Bulletin Daily Paper 04-01-13

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SPORTS• B1

LOCAL• A5

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

BEND PROFILE

DrOneS —Farfrom the battlefield, the civilian aircraft

are rich with possibilities.A3

By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin

March Madness —It's been a wild and unlikely ride that's set up four teams to play for all the marbles.B1

One in four people who in 2010 started repaying federal loans they took out to attend Central Oregon Community College have defaulted on them in the past three years, according to new data re-

leased last week. Each year the U.S. Department of Education releases two-year and three-year default rates for every college and university. The rates measure how many students who began paying back their loans in a certain year have

defaulted, or failed to make a payment on them in 270 days, in the following two or three years. COCC's draft three-year default rate for fiscal year 2010 is 26.3 percent; it's only the second year that the federal government has

issued a three-year look at the issue, and the college's rateincreased over lastyear, when it was 24.7 percent. Meanwhile, the college's two-year default rate dropped slightly, from 15.7 percent to 15.5 percent. See Defaults/A7

The spy whowrote a TVshow — Meet Joseph

Weisberg, once a CIA case officer, now the man behind FX's "The

Americans."Bl

In national news — A Texas DA who had armed him-

self after one of his prosecutors was slain is found shot to

• April 1 marks the traditional beginning of regular irrigation season

Maple-syrup farmers turn to high-tech answers astapping season gets shorter. bendbulletin.com/extras

When)o expectflows from youi'irrigationdistrict

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JEFFERSON

It takes a lot to slow down Harold Anderson. The 82-year-old from southeast Bend is technically retired I but has been a stalwart volunteer withthe Bend Police Department, Anderson Deschutes County codeenforcement, Central Oregon Police Chaplaincy and other organizations for the last several years. Anderson's volunteering came to a halt in September, however, when

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O E S CT HEUS

Agencythat beat the sequester

COUNTY

By Nick Anderson The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Jenna Kress sat down at her computer one recent evening to check the status of her application to the University of Georgia. The 17-year-old senior at Walt Whitman High School in Montgomery County,Md., let out a scream when video fireworks lighted up her screen. She got in. The next day she learned, also online, the fate of her bid for the University of Texas at Austin: She was denied. "Didn't really hit me that hard," Kress said. "I was so on my Georgia high that I didn't care that much." Kress said she barely scanned the UT letter once she got the gist. "I didn't need to read the other fluff they put in there to make me feel better." April I marks the height of decision season for colleges nationwide, a date by which most have told high school seniors whether theymade the cut for next year. Like Kress, many students nationwide have learned to cope with the ups and downs of an admissions process utterly changed from the thick-or-thin envelope ritual their parents endured. While some holdouts continue to rely only on the U.S. Postal Service to deliver the news, growing numbers ofcolleges have migrated to online notification in recent years, via websites or email. SeeAdmissions/A3

The Bulletin

him to go to the doctor. The diagnosis was cancer, and in addition to a large tumor that broke a bone in Anderson's leg, the cancer had also spread to his lymph nodes. After months of chemotherapy, Anderson learned last week that a positron emission tomography, or PET, scan showed the cancer was gone. Anderson must wait for his leg to heal, but he is itching to return to his volunteer jobs as soon as his doctor says it's OK. "It can't be soon enough," Anderson said. SeeVolunteer/A6

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EDITOR'5CHOICE

By Hillary Borrud

pain in his right leg forced

death in his home.A2

And a Web exclusive-

82-year-od vounteer takes break for cancer

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Andy Zeigert i The Bulletin

The sequester was supposed to be something new in Washington: a budget cut you couldn't beat. Once it hit, it hit. The money was gone, and nobody could get it back. That turned out to be true — for about three weeks. Then somebody beat it. Last week, President Barack Obama signed a spending bill that gave the Agriculture Department's food inspectors what everybody else wanted: a getout-of-the-sequestercard. SeeSequester /A2

In ADHDdata, growing worry of a diagnosisthat's overused By Alan Schwarz and Sarah Cohen New York Times News Service

r. Robert Caplin/New York Times News Service

Child psychiatrist Dr. Ned Hallowell has played a leading role in raisingawareness about ADHD. Now, though, he says he believes the diagnosis is being handed out too freely.

INDEX

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 68, Low 33

Page BS

Nearly I in 5 high-schoolage boys in the United States and 11 percent of school-age children overall have received a medical diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, according to new

data from the federal CentersforDisease Control and Prevention. These rates reflect a marked rise over the last decade and could fuel growing concern among many doctors that the ADHD diagnosis and its medication are overused in American

Calendar A6 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6De ar Abby Comics/Puzzles C3-4 Horoscope

C4 Local/State A 5- 6 SpottsMonday B1-6 B7 Movies B7 Sudoku C4 B 7 Nation/World A 2 T elevision B7- 8

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 110, No. 91, 22 pages, 3 sections

children. The figures showed that an estimated 6.4 million children ages 4 through 17 had received an ADHD diagnosis at some point in their lives, a 16 percent increase since 2007 and a 53 percent rise in the past decade. SeeADHD/A7

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A2

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013

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NATIoN 4% ORLD

exas sainin ome By Nomaan Merchant and Nicholas Riccardi

motive for the killings, Forney Mayor Darren Rozell said: "It The Associated Press appears this was not a random act." K AUFMAN, T e xas "Everybody's a little on edge Kaufman County District Attorney Mike McLelland took no and a little shocked," he said. chances afterone of his assisThe slayings came less than tant prosecutors was gunned two weeks after Colorado's down two months ago. McLel- prison chief was shot to death land said he carried a gun ev- at his front door, apparently erywhere he went and was ex- by an ex-convict, and a couple tracarefulwhen answering the of months a f ter K a ufman door at his home. County Assistant District At"I'm ahead of everybody else torney Mark Hasse was killed because, basically, I'm a sol- in a parking lot a block from his dier," the 23-year Army veteran courthouse offi ce. No arrests said in an interview less than have been made in Hasse's two weeks ago. slaying Jan. 31. On Saturday, he and his wife McLelland, 63, is the 13th were found shot to death in prosecutor killed in the U.S. their rural home just outside since the National Association the town of Forney, about 20 of District Attorneys began miles from Dallas. keeping count in the 1960s. While investigators gave no Sheriff David Byrnes would

not give details Sunday of how the killings unfolded and said there was nothing to indicate for certain whether the DA's slaying was connected to Hasse's. El Paso County, Colo., sheriff's spokesman Sgt. Joe Roybal said investigators had found no evidence so far connecting the Texas killings to the Colorado case, but added: "We're examining all possibilities." Colorado'scorrections director, Tom Clements, was killed March 19 when he answered the doorbell at his home outside Colorado Springs. Evan Spencer Ebel, a white supremacist and former Colorado inmate suspectedof shooting Clements, died in a shootout with Texas deputies two days later about 100 miles from Kaufman.

1 7 7 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

ficials adopted a statement declaring building nuclear weapons and

the economy the nation's top priorities. The meeting of the Supreme People's Assembly follows near-daily threats from Pyongyang, including vows of nuclear strikes on South Korea and the U.S. Pyong-

yang has reacted with anger over routine U.S.-South Korean military drills and a new round of U.N. and U.S. sanctions that followed its Feb. 12 underground nuclear test, the country's third.

Mali fighting —A small band of radicai Islamist fighters battled French and Malian soldiers for hours in a firefight in Timbuktu on

Sunday after infiltrating the Malian city overnight, Malian officials and witnesses said. The fighting, which was preceded by a suicide attack at a military checkpoint Saturday night, was the first such violence

to reach downtown Timbuktu since January, whenFrenchforces arrived and forced out the jihadists who had seized the city in 2012. No one claimed responsibility for the attack.

Mandela health —Former South African President Nelson Mandela remained in a hospital on Easter Sunday while receiving

treatment for a recurrence of pneumonia, the government said. South African presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj said there are no updates on 94-year-old Mandela since an official statement Saturday on

his condition. That statement reported the anti-apartheid leader was breathing without difficulty after having a procedure to clear fluid in

his lung area. InterState pileup —Nearly100 vehicles crashed Sundayalong

OUR ADDRESS Street

KOI'ea 'tenSIOn —After weeks of warlike rhetoric, North Korean leader Kim Jong Ungathered legislators early today for an annual spring parliamentary session taking place onedayafter top party of-

a mountainous, foggy stretch of interstate near the Virginia-North

Carolina border, killing three peopleand injuring 25 others. Police said traffic along Interstate 77 in southwest Virginia backed up for about 8 miles in the southbound lanes after the accidents. Authori-

FRANCIS' EASTER MESSAGE: PEACE

ties closed the northbound lanes sothat fire trucks, ambulances and police could get to the series of chain-reaction wrecks.

smuoo Aw.

Kidnapping suspect —A transient with a long criminal record is being sought in the kidnapping of a10-year-old girl who was snatched from her San Fernando Valley home before dawn last week

DcsuuesRe

and abandoned hours later in front of a hospital. Police identified Tobias Dustin Summers, 30, as a suspect Saturday, but they couldn't elaborate on the motive or what led them to him. They also don't

ADMINISTRATION

know if the girl was targeted.

Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541 -383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337

Blrd flu —Two Shanghai menhave died from a lesser-known type of bird flu in the first known humandeaths from the strain, and Chinese authorities said it wasn't clear how they were infected but that there was no evidence of human-to-human transmission.

DEPARTMENT HEADS

Egyptian SatiriSt —An Egyptian television satirist who was

Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541 -383-0370 CirculationandOperations Keith Foutz .........................541 -385-5805 FinanceHolly West ...........541 -383-0321

summoned by prosecutors on charges that he had insulted President

Mohammed Morsi was ordered to post bail Sunday, indicating that the authorities were continuing to pursue their investigation of the

popular host. After presenting himself to prosecutors Sundaymorning for questioning that lasted several hours, BassemYoussef paid

HumanResources Traci Donaca ......................

the equivalent of $2,200 bail and was released.

TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran..........541-383-0360 City Desk Joseph Oitzler.....541-383-0367 CommunityLife, Health JulieJohnson.....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe......541 -383-0353 GD! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 Home, All Ages Alandra Johnson................541-617-7860 News EditorJan Jordan ....541 -383-031 5 PhotosDeanGuernsey......541-383-0366 SporlsBill Bigelow.............541-383-0359

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Central African Repudlic —A rebelleader whoproclaimed Alessandra Taranuno/The Associated Press

People crowd St. Peter's Square at theVatican on Sunday for the celebration of the Easter Mass. Pope Francis delivered a plea for peace in his first

rose from the deadfollowing crucifixion. After Mass, he st eppedaboardanopen-toppedwhitepopemobile for a cheerful spin through the joyous crowd, kissing

himself president of the Central African Republic after his fighters invaded the capital has appointed a new cabinet. New minister of

information Christophe GazamBetty announced the makeup of the new government on national radio late Sunday. It includes both rebels and civilians.

Easter Sundaymessage tothe world, decrying the

babies and patting children on thehead.

seemingly endless conflicts in the Middle East and on the Korean peninsula after celebrating Mass at an

One admirer of both the pope and of the pope's favorite soccer team, Argentina's Saints of San Lorenzo,

Syria ShellS —Lebanon's state news agencysays shells fired

outdoor altar before more than250,000 people in the flower-bedecked square. Francis shared in his flock's exuberance asthey celebrated Christianity's core belief that JesusChrist

insisted that Francis take ateam jersey he was waving

News Agency said the shells exploded in four villages late Saturday

at the pontiff. A delighted Francis obliged, briefly holding up the shirt, and the crowd roared in approval. — The Associated Press

near the northern border and that residents reported an unpleasant smell after the strikes. — From wire reports

from inside Syria have struck Lebanese border villages. The National

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Find Your Dream Home

Sequester

happy, you lose the leverage in a negotiation" for a bigger deal, Continued from A1 said a Republican aide in the Their program got $55 mil- House, speaking anonymously lion in new money, which re- to explain the GOP leadership's placed almost all of what the thinking. The even spreadsequester took. ing of the pain "was the whole There's a story there, about point of sequestration to begin how power and lobbying can with," the aide said. still make money appear in Of course, Washington is not Washington, even in this age of a placewhere people sit back austerity. It started with sharp and accept equal treatment. political theater. Since sequestration began takAgriculture Secretary Tom ing effect on March 1, some proVilsack insisted that the se- grams have lobbied for little vicquester would force him to shut tories, taking a bigger piece of down all U.S. meat production their department's smaller pie. on at least 11 days. Corrections officers perThe inspectors union didn't suaded the Justice Department believe that. Neither did many to shift more money their way, in the powerful meat lobby. But eliminating the threat of furthey were too worried not to loughs. The Pentagon found help Vilsack anyway. After an $10.4 billion, so furloughs for ciextensive campaign, the Senate vilianemployees were reduced. gave Vilsack the money. But none of them got Congress S o the sequester can be to give them money to replace hacked. Now, other interest what the sequester took. That groups are waiting: police offi- trick was pulled off, somehow, cers, airport executives, Border by the workers who inspect Patrol agents. The question is: animal carcasses. Can it be hacked again? The campaign to do it began "It is those who make the in early February, when the semost noise that sometimes suc- quester was still weeks away. ceed," said Sen. Jerry Moran, R- Earlier than many other CabiKan., who failed in his push to net secretaries, Vilsack began exempt small air traffic control describing in detail how badly towers from the effects of the his department would be hit. "In our food safety area ... sequester. "I thought I'd made a lot of noise," Moran said. Until we will have to furlough workhe saw he had lost and the meat ers fora period of a couple of lobby and Vilsack had won. weeks," Vilsack said, speakThis was not, of course, the ing to an agriculture industry way sequestration was sup- conference in Las Vegas. "The posed to turn out. Back in 2011, problem is, as soon as you take it was designed to exempt some an inspector off the floor, that areas of government: welfare, plant shuts down." food stamps, Social Security, He had details: There could veterans programs. But where be $10 billion in lost production it cut, it was supposed to cut and more than $400 million lost like a razor, clean and even: worker wages. Diners would Defense programs lose 7.3 be affected, too;beef and poulpercent across the board. Non- try would get scarcer. "Food defense spending programs safety could be compromised," lose 5.1 percent. he said. Nobody could get out. BeIn the world of meat, people cause then, everybody would took notice. But a lot of them want out. And the sequester thought Vilsack was stretching was meant to force a gridlocked the truth. Washington to come up with Even the meat inspectors' something else. union doubtedhe would make "We need abig fix.And once good on the promise of shutyou start making everybody ting plants down. Federal law

requires the Agriculture Department to provide inspectors when a plant is running. A budget cut is not a valid excuse to stop, said Trent Berhow, an official with the inspectors union. "If the federal government truly did put the inspectors out of the plant, the industry would sue the hell out of them," he said.

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MONDAY, APRIL 1,2013 •THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Monday, April1, the 91st day of 2013. There are 274 days left in the year.

NEED TO KNOW HAPPENINGS

JOkeS —It's April Fool's Day. Be onthe lookout

White HOuSe —The135th

Drones — some as tiny as a hummingbird — promise everyday benefits as broad as the sky is wide. But the drone industry and

annual White House Easter Egg Roll takes place on the South Lawn.

those eager to tap its potential are running headlong into fears the peeping-eye, go-anywhere technology will be misused.

NumderS —The Institute for Supply Management releases

By Joan Lowy

its manufacturing index for March.

HISTORY Highlight:On April 1, 1789,

the U.S. House of Representatives held its first full meeting in New York; Frederick

Muhlenberg of Pennsylvania was elected the first House speaker. In1912, the city of Branson,

Mo., was incorporated. In 1933, Nazi Germany staged

a daylong national boycott of Jewish-owned businesses. In1939, the United States

recognized the government of Gen. Francisco Franco in Spain, the sameday Franco went on radio to declare victory in the Spanish Civil War. In 1945, American forces launched the amphibious inva-

sion of Okinawa during World War II. In1963, New York City's daily

newspapers resumedpublishing after settlement was reached in a114-day strike. The daytime drama "General Hospital" premiered on ABCTV.

In1972,the first Major League Baseball players' strike began; it lasted 12 days. In 1976, Apple Computer was founded by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniakand Ronald Wayne.

In1984, recording star Marvin Gaye was shot to death by his father, Marvin Gay Sr. in Los

Angeles, the daybefore his 45th birthday. (The elder Gay pleaded guilty to voluntary

manslaughter, and received probation.) In1992, the National Hockey

League Players' Association went on its first-ever strike, which lasted 10 days.

Ten years ago:American troops entered a hospital in

Nasiriyah, Iraq, and rescued Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch, who'd been held prisoner since her unit was ambushed

on March 23. Fiveyearsago:The Pentagon made public a legal memo dated March14, 2003, that

approved the use of harsh interrogation techniques against

terror suspects, saying that President George W.Bush's wartime authority trumped any international ban on tor-

ture. (The memowas rescinded in December 2003.) Top executives of the country's five biggest oil companies told a skeptical Congress they

knew record fuel prices were hurting people, but argued it wasn't their fault and that their huge profits were in line with

other industries. One year ago:A coalition of more than 70 partners, including the United States, pledged to send millions of dollars and

communications equipment to Syria's opposition groups. Former Mexican President

Miguel de la Madrid died at age 77. Taylor Swift won her

second consecutive entertainer of the yearaward at the Academy of Country Music Awards.

BIRTHDAYS Actress Debbie Reynolds is 81. Country singer Jim Ed Brown

is 79. Actor Don Hastings is 79. Actress Ali MacGraw is 75. Supreme Court Justice

Samuel Alito is 63. Actress Annette O'Toole is 61. Singer

Susan Boyle (TV: "Britain's Got Talent") is 52. Country singer Woody Lee is 45. Actress Jessica Collins is 42. Political

commentator Rachel Maddow is 40. Singer Bijou Phillips is 33. Actor Sam Huntington

is 31. Country singer Hillary Scott (Lady Antebellum) is 27. — From wire reports

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON The dawn of the age of aerial civilian drones is rich with possibilities for people far from the war zones where they made their devastatingmark as a weapon of choice against terrorists. The unmanned, generally small aircraft can steer water and pesticides to crops with precision, saving farmers money while reducing environmental risk. They can inspect distant bridges, pipelines and power lines and find hurricane victims stranded on rooftops. Since January, drone-related legislation has been introduced in more than 30 states, largely in response to privacy concerns. Many of the bills would prevent police f ro m u s i ng drones for broad public surveillance or to watch individuals without sufficient grounds to believe they were involved in crimes. Stephen Ingley, executive director of the Airborne Law Enforcement Association, says resistance to the technology is frustrating. Drones "clearly have so much potential for saving lives, and it's a darn shame we're having to go through this right now," he said. But privacy advocates say now is the time to debate the proper use of civilian drones and set rules, before they become ubiquitous. Sentiment forcurbing domestic drone use has brought the left and right together perhaps more than any other recent issue.

Photosby Don Ryan/The AssociatedPress

Flight test pilot Alex Gustafson carries an InsituscanEagle unmanned aircraft in preparation for a flight on March18 in Arlington, Ore. In the not-so-distant future, aerial drones may be part of Americans' everyday lives, performing countless useful functions, helping farmers and police departments and alerting authorities to people stranded on rooftops by hurricanes.

time," he said. "If our government holds back this technology,there's the freedom tomove elsewhere ... and all of a sudden these things will be flying everywhere else and competing with us." Law enforcement is expected to be one of the bigger initial markets for civilian drones. Last month, th e FB I u s ed drones to maintain continuous surveillance of a bunker in Alabama where a 5-year-old boy was being held hostage. In Virginia, the state Gen'A free society' eral Assembly passed a bill that "The thought of government would place a two-year moradrones buzzing overhead and torium on the use of drones constantly monitoring the ac- by state and local law enforcetivities of law-abiding citizens ment. Themeasure issupportruns contrary to the notion of ed by groups as varied as the what it means to live in a free American Civil Liberties Union society," Sen.Charles Grassley, on the left and the Virginia Tea R-Iowa, said at a recent hear- Party Patriots Federation on ing of th e Senate Judiciary the right. Committee. G ov. Bob M c D onnell i s With mil i t ar y bud g ets proposing amendments that shrinking, drone makers have would retain the broad ban on been counting on the civilian spy drones but allow specific market to spur the industry's exemptions when lives are in growth. Some companies that danger, such as for search-and make drones or supply support rescue operations. The legislaequipment and services say the ture reconvenes Wednesday to uncertainty has caused them consider the matter. to put U.S. expansion plans on hold, and they are looking over- In Seattle seas for new markets. Seattle abandoned its drone "Our lack o f s u ccess in program after community proeducating the p ublic about tests in February. The city's pounmanned aircraft is coming lice department had purchased back to bite us," said Robert two drones through a federal Fitzgerald, CEO of the BOSH grant without consulting the Group of Newport News, Va., city council. which providessupport servicIn Congress, Rep. Ed Markey, es to drone users. D-Mass., co-chairman of the "The U.S. has been at the House's privacy caucus, has inlead of this technology a long troduced a bill that prohibits the

Federal Aviation Administration from issuing drone licenses unless the applicant provides a statement explaining who will operate the drone, where it will be flown, what kind of data will be collected, how the data will be used, whether the information will be sold to third parties and the period for which the information will be retained. Privacy advocates acknowledge the many benign uses of drones. In Mesa County, Colo., for example, an annual landfill survey using manned aircraft cost about $10,000. The county recentlyperformed the same survey using a drone for about

impractical. Drones can be equipped with high-powered cameras and listening devices, and infrared camerasthat can see people in the dark. "High-rise buildings, security fences or even the walls of a building are not barriers to increasingly common drone technology," Amie Stepanovich, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Council's surveillance project, told the Senate panel. Civilian drone use is limited to government agencies and public universities that have received a few hundred permits $200. from the FAA. A law passed by Congress last year requires Assisting police the FAA to open U.S. skies to Drones can help police de- widespread drone flights by partments find missing people, 2015, but the agency is behind reconstruct traffic accidents schedule and it's doubtful it will and act as lookouts for SWAT meet that deadline. Lawmakteams. Real estate agents can ers and industry officials have have them film videos of prop- complained for years about the erties and surrounding neigh- FAA's slow progress. borhoods, offering clients a The FAA e s timates that b etter-than-bird's-eye vi e w , within five years of gaining though one that neighbors may broader access about 7,500 cinot wish to have shared. vilian drones will be in use. "Any legislation that restricts Although t h e Sup r eme the use of this kind of capabil- Court has not dealt directly ity to serve the public is putting with drones, it has OK'd aerial the public at risk," said Steve surveillance without warrants Gitlin, vice president of Aero- in drug cases in which officers Vironment, a leading maker of in a plane or helicopter spotted smaller drones. marijuana plants growing on a Yet the virtues of drones suspect's property. can also make them dangerBut in a case involving the ous, privacy advocates say. use of ground-based equipThe low cost and ease of use ment, the court said police genmay encourage police and erallyneed awarrant beforeusothers to conduct the kind of ing a thermal imaging device to continuous or intrusive surveil- detect hot spots in a home that lance that might otherwise be might indicate that marijuana

Admissions

"U-Va. was my dream school, sion letters were posted online at 5:30 p.m. March 21. the place I've wanted to go to "Great care and attention to gr what i worked towards my Continued from A1 At the same time, more detail is given to every student whole life," one student wrote students are applying to more who applies to the University," that evening. "Now I don't reschools in an effort to better the denial letter said. "Please ally know what to do." "Here's what you will do," theirchances. Morethan 27per- know that these decisions are cent now apply to at least seven never easy, and we recognize replied an admissions officer schools, a University of Caliand respect your accomplish- with the handle Dean JUVa. "You will pick one of the other fornia at Los Angeles survey ments and talents." found, roughly double the share Inevitably in the social media schools. You will go there. You of a decade ago. Five percent era, such notifications trigger will have a FABULOUS time now apply to a dozen or more waves of online celebration, de- and cram your brain full of schools, and many elite colleges jection and consolation through great ideas. It will be okay!" report record or near-record to- websites such as Facebook or Following tradition, the Mastals of applications. College ConfidentiaL U-Va. it- sachusetts Institute of TechnolThe flood o f a p plications self gave students a forum to ogy posted its decisions elecmeans that prestigious colleges vent on the university's official tronically on March 14, or 3/14, are often delivering mass rejec- admission blog as soon as the aka Pi Day. But not at I:59 p.m., tion via electronic form letters letters were released. as one might guess from the to several thousand or tens of thousands of students atonce. "The trick is to convey a sense of sympathy, understanding and respect through an online "Quality Painting Inside and Out" blurb," said Greg Roberts, dean J Painting in Central Oregon for over 18 years of admission at the University of Virginia. A record 29,000 students applied to U-Va. for this year's enteringclass,up more than 50 percent from the total five years Insured Bonded and Licensed¹156152 phone: 54c383-2927 ago. Of the applicants to the 18633Riverwoods Drive EmaiL heartlandllc®msn.com Bend,OR 97702 coveted public university, 8,530 tnquire about trading goods for services. were offered admission. Deci-

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first digits of the mathematical constant: 3.14159. On week-

days, colleges generally prefer evening notification to ensure student privacy. MIT decisions went live at 6:28 p.m. on Pi Day, timed to echo the ratio of a circle's circumference to its radius.

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plants are being grown there. In some states economic concerns have trumped public unease. In Oklahoma, an anti-drone bill was shelved at the request of Republican Gov. Mary Fallin, who was concerned it might hinder growth of the state's drone industry. The North Dakota state Senate killed a drone bill in part because it might impede the state'schances of being selected by the Federal Aviation Administration as one of six national drone test sites, which could generate local jobs. A bill that would have limited the ability of state and local governments to use drones died in the Washington legislature. The measure was opposed by the Boeing Co., which employs more than 80,000 workers in the state and which has a subsidiary, Insitu, that's a leading military drone manufacturer. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., recently drew attention to the domesticuse of drones when he staged a Senate filibuster, demanding to know whether the president has authority to use weaponized drones to kill Americans on American soil. The White House said no, if the person isn't engaged in combat. Industry oNcials worry that the episode could temporarily set back civilian drone use.

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MONDAY, APRIL 1,2013 •THE BULLETIN

AS

LOCAL 4 T A TE BRIEFING

SISTERS

mana erma soons e own

Sunshine togive way to April showers Central Oregon will likely

spend a fewdays in the sun early this week before spring

showers move into the region. Daytime temperatures are forecast to gradually decline toward the end of the week,

according to the National Weather Service in Pendleton. However, the weather is

expected to be mild, and the weather service has not issued

any warnings or advisories for this week. In Bend, the forecast is for

mostly sunny skies through Wednesday, with high temperatures in the mid- to upper 60s, according to the National

• 3 of 5 councilors ask Steinto resign; the other 2 opposethe move By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin

Sisters City Manager Eileen Stein is expected to resign at a special meeting this morning. According to an open letter sent by councilors David Asson and Catherine Childress on Saturday, Stein has been asked to resign because the other three city councilors have lost confidence in her and have beennegotiating her res-

ignation since early March. The Sisters City Council is scheduled to meet at 7 a.m. today in an executive session about pending litigation, and the council is then expected to enter public session and vote on the item discussed in executive session. Mayor Brad Boyd declined to comment, and Stein did not return a call for comment. Asson did not return a

call for comment. Childress, reached by phone on Sunday, said she and Asson were not told of the council majority's plan until after it had already been presented to Stein. She said she supports Stein and is concerned about getting rid of a city manager in the midst of

big projects. "We are in the process of undertaking the annexation of the airport, and the Cascade

Avenue project will begin in August," Childress said. "That's a big project.... And I thinkfor ustobedoingthis with an interim city manager or a new city manager, where there have been relationships build over time, I have concerns about the success of those projects." In November, the City Council changed significantly, with three new faces — McKibben Womack, Catherine Childress and Boyd —joining Wendy Holzman and David Asson on

the five-member council. Boyd, Womack and Holzman have not discussed with Stein why they've lost confidence in her, Childress said. In the letter, Asson and Childresssuggestthe move to get rid of Stein began days after the November election, questioned the process that brought on the expected resignation, and asked whether the hiring of an interim or new city manager would be conducted with transparency. SeeSteinIAG

Weather Service website. There is a chance of rain starting Thursday and continu-

ing through Sunday,with high temperatures expected to drop into the 50s. Overnight lows

are expected to be in the30s all week. Prineville has a similar out-

look this week, with sun early in theweekand highs expected to be in the upper 60s and low

70s. Rain is forecast to begin Thursday, and highs could decline into the 60s and 50s.

