WE
Serving Central Oregon since190375
ES DAYApril16,2014
SWeeI OllO Sullan SCain ull Summit SPORTS • C1
OUTDOORS • D1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
MIRROR POND DAM
What the crowknows
Divided
— A study patterned after one of Aesop's fables aims to measure how the birds think like us ... and how they don't.A3
ldeas oll
eral states want the search giant to make it harder for users to find prescription medsand illegal drugs online.A6
release of report
Mountain biking — A
By Hillary Borrud
guide to riding Redmond's Radlands.D1
The Bulletin
Google anddrugs —sev-
Bend Park & Recreation
District officials say they will let the utility company
Glass half full —Depend-
that owns Mirror Pond
ing on how it goes,Google may extend the sale of its Glass device.C6
gf.
I
n
dam decide whether the
s
public gets to see a tax-
payer-fundedinspection report on the structure.
@
V
At least on the surface,
ln national news — sur-
that decision appears to be at odds with how city
vivors, relatives and first responders in Boston marka year since the bombing.A2
councilors and utility
company officials want to proceed. In fact, each party involved has a different
idea on how the park district should handle
EDITOR'5CHOICE
the report. A PacifiCorp
spokesman said the decision on whether to release the report is up to the park district, while two city councilors involved in the
Health data clouded by censusshift
process said on Monday the report is part of an important community
Photos by Andy Tuiiis/The Bulletin
Students use school-issued iPads in ageometry class taught by Brandon Thompson, standing, at Summit High onMonday. By Robert Pear
Thompson frequently projects the work his students are doing on their iPads to a screen at the front of the class.
New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — The Census Bureau, the authoritative source of health
By Tyler Leeds
insurancedataform ore
The Bulletin
than three decades, is
Leo Dolan, a Summit High School junior temporarily
changing its annual survey so thoroughly that it will be difficult to measure the
when the game "2048" took
in the next report, due this
The first download, Dolan surmises, was by a friend
fall, census officials said. The changes are intended to improve the accuinterviews with tens of
he notes it was temporarily "quarantined" within the bus.
the new questions are so
different that the findings will not be comparable, the
officials said. SeeCensus/A5
Correction In a story headlined "Total lunar eclipse: What is ablood moon?" which appeared Friday, April11, on PageA3, the date of the eclipsewas reported incorrectly due to an editing error. Theeclipse began Monday, April14. The Bulletin regrets the error.
declared, his principal looking on with a skeptical grin. "Kids spend way too much time playing games, cutting off social interactions."
1
I
pJ 4
st>
.
of his on a lacrosse trip to Boise. Dolan was the third,
and whentheteam loaded up
,
-'- u<
DeWittie asked Dolan who
wouldbe in charge of keeping
q i>
kids on task at college, where
they will have similar freedomto use tablets and com-
on the bus, it spread, though "But when we got back, it
was like a disease, it was just like wildfire," Dolan said.
Ninth-grader Johnathon Kennedy uses an iPad Monday in geometry class at Summit High School in Bend.
Swinging on his crutches, Dolan said, "I see that." DeWittie said students and
teachers overwhelmingly seem to be embracingthe
The dominance of "2048,"
Beginningthis year, Summit is one of eight schools in the digital conversion pilot,
A new T. rex rolls into D.C.
puters whenever they want.
a number-based puzzle game a move by Bend-La Pine that can be downloaded on Schools to evaluate how the a smartphone or tablet, was devices can help replace facilitatedby the fact that all paper-based resources and Summit students have their own school-issued iPads.
SeeDam/A4
riment to the school," he
over his school.
racy of the survey, being conducted this month in thousands of households around the country. But
college and career success. Dolan isn't so impressed. "Overall it's been a det-
encumbered bya footcast, can pinpoint the moment
effects ofPresidentBarack Obama's health care law
discussion and should be released to the public. PacifiCorp spokesman Bob Gravely said the utility would like to see the report and possibly redact sections of it before the public would see it.
improve instruction. If every-
thing goes well, every student in the district could eventually be handed a device. Summit Principal Alice
DeWittie said the devices
devices, but, even so, "Some
have transformed the school,
kids are going to slack no
grantingteachersmore leeway in how they teach and providing students with more resources while enhancing digital literacy, something she continually emphasized is essential for
matter what." DeWittie characterizedthisyear as one of experimentation, a time for
By J. Freedom duLac The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — The FedEx truck arrived be-
fore daybreak Tuesday, backing up to the loading
teachers to use the devices
dock at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. The police escortwhich rolled with the
to whatever degree they feel
semi from Hagerstown,
comfortable with.
Md., more than an hour from the Mall — indicated
SeeiPads /A4
a very special delivery. So, too, did the custom
wrap on the trailer. "Delivering history: The Nation's T. rex," it said next
Ukrainian troopsface Russiansympathizers
Clarification
By Anthony Faiola
In a story headlined "Out-ofnetwork ERcosts often out of your control," which appeared Saturday, April12, on Page A1, a comment byMaryclair Jorgensen of St.CharlesHealth Systemmay havebeenunclear. Referring to apotential antitrust issue, according to Jorgensen, St. Charles cannot get involved in contract negotiations between insurancecompanies and the providers the health system contracts with andwho are not St. Charlesemployees.
DONETSK, Ukraine — The Ukrainian military on'Ittesday
The Washington Post
secured an airfield threatened by Russian sympathizers, signaling the start of a campaign to counter militants who have
stormed official buildings in at
rus rex. The first of 16 wooden
crates — each sealed with
Inside • In Russia, propaganda in full swing,AS • U.N. cites Crimea abuses, AS least 10 eastern cities.
of troops on'Tuesday could signal an escalation of the crisis, which is playing out much like
are acting to protect the interests of ethnic Russians in
tape and marked "FRAGILE" multiple times-
Ukraine's east. Too strong a
rolled off the 53-foot-long
what led to Crimea's annex-
response, officials in Kiev and Western capitals have wagered, could be used by Russia as a pretext to send its troops spilling over the border.
trailer at 6:26 a.m. A few minutes later, museum
ation by Russia early this year. Officials in Moscow have
After days of a cautious response and empty ultimatums, the government's deployment
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 56, Low36 Page B6
to a painted Tyrannosau-
sternly warned against using force to deter what they say are "self-defenders" who
SeeUkraine/A5
The Bulletin
INDEX C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Outdoors B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State Bf-6 S oI Ef-6 Dear Abby D6 Ob ituaries B5 IV/Niovies
Business Calendar Classified
• •
D1 - 6 C14 D6
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 112, No. 10e, 30 pages, 5 sections
•
•
I •
•
director Kirk Johnson signed for the delivery of a dinosaur. SeeDinosaur/A4
Q Weuserecyclednewsprinf
' IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
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NATION Ee ORLD Iran'S uranium — Diplomats say theU.N.will certify later this week that Iran's ability to make anuclear bomb hasbeenreduced because it has neutralized half of its material that can be turned quickly into weapons-grade uranium. Themove is part of Iran's commitments under adealthat mandates nuclear concessions by Tehran in exchange for a partial lifting of sanctions crippling its economy. Iran says it does not want nuclear weapons. But byJanuary, it had amassed nearly enough 20percent enriched uranium to beableto quickly make anuclear bomb with further enrichment. Twodiplomats told The Associated Pressearly today that a U.N. nuclear agency report will say that Iran hasdiluted half of that 20 percent stockpile to less proliferation-sensitive material.
KANSAS SHOOTINGS
i esu remacis c ar e w i mur er By Tony Riuo The Kansas City Star
OVERLAND PARK, Kan.
-
A capital murder conviction Miller, who was arrested carries a life sentence without about 20 minutes after the first parole unless prosecutors seek shootings, is being held in lieu the death penalty, Johnson of a $10 million bond. County District Attorney Steve Though the killings hapHowe said. Under Kansas law, pened at Jewish facilities, all Howe doesn't have to make a three victims were Christians.
Nigerian ViOlenCe —Suspected Muslim extremists kidnapped about100 girls Tuesdayfrom a school in northeastern Nigeria, less than a dayafter militants bombed a bus station and killed 75 people in the capital — a surge of violence that raised newdoubts about the military's ability to contain an Islamic uprising. With an11-month-old state of emergency in three northeastern states failing to bring relief, the attacks are increasing calls for President Goodluck Jonathan to rethink his strategy in confronting the biggest threat to the security of Africa's most populous nation. Theattacks by the Boko Haramterrorist network have killed more than 1,500 people in this year alone, compared with an estimated 3,600 deadbetween2010 and 2014.
Johnson County prosecutors on Tuesday filed two types of murder charges against a 73-yearold avowed racist and anti-Semite in the shooting deaths of decision on seeking the death Howe an n o unced the three people outside Jewish fa- penalty until after a prelimi- charges at a 'Ittesday morning cilities in Overland Park nary hearing. press conference. He was acFrazier Glenn Cross Jr., betMilleris chargedwithfirst-de- companied by Barry Grissom, ter known as F. Glenn Miller, gree murder inthe killing of Ter- U.S. attorney for the District of is charged with one count of ri LaManno, 53, a Kansas City Kansas, who said he does not capital murder in the killings of mother of three who was shot anticipate any federal charges 69-year-old Overland Park doc- outside Village Shalom senior tobe filedwithinthe nextweek. tor William Lewis Corporon living ~ , wh e re she had "Before I make any decision, and his 14-year-old grandson, gone to visither mother. I want all the facts," said GrisReat Griffin Underwood, outA first -degree murder con- som, who said that he is comside the Jewish Community viction carries a life sentence fortable at this point with movCenter where Reat was audi- with no parole possible for at ing forward on federal hate tioning for a talent contest. least 25 years. crime charges.
NYPDSurVeillanCe — The NewYork Police Department has abandoned asecretive program that dispatched plainclothes detectives into Muslim neighborhoods to eavesdrop on conversations and built detailed files on wherepeopleate, prayed andshopped, the department said. Thedecision by the nation's largest police force to shutter the surveillance program represents the first sign that William Bratton, the department's new commissioner, is backing awayfrom some of the post-9/11 intelligence-gathering practices of his predecessor. EPA tOXinlimitS — The U.S.Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Tuesdayupheld the Environmental Protection Agency's first-ever limits on air toxins, including emissions of mercury, arsenic andacid gases, preserving a far-reaching rule theWhite House hadtouted ascentral to President Barack Obama's environmental agenda. In a2-1 decision, the court ruled that the mercury rule "was substantively and procedurally valid," turning aside challenges brought both by Republican-led states that hadargued the rule was onerous andenvironmental groups that had contended it did not go far enough.
SOLEMN TRIBUTES MARK BOSTON BOMBING
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Kerean ferry SinkS —Dozensof rescue boats and helicopters are scrambling to savemorethan 470 people, including many high school students, caught on a ferry sinking off South Korea's southern coast, officials said. Thereare noimmediate reports of causalities. The ferry with 476 people including 325 high school students was sailing to the southern island of Jeju when it sent a distress call this morning as it began leaning to oneside, according to Ministry of Security and Public Administration.
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Chilean fireS — Most of the fires that havedevastated the central Chilean port city of Valparaiso andkilled15 people havebeencontained, the headof the government's forestry agency said. Substantial gains havebeenmadeagainst the blazes that broke out at theweekend, but firebreaks must beestablished to prevent the spread of theflames if winds pick up,saidAaron Cavieres, the executive director of the National Forest Corp.But Cavieres' agencywarned that it could take firefighters until the beginning of May tofully extinguish the blazes.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:
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04039 046 04v07o
The estimated jackpot is now $38 million.
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Elise Amendola i The Associated Press
Family members andsurvivors of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing walk down Boylston Street onTuesdayfor a remembrance ceremony at the finish line on theone-year anniversary. "This day will always behard, but this placewill always be strong," former Mayor ThomasMeninotold an invitation-only audience of about 2,500 people at theHynesConvention Center, not far from the finish line where three people diedandmorethan 260 others wereinjured ayear ago. Vice President Joe Biden, whoattended the ceremony, said the courage shown by survivors and thosewho lost loved ones is an inspiration for other Americans dealing with loss and tragedy. "You have becomethe face of America's resolve," he said. Biden also praised the 36,000 runners who plan to run themarathon next week, saying they will send amessage to terrorists. "America will never, ever,ever stand down," he said, to loud applause. He added, "Weownthefinish line." In Washington, President BarackObamawas observing the anniversary with a private moment of silence at theWhite House.
at Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices!
New SAT won't include obscurevocabulary words By Tamar Lewin
optional essay in which stu-
New York Times News Service
dents will be asked to analyze a
The College Board today text and how the author builds will release many details of its an argument. The essays will revised SAT, induding sample be scored for reading, analysis questions and explanations of and writing, and those scores the research, goals and specifi- will be reported separately cations behind them. from the other sections of the "We are committed to a clear SAT. The current test includes and open SAT, and today is the a required25-minute essay in first step in that commitment," which students are asked to Cyndie Schmeiser, the College take a position on an issue; the Board's chief of assessment, essay is graded without regard said in a conference call Mon- to factual accuracy. day, previewing the changes to The new test will have a 65-minute critical reading secbe introduced in spring2016. She said the 211-page speci- tionwith52 questions, a35-minfications and support materials ute written language test with being shared publidy include 44 questions, and an 80-minute "everything a student needs to math section with 57 questions. know to walk into that test and The language and math secnot be surprised and know ex- tions will each be scored from actly what will be on the test."
200 to800, and the top compos-
One big change is in the ite scorewillbe 1,600. vocabulary questions, which While the current test allows will no longer include obscure the use of calculators, the new words. Instead, the focuswillbe one will have some sections on what the College Board calls that do not allow calculators. "high utility" words that appear Also, instead of five multiin many contexts, in many dis- ple-choice answers, the new ciplines — often with shifting test will have four. meanings — and they will be Many of the college admistested in context. For example, sions officers who will be using a question based on a passage the test results praised the efabout an artist who "vacated"
fort to align the test with what
from a tradition of landscape students should be learning in painting, asks whether it would high school, and what they will be better to substitute the word need to know to do well in col"evacuated," "departed" or "re- lege, but cautioned that it would tired" or to leave the sentence be years before there was any unchanged. (The right answer evidence that the new SAT is "departed.") does a better job of predicting The test will last three hours, college performance than the with another 50 minutes for an current one.
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Wednesday,April16, the 106th day of 2014. Thereare 259 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Chilean fireS — Windsare predicted to die down in the region of Valparaiso, Chile, with most of the blazeshaving been contained.A2
NeWSpaper —Freedom Communications Inc. launches the Los Angeles Register, a daily paper that will be available at 5,500 locations around L.A.
RESEARCH
Feel like readingthis later? Studyexplainswhy
Ol'2 0 e SO eSO neW IS Cl 'OWS
By Melissa Healy To the many reasons why people are chronically late filing their taxes, add anoth-
A new study based on one of his fables looks at what crows can learn and
er possibility: Blame their genes.
HISTORY
18 to 35.
In1879, Bernadette Soubirous, who'd described seeing visions of the Virgin Mary at Lourdes, died in Nevers, France. In1912, American aviator Harriet Quimby becamethe first woman to fly across the English Channel, traveling from Dover, England, to France in 59 minutes. In1935,the radio comedy program "Fibber McGeeand Molly" premiered onNBC's Blue Network. In1947, the Frenchship Grandcamp blew up atthe harbor in TexasCity, Texas; another ship, the High Flyer, exploded the following day (the blasts and fires killed nearly 600 people). Financier Bernard Baruch said in aspeech at the South Carolina statehouse, "Let us not be deceived —we are today in the midst of a cold war." In1963, Martin Luther King Jr. wrote his "Letter from Birmingham Jail" in which he said, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." In1972,Apollo16 blasted off on a voyage to themoon with astronauts JohnYoung, Charles DukeJr. and KenMattingly on board. In1986, dispelling rumors he was dead, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi appeared on television to condemnthe U.S. raid on his country and to say that Libyans were "ready to die" defending their nation. In2007,in the deadliest shooting rampage in modern U.S. history, student Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people onthe campus of Virginia Techbefore taking his own life. Ten years age:Videotape broadcast on the Arab TVstation Al-Jazeera showedArmy Pfc. Keith Maupin, abducted during an attack on afuel truck convoy near Baghdad aweek earlier. (Arab television reported June 29,2004,thatMaupin had been killed; his remains were recovered in 2008.) Five years age:The crew of the cargo ship Maersk Alabama, who'd thwarted pirates off the Somali coast, returned to the U.S.; ship's captain Richard Phillips, held hostage for five days, arrived in Kenya aboard the USS Bainbridge. One year age:Federal agents zeroed in on howthe Boston Marathon bombingwas carried out — with kitchen pressure cookers packedwith explosives, nails and other lethal shrapnel — but said they didn't know yet who'd done it, or why.
BIRTHDAYS Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI is 87. Denmark's Queen Margrethe II is 74. Basketball Hall-of-Famer KareemAbdul-Jabbar is 67.Ann Romney is 65. NFL coach Bill Belichick
is 62. Actor-comedian Martin Lawrence is 49. — From wire reports
They lose jobs and fail classes. They develop health problems and let them progress beyond the point of no return. And yet, these traits sur-
vive — in some, very strongProcrastination, suggests a ly. Try as they might, pronew study, is an evolved trait crastinators tend to struggle that probably served humans throughout their lives with well in a time when finding the impulse to put off the unfood and fending off prey pleasant and to lunge at more were job one, and time spent pleasurable pursuits instead. working on lofty goals for an That suggests that these
what they can't in an effort to see how their intelligence works.
Highlight:In1964, The Rolling Stones' first album, eponymously titled "The Rolling Stones," was released in the United Kingdom byDecca Records (a slightly different version debuted in the United States a month and ahalf later). In1789, President-elect George Washington left Mount Vernon, Va., for his inauguration in NewYork. In1862, during the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln signed a bill ending slavery in the District of Columbia. The Confederacy conscripted all white men betweentheages of
Their credit scores suffer.
Los Angeles Times
By James Gorman New York Times News Service
Crows and their relatives,
like jays and rooks, are definitely in the gifted dass when it comes to the kinds of cognitive
indistinct future was sure to
o nce-adaptive traits
result in an early demise. The inclination to d efer
unpleasant but necessary tasks appears to coexist in-
neuroscientists and geneticists from the University of
t imately with th e
Colorado.
puzzles that scientists cookup.
They recognize human faces. They make tools to suit a given problem. Sometimes they seem, as humans like to say, almost
t r ait o f
impulsiveness.
human. But the last common
ancestor of humans and crows lived perhaps 300 million years ago, and was almost certainly no intellectual giant. So the higher levels of crow and primate intelligence evolved on separate tracks, but somehow reached some
For a report published last
After all, before complex societies made a virtue of
week in the journal Psychological Science, the team
such complicated tasks as timely tax preparation, completed homework and avoidance of fattening foods, bold initiative was a good thing. Acting on impulse was more likely to get one fed and spread one's genetic material than was careful planning and an unwavering dedica-
set out to discover not only
how much thetendency to procrastinate is determined by genetic inheritance, but whether procrastination and impulsiveness spring from the same genetic roots.
The University of Colorado team explored the genetic underpinnings of procrastion to m eeting deadlines tination the old-school way: and looking good at the next by looking at twins, sifting reunion. through their likenesses and It's not surprising, then, dissimilarities, and i nferthat psychologists have long ring the extent to which their noted that impulsive people shared and not-sharedtraits are highly likely to be pro- are the result of shared DNA. crastinators, and that proResearchers found that in crastinators are very likely to a broad population, genetic be impulsive. inheritance substantially inThese days, acting on im- fluenced whether the average pulse is a behavior that has person would be a procrastilost its evolutionary cachet. In nator, accounting for 46 peraworldwithrolling deadlines cent of that probability. Genes and goals that demand com- were an even stronger driver plex planning, those who put of impulsivity, explaining the offtasks can pay ahigh price prevalence of impulsiveness for it. in 49percent of cases.
of the same destinations. And
scientists are now asking what crows can't do, as one way to understand how they learn and
how their intelligence works. Auseful tool for this research comes from an ancient Greek
(or perhaps Ethiopian), the fabulist known as Aesop. One of his stories is about a thirsty
crow that drops pebbles into a pitcher to raise the level of wa-
ter high enough so that it can get a drink. Researchers have modified
this task by adding a floating morsel of food to a tube with The Associated Press file photo water and seeing which crea- A recent experlment tested New Caledonian crows' thought protures solve the problem of using cesses when it came todropping stones into tubes to earn treats, stones toraise the water enough a trlal Insplred by one of Aesop's storles. to get the food. It canbe used for
a variety of species because it's dry tube to gain a reward. Then theytookthe Aesop test, in sevdrop stones to change water eral different situations. levels," said Sarah Jelbert, a The birds learned not to drop doctoral student at Auddand the stones in a tube of sand Universityin New Zealandwho with a treat. And they correctworks with crows. ly chose sinking objects rather New C a ledonian c r ows, than floating ones, and solid rooks, Eurasian jays and hu- rather than hollow objects, to mans (past age 5) can do it, said drop in the water. Jelbert, who noted that great Butif part of thetube apparaapes could do a slightly differ- tus was hidden, the birds could ent version. not learn.They also seemed But in the latest experiment unable to learn that the water to test the crows, Jelbert, work- would rise more quiddy with ing with Alex Taylor and Rus- fewer stones in a narrow tube. sell Grayof Auckland and Lucy This suggested two things, Cheke and Nicola Clayton of Jelbert said. They weren't just the University of Cambridge in learning abstract rules, beEngland, found some dear lim- cause otherwise they would new to all of them. "No animal has a natural predisposition to
itations to what the crows can learn. And those limitations
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UNI-DRESSING
have been able to learn where to drop the stones to make the
provide some hints to how they water rise even if they couldn't think. see what was going on. The birds, Jelbert and her And second, the need to colleagues reported in PLOS see the results of the behavOne last month, were wild New ior suggested that they did Caledonian c r ow s t r a pped seem to have "a level of causal for the experiment and then understanding." These were released. just hints, though, in terms The crows were first trained of understanding how crows to pick up stones; this is not learn and think, Jelbert said. something they do in the wild. "We're still very much at the They dropped the stones into a beginning."
Mystery object inSaturn's ring may bebaby moon By Karen Kaplan
small for Cassini to see directly.
Los Angeles Times
But NASA scientists hope to get a doser look in late 2016, when
L OS ANGELES — T h e moons that orbit Saturn may be
Cassini is scheduled to fly near increasingbyone — an icy, pint- the A ring. sized object that astronomers There's good reason to think havenamed"Peggy." Peggy could join the very long NASA's Cassini spacecraft list of Saturn's moons (a list that has seen evidence that a myste- indudes 53 official moons and rious object measuring perhaps nine provisional ones). Astronhalf a mile across is disturbing omers have theorized that the the outer edge of Saturn's large, moons started out as collections bright Aring. Theobject's gravi- of ice from Saturn's hefty rings ty seems tohave roughedup the and then drifted into orbits farring's usually smoothprofile. ther away. As a result, a stretch of the The oldest moons probably A ring that measures 750 miles formed when the rings were long and 6 miles wide is now more substantial. By coalescing about 20 percent brighter than so much material, they grew it would typicaiiy appear. The large and drifted into orbits farfuzzy blob on the A ring's edge ther away fromtheplanet. was imaged by Cassini's narYounger moons, on the othrow-angle camera one year er hand, tend to be smaller and ago, on April 15, 2013. closer in. If Peggy is indeed a Peggy, which is believed to moon, it would certainly seem have caused this mess, is too
to be followingthat pattern.
m u st
be enshrined in our genes, said a team of psychologists,
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iPads Contlnued from A1 "Some people have really taken off w ith
i t," DeWittie
said, noting the math department in particular had found
ways to integrate iPads into instruction. In B r andon
T h ompson's
the sexiest thingto talk about." DeWittie said she has no Teachers can use Google Docs problem if students use an or other content management off period at school to relax, systems to receive papers, saying many of her students pass out assignments and are pushed too hard by their even provide students a digital schedules. Managing what to space to collaborate and evalu- do at school and what to do ate one another's work. at home is part of the learn"We can let students com- ing process, DeWittie said. ment online on someone's P ushing instruction out o f essay, and then you can even the classroom also bene-
geometry class, Thompson frequently projects the work comment on the comment," his students are doing on their DeWittie s aid. "It's really iPads to a screen at the front changing how students can of the class. On Monday, the work together." class was trying to use the B eyond changing h o w properties of right triangles teachersorganize class mateto figure out where a point fell rials, Summit has used iPads on the XY plane. After hav- to alter the entire rhythm of ing her screen beamed to the the school day. A few teachfront of the class, one student ers at the school have begun highlighted the steps she had using a "blended learning" taken in bright yellow as she approach, which has students explained why she used the divide their t i m e b e tween Pythagorean theorem. traditional class time and onNext door in an advanced l ine-based instruction. F o r algebra II c l ass, Patricia some classes, students are diMuns, a junior, said her iPad vided into two cohorts, with helps her to visualize math each group coming in every concepts, as the device offers other day. When students archarts and graphs that can be en't in class, they can go to the easily manipulated. school commons or to the flex "I'd also say class wasn't room, a space with tables and couches. said. "It was more of the teachDeWittie said this model alas reflect ive last year," Muns
er standing up front and just talking."
lows for more individualized
fits student athletes, who, D eWittie noted, travel t h e
state to compete and are often away from school. With
lessons and even recorded teacher lectures online, students are able to use their
iPads to keep up on classes while away. Next year, Summit plans to
offer more blended options, as the school begins formalizing its approach to the iPads following this year of experimentation. "We didn't set parameters
from above this year," DeWittie said. "If a teacher was very involved in on e
a rea, they
could lead a session. It's very self-perpetuating. But we're now h a ving
c o nversations
about where we want to focus forthe future." Not all of the conversations
begin with teachers. After Muns' teacher,Matt Johnrunning into a student in the son, said that in addition to class sizes shrink from the 30s hallway who was using his helping with e ngagement, to the teens. She also noted the iPad to learn how to play a there's am orepracticaladvan- model better resembles college Bright Eyes song on his guitar, tage to having iPads. and gives students the chance DeWittie told the genesis story "Nothing gets lost," he said. to learn how to self-manage of an iPad-based music class "We have a digital record of their time. Summit hopes to offer next all their thinking. Unless they Sammi Ewing, a junior, said year. "I heard what sounded like had a very, very well-orga- she "loves" the new approach nized spiral before, this is bet- in her history class. a little garage band in the hall"I actually stopped procras- way," DeWittie said. "It turned ter. Also, instead of collecting 30 papers, I can look at every- tinating," she said. "You can out to be students using their one's answers side by side on go home and do your work, iPads. One had downloaded a one screen." but when you are in class, you keyboard and there were othDeWittie said the school's have face-to-face time with the er things. And I said to them, beefed up digital infrastruc- teacher. The schedule gives 'Is this something we should ture is one of the biggest us a break; we're not just get- teach?'" changes since last y ear, ting stuff hammered into our — Reporter: 541-633-2160, though she admitted, "it's not heads." tleeds@bendbulletin.com attention when students are in class, as the cohort model lets
Dam Contlnued from A1 The park district, a government agency that is separate from the city of Bend, hired Phoenix, Ariz.-
based contractor Gannett Fleming Inc. to inspect the
Last fall, the century-old dam sprang a leak and after PacifiCorp conducted its own inspection, company officials said repairs at the hydroelectric project would be too costly to pencil out for their
Corp in the inspection report.
ratepayers. It was the third
decision," Gravely said of the
leak in five years at the dam. dam on the Deschutes Riv- Then in February, the utilier last month and provide ty company changed course an independent opinion of and agreedto repairtheleak. its condition. The inspec- A PacifiCorp spokesman said tion is supposed to provide in February that the utility crucial information on estimated the repairs would future dam m aintenance cost $250,000. costs for city councilors Gannett Fleming has writand park district officials, ten a report on its inspection who are negotiating to ac- of the dam. However, Horquire the dam from owner ton wrote in an email that in PacifiCorp. his opinion, the inspection report is not yet complete. "I
T he park d i strict w i l l
say what he asked the consultants to clarify.
The nondisclosure agreesigned a n o ndisclosure ment, which names the park agreement with P acifi- district as a potential purchasCorp, the utility has the le- er of the dam and the city of gal right to decide whether Bend as an interested party, the district can release the states that documents created report. Figurski and Hor- with confidential information ton declined to provide a from PacifiCorp can only be copy of the report to The released with the utility's conBulletin w ithout p ermis-
does. "I think ultimately they own the report, so it will be their park district. However, he said, the utility company does want
to review the park district's report before it is released to the
public and might ask the district to redact sections of it.
"I think the only thing we
would want to do first is to
make sure there's no commercially sensitive, confidential information that was provid-
ed under the nondisclosure agreement," Gravely said. "We wouldn't have a problem with
pay $23,500 for the inspec- reviewed it late last week and tion and r e port, M i r r or will be asking the consultants Pond Project Manager Jim to clarify some of their findFigurski wrote in a recent i ngs," Horton wrote i n t h e emaiL However, Figurski April 7 email. Horton did not and park district Executive Director Don Horton wrote in emails that because they
Gravely confirmed l ast week that the utility wants to see the report before the public
sent. It's unclear at this point
the report itself being released and that would ultimately be
their decision." Gravely said PacifiCorp employees have not yet seen the report, so he did not know what type of information the utility would consider to be
commercially sensitive and want to redact.
Gravely said PacifiCorp executives have not met with
local officials since December to negotiate the possible trans-
ferofdam ownership because officials were waiting to learn the findings of the inspection.
sion from PacifiCorp. whether there is any confidenCity Councilor Mark Ca- tial information from Pacifipell said on Monday that because this is an independent inspection report
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
Your Home
on the dam, it should not
contain any of PacifiCorp's proprietary i n formation. Capell and City Councilor Victor Chudowsky are both members of the Mir-
Deserves
theBEST!
ror Pond ad hoc commit-
tee, a group that includes park board members and
Nothingsays"home" like a Rreplace.It's historyls asprimitiveas man. Forcenturies, the hearthwasthe source of heat andlife, andit's still the gatheringplace inmost homestoday.
citizens and is tasked with
deciding the future of Mirror Pond.
"In my opinion, the community needs the informa-
lo
Sowhetheryou're building a newhome, or remodelingyour exist ingRreplace-makesure youinvest ina quality heater that will bring beautyand warmthto your homefor years to come!
tion to make a good decision," Capell said. "So it's
information that needs to be released."
Chudowsky agreed. "I think the main thing is the community needs to know whether we're taking over
Since i955
Emerald
an asset or a liability, and how big that asset or liabili-
ty is," Chudowsky said. "It's critical information, abso-
HEARTH, SPA 8L PATIO
lutely critical."
Nothing says "home" like a firepl ace-andnobodysaysit better thanMendota!
MEND>DIA A MRII I O A ' 8
L U X U II Y F I II E • LAOE
Nikki Kahn /The Washington Post
Pat Lelggl, left, administrative director of paleontology and director of exhlblts at the Museum of the Rockies, and Sheldon "Shelley" McKamey, executive director of the Museum of the Rockies, look over the right femur of the Wankel T. rex after It was delivered Tuesday to the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History In Washington.
Dinosaur Contlnued from A1 Within a half-hour, all of the bone-filled boxes were being inspected inside the museum, which had finally filled the
rock — for ages. It remained unseen and undisturbed from the late Cretaceous Period un-
Then, out of a box marked "WOW," came c omponents of the skull: the left maxilla
and right dentary (roughwhen rancher Kathy Wankel ly, the cheek and lower jaw). spotted a small part of an arm They contained massive babone during a day hike in a nana-shaped teeth that, JohnT. rex-sized hole in its fossil wildlife refuge. son said, will help the museum collection. Wankel and her husband, win over children for years to "It's like Christmas morn- Tom, eventually brought their come."Dinosaursarethegateing," declared dinosaur cura- find to the Museum of the way drug to science for kids," tor Matt Carrano. Rockies in Bozeman, Mont., he said. The Nation's T. rex, discovered by a Montana rancher near Fort Peck Reservoir in
til around Labor Day in 1988,
where thechief"preparator of
"It's a wonderful day for the nation," said Lt. Gen. Thomas
thane cast of the Wankel T.
9th Annual
Adults can't resist meat-eat-
paleontology," Patrick Leiggi, ers, either. Shortly after the began furiously puffing his beast's bones were introduced, 1988 and owned by the Army Marlboro Light upon seeing ¹NationsTrex began trending Corps of Engineers, is on loan the prehistoric find. on Twitter. to the Natural History MuseEventually, an excavation Once the fossil goes on disum for 50 years. team unearthed between 80 play in 2019, hundreds of milIt will replace a life-size T. and 85 percent of the bones on lionsof people are expected rex replica that's been dis- the Army Corps site, making to see it over the course of the played in the Natural Histo- it one of the five most complete 50-year loan. ry Museum's dinosaur hall T. rex specimens ever recovF or the t i m e b eing, t h e since 1999, shortly after the ered. It included the first T. bones are in an exhibition Smithsonian lost out on Sue, rex arm ever discovered ("not space dubbed the "Rex Room," the world's most famous dino- much bigger than my arm," near the museum's rotunda, saur fossil, at a hotly contested Johnson noted), and it was where Smithsonian conservaauction. dubbed "the Wankel T. rex" by tors, scientists, 3-D imaging "The absence of a T. rex was the Museum of the Rockies. technicians and others will "To see it come to the Na- clean, unforgivable," Johnson said, repair,reinforce and restanding among the crates. tional Museum is pretty ex- cord each piece between now "It's this amazing dream for citing," Leiggi said Tuesday, and National Fossil Day on me to get this iconic fossil." standing between a polyure- Oct. 15, after which the speci-
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rex skull, and Kathy and Tom mounting work. Bostick, the Army Corps com- Wankel and 24 of their relaOn T uesday m o rning, mander who signed off on the tives — 25, if you count the T. crowds heavy on f amilies long-term loan. rex. with spring-breaking kids "We're very proud ... par- streamed past the Rex Room, The worl d ' s second-most-visited museum has ents," Kathy Wankel said. peering through two metal big plans for the borrowed "Big, ugly baby. (But) we think gates for a glimpse of Washking carnivore: It will stand as he's beautifuL" ington's new rock star. Most of "Kind of old, too," her hus- the fossilized bones still were the centerpiece of the new dinosaur hall that's scheduled to band said. in their protective cradles inopen in 2019, after a five-year, Tuesday, after the seal on side the crates, so four skull $48 million makeover. The the trailer was broken and casts — of a T. Rex and some hall — one of the most visited the dinosaur was signed over related species — generated spaces at the Natural History to the Smithsonian, the mu- most of the oohs. Museum — closes April 28. seum began to reveal the old A sign o utside th e R ex "It's an amazing object," bones. Room announced, "Some asJohnson said of the T. rex. First came the T. rex's right sembly required." The 38-foot-long dinosaur femur, which was enormous Good work if you can get it, died more than 66 million — roughly the size of an ele- said Carrano, the dinosaur cuyears ago in a riverbed and mentary school student and rator. "This is a once-in-a-lifew as frozen in t ime — a n d weighing at least 100 pounds. time thing."
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FOoI 'I'I DeA i IOeN
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
ANALYSIS:UKRAINIAN TENSIONS
Census
Russiawalks afine line ontruth By David M. Herszenhorn
It is an extraordinary propaNew York Times News Service ganda campaign that political MOSCOW — T h e Face- analysts say reflects a new brabook post'Tuesdaymorning by zenness on the part of Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev of Russia was bleak and
officials. And in recent days,
it has largely succeeded — at full of dread. least for Russia's domestic au"Blood has been spilled in dience — in painting a picture Ukraine again," wrote Medve- of chaos and danger in eastdev, once favored in the West ern Ukraine, although it was for playing good cop to the hard- pro-Russian forces themselves boiledpresident, Vtadhnir Putin. who created it by seizing pub'Thethreatof civilwarlooms." lic buildings and setting up He pleaded with Ukrainians roadblocks.
were neither systematic nor
widespread," said the report, which was based on two U.N. missions to Ukraine between March 15 and April 2.
There is no question that the new Ukrainian government and its Western allies, includ-
ing the United States, have engaged in their own misinformation efforts at times. On
Tuesday, some U.S. officials were spreading unverified photographs allegedly showto decide their own future"withEven the U nited Nations ing Russian rocket launchers out usurpers, nationalists and weighed in. In a report released carried by pro-Russian dembandits, without tanks or armored vehides — and without
'Ibesday, the Office of the U.N.
secretvisitsbythe CIAdirector." And so began another day of bluster and hyperbole, of misinformation, exaggerations,
man Rights said that threats to ethnic Russians in eastern
conspiracy theories, overheated rhetoric and, occasionally,
Russian news media as a po-
High Commissioner for HuUkraine, cited repeatedly by Russian officials and in the
onstrators in eastern Ukraine. "It's all lies," said Lilia Shevtsova, an expert on Rus-
gest that the number of uninsured is indeed declining, beContinued from A1 cause of the Affordable Care An internal Census Bu- Act and improvements in the reau document said that the economy. new questionnaire included Tara McGuinness, a White a "total revision to health House spokeswoman, said the insurance questions" and, changes in the questionnaire in a test last year, produced would "make it easier to mealower estimates of the unin- sure the impact of the Affordsured. Thus, officials said, it able Care Act because it will be will be difficult to say how possible to compare data from much of any change is at- 2013 and 2014." But officials tributable to the Affordable Care Act and how much to the use of a new survey instrument.
With the new questions,
"it is likely that the Census Bureau will decide that there is a break in series for
leadership doesn't care about
the health insurance estimates," says another agency document describing the changes. This "break
tential rationale for Russian military action, were exagger- communication, in the world crisis in Ukraine that have ema- ated and that some participants where we have plurality of nated from the highest echelons in the protests in the region had i nformation and w h ere i n of the Kremlin and reverberat- come from Russia. formation can be confirmed "Although there were some and checked. This is a radical ed on state-controlled Russian television, hour after hour, day attacks against the ethnic change in attitude toward the after day, week after week Russian community, t h ese West." outright lies about the political
Ukraine Continued from A1 Fanning those fears ahead
in trend" will c omplicate efforts to trace the impact
of the Affordable Care Act, it said.
A major goal of the law is to increase the number of people with health insurance. The White House reported that 7.5 million people signed up for private health plans on the new insurance exchanges and that enrollment in Medicaid
increased by 3 million since October. But the adminis-
of four-party talks set to start within 48 hours in Geneva, Russia on Tuesday slammed
tration has been unable to
the Ukrainian government for waging "war" against its own people. In a sharply worded statement, the Foreign Minis-
try in Moscow accused Kiev of violently suppressing peaceful protests "with complete disregard for the legitimate interests of the population in the
south east" of Ukraine. The White House stood by
Sergei Grits/The Associated Press
Ukrainian army troops set up a position Tuesday at an airport in
Ukraine's response.
"The Ukrainian government has a responsibility to provide law and order, and these provocations in eastern
Kramatorsk, eastern Ukraine, where government forces clashed
Tuesdaywitharmed gunmen.
Ukraine are creating a situation in which the government
has to respond," White House press secretary Jay Carney SBld.
The government in Kiev appeared to show a new if tem-
pered willingness to back up its pledge in recent days to restore order. On Tuesday, wit-
nesses reported heavy gunfire as a Ukrainian jet tried to land at an airfield in Kramatorsk,
a city 10 miles south of Slovyansk, where pro-Russian forcesfirst set up roadblocks
Saturday. Shortly
afterward, Ukrainian troops were ferried
to the site by helicopter, landed and encountered a hostile
followed, officials and witnesses said, was a tense standoff in separatists in t h e n o rthern which the troops repeatedly part of the Donetsk region. "Soon there will be no teropened fire to push protesters back beyond the perimeter rorists left in Donetsk or any fences. other region," T urchynov It remained unclear whether vowed in parliament on Tuesthe areawas fully or temporar- day. "They will sit in prison, ily secured. But acting Pres- their proper place." ident Oleksandr Turchynov Stanislav Rech i nsky, Ukraine's minister of internal affairs, told reporters in Kiev
describedthe move as part of a staged"counterterrorism op-
eration" against pro-Russian that there had been no fatal-
to find out when that coverage
began and what months it was in effect. Using this technique, census officials believe they will be able to reconstruct the
said that the data for this year history of coverage month by would not ordinarily be avail- month, over a period of about able until September 2015, and 15 months. that the data for 2013 and 2014
H owever, O'Hara o f
the
Current Population Survey. The questionnaire tradition-
first time. The White House is always
allyused by the Census Bureau looking for evidence to show provides an "inflated estimate the benefits of the health law, of the uninsured" and is prone which is an issue in many of to "measurement errors," said this year's midterm elections. a working paper by statisti- The Department of H e alth cians and demographers at the and Human Services and the agency. White House Council of EcoIn the test last year, the per- nomic Advisers requested centage of people without several of the new questions, health insurance was 10.6 per- and the White House Office of cent when interviewers used Management andBudget apthe new questionnaire, com- proved the new questionnaire. pared with 12.5 percent using But the decision to make funthe old version. Researchers damental changes in the sursaid that they had found a vey was driven by technical similar pattern in the data for experts at the Census Bureau, differentage, race and ethnic and members of Congress groups. have not focused on it or sugIn addition, "the percentage gested political motives. The of people with private coverage new survey was conceived, in was statistically higher" when part, to reduce a kind of bias or thebureau tested the new ques- confusion in the old survey. tionnaire, the working paper Kathleen Thiede Call, a said. For reasons that are not professor at the University of clear, people were less likely Minnesota, said, "The health
unclear.
be directly comparable to what
Another Census Bureau pa-
Healthpolicyexperts and per said "it is coincidental and politicians had been assum- unfortunate timing" that the ing that the Census Bureau survey was overhauled just would help answer those before major provisions of the questions when it issued its health care law took effect. report on income, poverty "Ideally," it said, "the redesign and health insurance, based would have had at least a few on the Current Population yearsto gather base line and Survey. The annual report trend data." shows the number of people
q~~
Several recent private polls, including one by the Gallup organization, sug-
ed by the Census Bureau, said: "I am excited about the rede-
sign of the survey. For the first time, we will be able to look at monthly changes in coverage over a 14- or 15-month period."
< June15th,2014
www.be n d d a s h.com
• ut
ities during the operation by special Ukrainian forces at the airfield. Witnesses said
was reportedlastSeptember." But Call, who was consult-
U~lo
Das i"ia; fof
and for each state.
— New YorkTimes NewsService
reception by protesters. What
in February, March orAprilthen uses follow-up questions
insurance data reported in September of this year will not
of uninsured for the nation
GENEVA— Amid fears of escalating violence in eastern Ukraine, the United Nations called Tuesdayfor action to counter misinformation and hatespeechused aspropaganda andurged the authorities in Crimea toaccount for killings, torture and arbitrary arrests in the buildup to the March referendum that led to its annexation by Russia. "Facts on the ground need to beestablished to help reduce the risk of radically different narratives being exploited for political ends," the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, said in a statement releasedwith a report on human rights in Ukraine andCrimea, which until last month was anautonomous region of Ukraine. "People need areliable point of view to counter what has been widespread misinformation and also speechthat aims to incite hatred on national, religious or racial grounds," she added. The U.N. report came asPrime Minister DmItry Medvedevof Russia, on avisit to Crimea, said in a post on Facebookthat eastern UkraIne was"on the brink of civil war."
at the time of the interview-
say how many of the people gaining coverage were previously uninsured or had policies canceled, so the to respond when interviewers net increase in coverage is used the new questionnaire.
with various kinds of health insurance and the number
U.N. cites abuses in Crimea before vote
The old questionnaire asked consumersifthey had various types of coverage at any time in the prior year. The new survey asks if they have insurance
"We are expecting much would notbe directly compara- Census Bureau said the agenlower numbers just because ble with the long series of data cy was not planning to release of the questions and how for prior years. coverage data from early this they are asked," said Brett Census officials and re- year in its next report. AgenO'Hara, chief of the health searchers have long expressed cy officials want to assess the statistics branch at the Cen- concerns about the old version reliability of the monthly data, sus Bureau. of insurance questions in the being collected this year for the
sian politics at the Carnegie Moscow Center. "The Russia how it's being perceived in the outside world, in the world of
A5
o
that crowds of p r o-Russian
activists had roughed up a commander inthe area who approached them after the
airfield was supposed to be secured and that they remained on the airfield's edge, hurling verbal abuse at military officials.
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A6
TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
UPDATE RAIL SAFETY
IN FOCUS:ROGUE PHARMACIES
jjoa s een sepetsamj accj ents StateswantGoogle By Jad Mouawad
of the law in reducing risk," he
New Yorh Times News Service
sald.
Jodi Ross, town manager
Railroads are subject to pe-
in Westford, Mass., didn't expect shewould be threatened
riodic federal audits. But none
has ever been fined over its choiceof route since reviews
with arrest after she and her fire chief went onto the rail-
started in 2009, according to
Kevin Thompson, a spokesman for the Federal Railroad
road tracks to find out why a
train carrying liquid petroleum gas derailed on a bridge in February. But as they reached the acci-
Administration.
Some analysts cautioned that rerouting was not always possible or even desirable. Brigham McCown, an admin-
dent site northwest of Boston, a
manager for Pan Am Railways called the police, ciaiming she w as trespassing on railprop-
istrator of the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Ad-
erty. The cars were eventually
ministration during the Bush
put back on the tracks safely, New York Times News Service file photo but the incident underlined a The hatch of an oII tank car that burned after a December collision reality for local officials dealing between two trains outside Casselton, N.D. Increasing volumes with railroads. of crude oII being shipped by rail out of North Dakota have federal
administration, said a railroad
"They don't have to tell us a
may decide that a shorter route through a city may have better tracks,and therefore be less
risky, than a longer route with older tracks. "Rerouting may be less effective than some believe," he said. nanced by the federal gov- "The current concern is that the ernment, considers safety re- volume of hazmat is growing quirements as well as security exponentially, and the question factorssuch as the threat of is whether the agencies have terrorism, according to Robert the adequate resources to acFronczak, assistant vice presi- tively monitor that." dent for environment and hazRailroad officials said they ardous materials at the Asso- providelocal emergency reciation of American Railroads, sponders with a list of the 25 the industry's trade group. m ost hazardouscommodities But the system provides lit- transported through their comtle transparency, and outsiders munities. But th e r ecipients cannot find out why a particu- must sign an agreement to relar route is favored, forinstance. strict the information to "bona Railroads do not provide any fide emergency planning and information ontheir route selec- response organizations for the tion, citing safety concerns. expressed purpose of emergenAnd railroads are also al- cy andcontingency planning," lowed to consider the economic a constraint that preciudes effects of their routing choices them from making the inforand how it would affect their mation public.
authorities raassessIng laws that aggressively shield railroad
thing," Ross said. "It's a very ar- operators from oversight. rogant attitude." U.S. milroads have long operated under federal laws that to 40 mph when traveling in shield them from local or state large metropolitan areas, and oversight and provide a blanket providing $5 million to develop of secrecy over much of their training programs for emeroperations. But now a rapid gency responders. rise in the number of trains The problem has taken on a carrying crude oil — along new urgency since federal regwith a series of derailments ulators warned earlier this year and explosions — has brought that crude oil from the Bakken new concerns about the risks of region in North Dakota, which transporting dangerous cargo is mainly transported by rail, byrail. can explode in an accident, like Local and state officials it did near Casselton, N.D., in complain that they receive December.In July,47 people very little information about were killed in Canada, about w hen hazardous materials are 10 miles from the U.S. border, shipped through their com- when a runaway train carrying munities or how milroads pick Bakken oil derailed and blew their routes. Federal interstate up. commerce rules give them little Railroads are required to say in the matter, and railroads look at 27 factors before they are exempted from federal determine the "safest and most "right to know" regulations on secure" route for hazardous hazardous material sites. shipments. These inciude the Under pressure to act, the type of tracks on the route, disTransportation D epartment tance traveled, the number of said in February that railroads grade crossings and the proxhad agreed to apply the same imity of "iconic targets" like routing rules to oil trains that sports arenas along the way. they already apply to other hazThat information is fed into ardous materi als,such as ex- the Rail Corridor Risk Manplosives, radioactive materials agementSystem, aWeb-based and poisonous substances like program that examines alterchlorine. native routes and ranks them. This voluntary agreement, Tens of thousands of routes are which takes effect in July, was examined in this manner every among commitments that also year. included lowering speed limits T he software, partly f i -
customer relationships, which
gives them additional flexibility
"We feel the information is getting to where it needs to get,"
said Thomas Farmer, assistant Gary Sease, a spokesman vice president for security at for CSX, said the results of the the Association of American program's analysis "are con- Railroads. "It should be on a in their choice.
sidered sensitive security infor-
need-to-know b asis.
