Leaning now allowed at juvie - News
Transcription
Leaning now allowed at juvie - News
SPORTS state swimming CONNECTIONS COLD SCIENCE B1 A10 Yamhill Valley Tuesday February 24, 2015 ● $1 Forum confronts theory, reality of homelessness Good day, sunshine a crowd gathered to brainstorm for ideas. ‘She was society’s trash. I am also society’s trash, but I am as human as any one of you.’ Carol Hogan Homeless woman whose sister died this winter. Hogan, who suffers from multiple personality disorder, told the group one of the biggest challenges faced by the homeless is other people’s fear and ignorance. It broke her heart, she said, to see how people treated Cheryl. “She was society’s trash,” Hogan said. “I am Marcus Larson/News-Register As unseasonably warm and sunny weather continues in Oregon, McMinnville’s children have been taking advantage of the opportunity to play outside. TOP: New friends Rachel Dunn, left, and Ashtyn Groves race each other down a sand-covered hill at Discovery Meadows Park. BOTTOM: Charlie Knipe laughs with delight as he finishes a trip down the slide at Discovery Meadows Park. Rain is expected to return later in the week. See homeless, A8 Stabbings charged under Measure 11 male swinging what was AMITY — An Amity man described as a 10-inch knife was arrested last week after in a threatening manner. He he allegedly began swing- was taken into custody by ing a large knife around the two other deputies when he Amity Foods market at 615 walked outside. A female employee recS. Trade St. ognized Bagnall Peter Michael as someone who Bagnall, 21, was comes in often. arraigned before He was upset Yamhill County about having been Circuit Court Judge kicked out of his Ronald Stone on house, according one count of secondto the employee. degree disorderly She said he conduct, a Class B was swinging the misdemeanor. knife while talkHe’s also want- Bagnall: ed on a Marion Wielded knife ing to her, making her feel threatCounty warrant for ened. She said it failure to appear in a third-degree theft case. The appeared to her his anger Marion County hold renders was escalating and she him ineligible for release wasn’t sure what he was capable of doing. on bail. Bagnall’s next court A sheriff’s deputy responded to the store appearance is set for 10:40 on a report of an adult a.m. Thursday, March 12. The News-Register staff SPORTS District wrestling A10 By TOM HENDERSON Of the News-Register Radical reforms have taken place at the Yamhill County Juvenile Corrections Division’s detention facility in McMinnville: It’s youthful inmates are now being allowed to lean against its walls. That may not seem like a radical departure from past practices. However, in a facility known throughout the region for its tough, unyielding attitude toward incarcerated kids, it represents a sharp break from policy that has held sway since the place was built in 1996. Scott Paasch, manager of the Juvenile Corrections ‘We want kids staying alert and prepared during the day. It helps them go to sleep at night.’ Scott Paasch Manager of Juvenile Corrections Division Division, said intense deliberation led to the change. Leaning represents worrisome behavior to him, he said. If you have time to lean, you have time to dream. “We want kids staying alert and prepared during the day,” Paasch said. “It helps them go to sleep at night.” Still, provided that the new-found freedom to lean doesn’t get out of hand, Paasch said he and his staff are willing to risk the danger of the occasional unscheduled nap. Many authorities like Yamhill County’s tough reputation for the handling of juveniles. Officials in Polk County have no juvenile detention facility of their own, so they send their young offenders to McMinnville. And Polk County Sheriff Bob Wolf said he likes seeing kids from his county get a dose of tough love. Defense attorneys aren’t so enthusiastic. Megan Bishop, who defends juvenile suspects in both Yamhill and Wash- ington counties, would rather see her charges incarcerated in Hillsboro than McMinnville. And the fact that kids are now being allowed to lean against the walls in McMinnville hasn’t changed her view. “The corrections staff are lovely people, but they have a very distinct attitude when it comes to juvenile corrections,” she said. “I feel like there has to be a happy medium. The kids aren’t being rehabilitated, they’re being punished.” She said, “The fact of the matter is that adult prisoners have more rights than these kids do in Yamhill County.” Bishop said it may not be so much that local corrections officials are See Juvie, A6 Court reschedules plane foreclosure hearing The News-Register staff A hearing on a motion by Umpqua Bank, which is seeking to proceed with the foreclosure sale of 15 airplanes and replicas housed at the Evergreen Aviation Museum, has been rescheduled for April 16. The planes are owned by Evergreen Vintage Aircraft, a holding company subsidiary of the now-defunct Evergreen International Airlines. EVA filed for bankruptcy protection in U.S. District Court in December in an effort to block the sale, which it argues would unfairly favor one creditor over others. The bank argues that because EVA has repeatedly defaulted on tens of millions worth of loans, and has failed to raise the money by selling the planes, the bank is entitled to do so. The planes also were put up as collateral against a debt to World Fuel Inc. In all, Umpqua says, they secured $41 million in bank loans and $9.1 million in accumulated fuel charges. The bank has succeeded in finding a buyer. Erickson Aviation LLC, owned by Erickson Inc. founder Jack Erickson, who recent- NEWS CONNECTIONS New drug charges brought in Amity A5 Gallery to open new play B1 ly established an aviation museum in the Central Oregon community of Madras, has offered $11.8 million. If the deal isn’t allowed to proceed expeditiously, the bank says, Erickson has threatened to back out. Umpqua says it had to scour the world to find a willing buyer. It is crucial that the deal be allowed to proceed, bank officials argue. U|xaIICGHy02366qzZ Knife-wielder arrested in Amity But potential use as weapons keeps pillows banned from jail News-Register See stabbings, A8 Leaning now allowed at juvie Page 1 Two suspects in recent McMinnville stabbings are each facing one count of second-degree assault, in addition to other charges. A Class B felony, seconddegree assault carries a lengthy mandatory minimum prison sentence under Measure 11. Thomas Greenslade, 45, was also charged with one count each of unlawful use of a weapon, harassment and second-degree disorderly conduct. Harassment and disorderly conduct are Class B misdemeanors and the weapons charge is a Class C felony. There are 47 entries in Greenslate’s Oregon Judicial Information Network file, dating back to 1988. He is being held in the Yamhill County Jail without bai. Chad Holt, 26, was also charged with two counts of menacing and one count each of unlawful use of a weapon, fourth-degree assault and second-degree 1:41 PM By PAUL DAQUILANTE The News-Register staff 5/30/2006 Carol Hogan’s sister, Cheryl, died this winter in a tent outside McMinnville Cooperative Ministries. Hampered by lack of transportation for the regular dialysis sessions she needed to keep her alive, she succumbed to kidney failure. Between 75 and 100 people packed the Carnegie Room of the McMinnville Public Library Feb. 21 to discuss the homelessness issue. But homelessness is more than just an “issue” for Hogan. For the past three years, her sister’s final years, it has been a daily struggle to survive — one they shared until Cheryl’s death. Now, Carol Hogan is facing the challenge on her own. “I’m one of those scary homeless people,” she told McMinnville, Oregon 150th year, No. 16 News-Register.qxp By TOM HENDERSON Of the News-Register Keeping you connected since 1866 A2 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon Keeping you connected Correction Michael Todd Ellis, 50, of Sheridan, one of five co-defendants in a burglary and theft operation, was incorrectly identified in Friday’s edition, based on erroneous information from the Oregon Judicial Information Network. He is not related to the Michael Ellis who serves on the Sheridan City Council. how to reach us Newsroom 503-472-5114 newsregister.com Managing Editor Steve Bagwell ........Ext. 226 [email protected] News Editor Don Iler .................Ext. 238 [email protected] Features Editor Racheal Winter ......Ext. 246 [email protected] Sports Editor Robert Husseman...Ext. 285 rhusseman@ newsregister.com Viewpoints Editor Ossie Bladine .......Ext. 269 [email protected] weather McMinnville area Laura Wallace Today H 59 L 39 Certified Public Accountant News-Register file photo Sunny, SW winds 0-10 mph Wednesday H 55 L 44 Partly cloudy, 20% chance rain Thursday H 54 L 43 70% chance rain, SW winds 5-15 Friday H 54 L 49 70% chance rain, SE winds 5-15 Saturday H 52 L 33 Sunny, 10% chance rain The sun sunrisesunset Tues. 7:00 a.m. 5:53 p.m. Wed. 6:58 a.m. 5:54 p.m. Thurs. 6:56 a.m. 5:56 p.m. Local climate, past 7 days HighLow Precip. Monday 6347 – Tuesday 6636 – Wednesday59 47 Thursday 6140 Friday 5943 Saturday 6040 Sunday 5737 Actual Feb. to date Average Feb. 1-28 Actual year to date Average Jan.1-Dec. 31 – – – – – 4.47 6.67 6.98 41.81 Recorded at McMinnville Airport at 4:30 a.m. daily. Local records for the month February High Low Precip. Average 5135 5.18 Extreme 72-213.34 From records 1894 to present Oregon records yesterday Oregon records for the 24 hours ending at 5:30 a.m. Monday: High temp. Brookings.............. 66 Low temp. Rome........................9 High precip. ........no rain reported Source: National Weather Service Local warnings No local or N. coast warnings as of Feb. 23. Source: Weatherbug. Road condition information by state highway number: dial 511. Tides at Yaquina Bay High tide Low tide Tuesday 4:05 a.m. (9.1)10:37 a.m. (0.8) 4:55 a.m. (6.8)10:26 p.m. (2.6) Wednesday 4:57 a.m. (8.7)12:58 a.m. (1.2) 7:36 p.m. (6.3) unavailable Thursday 3:39 a.m. (3.8)7:02 a.m. (8.0) 2:11 p.m. (1.1) 8:59 p.m. (6.4) Wheatland Ferry Information: 503-835-8066. For more local and statewide weather information, visit www.newsregister.com. thought of the day Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known. Carl Sagan index Along the Street Arrests Carolyn Hax Classified Connections Crossword Events Calendar Government Calendar Legals Obituaries Sports a3 a8 b3 b5 b1 b5 b3 a8 b5 a4 a9 102 W Main St, Sheridan Event to marry cycling and sipping On the corner of Main and Bridge Street in Sheridan The News-Register Staff The McMinnville Wine & Food Classic, also known as Sip!, will be celebrating its 21st anniversary of fun and fundraising for St. James School next month. And this year, Steve Bernards, one of the Classic’s founders, is adding a new twist to the three-day festival, slated to run March 13-15 at the Evergreen Space Museum. He and his cohorts are planning to include a new event called Cycle and Sip Sunday, featuring a 30-mile cycling tour of Wine Country. Generously co-sponsoring the event are the folks at the Eola Hills Wine Cellars. They’re old hands at the sip and cycle concept, having organized wine country cycling tours since the mid1990s. Joining them in the March 15 endeavor is The Principal Financial Group, a multibillion-dollar investment management and consulting company known for its animated triangle television commercials. Portland’s Doernbecher Children’s Hospital and McMinnville’s St. James School will split the proceeds. Find check it out our If you go WHAT: Cycle and Sip Sunday, which is being held in conjunction with this year’s McMinnville Wine & Food Classic, set for March 13-15 at the Evergreen Space Museum. WHEN: Participating riders will assemble for their 30-mile Wine Country tour at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, March 15, and be admitted to the main event upon returning. WHERE: The assembly point is Evergreen’s Wings & Waves Waterpark, off Highway 18 at 500 Captain Michael King Smith Way. HOW: The fee is $60 per rider, which includes a long-sleeved commemorative T shirt in addition to museum admission, with proceeds going to the Doernbecher Children’s Hospital and St. James School; to sign up, contact Rich Washburn at [email protected], 503-623-2405 or 503-932-1401. Assembling at Evergreen’s Wings & Waves Waterpark, cyclists will depart at 9:30 a.m. for a trek through the Yamhill Valley’s vineyard-laden countryside. The $60 entry fee covers admission to the wine and food doings upon return. At the Space Museum, 70 booths will feature wine, 50 arts and crafts and 15 food. In addition to having the opportunity to sample wines and discuss them with their makers, participants will be able to purchase wine by the taste, glass, bottle or case. They will also get the chance to admire or purchase original carvings, paintings, sculptures, hats, scarves, décor items, jewelry pieces, beadwork and glass. Meanwhile, some of the best chefs in the Pacific Northwest will be on hand to demonstrate their culinary acuity. Edible examples will also be available for purchase and consumption. Vietnam Memorial seeks fallen vet photos The News-Register staff Fourteen Yamhill County residents died in the Vietnam War, but only eight are pictured on a website honoring the 58,300 Americans who died in Vietnam. Supporters are launching a campaign to come up with photos of the other six. The effort to post photos of everyone lost in Vietnam — from all over the U.S., not just Oregon or Yamhill County — is being publicized by a Hawaii woman, Janna Hoehn. She started collecting photos of the fallen Vietnam veterans from Maui County, where she lives. Next, she went on to gather photos from her hometown in California, then the entire state of California. Now she’s working her way across the country. “The response has been amazing,” she said. “I have collected more than 1,200 photos since May 2013. With your help it will be more.” She is seeking photos of these six veterans from Yamhill County: Sheridan residents David M. Barrett and Ronnie O. Bigelow, who died in 1968; McMinnville residents Jon W. Layton III, Roger W. Shipley and Michael G. Turner, who also died in 1968; and Newberg resident Edward H. Johnson, who died in 1972. The other fallen vets from Yamhill County, whose photos have already been posted, are William A. Oberg, Lafayette, 1965; Richard E. Traster, McMinnville, 1968;Robert D. Buswell, Willamina, 1969; Brian L. Wilson, Amity, 1970; Robert Altus, Sheridan, 1971; and Newberg residents William W. Newton, 1960, Michael C. Kamph, 1967, and Dick E. Whitney, 1969. Photos can be submitted to Hoehn at [email protected] . They will be posted at the “Wall of Faces” online memorial at www.vvmf. org/thewall . Disaster awareness course to be taught March 12 The News-Register staff The McMinnville Downtown Association and Third Street Books are joining to sponsor the FEMA-certified course, “Natural Disaster Awareness for Community Leaders.” It is set to run 9 a.m. to noon Thursday, March 12, at the McMinnville Fire Station downtown. Paul Manson of Portland State University’s Institute for Sustainable Solutions, an arm of its Hatfield School of Government, will teach the course. The course will teach leaders how to enhance their community’s ability to prepare for, respond to, recover from and mitigate against all forms of disaster. It will help them better assess risks, identify vulnerabilities and establish management procedures. Topics include the indentification of hazards and vulnerabilities, fostering of community preparedness and mitigation, value of partnerships, use of citizen volunteers, roles of church, business and civic groups, mission of emergency managers and responders, and involvement of elected leaders and the general public, There are no prerequisites or fees. Enrollment is limited to 30. If interested, please call the McMinnville Downtown Association at 503-472-3605 or e-mail Cassie Sollars at cassie@ downtownmcminnville. com. “Doing business without advertising is like winking at someone in the dark. You know what More online NewsRegister .com you’re doing, but no one else does. Your Yamhill Valley Connection Visit www.newsregister.com Laura Wallace CPA PC Participants enjoy wine at last year’s McMinnville Wine and Food Classic. This year will also feature a new cycling event, to add to the wine and food tasting. ” 503.843.1444 Classifieds T. R. Clevenger Construction LLC 503-857-6651 [email protected] Licensed • Bonded • Insured • CCB#109890 We can do it all! T-REX SAYS... Full Service • Commercial and Residential Kitchens • Bathrooms • Additions • Remodels • New Construction Mary Beth Branch Director of Marketing & Events, Creative Director Buchanan Cellars 971.241.2529 [email protected] 855 NE 5th St, McMinnville Buchanan Cellers’ long history and commitment to supporting its community made accepting a position as their Director of Marketing & Events an easy choice for Mary Beth Branch. Working along side her family and organizing events for kids is an added bonus. Mary Beth graduated from the University of Oregon with a degree in Architecture. She has been busy creating and launching the company’s new website and online store and is in the midst of a re-branding project for Buchanan Cellers’ proprietary brands. An expansion of the interior of the historic mill building will be a passion of hers for years to come. Mary Beth also serves on the Board of Directors for the McMinnville Downtown Association as their treasurer. She lives in McMinnville with her husband, Brian, and their toddler, Houston. Tuesday, February 24, 2015 A3 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon along the street Chamber of Commerce is scheduled to hold a Greeters from 8 to 9 a.m. Friday, at at Key Bank, 1815 Portland Road, for Soroptimist International of Chehalem Valley. Tom Henderson, the News-Register’s business editor, can be reached at thenderson@newsregister. com. GREETERS The McMinnville Area Chamber of Commerce is scheduled to hold a Greeters from 8 to 9 a.m. Friday, at the Evergreen Space Museum, 500 N.E. Captain Michael King Smith Way, for St. James School. Newberg’s Chehalem McMinnville Welcomes Joanne Douglas, recently moved here from Portland where she had a counseling practice with Wise Counsel and Comfort. She offers a new women’s group here, starting February 26th at the Senior Center, 2250 NE McDaniel Lane. This is a 6 weeks class focusing on improving quality of all relationships and reducing negative thinking patterns, meeting on Thursdays from 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Call 503 358-6933 to register or ask questions. Marcus Larson/News-Register The Stark Building at Fourth and Evans streets has housed many businesses throughout the 20th century, including the News-Register. The Springs will move in once the renovation is complete. Downtown building getting ‘gut and stuff’ CLIMAX EYES E-ZONE Climax Portable Machinery & Welding Systems, based in Newberg, wants to be included in the new enterprise zone the city is creating. That would qualify it for five years of local tax exemptions. Businesses normally earn exemptions by promising to create new jobs. SP Fiber Technology was recently approved for inclusion on that basis. However, Climax is limiting its pledge to increased productivity. THE JOY OF SOCKS The Yamhill Community Action Partnership hopes to blow the community’s socks off by collecting masses of socks and piling them on the Capitol steps in Salem to raise awareness about homelessness. YCAP is participating in a statewide campaign to collect 20,000 pairs of socks for a display Wednesday, March 11, coinciding with the Oregon Housing Alliance’s Housing Opportunity Day. The socks are designed to represent Oregon’s 20,000 homeless students. Afterward, they will be donated to homeless services providers around the state. Lee Means, who heads YCAP, said studies show homelessness is a major reason for high school dropout rates. Unfortunately, she said, some children are dropping out even before they get to high school, as they have changed schools so many times and missed so many days they just can’t keep up. Housing advocates are hoping to persuade legislators to allocate $20 million to the Emergency Housing Account and State Homeless Assistance Program. The EHA funds a rental assistance program and SHAP a homeless shelter network. “Socks are the most requested item at homeless shelters across the state,” said Oregon Housing Alliance Policy Manager Omar Carrillo. “Gathering 20,000 pairs of socks on the Capi- tol steps will be a striking and poignant reminder of the kids, parents and individuals who experience homelessness in Oregon communities.” YCAP will be collecting socks at 1317 N.E. Dustin Court until Friday, March 6. Donors can also purchase socks online and have them shipped to Neighborhood Partnerships, an arm of Oregon Housing Alliance, at 310 S.W. Fourth Ave., #715, Portland, OR 97204. Additional information, including a link to packages of low-cost socks available through Amazon, may be found at www. oregonhousingalliance.org/ socks. YCAP would also be happy to share additional details at 503-472-0457. POT TALK AT OLCC The Oregon Liquor Control Commission’s final public forum on the promulgation of rules governing the pending legalization of marijuana — the eighth in a series of eight — is set for 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday, March 11, at the Hallmark Resort, 744 S.W. Elizabeth St. in Newport. “Hearing first hand from community members is vital to our public process,” said Chair Rob Patridge. “The OLCC needs to hear from you. What should marijuana regulation look like in your community and throughout Oregon?” The forums are the first steps in a year-long public rulemaking process that will include monthly commission meetings and rules advisory committee meetings. “OLCC is committed to a transparent and inclusive public process to help us implement the law in a way that protects children, keeps our communities safe, and brings the recreational marijuana industry into the regulated market,” Patridge said. Under the new law, possession of recreational marijuana becomes legal on July 1. OLCC will begin accepting applications for commercial licenses in January. The first retail outlets are expected to open late next year. BIRD FLU IN TUMALO Bird flu has been detected in a flock of domestic birds in the Deschutes County community of Tumalo, near Bend. That has prompted a response from the state and federal departments of agriculture. Bruce Pokarney, a spokesman for the Oregon Department of Agriculture, said the property has been secured and no additional cases have been reported. He said officials are in the process of establishing a quarantine zone in the area to prevent further domestic exposure. Affected is a flock of about 90 birds, including chickens, ducks and turkeys, that had been accessing ponds also frequented by wild migratory waterfowl. Pokarney said bird flu is common in wild birds and it is not unusual for wild waterfowl to carry multiple strains. Bird flu has been reported in domestic birds in Washington and Idaho as well as Oregon. The Deschutes County outbreak is Oregon’s second. The first was in Southern Oregon’s Douglas County in December. Pokarney said the strains of bird flu detected in the three Northwest states pose some risk to public health, but at a very low level. He said the virus has not been detected in any commercial poultry operations in the Northwest, and does not affect poultry meat or egg products. He said they remain safe to eat. Joanne welcomes all inquiries at her confidential voice mail 503 3586933. She also offers a sliding scale fee option for those in need of more affordable services. Joanne looks forward to hearing from you! 22nd Annual Friday•Saturday•Sunday March 13th, 14th & 15th Admission SipClassic.org Shuttle service is available at the civic parking lot (1st & Cowls) and the Chemeketa parking lot. © 2014 News-Register Publishing Full text of these “Legal Notices” appears on B6 PROPERTY SALES NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS MEETINGS/PUBLIC HEARINGS CALL FOR BIDS SUMMONS Periodicals Postage paid at McMinnville, OR “POSTMASTER: SEND ADDRESS CHANGES TO News-Register, 611 N.E. Third Street / P.O. Box 727 McMinnville, Oregon 97128 Subscription Rates In-county delivery 1 year $86.00; 6 months $53.50; 3 months $28.50; EZPay $9.75 Out-of-county mail 1 year $157.00; 6 months $80.00; 3 months $41.50; EZPay $12.50 Who to call: 503-472-5114 E-mail: [email protected] Jeb Bladine nPresident/Publisher Ossie Bladine Editor/Asst. Publisher Robert Sudeith Director of Sales Steve Bagwell Managing Editor Matt Lazzeri Chief Finance Officer Christy Nielsen Production Manager Dan Shryock Digital Media Director Connie Crafton Circulation Manager Dan Spence Production Lead Artist This offer has been made possible by: May not be combined with any other offer or discount. Jacob Alan Sinsel Supervisor Cascadia Landscaping 503.472.5897 www.CascadiaLandscaping.com Jacob Alan Sinsel works for McMinnville’s Cascadia Landscaping in the same role his father did many years ago. When Jacob was growing up, he remembers his father sharing interesting stories about his job at Cascadia. The elder Sinsel also taught his son about the joys of landscaping and imparted his strong work ethic. In his role at Cascadia, Jacob supervises the construction and installation of custom irrigation systems. Jacob is a licensed landscape professional with over ten years of experience with Cascadia. Jacob enjoys the close camaraderie among the people with whom he works as he contributes to making the Yamhill Valley even more beautiful than it is. Born in Renton, Washington, Jacob plans to establish a family in McMinnville while he performs the job he loves. We went out into the real world to show real people what XFINITY® can do. With the X1 Entertainment Operating System,® you can enjoy TV and Internet together like never before. Plus, you’ll get faster in-home WiFi and more entertainment for less than what you’ll pay with Frontier FiOS. XFINITY. What will you say when you try it? 99 per month for Errors and Omissions: The NewsRegister assumes no financial responsibility for any errors or omissions in advertisements unless a proof is not shown and then only to the extent of the space occupied by such error. A correction in an equal amount of space will be run in the next available issue of the News-Register. Valid Friday Only Alex Q. | Real consumer trying the latest from XFINITY® 79 Legal News Today $3 OFF ‘‘This is the ultimate experience.’’ $ Ownership of Content: News and advertising prepared in whole or in part by the NewsRegister staff becomes the property of the News-Register. Permission in writing must be obtained before said news or advertising may be used in any other publication. McMinnville Wine & Food Classic SIP Evergreen Space Museum Get started with XFINITY TV & Internet (ISSN 1081-6631) The News-Register is published every Tuesday & Friday by The News-Register Publishing Company 611 N.E. Third Street P.O. Box 727 McMinnville, Oregon 97128 (503)472-5114 email: [email protected] www.newsregister.com PAID ADVERTISMENT ✁ ✁ The historic building at Fourth and Evans streets in downtown McMinnville is in the final stages of what builder Dennis Gaffney called a complete “gut and stuff.” Gaffney, vice president of JHC Construction, is directing renovation of the building. It has housed numerous McMinnville businesses since the early 20th century, including the News-Register through the mid-1970s. By the middle of March, it is scheduled to become corporate headquarters for The Springs, a McMinnville-based company that builds Tom Henderson and operis a long time ates senior Oregon journalliving facili- ist. He ties. The covers business, company social services is currently and religion. operating from quarters on Third Street. Fee Stubblefield, founder and president of The Springs, said he and his employees need more elbow room. “ This was a great opportunity,” he said. “Right now, we are out of the space,” he said. As a result, he said, “Half of our people are working in Sherwood.” The renovation will give The Springs 5,396-squarefeet, according to Gaffney. He said JHC Construction is handling the work, and has removed just about everything but the exterior walls. “It’s a complete remodel with completely new bathrooms, new windows and new everything,” Gaffney said. Since the newspaper moved out of the building, the space has been used as county clerk overflow area and put to various other uses. Stubblefield declined to say how much the renovation is expected to cost, but said it’s been an interesting process. “We’ve found something interesting things in the walls,” he said. With a M.S. Counseling degree and over 20 years of experience in the field, Joanne worked with youth, families, couples and individuals in mental and behavioral health settings. Her approach is a collaborative one in order to develop caring, respectful relationships, while fostering a non-judging, compassionate environment. 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NPA159764-0001 104586_NPA159764-0001 X1 Demo W Ad_Various/Fios_5.175x7.indd 1 1/14/15 4:29 PM A4 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon obituaries Cecilia Marie Kirsch 1906 -2015 Shirley Marie McGrew 1950 - 2015 Cecilia Marie Kirsch peacefully passed away February 21, 2015, in the home of her son, Richard, surrounded by her loving family. She was 108 years old. She was born on a homestead in Gwendolin, Oregon, the eldest child of William and Sara Fehrenbacher. She attended school in Lowden, Washington, and graduated from St. Mary’s in Walla Walla. Cecilia graduated from Monmouth College in 1928 and began her teaching career in a two-room schoolhouse in Masonville, Oregon. Later, she continued teaching third grade in Springdale, Oregon. She married John Kirsch in 1941 and enjoyed a happy marriage of 58 years, living on the family farm in McMinnville. Returning to teaching in 1964 at St. James Catholic School and retiring in 1974, she became a nanny for Mike and Mark Smith, sons of Evergreen’s Del Smith. For seven years she tutored and traveled with them to Europe, New Zealand, Australia, Fiji and Hawaii. Cecilia has been a member of St. James Church, Altar Society, and Catholic Daughters. She was a volunteer at St. Vincent de Paul, and was a 4-H leader. She enjoyed playing bridge, pinochle, oil painting, music, gardening and cooking. She was known especially for her hospitality as her door was always open. She is survived by her son, John (Candace); grandchildren, Cameron and Kristen; and great-grandchildren, Kyle and Kaitlyn. Also surviving is her son, Richard (Janet); grandchildren, Ann, John, Jim and Peter; and great-grandchildren, Kaden, Elly and Dylan. A memorial service is planned at a later date at St. James Catholic Church. The family would like to express their heartfelt thanks to the staff at Horizon Hospice for their loving care. For any who wish to make a donation in Cecilia’s memory, please consider St. James School, St. Vincent de Paul, or Horizon Hospice (123 W. Cascade Way, Spokane, WA 99028). Clair Lewis Sprankle 1929 – 2015 Lew Sprankle, of Sheridan, Oregon, passed away February 9, 2015, at Life Care Center in McMinnville, Oregon. He was 85. Lew was born March 29, 1929, in Petersburg, Pennsylvania, to Phillip Scott Sprankle and Mary Ora (Scott) Sprankle. He grew up and attended school in Petersburg. He entered the Army at age 17 in 1946, and was honorably discharged two years later in Fort Lewis, Washington. In 1950, he married Margaret Ramos in Reno, Nevada. They had three children, Sharon, Robert and Caroline, before their divorce in 1966. In 1967, he married Rae Nicolas in Carson City, Nevada. She died in 1975. That same year he married Shirley Camarillo in Virginia City, Nevada. Over the next 20 years, they owned and operated the Cowboy Saloon in Fernley, Nevada, and later the Adobe Bar and Grill in Sparks, Nevada. They retired and moved to Sheridan in the mid ’90s. They remained together until Shirley’s death in June of 2014. Lew is survived by daughters, Sharon Sprankle of Las Vegas, Nevada, Caroline Merryman of Sheridan, and Karen Hebert of McMinnville; son, Ed Camarillo of Hemet, California; and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. A private graveside service and interment will be held in March at Evergreen Memorial Park in McMinnville. Arrangements are with Macy & Son Funeral Home. Kevin Michael Dukes 1978 - 2015 Kevin Dukes, son of Dick and Sherry Bodeen, passed away February 20, 2015. A memorial service will be held at 2:00 p.m. Friday, February 27, 2015, at Yamhill United Methodist Church. Memorial donations can be made to Cancer Research in care of Macy & Son. To leave online condolences, visit www.macyandson.com. Shirley Marie McDaniel was born August 6, 1950, in Mena, Arkansas, to Floyd and Jessie McDaniel. Shirley passed away February 17, 2015, at home. She moved with her family to Oregon in 1961. Shirley resided in Oregon for 45 years and Malad City, Idaho, for the past eight years. She married Gary McGrew Sr. July 5,1968. They have two children, Gary Lee McGrew Jr. and Yvette Kay Hollis. She has seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Shirley has six surviving siblings, Cecil McDaniel, Charley McDaniel, Carl McDaniel, Betty Tatum, Brenda Carter and Lilly Tatum. She is preceded in death by five siblings, Wanda Samuel, FM McDaniel, Lonnie McDaniel, Jim McDaniel and Alene McDaniel. Shirley worked at Norpac Foods in Dayton, Oregon, for 20 years and was a homemaker. Shirley loved to shop and never met a stranger. A memorial service will be held at 2:00 p.m. Saturday, February 28, 2015, at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Preston, Idaho. Helen L. Sterett 1918 - 2015 Helen L. Sterett was born September 11, 1918, in Rockport, Texas, to Grover Cleveland and Nelle Grace (Russell) Smith. Helen passed away February 22, 2015, at Willamette Valley Medical Center. Helen moved to Corvallis, Oregon, at the age of 4 years. In 1938, Helen married Robert M. Sterett. Helen and Robert formed Sterett Plumbing of McMinnville in 1949. They had five children. Helen enjoyed sewing and quilting. Surviving are Bill Sterett of Salem, Oregon, Rich Sterett of McMinnville, Oregon, and Rosalie Sims of Crooked River Ranch, Oregon; 10 grandchildren; six greatgrandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild. Helen was preceded in death by a son, Ron Sterett, and a daughter, Roberta Sterett. Private family services will be held at the Masonic Cemetery, McMinnville. To leave online condolences, please visit www.macyandson.com David Lee Klass 1927 - 2015 David Lee Klass, 87, of Dayton, Oregon, passed away peacefully February 11, 2015, with his family by his side. He was born October 10, 1927, in Cambridge, Ohio, the son of the late Albert and Ada Klass. He is survived by his devoted wife, Dorothy (Ankrum), whom he married October 16, 1949; three children, Steven of Dayton, Michael (Gail) of Keizer and Cheryle Gendusa of Dayton; five grandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; and two brothers, James Klass and Richard Hewison, both of Cambridge. David served his country during WWII in the Army Air Corps as a sergeant in the Intelligence Division. He retired from Williams Air in Tigard, Oregon. David was a dedicated family man, enjoyed traveling, sports and served as a deacon in the Seventh-day Adventist Church in McMinnville, Oregon. Services, including the military Honor Guard, were held Monday, February 16, and burial took place at Evergreen Cemetery in McMinnville. Macy & Son Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. Frances Friedrich 1939 - 2015 Frances Friedrich passed away peacefully February 14, 2015, at home with her family. Always generous, thoughtful and kind. Wonderful memories she left behind. Our memories of her will never fade. She touched our lives in so many ways. For all of us you gave your best. Now the time has come for you to rest. You will be missed and thought of often, but never forgotten. Her family requests, in lieu of flowers, donations to Providence Hospice. Their care and support to our family is deeply appreciated. Online Obituary Guest Book Readers can leave condolences and words of remembrance online at web.newsregister.com/obituaries Most West Coast ports bustling again after labor deal OAKLAND — Nearly all West Coast seaports began the work week with crews hustling to load and unload cargo ships previously held up amid a months-long dispute over a new contract for dockworkers. The exception Monday was the Port of Oakland, where problems persisted three days after negotiators for the dockworkers’ union and for employers reached a tentative agreement covering all 29 West Coast ports. Those ports handle roughly one-quarter of U.S. international trade, an amount worth about $1 trillion annually. In Oakland, nine ships were at berth and ready for cranes to move cargo Monday, but only one was being worked due to what port spokesman Mike Zampa called a “temporary shortage of experienced crane operators.” He said port officials expected experienced crane drivers to return for the night shift. Other Oakland dockworkers were still putting containers that already had been unloaded onto trucks and trains. The port handles about 10 percent of the coast’s total seaborne trade. Operations at the other West Coast ports from Seattle to Southern California appeared to be back to normal. The job of restoring the free flow of goods will take at least two months — and more like three at the Port of Los Angeles, the nation’s largest. Put in a line, the cargo containers sitting on ships off the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach on Monday morning would stretch 731 miles. Stacked up, they’d rise more than 300 miles — higher than the orbiting altitude of the International Space Station. There are smaller, though substantial, backups in San Francisco Bay and Washington’s Puget Sound. Negotiators for the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the Pacific Maritime Association of companies that own, load and unload massive, ocean-going ships reached a tentative deal Friday night. Leaders for both sides pledged to keep labor peace on the West Coast waterfront as their respec- tive members vote on the deal. The union’s 13,000 voting members could make their decision in April, though the timing is not set. The maritime association has not said when it expects its members to vote. The issues in Oakland marked the second day of disruptions. A labor-management dispute related to work breaks escalated to the point that the port shut down Sunday. An arbitrator ordered a return to work on the night shift after finding that longshoremen took part in illegal work stoppages. Melvin Mackay, a spokesman for the local union branch that covers Oakland, did not return calls requesting comment. Stuff you don’t need? Sell it now in the News-Reigister Classifieds 503-472-SELL Anti-vaccine mothers discuss their reasoning amid a backlash By GOSIA WOZNIACKA Of the Associated Press LAKE OSWEGO — One is a businesswoman and an MBA graduate. Another is a corporate vice president. The third is a registered nurse. These three mothers — all of them educated, middle-class professionals — are among the vaccine skeptics who have been widely ridiculed since more than 100 people fell ill in a measles outbreak traced to Disneyland. Critics question their intelligence, their parenting, even their sanity. Some have been called criminals for foregoing ‘Contrary to common sentiment, we are not antiscience.’ Michelle Moore Lake Oswego mother who did not vaccinate children shots for their children that are overwhelmingly shown to be safe and effective. “Contrary to the common sentiment, we are not anti-science,” said Michelle Moore, a businesswoman who lives in the affluent Portland suburb of Lake Oswego with her 2½-yearold twin girls. “I’m not opposed to medicine, and I think vaccines have a place. We think it’s a medical choice, and it should be researched carefully.” The backlash, much of it from people who fear unvaccinated children could infect their own kids, has been so severe that dozens of anti-vaccine parents contacted by The Associated Press were afraid to speak out. But a handful of mothers agreed to discuss their thinking. Moore, an MBA graduate who runs an agriculturerelated business, traces her feelings to the time she took Lariam, a supposedly safe anti-malaria medication. Instead, she said, the drug saddled her with multiple health complications. She questions whether the government knew about the risks at the time. Health officials now acknowledge Lariam can cause severe side effects, some of which can be permanent. That experience broke Moore’s trust in the medical establishment and launched her on years of research into how vaccines can affect people’s health. When she got pregnant, Moore and her husband delayed immunization for Sierra and Savannah. “It was not an easy decision,” she said. “The thought of something happening to them because we chose not to vaccinate is terrifying. But I have so many questions, and I do think it’s the right decision for our family.” Nancy Babcock of Spokane, Washington, says people who share her opinions “are being vilified and ostracized.” Babcock, a vice president at a bank, told her daughter about her doubts. Then her daughter and her husband looked into the issue, and they decided not to immunize their two children. “In a community with many young people, those who don’t vaccinate are feeling a lot of pressure,” she said. Nationwide, parents who seek an exemption from vaccine requirements are still in a tiny minority. The median total exemption rate for kindergartners during the 2013-14 school year was just 1.8 percent, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But some individual schools or communities have higher exemption rates, at times approaching 60 percent or more. The parents who spoke to AP recounted spending hundreds of hours review- ing medical studies, books and news stories and networking on social media. They cited cases of children who were supposedly hurt by vaccines and the existence of a government-run vaccine injury-compensation program. And they worried about the oversight of pharmaceutical companies that reap profits from vaccines and are shielded from liability when a vaccine causes harm. Moore said she read a 1998 study published in The Lancet journal by Dr. Andrew Wakefield, who raised the possibility of a link between the measlesmumps-rubella vaccine, bowel disease and autism. She said she knows the study was later discredited and retracted. She believes the research was inconclusive. Moore concedes that the vast majority of studies show vaccines are safe, but she says some research points to inconsistencies, unknowns or negative effects that deserve further investigation. And while autism is still a concern, Moore and others also worry about how exposure to chemicals, bad nutrition and stress can affect genes and health. They say large doses of synthetic additives found in vaccines, including aluminum and mercury, can harm the immune and digestive systems and brain. The CDC has phased out a mercury-containing preservative in vaccines as a precautionary measure, and the agency says vaccines containing aluminum pose extremely low risk to infants. These parents say they should be able to decide whether their child undergoes a medical procedure — a decision, they say, that goes to the core of what it means to have freedom of choice. “I have the right to decide what to put into my child’s body,” said Heather Dillard, a mom in Springfield, Missouri, who is also a registered nurse. “Nobody has the right to put toxic chemicals into my son’s bloodstream. That’s taking my rights away, and it’s very scary to me.” Dillard said she decided against vaccinating because her first child was born a preemie and has autism. Dillard does not believe vaccines caused the autism, but the disease led her to do a lot of research about health. She says she now chooses to build her son’s immunity naturally, through diet, while avoiding shots or other medication. Moore said she does worry about affecting children who are immune-compromised and cannot be vaccinated. Before visiting friends with babies or young children, she said, she always informs them her twins are not vaccinated “so they have the power to make a choice.” She also keeps the girls home at any sign of sickness. If Oregon were to take away the right to a vaccine exemption, Moore said, she would likely home-school her twins. She’s keeping an open mind about vaccinating as her children get older, but hopes more studies on the long-term effects of vaccines can help dispel her doubts. “I worry about living in a society that’s progressively more intolerant toward any dissent,” Moore said. “All scientific advances have come from questioning the status quo.” SIMPLE CREMATION $495 Traditional Funeral $1,975 Immediate Burial $550 Tualatin • 503-885-7800 8970 SW Tualatin Sherwood Rd. Salem • 503-581-6265 412 Lancaster Dr. NE No Hidden Costs, Guaranteed Privately Owned Cremation Facility www.ANewTradition.com Tuesday, February 24, 2015 A5 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon New drug charges brought in Amity $15,000 bail. The raid capped a threeAMITY — The Yamhill month investigation into the County Interagency Narcot- sale of meth at the Goucher ics Team joined forces with Street address, according to the sheriff’s Community Sheriff’s Sgt. Chris Ray. During a traffic stop Response Team in serving a search warrant leading to preceding service of the the arrest of two Amity resi- warrant, a quantity of meth, packaging material, dents on drug charges. The arrests were car- paraphernalia and other ried out at 804 Goucher drug-related evidence was St., which lies within 1,000 seized, he said. “The Commufeet of Amity’s high nity Response school and middle Team and YCINT school. have no shortage The suspects were of work,” said identified as AlexanSheriff Tim Svender Placido Garcia son. “I’m glad Jr., 41, and Martin they are able to Vincent Selk, 53. recognize how The two were low-level dealers arraigned before Circuit Judge Selk: Arrested and users affect the quality of Ronald Stone on for meth life in a particuone count each of lar neighborhood, possession of a con- possession especially when trolled substance/ methamphetamine, a Class there are schools nearby.” The Amity and McMinC felony. They are due back court nville police departments at 1:30 p.m. Thursday for and Oregon State Police arraignment on a grand jury assisted with serving the warrant and taking the susindictment. Garcia was also cited pects into custody. Garcia is no stranger for violating terms of his release pending trial on to the drug team. He was an earlier drug charge. He indicted in October on was lodged on $35,000 bail one count each of felon in and his co-defendant on possession of a restricted By PAUL DAQUILANTE The News-Register staff weapon, a Class A misde- ty of meth was found in the meanor, and possession of a center console of the vehicontrolled substance/meth, cle and a pair of nunchucks was found on Garcia, whose a Class C felony. Ray gave this account of felony status precludes him from arming himself. the October incident: Valencia pleaded guilty to The drug and community response teams had two one count of delivery of a suspects under surveillance, controlled substance/meth, Garcia and Blanca Estella a Class B felony. Judge John Collins sentenced Valencia, 35, of Dayton. The two were riding her to six days in jail, 24 together when McMinnville months on probation, six months of driver’s police pulled over license suspension their vehicle at and $450 in fees the drug team’s and fines. request at HighGarcia is next way 99W and due back in court in McDaniel Lane. that case at 11:15 As officers waita.m. Monday, ed for arrival of a March 2. drug dog, ValenSelk also has an cia got out of the earlier case still vehicle and walked Garcia: pending. into a convenience He was indicted store, carrying a Arrested earlier this year on large purse. A plain for meth two counts each of clothes deputy fol- possession first-degree theft lowed to observe and second-degree her actions. When the dog arrived, it burglary, and one count each alerted on the car and the of attempt to commit a Class B felony. All the charges are suspects were detained. A search turned up digi- Class C felonies. Selk and a co-defendant tal scales, a glass meth pipe, drug records and a small were charged in connection with a rural Amity-area amount of marijuana. In addition, two small burglary in which batteries, ziplock bags of meth were milk cans, wire and other found on Valencia, a quanti- metal items were taken. Probation violaters apprehended The News-Register staff Yamhill County law enforcement agencies made four arrests as part of an abbreviated domestic violence sweep targeting probation violators. Picked up were Jamie Deann Bell, 30, Kenneth Muorala, 40, and Isaac Raymond Segobia, 26, all of Sheridan, and Heath- er Nicole Schreiber, 22, of Amity. Bell was also in violation of a release agreement. Muorala was released after booking. The other three were lodged without bail. Other subjects contacted by law enforcement personnel were found to be in compliance. UPCOMING TARGETED MARKETING O P P O R T U N I T Y. . . ROOTS TO ROOFS A Quarterly Guide to Yamhill Valley Homes, Garden & Real Estate Find valuable information on all things home related: yard & garden, buying & selling, decorating, remodeling, finances, organization and more! Publish Date: March 20 Deadline: February 25 Police begin probe into leaked Kitzhaber emails By HANNAH HOFFMAN Of The Statesman Journal The Oregon State Police last week began a criminal investigation into emails leaked from the state’s Department of Administrative Services regarding former Gov. John Kitzhaber’s behavior while in office, at the request of agency director Michael Jordan. On Friday, Jordan also launched his own internal human resources review of two high-level managers inside DAS, both of whom have been placed on paid administrative leave. The two reviews are not necessarily linked, spokesman Matt Shelby said, and no one has been placed on leave related to the criminal investigation. Gov. Kate Brown’s office did not request either review and is not involved, Shelby said, other than to remain informed of any findings. Brown’s office directed all questions to DAS. The emails in question included thousands of pieces of correspondence between Kitzhaber and his fiancee, Cylvia Hayes, as well as at least one email between Kitzhaber and his private attorney. That email appears to have breached attorney-client privilege, Shelby said, and the leak itself appears to have violated the state’s internal information security policies. Kitzhaber had requested DAS delete the emails, in a Feb. 5 email from his executive assistant Jan Murdock, but staff at the agency raised concerns that the request was inappropriate and ultimately refused to do it. OSP will decide whether any criminal activity occurred in leaking those emails, Shelby said. Meanwhile, Jordan has made several changes inside the department since Willamette Week, Portland’s alternative newspaper, published a story about the emails on Feb. 18. First, he reorganized the management structure for the Enterprise Technology Services (ETS) division of DAS, which housed those emails. Going forward, Chief Information Officer Alex Pettit will oversee the division, and Stefan Richards, the state’s chief information security officer, will manage the division’s security. The ETS division provides IT services across state agencies, and it was already undergoing a comprehensive review of that function, Shelby said, which played into Jordan’s decision to change its leadership structure. The division is also coordinating with the Federal Bureau of Investigation on fulfilling a host of criminal subpoenas. In addition, two highlevel managers have been placed on leave. Michael Rogers, the interim administrator of ETS, and Marshall Wells, a member of the management team, are both on paid leave and are the primary focus of the HR review, Shelby said. Jordan informed his staff of the criminal investigation on Wednesday, shortly after Brown was sworn in as governor. “Bottom line, this comes down to trust. Trust in our ability to securely store sensitive information; trust in our process to determine what information is public; trust that we can work with agencies to strike the appropriate balance between security and transparency. The recent breach has upset that balance. We’re working now to restore it,” Jordan wrote. Call now to Reserve Your Space! 503.687.1258 [email protected] Reading the Newspaper is Still This Cool! Alaska becomes 3rd state with legal marijuana By MOLLY DISCHNER Of the Associated Press JUNEAU, ALASKA — Smoking, growing and possessing marijuana becomes legal in America’s wildest state Tuesday, thanks to a voter initiative aimed at clearing away 40 years of conflicting laws and court rulings. Making Alaska the third state to legalize recreational marijuana was the goal of a coalition including libertarians, rugged individualists and smallgovernment Republicans who prize the privacy rights enshrined in the state’s constitution. But when they voted 52-48 percent last November to legalize marijuana use by adults in private places, they left many of the details to lawmakers and regulators to sort out. Meanwhile, Alaska Native leaders worry that legalization will bring new temptations to communities already confronting high rates of drug and alcohol abuse, domestic violence and suicide. “When they start depending on smoking marijuana, I don’t know how far they’d go to get the funds they need to support it, to support themselves,” said Edward Nick, council member in Manokotak, a remote village of 400 that is predominantly Yup’ik Eskimo. Both alcohol and drug use are prohibited in Nick’s village 350 miles southwest of Anchorage, even inside the privacy of villagers’ homes. But Nick fears that the initiative, in combination with a 1975 state Supreme Court decision that legalized marijuana use inside homes — could open doors to drug abuse. Initiative backers promised Native leaders that communities could still have local control under certain conditions. Alaska law gives every community the option to regulate alcohol locally. From northern Barrow to Klawock, 1,291 miles away in southeast Alaska, 108 communities impose local limits on alcohol, and 33 of them ban it altogether. But the initiative did not provide clear opt-out language for tribal councils and other smaller communities, forcing each one to figure out how to proceed Tuesday. November’s initiative also bans smoking in public, but didn’t define what that means, and lawmakers left the question to the alcohol regulatory board, which planned to meet early Tuesday to discuss an emergency response. In Anchorage, Alaska’s largest city, officials tried and failed in December to ban a new commercial marijuana industry. But Police Chief Mark Mew said his officers will be strictly enforcing the public smoking ban. He even warned people against smoking on their porches if they live next to a park. Other officials are still discussing a proposed cultivation ban for the wild Kenai Peninsula. But far to the north, in North Pole, smoking outdoors on private property will be OK as long as it doesn’t create a nuisance, officials there said. While the 1975 court decision protected personal marijuana possession and a 1998 initiative legalized medicinal marijuana, state lawmakers twice criminalized any possession over the years, creating an odd legal limbo. As of Tuesday, adult Alaskans can not only keep and use pot, they can transport, grow it and give it away. A second phase, creating a regulated and taxed marijuana market, won’t start until 2016 at the earliest. And while possession is no longer a crime under state law, enjoying pot in public can bring a $100 fine. That’s fine with Dean Smith, a pot-smoker in Juneau who has friends in jail for marijuana offenses. “It’s going to stop a lot of people getting arrested for nonviolent crimes,” he said. The initiative’s backers warned pot enthusiasts to keep their cool. “Don’t do anything to give your neighbors reason to feel uneasy about this new law. We’re in the midst of an enormous social and legal shift,” organizers wrote in the Alaska Dispatch News, the state’s largest newspaper. There’s no such pullback for former television reporter Charlo Greene, now CEO of the Alaska Cannabis Club, which is having its grand opening on Tuesday in downtown Anchorage. She’s already pushing the limits, promising to give away weed to paying “medical marijuana” patients and other “club members.” Greene — who quit her job with a four-letter walkoff on live television last year to devote her efforts to passing the initiative — plans a celebratory toke at 4:20 p.m. SUBSCRIBE TODAY $10 for 2 Months print and online In-County only • new subscribers only Call 503.472.5114 611 NE 3rd Street • McMinnville • NewsRegister.com LOCAL SAVINGS! 