Serving Central Oregon since190375
WEDNESDAY February25,2015
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ALSO INOUTDOORS:AN EXCURSION THROUGHTHEOREGON BADLANDS, D1
bendbulletin.com
esc ues'new o in inewi c uin'emou uic BUSINESS • C6
TODAY'S READERBOARD
REPORT
BLM
Preference for printSurprise: Plenty of evidence suggests college students prefer reading print books over e-books.A3
missing outon recfees
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
• Central Oregon farmsparticipating in programthat givesinterns ataste of the business
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
Late heroics —Hailey
WASHINGTON — The
Goetz's game-winning shot lifts the Cougars past the Lava Bears in girls hoops.C1
Bureau of Land Management is missing out on
potential revenue by not charging fees at some public camping sites and below-market prices at oth-
Plus: Back onthe duddle — Sunday's upset win over Utah bolsters the Ducks' case for an NCAAmen's basketball tournament berth.C1
ers, according to a report
released Tuesday by the Department of the Interi-
or's inspector general.
"BLM does not maxi-
And a Wedexclusive-
mize its opportunities to charge fees in a way that will generate revenue and protect resources. At a time when Federal agencies face continually decreasing appropriations, taking advantage of this (fees) program demonstrates
With some controversial Oscars winners, there aresigns that moviegoers andthe Academy are moving further apart. bendbulletin.cem/extras Ase us'gtt te /t,
QCg'yj < .
'
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Melting ice threatens to displace tiny village By Chris Mooney
BLM understands the need
for additional funding," the report states. SeeBLM/A6
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS
A final 4 in searchfor new leader
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Farm intern Aliza Rosenstein is pictured above pouring morning grain into the pigs' pails and in the top photoweeding arugula beside fellow intern Austin Dumbar (left) at Rainshadow Organics between Sisters and Terrebonne last week. Rainshadow and three other Central Oregon farms and ranches are participating in the Rogue Farm Corps program, which matches host farms and
ranches around the state with interns looking for agricultural experience.
The Washington Post
KIVALINA, AlaskaThis tiny and isolated town
of 400 cannot be reached by road. It lies on a fragile barrier island along the Chukchi Sea, 83 miles above the Arctic circle.
And for generations, the Inupiaq Eskimos of the region have hunted gigantic bowhead whales from
By Beau Eastes
herself as an artist, a teacher,
The Bulletin
does a little bit of everything
a journalist and a paralegal before coming to farming. "I've always been an envi-
on her small sustainable
ronmentalist, and I love the
The Bulletin
farm 15 miles east of Bend.
concept of ecological systems and how they work together."
The four finalists for the job of Bend-La Pine Schools superintendent indude a
ALFALFA — Gigi Meyer
Her Windflower Farm in Alfalfa boasts crops of
camps atopthe sea ice, which stretches out from
fruits, vegetables and herbs as well as laying hens, goats raised for milk, two heritage breeding pigs named Nigel and Maggie and some of the
the town's icy shores.
prettiest flowers this side of
But in recent years, cli-
mate change has thinned the ice so much that it has become too dangerous to hunt the whales. Soon, the
U.S. government says, it might be too dangerous to live here at all, with less
sea ice to protect the barrier island from powerful waves that wash across the village. "Global warming has caused us so much problems," said Joseph Swan,
the Cascades. By day, Meyer is usually
By Abby Spegman
Meyer and three other
Central Oregon farms and
top administrator with the district and two Oregon
ranches hope to pass on
their enthusiasm and knowledge for sustainable agricul-
superintendents. • Meet the They candidates, are Shay Mikalson,
ture this summer through
the Rogue Farm Corps. Created in 2003 by a group
' gT
of Southern Oregon farmers
Gigi Meyer, of Windflower Farm inAlfalfa, feeds her goats
of her 20-acre operation. It's a labor of love she has been
Rogue FarmCorps is accepting applications for this summer's FarmsNext program. Interested applicants should go to www.roguefarmcorps.org. Theagricultural nonprofit is also looking for more sustainable farms and ranches to host interns in the coming years.
doing for the past 10 years. "I love to nurture and
watch howthings happen," says Meyer, 55, who grewup in Portland and supported
conducted by the USDA-
the farm corps teams host farms and ranches from around the state with interns
looking to get their first real agricultural experience. SeeFarmers/A5
Bend-La
Andy Tuiiis/The Bulletin
concernedabout theirindustry's future — the average planting, feeding or fixing, and when the sun sets, she age of Oregon farmers was tackles the marketing, ac59.6 years according to the counting and logistical needs 2012 Census of Agriculture
involved in some sort of
Pine's assistant superintendent of secondary
carrots earlier this month. Windflower is participating in
the Rogue FarmCorps' apprenticeship program.
education; Yvonne Curtis, superintendent of the For-
Farmerswanted
est Grove School District; Robert Hess, superinten-
dentofLebanon Community Schools; and Sloan Presidio, assistant superintendent for instructional
services for Fairfax County Public Schools in Virginia. SeeSearch/A5
Sr., a Kivalina elder, at a
town meeting last week. The ice "does not freeze like it used to. It used to be like 10 to 8 feet thick, way
out in the ocean." The question now fac-
A switched-at -birthtalethat'sstrangerthanfiction
ing the town, the state of Alaska and the nation is
By Mafa De LaBaume
whether to move the people
New York Times News Service
of Kivalina to a safer loca-
GRASSE, France — When
Sophie Serrano finally held
light, she was caught off guard by the baby's thick tufts of hair. "I hadn't noticed it before,
tion nearby, either inland or farther down the coast
her daughter, Manon, in her
and it surprised me," Ser-
dollars to do it. It's a ques-
arms after the newborn, suffering from jaundice, had been placed under artificial
rano said in an interview at her home here in southern France, not far from the Cote
— and who would pay upward of a hundred million
d'Azur.
Serrano, now 39, was baffled again a year later, when she noticed that her
baby's hair had grown frizzy and that her skin color was darker than hers or her
partner's.
But her love for the child
trumped any doubts. Even as her relationship unraveled, in part, she said,
over her partner's suspicions, she painstakingly looked after the baby until a paternity test more than 10 years later
showed that neither she nor
her partner were Manon's biological parents. Serrano later found out that a nurse had
accidentally switched babies and given them to the wrong mothers. SeeSwitched /A4
tion already facing Kivalina and a handful of other
native Alaskan villages, and in the coming decades it could apply to numerous other towns along U.S. coastlines. SeeVillage /A6
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostlycloudy High 48, Low 28 Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D 5 Outdoors B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1 6 S I E1-8 Dear Abby D5 Ob ituaries B5 N'/Movies
D1 - 6 C1 4 D5
AnIndependent Newspaper
voi. 113, No. 5e, 32 pages, 5 sections
Q
ti/i/e use recyc/ed newsprint
': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
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O b ama
rejected a bill Tuesday to approve construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline, wielding his veto power for the third
time in his presidency. Obama offered no indica-
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debate about environmental policy and climate change. Instead, Obama sought to re-
assert his authority to make the decision himself, rebuffing GOP lawmakers who will con-
trol both the House and Senate for the remainder of the president's term.
"The presidential power to
NcConnelloffers2-vote solution to Homeland Security fundingfight WASHINGTON —Sen.Mitch McConnell,R-Ky.andtheSenate majority leader, onTuesdayoffered a path to avert a partial shutdown of the Department of HomelandSecurity, saying hewould allow a vote on abill solely to fund the agency, followed by asecond vote on legislation that would halt President BarackObama's 2014 executive actions on immigration. The move offered Republicans anavenue to breakout of an embarrassing impasse asthey try to prove their ability to govern as the majority party in Congress. But McConnell's proposal hardly settles the matter and increases the likelihood that Congress will be forced to fashion ashort-term spending bill to keep the department open. With financing for the department set to run out Friday, lawmakers engaged in tense brinkmanship over the president's immigration policies, with SenateDemocrats threatening to block McConnell's latest maneuver unless HouseSpeaker John Boehner of Ohio also guarantees that the Housewould accept the proposal. The Houselast month passed abill to fund the department but also repealed Obama's recent executive actions on immigration, including a provision that gave legal protections for young unauthorized immigrants known asDreamers.
VelleZIISI8 pl'OteStS —A police officer shot and killed a teenage boy during an anti-government protest in the restive Venezuelan city of San Cristobal on Tuesday, officials said, as tensions rose over a struggling economy and the recent arrest of a prominent opposition politician. The interior minister, Carmen Melendez, said the officer had been arrested and that he admitted firing on the boy, Kluiberth Roa, with a shotgun loaded with plastic pellets. Melendez said the boy was hit in the back of the neck. The national prosecutor's office said Kluiberth was14 years old.
California train crash —Acommuter train bound for Los Angeles derailed before dawn Tuesday in a fiery collision with an abandoned commercial pickup truck after its driver took a wrong turn and got stuck on the tracks. There was a loud boom and the screech of brakes before three of the train's five cars toppled over, sending 30 people to hospitals. Four were in critical condition, including the engineer.
NO ChargeS fOr Zimmermall —GeorgeZimmerman, the
— New YorkTimesNews Service
veto legislation is one I take
seriously," Obama said in a brief notice delivered to the Senate. "But I also take seri-
rided the veto as a "national
ously my responsibility to the American people."
and need about 11 more in the
embarrassment." The move sent the politiObama vetoed the bill in pri- cally charged issue back to vate with no fanfare, in con- Congress, where Republicans trast to the televised ceremo- haven't shown they can musny Republican leaders staged ter the t w o-thirds majority this month when they signed in both chambers needed to the bill and sent it to the pres- override Obama's veto. North
House. Although th e
ident. House Speaker John
care, immigration and financial regulation that Obama has promised to similarly reject.
Dakota Sen. John Hoeven,
Boehner, R-Ohio, said Repub- the bill's chief GOP sponsor, licans were "not even close" said Republicans are about to giving up the fight and de- four votes short in the Senate
v e t o is
Obama's first since Republi-
cans took control on Capitol Hill, it was not likely to be the last. GOP lawmakers are lin-
ing up legislation rolling back Obama's actions on
h ealth
of measles in Berlin, the first known death in an outbreak of the disease that has seen more than 570 cases in the Germancapital since October. An autopsy on the child, who died Feb. 18and wasn't immunized against measles, showed he had anunspecified medical condition, but it wouldn't have led to his death without the measles infection, the Charite hospital said Tuesday. TheGerman outbreak coincides with smaller ones in the United States, where 154 measles cases have beenreported this year, three-quarters of them tied to an outbreak that started in Disneyland in December.
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AIDS IlfIIg —For the first time, a study shows that a drug used to treat HIV infection also can help prevent it when taken before and after risky sex by gay men. The results offer hope of a more appealing way to help prevent the disease beyond taking daily pills and using condoms, although those methods are still considered best. The study, done in France andCanada, is the first to test "on demand" use of Truvada, a pill combining two AIDS drugs, by people planning to have risky sex. The uninfected men who took it were 86 percent less likely to get HIV compared to men given dummy pills.
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personalities are accused within weeks of each other of misrepresenting their wartime reporting experiences in ways that made those experiences seem more dangerous than they were. That's what Brian Williams and Bill O'Reilly have in common aseach man is besieged with questions about his credibility. Most everything else about their episodes diverge, from the responses to the consequences. NBCNews suspended Williams for incorrectly saying he rode in a helicopter hit by an enemy grenade while reporting in Iraq in 2003. O'Reilly, Fox NewsChannel's prime-time star, is accused of claiming he had reported in a combat zone for CBSNews during the1982 Falklands War when hewas more than a thousand miles from the front.
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Michael Ainsworth/The Dallas Morning News via The AssociatedPress
Former Marine Cpl. Eddie RayRouth stands during his capital murder trial at the Erath County Donald R. Jones Justice Center in Stephenville Texas, on Tuesday. Routh, 27, of Lancaster, Texas, was convicted of the 2013 deaths of Navy SEALChris Kyle and his friend Chad Littlefield at a shooting range near Glen Rose, Texas.
The trial has drawn intense interest, in part because of the blockbuster film based on former Navy SEAL Kyle's memoir about his four tours in Iraq. Since prosecutors didn't seek the death penalty in the capital murder case, Routh, 27, receives an automatic life sentence without parole in the deaths.
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Islamicmilitants kidnapat least 70Christians By Zeina Karam and Ryan Lucas
The Associated Press
BEIRUT — The Islamic State
The militants struck near the town of Tal Tamr in Hassakeh
northeastern Syria. They abducted at least 70 Christians
State group at 90. The Obserprovince, an area predomi- vatory relies on a network of nated by Assyrian Christians. activists inside Syria.
the attack and their relatives. His
groupfocuses on religious mi-
militiamen. Most recently, mil-
09;Oe Os®02s04s
the extremist group released a
itants in Libya affiliated with video showing the beheading of 21 Egyptian Christians. The group's bloody campaignin Syria and Iraq,where it seeks to form a self-styled caliphate, has repeatedly targeted
WC-'~Mh
searching for any news," said an Assyrian Christian woman
from Tal Shamiram who lives
Bend Walmart
in Beirut. The woman said she has been trying to find out what
heldbythe militants.
tries. The United States and a
The Britain-based Syri-
coalition of regional partners are conducting a campaign of airstrikes against the group.
an Observatory for H uman
Rights, which also reported the abductions, put the number of
©
RedmOnd Walmayt 0
children, but she couldn't reach
control of a third of both coun-
0
2015 SMILE DRIVE
"Have they been slaugh-
religious minorities since it took
+
Join Kemple Clinic in celebrating National Children's Dental Health Monththrough February.Donate toothpaste, toothbrushesand floss at one of these locations and we'll distribute it to Central Oregon kids in need.
tered? Are they still alive? We're
anyone in the village. "I feel so helpless, I cannot do anything for them but pray," she said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of endangering relatives believed to be
+
0
National Children's Oral Health Foundation®
norities in the Middle East.
has become of her parents, her brother and his wife and their
716 SW11th St. Redmond 541.923.4732
TQDTHFAIRY
said between 70 and 100 Assyrians were taken captive. About children — while thousands of 3,000 people fled and have othersfl ed to saferareas. sought refuge in the cities of The captives' fate was un- Hassakeh and Qamishli, he said, dear 'Ittesday, a day after they adding that his activist group were seized, and relatives said based its information on convermobile phone service was cut sations with villagers who fled — many of them women and
not going through, adding to the fear and uncertainty about their loved ones. Heavy fighting was reported in the area. The Islamic State group has a history of killing captives, including foreign journalists, Syrian soldiers and Kurdish
1-888-568-9884
AMERICA'S
called A Demand For Action,
off and land lines also were
FORMERLY
LEAQELDHEARINGAIDCENTER
Christians held by the Islamic
militants struck before dawn, Most of the captives came from staging house-to-house raids Tal Shamiram and some from in a cluster of villages nestled Tal Hurmiz. along the Khabur River in Nuri Kino, the head of a group
The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:
The estimated jackpot is now $127 million.
— From wire reports
— The Associated Press
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former neighborhood watch volunteer who fatally shot Trayvon Martin in a 2012 confrontation with the teenager, will not face federal charges, the Justice Department said Tuesday. Thedecision, announced in the waning days of Attorney General Eric Holder's tenure, resolved a case that focused public attention on self-defense laws and became aflashpoint in the national conversation about race two years before the Ferguson, Missouri, police shooting. Zimmerman has maintained that he acted in self-defense when he shot the17-year-old Martin during a confrontation inside a gated community in Sanford, Florida, just outside Orlando. Martin, who was black, was unarmed when hewas killed. Zimmerman identifies himself as Hispanic. Once Zimmerman wasacquitted of second-degree murder by a state jury in July 2013, Martin's family turned to the federal investigation in final hopes that he would be held accountable for the shooting.
Berlin meaSleS death —An18-month-old boy hasdied
DEPARTMENT HEADS HumanResources Traci Donaca .....................
Ukraine viOlenCe —Russian-backed separatists moved some heavy weapons well back from the front line Tuesday in eastern Ukraine, but the Ukrainian government disputed the rebels' claim that a real pullback had begun. A peaceplan worked out in marathon talks Feb. 12 aims to create a wide buffer zone between the two sides' artillery, part of efforts to end the conflict, which has left nearly 5,800 dead since April. Heavy weapons are to be pulled back 15 to 45 miles from the front line, depending on their caliber. The disagreement over a weapons pullback came asthe fragile peace deal for Ukraine was discussed in Paris by the foreign ministers of Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France. The talks ended without apparent progress, although the participants pledged adherence to the peace deal.
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It'sWednesday,Feb.25,the 56th day of 2015. Thereare 309 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS TOWn hall —President Barack Obama hostsameeting in Miami on immigration.
Janet Yellen —TheFederal Reserve chair testifies about monetary policy and theeconomy before the HouseFinancial Services Committee
HISTORY Highlight:In1940, a National Hockey Leaguegamewas televised for the first time by New York City station W2XBS as the NewYork Rangers defeated the Montreal Canadiens, 6-2, at Madison Square Garden. In1836, inventor SamuelColt patented his revolver. In1901, United States Steel
Corp. was incorporated by J.P. Morgan. In1906, the Upton Sinclair novel "The Jungle" was first published in serial form by the Appeal to Reasonnewspaper. In1913, the16th Amendment to the U.S.Constitution, giving Congress the power to levy and collect income taxes, was declared in effect by Secretary of State Philander ChaseKnox. In1922, French serial killer Henri Landru, convicted of murdering10 womenandthe son of oneofthem,wasexecuted in Versailles. In1943,Allied troops reoccupied the Kasserine Passafter clashing with Germantroops during World War II. In1964, Eastern Airlines Flight304, a DC-8, crashed shortly after taking off from New Orleans International Airport, killing all 58 on board. MuhammadAli (then known as Cassius Clay) becameworld heavyweight boxingchampion as he defeated Sonny Liston in Miami Beach. In1986, President Ferdinand Marcos fled the Philippines after 20 years of rule in the wake of a tainted election; Corazon Aquino assumedthe presidency. In1991, during the Persian Gulf War, 28Americans were killed when anIraqi Scud missile hit a U.S.barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. In1994, American-born Jewish settler Baruch Goldstein opened fire with an automatic rifle inside the Tombof the Patriarchs in theWest Bank, killing 29 Muslims before he was beaten to death byworshippers. Ten years ago:Municipal employee andchurch leader Dennis Rader wasarrested for the BTK ("bind, torture, kill") serial slayings that had terrorized Wichita, Kansas. (Rader pleaded guilty and wassentencedto 10 life prison terms.) A suicide bombing killed four Israelis outside a TelAviv nightclub, shattering an informal truce. Five years ago:President Barack Obamaconvened a health care summit with Democrats and Republicans; after a day of debateanddisagreement, the presidentconcluded the talkfest with a bleak as-
sessment that anaccord might not be possible. One year ago:In a blunt warning to Afghan President Hamid Karzai, President Barack Obamathreatened to withdraw all U.S. troops from Afghanistan by theend of 2014 if a crucial security pact wasn't signed. (U.S. andAfghan officials signed the pact in September 2014.)
BIRTHDAYS CBS newsman BobSchieffer is 78. Rock musician Dennis Diken (The Smithereens) is 58. Actress Veronica Webb is 50. Actor Alexis Denisof is 49. Actress TeaLeoni is 49. Comedian Carrot Top is 48. Actor Sean Astin is 44. Latin singer Julio Iglesias Jr. is 42. Rhythm-and-blues singer Justin Jeffre is 42. Comedian-actress Chelsea Handler is 40. Actress Rashida Jones is 39. Actors James andOliver Phelps ("Harry Potter" movies) are 29. Rock musician Erik Haager (Carolina Liar) is 28. — From wire reports
PHENOMENON
SCIENCE
gO e e g g en g i.eei. Gerbils: Plague rea in in rin OVer e- OO S mlprit? Believe it or not, millennials haven't turned the page on printed books. Textbook makers, bookstore
BySarah Kaplan The Washington Post
owners and surveys of college students say members of the generation strongly prefer print to digital books By Michael S. Rosenwald The Washington Post
gtlr~
Frank Schembari loves
W ASHINGTON — A f -
ter nearly eight centuries of accusing the black rat for spreading the bubonic plague, scientists say they have compelling evidence
! ~ vi "..' I
books — printed books. He
to exonerate the rodent. In
loves how they smell. He loves scribbling in the margins, underlining interesting sentences, folding a page corner to mark his place.
the process, they've identified a new culprit: gerbils. It's always the cute ones
you have to watch out for, isn't it?
According to a s tudy published in the Proceedings of the National Acad-
Schembari is not a retiree
who sips afternoon tea at Politics & Prose or some other 'n
bookstore. He is 20, a junior
emy of Sciences, climate
at American University, and, paging through a thick histo-
data dating to the 14th century contradicts the com-
ry of Israelbetween classes,
monly held notion that Eu-
he is evidence of a peculiar irony of the Internet age: Digital natives prefer reading in
ropean plague outbreaks were caused by a reservoir
of disease-carrying fleas hosted by the continent's rat population.
print.
"I like the feeling of it," Schembari said, reading under natural light in a campus atrium, his iPhone next to him. "I like holding it. It's
"For this, you would need warm summers, with not too much p r ecipitation," Nils C h ristian S tenseth,
not going off. It's not making
an author of the study, told
sounds." Textbook m akers, b ook-
store owners and college student surveys all say millennials still strongly prefer print for pleasure and learning, a bias that surprises read-
ing experts given the same group's proclivity to consume most other content digitally. A University of Washington
pilot study of digital text-
the BBC. "... And we have Michael S. Williamson/TheWashington Post
Despite being surrounded by books at American University's Bender Library, this student is working on a laptop. Although many college students do a majority of their school work electronically, a considerable number still like to read printed books.
and there is no relationship
between the appearance of plague and the weather." Instead, the fearsome
"These are people who aren't supposedto remember what it's like to even smell books. It's quite astounding."
"Black Death," as the epidemic was known, seemed curiously tied to th e cli-
— Naomi Baron, an American University linguist who studies digital communication
books found that a quarter
of students still bought print versions of e-textbooks that they were given for free. "These are people who aren'tsupposed to remember what it's like to even smell
him electronically," Nordquist said in between classes while checking his email. "That would just be awful." Without having read Baron's book, he offered reasons
on the corner. Researchers
evitable, and comprehension think this plays a key role in suffers. comprehension. In years of surveys, BarBut that is more difficult on on asked students what they screens, primarily because liked least about reading in the time we devote to readprint.Her favorite response: ing online is usually spent "It takes me longer because I scanning an d s k i mming, read morecarefully." with few places (or little time) The preference for print for mental markers. Baron over digital can be found at cites research showing readindependent bookstores such ers spend a little more than as the Curious Iguana in one minute on Web pages, downtown Frederick, Maryand only 16 percent of peoland, where owner Marlene ple read word-by-word. That England said m i l lennials behavior can bleed into readregularly tell her they prefer ing patterns when trying to print because it's "easier to
follow stories." Pew studies show the highest print readershiprates are among those
ages 18 to 29, and the same age group is still using public libraries in large numbers. It can be seen in the struggle of college textbook mak-
tackle even lengthier texts on screen.
"I don't absorb as much,"
one student told Baron. Another said, " It's harder t o
gins. While Nordquist called this a crapshoot, Wallis Neff,
a sophomore studying journalism, said she was delighted to get a psychology textbook last year that had been "run through the mill a few times."
"It had a bunch of notes and things, explaining what this versus that w as," she
said. "It was very usefuL"
es, whose electronic textbooks
Nordquist, a junior studying political science, is even willing t o s chlep around Alexis d e Toc queville's 900-plus-page "Democracy in
easier textbook updates, low-
er costs, less back strain from heavy backpacks and more interactivity. But the potential
downsides aren't being considered, she argued. " What's h appening i n American education today?" she said. "That's what I'm concerned about. What's happen-
"Did I fail to understand that
often include access to online technology marches on'?" she portals that help walk them writes. "That cars supplantthrough study problems and ed horses and buggies? That monitor their learning. Text- printing replaced handwritten book makers are pushing manuscripts, computers rethese "digital learning envi- placed typewriters, and digital ronments" to make screen screens were replacing books? Hadn't I read the statistics on learning more attractive. They prefer them for classes how many eReaders and tabin which locating information lets were being sold'? Didn't I quickly is key — there is no see all those people reading control-F in a printed book to eBooks on their mobile dequickly find key words. vices? Was I simply unable to And they prefer them for adapt?" cost — particularly when the
But after l e arning w h at
price is free. The Book Industry Study Group recently
millennials truly think about
found that about a quarter of
roundly vindicated."
rope always experienced plague outbreaks after central Asia had a wet spring followed by a warm summer — terrible conditions
for black rats, but ideal for Asia's gerbil population. Those sneaky rodents and
their bacteria-ridden fleas then hitched a ride to Europe via th e Silk R oad,
arriving on the continent a few years later to wreak
epidemiological havoc. The findings absolve Europe's black rats of responsibility for the deaths of more than 100 million people in the "second plague pandemic," which began with the Black Death in the mid-14th century and recurred until the 1800s.
They also explain why the disease popped up intermittently century after century, rather than lingering on the continent as long as rats
were around to carry it.
print, Baron concluded, "I was
1,600 students polled either downloaded or knew some-
one who downloaded pirated textbooks. Students, it turns out, are not as noble in their
keep your place online."
Tumblr, and then three hours
millions of tablets and laptops for classroom use, promising
ing to the American mind?" When dOeS digital Win Out? When she started researchWhen do students say they ing her book on reading, some prefer digital? of Baron's colleagues respondFor science and math class- ed with pity.
readinghabits when they need beer money. They become Digital diStraCtiOnS knowledge thieves. Another significant probBut stealing texts probably ers to shift their businesses lem, especially for college is more a reflection on the spito more profitable e-versions. students, is distraction. The raling cost of higher education Don Kilburn, North A m erlives of millennials are in— and the price of textbooks, ican president for Pearson, creasingly lived on screens. up 82 percent from 2002 to the largest publisher in the In her surveys, Baron writes 2012 — than some secret deworld and the dominant play- that she f o und " j aw-drop- sire of students to read digier in education, said the move ping" results to the question tally. If price weren't a factor, to digital "doesn't look like a of whether s tudents w ere Baron's research shows that revolution right now. It looks more likely to multitask in students would overwhelml ike an e v olution, and i t ' s hard copy (1 percent) com- ingly prefer print. Other studlumpy at best." pared with reading on screen ies show similar results. (90 percent). A'physical map' This month, while speaking EduCatiOnalCOnSequenCeS And it can be seen most to sophomores about digital The problem, Baron writes, prominently on college cam- behavior, Baron brought up is that there has been "pedapuses, where students still the problem of paying atten- gogical reboot" where faculty lug backpacks stuffed with tion while studying on screen. and textbook makers are in"You just get so distracted," creasingly pushing their stubooks, even as they increasingly take notes (or check one student said. "It's like if I dents to digital to help defray Facebook) on laptops during finish a paragraph, I'll go on costs "with little thought for class. At American, Cooper
mate in Asia. Analysis of 15 tree-ring records, which document yearly weather conditions, shows that Eu-
books," said Naomi Baron, an American University linguist for his print preference that who studies digital communi- squared with her findings. cation. "It's quite astounding." The most important one to This month, Baron pub- him is "building a physical lished "Words Onscreen: The map in my mind of where Fate of Reading in a Digital things are." Researchers say World," a book (hardcover readers remember the locaand electronic) that examines tion of information simply by university students' prefer- page and text layout — that, ences for print and explains say, the key piece of dialogue the science of why dead-tree was on that page early in versionsare often superior to the book with that one long digital. Readers tend to skim paragraph and a s mudge on screens, distraction is in-
looked at the broad spectrum of climatic indices,
educational consequences." "We need to t h ink m o re
later you're still not done with reading." carefully a bout s t udents' There are quirky, possibly mounting rejection of longlazy reasons many college form reading," Baron writes. s tudents prefer p r i nt , t o o : And that thinking shouldn't America." They like renting textbooks be limited to millennials, Bar"I can't imagine reading that are already highlighted on said. Around the country, Tocqueville or understanding and have notes in the mar- school systems are buying
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
UPDATE:A CHANGING ECONOMY
Switched
Sophie Serrano talks with her daughter, Manon, left, together on the balcony of their home in Grasse, France, last week. A court has awarded the Serranos
Continued from A1 The story made headlines in France for the first time
this month, when a southern court ordered the clinic
in Cannes where the babies were switched, as well as their insurer, to pay a total of
$2.13 million to the families. The money, Serrano said, would repair "an invaluable damage" and put an end to a 12-year ordeal. Tales of swapped newborns tend to crop up in popular culture, most recently in ElianaAponte/The New YotkTimee
The gap between haves and have-nots is evident in the Little
''
the ABC Family television series "Switched at Birth,"
in which two teenage girls learn that they were mis-
"All of a sudden, you
of touristy private restaurants in Havana called the paladares. The U.S. reconciliation with the country is expected to increase the
takenly swapped in a hospital and their families try to live together for the girls' well-being.
learn that you don't
But the story of M anon and her accidental mother
know where the child you have brought
Inequality becomes more visible inCuba
into the world is. takes turns more complicat- i wondered how i ed than most fiction could could find my child."
she said, grew stronger after
hair grow," Serrano said. "I
By Randal C. Archibold
argues that the shift to more
she learned that the girl was
trusted medical people. I was
New Yorh Times News Service
private enterprise, a pillar of
not her biological daugh- young, I wouldn't question ter. She also said that, after their competence." meeting the girl she had givThe other mother, also 18
H AVANA — T he r i v e r its strategy to bolster the flacwhere Jonas Echevarria fish- cid economy, will allow it to
es cuts through neighborhoods brimming with new fine restaurants, spas and boutiques, springing up in Cuba's accelerating push toward private enterprise.
en birth to, she felt no partic-
at the time, asked another
ular connection with her.
nurse why her baby lacked
France.
on a busy road in Havana proclaims, "The changes in Cuba are for more socialism." see as the deteriorating wel-
of old wealth and n ew. A bounty of private restaurants
fare state and the advantage that Cubans with access to
known as paladares serve pork tenderloin, filet mignon
cash from outside the coun-
try have in the new economy. "As Cuba is becoming more capitalist in the last 20 years,
it has also become more unequal," said Ted Henken, a cash to spend. professor at Baruch College These were things Eche- who studies the Cuban econvarria, with only a few eggs, omy. "These shantytowns are some plantains and a handful all over Latin America, and of rolls in his pantry, would Cuba's attempt with revolunot be having for dinner. tion to solve that inequality In his neighborhood, a succeeded to a certain degree shantytown called El Fangui- for a time. But as capitalism to (roughly, "Little Swamp") increases, you h av e s o me on the fringe of the Rio Al- people more well-positioned mendares and the margins to take advantage and others of society, few people have who are not." relatives sending m oney At Starbien restaurant, one from abroad, food r a tions of the most popular in Havaof Cuban entrepreneurs with
na, the owner, Jose Raul Co-
homes made of corrugated lome, said it was not unusual tin, wood scraps and crumfor a majority of the clientele bling concrete fail to keep out to be Cubans who live on the floodwaters. island, rather than tourists or Nobody goes to paladares, expatriates. "Some are artists who are much less has the money to start one. doing well or entrepreneurs "Never," said Echevarria, who have had luck," Colome whose livelihood depends on said. "A lot are tourists, natuthe catch of the day. "I guess rally, but we are getting more I could not even afford the Cubans who might be called water." middle class." In poorer neighborhoods A wideninggap like Little Swamp, many deAs Cuba opens the door scribe feeling like foreigners wider to pr ivate enterprise, in their own city, watching the gap between the haves the emerging economy but a nd have-nots — a n d b e -
lacking the means to partici-
tween whites and blacksthat the revolution sought to diminish is growing more
pate in it. They note the predomi-
evident.
the new ventures but broach the subject carefully, noting
That divide is expected to increase now that the United
nance of w h ite Cubans in the gains that the revolution
States is raising the amount brought to Afro-Cubans in of money that Americans can education and health but also send to the island to $8,000 a
the hard economic times that
year, up from $2,000, as part darker-skinned Cubans conof President Barack Obama's tinue to endure. "I look in those new places historic thaw with Cuba. Remittances, estimated at and don't see anybody like $1 billion to nearly $3 billion a me," said Marylyn Ramirez, year, are already a big source who works at a tourist hotel of the capital behind the new in the Vedado neighborhood small businesses. The cash i nfusion has b een on e o f
the top drivers of the Cuban economy in recent years, rivaling tourism revenues and mineral, pharmaceutical and sugar exports. Raising the remittance cap, along with allowing more Americans to visit Cuba and
other steps toward normal diplomatic relations, will help "support the Cuban people," the Obama a d ministration
contends. But some will enjoy that
support more than others. Cuban economists say that whites are 2.5 times more
likely than blacks to receive remittances, leaving many in crumbling neighborhoods like Little Swamp nearly invisible in the rise of commerce, especially the restau-
Photos by Rebecca Marshall/The New York Times
the neediest. As a billboard
Tattered mansions and lux-
barely last the month, and
maternal attachment. Serrano's love for Manon,
— Sophie Serrano
focus its social programs on
ury apartment blocks speak
Cuban-Americans v i siting relatives and a growing pool
anticipate, challenging cherished assumptions about
Family photos of Sophie Serrano and her daughter, Manon, who was switched at birth with another child, at their home in Grasse,
But many poorer Cubans are frustrated by what they
and orange duck to tourists,
and another
e
family $2.13 million in a switched-atbirth case that has made headlines.
Swamp neighborhood, a shantytown close by anew development pace of private development, as well as that gap.
i
and passes new restaurants
on the way to work. Asked if she receives finan-
"It is not the blood that
hair. She was told that pho-
makes a family," Serrano totherapy could also shorten said. "What makes a fami- hair. "My client didn't ask herly is what we build together, what we tell each other. And self questions," Verstraete I have created a wonderful said. "A baby swap was unbond with my nonbiological thinkable. She didn't react daughter." because medical authority The court decision end- told her that she shouldn't ed Serrano's long struggle worry. to obtain damages for the Serrano, who lived with nurse's negligence. It also her partner in a tiny village helped her, she said, silence near Grasse, raised her child those neighbors and others while facing growing suswho accused her of lacking picion from neighbors that maternal instinct and criti- Manon, so physically discized her inability to identify similar to her parents, might with her own child.
"After four days, how can you not recognize your baby?" Sophie Chas, the
have been the "postman's
daughter." The relationship eventually collapsed, in part, Serrano said, because her partner was also suspicious and
and Manon sat at the dining table of their modern apart-
"When I first met them, I noticed how much I looked like them," said Manon, a wide-
ment in Grasse for a lunch
break. eyed young woman who studSerrano said she was reies management at a nearby covering from years of detechnical school. "But I was pression. She is unemployed sitting in f r ont of c omplete and has two other children strangers, and I didn't know from a n other r e l ationship how to position myself." since her separation. Her frail Her biological parents are physique and reserved manmodest workers who raised ners contrasted with Manon's their own daughter — Ser- outspokenness and athletic rano's birth child "rather build. strictly," said Verstraete, their
Neither of the two women
lawyer.
said how they would spend the money from the trial, but
"The mother would wake up
second, a day, two days. But When they separated, her 10 years? The mothers may partner demanded a paterhave been involved in creat- nity test, saying he did not ing the damage." want to pay child support for Serrano answers such a girl he did not consider his disbelief by pointing out that own. "I believed that a paternity she was 18 at the time and that Manon, now 20, was test would be a relief for both
every morning thinking that Manon said she dreamed of she had never been able to rec- settling in Britain and pursuognize her daughter," he add- ing a career in management. ed. "It is not a physical wound. "The story of my birth has It is a moral suffering that will made me stronger," Manon never go out." said as she ate French fries out The families saw each other of an orange fast food containseveral times, during which er. She foundbalance, she said, Manon explored her Creole through therapy, her mother's origins. But the parents and love and her own "deeply indaughters had trouble build- grained" pragmatism. "I tend to never leave anying any rapport, and they eventually stopped seeing thing to chance," she said with
her first child. "I could never
each other. In the end, after
lawyer for the clinic, told the newspaper Le Figaro. "We can believe in it when it's a
refused tocare for Manon.
of us," Serrano said.
have imagined such a sceOn the contrary, the test nario," she said. revealed that Manon, 10 at the time, was not his child,
'Theeffectofa tsunami' When Serrano gave birth, thebaby developed neonatal jaundice and was almost immediately placed in an incubator. Because of a shortage of cradles,a nurse put the
a smile. "Now I even try to anticipate the unthinkable."
some discussion, both families preferred to keep the child they had raised, rather than
but that she was not Serra- taking their biological one. no's either. "I realized that w e w e re
WILSONSof Redmond
"It had the effect of a tsunami," Serrano said. "I felt
very different, and we didn't
naked baby in the same cra-
approach life inthe same way," tremendous anxiety, the Serrano said. "My biological worst anxiety that one can daughter looked like me, but ever feeL" I suddenly realized that I had "All of a sudden," she adds, given birth to a person I didn't
dle as another naked baby.
"you learn that you don't
know, and I was no longer the mother of that child."
know where the child you lawyer for the other family, have brought into the world which refused to speak pub- is. I wondered how I could licly about the case, said that find my child. And I sudonly one of the two babies denly recalled the baby hair was wearing an identifica- episode." tion tag, which "may have Reunited fallen off." When Manon was handIn order to find to whom ed overto Serrano afterthe her biological daughter had treatment, mother and child been given, Serrano filed had spent very little time to- a civil complaint against gether. Serrano noticed that the clinic in 2010. Police inD aniel V e rstraete, t h e
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'Virtual refugees' After the so-called special period of the 1990s, when the
collapse of the Soviet Union plunged Cuba into an economic crisis, thousands of desperate people moved from the countryside to H avana
without permission, hoping to find work. Many still live as virtual
refugees in their own country, in neighborhoods like Lit-
rants and bed-and-breakfasts tle Swamp, unable to register that tourists tend to favor. for government services such " Remittances h av e p r o - as ration books because it is duced new forms of inequal- almost impossible to change ity, particularly racial in- a ddresses without p r i o r equality," said Alejandro de authorization. "Erosion of poverty has la Fuente, director of the Afro-Latin American Research always been a concern, but Institute at Harvard Universi-
ty. "Now the remittances are
they have not managed to e liminate t h ese k i n d s o f
being used to fund or estab-
neighborhoods in the best
lish private companies, that years of the Cuban welfare is, not just to fund consump- state," de la Fuente said, "and tion, as in the past." it is much less likely they can The Cuban government do it now."
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
IN FOCUS:OPEN RECALLS
Used carsoften feature unfixed defects By Tom Krisher and Dee-Ann Durbin DETROIT — It's a case of
buyer beware, with potentiallydangerous consequences.
Carfax, a companythat sells vehicle history reports to dealers and car buyers, searched recalls and state registration databasesand found that more than 46 million cars on U.S.roads have recalled parts that have yet to be repaired. Here is a state-by-state breakdown of cars with unfixed recalls in 2014:
More than 46 million cars
and trucks on the road in the U.S. — about one-fifth the to-
tal — were recalled because of safety defects but never repaired, according to a study by Carfax, a company that sells vehicle history reports. Some of those defects have
the potential to cause a crash, injury, even death. Last year, around 5 million
ofthose carswere soldto new owners. There is no legal requirement for dealers or individ-
Federal law requires car They are not even obligated companies to notify owners
didn't have access to a nation-
to tell buyers if a car is subject
of a recall w i t hin 6 0 d ays
to a recalL "It's a very major public safety problem," says Chris Basso, a used-car specialist for Carfax, which analyzed
of finding a safety defect,
calls, says Steve Jordan, CEO of the 16,000-member Nation-
s tate registration d at a t o determine that one-fifth of
hands.
the 238 million cars on the
Burnie, Maryland, traded a
which Honda did in 2011. But there's no legal requirement that companies contact the
al databaseto check for real Independent Automobile Dealers Association.
That changed in August new owner if a car changes when the government set John Castro, 36, of Glen
up a website for dealers and
drivers to check recalls by keying in the 17-digit vehicle
pickup truck for a 2011 Toyo- identification number. Now, paired problem that was the ta Prius in March of last year Jordan says the association subject of a recall. "When at Koons Ford in Baltimore. may support a d i sclosure those recalled cars go unShortly after he took the law, as long as the database fixed,they compound over car home, he read a deal- allows dealers to check multithe years, and it increases the er-provided Carfax report ple numbers at a time to save chance of those parts failing." and found that his car had time and labor. F ederal regulators a r e been recalled in February The association still oppushing for legislation that 2014 to fix a hybrid compo- poses a repair requirement nation's roads have an unre-
re-
nent that could malfunction
because independent deal-
called used cars. Independent dealers oppose such a measure but say they might go along with a requirement to disclose recalls to buyers be-
and cause stalling. Koons had not done the repair, and
ers would be at the mercy of competitors franchised by
no sales person mentioned
automakers. Those dealers
the recall, Castro says. "You think when you buy
are the only ones authorized to do recall repairs.
cause a new government da-
something, it's been checked
tabase makes it easier to tell and cleared," he says. if a car on their lot has been Dennis Koulatsos, Koons recalled. Ford general manager, says The number of unfixed Castro's car should have been cars is certain to rise because fixed because there was a automakers recalled nearly safety issue.
64 million vehicles nationwide last year, double the record setin 2004. Government
data show that 25 percent of car owners never get recall
repairs done.
Dangerousconsequences No one is sure how many crashes or injuries happen because of unheeded recalls. But buying an unrepaired car cost Carlos Solis his life. The
35-year-old father of two died Jan. 18 when shrapnel from the driver's air bag in his 2002 Honda Accord tore into
his neck after a minor accident near Houston.
Solis' Accord had been recalled in 2011 to fix a faulty air bag inflator made by Takata Corp., which can explode with too much force. But neither the two previous
owners nor the independent dealer in Houston who sold Solis the car last April had
the repair done. Solis had no other injuries, says Rob Ammons, an attor-
ney representing his family in a lawsuit against Takata, Honda and the dealer. "You
fix the defective air bag and he doesn't die," Ammons says.
Each candidate will attend a public forum in LaPine at Rosland Elementary School, 52350 YaegerWay, and in Bendat the district's central offices, 520 NWWall St. Robert Hess March 2 from 4:30 to 6 p.m.
in La Pine March 3 from 4to6p.m.in Mikalson Bend
Hess
YvonneCurtis March 3from 4:30to 6 p.m. in La Pine March 4from 4to6p.m.in Bend
Curtis
Presidio
The National Automobile
Dealers Association, which represents new-car dealers that sell used cars, hasn't
taken a position on the repair requirements. It is waiting for the government to estimate
All dealers, he says, have the cost, the effect on sales incentives to fix recalled cars.
and whether th e
m e asure
They couldlose customers to would save lives. dealers who do, or they could Individual sellers won't be sued if something goes faceany repairor disclosure wrong. requirements. I n d ividuals But he also thinks dealers sold just less than one-third should be able to sell cars
of the 42 million used cars in
with open recalls if the prob- the U.S. last year, according lems don't affect safety or to the Strategic Vision redrivability. " Used cars ar e search firm. hard to get, and they depreLast year, a Honda execuciate by the day when they sit tive floated the idea of requiron the lot," he says. ing recall repairs before license plates can be renewed. Stalled legislation That's similar to the practice A number of attempts to in Germany, where the govpass lawsrequiring dealers ernmentcan revoke registrato fix r ecalled cars or di s- tions of cars with outstanding close problems have stalled recalls. under opposition from carU.S. federal law does remakers, auto dealers and the quire dealers to make recall U.S. Chamber of Commerce. repairs on new cars before M ark R o sekind, t h e n e w selling them. head of the National HighC arMax, th e nati o n 's way Traffic Safety Adminis- largestused-car dealership tration, and T r ansportation chain, says it informs buyers Secretary Anthony Foxx are of open recalls, but it does not making another push. get the vehicles repaired. Au"We cannot allow vehicles toNation, the largest dealerwith potentially dangerous ship group in the U.S., says it defects to leave used-car lots repairs recalled used cars bewithout the necessary re- fore selling them when parts are available. If there are no pairs," Rosekind says. Used-car dealers fought parts available, it discloses past legislation because they that to buyers and tells them
California
4,9 2 3,308
Texas 4,102,575 Florida 2,7 7 8,369 New York 2 , 116,136 Pennsylvania 1,997,334 lllinois 1,91 7,440 Ohio Michigan
1,898,505 1,5 7 9,969
Georgia 1,4 82,696 North Carolina 1,327,578 New Jersey 1,284,260 Virginia 1,2 2 5,118 Indiana 999,964 Arizona 983, 3 63 Massachusetts 954,570 Washington 9 49,641 Tennessee 9 4 4,972 Missouri 923 , 443 Wisconsin 8 9 4 ,650 Maryland 878 ,308 Minnesota 8 5 5 ,222 Colorado 817 ,869 Alabama 806 , 456 South Carolina 755,874 Oklahoma 70 7 ,367 Kentucky 692 ,582 Louisiana 682 ,206 lowa 513,600 Oregon 506,337 Connecticut 4 9 9,074 Mississippi 4 9 6,480 Arkansas 453 ,421 Kansas 449,270 Utah
427,741
New Mexico 343,956 Nevada 337, 990 Nebraska 297 ,006 West Virginia 295,709 Idaho
232,936
New Hampshire 222,560 Maine 204,143 Hawaii 196,880 Montana 177 ,425 Delaware 143 ,964 South Dakota 143,704
Rhode Island 137,479 Alaska 119,581 North Dakota 117,246 Wyoming 114 ,133 Vermont 100 , 904 Washington, D.C. 52,398 Source: Study of 2014 state registration data try Carfax
Search
"I think, for me, what
Continued fromA1 Each w i l l i nt e r view with the district's search c ommittee n ex t we e k .
They will also meet with principals, union leaders, high school students and
with a vision for
how high they could take our kids in our district."
administrators and attend
— Nori Juba, Bend-La Pine Schools board co-chairman
public forums in Bend and La Pine.