P ublic
mation, and we are not able to availability of highly detailed information is p r oblematic share details." Fred Millar, an independent from asecurityperspective. " Railroad officials say there is rail consultant, said the system had not demonstrated that it no need for tighter regulation. reduced shipping hazards by They argue that the industry avoidingpopulated areas. has made big investments in "Thefederalgovernment has recent years to upgrade tracks produced not one line of public a nd that t r ai n s afety h a s assessment onthe effectiveness improved.
to crack downon online drugsales ByMateaGold and Tom Hamburger The Washington Post
placed by unlicensed pharmacies dropped by 99.9 percent, according to Google.
Several state attorneys genThe r enewed p r essure eml are pressing Google to that Google is facing over make it harder for its users to illegal pharmaceuticals refind counterfeit prescription vives what has long been a medicine and illegal drugs on- thorny issue for the Internet line, marking the second time giant. In 2011, Google forfeitinthepast threeyears that the ed $500 million — in addition firm has drawn government to changing its advertising scrutiny for its policies on practices — to avoid federal rogue Internetpharmacies. criminal charges for its role Their complaints, con- in helping unlicensed Internet veyed in a letter signed by 24 pharmaciesmarket drugs to top state prosecutors, led to U.S. consumers. private meetings with Google Theepisodehas also drawn executives earlier this year in attention to Google's ties with Denver and Washington, pro- the White House. In a move ducing contentious exchang- considered unusual by lees about the company's prac- gal and ethical experts, the tices. Now, while some of the O bama administmtion a l attorneysgeneralarepleased lowed Google to participate with Google's response to in a White House event on their concerns, others want the topic while under federal the tech giant to go further. investigation. At the same time, the comWhite House spokesman pany's past practices have Eric Schultz said the forum raised the ire of sharehold- highlighted"efforts of various ers, who have alleged in two companies, not just Google, little-noticed lawsuits that a to curb rogue online pharmalax stance by the company cies." He said the event "had towardprescription drug ads no impact" on th e Justice until 2010 put it in legal and Department case against the financial jeopardy. company. Google, which failed to perIn its talks with the attorsuade a California judge to neys general, Google said it dismiss the suits, entered set- washiring120newemployees tlement talks last month after this year to flag rogue ads and attorneys for the shareholders videos. It also said it was elimobtained emails showing that inating 1,200 predicted seatch top executives warned then- phrases — such as "how to beChief Executive Eric Schmidt comeadrugdealer" — thatled and co-founder Larry Page people to potentially illegal or more than a decade ago about dangerous websites. the risks of accepting such ads. The steps Google has takGoogle decinedto com- en, outlined in a February ment on the shareholder suits. letter to six attorneys general, But the company said it has have not fully satisfied several pouredresourcesinto trying of the state prosecutors. to stamp out rogue Internet The attorney general leadpharmacies, disabling 4.6 ing the charge, Jim Hood of million pharmaceutical or Mississippi, has threatened to health supplement ads that pursue legal action if Google did not meet its standards last does not go further by removyear. And since 2010, when it ing from its search results toughened its advertising pol- sites that sell illicit drugs and icy, the number of Web ads other illegalproducts.
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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
BRIEFING
e mon ma moveci a
More prescribed burns scheduled Flreflghters are planning more prescribed burns around Central Oregon this week, if the weather is favorable. Two fires could be llt as soon as today in the Sisters Ranger District, according to the Deschutes National Forest. A 275-acre burn is planned for Glaze Meadow next to Black Butte Ranch and near U.S. Highway 20 and a160-acre burn is planned in the Metolius Basin near CampSherman. Both fires could continue throughout the week. The fires are intended to lower the likelihood of intense wlldflres and improve
IN D.C.
since cited figures doserto$8 millionto $9million. Before the
became available afewyears
some coredeficiencies(referring to city services and staff) recently, which was a big priority for the city," he said. "And
later and a citizen task force
we still have historically low
REDMOND — After years
recession, Redmond explored
of discussion, Redmond City Council gave staff the green light'Ibesday night to pursue remodeling Evergreen Elementary School into a new City Hall. The citypurchasedthe former school site in 2010for
theidea ofbuildinganew City
interest rates so it seems like a good opportunity to consider
serve for the newbuilding and chose apreliminary design,but
advocatingsavingthehistoric building appealed to the city to buy it, plans for a newbuilding were shelved. According to Jason Neff, city finance director, a friendly bond market and comfortable general fund have prompted
the economic crash stalled that
staff to research the feasibility
$250,000. At the time early estimates forrehabilitationwere
plan and dwindledthereserve balance. Whenthe Evergveen
of moving forward with anew City Hall.
• Council approves plan to pursueremodel of EvergreenElementary By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin
Hall on its existing site, esti-
mating anewbuilding would cost approximately$7million. It even set aside a $2 million re-
about $7million, but the city has site, which covers a cityblock,
"We've been able to add back
this." As an example of the
possibilities if the city would decide to incur bond debt for
FDAasked to rethink
rule on spent grain
the project, Neff told the coun-
cil that Redmond could easily afford$400,000 in annual payments, if a $6 million loan w as financed for30yearsat5 percent.
SeeRedmond/B2
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — The leaders of Senate Biparti-
san Small Brewers Caucus have joined the chorus calling for the Food and Drug Administration to re-
consider plans to regulate the spent grain produced bybrewers that is used as animal food. In a letter to FDA
Commissioner Margaret Hamburg, Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, cochairs of the caucus, wrote
wildlife habitat.
In the Ochoco National Forest, firefighters are set to start a prescribed fire today about 20 miles east of Paulina. The fire near Spur Butte should burn about 500 acres and the burning could last four or five days, according to the Ochoco National Forest. No roads will be closed during the burn, but it may put off smoke visible from U.S. Highway 26 and state Highway 380.
that the new rule would be
"onerous, costly and even wasteful" if implemented asproposed. The agency announced the potential change in October, suggesting it would require heightened sanitation re-
quirements for the storage and transportation of an-
imal food under the Food Safety Modernization Act. Breweries in Central
Oregon produce millions of pounds of spent grain a year, most of which they sell to local ranchers as an
— Bulletin staff report
inexpensive source of food for their cattle. In some
a
/~!'
cases, the ranchers sell their beef back to the pubs.
/"
SeeGrain/B5 P
ELECTION CALENDAR Are you holding anevent to educate voters in the lead-up to the Mayelectlon? Submit the lnfor-
mation toelections© bendbulletln.com.We will not publish lnformation about political fundraisers.
April 24 2014 PRIMARY ELECTION CANDIDATE FORUM:The Deschutes County Cltlzen's Action Group hosts forum for voters to meet candidates; 6:30 p.m.; La Pine Senior Activity Center, 16450 Victory Way; 541-536-3207, info@cagg.us or www. cagg.us.
April 28 REDMOND PATRIOTS MEETING:Candidate for U.S. Senate Republican Primary Dr. Monica Wehby; 6:30 p.m.; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 S.W. Highland Ave.; 541-6397784.
RohKerr/The Bulletin
Bonnie Malone, 67, said her two horses were trapped in mud Saturday during a trail ride. After the hourslong traumatic experience, the pair have begun eating normally again, Malone said. Pictured with her at her home in Sisters Tuesday afternoon are Stella, left, dog Weezer and Rage, right.
eame or e e s rairi e
Reader photos
• We want to see your photos showing "spring ln full swing" for another special version of Well shot!
The Bulletin
Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Fla-
herty and challenger John Hummel on Tuesday faced off for the third time, this
meetingbefore a League of Women Voters of Deschutes Coun-
Related
What was going to be a relaxing trail ride, the first
schutes County Sheriff's
for Bonnie Malone's puppy, turned terrifying Saturday when the Sisters woman's two horses became bogged
Office, Deschutes County
down in cold mud in the
woods southwest of town. Malone, 67, a local chiropractorand secretary forthe
Sisters Rodeo, said she spent about a half-hour trying to a white 29-year-old Arabian, and Stella, a red 18-year-old thoroughbred. "It was just treacherous, like a quick sand," she said. Stuck herself in a cell-
phone dead zone, Malone hiked about a quarter mile to her truck and then drove
back to Sisters to find help.
Search and Rescue, Sisters-Camp Sherman Fire District, a veterinarian and U.S. Forest Service teaming
up to save her horses. "I'm still looking at my horses, not believing they are home," she said Monday. The horse rescue serves as
a reminder for hikers, horseback riders and other trail users to be ready for vari-
able trail conditions around Central Oregon in spring, said Lt. Scott Shelton of the
Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. "Trail conditions can
change, just around the bend," he said.
She found it, with the De-
I
Cr f r om the Deschutes County Sheriff's fice, Deschutes County Search and Rescue, U.S. Forest Service and Sisters Fire Department pulled a pair of horses Saturday from deep mud ln the woods ne Sisters. The horses had become bogged
Si rs
Deschutes
Services Building listened as the candidates in the May 20 primary again explained their differing visions for the DA's office. One of the first questions posed by moderator Kristi Miller con-
down While on a t ail ride with their own r. I
I I
DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST
I
I I I
I
o
(tlt
CP
I
I I I
comparison with distribution of methamphetamine.
~Q)
g+
I I I
Location otrescue
I I
16
I I
THREE SISTERS WILDERNESS
2
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Source: Deschutes County Search and Rescue
Flaherty said his office doesn't, nor will it, prose-
cute marijuana dispensaries that are following state laws. He said he will contin-
MILES 0 I
SeeTrail /B5
cerned how each candidate would prosecute medical
marijuana dispensaries in
I
I
Seevideo tyspon coverage sored atbend fo~ bulletin.com/ dndebate3 houseatthe
O
Horse r
• Weekly trail update,D1
The Bulletin
free the two horses — Rage,
Well shot!
By Shelby R. King
romen in in isaser By Dylan J. Darling
Candidates for DA face off again
ue to prosecute those selling marijuana outside the law. SeeDA/B5
that will run ln the
Outdoors section. Submityour best work at bendbulletln.com /spring2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerpbotosO bendbulletln.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submissionrequirements: Includeas much detail as
possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must he high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Teen ste eller writes her ewn ticket to Stanferd By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin
OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS Educational newsand activities, and local kids and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info,B2
One day in fifth grade, Laura Robson's teacher gave her a black-and-white composition notebook and asked her to write a story. Maybe it was something about having a brand new notebook to work in, or maybe it was something about a set of freshly sharpened pencils, but sitting in the classroom that day,
Laura was suddenly struck with inspiration. She filled the book with stories, writ-
ing until her hands were smeared with graphite. Later that year, when her parents got her a laptop,
"I just started writing, and it feels like I never
Laura did the same thing, writing until the letters on the keyboard were stuck
She was also recently accepted to Stanford University, in a year when only 5 percent of applicants were
in place and no longer functioned. Since then, the Summit
High School senior has written 4t/2books, won her division in the Nature of Word's Rising Star Creative Writing Contest and attended the University of Iowa's Young Writers' Studio.
looked back," Laura, 17, sard.
admitted. "She's brilliant — her
language skills and insight about the human condition and what it means to be
human is exceptional," said Christie McCormick, Laura's English teacher. SeeWriter/B2
AndyTullis/TheBulletin
Laura Robson, a Summit High School senior, is an accomplished creative writer who was recently admitted to Stanford University.
B2
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
E VENT TODAY ATTRACTINGNATIVE POLLINATORS:Learn how bees and other pollinators are important in a healthy environment and a secure food supply; free, reservation requested; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events/ apr16nn. WHEELERBROTHERS:The Austin, Texas, Americana quintet performs, with Graham Wilkinson; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.
ENDA R TRIBAL SEEDS:California rootsreggae, with New Kingston and Inna Vision; $15 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; 8 p.m., doorsopen 7 p.m.;Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www.j.mp/ TribalSds.
THURSDAY
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli felbendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-593-4394 or www.sunrivernaturecenter.org. "I AM":A screening of the 2010 documentary (NR) about spiritual leaders discussing what is wrong with the world and how to improve it; free, donations accepted; 7:30 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-508-1059 or www. spiritualawarenesscommunity.
com. BOOK DISCUSSION:Discuss A ARMCHAIR STORYTELLING: Novel Idea's "The Dog Stars" by Peter Heller; free; noon; La Pine Local storytellers perform, with Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541- a theme of "Plan B"; $10; 7 p.m.; 312-1090 or www.deschuteslibrary. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-241-2271 or www. org/calendar. facebook.com/ArmchairBend. mcmenamins.com. "HOW DID WEGETHERE? LEE KOCH TRIO: The California HUMAN ORIGINS: EVOLUTION THE T SISTERS:The Oakland, Americana band performs; free; AND MIGRATION":Scott Fisher Calif., sister group performs, with 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Portland's Ike Fonseca and Olivia presents "Clues From the Solar Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond System"; $10, $8 for Sunriver Holman; $5; 9p.m., doors open8 St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Nature Center members, free for Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 students with ID; 6:30 p.m.; Central mcmenamins.com. or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. Oregon Community College, WILLY TEA8ETHE GOOD LUCK
Writer Continued from B1 "But what I like most about
her is how normal she is. She's funny and savvy, and she knows how to enjoy life. She gets along with all kinds of people and doesn't take anything too seriously." While Laura's been involved in plenty of activities, including swim team, newspaper staff and mock trial, the two that have become her real passions
inspired the teen to start a cre-
Summit High School senior Activities:Water polo, creative writing Favorite Movie:"Frozen" Favorite TVShow: "Friends" Favorite Book:The Chaos Walking trilogy by Patrick Ness
High. She also entered one of
Favorite Balii:The Shins
wrote and reread it, and just
cringe." "It was a real Cinderella moBut although Laura may
ment," Laura said. "We went
have lackedconfidence in her
from otherteams seeing usand ability, there were others who saying 'that's the team we're believed in her. After reviewsure we can beat' to 'Uh-oh, ing her application, the workSummit's coming.'" shop organizers invited her to Laura said the turnaround is a testament to the effort
attend. At the studio, Laura and
each of her teammates put into about60 otherstudentsherage practlce. When she's not in the pool, the restof Laura's free time is
from around the world spent their time sharing and then
FRIDAY YOUTH ARTWALK:Showcase of local youth art from Redmond
c o nference
LauraRodson
are water polo and creative writing. Laura started playing gious workshop was incredibly waterpolo herfreshman year. difficult. "Before that, I was really That year, her team didn't win a single game. Since then, Lau- shy about showing people my ra has helped take the Summit writing," she said. "Sometimes water polo team to state, where I'd pull out one of the books I it placed second two years in a row.
Attending th e
FELLAS:Folk and Americana performances, with The Sumner Brothers, Mosley Wotta and Marshall Law; proceeds benefit the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee; $10suggested donation; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. "WON'T BACKDOWN — THE STORY OFSTEVEPEAT": A screening of the brand new film documenting the career of legendary downhill mountain biker Steve Peat; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.
shop in the Nature of Word's Rising Star Creative Writing Competition last year, which earnedher firstplace for her age group in creative fiction. Laura has also continued to write novels, focusing on subjects that center around fantasy
and magic. "I don't like stuffy writing-
GEORGEMANN:The New Yorkbased activist singer-songwriter performs a benefit concert for universal and publicly funded health care for Oregon; $10 suggesteddonation;7 p.m .; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. TRIVIA BEE:TheEducation Foundation for the Bend-La Pine Schools holds a trivia competition;
visitredmondoregon.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jane Kirkpatrick presents the novella collection "Sincerely Yours"; $5; 6:30p.m.;Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St.,Redmond; 541-526-1491. "THE LITTLE MERMAID":Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the classic tale by Hans Christian Anderson; $15, $10 for students; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-419-5558 or www. beatonline.org. CITY CAREFUNDRAISER: Live music by Kim Kelley and raffle; proceeds benefit City Care of Bend; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-322-9392, bend.events@ yahoo.com or www.bendcitycare. com.
ages 21 andolder; proceeds benefit the foundation; $21 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open 6 p.m. with live music and appetizers; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. "BLUE JASMINE":A screening of the 2013 film (PG-13) starring Cate Blanchett; free, refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org.
SCHOOL NOTES
ative writing club at Summit her short stories at the work-
schools and home-schooled students; free; 4-8 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-923-5191 or www.
COLLEGE NOTES
William K. Worrell Scholarship for 2014.
The Center Foundation recently announced the winners of the Junior Scholarship. Thefollowing students are Junior Scholarship recipients: Tiffany Belvoir, JadenBoehme, Allie Bowlin, SamuelEarnest, Ella Feldmann, LaneGladden,Justin Hanway, AnnieJarvis, Melissa Olivera, Stephanie Olivera, Sarah Perkins, Collin Runge,Matthew Sjogren andAbigail Stevens. Marley Forestis the recipient of the
TEEN FEATS
he contributed 25 hours andheld a food drive for nonprofit service organization Neighborlmpact.
Alec Alldrittis a memberof Troop 23 and a junior at Summit High School. For his community service project, he contributed 92 volunteer hours to create a pedestrian route for when the Pine Nursery dog park is closed. Hayden McGee is amember of Troop 25 and a junior at BendHigh School. For his community service project,
MILITARY NOTES Navy SeamanRecruit Jennifer Littler has completedU.S.Navy basic training atRecruit Training Command inGreat Lakes,III. Sheis a 2012 graduate ofColumbia RiverHigh School in Vancouver,Wash.Sheis the daughter of Jayand LeaMcKnight, of Redmond.
I like writing about things that
apply to me," Laura said. "And even though it's magic and fantasy, that kind of subject matter
can sometimes resonate with you better. It can sometimes reflect real life back better than a
book about actual real life." Laura found out a few weeks
ago that she was amongthe talented and lucky few to get into Stanford University's 2014 ad-
mission dass. She said she was shocked to find out she'd been
How to submit
Story ideas
Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.) Contact: 541-383-0358, youth©bendbulletin.com Mail:P .O.Box6020,Bend,OR97708 Other schoolnotes:Collegeannouncements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
School brlefs:Items and announcements of general interest. Phone: 541-633-2161 Email: news@bendbulletin.com Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354 Email: mkehoe©bendbulletin.com
accepted, attributing much of the reason to luck.
McCormick doesn't agree. "Anybody who looked at her application would see that she's an exceptional kid that you
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet Ga sstfteds www.bendbulletin.com
critiquing one another's writ- would want in your freshman ing. Laura was nervous and class," McCormick said. "She's somewhat intimidated at first. a catalyst for moving people enthusiasm for t h e w r i t ten But, eventually, she found her forward. If I were looking for word prompted her to apply to rhythm. students to make up my fresh"It was the two best weeks of man class, the Iowa Young Writers' StuIw ould sure puther dio a couple of summers ago. my life," Laura said. "It forced in there." She said getting up the nerve me out of my comfort zone— Reporter: 541-383-0354, to even apply for the presti- but in the bestpossible way." mkehoe@bendbulletin.com. taken up by her second and biggest passion: writing. Her
Redmond
Director Heather Richards explained in response that
Continued from B1
because the block contains
in electrical and HVAC work alone. Another $500,000 is es-
timated for safety issues, from no parking or drainage — re- fire code improvements to lead lion would be available from quired by city code — "one of paint and asbestos abatement. the city's Urban Renewal Dis- those buildings will have to Initially the city does not trict and possibly another $1 go." But no decisions have been expect to use all 35,000 square million from city reserves. made as to which one. feet in the main building, so Slightly under $500,000is left The council's decision moves part of the funding formula in the City Hall building fund. forward an eight-month archi- couldcome from leasingspace. A public/private partnership is tectural planning and public According to Neff, the city is also a possibility staff will be design period, with construc- in discussion with potential investigating. tion to begin as soon as Feb- tenants. "This is exciting for RedCouncilor Jay Patrick asked ruary 2015 and ending after about whether the estimates aboutone year.Alltheapprox- mond," Bill Groetz of Redmond cover just the main histor- imate dates are contingent on told the council. "I know times ical building or all three of no unforeseen discoveries in have been tough, but I'm glad the structures on site, which the 94-year-old building, which to see council finally approachindude a gymnasium and a needs significant work. Early ing this project." 1950s-era classroom wing. engineering inspections result— Reporter: 541-548-2186, Community Deve l opment ed in estimates of $1.5 million Ipugmire@bendbulletin.com
A T THE L O D G E
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NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:22 p.m. April 7, in thearea of Northeast Carrie Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest made at6:07 p.m. April 9, in the 2500 block of Northeast U.S.Highway 20:----------------------------------------------------Theft —A theft was reported at 6:24 p.m. April10, in the 20700block of Beaumont Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:16 p.m. April10, in the 900block of Northwest Galveston Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:16 p.m. April11, in the19700 block of Dartmouth Avenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:17 p.m. April11, in the19700 block of Dartmouth Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:56
a.m. April12, in the 2700block of Northwest Polarstar Avenue. Unauthorizeduse — Avehicle was reported stolen at11:59 a.m.April 11, in the 63200 block of BoydAcres Road. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:16 p.m. April11, in the1300 block of Northeast Eighth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:22 p.m. April12, in the 2800 block of Northwest Polarstar Avenue. DUII —Colin Montgomery Smith, 28, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:54 p.m. April12, in the1100 block of Southeast ShadowoodDrive. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2':41"a".m."A'p'iil 1'3"iri'tlie'900 blo'ck of Northwest Newport Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:42 a.m. April13, in the 600 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:06 p.m. April11, in the 63400 block of U.S. Highway97. DUII —ThomasTheodore Taelour, 23, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:04 p.m. April11, in the 300block of Northeast GreenwoodAvenue. Theft — A theft was reported andan arrest made at5:15 p.m. April12, in the 900 block of Northwest BondStreet.
Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:03 a.m. April13, in the 200block of Northwest Jefferson Place. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 4:21 p.m. April13, in the 200block of Northwest Jefferson Place. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 4:40 p.m. April13, in the 200block of Northwest Jefferson Place. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:00 p.m. April13, in the 900 block of Northwest Wall Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:46 p.m. April14, in the 800block of Northeast Purcell Blvd. CffNlrraf NllcMBf'"" - "An'acrof "" criminal mischief was reported at 2:47 p.m. April14, in the 200block of Northwest Jefferson Place. Unauthorizeduse — Avehicle was reported stolen at1:58 p.m.April10, in the 500 block of Southwest Industrial Way. "
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PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal Mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:45 a.m. April14, in the areaof Southeast Lynn Blvd.
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON COVER OREGON
AROUND THE STATE Pot diSpenSary mOratOriumS — At least 71Oregoncities have
ew ire OrreinSinS en in By Gosia Wozniacka and Jonathan J. Cooper
technology committee will bring a final recommenda-
to keep," he said. "I want to avoid doing that."
Cover Oregon's tion to the board by the end of headquarters in April.
ecutive director duties last
D urham,
week, after i nterim execu-
ciated Press in an interview at
The Associated Press
DURHAM — A t ur naround expert brought in to
ou t -
Hamstreet said he's told
fix Oregon's troubled health Hamstreet sid e P o r t land. staff he must personally ap"I think we can insurance exchange is clampprove any new contract, and ing down on spending and help make a difference on he's limited who can approve who can make financial deci- that." large invoices. sions as he tries to get Cover Hamstreet said Cover OrHamstreet is the founder Oregon back on track. egon has terminated a con- of Hamstreet & A ssociates, In his third day on the job, tract with Deloitte for advice a Portland company that Clyde Hamstreet said Tues- on future technology options. specializes i n r e s tructurday that he's still gathering Oregon's exchange has never ing struggling businesses. information on finances and had a fully functioning web- He's advised a number of c ontracts an d l o o k in g a t site and is currently evaluat- companies through bankwhether the right people are ing whether to keep trying ruptcy and restructuring of in the right jobs. He'll even- to fix it s existing software their finances, operations or tually recommend a restruc- or drop it and use the federal management. turing plan to Cover Oregon's website instead. He describes the Cover Orboard of directions. The technology decision egon situation as "a crisis in "There are some good peo- will be central to Cover Ore- lack of confidence in technolple here ... but there isn't the gon's business model, Ham- ogy and leadership." "The agencies had a probclarity about w ha t t h ey're street said. He said he doesn't supposed to do and how to do know what the recommenda- lem with making commitit," Hamstreet told The Asso- tion will be. A Cover Oregon ments that they were not able
moratoriums on medical marijuana dispensaries, and morethan 40 others are considering bans, according to the League ofOregonCities and theAssociation of Oregon Counties. The Legislature allowed local governments to impose aone-year ban, if enacted by May1. The law also gives local governments the ability to regulate whenand where pot shops mayoperate. The Leagueof OregonCities and the Association of OregonCounties askedthe Legislature to give local jurisdictions the power to outlaw dispensaries. Thestate has242 incorporated cities and 36counties.
Hamstreet took over ex-
Medicare billing —ASalemrheumatologist received more
tive director Bruce Goldberg resigned. A search panel is
money from Medicare in 2012than any other doctor in Oregon. Data released last weekfrom the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services show Dr.RebeccaCallis received $2.7 million. She billed for nearly115,000 services for 547 patients. Callis said shedidn't know why her numbers were somuch higher than other rheumatologists but billing is not profit. She saysmoneyalso goes toward overhead, wages and thecost of expensive therapies for autoimmunedisease.
expected to recommend a
permanent director at the end of May. If adopted by Cover Oregon's board, Hamstreet's restructuring
r e commenda-
tions would be implemented by thepermanent director,he
Cillduf blOCk Off OlfOfpOSS —OregonState Police say they have identified two teenageboys who mayhavetossed a cinder block off an Interstate 5 overpass inCreswell, injuring aWashington state woman riding in acar below. Police saythe boys, ages 16and 17,are cooperating in the investigation, as aretheir parents. No one hasbeen arrested. Theblock crashed through the windshield of a car in which 30-year-old Tiffany Becker of Roy,Wash., was riding early Sunday, hitting her in the face.Shewastreated at a nearby hospital and released. Once police finish their investigation, the casewill be turned over to the LaneCounty district attorney for a decision on possible charges.
sard. Hamstreet said he took on
the job at the request of Gov. J ohn Kitzhaber, wh o
said
Cover Oregon had a "real issue" with organization, accountability and leadership. "You don't just tell the governor of the state you live in, 'No, I'm b u sy,'" Hamstreet
Portable classroom fire —Firehasgutted a portable class-
said.
room being used for storage at aBeaverton middle school. TheTualatin Valley Fire andRescuedepartment said the flames rose 40feet Tuesday morning at Highland Park Middle School, but firefighters put them out within about15 minutes. Nobodywas hurt, and nocause of the fire was immediately reported. Theclassroom was behind the main school building. Classeswereexpected to be held as usual.
Man sentencedto OSHA fines port 10 years inwhat he terminal operator called mercykiling By Steven Dubois
pany that operates the Port of
Company officials have accused longshoremen of engaging in an illegal slowdown for the past two years. The goal,
against the 10 years of his
Portland's container terminal
they contend, is to hurt pro-
sentence.
has been fined $18,360 following a safety inspection by
ductivity, and ultimately drive away shippers and ICTSI.
The Associated Press
PORTLAND — The com-
The Associated Press ROSEBURG
-
A
29-year-old Southern Oregon man has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for killing his roommate in what he said was a mercy
killing. Charles Henry Teal of Myrtle Creek was sentenced Monday in Douglas County Circuit Court i n
Bension's family was not placated. "No matter what I say to
you, our lives are still forever changed," Bension's mother, Debi Peters, wrote
in a letter read in court by prosecutor Steve Hoddle. " This senseless act
t o ok
R ose- away my right to say a final
burg for manslaughter in the October 2011 slaying of
not informing employees about gent said from San Francisco. potential exposure to airborne lead and having workers operate machinery that lacked proper guards against flying objects. OSHA did not identify any injuries that resulted from the alleged hazards. ICTSI Oregon can contest the findings and proposed penalty. Company officials did not respond to phone or email messages.
himself in a h o rrible situ-
"I don't understand how
and a murder charge was dropped. He pleaded guilty
anybody cangetfrom valuing human life, loving somelast month to manslaughter one, getting medical attenand a weapons charge. The tion to pulling the trigger 2t/~ years he has spent in and shooting someone," he jail awaiting trial will count
countable for its failure to pro-
found ICTSI Oregon to be in tect the men and women who violation of more than a dozen work at Terminal 6," ILWU
crystal clear you knew what
ation, which triggered his port the shooting, but a dep- post-traumatic stress, and uty failed to find the body. he made a decision he will It was later discovered by a regret for the rest of his life," hunter. Moro said. Although other people Judge Bill Marshall said said Bension had told them he had a hard time underhe had cancer, an autopsy standing how Teal could do did not show the disease. such a thing. p l e a d e al,
in late February. The inspector worker safety codes, such as
logging road outside Myrtle Defense attorney Laura Creek at about 10 p.m., and Fine Moro said Teal believed Bension said he was dying Bension was dying, and of cancer. Bension begged "acted wholly out of mercy." "Everyone we spoke to him to end the pain, Teal sard. preparingfor the case said Teal said he agreed to the (Teal) would give the shirt request and shot Bension off his back and was the in the head with a 12-gauge kind of guy you'd want as shotgun. your neighbor. He found
Teal took a
The union, meanwhile, has
repeatedly said the company Documents show the federal skimps on safety at the site agency levied the penalty last known as Terminal 6. "We're grateful that OSHA week after a routine inspection of the North Portland site is stepping in to hold ICTSI ac-
goodbye to my son.... It's
39-year-old Jeffrey Scott you did was despicable." Bension. Teal said he was deepTeal told authorities that ly sorry, and accepted his he and Bension drove to a punishment.
Afterward, Teal told his girlfriend to call 911 to re-
the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
sald.
spokeswoman Jennifer Sar-
Beached whale —Visitors to the north Oregon coast town of Seaside are being cautioned to stay well awayfrom the carcass of a 40-foot gray whale that's washing up onthe beach. Seaside Aquarium general managerKeith Chandler describes the carcass as "really smelly" and warns visitors they don't want their pets rolling on it. Chandler says oncehis team is donecollecting data from the carcass, the city of Seaside will bury it. — From wire reports
',
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-,'8aI S
Zndoor and Outdoor
i,'„:,""-'::Pcl,tl . o 5'qilcf k'-,,<": ZZZ SE peed' Afurket PoM 388-
II I<
Port spokesman Josh Thom-
as said he was told by a manager Tuesday that any safety issues identified by the inspector "have been and will continue to
be addressedby our terminal operator."
ICTSI Oregon is a subsidiary of International Container Terminal Services Inc., a major
global ports operator based in the Philippines. ICTSI signed a 25-year lease in2010tooperatethe struggling Portland terminal, and the U.S. venture has been marked by a
severely strained relationship with the International Longshore & Warehouse Union.
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TH E BULLETIN < WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
a enei o r a roac 0 SB el' I'cl IC 0 0
'
0 oC
embers of a group called Slower Safer Bend say too many neighborhoods are disrupted by speed-
ers passing through. Adding to the problem, in the group's view, has been the city's inability to correct the situation. U nfortunately, some o f t h e things that might seem perfect for calming traffic really are not. Speed humps and bumps, for example, can only slow people down right before and at the bump. Worse, those vehicles that actually are slowed are likely to be such things as emergency vehicles. In addition, humps and bumps can damage those same vehicles. More effective are the portable radar signs that the city uses from time to time. Slower Safer Bend wants the city to purchases 13 additional signs, then turn them over to neighborhood associations to be used as the associations see fit. The signs can be expensive, as much as $20,000 each, and they're expensive to maintain. Nor is the idea of allowing neighborhood associations to operate them a good one. The associations should not
be given the tools to act as law enforcement agencies. If Slower Safer Bend wants the city to have more speed detectors, it should work to raise the money needed topurchase and maintain them. Then it should allow city officials to decide when and where they should be used. S lower Safer Bend may b e right, however, in it s assertion thatBend has a speeding problem. That can happen as cit ies grow and as traffic on main thoroughfares increases. And that may be the group's best focus. Persuading city residents that speeding is unwanted in friendly small cities like Bend may take some effort, but spreading the word that good neighbors don't speed on residential streets may be the strongest tool in Slower Safer Bend's kit.
paulcombs7@gmail.cogs
ns ~E CX ScmWSAu, ~ x r
M 1Vickel's Worth What will electric car charging system cost?
why that is so, but we don't have many looking out for our interests. Several years ago I had the chance to meet Greg Walden in person and talk to him about his views on gov-
"'Electric Highway' nearly complete" by Scott Hammers in the
Transportation seems t o
F
am excited to vote for Miller as our
ernment and candidates. I was very
be in
Bend
charge of the installations. Taxes are the source of revenue for ODOT.
Miller for judge
Since cost is totally ignored, the sto-
Poor timing for ehanges to the Censussurvey while the old version found 12.5 percent. The test also found differences in the divide between private and p u blic i n surance, with the new questions finding a higher percentage with private coverage. The Census changes come amid an intense political push to prove or disprove the ACA's success in increasing the number of people with health insurance. The White House has reported that 7.5 million people have used the exchanges to buy private health insurance, but details are lacking on whether they were previously insured. That leaves critics to speculateon how much of an increase can be attributed to the new law. Surveys, l ik e s t a ndardized tests in education, do need periodic updating. But there's a great loss each time that happens, eliminating year-to-year comparisons, causing confusion and hampering evaluation of policies. Getting past the political rhetoric onthe ACA is no easy task. Destroying valid data hampers the quest further. The Census Bureau's timing is unfortunate, damaging ourchances of making public policy decisions on the basis of good data instead of political posturmg.
But more than that, Miller is a su-
perb person. He has great character, integrity and excellent judgment. I
next circuit court judge. I encourage cisely the network of all the electric impressed with his intelligence and anyone who shares my interest in car charging stations on the West judgment. I therefore once again en- supporting judicial candidates with Coast. The glaring omission is the courage all to vote for Walden and Miller's extensive civil l i t igation expenditure for this project. return him to Congress. Thankyou. background to do the same. The Oregon Department of Thomas McLaughii n Tia Lewis April 6 Bulletin covers quite con-
ry is incomplete. One wonders why such an effort at concealing the
or decades, the Census Bureau has asked people the same questions about health insurance in its annual Current Population Survey, allowing yeart o-year comparisons. But t h i s year, when the results could be a critical tool for examining the effects of the Affordable Care Act, the Bureau has changed the questions, destroying the possibility of before-and-after comparisons. There's some evidence the questions have needed updating for years, according to The New York Times, but why this year? If the updatinghad been done a few years earlie r — or a few years later — the survey could have helped answer important questions about the impact of the ACA. Whether the cause is political manipulation or clumsy coincidence, the result is the same: loss of vital data that could have helped drive smart public policy decisions. The survey asks about income, poverty and health insurance, and some reports indicate it has traditionally overestimated the number of people without health insurance. Last year, the Times reported, a test indicated the new questions would have shown 10.6 percent without health insurance
candidates.
I know Randy Miller will make
Bend
Support Miller with your vote
an excellent judge. Miller and I beI met Randy Miller as a client price of this venture. gan working together in 2006, when three years ago when he advised What is the source of income for he transferred from Schwabe, Wil- me on a business dispute case. From this project? Electricity is not man- liamson and Wyatt's Portland office the very first interaction, Miller imna from heaven. It would be most
to our Bend office location.
welcome to learn the actual, honest
Miller is a dedicated, hardworking, down-to-earth and balanced apintelligent and successful civil busi- proach, helping me understand not ness and individual rights litigation only my legal options, but also walkattorney. Over the years, I trusted ing the extra mile to educate me on Miller to represent my dients in mat- best practices. Thanks to Miller, I
expenses and income from this enterprise and those who are involved,
please. Thank you for your attention.
pressed me with his level-headed,
Margaret Johnson ters before the court, as did my partBurns ners. I personally know Miller has vast experience appearing, advocating and resolving complex civil matReturn Walden ters before our circuit court judges to Congress and in other courts around the state. It is always a challenge to know As a civil land use attorney, I that you are voting for the best want to knowthat our judges undercandidate for public office, but as stand the complexities of civil real
was able to successfully resolve the
the difference between conserva- estate, land use, construction, per-
as well as from a human one.
case with the least possible amount of money, tim eand headache. Miller's continued caring, thor-
ough and professional advice over the years on other legal matters made me understand that he really
has his client's best interests at heart — from a professional perspective,
tives and liberals becomes more mitting, land divisions and project pronounced, it becomes even more development, and the relationships
As judge, I'm confident Miller will bring not only his considerable important to know your candidates between clients and ODOT, Depart- knowledge and legal experience to and vote for the one that most close- ment of Environmental Quality, the the position, but also exercise his ly aligns with your views. I tend to U.S. Forest Service, Department of profoundly reality-based sense of simplify issues and make judgments Fish and Wildlife, as well as the city fairness and humanity on a daily accordingly but one office I think and county governmental bodies. basis. I look forward to voting for is particularly important for voters Through his work at Schwabe, Wil- Miller, and I hope you will support this time around. That office is our
liamson and Wyatt, Miller has that
representative in Congress. I will not extend this letter by explaining
experience, which is hard-earned and difficult to come by in judicial
him with your vote as well.
Simone Paddock LaPine
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P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Kee rura u siness tax rea s in rura areas By David Roth and Patrick Story t's been a long time since Bend was considered rural, but a legislative bill designed to bring jobs to rural communities could still apply to
t
the area. House Bill 4142, the Rural SIP Bill, could help attract business
to, say, Redmond, Sisters or La Pine. In the recent session, Tax Fairness Oregon worked hard in support of this bill. It would have closed a nasty tax loophole and made it easier
$25 million for a Rural SIP and $100 million for an Urban SIP. The minimum rural investment is set low to make it easier to attract strategic in-
vestments to rural communities. The SIP incentive is this: Property
IN MY VIEW They're no longer considered rural for land use planning purposes, but the SIP program still treats them as rural because of that 2002 date in the
taxes are waived for 15 years on as- law. As a result, the Rural SIP makes sessed value over the minimum in- some strategic urban investments vestment. A rural investment of $125 million would receive a tax waiver on
What's wrong witha state program that benefits rural communities? Nothing, unless rural benefits are going to urban communities.... about 5,000 acres of urban land in the Portland Metro area are treated as rural, because those acres were considered rural backin 2002.
much more profitable, since taxes
will be paid on only $25 million, rath- deep as rural investments, in order to er than $100 million of property. For encourage new development in rural lion = $100 million). An urban invest- example, Genentech, located in Hill- communities. To restore the original for rural communities to compete ment of $125 million would receive a sboro, will pay about $20 million less intention of the Rural SIP, HB 4142 with the Portland Metro area for tax waiver on $25 million ($125 mil- in taxes over 15 years because it got a would have replaced the fixed SIP large business investments. HB 4142 lion - $100 million = $25 million.) Rural SIP rather than the Urban one. date with the date of each applicaWhat's wrong with a state propassed the House with bipartisan As a w atchdog group, TFO's tion for the tax incentive. That would support (48 ayes, 9 nays, 3 excused). gram that benefits rural communi- mission is to protect Oregon's laws mean that the current land use status However, it was much harder going ties'? Nothing, unless rural benefits from abuses that give advantages of a piece of property would deterin the Senate, where the Republican are going to urban communities. Be- to wealthy and powerful interests. mine whether it qualified for a Rural caucus finally learned "SIP" refers to cause of a twist in the SIP law, about When we learned of the 2002 date in SIP or an Urban SIP, not its land use Oregon's Strategic Investment Pro- 5,000 acres of urban land in the Port- the SIP, we knew it would pervert the status as of 2002. gram for recruiting highly desirable land Metroarea aretreated as rural, law. It violates the original intention A Republican senator from a very industries. To qualify, an industrial because those acres were considered — that new urban investments would rural district told us he didn't see development must be large, at least rural back in 2002. get tax breaks, but not breaks as any reason to update the Rural SIP $100 million ($125 million - $25 mil-
because none of his constituents had complained to him about it. That's
ironic. It reveals the very reason that tax breaks are so insidious — they
are largely hidden in the tax code. That's why the senator wasn't hearing from his constituents. HB 4142 never got a floor vote in
the Senate — the Republican caucus decided not to support it. If your sen-
ator is Republican you might ask him or her, "Why did the caucus oppose HB 4142'?" — David Roth and Patrick Story are volunteers with Tax Fairness Oregon.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
DA
BITUARIES DE~TH NP TjgES Orie J. Eidson, of Bend Mar. 15, 1916 - April 10, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592; www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: 2:00 PM, Friday, April 18, 2014; Graveside Service at Deschutes Memorial Gardens, 63875 N. Hwy 97, Bend and 11:00 AM, Memorial Service, Saturday, April 19, 2014 at Grace Baptist Church, 566 NE Clay, Bend.
Marcelon "Marcie" Mae Houdesheil, of Redmond Mar. 30, 1927 - April 13, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) Please visit the on-line registry for the family at: www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private family celebration of life will be held later in the summer. Contributions may be made to:
Crooked River Ranch Chapel, 5060 SW Clubhouse Road, Crooked River Ranch, OR 97760.
James "Jime Loyal Imes, of Redmond Aug. 14, 1950 - April 5, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Jim requested that no formal services be held.
Mary M. Powell, of Bend May 10, 1920 - Sept. 8, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Robert Gene Bashford April 14, 1938 - March29, 2014 A l o n g t im e B e n d r e s i dent, Bob Bashford passed away on M a r c h 2 9 , 2 0 14 a fter a s h o r t b a t tl e w i t h cancer. He was 75. He was bor n i n E u g ene and r e t i r e d fr om t he plumbing industry. B ob i s s u r v i ved b y h i s wife, Su e a n d n u m e r ous loved ones.
FEATURED OBITUARY
Farthing was cloctol at forefront of AIDScare By Steve Chawkins Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Charles
Farthing, a physician who was at the forefront of care for HIV/ AIDS patients and who drew attention to the need for an
AIDS vaccine by announcing his willingness to inject himself, has died. He was 60. Farthing, who collapsed in a Hong Kong taxi April 5, had a heart attack, family members said in an announcement.
Farthing was chief of medicine for the Los Angeles-based
ELSEWHERE
foundation in June as director
of treatment programs in the 32 countries outside the U.S. where it provides services. At the time of his death, Far-
thing was based in Hong Kong and working for the pharmaceutical company Merck, Sharp & Dohme as Asia Pacific director of medical affairs for infectious diseases. "He was one of the most
recognizable personalities in our field," said Dr. Michael Gottlieb, a Los Angeles physicianwho co-wrote the first sci-
entific report identifying the disease that came to be known as AIDS. "He had a lifelong
commitment to the cause." In 1997, Farthing was frus-
trated by what he saw as the slow progress of work on a promising vaccine that contained a weakened form of the HIV virus. With drug companies reluctant to do ex-
pensive research that might be dangerous for human test subjects, he
c o ntroversially
said he would volunteer as a guinea pig. Others in the field followed suit and expressed
their willingness, although ultimately the idea stalled. Still, Farthing, who was untions, was for a time intent on the idea.
"Someone has to go first,"
he told the Los Angeles Times. And t h e f i r s t in j e ction
Deathsof note from around
it worked, it would have had
the world:
to be followed years later by shots of the virus in a stronger
Friday in Manhattan. — From wire reports
Miller also asked about how each candidate would deter-
Trail
rated soil was able to support a person, but not a horse. She
mine which cases to take to
trial and which to offer plea bargains. "Plea bargaining is a necessary evil," Hummel said. "If the defense attorney and the defendant and the prosecutor
all agree on a sufficient resolution to the case, it's an efficient
use of taxpayer dollars to do that." Hummel then said the deci-
sion needs to be equitable, not based on a person's finances or community connections.
He again brought up the Bret Biedscheid case. Hummel has contended in his campaign that because Biedscheidwho hit and killed a man with his car — was a former Les
Schwab executive, he was treated with preference by Flaherty. F laherty said h e o n l y charges cases in which he has evidence to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. He saidhis decision to offer plea bargains to defendants are regulated by
Oregon law. "We have never made a decision based on someone's connection," Flaherty said. "I
give you my word on that." — Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin.com
was planning to return to the
wouldn't be the last; to see if Zander Hollander, 91:Journalist who rebounded from the death of his newspaper in the mid-1960s by becoming what Sports Illustrated called "the unofficial king of sports paperbacks" — particularly a once wildly popular series of encyclopedic yearbooks. Died
ments), whether to pursue the doing is he's hunkering down death penalty.... If you don't in his office and sayingto heck Continued from B1 know what our personal be- with everyone. It's my way or "I oppose the legalization liefs are about public safety the highway." of marijuana because I do not measures, you're in the dark." Bothcandidates repeatediswant to see access to go up Hummel mentioned several suesheard many times during any more than it already is," times that the prosecutor's of- the campaign. Flaherty called he said. "It will have a nega- fice he envisioned was one of into question Hummel's abiltive effect on our children,to collaboration to focus on crime ity to prosecute crimes given put it mildly. As your DA I'll prevention and treatment for that his experience as a trial see more DUIIs, which means offenders willing to accept lawyer has all been as a dewe'll have more vehicular as- help. fense attorney. Hummel spoke saults and homicides." Flaherty said he meets reg- several times about litigation Hummel said his priority ularly with different law en- brought against Flaherty would be to prosecute people forcement groups to"discuss by five former and current who violate the law, but said philosophical issues and prac- employees. his personal views don't factor tical problems" the departThe five cases were settled ments face with resources. by the Oregon Department "I don't make the law.... EvBoth candidates spoke on of Administrative Services to eryonehas personal feelings this issue further following the the tune of $1.4 million, monabout the law, of course," he formal debate. ey that Hummel said was "We do have a vision. We wasted. said. "My personal feelings go on the threshold to the door- — the sheriff, FBI, (Central Flaherty again stood behind way of the DA's office. When I Oregon Law Enforcement his decision, saying the emwalk in that door my personal Services), police — get togeth- ployees who were let go made feelings are leftbehind." er and talk about public safety the "chemistry awful" in the Flaherty countered Hum- and where we're going, how DA's office and he had an obmel's statement. we're doing," Flaherty said. ligation to remove them from "What our personal beliefs "That's what we do." theu positions. are with respect to public safeHummel said Flaherty's colWhen asked after the debate ty measures is very important laborative efforts should ex- if he would make the same defor you to know because of tend further, into community cision even if the settlement the concept of prosecutorial groups, neighborhood associ- money from litigation would discretion," he said. "Every ations and nonprofits. have come from his ownpock"If Patrick's already collabo- et, or his department's pocket, day prosecutors make a decision whether or not to file a rating then I don't understand Flaherty said he would. "I regret the flood of liticharge, whether to take a case what the definition of collabMeasure II (with mandatory oration is," Hummel said fol- gation, but I would make the minimum sentencing require- lowing the debate. 'What he's same decision," he said.
