The Observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1968-current, March 01, 2019, WEEKEND EDITION, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ✷✠ ➋✡✆☛ ❖☞✌☛ ❱☛
❿➀➁➂
➁❿➃➃➄➅
×ØÙÚÛ
ÜÝÞßà áâ ãäáÞßàå æßäçè éå
êèë ìíêè Þßà Ýî ïíéðñÜèëäë
ßäë òíó Þßàâ ôëîê áõ êèë àëßäñ
Baker reports 37 inches of new snow in February
➉➊ ÕÖ➊➔×➍ ÕÖØ×Ù➊
Ú↕➛Û➜Ü Ý↕Þ➛ ß↕➤à➞➝↕
Luke Albert strides into
the meadow and his snow-
shoes disappear so rapidly
it seems something more
than plain gravity is at
play.
Albert gazes across the
unblemished
surface,
which glitters in an eye-
watering way under the
➚➨➶➬➚➥ ➴➷➚➥ ➧➯ ➼➨ ➼➷Ð➶➨➥
×ØÙÚÛö÷ øùúøûùúø×
üõ æßäçè éå éðòïå ýèßäôëâ
þñ ÿáõÞ ❆ ëä è ✁ äñå êèë
ïí ✷✂ Ýõêè ✷ ÝôÞ âÝõ Ýî ýèßäôëâ
ßõÞ þõõë ÿáõÞ ❆ ëä èå ✄ ßâ
❦ áÞõß ☎☎ ëÞ îäÝ ✂ êèë îß ✂ áôà
èÝ ✂ ë õëßä ❤ Ý ☎ ë ✄ ëôôå ✆ ë ✄
✁ ëäâëàñ ✳✝ ë ✂ ßáõâ áÞëõêá ❡ ëÞ
ßâ êèÝâë Ýî êèë çèáôÞ ✄ ëäë
îÝ ❢ õÞ êèë îÝôôÝ ✄ áõ æßàñ ✞
Ø ❖ ×øù÷ ÙÚ× ❚
■ õ é ✼✟ éå êèë ýÝõêáõëõêßô
ýÝõ äëââ ÞëçôßäëÞ êèë þä ✷
êáçôëâ Ýî ýÝõîëÞëäßêáÝõ êÝ ❆ ë
áõ îÝäçëå îÝôôÝ ✄ áõ äßêá ❡ çß ✷
êáÝõ ❆ à æßäàôßõÞñ
■ õ é ✼ ðíå ✠ äëâáÞëõê r ëÝä ë
❲ ßâèáõ êÝõ âá õëÞ ß ✂ ëß ✷
â ❢ äë ß ❢ êèÝäá s áõ êèë ❡ äâê
❯ õáêëÞ ✡ êßêëâ ýëõâ ❢ âñ ✳ ýëõ ✷
â ❢ â ☛ ßà ✄ ßâ þ ❢ ñ ïå é ✼ ðíñ ✞
■ õ é ✟ ðòå áõ ✈ ëõêÝä ✆ á ❦ Ýôß
Üëâôß ❡ äâê ☎❢❆ ôáçôà Þë ✂ Ýõ ✷
âêäßêëÞ äßÞáÝ Þ ❢ äáõ ß ✂ ëëê ✷
áõ Ýî êèë ✆ ßêáÝõßô ✐ ôëçêäáç
ÿá èê þââÝçáßêáÝõ áõ ✡ êñ ÿÝ ❢ áâ
❆ à êäßõâ ✂ áêêáõ ëôëçêäÝ ✂ ß ✷
õëêáç ëõëä à ✄ áêèÝ ❢ ê ✄ áäëâñ
■ õ éðó ✾ å îÝ ❢ ä ✠❢ ëäêÝ
✝ áçßõ õßêáÝõßôáâêâ Ý ☎ ëõëÞ
❡ äë îäÝ ✂ êèë â ☎ ëçêßêÝäâ ➆
ßôôëäà Ýî êèë ❯ ñ ✡ ñ ❤ Ý ❢ âë Ýî
✝ ë ☎ äëâëõêßêá ✈ ëâå ✄ Ý ❢ õÞáõ