Mikalson, who was previously superintendent of
the Redmond School Dis-
the Omaha, Nebraska, execu-
trict, arrived at Bend-La Pine in 2012 as the district's
tive recruitment firm McPherson 8z Jacobson on the search. "I think, for me, what I was
executive director of curriculum and instructional technology. Last year, he became assistant superintendent of s econdary education after Vicki Van
looking for was somebody to come with a vision for how
high they could take our kids in our district," said Nori Juba, co-chairman of
Continued fromA1 In a d dition t o Me y e r 's Windflower Farm, Rainshadow Organics between Sis-
ters and Terrebonne, Juniper Jungle near the Bend Airport and Pine Mountain Ranch
15 miles east of Bend on U.S. Highway 20 all expect to host i nterns t hi s
s u m mer. T h e
nonprofit corps now has 16 host farms spread over four regions: the Rogue Valley chapter, the South Willamette
Valley chapter, the Portland c hapter and, s t arting t h i s
year, the Central Oregon chapter. "We're r eally excited t o
help educate up-and-coming farmers," says Sarahlee Lawrence, 32, who with her
husband, Ashanti Samuels, owns and operates Rainshad-
ow Organics, a roughly 200acre farm and ranch approximately 15 miles west of Smith Rock State Park. "Investing
one summer is such a good idea instead of a whole bunch
of money before you even know if you like farming." Although the experience varies from farm to farm, interns, who will begin arriving in Central Oregon in March and April, can expect to work 30 to 40 hours a week in the field. By the end of their
"We're really excited to help educate up-andcoming farmers. Investing one summer is sucha good idea instead ofa wh olebunch of moneybeforeyou even know ifyou like farming."
dent Forest Grove district
The committee had planned
since 2009. (Bend-La Pine to select two or three finalists. "Four is bigger than ideal, has about 17,000 students.) She also sits on the Ore-
but we just had — as we've
gon Education Investment
said from the get-go — such a strong candidate pool," Juba She was p r eviously said. Forty-five applications a n administrator for t h e were submitted, which he Board.
Eugene School D i strict,
said was also more than he
a principal in the Red- expected. mond and Jefferson CounThe board plans to anty school districts and a
nounce its pick for the super-
teacher at Bear Creek Ele- intendent job at its March 10 mentary School in Bend. meeting. Hess has been superinSuperintendent Ron Wilkintendent of 4 , 000-student son said in October he would
Lebanon
C o m m unityretire at the end of the current
Schools since 2009. Before
school year after 17 years with
that he was an adminis- the district. The new superintrator in Springfield Public tendent will begin July 1. Schools and a principal — Reporter: 541-617-7837, in Lebanon. He is also the aspegman@bendbulletirt.com author of four books on school improvement.
Presidio was previously the director of educational programs for the Tigard-Tualatin S c hool 541-548-2066 District and principal of Adjustable Hillsboro High School. He Beds also worked as a principal, teacher, lawyer and legislative counsel in Oregon The search committeeincluding members of the
WILSONSof Redmond
RIATTRESS
G allery - B e n d
representat ives ofteachers, principals and staff — in-
A utoNation C E O Mi ke Jackson says he favors laws
terviewed seven semifinal-
requiring disclosure. "The recall situation is a
selected the finalists. The committee is working with
541-3$0-50$4
ists over the past week and
' NQRTHWEsT
mess. It's a disgrace, and it's
CROSSING
a black eye for the industry," he says.
won't have to start off with
a huge debt of knowledge," Meyer says. "There's so much to learn. I mean, every single plant has a different need." "If we can give our young farmers our experiences and — Sarahlee Lawrence, who with her husband, Ashanti Ssmuels, help them avoid our mistakes, owns andoperates Rainshadow Organics they'll be successful," she adds. "They're going to know what to do. But you've got to eight- or nine-month intern- thing going. I was really sur- hit the ground running or ship, they will have logged as prised how skilled the people you're not going to make it." many as 1,500 hours with a who do this are and how comNow in its 13th year, the mentor farmer. The program plicated a farm can be." program has continued to also includes 75 hours of Rogue Farm Corps' Farms- grow in part because of its classroom learning and tours Next program that Central benefits not just to students, and workshops of other area Oregon farms are participat- but also to host farms and Oring in — the corps also runs egon agriculture in general, farms and ranches. "I had no idea how much a more intensive two-year says O'Neill. "That newfound enthusiwork goes into feeding peo- apprenticeship program tiple every day," says Shelby tled FarmsNow — charges a asm from interns, that often W eston, wh o i n t e rned a t $1,500 tuition fee, which in- brings a fresh perspective to the Berggren Demonstra- cludes lodging on each farm farmers," O'Neill says. "It's a tion Farm outside of Spring- or ranch. Depending on the powerful experience." field last summer. Weston, farm, some food is included Working with the next gen24, stayed on with the farm in the internship, and month- eration of food providers can through the winter and now lysti pends between $400 and be powerful and rejuvenating, hopes to attend college to be- $600 are paid to students. adds Meyer. "There's always a point in come a veterinary technician. S ome farms w i l l h a v e a s "You can't take a day off," many as four interns, where- the fall when I'm tired and adds Weston, who grew up in as others may host one. I think, 'Really'? I'm doing Lake Oswego and had almost Stuart O'Neill, the group's this next year?'" says Meyno agricultural experience executive director, says in- er, whose farmhands are before joining the farm corps terns come from all kinds of all younger than she. "But program. "Animals have to b ackgrounds, but most ar e those guys keep me going.... be fed, there's deadlines to alreadyoutofcollegebecause They're educated about food, keep up on. And you have to of the length of the program. passionate and hardworking. "If I can package those 10 It feeds me." know a little bit of everything. You've gotto be a mechanic, years of learning into nine — Reporter: 541-617-7829, a plumber just to keep every- months, these young farmers beastes®bendbultetin.com
t h e s c hool
Buren retired. He has also board. "It was less about what been a teacher, an adjunct have you done in the past professor and aprincipal. (than) how do you plan to Curtis has been super- make us a world class school intendent of the 6,000-stu- district."
Bend-La Pine board and
of any danger.
I was looking for was somebody to come
Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's
Find It All Farmers
Shay Mikalsen March 4from 4:30 to 6 p.m. in La Pine March 5from 4to 6 p.m. in Bend Slean Presidie March 5 from 4:30 to 6 p.m. in La Pine March 6from 4to 6 p.m. in Bend
Patrick Semansky I The Associated Press
Eri and John Castro pose in front of their 2011 Toyota Prius in Glen Burnie, Maryland, this month. The Castros bought the pre-owned car last year, only to find out after they got it home that it was under recall because it could stall without warning.
ual sellers to get the repairs done before a used car is sold.
r equires dealers to f i x
Neet thecandidates
Openrecalls, dystate
The Associated Press
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Online
teestside.
bendbulletin.com
www.northwestcrossing.com
F riday, M a r c h 6 , 2 0 1 5 7sOOp.m., Bend High • R
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L I BRA R Y r o U No ATIO H
A6
TH E BULLETINs WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
The town of Kivalina, Alaska, is
seen from the air. In the rear of the photo is broken
sea ice in an area where solid ice used to form in the winter. Chris Mooney The Washington Post
Village
tion, it could be used to support
long-term resilience planning, planning that could consider
the school. Recently the town's
only general store burned, Continued from A1 leaving a large mess of tangled Here, climate change is less relocation as determined by metal and wood. A complete a futurethreat and more a dai- the community as well as other wolfskin hangs outside one ly force, felt in drastic changes actions and approaches," said home; toward the frozen beach, to weather, loss of traditional Jessica Kershaw, Interior Press a group of sled dogs tied to means of sustenance such as Secretary. tethers. Elsewhere, a jettisoned whale hunting, and the literal Other funding then might car is half buried in snow. The vanishing of land. have to come from other sourc- villagers live in cramped condi"We have a whole bunch of es, aproblem that is sureto rear tions without running water in infrastructure that w e n eed its head more frequently, first most buildings and have to haul to move, that the government in the Arctic — where dimate their own trash and sewage to should be moving themselves," change is stark and rapiddump sites. said Colleen Swan, who sits but later as it increasingly afFor Kivalina, the risk is all on the City Council and also fects coastal cities around the about the thinning Arctic sea works in disaster preparedness country and world. At least one ice — a phenomenon plainfor the community. "I would climate relocation is now com- ly visible from the sky. Along like to live without having to plete abroad: The small village much of the coast, open water worry about having to evacu- of Vunidogoloa, in Fiji, was re- was visible just offshore, inate, or havingto run." located inland last year by the stead of being fully covered Fiji government. by seasonalsea ice,asism ore Who will foot the bill? "There's no g overnment typical of mid-February in the The role the U.S. government agency that has the responsibil- area. will playis still an open question. ity to relocate a community, nor The scenery reflected what Interior Secretary Sally Jewell the fundingto do it," says Robin multiple scientific assessments came to Kivalina last week to Bronen, a director of the Alas- havefound about thechanging highlight the problems facing ka Immigration Justice Proj- Arctic. It is warming at "twice the town, and Besident Barack ect, a human rights group, and the rate of anywhere else on Obama hasproposed $50. 4 m il- a senior research scientist at Earth," according to a 2014 Nalion in federal spending to help the University of Alaska, Fair- tional Oceanic and AtmospherNative American communities banks. "It means that for com- ic Administration report. One grapplewithdimate change. Yet munities like Kivalina, they reason is a dimate "feedback" thatis less than half of what's es- don't know what steps they in which rising temperatures timated to be needed to relocate need to take to get which gov- melt the ice. Then, the loss of Kivalina alone. ernment agencies involved." highly reflective sea ice exposCongtess, controlled by Rees darker ocean water beneath. publicans skeptical of federal Gaining attention The darker sea absorbs more spending and interventions to If it is not getting enough re- solar radiation — r e taining stem climate change, might sources, Kivalina is at least get- more heat and leading to still not approve that. While it is not
ting more attention. Last week,
dear how congressional Re- Jewell made the first visit to the publicans will respond to this town by an interior secretary in budget request, in the past they
its 110 year history.
"Your story will help the have objected to climate-related initiatives, for instance the world understand what's hapadministration's recent pledge pening right here," said Jewell to spend up to $3 billion to help at a town meeting in the basother nations adapt to climate ketball court of Kivalina's only change. school, a day before announc"The p r e sident's cli- ing $8 million in funding to mate-change agenda has only help native communities adjust. siphoned precious taxpayer "It will help us make the case dollars away from the real for climate change in the U.S. problems facing the American Congress. It will help us bring people," said Sen. James In- the kind of resources that we hofe, R-Okla., late last year. have to bring to bear for people One of Alaska's Republican like you, and for people in othsenators, Lisa Murkowski, says
er parts of the world that live in
she doesn't trust the adminis- coastal communities that are at tration's moves on Kivalina. high risk." " Senator M u rkowski a c Residents of Kivalina sugknowledges the impacts of cli- gest the U.S. government might m ate change on Alaska's coast- have a special responsibility to al communities and believes relocate them — after all, they that the federal government say, it helped put them there. A should step up its relief role, 1906 Interior Department rebut she does not want Alaska's port records that $50,000 was rural communities used mere- appropriated for the "education ly as political talking points," of natives in Alaska," leading to said her spokesman, Matthew the construction of 26 schools, Felling. But Murkowski does including one at Kivalina. support using federal dollars As one historian notes, the to help Alaska native commu- establishment of government nities protect their communi- schools led to the "consolidaties and even relocate if that's tion" of previously mobile huntwhat's they choose to do, he ing and fishing communities in SBld. larger, stationary villages, such For the Obama adminis-
as Kivalina.
e
e
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No Exam Fee!
No Adjustment Fee!
more ice melt.
Weighing tradition
against uncertainty
A rock erosion barrier, constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to buy the town some time, might have prevented the worst during a powerful winter cyclone in November 2011, which tore down
doors and drove waters against thebarrier.Butthe Corps — and
everyone in Kivalina — knows that's only a temporary solution. Kivalina's villagers have voted to move along the coast a mile to the south, but the Corps has
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In the meantime, Kivalina remains torn between tradition
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Video Otoscope Ear Inspection
ers more than two decades ago — that lie at the entrance to the
Thls show-all plcture of your ear canal Is displayed on a color TV monltor, so you'll see exactly what we see.
town from the airstrip. "This is in some ways such an unprecedented problem, and a lot of our national poli-
ME 2150 only. Expires 3/4/15
cies for disaster have to do with
aftera disaster occurs, " says Christine Shearer, a researcher
'
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who wrote a book about Kiva-
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"I WaS Only hearing bitS and PieCeS and beginning to WithdraW frOm PeOPle and aCtiVitieS. My Son Called MiraCle-Ear and fOund they arrange finanCing, So We made an aPPOintment,
lina and now works for CoalSwarm, which shares informa-
water tanks, an airstrip, a post
y
•
That's Right...No Co Pay-!
tration, the problem is lack of Today, the town consists of tion about coal plants. "But funding. 'While we do not ex- some 85 homes, as well as two with climate change, it's really pect that funding of this scale
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thankfully! With my Miracle-Ear hearing aids my hearing has greatly improved. I can hear the birds singing at the feeders
about: We needto prepare for
could support actual reloca- office, and its largest building, what's coming."
all OVer our yard. My memOry haS alSO imPrOVed and I jOin in
conversation rather than withdraw. The courtesy, kindness and hugs received by the staff are unforgettable and settling when making
BLM
visitors have inundated recreational areas, even envi-
pay for upgrades to the facili- wrote. The BLM won't charge ties'publicbathrooms and gar- fees unless a facility meets bage facilities, the report notes. certain criteria, such as havThe BLM's Prineville office ing a public bathroom. lists nine recreational sites, The report recommended including the Lower Crooked that BLM find ways to address Wild and Scenic River and the the health concerns presented Lower Deschutes Wild and by garbage and human waste Scenic River, where camp- at certain nonfee sites, and ing costs $8 ($12 during peak that the agency should periseason) for individuals and odically review its holdings $25 ($35 peak) for groups per to look for appropriate sites night. to charge fees. Additionally, In a written response to the the BLM s h ould o ccasioninspector general's report, ally review its pricing to see BLM Director Neil K o rnze if it is in line with compara-
ronmentally sensitive areas.
n oted that "i n
Continued from A1 Charging appropriate fees would help generate revenue needed for the upkeep of recreational facilities and would alleviate the need to rely on
Congress for funding, according to the report. Auditors visited six
s ites
in Arizona, Nevada and Colorado (but none in Oregon) and found that in some cases
c e rtain c i r - ble private sites. The BLM
According to the most recent cumstances, the bureau may census, the population in the have compelling reasons to Western states, where there is not charge fees, including to a higherpercentage of feder- encourage visitor use and to al land, grew by 13.8 percent preserve maximum access to between 2000 and 2010. This the public. The benefits of fees expansion has created more identified in the report must demand for recreational facil- be considered along with the BLM's goals for public access ities, the report notes. Some nonfee camping sites and visitor use." overseen by the Yuma Field It would also be easier for Office i n
A r i z on a r e ceive the BLM to make the relatively
58,000 visitors a year, totaling small capital investments and 800,000 visitor days, and are upgrades required to charge so busy that they often have a fees at certain facilities as sugwaiting list, the report states. gested by the report if it hadn't Two private RV camps nearby seen a 55 percent reduction to charge $7 per night, and if the its deferred maintenance budBLM charged $40 for a two- get, which pays for upkeep, week stay, the revenues would over the past decade, Kornze
did not dispute any of these recommendations.
thiS tyPe of Change in yOur lifeStyle." - MaViS Paull
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In a 2012 triennial report
Bend
e ass o s
Dadatee Haaal rawl
to Congress on recreational fees on public lands, the BLM
BUrhs •
listed 3,600 recreational sites,
of which 430 charged fees. In 2011, BLM collected $17.4 mil-
—Shanelle Vega
lion in fees nationwide. The BLM report came one
day after the inspector general released areview of the
National Park Service's recreational fee collection. The Park Service also missed significant opportunities for additional revenues, the report concluded. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger®bendbulletitt.com
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY25, 2015
BRIEFING
Redmond rejects Butler's application
OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS
Attendance deadlines nearing
1I'
The deadline is nearing for Bend-La Pine Schools students looking to attend a school out-
side their neighborhood boundary.
-
I'e-CI'eB e 1S 0
The district recent-
ly redrew its school boundary lines to better balance enrollment and assign students to anew elementary school and middle school, both set to open in thecoming school year. Students affected by the boundary changes currently in fourth, sev-
• Airport services provider has90 days to ceaseoperations By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
REDMOND — The Redmond City Council
voted unanimously Tuesday night to reject Butler
enth, 10th or11th grade
can choose to begrandfathered in andremain at their current school. Families must notify schools of their intent to be grandfathered in by Friday. Students whodo not qualify for grandfathering but whowant to attend a school outside their boundary canfill out an attendancearea change request form by March 2.Forthose students andthose being grandfathered in, transportation will not be provided.
Aircraft Services' applica-
tion to provide fixed-base operator services at the Redmond Airport.
Butler, through a sublease with KC Aero, has provided aviation services
such as fueling, maintenance and flight training to the airport without a
contract since last summer. The council approved a recommendation from
airportManager Jeff Tripp to allow Butler 90 days to cease fixed-base
operations at the airport.
"It's too bad it's come to this, but it is what it is,"
Redmond Mayor George
10 Barrel noise citation upheld The city of Bendupheld a citation Tuesday given to10 Barrel Brewing Co. for violating the city's noise ordinance during a Nov.28, 2014, concert. 10 Barrel is the third Bend businesscited for violating the city's noise ordinance betweenJanuary 2012and mid-December 2014. Municipal Court Judge Bethany Flint upheld the citation after hearing testimony from BendPolice, several neighbors and Jon Weber, themanager on duty at10 Barrel on Nov. 28, whowascited for the complaint. Responsibility for the citation was transferred from Weber toGarrett Wales, a partner in and former owner of10 Barrel, a limited liability corporation that was sold to Anheuser-Busch in November. Bend PoliceSgt. Todd Fletcherand Officer James Pooletestified a sound readernear the business returned 76 decibels, 6 decibels above thedaytime limit for commercially zoned areas. Neighbors eight blocks awaysaid the concert, which started in late afternoon, wasplainly audible andrattled their windows. Thecity also restricts unnecessarily loud noise, such as bass, that cannot be measured bythe sound readers used byBend Police. Wales said thebusiness did not apply for a noise permit because it did not believe it was necessary. Theconcert was completed by10 p.m., when limits on decibel levels kick down to 65 decibels. 10 Barrel wasfined $250 — the minimum fine — for the violation.
Marketplace burglarized Sunriver Police are seeking information regarding a burglary at the Sunriver Marketplace store early Sunday morning. A man wearing a black hoodedsweatshirt entered the store onCottonwood Roadbetween 12:30 and12:45 a.m.and stole about 40packsof Marlboro cigarettes, 20 cigars and abox of lighters, according to anews release. SeeBriefing/B3
Endicott said.
SeeAirport /B5 Andy Tullie/Ttte Bulletin
"It's exciting and fun to dress up and say your speech," says third-grader Alex Smith, 9, while waiting for the next visitor to press his button and learn about Theodore Roosevelt, whom he played during the Living Wex Museum Event at High Lakes Elementary School in
Bend on Wednesday. By Jasmine Rockow
the culmination of a month-
The Bulletin
long lesson on biographies. After researching, writing and
For one night eachyear, the halls of High Lakes ElementarySchoolin Bend become a living and breathing wax
memorizing a speech, students
dressedin costume andpresentedafamous person'slife
museum.
history to parents and other
Third-graders gave the first big presentation of their
visitors. Parents full of pride crowded around each child, listening to their prepared speeches and snappingphotos.
elementary school careers last
week, after nearly a month of preparation. The event was
"We kind of lean them into
choosing somebody who's made a difference in their life
candidly reiterated Rowling's life story, rarely showing the
or in the world," said third-
nerves she daimed to possess.
gradeteacherJoanieValley. Because she loves to read
"There's lots of amazingpeople in the world to learn about,"
and write, Iben Orton, 8, de-
Iben said. "There's lots of peo-
cided to be J.K. Rowling. She found a high-traffic area in the hallway and set up abench with avase of pinktulips and all the "Harry Potter" books
ple that I really didn't know about before this. Now when I
spread out before her. She
walk around I see that there's
so many people, so many cool people." SeeHistory/B5
The Bulletin
CRIMINAL CASES A motion filed by thedefense to disqualify Deschutes County Circuit Judge Alta Brady wasdismissed Jan. 20. Link hasbeen housed in the Deschutes County jail since Aug. 26 and is seeking permission to return to custody of the OregonDepartment of Corrections. Eric Norgaard, 22, wasarrested early Nov.1 ::Norgaard was indicted on charges nergaard on suspicion of stabbing JamesBriles, : :of attempted murder, first-degree 18, his roommate in Juniper Hall at Cen-: assault and unlawful use of aweaptral Oregon Community College. : on.
Link is scheduled for a re-sentencing phase of a jury trial in January 2016. It is expected to take threeweeks.
John
The Oregon SupremeCourt will hear oral arguments March 9.
Link
Link, 31, wasconvicted and sentencedto life without parole in 2003 for his role in the murder of Barbara Thomas.Thecase hasbeenremandedto DeschutesCounty for re-sentencing by theOregonCourt of Appeals.
: Sines, 61,wasconvicted of sexually : abusing an8-year-old girl in 2009 and Sines . sentenced to nearly19 years in prison. , In 2014, theOregonCourt of Appeals : overturned theconviction, finding asei: zure of the girl's underwear unlawful and : that it should havenot beenadmitted as : evidence. Melissa The former Madras HighSchool track Bewerman coach is charged with second-degreesex abuse and other crimes for her alleged sexual relationship with a17-year-old on her track team. Albert
Deena Gess
The Jefferson County treasurer faces 36 charges of forgery, theft and official misconduct after a county investigation found altered checks andunderreported cash deposits.
William : Fix, 32, was arrested after a Sept. 27 car Wayne Fix: :accident on U.S.Highway 97 that result, :ed in the death of his 7-year-old step: ,daughter and injuries to four other girls.
An appeal filed by the state of Oregon is under review by theOregon Supreme Court.
Bulletin's retired operations director By Scott Hammers
WHAT'5 HAPPENING WITH ...
Justin
MIKE GREENING 1943 — 2015
Norgaard is scheduled to enter a plea March17.
Upon his retirement in 2007,Mike Greening observedthattheprocessof putting ink to paper had changed more over his 50year career than it had over the prior 500 years. Monday, the man who
started his career delivering The Bulletin as a teenager and retired as operations director for the Greening newspapers and
publications of Western Communications
Inc. died. Greening was 71. By the time Greening was in high school, he'd moved to The Bulletin mailroom, and not long after graduation, he moved to
the pressroom. Printing a newspaper was avery different process in the early 1960s than Ata video hearing Aug.15, Bow- : :'Bowerman is dueback in court March .::'12 for a pretrial conference. erman was granted athird-party release from the Jefferson County jail. Her husband, JonBowerman, posted $5,000 bail to haveher released Aug. 18. Goss pleadednot guilty to all A pretrial conference is scheduled for charges Aug. 13. Friday.
it is today. Lines of text
were cast from lead, then melted down to be reused. The "hottype" method was
perilous, with pressmen frequently suffering injuries from spattering molten
lead. In a2003 storymarking the paper's 100th anniver-
sary, Greening recalled how in 1966, The Bulletin
::'Fix is scheduled to enter a pleaMarch 6 : Fix has beenindicted on charges , :of first-degree manslaughter, ,:second- and fourth-degree assault ,:and driving under the influence of . :intoxicants.
got its first offset printing press. Offset printing wassupposedly — a cleaner process, and Bulletin owner and editor Bob Chandler asked that his pressmen
dress in white shirts and ties. Greening said within
OTHER STORIES
a week, every tie and white
shirt he owned was covered in ink. : :'Keinonen's estate filed a $7 million : ::Keinonen was shot and killed by Tyler Keinenen .::'Bend Police Officer Erick Supplee .::'suit against Supplee andthe city of :::in November 2013. Asubsequent Bendon Jan.6,claiming Supplee .::'review of the incident by then-Dis- .::'violated Keinonen's civil rights, used : trict Attorney Patrick Flaherty found ::'excessive deadly force andcommit,::'Supplee's use of force lawful and ::'ted battery. The suit further alleges .::'negligence on thepart of the city. justified.
: Court records showSupplee's attorney . :filed a brief Feb. 9denying allegations : of unlawful use of force andpraying : for dismissal of the case.TheCity of : :Bend filed an unopposedmotion for . :an extension to reply to the negligence complaint Feb. 2.
The tie rule was lifted
not long after, when a pressman narrowly missed beingpulled into a folding machine. Two years later, Greening was promoted to pressroom manager. SeeGreening/B2
B2
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
Greening
E VENT
ENDA R
TODAY LUNCH ANOLEARN: MarkandGina Montgomery of Bend Healing Together will speak on "Healing Tools From Chinese Medicine & Reflexology"; bring your lunch; noon-1 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SEReed Market Road; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-388-1133. AUTHORPRESENTATION:John Marzluff will speak on his book "Welcome to Subirdia"; $3
ugp,aur,'cpgbrgg~i ~slvy&zi, >r~ , i • >lAfgrWIuI»
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for members, $5for nonmembers;6:30p.m.; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S.Highway 97,Bend;www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Discuss"This Isthe Story of a Happy Marriage" by Ann Patchett; 6:30 p.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1070. "KING LEAR":Captured live at the Stratford Festival in Canada, King Lear tells the story of a kingdom divided and afamily destroyed; 7 p.m.; $18; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive; Bend; 541-312-2901. NATURE NIGHTS— AN OBSESSION WITH OOONATA: Learn about dragonfly and damselfly ecology, life history and conservation with the Deschutes Land Trust and entomologist Celeste Searles Mazzacano; free, registration required; 7-8:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org, event© deschuteslandtrust.org or 541-330-0017.
THURSDAY AUTHORPRESENTATION:John Marzluff will present on his book"Welcome to Subirdia"; $5; 5 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. "HAMLET":A performance of the classic Shakespeare play by the Ridgeview theater department; $10, $5 for students in grades 6-12, $3 for students in grade 5 or younger; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 SWElkhorn Ave, Redmond; www.ridgeviewhs.seatyourself.biz or 541-504-3600. JIVE COULIS:TheAshland rock band performs; 7 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1; Bend; www.btbsbend.com; 541-728-0703. KUNG FU: The New York-based jamband performs; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 9:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.p44p.biz or 541-323-1881.
FRIDAY "HAMLET":A performance of the classic Shakespeare play by the Ridgeview theater department; $10, $5 for students in grades 6-12, $3 for students in grade 5 or younger; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 SWElkhorn Ave, Redmond; www.ridgeviewhs.seatyourself.biz or 541-504-3600. TELLURIOE MOUNTAINFILM TOUR: Featuring films from the world-renowned film festival in
Submitted photo
Author John Marzluff will discuss his book "Welcome to Subirdie" today et the High Desert Museum and Thursday at Peuline Springs Books in Redmond. Telluride, Colorado, to benefit The Environmental Center; $20 plus fees in advance, $23 at the door, $35 for both nights; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. WILLY PORTER:The folk musician performs, with Carmen Nickerson; $20, $10 for youth; 7 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4045. "WHAT EVERHAPPENEDTO BABYJANE?": A play about Jane, her older sister, Blanche, and a suspicious accident; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m., opening reception at 6:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. ARCHAEOLOGY FILM FESTIVAL: Featuring the best films from the 2014 edition of the festival; $7; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; www.cocc. edu or 541-383-7700. CRYSTALBOWERSOX:The Ohio singer-
"HAMLET":A performance of the classic Shakespeare play by the Ridgeview theater department; $10, $5 for students in grades 6-12, $3 for students in grade 5 or younger; 2 and 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 SWElkhorn Ave, Redmond; www.ridgeviewhs.seatyourself. biz or 541-504-3600. CHINESENEWYEARCELEBRATION: Featuring m ask making, Chinesecarnivalgames,a traditional tea ceremony, a lion dance and more to benefit Education for Chinese Orphans; $12, $10 for seniors and students, $30 per family, registration requested; 2-5:30 p.m.; Bend Elks Lodge P1371, 63120 Boyd Acres Road; www. echoinchina.org, stacie@echoinchina.org or 541-815-2899. "HAMLET":A performance of the classic Shakespeare play by the Ridgeview theater department; $10, $5 for students in grades 6-12, $3 for students in grade 5 or younger; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 SWElkhorn Ave, Redmond; www.ridgeviewhs.seatyourself.biz or 541-504-3600. TELLURIOE MOUNTAINFILM TOUR:Featuring films from the world-renowned film festival in Telluride, Colorado, to benefit The Environmental Center; $20 plus fees in advance, $23 at the door, $35for bothnights; 7 p.m., doorsopen at6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. CENTRAL OREGON MASTERSINGERS CONCERT: A"Singers'Choice Concert" in celebration of the group's10th season, including pieces by Whitacre, Lauridsen and Brahms; 7:30 p.m.; $15; Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St.; Bend; www.co-mastersingers.com; 541-385-7229. "WHAT EVER HAPPENEDTO BABYJANE?": A play based on the novel by Henry Farrell, about agir lnamed Jane whoisovershadowed byher older sister, Blanche, and asuspicious accident; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. ARCHAEOLOGY FILM FESTIVAL: Featuring the best films from the 2014 edition of the festival; $7; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 NW College Way,Bend;www.cocc. edu or 541-383-7700. RANDY MCALLISTER: TheTexasblues-soul artist performs; 8 p.m.; $20 plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave.; Sisters; www.belfryevents.com; 541-815-9122.
songwriter and"American Idol" alumna performs; $25plus feesin advance; 8 p.m.,
SUMDAY
doors open at 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.ticketfly.com or 877-987-6487.
BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, children's activities and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. INANIMATEEXISTENCEANOWRVTH: The death metal bands perform, with Existential
SOFTBALLGARAGE-BAKESALE: Sale to benefit the varsity and junior varsity softball programs; free; 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; Redmond High School Hartman Campus, 2105 W.Antler Ave.; www. redmond.k12.or.us or 541-408-1919.
Depression,Seasonof Suffering, DeathAgenda and more; $5 plus fees in advance, $6 at the door; 2 p.m., headliners at 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SEThird St., Bend; www.j.mp/inexbend or 541-306-3017.
him, keeping a small zoo in the backyard of their home. "He enjoyed raising and savContinued from B1 Betsy McCool, chairwoman ing many animals. Had every of Western Communications kind of bird; he had raccoons, and Chandler's daughter, said badgers, buzzards," Patsy she first knew Greening as the Greening said. "His wildlife father of the girls who would love was his first love." often babysit for her and her Gordon Black, publisher of sisters and as the keeper of
The Bulletin from 1994 until
unusual pets — two backyard earlier this year, said he recogbadgers she and her sisters nized Greeningas a"jack-of-allw ere warned tosteerclearof.
trades" not long after they met,
McCool said as she grew old- as comfortableunder the hood er, she realized what an essen- of a car or running a trap line tial part of the family business
as he was in front of a computer
Greening was. Unlike many people who resist change in the workplace, she said, Greening showed nothing but enthusiasm forlearning every new technology he needed to know to stay on top of the latest innovations in printing.
terminal overseeing the printing of the day's paper. Inthe late
"It was his life," McCool said.
"He was always here, and always did an amazing job. He made sure things ran smoothly and took a t remendous pride in the print quality of the newspaper." Bob Moody was a pressman alongside Greening in their early days at the paper. In the mid-1970s, Moody and Greening were both tapped by Chan-
1990s, when The Bulletinbegan
planning the construction of its current facility, Greening was the obvious choice to run the
process, Black said. The current Bulletin headquarters is in many ways "the house that Mike built," Black sald. "There wasn't a day t hat
went by during every day of construction we weren't over here walking through, stepping overdrywalland metal beams and electrical stuff," Black said. "He's been such a key part of this company since the '60s." With the new building came
dler to head for northeastern
another new press, and another
Oregon to oversee operations at The (La Grande) Observer, with Moody as publisher and Greening as production manager. Moody remembered Greening as an exceptional organiz-
press-r elated mishap. OverMemorial Day weekend 2000, the new press broke down.
Greening and the company's production team headed across town, fired up the old press and
printed the next day's paper, keeping Greening's streak of best paper possible. During never missing a single edition their tenure together in La alive. Grande, the paper bought a Patsy Greening said her new building, Moody said, and husband was diagnosed with Greeningwas picked to over- Parkinson's disease around the er, dedicated to putting out the
see the move. In one night, they
time ofhis retirement. Together,
dismantled the press, moved it across town and reassembled it, not missing an issue, Moody said. "Mike was a good performer. He knew what he was doing, worked good with people, just an A-OK guy — and a good elk hunting partner, too," Moody said. Greening came back to Bend
they made several cross-country trips in their motor home before his health began to dedine more rapidly about six years ago. In hospice care in his final days, Greening would brighten, his wife said, whenever a visitor from his newspapering days would drop by, eager to
in 1989 but often returned to
northeastern Oregon, according to his wife, Patsy Greening. An avid photographer, hunter and fisherman, Greening was
Greening is survived by his wife; his brother, Steve Greening; his sister, Sandy Weston; daughters Susan Wakefield, Tracy Michaelsen, Rebecca
often most at home fishing on
Williams and Amanda Green-
the Snake River or camping on ing; and nine grandchildren. the Imnaha River with his chilThe family is planning a serdren and grandchildren. vice Saturday at Partners in Patsy Greening said her Care in Bend. husband brought his love for — Reporter: 541-383-0387, the natural world home with
shammers@bendbulletin.com
NEWS OF RECORD 17, in the600 blockof SWRimrock Way. Criminalmischief —Anactof criminal mischief wasreportedat3:38 p.m.Feb. The Bulletin will update items inthe Police 17, in the1500block of NWHickory Place. Log whensucharequest is received.Any Theft —Atheftwas reported at9:43a.m. new information,suchasthe dismissal of Feb. 18, inthe3700 blockof SWSam charges oracquittal, must be venfiable. For moreinformation, call 541-383-0358. SneadCourt. Burglary — Aburglarywas reported at 10:52a.m. Feb.18, inthe300blockof NW 882ilD POLICE OakTreeLane. DRPARTIIEIQT Unaufhedzeduse — Avehicle was reported stolenat 2:07 p.m. Feb.18, inthe TheN — Atheft was reported andan 200 blockof SWRimrock Way. arrest madeat3:20 p.m. Feb.19, in the Theft —Atheft wasreported andan 2600 blockof NE U.S.Highway 20. arrest madeat6:45p.m.Feb.18, inthe TheN — Atheft was reported andan 300blockofNWOakTreeLane. arrest madeat417 p.m.Feb.19, inthe Theft —Atheftwas reported at8:57 p.m. 63400 blockof HunnelRoad. l Feb. 18, in the1300 blockof SWRimrock TheN — Atheft was reported andan Way. arrest madeat10:41 a.m. Feb.20,inthe OUB — Ashley LynnShaw,23, was 20100 block ofPinebrookBoulevard. arrested on suspicion of driving underthe OUII —SarahElizabeth Monen,22, was influence ofintoxicantsat 1:44a.m. Feb. arrested onsuspicion of driving underthe in theareaof SWSixth Streetand SW influence ofintoxicantsat12:50a.m. Feb. 19, GlacierAvenue. 22, in theareaof NESixth Street andNE Unauthorizeduse — Avehicle was OlneyAvenue. reported stolenat 813a m. Feb.19, inthe Theft — Athefl was reportedat319p m. 2200blockofSW ReindeerAvenue. Feb. 22, inthe100 blockof SERoosevelt Criminalmischief —Anactof criminal Avenue. mischief wasreportedat9:09a.m. Feb. Theft — Athefl was reportedat3:24 p.m. 19, in the600block ofSWRimrock Way. Feb.22,inthe20300 blockofChaseRoad. —Atheft wasreported at12:58 Theft — Atheftwas reported at815 p m. Theft p.m. Feb.19,inthe 1300block of SW Feb. 22, intheareaof SW Columbia Street ObsidianAvenue. and Commerce Avenue. Unaufhedzeduse — Avehicle was Theft — Atheft was reported andarrests reported stolenat 2:04 p.m. Feb.19, inthe were made at12:15 p.m. Feb.20,inthe 700blockofSW DeschutesAvenue. 3100 blockof N.U.S.Highway97. Theft — Atheftwas reportedandan arrest madeat 2:42 p.m.Feb.19, in the REDMOND POLICE 300blockofNWOakTreeLane. DRPARTIIEIQT Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at2A3p.m.Feb.19, onU.S. TheN — Atheft was reported andan Highway97near milepost119. arrest madeat5:10 p.m. Dec.17,in the Vehiclecrash—Anaccident was 2300blockofSWSalmon Avenue. reported at2:45p.m.Feb.19, inthe2000 Burglary — Aburglaryand an actof block of SW SalmonAvenue. criminal mischiefwerereported andan Theft —Atheft wasreported at8:55a.m. arrest madeat12:29a.m. Dec.22,inthe Feb. 20, inthe3500blockof SWAntelope 2600 blockof NWCanalBoulevard. Avenue. Theft — Atheft was reported andan Theft —Atheft wasreported at9:30 arrest made at10:29a.m. Feb.16, inthe a.m. Feb.20,inthe 700block of NWFifth 2600blockofSW IVianposaLoop. Street. Criminalmischief —Anact of criminal Theft —Atheftwas reported at5:02 p.m. mischief wasreported at 12:04p.m. Feb. Feb. 20, inthe900 blockof SWVeterans 16, in the2000 blockof S.U.S.Highway Way. 97. Theft —Atheftwas reported at5:21 p.m. Theft — Athefl was reportedandan Feb. 20, inthe2600blockof SWObsidian arrest madeat1:35 p.m.Feb.16, inthe Avenue. 900 blockof SWVeteransWay. Criminalmischief —Anactof criminal Unlawfulentry —Avehicle wasreported mischief wasreportedat9:53 p.m.Feb. enteredat413 p.m. Feb.16, inthe800 20, inthe 600blockof NW28thStreet. block of NW Fifth Street. DUB —Ealicia LeePatrick,32, was Unlawfulentry —Avehicle wasreported arrested onsuspicion of driving under enteredat910 p.m.Feb.16, inthe300 the influenceof intoxicantsat1:25a.m. block ofNWOakTreeLane. Feb. 21, in the3100 blockof SWUmatiila Avenue. Theft — Athefl was reportedat9:30 a.m. Feb.17, inthe2400block ofS.U.S. Burglary — Aburglarywas reported at Highway97. 1:25a.m.Feb.21,inthe3100blockofSW Theft — Athefl was reportedat1:45 p.m. UmatillaAvenue. Feb. 17,inthe600 block of NWHemlock DUB —LoraLeeHeindch,28, was Avenue. arrested on suspicion of driving underthe Criminalmischief —Anact of criminal influence ofintoxicantsat 3:48a.m. Feb. mischief wasreported at3:26p.m. Feb. 21,inthe3200blockofSW LavaAvenue.
Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 9:09a.m. Feb. 21,in the 800blockof NE HemlockAvenue. Theft — Atheftwas reportedandan arrest madeat10:20a.m.Feb.21,inthe 3100 blockof S.U.S.Highway97. Theft — Atheftwas reportedandan arrestmadeat3:02p.m.Feb.21,inthe 300blockofNWOakTreeLane. Vehiclecrash—Anaccident was reported at7:38p.m. Feb.21, in the 900 blockof SWHighlandAvenue. Unlawfulentry —Avehicle wasreported enteredat3:57a.m. Feb.22, inthe2000 blockof NWNickernutAvenue. Theft — Atheftwas reportedandan arrest madeat4:38p.m.Feb.22,inthe 300blockofNWOakTreeLane.
OREGON STATE POLICE
Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at316 p.m.Feb.23, on U.S. Highway97nearmilepost117.
EDiID FIRE RUNS Friday 3:52p.m. —Building fire,2891 NE ConnersAve. 6:11p.m. —Unauthorizedburning, 60256 Pawnee Ln. 10:56 p.m. — Building fire,2926 NW Horizon Dr. 6 — Medicalaidcalls.
REDMOND HRE RUNS Feb.16 9:49a.m.—Authorized controlled burning,401 SW27thSt. 10:05 p.m. — Unauthorizedburning, area of SW HelmholtzWay.
4 —Medicalaid calls. Feb.17 9 — Medicalaidcalls. Feb. 18 8 — Medicalaidcalls. Thursday 343a.m. —Chimneyor fluefire,1213 SW31st St. 10 —Medical aidcalls. Friday 3:32 p.m.— Offroadvehicleorheavy equipmentfire,729 NE King Way. 8 —Medicalaid calls. Saturday 5:51p.m. —Authorized controlled burni ng,5648SWObsidianAve. 9:44p.m.—Authorizedcontrolled burning,292 NE HemlockAve. 10:26p.m. — Authorizedcontrolled burning,2095 NE13thSt.
9 — Medicalaidcalls. Sunday 3:07p.m. —Unauthorizedburning, 2590 SW23rd St. 5 — Medicalaidcalls.
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
tatewants race e taroun By Gosia Wozniacka The Associated Press
SALEM — Four days before a contract to host Oregon's
health insurance system for low-income Oregonians is due to expire, state officials asked a
judge Tuesday to force technology contractor Oracle Inc. to continue running the system.
Lawyers representing Oregon told Marion County Circuit Judge Courtland Geyer during the first of a two-day hearing that Oracle's plans to pull hosting services would result in Medicaid enrollment grinding to a halt. That, in turn, would cause
"irreparable harm" to thousands of people who would
hardware resides on servers ness with the state," Shwarts that are hosted by Oracle. The said. "It's the responsibility of contract to host that hardware Oregon to take care of Oregoexpires Feb. 28. nians and to ensure that they Witnesses for the state told have a (Medicaid) system in the judge that Oracle manag- place. The contract expires on ers orallypromised Oregon Saturday, and they knew that officials five months ago that for a long time." the hosting contract would be Medicaid serves more than renewed for 12 months. Ore- 1 million people in Oregon, gon officials acknowledged about a quarter of the state's they did not get that promise in population. Coverage is good writing.
This month, Oracle informed Oregon it would not re-
new the contract. Kaner called Oracle's decision a "capricious change of position." Oracle's lawyers said Oracle made no binding promises to renew the contract, only
ment would look like if Oracle terminates the hosting this
weekend. In April, Oregon ditched the Oracle-built exchange and switched to the federal exchange, HealthCare.gov, to sign up Oregonians for private health insurance. HealthCare.
gov does not handle Medicaid enrollment because each state is responsible for managing its for 12 months and then must own Medicaid program. be renewed. Oregonians can Oregon is now working to sign up for or re-enroll in Med- adopt technology from Kenicaid year-round. tucky for Medicaid enrollment Alex Pettit, the state's chief — but that won't be completed information officer, said at until January 2016. the hearing that the state tried Oracle said it no longer last year to extricate its Med- wants to do business with Oricaid system from Oracle, but egon because the state has the company rejected several previously sued the Redwood proposals to do that. That, he City, California, company over said, left the state with only one the Cover Oregon debacle, option: renewing the hosting claiming that Oracle officials contract. lied,breached contracts and Pettit also said it would take engaged in "a pattern of rackeabout a year to switch to an- teering activity." other hosting vendor, which is In its Cover Oregon comwhy the state didn't pursue that plaint, Oregon also seeks a peroption. manent injunction to bar OraState officials did not say cle from doing business with
a promise to negotiate about aidand accesshealth services, it. Oracle's attorney, Robert said attorney Lisa Kaner, who Shwarts, blamed the Oregon represents the state. Health Authority, which overThe state wants a court or- sees Oregon's Medicaid proder forcing Oracle to extend gram, for not having a continthe hosting contract. gency plan. The Medicaidsystem runs He also said the company on parts of the technology isn't obligated to continue hostthat Oracle built for the Cover ing,because the contract does Oregon healthinsurance ex- not contain a r ight-to-renew change. That exchange portal dause. whether they had a Plan B in "While Oracle is sympathet- case the judge did not grant was never fully functional, but after it failed, the state contin- ic to the state's issue, Oracle is a the court order, and they did ued to use parts of it for Med- commercial actor ... and it has not spell out what manual icaid enrollment. The system's no legal obligation to do busi- processing of Medicaid enrollnot be able to enroll in Medic-
UO VaCCinating StudentS —The University of Oregon is moving a vaccination clinic to Matthew Knight Arena as it steps up afight against a blood stream infection that can cause form a of meningitis, called meningococcemia. Theuniversity hopes to inoculate as many as 22,000 students. The disease is believed to beresponsible for the death of one student last weekandfor making three other students seriously ill this winter. KVALreports a university spokeswoman, Rita Radostitz, said manystudents previously received their meningitis shots, but the strain on campus is different. The school started vaccinating students in late January, and it movedthe effort to the basketball arena Monday.Thevaccine can cost up to $170 per student. School officials are working with insurance companies. SpI'lllgfleld tfefflC f8t8litiSS —A police investigator said it appears that the driver who struck and killed three children in a busy Springfield intersection drove through a redlight. The (Eugene) Register-Guard reports that the lead investigator, Officer Brian Antone, said witnesses indicated the driver's light was redandthe pedestrians had the right of way Sundayevening. Antone said Tuesdaythe investigation indicates the four pedestrians — the children andtheir mother — were properly in the markedpedestrian crossing. Police have identified the children as8-year-old John Day,5-year-old McKenzie Hudsonand4-year-old Tyler Hudson. Their mother, 26-year-old Cortney JeanHudson, of Springfield, was listed in critical condition. Police said shehasstabilized.
RaCial diSCriminatiOn Suit — Twocurrent andtwo former employees havesued Daimler Trucks North America, alleging they were discriminated against becausethey areAfrican-American. The lawsuit filed Tuesdaycameabout a month after the companyagreed to pay $2.4 million to settle bias complaints filed by six minority workers who said they weresubjected to threats and racial slurs at the company's Portland plant. Attorney Mark Morrell represented some of those workers. Hesaid at the time he represented four others who couldn't reach asettlement and would file civil lawsuits. Daimler Trucks North America did not respond to amessageseeking comment. As part of last month's settlement, it agreed to boost training, install a civil rights complaint hotline and takeother steps to improve the workplace.
the state in the future — which
Orade's Shwarts pointed out is incompatible with trying to force the company into a new
contract for hosting Medicaid.
— From wire reports
Ci settles for 450,000 in suit filed by manhurt by police The Associated Press
him to face them in order to attempt to communicate.
impairments. "The settlement was put to-
been impounded after Toll was ed his body and pulled away arrested one day earlier. A from him. A police department
of Springfield has agreed to and possibly suicidal. Under the settlement deal, pay $450,000 to settle a lawsuit Toll sustained right knee Toll, who now lives in Greshfiled by a deaf man injured by and leg injuries that required am, will be paid $200,000 to a police officer in September multiple surgeries and reha- compensate him for pain and 2012. bilitation, the lawsuit states. suffering; $150,000 for attorney Raymond Toll, 62, suffered a The injuries induded two bone fees; $86,624 for medical bills; serious knee injury when Offi- fractures,a dislocated knee and $13,376 for various court cerCharlesConrad forcedhim and complete tears of three costs. to the ground in the parking lot ligaments. The agreement also calls of an auto parts shop on Main The lawsuit says that Con- for the city's police depart-
gether because (police) could
note that Toll had written to the
SPRINGFIELD — The city
after a shop employee reported that Toll was causing a scene
Street. rad and a second officer knew Conrad handcuffed Toll that Toll was deaf and could
shortly before the takedown, read lips. But they did not allow
shop worker states he didn't municating with (Toll) and be- have money topay a towing cause (Toll suffered) an unfor- fee and that he "will be kill tunate injury to that knee," city self." spokesman Niel Laudati told Conrad wrote in a police reThe (Eugene) Register-Guard port Toll responded with a nonnewspaper. committal gesture when asked Police were called to the by police if he was suicidal. auto parts shop by an employConrad wrote t hat a f t er ment to revise policy on how ee who said Toll had asked handcuffing Toll, he forced officers deal with people who him to call authorities for help the deaf man to the ground behave hearing, speech or visual recovering his van, which had cause he had repeatedly twist-
Semn an s 0 owners oseMe OI 'S Otaaw The Associated Press MEDFORD — The owners
t
of secondhand shops urged the
• $ ~i
Medford City Council to take a
have done a betterjob com-
investigation concluded that
Conrad did not use excessive force, Police Chief Tim Doney sard.