AIDS H e althcare F oundation from 1994 to 2007. He
afraid to take outspoken posi-
DEATHS
6-month-old standard poodle. Given the sunny, warm day Continued from B1 she figured it was a good time Weather often triggers the for the dog's first trail ride. changes in trail conditions. She said she picked the Shelton said people heading trail "because it was safe." out onto trails should bring But she ran into conditions clothes suited to shifts in she'd never seen there before, weather, such as warm layers possibly caused by changes to and rain gear. the drainage brought by wild"As we are going out to fire in recent years. While explore and adventure we the ground held stable under need to make sure we are pre- Weezer as she walked along with the horses, it couldn't pared," he said. Late Saturday morning hold the big animals. Malone was on one of her It soonbecame a mucky favorite portions of the Win- mess under the weight of the digo Horse Trail, which she horses. Stella alone weighs has been riding for about 30 about 1,200 pounds. The years. Along with her and horses sank into th e s lop her horses was Weezer, her and became stuck. Created
Grain
cal breweries and ranchers would have to invest in expen-
Continued from B1 sive upgrades related to how "This historically standard they handle, store and transpractice provides nutritious port the grain — or abandon silage for animals and saves the practice altogether. the brewers from having to Wyden and Murkowski are pay for expensive disposal in part of the 21-member caulandfills, many of which are cus, founded in 2011 by thenalready overflowing," Wyden Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont. and Murkowski's letter states. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., is "It is our understanding that also a member. there are no documented casRep. P e t e r DeF a z io, es of contamination or health D-Springfield, is co-chair of threats caused by livestock caucus' counterpart in the consuming spent grains." House. The House caucus Under the proposal, lo- has more than 100 members,
by runoff from mountain streams, the mud was chilly
despite the warm day. It took about a dozen people — using ropes, plywood and ingenuity — about five hours to free the horses. Such situations and res-
said the 1,000-pound animal was able to free itself quickly. Having endured a fivehour ordeal due to mud, Malone said her horses will need time to heal. Neither has
cues occur in other, wetter parts of the state, said Kim
major injuries but both were
McCarrel, co-chairwoman of
ence. While not physically harmed, Malone herself is recovering mentally and said
the Central Oregon chapter for Oregon Equestrian Trails, a nonprofit advocating for horse trails. But "it doesn't happen too often in Central Oregon." McCarrel's own horse became stuck in the mud at Hyatt Reservoir in Southern Or-
egon in September. The satu-
traumatized by the experi-
she's thankful for all the peo-
ple who came to her horses' rescue.
"I feel like I should be polishing all their boots," Malone sard. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
including all five members of In 2012, craft b reweries Oregon's delegation. contributed $33.9 billion to "The alliance between one the U.S. economy, according of Oregon's oldest industries,
to the Brewers Association, a
agriculture, and one of the newest, craft beer, is at risk of being torn apart by federal regulators, "Wyden saidearlier this week during a news
Colorado-based trade group. Oregon's craft beer industry
conference in Portland. Earlier this month, Rep.
ic activity per resident older
supported almost 15,000 jobs,
and ranked top in the nation at almost $450 of econom-
Greg Walden, R-Hood Riv-
than 21. Overall, the industry produced almost $1.3 billion
er, also wrote to Hamburg,
in economic activity in Or-
urgingher to reconsider the egon, according to Brewers proposed rule. Last month, 13 Association figures. senators, including Murkows-
ki, signed a similar letter.
— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
form.
"Years ago, people took risks," Farthing said. "Now, it's as if medical research can't
IMPO
expose anyone to any risk. That's why this research is going so slowly. People have to accept some risk." In the end, discouraging
• g
$•
$
•
I
'
'
I
'
I
results from tests of a similar
vaccine on monkeys dissuaded even Farthing.
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obiis©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
B5
"Based on follow-up data, he
believed the vaccine wouldn't work," said Michael Weinstein, president of the AIDS Healthcare Foundation. "But
the fact that he was willing to take a chance with his own life — when we were still in the era of certain death — showed his commitment, his courage,
his willingness to do anything for a breakthrough." Research on a vaccine is ongoing, and medications have
SUPPORTIN G SPONSORS
made the disease far more
manageable. Born i n
Chr i stchurch,
New Zealand, on A pril 2 2, 1953, Charles Frank Farthing
ADMISSION FREE PARKIlÃG
SimpliCityHomes
thought of becoming a priest but was attracted to medicine
when he helped treat bangedup rugby players in high school. "He was a fixture on the sidelines with his little white box," said his cousin David Williams, who attended the
same school and is now a neurobiologist at the University of
H I P P O FINANCIAL
SHOW HOURS: AMERICAN FAMILY
m m l X KK E~
s
Allrauf pNI8CSlllulldllf OII8 t001
The Bulletin
tamdard
serving centraloresan since19ra
California, Los Angeles' Jules Stein Eye Institute.
Farthing received his medical degree from the Dunedin School of Medicine in New Zealand's Otago province. Practicing in London at St. Stephen's Hospital, he helped start one of England's first AIDS wards in the early 1980s. Several years later, he became head of an AIDS pro-
gram at New York's Bellevue Hospital.
MAY2,354 • 2014 FOR SHOW INFORMATION VISIT:
www.connectiondepot.com
FRIDAY 12-6 SATURDAY 10-6 SUNDAY 10-5
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
B6
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by WSI©2014
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ROAD CONDITIONS
Cold W arm Stationary
Yesterday WednesdayThursday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City
YesterdayWednesdayThursday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City
Yesterddj/ednesdayThursday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hilto/W Hilto/W
INTERNATIONAL
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53/44 r 65/35 pc 58/44 r 6982 pc 5$45 r 63/40 r 59/23 r 63/38 pc 69/46 r 53/44 r 56/47 r 71/45 pc 62/40 r 57/43 r 63/34 r 62/30 r 65/47 r 57/43 r 58/31 r 62/42 r
65/28 7 V S2 pc 70/50 pc GrandRapids, Ml 35/25 0.13 51/35 pc 57/39 pc nap/dCBT,SO ssna 42I24 6 43/288 Seanle Wa 5$46 0.02 57/45 r sal45 r 4$280.17 47/30 pc 63/40 pc Green Bay,Wl 3289 43 / 34 r 4 $31pc neno,NV 76 / 4 4 69/ 39 pc 74/42 pc Sioux Falls,So 4881 5$ 2 5 r 4 6/29 pc Albany, NV 66/41 0.37 4423 s SS/28 pc Greensboro,NC 67/47 1.56 53/30 s 5$39 pc Richmond,VA 75/680.19 52/33 s 57/41 pcSpokane,WA Sg/44 S S/40 sh Sslgg r Albuquerque,Ntt 6$33 74 / 44 pc TOI45 pc Harrisburg, PA 68I37 1.00 4$30 s SBI34 pc Rorhes/er, NY 49/32 0.59 38I26 s 57/37 pc Spri ngaeld,MO 54/25 62 / 39 pc 61/41 sh Anchorage,AK 46I31 5 $ 3 4 cd ey34 cd uarr/orri, CT 63/SO 1.05 4$27 s 53/28 pc Sacramenar, CA 81/51 8 1 5 1s 83/52 PcSC Louis, MO 50I31 0.01 5$43 pc 65/46 pc Arhnra,BA 64/440.91 Sg/34 s 63/41 pc Helena,Mr 53I34 4 7 /31 sn 61/38pc Salt takeoirr, UT 69/40 5 7 /41 pc 63/47 Tampa, Pc FL 82I720.04 75/65 pc aeles ts AeanticCnr, NI 60570.33 4$31 s 50/36 Pc Honolulu, HI 83//1 79 I 68 pc 79ISB sh Sannnton/ o,TX 67/39 72/58 pc 7$62cd Tvcsoll, AZ 91/49 8 7 /ST pc 89I64 pc Austin, TX 6$3g 7$ 5 5 pc 73/59 Pc Houston,TX Q/41 0.01 71/57 pc 73/62 pc San Diego, CA 69/SO 6 4/58 I sugg pc Tulsa, OK sr/27 67 /46 pc 64/43 sh Baltimore, MO 67/46 2.08 49/31 s 57/37 Pc Huntsville, AL 53/35 0.10 61/37 s 67/47 pc San Francisco,CA 65/52 62/51pc 62ISO PcWash/ngnn, OC 72/461.20 5$35 s sg/41pc Billings, MT Sg/4O 4 3 /29 6 SS/35 Pc IndianapolisIN 38I280.19 53/36 Pc 62/44 pc SanJose,CA 72/53 78I SI pc 7$51 pcWirhaa, KS 63/27 73 / 44 pc 52/36 r BirminghamAL 61/400.86 64I38 s 67/50 Pc Iarkson,rrig 55/421.37 6$42 s 69/54 Pc Sanlare,nm 6289 6 9/34 65/3 pc8 pc Yakima WA 67/42 65 / 39 sh 64/37 r Blsnrarck,NO 4$15 36 0 9 sn 38/26 Pc Iacksonvalerc, 77/641.61 6053 pc 70/61 sh Savannah,nn 74/670.62 63/43 s 7$53pc Vume,AZ + 95/ 6 4 s 91/66 pc Boise, IO 61/41 S a /42 pc 70/45 pc Juneau, AX 53/35 4 9 /37 r 47/35 r Bosron, MA 68/580.18 44/32 s 42/35 pc KansasCity, Mo 54/29 66I 4 0 pc 50/34 r Bulralo, NY 44/31 0.62 39/29 s 5$38 pc lansing, IW 34/240.07 4$33pc Sg/40 cd Amsterdam SO/37 51/41 pc 57/41 s Mecca 102IBO 102I82 s 102/84pc 67/44 1.28 3747 s 51/29 pc tas VegacNV 82ISS 9 $ 6 3 pc 90/64 pcAthens Burii~,Vr 68/44 68ISS s 6$55 pc MexicoCrlr 75/57 7.55 7$55 pc BOISSs Caribou, ME 53/470.08 36ng pc 44/25 pc lexington, KV 4$33 0.32 SS/34 pc 64/42 pc Auddand 71/64 69I64 r 71I64pc Monaeal 6$26 62/21 r 33/24 s Casper,wv 60/34 4 4 /26 8 5030 pc lincoln, NE 5709 60 3 1 pc 52/31 pcBaghdad 77IS7 84/68 pc 91/68cd ttosmw 53/41 53/46 pc 53/39 r Charleston,SC 74/690.19 61/41 s 6$50 pc I/ek Rock,An 57/34 63/4O pc 68I4 9 pc Bangkok 95/73 93/78 Is gel78pc Nairobi 77/60 75/59 Is 77/57 u Charlotte, NC 70/51 1.85 57/33 s 63/42 pc tos Angeles,CA 62lss 6 $ 5 6I 6 8I56 I Beiing 73/59 73/el al 73/53 pc Nassau 86/77 84ITS pc at/75 Is czouanoogaTN 63/41 0.19 63/35 s SBI45 pc louisville,KV 4il340.59 SBI38 pc 66/45 pc Beirut 77/59 Belascri78IBO pc New Delhi 96I73 98I71 s 93//I pc cheyenne,wv 52/28 4 6 I24 pc 5$28 pc Madison, Wl 3748 0.03 53/37 cri 50/35 cd Batn SO/39 53/35 r 53/35 s Osaka 66/41 73/SO pc 75/53 pc Ch/cago,IL 37R60.17 53/42 pc 5$39 r Memphis,TN 52I36 0.16 62/45 s 70/SS pc Bogole 62/53 ssl51 Is 66/51 r Oslo 44/39 51/42 s SS/46 pc Cinrinnati, OH 4OI320.49 53/36 pc 66/45 pc Stianri FL Ba/I6 80/73 sh 82/73 sh Budapest 33/39 53I33 s ST/33 r Onawa 53/21 3gn 5 I 39I21 s Clevelan4OH 41/31 067 46I31pc 61/43pc Milwaukee,Wl 35/23 0.01 SOI37 cri 5$35 r BuenosAires sg/53 68/59 s 6$57 s Pans 57/37 SS/39 s SBI41 s colo. Spgs, co 6422 53 / 2 5 r 3 8/26 8 Minneapolis, MN3648 42/2 6sn 4$29 pc Cabo SanLvcas 87/sg 87/64 s 82IBO s Riode/aneIro 73/69 7$69 r 77/Tt r Columbia, MO 5$27 62 / 41 pc 60I41 alNashville, TN ey360.43 63/39 s 67/48 pc Cairo 87/68 82/62pc 8460 s Rome 6$4I SBI39 Is 62I37 s Columbia, SC 73/67 0.33 61/35 s 68/47 s New Orleans,IA 6$46 0.38 62/53 s 7$61 pc Calgary 48/37 ey26 r 33/24pc Santiago 82/4! 82/4! s 73/46 pc Columbus,GA 65/480.69 su41 s 69/52 pc Nav VollC NV 61/57 0.19 49/35 s 51/38 pc cehcuh 86//8 86//5pc 84//I rs sao Paulo 66/62 71/64 r 78/64 rs Columbus,OH 45/320.33 5$35 pc 63/42 pc Newark, NI 67/630.18 4$34 s 5$36 pc Dublin 5$32 SS/42 pc 57/44pc Sapporo 5$50 41/33 s 42/32 pc Concord, NC 64/600.30 41/la s 4$25 pc Noriolk, VA 74/651.51 engg pc 5$46 pc Edinburgh 60/28 6$42 pc SS/42pc Seoul sg/44 69/46 cri 6$48 pc CorpusChristi, 1X 7QI46 7 3 /61 pc 8$67 pc Okla. City, OK 65/27 69/47 pc 6%43 Is Geneva 57/41 sg/33 s SOI33 s Shanghai 71/53 7VSS s 71/59 pc Oatas 1X 6035 sg l 49 pc 68/53 pc Omaha NE 51/22 6 2 /30 pc 52I33 pc uarare 73/51 75/57 pc 73/SSIs S/ngapore gs//3 gu73 Is 91/73 pc oaylon, 0H 36I300.62 5$35 pc 62/44 pc Orlando, FL Bg/65138 75/64 pc 8$67 sh Hong Kong 78/71 8$71 s 80/71pc Stockholm 4$30 46/30 pc 53I37 pc Denver, CO 64I31 5 $ 26 pc 52/29 sn PalmSprings,CA gt/st 95 / 66 pc 90/SS pc Istanbul 68/48 sr/SS s sa/53pc Sydney 6$57 69/59 r 71I57 pc Oes Moines,IA 4ilzs 6$ 3 5 pc SO/33 pc PeorIa,IL 43/270.12 5$41 pc 5$42 pc Iervsalem BSIST 82/60 cd 86/62 s Taipei 8$64 78/68 pc 78/Sg s -IDetroit IW 33/260.31 43/32 pc 6$42 pc Philadelphia, PA 69/54 0.29 49I35 s Ss/36 pc Iohannesburg 73/53 s SslgeIs TelAvIv BSI57 87/60 cd 82/62 s Ovlvlh, MN 31/12 30 / 19 sn 3$21 pcPhoenix, AZ 9$60 92 I 6 3 s 91/66 pc lima 73/62 71/62 pc 71/62pc Tokyo salso 69/53 pc 69/55 s El Paso,1X 71/38 8 3 /57 pc BVSB Pittsburgh, pc PA 64/320.25 4$30 pc 63/37 pc Lisbon 6$55 69/ss s 68/53pc Vanmuver ss/48 SS/46 pc 53/46 r rairirants, AK 32/26 S O/26 pc 51/26 cd Porllanri ME SS/500.03 44/23 pc 4OI31 pc tonrioh 57/39 SS/42 s 5$46 s Vienna 44/41 51/35 pc 53/35 r Fargo, NO 33/12 3 9 /21 sn 4$21 pc providence,nl 6$540.53 47/30 s 4333 pc Madrid 77/SS 78/53 s BOISS s Warsaw 48/41 51/32 r 51/30 pc Flagstaff, AZ 6487 64/2 8 pc 66I30 pc Raleigh, NC 7$65 1.04 53/32 s su41 pc Manila gr/Bo 89/77 pc ag/75
nalifax
30/6 3 I 46M2g
Death Valley, CA •
innipeg ~w~
9
• 95'
54/48 r 57/30 sh 66/47 pc 57/29 al 61/48 r 59/34 pc 56/27 pc 58/31 pc 68I41 pc
Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulati ons in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes.............Closed Hoodoo.........„„„„„„„,Closed M t. Ashland.................Closed Mt. Bachelor........................ 0" ...........106 -150" Mt. Hood Meadows............. 0"...........111 -144" M t.Hood SkiBowl...............0"...............27—37" Timberline............................ 0" ............. 73 - 123" Willamette Pass...........Closed
Akron,On
Calgarg
55/4 $
~KI REPORT
Abilene,TX
~ OS ~1 0 5 ~ 205 ~30 MO S ~ 505 60 s ~ 7 s ~8 s ~9 0 5 ~100 ~ s 4 Van ouv~er .
55/47 0.01 55/30 63/41 58/35 61/42 61/41 54/33 58/36 68I45 53/41 60/45 64/39 62/44 61/48 58/39 57/39 6$44 59/46 56I35 62/48
YesterdayWednesdayThursday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hilto/W Hilto/W City
City
Yesterday's extremes
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s ~35 ~2 5 ~ s
Fu ll
Snow level and road conditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key: T.T. = Traction Tires. Pass Conditions st/47 r 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit.................. Carry chains / TT. 59/43 r 1-84 at CabbageHill......................Carry chains/T.T. Aspen, CO............................O"...............67-92" 62/38 pc Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass.............. Carry chains / T.T. Mammoth Mtn., CA.............O"...............35-65" 6$42 sh Hwy. 26 a t Gove r nment Camp.. . . . Car r y c hai ns / T. T . ParkCity, UT........................O"...............77-77" 58/50 r Hwy. 26 at OchocoDivide.............Carry chains / T.T. Squaw Valley, CA.................O" ...............19 - 66" 58/31 pc Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.......... Carry chains / T.T. Sun Valley, ID.......................O"...............26-57" Redmond 59/34 cd Roseburg 65/40 r Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake...........Carry chains / T.T. Taos, NM..................... Closed Sale 59/49 r Hwy.242 atMcKenziePass..........Closedforseason Vail, CO................................O"...............70-70" Sisters 56I36 pc For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The OaBes 63/46 sh www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.onthesnow.com Lcgend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partialclouds,c-clouds,h-haze,shehowers,r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace ta Pine lakeview Medford Newport North Bend Ontano Pendleton Porriand PrineviBe
• 68'
Rome 54/31
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Yesterday Wednesday Thursday The higher the UVIndex number, the greater City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W the need for eyeand skin protection. Index is for solar at noon. Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totaIs through 4 p.m.
' 30'
Ashland
Fir st
REGON CITIES
Yesterday's stateextremes
Jordan Valley
PLANET WATCH
Tomorrow Rise Set Yesterday through 4 p.m. at BendMunicipal Airport Mercury..... 8:56 p.m..... 9:50 a.m High/Low.............. 55'/33' 24 hoursending4 p.m.*.. 0.00" Venus......... 7:33 p.m..... 6:47 a.m Remrdhigh....... 81'in1994 Monthtodate.......... 0.14" Mars.......... 9:26 a.m..... 8:58 p.m Remrd low.........17' in 1999 Average monthto dale... 0.33" Jupiter........ I:30 a.m..... 4:50 p.m Averagehigh.............. 59' Yeartodate............ 3.68" Saturn.......12:33 p.m....10:31 p.m Averagelow............... 29' Averageyeartodate..... 2.61" Uranus....... 8:41 p.m..... 9:29 a.m Barometricpressure4 p.m. 30.10" Remrd 24hours .. 0.12 in 1998 *Melted liquid equivalent
Apr22 Apr29 May6 May14
CENTRAL
• 67/38
Broo (lngs
67 36
Sunsettoday...... 7:50 p.m. Last N e w Sunrise tomorrow 6:18 a m Sunsettomorrow... 7:51 p.m. Moonrisetoday....9;43 p.m.
Crescent
59/4
58/45
HIGH LOW
67 38
Sunrisetoday...... 6:19 a.m.MOOn phaSeS
Ontario EAST 61/36
61/40 • 56/32
• Bandon
HIGH LOW
61 36
Rain likely in the morning. Highs around 60. Light wrnd.
mph.
• 49/3t
Burns
Gold Bea'ch
•
hhlhhtrh lh
HIGH LOW
WEST
Mostly cloudy, Highs 49 to 54. West wind 5 to 10
Chance of showers
61 38
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
x xx x ' 498 h h + i
rtvo Ie
Partly i-dy
HIGH LOW
BEND ALMANAC
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4 NHL, C2 NBA, C4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
TRACK 8. FIELD
Eugene dlddlng for 2019 worlds LONDON— Eugene is bidding to bring track and field's world championships to the United States for the first time. The International Association of Athletics
Federations said Tuesday that Eugene isone of three candidates in contention for the 2019 championshi ps,along with Doha, Qatar, and Barcelona, Spain. The host city will be selected in November. Even though theU.S. is the most successful country in the history of the world outdoors, the championship shaveyet to be held in thecountry, mainly for the lack of a suitable stadium. The University of Oregon's Hayward Field has hosted the NCAAoutdoor championships11 times and hasregularly staged the U.S.Olympic Trials. Thefacility underwent $8 million in renovations in 2008 but presumably would need to be expandedfor the world championships.
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP SOFTBALL
NBA
Buffs snapskid behind Reese'spi tching Bulletin staff report
dras coach Charles Brown said
MADRAS — Jasmyn Reese is
of his standout pitcher. "We had a
only a sophomore, but the Madras pitcher is beginning to play like an upperclassmen. Reese had 10 strikeouts in a complete game and led the White
long talk today, about her trying to strike everybody out. She was thinking that it was her responsi-
bility and I told her to just put the ball in play. Just put the ball on the ground and in play and let the team take care of the rest." Reese, who also went 2 for 3 and
Buffaloes to a 7-5 Tri-Valley Con-
ference win over Estacada on Tuesday to snap Madras' threegame losing streak. "She's doing a great job," Ma-
scored a run, limited the visiting Rangers to just three hits, allowing
Madras (1-2 TVC, 5-8 overall) to grab a 7-3 lead heading into the seventh inning and sent Estacada (0-3, 3-10) to its seventh straight loss. Keely Brown was also 2 for 3 with a run for the Buffs, and Chloe
Martin was "big, clutch" for Madras, according to Charles Brown. Martin had two hits and two
Ann Heisenfelt/The Associated Press
Tonight could be the last game in the long career of Minnesota Timberwolves coach Rick Adelman
orm swee
e man's career ma e comin oacose • Timberwolves coach won two WesternConference championshipswith the Blazers
PORT ST. LUCIE,
By Jon Krawczynski The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — As the clockticks down
on the Minnesota Timberwolves' regular-season finale tonight, one of the most quietly suc-
cessful coaching careersthe NBA has ever seen couldbe coming to a close right with it. Over the past 25 yearsincluding five-plus seasons as Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Summit's Lindsey Brodeck returns a serve while facing off against Bend's Sierra Winch at Summit on Tuesday.
MINNEAPOLIS-
Another group of former NHL players has joined the fight for compensation for head injuries they say they incurred while playing. Retired players Dave Christian, ReedLarson and William Bennett filed a class action lawsuit in federal court on Tuesday. The lawsuit, which is similar to one brought by former football players against the NFL, joins others filed by hockey players in Washington and NewYork and seeks monetary damages and increased medical monitoring. — The Associated Press
head coach in Portland after
servingfive-plusasa Blazer assistant — Rick Adelman's
NIXt gP
teams have won more than
l,ppp games. He developed an L.A. CliPPersat Portland Trail innovative offense that influences everyone from Gregg Popovich to Erik Spoelstra and developedareputation as a P m today master of exploiting opponents' TV:ESPN, weaknesses while maximizing BlazerNet thetalents onhis ownroster. gad i o:1pp.1
• Summit's Brodeck wins in rematchof last year's district title match at No. 1singles Bulletin staff report
But as Adelman's 23rd season
FM 111p AM
singles to the No. 4 doubles team
as an NBAheadcoach draws to a close, it does so with everyone
of Jean Foran and Brooke Finley,
involved — a coach who wanted
Tuesday's conference dualbelonged to Summit — and only Summit.
tomakeonelastplayoff push, a franchise hopingto persuade
The Storm took all but one match in straight sets at Summit
its star player not to abandon it, a fan base worn
From Lindsey Brodeck at No. 1
lnslde ' "" uP
downbymediocrity — left wanting more. SeeAdelman/C4
High en route to an 8-0 Class 5A Special District 1 girls tennis vic-
tory against crosstown rival Bend High. "I was very impressed with the
way our lineup played top to bottom," Summit coach Ryan Cruz
Bend's Sierra Winch returns a serve to Summit's Lindsey Brodeck.
Inside
said. "Each player continues to
improveand playthe way we need them to in order to win." In a rematch of last season's
"Caitlin and Caroline each had a
• Madras girls tennis tops Molalla. Prep roundup,C4
district singles championship final, Bend's Sierra Winch, the defending district champ. "Lindsey continues to show con-
fidence in her game and is proving tobe one of the top players in the state," Cruz said.
great win for us at No. 2 doubles," Cruz said. "Overall, it was a great
team victory and enjoyable to
Brodeck booked a 6-2, 6-2 win over
NHL More former players suelilHL
.
PREP GIRLS TENNIS
GOLF Local pros off pace to makecut
— Bulletin staff/eport
'
RBIs for the White Buffaloes, both run-scoring singles coming when she was in a two-strike hole.
—TheAssociated Press
Fla.— Two Central Oregon professionals will have somework to do today to makethe cut at the 2013Senior PGA Professional National Championship. Jeff Fought, the 53-year-old director of golf at Black Butte Ranch, shot a 3-overpar 75 in Tuesday's opening round at the Wanamaker Courseat PGA Golf Club to put him in 97th place, two shots behind the projected cut. Scott Cravens, a 55-year-old pro from Crooked River Ranch, is in a more dire position after his first round at PGA Golf Club's Ryder Course. His 10-over-par 82, whichincluded a 44 on the back nine, landed him in atie for 237th place out of the 262 golfers remaining in the field. The top 70 scorers and ties after today's second round advance to the final 36 holes on the WanamakerCourse. The top 35 finishers earn a berth in the Senior PGAChampionship in May at Harbor Shores in Benton Harbor, Mich. The 2013 Senior PNC was originally slated for last October but was postponed dueto inclement weather in northern Virginia.
5(I/i/,
Siena Ginsburg posted a 6-2, 6-1 win at No. 4singles for Summit, while the tandem of Caitlin and Caroline Nichols survived a 6-4, 7-5 victoryin the No. 2 doubles match against the Lava Bears' Marlena Beith and Marilin Morris.
watch." The most competitive match of
the day came in the No. 3 singles contest between Summit's Brenna Roy and Bend's Jessie Johnson.
The Adelman file Over23 seasons,RickAdelman,anoffseason resident of Black Butte Ranch, hasthe eighth-most wins in NBAhistory. But he hasn't won a conference championship since reaching the NBA Finals with the Portland Trail Blazers in 1992. W-L Pct. Seasons Team 1988-1994 P ortland 2 91- 1 54 . 65 4 1995-1997 Golden State 66-98 . 402 1998-2006 S acramento 368-206 . 6 4 1 2007-2011
Ho uston 1
93-1 3 5
.588
After droppingthe first set 6-4, Roy stormed back to win 6-2 in the sec-
2011-Pres M innesota 9 7- 132 . 424 Total 23 s e asons 1 0 42-748 . 582
ond set and 10-8 in the tiebreaker.
Source: hasketball-reference.com
OREGON DUCKS FOOTBALL
a riotaexcite a out otentia o oun By Steve Mims
"We have a lot of guys on the season.
The (Eugene) Register-Guard
outside and no matter what, we will be able to get the
"It is tough," Mariota said. "It is one of those things that
ball around. Those guys will make plays."
ment in practice last week.
happens in football. All we can do now is get behind him and try to be that support that he needs when rehabbing." Addison was expected to be Mariota's top target in
Addison is expected to miss most if not all of the 2014
the coming season after he ranked second on the team
EUGENE — Now likely without his top four receiv-
ers from last year, Marcus Mariota remains confident that he has more than
enough targets. "I look forward to seeing all the young guys step up," the Oregon quarterback said after practice on Monday.
Mariota lost his top play-
maker when wide receiver Bralon Addison suffered a torn anterior cruciate liga-
with 61 catches for 890 yards
s
Springgames
and seven touchdowns as a
sophomore. "It's hard to replace somebody like Bralon Addison; he is a special talent," Mariota said. "We havea lotofyounger guys starting to step up, so hopefully we see that out of these guys." SeeDucks /C3
OREGON
ORE GON ST
When:11a.m. May 3 TV:Pac-12
When: 1 p.m. May 3 TV: Pac-12
C2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY Time T V/Radie 9 :30 a.m. M L B 4 p.m. MLB 5 p.m. Root
BASEBALL
MLB, Pittsburgh at Cincinnati MLB, ChicagoCubsat N.Y.Yankees MLB, Seattle at Texas BASKETBALL
5 p.m. ESP N 7:30 p.m. BlazerNet,
NBA, Dallas at Memphis NBA, L.A. Clippers at Portland
ESPN, 1110 AM, 100.1 FM GOLF
LPGA,LOTTE Championship
3 :30 p.m.
G olf
HOCKEY
NHL Playoffs, Montreal at TampaBay NHL Playoffs, Columbus at Pittsburgh NHL Playoffs, Dallas at Anaheim WATER POLO
Women's college,UCLAatUSC 5 p.m. Pa c -12 SOCCER 11:45a.m. NBCSN EPL,ManchesterCityvs.Sunderland Copa del Rey, Final, Barcelona vs. Real Madrid 12:25 p.m. ESPN
MLB, Seattle at Texas MLB, St. Louis at Washington College Baseball, LSU atMississippi College Baseball, UCLAat Utah College Baseball, Arizona atUSC
10 a.m. MLB 11 a.m. Root 4 p.m. MLB 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 6 p.m. Pac-12 7 p.m. Pac-12
GOLF
PGA, RBCHeritage LPGA Tour ,LOTTE Championship
noon 3:30 p.m.
Golf Golf
SOFTBALL
College, Stanford at Utah College, Arizona State atWashington
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
Pac-12 Pac-12
HOCKEY
NHL Playoffs, Philadelphia at N.Y.Rangers NHL Playoffs, Chicago at St. Louis NHL Playoffs, Minnesota at Colorado NHL Pla yoffs,LosAngelesatSanJose
4 p.m. CNB C 5 p.m. N B CSN 6:30 p.m. CNBC 7:30 p.m. NBCSN
AUTO RACING
Formula One,ChineseGrand Prix practice SOCCER A-League, Melbourne Victory vs. SydneyFC
Today Baseball: Summiatt Bend,4:30p.m.; MountainView atRidgeview,4: 30p.m.;RedmondatCrookCounty, 4:30 p.m.;LaPineat Sisters, 4:30p.m4East Linn ChristianatCulver, 4:30p.m. BoflbalhBendatSummit (DH),3 p.m.;Ridgeviewat MountainView(DH), 3p.m.; CrookCountyat Redmond(DH),3p.mcLa Pineat Sisters, 4:30p.m. Girls golf: Bend,Mountain View,Summit, Redmond, Ridgeview, CrookCounty, Trinity LutheranatJuniper,noon Trackandfield: Bendat Ridgeview,330 pmcSummit atRedmond,3p.m. Boyslacrosse:Mountain ViewatSummit, 8p.m.
DEALS
IN THE BLEACHERS
Transactions In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucltck www.gocomics.com/rnthebreachers
~//u
Thursday Baseball:MadrasatGladstone,5p.m. Boflbalh Molalla at Madras,4:30p.m. Boystennis:BendatRedmond,4 p.m.;Mountain View atSumm it, 4 p,mc CrookCounty at Ridgeview,4p.m.; Madrasat Central, 4p.m. Girls tennis: RedmondatBend, 4p.m4Ridgeviewat CrookCounty, 4 p.m.; Central at Madras, 4 p.m.; Summiat t Mountain View,4p.m. Track andfield: Sisters,Sweet Homeat La Pine,4 p.m.; Culver atEast Linn,4 p.m. Boys golbRidgeview,Mountain View,CrookCounty, SistersatBlackButte Invite, noon
Boys lacrosse:HarneyatSisters, 5p.m.
THURSDAY BASEBALL MLB, Atlanta at Philadelphia
ON DECK
11 p.m. NBCSN 2:30a.m.
FS2
Friday Baseball: Bendat Summit, 4:30p.mcRidgeviewat MountainView,4:30p.m.; CrookCounty at Redmond,4:30p.m.; Sistersat CottageGrove,4:30 p.m.; La Pineat Junction City,4:30p.m.; Culverat Delphian,4:30p.m. Boflbalh Summit at Bend, 4:30 p.m.; Mountain View atRidgeview,4:30p.mcRedmond at Crook County,4:30p.m.; CottageGroveat Sisters, 4:30 p.m.;JunctionCityatLaPine,4:30p.m.; Culverat Delphian,4:30p.m. Boys tennis: SistersatWiffamette,4 p.m. Trackandfield: Ridgeviewat AppleBlossomInvite in Hood River,TBD Girls golf:RidgeviewatRunningYRanchin Klamath Falls, 10a.m. Boys lacrosse: Wilsonville at Bend,5:30 p.m.; Clevelandat Redmond, 5 p.m.; Summit at Hermiston,5 p.m. Equestrian: OregonHigh School Equestrian Teams Central Districtmeetat Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, Redmond,8:30a.m.
Saturday Boys tennis:Sistersvs. NorthBendat Wiffame tte, 10a.m. Girls tennis: Sisters,Redmond, Madras at Madras Invite,TBD Trackandfield: BendMountain Viewat CraterClassic, 10a.m.;Summit at Oregon Relays in Eugene, TBD; Sistersat ElmiraRelays,11a.m.; Summit, Redmond,LaPine, Culver, Gilchrist at LaPine, 10 a.m.; Crook County atMarshfield, TBD Boyslacrosse:Wilsonviffe atSisters,11 a.mcSummit atHoodRiverValley, 2p.m. Girls lacrosse:Sheldonat Central Oregon,10a.m.; Sherwood at Central Oregon,1:30 p.m. Equostrtan: OregonHigh School Equestrian Teams Central Districtmeetat Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, Redmond,8:30a.m.
Sunday Etfuestrfan:Oregon High School Equestrian Teams Central Districtmeetat Deschutes County Fair tk ExpoCenter, Redmond,8:30a.m.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
TENNIS
TRACK & FIELD JamaiCan SPrinter Cleared in dOPingCaSe —Jamaican sprinter Veronica Campbell-Brown vvascleared of doping because of blatant flaws in the test collection procedures andpossible "environmental contamination" of her urine sample, sport's highest appeals body said Tuesday.TheCourt of Arbitration for Sport released its full report explaining the decision to uphold the three-time Olympic gold medalist's appeal against a tvvo-year doping ban. In a58-page ruling, the three-man arbitration panel outlined "deplorable" mistakes by Jamaican athletics and anti-doping officials in the collection of the athlete's first partial sample. CAS said the errors could haveled to the sample being contaminated bywater or sweat containing a banned substance. Campbell-Brown tested positive for the diuretic HCT after competing in a national meet in Kingston, Jamaica, on May 4,2013. Both thenAnand nBnsamples cameback positive.
SAILING CBP Sailar de Ridder SuSPended five yearS —America's
Cup sailor Dirk de Ridder hasbeensuspended from sanctioned events for five years by sailing's international governing body, two people with knowledge of the decision said Tuesday.Thepeople spoke with TheAssociated Press on condition of anonymity because the suspension is being appealed. Unless areview board or the Court of Arbitration for Sport overturns the suspension, it effectively ends de Ridder's sailing career. Not only is the 41-year-old de Ridder banned from the 2017America's Cup, but he's unable to accept a $500,000 contract to sail in the Volvo OceanRace,which begins later this year. Word of the suspension cameless than aweekafter two New Zealand attorneys criticized the international jury that punished members of America's Cupchampion Oracle TeamUSA, including de Ridder, after investigating the illegal modification of boats used in warmup regattas.
ATP World Tour Monte-CarloRolex Masters Tuesday At The Monte-CarloCountryClub Monte Carlo,Monaco Purse: $4.8million (Masters1OOO) Burlace: Clay-Outdoor Singles Firsl Round AndreasSeppi, Italy, def. MikhailYouzhny(13), Russia,6-3, 7-6(4). TeymurazGabashvili, Russia, def. GiffesSimon, France,4-6,6-4,6-4. MichaelLlodra,France,def. JerzyJanowicz (16), Poland,6-4,6-2. Yen-hsunLu, Taiwan, def. FedericoDelbonis, Argentina,7-6(5), 6-1. GrigorDimitrov(12), Bulgaria,def. MarcelGranollers, Spain6-2, , 4-6, 6-2. Julien Benneteau,France, def. Jurgen Melzer, Austria,6-4,3-6, 6-4. PabloCarrenaBusta, Spain, def.Ivan Dodig, Croatia, 6-3,6-3. GuigermoGarcia-Lopez, Spain, def. Benjamin Balleret,Mona co, 7-5,6-2. MarinCilic, Croatia,def. MarinkoMatosevic, Australia, 6-1,3-6,6-2. Gael Monfils, France, def. KevinAnderson (14), SouthAfrica,6-4, 7-6(4). Nicolas Almagro(15), Spain, def. Paul-Henri Mathieu,France,6-3,6-2. SecondRound Jo-Wilfried Tsonga(9), France, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany,6-4, 1-6, 6-4. NovakDjokovic(2), Serbia,def. AlbertMontanes, Spain,6-1, 6-0. David Ferrer (6), Spain, def. JeremyChardy, France, 6-3,6-0. TomasBerdych (5), CzechRepublic, def. Dmitry Tursunov,Russia, 7-5,6-4.
BASEBAL L
AmericanLeague CHICAGW OHITESOX—Agreedtotermswith RHP FrankFranciscoonaminorleaguecontract. CLEVE LANDINDIANS— OptionedOFNyjer Morgan to Columbus(IL). ReinstatedOFMichael Bourn from the15-day DL. NEWYORKYANKEES— Pl acedC FranciscoCervelli onthe60-dayDL,retroactive to Sunday. Recalled CJohnRyanMurphyfromScranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). SelectedthecontractofINFScott SizemorefromScranton/Wilkes-Barre SEATTLE MARINERS— OptionedLHPLucasLuetge toTacoma(PCL). Recaled RHPBlake Beavan from Tacoma . TORO NTOBLUEJAYS—Placed 2BMaicerIzturis on the 15-dayDL,retroactiveto Monday. Reinstated LHPJ.A.Happfromthe15-dayDL.AssignedRHPJeremy Jeffressoutright to Buffalo(IL). Selectedthecontract of INF Mune nori Kawasaki fromBufalo. Designated RHPMarcusWaldenforassignment. National League CHICAGOCUBS — Named DarnellMcDonald basebaloperati l onsassistant. COLOR ADOROCKIES—PlacedLHPBret Anderson onthe15-day DL,retroactiveto Sunday. Recalled OF CoreyDickersonfromColoradoSprings(PCL). MIAMIMARLINS—Sent2BRafael FurcaltoJupiter (FSL) for arehabassignment. PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES— Optioned RHPLuis Garcia toLehighValey(IL). ReinstatedRHPMike Adamsfromthe15-day DL ST. LOUISCARDINALS — Reinstated INFMark Ellis fromthe 15-day DL.Optioned INFPete Kozmato
Memphis(PCL).
"Do you want the rest of your hot dog? And you spilled popcorn. Can I have it?"
WTA BMWMalaysian Open
Tuesday
At Royal SelangorGolf Club
Kuala Lumpur,Malaysia Purse: $2BB,O BB(Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round GiuliaGatto-Monticone,Italy, def. OnsJabeur, Tunisia, 3-6,6-4,6-2. ZarinaDiyas(6), Kazakhstan, def.Eleni Danilidou, Greece,6-2, 6-2. DuanYing-Ying, China,def. AnaVrljic, Croatia, 6-3,6-2. DonnaVekic(7), Croatia, def.ChanYung-jan, Taiwan,3-6,6-4, 6-1. KristynaPliskova,CzechRepublic, def. TimeaBa-
bos,Hungary, 7-6(6),3-6, 6-4. MagdaLinette,Poland,def. AlizeLim,France,6-3,
6-0. LyudmylaKichenok, Ukraine, def.AyumiMorita
(8),Japan,6-4r 6-2. KarolinaPliskova(3), CzechRepublic, def.Aleksandra Krunic,Serbia, 6-2, 6-2. Hsieh Su-wei,Taiwan,def. Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia,2-6, 6-4,6-3. Cagla Buyukakcay,Turkey, def. Kimiko DateKrumm (5),Japan,5-3,retired. ZhangLing,China,def. OlgaSavchuk, Ukraine, 6-3,6-2. ZhangShuai(2), China,def.ZhengSaisai, China, 2-6,6-2, 6-2.
PatriciaMayr-Achleitner(4), Austria, def.Eri Hozumi,Japan,6-4,2-6,6-3. TadejaMajeric, Slovenia,def.AkgulAmanmuradova, Uzbekistan, 4-6, 6-2,6-0.
BASEBALL College Pac-12 Btandings All TimesPOT
Conference Overall
Washington OregonState Arizona State Oregon Washington State UCLA USC Arizona California Stanford Utah
12-3 10-4 9-6 7-5 7-5 7-5 6-9 6-9 4-8 4-8 2-13
25-7 27-7 20-14 28-10 17-16 19-15 17-17 17-20 15-17 13-16 11-21
Tuesday'sGames Stanford7, St.Mary's(Calif.) 6 ArizonaState5, UNLV2 WashingtonState5, Gonzaga1 Thursday'sGames UCLAat Utah,4p.m.
WashingtonStateatOregon,6p.m. ArizonaStateat Stanford, 6p.m. WashingtonatCalifornia, 7p.m. ArizonaatUSC 7pm Friday's Games UCLAat Utah, 4p.m. WashingtonStateatOregon,6p.m. Arizona Stateat Stanford, 6p.m. WashingtonatCalifornia, 7p.m. ArizonaatUSC 7pm
BASKETB ALL USABASKETBALL— NamedSuePhillipscoach and MaryCoyle KlingerandBrian Robinsonassistant coaches forthewomen'sunder-17national team. FOOTBL AL National FootballLeague CHICAGO BEARS— ReleasedDEChetaOzougwu. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—Signed TEAllenReisner.
Claimed LBTerregManningoffwaiversfromSanDiego. PITTSBURGHSTEELERS — Signed P Adam Podleshtoaone-year contract. SANFRANCI SCO49ERS— SignedWR Brandon Saturday'sGames Lloyd toaone-year contract. UCLAatUtah,11a.m. HOCKEY ArizonaStateatStanford,1 p.m. National HockeyLeague Washington atCalifornia,1 p.m. COLUMBUS B L U E JACKETS— RecalledGJeremy WashingtonStateat Oregon,2 p.m. SmithfromSpringfield (AHL). Arizonaat USC, 7p.m. DALLAS STARS—SignedFBranden Troockto a three-year,entry-level contract. DETROIR TEDWINGS— ReassignedLW Andreas SOCCER AthanasiouandDMattias Backman to Grand Rapids (AHL). MLS FLORIDAPANTHERS— Reassigned DJoshMcMAJORLEAGUESOCCER Fadden fromCincinnati(ECHL) toSanAntonio (AHL). All Times POT NASHVILL E PREDATORS — ReassignedF Calle Jernkrok to Milwaukee(AHL). EasternConference NEW YORKISLANDERS— Reassi gned FsJoey W L T Pls GF GA Diamond and Mat MangenefromStockton (ECHL) to Columbus 3 1 1 1 0 8 5 Bridgeport(AHL)andFAlanQuineandDAndreyPedan TorontoFC 3 2 0 9 5 5 to Stockton. NEW YORKRANGERS—RecalledFJ.T.Miler from SportingKansasCity 2 1 2 8 5 4 D.C. United 2 2 1 7 5 6 Hartford(AHL). PHOENIX COYOTES— AssignedD ConnorMurNewEngland 2 3 1 7 4 8 BrandonGormley, GMarkVisentin andFTyler Philadelphia 1 1 4 7 8 8 phy and Houston 2 3 0 6 7 8 Gaudetto Portland(AHL). WASHIN GTON CAPITALS — Assigned D Brett Chicago 0 1 5 5 9 10 NewYork 0 2 4 4 6 10 FlemmingandFStanislav Galiev fromHershey (AHL) t o Readi n g (ECHL). Reassigned DTyson Strachanto Montreal 0 3 3 3 6 10 Hershey. WesternConference SOCCER W L T Pls GF GA Major League Soccer FC Dallas 4 1 1 13 15 9 MLS — Fi n e d Co l umbusDGiancarloGonzalezan Colorado 3 1 1 10 8 5 amount forembelishment duringSunday's Seattle 3 2 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 undisclosed RealSaltLake 2 0 4 1 0 1 0 6 game. COLLEG E Vancouver 2 2 2 8 8 6 ARIZONA — AnnouncedFAaron Gordon andG Los Angeles 2 1 1 7 5 2 wil entertheNBAdraft. ChivasUSA 1 2 3 6 7 11 Nick Johnson CALIFO RNIA— NamedCuonzo Martin men'sbasPortland 0 2 4 4 8 11 ketbal coach. l SanJose 0 2 2 2 5 7 CREIH G TON— Announced men's basketball G Today'sGame MauriceWatsonJr.wil transferfromBostonUniversity. Philadelphiaat NewYork, 4:30p.m. MICHIGAN — AnnouncedG NikStauskasandF Saturday'sGames GlennRobinsonIII wil entertheNBAdraft. Houston at Philadelphia,1 p.m. PRINCE TON— Named Mollie Marcouxathletic NewEnglandatChicago,1 p.m. director. SanJoseatColorado 3p m SETON HALL — Announced the resignation of Los Angeleat sVancouver,4 p.m. men'sassistantbasketball coachOliverAntiguato take D.C.Unitedat Columbus,4:30 p.m. the same position atSouthFlorida. MontrealatSporting KansasCity,5:30p.m. SYRAC USE— Announced sophomore FJerami TorontoFCat FCDallas, 5:30p.m. Grantwil enterthe NBAdraft. Portlandat Real Salt Lake,6:30 p.m. WASHIN GTON STATE — Announced G Royce Seattle FC at ChivasUSA 7:30p.m. WoolridgeandCJamesHunter haveleft themen'sbasketball program. Released men's basketball FJermaine Morgan fromhis leterof intent. HOCKEY WESTER NILLINOIS—Named Billy Wrightmen's basketballcoach.