❡✈ ë ✂ ë ✂❆ ëäâ Ýî ýÝõ äëââñ
Üèë ❯ õáêëÞ ✡ êßêëâ ÞëêÝõßêëÞ
ß Þäà ✷ î ❢ ëô èàÞäÝ ëõ ❆ Ý ✂❆ å
çÝÞëõß ✂ ëÞ ýßâêôë ❝ äß ✈ Ýå ßê
❝ á ❦ áõá þêÝôô áõ êèë æßäâèßôô
■ âôßõÞâñ
❈ Ø ☞☞❚❈ ×ùØ ❖✌
■ õ êèë ✠ ß ë þé âêÝäà ➇❝ ë
☎ äë ☎ ßäëÞ ♣❨ Ý ❢ ä êß ♦ äëê ❢ äõ
✂ á èê ❆ ë Þáîîëäëõê êèáâ àëßäå ➈
☎❢❆ ôáâèëÞ ❲ ëÞõëâÞßàå
ãë ❆ ä ❢ ßäà ï ✼ å êèë âêÝäà ✂ áâ ✷
âêßêëÞ êèë ß ✂ Ý ❢ õê Ýî ✂ Ýõëà
êèßêÜäáâèß ■ õ äß ✂ ßõÞ èëä
è ❢ â ❆ ßõÞ Ý ✄ ëÞ áõ êß ♦ ëâ ßîêëä
❡ ôáõ êèáâ êß ♦ âëßâÝõñÜèë
çÝääëçê ß ✂ Ý ❢ õê áâ ✍ ïå ✟ ííñ
ûØ×× ❚☞ Û
▼✎✏✑✒✓✔✕✖✗ ✩✘✙✘ ✚✛✜✜✛✢✣
ï ✷✟✷ ð ✷ ïó ✷ òé ✷ òì
▼✎✏✑ ▼✤✥✥✤✦✧✖✗ ✩★✪✫ ✚✛✜✜✛✢✣
✶✵✬✶★✬✶✹✬★✹✬✪✵✬★✵ ✭✮
P✦✇✎✯✒✑✥✥✗ ✩✮✹✘ ✚✛✜✜✛✢✣
ïé ✷ òé ✷✾ ï ✷✾ ð ✷ óð ✷✠❝ ïò ✷♦ ó
✰✤✧ ✱✦✯ ✲✤✱✎✗ ❋✴✸✙ ★✫
✫✬✶✫✬✺✪✬✪✺
P✤✔✕ ✻✗ ❋✴✸✙ ★✘
✽ ✿ ❀❁❂❁❃ ✿❄❅❄❇❄❉
✽ ❊ ❀❁❂❁❃ ✿❄●❄❅❄❍
✽ ❏ ❀❁❂❁❃ ●❄❏❄❊❄❅
✽ ✿❇ ❀❁❂❁❃ ❅❄❉❄❉❄❏
P✤✔✕ ✻✗ ❋✴✸✙ ★✫
✽ ✿ ❀❁❂❁❃ ❏❄●❄❅❄❇
✽ ❊ ❀❁❂❁❃ ❑❄●❄❏❄●
✽ ❏ ❀❁❂❁❃ ✿❄●❄❊❄❑
✽ ✿❇ ❀❁❂❁❃ ❊❄❇❄❍❄❑
☞ ØÚÙ ☞❚▲ Ø ☞ ×
◆◗✚✸✴❘❙ ❱✢ ❳❩✜✜❬
✽ ❭❪❫❴❵❛ ❜❞❛❣❥❪❃ ❉❇❇❄❅❏❏❄●❍●❉❁
✽ ❜❧♠❫❴❵❛ ❜❞❛❣❥❪❃ ♥❇❍❄♥❉❉❄❑❅❊✿❁
❖❚q ÷ ▲ Ú ▲❚☞ ûÚ× ❚t
✉①✴❘② ✴③③✢❘❱ ✛❙ ✚❩④✴ ❱✢ ④✴✬
✜✛①✴❘ ②✢◗❘ ⑤✸❙✴❘①✴❘ ✛✣ ❩ ❱✛✚✴✜②
✚❩✣✣✴❘✙ ⑤❳❳❩❙✛✢✣❩✜✜② ❳✢✣④✛✬
❱✛✢✣❙ ✴✭✛❙❱ ❱⑥❩❱ ✚❩⑦✴ ④✴✜✛①✴❘②
✚✢❘✴ ④✛③⑧❳◗✜❱✙
⑨✱ ⑩✦✓ ✑✯✎ ✧✦❶ ✦✧ ✑ ❷✦❶✦✯
✯✦✓❶✎❸ ④✴✜✛①✴❘② ❙⑥✢◗✜④ ✸✴
✸✴③✢❘✴ ✺❬✮✵ ❹✙✚✙ ❺③ ②✢◗ ④✢ ✣✢❱
❘✴❳✴✛①✴ ②✢◗❘ ❹❩❹✴❘ ❹✜✴❩❙✴ ❳❩✜✜
✺✹✶✬❻✪✮✬✮✶✪✶✙
❼❽ Ø× ❚ Ø ❾ ×ø ❚ ÙÚÛ
➇ þõ ëââëõêáßô ßâ ☎ ëçê Ýî
çäëßêá ✈ áêà áâ õÝê ❆ ëáõ ßîäßáÞ
êÝ îßáôñ ➈
➋ ✐ Þ ✄ áõ ❤ ñ ÿßõÞå þ ✂ ëäá ✷
çßõ áõ ✈ ëâêÝä ✳❆ Ýäõ éðíðå ÞáëÞ
êèáâ Þßêë áõ éððé ✞ ñ
❋ ✁✂❆❨✱ ✄❆ ☎✆ ✝✱ ✞✟✝✾
LOCAL
sky, and he reconsiders.
“I think we’re going to
need another section of
pole,” he said, sounding
much like the police chief