40-80% Off Retail HENRy’S HINTS Why Synthetic Blend is Better for your Car Are you still using conventional oil in your vehicle? It may be time to switch to synthetic blend, which features special additives that help engines operate more efficiently and provides increased protection against wear and sludge. Does your vehicle have more than 75,000 miles? Try high mileage oil, specially formulated to reduce oil burn-off, reduce leaks and minimize engine wear. 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Commissioners Allen Springer and Stan Primozich favor it, but Commissioner Mary Star- rett is adamant opposed. She argued Monday ‘I’ve said repeatedly, I hope that’s what the National Parks Service grant will help address.’ Laura Tschabold Yamhill County Administrator that it’s still not clear who will cover the cost of trail maintenance over the long haul. Grants and Special Projects Manager Jayne Mercer noted the plan is for volunteers from the non- profit group Friends of the Westsider Yamhelas Trail to maintain the trail, but Starrett said she fears volunteer enthusiasm will eventually wane, leaving the county to pick up the slack. Primozich said the group is committed to provided for trail maintenance, whether it actually performs the work or hires it out. County Administrator Laura Tschabold reminded Starrett that the previous commission approved pursuit of funding for the project without having a complete maintenance plan in place. “I’ve said repeatedly, I hope that’s what the National Parks Service grant will help to address,” she said. The aim of that grant is to fund a consultant contract with someone who has worked on similar projects. The consultant would help the county complete its plan for building and maintaining the trail. The grant Mercer wants to pursue totals $430,000. To be awarded through the Local Government Grant Program, the money would cover purchase of three miles of additional rightof-way along an 17-miles stretch of abandoned rail line running from St. Joseph, between McMinnville and Lafayette on Highway 18, and a point near Gaston, just past Hagg Lake. Willamina to name new superintendent WILLAMINA -- The Willamina School Board will meet at 6:30 tonight in the school library to hire a superintendent. The meeting originally was scheduled for the district office. W E E K LY R E V I E W compliments of EdwardJones STOCKS OF LOCAL INTE RE ST FRIDAY’S CHANGE FROM COMPANY Juvie Continued from A1 unyielding as that they are unimaginative. “Yamhill County seems to have an ingrained reluctance to be creative,” she said. “The premise of juvenile justice is supposed to be rehabilitative rather than punitive, and I fear that the juvenile department and juvenile detention have lost their way.” Paasch said he understands perfectly the ‘They have to be without the comforts of home for a few days, but they manage.’ Scott Paasch Manager of Juvenile Corrections Division difference between adult and juvenile offenders. “I’m not a big proponent of juvenile detention being like adult jail,” he said. “We only have them for a few days. We want them to have the least traumatic experience they can have in here.” That doesn’t mean a stint in juvie is going to resemble a holiday at the Ritz, though. After all, he said, it is a detention center. And that, he said, means that even everyday items like pillows may have weapons potential, thus have to be banned. That galls juvenile defense attorney Paula Lawrence. Even the vilest inmates in the state penitentiary system are issued pillows, Lawrence said. But kids locked up in Yamhill County have to make do with Naugahyde mattresses whose raised ends simulate pillows. Lawrence said it hardly takes the place of a real pillow. “Some people hug their pillow,” she said. “It’s not a stationary thing.” Paasch said the pillow issue isn’t keeping him up at night. “They have to be without the comforts of home for a few days, but they manage,” he said. “We also have to consider scabies and lice. You always have to measure risk versus reward.” There’s a risk of pillowrelated injuries, Paasch said. It’s no joke, he said, noting, “I personally witnessed a pillow do some serious damage to an individual here in detention.” That contention doesn’t convince Lawrence. “It’s a mindset that has to be addressed,” she said. With more definitive rules, they said, investment in Pendleton’s range would become easier. Chrisman said three developers are showing interest in building at the Eastern Oregon Regional Airport and are continuing to make progress on signing two companies to contracts to test at the range. The airport is also continuing to garner interest from private developers to build new hangars, with Chrisman saying he could easily see six new hangars at the airport within a year and a half. “They create the barriers to not having things. There’s no statutory reason you can’t have pillows.” Sometimes, Paasch said, something is withheld due to statute or policy. But in other cases, it’s just a matter of money. One of the common knocks against the county’s juvenile detention facility is the lack of an outside recreation area. All the kids have now is a dank room where the sun trickles in through high windows. The architecture of the detention facility, and the rest of the property at Sixth and Evans streets, doesn’t allow for an outside recreation yard, Paasch said. Besides, he said, there’s no budget for one. State law requires detention facilities to offer outdoor recreational facilities, as well as facilities for arts and crafts work, Bishop said. “I am concerned about the options for these kids,” she said, as Yamhill County is violating state law when it comes to recreational amenities. Paasch responded by saying money for renovation of the existing recreation room is included in the budget for the next fiscal year, beginning July 1. “It won’t give them all the exposure to the outdoors they want,” he said, awning was already in the facility’s capital budget for the year, he said. Bishop said Washington County offers many more options for young offenders and their families. For example, it offers free electronic home monitoring as an alternative to incarceration. “It ends up being cheaper for them than getting a bed in Multnomah County,” she said. In Yamhill County, monitoring runs $12 a day, and requires a $50 deposit up front. But Bishop said, “We’re He said Yamhill is the only county in the state where there have been no incidents of youth-on-youth or youth-on-staff violence, and he thinks it’s because the county runs such a tight ship. “We take great pride in those sorts of things,” he said. Lawrence agreed that kids who spend time locked up in Yamhill County are well-controlled. But in her view, they are too well-controlled. She said the center’s young charges aren’t allowed to look people in the eye or move their hands above their waist. Once, she added, an inmate asked her if it was OK if he scratched his nose while she was talking to him. “They’re very well trained, but that’s the problem,” Lawrence said. “They’re trained. “They don’t teach them to make the right choices. They teach them to make no choices.” She noted, “Statistically, we have more youth in detention than larger counties.” And she said, “That should be troubling to people.” ‘We need to find some way for these kids to see the sunlight.’ Paula Lawrence Juvenile defense attorney “but it will let in more sunlight. I’m envious of some of these new facilities with their outdoor recreation yards.” Lawrence and Bishop meet regularly with Paasch and his staff to raise issues. Lawrence said lack of adequate recreational facilities is a frequent topic. “I have had a reasonable relationship with them, but we need to find some way for these kids to see the sunlight,” she said. “Right now, it’s a privilege for them to to be in a room where they can see the sun.” County officials found money in the budget to install a metal awning over the security entrance to the detention facility earlier this year, after the NewsRegister ran a Nov. 4 story about visitors having to stand in the rain for hours. The fact the awning went up within weeks of the story is purely coincidental, Paasch said. Money for the ‘This is one of the few counties that assesses attorney fees on kids.’ Megan Bishop Juvenile defense attorney talking about indigent people who can barely make rent.” And she said the burden on poor families doesn’t end there. “This is one of the few counties that assesses attorney fees on kids,” she said. “The kids end up paying between $400 and $800. “We need to provide them options. We’re dealing with very poor people, and kids don’t have money. You’re putting a huge financial burden on them.” All this is counterproductive to rehabilitation, Bishop said. “There has been a lot of focus nationally on how we’re treating kids in detention,” she said. “If we’re treating these kids like criminals, they’re going to be criminals.’ “We want these kids to be contributing members of society as adults ... We want to rehabilitate these kids.” She said, “Yamhill County has been an eye-opener for me.” She said the kids themselves aren’t complaining, but that’s because they are just kids. “Kids are not the first ones to say anything or even know something is wrong,” she said. “As far as they’re concerned, they’re being punished and whatever happens just happens. “They don’t know when to say it’s not all right. It never dawned on me that they weren’t seeing the sunlight. They don’t know how to complain.” Paasch disputed her claim. He said it’s easy to complain. In fact, he said, “There are all kinds of horror stories about just about everything in a jail,” he said. +121.09 4,955.97 +62.13 INTEL 34.41 +.05 IBM 163.67 +3.27 NIKE 94.94 +2.90 HEWLETT PACKARD 38.39 -.16 NW NATURAL GAS 47.98 +.42 US BANCORP 44.61 -.46 SCHNITZER STEEL 16.36 -.83 MICROSOFT 43.86 -.01 CISCO SYSTEMS 29.61 +.18 ORACLE 43.77 -.16 BOEING 158.32 +8.58 Thad Brill PRICES EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 20, 2015 | SUBJECT TO CHANGE Bringing Wall Street to Yamhill County 715 NW Adams McMinnville (503) 472-0444 Save Big with HALF CRAZY DEALS Only Available At www.NewsRegister.Com/Store Limited Quantities BUSINESS Regular Price Sale Price News-Register 6-month NEW subscription $53.50 $26.75 Tequilla Grill $20.00 $10.00 Laughing Bean Bistro $30.00 $15.00 Lauralee’s Hair Service $20.00 $10.00 Jack of All Beads Stringing class $15.00 $7.50 Jack of All Beads Easy earring class $12.00 $6.00 Jack of All Beads Tin cup knotting class $20.00 $10.00 Liquid Light Glass Art $50.00 $25.00 Cornerstone Coffee $20.00 $10.00 Reel Hollywood Video $35.00 $17.50 Timmreck & McNicol $50.00 $25.00 Calypso Galvanic Medical Spa Facial $50.00 $25.00 McMinnville Family Eye Care Frames & Lenses $50.00 $25.00 Withnell Family Hair Design Haircut & Style $45.50 $22.75 $100.00 $50.00 Withnell Family Hair Design Spa Package The perfect gift to show your love? Share your wishes with your spouse. With our advance directives tools, it’s never been easier to give peace of mind. ©2013 Willamette Valley Hospice A recent set of regulations for drone operation proposed by the Federal Aviation Administration is seen as an encouraging sign for the Pendleton Unmanned Aerial Systems Range. The 195-page document, released Sunday, applies to non-recreational UASs under 55 pounds and includes language about height restrictions, operator certification and aircraft registration. Under the FAA’s proposal, a UAS operator would have to be at least 17 years posal has been released, the rules will be subject to public comment, a process that Pendleton’s range manager John Stevens said could take months. Stevens said he’s already poring over the regulations document and will most likely funnel his suggestions and comments to SOAR Oregon, a nonprofit that advocates for the state’s three test ranges. Regardless of what the final rules might be, both Stevens and Economic Development Director Steve Chrisman see the proposal as a positive development. PREVIOUS WEEK NASDAQ COMPOSITE Bethany Brill Abeln Pendleton UAS Range sees progress in proposed regulations old, pass an aeronautical knowledge test and obtain an operator certificate from the FAA. When piloting a drone, an operator cannot fly the vehicle higher than 500 feet and no faster than 100 miles per hour, fly directly over a person who isn’t involved in the flight or drop anything from the UAV. FAA Administrator Michael Huerta said in a press release that the rules attempt to balance safety and economic interests, although they are far from set in stone. Now that the FAA’s pro- CLOSE 18,140.44 DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS Kristi Brill By ANTONIO SIERRA Of The East Oregonian Carrie Zimbrick, principal at Willamina Elementary School, and David Phelps, interim superintendent in the Nestucca Valley School District in Cloverdale, are the finalists. The new superintendent will start July 1, replacing Gus Forster. The News-Register staff To learn more, call 503.588.3600 or visit wvh.org WVOR-025 SVC Gift/Love 4.94x7_4c.indd 1 10/11/13 1:37 PM Tuesday, February 24, 2015 A7 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon What will Portland look like after an earthquake? online of lines of old buildings in which all the fronts have come off and they look like dolls’ houses, you can see all the rooms.” Some of the metal fire escapes, which hung off the sides of older buildings, weren’t big enough for all the people trying to use them, and they collapsed. Many shops are still By KRISTIAN FODEN-VENCIL Of Oregon Public Broadcasting The U.S. Geological Survey says there’s a 30 percent chance of a magnitude six or greater earthquake that could affect downtown Portland in the next 100 years. What would that do to the Rose City? Experts think it might look a lot like Christchurch, New Zealand, after a 6.2 quake hit that city Feb. 22, 2011. Kathie Miles-Henderson, who lives in Beaverton, wasn’t there for the quake. But she has a home in Christchurch, and she experienced what it’s like to clean up afterward. She grew up in Oregon, but lived in New Zealand for a while. If her home there were picked up and placed in Portland, it would probably stand in the west hills, overlooking the city. “You couldn’t get at houses on hills because the roads were blocked,” she said. “So you can imagine the slide factor.” But building away from the hills was no guarantee of safety in Christchurch. “On the flat you’re not safe because of liquefaction,” Miles-Henderson said. “Liquefaction is when the ground moves so much that it turns to mud and the mud is in whirlpools so you can’t drive on the road. You will see online, buses suddenly in sink holes and things. You know your whole backyard turns into it.” More than 180 people died in the quake and at least 1,500 were injured. “One of the problems was that the older buildings, the bricks were not tied to the frame,” Miles-Henderson said. “So the people who were injured and killed were people who were running out. And the bricks fell on them and the parapets fell on them. We did have one building that collapsed like a house of cards. It was the TV building. It was a 1960s building.” Miles-Henderson is not a geologist, but she sees many housed in the shipping containers owners moved to following the quake, she said. In all, about 10,000 Christchurch homes needed to be demolished because they were so badly damaged and the government isn’t allowing any rebuilding in some areas because of liquefaction. Shutterstock The U.S. Geological Survey says there is a 30 percent chance for a magnitude six or greater earthquake in Portland. similarities between the shak- new policies by summer, builders to do the work. She said people turned ing that hit Christchurch and 2016. Miles-Henderson what Portland might have to said the quake caused dam- to bikes and walking to get age to her patio, garden, around. face. She said communications Portland Bureau of Emer- deck and windows. “The gency Management Director kitchen cupboards went. went down immediately, Things collapsed. Most- because cell phone towers Carmen Merlo agrees. Merlo said the two cities ly cupboard doors cracks are reliant on electricity and have similar sized popula- appeared, absolutely every- the power went out. It was off for about a week. tions; they have the same mix where.” Then, there was no water All told, she estimates, it’ll of buildings; they both have for three weeks -- because major rivers running through cost about $60,000 to fix. The home was built in the pipes had broken. and large areas of soils that People had to dig outdoor 1980 and has a wooden could liquify. What really worries Merlo frame bolted to the con- latrines and tanker trucks is the high concentration of crete foundation, a feature were parked throughout the unreinforced masonry build- lacking in many Portland city to provide water. She said gas was hard to homes. Miles-Henderson’s ings in both cities. “Like Christchurch, we main advice to Portlanders find, but people drove out have what’s called a passive is to install double glazing, of town for it, because many policy right now,” Merlo because it was the windows bridges survived. She’s worried Portland’s said. “We only trigger ret- with just one pane of glass rofits if the building owner that suffered the most in her bridges won’t fare as well, because they aren’t what she is proposing either chang- house. “You know the big fancy calls “base isolated.” That es to building occupancy or major alterations. And windows, and they had lots means, their foundations we’ve not really moved the of angles, and they were aren’t separated from the needle in getting many of glued,” she said. “And the shaking ground by a system these buildings retrofitted. glue stuck, but guess what of big springs. “I would say the buildings So, Christchurch after their didn’t? The window, so the earthquake adopted a very window went.” Four years really under the gun would strong mandatory retrofit later, there are still things be anything from Fourth policy and I would like for she needs to fix. The prob- street to the river, all those us to kind of explore some- lem, she said, is that tens of older original buildings,” she thing very similar here in thousands of Christchurch said, referring to downtown Portland.” Merlo hopes the structures were damaged, Portland. “You will see pictures city council will consider and there just aren’t enough Compost Makes All The Difference Recology Organics Recology sees a world without waste. Our compost and bark products demonstrate our commitment to the best and highest use of all resources by utilizing mixed organics that are diverted from landfills to produce nutrient-rich soil amendments. Recology products are created from diverse feedstocks made to meet the needs of individual growers. 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Recology: A World Without Waste IN-YARD PICK-UP • DELIVERY • BLOW-IN BARK SERVICE Mon-Fri 8–4, Sat. 9–4 503-434-1671 2200 NE Orchard Ave McMinnville Compost • Soil-Blends • Bark • Rock RecologyOrganics.com A8 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 Homeless Continued from A1 also society’s trash, but I am as human as any one of you.” There was so much more to Cheryl’s story than a 48-year-old homeless woman who died in a tent, her sister said. In fact, she was a popular waitress most of her adult life. “She was a supporting member of society,” Hogan said. “She took her friends to breakfast. She took my friends to breakfast. “But when she got sick, she lost her job. And they told her, ‘You are no longer part of society.’” The people gathered at the library said they were determined to help people like Cheryl Hogan reclaim their place in society. Howie Harkema, the operations manager of the Soup Kitchen at St. Barnabas, organized the brainstorming session. Participants were asked to identify common themes that surround homelessness, and many of them echoed Hogan’s sentiments, identifying fear, ignorance, disrespect, mistrust and stereotypes as factors impeding solutions. Patricafaye Marshall said Stabbings Continued from A1 disorderly conduct. The assault and menacing charges are Class A misdemeanors. Holt was lodged initially on $50,000 bail. He has since secured his release by posting the required $5,000. Greenslade allegedly stabbed a 59-year-old man outside First Baptist Church, 125 S.E. Cowls St., on Jan. 29. McMinnville police gave this account: the community needs to move beyond an “us” and “them” mentality and see everyone as part of a seamless whole. “Fear blocks out any solution,” she said. “We need to get rid of fear.” Few specific solutions were offered, but Nate McKay, who helped Harkema organize the meeting, said one of McMinnville’s most pressing needs is a 24/7 drop-in center where homeless people can go to take showers, do laundry and warm up. Susan Alley said she would like to see more coordination among local helping agencies. “In the five years I’ve been in McMinnville, I’ve not seen the nonprofits working together,” she said. “There’s a ton of money out there. We’re just not using it right.” Concerns about local homelessness moved to the fore when leaders of McMinnville Cooperative Ministries began letting a small number of homeless people pitch tents on church property downtown. City officials sent the church a letter Dec. 11 declaring the tents are a public nuisance, ultimately subject to up to $500 a day in fines if not remedied. The victim had just arrived at the church for an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting when Greenslade approached and slashed him in the arm with a razor blade. Greenslade exclaimed, “Gotcha, there you go,” before fleeing in a car. The victim, who did not require hospitalization, said he had attended AA meetings with Greenslade on numerous occasions. The next day, Greenslade was picked up by an Oregon State Police trooper News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon ‘I’ve done some pretty crazy things in my life, especially in the last two months. Yet everyone deserves a pillow, a blanket and a bed.’ Mark Riche Homeless man City and church officials have been discussing the issue since, sparking a wider community conversation. Harkema has assembled about a dozen activists in support of what he calls the COMPASS Center, COMPASS standing for Community Outreach of McMinnville Posting Action Sharing Sanctuary. He envisions it as a sort of “one-stop shopping” solution to homelessness. A homeless person coming to COMPASS would find dormitory-style accommodations as well as access to food, clothing, laundry, computers, child care, telephone service, medical attention, mental health counseling, job services and even education and job training. Harkema said the center would cost millions of dollars. He thinks up to 70 percent of the construction and operation expense could be grant-funded, but acknowledged seeing it through figures to take a number of years. In the meantime, he said, the community needs to pursue less ambitious alternatives. Mark Riche, who has spent the past few years on the street, said efforts should focus on the basic needs of shelter, job training and transportation. Those are essentials, he said. Other things, such has access to mental health care, can come later, he said, though he admitted that mental illness is a major problem among the homeless. “I’ve done some pretty crazy things in my life, especially in the last two months,” he acknowledged. “Yet everyone deserves a pillow, a blanket and a bed,” he said. The Rev. Michael Sayler, interim pastor at First Baptist Church, said he has heard concerns voiced about extending services for violating his probation on 2012 convictions for fourth-degree assault and harassment. He was carrying a knife at the time. The charges from the new case were added later. The case against Holt arose Feb. 8, when McMinnville police were called to a fight at the Muchas Gracias Mexican Restaurant, 220 N.E. 12th St. They gave this account: Holt arrived in a vehicle and confronted two men. He got out and punched one of them in the face for having allegedly pushed his girlfriend. When Holt attempted to throw another punch at the first man, the man’s companion put his arm up to block it and was stabbed. Holt then resumed punching his original target. Holt told responding officers he didn’t stab anyone. He admitting having punched one of the men several times, but said he was merely defending his girlfriend. Neither of the victims required hospitalization. serving as a draw for other homeless people. “What if we’re successful?” he said. “Will our success draw more people to the community for services?” Sayler doesn’t share that concern. He said he’d like to see McMinnville serve as a model for other communities. Harkema said he will review the notes from Saturday’s meeting, then call another one for more discussion. This is only the beginning of the process, he said. The most important aspect of the meeting, he added, is that people are talking about the issue. Whitney Ferwerda said one of the virtues of this sort of meeting is that it gives people a place where they can talk openly and frankly. That’s rare, she said. “There’s no safe place except here,” she said. “So go us!” Whatever people say when it comes to homeless people, Hogan hopes everyone remembers the “people” part is more important than the “homeless” part. “I’m one of the ... homeless, but the Bible I’ve read says we’ve all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, so you’re no better than me,” she said. Conceal Carry Permit Class Oregon Utah - Valid in 35 States March 11 1pm or 6pm at The Comfort Inn 2520 SE Stratus, McMinnville Utah/OR/WA: $80.00 or Oregon only: $45 FirearmTrainingNW.com ~ [email protected] 360-921-2071 Government Calendar Listed are meetings involving city government, county government and school district agencies in Yamhill County. To update information, please call the News-Register at 503-4725114, ext. 272 or 291. TUESDAY, FEB. 24 Housing Authority of Yamhill County: 6:30 p.m. HAYC office, 135 N. E. Dunn Place, McMinnville, 503-434-6571. McMinnville City Council: 6, dinner meeting, 7 p.m., formal session, civic hall, 200 N.E. Second St., 503-434-7302. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 25 Yamhill County Special Transportation Fund Advisory Committee: 1:30 to 3:30 p.m., Room 32, county courthouse, 535 N.E. Fifth St., McMinnville, 503-472-9371. THURSDAY, FEB. 26 Yamhill County Board of Commissioners: 10 a.m., Room 32, county courthouse, 535 N.E. Fifth St., McMinnville, 503-4347501. Formal session. YCOM Executive Board: 3 p.m., Room 32, county courthouse, 535 N.E. Fifth St., McMin- nville, 503-474-4946, harlanc@ co.yamhill.or.us. MONDAY, MARCH 2 Carlton Planning Commission: 7 p.m., city hall, 191 E. Main St., 503-852-7575. Dayton City Council: 6:30 p.m., city hall annex, 408 Ferry St., 503-864-2221. Newberg City Council: 6 p.m. work session, 7 p.m. business, Public Safety Building, 401 E. Third St., 1-503-537-1283, www. newbergoregon.gov/meetings. Sheridan City Council: 7 p.m., council chambers, city hall, 120 S.W. Mill St., 503-843-2347. Yamhill County Board of Commissioners: 2 p.m., 534 N.E. Fifth St., McMinnville, 503-4347501. Informal/formal session. TUESDAY, MARCH 3 Dundee City Council: 7 p.m., city hall, 620 S.W. Fifth St., 1-503-538-3922. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4 Amity City Council: 7 p.m., city hall, 109 Maddox Ave., 503835-3711. Lafayette Fire Department: 7 p.m., fire hall, 486 Third St., 503-864-2451. THURSDAY, MARCH 5 Yamhill County Board of Commissioners: 10 a.m., Room 32, county courthouse, 535 N.E. Fifth St., McMinnville, 503-4347501. Formal session. Yamhill Volunteer Fire Department: 7 p.m., fire hall, Second and Olive Streets, 1-503-6623511. Yamhill County Planning Commission: 7 p.m., Room 32, county courthouse, 535 N.E. Fifth St., McMinnville, 503-4729371. FRIDAY, MARCH 6 McMinnville Senior Citizens Inc.: 1 p.m., McMinnville Senior Center, 2250 N.E. McDaniel Lane, 503-435-0407. MONDAY, MARCH 9 Carlton City Council: 7 p.m., city hall, 191 E. Main St., 503852-7575. Dayton Fire Board: 7:30 p.m., new fire hall, 500 Seventh St., 503-864-3558. McMinnville School Board: 7:30 p.m., administration building, 1500 N.E. Baker St., 503-565-4000. Arrests & Citations YAMHILL COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE Eduardo Cantu, 21, McMinnville, Feb. 20, driving without a license; booked and released. Michael Todd Ellis, 50, Sheridan, Feb. 19, first-degree aggravated theft/two counts; booked into the Yamhill County Jail on $10,000 bail. Steven Scott Fuller, 25, McMinnville, Feb. 20, probation violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Alexander Placido Garcia Jr., 41, Amity, Feb. 19, possession of a controlled substance/ methamphetamine, violation of a release agreement; booked into the Yamhill County Jail on $35,000 bail. Jacob Brandon Gonzales, 23, Salem, Feb. 20, Polk County hold, probation violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Katherine Renee Kay, 26, McMinnville, Feb. 20, Drug Court violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Erendira Patricia Lopez, 38, McMinnville, Feb. 19, Drug Court violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Joshua Ian Mulbreight, 24, Newberg, Feb. 19, probation violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Kristen Lynn Porter, 32, Yamhill, Feb. 19, post-prison supervision violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Chealsi Leona Rade, 25, McMinnville, Feb. 20, probation violation/two counts; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Tiffany Louise Rohme, 36, Sheridan, Feb. 20, probation violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Amanda Sauceda, 31, McMinnville, Feb. 20, Drug Court violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Martin Vincent Selk, 53, Amity, Feb. 19, possession of a controlled substance/methaphetamine; booked into the Yamhill County Jail on $15,000 bail. Dylan Michael Lee Simkins, 19, McMinnville, Feb. 20, probation violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. McMINNVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Jonathan Cory Andrews, 27, McMinnville, Feb. 19, seconddegree disorderly conduct, third-degree criminal mischief, menacing, post-prison supervision violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Dakota James Blair, 21, McMinnville, Feb. 22, driving under the influence of intoxicants; booked and released. Tyler Wayne Bolt, 19, McMinnville, Feb. 21, second-degree robbery, second-degree theft; booked into the Yamhill County Jail on $155,000 bail. Allen Joe Cain, 34, McMinnville, Feb. 22, failure to report as a sex offender; booked into the Yamhill County Jail on $10,000 bail. Jonathan Lowell Malott, 25, McMinnville, Feb. 21, driving under the influence of intoxicants, reckless driving, probation violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Justin Michael McIntosh, 26, Dundee, Feb. 19, second-degree encouraging child sexual abuse; booked into the Yamhill County Jail on $22,500 bail. Megan Marie Page, 23, McMinnville, Feb. 20, first-degree criminal mistreatment; booked into the Yamhill County Jail on $7,500 bail. Antonio Zacharia Sanchez, 32, transient, Feb. 19, probation violation; booked into the Yamhill County Jail without bail. Isaac Mcutcheon Thompson, 27, McMinnville, Feb. 22, driving under the influence of intoxicants; booked and released. OREGON STATE POLICE Cavin Lee Finley, 18, Dayton, Feb. 22, possession of less than one ounce of marijuana; cited and released. Carol Ann Haworth, 71, Bend, Feb. 21, driving under the influence of intoxicants; cited and releaesd. Robert Daniel Linthicum, 23, McMinnville, Feb. 22, driving under the influence of intoxicants; cited and released. Natalie Kristina Minshall, 32, Newberg, Feb. 21, driving while suspended; cited and released. Enoch John Prater, 41, Sherwood, Feb. 20, driving under the influence of intoxicants; cited and released. NEWBERG-DUNDEE POLICE DEPARTMENT Clark James Salvey, 27, Boring, Feb. 21, driving under the influence of intoxicants; booked into the Yamhill County Jail on $5,000 bail. Stand up to heart disease. It’s not something you should take sitting down. So don’t. Exercise your right to live longer and more joyfully. Attend a forum to receive a free a copy of “Heart to Start.” Join “Heart to Start” author James Beckerman, M.D., for a FREE FORUM. Thursday, Feb. 26 • 6-7 p.m. Springbrook Meadows Community Center 4061 Hayes St., Newberg (Just off of Providence Drive behind the hospital.) The event is free, but registration is encouraged. Register at www.providence.org/classes or call 503-574-6595. How healthy is your heart? Find out at providence.org/myriskmyhealth. A9 Tuesday February 24, 2015 McMinnville, Oregon Sports Yamhill Valley Inside Amity boys basketball earns Class 3A state playoff berth/A11 ‘I was proud of how they came back’ Rockne Roll/News-Register McMinnville senior Owen Binkerd checks the time after a preliminary heat of the Class 6A boys’ 50-yard freestyle on Friday. BINK AND YOU’LL MISS HIM Grizzlies senior Binkerd paces McMinnville swimmers at OSAA state championships By ROCKNE ROLL Of the News-Register GRESHAM – Fatigue, travel and an elite competitive field had no chance of separating Owen Binkerd from his time to shine. McMinnville’s super-sprinter brought home a grip of medals from the weekend’s OSAA Swimming State Championships at Mount Hood Community College as the Grizzly boys took 12th place in the team standings, much of it due to Binkerd’s blistering performances. Binkerd took third place in the boys’ 50-yard freestyle, swimming a 21.89 second qualifying time and a 21.80 secodn run in the finals. Binkerd also turned in a 47.93-second qualifier and a 47.89 in the finals of the 100-yard freestyle to take fourth. “He had a really good meet. He’s had a really good year of training, he work hard for it and it really paid off,” McMinnville swimming coach Jason Hafner said. “He was right at his lifetime bests. The big thing is, when you’re racing at the state meet, it’s a pretty even field so you don’t get a lot of open water. To go right at his best in that was a really good swim. There’s a lot of turbulence because you’ve got a whole field of guys at that speed.” Binkerd was also part of the boys 200-yard medley relay team that won the consolation final in 1:41-05 to take seventh place and shave almost a second and a falf off their 1:42.43 Rockne Roll/News-Register preliminary time. On the girls’ side, Molli McMinnville junior Max Hayes powers through the second leg of the boys’ 200-yard medley Hartzell shook off illness to take relay qualifier at the OSAA Class 6A State Championships on Friday, Feb. 20, at Mount Hood Community College in Gresham. The boys medley relay took seventh place, winning the See Swimming, A12 consolation final on Saturday. Nine is fine: Grizzlies Oregon Sports Power Rankings ride high at districts The is not responsible for your legal fees STILL ON HIS FEET Flores, Crowston, Nelson win SD5 championships The News-Register staff SALEM – The McMinnville wrestling team was wellrepresented in weight class finals at the OSAA Class 6A Special District 5 Championships, held Friday and Saturday at Sprague High School in Salem. But how well are the Grizzlies set up for state? In all, nine McMinnville wrestlers will attend the OSAA Class 6A State Championships, held at Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Portland on Feb. 27-28. As a team, the Grizzlies compiled 299.5 points for second place, behind district champion and host Sprague (378 points) and ahead of third-place McNary (261 points) in the nine-team district. “We had a really good tournament. Felt like we could have moved 2-3 more kids through but I am very happy with the 9 we qualified,” McMinnville coach Shawn Keinonen wrote in an email. “They are all tough kids and should score/wrestle well at the state meet.” Of the nine state qualifiers, eight made it to the finals of their respective weight classes, with three winning district titles. Alvaro Flores and Aspen Nelson were dominant at 106 pounds and 113 pounds, respectively, in earning district crowns. Bobby Crowston won two matches by fall, one by technical fall and one by major decision at 145 pounds. “(Nelson) was so dominant, pinning all four of his opponents and never going past half way through the 2nd period,” Keinonen wrote. “Bobby looked amazing on his feet, again, just being a takedown machine. Alvaro won some close matches but wrestled very smart to win his first league title.” The runner-up finishes were disappointments in the moment but delineated the overall strength of the team. Manny Humlie (138 pounds), Dalton Donaldson (152 pounds), Alex Kiess (160 pounds), Josh Blanchard (170 pounds) and Brian Barnes (195 pounds) made their respective finals. “Manny Humlie and Dalton Donaldson really were on the wrong end of some horrific calls in the finals that cost both of them their matches,” Keinonen wrote. “Brian Barnes, Josh Blanchard and Alex Kiess also all lost tough matches in the finals. See Grizzlies, A11 Need to fire a coach? Wait until after the season is complete By ROBERT HUSSEMAN Of the News-Register 1. Owen Binkerd, McMinnville swimmer. In a whirlwind of a week for Oregon sports, the senior’s individual effort stands out in the hearts and minds of the News-Register. Binkerd capped off an outstanding career with a third-place finish in the Class 6A boys’ 50-yard freestyle (21.80 seconds) and a fourth-place finish in the 6A boys’ 100-yard freestyle (47.89). Binkered, the only McMinnville swimmer to qualify for the state championships’ second day, helped the Grizzlies to a 12th-place finish on the boys’ side. Congratulations to a standout young man and competitor. 2. Portland Trail Blazers. The NBA trade deadline came and went on Feb. 19 with a flurry of excitement – 38 players in total were traded, or 8.4 percent of all players under contract – and national observers are in agreement that Portland got better with a single deal. The Trail Blazers acquired guard Arron Afflalo from the Denver Nuggets for Thomas Robinson, Victor Claver, Will Barton and a first-round draft pick. Afflalo is a Robert UCLA product Husseman is in his eighth the sports ediNBA season tor of the Newswho shoots Register. well (career percentages of 45.5 from the field and 38.4 from the threepoint line) but is mostly regarded as a defensive presence. He is expected to be the first man off the bench for coach Terry Stotts. Robinson, Claver and Barton all had their moments – Barton, in particular, earned the nickname People’s Champ from the fans – but all are inferior players who could not be relied upon for significant contributions in the playoffs. Afflalo can, and landing him has excited the admittedly excitable Rip City faithful. 3. Yamhill County prep wrestlers. The county’s individual talent on the mat is impressive, but the depth is the real story. Thirty- five wrestlers will participate in the Class 3A, Class 4A or Class 6A state championships, with Willamina represented by 14 wrestlers and McMinnville represented by nine wrestlers. This upcoming weekend at the OSAA State Wrestling Championships will be a busy one. 4. Oregon State women’s basketball. The Beavers clinched at least a share of the Pac-12 Conference championship and won its 25th game of the season Sunday at Utah, a school record. Pick a statistic, and OSU is excellent at it; eight nationally in field-goal percentage (46.6), fifth in assists per game (19.4) and second in defensive rebounds (31 per game). The sky remains the limit for the best college basketball team in Oregon. 5. George Fox women’s basketball. That other team from Yamhill County, as Linfield fans might prefer to say, has been awesome. The Bruins blew through the Northwest Conference (25-0, 16-0 NWC) and are the No. 1-ranked team in the West region, according to the NCAA. George Fox’s average margin of victory is 24.1 points per game, the fifth- See Husseman, A10 A10 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon Local Sports Class 3A Special District 2 Championships Saxons smother Grizz in second half Mac girls fall against S. Salem By ROBERT HUSSEMAN Of the News-Register Marcus Larson/News-Register Willamina junior Austin Howard (in orange) attempts to take down Dayton senior Jared Tompkins (in black) in the Class 3A Special District 2 160-pound final Saturday night. CHAMPIONSHIP CALIBRATION Yamhill County schools combine to send 25 wrestlers to state tournament The News-Register staff ADAIR VILLAGE – Back on top, with a vengeance. Willamina captured the OSAA Class 3A Special District 2 championship this weekend at Santiam Christian High School while qualifying 14 of its 16 wrestlers for the OSAA Class 3A state championships. It was the seventh district title in the past eight years for the Bulldogs. Willamina racked up 262 points at the district tournament to bring home the championship, beating out Scio (228 points) and Harrisburg (200) for the honor. Dayton finished fourth with 163 points; Sheridan scored 55 points for eighth and Amity had 41 points for ninth in the 10-team district. “I was really impressed with how our boys competed,” Willamina coach Ariah Fasana wrote in an email. “Our crowd was large and vocal, the team had so much support, it was an exciting atmosphere. This group of kids has really worked hard this season, everyone is at every practice and ready to go, it has been nice not to have to deal with ‘off the mat’ distractions.” Three Yamhill County wrestlers took home district championships on Saturday. Willamina junior Michael Reyes, a returning state champion, pinned all three of his opponents to win the 126-pound weight class. Bulldogs junior Austin Howard, a returning state finalist, outlasted Dayton senior Jared Tompkins in the 160-pound final, 2-0, to claim the district title. The 138-pound final pitted a pair of former state champions in Sheridan senior Justin Acuff and Dayton sophomore Jared Henry. Acuff outlasted Henry in a 15-3 major decision for the fourth district championship of his career. SALEM – In a hostile environment at South Salem High School, McMinnville boys basketball controlled the tempo and executed with precision in building a 28-15 halftime lead. Ten second-half turnovers later – eight of which came in the third quarter – the lead was a fading memory. “They turned up the heat a little bit,” Grizzlies coach Willie Graham said. “They were able to get to the basket a little more, but off of turnovers they had a head of steam.” South Salem outscored McMinnville 44-20 in the second half en route to a 59-48 victory Friday night. Tanner Autencio filled up the stat sheet for the Grizzlies with 17 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists and two steals. Kyle Brooker and Joey Chapman had six points apiece, with Brooker adding four rebounds. Senior Matthew Long missed the game with a shoulder injury; he is doubtful for tonight’s Senior Night game against Sprague. His absence led in part to Aaron Baune’s first varsity appearance; the 6-foot-2 freshman had three points and two rebounds in limited minutes. McMinnville (14-9, 9-6 Class 6A Greater Valley Conference) and Sprague tip off at 7:15 p.m. at The Furnace. In other action: Girls basketball South Salem 70 McMinnville 30 SALEM – Rebecca Noble scored six points in the Grizzlies’ loss to the Saxons in Friday night’s Class 6A Greater Valley Conference game at South Salem High School. Alix Williams, Sydnee Reeser and Brittney Freeman each scored five points for McMinnville (10-13, 5-10 GVC). The Grizzlies host Sprague tonight at 5:45 p.m. for Senior Night. Philomath 69 Yamhill-Carlton 23 YAMHILL – The Tigers fell to the Warriors in Friday’s Class 4A Oregon West Conference game. Yamhill-Carlton (1-22, 0-9 OWC) plays at Newport tonight at 7 p.m. Boys basketball Philomath 80 Yamhill-Carlton 57 YAMHILL – The Tigers fell to the Warriors in Friday’s Class 4A Oregon West Conference game. Yamhill-Carlton (8-15, 1-8 OWC) plays at Newport tonight at 5:30 p.m. Find Quick CASH!!! Sell it in News-Register Classifieds Marcus Larson/News-Register Sheridan’s Justin Acuff (in blue) won a 15-3 major decision over Dayton’s Jared Henry (in black) in the 138-pound final at the Class 3A Special District 2 championships Saturday. “Justin is peaking at the right time and is looking good going into the state tournament,” Spartans coach Ray Carpenter wrote in an email. “He’s been working hard and is focused on his goal of competing for another state title and moving on to the next level to wrestle.” Willamina senior Jordan Combs (113 pounds), senior Keegan Davis (145 pounds) and sophomore Phoenix Walker (195 pounds) finished as the runner-up in their respective weight classes. Sophomore Justin Fasana (106 pounds), freshman Jacob Skjei (120 pounds), sophomore Chandler Allen (145 pounds) took third place in their respective weight classes, while freshman David Elwood (106 pounds), junior Cian BaileySaucy (138 pounds), freshman Ty Janes (152 pounds), freshman Tanner Cavan (195 pounds) and sophomore Chase Onstot (220 pounds) will also represent the Bulldogs at state as fourth-place district finishers. Nathan Johnson (sixth place, 126 pounds) and Logan DiBetta (132 pounds) also competed for Willamina. In addition to Henry and Tompkins punching their tickets to state, three Dayton wrestlers finished third at the district tournament. Senior Jake Brown went 3-1, winning all matches by fall, at 132 pounds. Sophomore Cody Stahl qualified at 152 pounds, and senior Tyler Clark won two matches by fall in the 182-pound weight class. The Pirates will also be represented at state by junior David Cervantes (120 pounds), sophomore Oscar Rosas (145 pounds), and sophomore Aaron See Wrestling, A11 On Deck On The Air Today NBA Time/TV 5 p.m., NBATV Indiana at Oklahoma City NHL Time/TV 4 p.m., NBCSN Philiadelphia at Carolina Men’s college basketball Texas at West Virginia Providence at Villanova Wisconsin at Maryland Louisiana St. at Auburn Boston College at Pittsburgh Texas A&M at Arkansas Creighton at DePaul New Mexico at Boise St. 4 p.m., ESPN2 4 p.m., FS1 4 p.m., ESPN 4 p.m., ESPNU 6 p.m., ESPNU 6 p.m., ESPN 6 p.m., FS1 8 p.m., ESPNU Wednesday NBA L. A. Clippers at Houston San Antonio at Portland Time/TV 5 p.m., ESPN 7:30 p.m., KGW, ESPN NHL Pittsburgh at Washington Husseman Continued from A9 best mark nationally. Junior post Justine Benner (16.2 points, 5.7 rebounds per game) and senior wing Lauren Codling (12.0 points, 11.3 rebounds) have the Bruins in great position for the NCAA Division III tournament. Here’s hoping that GFU coach Michael Meek and company are thrown a bone by the NCAA and not paired up with other Northwest Conference schools in the first couple rounds of the D-III tournament. Wishful thinking, I know. 6,874. Portland State women’s basketball. Longtime Vikings head coach Sherri Murrell was fired on Feb. 18; at the time, PSU had a 3-21 overall record. That said, it’s not about a coach being fired, even one who has lasted eight seasons. It’s not about the only openly out coach in NCAA Division I (Murrell has spoken often and publicly of her experience as a lesbian in major college sports) being fired. It’s about firing a coach with five games remaining in her team’s season, as the PSU administration did, insisting that she leave before the Vikings’ season concludes. There’s an old saying among athletic directors: what must happen eventually must happen immediately. Immediately, however, does not apply in-season. One more example of poor decorum for an athletic program that seems to know nothing but. 2.04372 x 1037. Dana Altman, Oregon men’s basketball coach. Altman, in conjunction with the University of Oregon, filed a counterclaim this week against a woman who accused three UO men’s basketball players of sexual assault. The counterclaim refutes the woman’s allegation that Altman knew that one of the accused, Brandon Austin, had previously been under investigation for sexual assault at his first academic destination, Providence College. Altman and the university have a sworn statement from Austin’s mother, Tammy, stating that she did not tell Oregon coaching personnel about allegations against her son. The woman who accused the basketball players stated that Tammy Austin admitted to telling Oregon coaches about the investigation. There is a serious gray area that would merit legal and procedural consideration. Of course, that doesn’t change the perception of the situation: the University of Oregon and its highpaid basketball coach are suing a rape survivor over Altman’s inability to perform a background check on a prospective student-athlete, one of the requirements of his job. The 2014-15 iteration of the Ducks upset No. 9 Utah on Sunday for its 20th win of the season, likely securing a spot in the NCAA Tournament in the process. Altman will collect $20,000 for the privilege. Oregon has never made the NCAA Tournament in three consecutive seasons, and apparently Altman’s winning touch is so valuable that the state’s flagship university will spend tax dollars defending it in court against a victim of sexual assault. Time/TV Time/TV 5 p.m., NBCSN Men’s college basketball Time/TV Connecticut at E. Carolina Virginia Commonwealth at Richmond 4 p.m., ESPNU 4 p.m., ESPN2 5 p.m., FS1 6 p.m., ESPNU 6 p.m., ESPN2 7 p.m. Pac-12 8 p.m., ESPNU Marquette at Butler Baylor at Iowa St. Duke at Virginia Tech Washington St. at S. California Oregon at California Thursday NBA Golden State at Cleveland Oklahoma City at Phoenix GOLF Honda Classic NHL Minnesota at Nashville Men’s college basketball Rutgers at Purdue Arizona St. at Utah San Diego at Gonzaga Oregon St. at Stanford Time/TV 5 p.m., TNT 7:30 p.m., TNT Time/TV Noon, TGC Time/TV 5:30 p.m., NBCSN Time/TV 6 p.m., ESPNU 7:30 p.m., FS1 8 p.m., ESPNU 8 p.m., Pac-12 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 A11 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon Local Sports ‘I saw the first one go down and I thought, “This might be my night”’ Rockne Roll/News-Register ABOVE LEFT: Dayton’s Zach Spink (third from left) congratulates Trent Pihas of Horizon Christian after the Pirates fell to the Hawks in the Class 3A West Valley League playoffs. ABOVE RIGHT: Amity’s Devin McShane drives the lane against Santiam Christian in the West Valley League third-place game. THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY Horizon Christian hands Dayton first loss of season Stull, Nelson shoot Amity into 3A state playoffs By ROBERT HUSSEMAN Of the News-Register By ROCKNE ROLL Of the News-Register INDEPENDENCE – Dayton boys basketball is no longer undefeated. So now what? The Pirates lost the Class 3A West Valley League playoff championship game, 55-48, to Horizon Christian on Saturday night to finish the regular season and league playoffs at 25-1. Dayton was awarded the No. 1 seed in the OSAA Class 3A playoff bracket and, of course, was recognized as regularseason champion. That the loss occurred against the Hawks, the No. 2 seed in Class 3A, lessens some of the sting. “We want to win every game we play,” Pirates coach Ron Hop said. “We competed (against Horizon); we just didn’t compete efficiently.” Therein lies the most important truth in Dayton’s defeat: if the Pirates are to achieve their lofty goals in the 3A state playoffs, they must continue to sharpen their skills and execution. “We just looked tired, not so much physically as mentally,” Hop said. “We looked rusty.” Dayton started out well enough, scoring on eight of its first nine possessions and taking a 17-7 lead in the first quarter. Horizon Christian guard Austin Forrester drained a three-pointer in the final seconds of the first quarter to cut the Hawks’ deficit to seven before fellow guard Trent Pihas took over offensively. Pihas shared WVL Player of the Year honors with Pirates guard Zach Bernards, and the pair sparred throughout the game, to the delight of the crowd at the Panther Pit at Central High School. Bernards struggled with his outside shooting but made up for it with aggressive drives to the basket, finishing with 16 points. Pihas, however, made four of his eight three-point attempts and scored 19 of his game-high 29 points in the second half. Dayton led 42-37 early in the fourth INDEPENDENCE – Amity head coach Justin Amaya listed out five keys to victory before the Amity Warriors played Santiam Christian in Saturday’s Class 3A West Valley league third place game at Central High School. One of them was “swagger.” “Swagger, which equals winning, which equals fun,” Amaya explained. “Which equals Coos Bay, hopefully.” His Warriors are just one game away from a trip to the south coast after securing a spot in the 3A State Championship bracket with a 48-43 win over the Eagles at the Panther Pit to take the third seed from the WVL. For Amity, Saturday was a bit of a grudge match. The Warriors had lost both of their regular-season contests against SC, and Amaya said his players felt like there was some unnecessary showboating by the Eagles. “I told them, ‘This is about pride today. Go out there and show them that you’re not going to put up with that nonsense.’ Dancing on the court, jumping up and down, pounding your chest. There’s a spot for that, but sometimes it’s just too much,” he said. There was no backing down to be seen for either side through three up-and down quarters. Jamie Stull knocked down three triples in the opening three frames and scored 14 points, tied for the team lead with Lance Nelson, in what Amaya described as one of his best games of the year. “I saw the first one go down, and I thought, ‘This might be my night.’ I just kept the confidence high and kept shooting,” Stull said. “Everybody had faith in me. It was an awesome feeling.” And while Stull provided critical scoring in the first three frames, a laundry list of Amity bench players upped their game to provide the defense needed to keep it tight. “Kolton Rohde had the best game of the year for us,” Amaya said. “Jared Ojua, Rockne Roll/News-Register Pirates guard Zach Bernards (11) looks to shoot between two Hawks. quarter but scored three points in the next seven minutes, with Pihas and catching the Hawks up. Horizon led 47-45 at the three-minute mark when the Hawks successfully passed the ball around to drain two minutes of clock. Horizon guard Trevor Tillema caught one pass on a running stop but was not whistled for a traveling violation, to Hop’s dismay. David Parsons of Horizon finished the possession with a basket with 49 seconds remaining, and the Pirates had to foul to give themselves a chance. “We didn’t make the free throws and layins when we had them in the second half,” Hop said. “We battled to the end. The only disappointment is, we didn’t play our best game.” Guard Zach Spink “started the game like gangbusters,” in Hop’s words, and finished with 14 points. D.J. Flowers contributed 10 points. Dayton hosts Umatilla in the 3A 1-16 game on Friday, Feb. 27, at 7 p.m. W. Mennonite girls win TRC playoffs; boys make state host City Christian for the first round at 6 p.m. Saturday. In other action: The News-Register staff CORVALLIS – Class 2A Tri-River Conference teams have tried 15 times to beat the Western Mennonite Lady Pioneers this season, and those fifteen attempts have one thing in common. They all failed. The last of them was Western’s 56-48 defeat of Regis on Saturday at Crescent Valley High School to secure the TRC Championship. Emma Gibb piled up 16 points and 21 rebounds, six of those on offense, to lead the game in both categories, while Jenna Christenson scored 13 and Emily Loyd added 11. Western shot 40 percent from the field and 33 percent from behind the arc while holding the Rams to 27 percent from the floor. Western (22-4) is seeded No. 1 in the OSAA 2A State Championship bracket. They Boys basketball Feb. 21 Regis 59 W. Mennonite 55 CORVALLIS – Wyatt Roth scored 21 points but the Pioneers still couldn’t upset the Rams in the TRC Championship game Saturday. Roth shot an even 50 percent on the night, including a pair of threes, to lead the Pios. Daniel Domes scored 11, and Colby Williams added nine. Western (18-8, 10-4 TRC) is seeded No. 7 in the OSAA bracket. Their first round game against Imbler is set for 6 p.m. Friday at Western Mennonite School. Wrestling Khayman Heard (sixth place, 182 pounds) also competed for Dayton. Sheridan sophomore Remy Tapia-Bravo went 2-1 for the tournament, finishing second at 106 pounds after dropping a 6-2 decision to Ricardo Flores of Gervais. “Remy has been having a great year. In just his second year of wrestling he has come a long way,” Carpenter wrote. “He’s dedicated, works hard, and takes the time to really learn the technique.” Oscar Tapia-Bravo (113 pounds), Jared Ellis (sixth place, 126 pounds), Josef Hasslen (220 pounds) and Jason Hasslen (220 pounds) also competed for the Spartans. Amity junior Louden Andrews will represent the Warriors at state after finishing second in the 220pound weight class, going 2-1 in the tournament. Freshman Aaron Runion (113 pounds), junior Jacob Riley (120 pounds), senior Troy Cole (sixth place 120 pounds), freshman Owen Williams (132 pounds), sophomore Trevor Hall (132 pounds), sophomore Shenrang Yang (145 pounds) and freshman Adam Atsma (170 pounds) also competed for Amity. The OSAA Wrestling State Championships take place Feb. 27-28 at Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Portland. Continued from A10 Hiatt (285 pounds), who finished fourth in their respective weight classes. Freshman Alexander Bellefleur (113 pounds), freshman Ryland Adams (126 pounds), junior Rylee Ramos (fifth place, 126 pounds), junior Oscar Trejo (160 pounds) and senior Grizzlies Continued from A9 “Unfortunately in the state seeding they only look at league champions so even though some of my guys have beat 2-4 of the other league champs they are not even up for seeding consideration. It is frustrating for me as a coach to look at some of these guys with 45-5 records on the year and a runner up in our conference and they are drawing the #1 and #2 overall seed in the state tournament for their matches. It is a terrible system that needs to be addressed but for the time being we just need to pull some upsets.” Third place was the cutoff for SD5, and Michael Abeyta slid into that spot in the 138-pound weight class. The Mac freshman lost by decision in the semifinals but rallied to win by fall in the consolation semifinals and by decision in the thirdplace match. Steven Weant (fifth place, 126 pounds), Bailey Young (fifth, 132 pounds), Rockne Roll/News-Register Amity’s Jamie Stull (33) vies for the ball with a Santiam Christian player. Charles Weigart. It was really our defensive kids today. T.R (McShane) played the best game that I’ve seen him play. It bought us time to get Lance’s swagger going.” “Swagger” is perhaps the best way to describe Amity’s fourth quarter. The Warriors opened the frame on a 13-1 run. Santiam Christian set up a man-to-man defense, and the Warriors saw an “open” sign on the basket. “The way we feel is that, when teams go man, we feel really good,” Amaya said. Nelson and Devin McShane beat a path to the basket and scored 12 points in the quarter, though the game drew close at the end thanks to Amaya’s one disappointment of the day – a 5-for-19 team performance at the foul line. “It felt amazing. We just kept grinding.,” Stull said. Amity (17-9, 8-6 WVL) took the ninth seed in the tournament bracket, they’ll open tournament play this Friday with a 6 p.m. tilt at Rogue River High School against the No. 8 Chieftains. Haddeland, ‘Cats beat PLU in game; Lutes take series Linfield baseball ace pitcher Chris Haddeland was a preseason All-American. Saturday afternoon, he showed Pacific Lutheran University why. Haddeland spread out seven hits without a walk as he went the distance and shut out the Lutes in a 3-0 victory for the Wildcats in their Northwest Conference opener at Roy Hesler Field. A ninth-inning double was the only time a Lute got into scoring position on Haddeland without the help of a Linfield error, of which there were three. Haddeland struck out eight and allowed multiple hits in an inning just twice, finishing the job in 119 pitches. The ‘Cats offense backed him up with the winning run in the second; Jo Carroll drew a leadoff walk and came in on an RBI fielder’s choice from Chance Laboda after Scott Schepige’s double put him on third. Linfield’s added two more for insurance in the fifth when Eric Lawson’s oneout single was followed by a stolen base and consecutive doubles from Ben Andrews and Carroll, with Andrews driving in Lawson and Carroll sending Andrews home and sending PLU starting pitcher Chris Bishop to the showers. Bishop was charged with the loss, giving up four walks and six hits in 4 1/3 innings. The Lutes left McMinnville with the last laugh, though, as they took the nightcap of Saturday’s doubleheader 5-2 and won the rubber match on Sunday, 6-3, packing a series win against the No. 4 team in the country back to Tacoma. For more on those games and the rest of the weekend in Wildcat sports, head over to the all-new Newsregister. com. Max Morton (sixth, 132 pounds), Talon Mishler (fifth, 220 pounds) and Vince Williams (sixth, 285 pounds) added points to the Grizzlies’ team tally at districts. Bryant Kemper (106 pounds), J.R. Pickell (120 pounds), Chance Atkinson (126 pounds), Brandon Austin (152 pounds), Jose Nairn (160 pounds), Steven Ryan (170 pounds), C.J. Lomas (182 pounds), Mike Freeman (182 pounds), Mason Hartzell (195 pounds), Nate Jeffers-Brown (220 pounds) and Deshon Sheridan (285 pounds) also competed. The News-Register staff A12 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon Local Sports Dayton 48, Amity 45 (OT) The Game Plan Basketball Basketball Wrestling Wrestling 5:45 p.m. girls Sprague 7:15 p.m. boys OSAA State Championship OSAA State Championship Basketball Wrestling Basketball Wrestling @ Rogue River OSAA State Championship Umatilla 8 a.m. TBD girls OSAA State Championship Basketball Wrestling Wrestling Basketball Umatilla OSAA State Championship OSAA State Championship Feb. 24 Feb. 24 Sprague McMinnville Feb. 27 Amity 6 p.m. boys Feb. 27 Dayton 7 p.m. boys 8 a.m. Wrestling OSAA State Championship OSAA State Championship Wrestling Wrestling OSAA State Championship OSAA State Championship 8 a.m. Feb. 27 Willamina Feb. 27 Wrestling Feb. 27 Sheridan Feb. 27 8 a.m. Feb. 28 Feb. 24 Y-C 5:30 p.m. boys Feb. 28 Feb. 28 8 a.m. Feb. 28 TBD 8 a.m. Feb. 28 TBD Colton 8 a.m. TBD TBD TBD Feb. 28 TBD TBD TBD Wrestling Wrestling OSAA State Championship OSAA State Championship 8 a.m. Feb. 24 @ Newport 7 p.m. girls Feb. 27 8 a.m. Tennis Baseball Softball @ Puget Sound (2) @ Lewis & Clark (2) 5 p.m.,women TBD 6 p.m. girls Whittier @ Whitman Feb. 27 Linfield 8 a.m. Feb. 28 8 a.m. Basketball Basketball @ Newport Feb. 27 Feb. 28 11 a.m. Feb. 28 Noon Feb. 28 TBD 8 a.m. Tennis Feb. 28 Texas-Tyler @ Whitman Tennis Feb. 28 Lewis & Clark 1 p.m.,women 11 a.m. men @NewsRegister @NewsRegSports Marcus Larson/News-Register Amity guard Madelynn Krotzer (14) and Dayton wings Malina Ray (4) and Maddie Shirley (3) jump up for a rebound while Amity’s Shealyn McClean (00) looks on. HOP IN THEIR STEPS Pirates force overtime, outlast Warriors to claim WVL playoff title We are buying quality cars any make or model. WE PAY CASH! 503.472.6144 By ROBERT HUSSEMAN Of the News-Register Exceeding Your Expectations INDEPENDENCE – For three quarters against rival Amity, Dayton wing Teddi Hop had a shooting performance to forget. Hop, a junior, had made three of her 13 attempted field goals to that point. In the third quarter, she had been whistled for traveling twice while Amity parlayed a 23-18 halftime advantage into a 34-26 lead entering the fourth quarter. “I told myself, I’d better start hitting shots or we’re going to lose this game,” Hop said. Hop responded with 10 points in the fourth quarter as the Pirates forced overtime with the Warriors; Shawnie Spink’s layup in the waning seconds tied the game at 41. In the extra session, Hop made a three-pointer on Dayton’s first possession and the Pirates outlasted Amity for a 48-45 victory. “We’ve never played in such a loud environment,” Spink said. “We’ve never been district champs. We put that pressure on ourselves.” The Amity-Dayton rivalry lost no luster in Saturday’s Class 3A West Valley League playoff championship game, transplanted to The Panther Pit at Central High School in Independence. The elated Pirates (22-3) and disappointed Warriors (22-5) were named co-champions of the WVL in a postgame trophy presentation. Even if the Amity players did not feel like co-champions, the trophy was a veritable token of appreciation for a strong performance. “It’s a tough mental one because we had them up by 10. They fought back in,” Warriors coach Reg McShane said. “The thing that hurt was, we didn’t shoot well from the free throw line.” Amity made nine of 22 free throws in the game, to be precise. Not good. (Dayton fared little better, shooting 7-of-14 from the line.) The Warriors attempted six free throws in the game’s final two minutes and made only two of them. Swimming Continued from A9 10th place in the girls 100yard backstroke, swimming a 59.31 in prelims and a 59.87 in the consolation final. Her illness forced her to scratch the 100-yard freestyle to conserve energy, but she also put up good splits in the girls medley relay and 200-yard freestyle relay. “We declared a false start because she was still sick. She was sick over the whole weekend and did an outstanding job on the relays and that 100 back,” Hafner explained. “To come back and swim near her best time and break a minute both days, she’s really tough. Swimming is a hard sport to begin with and if you’re not 100 percent physically, it makes it doubly hard.” The girls medley relay posted a 1:56.66 qualifier to take 14th place, missing SHOP local Shop local enVironmenT Improve the air, reduce sprawl and save energy by shopping at home instead of traveling. Think about these local businesses when you are looking for a greaT place To eaT: Rockne Roll/News-Register Dayton guard Shawnie Spink (11) scored nine points against Amity. Amity’s lead stemmed in large part from driving to the left side of the line, where the Pirates struggled to stop the Warriors. Caitlan Dumler (12 points) turned in an aggressive performance off the bench, while Maddie Worthington (eight points) was the recipient of several passes to the low block on drives. “We weren’t pushing them to their weak hand,” Hop said. Hop finished with 22 points, leading all scorers. Spink brushed off a slow start of her own with nine points, and Kalina Rojas added the finals while the girls short freestyle relay swam a 1:42.19 in prelims and a 1:42.25 in the consolation final tot take eighth place. Those relays, both boys and girls, had been a strength for the Grizzlies all season. “The boys in final won the consolation heat, and they all improved their times from the day before. The 200 free relay, that was a good race. That was a pretty fast field,” Hafner said. “All in all, I was happy. We were hoping to get a couple more swims. But we weren’t 100 percent healthy. I’m proud of the kids.” Between sickness and the energy it took to sweep the district championships, the Grizzlies were not in peak condition from top to bottom, but they battled through. ‘Some of the teams we beat were top-10 teams at state. It was a very competitive district this year. After a meet like seven points. Madelynn Krotzer scored seven points for Amity. In an additional sign of respect, both the Pirates and the Warriors will host their Class 3A state playoff first-round games. No. 3 Dayton takes on No. 14 Colton Saturday, Feb. 28, at 6 p.m., while No. 5 Amity hosts No. 12 Umatilla on Feb. 28 at a time to be determined. “This could qualify as the best day of my life,” Spink said Saturday. More such days could be in store. that, it’s hard to repeat that with 13 points, with state sometimes. We really had to champion Century scoring focus on districts this year 151.5. and swim fully rested and ready to go,” Hafner said. “There’s a lot of emotion at districts, it wears you out, physically and mentally. I was proud of how they came back.” Malia Riggs took 17th in the girls 200-yard freestyle with a 2:02.83 preliminary time, Mari Sato took 18th in the 500-yard freestyle with a 5:36.66 qualifying time, Levi Burress swam a 57.77 in the prelims of the boys 100-yard backstroke to take 17th place and the boys and girls 400-yard freestyle relays finished their prelims in 3:25.15 and 3:47.06, respectively. The boys long relay finished 16th; the girls came in 13th. McMinnville’s boys earned 45 team points in the meet; Jesuit took the state title with 169. McMinnville’s girls finished 22nd in the final team classification golden Valley Brewery & restaurant 980 NE 4th Street McMinnville 503-472-2739 www.GoldenValleyBrewery.com The grain Station Brew Works 755 NE Alpine Street, STE 200 McMinnville 503-687-BREW www.GrainStation.com Sandwich express 503-472-3500 3rd Street pizza company 503-434-5800 Sage restaurant 503-472-4445 Think of this local business next time you are craving coffee: cornerstone coffee 503-472-6622 Think of this local business when you look for a plumBer: gormley plumbing + mechanical 1715 Lafayette Ave McMinnville 503-472-4101 www.GormleyPlumbing.com Think about this local business when you are looking for a new neW hair cuT or STyle: urbanbliss Salon 1900 N Hwy 99W McMinnville 503-472-3097 www.UrbanBlissSalon.com B Connections Yamhill Valley Tuesday February 24, 2015 McMinnville, Oregon Inside Events /B3 Sudoku /B4 Gallery to open Mystery of Edwin Drood Charles Dickens died before he finished writing a thriller called “The Mystery of Edwin Drood.” No offense to Dickens, but that’s actually a plus when it comes to a stage play based on the partial manuscript: It gives the audience a chance to decide how the story ends. “The audience votes about who the detective is, who the murderer is — if there’s a murderer — and who the lovers are,” said Seth Renne, who is directing the musical comedy. Gallery Theater will present the uniquely crafted show Friday through March 21 on its main stage at Second and Ford streets in downtown McMinnville. The show starts at 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 3 p.m. Sundays. Tickets are $17 for adults and $15 for seniors and students. On the first Saturday, Feb. 28, tickets will be offered on a two-for-one basis. “Edwin Drood” has many elements of a traditional British music hall production, Renne said. It includes broad comedy, farce, melodrama and slapstick. There are lovers, villains and an actress who makes her living as a male impersonator. “It’s Dickens; it’s dark,” Renne said. “But the way it’s set up is very, very funny.” The play also uses the playwith-in-a-play format. Gallery’s actors play members of a traveling theater troupe in Victorian England, the Musicale greens & beans Stopping By By STARLA POINTER Of the News-Register Royale. And each member of the troupe has a role in a new show, also named “The Mystery of Edmund Drood.” The show — the one Gallery is presenting — is one of many efforts to finish Dickens’ manuscript, which was being serialized in newspapers at the time of his death. Some of the efforts maintained Dickens’ style, although no one knows how the original author intended the story to end. Others, like this one, take broad liberties, such as adding music, Renne said. It’s playwright/composer is Rupert Holmes, best known to most people for his pop hit, “The Pina Colada Song.” Renne Marcus Larson/News-Register Princess Puffer (Ember Eastman) sings “Wages of Sin” with her ensemble (Emily Jones, Ashley Benham Bertolini, Lauren Donovan, See Drood, B2 and Leticia Duran). Time to raid the freezer This is the time of year all those hours in the kitchen last summer and fall were spent ito help. Now, when there’s little in the garden and less in the orchard, is the hour of the pantry. It’s easy to forget that, and never quite manage to use all that stored up goodness, which leads to a great deal of frustration when the next preserving season rolls around. But if the pantry is, in fact, full, then now is the time to take full advantage, and cut back on your grocery spending. Time to rummage about in the freezer, and Nicole see how many Montesano components of is a vegetarsoup, stew or ian who likes casserole you to eat, cook can come up and garden. with. Time to contemplate all those containers of frozen fruit or jars of canned tomatoes and invent tasty ways to use them. Cranberry ginger muffins have been making a regular appearance in our kitchen, because after Thanksgiving, there were a lot of cranberries hanging around the refrigerator, some of which are still there. If I were inclined to make sauerkraut, I’d include some of the cranberries. But they’re really tasty in muffins, especially with some orange zest and minced candied ginger. So tasty, in fact, that I’ll be a little sorry when they’re gone. There was also a lot of cranberry sauce, much of which found its way into cranberry vinaigrette. A spoonful of cranberry sauce, blended with olive oil, raspberry vinegar (there’s a lot of that in the house, too, more or less by accident), a clove of garlic, a dash of mustard and some salt and pepper, made a delicious winter salad dressing. Last summer’s frozen corn makes fabulous winter soup, with the addition of potatoes and onions. It also goes well in enchiladas, with pureed butternut squash, onions, canned tomatillos and pickled peppers. Canned tomato sauce makes homemade pizza or spaghetti a quick and easy prospect; canned tomatoes find their way into chili or soups. Keeping some split peas and dried beans on hand provides the means of turning out all sorts of delicious soups and stews, without having to resort to the grocery store, especially if your supplies include some vegetables. A cupful of garden shallots dug from the freezer or a leek from the garden, a potato or See Freezer, B4 Submitted photo Cold science McMinnville High science teacher Jared Larson standing on arctic tundra during the fellowship program trip. By STARLA POINTER Of the News-Register Jared Larson saw his first wild polar bears during a trip to the Arctic in 2012 — big males hunting for food and mothers shepherding their babies away from potential danger. One moved within a few feet of the National Geographic Explorer, the ship on which Larson and other science teachers were traveling through the icy waters, which took them within 600 miles of the North Pole. “The bear was curious,” the McMinnville High School teacher said, acknowledging the feeling was mutual. The polar bear seemed to be just as interested in the ship and its passengers as the teachers were in the Arctic wildlife. As people clicked cameras from the deck, the bear checked them out, sniffing them before ambling off across the pack ice. Just another day in Svalbard, the bear might have said if it could talk. Ice. Cameras. Scientists. But for Larson, it was anything but. Getting an up-close look at polar bears in the wild was an awesome part of his fellowship with the acclaimed Grosvenor Teacher Fellow Program. The program is designed to give K-12 teachers first-hand experience in geographic awareness and ocean stewardship. He was paired with several other fellows during the trip, including a bear and bee expert. “I brought the working-with-kids aspect” to the learning experience, he said. He said he suspects he was chosen, at least in part, thanks to his work with the McMinnville Submitted photo A pod of walruses take an Arctic snooze together. Education Foundation on the district’s science experiences program for elementary students. Larson teaches a variety of science courses at Mac High. The current lineup includes forensic science, forestry and advanced placement biology. In the latter class, he will be using his Arctic trip as a springboard for teaching ecology, thereby passing on what he learned about geographic awareness and ocean stewardship. Although he enjoys and values what he does, he didn’t plan to become a teacher. He fell for fish as a child and spent happy hours fishing with an older cousin and his grandfather. In school, he enjoyed science, especially biology. Those interests led him to set his sights on a career as a fisheries biologist. He started college at the University of California at Davis, then transferred to Linfield. Linfield didn’t have a fisheries biology curriculum, but it proved a much better fit for him otherwise. “I knew the professors, they knew me,” he said. “It was awesome.” Besides, he was interested in a girl from McMinnville, Mindy Legard. After graduating in 1995, Larson went to work in the Oregon State University fish lab while he searched for other opportunities in fisheries. Then he and Mindy, now married, began to discuss the possibility of his joining her in the teaching field. “I went and watched Chris Chennell teach,” Larson said, recalling the days he spent with the longtime science teacher, now retired. “Then I did my student teaching with him.” Not long after Larson joined Mac High in 1998, Tony Vicknair, then assistant principal, was formulating the school’s new career pathways program. He noticed Larson’s background with fisheries biology, and chose him to start a program in that area. Now his classroom includes large fish tanks, as well as a range of tools used in biological sciences and the specific courses he teaches: skulls and skeletons; fossils and models; birds’ nests; hardhats for the forestry program, body outlines for faux murder investigations in the forensics class; even a cat-toy size stuffed version of the E. coli bacteria. Outsid,e there’s a small courtyard with a pond, small trees, native plants and other flora. Taped to his desk is a frequently posted sign, “At Rotary Park. Be back at end of period.” To Larson, science is a core subject, as important as reading and math. It teaches key concepts that everyone needs as a citizen of the earth, a family wage earner and a critical thinker. “Your understanding of science impacts how you interact with the world on a daily basis,” he said. People can use scientific skills, such as interpreting graphs, to make all kinds of judgments — how much credence to give to claims printed in a voter’s pamphlet, for example. And knowing how the earth works helps a person make choices such as which type of car to buy, whether to walk to work or whether to buy local products. That doesn’t mean See Science, B2 B2 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon Getting out for science The News-Register staff Marcus Larson/News-Register Jared Larson discusses the studies his high school science classes do with goldfish. Science Continued from B1 everyone has to make the same choices, Larson said; rather, that they have the capacity to make an informed decision. He said he wants his students to discover ways to care for the earth, its wildlife and oceans. They need to understand that humans always have an impact on the places they visit or the resources they use. “When you leave, could someone tell if you’d been there or not?” he said he asks them, telling them their goal is to “be in the wild and not leave a trace.” That’s something Larson and the other fellows kept in mind when they were exploring the land and ice of Svalbard. Not only did they want to protect fragile ecosystems, he said, but they also wanted to preserve the flora and fauna for future generations. “We were always cognizant of being intruders in their space,” he said. “We didn’t get close enough to disturb them ... we wanted to ensure we can experience this, and our kids can, and their kids can.” They spent most of their trip on the Explorer, 3a 56-foot research ship. The ship isn’t luxurious, he said. He bunked in the same type of quarters as the crew, a small, barebones cabin with a 12-inch porthole. But even with minimal accommodations, the trip was ripe with opportunities for a teacher, he said. “No matter where you are, there are amazing things to flocks of seabirds. There are no trees. Any wood used by Svalbard’s early residents washed in on the tide from locations as far away as the equator. Today, lumber is shipped in. And wood still washes ashore from far flung places, Larson said. So does beach trash, much of which carries ‘I tell kids, your trash here will get to the ocean. It may end up on a beach in Svalbard or some other country, or it may become part of the permanent collection of garbage fouling the sea.’ see and bring back to show others,” he explained. The ship was based at Longyearbyen, originally a coal-mining town that has reinvented itself as a tourist destination. The