NHL
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT FIRSTROUND
(Best-of-7) (x-if necessary) Today'sGames Montrealat Tampa Bay, 7p.m. Columbus atPittsburgh, 7:30p.m. Dallas atAnaheim,10 p.m. Tbursday'sGames Philadelphiaat N.Y. Rangers,7 p.m. Chicagoat St.Louis, 8p.m. Minnesotaat Colorado,9:30 p.m. Los AngelesatSanJose,10:30 p.m. Friday's Games Montrealat Tampa Bay, 7p.m. Detroit atBoston,7:30p.m. DallasatAnaheim,10 p.m.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook, steelhead andwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Sunday. Chnk Jchnk Btlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 1 373 5 52 18 The Daffes 311 1 23 16 John Day 20 0 10 26 15 McNary 60 1 19 11 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslastupdatedonMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 6,003 32 3, 232 1,033 The Daffes 1,546 7 176 76 John Day 90 6 36 2, 600 1,008 McNary 294 2 309 189
NHL PLAYOFFS
BASKETBALL Arizana'S GOrdan, JOhnSOn deClare far NBA draft — Aaron Gordon andNick Johnson areleaving Arizona for the NBA.One of the top freshmenduring the 2013-14 season, Gordonwas widely expected to leaveafter one season in Tucson. Johnson built up his draft stock with a superb junior season, earning numerous All-America honors and thePac-12player of year award. Johnson ledArizona with16.3 points per gamelast season while proving to be one of the nation's best perimeter defenders. Gordonvvasnamedthe Pac-12 freshman of theyear after averaging 12.4 points and 8 rebounds per game.
Cal hireS TenneSSee'S Martin aS COaCh —California hired Tennessee's CuonzoMartin as its coach Tuesday, charging him with taking over another program after a successful run by his predecessor. Martin replaces MikeMontgomery, who retired last month after six seasons in Berkeley. Martin went 63-41 in three seasonsat Tennessee, including a 24-13mark and anappearance in the regional semifinals of the NCAA tournament this season. Healso vvaspreviously the coach at Missouri State.
PrinCetOn hireS first WOmanathletiC direCtOr —IVlolie Marcoux has beenhired as Princeton's athletic director, leaving her job as a sports managementexecutive and returning to the school where she starred in hockeyand soccer. Shesucceeds Gary Walters, who said last fall he would beretiring after 20 years. Marcoux is Princeton's first female athletic director since the position was first held in1941. OregonState men's basketball coach Craig Robinson was reported to be acandidate.
HOCKEY PantherS jumPSahreS tO WinNHLdraft lOttery — The Florida Panthers bucked theodds byjumping up a spot to win the NHL draft lottery and earn the right to the top pick in June.ThePanthers, who finished 29th in the league,vaulted ahead of the last-place Buffalo Sabres, who hadthe best odds of winning the lottery held in Toronto on Tuesdaynight. The Panthers (29-45-8) had an18.8 percent chance of winning the lottery, behind only Buffalo (21-51-10), which had a 25percent shot. The top tvvo projected prospects are left wing Samuel Bennett, from Kingston of the Ontario HockeyLeague, who finished first in the final rankings released byNHLCentral Scouting last week, andthe OHL's Barrie defensemanAaron Ekblad. — Bulletin wire reports
As always,Roybold andbrash, but winning • Former Avalanche goalie broughthis fire behindthe bench By Pat Graham The Associated Press
From pulling his goalie with two, three, sometimes four minutes remaining if they're down a goal to assembling them atcenterice after apractice and having them all yell s
u
"team" at the same time. "If we want to be different than we've been in past years,
. se
ENGLEWOOD, Colo.
Patrick Roy's fiery personality was on full display in the openinggame when the Colorado coach got into a heated exchange withAnaheim, banging his hands again and again on the glass partition
then we have to do things differently," captain Gabriel Landeskog said. "It's been great to see his point of view on things. You see the team that we are. You see the team that
First-year coach Patrick Roy jas pushed all the right buttons in
we've become. "At first, you might wonder, 'What's going on here?' But it's certainly working for us."
leading a team that finished last in the Western Conference a eeaeon agoback into theplayoffs.
T he foundation fo r t h a t t ransformation was built i n
until it tilted.
That eruption set a tone for the season: The Avalanche weren't going to be pushovers. Not with the combustible
The Associated Presa file photo
Hall of Fame goaltender taking over behind the bench. Roy guided this franchisethat as a coach. — not after a bad period or a "He does that when he plays tough loss. the one he led to two Stanley Cup titles as a player — back golf, he does that when he The breathing room allowed into the playoffs by tying a plays cards, he does every- the youthful Avalanche to team record with 5 2 w i n s.
They play Minnesota in a first-round series that begins Thursday. "Patrick i s
thing to win. And that has re-
make some mistakes and learn ally translated to our team. He from them. "They need to have someone changed the whole mentality in this room, and it shows ev- who they can come up to and
Roy's very first game in charge when he lost his cool and yelled at Ducks coach Bruce Bou-
dreau, pounding on the glass. That was after a 6-1 win, too.
Roy was fined $10,000 and reprimandedby the league. Wild coach Mike Yeo jokingly said he plans to "check the partition" between the benches before the playoff series.
t h e u l t i mate ery time we go out on the ice. talk," said Roy, who's the fifth "This is a team that we have We play to win, so it's fLTn to coach in NHL history to win 50 see that." or more games in his first sea- tohave a lotofrespectfor,"Yeo As for that volatile temper, son. "It's their system." said. "They're an in-your-face the players insist they rarely Roy has been a little unteam." see it inside the locker room orthodox in running the team: Just like their coach.
winner. He doesn't accept anything less than winning," backup goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere said. "He did that as a player and he's doing
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL LET'S TRY IT AGAIN
Standings All TimesPDT
Toronto NewYork Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston
Oakland Seattle Texas Los Angeles Houston
AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 8 6 .5 7 1 7 6 .5 3 8 '/r 7
7
.5 0 0 1
6
7
.4 6 2 H / t
5
9
Central Division W L 6 8 6 6 5
4 6 7 7 7
10 7 7 6 5
4 6 7 8 9
West Division W L
.3 5 7 3
Pct GB
.6 0 0 .5 7 1 .4 6 2 H / r .4 6 2 H/r .4 1 7 2
Atlanta Washington NewYork Philadelphia Miami
9 8 7 6 6
4 6 7 7 9
Sam LeCure on Tuesday in the seventh inning of a game that
Pct GB
wassuspended
714 538 2'/r 500 3 429 4 357 5
Tuesday'sGames Chicago Cubsat NewYork, ppd,r rain Tampa Bayat Baltimore, ppd., rain ClevelandatDetroit, ppd.,inclementweather Texas 5, Seattle 0 Chicago WhiteSox2, Boston1 Kansas City4, Houston2 Toronto9, Minnesota3 Oakland10, L.A.Angels 9,11innings Today'sGames Tampa Bay(Odorizzi 1-1)at Baltimore(Mi.Gonzalez 0-1),9:35a.m. Chicag oCubs(Hammel2-0)atN.Y.Yankees(Tanaka 1-0),10:05a.m.,1st game ChicagoCubs(TWood 0-1) at N.Y.Yankees (Pineda 1-1), 4:05p.m., 2ndgame Cleveland (McAllister1-0) at Detroit (A.Sanchez0-0), 4;08 p.m. Seattle(FHea rnndez3-0) atTexas(Darvish1-0),5:05p.m. Boston(Buchholz0-1) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Joh. Danks1-0),5:10p.m. KansasCity(Guthrie2-0) at Houston (Keuchel 1-1), 5:10 p.m. Toronto(Dickey1-2) atMinnesota(Pelfrey0 2),510 pm. Oakland(Milone 0-1) atL.A.Angels (Skaggs 1-0), 7:05 p.m. Thursday'sGames ClevelandatDetroit, 10:08a.m. TorontoatMinnesota,10:10a.m. SeattleatTexas,11:05a.m. N.Y.Yankeesat TampaBay,4:10 p.m. Bostonat ChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. KansasCityatHouston, 5:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L
Pittsburgh's Andrew McCutchen advances to third on a wild pitch by Cincinnati relief pitcher
Pct GB
.6 9 2 571 H / t .5 0 0 2 '/r .4 6 2 3 .4 0 0 4
after six innings
Monday evening by rain in Cincinnati. McCutchen scored later in the inning in the game. Pittsburgh won 8-7. Ai Behrman/The Associated Press
White Sox 2, RedSox1
Rangers 5, Mariners 0
CHICAGO —Alexei Ramirez scored the winning run in the bottom of the ninth inning on a throwing error. Tied at one,Red Sox reliever BurkeBadenhopallowed a one-out single to Ramirez. After Tyler Flowers struck out, Chris Capuano replacedBadenhop. Capuanowalked AdamEaton to moveRamireztosecond.Then with a 3-2 count, Marcus Semien hit a grounder to XanderBogaerts at shortstop, who one-hopped his throw to first basemanMike Carp. Carp wasn't able to scoop the throw and Ramirez, whowas already running on the pitch, never stopped when rounding third and scored without a throw.
Prince Fielder andKevin Kouzmanoff hit back-to-back home runs off Blake Beavanbefore the fill-in starter left with a sore shoulder and RobbieRoss limited Seattle to five singles in 7 2/3 innings. The Mariners were held scoreless for the third time in aweek, but in this one, they didn't get a runner pastsecond base. Seatge Texas ab r h bi ab r hbi A lmontcf 4 0 1 0 Choolf 4010 BMillerss 2 0 0 0 Andrusss 4 1 2 0 C ano2b 4 0 1 0 Riosrf 4010 Hartdh 4 0 2 0 Fielder1b 3 2 1 1 MSndrspr -dh0 0 0 0 Kzmnff 3b 4 2 3 3 Romerrf 3 0 1 0 Morlnddh 3 0 2 1 Ackleyph-If 1 0 0 0 DMrph2b 3 0 0 0 Seager 3b 4 0 0 0 LMartn cf 2 0 0 0 Smoak1b 4 0 1 0 Choiceph-cf 1 0 0 0 Blmqstlf-rf 4 0 1 0 Chirinsc 3 0 1 0 Zuninoc 4 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 0 7 0 Totals 3 15 115 Seattle 0 00 000 000 — 0 Texas 020 000 03x — 6 DP —Seattle1. LOB—Seattle 9, Texas5. 2B—An-
National League
Pirates 8, Reds7 CINCINNATI —Andrew McCutchen doubled andcame around on Russell Martin's single in the seventh inning in the completion of a gamethatspannedtwodaysand 10 home runs. The NLCentral rivals put on a record-setting show Monday night before the game was suspended in a7-all tie after six innings because of rain. They combined for10 homers in those six innings, the most for a game in Great American Ball Park's 12 seasons.
Marlins11, Nationals 2
Rockies 3, Padres 2
MIAMI — Giancarlo Stanton tied a career high with five RBls, including a three-run homer off Stephen Strasburg, and theMiami Marlins broke an eight-game losing streak. Strasburg enduredanother rough outing in Miami, allowing six runs and eight hits in four innings. Both benches andbullpens cleared briefly in the fourth inning when the Nationals' lan Desmondand Marlins catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchiaengagedinaheated,nose-tonose conversation at homeplate.
SAN DIEGO— Juan Nicasio pitched six solid innings andColorado recorded a rare roadvictory. Nicasio limited the light-hitting
Padres to two runs on six hits. The right-hander allowed hits to San Diego's first four batters in the first inning as thePadrestook a 2-0 lead. Rockies scratched together a single run in three separate innings. Colorado
San Diego
ab r hbi ab r hbi Barnesrf 3 0 0 0 Venalecf 3 1 2 0 Blckmnph-rf 1 0 0 0 Nadyph-rf 0 0 0 0 Washmgton Miami Cuddyr1b 4 1 1 0 Amarstss 4 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi R endon3b 3 0 1 0 Yelichlf 4 2 2 0 Loganp 0 0 0 0 S.Smithlf 3 0 2 1 Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 Gyorko2b 4 0 1 1 Harperlf 4 1 1 0 Ozunacf 5 3 4 1 Dickrsnph 0 0 0 0 Headly3b 4 0 0 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 Stantonrf 4 3 2 5 Werthrf 1 0 0 0 GJones1b 5 0 1 1 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 Alonso1b 4 0 1 0 Souzarf 1 0 1 0 McGeh3b 5 0 3 2 CGnzlzlf 4 0 1 0 Denorfirf-cf 4 0 1 0 LaRoch1b 3 0 0 0 Sltlmchc 5 0 1 0 Tlwtzkss 3 2 2 0 Hundlyc 4 0 0 0 Dsmndss 2 0 0 0 Dietrch2b 4 1 1 0 R osarioc 4 0 3 1 Erlinp 1000 Waltersss 2 1 1 1 Hchvrrss 3 2 1 0 Arenad3b 3 0 1 1 Stauffrp 1 0 0 0 Espinos2b 4 0 0 0 Koehlerp 2 0 0 0 S tubbscf 4 0 0 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 McLothcf 3 0 0 0 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 4 02 1 Grandlph 0 0 0 0 Leonc 4010 Nicasiop 3 0 0 0 Cashnrpr 0 0 0 0 Strasrgp 1 0 0 0 Bettisp 0 0 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 TMooreph 1 0 0 0 Mornea 1b 1 0 0 0 Roach p 0 0 0 0 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 10 3 Totals 3 2 2 8 2 Blevinsp 0 0 0 0 C olorado 010 1 1 0 000 — 3 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 S an Diego 200 0 0 0 000 — 2 Frndsnph-If 2 0 0 0 E — H e adl e y (4). DP —Colorado 2, SanDiego2. Totals 3 1 2 5 1 Totals 3 711159 LOB — C o lor ado 9, Sa n Diego6. 28—Tulowitzki (4), Washing ton Ogg Ogg 011 — 2 Miami 330 OBB Ogx — 11 Arenado(4), Venable(3), S.Smith(3). SB—Blackmon
E—Werth (1), Stammen (1), Ozuna (1). DP—Mi- (4), Cuddyer (1). CS—Venable(1). SF—Arenado. IP H R E R BBSO ami 1. LOB —Washington 7, Miami8. 28—Stanton 5). 38 — Hechavarria (2). HR—Walters(1), Stanton Colorado N icasio W, 2 -0 6 6 2 2 1 3 5). S—Koehler2. IP H R E R BBSO Bettis H,1 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 Washington LoganH,1 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 StrasburgL,1-2 4 8 6 6 3 5 OttavinoH,4 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Stammen 1 6 5 5 1 1 HawkinsS,3-3 1 1 0 0 0 0 Blevins 1 0 0 0 0 2 San Diego Clippard 1 0 0 0 0 2 Erlin L,1-1 42-3 6 3 3 1 7 R.Soriano 1 1 0 0 0 1 Stauffer 12-3 2 0 0 1 2 Miami A.Torres 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 KoehlerW,2-1 7 1 0 0 5 3 Thayer 1 1 0 0 0 2 Da.Jennings 2 4 2 1 0 3 Roach 1 0 0 0 2 0 WP —Strasburg,Koehler, Da.Jennings. T—3:29. A—18,012(42,302). T—2:54.A—19,931 (37,442).
I)
Cardinals 6, Brewers1
Leaders
AMERICAN LEAGUE BAlTING —AIRamirez, Chicago, .415; Wieters, MILWAUKEE — Shelby Miller Ellsbury,NewYork,.362; Kubel, Minstruck out sevenandallowed three Baltimore,.366; Central Division nesota,.357;Solarte,NewYork,.357; RDavis, Detroit, Pitlsburgh Cincinnati hits over six innings, and MarkEl- .345; Lcain,KansasCity,.342. W L Pct GB ab r hbi ab r hbi Milwaukee 10 4 . 7 14 RUNS —Dozier, Minnesota,14; Eaton,Chicago, Martelf 5 2 2 1 BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 lis had two RBls in his return from 14; Bautista, Toronto, 12; Calhoun,Los Angeles, St. Louis 9 5 .6 4 3 1 S niderrf 5 1 1 1 Votto1b 3 2 1 2 the disabled list to lead St. Louis. Pittsburgh 7 7 .5 0 0 3 12; AIRam irez, Chicago,12;Trout, LosAngeles, 11; AMcctcf 5 1 3 1 Phillips2b 4 0 1 0 Cincinnati 5 9 .3 5 7 5 Boston Chicago Donaldson,Oakland,10; Lowrie,Oakland,10; Plouffe, PAlvrz3b 5 0 0 0 Frazier3b 4 2 2 2 St. Louis Milwaukee Chicago 4 8 .3 3 3 5 ab r hbi ab r hbi Minnesota,10. R Martnc 5 0 1 1 Brucerf 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi West Division G Sizmrlf 4 0 0 0 Eatoncf 4 0 1 0 RBI—Colabelo, Minnesota,15;Abreu,Chicago, NWalkr2b 5 2 3 2 Ludwcklf 4 1 1 2 Mcrpnt3b 3 1 0 0 CGomzcf 2 0 0 0 W L P c t G B Bogartsss 4 0 0 0 Semien2b 5 0 0 0 14; Ibanez,LosAngeles, 12; Moss,Oakland, 12; C raigrf 4 0 1 1 Segurass 4 0 0 0 Los Angeles 9 4 .6 9 2 D.crtizdh 4 0 0 0 Gigaspi3b 4 0 0 0 drus (3),Kouzmanoff 2 (3). HR —Fielder (1), Kouz- GSnchz1b 4 2 2 2 Mesorcc 4 1 1 1 AIRamirez,Chicago,12;DavMurphy, Cleveland, 11; Barmesss 4 0 2 0 Cozartss 3 0 0 0 Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 Braunrf 4 0 1 0 SanFrancisco 8 5 .6 1 5 1 Napoli1b 3 0 1 0 Abreu1b 3 0 0 0 manoff(1). CS—Andrus(2), Rios (2). S—Moreland. Bautista,Toronto,10; Brantley,Cleveland, 10;CesManessp 0 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 1 1 1 Colorado 7 8 .4 6 7 3 Pedroiapr-2bg 0 0 0 A.Dunndh 1 1 1 1 IP H R E R BBSO WRdrgp 2 0 0 0 Lecurep 0 0 0 0 pedes,0akland,10;Trout,LosAngeles,10. Tabataph 1 0 0 0 Christnp 0 0 0 0 SanDiego 6 8 .4 2 9 3'/r Navarf 3 1 1 1 LeGarcpr-dh 0 0 0 0 Seatlle Hollidy If 4 1 1 1 Lucroy c 3 0 0 0 HITS —AIRamirez, Chicago,22; Mecabrera,ToMAdms1b 4 0 2 0 KDavislf 2 0 0 0 Arizona 4 1 3 . 235 7 JGomsph-rf 1 0 0 0 Viciedorf 4 0 2 0 BeavanL,0-1 4 6 2 2 0 1 Morrisp 0 0 0 0 Berndnph 1 0 0 0 ronto,21;Trout,LosAngeles,19; Eaton, Chicago,18; YMolinc 3 3 1 0 MrRynl1b 3 0 0 0 Tuesday'sGames Przynsc 2 0 0 0 DeAzalf 3 0 0 0 Leone 2 1 0 0 0 2 W atsonp 0 0 0 0 Baileyp 1 0 0 0 Andrus ,Texas,17;Donaldson,Oakland,17;Eff sbury, JhPerltss 4 1 2 2 Gennett2b 2 0 1 0 Pittsburgh8, Cincinnati7, comp.ofsusp. game RRorts3b 3 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 3 1 1 0 Beimel 1 1 0 0 1 1 Ishikawph 0 0 0 0 N.Sotoph 1 1 1 0 NewYork,17. M.Ellis2b 3 0 0 2 Bianchiph-2b 1 0 0 0 Atlantaat Philadelphia, ppd.,rain Carpph-1b 1 0 0 0 Flowrsc 4 0 0 0 Wilhelmsen 1 3 3 3 1 1 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Griffip 0 0 0 0 RSantgss 1 0 1 0 Bourjoscf 4 0 1 0 Estrad p 2 0 0 0 DOUBLES — Colabello,Minnesota,6;DeJennings, Chicago Cubsat NewYork, ppd., rain BrdlyJrcf 2 0 0 0 Texas Heiseyph 1 0 0 0 TampaBay,6;SPerez,KansasCity,6;Solarte,New Cincinnati 7,Pittsburgh5 JHerrr2b-3b 3 0 1 0 RossJr.W,1-0 7 2 - 3 5 0 0 0 2 SMifferp 2 0 0 0 Thrnrg p 0 0 0 0 Totals 41 8 148 Totals 3 4 7 8 7 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0Dukep 0 0 0 0 York, 6; Beltran,NewYork, 5; Acabrera, Cleveland, Miami11,Washington2 Totals 30 1 3 1 Totals 3 1 2 5 1 Ogando H,2 120 0 2 2 100 — 8 Descalph 5; 23 tiedat4. St. Louis6,Milwaukee1 Boston 0 00 100 000 — 1 Cotts 1 1 0 0 0 0 P itlsburgh s 0 0 0 0 Weeksph 1 0 0 0 Cincinnati 200 2 2 1 Ogg — 7 Roinsn HBP —byRossJr.(B.Miler, B,Miger), ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 TRIPLE S— Aoki,KansasCity,2;Aybar,LosAngeN.Y.Mets9,Arizona0 Chicago 010 000 001 — 2 LOB — P itt s burgh 7, Ci n ci n nati 3. 28 — M ar t e (3), T—2:22.A—26,628 (48,114). Colorado 3, SanDiego2 Two outswhenwinning runscored. Totals 32 6 8 6 Totals 2 8 1 3 1 les, 2;Fuld,Oakland, 2; 31tiedat1. A.Mccutchen (3), Fra z i e r (1), N. S oto (1). HR — M arte L.A.DodgersatSanFrancisco (n) E—Bogaerts (2). LOB —Boston 6, Chicago10. St. Louis 0 11 100 003 — 6 HOMERUN S—Bautista, Toronto, 5; Trout, Los (1), Snider(3),N.Walker 2(4), G.Sanchez2 (2), Vot- Milwaukee Today'sGames 2B — Viciedo(4). HR —Nava(2),A.Dunn(3). CS—De 0 00 100 000 — 1 Angeles,5; Abreu,Chicago,4; MeCabrera, Toronto, to (3), Frazie(3), r Ludwick (2), Mesoraco(3). S—B. DP — St. Louis 1. LOB Pittsburgh(Liriano 0-2) at Cincinnati (Cueto0-2), Aza(1). — S t. Loui s 2, Mil w au4; Dozier,Minnesota,4; Pujols, LosAngeles,4; 20 Hamilton. 9:35a.m. IP H R E R BBSO Athletics10, Angels 9, 11 inn. kee 4. 28—Craig(1), Jh.Peralta(2). HR —Hogiday tied at3. IP H R E R BBSO 1), Jh.Peralta(4), Chicag oCubs(Hammel2-0)atN.Y.YankeesPanaka Boston Ar.Ramirez (2). CS —Lucroy (1). ), STOLENBASES— Eff sbury,New York,6;RDavis, Pittsburgh F—M.Elis. 1-0)r1005am.,1stgame Peavy 6 3 1 1 4 8 ANAHEIM, Calif.— Josh DonaldDetroit, 5;Altuve,Houston, 4; Andrus, Texas, 4;8 tied W .Rodri g uez 5 6 6 6 1 2 St. Louis(J.Kegy1-0) at Milwaukee(W.Peralta1-0), IP H R E R BBSO Tazawa 1 1 0 0 0 1 son drove in JedLowrie with an at 3. MorrisW2-0BS,1-1 1 1 1 1 0 2 St. Louis 10:10a.m. A.Miller 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 PITCHING —FHernandez, Seattle, 3-0; Sale,ChiWatsonH,3 1 1 0 0 0 1 S.MigerW,1-2 N.Y.Mets(GeeH) atArizona(Mccarlhy0-2), 12:40p.m. BadenhopL,0-2 1 6 3 1 1 3 7 cago 3-0 BuehrleToronto 3-0 20tiedat2. 1 1 0 1 1 11th-inning double, andOakland MelanconH,5 1 0 0 0 1 0 Neshek Atlanta (Teheran 1-1) at Philadelphia (CI.Lee2-1), Capuano H,2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 overcame Mike Trout' s tying hoE RA — D a r vish,Texas,0.00;Feldman,Houston, Griffi S,4-5 1 0 0 0 0 2 SiegristH,4 4:05 p.m. 1 0 0 0 0 1 0.44; Ventura,KansasCity, 0.69;Tilman,Baltimore, Chicago ChicagoCubs(TWood 0-1) at N.Y.Yankees (Pineda Er.Johnson 62-3 3 1 1 2 9 mer in the ninth. Lowrie led off the Cincinnati Maness 1 0 0 0 0 2 0.84; BuehrleToronto, , 0.86; Gray,Oakland, 0.95; Bailey 5 8 5 5 0 9 Milwaukee 1-1), 4:05p.m., 2ndgame Downs 1 0 0 0 0 1 11th with a single against Yoslan Oakland, 1.35. 2 2 2 0 2 Estrada Washington (Roark 1-0) at Miami(Fernandez2-1), Petricka L,1-1 6 5 3 3 1 3 Jchavez, 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Herrera, the Angels' seventh pitch- HooverBS,2-2 1 STRIKE OUTS—FHernandez, Seattle, 30;Scherzer, LecureL,0-1 2 3 1 1 1 3 Thornburg 4:10 p.m. 1 0 0 0 0 1 Veal 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Colorado(J.DeLaRosa0-2) at SanDiego(Cashner D.WebbW,1-0 1 - 3 Duke 1 0 0 0 0 1 Detroit, 25;CWilson,LosAngeles, 24; Price,Tampa 0 0 0 0 0 er. Donaldson hit a sharp grounder Christiani WP — B ailey, L e cure. B ay, 2 2 ; J ch avez,Oakland,22;Sabathia,NewYork, 1-1), 7:10p.m. Henderson 1 3 3 3 0 1 Capuano pitchedto2 battersin the9th. inside third base for theAL-leading T—3:07(Raindelay:1:38). A—17,756(42,319). HBP —bySiegrist (C.Gom LA. Dodgers(Maholm0-1) at SanFrancisco (Vogel- HBP—byVeal(Pierzynski). WP—Veal. ez), byEstrada(Y.Molina). 21; Peavy,Boston, 20; Lester, Boston,20. A's. Trout hit a two-run shot in the WP —Estrada. SAVES —Holland, KansasCity, 4; Balfour,Tampa song0-0),7:15p.m. T—3:36. A—13,402(40,615). T—2:41.A—27,470 (41,900). Bay, 4;Axford, Cleveland,4; Santos, Toronto, 4; PerThursday'sGames ninth for the Angels, who have l o st Reds 7, Pirates 5 kins, Minnesota,3; Rodn ey, Seattle, 3; TomHunter, Atlanta atPhiladelphia, 10:05a.m. three of four. Baltimore,3; Kelley,NewYork, 3. LA. Dodgers atSanFrancisco, 12:45p.m. Mets 9, Di amon db ack s 0 Blue Jays 9, Twins 3 Coloradoat San Diego,3:40p.m. N ATIONAL LEAGUE CINCINNATI —Mike Leake Milwaukee atPittsburgh, 4;05 p.m. Oakland Los Angeles BATTING —utley, Philadelphia, .489; Blackm on, doubled and hit a two-run homer St. LouisatWashington, 4:05p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi PHOENIX— Kirk Nieuwenhuis had Colorado,.468;Pagan,SanFrancisco,.412; Freeman, MINNEAPOLIS — Jose Bautista Jasoc 5 0 0 1 Calhonrf 6 3 3 2 Tuesday night, ending Gerrit Cole's three hits and threeRBls in his sea- Atlanta,.404;DGordon, LosAngeles, .400; Bonifacio, had three hits and anRBI,and B arton1b 1 0 0 0 Troutcf 6 2 3 3 winning streak andleading Cincingo,.392;Adams,St.Louis,.370. American League son debut andJenrry Mejia pitched Chica Brett Lawrie hit a grand slam in Lowriess 5 2 3 1 Pujols1b 5 0 0 0 RUNS —Freeman,Atlanta, 12;Stanton, Miami, 12; nati. Leake gave up three runs and Dnldsn3b 6 1 3 1 Ibanezdh 6 0 0 0 five effective innings in a combi n ed 10 tied at11. the ninth inning. Moss1b-rf 6 1 1 1 HKndrc2b 5 1 2 1 five hits in 6 2/3 innings. Leake RBI—Stanton, Miami, 21; Trumbo,Arizona, 18; Royals 4, Astros 2 three-hitter for NewYork. C espdsIf 5 1 1 0 ShuckIf 5 1 1 0 AdGonzalez,LosAngeles, 14;CGonzalez,Colorado, Toronto Minnesota doubled and scored in the third. Callaspdh 5 0 1 1 Freese3b 4 1 2 1 13; McGeh ee,Miami,13; ArRamirez, Milwaukee,12; ab r hbi ab r hbi HOUSTON — Rookie Yordano Reddckrf 1 2 0 0 Cowgillpr 0 0 0 0 New York Arizona Rendon,Washington,12. Mecarrlf 4 0 1 0 Dozier2b 3 1 0 0 DNorrsph-c 3 0 2 2 Congerc 1 0 0 0 Pitlsburgh Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi Ventura threw sevensolid innings HITS — Bla ckmon, Colorado, 22; Goldschmidt, Kawsk2b 5 1 2 0 Mauer1b 5 0 1 1 G entrycf 4 2 3 0 lannettc 1 1 1 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi EYonglf 5 2 3 2 GParrarf 3 0 0 0 Arizona,22;Utley, Philadelphia,22;Pagan, SanFranfor first major leaguewin. Omar Bautistcf 5 1 3 1 Plouffe3b 5 1 1 1 Sogard2b 4 1 2 2 IStewrtph-3b 2 0 0 0 M artelf 4 0 0 0 Heiseylf 4 0 1 0 DnMrp2b 5 2 2 0 Prado3b 4 0 0 0 cisco, 21;Adams,St. Louis,20;Bonifacio, Chicago, inddh 2 1 1 0 Colaellrf 5 0 3 1 Crispph 1 0 0 0 Aybarss 5 0 0 0 S niderrf 3 0 0 0 Broxtnp 0 0 0 0 DWrght3b 5 0 2 0 Gldsch1b 4 0 1 0 Infante homeredand drove in two LTholeph 20; ArRam irez, Milwaukee,20;Stanton, Miami, 20. -dh 2 0 0 0 Kubellf 3 0 0 0 Punto2b 0 0 0 0 Tabataph-rf 1 0 0 0 Votto1b 4 1 4 1 Duda1b 4 1 0 1 Monterc 4 0 0 0 runs for the Royals. DOUBLE S—Goldschmidt, Arizona,7; Uribe, Los E ncrnc1b 4 2 2 1 Pintodh 3 0 0 0 Totals 46 10169 Totals 4 6 9 129 AMcctcf 4 1 1 0 Phiffips2b 5 0 2 0 A Brwnrf 4 1 1 2 Hill2b 4000 Angeles, 7;Utley, Philadelphia,7; Adams,St. Louis, Navarrc 4 2 1 0 KSuzukc 3 0 0 0 Oakland 003 000 240 01P Alvrz3b 3 2 1 0 Brucerf 4 1 0 0 N iwnhscf 5 1 3 3 Trumolf 3 0 0 0 Sierrarf 4 1 1 1 A.Hickscf 3 0 0 0 6; Ecabrera,SanDiego, 6; Hill, Arizona, 6; Lucroy, KansasCity Houston 10 RMartnc 4 0 0 1 Frazier3b 3 2 1 2 dArnadc 2 1 0 0 Owingsss 2 0 1 0 Lawrie3b 4 1 1 5 Flormnss 2 1 1 0 Milwaukee, 6; HRamirez,LosAngeles,6. ab r hbi ab r hbi Los Angeles 2 0 0 4 0 0 012 00 NWalkr2b 4 2 2 2 Berndncf-If 3 0 1 0 Quntnllss 4 1 1 0 Pogockcf 3 0 1 0 TRIPLES —Hechavarria, Miami,2; Rendon,WashA okirf 4 1 1 0 Fowlercf 4 1 1 0 Goinsss 5 0 2 0 EEscorph-ss 1 0 1 0 9 GSnchz1b 4 0 2 1 Mesorcc 4 0 3 2 Mejiap 3 0 0 0 Arroyop 1 0 0 0 Totals 39 9 148 Totals 3 3 3 7 3 E—Donaldson(2). LOB—Oakland9, LosAngeles Mercer ington, 2;Simmons,Atlanta, 2; 38tiedat1. Infante2b 3 2 1 2 Presleyrl 3 0 0 0 ss 3 0 1 1 Cozart ss 4 1 0 0 Germnp 1 0 0 0 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Toronto 0 00 006 004 — 9 8. 28 — Lowrie 2 (3), Donaldson (4), Cespedes (4), C olep 2 0 0 0 Leakep 3 2 2 2 Frnswrp 0 0 0 0 EChavzph 1 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 3 0 2 1 Jcastrodh 4 0 1 0 HOME RUNS — Trumbo, Arizona,6; PAlvarez, M innesota 110 0 0 0 001 — 3 Calhoun(4),Trout(3), lanneta(3). HR BButlerdh 3 0 0 1 Altuve2b 3 0 0 0 —Calhoun (3), I shikawph 1 0 0 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh,5;Belt,SanFrancisco,5; AdGonzalez, Los E—Encarnacion (1), K.Suzuki (1). DP—Toronto1, Trout(5).SB—Trout (1), lannetta (1). AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 Carter1b 4 0 0 0 JuWlsn p 0 0 0 0 BHmltnph-cf 1 0 1 0 P utzp 0 0 0 0 Angeles, 5;Stanton,Miami,5; Walker, Pittsburgh,5; Minnesota1. LOB—Toronto 9, Minnesota 11.2BS.Perezc 4 0 1 0 MDmn3b 4 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO JGomzp 0 0 0 0 Campnph 1 0 0 0 6tied at4. Mostks3b 4 00 0 Grssmnlf 4 0 0 0 Kawasaki(1), Bautista(2), Colabello(6). 3B—FloriOakland JHrrsnph 1 0 0 0 A.Reed p 0 0 0 0 STOLEN BASES—DGordon, LosAngeles,9; Bonm on (1). HR — La w rie (3), Pl o uffe (1). SB — A .H ick s 3 2-3 7 6 6 1 3 Lcain cf 4 1 2 0 Corprn c 3 1 1 1 Straily Totals 34 5 7 5 Totals 3 5 7 157 Totals 38 9 12 8 Totals 3 0 0 3 0 ifacio,Chicago,7; EYoung, NewYork, 7;Revere, PhilAEscorss 4 0 0 0 Viffarss 2 0 0 0 (2). S —Florimon.SF—Lawrie. Pomeranz 22-3 0 0 0 1 2 P itlsburgh 010 1 0 0 120 — 5 N ew York 300 6 0 0 000 — 9 adelphia, 5;Blackmon, Colorado, 4; Ccrawford, Los IP H R E R BBSO Cook Totals 33 4 7 4 Totals 3 1 2 4 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 Cincinnati 001 0 0 4 2 0x — 7 Arizona 0 00 000 000 — 0 es,4;Heyward, Atlanta,4; Owings, Arizona,4. 2-3 2 0 0 0 2 E—Leake (1). DP—Pittsburgh 2. LOB—PittsE—Pollock (1). LOB—New York 6, Arizona5. Angel K ansas City 1 0 2 0 1 0 000 — 4 Toronto OteroH,1 PITCHING —Greinke, LosAngeles, 3-0; Lynn,St. Morrow 3 2-3 4 2 2 4 4 Houston 100 010 000 — 2 Doolittle BS,1-2 1 2 2 2 0 1 burgh 7,Cincinnati9. 28—G.Sanchez(2), Mercer(1), 28 — Quintanilla (1). HR —Nieuwenhuis (1). SF—A. Louis, 3-0;Avilan,Atlanta,3-1;28tied at2. E—Ventura (1), Grossman(1). LOB—Kansas Loup W 1-0 11-3 0 0 0 1 1 Ji.Johnson W,2-2 2 1 0 0 1 1 Leake(1). HR —N.Walker (5), Frazier(4), Leake (1). Brown. ERA —ESantana, Atlanta, 0.64; Harang,Atlanta, 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 Los Angeles SB—PAlvarez(2), Heisey(2), Bruce(1), Bernadma City 6,Houston5. 28—Hosmer (4), S.Perez(6), L. WagnerH,2 IP H R E R BBSO 0.96; Gaffardo,Milwaukee,0.96; Simon,Cincinnati, 1 1 0 0 1 2 Richards Cain (2),Fowler(3). HR—Infante (1), Corporan(2). Cecil H,4 7 8 5 5 2 5 (1). CS —B.Hamilton(2). S—Heisey. SF—Mercer. New york 1.20; Cashner,SanDiego,1.29; Volquez,Pittsburgh, DelabarH,2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 J.SmithBS,1-1 0 SF — B.Butler. 3 4 4 2 0 IP H R E R BBSO MejiaW,2-0 1.29;Sam ardzija, Chicago,1.29. 1 2 1 1 0 1 J.Alvarez IP H R E R BBSO Santos 0 1 0 0 0 0 Pitlsburgh Germen STRIKE OUTS—Strasburg, Washington, 33;WainKansasCity Minnesota Kohn 1 0 0 0 1 1 Cole L,2-1 6 9 5 5 3 3 Farnsworth wright, St. Louis,24;Fernandez, Miami, 23; Cueto, 2-3 2 2 2 1 0 VenturaW,1-0 7 4 2 1 3 7 HughesL,0-1 5 8 4 4 1 7 Salas 1 0 0 0 0 1 Ju.Wilson Arizona 1 1-3 4 0 0 0 1 W.DavisH,2 1 0 0 0 0 2 Tonkin 1 2 1 1 0 0 Frieri 1 2 0 0 0 1 J.Gomez ArroyoL,1-1 31- 3 10 9 9 1 1 Cincinnati,23;Ryu,LosAngeles,22; Lynn,St.Louis, SanDiego,22. 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Y.HerreraL,0-1 1 G.HollandS,4-4 1 0 0 0 0 3 Thielbar 2 1 1 1 2 Cincinnati Delgado 12-3 0 0 0 1 2 22; Cashner, SAVES —Kimbrel, Atlanta, 5; Griffi, Pittsburgh,4; 12-3 1 0 0 1 0 J.Smithpitchedto 5baters in the8th. Hoiistoti Swarzak LeakeW,2-1 6 2 - 3 5 3 3 1 8 O.Perez 2 1 0 0 0 4 1 1-3 1 2 2 1 1 Putz Harrell L,0-3 5 5 4 4 3 4 Burton 1 1 4 4 3 0 J.Alvarezpitchedto1 batter inthe8th. M.ParraH,1 1 1 0 0 0 1 Street,SanDiego, 4;Jansen, LosAngeles, 4; FRodriWP — Richards. Clemens 3 2 0 0 0 1 Hughes pitchedto4 batters inthe6th. BroxtonS,1-1 1 1 0 0 1 0 A.Reed 1 0 0 0 0 2 guez,Milwaukee,4; Rosenthal, St. Louis,4; Hawkins, —byLoup (Kubel). HBP —byLeake(Marte). WP—Cole, M.Parra. HBP—byDelgado(Duda). Colorado,3; Romo, SanFrancisco, 3; Papelbon, PhilFields 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP T—4;12.A—34,887 (45,483). T—3:13. A—18,462(42,319). T—2:45.A—29,778 (42,060). T—3:31. A—21,818(39,021). T—2:49.A—21,969 (48,633). adelphia,3; AReed, Arizona, 3.
Ducks Continued from C1 Without Addison, Oregon loses its top four receivers from last year who
combined for 168 receptions. The top returnee is senior Keanon Lowe, who had 18 catches for 233 yards and
three touchdowns. "He's huge out there," Mariota said of Lowe. "He's that steady fac-
tor for guys outside. No matter what, younger guys look up to him. He is an awesome role model. He will
teach those guys the right way to do
ing last year because of injury. New
banged up in my first fall camp, so I was looking forward to getting some freshmen Devon Allen and Darren playing time in the spring game (on Carrington and true freshman Jalen May 3)," Carrington said. Brown. Now Carrington hopes to be ful"I think any one of those guys can ly healthy to compete for time in the step up and be that guy," Mariota fall. "Bralon, to me, is our go-to guy said. "There is a reason why they are here. They have the ability and talent here," Carrington said. "So with that to go out there and produce. These happening, I think a lot of us young guys really look forward to stepping receivers have to step up and make up and are motivated out there. I look plays. We definitely have those playforward to seeing them play." makers that have the potential to Carrington injured hi s h a nd make plays and have a breakout seaduring spring practice and said he is son like Bralon." additions next season are redshirt
improve. "He is a guy with obvious has good hands and is nice with it afincredible natural ability from a ter the catch. He gets yards. No matspeed standpoint, but putting it to-
ter what, that dude is an athlete and
gether play after play after play. If it is lining up, blocking, whatever the assignment is, being locked in and rolling. At times, he has looked great. The other day he had a big play at
he'll find his role on the team."
the end ofour scrimmage to score a
out of that group last year with 16
Oregon also returns three veteran tight ends, although Pharaoh Brown
has been injured in the spring. Johnny Mundt was the leading receiver
touchdown but five others where he catches as a freshman; Brown had 10 either had assignment errors, missed and Evan Baylis had four. "They have gotten better, particualignments, or busts or things that can't happen." larly Evan at the line of scrimmage, The wild card in the mix is Johna-
than Loyd, the point guard in basketit." not sure if he will be able to practice Potential has always been the word ball who joined the football team last The only other returning wide re- again before the preseason sessions. used to describe Kelley, the 6-foot-2 week to play for one season. "He's done well for a guy that ceivers who caught a pass last season He said he is only able to run along speedster who has just six catches in hasn't played in a few years," Mariota are Chance Allen with five catches, the sidelines during practice while two seasons. "In his particular case, consis- said ofLoyd. "He has come out and Blake Stanton with two and B.J. Kel- staying mentally ready. "It is really frustrating because tency," is where Oregon head coach tried to learn as much as he can. I am ley with one. Dwayne Stanford had ll catchesas a freshman before miss- coming in as a freshman, I got Mark Helfrich said Kelley needs to excited to see where he's going. He
and Johnny is more comfortable with
everythinghe is doing," Helfrich said. "He needs to cut it loose. He is not the fastest guy in the world, so when you have hesitancy combined with that, you have to play faster. With those two and Pharaoh and a couple other
guys, I expect big things out of that position."
C4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
PREP ROUNDUP
ie u a oeSSa Bulletin staff report
County forfeits to claim the
mit's Connor Steele and Davis
MOLALLA — Madras continued its stellar start to the
Intermountain Hybrid victo-
Calande 6-3, 6-3.
ry. Elsa Harris had a straight2014 girls tennis season Tues- set win at No. 1 singles for the day, surging past host Molalla Cowgirls, Maggie Kasberger 5-3 in a Class 4A/3A/2A/1A won at No. 4 singles, and LauSpecial District 2 match. ra Fraser and Gwyneth PtomRo m e ro ,
Meg a n
0: REDMOND — Behind a 6-1, improve to 4-0 in league play. 6-0 win by Caitlin Carr at No.
Foristall wa s
p a r ticularly 1 singles, the Ravens cruised
gles matches and two extreme-
and James Rockettscored four
ly competitive doubles con-
apiece to lead the visiting Lava Bears to the High Desert Con-
tests to take the Intermountain
a 7-5, 6-3 win over the Ravens' T.J. Smith.
to an Intermountain Hybrid
singles match 6-1, 6-1. In doubles play, Wendy
victory over the visiting Cougars. The closest match of
DRAS — Jacob Rudd won
L o rena A l onso the day was at No. 4 doubles,
the tandem of Joey Jiminez
and Voshaun Bryant won 6-0, 6-0 at No. 4 doubles, and the
and Stephanie Olivera were
White Buffaloes escaped with
also victorious for Madras, bourn and Angie Vasquez 5-7, a Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Special boasting a 6-0, 6-0 doubles 6-1, 12-10. District 2 win. win. BOYS TENNIS Sisters 4, Canyonville 1: The Buffs continue league Summit 8, Bend 0:The visitB LACK BUTTE RANCH play today at home with a ing Storm posted three 6-0, 6-0 The Outlaws won three of S pecial D i strict
2 mat c h
against Central.
victories — including Carter
had three goals and Chance Beutler added two for Bend, which claimed its fifth consec-
in assists with four, and Hin-
four singles matches and the
Class4A/3A/2A/1A Special District2 Madras 4,Molalla 4 Bend (2-0 HDC, 7-1 overall) (Madraswins ingames90-52) led 12-0 at halftime against At Madras Singles — NoelCardenas,Mad,def.Johnny the Panthers (0-4, 1-4). Hutchison,Mol,7-5,6-3; EricDickson,Mol, def. SiBASEBALL mon Sangha,Mad,6-2, 4-6, 6-4; JacobRudd, Mad, Gladstone 6, Madras 4: def. EddieRivera, Mol, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3;TrevorMils, Mol, def.GustavoEnriquez, Mad, 7-5,7-5. Doubles MADRAS — S even errors — JesseStutzman/Emmett Copher, Mol, def.Jered doomed the White Buffaloes Pichette/Oved Felix, Mad,3-6, 6-2, 6-3;SkylerFister/ N athan Wiliams,Mol,def.JosephCalica/Ricky Salgaagainst the Gladiators in the do, Mad, 6-1,6-1; Oma r Dominguez/ObieEriza, Mad, Tri-Valley Conference game. def. GarrettThrower/Damon Seward, Mol, 6-0, 6-4; oeyJiminez/VoshaunBryant, Mad,def.David Quiroz/ Cody Shepherd highlighted JVictor Soriano, Mol,6-0, 6-0.
were credited with two apiece.
take the Class 5A Special Dis-
Fullhart, Trevor Standen and
4-for-4 performance that in-
Redmond 5, Crook County trict 1 win. The Lava Bears' Evan Rickards all won sin- cluded a triple and two RBIs. 3: PRINEVILLE — J essica most competitive match came gles matches for Sisters. Ethan Parker Dominguez added two Brunot won 6-4, 4-6, 11-9 at No. 2singles,and the Panthers
benefited from four Crook
NBA scoREB0ARD
at No. 3 doubles, where the
All TimesPDT
EasternConference W L Pct GB z-Indiana 55 26 679 y-Miami 54 27 667 1 y-Toronto 46 33 593 7 x-Chicago 46 33 593 7 x-Brooklyn 44 37 543 11 x-Washington 43 36 531 12 x-Charlotte 42 39 519 13 x-Atlanta 37 44 457 16 NewYork 36 45 444 19 Cleveland 32 49 395 23 Detroit 29 52 358 26 Boston 25 56 309 30 Orlando 23 56 264 32 Philadelphia 16 63 222 37 Milwaukee 15 66 165 40 WesternConference W L Pct GB z-San Antonio 62 19 765 y-Oklahoma City 56 23 716 4 y-L.A.Clippers 57 24 704 5 x-Houston 54 27 667 6 x-Portland 53 26 654 9 x-Golden State 50 31 617 12 x-Dallas 49 32 605 13 x-Memphis 49 32 605 13 Phoenix 47 34 560 15 Minnesota 40 41 494 22 Denver 36 45 444 26 NewOrleans 33 46 407 29 Sacramen to 26 53 346 34 LA. Lakers 26 55 321 36 Utah 24 57 296 36 x-clinched playoffspot y-clinched division z-clinched conference
Tuesday'sGames NewYork109,Brooklyn96 L.A. Clippers 117,Denver 105 Today'sGames Indiana at Orlando, 4p.m. Chicago at Charlotte,4 p.m. Utah atMinnesota,5 p.m. Detroit atOklahomaCity,5 p.m. Atlantaat Milwaukee,5p.m. DallasatMemphis,5 p.m. L.A. Lakers at SanAntonio, 5p.m. Houstonat NewOrleans,5 p.m. Washington atBoston,5 p.m. BrooklynatCleveland,5 p.m. Philadelphiaat Miami,5 p.m. TorontoatNewYork,5 p.m. L.A. Clippers atPortland,7;30 p.m. Phoeni xatSacramento,7:30p.m. GoldenStateat Denver, 7:30p.m.