in “Jaws,” who distrusts
the diminutive boat once
he’s seen the shark.
The pole Albert referred
to is a hollow aluminum
tube used to measure snow.
To spare snow survey-
ors the potentially painful
indignity of lugging an ob-
ject of considerable length
through forests, the tube
is thoughtfully divided
into sections of about two
➯➥➥➺✃ ➱➻➶➭➻ ➹➺ ➪➨➚➦➷➸ ➶➨➺➧
the sleeves of a nylon pack
that wraps into a manage-
able size.
This meadow just east of
Anthony Lake, at an eleva-
tion of 7,125 feet and very
nearly in the shadow of
Gunsight Mountain, is the
last of three survey sites
Albert visited Wednesday
afternoon.
The three-man crew also
included Jason Yencopal,
Baker County’s emergency
manager, and Joe John-
son, who works at the
Baker County Dispatch
Center.
The two other sites are
at lower elevations —
Little Alps, 6,200 feet, and
Little Antone, 4,560. At
both, three sections of pole
➱➥➵➥ ➪➚➫➭➶➥➨➺❰
But Albert’s plunge into
the snowbound meadow
convinced him that if he
were to thrust six feet of
aluminum into the snow
here, the pole would van-
ish as thoroughly as his
snowshoes did.
This turned out to be
wise, as the snow was
about 83 inches deep —
one inch short of 7 feet —
and so fully justifying the
addition of the fourth sec-
tion.
The numbers Yencopal
jotted down in a notebook
put into numerical per-
spective the onslaught of
➪➺➧➵➳➪ ➺➻➼➺ ➾➥➹➨➥➾ á➥➴➵➚ -
ary.
The snow depth in-
creased by 37 inches dur-
ing the month.
Snow surveyors have
trudged into this meadow
to measure snow every
winter since 1936, mak-
ing it one of the older such
sites in Oregon.