Overnight lows will likely be in the 30s to low 40s this

week. In Madras, sun andhighs in the upper 60s areexpected through Wednesday. Rain and

daytime temperatures in the 50s are forecast Thursday through Sunday.

Overnight lows will likely be in the 30s and low 40s, according to the National

Weather Service.

Shots hit house

on DixonLoop Someone fired a gun ata house on Dixon Loopnear Alfalfa Market Road on Saturday night or early Sunday morning, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office.

Deputies responded to a report of a gunbeing fired at a garage east of Bendaround 8:20 a.m. Sunday,andfound a bullet hole through the siding

next to the home's garagedoor and a bullet lodged in Sheetrock inside the home.

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

The home's occupants were present at the time of the shooting but were not injured, and deputies do not know whether the house was intentionally targeted. The bullet was turned over to the Sheriff's Office.

ort Rock Community Church Pastor Jeremy Warkentin, left, delivers a sermon to a crowd gathered around the

F remnants of a bonfire during a sunrise service at Fort Rock State Natural Area on Easter Sunday. The annual event, which is open to the public, has been celebrated at Fort Rock since World War II, or thereabouts. The bonfire started off the Easter service before sunrise, followed by songs, prayer and a breakfast at the Fort Rock Grange.

An investigation is ongoing, and anyone with information is asked to call the Sheriff's Office at 541-693-6911. — Bulletin staff reports

een e ues rianssOW eir s By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

EYES ON THE PRIZE reader contest On Page B2 in

Saturday's edition, we challenged readers to identify the eyes of

nine animals in Central Oregon — ahorse, dog, falcon, chicken, rabbit, trout, butterfly,

porcupine andcat. To enter the EYES ONTHE

PRIZE competition for a $200 gift certificate

toward sunglasses, eye care or prescription

REDMOND — Charisa Bates, of La Pine, grew up watching older kids competeinequestrian events,when her family went to meets organized by the Oregon High School Equestrian Teams, Inc. Now, Charisa is competing in the ring just like the girls she used to watch. She was one of the equestrians who participated in an Oregon High School Equestrian Teams, Inc., or OHSET, meet in Redmond over the weekend. Charisa, 17, said she enjoys OHSET events because "you get to involve your horse and your friends in a team." The athletes can compete in up to five individual events, plus additional team events, she said. Kathy Russell, co-adviser to the La Pine High School team and a spokeswoman for the Central District, said riders of all skill levels compete in the events. The Central District meet over the weekend drew 120 riders from 15 schools, Russell said. Riders came from as far away as Pendleton, as well as Sherman and Lake counties. At many

schools,the equestrian program is a club sport. OHSET has been operating for 20 years and now has eight districts across the state, Russell said. Each district holds three meets annually, such as Sunday's event in Redmond. Teenagers must qualify at these events in order to move on to the state meet. The third Central District meet will be April 19 through 21 in Redmond. The statewide meet will also be at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, on May 16 through 19, Russell said. Megan Foster, 16, is a junior at Summit High School in Bend and represents the high school on the board of the Central District of OHSET. Foster began participating in OHSET as a freshman and on Sunday morning,she competed in timed events such as barrel racing and Canadian flags, in which riders race to a group of flags, try to grab one and then race back to the finish line. "It's really fun," Foster said of OHSET. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrudC<bendbulletin.com

Jee Kline /The Bulletin

Alyesa Booren, of Madras, rounds a barrel while competing in the Oregon High School Equestrian Teams, Inc., meet at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center on Sunday.

lenses at Lifetime Vision

Care, visit our Facebook page at www.facebook. submit your answers by n 10a.m. Monday. ("Like

Tumalo trail project hits a roadblock

us while you're there!)

By Scott Hammers

com/bendbulletin and

A winner will be

chosen at random from entrants who answer all

nine correctly. Answers — and our winnerwill be posted on Face-

book and announced in Tuesday's paper.

The Bulletin

A proposed 1.2-mile trail linking Tumalo with Tumalo State Park has hit a roadblock, with the discovery of archaeological sites that could force its relocation. A joint effort of Deschutes County and the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, the Tumalo Trail would be a paved path beginning at the

end of Riverview Avenue in Tumalo and following the west shore of the Deschutes River under the U.S. Highway 20 bridge. Near the south end of the Knife River facility, the paved path would veer away from the river and connect with Cook Avenue, while a dirt path would continue south along the river's edge to Tumalo State Park. PeterRussell,seniortrans-

portation planner for Deschutes County, said the project's primary goal is to improve safe, nonmotorized connectivity betweenthe state park and Tumalo, but also to expand the Deschutes River Trail. Beyond the Tumalo segment, projects are in development by the Deschutes National Forest and the Bend Park 8t: Recreation District to close the remaining gaps in the trail linking Sun-

river with Tumalo. As part of the initial review of the trail project, the State Historical Preservation Office — a division of the state parks department — conducted a survey of the proposed route last falL The survey noted three archaeological sites, one of which had not been previously catalogued by the state. SeeTumalo/A6

Prescribed burns being planned Bulletin staff report The U.S. Forest Service plans to start prescribed burning now that springlike weather is on the way. Prescribed burns are usually done in conjunction with thinning and mowing in order to cut down on the number of hazardous fuels that increase wildfire danger. The fires are set when the weather is good and when smoke will have the least impact on air quality and public health, according to a news releasefrom the Forest Service. A variety of areas in Central Oregon's Deschutes and Ochoco national forests may see prescribed burns this year. In the Sisters Ranger District, five sites are under consideration: • 170 acres to be cooperatively burned with the Deschutes Land Trust, one mile southwest of Metolius Meadows on Forest Road 500 in the Metolius Preserve • Up to 400 acres between state Highway 242 and Forest Road 300 near Cold Spring Campground • Up to 650 acres off Forest Road 1014 near Graham Butte • Up to 800 acres off Forest Road 1425 in the Metolius Basin • Up to 160 acres in the Glaze Forest Stewardship area, between Forest Roads 330 and300,adjacent to G laze Meadow See Burns/A6


A6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013

Stein

It's not the first time Stein has clashed with the City Council. Continued from A5 In January 2012, the coun"We were never consulted. cil held a special meeting and We were never allowed to par- nearly terminated Stein's emticipate in (the process) even as ployment without cause, with a courtesy," the letter states."We some councilors saying her were only told what happened performance was not up to par. after the fact. How the three- After that, the city held a public some arrived at their decisions meeting in which residents and during these months and did so staff spoke in favor of the city within public meeting rules is m anager, and the council held unknown. But they did." two executive sessions to deal

with the issues raised by council members. In April 2012, the council's performance review for Stein included a variety of unattributed comments criticizing her, and created a list of goals for her to focus on. Despite the accusations in the review's narrative, Stein's final score in that evaluation was a 2.92 out of 5.

Burns

• 97 acres split between two areas west of state Highway 58 near the Cascade Estates subdivision And in the Ochoco National Forest, five sites are under consideration: • 400 acres east of Haystack Reservoirin the Crooked River National Grassland • 2200 acres on the east end of the Maury Mountains • 275 acres along Mill Creek near WildcatCampground • 5 00 acres east of B i g Summit Prairie an d B l ack Mountain • 400 acres on the West end of the Maury Mountains near Florida Creek When a p r escribed burn takes place, the Forest Service will send information to media outlets, and signs will warn drivers so they can watch for smoke. Drivers who encounter smoke should slow down, turn on headlights and drive with care.

Bachelor Road • 43 acres about 19 miles east Continued from A5 of La Pine near Willow Butte In the Bend-Fort Rock Rang• 125 acres southwest of Caber District, 12 sites are under in Butte along Forest Road 18, consideration, most notably a also known as China Hat Road 326-acre parcel a half mile west • 533 acres southeast of Coyof Horse Butte on the southeast ote Butte along Forest Road side of Bend. If that prescribed 1820 burn takes place, it could begin • 107 acres on S k y liners in early April, and would likely Road, 7 miles west of Bend be very visible for Bend resi• 1 2 acres about a h a l f dents. In addition to the Horse mile south of the High Desert Butte burn, the following sites Museum are under consideration: • 4 0 acres about a m i l e • 670 acres about 10 miles northwest of Sugar Pine Butte northwest of La Pine in and along Forest Road 9720 around the Pringle Falls Ex• 61 acres adjacent to the perimental Forest eastern side of Sunriver along • 62 acres about 8 miles west County Highway 40 of La Pine along Forest Road In the Crescent Ranger Dis44, also known as South Wicki- trict, three sites are being conup Reservoir Road sidered for a prescribed burn: • 167 acres about 2 miles west • 150 acres on Ringo Butte of Sunriver along Forest Road along Forest Road 6210 41, also known as Conklin Road • 172 acres about a mile west • 92 acres about 6 miles west of the Cascade Lakes Highway of Sunriver along Forest Road along Forest Road 4652 near 45, also known as Sunriver-Mt. Wickiup Reservoir

Nmalo

"County staff is doubtful the paved portion of the trail can be Continued from A5 routed to miss all the archaeoRoss Kihs with th e state logical sites," Russell wrote. parks department said the new "County staff would also point site was discovered by a group out that this second alternate of University of Oregon ar- route has not been field surchaeology students. In a walk- veyed for culturalresources through survey of the area, the and could very well have lithic students discovered "lithic scat- scatters identified by the sumters" — remnants of stone tool- mer 2013 field work, essentially making — on the surface in the putting the county in the same area where the paved portion bind again." of the trail would be built. Kihs said Russell's concerns T o avoid d i sturbing t h e are well-grounded, as it's quite ground where the lithic scatters possible the user-created footwere discovered,the preserva- paths along the Deschutes near tion officerecommended the Tumalo have been used for county consider using a perme- thousands of years. "Anything along a river in able fabric topped with rock, on top of which the paved path a desertenvironment, there's could be built. Alternatively, the a probability of finding someagency suggested the county thing," Kihs said. move the trail to a different Additional ar ch a eologilocation. cal investigation of the area In a memo to county com- is planned over the coming missioners, Russell wrote that months, but both K ihs and relocating the trail to a not-yet- Russell said though it's unclear surveyed area proposed by the when construction might propreservation oNce may n ot ceed,they don'texpect the conbe a workable solution. Com- flict will ultimately prevent the missioners are scheduled to completion of the trail project. be briefed on the issue at their — Reporter: 541-383-0387, meeting Wednesday. shammers@bendbulletin.com

Volunteer Continued from A1 The city of Bend recognized Anderson for his service at a meeting in early February, and Mayor Jim Clinton called him "not just a regular volunteer, but a super volunteer." Volunteers like Anderson have helped the city t o c ontinue providing some services that would otherwise have been cut due to budget reductions, Clinton said. Bend Police D epartment volunteers go through a nineweek citizen'sacademy program, plus three additional months of training. The department provides uniforms, badges and marked police vehicles to volunteers, but does not issue guns. Steve Esselstyn, community liaison for the Bend Police Department, said Anderson has often worked weekends for the department over the last four years and has spent most of his time doing speed watch, disabled parking enforcement and crowd control at events. Volunteers do not write speeding tickets, but they gather data that helps police officers determine where speeding is a problem. "We have about 18 active volunteer members, and each of them have different skills," Esselstyn said.He described Anderson as "very cool and collected" and said Anderson remains calm even when the people he is talking to get angry and begin to swear. "He's very good about taking that kind of harassment," Esselstyn said. "If I give him an assignment ... I don't worry about it anymore, because it will get done and it will get

done properly." Anderson also began volunteering for Deschutes County code enforcement inOctober

— Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com

To Siste

Tu lo —RiverviewAve

Proposed paved path nderpass

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

TODAY BOOK DISCUSSION: Discuss "The Snow Child" by Eowyn Ivey; part of "A Novel Idea ... Read Together"; free;1 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ calendar. BRING OUTYOUR DEAD! AN ILLUSTRATEDHISTORY OF PLAGUE: A presentation by Mark Eberle on the historical and medical story of the plague; free; 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-330-4640. BOOK DISCUSSION: Discuss "The Snow Child" by Eowyn Ivey; part of "A Novel Idea .. ReadTogether";

free; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Books & Music, Sunriver Village Building 25C; 541-593-2525 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. BLACK BEAST REVIVAL: Heavy rock from Bellingham, Wash., with Sifted; $5; 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999 or www. liquidclub.net.

WEDNESDAY "IT'S IN THEBAG" LECTURE SERIES: Sandy Brooke presents the lecture "Fate and Luck: A Series Crossing Boundaries" about her series of artwork; free; noon-1 p.m.; OSLI-Cascades Campus, Cascades Hall, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-322-3100, info@osucasades. edu or www.osucascades.edu/ lunchtime-lectures. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: FRANCESCA DARIMINI": Starring Eva-Maria Westbroek, Mark Delavan andMarcello Giordani in an encore presentation of Zandonai's masterpiece; operaperformance transmitted live in highdefinition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; RegalOldMill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541-382-6347.

TUESDAY GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: Featuring a screening of "Genetic Roulette," a documentary film about genetically engineered food; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.

NEWS OF RECORD Trust, and Wells FargoBank,NA, Successor by Merger toWachovia Mortgage Corporation, complaint, $108,598.86. 13CV0414 — JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association v. Randy R. Kilby, Teryce A. Kilby, RayKlein, INC, LVNVFunding, LLC, State of Oregon, OregonAffordable Housing Assistance Corporation, and Bonneville Billing & Collections, INC, complaint, $87,457.08. 13CV0415 —Wells Fargo Bank, National Association as trustee for structured asset mortgage investments II trust 2007-AR4, Mortgage Pass-through certificates series 2007-AR4 through its loan servicing agent JPMorganChase Bank, N.A. v. Edward T.Pecoraro and Mid Oregon Federal Credit Union, complaint $232,932.15 plus interest, costs and fees. 13CV0416 — JPMorganChase Bank, National Association v. Julie A. Burgoni, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and Security National Mortgage Company, complaint,$265,529.57. 13CV0417 —JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association v. Connie G. Hicks, Connie G.Hicks Trustee, or her successor in trust, under the Connie G. Hicks revocable living trust dated the 22ndday of September, 2000and First Horizon HomeLoan Corporation, complaint, $161,124.06.

Association, as trustee for the certificate holders of the LXS200716N Trust Fund v.Farris Dwinell and James Dwinell, complaint, Filed March 15 $318,005.74. 13CV0400— Rob Marken v.Olivet Church-Heichel, LLC, aDelaware 13CV0407 — TDAuto Finance, Limited Liability Company, Susan M. LLC v. Cecil E. Imel, complaint, Heichel, Anjou Wellness, LLC,Olivet $10,926.59. Church Exchange, INC and Inland 13CV0408 — Asset Acceptance, Private Capital Corp., fka lnland Real LLC v. CherieAppleby, complaint, Estate ExchangeCorp, complaint, $23,526. $170,431.50 with interest rate of 8 13CV0409 — Asset Acceptance, percent. LCC v. Brandy Leroy, complaint, Filed March 18 $20,430.34. 13CV0401 — State Farm Mutual 13CV0410 — Asset Acceptance, Automobile InsuranceCompany, LLC v. Joshua L.Holmes,complaint, as subrogee ofShawnLeatham $16,804.05. and Jill Leatham v.Tanner Steven 13CV0411 —Asset Acceptance, Nantz andCarieJan Otis, complaint, LLC v. Erick V. Ramirez, complaint, $25,327.65. $10,594. 13CV0403 — Bank ofAmerica, N.A. 13CV0412 —Wells Fargo Bank,NA, v. Victoria R. Cabrera andMartin C. alsoknown asWachoviaMortgage Padilla, complaint $173,680.68. Corporation v. DwaneKrumme, 13CV0404 — Bank ofAmerica, N.A. Donna Krumme,TheSunriver Owners v. Marilyn Y. Wagnerand Richard D. Association, Selco Community Wagner, complaint, $176,218.68. Credit Union andDOES1-2, being 13CV0405 — TheBank of New all occupants or other persons or York Mellon fka TheBankof New parties claiming any right, title, lien, York, as trustee for the certificate or interest in the property described holders of the CWABS,Inc., assetin the complaint herein andlocated at backed certificates, series 2006-20 57640 Hart Mountain Lane,Sunriver, v. Eugene V.Cordell, Jr., Kristan OR,97707,complaint,$348,060.85. E. Cordell and the State of Oregon 13CV0413 — JPMorganChase Department of Revenue, complaint, Bank, National Association v. Kathy $413,990.16. L. Bell, individually and as trustee of 13CV0406 — U.S.Bank, National the Kathy L. Bell Revocable Living

CIVIL SUITS

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umalo State Park Greg Cross i The Bulletin

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Nurse Tina Grant takes Harold Anderson's temperature during an appointment at the St. Charles Cancer Center on Wednesday in Bend. Anderson's cancer diagnosis in September forced him to take a medical leave from several volunteer jobs. But Anderson just learned that the cancer is gone, and he hopes to soon return to his volunteer work. 2011, said county Code Enforcement Technician John Griley. Code enforcement technicians and volunteerscheck to make sure people comply with the county's environmental, land use and construction codes. The county attempts to get people to voluntarily follow the code, but it also has the ability to punish violators. Anderson came up with the idea for volunteers to help with code enforcementand pitched the concept to then-Community Development Director Tom Anderson, Griley said. "In some ways, I don't know if we would have a volunteer program had it not been for that contact," Griley said. "(Harold Anderson)'s assisted us in our proactive code enforcement program, and in that program, his work involved following up on certain kinds of (building) conditions and approvals to ensure the conditions underlying those approvals are still being met." For example, agricultural

buildings do not require building permits. Anderson checked to make sure these structures were still being used for agriculture and have not been convertedto some otheruse, such as housing or a business. Anderson said, "I've discovered a lot of these buildings suddenly have an upstairs," with a relative living on the upper floor. In roughly six months, from October 2011 through April 2012, Anderson and another volunteerchecked compliance for 516 permit reviews, Griley said. The volunteers continued to check permits after that, but Griley did not have more recent data on their work. At a Feb. 6 Bend City Council meeting, Anderson asked officials to look for more ways to use volunteers to improve the city. " Consider what yo u c a n do," Anderson said. "There's a brain trust in this city.... Bring it forward, put it to use." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrudC<bendbutleti n.com

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MONDAY, APRIL 1,2013 • THE BULLETIN A7

Have you noticed a change in your ability to remember?

COCC student loan default rates Last week, Central Oregon Community College received a draft version of its fiscal year 2010 three-year default rates. Of all the borrowers who began paying back their federal loans in 2010, 26.3 percent are now in default, meaning they haven't made a payment in 270 days.

Two-year default rate

Three-year rate

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Defaults Continued from A1 While the three-year default rate is on the rise, Financial Aid Director Kevin Multop is hopeful the two-year rate is a

sign of a change. "Our first goal was to stop the trend increasing," Multop said, noting that seems to have happened, at least with those who have been repaying loans for two years. "Now we have to start bringing it down." D raft rates for the 2010 fiscal year are not yet available for other colleges. But for the 2009 fiscal year, only four of Oregon's community colleges had higher three-year default rates than COCC's 24.7 percent: Rogue, Klamath, Blue Mountain and Southwest Or-

egon community colleges. By comparison, nationwide 13.4 percent of those who started paying back their student loans in 2009 have defaulted in the three years since. The numbers released this month are preliminary, and won't be finalized until September. COCC can challenge the numbers i f i t b e l ieves they're incorrect. COCC Dean of Students Alicia Moore said she and Multop believe there could be a connection between Central Oregon's high unemployment rate and the default rates. "While proving c ausality would be difficult, there does appear to be at least a correlation between the two," Moore said in an email. Tri-county u n employment numbers from Economic Development of Central Oregon show that unemployment hovered in the single digits until 2009, when it exploded to about 15 percent and remained in the double digits in 2010 and 2011. Meanwhile, the college's twoyear default rates similarly remained in the single digits until 2010, when they more than doubled, from 7 percent to 15.2 percent. "In t hi s t o ugh e conomic time, those who were in the gravest e conomic p o sition looked to the community college," college relations director Ron Paradis said. "Many of the

ADHD

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

students we've been serving have been those in the toughest situations." But Multop said he can't explain why COCC's numbers went up so sharply over the past few years. Statewide, he said, there doesn't seem to be a theme to Oregon's community college default rates. Some, he said, have seen small drops; others have shot up 5 and 6 percent. "As of today, finding any kind of silver bullet or common reason why Oregon community colleges are seeing these changes? I think the verdict is out," he said. A student loan becomes delinquent on the first day after a payment is missed. Delinquency continues until payments bring the loan current. Most federal loans go into default when there's been no payment for more than 270 days. Going into default on a student loan is no joke: the loan and its interest become immediately due in full, and using deferment,forbearance and other repayment plans is no longer an option. Further, a person whose loans are in default is not eligible for future federal financial aid, and the account is sent to a collection agency. It's also reportedto creditbureaus, and the government can garnish w ages or federal and state tax refunds to collect on the debt. A c o llege's rate d o esn't change even if a b o r rower eventually comes out of default. And the default rate isn't weighted depending on how much money a person defaults. Students might borrow a sum for school, spottily attend for a term and then drop out. Those people are particularly hard for the college to reach. "The trick for schools is that there's not a whole lot we can do to (stop) one-term borrowers," Multop said. And now that the federal government is using the new three-year measure, colleges that have a default rate of 30 percent ormore for three straight years could lose eligibility for federal financial aid. It's certainly not an issue solely in Central Oregon. Accordingto a national study

calm behavior or to do better in school. Pills that are shared Continued from A1 with or sold to classmates — diAbout two-thirds of those version long tolerated in college with a current diagnosis receive settings and gaining traction in prescriptions for stimulants like high-achieving high schoolsRitalin or Adderall, which can are particularly dangerous, docdrastically improve the lives of tors say, because of their health those with ADHD but can also risks when abused. lead to addiction, anxiety and The findings were part of a occasionally psychosis. broader CDC study of children's "Those ar e a s t ronomical health issues, taken from Februnumbers. I'm f l oored," said ary 2011 to June 2012. The agenDr. William Graf, a pediatric cyinterviewedmorethan76,000 neurologist in New Haven and parents nationwide by both cella professorat the Yale School phone and landline and is curof Medicine. He added, "Mild rently compiling its reports. The symptoms are being diagnosed New York Times obtained the so readily, which goes well be- raw data from the agency and yond the disorder and beyond compiledthe results. the zone of ambiguity to pure ADHD has historically been enhancement ofchildren who estimated to affect 3 to 7 perare otherwise healthy." cent ofchildren. The disorder And even more teenagers are has no definitive test and is likely to be prescribed medica- determined only by speaking tion in the near future because extensively with patients, parthe American Psychological ents and teachers,and ruling Association plans to change the out other possible causes — a definition of ADHD to allow subjective process that is often more people to receive the di- skipped under time constraints agnosis and treatment. ADHD and pressurefrom parents.It is described by most experts as is considereda chronic condiresulting from abnormal chem- tion that is often carried into ical levels in the brain that im- adulthood. pair a person's impulse control The CDC director, Dr. Thomand attention skills. as Frieden, likened the rising While some doctors and pa- rates of stimulant prescriptions tient advocates have welcomed among children to the overuse rising diagnosis rates as evi- of pain medications and antibidence that the disorder is being otics in adults. "We need to ensure balance," betterrecognized and accepted, others saidthe newrates suggest Frieden said. "The right medithat millions of children may be cations for ADHD, given to the taking medication merely to right people, can make a huge

by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, student debt is nearing $1 trillion and nearly tripled between 2004 and 2012. Along with that, the percentage ofborrowers delinquent or defaulting is also increasing. There's also a l e gislative push that would overhaul the process, no longer tying defaults to a college but instead to the person. A bill sponsored by Rep. Thomas Petri, R-Wis., proposes that a b o r rower's monthly student loan p a yments becapped at 15 percent of discretionary income and the money be taken out of the person's paychecks until it is

0 0

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Do y o u have trouble understanding the voices of women and small children when they are speaking?

repaid.

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Is i t hard to follow the conversation in noisy places like parties, crowed restaurants or family get-togethers?

mumble ordo not speak clearly? 0

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difference. Unfortunately, misuse appears to be growing at an alarming rate." Giventhat severe ADHD that goes untreated has been shown to increase a child's risk for academic failure and substance abuse, doctors have historically focused on raising awareness of the disorder and reducing fears surrounding stimulant medication. A leading voice has been Dr. Ned Hallowell, a child psychiatrist and author of best-selling books on the disorder. But in a recent interview, Hallowell said that the new CDC data, combined with recent news reports of young people abusing stimulants, left him assessing his role. Whereas Hallowell for years would reassure skeptical parents by telling them that Adderall and other stimulants were "safer than aspirin," he said last week, "I regretthe analogy" and that he "won't be saying that again." And while he still thinks that many children with ADHD continue togounrecognized and untreated, he said the high rates demonstrate how the diagnosis is being handed out too freely. "I think now's the time to call attention to the dangers that can be associated with making the diagnosis in a slipshod fashion," he said. "Thatwe have kids out there getting these drugs to use them as mental steroids — that's dangerous, and I hate to think I have a hand in creating that problem."

D ofamily or friends get frustrated when you ask them to repeat themselves?

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— Reporter:541-617-7831, smillerC<bendbulletin.com

Do y o u turn the TV up louder than others need to?

0 0

Also included in the bill is a provision that would not allow interest accruing on a loan to reach morethan 50 percent of the loan's original balance. For now, though, COCC is trying to fight the trend, and Multop believes it might be The college has begun offering a program through the American Student Assistance called SALT, which is designed to help students manage their loan debt and prevent them entering default. The program tries to educate students before they take out loan debt about what it will cost them in the long run, and provides them with tips for navigating the loan process. And, Multop said, the program is "proactive" about making sure students keep making regular payments when the loans come due. COCC recently agreed to allow American Student Assistance to conduct a demographic study that would try to identify a profile of the average student going into default, and Multop hopes that will help his office get a handle on the default rates. "We're trying to be on top of the issue," Multop said. "We're encouraging students to use SALT, and their activation rate is going up, and we're reviewing and communicating with students when they leave. We have historical rates in the single digits, and we'd like to get back there."

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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE, TV (0 WEATHER > Scoreboard, B2 Golf, B3 NBA, B3

Community Sports, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013

A rundown of games and events to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:

Today

Tuesday

Thursday-Sunday

Saturday

Major LeagueBasedall, opening day for most teams:It's not really the first

NBA, New York Knicks at Miami

Heat,Sp.m. (TNT):Twoof the top

Alpine skiing, Pacific Northwest SkiAssociation Masters Championships at Mt. Bachelorski area: Presented by the

official day of the season, as the Astros and Rangers played Sunday. But it is the start of

teams in the Eastern Conference

Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, racing starts at

Men's college daskefdall, NCAAtournament, Final Four, 3 p.m. (CBS):It's the beginning

meet in a nationally televised game 10 a.m. all four days on the Cliffhanger run and will include super-G, giant slalom andslalom events. Register online at play for a lot of teams.Youcanwatch several that could be amatchup down games on the ESPN family of networks: the line in the playoffs. Miami www.mbsef.org. Boston at the NewYork Yankees (10a.m., has already clinched homecourt ESPN), defending World Series champSan advantage throughout the Friday-Saturday Francisco at the LosAngeles Dodgers (1 conference postseason, although Boys preptennis, Summit Invitational at the Athletic Club p.m., ESPN), Philadelphia at Atlanta (4 p.m., San Antonio and Oklahoma City of Bend, noon (Friday) and 8a.m. (Saturday): TheStorm host ESPN2) andSt. Louis at Arizona (7 p.m., are both in the running for the some of the strongest programs in Class 5A inthis two-day, ESPN2). If you get Root Sports, you canalso Pitcher C.C. Sabathia will league's best record with Miami. nine-team dual match tournament. BendHigh and Mountain start today's opener for the The Spurs andThunder play see the Seattle Mariners open their 2013 View will also be in the field. New York Yankees. campaign at Oakland at 7p.m. Thursday at 6:30 p.m. onTNT.

PREP SPORTS

of the end for March Madness.

Top overall seed Louisville takes on the Cinderella of the tournament, ninth-seeded Wichita State, in the early

game. A pair of No. 4seedsMichigan andSyracuse — meet in the second gameat about 5:50p.m.Thechampionship game will be Monday, April 8, at

6 p.m., also on CBS.