Toll's lawsuit states he was not suicidal. He was homeless at the time, and the note was
meant only to convey the importance of getting his van and personal belongings. A mental health professional who examined Toll after the incident found he was not suicidal.
S CIENCE. TECHNO L O G Y . ENGINEERING. MATH. MUSIC. SPANISH. AND THAT IS ALL BEFORE RECESS. KINDERGARTEN THROUGH STH GRADE SPACES AVAILABLE NOW!
second look at a new law that requires them to photograph all their merchandise.
The council approved the ordinance in December, and it's scheduled to take effect March 22.
If the ordinance is not amended, pawn shops and secondhand stores must take photos of thousands of items each month, upload them to a
( I ~iij. J i'i
police database and then store Jamie Lusch /(Medford) Mail Tribune via TheAssociated Press the items during a 15-day hold- Kori Forney, standing in her secondhand children's store, Kid to Kid, mg pertod. says a newcity ordinance requiring pawnshops and thrift stores to The o r dinance d oesn't photograph all merchandise would put her out of business. specify a m i nimum dollar amount, so even a pair of chil-
dren's socks would have to be she doesn't have the staff to photographed. handle the law's requirements. Kori Forney owns Kid to Kid The council passed the orof Medford, which that sells dinance to curtail retail theft. used children's clothing. She Though primarily aimed at told the Mail Tribune the aver- pawn shops, it affects all busiage price for an item purchased nesses that purchase used by her store is $1.12, and she goods forresale or putthem on can receive 10,000 items a consignment. It does not apply month. to organizations that resell doForney said she understands
nated items, such as Goodwill.
"What they're really trythe desire of police to catch more crooks but points out that ing to do is hit those big-ticket
Anyone with information may call Sunriver Police at 541-5931014 or DeschutesCounty's nonemergency dispatch line at
items like guitars or guns," said Brandon Cox, owner of Run-
way Fashion Exchange. Medford Police Chief Tim George said secondhand stores sometimes unwittingly assist thieves who want cash rather than store credit for stolen
goods. George said methamphetamine and heroin addicts steal new items from retail
stores and then try to sell them elsewhere to pay for their habit.
Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. No new caseshavebeenidentified, but officials are still performing Continued from B1 Surveillance camerasshowed active surveillance inTumalo and the thief to beabout 5 feet 8 inches 541-693-6911. northern Bend. to 5 feet10 inches tall andweighThe OregonDepartment of Avian flu still deing ing about185 to 200 pounds. Agriculture announcedFeb. 13that Along with the sweatshirt, the thief monitored a flock of about 90 backyard birds was wearing blue jeansand tan — includi ngchickens,ducksand State and federal agriculture exhiking or work-style boots, accordturkeys — nearTumalo hadbeen perts are asking people with backing to police. detected to havehighly pathogenic yard birds flocks living in Bend Police are also looking for the avian influenza. Thecase is the north of Revere Avenue to contact driver and occupants of adark-colsecond of avian flu in the state. a surveillance team investigating ored late1980s or mid-1990s Ford Backyard bird owners in an avian flu case from this month. SuperCab pickup truck that pulled northern Bendare asked to call A combined Oregon Department up to the front of the store shortly of Agriculture andU.S.Department 800-347-7028. Toreport wild bird before the burglary, the news of Agriculture teamhas beenin deaths, people maycall the Oregon release stated. Police believe the Central Oregon sinceFeb.16, Department of FishandWildlife at truck has anantenna onthe pas866-968-2600. senger side bumper ormayhavea monitoring wild and domestic — Bulletin staffreporrs modified bumper. bird populations, according to the
Briefing
,
Morning Star Christian School offers a unique, innovative approach to education. We provide an advanced, academically rigorous program in a safe, nurturing environment. We are a unique Christian school where students can unleash their greatest potential, develop their creativity, and hone their language and music skills. We offer a curriculum that will challenge your child and quench their thirst for knowledge every day, all while having fun. We are Bend's only K-8th S.T.E.M. school, engaging students with hands-on Project Based Learning.
~.
M OWrM STAB. CHRISTIAti SCHOOL
541-382-5091
i vn s tvv.mscsbend.org 19741 Baker Rd. 97702
B4
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P,
regonians should not dreamily hope that Gov. Kate Brown's office is going to be a lot different from Gov. John Kitzhaber's office when it comes to public records. There's always lots of s uch talk Any skilled Oregon politician knows how to say the right things about the state's laws about openness. What matters is what they do. Kitzhaberused to say he wanted to increase transparencyto increase government accountability. But he delayed records requests by media organizations trying to discover if he or his fiancee, Cylvia Hayes, waltzed right across ethical lines. In the final days of his administration, his office even tried to get emails destroyed. Brown's new biography as governor says she was a leader "in increasing government transparency and accountability." In her first
paid leave. Oregon State Police are investigating. The investigation doesn't have to go that way. It doesn't have to be a criminal investigation. It could be handled as a personnel matter. R emember what was i n t h e emails. They revealed Kitzhaber was saying one thing in public. In private, the tale was different. He cast doubt publidy that Hayes was a member of his household. The emails show a mingling of finances. That leak was embarrassing and inconvenient for Kitzhaber. It was disconcerting and disturbing for those who have supported him. It should not be a crime to expose the governor as a double-dealer. speech as governor, she pledged: State officials have known for "We also must strengthen laws years about the problems with Oreto ensure timely release of public gon's public records laws. They are documents." structured to be convenient — for But state officials have asked public officials. Many documents for a criminal investigation into the are released in a timely way. But the leaks of some of Kitzhaber's emails law freely allows officials to delay to the Willamette Week newspa- a release or to effectively deny it by per. Two employees at the state's heaping on legal fees. Brown needs data center have been placed on to change that.
State should not make
deeisionsfor employers
w
elcome to the nanny state. If O r egon's l e gislative D emocrats hav e t h e ir way, the state will, in the next few months, order employers to give their workers unpaid time off to attend to their children's school affairs. Surely lawmakers have better ways to spend their time. The measure, House Bill 2646, would require employers to give workers eight hours of u npaid leave each school year for everything from school-sponsored events to parent-teacher conferences to emergencies. Add that to a proposedpaid sick leave measure working its way through the Legislature, and you're talking about a
real challenge for many employers. The additional paid sick leave56 hours — and unpaid school leave — 8 hours — adds up to eight days. That's great for the workers, to be sure. But for a small-business owner trying to ensure his cash register is covered during business hours, 12 months a year, it can be a real burden. Nor is it necessarily easy for a much larger employer to manage.
There's good reason to wantparents to attend such things as teacher conferences, no doubt.Butmany school districts already offer flexible conference hours to accommodate parents' busy schedules, and nearly all will work with parents to find times suitable for parents and teachers alike. As for emergencies, it's difficult to imagine a boss putting a worker's job in jeopardy because the latter must respond to an
emergency. We agree that parents should be actively involved in their children's education. Parents who know teachers,who attend school plays, mother-daughter teas and father-daughter dances demonstrate clearly to their children that they value education, and the kids do better as a result. But we do disagree with the notion that it's up to the state to define that involvement and then order employers to grant time for it. Many good employers already do just that, and all should, if they possibly can. But the decision should be left to the employer, not to the good folks in Salem.
M 1Vickel's Worth Kitzhaber shouldhave had due process
setbacks through no fault of their
range. There are currently U.S. prisfallen off 50 percent, like the drive- ons who are teaching the inmates to The opinion column of Feb. 22, up coffee hut on the Chevron gas sta- train mustangs, and there are proby Bulletin Publisher John Costa, tion lot. Since the construction work grams like the "Extreme Mustang," questioned the lament felt by many on Reed Market didn't actually close a competition with professional voters regarding the resignation any ingress/egress to them, the city horse trainers. Afterward, those of John Kitzhaber and challenged of Bend will not compensate them. It horses then sell at a special auction, the opinionsexpressed by James was estimated that the construction where some of them bring lots of Lussier in his letter to The Bulletin. project would take one year to com- money. The premise of (Costa's) column is plete, and it seems unfair that these Humans can intervene in the wild that Kitzhaber's fall from grace was businesses will not be compensated environment and make things better. "strictly on merit," in part due to his eventhough they can produce finan- I think God expects it. The mustangs efforts to prevent access to public cial reports that clearly show the fiare a wonderful part of our western information requested by the media nancial hit they have taken. heritage, and they deserve our refor a complete picture of the issues. Dave Madrigal spect. They sure aren't getting it now. It is further indicated that, "after Bend Marilyn Bernal the investigations are complete, Terrebonne (Kitzhaber) will be lucky if only his Wildhorses deserve better reputation is in tatters." Although it
is noted in the column that, "recentRegarding the article about the ly,much more has been revealed," wild horse group's idea that the that would substantiate the innuendo of wrongdoing on the part of
porarily sterilize the wild horses silent majority. However, an issue with drugs, I thought, "Egad, more has arisen about which I do not want
John Kitzhaber.
insanity!" Here's a comparison ev-
to remain silent. I, and many others
is that we live in the United States of
Does anyone really think that catch-
Lady," as it has been used to describe
America. As such, this is a country
ing them and temporarily sterilizing former Gov. Kitzhaber's girlfriend. If with due process of law and the pre- them every six months is the best the media reports are even half-true, sumption of innocence until proven way to solve the problem? The an- in my opinion Cylvia Hayes is cerguilty. This basic right seems to have swer is no. Good owners who "fix" tainly no "lady" and did not deserve been obscured in this case and the their cats and the surgical steriliza- to be called the First Lady of the investigations, yet to be concluded, tion of the wild ones (cities are doing state of Oregon. Cylvia is Kitzhaber's will determine whether Kitzhaber's that!) would eventually save thou- roommate and, in my opinion, that resignation was justified or not. sands from starvation and disease. gives her no status that entitles her to Patrick Elliott Bend
Since I'm a horse lover, I'd love to
ically selected for traits that made
them popular with riders, namely soundness, color and train-ability, businesses, even those not immedi- more people would buy them from ately adjacent to the work in prog- the BLM, thus helping their overress. Just one block west of Third population issue and their finanThe Reed Market Road construction project in Bend has hurt many
Street on Reed Market Road, several businesses have suffered financial
cial problem. Those horses without those traits would be sterilized
worthy of it. Perhaps the media and others need to be a bit more careful
and selective when bestowing titles where not deserved. Bill MacDonald Powell Butte
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
ing official who left the church in 2004 and hassince been subjected to
suit. Although the suit was eventual-
Scientology harassment, as the film
ly dismissed, it took years, and cost
documents. It also retells the story, first reported in The New York Times,
pose of Scientology, callingit a"hugely It is virtually impossible to tell the profitable global racket that survives story of Scientology without getting by intimidatingmembers and critics in into the issue of intimidation. As the a Mafia-like manner." film notes, going on the offensive Before the article was published, against its critics is part of ScientolBehar sayshe was followed by pri- ogy's doctrine, handed down by its vate detectives, who also contacted founder, L. Ron Hubbard. "It is the anacquaintances, asking whether he had tithesis of turn the other cheek," says financial problems. After its publica- Marty Rathbun, a former high-rank-
title of First Lady. It diminishes the title to apply it to a person who is not
Letters policy
ued, he says — along with a major libel
HBO on March 29.
be called the First Lady.
see the mustang herds managed by Oregon has had many governors knowledgeable horse people. Many in the past whose wives were truly riders love flashy colored paints and ladies, who were role models to be buckskins. If the herds were genet- looked up to and really deserved the
Reedconstruction hurt business
tion, that sort of harassment contin-
magazine, Behar had written an ex-
nian and a member of the usually
The lament that many of us vot- eryone can understand. There are I've spokenwith, are affrontedbythe ers share along with James Lussier thousands of feral cats in the U.S. news media's use of the title, "First
New York Times News Service
colleagues was a reporter millions of dollars to defend. Behar's named Richard Behar. He had a spe- deposition alone lasted 28days. cial lock on his door, and he wouldn't What brings this to mind is Alex even let the janitor in to empty his Gibney's fine new HBO documentawastebasket. He used a secret phone, ry about Scientology, "Going Clear: whichhekepthiddenin adeskdrawer, Scientology and the Prison of Belief," so that calls made to sources couldn't which is based on the book "Going be traced back to him. Clear" by Lawrence Wright. (DisdoAt first, I just thought he was par- sure: I played a small role in Gibney's anoid. But I soon learned that he had 2005documentary on Enron.)"Going come by his paranoia honestly. In May Clear," which was shown at Sundance 1991, as a correspondent for Time in late January, is scheduled to air on
I am a 79-year-old native Orego-
Bureau of Land Management tem-
By Joe Nocera
w
HayeswasnoFirst Lady
there was no new evidence provided
T ec i in e e c t o ci e n to o hen I was at Fortune magazine in the 1990s, one of my
and could live out their lives on the
own. In some instances business has
of how, in 1993, Scientology won a 25-year fight against the Internal Revenue Service, which had refused to grant it nonprofit status. Scientologists filed several thousand lawsuits, against not just the IRS but also indi-
vidual IRS officials, and hired private detectives to look for dirt and conduct
surveillance operations. But the film doesn't really tadde the intimidation of journalists. One of the
Please address your submission to either My Nickei's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: ietters©bendbulietin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
asw a n e
offices and discovered the plot against her in 1977.
famous Scientologist of them all.) No lawsuit. Anderson Cooper did a series
Over the course of the next three on CNN. The BBC weighed in. Ditto decades-plus, there were a
h a nd- and ditto.
ful — though only a handful — of (In a lengthy statement, a Scientolotough-minded articles like Behar's. gy spokesperson said Gibney had"lied "Everybody who wrote about Scien- to us repeatedly," that Marty Rathbun tology knew they were taking a risk," had "destroyed evidence and lied unWright told me. You've heard of the der oath," that a judge had described "chilling effect"'? Scientology offered a Behar as "biased," and that in defendprime example ofhowit works. ing itself against Gibney's "propaganThen, in 2009, The Tampa Bay da and bigotry," it was speaking "for Times (then The St. Petersburg Times) those who are subjected to religious published an important series about persecution and hatred.") Scientology, based on interviews with Gibney also noted that the people high-ranking defectors, including who are reallyharassed these days ar-
first journalists to take on Scientology, Rathbun and Mike Rinder,who had in the early 1970s, was a young free- been Scientology's top spokesman. lance writer named Paulette Cooper. The series was the first to suggest that Scientology's retaliation was astound- Scientology had a longstanding culing. It framed her for supposedly send- ture of abuse. Amazingly, the church ing bomb threats to the church. The did not sue. documentsitforged were so convincVanity Fair published a big piece ing that she was indicted in 1973 and about Scientology. (This was after was fully exonerated only when the the breakup of Tom Cruise and Katie FBI, acting on atip, raided Scientology Holmes; Cruise, of course, is the most
en't journalists but those who have left the church, such as Rathbun, who told
me that, with more people leaving and talking about the church, it no longer has the resources to sicprivate eyes on all its critics. "Part of the message here is that you
don't need to fear Scientology anymore," Wright says. It's long overdue.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
65
History
BITUARIES DEATH 1VOTICES Kathy Freeman,of Walter Eugene 'Gene'
Rogers, formerly of Bend May 25, 1956 - Feb. 21, 2015 Arrangements: Holy Angels Funeral 8 Cremation Center; 925-932-0900
Services: Visitation Thursday, February 26, 2015 from 6:30 pm with a Vigil at 7:30 pm at Christ the King Church on Brandon Road in Pleasant Hill, CA. Funeral mass Friday, February 27, 2015 at 10am, Christ the King Church followed by burial at Queen of Heaven Cemetery at 1965 Reliez Valley Road, Lafayette, CA. Contributionsmay be made
Culver July28, 1955- Feb. 14, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday, March 14, 2015, at 1:00 PM, at Culver Christian Church, located at 501 W. 4th Avenue in Culver. A Gaveside Service will be held at Sunset Heights Memorial Gardens in Tillamook at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
to:
FurEver Animal Rescue, 2687 Cornelius Drive, San Pablo, CA 94806
Walter Eugene 'Gene' Rogers May 25, 1956- February21, 2015
Robert "Bob" Flores, of Monterey Park, CA Sept. 15, 1926 - Feb. 20, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Mass of Christian Burial will be held Saturday, February 28, 2015, 11:OOAM, at the Rainbow Chapel in Rose Hills Memorial Park located at 3888 Workman Mill Rd., Whittier, CA. Immediately following, there will be a procession to Trinity Lawn in Rose Hills Memorial Park. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org
Janice C. Watts, of Black Butte Ranch Oct. 4, 1937 - Feb. 21, 201 5 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Graveside Service will be held at Restlawn Memorial Gardens in
Eugene on Sunday,
March 1, 2015, at 1:30 PM. A Memorial Service will take place at Reedsport Presbyterian Church on Saturday, March 21, 2015, at 1:30 PM.
Ramona "Mona" Gay (Austin) Fletcher, of Redmond (former Medford resident) Jan. 7, 1937 - Feb. 20, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Services: A private family memorial will take place in the
spring.
Contributions may be made to: Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org
We honor G ene R ogers, most recently a resident of M artinez, California, w h o passed away unexpectedly. G ene Rogers was born i n Bend, Oregon to Robert and Irene Rogers, the second of five children. A f ter gradua ting f r o m B e n d S e n i o r High School, Gene served h onorably i n t he Un i t e d S tates N a v y and l ate r graduated from the University of Oregon with a B . S. d egree in Science. Upo n graduation Gene moved to the San Francisco Bay Area to work i n t h e b i otech ind ustry and had a 3 0 y e ar successful career; most recently with Do w C h emical in Pittsburg. G ene is survived b y h i s l oving w i f e , M a r y L y n n , and t h e i r you n g son , M ichael, of M a rtinez. H e leaves his brother, Edward, and sister, Robyn ( B ruce) Garrett from Bend, Oregon, a nd h i s b r ot h er , Pa u l (Shannon) f r o m P l e asant Hill, CA; his sisters-in-law, Karen (Steve) Gagnon from Van Buren M aine, Margaret (Mike) Mullins, Michelle O chlan, an d R a chel ( D o minick) Gallelli from L o ng Island, New York. G ene is also survived by many loving nieces, nephews, cousi ns and f r i ends wh o w i l l m iss h i s ca r i n g na t u r e, beautiful smile and j oyous spirit. H e was preceded in death by his parents, Robert a n d Ir e n e , a n d h i s brother, David Jett. Gene and his family were very active in the Christ the King P a rish a n d S c h ool, where his son, Michael, att ends middle school. A s a devoted father, he was always active with hi s son's Boy Scout troop and was a l ifelong "super fan" o f h i s beloved U of 0 Ducks. V isitation w i l l b e h el d Thursday, F e b r u ar y 26 , 2015 from 6:30 p.m. with a Vigil at 7:30 p.m. at Christ the King Church on B r andon Road in Pleasant Hill. Funeral mass Friday, February 27, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. at Christ the King Church, followed by burial at Queen of Heaven Cemetery at 1965 Reliez Valley Road, Lafayette, CA. I n l i e u o f f lo w e rs, t h e family r e quests d onations b e made t o F u r Ever A n i mal Rescue, 2687 Cornelius Drive, S a n Pab l o , CA 94806.
Vernon Johnson 1923 - 2015 Joseph Vernon J o h nson w as bor n S e ptember 1 3 , 1923, in A l b a ny , O r egon, t o J o seph J o h n son a n d
Martha PVik) Johnson. He
passed away February 22, in Bend, Oregon. Vernon spent most of his
younger
y ears i n Salem,
Oregon
"It's really neat to hear the
and
graduated from Salem High School in 1941. Af Vernon Johnson t er s e r v -
ing
as
p resident o f th e Sal e m H igh F u t ur e F a r m er s o f A merica, h e p art n e r e d with h i s b r o t h e r -in-law, Jim T h o m p son t o pu r chase and operate a cattle and hay r anch i n C e ntral O regon. V e r no n m a r r i e d Charcelene B ar n e s in P ortland o n A u g u s t 2 2 , 1948. They later moved to B end w h er e V e r no n b e came a general contractor. O ver th e y e ar s h e b u i l t d ozens of h o mes i n C e n t ral O r e g on . He al so , along w i t h Ch a r c e lene, started a h o m e p r o d u cts and a p p l i anc e b u s i n ess called th e H o m e C e n t er, changing t h e n a me t o J ohnson Brothers TV a n d Appliance in 1980. Vernon stayed active in t h e b u siness until 2004. Vernon was a member of F irst B a ptist C h u rc h f o r m any years an d w a s i n v olved in l ead e r s h i p , teaching and outreach. He later a t t e nded E a s t mont Church. Vernon served the American Sunday S c hool Union for several years as a lay pastor to small communities. He l oved studyi ng a n d t e a c h in g G o d ' s Word. Vernon wa s a r e s ourcef ul entrepreneur who w a s n ot afraid o f t a k in g r i s k s t o b u i l d b u s i n e ss . In middle age he earned his pilots license and b o ught an airplane in order to extend his business interests out of th e ar ea. He never l ost hi s l o v e o f f a r m i n g a nd m a i ntained a sm a l l farm with polled Hereford cattle until s h ortly b e f ore his death. Vernon was preceded in d eath b y h i s s o n , M a r k A llen i n 1 9 58, hi s w i f e C harcelene i n 1 9 8 8 , h i s second wife, Mary F o rbes J ohnson i n 2 00 0 an d h i s sister, Eunice in 2012. Vernon i s s u r v i ve d b y h i s c hildren, Robert and w i f e M arsha of B en d, an d C harcie an d hu sb a n d Steve Madsen of Bend. He is also survived by gr andsons, David and wife Carr ie of K l a m ath F a lls, O r e gon, and Brian and w i f e Kelly of Williams, Oregon. H e i s s u r v i ved b y e i g h t e at-grandchilden: S c a r ett, Jude, Georgiana and C harlie J o h nson o f K l a m ath F a l l s ; K a t y , A l l i , Emma and Clara Johnson of W i l l i ams; a s w e l l a s many nieces and nephews. A memorial service w i l l be held T h ursday, February 26, at 11:15 a.m, at the N iswonger R e y n old s f u n eral c h apel. I n li e u o f f lowers, th e f a m i l y s u g g ests donations t o P a r t ners In Care Hospice.
The Washington Post
John Craven, a top scientist for the Navy during the Cold War, who oversaw many undersea weaponry and research programs, including efforts to retrievea missing hyrdrogen bomb and to spy on the Soviet Union, died Feb. 12 at his home
in Honolulu. He was 90. He had complications from
nuclearsubmarines before he was named chief scientist in
the USS Scorpion, a nudear 1958 of what was then called submarine that disappeared in
the Special Projects Office.
the Atlantic Ocean. He exam-
Under the general superviParkinson's disease, his daugh- sion of Navy Vice Adm. Wil-
ined oceanographic research
ter, Sarah Craven, said. Craven, who served as an
where an explosion caused the submarine to sink.
enlisted sailor during World
liam Raborn, Craven led a team
that, in 1960, successfully fired a Polaris missile from a sub-
records to pinpoint the location
merged submarine. It was con-
Courtney Welch,of Bend, and Emily Woodworth, of Sisters, were namedto the fall 2014 dean's list at Pacific University.
TEEN FEATS
Tia Hatton,a senior at Mountain View High School, was named The Center Foundation'sHigh Desert Hero for March 2015.Hatton ranks first in herclass academically and participates in cross country, Nordic skiing, and track and field. She ispresident of the Green Club and a member of the National JuniorHonor Society. Each month, The Foundation accepts nominations for high school seniors who "I'm kinda smart like him ... Center maintain a 3.5 or higher GPA, display leadership inschool activities I'm really good at math, and I and participate in communityvolunteer efforts. Hatton will receive a can readpretty fast,"he said. $250 scholarship.
How to submit
Story ideas
Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.) Contact: 541-383-0358, youth©bendbulletin.com Mail:P .O.Box6020,Bend,OR97708 Other schoolnotes:Collegeannouncements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
School briefs:Items andannouncements of general interest.
Airport Continued from 61 In a letter sent to Butler on
Jan. 29, Tripp highlighted four areas in which he considered Butler's application to be deficient: expanded envi-
ronmental impairment liability coverage;a more specific completion date for a Spill Prevention, Control and Counter-
m easure Plan;avalidsublease with KC Aero; and confusion
over whether Butler was offering rental services or flight instruction.
Phone: 541-633-2161
Email: news@bendbulletin.com Student profiles:Knowof a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354
Email: mkehoe@bendbulletin.com
"Is 90 days enough time?" Councilor
Later reading from a pre-
A n n e G r a h am pared statement, Newton add-
asked, considering the airport's readiness to maintain
ed that Butler was "dismayed that the current city staff in
charge of the Redmond Airoperations. port has chosen to suddenly Tripp answered: "Yes, and breach the agreements that we'll maintain a continuation have long been in place beof services." tween Butler Aircraft Services services once Butler ceases
Kurt Newton, Butler's gen-
and the City of Redmond."
eral manager, who spoke at Redmond is facing lawsuits the end of the council meeting from Butler and KC Aero that duringthe public comment pe- charge the city with, among riod, was livid. otherthings,fraud andbreach "I'm appalled," Newton of contract. said."It sounds like we opened
(this) shot down."
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletin
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. Theymay be 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 541-617-7825.
Phone: 541-617-7825 Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
He believed a torpedo acci-
dentally exploded inside. The sideredalandmarkmilitaryde- submarine's wreckage has of the Navy's Special Projects velopment of the Cold War. been photographed, but the Office. He had key roles in the After the nuclear submarine Scorpion and the 99 sailors on development of the Polaris, the USS Thresher sank in 1963 board remain entombed at the first intercontinental ballistic with 129 sailors on board, Cra- bottom of the sea. missile to be launched from a ven was put in charge of a new Survivors include his wife of submarine,and in underwater program called the Deep Sub- 64 years, Dorothy Drakesmith exploration and r econnais- mergence Systems Project. Craven, of Honolulu; two chilsance efforts carried out by In 1966, an Air Force B-52 dren, David Craven, of Chicago submarines. collided with a tanker during and Sarah Craven, of Bethesda, He began his civilian career midair refueling near t he Maryland; a brother, a sister, with the Navy in 1951 at the southern coast of Spain, killing and five grandchildren. War II, went on to spend more than a decade as chief scientist
liams afterher older brother suggested it. She had never worked on a project that took so long to complete. "It's really fun," Willa said. "I like talking, and I liked making the poster, that was like, really fun." Nate Miller, 9, decided to be Albert Einstein because
Email: obils©bendbulletin.com
entists plotted the probable spot where the bomb had come to
MILITARY NOTES
Jacob Biber,of Sisters, has received an Army Reserve Officers' TrainingCorps scholarship to attend the University of Oregon. He is they really liked. It just kind of a 2014 graduate of Sisters High School and theson of John Biber of puffs them up." Sisters. Tennis lover Willa Jensen, 9, decided to be Serena Wil- COLLEGE NOTES
covered several months later. In 1968, Craven helped find
bombs, and three were found on land. Craven and other sci-
SCHOOL NOTES
they can improve, and what
rest on the sea floor. It was re-
seven U.S airmen. The B-52 FEATURED OBITUARY was carrying four hydrogen David Taylor Model Basin, in Carderock, Maryland, a leading design and testing facility for Navy ships. He participated in some of the early work on
older kids give them compliments," Valley said. "They give (the third-graders) ideas on public speaking and how
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted Until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Scientist directed top-secret Navyprojects ByMnttSchudel
Before doing this project, Nate and she learned a lot about the didn't know that e=mc' stands history and everything." Continued from 61 forenergy equalsmass times Willa, Kendra and Iben all Teachers use the project the speed of light squared, he said they felt a little nervous to introduce students to sev- sald. talking in front of everyone. eral skills they will need as Kendra Lee, 9, dressed as Each of them had her own they progress in school. Stu- Sacajawea, complete with a way of getting through it. For dents learn how to conduct baby on her back. Kendra and Iben, the key "She is very special and has to overcoming nerves was researchatthelibrary and on the Internet, and how to com- a dollar coin with her picture practice. "I practiced a lot," Iben said. pile their findings into an in- on it," Kendra said. "I was very formational report. Then they excited to have this baby on "Ever since I f i nished this learntodraw facesand create myback." poster." a poster about their historical Kendra said it t ook h er W hen a sked h o w s h e figure. a week t o m e morize her copes with nerves, Willa just The students had two dress speechand that she was ner- laughed and said, "I don't rehearsals before presenting vous to talk in front of people. know. I just do it." "It is really cool," Valley to their parents that evening. Her parents stood nearby as In the morning, students in shepresentedto otherparents. said. "They just become a "She learned a lot," said whole different person. My kindergarten through second grade listened to presenta- her father, James Lee. "She shy kids just blossom." tions, and in the afternoon, checked out all the books that — Reporter: 541-383-0354, fourth- and fifth-graders lis- she could about her character, jrockow@bendbulletin.com tened and gave feedback.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnote from around the world: Ben Woolf, 34: Actor on "American H o r ro r S t o ry."
Died Monday in Los Angeles after being injured in a street
accident. — From wire reports
Donna anB Clarenee(Mac) PIcCoy Together for 75 Years, Die One Day Apart D onna Mae McCoy, age 93,died peacefully athome in Bend on Feb. 10, 2015, surrounded by her family and husband of 73 years, Mac. Clarence (Mac) Ernest McCoy, age 92, died one day later. They lived in Bend for 45years. Childhood sweethearts, Donna and Mac were married in September of 1941. At the time of their marriage, Mac was a member of the National Guard unit in Marshfield, Oregon. Due to unrest throughout the world in 1940, Mac's unit was activated and assigned to the defense of the Columbia River basin at Fort Stevens. Before his dependency discharge couldbe 6nalized,Japan'snavy bombed PearlHarbor and Mac and D onna were in "for the duration." Earl y in 1942,Mac was accepted for OScer Candidate School, and after being commissioned was assigned to the defense of the seacoast adjacent to the San Francisco basin. In 1944, his unit participated in the invasion of Saipan and Tinian, which was necessary to provide an aircraft base within range of Japan. Ayear later, his unit was assigned to, and participated in the invasion of Iwo Jima, again for the need of a 68hter aircraft base. Shortly after the War ended, Mac was transferredto reserve status. This inactive service lasted until June, 1951 when he was recalledto active service and assignedto the First Infantry Division in Germany. Donna followed Macto Germany with their two srnaH children in tow on a sea liner. Mac upgraded his commission statusto Regular Army, and rernained on active service, during which time they lived stateside as well as in Taiwan and Panama. Mac retired in 1969 as a full Colonel. Among numerousawards Mac received were two presentations ofthe Legion of Merit medal, one by the US Southern Command for service in South and Central America, and the other by the US Eighth Arrny in Korea.
Donna lived the life of an Army wife, seeing and living in many wonderful and exoticparts of the world while rearing their children. She was involved in charitable and Red Cross activities, as well as Cub Scout functions. Throughout her life, she had an amazing talent for reciting long poems from memory, enjoyed collecting seashells, driftwood and beach agates, and, in her latter years, was a talented and passionate crossstitcher.
After retiring from the military, Mac and Donna together operated an independent real estate appraisal business for about 10years. Additionally, they were both active over manyyears in the Discovery Christian Church. Mac issurvived byhis brother,Don of Bend. Donnaand Mac are
survived by their three children, William "Bill" in Grants Pass, Bonnie in Terrebonne, and Jay in West Linn, threegrandchildren,and one greatgranddaughter. A private family memorial service will be held at a later date.
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
B6
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
I
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TODAY
iI
TONIGHT i
HIGH 48'
TEMPERATURE Low
46 25'
I,
Cloudy with a shower or two; snow at night
73' in 1995 1'in 1993
/
/40
Portland
2/
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PRECIPITATION
Iington 5'I/35
39
•
Meac am Losti ne
dl b n 46 •
5
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49/3 •
47/30
•
•
•
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Feb 25 Mar 5
M a r 13 M ar 20
Roseburg 6/ Gold ach
0'
UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon
2 I~
S
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The highertheAccuWealher.mm tiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protscgon.9-2 Low, 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems.
ROAD CONDITONS ror web camerasof ourpasses, goto www.bendbueetin.com/weboams I-B4 at Cabbage Hill: Partly sunny today.A little snow late tonight. US 20 at SantiamPass:Mostly cloudy today. A little snow will move intonight. US 26 atGov'tCamp:Partly sunny today. Cloudy tonight with a little snow. US 26atOohooo Divide:Cloudsand sun today. Acoating of snowtonight.
ORE eaat Wigamette Pass:Rather cloudy today. Cloudytonight with a little snow at times, mainly later. ORE1sa at DiamondLake: Partial sunshine today. Rathercloudy tonight.
SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 3 49-4 9 1-1 Hoodoo SkiArea 0 Mt. Ashland 0 22-5 2 0 46-8 8 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 30-71 1-5 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 29-4 4 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 1 40-B 4 Vail, CO 0 51-5 1 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 10 24-4 8 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-3 8 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 54-54 Sun Valley, ID 0 31-6 0 Source: OnTheSnow.com
50/30
48/29
Fields • 52/31
• Burns Jun tion • 53/30 Rome 53/29 McDermi
• Paisley
• Lakeview
56/24
Yesterday Today Thursday
53/27
Jordan V gey
Frenchglen
5 4 / 28
56/3
59/
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
~ Z
Ch ristmas alley
Klamath • Ashl nd e Falls
Bro ings
Riley 51/27 48/29
Sitver 50/28 Lake 52/27
Chiloquin
Medfo d
57/
Source: JimTodd,OMSI
•
•
Beaver Marsh 51/26
Gra a
•
50/28
55/43
Low:10' at Lakeview
Tonight's slty:First Quarter Moon(9:14 am) means that it's the first one quarter of the moon cycle that is visible before it becomes a Full Moon.
• Fort Rock Cresce t • 50/28
56 6
YESTERDAY High: ee' at Roseburg
51/29
Yesterday Today Thursday
Yesterday Today Thursday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City 54/30/0.00 53/44/c 54/43/sh La Grande 59/21/0.00 50/32/s 47/31/c Portland 54/16/0.00 50/28/s 47/26/sh L a Pine 61/11/0.00 49/29/c 46/30/sh Prinevige Brookings 62/39/0.00 59/45/pc58/48/c Medford 62 /25/0.00 57/34/s 55/39/c Redmond Bums 62/1 5/0.00 51/27/s 48/26/c Ne wport 54/3 4 /0.00 54/46/c 54/46/sh Roseburg Eugene 60/27/0.00 55/42/c 54/45/sh N o rth Bend 5 7 / 36/0.00 57/47/c 56/47/sh Salem Klamath Fags 58/13/0.00 56/24/s 51/30/c O n tario 54/18/0.00 55/33/pc 55/30/sh Sisters Lakeview 55/10/0.00 53/27/s 48/28/c Pe ndleton 58/ 2 7/0.00 50/36/s 49/35/sh The Dages
City Astoria Baker City
59/3 2/0.0052/44/c 53/44/sh 61 / 1 8/0.00 50/31/c 46/31/sh 65 / 1 9/0.00 50/29/c 50/29/sh 66 / 28/0.00 55/43/s 55/46/sh 61/28/0.00 55/45/c 55/45/sh 61/1 3/0.00 51/30/c 49/29/sh 6 5 / 25/0.00 56/38/pc 56/39/sh
Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108 ~
gs
~ 08
~ 108
~ 209 *
NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the
53/44
48 contiguousstates) National high: ea at Fort Lauderdale, FL National low: -29'
+
~ 308 *
*
~ 408
~ 508
*
*
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~ 10 0 8 ~ 1 1 08 *
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52/44
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Yesterday Today Thursday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 37/22/0.00 58/29/s 38/20/c Akron 22/-9/0.01 21/6/c 17/1/sn Albany 19/-9/0.00 25/2/sf 18/-1/c Albuquerque 46/23/Tr 55/27/s 48/25/c Anchorage 40/33/Tr 32/1 9/s 31/18/s Atlanta 37/32/0.11 43/34/r 47/29/c Atlantic City 26/7/0.00 37/23/s 30/20/sn Austin 37/30/Tr 61/31/r 54/26/pc Baltimore 25/3/0.00 36/20/s 31/16/sn Billings 49/27/0.00 34/10/sn 20/6/c Birmingham 45/29/0.01 37/27/sn 45/22/pc Bismarck 32/26/Tr 10/-15/sn 5/-15/s Boise 53/26/0.00 52/32/s 50/31/sh Boston 18/2/0.00 33/12/pc 22/9/c Bridgeport, CT 19/0/Tr 33/12/pc 24/11/c Buffalo 21/-7/0.02 12/-2/sf 12/-3/sn Burlington, YT 15/-19/0.00 24/-3/sf 10/-5/pc Caribou, ME 7/-18/0.00 23/3/sn 13/-14/pc Charleston, SC 38/32/0.19 49/37/r 52/34/r Charlotte 31/28/0.07 47/32/r 43/28/c Chattanooga 42/27/0.03 38/31/sn 46/23/c Cheyenne 43/1 7/0.00 35/3/sn 17/2/sn Chicago 29/4/0.01 21/1 2/pc 15/-2/sf Cincinnati 28/-6/0.00 32/1 5/pc 25/2/sf Cleveland 21/-3/0.02 17/5/pc 13/0/sn ColoradoSprings 35/1 2/0.00 40/13/sn 20/2/sn Columbia, Mo 41/8/0.00 43/18/pc 22/2/sf Columbia, SC 36/33/0.14 48/36/r 48/32/c Columbus,GA 49/36/0.19 46/36/r 53/32/c Columbus,OH 24/-11/0.00 25/11/pc 19/2/sf Concord, NH 16/-21/0.00 30/3/pc 22/0/pc Corpus Christi 41/36/Tr 68/44/pc 67/39/pc Dallas 37/25/Tr 50/31/sn 40/23/c Dayton 25/-2/0.00 25/11/pc 18/-1/sf Denver 38/12/0.00 38/9/sn 20/1/sn Des Moines 40/13/0.00 25/4/sn 9/-10/pc 20/-1/Tr 19/5/s 17/-3/pc Detroit Duluth 21/13/0.02 8/-13/pc 7/-11/pc El Paso 63/29/Tr 64/38/s 55/30/s Fairbanks 32/25/Tr 20/-3/pc 18/1/c Fargo 20/16/Tr 5/-13/pc 4/-12/s Flagstaff 38/21/0.12 50/19/s 47/20/s Grand Rapids 24/5/0.01 18/4/pc 13/-8/pc Green Bay 34P/Tr 13/-5/pc 11/-9/pc Greensboro 28/22/0.03 46/29/pc 38/25/c Harrisburg 24/0/Tr 33/15/pc 27/14/c Harfford, CT 19/-8/0.00 32/6/pc 25/5/c Helena 48/15/0.00 36/16/sn 29/13/sn Honolulu 83/70/0.01 83/70/pc 83/69/pc Houston 43/33/Tr 58/35/r 61/34/pc Huntsville 40/28/Tr 37/28/sn 42/21/c Indianapolis 24/-5/0.00 27/13/pc 20/0/sf Jackson, MS 33/27/0.35 41/28/sn 45/24/pc Jacksonville 53/51/0.31 58/52/r 61/43/r
•
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45/34/sh 61/50/sh 75/61/s 66/45/pc 95/77/s 41/20/s 64/52/sh 45/31/pc 67/46/c 53/39/r 80/68/r 83/56/s 69/53/s 23/9/sn 86/72/pc 52/43/pc 48/43/sh 43/28/c 77/59/1 75/68/pc 56/47/c 55/43/pc 78/59/1 82/71/c 58/50/pc 52/46/pc 55/40/pc 89/75/s
46/35/r 58/49/sh 76/60/pc 68/48/s 95/77/s 39/21/s 69/58/s 46/33/s 69/45/c 48/35/c 77/64/1 81/56/s 75/57/pc 23/12/pc 87/70rt 45/33/pc 45/35/pc 45/37/pc 81/60/1 76/67/c 57/46/pc 65/49/s 81/58/pc 82/70/pc 59/51/pc 53/34/r 60/42/pc
gon5/s
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Yesterday Today Thursday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 43/39/0.09 42/33/r 41/28/s 45/11/0.00 46/13/sn 17/1/sf
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln
21/5/Tr 18/3/s 12/-7/pc 65/45/0.00 66/44/s 65/44/s 28/5/0.00 35/19/pc 30/5/sf 50/16/0.00 43/5/sn 15/-6/pc 43/22/Tr 38/25/sn 42/20/c 74/46/0.00 74/50/s 73/54/pc 31/10/0.00 37/22/pc 32/12/$1 35/6/Tr 16/2/pc 10/-7/pc 36/22/0.00 39/27/sn 38/21/c 85/67/0.00 82P2/s 8690/t 32/4/0.01 17/7/pc 13/0/pc 32/21/0.01 15/-3/pc 9/-6/pc 36/23/0.00 37/26/sn 40/1 8/c 48/40/0.00 52/37/r 55/37/pc 22/4/0.00 37/16/s 24/18/c 22/4/0.00 35/15/s 26/16/c 28/21/0.05 39/28/pc 33/24/sn 41/19/Tr 50/21/pc 33/16/pc 48/19/0.00 39/5/sn 12/-3/pc 76/60/0.08 76/64/pc 73/55/sh 76/49/Tr 80/54/s 82/54/s 36/4/0.00 28/13/s 19/0/sf 25/7/0.00 36/19/s 29/1 6/c 67/51/Tr 72/48/pc 75/50/s 27/-9/0.00 26/9/sf 21/6/sn 16/-11/0.00 330/sn 23/6/pc 16/-3/0.00 32/10/pc 23/9/c 29/21/0.09 46/29/pc 39/25/sn 56/30/0.00 34/0/sn 17/-4/s 59/20/0.00 60/29/s 56/30/c 27/17/0.02 45/27/s 35/21/sn 26/-9/0.00 16/-2/sf 12/-4/sn 68/32/0.00 66/42/s 69/43/pc 43/11/0.00 39/21/pc 26P/sf 47/23/0.00 50/28/s 48/29/sn 42/32/Tr 66/39/pc 60/31/pc 67/51/Tr 68/53/s 67/56/pc 66/44/0.00 64/50/pc 67/55/pc 66/35/0.00 67/42/pc 68/49/pc 41/18/0.01 47/22/s 35/13/sn 44/42/0.22 53/39/r 56/37/c 52/36/0.00 53/44/pc 53/44/sh 41/25/0.00 17/-6/sn 7/-10/s 46/27/0.00 46/29/s 43/28/c 38/20/0.00 44/22/pc 25/3/sf 71/64/0.10 73/61/sh 68/54/sh 60/49/0.29 68/41/s 73/44/s 42/22/0.00 49/20/pc 32/12/pc 30/14/0.00 41/26/s 33/22/sn 49/15/0.00 48/15/pc 22/5/pc 58/22/0.00 53/32/pc 54/35/sh 71/53/0.00 77/48/s 79/50/s
Litffe 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
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 Wichita
Yakima Yuma I
/18 M ne 1 /4
22'
~P fq+
Sunny to partly cloudyand chilly
46/37/0.41 Boston 59/48/0.27 • 52/32 , „ y p+ * * • Mil e Mr f Auckland 70/60/0.00 * * * * * * + * * * * * "* 17/7 19 w York "' Baghdad 68/45/0.04 * * Ch oi s at Morrisville, VT /14 + Bangkok 95/75/0'.00 * Precipitation: O.B1" iladelphie Beijing 45/25/0.00 * e xa e e e ~* " C Mg o 8/il 6/19 Beirut 66/57/0.12 at Yaldosta, GA n eucuco Se f t Lske oy * 21/1 50/28 'ra * Berlin 46/33/0.01 44/50 ingion Denver Las V es Loui ' le 41 Bogota 68/43/0.02 * 38/9 46/4 Kansas Iiy Budapest 50/45/0.15 46/13 Buenos Ai r es 93P5/0.00 39/21 •' 8 eihvil Cherfo Los Au lvu 2 Cabo San Lucas 86/64/0.00 L' Cairo 64/54/0.04 Phoen Anchorage Albuque ue klahoma Ci 9 +i i iaA Calgary 52/37/0.00 • 72/48 55/27 8 + v'Bjj fled Cancun 84/64/0.00 Juneau 81 Pe Dublin 45/37/0.45 XJ dg d d 56/3 Edinburgh 43/36/0.16 42/33 s Geneva 45/37/0.13 +<k ' • rlendo Harare • 79/57/0.38 II d,d Hong Kong 75/67/0.14 Honolulu Chihuahua o ~ . t Istanbul 57/48/0.05 SZ/7O 70/34 Miemi Jerusalem 60/49/0.20 82/vu 71/44 Johannesburg 81/57/0.33 xx dddd~d Lima 77/70/0.10 Lisbon 57/48/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 49/39/0.00 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 52/39/0.00 Manila 90/73/0.00 * % / t g*
Bols
SUNDAY
TRAVEL WEATHER
• 50/ CENTRAL: Sunshine andy • 56/38 Mc innvie Joseph I/42 Govee n t • u p i • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" will give way to clouds Condon 0/35 Cam • 51 50 32 Record 0.90" in 1917 today. Mostly doudy Lincotn union 42/ ;afewshowers 53/47 Month to date (normal) 0.2 3" (0.95") tonight Sale pmy Granite Year to date(normal) 0.48 " (2.48") or rain and snow. 55/4 2/36 a 'Baker C Newpo 45/27 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 2 5" • 51/33 4/44 54/46 • Mitch H 50/28 Camp Sh man Red n WEST:Areasof low 48/32 R SUN ANDMOON eu 49/31 • John clouds and fog to 55/45 • Prineville oay /28 Today Thu. tario start; otherwise, 50/31 • Pa lina 48/ 3 2 6:50 a.m. 6 : 4 8 a.m. 5 33 mostly cloudy north Floren e • Eugene ' Re d Brothers 5:49 p.m. 5: 4 9 p.m. andpartlysunnysouth 54/47 Valee Su iVere 48/28 11:02 a.m. 1 1 :49 a.m. 55/35 today. Nyssa • 48/ Ham ton 12:57 a.m. 1 : 5 5 a.m. La plne Juntura Grove Oakridge • Burns OREGON EXTREMES Full La s t New 53/32 55/41 /37
e
43' 24'
Clo udy with a couple of showers
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood 54/38 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
ria
EAST:Sunshine will mix with someclouds today. Mostly cloudy tonight; a rain or snow showers late. 52/47
Yesterday Normal Record 59 18'
29'
t,
SATURDAY
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
High
28' Rather cloudy with a bit of snow late
ALMANAC
FRIDAY
49'
LOW
Mostly cloudy
I f ' I
THURSDAY
I
Mecca Mexico City
93/72/0.00 93/73/s 96/72/s 81/51/0.00 78/49/s 77/44/s 14/-13/0.00 21/-9/sn 8/-9/pc Montreal Moscow 43/34/0.00 36/24/pc 35/27/c Nairobi 86/59/0.00 86/59/s 87/59/s Nassau 84/67/0.00 79/69/s 82/69/pc New Delhi 82/60/0.10 81/55/1 74/49/pc Osaka 55/40/0.00 54/40/pc 52/33/r Oslo 36/32/1.13 43/36/pc 42/38/sn Ottawa 14/-11/0.05 16/-1 2/sn 7/-14/pc Paris 48/36/0.04 47/39/sh 51/35/sh Rio de Janeiro gons/0.00 95/78/1 94/76A Rome 61/50/0.47 59/45/r 60/42/pc Santiago 68/55/0.00 83/54/c 83/54/s Sao Paulo 86/72/0.32 83/69/1 86/70/t Sapporo 34/31/0.15 34/25/sf 37/32/pc Seoul 43/23/0.00 50/30/pc 35/23/pc Shanghai 49/40/0.29 51/45/r 49/40/sh Singapore 87/77/0.07 89P5/t 89/75/t Stockholm 39/34/0.00 42/31/pc 40/32/pc Sydney 74/70/0.30 75/66/sh 81/69/pc Taipei 71/59/0.07 81/65/pc 76/66/sh Tel Aviv 70/53/0.07 64/51/pc 74/58/s Tokyo 54/46/0.06 51/44/c 50/44/r Toronto 16/-4/0.03 13/-7/sf 13/-7/pc Vancouver 48/34/0.00 47/37/r 48/39/c Vienna 43/36/1.13 44/36/sn 45/33/c Warsaw 45/39/0.02 46/37/c 46/37/c
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C3 NHL, C2 Preps, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY25, 2015
NFL
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL
uc s ac inosition ortourne ert Newhelmel
• Oregon returns to the bubblebut , morewins are necessaryto qualify for NCAAs By Steve Mims The (Eugene) Register-Guard
EUGENE — Oregon's win
over then-No. 9 Utah on Sunday moved the Ducks into most NCAA men's basketball
Oldhelmet Orange isthe new
orangeforBrowns CLEVELAND — By
tournament projections.
seed. Oregon (20-8) still needs to win a few more games to get the call on Selection Sunday few expected the Ducks to be in the mix for a third straight
The Ducks were the last
trip to the NCAA tournament
this late in the season. After an offseason in which three players were kicked off the team and two
No. 12 seed Monday, while Jerry Palm of CBSSports. com has Oregon as a No. 10
• No. 14 Maryland upsets No. 5 Wisconsin. Roundup,C3
in less than three weeks, but
team in the bracket forecast by ESPN's Joe Lunardi as a
win over the Utes. "When you
Inside
otherstransferred toleave
sticking with a helmet as their new primary logo, the Cleveland Browns gave fans aglimpse of the future when they unveiled the updated mark Tuesday. The new logo features a brighter orange helmet than its predecessor with a brown facemask instead of a grayone.
the Ducks with just three returning players, coach Dana Altman acknowledged he did not know if Oregon would be around for March Madness. "You like to be optimistic, but I'm a realist," Altman said after Sunday's 69-58 home
have only three guys back and two that really played, other than talent, experience is the next most important
thing so I was really worried just about our experience level. I think that showed early,
but I have been really, really pleased with the way guys stuck together and stuck with me." SeeDucks/C3
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
— The Associated Prass
Oregon St. at Stanford When:8 p.m. Thursday TV:Pac-12 Radio:KICE 940-AM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
DIAZ~ Q»: .