â➨ Ò➚➪➺ ➹❒➥ ➧➯ ➺➻➧➪➥ ãä
years — one happening
70 years to the day of the
trio’s arrival — did they
➹➨➾ ➺➻➥ ➪➨➧➱ ➾➥➥Ð➥➵ ➼➺
this point in winter.
(Surveys
are
done
monthly, typically in the
last week of a month or
➺➻➥ ➹➵➪➺ ➱➥➥➮ ➧➯ ➺➻➥ ➨➥å➺
➳➧➨➺➻❰ æ➻➥ ➧➫➭➶➼➷ ç➼➵➭➻
1 readings, then, generally
represent surveys actually
done between Feb. 23 and
March 5.)
The top 5:
è éêë ➶➨➭➻➥➪✃ á➥➴❰ ìí✃
1965 (this is the deepest
snow ever measured at the
site, at any time; in many
winters the snow depth
peaks around April 1)
è ëî ➶➨➭➻➥➪✃ á➥➴❰ ìä✃
1956
è ëï ➶➨➭➻➥➪✃ á➥➴❰ ìð✃
1949
è ëì ➶➨➭➻➥➪✃ á➥➴❰ ìã✃
1972
è ãã ➶➨➭➻➥➪✃ ç➼➵➭➻ í✃
1997
The situation at Antho-
ny Lakes is representa-
tive of much of the rest of
Northeastern Oregon.
The snowpack is run-
ning about 35 percent
above average. Every mea-
suring site is reporting
more snow now than at
the same time a year ago.
Many places have more
snow now than they did on
March 1, 2017, during one
of the snowiest winters on
record in the region.
The parade of blizzards
during February is espe-
cially noteworthy because
ñòóôõö ñò÷õøó ù úûüýþ ÿ
ýþû
❡ ✁✂
✄☎
▲✆✝✞ ❆✟✠✞✡t ☛☞✟✟✞☛t✌ ✍ ☛☞✡✞ ✌✍✎✏✟✞ ☞✑ ✌✒☞✓ t✔✍t ✓✕✟✟ ✠✞
✓✞✕✇✔✞✖ t☞ ✖✞t✞✡✎✕✒✞ t✔✞ ✓✍t✞✡ ☛☞✒t✞✒t❛
the month typically rep-
resents a lull in wintry
weather.
Statistically it is the sec-
ond-driest month at the
Baker City Airport, with an
average precipitation (rain
and melted snow) of 0.63
of an inch.
(Only July, at 0.53 of an
inch, is drier.)
But this February was
the dampest ever at the
airport, where records
date to 1943.
The monthly total was
1.92 inches, eclipsing the
previous record of 1.66
inches set in February 1966.
A now defunct weather
station, in Baker City itself,
recorded one wetter Febru-
ary — 1980, with a total of
2.3 inches. The total at the
airport that February was
é❰éð ➶➨➭➻➥➪✃ ➵➥❐➥➭➺➶➨➦ ➺➻➼➺
the city typically gets more
precipitation than the air-
port, which is about three
miles to the north.
Baker City leading the contest for new playground equipment
➉➊ Ö➔➐➊ ➏×➑➓➐➊
Ú↕➛Û➜Ü Ý↕Þ➛ ß↕➤à➞➝↕
❇
❇
If the Moda Assist con-
test ended today Baker City
would receive a grant of
more than $30,000 to pay
part of the cost for an all-
abilities playground, but
citizens shouldn’t be com-
placent, said Joyce Bornst-
edt, who oversees the city’s
parks department.
That’s because the on-
line contest continues
through March 20.
As of this morning, Bak-
er City had 21,024 votes,
giving it a lead over its
two competitors — Prin-
eville, 14,744 votes, and
Independence, with 7,773.
With the size of the
lead, Bornstedt and other
city workers have begun
planning for the possible
addition of an accessible
play structure at Geiser-
Pollman Park.
The winning city will
likely receive between
$35,000 and $40,000.