COMMUNITY SPORTS

MLB

Astros get big

win in AL debut

BEAU EASTES

HOUSTON — The Houston Astros and their spiffy new uni-

forms looked like aperfect fit in the American

What does OSAA have in store for local schools? s the 2012-13 school year begins to wind down, theOregon School Activities Association's classification and districting committee is slowly starting to mold its final suggestions for the organization's next four-year time block, which begins in fall 2014. Last month the 14-person committee released four recommendations on which it has reached consensus aftersix meetings over the past six months. Those recommendations include maintaining the current sixclassification system, using adjusted daily attendancenumbers when classifying schools, proposing an amendment tothe OSAAhandbook that schools must

Qg Qe ~eg

pres ent quantifiable data

recent OSAA reclassification ProPosal in its entirety, go to

hybrid leagues.

League. Rick Ankiel and the

Astros made animpressive debut in the AL,

trouncing the Texas Rangers 8-2 Sunday night in the major league openerand giving Bo

". rv

Porter a win in his first

game as manager. "To come out with a win is perfect," Astros designated hitter Carlos

Pena said. "To bepart of it is really cool. To play

our rivals here inTexas and to comeout on top today, it's a treat." Ankiel launched a

pinch-hit three-run shot for the majors' first homer this season, Bud Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Volunteer Mark Clark cleans a rear axle of dirt and grease while working at the Bicycle Re-Source of Bend last week. The bike shop repairs donated and abandoned bikes and gives them to local residents.

See additional Central Oregon prep sports photos on TheBulletin's website: benddulletin.com/preppics

O

nings for his first career save. Having switched from

the National Leagueto the AL in the offseason, the Astros earned their

to play in a lower classification, and eliminating

While nothing is final until the OSAA executive board votes on the www.osaa.org. r ecommendations t h i s fall, Central O regon's large schools do not appear to be faced with significant changes. With the six-class system apparently safe for at least another four years — athletic directors explored the possibility of going to a five-class system during the next time block — Bend High, Mountain View, Summit, Redmond and Ridgeview all look destined to play together in a five-team Class 5A Intermountain Conference. "We'd definitely like the league to be a little bit bigger," Summit athletic director Gabe Pagano says. "In basketball, we're playing (teams) in our league three times just to get 15 games. It's tough to encourage people to travel (to Central Oregon), and it's tough on us to have to go over the mountain all the time." "Yeah, we'd like to have bigger leagues, but we come from 'the land of nobody wants you,' " adds Craig Walker, the athletic director at Bend High and a member of the classification and districting committee. "Who knows, four years or 10 years from now, we could have more schools (in the 5A enrollment range). Crook County could grow, Madras could grow. We anticipated that happening this go-around (of reclassification), but the economy had a say in it." SeeOSAA/B5

Norris pitched well for the win and Erik Bedard threw 3~/~scoreless in-

first opening day victory since 2006 and the 4,000th regular-season

win in franchise history. Justin Maxwell added

a pair of triples and made a nifty catch in center field.

Norris (1-0) allowed five hits and two runs with five strikeouts in 5'/a innings. For more

• BiCyClRe-SO e urCe, of Bend, Started as atemPOrary endeaVOr, but nOWthe nOnPrOfit fiXeS and diStributeS hundredSOf bikes ayear fOrlOCalSin need By Elise Gross The Bulletin

The scene on a recent weekday morning at Bicycle Re-Source of Bend is not unlike that at any bike shop in town: A man, Mark Clark, inspects a lavender Huffy mountain bike in a workshop, his greasy hands spinning wheels and checking brakes. Dozens of tires hang from a wall, along with myriad tools on a pegboard. But unlike most bike shops, Bicycle Re-Source of Bend (BRoB, for short), fixes bikes to give away. Since December 2010,BRoB has been repairing donated and abandoned bikes and distributing them to financially strapped adults and children throughout Central Oregon. "There's a huge demand (for bikes) among the low-in-

MLB news, seeB5. — The Associated Press

BicycleRe-Sourceof Bend Location:2669 N.E. Twin Knolls Road, Suite 203, Bend Phone:541-382-6977

Email:Bicycleresourceofbend©gmail.com

"I believe in what (BRoB is) doing," says Miller, whose regular job is with Hutch's Bicycles. "Bikes are the answer to everything." JeffSchuler,BRoB's co-founder and president,agrees. For many of the people the organization assists, "a bike literally spearheads a change of life." Through partnerships with local nonprofit agencies come (population), homeless people and veterans," says such as Central Oregon Veterans Outreach, Family Rod Miller, vice president of BRoB's board of directors. Access Network and Neighborlmpact, BRoB provides Miller is one of a handful of regular staff members bikes (along with helmets and bike locks) to roughly 20 with the nonprofit, which is housed in a strip mall on community members each month, according to Miller. Bend's east side. Like several other staff members, he "With 90 percent of the bikes we give away, we have works full time as a bike mechanic at a local shop dur- gotten a call from an (agency) advocate saying there's a ing the day but finds time to volunteer at BRoB several need," says Schuler. hours each week. SeeBicycle/B5

Houston's Rick Ankiel (28) rounds the bases after a home run on Sunday in Houston.

EQUESTRIAN

Results listed for OHSETmeet MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT

Final Four Atlanta

National Semifinals Saturday, April 6

Louisville (33-5) vs. Wichita State (30-8), 3:09 p.m.

Michigan (30-7) vs. Syracuse (30-9), 5:49 p.m. National Championship Monday, April 8 Semifinal winners, 6 p.m.

Wichita State an unlikely finalist in anunusualtourney By Shannon Ryan

Inside

Chicago Tribune

• A roundup of Sunday's regional finals,B4

The Final Four will pit a storied program against a fairy tale in the making on one side. The other will feature the lone Big Ten team standing against a team trying to end its Big East era in historic fashion. After a season in which parity was

the storyline, No. 1 seed Louisville, No. 9 Wichita State, No. 4 Syracuse and No. 4 Michigan gather in Atlanta, all hoping to win tw o more games David J. Phillip /The Associated Press and earn t h e N C A A t o u r nament Michigan players celebrate after beating Florida championship. 79-59 in Sunday's South Regional final in ArlingSeeTourney /B4 ton, Texas.

REDMOND — Riders

representing 15 high schools took part over the weekend in the sec-

ond Oregon HighSchool Equestrian Teams Central District meet of the

2013 season. Redmond, Crook County, Summit and La Pine won team titles in their respective divi-

sions. The three-day competition concluded Sunday atthe Deschutes

County Fair & Expo Center. Meet results are listed in Scoreboard,B2. — Bulletin staff report


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013

ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY BASEBALL 10 a.m.: M LB, Boston atNew

York Yankees,ESPN. 1 p.m.:MLB,SanFranciscoat Los Angeles Dodgers, ESPN. 4 p.m.:MLB, Philadelphia at Atlanta, ESPN2. 7 p.m.:MLB, St. Louis at Arizona, ESPN2. 7 p.m.:MLB, Seattle at Oakland,

Root Sports. BASKETBALL 4 p.m.:Women's college, NCAA tourney, regional final, Kentucky vs. Connecticut, ESPN. 6 p.m.:NBA, Portland at Utah, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.

6:30p.m.:W omen'scollege, NCAA tourney, regional final, Georgia vs. California, ESPN.

HOGKEY 4:30 p.m.:NHL, Colorado at Detroit, NBCSN.

SOCCER 11:30 a.m.: UEFA Champions

League, quarterfinal, FCBayern M unich vs.Juventus,Root

Sports. BASEBALL Noon:MLB, Baltimore at Tampa Bay, MLB Network. 7 p.m.: MLB, Seattle at Oakland, Root Sports. 7 p.m.:MLB, San Francisco at Los Angeles Dodgers or St. Louis at Arizona, MLB Network.

BASKETBALL 4 p.m.: Women's college, NCAA tourney, regional final, Notre Dame vs. Duke, ESPN.

4 p.m.:Men's college, NIT, semifinal, BYU vs. Baylor, ESPN2.

5 p.m.:NBA, NewYork at Miami, TNT.

6 p.m.: Women's college, NCAA tourney, regional final, Tennesseevs.Louisville,ESPN. 6:30 p.m.:Men's college, NIT,

semifinal, lowa vs. Maryland, ESPN2.

HOCKEY 4:30 p.m.:NHL, Buffalo at Pittsburgh, NBCSN.

SOFTBALL 5 p.m.:College, California at Arizona, Pac-12Network.

ON THE AIR: RADIO TODAY

TUESDAY

BASEBALL 1 p.m.:MLB, SanFranciscoat

BASEBALL 5:30 p.m.:College, Portland at

Los Angeles Dodgers, KICE-AM 940.

Oregon State, KICE-AM 940.

6 p.m.:NBA, Portland at Utah, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690. Listings are themostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF four teams.

Murray rallies past FerI'0l' —Andy Murray erased a

championshi ppointSundayand rallied past David Ferrer 2-6,

BASKETBALL Kentucky guardtransfer-

6-4, 7-6 (1) in a grueling final at theSonyOpen inKeyBiscayne,

I'Illg — Kentucky coach John

Fla. One point from defeat in the last set, Murray skipped a

guard Ryan Harrow is transferring to Georgia State. Calipari

Calipari says sophomore point

forehand off the baseline to stay says he supports Harrow's deciin the match. He then dominated the tiebreaker, while Ferrer ap-

sion to be closer to his family in Atlanta. Calipari says the

peared to cramp andcollapsed

health of Harrow's father played

to the court after one long point. The match was filled with grind-

a role in the decision. Harrow

ing baseline rallies, including at least a dozen of more than 20 strokes and one lasting 34.

Murray and Ferrer dueled for 2 hours, 44 minutes, and as a result, the11:30 a.m. start on

Easter turned out not to beearly enough for CBS. The network cut away from the final when it went to the tiebreaker, switching to the tipoff of the NCAA tournament game between Michigan

and Florida.

averaged 9.3 points per game as a freshman at North Carolina State in the 2010-11 season before transferring to Kentucky. He sat out the Wildcats' 2011-12

national championship season. Harrow averaged 9.9 points in 29 games, including 24 starts, for Kentucky last season.

Cavs' Irving returnsCleveland Cavaliers star Kyrie lrving returned to the lineup Sun-

day night against NewOrleans after missing eight games with a strained left shoulder. There

HOCKEY CroSdy Out indefinitely

— Sidney Crosby has abroken jaw and is out indefinitely after being hit in the mouth with a

puck during a win against the New York Islanders on Saturday. The Pittsburgh Penguins said

on the team website Sunday that Crosby had surgery Saturday night, and there will be an update on his status later in the week. Crosby, the NHL's leading

scorer, was struck in the face during the first period of the

was speculation lrving would miss the rest of the season after injuring the shoulder March 10

against Toronto. HaWkS' SeaSOnOVer— Atlanta Hawks center ZazaPachulia will undergo surgery on his sore right Achilles and miss the

rest of the season. Theexpected recovery time is approximately sixmonths, meaning the Hawks will be without another valuable member of their bench heading into the playoffs. The team al-

flying out of his mouth after

ready lost guard LouWilliams to a season-ending kneeinjury. In 52 games this season, including 15 starts, Pachulia averaged5.9

the puck struck him during his first shift. The team said Crosby

points, 6.5 rebounds and 1.5 assists in 21.8 minutes.

Penguins' 2-0 win. Slow-motion replays showed multiple teeth

had "major dental work" and

will have more done later in the

week.

Frozen Fourfirst timers

CYCLING Cancellara wins event-

— Pittsburgh will host the Fro-

Fabian Cancellara brokeaway

zen Four for the first time ever

on the final hill of the Ronde of Flanders in Oudenaarde, Belgium, and finished the classic in his time-trial style to win the WorldTour race ahead of Slovak

nextmonth.And in a season of firsts, three of four teams will be headed to the national hockey showcase for the first

time. UMass Lowell (28-10-2), Saint Cloud State (25-15-1j and

Quinnipiac (29-7-5) all clinched berths in the national semifinals for the first time this weekend, setting up a new look at the Consol Energy Center April 11-13. And the fourth member, Yale (20-12-3), hasn't been this far since 1952, when the entire

tournament field featured just

ON DECK Today Baseball: Sistersat CotageGrove,4:30 p.m.;LaPine at Junction City,4:30p.m. Softball: Cottage GroveatSisters, 4:30 p.m.;Junction City atLaPine, 4:30p.m.

Tuesday

Baseball: LaSalleat Madras, 4p.m.; CulveratWaldport, 4:30 p.m.;Summit at Mazama,4:30p.m. Softball: MountainViewat HoodRiver Valley, TBD; Madrasat LaSale, 4:30p.m.; Culverat Waldport, 430p.m. Boys golf: Redm ond,Ridgeview, CrookCounty, Bend at Ridgeview/CrookCounty Invitational at Brasada Ranch,noon Boys tennis:Ridgeviewat Bend,4 p.mzCrookCounty at MountainView,4 p.m.; Sum mit at Redmond, 4

p.m.

Girls tennis: Mountain View,Shermanat Crook County,4p.m.;Bendat Ridgeview, 4p.m.;Redmond at Summit4 , p.m.

Wednesday Basebalh CentralCatholic at MountainView,4:30 p.mc Sisters atSweetHome,4:30 p.m.; Cottage Grove atLaPine,4:30p.m. Softball: Sweet Home at Sisters, 4:30p.m.; LaPine at CottageGrove,4:30p.m. Track: GilchristatSummitJV,330p.m. Boys tennis:MadrasatBlanchet,4p.m. Girls tennis: Bianchet atMadras,4 p.m. Thursday Baseball: Madras at LaSage,430 p.m. Track: CulveratEast LinninLebanon,4 p.m.; Sisters, CottageGroveat Junction City, 4 pm.; LaPineat SweetHome, 4p.m. Boys tennis: Summiat t Ridgeview,4p.m.; Mountain View atRedmond, 4 p.m.; CrookCounty atBend,4 p.m. Girls tennis: Redm ond at Mountain View,4 p.m.; RidgeviewatSummit, 4p.m.; Bendat CrookCounty, 4p.m. Friday Baseball: EaglePoint at Ridgeview(DH), 12 p.m.; Elmira atSisters,4:30p.m.; Regisat Culver,4:30 p.m.; LaPineatSweetHome,4:30p.m. Softball: Gladstone at Madras,4:30 p.m.; Sisters at Elmira,4:30p.m.; Regis af Culver, 4:30p.m.; Sweet HomeatLaPine,4:30 p.m. Boys golf: Summit,Redmond, Ridgeview, Mountain View,Sisters,CrookCounty at Panther Inviteat JuniperGoltClubin Redmond, noon Girls golf: Ridgeview, Bend,Mountain View,Summit, CrookCounty, Redmond, Sisters, Madrasat Eagle CrestRidge,noon Track: MountaiVi newatMcKenzieinBueRiver,1p.m.; BendatEast County ClassicatMt. HoodCommunity CollegeinGresham,4 p.m.;CrookCounty at Dregon Trail Invitational inVale,2 p.m. Boys tennis:MountainView,Summit, Bend, Redmond at SummiInvi t te,TBD

PREP SPORTS Equestrian

BASKETBALL

TENNIS

COREBOARD

TUESDAY

Peter Sagan. Cancellara won his second major WorldTour race in thepasttwo weeks. He also won the E3 Harelbeke event on simi-

lar terrain. The victory makes Cancellara the favorite for next

Sunday's Paris-Roubaix classic, particularly after Belgian Tom Boonen crashed our early in the Ronde. — From wire reports

OregonHighSchool EquestrianTeams Central District Meet in Redmond March 29-31 Individual Events (Top threeplacers) Hunt Seat over Fences — 1, Olivia Chandler, Sisters. 2,EffieChandler, Sisters. 3, LaurenWaffey, Trinity Lutheran.

Dressage — 1,OliviaChander, Sisters. 2, Autumn Sanders,Sisters. 3,GeorgannIreland, Bend. Saddle Seat Equitation — 1, Bohbi JoRosauer, Sisters. 2, GeorgannIreland, Bend. 3, Region Hayden,Redmond Hunt Seat Equitation — I, Rosie Skinner, Redmond. 2,CammiBenson, Sisters. 3, Crystal Mitchell, Pendleton. Showmanship — 1(tie), MollyCoehlo, Mountain View, andCharisaBates, La Pine. 3, Mickaela Cyrus,Redmond. In Hand Trail — 1, LaurenCurl, Trinity Lutheran. 2, CharisaBates,La Pine.3, AnnieKamperman, MountainView. Working Rancher — 1, CammiBenson, Sisters. 2(tie), BobhiJo Rosauer, Sisters, andJakePalin, Madras Trail Equitation — 1,MollyCoehlo, Mountain View. 2, Crystal Mitchell, Pendleton. 3,RosieSkinner, Redmond. Driving 1, RegionHayden,Redmond. 2, Cammi Benson,Sisters.3, Hailey Mccarty, LaPine. Breakaway Roping — 1, NathanGilbert, North Lake,1 catch,6.42. 2,JakePalin, Madras,1catch, 8.08. Steer Daubing — 1,JakePalin, Madras,2 daubs, 4.33. 2,McKenzie King,Sisters,2 daubs,5.43.3, Bohbi JoRosauer,Sisters, 2dauhs, 5.51. Western Horsemanship — 1, Rosie Skinner, Redmond. 2,CammiBenson, Sisters 3, Crystal Mitchell, Pendleton. Reining — 1,RosieSkinner, Redmond. 2, Amanda Grippin,MountainView.3,KateCampbell, Bend. Barrels 1, MeganFoster,Summit, 14.39(district record). 2,SavannahGeist, Ridgeview,14.41(district record).3, KateCampbell, Bend,14.94. Pole Bending — 1,MaddieSmith, Summit, 22.75. 2, KateCampbell, Bend,22.80. 3, DeborahDial, Ridgeview, 23.04. Keyhole — I, LacieBrant, Bend,7.92. 2 (tie), 01ivia Chandler,Sister,8.07,andSethBouris, Sisters, 8.07. Figure 8 — 1,Denali Hart,Summit,1084. 2, Maddie Smith,Summit, 10.87.3, SavannahGeist, Ridgeview,10.98 Individual Flags — 1,KayceeHansen, Redmond, 9.6 2, RegionHayden,Redmond,9.87. 3,Svannah Geist, Ridgeview,10.18. TeamEvents

(Top threeplacers)

In Hand Obstacle Relay 1, Trinity Lutheran (Lauren Curl, JaycieHaynes, Taylor Mccabe,Lauren Wage y). 2, Redmond (Mickaela Cyrus, Rosie Skinner,RegionHayden,KaseyStevens).3, Charisa Bates,HaileyMccarty, KelbiIrvin. Working Pairs — 1, CammiBenson and Eissa O'Connor,Sisters. 2, RosieSkinner andRegion Hayden,Redmond.3,TylerRuthandCrystal Mitcheff, Pendleton. Freestyle 4 Drill — 1,Redmond(Mickaela Cyrus, Kaycee Hansen,Bigie Richardson, RegionHayden). 2, MountainView(Jamie Kelly, JoyGrossman, Annie Kam perman, Justine Heywood). 3, Summit (Denali Hart, MaddieSmith, Isabella Affenbach, Keffi Nicho son,MeganFoster). Freestyle 6+ Drill — 1, Bend (KathleenMitchell, LacieBrant,Kaitlin Cam pbell, AvalonIrwin, Sarah Stewart,RiannCornet). Team Penning — 1, Summit A(MaddieSmith, IsabellaAgenbach, Megan Foster), 3pens, 7 cows, 225.24. 2, Madras B(Alyssa Booren, Stephanie Affard,AngelicaMeteer), 3 pens,7cows,228.44. 3, Sisters B(Egie Chandler, SethBouris, Autumn Saunders),3pens, 6cows, 232.26. BiRangle — 1,Alyssa Booren and LakotaJensen, Madras ,26.66.2,JaydraKinseyandLaurenWalley, TrinityLutheran,27.02.3, BiffieRichardsonand KelseyTobin,Redmond,27.33. Canadian Flags — 1, Summit A (Denali Hart, MaddieSmith,Isabella Agenbach, Megan Foster), 37.42. 2,RedmondB(Biff ieRichardson,KelseyTobin, BrittneyGriggs, CodieGarlitz), 39.37.3, Bend A(LacieBrant,KateCampbell, LaurenRichardson, JessicaWallace, RiannCornet), 39.79. Overall TeamResults Large Team11+Riders — Redmond 560, Sisters 492, MountainView471, Bend412. MediumTeam 7-10 Riders — CrookCounty229, The Dages Wahtonka68 Small Team 4-6 Riders — Summi389, t Trinity Luthersn264, Madras243, Pendleton 194, Ridgeview162 Mini Team1-3 Riders — LaPine153, NorthLake 87, Dulur87.

BASKETBALL Men's college NCAATournament AN TimesPDT EASTREGIONAL

Regional Championship Saturday, March30 Syracuse 55,Marquette 39 SOUTHREGIONAL

Regional Championship Sunday, March31

Michigan79,Florida59 MIDWESTREGIONAL

Regional Championship Sunday, March31 Louisville85, Duke63 WEST REGIONAL

Regional Championship

Saturday, March30 WichitaState70,OhioState66 FINAL FOUR At TheGeorgia Dome Atlanta National Semifinals Saturday, April 6 Louisville(33-5)vs WichitaState(30 8), 3:09p.m. Michigan(30-7)vs.Syracuse(30-9), 5:49p.m. National Championship Monday,April 8 Semifinawinners,6pm. National Invitation Tournament AU TimesPDT At MadisonSquareGarden New York Semifinals Tuesday,April 2 BYU(24-11)vs.Baylor (21-14), 4p.m. Maryland(25-12)vs. Iowa(24-12), 630pm. College Basketball Invitational ChampionshipSeries AN TimesPDT

(Best-of-3) (x-if necessary) Today April 1 GeorgeMason(21-14) atSantaClara(24-11), 7p.m. Wednesday,April 3 SantaClaraatGeorgeMason,4 p.m. Friday, April 6 x-Santa Claraat George Mason, 4p.m. College Insider.comTournament AH TimesPDT

Championship Tuesday,April 2 EastCarolina(22-12) vs Weber State(30-6), 5 p.m.

Wom en's college NCAATournament All Times PDT OKLAHOMACITY REGIONAL Regional Semifinals

Sunday,March31 Tennessee 74,Oklahoma59 Louisville82,Baylor81 Tuesday,April 2

RegionalChampionship Tennessee (27-7) vs Louisville (27-8), 6p.m.

Men Championship AndyMurray(2), Britain, def. DavidFerrer (3), Spain, 2-6, 6-4,7-6(1).

San Franciscoat LA. Dodgers, 7:10p m.

College Pac-12 Standings AH TimesPDT

Conference Oregon DregonState UCLA California WashingtonState 3 Stanford ArizonaState SouthernCal Arizona Utah Washington

W 8 5 6 5

3 4 4 3 2 2

L 1 1 3 4

3 3

5 5 6 7 7

Today's Game

SOCCER

Overall

W 22 22 18 16 16 13 15 11 18 12 6

L 6 4

6 12 10

9 8 16 11 13 19

California atStanford, 7p.m. Tuesday's Games x-ArizonaStateatWichita State 4.30p.m. x-PortlandatOregonState,5:35 p.m. x-Cal StateFuffertonat UCLA,6 p.m. Wednesday sGame ArizonaStateat Wichita State,430p.m. x=nonconference

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AN TimesPDT

EasternConference Atlantic Division

GP W L OT PtsGF GA Pittsburgh 3 6 2 8 8 0 56 123 84 N ew Jersey 35 15 11 9 3 9 88 97 N .Y.Rangers 34 16 15 3 3 5 78 84 N .Y.lsanders 35 16 16 3 3 5 100 112 P hiladelphia 35 15 17 3 3 3 95 108 Norlheast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Montreal 34 22 7 5 49 107 83 Boston 34 22 8 4 48 97 75 Ottawa 3 5 19 10 6 4 4 89 76 Toronto 3 6 20 12 4 4 4 112 100 3 6 13 17 6 3 2 94 113 Buffalo

Southeast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA W innipeg 3 6 1 8 16 2 3 8 89 106 C arolina 33 1 6 1 5 2 3 4 92 97 W ashington 35 16 17 2 3 4 102 101 T ampaBay 34 15 18 1 3 1 110 103 F lorida 36 11 1 9 6 2 8 88 125

MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AN TimesPDT Montreal

W L T 4 1 0 1 0 2 1 1 2 0 2 2 2 1 1 2 I 1 2 I 0 3 1

Houston 3 SportingKansasCity 2 I Columbus 2 Philadelphia 2 NewYork 1 TorontoFC 1 D.C. NewEngland

Chicago

P t sGF GA 12 6 4 9 8 4 8 6 3 7 7 4 6 5 6 5 6 7 4 5 6 4 2 4 4 I 2 1 1 9

Western Conference W L T P t sGF GA FC Dallas 4 1 0 12 8 5 ChivasUSA 3 1 1 10 10 7 Los Angeles 2 0 2 8 8 3 RealSaltLake 2 2 1 7 5 5 SanJose 2 2 1 7 4 6 Vancouver 2 2 0 6 5 5 Portand 0 1 3 3 7 8 Colorado 0 3 2 2 4 7 Seattle 0 3 I I 2 5 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie.

