Bulletin Daily Paper 04-21-14

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75

MO A Y April 21,2014

6 Cnurse Our: a - ee-a

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TEE TOGREEN• B1

TEE TOGREEN• B6

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

GOVERNOR

Ba ot

NBA playoffs — Blazers win a thriller in Game1.B1

ass

Plus —Despite early upsets, why the favorites are favored. BS

ac in oson,

Photos from Fort Rock — Easter service welcomesthe sun, a tradition sinceWWII. A5 PIUS —Pope Francis gives plea for peace inEaster Mass.

or to ost

ready to finish

A2

Legs for Rodonaut-

By Hillary Borrud

Now the experimental space station robot will get to move around. A3

The Bulletin

A ftera seriesof

high-profile problems during Gov. John Kitzhaber's third term,

In national news — Bankrupt San Bernardino is again taking on California's pension agency.A2

the Oregon governor's race would appear ripe for challengers. The failed launch of Oregon's online health insurance

By BeauEastes eThe Bulletin

NS,

Cherri Brewer was cruising.

AndaWedexclusive

Competing in her first Boston Marathon last April,

— The gun metaphors in our everyday slang. benttbulletin.cem/extras

market-

place drew MAY 20

Brewer, a 63-year-old registered nurse from Bend,

attention, and

breezed through the race's halfway mark in 2 hours,

Kitzhaber was unable to

13 minutes and was eyeing a finish time that would

EDITOR'SCHOICE

convince state lawmakers to proceed with the Colum-

qualify her for this year's marathon.

Photos link

ELECTION

bia River Crossing project. Yet none of this was

enough fodder to draw a serious Democratic challenger into the governor's race, and political analyst Bill Lunch said the Republi-

masked men, Russia

can front-runner, state Rep. Dennis Richardson, will find it difficult to win in the

increasingly Democratic By Andrew Higgins, Michael R. Gordon and Andrew E. Kramer

suburbs outside Portland

because of his conservative positions on social issues.

Six Republican candidates will face off in the May 20 primary election, while the only candidate who filed to challenge

New York Times News Service

KIEV, Ukraine — For two weeks, the mysteri-

ously well-armed, professional gunmen known as "green men" have seized

ossos

Ukrainian

to be actively campaigning. See Governor/A4

ABOVE: Cherri Brewer, Kathy Lein and Amy Houchens, at the finish line of the Boston Marathon on Sunday. Brewer and Houchens, of Bend, and Lein, formerly of Bend, will run the race today. The three

government

• Checkpoint sites intown shootout, after town, A2 igniting a brush fire of separatist unrest across

were unable to finish last year because of the bombings. BACKGROUND: Runners near the midpoint of a 5K race Saturday in Boston, part of marathon weekend.

eastern Ukraine. Strenuous

denials from the Kremlin have closely followed each

"I was doing really well for me," says Brewer, a fit grand-

accusation by Ukrainian officials that the world was

mother of two who has 11

witnessing a stealthy invasion by Russian forces. Now, photographs and descriptions from eastern

then all of a sudden we came to

Ukraine endorsed by the

thousands of other runners ground to a halt after a pair

marathons under her belt. "And an abrupt stop." Less than 2 miles from the end of the race, Brewer and

Obama administration on Sunday suggest that many of thegreen men are indeed Russian military and intelligence forces — equipped in the same fashion as Russian special

of homemade bombs went off near the finish line of the 2013 Boston Marathon, an act of terror that killed three people and

operations troops involved in annexing the Crimea

To follow the 118th Boston Marathon live: www.baa.org it's not wise for distance runners to stop abruptly?' "Some people had cellphones," Brewer adds. "You started hearing words like, 'bomb,"explosion' and 'blood.'And then you heard the helicopters and sirens.

By Dina Cappiello The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Biofu-

els made from the leftovers

It was such a surreal scene." One ofalmost 5,000 runners

of harvestedcorn plants

who were unable to finish the

are worse than gasoline for global warming in the

None of that information, though, was known to the run-

marathon becauseofthe bomb-

short term, a study shows,

ings, Brewer is back in New England today — along with

challengingthe Obama administration's conclusions

a host of other Central Orego-

that they are a much cleaner

nians — set to compete in what is expected to be a highly emo-

oil alternative and will help combat climate change. A $500,000 studypaid for bythe federal government

there's a car-to-car traffic jam,"

Brewer explains. "And we had no idea why. People started

grumbling. 'Don't they know

TODAY'S WEATHER

Study casts doubt on corn fues

Follow along

injured almost 300 more. ners stranded on the course. "It was like a freeway when

region in February. See Russia /A4

Mostlycloudy High 59, Low38 Page BB

Kitzhaber does not appear

Submitted photo; background photo from The Associated Press

tional 118th Boston Marathon. See Marathon /A8

and released Sunday in the

peer-reviewed journal ¹ ture Climate Change concludes that biofuels made with corn residue release 7

*-

percent more greenhouse gases in the early years

INDEX Calendar A5 L ocal/State A5-6 C lassified C1-6 Movies A 7 Comics/ Nation/World A2 Puzzles C3-4 Sports B 1-8 Crosswords C4 Tee/Green B6-7 Dear Abby A7 Television A7 The Bulletin

An Independent Newspaper

voi. 112, No. 111, 22 pages, 3 sections

Q i/l/e use recycled newsprint

: 'IIIII I o

88 267 02329

compared with convention-

al gasoline. See Fuels/A8

U.S. promotes network to frustrate digital spying By Carlotta Gall and James Glanz Mediterranean fishing town,

But residents here have a surprising level of digital savvy and sharp memories of how the Internet can be

with its low, whitewashed

misused.

buildings and sleepy port, is an unlikely spot for an experiment in rewiring the

A group of academics and computer enthusiasts who

rising in Tunisia that overthrew a government deeply invested in digital surveillance have helped their town become atestcaseforan alternative: a physically separate, local network made up of cleverly programmed

took part in the 2011 up-

antennas scattered about on

New York Times News Service

SAYADA, Tunisia — This

global Internet.

rooftops. The State Department provided $2.8 million to a team of U.S. hackers, community

municate more freely and

activists and software geeks to develop the system, called

a mesh network, as a way for dissidents abroad to com-

securely than they can on the open Internet. One target that is sure to

start debate is Cuba; the U.S. Agency for International Development has pledged $4.3 million to create mesh networks there. See Network/A8


A2

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ussia, raine tra e amein ata s ootout The Associated Press

neva to ease tensions in east- Ponomaryov said d u r ing a news conference in Slovyansk shown on Rossiya state seizedgovernmentbuildings in television.

about 20men celebrating Eas-

Afghah eleCtlOh —With half the votes counted in the Afghan presidential race, the candidate Abdullah Abdullah widened his lead, but a runoff seemed likely betweenthetop two contenders, according to data releasedSunday bythe Independent Election Commission. Abdullah, the runner-up to President Hamid Karzai in the 2009 elections, had received 44.4 percent of the vote so far, followed byAshraf Ghani, a former World Bankeconomist and Karzai adviser, with 33.2 percent. Zalmay Rassoul, a former foreign minister in Karzai's government, was adistant third, with10.4 percent of the vote.

ter when unknown men drove up in four vehicles and opened

Everest avalahClle —Threedayshavepassed since anavalanche

B YLBASIVKA, Uk r a i n e ern Ukraine, where armed — Within hours of an Easter pro-Russia activists h ave

morning shootout at a checkpoint manned by pro-Russia in surgents i n

e a s tern

at least 10 cities.

Yuri Zhadobin, who coor-

Ukraine's new leaders and dinates the pro-Russia unit

Ukraine, Russia's Foreign many in the West fear that Ministry issued a statement such clashes could provide a blaming militant Ukrainian pretext for Russiato seize more nationalists an d R u ssian Ukrainian territory. state television stations aired Russia, which annexed the pictures of supposed proof Crimean Peninsula last month, o f their involvement in t h e has tens of thousands of troops

manning the checkpoint in the

village of Bylbasivka, told The Associated Press he was with

fire about 3 a.m.

"We began to shoot back from behind the barricades,

attack that left at least three

along its border with Ukraine.

people dead. The Ukrainian Security Ser-

Russian officials, including

vice, however, said the attack

in Ukraine, where it soon had

originally said the troops were there for military exercises, but Putin's spokesman on Saturday acknowledged that some were there because of instability in eastern Ukraine. The self-prodaimed mayor of Slovyansk appealed to Putin on Sunday to send in peace-

its own Trrvitter hashtag.

keeping troops to protect Rus-

The statement said some of

The armed clash early Sunday near the city of Slovyansk

sianspeakers from Ukrainian

the attackers were also killed or wounded, but the number

was staged by provocateurs from outside the country. And the presented evidence — particularly a p r istine business

card said to have been left behind by the attackers — was met with widespread ridicule

P resident V l a dimir

P u t i n , and we threw Molotov cocktails at them," Zhadobin said.

nationalists.

Two of the vehicles caught fire and the attackers fled in the

other two, he said. The U k r a inian In t erior Ministry's office in the east-

ern Donetsk region said three people died in the attack and three others were wounded.

"They want to make us wasn't known. Russian state slaves. They don't talk to us, television reported that two of was reached last week in Ge- but simply kill us," Vyacheslav the attackers were killed. appeared to be the first since an international a greement

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coseervatore Romano vra The Associated prese

Marking Christianity's most hopeful day, Pope Francis made anEaster Sunday pleafor peace and dialogue in Ukraine andSyria, for an end to terrorist attacks against Christians in Nigeria andfor more attention to the hungry andneediest close to home. Well over150,000 tourists — Romansand pilgrims, young andold — turned out for the Massthat Francis celebrated at analtar set up under a canopy on the steps of St. Peter's Basilica. So great were their numbers that they overflowed from sprawling St. Peter's Square, which wasbedecked with row after row of potted daffodils, sprays of blue hyacinths and bunches of white roses. Waving flags from the pope's native Argentina aswell as from

Brazil, Mexico, Britain, Poland andmanyother countries, they also filled the broad boulevard leading from the square to the Tiber River. Easter is the culmination of Holy Weekand marks the Christian belief that Jesus rose from thedead after his crucifixion. Francis noted that this year theCatholic church's celebration of Easter coincided with that of Orthodox churches, which havemanyfollowers in Ukraine. Francis prayedthat Godwould "enlighten and inspire the initiatives that promote peace inUkraine, sothat all those involved, with the support of the international community, will makeevery effort to prevent violence." — The Associated Press

Bankrupt SanBernardino faces off againstpensionagencyasothers watch By Rick Lyman and Mary Williams Walsh New YorJz Times News Service

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — When this bankrupt,

working-class city took the unprecedented step in 2012 of stopping its required pension contributions — arguing that it could not otherwise make payroll — other financially stressed California cities took notice: Could San Bernardino defy CalPERS, the powerful agency that administers the state's huge pension system? The resistance ended last

year when the city resumed its payments. But now, with a mayor who swept into office

in March promising to deal once and for all with skyrocketing pension costs, San

Bernardino is in another fight

failed to make between de-

in th e

in defiance of state law. But CalPERS has insisted that t his does not apply to t h e s ituation i n C a l ifornia, an

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with CalPERS that could embolden other municipalities

All Bulletinpaymentsareaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may beconverted to an electronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS A652-520, ispublished daily byWestern CommunicationsInc., 1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR9770Z Periodicalspostage paid atBend,OR.Postmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,PO.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706.TheBulletin retainsownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews orad illustrations.Theymay not be reproduced withoutexplicit priorapproval.

payments to the nation's larg-

assertion that may be tested

est public pension system. "We are underthe micro-

in court, if the mediation pro-

seeking relief from crippling

sociation, which represents the city's uniformed officers.

"Everyone in California is watching San Bernardino, and everybody in the nation scope, no q u estion a b out is watching California." it," said Carey Davis, 61, the CalPERS has for many mayor. "San Bernardino took years resisted all efforts to a different approach in bank- allow cities, for whatever ruptcy as related to pensions, reason, to stop making their and everybody is waiting to required payments. (Federal see how it comes out." law allows bankrupt comAt issue is the $17 million panies to slow them greatly.) in back payments and pen- While agreeing that "signifialties that San B ernardino cant progress has been made

killed at least13 Sherpas asthey carried gear for international expedition groups. It was theworst single-day death toll in the mountain's history, and it hasfocused a spotlight on the role of the local Sherpas, members of anethnic group renowned for their skill at high-altitude climbing. OnSunday, disappointed at the Nepali government's offer of 40,000 rupees ($408) ascompensation for the families of the dead, some Sherpas proposed a"work stoppage" that could disrupt or cancel the 334 expeditions plannedfor the 2014climbing season. Health law —The Government Accountability Office provided new details Sunday of howthe Obamaadministration raised money from outside organizations to promote enrollment in health insurance under the health care law. Republicans said such solicitations were meant to circumvent limits on government spending imposed by Congress. But in a report to Congress, the accountability office did not give a legal opinion on the propriety of the fundraising. Administration officials said it was legal. Under federal law, they said, the secretary of health and humanservices can encourage support for nonprofits that promote public health. COIOradO POt —Tens of thousands of revelers raised joints, pipes and vaporizer devices to the skySunday at acentral Denver park in a defiant toast to the April 20 pot holiday, aonce-underground celebration that stepped into the mainstream in the first state in the nation to legalize recreational marijuana. The 4:20 p.m. smoke-out in the shadow of the Colorado capitol was the capstone of anEaster weekend dedicated to cannabis in states across the country. Although it is still against the law to publicly smokemarijuana in Colorado, police reported only130 citations or arrests over the course of the two-day event, 92 for marijuana consumption. Prizefighter death —Rubin (Hurricane) Carter, a star prizefighter whose career wascut short by a murder conviction in NewJersey and who became aninternational cause celebre while imprisoned for 19 years before the chargesagainst him were dismissed, died Sunday morning at his home inToronto. Hewas 76. Thecause of death was prostate cancer, his friend andonetime co-defendant, John Artis, said. Carter was being treated in Toronto, where hehadfounded a nonprofit organization, Innocence International, to work to free prisoners it considered wrongly convicted. Carter was convicted twice on the samecharges of fatally shooting two men and awoman in a Paterson, N.J., tavern in1966. But both jury verdicts were overturned on different grounds of prosecutorial misconduct. POStal hill —Rep. Darrell Issa mayintroduce a U.S.Postal Service overhaul bill next weekthat more closely tracks with a White House plan, a movethat the California Republican hopeswill help rally more Democrats, congressional aides say.With the clock ticking on his tenure as chairman of theOversight and Government Reform Committee, Issa, the leading Houseadvocate for legislation to overhaul the financially troubled agency, mayintroduce the bill as soonas next week, whenCongress returns from its break. Thenewstrategy comesasroadblocksintheHouseandSenatecontinuetodoga three-year effort to stabilize the Postal Service. TheSenate, after painstaking negotiations, passed onepostal bill in the last Congress in 2012, but anoverall agreement remains elusive. Malaysian flight —As the search continued off the coast of Australia for the missing Malaysia Airlines jet, the airline announced another plane boundfor India wasforced to make anemergency landing early today after one of its tires burst on takeoff. All 159 passengers andseven crew members arrived safely back in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, about 2 a.m., about four hours after the planetook off for Bangalore, India. The incident was moredramafor an airline already under immensepressure for answers from the public and the families of those missing from Flight 370, more than six weeksafter it departed the sameairport. PakiStani aCCident —At least 42 people were killed Sunday morning in southern Pakistan after a busslammedinto a tractor-trailer in one of theworst traffic accidents in this country in recent years, officials and rescueworkers said. Thewreck took place on abusy highway in the Sukkur district of southern Sindh province, when the bus, which departed from theDeraGhazi Khandistrict of Punjab province, collided head-on with a truck traveling in the opposite direction, said Sharjeel Kharal, the deputy inspector general of the Sindhpolice. — From wire reports

m e diation," Rosan-

claring bankruptcy in August na Westmoreland, external 2012 and resuming payments communications manager for in July. CalPERS has main- CalPERS, said the pension tained that it is owed in full. system's hands were largely But now in bankruptcy nego- tied by statutes mandating tiations, the city is hoping to that all the pension system's pay only a fraction of that, ar- participants make their full guing that the city's creditors c ontributions on t i m e a n d must all share in the bank- that no workers' benefits be ruptcy pain. The amount may reduced. "It is the law," she said. be small, given the system's assets, but if San Bernardino The problem is that it regets a reduction, the prece- mains unclear whether, in dent could be huge, opening cases like this, federal bankthe door to other struggling ruptcy law trumps state penmunicipalities using bank- sion laws. A federal judge ruptcy law to justify delaying hearing th e D e troit b a n kor withholding payments to ruptcy case ruled, for inthe pension system. stance, that federal laws took "This city has taken on the precedence in that case, so 800-pound gorilla, which is the benefits of city workers CalPERS," said Ron Oliner, in Detroit could be reduced a lawyer for th e San Bernardino Police Officers As-

SOuth KOrean ferry —A portrait of the last voyage of a South Korean ferry is emerging from crewmembers, survivors and atranscript of communications with emergency dispatchers on shore. It is a scene of rapidly building chaos inwhich the captain and his crew faced aseries of tough choices andmechanical failures. Thosefactors may have all contributed to the ship's sinking andthe death of at least 64 people, with hundreds still missing. Investigators trying to reconstruct events have beenweighing a range of possible causes, including pilot error; an unexpected current; and loose orunbalanced cargo.

vides no solution. "With Vallejo and Stockton and other cities, everybody is looking at pensions and those obligations," said Rikke

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Van Johnson, who, with 10

years in office, is one of the few remaining veterans on the City Council. "We're all in

the same boat. Some of us are just in a little deeper."

SMOLlt:HVOLVO.cow


MONDAY, APRIL 21,2014 •THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Monday, April 21, the111th day of 2014. Thereare254 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Ukraine —U.S.Vice President Joe Biden plans to bein Kiev to meet with government leaders and democracy advocates.A2

BOStOnMarathnn — Marathoners compete in the118th race.A1

CUTTING EDGE

NEED TO KNOW

BCe IO 0

e in i s e s

BIRTHDAYS Britain's QueenElizabeth II is 88. Singer-musician Iggy Pop is 67. Rapper Michael Franti (Spearhead) is 48. Actor Rob Riggle is 44. Actor James McAvoy is 35. — From wire reports

0

massin ex as aws

The calculation, developed by a statistician in the 1830s, doesn't take into account a person's amount of body fat, or its distribution.

HISTORY Highlight:In1789, John Adams was sworn in asthe first vice president of the United States. In1509, England's King Henry Vll died; he wassucceeded by his 17-year-old son, Henry Vlll. In1649, the Maryland Toleration Act, providing for freedom of worship for all Christians, was passed by theMaryland assembly. In1836, an army ofTexansled by Sam Houston defeated the Mexicans at SanJacinto, assuring Texas independence. In1910, author Samuel Langhorne Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, died in Redding, Conn., at age74. In1914, U.S. military forces occupied the Mexican port of Veracruz at the order of President Woodrow Wilson; the occupation lasted until the following November. In1918, Baron Manfred von Richthofen, the Germanace known as the "RedBaron," was killed in action during World War I. In1930,a fire broke out inside the overcrowded OhioPenitentiary in Columbus, killing 332 inmates. In1955, the JeromeLawrence-Robert Lee play "Inherit the Wind," inspired by the Scopes trial of1925, opened at the National Theatre in New York. In1960, Brazil inaugurated its new capital, Brasilia, transferring the seat of national government from Rio deJaneiro. In1972, Apollo 16 astronauts John W. Youngand Charles M. Duke Jr. explored the surface of the moon. In1980, Rosie Ruiz wasthe first woman to cross the finish line at the Boston Marathon; however, shewas later exposed as afraud. (Canadian Jacqueli neGareauwasnamed the actual winner of the women's race.) Ten years ago:Fivesuicide attackers detonated car bombs against police buildings in Basra, Iraq, killing at least 74 people. Five years ago:Calling on Americans to volunteer, President Barack Obama signed a $5.7 billion national service bill tripling the size of theAmeriCorps service program. The sole survivor of a pirate attack on an American cargo ship off the Somali coast was charged as an adult with piracy in federal court in NewYork. (A prosecutor said Abdiwali Abdiqadir Muse had given wildly varying ages for himself before finally admitting he was18. Muselater pleaded guilty to hijacking, kidnapping and hostage-taking and was sentenced to more than 33 years in prison.) One year ago:Onthe first Sunday since the deadly Boston Marathon bombing, churches paused to mourn the deadand console the survivors while in West, Texas, residents prayed for comfort four days after a fertilizer plant explosion that killed14 people. In Britain, the London Marathon sent out a powerful message of solidarity with Boston and its victims as runners crossed the line in front of BuckinghamPalace with black ribbons on their chests. Joe Scarborough, a 50-year-old self-employed electrical contractor, rolled the first 900 series in Professional Bowlers Association historythree straight perfect games.

s a measLiie o o esit,

By Jane E. Brody New York Times News Service

In July 1998, the National Institutes of Health

changed what it means to be overweight, defining it as a body mass index of 25 or greater for adults. The cutoffhad been 28 formen and

27 for women, so suddenly about 29 million Americans who had been considered

normalbecame overweight even though they hadn't gained an ounce. The change, based on a review of hundreds of studies that matched BMI

levels with health risks in large groups of people, brought the country in line with definitions used by the World Health Organization and other health agencies.

But it also prompted many to question the real meaning of BMI and to note its

NASAvia The AssociatedPress

Each Robonaut leg, 4 feet, 8 inches long when straight, has seven

joints. Instead of feet, there are grippers. Each gripper, or foot, has a light, camera and sensor for building 3-0 maps.

By Marcia Dunn

and testing.

The Associated Press

Ambrose acknowledges the legs are "a little creepy" when

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Robonaut, the first out-of-

they move because of the num-

this-world humanoid, is finally getting its space legs. For three years, Robonaut has had to manage from the waist up. This new pair of legs means the experimental robot — now stuck on a pedestal — is

ber of joints and the range of

going mobile at the Internation-

division at Johnson.

al Space Station. "Legs are going to really

The grippers will latch onto handrails inside the space station, keeping Robonaut's hands freeforworking and carrying things. Expect slow going: just

kind of open up the robot's

horizons," said Robert Ambrose from NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston.

motion.

"I hope my knee never bends that many degrees, but Robonaut has no problems at all," said Ambrose, chief of soft-

ware, robotics and simulation

inches a second. If Robonaut

It's the next big step in NA- bumps into something, it will SA's quest to develop robotic pause. A good shove will shut

helpers for astronauts. With

legs, the 8-foot Robonaut will be able to dimb throughout

itdown.

"The robot's not going to have as much fun as the as-

the 260-mile-high outpost, per- tronauts," Ambrose said. "No forming mundane cleaning jumping, no somersaults, no chores and fetching things for flying." the human crew.

The robot's gangly, contortionist-bending legs were packed aboard a SpaceX supply ship that launched Friday, more than a month late. It was

the private company's fourth shipment to the space station for NASA, and it arrived Sun-

daymorning. Robonaut 2 — R2 for short — has been counting down the

Robonaut

a l r eady h as

demonstrated it can measure the flow on air filters, "a really crummy job for humans," Ambrose said. Once mobile, it can take over that job around the station.

How about deaning the space station toilets? "I have a feeling that's in Robonaut's fu-

ture," Ambrose said. This robot will stay indoors

days. as it learns how to dimb. The "Legs are on the way!" read next-generation model, cura message Friday on its Dvit- rently in development and tarter account, @AstroRobonaut. geted for a 2017 launch, will (OK, so it's actually a Johnson venture outside on spacewalks. Space Center spokesman who's

That's where the real payoff

doingthe tweeting.) lies. Space Exploration TechnolA robot doesn't need oxygen ogies Corp.'s unmanned cap- tanks and fancy spacesuits.A sule, Dragon, holds about2tons robotnever tiresorgetsbored. of space station supplies and A robot could stay out in the experiments, Robonaut's legs vacuum of space for days, included. weeks or even months, dinging Until a battery backpack ar- to the station. Human spacerives on another supply ship walkers are limited to eight or later this year, the multimil- nine hours. lion-dollar robot will need a Now imagine base camps power extension cord to stretch

on the moon, Mars or beyond

its legs, limiting its testing area staffed by a team of robotic to the U.S. side of the space sta- caretakers. Future Robonauts tion. Testing should start in a could be deployed in advance few months. and get everything runningbeEach leg — 4 feet, 8 inches forethe humans arrive — and long — has seven joints. Instead stay behind when they leave. offeet,there aregrippers,each And if there's a chore too with a light, camera and sensor risky for humans "we could let for building 3-D maps. the machine go out and sacri"Imagine monkey feet with fice itself," Ambrose said, "and eyes in the palm of each foot,"

that's OK. It's not human. We

Ambrose said. can build another one. We'll NASA engineers based the build one evenbetter." NASA's space station prodesign on the tether attachments used by spacewalking gram manager, Mike Suffrechastronauts. The legs cost $6 ni, cautioned Friday that there's million to develop and another still "quite a ways to go" before $8 million to build and certify future Robonauts make spacefor flight. The torso with head walk repairs like the computand arms delivered by space er replacement job coming up shuttle Discovery in 2011 on its Wednesday for the two U.S. final flight cost $2.5 million, not station astronauts. Software is counting the untold millions of the biggest challenge, he said, dollars spent on development but"these are great first steps."

An alternatiVe:Stait WithataPemeaSure Although BMI is a reasonable measure of fatness for the average sedentary person, there areseveral potentially more accurate methods. But doctors rarely use thembecausethey are more time-consuming and thus morecostly, and some require equipment rarely found in medical offices. The simplest is a tapemeasurearound thewaist and hips. Divide the waist measurement by the hip measurement; a result above 0.9 for men or 0.85 for women indicates abdominal obesity and an elevated health risk. Almost as simple is askin-fold caliper, used to measure fat beneath the skin. It updates the old pinch at thewaist; more than an inch between the fingers, and you're too fat. A more sophisticated measurement, called bioelectric impedance analysis, uses aspecial scale that measures resistance to the flow of an electric current to estimate fat-free body massand body fat percentage. Its accuracy depends onhowmuch water you retain in your body. The so-called gold standard of body fat measurement, hydrostatic weighing, takes about half an hour, costs up to $150and involves being weighedwhile submerged in atank of water. Finally, a DEXAscan, like that used to measure bone density, improves on theaccuracy of water weighing. It divides the body into fat and fat-free tissue, andcananalyze the distribution of body fat.

potential drawbacks: labeling some healthy people as overweight or obese who are not overly fat, and failing to distinguish between Prevention cautions doctors dangerous and innocuous against using it as a diagnostic distributions ofbody fat. tool. More recent studies have For one thing, body weight indicated that many peo- is made up of muscle, bone ple with BMI levels at the and water, as well as body fat. low end of normal are less

BMI alone is at best an imprecise measure of how fat a

— Jane E.Brody, New YorkTimesNews Service

Physical fitness, too, influences the effects of BMI In an editorial in JAMA last year,

Dr. Steven Heymsfield and Dr. William Cefalu of the Pen-

nington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, La., noted that "cardiorespiratory

healthy than those now considered o v erweight. person may be. When Arnold fitness" is an independent preAnd some people who are Schwarzenegger was Mr. Uni- dictor of mortality at any level overly fat according to their verse, his BMI was well in the of fatness. BMI are just as healthy as obese range, yet he was hardly While experts continue to those considered to be of fat. debate whether a person can normal weight, as discussed Another problem: the distri- be "fit and fat," Keri Gans, a diin a newbook, "The Obesity butionof excessbody fatmakes etitian in New York and former Paradox," by Dr. Carl Lavie, a big difference to health. spokeswoman for the Acadea cardiologist in New Orle- Those with lots of abdominal my of Nutrition and Dietetics, ans, and Kristin Loberg. fat, which is metabolically ac- points out that physical activity Unlike readings on a tive, are prone to developing in- and a healthy diet tend to offset scale,BMI isbased on an sulin resistance, elevated blood the risks ofbeing overweight. "You don't need to be thin to individual's weight in rela- lipids, high blood pressure, tion to that person's height. diabetes, premature cardiovas- be fit," she said. It is calculated by dividing cular disease, and an increased At any weight, fitness can weight in k ilograms by risk of erectile dysfunction and reduce the risk of developing height in meters squared Alzheimer's disease. heart disease, lung disease, di(or, for those not metric-savBut fat carried in the hips, abetes or high blood pressure. vy, weight in pounds di- buttocks or thighs is relativeA t the other end o f t h e vided by height in inches ly inert; while it may be cos- weight spectrum, people with squared and the result mul- metically undesirable, it is not a low-normal or below-normal tiplied by 703). linked to chronic disease or BMI (less than 18.5) face a difAccording to current cri- early death. ferent set of health risks. They teria, those with a BMI beFurthermore, a person's age, may lack sufficient reserves to low 18.5 are underweight; gender and ethnicity influ- survivea serious health probthose from 18.5 to 2 4.9 ence the relationship between lem, and they are prone to osare normal; those from BMI, body fat and health risk. teoporosis, infertility and seri25 to 29.9 are overweight; Among children, a high BMI ous infections resulting from a and those 30 and higher is a good indicator of excess weakened immune system. are obese. The obese are fat and a propensity to remain Last year a widely publifurther divided into three overly fat into adulthood. But cized meta-analysis covering grades: Grade 1, in which foran elderly person or some- more than 2.88 million peoBMI is 30to 34.9;Grade 2, one with a chronic disease, a ple and 270,000 deaths found 35 to 39.9; Grade 3, 40 and BMI in the range of overweight that those whose BMI indicathigher. or obesity may even be pro- ed they were overweight and Before you contemplate tective. Sometimes — after a those with Grade 1 obesity a crash diet because your heart attack or major surgery, were not at a greater risk of BMI classifies you as over- for example — extra body fat death than those in the normal weight, consider what the can provideenergy that helps range. And a new analysis of index reall y representsand the patient to survive. An add- 32 studies by researchers in what is now known about ed layer of fat can also protect Australia concluded that for its relationship to health against traumatic injuries in an older people, being overweight and longevity. accident. did not increase mortality, but The index was devised On average, women have a the risk rose for those at the in the 1830s from measure- higher percentage of body fat lower end of normal, with a ments in men by a Belgian in relation to total weight than BMI of less than 23. s tatistician i nterested i n human growth. Morethan a century later, it was ad-

do men, but this does not nec-

essarily raise their health risks. And African-Americans, who

opted by insurers and some tend have heavier bones and researchers studying the weigh more than Caucasians, distribution of obesity in the

face a lower risk to health even

%ILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066

Adjustable general population. Though with a BMI in the overweight never meant to be an indi- range. Beds vidual assessment, only a way to talk about weight in large populations, BMI Brad Haun N.~221546 gradually was adopted as an easy and inexpensive 541-280-2564 Mi3zf3-fP~ •

way for doctors to assess weight in their patients.