The amount is based on
the number of assists the
Portland Trail Blazers
have this season. Moda
Health is donating $20 for
each assist.
The grant wouldn’t pay
the entire cost of build-
ing the all-abilities play-
ground.
Bornstedt expects the
Moda grant would cover
about half the cost. The
city has already started
looking at other grants to
estimated cost of all-abil-
➳➼➮➥ ➚Ð ➺➻➥ ➾➶➽➥➵➥➨➭➥❰
➶➺➶➥➪ ➥➬➚➶Ð➳➥➨➺❰
If the city doesn’t receive
any grants, they could use
money from the general
fund or try collecting the
money through fundrais-
ers.
Next week Bornst-
edt plans to attend a
To make a playground ful-
ly accessible, the city would
need to install surfacing ac-
cessible to wheelchairs.
The surface would
be similar to the arti-
✗
➥➵➺➶➹➥➾
✘
➷➼➸➦➵➧➚➨➾
Safety Inspector Recerti-
➹➭➼➺➶➧➨ ➭➷➼➪➪ ➱➻➥➵➥ ➪➻➥
can talk with playground
manufacturers about the
➹➭➶➼➷ ➺➚➵➯ ➴➥➨➥➼➺➻ ➺➻➥
playground
structure
installed in May 2014.
Residents can vote once
per day online. To vote, go to
https://www.nba.com/blaz-
ers/assist
As snowpack soars, Oregon’s governor declares emergency
✙ ❚✚✛ ✜✢✣✤✥✦✧❦ ★✣✩ ✪✚✛ ✜✪✦✪✛ ✫✜ ✬✬✭
➺➻➥ ➦➧❒➥➵➨➧➵❮➪ ➧➫➭➥ ➪➼➶➾❰
Heavy snow in Spring-
✥✛✩✧✛✢✪ ✣★ ✢✣✩♣✦✮ ✦✜ ✣★ ❚✚✯✩✜✰✦②
➉➊ ➌➍➎➏➐➑ ➒➐➓➔→➊
➣↔↕ ➙➛➛➜➝➞➟➠↕➡ ➢➤↕➛➛
SALEM — After a slow
start, wintry weather has
walloped Oregon, with
the snowpack surpass-
ing the norm by as much
as 160 percent in some
parts of the state and Gov.
Kate Brown declaring an
emergency Thursday in 10
counties.
Brown directed the Or-
➥➦➧➨ ➩➫➭➥ ➧➯ ➲➳➥➵➦➥➨➭➸
Management to coordi-
nate the deployment of
the state transportation
department, state police
and the Oregon National
Guard to support local
communities as needed.
Since early February,
the snowpack rose from
70 percent of normal
statewide to 119 percent
of normal as of Thursday,
according to Scott Oviatt,
snow survey supervisor
for the U.S. Department
of Agriculture’s Natural
Resources Conservation
Center. It is already help-
ing to alleviate a drought
state, with its severity clas-
➪➶➹➭➼➺➶➧➨ ➶➨ ➘➧➚➺➻➥➵➨ ➼➨➾
Central Oregon reduced
this week, Oviatt said.
“Cold air from Canada
and moisture from the Pa-
➭➶➹➭ ➩➭➥➼➨ ➭➧➳➴➶➨➥➾ ➺➧
create this,” Oviatt said.
“In the last three weeks,
➭➧➷➾ ➼➶➵ ➻➼➪ ➶➨➹➷➺➵➼➺➥➾ ➺➻➥
entire state.”
Warm, dry air could
wipe out the drought miti-
➦➼➺➶➧➨ ➴➥➨➥➹➺➪ ➬➚➶➭➮➷➸
➱➶➺➻ ➼ ➯➼➪➺ ➵➚➨➧➽✃ ➧➵ ➵➼➶➨
on top of snow could cause
❐➧➧➾➶➨➦✃ ➩❒➶➼➺➺ ➪➼➶➾✃ ➴➚➺
the forecast over the next
8-14 days was for cold
temperatures.