Friday's Game

D.C. UnitedatSporting KansasCity, 5:30pm. Saturday's Game Fc DallasatTorontoFC,1p m. PhiladelphiaatColumbus, 2p.m. RealSaltLakeatColorado, 4:30p.m. Houston at Portland,7:30p.m. Vancouverat SanJose,7:30p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

American League

BALTIMOREDRIDLES— Placed RHP SteveJohnson, INFWilson Betemit andLHPTsuyoshi Wadaon the15-day DL;Wadaretroactiveto March22,Johnson Regional Championship to March 23andBetemit to March26. Selectedthe Today,April 1 contractof INF/DFStevePearce. Georgia(28-6)vs.California(31-3),6:30p.m. BOSTONRED SDX— Placed LHP Craig Breslow, NORFOLKREGIONAL LHP FranklinMoralesandDHDavid Drtizon the15Regional Semifinals Western Conference day DL,retroactiveto March22. Selectedthecontract Sunday,March31 Central Division of DF JackieBradleyJr. IromPawtucket (IL). DesigNotreDam e93, Kansas63 GP W L OT PtsGF GA natedINFMauro Gomezfor assignment. Duke53,Nebraska45 Chicago 34 26 5 3 5 5 116 74 CHICAGO WHITE SDX—Dptioned RHPBrian RegionalChampionship Detroit 3 5 17 13 5 3 9 91 92 Dmogrosso to Charlotte (IL). Tuesday,April 2 Columbus 3 6 15 14 7 3 7 87 97 CLEVELAND INDIANS—Piaced RHPFrank HerNotreDam e(34-1)vs. Duke(33-2), 4p.m. St. Louis 3 3 17 14 2 3 6 94 93 rmann on the 15-day DL ReassignedRHPMat BRIDGEPORTREGIONAL Nashville 3 5 14 14 7 3 5 87 96 Capps, RHP Jerry Gil, RHPDaisuke Matsuzaka, C Regional Championship Northwest Division DmirSantos,INFLuis HemandezandDFMatt Carson Today, April 1 GP W L OT PtsGF GA to Columbus (IL). Selectedthecontract of INFRyan Kentucky(30-5) vs. Connecticut (32-4),4:30p.m. Minnesota 3 4 21 11 2 4 4 97 86 Rabum from Columbus.DesignatedLHPDavid Huff Vancouver 3 5 19 10 6 4 4 92 90 for assignmen t. Edmonton 3 4 14 13 7 3 5 87 95 DETROITI TGERS—Selected the contracts of DF BASEBALL Calgary 3 3 13 16 4 3 0 93 114 Don KellyandINFMatt TuiasosopofromToledo (IL). Colorado 3 4 12 18 4 2 8 84 108 HOUSTO NASTRDS—Selectedthe contracts ofDF MLB Pacific Division Rick Ankiel,LHPErik Bedard andRHPEdgar Gonzalez MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL GP W L OT PtsGF GA from Oklahoma City (PCL). Recaled DFJ.D. Martinez AO TimesPDT Anaheim 3 5 2 3 7 5 51 107 90 from OklahomC aity (PCL). PlacedDFFernandoMarL os Angeles 35 20 12 3 4 3 103 88 tinez onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to March27, and AMERICANLEAGUE S anJose 3 4 1 7 1 1 6 4 0 85 84 RHPAlexWhiteonthe60-day DL. East Division D allas 34 16 1 5 3 3 5 94 103 KANSAS CITYRDYALS—Selected thecontract of W L Pct GB P hoenix 35 1 4 1 5 6 3 4 94 101 INF MiguelTeiadatromOmaha (PCL). Placed LHP Baltimore .000 0 0 NOTE:Twopoints tor a win, onepoint for overtime DannyDuffyonthe15-day DL. Boston 0 0 .000 loss. MINNES OTATWINS—Selected thecontract ofOF NewYork 0 0 .000 Sunday's Games Wilkin Ramirezfrom Rochester (IL). TampaBay 0 0 .000 Chicago 7, Detroit 1 NEW YORKYANKEES Pl aced DF CurtisGrandToronto 0 0 .000 Philadelphia5, Washington 4, DT erson, SSDerekJeter, RH PPhil Hughesand18 Mark Central Division Los Angele3, s Dallas2 Teixeira onthe 15-dayDL, retroactive to March22. W L Pct GB Columbus2, Anaheim1, DT Selectedthecontract of18 LyleOverhayfromScranChicago 0 0 .000 Bosto2 n,Buff alo0 ton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). Recalled RHPAdamWarren Today' s Games Ceveland 0 0 .000 from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.DesignatedLHPClay Detroit 0 0 .000 N.Y. Isandersat NewJersey, 4p.m. Rapada forassignment. Kansas City 0 0 .000 Winnipegat N.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. OAKLAND ATHLET ICS— Placed SS Hiroyuki Minnesota 0 0 .000 CarolinaatMontreal, 4:30p.m. Nakajimaonthe15-day DL,retroactive to March27. West Division Colorado at Detroit, 4:30p.m. Dptioned LHPPedroFigueroa andINFAndy Parrinoto W L Pct GB St. LouisatMinnesota,5p.m. Sacramento(PCL). Houston 1 0 1.000 Nashville atChicago,5:30p.m. SEATTLE MARINERS Selectedandoptionedthe Los Angeles 0 0 000 I/2 Anaheim at Dalas, 5:30 p.m. contract ofRHPD.J. Mitchel to Tacoma(PCL) DesI/2 Oakland 0 0 000 Calgaryat Edmonton, 6:30pm. ignatedDFCasper Wells tor assignment. Reassigned Seattle 0 0 000 I/2 VancouveratSanJose,7.30p.m. RHPDannyFarquhar, CJesusSucre, INFBrad Miler Texas 0 1 .000 1 and DFEndyChaveztotheir minorleaguecamp. TEXAS RANGERS— Placed RHP Colby Lewis, GOLF Sunday'sGame RHPJoakimSoriaand LHPMartin Perezonthe15Houston8,Texas2 day DL,retroactiveto March22. DptionedRH PCory Today's Games PGA Tour Burns,RHPJoshLindblom andINFJurickson Protar Boston(Lester0-0) at N.Y.Yankees (Sabathia 0-0), to RoundRock(PCL). Selectedthecontracts of INF HoustonOpen 10:05a.m. Jeff BakerandRHPDerek Lowefrom Round Rock. Sunday Detroit (Verlander 0-0) atMinnesota(Worley0-0),1:10 ReleasedINFBrandonAllen fromRoundRock. At RedstoneGolf Club, TournamentCourse National League p.m. Humble, Texas KansasCity(Shields0-0) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Sale ARIZONADIAMDNDBACKS — Dptioned RHPRanPurse: $6.2 million 0-0), 1:1 0p.m. daff Delgado toReno(PCL). Recalled DFAlfredoMarte Yardage:7,441; Par:72 L.A. Angels(Weaver 0-0) at Cincinnati (Cueto0-0), from Reno.Selectedthe contract of INFJoshWilson Final 1:10p.m. from Reno. Pl acedINFWilie Bloomquist, DFAdam D.A.Points(500),$1,116,000 64-71-71-66—272 Seattle (Hernan dez0-0) at Oakland(Anderson 0-0), Billy Horschel(245),$545,600 68-72-67-66 273 Eaton,INFDidi GregoriusandDFCody Ross onthe 15-day Dl . ; Eaton andRoss retroactive to March22, 7:05 pm. HenrikStenson(245),$545,60069-70-68-66—273 Bloomquisto t March27andGregoriusto March30. Tuesday'sGames BenCrane(123),$272,800 69-70-67-68—274 BaltimoreatTampaBay,12:10p.m. ATLANTA BRAVES—Selected the contract of C DustinJohnson(123),$272,80069-70-70-65—274 EvanGattis fromGwinnett (IL). PlacedLHPJonny ClevelandatToronto,407 p.m. KevinChappeff(92),$207,700 70-70-67-68—275 Ventersonthe15-day DL,retroactive to March27. Texas at Houston,5:10 p.m. StewartCink(92), I207,700 71-66-68-70 275 CHICAGO CUBS PlacedRHPMattGarzaandINF Seattle atOakland, 7:05p.m. BrianDavis(92), $207,700 67-70-71-67—275 lan Stewartonthe15-day Dl., retroactiveto March22, JasonKokrak(80), $179,800 66-69-71-70—276 and RHP Scott Bakeronthe60-dayDL. DptionedDF Sunday'sSummary B. deJonge(64), $137,433 71-68-72-66—277 Brett Jackson to lowa(PCL). Selectedthe contracts C. HowellIII (64),$137,433 69-72-70-66—277 of INF Brent Liffibridge andLHPHisanori Takahashi Keegan Bradley(64), $137,433 70-70-67-70 277 Astros 8, Rangers 2 f r om l o wa. Bill Haas(64), $137,433 68-70-67-72—277 CINCINNATI REDS Dptioned RHP Logan DnL. Dosthuizen (64), $137,433 70-72-65-70—277 Texas Houston drusek toPensacola (SL). PlacedRHPNick Masset LeeWestwood(64),$137,433 68-72-67-70—277 ab r hbi ab r hbi on the 15-day DL, retroactive to March22.Assigned AngelCabrera(54),$96J00 66-72-69-71—278 K insler2b 3 I 0 0 Altuve2b 4 0 2 I Bud Cauley(54),$96,100 68-74-65-71—278 RHPJoseArredondooutright to Louisville (IL). DesAndrusss 4 0 0 0Waff aclb 4 1 1 0 Phil Mickelson(54),$96,100 72-71-67-68—278 ignatedINFJason Donald Ior assignment. Selected B rkmndh 4 1 2 0 Carterlf 4 0 0 0 the contract oi INFCesar Izturis fromLouisville. ReCameronTringae(54), $96,10065-73-69-71—278 Beltre3b 4 0 0 0 C.Penadh 4 1 I 0 assignedINFEmmanuel Burriss, C CorkyMiler, DF CharleyHoffman(51), $77,500 68-71-70-70—279 D vMrplf 3 0 1 1 Maxwffci 3 2 2 2 DenisPhippsandDFDerrick Robinson totheir minor John Roffins(51), $77,500 65-74-71-69—279 N.cruzrf 3 0 2 1 Jcastroc 4 0 0 1 league camp. Chris Kirk(47), $59,520 71-70-72-67—280 Przynsc 4 0 I 0 Dmngz3b 3 1 1 0 LDS ANGELESDODGERS— Placed RHP Chad DougLaBegeII (47), $59,520 71-71-72-66 280 M orlndlb 4 0 0 0 BBarnsrf 1 1 0 0 Biffingsl ey,LHPScott ElbertandINFHanley Ramirez GregOwen(47), $59,520 68-73-68-71—280 LMartnci 3 0 0 0 Ankielph-rf 2 1 1 3 on the15-dayDL,retroactiveto March22, and LHP RobertStreb(47),$59,520 70-71-71-68—280 Rceden ss 3 1 1 0 T Steve Wheatcroft,$59,520 67-67- 72-74— 280 T otals 3 2 2 6 2 Totals 3 28 9 7 Jeff Dverton(43),$44,950 67-73-71-70—281 Texas 0 00 002 000 — 2 Pat Perez (43), $44,950 7 2 -71-70-68 281 Houston 000 223 Olx — 8 KevinStadler(43), $44,950 70-73-69-69—281 E—N.cruz (1). LDB—Texas6, Houston 3. 3BMaxwell 2 (2). HR —Ankiel (1). CS—Dav.Murphy NickWatney(43), $44,950 71-71-72-67—281 AaronBaddeley(37),$35,163 70-71-72-69—282 (1) Texas IP H R E R BBSO RossFisher(37), $35,163 73-69-72-68—282 Tim Herron(37), $35,163 69-73-69-71—282 M.HarrisonL,0-1 52-3 6 6 5 3 9 6 9 -74-69-70 —282 D.Lowe 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 Jin Park(37), $35,163 rhays(37), $35,163 72-71-69-70—282 Frasor 1 0 0 0 0 1 D. Summe G raham D eL ae t (37), $35,163 71-71-68-72 —282 J.Drtiz I 2 I I 0 2 ChezReavie (37), $35J63 72-70-68-72—282 Houston CharlieBeljan(30), $25,420 71-72-70-70—283 B.NorrisW,1-0 5 2 - 3 5 2 2 3 5 Boh Estes (30), $25,420 71 -69-74-69 283 BedardS,l-l 3 1- 3 I 0 0 0 2 Matt Jones(30), $25,420 68-73-70-72—283 T—3:00. A—41,307(42,060). BrendanSteele(30), $25,420 70-71-71-71—283 SteveStricker(30), $25,420 73-68-71-71—283 NATIONALLEAGUE Chris Stroud(30), $25,420 71-72-71-69—283 East Division JoshTeater(30), $25,420 74-67-69-73 283 W L Pct GB RusseIHeney(24),$18,154 72-70-74-68—284 Atlanta 0 0 000 Rory Mcffroy(24),$18J54 73-70-71-70—284 Miami 0 0 .000 John Merrick(24),$18,154 68-72-69-75—284 NewYork 0 0 .000 Scott Staffings(24), $18J54 70-69-73-72—284 Philadelphia 0 0 .000 BooWeekley(24),$18,154 70-69-75-70 284 Washington 0 0 .000 Harris English(19), $14,839 69-74-73-69—285 Central Division JordanSpieth (19),$14,839 72-70-74-69—285 W L Pct GB JimmyWalker (19), $14,839 68-71-78-68—285 Chicago 0 0 000 GaryWoodland(19), $14,839 72-70-73-70—285 Cincinnati 0 0 .000 Kelly Krait,$14,839 70-72-72-71 —285 Milwaukee 0 0 .000 Justin Leonard(19), $14,839 71-72-70-72—285 Pittsburgh 0 0 .000 S teven Bo w di t ch (14), $13,950 73-70-69-74 —286 St. Louis 0 0 .000 JamesHahn(14), $13,950 74-69-68-75—286 West Division DavidLynn(14), $13,950 72-70-72-72—286 W L Pct GB TroyMatteson(14), $13,950 71-71-73-71—286 Arizona 0 0 000 ChadCampbell (9), $13,392 72-71-74-70 287 Colorado 0 0 .000 BrandtJobe(9), $13,392 69-73-70-75—287 Los Angeles 0 0 .000 Jerry Kelly(9),$13,392 7 1-72-75-69—287 San Diego 0 0 000 D.H. Lee (9), $13,392 72 - 71-68-76 —287 San Francisco 0 0 .000 N. Thompson (9), $13,392 70-73-71-73—287 HunterHaas(5), $12,834 69-71-74-74 288 Today'sGames Miami (Nolasco0-0) at Washington (Strasburg0-0), HenrikNorlander(5), $12,834 74-68-73-73—288 Carl Pettersson(5), $12,834 74-69-74-71—288 10:05a.m. cott Verplank(5), $12,834 72-68-70-78—288 San Diego(Volquez0-0) at N.Y.Mets(Niese 0-0), S RickyBarnes(2), $12,524 73-68-73-75—289 10:10 a.m. eorgeCoetzee, $12,276 72-71-72-75—290 ChicagoCubs(Samardzija0-0)at Pittsburgh(Burnett G CameronPercy (1), $12,276 73-70-71-76—290 0-0), 10:35a.m. W esShort,Jr. (I), $12,276 71-70-75-74—290 Colorado(Chacin 0-0) at Milwaukee(Gagardo 0-0), 11;10 a.m. L.A. Angels(Weaver0-0) at Cincinnati (Cueto0-0), TENNIS 1.10 p.m. San Francisco(Cain0-0) at L.A.Dodgers(Kershaw Professional 0-0),1:10p.m. Philadelphia(Hamels 0-0) at Atlanta(Hudson0-0), Sunday 4:05 p.m. At TheTennis Center atCrandonPark St. Louis(Wainwright0-0)at Arizona(Kennedy 0-0), Key Biscayne, Fla. 7:05 p.m. Purse: Men,$5.24 million (Masters1000); Tuesday's Games Women,$6.19 million (Premier) ColoradoatMilwaukee, 5:10pm. Surface: Hard-Outdoor St. LouisatArizona, 6:40p.m. Singles SPOKANEREGIONAL


MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Points survives e a, wins Houston en GOLF ROUNDUP

The Associated Press HUMBLE, Texas — D.A. Points came back from a long rain delay and made four pars, the last one giving him a one-shot victory in the Houston Open and a trip to the Masters. With a putter he once borrowed from his mother and never returned, Points rolled in a putt from just outside 12 feet on the final hole to polish off a 6-under 66 and avoid a sudden-death playoff with Masters-bound Henrik Stenson and Billy Horschel. It was quite a turnaround for Points, whose only other PGA Tour win was at Pebble Beach two years ago with actor Billy Murray along for the laughs. He started the year by missing the cut seven times in nine tournaments. He arrived at Redstone Golf Club having not broken 70 in the past nine rounds. But he stayed in the hunt after opening with a 64, and he kept his calm when he returned to the golf course after a rain delay of nearly three hours. "Thank you for staying," Points said to the sparse gallery in the bleachers as he walked off the green. Stenson birdied his last two holes for a 66 before the storms rolled across Houston, and while he came up one shot short, he moved up to No. 42 in the world ranking to earn an invitation to the Masters. Horschel was on the 18th tee when play was halted, and then had to wait some more for his turn to hit on the tough driving hole. He split the middle, found the green and two-putted for par to join Stenson in the clubhouse lead. They waited around for a playoff that wasn't necessary when Points saved par on his last two holes. "I've been having a really tough year," Points said. "To have a putt to win, you want that starting out every week. I would have liked for it to have been closer." Points picked up his final birdie on the par-5 13th

The Associated Press

Patnc Schneider/The Associated Press

D.A. Points chips on the 18th hole during the final round of the Houston Open Sunday in Humble, Texas. Points came back from a long rain delay and made four pars for a one-shot victory.

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONAL BASKETBALLA880 CIATION All TimesPDT

EasternConference

x-clinchedplayoff snot z-clinched conference Darren Abate/The Associated Press

San Antonio Spurs' Tony Parker, center, loses the ball between Miami Heat's Udonis Haslem, right, and Norris Cole during Sunday's game in San Antonio.

Bosh leadsHeat over Spurs The Associated Press SAN ANTONIO — Often the forgotten member of Miami's "Big Three," Chris Bosh stepped up with LeBron James and Dwyane Wade sitting out to get the Heat a big win and move closerto securing homecourt advantage throughout the NBA playoffs. Bosh scored 23 points, including the winning 3-pointer with 1.9 seconds remaining, and the Heat beat San Antonio 88-86 on Sunday night with James, Wade and Mario Chalmers watching from the locker room as they sat out with injuries. "We are th e d e fending c hamps no matter who w e put out there," Bosh said. "We are still the Miami Heat. We believein ourselves. Each one of these guys is a professional.

NBA ROUNDUP

W L 58 15 46 26 47 27 42 31 40 32 41 33 38 35 35 37 30 43 27 46 27 46 24 50 22 50 19 55 17 56

Pct G8 795 639 u'/t

W L 55 18 54 20 50 24 49 25 49 24 42 32 40 33 38 36 38 36 36 37 33 40 27 47 25 46 26 48 23 51

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WesternConference

x-SanAntonio x-Oklahoma City x-Denver x-L A.Clippers x Memphis GoldenState Houston Utah LA. Lakers Dallas Portland Sacramento Minnesota NewOrleans Phoenix

635 11i/r

575 16 555 17'Ir 554 17'4 521 20 485 22'/z 411 28 370 31 370 31 324 34'4 306 35'/t 257 39'/z 233 41

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Sonday'sGames NewOrleans112,Cleveland92 Washington109,Toronto92 Chicago95,Detroit 94 Miami 88,SanAntonio 86 NewYcrk108, Boston89

Today'sGames Detroit atToronto 4pm Clevelandat Atlanta,4.30 p.m. OrlandoatHouston, 5p.m. SanAntonioatMemphis, 5p.m Bostonat Minnesota,5p.m Charlotteat Miwattkee,5p.m. Portlandat Utah,6 p.m. IndianaatLA. Clippers,7:30 p.m. Toesday'sGames ChicagoatWashington, 4pm. NewYorkat Miami,5 p.m. Dailas atLA. Lakers,7:30p.m.

Knicks 108, Celtics 89: NEW YORK — Carmelo from straightaway in the clos- Anthony had 2 4 p o i nts ing seconds. He let out a loud and 10 rebounds, and New yell after m aking th e shot York extended its winning and celebrated with t e am- streak to eight games and Summaries mates when Parker's jumper moved closer to e n ding Sonday'sGames bounced off the backboard as Boston's hold on the Atlanthe buzzer sounded. tic Division title with a win Heat 88, Spurs86 "He's a heck of a p l ayer, over the Celtics. MIAMI (88) No. 1, but he's also a hell of a Bulls 95, Pistons 94: CHILewis3-110-07, Haslem4-70-08, Bosh9-152-2 23, Col e 4-125-7 13, Miler 480-012, Battier2-50-0 shooter," Spurs coach Gregg CAGO — Luol Deng scored 6, Allen6-120-014, Andersen1 12-44 Anthony0-0 Popovich said. "He knocked 28 points, Jimmy Butler 1-21, Jones 0-00-00 Totals 33-71 10-1588. SANANTO NIO(86) down a big shot. Timmy conand Nate Robinson each LeonardB-t30-017, Duncan8-151-317, Splitter tested it and he hit a big shot added 16, and Chicago beat 2-4 3-6 7, Parker4-14 4-4 12, Green4-14 1-3 12, to win the game. Give him Detroit for the 18th straight Diaw1-20-02, Neal2-80-05 De Colo1-1 0-03, Jackson 5-80-011, Bonner0-00-00. Totals 35-79 credit." time. 9-16 86. The game was similar to Hornets 112, Cavaliers 92: Miami San Antonio their first meeting this sea- NEWORLEANS — Greivis son, when the Spurs' reserves Vasquez scored 25 points Wizards109, Raptors92 nearly toppled the Heat. This and Ryan Anderson added time the reserves prevailed, 23 to lead New Orleans to a TORONTO (92) Johnson2-74-48, Gay4-10 2 311, Valanciunas however. victory over Cleveland. 5-9 8-1018, Lowry4-104-415, DeRozan 6-18 3-4 "There's no question, it's a Wizards 109, Raptors 92: 15, Fields4-7 0-1 8, Anderson3-9 0-0 7, Gray0-0 0-0 0, Ross 0-5 0-00,Telfair 4-60-010. Totals 32gratifying win," Miami coach WASHINGTON — Brad81 21-26 92. We played bigger roles in oth- Erik Spoelstra said. "To come ley Beal scored 24 points WASHINGTON (109) Booker1-31-2 3, Webster2-93-5 7,Okafor 7-14 er cities but we came together in and play against a great in his return to the lineup, 5-719, Wal7-15 l 3-418, Temple0-2 0-0 0,Seraphin and accepted lesserroles to team, an elite team. We talked leading Washington past 6-10 1-2 13, Beal8-14 2-2 24, Ariza3-5 2-2 10, win a championship here. We about coming in with Miami Toronto. can still tap into that." Heat pride. It doesn't matter Ray Allen added 14 points, who's in uniform or not, all Norris Cole had 13 and Mike of our guys have proven that Miller 12 for Miami (58-15), it's the pride of the name on ~o~ . FAS T Olt CHAHGES rt MORE which swept the season series the jersey, on the front of the with San Antonio (55-18). By jersey." earning the head-to-head tieJ ames and W a d e w e r e I breaker with San Antonio, the surprise late scratches while 'I l « t Heat have a four-game cush- Chalmers did not play Friday ion with nine remaining for in New Orleans and was listed the league's best record. as day-to-day with a sprained Miami beat San A n tonio right ankle. 105-100 on Nov. 29 when the James strained his r i ght Spurs opted to rest Tim Dun- hamstring in the first half of can, Tony Parker, Manu Gino- the 108-89 victory a gainst bili and Danny Green. the Hornets, according to the All but Ginobili (strained Heat. He continued to play deright h a mstring) p l ayed spite the injury, however, scorSunday. ing 36 points in 32 minutes Duncan had 17 points and prior to sitting out late in the 12 rebounds and Kawhi Leon- blowout victory. ard added 17 points and 11 Wade injured his right anrebounds for the Spurs, who kle in Miami's 101-97 loss to had a seven-game home win- the Chicago Bulls on Wednesning streak snapped. Green day night, w h ich s n apped and Parker added 12 points the Heat's 27-game winning apiece and Stephen Jackson streak. Wade had 17 points ® e — - veep had 11. and nine assists in 33 minutes Bosh finished three for five Friday against New Orleans. on 3s, including the final shot Also on Sunday:

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Late Flyers to win over Capitals

applause. Suddenly, his year is looking up.

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

NHL ROUNDUP

goal lifts

when the hole got in the way of his chip and kept the ball from running well past. It instead stopped 3 feet away. Then, he made it hard on himself. His 5-iron to the 17th came up well short, and Points hit a beautiful pitch-and run to tap-in range for his par. On the final hole, his hybrid began to sail right of the green toward the bunkers, but it caught just enough of the grass to end up in the rough. He played a peculiar shot, lobbing the pitch instead of playing it closer to the ground, and the ball came up well short on the rain-softened green. The putt dropped into the left corner, and Points screamed so loud itcould be hear over the sparse He finished at 16-under 272, and the win gives him another two-year exemption. His exemption from Pebble Beach would have expired this year. More important, the win gets him back to Augusta National in two weeks. Twenty players were separated by four shots going into the final round, and it stayed that way for a while, with a dozen players poised to make a run and seize control as the storm clouds gathered. Also on Sunday: Germany wins in Morocco:AGADIR, Morocco — Marcel Siem of Germany shot a 2-under 70 to win the Hassan II Trophy by three strokes. He earned his third European Tour title with a 17-under 217. Siem held off Finland's Mikko Ilonen and England's David Horsey, who were tied for second.

B3

Singleton 0-10-00, Vesely4-71-49, Price350 05, Collins 0-0 0-00. TotaIs 41-85 18-28 109. Toronto 25 25 26 16 — 92 Washington 27 33 30 19 — 109

Hornets112, Cavaliers 92

PHILADELPHIA Ruslan Fedotenko scored 1:34 into overtime after Kimmo Timonen got the tying goal with 9.5 seconds left in regulation and the Philadelphia Flyers beat the Washington Capitals 54 on Sunday night. M axime T albot, M a t t Read and Claude Giroux also scored for the Flyers, who m oved w i t hin two points of the idle New York Rangers and N ew York Islanders for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. Desperate to get a point, the Flyers tied it at 4 when Timonen ripped a slap shot past Braden Holtby after several chances in front. Timonen then set up Fedotenko with a perfect crossing pass in OT to cap off a remarkable comeback and set off a wild celebration. Marcus Johansson and Alex O v e chkin s c o red

power-play goals 26 sec-

CLEVELAN(92) D Gee2-6 0-24,Thompson 6-9 0-112,Zeller2-5 0-0 4, Irving 11-206-6 31, Ellington5-10 0-0 12, Walton1-40-03, Miles1-90-0 3, Gibson0-40 00, Speights5-90-012, l.ivingston4-53-311, Casspi0-

10-00, Jones 0-00-00 Totals 38-82 9-12 92. NEWORLEANS(112) Amino 1-22-2 4, Davis5-11 7-1117, Lopez1-5 1-2 3, Vasquez 10-14 3-4 25, Gordon5-114-5 14, Anderson9-140-0 23, Harris 0-21-2 1, Miller 3-7 0-0 8, Roberts5-7 2-3 15, Amundson1-1 0-0 2, Henry 0-00-0 0,Thomas0-0 0-0 0 Totals 40-74 20-29 112. Cleveland 21 28 24 19 — 92 Naw0rleans 23 2 5 86 28 — 112

Bulls 95, Pistons 94 DETROIT (94)

Singler 3-4 1-1 8, Monroe7-124-6 18,Drummond4-7038, Caideron482-211, Knight2-60-0 5, Jerebko2-31-2 5, English 0-00-0 0, Vilanceva 4-134-414 Stuckey10-193-425,Middleton0-00-0 0. Totals36-7215-22 94.

CHICAGO (95) Deng7-18 t-t728, t Boozer5-111-211, Mohammed0-40-00, Hinricn1-51-1 3 Botler4-77-915, Gibson 3 5 6 811, Cook3 72 310, Robinson718 0-016, Teague 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 30-7627-4095. Detroit 24 33 17 20 — 94 Chicago 20 33 18 24 — 95

Knicks108, Celtics 89 BOSTON (89) Green10-145-8 27, Bass1-4 0-02, Wilcox 1-2 0-0 2, Bradley1-50-0 2, Pierce6-16 8-1024, Lee 5 11 0 0 10,Terry 3 71-1 8, Crawford3 104 410, Randolphg-00-00, Williams1-40-02, D.White1-1 0-0 2.Totals32-74 18-23 89. NEWYORK(108) Shompert3-32-210, Anthony9-194-4 24, Martin1-21-3 3, Felton 6-10 3-318, Prigioni 1-40-03, Smith 4 127-1015, Kidd1-4 0-0 3, Novak4-7 0-0 10, Ccpeland 5-107-922, J White 0-10-00. Totals 35-72 24-31 108. Boston 23 25 21 20 — 89 New York 28 37 21 22 — 108

onds apart in the third period to give the Capitals a 4-2 lead. Also on Sunday: Blackhawks 7, Red Wings 1: DETROIT — Brandon Saad had two goals and an assist and Dave Bolland scored twice in Chicago's win over Detroit. Blue Jackets 2, Ducks 1: COLU M B U S , O h io — Mark Letestu set up the only goal in regulation and scored the g ame-winner in overtime, and Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 29 of 30 shots to lead Columbus over Anaheim. Kings 3, Stars 2: DALLAS — Brad Richardson and Justin Williams scored third-period goals just over a minute apart to help lift Los Angeles past Dallas. Bruins 2, Sabres 0: BUFFALO, N.Y.— David Krejci and Nathan Horton scored goals less than three minutes apart in the third period, and Anton Khudobin stopped 26 shots in leading Boston over Buffalo.

Leaders ThroughSaturday Scoring G F G F T PTS AVG Durant, OKC 74 568 5 32 2097 28 3 Anthony, NYK 58 546 375 1601 27.6 Bryant, LAL 72 58 2 4 62 1950 27.t James, MIA 72 72 7 3 82 1937 26.9 Harden, HOU 70 525 609 1817 26.0 Westbrook, OKC74 504 420 1714 23.2 C urry,GOL 70 55 3 2 41 1583 22 6 W ade, MIA 56 5 4 9 2 94 1409 21.3 Aldridge, POR 69 593 263 1451 21.0 Parker, SAN 60 492 2 53 1261 21.0 E llis, MIL 7 2 5 3 3 2 5 7 1395 19.4 Lopez,Bro 6 6 5 0 4 2 58 1266 19.2 t illard, POR 73 49 2

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On May 12, The Bulletin will drive headlong into the Central Oregon golf season with Tee to Green, our annual spring golf preview! This highly anticipated product will be packed with information on the courses that make this one of the finest golf destinations in the nation. Tee to Green will reach over 70,000 Bulletin print readers and thousands more online, making it the premier locals guide to golf in Central Oregon — and the best way to reach the local golfer with your marketing message!

FEATURES INCLUDE: • What's new in 2013 • Central Oregon course index • Comprehensive tournament schedule • Central Oregon junior Golf Association coverage ...and much more! A 2,500 copy over-run will be included with additional copies being distributed to all local coursesand advertisers in the preview.