Stengle and Shawn Horton
Bend tandem ofShane Sehgal teamed uptorecord a victory and Miles Herman fell to Sum- in doubles play.
Atieltnan Continued from C1 The "coaching lifer," as Popovich describes Adelman,
Standings
hits and a run scored for the
White Buffaloes (0-3 TVC,4-9 overall).
COaChing US to ViCtOrieS. You juSt WiSh him the beSt, WhateVer he feelS
like he needS to do. We'll be right beSide him."
home against Memphis, San then it becomes really difficult Antonio and Houston. Losses because you're just trying to at Orlandoand Sacramento, find answers and you're not a maddeningly inconsistent sure if they're there."
helped him lead Portland to
the final season, meaning
two NBA Finals (1990 and
either side can opt out of the deal. Adelman will turn 68 in
1992), turn woebegone Sacramento into a hoops hotbed
June, and the contract calls
and take a n
for a decision to be made no later than two weeks after the
Houston team to Game 7 of the Western Conference semifinals against the mighty Los Angeles Lakers was not as
a team that had won just 17
games the season before he took over back to respectability. A win in the finale tonight
Clippers117, Nuggets105 DENVER (105)
Miller 4-120-0 11, Faried7-12 7-621, Mozgov 6-10 6-716,Brooks6-124-4 19, Foye2-12 7-711, Vesely4-71-2 9, Fournier3-102-2 9, Chandler 3-7 0-0 7.Totals 35-52 27-30105.
LA. CLIPPERS I117) Barnes 2-5 0-05, Griffin 9-17 6-624,Jordan6-6 1-613, Paul6-102-421, Redick5-10 4-416, Collison 5-100010, Crawford 3 93 39, Davis 3 63 39, Turkogl2-51-2 u 6, Dudley1-10-02. Totals 44-53
26 20 34 25 — 105 35 2 5 25 29 — 117
Leaders
is made up'? If it is, this is not the way his players wanted to see him go. "I'm sure it's been tough on him, dealing with us knuckleheads and then he has to deal with his family problems," said Kevin Martin, who has
u n dermanned
(Another f a ctor i s the health o f A d e lman's w i f e, present.
over. Adelman did help bring
BROOK LYNIgg)
Class4A Trt-VatteyConference Gladstone 2 0 1 0102— 6 5 5 Madras 010 010 2 — 4 10 7
Intensely private and intro-
"If you play like you really want it, you take the losses," Adelman said a few days after a particularly ugly loss to the Kings in January. "You're going to have some. But when
• He did not play young players e nough. R o okie Gorgui Dieng has had a terrific final month of the season,
but he hardly played until Nikola Pekovic's injury forced
Eric Gadrielson 8JesseJohnson
Adelman's hand in March. Shabazz Muhammad also they will sit down to discuss showed some promise as a things when the season is scoreroffthe bench but rare-
Kirilenko 2-6 0-0 4, Pierce4-6 4-6 13, Garnett 0-4 0-0 0,Wiliams4-91-1 10,Johnson3-9 4-712, Plumlee7-92-416, Thornton7-156-6 24,Blatche 2-4 3-3 6,Gutierrez2-70-05, Teague1-2 2-24, Collins1-2 0-02.Totals 33-7522-3195. NewYork 29 26 25 26 — 109 Brooklyn 15 25 24 31 — 95
Baseball
played for Adelman both in verted, Adelman, an offseason Minnesota and Houston. "He did a great job of manresident of Black Butte Ranch, has shown a softer, warmer aging it and being there for us side over the past two months. at night, coaching us to vicHe has patted a struggling tories. You just wish him the player on the behind as he ex- best, whatever he feels like he you don't see that, like you ited the court, engaged those needs to do. We'll be right besaw in the Sacramento game, around Target Center in ca- side him." team.
Wieden & Kennedy
ident Flip Saunders have said
NEWYORK(109) Shumpert4-9 3-4 11, Stoudemire 3-4 6-9 14, Chandler1-10-02, Felton3-60-06, Smith 3-65-6 14, Hardawa yJr5-102-216, Aldrich4-65-513, Tyler 3 5 2 4 6,Prigioni 0-10 00, Brown4 76 614, Murry 2-63-49. Totals32-6734-40109.
IntermountainHybrid Ridgeview 5,Mountain View0 At Ridgeview Singles —Caitlin Carr,RV,def. BrandyGraham, MV, 6-1,6-0; RileyHanks, RV,def. MissyBurke,MV, 6-0, 6-2;SavannahKing,RV,def.CharlotteSwaney, MV, 6-4,6-4; HeidiRonhaar, RV,def. Payton Korish, MV,6-1,6-1. Doubles—RhianSage/MakenaJordison, RV,def.ChloeJohnson/GraceCole,MV,6-2,6-0; ClaireWright/ChloeGoodwin, RV,def. MeganCulbertson/AliciaWoolhiser,MV,6-2, 6-0; Brittany Hoffm an/ ShelbySmith,RV,def. Whitney Weber/BrookeMiler, MV, 6-1, 6-1; CassidySimmons/Alexandria Doyal, RV, def. AliciaWelbourn/AngieVasquez, MV, 5-7, 6-1, 12-10.
• The competitive fire that
Adelman's contract has a mutual option included for
season ends.
Intermountam Hybrrd Redmond 5, CrookCounty 3 At CrookCounty Singles — ElsaHarris, CC,def. SelenaLafontaine, R, 6-0, 6-0;JessicaBrunot, R,def. GretaHarris, CC,6-4,4-6, 11-9;MaggieKasberger,CC,def. Carol Selta, R,6-1, 6-4; Redm ond winsNo. 4 singles by forfeit. Doubles — Laura Fraser/Gwyneth Ptomey, CC,def.TaniaMendoza/KelseySantos,R,6-2,6-4; Redmond wins Nos.2, 3and4doublesbyforfeit.
Is that a sign that his mind — Kevin Martin
fore by an inability to squeeze Wolves routinely let leads slip more out of a talented but away in the final period. "He's had to throw differflawed Timberwolves team. "This year it just seems like ent lineups out there and give we have a good game, and us different looks in order to then it could be from one half get over the hump," said Love, to the next half," Adelman who has one more year on his said recently. contract before he can opt out "That's been the hard part, as well. "We've been able to trusting what's going to come. get better through the season. It's just been a very difficult ... With coach, he's not out year. I don't think I've ever re- there playing. It's definitely on ally experienced (this)." us that last quarter."
4-6, 6-2,10-6;AutumnLayden,S,def. GracePerkins, B,6-3,6-2;SienaGinsburg,S,def.JaneaSchaumfoeffel, B,6-2,6-2. Doubles —KelseyColis/MorganDeMeyer,S,def.RubyLadkin/ZoeRaiter,B,6-2, 6-3; CaitlinNichols/CarolineNichols, S,def. Marlena Beith/Marilin Morris, B,6-4, 7-5; AndreiaTodd/Eleni Harrington, S,def. KatieReed/Annabelle Farina,B, 6-1, 6-1;JeanForan/Brooke Finley, S, def. Melissa Lorenz/AlexisBenitez,B,6-0,6-0.
sual conversation about golf, travel and family, things he rarely did over the past three seasons.
"He did a greatjob Of managing it and being there fOr USat night,
been frustrated like never be-
missed 11 games last season to be by her side while she received treatments.) Adelman and Wolves pres-
Knicks109, Nets98
Class5A Special District1 Summit5,Bend0 At Summit Singles —LindseyBrodeck, S,def. SierraWinch, B, 6-2, 6-2;BrennaRoy, S, def. JessieJohnson, B,
come up with right answers to basketball problems has
fered seizuresthat have baffled doctors; Rick Adelman
Tuesday'sGames
Girls tennis
who has always been able to
Mary Kay, who has suf-
Summaries
Denver L.A. Clippers
Class5A Special District1 Summit5,Bend0 At Bend Singles — CarterQuigley, S,def. ZachHite, B, 6-0, 6-0; ChandlerOliveira, S, def. AaronBanquer-Glenn, B,6-0,6-0; WiliamDalquist, S,def.Sean Hebert,B,6-1,6-0; LindseyValentine, S,def. Michael Martin, B,6-0, 6-3. Doubles —GarenGasparovic/ Liam Hall, S,def. SamAinsworth/JadenBoehme, B, 6-0, 6-0; Thomas Wimberly/Hudson Mickel, S, def. Will Ainsworth/MaxFarrens, B, 6-2, 6-0; Connor Steele/DavisCalande,S, def. ShaneSehgal/Miles Herman,B, 6-3, 6-3; PeterRutherford/Nick Berning, S,def.JesseJames/NickCampbell,B,6-0,6-3.
Quigley and Chandler Olivei- only doubles contest staged to ra at Nos. 1 and 2 singles — to earn the home victory. Paul the Madras offense with a
In other Tuesday action: GIRLS TENNIS
20-30 117.
Boys tennis
4-6, 6-4, 6-3 at No. 3 singles, derlider, Rockett and Johnston
won their No. 1 doubles match where Cassidy Simmons and 6-4, 6-1. Twin sisters Milissa Alexandria Doyal defeated Mountain View's Alicia Wel-
ference win. Cohl Johnston
utive victory. Buck Schlerf and Madras 4, Molalla 4 (Madras Skylar Larsen also scored for wins in games 90-82): MA- the Bears; Pite led the winners
dominant, taking her No. 2 Galan and
PREP SCOREBOARD
BOYSLACROSSE
Mountain View 5, Ridgeview MOND — Cade Hinderlider 3: The Cougars won three sin- scored five goals and Eli Pite
ey posted a victory at No. 1
to help the White Buffaloes
e n i a nS
Bend 20, Redmond 0: RED-
Hybrid victory at home. Philip Foristall and Jessica Gonzalez doubles for Crook County. Atkinson led Mountain View all won their singles matches Ridgeview 8, Mountain View in the No. 1 singles match with I tzel
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against Utah would mean the Wolves (40-41) would finish with a record of at least .500 for the first time since 2004-05. But this season also began
ly got consistent minutes behind struggling veteran Chase Budinger. The last one is particularly
Making a Credible Gonnection — ALookBehind P&G's Olympics Campaign
difficult for Adelman to swal-
low. At 67 years old and having never won a championship, Adelman says he has no time to play favorites. "I've just been searching,"
The OlympicsgaveProcter & Gambleanopportunity
with playoff expectations, Adelman said. "I've been in and Adelman has shouldered this business a long time. I unsome of the blame. derstand if the coach doesn't Among the biggest criti- win, they're not going to be cisms was that he played All- there very long. Whoever I feel Star forward Kevin Love the can win the game for us, that's entire third quarter all season who I tried to play." long, which caused him to The last two weeks of the restLove for long stretches of season offer a perfect window the fourth quarter, and nev- into the season as a whole: er changed that even as the
V ictories at M i am i
to haVe aPOint of VieWthat WOuld reSOnateWith milliOnS ofPeOPle.But to do thiS, P&Ghadto
find its authentic andmeaningful connection to the OlymPiCS GameS. JOin Wieden 8 Kennedy'SEriCGabrielSon and JeSSeJOhnSOnaSthey highlightPBG'SS0Chi
and at
Olympicseffort, and intheprocess discuss lessons and overarchingstrategy increating acompelling creative campaign.
NBA ROUNDUP
Griffin suspended for finale
Through Monday'sGames Durant,OKC Anthony, NYK James,MIA Love,MIN Harden,HOU Griffin, LAC Curry,GOL Aldridge,POR DeRozan,TOR Cousins,SAC Jefferson,CH A George,IND Nowitzki,DAL
Irying,CLE Lillard,POR
Jordan,LAC Drummond,DET Love,MIN Howard,HOU Paul, LAC Wall, WAS Lawson,DEN
Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG
The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Blake
playoffs. They would need to
Rebounds G DFF DEF TDTAVG 60 325 773 1096 13.7 60 432 626 1056 13.2 76 224 729 953 12.5 70 231 631 662 12.3
Assists
G AST AVG 61 653 10.7 6 1 712 6.6 6 2 54 3
ed 18 points in the Clippers' finale at home, where they went 34-7 for
6 . 6 in the Western Conference
g
• •
•
•
I I
I '
•
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scored 16 points and New York, playing without the injured Carmelo Anthony, beat
Brooklyn to win the season series between city rivals.
•
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g
e
I
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•
Also on Tuesday:
Knicks 109, Nets 98: NEW a n other f r anchise YORK — Tim Hardaway Jr.
mark. DeAndre Jordan had 13 points and 16 rebounds. The win kept the Clippers in the hunt for the No. 2 seed
• g
•
win at Portland and Oklaho-
60 635 690 2551 31.9 ma City would need to lose to 77 743 459 2112 27.4 Griffin scored 24 points while 77 767 439 2069 27.1 picking up his 16th technical, Detroit tonight for the Clippers 76 646 510 1991 26.2 73 549 576 1651 25.4 foul and the Los Angeles Clip- to claim the second spot. 0th79 709 476 1906 24.1 pers led all the way in beating erwise, they will remain the 76 652 306 1673 24.0 69 652 296 1603 23.2 the Denver Nuggets 117-105 on third seed. Los Angeles will have to get 76 602 514 1762 22.6 Tuesday night for their fran71 591 432 1614 22.7 chise-record 57th victory of by without Griffin on the road 72 696 169 1564 22.0 since his 16th tech triggered a 60 577 401 173721.7 the season. 79 621 335 1705 21.6 Chris Paul had 21points and league-mandated one-game 70 526 266 1463 20.9 61 550 371 1666 20.6 10 assists, and J.J. Redick add- suspension.
P resen tedbv:St. Charl e S HEALTH SYSTEM
•
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C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
+
NASDAQ ~
16,262.56
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
+
S&PBOO
>< 47
4,034.16
Todap t,seo "
Google's online ad rates have been falling as more people use smartphones and tablets instead of PCs. That's because marketers have been unwilling to pay as much for ads on mobile devices, citing their smaller screens. Google reports first-quarter earnings today. Investors will be listening for an update on how the Internet company's average ad rates fared in the quarter.
1,800' " ""'10 DAYS
$538.XX
"
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1,800 "
16,400"
"
16,000"
"
1,750
15,600"
1 700 0
N
D
StocksRecap NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 3,684 2,359 Pvs. Volume 3,066 1,846 Advanced 1900 1260 Declined 1198 1368 New Highs 62 25 New Lows 57 127
500 '14 380 'I
1 Q '13
Price-earnings ratio:
+
$1,300.00
"
+ -.52
27 2p
$19.48
J
F
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Coca-Cola
N
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KO MasterCard MA Close:$40.18L1.45 or 3.7/o Close:$72.15 L0.97 or 1.4% The first global sales volume decline Janney Capital upgraded major
A
for soda in at least a decade was offset by sales of noncarbonated drinks such as juice. $42
%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.0.55% T -1.89% $.0.86% +0.89% $.1.29% L L L +11.02% $.0.41% +0.02% $.0.29% T -3.41% $.0.68% -0.29% -0.70% $.0.65% T $.0.61% T -0.68% $.0.37% -3.79% T
NAME
80
38
70
F M 52-week range
$36.83~
$43 43
Johnson & Johnson
95.98 89. 8 5 +. 5 0 +0.6 T T 31.29 31 .10 + . 5 1 +1 .7 L L 18.03 16. 3 9 +. 3 9 +2.4 L T 102. 2 0 5 7 .0 1 + . 19 +0.3 L T 144. 5 7 12 4.27 +1.02+0.8 L L 6.95 4.82 -.04 -0.8 T T T 0.3 6 26.70 -.12 -0.4 T 88. 25 79.87 -.43 -0.5 L T 26.1 2 11 2.86 -.50 -0.4 T 18.70 14. 3 0 +. 1 1 +0.8 L T 37.35 35. 1 0 +. 5 5 +1.6 L L 33.90 3 2.3 9 -.51 - 1.6 T L 6.03 14. 8 8 + . 1 2 +0.8 L T 27.12 26 .77 + . 2 1 +0.8 L L 14.70 13. 4 5 +. 1 4 +1.1 L T 45.47 4 4.0 2 -.56 -1.3 ~ ~ 8.52 7.86 +. 0 7 + 0.9 L L 20.35 15.3 5 +. 2 1 +1 .4 L T 35.60 34 .89 + . 37 +1.1 L L 24.31 20 .10 -.01 . . . T T 41.66 39 . 7 5 + . 5 7 +1.5 L L 80.26 7 2.2 8 -.10 -0.1 L T 64.19 60.9 8 +. 4 6 +0 .8 L T 45.89 44.5 8 +. 3 3 +0 .7 L L 68.81 64. 5 5 +. 2 6 +0.4 L T 2 93 2 86 -.02 -1 0 L T 54.6 2 41. 40 + . 2 9 +0.7 L T 274. 9 6 24 6.61 +1.10 +0.4 L T 36.03 34. 1 9 +. 1 7 +0.5 L T 33.32 28.14 + . 29 +1.0 L L 208. 6 3 19 1.56 +1.45 +0.8 L T 69.51 61.0 1 +. 1 8 +0 .3 L T 82.50 6 8. 8 9 -.42 -0.6 L T 13.96 13 .26 + . 17 +1 .3 L L 9.6 5 18.75 +.59+3.2 L L L 43.66 41.0 1 +. 4 0 +1 .0 L T 4.5 3 21.78 -.56 -2.5 T T 0.4 9 48.78 +.67+1.4 L L 33.24 2 7. 7 6 -.13 -0.5 L T
T L T T T T T T L
T T L T L T L L T L T
T T T L
T L
T T L T T T T T T T T T
+22. 5 +5 2 .2 6 1 9 1 2 1 . 00f +10.3 +16 .7 5 3 2 1 7 1. 2 7f +5.3 +31 . 7132039 16 0.20f - 38.5 + 2 . 6 56 24 0.7 2 -9.0 +41.1 2700 21 2.92f -7.8 -24.5 42 4 -2.9 +2 6.6 1 8 5 2 2 0 . 48f +1.4 +37 . 5 74 30 1.1 2 f -5.8 + 7 . 2 2 092 2 5 1 . 24 -12.9 +85.0 5 8 cc + 16. 6 +3 6 .3 1 049 23 0 .40f +15.8 +6 0 .2 13053 12 0 .64f - 0.1 +25.6 47 dd 0. 2 4 +3.1 +26. 7 40156 14 0 . 9 0 t 0.2 +37. 5 9 8 26 1 4 0 . 2 2 +11.4 +36 . 5 3526 15 0 .66 +43.2 +4 8 .9 94 6 cc -17.1 -23.1 4597 13 +14. 2 +4 1 .4 5 1 4 2 4 0. 7 1 -16.5 +15.6 8 6 7 1 6 0 . 20f +6.3 +3 9 .6 33273 15 1 . 12 -8.1 +21.0 3881 25 0 . 9 6 -1.3 + 8. 7 1 083 1 6 1.32f +4.1 +2.4 128 2 1 1.8 4 +9.1 +31 . 4 1 5 22 20 0 .80a -189 +8 9 39 dd -11.0 - 17.5 603 3 1 1 . 76 - 8.4 +30.0 7 2 1 2 1 0 . 1 2 +17. 3 +4 4 .5 3 41 8 2 0 . 80b - 13.9 +15.0 4 9 8 d d 0 . 75 $-4.4 +1 2 .5 68 8 2 6 2 . 20f -7.9 +48.1 2 0 0 1 2 1 . 10f -12.1 +18.9 7601 2 9 1 . 04 + 59.0 + 1 58.2 4506 d d -2.0 +52.6 4402 21 0.60a +1.5 +21. 9 10624 14 0 . 9 2 - 6.5 +33.9 5 8 6 1 5 0 . 40 +7. 4 + 32.5 21353 12 1.20 -12.1 -9.5 3735 24 0 . 8 8
DividendFootnotes:3 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. 1 -Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid ic preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 8 clcsed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss ic last12 months.
::.";,"" DSW to expand in Canada DSW is taking a step across j the border. The footwear and accessories retailer will spend about $62 million to establish an operating base in Canada by acquiring a 44 percent stake in Town Shoes. Town Shoes is Canada's largest specialty retailer of footwear, and DSW will have the right to purchase the rest of the company after four years.
DSW (DSW)
Town Shoes runs 182 locations across Canada, mainly under the banners The Shoe Company, Shoe W arehouseand Town Shoes. Itis owned mainly by Alberta Investment Management and Callisto Capital, a Canadian private equity firm. DSW operates 407 DSW stores in 42 states, the District of Columbia
t L
and Puerto Rico. The companies expect the deal to close next month
Tuesda y 's close: $34.68 Price-earnings ratio:21
$31 AP
48
Total return • DSW
* 5- YR* YTD 3 - YR - 18.4% 20. 6 48 . 7 •
(Based on trailing 12 month results) *Annuagzed
T o t al retums through April 15
AmdFocus
Source: FactSet
SelectedMutualFunds
JNJ
Close:$99.20%2.06 or 2.1% Controlled costs and a jump in prescription drug sales fueled an 8 percent hike in quarterly profit at the health care company. $100 95 90
J
F M 52-week range
$51.86~
A $ 84.75
Whirlpool
WHR Close:$151 A6%3.09 or 2.1% Good news for shareholders as the appliance maker announced a $500 million share repurchase program and a bigger dividend. $180 160 140
J
F
M
J
A
52-week range $82.07 Vol.:14.0m (1.6x avg.)
F
M
$99.38
$16788 ~
$ 16D D1
PE: 20.6 Vol.:1.1m (0.8x avg.)
Charles Schwab
A
52-week range
Yield: 2.7% Mkt. Cap:$11.74b
Mkt. Cap:$280.57b
S CHVV
Close:$26.11 L0.81 or 3.2% Profit rose almost 60 percent with the online broker picking up healthy asset-managementfees and seeing stronger trading revenue. $30
PE:1 4 . 8 Yie l d: 1.7%
PetSmart PETM Close:$66.61 T-2.76 or -4.0% New competition in pet care will create some headwinds, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch, which downgraded the retailer. $75 70
25
65 J
F
M
A
J
52-week range $76.85~
$3$.13
Close:$61.39%-6.89 or -10.1% The bar-codecompany willspend $3 billion to buy the enterprise business of Motorola Solutions in a considerable expansion. $80
$63.13 ~
$77.32
HALO Close:$7.39 L0.20 or 2.8% Citigroup initiated coverage of the biopharmaceutical company, saying Wall Street is not fully recognizing its value. $20 15
60
10
F M 52-week range
A
J
F M 52-week range
$72 .76 $5.47~ PE: 2 3 .4 Vol.:4.6m (1.9x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$919.93 m
SU
HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.63 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
A $ 18. 18
P E: .. . Yield : ...
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
A
Vol.:4.3m (2.3x avg.) P E:1 6 . 7 Mkt. Cap:$6.57 b Yie l d : 1.2%
70
Vol.:4.1m (11.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.09 b
M
ZB R A Halozyme Thera.
Z ebra Technologies
J
F
52-week range
Vol.:13.4m (1.5x avg.) PE: 33.5 Mkt. Cap:$33.95b Yie l d: 0.9%
$43.51 ~
Home sales beltwether Bank of America's latest quarterly earnings should provide insight into the strength of the home loan market. The lender, due to report first-quarter financial results today, reported a slowing in its mortgage origination business in the fourth quarter. Bank of America's profit got abig boost because the bank was able to significantly reduced the amount of money it holds on its balance sheet to protect itself from bad loans.
A
Vol.:47.5m (2.6x avg.) PE: 21.2 Vol.:7.0m (1.0x avg.) P E: 28.2 Mkt. Cap:$177.03b Yi eld:3.0% Mkt.Cap:$82.34 b Yield: 0.6%
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Alaska Air Group A LK 50.31 ~ Source: FactSet Avista Corp AVA 25.55 — 0 Bank of America B AC 11. 23 ~ Barrett Business BB S I 4 8 .08 ~ Home construction monitor Boeing Co BA 8 5 .75 ~ Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .31 ~ The Commerce Department ColumbiaBokg COL B 19.85 ~ 3 reports figures today on the Columbia Sportswear COLM 55.58 ~ number of homes that builders Costco Wholesale CO ST 103.20 ~ 1 broke ground on last month. Home construction faltered over C raft Brew Alliance BREW 7.13 ~ FLIR Systems F LIR 23.00 ~ the winter, partly because harsh H ewlett PacKard HPQ 19 .07 ~ weather discouraged some HomeFederal Bocp ID HOME 11.54 ~ 1 Americans from venturing out to Intel Corp INTC 21.36 — 0 house-hunt. In addition, the Keycorp K EY 9 .29 ~ average rate on a 30-year Kroger Co K R 3 2 .71 ~ mortgage is about a percentage Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ point more than it was last spring. LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ Economists predict that home MDU Resources MDU 23 .40 — o construction picked up in March MentorGraphics M EN T 1 7.06 ty as thespring homebuying season Microsoft Corp MSF T 2 8.50 ~ Nike Ioc 8 N KE 59.11 ~ ramped up. NordstromInc J WN 54.50 ~ Housing starts Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ seasonally adjusted annual rate PaccarIoc PCAR 47.12 ~ 1.2 million Planar Systms P LNR 1 55 ~ Plum Creek PCL 40.57 o — 1.10 Prec Castparts PCP 182.41 ~ Safeway Ioc SWY 19.92 ~ 1.02 SCH N 2 3.07 ty est Schoitzer Steel 1.0 .97 Sherwin Wms SHW 163.63 ~ StancorpFncl S FG 40.32 ~ . 91 . 9 1 .90 StarbucksCp SBUX 57.50 ~ Triquiot Semi TQNT 4.72 — O UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 11.45 ~ 1 0.8 U SB 31.99 ~ 0 N DI : J F M US Bancorp ' 13 : ' 1 4 Washington Fedl WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 WellsFargo & Co WF C 3 6.19 ~ 5 Source: Factset Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~
credit card companies, citing a significant pullback in stock prices and solid business plans. $90
40
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NorthwestStocks
Dividend: none
-.0014
.
1 Q' 1 4
based on trailing 12 month results
1.3809+
The stock market fluctuated throughout the day between gains and losses, ultimately turning higher late in the afternoon. All of the major indexes finished up. Coca-Cola and Johnson & Johnson both reported healthy earnings and were the big winners in the Dow Jones industrial average. Seven of the 30 stocks in the Dow finished down for the day, all with declines of less than 1 percent. In the broader market, all 10 sectors of the Standard & Poor's 500 index finished higher. Utilities were the big winner for the day. The stocks of utilities are up nearly 12 percent this year, compared with just over 2 percent for the next best performer, energy stocks.
"
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. DOW 16272.95 16063.20 16262.56 +89.32 DOW Trans. 7485.83 7360.04 7466.79 +63.55 DOW Util. 544.69 537.70 544.65 +6.95 NYSE Comp. 10407.31 10271.92 10401.98 +42.54 NASDAQ 4054.80 3946.03 4034.16 +11.47 S&P 500 1844.02 1816.29 1842.98 +1 2.37 S&P 400 1335.70 1311.16 1333.19 +8.58 Wilshire 5000 19590.53 19268.85 19572.13 +117.71 Russell 2000 1123.77 1095.79 1119.49 +4.14
15
+ -.30 '
StoryStocks
Close: 16,262.56 Change: 89.32 (0.6%)
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15200 0
A
$1 03.75
Dow jones industrials "
16,000" ""' 10 DAYS "
16,800"
1,850 "
GOLD
p2
.
16,320"
1,900
$395.41
Operating EPS
16,640"
............ Close: 1,842.98 Change: 12.37 (0.7%)
Ad rates improving?
GOOGL
+
SstP 500
Wednesday, April 16, 201 4
$620
10 YR TNOTE 2.63%
1,842.98
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3 -month T-bill . 0 3 .0 3 6-month T-bill . 0 5 .0 4 + 0 .0 1 52-wk T-bill .09 .09 2 -year T-note . 3 5 .35 ... T 5-year T-note 1.62 1.61 +0.01 T 10-year T-note 2.63 2.65 -0.02 T 30-year T-bond 3A6 3.49 -0.03 T
BONDS
T
L T T
.05 .08 T .22 T .68 T 1.68 T 2.86
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.27 3.29 -0.02 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.64 4.64 . . . T T Barclays USAggregate 2.31 2.29 +0.02 T T PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.04 5.09 -0.05 T T RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 4.22 4.21 +0.01 T T YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.83 1.81 +0.02 T L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.00 2.98 +0.02 T T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
T 2.60 T 4.07 T 1.77 T 5.47 T 3.7 0 .98 T 2.6 4
AP
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 24.3 9 + .11 +0.4 +14.7 +11.6+15.2 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.65 +.14 +1.7 +10.2 +8.8+13.2 C A 8 CpWldGrlA m 45.18 +.82 +0.1 +17.6 +9.5+15.5 C 8 D EurPacGrA m 48.25 -.21 -1.7 +15.8 +5.1+13.4 A C C iShEMkts 1528819 41.11 -.63 FnlnvA m 50. 5 1 +.27 -1.6 +20.4 +11.9+17.8 C D C S&P500ETF 1486638 184.20 +1.26 GrthAmA m 42.26 +.22 -1.7 +22.7 +13.0+17.4 8 8 D BkofAm 1320388 16.39 +.39 Keeley SMCpgalA m KSMVX IncAmerA m 20.88 +.88 +1.9 +12.9 +10.5+15.8 8 A A Facebook 1069551 59.09 +.20 InvCoAmA m 36.86 +.19 +0.8 +22.5 +13.4+17.1 8 8 D SiriusXM 916456 3.09 -.04 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m36.70 +.83 -2.3 +17.7 +9.8+16.8 C 8 C SPOR Fncl 841488 21.65 +.20 WAMutlnvA m39.44 +.29 +0.5 +21.4 +14.5+18.6 8 A 8 PwShs QQQ 798810 85.05 +.28 iShR2K 745688 111.15 +.43 Dodge &Cox Income 13.78 +.81 +3.0 +2 .5 + 4.8 +7.5 A 8 B B iPVix rs 559319 43.92 -.46 IntlStk 43.75 -.26 +1.6 +23.7 +8.1+17.4 A A A iShJapan 517913 10.94 -.01 Stock 167.99 +.69 +0.1 +26.8 +15.8+21.3 A A A Fidelity Contra 92.70 + .69 -2.6 +21.7 +13.4+18.8 C 8 B Gainers ContraK 92.6 6 + .69 -2.6 +21.9 +13.5+18.9 C 8 8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 49.30 -.81 -0.3 +22.6 +13.8+21.4 C A 8 Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 65.38 +.44 +0.3 +21.2 +14.2+19.1 C 8 B 22ndCentry 2.78 +.58 + 2 6.4 NwstBio wt 3.89 +.69 + 2 1.6 «C FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC m 2.52+.81 +4.4 +13.4 +9.2+15.9 A A A FX Ener 3.86 +.62 + 1 9 .1 53 IncomeA m 2. 4 9 ... +4 .6 + 13.6 +9.7+16.4 A A A Chinalnfo 5.23 +.83 + 1 8.9 Oakmarb Intl I 26.28 -.85 -0.2 +21.5 +11.4+20.1 A A A Conns 45.48 +5.77 + 14.5 Do Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 33 +.13 -1.8 +15.8 +11.0+15.4 E D E NQ Mobile 12.60 +1.55 + 14.0 RisDivB m 17 . 28 +.12 -2.1 +14.7 +10.0+14.4 E E E bioroingstar OwnershipZone™ Highpwrlnt 4.75 +.54 + 1 2.8 RisDivC m 17 . 17 +.11 -2.1 +14.9 +10.1+14.5 E E E AmDGEn 2.30 +.26 + 1 2 .7 OoFund target represents weighted SmMidValAm 44.44 +.22 +0.4 +26.4 +9.5+18.1 B E E Twitter n 45.52 +4.65 + 1 1.4 average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 37.42 +.19 +0.2 +25.4 +8.6+17.2 B E E ZionO&G 2.55 +.26 + 1 1.4 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.75 +.20 +0.3 +18.9 +12.8+18.7 D C B Losers CATEGORY Small Blend GrowStk 50.86 +.29 -4.8 +24.8 +14.5+20.0 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 57.27 +.39 -0.9 +29.8 +24.0+28.3 B A A RATING™ * ** * f t -2.19 -30.6 Vanguard 500Adml 170.86+1.14 +0.3 +21.2 +14.2+19.2 C 8 8 TransitnT g 4.97 TrovaGnwt 3.34 -.88 -20.9 ASSETS $125 million 500lnv 170.85+1.14 +0.2 +21.0 +14.1+19.0 C 8 8 -2.34 -19.3 MFRI 9.79 500Sgnl 140.48 +.95 +0.3 +21.2 +14.2+19.2 C A 8 EXP RATIO 1.40% AuspexP n 21.46 -5.08 -19.1 CapOp 46.68 +.31 +1.1 +25.1 +15.1+19.5 A A B MANAGER Kevin Chin -6.46 -19.0 Comverse 27.52 Eqlnc 29.96 +.17 +1.4 +18.9 +15.6+19.9 D A A SINCE 201 3-12-31 IntlStkldxAdm 27.78 -.14 -0.1 +13.2 +3.7 NA C D -2.7 RETURNS 3-MO Foreign Markets StratgcEq 30.53 +.22 +1.8 +31.2 +16.3+24.1 A A A YTO -3.1 TgtRe2020 27.39 +.85 +1.0 +11.7 +8.4+13.5 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +21.9 Tgtet2025 15.88 +.83 +0.8 +13.2 +8.8+14.5 8 A C -39.21 -.89 Paris 4,345.35 3-YR ANNL +14.7 TotBdAdml 10.76 +.81 +2.7 -0.3 +3.8 +4.8 D C E London 6,541.61 -42.15 -.64 5-YR-ANNL +25.6 Totlntl 16.61 -.89 -0.1 +13.0 +3.6+13.0 C D C Frankfurt 9,173.71 -1 65.46 -1.77 TotStlAdm 46.49 +.30 0.0 +22.1 +14.0+19.9 8 8 A Hong Kong22,671.26 -367.54 -1.60 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT -.12 Manitowoc Co Inc TotStldx 46.47 +.29 0.0 +21.9 +13.9+19.8 8 8 A Mexico 40,481.80 -48.89 1.46 Milan 20,81 7.49 -497.07 -2.33 USGro 28.83 +.20 -2.3 +22.8 +13.9+18.4 8 A 8 F idelity National Financial Inc. 1.36 Tokyo 13,996.81 +86.65 + . 62 Welltn 38.39 +.13 +1.8 +13.8 +10.9+14.8 8 A A 1.28 Stockholm 1,329.28 -18.94 -1.40 Terex Corp Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 1.24 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales cr Sydney 5,380.30 +26.70 + . 50 Cardinal Health Inc Zurich 8,280.53 -32.37 -.39 Westinghouse Air BrakeTechnologies Corp redemption fee.Source: Mcrningstar.
Keeley Small-Mid Cap Value is a top performer in the small Marhetsummary blend fund category, its 5-year Most Active annualized returns rank in the NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG top 5 percent of its peer group.
FAMILY
Commodities Crude oil fell for the first time in three days, though it remains close to a six-week high. Silver fell to its lowest settlement price since Jan. 31, and gold hit a oneweek low.
Foreign Exchange The dollar held steady against other major currencies. It was just about flat against the British pound, euro and
Japanese yen. It inched higher against the Australian dollar.
55Q QD
FUELS
CLOSE PVS. 103.75 104.05 Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) 2.25 2.33 Heating Oil (gal) 2.99 2.98 Natural Gas (mmbtu) 4.57 4.56 UnleadedGas(gal) 3.04 3.04
%CH. %YTD - 0.29 + 5.4 -0.77 +1 7.6 +0.27 -2.9 + 0.15 + 8 . 0 + 0.12 + 9 . 2
CLOSE PVS. 1300.00 1327.20 19.48 20.00 1444.10 1466.80 3.02 3.07 796.15 811.75
%CH. %YTD - 2.05 + 8 . 2 - 2.61 + 0 . 7 - 1.55 + 5 . 3 -1.65 -1 2.4 -1.92 +11.0
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.45 1.45 - 0.06 + 8 . 0 Coffee (Ib) 1.92 2.05 -6.20 +73.6 Corn (bu) 5.04 5.03 +0.15 +1 9.4 Cotton (Ib) 0.90 0.91 - 1.09 + 6 . 2 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 324.20 323.50 +0.22 -1 0.0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.64 1.63 +0.80 +20.5 Soybeans (bu) 15.01 14.76 +1.69 +1 4.4 Wheat(bu) 7.02 6.79 +3.39 +1 5.9 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6721 -.0006 -.04% 1.5278 Canadian Dollar 1.0 981 +.0017 +.15% 1.0246 USD per Euro 1.3809 -.0014 -.10% 1.3036 JapaneseYen 101.84 + . 1 3 + .13% 9 7 . 18 Mexican Peso 13. 0 938 +.0544 +.42% 12.2398 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4707 +.0025 +.07% 3.6390 Norwegian Krone 5 . 9566 -.0106 -.18% 5.7555 SouthAfrican Rand 10.5669 +.0576 +.55% 9.1933 Swedish Krona 6.5 7 8 1 + .0175 +.27% 6.4115 Swiss Franc .8806 +.0009 +.10% . 9 323 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0690 +.0067 +.63% .9688 Chinese Yuan 6.2220 +.0030 +.05% 6.1893 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7541 +.0007 +.01% 7.7625 Indian Rupee 60.255 +.055 +.09% 54.540 Singapore Dollar 1.2531 +.0002 +.02% 1.2386 South KoreanWon 1043.74 +4.74 +.45% 1122.91 -.00 -.00% 29.92 Taiwan Dollar 30.21
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
BEST OFTHE TODAY • BeginningPhotoshep Plus:Course provides additional time to gain a solid understanding of the basic tools and concepts of Photoshop; registration required; $95; 9 a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Community Health Worker Course:Learn to be a Community Health Worker, an outreach person who coordinates access and care to help bridgethe gaps and eliminate barriers between health care, social services, and the needs of at-risk community members; registration required; $595; 9 a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Spanish forHealth Care:Professionals can learn basic Spanish for medical use: online course starts April16; classroom sessions begin May20; registration required; $189; 3:30-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Grant Writing A teZ: Discover how andwhere to look for potential nonprofitfunders who are good matches for your organization, how to network and develop partnerships with funders, how to organize a successful grant-writing campaign and how to put together a complete proposal package; online course starts April16; classroom sessions start May 5; registration required; $189; 6-8:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • Project Management Course:Learn to meetthe challenges of truncated timelines, short-staffed project teams, skimpy budgets and crippling risks; online course starts April16; classroom sessions meet April 29, registration required; $189; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbugetin.cem/bizcal
BRIEFING
wans an lu
BIZ CALENDAR
0 Iml I S I B I I By Todd Spangler
in I'eea
asked for a delay in the case until both a bankruptcy judge WASHINGTON — General plans, if any, to compensate ruleson itsrequestand, sepaMotors wants to delay a fed- in 2009. families impacted by the de- rately, a federal panel decides eral judge in San Francisco GM went through abank- fective Chevrolet Cobalts, Sat- — most likely after a May 29 from ruling on a class-action ruptcy reorganization funded urn Ions and similar cars. Two hearing in Chicago — whethcase until a bankruptcy judge by U.S. taxpayers five years weeks ago, GM CEO Mary er to consolidate at least 19 in New York decides whether ago that left most of its prod- Barra announced compensa- casesacross the U.S. linked to the company is shielded from uct liability with the old com- tion expert Kenneth Feinberg the recall. all product liability claims tied pany, which mainly consisted had been hired to advise the The company said it would to crashesor defects before of shutt ered factories,some of company. seek an order in bankruptit exited bankruptcy in July which have been sold. GM's GM officials did not immecy court against "plaintiffs 2009. critics have argued it should diately respond to a request in all related actions to cease It was believed to be the bear responsibility for a de- for comment from the Detroit and desist from further prosfirst time since the recall of fect linked to 13 deaths and Free Press. ecuting against 'New GM,' 2.6 million cars began in Feb- more than30 crashes in North GM made its plans public or otherwise pursuing any ruary that GM acknowledged America. in a motion submitted Friday and all claims barred by the it would ask a federal bankIt was not immediately clear in a p r oposed class action provisions" of the July 2009 ruptcy judge to protect it from how the request — which GM filed in U.S. District Court in bankruptcy r eorganization claims. In the filing Friday, said would be filed "soon" San Francisco. The company and sale. Detroit Free Press
the company said it would make the request based on protections given "New GM"
Senior homecare companyhiring 30
in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York — would affect its
ac eorowner ow r incour over a s i area By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
Park City Mountain Resort, a sister ski area to Mt. Bachelor, is battling Vail Resorts to Park City's 3,300 acres of skiable terrain in Utah.
But the legal fight also pits owners: Powdr Corp., which owns Park City Mountain Resort and eight others in six
states — including Mt. Bachelor, and Vail Resorts, which owns 10 ski areas in five states
including four in Colorado. At issue: whether Park City Mountain Resort let its lease
lapse in 2011 and whether it can be evicted. John Lund, attorney for
Talisker Land Holdings, LLC — the landlord/corporation thatowns about 2,800 acres of ski resort — said the lease
Chapter 7 Filed April 8 • Julie A. Norman, 64682 Cook Ave., No. 62, Bend • Brian G. Werkman,8291 Highway 97, Terrebonne • Eric L. Bays, 61126 Brookhollow Drive, Bend • Susan L. Bennett, P.O. Box 562, Sisters • Veronica M. Montes, 2705 N.E. Flower Court, Bend • Christopher G. Browning, P.O.Box 3536, La Pine Filed April 9 • Laurel J Pierson, 14878 Bluegrass Loop, Sisters • Marco A. T. Mejia, 63930 N. Highway 97, Space38 Bend • Barbara A. SangerMorales, P.O.Box1343, Bend • Katie M. George. 833 N.W. Ivy Ave., Redmond • Michael A. Mull, 1123 N.W. Elm Ave., Redmond Filed April 10 • Alicia M. Wobbe, P.O. Box 2461, Redmond • Nila B. McQuin, 1001 S.E. 15th St., No. 168 Bend • Rosemary F.-Walker, P.O. Box 2231, La Pine Filed April 11 • JulieAnn D. Waltosz, P.O. Box 2004, Sisters • Rebecca L. Joyce 35, S.W. McKinley Ave., Apt. 10 Bend Filed April 14 • Jeremiah R. Clark, 649 N.E. Blackbear St., Prineville Filed April 15 • Michael R. Peck, 5236 S.E. Jerry Drive, Prineville Chapter 13 Filed April 8 • Todd W. Everest, 660 S.W. Cliffside Lane, Prineville Filed April 15 • David J. Massingill, 19904 Antler Pt., Bend
The jobs start at $10anhour, hesaid. Applicants must passa background checkand drug test, havereliable transportation and avalid driver's license. "There is nocertificate or training theyneedto come to uswith, just the heart to serveseniors," Sensenbachsaid. Employeesstart with 14 hours of training and progress from there, he said. Thecompany specializes incaring for seniors who prefer living at home rather thana care facility. Interested applicants may visit the website at Homelnstead.com andcl ickthe"Become a CAREGiver" link, or call
New regulations for big danks?
two of the nation's big ski-area
Photo courtesy of Park City Mountain Resort
expired. Park City Mountain Resort, owned by Powdr Corp., overlooks the community of Park City, Utah. So Talisker rightfully leased Powdr Corp., which also owns Mt. Bachelor, and Vail Resorts are battling in a Utah court over which the land to a new tenant, Vail Resorts, Lund said, and last
sald.
541-330-6400.
maintain control of much of
the upper portion of the Utah
BANKRUPTCIES
Home InsteadSenior Care plans to hireanother 30 employees inCentral Oregon this year,the company announced Tuesday. The companyprovides nonmedical in-home care to senior citizens, ranging from running errands andcooking to caring for Alzheimer's or hospice patients, said Todd Sensenbach,owner of the local HomeInstead franchise in Bend.He already employsmore than100 part-time and full-time employees,he
The Federal Reserve is considering tougher rules for big banks to keep credit flowing in case of another financial crisis, FedChair Janet Yellen said Tuesday. Although officials from the Fedandregulatory agencies approved more stringent requirements for the eight largest banks last week, Yellen said additional measures might be needed to keepshortterm credit markets from freezing up during stressful financial conditions. — Staffand wirereports
company will have the rights to most of Park City Mountain Resort's skiing terrain.
summer, Vail Resorts issued an eviction notice to Park City Mountain Resort. But Park City Mountain Resort's lawyer, Alan Sullivan,
said the lease didn't expire and regardless, Park City Mountain Resort owns the bottom portion of the resort,
which includes the parking or
During two separate hear-
ings earlier this month, a Utah judge took all of the motions under advisement and said he
we don't want a negotiated resolution, which we have
area west of Bend. According to the April season pass hold-
consistently told you is our
er letter, Mt. Bachelor season
preference." Powdr spokeswoman Krista Parry said the legal
pass holders will receive up to 15 days of skiing at Powdr resorts next year including Park
would probably issue a ruling in late May or early June, Sullivan said. dispute will not affect Powdr's Vail Resorts representatives other resorts, including Mt. would not comment on the litigation. But in a letter provided
Bachelor.
by Lund, Talisker's attorney,
"It's not going to impact operations or planned invest-
Robert Katz, Vail CEO, told
ments that we have across
upper part of the mountain because Park City (Mountain
John Cumming, Powdr CEO, "We intend to continue to vigorously defend Talisker in this
other business," she said. Andy Goggins, director of marketing and communica-
Resort) owns the bottom," Sul-
lawsuit, but that should not be
tions for Mt. Bachelor, said it's
livan said.
misconstrued to suggest that
business as usual at the ski
base area.