At best, though, BMI is a

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Einstein College of Medicine, has noted. Someone with a "normal" BMI can

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4


A4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014

Governor

drug benefits and to require medicall y accurate sex educaContinued from A1 tion in Oregon public schools. Lunch, a r e t ired Oregon Meanwhile, Richardson has State University professor attracted support from Oregon who regularly provides politi- Right to Life's political action cal analysis for Oregon Public committee, which contributed Broadcasting, said in an in- $20,000 to his campaign in Noterview last week that health care reform and the gover-

nor's other policy priorities are still popular enough with

vember,according to state cam-

paign finance records. "Those positions work extremely well in the Republican

," Lu nch said."They

Democraticvoters in Oregon

p~

that they are not much of a liability for Kitzhaber.

don't work well in the general

"The issues that might be

election in Oregon anymore." The Bulletin interviewed sev-

problematic for the governor en candidates about why they are not ones that have a lot of are running for governor. Here resonance with the kind of vot- are their responses. ers on the Democratic side," Lunch said. "The Republicans Democrats have a kind of structural prob-

John Kitzhaber: Kitzhaber,

lem right now, which is their

67,said heisaskingvotersfora fourthtermbecausehewants to continueworking on Oregon's economic recovery. "I ran in 2010 because I felt that embed-

appeal to rural constkuencies,

which is substantial, probably covers at the very most a third of the state's population," Lunch

said. "What has happened in ded in this recession was an opthe last 10 to 12 years is the sub- portunity for some real transurbs have swurg more to the formational change," Kitzhaber Democrats." said. Four years later, "There The higher concentration of are partsof ruralOregon that voters and political power in the continue to suffer from doustate's liberal metro areas is ex- ble-digit unemployment, and actly what frustrates many Re- a lot of the jobs we've created publican gubernatorial candi- have been at the bottom or top dates, who say they want more of the income ladder." local control of their property Kitzhaber said the economy and tax dollars. continues to be the most imKitzhaber is a well-known

JOHN KITZHABER Party:Democrat Age:67 Family:partner Cylvia Hayes, son from a previous marriage Education:South Eugene High School, bachelor's degree from Dartmouth College anddoctor of medicine from University of Oregon Medical School Experience: governor of Oregon; president,EstesPark Institute; endowedchair of health policy —Foundation for MedicalExcellence; director emeritus, Centerfor Evidence-basedPolicy, Oregon Health 8 ScienceUniversity; emergency roomphysician, Roseburg, 1973-1989 Hometown:Portland Time inOregon:52 years

TIM CARR Party:Republican Age:56 Famigwife RosanaCarr, two children Education:Jesuit High School in Portland,bachelor's degree inpolitical science fromPortland State University Experience: CEOfor10years at CoSourceUSA,aTualatin companythat manufactures truck parts forFreightliner and othercompanies; nine years asvicepresidentof Portland-basedDePaul Industries, anoutsourcingfirm that providesemploymentfor people withdisabilities Hometown:Portland Time inOregon:56years

IFEANYICHUKWUDIRU Party:DemNophoto ocrat'

Party:Republican No photo Age: 58 provided Family:wife Mary Challstrom, five children Education:bachelor's degree in businessadministration from University of Nevada, Reno Experience:founder and owner of C.W.Concrete Inc. in Medford Hometown:Medford Time inOregon:37 years

provided Age: unavailable

Family:unavailable Education:unavailable Experience:unavailable Hometown: unavailable Time inOregon:unavailable

portant issue in this election,

advocate for health care inno- and hecreated Regional Soluvation, and the state got an ear-

tions Centers to identify local

ly start building its own online economicdevelopment opporhealth insurance marketplace. tunities across the state. The But six months after the insur- regional advisory committee ance exchange was supposedto in Central Oregon identified as go live, Oregon is the only state its top priority the expansion of in the nation where residents Oregon State University-Casstill cannot sign themselves cades Campus, and university up forhealth coverage in one officials say the first phase of sitting. The state has paid the

the campus will open to stuprimary technology contractor, dents in fall 2015. Kitzhaber

Orade Corp., $134 million in federal money and is withholding $26 million from the company, while Cover Oregon's board

said the new campus will help

boost job gtowth by loosening land use restrictions, induding

mining and timber reforestation policies, so the state can make better use of its natural

resources. Challstrom said he would push for the federal government to transfer land it owns

in Oregon back to state control. According to Challstrom's website, this would spur the creation

of well-paying jobs in Oregon.

more Oregonians obtain the

skills necessary to obtain good Darren Karr: Karr, 44, said jobs. that if voters elect him as goverdecides how to proceed with I feanyichukwu D i r u , t h e nor, he will use crowd-sourcing the website. Board members only Democraticcandidatewho to gather new ideas to improve are deciding whether to fix the filed to challenge Kitzhaber, Oregon's government. 'There's existing website or go to the fed- does not appear to be actively a lotof ideas andinnovationthat eral insurance exchange. campaigning and did not re- we're missing out on because For his part, Kitzhaber, a spond to repeated attempts to we're stuck in this old party former emergency room physi- contact him. system," Karr said. Karr did not cian, said his takeaway from the provide details of how he would experience is that he is a good Republicans orchestrate his crowd-sourcing doctor, "but I don'tknow a whole Tim Carr: Carr, 56, said he plan, but he said he would hire lot about building websites." decided to run for governor technology firms to set up the The governor defended the because no other Republicans new system. ove~ g g o al of health carefrom the Portland metro area reform. "The buck stops here had jumped into the race, and Lorraine Mae Rafferty: Rafon the management problem," he believes a moderate Repub- ferty, 52,saidshedecidedto run Kitzhabersaid."Butattheendof lican from this area would be for governor because she optheday,thewebsiteis ameansto the strongest candidate to chal- poses Richardson's plan to atan end, not an end in itself." lenge Kitzhaber. Carr said that tract Chinese companies to OrThat's not the only problem withongoingproblems at Cover egon.Rafferty said shelearned Kitzhaber faces. Republicans Oregon, "This is the one time I of Richardson's support for the also say the governor wasted think Kitzhaber could go down. idea through a June 2011 newsmoney on the defunct Colum- ... He could do anything wrong, letter to constituents, in which bia River Crossing project, the and no one seems to care." Richardson cited the benefits of planned new Interstate 5 and Carr said his top priority as Japanese car companies openlightrailbridgeinwhichOregon governor would be to reform ing manufacturing plants in the and Washington jointly invest- Oregon's publicpension system, United States. "Our message ed more than $180 million. The andthe onlywayto achieve this for Chinese investors is this ... Oregon Department of Trans- would be to start by moving the Oregon isopen for business," portation shut down planning governor and his or her staff, Richardson wrote. Rafferty for the project in March, after plus all lawmakers and the Or- saidshe is concerned that as state lawmakers dedined to egon Supreme Court, onto a Chinese companies purchase pay for construction. Kitzhaber 401(k) retirement system. The land for companies in Oregon, said the state's investment in the governor, lawmakers and judg- Americans will lose control of project was notwastedbecause es currently have a financial the state. "We're inviting an inthe state will archive all of the

interest in maintaining the pen-

planning documents for later use. "It is the weak link in our

sion system because they bene-

transportation between Canada and Mexico," Kitzhaber said

of the existing1-5bridge. And as Richardson is quick to point out, Kitzhaber hired

Rafferty also said Oregon fit from it, Carr said. has too many regulations, so "Thatis goingto take such an she would like to pick a point effort to get these people to vote in history and remove all the against their own financial in-

state laws passed since then.

terest," Carr said. "People can- Rafferty said that going back to not forget that issue is still out Oregon's 1959 laws "might be

former Chief Education Officer there. It's going to bankrupt this Rudy Crew at an annual salary

vasion," Rafferty said.

state."

of $280,000 to oversee the governor's plan to improve student

Bruce Cuff: Cuff, 53, wants

achievement and c oordinate

to give local communities more

good," but she would have to do furtherresearch in order to se-

lect the correctyear. Dennis Richardson: Rich-

the education system from pre- controlovergovernmentspend- ardson, 64, said in an interview school through college. Crew ing. First, Cuff would like to Thursday that he is running for left after barely a year on the cut personal income taxes and governor because he would be job, to take a job as president eliminate the business income a better leader than Kitzhaber. of the City University of New tax — which currently provide "Presently, what we have is a York's Medgar Evers College. a majority of schools funding governor who makes promises Kitzhaber served two terms — and instead require school about the future, and then fails as governor, from 1995 to 2003. districts to ask voters to ap- to deliver," Richardson said. The state constitution prohibits prove local sales taxes to pay "Cover Oregon was going to be governors from serving more for schools. Cuff said this would (Kitzhaber's) legacy.... Instead than eight years during a 12- make school districts account- of admitting failure and stopyear period, but there is no limit

able to voters and free up state

onthetotal number of terms.

lawmakers to focus on other spend taxpayer dollars because budget issues. Cuff would also they want to save face. It's gu-

In 2010, Kitzhaber narrow-

ly won the governor's seat in a like to redirect much of the Orrace against moderate Republi- egon State Police budget to the can and former Portland Trail sheriffs offices in each of OreBlazer Chris Dudley. gon's 36 counties. According to Lunch said it's possible to Cuffs website, he wants to preimagine a Republican beating serve Oregon State Police fundKitzhaber, "but not somebody ing "where it makes sense," inas far to the right as Richard- duding for the state crime lab son." Lunch said he expects Richardson will have a "terri-

ble time with suburban voters," particul arl y women, because of Richardson's conservativepositions on social issues. Last year,

and protection of state property.

Cuffs third major strategy involves appointing to the Land Conservation and Development

ping the loss, we continue to bernatorial malpractice, what

he's doing." Richardson said the most im-

portant issues in the governor's

race this year are job creation and improvingthe economy. Richardson said the state's tax

system is problematic but did not provide details during his interview on how h e w ould

change the current system."We need to go through and deter-

Commission seven new mem- mine the barriers that prevent bers who will transfer land use Oregon from having a robust NARAL-Pro-Choice O r egon planning control back to local economy," Richardson said. launched anattack on Richard- communities so property own— Reporter: 541-617-7829, son, calling his voting record in ers can benefit from their land hborrud@bendbulletin.com

the Oregon House the "worst-

and have fewer restrictions.

successful 2006 ballot measure

Gordon Challstrom: Challstrom's main focus in this elec-

of-the-worst." The group cited Richardson's support for an un-

to require parental notification when teens sought abortions. The group also took Richardson to task for voting against legislation to mandate birth control coverage in prescription

tion is on jobs. "That's what this state is starving for," he said. "I want to

seepeoplebecome more self-reliant and self-sufficient." Challstmm, 58, would like to

— Monicia Warner contributed to this report.

p~~ UrolO Dash for

GORDONCHAELSTROM

BRUCECUFF

Party:Repub-

No photo provided Age'53

Famigwife Mary Cuff, four children Education:bachelor's degree in political sciencefrom Willamette University Experience:residential sales broker for Prudential Real Estate Professionals; residential property preservation inspector; served onthe Marion CountyBoard ofProperty Tax Appeals Hometown:Mehama Time inOregon:53years DARRENKARR Party:Republican Age:44 Famigwife Leslie Karr,two children from aprevious marriage Educati on:studiedcomputer scienceat Clackamas Community College Experience:self-employed property manager;previously operated afloating food cart on theWilamette River and worked asa business analystfor Portland-based email marketing company Yesmail Hometown: West Linn Time inOregon:34 years LORRAINEMAE RAFFERTY Party:Republican Age:52 Family:husband James Rafferty Education:high school diploma, classesat Northwest NazareneUniversity in Nampa, Idaho Experience:ownsandoperates HardwoodsPluslumber store in GrantsPass Hometown: Selma Time inOregon:27 years DENNISRICHARDSON Party:Republican Age:64 Famigwife Cathy Richardson, ninechildren and31 grandchildren. Education:bachelor's degree in pre-lawstudies from BrighamYoungUniversity, law degreefrom J. Reuben Clark LawSchool Experience:Oregon House of Representatives,2002 to present; co-chair of the Joint Senate-HouseWays and MeansCommittee, 2011-13;several decades of experience asasmall business ownerandsmall town attorney;Army combat helicopter pilot; previously served as aCentral Point City Councilor andmemberof the local school district budget committee Hometown:Central Point Time inOregon:35 years

Russia

And one country, Schindler noted in an article last

Continued from A1

year in which he coined the

Some of the men pho- t erm, that p a r ticularly ex -

tographed i n Uk r a ine cels at special war is Russia, have been identified in which carried out its first other photos clearly taken

p ost-Soviet wa r

among Russian troops in other settings.

control of rebellious Chechnya back in 1994 by sending in

And Ukraine's state se-

a column of armored vehicles

curity service has identified one Russian reported to be active among the green men as Igor Ivanovich Strelkov, a Russian military intelligence operative in his midto late 50s. He is said to have a long resume of undercov-

filled with Russian soldiers masquerading as pro-Mos-

er service with the Main

mostly from that same Soviet

Intelligence Directorate of the Russian general staff,

intelligence agency. Heightening skepticism of

most recently in

cow Chechens.

Russia's flair for "maskirovka" — disguised warfare — has become even moreevident under Putin, a former KGB offi-

cer whose closest advisers are

C r imea Russia's denials is also the fact

in February and March

that Putin, after denying any

and now in and around the eastern Ukrainian city of

Russian link to the masked

Slovyansk.

gunmen who seized government buildings in Crimea and

"There has been broad unity in th e i nternational

blockaded Ukrauuan rrnhtary

nection b etween R ussia

Russian servicemen did back

and some of the armed mil-

the C r imean forces."

bases there, last week changed community about the con- his story and said, "Of course, itants in eastern Ukraine, and the photos presented by the Ukrainians last week

www.benddash.com

s elf-defense

More direct evidence of a Russian hand i n e astern

only further confirm this, which is why U.S. officials

Ukraine is contained in a dossier of photographs provided

have continued to make that case," Jen Psaki, the State Department spokeswoman,

by Ukraine to the Organization

said Sunday. Russia's role in

for Security and Cooperation in Europe, a Vienna-based or-

ganization now monitoring the east- situation in Donetsk and oth-

ern Ukraine has a critical

er parts of the country. It fea-

bearingon the agreement tures pictures taken in eastern reached Thursday in Ge- Ukraine of unidentified gunneva among R u ssian, men and an earlier photograph Ukrainian, U.S. and Euro- of what looks like the same pean diplomats to ease the men appearing in a group shot crisis. U.S. officials have

of a Russian military unit in

said that Russia would be held responsible for ensuring that the Ukrainian government buildings were vacated, and that it could face

Russia. One set of

p hotographs

shows what appears to be the

same gunman inpictures taken in the Crimean annexation and

more recently in Slovyansk. Another features a p ortly bearded man photographed in Slovyansk on April 14, wearing a camouflage uniform without insignia, but six years earlier, not as a Russian operative had been photographed during sent to Ukraine with orders Russia's invasion of Georgia

new sanctions if the terms were not met. The Kremlin insists that Russian forces are in no way involved, and that Strelkov does not even exist, at least to stir up trouble. "It's all nonsense," President Vladimir Putin said

Thursday during a four-

with a Russian special forces patch on his left arm. A nother cha r acter in Ukraine's case against Russia

is Strelkov, the supposed milshow on Russian television. itary intelligence officer who hour question-and-answer

"There are no Russian units,

Kiev says took part in a furtive

special services or instruc- Russian operation to prepare tors inthe east of Ukraine." for the annexation of Crimea Pro-Russian act i v ists and, more recently, in insurgent who have seized govern- action in Slovyansk. ment buildings in at least No photographs have yet 10 towns across eastern

emerged of Strelkov, but the

Ukraine also deny getting help from professional Russian soldiers or intelligence agents. But masking the identity of its forces, and douding the possibilities for international denunciation, is a cen-

Security Service of Ukraine, the successor organization to

tralpart of the Russian strat-

turbing amount of finesse that

what used to be Ukraine's lo-

cal branch of the KGB, has released a sketch of what it says is his face. Military analysts say the Russian tactics show a dis-

egy, developed during years speaks to long-termplanning. "The Russians have used of conflict in the former Soviet sphere, Ukrainian and very specialized, very effective U.S. officials say. forces," said Jacob Kipp, an John Schindler, a former

National Security Agency counterintelligence officer who now teaches at the

expert on the Russian military and the former deputy director

of the Army's School of Advanced Military Studies at Fort

Naval War College, calls it Leavenworth, Kan. "special war" — "an amalgam of espionage, subversion, even forms of terror-

ism to attain political ends without actually going to war in

an y c onventional

sense."

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MONDAY, APRIL 21,2014 •THE BULLETIN

A5

LOCAL Ee TATE BRIEFING

Opened hydrant causes flooding An open fire hydrant in southwest Bend flooded two homes around 1 a.m. Sunday, according to Bend Police. Deschutes County 911 dispatch received a call at1 a.m. Sunday that a fire hydrant with an open valvewas flooding the street near Wild Rapids Drive. Bend Public Works andthe Bend Fire Department responded to the area and shut the hydrant off. Less than ahalf hour later, two homes reported flooding as aresult of the open hydrant, including one home with several inches of standing water and mud and debris. Police estimate the flooding cost thousands of dollars of damage and are asking anyone with information on who unlawfully opened the fire hydrant valve to call

en em o eeun erinvesi aion • Supervisor was disciplined in 2011 andis now on paid leave By Hillary Borrud

Construction Supervisor Chris

not comment on the situation

Brelje onpaid leave April 16, A city of Bend employee pre- city spokesman Justin Fineviously disciplined for going stone wrote in an email. It is on a hunting trip partially paid undear why Brelje was placed for by a city contractor is once onleave. again under investigation. Human Resources Director The cityplaced Utilities Rob DuValle saidhe could

because he is conducting a personnel investigation. "It is

The Bulletin

my role to conduct the investi-

gation in an impartial manner that ensures fairness to all persons involved the process,"

DuValle wrote in an email. "I

am unable to comment further at this point in time." DuValle wrote he was unaware untilinformedby

employee authorized Brelje to appear in the SolarBee materi-

The Bulletin that Brelje had appeared in an advertising brochure for a company called SolarBee, which sold

city's water treatment tanks.

solar-powered water treatment

"Then put a SolarBee mixer in

equipment to the city. DuValle did not know whether any city

your tank." See Investigation IA6

als. In the ad, Brelje stands next

to a solar panel, atop one of the "Do you want high quality water in your town'?" the company quotes Brelje as asking.

541-693-6911. — Bulletin staff More briefing, A6

CIVIC CALENDAR TODAY

Deschutes County CommissionCounty commissioners are expected to meet for a work session at 1:30 p.m. at the county administration building, 1300 N.W. Wall St., in

Bend. The commission is scheduled to heara tax and budget update and discuss charges for mental health treatment services.

Jeremy Warkentin, pastor of the Fort Rock Community Church, gives a sermon on the meaning of Easter to a crowd gathered for a sunrise service Sunday at Fort Rock State Natural Area. "I feel privileged. We definitely want to honor Jesus Christ and just the sense of history here. It's fun to be a part of. This kind of transcends denominational lines," Warkentin said.

Photos by Joe Kline ~The Bulletin

n a chilly Easter Sunday morning, in the

TUESDAY

Madras CityCoun-

Cii —Citycouncilors are expected to meet at7 p.m. for a regular meeting at City Hall, 125S.W. E St. TheCity Council is scheduled to vote onan ordinance to regulate the construction, alteration and repair of sidewalks, as well as use ofthe sidewalk area.TheCity Council is also scheduled to vote on anordinance that would imposea moratorium on medical marijuana facilities in

shadow of Fort Rock east of Bend, Jeremy Warkentin led a crowd in worship. The pastor of Fort Rock Community Church, Warkentin said he's been in attendance at the annual sunrise service for 30years, off and on. The event itself has been held every Eastersince at least the end of WWII. Along with a bonfire, the nondenominational „s ervice includes

the city.

songs prayer and a

WEDNESDAY

breakfastafterward

DeschutesCounty Commission — Coun-

hosted by the Fort

ty commissioners are expected to meetfor a regular businessmeeting at10a.m. at thecounty administration building,

Rock Grange.

Attendees of a sunrise Easter service stand around a bonfire Sundaymorning at Fort Rock State Natural Area. At left, Valerie Maxwell, of Fort Rock, raises her hand while singing with

other worshipers during the sunrise service.

1300 N.W. Wall St., in

Bend. Thecommission is scheduled tovote on a new three-year labor contract with the union that represents most county employees. The proposedcontract includes cost-of-living raises, an increasein longevity payandthe opportunity in 2015to negotiate "fair share," which would require all employees represented by the union topay dues. Contact:541-383-0354, news©bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.

EVENT CALENDAR TODAY BINGOAND COMMUNITY DINNER:Featuring a dlnner, blngo, silent auction and dessert; $2 for dinner, $15 for11 gamesofbingo;5:30 p.m. dinner, 6:30 p.m. bingo; Sisters High School,1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; 541-549-4050 or tim. roth@slsters.k12.or.us. BOOK DISCUSSION: Discuss A Novel Idea's "The Dog Stars" by Peter Heller; free; 5:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books,

NITROGEN DIOXIDE IN OREGON

Study: Bend's pollutant levelsshow low racial disparity By Andrew Clevenger

study found. In Oregon cities, Salem (9.4 ppb and WASHINGTON — The difference 8.6ppb; .8 diff erence) had the biggest in concentration of the pollutant nitro- disparity, followed by Portland (11.9 gen dioxide between where whites and ppb and 11.3 ppb; .6), which had the non-whites live is less pronounced in highest levels overall. Corvallis (7.1 Bend than in other cities in Oregon, ac- ppb, 6.7 ppb; .4), Eugene (9.1 ppb, 8.8 cording to a new study by researchers ppb; .3) and Medford (8.8 ppb, 8.5 ppb; at the University of Minnesota. .3) were the other Oregon cities includBend's levels of nitrogen dioxide, ed in the study.

research in the civil and environmental engineering department, said he "criteria pollutants" that must be mon- wasn't surprised by the new study's itored and established the maximum findings because socioeconomically annual average concentration at 53 challenged groups often live near roadppb. NO, is linked to respiratory issues ways and in industrial areas. "It was a bit surprising that it was and can exacerbate the onset or intensity of asthma. quite as large a difference as it was (beNO, is produced by combustion of tween the two groups)," he said. fossil fuels, often by motor vehicles or In the Pacific Northwest, meteorolalso called NO„were 10.3 parts per bilStatewide, Oregon's NO, levels were coal-fired power plants. ogy andmountain topography have a lion in neighborhoods where people of 9.4 ppb in communities of color and 8.0 Timothy VanReken, an assistant big impact on how pollutants are dilutcolor live and 10.1 ppb in white neigh- ppb in white neighborhoods, a differ- professor at Washington State Uni- ed in the atmosphere, he said. borhoods, a difference of .2 ppb, the ence of 1.4. versity's laboratory for atmospheric SeeStudy IA6 The Bulletin

252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866 or www. deschuteslibrary.orgl calendar. PALEOANDESME PATTERSON: Thefolk musicians perform, with Amy Bathen andOlivia Holman; $5; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. TUESDAY ARTIST PRESENTATION:

Irene HardwickeOlivieri discusses hernatureinspired creative process in "I LoveYour Secret: Turnlng Experlencesand

Emotions into Art"; $5; noon; Tin PanTheater, 869 N.W. Tin PanAlley, Bend; 541-647-2233 orwww. thenatureofwords.org. ARTIST PRESENTATION FOR YOUNG ADULTS: Irene HardwickeOlivieri discusses thesubject of her paintings in "Insects, Animals andthe Natural World"; $5, freefor children 16 and younger; 4 p.m.; Tin PanTheater, 869 N.W. Tin PanAlley, Bend; 541-647-2233 orwww. thenatureofwords.org. ARTIST PRESENTATION: I reneHardwicke Olivieri discusses hernatureinspired creative process

in "I Love YourSecret: Turning Experiencesand Emotions into Art"; $5; 7 p.m.; Tin PanTheater, 869 N.W. Tln PanAlley, Bend; 541-647-2233 or www. thenatureofwords.org. PLAY READING: John Logan reads the 2010 Tony Award wlnner for best play, "Red"; free; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. WEDNESDAY SMOKEYBEAR 70TH BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION:Meet

In 1971, the Environmental Protec-

tion Agency listed NO, as one of six

Smokey Bearand firefighters, with birthday cake and more; free; 3-6 p.m.; DesChutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-389-1813 or www. deschuteshistory.org. BOOK DISCUSSION: Discuss A Novel Idea's "The Dog Stars" by Peter Heller; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. "A NIGHTOF INSPIRATION":The University of Oregon Gospel Singers perform; free; 7 p.m.; Tower

Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. BOMBADIL:The North Carolina-based indie-folk-pop band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francls School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamlns.com. "PETERGABRIEL:BACK TO FRONT":A screenlng of the film about the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee; $15; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.

THURSDAY SMOKEYBEAR ASSOCIATION MEMORABILIA DISPLAY:Smokey Bear memorabilia experts, vendors, collections and prize drawings; bring your SmokeyBeardoll for public display and photo; free; 5-8 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-389-3111or smokeybearassociation© gmail.com. "THE INVISIBLEWAR": A screening ofthe documentary aboutthe rape of soldiers within the

U.S. military, followedby discussi onledbyThomas Barry; free; 6p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7590. "RECEPTIONTO FOLLOW": Acomedic interactive theater experience inthe style of "Tony'n Tina's Wedding"; $18, $12students and seniors (meal included), reservation requested; 6:30 p.m.; Summit HighSchool, 2855 N.W.Clearwater Drive, Bend;541-355-4103 or www.bend.k12.or.usl shs.

SeeCalendarIA6


A6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from A5

Prineviiie manrescued during huntingtrip The Crook County Sheriff's Office and search andrescue volunteers searchedearly Sunday morning for a 44-year-old Prineville man whowent missing during a hunting trip. According to a newsrelease from the Sheriff's Office, family of Coby Hanescalled law enforcementafter11 p.m. Saturday to report Hanes hadgoneturkey hunting alone in theOchoco Mountains and failed to return. Search and rescuemembers went to the areanear Big Summit Prairie, searching the surrounding roads. Just before 2 a.m.Sunday, search and rescuefound Haneson Forest Service Road 22near Allen Creek Reservoir. His vehicle was stuckinthemud.Haneswasuninjured and takenback to Prineville. — Bulletin staff

Study Continued from A5 Particularly in valley areas, the air doesn't mix as well in

the colder winter weather, he

"In any urban area, you would expect to have higher concentrations than in the remote areas

Continued fromA5 "IREMEMBER YOU" PREVIEW NIGHT: A play byBernardSladeabout alounge pianist-singerthat meetsayoung beauty who resemblesawomanfrom apast love affair; $10;7:30 p.m., doors open6:30p.m.; GreenwoodPlayhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend;541389-0803 or www.cascadestheatrical. org. "SHATNER'SWORLD":Ascreening of the film aboutWilliam Shatner's life andcareer; $15;7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-2901. DALLASBURROWS: TheTexasfolkrockartist performs, with DavidGideon; free; 8 p.m.;Dojo, 852N.W.Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091or www.dojobend. com. JEFF CROSBYAND THEREFUGEES: The LosAngeles-basedsingersongwriter performs, with Anthony Tripp; $5;9p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drlve, Bend;541-3231881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. FRIDAY ARTONTHERIVER:Featuring art demonstrations andsales; aportion of proceedsbenefits art education in Redmondschools; free; 5-8 p.m.; River Run EventCenter, 1730Blue Heron Drive, Redmond;541-504-4501. TAKEBACKTHENIGHT:An international eventto promote awareness ofsexual assault and support survivors with SavingGrace; meetatthe footbridge; free;5:30 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541-383-7590. "RECEPTIONTO FOLLOW":A comedic Interactive theaterexperience Inthe styleof "Tony 'n Tina's Wedding"; $18, $12students andseniors (meal included), reservation requested;6:30 p.m.; Summit HighSchool,2855 N. W. Clearwater Drive,Bend;541-355-4103 or www.bend.k12.or.us/shs. BENDFOLLIES:Afast- pacedvariety show starring local business, civic, educational andentertainment personalities; proceedsbenefit the Tower TheatreFoundation; $19-$49 (no fees);6:30p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. WallSt.; 541-317-0700 orwww. towertheatre.org. STORYTELLINGPRESENTATION: Storyteller Susan Strauss presents "Seeds From the Sun: Stories of Farmers, Gardensand Earth Wisdom"; $10;7 p. m .,doorsopen 6:30p.m.; 2nd StreetTheater, 220 N.E Lafayette Ave.,Bend;541-389-1713or IMndstorytelling@gmail.com. "IREMEMBER YOU":A playby Bernard Sladeabout alounge pianistsingerthat meetsayoung beauty who resemblesawomanfrom apast love affair; $19, $15seniors, $12 students; 7:30p.m., 6:30p.m.dessert reception; GreenwoodPlayhouse,148 N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend;541-389-0803 or www.cascadestheatrical.org. "SEARCHINGFOR SUGAR MAN":A screening of the2012 documentary about two SouthAfricans setting out to discover whathappenedto1970s rock 'n' roller Rodriguez; free, refreshments available; 7:30p.m.; RodriguezAnnex, Jefferson County Library,134 S.E E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 orwww. jcld.org. A NOVELIDEA:THE NIGHT SKY BY EYE:Learnaboutthe constellations and the mythology behindthem, followed by an outdoor viewing; bring warm clothes; free; 8-10p.m.; Sunriver NatureCenter & Observatory,57245River Road;541593-4394 or www.deschuteslibrary. org. QUICKANDEASY BOYS:ThePortland funk-rock bandperforms; free;10 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E MainAve., Slsters;541-815-9122or www. astroloungebend.com. SATURDAY

ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT PANCAKE BREAKFAST: Includes pancakes,aside ofsausageand beverage;proceeds benefit BrightSideAnimal Center; $8; 8-10a.m.; Applebee'sNeighborhoodGril & Bar, 3807S.W.21st St., Redmond; renee©brightsideanimals.org. CASCADESACADEMYGIGANTIC RUMMAGE SALE:Proceeds benefit the school's TravelingSchool to the Southwest National Parks; free;9 a.m.-3p.m.; CascadesAcademy, 19860TumaloReservolr Road,Bend; 541-382-0699. "THEMETROPOLITAN OPERA: COSI FAN TUTTE": Mozart's opera about testing the ties of love;opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24,$22 seniors, $18 children;9:55 a.m.;Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-2901. Contact:541-383-0351, communitylife© bendbulletin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.

been linked to respiratory-relatedemergency department visits and hospital admissions inthe United States," the EPA's

announcement states. While NO, levels may conface can stay there, keeping around it." tinue to drop as emission pollutants from dispersing, he — Timothy VanReken, standards improve, it will take said. Air that's dose to the sursald.

Washington State University

Overall, Oregon's air is "quite dean," he said. As an urban center, Bend

searchers that feel there is a

years to notice the effects, said

Deborah Bennett, an associateprofessor of environmental and occupational health at

stands to have higher con-

concern with exposure to NO, the University of California, centration of NO, than rural even at the levelwe are looking Davis. "It is difficult for (the) EPA areas, where fewer cars are at these days as being 'safe.'" drivenin a w ider area,he said. The EPA now requires NO, to regulate motor vehicles for "In any urban area, you monitoring near roadways in emissions(as a means of rewould expect to have higher large metropolitan areas, he ducingpollution) because peoconcentrations than in the re- sald. ple can keep their cars as long "Over theyears, what'sbeen as they want, and can drive as mote areas around it," VanReken said. found is people who live dose much as they want," she said. While NO, is itself a pollut- to roadways are exposed to "Any improvements made ant,itis often used as a surro- much higher levels of pollution now aren't instantaneous but gate marker for other types of from cars and trucks," he said. integrated over time." pollution during monitoring, "Once these monitors start deBecause different popusaid Ron White, the ditector of veloping data that researchers lation centers have different regulatory policy at the Cen- can use, I suspect what you're conditions — traffic, neighborter for Effective Government going to find is levels are much hoods near roadways, weathin Washington, D.C. He also higher (there)." er patterns— effortsto reduce In 2010, the EPA imposed

teachesatJohns Hopkins Uni-

Calendar

to levels below those that have

NO, pollution may have to

Investigation

having paid for the trip was local parts supplier ConsoliContinued from A5 datedSupply Co. OthercomThe company goes on to panies were involved, but the quote additional comments law firm hired by the city to by Brelje. investigate, Harrang Long Under the city of Bend's Rudnick Gary PC, did not ethics policy, employees identify them. cannot accept "any personT he i n vestigation w a s al benefit" from any vendor sparked by an anonymous that does business, or seeks complaint emailed to city to do business, with the city. c ouncilors, claiming t h a t It is unclear whether Brel- Brelje funneled business to je recei ved payment or any his friend Rob Jackson, who other benefit for his partici- in 2006 was a salesman for pation in the advertisement. Consolidated Supply and The Dickinson, N.D.-based laterbecame the co-owner parentcompany ofSolarBee of Creative Utility Solutions was closed for Good Fri-

tigation revealed he went on

from July 1, 2009, to June 30,

an all-expenses-paid hunting trip in 2006. The city never revealed the type of discipline Brelje faced, nor did the investigative report name all

2011, The Bulletin reported.

of the companies that paid for the hunting trip. The cost

versity's school of publichealth. stronger standards on NO„ be individually tailored for If NO, is present, that likely setting the maximum allow- various locations across the

of the trip was estimated at $600, and the only company

means that other pollutants

able level for one hour at 100

identified in the report as

are as well, he said.

parts per billion. The maximum annual average remained at 53 ppb. "This suite of standards will protect public health by limiting people's exposures to short-term peak concentrations of NO, — which primarilyoccur near major roads — and by limiting communitywide NO, concentrations

Since the EPA put its stan-

dards in place, NO, levels have continued to drop, largely because ofimproved emission standards on newer cars, White said.