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B4 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT

WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT

Louisville

guard Russ Smith (2)

goes up

Baylor knocked out of tournament

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with a layup against Duke defenders during the first half of the Midwest Regional final in the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday in Indianapolis.

li

The Associated Press OKLAH OM A CITY — From the opening tip of the season, there was only one question in women's college basketball: How do you stop Brittney Griner'? Louisville found the answer Sunday night, and

pulling off one of the big-

Michael Conroy /The Associated Press

gest upsets in NCAA tournament history. Considereda lock forthe Final Four — and prohibitive favorites to win a second straight championship — Griner and her L ady Bears got bounced 82-81 by fifth-seeded Louisville.

Baylor (34-2) had won

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mo iona ouisvi e e 0 i n a ouf ue, The Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS — Crying and shaken by the sight of Kevin Ware writhing on the court, his right leg splintered, Rick Pitino and his Louisville players had no idea how they were going to pull it together with a half still left to play and a Final Four berth on the line. Ware showed them the way. "I don't think we could have gathered ourselves — I know I couldn't have — if Kevin didn't say over and over again, 'Just go win the game,' " Pitino said. "I don't think we could have gone in the locker room with a loss after seeing that. We had to gather ourselves. We couldn't lose this game for him. "We just couldn't." With Russ Smith, Peyton Siva and Gorgui Dieng leading the way, the Cardinals finally shook off their grief early in the second half, erupting for a 13-2 run that Duke was powerless to answer. The 85-63 victory clinched a second straight trip to the Final Four for the top-seeded Cardinals, who are determined to win it all for Ware, a New York City native who moved to the Atlanta area for high school. The Cardinals (33-5) will play Wichita State in the national semifinals next Saturday. The ninth-seeded Shockers (30-8) added to their streak of upsets with a 7066 victory over Ohio State on Saturday night. As the f i nal seconds ticked down, Ware's best friend on the team, Chane Behanan, put on the guard's No. 5 jersey and stood at the end of the bench, screaming. Cardinals fans chanted "Kevin Ware! Kevin Ware!" "We talked about it every timeout, 'Get Kevin home,' " Pitino said. Smith finished with 2 3 p oints and earned Most Outstanding Player honors for the Midwest Region. Siva added 16 while Dieng had 14 points and 11 rebounds. Mason Plumlee had 17 points and 12 rebounds for Duke. But the Blue Devils (306) couldn't overcome a poor start by Seth Curry, who scored all 12 of his points in the second half, or their foul trouble. "I thought we had a chance there, and then, boom," coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "That's what they do to teams. They

can boom you." This was the f irst time Pitino and

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Darron Cummings/The Associated Press

Louisville players talk to guard Kevin Ware after Ware's injury during the first half of the Midwest Regional final against Duke on Sunday in Indianapolis. Krzyzewski had met in the regional finals since that 1992 classic that ended with Christian Laettner's improbable buzzerbeater, a game now considered one of the best in NCAA tournament history. This game will be remembered, too, but for a very different — and much more somber — reason. With 6:33 left in the first half, Ware, who has played a key role in Louisville's 1 4-game winning streak, j umped t o try and block Tyler Thornton's 3-point shot. When he landed, Ware's right leg snapped midway between his ankle and knee, the bone skewing almost at a right angle. Ware dropped to the floor right in front of the Louisville bench and, almost in unison, his teammates turned away in horror. Thornton grimaced, putting his hand to his mouth as he turned around. "I heard it and then I seen what happened, (the bone) come out," Smith said. "I immediately just, like, fell. I almost didn't feel nothing." Pitino went to help Ware up and then saw the leg, which broke in two places. "I literally almost threw up," Pitino said, his voice catching. "Then I just wanted to get a towel to get it over that. But all the

players came over and saw it." Louisville forward Wayne Blackshear fell to the floor and Behanan looked as if he was going to be sick on the court, kneeling on his hands and feet. Luke Hancock patted Ware's chest as doctors worked on the sophomore and Smith walked away, pulling his jersey over his eyes. The arena was silent, and several fans wept and bowed their heads. Pitino had tears in his eyes as he tried to console his players. Dieng draped an arm around the shoulders of Smith, who repeatedly wiped at his eyes and shook his head. "It was really hard for me to pull myself together," Smith said. "I didn't ever think in a million years I would ever see something like that. And that it happened, especially, to a guy like Kevin Ware, I was completely devastated." As the Cardinals (33-5) gathered at halfcourt to try and regroup before play resumed, Pitino called them over to the sideline, saying Ware wanted to talk to them before he left. "Basically, the bone popped out of the skin. It broke in two spots," Pitino said. "Remember the bone is six inches out of his leg, and all he's yelling is 'Win the game, win the game.' I've never seen anything like that." Added Siva, "He told us countless times: 'Just go win this game for me. Just go win this game. Don't worry about me, I'm fine. Just go win this game.' I don't know how he did it. I don't know how he got strength to do it, but he told us to go out there and win." In another game on Sunday: SOUTH REGIONAL Michigan 79, Florida 59: ARLINGTON, Texas — Freshman guard Nik Stauskas scored 22 points, including six 3-pointers, and Michigan is going to the Final Four for the first time since the Fab Five era after a rout of Florida. The Wolverines (307) scored the game's first 13 points and maintained a double-digit lead the rest of the game against the SEC regular-season champion Gators (29-8), who lost in a regional final for the third straight year. Stauskas hit all six of his 3-point attempts, including consecutive makes from the left corner to give Michigan a 41-17 lead. Kenny Boynton and Will Yeguette had 13 points each for Florida.

32 straight games behind Griner, among the greatest players ever in her sport. But the 6-foot-8 star didn't make a basket until t he second half, then committed a foul with 2.6 seconds left that gave Louisville a chance to win. Monqiue Reid madethose two foul shots, rescuing the Cardinals (27-8) after they squandered a 17-point lead in the last 7'/2 minutes. Louisville will play Tennessee in the regional final on Tuesday for a berth in the Final Four. Odyssey Sims scored 29 points, including two free throws with 9.1 seconds to go that put Baylor ahead 81-80. Sims had one more chance to save the season, but she was off-target and late on a desperation heave. S ims dropped t o t h e floor after her miss, pulling her jersey over her face and kicking her legs as she lay flat on her back. Grinersquatted near her and slapped the floor with both hands before pulling Sims up to her feet. It was a stunning end of a remarkable college careerforGriner, the secondhighest scoring player in NCAA history. "I'm just s ad," Griner said. "I didn't do what I needed to do to get my team to the Elite 8 and just disappointment in myself." Griner, who had averaged 33 points in Baylor's f irst tw o g a mes i n t h e tournament, didn't make a basket until she converted a putback with 15:20 left in the second half. She wound up with 14 points and 10 re-

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bounds, making only four of her 10 shots and being a relative non-factor for her considerable stature. Louisville surrounded Griner as she has been most of her career, and her teammates were unusually unable to hit outside shots and relieve the pressure. The Lady Bears had been practically invincible for the past four m onths, winning 32 straight games, mostly by double digits. Also on Sunday: OKLAHOMA CITY REGIONAL Tennessee 74, Oklahoma 59: O KLAH OM A C ITY — K a m iko W i l l iams s cored 1 5 p oints, Cierre Burdick h ad 13 and second-seeded Tennessee routed Oklahoma in the regional semifinals of the NCAA women's tournament.

The Lady Vols (27-7) opened a 20-point lead in the first half and never let Oklahoma make a comeback,improving to 265 in regional semifinals. NORFOLK REGIONAL Notre Dame 93, Kansas 63: NORFOLK, Va. — Skylar

Diggins was already having such a great day, her coach f igured she might a s w e l l make it historic. The Notre Dame point guard scored 22 of her 27 points by halftime and became the school's career scoring leader,leading the top-seeded Fighting Irish to a victory against Kansas in the semifinals of the Norfolk Regional. Notre Dame will play No. 2 seed Duke on Tuesday for a berth in the Final Four. Duke 53, Nebraska 45: NORFOLK, Va. — Tricia Liston scored 17 points and Duke shook off a slow start to beat Nebraska in the semifinals of the Norfolk Regional. Alexis Jones added 14 points for the Blue Devils (33-2), who also struggled last w e ekend at home. DOUBLE SAVINGS NOW! $25-50 rebates on select Hunter Douglas products, and matching instant dealer rebates (thru 4/2/1 3)

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ler appearing in 2010 and 2011 acuse from his days as a Big and VCU joining the Bulldogs East coach at West Virginia. Continued from B1 last season. The two a lso ar e f a miliar No. I Louisville was fueled The only thing missing is a with each other from the time by the loss of guard Kevin championship. Beilein coached at Le Moyne Ware to a gruesome leg injury The appearance by Wichita College in S y r acuse, N.Y., to beat No. 2 Duke in the Elite State will do wonders for the from 1983-92 as he worked his Eight. Missouri Valley Conference's way up the coaching ladder. T he Cardinals, wh o r e - reputation. The Wolverines will f ace ceived the nation's support The last time a MVC team the Orange and their perplexfor the loss of Ware, is back appeared in the Final Four, ing 2-3 zone defense. in familiar territory. They lost there was a guy named Larry B oeheim i s m a k in g h i s to Kentucky in last season's Bird competing for I n diana fourth trip to the Final Four, the Final Four. This season they State. last time in 2003 resulting in his meet a team with far less notoW ho c o ul d h a v e s e e n only national championship. riety in Wichita State, which is Wichita State's tournament The Orange solved top-seeded navigating new territory. run coming? The Shockers Indiana 61-51 by neutralizing Of the three teams in the finished second in the confer- Cody Zeller to earn a trip. tournament f r o m Ka n s as, ence, losing twice to EvansMichigan's Trey Burke is including the Jayhawks and ville and to Indiana State and the last of the top player of the Kansas State, few t h ought Southern Illinois. year candidates still competWichita State would be the But they're headed to Ating. And the Wolverines still one in the Final Four. lanta after holding Ohio State are competingmostly because The aptly named Shockers to 31 percent shooting and 20 of him. are the first No. 9 seed to ad- percent on 3-pointers in the He hit a long 3-pointer with vance to the Final Four since Elite Eight victory. 4.3 seconds left in regulation the tournament expanded to Michigan a n d S y r a cuse against top-seeded Kansas 64 teams. have slightly more history, but to force overtime and after a But a mid-major storyline is the game features an interest- rough start finished with 23 nothing new in the recent his- ing crossing of paths between points and 10 assists. tory of the tournament. A so- the coaches. In a b r a cket-busted seacalled mid-major Cinderella M ichigan c o a c h Joh n s on, one team will end a n has appeared inthree of the Beilein can dust off some old unpredictable tournament as past four Final Fours with But- scouting reports on No. 4 Syr- champion.

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MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Openersfeature rivalries inAL, NL By Ben Walker

Angels teammates visit Cincinnati in the first interleague The Kansas City Roymatchup this season. als have been absent from The Astros' move left 15 the playoffs since the day teams in each league, meanB illy B u tler w a s b o r n . ing an AL vs. N L m atchup They've barely had a winmost every day this season. "It is very strange," Reds ning season in the past two decades. They've often lost manager Dusty Baker said. 100 games in a year. On both coasts, there was a And yet, buoyed by the very familiar look — Red Soxbest record in spring train- Yankees and Giants-Dodgers. ing, hope abounds — for Mariano Rivera was set for the Royals, for most evhis final opening day when the erybody putting on a big banged-up Yankees hosted league uniform. Boston. The New York closer "There's no reason we is among several big names shouldn't be better," said who missed most or even all Butler, the Royals' All-Star of last year — Troy Tulowitslugger. "How much better zki, Victor Martinez and John that is? I'm not a mind read- Lackey are in that group. er. I'm not a projector." Injured stars Derek Jeter, Ah, opening day. A lex Rod r i guez, Cur t i s The hot dogs taste bet- Granderson and Mark Teixter, the boxscores mean eira won't be in pinstripes for more and most every team the first pitch. "It's still the Yankees, it's thinks it's just a break or two away from reaching still going to be a good lineup," BostonstarterJon Lester the World Series. A dozen games were set said Sunday. "They're missfortoday across the majors. ing a few of their big guys but Star pitchers Justin Veranybody that fills in for them, lander, Stephen Strasburg it's like what I said, they're and Adam Wainwright try going to put professional atto get off to great starts, bats together and still — it's old rivalries are renewed not going to be a walk in the at Yankee Stadium and park." D odger Stadium, and a No easy decisions, either, quirky interleague sched- for Boston manager John Farule unfolds. rell, one of six new skippers in No snow is in the forecast the majors this year. for any ballpark on April At Dodger Stadium, Matt Fools' Day, but f r eezing temperatures are expected at Target Field in Minnesota when Verlander and the & HEARING AID CUNIC AL champion Tigers take www.central oregonaudtology,com on the Twins. "It's going to be cold but Bend• Redmond• P-ville • Burns I've pitched in that kind of 541.647.2884 weather before," Verlander said. "I don't think about it. It's always cold in Detroit The Associated Press

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Rod Miller, left, and Mark Clark work at the Bicycle Re-Source of Bend on Wednesday afternoon.

Bicycle

"We planned togive away 40 bikes at Christmas," says Continued from B1 Schuler. For Central Oregon resiOnly a few bikes were disdents who cannot afford a car, tributed that December, he ret ransportation o p tions a r e calls, but the small space was limited. While the local bus taking form as a bike shop, system, Cascades East Tran- complete with tools and parts sit, offers public transporta- purchased at a discount from tion t h roughout D eschutes local bike stores, including County, it does not operate on Hutch's and Bend Velo. nights or weekends. And most Instead of closing after the bikes sold at specialty shops holidays, BRoB began partaround town are expensive, nering with nonprofits, repairMiller observes. ing and distributing more than Additionally, BRoB provides two dozen bikes each month bicycles to children and teens by spring 2011. "That's when we said, 'This who can then bike to school or ride for recreation. is what we are,'" says Schuler. Schuler tells of a r e cent Since then, BRoB has exrecipient who uses his new perienced significant growth. bike to travel to and from his In one year it has more than middle school. The teen, says doubled its distribution, handSchuler, is no longer late to ing out 233 bikes in 2012 comclass because he can now bike pared with 98 in 2011. to school instead of walk. Last November, BRoB was Bicycle Re-Source Center of granted n o n profit s t a t us, Bend is the only organization which has opened the door of its kind in Central Oregon, to potential grant money. Acsays Miller. cording to Miller, BRoB reBend's Community cently applied for a $22,000 BikeShed, a similar operation grant through th e O r egon and former affiliate of Bend's Community Foundation and is Community Center, closed in waiting to hear back. September 2010. (It reopened Currently, B R o B r a i s es four months later but closed funds through bike valet seragain last fall due in part to fi- vices at o c casional events nancial hardship.) such as Munch & M usic in In October 2010, Schuler Bend's Drake Park. The orgaa nd Mike M a r ti n — b o t h nization also regularly sells former v o lunteers a t t he refurbished bikes on CraigBikeShed — co-founded Bi- slist. The proceeds cover most cycle Re-Source of Bend and of the $1,000 needed each rented a work space off 27th month to pay BRoB's expensStreet with two other former es, says Miller, but funds are BikeShed workers. "When limited. "We're just a shoestring op(the BikeShed) closed, we knew there was going to be a eration," he says. need," says Schuler. Miller estimates that of the It was intended to be only a bikes donated to BRoB from temporary service. the local community and area

Lookingdack Athlete of the week: Senior J.D. Abbas put

an exclamation point on Redmond High's run at the three-day Glencoe

tournamentonW ednesday, pitching a complete game and allowing just one hit

and no runs while recording 13 strikeouts against Hillsboro's Century High. Abbas also went three for four with two RBls to highlight the Panthers' third straight shutout.

Contest of theweek: In Ridgeview's secondgame of the Central Oregon Spring Break Softball

Tournament at Bend's Pine Nursery on Monday, the Ravens rallied for four runs in the bottom of the seventh inning, including

agame-winnin gdoubleby Shawna Marshall, to defeat Brookings-Harbor 9-7.

Lookingahead TODAY Cottage Groveat Sisters softball, 4:30 p.m.:The Outlaws kick off Sky-

Em League playagainst Cottage Grove. With Redmond High transfer

Cassidy Edwards, Sisters is one of the favorites to win the league title in 2013.

TUESDAY Prep baseball, La Salle at

Madras, 4 p.m.:TheWhite Buffaloes openClass 4A Tri-Valley Conferenceplay against the Falconsfrom Milwaukie, looking to snap a

two-game skid andimprove on their 6-3 record. Madras, the TVC's top run-scoring

team heading into league play, hosts the conference's third-most-productive club in La Salle, which is 7-3

overall.

OSAA

landfills, only half are fixable. Many of those bikes, he notes, were o r iginally p u r chased from warehouse-type stores and are not of high quality. "They look like bikes," he says, "but they ar e p oorly made." Severely damaged b i k es that come to BRoB go through a triage process in which usable parts are salvaged and steelframes are recycled. Before being sorted, bikes are housed inthree rented storage units behind the building. BRoB's 500 - square-foot space also hosts donationonly bike tuneup service and mechanic classes for community members. For some, the instruction also serves as vocational training. "We have a three-prong attack," says Miller. "Fix bikes, sell bikes, and teach people how to fix bikes." BRoB also teaches basic bike maintenance and repair classes at local schools, and at shelterssuch as Living Operations for Teens and the Bethlehem Inn. "Some (people) have never held a bike wrench in their life," notes Miller. In the future, BRoB hopes to expand its educational offerings. If the budget allows, Miller says, the board would also like to hire a f u ll-time staff member to oversee the nonprofit's daily affairs. For now, BRoB will wait and see what happens. "There's no crystal ball for what the future brings," says Schuler. "You grow as your needs grow." — Reporter:541-383-0393, egross@bendbulletin.com.

immediately (after the classification and districting comContinued from B1 mittee first met)." Despite having 6A enrollAccording to Bend High's ment numbers based on the Walker, schools from Westlatest reclassification draft, ern Oregon's Central Valley B end High w o ul d s t il l b e Conference and M i d-Willap laced in the 5A IM C w i t h mette League have reached t he other f ou r B e n d a n d out to Central Oregon schools Redmond high schools, ac- and appear to be willing to set cording to the OSAA's most up nonconference contests. "There's some partnerships recent proposal. "I think it would be really being built t h ere," Walker says. "Granted, no one wants hard to let Bend (High) take off to a 6A l eague as they us in their league, but they are driving by 5A schools on b oth r ecognize t hat p l a ythe way," Summit's Pagano ing Central Oregon schools says. "Look what happened can be mutually beneficial to Redmond two years ago. from the (OSAA's) ranking They were a 6A t eam that standpoint." was going all over the place The biggest change involvf or league games. I d o n 't ing Central Oregon schools think (the OSAA) would do could be Culver's move from that again ... and we (the other area 5A schools) are fine with that." In Class 4A , t h e l a t est OSAA reclassification draft would placeCentral Oregon's Crook County and M adras high schools in the Tri-Vall ey Conference along w i t h the Portland area's Estacada, Gladstone, Molalla and North Marion high schools. Sisters and La Pine would remain in the 4A Sky-Em League with four Willamette Valley high schools: Cottage Grove, Elmira, Junction City and Sweet Home.

Cain starts for the World Series champion San Francisco Giants when they play Los Angeles in t h e c entury-old rivalry. It will mark the 64th season at the microphone for Dodgers announcer Vin Scully. Heck, Tigers manager Jim Leyland seems like a mere pup by comparison, now starting his 50th year in pro ball. All-Star shortstop Hanley Ramirez is sidelined for the Dodgers. Around the majors, third basemen Chase Headley of San Diego, David Freese of St. Louis and Brett Lawrie of Toronto will begin the season on the disabled list. Mets third baseman David Wright plans to be in the lineup at Citi Field to take on San Diego. He hurt his ribcage at the World Baseball Classic. "I feel g ood p h ysically," Wright said. "It would have been nice to have maybe a few more at-bats toward the end, but I d i dn't have that luxury." On Tuesday, there are two more openers — Baltimore at Tampa Bay, andCleveland at revamped Toronto.

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on opening day." The season started Sunday night in Houston when the Astros, who s h ifted from the National League to the American League during the winter, hosted the Texas Rangers. Astros righty Bud Norris threw a called strike to Ian Kinsler to begin the year, and Houston's Jose Altuve singled for the first hit. (Story,

ju

BI.) Long the site of baseball's traditional opener, C incinnati was going t o have a new l ook t oday. That's when Josh Hamilton and his new Los Angeles

the Salem-based Tri-River Conference to a new Eastern Oregon conference initially dubbed the "Rolling Plains League." In the proposal the OSAA released two weeks ago, Culver, Heppner, Irrigon, Pilot Rock, Stanfield and Weston-McEwen essentially the old Columbia Basin Conference — would make up the Bulldogs' new league. The classification and districting c o m m ittee m e ets a gain n ex t M o n day. A n y ideas or suggestionsfor the n ext r e c l assification c a n be sent to the OSAA's Peter

Weber (peterw@osaa.org) or

Dr. Susan Gorman

omen's Center OF CENTRAL OREGON

H ea l t h C a r e

Kyle Stanfield (kyles@osaa.

org). — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes~bendbulletin.com.

The biggest change for area teams based on the current recommendations would be the elimination of hybrid leagues. Presumably, teams would qualify for state competition based on how they

finish in league play (a separate championship committee is coming up with its own specific suggestions), similar to life before hybrid leagues were introduced at the start of the 2010-11 school year. "It'd be nice to have seven or eight or nine teams (in the IMC), but th e h y brids just didn't work," Pagano says. "That pretty much went away

H ea l t h C a r e

WomensCenter Carole Bradfield

Bulletin Subscriber since 1998

T o subscribe, c al l 5 4 1 - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 0 The Bulletin bendbulletin.com

NOW IN REDMOND 1001 NW CANAL BLVD., REDMOND

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B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013

O M M U N IT Y

P OR TS

AFTER SCHOOLCYCLING: Sessions presented by Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, in ARCHERY:Ages 8-13; Thursdays Bend,April10-May1; three groups, through April 4;5:30-7 p.m.; Centincluding Trail Groms (ages 8-10), Wise Sporting Goods, 433 S.W. Trail Shredders (11-14) and Trail Fifth St., Redmond; learn safety, Masters (15-18); second session etiquette, bow handling; equipment May15-June 5;$75 per session; provided; $25; 541-548-7275 or to register or for more information, www.raprd.org. go to www.mbsef.org/programs/ cycling or call 541-388-0002. BIKERODEO OBSTACLE COURSE: BASEBALL Free bike-handling and safety class ADULT BASEBALL LEAGUE:Teams with obstacles, presented by Bend Endurance Academy as part of the forming for 2013 season of the Deschutes National Adult Baseball Bend Spring Festival in NorthWest Association; competitive wood-bat Crossing;April14; 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; info©bendenduranceacademy.org. league for ages18-older; season runsJune-August;teams for ages MINIGROMS AFTER SCHOOL 40-older will also be formed if CYCLING:Sessions presented by adequate numbers are available; Mt. Bachelor Sports Education team managersneeded in both Foundati on,in Bend,We dnesdays, divisions; Michael McLain, 541-410- May1, 8, 15, 22;ages 6-7; MBSEF 2265, trailrun50©gmail.com. coaches will pick up participants at their school 2-2:30 p.m.; rides are 2:45-4 p.m.; riders will return BASKETBALL to MBSEF office by 4:30 p.m.; $75; to register or for more information, YOUTH BASKETBALL CAMP: A go to www.mbsef.org/programs/ coed basketball camp with coach cycling or call 541-388-0002. Jeff Christensen for ages 7-17 at the Athletic Club of Bend focusing on skill MOUNTAINBIKINGGRIT CLINICS FOR WOMEN: Presented by Pine development technique, presented Mountain Sports in Bend, series of by Showcase Basketball;July13-14; two two-day clinics for beginner and online registration now open; $50 intermediate female mountain bikers; registrationfee before May1, $100 May 4-5 andJune 15-16; registration after May1; 503-213-3413; info© now open at Pine Mountain Sports; showcasebasketball.com; www. cost $250 per two-day clinic; www. showcasebasket ball.com. GritClinics.com, or email to info© GritClinics.com.

ARCHERY

CLIMBING BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY COMPETITIONTEAM: Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays through June 27;4-6 p.m.; ages10-18; age and skill appropriate training for climbers wishing to compete in local, regional and national competitions; must have previous climbing experience; mike© bendenduranceacademy.org; bendenduranceacademy.org. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY CLIMBINGDEVELOPMENTTEAM: Mondays andWednesdays through June 27;4-6 p.m.; ages 10-18; age and skill appropriate instruction for beginner to intermediate climbers; a program for those that want a fun, safe introduction to competitive climbing and for those looking to see if a competitive team is the rightfit for them; must have previous climbing experience; www. bendenduranceacademy.org; info@ bendenduranceacademy.org.

CYCLING BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY JUNIORCYCLING TEAM: Road and mountain bike training fourfive days each week,nowthrough August;dates, times vary; ages 12-18; enrollment open at www. bendenduranceacademy.org.

MOTOR SPORTS CENTRAL OREGONOFF-ROAD RACE PARK: Short-course races scheduled forApril 27, June 29, Aug. 10 and Sept. 21outside the Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center in Redmond; off-road shortcourse races includetrucks, buggies and other vehicles competing on a loop dirt track; races start at10 a.m. each day; spectator admission is $12 for adults and free for kids under 10; centraloregonracepark.com or craig©centraloregonracepark.com.

MULTISPORT UP THECROOKEDRIVER DUATHLON:Sixth annual event in Prineville set for10 a.m. onSunday, April 20;a running event will include a 5K run, 40K bike and 5K run; a walking event will include a 2-mile walk, 10-mile bike and 2-mile walk; start and finish at Pioneer Park; for all ages and abilities; entry fee $40 for individuals and $70 for teams before April 23; benefit for the Crook County Middle School track team and the Prineville Band of Brothers veterans group; information, entry forms available at www.normsxtremefitness.com or by calling Norm's Xtreme Fitness at 541-416-0455.

Email events at least 10days before publication to sportsCbendbulletin com or click on "Submit an Event"at www bendbulletin com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.comlcomsportscal.

A

DESCHUTESDASHTRAINING GROUP:Fifteen-week program led by USATTriathlon certified coach Joanne Eastwood; begins April1;includes training for both the sprint- and Olympic-distance triathlons; two coached workouts per week, running analysis, bike skills training, email communication for support and motivation, and discounted entry to Deschutes Dash; $199; poweredbybowen.com; 541-585-1500.

