrationally. Tonight: stick. If you are single, you are more in A force to be dealt with. control than you are aware. You are likely CANCER (June 21-July 22) to meet someone ** * * You will see a situation in a new Stars showthe kind of significance light if you can manage not to be reactive of tfay yon'8 have in the summer. If to the other party. When paring down ** * * * D ynamic you are attached, the problem, you could discover thatyou ** * * Positive yo u could be more have run into an issue of power and con** * Average will f ul with your trol. Recognize thatyou can't manipulate ** So-so sweetie than you others. Tonight: Inthe limelight. * Difficult have been in the LEO (July23-Aug.22) past. Be aware of this behavior, and be more willing to relax ** * * You will change your tune quickly if you sense a change in the mood of and let him or her make more decisions. PISCES understands you better than you those around you. Get together for meetings in the morning. By midafternoon, might realize. you'll want more alone time, whether it be ARIES (March21-April 19) at work or at home. Honor that need. To** * * You could stumble into a very night: Make it a night to be remembered. agreeable situation before late afternoon. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) You are likely to get what you want if you ** * * D ive into work or clear out act quickly. A decision made today is more likely to stick than you might choose errands quickly. By midafternoon, you to believe. Tonight: Get some rest; you will could discover that your main focus has changed. Perhaps you will run into a key need it very soon. friend or two. Remember, you do not TAURUS (April 20-May20) always need to be so serious. Tonight: Go ** * You'll handle responsibilities with along for the ride. ease, but you might want to stop being so LIBRA (Sspt. 23-Oct. 22) open to taking on additional ones. Come ** * * You might want to leave most midday, a friendship is likely to take on a special significance.Reachout to your ofthedayopen,asa new beginning becomes possible in an emotional situation. loved ones for some feedback. Tonight: You'll be able to make adifference to Only where the gang is. someonewho seems to bestuck in a rut. GEMINI (May 21-June 28) ** * * Detach from a difficult situation, You often see solutions that others don't. Tonight: Don't take a comment personally. but also strive to understand how others feel. It might be best to remove yourself SGORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

do Ido? — Frustrated Homeowner

Dear Frustrated: Discuss this with your insurance broker. You are correct that if one of the chil-

dren gets hurt on your property, you could be liable. You also need to be more proactive than you have been. Tell the kids they are disturbing your children who are trying to nap, and if the kids don't go away, find out where they live and talk to the other parents.

It would be cheaper than having to install a gate in front of your driveway. — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

** * * You might want to explain exactly whatyou want to a loved one.Onceyou do, there likely will be a newsense of closeness and a possibility for a new beginning. Fatigue could affect your ability to make an important decision. Tonight: Let your imagination take over.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * Have an important discussion. Confirm an agreement. Handle all communication before lunch. Afterward, pressure could build to a point where you will want to vanish. Just take a deep breath, slow down and relax. Tonight: Drop the negativity.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * You will be ready for a change of pace. You might be tired of trying to handle a financial matter, especially as others seem to be looking at different solutions. Communication could flourish by late afternoon. Tonight: Say "yes" to an invitation.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Fsb.18) ** * * H ighlight the daylight hours, when you are more in command and likely to be very effective. If you make adecision in this time period, it is likely to work out. Be aware of the financial implications, then release any concerns. Tonight: Pay bills first.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * You could be out of sorts for a good part of the day. No matter whatyou do, you might not be able to shake your mood. Try to get to the root of the issue. By midafternoon, you are likely to feel energized. Tonight: Paint the town red. © King Features Syndicate

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 11:20 a.m., 1 2:30, 2:45, 4:15, 6:15, 7:20, 9:20, 10:20 • BLACKORWHITE(PG-13) 12:05,3:20,7:15,10:15 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 11:30 a.m.,12:15, 1, 3:15,4, 4:45, 6:30, 7, 9:30, 10 • THE H088IT: THEBATTLEOFTHE FIVE ARM IES(PG-13) 9:35 • THE IMITATION GAME(PG-13) noon, 2:50, 9:10 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-13) G 12:35, 6:55 • JUPITER ASCENDIN3-0 G (PG-13) 3:50, 10:05 • JUPITER ASCENDINIMAX3-0 G (PG-13)11:15a.m., 6:20 • KINGSMAN: THESECRETSERVICE(R) 11:05 a.m., 11:45 a.m., 2:20, 3:30, 6:45, 7:10, 9:45, 10:25 • MET OPERA:IOLANTA/BLUEBEARD'8 CASTLE (no MPAA rating) 6:30 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11a.m., 3:25, 6 • PROJECTALMANAG (PG-13)11:40a.m.,3:05,7:45, 10:40 • SEVENTH SON (PG-13) 12:10, 7:55 • SEVENTH SON 3-0 (PG-13) 2:15, 10:35 • SEVENTH SONIMAX 3-D (PG-13)3,9:25 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:10a.m.,1:20, 2:30, 7:30, 9:10 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SPONGE OUT OF WATER 3-0 (PG) 3:40,6:05,9 • WILD(R) 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 10:20 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • 8IG HER06 (PG) 2:30 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PG13) 6 • TAKEN(PG-13) 3 9 • Younger than 2t may attend aiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • The "Spaghetti Western" will screen at 6:30 p.m. (doors open at 6 p m) andincludesan all you-can-eatspaghettr dinner. I

I

member Meg Steedle) assigned

(Simon Baker)reprises hispsychic act to help the FBI catch a serial killer. Then, he asks Lisbon (Robin Tunney) to marry him, butsomeone with vengeance in mind might prevent them from living happily ever after — or just from living, for that matter.

Former cast regularsOwainYeoman and Amanda Righetti return for the final hour. 8 p.m. on10, "American Idol" —One of the sites in the House of Blues franchise is the setting for performances by the contestants in the newepisode "Showcase No. 1." It also will turn out to be the last stand for some of them, since they learn whether they'll continue on to the next round. Harry Connick Jr., Jennifer Lopez and Keith Urban are the judges, and Ryan Seacrest is the host.

9 p.m. on LIFE,"Little Women: LA" — Terra treats the gangtoaweekendonCatalina Island, although half of the group is unhappy to discover that they're going to be roughing it in the newepisode "Into the Woods." An exhilarating day of zip-lining puts everyone in a better mood, however, and they later reward themselves with a fancy dinner in town. All goes well until a testy Lila lashes out at each of the girls. 10:02p.m. on LIFE,"BigW om-

en:BigLove" — In the season finale called "Big in the City," Kristi confronts Jefferson and Jenn takes a painful tumble down the stairs. On a romantic moonlit date with Eric, Jessica rides a Ferris wheel. Mar is unsure whether she will be able to attend Sabrina's full-figured fashion show. © Zap2it

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 4:30, 7:15 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-I3) G 4:20, 6:55 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)4:45,7:30 • THE SPONGE808 MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4,6:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 6 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 6:30 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-13) G 6:45 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)6 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:45 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R)4:10, 7 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-13) G 4:05, 6:50 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)4:25,7:15 • SEVENTHSON(PG-13) 5,7:20 • THE SPONGE808 MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:50,7:10

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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 Gg! Magazine

C om p l e m e n t s

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541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

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Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Musical Instruments