"The issue is whether the

standard that is in place is ade-

quate to protect public health," he said. "There are health re-

country. "We know that we have un-

LLC.

day, and Brelje could not be The city spent $2.9 million reached for comment. with Consolidated Supply In 2011, the city disciplined and morethan $700,000 with Brelje after an internal inves- Creative Utility S o lutions However, the city's purchas-

ing manager reviewed all transactions with the companies during the time and did not find any indication

that employees violated city purchasing guidelines. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com

acceptable levels of pollution in some ofthe areas, and we need to continue to work to

reduce those somehow," she said. Particularly in high trafficareas,"We do keep a lotof diesel trucks on the road for

Get ATaste For Food. Home Sr Sarden

extended periods of time."

Every Tuesday In ATHOME

— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger®bendbulletin.com

TheBulletin

Together we're mal<ing a difference. Huge thanksto our more than 95,000 customers for choosing Blue Sky'".In 2013 alone, Blue Sky program participantssupported enough renewable energy to power 51,586 homes and provided funds to help construct 14 community-based renewable energy projectsin Or egon.You can join these customers — including the following businesses — who have made a commitment to support local and regional renewable energy. It's easy when you enroll in our Green-e® Energy Certified Blue Sky program. Learn more at pacificpower.net/bluesky or call I-800-769-37I7. 35 Hawthorne, LI C

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AmericanLicorice Company Amish House Ancient Traditions AngelinaOrganic Skincare

City of Bend Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Oregon

joe A. Lochner Insurance Agency, Inc.—State Farm KebabaVentures, LLC KirbyNagelhout Construction Company

Robberson Ford-Mazda Rockin' Daves Bagel Bistro and Catering Searing Electricand Plumbing Sports Vision SproutsKidsSalon

Commercial PowderCoating, Inc. ContemporaryFamilyDentistry CuppaYo Frozen Yogurt DANI Naturals Deschutes Brewery,Inc.

KitchenCompliments

StanleySteemer

KOHD TV Kombucha Mama La Rosa AModern

Staples

DeschutesCounty Fairgrounds Dice Construction Digital Services, Inc. DKA Architecture & Design, PC

LaPaw AnimalHospital

Dr. john Holpuch, DDS E2 Solar, Inc. Eberhard's Dairy Products

Losjalapenos NadrasAcu puncture MiniMachine, Inc. Mount Bachelor Sports

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Edward D.jones & Company Fagen Tree& Chips First Presbyterian Church FootZone of Bend

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Little Pizza Paradise Lone Pine Coffee Roasters

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Pamir Properties, Inc.

Visit Bend

High Country Disposal High Desert Ranch & Home Homecare IV

PaulinaSprings Books Phat Matt's Brewing Company Pine Ridge Inn

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PACIFICPOWER Let's turn the answers on.


MONDAY, APRIL 21,2014 • THE BULLETIN

A7

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Jos C aresmoveson er'I eGoo Wie' TV SPOTLIGHT By Jay Bobbin Zap2it

Q

• do, now that he's off

"The Good Wife"?

—Julie Todd, Columbus, Ohio • The actor has finished a • couple of movies, "Bird People" and "Brother's Keeper," and there's likely more film work — and possible stage work as well, since he also has done that — in his future.

Variety would seem to be what Charles

rection" an extra run in that

She'll also be back in the

Q •• Anderson back on tele-

• With his return to tele"The X-Files"? • v ision, w o u ld C h r i s — David Fisher, topher Meloni ever consider Pottstown, Pa. doing a guest shot as Detec• S he d id m u c h w o r k tive Stabler on "Law & Order: • on television ("Bleak Special Victims Unit"'? House," "Great Expectations," — Charles Wright, "The Crimson Petal and the Richmond,Calif.

ts '

A

gifjj~i.-','Q Qt

A

the

CBS series was prompted by his desire to leave the comfort ter — which he'd played for the bette rpartoffive seasons

Courtesy Newscom

Chloe Sevigny stars in "Those Who Kill," which had a brief stint on A8 E Network before it moved to Lifetime Movie Network in March.

Will "Those Who Kill"

Q •• be returning?

plunge in numbers it had in being scheduled right after "Bates Motel," which now is

it wasn't the only show that ran into them in that Tuesday time slot on ABC this season.

in Season 2 on A&E. "Those "Lucky 7" was gone about as

— Larry English, Hoff manEstates, Ill. • It already has, but in a • different "location"

White"), in film ("The Last • That's a tough question King of Scotland," "Johnny • to answer, since Meloni English Reborn") and onstage himself doesn't answer it. We ("A Doll's House") in England, posed it to him very directly where she spent much of her in a recent interview for his childhood. Of course, she also new Fox sitcom, "Surviving returned as Dana Scully in the Jack," and he was noncommovie "The X-Files: I Want to Believe," and she had a recur-

— and see what else was out

there.

Q

has she done in the years since

his career these day s , s ince his

of his Will Gardner charac-

Maria in the fold permanently.

vision in "Crisis." What else

a bout i n

e xit f r o m

ing the part again now in the movie "Captain America: The Winter Soldier."

hour for a couple of weeks be- partin next year's "Avengers: fore bringing "Celebrity Wife Age of Ultron," but now that Swap" back. she's a free agent where television is concerned, time will tell It's nice to see Gillian whether "S.H.I.E.L.D." wants

s

• What will Josh Charles

he's

remove it from the lineup and give the well-received "Resur-

that range, which led ABC to

W ho Kill" m oved to L M N , aka Lifetime Movie Network,

fast as it started there at the

mittal — not to mention rather nonverbal — on the subject as

ring role last season on NBC's a whole. "Hannibal."

When it w a s m e ntioned to him that people certainly would think in t hose terms

"How I Met Your Q •• With Mother" over, is there

because of his long run on the

beginning of the TV year, a chance Cobie S mulders at the end of March; it's been and "Killer Women" — whose will join "Marvel's Agents of running there on Sundays, ratings ironically prompted S.H.I.E.L.D."? which well could be the reason and it's a reasonable bet this ABC to pull it in order to pre— JeffCohen, Buffalo, NY. you weren't aware of it resur- will be the show's only season. miere "Mind Games" earlier • There's always a chance facing. A&E Network pulled than planned — had a slight• f or anything in t h i s the Chloe Sevigny-starring Why has "Mind Games" ly longer but still-brief tenure world, as long as the relevant drama series after two tele• been taken off? there. people are around. Smulders casts whose ratings didn't ex— Susan Rivers, After a lo w - rated start, clearly has kept up her Marvel actly set the world on fire, to Rio Rancho, N.M. "Mind Games" scored even ties, having appeared again be charitable. • Again, it was due to un- lower in subsequent weeks as agent Maria Hill in the Especially telling was the • satisfactory ratings, but and pretty much stayed in "S.H.I.E.L.D." pilot and play-

A

A

Q•

A

in moms ou eevauate

NBC drama, the closest thing

to a

that he's focused on his professional present and future rather than revisiting its past. — Send questions of general interest via email to tvpipeline@ tribune.com. Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent.

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f

Dear Abby:My 83-year-old mother has decided she wants to die. She says she's miserable, but I think she's causing her own misery. She has medications to address her physical ailments — none of which are critical. My siblings live in other states. Mom feels it's a "burden" for them to

travel to see her, and

DFP,R

she is depressed, but the question

the situation can't be changed, then

fecting her mental state. Then let the

that allow you to meet new people

doctorbe your guide. Dear Abby:I dated my ex for six years, but we broke up recently. The problem is, we signed a lease on our

andmake new friends. Dear Abby:My new husband's family informed him they were

is whether she also has something it's important that you fill your time physically wrong with her that is af- with activities and opportunities

apartment that won't

coming to visit us for seven to 10

days. This was eight relatives, and I was not asked whether this was

be up until next year. convenient or not. They were so ABBY Mom is in assisted He still lives here, and noisy that our neighbors finally I don't have the heart asked, living and is now re"When arethey leaving?" fusing to bathe, trying to kick him out. FiHow can I prevent this from hapnot to eat, and doesn't want to talk to nancially, our living together makes pening again in the future without anyone or have visitors. She's obvi- sense, and I'd rather live with him offending anyone'? My husband said ously depressedbut refuses counsel- thanwith a stranger. after theyhad left,"You don'thandle ing. If she continues being uncoopAbby, this living arrangement chaos and confusion well, do you?" erative, I'm afraid she'll have to go to

has made it tough to get over him.

a nursing home where they might let Ourbreakup was amicable — some-

— Needs To Be Consulted

in Georgia Dear Needs To Be Consulted:

her starve herself to death. One sistersays I should force

what — and we remain civil to each other. I have no desire to get back

Mom to do fun things, but I don't know what she wants. We used

together with him. I just find it hard asked you. And when you do, tell because I'm not sure how to survive him the answer is not only do you

to go out to eat, but she no longer

this weird situation I'm in. Is it a

NOT handle chaos, confusion and

wants to do that. I have tried to honor Mom's wishes, but I'm at a loss

good idea to keep livingtogether?

eight surprise houseguests well, neither do your neighbors. Then

— Remaining Civil in Canada

Revisit the question your husband

about what to do for her. Do you Dear Remaining Civil:It depends set some boundaries for the next have any suggestions? upon how high your tolerance is time they say they are coming. His — Almost at Wits'End for pain. If seeing your ex with oth- first response should always be, Dear Almost: I have one. You

ers hurts to the extent that you shed

"I'll check with my wife to see if it's

and your siblings should have your tears onyourpillow, or obsess about convenient." mother evaluated by a geriatrician who he's with and where he's going, — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com IMMEDIATELY. It's apparent that

then it's not a good idea. However, if

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014:Thisyearyou are able to fulfill a wish, mainly because of an artistic or creative friend who walks into your life. This person will encourage youto liberate yourself and develop atalent that has remained hidden until now. If you are single, you often will feel as if you havemet The One, only to discard that person later in order to meet Stars showthe kind someone better. of dayyou'Iihave T„ust thatyou ** * * * D ynamic

By Jacqueline Bigar

scenes with a moneymatter. Walkaway from a controlling individual who makes your life difficult. Ultimately, you will be happier if you do.Tonight: Play it nice and easy.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

** * * Listen to feedback from someone you respect. This person might be very you ** * * p ositive know when different from you, but because of that fact, have found Mr. or he or she will presentadifferent way of Ms. Right. Ifyou are thinking about life. Allow a child a little more attached, your sig* Difficult freedom if you do not want to get into a nificantother might power play. Tonight: As you like it. be distant. You LEO (July23-Aug. 22) will want to draw him or her closer to you. ** * You have certain matters to handle Know that someone will only changewhen he or she is ready andwilling. CAPRICORN immediately. You might want to relate to often keeps youanchored and helpsyou someoneonaone-on-onelevel.Adomessee the big picture. tic situation could beweighing you down. Understand that working through this probARIES (March 21-April19) lem will take patience. Tonight: Stop at the ** * You mightsense that someone's gym onthe wayhome. eyes are onyou. A partner could be unusually touchy or difficult. Do not allow this be- VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) havior to color a project. Be willing to make ** * * Where others get stuck, you a necessary adjustment, but realize that seem to make it through because of your you might want to hold backyour feelings. resourcefulness. You recognize the imporTonight: Out late. tance of following through. Honor a need to be somewhat reclusive. Youmight not TAURUS (April20-May20) always understand your feelings, but trust ** * * Make the effort to get past a them. Tonight: So what if it is Monday? hassle. You could feel as if you are atan impasse. Understand what is happening LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct. 22) with a partner who might be depressed or ** * You will be more grounded than you withdrawn. You might feel stuck, but know have been in awhile. Consider moving in thatyou are about to have breakthrough. a a new direction. Make apoint to recognize Tonight: Find a good friend to hang with. your limits, especially when it comes to GEMINI (May21-June20) your finances. Honor boundaries, and you ** * * * Deal with a loved one directly. will find a way to removethem. Tonight: Recognize what is happening behind the Headhome

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or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE

s i gnificant response

was, "I understand that." The translation would seem to be

** * * Someone might want to spend time with you, but you'll have little choice, as you likely already haveestablished plans. You might not want to reveal everything you are thinking right now. Besensitive to your schedule and its limitations. Tonight: Try not to be controlling.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) ** * You could be overserious about a money matter and its implications to you. Recognize what needs to happen in order to gain greater strength professionally. A family member will remain receptive to your ideas. Do nothing halfway. Tonight: Balance your budget, then pay bills.

GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * You could go over someone's head if you so choose. Youcould be abit more tied to a problem than you realize. When you have to make a herculean effort to maintain the status quo, you will see how attached to the issue you really are. Tonight: Hang out with friends.

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feh.18) ** * Your intuition could be unusually accurate with money and risk-tasking. You might be reacting to a boss far more than yourealize.Someonecould be pushing you beyond your limits, so you might want

to changehowyouapproachthis person. Tonight: On top of your game.

PISCES (Fsb.19-March20) ** * * A meeting could playa bigger role in your day than you might have intended. Seeking out new information could be difficult, as you can't seem to touch basewith someone who often offers you his or her perspective. Usecaution with a decision. Tonight: Where the crowds are. © King Features Syndicate

• J

TV TODAY 8 p.m. on 5 8, "The Voice"It's your turn, America. The12 singers who have made it this far begin performing live in this new episode, hoping to attract the viewer votes that will keep them in contention. The coaches, however, still have the power to

save someonewho comes up

short on votes each week. Carson Daly hosts "The Live Shows Premiere." 8 p.m. on 6,c2 Broke Girls" — Hal Linden ("Barney Miller") guest stars in this new episode as Lester, the original tenant of

Max andCaroline's (Kat Dennings, Beth Behrs) apartment. When the girls' lease comes up for renewal, they realize they have to locate Lester and have

him sign thenewone, claiming

he still lives there, or they're out. Garrett Morris and Matthew Moy also star in "And the New Lease on Life."

8 p.m. on(CW), "Star-Crossed" — A hurricane traps everyone inside the school in this new episode. Teri (Chelsea Gilligan) drugs Roman (Matt Lanter), making him angry and paranoid and causing him to lash out at Emery (Aimee Teegarden). After Taylor (Natalie Hall) talks Drake (Greg Finley) into going public with their relationship, Grayson (Grey Damon) blackmails Drake into breaking up with her. Malese Jow also stars in "What Storm Is This That Blows So."

8 p.m. onFOOD,"Rewrapped" — In this new competition, a spinoff of "Unwrapped," contestants try to re-create iconic snack foods such as Hostess

cupcakes —reproducing the look, taste and texture as faithfully as they can — and then create a dish using the original packaged version as an ingredient. Pepperidge Farm Goldfish crackers are the featured snack in the premiere, "All that Glitters Is Goldfish." Joey Fatone hosts; Marc Summers is head judge. 8:30 p.m. on 6, "Friends With Better Lives" —Will (James Van Der Beek) decides he needs to be more adventurous, and he starts by sending racy texts to the woman he's started dating. Kate (Zoe Lister-Jones) is distressed to discover that Jules and Andi (Brooklyn Decker, MaIandra Delfino) have left her out of planning Jules' wedding. Kevin Connolly and Rick Donald also star in the new episode "Game Sext Match." © Zap2it

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014

Marathon Continued from A1 Twenty-nine local runners

qualified for this year's Boston Marathon, which starts today at 5:50 a.m. PST in Hopkinton,

M ass., and ends26.2mileslater in the heart of Boston. "I decided pretty quiddy I wanted to be there (for this year's race)," says Tanya Koopman, a friend and running partner of Brewer's, who will be running in her first Bos-

again this year without having to record a qualifying time.

for his future wife. The train

never came, though, andhe ran

"I felt bad that I didn't get to

back to the course looking for finish, and then I felt guilty for Cherri. "I texted him I was OK on a feeling bad," says Houchens, who also runs with Koopman phone I borrowed from someand Brewer. "It took some time one, but I didn't know if he got

to process. Do you say you finished? Would (runners who were stopped) have an opportunity to come back? ... I definite-

lywantedto slaythat dragon." Stephanie Waritz, a 44-year-

it or not," Cherri Brewer recalls. Once she had been ushered

offthe course, Cherri began frantically making her way back to her hotel, asking any-

old social studies teacher at

one she ran into how to get to Franklin Street.

A veteran distance runner, Koopman, 44, ran in two mar-

50th marathon.

emotional."

athons last year before qualify-

qualify for Boston, made it and

ing for Boston on her third try at Utah's Big Cottonwood Mar-

ran in it last year for the first

ment started in the moments after the bomb, Cherri Brewer

Bend's High Desert Middle School, runs today after draw"Having friends that were go- ing inspiration from friend and ing back (after the bombing), I running partner Kathy Lein, wanted tobe there and support who celebrated her 50th birththem." day this year by running her ton Marathon this morning.

"She worked really hard to

time," Waritz says about Lein, a

athon. She prepped for Boston former Bend resident who now this winter by competing in lives in North Dakota. "That inmarathonsinPhoenix, Sedona, spired me and made me think, 'Wow, let's see if I can qualify.' Ariz., and Yakima, Wash. "I'm excited tobe around elite Before, I'd look at the (qualifyrunners, and it's exciting to be ing) times for age groups and around so many people whose think if I keep running, maybe passion is marathon running," by the time I'm 60 I'll make it to says Koopman, a Bend nurse Boston if they don't change the practitioner who will be com- times." peting in her 28th marathon toWaritz shaved 31 minutes off day. "But what's really incredi- her previous marathon personble is being associated with this al record to qualify for Boston. "I've tormented my kids all marathon, an experience that symbolizes the whole year of week, making them listen to me Boston Strong." about the Boston Marathon all Amy Houchens, a physical week," says Waritz, who ran her therapist in Bend, returns to

first ~

on in 2 010. 'This is

Boston after being stopped sort of the ~ on th a t everyabout a half-mile short of the one aspires to do.... It's going to finish line last year. be reallyspecial, and I'm excited "After we stopped, people tobe apart of it." around methoughtthey heard While today's marathon is something," says Houchens, sure to evoke emotions of all who was fairly close to the kinds, Brewer in particular blasts. "But for me, at that point hopes to return the kindness in the race I wasn't all that

and caring Boston showed her

last year while she was trying to make her way back to her fiinternally focused to get to the ance, now husband, Raymond finish." Brewer. After running about Houchens, 46, like Brewer, is 21 miles of the race as a"bandit one of 4,700 runners from last runner" with Cherri, Raymond year who did not finish but ac- hadplannedto take the subway cepted an invitation to compete to the finish line and wait there

"Boston was very gracious and very kind to me," Cherri says. "Anyone I'd ask (for directions), they'd help. Needless to say, when I saw Raymond in the lobby it was very The Boston Strong movesays, before there was even a name for it. "Spectators, they brought out

a pitcher of water with paper cups and passed them around for the runners while we were

stopped," Brewer remembers. "Others went and got trash bags and punched holes in them to be used as jackets to keep runners warm." Later that night Brewer had

a good cry and laugh on the phone with one of her daughters,who said shewas grateful her mother was so slow and not near the finish line when the

bombs went off. "I was indignant!" Brewer

says with a laugh. "I was running agood race. The runner in me bristled at that.

"Our experience gast year) was so m i nor c ompared to what other people went

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through," Brewer continues.

"My one goalcoming back here is tohonorthose killed and

aware of my surroundings. I

injured and to show distance

was pretty miserable, pretty

runners will persevere and be resilient. "This act ofhorror," she adds,

"will not stop people from pursuing their passion."

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Fuels Continued from A1 While biofuels are better in

the long run, the study says they won't meet a standard set

simplistic in its analysis of carbon loss fmm soil, which can vary over a single field, and vastly overestimated how much

lion gallons of cellulosic ethanol using corn residue from nearby farms. An assessment paid for by DuPont said that

residue farmers actually would remove once the market gets

the ethanol it will produce there

couldbe more than 100percent in a 2007 energy law to qualify underway. better than gasoline in terms of "The core analysis depicts greenhouse gas emissions. as renewable fuel. The conclusions deal ablow to an extreme scenario that no The research is among the whatateknownascellulosicbio- responsibl e farmer orbusiness first to attempt to quantify, over fuels, which have received more would ever employ because it 12 Corn Belt states, how much than a billion dollars in federal would ruin both the land and carbonis lost tothe atmosphere support but have struggled to the long-term supply of feed- when the stalks, leaves and meet volume targets mandated stock. It makes no agronomic or cobs thatmake up residue are by law. About half of the initial business sense," said Jan Kon- removed and used to make biomarket in cellulosics is expected inckx, global business director fuel, instead of left to naturally tobederivedfmm cornresidue. for biorefineries at DuPont. replenish the soil with carbon. The biofuel industry and Later this year the company The study found that regardadministration officials imme- is scheduled to finish a $200 lessof how much corn residue diately criticized the research million-plus facility in Nevada, is taken off the field, the process as flawed. They said it was too Iowa, that will produce 30 mil- contributes to global warming.

Network

the world," said Ben Scott, a former State Department of-

A similar motivation is at work

ficial who supported the financing and is now at a Berlin policy nonprofit, the New Responsibilities Foundation. "It is in my mind one of the great,

where the State Department

unreported ironies of the first

community center, using the

in some Detroit neighborhoods, mesh to spread Internet access to the park, a center for relief

financed trial runs of mesh net- efforts. Residents relied on the works as a low-cost gateway to mesh to getemergency updates wireless Internet access and as

and connect with people out-

a community organizing tool. But privacy issues also pro-

side the city. About 25 routers are now in place, Schloss said.

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voke intensediscussion, parThe citizens of Sayadaticularly among groups that Continued from A1 population 14,000 — are fo- have historicallybeen targets of Even before the network in cused on using the mesh for racial and other profiling, said Sayada wentlive in December, local governance and commu- Diana Nucera, the community pilot projects financed in part nity building than beating sur- technology director at an orbythe State Departmentproved veillance since President Zine ganization called Allied Media that the mesh could serve resi- El Abidine Ben Ali was ousted Projects, which has already dents in poor neighborhoods in in 2011, said Nizar Kerkeni, helped several Detroit neighborDetroit and function as a digi- 39,a resident and professor of hoods putup mesh networks. "I don't want the NSA, the tal lifeline in part of Brooklyn computer science at the nearby during Hurricane Sandy. University of Monastir. government, anyone to necesBut just like their overseas The mesh network blankets sarily know how I think about counterparts, Americans in- areas of town including the something," Holbrook, an Africreasingly cite fears of govern- main stteet, the weekly market, can-American who is a Detroit ment snooping in explaining the town hall and the train sta- social and political activist, said the appeal of mesh networks. tion, and users have access to a at a workshop ledby Nucera. "There's so much invasion of local server containing WikipeResidents of the Brooklyn privacy on the Internet," said dia in French and Arabic, town neighborhood of Red Hook Michael Holbrook, of Detroit, street maps,2,500 freebooks in found that the mesh was useful referring to surveillance by the French, and an app for secure duringa naturd disaster.Red National Security Agency. chatting and file sharing. Hook, which is dominated by "The NSA is all over it," he The mesh is not linked to the public housing, was one of New added. "Anything that can help wider Internet, Kerkeni says. York's most exposed neighbor"Some parents ask me if it is hoods when Hurricane Sandy to mitigate that policy, I'm all forit." safeto connect to the server," struckthe coastin October2012. Since this mesh project be- he said. "They don't allow their By chance, two ~ , J.R. gan three years ago, its original little children to connect to the Baldwin and Tony Schloss, had aim — foiling government spies Internet. I say, 'I know it's safe.'" beentrying tocreate ameshnet— has become an awkward There are some drawbacks, work in Red Hook. They had set subject for U.S. government as communications can slow up a router atop a community officials who backed the proj- when signals make multiple center run by the Red Hook Iniect and some of the technical "hops" from one router to an- tiative, where Schloss worked experts carrying it out. That is other, leading some Internet as a technologist, and managed because the NSA, as described experts to question how large to connect it to a second one in in secret documents leaked by a single mesh could grow. 0th- an apartment overlooking Cofthe former contractor Edward er experts counter that mesh fey Park, a local gathering point J. Snowden, has been shown networks in Europe, including a fewblocks away. to be a global Internet spy with some servinglarge sections of As the storm struck, stanfew, if any, peers. Berlin, Vienna and Barcelo- dard Internet and cellphone "Exactly at the time that the na, have thousands of routers, networks collapsed across NSA was developing the tech- although they require highly nearly all of Red Hook. But the nology that Snowden has dis- technical skills. mesh stayedup. dosed, the State Department Many of t h ose networks Hearing about the work, the was funding some of the most were built to compensate for Federal Emergency Managepowerful digital tools to protect spotty or nonexistent coverage ment Agency installed a satelfreedom of expression around by corporate Internetproviders. lite Internet connection at the

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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W MLB, B3 Community sports, B4 NHL, B4 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 21,2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

The week ahea

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

Today

Tuesday

Wednesday

Friday

Friday-Sunday

Prep baseball, Ridgeview atBend High, 4:30 p.m.:With a combined overall record of 22-4, these two Intermountain Hybrid foes areamongthe strongest teams in Central Oregonthis spring. The Ravens (11-1)havewonseven in a row and the LavaBears (11-3) havewon10 straight as they open a three-game series that will include gamesWednesdayat Ridgeview andFriday back atBend High.

Prep boyslacrosse, Summitat Bend High, 6 p.m.:Intracity rivals collide as the Storm, co-leaders of the HighDesert League along with Sisters (both at 3-0), takeon 2-0BendattheLavaBears'home 15th Street Field. Both Summit andBend were ranked in thestate's top10as of Saturday, andboth bring six-gamewinning streaks into Tuesday's contest.

NBA playoffs, PortlandTrail Blazers at HoustonRockets, 6:30 p.m. (TNT): In the postseason for the first time since 2011, the Blazersare looking to win a playoff series for the first time since 2000. LaMarcus Aldridge scored a franchise playoff record 46 points in Sunday's Game1 overtime win. Portland has a chance to return to the ModaCenter up 2-0 in their best-of-seven series.

College baseball, Oregonat Oregon State, 7 p.m. (Pac-12Networks): These archrivals open athree-game series at Goss Stadium inCorvallis with the second-place Beaversandthird-place Ducks in hot pursuit of the Pac-12Conference-leading Washington Huskies. Saturday's gamestarts at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday's series finale starts at1 p.m.

Golf, Central Oregon Shootout: More than 300 golfers will be in theareafor the annual Central OregonShootout, which tees off Fridayand is expected to feature payouts of more than$20,000. Players will come from aroundthe Northwest for three days of competition at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters, Black Butte Ranch, andEagleCrest Resort near Redmond.

BOXING

TEE TOGREEN: CENTRAL OREGON GOLF COURSE TOUR

'Hurricane' dies at age 76

The dasics

Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, a star boxer whose career wascut short by a murder conviction in NewJersey and who becamean international cause celebre while imprisoned for19 years before the charges against him were dismissed, died Sunday morning at his home in Toronto. He was 76. The cause of death was prostate cancer, his friend and onetime co-defendant, John Artis, said. Carter was being treated in Toronto, where he hadfounded a nonprofit organization, Innocence International, to work to free prisoners itconsidered wrongly convicted. Carter was convicted twice on the same charges of fatally shooting two menand a woman in aPaterson,

Number ofholes:18 Status:Openyearround, weather permitting

Location:6823 Highway 8, WarmSprings Tee times: 541-553-4971

Stats:Par 72, 6,352 yal'ds

Green fees:Through Oct. 15, $40 unlimited play Power cart:$30 (can be shared) Head golf professional:Joe Rauschenburg Course designers: Original nine: William Bell (1972); second nine: Gene"Bunny" Mason (1976) Extras:Putting green, driving range, snack bar Website:www. kahneeta.com

Breakingdown the course

N.J., tavern in1966. But

both jury verdicts were overturned on different grounds of prosecutorial misconduct. Carter first became famous asa ferocious, charismatic, crowd-pleasing boxer who was known for his shaved head, goatee, glowering visage and devastating left hook. He narrowly lost a fight for the middleweight championship in 1964 and finished with a career record of 51-5 with 35 knockouts.

A closer look at KahNee-Ta. Formore information on the items below,D8. DIFFICULTY Kah-Nee-Tagradually changes from a straight-forward front nine to a more difficult back nine, but the course should be manageable for most golfers. STRATEGY Be aggressive on the relatively open and short front nine. Throttle backand play for position on the challenging back nine. VERDICT The drive from many parts of Central Oregon to Kah-Nee-Ta, which is located on the southern edge of Wasco County, is worth the trip for golfers who want the freedom to play at their own paceat a course with some enticing holes.

Andy TullisI The Bulletin

John Young, left, of Washougal, Wash., watches as his wife Hillery Young tees off on hole 7at KahNee Ta Golf Course.

• Serenity makes the course near Warm Springs afun place to play

Inside

easily the coolest hole on the

Editor's note:This is another installment in a seasonlong seriesin which Bulletin golf writer Zach Hall visits each public and semiprivate golfcoursein CentralOregon.

course.

2ACK.

With a red-tailed hawk soaring above and not another per-

son in sight, a real possibility for any round at Kah-Nee-Ta

WARM SPRINGS-

ne thought was inescapable as I walked from

I had just made bogey on the par-3 16th, and walking down

the 16th green to the 17th

from the elevated green I could

O tee at Kah-Nee-Ta High Desert Resort.

see the Warm Springs River rushing by the par-5 17th,

played during a weekday, it hit me just how beautiful the setting truly is on the only golf course on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation.

SeeKah-Nee-Ta/B6

— New YorkTimes News Service

• Golfers try new gimmicks to get more players,

NBA PLAYOFFS

B6

• Kuchar wins RBC with chipin,B6

Kah-Nee-Ta HighDesert Resort scorecard Hole P ar Yards

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 3 5 3 4 4 5 4 3 4 35 3 5 1 4 4 4 8 6 2 0 7 3 9 2 3 3 4 4 9 1 3 4 8 1 6 0 4 1 8 2,9 8 0174 5 15

12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total 4 4 5 4 3 5 4 37 72 36 8 33 5 48 8 39 0 21 8 51 5 36 9 3,3 72 6,352

Spurs Mavericks

9 85

eat Bobcats

88

izar s Bulls

10 93

rail Blazer Rockets

12 120

Distances measured from back tees

NBA PLAYOFFS

azers come ac 0 winin By Kristie Rieken

Portland's

The Associated Press

LaMarcus

HOUSTON — LaMarcus

Aldridge blocks a shot

Aldridge scoredafranchise playoff-record 46 points and Damian Lillard added 31, including the go-ahead free

BUFFET

by Houston's Dwight How-

ard during

throws in overtime, to lift the Portland Trail Blazers to a 122-120victoryoverthe Houston Rockets on Sunday night

the first half

Sunday. David J. Phillipr The Associated Press

in Game I of their first-round playoff series. Aldridge fouled out with

Sun: Blazers122, Rockets120(OT) Wednesday at Houston 6:30 F riday

at P o rtland 7 : 30

April 27 a t Portland x-April 30 at Houston x-May 2 at Portland x-May 4 at Houston

about a minute left in overtime and Lillard, who was

making his playoff debut, took over. He scored the next five points for Portland and put

DLAZERS 1, ROCKETS0

6:30 TBD TBD TBD

All times PDT x-if necessary

night in Houston.

the Trail Blazers on top by

two freethrows seconds later to give the Blazers the win in

one point with a pair of free

their first trip to the postsea-

Aldridge, who was playing in his home state, also had 18

throws with 17 seconds left. Joel Freeland made one of

son since 2011.

rebounds and two blocks.