RUNNING FOOTZONE PUBRUN: Monday, April 16;5:30 p.m.; group run starting at FootZone in downtown Bend; loop distance options of 3-5 miles, finishing at Bend Brewing Company, where runners will be offered a $1 discount on a pint of beer and complimentary chips and salsa; for all paces and running levels; footzonebend.com or 541-317-3568. LADIESNIGHT PERFORMANCE GROUP: Thursday, April16;5:30 p.m.; location to be determined; with Max King; introduction to King's interval-based Tuesday Performance Group weekly runs led by King; geared toward women of all ability levels; free, but sign up at footzonebend.com/events/ladiesnight-performance-group. LIGHT OFHOPE:10K, 5K and 1K runs/walks;April 21; 9 a.m.; Riverbend Park, Bend; benefitfor CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates); $10-$30; www. casaofcentraloregon.com. KAH-NEE-TAMINIMARATHON: Saturday, April 20;race distances include14.5 miles,10K and 5K, and a1-mile fun run/walk; 14.5-mile race starts at 9 a.m., others start at 10 a.m.; eventstages atKah-Nee-Ta Resort 8 Spa village, where raceday registration begins at 8 a.m.; entry fees $8-$15; for information, call the Community Wellness Center/Recreation Department, 541-553-3243. FOOTZONELASTTHURSDAY FUN RUN SERIES/DOUGHNUT RUN: Thursday, April 25;5:30 p.m.; meet atFootZonein downtown Bend; 3- to 5-mile distance options, finish at Crow's Feet Commons; free; strollers, friendly dogs, all paces and levels welcome; free doughnuts; footzonebend.com. TRAINING 201 CLINICWITHMAX KING: Thursday, May 8; 7 p.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend;in-depth examination of specific training functions; free, but sign up at footzonebend.com/events/training201-clinic-with-max-king. REDMOND OREGONRUNNINGKLUB (RORK):Weekly run/walk; Saturdays at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for more information and to beadded to a weekly email list, email DanEdwards at rundanorun19@yahoo.com; follow

Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook. REDMOND RUNNINGGROUP: Weekly runs onTuesdays at 6:30 p.m.; meet at 314 S.W.Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; piaOrunaroundsports.com; 541-639-5953. MOMS RUNNINGGROUP: Tuesdays; 9:15a.m.;meetat FootZone, downtown Bend; all moms welcome with or without strollers; 4.5-mile run (or less) at mile pace of 9-12 minutes; designed for new runners, moms just getting backto running or experienced runners; runs occur in all weather conditions; lisa.nasr©me.com. MOVE ITMONDAYS: Mondays at 5:30 p.m.; carpool from FootZone to trailhead when scheduled (first and third Mondays of each month); all other runs start and finish at FootZone, downtown Bend; 3-5 miles; paces 7-12 minutes per mile; melanie@footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30p.m. onTuesdays;with Max King; locations vary; intervalbased; all ability levels; maxO footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. ASK THEEXPERTS: Tuesdays; 6 p.m.; atFootZone,downtown Bend; informal, drop-in Q-and-A session with a physical therapist; teague© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. NOON TACORUN: Wednesdays at noon;meetatFootZone,downtown Bend; order a Taco Stand burrito before leaving and it will be ready upon return; teague©footzonebend. com; 541-317-3568. LEARN TORUNGROUPRUN: Wednesdays, 5:30 p.m.;meet at FootZone, downtown Bend; conversational-paced runs of 2-3 miles; beginners and all paces welcome; 541-317-3568. WEEKLYRUNS:Wednesdays at 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports Bend; 3-5 miles; two groups, different paces; 541-389-1601. YOGA FORRUNNERS: Wednesdays at 7 p.m.; at Fleet FeetSports Bend; $5 per session or $50 for12 sessions; focuses on strengthening and lengthening musclesand preventing running injuries; 541-389-1601. CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUN: Thursdays;5:30 p.m.; locations vary; call Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more information. FUNCTIONALSTRENGTH TRAINING: Thursdays;5:15p.m.; WRP Studio, 390 S.W. Columbia St., Suite 120, Bend; weekly workouts for runners, triathletes and cyclists; $5; 541-330-0985.

SNOW SPORTS TUESDAYNIGHTSKATESKI: Depending onsnow conditions;6

p.m.; meet at Pine Mountain Sports in Bend and carpool to Virginia Meissner Sno-park; outings of 6090 minutes; all abilities welcome; bring a headlamp and afew dollars for the donation box at the sno-park; skate ski demos available on a firstcome, first-served basis (come 30 minutes early and show a credit card and drivers licence); free; sign-up required, call 541-385-8080. MBSEFALPINESKI RACES:Masters Race at Mt. BachelorApril 4-7; Skyliner Open Raceat Mt. Bachelor April 4-7;Northwest Cup Finals Race at Mt. BachelorApril 12-16; May Day Race at Mt. BachelorApril 26-28; contact 541-388-0002, mbsef@ mbsef.org, or visit www.mbsef.org. MBSEF MASTERS ALPINE PROGRAM:Still accepting enrollments; Mt. Bachelor ski area; 541-388-0002; mbsef@mbsef.org; mbsef.org. NORDIC SKATEPRE-POLE PEDAL PADDLECLINICS: In preparation for the Pole Pedal Paddle on May 18; now accepting enrollments for one-, three- and five-day clinics; 541-388-0002; mbsef@mbsef.org; mbsef.org. PRE POLEPEDALPADDLE NORDIC RACE: May 6at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; race the same course used for PPP; contact 541-388-0002, mbsef@mbsef.org, or visit www. mbsef.org. INTRO TOSKATESKIING/CLASSIC SKIING:Four-week programs start at the beginning of each month; for beginning nordic skiers; Mt. Bachelor ski area; $120-$160; 541382-1709,ext.2211; mtbachelor. com. SKI CONDITIONINGCLASS: Tuesdays, Thursdays, 6 a.m.; WillPower Training Studio, Bend; work on core strength, anaerobic conditioning, leg strength and more;12 hourlong classes, $80; 541-350-3938. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY NORDICCOMPETITION PROGRAM: Ages 14-23;Tuesdays through Sundays throughMay1; times vary; instruction in varying activities to improve strength, technique, coordination, agility and aerobic and anaerobic capacities with the goal to apply these skills to ski-racing environments; transportation provided; benO bendenduranceacademy.org or 541-678-3864; enroll online at bendenduranceacademy.org. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY SPRINGAFTER SCHOOL SKIING: Wednesdays fromApril 3 through May1;1 to 4:15 p.m.; popular program on early-release Wednesdays; separate groups for both middle school and high school athletes; allows skiers to continue their development; transportation provided; $75; www. bendenduranceacademy.org; info© bendenduranceacademy.org.

SOFTBALL BEND 60+ SENIORSOFTBALL: Bend Masters 60+ Softball League for players age 60-older of all skill levels; slow-pitch games will be played on Wednesdays fr om 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Big Sky Sports Complex in Bend; four teams planned, each of which will play two games each Wednesday; season runs May15-Aug. 28, ending with a single-elimination playoff and year-end barbecue; registration fee $25; registration forms due by April 15; for information or registration forms, contact Rob Cohenat 541-382-5659 or rob0405@ bendbroadband.com. HIGH DESERTINVITATIONAL: April13-14;Redmond; for ASA10U and 12U girls fast-pitch softball teams; five-game guarantee; $350 per team, registration open until filled; Jeremy Puckett, 541-325-3689, jeremypuckett@ highdesertyellowjackets.com; highdesertyellowjackets.com. SOFTBALLTOURNAMENT: Double-elimination coed softball tournament, proceeds benefit Wildland Firefighter Foundation; 8 a.m.-5 p.m. April 13-14at Kilowatt Field in Prineville; registration fee $250 per team in advance or $300 per team day of tournament; April 8 advance registration deadline; 541410-9863; spmartin©fs.fed.us.

SPECIAL OLYMPICS SPRING/SUMMER GAMES: Register for the spring/summer 2013 season and regional competitions, including athletics in MiltonFreewaterJune15and softball, golf andboccein EugeneJune22;mail registration forms by April11; for information or registration forms, contact Angie at 541-749-6517 or soor503©gmail.com.

SWIMMING BEND WAVESWATER POLO CLUB: For boys and girls ages12-18; season continues into August; practices scheduled forMondays and Wednesdays,7:30-8:30 p.m. (conditioning), andTuesdays and Thursdays,6:30-8:30 p.m. (pool time); for all experience levels; $125 per month or $600 for season (10 percent discount for second child); bendwaves.com. ADAPTIVESWIM LESSONS: All ages; for swimmers with disabilities; instructional staff is trained in adaptive aquatics and instruction techniques for patrons with developmental disabilities; Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, April 1-19;5:30-6 p.m.; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; $33.75; 541-548-7275; raprd.org.

SPORTS IN BRIEF RUNNING

Light Of HOPeSet fOrAPril

for United Way ofDeschutes

made all seven of his conversion

directed by Jeff Christensen, a

email info©showcasebasketball.

Firefighters climdstairs

— The sixth annual Light of Hope run/walk will take place at 9 a.m.

County. The fifth annual Mt. Bachelor Charity Ski Week fundraiser

attempts. Also on Saturday, the Bend Rugby Club women notched

former NCAA Division I basketball

com or call 503-213-3413. — Bulletin staff reports

far Charity —The BendFire

on Sunday,April 21, at Riverbend

will be held April 8-12 andApril

a 45-5 home win over the Boise

Department finished 15th out of 177 teams last month at the 22nd annual Seattle Scott Firefighter Stairclimb. Firefighters from across the Northwest climbed

Park in Bend. The event, which starts at 9 a.m., will include 10K,

22-26. Mt. Bachelor provides lift-ticket vouchers to United Way

pants will practice NBA-style drills and skill work. Cost for the clinics

5K and 1Kdistance options. The

ofDeschutesCounty,andthose vouchers can beredeemed for a

Nemesis at High Desert Middle School. Erica Cardwell led Bend with four tries.

the Columbia Center building (788 feet high with1,311 steps) in full gear to raise funds for the

event is a benefit for Court Ap-

pointed Special Advocates, an organization that uses trained volunteers to advocate for abusedor

$25 full-day lift ticket. Vouchers

through the United Wayoffice can be reserved by phone or picked

BASKETBALL

up in person at1130 N.W. Har-

riman St., Suite A, in Bend.For

CliniC —Registration is now

Bend captain Scott Wyman took 19th place overall in the event with

the 10K or 5K with a T-shirt, or $20 without a shirt. The 1K costs $10

more information, visit www.

a time of13 minutes, 20 seconds.

for the entire family. Register at www.casaofcentraloregon.org or

541-389-6507.

open for a youth basketball clinic scheduled for July13-14 at the Athletic Club of Bend. The Showcase Basketball clinic is open to boys and girls ages 7-17. It is

in Bend at Fleet Feet Sports, 1320

of lymphoma, served asinspira-

N.W.GalvestonAve.,orFootZone,

tion for the14 Bend firefighters who raised more than $25,000

845 N.W. Wall St. For more information, call 541-389-1618.

RUGBY Roughriders roll in Med-

over the past few months. The

fOfd —The BendRugby Club's

Sunriver Fire Department finished 96th as a team. In 2012, the event

Roughriders got two tries each from Mike Hunter and Clint Peter-

SKIING

brought in a record $1.2 million for blood-cancer research andpatient Event denefitS United Way

Mountain Medical Immediate Care 541-388-7799 1302 NE 3rd St. Bend www.mtmedfsr.com

Bu New ... Bu

5

IN !

WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066 Adjustable Beds-

t

7

NIXtTREss

G allery- B e n d 541-330-5084

Local

son on their way to aconvincing

— Mt. Bachelor ski area is cur-

49-5 victory Saturday over Rogue Valley. Nate Tow, Mike Gamm and

llswa.org and click on "Scott Fire-

rently offering $25 weekday lift-

Mike Morrelli each scored asingle

fighter Stairclimb."

ticket vouchers to help raise funds

try for the winners, and Hunter

services. To make a donation, visit

casebasketball.com. For more information and session schedules,

RegiStratiOn OPenfOryauth

neglected children going through

the court system. Cost is $30 for

Collin Ellingson, a12-year-old La Pine boy battling a rare form

is $50 before May1, and$100 after May1. Register at www.show-

Leukemia8 Lymphoma Society.

deschutesunitedway.org or call

player who hascoached in the NBA Development League.Partici-

THE BULLETI N'SBID-N-BUY ONLINEAUCTION EVENT RETURNS, BRINGIN QUALITYPRODUCTS AT LOW-AUCTION PRICESTO CENTRAL OREGON I I

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TNT — Old Guys Rule; RommelSundita, 268/639;shaunaLatses, 213/544. Latecomers —COTrophies; DebRosenthal, 192/536. progressive — G's up; Bryan Meeker, 266/686. FreeBreathers —2Tigers and1 Cougar;Jlm Whits n, o257/636;JoyceHuey,195/507. T.G.I.E —MarkIt Zero;RyanHilier, 255/709, DebbiePowell, 215/539. Draft —5 0'clockSomewhere; WayneMurray, 215/578;PattiSundita, 178/505. RimrockLanes, Prineville Week 29 50+ or - —Teamscratch game.SNAFU, 606. Teamscratch series: Fve Baller's, 2,066. Men's scratchgame:Mike Koivisto, 211. Men's scratch series:Matt Hawes,635.Women's scratch game: Stella Oia, 160. Women'sscratch series: Laura Hawes, 456. Week 24 Friday NightSpecials —Teamscratchgame: The GrayMayers, 783.Teamscratch series: Split It, 2,267. Men'sscratch game:RickyMayers, 252. Men'sscratchseries: l.arry Gerke,658 Women 's scratchgame:Edith Roebuck, 213.Women's scratch series:Ari Mayers,621.

See What's In The Auction: 29940.B.RileyRd,Bend• 541-382-5900 WWW.mjaCOdSfamilyofStoreS.COm YOU CAN BID ON:

Gift Certificates, Stress-Free Chairs and a Sleeper Sofa RETAIL I/ALUE: From$280to $5,000

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MONDAY, APRIL 1,2013 • THE BULLETIN

B7

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

' mericans'crea or rawson TV SPOTLIGHT

ple told me I was stubborn and I know what that meant. But By Laura M. Holson I wanted to be a positive, not a New York Times News Service negative. I see that in Elizabeth. When Joseph Weisberg was Philip has lightness and humor training to be a case officer for masking a lot of dark stuff, the CIA in the early 1990s, he which is familiar to me. And I soon learned that deception see Stan, who is confronted by was a crucial skill, one that inso much stuff, having to make volved lying to his family on a decisions, spiraling down." regular basis. He paused. "I don't feel like "It was painful," Weisberg that now," he said. recalled. "Fundamentally, lies Weisberg came to New York were at the core of the relationin 1997 by way of Chicago, ships. I lied to all my friends where he grew up in a liberal and most of the people in my Joshua Bright/ New York Times News Service Jewish home. His father, Berfamily. I lied every day. I told 20 Joseph Weisberg's work for the CIA has been put to use in "The nard, was a prominent civil lies a day and I got used to it. It Americans," which tells the story of two Russian spies living rights lawyer, and his mother, was hard for about two weeks. undercover in suburban Virginia in the 1980s. Lois, a well-known social activThen it got easy. I watched it ist celebrated bythe writer Malhappen to all of us." colm Gladwell in a 1999 New "They tap into your Jungian Yorkerarticle as a "connector" So does he find it easy to tell tan office that smelled faintly lies now? "It's had the opposite of cigarettesmoke, Weisberg self-consciousness," he said of for her uncanny ability to navieffect, "he said. recalled the episode in which fans' comments. gate the city's social strata. That experience, though, has Elizabeth, played with c ool Weisberg nodded. "In the agIn 1987, Weisberg graduated been put to good use in the criti- detachment by Keri Russell, gregate," he said, "they are sim- from Yale University, where cally acclaimed FX show "The pounded the face of her KGB ply all the things in my brain." he took classes in Russian hisAmericans," of which Weis- boss with her bare fists after For those who suggest spy tory, having come of political berg, 47, is the creator and head her husband, Philip (Matthew culture is a vestige of the past, age in an era when Reagan writer. Rhys), was accused of being a Weisberg pointed out that, in railed against Soviet-style comThe show, which is shown mole. 2010, federal prosecutors ar- m unism. Threeyears later,he "Everyone watching went Wednesday nights, tells the rested 10 Russian agents liv- joined the CIA and moved to story of tw o R ussian spies, crazy," Weisberg said. On Twit- ing suburban lives (one couple Washington, because, he said, Elizabeth and Philip Jennings, ter,someone praised Russell's grew hydrangeas in Montclair, "I wanted a job where I could living undercover in suburban ultra-aggressive demeanor. N.J.), part of a n e s pionage be a Cold Warrior," adding, Virginia in the 1980s, at the Weisberg shuddered withde- ring that, among other things, "where you can be a brainy, height of the Reagan-era Cold light; the poster had picked up sought to recruit Americans. dark weirdo and do all kinds of "I feel close to all of them," fascinating crazy stuff." War. Their artful deceptions on the physical ferocity that — a pretend marriage, made- Weisberg hoped appeared au- Weinberg said of the show's In 1993, Joe Weisberg took a up back stories, ever-changing thentic in the show. main characters, including Stan leave of absence before his first "I shouted, 'KGB! KGB!re he Beeman (Noah Emmerich), an foreign assignment and moved identities, quick-shifting loyalties — are at the series' core. said, jumping to his feet, his FBI agent who lives next door back to Chicago to take care of On a recent Thursday after- two fists punching the air. to the Jennings family and who his ailing father. Disillusioned noon, in the writer's room of a Joel Fields, a fellow writer for seems alternately friendly and by then with spy work, he defifth-floor downtown Manhat- the show, looked on knowingly. suspicious. "A lot of my life peo- cided not to return to the CIA

a oos we mor as e Dear readers:It's April Fools' Day, the day on which I share some offbeat letters and examples of readers' efforts to pull my leg. It's all in

fun — so enjoy! Dear Abby: My husband and I have been married almost 10 years. He has always been a DEAR good husband, but ABBY recently he has been coming home increasingly late. He says he's putting in overtime. The other day when I was doing the laundry, I discovered a red stain on his underwear. He said they were painting the bathroom at work and he had gotten paint on it when he used the facilities, but it looks more like lipstick to me. Can you tell me how to get the lipstick out of his shorts? — Good Housewife in Utah Dear Good Housewife: There's more to m a rriage than getting whiter whites. You may be a great housewife, but you're missing the big picture. More important than getting the lipstick out of his shorts is keeping his shorts away from the lipstick. And that's no joke. Dear Abby: My girlfriend just moved in, and we're going to have a

party to celebrate. We have decided to have it here, but the problem is we have just one bathroom. I think we should rent a portapotty. We could put it in the hallway next to the dining room. My girlfriend thinks that's tacky, but I think it's a sensible solution. B ecause this i s a fourth-floor walk-up, the porta-potty folks may charge extra to deliver it. Advice, please? — Tom and Nancy in New York Dear Tom And Nancy: Gladly. Charge for the use of the portapotty and two things will happen: You will make enough money to reimburse yourself for the delivery cost, and so few guests will accept your invitations in the future that your one bathroom will be able to accommodate them. Dear Abby:My wife and I and our teenage son came home from a family get-together, and after he went to bed, my wife told me she wants to get anew, "bouncier" bed. We don't want to wake up our son with the noise of our enjoying it. What kind of bed do you recommend? — Mr. Romancein Oregon Dear Mr. Romance:Forget the bed

and buy a trampoline. And if your son asks why, tell him you're training to join the circus. Dear Abby: How can I give my boyfriend makeup sex if we never have an argument'? — Miss Bliss in Indiana Dear Miss Bliss: That's a good question. If you figure out the answer, let me know. Dear Abby:I am a married man dating a married woman. She's the love of my life. My girlfriend is sweet, kind, has a caring heart and is very much a lady. We oftensneak away forromantic weekends, where we laugh and enjoy being together and forget our daily routines. Sometimes I'll stop and watch her while she shops or talks to people and admire how beautiful she is. The twinkle in her eyes is as close as I can get to the stars in the sky. I adore her and plan to be with her for the rest of my life. And one more thing: My girlfriend is also my bride of 40 years! — One Lucky Guyin Tennessee Dear Lucky Guy: Normally I'd advise you to try to turn your wife into the love of your life, but you're ahead of me! — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

TV TODAY after his father died the followingyear. He wanted to write fiction, a nd supported h imself b y teaching after moving to New York City. He also wrote country songs that he i m plored friends to watch him perform in local bars. He was marriedin 2005 to Julia Rothwax, who works in public relations; they have a daughter, and he has written two novels, including "An Ordi-

nary Spy," inspired by his work at the CIA. "There is a mystery to Joe," said Peter Jacobson, an actor and one of his closest friends, whom he met in 1974. "He is funny, nice and fun to be with, but there is an underside. He was able to hide that in the CIA." That underside proved lucrative in the creation of "The Americans," which has been picked up for a second season, and aboontothe actors who receive lessons from Weisberg in countersurveillance. Rhys said Weisberg spent an afternoon

explaining, amongotherthings, how to hide behind buildings when trying to evade capture. They ventured onto the streets of Brooklyn, where Weisberg taught Rhys how to determine if he was being followed. One technique: cross a street, which allows a look around without suspicion. "You can look two or three times if you know how to do it well," Rhys said.

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 andIMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • ADMISSION(PG-13) 12:20, 3:55, 7:30, 10:05 • THE CALL (R)4:45, 7:50, 10:25 • THE CROODS (PG) 1,3:45, 6:35, 9:10 • THE CROODS 3-0 (PG)1: I5, 4:15, 6:50, 9:25 • G.I. JOE:RETALIATION(PG-13) I:10, 4:10, 4:35, 7:05, 9:45 • G.I. JOE:RETALIATION3-D (PG-I3) I:20, 4:05, 7, 9:50 • G.I. JOE: RETALIATION IMAX (PG-13) 1:25, 4: I5, 7:15, IO • THEHOST(PG-I3) I2:45,3:50,6:55,9:55 • IDENTITY THIEF(R) 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6:05, 9:50 • THEINCREDIBLE BURT WONDERSTONE (PG-I3)1:20, 4:25, 7:40, 10:15 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER3-D (PG-13) Noon, 6:40 • JACKTHE GIANT SLAYER (PG-I3)3:20,9:40 • LIFE OF Pl(PG)12:10 • LIFE OF Pl 3-D (PG)3:10, 6:05, 9 • OLYMPUSHASFALLEN(R) 12:30, 1:45, 3:30, 7: IO,10:10 • 01THE GREAT AND POWERFUL (PG)12:l5,3:25,6:45, 9:45 • 01 THE GREAT AND POWERFUL 3-D (PG) 1:30,4:30, 7:25, 10:15 • SPRINGBREAKERS(R) 1:40, 7:45, 10:20 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. '

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• DJANGOUNCHAINED(R) 4 • EMPEROR (PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 6:45 • QUARTET(PG-13) 1, 3:15, 6:15 • SIDE EFFECTS (R) 12:15, 7:15 • SILVERLININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 12:45, 3:30, 6:30 • STOKER (R) 12:30, 3:45, 7 • WESTOF MEMPHIS (R)Noon,3,6 I

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013:This yearyouwill tend to be more adventuresome than in past years. You haveunusually high energy and need a positive outlet. You communicate with excellence; people respond to you. If you are single, Stars showthe kind you are like a of day you'll have ma gnet — several ** * * * D ynamic admirers cannot ** * * P ositive st ay away. You ** * A verage could be interested ** S o-so in someone who * Difficult has a very unusual lifestyle. If you are attached, form a habit of jogging or walking every day, or else you could find yourself fighting with your sweetie. Your frustration level might be aproblem. SAGITTARIUS encourages you to take risks.

ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * O n ce more, you are energized and ready to go. Others respond to your efforts. Opportunities pop up leftand right; know that you are fortunate. Trust yourself to know which way to turn. A call comes in from out of left field that makes you smile. Tonight: Hang out.

SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21)

directly, especially if you feel angry or frustrated. Clearing the air will energize you. Tonight: Go for what you want.

** You have a tendency to go overboard. Hold back, as you might not be interested in what comes down your path in the long run. What is behind your sudden desire to go wild? You might gain more self-control when you find that answer. Tonight: Run some errands on the way home.

CANCER (June21-July22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * You might want to approach a personal matter differently. You'll open up to a positive change, mainly because your sixth sense pushes you in that direction. You are in a period where you make the right choices. Tonight: Back away from a controlling authority figure.

LEO (July23-Aug. 22) ** * * You might want to rethink a personal issue. What you might have believed was happening likely will be true, and it will result in a wonderful opportunity that comes forward. You could be delighted as a result. Friends are asource of good news. Tonight: Ever playful.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * * You beam and draw many people toward you. When you seeyour options more clearly, the way you handle a personal matter could change radically. A person who seems to bring you luck will suddenly appear. Be happy for the ease at present. Tonight: Head home early.

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** You could feel off-kilter right now. Assume a low profile — at least for a little while. Observe what is happening on the home front. You might wish for a changeofpaceand/ora more peaceful atmosphere. Just go with the moment. Tonight: Nap, then decide.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18)

** * * * Z e ro in on your priorities. ** * Tension builds around a family Someone you interact with could find you member, real estate or a matter relating to be very touchy or difficult to deal with. to your home. You can only push so TAURUS (April 20-May20) This person lets you know what he or she ** * * Go with the moment, but be sure much. You are making a judgment that is feels in no uncertain terms. Do you really increasing the pressure. Understand that to include a friend or loved one in your wantafight? Letgo ofthe issue. Tonight: you cannot control others, nor should you Try to make it an early night. plans. You might be in the throes of anger even try to. Tonight: Make it easy. and trying to suppress your feelings. PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) Know that they will come through anyway. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) ** * * Aboss could anger you. You ** * * * B e aware of your limits. By The other party happily will work through might notfeel free to really express what honoring boundaries, everyone will get this rift with you. Tonight: Togetherness. you are thinking. Follow your intuition, and along much better. News from a distance GEMINI (May 21-June20) encourages you to try something different give the situation some time. Get feedback ** * * D efer to a partner or an associate from a trusted friend or an adviser. Timing or open up to new possibility. You might who seems to have a lot to share. This can make all the difference. Tonight: Burn need to pull back some in order to get the person might want to have an open the candle at both ends. big picture. Tonight: At a favorite spot. discussion with you. Relate to him or her ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

1 p.m. on H A, "General Hospital" —Fifty years — that's a lot of drama. The venerable daytime serial's golden anniversary celebration culminates this week with the return of the Nurses' Ball. As fans have already noticed, lots of characters from the show's pasthave come backin recent weeks to help mark the milestone, including Laura Spencer (Genie Francis), half of one of daytime's all-time supercouples. The other half is, of course, Luke (Anthony Geary), still a regular. 8 p.m. on (CW), "The Carrie Diaries" — Carrie (AnnaSophia Robb) tries to make amends for complicating a situation with Sebastian (Austin Butler) by taking him to Madonna's tour launch party, but things don't go as planned. Mouse (Ellen Wong) finds it hard to deny her feelings for West (RJ Brown). Dorrit (Stefania Owen) seeks romantic advice from Donna LaDonna (Chloe Bridges). Tom (Matt Letscher) has an awkward encounter in the new episode "A First Time for Everything." 9 p.m. on TNT, "Dallas" — Christopher (Jesse Metcalfe) becomes the target of a conspiracy aimed at pinning the blame on him for the recent disaster and crippling Ewing Energies. As the family investigates, a new adversary surfaces. John Ross (Josh Henderson) helps Pamela (Julie Gonzalo) deal with a personal matter, which brings them closer together, while Christopher's relationship with Elena (Jordana Brewster) takes a turn in the new episode "Let Me ln." 10 p.m. on TNT, "Monday Mornings" —Ty and Hooten (Jamie Bamber, Alfred Molina) operate on a judge (Mercedes Ruehl) for what they think is a brain tumor but discover something more shocking. A difficult case in the ER pushes Michelle (Emily Swallow) over the edge. Sung and Tina (Keong Sim, Jennifer Finnigan) disagree over how to treat an obsessive writer with a rare form of epilepsy in the new episode "Wheels Within Wheels." 10:01 p.m. on H gl, "Castle" — In an homage to the classic film "Rear Window," the series' 100th episode has Castle (Nathan Fillion) witnessing what he thinks is a murder in an apartment across the street while he's laid up at home with a broken leg. Stana Katic also stars in "The Lives of Others." ©Zap2tt

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THE CROODS (PG)3:45, 6:15 • G.l. JOE:RETALIATION(PG-13) 4:30, 7 • OLYMPUS HASFALLEN(R) 4,6:30 • OZTHE GREAT AND POWERFUL (PG)4,6:45

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ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 1, 20'l3

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cantact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

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T h e

B u l l~ t i n : • •

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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - ExerciseEquipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health andBeautyItems 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, StereoandVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 -Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

VV.

C h a n d I e r

210

246

Furniture & Appliances

Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing

A1 Washers&Dryers

264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- GardeningSupplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGE SALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses and Equipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood

+

$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355

China cabinet, beautiful white solid wood with tempered glass doors 8 sides, glass shelves, mirrored inner back, 2 drawers below, 68" high x 40" wide x 18" deep. $350. 541-548-2849

AR15, .223 Bushmaster, like new, 2-30 rd mags, $1650 obo 503-250-0118 Bend local pays CASH!! for all firearms & ammo. 541-526-0617 Bushmaster AR-15 223 cal. + Red Dot scope $1,499. Brand new in box. 541-279-1843 CASH!! For Guns, Ammo &

Reloading Supplies.

DRYER-

541-408-6900.

Kenmore heavy duty, $50. 541-388-1484

DON'TMISSTHIS

GENERATE SOME excitement i n you r neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809. La-Z-Boy Big Man chair, swivel rocker recliner, b rown c l oth, $1 5 0 . 541-382-6310 after 3pm Loveseat, plum color, exc. cond., only 6 mo. pd. $ 4 00 , a s k ing

208

Pets 8 Supplies

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$325. 541-382-2046,

~2 e e k s 2 0 ! Ad must

Tempur-Pedic set with brushed nickel bed; Cal-King; excellent condition; $700.00

include price of s~ le te ot $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.