"Even if (Vail) wins on everything, it's got a problem, and that is they cannot use the
City Mountain Resort. And
on its own website, Park City Mountain Resort has 2014-15
season passes for sale. "Everything that we've seen and heard is that Park City is
planning on operating as normal for the 2014-2015 season,"
Goggins said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
Correction In a story headlined, "Cutting Coal," which appeared Sunday,April 13, on PageE1,the amount of the increases in residential rates for electricity from 2005 to 2012 were incorrect. The rates areabout 4 cents per kilowatt hour for Oregon and 6cents for Idaho. The Bulletin regrets the error.
bank.
Free to Attend!
1-day sale ofGoogleGlassmaybe BUSINESS. ~ = ' extended, dependingondemand H I I % % = ":-==:- - : By Dan Nakaso
activation to access many of
adopters have reported an-
"Building Relationships"
San Jose Mercury News
the same tools and toys en-
gry confrontations over the
wEDNEsDAY,ApRIL23,2014 -1:00 pm. -600 p.m.
Google Inc. said Tuesday it could extend the one-day sale of its $1,500 Google Glass device, depending on how many requests it receives. Google originally said its
joyed by smartphone, laptop wearable technology's ability and tablet users — except in a to surreptitiously record and lighter, wearable package. shoot images and instantly Until Tuesday, an estimat- upload them to the Internet. ed 10,000 units have only Google has said it hopes been in the hands of people to bring Google Glass to hand-selected by G o ogle, the mass consumer market wearable computers would be available only for a limited dubbed Explorers. sometime later this year. So time Tuesday. But in an email On its Google Plus account, it was unclear what Google Tuesday to the San Jose Mer- the company wrote Tues- was trying to accomplish by cury News, the Mountain day, "Wow, what a morning! offering an unspecified numView, Calif., search giant We're happy to see so many ber of units for a limited time said, "The sale may go lon- new faces (and frames) in the — for a cool $1,500 each, not ger than a day; we just have Explorer community. Just a including tax. to see how well everything q uick update that — ack B ut J.P. G o wnder, v i c e works and how well we han- we just sold out of Cotton, president and principal andle the demand." (a color of Google Glass) so alyst with the Forrester tech Google said it still has no things are moving really research firm, told the Merintention of r e vealing how fast." cury News that Tuesday's many units it sells. While many are curious sale will give Google prime Google Glass allow its us- about the capabilities of Goo- market data onthe demand ers to use voice and touch gle Glass, some of the early for Google Glass.
Deschutes Fair & Expo Center
IntrOduCtiOn toBaSXSOlutiOnS LunCheOn Davld Benson & MatthewTobolskl — BasXSolutions 12:00 p.m.-1:00 p.m.—516.00- AsvPkaren@visitredmondoregon.com
"Grow Your Businesswith Social Media" LiSa Smith — 7-Touth Marketing 1:30 p.m.—2:30 p.m.
"The Importanceof Creating TrustedRelationships" Jay Clark- RelationshipManager,U.s.Bank Steve Curley -Director,smalBusi l nessDevelopmentcenteratcocc 2:30 p.m.- 3:30 p.m.
"KeepCalm and M obil eOn" Amanda Read- Read Mobile Marketing 3:30 p.m. - 4:30p.m.
For moreinformation or boothapplication, visit usonline atwww.COBusinessExpo.com and onfacebookatwwwfacebook.com/COBusinessExpoor call 541-923-5191
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing Report, D4
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
SNOW REPORT
MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL GUIDE
For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts, seeB6
a ri in , i
BRIEFING Conservation work for teens Youths 16 to 18
years old can apply for eight weeks of summer employment with the Central OregonYouth Conservation Corps. The Heart of Oregon Corps is recruiting for the education andwork program, which provides natural resource employment for conservation projects in the Ochoco andDeschutes national forests, according to a newsrelease. Nearly100 applicants will be selected for the summer program. They will earn $9.10 per hour working 36 hours a week. Projects include building trails, maintaining fences, piling hazardous fuels, restoring campgrounds, improving wildlife habitat and doing other types of conservation work, according to the release. Youths will work nine hours a day,Monday through Thursday, from June 23to Aug.14, with crews based inCrescent, Bend, Sisters, Redmond, Prineville, La Pineand Madras. Applications must be received by May1 and are available online at www.heartoforegon.org. Contact: Lynn Roby,
O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors
Editors note:Mountain Bike Trail Guide, by Bulletin sports and outdoors writer Mark Morical, features various trails in Central Oregon and beyond. The trail guide appears in Outdoors on alternating Wednesdays through the riding season.
R
technical terrain on
a mountain bike is
usually all about mind over matter. Those who have the
confidenceand make a quick decision to just go for it will often ride a challenging section without incident. Hesitation can cause
problems. It reminds me of what my
Sports Complex on Maple
over to crash onto the rocks.
marks the north section of the trail system that is planned
trails in northeast Redmond,
MARK
the Radlands is the ideal place MORICAL to develop technical-riding skills. Lava rock is incorporated creatively into much of drive some 20 years ago: "Hes- the singletrack, designed by itation causes accidents."
Biking at the Redmond
0i
Braking hard or stopping can be disastrous, as that can lead to a loss of balance or tipping Currently made up of about 10 miles of looped singletrack
REDMOND-
iding over rocky,
ou're u
volunteers with the Central
Oregon Trail Alliance over the
Avenue, home to the Smith Rock BMX racetrack. That to reachas farsouth as state
Highway 126 in years to come. The project is a collaborative effort of COTA, the
Redmond Area Park and Recreation District, and corporate sponsors Trinity Bikes, REI and Altrec.com. The current trails are located on Deschutes County land,
Radlands trails last week, I
last three years.
focused on riding fast and continuously through the myriad rock gardens, using
Plans call for about 30 miles where the western portion of of trails to eventually be built the Radlands will be built. The east of Redmond. Existing eastern half of the trail system singletrack starts from a is planned for BLM land. trailhead at the High Desert SeeRadlands/D2
dad told me over and over
my momentum to carry me
when teaching me how to
through the rugged terrain.
fish don't bite. Yes, I take
people fishing, but just for fun, not for profit.
I took three guys the other day and had a couple of young experts — Tommy Brown and Logan DeGree — along to test some
GARY LEWIS tackle. Someone should have told the fish we were coming, because they showed up late for their own party. Finally Logan caught one, but the fishing was tough. Braeden, 16, walked
With ChrisSabo
back from the other side
of the pond. The fly and bubble didn't work; the pink plastic didn't work;
the spinner didn't work. He needed a lifeline. I dove into the tackle
bag and opened my crappie box. One lure almost
leaped into my hand. I had never seen such enthusiasm in a fat-bodied, scoop-
Andy Tullie/The Bulletin
Gordon Boehm, of Bend, rides with friends (including this reporter) as they enjoy some sun st Bend's new Ponderosa Park Skstepsrk.
while the fish look at each bait as a potential meal or threat. We make distinc-
tions based on what we think the trout will eat. But the fish is basically
By David Jasper• The Bulletin
Reader photos
in western Wyoming. Deschutes River Trail. From at the north end of the park. There areplentyof options M eadowCampupstteam, Completed this winter, the as warm, sunny and to get afresh-air fixinthe dogs are still allowedoff-leash park's terrain and features pleasantly springlike Bend area: a lunchtime through May 14. How- would appeal to anyone who as youcould expectforearly mountain bike ride O UTING ev e r, May 15-Sept. 15, can ride a skateboard: small April in Central Oregon. With at Phil's Trail; or, it's they need tobe leashed banks, mogul-like "pump highs in the 60s, it was hard gettingwarmenoughtoget ory o u mayfaceafine. bumps," quarterpipes, stairs, "hubbas" (sloped ledges), tobelieve it'dbeen less than your kayak, canoe or stand-up I s e ttled on a lunchtime two weeks since the April 1 paddleboard in the water, or j au n t to east Bend's Ponder- handrails, even a pair of blizzard (well, it felt to some rentorborrowone. Another o s a Park Skatepark, a more small wavelike banks that of us like ablizzard), an event option: Hike or runwithyour u p - to-date design replacing echoone ofthelargerfeathat spawned something in favorite dog on a stretch of th e o l d Ponderosa Skatepark tures in the old park. the neighborhood of See Skate /D3 9,832 local tweets, Instagram photos and Facebookposts, < A helmeted David all attemptingto wed Jasper grinds thecoping the weather to April of a concrete halfpips at Fool's Day jokes. Ponderosa ParkSkatepark
possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aewell ae your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must he high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
hooks. It wanted into the water, bad. "You don't look like food," I told it.
We tend to classify lures
Well shot!
Include ae much detail aa
lipped crankbait. It was a Bandit After Shock, pink with an orange belly, black freckles and blood-red
into neat little categories
• Lunchtime 'sesh' at new Ponderosa ParkSkatepark takesadvantage of warm day
Submissionrequirements:
Crankin' for sprlng stockers t
TRAIL UPDATE
• We want to see your photos showing "spring in full swing" for another special version of Well shot! to run in this section. Submityour best work at hendbulletin.com /spring2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphotos© bentibulletin.com and tell us a bit about where and whenyou took them.
FISHING
could never be a fishing guide. When you take people's money to take them fishing, there is an expectation fish will be caught. And some days
541-416-6542. — From staff reports
The snow line continues to climb along with area temperatures. There is potential for higher-elevation winter trails to receive some precipitation, but lower elevations such asVirginia Meissner Sno-park are likely done for the winter. Conditions at Wanoga Snoplay Areaare marginal, and accessto winter trails is limited mainly to Dutchman, Vista Butte andSwampy Lakes. Summer trails in the Deschutes National Forest continue to dry out and improve, and users may encounter trails seeing moderate to heavy use. Volunteer crews will be heading out to clear trails of blowdown as thesnow line recedes. See Trails /D4
Gary Lewie/For The Bulletin
Braeden Frederick, 16, holds a holdover rainbow that chased down s pink crankbait.
ast Thursday, the weather was about
Just amatter of days later, the weather was perfect for
being outdoors, but I had plenty of work to catch up on after taking a long weekend to snowboard and hike
during lunchtime Thurs-
day. (Safsty first, especially for children: Oregonlaw requires anyone16 and under to wear a helmet
when skateboarding, or else you, oryourparents, face a fine.)
asking two questions: 'Can I eat it?' 'Is it going to eat me?' With the lure tied on, Braeden stalked around to the other side of the lake
and I forgot about him and was talking to Logan when I heard one of my favorite sounds in the world — the rattle of gill plates and the slap of a tail on the water
and the clack of a crankbait pinned by a treble in a lip. I cocked an ear and heard it again and saw Braeden battle a nice trout to the bank. On the second
cast, the fish bumped it then spun back around and nailed it. See Trout /D4
"A lot of us think
of crankbaits as bass gear, but trout like to think of them as food. It is a reaction bait
designed to trigger a response."
D2 THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
Grande RondeRiver: agoodfloat for beginners The Associated Press ing, this trip is very dependent on servicesand raft rentals for those ELGIN — Eastern Oregon's weather and water flow. In just a not totally equipped for the day.
ence. Somewhere between a Class
Grande Ronde River offers an ex-
and dangerous rapids are Class VI), the sketchy spot is located at
few days' time, this could turn into
If you don't need a shuttle and
cellent day trip for beginning rafters as it snakes from open farm
a rip-roaring ride, easily traveling have an extra vehicle, it can be left at 8 mph without even dipping near a public boat ramp access c ountry around Elgin i nt o t h e an oar in the water. On low-water point about 2 miles past Lookingshady canyons and steelhead wa- years or too late into the summer, glass Creeknear Palmer Junction. ters near Lookingglass Creek. you might find yourself bumping That allows you a half-day float The roughly 13-mile float pro- along the bottom just as often as (again, very dependent on water vides long stretches of nice scen- floating encumbered. flows) through country that cannot ery and relaxing travel, as well as An excellent public boat ramp is be seen or accessed from a road. places to ratchet up the heart rate located in the city of Elgin on Cedar Depending on the water level, and send a few splashes of water Street. It's a simple place to put in. there is one bend in the river seriIt's also just down the street from ous enough to require some foreonto paddlers. Like any early-season raft- Joining Waters, which offers shuttle planning and whitewater experi-
III and Class IV (the most difficult the head of a tight canyon about 4
miles downstream of Elgin. The season for comfortable rafting of the Grande Ronde near Elgin is short, however. The number of spring weekends sans spring
Tim Trainor/East Oregonian
downpours (not the most fun raft-
The182-mile Grande Ronde River meets the
ing weather) are not that numerous. If you catch one, though, you could do worse than exploring this nearby river.
Snake River. Kayakers, especially, could cover ground quickly enough to see both rivers. It would be feasible, too, to turn n float into n multi-
day raft trip, with riverside campsites galore.
Badlands, the Radlands were made for mountain bikes. The rock-riddled trails push the limits of the latest in fat-tire technology."
Redmond Radlands Directions:From Bend,take U.S. Highway 97 north to Redmond.Turn right on state Highway126/EvergreenAvenue.Turn left on Ninth Street. Turn right on NegusWay.Stay straight to go onto MapleAvenue.TheHigh Desert Sports Complex andthe Radlands trailhead are on the left. Length:About10 miles of slngletrack bike trails, with several loop options. Plans call for 30 miles of trails, eventually. Rating:Technically intermediate to advanced; aerobically easy to intermediate. Trail features:Trails range from easyto advanced. Many of the trails include technical riding over lava rock. Views include theCascade Range andSmith Rock State Park.
~~aAe Ir,P,' tQ '~ty'/1s'r
I
Upas Ave.
High
sert g
Don't forget the views: Smith Rock State Park dominates the horizon to the north of the Radlands.
ot"Is
mpl Negus Transfer Station
Smith Rock BMXtrack trailhead
Hmlc A
RED ND
Antler Ave.
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
n
Some trails at the Redmond Radlands are actually smooth, flowing singletrnck.
Radlands
Photos by Mark Morical /The Bulletin
Some sections of the trails at the Redmond Redlnnds require advanced technical riding skills.
cult" or "most difficult."
wheels that are designed to
A ccording to C O TA, t h e area also holds "endless miles"
smooth out a ride.
Continued from D1 The COTA website (www. of doubletrack to explore. cotamtb.com) calls the scope Redmond is home to draof the project "massive, on par with the Peterson Ridge Trail
in Sisters and the Wanoga Network near Bend."
The Radlands area also includes 7 miles of horseback riding trails, built and maintained by RAPRD and Oregon Equestrian Trails. The biking/hiking portion of the Radlands currently includes two loops north of Ma-
matic views of the Three Sisters to the west and Smith Rock State Park to the north.
the work. Much of the rock built into relatively easy to r ide over.
are visible most anywhere in
But some rock sections are particularly tricky, with the rocks jutting up sharply for the barren landscape, much several feet at a time, similar like the Badlands Wilderness to the Horse Ridge trails east the network. Twisty old juniper trees dot Area east of Bend. But while
at the Rndlends.
loop. ty unique, from continuously in snow or mud. But last week I rode the longer loop twice rock-strewn trails to smooth, the trails were already becomIndeed, I was thankful for around, first clockwise then flowing high desert single- ing somewhat dusty, and as my full-suspension 29er as counterclockwise to increase track. The area has little eleva- summer approaches, those I rolled over the high desert the variety. Then I crossed tion change, so mountain bik- conditions will only worsen. lava rocks, letting my bike do Maple Avenue to ride the ers need not worry about helSo don't hesitate to get out
The flat, open expanse of the the singletrack at the RadRadlands makes the most of lands is flat slab rock that is these views, as the mountains
A mountain biker rides over somerocky terrain
of Bend.
ple Avenue that will make up
biking is prohibited in the
Several well-placed turns
the upper-left quadrant of the future 30-mile complex, and
Badlands, the Radlands were made for mountain bikes. The
provide more flow to the trails that are not inherently flowy
a loop south of Maple Avenue
rock-riddled trails push the
that leads to a free-ride jump
limits of the latest in fat-tire
park. Posted signs rate the trails as "easy," "more diffi-
technology, including full-sus- er rocky, technical sections pension bikes and 29-inch than a longer, intermediate
south loop of the Radlands.
lacious climbs or teeth-chat-
There, more singletrack led to the dirt-jump park. I also
tering downhill sections. The technical rock c hal-
— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com
lenges are enough, and they south of the jump park that make the Radlands a good weavedthrough juniper trees, d estination for a n y m o u n found some smoother trails and I noted more terrain that
tain biker, not just those from
was pin flagged for future trail construction.
Redmond. The area is a perfect win-
74tsoNO.
ter/spring option when other tures in the Radlands is pret- trails near Bend are still mired The variety of the trail fea-
because of the lava rock. A
30"Range
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short, easy loop features few-
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
By Tim Mowry The Associated Press
F AIRBANKS, A l a s k a — When Elliot Wilson de-
cided to ride a unicycle in the White Mountains 100
endurance race, he knew it was an off-the-wall idea. After all, most people
wouldn't think about riding 100 miles on snowmobile and dog-mushing trails in late March in Fairbanks on two wheels, much less one. Wilson succeeded, much
~!
to the surprise ofhimself, as well as some of Fairbanks' foremost two wheelers.
.ig':, 'yi t
"That dude's crazy" is how Alaska's winter riding king, Jeff Oatley, put it after Wilson finished the 100-
*„
mile bike, ski and foot race in the White Mountains ¹
/P
tional Recreation Area on Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Gabe Triplette, a skateboard instructor, floats e backside ollie off e
transitioned rock feature at Ponderosa Park's newskatepark.
"The8,000-square-foot skatepark boasts a 4,000-square-foot skatepath with two
quarterpipes. A crowded skatepark can seem like a coral reef of activity with everyone crossing paths, and one smart feature was to put the halfpipe and quarterpipes at the outer edges to curb the possibility of collisions."
a recent Sunday in a more than respectable 189z hours. No, what's crazy is that
Wilson took up unicycling less than a year ago and did most of his trainingand learning — in India, which is about as far away from winter in Alaska as
you can get. "What really blows my mind is it's been less than a year," Wilson said a day after finishing the race. "I think it's so cool at the age of 30 that you can pick up something and e xplore the limits with it in a short amount of time." Explore the limits? Wil-
If yougo Getting there:PonderosaPark,225S.E.15thSt.,Bend.The skatepark is located at the south end of the park. Theentrance to the south parking lot is off Wilson Avenue. Difficulty:Depends on the rider's abilities. The park's smooth concrete surface will appeal to anyonefrom beginner to expert. Cost:Free. Contact: info©bendparksandrec.orgor541-389-7275.
Skate
"coach." Several times over the years I've skated with him,
Continued from D1 Despite those amenities, I,
he's offered this rider some insightful kernel of advice
falling squarely into the aging that made the difference in skateboarder category, hadn't
landing whatever trick I was
yet ridden there, even though attempting. it opened a few months ago. The 8,000-square-foot skateOn Wednesday, I sent a cou- parkalsoboasts a4,000-squareple of texts andposted on Face- foot skatepath with two quarbook a call for skaters I knew terpipes. A crowded skatepark around town asking them to can seem likea coralreef of join me for a short lunchtime activity with everyone crosssesh — that's a skateboarding ing paths, and one smart feasession in the parlance. ture was to put the halfpipe Alex B olonde, G ordon and quarterpipes at the outer Boehm and Gabe Triplette an- edges to curb the possibility of swered the call. Bolonde is a collisions. house painter who was makW hat we had all t o o u ring bids that day, Boehm man- selves for the first few minutes ages the Bend-based online slowly began to fill with more skate shops The Longboard riders, including a BMX bike Store and T h e S k ateboard rider. Store, and Triplette is the guy
According to Matt Mercer,
dren to skate if you've ever
director of recreation services for Bend Park & Recreation
who's likely taught your chil-
signed them up for lessons. District, bikes and scooters With last weekend's ciosure of are being allowed at the park Bend's longtime indoor skate- on a trial basis. park The Truckstop, where He also mentioned that the Triplette gave instruction, he old skatepark will remain in was taking a break from build- place for now. "The hope is that the skateing a new indoor skate space on the north end of town, Bear- park can remain for a longer ings Skateboard Academy. period of time, andif it does, we The three seasoned riders
can reinvest some money into
made good on the short sesh, it and bring it into better conwith Bolonde pulling, among dition than it's in now," he said. other tricks, his t r ademark
T he park c losed for t h e
son did something that nobody in Alaska, or probably anywhere else in the world for that matter, has ever thought about doing. To say that he puts the
Ed Plumb via The Associated Press
Elliot Wilson rode the entire100 miles of the White Mountains 100 endurance race, which took place last month north of Fairbanks, Alaska, on a fat unicycle. The 30-year-old engineer had been unicycling for just10months, and he learned and trained in India, of all places.
It worked out better than Wilson ever expected.
Riding a unicycle with a 4-inch-wide tire — a fat uni, not a fat bike — he finished in 43rd
place, ahead of 20 other racers, including a handful of two-wheeled cyclists, several skiers
and all but one runner. "When I first signed up for it, I didn't know if it was pos-
sible," said Wilson, who figured he could ski it if he got a spot in the race and didn't feel confident on a unicycle by that time.
In November, Wilson entered a 5-mile mountain bike
uni in unique would be an race on the snow to see what he was getting into. It wasn't "It just seemed like some- an auspicious beginning. "I was horrible," he said. "I thing crazy enough that it might work," Wilson said. could barely complete a 5-mile "There's something very race." That's where his trip to Infascinating in doing something that seems stupid." dia came in. understatement.
It worked out better than
"I usually take a vacation in
Wilson ever e x pected. December, January and FebRiding a unicycle with a ruary because the engineering 4-inch-wide tire — a fat uni, and design season is pretty not a fat bike — he finished slow," Wilson said. "I'm very in 43rd place, ahead of 20 interested in philosophy, and I other racers, including a figured India would be a better handful of t w o-wheeled place to learn how to unicycle cyclists, several skiers and
than 40 below in Fairbanks.
"That's where I got most of all but one runner. His official time was 18 hours, 38 my practice in," he said. minutes. The winner, Josh
Wilson spent three months
Chelf, did it in just less than unicycling a round I n dia, eight hours. which he said was a "very in"It w a s m u c h b e t ter teresting experience." "Nobody there had ever than I originally thought," Wilson said of his per- seen a unicycle before," he formance. "I had packed said. "I would stop for 30 secenough food for 30 hours." onds, and all of a sudden, I'd R ace organizer E d have 30 Indians around me Plumb heard about Wilgrabbing my unicycle and son's plans to ride a unicy- asking questions. It was a little cle and spoke to him before overwhelming." the race. The key to riding a unicycle "I thought he w ould is learning to keep your balmake it, but I was just going ance without thinking about by his confidence," Plumb it, something he was able to do said. "Some very hardcore by riding almost every day for cyclists were skeptical." three months in India, Wilson Wilson benefited from said. "I kind of have a personaliideal trail and weather conditions. With no snow in the ty for getting very focused on past two weeks and lots of things," he said. traffic during spring break, When he returned to Alasthe trails were practically ka, Wilson swapped the as hard as pavement. It was all-terrain tire he was using in a beautiful, sunny day with India for a fatter tire for riding
backside disasters — a back- weekend and part of Monday side ollie, or hands-free air, in while workers did finishing which he turns 180 degrees w ork t ha t r e q uired w a r m and lands midboard on the weather, including caulking of coping, then pops back in and joints. While seams aren't nec-
no wind to speak of. All of that said, Wilson's feat still
in the snow. The farthest he had ridden at one time before
is impressive, Oatley said.
the White Mountains race was
"That doesn't make riding 100 miles in the White
50 miles two weeks earlier.
rides down the transition, or
Mountains on a unicycle
essarily noticeable to riders,
"tranny" again in the parlance sealing them was critical to (really). the longevity of the concrete. Boehm, who rides with an
Finally, he mentioned that
enviable grace as though he was born riding a skateboard (not, by the way, recommended by health professionals) was pulling frontside rock 'n' rolls, frontside smith grinds
the turf, landscaping and irrigation work the district will be
a nd other m oves w it h s o much style and finesse that
After about 30 m inutes of riding,we parted compa-
he makes them look easy.
ny to attend the rest of our
They're not. Trust me. I have
Thursday. Asked for a quote as things were winding down, Bolonde said, "Just put something like,
fallen or bailed attempting both tricks more times than I've made them.
doing to complete the southern
end of Ponderosa Park should be done by July and shouldn't interfere with skating.
Triplette can seemingly do 'It was a beautiful day in Cenanything he wants on a board, tral Oregon.'" including ollies on a very narIt was. I'm already planning row stone feature at the top of
the street skating plaza. It's no wonder it's not just his students who sometimes call him
with something like 7,000
feet of elevation gain trivial," Oatley said of the biker-friendly conditions. Wilson, a 30-year-old engineer for PDC Engineering in Fairbanks, took up unicycling in June. He decided to sign up for the White Mountains 100 last
"I wanted to get an idea of trail hardness and how stupid of an idea this really was," is
White Mountains 100 course,
suffered was a bruised ego. "That kept me humbled," s aid Wilson, wh o
w ore a
backpackwith food and extra clothing in it. Other than that and one or
two other face plants, Wilson said he managed to stay upright. He figures he rode about 80 percent of the course and walked 20 percent, most of
which features some long, which was in the last 30 miles steep downhills, much more when his right knee started feasible because he could slow hurting. "At around mile 70, my right down, said Wilson, noting that the fasterhe goes, the faster knee started going out, and it made it hard applying a whole his legs have to turn. "You don't get to coast, lot of pressure,"he said. "I but at least, it takes little bit started using my left leg as the of pressure off your legs go- dominant one." Wilson said he had "tons of ing downhill," Wilson said of his brake. "If you start spin- encouragement"from friends, ning too fast, it causes a lot of race organizers and volunteers, and fellow racers. It was an problems." Even with a brake, it's not awesome experience he said he will be tempted to repeat. easy going downhill, he said. "You always have to be apHaving a unicyclist entered plying pressure because that's "added a little flair to the race," also how you maintain your Plumb said. balance," said Wilson, whose "It was cool to have him," he 6-foot-6-inch, 190-pound frame sard. makes for an imposing sight Now, though, Wilson said sittingthree feetoff theground. he is going to take a break to "The brake will lock the wheel let his knee heal. The day after sometimes, so you're still using the race, he said he could bareyourfeetto brake.You're sort ly walk. "I'm not going to unicycle of dancing back and forth with for a little while," Wilson said. your legs and hands." It was going downhill when other racers, taking advan-
tage of the ability to coast and glide, would pass him, Wilson
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"The moment I started going downhill, I had all these skiers and bikers zipping past me," he said. "It would have been really nice to be able to coast."
At one point going down a hill on Cache Mountain Di-
vide, Wilson said he got a little cocky and got going a little too fast, at which point his
tirepunched through several inches of soft snow and he was thrown out of the saddle. His
unicycle flew over his head as he landed face first in the snow, but the only injury he
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how Wilson put it. After talking with him at the start of the race, Oatley,
who sat out this year's race after riding to Nome a month ago, said he could tell Wilson knew what he was getting into. "He knew what he was do-
summer — a lottery is held ing, or what he was going to in October to pick the 65 try to do," Oatley said. racers who get in the race As far as unicycles go, Wil— after his friend, Seth son's Nimbus Oregon is "fairAdams, skied the race last ly fancy." It has only one gear, year and told him how but it's equipped with a disc much fun it was. That was brake, which Wilson controls before he even really knew with a lever under the seat. how to ride a unicycle. The brake made riding the
my next l u nchtime escape. Who's with me? — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbuIIetirt.com
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
UTDOORS CLIMBING ROCK MONKEYSTUESDAYS ORTHURSDAYS:Beginner rock climbing class for kids ages 7 to 12; $75 to $95 per month, includes gym membership; throughJune;4 to 5:15 p.m.;Bend Rock Gym; 541388-6764; info©bendrockgym.com. YOUTH ROCKCLIMBING MONDAYS AND WEDNESDAYS:Designed for intermediate to advanced climbers looking to hone their skills; $95 to $110 per month, includes gym membership; through June; 4 to 5:30 p.m.; Bend Rock Gym; 541388-6764; info©bendrockgym.com.
CYCLIMG WOMEN DIRTTRIXIE MOUNTAIN BIKEGROUP RIDE:W omen-only group ride at Maston trails near Redmond; Dirt Trixie rides are not training rides and they are not races; they are a chancefor women riders to
meet new people,stayinshapeand enjoy cycling; open to all levels; free; Thursday, April 24, from 5 to 7 p.m.; meet at Trinity Bikes, Redmond; 541923-5650; trinitybikes05©gmail. com; www.trinitybikes.com.
E1VD
Email events at least 10 days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.
www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB: Agroup of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541306-4509 or bendcastingclub© email mbsef©mbsef.org, or visit gmail.com. www.mbsef.org. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB:7 SUMMER MOUNTAINBIKING p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of PROGRAM: The Mt. Bachelor Sports eachmonth; Sunriver Homeowners Education Foundation will hold the sessions for two weeks each in June, Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www. July, and August; call 541-388-0002, sunriveranglers.org. email mbsef@mbsef.org, or visit THE CENTRALOREGON www.mbsef.org. FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m .;meets on the third Wednesday of each FISHIMG month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org. CENTRALOREGON BASS CLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; HORSEBACK meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; RIDING www.cobc.us. STILL MEMORIALWEEKEND: May DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT 2-4, at Skull Hollow-Crooked River UNLIMITED: For members to meet National Grasslands, Lone Pine; and greet and discuss what the includes three American Endurance chapter is up to; 6 p.m.; meets on Ride Conference Endurance Rides, the first Monday of each month; and manyotherchallenges and Oregon Natural Desert Association horse-related demonstrations; offices, Bend; 541-306-4509, communications©deschutestu.org, tinyurl.com/StillMemorialWeekend. YOUTH MOUNTAINBIKING PROGRAM:The Mt.Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is accepting enrollments for its Wednesday after-school, earlyrelease mountain biking program; sessions run May 7 through June 4; cost is $75; call 541-388-0002,
condit ions,somegoodmidday hatches have been reported. Restricted to fly-fishing with barbless hooks. Fall River below the falls closed at the end of September. FROG LAKE:Snow will limit access until mid-May. HAYSTACKRESERVOIR: Trout fishing has been slow to fair. The bass and bluegill will become more active as the water warms. HOOD RIVER:Winter steelhead fishing is at its peak for the season. Lots of fresh fish have been coming over Bonneville, and good river conditions should make a good combo for great fishing the remainder of April. HOSMERLAKE:Rainbow and cutthroat trout are now available for harvest. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK:Fishing for bull trout was slow, but fishing for kokanee was excellent. Anglers are reminded there are small numbers of spring chinookand summer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Please release these fish unharmed. LAKE SIMTUSTUS:The reservoir is now open to fishing year-round. Anglers will need both a tribal fishing
FLY-TYING CORNER
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Baby Bugger Black, courtesy Fly and Field Outfltters.
Blue on black. This fly speakssea-run cutthroat in October when harvest trout stack against the bank indeep, slow poolsblue-backed tears on ariver. This fly boasts a slim, dark profile that swims with a tantalizing up-and-down motion. Don't mess around with other patterns and don't cast over the fish. Lay the fly down about 6 feetawayfrom the nearest trout and let the fly sink to the count of three. Match on afire. Start a slow 1-inch retrieve and, if you seethe strike, wait until the fish turns before lifting the rod. Tie this onewith black thread andadark bead. Forthe tail, use a short length of black marabou.Dubthe tapered bodywith midnight blue sparkle dubbing. Finish with apalmered black dry-fly hackle. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin license and a fishing license from ODFW. The reservoir is stocked annually with 30,000 rainbow trout and has a decent, self-sustaining population of smallmouth bass. LOST LAKE:Snow will limit access. METOLIUS RIVER:Winter fishing is usually best on mild days when the temperature reaches above the high 40s. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day with an 8-inch minimum length. Trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead and must be released unharmed. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Trout fishing has been slow to fair. The bass and
crappie will becomemoreactive as the water warms.
POINTING DOG FIELD TRIAL: Watch several breeds of pointing dogs perform and find birds with handlers and judges on horseback in this AKC-sanctioned field trial sponsored bythe German Wirehaired Pointer Club of Central Oregon; free; dog entry fees apply; April19-20, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Boyce Corral in Madras; 541-312-3183; j.proulxO
yahoo.com;gwpcco.org. LEARN THEARTOFTRACKING ANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker to learn how to identify and interpret tracks, signs and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; 8 a.m. to noon; two or more walks per month; $35; 541-6337045; dave©wildernesstracking. com, wildernesstracking.com. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION:
7 p.m. ;meetsthesecond W ednesday ofeach month;King Buffet, Bend;ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall;
Trails
FIsHING REPoRT Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in and around Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. This report was last updated on April 9. For the most recent report, visit www.dfw.state.or.us/RR/central. ANTELOPE FLATRESERVOIR: Fishing has beenfair. The water level is to the bottom of the pavedportion of the ramp. Water clarity is low. Using scent or lots of flash will help the fish find your offering. Themajority of the fish range from12to14inches long. CLEAR LAKE: Snow will limit access until late April or early May. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM: Flows have increased significantly now that Prineville Reservoir is full. The fishing is usually poor until the flows have had a few days to stabilize. FALL RIVER:Depending on weather
HUNTING
PINEHOLLOW RESERVOIR:The reservoir is warming up and hasbeen stocked, so fishing should be great. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR: Fishing has been slow to fair for trout up to 18-inches long. PRINEVILLEYOUTHFISHING POND:There are some holdover trout still available and some bass have been seen cruising the shallows. ROCK CREEK RESERVOIR: The reservoir has been stocked and should be a great place to go this spring and catch some rainbow trout. The reservoir is warming up and hasbeen stocked,so fishing should be great. TAYLORLAKE:Taylor has been stocked and there should be good fishing for rainbows.
Continued from D1 A successful controlled burn in the Phil's Trail area required the temporary closure of Marvin's GardenTrail, which should becompletely reopened in time for the weekend. The burn will improve future vegetation, wildlife habitat and fireproofing in the area. Future controlled burns are planned for trail systems in the area. A Heart of OregonCorps crew will thin small-diameter trees in several units for the West Bend Project. Forest users may seecrews working and hear chainsaws running as they movethrough the area weekdays through June, but that shouldn't result in trail closures. The Phil's Trail system is snow-free on lower trails, with increasing snowabove4,700 feet. Users should expect and avoid muddy trails. Tumalo Falls Trailhead is
541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.
pinemountai nposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10a.m.; first and third Sunday; Central OregonShooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass.com.
PADDLIMG KAYAKROLLSESSIONS: Noninstructed sessions at indoor pool; 4:05-6 p.m.; runs through the end of May; $12 for in-district residents, $16 otherwise; Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center, Bend;
SMOW SPORTS ALPINESKIING YOUTH CAMP: The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is holding an alpine skiing camp for youth at Mt. Bachelor, June 13-20; for more information, call 541388-0002, email mbsef©mbsef.org, or visit www.mbsef.org. NORDICSKIING YOUTH CAMPS: The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is holding a Memorial Day weekend nordic camp for youth, May 24-26, and a Fire and Ice nordic camp for youth, June13-18; call 541-
register at bendparksandrec.org or call 541-389-7665.
SHOOTING COSSAKIDS: Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, earand eye protection are provided; parentor guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shootingclub;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www.
388-0002, emaimbsef©mbsef.org, l
or visit www.mbsef.org. FREERIDESKI ANDSNOWBOARD YOUTH CAMP: The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is holding a campfor youth, June13-21; call 541-388-0002, email mbsef© mbsef.org, or visit www.mbsef.org.
now open to motor vehicle traffic for the season, but the path just above the parking area is still blocked by snow. Deschutes River Trail and its trailheads are snow-free and in fair to good condition from the Bend area to BenhamFalls and onto Sunriver, but somedowned trees have beenreported. As at Phil's and other summer trails still drying out from winter, hikers and riders should avoid
•
muddy trails. Metolius River trails are snow-free and in fair to good condition. Starting Monday, youth crews will be continuing with trail improvements and riparian restoration projects. Peterson Ridge trails are in fair to good condition, but blowdown has been reported on some of its trails. Expect snow above5,000 feet.
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Trout
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Continued from D1 A lot of us think of crank-
Thursday, April 24'", 2014, 3pm
baits as bass gear, but trout like to think of them as food.
Presented by Lorie Weber, PA-C, Partners In Care Home Health and Hospice
It is a reaction bait designedto trigger aresponse. In the spring, before the water warms and bug life burgeons, a crankbait can trig-
Stress Reduction for Seniors
ger fast limits from some of
our best hatchery trout lakes. There is no easier lureto fish. Tie it on and reel it back. The trick is to run the bait down
Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin
where the feeders are. They can be anywhere in the watercolumn. If you think fish are deeper, use a deeper running plug.If the fish are in the top 18 inches, use ashorter-lippedbait. How do you choosefrom the staggering number of
A 2-Inch crankbalt can be a great go-to lure when the fishing is good, but the catching is tough.
lures on the market? Pick several. Start with a pattern that
eat. For me, the most depend-
ery trout are the new Bandit
able trigger color is that dark, matches the size of the local bloody gill-colored red. bait fish. Then focus on strike Many lures show gill flash trigger details. Small scared color already. You can add it fish have big eyes thatsuggest with fingernail polish or by vulnerability. Glue on stickers changing out one of the hooks. or 3-D prisms — make sure Becausepredatory trout often it has big eyes. An erratic re- strike from the side, I change trieve suggests fear, and fear out the center hook on a threeprovokes apredator.A rattle hook stickbait, swapping the might be a strike trigger as standard bronze for a Mood well, allowing fish to find the red treble. Rather than hiding
Lure (in pink), Worden's Timber Tigers, the Rapala Count-
lure in murky water. thetreble, I want that red hook Redis another strike trigger. to become the target. When fish feed, they flare their There are lots of go od gills, which may be asignal to crankbaits on the market, but other fish there's something to some of my favoritesfor hatch-
down and the Luhr Jensen
Hot Lips Express.For fast ac-
Lorie reviews the types of stress senior's deal with, how to recognize the stress, manage it and transform it. She gives great examples of how folks living in Assisted Living can deal with the stressors of being a senior adult.
Partners In Care
All presentations are held at High Desert Assisted Living, 2660 NE Mary Rose Place.
tion, smaller is better. I don't care how many trout
we catch on crankbaits, for some reason I never tie them
on first. Maybe if I was a fishing guide, I would. — Contact Gary Lewis at www.GaryLewisOutdoors.com.
Please RSVPto (541) 312-2003 Refreshments provided.
Prestige Senior Living High Desert www.PrestigeCare.com
2660 NE Mary Rose Pl Bend, OR 97701
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Grayingmoose:proof that tickssuck
SKY WATCH
arsis ri The moon will rise later throughout the week, providing longer viewing opportunities for observing Mars without interfering light. Look to the east. Tothe unaided eye, Mars appears asa tiny orange dot at adistance of 0.618 astronomic units (AU), or about 57 million miles. Arcturus, a star, is nearby and left of Mars and is often mistaken for Mars due to its similar color. Arcturus is in fact a hugeredgiant star far outside the solar system, 36.7 light-years away. Mars, namedfor the Roman god of war, is the fourth planet from the sun. The farther out a planet orbits, the slower its speed is, and its orbital path is longer. While Earth's year is 365.25 days, the Martian year is 686.98 days. Eachsolar day on Mars ("sol") is 24 hours, 39 minutes and 35.244 seconds, only slightly longer than anEarth day.Surface gravity is weak, about 38 percent of Earth's. The atmosphere is extremely thin, only 0.6 percent of Earth's, and 95 percent of that is carbon dioxide. Mars' two known moons, Phobos andDeimos, were discovered byAmerican astronomer AsaphHall over the course of a single weekback in 1877.
Early astronomers, believing in an Earth-centered system, were confounded by Mars' apparent retrograde motion; Mars seems to back up in alooping movement and then goforward again. This illusion is created as Earth in its orbit approaches
By Rich Landers
OI1I
The S pohesman-Review
SPOKANE, Wash.— The
graying look of moose you might see in the field this spring isn't the result of old
Mars in the constellation Virgo Mars as it will appear in the eastern sky at 9:30 p.m. tonight.
Mars
c'
*
age. It's likely the work of blood-sucking ticks. The Coeurd'Alene office of the Idaho Department of
'e
Fish and Game has received
several calls recently from .'r wildlife watchers concerned about odd-looking moose The Spokesman-Review around towns as well as in A bullmoose wanders a Spokane Valley,Wash., neighborhood wild places. last year. The moose likely isn't old; it's infested with ticks. "The moose appear to be
partially white, or, as one caller described, 'ghost-like' dioxide exhaled by a moose, fatal to a moose. While some in appearance," said Phil the ticks interlock their legs moose survive until the ticks Cooper, department conser- and wait. fall off, some moose die. "When a moose contacts "The cause of mortality vation educator. "Moose can experience the brushy vegetation cov- can be loss of blood, hypotick infestations that start in mid-September, but the
Source: Kent Fairfield, Pine Mountain Observatory
and overtakes Mars in its more distant orbit. From our perspective, Mars appears to back up in relation to background stars and then moveforward again. Geocentric models were hardpressed to create a credible explanation and never really did so. The heliocentric (sun-centered) system solved the problematic observance created by observational perspective. Various probes haveconfirmed that Mars doeshavewater as ice locked in polar capsand in shallow subsurface locations at more temperate latitudes. The
Greg Cross I The Bulletin
Martian landscapesuggests that great quantities of liquid surface water may havebeenpresent in the past. If so, where hasit gone? An answer might uncover important information concerning planetary evolution here on Earth. Although Mars hasbeen extensively studied for signs of life, no definitive evidence has,as yet, been found. — Kent Fairfieldis a volunteer with Pine Mountain Observatory and a lifelong amateur astronomer. Hecan be reached atkent.fairfield©gmati. com.Other PMOvolunteers also contributed to this article.
ered by interlocked tick larvae, strings of thousands of
problem is not clearly visible ticklarvae clingonto the hair to people until late in the fol- of the moose and crawl tolowing winter. ward the skin," Cooper said. "These tick larvae can T he t i ck s a r e ca l l ed "moose ticks" or "winter also cling to deer; howevticks." They are not attract- er, deer appear to be able to ed to humans. scratch them off." "The infestations become Moose are a giant free visible when moose scratch buffet to these specialized and paw at their own skin arachnids. For example, reenough to cause large patch- searchers investigating a es of hair to break or fall moose carcass documented out," Cooper said. more than 100,000 ticks. "Moose ticks take a blood Moose tick larvae hatch from eggs and lay on the meal from their host in Noground in April and climb vember, January, March and vegetation during the late April to mature from larvae summer and early fall, Coo- to adults," Cooper said. "In per said. April, the adult female ticks This is where the story drop off to lay their eggs on gets creepy. They don't get the soil surface, starting the themselves in position to tick life cycle over again." infest moose one at a time. Wildlife biologists already Rather, they gang up. know that thousands of Stimulated by the carbon feeding ticks are potentially
thermia due to loss of hair,
or starvation when the severe itching causes them to forage less than is necessary to maintain themselves," Cooper said. Studies in several states
are looking into tick infestations asone of severalpossi-
bilities for general declines in moose populations. "Mortality is highest in calf moose,"Cooper said. "Their smaller body mass loses heat more readily and
is more vulnerable to blood loss. A National Geographic video program on moose ticks reports that calves can
potentially lose half of their blood to the attached ticks."
By late May, the moose are mostly tick-free and they begin to recover their nor-
mal look before facing the possibility of a new infestation in the fall.
The Bm11etin, U Magamim,e ar Rohherson pord, presemt 0
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D6
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT TV TODAY
erea o e :
a a e- n i n e e s?
8 p.m. on(CW), "Arrow"-
TV SPOTLIGHT
This could happily go on
ing because he feels like it, but it can't be purely coincidental
forever, but why should Col-
By Hank Stuever The Washington Post
Stephen Colbert will t ake
over as host of the network's "Late Show" sometime next
year when longtime host David Letterman retires. It's a five-year contract. It's also a
welcome and possibly daring choice in the late-night genre, which could use the inventive, concertina-wire wit and
mastery of tone that Colbert possesses. Nation, I can tell you're mildly alarmed. Don't be. In announcing the deal, Colbert and CBS felt the need to make it clear that "Stephen Colbert," the conservative fire-
CBS via The Associated Press
CBS moved swiftly last week to replace the retiring David Letterman, pictured right dudng a 2012 interview, with Stephen Colbert, left. Colbert,49, will take over the"Late Show" next year and do battle with the Jimmys (Fallon and Kimmel) for late-night television supremacy — all while he retires his fictional conservative pundit character.
brand cable-news pundit he has played to great effect on Comedy Central's "The Col-
bertReport" fornine years,is not coming along for the ride. Instead, Colbert will h ost "Late Show" as himself. "I won't be doing the new show
in character, so we'll all get to find out how much of him was me," he said in a statement.
All along, there has been the perception that viewers strug-
that there is a whole lot more news media have been mocked to the man behind that show's once more with another strong essential s h t ick . C o l bert's dose of nuanced parody.
background is in theater and improv comedy. He's a gifted singer and dancer. He's a married father and devout Catholic. He keeps his personal politics and beliefs low-key, probablyto enhance the character he plays on TV, or maybe be-
Since its debut in 2005 as a companion piece to "The Daily Show With Jon Stewart," "The
Colbert Report" has served its fans as a welcome relief to
the noise of politics — by adding more noise. First it took on the jingoistic tone of the
Fox News Channel during the easily coast above the fray. post-9/11 years, mining AmerAnd if you're a very percep- ican culture's red-blue divide tive fan of "The Colbert Re- for laughs. The years went by, port," then you shouldn't want Barack Obama was elected to him to be required to play that two presidential terms, and It's not like we're talking part through endless election "The Colbert Report" never about Pee-wee Herman or the cycles, just so you can go to wavered, adjusting its targets Easter Bunny here. It should bed with the smug satisfaction and providing a welcome jab be clear to anyone who has that politicians (mostly conser- at the ineffectual gridlock of enjoyed "The Colbert Report" vative ones) and the clueless Washington. gle to understand that Colbert
cause, like Letterman, he can
playsa character.Thisdoesn't have to be as confusing as it might seem. We should eagerly look forward to seeing Colbert ditch "Colbert."
bert have to be the one to do that the latest "Late Show" it? (Especially when Stewart is numbers aren't encouraging. still going strong?) Since his debut in February, Colbert, who will turn 50 Fallon has enjoyed a nightly next month, has proved adept total average Nielsen rating at conversing with just about of just over 5 million viewers; any guest on "The Colbert Re- Letterman'saverage is about port" one can imagine — from 2.8 million over the same sevelected officials and scientists en weeks. That gap narrowed to actors and authors. The lay- considerably in l ast w eek's ers of irony routinely practiced ratings, but Fallon still has a on "The Colbert Report" (in strong lead. Kimmel is averwhich the guest knows before- aging about 2.7 million. ("The hand that he or she will be in- Colbert Report," for comparterviewed by a caricature of a ison, averaged about 1.4 milmedia monster) have been ex- lion viewers last week.) Late-night viewers have a cellent practice for what could be a higher level of chit-chat year or soto get comfortable on "Late Show." This is the quality that the
with the idea of Colbert re-
placing Letterman. Not evlate-night field needs most. We erything about "The Colbert need a seriously funny adult to Report" should be flushed talk to other interesting adults away with its make-believe for an audience of adults, in host; like all late-night shows, this century as it is lived, with t he new v e rsion o f " L a t e a gift for skepticism and as Show" will need more than free as possible from Johnny just guests and a live band. Carson nostalgia. On NBC, The same critical mind (and "The Tonight Show's" Jimmy writing staff, one hopes) that Fallon is sweet, but he only gave viewers such lasting seems interested in his guests concepts as "truthiness" and as recess playmates and par- "factose intolerance" will now ticipants in a sketch show. On go to work coming up with the ABC, Jimmy Kimmel's con- next version of whatever will versational style is perfuncto- replace the mother of all latery and witty, sometimes prob- nightbits: the Top Ten List. It's a tall order, maybe an ing, occasionally sneering, but not always that interesting. impossible standard to match, There is still the matter of ratings, even as all of the TV
but of all the names that were
tossed around in the last week industry's most reliable mod- as possible Letterman replaceels and metrics are essentially ments, Colbert seemed most held together with duct tape likely — and, more important, these days. Letterman is leav- most able.