Heating & Stoves

Sales Northeast Bend

Horses 8 Equipmen

Employment Opportunities

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NOTICE TO ** FREE ** ADVERTISER .s, I S, Since September 29, Garage Sale Kit 9-1-1 Public i caution when pur1991, advertising for Place an ad in The Communications chasing products or I used woodstoves has Bulletin for your gaOfficer services from out of I limited to mod- rage sale and re(Dispatcher) Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, been 3-horse Silverado HAVANESE PUPS, ~ the area. Sending ~ els which have been City o f Pr i neville ceive a Garage Sale 1977, excellent cond, Smith & Wesson AKC non-shedding, ' cash, checks, o r ' 2001 29'x8' 5th wheel Police Department is certified by the Or202 only played senior year in Kit FREE! hypo-allergenic, great i credit i n f ormation M&P15-22 with trailer. Deluxe showcurrently accepting college, $1000 obo.AND egon Department of Want to Buy or Rent family pets, UTD shots/ may be subjected to 4x16x44 BSA Cats man/semi living Environmental Qualapplications for KIT INCLUDES: wormer. $850. i FRAUD. For more Eye scope, Fieldline quarters, lots of exity (DEQ) and the fed- • 4 Garage Sale Signs full-time 9-1-1 PubWanted: $Cash paid for 541-460-1277 information about an r Tactical carrying tras. Beautiful condieral E n v ironmental • $2.00 Off Coupon To lic Communications vintage costume jewadvertiser, you may I case. Excellent contion. $21,900. OBO Protection A g e ncy Use Toward Your Officer. Job conelry. Top dollar paid for AKC LAB 1 black male f call t h e Ore g on f dition, was used in 541-420-3277 Next Ad (EPA) as having met sists of radio disGold/Siiver.l buy by the left! 9 wks, dew claws, ' State Atto r ney ' National Finals • 10 Tips For "Garage smoke emission stanpatching for police, Estate, Honest Artist shots, wormed. $500. i General's O f fi ce 368 Rodeo for target Sale Success!" dards. A cer t ified fire, amb u lance. Elizabeth,541-633-7006 541-410-3635 King Trombone, 1941 Consumer Protec- • competition. Comes Farmers Column w oodstove may b e Position is computer HN White, 7-1/2" bell, tion h o t line a t i with original sights Labrador pups,black, oriented with related 206 obo. 541-388-2045 identified by its certifiPICK UP YOUR and 25-round maga- $500, 10X20 Storage Buildings paper record keepborn 1/17, $400/ea. i 1-877-877-9392. cation label, which is GARAGE or 541-280-1912 eves Items for Free SALE KIT at zine. $850 obo. for protecting hay, $200 dep. ready in 4 permanently attached ing. Applicants must 1777 SW Chandler > Sen TheBulletin > 541-410-0841 firewood, livestock etc. weeks. 1 Chocolate to the stove. The Bul- Ave., be able to multi-task ing CentralOregon since fgga 260 Sleeper sofa, good Bend, OR 97702 $1616 Installed. AKC male left, $800. letin will not knowbetween phones and cond., FREE, we're Misc. Items 541-408-8880 (other sizes available) ingly accept advertisradios. This posiWanted: Collector seeks moving.541-390-9682 The Bulletin 212 541-617-1133. Serr ngCentral oregon since igga ing for the sale of t ion will w ork a l l high quality fishing items Malemute/Husky pups, Buylng Dlamonds CCB ¹173684 Antiques & uncertified shifts, holidays, and & upscale fly rods. Call 208 blue eyes 3 females, kfjbuildersOykwc.net /Gofd for Cash woodstoves. w eekends. En t r y Collectibles 541-678-5753, or 290 5 males. Can send Pets & Supplies Saxon's Fine Jewelers level salary starts at 503-351-2746 photos. $500 & up. 267 Have an item to 541-389-6655 Sales Redmond Area $3,717/mo plus a Old Gas Pumps/Soda 541-977-6150. Fuel 8 Wood Win. Mdl 12 (1959) 20 sell quick? complete b e n efit Vending Machines The Bulletin recomBUYING Household, furniture, immac., 28" full package. C l osing mends extra caution POODLE or POMAPOO WANTEDI Will pav cash. ga. If it's under kids stuff, kayak, etc. Lionel/American Flyer choke, field mdl $750. d ate is M arch 2, Kyle, 541-504-f050 when purc has- puppies, toy. Adorable! trains, accessories. 912 NW Canyon Drive, '500 you can place it in 2015 WHEN BUYING 541-475-3889 Mdl 12 (1955) 12 at 5pm. ing products or serThe Bulletin reserves Win. 541-408-2191. Sat. & Sun., 9-5. ga. immac., 30" full FIREWOOD... A pply o n line a t vices from out of the The Bulletin the right to publish all choke field mdl SOLD! QueenslandHeelers www.cityofprineville. area. Sending cash, Standard To avoid fraud, ads from The Bulletin 7mm Rem. mag 8 Mini, $150 Classifieds for: Need to get an com. Equal Opporchecks, or credit inThe Bulletin newspaper onto The HVA action. improved & up. 541-280-1537 tunity Employer. f ormation may be ad in ASAP? recommends paywww.rightwayranch.wor Bulletin Internet web- Mauser 98 M o n te '10 - 3 lines, 7 days subjected to fraud. ment for Firewood site. You can place it dpress.com Carlo stock, Leupold For more i nforma'16- 3 lines, 14 days Add your web address only upon delivery 4x scope $600. Win. online at: to your ad and readtion about an adverSiberian Husky-Wolf and inspection. The Bulletin (Private Party ads only) ers Sereing Centrat Ctregon since sgtg mdl 43 .218B (1952) tiser, you may call pups! 2 adorable females, www.bendbulletin.com • A cord is 128 cu. ft. onThe Bu//etin's Weaver 2.5X scope 4' x 4' x 8' the O regon State $400 each. 541-977-7019 web site, www.bend245 SOLD! Win. Mdl 75Attorney General's • Receipts should bulletin.com, will be 541-385-5809 .22 LR (1942) Exc. Golf Equipment Office C o n sumer Yorkie AKC tiny pups, 2 include name, able to click through g g cond., Weaver 2.5x Protection hotline at Fs,1 M,12wksold, UTD automatically to your phone, price and 316 shots, health guar, pics. scope $750. W i n. BUYING & S ELLING CHECKYOUR AD 1-877-877-9392. kind of wood website. $1100. 541-777-7743 Pre-64 Mdl 70 nfeath- All gold jewelry, silver Irrigation Equipment erweight" .243, (1955) and gold coins, bars, • purchased. The Bulletin Firewood ads 210 Banking Serving Central Oregonsince tgtg FOR SALE E xc., Bushnell 3 x rounds, wedding sets, MUST include Furniture & Appliances scope, SOLD! 1944 class rings, sterling sil- species & cost per Tumalo Irrigation ) first communit Water Mauser Mdl 98K-44, ver, coin collect, vinAdopt a rescued cat or cord to better serve tage watches, dental Military rifle w/sling, $5,000/acre kitten! Altered, vacci- A1 Washers&Dryers on the first day it runs good cond., SOLD. gold. Bill Fl e mIng, our customers. Call 541-419-4440 We are excited to Full warranty, FREE 421 nated, ID chip, tested, to make sure it is cor- Leupold VariX11 scope 541-382-9419. announce an more! CRAFT, 65480 delivery! Also, used Schools & Training rect. nSpellcheckn and The Bulletin 325 washers/dryers wanted. available position for 3x9, SOLD! Call Bob, Serefng Central Ctregon gnceIgtg 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, human errors do ocCooker King d e ep 541-280-7355 a full-time teller in 541-419-5126. Hay, Grain & Feed 1-5. 54 1 -389-8420 IITR Truck School cur. If this happens to f ryer, l i k e n ew. Bend, Oregon. www.craftcats.org REDMOND CAMPUS your ad, please con$200. 541-279-8908 All Year Dependable 1st Quality, 2nd cutting USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Firewood: Seasoned; Our Grads Ger Jobs! tact us ASAP so that Bichon Frise AKC reg'd grass hay, no rain, Salary Range: 1-888<38-2235 Lodgepole, split, del, barn corrections and any paying cash stored, $225/ton. puppies, 5 fem ale, $11.00- $18.00 Door-to-door selling with WantedWWW.DTR.EDU B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 adjustments can be for Hi-fi audio & stu$900/ea. 541-953-0755 Call 541-549-3831 fast results! It's the easiest dio equip. Mclntosh, or 2 cords for $365. Patterson made to your ad. or 541-912-1905. Ranch, SIsters First Community 470 Multi-cord discounts! 541-385-5809 way in the world to sell. JBL, Marantz, DyCredit Union is an 541-420-3484. Premium orchard grass, Domestic & The Bulletin Classified Armolre naco, Heathkit, Sanequal opportunity barn stored no rain, In-Home Positions The Bulletin Classified Upright Dressersui, Carver, NAD, etc. employer of 269 246 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. Call 541-261-1808 Custom quality, excel541-385-5809 protected Veterans Gardening Supplies avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 Child care needed, part and Guns, Hunting lent condition, crafted individuals with or 541-948-7010. & Equipment walnut & swirly walnut time, good pay, my home & Fishing 262 disabilities. For more 255 burl, 2 upper shelves, 2 or possibly yours. 10 yr details please Quality orchard mixed old boy. References, reCommercial/Office Brittany Spaniel/ Computers cedar-lined drawers plus local pays CASH!! grass hay, $190-$235 sponsible. Call Joyce for apply online: W hoodle mix puppies,2 3 other drawers (2 parti- Bend BarkTurfSoil.com Equipment & Fixtures for firearms 8 ammo. ton, small bales. Deliv. www.myfirstccu.org. girls, 1 stud, reddIsh hy- tioned for socks). Size: T HE B U LLETIN r e details, 541-390-4478 541-526-0617 avail.541-280-7781 poallerqenic coat. $650. 73 nH x 36nW x 16n D. If quires computer adPROMPT DELIVERY betwn Bend/Redmond 541-408-0490 new, $5,500; By far Central vertisers with multiple 542-389-9663 selling for $1275. Wheat Straw for Sale Oregon's largest ad schedules or those Chihuahua Toys (3), 6 541-312-2393 Also, weaner pigs. Gun & Knife Show! selling multiple sysmos to 1 year, $150 541-546-6171 tems/ software, to disFor newspaper each. 541-977-7766 Electrolux Affinity Frigid- Sat. Feb. 21st, 9-5 the name of the delivery, call the aire front loading washer, Sun. Feb. 22nd, 9-3 close or the term Circulation Dept. at 5-drawer Hon Dachshund AKC creams red, 5 yrs old, needs Admission only $6.00! business Garage Sales Check "dealer" in their ads. 541-385-5800 Rare color! 541-508-4558 electrical part. $225 obo. 503-363-9564 Industries Private party advertisTo place an ad, call Garage Sales The Bulletin Classified $800. bendweenies.com 541-390-4478 commercial file www.wesknodelguners are defined as 541-385-5809 shows.com cabinet, Donate deposit bottles/ G ENERATE those who sell one or email Garage Sales SOM E 43" wide, 66" high. clagsified@bendbtslletin.com CASH!! computer. cans to local all vol., EXCITEMENT in your Originally $1000; Find them non-profit rescue, for neighborhood! Plan a For Guns, Ammo 8 asking$450. The Bulletin feral cat spay/neuter. Reloading Supplies. 257 arage sale and don't Serefng Central Oregonsince Igtg in 541-948-1824 T railer a t Jak e ' s forget to advertise in 541-408-6900. Musical Instruments The Bulletin D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; classified! Prompt Delivery Petco in R edmond; 541-385-5809. Rock, Sand & Gravel Classifieds 266 donate M-F at Smith Multiple Colors, Sizes Building Materials Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded Instant Landscaping Co. 541-385-5809 Bend; or CRAFT in glass doors & mirror DO YOU HAVE 541-389-9663 Tumalo. Can pick up at back, 3 cupboards La Pine Habitat SOMETHING TO large amts, 389-8420. below. Exc. c o nd. RESTORE 270 SELL Looking for your www.craftcats.org Building Supply Resale $400. 541-318-8797 FOR $500 OR Lost & Found next employee? 1981 Yamaha Quality at LESS? Place a Bulletin Find "The One"! LOW PRICES Console Piano Non-commercial Found pedal paddle help wanted ad Cat adoptions at CRAFT, Sleep Comfort Twin 52684 Hwy 97 with bench, canoe at Suttle Lake, XL adjustable bed advertisers may today and featuring special needs 541-536-3234 1 owner, rich tone, with vibrator, with or place an ad 2/13. Call 541-233-3684 cats & others! Sat. 8 reach over excellent condition, Open to the public . without mattress & with our Sun., 2/14 & 2/15, 1 to 5 Lost keys, on horse trails 60,000 readers currently tuned foundation, clean, "QUICK CASH pm. A great chance to around Tumalo Resereach week. by Jana. needs new air pump. 266 SPECIAL" give a senior or special voir & the holding pond, Your classified ad $400 cash 1 week3lines 12 needs cat a forever Heating & Stoves Feb. 15. 541-604-6168 $1200obo. will also 541-382-7072 or OI' homel Reduced adop541-389-1966 appear on 541-410-5165 tion fees, 8 fee waived ~e e eka 2 N bendbulletin.com Ad must for seniors/veterans! 2007 Breckwell whlch currently Other cats of all kinds include price of Drum Kits:Specializing Pellet Stoye REMEMBER: If you receives over also available. s~ le 'te oi gaoo in High Quahty New 8 have lost an animal, Need to get an ad Very good condition, www.craftcats.org 1.5 million page or less, or multiple Used Drum Sets! don't forget to check has self-lighter. 541-389-8420. in ASAP? views every items whose total Kevin, 541-4202323 The Humane Society Comes with a ton of does not exceed The Drum Shop month at no pellets (valued at Bend German Shepherds $500. extra cost. 541-382-3537 $250 alone!), stove www.sherman-ranch.us Fax It te 541-322-7253 www.bendbulletin.com Bulletin Redmond pipe, pellet bucket $1900+. 541-281-6829 For Sale: Call Classifieds at 541-923-0882 Classfffeds and cleaning The Bulletin Classifieds Piano Technician 541-385-5809 brushes. Need to Madras Get Results! Golden Retrievers, AKC tools & supplies, www.bendbulletin.com 541-475-6889 move it soonCall 541-385-5809 English Cream, Eurowith rolls of piano selling for$600. Prineville ean bloodlines, all certi- Washer & dryer white or place your ad string, $725. 541-447-7178 ied. Taking $500 deposMaytag Neptune, Glock 34 Gen4, night Call 541-388-2552 on-line at Call 971-219-9122 its now, puppies due runs great, $500. sights, extra mags, holbefore 7 pm. or Craft Cats in Redmond bendbulletin.com Feb. 25. 541-815-8456 541-788-5206. 541-389-8420. ster, $650. 541-771-3222 ra o

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The Bulletin recommends extra '

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Handguns & Riflescall for info. Also, Oak un cabinet with drawers. vt party, 541-923-8868

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Job Hunting?

Claskfleds

541-385-5809


E2 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad foronly$15.00per week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER'500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

*llllust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box ia available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbuuetimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

476

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Caregivers w anted t o

our

MEDICAL

Physician/ j o i n Nurse Practitioner

caring

memory ca re We haye an immediate opening for a licensed c ommunity. A l l physician or n u rse shifts a v ailable. r actitioner a t ou r Must be reliable. edmond clinic as a Also needed part rimary care provider. his is an excellent t ime c hef. F o r opportunity for a motimore in f o rma- vated, caring provider tion, or any to join our growing questions, practice. please call • Primary care, internal mediane, and/or geri541-385-4717 atric care experience preferred.

Houses for Rent General

Cooper Contracting has limited openings for exp. timber fallera, engine

bosses

and

squad b o s s es. N ot a n ent r y level p o s itions. Call S e a n at 541-948-7010 for more info. Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

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528

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 476

Employment Opportunities

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Employment Opportunities

648

INildland Fire

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

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Mental Health TELEFUNDRAISING Associate Community CounTele-funding for seling Solutions has • Meals On Wheels an opening for a • Defeat Diabetes part-time, weekend Q ualified Me n t al Foundation Health A s s ociate eVeterans (OPVA) (QMHA) at our Juniper Ridge A cute Seniors and a/l Care Center located others we/come. in John Day, OR. S tarting wage i s Mon-Thur. $11.15-$16.73/hour 4:30- 8:30 p.m. DOE. For more in$9.25/hour. formation g o to www.worksourceoCall 541-382-8672 regon.org, Job Listing ID ¹ 1 3 14562. Download an application at www.communitycounselingsolutions.org or when purcontact Human Re- I caution products orI sources at • chasing services from out of • (541)676-9161. Po- l the area. Sending sition is open until c ash, checks, o r filled. EOE. l credit i n f ormation

Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help All real estate adver- wanted ad today and tising in this newspareach over 60,000 per is subject to the readers each week. F air H o using A c t Your classified ad which makes it illegal will also appear on to a d vertise "any bendbulletin.com preference, limitation which currently reor disc r imination ceives over based on race, color, 1.5 million page religion, sex, handiviews every month cap, familial status, at no extra cost. marital status or naBulletin Classifieds tional origin, or an inGet Results! tention to make any Call 385-5809 or such pre f erence, place your ad on-line limitation or discrimiat nation." Familial stabendbulletin.com tus includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cus t odians,• Lots pregnant women, and people securing cus- Awbrey Butte .48 acre tody of children under lot withCascade Mtn. 18. This newspaper views,3275 NW Horiwill not knowingly aczon Dr. $289,900. Call 714-510-7388 cept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. O ur r e aders a r e Manufacturedl hereby informed that Mobile Homes all dwellings advertised in this newspaList Your Home per are available on JandMHomes.com an equal opportunity We Have Buyers basis. To complain of Get Top Dollar d iscrimination ca l l Financing Available. HUD t o l l-free at 541-548-5511 1-800-877-0246. The toll f ree t e lephone number for the hearing i m p aired is 1-800-927-9275. PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

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Loans & Mortgages WARNING

o 0 0 850

Snowmobiles

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M ot o rhomes

Ads published in th "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats.