NASCAR must be proactive on safety
T
here is always drama in Daytona. Potholes in 2010.
Love-bug shenanigans in 2011. Fire and rain in 2012
with the jet-fuel-dryer track fiasco. And of course, tragedy in 2001 when Dale Earnhardt
died after hitting the wall on the last lap of the Dayto-
na 500. Another driver hit a wall last weekend in Daytona,
and he ended up with a compound
fracture ofhis left leg and a brokenright foot. Kyle Buschisgoingto
Inside e Who will
rePlace Kyle Busch? SPorts in brief,C2
be out for a
while after hitting an un-
— Akron (Ohio) Beacon Joumai
— Two members of Congress haveasked NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to clarify whether teams canlose draft picks if they do not properly address domestic violence. In a letter sent Tuesday to Goodell, Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, and Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., wrote: "We urge you to createaccountability at all levels of the NFL, particularly among team owners, who have themost direct financial incentives to avoid long-term suspensions and quickly get players back onthe field." The letter noted that the league hasdocked clubs draft picks in the past, such aswhen the Saints were investigated for a bounty system and when thePatriots were caught videotaping an opponent's sideline signals. "We support this potential disciplinary action as a significant indication that the NFL takes these issuesvery seriously and intends to hold teams responsible for allowing cultures of violence andabuse," Schatz and Speier wrote.
TV:ESPNU
GEORGE
It's a reflection of the
WASHINGTON
Oregon at California When: 8tonight
MOTOR SPORTS COMMENTARY
new helmets Browns players will wear next season. A Browns spokesman said the teamused helmets with brown face masks in someseasons between 1952-62. However, the spokesman said the team's logo had never featured a helmet with a brown facemask until now. "We thinkthe orange brings more energy and vibrancy to the logo," Browns presidentAlec Scheiner said Tuesday. "It's also a hint of what's to come with the uniforms. And then the brown face mask, we think, brings toughness. "What we wanted to accomplish here and what our fans essentially gave us permission to do ... is push forward but don't lose track of our tradition." Updating the primary logo was atwo-year process, Scheiner said. The team relied on focus groups and surveys to gauge fans' opinions and then askedthe NFL and Nike to develop designs.
Goodell gets Congressquery
Nextup
protected wall in the infield
during the Xfinity Series race Saturday afternoon. Photos by JoeKline/The Bulletin
Mountain View's Hailey Goetz,center, is mobbed by teammates after she made the game-winning shot against Bend on Tuesday at Bend High School. The Cougars won 35-34.
Daytona International
Speedway president Joie Chitwood reacted quickly, admitting there should
• GaetZ hitS the game-Winning Shatfalling down at the buzzerfor Mountain view By Victoria Jacobsen The Bulletin
MountainView had pre-
pared for this scenario if it presented itself against Bend
High onTuesday night. If the Cougars had possession out
Mountain View's
Kylee Reinwald shoots from the
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: hendhnlletin.com/spotts
O
Inside • Cowboys beat Estacada, reach state playoffs. Prep roundup,C4
have been a SAFER protective wall barrier in place. Soon after the incident, that
portion of the track's wall was protected with stacks of tires. And then'Ittesday, Inter-
corner
national Speedway Corpo-
durlhg
ration issued a statement
Tuesday's game at
saying that it is "developing a significant plan for the installation of additional
the game late in regulation, they would be ready. Trailing by two points with six seconds remaining, Moun-
attempt dropped through the net, giving the Cougars a
Bend High School. Reinwald led the
35-34 Intermountain Confer-
Cougars
Daytona and Talladega.
ence girls basketball win at
tain View faced that very scenario. And were they ever
Bend High as Goetz was soon
with11 points.
Chitwood and NASCAR got it right, but that honor-
of bounds and a chance to win
mobbed by her teammates. "We sent up the play we
impact-absorbing technologies including but not limited to SAFER barriers" at
able mea culpa does not do
ready. As time expired, Hailey
worked on in practice the oth-
much for Busch. Drivers are the show — the reason
Goetz received the inbounds
er day and drew it up again,"
the fans buy the tickets,
pass, turned and heaved the
Mountain View coach Steve
T-shirts and all that other
Riper said.
merchandise.
ball toward the basket. As the buzzer sounded, the 3-point
SeeCougars/C4
SeeNASCAR/C4
SOCCER
Clubs, playersunhappyabout likely winter '22 WorldCup By Sam Borden
ficial announcement after a six-
executive committee at a meeting in Zurich.
month evaluation. The committee, which is composed of representa-
switch to a November-December
tives from each of the world's soccer confederations, can only offer
tournament seems a foregone conclusion.
moving the soccer tournament
a November-December World Cup
In a news release Tuesday,
from the summer to the cooler months, between Thanksgiving
as a proposal. A final decision is expectednext month, when the
and Christmas.
proposal is voted on by the FIFA
New York Times News Service
FIFA's scheduling committee formally recommended Tuesday what most had been expecting for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar:
Technically, it was not an of-
At this point, however, the
soccer's governing body said that the committee considered a number of options and "aimed to
find the most viable solution for all
stakeholders" given the extreme temperatures in Qatar during the traditional summer World Cup wm(low. Many of those stakeholders
responded to Tuesday's announcement with anger, but also resignation. SeeWorld Cup/C4
Inside • Howa NovemberDecember World Cup would fit in with
European seasons,C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER Time TV / Radio Europe, Champions League, Arsenal (England) vs. Monaco (France) 11:30 a.m. FS1 Europe, Champions League,Bayer Leverkusen (Germany) vs. Atletico Madrid (Spain) 1 1:30 a.m. FS 2 North America, Champions League,Saprissa 6 p.m. FS2 (Costa Rica) vs. ClubAmerica (Mexico) TENNiS
ATP, Abierto MexicanoTelcel ATP, Abierto MexicanoTelcel ATP,DubaiChampionships
2 p.m. Ten n is 6 p.m. Ten n is 3 a.m. (Thu.) Tennis
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Indiana atNorthwestern 4 p.m. Big Ten Men'scollege,VCU atRichmond 4 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Connecticut at East Carolina 4 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Virginia at WakeForest 4 p.m. Root Men's college, Kentucky at Mississippi St. 4 p.m. SEC NBA, L.A. Clippers at Houston 5 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Tulane atTulsa 5 p.m. ESPNN Men's college, Marquette at Butler 5 p.m. FS1 Men's college, lllinois at lowa 6 p.m. Big Ten Men's college, Duke atVirginia Tech 6 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Baylor at lowa St. 6 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, NevadaatAir Force 6 p.m. Root Men's college, Georgia at Mississippi 6 p.m. SEC Men's college, Washington St. at Southern Cal7 p.m. Pac-12 7:30 p.m. NBA, SanAntonio at Portland ESPN, BlazerNet; KBND1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM Men's college, Washington at UCLA ESPN2 8 p.m. Men's college, Oregon atCalifornia 8 p.m. ESPNU HOCKEY 5 p.m. NBCSN NHL, Pittsburgh at Washington GOLF
LPGA Tour ,LPGAThailand PGATour, Joburg Open
10 p.m. 4 a.m. (Thu.)
Golf Golf
THURSDAY
11 a.m. 10 p.m. 4 a.m. (Fri.)
Golf Golf G olf
1, 3, 6:30, 8:30 p.m. Tennis
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Minnesota at Michigan St. 4 p .m. Men's college, Nebraska atOhioSt. 4 p.m. M en's college, Vanderbilt at Tennessee 4p . m . Men's college, High Point at UNC-Asheville 4 p.m. Women's college, Virginia at North Carolina 4 p.m. Women's college, Florida at Alabama 4 p.m. 5 p.m. NBA, GoldenState at Cleveland Men's college,UTEPatLouisianaTech 5 p.m. Men's college, Arizona atColorado 6 p.m. Men's college, SMUat Memphis 6 p.m. Men's college, Rutgers at Purdue 6 p.m. Women's college, Stanford at Oregon St. 6 p . m. Women's college,TennesseeatGeorgia 6 p.m. Men's college, BYU at Portland 7 p.m. NBA, OklahomaCity at Phoenix 7:30 p.m. Men's college, Arizona St. at Utah 7:30 p.m. Men's college,SanDiegoatGonzaga 8 p.m. Men's college, OregonSt. at Stanford 8 p.m.
Big Ten ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU
Root SEC TNT FS1 ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU
Pac-12 SEC Root TNT FS1 ESPN2
Pac-12
HOCKEY
NHL, Minnesota at Nashville College, Michigan St. at Minnesota
Today
Girls basketball: Class1A first round,JordanValley at TrinityLutheran,5p.m.
Friday Boysbasketball:RedmondatBend,7p.m.;Summit at MountainView,7p.m.;Ridgeviewat HoodRiver Valley, 7p.m.;Class4Aplay-in Girls basketball: Bend at Redmond,7 p.m.;Summit at MountainView,5:15 p.m. Wrestling:Class5A,4A,3A,2A/1Astatechampionships atMemorial Coliseumin Portland Nordic skiing: OHSN Ostatechampionships at Mt. Bachelor,TBD
5:30 p.m. NBCSN 6 p.m. Big Ten
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.
In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck www.gocomics com/rnthebreachers
/
! I,
Saturday
Girls basketball: Class 4Aplay-in; Class1Asecond round Wrestling: Class5A,4A, 3A, 2A/1A statechampionships atMemorial Coliseumin Portland Nordic skiing: OHSN Ostatechampionships at Mt. BacheloTB r, D
/
W<rcnOrKn ~
BASKETBALL
I
Pac-12 All TimesPST
Conference
W L Pct Arizona 12 2 . 8 57 Utah 11 3 .786 O regon 10 5 . 6 67 S tanford 8 6 .57 1 Oregon St. 8 7 .5 3 3 UCLA 8 7 .533 A rizona St. 7 7 . 5 00 C alifornia 6 8 .4 29 C olorado 5 9 .3 5 7 Washington St. 5 9 .357 Washington 4 1 0 .286 Southern Cal 2 13 .133
/ Overall
W L Pct 24 3 .889 21 5 .808 20 8 .714 17 9 .654 17 10 .630 16 12 .571 15 12 .556 16 11 .593 12 14 .462 11 15 .423 15 11 .577 10 17 .370
sia, 6-4,5-7,6-4. Karolina Pliskova,CzechRepublic, def. Stefanie
',(/, I r/,rr'; ,),r
VoegeleSw , itzerland, 7-6(4), 6-4. ZarinaDiyas, Kazakhstan, def.OnsJabeur,Tunisia, 6-3, 6-2. JelenaJankovic,Serbia, def.ZhengSaisai, China, 6-0, 6-2. AlexandraDulgheru, Romania, def. Alize Cornet, France,6-4,3-6,6-1. SecondRound VenusWiliams(7), UnitedStates, def. Barbora Zahlavova Strycova, CzechRepublic, 7-5, 3-6,7-6(5).
Today'sGames WashingtonSt.at Southern Cal, 7 p.m. Washin gtonatUCLA,8p.m. OregonatCalifornia, 8 p.m. Tbursday'sGames Arizona at Colorado, 6p.m. Arizona St. atUtah,7:30p.m. Oregon St.at Stanford,8p.m. Saturday'sGames Arizonaat Utah, 6p.m. WashingtonatSouthern Cal, 7:30p.m.
TOP 26 No.14 Maryland 59,No.5Wisconsin53 No. 6Viganova89, No.25Providence61 Syracuse 65,No. 9Notre Dame60 N.C.State58, No.15NorthCarolina 46 No.18Arkansas81,TexasA&M75 No. 20West Virginia 71, Texas64 EAST Buffalo67, Akron62 Niagara82,Canisius 71 Pittsburgh71,Boston College65 Villanoya 89, Providence61 WestVirginia71,Texas64 SOUTH Alabama 59,South Carolina 51 LSU84,Auburn61 Maryland59,Wisconsin 53 NC State 58, North Carolina46 MIDWEST BowlingGreen76, Ohio 65 Cent. Michigan 72,E.Michigan 56 Creighton75,DePaul62 Miami(Ohio)86, KentSt.81, OT Missouri64,Florida52 Syracuse 65,Notre Dame60 W. Michigan 53, Ball St.48 N. Illinois atToledo,ppd. SOUTHWE ST Arkansas81,TexasA&M75 McNeese St. 77,Cent. Arkansas60 TexasA&M-CC67, Abilene Christian 44 FARWEST Boise St.76,New Mexico65 UtahSt.83, UNLV65
Women's college USATodayTop26 coaches poll Record Pts Pvs 27-1 80 0 1 1. UConn(32) 26-1 766 2 2. SouthCarolina 26-1 734 3 3. Baylor 26-2 70 6 4 4. NotreDame 25-2 67 3 5 5. Maryland 23-4 62 2 6 6. Tennes see 25-2 60 9 8 7. Oregon St. 25-3 56 2 9 8. FloridaSt. 23-4 55 8 7 9. Louisville 24-4 493 13 10. Arizona St. 22-6 46 2 14 11. NorthCarolina 12. TexasA&M 22-6 45 2 15 13. MississippiSt. 25- 4 41 2 16 25-0 332 17 14. Princeton 19-8 326 10 15. Kentucky 2 1-6 311 11 16.lowa 19-8 30 1 12 17. Duke 20-7 19 9 18 18. Rutgers 25-3 18 1 22 19. Chattanooga 2 0-8 181 1 9 19. Stanford 2 1. George Washington 24-3 14 3 2 3 22. FloridaGulfCoast 25- 2 1 1 4 24 1 9-8 10 4 20 23. Nebraska 24. Texas 18-8 6 2 25 24-4 5 4 NR 25. Seton Hal Others receiving votes: Syracuse 52, South Florida46,JamesMadison42, Northwestern40, DePaul 15,California14, W.Kentucky10, St. John's8, UALR4,Minnesota3,Oklahoma3,Gonzaga2,Ohio St. 2, Miami1,Wa shington1.
Abierlo MexicanoTelcel Tuesday atAcapulco,Mexico First Round Kiki Bertens,Netherlands,def. RobertaVmm(6), Italy, 6-5,retired. LesiaTsurenko,Ukraine,def. AnaSofia Sanchez, Mexico,6-2,6-0. Johanna Larsson, Sweden, def. SloaneStephens (7), UnitedStates,6-3,6-2. MagdalenaRybarikova, Slovakia,def. Ajla Tomljanovic(10),Croatia, 6-3,6-4. SaraErrani(2), Italy, def.LucieHradecka,Czech Republic,6-1, 6-3. CarolineGarcia (3), France,def. PolonaHercog, Slovenia,6-4,6-1. ElenaBogdan, Romania, def. LaurenDavis, United States,6-4, 7-6(3). MarianaDuque -Marino, Colombia,def. Louisa Chirico,UnitedStates,1-6, 6-3, 7-5. Aleksandra Krunic, Serbia, def.AnnaSchmiedlova, Slovakia,6-2, 6-1. TimeaBacsinszky (5), Switzerland,def. Richel Hogenkamp, Netherlands, 2-6,6-2, 6-3. Sesil Karatantche va,Bulgaria, def. MarieBouzkova, CzechRepublic, 6-4,6-3.
Qatar Open TuesdayatDoha,Qatar Firsl Round AndreaPetkovic (6), Germ any, def. KirstenFlipkens,Belgium,6-7(5), 6-3, 6-2. CarlaSuarezNavarro (9), Spain, def.GarbineMuguruza,Spain, 6-5, retired. ElinaSvitolina,Ukraine,def.DariaGavrilova, Rus-
Men's college
Tuesday'sGames
GOLF
WTA
IN THE BLEACHERS
Sunday'sGames Oregon St.at California, noon Oregon atStanford, 4p.m. ArizonaSt. atColorado,5:30p.m. WashingtonSt.at UCLA, 6:30p.m.
SOCCER Europa League,Besiktas (Turkey) vs. Liverpool (England) Europa League,Fiorentina (Italy) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (England) Europa League,Everton (England) vs. Young BoysSwitzerland) Europa League, Feyenoord (Netherlands) vs. Roma(Italy) North America, Champions League, Alajuelense (Costa Rica) vs D.C. United (USA) 5 p.m. PGA Tour, HondaClassic LPGA Tour ,LPGAThailand EuropeanTour, Joburg Open TENNis ATP, Abierto MexicanoTelcel
ON DECK
Tuesday'sGames EAST Canisius65,Niagara59 NJIT70,Md.-Eastern Shore 41 Quinnipiac82,Manhattan71 SOUTH Campbel78, l Coastal Carolina 69 High Poin74, t Gardner-Webb58 Liberty91,Winthrop71 Presbyterian56,CharlestonSouthern48,OT Radford50,UNCAshevile 47 Tulsa 65,Memphis62 UCF59, Houston38 MIDWEST lowaSt.59,TexasTech47 Michigan81, Purdue50 Nebraska 74,Minnesota50 SouthFlorida74, Cincinnati 44 SOUTHWE ST TCU 73,West Virginia 63
HOCKEY
GOLF Professional
MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup
World Ranking 1. RoryMcgroy,Northern Ireland,11.43. 2. Bubba Watson,UnitedStates, 7.32.3. HenrikStenson, Sweden, 7.20.4.JasonDay,Australia,6.87.5.Adam Scott,Australia, 681.Sergio Garcia, Spain, 6.19.
Points leaders 1, JoeyLogano,47. 2,KevinHarvick,42. 3, Dale EarnhardtJr., 42. 4, DennyHamlin, 41. 5, Jimmie Johnso,n40.6,CaseyMears,39.7,ClintBowyer,37. 8, MartinTruexJr., 37.9, Kasey Kahne, 35.10, Greg Biffle, 35.
TENNIS
DEALS
ATP
Transactions
Abierto Mexicano Telcel Tuesday atAcapulco,Mexico First Round Lu Yen-Hsun, Taiwan, def. Victor EstregaBurgos, Dominican Republic, 6-2,7-5. GrigorDimitrov(3), Bulgaria,def. Filip Krajinovic, Serbia,6-3, 5-7t 6-0.
Viktor TroickiSerbi , a,def.Daniel Garza,Mexico, 6-4, 6-3. AndreasHaider-Maurer, Austria, def. RobinHaase, NHL Netherlands,6-3,2-6, 6-2. NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Steve Johnson,UnitedStates, def. Ivan Dodig, AR TimesPST Croatia,6-4, 6-4. Grigor Dimitrov(3), Bulgaria,def. Filip Krajinovic, EASTERNCONFERENCE Serbia,6-3, 5-7,6-0. RyanHarrison,UnitedStates, def. DonaldYoung, Atlantic Division GP W L OTPtsGF GA UnitedStates,4-6, 6-2,4-2, retired. Kei Nishikori(1),Japan,def. AlejandroGonzalez, Montreal 60 39 16 5 8 3 162 133 , 7-5. TampaBay 62 37 19 6 80 203 167 Colombia6-3, BernardTomic, Australia, def.AdrianMannarino, Detroit 59 33 15 11 77 173 154 France,3-6, 6-4,6-4. Boston 60 29 22 9 67 158 158 Ivo Karlovic(6),Croatia,def. TeymurazGabashvili, Florida 60 26 21 13 65 145 169 Ottawa 57 24 23 10 58 163 161 Russia,6-4,3-6,6-2. DavidFerrer(2), Spain,def. IgorSijsling, NetherToronto 60 24 31 5 5 3 167 183 Buffalo 61 18 38 5 4 1 114 204 lands,6-3,7-6(4). Metropolitan Division Argentina Open GP W L OTPtsGF GA TuesdayatBuenosAires, Argentina N.y.lslanders 62 40 20 2 82 200173 First Round N.Y.Rangers 59 37 16 6 80 186145 FedericoDelbonis,Argentina, def. PabloCarreno Pittsburgh 6 0 3 4 1 7 9 7 7 172 149 Busta(8), Spai n , 7-6 (2), 3-Otretired. Washington 61 33 18 10 76 181 152 BlazRola,Slovenia,def.Jiri Vesely(6), CzechRePhiladelphia 61 26 24 11 63 162 178 public, 6-4,6-3. NewJersey 60 25 26 9 59 136 158 FacundoArguego,Argentina, def.AlbertMontanes, Columbus 59 26 29 4 5 6 155 184 Spain, 6-3,6-2. Carolina 59 2 2 3 0 7 5 1 134 159 GuidoAndreozzi, Argentina, def.AndresMolteni, WESTERN CONFERENCE Argentina,6-2,6-2. Central Division RenzoOlivo,Argentina,def.JarkkoNieminen,FinGP W L OT Pts GFGA land,7-6(3), 5-7,6-0. Nashville 61 41 13 7 89 186 143 Albert Ram os-Vinolas, Spain,def. HoracioZebalSt. Louis 60 38 18 4 80 188 151 los, Argentina,6-4,6-1. Chicago 61 36 20 5 77 180 146 Carlos Berlocq,Argentina,def. DiegoSchw arlzWinnipeg 62 31 20 11 73 173 168 man,Argentina,6-3,6-3. Minnesota 60 31 22 7 69 169 158 Facundo Bagnis, Argentina, def.MarcoCecchinato, Dallas 61 27 25 9 6 3 191 202 Italy, 4-6,7-5,6-3. Colorado 61 26 24 11 63 161 175 NicolasAlmagro,Spain, def. PabloAndujar(7), Pacific Division Spain,6-3,3-6, 6-2. GP W L OTPtsGF GA Anaheim 61 38 16 7 8 3 182 171 DubaiCham pionship Vancouver 60 35 22 3 73 171 156 Tuesday atDubai, UmtedArabEmirates First Round Los Angeles 59 29 18 12 70 162 152 NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia,def.VasekPospisil, Calgary 60 32 24 4 68 171 157 SanJose 61 30 23 8 68 171 174 Canada,6-4,6-4. Andy Murray(3), Britain, def.Giles Muller,LuxArizona 61 20 34 7 47 134 206 6-4,7-5. Edmonton 62 18 34 10 46 142 206 embourg, TomasBerdych(4), CzechRepublic, def.Jerem y Chardy, Fran ce,7-6(2), 6-4. Tuesday'sGames Fehci a no Lo pe z (6), Spa i n , def. Jame s W ar d, Bri t Chicago3,Florida2, SO ain, 6-4,6-4. Vancouver 2, Boston1 Roberto Bauti s ta Agut (7), Spai n , def. Domi n ic N.Y.Islanders5,Arizona1 Thiem,Austria,6-3, 6-2. N.Y.Rangers1, Calgary 0 MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus,def. DavidGoffin(8), Carolina4, Philadelphla1 Belgium,6-2,7-5. Buffalo 4,Columbus2 Marselghan,Turkey,def. AlexanderZverev,GermaMontreal5, St.Louis2 ny, 6-1,7-6(4). Nashville 5,Colorado2 SimoneBoleli, Italy, def.LucasPouile, France, Edmonton 2, Minnesota1 6-3, 6-3. Winnipeg4,Dalas 2 BornaCoric, Croatia, def. MalekJaziri, Tunisia, Los Angeles1,Detroit 0 5-7, 6-3,6-3. Today'sGames Sergiy Stakhovsky,Ukraine, def. LukasRosol, Calgaryat NewJersey,4:30 p.m. Czech Republic,4-6, 6-1,6-4. Pittsburghat Washington,5 p.m. FernandoVerdasco, Spain, def. GuigermoGarOttawaatAnaheim, 7p.m. cia-Lopez, Spain, 7-5,6-1.
BASEBALL
AmericanLeague DETROIT TIGERS — Agreed to termswith RHP JobaChamberlain onaone-yearcontract. Designated RHPChadSmith forassignment. TEXASRANGERS — Claimed LHP Edgar Olmos from Seattleoffwaivers. PlacedINFJurickson Profar on the60-dayDL. National League CHICAG OCUBS—NamedJoshLifrakdirector-mental skillsprogram,ReyFuentesLatin coordinator-mental skills program, Dr.KenRavizza consultant-mental skils program,Manny Ramirezhitting consultantandKevin Youkilisscoutingandplayer developmentconsultantand DanielCarte,Kevin Ellis, GregHopkins andAlex Levitt areascouts.PromotedTimAdkins to midwest/norlheast crosschec kerandTreyForkerwaytocentral crosschecker, TerryKennedy to major leaguescout andJason Parks professional/am ateurscout. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association CLEVEL ANDCAVALIERS— Signed CKendrick Perkins. LOS ANGELESCLIPPERS — Signed F Jordan Hamilton toa10-daycontract. PHILADELP HIA 76ERS — Claimed F Thomas Robinsonoffwaivers. ReleasedGTimFrazierfromhis second10-day contract. UTAH JAZZ— Signed FJackCooley to a10-day contract.AssignedGlanClarkto Idaho(NBADL). FOOTBALL
National Football League ATLANTAFALCONS— Re-signedFBPatrickDiMarcoandDECliff Mathewsto contract extensions. NEWYOR KGIANTS— ReleasedDEMathias Kiwanuka. OAKLANDRAIDERS— Signed KGiorgioTavecchio. SANDIEG OCHARGERS—Announcedtheretirement ofLBJarret Johnson. TENNE SSEETITANS— Announced the resignation of executivevicepresident of administration and facilitiesDonMacLachlan. NamedStuartSpearschief revenueofficerandBobFlynnheadof facilities and
gamedayoperations.
HOCKEY
National HockeyLeague LOSANGELESKINGS— SignedFJordanNolanto athree-yearcontract extension. MINNESOTA WILD — AcquiredFSeanBergenheimfromtheFlorida Panthersfor a2016third-round draft choice. MONTREAL CANADIENS— TradedRW JiriSekac to Anaheim for RWDevanteSmith-Pelly. NASHVILL EPREDATORS— Reassigned D Anthony Bitettoto Milwaukee(AHL). NEW YORKISLANDERS—Agreedtotermswith D Nick Leddy onaseven-yearcontract. NEWVORKRANGERS— RecalledFOscarLindbergfromHarfford (AHL). SOCCER
Major LeagueSoccer
SPORTINGKANSASCITY— WaivedMFJames Marcelin.Mutuallyagreedto part wayswith MFJorge Claros. Nationa lW omen' sSoccerLeague WASHING TONSPIRIT —Aquired DEstegeJohnson from WesternNewYorkfor DToni Pressley. COLLEGE NEBRA SKA — Named Brian Stewart defensive
backscoach.
SPORTS IN BRIEF NHL ROUNDUP
BASEBALL DuCkS rOut PilOtS —Starting pitcher Jacob Corn gaveup one run over seven innings, and Mitchell Tolman hadsix RBls to lead Oregon to an8-2 win over Portland onTuesday in Eugene.Corn(1-0) scattered sevenhits and struck out three for the Ducks (8-1). Tolman cleared the baseswith a three-run double in the eighth. The Pilots (28) tied the game inthe top of the seventh before the Ducks answered with four runs in the bottom of the inning, highlighted by atwo-run single by Tolman.
MLB PlayerS to undergOdOmeStiCViOlenCe eduCatiOn
— All major leagueplayers on 40-man rosters will attend amandatory education program ondomestic violence during spring training. Major League Baseball said Tuesdaythesessions, which will be held for every team under an agreement with the players' association, will be coordinated bySanFrancisco-based Futures Without Violence.
Rare win for Oilersagainst red-hot Wild The Associated Press
500th NHL game for Carolina
Pouliot made sure his former
goalie Cam Ward. Canadiens 5, Blues 2: ST.
team didn'tembarrass hiscur-
LOUIS —
rent one for the second time in less than a week.
Galchenyuk and B r endan Gallagher had tw o g oals
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Benoit
M o ntreal's Alex
Pouliot scored twice, Bert
apiece, aztd Carey Price set
Scrivens stopped 33 shots and the Edmonton Oilers beat
a franchise record with his
Minnesota 2-1 o n
ninth straight road win.
Predators 5, Avalanche 2:
D zesday
SKIING
night to snap the Wild's threegame winning streak.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Pekka
Diio Win 1St AmeriCan nOrdiC WOrldS medalS —NoAmer-
E dmonton won f o r o n l y the fourth time i n i t s p ast
NHL-best 35th win. Jets 4, Stars 2: WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Adam Lowry put in his own rebound to break a
ican womanhadever won amajor championship medal in a long distance cross-country skiing race before Tuesday inSweden. Minnesota natives Jessie Diggins andCaitlin Gregg made it two in oneday. Diggins and Greggstunned the established favorites by taking silver and bronze in the 10-kilometer freestyle event at the nordic skiing world championships behind winner Charlotte Kalla of Sweden.
Rinne made 18 saves for his
24 games at Minnesota and handed the Wild their second
loss in regulation since the AllStar break. Pouliot, drafted fourth over-
Ann Heisenfelt/The Associated Press
Edmonton's Benoit Pouliot scores on Minnesota's Devan Dubnyk in the first period Tuesday night in St. Paul, Minnesota. Pouliot
scored two goals against his former team in a2-1 win.
all by Minnesota in 2005, beat goalie Devan Dubnyk twice in
MOTOR SPORTS
Rangers 1, Flames 0: NEW in five straight games. YORK — Kevin Hayes broke a Also on Tuesday: scoreless tie 3:00 into the third Canucks 2, Bruins 1: BOS- period for New York. TON — Zack Kassian broke Islanders 5, Coyotes 1: a tie early in the third period, UNIONDALE, NY. — Matt the first period and has scored
Ragan, JOneS to rePlaCe Kyle BBSCh —David Raganwil drive Kyle Busch's car in the Sprint CupSeries this weekend atAtlanta, while18-year-old Erik Jones will drive Busch's car in theXfinity Series. Busch broke his right leg and left foot when hecrashed headon into a concrete wall Saturday at Daytona International Speedway. Ragan will drive the No. 18Toyota for at least the next several weeks. Jones will drive the No. 54Toyota in Saturday's race. — From wire reports
artd Eddie Lack had 13 of his
40 saves in the final period for Vancouver.
New York.
second-period tie, and Michael Hutchinson made 26 saves for Winnipeg. Blackhawks 3, Panthers 2: CHICAGO — Chicago lost Patrick Kane to an injury in
Sabres 4, Blue Jackets 2: the first period, and then blew COLUMBUS, Ohio — Buffa- a two-goal lead before escapio's Zemgus Girgensons had a ing for a shootout victory. goal and an assist before ieavKings 1, Red Wings 0: LOS ing with a leg injury. ANGELES — Jonathan Quick Martin artd Johnny Boychuk Hurricanes 4, Flyers 1: RA- earned his fourth shutout of scored less than a minute LEIGH, N.C. — Justin Faulk the season as Los Angeles apart early in the third to lead had a goal and an assist in the won its eighth straight game.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALLNOTEBOOK
an onuna rai 0 as a s , Bulletin wire reports T he $325 million man i s
ready to go. G iancarlo S t anton,
ing gets underway at the Mar- spring training. But he will fig- pick in last year's draft after lins' facility in Jupiter, Florida. ure it out as he goes. starring at North Carolina
Won't he be a little scared "As long as it doesn't alter f o u r facing pitchers this spring who playing or seeing low balls,
State. Turner in D ecember was
a ions Lots of new faces for A's
him in the Rule 5 Draft from O a k l an d A t h l etics Miami, also could figure into might want to use name tags the mix. for the first full-squad workBen Zobrist will take over The
months removed from signing are still a month from getting the richest contract in base- into game shape? Won't that ball history, is ready to put the beanball that shattered teeth,
broke bones in his face and sidelined him for the final 17
games of the Miami Marlins' 2014 season in the past. He is ready to step into the batter's box, put his new
protectiveface guard to use against live p itching and smash some fastballs. Stanton, who led the Nation-
al League in home runs (37), slugging percentage (.555), OPS (.950), extra-base hits (99) and RBIs (105) when he was lost for the season on Sept. 11, said he feels no lasting pain from his injuries. But it is not the pain most are worried about as spring train-
high balls whatever, I plan to dealt to Washington in a three- out of the spring today in wear it," he said. "We'll just see team, 11-player deal that sent Mesa, Arizona. fastball teammate Jose Fernan- how the games go." center fielder Wil Myers from One would be pressed to dez plunked him with on these Tampa Bay to San Diego. find a major league team with same practice fields two years A Nationals player shows up The problem is, there is a more newcomers. " Your team m a kes n i n e ago pop into his head? Won't at Padres camp. Huh? rule that says a player selected Trea'Ibrner has shown up to in the June amateur draft can- trades involving 27 players, he be a little bit anxious'? "I've been in my normal rou- the San Diego Padres camp in not be traded until one year has that probably doesn't happen tine," Stanton said. "I've hit just Peoria, Arizona, even though passed since he signed his ini- often," A's manager Bob Melabout every day since I first got he has been traded to the tial professional contract, and vin said Tuesday. back to Florida a couple weeks Washington Nationals. another rule established a sixFirst base will be the doago. I look forward to hitting Confused? So is he. The month maximum for a player main of Ike Davis and Billy off live pitching. I don't look young shortstop is in one odd to switch teams after he is in- Butler. Davis, once a firstforward to it anymore than in situation. He is a not-so-secret cluded in a trade as a player to round pick by the New York years past. What happened to playerto be named from an be named later. Mets, was acquired in a trade me isn't one of my focuses to offseason deal who cannot ofSo the 21-year-old Turner with Pittsburgh. Butler left get past. I'm just looking at this ficially be sent east because of cannot head to Washington the American League chamas a normal spring training. As an obscure rule. until mid-June. pion Kansas City Royals to "A lot of people have to make sign a three-year, $30 million long as I keep that way I'll be Weird, huh? "I didn't even know it was decisions that I d on't really fine." free-agent deal with the A's. Stanton said the protective possible," 'Ihrner said'Ibesday. have a say in," Turner said. "So Mark Canha, who was acface guard he will wear might Here is what happened: I'm just going out there to play quired in a trade with Coloraneed altering t h roughout Turner was the 13th overall and help whoever I'm with." do after the Rockies selected
at second base aftercoming over from the Tampa Bay Rays, Marcus Semien, a Bay Area native who returned home in a trade with
the Chicago White Sox for right-handed starter Jeff Samardzija, "will be given every opportunity" to win the shortstop job. The A's
t r aded A l l -Star
third baseman Josh Donaldson to Toronto, but the man they got in return, Brett Law-
rie, should fit in nicely. Lawrie seldom sits still, and Melvin said A's fans "will like his energy." Josh Phegley, acquired in the Samardzija deal, will s hare r esponsibilities a t catcher with the returning Stephen Vogt.
NBAROUNDUP
Ducks Continued from C1
Bulls' Rosewill have yet
Altman said he has been
tough on his team in recent weeks as they won seven of
nine games to move into third place in the Pac-12 standings
another kneesurgery
at 10-5.
Oregon senior guard Joseph Young said he also
The Associated Press played in 19 straight games The hand-wringing over a nd 30 of 31. and scrutiny of Derrick Rose's I nTuesday's games: up-and-down play as he atWa r r iors 114, Wizards 107:
knew the Ducks could have
a successful season even after they were picked to finish eighth in a preseason Pac-12 media poll. "Going back to where they
tempted his second comeback W A S H INGTON —
had us in the conference, we
Bulls' season.
used that as confidence," Young said. "What t h ey
Now, almost unbelievably, a new chap- NS Xt IIP
Thompson a d d ed 17 mor e f or Golden
thought we'd be because of
ter has been written
State.
our lack of size, we put that to
— and it could be a career-ending, or at least career-defining, one.
tons 93: A U B U RN H ILLS, M i c h . K evin L ove t ie d a
S t ephen
from season-ending knee sur- Curry returned from a onegery has defined the Chicago game absence to lead all scor-
the side and came together as one team. We fight adversity
all around us, all the people criticizing us, and keep get-
The
ting better."
With Oregon on the outside of the NCAA bubble last
week, Young made a bold proclamation, telling report-
ers with 32 points, and Klay
B u l l s an-
Cavaliers 102, Pis-
$an Antpnjp
career-best
with
nounced late Tuesday at pprtland that an MRI exam confirmed a medi- +h
eight 3-Pointers for
al meniscus tear of
7 30 "g h
p oi nts a n d 11 assists
team said a timeline f or hi s r e turn w i l l be determined, it i s
1 0 0.1-FM; MA CITY — R u ssell KR CO 690-AM, W estbrook h a d 2 0 96 . 9-FM points, 11 rebounds
24 points, and LeBron James added 19
Rose's right k nee, T": ESPN for Cleveland. which will r equire Ra lie: KBND T hun d er 105, Pacsurgery. Though the 1110-AM, e rs 92 : O K L A H O-
ers, "We are going to the tour-
nament." Young downplayed the importance of those rem arks after th e w i n o v er Utah.
"That's just the confidence
said. "We put a lot of work in and day in and day out
almost certain Rose and 10 assists for his will miss the remainder of this third triple-double of the seaseason and the playoffs. son and 11th of his career, and It is the the same medial me- Oklahoma City picked up its
we have to go 100 percent so
niscus Rose tore in November s e venth straight win.
we can keep that statement. We're not really worried
2013, ending his first come-
I have in this team," Young
Ma v ericks 9 9 , R a ptors
back. Rose also tore his left 9 2 : D A L L A S — M o nta El ACL in April 2012. lis scored 20 points and Dirk Rose, who missed'Ibesday's N o w itzki had 18 as Dallas hit
about it, that's why I put the
statement out there early." The Ducks jumped up 12
light workout after complain- seven of its first 10 shots of the ing of right knee soreness, had fourth quarter.
spots to No. 44 in the RPI
rankings following the upset of Utah.
Oregon is on the road for the restofthe regularseason beginning with a trip south this week to play at Califor-
nia tonight and Stanford on Sunday.
NBA SCOREBOARD
Alex Gallardo/The Associated Press
Oregon's Joseph Young dunks against UCLA earlier this month in Los Angeles. Young, the only returning starter for the Ducks, has led the team to the brink of an unlikely NCAA tournament bid.
Standings
from the beginning to now and all the work we put in, but it's still not done," Young
said. Young was Oregon's only returning starter entering the
season. After scoring 18.9 points
per game last season, he has game. "I said at the beginning of boosted his scoring average to 19.8 points per game. the season, it's not Joe Young, He has also improved on I've got a squad with me," last year's totals with 4.5 re- Young said. "I can't play evbounds and 3.7 assists per erything by myself on the game. Six other players av- court and they understand erage at least five points per that. Everyone needs to step
up and make the extra play, not just me. They are going to deny me and keep the ball away from me. It is not just about offense. I feel like when
I don't score, it is a big deal to people. I like to play defense too, I play the game."
COLLEGE BASKETBALLROUNDUP
No. 14 MarylandsnapsNo. 5Wisconsin's streak The Associated Press
Maryland's
Jake Layman,
COLLEGE PARK, Md. The 11-point halftime lead -
was long gone, and Maryland suddenly was tied with a surging Wisconsin team that hadn't lost in more than
six weeks. In other words, the Terra-
pins were in perfect position to come away with another tight victory. D ez Wells scored 2 6 points, and No. 14 Maryland held off fifth-ranked Wisconsin 59-53 Tuesday night, ending the Badgers' 10-game a total of 17 points. Although winning streak. Wisconsin had an opportuMelo Trimble added 16 nity to take the lead in the points for the Terrapins, who closing minutes, Maryland finished the game with a coach Mark Turgeon said it 12-6 run. " We knew w e
wouldn't have mattered.
"We've been in so many poise and toughness to win closegames, we'd have just the game," Wells said. kept doing what we do," The Terrapins improved to Turgeon said. Frank Kamin9-0 in games decided by six sky scored 18 for Wisconsin points or fewer, and they've (25-3, 13-2) and Sam Dekker won their previous three by added 14. The Badgers' winhad the
Summaries
All TimesPST
"Where this team has come
Syracuse 65, No. 9 Notre
left, blocks a shot by Wis-
Dame 60: SOUTH B E N D, Ind. — B.J. Johnson scored 19 points, Rakeem Christ-
consin's Sam
mas added 14 and Syracuse
Dekker in the Terrapins' 5953 win Tuesday night at College Park,
b eat Notre D ame fo r t h e sixth time in the past seven
Maryland. Patrick Semansky /The Associated Press
ning streak was their lon-
gest since an 11-game run in 1941 to win the national
championship. Also on Tuesday: No. 6 Villanova 89, No. 25 Providence 61: VILLANOVA, Pa. — Darrun Hilliard scored
19 of his game-high 24 points in the second half, and Villa-
meetings. North Carolina State 58, No. 15 North Carolna 46: CHAPEL HILL, N .C. — Anthony "Cat" Barber scored 15
points and North Carolina State earned its first road win in the series in a dozen
years by holding North Carolina to its lowest point total in its n early t h ree-decade run in the Smith Center.
No. 18 Arkansas 81, Texas A&M 75: FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Bobby Portis scored
22 points, and Arkansas won its seventh straight game.
No. 20 West Virginia 71,
nova clinched at least a share
Texas 64: MORGANTOWN, WVa. — Devin W i l l i ams
of its second straight Big East regular-season title.
scored 14 points to lead West Virginia.