Oliver, Canary, Diggle and Felicity (Stephen Amell, Caity Lotz, David Ramsey, Emily Bett Rickards) confront Slade (Manu Bennett) at the lair, and the resulting battle sends one member of Team Arrow to the hospital. Oliver is faced with a difficult choice when Thea (Willa Holland) reaches a breaking point. Laurel (Katie Cassidy) wrestles with a secret in the new episode "The Man Under the Hood." 8 p.m. on FAM, "Melissa & Joey" —Christopher Rich
("Reba") gueststars inthis new episode asMel's (Melissa Joan Hart) father, who comes to town to help her announce her state senate candidacy. When he learns about"selfies" from Joe (Joey Lawrence), he inadvertently sends a racy photo to everyone involved in the campaign. Oops. Nick Robinson andTaylor Spreitler also star in "Born to Run." 9p.m.on29, "M odernFamily"
— Cameron(Eric Stonestreet) is so determined to win the upcoming football game that he's ignoring the fact that the other team will be playing at a disadvantage to begin with. Claire (Julie Bowen) wants to prove her worthiness to the staff at work. Phil (Ty Burrell) tries to teach the kids how to be optimistic, but a series of unfortunate events makes that difficult in "The Big Game." EdO'Neill and Sofia Vergara also star. 9 p.m. on 6, "Criminal Minds"In Boston to investigate a series of strangulation deaths, the team looks for a common link among the victims in hopes of finding
the killer. Rossi(JoeMantegna) learns his favorite bar is in danger of going out of business in "Gatekeeper." Thomas Gibson, Shemar Moore, Matthew GrayGubler and
JeanneTripplehorn alsostar.
Cellphonesnoop: Mybo riend cheats Dear Abby: I have been in a long-distance relationship with "Victor" for several years. Recently I began to suspect he was cheating. What raised my suspicion was that I suddenly couldn't reach him on
is beyond me. My advice is to disHow would I go about compliconnect from him and say nothing. menting her on her new look? I It should be interesting to see how don't want to say the wrong thing. long it takes him to notice your Or should I just say nothing'? — Enjoys the View fn Phoenix absence. When he does — which probaDear Enjoys The View:All you
the weekends. Usually we would
bly won't be on a weekend — tell
need to say is, "You look GREAT!"
Skype — Sunday him the romance is and she'll get the message. Trust night for me, Monday over and reference me. morning for him. the email he sent his Dear Abby: Every time I talk to DFP,R Last Fe b ruary former g i r l friend. anyone, my husband says I give ABBY when I visited him, I Expect him to go on too many details. While I undersnooped in his phone t he o ffensive a n d stand that men are different from — spare me the contry t o m ake y ou women, he often bugs me when I demnation. I found an email he feel guilty for having checked his talk to female friends or my mothhad written to an old girlfriend in
cellphone. Don't buy it, and don't
er-in-law. I don't know what to do,
which he suggested they plan their
relent. Just be glad you found out
"next"rendezvous.
now.
because we women love to talk and sharedetails.Please reassure me
I plan on dumping him, but I Dear Abby:I don't know if you that I'm not an oddity. don't know how to go about it. I've have addressed the issue of wom— Talfzin' Up a Storm alwaysbeen bad atdumping peo- en and breast augmentation from Dear Talkin' Up a Storm:You're ple. Should I write him a letter and the standpoint of noticing the work not an oddity, and your husband confess that I snooped? My first in- done, but I am trying to find a way should not be eavesdropping on clination is to disconnect complete- to say "I noticed" without being your conversations. He should be ly and say nothing. crude or tacky. glad that you and his mother get I'm afraid to confront him beMy wife works with a woman along so well that you both enjoy cause he is obviously a good liar. who recently had augmentation sharing details, because it's a sign I'm afraid if I do, he'll make me surgery, and we agree that the of a healthy relationship. However, doubt the evidence — trust me, he's doctor did a very nice job. Accord- because hecan'tresist "bugging" that good! ing to my wife, the woman is not you, converse with your friends — Cheated on fn L.A. shy about discussing her surgery. and his mother when you're out of Dear Cheated On: Why any I have known her for years, and earshot. woman would stay with someone we're on friendly terms. We talk of— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com who is a practiced liar ("that good") ten and exchange hugs. or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, APRIL16, 2014:This yearyou often disagree with those around you. Howyou manifest this difference of opinion will strongly affect your relationships. If you develop respect for others' ideas, better interactions will emerge as a result. A change on the homefront will be for the better. If you are single, at times you might feel out of Stars showthe kind sync with others of day you'll have when dating. Real** * * * D ynamic ize that not everyone is right for you. Theperiod from so July15 to your * Difficult next birthday could draw a significant person into your life. If you are attached, youenjoyeachother's company. Youalso enter a new phase of your relationship this year. SCORPIOprobes to find answers.
ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Your intensity might be heightened by a night of vivid dreams. A personal or domestic matter will loosen you up. You could see a white rabbit pop out of a black hat. Stay centered in your apparent good fortune, and don't let anyone get to you. Tonight: Togetherness counts.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) * ** Others seekyou out,astheyhave plans or a project that they would like to include you in. You might have different plans. Howyou explain this could define your interactions for a while. Takean overall look at a situation. Tonight: Sort through invitations.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * Focus on a project, rather than allow others to be distracted. You will be optimistic when it comes to an in-
Tonight: Take a break from routine.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
vestment. A partner surprises you with a different perspective. You could feel awkward about a personal crisis. Tonight: Take your time heading home.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * Your creativity emerges, and you seem to find answers quickly. On the other hand, others easily could be stumped by a problem. Be careful with a roommate who might decide to cause some uproar. Maintain a sense of humor. Tonight: Ever playful.
LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * You need to focus on the here and now, as well as on what direction you want to head in. You need to be determined, or else you will be distracted too easily. Count on your inner voice. You might be receiving an odd yet valid message. Listen carefully. Tonight: At home.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sspt. 22) ** * * You could tumble into a snafu, but you will bounce right out. Use care with spending, as itcould causea problem. Tempers might flare regarding something that seems more important than it really is. A meeting could be more instrumental than you think. Tonight: Where the action is.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * Patience doesn't appear to be very evident right now, as tempers are close to the surface. Respect differences instead of viewing others as being wrong. Unexpected developments involving a partner or close associates will land in your lap.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * You could choose to bypass a frustrating situation. If you would like to maximize your energy, detach. Instability comes from an associate and/or a changeinschedule.News sheds lighton a decision. First, digest the information. Tonight: Alone does not work.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dsc. 21) ** * Listen to others' complaints. You might be inclined to start a discussion and get to the bottom of a problem. You might be surprised by the anger that arises. Keep your opinions to yourself for now. Tonight: Your popularity is about to soar!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * Zero in on your priorities while you can. A boss or a personal situation has the capacity to distract you. Decide how to handle this issue, especially if you have a lot to get done. Realize that you have options. Tonight: Loosen up with a friend. Say "goodbye" to tension.
aauaRluS(Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * You are full of playfulness, while others seem to be pulling out their hair. If you stop, you will see that a situation has evolved that forces your hand. You need to respond to someone who really could use your support. Tonight: Out till the wee
hours. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * A llow your imagination to wander. How you deal with someone could changeradically onceyou detachand can understand his or her actions, ideas and thoughts. You might not have seen this dimension of this person before. Tonight: Be where there is great music. © King Features Syndicate
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IIMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) Noon, 3:15, 3:30, 6:25, 9:30, 9:50 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER 3-0 (PG-13) 12:15, 6:45 • CAPTAINAMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER IMAX3-0 (PG-13) 12:30, 3:45, 7,10:05 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 12:05, 3:20, 6:30, 9:40 • DRAFT DAY (PG-13) 12:45, 3:50, 7:15, 9:55 • GOD'S NOTDEAD(PG) 1:25, 4:25, 7:10, 10 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 12:55, 4:15, 7:05, 9:35 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG)12:30, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15 • MR.PEABODY & SHERMAN (PG)12:35,3:05,6 • MUPPETSMOSTWANTED(PG)12:10, 2:55, 6:10, 9:10 • NOAH(PG-13) 12:20, 3:25, 6:50, 10:10 • OCULUS(R)I:30,4:30,7:40, IO:I5 • THE RAID 2(R) 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:40,10 • RI02 (G) 1,3:40, 6:20, 9 • RIO 23-0(G) 1: I5, 3 55, 635, 9:I5 • SABOTAGE (R) 9:05 • SOMETHINGWICKED(R) I:10, 4:05, 7:20, 9:45 • Accessibilitydevices areavailable for somemovies. •
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • FROZEN(PG) 3 • HER(R) 9 • POMPEII(PG-13)6 • After 7p.m.,showsare2fandolderonly.Youngerthan 21 mayattend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guadian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • The "Spaghetti Westem" will screen at 630 tonight (doors openat 6 p.m) andincludes anall-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) 3:45, 8:45 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 4:15, 7:15 • NOAH(PG-13) 4:30, 7:30 • RI02(G)4:15,6:30
9:30 p.m. on TRAV,"ToyHunter" —In the season finale, Jordanfi nds something he hasbeen
seeking for ayear: aJamesBond attache case from1965, which is worth about $3,500 in pristine condition. There's a catch, however, which leaves Jordan a bit shaken — not stirred — in "Live and Let Play." 10 p.m. on FX, "The Americans" — Philip's and Elizabeth's (Matthew Rhys, Keri Russell) respective missions take painful turns in this new episode. Hoping to gain the upper hand in his battle with Oleg (Costa Ronin), Stan (Noah Emmerich) fights for access to a U.S. military program. Holly Taylor also stars in "New Car." © Zap2it
WILSONSsf Redmond 541-548-2066
Adjustablc Beds
I)V&TREss
G allery - B e n d 541-3$0-50$4 Pure. &mri.6 t"o.
>j B~ do Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) 6:15 • DRAFT DAY (PG-13) 8:30 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 7 • NOAH(PG-13)6 • RIO 2 (G) 5 Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) 4:05, 7 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG) 4:20, 6:50 • NOAH(PG-13)3:30, 6:30 • OCULUS(R) 5:05, 7:20 • RI02(G) 5,7:10 •
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (Upstairs — PG-13) 6:30 • RI02 (G)6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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TOUCHMARK SINCE 19ss
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
Plafs Well, Retire Well
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775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0321 ewww.elevationcapital.biz
ON PAGES 3R4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com To place an ad call 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 208
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Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Tools
Employment Opportunities
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Help needed
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Want to Buy or Rent
CASH for dressers, dead washers/dryers 541-420-5640
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jeweliy. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006
Wanted white peace doves for outdoor aviary. 541-382-2194 Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily
22" diameter x 17" high, 12 lights,
bronze & crystal, has 6 arms (2 lights on each arm), $300 obo. 541-923-7491
Montgomery, who just had a leg amputated. He was seen injured with a bone protruding from his leg for over 2 mo. by Sisters resiDining table dents before they conBeautiful round tacted CRAFT to help oak pedestal table him. He needs time 8 with 4 matching a quiet place to heal. chairs, table is 42" Young & strong but in diameter and in lucky to be alive. A big brand new condivet bill for a small restion, as are the cue group, so sponchairs. Priced at sors are needed; Safe Home for Montgomery, $300. 541-447-3342 PO Box 6441, Bend 97708 541-598-5488. Kenmore 1-yr-old upwww.craftcats.org right freezer 16 cu. ft. $325. (830) 822-3945 Labradors, purebred chocolates, vet-checked, $250. 541-416-1175
Maine Coon (part) Tuxedo siiayed female cat, "Chirp,' 4 white paws, bib, semi-long hair, Free (4) Tires, used, white shots, microchipped. 1 6", p retty g o o dall Hand-raised (mom died), shape. 541-388-5690 gentle, petite, free to good home only. 541-526-0687 208 205
Items for Free
Pets & Supplies
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LEATHER CHAIR
Espresso brown in very good condition, lessthan2 years old. $250. In SE Bend
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541-508-8784
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1 3", 16" an d
18"
toms, 14 " s n a re drum, $800. Both in excellent condition. 541-410-4983 260
Misc. Items 280
Estate Sales ESTATE SALE Tools, and stuff! 8 a.m. to noon Sat. 4/19, 20639 Wild Goose,Bend. 282
ales Northwest Bend
Garage Sale! Dog kennels, household items, some tools, chairs, glassware, clothes. Fri-Sat only, 9-4, 67170 Gist Rd. (6 miles East of Sisters, off Hwy 20.) Huge Multi-Family Garage Sale! Sat 4/19, 8-2, Summit High School. All proceeds to benefit Sparrow Club.
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Sales Northeast Bend Sales Northeast Bend
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!
KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon stnce1903
ESTATEIFARM SALE Huge Sale!!! Outdoor & farm relics of all kinds, tack 8 saddles, old wheels, doors 8 windows, antique anvil, antique tools & cupboards, huge shop packed with all kinds of power 8 hand tools, camping, old guns, old toys & more. House & garage full of antique furniture, oil lamps, Huil pottery, linens, antique pictures, china & glass, old books, dollhouse, jewelry, kitchenware & more!
Outside/Shop opensTHURSDAY. 9-4 numbers 8 a.m. Thurs.
House/Garage/Everything opens FRIDAY & SATURDAY, 9-4
numbers 8 a.m. Fri. Take Highland to Reindeer Ranch, turn south on Helmholtz, then west on SW Obsidian, then left on 58th to 2076 SW 58th For pics and info go to www.atticestatesandappraisals.com 541-350-6822
PRE-ESTATE SALE full house, furniture, tools,
c amping gear a nd much more. Fri. 4/18 Sat. 4/19, 8-4. 1800 NE Pheasant Lane. 288
Sales Southeast Bend Moving Sale! Lots of furniture, decor items, office desk, file cabinet & chair, misc tools & shop stuff. Sat 4/19, 8-4, 20566 Brightenwood Ln.
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1000 rds of 22LR, $160. 160 rds of 22-250 $140 200 rds of .25, $120. 541-647-7950 .380 Ruger LCP pistol w/ Total Shop - Sheet LaserMax laser, NIB, Metal Equipment $349. Bob 541-788-6365 4' air shear; 6'x16ga Hand Brake; Pinspotter; 400 rds .45 acp, $230. Pittsburgh 20ga w/Acme 300 rds of .308, $270. Rolls', Manual Cleat541-647-7950 bender 24"x20ga; Spot 600 rds of 7.62x39, $250. Welder w/24" arms; Slip 400 rds of .556 ammo, roll (manual) 3'x2" dia; Box & Pan Brake 48" x16 $250. 541-647-7950 ga; Easy Edger (Bench 900 rds of .223, type)... will sell complete $500. or by the piece. 541-647-7950 Call 541-771-1958 Bend local pays CASH!! 265 for all firearms & ammo. 541-526-0617 Building Materials CASH!! French door, For Guns, Ammo & Craftsman $100. Half-light door, Reloading Supplies. $40. 541-771-8809 541-408-6900. La Pine Habitat Call The Bulletin At RESTORE 541-385-5809 Building Supply Resale Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Quality at At: www.bendbulletin.com LOW PRICES 52684 Hwy 97 Private party wants to 541-536-3234 buy WWII 1911 pistol, Open to the public . S&W Victory, M1 carbine. 541-389-9836 267 Siq M400 e n hanced Fuel & Wood $1200; Remington 12 a. mdl 11 , $ 400; All yearDependable lock mdl 22, $450. Firewood: Seasoned; 541-408-8850 Lodgepole 1 for $195 Wanted: Collector seeks or 2 for $365. Cedar, high quality fishing items split, del. Bend: 1 for & upscale bamboo fly $175 or 2 for $325. rods. Call 541-678-5753, 541-420-3484. or 503-351-2746 269 247 Gardening Supplies Sporting Goods & Equipment - Misc.
Place 1 column Adopt a rescued cat or kitten! Fixed, shots, ID Photo Here chip, tested, more! 65480 78th, Tumalo, I T hurs/Sat/Sun 1 - 5 , Miniature Pugs, AKC 541-389-8420 reg. 9 wks, $800, dewww.craftcats.org livered. 541-573-5300 Ottoman - about 17y2" tall and 34y~" in diamAussie Mini puppies, 5 POODLE pups,toys or purebred, born 3/13/14, sml mini. also 'rescued eter, in good cond. floral pattern $25 obo. ready 5/8. 541-693-4888 pup'. 541-475-3889 541-419-6408 www.miniaussiesbend.com QueensfandHeelers Upright freezer Kenmore 1-yr-old 7 cu. ft. Tent, 6 person, good Standard 8 Mini, $150 $250. (830) 822-3945 & up. 541-280-1537 c ond. $ 3 5 . Cal l Aussie, Mini/Toy pup, www.rightwayranch.wor Vacuum, Diamond Ultra 541-279-1930. tri-color, first shot, $320 dpress.com Edition Kirby w/shamcash. 541-678-7599 253 pooer & all attachments, Bow front fish tank, 45 $250 obo. 541-388-1025 TV, Stereo & Video gal. w/ stand, pump & 212 h eater, $250 o b o. 541-408-0846 Antiques & Collectibles Chihuahua puppies, very MueicNoice Studio tiny, 1 male, 1 female, S ponsor needed f o r Includes: Antiques wanted: tools, $250. 541-420-1068 • Pro Tools 8 software Peanut, a sweet, tiny furniture, marbles,early • Mbox 2 mini version 8.0 calico who came to B/W photography, • Behringer B1 mic CRAFT in respiratory toys, Call a Pro decoys, jewelry. • Sony headphones distress. The vet was 541-389-1578 Whether you need a • Samson USB studio unable to determine if fence fixed, hedges it was f ro m b eing Dark oa k 2 - d rawer mic w/stand; maced or from being dresser, curved front, • Training books trimmed or a house struck; n o br o ken $250. White wicker • Corrugated foam built, you'll find bones but she had in- baby crib, u n ique padding Package price new, ternal bleeding. After $250. Large dark oak professional help in $1200+a week she is stable 8 roll top desk, $800. The Bulletin's "Call a can stand, & loves at- Surveryor's t r a nsit Offered at $550. Service Professional" tention. The vet costs 1930-1940, orig. box (All reasonable offers considered) were a big hit for our $350. Directory C ASH small rescue, so any 541-923-5960 Call 541-639-3222 541-385-5809 help is a ppreciated. 257 She will need a safe, The Bulletin reserves Donate deposit bottles/ loving home once we the right to publish all Musical Instruments cans to local all vol., know she i s c o m- ads from The Bulletin non-profit rescue, for pletely okay, but a newspaper onto The feral cat spay/neuter. foster home may also Bulletin Internet webCans for Cats trailer be a good option. Box site. at Bend Pet Express 6441, Bend 9 7 708 E; or donate M-F at www.craftcats.org, 541 The Bulletin Servfng CentralOmyonslnce 1%8 Smith Sign, 1515 NE 598 5488. 2nd; or a t C RAFT, 240 Beautiful Lowrey Tumalo. Lv. msg. for White Front Amazon, • Crafts & Hobbies Adventurer II Organ p ick up o f la r g e cage, pla y pen, Absolutely perfect amounts, 389-8420. $500. 541-771-0665 condition, not a www.craftcats.org AGATE HUNTERS scratch on it, about 210 Potlshers • Saws Foster homes needed 4-feet wide, does for o rphan k ittens, Furniture & Appliances everything! Includes Repair & Supplies kittens with moms and a nice bench, too. 3-pc display cabinet/curio special needs cats. $1600obo. w/lights, glass shelves, Orphan kittens would 541-385-5685 be weaned but not yet faux finish (looks like 241 big enough for spay/ stone), end sections 70" Bicycles & neuter & a d o ption.tall, middle section 80" DRUM SETS: 72" width. $450 obo. Foster needs to com- tall; Accessories Ludwig drum set, mit to 2-6 weeks. We 541-330-8177 after 11 am d rums o nly, n o provide food, cage, Trek 2120 bicycles, (2) hardware, 26" base litter, vet care, etc.; A1 Washers&Dryers 54cm and 58cm, car- drum, 13", 16", and foster provides a safe, bon fiber, Shimano 18" toms, 14" snare, $150 ea. Full warlovinghome. Home ranty. Free Del. Also 105, SP D p e dals, $500. REMO Masvisit required. e-mail wanted, used W/D's $400 each. Miyata ter Touch drum set, info@craftcats.org or 541-280-7355 kids Triathalon bike, drums o nl y no call 541-815-7278. $125. 541-410-7034 hardware, 22" base drum, 8", 10", 12", •
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2012 Sim p licity Gusto Hepa canisler va c uumwith attachments, extra filter and bags, exc. cond. Retail $1500, A sking $700 . 971-221-8278 (cell)
Buying Diamonds /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers
BarkTurfSoil.com PROMPT DELIVERY
541-389-9663 270
Lost & Found
470
Domestic & In-Home Positions
Immediate opening for caregiver in the Sisters area, 1-2 days/week.
Lost cat, black/gray tiger striped, yellow eyes, female, 8 lbs., in DRW Navaio Rd. area. REWARD. 541-554-6031 LOST LOVEBIRD: peachfaced, green body, 4/8/14 at Larch Grove in Shevlin Park. Has blue band on leg with "¹3." $100 REWARD. 541-771-1311
(Long & Short) for logging company in Florence, OR.
Experience
required, CDL, current medical card. Great pay and benefits. Year-round, long-term employment. Call 541-997-8212
528
Loans & Mortgages
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party
208-369-3144
suaARu Caregiver Prineville Senior care h ome l ooking f o r Caregiver for multiple s hifts, p art-time t o full-time. Pass criminal background check. 541-447-5773.
Sales TURN THE PAGE Sales professional to For More Ads 850 Join Central The Bulletin Snowmobiles Oregon's l a rgest new ca r de a l er Subaru of B e nd. 630 Offering 401k, profit Rooms for Rent sharing, m e d ical plan, split shifts and Beautiful golf c ourse paid vacation. ExpeConcrete Finishers home, all furn., owner rience or will train. Wanted! absent 90% of time. Roger L a n geliers 90 day $1500 guar$600, share util. avail 1989 Yamaha a ntee. Dress f o r Const. Co is looking 4/20.. 541-279-9538. Exciter, success to work in for experienced ce2,000 miles, our drug free work 632 ment finishers. Full original owner, benefit p a c kage, place. Please apply Apt./Multiplex General always garaged, at 2060 NE Hwy 20, EOE. We E-Verify, Bend. See Bob or $600. d rug screen r e CHECK yOUR AD Devon. 541-480-7517 quired. Applicants m ay come bythe office at 62880 MerArctic Cat 580 1994, cury Place to fill out Sales EXT, in good an application, or condition, $1000. call Steve Located in La Pine. on the first day it runs 5 41-318-6200, o r Call 541-408-6149. to make sure it is cor541-948-0829 rect. "Spellcheck" and 860 human errors do oc- lillotorcycles & Accessories Toyota-Scion Auto cur. If this happens to Sales. Great earnELECTRICIAN your ad, please coning potential, boBurns, Oregon tact us ASAP so that n uses, 401k a n d company seeks corrections and any benefits. Qualifying Journeyman adjustments can be e xp. e l igible f o r Electrician made to your ad. guarantee 90 d ay Must have a 541-385-5809 salary. Full service General Electrical facility pro v iding The Bulletin Classified 2005 HD Super Glide Journeyman training and support. custom, fuel injected 634 License. Must pass criminal 7k mi, new tires, like Resume and referbackground check, Apt./Multiplex NE Bend new cond. $9500 ences required, 541-639-9857 clean DMV and drug 2 story, 2 master plus a copy of screen. A p ply at suites, all appliances, Toyota-Scion of journeyman w/s/g pd., no pets/ license. Bend, 61430 S. Hwy smoking. $750 mo. 97, Bend, Oregon. Please contact 541-389-7734 541-573-6050. '
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Hay, Grain & Feed Mixed Grass Hay, 1st quality, big bales, 3'x3'x8', barn stored, $230/ton. Patterson Ranch Sisters, 541-549-3831 341
Horses 8 Equipment
Housekeeper wanted
Horse stall i/~"x4'6" rub p art time, apply at
ber mats, 7 I $30 ea. The Pines at Sunriver. (830) 822-3945 Bend 541-5 9 3-2160.
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Graphic Designer Position The Bulletin's Creative Services team is seeking a graphic designer. The ideal candidate possesses practiced design skills and excellent communication skills in order to work with account executives and local businesses to design and produce advertisements that get results for that advertiser. Proficiency using Adobe InDesign, lllustrator, and Photoshop softwares to create basic and advanced ad layouts and designs is a must. For qualifying employees we offer benefits including life insurance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace, EOE. Send a resume with qualifications, skills, experience and a past employment history by Friday, April 25th to: The Bulletin Attention: James Baisinger. 1777 S. W. Chandler Ave P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020
The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since 1903
541-389-6655
BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.
Log Truck Drivers
AptANultiplex NE Bend
%RE3RQ will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no IRP 4th problem, good equity 541-598-4527 is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mort476 gage 541-388-4200. Employment LOCAL MONEY:Webuy Opportunities secured trust deeds & some hard money Add your web address USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! note, loans. Call Pat Kellev Redmond Homes to your ad and read541-382-3099 ext.13. ers onThe Bulletin's Door-to-door selling with $282,900. 2189 sq.ft., web site, www.bend- fast results! It's the easiest Real estate investor loan needed. Investor will single level, 3/2, fambulletin.com, will be way in the world to sell. able to click through pay 7% on a $40,000 ily room w/ gas fireto $60,000 loan se- place, formal dining automatically to your The Bulletin Classified cured by First Trust room, den, sunroom, website. upgrades galore. For541-385-5809 deed. 541-771-4414 SaleByOwner.com ID <© sueaau RN Clinical Coordinator ¹ 23975895. Call 541-526-1206 for info. needed for Heart 'n Auto Sales BxiMlh Sales professional to Home Hospice & PalJoin Central liative Care in Bend. Manufacturedl Oregon's l a r gest Top 100 Best Places Mobile Homes new ca r de a ler to Work in Healthcare Subaru of B e nd. in the N ation with FACTORYSPECIAL Offering 401k, profit great pay and benNew Home, 3 bdrm, sharing, me d ical efits. $46,500 finished www.goHospice.com plan, split shifts and on your site. 627 paid vacation. ExpeJ and M Homes rience or will train. Sales - Retail Vacation Rentals 541-548-5511 Immediate Opening for 90 day $1500 guar& Exchanges motivated self starter, a ntee. Dress f o r experience helpful but success to work in not required. Apply in Oceanfront house, our drug free work person only at Furnieach walk from town, place. Please apply ture Outlet, 1735 NE 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Fireplace, BBQ. $95 Hwy 20, Bend. Bend. See Bob or per night, 3 night MIN. Devon.
Found man's ring at Redmond High S chool J V fie l d . 541-610-2558
Rm(ji)(83
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General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week, BUYING & S ELLING everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts YARD SALE! All gold jewelry, silver start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Miscellaneous tools, and gold coins, bars, end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpobig boat, clothing. rounds, wedding sets, sitions we are hiring for work Saturday nights. Guns ammo, reloadclass rings, sterling sil- Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a ing stuff, shot, wads, ver, coin collect, vinminimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts bullets, powder. Fishtage watches, dental short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of ing poles, line, lures, gold. Bill Fl e ming, are loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack541-382-9419. reels. Sat-Sun, 8-5, ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup 61856 Somerset Dr. and other tasks. For qualifying employees we FAST TREES Grow 6-10 feet yearly! offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, $16-$21 delivered. short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid Just bought a new boat? www.fasttrees.com Sell your old one in the vacation and sick time. Drug test is required classifieds! Ask about our or 509-447-41 81 prior to employment. Super Seller rates! IMPORTANT MEETING Please submit a completed application atten541-385-5809 for residents of tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Deschutes River Woods at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chan292 Thurs., April 17, 7 p.m. dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be • Sales Other Areas at the Morning Star obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Christian School gym. Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). BIG YARD SALE www.drwna.org No phone calls please. Only completed appliSat. 4/19, 8-4, 2234 Elwill be considered for this position. No l iott H e ights R d . ,Wanted- paying cash cations resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reWarm Springs, elec- for Hi-fi audio & stutronics, cam p ing, dio equip. Mclntosh, quired prior to employment. EOE. hunting, boating, golf, JBL, Marantz, D yThe Bulletin households, TONS of naco, Heathkit, SanServinyCenrral Oregon sincel903 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. great stuff. Call 541-261-1808
Merchant Services Specialist Reconciles merchant services (Visa, M/C, AMEX and Discover) transactions for all store locations; monitors analyzes and re-bills bankcard fees; investigates chargeback and retrieval request notices; resolves customer transaction disputes; sets up new store locations with merchant ID ¹s; reconciles monthly bank statements and performs other duties as assigned. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the western United States. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus.
FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684 Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939
Please go towww.lesschwab.com to apply. Applications will be accepted through April 23, 2014. No phone calls please. EOE
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
Home Delivery Advisor The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. S t rong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. C o mputer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we believe in promoting from within, so advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000or best offer. 541-318-6049
HDFatBo 1996
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
$17,000
541-548-4807
The Bulletin
c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmullerObendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE
Honda 110 Trail, 1986, street legal, licensed & reg'd, like new. Has auxiliary tank 8 t o o l k it. $1995. 541-480-4937
E2 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
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Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
• 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% • Just completely serviced • 39,000 miles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150
Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • •• 11:00 am Fri.
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER'500 in 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 ................................. $20.00
lcall for commercial line ad rates)
*ftlfust state prices in ad
only 6 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441
•
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Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011
Mdl P 27RL 31', 15'
Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries, LED lighting, always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $28,000. Call Bill,
Travel Trailers AIRSTREAM 2010 25' FB, Int'I-
Serenity, like new, only used 4x. Originally $75,000; asking $56,950. Call for details, 541-593-0204
Fleetwood Wilderness NW Edition 2002, 26' 1 slide, electric
S X
tongue jack, stabilizers, new brakes, waste tank heaters, ducted heat/AC, micro/stove/oven, tub/shower, couch, elec/gas hot water tank. Sleeps 6. Includes Eaz Lift hitch, storage cover and accessories. $10,500. 541-447-3425
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 860
880
880
880
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
G H E AT
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National RV Tropical, 1997,
Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201 536.
$4995 Dream Car
Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend DreamcarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
Get your business
e ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
V ictory TC 9 2 c i 2002, runs great, 40K mi., Stage 1 Performance Kit, n ew tires, r e a r brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 541-771-0665 870
Boats & Accessories 12'1969 Searsaluminum fishing boat, low hours on new 8 hp engine, with trailer and extras. Good shape! $1600. 541-382-2599 15' fiberglas Sportsman, 75HP motor, trailer, good condition, $950. 541-369-1066 541-419-6034
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,
35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new tires, new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed, Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included. $19,900. 541-815-4811
l~iig,I 'I
$28,000
Just too many collectibles?
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541-460-7930
881
Motorcycles & Accessories
|iaa
VW Eurovan 2000
RV CONSIGNllllENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
-
1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 160 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ 1976 Cessna 150M prop, located KBDN. approval team, Just over 3000hrs, 600 MONTANA 3565 2008, $65 000 541-41 9-9510 web site presence. hrs since out of frame www. N4972M.com exc. cond., 3 slides, We Take Trade-Ins! major, Horton Stol Kit. king bed, Irg LR, Free Advertising. Avionics Apollo 65 GPS Arctic insulation, all & additional radio (4 freBIG COUNTRY RV options $35,000 obo. quencies can be moniBend: 541-330-2495 541-420-3250 tored at once). TranRedmond: 541-548-5254 sponder w/mode C, JPI Fuel Flow Monitor, digiHave an item to tal density, temp & amp 882 sell quick? 1/5th interest in 1973 monitor. Nice paint & upFifth Wheels If it's under Cessna 150 LLC holstery w/memory foam 150hp conversion, low seat bottoms. Oil filter & '500you can place it in time on air frame and block htr. 1 owner past engine, hangared in 14 yrs; always hangared, The Bulletin no damage history. Bend. Excellent perClassifieds for: N9475U.$26,000. formance &afford541-480-4375 able flying! $6,000. '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 541-410-6007 • a Alpenlife 29' 1993, '16 - 3 lines, 14 days J I with goo s eneck. (Private Party ads only) Need help fixing stuff? $3500 OBO. Needs Call A Service Professional new ref r igerator find the help you need. Thank you St. Jude & Sacred H e ar t of 541-306-1961. www.bendbulletin.com Leave message. Jesus. j.d.
camper
Excellent cond. in every way. 92,000 miles, AC, refrigerator, sink, stove, furnace. Pop-top, 2 beds, above and fold-down. Seats 6+ assengers. 25,900 OBO 541-369-3314.
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541-548-5254
I
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•
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Call 54 i -385-580 9 to r o m ot e o u r service Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for construction work to Serving Central be licensed with the Oregon Since 2003 Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An Residental/Commercial active license Sprinkler means the contractor Activation/Repair is bonded & insured. Verify the contractor's Back Flow Testing CCB l i c ense at Malntenance www.hirealicensed«Thatch & Aerate contractor.com • Spring Clean up or call 503-378-4621. •Weekly Mowing The Bulletin recom& Edging mends checking with •Bi-Monthly & Monthly the CCB prior to con- Maintenance tracting with anyone. Some other t rades •Bark, Rock, Etc. also req u ire addi~Landsca in tional licenses and •Landscape certifications. Construction Feature Custom Remodel & Tile •Water Installation/Maint. T. Schellworth, Gen. •Pavers Contractor/Builder •Renovations CCB ¹188631 •Irrigations Installation 541-586-0956 Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured Debris Removal 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759 JUNK BE GONE
I Haul Away FREE
NOTICE: Oregon LandFor Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts scape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all Mel, 541-389-8107 businesses that advertise t o pe r form Handyman Landscape Construction which includes: I DO THAT! l anting, deck s , Home/Rental repairs ences, arbors, Small jobs to remodels water-features, and inHonest, guaranteed stallation, repair of irwork. CCB¹151573 rigation systems to be Dennis 541-317-9768 l icensed w it h th e Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home & number is to be inCommercial Repairs, cluded in all advertisements which indiCarpentry-Painting, cate the business has Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On-time a bond, insurance and workers compensapromise. Senior Discount. Work guar- tion for their employanteed. 541-369-3361 ees. For your protecor 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured CCB¹t st 595
I
TIFFINALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP
Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings W~ i 541-385-5809 Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans Generator Kubota 3500 / Less than 40K miles /Offered at $199K. qas, 60 h rs, $1000 Too many options to CASH. 541-923-5960 2007 Winnebago list here! For more Outlook Class "C" information go to 31', solar panel, Cat. mne ~ heater, excellent ~alle robue.com or email condition, more extrainwater157© tras.Asking $58K. gmail.com Ph. 541-447-9268 or call 858-527-8627 Can be viewed at KOUNTRY AIRE Western Recreation 1994 37.5' motor(top of hill) home, with awning, in Prineville. and one slide-out, Tioga 24' Class C Only 47k miles lilotorhome Bought new in 2000, Good classified adstell and good condition. currently under 20K the essential facts in an $25,000. miles, excellent interesting Manner. Write 541-548-0318 shape, new tires, from the readers view not (phoroaboveis of a professionaly wintersimilar model & not the the seller's. Convert the ized every year, cutactual vehicle) facts into benefits. Show off switch to battery, the reader howthe item will plus new RV batterhelp them insomeway. ies. Oven, hot water This heater & air conditioning have never advertising tip been used! brought to you by $24,000 obo. Serious The Bulletin inquiries, please. servingcentral oregonsince r9ta Monaco Lapalma, Stored in Terrebonne. 2002, 34'10" -Work541-548-5174 (2) 10' Kayaks; Old horse 6.1t Less than Town Otter, Ocean 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan Frenzy Si t -on-top, genr, 2 slides, 4 dr. Need to get an both with p a ddles, refrig w/icemaker, $225/ea. ad in ASAP? micro/convection 541-593-6053 oven, water purifier, You can place it jacks, power Enclosed raft t r ailer, hydraulic online at: seat+ more op12'x7', pulley system pilot tions. Exceptionally www.bendbulletin.com to help load, wired for clean. $59,900/make 12 volt ai r p u mp. offer. 541-504-1008 541 -385-5809 $750. 541-593-6053
$150,000
541-268-3333
$11,999. 541-447-7968
LXI 2003 35' 3 Forest River 27' by Wild- Cameo slides, 3600 O n an wood 2004, winter pkg, generator, very nice OPEN ROAD 36' slide, AC, oven, and clean. $16,950. 2005 - $25,500 tub-shower, outside 541-548-0625. shower, micro, awning, King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass always stored. $12,500. shower, 10 gal. waPrineville, 541-447-9199 Tick, Tock ter heater, 10 cu.ft. $24,995. fridge, central vac, TiCk, TOCk... 541-383-3503 s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front ...don't let time get front power leveling away. Hire a jacks and s cissor a '•' stabilizer jacks, 16' professional out awninq. Like new! rl KeystoneLaredo 31' of The Bulletin's 541-419-0566 RV 20 06 w ith 1 2' "Call A Service slide-out. Sleeps 6, Navion IQ Sprinter queen walk-around Bigfoot Diesel 32' Professional" chassis RV 2008, 25' Adven- bed w/storage under2006, Su p er C Mercedes Benz diesel, Winnebago Directory today! t/~', gas, turer 2005 35 neath. Tub & shower. Duramax d i e sel, only 24k miles, excelless than 20,000 miles, 2 swivel rockers. TV. Allison trans., only lent condition, autoexcellent condition, 2 Air cond. Gas stove & 37K mi., do u ble matic rear slide-out slide, 5500 Onan w/queen bed, full bath slide-outs, work horse refrigerator/freezer. Awning. diesel gen., to many w/shower, deluxe cap- chassis, Banks power Microwave. Recreation by Design sho w er. tain swivel front seats, brake system, sleeps Outside options to list. Vin¹ 2013 Monte Carlo, Slide through stor5, with al l o p tions, diesel generator, 36-ft. Top living room, 2 534032, $79,995. a ge, E a s y Lif t . $62,000 / negotiable. awning, no pets/ Beaver Coach bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 Call 5 4 1-306-8711or $29,000 new; no smoking.$69,500. Fleetwood Prowler A/Cs, entertainment Sales & Service, Asking $18,600 32' 2001 email a i kistu@bend541-382-2430 Bend 541-914-8438 center, fireplace, W/D, 541-447-4605 cable.com 2 slides, ducted DLR ¹3447 garden tub/shower, in heat & air, great great condition.$36,000 Where can you find a condition, snowbird obo. Call Peter, ready, Many up307-221-2422, helping hand? grade options, fi( in La Pine ) • I ,® From contractors to nancing available! WILL DELIVER J yard care, it's all here $14,500 obo. I Providence2005 in The Bulletin's RV Fully loaded, 35,000 Call Dick, Winnebago Aspect "Call A Service CONSIGNMENTS miles, 350 Cat, Very 541-480-1687. 200932', 3 slideWANTED Dodge clean, non-smoker, Professional" Directory outs, Leather inteWe Do the Work, Brougham 1978, 3 slides, side-by-side rior, Power s eat, You Keep the Cash! 15', 1-ton, clean, refrigerator with ice win d ows, On-site credit maker, Washer/Dryer, locks, 69,000 miles. Aluminum wheels. approval team, Flat screen TV's, In $4500. 17" Flat Screen, web site presence. motion satellite. In La Pine, Surround s o u nd, We Take Trade-Ins! $95,000 camera, Queen bed, Free Advertising. call 541-602-8652 541-480-2019 Foam mattress, AwHoliday Rambler 37' BIG COUNTRY RV Lance Travel Trailer ning, Generator, InBend: 541-330-2495 Presidential model (Model 1985) 2012, verter, Auto Jacks, Redmond: RV 2003, all factory opdinette/slide makes Air leveling, Moon 541-546-5254 tions, 3 slides, 2 A/C CONSIGNMENTS to a queen-size bed, roof, no smoking or WANTED units, 4 door fridge, queen walk-around p ets. L i k e ne w , fireplace, generator, We Do The Work ... bed, inside/outside $74,900 Take care of You Keep The Cash! sound system, mi- electric jacks front 541-460-6900 On-site credit and rear, flat screen crowave, c o oktop Fleefwood Discovery your investments approval team, TV, e n t ertainment 40' 2003, diesel, w/all with oven, power with the help from center, bay window, web site presence. awning, flat screen options - 3 slide outs, Look at: exc. cond., MUST We Take Trade-Ins! TV, only used 10 The Bulletin's satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Bendhomes.com Free Advertising. SEEI Sacr i fice times. Easy tow with etc., 32,000 m i les. "Call A Service BIG COUNTRY RV for Complete Listings of $24,500 OBO. F-150. Call for price. Wintered in h eated 541-223-2216 541-330-2495 Area Real Estate for Sale 541-647-0656. Professional" Directory shop. $84,900 O.B.O. Bend:Redmond: 541-447-8664
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Financing available.
Say "goodbuy" 541-385-5809 to that unused Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, item by placing it in 2 slides, AC, recliners, The Bulletin Classifieds walk-around queen bed, sliding glass door closet, new tub & 10-gal water 54$ -385-5809 heater, good tires. Brand new 20' screen room available. Super clean, 1 owner, n o n-smokers.
Garage Sales 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, great cond, well maintained, $8995obo. 541-350-7755
1/3 interestin
Columbia 400,
Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Garage Sales Garage Sales M%6
172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new avionics Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. Exceptionally clean & economical! $13,500. Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773
Aircraft, Parts & Service
(located © Bend)
with living r o om slide, 48,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV. $31,000 Call Dick at 541-408-2387
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com 541-419-3301
For Sale
• 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines
Orbit 21' 2007, used
Winnebago Sightseer 30' 2004
• 3:00 pm Fri. Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad foronly$1 5.00par week.
908
WINNEBAGO BRAVE 2003
Monday • • • • • .5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday.••• • ..Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Laredo 30'2009
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
908 n
Lsndscsping/Ysrd Care
•
Zaped Qua/reI L'a~< C'~ r,. More Than Service Peace Of Mind
Spring CleanUp •Leaves •Cones •Needles • Debris Hauling
Weed FreeBark & FlowerBeds •
•
Lawn Renovation
'1
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rrem pricedar: Your Total Ad Coston: • Under $500.......................................................................$29 • $500 fo $999...................................................................$39 • $1000 fo $2499..............................................................$49 • $2500 and over...............................................................$59 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. Some restrictions apply
The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since 1903
541-385-580rtl
yourad will also appear in:
• The Bulletin • (sntral Oregon Marketplace
• The CentralOregonNickel Ads • bsndbuIetin.tom
*Privateparty merchandiseonly- excludespets &livestock, autos, Rvs,motorcycles,boats, airplanes,andgaragesalecategories.
tion call 503-376-5909
or use our website: www.lcbistate.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing land scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i cense. Aeration/Dethatching
1-time or Weekly Services Ask about FREEadded svcs w/seasonalcontract! Bonded & Insured.
COLLINS Lawn Maint. Call 541-480-9714 Allen Reinsch Yard Maintenance & Mowing (& many other things!) Call 541-536-1294 or 541-815-5313
Aeration - Dethatching Painting/Wall Covering Overseed Compost Top Dressing WESTERN PAINTING CO. Richard Hayman, a semi-retired paintLandscape ing contractor of 45 Maintenance years. S mall Jobs Full or Partial Service Welcome. Interior & •Mowing ~Edging Exterior. c c b¹51 64. •Pruning ~Weeding Sprinkler Adjustments 541-386-6910
Fertilizer included with monthly program
BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of Weekly,monthly classified advertising... or one time service. real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting EXPERIENCED goods. Bulletin Classifieds Commercial appear every day in the & Residential print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bsndbulletin.com Senior Discounts
541-390-1466 Same Day Response
The Bulletin servmgcentral c eganvncese
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
In a money game, South was the notorious Joe Overberry, who thinks it's nobler to go down in pursuit of an overtrick than to make his bid. At four spades, Joe won the first heart in dummy and let the ten of trumps ride, losing to West's queen. Joe won the next heart, led a diamond to dummy and returned a second trump. When East discarded, Joe took his ace and led the king and a t h ird diamond. If West had followed, Joe could have pitched a loser on the fourth diamond, making the contract. But West ruffed the third diamond, took his high heart and led a club. Down one.
he bids two clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: Game is certain, but in most partnerships, a jump to three diamonds or to three spades would not be forcing. Bid two hearts, the "fourth suit," which shows only a desireto hear more from partner.If h e b i d s t h r e e d i a m onds n e x t , suggesting a six-card suit and a good hand, you can try for a diamond slam. South dealer Both sides mdnerable
'"To finesse twice in trumps was correct," Joe said."And ifEasthas an honor, I make an overtrick." Meanwhile, North mourned the loss of a cold game. Joe must win the first heart in his hand, take the ace of trumps and start the diamonds. West ruffs the third diamond and leads another heart, but Joe wins in dummy and throws his last heart on the high diamond. He loses two trumps and a club.