For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Servin Centra(cre on since 1903

Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590.

areignttiner 1tlge Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077

541-548-0345. 875

Watercraft HOLIDAY RAMBLER ds published in eWaVACATIONER 2003 tercraft" include: Kay- 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, aks, rafts and motor- workhorse, Allison 1000 Ized personal 5 speed trans., 39K, watercrafts. For NEyff TIRES, 2 slides,

"boats" please see Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockClass 870. pit, washer/dryer, fire541-385-5809 lace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, Serving Central Oregon since 1903 was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008

The Bulletin 880

Illlotorhomes •

REDUCED! 2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking$54K. Ph. 541-447-9268

IS!

JAYCO 1993 27' 50k miles, excellent condition. $9300 obo. 541-573-7131

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

The Bulletin recomapproval team, mends you use cauweb site presence. tion when you pro732 We Take Trade-Ins! vide personal ~ • g t ca s information to compa- Commercial/Investment BIG COUNTRY RV Properties for Sale nies offering loans or Bend: 541-330-2495 credit, especially 4-place enclosed InterRedmond: those asking for ad541-548-5254 state snowmobile trailer 24' Mercedes Benz HIGH PROFILE vance loan fees or w/ Rocky Mountain pkg, LOCATION IN Prism, 2015 Model G, companies from out of $8500. 541-379-3530 DOWNTOWN Mercedes Diesel engine, Want to impress the state. If you have REDMOND 18+ mpg, auto trans, YAMAHA 700 2000 concerns or quesrelatives? Remodel This commercial fully loaded with tions, we suggest you 3 cyl.i 2300 mi.; 2006 building offers exdouble-expando, your home with the Polaris Fusion 9 00, consult your attorney cellent exposure and only 5200 miles. help of a professional only 788 mi., new miror call CONSUMER along desirable NW Perfect condition rors, covers, custom from The Bulletin's HOTLINE, 6th Street. only$92K. skis, n e w rid e -on 'I -877-877-9392. "Call A Service Currently housing r ide-off t r ailer w i t h Call 541-526-1201 or see at: Professional" Directory The Redmond spare, + much more. Call a Pro 3404 Dogwood Ave., Spokesman news$ 6,995. Call for d e in Redmond. paper offices, the Whether you need a tails. 541-420-6215 2,748 sq. ft. space is fence fixed, hedges 860 perfect for trimmed or a house owner/user. Two Motorcycles & Accessories private offices and built, you'll find generous open professional help in spaces. Three RV PACKAGE-2006 The Bulletin's "Call a parking places in Allegro 32' 2007, like Monaco Monarch, 31, back + street parkService Professional" new, only 12,600 miles. Ford V10, 28,900 miles, ing. $259,000. auto-level, 2 slides, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Directory transmission, dual ex- queen bed & hide-a-bed 541-385-5809 Call Graham Dent sofa, 4k gen, conv mihaust. Loaded! Auto-levHarley Davidson 541-383-2444 eling system, 5kw gen, crowave, 2 TV's, tow BANK TURNED YOU COMPASS 2001 FXSTD3twin power mirrors w/defrost, package,$66,000. DOWN? Private party cam 88, fuel injected, 2 slide-outs with awCommercial OPTION - 2003 Jeep will loan on real esVance & Hines short nings, rear c a mera, Wranglertow car, 84K tate equity. Credit, no shot exhaust, Stage I trai(er hitch, driyer door miles, hard & soft top, 5 738 with Vance 8 Hines problem, good equity w/power window, cruise, speed manual,$1 1,000 is all you need. Call Multiplexes for Sale fuel management exhaust brake, central 541-815-6319 Oregon Land Mortsystem, custom parts, vac, satellite sys. Asking extra seat. gage 541-388-4200. West side 10 units $67,500. 503-781-8812 near old Mill, owner $1 0,500 OBO. LOCAL MONEY:Webuy Call Today carry for qualified secured trust deeds & 541-516-8684 principals only. note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev Broker, 541-480-9947 541-382-3099 ext.13. 745 Ready to makememories! Harley Davidson Top-selling Winnebago Homes for Sale 883 Sportster 31J, origina! owners, non1998, 20,200 miles, smokers, garaged, only Beaver Marquis, exc. cond., NOTICE 18,800 miles, auto-level1993 All real estate advering jacks, (2) slides, up$3,500. 40-ft, Brunswick tised here in is subgraded queen bed, bunk 541-548-2872. floor plan. Many ject to the Federal beds, micro, (3) TVs, extras, well mainF air Housing A c t , sleeps 10! Lots of stortained, fire supwhich makes it illegal age, maintained, very to advertise any prefpression behind clean!Only $67,995! Exerence, limitation or refrig, Stow Master tended warranty and/or fi632 discrimination based 5000 tow bar, nancing avail to qualified Apt./Multiplex General on race, color, relibuyers! 541-388-7179 $21,995. ion, sex, handicap, 541-383%503 Harley Dyna Wide Glide 881 CHECK YOUR AD familial status or na2003 custom paint, tional origin, or intenTravel Trailers extras, 13,000 orig tion to make any such TURN THE PAGE preferences, l i mita- miles, like new, health For More Ads tions or discrimination. forces sale. Sacrifice $10,000 obo. We will not knowingly The Bulletin 541-633-7856. any advertison the first day it runs accept ing for real estate to make sure it is cor- which is in violation of HD Fat Bo 1996 rect. 4Spellchecke and 2007 Jayco Jay Flight law. All persons human errors do oc- this 29 FBS with slide out & are hereby informed cur. If this happens to that all dwellings adawning - Turn-key ready your ad, please con- vertised are available to use, less than 50 totact us ASAP so that tal days used by current on an equal opportuFleetwood D i scovery owner. Never smoked in, corrections and any nity basis. The Bulle40' 2003, diesel, w/all adjustments can be no indoor pets, excellent tin Classified Completely options - 3 slide outs, cond., very clean. Lots of made to your ad. Rebuilt/Customized 541-385-5809 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, bonus features; many What are you 2012/2013 Award etc., 32,000 m iles. have never been used. The Bulletin Classified Winner Wintered in h eatedAsking $16,500. C a l l looking for? Senior ApartmentShowroom Cond. shop. $79,995 obo. Lisa, 541-420-0794 for Independent Living You'll find it in Many Extras 541-447-8664 more info / more photos. ALL-INCLUSIVE Low Miles. with 3 meals daily The Bulletin Classifieds $15,000 Month-to-month lease, 541-548-4807 check it out! Call 541-233-9914 541-385-5809

• Competitiye salary with Food Service - Bruno's paid holidays, liability Grocery/U-bake is hiring insurance, 401k and for C a shier & Pizza bonuses. Maker. Apply: 1709 NE • Flexible schedule with 6th, Bend. No phone calls either part or full time available. • Weekday schedule only; weekends off. Marketing Sales • Recent graduates or Manager experienced profesExperience in the sionals welcome. l may be subjected to health care field • Oregon licensure reFRAUD. preferred, but not For more informa- I quired. Where can you find a tion about an adver- • required. Must be • Any existing credenhelping hand? tiser, you may call tialing for major insuroutgoing and perl ance benefiaal for the the Oregon State From contractors to s onable. Mus t position but not rel Attorney General's have reli a ble yard care, it's all here e Office C o n sumer e uired. transportation. lease reply via email in The Bulletin's l Protection hotline atl For more i nforwith your cover letter, I 1-877-877-9392. "Call A Service m ation, o r a n y CV, and references to Professional" Directory rossclinicO ahoo.com LThe Bulle~g questions, please or fax to (541 923-4068. call 541-385-4717 We thank you in advance for your interest in joining our team! AdvertisingSales Assistant Good classified adstell the essential facts in an Get your interesting Manner.Write business from the readers view not Serving Central Oregon since f903 the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show The Bulletin is searching for a part-time Adverthe reader howthe item will e ROW I N G tising Sales Assistant. This person will support help them in someway. the Major Accounts and Executive Sales with an ad in This Team. advertising tip The Bulletin's Duties will include but are not limited to the brought to you by "Call A Service following: Assist the Major Accounts DepartProfessional" The Bulletin ment with insert work flow and order entry Senag Cent or I egon ence teet management, production coordination, hourly Directory time keeping, maintain expense records and mileage for reimbursement and clerical tasks Accounting Supervisor as needed, including basic departmental reporting and data collection. This person will The City o f Pe n dleton i s ac c epting also assist the Executive Sales Team with light applications for a ful l -time A ccounting delivery, editing and processing ad proofs, Supervisor p o sition in the Fin a n ce filing of paperwork and ad o rder entry. Department. Proficient typing, Google Docs and Excel skills a plus. Must h ave p ersonal auto f o r Requires working knowledge of generally occasional driving. accepted accrual accounting procedures and f inancial r e p orting re q uirements fo r The successful candidate should be very governmental entities; and the a bility to detail oriented, able to meet daily deadlines, supervise, train, evaluate and coordinate exercise excellent organizational skills and activities of employees. Must have excellent thrive in a f a st-paced work environment. interpersonal, oral and written communication Should also be able to maintain a strict level of skills. Five (5) years progressive experience in professionalism and contribute to an environaccounting, preferably with at least two in a ment of teamwork within the department. Pre 870 public or nonprofit agency with an accrual or employment drug testing is required. 634 Boats & Accessories modified a c crual a c c ounting s y stem; APtJMultiplex NE Bend Southwest Bend Homes Bachelor's degree from an accredited college Please e-mail your resume to or university with major course work in Jbrandt© bendbulletin.com Call for Specials! accounting, finance or business administration; Broken Top Town home! Limited numbers avail. 2003, 2-story, 2310 sq ft. and supervisory experience required. Salary No phone calls please. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. range is $4,817 - $6,433/month plus excellent Enjoy 3 pnvate suites W/D hookups, patios w/own bath, library, office, benefits. The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer or decks. large private wood deck. 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 MOUNTAIN GLEN, Comfy, quiet, convenApplications are available at EDUCATION Wakeboard Boat ient! Call to schedule 541-383-9313 www.pendleton.or.us/employment or at City I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Director of Performing Arts Professionally showing: Sam Rawlins, Hall, 500 SW Dorion, Pendleton OR 97801 or Jefferson County School Distnct 5094 tons of extras, low hrs. managed by Norris & Broker, Rim Rock Investby calling 966-0201. Closing date is March Application Deadline: Open Until Filled Full wakeboard tower, ments, 541-620-4242 Stevens, Inc. 3, 2015. The City of Pendleton is an Equal light bars, Polk audio Opportunity employer. speakers throughout, Education/Back round: Maintenance completely wired for Performing Artsl Business Managementl Education amps/subwoofers, unGeneral derwater lights, fish The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturJefferson County School District is seeking a Difinder, 2 batteries cusday night shift and other shifts as needed. We rector tom black paint job. Performing Arts. The Director will be a vicurrently have openings all nights of the week. sionaryofwho will operate and manage our new Per$1 2,500 541-815-2523 Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts forming Arts Center (PAC). The successful candidate start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and will be responsible for arranging day-to-day operaend between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo- tions and activities, finances, marketing, promotion, Maintenance Supervisor sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. and development. The Director must demonstrate a Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a collaborative business sense, have excellent com- Responsible fo r a l l Pr o duction C enter minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts munication skills, create and foster school-commuPlant) machinery and equipment, are short (t t:30 - 1:30). The work consists of nity partnerships, enhance economic development, (Retread an d rep a ir . Su p ervises loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack- and promote cultural dIversity. Additional responsi- maintenance and storeroom staff and works ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup bilities will include assisting District staff and stu- maintenance management to troubleshoot and resolve 2007 Bennington and other tasks. For qualifying employees we dents with music performances and theatre produc- with including nights and w eekends. Pontoon Boat offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, tions, stage, sound and lighting management, and issues, Requires High School Diploma or GED along 2275 GL, 150hp short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid event planning. Experience in theater production, with two y ears' experience in g eneral Honda VTEC, less vacation and sick time. Drug test is required eventplanning, and management, and business maintenance and the ability to recognize than 110 hours, prior to employment. promotion is preferred. The projected salary range for this position is electrical, p l u mbing a n d mec h anical original owner, lots or equipment failures. Formal of extras; TennesPlease submit a completed application atten- $30,000-$40,000plus incentwe pay, and includes a malfunctions in related field is a plus. Requires see tandem axle tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available comprehensive benefit package. A job description training managing crew a n d s t rong trailer. Excellent at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chan- and information about the PAC can be found at: experience maintenance background. condition,$23,500 dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be htt:l/www.'csd.k12.or.us/PAC Pl ease direct in503-646-1804 obtained upon request by contacting Kevin quiries to a rryl Smith, Director of Human ReHR 5 net 0 ee Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). se rces 1eemail-~ We ask that interested candidates provide the fol- customer service and over 400 stores in the 20' Fiberform, cabin, No phone calls please. Only completed appliLetter of Interest, resume, and a list of refer- western United States. We offer competitive cations will be considered for this position. No lowing: head, new manifolds, contacts. All materials to be submitted elec- pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash resumes will be accepted. Drug test is re- ence small block Chevy V8, tronicallr es one Poa file to ~ HReeee'.net. bonus. Please go to www.lesschwab.com to quired prior to employment. EOE. w/2 axle caulkins, EZ apply. No phone calls please. load trailer, new tires, Jefferson County School District 509-J The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer. $900. (some assemLes Schwab is proud to be an Serving Central Oregon sincefgte A criminal background checkis conducted bly required) equal opportunity employer.