EasternConference d-Atlanta
d-Toronto d-Chicago Cleveland Washington Milwaukee Miami Brooklyn Charlotte Detroit Indiana Boston Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
u~ah
W L 44 12 37 20 36 21 36 22 33 24 31 25 24 31 23 31 22 32 23 34 23 34 21 33 19 39 I2 44 10 45
Pct GB
W L 44 10 41 14 38 1II 36 19 39 20 37 20 34 22 32 25 29 27 29 28 21 34 20 36 19 35 14 41 12 43
Pct GB 815
WesternConference
d-Golden State d-Memphis Houston d-Portland Dallas LA. Clippers SanAntonio Oklahoma City NewOrleans Phoenix
Denver Sacramen to LA. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader
Warriors114, Wizards107
Tuesday'sGames Golden state04, washington107 Cleveland102, Detroit 93 Oklahoma City105, Indiana92 Dallas99,Toronto 92 Today'sGames Miami atOrlando,4p.m. DallasatAtlanta,4:30p.m. NewYorkatBoston, 4:30p.m. BrooklynatNewOrleans,5 p.m. CharlotteatChicago,5 p.m. Philadelphiaat Milwaukee,5p.m. Washingtonat Minnesota, 5 p.m. LA. ClippersatHouston,5 p.m. PhoenixatDenver, 6p.m. LA. Lakers at Utah,6p.m. MemphisatSacramento, 7p.m. SanAntomoatPortland, 7:30p.m. Thursday'sGames GoldenStateatCleveland,5p.m. Oklahoma City at Phoenix, 7:30p.m
786 649 7'/z 632 8'/z 621 9 579 11'/z 554 13 436 19'I~ 426 20 407 21 404 21'/z 404 21i/z
389 22 328 26 214 32 182 33'/~
GOLDEN STATEI114) Barnes5-120-011, Green5-90-013, Bogut1-4 0-0 2, Curry 0-18 5-532,Thompson7-132-217, Lee2-61-25, Speights6-124-616, Iguodala4-80-2 9, Barbosa1-30-0 3, Livingston3-5 0-0 6. Totals 45-9012-17114. WASHINGTO N(107) Pierce7-u 9-9 25,Nene3-4 3-5 9, Gortat 8-11 0-016,Wall8-180-1 16,Temple3-72-210, Seraphin 5-9 0-010, Butler4-7 0-0 9, Sessions1-5 2-24, Webster 0-22-2 2, Humphries 3-50-06. Totals 427918-21 107. Golden State 30 2 4 32 28 — 114 Washington 28 23 32 24 — 107
Thunder 105, Pacers92 INDIANA (92)
S.Hill 4-81-211,West5-131-211, Hibbert3-80-0
745 31/2 6, G.HIII5-122-213, Miles9-14M 21,Stuckey2-8
679 7 655 8~/z 661 7'/z 649 8'/z 607 11 561 13'/z 518 16 509 16'/z 382 23'/~ 357 25 352 25 255 30'/z 218 32'/~
0-05, Mahinmi2-31-25, Watson1-50-03, Scola4-9 1-29, Rudez1-60-03,Copeland1-10-03, Sloan0-0 0 00, Allen1-I 0 OzTotals388871192. OKLAHOMA CITY (105) Singler0-4 0-00, Ibaka9-114-423, Kanter 6-10 3-415, Wes tbrook 8-193-320, Roberson1- I 0-0 2, Waiters5-180-014, Morrow5-90-012, Collison2-6 1-25,Augustin1-60-03,McGary2-75-59,Jones 0-1Ij 00, Lamb1-400z Totals40-9616-18105. Indiana 20 22 27 23 — 92 OklahomaCit y 3 0 1 8 32 25 — 105
Cavaliers102, Pistons 93 GLEYElAND I102) James6-14 6-1019, Love8-160-0 24, Mozgov 5-6 4-4 14, Irving 6-166-6 18, Smith 1-4 2-2 4, Shumpert2-102-2 8, Thompson2-3 0-0 4, Jones 2-4 0-0 6,Dellavedova1-30-0 3, Perkins1-1 0-02, Harris 0-00-00.Totals 34-7720-24102. DETROIT (93) Prince2-7 2-47,Monroe4-13 4412, Drummond 8-141-617, Jackson7-15 7-8 22, Caldwell-Pope 7-13 2-3 21,Tolliver2-5 1-4 6, Butler1-4 0-0 3, Meeks1-5 1-13, Dinwiddie0-4 0-00, LucasIII 1-2 0-0 2.Totals 33-8218-3093. Cleveland 30 23 24 25 — 102 Detroit 27 35 12 19 — 93
Mavericks 99, Raptors 92
TORONTO (92) J.Johnson 3-40-0 6,A.Johnson3-5 0-06, Valanciunas5-70-010, Lowry4-151-211, DeRozan7-21 4-518, Patterson 5-0 0-012, Wiliams4-101-210, Hayes1-20-02,Vasquez5-61-214, Ross1-30-03. Totals 38-847-11 92. Leaders DALLAS (99) ThroughMonday'sGames Jefferson3-74-4 u, Nowitzki 7-182-218, ChanScoring dler 2-3 0-0 4,Rondo2-6 0-0 4, Ellis 8-15 3-420, G FG FT PTS AVG Aminu4-91-29, Harris5-103-314,Stoudemire 2-3 Harden,HOU 56 459 460 1528 27.3 2-3 6,Barea5-8 0-013, Vilanueva0-00-0 0.Totals WestbrookOKC 42 372 309 1095 26.1 38-7915-18 99. James,CLE 47 431 275 1213 25.8 Toronto 29 26 22 15 — 92 Anthony,NYK 40 358 189 966 24.2 Dallas 25 24 25 25 — 99
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
C4
World Cup
summer,and a bevy ofcooling technologies have been
Continued from C1 A
in development. But medical s p okesman fo r E n - experts largely found the
gland's Premier League said premise of staging an event a winter World Cup was "nei- that stretches for more than ther workable or desirable," a month during the year's and the chairman of the h ottest period t o b e t o o European Club Association, dangerous. the former German player
Instead, the tournament Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, will be held for the first time hinted that his organization in what is the middle of the
might pursue millions of club season for a majority of dollars in payments if league the richest and most popular schedules and t elevision leagues around the world. contracts were affected by a Some soccer officials had midseason tournament. pushed for the tournament "The European clubs and to be held in January or Febleagues cannot be expect-
ed to bear the costs for such rescheduling," Rummenigge said. "We expect the clubs to be compensated for the damage that a final decision would cause."
Spanish, German and
ruary 2022, but FIFA said in the news release that the two
cities bidding for the 2022 Winter Olympics — Beijing and Almaty, Kazakhstan-
planned to run the Games from Feb.4 to Feb.20.Since Ramadan begins in early
PREP ROUNDUP
Cowboys inplayoffs for 1sttime since'12 Bulletin staff report
ing the win and a postseason mountain Conference victory. ed 10 points.
P RINEVILLE — Cr o o k County is driving into new
berth.
Davis Holly scored 22 points
French soccerofficials also released statements critical
April in 2022, and the hottest
temperatures in Qatar are
is a testament to the h ard
of the FIFA proposal, which would disrupt not only domestic league schedules for
from May to September, the
work of these boys and their
Boys basketball
news release said, "the only remaining effective option
dedication and their commitment to getting better."
Mountain View 67, Bend 65: Ments Haugen sank a pair of
at least two m onths, and
is the November-December
Crook County (14-11 over- free throws with 2.7 seconds all) outscored the Rangers left, and Jordan Vance stole 15-8 in the second quarter to the ensuing inbounds pass take control, eventually seal- to secure the Cougars' Inter-
perhaps for more than one window." season, but also continental
competitions like UEFA's Champions League and Europa League. And FIFPro, the world players' union, said that while " a s w itch to the winter months is the
only viable solution" it remained c oncerned a bout
the welfare of players who would be expected to absorb a World Cup into the middle
of an already challenging league season. "Changes to th e m atch
Television networks, like Fox in th e U n ited States,
tially that it was displeased because it had bid on the the games would be played during the summer window as opposed to later in the year, when the tournament will conflict with more pre-
mium programming like NFL games.
FIFA recently a n nounced that Fox and Telemundo, the
— The Associated Press
Ridgeview 18 18 24 12 — 72 Redmond 14 2 18 18 — 52 Standings Three-poingoal t s — Ridgeview:Mendazona 3, AlIntermountainConterence varez 2, Albrecht, Blundell; Redm ond: Benson, Team Conference O v erall Troutman, Winters. 19-4 MountainVie w 9-2 7-4 Summit 17-5 Class 4A Ridgeview 7-5 16-7 Tri-Valley Conterence Bend 5-6 11-11 Playoffs Redmond 0-11 3-20
Redmond 10 7 14 7 — 38 Ridgeview 21 16 21 16 — 74 Standings Three-pointgoals—Redmond: Edwards3, Hamilton; IntermountainConference Ridge view:S.Wilcox,Epps,Ross. Team Conference O v erall 9-2 17-5 Summit Class 4A 7-4 Bend 13-10 Tri-Valley Conference Ridgeview 8-4 14-10 Playoffs M ountaiVine w 4-7 7-16 Redmond 0-11 2-20
Class 5A IntermountainConference
Mountain View 67,Bend 65 Bend (65) —ChristianJohnson25, Spitler 18, Willy 9, Parsons 8, Mora4, Wallace1. Totals 21 17-23 65. Mountain View(67)—Davis Holly 22,Haugen
16, Albin 0, vance 6, scinto6, vansise2, wilcox 2, Kurzynowski z Totals 2412-1267. Bend 20 14 11 20 — 65
MountaiVi new 14 13 15 25 — 67 Three-pointgoals —Bend:Johnson3, Spitler 2, Mora;MountainView:Holy 4,Albin 3.
Ridgeview (72) —Garrett Albrecht23,Mendazona21,Alvarez0, Manselle6, O'Neal6, Blundell 3, Taylor 2.Totals 29 7-972. Redmond (52) — CodyMoss12, Aamodt 10, Benson9,Winters5, Soper 4, Burroughs3, Troutman 3, Hair 2,Kitchin2, Ridlings2. Totals1911-1552.
Cougars
Girls basketball
Crook County54, Estacada48 Estacada(48) — Douglas Kirchhofer11, Smith 9, Avants 9, Shannon8,W.Blankenship8,S.Blankenship3. Totals193-848. CrookCounty(54) —BlakeBartels17, Kessi13, Harper10,Kee10,Lapsley2, Hernandezz Totals18 14-26 54. Estacada 14 8 9 17 — 48 CrookCounty 1 4 1 5 9 16 — 54 Three-poingoal t s— Estacada:Ayants 3, Kirchhofer, S. BlankenshipShannon, , Smith; CrookCounty: Kessi 2,Kee,Harper. Class1A playoffs Round 1 Tuesday'sGames DaysCreek67, Chiloquin 51 Crane54, Echo49 Adrian45,Triad43(OT) Dufur63,Joseph42 TriangleLake52, North Douglas41 Sherman 79,Life Christian 53 ColumbiaChristian56, C.S.LewisAcademy36 Crosshill Christian53,Lowell 41
Class 5A IntermountainConference
Mountain View 35,Bend 34 Mountain View (35) — KyleeReimwald 11, Goetz10 ,Bailey9,VanderZwiep2,Skoog2,Hughes 1. Totals115-1235. Bend (34) —SophiaJackson10, Wheeler 8, Parker7,Kinkade6, A.Jackson3. Totals 13 6-11 34.
Mountai nView 4 14 8 9 — 35 Bend 7 7 12 8 — 3 4 Three-poingoal t s—MountainView: Reinwald3, Bailey 3,Goetz2;Bend:Parker, S.Jackson.
Ridgeview 74, Redmond38 RedmondI38) — Chantel Dannis 15,Edwards 13, Hamilton 9, Joyce1. Totals13 8-2338. Ridgeview (74) —Sailor Woodward 16, Shae Wilcox 16,Wilder 13,Epps10, McFetridge 6, Ross 5, Whitney 3,Pinkerton2, A.Wilcox 2, Platt1. Totals 26 19-32 74.
Mountain Viewand
«.'I2-5I 6 N
Continued from C1 But this w asn't p ractice. As the seconds ticked away,
l
Bulletin
en 8, Rieskam p 8, cox 5, clarizio 3,Marrz Totals 19 8-15 50.
C rookCounty 6 13 1 1 3 — 33 Molalla 8 13 17 12 — 50 Three-poingoal t s— CrookCounty: Malott; Molala: Cox,Elliot, Rieskamp,Schultz. Class1A playoffs Round 1 Today'sGames North Clackama s Christian (13-10j atSherman(1213),6p.m. Dufur(17-9)at Powder Valley (14-10j, 6 p.m. Wallowa (14-10) atAdrian(21-5j, 8 p.m. Jordan Valley(17-9) at Trinity Lutheran(23-4),5 pm. Hosanna Christian (18-10j at Elkton(17-9), 6 p.m. Camas Valey (20-7) at SiletzValey (15-7),6 p.m. Lowell (13-11jatWilametteValey Christian(11-11j, 7p.m. Falls City(10-12)atPortlandLutheran(15-10j,7pm.
Bend guard Tayla Wheeler scored six of her eight points
Todd Ervin said. While the last-second shot
was a devastating way for
was left at that point when been much."
Crook County (33) — KimmerSeverance13, Thomas 8, Malott 7, Rhinehart4, Morgan1. Totals 12 8-17 33. Molalla (50) —AliciaSchultz16,Elliot 8,Lars-
Bend players in the third to help erase most go for a loose of that advantage, but Mounball during tain View came out on top for thegame the firsttime in three tries Tuesday night against the Lava Bears this at Bend High season. "Typical B end-Mountain School. View ending," Bend coach Joe Kline/The
the screens fell apart and the Cougars could not find an open look, eventually kicking the ball to Goetz on the wing. "I thought for a m inute there we weren't going to get off (a shot), because I couldn't tell how much time there she grabbed the ball," Riper explained. "It couldn't have
Molalla 50, CrookCounty 33
the Lava Bears to end their "It's just one of those things where you go, 'Wow, it was
"The only thing that was just another one of those going through my head was kinds of games.' I believe the to win it for the team, because harder you work the luckier we deserved it and it was you get, and our kids worked something we all wanted so hard all season. They deserve bad," Goetz said. it, and they needed something The Lava Bears (7-4 IMC, like this for all the hard work
players had racked up four fouls by the middle of the fourth quarter. "Obviously that hurts, to
last home game of the regular season, Riper said the win helped ease the disappoinotment from the opportunities
his team had missed earlier in have some of your best play- the year. "They're maturing; they ers sitting out of the game, but tonight they were really continue to get better," Ripsmart with i t," R iper said. er said of his players. "They "They never picked up that stuck with things even though 13-10 overall) went on a 12-0 we put in." fifth foul, and they stayed in we've had a rough year from run during the third and The Cougars were some- it, so it all worked out for us." the win-loss record. They've fourth quarters to build a what fortunate to even have Kylee Reinwald led the maintained the integrity of 32-26 lead, but two c rucial Bailey and Goetz — who fin- Cougars with 11 points, in- playing hard and finishing 3-pointers from Sarah Bai- ished the night with nine and cluding three 3-pointers that the season, and they just don't ley put the Cougars (4-7, 10 points, respectively — on helped build a 21-14 lead over quit." 7-16) in position for Goetz's the floor in the final minutes the Lava Bears in the opening — Reporter: 541-383-0305, game-winner. of a physical game, as both minutes of the third quarter. vjacobsen@bendbulletin.com "I wasn't hoping for the last-second finish. We were f ortunate that that went i n
WK'RK OPKN!
for us. We've been in several of these kinds of games this year where it's come down to the end," Riper said, noting that in the past week alone his
team had lost to Ridgeview on a similar game-winner and survived a missed buzz-
er-beater against Redmond.
Bad stuff happens when you Formula One. He would have are reactive, not proactive. likely survived that crash toConsidering the immensisignificant safety initiatives in day. Dan Wheldon's death in
Las Vegas in 2011 sparked changes in Indy Car, including dropping Vegas out of the rotasafety changes that are made tion because it was conducive are reactionary, not proactive. to pack racing at ridiculous "I hit the same wall a little speeds. further up, lastyear, at this parAnd NASCAR, of course, ticular race and kind of voiced made massive changes in my opinion and unfortunately I safety technology after Earnwas just a'dot'on the chart and hardt's death. Among the there was no reaction," Kevin wrenching aspects of the In-
ty of grief that NASCAR and
Daytona took last Saturday after Busch's mishap, imagine the vitriol had another driver
competing in that Xfinity race
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Rising, Saturday night. Every racing sanctioning
timidator's death is that media,
those initiatives.
BEND GOLF 86 COUNTRY CLUB P RESEA SON P R O M O T I O N
hit the wall. That would be Dale Earnhardt Jr. And that would have been Daytona Burning, not
taking notes, and spending in the week leading up to the everycentpossible on making track. So hopefully this is a les- race, predicted that tragic per- their venues the safest place to son learned. You don't want to fectstorm because tracks and be on race day. It should be a have a reaction." drivers were not adequately non-negotiable budget item. This has played out in prepped for a safe ride. There is no money to be a ll motor s ports, no t j u s t Every NASCAR driver is made ifdrivers are hurt or, NASCAR. now required to wear a protec- heaven forbid, dead. The death of star driver tive head restraint as part of — George Diaz is a columnist Ayrton Senna in 1994 led to
15 points, while Maddie Ed-
points and 16 rebounds, won wards had 13. this intracity IMC showdown. Molalla 50, Crook County George Mendazona had 21 33: MOLALLA — K i m m er points and 14 assists for the Severance had 13 points and Ravens (7-5 IMC, 16-7 over- 10 rebounds as the Cowgirls all), who held the Panthers to e nded their season with a just two points in the second Tri-Valley Conference playoff quarter. Cody Moss paced loss. Chelsea Thomas added Redmond (0-11, 3-20) with 12 eight points for Crook County points, and Nick Aamodt add- (8-17).
Boys basketball
Ridgeview 72, Redmond52
With the 2022 World Cupfalling in the middle of the season for Europe's richest leagues, seasonswill have to start earlier and end later to accomodate the monthlong tournament. Here is how the Europeanseason could shape up. May2022:European seasonendsas usual. June:When the World Cupwould usually be played, players will have the month off. July:Champions Leaguequalifiers as normal. There might have to be fewerqualifying entrants to copewith the earlier start. Mid-July:Start of season for leading European leagues. Aug 2-3, 9-10:ChampionsLeagueplayoffround Miti-August:European transfer window closes Aug 23-24: ChampionsLeaguegroupstagebegins Sept 2, 6:Euro 2024 qualifiers Sept13-14:ChampionsLeaguegroupmatchday2 Sept20-21:ChampionsLeaguegroupmatchday3 Sept 30, Oct. 4:Euro 2024 qualifiers Oct11-12: Champions Leaguegroup matchday4 Oct18-19: ChampionsLeaguegroupmatchday5 Nev1-2: ChampionsLeaguegroupmatchday6 Nev4:Mandatory release of players two weeks before World Cup. World Cupwarm-up games would takethe place of the regular November international date. Nov18:World Cup begins in Qatar. Dec1:World Cup group stage ends. 368 of the 736 players exit. Dec 4-6:World Cup round of16. 184 players exit. Dec 9-10:World Cup quarterfinals. 92 players exit. Dec13-14:World Cupsemifinals. Dec17:World Cup third-place. 46 players exit. Dec 18:World Cupfinal. The final 46 players exit the tournament. Dec 26:England's Premier Leaguecould return to start its traditional packedChristmas fixture program. Other leagues could choose to resumelater if they determine that players returning from the World Cupafter reaching the final or thirdplace gameneeda longer break. Mid te lateJune2023:European leaguesend. August 2023:England's season starts as usual after a twomonth break. In 2014, the Premier Leagueseason started just a month after the World Cup final in Brazil. Notes:FIFAwould have to find a spot in 2021 for the Confederations Cup, which usually serves asthetest event for the following year's World Cup. Anew place in the calendar would also have to befound for FIFA's ClubWorld Cup, which is usually played in December.
Harvick said at Daytona. "Now there'sa reaction from the race
led by Garrett Albrecht's 23
PREP SCOREBOARD
rights to t h e t o u rnament with the expectation that
How itcouldwork
Continued from C1 NASCAR and every governing body in motor sports should mark that on the company logos. Way too often,
REDMOND — Sailor Wood-
the past 11 seasons. Haugen ward and Shae Wilcox each chipped in with 16 points, scored 16 points for the host nine rebounds and five assists Ravens, who wrapped up for the Cougs, and Austin their regular season with an Albin had 11 points and six IMC win. Woodward added boards. For Bend (5-6, 11-11), six rebounds, and Hosanna Christian Johnson scored 25 Wilder had 13 points for Ridpoints, and J.J. Spitler had 18 geview (8-4 IMC, 14-10 overpoints and six rebounds. all), which led 21-10 after the Ridgeview 72, Redmond 52: first quarter. Chantel Dannis REDMOND — Ri d g eview, led Redmond (0-11, 2-20) with
ics of the move. Fox said ini-
gether with all stakeholders in due course," the organiza- Spanish-language TV-rights tion said. holder in the United States, Officials involved in the would have their contracts Qatari bid have long main- to broadcast the tournament tained their willingness to extended for an additional host the event during the cycle, to 2026.
NASCAR
tured its ninth league title in
were among the many crit-
schedule that could potenIn a d e v elopment that tially place extra strain on many observers thought to the workload of the players be related to that situation, is for FIFPro to analyze to-
for No. 1 Mountain View (9-2 Girls basketball IMC, 19-4 overall), which capRidgeview 74, Redmond 38:
Seth Kessi chipped in with territory now. 13 points, nine repounds and Behind 17 points and four four steals for the Cowboys, rebounds by Blake Bartels, while Garrett Harper and the Cowboys dispatched Es- Kohlter Kee each posted 10 tacada 54-48 in a Tri-Valley points. The Class 4A play-in Conference boys basketball round begins Friday. "I told the boys tonight that playoff game Tuesday night, earning Crook County a spot from here on out, every team in the Class 4A postseason for gets better," Darin Kessi said. "Every team gets more diffithefirsttim esince 2012. "It's been a long time since cult. It's been quite a few firsts Crook County even gotten for these boys, so it's cool to into a play-in game," Cow- see they're doing things at boys coach Darin Kessi said. Crook County that h aven't "For us to win two games last been done in a while." year and win 14 (this season) Also on Tuesday:
with the Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel.
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C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY25, 2015
+
S&PBOO
NASDAQ ~ 4,968.12
18,209.19
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
TOdap Wednesday, February 25,2015
Better quarter? Dollar Tree reports its fourth-quarter financial results today. Wall Street anticipates that the retailer will deliver improved earnings and revenue for the quarter. The company has been facing increased competition from Wal-Mart Stores and Kroger, which have been opening smaller store formats to directly compete with other discount retailers.
1 0 YR T NOTE ~ - . 0 8 1.98%
2,115.48
S8$P 500
18,240 "
Close: 2, 1 1 5.48
17,980"
Change: 5.82 (0.3%) 2,040' " ""'10 DAYS
GOLD ~ $1,196.90 ~
3 40
SILVER
+
18,000 ":. 17,500 ":.
2,000 17,000 ":.
1,840.
16,500" . .1 "".S" . " 1 " " " O
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Home Depot
- : .
1 6,000
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NYSE NASD
Vr'I44
Vol. (in mil.) 3,117 1,788 Pvs. Volume 3,006 1,705 Advanced 1939 1568 Declined 1205 1142 New Highs 1 99 1 5 9 New Lows 14 30
HIGH LOW CLOSE 18231.09 18098.73 18209.19 DOW Trans. 9184.76 9093.28 9178.48 DOW Util. 611.45 602.24 607.98 NYSE Comp. 11133.78 11070.57 11122.12 NASDAQ 4971.18 4945.14 4968.12 S&P 500 2117.94 2105.87 2115.48 S&P 400 1518.62 1512.16 1517.72 Wilshire 5000 22329.27 22221.31 22308.64 Russell 2000 1236.20 1230.07 1233.98
CHG. +92.35 +34.96 +3.92 +47.54 +7.15 +5.82 +2.10 +48.64 +2.15
DOW
J
%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.0.51% L L L +2.17% $.0.38% L +0.42% $.0.65% L -1.63% $.0.43% L L L +2.61% $.0.14% L L L +4.90% $.0.28% L L L +2.75% $.0.14% L L L +4.49% $.0.22% L L L +2.95% $.0.17% L L L +2.43%
110 100
Eye on housing With the spring-home selling season now underway, is demand picking up after a weak 2014? Recent home salesdata suggest the opposite is true. Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes tumbled 4.9 percent last month to the lowest level since April. What about sales of newly built homes? Economists expect that the Commerce Department will report today that new-home sales slowed in January.
New home sales seasonally adjusted annual rate 500 thousand 481
est. 470
462
450
448 456
431
400
A
6
0
N : D '14 i '15
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Source: Facteet
On target?
A LK 40.69 ~ A VA 29.03 ~ BAC 14 . 37 ~ B B S I1 8 . 25 ~ BA 116.32 ~ C A C B 4 . 11 ~ COLB 2 3.59 ~ COLM 34.25 — CO ST 110.36 ~ BR EW 10.07 ~ F LIR 28.32 ~ HPQ 2 8 .75 ~ I NTC 24.30 ~ K EY 11.55 ~ K R 3 9 .47 ~ LSCC 5.87 ~ L PX 12.46 ~ M DU 21 . 33 ~
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MEN T 18.25 — o MSFT 37.19 ~ N KE 70.60 ~ JWN 58.60 — e N WN 41.51 ~ PCAR 55.34 ~ P LNR 1.93 ~ P CL 38.70 ~ PCP 186.17 ~
SCHN 1 5.90 o — SHW 188.25 — o S FG 57.77 ~ SBUX 67.93 ~ UM P Q 14.70 ~ 1 U SB 38.10 ~ WAF D 19.52 ~
WF C 4 5 .61 — o W Y 2 7.48
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JPM
Close:$60.82 L1.47 or 2.5% The bank plans to save $1.4 billion in annual expenses through cost cutting measures while charging large clients deposit fees. $65 60
$74.61 ~
F $117.92
Chegg
71.40 64. 4 3 +. 2 9 +0.5 L 38.34 34.4 1 +. 0 5 +0 .1 L 18.21 16. 3 8 + . 1 8 +1.1 71.76 39. 0 6 +. 6 6 + 1.7 L 158. 8 3 15 4.38 -.36 -0.2 V 5.82 4.72 -.03 -0.6 T 0.3 6 28.13 +.03+0.1 W 56.28 55 .58 - .06 -0.1 W 56.8 5 148.21 -.18 -0.1 L 17.89 1 2. 3 4 -.04 -0.3 L 37.42 32.1 5 +. 0 6 $ .0.2 L 1.1 0 38.49 +.30+0.8 L 37.90 34. 4 1 +. 6 5 +1.9 ~ 14.70 14.0 8 +. 1 7 + 1 .2 L 73.60 7 2. 9 2 -.22 -0.3 L 9.19 6.51 +. 1 1 + 1.7 L 18.88 17.6 2 +. 3 5 +2 .0 L 36.05 23. 2 6 +. 4 2 +1.8 L 25.39 25 .10 -.01 . . . W 50.0 5 4 4. 0 9 -.06 -0.1 L 99.76 95.4 2 +. 4 1 +0 .4 L 81.78 80 .56 -.55 -0.7 V 52.57 48.5 2 +. 2 1 + 0.4 L 71.1 5 6 3. 7 9 -.12 -0.2 V 9.17 5.75 -.04 -0.7 V 45.45 4 3. 1 4 -.25 -0.6 ~ 275. 0 9 21 5.13 +1.15 +0.5 V 30.0 4 15 . 9 3 -.14 -0.9 V 29 0.50290.62 +1.06 +0.4 L 71.80 66.7 5 +. 5 6 +0 .8 V 93.9 3 9 3. 4 5 -.13 -0.1 V 9.6 0 16.68 +.08+ 0.5 V 46.10 44.7 2 +. 2 4 +0 .5 L 24.53 21. 1 1 +. 1 8 +0.9 L 55.95 55 .37 + . 27 +0.5 L 37.04 3 5.1 4 -.59 -1.7 V
JPMorgan Chase
D J 52-week range $52.97~
F $ 63.49
Vol.:12.8m (2.3x avg.) PE: 26.5 Vol.:22.9m (1.2x avg.) PE: 1 0 .6 Mkt. Cap:$153.86b Yi eld: 1.6% Mkt.Cap:$227.36 b Yield:2.6%
NorthwestStocks NAME
ppp3
55
D J 52-week range
52-WK RANGE e CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp ColumbiaBnkg Columbia Sportswear Costco Wholesale Craft Brew Alliance FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard Intel Corp Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Microsoft Corp Nike Inc B Nordstrom Inc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarInc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Schnitzer Steel Sherwin Wms StancorpFncl StarbucksCp Umpqua Holdi ngs US Bancorp Washington Fedl Wells Fargo & Co Weyerhaeuser
HD
Close:$116.75 L4.47 or 4.0% The home-improvement store reported better-than-expected financial results and guidance while boosting its quarterly dividend. $120
I
StocksRecap
1.1338+
Stocks rose broadly on Tuesday to record highs after encouraging signs from the Federal Reserve, strong corporate earnings and hopeful news on Greece. Fed Chair Janet Yellen testified to Congress that the central bank will remain patient in raising interest rates because of sluggish wage growth and low inflation. Investors were also encouraged by a report showing home prices rose in December at a faster pace than the month before. The stock rally in the U.S. followed one in Europe as creditors to Greece extended their bailout loans to the country by four months. Nine of the 10 sectors of the Standard and Poor's 500 index rose, led by utilities.
18,500 ":.
1,920
EURO
q
' 7
StoryStocks
'
2,080
$49.28 +
Dow jones Industrlals Close: 18,209.19 Change: 92.35 (0 5%)
"
17,720 ' ""' 10 DAYS "
2,160 ":"
CRUDEOIL
07
$16.18
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CHGG Close:$8.60%1.85 or 27.4% The textbook company reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit and announced a new deal with Ingram Content Group.
$9
Oneok
OKE Close:$45.10 V-2.32 or -4.9% The natural gas company reported mixed fourth-quarter profit and revenue results and lowered its 2015 financial outlook. $60 50
D
J
F
D
52-week range $4.82~
$8 .71
Vol.:10.0m (21.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$721.1 m
J
F
52-week range
PE:. Yield:.
$39.53~
$71.19
Vol.:3.5m (1.3x avg.) PE:2 9 . 9 Mkt.Cap:$9.39 b Yield: 5.4%
Toll Brothers
TOL Chart Industries GTLS Close:$38.53L1.43 or 3.9% Close:$34.79L3.42 or 10.9% The homebuilder reported betThe engineering equipment compater-than-expected fiscal first-quarter ny reported better-than-expected financial results and set positive fourth-quarter financial results and a home-building guidance. positive fiscal outlook. $40 $40 35
35
30 D
D
52-week range
52-week range
$28.92~
$39.95
Vol.: 6.7m (2.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$6.76 b
J
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$27.34 ~
$89.49
PE: 21.1 Vol.:3.2m (5.6x avg.) P Yield:... Mkt. Cap: $1.06 b
Rosetta Resources
E:1 4 . 0 Yield: ...
RO S E PLD Biopharma
Close:$18.58V-3.29 or -15.0% The oil and gas company reported worse-than-expected fourth-quarter profit and said it is deferring production growth. $30
PDLI Close:$6.86V-0.48 or -6.5% The patent and royalty assets manager, focusing on cancer treatments, reported worse-than-expected fourth-quarter results.
$9
25
8
Target has been working to win 20 back customers since a 2013 data breach. D J F D J F The nation's second-largest 52-week range 52-week range discount retailer, due to report $15.92~ $5 5.45 $6.52~ $ 16.26 fourth-quarter earnings today, has DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 6 -Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredor paidin last12 months. I - Current Vol.:10.3m (3.8x avg.) PE: 9 .6 Vol.:9.7m (3.3x avg.) P E:3. 6 annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, rs regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent recently begun adding more Mkt. Cap:$1.14 b Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$1.1 b Yiel d : 8. 7% dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend organic and sustainable brands announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP and products. It's also taking aim value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. at competitors by slicing its NET 1YR minimum online purchase to TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO qualify for free shipping in half to $25. Will its latest results show Home Depot shares jumped 4 percent analysts were anticipating. Its quarterly 3-month T-bill . 0 1 .01 ... .04 signs that the strategy is paying Tuesday after the home improvement revenue of $19.16 billion, helped by 6-month T-bill . 0 6 .06 ... W V W .07 off? retailer reported better-than-expected strong holiday sales, also topped market 52-wk T-bill .18 .20 -0.02 V L L .10 fourth-quarter results. It also announced Jl forecasts of $18.68 billion. TGT $76.95 2-year T-note . 5 6 .61 -0.05 V L L .32 $80 plans to repurchase $18 billion of its own Home Depot said that it expects 2015 The yield on the $56.24 5-year T-note 1.45 1.54 -0.09 W L W 1 5. 5 10-year shares, boosted its quarterly dividend by earnings of between $5.11 and $5.17 per 70 Treasury fell to 10-year T-note 1.98 2.06 - 0.08 W L W 2.7 4 26 percent and issued a strong outlook share. Analysts were anticipating 1.98 percent for the year. full-year earnings of $4.50 per share. 30-year T-bond 2.59 2.66 -0.07 V L W 3.70 60 ,"15 The company earned $1 per share on However, the company did warn that the Tuesday. Yields affect rates on 50 an adjusted basis for its fourth-quarter, strong dollar could weigh on its NET 1YR mortgages and BONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO well above the 89 cents per share that performance this year. Operating
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Home Depot (HD) T
4Q '13 4 Q '14
52-wEFK RANGE
Price-earnings ratio: 32 $75
based on past 12-month results
Dividend: $2.08 Div yield: 2.7% Source: Factaet
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YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities AmericanFunds AmBalA m 25 . 39 +.13+2.6 +11.7 +13.4+12.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 61.51 +.22 +3.2 +9.5 +10.7+10.2 A A A The price of oil CpWldGrlA m 48.23 +.13 +4.6 +7.5 +13.6+11.2 8 8 C fell Tuesday on EurPacGrA m 49.54 +.69 +5.1 +1.9 +9.2 +8.0 C C C expectations of FnlnvA m 54. 1 1 +.23+3.9 +13.5 +16.8+14.7 D C C rising inventoGrthAmA m 44.59 +.12 +4.5 +11.3 +18.0+14.9 D 8 D ries in the U.S. IncAmerA m 22.22 +.68 +3.0 +10.2 +12.4+12.0 8 A A Natural gas InvCoAmA m 38.27 +.16 +3.2 +14.5 +17.7+14.4 C 8 C rose. In other NewPerspA m38.12 +.15 +5.1 +7.6 +14.1+12.4 8 A 8 commodities WAMutlnvA m42.66 +.22 +2.7 +14.3 +17.0+15.7 8 8 A trading, gold Dodge &Cox Income 13.93 +.65 +1.1 + 4 .7 + 4.1 +5.2 D 8 8 and silver IntlStk 44.24 +.21 +5.1 + 4.1 +12.3 +10.0 A A A Stock 183.55 +.83 +1.4 +11.8 +20.1 +15.9 D A A edged lower. Fidelity Contra 101. 3 4 +.10+4.4 +11.6 +17.4+16.3 D C 8 Copper and ContraK 101 . 27 +.10+4.4 +11.7 +17.5+16.4 C C 8 corn rose. LowPriStk d 51.66 +.69 +2.8 +10.9 +16.2+15.9 D D C Fideli S artan 500l d xAdvtg 75.69 +.21 +3.1 +16.8 +18.2+16.2 A 8 A FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.48 +.61+2.8 +4.0 +9.5 +9.7 D A A IncomeA m 2. 4 5+.61 +2.9 + 4 .1 +10.0+10.1 D A A Oakmark Intl I 25.60 +.62 +7.1 -0.2 +13.1+11.9 C A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 48 . . . +2 . 5 + 13.8 +14.4+13.9 D E D RisDivB m 18 . 69 -.61+2.3 +12.9 +13.4+12.9 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 97 . . . +2 .3 + 12.9 +13.5+13.0 D E E SmMidValA m50.63 +.16 +3.9 +14.3 +16.8+14.1 8 C E SmMidValB m42.64 +.13 +3.8 +13.4 +15.9+13.1 8 D E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.30 + .14 +1.5 + 9 .9 +15.2+13.7 E D C Exchange GrowStk 55.3 9 - . 64 +6.6 +12.9 +19.2+18.1 C A A The ICE U.S. HealthSci 74.9 7 - . 34+10.3+28.4 +36.6+29.8 A 8 A Dollar index — a Newlncome 9. 6 7 +.63+ 1.3 + 5.4 + 3.1 +4.5 8 C D measure of the Vanguard 500Adml 195.72 +.55 +3.1 +16.8 +18.2+16.3 A 8 A dollar against a 500lnv 195.68 +.54 +3.0 +16.7 +18.0+16.1 8 8 8 basket of key CapOp 55.10 +.10 +4.5 +16.0 +24.3+17.1 8 A 8 currencies, Eqlnc 31.88 +.14 +2.1 +14.6 +16.8+16.5 8 C A including the IntlStkldxAdm 27.47 +.16 +5.7 +1.1 +6 8 NA 8 D Japanese yen, StratgcEq 33.77 +.63 +4.9 +15.8 +21.0+19.9 A A A British pound TgtRe2020 29.29 +.10 +2.9 +9.2 +10.2+10.4 A A A and euro — fell. TgtRe2035 18.47 +.67 +3.5 +10.2 +12.8+12.3 A 8 8 Tgtet2025 17.64 +.65 +3.1 +9.5 +11.1+11.0 A 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.96 +.64 +1.2 +5.5 +2.7 +4.3 8 D D Totlntl 16.43 +.10 +5.7 +1.1 +6.7 +6.6 8 D D TotStlAdm 53.30 +.12 +3.3 +15.4 +18.1+16.5 C 8 A TotStldx 53.28 +.13 +3.3 +15.2 +17.9+16.4 C 8 A USGro 31.61 +.64 +5.3 +15.7 +18.5+16.9 8 8 8 FAMILY
CATEGORY Multisector Bond C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * *** r r -.96 -28.1 GtBasScin CymaBayn -2.27 -18.5 ASSETS $2,298 million -5.38 -15.8 LibertyTax 28.66 EXP RATIO 0.90% RosettaR 18.58 -3.29 -15.0 MANAGER Matthew Sheridan -1.94 -15.0 Daktronics 11.01 SINCE 2005-10-31 RETURNS3-MO +0.6 Foreign Markets YTD +1.8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +3.1 Paris 4,886.44 +24.14 + . 50 3-YR ANNL +7.8 London 6,949.63 + 37.47 + . 54 5-YR-ANNL +9.4 Frankfurt 11,205.74 + 74.82 + . 67 Hong Kong24,750.07 -86.69 -.35 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 43,921.55 +245.68 + . 56 US Treasury Note 1.625% 4.85 Milan 22,149.75 +1 85.46 +.84 4.82 Tokyo 18,603.48 +1 36.56 +.74 US Treasury Note 1.5% 0.82 Stockholm 1,683.92 + 5.59 + . 33 Brazil(Fed RepOf) 10% Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 0.71 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,890.00 +17.60 + . 30 US Treasury Bond 7.625% Zurich 8,984.61 +6.92 + . 08 Ivory Coast Republic 2.5% 0.49 redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar. NAME
Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 2.48 2.53 -0.05 W L BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.25 4.26 -0.01 L L Barclays USAggregate 2.17 2.22 -0.05 L L
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+ 1 9 .1 Vertical axis represents average credit
+5.00 + 18.0 +.36 + 1 7.4
price-eamings ratio: 25 (B a sed on Past 12-month results)
AmdFocus
Gainers NAME
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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) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
W 3 .51 W 4.86 W 2.3 3
w W W W
5. 3 2 4.4 4 1. 7 8 3. 0 7
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 49.28 49.45 -0.34 -7.5 1.37 1.40 -0.07 -15.7 2.03 2.22 - 8.52 + 9.9 2.90 2.88 + 0.80 + 0 . 5 1.62 1.65 -1.58 +1 2.9
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1196.90 1200.30 - 0.28 + 1 . 1 16.18 16.25 - 0.40 + 4 . 0 -3.8 1162.60 1162.90 -0.03 2.71 2.64 +2.73 -4.5 790.30 786.25 +0.52 -1.0 CLOSE
PVS.
1.57 1.56 Coffee (Ib) 1.45 1.44 Corn (bu) 3.78 3.79 Cotton (Ib) 0.65 0.65 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 295.20 303.20 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.24 1.27 Soybeans (bu) 10.16 9.99 Wheat(bu) 5.06 5.06
%CH. %YTD +0.40 +0.62 -0.33 + 0.02 -2.64 -2.13 +1.68
-5.5 -1 2.8 -4.9 + 7.5 -10.8 -11.5 -0.3 -1 4.2 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5455 -.0000 -.00% 1.6665 Canadian Dollar 1.2 5 08 -.0069 -.55% 1.1061 USD per Euro 1.1338 +.0003 +.03% 1.3735 JapaneseYen 118.93 + . 0 6 + .05% 1 02.49 Mexican Peso 14. 9254 -.1575 -1.06% 13.2460 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9525 +.0392 +.99% 3.5162 Norwegian Krone 7 . 5883 -.0303 -.40% 6.0366 South African Rand 11.4865 -.1596 -1.39% 10.7659 Swedish Krona 8.3 9 41 -.0218 -.26% 6.5053 Swiss Franc .9501 -.0005 -.05% . 8 890 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2778 -.0046 -.36% 1.1063 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2483 -.0067 -.11% 6.0985 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7568 +.0003 +.00% 7.7596 Indian Rupee 61.916 -.248 -.40% 62.075 Singapore Dollar 1.3573 -.001 4 -.10% 1.2627 South KoreanWon 1112.99 +3.72 +.33% 1074.50 -.01 -.03% 30.35 Taiwan Dollar 31.75
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY25, 2015
VERNON JOHNSON 1923- 2015
BRIEFING Yellen: Nohurry to raise rates
Owner of appliance store dies
WASHINGTONJanet Yellen, theFederal Reserve chairwoman, told Congress onTuesday that theFedwas pleased with recent economic growth, convinced therewasroom for improvementand still pondering when tostart raising interest rates. In testimony before the Senate BankingCommittee, Yellenadvanced the Fed's slow-motion progress toward raising its benchmark interest rate, describing for the
By Stephen Hamway The Bulletin
Vernon Johnson, owner of Johnson Brothers TV
8 Appliance in Bend, died Sunday. Hewas 91.
"He was just a hardworking, honest man," said
first time how the central
bank plans to signal that the moment is approaching. But she saidthat patience remainedthe central bank's watchword. "There hasbeenimportant progress," she said. "However,despite this improvement, too manyAmericans remain unemployed orunderemployed, wagegrowth is still sluggish andinflation remains well belowour longer-run objective." Yellen's careful performance reflected theFed's desire to delaydecisions as it seeksgreater clarity
Bob Johnson, Vernon's son
and the current manager of the appliance store. "Back when he started his busi-
ness, people loaned him money on a handshake. That's how much they trusted him." Johnson Brothers TV & Appliance has been a sta-
ple of the Bend area for 61/~ decades. Vernon Johnson started the store in 1950,
after moving to Bend from Salem. "He started real small, in
his garage," Bob Johnson said of his father. Bob Johnson added that
his father eventually moved
about the health of the
economy. In response she drewgentle prodding from someRepublicans concerned theFedwil move too slowly, and from someDemocrats who havethe opposite concern. — From yiire reports
Andy Tullie/The Bulletin
Workers install the new bottling line at Deschutes Brewery, in Bend. Bottles will enter from left on a conveyor belt, through the rinser wheel, bottom center, to the filler wheel, top right. From there, a conveyor belt moves them to labeling, inspecting end packaging.
BEST OFTHE TODAY • Online Marketingwith Facebook: UseFacebook to market andadvertise yourbusiness;must have a Facebookaccount. Class runs through March 4;$79, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; COCC - Crook County Open Campus,510SE Lynn Blvd., PrIneville; 541383-7270orwww.cocc. edu/continuinged THURSDAY • PubTalk: 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 Nine; and Julia Junkin, founder of Juju; $20 EDCO members, $30 nonmembers, registration required; 5-7:30p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; 541-388-3236, ereilly@ edcoinfo.comorwww. edcoinfo.com/events • ExpandingProduction 5 Post-Harvest Handling: Producing for the wholesale market and the technicalaspects of harvesting; $10/farm; RSVP onlineor call; 6-8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541447-6228 or www.agbiz. eventbrite.com MONDAY • Build YourBusiness Website withWordPress — Intermediate:Learn basic HTMLandCSS, howto customizeyour Wordpress site andhowto protect it from spammers, hackers and malware. Class runsthrough March 11; $179, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged TUESDAY • Employment Supervision:Two-day seminarwill include an overview of at-will employment, wageand hour laws, civil rights protections,leave laws, documenting performance issues,hiring and termination; $260 per person, two to five people $245 each, sixor more $235 each; 9a.m.-4 p.m.; Shiio inn Suites Hotel, 31050B Riley Road,Bend; 971-673-0824or www. oregon.gov/boli. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
Johnson changed the name to Johnson Brothers TV &
By Joseph Ditzler
ventory the distributors could
The Bulletin
Control Commission records.
Brewery products in Northern
Virginia and in Washington,
sald.
D.C. In November, Deschutes
until the early 1970s and opened several other loca-
Brewery introduced several
In addition to Virginia and Washington, D.C., Deschutes Brewery products reach 28
beers to those markets in draft
states, "if you count one coun-
only, including Black Butte
ty in Maryland," Randles said, as well as the provinces of
571 NE Azure Drive, near
Alberta and British Columbia
of Pilot Butte. Bob Johnson said his
to install a new bottling line,
a company spokesman said Monday. The new bottling line, made
by The Krones Group, of Neutraubling, Germany, when up and running will fill 567 bottles per minute, said Jason Randles, digital marketing manager for the Bend-based beer maker. The old bottling line filled 384bottles per
A portion of the new line was installed last week; work-
erswere preparing thefloor for further sections this week, he said. Three weeks'worth ofbot-
tling amounts to about 15,000 barrels ofbeer,a portion of
which was set aside to accommodate demand before the line was shut down, Randles
said. The brewery produced a
minute.
"Our team did a great job es- total 334,800 barrels in 2014, timating the time we're going he said. It sold 92,022 taxable to be down so our sales team barrels in Oregon last year, could work up a days-of-inaccording to Oregon Liquor
Appliance in 1980, as an homage to his grandsons, Bob Johnson said.
The interruption in bottling
means a delay in plans to introduce bottled Deschutes
we went into that."
beer was sent, and when it's
gone, it's gone." The brewery expects to start shipping packaged beer by late March, early April, he
hold on to," Randles said. "We
bumped up our own inventory piled enough of its bottled beer as well, making sure our own to last the three weeks needed warehouses were full before Deschutes Brewery stock-
BIZ CALENDAR
into a location at NE First Street and NE Franklin Avenue in 1958. At that time, the store was named Home Center, before Vernon
Porter, Mirror Pond Pale Ale and Fresh Squeezed IPA. The
brewery continues to ship beer in barrels to those markets, Randles said.
It also shipped a limited amount of itsReserveSeries in bottles.
"That was a once-and-done-type proposition," Randles said. "An allocated amount of
in Canada. Small shipments go to Thailand, Australia and Singapore. Premium Distributors, part of the Reyes Beverage Group, supply Northern Virginia and the District of Columbia.
According to Bob Johnson, the business stayed at the Franklin location tions around Bend, before
settling nearly two decades ago in its current location, U.S. Highway 20, just east father played an active role in the business he built, up until he had to step away
from the day-to-day running of the company at the age of 81.
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulletin.com
Study: Many retire FCC chief cites wirelie nss dustry as earlier than planned precedent in net neutrality proposal Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
nancial adviser for Henderson
By Jim Puzzenghera
ers don't give preference to
PITTSBURGH — Although
Brothers Retirement Plan Ser-
Los Angeles Times
more Americans are working past age 65, not everyone will be able to control retirement timing. Even as many people who have not put aside enough money to leave the workforce
vices in Pittsburgh. "Theyhave to quit for healthproblems,
WASHINGTON — The first Internet browser had
video and other content from some websites over others.
plan to make up the difference
by working longer, statistics show workers are not always
who were not confident about their financial security once they stop workingplanned
able to delay retirement as long
to retire later thanthose
as theyhad hoped. A2014 surveyby the Washington, D.C.-basedEmployee Benefit Research Institute
who were more financially prepared. The researchers said the annual survey has consistently
found that 49 percent of retir-
shown that many Americans
ees surveyedhad retired earlier
findthemselves retiringunexpectedly, and many retirees cited negative reasons for leaving the workforce, such as health problems or disability (61 percent), changes such as downsizingor a company closure (18 percent), and having to care for a spouse or another family member (18percent).
than they had planned. The survey did not indicate their
ages, only that they left their jobs before they intended to. The highest percentage of people who participated in the study (35 percent) retired before age 60. Researchers at
EBRI surveyed 1,500 people. "Most people say they will work forever and never retire. But rarelydoes thateverhap-
pen," said Brendon Costa, a fi-
disability and other reasons beyond their control.
