Serving Central Oregon since190375
SATURDAY April 5,2014
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
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DESCHUTES
Terrebonne recalls are
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not the 1st
nrd
for county
Enceladus —Oneof Sat-
urn's moons is filled with water, scientists say, raising hope life could be found there.A3
By Elon Glucklich
Afghan VOte —Thecoun-
Trees thatge;trees that stay
x Tree to be removed
OSU-Cascades' Phase 1plan includes constructing buildings and parking lots on f 0 acres of land currently occupied by pine, juniper and deciduous trees. The university recently released aplanthat highlights many of the trees it pl anstoremoveandtheonesitplanstokeep.
4 Treetobeadded Building
try's first democratic transition of power has beenplagued by violence andcorruption. A6
The Bulletin
LEGEND
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This week, Terrebonne voters exercised one of Oregon's basic democratic
rights. Frustrated by what they saw as a lack of transpar-
ency from the Terrebonne
Plus: Obituary —Pulitzer
~ re
Prize-winning photographer Anja Niedringhaus waskilled in pre-election violence there.B5
lh sports —Prepgolf, base-
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Parking
bills last summer, voters
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—.,Science
natural hairstyles favored by some black womenhave sparked protests.A4
Domestic Water District's board of directors, which hit 50 customers with
eme
higher-than-normal water
ball and more.C1
Military hair —Banson
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recalled board members Kay Walters and Sharon
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Struck on Tuesday. The
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recall forces Walters and Struck to bow out from their elected positions within the next two weeks. It marked Deschutes
plannedcampus
County's first successful
And a Web exclusiveAfter campaign finance ruling, parties wasted no time in asking for more money. beetlbeuetie.cem/extras
recall in 12 years. But the
county has a history of recall attempts that have
.Phase,2-, 46acies
targeted city councilors,
• ..OX.. -
county commissioners, school board members and judges over the past 50 years. The county has seen at
.
Soums: OSU-Cascades
Andy Zsigert I The Bulletin
EDITOR'SCHOICE
least 12 recalls advance to the ballots since 1967, a re-
By Tyler Leeds
view of county election re-
The Bulletin
sults shows. Half of them
h
led to elected officials' removal from office. SeeRecalls/A4
Ponderosa pines, some tmh, i h
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likely near 150 years old, dominate the 10-acre site on Bend's west side where Or-
egon State University-Cascades Campus plans to expand into a four-year university. To foster the feel of an authentic Central Oregon
lllegal pot still selling in Colorado
landscape, the university
trait is among those of
plans to embrace the land's roughly 400 trees and topography in its campus design. OSU-Cascades hopes the four-year campus will serve
more than two dozenworld
up to 1,900 students, 300 of
leaders he's painted.
whom will live in on-campus residence halls. The campus, which will include academic,research,cafeteria and
BrandonThibodeaux/New YorkTimes
George W. Bush's self-por-
Former president's paintings
on display By Peter Baker New Yorh Times News Service
A dour Vladimir Putin
glares ever so frostily, full of menace, free of mirth, ready to annex anypasser-by unwise enough to get too close. Tony Blair stares ahead, sober and resolute. Hamid Karzai, in traditional green
t d'.
By Sadie Gurman The Associated Press
DENVER — A 25-year-
old is shot dead trying
commercial space, is slated
to sell marijuana the
old-fashioned, illegal way.
for a fall 2015 opening. The proposed plans call for four large buildings running
lan Smith, left, and Michael Zilis, with design firm Walker Macy, discuss the plan for maintaining
east to west from the site's
many of thetreesatthe OSU-Cascades Campus site Wednesday.
Two men from Texas set
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
up a warehouse to grow m ore than they would ever need. And three people buying pot in a grocery store parking lot are robbed at gunpoint.
border with Southwest Century Drive and two smaller
ComingSunday likely used for industry at ademic space is placed in a one point. There are no trees • How OSU-Cascadescameup clearing to the site's far west with its parking plan. there, and it's just a great edge, which not only helps spot to place parking beminimize the reduction in where they are not, in order cause of all that." for the campus, and clearly trees, but also offers views of to understand where best to Another feature that sends the OSU message of the Cascades. Despite deferplace the parking and build- guided the campus design environmental stewardship," ring to the site's geography, ings,u said Michael Zilis, is what Zilis described on Zilis said. "Having it betrees will still have to come a principal and landscape Wednesday as "a thick tween most of the buildings down. Zilis estimates that architect with Walker Macy, wedge ofbeautiful trees" and the street also helps us about half the trees, many a Portland-based firm in that rise on a small hill build while still embracing of which are too young to be charge of the site's landscap- along Southwest Chandler the outdoor character of distinguished from the uning. "In the back, there's this Avenue. Bend." dergrowth, will be cut. "It will provide frontage flattened, beaten up place, A building dedicated to acSeeCampus/A5 buildings facing Chandler
Avenue. "What we did is look at not only where trees are, but
While noone expected the state's first-in-the-
nation recreational sales would eliminate the need
for dangerous underground sales overnight, the violence has raised
concerns among police, prosecutors and pot advocates that a black market
for marijuana is alive and well in Colorado. See Pot/A5
capand cape,glancesoffto the side, almost as if check-
ing over his shoulder for the Taliban — or perhaps for the United States. The Dalai
Lama looks serene, Stephen Harper jovial, Jiang Zemin grlIn. The world's most distinc-
Keeping Mideasttalks goingbecomesan end in itself By Jodi Rudoren
both sides balking on condi-
tive gallery of international leaders opens in Dallas today, seen throughthe eyes of the formerpresident of
New York Times News Service
tions set when the U.S.-brokered negotiations started
the United States and noted
week was much more about preserving the process than finding a path to peace. The breakdown involved
amateurpainter,George W. Bush. Graduating from dogs and cats and landscapes, Bush has produced a collection of more than two dozen portraits of for-
eign figures he encountered while in office and put them
on display at his presidential library. SeePaintings/A5
JERUSALEM — The crisis
that engulfed the ailing Mid-
last summer.
dle East peace process this
On Friday, even after Secretary of State John Kerry
called "reality-check time" and said Washington would re-evaluate its role, intense
TODAY'S WEATHER Chance ofrain/snow <'@ @h H i gh 52, Low29
Page B6
ANALYSIS talks ensued in search of a new set of conditions that might allow the conversations to continue.
come with tangible take-
ue chasing an elusive peace
homes for the Palestinians,
while there is so much else
ease international pressure on Israel and lend credibility
to deal with in a tumultuous
to the Obama administra-
All three parties have
tion's faltering foreign policy. But now all three parties are
vested interests in the en-
calculating the costs as well:
gagement: Negotiations often
How long can Kerry contin-
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Puzzles F3-4 Dear Abby D5 Obituaries B2 Community Life Df-6 Horoscope D5 S oI Ff-6 Crosswords F 4 L o cal/State Bf-6 TV/Movies
B5 C1-4 D5
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 112, No. 95,
30 pages, 5 sections
world, and how can Israeli and Palestinian leaders avoid
looking weak to their skeptical constituents and fractured governments? SeeTalks/A4
Q
tt/f/e use recycled newsprint
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