DAILY QUESTION
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: O P A L C A P E R p o s T I T NQ TE H U E N A I L E A S T I R C O F F T E A C U P O S I S R A E L S O M H O T L I N T R I P S L O U E C L I P S E N W A I T S T A F F TA T A I R E H E A P S H E ET E T N A H O L ES WA T T E D D Y xwordeditorreaol.com T A P E O R E S
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By Gareth Bain (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
63
04/16/14
TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 908 933 935 Aircraft, Parts Pickups Sport Utility Vehicles
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY APRIL16 2014 E5 975
975
975
975
975
975
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Nissan Alfima2010
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
& Service
444444
Chevy Colorado LX Crew Cab2009
7
BMW X3
Cessna 182Q, 1977, mid-time engine/ prop, custom panel, S-Tec 30+ altitude hold, Garmin 430, GPSS, oversized tires, digital fuel flow, excellent paint & interior. Must see to appreciate. Asking $68,000. Bill, 541-480-7930
4 wheel drive, less than 50k miles. ¹132212 $20,977 ROBBERSON LINcoLN ~
IM RO R
541-312-3986 DLR¹0205
2 0 07, 99K
The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809 T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. 916
Trucks & Heavy Equipment Hyster forklift, H30E propane, 2 stage, 672 hours, $1900 o b o. 541-389-7596 International Harvester TD6 Bulldozer, older model, has logging winch in back for skidding or dragging. $3500 obo. Call 541-389-5353 or 541-647-8176
Kenworth 1991 T800 Water Truck 914 350hp diesel eng, 9-spd trans, Hendrickson cab suspension, double framed, self-contained John Deere pony motor, 4000 gallon water tank, new battery, 902,832 miles. $22,500 obo. 541-589-2209
L82- 4speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-
aged or abused. $72,900.
Dave, 541-350-4077
541-388-4360
Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 with camper s hell, ood cond., $1500 BO. 541-447-5504.
BMW X3 2011black on black, sport/prem Save money. Learn packs, leather, 3.5i to fly or build hours turbo, nav., 20k with your own airmiles, 19" wheels, c raft. 1968 A e r o D odge Dakota S L T cold weather pkg, 2 004 4x4, 4 . 7 V 8 , Xenons, warranteed Commander, 4 seat, A/C, camper shell, 150 HP, low time, $38,000 runs g reat, l o o ks to 9/2015. full panel. $23,000 One owner, reat. $8,750 C all obo. Contact Paul at 503-789-9401 Iv!ark at 541-977-2780 541-447-5184. (Portland)
What are you looking for? You'll find it in
Corvette 1979
miles, premium package, heated lumbar supported seats, pan- Corvette Coupe oramic moo n roof, 1996 Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe137k, auto. non headlights, tan & Bose Gold sound. black leather interior, synthetic oil/ n ew front & re a r non-ethanol fuel brakes © 76K miles, one owner, all records, $10,500 very clean, $16,900. 541-923-1781
Dodge Ram 1500 SLT uadcab 1999
®
4fQM'KV! j~
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010
CorvetteCoupe 1996, 350 auto, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold sound system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! 137k, $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell!
Grand Sport-4LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.
Audi A4 2011, 34K mi. $22,000. Call 541-389-8181
Ford Thunderbird 2002 c o nvertible with brand new tonneau cover, white with grey i nterior, loaded, 88,600 low miles, choice condieverything tion, works. Great fun car to d r ive. I l l ness
IK Q D B
Dodge Ram 2500 2008 Diesel, exc. towing vehicle, 2WD, 55,000 miles. New batteries, rear air bags, Roll-n-lock bed cover, spray-in liner. 5th wheel hitch available, too. $19,000. 541-604-1285 Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993
forces sale. price re-
Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989Automatic, power steering, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662
duced to $12,500. Call Bill 541-604-9307
BMW Z4 3.0 2004 convertible Only 28k miles! 6 spd, loaded, flawless. Local car, clean CarFax. Reduced to $16,950obo! (928) 210-8323
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Reach thousands of readers!
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Cfassiffeds
®~
2~ PN®~.;~
Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully ser-
I M ROR
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205
viced, garaged,
looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
LINCOLII ~
2.0L 4 cyls, FWD, automatic, 43k miles, 28 MPG Hwy, vin¹438072 $13,977 ROBBERSON y LIIICOLN ~
~
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205
~
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205
The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs. Call on one of the professionals today!
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
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, and battery, Bose p remium so u n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. I The Bulletin recoml Garaged, p e rfect mends extra caution I condition, $59,700. when p u rchasing ~ 541-322-9647 f products or services from out of the area.
FWD, V6 auto., 90k
mi., 29 mpg Hwy, Vin¹572987 Bar ain Corral 6,977 ROBBERSON y
Looking for your next employee?
Porsche 911 Turbo
Fax it te 541-322-7253 Olds 98 Regency 1990 exc. shape, runs as new, one owner, 20 The Bulletin Classifieds mpg in town. New battery, stud snow tires. $2000. 541-389-9377 Hyundai Sonata 2011 GLS silver, 41,200 mi. ¹003928 $14.995 Pontiac Grand Ahf SE1 2003
Kia Soul+2012
people Look for Information About Products and Services EveryDaythrough The BvllefreCleeerliede
I
f
f S ending c
ash ,f
Porsche Carrera 911 checks, or credit in- g 2003 convertible with formation may be I hardtop. 50K miles, toFRAUD. new factory Porsche J subject For more informamotor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory war- f tion about an advertiser, you may call ranty remaining. I the Oregon State $37,500. Attorney General's I 541-322-6928 Office C o nsumer I / Protection hotline at 'I -877-877-9392. Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! ScfNhg CH1tt8I OfIgOII SIIIC879IB 541-385-5809
I
f f
I
/
~m-HW.r ~
Ford Edge 2011
Leather trimmed heated seats, AWD, auto. 6 speed. vin ¹A50096 $26,997 ROBBERSON i
1000
1000
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE Bank of A merica, N.A., Plaintiff/s, v. Erin K. O 'Connell; 541-312-3986 The Tall Pines Road DLR ¹0205 A ssociation; J o hn 541-647-8176 and Jane Does, I through V, O ccupants of the subject real property, and all other persons or parties u n k nown, claiming any right, Ford F150 LIGHTNING Ford Escape Ltd title, interest, lien or 1993, 500 miles on re- 2012 Exc. cond! Silestate in the propbuilt engine. Clean inte- ver gray m e tallic, e rty h e rein d e rior & new tires. $7000, loaded f le x f u e l, scribed, Peterbilt 359 p o table Bluetooth, l e a ther Defendant/s. Case water t ruck, 1 9 90, OBO. 541-647-8723 3200 gal. tank, 5hp int., ski rack, keyless No.: 13C V0544. pump, 4-3" h oses, Ford F-350 2010 entry, back-up senNOTICE OF SALE camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Cabela's Crew Cab sors. new all season UNDER WRIT OF 541-820-3724 tires, Ext. warranty. EXECUTION al g Q Great all weather veREAL PROPERTY. 932 hicle! $22,000 Notice i s h e r eby Antique & Call or text Sandy at given that the Des541-480-4778 c hutes Coun ty Classic Autos Sheriff's Office will V8 diesel, 4 wheel Jeep Wrangler Rubicon on May 15, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM i n t h e drive. ¹A74567 2012, red, 5,500 mi. main lobby of the ¹261080 $30,995 Deschutes County $39,777 S heriff's Of fi c e , ROBBERSON Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 63333 W. Highway engine, power everyLINcoLII~ IM RO EI 20, Bend, Oregon, 541-598-3750 thing, new paint, 54K sell, at public oral orig. miles, runs great, 541-312-3986 www.aaaoregonauto- auction to the highexc. cond.in/out. $7500 DLR¹0205 source.com est bidder, for cash obo. 541-480-3179 or cashier's check, the real p roperty Mercedes Benz Ford F-350 4x4, commonly known as C300 S orf2012 53280 Deep Woods Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must Plymouth B a r racuda arrive 15 m inutes 1966, original car! 300 2006 XLT 4-door prior to the auction hp, 360 V8, centerLess than 14k mil, Crew Cab lines, 541-593-2597 AWD, 7 spd, leather to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y vin ¹700716 6.0L Turbo diesel, full Sheriff's Office to Want to impress the $31,977 power, a u t omatic, review bid d er's relatives? Remodel 6-disc CD, cruise, fog ROBBERSON ~ f unds. Only U . S. lights, running boards, your home with the currency an d / or ~n maa a tow pkg, bediiner, grill help of a professional cashier's c h e cks guard, folding rear 541-312-3986 from The Bulletin's made payable to seat. Tan cloth inteDLR ¹0205 Deschutes County "Call A Service rior, metallic tan exteSheriff's Office will Professional" Directory rior. 91,400 miles. be accepted. PayToyota Highlander Ltd ment must be made Priced to sell$21,500 2010 4WD nav, 3rd in full immediately 541-350-6925 row seat. upon the close of ¹S016219 $32,995 the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa Rolls Royce 1992 Sil541-598-3750 les.htm ver Spur II, excellent! www.aaaoregonautoMidnight Blue exterior, source.com Parchment leather inteFORD XLT 1992 Advertise your car! rior, 15-inch chrome RR 3/4 ton 4x4 ToyotaLandcruiser Add A Picture! wheels, Alpine Sirius Reach thousands of readers! matching canopy, VX 1999 DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS Call 541-385-5809 30k original miles, navigation system, The Bulletin Classifieds possible trade for 77,200 miles, dealerclassic car, pickup, ship maintained, alLEGAL NOTICE ways garaged. New, motorcycle, RV Bank of America, Naabout $250,000; sell $13,500. tional As s ociation, $19,500. 541-480-3348 In La Pine, call Plaintiff/s, v. Ronald D 4.7L V8, 4WD, auto., 928-581-9190 Autry; Teresa L Autry, WHEN ONLY THE 16mpg Hwy, Vin¹ Other Persons or ParBEST WILL DO! 66902 Bargain Corties, including Occural $9,977 pants, Unk n own claiming any r i ght, ROBBERSON title, lien, or interest in I nternational Fla t LlllcoLN ~ I M ROB t he p r operty d e Bed Pickup 1963, 1 scribed in the comton dually, 4 spd. 541.312.3986 plaint herein, DefenBuick Skylark 1972 trans., great MPG, DLR¹0205 d ant/s. Case N o . : 17Korig. miles. Please could be exc. wood 13CV0138. NOTICE see Bend Craiglist for hauler, runs great, OF SALE U N DER details. $18,900. new brakes, $1950. 940 WRIT O F E X ECU541-419-5480. 541-323-1898 Vans TION - REAL PROP933 ERTY. N o t ic e is 935 hereby given that the Pickups Sport Utility Vehicles Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on May 27, 2014 at 10:00 Volvo S60T5 2013 AM in the main lobby of t h e De s chutes Chrysler Town & County Sheriff's OfCountry LXI 1997, fice, 63333 W. Highbeautiful inside & I way 20, Bend, Orout, one owner, non2005 Diesel 4x4 egon, sell, at public smoker,. loaded with Chev Crewcab duo ral auction to t h e options! 197,892 mi. ally, Allison tranny, AWD, less than 11k Service rec o rds h ighest bidder, f o r tow pkg., brake conmi., auto, 6 spd. or ca s hier's available. $4 , 9 50. cash troller, cloth split vin ¹202364 check, the real propCall Mike, (541) 815front bench seat, $31,977 erty commonly known 8176 after 3:30 p.m. only 66k miles. as 66345 White Rock Very good condition, ROBBERSON y Loop, Bend, Oregon Original owner, The Bulletin \ I II c 0 4 N ~ IM RDB 97701. Conditions of $34,000 Sale: Potential bidTo Subscribe call or best offer. 541-312-3986 ders must arrive 15 541-385-5800 or go to 541-408-7826 DLR ¹0205 www.bendbulletin.com minutes prior to the
Power Stroke diesel, turbocharged, 5-spd, good runner & work truck. $4500 obo. Call 541-389-5353 or
LINcoLN ~
Volvo S40 TS 2005 AWD, sunroof, luxury and winter packages, new tires, and more! $6775 obo. Call 541-330-5818
1996, 73k miles,
541-598-3750 www. aaaoregonautosource.com
ROBBERSON 541-312-3986 DLR¹0205
with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)
2.5S 4cyl., FWD, CVT, 76k mi., 32 mpg„Tuscan Sun Metallic, vin¹443778 $11,997 ROBBERSON y
541-923-178'I
FIND IT! BUV IT! Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, SELL IT! AWD, V6, remote entry, 5 .2L V8 aut o . , clean title, 12/15 tags, The Bulletin Classifieds 1 43,659 mi. R W D $5995. 541-610-6150 Vin ¹628726 Bargain Corral. $5,977 LINCOIII ~
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auction to allow the To "appear" you must LEGAL NOTICE Deschutes C o unty file with the court a le- Deutsche Bank NaSheriff's Office to re- gal paper called a tional Trust Company, view bidder's funds. "motion" or "answer." as Trustee of the InOnly U.S. currency The "motion" or "an- dymac Inda Mortgage cashier's swer" must be given Loan Trust 2007-AR9, and/or checks made payable to the court clerk or Mortgage to Deschutes County administrator w i thin Pass-Through CertifiSheriff's Office will be thirty days along with cates, Series accepted. Payment the required filing fee. 2007-AR9 under the must be made in full It must be in proper Pooling and Servicing immediately upon the form and have proof Agreement dated Declose of the sale. For o f service o n t h e c ember 1 , 200 7 , more information on plaintiffs attorney or, Plaintiff/s, v. Timothy this s al e g o to: if the plaintiff does not Larkin, and Persons www.oregonsheriffs.c have a n a t t orney, or Parties Unknown om/sales.htm proof of service on the claiming any r ight, plaintiff. IF YOU title, lien, or interest in LEGAL NOTICE HAVE ANY Q UES- t he P r operty d e CIRCUIT COURT OF TIONS, scribed in the ComOREGON FOR DES- S HOULD SEE YOU A N plaint herein, DefenCHUTES COUNTY. A TTORNEY I M M E d ant/s. Cas e N o . : W ELLS FARG O DIATELY. If you need 1 3CV0941FC. N O BANK N.A., Plaintiff, help in finding an atv. THE ESTATE OF torney, you may call TICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXCONSTANCE BECKER, DE- the O regon S t ate ECUTION - REAL Bar's Lawyer ReferUNPROPERTY. Notice is CEASED; ral Service at (503) hereby given that the KNOWN HEIRS AND 684-3763 or toll-free DEVISEES OF CON- in Oregon at (800) Deschutes C o u nty STANCE B E CKER, 452-7636. The object Sheriff's Office will on DECEASED; SUSAN of the said action and May 15, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby DUNN; SUSA N relief sought to be of t h e De s chutes DUNN AS ADMINIS- the County Sheriff's OfT RATOR O F T H E obtained therein is set forth in said fice, 63333 W. HighESTATE OF ERICK fully an d is way 20, Bend, OrC . B ECKER, D E - complaint, briefly stated as fol- egon, sell, at public CEASED; UN- lows: Foreclosure of a o ral auction to t h e KNOWN S UCCESDeed of Trust/Mort- h ighest bidder, f or SOR TRUSTEE OF Grantors:Concash o r ca s hier's THE CONSTANCE A. gage: Becker. Prop- check, the real propB ECKER TRU S T stance erty address:635 SE erty commonly known D ATED MARCH 2 , OR as 63465 Hamehook 2 001; A N D PE R - 6th Street,PBend, u blication: Road, Bend, Oregon SONS OR PARTIES 97702. The Bend B u lletin. UNKNOW N C L A IM- DATED this 25 day of 97701. Conditions of Sale: P otential bidING AN Y R I G HT, 2014 . ders must arrive 15 TITLE, LIEN, OR IN- February, Brandon Smith, OSB minutes pnor to the TEREST I N THE ¹ 124584, Emai l : auction to allow the PROPERTY DE- bsmith © robinsontait.c Deschutes C o u nty S CRIBED I N T H E om, Robinson Tait, Sheriff's Office to reCOMPLAINT Attorneys for view bidder's funds. HEREIN, Defendants. P.S., Plaintiff, Tel: ( 2 06) Only U.S. currency NO. 1 3 C V1244FC. 676-9640, Fax: (206) and/or cashier's P LAINTIFF'S S U Mchecks made payable MONS BY PUBLICA- 676-9659. to Deschutes County T ION. TO:THE E S LEGAL NOTICE TATE OF C itiBank, N .A . a s Sheriff's Office will be CONSTANCE trustee for American accepted. P ayment DE- Home Mortgage In- must be made in full BECKER, UN- vestment CEASED, Trust immediately upon the KNOWN HEIRS AND 2004-3, Plaintiff/s, v. close of the sale. For DEVISEES OF CON- Robert R. L a c roix, more information on STANCE BECKER, Suntrust Bank, and this s al e g o to: DECEASED, UN- Persons or P a rties www.oregonsheriffs.c KNOWN S UCCES- Unknown c l a iming om/sales.htm SOR TRUSTEE OF any right, title, lien, or THE CONSTANCE A. interest in the propB ECKER TRU S T erty described in the Need to get an ad D ATED MARCH 2 , complaint her e in, in ASAP? 2 001 A N D PER - D efendant/s. C a s e SONS OR PARTIES No.: 1 3 C V1091FC. UNKNOWN C LAIM- NOTICE OF S A LE Fax it te 541-322-7253 ING AN Y R I G HT, U NDER WRIT O F TITLE, LIEN, OR INEXECUTION - REAL TEREST I N THE PROPERTY. Notice is The Bulletin Classifieds PROPERTY DE- hereby given that the S CRIBED I N T H E Deschutes C o u nty LEGAL NOTICE COMPLAINT Sheriff's Office will on Deutsche Bank NaHEREIN. I N TH E May 22, 2014 at 10:00 tional Trust Company, NAME O F THE AM in the main lobby as Indenture Trustee STATE OF OREGON: of t h e D e s chutes for American Home Mortgage Investment You are hereby re- County Sheriff's Of2007-2, quired to appear and fice, 63333 W. High- Trust Plaintiff/s, v. Rebecca defend against the way 20, Bend, Orallegations contained egon, sell, at public Larsen; and Persons or Parties Unknown in the Complaint filed o ral auction to t h e a gainst you i n t h e highest bidder, f or claiming any r i ght, above entitled pro- cash o r ca s hier's title, lien or interest in ceeding within thirty check, the real prop- t he p r operty d e (30) days from the erty commonly known scribed in the comdate of service of this as 2118 NW Cedar plaint herein, DefenSummons upon you. Avenue, R edmond, d ant/s. Case N o . : If you fail to appear Oregon 97756. Con- 13CV0093. NOTICE OF SALE U N DER and defend this mat- ditions of Sale: Poter within thirty (30) tential bidders must WRIT O F E X ECUdays from the date of arrive 15 minutes prior TION - REAL PROPpublication specified to the auction to allow ERTY. N o tice is herein along with the the Deschutes County hereby given that the required filing f ee, Sheriff's Office to re- Deschutes C o u nty W ELLS FARG O view bidder's funds. Sheriff's Office will on BANK N.A. will apply Only U.S. currency May 22, 2014 at 10:00 to the Court for the re- and/or cashier's AM in the main lobby lief demanded in the checks made payable of t h e De s chutes Complaint. The first to Deschutes County County Sheriff's Ofdate of publication is Sheriff's Office will be fice, 63333 W. HighMarch 26, 2014. NO- accepted. P ayment way 20, Bend, OrTICE T O D E FEN- must be made in full egon, sell, at public DANTS: READ immediately upon the o ral auction to t h e T HESE PAP E R S close of the sale. For h ighest bidder, f or CAREFULLY! You ca s hier's more information on cash o r must "appear" in this this s al e g o to: check, the real propcase or the other side www.oregonsheriffs.c erty commonly known will win automatically. om/sales.htm as 524 NW Canyon
Drive, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i dders m u s t arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Indenture Trustee for American Home Mortgage Investment Trust 2006-3, Plaintiff/s, v. Marcia S. Mitchell; The Parks Homeowners Association, Inc.; Persons or Parties Unknown claiming any r ight, title, lien or interest in t he p r operty d e scribed in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o .: 13CV0879. NOTICE OF SALE U NDER WRIT OF E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on May 20, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t h e De s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 19563 Fisher Lake Ln, Bend, O regon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Federal Nat i onal Mortgage Association, its successors and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. James C. Nore; and SELCO C ommunity Credit Union, Defend ant/s. Cas e N o . : 13CV0075. NOTICE OF SALE U N DER WRIT OF E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o tice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on May 15, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t h e De s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 6 1 22 5 Ni s i ka
Court, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE GMAC Mo r tgage, LLC, its successors and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Richard W. York; and Mid O regon Federal Credit Union, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0479. N OTICE OF S A LE U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on May 15, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known a s 1 9 33 0 Ga l e n Road, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE H SBC Bank U S A, National Association, as Trustee for Luminent Mortgage Trust 2006-7, Mo r tgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-7, Plaintiff/s, v. Steven L. Haines, and Persons or Parties Unknown claiming any r i ght, title, lien, or interest in t he p r operty d e scribed in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 'I3CV01'I4. NOTICE OF SALE U N DER WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o tice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on May 15, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t h e De s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 2 0008 P o wers Road, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of
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Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm
way 20, Bend, Or- ¹B26 Seastrand, Amy egon, sell, at public ¹B52 Gearke, Mike o ral auction to t h e ¹B96 Orlandos, Holly h ighest bidder, f o r ¹C15 Peters, Kathina/ cash o r ca s hier's Rose, Edward check, the real prop- ¹C37 Bewley, Mike erty commonly known ¹E6 Evans, Gerald as 63612 High Stan¹E8 Arisaga, Judith dard Drive, Bend, Or- ¹E103 Dickerson, Phillip egon 97701. Condi- ¹E108 Gregorson, Craig tions of Sale: LEGAL NOTICE Potential bidders must OF PUBLIC arrive 15 minutes prior NOTICE HEARING to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Pursuant t o OR S Sheriff's Office to re77.250, notice i s view bidder's funds. 4 Only U.S. currency hereby given that a and/or cashier's public hearing will be checks made payable held to receive from interested perto Deschutes County any LEGAL NOTICE Sheriff's Office will be sons suggestions, adIN T H E CIR C UIT accepted. P ayment vice, objections or COURT O F THE must be made in full remonstrance's to the STATE OF OREGON immediately upon the proposed budget for FOR THE COUNTY close of the sale. For the Central Oregon OF DES C HUTES Forest Protection Disinformation on Probate Department. more this s al e g o to: trict. A hearing will be In the Matter of the held on Wednesday, Estate of: ANGELA M. www.oregonsheriffs.c April 23, 2014, at 1:00 om/sales.htm CONNOR, Deceased. P.M., at the Prineville Case No. 14PB0012. LEGAL NOTICE Unit, 350 1 E 3rd NOTICE TO INTER- N ationstar M o r t - Street, Prineville, OR. ESTED P ERSONS. gage Copies of the tentaLLC, NOTICE IS HEREBY P laintiff/s, v . Le tive budget may be GIVEN that Corinne onard M. Mallory; inspected during norMartinez has b een Kimberly M. Mallory; mal working hours. appointed p e rsonal Nathan To ensure the broadNeal representative of the Elledge; Jo a n ne est range of services Estate of Angela M. Elledge; S u nriver to individuals with disConnor, deceased, by Owners' A ssociaabilities, persons with the Circuit Court of disabilities r equiring tion; Occupants of the State of Oregon the Property, Despecial arrangements for Deschutes County. fendant/s. Case No.: should contact All persons having 13CV0247. NO541-447-5658 at least c laims against t h e two working days in T ICE O F SAL E estate are required to UNDER WRIT OF advance. present them, w ith EXECUTION vouchers attached, to REAL PROPERTY. OREGON the undersigned at the Notice is h e reby DEPARTMENT OF below address within given that the DesFORESTRY four months after the c hutes Cou n t y date of first publica- Sheriff's Office will DOUG DECKER, tion of this notice, or STATE FORESTER on May 27, 2014 at the claims may be 1 0:00 AM i n t h e LEGAL NOTICE barred. All persons main lobby of the NOTICE TO INTERwhose rights may be Deschutes County ESTED P ERSONS. affected by the pro- S heriff's Of fi c e , Estate of Jan Carol ceedings may obtain 63333 W. Highway Pickett. Case Numadditional information 20, Bend, Oregon, ber 14PB0031. Nofrom the records of sell, at public oral tice: The Circuit Court the Court, the perauction to the highof the State of O rsonal representative, est bidder, for cash egon, for the County or the attorney for the or cashier's check, personal representa- the real p roperty of Deschutes, has appointed John D. Sortive. Dated and first commonly known as lie, attorney at Bryant, published on April 16, 57540 Lupine Lane, Lovlien & Jarvis, P.C. 2 014. MERR I L L Sunriver, O r egon O 'SULLIVAN, L L P . 97707. C onditions as Personal Representative of the EsTerrence B. of Sale: P otential O'Sullivan, OSB bidders must arrive tate of Ja n P ickett, deceased. Al l p er¹681225, Attorney for 15 minutes prior to sons having claims Personal Representa- the auction to allow tive, Merrill O'Sullivan, the Desc h utes against said estate are r e q uired to LLP, 805 SW Indus- County Sheriff's Oft rial Way, Suite 5 , f ice to rev i e w present the s a me, with proper vouchers Bend, O R 9 7 7 02, bidder's funds. Only to John D . S o rlie, Phone: 541-389-1770, U.S. currency Fax: 5 4 1-389-1777, and/or ca s h ier's B ryant, L ovlien & Jarvis, PC, 591 SW Email: checks made payMill View Way, Bend, Terry©merrill-osulliable to Deschutes Oregon 97702 within van.com. P e r sonal County Sheriff's Offour months from the Representative: f ice will b e ac Corinne Martinez, PO cepted. P a yment date of first publication of this notice as Box 1880, La Pine, must be made in full stated below, or they OR 97739. Attorney immediately upon m ay be barred. A l l for Personal Repre- t he close o f t h e persons whose rights sentative: Terrence B. sale. For more inO'Sullivan, OSB f ormation on t h i s may be affected by this proceeding may ¹ 681225, Merr i l l sale go to: www.orO'Sullivan, LLP, 805 egonsheriff obtain additional ins.com/sa f ormation from t h e SW Industrial Way, les.htm records of the court or Suite 5, Bend, OR LEGAL NOTICE John D. Sorlie. Dated 97702, Phone: N ationstar Mor t 5 41-389-1770, F a x : and first p u blished LLC, April 9, 2014. Per541-389-1777, Email: gage Plaintiff/s, v. R. Cosonal Representative/ Terry©merrill-osullirey Egner; WashA ttorney: John D . van.com. ington Mutual Bank; Sorlie, OSB ¹95045, LEGAL NOTICE RHW Enterprises, B ryant, Lovlien & JPMorgan Chase Inc.; Occupants of Jarvis, P.C., 591 SW Bank, National Asthe Property, DeMill View Way, Bend, sociation, Plaintiff/s, fendant/s. Case No.: Oregon 97702, Telev. John P. Erhard; 12CV1025. NOphone: (541) Deedee Er h ard; T ICE O F SAL E 382-4331, Fax: (541) First Horizon Home UNDER WRIT OF 389-3386, Email: sorLoan Corporation; EXECUTION lieIbljlawyers.com Citibank South DaREAL PROPERTY. LEGAL NOTICE kota, N.A.; Capital Notice i s h e r eby One Bank, N .A.; On April 19, 2014 at given that the Des9:00 AM, the entire O ccupants of t he c hutes Coun t y Property, D e f e n- Sheriff's Office will contents of storage units ¹117 Cheryl Wildant/s. Case No.: on May 27, 2014 at 13CV1013. NOlis 5 x 5, ¹128 Daniel 1 0:00 AM i n t h e Harris 5 x 30, ¹ 1 76 T ICE O F SAL E main lobby of the UNDER WRIT OF Sarah Barboza 10 x Deschutes County 10, ¹244 Elaine Picco EXECUTION S heriff's Of fi c e , REAL PROPERTY. 5 x 5, ¹ 393 James 63333 W. Highway Edward Markham 10 Notice is h e reby 20, Bend, Oregon, x 14, ¹281 Dave Grifgiven that the Dessell, at public oral fith 5 x 10 will sold to c hutes Cou n t y auction to the highSheriff's Office will the highest bidder to est bidder, for cash satisfy lien placed on on May 8, 2014 at or cashier's check, 1 0:00 AM i n t h e the real p roperty t he said u nits f o r non-payment of rent. main lobby of the commonly known as Deschutes County The sale will t ake 53140 Bridge Dr., S heriff's Of fi c e , La Pine, O regon place at Alliance Stor63333 W. Highway a ge, 257 S E 2 n d 97739. Conditions 20, Bend, Oregon, of Sale: P o tential Street, Bend, OR. For sell, at public oral more inf o rmation bidders must arrive please call auction to the high15 minutes prior to 541-389-5500. est bidder, for cash the auction to allow or cashier's check, the Desc h utes LEGAL NOTICE the real p roperty County Sheriff's OfOregon H o u sing commonly known as f ice to rev i e w and Co m munity 2883 NW Polarstar bidder's funds. Only Services D e partAvenue, Bend, OrU.S. currency egon 97701. Condiand/or ca s hier's ment, State of Oregon, Plaintiff/s, v. tions of Sale: Pochecks made payDavid J. Gregory, tential bidders must able to Deschutes an individual; and arrive 15 minutes County Sheriff's OfMonica A. Keeney, prior to the auction f ice will b e a c to allow the Descepted. P a yment an individual, Defendant/s. Case No.: c hutes Cou n t y must be made in full 13CV0538. NOS heriff's Office t o immediately upon T ICE O F SAL E review bid d er's t he close o f t h e UNDER WRIT OF funds. Only U . S. sale. For more inEXECUTION c urrency an d / or f ormation on t h is REAL PROPERTY. cashier's c h e cks sale go to: www.orNotice is h e reby made payable to egonsheri ff s.com/sa given that the DesDeschutes County les.htm c hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will LEGAL NOTICE Sheriff's Office will be accepted. PayNOTICE OF PUBLIC on May 29, 2014 at ment must be made AUCTION 1 0:00 AM i n t h e in full immediately WRIGHT MINI main lobby of the upon the close of STORAGE Deschutes County the sale. For more Sheriff's Off i c e, information on this The contents of the 63333 W. Highway sale go to: www.orfollowing storage units 20, Bend, Oregon, egonsheriff s.com/sa will be auctioned to sell, at public oral les.htm collect unpaid stor- auction to the highLEGAL NOTICE age fees on Saturday, est bidder, for cash McKenzie A v iation, May 3, 2014 at 10:00 or cashier's check, LLC, an Oregon lim- a.m. the real p roperty ited liability company, commonly known as P laintiff/s, v . D a w n WRIGHT MINI 17566 Sutter Street, Williams and Michael STORAGE La Pine, O regon Williams, Defendant/s. 1835 S. HIGHWAY 97 97739. C o nditions Case No.: 13CV0500. REDMOND, OR 97756 of Sale: P otential N OTICE OF S A L E bidders must arrive (541) 548-2138 U NDER WRIT O F 15 minutes prior to EXECUTION - REAL UNIT ¹'s: the auction to allow PROPERTY. Notice is ¹8 Botorff, Harry the Desc h utes hereby given that the ¹40 Dallas, Jeannie County Sheriff's OfDeschutes C o u nty ¹52 Hunt, Michael f ice to rev i e w Sheriff's Office will on ¹53 Huizar, Krystal bidder's funds. Only U.S. May 20, 2014 at 10:00 ¹54 Springer, Anne currency AM in the main lobby ¹90 Thompson, Larry and/or ca s h ier's of t h e De s chutes ¹A21 Eggers, Sean checks made payCounty Sheriff's Of- ¹A27 Adams, Shelby able to Deschutes ¹B2 Fonseca, Tarna fice, 63333 W. HighCounty Sheriff's Of-
f ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation o n t h i s sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE This is an action for Judicial Foreclosure of real property comm only k nown a s 6 1609 Summ e r Shade Drive, Bend, OR 97702. A motion or answer must be given to t h e c o urt clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein a long with the r e quired filing fee. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DE S CHUTES. CITIMORTGAGE, INC., ITS SUCCESSORS AND/OR ASSIGNS, Plaintiff, v. NORRELL J. ROSE; FIRST HO R I ZON HOME LOAN CO RPORATION; AMERIC AN EXPR E S S BANK FSB; ASSET SYSTEMS, INC.; and ALL OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOW N C L A IMING AN Y R I G HT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INT EREST I N THE REAL P R O PERTY COMMONLY KNOWN AS 6 1609 S UMMER SH A D E D RIVE, BEND, O R 97702, D e fendants.
Case No. 13CV1215FC. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. TO D E FENDANT ALL OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES UNK N OWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, O R I NTEREST I N THE REAL P ROPE RTY C O M M O N LY KNOWN AS 6 1609 S UMMER SH A D E D RIVE, BEND, O R 97702: IN THE NAME
OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You a re hereby required to appear and defend the action filed against you in the above-entitled cause within 30 days from the date of service of this Summons upon you; and if you fail to appear and d efend, f o r wan t thereof, the Plaintiff will apply to the court f or th e r e lief d e manded ther e in. Dated: April 1, 2014. PITE DUNCAN, LLP. B y S t ephanie L . Beale, OSB ¹136474, (858) 750-7600, 621 S W M orrison S t . , Suite 425, Portland, OR 97205, Of Attorneys for Plaintiff. NOTICE T O D E F ENDANT/ DEFENDANTS READ T HESE PAP E RS C AREFULLY. Y o u must "appear" in this care or the other side will win automatically. To "appear" you must file with the court a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer". The "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i thin 30 days (or 60 days for Defendant United States or State of Oregon Department of Revenue) along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n a t t orney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral S ervice o nline a t www.oregonstatebar. org or by calling (503) 684-3763 ( in t h e Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. LEGAL NOTICE This is an action for Judicial Foreclosure of real property commonly known as 2999 NE Rock Chuck Drive, Bend, OR 97701. A motion o r a n swer must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein along with the required filing fee. IN T HE CIRCU I T COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DE S CHUTES. GREEN TREE SERV ICING, LLC, I T S SUCCESSORS AND/OR ASSIGNS, Plaintiff, v. DAVID L. BARKER; MARILYN L. BARKER; AND ALL OTHER P E RSONS O R PARTIES U N KNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE REAL PROPERTY C O M M O N LY KNOWN AS 299 NE ROCK CHUCK D RIVE, BEND, O R 97701, D efendants. Case No. 13CV0928FC. SUM-
MONS BY PUBLICATION. TO D E FENDANT ALL OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES UNK N OWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, O R INTEREST I N THE REAL PROPE RTY C O M M O N LY K NOWN 2999 N E ROCK CHUCK DRIVE, BEND, OR 97701: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby required to
appear and defend
the action filed against you in the above-entitled cause within 30 days from the date of service of this Summons upon you; and if you fail to appear and d efend, f o r wa n t thereof, the P laintiff will apply to the court f or th e r e lief d e manded the r e in. Dated: April 4, 2014. PITE DUNCAN, LLP. By Shannon K. Calt, OSB ¹121855, (858) 7 50-7600, 621 S W Morrison St., S uite 4 25, Portland, O R 97205, Of Attorneys for Plaintiff. NOTICE TO DE F ENDANT/ DEFENDANTS READ T HESE PAP E R S C AREFULLY. Y o u must "appear" in this care or the other side will win automatically. To "appear" you must file with the court a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer". The "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i thin 30 days (or 60 days for Defendant United States or State of Oregon Department of Revenue) along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an a t t orney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral S ervice o nline a t www.oregonstatebar.
Sheriff's Office will on May 8, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t h e De s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e highest bidder, f or cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known a s 2443 N W 2 n d Street, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm
LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Mark Shank aka Mark A. Shank aka Mark Allen Shank; Sarah R. Shank aka Sarah Ruth Shank aka Sarah Shank fka Sarah R. Martin; Oregon Affordable Housing Assistance C orporation; R a y Klein, Inc., an Oregon c o rporation, dba P r o fessional Credit Service; Oregon Water Wonderland P r o perty Owners Association, Unit II, Inc.; Occupants of the Premises; and the Real Property located at 17178 Wood Duck Court, Bend, O regon 97707, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0132. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.
Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will on May 27, 2014 at
given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will on May 13, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p r operty commonly known as 20663 Wild Rose L ane, Bend, O regon 97702-2781. Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidd e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will
be accepted. Pay-
ment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm
LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, as 0:00 AM i n t h e Trustee f o r the 1 lobby of the C-Bass Mo r tgage main County Loan Asset-Backed Deschutes S heriff's Of fi c e , Find exactly what Certificates, S e r ies 63333 W. Highway you are looking for in the 2006-MH1, Plaintiff/s, 20, Bend, Oregon, v. Scott W. Aldridge; sell, at public oral CLASSIFIEDS Edie K. Aldridge, Amy to the highMoser; American Fi- auction bidder, for cash LEGAL NOTICE nancial Services (DE), est cashier's check, Wells Fargo Bank, Inc.; Persons or Par- or real p roperty N.A., its successors ties Unknown claim- the known as in interest and/or ing any right, title, lien commonly 17178 Wood Duck assigns, Plaintiff/s, o r interest i n t h e Court, Bend, O rv. Charlie Grant III; property described in egon 9 7707-2356. Mid Oregon Fedthe complaint herein, Conditions of Sale: eral Credit Union; D efendant/s. C a s e Potential b i d ders O ccupants of t h e No.: 13CV0892. NO- must arrive 15 minPremises; and the TICE OF SALE UN- u tes prior t o t h e real property l oDER WRIT OF EX- auction to allow the c ated a t 627 4 0 ECUTION - REAL Deschutes County Dixon Loop, Bend, PROPERTY. Notice is S heriff's Office t o Oregon hereby given that the review d e r's 97701-9300, DefenDeschutes C o u nty funds. Onlybid U . S. dant/s. Case No.: Sheriff's Office will on c urrency an d / or 13CV0272. NOMay 20, 2014 at 10:00 cashier's c h e cks T ICE O F SA L E AM in the main lobby made payable to UNDER WRIT OF of t h e D e s chutes Deschutes County EXECUTION County Sheriff's OfOffice will REAL PROPERTY. fice, 63333 W. High- Sheriff's be accepted. PayNotice is h e reby way 20, Bend, Orment must be made given that the Desegon, sell, at public in full immediately c hutes Cou n t y o ral auction to t h e upon the close of Sheriff's Office will highest bidder, f or sale. For more on May 29, 2014 at cash o r ca s hier's the information on this 1 0:00 AM i n t h e check, the real prop- sale go to: www.ormain lobby of the erty commonly known egonsheriff s.com/sa Deschutes County org or by calling (503) as 5 2692 S u nrise les.htm S heriff's Of fi c e , Blvd, La P ine, Or684-3763 ( in t h e 63333 W. Highway LEGAL NOTICE Portland metropolitan egon 97739. Condi20, Bend, Oregon, Fargo Bank, area) or toll-free else- tions of Sale: Poten- Wells sell, at public oral where in Oregon at t ial b i dders m u s t N.A., its successors auction to the higharrive 15 minutes prior in interest and/or (800) 452-7636. est bidder, for cash to the auction to allow assigns, Plaintiff/s, or cashier's check, LEGAL NOTICE the Deschutes County v. Unknown Heirs of the real p roperty U.S. Bank N.A., as Sheriff's Office to re- Katherine S. Wright; commonly known as Trustee, on behalf of view bidder's funds. Lisa K. Baker; Un62740 Dixon Loop, the holders of the J.P. Only U.S. currency k nown Heirs o f B end, Oreg o n Morgan A l t ernative and/or cashier's Clymer Lewi s 97701-9300. CondiLoan Trust 2007-A2 checks made payable Wright, Jr.; Cindy Mortgage to Deschutes County Wright Gab r iel; tions of Sale: Potential bidders must Pass-Through Certifi- Sheriff's Office will be Clymer Wright III; arrive 15 m inutes cates, Plaintiff/s, v. accepted. P ayment Linda Wright Tomaprior to the auction Aaron J. Ulrich; Laura must be made in full s etti; KS W V e n to allow the DesJ. Ulrich; Mortgage immediately upon the tures, LLC; Juniper c hutes Cou n t y Electronic Registra- close of the sale. For Glen North Sheriff's Office to tion Systems, Inc.; more information on Homeowner's Assoreview bid d er's RBS Citizens, NaWo o dhill this s al e g o to: ciation; funds. Only U . S. tional As s ociation, www.oregonsheriffs.c Homes, LLC; State currency an d / or Other Persons or Par- om/sales.htm of Oregon; Occucashier's c h e cks ties, including Occupants of the Premade payable to pants, Unk n own mises; and the real Deschutes County LEGAL NOTICE Claiming any Right, property located at Sheriff's Office will Title, Lien, or Interest Wells Fargo Bank, 2944 Southwest Inbe accepted. PayN.A., its successors in dian Circle, Redin the Property Deinterest and/or asmust be made scribed in the Comm ond, Ore g o n ment in full immediately plaint Herein, Defen- signs, Plaintiff/s, v. 97756, Defendant/s. upon the close of d ant/s. Case N o . : Frank Ceniga; Shelby Case No.: the sale. For more 1 3CV1189FC. N O - Ceniga; and all Other 12CV1257. NOPersons or P arties T ICE O F information on this TICE OF SALE UNSAL E sale go to: www.orUnknown c l a iming UNDER WRIT OF DER WRIT OF EXegonsheriff s.com/sa ECUTION - REAL any right, title, lien, or EXECUTION les.htm PROPERTY. Notice is interest in th e r e al REAL PROPERTY. hereby given that the property c ommonly Notice i s h e r eby LEGAL NOTICE Deschutes C o u nty known as 2967 SW given that the DesWells Fargo Bank, Sheriff's Office will on F orest Ave , R e d - c hutes Coun t y N.A., its successors 9 7 7 56, Sheriff's Office will May 8, 2014 at 10:00 mond, O R in interest and/or AM in the main lobby D efendant/s. C a se on May 8, 2014 at assigns, Plaintiff/s, of t h e De s chutes No.: 13CV0909. NO- 1 0:00 AM i n t h e v. Darren C. WatCounty Sheriff's Of- TICE OF SALE UN- main lobby of the son, ak a D a rren DER WRIT OF EXfice, 63333 W. HighDeschutes County Watson; Charlene ECUTION - REAL S heriff's way 20, Bend, OrOf fi c e , M . Watson, a k a egon, sell, at public PROPERTY. Notice is 63333 W. Highway Charlene Watson; o ral auction to t h e hereby given that the 20, Bend, Oregon, Shevlin Ridge HoDeschutes C o u nty sell, at public oral h ighest bidder, f o r meowners Associacash o r ca s hier's Sheriff's Office will on auction to the hightion; SELCO Comcheck, the real prop- May 13, 2014 at 10:00 est bidder, for cash munity Credit Union; erty commonly known AM in the main lobby or cashier's check, Kristin M. Larson; De s chutes the real p roperty as 20468 Mazama of t h e Phillips Gordon; and Place, Bend, Oregon County Sheriff's Of- commonly known as O ccupants of t h e fice, 63333 W. High- 2944 Southwest In97702. Conditions of Premises, D e fenSale: Potential bid- way 20, Bend, Or- dian Circle, RedCase No.: ders must arrive 15 egon, sell, at public m ond, Ore g on dant/s. 12CV0794. NOminutes prior to the oral auction to t he 97756. C onditions T ICE O SAL E auction to allow the h ighest bidder, f o r of Sale: P o tential UNDER F WRIT OF ca s hier's bidders must arrive Deschutes C o u nty cash o r EXECUTION Sheriff's Office to re- check, the real prop- 15 minutes prior to REAL PROPERTY. view bidder's funds. erty commonly known the auction to allow is h e reby Only U.S. currency as 2967 SW Forest the Desc h utes Notice given that the Desand/or cashier's Ave., Redmond, Or- County Sheriff's Ofhutes Cou n t y checks made payable egon 97756. Condi- f ice to rev i e w c Sheriff's Office will to Deschutes County tions of Sale: Poten- bidder's funds. Only on May 13, 2014 at Sheriff's Office will be t ial b i dders m u s t U.S. currency 0:00 AM i n t h e accepted. P ayment arrive 15 minutes prior and/or ca s h ier's 1 main lobby of the must be made in full to the auction to allow checks made payDeschutes County immediately upon the the Deschutes County able to Deschutes S heriff's Of fi c e , close of the sale. For Sheriff's Office to re- County Sheriff's Of63333 W. Highway more information on view bidder's funds. f ice will b e ac this s al e g o to: Only U.S. currency cepted. P a yment 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral cashier's must be made in full www.oregonsheriffs.c and/or auction to the highchecks made payable immediately u p on om/sales.htm est bidder for cash to Deschutes County t he close o f t h e LEGAL NOTICE or cashier's check, Sheriff's Office will be sale. For more inU.S. Bank NA, Suc- accepted. Payment f ormation on t h i s the real p roperty c essor Trustee t o commonly known as must be made in full sale go to: www.orBank of America, NA, immediately upon the egonsheriff 3007 Nor t hwest s. com/sa Successor in Interest close of the sale. For les.htm Shevlin M eadows D rive, Bend, Orto Lasalle Bank NA, more information on as Trustee, on behalf this s al e LEGAL NOTICE egon 97701. Condigo to: of the Holders of the www.oregonsheriffs.c Wells Fargo Bank, tions of Sale: PoWashington M u tual om/sales.htm N.A., its successors tential bidders must Mortgage in interest and/or arrive 15 m inutes Pass-Through Certifiassigns, Plaintiff/s, prior to the auction cates, WMALT Series v. Edward J. Sponto allow the DesSell an Item 2006-AR6, Plaintiff/s, tak; Mortgage Elecc hutes Cou n t y v. Travis Yamada, tronic Registration S heriff's Office t o Other Persons or ParSystems, Inc., solely review bid d er's as nominee for Sif unds. Only U . S. ties, including Occupants, Unk n o wn erra Pacific Mortcurrency an d / or Claiming any Right, gage C o mpany, cashier's c h e cks If it's under$500 Title, Lien, or Interest Inc.; Larkspur Vilmade payable to in the Property Delage Homeowners Deschutes County you can place it in scribed in the ComA ssociation, I n c . ; Sheriff's Office will The Bulletin be accepted. Payplaint Herein, Defenand Occupants of d ant/s. Case N o . : the Premises, Dement must be made Classifieds for: 1 3CV1020FC. N O fendant/s. Case No.: in full immediately TICE OF SALE UN13CV0254. NOupon the close of DER WRIT OF EX- $10- 3 lines, 7 days T ICE O F SAL E the sale. For more ECUTION REAL UNDER WRIT OF information on this $16 • 3 lines, 14 days PROPERTY. Notice is EXECUTION sale go to: www.orhereby given that the (Private Parly ads only) REAL PROPERTY. egonsheriff s.com/sa Notice is h e reby les.htm Deschutes C o unty
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LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., on behalf of registered holders of Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities I LLC, Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2007-AC3,
Plaintiff/s, v. Nicholas JA Watson; Judy E. Watson; Moon Over Sunriver, LLC; M ortgage El e c tronic Registration Systems, Inc., Citi Bank, N . A. , a s Trustee for Certificateholders of Bear Stearns S e c ond Lien Trust 2007-1, Mortgage-Backed Certificates, Series 2007-1; The Sunriver Owners Association; Occupants of t h e P r o perty, Def