Game 2 is Wednesday

See Blazers/B5

Inside • Favorites almost always advance in the NBA playoffs, B5 • NBAadmits referee error,BS

Sunday, Ma y 1 l t" R eservati on s Av a i l a b l e 11:00 AM through 3 : 3 0 PM A dults $37.~ C h i l d r e n 6 - 1 2 $ 1 4 .~ Children 5 and un d er F R E E Reservations Required

541-383-8200 or

ajhueyobrokentop.com 62000 Broken Top Dr. www.brokentop.com


B2 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 21,2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY RUNNING

Boston Marathon

Time T V/Radio 5:30 a.m. Universal

BASEBALL

MLB, Baltimore at Boston 8 a.m. MLB MLB, Cincinnati at Pittsburgh 4 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. ESPNU College, Notre Dameat Miami College, OregonState at Sacramento State 6:30 p.m. 940-AM MLB, Houston at Seattle 7 p.m. Root SOCCER EPL, Manchester City vs West Bromwich Albionnoon NBCSN HOCKEY

NHL Playoffs, Pittsburgh at Columbus NHL Playoffs, St. Louis at Chicago NHL Playoffs, Anaheim atDallas

4 p.m. N B CSN 5 p.m. CNB C 6:30 p.m. NBCSN

BASKETBALL

NBA Playoffs, Memphis at OklahomaCity NBA Playoffs, Golden State at LosAngeles

5 p.m. 7:30 p.m.

TNT TNT

TUESDAY SOCCER UEFAChampions League, semifinal, Atletico Madrid vs Chelsea

Time T V/Radio 1 1:30 a.m. F S 1

BASEBALL

College, OregonState at Sacramento State MLB, Houston at Seattle

1 p.m. 7 p.m.

940-AM

Root

HOCKEY

NHL Playoffs, Boston at Detroit NHL, NewYork Rangers at Philadelphia NHL, SanJose at LosAngeles

4:30 p.m. NBCSN 5 p.m. CNB C 7 p.m. N B CSN

BASKETBALL

NBA Playoffs, Atlanta at Indiana NBA Playoffs, Washington at Chicago NBA Playoffs, Atlanta at Indiana

5 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 1 a.m.

TNT TNT TNT

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible forlate changesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF TENNIS Wawrinka winS MOnte CarlO MaSterS — Stanislas Wawrinka won the MonteCarlo Masters for the first time Sunday in Monaco, rallying to beat RogerFederer 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-2 in a rareall-Swiss final. The Australian Openchampion had lost his previous two Masters finals and looked to belosing a third until Federer's level dropped suddenly late in the secondset, andWawrinka begantroubling the 17-time GrandSlamchampion with his aggressive backhand. The fourth-seeded Federer, whoaccepted awild card invitation to play in the tournament, was also looking to win it for the first time after losing his three previous finals here to eight-time champion Rafael Nadal from 2006-08. Wawrinka hasbeatenFederer only twice in15 matches but both victories havecomehere. Healso beat him in the third round in 2009.

VekiC deatS CihulkOVafOrfirSt WTA title — Seventh-seeded DonnaVekic of Croatia clinched her first WTAtitle on Sunday after beating top-seededDominika Cibulkova of Slovakia 5-7,7-5, 7-6 (4) in the Malaysian Open final in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The17-year-old Vekic, playing in her third final, prevailed in amatch that stretched to almost three hours.

FranCe edgeS U.S. 3-2 in Fed CuP — Thedoubles team of Caroline Garcia andVirginie Razzanoled France to a3-2 win over the United States in FedCupcompetition Sunday in St. Louis. France qualified for the World Group in 2015and will compete for the Fed Cup championship. TheUSAdrops down to World Group II for next year. GarciaandRazzanobeatthe USA'sSloaneStephensandMadison Keys 6-2, 7-5 in the fifth and deciding match of the best-of-five, two-day competition held at Chaifetz Arena on the campus of Saint Louis University.

GYMNASTICS ArkanSaS' Grable winS twO titleS at NCAAS —Arkansas' Katherine Grable wontwo national titles and Florida's Bridget Sloan captured the third of her career at theNCAAwomen's gymnastics championships in Birmingham, Ala. Grablewonthe floor exercise with a 9.9625 and tied with LSU's RheaganCourville for first on the vault in Sunday's individual competition. It's the second straight year Courville has shared thevault title. Both scored 9.975. A2008 Olympian, Sloanwon the unevenparallel bars with a score of 9.9375. She won the all-around andbalance beamtitles last year and had helped the Gators win ashare of their second straight championship on Saturday night. Co-champion Oklahomatied the Gators again with one title. Taylor Spears wonthe balance beamat 9.925, while Oregon State's Madeline Gardner finished third on the beamwith a 9.8875.

CYCLING Belgium'S Gildert winS AmStel GOld — Philippe Gilbert of Belgium won theAmstel Gold Racefor the third time on Sunday, clinching the 49th edition in the hills of the southern Netherlands. Racing for BMC,Gilbert broke awayfrom the peloton about three kilometers (two miles) from the finish during the race's final steep ascent of the Cauberg hill, and then held onfor victory as others tried to narrow the gap.Gilbert's win in the 251-kilometer race followed his triumphs in 2010and 2011. Hefinished in a time of 6 hours, 25 minutes, 57 seconds. Fellow Belgian Jelle Vanendert wassecond, and Australia's Simon Gerrans third, ahead ofAlejandro Valverde of Spain.

MOTOR SPORTS Hamilton winsthird straight F1 race at Chinese GPMercedes driver Lewis Hamilton captured his third straight Formula One race with ease onSunday in Shanghai, leading from start to finish to win the ChineseGrand Prix. Mercedes showedagain that it's in a different class from its rivals, with Hamilton's teammateNico Rosberg taking second place —thethird time in four races this season the pair have finished one-two. Ferrari's FernandoAlonso held onfor third place to get his team's first podium finish of the year.

SOCCER KeePer dieS after GadOn SOCCer matCh —Ateam official said a goalkeeper diedafter being kicked in the headduring a championship tournament match in theWest African country of Gabon. Sylvain Azougoui of the ACBongoville soccer club had just stopped a shot on goal, but the attacker lost his balance onthe wet grass and stepped on thegoalkeeper's head. Theteam official said the 30-yearold from Benin died ontheway to the hospital Sunday. — From wire reports

ON DECK Today Baseball:Ridgeviewat Bend, 4:30 p.muMountain View atCrookCounty,4;30p,muRedmondatSummit, 4:30p.m.;Junction CityatLaPine, 4:30p.m.; PerrydaleatCulver,4:30 p.mt SoflbaH: LaPineatJunction City, 4:30p.muMadras at North Marion,4:30 p.m.; Perrydaleat Culver, 4:30p.m. Boys golf:Bend,Mountain View,Summit, Crook CountyatTetherow,10a.m. Girls gotfiBend,MountainView,Summit, Redmond, Ridgeview,CrookCountyat AwbreyGlen,noon Boystennis:BendatRedmond,4p.muMountain View atSummit, 3p.m. Girls tennis:Redmondat Bend, 4 p.muRidgeview at CrookCounty,4 p.m.; SantiamChristian atMadras, 4p.m.

Philadelphia Houston NewYork Chicago Montreal

IN THE BLEACHERS Inthe Bleachers0 20ts Steve Moore. Dist, by UnrversslUclrck

www.gcccmics.vktm/inthsbteschers

TIHF.

OOT!

Friday Baseball:Ridgeviewat Bend,4:30 p.muCrook County atMountainView,4:30p.muSummit at Redmond, 4:30p.m.; Sisters at Sweet Home,4i30 p.mu La PineatCottageGrove,4:30 p.muCulver at Regis,4:30p.m. SoflbaH:Ridgeviewat Bend,4:30p.m.; Mountain ViewatCrook County,4:30 p.muRedmond at Summit,4:30p.muSweet Homeat Sisters, 4:30 p.msCottageGroveat LaPine,4:30 p.muCulver at Regis,4:30 p.m. Boysgolf: Bend,MountainView,Summit, Redmond, Ridgeview,CrookCounty at IMCDistrict Preview

5 1 4 6 3

8 7 7 6 3

9 10 7 8 8 11 1 011 6 14

W 5 4 3 3 2 2 1 0 0

L T Pls GFGA 1 1 1 6 17 10 2 1 1 3 14 11 0 4 1 31 1 6 1 2 11 8 5 2 3 9 10 8 1 2 8 7 4 3 3 6 8 13 3 4 4 8 12 2 3 3 5 7

Colorado Vancouver Los Angeles ChivasUSA Portland SanJose NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint fortie.

Wednesdny'sGame

f NEED PELFH ' tg HY' CRoS SWog), SIX-ACROSS„.

'AFFRFecTL( 7HRDHH PALL,"

Wednesday Baseball:Bendat Ridgeview, 4:30p.muMountain ViewatCrook County,4:30 p.mxRedmond at Summit, 4:30p.m.;CulveratKennedy,4:30p.m. SoflbaH:Bendat Ridgeview(DH), 3 p.m.; Crook County atMountainView(DH), 3 p.muSummit at Redmond (DH), 3 p.m.; Culverat Kennedy, 4:30 p.m. Girls golf:Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeview, CrookCounty, Trinity Lutheranat Prinevile CountryClub,noon Boys tennis: CrookCountyat Ridgeview,4 p.m. Track and field: Bendat Summit, TBD;Mountain View atRidgeview,3:30 p.muRedmond at Crook Couniy,3:30p.m. Boyslacrosse:MountainViewatHarney,5p.m. Girls lacrosse:BendatSouthEugene,5p.m. Thursday Baseball:EstacadaatMadras,4:30 p.m. Softball: Madras at LaSalle, 4:30p.m. Boystennis: Ridgeviewat Bend, 4p.muSummit at Redmond, 4 p.mu PhilomathatMadras,4p.m.; CrookCountyatMountainView,4p.m. Girls tennis:Bendat Ridgeview,4 p.m.; Redmond at Summit, 4p.m.; Madrasat Philomath, 4 p.mu MountainViewatCrookCounty, 4p.m. Trackandfield: La Pine,CottageGrove,Sisters at Elmira, 4p.m.;CulveratRegis, 4 p.m.

2 3 2 1 4

WeslernConference FC Dallas Seattle RealSaltLake

Tuesday

Baseball:CottageGroveat Sisters, 4:30p.m.; Madras atEstacada,5p.m. SotlbaH: Sisters at CottageGrove,4:30p.m. Boystennis: MountainViewat Bend, 4p.m.; Redmond atRidgeview,4 p.m.; Madrasat LaSalle, 4 p.m.; Summiatt CrookCounty, 4p.m. Girls tennis:Bendat MountainView,4 p.m.; Ridgeview at Redmond, 4 p.m.; LaSale at Madras,4 p.m.; Crook County atSummit, 4 p.m. Trackandfield: Gilchrist atGlide, 4p.m. Boyslacrosse:Summit atBend,6 p.m.

1 2 1 0 0

Houstonat NewYork, 4:30p.m. Saturday'sGames PhiladelphiaatMontreal, 1p.m. ColoradoatSeattleFC,1 p.m. FC DallasatD.C.United, 4p.m. NewYorkatColumbus,4:30p.m. SportingKansasCity atNewEngland,4:30 p.m. Vancouverat Real Salt Lake,6:30 p.m. ChivasUSAat SanJose, 7:30p.m.

Sunday'sGame Portlandat Houston, noon

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPOT

Sunday'sGames

Philadelphia4, NewYorkRangers 2,seriestied1-1 Boston 4,Detroit 1,seriestied1-1 Montreal3, TampaBay2,Montreal leadsseries 3-0 SanJose7, LosAngeles2, SanJose leadsseries 2-0

Today'sGames

Heat 99, Bobcats88 CHARLO TTE(BB)

Kidd-Gilchrist 2-41-1 5, McRoberts6-9 0-015,

Jefferson 9-170-018, Walker6-155-620, Henderson 3-90-1 6,Zeller2-30-04, Neal7-161-217, Ridnour 1-5 0-0 2,Douglas-Roberts0-1 1-21, Biyombo0-0 000, Togiver 00 00 0. Totals 3679 812 BB. MIAMI (99) James8-167-1027, Haslem0-2 2-2 2, Bosh 4-13 3-413, Chalmers3-7 0-0 7, Wade10-16 2-3 23,Cole3-50-07,Lewis0-20-00,Allen0-40-00, Andersen 3-52-48, Jones4-62-312. Totals35-76 18-26 99. Cbarlotle 23 19 23 23 — BB Miami 19 30 23 27 — 99

def. GabrielaDabrowski andSharonFichman,Canada, 6-4, 5-7,11-9. France 3, UnitedStates2 At CbeifetzArena St. Louis Surlace:Hard-Indoor CarolineGarcia,France, def. SloaneStephens, UnitedStates,6-3, 6-2t MadisonKeys,United States,def. AlizeCornet, France,6-7(4),7-6(4), 6-3. SloaneStephens,UnitedStates, def. AlizeCornet, France,6-2,6-4. Caroline Garcia, France,def.Madison Keys, United States,6-4,6-3. CarolineGarcia andVirginia Razzano, France,def. MadisonKeysandSloaneStephens, UnitedStates, 6-2, 7-5.

Pittsburgh at Columbus, 4p,mvseries tied1-1 Coloradoat Minnesota, 4 p.mvColorado leadsseries 2-0 St. Louis atChicago,5:30p.mvSt. Louisleadsseries2-0 Anaheim at Dallas, 6:30p.mnAnaheimleads series 2-0

Tuesdey'sGames

Tampa Bayat Montreal,4 p.m. BostonatDetroit, 4:30p.m. N.Y.Rangersat Philadelphia, 5p.m. SanJoseat LosAngeles, 7p.m.

Wednesday'sGames

Pittsburghat Columbus, 4p.m. AnaheimatDallas, 5 p.m. St. Louisat Chicago,6;30 p.m.

Thursday'sGames BostonatDetroit 5 p m x-MontrealatTampaBay,4p.m. ColoradoatMinnesota, 6:30p.m. SanJoseat LosAngeles,7:30p.m. Fridey'sGam es N.Y.Rangersat Philadelphia, 4p.m. x-Chicago at St.Louis, 5p.m. x-DallasatAnaheim,7:30p.m.

Poland 3,Spain2 At OlympicStadium Barcelona,Spain Surlace:Clay-Outdoor MO TOR SPORTS DALLAS (BB) Agnieszka Radwanska, Poland, def.Silva SolerEsMarion4-11 0-08, Nowitzki 4-143-411, Dalem- pinosa, Spain,6-2, 6-2. bert 1-20 02, Calderon 3-90-07, Egis 4-143-411, Maria-TeresaTorro-Flor, Spain,def. UrszulaRadFormula One Harris 8-160-019, Carter5-110-010, Blair 0-00-0 wanska, Poland,4-6,6-0,6-1. ChineseGrandPrix 0, Crowder 2-30-06, Wri g ht 4-53-511. Totals 36A gnie s z k a R a d wa n s k a , P o l a n d , d e f . Ma r i a T e r e s a Sunday at Juniper,noon 86 9-13BB. Torro-Fl o Spai r, n , 6-3, 6-2. At ShanghaiInternationalcircuit Boys tennis:MountainView,Summit at Ashland SANANTONIO(gg) S ilvia Soler Espi n osa, Spai n , def. Urszul a Ra d Shanghai InvitationalTBD , 4-113-411, Duncan12-203-527, Splitwanska,Poland,6-1,6-3. Lnp length:3.39 miles Girls tennis:Sisters, North Bendat Junction City, terLeonard 3-6 2-4 8,Parker9-16 3-321, Green0-2 0-00, Agnie szkaRadwanskaandAlicjaRosolska,Poland, 1. Lewis Hami lton, England,Merced es, 54 laps, 2 p.m. Ginobili 4-106-617,Belinegi0-40-00, Diaw2-80-0 def. Anabel MedinaGarriguesandSilvia SolerEspino1:33:28.338,117.330 mph. Boyslacrosse:SistersatHermiston,5 p.m.;Summit 4, Migs1-40-02,Bonner0-00-00, Ayres0-00-00. sa, Spain6-4, , 6-2. 2.NicoRosberg,Germany,Mercedes,54,1:33:46.400. at Wilsonvige,8 p.m. Totals 35-8117-2290. 3. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,54,1:33:51.942. Dallas 12 32 21 2B — BB WORLD GROUPB 4. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Red Bull, 54, Saturday SanAntonio 21 2 2 22 26 — 90 Playoffs 1:33:55.474. Boys tennis: Sisters vs. HenleyandSt. Mary'sat DIT Winners to2015WGH;losers to2015 zonal in Klamath Fals, 10a.muMountain View,Summit 5. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 54, groups Wizards102, Bulls 93 at Ashland Invitational, TBD 1:34:16.116. Romania4, Serbia1 Trackandfield: Redmond,Summit, MountainView, 6. Nico Hulkenberg,Germ any, ForceIndia, 54, At AreneleBNR WASHING TON(102) La Pine,Sisters,CulveratSummit Invitational,10 1:34:22.633. Bucharest, Rom an i a Ariza 5 8 5618, Nene11-17 2 524, Gortat 6 10 7. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,54, 1:34:24.035. a.m.; Sisters,CrookCounty atCentennial Invite, 11 3-415, Surface:Clay-Outdoor Wal4-14 l 8-1016, Beal3-117-7 13, Booka.m.;Ridgeview,Madrasat Sterling/Lithia Inviteat er 1-31-2 Sorana Cirstea,Romania, def.AnaIvanovic, Serbia, 8. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Ferrari,54,1:34:44.673. 3, Web s ter 1-3 0-1 3, Mi l er 5-7 0-010, OIT,TBD 9. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia, 54,1:34:50.985. 6-1,6-2. 0-00-0 0, Harrington 0-10-0 0,Temple0-0 3-6, Boys lacrosse:TualatinatBend,1 p.m.;West Albany Gooden Simona Halep,Romania,def.BojanaJovanovski, 10. DaniilKvyat,Russia, ToroRosso,53, +I lap. 0-00.Totals36-7426-36102. at MountainView,1 p,muSummit atCanby,TBD 11. JensonButton, England, McLaren, 53,+f lap. Serbia, 6-2, 6-4. CHICAGO (93) Sunday Ana IvanovicSerbi , a,def. SimonaHalep,Romania, 12. Jean-EricVergne,France,ToroRosso, 53,+f lap. D unl e avy 4-12 0-011, Boozer 5-101-1 11, No a h Girls lacrosse: Central OregonatSisters, 1:30p.m. 4-62-210, Hinrich7-160-016, Butler6-123-715, 6-3, 7-6 (2). 13.KevinMagnussen,Denmark,McLaren,53,+tlap. Sorana Cirstea, Romania, def. BojanaJovanovski, 14. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus,53, +I lap. Augustin 3-1510-1016, Gibson4-6 4-6 12, Mo- Serbia,6-3,6-7(7), 6-3. 15. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Wiliams,53, +1lap. BASKETBALL hammed0-00-00,Snell1-40-02.Totals34-81 Irina-Cam elia Beguand Monica Niculescu, Roma- 16. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber,53,+t lap. 20-26 93. nia, def.JovanaJaksic andNinaStojanovic, Serbia, 17. JulesBianchi, France,Marussia, 53, +t lap. Washington 24 24 24 30 — 102 NBA 1-0, retired. 18. KamuiKobayashi,Japan,Caterham,53,+t lap. Chicago 22 32 21 18 — 93 Netherlands 3, Japan2 19. MaxChilton, England,Marussia, 52,+2laps. NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION A t Maaspoort Sports & E ven ts 20.MarcusEricsson,Sweden,Caterham,52,+2laps. PleyoHs Oen Bosch, Netherlands Not Classified TENNIS AH TimesPOT Surlace:Clay-Indoor 21. Romain Grosjean, France,Lotus, 28,retired. Kurumi Na ra, Ja p an, def . Ara ntxa R u s, N e the rl a nds, 22. Adrian Sutil, Germany,Sauber, 5, retired. FIRSTROUND Professional 7-5, 2-6,6-1. x-il necessary) DriversStendmg s Monte-CarloRolexMasters Kiki Bertens,Netherlands,def. Misaki Doi,Japan, unday'sGames (Afler fourof19 races) Sunday 6-0, 7-6 (3). 1. NicoRosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 79points. San Antonio90,Dallas85, SanAntonio leadsseries At TheMonte-Carlo Country Club Kiki Bertens,Netherlands,def. KurumiNara,Japan, 2. LewisHamilton, England,Mercedes,75. 1-0 Monaco 7-6(5), 4-6,9-7. 3. Fernando Alonso,Spain, Ferrari,41. Miami99,Charlotte88,Miami leadsseries1-0 P urse: S4.8 million (Masters10BO ) ArantxaRus,Netherlands, def. Misaki Doi,Japan, 4. NicoHulkenberg,Germany, ForceIndia, 36. Washington102,Chicago93, Washington leadsseSurface:Clay-Outdoor 7-5, 6-3. 5. Sebastian Vetel, Germany, RedBul, 33. ries 1-0 Singles Shuko AoyamaandRisaOzaki,Japan,def.Richel 6. DanielRicciardo,Australia, RedBull,24. Portland122,Houston 120(OT), PortlandleadsseChampionship Hogenkamp and M ic ha eg a K r aj i c ek, Ne t h erl a nds, 1-6, 7.Valtteri Bottas,Finland,Wiliams,24. ries 1-0 StanislasWawrinka(3), Swilzerland, def. Roger 6-3, 10-8. Today'sGames 8.JensonButton,England,McLaren,23. Federer (4), Swi t zerl a nd,4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-2. Sweden 4, Thailand 0 9. KevinMagnussen,Denmark, McLaren,20. Memphis atOklahomaCity, 5 p.mv OklahomaCity At SparbankenLidkopingArena 10. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia,18. leadsseries1-0 B MW Malaysian Op en Lidkoping, Sweden 11. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Wiliams,12. GoldenStateat L.A.Clippers, 7:30p,mvGoldenState Sunday Surlece: Hard-Indoor 12. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Ferrari,11. leadsseries1-0 At Royal Selangor Golf Club Johanna Larsson, Sw ed en, def. Nop pa w a n L ert 13. Jean-EricVergne,France,ToroRosso, 4. Tuesday'sGames KualaLumpur, Malaysia cheewakarn, Thailand, 6-1,6-3. 14. DaniilKvyat,Russia,ToroRosso,4. Atlantaat Indiana,4 p.m. Purse: $2gg,ggg (Intl.) S ofia Arvi d sson, Sw e den, def. Luksi k a Ku m k hum , Constructors Standings BrooklynatToronto, 4:30p.m. Surface: Hard-Outdoo r Thailand, 6-4, 6-2. 1. Mercedes,154points. Washin gtonatChicago,5:30p.m. Singles J ohann a L a r s s o n , S w e d e n , d e f . L u k s i k a K u mk h u m, Wednesdey'sGames 2. RedBull, 57. Championship Thailand,6-4, 6-2. Charlotteat Miami,4 p.m. ForceIndia,54. DonnaVekic(7), Croatia, def.Dominika Cibulkova Sofi aArvidsson,Sweden,vs.NoppawanLertchee- 3. DallasatSanAntonio, 5p.m. 4. Ferrari,52. (1), Sl o vaki a ,5-7, 7-5, 7-6 (4). w akarn, Thai l a nd, aba ndon ed. PortlandatHouston, 6:30 p.m. McLaren,43. Hilda MelanderandRebeccaPeterson,Sweden, 5. Williams, Thursday'sGames 36. Fed Cup def. TamarineTanasugarnandVaratchayaWongtean- 6. Indiana atAtlanta, 4 p.m. 7. ToroRosso,g. WORLD GROUP chai, Thailand, 6-4, 6-2. Oklahoma City at Memphis, 5p.m. Semilinals Switzerland 4, Brazil1 L.A. ClippersatGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Winners tofinal, Nov.8-9 At ClubedeTenisCatanduva DEALS Friday'sGames Czech Republic4, Italy0 Catenduve,Brazil TorontoatBrooklyn,4 p.m. A t CEZ Aren a S urface: Clay-Ou tdo o r ChicagoatWashington,5 p.m. Transactions Ostrave,CzechRepublic Timea Bacsinszky, Switzerland,def. Teliana Pereira, HoustonatPortland, 7:30p.m. Surface: Hard-Indoor Brazil, 6-3, 6-3. BASEBAL L Saturday,April 26 LucieSafarova,CzechRepublic, def.SaraErrani, BelindaBencic, Switzerland, def. PaulaCristina AmericanLeague Indiana atAtlanta, 11a.m. Italy, 6-4, 6-1. Goncal v es, Bra zi l , 6-3, 6-3. DETROI T T I GE R S — R e l e a s edSSAlexGonzalez. SanAntonioat Dalas, 1:30p.m. PetraKvitova,CzechRepublic, def. Camila Giorgi, Teliana Pereira, Brazil, def. BelindaBencic, SwitzerSelectedthecontract of INFDannyWorthfromToledo Miami atCharlotte,4 p.mr Italy, 6-4,6-2. land, 6-3,6-4. (IL). Oklahoma City at Memphis, 6:30p.m. PetraKvitova,CzechRepublic, def.Roberta Vinci, MINNES OTA TWINS — DesignatedOFDarin Timea Bacsinszky, Switzerland, def. PaulaCristina Sunday,April 27 Italy, 6-3, 7-5. Goncalves, Brazil, 7-5, 6-2. Mastroianniforassignment. ClaimedOFSamFuldoff Chicago atWashington,10 a.m. Lucia Saf a rova, C z e ch R epu bl i c , vs. Ca m i l a G i o rgi , Belinda Ben ci c and Vi k torija Gol u bi c , Swi t zerl a nd, w aivers from Oakland. L.A. Clippers atGoldenState,12:30 p.m. ltaly,abandon ed. def. Gabriela Ceand LauraPigossi, Brazil,6-2, 6-2. NEW YORKYANKEES— PlacedRHPIvanNova TorontoatBrooklyn,4 p.m. AndreaHlavackovaandKlara Koukalova, Cze ch on the15-dayDL.OptionedINFScott Sizemorefrom HoustonatPortland,6:30 p.m. Republic,def.CamilaGiorgi andKarin Knapp, Italy, Scranton/Witkes-Barre(IL). DesignatedRHPMat Monday,April 28 BASEBALL 6-2,5-7, 11-9. Daley for assignm ent. Reinstated1BMarkTeixeira Miami atCharlotte,4 p.m. Germany 3, Aus trelia1 from the15-dayDLRecaled RHPsPrestonClaiborne x-Atlantaatlndiana,5p.m. At Oueenslnnd Tennis Centre College from Scranton/Wtlkes-Barre andBryanMitchell from SanAntonioat Dalas, 6:30p.m. Brisbane,Australia Trenton(EL). Tuesday, April29 Pac-12 Standings Surface: Hard-Outdoo r S EATTLE MA R I N E R S — O ptionedOFJamesJones x-WashingtonatChicago,TBD AH TimesPDT AndreaPetkovic, Germany, def. SamStosur, Austo Tacoma (PCL). Recalled RHPBrandon Maurer from x-Memphiat s OklahomaCity, TBD tralia, 7-6(7), 6-1. x-GoldenStateatL.A.Clippers, TBD Conference Overall Tacoma. Angetique Kerber, Germany, def. Casey Dettacqua, Washington NationalLeague Wednesday,April 30 14-4 27-8 Australia, 6-1, 6-0. MILWAUKEE BREWERS— PlacedDFLoganSchax-Charlotteat Miami,TBD 11-4 27-7 Oregon State Angeti q ue Ke r ber, G erm a ny , def . Sa m S tos ur, Au sf e r on the15-day DL,retroactiveto Friday.Reinstated x-BrooklynatToronto, TBD 10-5 Oregon 31-10 tralia,4-6, 6-0,6-4. x-DallasatSanAntonio, TBD 9-9 19-17 1B LyleDverbayfrompaternity leave. ArizonaState Casey Dettacqua, Austral i a, vs. Andrea Pe t k ovi c , HOCKEY x-PortlandatHouston, TBD 9-6 UCLA 21-16 Germany,aband oned. NationalHockeyLeague Thursday,Mey1 7-8 Washington State 17-19 Ashleigh Ba rty and C a se y D eg a cqua , A us t r al i a ,def. NHL — Suspended Chicago D Brent Seabrook x-IndianaatAtlanta, TBD 8-9 19-17 Julia Goerges andAnna-LenaGroenefeld, Germany, USC x-ChicagoatWashington, TBD 7-8 s for his hit on ChicagoCDavid Backes Stanford 16-16 threegame 6-2,6-7(5), 10-2. x-Oklahoma City atMemphis, TBD Arizona 6-11 17-22 duringSaturday'sgame. Playoffs x-L.A. Clippers at GoldenState,TBD 5-9 CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Recaled G Jason California 16-18 Winnersto 2015WG;losers to 2015WGH andDKlasDahlbeckfromRockford(AHL). Utah 3-16 12-24 LaBarbera Russia 4, Argentina 0 FLORIDA PANT HERS — Assigned D Josh Sunday'sSummaries At AdlerArena Today'sGame McFaddenfromSanAntonio (AHL) to Cincinnati Sochi, Russia OregonStateat Scaramento State, 6:30p.m. (ECHL). Blazers122, Rockets120 (OT) Surface:Clay-Indoor MONTREAL CANADIENS— RecalledGsDevan uesdey'sGames ElenaVesnina, Russia, def. PaulaOrmaechea, Ar- OregonStateat ST acramento State, 1p.m. DubnykandDustin Tokarski, FsSvenAndrighetto, PORTLANO (122) gentina,6-3, 6-3. U tah at Utah V al l e y, 5 p. m . Mike Bl u nden, Gabriel Dumont,Louis Leblancand Batum6-10 0-0 14, Aldridge17-31 10-13 46, EkaterinaMakarova, Russia, def.Maria Irigoyen, Washington atSeatle, 6p.m. Christian ThomasandDs Nathan Beaulieu, Davis Lopez2-7 2-4 6, Lillard 9-19 10-12 31,Matthews Argentina,7-5,6-1. onzagaatWashington State,6 p.m. Drewiske andGregPateryn fromHamilton (AHL). 6-165-618,Robinson1-41-23, Wigiams1-60-03, EkaterinaMakarova,Russia,def.PaulaDrmaechea, G Stanfordat SantaClara 6p.m. Wright 0-30-00, Barton0-10-0 0, Freeland0-01-2 Argentina,6-1,6-2. H awai i at USC , 6 p.m . 1.Totals 42-9729-39122. ElenaVesnina, Russia, vs.MariaIrigoyen,Argen- Loyol FISH COUNT aMarymountatUCLA,6p.m. HOUSTON (120) tina,abandon ed. Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack Parsons10-211-224, Jones6-100-012, Howard ValeriaSolovyevaandElena Vesnina, Russia, def. Californiaat FresnoState, 6:35p.m. chinook, steelhead andwild steelheadat selected 9-21 9-1727,Beverley3-8 2-49, Harden8-28 8-10 Victoria BosioandNadia Podoroska, Argentina,6-2, ColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Saturday. 27, Asik1-20-02, Lin5-113-314, Garcia1-43-45. 6-1. SOCCER Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Totals 43-10526-40120. Canada3, Slovakia1 Bonneville 1350 5 42 11 Portland 27 2 1 2 5 33 16 — 122 At PEPS,LnyatUniversity MLS T he Dal l es 505 4 7 2 Houston 20 2 9 3 0 27 14 — 120 QuebecCiiy, Canada 3-Point Goal— s Portland 9-27 (Ligard3-7, AlJohn Day 53 9 1 18 8 Surface:Hard-Indoor MAJORLEAGUESOCCER McNary 1 41 3 11 6 dridge 2-2,Batum2-4, Wiliams1-4, Matthews1-7, Aleks andraWozniak,Canada,def.JanaCepelova, AH TimesPDT Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, Barton 0-1, Wright 0-2), Houston8-35 (Parsons Slovakia,4-6, 7-5,7-5. 3-11, Harden 3-14, Lin 1-3, Beverley1-4, Garcia EugenieBouchard, Canada, def. KristinaKucova, EasternConference jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected 0-3). FouledDut—Lopez, Aldridge, Beverley, Howard. Slovakia7-6 , (0), 2-6,6-1. W L T Pls GF GA ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Rebounds —Portland 66(Aldridge 18), Houston75 EugenieBouchard, Canada, def. JanaCepelova, SportingKansasCiy 3 1 2 119 4 Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd (Howard 15).Assists—Portland14(Lilard 5), Hous- Slovakia,7-6(6), 6-3. Columbus 3 1 2 11 9 6 Bonneville 14,226 6 3 3 , 4361,087 ton16 (Harden 6). Total Fouls—Portland32, Houston Aleksandra Wozniak,Canada,vs. KristinaKucova, TorontoFC 3 3 0 9 6 7 The Dalles 4,798 4 6 258 108 33. Technical— s Lopez, Beverley, Howard. Flagrant Slovakia,abandon ed. D.C. 2 2 2 8 6 7 John Day 2,744 48 2,6 73 1 ,050 Fouls—Williams. A—18,240 (18,023). JanetteHusarovaandAnnaSchmiedlova, Slovakia, NewEngland 2 3 2 8 5 9 McNary 7 6 3 12 397 256

Spurs 90, Mavericks85


MONDAY, APRIL 21,2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

BREWER BROUHAHA

AN TimesPDT

Mets 4, Braves 3(14 innings) Brewers 3, Pirates 2(14 innings) NEW YORK — Slumping newcomer Curtis Granderson hit a sacrifice fly in the 14th inning

PITTSBURGH — Khris Davis delivered the biggest hit in a game interrupted by apunch-filled to lift New York. David Wright brawl, homering in the14th inning had four hits and the Mets took to lift Milwaukee. Brewers center advantage of three early errors by fielder Carlos Gomez,Pirates Atlanta. Kirk Nieuwenhuis drew outfielder Travis Snider and Milaleadof fwalkandadvancedon waukee benchcoachJerry Narron Ruben Tejada's sacrifice bunt. Eric were ejected after the third-inning Young Jr. was intentionally walked fracas. to bring up Granderson. Therunners moved up on a wild pitch, and Milwaukeeab r hbi Pittsburghab r hbi Granderson lifted the next delivery C Gomzcf 2 0 1 0 Martelf 7 0 1 0

AMERICANLEAGUE

NewYork Toronto Tampa Bay Boston Baltimore Detroit Kansas City Minnesota

Chicago Cleveland

Oakland Texas Los Angeles Seattle Houston

East Division W L 11 8 10 9 9 9 8

Pot GB

.579 .526 1 0 .474 1 0 .474 9 .471

Central Division

1 2 2 2

W L Pot GB 9 6 .600 9 8 .529 1 9 9 .500 1(/r 9 10 .474 2 8 10 .444 2(/r

West Division W L 13 11 8 7 5

5 8 10 11 14

Pot GB .722 .444 5 .389 6 .263 8(/r

Sunday'sGames Cleveland 6,Toronto4 Detroit 2,L.A.Angels1 Miami 3,Seatle 2 N.Y.Yankees5, TampaBay1, 12innings Minnesota 8, KansasCity 3 Chicago WhiteSox16, Texas2 Oakland 4, Houston1 Boston 6, Baltimore5 Today'sGames Baltimore(W.chen2-1) at Boston(Buchholz0-1),

8:05a.m. KansasCity (Guthrie2-0) at Cleveland(McAllister 2-0),4:05p.m. LA. Angels(Richards 2-0)at Washington(Roark 1-0), 4:05 p.m. ChicagoWhiteSox(Joh.Danks1-0) atDetroit (A.Sanchez0-1),4:08p.m. Texas (Darvish1-0) atOakland(Straily1-1),705 pm.