The EBRI report found, as one might expect, that workers
Others cited changes in the
skills required for the job (7 percent) or other work-related reasons (22 percent).
But he promised that the FCC just been launched, people wouldn't use the new authorwere experimenting with a ityto regulate rates or take new form of letter-writing other steps that would hinder called email, and the cellular investment in expanding fiber telephone was evolving from andwireless networks. a bulky luxury to a mass-marInstead, the FCC would use ket convenience. the same light-touch approach The communications landthat came after the 1993 legscape was shifting rapidlyin islation and that "went hand1993, when Congress made a in-hand with massive invest-
trality rules.
"We have 20years of experience with wireless that tells us that (that type of) regulation does not prevent investment," said Harold Feld, senior vice president at
Public Knowledge, a digital rights group."We went from having virtually no wireless coverage inthis country ... to something that everybody had everywhere." Critics of Wheeler's plan saidhe's proposing something
little-noticed change that das-
ment" in wireless networks,
sified mobile voice calling as a utilityyet freed it from onerous utility regulation — part of an initiative to spur competition in the young wireless
said Wheeler, a Democrat who was a top industry lobby-
llldustry.
has been monumentally successful," Wheeler said in
"Wall Street analysts, economists and certainly
a speech last month in Las
folks in the industry... are veryconcerned about where
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler now cites that move
ist at the time. "Under that, for the last 20 years, the wireless industry
Vegas. as a keyprecedent for the The early history of controversial net neutrality wireless regulation offers a proposal that the agency is ex- playbook for how the FCC pected to approve Thursday. could expand its oversight to His plan would impose fed- broadband without disrupting eral oversight of online traffic the Internet economy, said to ensure that Internet provid- supporters of tough net neu-
much different than what
Congress and the FCC did in 1993 — and opening the door to potentially onerous
regulations.
this will lead," said former
FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell, a Republican and senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. "They don't trust the FCC to stop where it says it's
going to stop."
BANKRUPTCIES Chapter7 Filed Feb.17 • RobertH. and Edith A. Simpson, 21 38NW Poplar Ave., Redmond • Deborah L. Carpenter, P.O. Box 2728, La Pine Filed Feb. 19
• Linda F.Gregory, 1850 NE Lotus Drive Apt. 50, Bend • Jamie L. Scarberry, 1550 NW MilwaukeeAve. No. A2, Bend • Mindy M. Stiff, P.O. Box 5366,Bend • Kathleen J.Reese,
5506SWDeschutes Drive, Madras Filed Feb. 20 • Steven W. and Lenora L. Turner, 770 SW Sunrise St., Madras • Erik A.S. and Hayley K.Johnson,1965 NW Monterey PInes Drive No.
5, Bend • Danielle M. Chubb, 1133 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond Filed Feb. 23 • Judy M. Clemmer, 19832 Fennic Court, Bend
• Sandra L. Turk, 70 SW Century Drive, Ste. 100231,Bend • Joseph J. and Summer J. Smith, P.O.Box1760, La Pine Chspter13 Filed Feb. 18
• Katherine Hollister, 2069 NE RedbayLane, Bend • Carl H. and Michele L. Wade, 61543 Marlece Lane, Bend Filed Feb. 20 • Lawrence M. Bashian, 22390 Bear CreekRoad,
Bend Filed Fed. 23 • Virgiiio L. CarvajalNunez, P.O.Box 661, Madras Filed Feb. 24 • John L. Taylor,67667 U.S. Highway 20, Bend
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photos, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D3 Fishing Report, D4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY25, 2015
O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors
SNOW REPORT
GARY LEWIS
For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts, seeB6
Chasing steelhead on Idaho's Clearwater
BRIEFING Redmondbanquet set for Saturday The annual fund-raising banquet for theRedmond Chapter of theOregon Hunters Association is scheduledfor Saturday at the DeschutesCounty Fair & ExpoCenter in Redmond. Doorsopenat 5:15 p.m. The event will include an auction of apremium antelope tag, goodfor any unit in which there is an antelopeseason in
The Niimiipu (Nez Perce) call the river the Koos-Koos-
Kai-Kai. The big steelhead we call B-runs. As smolts, they're swept downriver on
vt-'
floods to the
FISH NG I Columbia and to the ocean.
2015.
When the Clearwater calls them home, they find their
Ticket packagesfor singles andcouples range from $115to $225 and include dinners, drink couponsand avariety of raffle tickets. In addition to dinner, a variety of outdoor gear, artwork, gifts and other items will beauctioned and raffled with proceeds used to fund local wildlife habitat projects and youth education events. For more information on the banquet or to purchase tickets, call 541-383-1099.
way back to the mouth of
the Columbia, where they catch the scent of their native stream.
I explainedthese things to Kristy Titus and Sam Pyke as we sped east to-
ward Idaho. The B-runs are some of the biggest steelhead in the Northwest. They're headed
p
back to the Clearwater after years in the ocean. At an (p$~
'e
»
~
.
.. M~v
Badlands offers a different view
from some ofthe more popular hikes in Central Oregon.
duced usto his dad,Jim "Jake the Snake" Wyatt.
With interesting geological for-
mations anddiverse foliage, The
ea in eas o
TRAIL UPDATE With ChrisSabe DutchmanFlat continues to bethe only functioning sno-park, and therewasvery little winter use onthe trails last weekenddueto the lack of snow.All other sno-parks areoutof commission for snow access, andoverall, snow conditions areresembling more those oflate May andearly June. Summer trails are in great condition for hiking, biking andhorseback riding. Thesnow-line for trails varies from 4,900 to 6,000 feet, depending on the area.Summer users are starting to usethe wilderness trailheadsand hiking up tothe6,000 foot level with minimal snow encounters. Summer trail clearing won't start until April or May. Volunteers have been clearing some trails, however.Thefirst five miles of thePaulina Creek Trail havebeen cleared of anyblowndown treesanddebris from windstorms. All seasonal highway and forest-road closures remain in effect. Theroad to TumaloFalls is closed to hikers, bikers andmotorized vehicles during the installation of water lines. Theroad will likely remain closedthrough early summer.Hikers can get to thefalls via the Tumalo Creek Trail out of Skyliner Lodge.Thefootbridge alongthat trail is closed for repairs. Detour signs are posted. Construction of a heavy rock wall around the Suttle LakeLoopTrail will begin in April. There are piles of rocksaround the trail loop, andhikers are asked toavoid climbing on theserock piles. With the early-spring meltoff, hikers arestarting to plan for trips on the wilderness trails in the DeschutesNational Forest. This is agood time for hikers to review information onthe"leave no trace" philosophyand the10 essentials of going prepared. Information on outdoor ethics andpreserving our wilderness is available online athttp:// Int.org.
e
most summer-runs.
We met up with third-generation fishing guide Toby Wyatt of Reel Time Fishing, who intro-
David Jasper/The Bulletin
— Bulletin staffreport
average of 12 to 13pounds, they are twice as big as
Jake shook our hands and then told us he'd show us the
Snake Jake Fishy Shakeif we caught a fish. They introduced us to
Toby's boat, a 27-foot Whitewater custom-built by his dad, Snake. The Snake has
built 244boats in his career. We saw several on the river. Before we left the bank,
• Take a break from crowds to checkout Flatiron Rock By David Jasper• The Bulletin
regon Badlands Wilderness is great for many things. When you're in the mood for a hike or run, it's an often sunny, out-east alternative to Bend's overused trails (I'm
Jake showed Kristy howto cast the spinning rod and
Ifyou go
put the bait down, lift and
Getting there:TakeU.S. Highway 20 east from Bendandturn left into trailhead parking areanear milepost16. Difficulty:Easy, though distance on sandy trail may tire some legs. Cost:Free Contact: BureauofLandManagement, 541-416-6700
feel the weightbounce on the bottom. It had to be a
short learning curve if she was going to catch a fish. This lifelong outdoors girl has a lot of experience in the
elk woods, but there are still big gaps in her fishing education. She'd never fished
forsteelheadbefore. "All the fish seem to be
looking at you, Shevlin Park and Deschutes River Trail). If you're in the market for seeing rabbitbrush, junipers, sage and oodles of crazy-looking lava rock,
stackedup dose to the hatcheries right now," Toby said. "We're going to have a lot ofboats around us."
you need venture no farther than The Badlands.
He fired the big engine and backed the boat away
And trek out to one of
The Badlands' high spots, such as Flatiron Rock or Badlands Rock, and you can catch some prime views of the terrain in all directions — the Cascades to the west,
Horse Ridge to the immediate south, Smith Rock to the north and, just a stone's throw to the east, Badlands
Rock.
Another thing that limped into my mind immediately
could jump rope or run in place. Or you could just go
after a hike there. On one
hike in the 29,000-acre Bad-
warm.
lands, home of sandy trails a while: It's a great through Western juniplace to develop the OUTING per woodlands. kind of calves Popeye Even if you're not might envy. thinking about how to tone Sure, you could grab some or bulk up your calves, the weights, hit the treadmill southern regions of your and do calf raises. You legs are going to be sore after my first hike in quite
condition, that is: if it stays Like other sandy east-side trails, by which I mean those in the China Hat Road vi-
cinity, such as Horse, Cabin and Bessie buttes, the tread will firm up once it cools off
again. See Badlands/D3
from thebeach, and we ran upriver around a couple of bends tothe confluence of the mainstem Clearwater and the North Fork. There was a state hatchery on one
side and a federalhatchery onthe other. Amile up the North Fork, Dworshak
Dam towered above us like a mountain cliff. SeeSteelhead/D3
ADVENTURE
i'sin e rua ? Ou e er Cars and trucks packed the parking area at Phil's Trailhead as if it was the middle of
June.
members — who build and
MARK
MORICAL
Only it was the middle of
February. A mountain bike ride west of Bend up Ben's Trail then
down Phil's Trail offered ideal springlike conditions in what the calendar says should be
chairman of the Central Ore-
paradise almost four months earlier than normal this year.
"People are going all over Wanoga (trail network), where a sno-park permit is required," says Woody Starr,
maintain Central Oregon singletrack — do not mind if bikers are enjoying the trails during the winter. But they do mind if those folks are riding in muddy conditions, because
gon Trail Alliance. "People are doing so can leave lasting ruts parking at Wanoga and bikin our world-class singletrack. ing. This is unheard of. I really Rain and melting snow are don't know what to do. I don't not required to create mud know what to say." — sometimes all it takes is a
the depths of winter. Other bikers reportedly Starr has been mountain found perfect riding condibiking Central Oregon trails tions on trails as high as 5,000 for the last 25 years, and he feet west of town this month. The area is a mountain biker's
e i evei
says he has never seen Bend's
west-side trails be accessible and ridable this early in the year. "I've never seen it anytime
combination of below-freez-
ing overnight temperatures followed by warmer temperatures the next day. Those
frozen trails from overnight can melt into a muddy mess the next day. Riding on them
can leave tire ruts, which dry
between December and April
and harden and can become
like this," Starr says. Starr and other COTA
permanent. See Phil's /D4
Joe Kline i The Bulletin
Tim Marchant, of Bend, rides on Kent's Trail in the Phil's Trail complex Thursday afternoon west of Bend. Many singletrack trails near Bend are accessible earlier than usual during this warm and dry winter, but mountain bikers should avoid muddy conditions.
D2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
Barbara Rumer
EAGLES AT SMITH ROCK
I
r
Dave MacManiman
Yuko Moulton
SUNSET AT SMITH ROCK
LOOKING WEST FROM BLACK BUTTE
Julien Havac
BIRDS PLAY ON THE OREGON COAST
Ray DeBaun
SUTTON MOUNTAIN WILDLIFE STUDY AREA Submit your best work at Q bendbnlletin.com/readerphotos. Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Also contribute to our other categories, including good photos of the great Central Oregon outdoors. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Carolyn Waissman
GREAT HORNED OWL RELEASE
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
UTDOORS CYCLING
Aquatic & Recreation Center; www
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 Rockand 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.
THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m .;meets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.
END
Email events at least 10 days before publication to communitylifeibendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.
sunriveranglers.org.
EQUESTRIAN SPRING TUNEUP CLINIC: At Pilato Ranch, 70955 Holmes Road, Sisters; May10-11,9a.m. to noon and1 to 4 p.m. each day; $300 for two full days; local horse trainer Clint Surplus will teach a two-day clinic to include ground work in the mornings and mounted work in the afternoons; 541-9615727;kathyebarnes©gmail.com; truhorsemanship.com.
FISHING CENTRALOREGON BASSCLUB: 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 monthat6 p.m .; 50 SW Bond St., Bend, Suite 4; 541306-4509, deschutestu@hotmail. com; www.deschutes.tu.org. BEND CASTING CLUB:A group of fly-anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541306-4509 or bendcastingclub©
gmail.com. THE SUNRIVER ANGLERSCLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of eachmonth; Sunriver Homeowners
HIKING DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Ledby skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds and take in spring wildflowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.
HUNTING CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION: Meets Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m.; next meetings are March 4, 11,18,25; VFWHall, Redmond; 541447-2804orfacebook.com atRMEF Central Oregon. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meetsthesecond Wednesday ofeachmonth;King Buff et,Bend;
ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCOCHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.
MISCELLANEOUS 2015 CENTRALOREGON SPORTSMEN'SSHOW: March5-8 at the Deschutes County Fair tf 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 to16; www.thesportshows.coml
shows/central-oregon/.
D3
BIRD WATCH
Orange-eyed shorebirds Killdeer
hatching but takeabout 25 days to fly. Pairs may raise up to three broods ayear. Scientific name:Charandrius vociferus Habitat:Killdeer are found in open areas Characteristics:Medium-sized shorebirds, such as marshes, ponds, pastures, agriculkilldeer are members of the plover family. At tural fields, golf courses, dirt parking lots 10t/2 inches long, they have two black breast or fallow fields. Theyareone of the least bands, a reddish orange rump, short pointed water-associated shorebirds. Courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service I Submitted photo bills and white undersides. Thebrownish, Killdeer Food:These birds eat insects, invertebrates, pointed wings havelong white wing stripes snails, crayfish, dead minnows andseeds, that are best seenwhenthe bird is in flight. often chasing prey onfoot or with a short up and down before running away ashort The large brown headhas awhite forehead flight. distance. Before mating, the adults engage and eyebrow stripe. Thedark eyehas aredBird facts:Early-season migrants, the first in a "scrape ceremony," where themalelays dish-orange eyering. ones are usually observed in Central Oregon down in a small depression or scrape, and Range:Found throughout the United States inFebruary.Thecommon name comesfrom digs with his feet. Thefemaleapproaches, and Canadian provinces during the breeding the bird's call "kill-dee!" or "kill-deer." Early and then shesits in the scrape while the male season; many of these birds winter in Mexi- naturalists called them thenoisy plover or stands nearby with his tail spread out, and co, Central America andSouth America. chattering plover. Thespecies namevocalling rapidly. Breeding:Using a shallow depression as ciferous means "very loud voiced," which Current viewing:Agricultural fields, marsha nest site, killdeer nest on beaches, fields, aptly applies to these birds. Whendanger pastures or along theedge of gravelly roads, threatens a nest site, the adult stretches es, river shorelines andpastures throughout and even ongraveled roofs. The birds may the region. out one wing andpretends to have abroken add grass, shells, pebbles or other debris to wing, thus luring the intruder awayfrom the — Damian Faganisa volunteer with the East the nest to help camouflage the site. Thefenest. If the intruder is a cow orhorse, the CascadesAudubon Society. Hecan bereachedat male lays three to six brown, speckled eggs killdeer fluffs up its feathers and spreads damian.fagan©hotmaif.com. that blend into the surroundings; both adults its tail feathers up high behind its backand Sources: Oregon Department of Wildlife Resources, incubate the eggsfor 24 to 26 days. The charges at the animal in anattempt to keep it All About Birds website and "The Audubon Society away from the nest. Thebirds mayalso bob Encyclopedia of North American Birds" by John Terres young are able to walkand run soonafter
SHOOTING HIGH DESERTFRIENDS OF NRA:Meets every Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at Strawhat Pizza in Redmond through April1; annual fundraising banquet will be March 28, at the Riverhouse Convention Center; like us on Facebook at High Desert Friends of NRA for more information. COSSAKIDS:Coachesare onhand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear
and eyeprotection areprovided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10;10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting
Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www.
pinemount ainposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns;10 a.m.; firstand 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.
parks; depart from Pine Mountain at 7:30 p.m.; bring food, water, headlamp and few a dollars for SHOES,BREWS, AND VIEWS, grooming donation box; www. SNOWSHOE TOUR:March4, pinemountainsports.com. 11, 1:30 p.m.; snowshoe off trail to enjoy a gorgeous view of the JOHN CRAIGSKITOUR:March CascadeMountainsofOregon;$70; 7; Oregon Nordic Club hosts this Wanderlust Tours, 61535 S. Hwy97, 6.6-mile nordic trek from the east Suite 13, Bend; www.visitbend.com. gate of the McKenzie Pass to the Dee Wright Observatory at the pass MOONLIGHT 8t STARLIGHT summit; a noncompetitive groomed SNOWSHOE TOURS: March 6,13, ski tour; new.onc.org/eventl 7 p.m.; snowshoe by the light of the moon; $70; Wanderlust Tours, 61535 john-craig-ski-tour/. S. Hwy 97, Suite 13, Bend; www. GREAT NORDEENXCSKI AND FAT visitbend.com. BIKE RACE:March 14, 7:30 a.m.; the 13th Annual Great Nordeen FULL MOON XCSKI: March 7; moonlight cross-country ski outing XC Ski and Fat Bike Race at Mt. at Meissner or Swampy snoBachelor; www.visitbend.com.
SNOW SPORTS
Steelhead
S;,
Continued from 01 Outflow streams from
the hatchery ponds poured into the rivers on both sides, and, we guessed, there were steeihead piled in the seams of the riffles. We aii were armed with
a spinning rod, rigged with a Corky (mine was fire orange) and steeihead
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roe cured with Pautzke's BorX O'Fire. When our boat sli d i n t o po s ition, Gary Lewis /For The Bulletin I felt the motor go i n to Kriety Titus end Toby Wyatt show off a big hatchery steelheed reverse. Toby shouted, from the Clearwater River in Idaho. "Throw 'em," and I threw.
The weight ticked bottom a couple of times, and a fish tugged. Bam-bambam. I missed him.
spit out the hook. We don't feei the gentle take as the
fish expels water through
Snake.
its gills and sucks the bait in. We feei the movement
in the icy Koos-Koos-Kai-Kai
when the fish is trying to
David Jasper/The Bulletin
On a clear dey, views from e perch atop Flatiron Rock in Oregon Badlands Wilderness are impeccable.
Badlands Continued from D1 On Friday, which was still
fairly warm considering it's February, my hiking companion,Map Guy, and I met up and gorgedon a breakfast of gut-bomb burritos, then set out the 17 miles southeast on
U.S. Highway 20 to The Badlands, portions of which, back
in the olden days of the 1940s, were used as abombing range and gunnery site by the U.S. military. There were just a few cars at the trailhead when Map Guy and I pulled up for our stroll to Flatiron Rock, about 2 t/z miles north of where we stood.
Owners of low-profile vehicles, be warned: The exposed rocks could take a toil on your
undercarriages. As usual, Map Guy and I passed the time by quarreling about things such as the cold he was terrified I might pass along to him, how he wished he'd put Neosporin ointment up his nose and how terrible that idea sounds.
He claimed a doctor once advised doing that. I
l a t er
noticed the sounds of the wind and birds. Map Guy showed me how if you rub sage with your fingers, they'll smell like sage. The rugged outdoors has much to teach us if we only pay attention.
come right across U.S. Highway 20 at Horse Ridge. Once atop Flatiron Rock,
we admired the views, bothup closeas we wandered through the formation and of the sights in the distance.
Not everyone quiets down
Much ofour hike out and to pay mind to their surround- back was spent searching for ings. Just a week and a half contoured lava rock that could ago, my wife and her friend serveas a naturalwater dish and frequent walking com- for my dog,Kaioo. I'd brought panionsomehow managed to plenty of water, but not abowl miss Flatiron Rock — it's OK, to serve it in. Nothing says I told her I was going to em- "poorly prepared" quite like barrass her this way — and scoping out rocks for a bevwalked right past it, before re- eiedsurface to use asa w ater alizing their mistake and turn- dish for your thirsty mutt. Foring around eventually. ttmately, we found a couple As required by law, I made that served their purpose. the obligatory husband joke There was no way Map Guy about how garrulous they and I would have missed Fiatprobably were being. To be iron Rock. Our eyes had been fair, though, the trail contin- peeled for a while, as Map ues north past the large out- Guy had beengriping about cropping,the base of which is the distance from somewhere situated maybe 25, 30 feet west shortly a f ter t h e on e -mile of the trail, with a sign right at mark. the site of the rock that says By the end of the hike, we "Flatiron Rock Trail" pointing were beat, and Ka loo w a s north. Soif you're not looking trotting ahead to rest in evaround, or only glance at the ery shady spot hecould find, sign, it's conceivable youcould though he mighthave done misread it and think the rock that to get away from Map Guy's whining. still lies ahead. Some peopledon'tread the For those unlike Map Guy,
Googied "Neosporin up your nose," and WebMD says not to signs at alL We saw what were who want to add in a l i t tle do it — unless directed to by a clearly bike tracks, thoughbi- more distance/calf-building doctor. Curses, foiled again. cycles are not allowed here. exercise, another option for In this manner, the f irst Horses are OK, though, so reaching Flatiron Rock is the mile flew by, even though it saddle 'em if you've got 'em. adjacent, winding 1.9-mile Ansomehow took us 30 minutes Don't pout, though, mountain cient Juniper Trail. to travel that far. During rebikers. Your preferredmode of — Reporter: 541-383-0349, spites from the conversation, I enjoying the outdoors is weldjasperibendbulletift.com
as it tries to let go.
author of "John Noster — Going Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www. GaryLewisOutdoors.com.
she battled it to the boat while
Toby coached and Snake scooped it into the net. We guessed it at 13pounds. Kristy had earned her first one and a fishy handshake with Jake the
Most often the bite we feei is actually the un-bite, 'a
she hooked a steeihead, a big adipose-clipped B-run, and
Last November, we stood
Toby was first to con-
and helped spawn wild Chinook. We gave back to the
nect, and he brought in a rainbow-striped hatchery
river before we fished it. Now, with six hatchery steeihead in
male of about 13 pounds. Soon af ter t h a t, K r i s ty
the box for Kristy, Sam and
struck a fish and lost it
loose,we'd come full circle on
me, and four wild ones turned
closeto the boat.
the Clearwater. After she lost her second — Gary Lewis is the host of
fish, I told her, "Some people fish their whole lives and never catch one." With that bit of helpful w isdom imparted, I
C om p l e m e n t s
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337
"Frontier Unlimited TV"and
w ww . c o m p l e m e o t s h o m e . c o m
put
my bait back in the water, bounced it d o wnstream through a hundred yards, felt the tug as a fish chewed the bait, felt its weight in the rod and set the hook.
Five minutes later and several hundred yards down-
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stream, Wyatt slid the net
the mouth of the Columbia it probably weighed 17 pounds. We guessed its winter weight at a bit more than 14. It was a hatchery fish, and we kept it.
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under my first Clearwater steelhead. The tape said it was 36 inches long. At
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ygll%4 IL
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There's a thing guides do. They call it a hand-off. They'll fish, hook one and hand the rod to the client to land. It's in good grace
I v
v
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to take a hand-off, but it's
up to the client if he wants to call it his first steeihead or not. We watched Kristy
take and land a couple of hand-offs. We b r ought more fish to th e boat. Kristy hooked her own fish and lost them. Downriver after l unch
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
D4
Fishing in Montana's cold offers respite from crowds By Ben Pierce
be, but it doesn't take much ef-
Bozeman (Mont.) Daily Chronicle
fort to get away."
MADISON RIVER, Mont.
During the summer months,
on break from her studies at MSU, Montgomery guides for
— Abby Montgomery grew
day, Montgomery set out on the gravel trail leading into the heart of Bear Trap Canyon. far from her home in Helena. The week before she'd caught After graduating from high 15 trout on midge patterns school, she moved south to below Madison Dam and was Bozeman to attend Montana hoping to find some risers. State University and t o ex Beyond the Lee Metcalf plore the waters of southwest Wilderness boundary, MontMontana. gomery dropped off the trail to On Thursdays, there is no explore a boulder garden. class. On Thursday, there's The wind had kicked up just quiet rivers and the prom- in the canyon, and the hopes ise of trout. of castingdry flies faded as "I've been out 12 days this sheets of water lifted off the winter," Montgomery said river. Montgomery rigged her when we met at the Bear Trap line with nymphs and an indiCanyon trailhead late last cator and cast into the gale. "(Winter fishing) is a differweek. "There's less people fishing this time of year, and ent scene, different bugs, and since the weather has been so the trout hang out in differnice, the fishing has been a lot ent water," Montgomery said. "With fewer hatches going better." Montgomery is one of a har- on, the trout are trying to condy contingent of anglers who serve their energy. Generally, don't shy away from the river they are in slower water." when the snow flies. Powerful gusts of w i nd "Fishing can be great this ripped down from the canyon time of year," said Toby Swank walls as Montgomery cast, of Fins & Feathers fly shop rattling cones from the Dougin Four Corners. "It is always las fir trees and stirring the pretty busy on the Gallatin up sagebrush and curl-leaf mounby Big Sky and on the lower tain mahogany. The surface Madison. The Yellowstone is of the river rippled with each gust. great, too." "The wind is hard in this Mild winter temperatures surely contribute to an uptick canyon because it seems like in angler activity, but the hand- it comes from all directions," ful of anglers on the water still Montgomery said. "I just keep pales in comparison with the moving upstream to find some summer months. Swank said shelter." solitude can frequently be Montgomery rose from the found around the next bend. river and followed the trail be"When itis 50 degrees and low the towering rock facades the wind is not blowing, well of the canyon. Wind blasted it is Bozeman, Montana, and the landscape, gusts strong thereare a lot ofpeople here enough to stop Montgomery in that fish," Swank said. "It is her tracks. Carrying her boat busier than people think it will bag and fly rod, she pressed up fishing for cutthroat trout on the Blackfoot River not
Glacier Anglers in West Gla-
cier. She leads five-day outfitted fishing trips on the Middle Fork of the Flathead River in
the Great Bear Wilderness. On top of getting clients into fishing, she navigates rafts through class IV and class V whitewater. The cutthroat fishing can be
fantastic, but summer is a long way off. Just below Bear Trap Creek,
a channel of the Madison beaks from the river to create
a small slough. The current line below caught Montgomery's eye. Surely there would be fish feeding in the choppy seam downstream of the island. We hadn't seen an angler for more than an hour. In fact, with the exception of a trail
runner, we hadn't seen anyone at all. "I was surprised to see cars
in the parking lot," Montgomery said, "but it is to be expected when the snow is bad.
I haven't used my Bridger Pass nearly as much as I should this winter."
Montgomery dropped off the trail and worked up the bank toward the head of the
island. She waded out into the Madison and crossed a shallow riffle over a rock bar to the
island. Rod inhand, Montgomery cast into the riffle.
Tomorrow would be filled with books and studies and class, but today the quiet soli-
tude of the Madison River and the promise of a trout were all that mattered.
of Central Oregon trails, but it is extremely difficult to
know the precise conditions t e m p eratures h a v e until you are out there. The cooled this past week, trail trail conditions can change conditions in the Phil's com- not only daily, but also hourly, As
Starr notes. A m ountain b iker c ould start his or her ride on a per-
"The freeze/thaw is what's
going to cause the problem," Starr says. "I can't really direct anybody anywhere specific for daily trail updates. So if it's freezing overnight, I would avoid everything on the west side. But if it gets really wet or if we get snow, that's
fect, firm, tacky trail, and end up riding through mud later in the ride, leaving lasting damage to the trail. Riding early in the morning
another reason to avoid it."
when the mud has possibly dried out.
zen is an option, according to Starr, or late in the afternoon
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Most fly-tiers have never tied aTup's Indispensable becausethe materials are hard to comeby.Tup is a word for what some folks call a ram, andone of the original ingredients came from the hair found on the privates of amalegoat. Goats are pretty protective of that real estate, so it is easier to tie other patterns. Turn to Tup's Indispensable whenpale cream or yellow mayflies are on the water. Cast it with a light tippet and mendthe line for a dead-drift to rising trout. To tie Tup's Indispensable, start with yellow thread and aNo. 14 to 16 dry fly hook. For the tail, use honeyduncock fibers. Construct the body with two-thirds yellow floss and one-third of a dubbing mixture made up of ramhair (as described), cream seal substitute, lemon spaniel and crimson seal substitute (just enough to add apinkish hue). Finish with honey dun hackle. — Gary Lewis,for TheBulletin chinook andsummer steelheadin Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Pleaserelease these fish unharmed. LITTLE LAVA LAKE: Vehicle access to lakeclosedviaCascadeLakesHighway. Open to fishing all year.Lakemaybe frozen during colderweather patterns. METOLIUSRIVER:Anglers report fair fishing during thewarmer part of the day. Metolius Riverupstreamof Allingham Bridgeclosed to fishing until May 23. Metolius Riverdownstream of AllinghamBridge isopenall year. Special regulations ineffect for this section. NORTHTWIN: Opento fishing all year. With the recentwarmweather, North Twin is accessible. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Angling is restricted to
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artificial flies andlures only; two trout per day with an8-inch minimum length. Trout over 20inchesare considered steelheadandmust bereleased unharmed. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Fishing has been goodfor trout that average14 to16 inches. The water level is high enough that theboat ramp isusable. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR: Fishing for trout has beenslow. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Open all year toangling. Twotrout per day, 8-inch minimumlength. Fishing restricted to anglers17 yearsold and younger. SUTTLELAKE:Opento fishing all year. TAYLORLAKE (WASCO COUNTY):The lakehasbeenstocked,andthereshould be a goodopportunity to catch alimit oftrout.
EVERGREEN
out there."
In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
But to be sure to avoid leavHorse Butte, Horse Ridge and ing ruts behind on any Central
a set-in-stone rule, though," •
RyanBrenneckeirhe Bulletin
Tup's Indispensable, tied by Quintin McCoy.
Maston. Trails in t hose areas be-
s h ould
to recommend riding on trails north or east of Bend, such as
"I can't promise that that's
lar updates on the conditions
'IIIII/I'
ASSURANCE
when the trails are still fro-
The "Bendtrails" Facebook page off ers some fairly regu-
FLY-TYING CORNER
Oregon singletrack, mountain mountain bike, maybe there's bikers can ride the hundreds some fun road routes," Starr also watch out for downed come muddy from thefreeze- of miles of dirt roads through- says. "There's tons of roads out trees and logs on trails that thaw cycle as well, but Starr out the region, which are all there. Then you're guilt-free." have yet to be cleared. Justbe- explains that because those open to bikes. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, "If you've got to go ride your cause the trails are accessible soils are more sandy than mmorical@bendbulletin.com earlier than normal does not west-side trails, the chance of necessarily mean that those creating long-term damage trails will be cleared of blow- when riding there is minimal. "There's no good answer," down earlier than normal. iswhatyougetwhen EVERGREEN SUN FoREsT Starr notes that there might Starr says. "Just common CoNSTRUcTION be downed trees on trails such sense and... some people be- managesyour loved one's medicatfons as Storm King, Funner and lieve mountain biking in the Tiddlywinks, all located in the mud is part of the experience. Wanoga complex, where trails But that does lasting damage DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL typically are not ridable until on some of our trails around PAINT late spring. here. Not so much (on east803 SW Industrial Way, Bend, OR For now, COTA continues side trails). It's a little sandier Starrwarns. Mountain b i k er s
Continued from D1
plex area have gone from perfect to pretty questionable.
ANTELOPEFLATRESERVOIR: USFS road17 ispassable leading to the reservoir. Thereservoir isn't completely full but there isenough water to launch aboatfrom the ramp. Thewater is very dirty, and fishing hasbeenslow. CRESCENT LAKE: Opento fishing allyear. CROOKEDRIVER BELOW BOWMANDAM:Theflows have been maintained ataround 80cfs for a fewdaysnow. Fishing for trout and whitefish hasbeenfair. Trout may begetting to spawn with the warmer thanusualweather, so please bemindful of whereyou are wading so asto nottrample any redds. Anglers areremindedthat trout over 20inchesareconsidered steelheadandmust bereleased unharmed. CULTUSLAKE: Opento fishing allyear. DAVIS LAKE:Opento fishing all year. With the recentwarm weather, Davis Lake isaccessible. Lowwater hasimpacted boat-rampaccess. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. FALL RIVER:Anglers reportfair fishing nearthe hatchery andthe tubes. Fall Riverdownstreamof the falls is closed tofishing. Fishing upstream ofthe falls is openall year. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. HOODRIVER:Bright winter steelheadareentering the lower Hood. Anglers shouldwatchfor good flows after high-water events. Fishing will continue toget better as winterprogresses. HOSMERLAKE:Vehicle access to lakeclosedviaCascadeLakes Highway. Lakemaybefrozen during colder weatherpatterns. LAKEBILLY CHINOOK: Opportunitiesfor rainbowand brown trout in theupper Deschutes and CrookedRiver arms are good. The Metolius Armwill open to fishing March f. Fishing licenses from both thestate of Oregon and the ConfederatedTribes of the Warm Springsareneededto fish in the Metolius Arm.Opportunities for bull trout areexpected to begood thisyear. Anglers arereminded there aresmall numbers ofspring
farther into the canyon.
Just before noon on a Thurs-
Phil's
FISHING REPORT
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DISCOVERTHE VERY BEST CENTRAL OREGON HAS TO OFFER.
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The mostcomprehensive visitors' guide in the tri-county area, this colorful, slickstock-covered, informationpacked magazine is distributed through Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year round.
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112 WAYS
Call: 541-382-1 81 1 to reserve your ad space in 112 WAYS TO DISCOVER CENTRAL OREGON
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Publishes: April 27 Sales Deadline: April 8:
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
e ar est-wor in 'a TV SPOTLIGHT By Luaine Lee Tribune News Service
PASADENA, Calif. — Ac-
tress Felicity Huffman claims she's lazy. The star of "Des-
perate Housewives," "Sports Night" and "Transamerica" says that because she is lazy,
she tries harder. "I always feel that uncomfortable going into a role. The way I compensate for it is I work really hard. I try and make up inhard work what I might lack in natural talent,"
she says,seated in a frieze side-chair. "And that's not natural to
me. I'm naturally lazy, but I just work really hard, and whenever I look at it I go, 'Is there anything I can do today? Have I left anything undone'?'" When it comes to acting, rarely has Huffman left anything undone. A prime ex-
ample is her latest role as the relentless mother seeking the
killer of one of her sons in ABC's vivid drama "American
Crime," premiering March 5. She plays the former wife of Timothy Hutton, and there's not a moment that you doubt
this couple have suffered the barbs of marital exigencies for years. Huffman herself is happily married to actor William H.
Macy ("Shameless"). But she didn't go willingly. The two datedfor 15 yearsbefore they wed. "I was so scared of mar-
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
a ctorintown
five years when he asked me cess, she says to this day she again, I knew I couldn't say still considers quitting. "As no. It was the work I had to do an actor your last job is alin order to bring myself to the ways your LAST job. And I've marriage and then the work gone years without working, that I did to be able to trust and there's always that thing another person and see what like, 'Would you get serious? comes out of that comfort and Would you stop this silly hobthat safety. I was able to blos- by that you have and geta real som out of that." job? You're done.' I've wanted She says she was fearful to quit quite a few times." that she would lose her idenShe didn't, she says, betity. "I thought I'd disappear. cause, "One, I can't do anyMen's stock when they get thing else so my options are married goes up. Women's limited.... I was in L.A. many stock goes down. Another years ago. I'd come from New ,t v' thing, 60 percent of first mar- York. I had a good theater )) t riagesfail,80 percent of sec- career in New York; people 'i-; ond marriages fail. knew me. I was getting play .:,p;:~'W "And if we applied that sta- after play, and I couldn't get )e ) r r tistic to anything else like the arrested in this town. So I 'rc post office or the military, we'd finally drove up to the Marigo, 'This isn't working.' Where- nello School of Beauty, and as with marriage we just go, I went in and got an applica'See you all,' like that (wav- tion because I wanted to be a ing her hand in the air). And I beautician. I got back in my thought I would lose myself." car, and my phone rang. It was But it was before their mar- my agent going, 'You have an riage that Huffman really audition.' It was always just suffered a setback. "I went as I'm about to go, 'That is IT!' If)I)) ' 4 + ) through a very, very dark something pulls me back in." three years, and that deep deShe says if she could change spair and depression changed herselfshe' d be less fearful. me," she says. "It was kind of "I wake up afraid. I'm afraid CourtesyABCvia Tribune News Service the crucible, from 28 to 31. of everything. Everything is Felicity Huffman plays the mousey but relentless mother of a That dark time changed me I triage to me. I have to get the kids'breakfast. I have to get evmurdered son in ABC'sabsorbing newdrama, "American Crime," think for the better." premiering on March 5. She was able to r ecover erything done. I guess I would "through the love of my fami- string it together to say I feel ly, through therapy. I came out like I'm a lazy girl. I feel bad riage that I thought I would've eral years. And I was finally of it. It was that kind of depres- about being a lazy girl. I want preferredto step in front of a smart enough to go: 'I'm going sion where I just wished I was to be a perfect girl, so I drive bus," she says. to marry this guy or really dead, that kind of relentlessmyself to do it. I think that's "Bill Macy asked me to mar- lose him for good.' And it was I just wished I was dead." how I would thread the neckry him several times over sev- after webroke up for four or In spite of her acting suc- laceofthose different beads."
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Business tri ac in ie s istrust Dear Abby:I'm in my 40s, and my boyfriend of three years is 12 years older. We are in love, and our relationship is great. He travels for work and lives in another state, so he flies in to see my daughterand me every other week. Because he is older, he uses Viagra, and it's kept DFP,R at my place in a drawer. I assumed that's where it was
always kept. Abby, when he left for his trip yesterday, he took his Viagra with him! He says he grabbed the
ED, I'd say you have a right to be she'll be seeing less of you unless suspicious. Because his little blue she visits you — alone. Because pills were kept apart from his this isn't the first time your stepother medications, it took special
effort for him to pack them. Talk with him further, because he may have been contemplating a "party of one" during his travels and not have
b een looking f o r adventure. Dear Abby: I'min the middle of a situation that I'm not
father has acted inappropriately, it
won't be news to her. And because she has tolerated his behavior in the past, I doubt it will cause prob-
lems between them now. Dear Abby:My husband's family gave us a large painting that is not our taste at all. We would love
to get rid of it, but of course we feel obligated to keep it and hang it in order to not hurt their feelings. They live nearby and visit often, so putting the painting away doesn't seem realistic. We live in a small apartment and there is no-
sure how to deal with. My mother's husband made a pass at my boyfriend. My boyfriend thinks I bottle without thinking and that should tell her. I'm overreacting. The rest of his Abby, my mother and her hus- where "discreet" to hang it. Plus, it things are kept in his travel bag, band are in their 70s, and I don't is too large to take to our offices. so it's not as if he just gathered up want to cause problems in their Other than staging a robbery, all of his pills. They were the only marriage. I'd like to write it off are there any options that would ones. Now he's upset with me be- as a "misunderstanding," but my keep everyone happy? cause "I don't trust him." stepdad has a history of doing — Grinning & Bearing It Can you help me get my think- things like this. Dear Grinning:Another option ing straight? I caught him lying — Anonymous in Oregon would be to level with your inabout something when we f irst Dear Anonymous:If your boy- laws. Tell them you are grateful started dating, so he's not all friend didn't already, he should for their generosity, but the artsqueaky clean as he acts. tell your stepfather the pass was work is not your taste, and then — Suspicious in Virginia unwelcome and he doesn't want it ask if they would mind if you exDear Suspicious: Unless your to happen again. If it does, you and changed it. boyfriend was prescribed the your boyfriend should talk to your — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com Viagra for a condition other than mother about it and explain why or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, FEB. 25, 2015:This yearconfu-
Tonight: Squeeze in someexercise.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * Understand that you might need to say"no" to an indulgence or to a request from a loved one. You might be surprised by this person's reaction. Funnel your energy into pursuing a goal that is very important to you. Open up talks. Tonight: In the thick of things.
GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * Put your best foot forward. You could find that someone disagrees with you over a key issue. Try to understand
• There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. r I I I Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 6:40, 9:45 • AMERICAN SNIPER IMAX (R) 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:15, 9:25 • BIRDMAN (R) 3:45, 7:05 • BLACKOR WHITE(PG-13) 12:25 • THE DUFF (PG-!3) 12:45, 4:05, 6:35, 9:15 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 11:40 a.m., 12:40, 2:45, 3:40,6:30,7:15,9:40, IO:I5 • FROM STAGETO SCREENSERIES:KING LEAR (no MPAA rating) 7 • HOT TUB TIME MACHINE2 (R) 12:30, 4:15, 7:30, 10:30 • THE IMITATION GAME(PG-l3) 3:20, 6:05, 9:05 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-13) G 12:25, 6:45 • JUPITERASCENDING 3-D(PG-!3)3:35,9:55 • KINGSMAN: THESECRETSERVICE (R) 11:30a.m.,12:35, 3:05, 3:50, 6:55, 10 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG)noon, 3, 6, 9 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:55 a.m., 3:40 • PROJECT ALMANAC(PG) 9:35 • SEVENTH SON (PG-13) 10:05 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:45a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SPONGE OUTOF WATER 3-D (PG) 2:55, 6:50, 9:10 • THETHEORY OFEVERYTHING (PG-13) 1, 3:55, 7:10 • TWO DAYS, ONENIGHT (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 3:15, 6:10 • WHIPLASH (R) 12: I5, 3:30, 7, 10:10 • WILD(R) 1, 9:50 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • BIG HER06 (PG) 2:30 • THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY— PART1 (PG13) 6 • TAKEN3(PG-l3) 9:15 • Younger then 2t mayattend all screeningsif accompanied tJy laegal guardian.
8p.m.on2,9,"The Middle" — Missing your child's birthday is bad. Realizing it three months later is really, really bad. Frankie (Patricia Heaton) desperately tries to make it up to Brick (Atticus Shaffer) in the new episode "Steaming Pile of Guilt." Devin (Gia Mantegna) suddenly calls it quits with Axl (Charlie
McDermott). Sue(EdenSher)
tries to stand out in some way, to qualify for special attention in the school yearbook. Neil Flynn also stars. 8 p.m. on 6, "Survivor" —The phrases "white collar" and "blue collar" get different meaningswith "no collar" added to them — as the Jeff Probst-hosted contest launches its 30th round with the theme "Worlds Apart."
The newestcastawaysareseparated into three tribes, based on whether they break rules, make rules or simply follow rules. Don't bet that they'll all stay in their initially assigned slots over the course of pursuing the $1 million grand prize.
9 p.m. onCW, "The100"Clarke and Lexa(Eliza Taylor, Alycia DebnamCarey) put everything on the table with each other as they bracefor a fight against others in the new episode "Bodyguard of Lies." Raven (Lindsey Morgan) seeks Wick's (guest star SteveTalley) assistance. Jahaand Murphy (Isaiah Washington, guest star Richard Harmon) try to make their way through a literal roadblock. Bob Morley also stars. 10 p.m. on FX, "The Americans" — As Elizabeth (Keri Russell) resorts to drastic measures to complete a mission, Philip (Matthew Rhys) focuses on juggling the many women in his life in a new episode called "Salang Pass." Stan (Noah Emmerich) asserts a plan to save Nina(Annet Mahendru) with an unlikely ally. O Zap2it
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YOURHOROSCOPE
sion seems to surround you. You'll need to By Jacqueline Bigar sort through what is happening between you and a family member. Don't comprowhy, but know that the answer might not mise who you are, but remain sensitive to others. You discover the importance be readily available, as there seems to be of handling your finances on your own. so muchconfusion betweenyou.Tonight: If you are single, from August to your Tap into your imagination. next birthday is an extremely important CANCER (June21-July22) period, as you will ** * * Your ability to read between the 8tarsshowthe ging meetsomeone lines emerges. However, until you validate who could have a of rfay you 8have your hunches,hold off on makingany ** * * * D ynamIclong-term effect decisions based on them. Detaching could on you. If you are ** * * p ositive be difficult, as your imagination leaps from ** * Average atta ched, you'll find one idea to the next. Enjoy the unexpected. thatyou and your ** So-so Tonight: Do your own thing. sweetie often are * Difficult on different paths. LEO (July23-Aug. 22) It will be important ** * * You can pull rabbits out of a hat with one smile. Be smart and let your for both of you to make room for each other's individuality. GEMINI often seems smile do some of the work when you superficial to you. encounter a conflict. An element of confusion could mark your day. Becareful ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You couldnot be in a betterframe that a deception involving your finances is of mind than you are early in the morning. not developing. Tonight: Where you want to be. Tension builds, as others also will have very strong ideas. There is a fact that is VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) eluding you or that has not been shared, ** * You might be asked to fill in for
which could change your perspective.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY
6 p.m. on TCM, Movie: "Arthur" —He played the character twice — in this 1981 comedy and in a1988 sequel — but Dudley Moore will forever be remembered as Arthur Bach, the lovable lush short on stature and ambition but long on money and heart. Liza Minnelli plays the waitress with whom he becomes smitten, putting his inheritance in jeopardy. The film was nominated for four Oscars and won two, for its theme song and for John Gielgud's cutting performance as Arthur's butler.
someone,which will add to your responsibilities. Know when to say that you have hadenough.Openup to suggestions,but also be willing to say "no." Your high energy could take you in a different direction. Tonight: A force to be dealt with.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22)
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21) *** Be aware ofthecost of saying "yes" to aloved one.You could be upsetbywhat happens when you deal with this person. Share this problem with a partner, and discuss different ways of handling it. You might be amazed by how simple it is. Tonight: Togetherness is the theme.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You might want to let others make the first move. A lot seems to be changing, and quickly at that. Be sure of your expectations with a money matter. It is better to discuss it too much rather than not enough. Tonight: Go along with some-
one else's suggestion. GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * You know how much you need to do. Count on one ideatriggering another. You could experience a tremendous gain as a result. Relax and work with the moment. You might discover what a good time you can havewhen you are less rigid. Tonight: Whatever suits you best.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You could be on top of a situation if you really wanted to be. However, you seem to be in another world. Be careful with financial matters, and stay on top of your priorities. Any sloppiness could cause a problem, and you won't want to deal with that. Tonight: Throw a party!