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C all 54 /-385-580 9 to r o m ot e o u r service Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that adbe licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Construction Contrac- Landscape Constructors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: active license p lanting, deck s , means the contractor fences, arbors, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of irCCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e contractor.com Landscape Contracor call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin recom- number is to be inmends checking with cluded in all adverthe CCB prior to con- tisements which inditracting with anyone. cate the business has Some other t rades a bond, insurance and also req u ire addi- workers c ompensational licenses and tion for their employcertifications. ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: Debris Removal www.lcblstate.or.us to check license status JUNK BE GONE before contracting with the business. Persons I Haul Away FREE doing lan d scape For Salvage. Also Cleanups 8 Cleanouts maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i Mel, 541-389-8107 cense.

Handyman I DO THAT!

Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768

Get onthe list now for

Weekly Serviceand Spring Clean-ups! Free estimates!

COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca/i 541-480-9714


THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEB 18, 2015

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TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, FEB 18, 2015

DAILY B R I D G E

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLABBIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sbprtz

C L U B w edn~day, Febru~y 18,2015

Pointless play

ACROSS 1 Box-offfce dud S Court sport 11Lead-into law 14Roll call no-show 15Salvation Army donation

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

Cy the Cynic says that trying to w rite w i t h a br o k e n p e n ci l i s

doubles. What do you say? ANSWER: If your opponent had passed, you would bid one heart to seek a fit in the major suit. But the double suggests length and strength in hearts, after which experts would disagree on the best action. Some would "ignore the double" and bid one heart anyway; some would pass.

pointless. Today's declarer took (or rejected) finesses all over the place, and there was no point to any of them.

North opened 2NT, upgrading his h and because o f h i s t e n s . H e supported South's spades next, and South bid slam. When West led a club, South was reluctant to lose a finesse that might guarantee defeat. He took dummy's ace and led the queen, ruffing when East played low. South then let the queen of trumps ride, and East won and led the king of clubs. Declarer ruffed, drew trumps, took the A-K of diamonds and ruffed

My preference would be for a descriptive bid of 1NT. North dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH 48A J10

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a diamond. When no queen appeared, he guessed to let the jack of hearts ride, but East had the queen.

ACE OF TRUMPS South needed no finesses. After he ruffs a club at Trick Two, he leads a trump to the ace. When East-West play low, South ruffs a club and exits with a trump. East must lead a red suit, yielding a free finesse, or a club, conceding a ruff-sluff. Either way, South is home.

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BIZARRO

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For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.

Annual subscripfions are available for the best of Sunday croaaworda from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX Io 388 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online aubacriptiona: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nyiimes.com/crosawords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nyiimes.com/leaming/xwords.

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By Jeff Stiilman O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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02/18/15


THE BULLETIN i WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 18 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 881

Travel Trailers

Cano pies & Campers

Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR.

Adventurer 2013 86 FB truck camper, $19,800. 2205 dIY weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 deep cycle batteries, LED lights, full size q ueen bed. n i c e floorplan. Also available 2010 Chevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 360-774-2747 No text messages!

54'I -604-5993

o

Heartland P rowler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & la r ge closet. Large enough to live in, but easy to tow! 15' power awning, power hitch & stabilizers, full s i ze queen bed, l a rge shower, porcelain sink & toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

932

935

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles

885

0 0

00 908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Mountaineer 2004

.I Ijli~

Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 1 55 K m i l es, $11,500. 541-549-6407

1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswaqen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399

Chev Silverado

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$125,000

2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932

541-548-5254

ROBBERSON

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Re-

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price

~

sults! Call 385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 882

Fifth Wheels

Alpenlite 28 ft. 1987,New stove, fridge. Good furnace, AC. Stereo, DVD player. Queen bed WITH bedding. 20 ft. awning. Good shape. $4500 541-977-5587 CHECKYOUR AD

' ~

T T I

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. Check out the classifieds online wwvv.bendbuttetin.com Updated daily 916

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

Redmond:

541-548-5254

,dJ

925

Utility Trailers

LINcoLII ~

I M ROQ

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/2015

1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop BEND 541-382-8038

~

541%12-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin Sening CentralOregonsince19te

975

Automobiles

Convertible, seasonal special Vin¹U96242

$7,977 ROBBERSON'L ~

mama ~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/15

7.3 Powerstroke 4x4 ¹A90623.

$12,977 I M ROR

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 2/28/1 5

ALMOST PERFECT! Vin ¹151095.

$12,977 ROBBERSON~ 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Honda Accord2005

Gorgeous and Priced to se//! Vin ¹¹018628 11.977 ROBBERSON'L

1950 Mercury 4-dr Sedan

A Private Collection

LINCOLII ~

Focus SEL2012

LINcoLN ~

Ground-up restoration, beautiful! Call for details. $35,500 or best offer.

ROBBERSON

$8,977 ROBBERSON

ROBBERSON

CargoMate tra i ler 8'x12' with large rear door and extra side door, additional hauling rack on top, very good condition. $3800. Call Stan Hto see 541-420-1916

2008 Sport, 3rd row, and lots more! Vin¹024803 $19,977

Super cab 1995,

M.F. 230 DIESEL CASE 200 GAS FORD 2N GAS BEND 541-382-8038

541-892-3789

Price Reducedl Open Road 36' 2005 model is like new w/3 slides!! King bed, hide-a-bed, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $19,500 541-419-0566

ToyotaHighlander

4.9L V6 Vin¹A90118

Toyota Tacoma 2013 4x4, TRD/TX F latbed t r ailer w i t h double cab, tow pkg, Keystone Everest 5th ramps, 7000 lb. catilt, cruise, Bluetooth, Wheel, 2004 pacity, 26' long, 8'6" PW, PDL, AM/FM/CD, Model 323P - 3 slides, wide, ideal for hauling locking differential, rear island-kitchen, hay, materials, cars, 10-ply Michelins, PIAA fireplace, 2 TV's, exc.cond. $2800. back-up lights, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner 541-420-3788 back-up camera. w/surround sound, A/C, 1 owner, 26K miles, custom bed, ceiling fan, 932 immaculate!$29,995. W/D ready, many extras. 541-593-9710 or New awning & tires. Antique & 541 450-8711 Excellent condition. Classic Autos $18,900.More pics available. 541-923-6408 935 Sport Utility Vehicles Laredo2006 31'

Fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649

Subaru Forester 1998 170k miles., red, two sets tires, daughter moved to Sweden needs $. Clean, no pets. Dependable car. $4200. 541-647-0657

BMM/330c 2003

Ford F350 2002

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs.

Call on one of the professionals today!

...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

naaaa ~

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bogood thru 02/28/15 nanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. Just bought a new boat? $65,000. 541-419-9510 Sell your old one in the www.N4972M.com classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! HANGAR FOR SALE. 541-385-5809 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. CA L L vh Dry walled, insulated, TODAY 5 and painted. $23,500 Chevy Pickup 1978, Tom, 541.788.5546 long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, Save money. Learn n ew wheels a n d to fly or build hours tires, You must see with your own airit! $25,000 invested. c raft. 1968 A e r o $12,000 OBO. Commander, 4 seat, 541-536-3889 or 150 HP, low time, 541-420-6215. full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184. Ford F250 XLT

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

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

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

$19,977

Redmond:

IM RO S

V W CONV.

1/3interest in

541-288-3333

ROBBERSON 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 2/28/15

933

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

Only $7,977

LINcoLII ~

Pickups

(located @ Bend)

4x4, lots of room! Vin¹J21627.

~

BMW X3 35i 2010

Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carder not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170

Ford Esca 2005

mama ~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167

$5,977 ROBBERSON LINCOLII ~

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

4x4 ready for adventure! ¹D11893. Bargain Corral priced @ $5,977 ROBBERSON

1965 Mustang

Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

LINCOLII ~

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/15

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,

power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, alGMC 2004 Yukon ways garaged, all 4x4, silver, 5.3L, 120K maintenance up to miles, mud & snow tires, excellent cond. 1 owner, well maintained, Adate, STEALAT $13,900. $7850. 541-223-2218 541-389-3316