Houston (Keuchel 1-1) at Seattle (F.Hernandez3-0), 7;10 p.m. Tuesday'sGames KansasCityatCleveland,4:05p.m. L.A. Angelat s Washington,4:05 p.m. Baltimore atToronto,4:07 p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxat Detroit, 4:08p.m. Minnes otaatTampaBay,4:10p.m. N.Y.YankeesatBoston,4:10 p.m. Texas atOakland,7:05p.m. Houston at Seattle, 7:10p.m.

EHerrrpr-cf 4 0 0 0 JHrrsn3b 6 0 2 0 Segurass 6 0 1 0 JGomzp 0 0 0 0 Braunrf 5 1 2 1 AMcctcf 6 0 0 0 Atlanta New York Lucroyc 6 0 0 0 I.Davis1b 6 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi KDavislf 6 1 3 1 NWalkr2b 6 1 3 1 Heywrdrf 6 1 3 0 EYongIf 6 1 0 0 Gennett2b 6 0 2 0 Tabatarf 6 0 1 1 Buptoncf 6 1 1 1 Grndrsrf 6 0 0 1 MrRynl1b 4 1 2 1 Barmesss 5 0 0 0 Fremn1b 5 0 1 1 DWrght3b 6 1 4 1 Wootenp 0 0 0 0 CStwrtc 6 0 1 0 J.Uptonlf 6 0 1 0 DnMrp2b 6 0 1 0 A rRmrph 0 0 0 0 Colep 3020 CJhnsn3b 6 0 1 0 CYoungcf 5 0 0 0 D ukep 0 0 0 0 Grillip 0000 Uggla2b 5 0 1 0 Matszkp 0 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 GSnchzph 1 0 0 0 Smmnsss 6 0 0 0 dArnadph-c 1 0 0 0 Bianc hi3b 5 0 0 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Lairdc 1 0 0 0 Duda1b 5 1 2 1 Estradp 2 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Pstrnckpr 0 0 0 0 Reckerc 6 0 1 0 Thrnrgp 0 0 0 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 A vilanp 0 0 0 0 Valvrdp 0 0 0 0 Weeksph 1 0 0 0 Mercerph 1 0 1 0 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 Quntnllss 1 0 0 0 Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 1 0 1 0 R.Penaph 1 0 0 0 ABrwnph 1 0 0 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Schlssrp 1 0 1 0 Frnswrp 0 0 0 0 2010 Halep 2 1 0 0 Niwnhscf 1 1 0 0 Overay1b Totals 49 3 123 Totals 5 4 2 132 JSchafrph 1 0 1 0 Wheelrp 2 0 0 1 Milwaukee 000 000 011 00001 — 3 Thomsp 0 0 0 0 Satinph 1 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 000 100 010 000 00 — 2 Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 Germnp 0 0 0 0 DP — Pitsburgh 2. LOB—Milwaukee 10, PittsG attisph-c 3 0 0 0 Ricep 0 0 0 0 burgh 11. 28 —Mar.Reynolds (2), J.Harrison (1). CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 38 — C.Gomez (2). HR—Braun (6), K.Davis (1), Teladaph-ss 2 0 1 0 MarReynolds (5), N.W alker (6). SB—J.Harrison(1). Totals 4 9 3 102 Totals 4 9 4 9 4 CS — J.Harrison(1). S—E.Herrera, Duke. Atlanta 000 030 000 00000 — 3 IP H R E R BBBO New York 110 001 000 00001 — 4 Milwaukee Twooutswhenwinning runscored. Estrada 6 6 1 1 0 4 E—Uggla2(5),J.Upton (2), Granderson(1). DPThornburg 1 1 0 0 1 0 Atlanta 2,NewYork 2. LOB—Atlanta9, NewYork11. 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 Henderson 28 — Heyward (2), B.Upton (2), Freeman(7). 38—J. 11-3 2 0 0 0 0 th Upton(1).SB—Duda(1). CS—Heyward (1). S—Te- W.Smi Wooten 2 0 0 0 0 2 lada. SF —Granderson. DukeW,1-0 2 2 0 0 0 2 IP H R E R BBSO Fr.Rodriguez S,7-7 1 1 0 0 0 2 Atlanta Pittsburgh Hale 6 6 3 2 2 5 Cole 8 6 1 1 1 6 Thomas 1 1 0 0 0 0 Grilli BS,3-7 1 1 1 1 0 1 D.carpenter 1 0 0 0 0 2 Melancon 1 0 0 0 0 0 Avilan 1 1 0 0 0 1 Watson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Varvaro 1 1 0 0 0 2 Ju.Wilson 1 2 0 0 1 1 SchlosserL,0-1 3 2-3 0 1 1 2 1 J.Gomez L,0-1 2 3 1 1 2 1 New York T — 4: 2 1. A — 21,7 61 (38, 3 62). Wheeler 6 6 3 3 3 6 Germen 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Rice 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Interleague C.Torres 2 0 0 0 1 2 Farnsworth 1 1 0 0 0 1 Matsuzaka 3 0 0 0 1 5 Marlins 3, Mariners 2 ValverdeW,1-0 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP—bySchlosser(Duda). WP—Schlosser. MIAMI — Adeiny Hechavarria hit a T—4:37.A—33,131(41,922).

into left field.

.579 2(/r

Gene J. Puskar/The Associated Press

Pittsburgh's Travis Snider, left, takes down Milwaukee's Carlos Gomez as Rickie Weeks joins a skir-

mish during the third inning. Gomezand Snider were ejected from Sunday's games.

Twins 8, Royals3

White Sox16, Rangers 2

KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Phil

ARLINGTON,Texas —Jose Abreu and Jordan Dankseach had two-run homers, Erik Johnson combined with three relievers on a two-hitter and Chicago snappeda four-game losing streak.

Hughes endedhis losing streak that dated to last July, pitching into the seventh inning andhelping the Twinsavoidathree-game sweep.

National League

Nationals 3, Cardinals2 WASHINGTON — Denard Span hit a sacrifice fly in the ninth inning to rally Washington. TheNationals loaded the bases in the ninth, and Span lofted a fly to left field. Danny Espinosa easily beat the throw from John Jay.

Minnesota KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi Chicago Texas D ozier2b 6 1 3 0 Aokirf 5020 NATIONALLEAGUE ab r h bi ab r hbi Mauer1b 4 1 0 0 Infante2b 5 0 1 1 East Division S emien2b 6 2 4 4 Choolf 1 0 0 1 Plouffe3b 4 2 3 2 Hosmer1b 4 0 2 0 W L Pct GB Gigaspi3b 5 1 1 3 Andrusss 2 1 0 0 Colaellrf 4 0 1 1 S.Perezc 4 0 0 0 St. Louis Washington 6 2 3 3 Sardinsss 1 0 1 0 Atlanta 12 6 .667 H rmnnrf 1 0 0 0 Hayesc 0 0 0 0 Abreu1b ab r hbi ab r hbi A (Dunndh 6 0 0 0 Riosrf 4000 Washington 11 8 .579 1(/t Kubellf 4 1 1 1 AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 Viciedorf 5 3 3 2 Fielder1b 2 0 0 0 M crpnt3b 4 0 0 0 Spancf 5 0 1 1 NewYork 9 9 .500 3 Pintodh 3 2 1 1 BButlerdh 4 0 2 0 4 0 1 0 Harperlf 4 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 5 2 20 Kzmnff 3b 3 0 0 0 JCayrf Miami 9 10 474 31/2 KSuzukc 4 0 2 2 Mostks3b 4 0 0 0 raiglf 4 0 1 0 Werthrf 3 0 0 0 DeAzalf 5 1 1 2 DMrphph 1 0 0 0 Philadelphia 8 10 .444 4 MAdms1b 4 1 2 0 LaRoch1b 4 1 1 0 A.Hickscf 4 1 0 0 Maxwllcf 4 1 2 0 Flowrsc 4 3 3 0 Morfnddh 4 0 0 0 Central Division YMolinc 4 0 1 0 Rendon3b 4 1 1 0 EEscorss 4 0 2 1 AEscorss 3 2 2 2 W L Pct GB Totals 3 8 8 138 Totals 3 7 3 113 JrDnkscf 4 2 1 2 JoWilsn2b 1 1 0 0 JhPerlt ss 4 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 5 0 1 1 LMartncf 2 0 1 0 Milwaukee 14 5 .737 M.Ellis 2b 3 0 1 0 Espinos 2b 4 1 3 1 M innesota 2 0 0 1 2 0 300 — 8 Choice cf 1 0 0 0 St. Louis 11 8 .579 3 CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 Loatonc 5 0 3 0 K ansas City 0 0 0 0 1 0 200 — 3 Arenciic 2 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 8 1 1 .421 6 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Strasrgp 1 0 0 0 E—Ventura (2). DP—Minnesota 1, Kansas City Totals 4 6 161816 Totals 24 2 2 1 Cincinnati 8 10 .444 5(/( 2. LOB —Minnesota11, KansasCity 8. 28—Plouffe Chicago go-ahead sacrifice fly in the eighth 002 033 107 — 16 Neshekp 0 0 0 0 Waltersph 1 0 0 0 Roinsnph 1 0 00 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 Chicago 5 1 2 .294 8 2 (7), K.Suzuki(3), Maxwell (1), A.Escobar(5). 3BTexas 0 01 100 000 — 2 inning after an instant replay went Manessp 0 0 0 0 Frndsnph 1 0 0 0 Reds 6, Cnbs 2 West Division Plouffe(1).HR—Pinto (4), A.Escobar(1). CS—CoE—Flowers (1), Kouzmanoff (2)( DP — Chicago2. 2 1 0 0 Blevinsp 0 0 0 0 W L Pct GB labello(2). in Miami's favor. TomWilhelmsen LOB —Chicago6, Texas 4. 2B—Gigaspie (6), Abreu Bourloscf 2 0 1 1 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 LosAngeles 12 7 .632 IP H R E R BBBO 2(5), Viciedo(5), AI.Ramirez(5). 38—Semien(1). SMillerp CHICAGO — Homer Bailey pitched (0-1) took the loss for the MarChoatep 0 0 0 0 McLothph 0 0 0 0 SanFrancisco 11 8 .579 1 Minnesota HR —Abreu (5), Viciedo(1), Jor.Danks(1). SBs2b 1 0 0 0 six scoreless innings for his first iners, who dropped their sixth Colorado 10 10 .500 2(/t HughesW,1-1 6 9 3 3 1 3 AI.Ramirez (4), Andrus(9), L.Martin(3). CS—Choo Descal Totals 33 2 7 1 Totals 3 7 3 11 3 win of the seasonandJay Bruce SanDiego 9 10 .474 3 Duensing 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 (2). SF —Gillaspie,Choo. straight. Mariners starter Brandon B t. Louis 010 0 1 0 000 — 2 Arizona 5 16 .238 8 Fien 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBBO W ashington 00 0 0 0 0 201 — 3 homered anddoubled for CincinMaurer beganwell, holding Miami Perkins 1 1 0 0 0 2 Chicago Two outswhenwinning runscored. nati. Zack Cozart hit a two-run Kansas Ci t y E r.Johnson W ,1-1 5 1 2 1 5 2 hitless into the fifth inning. Then, Sunday'sGames E — M. c arpen ter (4). DP — W a shing t o n1. LOB VenturaL,1-1 4 6 4 4 4 6 Belisario 2 0 0 0 0 1 St. Louis 5,Was N.Y.Mets4, Atlanta3,14 innings homer for the Reds. Bai l ey struck h i n gton 17. 2B — M a.A dam s 2 (8 ), he wore down in ahurry during his Coleman 1 1 1 1 0 1 Rienzo 1 1 0 0 1 1 S.Miger(1).SB—Harper(1). SF—Span. Miami 3,Seatle 2 out eight while allowing six hits first start of the season. Maurer Marks 2 4 3 3 3 2 Lindstrom 1 0 0 0 0 1 Milwaukee 3,Pittsburgh2, 14innings IP H R E R BBSO Mariot 2 2 0 0 1 2 Texas and three walks. Washington 3, St.Louis 2 Bt. Louis did not figure into the decision as Venturapitchedto2 batters inthe5th. RossJr. L,1-1 51 - 3 7 7 4 0 8 S.Miger Cincinnati 8,ChicagoCubs2 5 1-3 4 0 0 5 7 he allowed one run on two hits and 12-3 2 2 2 1 2 ChoateH,3 Hughes pitchedto2 batters inthe7th. Togeson L.A. Dodgers 4,Arizona1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati Chicago Figueroa 1 2 0 0 0 1 C(MartinezBS,1-1 1 WP — Ventura. two walks in 4 '/5 innings. Philadelphia10,Colorado9 4 2 2 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Noesi 1 7 7 7 1 1 Siegrist T—3:08. A—17,710(37,903). SanFrancisco4, San Diego3 23 1 0 0 1 1 BHmltncf 5 0 1 0 Bonifaccf 4 1 2 0 HBP —by Belisario (Choo), by Rienzo(Arencibia). Neshek 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Votto1b 4 0 1 0 Sweenylf 4 1 2 1 Today'sGames Seattle Miami WP — E r .Jo hnson, R os s Jr . Maness L,0-1 2 3 2 1 1 1 1 Cincinnati (Leake 2-1) at Pittsburgh(Liriano 0-3), Tigers 2, Angels1 Phillips2b 5 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 3 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi T—3:16.A—35,402 (48,114). Washington 4:05 p.m. B rucerf 5 2 2 1 Schrhltrf 5 0 2 1 A lmontcf 4 0 0 0 Yelichlf 4 1 1 0 Strasburg 6 5 2 2 1 9 Frazier3b 5 2 2 1 Scastross 5 0 1 0 L.A.Angels(Richards2-0)at Washington(Roark 1-0), DETROIT — Blmqst3b 4 0 0 0 O z u n acf 2 0 00 Rick Porcello pitched Athletics 4, Astros1 Stammen 1 0 0 0 0 0 L udwcklf 4 0 2 1 Olt3b 4 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 1 2 0 Stantonrf 3 1 0 0 4;05 p.m. Blevins 1 2 0 0 0 2 MParrp 0 0 0 0 Castilloc 5 0 1 0 Hartrf 4 1 2 0 McGeh3b 3 0 1 0 Miami (Koehle2-1) r at Atlanta(Teheran 2-1), 4:10 seven sharp innings, andDetroit R.SorianoW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Lecurep 0 0 0 0 Barney2b 2 0 0 0 BMillerpr 0 0 0 0 GJones1b 4 1 1 1 p.m. took advantage of four Los Ange- OAKLAND, Calif.— Josh Donald- HBP—byS.Miler (Werth). N .Sotoph 1 0 0 0 Wrghtp 0 0 0 0 Ackleylf 3 0 0 1 Hchvrrss 2 0 0 1 St. Louis(Lyons0-0) at N.Y.Mets(Melia 2-0),4:10 les errors. Three of those errors son homered anddoubled twice to T—3:18. A—27,653(41,408). SMrshllp 0 0 0 0 Kalishph 1 0 1 0 Smoak1b 2 0 1 1 Solano2b 4 0 1 1 p.m. M esorcc 4 2 3 1 Verasp 0 0 0 0 Frnklnss 3 0 0 0 Mathisc 2 0 0 0 Arizona (Arroyo1-1) at ChicagoCubs(TWood0-2), came on oneplay in the first inback another solid start by Jesse Cozartss 5 2 3 3 Russellp 0 0 0 0 Buckc 2 0 1 0 Sloweyp 1 0 0 0 Dodgers 4, Diamondbacks1 5:05 p.m. ning, allowing Detroit's lan Kinsler Chavez as Oakl and comple t ed a Baileyp 3 0 1 1 Rugginph 1 0 0 0 MSndrsph 1 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 San Diego(Cashner 2-1) at Milwaukee(W.Peralta Heiseyph-If 1 0 0 0 Grimmp 0 0 0 0 Maurerp 1 0 0 0 Caminrp 0 0 0 0 to score from first on a walk. Por- series sweep. JedLowrie and Eric 2-0),5:10p.m. LOS ANGELES — Yasi e l Puig hit a Viganv p 1 0 0 0 Leone p 0 0 0 0 DJnngs p 0 0 0 0 SanFrancisco(Vogelsong0-0) atColorado (J.DeLa cello allowed a runandfive hits, Sogard added two hits apiece for three-run homer for LosAngeles. Valuen 2b 1 0 0 0 B eimelp 0 0 0 0 Marmlp 0 0 0 0 Rosa0-3),5:40 p.m. striking out four and walking one. the A's. Chavez al l owed four hits Totals 4 2 8 15 8 Totals 3 6 2 11 2 Romerph 0 0 0 0 Dobbsph 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia(CI.Lee2-2) at LA. Dodgers(Maholm Dodgers starter Josh Beckett incinnati 000 3 2 0 300 — 8 Seagerph 1 0 0 0 JeBakrph 1 0 0 0 0-1), 7:10 p.m. over six innings and retired seven pitched five innings of one-hit ball, C Chicago Farqhrp 0 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 000 000 200 — 2 Los Angeles Detroit Tuesday'sGames of the final eight batters he faced. striking out sevenandwalking two. DP — Cincinnati1. LOB—Cincinnati10, Chicago Furushp 0 0 0 0 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Cincinnatiat Pittsburgh,4:05p.m. 1 4. 2B — Br uc e (3), F ra z i e r (2), Lu d w i c k (1), Me s or ac o Wlhlmsp 0 0 0 0 Shucklf 4 0 0 0 RDavislf 4 0 0 0 L.A. AngelsatWashington,4:05p.m. (6), Cozart(3), Bonifacio(4)(Kalish (2). HR —Bruce Totals 29 2 6 2 Totals 2 73 4 3 Troutcf 3 0 0 0 Kinsler2b 2 1 0 0 Houston Oakland Arizona Los Angeles Miami at Atlanta,4:10p.m. 3), Cozart(1). SB—B.Hamilton (7), Bonifacio(9). Seattle 010 100 000 — 2 Pulols1b 4 1 1 0 Micarrdh 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi St. Louisat N.Y.Mets,4:10 p.m. S—Bonifacio(2). Miami 000 010 02x — 3 IStewrt3b 4 0 1 0 VMrtnz1b 4 0 0 0 A ltuve2b 4 0 1 0 Crispcf 5 1 0 0 GParrarf 4 0 0 0 DGordn2b 4 1 1 0 Ariz onaatChicagoCubs,5:05p.m. DP — S ea ttl e 1. LOB —Seattle 6, Miami7. 2BFowl e rcf 2 0 1 0 Lowriess 3 2 2 0 IP H R E R BBSO H Kndrc2b 4 0 3 1 TrHntrrl 4 0 2 0 P nngtnss 2 0 0 0 Crwfrdlf 4 1 1 1 SanDiegoatMilwaukee,5:10 p.m. Jcastroc 3 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 4 1 3 3 Cincinnati Cano(3),Hart2 (3), Yelich (5). CS—Cano (1). SFreesedh 3 0 0 0 AJcksncf 2 1 0 0 Gldsch1b 3 1 1 0 HRmrzss 4 0 0 0 SanFranciscoatColorado, 5:40p.m. BaileyW,1-1 6 6 0 0 3 8 Maurer.SF—Ackley,Smoak,Hechavarria. Springrrf 4 0 1 0 Moss1b 3 0 1 0 Ibanezph 1 0 0 0 Cstllns3b 4 0 1 1 Monterc 3 0 1 0 AdGnzl1b 2 1 1 0 Philadelphiaat L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m. M.Parra 1-3 3 2 2 2 1 Krauss 1b 3 0 0 0 Barton 1b 0 0 0 0 H ill2b 4 0 0 0 Puigrf 3 1 1 3 IP H R E R BBSO C ongerc 3 0 0 0 Avilac 3000 12-3 0 0 0 1 0 Seattle Guzmn p h 1 b 1 0 0 0 C e s p d sl f 2 0 0 0 E chavz3b 4 0 1 1 Ethiercf 3 0 1 0 Lecure Boeschrf 2 0 1 0 AnRmnss 2 0 2 0 41-3 2 1 1 2 4 C arterdh 4 0 0 0 Gentrylf 1 0 0 0 Trumolf 2 0 0 0 C.Perezp 0 0 0 0 S.Marshal l 1 2 0 0 0 1 Maurer Cowgillph-rf 1 0 1 0 American League 11-3 1 0 0 1 2 Hoeslf 4 0 0 0 Callaspdh 4 0 1 0 Pogockcf 2 0 0 0 Howellp 0 0 0 0 Chicago Leone Aybarss 3 0 0 0 Campncf 1 0 0 0 Jansenp 0 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 MGnzlz3b 4 1 2 1 Reddckrf 4 0 1 0 Viganueva L,1-4 4 2-3 9 5 5 1 7 BeimelH,2 Totals 32 1 7 1 Totals 2 8 2 5 1 Cllmntrp 2 0 0 0 Uribe3b 2 0 0 0 W Wri g ht 1 1-3 2 0 0 0 1 V illarss 4 0 0 0 Jasoc 3 0 0 0 F arquhar H,2 2 3 0 0 0 1 0 Yankees 5, Rays1(12 innings) Los Angeles 10 0 000 000 — 1 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Fdrwczc 3 0 0 0 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 Sogard 2b 4 0 2 0 Veras 1 2 3 3 2 2 FurbushH,5 Detroit 100 001 ggx — 2 Owmgsph 1 0 0 0 Beckettp 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 3 1 5 1 Totals 3 34 103 Russell 1 0 0 0 0 1 Wilhelmsen E—Conger2 (2), H.Santiago (1), Trout(1). DPST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Dean Houston 0 00 100 000 — 1 Thtchrp 0 0 0 0 JWrghtp 1 0 0 0 Grimm 1 2 0 0 0 1 L,0-1 BS,2-2 1 0 1 1 2 0 Los Angeles1,Detroit1. LOB —LosAngeles 5,Detroit Kempcf 1 0 0 0 HBP—byBailey(Sweeney). WP —Villanueva. Anna drew abases-loaded walk on 8. 28—Boesch(1). SB—TorHunter(1), An.Romine2 Oakland 200 000 20x — 4 Miami Totals 28 1 3 1 Totals 2 8 4 5 4 T—3:50.A—27,927(41,072). E — Lo w ri e (3), Dona l d son (5). DP — H ous ton 1. Slowey 5 3 2 2 0 3 (3). CS — H .K en dr i c k (2). a full-count pitch with two outs, 0 00 000 100 — 1 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 —Houston 9, Oakland 9. 28—Altuve(3), Don- Arizona Caminero IP H R E R BBBO LOB — 4 Los Angeles 000 004 Ogx and Carlos Beltran followed with aldson2 (7), Reddick (1), Sogard(2). HR —Ma.GonDa.Jennings 1 3- 1 0 0 2 1 Los Angeles E—Federow icz (3). DP—Arizona1, LosAngeles Phillies10, Rockies 9 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 zalez (1), Don a l d son (4). SB — A ltuv e ( 8), Fo w l e r (1). Marmol 0 5 7 a two-run single during a four-run H.SantiagoL,0-3 52-3 2 2 1. LOB —Arizona5,LosAngeles2. 28—E.chayez(2), Altuve(1). M.DunnW,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 CS — A d.Gonza l e z (7). 38 — C .cra w ford (1). HR — Pu ia ( 2). 12thinning for NewYork. Yanger- Jepsen IP H R E R BBSO — Jimmy Rollins homCishekS,3-3 1 1 0 0 1 2 Kohn 1 1 0 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBSO DENVER Furbushpitchedto 1batterin the8th. vis Solarte was walked byHeath J.Smith 1 1 0 0 0 1 Houston Arizona ered early, then hit a go-ahead P eacock L, 0 -2 5 5 2 2 3 4 T — 2: 5 8. A — 20,228 (37 ,442). CollmenterL,0-2 6 5 4 4 2 6 Bell to open the12th. After failing Detroit 3 5 2 1 1 1 Delgado PorcelloW2-1 7 5 1 1 1 4 Williams 1 0 0 0 0 2 single in the eighth inning to give twice to bunt against C.J. Riefen- Krol H,4 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Oakland Thatcher 1 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia the win. Rollins finLeaders W,1-0 6 4 1 1 3 6 Los Angeles AlburquerqueH,2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 J.chavez hauser, Brett Gardner reachedon ished with three hits as thePhillies Ji.Johnson H,2 23 1 0 0 1 0 NathanS,3-5 1 1 0 0 0 2 Beckett 5 1 0 0 2 7 ThroughSunday'sGames a fielder's choice andwent to third T—3:28. A—28,921(41,681). Doolittle H,5 11 - 3 0 0 0 0 2 J.WrightW,1-0 1 1 1 1 1 1 averted a series sweep.Ryan GregersonS,3-5 1 0 0 0 0 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 C.Perez H,6 AMERICAN LEAGUE on Brian McCann's two-out single. four hits, including PB—J.castro. HowellH,5 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Howard added BATTING —AIRamirez, Chicago,.360; Colabello, Jacoby Ellsbury was intentionally Indians 6, Blue Jays4 T—2:54.A—16,382 (35,067). Jansen S,7-9 1 0 0 0 0 3 a homer and triple, and three RBls. Minnesota,.353;Mecabrera,Toronto, .345;Egsbury, J.Wrightpitchedto 2 batters inthe7th. walked before Annachecked his NewYork,.338; Solarte, NewYork,.328; Kubel, MinT—2:45. A—37,447(56,000). CLEVELAND — David Murphy hit Philadelphia Col o rado nesota,.328;Longoria,TampaBay,.324. swing to complete aneight-pitch Red Sox 6, Orioles 5 RBI — Colabello, Minnesota,20; Abreu,Chicaab r hbi ab r hbi at-bat and score the go-aheadrun. a three-run double in the sixth inReverecf 5 2 2 0 Blckmncf-If 4 2 1 1 go, 17; Brantley,Cleveland,16; Moss,Oakland, 15; Giants 4, Padres 3 ning, and John Axford worked out BOSTON — Dustin Pedroia scored DavMurphy, Cleveland,15; Puiols, LosAngeles,14; Mayrry1b 0 0 0 0 Barnesrf 4 2 3 0 Beltran had his hit off Josh Leuke AIRamirez, Chicago,14; KSuzuki, Minnesota,14. Rollins ss 4 2 3 2 CGnzlz If 4 2 1 1 of a bases-loadedjam inthe ninth from third on left fielder David before Alfonso Soriano addedan SAN DIEGO — Buster Posey hit a DOUBLES —Colabello, Minnesota,9; Donaldson, Utley2b 4 1 1 2 Stubbscf 1 0 1 0 Lough's throwing error with two for Cleveland. TheIndians entered Oakla nd,7;SPerez,KansasCity,7;Plouff e,MinnesoRBI single that made it 5-1. two-run home runand Tim LinceHoward1b 5 3 4 3 Tlwlzkss 3 2 3 1 the sixth trailing 4-2 before Murouts in the ninth inning to lift Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Mornea1b 4 1 2 5 ta, 7; Solarte,NewYork, 7; 9tiedat 6. cum earned his first victory of the TRIPLES — Aok i, K an sas C ity, 2; Ay ba r, LosAngePapelnp 0 0 0 0 Arenad3b 5 0 2 1 New York TampaBay phy delivered a linedrive past third Boston toacomebackwin.Jonny , kland,2; LMartin, Texas,2; Stewart, Los season for SanFrancisco, which Byrdrf 5 1 2 1 Rutledg2b 4 0 1 0 les,2; FuldOa ab r hbi ab r hbi base that kicked off the standsand Gomes hit a three-run homer asthe had only three hits. Angeles,2; 41 tiedat1. DBrwnlf 4 0 1 1 Pachecc 4 0 1 0 Ellsurycf 5 1 0 0 SRdrgzlf 3 0 0 0 HOMERUNB —Bautista, Toronto, 6; Pulols, Los Nieves c 5 0 1 0 Nicasio p 2 0 0 0 caromed into shallow left field, al- Red Soxovercame a5-0 deficit. Jeterss 4 0 1 0 DeJessph 1 0 0 0 Angel e s, 6; Abreu, Chicago,5; Dozier, Minnesota, 5; Asche 3b 2 0 0 0 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 ISuzukipr 0 0 0 0 JMolinc 1 0 0 0 Ban Franci s co B a n Diego lowing all three runners to score. Trout,LosAngeles, 5;8tied at4. Galvisph-3b 2 1 1 1 Dickrsnph 1 0 0 0 Annass 0 1 0 1 Zobristdh 5 0 1 0 Baltimore Boston ab r hbi ab r hbi STOLEN BASES —Andrus, Texas, 9; Altuve, RHrndzp 2 0 0 0 Loganp 0 0 0 0 Beltranrf 6 0 2 2 Forsyth2b 6 0 1 0 Pagancf 4 0 1 2 Ecarerss 4 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Houston, 8;Egsbury,NewYork, 8; RDavis, Detroit, Toronto Cleveland Hollndsp 0 0 0 0 Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 ASorindh 5 1 2 1 Longori3b 5 0 0 0 Pencerf 3 1 0 0 Venalecf 4 1 1 0 Markksrf 3 0 0 0 GSizmrcf 4 1 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Nixph 1 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 6; Dozi e r, Mi n nes ota, 5; Crisp, Oakland, 4; Florimon, Teixeir 1b 6 0 2 0 Myers rf 5 0 0 0 Poseyc 4 1 1 2 S.Smithlf 2 1 1 0 N.cruzdh 5 1 2 1 Pedroia2b 5 1 2 0 Minnesota,4; AIRamirez, Chicago, 4; Rios,Texas, 4; R eyesss 5 1 2 1 Bourncf 4 0 1 0 Rosnrgp 0 0 0 0 LeMahiph 1 0 0 0 M orself 3 0 0 0 Nadyrf 3 0 0 0 Solarte3b 4 0 0 0 Loney1b 4 1 2 0 C.Davi s 1b 3 1 0 0 D.Ortizdh 4 1 2 1 4. Mecarrlf 4 1 2 0 Swisher1b 3 0 1 1 D iekmnp 0 0 0 0 Bettisp 0 0 0 0 Villar, Houston, Blancolf 1 0 0 0 Headly3b 3 0 1 2 Gardnrlf 5 1 2 1 Guyercf 3 0 0 0 A.Jonescf 5 1 4 1 Napoli1b 3 1 0 0 ERA —Buehrle, Toronto, 0.64; Darvish, Texas, Bautistrf 3 1 1 1 Kipnis2b 3 1 0 0 Belt1b 4 0 0 0 Medica1b 3 0 0 0 GwynJph-cf 1 0 0 0 Rosarioph 1 0 0 0 BRorts2b 5 0 0 0 YEscorss 5 0 2 0 Wietersc 5 1 2 1 JGomslf 4 1 2 3 Encrncdh 4 0 0 0 CSantnc 3 1 0 0 Totals 4 0 101510 Totals 3 8 9 159 0 .82; G i b s o n , Mi nnesota,0.93;Vargas,KansasCity, Arias3b 4 0 0 0 Grandlph 1 0 0 0 JMrphyc 3 0 0 0 Hanignc 2 0 0 0 H ardyss 2 0 1 1 Carpph 1 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 Brantlylf 3 2 2 2 Philadelphia 10 2 002 320 — 10 1.24. B.Hicks2b 3 1 0 0 Hundlyc 4 1 2 1 Mccnnph-c 2 1 1 0 Joyceph-If 1 0 0 1 Frncsc1b L mrdzzph-2b2 0 0 0 Navarf 4 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 4 0 0 1 Acarerss 2 1 0 0 Colorado 1 03 020 210 — 9 NATIONAL LEAGUE Bcrwfrss 2 1 1 0 Amarst2b 1 0 0 0 Totals 4 5 5 105 Totals 4 1 1 6 1 LoughIf 5 0 1 1 Bogarts ss 4 0 1 0 E—Barnes(1)( Rutledge(1). DP—Philadelphia1. Rasmscf 4 0 0 0 DvMrprf 4 0 1 3 BATTING —Utley, Philadelphia, .406; Blackmon, Linccmp 1 0 0 0 Denorfiph 1 0 0 0 New York 000 100 000 004 — 6 Tholec 4 1 2 0 Raburndh 3 0 0 0 Schoop2b-3b4 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 LOB —Philadelphia 7, Colorado10. 28—Rollins (2), Colorado, .406;Freem Affe l d tp 0 0 0 0 Vi n c e n tp 0 0 0 0 an, Atl anta, .397; Tulowitzki, TampaBay 00 0000 100 000 — 1 F lahrty3b-ss 4 1 2 0 Holt3b 3 1 1 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Stauffrp 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0Chsnhll3b 2 1 0 0 Utley(8),Byrd(3), Nieves(2), C.Gonzalez(4), Stubbs Color ado,.393;DGordon,LosAngeles,.367;BonifaE—B.Roberts(2), Teixeira (3), Anna(1). DP—New Goins2b Totals 38 5 125 Totals 3 6 6 8 4 ph 1 0 1 0 Casillap 0 0 0 0 Alonsoph 1 0 0 0 (1), Tulowitzki 2(7), Rutledge(1). 38—Howard (1), cio, Chicago,.366;MaAdams,St.Louis,.357. York 1. LOB —NewYork9, Tampa Bay 11. 28—A. Navarr B altimore 300 0 1 1 000 — 5 R omop 0 0 0 0 Erlinp RBI — Stanton, Miami,26;Trumbo,Arizona, 18; D iaz pr 0 0 0 0 2000 Pacheco(1). HR—Rogins(3), Howard(4), Blackmon Soriano(3),Gardner (3), Forsythe(3), YEscobar(4). Totals 3 4 4 9 4 Totals 2 76 5 6 Boston 000 003 201 — 6 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 ( 2), Morneau ( 4). SB — B a r n e s ( 2 ). C S — A re n a d o (1 ). A dGonz alez,LosAngeles,17;McGehee,Miami,15; CS — I.Suzuki(1), Myers(1). S—Guyer. SF—Joyce. Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. Gyorkoph-2b 1 0 0 0 S—Rutledge.SF—Utley,D.Brown, Galvis, Morneau. Toronto 0 00 310 000 — 4 Morneau,Colorado,15;ArRamirez, Milwaukee, 15; IP H R E R BBSO Cleveland E—Lough (1), Flaherty(2), Schoop(4). LOBTotals 2 9 4 3 4 Totals 3 03 7 3 010 1 0 3 10x — 6 IP H R E R BBSO Braun,Milwaukee,14; Freeman, Atlanta,14; CGonzaNew York B an Francisco 220 000 000 — 4 Baltimore 11, Boston 9. 28 — A.Jo nes (4), Lough LOB —Toronto 9, Cleveland4. 28—Reyes (1), Philadelphia lez, Colorado,14;Rendon,Washington,14. Nuno 5 3 0 0 2 6 Brantley(4), Dav.Murphy(4). HR 002 0 0 0 100 — 3 R.Hernandez 4 (1), Flaherty(3), Pedroia(6), J.Gome s (2). HR—N. B an Diego —Brantley(3). SB9 6 6 1 3 DOUBLES —Lucroy, Milwaukee,9; MaAdams, St. DP — San Francisco 2. LOB —San Francisco 3, Hollands PhelpsH,5 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 Me.cabrera(3), Bo urn (2). CS—Kipnis (1). S—Go- Cruz(3), J.Gomes(2). SB—G.Sizemore(2), Holt (1). San 1 0 0 0 0 1 Louis, 8;Goldschmidt, Arizona, 8; Uribe,LosAngeDi e go 5. 28 — H e adle y (3). HR — P os e y (4), H unThornton 0 1 1 0 0 0 ins. SF S F — H ard y. 2-3 1 0 0 2 0 les, 8; Utley,Philadelphia,8; Ecabrera,SanDiego, —Swisher. Rosenberg WarrenBS,2-3 1 2 - 3 1 0 0 0 1 —E.cabrera(3). S—Lincecum. IP H R E R BBSO dley (1).CS IP H R E R BBBO DiekmanW2-1 1 1-3 2 2 2 0 3 7; Freeman,Atlanta, 7; AdG onzalez, LosAngeles, 7; IP H R E R BBSO BastardoH,2 Kelley 2 0 0 0 2 4 Toronto Baltimore 1 2 1 1 1 2 HRamirez,LosAngeles, 7;Tulowitzki, Colorado,7. ClaiborneW,1-0 2 1 0 0 1 2 Morrow 5134 3 3 3 5 San Francisco 5 3 2 2 2 6 Jimenez P apel b on S, 5 -6 1 1 0 0 0 0 TRIPLES — De n orfi a , San Diego,2; CGomez,MilW,1-1 6 7 3 3 3 7 TampaBay 1 3 2 0 0 2 Lincecum Loup L,1-1BS,1-1 2-3 1 3 3 3 0 BrittonH,2 waukee,2; Hechavarria, Miami,2; Rendon,WashingAffeldtH,1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Colorado C.Ramo s 5 4 1 1 1 3 Wagner M eek BS, 1 -1 12 3 0 0 0 0 1 23 1 1 1 1 0 5 7 5 4 1 5 ton, 2;Simmons, Atlanta, 2. 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Nicasio H,4 B.Gome s 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Cecil 1 3- 1 1 0 1 1 J.Lopez 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 MatuszL,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 HOMERUNS—PAlvarez, Pitsburgh, 6; Belt, San 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 BrothersH,5 H,4 McGee 11-3 0 0 0 0 3 Happ 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Casilla 1 0 0 0 0 0 O'Day L ogan BS , 1 -1 1 3 3 3 2 0 0 Francisco,6; Braun,Milwaukee,6; Stanton, Miami,6; RomoS,5-5 1 0 0 0 1 0 Jo.Peralta 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 Cleveland Boston Ottavino 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Trumbo,Arizona,6;Walker, Pittsburgh,6; 5tiedat 5. Ban Diego Balfour 2 0 0 0 0 1 Carrasco 52-3 10 5 5 4 5 Erlin L,1-2 52-3 6 4 4 3 5 Peavy BelisleL,0-2 1 3 2 2 0 0 STOLENBABEB—DGordon, Los Angeles, 10; 6 3 4 4 3 3 H.Bell L,0-1 1 1 1 1 2 2 OutmanW,3-0 1 - 3 12-3 1 0 0 0 2 A(Torres 1 0 0 0 1 Capuano Bettis 1 1 0 0 0 0 EYoung, NewYork,10;Bonifacio,Chicago,9;BHam1 0 0 0 1 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Vincent Riefenhauser 2 - 3 1 3 3 2 0 ShawH,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Tazawa ilton, Cincinnati, 7;Marte, Pittsburgh,7; Blackmon, 1 0 0 0 0 1 Nicasiopitchedto 2batters inthe6th. 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Allen H,4 Lueke 1 0 0 0 1 0 A.Miller 1 1 0 0 0 1 Stauffer pitchedto 3battersin the5th. Colorado,5; Revere, Philadelphia, 5. 1 0 0 0 0 1 R.Hernandez H.Bell pitched to1 baterin the12th. AxfordS,6-7 1 2 0 0 1 1 MulicaW,1-1 1-3 0 0 0 0 Lincecum pitchedto1 batter inthe7th. HBP —byR.Hernandez(Blackmon), byPapelbon(PaERA —Harang, Atlanta, 0.70; ESant ana, Atlanta, HBP—byO'Day(Napoli). WP—Matusz. Thornton pitchedto 2 battersinthe 7th. Morrowpitchedto1 batter inthe6th. WP — Lincecum,Romo. checo) .WP— Belisle.PB— Pacheco. 0.86; Simon,Cincinnati, 0.86; Cashner,San Diego, T—4:23.A—26,462 (31,042). T—2:55. A—11,716(42,487). T—3:32.A—33,947 (37,499). T—2:59. A—25,035(42,302). T—4:08.A—33,563 (50,480). 1.27;Sam ardziia, Chicago,1.29.