541-548-3774;

0

Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12

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Computers T HE B U LLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are d efined as those who sell one computer. 257

Musical Instruments Fiddle/violin Stand, New Folds Flat $30. 541-330-9070

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?

n d • O r e g o n

A v e . , • Be

260

Fuel & Wood

Lost & Found

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin

recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'

REWARD! Alive or remains. Lost 16-yr-old male mini Doxie black 8 silver, green collar and tags. Hearing and s ight not g o od. I n Peterson's Rock Gard en ar e a , 3/2 6 . 541-389-8782 286

Sales Northeast Bend

• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species and cost per cord to better serve our customers.

** FREE ** Garage Sale Klt

Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-

rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!

Misc. Items

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Schools & Training Oregon Medical Training PCS — Phlebotomy classes begin May 6, 2013. Registration now P ":~ medicaltrainin .com 541-343-3100 476

Employment Opportunities

The Bulletin • 4 Garage Sale Signs CAUTION READERS: Buying Diamonds • $2.00 Off Coupon To Ads published in "Em/Gofd for Cash 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Use Toward Your Ad ployment OpportuniSaxon's Fine Jewelers $190/cord. Multi-cord •Next 10 Tips For "Garage t ies" i n clude e m 541-389-6655 discounts, & ~/2cords Sale Success!" ployee and available. Immediate BUYING i ndependent pos i Lionel/American Flyer delivery! 541-408-6193 tions. Ads for posiJust bought a new boat? PICK UP YOUR trains, accessories. tions that require a fee Sell your old one in the GARAGE SALE KIT at 541-408-2191. or upfront investment classifieds! Ask about our 1777 SW Chandler must be stated. With BUYING & S E LLING Super Seller rates! Ave., Bend, OR 97702 any independent job All gold jewelry, silver 541-385-5809 p l e ase and gold coins, bars, AH Year Dependable Thc Bulletin opportunity, investigate thorrounds, wedding sets, Firewood: Seasoned oughly. class rings, sterling silLodgepole, Split, Del. ver, coin collect, vin- Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 Use extra caution when tage watches, dental applying for jobs ongold. Bill Fl e ming, for $335. Cash, Check or Credit Card OK. line and never pro541-382-9419. KjkGBSR 541-420-3484. vide personal inforFAST TREES, Potted Seasoned Juniper$150/ mation to any source Grow 6-10 feet yearly! you may not have record rounds; $170/ $16-$22 delivered searched and deemed cord split. Delivered in www fasttrees com to be reputable. Use Central OR, since or 509-447-4181 extreme caution when 1970! Call eves, 541-420-4379 r esponding to A N Y Leather org a nizer, online e m p loyment 3-ring binder & inserts, 269 $20. 541-330-9070 Hay, Grain & Feedg ad from out-of-state. Gardening Supplies Metal garden arbor, $75. We suggest you call & Equipment 1st quality grass hay, Wicker chair, $25, 8 the State of Oregon settee, $45. Bow front 20 assorted gardening 70- Ib bales, barn stored, Consumer Hotline at ton. Also big bales! 1-503-378-4320 (glass) curio cabinet tools, plus self-propelled $250/ Patterson Ranch w/light, $95. B aker's mower, sell separately Sisters, 541-549-3831 rack, $75. 541-389-5408 or all, $250. E-mail For Equal Opportunity sgin©bendbroadband.com L aws: Oregon B u Sauna, 2-person infra- or call 541-516-8646 Looking for your reau of Labor & Inred, hardly used, stenext employee? dustry, C i vil Rights reo, light, must see. Division, BarkTurfSoil.com Place a Bulletin $900. 541-389-2919. 971-673-0764 help wanted ad Wanted- paying cash PROMPT DELIVERY today and If you have any quesfor Hi-fi audio 8 stureach over 542-389-9663 tions, concerns or dio equip. Mclntosh, 60,000 readers comments, contact: J BL, Marantz, D y - Garden Shelf, '/4 circular, each week. naco, Heathkit, San- folding shelves, green, Your classified ad Classified Department The Bulletin sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 3 $49. will also 541-330-9070 541-385-5809 Call 541-261-1808 KIT INCLUDES:

Dachs. AKC mini pups Miniature Pinscher AKC Call Classifieds at www.bendweenies.com puppies, red males only. Twin box springs, good 541-385-5809 All colors. 541-508-4558 Champion b l oodlines, www.bendbulletin.com cond, $35. 8 w ormed. 541-420-2220 Donate deposit bottles/ vaccinated cans to local all volun- $400. Call 541-480-0896 Washer, Roper, heavy DPMS AR-15 M4 .556 teer, non-profit rescue, to Pet door, Ruff Weather, duty extra large capacity, rifle w/4 30-rd mags, NIB, $1375. 541-647-8931 help w/cat spay/neuter medium sz, 7'i4"' x 13" $150. 541-388-1484 vet bills. Cans for Cats high, $40. 541-548-5516 F S-Browning Cam o I Want to Buy or Rent trailer at Bend Pet ExBPS 12g pump shotpress, 420 NE Windy Poodle pupsAKC toys. The Bulletin un, excellent shape, cuddly compan- recommends extra Wanted: $Cash paid for Knolls thru 4 /8; t h en Loving, 550. Baikal MP153 ~ • p. vintage costume jew- Ray's Food, Sisters thru ions. 541-475-3889 semi-auto 12g shotchasing products or • elry. Top dollar paid for 4/29. Donate Mon-Fri © Queensiand Heelers un, excellent shape, Gold/Silver.l buy by the Smith Signs, 1515 NE standard & mini,$150 & services from out of I 503-440-1333. Estate, Honest Artist 2nd; or at CRAFT, Tuy the area. Sending y In350. up. 541-280-1537 Sisters. • c ash, c h ecks, o r • Elizabeth,541-633-7006 malo any time. www.rightwayranch.wor 5 41-389-8420; Info : i credit i n f o rmation Kel-Tec PMR-30. New dpress.com WANTED: Tobacco www.craftcats.org may be subjected to in box. $995 OBO. pipes - Briars and Rodent control experts i FRAUD. For more Call 541-475-6892 smokinq accessories. DO YOU HAVE (barn cats) seek work information about an g after 2 p.m. WANTED: RAZORSin exchange for safe SOMETHING TO advertiser, you may I Gillette, Gem, Schick, Rare Guns: Calico M100 shelter, basic c are. I call t h e SELL Ore g onI etc. Shaving mugs Fixed, shots. Will de- ' State Attor ney ' .22LR w/100-rnd helical FOR $500 OR and accessories. $750 obo. S&W liver! 541-389-8420. LESS? i General's O f f i c e drum, Fair prices paid. 624 .44 cal stainNon-commercial P rotec- • Model Call 541-390-7029 Shih Tzu awesome pup- Consumer less w/original box, $700 ho t l in e at I obo. Ruger Super between 10 am-3 pm. advertisers may pies, 1st shots, wormed, t ion Blackplace an ad with i 1-877-877-9392. $400. 541-977-4686 hawk .44mag stai nless, our 10'Iz" barrel w/scope, appear on Pets 8 Supplies "QUICK CASH $850 obo. 541-848-8602 bendbulletin.com Fornewspaper 265 SPECIAL" The Bulletin delivery, call the which currently Remington Wingmaster Building Materials Circulation Dept. at receives over The Bulletin recomModel 8 7 0L W 20 o 2~ eeks 20! 541-385-5800 Caregiver 1.5 million page auge shotgun, $500. mends extra caution La Pine Habitat Ad must include Prineville Senior care To place an ad, call all Eric views every when purc h as- price of single item RESTORE 541-385-5809 h ome l o oking f o r 541-639-7740 for Building Supply Resale month at no ing products or serS ponsor needed f o r of $500 or less, or Caregiver for multiple or email pictures/details. vices from out of the s weet little Jenny 8 extra cost. Quality at multiple items classified@bendbulletm.com s hifts, p a rt-time t o Spencer, a b a ndonedAntique barber chair, Triple K leather shoularea. Sending cash, Bulletin LOW PRICES whosetotal does full-time. Pass with badly injured eyes. checks, or credit in$150. 52684 Hwy 97 Classifieds der holster, for 1911. The Bulletin not exceed $500. criminal background sen ng cenval oregon since 1%B One of Jenny's eyes had f ormation may b e 541-536-3234 541-420-2220 Get Results! Dbl. mag pouch. $135 check. 541-447-5773. to be removed 8 she has subjected to fraud. Open to the public . Call Classifieds at new, take $75 cash. Call 541-385-5809 little vision in the other. Crystal c o r dial/sherry 541-480-5203 SUPER TOP SOIL For more i nforma541-385-5809 or place your ad (Photo after surgery.) www.hershe sovandbark.com Prineville Habitat Call a Pro tion about an adverglasses (4) $35. www.bendbulletin.com on-line at Her brother Spencer also 541-330-9070 Walther P22 semi-auto Screened, soil 8 comReStore tiser, you may call Whether you need a bendbulletin.com had to have an eye re.22, like new, w/2-10 post mi x ed , no Building Supply Resale the O r egon State German Shepherds, AKC fence fixed, hedges moved but has good vi- The Bulletin reserves rd mags, case and rocks/clods. High hu1427 NW Murphy Ct. Attorney General's sion in the other. Vet the right to publish all 100 rds of mus level, exc. for a m m o. 541-447-6934 trimmed or a house Office Co n s umer www.sherman-ranch.us 341 541-281-6829 s ervices are no t d o ads from The Bulletin $320 541-604-0862 flower beds, lawns, Open to the public. Protection hotline at built, you'll find nated 8 this was a big Horses & Equipmentg newspaper onto The straight gardens, 1-877-877-9392. Hounds, started, 1 fefor a small non- Bulletin Internet web- BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS 266 s creened to p s o il. professional help in male (2.5 yrs); 1 male expense Can you help by site. COLT STARTING Bark. Clean fill. DeSearch the area's most The Bulletin's "Call a The Bulletin (2.5 yrs); 1 male (16 profit. Heating 8 Stoves sponsoring one of them? ServrngCentral Oregon s>nce 1903 comprehensive listing of liver/you haul. We build solid foundamo.); house broke, Are you able to offer a Service Professional" tions. Check us out. The Bulletin 541-548-3949. classified advertising... $250ea. 541-447-1323 safe forever home for NOTICE TO ser ng cenvat Qregon s nce l903 541-419-3405 Directory real estate to automotive, Adopt a nice CRAFT cat ADVERTISER or both? Cat Reswww.steelduststable.com from Tumalo sanctuary, Lab mix female 1 yr. one merchandise to sporting 245 541-385-5809 Since September 29, cue, Adoption & Foster FREE to good home • Lo s t 8 Found Pet Smart, o r P e tco! goods. Bulletin Classifieds 1991, advertising for Team, 5 4 1 -389-8420, Golf Equipment Fixed, shots, ID chip, 541-420-5602, Joe. appear every day in the used woodstoves has Chief Engineers PO Box 6 441, B end tested, more! Sanctuary Lab Pups AKC, black 97708; print or on line. Farmers Column • been limited to mod- Found assortment of OPB Seeks Chief EnPayPal & more Golf Membership tools on Barr Rd., north open Sat. 1-5 (CLOSED 8 y ellow, Ma s t erthru www.craftcats.org. Call 541-385-5809 els which have been of Tumalo. 360-610-5443 gineers excited about Brasada Ranch,long Easter Sun.), other days Hunter sired, perfor- Thanks 8 bless you! 10X20 STORAGE www.bendbulletin.com c ertified by the O r the possibilities of the term lease. by appt. 65480 78th, BUILDINGS egon Department of Found Toyota key, off evolving broadcast in541-408-0014 Bend. 54 1 - 389-8420. mance pedigree, OFA Yorkie, 8 wks, purebred for protecting hay, The Bulletin cert hips & elbows, Environmental QualChina Hat Rd. Call to dustry and h e lping Photos, map, more at Servtng Cenrral Oregon|<nce 19IB male, 1st shots/dewfirewood, livestock Call 541-771-2330 ity (DEQ) and the fedidentify: 541-948-3624 O PB m a i ntain a www.craftcats.org 8 like www.kinnamanretrievers.com orming, mom 8 dad on etc. $1496 Installed. WANTED! Cash paid eral E n v ironmentalFound women's s unstatewide b r oadcast us on Facebook. Guns, Hunting site. $400. K r istina, 541-617-1133. for old cartridge col- Protection A g e ncyglasses, Nordeen x-counpresence. There are Labradoodies Mini & 541-408-3211 CCB ¹173684. Boxer X English Bulldog med size, several colors & Fishing two positions availlections. (EPA) as having met try trail 3/23. 541-290-1220 kfjbuilders O ykwc.net pups, CK C re g 'd. 541-280-6175/ smoke emission stanable, one located in 541-504-2662 Yorkies! 7 wks, 1 male, 2 $800. 541-325-3376 dards. A cer t ified R EMEMBER: If you Medford and one in www.alpen-ridge.com females, tails docked & 200 rds .40 WinWanted: Collector People Look for Information w oodstove may b e have lost an animal, La Grande. These are $600. Can de- chesterwhite box. seeks high quality Canary Males Labrador, black male, 7 dewclaws, About Products and identified by its certifidon't forget to check full-time, salaried, exliver. Call 541-792-0375 Jacketed Hollow fishing items. 5 @ $45-$55 each. rs, great family dog, Services Every Day through cation label, which is The Humane Society empt, regular status Points JHP. Not ball. Call 541-678-5753, or (541)548-7947. ealthy, loves cats. Free 210 positions with b e npermanently attached in Bend 541-382-3537 TheBulletin Classirreds 503-351-2746 180 Grain. Personal good home o nly. Furniture & Appliances to the stove. The BulRedmond, efits. For more inforCATS: male, 3 yrs, inde- to Defense ammo. 541-536-7960 Winchester desirable letin will no t k n ow541-923-0882 mation and i nstrucRafter L F Ranch & pendent but loving; fe$160./ 200rds 9mm model 70 Pre 64 300 ingly accept advertisPrineville, Farm Svcs. - Custom tions on how to apply, male, 6 yrs, indoor only, Labradors, AKC: black & 60" glass-top patio ped- Federal Champion W IN a n d mod e l ing for the sale of 541-447-7178; to: shy but affectionate. Free choc; 1st shots, athletic estal table w/chairs & um- 115 gr. FMJ $110. Haying 8 Field Work go 100-284. to good homes only. parents, $350-450. Ready brella, heavy good quality, David 415-606-0547 Call uncertified OR Craft Cats, Call Lee Fischer, http://www.opb.org/in541-536-7960 3/23. 541-410-9000 $75. 541-312-2951 541-420-8689 woodstoves. 541-389-8420. 541-410-4495 sideopb/careers/jobs/.

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C2 MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013• THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mon.

Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess

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000rj 603

705

Rental Alternatives

Real Estate Services

Single Male, 61, em-

Boise, ID Real Estate For relocation info, call Mike Conklin, 208-941-8458 Silvercreek Realty

ployed, seeks caretaker living arrange-

a

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. ment. 54'-389-3639. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. 627 Vacation Rentals Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • 8 Exchanges Saturday • • • Gold C rown! • 3:00 pm Fri. 5-star Exc. 2 bdrm, Sunrinext to amuseSunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • ver, ment par k A v a il. Starting at 3 lines

Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

"UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days..................................

(call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

*Must state prices in ed

4/4-11 & 4 / 1 1-18. 541-433-2901 630

Rooms for Rent Studios 8 Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & l inens. New owners. $145-$165/wk 541-382-1885 632

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R edmond, is

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accepting a p plications for their waiting

745

Homes for Sale

NOTICE All real estate advertised here in is subject to t h e F e deral F air H o using A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i m itations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r ea l e state which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available

on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified 749

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RENTALS 603- Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636- Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638- Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Housesfor Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675- RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705- Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750 - RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764 - Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 860

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & AccessoriesI

14' 1982 Valco River Sled, 70 h.p., FishFinder. Older boat but Harley Limited 103 2011, price includes trailer, many extras, stage 1 & air 3 wheels and tires. All $1 5 00 ! Cal l cushion seat. 18,123 mi, for 541-416-8811 $21,990. 541-306-0289

l ist of 1 8 2 B d r m Southeast Bend Homes apts. Rent based on income. I ncome 20688 White Cliff Circle. 4 Bdrm, 2 bath home Snowmobiles restrictions apply. PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is FSBO, . 46 a c r e , Call 541.548.7282 needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or TDD 1.800.735.2900 single level, w/ office, ( 2) 2000 A rctic C a t reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher laundry room, paved Z L580's EFI with n e w I shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days driveway, hardwood covers, electric start w/ will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. f loors, w h it e v i n y l reverse, low miles, both fence. $260 , 000. excellent; with new 2009 OBO. 541-317-5012. Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, HD Fat Boy 1996 drive off/on w/double tilt, Completely customized 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 634 > Independenteoseons Volvo Penta, 270HP, lots of accys. Selling due Must see and hear to I» ~f Apt./Multiplex NE Bend low hrs., must see, Get your to m e dical r e asons. appreciate. 2012 $8000 all. 541-536-8130 business Award Winner. 17,000 $15,000, 541-330-3939 Can be found on these pages : Delivery Jump Into obo. 541-548-4807 Earn extra money • Yamaha 750 1999 Sprinq! d elivering the D ex 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, EMPLOYMENT FINANCEANO BUSINESS Where can you find a 2 bdrm, 1 bath, Mountain Max, $1400. a ROW I N G Directory i n the 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 410 - Private Instruction 507- Real Estate Contracts • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 $530 8 $540 w/lease. helping hand? Bend/Redmond area. hp Bowrider w/depth 421 - Schools and Training 514 - Insurance Carports included! EXT, $1000. Must over the age of with an ad in From contractors to finder, radio/CD player, • Zieman 4-place 18 years, have a 454- Looking for Employment 528- Loans and Mortgages FDX HOLLOW APTS. rod holders, full canThe Bulletin's yard care, it's all here trailer, SOLD! valid driver's license, 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 543- Stocks and Bonds (541) 383-3152 vas, EZ Loader trailer, All in good condition. your own vehicle and "Call A Service in The Bulletin's Cascade Rental 476 - Employment Opportunities exclnt cond, $13,000. 558- Business Investments Located in La Pine. proof of i nsurance. "Call A Service Management. Co. Professional" 707-484-3518 (Bend) 486 - Independent Positions 573- Business Opportunities Call 541-408-6149. We pay per book, Directory Professional" Directory per stop, b lended 636 476 476 476 r ate. P lease c a l l 860 HD Screaming Eagle Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 425-736-7927 Employment Employment Employment 750 Electra Glide 2005, Motorcycles & Accessories Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities 103" motor, two tone Redmond Homes Small studios close to liBMW K100 LT 1 9 87 candy teal, new tires, brary, all util. paid. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Ranch / Farm Team, Special Education $550 mo.w/ $525 dep. Looking for your next 52k miles, b ronze, 23K miles, CD player, Dental lnsurance in Eastern Oregon Teacher Door-to-door selling with $495 mo.w/$470 dep extra wind s hield, hydraulic clutch, ex- 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, employee? & Collections Seeking 2-person team No pets/ no smoking. cellent condition. trailer hitch, battery fast results! It's the easiest Place a Bulletin help Full-time position for hard labor job op- L ake County ESD i s 541-330- 9769 or Highest offer takes it. inboard motor, g reat charger, full luggage way in the world to sell. wanted ad today and cond, well maintained, e rating a rem o t e now accepting appli541-480-7870 541-480-8080. with attractive hard bags, manuals $9995 obo. 541-350-7755 reach over 60,000 ranch, dealing with cations for a Special and paperwork. Albenefits package. 1 he Bulletin Classified readers each week. cattle, wheat farming Education T e acher. 642 ways garaged. $3200. Fun, family-like Your classified ad 541-385-5809 ATVs and large garden. No Applicants must have Don, 541-504-5989 Apt./Multiplex Redmond team. Musthave will also appear on smoking, drug use, or qualify for Oregon bendbulletin.com dental experience drinking or c r iminal licensure as a Country Living! Upstairs Harley Heritage which currently rewith work referhistory; we will check. Teacher with Handiduplex, small kitchenSoftail, 2003 ceives over Must have lived and capped Learner Enences to apply; ette, 1 bdrm, den, out$5,000+ in extras, 1.5 million page worked in the country dorsement. This is a side deck. 17735 NW $2000 paint job, Dentrix helpful. views every month 1996 Seaswirl 20.1 and understand that part-time (.5 FTE) poLone Pine Rd., Terreb30K mi. 1 owner, at no extra cost. ranch life is a 24/7 job sition with a s a lary onne. $500 per mo. For more information Yamaha Banshee 2001, Cuddy, 5.0 Volvo, exc Fax resume to Bulletin Classifieds cond., full canvas, one for both m e mbers. range $ 1 6,565 541-504-0837 please call Get Results! custom built 350 motor, owner, $6500 OBO. 541-475-6159 Nearest drug store is $29,716 DOE, partial 541-385-8090 race-ready, lots of extras, Call 385-5809 or 541-410-0755 (Madras). 100 miles away and benefits. Pos i t ion 648 or 209-605-5537 $4999/obo 541-647-8931 place your ad on-line neighbors are few. At closes 4/30/1 3. Houses for at least one team memSubmit application 528 Rent General bendbulletin.com ber must have experionline at Loans & Mortgages ence with cattle and www.edzapp.com DO YOU NEED PUBLISHER'S include application, A GREAT g rowing crops, i n 773 WARNING NOTICE cluding operating and resume 8 cover letter EMPLOYEE The Bulletin recomAll real estate adverAcreages repairing machinery. RIGHT NOW? mends you use cautising in this newspaThe other m ember Call The Bulletin tion when you proCall54I 385 5809topramcteyourservice'Advertise for 28daysstarting at ' I4I lnit speci alpackogeawtavoilabteonourwebste) per is subject to the should love to garden Looking for your next before 11 a.m. and (440) Dryland Acres vide personal F air H o using A c t and plan to plant and get an ad in to pubinformation to compa- which makes it illegal 5 miles east of Ashharvest a large gar- Placeemployee? lish the next day! a Bulletin help o n G r osner nies offering loans or to a d vertise "any wood den and can some, 541-385-5809. wanted ad today and credit, especially preference, limitation R d. S p ring a n d Building/Contracting L andscaping/YardCare Landscaping/YardCare( and separately have reach over 60,000 pond. Good for seaVIEW the those asking for ador disc r imination sonal grazing, c omputer skills t o readers each week. hunt- NOTICE: Oregon state Classifieds at: vance loan fees or based on race, color, Nelson prepare and s ubmit www.bendbulletin.com Your classified ad ing/recreation. law req u ires anycompanies from out of religion, sex, handiLandscaping & weekly reports of daily will also appear on $330,000 firm. As is. one who co n t racts state. If you have cap, familial status, activities and r anch Maintenance Zorfdtz gaaErip bendbulletin.com No agents. for construction work concerns or quesmarital status or naServing Central conditions. Su b m it 541-205-3788, which currently tions, we suggest you to be licensed with the Zacug gas.e, i,. tional origin, or an inOregon Since 2003 detailed resumes, inWant to impress the receives over 1.5 541-823-2397, C onstruction Con - More Than Service consult your attorney tention to make any dobales Residental/Commercial cluding work history O msn.com relatives? Remodel million page views tractors Board (CCB). or call CONSUMER such pre f e rence, Peace Of Mind with dates, education, every month at A n active lice n se HOTLINE, Sprinkler your home with the limitation or discrimiskills, goals, three refno extra cost. 1-877-877-9392. means the contractor Spring Clean Up nation." Familial staActivation/Repair help of a professional erences with phone Good classified ads tell Bulletin Classifieds i s bonded an d i n tus includes children Back Flow Testing •Leaves from The Bulletin's numbers. T w o-perBANK TURNED YOU the essential facts in an Get Results! s ured. Ve r if y t h e the age of 18 son team applications •Cones interesting Manner. Write "Call A Service DOWN? Private party under Call 385-5809 contractor's CCB Maintenance with parents or from the readers view - not • Needles only, please. will loan on real es- living Professional" Directory or place • Thatch 8 Aerate c ense through t h e legal cus t o dians, Email resume to: • Debris Hauling tate equity. Credit, no your ad on-line at CCB Cons u m er • Spring Clean up women, and the seller's. Convert the rm33307736 © gmail.com problem, good equity pregnant bendbulletin.com •Weekly Mowing Website people securing cus- facts into benefits. Show Weed free Bark is all you need. Call www.hirealicensedcontracton 8 Edging MENTAL HEALTH tody of children under the reader how the item will 8 flower beds Oregon Land M ortcom •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly help them in someway. 18. This newspaper THE CHILD CENTER Remember.... or call 503-378-4621. gage 541-388-4200. Maintenance A dd your we b a d will not knowingly acThis A Circle of Care for The Bulletin recom- Lawn Renovation •Bark, Rock, Etc. Find exactly what advertising tip cept any advertising Children and Families dress to your ad and LOCALMONEY:We buy Aeration - Dethatching mends checking with you are looking for in the brought to you by A treatment program for readers on The secured trustdeeds 8 for real estate which is Overseed the CCB prior to con~Landsca in emotionally/behaviorally Bullefin' s web site note, some hard money in violation of the law. CLASSIFIEDS tracting with anyone. Compost •Landscape The Bulletin loans. Call Pat Kelley disturbed children and will be able to click O ur r e aders ar e e vng central0 won swcel903 Top Dressing Some other t r ades Construction 541-382-3099 ext.13. t heir families has a n hereby informed that through automatically also req u ire addi•Water Feature opening for: to your site. all dwellings advertional licenses and Landscape Installation/Maint. Program Supervisor tised in this newspacertifications. ACCOUNTANT CHECK YOUR AD •Pavers Maintenance Resort /Therapist per are available on check your ad Established CPA firm in Klamath Falls, OR is Full or Partial Service •Renovations Activities person Minimum qualifications: an equal opportunity Please on the first day it runs seeking a CPA with 3-8 years' experience in pub• Irngations Installation •Mowing ~Edging needed at Master's degree plus two basis. To complain of to make sure it is cor- • D e bris Removal lic accounting. The successful candidate shall • Pruning «Weeding years of post-masters The Pines at Sunriver. have a strong technical background in tax and fidiscrimination cal l rect. Sometimes inSenior Discounts 541-593-2160. Sprinkler Adjustments work in psychology, soJUNK BE GONE HUD t o l l-free at s tructions over t h e accounting, as well as excellent commuBonded & Insured cial work o r r e l atedService Technicians nancial 1-800-877-0246. The I Haul Away FREE 541-815-4458 nication skills. The applicant should be able to are misunderFertilizer included mental health f i elds. toll f re e t e l ephone phone For Salvage. Also LCB¹8759 both independently and as a team player. stood and a n e r ror Demonstrated compe- Central Oregon RV work with monthly program number for the hearCleanups & Cleanouts Candidate should have experience preparing 8 can occurin your ad. tence in leadership, pro- dealership seeks ser- reviewing complex individual, corporate, and ing im p aired is If this happens to your Mel, 541-389-8107 g ram p l anning a n d vice technicians. Must partnership returns. Responsibilities will also inWeekly,monthly 1-800-927-9275. SPRING CLEAN-UP! ad, please contact us evaluation, p e rsonnel be customer service clude tax planning, business consulting and acor one time service. Aeration/Dethatching oriented and have RV the first day your ad supervision and manExcavating Weekly/one-time service 650 • services. We ar e a p r ofessional agement. Salary range: & camper experience. counting appears and we will avail Bonded insured EXPERIENCED team and offer a competitive salary Houses for Rent be happy to fix it as Levi's Concrete & Dirt $ 33,523-37,003 plu s Competitive pay and family-like Free Estimates! complete fringe benefit package. Commercial s oon a s w e ca n . Works - for all your dirt & v ery g enerous e m - benefits. Please send and aPlease NE Bend COLLINS Lawn Maint. send cover letter and resume to: & Residential ployee benefits package. resume' to Deadlines are: Weekexcavation needs. ConCa/l 541-480-9714 risaksonOiscocas.com E-mail resume to bcrvhire@gmail.com A very sharp looking days 11:00 noon for crete, Driveway Grading, Free Estimates Augering. ccb¹ 194077 ii h e or apply in person at 2000 sq.ft. 3 B drm/ next day, Sat. 11:00 Senior Discounts 541-639-5282 thechildcenter.or 63500 N. Hwy 97, Independent Contractor 2bath home, gas FP & a.m. for Sunday and BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS 541-390-1466 Bend, Oregon. Monday. furnace, tile floors & Search the area's most Same Day Response Just bought a new boat? 541-385-5809 carpet, open l i ving comprehensive listing of Sell your old one in the Thank you! k itchen, dining. N o * Supplement Your Income* OTICE: O R E G O N classified advertising... Ask about our N Landscape smoking/no pets. Call The Bulletin Classified classifieds! Contrac- real estate to automotive, Super Seller rates! 541-388-2250, or tors Law (ORS 671) merchandise to sporting 541-385-5809 541-815-7099. r equires a l l bu s i - goods. Bulletin Classifieds Advertising Account Executive 775 nesses that advertise appear every day in the Handyman Manufactured/ to p e r form L a n dNeed to get an print or on line. The Bulletin is looking for a professional and scape C o nstruction Call 541-385-5809 Mobile Homes ad in ASAP? driven Sales and Marketing person to help our I DO THAT! which incl u des: customers grow their businesses with an Home/Rental repairs You can place it p lanting, deck s , www.bendbulletin.com FACTORY SPECIAL Small jobs to remodels expanding list of broad-reach and targeted fences, arbors, online at: New Home, 3 bdrm, Honest, guaranteed products. This full time position requires a w ater-features, a n d servtngcentral 0 egon 5 nce 1903 $46,500 finished www.bendbulletin.com work. CCB¹151573 background in consultative sales, territory installation, repair of on your site. Dennis 541-317-9768 management and aggressive prospecting skills. irrigation systems to J and M Homes 541-385-5809 be licensed with the Two years of media sales experience is 541-548-5511 ALLEN REINSCH ERIC REEVE HANDY Landscape ContracYard maintenance 8 preferable, but we will train the right candidate. SERVICES. Home 8 t ors B o a rd . Th i s clean-up, thatching, We are looking for independent conCrest Butte Apartments Commercial Repairs, 4-digit number is to be plugging & much more! The position includes a competitive tractors to service home delivery Carpentry-Painting, 1695 Purcell Blvd., Bend, Oregon included in all adverCall 541-536-1 294 compensation package including benefits, and Now accepting applications for the wait list of a Pressure-washing, routes in: tisements which indirewards an aggressive, customer focused Honey Do's. On-time federally s u bsidized A f f ordable F a m ily cate the business has salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Housing project. Crest Butte is a beautiful promise. Senior a bond, insurance and Call a Pro Discount. Work guarproperty, less t han 3 y e a r s r e modeled, workers c ompensaMust be available 7 days a week, early mornEmail your resume, cover letter and salary offering 1 and 2 bedroom units to those who anteed. 541-389-3361 tion for their employ- Whether you need a ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle history to: or 541-771-4463 income qualify. Close to St. Charles and ees. For your protec- fence fixed, hedges Jay Brandt, Advertising Director medical/dental providers, as well as daycare Bonded 8 Insured tion call 503-378-5909 Please call 541.385.5800 or trimmed or a house CCB¹181595 jbrandt@bendbulletin.com and schools. On-site laundry facilities and new or use our website: 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or playground available. built, you'll find www.lcb.state.or.us to Please contact site manager for further detail. • Janitorial Services or drop off your resume in person at apply via email at check license status professional help in Project phone ¹: (541) 389-9107 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; before co n t racting The Bulletin's "Call a online © bendbulletin.com TTY. 1(800)735-2900 Or mail to PO Box6020, Bend, OR 97708; Integrity Office Cleaning with t h e bu s iness. No phone inquiries please. Honest services tailored to Persons doing land- Service Professional" "This institute is an equal scape m aintenance your needs! Licensed & Directory opportunity provider." Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Insured, Free Estimates. do not require a LCB EOE / Drug Free Workplace 541-385-5809 Call Nikki, 541-419-6601 license.