city is the capital of Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago at latitude 78 to 80 degrees north — northwest of mainland Norway and northeast of Greenland. Glaciers cover parts of the islands. Despite the year-round chill, plants grow — lichen, purple saxifrage and other hardy flora that can survive the harsh conditions. Larson’s photos show some areas that are a vibrant green with plant life fertilized by the large labels that easily identify its origins — including fast food wrappers from all over the globe. It’s a terrible thing to see, he said, but the photos he took of beach trash in Svalbard are a good learning tool: They help convince students about man’s impact on the environment. “I tell kids, your trash here will get to the ocean,” he said. “It may end up on a beach in Svalbard or some other country, or it may become part of the permanent collection of garbage fouling the sea.” Svalbard’s west side is touched by the warm West Spitsbergen Current, which keeps the coast free of ice. But to the north and east lie sea ice where polar bears live. That’s why the islands, once known as Spitsbergen, were renamed with a Norwegian term meaning “land of the white bear.” In the year Larson visited, the ice had receded more than in most years. It changes constantly. Larson said scientists look at the thickness and density of the ice over the long run, rather than its spread or decline from one year to the next. For the bears, though, annual changes in pack ice make a big difference. The low level in 2012 meant many polar bears were visible. While that was good for visitors, who wanted to capture them on camera, it was bad for the bears, which were forced into the open in search of food. “They were starving,” Larson said. That meant the observers had to be extra careful when they left the ship. Humans could look mighty tasty to hungry bears, he noted. In addition to polar bears, Larson said, “We saw all kinds of amazing wildlife.” Many species of birds, including Arctic terns that resented the human intruders getting anywhere near ly “Stopping By” column since 1996. She’s always looking for suggestions. Contact her at 503687-1263 or spointer@ newsregister.com. Original posters and info-graphics created by News-Register and Oregon Wine Press artists and printed right here in Yamhill County. Drood Continued from B1 said that might make him sound like a lightweight composer, but he’s really created a great production with “Edwin Drood.” It’s a fun, but challenging, show for the cast. Each actor must learn several variations, which he or she may or may not be called on to perform on any given night. “We’ve staged and rehearsed all of them,” said Renne, adding that he is “incredibly lucky” to have such a wonderful cast. The director appeared in a production of “Edwin Drood” when he was studying theater at Western Oregon University. “You just never know what the audience will do, and that keeps it fresh for the actors,” he said. “You have to be prepared for anything.” The actors also need to be prepared to sing songs that flesh out their characters, so they must learn several sets of lyrics to accommodate the voting. Each potential murderer, for instance, has a song that’s uniquely his or hers. The live band also has to be ready to play what the audience requests. Depending on how the audience votes, the production can vary a little or a their nests. Dolphins. Seals. Whales, including a blue whale who swam under and around the Explorer. They saw reindeer, as well. Svalbard is the northernmost habitat for these mammals, and they look different here than they do at more temperate latitudes. The arctic reindeer have adapted by developing shorter legs and more massive bodies. It helps them retain as much heat as possible. They don’t need the long legs of reindeer found in warmer climates, Larson said, because they don’t have to depend on speed to escape predators on the ice. While the reindeer, polar bears and other animals were all memorable, he said, a herd of walruses was noteworthy for another reason. They are the smelliest creatures he’s ever encountered. “Their whole diet is shellfish,” he explained. But the walruses didn’t give the human visitors a second glance — or even sniff. “They just did their thing,” he said. Starla Pointer, who is convinced everyone has an interesting story to tell, has been writing the week- McMinnville High School science teacher Jared Larson enjoys opportunities to take his students into the field. He enjoys working with science experience field trips at the elementary school level as well. He serves as district coordinator of the experiences, such as one in which kindergartners visit a meadow to study bugs or another in which students visit Miller Woods to learn about soil, water and other aspects of the outdoors. “I’ve been called the Miller Woods guy,” he said, noting that children remember seeing him from year to year. Larson said the science experiences have been great for students of all ages. The program depends on Mac High’s environmental science classes and students interested in becoming teachers themselves. They help their younger peers with experiments and observations. Larson said he has also enjoyed working with the adults who staff the elementary science experiments: Ryan McIrvin, who coordinates the high school helpers; Teresa Crain, who oversees each experience; Michelle Barf, who makes sure students have the materials, equipment and critters they need for science projects; and the district’s cadre of elementary teachers. The experiences give him a chance to get out in the field as well, as do some of his high school classes. And if school doesn’t take him outside, he goes out on his own, as he loves to fish, hike and enjoy nature. “Now it’s my hobby,” he said. Map of Yamhill Valley Marcus Larson/News-Register John Jasper (Sam Dinsmore) sings a duet with Rosa Bud (Karen Kumley) as she confronts him about possibly being the murderer. lot. There are 486 possible outcomes, virtually assuring that each of Gallery’s 11 performances will be unique. Renne, who is also the theater manager, suggested audience members attend more than once for the full experience. The cast of “The Mystery of Edwin Drood” includes Lance Nuttman, Cassandra Pangelinan, Sam Dinsmore, John Hamilton and Ember Eastman, who’s The News-Register gives you also choreographing the show. Other cast members are Evan Ewing, Austin Ewing, Nick Quinteros, Cesar Anguiano, Charity Benham, Karen Kumley and Seth Mayhew. Members of the ensemble are Christian Anguiano, Kelly Ashton, Ashley Benham-Bertolini, Rolan Cranford, Lauren Donovan, Leticia Duran, Cassie Jarvis, Emily Jones, Mary Smalley and Tracy Webber. Local Kelly Janssen is assistant director for the production. Dinsmore is music director, and Christie Jungling is leading the orchestra. Paula Terry is the stage manager. Sami Whitmore designed the lighting and Adam Ewing designed the sets. Costume coordinators are Janssen and BenhamBertolini. For more information and reservations, call the theater box office, at 503472-2227. Kitchen Conversions Hottest Peppers news sports bargains The Coffee Machine The Beer Diagram Exclusively at NewsRegister.com/the-poster-site rohse colored glasses News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon Tuesday, February 24, 2015 B3 tell me about it Homemakers, Let daughter-in-law off the hook take note done in the fall. Their I’m far from being reasoning is that, during a Heloise or a Handy spring and summer’s Mandy, so I’m always nicer, warm weather, happy to increase my pets, kids and adults collection of household create more traffic in hints. And I’ve lately acquired some new ones I and out of a home. Open doors and windows think are winners. I wish I’d learned them long ago. may result in more indoor dust. This These aren’t accumulated over-the-backyard dirt, if ground fence hints — no, into carpets they are from all during the professional winter, may cause homemaking considerable wear experts. And and damage. Fall one thing they deep-cleaning suggest is that has another we housekeepers McMinnville’s advantage: your Elaine Rohse are often guilty home is ready for is fascinated of overkill. They by words, the holidays. advise us to clean books and Expert Aslett something only if writing — adds that an it’s dirty. Do not and spends annual deep do so because it’s much time clean may not, the time you’ve sating that indeed, even customarily fascination. be necessary. If scheduled for that you’re hard on a cleaning. And house, that annual deep when you are cleaning clean could well be something and can no advisable, but for those longer tell what you’ve living in a new home — cleaned and what is still dirty, a better use for your or in a home lightly used — deep cleaning every time is to take a nap. three years is probably Just the other day, I sufficient. was polishing silverware And here’s a consoling and could not tell which thought for homemakers had been polished and whose grungy windows which hadn’t. Experts have long needed would have suggested I attention. Although go pick daffodils. carpets may be damaged Don Aslett, author of by continuous ground“500 Terrific Ideas for in traffic soil, windows Cleaning Everything” are not damaged by suggests, too, that inattention. Glass is of a homemakers do a nondepreciable material little checking before and will be good as they tackle a cleaning new when washed. If, project. He suggests that however, the window homemakers consider the soil level of whatever washing is done when the sun is shining, your next they plan to clean rather problem may be pesky than to deep clean streaks. These result from by habit, schedule or tradition. the washing solution Sometimes, too, drying too quickly. And homemakers are the more cleaner in the prone to do something water, the worse the because their mothers, streaks will probably be. or grandmothers always Professionals, for their did even though it is window washing solution, not something vitally use only a few drops of important. I know about dishwashing detergent those inherited tasks, too. in a bucket of water. If It came to mind recently you’re using a squeegee, when I was ironing squeegee the glass as sheets and pillowcases quickly as you can. and began wondering Spots on clothing and why I was doing it. Was carpets — such as ink, it really essential? Was blood and wine — have I ironing bed linens posed a problem for because I thought all homemakers who have good homemakers did? been taught to attempt When no-iron fabrics removal as quickly as came along, this became possible. Now comes something of a nonword that this is not the issue. A quick press or proper approach for white once-over did the job. rings appearing so often But when my supply of on wooden tabletops. no-iron bed linens wore These unsightly rings out, I went on a shopping result from the moisture trip, and, feeling a bit at the base of hot or extravagant, bought a cold beverage containers considerable supply of condensing and reacting Egyptian cotton sheets with furniture varnish. and pillowcases. I soon Now, we homemakers are discovered they did not advised to disregard those come out of the dryer rings for a few days. unwrinkled. Often they disappear. I continued ironing And experts say them. And then, as I homemakers are also stood there at the ironing guilty of overkill when board that day, I asked trying to achieve a fine myself whether this was shine on their furniture. something I really needed Furniture’s biggest to do when so many other problem is due to things needed attention. accumulation of too much What purpose did it gunky polish. Use less serve? polish when polishing, When I put my head and do it less often. on my pillow at night, I Here’s a household hint could not tell whether the — one of my favorites pillowcase was ironed. — to use when company Every morning, soon is arriving within five after getting up, I made minutes and the house my bed. There was no is a fright. What to do? chance that anyone would Turn all the lights up ever see my wrinkled to their highest as your pillowcases. I became a company comes up the slovenly housewife who driveway. Whereas I used did not iron pillowcases or to turn my lights low so sheets. Now, I no longer the disarray would not be even iron my nighties. noticed, experts say that Our previous home had bright lights convey an two spare bedrooms. I illusion of cleanliness. regularly cleaned these I’m taking all these two rooms not regularly homemaking suggestions used. We scarcely even to heart, although overkill entered them, but since is not likely to be my cleaning them was problem, But I shall one of my recognized remind myself not to do weekly household tasks, something when it is not it behooved me to clean reasonably necessary. I them. Now I realize it shall remember to turn up was a waste of time and lights to their brightest effort. when company is Thinking now has also coming. I shall assuredly changed with regard remember to stop cleaning to the once-popular, when it is apparent my deep-clean spring effort is of no value — housecleaning. and at that time, I shall Experts are thinking instead go for a walk. that, rather than in the Elaine Rohse can be spring, deep house reached at rohse5257@ cleaning should be comcast.net. not to answer the door. She Dear Carolyn: I offered no apology for her recently had occasion to actions. I was stunned and drop off a package at my deeply hurt. granddaughter’s afternoon In the two weeks that preschool. Believing I have followed, I have seen was doing my daughterher three to four times but I in-law (DIL) a favor, I avoid her as much as I can. timed my drive to stop at She seems none the my son and DIL’s wiser and, to her, house to pick up everything remains my granddaughter as it was before the and save my DIL school incident. the trip to the Meanwhile, I school. Admittedly, remain deeply hurt I stopped and feel unwelcome unannounced, but at my son and we have a good Carolyn Hax DIL’s house. I can’t relationship and offers readhelp but harbor ill often visit each ers advice will toward her and other’s houses based on the dread the day I am unannounced. experiences invited back into Upon arriving at of someone their home. Should my DIL’s house, I who’s been I forget the whole knocked repeatedly there. incident knowing on the front I was wronged door but nobody and take the higher road, answered. My DIL’s car or should I expose her for was parked at the house. I her poor behavior? I have even took the time to look kept this whole incident in the backyard to see if to myself so far, not even they were outside. After confiding in my wife or trying a second time at the son. front door, I left. — S. Sure enough, after 10 Wrong, you mean — not minutes, my DIL showed wronged. You’re two letters up at the school with my over the line. granddaughter in tow. I OK, you have a dropapproached my DIL and said I was just at her house in-unannounced-type relationship with your son but nobody was apparently and daughter-in-law. That’s home. She acknowledged great. It’s also good of you that she was there and to have attempted to make saw me at the door, but your DIL’s life easier by simply blew it off saying timing your trip the way she was running late for you did. In general, small school. I then said to her favors like offering a lift that I had knocked on the to preschool are rescues door several times with in miniature for parents of no answer. Again she young kids. responded only that she But the general good was running late and chose intentions of your stopping by don’t outweigh the missteps you made when you got there. For one, being on a drop-in basis with someone doesn’t mean every dropin will be welcome; being casual on your side of the door means she can be casual on her side, too. Plus, you popped by apparently as DIL was in full scramble mode to get her child to school on time. She had every right not to answer the door, just as people have every right not to pick up the phone when they know they’re unable to talk. Had she been in the shower, or changing her clothes, or on the phone, or in tears over somethingor-other she didn’t care to explain, would you still begrudge her ignoring your knock? Respecting people’s privacy means respecting the fact that 1. not all times will be opportune ones for a visit, and 2. they are not obligated to explain that to you in the moment just because you’re on their front stoop. And/or peering in their backyard, but that’s a whole other harrumph. Remember, she had no way of knowing you were there to help; she just knew answering door (equals sign) late. And this is all assuming she told you the truth about being late. People in their own homes do not need to explain their reasons for declining to answer the door, which means they are absolutely entitled to give a vague explanation like, “I didn’t answer because I was running late.” You think she “blew it off,” but maybe she had an excellent reason you’re just not entitled to know. Yes, her explanation ought to have started with, “I’m sorry.” That’s a point in your favor. Is it one worth trashing your relationship for? At this point, if anything, the intense grudge you’re nursing right now is the worst offense of them all to arise from this (non-) incident. So petty. Your needs and feelings were not then, are not now, and are rightfully not going to be her priority! She has her immediate family and herself to think about first — and she welcomes you freely, it seems, when circumstances allow her to. On a regular basis, judging from your account. You have to allow people their reasonable priorities, even when yours might differ, if you want to occupy a harmonious place in their lives. The lift to preschool was meant as a small favor; please consider the significant favor of inclining yourself to let her off the hook. To contact Carolyn Hax, e-mail tellme@washpost. com; fax 1-202-334-5669; or write “Tell Me About It,” c/o The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St., NW, Washington, D.C. 20071. lemonadeday.org. Every Saturday Farmers markets : Two local farmers markets operate on Saturdays. The Farmers Market at the McMinnville Grange is open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 1700 S.W. Old Sheridan Road; for more information, call 503-8431594. The Willamina market is open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. through today, Oct. 18, at the Willamina Community Campus, 266 S.E. Washington St.; for more information, call 503-8762061. The Granary Marketplace is open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays at 755 N. Alpine St., McMinnville; for more information, call 503-435-8417. Fundraising concert : Yamhill County local band Cascade Rye, playing Americana, folk, rock, pop, country and the blues, will be in concert from 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 28, at the Monroe Event Center, 121 S.W. Monroe St., Sheridan. Cost is $25 at the door and includes their new CD, food and a beverage. The event is a send off fundraiser for the band that is going to Austin to promote their new CD. For more information, contact Susan Chamberlain at [email protected] or 971-599-1594. Appointed Special Advocates. For more information, contact Jennifer Behnke at jsbehnke@ gmail.com or 503-687-1313. Events Calendar TUESDAY, FEB. 24 Local economics : Jody Christensen, Chad Freeman and Mitchell Gee will speak at an Economic Forum lunch, a 2015 forecast for city, county and state, from noon to 1 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 24, in the McMinnville Grand Ballroom, 325 N.E. Third St. Cost for the public is $15; reservations are required by Feb. 23 to the McMinnville Area Chamber of Commerce at [email protected] or 503472-6196. THURSDAY, FEB. 26 Seniors’ topics : End-of-life choices will be explored at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Feb. 26, in the Manor Activity Room at Hillside, 900 N.W. Hill Road, McMinnville. For more information on the free “What to Pack for Your Last Journey”presentation, call 1-800-275-2384. Sports journalism : (Note time change.) Pro baseball player Scott Brosius, Chris Ballard and Lindsay Schnell of Sports Illustrated and a sports agent from Portland will speak at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 26, in Melrose Hall’s auditorium, Linfield College. For more information about the free event, contact Brad Thompson at 503-8832291 or [email protected]. 1810 Astoria : Author Peter Stark will discuss his book “Astoria” about the Astor Expedition at 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 26, at Third Street Books, 320 N.E. Third St., McMinnville, as part of the public library’s Conversation Project. For more information about the free event, e-mail [email protected]. FRIDAY, FEB. 27 NRA fundraiser : The Friends of NRA will hold a dinner and auction at 5:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 27, in the Leslie Lewis Pavilion at Yamhill County Fairgrounds on Northeast Lafayette Avenue, McMinnville. Half the proceeds will remain in Oregon. Prime rib dinners (chicken option available) and the auction, which includes firearms, knives, camping gear and NRA merchandise, cost $40. For more information and invitations, visit http:// friendsofnra.org or e-mail [email protected]. Swing dancing : The Recording Studio Project at the Chehalem Cultural Center will hold a swing dance with lessons from 6:30 to 10 p.m. Friday, Feb. 27, in the CCC grand ballroom, 415 E. Sheridan St., Newberg. Lessons cost $5; admission is $8, $6 for students and seniors, $5 for members. For more information, contact Dylan Beam at [email protected] or 503-476-6549, or visit www.chehalemculturalcenter.org. Biblical entertainment : A nonprofit theater group will present its sixth annual show, “Samson, God’s One-Man Army,” opening Friday, Feb. 27, and running through Sunday, March 8, at Northside Community Church, 1800 Hoskins St., Newberg. Curtain times are 7 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 3 p.m. Sundays. The MCO show includes orchestra, singing and dancing. Tickets cost $10, online or at the door. For more information, contact Sherri Janzen at 503-932-3187 or mcoproductions sherri@hot mail.com. Newberg theater : Valley Repertory Theatre will present “All My Sons,” a tragedy of the American dream, from Feb. 27 to March 15 at the Masonic Lodge, 402 E. Sheridan St., Newberg. Curtain times are 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays. Tickets cost $15, $12 seniors, $10 children. Shows on March 1 and 8 are pay-whatyou-will. For more information or tickets, call 971-832-9202 or visit www.valleyrep.org. Gallery play : Gallery Theater will present “The Mystery of Edwin Drood” at 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 3 p.m. Sundays, Feb. 27-March 21, at 210 N.E. Ford St., McMinnville. Tickets cost $14, $12 for students and ages 62 and older. For more information, visit www. gallerytheater.org or call 503472-2227. SATURDAY, FEB. 28 Youth entrepreneurs : The McMinnville Area Chamber of Commerce will kick off Lemonade Day from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 28, at the Grain Statio Brew Works, 755 N.E. Alpine St., McMInnville. The free learning program teaches kids how to start, own and operate their own businesses; lemonade stands to open Saturday, May 2. To participate as a youth or mentor, register at mcminville. SUNDAY, MARCH 1 Children’s concert : The Newberg Community Band will present a free circus-themed concert for children of all ages at 2:30 Sunday, March 1, in Bauman Auditorium at George Fox University in Newberg. For more information, contact Marilyn Godfrey at godfreykitty@ gmail.com. Scout program : The Sea Scout program is hosting an open house from 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday, March 1, at McMinnville Cooperative Ministries, 544, N.E. Second St. The free event teaches about the program by playing games and visiting with current members. For more information, contact Karen Peterson at 503-936-6020 or [email protected]. Concert fundraiser : The Occasional Quartet and Sky Bound Blue will perform a Triple Play for Kids at 7 p.m. Sunday, March 1, in the McMinnville Grand Ballroom, 325 N.E. Third St. Donations will be accepted for Juliette’s House, A Family Place relief nursery and Court TUESDAY, MARCH 3 Relief nursery : A Family Place relief nursery will hold its second annual Champions for Children lunch from noon to 1 p.m. Tuesday, March 3, in the McMinnville Grand Ballroom, 325 N.E. Third St., McMinnville. Lunch is complimentary; reservations are requested to Elaine at [email protected] or 503472-4020. Soup kitchen : The Soup Kitchen at St. Barnabas invites the community to its 25 th anniversary celebration with spaghetti and cake from 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesday, March 3, at 822 S.W. Second St., McMinnville. For more information, call 503472-3711. Conservation, veterans : The Yamhill Soil & Water Conservation District will show “Ground Operations,” a movie about the Veterans (blueberry) Farm, at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 3, in the Moonlight Theater, 433 N.E. Third St., McMinnville. For more information on the free event, contact Marie Vicksta at marie@ yamhillswcd.org or 503-4726403. class reunions McMinnville High School: Class of 1975 will hold a 40th class reunion with dinner and dancing starting at 5:30 Saturday, Sept. 12, in the McMinnville Grand Ballroom, 325 N.E. Third St. Organizers would appreciate help with contacting classmates. Early bird registration costs $40, $75 for a couple. Prices increase after June 15 and Aug. 31. For more information, visit www. machigh75.com or contact Cheryl (Benson) Walker at [email protected] or 503-338-8149. To list a local class reunion, send details to the News-Register, call 503-472-5114, ext. 246, or e-mail to events@newsregister. com. FEATURED EVENTS OF THE YAMHILL VALLEY S A M S ON GOD’S ONE-MAN ARMY a musical by marilyn Olson Northside Community Church Feb 27, 28 March 1, 6, 7, 8 1800 Hoskins St, Newberg Elsinor Theater March 13 170 High St. SE, Salem MCOProductions.net Yamhill Valley Calendar Featured Events Package Want your event listed here? We’ll help get your special event the attention it deserves! For pricing and more information, contact us at 503.472.5114 or [email protected] Go to www.YamhillValley.com/events for a complete list of events B4 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon offbeat oregon Roseburg train robbery the sky, which suggested the explosion was an accident — maybe a catastrophic one. Lindsey put the rifle down and, grabIt was just another work bing an ax and a bucket, night for the engineer and ran to help put out the fire crew of the No. 15 Califor- and rescue the victims. nia Express Jan. 29, 1897. Alas, upon arriving he They’d passed all the long, realized he’d brought the lonely stretches where train wrong tools. It was indeed robbers liked to operate a robbery. and were traveling through It had started off well settled country, steaming enough for the robbers. past the little community of After the engineer pulled Shady Point; in three miles, up at the signal light, the they’d be pulling into signaler gave him a good Roseburg. When a man look at the business end with a lantern started sigof a revolver; then another naling frantically for their robber stepped around the train to stop, they coal tender to join weren’t particularly him. This second suspicious. robber, apparently But they probwanting to make ably should have sure Morris didn’t been. A