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014

O M M U N IT Y ALPINE SKIING/ SNOWBOARDING FREESKIERAND SNOWBOARD PROGRAMS:MBSEFfull-time program for freeskiers and snowboarders;through April; www.mbsef.org. SPRING SKIING:Spring skiing for high school and middle school students; early-

releaseWednesdays;transportation from school provided;April 23, 30; $80; www. bendenduranceacademy.org. JUNE ALPINE CAMP: M BSEFalpinecam pat Mt. Bachelor; June13-20; mbsef©mbsef. org, 541-388-0002. JUNE FREERIDESKI SESNOWBOARD CAMP:MBSEFfreeride ski and snowboard youth camp; at Mt. Bachelor;June13-21; mbsef©mbsef.org, 541-388-0002.

PORTS

YOUTH PROGRAMS:After-school program; Wednesdays; elementaryschoolkids, 2-5 p.m.; middle school kids, 1-4:30 p.m.; MBSEF;$75; molly@mbsef.org, 541-388-0002. MOUNTAINBIKEYOUTH PROGRAMS: After-school program;Wednesdays, May 7-June4; MBSEF;$75; mbsef©mbsef.org, 541-388-0002. SUMMER MOUNTAINBIKEPROGRAM: Sessions run for two weeks in June, July and August; MBSEF;mbsef@mbsef.org, 541-388-0002. CASCADE TRIPLECHALLENGE:Three-day weekendofroad cycling,hosted by Bowen Sports Performance;June 20-22; June 20, 50-mile ride on Crater Lake Loop; June 21, 73-mile ride on Aufderheide Scenic Driveto Belknap HotSprings; June22, 49-mile ride from Belknap Springs up Three Creeks Sno-park; $375; full supported, cost includes lodging, meals and transportation;

bowensportsperformance.com or

BASKETBALL SUMMIT GIRLSCLINIC: Summit High youth clinic for girls;June16-19;girls entering grades 2-9; 9-10:30 a.m. for grades 2-4 and

9 a.m.-noon for grades5-9; $55 for younger grades and$85 for older girls; ryan.cruz©

541-977-1321. WOMEN'S RIDES: Road rides;Thursdays; meet at Sunnyside Sports; casual pace, 25 miles to start; led by Wenzel coaches Karen Kenlan and Anne Linton.

bend.k12.or.us.

EQUESTRIAN

CYCLING

BIOMECHANICAND POSTURE CLINIC: Finding Neutral: Improving Horseand Human Posture for Increased Performance clinic;April 26-27;$300; at Weston Equine Services in Sisters; Weston Equine Services, LLC on Facebook. STILLMEMORIAL WEEKEND: Threedaysof equestrian events,May 2-4; Events include American Endurance Ride Conference rides, an American Competitive Trail Horse Association trail challenge, an Equine Trail Sports trail challenge, an Obstacle Horse Association of North America in-hand obstacle challenge, a poker rider, a mounted archery demonstration; at Skull HollowCrooked River National Grasslands in Lone Pine; www.mustangstotherescue.org.

MINI MOUNTAINBIKECLASS:Ages 6-8; bike skills and trail etiquette; two sessions, June16-July17 and July 21-Aug. 21; 8:30 a.m.-noon; www.bendenduranceacademy.

or'g.

MIGHTY MOUNTAINBIKE CLASS: Ages 9-12; bike skills and trail etiquette; two sessions,June16-July17 andJuly 21-Aug. 21;8:30 a.m.-noon; www. bendenduranceacademy.org. MOUNTAINBIKEDEVELOPMENT: Ages 13-18; three days a week,June16-Aug. 21; riding with teammates and coaches, www.

bendenduranceacademy.org.

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

ND

E

MULTI-SPORT PPP TRAINING:Specific training for the Pole Pedal Paddle; Wenzel Coaching; www.wenzelcoaching.com/ pole-pedal-paddle-training-program/. LEADMANTRI: 85-, 125-or 250-kilometer triathlons; prices start at $110; Sept.20. Race starts at Cultus Lake and finishes at Northwest Crossing; www.leadmantri.com.

NORDIC SKI MIDDLEAND HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAMS: Bend Endurance Academy;Wednesdays in April,1:30-4:15 p.m.; transportation to school and back provided by BEA; $80; www.bendenduranceacademy.org. MEMORIALWEEKENDCAMP: Youth camp; May 24-26;MBSEF;mbsef©mbsef.org, 541-388-0002. JUNE CAMP:MBSEFFire and Ice youth camp; June13-16,atMt.Bachelor,m bsef© mbsef.org, 541-388-0002.

RUNNING MOM'S RUNNINGGROUP:Rain or shine, 3-4.5-mile runs;Thursdays,9:30a.m .; outside FootZone; lisa.nasr@me.com,

angela©foot zonebend.com. ROBE RUN:Bath robe/pajama costume fun run;April 24, 5:30 p.m.; free; leave from FootZone and finish at Crow's Feet Commons;free doughnuts and chocolate milk for participants; RSVP at www.

footzonebend.com.

SISTERS "BETTERHALF" MARATHON:Third annual half marathon and quarter marathon;April 26, 9 a.m.; in Sisters; $25 for quarter marathon, $40 for half marathon, $60 for relay teams; www.sistershalfmarathon.com, ruandracesisters@gmail.com. LIGHTOF HOPESUPERHERO RUN: Famil yfriendly fun run/walk; routes of 5K and10K; 1K kids run;April 27, 9 a.m.; $30; www. lightofhoperun.org.

JUNGLERUN:Central Oregon Community College Jungle Run; 4-mile trail run or 2-mile trail walk with mud bogs, log crossings and steepascentsand descents;May22,5:30

p.m.; $5; register at race. STORM THE STAIRS: Central Oregon Community College's Storm the Stairs run/ walk;June 6,5:30 p.m.; starts at CDCCtrack;

$5. SMITH ROCKTRAIL RACES:Trail races at Smith Rock State Park;June14, 7:45 a.m.; 50K, 15-mile, and 4-mile options; $35-$85; free kids run; www.smithrockascent.com/ trail. SMITH ROCKROAD RACES: Road races at Smith Rock State Park;June15, 7 a.m.; 5K, 10K, and half marathon options; www. smithrockascent.com/trail. STRENGTHCLASSFORRUNNERS: Beginner/Intermediate class,Thursdays, 6:30 p.m.; Intermediate/advanced class, Thursdays, 5:30 p.m.;through May29; $96; at Rebound Physical Therapy's Bend Westside Clinic; 541-419-8208. ADVENTURERUNNING: Runsfrom 3.5 to 5 miles long over trails, roads, parks at10- to12-minute-mile pace;first and thirdWednesdays of each month, 6 p.m.; run location changes, email laura@ footzonebend.com. for locations; dress warm and bring a headlamp. REDMOND OREGON RUNNINGKLUB (RORK):Weekly run/walk; Saturdays at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for more information and to be added to a weekly email list, email Dan Edwards at rundanorun19©yahoo.com; follow Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook. REDMONDRUNNINGGROUP: Weekly runsonTuesdaysat6:30 p.m.;meetat314 S.W. Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; pia@ runaroundsports.com; 541-639-5953. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30 p.m.onTuesdays;with Max King; locations vary; interval-based; all ability levels; max© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568.

MOVE ITMONDAYS: Mondaysat5:30 p.m.; carpool from FootZone to trailhead when scheduled (first and third Mondays of each month); all other runs start and finish at FootZone, downtown Bend; 3-5 miles; paces 7-12 minutes per mile; melanie© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. NOON TACORUN: W ednesdaysatnoon; meetat FootZone, downtown Bend; order a Taco Stand burrito before leaving and it will be ready upon return; teague© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. GROWLERRUN:Group run of 3-5 miles; Thursdays, 6 p.m.; leave from Fleet Feet and finish with a shared growler of beer from Growler Phil's; free; 541-389-1601. CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUN: Thursdays; 5:30 p.m.; locations vary; call Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more information. WEDNESDAY RUNS: Fleet Feet"s 3-5 mile "Run this Town" run, Wednesdays, 6 p.m.; free; 541-389-1601.

TABLE TENNIS BEND TABLE TENNIS CLUB: Evening play Mondays;6-9 p.m. (setup 30 minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost $60; at Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; drop-in fee, $3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; club membership available to those who donate $100 or more; Jeff at 541-480-2834; Don at 541-318-0890; Sean at 267-6146477;bendtabletennis©yahoo.com; www. bendtabletennis.com.

TENNIS MIXED DOUBLESTOURNEY: Sage Springs Club and Spa Mixed Doubles Tournament; April 26-27;NTRP combined7.0,8.0 and 9.0; bharrington©destinationhotels.com, 541-593-7890. SUMMIT CLINIC:Youth clinic for ages 6-14; at Summit High tennis courts;July 7-10; 8:30-9:45 a.m. for ages 6-9 and10-11:45 a.m. for ages10-14; coed; $65; ryan.cruz© bend.k12.or.us.

COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF

COMMUNITY SPORTS

MMA

Oregon SeniorGamesare back in Bendafter10 years

Zane Viles earned asilver medal in the parallel bars (Level 5, age7-8); Nathan Vezinawas the runner-up LOCal fighter imPrOVeS to 5-0 — Redmond's in the floor exercise (Level 5, 9-10); andTravis Fields Colton Howard topped Denver fighter Andrew Lipp on placed second in the parallel bars (Level 7,13 and April12 at the BendBudofights to improve to 5-0 on over). En route to his second-place all-around finish, his career. Howard wonwhat was scheduled to bea Davis took second in the floor exercise, third in the five-round fight when the referee stopped thematch rings, fourth in the vault, and second onthe parallel in the fourth round. bars.

By Beau Eastes

SNOWBOARDING

RODEO

The Bulletin

LOCalnamedto U.S. halfPiPe rOOkieteam

Mote WinS aVerage at NatiOnal CirCuit Fi-

are back after a 10-year ab-

— Bend's NateJacobson hasbeen invited to participate on the U.S.Snowboard halfpipe rookie team. Jacobson, who rides locally with the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, placed sixth at the 2013USASA nationalchampionships.Jacobsonconcluded the 2013-14snowboard seasonwith a bronze medal at the USASA open class nationals halfpipe.

h8IS —Bobby Mote, a part-time resident of Culver, won the barebackaverage at the RamNational Circuit Finals Rodeo inGuthrie, Okla., on April12. Mote recorded 165 points on two head inthe first and second rounds of the NCFR, earning $4,525. He also put together solid rides in the semifinals (81 points, second, $4,113) and finals (84 points, tie for first, $4,113).

GYMNASTICS Area baySmedal at regiOnal ComPetitlOll —Acrovision's Blaine Davis won the pommel horse event in the Level 9boys 13and over division at the Men's Gymnastics Region III meet at Lewis 8 Clark College in Portland on April12 and13. Davis, who placed second in theall-around in his division, highlighted a strong showing by Bendgymnasts.

RUGBY BlueS Win Dii the rOad —The BendBlues topped The Valley Rams26-17 in McMinnville on Saturday in a Rugby OregonClub match. Keegan Bloss led the Blues with two tries and three conversions. TheBlues are back on the roadthis Saturday at Pendleton. — Bulletin staff report

COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD Bowling Leagueleadersandhigh scores Lava Lanes,Bend March 31-Apru6 CASINOFUN— TheGang;DanMcDonald224/598; EdieRoebuck168/480

Hls ANDHERs—Ican't believe it's notGutter; Jayme Dahlk e264//46;BrandiMcclennen227/580

GUYS ANDGALS—TheWeakest Link; Mikecaisse 289/6 87;Kimberl ysoto220/58e LAVALANEs GLAsslc — Team12; Dave vianelle 300/7 71;Bevsunderlin234/623 TEATIMERS— 6endVFW;DebbieSmith204/541 LATEC OMERS — No Threat; Christine Moberly 213/532 FREEBREATHERS— Team 4;Jim Whi tson258pt4; SandyWeaver238/556 GREASEDLIGHTENING — Mark itDude;Rueben

The Oregon Senior Games sence, and the city of Bend is excited to play host. "We're thrilled to be r e-

viving the Oregon Senior Games and bringing them to Bend for the first time," says

Kevney Dugan of Visit Bend, which is helping put on the Olympics-style event. "This is an amazing opportunity to present a competitive yet fun and social event to an older

for the 2015 National Senior Games in St. Paul, Minn. Registration costs are as low

and the rest of the Philadel-

three-minute span in the first

phia Flyers. Emery stood in again for in-

period as Boston evened its playoff series at 1-1. Canadiens 3, L i ghtning 2 : MONTREAL —

Bourque scored l l

Kathy Willens /The Associated Press

Philadelphia goalie Ray Emery makes one of his 31 saves.

on that. I've had leads before

and I've been down before so it's just kind of a consistent

s e conds

into the game, and Brendan Gallagher broke a 1-1 tie 18:10

want," the 31-year-old Emery

Philadelphia no longer has to hear about its nine-game

our shoulders, to come inhere and get th e split," Schenn

approach." losing streak at M a dison said. "Going back home, Luke Schenn scored the go- Square Garden in which the we feel a bit better about ahead goal in the second pe- Flyers were outscored 35-10 ourselves." riod after Jakub Voracek and and never had more than two Henrik Lundqvist stopped Jason Akeson got the Flyers goals in any game. 21 shots after a 14-save win"That's a huge weight off ning effort in the opener. even at 2.

set for 11 a.m., June 22, at

contest, are also offered. Ore- Riverbend Park. gon is an "open" state, so men Participation and women from al l

es t i m ates o v er for the event vary, but the

the country are welcome to participate.

state of Washington, which has been holding its senior games in Olympia for the past 17 years, reportedly

W hile most events a r e

Find It All

into the second period. P.K.

Subban had two assists for the Canadiens. Sharks 7, Kings 2: SAN JOSE, Calif. — Fourth-liners Mike Brown and Raffi Torres

Plae Well, Retire Well

Online bendbulletin.COm 775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0321 wwwelevationcapital biz

T

ALL,NEW STATEOF — THE ART DEALERSHIP!

T o mas

Plekanecscored at 5:43 ofthe thirdperiod, and Carey Price made 27 savesto give Montreal a 3-0 series lead. Rene

whether it's going well or you don't get off to the start you said. "I play with a system in there, and I just kind of rely

J u stin F l orek

OIS

"I try to stay even-keeled,

The bulkoftheOregon Senior Games competition then kicks off on June 19, when

as $5 for some events, and up still two months away, the to $140 for the 36-hole golf cycling portion of the Ore- expects nearly 2,000 particitournament at Lost Tracks gon Senior Games will be pants for its event in July. and Widgi Creek golf cours- May 24 as part of the Bend Registration is now open es. While traditional sports Don't Brake road race east for all events.

and Reilly Smith scored in a

ers 4-2 on Sunday to even the first-round playoff series.

ation east of Bend.

a three-person bat-and-ball

BOSTON —

and beat the New York Rang-

games, at the Central Oregon Shooting Sports Associ-

June 22. Competitions in 16 different sports will b e of-

was three years in the making for backup goalie Ray Emery

31 saves tohelp the Flyers rally from an early two-goal deficit

course, will be June 14, a week before the rest of the

such as cycling, swimming, pickleball at Pine Nursery running and softball make Park gets things underway up most of the senior games, at 8 a.m. The senior games events like cowboy action run through the weekend, shooting and over the line, and closing ceremonies are

In other games Sunday: Bruins 4, Red Wings 1:

jured Steve Mason and made

of pistols, rifles and shotguns on a Western-themed

playground." Open toparticipants age 50 and older, the Oregon Senior Games will take place primarily from June 19 through

Flyersevenseriesasit headsto Philadelphia NEW YORK — This win

cally use some combination

Bend as the ultimate outdoor

NHL ROUNDUP

The Associated Press

When:June19-22 Where:Bend Web:http:I/www.visitbend.com/Bend Oregon Activities Recreation/ Oregon-Senior-Games Note:Cycling takes place May 24 aspart of the Bend Don't Brake road race,and cowboy action shooting is scheduled for June14.

set of visitors that showcases

fered, with the top four finishers in most events qualifying

pierce258//41;vonnieGreen170/420 REJECTS — OldGeezers;DougGray255/698;Hazel Keeton244/590 WEDNE SDAYINC—Eyeof theNeedle; Garry Baglien 279/783;MichelleSmith 270/774 TNT— DaveGrimes257/692;LydiaSmith213/488 PROGRESSIV E— Y'sGuys;Jim Lanier256/684 TG.I.F.— Badtot heBone;BryanMeeker258/697; shari Hamel 212/601

of town. Male cyclists will race five laps of the 9.9-mile course (49.5 miles) and female competitors will race three laps (29.7 miles). Cowboy action shooting, in which competitors typi-

OregonSenior Games

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scored second-period goals to spark a San Jose comeback. Justin Braun, Patrick Marleau, Joe Pavelski, Logan Couture

and Joe Thornton also scored for the Sharks.

SMOLlt:HVOLVO.cow


MONDAY, APRIL 21,2014 • THE BULLETIN

NBA PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP

B5

NBA COMMENTARY

u rs a e ame, u The Associated Press

are

San Antonio's

SAN ANTONIO — The Spurs

Tim Duncan shoots over Dallas' Monta Ellis in the first quar-

rode the wide shoulders of Tim Duncan to victory.

The Mavericks were not going to let San Antonio beat them with 3-pointers, and they did not want

ter. Duncan

Tony Parker using the lane as his personal playground. So the vetjury scareto score 27 points.The Spurs held Dallas to one field goal

scored 27 points in the Spurs' 90-85 win over Dallas on

in the final seven minutes to rally

Sunday.

for a 90-85 win Sunday in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series.

Eric Gay/The Associated Press

eran Duncan overcame a brief in-

plays (defense), rebounds, scores here and there. He just does his job." Parker had 21 points, and Manu Ginobili added 17. Kawhi Leonard had 11 points and 10 rebounds

and Tiago Splitter pulled down 11 rebounds for top-seeded San An-

Despite early upsets, history shows lowseeds rarely succeed

tonio, which has won 10 straight

against Dallas. Devin Harris scored 19 points for the Mavericks.

In other games Sunday:

t

f the playoff-bound Atlanta Hawks were in

any other sport, they might have a glimmer of hope for winning a championship.

The NBA?

Heat 99, Bobcats 88: MIAMI

No way. More than the NFL ,

that stretch, their lone field goal

LeBron James scored 27 points, Dwyane Wade added 23 and Miami used a late charge to beat Charlotte in Game 1. Chris

coming with less than a second

Bosh scored 13 points and James

Baseball, the

remaining. San Antonio won despite going 3 for 17 on 3-pointers and getting only 23 points from its normally

Jones had 12 for the Heat. Kemba W alker scored 20 points for the Bobcats, who led by nine early and led again in the third.

cream of the regular season in the NBA always seems to rise

potent bench. "We got killed on 3s in the first

Wizards 103, Bulls 92: CHICAGO — Nene dominated with 24 points, Trevor Ariza scored 18,

have been claimed by teams that had at least

T he M a vericks a l s o w e n t scoreless for 5 t/~ minutes during

four outings this year," Mavericks star Dirk Nowitzki said. "It

San Antonio coach Gregg Popo- and fifth-seeded Washington was no secret; we stayed home a 4-for-5 shooting from the paint in vich said. "He's the base from rallied from 13 down to win its little more on 3-point shooters, the final quarter to help the Spurs which everything else occurs, playoff opener. John Wall scored but you've got to give them some- overcome a 10-point deficit. whether he's scoring or not. It 16 in his postseason debut. Mar"Timmy, he's not going to score just gives us a comfort level and cin Gortat added 15 points and 13 thing, and Duncan in there is obviously still solid." 24 a game or anything like that," a point from which to operate. He rebounds. Duncan scored nine points on

-

.~

PAUL

NEWBERRY to the top of the rim come playoff time. In the past two decades, all but three titles the fourth-best overall record in the league. So

maybe the two-time defendingchampion Miami Heat have some reason to worry: They were No. 5 this season.

"For the mostpart," Atlanta's Kyle Korver said

Friday, "the best team wins." The Hawks, therefore, have no chance, even

after a Game 1 win Saturday against top-seeded Indiana. Not with the worst record (38-44) among the playoff qualifiers. Not in this league, which tends to weed out the sort of surprisesyou see in the one-and-done NCAA tournament-

NOTEBOOK

where a No. 7 seed (Connecticut) beats a No. 8 seed (Kentucky) for the championship. Or in the NFL, where a team getting hot at the right time

NHA a mits re error

can springam ajorsurpriseon therightday. The NBA is best-of-seven through four grueling rounds; but, then again, so is the NHL, which also requires 16 playoff wins to take the championship. Baseball, for that matter, has the same format for its league championship series and World Series. Why, then, do those leagues producefarmore surprise champions than the NBA?