PISCES (Feb.19-March20)
** * Tension builds, as it appears as ** * * Keep reaching out to someone though a family matter needs handling. at a distance. You might not realize how You are likely to have other domestic recomplicated you have made a situation. sponsibilities, so understand thatyou will need to prioritize them. Only time will tell Detach, and you might see a pattern. It would be wise to consider updating whether someone honors your choices. or changing it. Ask a friend if he or she Tonight: Head homeearly. sees this same pattern. Tonight: Follow © King FeaturesSyndicate
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.) andincludes anall-Jrou-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R)4:30, 7:15 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)4:45,7:30 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG)4:15, 7:05 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4,6:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 6:30 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)6 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG) 6 • SPARE PARTS (PG-13) 7 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 5 Madras Cinema5,1101 SWUS. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R)4:10, 7 • HOT TUB TIME MACHINE2 (R) 5:10, 7:20 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-13) G 6:50 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)4:25,7:15 • SEVENTH SON (PG-13) 4:30 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:50, 7:10 •
•
Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt.,541-416-1014 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG) 6:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (Upstairs — PG)6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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D6 T H E BULLETIN
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015
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LOOK FORIT COMING YOURWAY In The Bulletin March 29th In The Redmond Spokesman April 1st
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In The Nickel April 2nd
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Powder ouse % M
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In The Central Oregon Marketplace March 31st
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311 SW Century Drive, Bend, OR 97702 • 54 1 -389-6234 I
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A PE IAITY PUBI.I ATI N REATED AND DI TRIBUTED BY WE TERN MMUNI ATI N IN . 541-
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015 •
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
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Call for package rates
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Packages starting at $140for28da s
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Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
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B u I l e t i n :
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Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Chihuahua Toys (3), 6 mos to 1 year, $150
A1 Washersc Dryers
each. 541-977-7766
Full warranty, FREE delivery! Also, used washers/dryers wanted.
541-382-6013
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Musical Instruments
Commercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures
Fuel & Wood
Lost & Found
For Sale: Piano Technician tools & supplies, with rolls of piano string, $725. Call 971-219-9122 in Redmond
Smith & Wesson M&P15-22 with 4x16x44 BSA Cats Eye scope, Fieldline Tactical carrying case. Excellent condition, was used in National Finals i FRAVD. For more Rodeo for target information about an I competition. Comes advertiser, you mayc with original sights f call t h e Ore g onf and 25-round maga' State Atto r ney ' zine. $850 obo. i General's O f f i ce 541-410-0841 Consumer Protec- • tion h o t line a t i Wanted: Collector seeks i 1-877-877-9392. high quality fishing items I TheBulletin I & upscale fly rods. Call
i caution when pur-i
chasing products or • services from out of I I the area. Sending I ' cash, checks, o r ' i credit i n f ormation may be subjected to
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Serving Centrat Oregon sincetgga
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Antiques 8 Collectibles
541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746
BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS 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
Weatherby Vanguard, series 2-243, N I B, m ount/ring, $5 0 0 .
The Bulletin Selvlllg Csnoel Olegon tlllce lstg
5-drawer Hon Industries commercial file cabinet, 43" wide, 66" high. Originally $1000; asking$450. 541-948-1824 263
Tools
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'
• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.
Delta contractor's table saw, with table, SOLD The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincefgga DeWalt mitre saw DW730, $350. 541-526-0377 Aii Year Dependable
Found large chain saw bar, west side in Bend. Call to ID: 541-383-5825 FOUND: small intact male terrier mix had red collar. Pix avail. Call Cinder Rock Veterinary. 541-923-1638 to identify.
Found stamp collection book in Sunriver area. Call Sunriver police to identify. 541-593-3911 MISSING FAWN PUG-
5 yrs old, black collar, very hyper, goes by Rocky. Please call 541-404-7695.
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
541-815-2505 Firewood: Seasoned; Antiques Wanted: Lodgepole, split, del, Win. Mdl 12 (1959) 20 265 Tools, furniture, marbles, ga. - immac., 28" full B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Building Materials sports equipment, beer or 2 cords for $365. RENIEMBER:If you choke, field mdl $750. Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, cans, pre-'40s B/W pho- Win. Mdl 12 (1955) 12 1977, excellent cond, llllultl-cord discounts! have lost an animal, MADRAS Habitat tography. 541-389-1578 ga. immac., 30" full only played senior year in 541-420-3484. don't forget to check RESTORE college, $1000 obo. AND The Humane Society field mdl SOLD! Building Supply Resale The Bulletin reserves choke 269 Bend Rem. mag Quality at the right to publish all 7mm Gardening Supplies 541-382-3537 action. improved LOW PRICES ads from The Bulletin HVA Redmond 98 M o n te & Equipment 84 SW K St. newspaper onto The Mauser 541-923-0882 stock, Leupold 541-475-9722 Bulletin Internet web- Carlo Madras 4x scope $600. Win. Open to the public. site. BarkTurfSoil.com 541-475-6889 mdl 43 - .218B (1952) Prineville Weaver 2.5X scope King Trombone,1941 The Bulletin 266 HN White, 7-1/2" bell, Servrng Central Oregon since f9t8 541-447-7178 SOLD! Win. Mdl 75PROMPT DELIVERY $500, obo. 541-388-2045 or Craft Cats .22 LR (1942) Exc. Heating & Stoves 541-389-9663 245 541-389-8420. cond., Weaver 2.5x or 541-280-1912 eves NOTICE TO scope $750. W i n. Golf Equipment 260 Pre-64 Mdl 70 "feathADVERTISER 288 For newspaper erweight" .243, (1955) Misc.ltems Since September 29, delivery, call the CHECK YOUR AD Sales Southeast Bend 1991, advertising for E xc., Bushnell 3 x Circulation Dept. at Buying Diamonds used woodstoves has scope, SOLD! 1944 54'I -385-5800 been limited to modA nnual e l a s s y Mauser Mdl 98K-44, /Goid for Cash To place an ad, call Military rifle w/sling, Saxon's Fine Jewelers els which have been Junquesale 541-385-5809 certified by the O rgood cond., SOLD. 541-389-6655 at Nativity Lutheran or email Leupold VariX11 scope egon Department of clannifiedCtbendbulletin.com Church, corner of on the first day it runs 3x9, SOLD! Call Bob, Environmental QualBUYING Knott Rd. & Brosterto make sure it is cor- 541-419-5126. Bulletin hous. Lionel/American Flyer ity (DEQ) and the fed- The Sat. Feb. 28, Serving Central Oregon sincetgga nSpellcheck n and rect. trains, accessories. eral E n v ironmental from 8-3:30. Wide human errors do oc541-408-2191. 255 Protection A g e ncy variety of indoor and Prompt Delivery cur. If this happens to (EPA) as having met outdoor items, "fly Computers BUYING & SE LLING smoke emission stan- Rock, Sand & Gravel your ad, please confishing", fr e e tact us ASAP so that T HE B ULLETIN r e - All gold jewelry, silver dards. A cer t ified Multiple Colors, Sizes coffee and cookies. Instant Landscaping Co. corrections and any and gold coins, bars, w oodstove may b e quires computer ad- rounds, wedding sets, 541-389-9663 adjustments can be identified by its certifivertisers with multiple class rings, sterling silmade to your ad. 290 ad schedules or those ver, coin collect, vin- cation label, which is 270 541-385-5809 permanently attached Sales Redmond Area selling multiple systage watches, dental Lost & Found The Bulletin Classified tems/ software, to disthe stove. The Bulgold. Bill Fl e ming, to letin will not knowRHS Softball Garage, close the name of the 541-382-9419. 246 ingly accept advertis- Found: 1 (one) ring on Bake Sale. 2/28, 8-3, business or the term 1/28/15, area of Mary ing for the sale of Guns, Hunting "dealer" in their ads. Liberty Blue dish set Redmond High. To Rose Place & Watt Way donate G/S items call Private party advertis- many pieces, call for uncertified & Fishing Please call 541-848-1657 541-408-1919. woodstoves. ers are defined as prices 541-410-2259 to identify. Bend local pays CASH!! those who sell one for firearms 8 ammo. computer. 257
Musical Instruments
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1981 Yamaha Console Piano with bench,
1 owner, rich tone, excellent condition, currently tuned by Jana. $1200 obo.
541-389-1966
Drum Kits:Specializing in High Quahty New & Used Drum Sets! Kevin, 541-420-2323 The Drum Shop
Get your business
sROWING
541-815-2505.
Buy 8 Sell Safely In TheBulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every attempt to ensure that products sold in our classifieds are from a valid source.
Call 541-385-5809 toplaceyour adtoday.
With an ad in The Bulletin's
"Call A Service dpress.com Brittany Spaniel/ W hoodle mix puppies,2 Yorkie AKC tiny pups, 2 Wingback, chairs, dark Mossberg model 800A, Prof essfonal" girls, 1 stud, reddish hy- Fs,1 M,12wksold, UTD green, matching foot- .308 WIN. C u stom poallergenic coat. $650. shots, health guar, pics. s tools, like new $199, use/ladies, $35 0 . Directory $1100. 541-777-7743
d
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Dachshund AKC creams 541-280-7355 Rare color! 541-508-4558 $800. bendweenies.com 202 Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., Want to Buy or Rent non-profit rescue, for Wanted: $Cash paid for feral cat spay/neuter. Jak e ' s vintage costume jew- T railer a t Armoire elry. Top dollar paid for Diner, Hwy 2 0 E; Upright DresserPetco in R edmond; Gold/Silver.l buy by the quality, excelEstate, Honest Artist donate M-F at Smith Custom lent condition, crafted Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, walnut & swirly walnut Bend; or CRAFT in Wanted- paying cash Tumalo. Can pick up burl, 2 upper shelves, 2 drawers plus for Hi-fi audio 8 stu- large amts, 389-8420. cedar-lined 3 other drawers (2 partidio equip. Mclntosh, www.craftcats.org tioned for socks). Size: JBL, Marantz, DyGerman Shepherds 73 nH x 36nW x 16n D. naco, Heathkit, San- www.sherman-ranch.us new, $5,500; sui, Carver, NAD, etc. $1900+. 541-281-6829 NowIfReduced fo $980! Call 541-261-1808 541-312-2393 Golden Retrievers, AKC WANTEDwood dress- English Cream, Euro- Bunkbed w/mattresses, ers; dead washers. ean bloodlines, all certi- twin over dbl futon $100. 541-420-5640 ied. Taking $500 depos.541-382-6379 its now, puppies due 206 Feb. 25. 541-81 5-8456 Dryer, Kenmore, $125. 541-526-0617 Pets & Supplies call evenings, Husky-Wolf female, 12 541-504-1127 wks, $300. Husky stud People Lookfor Information The Bulletin recom- svc avail. 541-977-7019 Just bought a new boat? About Products and mends extra caution Japanese Chinfemale Sell your old one in the Services EveryDaythrough when purc has- puppy, 4 mo., crate classifieds! Ask about our The BulletinClassiifeds Super Seller rates! ing products or sertrained, shots. $320 541-385-5809 vices from out of the (541) 279-6719 CASH!! area. Sending cash, Electrolux Affinity Frigid- For Guns, Ammo & checks, or credit in- Labrador pups,black, aire front loading washer, Reloading Supplies. f ormation may be born 1/17, $400/ea. 541-408-6900. 5 yrs old, needs subjected to fraud. $200 dep. ready in 4 red, electrical part. $200 obo. For more i nformaweeks. 1 Chocolate 541-390-4478 tion about an adverAKC male left, $800. IOI'I IIS TNI tiser, you may call 541-408-8880 G ENERATE SOM E the O regon State EXCITEllllENT in your Attorney General's Malemuts/Husky pups, neighborhood! Plan a DO YOU HAVE Office C o n sumer blue-eyed males. Can SOMETHING TO arage sale and don't send photos. $500 & Protection hotline at SELL orget to advertise in up. 541-977-6150. 1-877-877-9392. FOR $500 OR classified! LESS? 541-385-5809. or POMAPOO The Bulletin POODLE Non-commercial Serving Central Oregon since tggt puppies, toy. Stud also 541-475-3889 GE washer and dryer, advertisers may l ike n e w $400. place an ad Adopt a rescued cat or 580-741-0055, Bend. with our kitten! Altered, vacci"QUICK CASH nated, ID chip, tested, Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded SPECIAL" more! CRAFT, 65480 glass doors & mirror 1 week3lines 12 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, at back, 3 cupboards or' 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 below. Exc. c o nd. ~ee eks t N www.craftcats.org Poodles, Standard AKC, $400. 541-318-8797 Ad must 4 Males, Dews/Tails include price of Bichon Frise AKC reg'd Docked. F-1 Labraa~ ta le oi teoo puppies, 5 female, doodles, 1 Female, 3 Sleep Comfort Twin or less, or multiple $900/ea. 541-953-0755 Males. Vaccines, DewXL adjustable bed items whosetotal or 541-912-1905. with vibrator, with or orming. $1000-$1300. does not exceed 541-848-0217 without mattress 8 $500. foundation, clean, Queensiand Heelers needs new air pump. Call Classifieds at Standard & Mini, $150 $400 cash 541-385-5809 & up. 541-280-1537 541-382-7072 or www.bendbulletln.com www.rightwayranch.wor 541-410-5165
541-408-0490
• B en
210
The Bulletin recommends extra '
264- Snow Removal Equipmsnt 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwastBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horssshosing/Farriurs 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood
,
Furniture & Appliances
a ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
A v e .
BSSl 1C
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, FEB 25, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
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TH E BULLETIN6 WEDNESDAY, FEB 25, 2015
E4
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sbortz
C L U B w edriesday, Febru~ 25,2015
Relaxing evening
ACROSS 1 Protrudes, with "out" 5 With 7-Down,
33 Not at all hidden 36 Pointless 38 Defense grp. since 1948 incapable of 39 J.F.K. Library leaking architect 10Online info soUI'ces 40 Chem. unit 14WhenJuliet tells 41 Catty remark? the Nurse she III" actor will come in from 42 "Rocky (and an apt the balcony answer in this 15Stand puzzle) 16Chill producer 43Wheat bristle 17Popular online 44 Sta- f a b ric reference, for softener short 18Mr. Spock's forte 45 Suffix with ethyl 46Treeswith 19Wreck triangular nuts 20 Flight component 48Alarm clock's 21 Self-portraitist purpose Frida 50 Following the nine 22 "Lethal Weapon" black squares in force, briefly the center of the grid, a hint to five 23 History is
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
D ue t o fa m i l y a n d wr i t i n g obligations, I rarely get to play. But occasionally I travel to Birmingham, Alabama, for an evening of bridge with three old friends. On my most recent visit, we had a great many interesting deals. I wa s t o day's S outh. N o rth's double was negative, showing four cards in spades. When East jumped to four hearts, I felt obliged to try four spades. For all I knew, both majorsuit games might be making. East, Mark Jones, found a good " Lightner d o u b l e. " W hen a preempter doubles a voluntarily bid contract, he suggests an unusual opening lead — often the lead of the first suit dummy bid.
Jim Foster, West, duly led the six of clubs (his highest spot to suggest the return of a heart, the high-ranking side suit). When dummy played low, Jones ruffed, led a heart to West, ruffed a club, returned a diamond to the ace and ruffed a third club. I was down two before I could catch my breath. We were minus 500, and what was worse,four hearts would have failed.
and he rebids two diamonds. The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: Yo u h a v e e n o ugh strength to invite game but not to force (cspecially if your partner is apt to open light, shapely hands). Hence you cannot afford to bid three clubs, forcing. Since partner's rebid promises a six-card suit, to raise to three diamonds is your correct action. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 431065 2
9 J10 OKJ93 4AQ5
recorded in it
26 With 28-Down,
WEST
EAST
4574
45 J98
QA865 2
QQ743 0 Q 1087 6 5
(4 A2
4K643
disagreeable quality of diet sodas 29 With 30-Down, frequently
pairs of answers in this puzzle 52With 54-Down, song with the same name as its album 55 Exiled Amin
4 None ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
SOUTH 43AKQ3 QK9 04 4 J1098 7 2 South 14 3
4 43 All Pass
DAILY QUESTION
W est 19 Pass
Nor t h Dbl Pass
PER 0 L D AXE R0 W JOT CA E ADO S M E MU R P H Y B AST R 0 AGE C R YST A BAA 5 C U EMS CH E LEH A R R R 0 BOT COM I CR E HOO D I R ANN E S A
Eas t 49 Dbl
You hold: 43 7 4 9 A 8 6 5 2 Opening lead — Choose it 0 A2 4 K 6 4 3. Y o ur partneropens one diamond, you respond one heart (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
HA T EN A
C MA J L A N E
SA R S A L A D S P H I A L E D
EMM Y S
O DD U Z I E NE E T E S LG E Y S E R D MOC Y A R D S
OC K R AN L I E ON E N E L
O P E F R Y
E R A V I L EV A R EM E L I
56 With 57-Down,
meal for which everyone pays his or her own way 60 Bruins legend Bobby 61 Totally befuddled 63A. A. Milne hopper 64 Shows the way, biblically 61 Heat or Thunder 10 Performance extras 71 Something in brackets 72Adopt,as a stray 73 Incite to action
1
DOWN 1 Thriller set on Amity Island 2 College course part 3 Joint action 4 Small excerpt 5 Beats the rap 6"ThreeMen in " (Jerome K. Jerome novel) 7 See 5-Across 8 Roman magistrate 9 Scout's mission, for short 10Socialists, on the political spectrum 11Lagoor rio contents 12Witty bit 13Texter's button 24Ally of the Cheyenne: Var. 25 Chitlins, ham hocks, etc. 26 Enola Gay'8 payload, in brief
60
2
3
5
4
6
7
8
No. 0121 9
10
11
12
13
29
30
31
2
56
57
58
9
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23 26
27
24
25
28
33
34
38
36
35
39
42
37
40
43
46
47
48
50 52
53
51
54
55
61
64
65
62
66
68
67
70
69
71
72
73
PUZZLE BYJIM HILQER
27 Roadside attention-getter 28 See 26-Across 30 See 29-Across 31Justice Kagan 32 Handrail support 34 Built later 35 Some sheet metal workers 36 Fidgety 37 Michael of "Flashdance" 47 North-of-theborder grid org.
61 "...
49 First Burmese prime minister 51 YouTube video lead-ins 52 Sign of availability 53 "The Faerie
pole!"
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62 Simple quatrain pattern 65 Buck passer, maybe
Queene" woman 66Verdiaria" 54 See 52-Across tu" 51 See 56-Across 58 Kinkaiou cousin 68 Hacker's need 59Go yard, in 69 -80 (classic baseball slang computer)
Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.
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11 Google Maps directions word 12 Sea-Tac approx. 13 Protein-rich bean 19 Org. that funds cultural exhibitions 21 Litter peeps 24 Cruise stop 25 Italian archaeological attraction 26 Puma competitor
27 Paper holder 28 Italian tourist attraction 33 CFO's degree 34 Invite as a member of 35 Verizon competitor
36 Unruly groups 37 The Lord, in Lourdes
movie role? 56 Chamber group
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By JeffreyWechsler O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
02/25/15
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 732
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land 648
Houses for Rent General
.00 632
Apt./Multiplex General CHECK YOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. NOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. Find It in
The BuHetlnClasstgedsl 541-385-5809
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Commerciai/Investment Southeast Bend Homes Properties for Sale $519,000 By Owner: Fabulous SE home HIGH PROFILE on manicured parkLOCATION IN l ike .58 a c re. 4 DOWNTOWN Bdrm, 2. 5 B a t h, REDMOND Master Main, 3 car This commercial garage all h a rdbuilding offers exwood and tile accellent exposure cents, AC, Gas, RV along desirable NW Pad, Electric Dog 6th Street. fence and so much Currently housing more. Call ( 541) The Redmond 420-1777 for your Spokesman newsprivate s h o wing. paper offices, the View at 2,746 sq. ft. space is www.21030kellerct. perfect for com owner/user. Two private offices and generous open Where can you find a spaces. Three helping hand? parking places in back+ street parkFrom contractors to ing. $259,000. yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's Call Graham Dent 541-383-2444 "Call A Service COMPASS Professional" Directory Commercial 750
Redmond Homes
FIND IT! BIIT I T I
SELL ITr The Bulletin Classifieds 738
Multiplexes for Sale West side 10 units near old Mill, owner carry for qualified principals only. Broker, 541-480-9947
%0o0o
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t 732 which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any Commercial/Investment preference, limitation or disc r imination Properties for Sale based on race, color, religion, sex, handiHIGH PROFILE cap, familial status, LOCATION IN marital status or naDOWNTOWN tional origin, or an inREDMOND tention to make any This commercial such pre f erence, building offers exlimitation or discrimicellent exposure nation." Familial staalong desirable NW tus includes children 6th Street. under the age of 18 Currently housing living with parents or The Redmond legal cus t odians, Spokesman newspregnant women, and paper offices, the people securing cus- 2,748 sq. ft. space is tody of children under perfect for 16. This newspaper owner/user. Two will not knowingly acprivate offices and cept any advertising generous open for real estate which is spaces. Three in violation of the law. parking places in O ur r e aders a r e back + street parkhereby informed that ing. $259,000. all dwellings advertised in this newspaCall Graham Dent per are available on 541-383-2444 an equal opportunity COMPASS basis. To complain of Commercial d iscrimination ca l l HUD t o l l-free at 1-800-877-0246. The Need to get an toll f ree t e lephone ad in ASAP? number for the hearing im p aired is You can place it 1-800-927-9275. online at: Need help fixing stuff'? www.bendbuffetin.com Call A Sewice Professional find the help you need. 541 -385-5809 www.bendbuiletin.com
749
745
Homes for Sale
NOTICE
All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified 747
Southwest Bend Homes
Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 771
Lots Awbrey Butte .48 acre lot with Cascade Mtn. views, 3275 NW Horizon Dr. $259,900. Call 714-510-7388
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Snowmobiles tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries cus4-place enclosed Inter- tom black paint job. state snowmobile trailer $1 2,500 541-815-2523 w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 541-379-3530 YAMAHA 700 2000 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Polaris Fusion 900, only 788 mi., new mirrors, covers, custom skis, n e w rid e -on r ide-off t r ailer w i t h spare, + much more. 2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat $6,995. Call for d e2275 GL, 150hp tails. 541-420-6215 Honda VTEC, less 860 than 110 hours, II!otorcycles & Accessories original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition, $23,500 503-646-1804 850
Harley Davidson 2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684
Financing Available. 541-548-5511
The Bulletin is your Employment
880
Motorhomes
24' Mercedes Benz Prism, 2015 Model G, Mercedes Diesel engine, 16+ mpg, auto trans, fully loaded with double-expando, and only 5200 miles. Perfect condition only $92K. Call 541-526-1201
or see at: 3404 Dogwood Ave., in Redmond.
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
Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Advertise your car! Add A Prcture! transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-lev- Reach thousands of readersl eling system, 5kw gen, Call 541-385-5809 power mirrors w/defrost, The Bulletin Classigeds 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trai(er hitch, drlver door w/power window, cruise, exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Asking $67,500. 503-781-8812 RV PACKAGE-2006 Monaco Monarch, 31', Ford V10, 28,900 miles, Bayliner 185 2006 auto-level, 2 slides, open bow. 2nd owner queen bed & hide-a-bed — low engine hrs. sofa, 4k gen, conv mi— fuel injected V6 crowave, 2 TV's, tow — Radio & Tower. package, $66,000. Great family boat Four Winds 32' OPTION - 2003 Jeep Priced to sell. 2010 Wrangler tow car, 84K $11,590. Triton V-10 with miles, hard & soft top, 5 541-548-0345. 13,000 miles. Large speed manual,$1 1,000 slide, Sleeps 7. Lots 541-815-6319 of storage. 5000lb 875 hitch. Like new. Watercraft $51,900 541-325-6813
5wp.~W~
1998, 20,200 miles, exc. cond.,
$3,500.
16' Cata Raft
541-548-2872.
Harley Dyna Wide Glide 2003 custom paint, extras, 13,000 orig miles, like new, health forces sale. Sacrifice $10,000 obo. 541-633-7856.
2 Ouffitter oars, 2 Cataract oars, 3 NRS 8" Ouffitter blades and l ots of gear, all i n "very good to exc." condition plus custom camp/river tables and bags, more!. $2,700 541 316 1322. Additional information and photos on request, too!
Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 6.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd o wner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077
880
Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago 31 J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very cleanl Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers! 541-388-7179 881
Travel Trailers
Motorhomes
HDFatBo 1996
Marketplace
The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since l91
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JAYCO 1993 27' 50k miles, excellent condition. $9300 obo. 541-573-7131
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award
Winner Showroom Cond. Many Extras Low Miles. $15,000 541-548-4807
REDUCED! 2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking$54K. Ph. 541 -447-9268
HOLIDAY RAMBLER 2007 Jayco Jay Flight VACATIONER 2003 29 FBS with slide out & 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, awning - Turn-key ready workhorse, Allison 1000 to use, less than 50 to5 speed trans., 39K, tal days used by current NEI/I/ TIRES, 2 slides, owner. Never smoked in, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS no indoor pets, excellent brakes, steel cage cock- cond., very clean. Lots of pit, washer/dryer, fire- bonus features; many lace, mw/conv. oven, have never been used. ree standing dinette, A sking $16,500. C a l l was $121,060 new; now, Lisa, 541-420-0794 for $35,900. 541-536-1008 more info / more photos.
Time to declutter? Need some extra cash? Need some extra space the garage?
UM
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Harley Davidson 883 Sportster
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
List Your Home JandNIHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar
880
Moto r homes
~C%a
775
Call Open House 2/28, 1-4 Broken Top Townhome! 19425 Ironwood Circle 5 41- 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 2003 2-story, 2310 sq ft. Enjoy 3 pnvate suites to advertise. w/own bath, library, office, large private www.bendbulletin.com wood deck. Comfy, quiet, convenient! Sam Rawlins, Broker, Rim Rock Investments, 541-620-4242
870
Boats & Accessories
oca
List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
To receive your FREECLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SWChandler Ave. (on Bends west side) *OI!erallowsfor 3lineso! textonly. Excludesall service,hay,wood,pets/animals, plants,tickets,weapons,rentals andemployment advertising, aridall commercial accounts. Mustbeanindividual itemunder$200.00aridpriceol individual itemmust beincludedinthead. Ask yourBulletin SalesRepresentativeaboutspecial pricing,longerrunschedulesandadditional features. Limit I adperitemper 30daysto besold.
E6 WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 25 2015 • THE BULLETIN
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 933
935
975
975
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
FordEscape 2005
oncord
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AUTOS& TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
ChevyPickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3689 or 541-420-6215.
sr
4x4 ready for adventure! ¹D11893. Bargain Corral priced O $5,977
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
A Lot of car for
$6,977!
Vin¹133699
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Pavement Removal LEGAL NOTICE and CIRCUIT C O U RT, 3.Processing ROBBERSON 4 STATE OF OREGON, P lacement of R e moved Pavement on ~ mm m DESCHUTES COUNTY, P r o bate Airport Service Roads 541-312-3986 541-312-3986 D epartment. In t h e 4.Pavement Subbase www.robberson.com www.robberson.com Matter of the Estate and Base ConstrucDlr ¹0205. Good thru Dlr ¹0205. Price of: AL V I S JOE tion 3/01/1 5 good thru 03/01/15 CARDER, Decedent. 5 .Bituminous B a s e Take care of No. 15-PB-0009. NO- and Surface Course 881 932 People Lookfor Information TICE T O IN T E R- Construction your investments Honda Accord 2005 Travel Trailers 0 Antique & VM/BUG 1971 ESTED PERSONS/ 6.Pavement UnderdAbout Products and with the help from Classic Autos ENTITIES. ORS rain Construction Services EveryDaythrough i,' 7.Drainage Improve113.155. NOTICE IS Dutchman Denali The Bulletin's The Bvlletin Classifteds p/ ments HEREBY GIVEN that 32' 2011 travel "Call A Service of the undersigned was 8.Construction GMC 2004 Yukon trailer. 2 slides Evappointed P ersonal New Runway Edge erything goes, all Professional" Directory 4x4, silver, 5.3L, 120K Representative of the Lights miles, mud & snow tires, kitchen ware, linens Fully restored Gorgeous and above-entitled estate 9 .Construction of a 1 owner, well maintained, etc. Hitch, sway Vin ¹359402 Priced to sel/! on January 26, 2015. New Lighted WindFordF350 2002 $7850. bars, water & sewer ¹018628 $11,977 $7,998 908 All p e r sons/entities cone 541-389-3316 hoses. List price 1950 Mercury having claims against 10.Miscellaneous Aircraft, Parts $34,500 - asking ROBBERSON y ROBBERSON 4-dr Sedan t he estate are r e - E lectrical and S i g$26,800 Loaded. & Service Jeep Grand u seoar~ ma ga a Ground-up quired t o pr e sent nage Improvements Must see to appreciCherokee 2003 restoration, beautiful! them, with vouchers 11.Pavement Groovate. Redmond, OR. 541-312-3986 541-312%986 attached, to the un- ing Call for details. 541-604-5993 www.robberson.com www.robberson.com 7.3 Powerstroke dersigned Personal 12.Pavement Marking $35,500 Dlr ¹0205. Good Dlr ¹0205. Price 4x4 ¹A90623. R epresentative a t : or best offer. thru 03/01/1 5 good thru 03/01/15 P.O. Box 667, Red- The Contract Docu$12,977 mond, Oregon 97756, ments for the above 541-892-3789 ROBBERSON within four (4) months project may be exWell cared for 1/3interest in after the date of first amined at the Airport LINcoLII ~ IM RO S Looking for your Vin¹613798$6,977 Columbia 400, publication of this no- Director's office lonext employee? 541-312-3986 tice, or the claims may cated a t Ro b e rt's Place a Bulletin help Heartland P rowler Financing available. ROBBERSON Field-Redmond Muwww.robberson.com be barred. All perwanted ad today and $125,000 2012, 29PRKS, 33', LI II C 0 L II ~ II R M K I nicipal Airport, 2522 Dlr ¹0205. Price sons whose rights (located © Bend) reach over 60,000 like new, 2 slides-livgood thru 3/01/15 may he affected by SE Jesse Butler Circle 541-268-3333 readers each week. i ng area & la r ge 541-312-3986 the probate proceed- ¹17, Redmond, OrYour classified ad closet. Large enough V W CONV. 1 9 78 www.robberson.com 1995. auto., 4 cyl ings may obtain addi- egon 97756, or City of will also appear on to live in, but easy to $8999 -1600cc, fuel Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 2.2L, dark blue tional information from Redmond City Hall, bendbulletin.com tow! 15' power awinjected, classic 1978 3/01/1 5 Vin061167 $5,977 t he records of t h e 716 SW Evergreen, which currently reVolkswaqen Convertning, power hitch & court, the Personal Redmond, O r egon ible. Cobalt blue with ceives over 1.5 milstabilizers, full s i ze ROBBERSON y 97756, on w o rking Representative, a black convertible lion page views queen bed, l a rge Garage Sales ~ mama and/or the attorneys days, between t he top, cream colored every month at shower, porcelain sink for the personal rep- hours of 8:00 a.m. interior & black dash. Toyota Tacoma no extra cost. Bulle& toilet. 1/3 interest in wellGarage Sales 541-312-3986 resentative. Fred Ko- and 5:00 p.m. Coplittle beauty runs 2013 4x4, TRD/TX tin Classifieds $26,500. 541-999-2571 equipped IFR Beech Bo- This www.robberson.com double cab, tow pkg, wolowski, PC. Dated ies of said docuGet Results! Call nanza A36, new 10-550/ and looks great and Garage Sales Dlr ¹0205. Price turns heads wherever and first published: ments may be obtilt, cruise, Bluetooth, 385-5809 or place prop, located KBDN. RV good thru 03/01/15 PW, PDL, AM/FM/CD, February 25, 2 0 15. tained at a cost of Find them your ad on-line at $65,000. 541-419-9510 it goes. Mi: 131,902. CONSIGNMENTS Phone 541-504-8399 locking differential, Personal Representa- $100.00 per set from www.N4972M.com bendbulletin.com WANTED in 10-ply Michelins, PIAA tive, Karen K. Brown. Century West EngiWe Do The Work ... HANGAR FOR SALE. back-up lights, anAltim 200 Attorney for Personal neering Corporation, The Bulletin 933 You Keep The Cash! back-up camera. 30x40 end unit T Representative: Fred 1 020 S W Em k ay On-site credit Classifieds Pickups hanger in Prineville. 1 owner, 26K miles, Say"goodbuy" Kowolowski, PC, D rive, Suite 1 0 0 , approval team, immaculate!$28,995. Dry walled, insulated, OSB¹: 74179, 1323 B end, Oreg o n, to that unused web site presence. 541-385-5809 541-593-9710 or and painted. $23,500. SW 15th Street, P.O. 97702, te l e phone Chev Silverado We Take Trade-Ins! 541-350-8711 item by placing it in Tom, 541.788.5546 Box 667, Redmond, (541) 322- 8 962. Subaru Forester 1998 Oregon 97756-0154, Technical questions BIG COUNTRY RV 170k miles., red, two Looks & runs great! The Bulletin Classifieds PH: (541) 923-7531 shall be directed to 935 Bend: 541-330-2495 Vin¹ 178487 sets tires, daughter FAX: (541) 923-7537, Tom Headley, P.E., Redmond: Sport Utility Vehicles moved to Sweden $6,977 541-385-5809 EMAIL: hir e dgun- Century West Engi541-548-5254 needs $. Clean, no cryptomonkeys.org. neering Corporation, pets. Dependable car. ROBBERSON ~ (541) 322- 8 962. 2005 crew cab great LEGAL NOTICE $4200. ~ m a aa Documents will only looking! Vin¹972932 Looking for your Save money. Learn CitiMortgage, Inc., its be 541-647-0657 I The Bulletin recoml mailed upon renext employee? to fly or build hours $19,977 541-312-3986 mends extra caution I successors in interest ceipt of $100.00 per Place a Bulletin help with your own airwww.robberson.com and/or assigns, Plainwhen p u r chasing ~ s et to c o ver t h e Toyota Highlander wanted ad today and c raft. 1968 A e r o ROBBERSON Dlr ¹0205. Good thru f products or services tiff/s, v. Carl Howe document fee and reach over 60,000 Commander, 4 seat, 3/01/15 aka Carl Taylor Howe; postage/handling. BMW X3 35i 2010 from out of the area. ~ na m a readers each week. John N. Howe; Jodi A. The cost of the docu150 HP, low time, Exc cond., 65K f S ending c ash , Your classified ad full panel. $21,000 541-312-3986 miles w/100K mile checks, or credit in- g H owe; Stacie A n n ments is non-refundwill also appear on obo. Contact Paul at www.robberson.com transferable warformation may be I Stonehocker; Rachel able, and the docuTiCk, TOCk bendbulletin.com 541-447-5184. Dlr ¹0205. Price ranty. Very clean; l K. Busch; CitiBank, ments do not need to [ subject to FRAUD. which currently reN.A., successor in in- be returned. good thru 03/01/15 loaded - cold For more informa2008 Sport, 3rd row, TiCk, TOCk... ceives over 1.5 milweather pkg, pref tion about an adver- terest t o Ci t yBank T-Hangar for rent lots more! ¹024803 lion page views evSouth Dakota, N.A., Contractors must be mium pkg & tech...don't let time get tiser, you may call at Bend airport. $19,977 ery month at no Just too many nology pkg. Keyless I the Oregon Statel D efendant/s. C a s e qualified in a c corCall 541-382-8998. away. Hire a extra cost. Bulletin access, sunroof, collectibles? s Attorney General's s No.: 13CV0575. NO- dance with the appliROBBERSON Classifieds Get Renavigation, satellite professional out 916 > Office C o nsumer > TICE OF SALE UN- cable parts of ORS sults! Call 385-5809 DER WRIT OF EX- 279C in order to enradio extra snow f Protection hotline at of The Bulletin's Trucks & Sell them in or place your ad tires. (Car top carECUTION - REAL ter into a contract with 1-877-877-9392. 541-312-3986 "Call A Service on-line at Heavy Equipment The Bulletin Classifieds PROPERTY. Notice is the City. The City will rier not included.) www.robberson.com bendbulletin.com hereby given that the only consider con$22,500. Professional" Dlr ¹0205. Price Serving Cenlval Oregon since19IB Deschutes C o u nty tractors who are able 541-915-9170 good thru 03/01/15 541-385-5809 Directory today~ Sheriff's Office will, on to demonstrate prior 882 Thursday, April 30, experience with simiFifth Wheels 2015 at 10:00 AM, in lar work. The City may the main lobby of the investigate to deterDeschutes C o u nty mine the q ualificaM.F. 230 DIESEL Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 of the bidders as CASE 200 GAS W. Highway 20, Bend, tions of the evaluation FORD 2N GAS Oregon, sell, at public part of the bids. BEND 541-382-8038 o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r Keystone Everest 5th must submit cash o r ca s hier's Bidders Wheel, 2004 925 q ualification sta t e check, the real propModel 323P - 3 slides, in accordance Utility Trailers erty commonly known ments rear island-kitchen, ith the t e rms o f as 19805 Wetland w fireplace, 2 TV's, 20-02 of latbed t r ailer w i t h Court, Bend, Oregon subsection CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner F ramps, Contract 7000 lb. ca97702. Conditions of the w/surround sound, A/C, pacity, 26' and long, 8'6" custom bed, ceiling fan, Sale: Potential bid- Conditions P rovisions W/D ready, many extras. wide, ideal for hauling ders must arrive 15 General with their Proposal. hay, materials, cars, New awning & tires. minutes prior to the Proposals submitted exc.cond. $2800. Excellent condition. auction to allow the without q ualification 541-420-3788 $19,750.More pics Deschutes C o u nty statements available. 541-923-6408 Just bought a new boat? Sheriff's Office to re- accepted. will not be view bidder's funds. Sell your old one in the Only U.S. currency This contract will be classifieds! Ask about our Laredo 31' 2006, Super Seller rates! and/or cashier's 5th wheel, fully S/C in part, by a checks made payable funded, 541-385-5809 one slide-out. from the Federal to Deschutes County grant Awning. Like new, Aviation 931 Sheriff's Office will be Administration. hardly used. As accepted. P ayment such it will be subject Automotive Parts, Must sell $20,000 must be made in full Service & Accessories federal or take over payimmediately upon the to requirements. These ments. Call close of the sale. For Pacemaker Snow Tracker but are not 541-410-5649 more information on include, tires on 6-hole GM alloy this s al e g o to: limited to: rims, (4) P265/70Rx16, www.oregonsheriffs.c $300. 541-475-4887 •Buy America om/sales.htm Preferences; REV-cor 14" pusher LEGAL NOTICE •Foreign T rade fan, $85. CITY OF REDMOND Restrictions; 541-318-6368 ROBERTS FIELD•P revailing W a g e ~IIH REDMOND Rates (higher of BOLI 932 Price Reduced! MUNICIPAL AIRPORT or Davis-Bacon rates); Open Road 36' 2005 Antique & ~Affirmative A c t i on model is like new RUNWAY 4-22 Requirements; Classic Autos w/3 slides!! King REHABILITATION•G overnment w i d e bed, hide-a-bed, PHASEII Debarment and glass shower, 10 gal. Suspension water heater, 10 A.I.P. PROJECT No. Provisions; and cu.ft. fridge, central 3-41-0052-036/039 •G overnment w i d e vac, satellite dish, Requirements for 27" TV /stereo sysINVITATION TO BID Drug-free workplace tem, front power levRequirements. A Private Collection eling jacks 8 scisSealed bids for Rob1956 Ford pickup sor stabilizer jacks, erts Field-Redmond All applicable federal 1932 DeSoto 2dr 16' awning. 2005 Iillunicipal A i rport, provisions are given in 1930 Ford A Coupe model is like new! Runway 4-22 Reha- the specifications. 1929 Ford A Coupe $19,500 b ilitation-Phase I I , 1923 Ford T Run. 541-419-0566 The proposed contract A .I.P. Project N o . All good to excellent. Add a photo to your Bulletin classified ad for just $15 per week. 3A1-0052-038/039 is under and subject Inside heated shop Reese 20,000-lb 5th will be received by the to Executive Order BEND 541-362-8038 wheel receiver hitch, City Recorder at City 112456 of September $400 obo. 541-610-3119 of Redmond, C ity 24, 1986, and to the Chevrolet Silverado Hall, 716 SW EverEqual E m ployment 2006 diesel, 113K miles, RV green, Redmond, Or- Opportunity (EEO) ext'd cab, long bed, CONSIGNMENTS egon 97756, until the and Federal Labor excellent condition, WANTED Provisions. bid closing time of $19,000. 541-548-4667 We Do the Work, 2:00 .m . l ocal time You Keep the Cash! based on the "Official A ll labor o n th e On-site credit Time" of the clock at project shall be paid approval team, the Cit R e corder's n o less t ha n t h e web site presence. office at Redmond minimum wage rates We Take Trade-Ins! Ci Hall on the 18th e stabhshed by t h e da of March 2015 at U .S. Secretary o f BIG COUNTRY RV which time the bids Labor or The State of Bend: 541-330-2495 1965 Mustang will be publ i cly Oregon BOLI, Redmond: Hard top, opened and r e ad. whichever is greater. 541-548-5254 6-cylinder, auto trans, Bidders shall submit power brakes, power the required first-tier Each Bidder m ust steering, garaged, subcontractors disclo- supply all information 885 well maintained, sure form within two required by the bid Canopies & Campers engine runs strong. hours of the bid clos- documents and speci 74K mi., great condiing t i me. B i dders fications. tion. $12,500. whose bids a nd/or Adventurer 2013 86 Must see! disclosure statements The EEO FB truck camper, 541-598-7940 are received after the requirements, l abor $19,800. 2205 dry stated times will be provisions, and wage weight, 44 gallons considered n o n-re- rates are included in f resh w ater. 3 1 0 sponsive, and their the specifications and watts rooftop solar, 2 bids will not be con- bid documents. deep cycle batteries, sidered. LED lights, full size Each Bidder m u st q ueen bed. n i c e The scope of work complete, sign, and floorplan. Also availbeing considered is: furnish with their bid a able 2010 C hevy Mercedes 380SL 1982 "Certification of Roadster, black on black, Silverado HD, 1. Excavation, EmNonsegregated soft & hard top, excellent $15,000. bankment, Earthwork Facilities" a n d a condition, always ga360-774-2747 raged. 1 55 K m i l es, and Grading statement en t i tled No text messages! 2.Asphalt C oncrete "Bidders S tatement $11,500. 541-549-6407 ROBBZRSON LIIICOLII ~
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THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 25 2015 E7
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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on Previous Contracts Subject t o EEO Clause," as contained in the Bid Proposal.