“We’re cautiously opti-
mistic and hope the trend
continues,” Oviatt said.
The belated blast of win-
ter has hit communities
with heavy snow and ice
accumulation, high winds,
❐➧➧➾➶➨➦ ➼➨➾ ➷➼➨➾➪➷➶➾➥➪✃
➹➥➷➾ ➭➼➚➪➥➾ ➺➻➥ ➵➧➧➯ ➧➯
a gym at Thurston High
School to partially collapse
Wednesday, The Register-
Guard of Eugene reported.
There were no injuries.
A town in the Cascade
Range experiencing a pro-
longed blackout has been
struggling. Oakridge was
the town where an Am-
trak train was stranded for
about 36 hours this week
because of fallen trees and
snow on the tracks.
The passengers had
electrical power while
the town didn’t and they
stayed on board. Passen-
gers saw townspeople on
snowshoes making their
way through snow-blan-
keted streets.
Ray’s Food Place in the
town of 3,200 people is
open, but customers navi-
gate the darkened aisles
➱➶➺➻ ❐➼➪➻➷➶➦➻➺➪✃ ➺➻➥ Ï➥➦➶➪ -
ter-Guard reported.
Payments are accepted
➨➩➫➭➯➲ ➳➵➸➺➻
only in cash or local check,
with credit card machines
down.
Most businesses in town
were closed Wednesday in
the town, which lies along
Highway 58 that goes over
Willamette Pass and to a
ski area there. The road
has been closed to regular
➺➵➼➫➭ ➱➶➺➻ ➾➧➱➨➥➾ ➺➵➥➥➪
lining the roadside.
The highway closure
and the power outage are
a “double whammy,” said
resident Tim Foster.
“It just takes away any
hope of being able to do
anything,” Foster told the
Register-Guard,
whose
reporter was escorted to
the town Wednesday by
the Oregon Department of
Transportation.
In Central Oregon,
which has 113 percent over
Sunriver, was last seen
getting gas on Sunday in
Sunriver, a resort commu-
nity south of Bend.
“He is known to
➯➵➥➬➚➥➨➺
➺➻➥
➯➧➵➥➪➺ -
ed area to the west of
Sunriver where he en-
Ò➧➸➥➾ ➧➽Ñ➵➧➼➾➶➨➦❰ Ó➧➱ -
ever, it is unknown where
he was going after getting
gas in Sunriver on Sun-