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD WillShortz

2013 Mo nday,Aprilli

ACROSS 37 Where an e4 lmus of "Imus ocean and a in the Morning" one's time continent meet (waits patiently) es Literary device 39 BlackBerry or much used by s Open-air rooms iPod Touch, for O. Henry 12 Slippery, as short es "Imus in the winter roads 42 Toots of a horn Morning" 24 Perfect medium 42 ". .. better left xs Chili ingredients e7 Poem of praise xs This instant 44 Ye S h o p pe es Ferber and

Louie beats the odds By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

"After diligent effort," Unlucky Louie told me, "I've determined that the odds against my wife going to Walmart for a loaf of bread and coming out with only that one item are 1,500 to 1." I sympathize with Louie, whose wife is a spendthrift, but I c an't understand why he can figure odds everywhere but at the bridge table. In today's deal, North's bid of t hree spades promised heart support and spade shortness. At six hearts, Louie drew trumps and saw that he needed a third trick i n a m i nor suit. He shrugged and tried the A-K and a third diamond. East discarded, and West took the ten and led the queen. Louie ruffed but needed a miracle in clubs that he didn't get.

one spade, you bid two hearts and he raises to three hearts. What do you say? ANSWER: Many minimum hands for partner will give six hearts a good c hance. He may have A K 7 5 3 , K 10 5, A 2, 8 7 4. Cue-bid four clubs. If partner cue-bids four diamonds in reply, you will have a close decision: Either a bid of four hearts, leaving the next move to him, or a cue bid of five clubs would be acceptable. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

x7 Iced tea brand ro Mom's forte, in brief 2o Greets the Red Sox at Yankee Stadium, say 2> Young's partner in accounting 22 "Cheers" actress Perlman 23 Canadian capital 2s Spine-tingling 27 Obseryance prescribed in the Book of Esther 32 Provide with guns 3s An "A" in N.C.A.A.: Abbr. 3s Old-time actress Dolores

WEST 4QJ942 998 0 Q10 8 2 4Q9

Because dummy had the 10-8of clubs, Louie could have gotten better odds in that suit. After he draws trumps, he takes the A-K . W h en West's nine and queen fall, Louie l eads a t h i r d c l u b , s e tting u p dummy's ten. Louie wins not only in the actual deal but when East has any three clubs or, say, J-x.

EAST 4 K 1087 5 3 92 0 J7 4 J752 SOUTH 46 9 AQ J 7 6 4 0953 AAK 6

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puzzles, nytlmes.com/crosswords (S39.95 a year). Share tips: nytlmes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytlmes.com/learnlng/xwords.

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Gershwin 7 Pay- -view 8 Sushi bar cupful 9 Machu Picchu builders 10 *Trapshooter's target 11 Snakelike swimmer 12 Longtime auto

30 Betting info 32 Soft-hearted 34 Thirst-inducing, like potato chips 37 Year, Dn monuments 39 Vigilant 43 Aroma 45 Passe 4B Grand parties 50 Coin toss choice 52 Scotland 54 Quite a distance

55 Actor's cameo,

e.g. 56 Forest-floor plant 57 One-armed bandit 58 Descriptive wd. 59 Org. that created American Hunter magazine 61 Potpie veggie 62 Chrysler truck that

sounds hardhitting

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

W I K A Q U racing sponsor 15 Newsletter edition R U N 17 Spins in board P I T games, say ST A 21 Reef explorer's

T I O N A A R T E R S S C A R T I RWA Y E CO L E gear S P E R MWH A 23 Seamstress's T H X P E A H purchase R E I D D I M 24 Tapped maple AN T O N G A fluid 26 Unhip type T O L T E C N 27 Ann , Michigan A M A D E U S 28 "Seinfeld" G E NA B U R episodes, now E N E S I M P 29 *Lightweight, MA S H C O M crinkled material xwordedltorieaol.com used for suits 1

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C H A R I A N H E D S O V I N R E C G ER K A T I E M A N D

8

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(c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

68

04/01/13


THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 1 2013 C5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 932 •

s

BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 860 - Snowmobiles 860 - MotorcyclesAndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890- RVsfor Rent

AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts andService 916- Trucks andHeavy Equipment 926 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique andClassic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 976 - Automobiles 880

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

OOO

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

Antique & Classic Autos

Aircraft, Parts & Service

4

Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, based in Madras, always hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 total t i me . $6 8 ,500. 541-475-6947, ask for Rob Berg.

Sport Utility Vehicles •

Honda CRV 2004, $9,995. Ford Model A 1930, 541-610-6150 or see Sports Coupe. Call http://bend.craigslist.org R umble seat, H & H /cto/3676208637.html rebuilt engine. W i ll cruise at 55mph. Must

Aut o m obiles

BMW 740 IL 1998 orig.

$8,300. 541-706-1897

~ CI

M orePixatBendbolletin,com

Take care of your investments 541-410-0818 with the help from Ford Mustang Coupe Jeep Patriot 2 0 08 The Bulletin's 1966, original owner, 4x4, 60k mi., single "Call A Service V8, automatic, great owner, 5-spd, 30 mpg, shape, $9000 OBO. new tires, exc. cond. Professional" Directory 530-515-8199 $11,900 541-604-0862

Ford Ranchero 1979 with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo.

Monaco Dynasty 2004, loaded, 3 slides, diesel, Reduced - now

Wouldn't you really like to drive a Buick? Bob has two 75,000 mile Buicks, priced fair, $2,000-$6000. Remember, t h ese cars get 30mpg hwy! 541-318-9999

Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slides, 541-420-4677 5 41 -385-580 9 inverter, satellite sys, $119,000, 5 4 1 -923- fireplace, 2 flat screen 8572 or 541-749-0037 TVs. $54,950 Diamond Reo Dump 21' Crownline 215 hp Toyota 4Ru n n er 541-480-3923 Truck 1 9 74, 12 -14 in/outboard e n g ine 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , yard box, runs good, RV 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin Cougar ¹295 RL 2 9', 4WD, V6, 5 speed, $6900, 541-548-6812 sleeps 2/3 p e ople, CONSIGNMENTS 2005, exclnt cond., 2 t ow pkg., plus 4 WANTED portable toilet, exc. slides, A/C, $19,500. Forklift, Hyster H30E Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 studs tires on rims, cond. Asking $8,000. We Do The Work ... 541-385-0593 for pix. LPG, good condition, engine, power every- r uns great. W a s You Keep The Cash! OBO. 541-388-8339 607 hrs, $2000 OBO. thing, new paint, 54K $ 5500, now o n l y On-site credit original m i les, runs $4000.541-659-1416 541-389-7596 Ads published in the approval team, great, excellent condi"Boats" classification web site presence. tion in & out. Asking Toyota Highlander 2011 include: Speed, fishWe Take Trade-Ins! G K E AT $8,500. 541-480-3179 Limited AWD, loaded. ing, drift, canoe, Free Advertising. Call The Bulletin At house and sail boats. ¹058474. $35,995 BIG COUNTRY RV Laredo 2009 30' with 2 For all other types of 541-385-5809 Bend: 541-330-2495 Hyster H25E, runs slides, TV, A/C, table watercraft, please see Redmond: Place Your Ad Or E-Mail & c h airs, s a tellite, well, 2982 Hours, Class 875. 541-548-5254 $3500,call Oregon At: www.bendbulletin.com Arctic pkg., p o wer 541-385-5809 541-749-0724 AutnSource awning, Exc. cond!

complete in & out. $16,000. 541-504-3253 Buick LeSabre 1996. Good condition, 121,000 miles.

Non-smoker

$2600 OBO.

541-954-5193.

QfogfI

Chevy Malibu 2009

541-598-3750 aaaoregonautosource.com

$28,000. 541-419-3301

SerVing Central Oiegan SinCe l903

43k miles, loaded,

studs on rims/ Asking $12,900.

940

j;w; Southwind 35.5' Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Boat loader, elec. for Bought new at pickup canopy, extras, $132,913; $450, 541-548-3711 asking $91,000. Call 503-982-4745

Classifieds

541-385-5809 GENERATE SOME excitement in your neig-

borhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

The Bulletin SerVing Central OregOn SiiiCe 1903

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000.

Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' 2004, only 34K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243

Nuyya 297LK HitchHiker 2007, 3 slides, 32' touring coach, left kitchen, rear lounge, many extras, beautiful c ond. inside & o u t , $32,900 OBO, Prinevine. 541-447-5502 days & 541-447-1641 eves.

881

Travel Trailers

541-820-3724

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

like new, S acrifice, $17,500. 541-598-7546

The Bulletin

541-548-5254

Space for rent: 30 amp +water, sewer, gravel lot. $350 mo. Tumalo area. 541-419-5060

Sea Kayaks - His & Prowler 2009 Extreme Hers, Eddyline Wind E dition. Model 2 7 0 Dancers,17', fiberglass boats, an equip incl., RL, 2 slides, oppospaddies, personal flo- ing in living area, ent. tation devices,dry bags, center, sep. bedroom, spray skirts,roof rack w/ 2 ne w e x tra t i res, towers & cradles. Re- hitch, bars, sway bar duced price $1100/boat included. P r o-Pack, anti-theft. Good cond, Firm. 541-504-8557. c lean. Req . 'til 4/20/15. $19 , 900. 541-390-1122 I Mo t o rhomes skslra@msn.com

0 0

I

541-923-6049

Chevy 1955 PROJECT

car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-7669.

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

e

E You Keep The Cash! 2003 Fleetwood DisOn-site credit covery 40' diesel moapproval team, torhome w/all web site presence. options-3 slide outs, We Take Trade-Ins! satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Free Advertising. etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. BIG COUNTRY RV Wintered in h e ated Bend: 541-330-2495 shop. $89,900 O.B.O. Redmond: 541-447-8664 541-548-5254

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. owner, $19,950,

Jeep Comanche, 1990, original owner, 167K, 4WD, 5-spd, tags good till 9/2015, $3900 obo.

G MC Sierra S L T 2006 - 1500 Crew Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. cond., 82 k m i les, $19,900.

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.

werenuun!

541-548-5216

RV Tow car 2004 Honda Civic Si set up for flat towing with base plate and tow brake, 35k mi, new tires, great cond. $12,000. 541-288-1808

Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. 28K miles, 2 slides, Duramax diesel, 1 owner, excellent cond, $94,500. 541-546-6920

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

$65,000. 541-419-9510

Titan

541-383-3888, 541-815-331 8

541-410-6183.

body is good, needs some r e s toration, runs, taking bids,

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellentperformance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541-382-6752

Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' d eep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent

2 007

4x4

Off-Road, beautiful inside and out, metallic black/charcoal leather, loaded, 69k mi., $19,995 obo.

935

Sport Utility Vehicles

FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd,

door panels w/flowers & hummingbirds, white soft top 8 hard top. Just reduced to $3,750. 541-317-9319 or 541-647-8483

'10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on Lincoln Town Car 2002, bendbulletin.com signature series, pearl which currently rewhite ext., ta n i n t., ceives over 1.5 mil59K mi 22-25 mpg lion page views spotless. Never damevery month at aged, new topline inno extra cost. Bulleterstate battery, altin Classifieds ways garaged. $7200. Get Results! Call 541-923-8868 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com Hyundai Sonata 2007 GLS, 64,700 mi, excellent cond, good tires, non-smoker, new tags, $9500. 541-280-7352

r----

mends extra caution i Nissan Sentra 2012 p u r chasing ~ Full warranty, 35mpg, f when products or services 520 per tank, all power. from out of the area. $13,500. 541-788-0427

I

f

-a

Chrysler Sebring 2004 84k, beautiful dark gray/ brown tan leather int $5995 541-350-5373

J S ending c

ash ,J

Pontiac Bonneville, 2005, checks, or credit inwhite with black leather formation may be I interior, new tires, $4500. J subject to FRAUD. 541-941-1249 For more informa-

Little Red Corvette1996 conv. 350 auto. 132K, 26-34 mpg. $12,500 541-923-1781

I

Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928

f

f tion about an advertiser, you may call I the Oregon State I ~ Attorney General's i Office C o n sumer f Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

I f

The Bulletin

Servrng Centrai Oregan since 1903

L

PRINEVILLE-CROOK COUNTY AIRPORT AWOS AND LIGHTED WINDCONE CONSTRUCTION Oldsmobile Alero 2004, AIP PROJECT classic 4-dr in showroom ¹3-41-0051-011 condition, leather, chrome CONNECT OREGON wheels, 1 owner, low IV ¹28714 miles. $7500. 541-382-2452 Sealed bids for the PROJECT CARS:Chevy Prineville-Crook 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & County Ai rport AyyOS and Lighted Chevy Coupe 1950 rolling chassis's $1750 yyindcone Construcea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, tion, Aip Pro j ect complete car, $ 1949; ¹3-41-0051-011/ConCadillac Series 61 1950, nect O r egon IV 2 dr. hard top, complete 28714 w i l l b e rew /spare f r on t cl i p ., ceived by the City of $3950, 541-382-7391 Pnneville (the City) at the Airport Terminal 933 Building; 4585 Airport Pickups Road; Prineville, OR 9 7754 until th e b i d closing ti m e of 2 :OOPM, April 1 7 , 2013, at which time the bids will be publicly opened and read. Bidders shall submit Ford 250 XLT 1990, the required first-tier 6 yd. dump bed, subcontractor disclo139k, Auto, $4500. sure form within two 541-410-9997 working hours of the

Chrysler SD 4-Door 1930, CD S R oyal Standard, s-cylinder,

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

Looking for your next employee?

ChevyAstro Cargo I/an 2001, pw, pdl, great cond business car, well

541-633-5149

approval) $775. Also: Please call S21 hangar avail. for 541-389-6998 s ale, o r l e ase @ $15/day or $ 325/mo. Chrysler 300 C o upe 541-419-5480. 541-948-2963 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, 32' Fleetwood Fiesta original blue interior, 2003, no slide-out, original hub caps, exc. Triton engine, an chrome, asking $9000 amenities, 1 owner, or make offer. RAM 2500 HD '03 hemi, perfect, only 17K miles, Springdale 2005 27', 4' 1 /3 interest i n w e l l 541-385-9350 2WD, 135K, auto, CC, $22,000 firm! slide in dining/living area, equipped IFR Beech Boam/fm/cd. $7000 obro. 541-504-3253 sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 nanza A36, new 10-550/ 541-680-9965 /390-1285 prop, located KBDN. obo. 541-408-3811

Four Winds Class A 32' H u r ricane tta - t i 2007. CAN'T BEAT II I THIS! Look before you buy, b e low market value! Size Weekend Warrior Toy & mileage DOES Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, matter! 12,500 mi, fuel station, exc cond. all amenities, Ford 8, black/gray V10, Ithr, c h erry, sleeps i nterior, u se d 3X , slides, like new! New $19,999 firm. low price, $54,900. 541-389-9188

both 7-passenger vans, 160K miles, low prices, $1200 8 $2900, and worth every cent!

maint'd, regular oil changes, $4500. Please call

541-408-0763

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 located Chevy Wagon 1957, @ Sunriver. H o urly 4-dr., complete, rental rate (based upon $7,000 OBO, trades.

Ford Taurus wagon 2004, very nice, pwr everything, 120K, FWD, good tires, $4900 obo. 541-815-9939 Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

96 Ford Windstar 8 2000 Nissan Quest,

1000 Automotive Parts, • Mercedes 450SL, 1977, w ell-maintained, Legal Notices Service & Accessories 113K, a raged, b ot h t o p s . 11,900. 541-389-7596 TIRES set of 4 mounted LEGAL NOTICE In t e rnational on rims + extra rim. INVITATION TO BID

Ads published in "Watercraft" include: KayPilgrim aks, rafts and motor2005, 36' 5th Wheel, 4 5% h wy t rea d , ized personal Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 225/60R16, $400 obo watercrafts. For Fleetwood 31' W ilderFall price $ 2 1,865. 541-489-6150 " boats" please s e e n ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' 541-312-4466 slide, 2 4 ' aw n i ng, Class 870. queen bed, FSC, out541-385-5809 Antique & RV side shower, E-Z lift CONSIGNMENTS Classic Autos stabilizer hitch, l i ke WANTED new, been stored. We Do The Work ... $10,950. 541-419-5060 You Keep The Cash! Just too many On-site credit P ioneer 2 3 ' 19 0 F Q collectibles? approval team, 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. 1921 Model T 541-548-1096 web site presence. Delivery Truck We Take Trade-Ins! Sell them in Restored & Runs Free Advertising. The Bulletin Classifieds Find exactly what $9000. BIG COUNTRY RV you are looking for in the Bend: 541-330-2495 541-389-8963 541-385-5809 CLASSIFIEDS Redmond:

503-358-8241

The Bulletin recoml

541-318-9999

GMC ki ton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171

541-633-7761 Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th Utility Trailers • wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awninq, excel- Light equipment trailer, lent shape, $23,900. 3 axle, 8'x21' tilt bed. Flagstaff 30' 2006, with 541-350-8629 $3500. 541-489-6150. slide, custom interior,

Watercraft

I

pump, 4-3" h oses, camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000.

541-420-3250

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin

MONTANA 3585 2008

FORD FUSION 2008 Toyota Corolla 2004, v ery e x c . con d . auto., loaded, 204k 62,500 mi. $10,750. miles orig owner non Call 541-647-6410 smoker, exc. c ond. $6500 Prin e ville

541-610-6834.

Vans GMC 1966, too many Peterbilt 359 p o tableextras to list, reduced to water t ruck, 1 9 90, $7500 obo. Serious buy3200 gal. tank, 5hp ers only. 541-536-0123

Toyota Camrys: 1984, SOLD; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car only one left! $500 Call for details, 541-548-6592

Buick Invicta1959! 2 door hardtop, 99.9%

e t jv r

The Bulletin

Automo b iles

Ford Focus 2012 SE Excellent cond. 12k mi., silver, $16,500 obo 541-306-3662.

owner, exc. c o n d. 101k miles, new tires, loaded, sunroof.

see to believe. Absolutely stunning condition! $17,500

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Automobiles •

Chevrolet Blazer LT 2000 -130k miles, Call for info. $3800 OBO 541-480-0781

to Frontage Rd; great visibility for aviation business. Financing available. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjockOq.com Check out the Ford Galaxie 500 1963, Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, ciassifieds oniine 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, most options, new tires, www.bendbulletin.com 390 vs,auto, pwr. steer & 159K miles, $3750. Call Updated daily rad i o (orig),541-419-4989 541-233-8944

1000

bid closing time. Bidd ers w h os e bi d s and/or dis c l osure s tatements ar e r e ceived after the stated times will be considered non-responsive and their bids will not be considered. The scope of w ork being considered is: 1. Construction of an AWOS with a fenced enclosure; 2. Construction of a gravel access road to the AWOS; 3. Demolition of the existing lighted windcone; 4. Construction of a new lighted windcone with segmented circle. The Contract Documents for the above project may be examined at the Airport FBO Office on working days, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Copies of s ai d d ocuments may be obtained at a cost of $90- per set from Century West Engineering Corporation. Technical questions shall be directed to Bill Brackett, Cent ury W e s t En g i neering Corporation, (541) 322- 8 962. Documents will promptly sent upon receipt of $ 1 00.00 per set to cover the d ocument fee a n d postage/handling fThe documentcosts also apply to Plan Centers). The cost of the documents is nonr efundable, and t he documents need not be returned. Contractors must be qualified i n a c c ordance with the applicable parts of ORS 279C in order to enter into a contract with the City. The City will only consider con-

Le g al Notices tractors who are able to demonstrate prior experience with similar work. T h e C i ty m ay investigate t o determine the qualifications of the bidders as part of the evaluation of the bids. Bidders must submit q ualification sta t e ments in accordance with the terms of Subsection 20-02 of the s pecifications wit h their Proposal. Prosubmitted posals without q u alification statements will not be accepted. The proposed contract is u nder a nd subject to Executive Order 11246 of September 24, 1965, and to the Equal Employment Opp o rtunity (EEO) and F ederal Labor Provisions. All l a bo r o n the project shall be paid n o less t h a n t h e minimum wage rates e stablished by t h e U .S. S ecretary o f Labor or The State of Oregon BOLI, whichever is greater. E ach B idder m u st supply all information required by the b id documents and specifications. The E E O re q u ire ments, labor provisions, and wage rates are included in the specifications and bid documents. Each Bidder m u st complete, sign a nd furnish with his bid a "Certification of

Nonsegregated Facilities" and

a statement ent i t led "Bidders S t a tement on Previous Contracts Subject to EEO Clause," as contained in the Bid Proposal. A contractor having

50 or more employees and his subcontractors having 50 or more employees a nd who m a y b e awarded a subcontract of $50,000 or more will be re q u ired to maintain an affirmative action program, the standards for which are contained in the specifications. T o b e e l igible f o r award each B idder must comply with the affirmative action requirements w hich are contained in the specifications. Disadvantaged Business Enterprises will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, or national origin in consideration for an award of any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement. This contract will be funded in part by a grant from the Federal

Legal Notices •

Legal Notices

The s uccessful Aviation A d m inistra bid. bidder will be required tion. In a c cordance to furn i s h a with federal p erformance bo n d requirements, the City and payment bond, has determined that ach i n the ful l t his c o n tract h a s e amount of the contract subcontracting price. possibilities and The City reserves the encourages the right to reject any and participation of all bids, to waive any Disadvantaged irregularities, and to Business Enterprises accept bid as prime contractors deemed inthe the best and subcontractors. A interest of the City. DBE contract goal of The City may reject 0.3% h as been in e stablished fo r t h i s any b i d not c ompliance with a l l project. p rescribed pub l i c The o v e rall DBE bidding p r o cedures project goal is 0.3% of and req u irements, the total amount bid. may reject for B ased on t h e 9 t h and good cause any or all Circuit Court Decision bids upon a finding by in W e stern S t ates the City that it is in the Paving Company v. public interest to do W ashington Sta t e So. Department of T ransportation, t h e KELLY COFFELT City has determined CITY OF PRINEVILLE that it is appropriate to use a r a c e/gender Dated at the City of neutral goal. The City Prineville, that March encourages all bidders to take active 25, 2013 race/gender n e utral Published: s teps to incl u de DBE's in this contract. DAILY JOURNAL OF COMMERCE: Race/gender neutral March 25th & April 1st steps include: THE BEND BULLETIN: u nbundling larg e March 25th & April 1st contracts, THE CENTRAL subcontracting work OREGONIAN: the prime contractor March 26th 8 April 2nd may sel f -perform, providing bonding or PUBLIC NOTICE financing assistance, The Bend Park 8 Recproviding t e c hnical reation District Board assistance, etc. This of Directors will meet contract c a n be in a work session and awarded without the regular busi n ess lowest re s p onsive meeting on Tuesday, b idder meeting t he April 2, 2013, at the goal or demonstrating D istrict Office, 7 9 9 good faith effort to SW Columbia, Bend, meet the goal. O regon. The w o r k Each pro s p ective session will begin at bidder is requested to 5:30 p .m . A g enda attend a vo l u ntary i tems include a r e pre-bid meeting to be view of th e C apital held at 2:OOPM local I mprovement Pl a n time on the April 4, and a discussion re2013 at the airport. At garding a p roposed this meeting, Park & Facility Namquestions concerning ing Policy. The board the Contract will meet in executive Documents and the session immediately proposed work will be f ollowing th e w o r k discussed. A nswers session pursuant to and clarifications will ORS 192.660(2)(h) for b e in t h e f o r m o f the purpose of diswritten addenda to the cussing real property contract and will be transactions. The mailed or faxed to all board will conduct a plan holders. regular busi n ess Contractor l icensing meeting beginning at under ORS 468A.720 7:00 p.m., to consider for asbestos abate contract awards for ment is not a require M iller's Land i n g ment of this project. structures, P o n deNo b i d sh a l l be rosa Park playground considered unless the and site furnishings, bidder is r egistered and umpire services. w ith t h e Ore g o n The board will also Construction Contrac consider approval of tors Board or licensed R esolution No. 3 5 2 by the State authorizing issuance Landscape of General Obligation Contractors Board as Bonds, and Resolurequired b y ORS tion No. 353 autho671.530. rizing the district to P roposals must b e apply for a Renewsubmitted o n t he able Energy Develprescribed forms and o pment grant. T h e m ust b e acco m April 2, 2013 agenda panied by c e rtified and meeting report check, cashier's a re posted on t h e check, or bi d b o nd district's website: executed in favor of www.bendparksanthe City in an amount drec.org. For m o re equal to ten percent information call (10%) of the amount 541-389-7275.


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

C6 MONDAY, APRIL 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?

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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (on Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines of text only. Excludes all service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals and employment advertising, and all commercial accounts. Must be an individual item under $200.00 and price of individual item must be included in the ad. Ask your Bulletin Sales Representative about special pricing, longer run schedules and additional features. Limit1 ad per item per 30 days to be sold.


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