"There's not a hockey goalie who can get hot or a pitcher who can be dominating and change a series," Hawks coach Mike Budenholzer the-

orized. "In the NBA, it's hard to go against the numbers. It just doesn't happen as often." If you're going by the numbers, top overall seed San Antonio (62-20) or Oklahoma City (the next-best record at 59-23) are the most likely

Bulletin wire reports The NBA issued a statement Sunday that said Los

Angeles Clippers point guard Chris Paul w as

teams to be celebrating after the final game.

c,'

fouled by Golden State for-

ward Draymond Green when he lost control of the ball and should have been awarded two free throws duringGame 1on Saturday.

g4

'f"

I

That's not to say LeBron James & Co. might as well call it a season. In an interesting twist, the last champion to finish outside the top four

I

duringthe regular season was ... the Heat. That was in 2006, before the Big Three unit-

ed in south Florida. Led essentially by Dwyane W ade, Miami went 52-30duringtheregularseason and finished second in the East, a staggering

"Just prior to the ball go-

ing out of bounds, Paul was fouled by Green and Paul should have been granted

12 games behind Detroit. But the Heat upset the

8/J'

two free throws," the NBA statement said. "Contact

preceding out of bounds calls is not a reviewable

top overall seed in the conference finals, then beat Dallas for the title. '

Still, history shows that's a major anomaly in the NBA. Over the entire history of the league,

,

stretching back to 1947 when it was known as the Basketball Association of America, the

matter." For the Clippers, it was

teams with the most regular-season victories

too little, too late to hear

have hoarded32 championships. Those at No. 2

g )' '-t

that the league office was being transparent about

have finished on top 18 times, a staggering 50 of 67titles. "With all due respect to a good question," said

its officials missing a call during Los Angeles' 109-

Dallas coach Rick Carlisle, whose Mavericks were the last team to qualify in the West, "it's a

105 loss to Golden State.

"We still had opportuni-

question to ask some other historian."

OK, here goes. Beyond the top four, there's not much reason

ties to win," Paul responded

about the league's admission. "When the ball went

for hope — a mere five titles in NBA history.

The fifth-best team has pulled out a couple:

out of bounds, I knew it was off me. It felt like it was

a foul, though."

the aforementioned Heat and the 1969 Boston Celtics, the last hurrah for the NBA's greatest

4

The officials looked at

dynasty. Detroit had only the sixth-best record

the replay monitor to make sure the ball went off Paul,

Pk Portland's Damian Lillard goes upfor two of his 31 points as Francisco Garcia defends during the second quarter

ly known as the Washington Bullets was eighth bestbefore a surprisingrun to the championship in 1978. And, finally, there's the Houston Rock-

Sunday night. The Trail Blazers won 122-120 in overtime.

ets, who were sixth in the West and 10th overall

a warding the ball to t h e

Warriors. "It doesn't change it. It

Photos tty David J. Phillip /The Associated Press

before they won the crown in 1995.

doesn't make me feel any

better," Clippers Coach Doc Rivers said about the NBA's ruling. " But I d o think it's a good thing to do. I think they (the NBA) take ownership."

Popovich to Sager I promise I'll be nice' S an

A n t o ni o Sp u r s

ton's Jeremy Lin for a loose ball during the fourth quarter. Lin came off the bench to score14 points for the Rockets.

Houston, and Howard grabbed 15

rebounds. Houston could have tied it, but Harden missed a short jump shot at

for leukemia. So his son,

cia and Howard both made oneof two free throws after that to give

The younger Sager, a sports reporter in Atlanta,

Portland's Mo Williams battles Hous-

Continued from B1 James Harden and D wight Howard each scored 27 points for

the buzzer. He had missed a 3-pointer on H ouston's second-to-last possession. It was a physical game with the teams combining for 79 free throws. A three-point play by Lillard gave

after the third quarter.

But even that last one wasn't a huge shocker:

Blazers

coach Gregg Popovich says he looks forward to sideline reporter Craig Sager's return and "I promise I'll be nice." TNT's Sager is missing the NBA playoffs as he undergoes treatment Craig Sager Jr., filled in for Sunday's broadcast of San Antonio's playoff opener against Dallas, asking Popovich a few questions

Portland a one-point lead with 44.5

seconds remaining. Francisco Gar-

have gone on to win the Super Bowl. During thatsame span,there have been justas many champions from the wild-card ranks. More recently, there was a run of three straight titles by

lar-season record as those who didn't even crack

Aldridge fouled out when he

the top four (six apiece). Most notably, the Los Angeles Kings celebrated in 2012 after being

knocked Patrick Beverley to the floor setting a pick with 1:04 left in

the very last team to make the playoffs out of the

overtime. An emotional Aldridge

Western Conference, with only the 13th-best record overall.

Portland a 116-114 lead before he

at 104-all before Harden put Hous-

"We miss you. You've been an important part of all of us for a long time, doing a great job. We want your fanny back on the court, and I promise I'll be nice."

five teams with the best regular-season record

later.

A 3-pointer by Lillard had tied it

this message for his father:

This sort of top-end dominance isn't as pro-

nounced in the other major team sports. In the NFL over the past two decades, only

Houston a 120-119 lead 20 seconds

A dunk by Robin Lopez gave

standing here." Popovich then shared

and Clyde Drexler. Not exactly some Cinderella team thatcaught everyone offguard.

Of the last 20 Stanley Cup winners in the

suggestions but was told,

I'd rather have your dad

future Hall of Famers in Hakeem Olajuwan

NHL, therehave been the same number of champions that finished with the best regu-

said he asked his father for

"You did a great job," Popovich said to him, "but

The Rockets were showing their age, but they were the defending champs and had a pair of

teams that had no better than the eighth-best record during the season, a streak finally broken this year by the top overall team, the Seattle Seahawks.

continued to yell at the referees even after he went to the bench.

"You're on your own."

before it won the title in 2004. The team former-

In baseball, the St. Louis Cardinals slipped

into the playoffs in 2006, also with just the 13thbest record overall, and went on to claim an

fouled out seconds later. Howard ton up with two free throws. Almade both free throws to tie it. dridge's tip-in with 2.9 seconds left

Portland trailed by 11 when it used a 9-2 spurt to get within 73-69 with about two minutes left in the third quarter. Aldridge started the

Houston scored the first seven points of the fourth quarter with the first four from Howard to make it 86-73. But Portland used a 10-0 run, with the help of the Hack-A-How-

run with four points and Wesley Matthews finished it off by scoring the last five and capping it with a dunk on a fast break. The Rockets had a four-point

make the postseason but benefited from a weak dlvlslon.

ard defense of intentionally fouling the center, to tie it at 98 with 2:46

remaining. Howard missed four straight free throws as Portland cut the deficit.

tied it at 106. Houston had a chance to win it in regulation, but Harden's

shot was off. Howard and Jeremy Lin both

made three-point plays to start overtime before Aldridge and Nico- lead early in the third quarter when las Batum hit consecutive 3s to tie it Harden heated up, scoring 10 points backup. of a 12-3 run which extended HousHouston led 79-73 entering the fourth quarter.

ton's advantage to 66-53 with 7 '/~

minutes left in the period.

improbable World Series title. Heck, they had

a worse record than five teams that didn't even In those other leagues, you soundmorebelievable when you say everyone starts 0-0 at playoff time.

In the NBA, most teams have already been eliminated.

Before they even play a game. Paul Newberry is a columnist with The Associated Press.


B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014

T EE TO

REEN

o stem an exo us, o ers ret in rues

GOLF ROUNDUP

uC al'S CI

ea s

• Sport's leaders aretrying gimmicks in order to get morepeople onthe course "We've got to stop scaring people away from golf by teII GREENSBORO, Ga.— Golf ing them that there is only one holesthesizeofpizzas. Soccer way to play the game and it balls on the back nine. A mul- includes these specific guideligan on every hole. lines," said Ted Bishop, presBy Bill Pennington

New York Times News service

The Associated Press HILTON HEAD I S LAND, S.C. Matt Kuchar saw his well-struck 5-iron

These are some of the mea- i d ent of the PGA of America, who also owns a

-

on the 18th hole at the RBC Heritage come up way short of the target and settle in a front bunker.

"Well," he thought as he walked to-

ward the shot, "there are a lot worse

places to be." For Kuchar, therewas no betterplace He followed with a stunning chip-in on Harbour Town Golf Link's closing lighthouse hole to overcome a four-shot

deficit for a one-stroke victory and end nearly a month of Sundays where he end.

r. " ' • 4K

*

r

as

3

ald, who had his third second place and

'

~

Stephen B. Morton /The Associated Press

Matt Kuchar celebrates after making birdie from the bunker on the18th green to win

years. the final round of the RBC Heritage in Hilton Head Island, S.C., Sunday. Kuchar won the Donald's latest chance ended after tournament with an 11-under per. Kuchar's winning chip. He hit it solid, felt it was a good line and watched it rat-

tlehome. "Iheard the crowd go crazy,"

hoped the momentum would carry into

is enough to get it done on Sundays. It's

Kuchar said. "Then I went crazy." Kuchar punched theair to celebrate,

Harbour Town.

tough to win out here and hats off to Matt

"It's awfully sweet to have another

grabbed his cap and swung it around to chance," Kuchar said. the cheers of the crowd. It was Kuchar's seventh career PGA Tour victory. He

Kuchar made up the four shots on

for a superb round." Donald was at 10-under 274 after his

69.

earned $1.044 million and his first tro-

Donald with seven birdies in his first 10 Ben Martin, who turned pro in 2010, holes. Then nearly gave away another shot 67 to finish tied for third at 9 under

phy since the Memorial last June.

tournament when he three-putted from

It also followed a stretch of golf were Kuchar was in contention nearly every

less than eight feet away at the par-3 Also on Sunday: 17th, a bogey that dropped him into a tie Jimenez closes with 67 to win Greater for the top spot — and set up the dramat- Gwinnett: DULUTH, Ga. — Miguel Anic 72nd hole. gel Jimenez held off Bernhard Langer

week.

He was two shots behind winner Steven Bowditch at the Texas Open on March 30, then lost a playoff at the Hous-

"I was in a little bit of shock," Kuchar

with John Huh, who shot 68.

to win the Greater Gwinnett Champi-

est-ranked golfer here, could've taken

said. "But I think I did a good job of shak- onship, becoming only the third player ing things off." to lead from start to finish in his ChamDonald had two holes to catch Kuchar pions Tour debut. Jimenez, coming off a fter the chip but couldn't do it. He a fourth-place finish in the Masters, missed a 28-foot birdie putt at the 17th closed with a 67 to finish two strokes hole, then saw his own try at a chip-in ahead of Langer. Jimenez finished the birdie slide past the cup. tournament with 32 consecutive holes " Finishing second isn't what I w a s without a bogey at TPC Sugarloaf. Jay hoping for," he said. "Disappointed, ob- Haas shot 67 and was third, four shots viously, not to have won. Usually a solid off the lead. Fred Couples shot 70 and

a break like other top competitors, but

69 on a windy day with a two-shot lead

ton Openaweek lateron MattJones'42yard chip in. Kuchar was in the mix at Augusta Na-

tional a week ago, having a share of the lead on Sunday before a four-putt double bogey at the fourth hole dropped him from contention.

Kuchar, at No. 6 in the world the high-

Kah-Nee-Ta Continued from B1 Kah-Nee-Ta rests at the bot-

tom of a steeply walled canyon about 11 miles from the town

of Warm Springs, creating a unique landscape for a golf course, at least in these parts. The serenity of the setting

with to stop play- to intrOduCe

have to do some-

rich

came close to a title only to lose at the

fifth top-three finish here in the past six

large Indiana golf complex. "We've got to o ffer more forms of golf for people to try. We

ers from quitting the game. G off has al ways reveled in its standards and

— and no better shot in the tournament.

Kuchar shot a 64 to finish at 11-under par 273, one stroke ahead of Luke Don-

sures - some would say gimmicks — that golf "Little League courses across bB SebB// jS Bri the country have experimented exBmP/e Of /IO®

County.) "You can come out here and zip through in an hour and a half if you are riding (in a cart)," Rauschenburg says. "If you are walking, maybe two." Havingthat kind of freedom

was fourth.

SOmeOAe

tr a d i t ion.

thing to get them i nto th e f o l d, 'tO B gBme and then maybe Wi th d iffe r e nt they'l l h a ve this eqUj pmerI t ~QB11 idea it's supposed to be fun."

But increasing- t/ 7e SOP/I IStlCBted ly a victim of its Pl a yerS uSe. We u image and S/IOU/d B/SO be a hidebound ways' t / k ~ bo t golf has lost 5 million players in Uri CO1I Veri t:101I B/ the past decade, gO/f Orl SC/IOO/ 1 accord~ng to the fj e / dS O N ational G o l f Foundation, with ba C kyardS. That 20 percent of the mjghg Qe t.he 25 million golfers apt to quit m the be S t.WBQfOI' klCfS next few years. Bnd b e g i n n e rS to Prospective /e B r ri B II~B ~ • players younger than 35 have es-

Amon g the ncon v e ntionI type s of golf is an en ry eve

version f eaturing h oles that are 5 inc h es wide, about four times t he width o f

a

stan d ard hole. A 15-inch-hole event was h eld

here at the Reynol d s Pl a ntation resort lastMon-

day. It featured

— ArlenKantarian to p

p r o fessional

pecially spurned golfers S e rgio the game, saying Garcia and Justin it takes too long to play, is too Rose, the defending U.S. Open difficult to learn and has too champion. "A 15-inch hole could help many tiresome rules. Many of golf's leaders are junior golfers, beginning golfso convincedthat the sport ers and older golfers score is in danger of following the better, play faster and like golf baby boomer generation into more," said Garcia, who shot a the grave that an internal 6 -under-par 30 for nine holes rebellion has led to alterna-

i n the exhibition.

tive forms of golf with new Ro s e said he was planning equipment, new rules and t o use an expanded hole to radical changes to courses. reintroduce the game to his The goal is to alter the game's 5-year-old son, who rejected reputation in order to recruit the game recently after he had lapsed golfers and a younger tired of failing at it. demographic. See Exodus /B8

golf course and the modest clubhouse. Kah-Nee-Ta also

has a medium-sized practice putting green. The clubhouse has a fully stocked pro shop, and during the summer the course opens a reasonably priced snack bar. Though Kah-Nee-Ta's casino is now 11 miles away in

to play at your own pace is not common in Central Oregon, particularly during the peak is reason enough to make the of the golf season. So it can be Warm Springs, the resort is hour-plus drive from Bend to exhilarating to whip through a just up the hill from the course Kah-Nee-Ta, if a golfer has the round in seemingly no time. and has both a hotel and an time. The turf at Kah-Nee-Ta Of course, none of that RV park, with pools, horsealso tends to green up earlier would matter if the track itself back riding and tennis. in spring than at many of Cen- was no fun to play. tral Oregon's other courses beHighlighted by slick greens Verdict cause of its relatively mild mi- that get dialed in by the middle croclimate. And perhaps most of March, Kah-Nee-Ta defiThe course has a quirky deimportant for a golfer, because nitely has its strong points. sign, to be sure. play here is typically light, you The 418-yard, par-4 ninth But the serene setting, quick s can feel like you have the en- hole with a pond and a foungreens and light play on the tire 6,352-yard, par-72 layout tain fronting the green, the course m a k e K a h - Nee-Ta to yourself. sneaky-difficult, 1 7 4-yard, Andy Tullis i The Bulletin worth the drive. "If you play more than four par-3 10th hole, and the weav- Trees and green grass surround the green on the sixth hole at Kah-Nee-Ta Golf Course. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, hours you should be bowling," ing 17th, which forces apzhall@bendbulletin.com jokes Joe Rauschenburg, who proach shots to be played over is in his 17th season (spread the Warm Springs River to a forgiving than the back nine, tion,some treesand,ofcourse, course. Play it safe and wait over two tenures) as the head tiny green, are the best on the b ut for th e m ost part, t h e the Warm Springs River. The for scoring opportunities on professional at Kah-Nee-Ta. course. course is ideal for players who third shot is a tough one, forc- the three par 5sand the short "We are a four-hour course no Kah-Nee-Ta does have some struggle to keep the ball in ing a perfect placement on par-4 13th hole. P tt.re. &md.6 t"o. matter how you look at it." quirky holes, like the 334- play at some of Central Ore- your second shot for a clear He should have said four yard, par-4 fifth hole, with an gon's most difficult layouts. look at the small green on the Off the course hours or less. extremely elevated green that Though the Warm Springs other side of the river. Kah-Nee-Ta's driving range Bend Since the Indian Head Ca- spells doom for anyone who River runs alongside KahHowever, do not sleep on sits atop a hill overlooking the Redmond sino was relocated from Kah- ventures to its left. But over- Nee-Ta,it becomes a forced No. 10, which is among the John Day Nee-Ta's resort grounds to all the playing experience at carry only on the par-5 17th toughest little par 3s you will Warm Springs in 2012, the Kah-Nee-Ta is enjoyable, if a hole. In fact, water of any kind find anywhere. Burns weekday golf traffic that has bit uneven. is not a factor with the excepLakeview always been sparse at the golf Besides, with rates that in- tion of the par-4 ninth hole and How to approach the course EVERGREEN La Pine course has thinned even more, clude unlimited play for the the par-5 14th. And trees only Playing Kah-Nee-Ta is alIn-Home Care Servlcss Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541.382.6447 day — allowing for an almost rarely come into play on the most like playing two different Rauschenburgsays. 541-3S9-0006 bendurology.com www.evergreentnhome.com When I played here on a re- unfathomable number of holes lightly wooded layout. courses. cent 'Iiiesday morning, it was to be played — what is there to O ut-of-bounds areas a r e Designed in 1972 by Wilthe busiest weekday so far this complain about? present on the majority of liam F. Bell, a prolific West "You come out this far," the 18 holes. But even most of Coast architect who also deyear. That meant a smattering of Rauschenburg says, "you those border on just one side signed famed Torrey Pines cars in the parking lot at any should be able to play as much of the fairway, leaving plenty Municipal Golf Course in La one time, and for me it meant as you like." of room to bail out on the op- Jolla, Calif., the front nine for playing 13 holes by myself in posite side. the most part is the far more about two hours with bare- Difficulty of course forgiving side at Kah-Nee-Ta. ly an interruption. (My first At 6,352 yardsfrom the Favorite hole Be aggressive to take adfive holes were played con- back tees, Kah-Nee-Ta is not a Simply put, the 515-yard, vantage of the front's relativeExtro discount on 2014 orders siderably slower with a lei- long course. And its distance par-5 17th hole happens to be ly short 2,980 yards. for Spring Delivery surely threesome of friendly from the red tees — 5,195 among my favorite par 5s in The back nine, designed residents of the tiny town of yards — makes it manageable the region. in 1976 by legendary Central Maupin, about a 4 5 -minute for novices. The hole weaves in and Oregon professional Gene 222 SE Reed Market Road 5 4 1 - 388-0022 drive away in central Wasco The front nine is far more around a hill, native vegeta- "Bunny" Mason, is a position

aj B~ dc

Patlo kYor ld "Early Bird Special"


MONDAY, APRIL 21,2014 • THE BULLETIN

87

GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletinwelcomescontributions to its Jim Wyzard/PhyllisRice,34.7. 3, BobRingering/Betty weekly localgolf results listingsandevents Cook,35.9. calendar. Clearly legible items should be SundayGroupPlay, April13 faxed to the sports deparlment, 841-385StrokePlay 0831, emailed to sportsObendbulletin.com, Gross:1(tie), SpudMiler, 73;DennyStory, 73. ormailedtoP.G.Box6020;Bend,GR97708. 3rd Gross, GaryBurtis,80. Net:1,FredBlackman,66. 2(tie),DonKraus,69;JimWyzard, 69. KP — RichVigil. Club Results LO — SpudMiler. AWBREYGLEN EAGLE CREST Men'sSpringOuting, April11-12 Women's GolfGroup,April15 at Oswego LakeCountry Club(LakeOswego) LowPutls andPumpkinRidgeGhostCreek Flight A —1, Alice Gomm oll, 33. 2 (tie), Kat (NorlhPlains) Widmer, 35; Ka t h l e en Mooberry, 35; Patty Scott,35. Net BetterGall Flight 8 — 1 (tie), Carol Haffock,33; Sandy 1, DaveQuatrone/Michael Flynn, 141. 2, Bert Larso n/BobJohanson,141.3,MichaelMount/Duane Austin,33;JoanWellman,33. 4(tie), VeronRygh,35; BettyStearns,35. Warner,142. Flight 0 — 1(tie),Judith Moore,35;TeddieCripMastersGame,April12-13 MemberSaturdayNet PlusProSunday Score pen, 35;NancyDolby, 35.4, CharleneKenny36. Flight D — 1, RitaJefferies, 36.2, JoanMathews, Men'sGreen/GoldFlight—1,GregMeier/Bubba 38.3,BetteChappron,39.4,PatPort er,40. Watson,136. 2,JamesChrisman/HenrikStenson,142. Men'sGold/WhiteFlight —1, TuckerDuggan/ JUNIPER Jordan Spieth,145. LadiesGolfClub,April16 SpringTripMaslers Game,April13 StrikeThree MemberGrossPlus ProScore 1st Flight(0-19handicaps)— 1(tie), Cheryl 1, Duane Warner/BubbaWatson, 149.2, Michael Steppe, 62; R osi e C ook, 62. 3,SandyCameron,64.4, Flyn/Ad n am Scott,150.3,KenWaskom/BubbaWatShanWattenburger,70. son,1514, BertLarson/BubbaWatson,152. 2nd Flight(20-26) —1, JanetKing, 71.2 (tie), JackieCooper, 74;Carol AnnStiff, 74.3, JackieYake, BENOGOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB 75. LadiesGolfAssociation, April 9 3rd Flight(27-33) —1, SharWanichek,80. 2, StrokePlay First Flight —Gross:1, ConnieNew port, 26; ArleneLipscomb,81.3, Darla Farstvelt, 86. 4th Flight(34andhigher)—1, BarbSchreiber, JulaneDover,26. Net: 1, WesineHall,20.5.2, Nanc y 80. 2 (tie),DeannaCooper,82; Carolyn Houghton,82. Hakala,21.5. SecondFlight—Gross: 1,JoyStrickland, 30. 4, MarilynBaer,84. LD —0-19; RosieCook. 20-26: LindaWakefield. 2 (tie),Terri Holm,38;LindaCorson, 38. Net:1 (tie), JackieYake.33-36:MarilynBaer.37andhighSue Wesson,20.5; DoloresRiquelmie, 20.5; Laurel 27-32: er: CarolAnnThurston. Sorlie, 20.5. KPs — JanCarver, No.3;SandyCameron,No.8; Men'sDailyGame,April10 SharWanichek, No.16. Best NineScores Chip-Ins — Shari Nollz, No.15 1st Flight(11 handicaporless) —Gross:1, Birdies —SandyCam eron, Nos. 3, 12;Rosie CharlieRice,30.2, JeffWard, 31. Nek1, Bill Holm, Cook, No.1; Sue Adams, No.6;Jackie Yake, No.18. 26. 2 (tie),BrianMikkelborg,29;Bil DeGree, 29. Men'sClub,April 17 2nd Flight (12-17) —Gross: 1,Jim Rodgers, 1-2-3 Waltz 32. 2, Mac Ryder, 33. Net: 1, DanNewport, 23.5. 2, 1,JohnnyMcDaniel/ChuckSwenson/Alan Stewart/ Bob Brubaker, 25.5.3, JackSealock,27.5. Pat Ross, 130. 2 (tie), MikeMontgom ery/Ed Lip3rd Flight (14andhigher) —Gross:1, Scott scomb/JimFlaherty/EdAgumbaugh, 132; PaulKlotz/ Hakala,34.2 (tie), JohnCollins, 36;MikeGoldstein, 36.NeIr1,Jim Bromm er, 23.5.2, TedHetzel, 25.5. 3, DaveKing/KipGerke/KenJohnson,132; DonNoldge/ Earl Clausen/Rod Cooper/Bill Robinson,132. GaryNickerson,26. KPs —RodCooper, No.3; DonNoldge, No.8; Men'sGolfAssociation BendMasters AllenHare,No.13; JohnnyMcDaniel, No.16. April12 ModifiedBestBall 1, CarlRyan /Richard Funk/Bob Brubaker/TedHetzel,111.2, MikeGroat/DonKlippenes/Neil Bryant/Don Christensen,114. 3, Scott Holmberg/Gene Poweff/ MancoSnapp/Scott Hiss, 116.4, AndyWest/Jay Bennett/DanNewport/DaveBaker, 117. 5, EricKnapp/Eiel Eielson/TerryRennie/DonThornburg, 118;JeffPufinburger/Trevor Kallberg/Chris Stigen/Bil Anderson,118 StrokePlayPlusPro'sMastersThirdRound White Dogwood Flight (0-10 handicaps)Gross:1, Scott Holmberg/JasonDay,142.2, Jeff W ard/ Bill Haas,146.3, JeffWilson/Brendon DeJonge, 151. Net:1, EricKnapp/Gary Woodland, 136.2 (tie), Mike Groat/Fred Couples,144; JayBennett/JasonDay,144. Golden Bell Flight (11-14) — Gross: 1, RichardFunk/Ricky Fowler, 151.2, CraigSmith/lan Poulter, 152. 3,DonKlippenes/JordanSpieth, 156. Net:1, Scott Hakala/lanPoulter, 139.2 (tie), Trevor Kallberg/GaryWodl oand,143;3(tie), DougRude/Rory Mcffroy,143. Azalea Flight(16 andhigher) — Gross:1, Bob Caine/BrendonDeJonge, 165.2, DonChristensen/JM.Olazabal,166. 3(tie), TedHetzel/Bernhard Langer,169;PaulBeem/Jordan Spieth, 169; David Baker/Kevin Stadler,169.Net:1, RichGagne/Thongchai Jaidee,146.2 (tie), GeneGyesky/Ricky Fowler, 148; ScottHiss/G.Fernandez-Castano,148. IndividualStrokePlay White Dogw oodFlight —Gross:1(tie), Scott Holmber g,72;JefWard,72.3,JefWilson,75.4, Franz Miler, 76.Net:1, EricKnapp,67.2, Jeff Puffinburger,70.3 (tie), MikeGroat, 71;Carl Ryan, 71. 5, MacRyder,72. GoldenBell Flight — Gross:1, CraigSmith, 82. 2,DougRude,83. 3,RichardFunk,84. 4(tie), Don Klippenes, 86; GenePowell, 86.Net:1, Scott Hakala, 69. 2,BobBrubaker, 71. 3,Terry Rennie, 73.4,Trevor Kallberg,74. Azalea Flight(15 andhigher) — Gross:1, Bob Caine, 89. 2, DonChristensen, 93.3, TedHetzel, 96. 4(tie),BobThye,97; JohnCasey, 97.Net:1, Rich Gagne,71. 2, Scott Hiss,74.3, David Baker,78. 4(tie), Paul Beem,80; SidSmith,80. KPs —DonChristensen,No.3; Scott Hakala, No.11. LongPutts—CraigSmith, Nos.9,18. LadiesGolfAssociation BendMasters April12 TwoNetBestBalls 1, Karen Stanand/JulaneDover/JoanneChristensen/Debbi Smith,123. 2, Nancy Breitenstein/Debbi Smith/AnitaBrown/Kristina Evans, 129. LD — KarenStanard. LongPutt—Cindi Eielson. KP — JaneLussier. Master'sProfessional/MemberTeam 1, Joanne ChristenserVRickie Fowler, 141. 2 (tie), NancyBreitenstein/GaryWoodland,143; KarenStanard/ JimmieWalker,143;DebbiSmith/BrandtSnedeker,143. Ladies' GolfAssociation, April16 Nine-HoleStrokePlay 1st Flight(0-13handicap)—Gross:1, Nettie Morrison,38.2,Jane Lussier 41.Net: 1, NancyHakala, 32.5.2, KarenStanard, 35.5. 2nd Flight — 13.6 andhigher) — Gross:1, GingerWiliamson,51. 2 (tie), SandyEdwards, 53; Ma

THE GREEN SAT REDMOND Pat Rogers,Redmond No. 1.........................147yards........................ 7-iron

Calendar The Bullelin welcomescoatributions to its weeklylocalgolfeventscalendar. Itemsshould be mail edtoP.O.Gox6020,Bend,DR 97708; faxed to the sporlsdeparlment at 541-3880831; oremailedtosporlsObendbuletin.com. PUBLICLEAGUES April 22:MeadowLakes Senior Men's League, for golfersage60andolder, begins at9 a.m. Cost forthe leagu eis$17andyoumusthaveanOGAhandicap (total costwithhandicapservices is $50).Youdonot have tobea member ofMeadowLakesGolf Courseto participate.Thepublic iswelcome.Formore information:541-447-7113. May1: Ladiesof theLakesWomen's Association opensthe2014seasonwith registration, lightbreakfast andwelcome meetingat7:30 a.m.Golf beginsat 9a.m.Thepublic is welcome.Formoreinformation: call Jean Gregersonat541-475-6595orthe golf shop at 541-447-7113. Aspen LakesMen:TheMen'sClubatAspenLakes Golf CourseinSisters playsonWednesdaysat 8 a.m. through thegolf season. Newmembersarewelcome. For moreinformation, call AspenLakesat 541-549-

Carlin at541-604-4054or vptcarlin@yahoo.com. April 26: 18thAnnual CrookCounty HighSchool Golf TeamBenefit tournamentat MeadowLakesGolf Course inPrinevile. Four-personscramble teesoff with anoonshotgunstart. Costis$280perteamand includesgolf, carttri-tip dinner,awards, contestsand grossandnetteamprizes. Proceedsgotowardfunding CrookCounty's boysandgirls golf teams.Formoreinformationorto register, callZachLampert at 541-4800110ortheMeadowLakesproshopat541-447-7113. April 26: Season opener at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond.Four-personscramble divided into two-coupleteams.Shotgun start at 10a.m.Cost is $140perteam.Toregister, call theJuniper proshop at 541-548-3121or downloadentry format www. playjunipercom. April 26: WarmSpringsBoys & Girls ClubGolf Scrambleat Kah-Nee-Ta Resort nearWarmSprings. Four-personscramble begins with 10a.m.shotgun.