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

bids will not be con- bid documents. arrive 15 m inutes LEGAL NOTICE Dated at the City of prior to the auction CitiMortgage, Inc., its sidered. Each Bidder m ust Redmond, this 18th to allow the Dessuccessors in interest The scope of work day o f Fe b ruary, c hutes Cou n t y and/or assigns, Plaincomplete, sign, and being considered is: furnish with their bid a 2015. S heriff's Office t o tiff/s, v. Carl Howe "Certification review bid d er's aka Carl Taylor Howe; of E m - Nonsegregated Published: The Bend funds. Only U . S. John N. Howe; Jodi A. 1 .Excavation, bankment, Earthwork Facilities" a n d a Bulletin - February 18, currency an d / or H owe; Stacie A nn Stonehocker; Rachel and Grading statement en t i tled 2015 and F ebruary cashier's c h e cks made payable to K. Busch; CitiBank, 2.Asphalt C o ncrete "Bidders S t atement 25, 2015 on Previous Contracts Deschutes County N.A., successor in in- PavementRemoval 3.Processing and Oregon Daily Journal Sheriff's Office will terest t o C i t yBank Subject t o EEO P lacement of R e of C o m merce be accepted. PaySouth Dakota, N.A., Clause," as contained F ebruary 16, 2 0 15 ment must be made D efendant/s. C a s e moved Pavement on in the Bid Proposal. Airport Service Roads a nd F ebruary 2 5 , in full immediately No.: 13CV0575. NOupon the close of TICE OF SALE UN- 4.Pavement Subbase A contractor having 2015 and Base Construc- 50 or more employees the sale. For more DER WRIT OF EXRedmond information on this ECUTION REAL tion and their subcontrac The t ors having 5 0 o r Spokesman sale go to: www.orPROPERTY. Notice is 5 .Bituminous B a s e s.com/sa hereby given that the and Surface Course more employees and F ebruary 18, 2 0 15 egonsheriff Construction who may be awarded a nd February 2 5 , les.htm Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on 6.Pavement Underd- a s u b contract o f 2015 LEGAL NOTICE rain Construction Thursday, April 3 0, $50,000 or more will LEGAL NOTICE Elizon Master Partici2015 at 10:00 AM, in 7.Drainage Improve- be re q u ired to Deutsche Bank Na- pation Trust I, U.S. maintain an the main lobby of the ments of a ffirmatwe Deschutes C o u nty 8.Construction act i o n tional Trust Company, Bank Trust National New Runway Edge program, the as Trustee for FFMLT Association, as Owner Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 2006 - FF4, Trustee, Plaintiff/s, v. W. Highway 20, Bend, Lights standards for which Trust John A. Hildebrandt; Oregon, sell, at public 9.Construction of a are contained in the Mortgage Pass-Through Certifi- and Lisa Hildebrandt, o ral auction to t h e New Lighted Wind- specifications. cates, Series D efendant/s. C a s e cone h ighest bidder, f o r Plaintiff/s, No.: 13CV0905. NOcash o r ca s hier's 10.Miscellaneous T o b e e l igible f o r 2006-FF4, Jackie Verlanic; TICE OF SALE UNcheck, the real prop- Electrical and S i g- award each Bidder v. the DER WRIT OF EXerty commonly known nage Improvements must comply with the Occupants o f ECUTION - REAL act i o n premises, as 19805 W e tland 11.Pavement Groov- a ffirmative D efendant/s. C a s e PROPERTY. Notice is ing Court, Bend, Oregon requirements w hich 12.Pavement Marking are contained in the No.: 1 4 CV0468FC. hereby given that the 97702. Conditions of N OTICE OF S A L E Deschutes C o unty Sale: Potential bidspecifications. U NDER WRIT O F Sheriff's Office will, on ders must arrive 15 The Contract DocuEXECUTION - REAL Thursday, April 16, minutes prior to the ments for the above Disadvantaged Business Enterprises PROPERTY. Notice is 2015 at 10:00 AM, in auction to allow the project may be exhereby given that the the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty amined at the Airport will be afforded full Director's office lo- opportunity to submit Deschutes C o u nty Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to re's Office,63333 Ro b e rt's bids in response to Sheriff's Office will, on Sheriff view bidder's funds. cated a t uesday, April 2 8 , W. Highway 20, Bend, Only U.S. currency Field-Redmond Mu- this invitation and will T at 10:00 AM, in Oregon, sell, at public and/or cashier's nicipal Airport, 2522 not be discriminated 2015 on the the main lobby of the o ral auction to t h e checks made payable SE Jesse Butler Circle against Deschutes C o u nty h ighest bidder, f o r to Deschutes County ¹17, Redmond, Or- grounds of race, color, Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 cash o r ca s hier's Sheriff's Office will be egon 97756, or City of or national origin in W. Highway 20, Bend, check, the real propaccepted. P ayment Redmond City Hall, consideration for an sell, at public erty commonly known must be made in full 716 SW Evergreen, award of any contract Oregon, ral auction to t h e as 16345 Dyke Road, immediately upon the Redmond, O r egon entered into pursuant o h ighest bidder, f o r La P i ne , O r egon close of the sale. For 97756, on w o rking to this advertisement. cash o r ca s hier's 97739. Conditions of more information on days, between t he check, the real propSale: Potential bidIn accordance with this s al e go to: hours of 8:00 a.m. commonly known ders must arrive 15 www.oregonsheriffs.c and 5:00 p.m. Cop- federal requirements, erty City has as 62946 Nasu Park minutes prior to the om/sales.htm ies of said docu- the Loop, Bend, Oregon auction to allow the ments may be obdetermined that this LEGAL NOTICE 97701. Conditions of Deschutes C o u nty tained at a cost of contract has CitiMortgage, Inc., its $100.00 per set from subcontracting Sale: Potential bid- Sheriff's Office to reSuccessors a n d/or Century West Engi- possibilities must arrive 15 view bidder's funds. and ders Assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. neering Corporation, encourages prior to the Only U.S. currency the minutes Bill G. Chaney aka Bill 1 020 S W auction to allow the and/or cashier's participation of Disad Deschutes C haney ak a B i l l y D rive, Suite Em1k0a0y, vantaged C o u nty checks made payable B u siness C haney ak a B i l l y Bend, Office to re- to Deschutes County Oreg o n, Enterprises as prime Sheriff's Gene Chaney aka 97702, view bidder's funds. Sheriff's Office will be te l e phone contractors and Billie Chaney, Indi- (541) Only U.S. currency accepted. P ayment 322- 8 962. s ubcontractors. N o vidually; B i l l G. Technical questions and/or cashier's must be made in full DBE contract goal has Chaney as Trustee of shall be directed to been established for checks made payable immediately upon the the Billy G. Chaney Tom Headley, P.E., this project. to Deschutes County close of the sale. For R evocable Liv i n g Sheriff's Office will be more information on West EngiTrust dated August Century accepted. P ayment this s al e g o to: neering Corporation, B ased on t h e 9 t h 11, 2009; Elizabeth (541) must be made in full www.oregonsheriffs.c 3228 962. Circuit Court Decision Chaney aka E l iza- Documents will only in Western S tates immediately upon the om/sales.htm beth Eileen Chaney; be mailed upon re- Paving Company v. close of the sale. For LEGAL NOTICE Louise A. Chaney as ceipt of $100.00 per W ashington more information on Sta t e N a t ional Trustee of the Billy G. s et to c o ver t h e Department this s al e g o to: Federal of Mortgage AssociaChaney R evocable document fee and T ransportation, t h e www.oregonsheriffs.c tion, its successors Living Trust d a ted postage/handling. has determined om/sales.htm in interest and/or August 11, 2009; Oc- The cost of the docu- City that it is appropriate to LEGAL NOTICE assigns, Plaintiff/s, cupants of the pre- ments is non-refund- use a r a ce/gender mises, and the Real able, and the docu- neutral goal. The City Deutsche Bank Na- v. William R. Bertional Trust Company, berick AKA R uss Property located at do not need to encourages all as Trustee for First Berberick AKA Wil17676 Penny Court, ments bidders to take active Franklin M o r tgage liam Russell BerLa P i ne, O r egon be returned. race/gender neutral Loan Trust berick; Tamela J. 97739, Defendant/s. Contractors must be steps to include DBEs 2006-FF16, Berberick AKA Case No.: qualified i n in t h i s con t ract. a c cor1 3CV1159FC. N O - dance with the appli- Race/gender neutral Asset-Backed Certifi- Tamela Jane Bercates, Series berick; Cit i bank TICE OF SALE UN- cable parts of ORS steps include: 2006-FF16, Plaintiff/s, South Dakota NA; DER WRIT OF EX279C in order to enu nbundling lar g e v. Marcos Rodriguez; Capital One Bank ECUTION REAL into a contract with contracts, subcontrac Ana Yeli Rodriguez; USA NA ; C h ase PROPERTY. Notice is ter City. The City will ting work the prime Mortgage Electronic Bank USA NA; Ochereby given that the the may Registration Systems cupants of the Preconsider con- contractor Deschutes C o u nty only tractors who are able self-perform, providing Inc.; First Franklin, a m ises; th e R eal Sheriff's Office will, on to demonstrate prior bonding or financing Division of National Property Located at Thursday, April 16, experience with simiassistance, providing 15588 Bur g e ss 2015 at 10:00 AM, in lar work. The City may technical assistance, City Bank; State of Oregon; Occupants of Road, La Pine OR the main lobby of the investigate to deter- etc. the premises, Defen97739, Defendant/s. Deschutes C o u nty mine the q ualificad ant/s. Case N o . : Case No.: Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 of the bidders as A MA ND A TORY 1 4CV0261FC. N O - 13CV0684. NOW. Highway 20, Bend, tions pre-bid meeting is to of the evaluation TICE OF SALE UN- T ICE O F SAL E Oregon, sell, at public part of the bids. be held at 2:00 p.m., DER WRIT OF EXUNDER WRIT OF o ral auction to t h e local time on the 3rd ECUTION - REAL EXECUTION h ighest bidder, f o r Bidders must submit day of March, 2015, at PROPERTY. Notice is REAL PROPERTY. cash o r ca s hier's ualification th e hereby given that the Notice is h e reby sta t e t he office o f check, the real prop- q ments in accordance A irport Director a t erty commonly known w ith the t e rms o f Roberts Field Airport Deschutes C o u nty given that the DesSheriff's Office will, on c hutes Cou n t y a s 1 7 67 6 P e n ny subsection 20-02 of Terminal, Airp o rt Tuesday, May 5, 2015 Sheriff's Office will, Court, La Pine, Or- the Contract Administration Office. at 10:00 AM, in the on Tuesday, April egon 97739. Condi- Conditions and I nterested prim e main lobby of the De- 28, 2015 at 10:00 tions of Sale: Poten- General P r ovisions c ontractors are r e s chutes Coun t y A M, in t h e m a in t ial b i dders m u s t with their Proposal. quired to attend. At Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 lobby of the Desarrive 15 minutes prior Proposals submitted this meeting, Cou n t y to the auction to allow without q ualification questions concerning W. Highway 20, Bend, c hutes Oregon, sell, at public Shenff's Office, the Deschutes County statements will not be the Contract o ral auction to t h e 63333 W. Highway Sheriff's Office to re- accepted. Documents and the h ighest bidder, f o r 20, Bend, Oregon, view bidder's funds. proposed work will be cash o r ca s hier's sell, at public oral Only U.S. currency This contract will be discussed. A tour of check, the real prop- auction to the highand/or cashier's in part, by a the project site will be erty commonly known est bidder, for cash checks made payable funded, grant from the Federal conducted after the as 62920 Clyde Lane, or cashier's check, to Deschutes County Aviation meeting after which Bend, Oregon 97701. the real p roperty Sheriff's Office will be Administration. As no other tours or site accepted. P ayment such it will be subject visits will be sched Conditions of S ale: commonly known as Potential bidders must 15588 Bur g e ss must be made in full to uled. arrive 15 minutes prior Road, La Pine, Orimmediately upon the requirements. federal These close of the sale. For include, but are not N o bi d s h a l l b e to the auction to allow egon 97739. Condithe Deschutes County tions of Sale: Pomore information on limited to: considered unless the Sheriff's Office to re- tential bidders must this s al e g o to: bidder is r egistered view bidder's funds. arrive 15 m inutes www.oregonsheriffs.c •Buy America with t h e Or e g on Only U.S. currency prior to the auction om/sales.htm Preferences; Construction and/or cashier's to allow the DesLEGAL NOTICE •Foreign T rade Contractors Board as checks made payable c hutes Cou n t y CITY OF REDMOND Restrictions; required by ORS 701. to Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o ROBERTS FIELD•P revailing W a g e Sheriff's Office will be review bid d er's REDMOND Rates (higher of BOLI P roposals must b e accepted. P ayment f unds. Only U . S. MUNICIPAL AIRPORT or Davis-Bacon rates); s ubmitted o n the must be made in full currency an d / or ~Affirmative A c t i on prescribed forms and immediately upon the cashier's c h e cks RUNWAY 4-22 Requirements; must beaccompanied close of the sale. For made payable to REHABILITATION•G overnment w i d e by certified check, more information on Deschutes County PHASE 11 Debarment and cashier's check, or bid this s al e g o to: Sheriff's Office will Suspension b ond executed i n www.oregonsheriffs.c be accepted. PayA.I.P. PROJECT No. Provisions; and favor of the City in an om/sales.htm ment must be made 3-41-0052-038/039 •G overnment w i d e amount equal to ten in full immediately Requirements for percent (10%) of the LEGAL NOTICE upon the close of INVITATION TO BID Drug-free workplace amount b i d . Th e DLJ Mort g age the sale. For more Requirements. successful bidder will Capital, Inc., Plaininformation on this Sealed bids for Robbe required to furnish t iff/s, v. M a r k S . sale go to: www.orerts Field-Redmond All applicable federal a performance bond Hall; Diena K. Hall; egonsheriff s.com/sa Municipal A i rport, provisions are given in and payment bond, Oregon Affordable les.htm Runway 4-22 Reha- the specifications. e ach i n t h e fu l l Housing Assistance b ilitation-Phase I I , amount of the contract Corporation; OccuLEGAL NOTICE The proposed contract price. Federal Nat i onal A .I.P. Project N o . pants of the prop3-414052-038/039 is under and subject erty, D efendant/s. Mortgage Association will be received by the to Executive Order No bi d No.: ("FNMA"), Plaintiff/s, m a y be Case City Recorder at City 112456 of September w ithdrawn after t he 13CV0888. NOv. John W. Cooper; of Redmond, C ity SA L E Lisa D. Cooper; Rob24, 1986, and to the scheduled time for the T ICE O F Hall, 716 SW EverEqual E m ployment public opening of the UNDER WRIT OF ert Allen Taylor Co., EXECUTION other Persons or Pargreen, Redmond, Or- O pportunity E E O ) bid a s spe c ified egon 97756, until the and Federal Labor a bove. T h e Cit y REAL PROPERTY. ties, including Occubid closing time of Provisions. reserves the right to Notice is h e reby pants, unknown 2:00 .m. Iocal time reject any and all bids, given that the Desclaiming any r i ght, wai v e any c hutes based on the "Official All l abor o n the to Cou n t y title, lien, or interest in Time" of the clock at project shall be paid irregularities, and to Sheriff's Office will, t he p r operty d e the Cit R e c order's n o less t ha n t h e accept t he bid on Thursday, May 7, scribed in the comoffice at Redmond minimum wage rates deemed in the best 2015 at 10:00 AM, plaint herein, DefenCi Hall on the 18th e stablished by t h e interest of the City. in the main lobby of dant/s. Case N o .: da of March 2015 at U .S. Secretary o f The City may reject the Desc h utes 13CV0720. NOTICE which time the bids Labor or The State of any b i d n ot in County Sheriff's OfOF SALE U N DER will be publ i cly Oregon BOLI, c ompliance with a l l fice, 6 3 33 3 W. WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPopened and r ead. whichever is greater. prescribed public bid Highway 20, Bend, Bidders shall submit ding procedures and O regon, s ell, a t ERTY. N o t ic e is the required first-tier Each Bidder m ust r equirements, a n d public oral auction hereby given that the subcontractors disclo- supply all information may reject for good to the highest bidDeschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on sure form within two required by the bid cause any or all bids d er, for cash o r hours of the bid clos- documents and speci upon a finding by the cashier's check, the T hursday, April 2 3, ing t i me. B i dders fications. City that it is in the real property com2015 at 10:00 AM, in whose bids a nd/or public interest to do m only known a s the main lobby of the EEO So. disclosure statements The 3258 SW P umice Deschutes C o unty are received after the requirements, l a bor Pl, Redmond, OrSheriff 's Office,63333 stated times will be KELLY MORSE, egon 97756. CondiW. Highway 20, Bend, provisions, and wage considered n o n-re- rates are included in CITY RECORDER tions of Sale: PoOregon, sell, at public tential bidders must sponsive, and their the specifications and CITY OF REDMOND oral auction to t he


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h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 10290 NW Oak Lane, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i dders m u s t arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Federal Nat i onal Mortgage Association, its successors and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Joseph M. Davies; Stacey M. D a vies; Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.; and al l o t her Persons or P a rties unknown clai ming any right, title, lien, or interest in t h e R e al Property c ommonly known as 6415 SW Jaguar Avenue, Redmond, O R 9 7 7 56, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 1 4 C V0106FC. N OTICE OF S A L E U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, May 5, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Des chutes Coun t y Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 6415 SW Jaguar Avenue, R e dmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm

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 576 & 578 Centennial Street, Bend,

Oregon

97702-0000. Condi-

tions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Federal N a t ional Mortgage Association, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. David L. Dunlap; Dynamic Strategies, Inc.; an d O c c upants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0589. NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, April 16, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a i n lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's 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 6655 Northeast 41st Street, R e dmond, O regon 977 5 6 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office to review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will LEGAL NOTICE Federal Nati o nal be accepted. PayMortgage Association, ment must be made Plaintiff/s, v. James in full immediately upon the close of Lodahl; Barbara D. Lodahl; Mid Oregon the sale. For more Federal Credit Union; information on this Target National Bank; sale go to: www.ors.com/sa American E x press egonsheriff les.htm Bank, FSB; and all other Persons or Parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, Check out the or interest in the Real classifieds online Property commonly known as 2500 NE www.bendbulletin.com Wintergreen D r ive, Updated daily Bend, O R 97 7 0 1, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 1 3 C V 1191FC. N OTICE OF S A LE LEGAL NOTICE U NDER WRIT O F JPMorgan C hase EXECUTION - REAL Bank, National AsPROPERTY. Notice is sociation, succeshereby given that the sor in interest by Deschutes C o u nty purchase from the Sheriff's Office will, on Federal Deposit InT uesday, April 1 4 , surance Corpora2015 at 10:00 AM, in tion as receiver of the main lobby of the Washington Mutual Deschutes C o unty Bank Association, its successors in Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, interest and/or asOregon, sell, at public signs, Plaintiff/s, v. o ral auction to t he Kae A. Meier aka Kae An n M e ier; h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's Carol Osgood; Eqcheck, the real prop- uable Ascent Finanerty commonly known cial LLC; and Occuof the as 2500 NE Winter- pants reen Drive, Bend, premises, D e fenregon 97701. Con- dant/s. Case No.: ditions of Sale: Po- 13CV1083FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior UNDER WRIT OF to the auction to allow EXECUTION the Deschutes County REAL PROPERTY. Sheriff's Office to re- Notice is h e reby view bidder's funds. given that the DesCou n t y Only U.S. currency c hutes and/or cashier's Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, May 5, checks made payable to Deschutes County 2015 at 10:00 AM, Sheriff's Office will be in the main lobby of Desc h utes accepted. Payment the must be made in full County Sheriff's Ofimmediately upon the fice, 6 3 33 3 W. close of the sale. For Highway 20, Bend, more information on O regon, sell, a t this s al e go to: public oral auction www.oregonsheriffs.c to the highest bidd er, for c ash o r om/sales.htm cashier's check, the LEGAL NOTICE real property comFederal N a t ional m only known a s Mortgage Associa3430 SW Reindeer t ion ( FNMA), i t s Ave, Redmond, Orsuccessors in interegon 97756. Condiest and/or assigns, tions of Sale: PoPlaintiff/s, v. Harold tential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes G. Rogers; Occupants of the p reprior to the auction mises of 576 Cento allow the Destennial Street, Bend, c hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Office to Oregon; and Occupants of the p rereview bid d er's mises at 578 Cenf unds. Only U . S. tennial Street, Bend, currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks Oregon, Defendant/s. Case made payable to No.: 13CV1084FC. Deschutes County NOTICE OF SALE Sheriff's Office will UNDER WRIT OF be accepted. PayEXECUTION ment must be made REAL PROPERTY. in full immediately Notice i s h e r eby upon the close of the sale. For more given that the Desc hutes Coun t y information on this Sheriff's Office will, sale go to: www.oron Thursday, April egonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm 16, 2015 at 10:00

Sheriff's Office will LEGAL NOTICE be accepted. PayN ationstar Mo r t ment must be made gage, LLC, in full immediately Plaintiff/s, v. Ross upon the close of Miller and Connie the sale. For more M iller; John a n d information on this J ane D o e s , sale go to: www.orthrough V, O ccuegonsheriff s.com/sa pants of the subject les.htm Real Property, and All Other Persons or LEGAL NOTICE Parties U nknown, NOTICE OF SEIZURE claiming any right, FOR CIVIL title, interest, lien or FORFEITURE TO ALL estate in the propPOTENTIAL e rty h e rein d e - CLAIMANTS AND TO scribed, ALL UNKNOWN Defendant/s. Case PERSONS READ THIS No.: 13CV1249FC. CAREFULLY NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF If you have any interEXECUTION est in t h e s e ized REAL PROPERTY. property d e scribed Notice is h e reby below, you must claim given that the Desthat interest or you will c hutes Coun t y automatically lose that Sheriff's Office will, interest. If you do not on Thursday, April file a claim for the 30, 2015 at 10:00 property, the property A M, in t h e m a in may be forfeited even lobby of the Desif you are not conc hutes Cou n t y victed of any crime. Sheriff's Off i c e, To claim an interest, 63333 W. Highway you must file a written 20, Bend, Oregon, claim with the forfeisell, at public oral ture counsel named auction to the highbelow, The w r itten est bidder, for cash claim must be signed or cashier's check, by you, sworn to unthe real p roperty der penalty of perjury commonly known as before a notary public, 52437 Lost Pondeand state: (a) Your rosa Road, La Pine, true name; (b) The O regon 977 3 9 . address at which you Conditions of Sale: will a c cept f u t ure Potential b i d ders m ailings from t h e must arrive 15 mincourt and f orfeiture u tes prior to t h e counsel; and (3) A auction to allow the s tatement that y o u Deschutes County have an interest in the Sheriff's Office to seized property. Your review bid d er's deadline for filing the funds. Only U . S. claim document with currency an d / or forfeiture cou n sel cashier's c h e cks n amed below is 21 made payable to days from the last day Deschutes County of publication of this Sheriff's Office will notice. Where to file a be accepted. Payclaim and for more ment must be made i nformation: D a i na in full immediately Vitolins, Crook County upon the close of District Attorney Ofthe sale. For more fice, 300 N E T h ird information on this Street, Prineville, OR sale go to: www.or97754. egonsheriff s.com/sa Notice of reasons for les.htm Forfeiture: The property described below LEGAL NOTICE Nationstar Mortgage, was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) L LC, Plaintiff/s, v . David Su t herland; Constitutes the proPatricia S a m pson; ceeds of the violation Mid Oregon Federal of, solicitation to vioC redit Union; E q - late, attempt to viouable Ascent Finan- late, or conspiracy to cial, LLC; D iscover violates, the criminal Bank; and C avalry laws of the State of Porffolio Se r v ices Oregon regarding the LLC, Assignee Cav- manufacture, distribualry Investments, As- tion, or possession of signee HSBC Bank controlled substances Nevada, N.A., Defen- (ORS Chapter475); dant/s. Case N o .: and/or (2) Was used 1 4CV0236FC. N O - or intended for use in TICE OF SALE UN- committing or faciliDER WRIT OF EX- tating the violation of, ECUTION - REAL solicitation to violate, PROPERTY. Notice is attempt to violate, or hereby given that the conspiracy to violate Deschutes C o u nty the criminal laws of Sheriff's Office will, on the State of Oregon T uesday, April 2 1 , regarding the manu2015 at 10:00 AM, in facture, distribution or the main lobby of the possession of consu b stances Deschutes C o u nty trolled Sheriff's Office, 63333 (ORS Chapter 475). W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public IN THE MATTER OF: (1) $4,700.00 in US oral auction to t he Currency, Case No h ighest bidder, f o r sei z e d cash o r ca s hier's 1 4-396334 check, the real prop- January 5, 2015 from erty commonly known Bradford Martson and a s 2423 S W 2 4 t h Angela Lindgren. Street, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Poten- People Look for Information t ial b i dders m u s t About Products and arrive 15 minutes prior Services Every Daythrough to the auction to allow The Bulletin Classiffeds the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. LEGAL NOTICE Only U.S. currency Ocwen Loan Serand/or cashier's vicing, LLC, its succhecks made payable cessors and/or to Deschutes County signs, Plaintiff/s,asv. Sheriff's Office will be Lee E . o n jorni; accepted. Payment Cynthia G. B Bonjorni; must be made in full Midland F nding, immediately upon the LLC; and alluother close of the sale. For Persons or Parties more information on claiming this s al e go to: unknown any right, title, lien, www.oregonsheriffs.c or interest in t he om/sales.htm Real Property comm only known as Advertise your car! 17376 Golden Eye Add A Prcfure! D rive, Bend, O R Reach thousands of readers! 97707, Defendant/s. Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds Case No.: 13CV0924. NOLEGAL NOTICE T ICE O F SAL E N ationstar Mo r t UNDER WRIT OF gage LLC, EXECUTION Plaintiff/s, v. Terry L. REAL PROPERTY. Johnston aka Terry Notice is h e reby J ohnston; O c c u- given that the Despants of the propc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, erty, D efendant/s. Case No.: on Thursday, April 14CV0229FC. NO23, 2015 at 10:00 T ICE O F SAL E A M, in t h e m a in UNDER WRIT OF lobby of the DesEXECUTION c hutes Cou n t y REAL PROPERTY. S heriff's Of fi c e , Notice i s h e r eby 63333 W. Highway given that the Des20, Bend, Oregon, c hutes Coun t y sell, at public oral Sheriff's Office will, auction to the highon Thursday, April est bidder, for cash or cashier's check, 30, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a i n the real p roperty lobby of the Descommonly known as c hutes Coun t y 17376 Golden Eye Sheriff's Off i c e, D rive, Bend, O r 63333 W. Highway egon 97707. Conditions of Sale: Po20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral tential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes auction to the highest bidder, for cash prior to the auction or cashier's check, to allow the Desthe real p roperty c hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office to commonly known as 12430 NW Chinook review bid d er's Drive, Terrebonne, f unds. Only U . S. O regon 977 6 0 . currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders made payable to must arrive 15 minDeschutes County u tes prior t o t h e Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payauction to allow the Deschutes County ment must be made S heriff's Office to in full immediately review bid d e r's upon the close of funds. Only U .S. the sale. For more c urrency an d / or information on this cashier's c h e cks sale go to: www.ormade payable to egonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm Deschutes County

LEGAL NOTICE Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Michael E. B urdick; Nancy C . B u rdick; Persons or P a rties unknown clai ming any right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defendant/s. Case N o .: 12CV0214. NOTICE

OF SALE U NDER WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, April 2 1 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known a s 6 1 13 8 Ge a r y Drive, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Michael E. B urdick; Nancy C. B u rdick; Persons or P a rties Unknown C l aiming any right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint her e in, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0214. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, April 2 1 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 2 01 34 H awes Lane, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: P o tential 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 Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Buckley Morgan I I; Leanna M. Morgan; Persons or P a rties Unknown c l a iming any right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint her e in, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0004. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T hursday, May 7 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's O ffice,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 51244 Diane Road, La P i ne, O r egon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Denise L. S tauffer; National City Bank; and Persons or Parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, o r interest i n t h e property described in the complaint herein, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV1240. NOTICE OF SALE UN-

DER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, April 1 4 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's Office,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 20566 Brightenwood Lane, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE O neWest Ba n k , FSB, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Suzanne Maker A KA Suzanne L . M aker; Unit e d States of America; State of O r egon; and occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV1063FC. 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, April 23, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a i n lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Off i c e, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 1104 Northeast Revere Ave., Bend, O regon 977 0 1 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office t o review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE OneWest Bank, FSB, Plaintiff/s, v. Meghan Leisek; Washington M utual Bank; a n d Persons or P a rties unknown clai ming any right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 12CV0878. NOTICE OF SAL E U N DER WRIT OF E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o tice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, April 1 4 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's Office,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e highest bidder, f or cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 3078 NE Stonebrook Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE P ennyMac L o a n Services, LLC, its successors in interest and/or assigns, P laintiff/s, v. G r egory A. Skinner aka Gregory Adam S kinner; Lor i L . Skinner; Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as nominee for G MA C M o r tage, LLC; National redit A d j usters; Cavalry P o r tfolio Services; and Occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. No.: Case

13CV1051FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.

Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, April 28, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Off i c e, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 3387 Nor t heast Sandalwood Drive, B end, Ore g o n 97701. C onditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's

checks made pay-

secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursua nt to Sect i o n 86.752(3) of Oregon Revised St a t utes. There is a default by grantor or other person owing an obligation, performance of which is secured by the trust deed, or by the successor in interest, with respect to provisions the r ein which authorize sale in the event of such provision. The default for which foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due th e f o l lowing sums: Del i nquent Payments: Payment I nformation Fro m 9/1/2010 Thr o ugh 1/1/2015 Total Payments $8 9 ,368.24 Late Charges From 9/1/2010 Thr o ugh 1/1/2015 Total Late Charges $ 2 ,200.33 Beneficiary's Advances, Costs, And Expenses Total Advances: $0.00 TOTAL FORE CLOSURE COST: $ 4,380.00 TO T A L REQUIRED TO REINSTATE: St 03,407.23 TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $254,346.25 By reason of the default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by th e t rust deed immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to- wit: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 0 9/01/2010 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 an y a t t orney ees and court costs arising f r o m or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve i ts security, all o f which must be paid as a con d ition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice s h a l l be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed o f T r ust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Whereof, notice hereby is given t hat Q u ality L o a n Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 6/12/2015 at the hour of 11:00 am, Standard of Time, as established by section 1 87.110, Ore g o n Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond S t reet, B end, O R 977 0 1 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the h ighest bidder f o r cash the interest in the said d escribed real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the t i m e of the execution by him of the said trust deed, t ogether wit h a n y i nterest which t h e grantor or his successors in interest a cquired after t h e execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the co s t s and e xpenses of s a l e , including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any p erson named i n S ection 86.778 o f Oregon Rev i sed Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire a mount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occ u rred), t ogether w it h th e costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and c uring a n y ot h e r default complained of i n the N o t ice o f Default by tendering

able to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately u p on t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation o n t h i s sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Planet Home Lending L LC, Plaintiff/s, v . Quinten S Hargraves; The Estate of Mary E Hargraves, Deceased; Unknown Heirs and Devisees of Mary E Hargraves, Deceased; and Persons or Parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, o r interest i n t h e property described in the complaint herein, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 1 3 C V1443FC. N OTICE OF S A L E U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, April 30, 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 or cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 53795 4th Street, La P i ne , O r egon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-14-636189-NH Reference is made to t hat c e rtain d e e d made by, B ONNIE SPATRISANO as Grantor t o W E S TERN TITLE AND ESCROW, as trustee, in favor of NEW CENTURY M O R T GAGE CORPORATION, as B eneficiary, d a t e d 7/26/2004, recorded 7/30/2004, in official r ecords o f DES CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. and/or as fee/file/instrument/microfilm/reception number 2004-45552 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and S tate, to-wit: APN: 171233 BC 01400 171233 BC 01400 LOT 9, BLOCK 18, CENTER ADDITION TO BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. Com monly known as: 374 NE KEARNEY AVE, BEND, OR 97701 The undersigned hereby certifies that b ased upon business records there are no k nown written a s signments of the trust deed by the trustee or by the beneficiary and no appointments of a successor tr u stee have been made, ex- t cept as recorded in t he records of t h e county or counties in which the above described real property is situated. Further, no action has been instituted to recover the d ebt, or a n y p a r t thereof, now remaining secured by the trust deed, or, if such action has been instituted, such action has been dismissed except as permitted by ORS 86.752(7). Both the beneficiary and t he t r ustee h a v e elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the o bligations


THE BULLETIN i WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 18 2015 E7

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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Corp. of Washington 108 1st Ave South, Suite 202, S eattle, WA 98104 Toll Free: (866) 925- 0 2 41 A-4508836 02/1 8/2015, 02/25/2015, 03/04/2015, 03/1 1/2015

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-14-644294-NH

Reference is made to t hat c e rtain d e e d made by, SHARON L. D ILLARD, A M A RRIED WOM AN, AS H ER S OL E AN D SEPARATE P ROPERTY as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE and E SCROW CO., a s trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYS T EMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FO R CENTRAL PACIFIC M ORTGAGE C O M PANY, A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, dated 8/23/2006, recorded 8/30/2006, in official r ecords o f DES CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. and/or as fee/file/instrument/microfilm/reception number 2006-59599 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and S tate, to-wit: APN: 185708 181203BB03728 LOT 26, WINDANCE ESTATES, PHASE 11, DESCHUTES

COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 171 SE WINDANCE CT, BEND, OR 97702 The und e rsigned hereby certifies that

based upon business

records there are no k nown written a s signments of the trust deed by the trustee or by the beneficiary and no appointments of a successor tr u s tee have been made, except as recorded in t he records of t h e county or counties in which the above described real property is situated. Further, no action has been instituted to recover the d ebt, or a n y p a r t thereof, now remaining secured by the trust deed, or, if such action has been instituted, such action has been dismissed except as permitted by ORS 86.752(7). Both the beneficiary and t he t r ustee h a v e elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the o bligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursua nt to Sect i o n 86.752(3) of Oregon Revised St a t utes. There is a default by grantor or other person owing an obligation, performance of which is secured by the trust deed, or by the successor in interest, with respect to provisions the r ein which authorize sale in the event of such provision. The default for which foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due th e fo l lowing sums: Del i nquent Payments: Payment I nformation Fro m 5/1/2009 Thr o ugh 1/1/2015 Total Payments $9 4 ,446.68 Late Charges From 5/1/2009 Thr o ugh 1/1/2015 Total Late C harges $47. 3 3 Beneficiary's Advances, Costs, And Expenses Total Advances: $0.00 TOTAL FORE C LOSURE COST: $ 4,743.00 TOT A L REQUIRED TO REINSTATE: $114,498.24 TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $422,577.98 By reason of the default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by th e t rust deed immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to- wit: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 5/1/2009, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent pro p erty 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

may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to b e t o xic. Prospective purchason 6/12/2015 at the res i dential hour of 1 1:00 am, ers o f Standard of Time, as property should be aware of this potenestablished by section 187.110, Oregon tial danger before deciding to place a bid Revised Statues, At the front entrance of for this property at the the Courthouse, 1164 trustee's sale. N ON.W. Bond S t reet, TICE TO TENANTS: documents. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will

B end, O R

977 0 1 C ounty o f DES C HUTES, State o f Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest w h i c h the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs and e x penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given t hat a n y per s on named i n S e c tion 86.778 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure p r oceeding d ismissed and t h e trust deed reinstated b y payment to t he beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), t o gether w ith t he cost s , trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance r e q uired under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. Other than as shown of record, neither the beneficiary nor the trustee has any actual notice of any person having or claiming to have any lien upon or interest in the r ea l pr o perty hereinabove described subsequent to t he interest o f t h e trustee in th e t rust deed, or of any successor in interest to grantor or of any lessee or other person in possession of or occupying the property, except: Name a nd Last Known Address and Nature of Right, Lien o r Int e rest SHARON D I LLARD 171 SE WINDANCE

T ENANTS OF T H E SUBJECT REAL P ROPERTY H A V E CERTAIN PROTECTIONS A F FORDED TO THEM UNDER O RS 8 6 .782 A N D POSSIBLY U NDER FEDERAL LAW. ATTACHED TO T H IS NOTICE OF S ALE, AND INCO R PORATED HEREIN, IS A N OTICE TO T E N ANTS THAT S ETS F ORTH SOM E O F THE PROTECTIONS THAT ARE AVAILABLE TO A TENANT OF THE S UBJECT REAL P R O PERTY AND WHICH SETS FORTH CE R TAIN REQUIREMENTS THAT M U S T BE COMPLIED WITH BY ANY T E NANT IN ORDER TO OBTAIN THE A FF O R DED P ROTECTION, A S REQUIRED UNDER ORS 86.771. QUALITY MAY BE CONSIDERED A D E BT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE U SED FO R T H A T P URPOSE. TS N o : OR-14-644294-NH Dated: 1/27/15 Qual-

ity Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as Tru s t ee Signature By: Nina Hernandez, Assistant Secretary T rustee's Mailing Add r ess: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C /0 Q u ality L o a n Service Corporation 411 Ivy Street San D iego, C A 92 1 0 1 Trustee's Ph y sical Address: Quality Loan Service C o rp. of Washington 108 1st Ave South, Suite 202, Seattle, WA 9 8 104

Toll F r e e: (866) 925-0241 A-4508815 02/18/2015, 02/25/2015, 03/04/2015, 03/1 1/2015

LEGAL NOTICE Umpqua Bank, as successor in interest by merger to Sterling S a v ings Bank, Plaintiff/s, v. Allen L. Lowery, an individual; Evonne K. Lowery, an individual; and All Occupants of the Real P roperty a s de CT BEND, OR 97702 scribed in the comOriginal Borrower For plaint herein, DeSale Information Call: fendant/s. Case No.: 714-730-2727 or Lo14CV0499FC. NOgin to: www.service- T ICE O F SA L E linkasap.com In con- UNDER WRIT OF struing this notice, the EXECUTION singular includes the REAL PROPERTY. p lural, t h e wor d Notice is h e reby "grantor" includes any given that the Dessuccessor in interest c hutes Coun t y to this grantor as well Sheriff's Office will, as any other person on Thursday, May 7, owing an obligation, 2015 at 10:00 AM, the performance of in the main lobby of which is secured by the Desc h utes the trust deed, and County Sheriff's Ofthe words "trustee" fice, 6 3 33 3 W. and "beneficiary" in- Highway 20, Bend, clude their respective O regon, s ell, a t successors in interest, public oral auction if any. Pursuant to to the highest bidOregon Law, this sale d er, for cash o r will not be deemed fi- cashier's check, the nal until the Trustee's real property comdeed has been is- m only known a s sued by Quality Loan 16905 Cagle Road, Service Corporation of La Pine, O regon Washington. If any ir- 97739. Conditions regularities are dis- of Sale: P o tential c overed w ithin 1 0 bidders must arrive days of the date of 15 minutes prior to this sale, the trustee the auction to allow will rescind the sale, the Desc h utes return th e b u y er's County Sheriff's Ofmoney and take fur- f ice to revi e w ther action as neces- bidder's funds. Only sary. If the sale is set U.S. currency aside for any reason, and/or ca s hier's including if the checks made payTrustee is unable to able to Deschutes convey title, the Pur- County Sheriff's Ofchaser at th e s a le f ice will b e a c shall be entitled only cepted. P a y ment t o a r eturn of t h e must be made in full monies paid to t he immediately upon Trustee. This shall be t he close o f t h e the Purchaser's sole sale. For more inand exclusive remedy. f ormation on t h is The purchaser shall sale go to: www.orhave no further re- egonsheriffs.com/sa course against the les.htm Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the LEGAL NOTICE Beneficiary's Agent, U.S. Bank NA, Sucor the Beneficiary's c essor Trustee t o Attorney. If you have Bank of America, NA, previously been dis- Successor in interest charged thr o u gh to LaSalle Bank NA, bankruptcy, you may as Trustee, on behalf have been released of of the holders of the personal liability for Washington M utual this loan i n w h i ch Mortgage case this letter is inPass-Through Certifitended to exercise the cates, WMALT Series note holders right's 2006-AR6, Plaintiff/s, against the real prop- v. Travis Y amada, erty only. As required other Persons or Parb y law, y o u a r e ties, including Occuunknown hereby notified that a pants, negative credit report claiming any r i ght, r eflecting o n y o u r title, lien, or interest in credit record may be t he p r operty d e submitted to a credit scribed in the comreport agency if you plaint herein, Defenfail to fulfill the terms d ant/s. Case N o . : of your credit obliga- 1 3CV1020FC. N O tions. Without limiting TICE OF SALE UNt he t r ustee's d i s - DER WRIT OF EXclaimer of representa- ECUTION - REAL tions or w arranties, PROPERTY. Notice is Oregon law requires hereby given that the the trustee to state in Deschutes C o u nty this notice that some Sheriff's Office will, on residential p r operty Thursday, April 23, sold at a trustee's sale 2015 at 10:00 AM, in