few months get any heroic previously, Judge ideas, sent a couple Charles Bellinger bullets singing past had overturned his ears — which the conviction of Finn J.D. John, alerted the fireman, two men who had an instructor Mr. Hendricks, as almost certainly at OSU, writes to what was going robbed the same about unusual on. train in Cow Creek and littleHendricks found known aspects himself on the Canyon in 1895 of Oregon — Jack Case and other side of the history. James Poole. The engine from both two had been seen bandits. The town around Roseburg. of Roseburg was less than And as if they weren’t three miles away. So he trouble enough, another leaped from the train and notorious train robber, Bob sprinted for his life toward Hinman, was rumored to the cover of a nearby be hiding in town after embankment, as the cursbreaking out of prison in ing robbers hustled to get The Dalles. around the train in time to The unsuspecting engishoot him down. For an neer — a man named Mr. instant, he was exposed to Morris (the newspapers their fire as he vaulted over supplied no first names a short wire fence — if the for anyone involved in this robbers had been ready, story) — promptly reached they could have picked for the brake and started him off easily — but they the laborious process of weren’t, and, after he was bringing the train to a halt. over it, he was gone. A few minutes later, a There was nothing for it neighboring farmer named but to work fast. Hendricks Mr. Lindsey heard a huge would cover the three miles explosion by the railroad to Roseburg in less than a tracks. The train crew may half hour and a mounted not have been thinking of posse would be on its way robbers, but Lindsey sure minutes after. was. He reached for his The robbers hurried to Winchester and started collect the train crew as toward the railroad tracks hostages and, so to speak, — then stopped short. In apply for admission to the distance he could see the express car — where flames starting to brighten all the good stuff was located. The escape of Hendricks probably meant they wouldn’t have time to crack the huge express safe, but there would probably be other things. Having gathered from all the pistol shots what was going on, the express messenger, a Mr. Butler, readied his shotgun and waited to see what would develop. Soon someone thumped on his main door. “Open up here, or I’ll blow you to hell,” the robber yelled. Cautiously leaning out the other door, Butler cut loose with a charge of buckshot at the shadow beating on the side of the car — but he must have shot high, because the robber whipped around and fired at his muzzle flash. The woodwork behind Butler’s head splintered. Butler pulled the trigger again, but his second barrel didn’t fire. Dodging back into the car, he started feeling around for his box of shotgun shells. “As I was groping around to find it he suddenly threw a big bomb in the car, and I knew it was time to get out,” Butler told the Roseburg Plaindealer afterward. “I was taking a good many chances to get out, but I knew that if I had stayed there I would be blown to pieces the next minute. I jumped out on the river side of the car, a jump of about six feet, and ran, gun in hand, into the coach behind. The next minute, the bomb blew up with a terrible explosion, splintering the window glass in the coach I was in and tearing the express car nearly to pieces.” This was the explosion farmer Lindsey had heard, and it started the fire he’d seen. The robbers grabbed what they could, forced their way into the mail car and ransacked the registered-mail pouch. But they made no move to bother the passengers — either Freezer them: sprinkled on hot cereal, baked into muffins, pancakes or quick bread, made into cobbler, crisp or pie. Mine is full of sour cherries, some of which I dug out recently, in defiance of my freezer’s annoying tendency to show me the same object every day for two weeks when it isn’t what I’m looking for, and then hide it when it is. I wrestled out two small containers, however, in order to try a new recipe; sufganiyot; a type of Hanukkah doughnut. No time like the middle of winter to try out a Bold bandits robbed express train three miles from Roseburg Continued from B1 two from the garage root cellar, a handful of dried beans, a jar of canned tomatoes, and you’re well on your way to dinner, with no shopping required. An Italian standby, the soup or stew-like pasta fagioli (fazool! It’s fun to say, too), lends itself perfectly to the pantry approach, relying as it does on small pasta, beans, herbs and sometimes canned tomatoes or tomato sauce. The name means pasta and beans; traditional versions may be made with or without meat. Featuring hamburger, it was a staple of my childhood, but I never liked it, until I made a vegetarian version as an adult. That was delicious. It’s perfectly suited to winter cooking, and is one of those dishes that every cook makes uniquely his or her own. Is the freezer full of berries you thought you’d enjoy in smoothies all winter, only to discover you don’t like drinking smoothies when it’s cold? Or don’t like, period? Explore other uses for Submitted postcard A passenger train passes through the town of Shasta Springs, making for the Oregon border, around 1910. The train robbed near Roseburg in 1897 had passed through this town a few hours earlier. because they were aware that a posse was probably already on its way, or because they worried about being shot or “made” by one of the passengers. In any case, “the passengers were not subjected to the mortification and indignity, to say nothing of the financial loss, of a ‘stand and deliver’ ordeal,” the Plaindealer writes. “Nevertheless, there was a hasty concealment of valuables and those who were traveling with their wives, knowing the gallantry of the Western bandit, gave their purses into the keeping of the weaker half.” But the robbers merely grabbed what they could from the wreckage of the express and mail cars and galloped away. Behind them, they left the burning express car in such a shambles that no one was ever able to figure out how much valuable property was stolen and how much simply destroyed or burned up. They never did figure out for sure who the robbers were. The next day, Jack Case emphatically denied he’d had anything to do with the job. And in fact, he probably hadn’t. It was not Case’s style to neglect to rob the passengers. Perhaps aware that he’d be the first suspect, he left the town almost immediately, new recipe. Especially one for doughnuts. This particular recipe, which I found online, was unsweetened, with a very simple sour cherry filling. They were tasty, albeit not sweet, and the reserved thawed cherry juice made a delicious addition to hot chocolate. Next time, though, I might add a little sugar to the dough , and stir some cherry jam into the filling. Not much, but a little. Enjoy your own hearty winter specialties. The weather may not be frightful, but comfort food is still delightful. Senior Activities The McMinnville Senior Center offers a variety of activities each week. The center, located at 2250 N.E. McDaniel Lane, is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mondays and Thursdays; 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays; and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Fridays. The center is closed on major holidays. More information is available by calling 503-435-0407. Farm-to-Table: Seniors can travel to Bob’s Red Mill and learn about the world of grains and quartz stone grinding, touring the manufacturing facility with a “grain guide.” A freshly prepared lunch at Bob’s Red Barn is included as well as a visit to Savory Spice to find fresh spices. The trip then shows participants what urban homesteading is all about at Portland Homestead Supply Co. The last stop will be at Moreland Farmers Panty. Using a farm-to-table model, pantry owners recently converted in an historic building, giving it an old-style general store feeling. Vendors display their groceries and wares in the tradition of a roadside farm stand. The trip runs from 8:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 25. Cost: $62 Protecting What’s Important: Kevin Gebhart of Edward Jones Investments leads a retirement planning workshop at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 24. Cost: $2 Mosaic Workshop: Students arrange tiles into your own design in this class taught by Lynn Takata that runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 28. Registration is required by Wednesday, Feb. 25. Participants are asked to bring safety goggles or glasses. A $10 supply fee is paid to instructor. Cost: $50 Reiki: A class on reiki helps reduce stress, stimulate the immune system, increase energy and relieve the pain and symptoms of health conditions. The clasds is taught by Loretta Rossini with individual 20-minute sessions available by appointment from 9 a.m. to noon Monday, March 2. Cost: $20 Hearing Screenings: Greg Arnone from McMinnville Hearing Center Inc. provides hearing screenings and hearing aid checks from 11 a.m. to noon Wednesday, March 4. He will clean hearing aids, change batteries and answer questions. Cost: Free Personal Support: A support group for people dealing with fibromyalgia, chronic pain, chronic fatigue and multiple sclerosis meets from 12:30 to 1:45 p.m. Monday, March 2. Cost: Free and shooting range, 15955 N.E. Quarry Road, Newberg. Information: 503-472-7667 or www. nrpc.net. Providence Medical Center, 1001 Providence Drive, Newberg. For caregivers of older adults. Information: 503-5371549 or jill.smith2@providence. org. Democratic Party: 6 p.m., Newberg Izzy’s. Information: 503-857-0944, [email protected] or www.ycdemocrats. org. Mac Spinners: 6 p.m., Oregon Knitting Co., 309 N.E. Baker St., McMinnville. Information: Carol, 503-876-2152, suzukawa@ embarqmail.com. Native Plant Society: 6:45 to 8:45 p.m., Carnegie Room, McMinnville Public Library, 225 N.W. Adams St.. Photographer and artist Tanya Harvey of Eugene will show photos of the “rock stars” of the Western Cascades and bring her art for sale. Information: Lisa Blackburn, 503538-3976, www.npsoregon.org. -- News-Register staff monthly meetings TUESDAY, FEB. 24 Christian Chamber of Commerce: 7:30-9 a.m. Windrose Conference Center, 809 W. First St., Newberg. Breakfast costs $5. Information: 503-928-8354 or www.cccnw.net. Canvas Connection Needlepoint: 10 a.m., St. Barnabas Episcopal Church, 822 S.W. Second St., McMinnville. Information: Lynda Nyseth, 503-835-2044, or Marcia, 503472-3980. Caregivers’ Support: 3 p.m., health care center, Hillside Terrace, 440 N.W. Hillside Park Way, McMinnville. Information: Shanena Perez, 503-472-9534. Task Force Against Sex Trafficking: 5:30 p.m., Linfield College library. Information: Marti Crook, [email protected]. AMVETS Post No. 1993: 6 p.m., American Legion, 126 N.E. Atlantic St., McMinnville. Information: 503-435-2218 or John Vernon Peterson, 971-2419828. Camera Club: 6:30 p.m. clinic, Room 201, McMinnville Community Center, 600 N.E. Evans St., McMinnville. Information: Steve Singleton, 971-237-9314 or http://yamhillcameraclub.org. Women for Agriculture: 7 p.m., Citizen’s Bank, 455 N.E. Baker St., McMinnville. Information: 503-864-2737. Dundee Community Committee: 7 p.m., Dundee City Hall, 401 Trade St. Information: 1-503538-5657. Diabetic Support: 7-8 p.m., WVMC classrooms, 2700 N.E. Stratus Ave., McMinnville. Information: [email protected] or 503-472-5749. Newberg Rifle and Pistol Club: 7 p.m. Gibbs Community Center WEDNESDAY, FEB. 25 Bitter Monks pub runners: 5:30 p.m., Bitter Monk, 250 N.E. Third St., McMinnville. Information: Rebecca Quandt, 503-472-3605, www.facebook. com/thebittermonk. Cultural Coalition: 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Location and information: Deb Broocks, 503-662-3316 or [email protected]. American Legion Riders: 7 p.m., American Legion, 126 N.E. Atlantic St., McMinnville. Veterans motorcycle group. Information: 503-435-2218. THURSDAY, FEB. 26 Caregiver Support: 1:30-3 p.m., making his way north to Washington, where he apparently hoped to find fresher pickings. He did — and he found something else, too. About halfway between Tacoma and Steilacoom in Washington, he threw down “the gauntlet” on a streetcar full of passengers and started relieving them of their valuables. One of his victims — the superintendent of the streetcar line, a Mr. Dame — pulled a revolver on him. The air for a moment was thick with smoke and lead, and when it cleared away, Mr. Dame had been shot in the arm and one of the passengers had taken a bullet in his leg. As for Jack Case, he was lying in the gravel beside the car, stone dead. (Sources: Roseburg Plaindealer: 2-01, 2-04 and 5-24, 1897; The Dalles Chronicle, 2-03-1897; Sacramento Union, 2-02-1897 Wilson, R. Michael. More Frontier Justice in the Wild West. Helena: Twodot, 2014) Finn J.D. John is author of “Wicked Portland,” a book about the dark side of Oregon’s metropolis in the 1800s. He produces a daily podcast, reading archives from this column, at ofor.us/p. To contact him or suggest a topic: finn@ offbeatoregon.com, twitter. com/OffbeatOregon, or 541-357-2222 Weekly sudoku Today’s solution appears on Page B8. Linda Thistle/© King Features Syndicate. World rights reserved. Place a number in the empty boxes in such a way that each row across, each column down and each small 9-box square contains all of the numbers from one to nine. level: CHALLENGING For the week oF February 23 — February 27 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) There could be some negative reaction to your tough stance when making a recent decision. But overall, your efforts result in well-earned recognition and all that can follow from that. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Your financial situation seems confusing, even for the fiscally savvy Bovine. Maybe it’s the conflicting advice you’re getting. Check it out before things get too tangled to unknot. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) A relaxed attitude goes a long way in helping you deal with any of life’s irritants that might be popping up this week. You’re also a reassuring role model for others in the same situation. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Your aspect favors creativity, which should persuade you to work on your artistic projects. If time is a problem, prioritize your commitments so that your work isn’t compromised. LEO (July 23 to August 22) Scrutinize all the job offers that interest you. Most are honest and worth considering. But a few might not be completely forthcoming about what the job is and what the salary and benefits are. VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) An unexpected snafu could delay the completion of a project you’re eager to finish. Find out what’s causing it, fix it, and if you need help, don’t be shy about asking for it. Good luck. LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) An idea that could be helpful to you comes from an unlikely source. Listen to it. Discuss it. If necessary, adjust it. If it looks as if it might work out quite well, go ahead and use it. SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) Be careful about allowing someone to share a very personal secret with you. This could cause problems down the line with others who are involved in that person’s private life. SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) A cooling down of a relationship could be the result of neglect, unintended or not. To save it from icing over, you need to warm it up with a large dose of hot Sagittarius passion. CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) This is a good time to get involved with a number of family matters that involve money and other issues that might jeopardize the closeness between and among family members. AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) Cheer up. That difficult person who appears to be deliberately stalling your project might just need to be reassured of the value she or he brings to it. PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Good news! Expect to feel re-energized now that you’ve gone through that stressful energy-depleting period involving a lot of changes. Now, go out there and show them what you can do. BORN THIS WEEK: You have a warm, giving nature that inspires many to follow your example. News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon Tuesday, February 24, 2015 B5 Legal Notices call for bids CALL FOR BIDS February 20, 2015 The Director of Public Works, Yamhill County, McMinnville, Oregon, will receive sealed bids until March 9, 2015, at 2:00 p, m. for the” YAMHILL COUNTY 2015 ROAD SIGN KIOSK PROJECT.” The work will consist of providing two Sign Kiosk frames (base bid two units, with one additional unit to be added to the order if elected by Yamhill County) to be placed (by county) along county roads in Yamhill County, Oregon AND an additional panel to be installed on each of the two existing kiosks. Plans and Specifications may be obtained from the Yamhill County Department of Public Works, 2060 Lafayette Avenue, McMinnville, Oregon 97128. Telephone #(503) 434-7515 Bids shall be mailed or delivered to William Gille P.E., County Engineer at the above address, no later than March 9, 2015, at 2:00 p.m. at which time they will be publicly opened and read at the same location. Bids may not be submitted by facsimile or electronic means. Bids shall be submitted in a sealed envelope plainly marked “ YAMHILL COUNTY 2015 ROAD SIGN KIOSK PROJECT” and shall show the name and address of the bidder on the outside. No bid will be received or considered by the County Engineer unless the bid contains a statement by the bidder that the provisions of ORS 279C.530 shall be complied with. Each bidder must identify whether the bidder is a resident bidder, as defined in ORS 279A.120. If a bid is received from a non-resident bidder, the provisions outlined in ORS 279A.120 will apply to said bid after the bid is opened and before the contract is awarded. The Board of Commissioners, Yamhill County, reserves the right to waive formalities and to reject any or all bids that do not comply with prescribed public contracting procedures and requirements, including the requirement to demonstrate the bidders responsibility under ORS279C.375(3)(b), or if Yamhill County finds that it is in the public interest to do so. BY ORDER OF YAMHILL COUNTY Board of Commissioners / s/ John F. Phelan Director Department of Public Works NR Published February 24, 2015 public notice PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Yamhill County Planning Director has approved the following request: L-04-15, a request by Thomas Smith for approval of a property line adjustment to transfer approximately 1.13 acres from Tax Lot 5427600 to Tax Lot 5422-400. The resulting parcels would be approximately 2.5 and 53.86 acres. The properties are located at 7001 and 7005 SE Amity Road, Amity. This application was reviewed based on criteria in Sections 402.09(B.2) of the Yamhill County Zoning Ordinance and the Yamhill County Land Division Ordinance. Any person wishing to appeal this decision to the Board of County Commissioners must submit the request on an approved appeal form, accompanied by $250.00, by March 11, 2015. For additional information, contact the Planning Department at 503-434-7516. Dated February 24, 2015, by Michael Brandt, Planning Director. NR Published February 24, 2015 civil summons IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF YAMHILL Nationstar Mortgage LLC, Plaintiff, vs. JAMES D. KORDICH; LAFAYETTE HIGHLANDS PHASE I HOME OWNER’S ASSOCIATION; MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC.; MORTGAGEIT, INC.; TEHA VILBRANDT; STATE OF OREGON; OCCUPANTS OF THE PREMISES Defendants. No. 14CV16995 CIVIL SUMMONS TO THE DEFENDANTS: James D. Kordich, Occupants of the Premises and Teha Vilbrandt NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY! A lawsuit has been started against you in the above-entitled Court by Nationstar Mortgage LLC, Plaintiff. Plaintiff’s claim is stated in the written Complaint, a copy of which is on file at the Yamhill County Courthouse. You must “appear” in this case or the other side will win automatically. To “appear” you must file with the court a legal paper called a “motion” or “answer.” The “motion” or “answer” must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff’s attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service on the plaintiff. The object of the complaint is to foreclose a deed of trust dated March 30, 2006 and recorded as Recorder’s Fee No. 200607253 given by James D. Kordich on property commonly known as 1054 East 14th Street, Lafayette, OR 97127 and legally described as: Lot 66, LAFAYETTE HIGHLANDS, in the City of Lafayette, Yamhill County, Oregon. The complaint seeks to foreclose and terminate all interest of James D. Kordich, Occupants of the Premises and Teha Vilbrandt and all other interests in the property. The “motion” or “answer” (or “reply”) must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein along with the required filing fee. The date of first publication of the summons is February 24, 2015. If you are in the active military service of the United States, or believe that you may be entitled to protection of the SCRA, please contact our office. If you do not contact us, we will report to the court that we do not believe that you are protected under the SCRA. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar’s Lawyer Referral Service online at www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. Attorneys for Plaintiff, SHAPIRO & SUTHERLAND, LLC / s/. Mary Hannon Mary Hannon # 131074 [[email protected]] 7632 SW Durham Road, Suite 350, Tigard, OR 97224 (360)260-2253; Fax (360)2602285 NR Published February 24, March 3, 10, 17, 2015 Home Shopping? Check HomeFinder on newsregister.com public notice NOTICE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS, READ THIS NOTICE CAREFULLY. You must “claim” an interest in the seized property described below or you will automatically lose any interest you may have. To “claim” you must file with the “forfeiture counsel” listed below, a legal paper called a “claim”. The claim shall be signed by the claimant under penalty of perjury and shall set forth all of the following. The claim must include a) your true name, b) the address at which you will accept future mailings from the court for forfeiture counsel, and c), a statement that you have an interest in the seized property. The deadline for filing is 21 days from the date of the last publication of this notice. Where to file a “claim” and for more information: FORFEITURE COUNSEL: Yamhill County District Attorney’s Office Phone 503-434-7539 Address: 535 E. 5th Street, McMinnville, Or. 97128 SEIZING AGENCY: Yamhill County Interagency Narcotics Team Phone 503-472-6565 Address: 535 E. 5th Street, McMinnville, Or. 97128 IN THE MATTER OF CIVIL FORFEITURE OF 1: 2004 FORD F150 PICKUP BLACK IN COLOR DISPLAYING OREGON LICENSE PLATE 016ECZ, VIN#1FTPW145X4KB01730. 2: 2005 SCHWINN SCOOTER DISPLAYING VIN PLATE #LD5TCBP651001768. 3: BLACK COLORED WOOD AND METAL FLATBED TRAILER WITH SIDE AND END WOOD RACK. NO SN OR VIN. 4: 1986 HARLEY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE, BLUE AND CROME IN COLOR DISPLAYING VIN#HD4CAM13GY125957. 5: 1993 KAWASAKI MOTORCYCLE DISPLAYING OREGON LICENSE PLATE M/6 81260, VIN#JKAZX4D13PB508727. YCINT case #YCT 14-20 Seized from: : JAQUES, CORY ALLYN SUMMARY STATEMENT OF BASIS FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE On the 29th day of January 2015 the above described property was seized for civil forfeiture by the Yamhill County Interagency Narcotics Team. The property is subject to forfeiture under ORS Chapter 131A- Civil Forfeiture as proceeds, profits, and / or the solicitation, attempt or conspiracy to commit the following prohibited conduct: possession and delivery of a controlled substance. Forfeiture means that the property will be transferred to the government and persons with any interest in the property will be deprived of that interest without compensation because of the use of acquisition of the property in or through prohibited conduct as defined in Oregon law. NR Published February 24, March 3, 10, 17, 2015 public hearing Notice to Modify Transportation System Development Charges (SDC) As required by Oregon law, ORS 223.304, the City of McMinnville is providing at least ninety (90) days notice that it intends to hold a public hearing to consider modifications to the Transportation System Development Charge (SDC) rates. A public hearing to take testimony regarding the proposed Transportation SDC modifications is scheduled for 7:00 pm on May 26, 2015, at the McMinnville Civic Hall, 200 NE Second Street, McMinnville, OR 97128. CONTINUED ON PAGE B6 SOLUTION ON PAGE B8 B6 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon Legal Notices (cont’d) CONTINUED FROM PAGE B5 To adopt the changes in McMinnville’s Transportation SDCs, Oregon law requires the City to provide the methodology supporting the SDC modifications for public inspection sixty (60) days prior to the first public hearing. The written information setting out the methodology to modify the Transportation SDC and associated charges will be available for review during the required sixty (60) day period prior to the public hearing at the City Engineer’s office at 231 NE Fifth Street, McMinnville, OR 97128, or by calling (503) 434-7312. If you have questions or comments please contact: Mike Bisset Community Development Director / City Engineer 231 NE Fifth Street McMinnville, OR 97128 Phone: (503) 434-7312 Email: mike.bisset@ ci.mcminnville.or.us NR Published February 24, 2015 civil summons IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF YAMHILL Federal National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”), Plaintiff, vs. KATHLEEN M. DAVIS; MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC.; MORTGAGE MARKET, INC.; BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.; JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A.; PARTIES IN POSSESSION Defendants. No. 15CV00506 CIVIL SUMMONS TO THE DEFENDANTS: Kathleen M. Davis and Parties in Possession NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY! A lawsuit has been started against you in the above-entitled Court by Federal National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”), Plaintiff. Plaintiff’s claim is stated in the written Complaint, a copy of which is on file at the Yamhill County Courthouse. You must “appear” in this case or the other side will win automatically. To “appear” you must file with the court a legal paper called a “motion” or “answer.” The “motion” or “answer” must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff’s attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service on the plaintiff. The object of the complaint is to foreclose a deed of trust dated March 15, 2011 and recorded as Recorder’s Fee No. 201103949 given by Kathleen M Davis, a married woman as her sole and separate property, her heirs, successors and assigns. on property commonly known as 617 Donald Court, Newberg, OR 97132 and legally described as: Lot 10, Block 3, BUCKLEY’S MOUNTAIN VIEW PARK in the City of Newberg, County of Yamhill and State of Oregon. The complaint seeks to foreclose and terminate all interest of Kathleen M. Davis and Parties in Possession and all other interests in the property. The “motion” or “answer” (or “reply”) must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein along with the required filing fee. The date of first publication of the summons is February 24, 2015. If you are in the active military service of the United States, or believe that you may be entitled to protection of the SCRA, please contact our office. If you do not contact us, we will report to the court that we do not believe that you are protected under the SCRA. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar’s Lawyer Referral Service online at www. oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. Attorneys for Plaintiff, SHAPIRO & SUTHERLAND, LLC / s/. Mary Hannon Mary Hannon # 131074 [[email protected]] 7632 SW Durham Road, Suite 350, Tigard, OR 97224 (360)260-2253; Fax (360)2602285 NR Published February 24, March 3, 10, 17, 2015 notice of public sale At Sheridan Self Storage, 1017 W Main, Sheridan 503-8433333 Date: March 13, 2015 Time: 11:30 AM Units to be sold by auction: Christopher Huntley: 41 Cash only. Sale is subject to cancellation. NR Published February 24, March 3, 2015 notice to interested persons IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF YAMHILL Probate Department In the Matter of the Estate of NANCY LINGSCHEIT COLVIN, Deceased. Case No. 15PB00512 NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Charles Michael Colvin has been appointed Personal Representative of the above-captioned estate. All persons having claims against the estate are required to present them with vouchers attached, to the Personal Representative in care of 820 NE 19TH Street, McMinnville, Oregon 97128, within four months after the date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred . All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the court, the Personal Representative, or the lawyers for the Personal Representative, Haugeberg, Rueter, Gowell, Fredricks & Higgins, PC. Dated and first published on February 17, 2015. / s/ Douglas S. Fredricks, OSB #832041 Personal Representative Charles Michael Colvin 820 N E 19th Street McMinnville, OR 97128 Telephone: 503-883-3052 Of Attorneys for Personal Representative Dianne L. Haugeberg, OSB #035171 Haugeberg, Rueter, Gowell, Fredricks & Higgins, PC P.O. Box 480 McMinnville, OR 97128-0480 Telephone: 503-472-5141 Facsimile: 503-472-4713 e-Mail dlhaugeberg@hrg lawyers.com NR Published February 17, 24, March 3, 2015 it sold? Want 1. Call 503-472-SELL 2. Place a classified ad 3. Stand by the phone! notice to interested persons IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF YAMHILL In the Matter of the Estate of LILLIAN E. SATTLER, Deceased. Probate Department Case No. 15PB00460 NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Steven E. Sattler has been appointed Personal Representative of the above-captioned estate. All persons having claims against the estate are required to present them, with vouchers attached, to the Personal Representatives in care of 23326 SW Price Terrace, Sherwood, Oregon 97140 within four months after the date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the court, the Personal Representative, or the lawyers for the Personal Representative, Haugeberg, Rueter, Gowell, Fredricks & Higgins, PC. Dated and first published on February 10, 2015 s/ s Douglas S. Fredricks, OSB #832041 Personal Representative Steven E. Sattler 23326 SW Price Terrace Sherwood, OR 97128 Telephone: 971.217-3214 Attorneys for Personal Representative Douglas S. Fredricks, OSB #832041 Haugeberg, Rueter, Gowell, Fredricks & Higgins, PC P.O. Box 480 McMinnville, OR 97128-0480 Telephone: 503-472-5141 Facsimile: 503-472-4713 e-Mail: [email protected] NR Published February 10, 17, 24, 2015 summons by publication IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE STATE OF OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF YAMHILL WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., its successors in interest and/ or assigns, Plaintiff UNKNOWN HEIRS OF HOWARD D. MICHAEL; DONALD L. MICHAEL; DAVID D. MICHAEL AKA DAVID DEWEY MICHAEL; LAURA K. MICHAEL-TAYLOR; UNITED STATE OF AMERICA; STATE OF OREGON; OCCUPANTS OF THE PREMISES; AND THE REAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 515 SOUTHWEST BROCKWOOD AVENUE, MCMINNVILLE, OREGON 97128, Defendants. Case No. 14CV18014 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION TO THE DEFENDANTS: UNKNOWN HEIRS OF HOWARD D. MICHAEL AND THE REAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 515 SOUTHWEST BROCKWOOD AVENUE, MCMINNVILLE, OREGON 97128: In the name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the aboveentitled Court and cause on or before the expiration of 30 days from the date of the first publication of this summons. The date of first publication in this matter is February 10, 2015. If you fail timely to appear and answer, plaintiff will apply to the aboveentitled court for the relief prayed for in its complaint. This is a judicial foreclosure of a deed of trust in which the plaintiff requests that the plaintiff be allowed to foreclose your interest in the following described real property: A PART OF LOT 1, BLOCK 2, FIR GROVE SUBDIVISION, IN YAMHILL COUNTY, OREGON, MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF A TRACT OF LAND CONVEYED TO WILLIS C. BAKER AND WIFE BY DEED RECORDED SEPTEMBER 11, 1969 IN FILM VOLUME 77, PAGE 132, DEED AND MORTGAGE RECORDS, YAMHILL COUNTY, OREGON; THENCE WEST ALONG THE SOUTH LINE OF SAID BAKER TRACT, 100 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 89 FEET TO THE SOUTH LINE OF THE NORTH HALF OF SAID BLOCK 2; THENCE EAST ALONG THE SOUTH LINE OF THE NORTH HALF OF SAID BLOCK 2, 100 FEET TO THE WEST LINE OF BROCKWOOD AVENUE; THENCE NORTH ALONG THE WEST LINE OF BROCKWOOD AVENUE, 89 FEET TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING. Commonly known as: 515 Southwest Brockwood Avenue, McMinnville, Oregon 97128. NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS: READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY! A lawsuit has been started against you in the above-entitled court by Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., plaintiff. Plaintiff’s claims are stated in the written complaint, a copy of which was filed with the above-entitled Court. You must “appear” in this case or the other side will win automatically. To “appear” you must file with the court a legal document called a “motion” or “answer.” The “motion” or “answer” (or “reply”) must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff’s attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have any questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar’s Lawyer Referral Service online at www. oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. This summons is issued pursuant to ORCP 7. RCO LEGAL, P.C. Alex Gund, OSB #114067 [email protected] Attorneys for Plaintiff 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste. 400 Portland, OR 97205 P: (503) 977-7840 F: (503) 9777963 NR Published February 10, 17, 24, March 3, 2015 summons by publication IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF YAMHILL NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE, LLC, ITS SUCCESSORS AND/ OR ASSIGNS, Plaintiff, V. VICTOR R. MCKAY; CHARLENE J. MCKAY; CHARLES E. CHRISTIAN; and ALL OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE REAL PROPERTY COMMONLY KNOWN AS 402 DAYTON AVENUE, NEWBERG, OR 97132 Case No. 13CV04840 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION CHARLES E. CHRISTIAN; and ALL OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE REAL PROPERTY COMMONLY KNOWN AS 402 DAYTON AVENUE, NEWBERG, OR 97132 TO DEFENDANTS: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby required to appear and defend the action filed against you in the above-entitled cause within 30 days from the date of service of this Summons upon you; and if you fail to appear and defend, for want thereof, the Plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded therein. PITE DUNCAN, LLP Dated: January 29, 2015 By: s/ s Ryan A. Farmer, OSB #113795 503-345-9878 503-222-2260 (facsimile) [email protected] 621 SW Morrison Street, Suite 425 Portland, OR 97205 Of Attorneys for Plaintiff NOTICE TO DEFENDANT/ DEFENDANTS READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY You must “appear” in this case or the other side will win automatically. To “appear” you must file with the court a legal paper called a “motion” or “answer”. The “motion” or “answer” must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days (or 60 days for Defendant United States or State of Oregon Department of Revenue) along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiffs attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar’s Lawyer Referral Service online at www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metropolitan area) or toll- free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. NR Published February 3, 10, 17, 24, 2015 If the newspapers of a country are filled with good news, the jails of that country will be filled with good people. Daniel Moynihan (1927– 2003 ) US politician, professor We cover it all. Good news and bad. You get it all when you subscribe. Call 503-472-1199 to start home delivery. Employment help wanted INFANT/Toddler Teacher needed Discovery Zone Child Development Center is currently seeking a full-time teacher for our infant/ toddler class. This teacher would be responsible for providing a caring, flexible, and loving environment for children between the ages of six weeks to one year. Minimum requirement: at least 30 college credits in Early Childhood Education or Child Development and six months teaching experience in a certified center. A step 8 on the Oregon Registry or an Associates degree in Early Childhood Education or Child Development is preferred. 503435-1414 Data Entry Operator Elk Creek Forest Products seeks Data Entry Operator Excellent opportunity for individual to join growing lumber company in McMinnville. The basic function of this position is to enter sales and purchase orders into industry specific software. This position will collaborate daily with the sales and purchasing teams. Additional responsibilities will include daily relief phone coverage of the front desk for break periods, filing and other general office duties. Elk Creek specializes in the remanufacturing and distribution of lumber products at a National level. Our company culture includes a positive work environment, integrity and excellence. We highly value each relationship we have within the industry and with those on our team. Every person that works at Elk Creek is an integral part of what makes the company successful. Requirements for this position are: • Math skills, to include basic algebra • Data entry skills, 60-70 wpm with accuracy • Problem solving skills • Ability to analyze and prioritize workload • Excellent communication and listening skills • Outstanding customer service skills • Positive mindset and motivated • Willingness to learn lumber industry and software • High school diploma or equivalent Benefits and 401K offered. Compensation commensurate with experience. All interested candidates please submit your resume to karen@ elkcreekforest.com. No phone calls please. Registered Nurse Well established organization is looking for a RN to complete our team and provide nursing services to our 16 residents with medical and mental health issues. This is a full time position, which includes a comfortable Monday through Friday schedule with holidays off. We are located at 1535 SW Shirley Anne Drive, McMinnville. Please fax resumes to Jen Schnitzer at 503-472-9986 Fir Crest Assisted Living/Memory Care is also looking for a full time RN. Please send resumes to: denise_mcminnville@yahoo. com or fax to 503-883-9462 if interested. CONTINUED ON PAGE B7 SELL IT! (503) 472-SELL Tuesday, February 24, 2015 B7 News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon CONTINUED FROM PAGE B6 Help Wanted Engineering Technician $4,010 - $5,114/ month D.O.E. For additional information on this recruitment, please go to the City’s website at www. ci.mcminnville.or.us or contact Rose Lorenzen at 503.434.7405 or at [email protected]. or.us. The City of McMinnville is EOE. EXPERIENCED Yarder Engineer and Log Truck Drivers. Pre-employment drug test required. Great wages & benefits. Application available online www.crossandcrowninc.com Mail to: 12633 NW Luoto Lane Carlton, OR 97111. For assistance call: 503-852-6176. HS Specialist I Employment Specialist Yamhill County Abacus Program - Full-time $3338-$3659 DOE Benefits. Closes 03/06/15. For info on Job #CS-08 and other current job openings, visit http:// www.co.yamhill.or.us/ hr. EOE. Laborer I and II Yamhill County Public Works – Temporary Full-time $13 - $17/ hour DOE - Closes 03/06/15. For info on Job #PW-09 and other current job openings, visit http://www.co.yamhill.or.us/ hr. EOE. Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Maintenance Worker Office Specialist Part-time Second Cook Help Wanted Life Enrichment Coordinator The City of Lafayette is seeking to hire a Maintenance Worker to maintain infrastructure and building facilities with emphasis on City Parks. This position is fulltime employment with benefits, and entry-level monthly salary is $2,694/month and negotiable DOQ. Possession of a valid Oregon Driver’s License and successful completion of a physical exam are required. Applicant must be able to perform strenuous manual tasks, operate small equipment, and work outdoors in adverse weather conditions. A City Employment Application is required and may be obtained at www.ci.lafayette.or.us or by contacting City Hall at (503) 8642451. The City is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Applications will be accepted until 4:00 p.m. on Monday, March 2, 2015. Energetic, Creative individual that is a proponent of lifelong learning and can develop and maintain activities and programs promoting health, balance and stimulation for seniors in an assisted living environment. The Life Enrichment Coordinator will be responsible for the planning, implementation and supervision of the day-to-day social, educational, recreational, spiritual and therapeutic individual and group activities, entertainment and transportation services for the residents living at the community. This position also concerns itself with achievement of occupancy development goals through coordination with management of the promotion of the community to the general public; through innovation, successful planning, implementation, resident participation and direct supervision of all activities. Apply online: www.vineyardheightsassistedlivWe are growing! ing.com Join our Team! send resume to: www.freelin-wade.com [email protected] April Saturday We are an equal opportunity employer. Get it in Print. What’s going on? Friday Monday City of Carlton $15.39-$18.30 DOE. P/ T, 25 HOURS/ WEEK, FLSA NON-EXEMPT; NO BENEFITS/ ACCRUALS. Under direction of Finance Director, primary responsibility front counter, cashier, reception, admin/ clerical duties. Provides admin services for utility billing & collection, municipal court, accounts payable, planning/ building & other departments. For more info & job application: 503.852.7575 or www. ci.carlton.or.us/ jobs. Submit application & resume by March 3, 2015 at 4:00 PM to: City of Carlton, 191 E. Main St, Carlton, OR 97111 Email: [email protected] Fax: 503.852.7761 Read it Assist food services team in preparation, presentation of highest quality meals and service and to perform duties as required for the smooth operation of the Food Services Department. Assist First Cooks or Dietary Supervisor on breakfast, lunch or dinner preparation, production or service lines. Promote a thorough and continuous understanding among all employees of the importance of the food services department to the quality of life for all residents and prospective residents. An interest in and willingness to learn and a demonstrated initiative in developing skills in caring for the elderly consistent with the philosophy and policies of the Community. Also must be at least 18 years of age. Apply online: www.vineyardheightsassistedliving.com send resume to [email protected] An equal opportunity employer Street/Park Maintenance Worker Full -Time Temporary without benefits. (Apr-Sept 2015) $9.25 an hour. Must be 18 years old, have a valid drivers license and good driving record. City of McMinnville employment application forms are available by calling (503) 434-7405. By email: [email protected] or by accessing the City’s website at www.ci.mcminnville.or.us. Completed applications are to be returned to the City of McMinnville, Attn: Rose Lorenzen 230 NE 2nd Street McMinnville OR 97128. Application deadline is Friday, March 13, 2015 at 5:00 pm. The City of McMinnville is an equal opportunity employer. CONTINUED ON PAGE B8 SELL IT! (503) 472-SELL call 503-472-1199 Find Quick CASH!!! Sell it in check the events calendars Nove December on newsregister.com January Help Wanted to Subscribe News-Register Classifieds Published once weekly in each Tuesday’s News-Register and The Post Display ad $25/week Line ad (approx. 25 words) $15/week Minimum 12 week commitment Call 503-472-7355 Automotive AUTOMOTIVE Internet/I.T. Painting BUILDING services HOUSEHOLD HELP Plumbing Classes Landscaping Building SERVICES Household help Yard WorK Plumbing Housekeeping & Maintenance, 20 years experience. Openings for residential, rental cleanups. Reliable, honest, references. Free estimate! Lynn 503-474-0702. Maintenance: Rich 503-560-8346. Landscaping TRI Bark Red Fir Barkdust Classes 3 yards delivered Mac $100. 1 Unit = 7.5 yards delivered $200 Mac, U-haul $23 a yard. Call during the day for evening or Sat. delivery. Credit/ Debit accepted. 503-550-8911. Painting Corey’s Plumbing Senior and Military discounts. CCB#197829. 503-583-0438 Yard Work BLAKE’S YARD MAINTENANCE Insured & Bonded. The BEST deal for basic, weekly yard care. Mowing, Edging, Blowing & Weeding. For FREE estimates, call Blake 971-237-3007 or visit us at: www.blakesyard.com BRUSH CLEARING, YARD CLEAN UP, TRACTOR WORK, EXCAVATOR, TRACTOR, DUMP TRUCK. Call Vern at HNL: 971-203-4232. Francisco Lawn Maintenance Mowing, edging, blowing, weed & moss control, barkdust, and clean ups. Call Francisco. 971-241-1473/503209-1753. FREE ESTIMATES Internet/I.T. Yard Maintenance Service NICHOLSON PAINTING Exterior, Interior Painting, Power Washing. 23 years experience in Yamhill County. Quality, reasonable, have references. Lead-base (certified). 503-472-9220, CCB#093785, FREE ESTIMATES. Shrub & tree pruning, mowing, edging, weed control, fertilizing, clean-ups, bark dust. Free estimates Luis 503-206-9297 B8 Tuesday, February 24, 2015 All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians; pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD Tollfree at 1-800-669-9777. The Toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-9279275. Carlton news? We’ve got it! Nobody covers the Yamhill valley like the award winning News-Register/McMinnville, Oregon CONTINUED FROM PAGE B7 Help Wanted Long Term Care RN MCMINNVILLE, OR NorthWest Senior & Disability Services This is NOT your typical nursing position. Regular hours Monday through Friday. Office time interspersed with face-to-face time with consumers. GREAT SUPPORTIVE ENVIRONMENT. We want and need an RN who is: •PASSIONATE about and experienced with helping seniors & people with disabilities. •Wants to work a REGULAR M-F, day-time SCHEDULE. • Wants paid HOLIDAYS OFF. • Wants excellent BENEFITS. Salary range $4,854 - $6,901 per month with excellent benefits (Medical, Dental, Vision, generous paid leave, Oregon Public Employees Retirement (PERS), and more). Apply Online at http:// www. nwsds.org/ about-us-2/ work-forus/. Open until filled. EOE. Resumes are not accepted in place of a fully completed NWSDS application. Personals Classes & Instruction private piano lessons Only $7 for a 30 minute lesson. Call today to schedule your first lesson. 503-754-7990 Limited enrollment SENIOR CENTER 2250 Northeast McDaniel Lane McMinnville, OR 97128 To register/questions call: (503)358-6933 Joanne Douglas M.S. Counseling QMHP You will find comfort and compassion here. All Cash Paid NOW We buy and loan on all types of gold & silver. Edge Exchange 503474-1845. All kinds of Unwanted Cars, Will pick up and willing to pay up to $300, title or not. 971241-1916. buy CAR/TRUCK batteries @ .15 cents/pound. Gale’s Towing (503)474-9334. Buying batteries, Call for pricing. Trenton’s 503-4372972. Free appliance drop off, TV, miscellaneous metal. Trenton’s 503-437-2972 Found Pets/Supplies Found Cat: Near Three Mile Lane McDonalds. 503-4744470 Found, adorable small male dog in Squires Court. Call to ID. 503-857-5005. Ring Found on third street. Call the News Register to identify. 503-472-5114 Lost LOST DOG Dalmatian mix, female, 45 pounds, predominately white, with spotted black and white ears. Comes to name of Sierra. Disappeared on High Heaven Road, McMinnville on Friday, 2/20. REWARD. 971-2377570, 503-435-1102. Lost Dog, terrier mix, white face, red collar 9th/ Yamhill St. 971-261-2272. Merchandise • Washer/Dryer Hookups TALL OAKS ESTATES • Coin-Op Laundry Facilities • Private Patios/ Decks (503) 472-4720 • (503) 581-2485 1647 SW Fellows St. • Mac On-Site Managers • Covered Parking • Garages & Storage Units • Park-like Setting TRI Bark Red Fir Barkdust Women’s Group Starts February 26, 2015 6:30 pm - 8:00 p.m. 6 week class, $120. Learn to let go of negative thinking and improve quality of relationships. Osbourne Baby Girl Lovell ILa Rose Osbourne. Born at 12:15 Thursday, Feburary 19, 2015. Proud parents William Robert Parker and Desire Destiny Osbourne. • 2 Bedroom Apartments Garden/Yard Miscellaneous Wanted Announcements Call 503-472-1199 to start home delivery. Merchandise Unwanted Heavy Equipment, SCRAP METAL. Pick up for free. After 1st ton, price will be negotiable. 971-241-1916 Merchandise 1968 Brunswick montclair pool TABLE 8’, $600. 503-201-4332. Barn stored, mixed wood. $200/ cord delivered. 971-241-4913. SEASONED FIR - Fir/Maple mix. U-Haul, $150. 503-4729063. YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE TO 2,000,000 EXPOSURE FOR ONLY $250! Contact: News-Register, 503-472-5114 Oregon Classified Advertising Network is a service of the Oregon Newspapers Publishers Association. SeRviCeS DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives.com [email protected] eMPLOYMeNT GTI - NOW HIRING! TOp pay fOR CDL a DRIVERs! Dry Van or Reefer you choose! Frequent time at home. Well-appointed trucks. EOE. 866-435-8590 GordonCareers.com SCHOOLS MEDICaL BILLING TRaINEEs NEEDED! Train at home to process Medical Billing & Insurance Claims! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Online training at Bryan University!! HS Diploma/ GED & Computer/Internet needed! 1-877-259-3880 Check out OCANS online at oregon.com! Adult English Bulldog 2.5 years old, make reasonable offer, Carol: 503-835-8084. Stuff Under $500 riding mower tires 18x8.5, 8 tires on wheels, $40 for 2. 503-434-6153 2 - solid oak entertainment centers, $25 & $50, OBO. 503-472-7104. 2 bar stools, beautiful wood, $90 both. 503-5830588. 4 boxes of assorted floral, vases/arranging supplies. $70. OBO. 503-985-7025. 50-55 gallon fish tank with accessories and enclosure, $50. 503-864-8844 AREA RUG Multicolor NS, No pet, 7ft.10”X 5ft.2” $35. 503-472-2849 Bar height table, 39x39”, Espresso, good condition . 503583-0588 Electric Scooter Jazzy brand, VERY good condition, $385. 503-474-3181 Free Platform bed, no mattress, 503-434-5263. Home Interior Religious glass candle holder, $7 OBO. 503-857-8806 Honeywell Thermostat Programmable Vision ProTH8000, $80. OBO 503-4722849 New Stainguard Carpet 10X25’ Endless (Endless beige) $1.75 sq foot. 503-472-3938. New Stainguard Carpet. 12.75X21 feet. (Devango Beige) $1.75 sq foot. 503-472-3938 . news register subscription Special. In County/ New Subscribers only. First two months $10.00. Reduced 6 months special to follow. Includes free online access to our webpage. Call to subscribe or for more information. 503-472-5114. Noritake fine China 12-place setting, serving pieces. perfect condition, $495. 503474-3181. Princess house crystal goblets no cracks or chips, $25. 503-857-8806 Queen headboard black with mirror, $10. 503-864-8844 St. Francis statue yard art table, $45. 503-583-0588 U-dig Free beautiful Irises. Deep purple, 503-472-4089. Winnie the Pooh crib set, wall decor, $10 OBO. 503-8578806 Garden/Yard Firewood, Oak for sale! 2 cord loads delivered to McMinnville for $280. Sheridan and Willamina loads are $260. This is green slab wood, a byproduct of sawing lumber. (Monroe Oak, Inc.) 503-8435353. 3 yards delivered Mac $100. 1 Unit = 7.5 yards delivered $200 Mac, Uhaul $23 a yard. Call during the day for evening or Sat. delivery. Credit/ Debit accepted. 503-550-8911 Garage Sales Garage/Yard/ Estate Sale Dayton 16330 McDougall Road February 28, 2015 9-3 37 years of accumulation, we’re moving. Big screen TV, Mitsubishi, craft supplies, furniture, Antique Occupied Japan ceramics, Hummels and much more! McMinnville 587 NW Mt Bachelor Street 28 February 8-2 Full size bed with Headboard. 2 pc Outdoor cushion set. Hooker desk (Oak). Brand new Bunk Beds (with linens). Whirlpool Refrigerator. Whirlpool Deep Freezer. Wreaths (All season). Garden supplies. Candles. Lounge Chairs with table. Floor fans. Military goods. Decorative goods and much more. McMinnville Presbyterian Women RUMMAGE SALE 2nd and Davis Thursday, March 5 from 9-6 Friday, March 6 from 9-12 Venta de articulos usados del groupo de mujeres Presbyterianos, 2nd y Davis, Juevens 5 de marzo, de 9-6 y Viernes 6 de marzo, de 9-12. Transportation Cars 2001 Taurus (fancier) SES and extra clean, perfect mechanically & guaranteed. New rotor, s brakes, tires, battery, tune-up, heater and radiator flush, 138K. $1,995. (FIRM). 503-569-5860 DONATE YOUR JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS to McMinnville Fire Department. Tax donation. For information call (503) 434-9000, M-F 8-5pm. Recreational Vehicles ROY’S RV REPAIR & MOBILE SERVICE Full Service & Repair, LP Certified. (503)434-7631. Trucks/SUVs Wanting to buy, small older pickup, 971-241-4776. GET IT IN PRINT! Sudoku Solution Classified Ads Work You’re reading one now! For puzzle, see Page B4. Real Estate For Sale Homes for sale New Marlette Special 1404 sq ft, 4/12 roof, arch shingles, dbl dormer, 9 lite door, glamour bath, appliance pkg, fireplace, $69,900 finished on site. PRICE GUARANTEED TILL MARCH. JandMHomes.com 503-435-2300 Open House: Manufactured home 1602 NE Riverside #56. Sunday, Feb 22nd. 10-4. 503-472-8740 Real Estate For Rent Apartments/ Duplexes/ Townhomes MAC 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath townhouse duplex, fenced yard, garage, near Linfield, students welcome, $1,000/ month. 503550-6077. McMinnville Studio apartment, quiet neighborhood, w/ d, carport. $495/ month. 503-8434756. Commercial Property BUNN’S VILLAGE COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS for rent at www.bunnsvillage.com. Lou (503)930-1930. Storage Units local Storage units starting at $50.00 and up. RV Storage also. RV tech available by appointment. 503-434-5866 VETERANS STOP PAYING RENT! 0 Down/0 Closing You can use your VA Loan benefit more than once! 100% Cash-out Debt Consolidation Refinance Available • $417,000 – max. amt. • Jumbo Loans up to $650,000 • Bankruptcies OK Chapter 7 - 2 years after discharge; Chapter 13 w/ 12 months payments Call Tom Fitkin VA Loan Specialist 503.697.7214 503.703.5227 Office Mobile NMLS Personal 263844 NMLS Office 233782 ML www.oswegomortgage.com 1018 Save $$ Shop Classifieds PUZZLE FOUND ON PAGE B5