3258 SW P umice Pl, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes A contractor having 50 or more employees prior to the auction Redmond to allow the Desand their subcontrac The t ors having 50 o r Spokesman c hutes Coun t y more employees and February 18, 2 0 15 Sheriff's Office to who may be awarded a nd F ebruary 2 5 , review bid d e r's funds. Only U .S. a s u bcontract o f 2015 c urrency an d / or $50,000 or more will LEGAL NOTICE cashier's c h ecks be re q uired to Deutsche Bank Namaintain an made payable to Trust Company, Deschutes County a ffirmative act i o n tional as Trustee for First the Sheriff's Office will program, M o r tgage be accepted. Paystandards for which Franklin Loan Trust are contained in the 2006-FF16, ment must be made in full immediately specifications. Asset-Backed Certifi- upon the close of Series the sale. For more T o b e e l igible f or cates, award each Bidder 2006-FF16, Plaintiff/s, information on this v. Marcos Rodriguez; must comply with the Ana Yeli Rodriguez; sale go to: www.ora ffirmative act i o n egonsheriff s.com/sa Electronic les.htm requirements w hich Mortgage Registration Systems, are contained in the Inc.; First Franklin, a LEGAL NOTICE specifications. Division of National Federal N a t ional City Bank; State of Mortgage AssociaDisadvantaged Oregon; Occupants of Business Enterprises tion, its successors the premises, Defen- in interest and/or will be afforded full d ant/s. Case N o . : opportunity to submit 1 4CV0261FC. N O - assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. William R. Berbids in response to this invitation and will TICE OF SALE UN- berick AKA Russ DER WRIT OF EXnot be discriminated ECUTION - REAL Berberick AKA William Russell Beragainst o n the Notice is berick; Tamela J. grounds of race, color, PROPERTY. hereby given that the or national origin in Berberick AKA C o u nty Tamela Jane Berconsideration for an Deschutes Sheriff's Office will, on Cit i bank award of any contract Tuesday, May 5, 2015 berick; South Dakota NA; entered into pursuant at 10:00 AM, in the to this advertisement. Capital One Bank main lobby of the De- USA NA; C h ase s chutes Coun t y Bank USA NA; OcIn accordance with Office, 63333 cupants of the Prefederal requirements, Sheriff's W. Highway 20, Bend, the City has m ises; th e R e a l Oregon, sell, at public Property Located at determined that this o ral auction to t h e contract 15588 Bur g ess has h ighest bidder, f o r Road, La Pine OR subcontracting cash o r ca s hier's and 97739, Defendant/s. possibilities the real prop- Case No.: encourages the check, erty commonly known NOparticipation of Disad as 62920 Clyde Lane, 13CV0684. SAL E vantaged B u siness Bend, Oregon 97701. T ICE O F Enterprises as prime UNDER WRIT OF of S ale: EXECUTION contractors and Conditions Potential bidders must REAL PROPERTY. s ubcontractors. N o 15 minutes prior Notice i s h e r eby DBE contract goal has arrive to the auction to allow been established for given that the Desthe Deschutes County c hutes Coun t y this project. Sheriff's Office to re- Sheriff's Office will, bidder's funds. on Tuesday, April B ased on t h e 9 t h view Circuit Court Decision Only U.S. currency 28, 2015 at 10:00 and/or A M, in t h e m a in in Western S tates checks madecashier's payable lobby of the DesPaving Company v. to Deschutes County Coun t y W ashington Sta t e Sheriff's Office will be c hutes Department of Sheriff's Off i c e, accepted. P ayment 63333 W. Highway T ransportation, t h e must be made in full City has determined 20, Bend, Oregon, upon the sell, at public oral that it is appropriate to immediately use a r a ce/gender close of the sale. For auction to the highmore information on est bidder, for cash neutral goal. The City this s al e g o to: or cashier's check, all encourages the real p roperty bidders to take active www.oregonsheriffs.c race/gender neutral om/sales.htm commonly known as 15588 Bur g e ss steps to include DBEs LEGAL NOTICE in t h i s con t ract. Deutsche Bank NaRoad, La Pine, OrRace/gender neutral tional Trust Company, egon 97739. Condisteps include: as Trustee for FFMLT tions of Sale: Pou nbundling lar g e Trust 2006 - FF4, tential bidders must contracts, subcontrac Mortgage arrive 15 minutes ting work the prime Pass-Through Certifi- prior to the auction contractor may cates, DesSeries to allow theCoun ty self-perform, providing 2006-FF4, Plaintiff/s, c hutes Sheriff's Office to bonding or financing v. Jackie Verlanic; bid d e r's assistance, providing Occupants o f the review technical assistance, premises, funds. Only U .S. an d / or etc. D efendant/s. C a s e c urrency c h ecks No.: 1 4 CV0468FC. cashier's A MA ND A TORY N OTICE OF S A L E made payable to pre-bid meeting is to U NDER WRIT O F Deschutes County be held at 2:00 p.m., EXECUTION - REAL Sheriff's Office will local time on the 3rd PROPERTY. Notice is be accepted. Payday of March, 2015, at hereby given that the ment must be made the office o f the Deschutes C o u nty in full immediately A irport Director a t Sheriff's Office will, on upon the close of the sale. For more Roberts Field Airport T uesday, April 2 8 , T erminal, Airp o rt 2015 at 10:00 AM, in information on this Administration Office. the main lobby of the sale go to: www.ors.com/sa I nterested prim e Deschutes C o u nty egonsheriff c ontractors are r e Sheriff's Office, 63333 les.htm quired to attend. At W. Highway 20, Bend, this meeting, Oregon, sell, at public LEGAL NOTICE Nat i onal questions concerning o ral auction to t h e Federal the Contract h ighest bidder, f o r Mortgage Association Documents and the cash o r ca s hier's ("FNMA"), Plaintiff/s, proposed work will be check, the real prop- v. John W. Cooper; discussed. A tour of erty commonly known Lisa D. Cooper; Robthe project site will be as 62946 Nasu Park ert Allen Taylor Co., conducted after the Loop, Bend, Oregon other Persons or Parmeeting, after which, 97701. Conditions of ties, including Occuunknown no other tours or site Sale: P otential bid- pants, visits will be sched ders must arrive 15 claiming any r ight, uled. minutes prior to the title, lien, or interest in he p r operty d e auction to allow the tscribed in the comNo b i d sh a l l be Deschutes C o u nty plaint herein, Defenconsidered unless the Sheriff's Office to rebidder is r egistered view bidder's funds. dant/s. Case N o .: with t h e Or e g on Only U.S. currency 13CV0720. NOTICE Construction and/or cashier's OF SALE U NDER Contractors Board as checks made payable WRIT OF E X ECUrequired by ORS 701. to Deschutes County TION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is Sheriff's Office will be hereby given that the P roposals must b e accepted. P ayment submitted o n the must be made in full Deschutes C o u nty prescribed forms and immediately upon the Sheriff's Office will, on must beaccompanied close of the sale. For Thursday, April 23, by certified check, more information on 2015 at 10:00 AM, in cashier's check, or bid this s al e g o to: the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty b ond executed i n www.oregonsheriffs.c favor of the City in an om/sales.htm Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, amount equal to ten Oregon, sell, at public percent (10%) of the Good classified ads tell oral auction to t he amount b i d . Th e the essential facts in an successful bidder will interesting Manner.Write h ighest bidder, f o r ca s hier's be required to furnish from the readers view - not cash o r check, the real propa performance bond the seller's. Convert the erty commonly known and payment bond, facts into benefits. Show e ach i n t h e fu l l as 10290 NW Oak the reader how the item wi l l amount of the contract Lane, Redmond, Orhelp them in some way. egon 97756. Condiprice. This tions of Sale: Potenadvertising tip No bi d m a y be t ial b i dders m u s t brought to you by arrive 15 minutes prior withdrawn after the to the auction to allow scheduled time for the The Bulletin the Deschutes County public opening of the Senring CentralOwgons/nce 19N bid a s spe c ified Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. a bove. T h e Cit y LEGAL NOTICE DLJ Mort g age Only U.S. currency reserves the right to and/or cashier's reject any and all bids, Capital, Inc., Plainto wai v e any t iff/s, v. M ark S . checks made payable to Deschutes County irregularities, and to Hall; Diena K. Hall; Sheriff's Office will be accept t he bid Oregon Affordable deemed in the best Housing Assistance accepted. Payment interest of the City. Corporation; Occumust be made in full immediately upon the The City may reject pants of the propclose of the sale. For any b i d n ot in erty, D efendant/s. more information on c ompliance with a l l Case No.: NOthis s al e go to: prescribed public bid 13CV0888. www.oregonsheriffs.c ding procedures and T ICE O F SAL E r equirements, a n d UNDER WRIT OF om/sales.htm may reject for good EXECUTION cause any or all bids REAL PROPERTY. Get your upon a finding by the Notice i s h e r eby City that it is in the given that the Desbusiness public interest to do c hutes Coun t y so. Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, May 7, KELLY MORSE, 2015 at 10:00 AM, CITY RECORDER in the main lobby of CITY OF REDMOND the Desc h utes County Sheriff's OfWith an ad in Dated at the City of fice, 6 3 33 3 W. Redmond, this 18th Highway 20, Bend, The Bulletin's day o f Fe b ruary, O regon, sell, a t 2015. public oral auction "Call A Service to the highest bidPublished: The Bend d er, for c ash o r Professional" Bulletin - February 18, cashier's check, the 2015 and February real property comDirectory m only known a s 25, 2015
Oregon Daily Journal of C o m merce F ebruary 18, 2 0 15 a nd February 2 5 , 2015
sROWING
prior to the auction LEGAL NOTICE Federal Nat i onal to allow the DesCou n t y Mortgage Association, c hutes its successors and/or S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Joseph M. D avies; funds. Only U . S. an d / or Stacey M. D a vies; c urrency Mortgage Electronic cashier's c h e cks Registration Systems, made payable to Inc.; and al l o ther Deschutes County Persons or P arties Sheriff's Office will unknown clai ming any be accepted. Payment must be made right, title, lien, or int erest in t h e R e a l in full immediately Property c ommonly upon the close of known as 6415 SW the sale. For more Jaguar Avenue, Red- information on this mond, O R 9 7 7 56, sale go to: www.ors.com/sa D efendant/s. C a s e egonsheriff No.: 1 4 CV0106FC. les.htm N OTICE OF S A L E U NDER WRIT O F LEGAL NOTICE EXECUTION - REAL N ationstar Mor t PROPERTY. Notice is gage LLC, hereby given that the Plaintiff/s, v. Terry L. Deschutes C o unty Johnston aka Terry Sheriff's Office will, on J ohnston; Oc c u Tuesday, May 5, 2015 pants of the propat 10:00 AM, in the erty, D efendant/s. main lobby of the De- Case No.: s chutes Coun t y 14CV0229FC. NOSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 T ICE O F SA L E W. Highway 20, Bend, UNDER WRIT OF Oregon, sell, at public EXECUTION o ral auction to t h e REAL PROPERTY. highest bidder, f or Notice is h e reby cash o r ca s hier's given that the Descheck, the real prop- c hutes Cou n t y erty commonly known Sheriff's Office will, as 6415 SW Jaguar on Thursday, April Avenue, R e dmond, 30, 2015 at 10:00 Oregon 97756. Con- AM, in t h e m a in ditions of Sale: Polobby of the Destential bidders must c hutes Cou n t y arrive 15 minutes prior S heriff's Offi c e , to the auction to allow 63333 W. Highway the Deschutes County 20, Bend, Oregon, Sheriff's Office to re- sell, at public oral view bidder's funds. auction to the highOnly U.S. currency est bidder, for cash and/or cashier's or cashier's check, checks made payable the real p roperty to Deschutes County commonly known as Sheriff's Office will be 12430 NW Chinook accepted. P ayment Drive, Terrebonne, must be made in full O regon 977 6 0 . immediately upon the Conditions of Sale: close of the sale. For Potential b i d ders more information on must arrive 15 minthis s al e g o to: u tes prior to t h e www.oregonsheriffs.c auction to allow the om/sales.htm Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o LEGAL NOTICE review bid d er's JPMorgan Chase funds. Only U . S. Bank, National Ascurrency an d / or sociation, succescashier's c h e cks sor by merger to made payable to C hase Home F i Deschutes County nance LLC, its sucSheriff's Office will cessors in interest and/or ass i gns, be accepted. Payment must be made Plaintiff/s, v. James in full immediately A . Dejon AKA J . upon the close of Kimo Dejon; Karen the sale. For more Moser-Dejon F KA information on this Karen Jane Moser; sale go to: www.orand Occupants of egonsheriff s.com/sa the Premises, Deles.htm fendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0084. NOT ICE O F SAL E LEGAL NOTICE UNDER WRIT OF N ationstar Mo r t EXECUTION gage, LLC, REAL PROPERTY. Plaintiff/s, v. Ross Notice i s h e r eby Miller and Connie given that the DesM iller; John a n d c hutes Coun t y Jane D o es , I Sheriff's Office will, through V, O ccuon Thursday, May 7, pants of the subject 2015 at 10:00 AM, Real Properly, and in the main lobby of All Other Persons or the Desc h utes Parties U nknown, County Sheriff's Ofclaiming any right, fice, 6 3 33 3 W. title, interest, lien or Highway 20, Bend, estate in the propO regon, sell, a t e rty h e rein d e public oral auction scribed, to the highest bidDefendant/s. Case d er, for c ash o r No.: 13CV1249FC. cashier's check, the NOTICE OF SALE real property comUNDER WRIT OF m only known as EXECUTION 2895 Nor t h east REAL PROPERTY. Hidden Brook Place, Notice is h e reby B end, Oreg o n given that the Des97701. Conditions c hutes Cou n t y of Sale: P o tential Sheriff's Office will, bidders must arrive on Thursday, April 15 minutes prior to 30, 2015 at 10:00 the auction to allow AM, in t h e m a in the Desc h utes lobby of the DesCounty Sheriff's Ofc hutes Cou n t y f ice to revi e w S heriff's Of fi c e , bidder's funds. Only 63333 W. Highway U.S. currency 20, Bend, Oregon, and/or ca s hier's sell, at public oral checks made payauction to the highable to Deschutes est bidder, for cash County Sheriff's Ofor cashier's check, f ice will b e a c the real p roperty cepted. P a yment commonly known as must be made in full 52437 Lost Pondeimmediately upon rosa Road, La Pine, t he close of t h e O regon 977 3 9 . sale. For more inConditions of Sale: f ormation on t h is Potential b i d ders sale go to: www.ormust arrive 15 minegonsheriff s.com/sa u tes prior to t h e les.htm auction to allow the Deschutes County LEGAL NOTICE S heriff's Office t o JPMorgan C hase review bid d er's Bank, National Asf unds. Only U . S. sociation, succescurrency an d / or sor in interest by cashier's c h e cks purchase from the made payable to Federal Deposit InDeschutes County surance C orporaSheriff's Office will tion as receiver of be accepted. PayWashington Mutual ment must be made Bank Association, in full immediately its successors in upon the close of interest and/or asthe sale. For more signs, Plaintiff/s, v. information on this Kae A. Meier aka Kae An n M e i er; sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa Carol Osgood; Eqles.htm uable Ascent Financial LLC; and Occupants of the LEGAL NOTICE premises, D e fenNOTICE OF PUBLIC dant/s. Case No.: AUCTION 13CV1083FC. NOWRIGHT MINI T ICE O F SAL E STORAGE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION The contents of the REAL PROPERTY. following storage units Notice i s h e r eby will be auctioned to given that the Descollect unpaid storc hutes Coun t y age fees on Saturday, Sheriff's Office will, M arch 14, 2015 a t on Tuesday, May 5, 10:00 a.m. 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of WRIGHT MINI the Desc h utes STORAGE County Sheriff's Of1835 S. HIGHWAY 97 fice, 6 3 33 3 W. REDMOND, OR 97756 Highway 20, Bend, (541 ) 548-2138 O regon, sell, a t public oral auction UNIT ¹'s: to the highest bid¹33 Miller, Kayla d er, for c ash o r ¹40 Dallas, Jeannie cashier's check, the ¹73 Miller, Kayla real property com¹A25 Krueqer, Jamie m only known as ¹A45 Black, Ray & Debbie 3430 SW Reindeer ¹A67 Rogers, Brandon ¹B48 Murray, Adrina Ave, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Condi- ¹B60 Keller, Samantha tions of Sale: Po¹E65 Fischer, Jenn tential bidders must ¹E69 Fischer, Jenn arrive 15 minutes ¹E81 Major, Craig
20, Bend, Oregon, 1104 Northeast Resell, at public oral vere Ave., Bend, auction to the highO regon 977 0 1 . est bidder, for cash Conditions of Sale: or cashier's check, Potential b i d ders the real p roperty must arrive 15 mincommonly known as u tes prior t o t h e 17376 Golden Eye auction to allow the D rive, Bend, O r Deschutes County egon 97707. CondiSheriff's Office to review bidd e r's If you have any inter- tions of Sale: P otential bidders must funds. Only U . S. est i n t h e s e ized arrive 15 m inutes c urrency an d / or property d e scribed cashier's c h e cks below, you must claim prior to the auction made payable to that interest or you will to allow the DesCoun t y Deschutes County automatically lose that c hutes Sheriff's Office will interest. If you do not S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's be accepted. Payfile a claim for the ment must be made property, the property funds. Only U . S. an d / or in full immediately may be forfeited even currency cashier's c h e cks upon the close of if you are not conthe sale. For more victed of any crime. made payable to information on this To claim an interest, Deschutes County sale go to: www.oryou must file a written Sheriff's Office will egonsheriff s.com/sa claim with the forfei- be accepted. Payles.htm ture counsel named ment must be made below, The w r itten in full immediately claim must be signed upon the close of LEGAL NOTICE by you, sworn to un- the sale. For more P ennyMac L o a n der penalty of perjury information on this Services, LLC, its before a notary public, sale go to: www.orsuccessors in inters.com/sa and state: (a) Your egonsheriff est and/or assigns, les.htm true name; (b) The Plaintiff/s, v. G r eaddress at which you gory A. Skinner aka LEGAL NOTICE will a c cept f u t ure Ocwen Loan Servic- Gregory Ada m m ailings from t h e ing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Skinner; L or i L. court and f orfeiture Buckley Morgan II; Skinner; Mortgage counsel; and (3) A RegistraM. Morgan; Electronic s tatement that y o u Leanna Systems, Inc., or P a rties tion have an interest in the Persons solely as nominee Unknown c l a iming for G MA C M o r tseized property. Your any right, title, lien, or gage, LLC; National deadline for filing the interest in the prop- Credit claim document with erty described d j usters; in the Cavalry A P forfeiture co u nsel complaint o r ffolio her e in, named below is 21 and Ocefendant/s. C a s e Services; days from the last day D cupants of the preNo.: 12CV0004. NOof publication of this TICE Defendant/s. OF SALE UN- mises, notice. Where to file a DER WRIT Case No.: OF EXclaim and for more - REAL 13CV1051FC. NOECUTION i nformation: D a i na ICE O F SA L E Notice is T Vitolins, Crook County PROPERTY. UNDER WRIT OF hereby given that the District Attorney OfC o u nty EXECUTION fice 30 0 N E T h i rd Deschutes PROPERTY. Sheriff's Office will, on REAL Street, Prineville, OR Thursday, is h e reby Ma y 7, Notice 97754. given that the Desat 10:00 AM, in Notice of reasons for 2015 c hutes Cou n t y the main lobby of the Forfeiture: The prop- Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office will, erty described below Sheriff on Tuesday, April 's O ff ice,63333 was seized for forfei- W. Highway 28, 2015 at 10:00 20, Bend, ture because it: (t) Oregon, sell, at public A M, in t h e m a in Constitutes the pro- o ral auction to t he lobby of the Desceeds of the violation h ighest bidder, f o r c hutes Cou n t y of, solicitation to vio- cash o r heriff's Of fi c e , ca s hier's S late, attempt to vio- check, the real 63333 W. Highway proplate, or conspiracy to erty commonly known 20, Bend, Oregon, violates, the criminal as 51244 Diane Road, sell, at public oral laws of the State of to the highLa P i ne , O r egon auction Oregon regarding the 97739. est bidder, for cash Conditions of manufacture, distribu- Sale: Potential bid- or cashier's check, tion, or possession of ders must arrive 15 the real p roperty controlled substances minutes prior to the commonly known as (ORS Chapter475); auction to allow the 3387 Nor t heast and/or (2) Was used Deschutes C o unty Sandalwood Drive, or intended for use in Sheriff's Office to re- B end, Oreg o n committing or facili- view bidder's funds. 97701. Conditions tating the violation of, Only U.S. currency of Sale: P otential solicitation to violate, and/or bidders must arrive attempt to violate, or checks madecashier's 15 minutes prior to conspiracy to violate to Deschutes payable auction to allow County the the criminal laws of the Desc h utes Sheriff's Office will be the State of Oregon accepted. Payment County Sheriff's Ofregarding the manuice to rev i e w be made in full fbidder's facture, distribution or must funds. Only immediately upon the possession of con- close of the sale. For U.S. currency trolled su b stances more information on and/or ca s h ier's (ORS Chapter 475). made paythis s al e go to: checks able to Deschutes IN THE MATTER OF: www.oregonsheriffs.c County Sheriff's Of(t) $4,700.00 in US om/sales.htm f ice will b e ac Currency, Case No cepted. P a yment LEGAL NOTICE 1 4-396334 sei z e d Ocwen Loan Servic- must be made in full January 5, 2015 from ing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. immediately u pon Bradford Martson and Michael E. B urdick; t he close o f t h e Angela Lindgren. Nancy C . B u rdick; sale. For more inPersons or P a rties f ormation on t h is LEGAL NOTICE unknown clai ming any sale go to: www.orN OTICE T O IN s.com/sa right, title, lien, or in- egonsheriff T ERESTED P E Rterest in the property les.htm SONS: Probate prodescribed in the comceedings i n th e plaint herein, DefenLEGAL NOTICE Estate of Ann Marie d ant/s. Case N o .: Planet Home Lending Mombert, deceased, 12CV0214. NOTICE L LC, Plaintiff/s, v . are now pending in OF SALE U N DER Quinten S Hargraves; the Circuit Court for WRIT O F E X ECU- The Estate of Mary E Deschutes County, TION - REAL PROP- Hargraves, Deceased; Oregon, Case No. ERTY. N o t ic e is Unknown Heirs and 15PB0015. Bradly hereby given that the Devisees of Mary E L . Mombert h a s Deschutes C o u nty Hargraves, Deceased; been appointed as Sheriff's Office will, on and Persons or Parpersonal represenT uesday, April 2 1 , ties unknown claimtative of Decedent. 2015 at 10:00 AM, in ing any right, title, lien, All persons having the main lobby of the o r interest i n t h e claims against the Deschutes C o unty property described in Estate are required Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 the complaint herein, to present them, in W. Highway 20, Bend, D efendant/s. C a s e due form, within four Oregon, sell, at public No.: 1 3 C V1443FC. m onths after t h e o ral auction to t he N OTICE OF S A L E date of first publicah ighest bidder, f o r U NDER WRIT O F tion of this Notice. ca s hier's EXECUTION - REAL The date o f f i rst cash o r check, the real prop- PROPERTY. Notice is publication of t his erty commonly known hereby given that the Notice is February a s 6 1 13 8 Ge a r y Deschutes C o u nty 25, 2015. C laims Drive, Bend, Oregon Sheriff's Office will, on shall be presented 97702. Conditions of Thursday, April 30, to the personal repSale: Potential bid- 2015 at 10:00 AM, in resentative at t his ders must arrive 15 the main lobby of the address: c/o Robert minutes prior to the Deschutes C o u nty A. Smejkal,PO Box auction to allow the Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 1758, Eugene, OR Deschutes C o unty W. Highway 20, Bend, 97440-1758, orthey Sheriff's Office to reOregon, sell, at public may be barred. All view bidder's funds. o ral auction to t h e p ersons who s e Only U.S. currency h ighest bidder, f o r rights may be afand/or cashier's cash o r ca s hier's fected by these prochecks made payable check, the real propceedings may obto Deschutes County erty commonly known tain additional Sheriff's Office will be as 53795 4th Street, information from the accepted. Payment La P i ne , O r e gon records of the court, must be made in full 97739. Conditions of the personal repreimmediately upon the Sale: Potential bidsentative, or his atclose of the sale. For ders must arrive 15 torney, Robert A. more information on minutes prior to the Smejkal, whose add ress i s lis t e d this s al e go to: auction to allow the www.oregonsheriffs.c Deschutes C o u nty above, and whose om/sales.htm Sheriff's Office to retelephone number is view bidder's funds. (541) 345-3330. LEGAL NOTICE Only U.S. currency LEGAL NOTICE O neWest Ba n k , and/or cashier's Ocwen Loan SerFSB, its successors checks made payable vicing, LLC, its sucin interest and/or to Deschutes County cessors and/or asassigns, Plaintiff/s, Sheriff's Office will be v. Suzanne Maker signs, Plaintiff/s, v. accepted. P ayment Lee E . B o njorni; A KA Suzanne L . must be made in full Cynthia G. Bonjorni; M aker; Unit e d immediately upon the Midland F u nding, States of America; close of the sale. For State of O r egon; more information on LLC; and all other Persons or Parties and occupants of this s al e g o to: unknown claiming the premises, Dewww.oregonsheriffs.c any right, title, lien, fendant/s. Case No.: om/sales.htm o r interest in t h e 13CV1063FC. NOReal Property comT ICE O F SAL E m only known a s UNDER WRIT OF The Bulletin is your 17376 Golden Eye EXECUTION D rive, Bend, O R REAL PROPERTY. Employment 97707, Defendant/s. Notice i s h e r eby No.: Case given that the DesMarketplace 13CV0924. NOc hutes Coun t y T ICE O F SA L E Sheriff's Office will, UNDER WRIT OF on Thursday, April Call EXECUTION 23, 2015 at 10:00 REAL PROPERTY. A M, in t h e m a i n 541-385-5809 Notice is h e reby lobby of the Desgiven that the Desc hutes Coun t y Off i c e, to advertise. c hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Sheriff's Office will, 63333 W. Highway on Thursday, April 20, Bend, Oregon, www.bendbulletin.com 23, 2015 at 10:00 sell, at public oral A M, in t h e m a in auction to the highlobby of the Desest bidder, for cash c hutes Cou n t y or cashier's check, S heriff's Of fi c e , the real p roperty serving central oregonsince f9ra 63333 W. Highway commonly known as
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY
The Bulletin
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 R RIED WOMAN, AS H ER S OL E A N D SEPARATE P ROPERTY as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE and E SCROW CO., a s trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE E LECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYS T EMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR CENTRAL PACIFIC M ORTGAGE C O M PANY, A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, dated 8/23/2006, recorded 8/30/2006, in official r ecords o f DES CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. and/or as fee/file/instrument/microfilm/reception number 2006-59599 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and S t ate, 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 cer
ES WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
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There is a default by S PATRISANO 3 7 4 LEGAL NOTICE grantor or other per- NE KEARNEY AVE Umpqua Bank, as son owing an obliga- B END, O R 97 7 0 1 successor in intertion, performance of Original Borrower For est by merger to which is secured by Sale Information Call: Sterling Sa v ings 714-730-2727 or Bank, Plaintiff/s, v. the trust deed, or by the successor in in- Login to: Allen L. Lowery, an terest, with respect to www.servicelinkasap. individual; Evonne provisions th e rein com In construing this K. Lowery, an indiwhich authorize sale notice, the singular vidual; and All Ocin the event of such includes the p lural, cupants of the Real provision. The default the word "grantor" P roperty as defor which foreclosure includes any scribed in the comFEDERAL LAW. ATis made is grantor's successor in interest plaint herein, DeT ACHED TO T H I S failure to pay when to this grantor as well fendant/s. Case No.: NOTICE OF SALE, due t h e fo l lowing as any other person 14CV0499FC. NOAND INC O RPO- sums: De l i nquent owing an obligation, T ICE O F SAL E RATED HEREIN, IS A Payments: Payment the performance of UNDER WRIT OF N OTICE T O T E N - I nformation Fro m which is secured by EXECUTION ANTS THAT SETS 9/1/2010 Thr o ugh the trust deed, and REAL PROPERTY. F ORTH SOME OF 1/1/2015 Total Pay- the words "trustee" Notice i s h e r eby THE PROTECTIONS ments "beneficiary" given that the Des$89 , 368.24 and THAT AR E A V AIL- Late Charges From include their c hutes Coun t y ABLE TO A TENANT 9/1/2010 Thr o ugh respective successors Sheriff's Office will, OF THE SUBJECT 1/1/201 5 Total Late i n interest, if a n y . on Thursday, May 7, REAL P R O PERTY Charges $ 2 ,200.33 Pursuant to Oregon 2015 at 10:00 AM, AND WHICH SETS Beneficiary's Ad- Law, this sale will not in the main lobby of FORTH C E R TAIN vances, Costs, And be deemed final until the Desc h utes REQUIREMENTS Expenses Total Ad- the Trustee's deed County Sheriff's OfTHAT M U S T BE vances: $0.00 TOhas been issued by fice, 6 3 33 3 W. COMPLIED WITH BY TAL FORE CLO- Quality Loan Service Highway 20, Bend, A NY T ENANT I N SURE COST: Corporation of O regon, sell, a t ORDER TO OBTAIN $ 4,380.00 TO T A L W ashington. If a n y public oral auction THE AFF O RDED REQUIRED TO REirregularities are to the highest bidP ROTECTION, A S INSTATE: discovered within 10 d er, for c ash o r REQUIRED UNDER $1 03,407.23 TOTAL days of the date of cashier's check, the ORS 86.771. QUALREQUIRED TO this sale, the trustee real property comclosure proceeding ITY MAY BE CON- PAYOFF: will rescind the sale, m only known as d ismissed and t h e S IDERED A D E B T $254,346.25 By reareturn th e b u y er's 16905 Cagle Road, trust deed reinstated C OLLECTOR A T - son of the default, the m oney an d tak e La Pine, Oregon b y payment to t he TEMPTING TO COL- beneficiary has de- further a c tion as 97739. C onditions beneficiary of the en- LECT A DEBT AND clared all sums owing necessary. If the sale of Sale: P o tential tire amount then due ANY INFORMATION on the obligation se- is set aside for any bidders must arrive (other than such por- OBTAINED WILL BE cured by t h e t r ust reason, including if 15 minutes prior to tion of said principal USED FOR T H AT deed immediately due the Trustee is unable the auction to allow as would not then be PURPOSE. TS No: and payable, those to convey title, the the Desc h utes due had no default OR-14-644294-NH sums being the fol- Purchaser at the sale County Sheriff's Ofoccurred), t ogether Dated: 1/27/15 Qual- lowing, to- wit: The in- shall be entitled only f ice to rev i e w w ith t he cost s , ity Loan Service Cor- stallments of principal t o a r e turn of t h e bidder's funds. Only trustee's and poration of Washing- and interest which be- monies paid to the U.S. currency attorney's fees a nd ton, as Trus t ee came d ue on Trustee. This shall be and/or ca s h ier's curing any other de- Signature By: Nina 0 9/01/2010 and a l l the Purchaser's sole checks made payfault complained of in Hernandez, Assistant subsequent i n stall- and exclusive remedy. able to Deschutes the Notice of Default Secretary Trustee's ments of principal and The purchaser shall County Sheriff's Ofby tendering the per- Mailing Add r e ss: interest through the h ave n o furt h er f ice will b e ac formance r e quired Quality Loan Service date of this Notice, recourse against the cepted. P a yment under the obligation or Corp. of Washington plus amounts that are Trustor, the Trustee, must be made in full trust deed, at any time C/0 Q u ality L o an due for late charges, the Beneficiary, the immediately upon prior to five days be- Service Corporation delinquent p roperty Beneficiary's Agent, t he close o f t h e fore the date last set 411 Ivy Street San taxes, insurance pre- or the Beneficiary's sale. For more infor sale. Other than as D iego, C A 92 1 0 1 miums, ad v ances Attorney. If you have f ormation on t h i s shown of record, nei- Trustee's P h y sical made on senior liens, previously been dis- sale go to: www.orther the beneficiary Address: Quality Loan taxes and/or insur- charged thr o u gh egonsheriff s.com/sa nor the trustee has Service C o rp . o f ance, trustee's fees, bankruptcy, you may les.htm any actual notice of Washington 108 1st and any a t torney have been released of any person having or Ave South, Suite 202, ees and court costs personal liability for Sell an Item claiming to have any Seattle, WA 9 8 104 arising f r o m or t his loan i n w h i ch lien upon or interest in Toll F r ee: (866) associated with t he c ase this l etter i s the r e a l pr o perty 925-0241 A-4508815 beneficiaries efforts to intended to exercise hereinabove de- 02/1 8/2015, protect and preserve the n o t e ho l ders scribed subsequent to 02/25/201 5, i ts security, all o f right's against the real t he interest of t h e 03/04/2015, which must be paid as p roperty only. A s trustee in th e t rust 03/1 'I/2015 If it's under$500 a con d ition of required by law, you deed, or of any sucreinstatement, are hereby notified you can place it in cessor in interest to including all sums that that a negative credit grantor or of any les- FIND YOUR FUTURE shall accrue through report reflecting on The Bulletin see or other person in HOME INTHE BULLETIN reinstatement or your credit record may Classifieds for: possession of or oc- Yourfutureisjust apageaway. pay-off. Nothing in this b e submitted to a cupying the property, Whetheryou'relookingfor ahat or notice s h a l l be credit report agency if e xcept: Name a nd construed as a waiver you fail to fulfill the f10 • 3 lines, 7 days Last Known Address aplacetohangit, TheBulletin of any fees owing to terms of your credit $16 - 3 lines, 14 days C lassi f i e di s your b es t s ource. and Nature of Right, the Beneficiary under obligations. W ithout Lien or Inte r est the Deed o f T r ust limiting the trustee's SHARON DILLARD Everydaythousandsolbuyersand pursuant to the terms disclaimer of repre- (Private Party ads only) 171 SE WINDANCE sellersof goodsandservicesdo of the loan sentations or business inthesepages.They CT BEND, OR 97702 documents. Whereof, warranties, O regon LEGAL NOTICE Original Borrower For know youcan't beatTheBulletin notice hereby is given l aw r e q uires t h e U.S. Bank NA, SucSale Information Call: ClassifiedSectionforseledion t hat Q u ality L o a n trustee to state in this c essor Trustee t o 714-730-2727 or LoService Corporation of n otice t ha t so m e Bank of America, NA, and con v en i e nceev ery i t e mi s gin to: www.serviceWashington, the residential p roperty Successor in interest just a ph on e ca l a w a y. linkasap.com In conundersigned trustee sold at a trustee's sale to LaSalle Bank NA, struing this notice, the will on 6/12/2015 at may have been used as Trustee, on behalf TheClassifiedSectionis easy singular includes the tousa Every the hour of 11:00 am, in manufacturing of the holders of the itemis categorized p lural, t h e wor d Standard of Time, as methamphetamines, Washington M utual and every c a te gor yi s i n dexed o n "grantor" includes any established by section the chemical Mortgage the section'sfront page. successor in interest 1 87.110, Ore g o n components of which Pass-Through Certifito this grantor as well Whetheryouarelookingfora home Revised Statues, At are known to be toxic. cates, WMALT Series as any other person the front entrance of Prospective 2006-AR6, Plaintiff/s, aservice,yourfutureis in owing an obligation, or need the Courthouse, 1164 purchasers of v. Travis Y amada, olTheBulletin Classfied. the performance of the pages N.W. Bond S t reet, residential p r operty other Persons or Parwhich is secured by B end, O R 97 7 0 1 should be aware of ties, including Occuthe trust deed, and The Bulletin County of this potential danger pants, unknown the words "trustee" DESCHUTES, State b efore deciding t o claiming any r i ght, and "beneficiary" ino f Oregon, sell a t place a bid for this title, lien, or interest in clude their respective LEGAL NOTICE public auction to the property a t the t he p r operty d e successors in interest, TRUSTEE'S NOTICE h ighest bidder f o r trustee's sale. scribed in the comif any. Pursuant to OF SALE T.S. No.: cash the interest in NOTICE TO plaint herein, DefenOregon Law, this sale OR-14-636189-NH the said d e scribed TENANTS: TENANTS d ant/s. Case N o . : will not be deemed fi- Reference is made to real property which OF THE S UBJECT 1 3CV1020FC. N O nal until the Trustee's t hat c e rtain d e e d the grantor had or had REAL P R O PERTY TICE OF SALE UNdeed has been is- made by, B ONNIE power to convey at H AVE CERT A I N DER WRIT OF EXsued by Quality Loan SPATRISANO as the t i m e of the PROTECTIONS ECUTION - REAL Service Corporation of Grantor to W E S T- execution by him of AFFORDED TO PROPERTY. Notice is Washington. If any ir- ERN TITLE AND ES- the said trust deed, THEM UNDER ORS hereby given that the regularities are disAND Deschutes CROW, as trustee, in t ogether wit h a n y 86.782 C o u nty c overed within 1 0 favor of NEW CEN- i nterest which t h e POSSIBLY UNDER Sheriff's Office will, on days of the date of T URY M O R T G A G E grantor FEDERAL LAW. or his Thursday, April 2 3, this sale, the trustee CORPORATION, as successors in interest ATTACHED TO THIS 2015 at 10:00 AM, in will rescind the sale, B eneficiary, d a t e d a cquired after t h e NOTICE OF S ALE, the main lobby of the return th e b u yer's 7/26/2004, recorded execution of said trust AND Deschutes C o u nty money and take fur- 7/30/2004, in official deed, to satisfy the INCORPORATED Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 ther action as neces- r ecords o f DES - foregoing obligations HEREIN, IS A W. Highway 20, Bend, sary. If the sale is set CHUTES County, Or- thereby secured and NOTICE TO Oregon, sell, at public aside for any reason, egon in book/reel/vol- the cos t s and T ENANTS T HA T o ral auction to t h e including if the ume No. and/or as expenses of s a le, SETS FORTH SOME h ighest bidder, f o r Trustee is unable to fee/file/instrument/miincluding a OF THE cash o r ca s hier's convey title, the Pur- crofilm/reception reasonable charge by PROTECTIONS check, the real propchaser at the s ale number 2004-45552 the trustee. Notice is THAT ARE erty commonly known shall be entitled only covering the following further given that any AVAILABLE T O A a s 2443 N W 2 n d t o a r eturn of t h e described real prop- p erson named i n T ENANT O F TH E Street, Bend, Oregon m onies paid to t h e erty situated in said S ection 86.778 o f SUBJECT REAL 97701. Conditions of Trustee. This shall be County, and S tate, Oregon Rev i s ed PROPERTY AND Sale: Potential bidthe Purchaser's sole to-wit: APN: 171233 Statutes has the right WHICH SETS ders must arrive 15 and exclusive remedy. BC 01400 171233 BC to have the FORTH CE R T AIN minutes prior to the The purchaser shall 01400 LOT 9, BLOCK foreclosure REQUIREMENTS auction to allow the have no further re- 18, CENTER ADDI- proceeding dismissed THAT M US T BE Deschutes C o u nty course against the TION TO BEND, DE- and the trust deed COMPLIED WITH BY Sheriff's Office to reTrustor, the Trustee, SCHUTES COUNTY, reinstated by payment ANY T E NANT IN view bidder's funds. the Beneficiary, the O REGON. C om - to the beneficiary of ORDER TO OBTAIN Only U.S. currency Beneficiary's Agent, monly known as: 374 the e ntire a m ount THE AFF O RDED and/or cashier's or the Beneficiary's NE KEARNEY AVE, then due (other than P ROTECTION, A S checks made payable Attorney. If you have BEND, OR 97701 The such portion of said REQUIRED UNDER to Deschutes County previously been dis- undersigned hereby principal as would not ORS 86.771. Sheriff's Office will be charged thr o u gh certifies that based then be due had no Q UALITY MAY B E accepted. P ayment bankruptcy, you may upon A must be made in full business default oc c urred), CONSIDERED have been released of records there are no together w i t h the DEBT COLLECTOR immediately upon the personal liability for k nown written a s costs, trustee's and ATTEMPTING TO close of the sale. For this loan i n w h ich signments of the trust attorney's fees and COLLECT A D E BT more information on case this letter is in- deed by the trustee or c uring an y ot h e r AND ANY this s al e g o to: tended to exercise the by the beneficiary and default complained of INFORMATION www.oregonsheriffs.c note holders right's no appointments of a i n t h e N o t ice o f OBTAINED WILL BE om/sales.htm against the real prop- successor tr u s tee Default by tendering USED FOR T H AT erty only. As required have been made, ex- the per f ormance P URPOSE. TS N o : LEGAL NOTICE b y law, y o u a r e cept as recorded in r equired under t h e OR-14-636189-NH US Bank National hereby notified that a t he records of t h e o bligation o r tr u st Dated: 1/27/1 5 Quality Association as negative credit report county or counties in deed, at any time prior Loan Service Trustee for RASC r eflecting o n y o u r which the above de- to five days before the Corporation of 2007-KS3, its succredit record may be scribed real property date last set for sale. Washington, as cessors and/or assubmitted to a credit is situated. Further, no Other than as shown Trustee Signature By: signs, Plaintiff/s, v. report agency if you action has been insti- of record, neither the Nina Her n andez, D aniel O . S i m ofail to fulfill the terms tuted to recover the b eneficiary nor t h e Assistant S ecretary neau; Kelly K. Siof your credit obliga- d ebt, or a n y p a r t trustee has any actual Trustee's Mai l i ng moneau; State of tions. Without limiting thereof, now remain- notice of any person Address: Quality Loan O regon; an d a l l t he t r ustee's d i s - ing secured by the having or claiming to Service C o rp. o f other Persons or claimer of representa- trust deed, or, if such have any hen upon or Washington C/0 Parties U n known tions or w arranties, action has been insti- interest in di e r e al Quality Loan Service claiming any right, Oregon law requires tuted, such action has property hereinabove Corporation 411 Ivy title, lien, or interest the trustee to state in been dismissed ex- described subsequent Street San Diego, CA in the Real Property this notice that some cept as permitted by to the interest of the 92101 Trus t ee's commonly known as residential p roperty ORS 86.752(7). Both trustee in t h e t r ust Physical Ad d ress: 2374 Nor t hwest sold at a trustee's sale the beneficiary and deed, o r of any Quality Loan Service Quinn Creek Loop, may have been used t he t r ustee h a v e successor in interest Corp. of Washington Bend OR 9 7 701, in manufacturing elected to sell the said to grantor or of any 108 1st Ave South, Defendant/s. Case methamphetamines, real property to sat- lessee or other per- Suite 202, S eattle, No.: 13 C V0505. the chemical compo- isfy the o bligations son in possession of WA 98104 Toll Free: NOTICE OF SALE nents of which are secured by said trust o r o c cupying t h e (866) 925- 0 2 41 UNDER WRIT OF known to b e t o xic. deed and notice has property, EXECUTION exc ept: A-4508836 Prospective purchas- been recorded pursu- N ame a n d Las t 02/1 8/2015, REAL PROPERTY. ers o f res i dential a nt to Sect i o n Known Address and 02/25/201 5, Notice is h e reby property should be 86.752(3) of Oregon Nature of Right, Lien 03/04/2015, given that the Desaware of this poten- Revised St a t utes. or Interest BONNIE 03/1 1/201 5 c hutes Cou n t y tion 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond S t reet, B end, O R 97 7 0 1 County 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 ic 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 fore-
tial danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at the trustee's sale. NOTICE TO TENANTS: T ENANTS OF T H E SUBJECT REAL P ROPERTY H A V E CERTAIN PROTECTIONS A FFORDED TO THEM U NDER O RS 8 6.782 A N D POSSIBLY UNDER
FAST!
Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, May 7, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, sell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for c ash o r cashier's check, the real property comm only known a s 2374 Nor t hwest Quinn Creek Loop, 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-
able to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately u pon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation o n t h i s sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for MASTR A djustable Rat e M ortgage Tru s t 2 006-0A1, Mor t gage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 206-0A1, Plaintiff/s, v. Lisa K. Wachs; David T. W a chs; Selco C ommunity Credit Union; and Persons or Parties unknown c laiming any right, title, lien o r interest in t h e property described herein, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0143. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, April 23, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 19175 Tumalo Reservoir Road, Bend, O regon 977 0 1 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior to t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office t o review bid d er's f unds. Only U . S . currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee fo r th e holders of the First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust 2 006-FF12 M o rtgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-FF12, through their loan servicing agent Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc., Plaintiff/s, v. Tyson S. Rearden; Mortgage Ele c tronic R egistration S y s tems, Inc.; United States of America (Internal Revenue Service); State of Oregon Department of Revenue; Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as Trustee for the holders of the First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust 2 006-FFA, Mo r t age Pass-Through ertificates, Series 2 006-FFA; Firs t Franklin a division of National City Bank of IN.; Occupants of the property, Defendant/s. Case No.: 1 3CV0520. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, April 28, 2015 at 10:00 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 52442 Wes t l ey Loop, LaPine, Oregon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction
to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank Trust, N.A.,
LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Ruth E. Harpole aka Ruth E l aine Harpole; Steven L. Harpole aka Steve Harpole; Deschutes County; C olumbia Collection Service Inc.; Ray Klein, Inc.; U nited States o f America; and Occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 1 3CV0557. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF
EXECUTION as Trustee for LSF8 REAL PROPERTY. Master Participation Notice is h e reby Trust, Plaintiff/s, v. given that the DesA rlen B . Mom b ; c hutes Cou n t y Peggy E. Ketteman; Sheriff's Office will, Oregon A ff ordable on Tuesday, May 5, Housing Assistance 2015 at 10:00 AM, Corporation; State of in the main lobby of Oregon, other Perthe Desc h utes sons or Parties, in- County Sheriff's Ofcluding O ccupants, fice, 6 3 33 3 W. Unknown c l a iming Highway 20, Bend, any right, title, lien, or O regon, sell, a t interest in the prop- public oral auction erty described in the to the highest bidcomplaint her e i n, d er, for c ash o r D efendant/s. C a s e cashier's check, the No.: 1 3CV1520FC. real property comN OTICE OF S A L E m only known a s U NDER WRIT O F 51366 Evans Way, EXECUTION - REAL La Pine, O regon PROPERTY. Notice is 97739. Conditions hereby given that the of Sale: P o tential Deschutes C o u nty bidders must arrive Sheriff's Office will, on 15 minutes pnor to T uesday, May 1 2 , the auction to allow 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the Desc h utes the main lobby of the County Sheriff's OfDeschutes C o u nty f ice to revi e w Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 bidder's funds. Only W. Highway 20, Bend, U.S. currency Oregon, sell, at public and/or ca s h ier's o ral auction to t h e checks made payh ighest bidder, f or able to Deschutes cash o r ca s hier's County Sheriff's Ofcheck, the real prop- f ice will b e a c erty commonly known cepted. P a yment as 60471 Pima Road, must be made in full Bend, Oregon 97702. i mmediately u p o n Conditions of S a le: t he close o f t h e Potential bidders must sale. For more inarrive 15 minutes prior f ormation on t h is to the auction to allow sale go to: www.orthe Deschutes County egonsheriff s.com/sa Sheriff's Office to re- les.htm view bidder's funds. LEGAL NOTICE Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors checks made payable to Deschutes County in interest and/or Sheriff's Office will be assigns, Plaintiff/s, Ro n al d L. accepted. P ayment v. must be made in full Boughton Jr.; Maria immediately upon the J . Boughton a ka close of the sale. For Maria Jesus Flores; Wate r more information on Oregon this s al e g o to: Wonderland Property Owners Assowww.oregonsheriffs.c ciation, Unit II, Inc.; om/sales.htm and Occupants of the premises, DeLEGAL NOTICE fendant/s. Case No.: Wells Fargo Bank, 1 4CV0315FC. NON.A. as Trustee for T ICE O F SAL E WAMU M o rtgage UNDER WRIT OF Pass Through CerEXECUTION t ificates Seri e s REAL PROPERTY. 2006-PR3, its sucNotice i s h e r eby cessors in interest and/or as s igns, given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Plaintiff/s, v. Darryl Sheriff's Office will, E . Spencer a k a on Tuesday, April Darryl Spencer, in21, 2015 at 10:00 dividually; Darryl E. Spencer as Trustee A M, in t h e m a in of t h e Sp e ncer lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y F amily Trust o f S heriff's Of fi c e , January 3, 2 0 02; 63333 W. Highway Janet E. S pencer 20, Bend, Oregon, aka Janet Spencer, individually; Janet E. sell, at public oral auction to the highSpencer as Trustee of t h e Sp e ncer est bidder, for cash or cashier's check, F amily Trust o f the real p roperty January 3, 2 0 02; commonly known as and Occupants of 56045 Black Duck the premises, DeR oad, Bend, O rfendant/s. Case No.: egon 97707-2101. 13CV1 1 45FC. NOConditions of Sale: T ICE O F SAL E Potential b i d ders UNDER WRIT OF must arrive 15 minEXECUTION u tes prior t o t h e REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby auction to allow the Deschutes County given that the DesSheriff's Office to c hutes Coun t y review bid d e r's Sheriff's Office will, funds. Only U . S. on Tuesday, April c urrency an d / or 28, 2015 at 10:00 cashier's c h e cks A M, in t h e m a in made payable to lobby of the DesDeschutes County c hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will S heriff's Off i c e, be accepted. Pay63333 W. Highway ment must be made 20, Bend, Oregon, in full immediately sell, at public oral upon the close of auction to the highthe sale. For more est bidder, for cash information on this or cashier's check, sale go to: www.orthe real p roperty egonsheriff s.com/sa commonly known as 215 Sou t h west les.htm M aricopa Dr i v e, LEGAL NOTICE B end, Ore g o n Wells Fargo Bank, 97702. C onditions National A s sociaof Sale: P o tential tion as Trustee for bidders must arrive the Structured As15 minutes prior to set Mortgage Inthe auction to allow v estments I I I n c . the Desc h utes Bear Stearns MortCounty Sheriff's Ofgage Funding Trust f ice to rev i e w 2 007-AR4 Mor t bidder's funds. Only age Pass-Through U.S. currency ertificates, Series and/or ca s h ier's 2007-AR4, checks made payPlaintiff/s, v. Nicole able to Deschutes P atterson; O c c uCounty Sheriff's Ofpants of the propf ice will b e a c erty, D e fendant/s. cepted. P a yment Case No.: must be made in full 13CV0039. NOimmediately u p on T ICE O F SAL E t he close o f t h e UNDER WRIT OF sale. For more inEXECUTION f ormation o n t h i s REAL PROPERTY. sale go to: www.orNotice is h e reby egonsherlffs.com/sa given that the Desles.htm c hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, May 5,
Garage Sales
GarageSales
GarageSales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!
541-385-5809
2015 at 10:00 AM,
in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, sell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for c ash o r cashier's check, the real property comm only known a s 19767 Buck Canyon Road, Bend, O regon 977 0 2 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior to t h e
auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriffs.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, National A s sociation as Trustee for S tructured A s s e t M ortgage I n v