➾➼➸✃Ô ➺➻➥ ➪➻➥➵➶➽❮➪ ➧➫➭➥
said.
Brown made the emer-
gency declaration for Coos,
Curry, Deschutes, Doug-
las, Jackson, Josephine,
Klamath, Lane, Linn, and
Marion counties.
➓➔ →➣↔↕➙➛
↔➜➝➞ ➣➛➟↔➠➣
➨➧➵➳➼➷ ➪➨➧➱Ð➼➭➮✃ ➼➨ ➧➽Ñ
road enthusiast has been
missing for four days, the
Deschutes County Sher-
➶➽❮➪ ➩➫➭➥ ➵➥Ð➧➵➺➥➾❰
Jeremy Taylor, 36, of
➡➡➡➢➤➥➦➧➥➨➩➫➥➭➯➲➧➫➳➥➵➧➢➸➲➺
➻➼➽➾
➚➪➶➚➹➘➴➪
➾➴➘➷➹➼➬➼➮➱
➚➶➚✃➬➚❐➬➴
ÐÑÒ ÓÑÔÕÖ ➚➘➪❒❮❰Ï➾➽➽
❴❵❛❜❝❞❣ ❴❛❤✐❵❥❛❦
✇✇✇❏❑▼◆P◗❘❚❯❲❳❩❬❭❩❳❯❏❪▼❫
➺➻➼➺ ➼➽➥➭➺➥➾ ➳➚➭➻ ➧➯ ➺➻➥
äåæçèçæ éêëìíîïðì
ñòñóôñõ öñó÷øùúûüùõ üýþúüùõ øÿñ÷üõ üùûñùñ
❹❺❻❼❽ ❾ ❿➀➁➁➀➂➃ ➄➅➆➀➇➆ ➈➂➉➊➋➌➍➎➊➍➉➃➍➉➎ ➌➀➊➋ ➏➐➎➊ ➑➃➍ ❼➅➁➁➒
✤ ✥✦✧★ ★✩✪✫✫✬✭✬✮✧ ✯ ✰✱✲✳✴ ✵✶✷✸✹✱✹✶✺✸
✻✼ ✽✾✿❀❁❂❁✾❃❀ ❄ ❅❆❅❇❈❆✼❇❉ ❊❋❃❊●❍❂■❋❏✽
❑▲▼◆❖P ◗❘ ❙◗P❚❯❱ ❲❳ ❨ ❩❬❭P❪ ❙◗P❚ ❫◗❯❭❱❴❵❛
❜◗❯❭❱ ❴❳❝❛❞❡❢❣❤✐❥❦❣❤❧❥❢♠♥♦❧♣qr❤♥❣❥s❢♣♥❣t✉✈♣❤✇①
✤✥✦✧✦ ②③② ✧✬✫✥✩✪④ ✯ ✰✱✲✳✴ ✵✶✷✸✹✱✹✶✺✸
✻❈ ✽✾✿❀❁❂❁✾❃❀ ❄ ❅❆❉❅⑤❆❇⑤⑥ ❊❋❃❊●❍❂■❋❏✽
⑦⑧⑨❖❱❲⑩❲❞✐✇❲❳❶⑩❲❶① ❜◗❯❭❱❵⑩ ❲⑩❲❷ ❴❵❸❛❳❛
✁✂✄☎ ✆✝✞✂✟ ✠✡☛✡☞✌✍✎☛✏✑✍✒☛✓✔ ✓✕ ☛✍☞☞ ✖✗✘✙✚ ✛✜✜✢✙✣✘✘
❮❰Ï ÐÑÒ ÓÔÕÖÖÔ ×Ø ÙÕØÚÛÖ ÜÏÝ❰Þ ßàáâÏÝÝã
➼➽➾➚➪➶➹➘➚➴➷➾➼➬➚➷➾➹➮➼➱✃➮➚➚➾➹➘➘❐❒➽✃
❧♠♠♣ qr q t✉✈①③④⑤③t✉✈① ⑥♠⑦⑧q⑨✉⑩♠❶
❷❸❹❺❻❼❽❻❾❿❹ ➀❸➁➂❻➀❺❽➃➄➅❸
➆➇➈➉➊➌➍➎➏ ➆➏➐➎➑➈➒➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓ ➔➉➌ ➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓→➆
➣↔➌➐➑↕➎➙➛➐➎➑➈➒➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓ ➔➉➌ ➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓→➆
➣➛➈ ➜ ➌➉➝➝ ➎➐ ➇➍➉➈ ➞➑➈➉➒ ➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓ ➔➉➌ ➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓→➆
➟➑➠➉➛➡➝➉➒➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓ ➔➉➌ ➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓→➆
➢➑➤➛➐➎➑➈➒➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➓➔➑↔➊ ➥➑↔➌➉➓➓➓ ➦➤➊➑➌➌ ➧➑➇➈
❙✍✍ ✎✏✑ ✒✓✔✕✖✗② ✖✎✘ ✗✘
✶✙✶✙✚ ✛✜ ✥✢✣✤✦✧★✩✪ ✫✬✭✮ ✯✧✤✭✰✮ ✲✦★✳
✴✵✸✶✹ ✺✺✻✼✙✚✸✺ ✬✪ ★✬✤✤ ✽✪✩✩ ✴✿✙✙✹ ✺✿✚✼✙✵✿❀
▲❁❂❃❄❄❅ ❁♦♥❇❈ ❃♥❈ ❁❉❇❊❃●❇❈ ❢❁❊ ❁❍❇❊ ❡■ ❅❇❃❊s