the main lobby of the Notice is h e reby Deschutes C o u nty given that the DesSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 c hutes Cou n t y W. Highway 20, Bend, Sheriff's Office will, Oregon, sell, at public on Thursday, April o ral auction to t h e 23, 2015 at 10:00 highest bidder, f or AM, in t h e m a in cash o r ca s hier's lobby of the Descheck, the real prop- c hutes Cou n t y erty commonly known S heriff's Of fi c e , a s 2443 N W 2 n d 63333 W. Highway Street, Bend, Oregon 20, Bend, Oregon, 97701. Conditions of sell, at public oral Sale: P o tential bid- auction to the highders must arrive 15 est bidder, for cash minutes prior to the or cashier's check, auction to allow the the real p roperty Deschutes C o u nty commonly known as Sheriff's Office to re- 19175 Tumalo Resview bidder's funds. ervoir Road, Bend, Only U.S. currency O regon 977 0 1 . and/or cashier's Conditions of Sale: checks made payable Potential b i d ders to Deschutes County must arrive 15 minSheriff's Office will be u tes prior to t h e accepted. P ayment auction to allow the must be made in full Deschutes County immediately upon the S heriff's Office t o close of the sale. For review bid d er's more information on f unds. Only U . S. this s al e g o to: currency an d / or www.oregonsheriffs.c cashier's c h e cks om/sales.htm made payable to Deschutes County LEGAL NOTICE Office will U.S. Bank National Sheriff's Association, as be accepted. Paymust be made Trustee for Citigroup ment Mortgage Loan Trust in full immediately Inc., A s s et-Backed upon the close of Pass-Through Certifi- the sale. For more cates, Series information on this 2005-WF1, its s uc- sale go to: www.orff s.com/sa cessors and/or as- egonsheri les.htm signs, Plaintiff/s, v. Lauralee A. M a nn; LEGAL NOTICE and all other Persons U.S. Bank National or Parties unknown Association, as claiming any r i ght, Trustee fo r the title, lien, or interest in holders of the First the Real P r operty Franklin Mortgage commonly known as Loan Trust 2055 Southwest 34th 2 006-FF12 M o r t St., Redmond, OR age Pass-Through 97756, Defendant/s. ertificates, Series 2006-FF12, through Case No.: 1 3CV1118FC. N O - their loan servicing TICE OF SALE UN- agent Select PortfoDER WRIT OF EXlio Servicing, Inc., ECUTION - REAL Plaintiff/s, v. Tyson PROPERTY. Notice is S. Rearden; Morthereby given that the gage El e ctronic Deschutes C o u nty R egistration S y s Sheriff's Office will, on tems, Inc.; United Thursday, April 16, States of America 2015 at 10:00 AM, in (Internal Revenue the main lobby of the Service); State of Deschutes C o u nty Oregon Department Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 of Revenue; Wells W. Highway 20, Bend, Fargo Bank, N.A., Oregon, sell, at public as Trustee for the o ral auction to t h e holders of the First highest bidder, f or Franklin Mortgage cash o r ca s hier's Loan Trust check, the real prop- 2 006-FFA, Mo r t erty commonly known gage Pass-Through a s 2055 S W 3 4 t h Certificates, Series Fir s t Street, Redmond, Or- 2 006-FFA; egon 97756. Condi- Franklin a division of tions of Sale: Poten- National City Bank t ial b i dders m u s t of IN.; Occupants of arrive 15 minutes prior the property, Defento the auction to allow dant/s. Case No.: the Deschutes County 13CV0520. NOSheriff's Office to re- T ICE O F SA L E view bidder's funds. UNDER WRIT OF Only U.S. currency EXECUTION and/or cashier's REAL PROPERTY. checks made payable Notice is h e reby to Deschutes County given that the DesSheriff's Office will be c hutes Cou n t y accepted. P ayment Sheriff's Office will, must be made in full on Tuesday, April immediately upon the 28, 2015 at 10:00 close of the sale. For AM, in t h e m a in more information on lobby of the Desthis s al e g o to: c hutes Cou n t y www.oregonsheriffs.c S heriff's Offi c e , om/sales.htm 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank, National sell, at public oral auction to the highAssociation, Plaintiff/s, v. est bidder, for cash cashier's check, Lawrence Peters; and or Persons or P a rties the real p roperty commonly known as unknown clai ming any 52442 Wes t l ey right, title, lien, or inLaPine, Orterest in the property Loop, described in the com- egon 97739. Condiof Sale: Poplaint herein, Defen- tions bidders must d ant/s. Case N o . : tential 13CV0219. NOTICE arrive 15 m inutes OF SALE U NDER pffor to the auction allow the DesWRIT O F E X ECU- to Cou n t y TION - REAL PROP- c hutes heriff's Office t o ERTY. N o tice is S bid d er's hereby given that the review Only U . S. Deschutes C o u nty funds. an d / or Sheriff's Office will, on currency cashier's c h e cks T uesday, April 2 1 , made payable to 2015 at 10:00 AM, in County the main lobby of the Deschutes Office will Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's accepted. PaySheriff 's O ff ice,63333 be W. Highway 20, Bend, ment must be made full immediately Oregon, sell, at public in upon the close of o ral auction to t h e the sale. For more highest bidder, f or cash o r ca s hier's information on this go to: www.orcheck, the real prop- sale s.com/sa erty commonly known egonsheriff a s 1565 N E B e a r les.htm Creek Road, Bend, LEGAL NOTICE Oregon 97701. Con- US Bank National ditions of Sale: PoAssociation as tential bidders must Trustee for RASC arrive 15 minutes prior 2007-KS3, its sucto the auction to allow cessors and/or asthe Deschutes County signs, Plaintiff/s, v. Sheriff's Office to reaniel O . S i m oview bidder's funds. D Kelly K. SiOnly U.S. currency neau; moneau; State of and/or cashier's O regon; an d a l l checks made payable Persons or to Deschutes County other Parties U n known Sheriff's Office will be claiming any right, accepted. P ayment title, lien, or interest must be made in full in the Real Property immediately upon the commonly known as close of the sale. For 2374 Nor t hwest more information on Creek Loop, this s al e g o to: Quinn Bend OR 9 7 701, www.oregonsheriffs.c Defendant/s. Case om/sales.htm No.: 13C V 0505. NOTICE OF SALE LEGAL NOTICE UNDER WRIT OF U.S. Bank National EXECUTION Association, as REAL PROPERTY. Trustee for MASTR Notice is h e reby A djustable Rat e given that the DesM ortgage Tru s t c hutes Cou n t y 2 006-0A1, Mor t Sheriff's Office will, age Pass-Through on Thursday, May 7, ertificates, Series 2015 at 10:00 AM, 206-0A1, Plaintiff/s, in the main lobby of v. Lisa K. Wachs; the Desc h utes David T. W a chs; County Sheriff's OfSelco C ommunity fice, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, Credit Union; and Persons or Parties O regon, sell, a t unknown claiming public oral auction any right, title, lien to the highest bidor interest in t he d er, for cash o r property described cashier's check, the herein, Defendant/s. real property comCase No.: m only known a s 2374 Nor t hwest 13CV0143. NOT ICE O F SAL E Quinn Creek Loop, UNDER WRIT OF B end, Ore g o n EXECUTION 97701. C onditions REAL PROPERTY. of Sale: P otential

bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full i mmediately u p on t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for R esidential Asset Securities C orporation, Home Equity Mortgage Asset-Backed Pass-Through Cert ificates, Ser i e s 2007-KS2, its successors and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Steven D. Derrickson; Connie Derrickson; Whitney M. Hewitt; Lyon Financial Services, Inc. dba The Manifest Group; Wells Fargo B ank, N .A ; U . S . Bank, National Association; Cascade Credit Consulting, Inc.; and all P ersons or Parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, or interest in the Real Property commonly k nown a s 27 4 1 Northwest L y n ch Lane, R e d mond, OR 97756, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV1075FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, April

the real p roperty commonly known as 19011 Baker Road, B end, Oreg o n 97702. Conditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s hier'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 immediately 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

14, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 2741 N W L y n ch Lane, R e d mond, O regon 977 5 6 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h ecks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will

28, 2015 at 10:00

LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as Trustee for WAMU M o rtgage Pass Through Cert ificates Seri e s 2006-PR3, its successors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Darryl E . Spencer a k a Darryl Spencer, individually; Darryl E. Spencer as Trustee of t h e Sp e ncer F amily Trust o f January 3, 2 0 02; Janet E. S pencer aka Janet Spencer, individually; Janet E. Spencer as Trustee of t h e Sp e ncer F amily T r ust o f January 3, 2 0 02; and Occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV1145FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, April

LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Ro n al d L. Boughton Jr.; Maria J. Boughton aka Maria Jesus Flores; O regon Wate r Wonderland Property Owners Association, Unit II, Inc.; and Occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0315FC. NO-

T 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, April 21, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 56045 Black Duck R oad, Bend, O r egon 97707-2101. 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 t o review bid d er's f unds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.or-

egonsheri ff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE

Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. its s uccessors and/or assigns, Plaint iff/s, v . C h a d A . Good; Annie M. Good; and All Other Persons or Parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, or int erest in t h e R e a l Property commonly known as 1779 NE Sonya Court, Bend, OR 97701, D efend ant/s. Case N o . : 1 3CV1207FC. N O TICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, April 1 4 , 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 be accepted. Payh ighest bidder, f o r ment must be made cash o r ca s hier's in full immediately check, the real propupon the close of erty commonly known the sale. For more as 1779 NE Sonya information on this Court, Bend, Oregon sale go to: www.or97701. Conditions of egonsheriff s.com/sa Sale: Potential bidles.htm egonsheriff s.com/sa ders must arrive 15 les.htm minutes prior to the LEGAL NOTICE auction to allow the U.S. Bank, National Deschutes C o u nty Association, as Sheriff's Office to reTrustee, successor LEGAL NOTICE view bidder's funds. in interest to Bank of Wells Fargo Bank, Only U.S. currency America, National NA, as Trustee, on and/or cashier's Association as behalf of the holdmade payable Trustee as succesers o f S t ructured checks to Deschutes County sor by merger to Asset Mortgage InSheriff's Office will be vestments II, Inc., LaSalle Bank Naaccepted. P ayment tional Association, Bear Sterns Mortmust be made in full as Trustee for Cergage Funding, Trust immediately upon the tificateholders of 2 007-AR4, Mo r t close of the sale. For age Pass Through Bear Stearns Asset more information on Backed Securities I ertificates, Series this s al e g o to: 2007-AR4, LLC, Asset-Backed www.oregonsheriffs.c Certificates, Series Plaintiff/s, v. Sheryl om/sales.htm 2005-HE9, L. Simpson; LEGAL NOTICE Plaintiff/s, v. John B Fredrick L. S impMockus a/k/a John Wells Fargo Bank, son; The Ridge at N.A. its successors Bryan Mockus, indiEagle Crest Owners Association; Ocin interest and/or v idually, an d a s assigns, Plaintiff/s, C o-Trustee of t h e cupants of the propNancy G. and John v. Ruth E. Harpole erty, D e fendant/s. aka Ruth E l aine B. Revocable Living Case No.: Trust A g r eement 13CV0080. NOHarpole; Steven L. Harpole aka Steve dated May 13, 2010, T ICE O F SAL E Nancy Mockus a/k/a UNDER WRIT OF Harpole; Deschutes County; Columbia Nancy G. Mockus, EXECUTION individually, and as REAL PROPERTY. Collection Service C o-Trustee of t h e Notice is h e reby Inc.; Ray Klein, Inc.; Nancy G. and John U nited States o f given that the DesAmerica; and OccuB. Revocable Living c hutes Coun t y Trust A g r eement Sheriff's Office will, pants of the premises, Defendant/s. dated May 13, 2010; on Thursday, April the Nancy G. and Case No.: 9, 2015 a t 1 0 : 00 13CV0557. NOJohn B. Revocable A M, in t h e m a in Living Trust Agreelobby of the DesT ICE O F SA L E ment dated May 13, c hutes Cou n t y UNDER WRIT OF S heriff's Of fi c e , EXECUTION 2010; AAME S REAL PROPERTY. Funding Corpora63333 W. Highway Notice is h e reby tion, DBA AAMES 20, Bend, Oregon, given that the DesHome Loan; Mortsell, at public oral c hutes Cou n t y gage El e ctronic auction to the highSheriff's Office will, R egistration S y s est bidder, for cash tems Inc.; State of or cashier's check, on Tuesday, May 5, 2015 at 10:00 AM, Oregon; C i tibank, the real p roperty National A ssociacommonly known as in the main lobby of the Desc h utes tion d/b/a Citibank, 543 Goshawk Drive, Redmond, Oregon County Sheriff's OfN.A.; A da m G. fice, 6 3 33 3 W. Mockus; Occupants 97756. Conditions of the property, Deof Sale: P o tential Highway 20, Bend, O regon, sell, a t fendant/s. Case No.: bidders must arrive 12CV0940. NO15 minutes prior to public oral auction to the highest bidT ICE O F SAL E the auction to allow UNDER WRIT OF the Desc h utes d er, for cash o r cashier's check, the EXECUTION County Sheriff's OfREAL PROPERTY. f ice to revi e w real property comm only known a s Notice i s h e r eby bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency 51366 Evans Way, given that the Desc hutes Coun t y and/or ca s h ier's La Pine, O regon Sheriff's Office will, checks made pay97739. Conditions of Sale: P o tential on Thursday, April able to Deschutes County Sheriff's Ofbidders must arrive 9, 2015 a t 1 0 00 15 minutes prior to A M, in t h e m a in f ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment the auction to allow lobby of the Desthe Desc h utes c hutes Coun t y must be made in full S heriff's Of fi c e , i mmediately u p on County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w 63333 W. Highway t he close o f t h e sale. For more inbidder's funds. Only 20, Bend, Oregon, U.S. currency sell, at public oral f ormation on t h is auction to the highsale go to: www.orand/or ca s hier's checks made payest bidder, for cash egonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm able to Deschutes or cashier's check, A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 215 Sout h west Maricopa Dr i v e, B end, Oreg o n 97702. Conditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s hier'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 immediately u p on t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.or-

County Sherif


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