Cost is $75per personor $280perfoursomeand includes greenfees,cart, rangeballs, lunch, andKP, long-drive,andlong-putt contests. Proceeds benefit the Boys andGirls Clubof WarmSprings. For more informationorto register: contactJuneSmith at 541553-2 323orjsmith©bgcsc.com. April 25-27: TheCentral OregonShootout is a two-personteamevent held at AspenLakesGolf Coursein Sisters,BlackButte Ranch and EagleCrest Resort in Redmond.The tournament will feature scramblebest , ball andChapman formats. Cost is 4653. Black ButteRanchWomen: Black Butte Ranch $580 perteamand includes greenfees,carts, range balls, tee gi ft, continental breakfastandlunch. DeadWomen'sGolf Clubacceptswomengolfers ofafflevels line to registeris April16 or first180 teams.Formore for Tuesday tournaments eachweek. Formoreinformation orto register,call theBigMeadowgolf shop information or to requestanentry form, call 541549-4653,541-595-1294or 541-923-4653; orvisit at 541-595-1500. s.com, blackbutteranch.com,or www. CentralOregonSenior Men:TheCentral Oregon www.aspenlake SeniorGolfOrganizationmeets ona Mondayeach eagle-crest.com. April 27:Raceand Acegolf tournament at Mount monthatgolfcoursesacrosstheregion. Seriesisopen to men'sclubmembersof host sites. Costis $150for BachelorandTheOld BackNineat Mountain High in Bend. Eyent beginswith runsof superslalomand theseasonplus$5perevent.SeasonbeganMarch31. For moreinformation: TedCarlin at 541-604-4054or modifiedgiantslalomatMount Bachelor. Four-person scramblebeginsat2 p.m.Entry feeis $200per team, vptcartinrlyahoo.com. barbecuelunchand social. Eachteamis CentralOregonGolf Tour: Acompetitive seriesheld and includes imited tooneBend High varsity skierandonegolfat golf coursesthroughout Central Oregon. Grossand ler. Proceedsbenefit theFriendsof BendSki Racing. net comp etitions opento amateur golfers of all abilities. or moreinformation or to register: call GregTimm Prizepoolawardedweeklyandmembershipnot required. F at 541-390-6635. For moreinformationor toregister: 541-633-7652,541May1: CentralOregonGolf Tour'sseasonopener 350-7605,orwww.centraloregongolftour.com. an individualstrokeplay tournament at Brasada DesertPeaksLadies: LadiesClubatDesert Peaksin is Canyons Golf Clubin Powell Bute. TheCentral Oregon Madras.Timesvary each Wednesday.For moreinforGolfTouris acompetitive golfseriesheldatgolfcoursmation,call DesertPeaksat 541-475-6368. es throughout Central Oregon.Grossandnet competiEveryWom en's Golf Association: TheCentral Oropen to agamateur golfers of agabilities. Prize egonChapterof theEvery Women's Golf Association tions awarded weekly, andmembership not required. meetsmultipletimeseachweek— including week- pool moreinformationor to register: 541-633-7652, night leagues and Saturday play— during thegolf For 541-350-7605, orwww.centraloregongolftour.com. season. Eventsareopentoanyoneinterestedin joining May 2:Chippin' Infor BendAreaHabitat tournathe EW GA. For moreinformation orto jointheEWGA; ment atBrasadaCanyonsGolf Clubin Powell Butte. EileenHaasat edhaasObendbroadband.comor visit Four-personscramblebeginswith a10a.m.shotgun. www.ew gaco.com. Cost is $125pergolfer beforeMarch20 and $150 JuniperLadies:Juniper LadiesGolf Clubmeets Priceincludes,golf, cart, rangeballs, awards weekly onWednesday morning. All womenplayers after. uncheonandteeprize. Proceeds benefit the Bend welcome.For moreinformation, visit www.juniperla- lArea Habitatfor Humanity. Formore information orto dies.com. register: 541-385-5387orrcooper@bendhabitat.org. Ladiesof TheGreens: Ladies of theGreenswomMay 3-4: Two-man best-ball tournament at en's golf clubat TheGreensat Redmond golf course GolfClub.Two-daygross andnet payoffs, playsweekly on Tuesdays through October.New Prineville optionalsidegames. Friday practice roundalso members arewelcome. Formoreinformation, call The with available. Formoreinformation or to register, call Greens atRedmondat541-923-0694. GC at 541-447-1354. LostTracks Ladies:The LadiesLeague atLost Prineville 6-8:CentralOregonSenior SpringTourProTracksGolfClubin Bendplaysweekly onTuesdays. AmMay is for teams and individuals throughthe Oregon All womengolfers arewelcome.For moreinforma- Chapter ofthePGA . This three-dayevent is held at tion: call LostTracksat 541-385-1818, email lost- Crooked iver Ranch,theRidgeCourseat EagleCrest tracksladiesgolf@b endbroadband.com or visit www. ResortinRRedm ond,andGlaze Meadowat Black Butte losttracks.com. Golferswil compete inanet Stableford, gross Lost TracksMen:Men's club at Lost TracksGolf Ranch. and net stroke pl yandonegrossandtwonet formats. Club holdsweeklyeventsonWednesdaysandThurs- Golfersmustbea50 ars old orolder. Costis $960 days through theOctober. Formoreinformation: call perteam.Contact:80ye 0-574-0503orwww.orpga.com. Lost Tracksat 541-385-1818,email losttracksmc© M ay10-11: 43rd an nualTeePeeChapmanat Kahhotmail.com orvisit www .losttracks.com. Resort nearWarmSprings. 36-hole couples Meadow LakesMen: Men's Golf Associationat Nee-Ta begins eachdaywith a9 a.m. shotgun start. Meadow LakesGolf Coursein Prineville playsweekly Chapman is$200percoupleandincludesgolf, rangeballs, onWednesdays.Costfortheleagueis$32andyou Cost dinner banquet buffet. Special roomrates anda musthaveanOGAhandicap(total costwith handicap Fridaypracticeand roundare also available. For more services is$65).Thepublic is welcome.Formore ininformationor to register,visit www.kahneeta.comor formation:541-447-7113. QuailRunWomen: Quail RunGolf Coursewomen's call541-553-4971. May 12:Hospitality Cupat BlackButte Ranch's 18-holegolf leagueplays at 8 a.m. duringthe golf Glaze Meadowcourse. Eachteamin four-person season.Interestedgolfersarewelcome. Formore in- scrambl etournament must consist offour employees formation,call PennyScott at541-598-7477. rom thesameCentral Oregonrestaurant, hotelorothRive r' sEdgeMen:TheMen'sClubatRiver'sEdge fer hospi t ality business.Tournament begins with a10 Golf CourseinBendplaysweekly tournamentsonTues- a.m.shotgun. Costis $150perteamand includescart, day. Mem bers of themen's clubandother interested barbecuelunch,pri zesandawards. FormoreinformaRiver'sEdgeGolf Clubmenwith anestablishedUSGA tion or to register;email bbain©blackbutteranch.com, handicap areinvitedto participate. Formoreinformation call 541-595-1292 orvisit www .blackbutteranch.com/ or to register,call River'sEdgeat 541-389-2828. Rive r' sEdgeWomen:TheWomen' sClubatRiver's golf/golf-events. May12: Cent r al Ore gon S eni orsGolf Organization EdgeGol fCoursein Bend playseachWednesday atCrookedRiver Ranch. Theformat is individual during thegolf season.Members arewelcome and event net best bal, aswell asteambestbal. Cash should sign up bythe preceding Saturdayfor the grossand awardedat eachevent. Tournament series is tournaments.Formoreinformation, orto register,call prizes open to me n'sclub membersat host sites, andparticiRiver'sEdgeat541-389-2828. musthaveanOregonGolf Associationhandicap. SunriverRes ort Men;Men's club at Sunriver Re- pants theseasonplus a$5per-eventfee. For sort playsWednesdaytournaments attheMeadowsor Costinis$150for formation,contactTedCarlin at541-604-4054 Woodlandscourseswith shotgunstarts around9 a.m. more or vptcarl i n ©yahoo. com . Cost is$55forannual membership. FormoreinformaMay12:OregonGolf AssociationTourpartner setion, emaiRobert l Hil at rhil@taftcollege.eduor visit ries tournam ent at BendGolf andCountry Club.Tee www.srmen sgolf.com. beginat 8:30a.m. OG A Tour events areopen SunriverResort Women: Women'sclub at Sunriver times to any gol f er thaUSGAhandicapandinclude open ResortplaysWednesdaytournamentsat theMeadows and seniodirvwi ions. Costfor thiseventis $79for OGA or Woodlandscourseswith shotgunstarts approxi- membersandis$99 for nonmembers. Deadline to enter mately 9a.m.Thereareboth nine-hole and18-hole is May 5.Formore informationor to register,visit groups.For moreinformation onnine-hole group: www.oga.org or cal l theOGAat 503-981-4653. Vicki Doerfleratvickilynn49©yahoo.comor call 541May13;OregonGolf Association Tourpartner se598-8467;18-holegroup:ShennyBraemer at sbrae- ries tournam ent at theMeadowsCourseatSunriverRemer4@gm ail.comorcall 541-593-4423. sort. times begin at10:30a.m.OGATour events are Widgi CreekMenand Women:Widgi CreekMen's openTee to any fer with aUSGAhandicapand include Club andWomens' Golf Association at Widgi Creek openandsenigol or divisions.Costforthis eventis $79for Golf Club inBendareweekly golf leaguesthat play OGAmembers and $99 for nonmembers. Deadline to eachWednesday. Formoreinformation, call theWidgi enter isMay6.For moreinformationortoregister, visit Creekclubhouseat541-382-4449. www.oga.orgorcalltheOGAat 503-981-4653. May15:CentralOregonGolf Tour individual stroke play tournam entat Tetherow Golf Clubin Bend.The CentralOregonGolf Touris acompetitive golf series held atgolf coursesthroughout Central Oregon. Gross and netcompetitions opento affamateur golfers ofall abilities. Prizepoolawardedweekly, andmembership not required.Formore information orto register: 541633-7652,541-350-7605,orwww.centraloregongolftour.com. May16:RonaldMcDonaldHouseCharities Central OregonOpenis afour-person scramble tournament atBlackButteRanch'sBigMeadow andGlazeMeadow courses.Tournament beginswith 9 a.m.at both courses.Costis $135perplayeror $500perteam and includes greenfees,cart andlunch. Sponsorship opportunitiesavailable. Agproceedsbenefit Ronald McDonaldHouseCharities of Central Oregon.For more information or to register: 541-318-4950or www.rmhcfcoentraloregon.org. May17:CrookCountyHigh School Wrestling benefit tournamentat PrinevigeGolf Club. Three-person scramblebeginswith a 10 a.m.shotgun. Proceeds

MartinKayme r (47),$55,680 73-67-72-70—282 Graeme McDoweg(47), $55,680 71-69-72-70—282 Matthew Filzpatrick, $0 71-71-69-71—282 Tim Herron (43), $43,790 69-72-72-70—283 Chris Kirk(43),$43,790 71-72-71-69—283 GeoffOgilvy(43),$43,790 72-68-71-72—283 CamiloVigegas(43),$43,790 72-71-73-67—283 Jonathan Byrd(37),$34,469 71-73-73-67—284 K.J. Choi(37),$34,469 70-67-74-73—284 HarrisEnglish(37), $34,469 68-73-75-68—284 Billy Hurleyffl (37), $34,469 70-69-73-72—284 JerryKelly(37),$34,469 76-70-67-71 —284 RichardH.Lee(37), $34,469 70-69-71-74—284 SteveMarino(37),$34,469 72-72-72-68—284 RrckyBarnes(29), $23,200 72-73-72-68—285 Tim Clark(29), $23,200 72-71-71-71—285 ChessonHadley(29), $23,200 72-67-73-73—285 Justin Hicks(29),$23,200 75-70-68-72—285 CharleyHoffman(29), $23,200 73-71-68-73—285 KevinKisner(29), $23,200 73-72-68-72—285 ScottLangley(29), $23,200 66-73-75-71—285 members arerequired to attend. Formoreinformation, SpencerLevin (29), $23,200 72-74-70-69—285 71-69-72-73—285 call COJGA president Neil Pedersenat 541-480-6288, KevinStadler(29),$23,200 Todd(29), $23,200 75-71-71-68—285 emailcojgagolf©hotmail.com,orvisitwww.cojga.com. Brendon 72-71-69-74—286 May 26:Mem orial DayFlagDaytournament at KenDuke(21), $15,335 Loupe(21), $15,335 70-73-72-71—286 Prineville Golf Club. Flag tournam ent. For more Andrew Patrick Ree d (2 1), $1 5, 3 35 71-72-70-73—286 informationor toregister, call Prineville GCat 541ChrisStroud(21)$15335 71-71-74-70—286 447-1354. Pelt (21), $15,335 69-70-73-74—286 May 27-28:OregonChapter of the PGApro-am Bo Van tournament.Formatfor bothdaysis anet Stableford. WoodyAustin (15), $13,326 74-71-67-75—287 G. Fdez-Ca s t a no (1 5), $13, 3 26 74-71-67-75—287 This two-day event is heldat BendGolf andCountry 73-71-72-71—287 Club andPronghornClub's NicklausCoursenear BriceGarnett (15), $13,326 —287 Bend.Costfor amateursis $200per golfer. Contact: CharlesHowell ffl(15), $13326 69-73-74-71 Shawn Stefani (15), $13,326 74-69-71-73—287 800-574-0503orwww.pnwpga.com. Kevin Streel m an (15),$13,326 69-72-70-76—287 May 27:OregonGolf Association Tourindividual s(15), $13,326 73-73-72-69—287 seriestournament at theRidgeCourseat Eagle Crest DavidTom 73-73-73-68—287 Resort in Redm ond. Teetimes begin at 8:30 a.m. BooWeekley (15), $13,326 70-72-72-74—288 OGAToureventsareopen to anygolfer with aUSGA StewartCink(9), $12,644 Zach Johnson (9), $12, 6 44 71-73-70-74—288 handicap andincludeopenandsenior divisions. Cost Tim Wi l k i n son (9), $12,644 70-71-73-74—288 for this event is$79for OG A membersand $99for 72-73-73-71 —289 nonmem bers. Deadline to enter is May20. Formore ErnieEls(6), $12,238 Gainey(6),$12,238 72-74-75-68 —289 information orto register,visit www .oga.org orcallthe Tommy Jeff Maggert (6), $12, 2 38 70-76-72-71 —289 OGA at503-981-4653. John Maffi n ger (6), $12,238 69-74-73-73 —289 May 28:OregonGolf Association Tourindividual —290 seriestournament atthe Resort Courseat Eagle Crest MarkAnderson 2), $11,716 71-75-74-70 70-75-73-72 —290 Resort in Redm ond. Teetimes begin at 8:30 a.m. Erik Compton(2, I $11,716 B rian Ga y (2), $11, 7 1 6 70-74-74-72 —290 OGAToureventsareopento anygolfer with aUSGA James H ah n ( 2), $1 1, 7 16 72-74-69-75 —290 handicapandincludeopen andsenior divisions. Cost Horschel(2),$11,716 69-74-72-75 —290 for this eventis $79for OG A membersand $99for Billy Garrigus 1), $11,368 71-74-71-75 —291 nonmemeb rs. Deadline to enter is May21. Formore Robert Brian Davi s (1), 11,078 71-75-73-73 —292 information orto register,visitwww.oga.orgorcallthe DudleyHart(1), I$11,078 73-69-75-75 —292 OGA at503-981-4653. Immelman(1), $11,078 74-69-75-74—292 May29:Central OregonGolf Tour individual stroke Trevor play tournam entat BlackButte Ranch's Big Meadow. BrandtSnedeker(1), $11,078 72-73-74-73—292 72-72-74-78—296 The CentralOregonGolf Tour is a competitive golf BrinyBaird(1), $10,788 series heldat golf coursesthroughout Central Oregon. Grossandnetcompetitions opento all amateur golfers ofall abilities.Prizepoolawardedweekly, and membership notrequired. Formoreinformation orto register:541-633-7652,541-350-7605,or www.centraloregongolftour.com. May 31; WildlandFirefighterFoundation Benefit Golf Tournam ent at TheGreensat Redmond. Four-playerscramble begins with 8:30a.m.shotgun. Cost is$60pergolfer andincludes18 holesof golf, cart andbarbecue.Proceedsbenefit theWildland Firefighter Foundation,which helpsfamilies of killed or injuredfirefighters. Deadline to enter is May24. For more informationorto register, contact theRedmond Hotshots at 541-504-7350orcbuhrig©fs.fed.us. May 31: 2014Scrimmage on the Links benefit golf tournam entat LostTracksGolf Club.Four-person scramblbeg e inswith 2 p.m, shotgunstart. Entry fee: $100perperson or$400per teamand includes refreshme nts, beverages, barbecuedinner, gifts and prizes.Benefits theBend,MountainViewandSummit high schoolfootball teams.Toregister orfor moreinformation,visit www .scrimmageonthelinks.com. May 31:TheMuseumat WarmSprings presents The BoomerClassic Benefit Golf Tournam ent, a four-personteamscramble at Kah-N ee-Ta Resort. Tournamentbegins with 9:30 a.m.shotgun. Cost is $75 perpersonandincludes lunch, contestsand prizes.Proceedsbenefit community educational programs ofTheMuseumAt WarmSprings. For more information or toregister: call 541-322-5753,email dstacona@ museumatwarmsprings.org, or visit www. museuma twarmsprings.org. May31;The15th Annual Golf ForeKids at Meadow Lakes Golf Coursein Prineviffeis sponsoredby the Kiwanis Club of Prinevige.Four-personteam scramblebeginswith 9a.m.shotgun. Costis $75per playerandincludesrangeballs, cart, lunch,teeprize, flightedgrossandnet payouts andadditional prizes and games.Thefield is limitedto thefirst 25 teams, and thedeadlineto register is May24. Formoreinformationorto register:www.prinevigekiwanis.org or contactMeadowLakes at 541-447-7113or zach@ meadowlaeksgc.com. May31:AspenLakesOutlawSports Dayat Aspen LakesGolf Coursein Sisters is afundraiserfor the Sisters HighSchoolathletics teams.Teetimesare availableall day.Costis $80andincludesgolf, cart and range balls. Golfersarealsowelcometo participate in asilent auctionandasocial hourafterplay. Half ofall proceedswil fromthedaywil be donated to SistersHighathletics. Formoreinformation: www. outlawopen.org. to benefit theCrookCountry wrestling program.For more informationorto register:call JakeHuflmanat 541-829-1109. May17-18:OregonEmbroideryScrambleat KahNee-TaResort near WarmSprings. Two-personscramble. Cost is$300perteamand includes golf, range bags, dinnerbanquetand buffet. Specialroomrates and a Friday practice roundarealsoavailable. For more informationor to register,visit www .kahneeta. com or call 541-553-4971. May17-18;30thedition of theJuniperChapman at JuniperGolf Coursein Redmond. Opento anytwo malegolferswith amaximumhandicapdifferential of eight strokes between partners. Costis $250per team for the two-day,36-holetournament with grossandnet divisionsandincludes a practice round.Toregister, call theJuniperproshopat 541-548-3121ordownloadentryformatwww.playjunipercom. May20-24;Central OregonJunior Golf Association new-mem ber qualification at AwbreyGlenGolf Club in Bend. Teetimes canbemade by appointment. New



ON PAGES 3%4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin

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THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 21,2014 210

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Furniture & Appliances gTV, Stereo & Video 0

A1 Washers&Dryers

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Want to Buy or Rent

CASH for dressers, dead washers/dryers 541-420-5640

Wanted: $cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006 205

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

265

270

476

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Building Materials

Lost & Found

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

MADRAS Habitat Found man's ring at RESTORE Redmond High Supply Resale S chool J V fie l d . Music!Voice Studio Building Quality at 541-610-2558 Includes: LOW PRICES • Pro Tools 8 software Lost cat, black/gray tiger 84 SW K St. • Mbox 2 mini version 8.0 striped, yellow eyes, 541-475-9722 • Behringer B1 mic female, 8 lbs., in DRW Open to the public.

• Sony headphones • Samson USB studio mic w/stand; • Training books bronze & crystal, has 6 arms (2 lights • Corrugated foam padding on each arm), Package price new, $300 obo. $f200+541-923-7491 Offered at $550. (A// reasonable offers Couch & loveseat, very considered) ood cond, $250 both. ext / call 541-815-5027 Call 541-639-3222 or 541-771-6556. 257 22" diameter x 17" high, 12 lights,

Prineville Habitat ReStore Building Supply Resale 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 541-447-6934 Open to the public. 267

Fuel & Wood

All Year Dependable Firewood: Seasoned; Lodgepole 1 for $195 Musical Instruments or 2 for $365. Cedar, split, del. Bend: 1 for

Navaio Rd. area.

REWARD. 541-554-6031

470

Domestic & In-Home Positions

LOST LOVEBIRD: peachfaced, green body, 4/8/14 Immediate opening for at Larch Grove in Shev- caregiver in the Sisters lin Park. Has blue band area, 1-2 days/week. on leg with "¹3." $100 541-598-4527 REWARD. 541-771-1311 Reward to return my son's new 24" 21 spd mt bike. 541-350-5336

476

Employment Opportunities

Flooring Installer Licensed & bonded, Masonry with references, ExLaborers perience with carpet, Needed! vinyl, laminate & wood Must have valid floors. Send resume to: Installers, 2260 ODL. Wage Shasta Way, Klamath DOE. Apply Falls, OR 97601 between Food & Beverage 8a.m. -2 p.m., GENERAL MANAGER Mon. - Fri., at WANTED for f amily 63026 Lower s tyle restaurant i n Central Oregon area. Meadow Dr., Must have 2 y ears Suite ¹200, management experiBend. ence with a cooking & customer ser v ice background and be able to pass a lottery Good classifiedadstell background c h eck. the essential facts inan Send resume to wiggbilly1 0Oyahoo.com interestingManner.Write

Add your web address Need to get an to your ad and readad in ASAP? ers on TheBui/etin's j+ 1 Free Day Lilliesi $175 or 2 for $325. You can place it web site, www.bendassorted colors 8 sizes. 541-420-3484. bulletin.com, will be online at: 541-279-9013 able to click through C.O. m i xed w o o d,www.bendbulletin.com Golf Course automatically to your Meadow Lakes Golf 208 LEATHER CHAIR semi-dry, split, Del. in Espresso brown Bend. 2 cords $270; 1 website. Course is accepting Pets & Supplies 541-385-5809 in very good condi2006 Gibson Stan- cord for $145, Cash or job applications for tion, less than 2 dard Le s P a u le check. 541-312-4355. Bookkeeperwait staff, kitchen A dorable Cava T z u 280 years old. $250. Electric Guitar, one Full Cycle staff, and beverage puppies, ready to go 269 In SE Bend owner, dual bridge Estate Sales Part time p osition cart driver positions. on the 26th with first Gardening Supplies 541-508-8784 and dual controls, near Sunriver. ExpePositions pay minishot and w orming. great con d ition. rience with A/R, A/P, Only one female and & Equipment ESTATE SALE m um wage p e r F antastic so u n d. two males left. $400 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 4/25 and 26, 9-4 P/R, G/L, p rompt hour, plus tips. We Blue tone c o lor. 61155 Ridge Falls Pl. payments, financial female, $350 males. are an equal opBarkTurfSoil.com Comes with original statements, f i s cal portunity employer. Kelly at 541-489-3237 Door-to-door selling with off 15th and Ferguson case. $1200 firm, budget, meeting noT o apply, go t o Aussie Mini puppies, 5 fast results! It's the easiest cash only, no trades. tices for Municipality. www.cityofprineville. PROMPT D ELIVERY purebred, born 3/13/14, way in the world to sell. 541-322-9619 Must be proficient 542-389-9663 c om and ap p ly ready 5/8. 541-693-4888 with Qu i c kBooks online. www.miniaussiesbend.com The Bulletin Classified Pro. Please email MOVING SALE! Here's Donate deposit bottles/ resume, references 541-385-5809 your chance to qet cans to local all vol., and contact informasome mighty fme Get your non-profit rescue, for tion to: 212 fawn maintenance business feral cat spay/neuter. Karen ©sunriverofequip. at a very good Antiques & Cans for Cats trailer ficeservices.com price! John Deere LT at Bend Pet Express Collectibles 170 riding mower, like Beautiful Lowrey e ROW I N G E; or donate M-F at new, with 42" mulch308 Adventurer II Organ Smith Sign, 1515 NE Antiques wanted: tools, ELECTRICIAN ing deck, 42" bagginci Absolutely perfect Farm Equipment 2nd; or a t C RAFT, furniture, marbles,early Burns, Oregon with an ad in deck, $1300. JD 40' B/W photography, condition, not a Tumalo. Lv. msg. for & Illlachinery company seeks pull-behind thatcher, The Bulletin's scratch on it, about p ick up o f la r g e toys, decoys, jewelry. Journeyman $25. 36 " 5 5 gal "Call A Service 541-389-1578 4-feet wide, does amounts, 389-8420. pull-behind lawn Electrician Includes I I 'ii'imm3 if~HI www.craftcats.org Professional" Dark oa k 2 - d rawer everything! r oller, $10. JD 4 0 " Must have a a nice bench, too. pull-behind plug re- 60" 3 Pt. h o o kup General Electrical Directory In honor of the ASPCA dresser, curved front, $1600 obo. moval areator, $30. Prevention of Cruelty $250. White wicker Journeyman 541%85-5685 rototiller, very good Craftsman pull b e- c ondition. to A nimals M o nth, baby crib, u n ique License. JuniperSwim hind 15 gal. sprayer, 541-408-3215 $70 0 . Stone Lodge Retire- $250. Large dark oak Resume and refer$15. Craftsman HD & Fitness Center roll top desk, $800. ment is h osting a ences required, DRUM SETS: fertilizer spreader $15, •Lifeguards tr a nsit Ludwig drum set, fundraiser lunch ben- Surveryor's plus a copy of 42" lawn sweeper, •Swim Instructors 325 efiting Cat Rescue, 1930-1940, orig. box d rums o nly, n o journeyman $20. W h eelbarrow, Apply online today! C ASH Adoption & F o ster $350. hardware, 26" base Hay, Grain & Feed license. www.bendparks $5. JD pull wagon, 541-923-5960 Team on April 25 at drum, 13", 16", and Please contact andrec.org $10. Craftsman self12:30; 1460 27th St., The Bulletin reserves 18" toms, 14" snare, Mixed Grass Hay, 1st p ropelled 21" l a wn 541-573-6050. EOE Bend, $5 donation for the right to publish all $500. REMO Masquality, big bales, 3'x3'x8', mower, $30. Troy-bilt a 3-course salmon ads from The Bulletin ter Touch drum set, barn stored, $230/ton. rear rototiller tines, Patterson Ranch Sisters, lunch. RSVP to Kait- newspaper onto The drums o nl y no Mill Workers $100. Craftsman lawn 541-549-3831 lin, 541-233-9914 by Bulletin Internet web- hardware, 22" base edger, $50. Stihl cultiApril 23. Help support site. BRIGHT WOOD CORPORATION drum, 8", 10", 12", vator, Over $300 new, your local non-profit, 1 3", 16" an d 1 8 " now $75 Extension Call a Pro no kill rescue group! The Bulletin We are accepting applications for experienced toms, 14 " s n a re tree trimmer w/ saw Whether you need a Senlng Central Oregon sincefRB www.craftcats.org. millworkers to fill positions in our Moulding and blade and clippers, drum, $800. Both in fence fixed, hedges Fingerjoint departments. excellent condition. $25. Stihl weed eater 241 Lab mix, perfect family 541-410-4983 w/ plastic blades, $20. trimmed or a house dog, good with children Bicycles & These are all on sale Looking for Moulder Operators and Set Up & all other animals, built, you'll find Accessories in Prineville at 1184 people, Fingerjoint Operators and feeders as housebroken, spayed, 260 N E Tamarack C t . professional help in well as entry level stacker positions at our up to date on shots. Trek 2120 bicycles, i2) • Misc.ltems 541-447-3342. headquarters facility in Madras. We are in Free to good home. The Bulletin's "Call a 54cm and 58cm, car503-310-2514 need of people with bonafied experience, good People Lookfor Information Service Professional" bon fiber, Shimano attendance and a positive work attitude. If this About Products and 105, SP D p e dals, 2012 Directory sounds like you please come to our Personnel Si m plicity $400 each. Miyata Department in the Madras Industrial Park at Gusto Hepa canis- Services EveryDaythrough 541-385-5809 kids Triathalon bike, The Bulletin Clsssiffsrfs the address below to apply. ter va cuumwith $125. 541-4'I 0-7034 attachments, extra Starting wage is dependent on your experifilter and bags, exc. 242 Graphic Designer Position cond. Retail $1500, ence, entry level positions start at $10.00 plus Labrador Retriever pup- Exercise Equipment The Bulletin's Creative Services team is per hour. Benefits after 90 days as a full time A sking $700 . pies. Purebred rare Enseeking a graphic designer. The ideal candiassociate include medical, dental and life glish-style yellow, ready Weslo Cadence G 5.9 971-221-8278 (cell) date possesses practiced design skills and exinsurance. 5/26. Dew claws, 1st treadmill, perfect cond, cellent communication skills in order to work shots, vet check & lots of $550 obo. 541-647-1444 Buylng Dlamonds with account executives and local businesses Vision and Aflac are available for optional socialization. Great fam- leave message. /Gold for Cash to design and produce advertisements that get purchase. Accrued vacation time is available ily pets or hunting comSaxon's Fine Jewelers results for that advertiser. Proficiency using after 6 months of employment. We are an panions. Parents on site. 246 541-389-6655 Adobe InDesign, lllustrator, and Photoshop $500 with $100 deposit equal opportunity employer and require passGuns, Hunting to hold. 541-516-8985 softwares to create basic and advanced ad ing an on-site drug test. BUYING & Fishing layouts and designs is a must. For qualifying Lionel/American Flyer Maltese darling male 10 employees we offer benefits including life inBright Wood Corporation, trains, accessories. mo. old, apricot and Belgium Brownsurance, short-term 8 l ong-term disability, 541-408-2191. 335 NM/HessSt. white, perfect for ac- 1958 ing Auto 5 Li g ht401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test Madras, Or 97741 tive seniors or small weight in e x cellent BUYING & S ELLING is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is 541-475-7799 family, asking $250. condition. $1, 0 00. All gold jewelry, silver a drug-free workplace, EOE. Call Arlene for appt. to i541) 788-2769. and gold coins, bars, see 541-317-0297, rouncrs, wedding sets, Send a resume with qualifications, skills, rds .45 acp, $230. class rings, sterling silJust bought a new boat? 400 experience and a past employment history 300 rds of .308, $270. ver, coin collect, vinSell your old one in the by Friday, April 25th to: 541-647-7950 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 tage watches, dental classifieds! Ask about our gotd. Bill Fl e ming, Super Seller rates! 500 rds of 22LR, $75. The Bulletin EDITORIAL CAREER OPPORTUNITY 541-385-5809 160 rds of 22-250, $140. 541-382-9419. Attention: James Baisinger. 200 rds of .25, $100. 1777 S. W. Chandler Ave FAST TREES THE BULLETIN SPECIAL PROJECTS 541-647-7950 P.O. Box 6020 Grow 6-10 feet yearly! MANAGING EDITOR $1 6-$21 delivered. Bend, OR 97708-6020 600 rds of 7.62x39, $250. 400 rds of .556 ammo, www.fasttrees.com The Special Projects Managing Editor or 509-447-4181 $250. 541-647-7950 manages the day-to-day, project-to-project serving central oregon since r903 Fitz & Floyd service for 8 950 rds of .223, editorial content of The Bulletin's special Miniature Pugs, AKC w/extra pcs of gold Man$500. projects. This division is part of the Bulletin reg. 9 wks, $800, dedarin Crest dinnerware, 541-647-7950 livered. 541-573-5300 advertising department. bisque color with gold Accounting Clerk POODLE pups,toys or Bend local pays CASH!! crest, $300/obo. Vermeil for all firearms & (Reporfs to the Controller) Duties include but are not limited to: flatware, svc for 10 w/exsml mini. also 'rescued ammo. 541-526-0617 tra serving pcs, $300/obo. •Development of all editorial budgets in pup'. 541-475-3889 for The Bulletin 541-330-8177 after 11 am collaboration w i t h Sp e cial P r o jects CASH!! Queensland Heelers Manager and/or event promoters. This For Guns, Ammo 8 Wanted- paying cash The right person for this position will perform Standard & Mini, $150 includes content outlines, story direction, Reloading Supplies. & up. 541-280-1537 for Hi-fi audio & stu- numerous clerical duties in accounting includ541-408-6900. image collaboration and design consultawww.rightwayranch.wor dio equip. Mclntosh, ing providing backup for accounts receivable tion. Some of the department's premier and accounts payable as well as working dpress.com JBL, Marantz, D yclosely with the Credit Manager on customer products include "Ageless Magazine" naco, Heathkit, SanWhite Front Amazon, "U Magazine" and "Central Oregon Living". file maintenance, credit rule compliance, and sui, Carver, NAD, etc. f Largest 3-Day I cage, pla y pen, account auditing. Ideal candidate will be de•Management of editorial assignments to Call 541-261-1808 GUN & KNIFE $500. 541-771-0665 tail oriented, a great multi-tasker and comfortfree lance writers. sHow 263 able with using a variety of industry specific •Editing of all s pecial projects editorial Yorkie pups AKC, 2 boys, April 25-26-27 software applications. content. 2 girls, potty training, UTD • Tools Portland Expo shots, heaith guar., $450 •E ditorial c o ntent c o l laboration w h e n Center Extensive customer interaction is involved re& up. 541-777-7743 Band saw needed with various event promoters and Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, quiring excellent problem solving and cus$50 directors. 210 Sun.10-4 tomer service skills. Excellent communication 541-280-4459 •Helping development year-long project 1-5 exit ¹306B skills both verbally and in writing with customFurniture & Appliances calendars and objectives with the Special Admission $10 ers and co-workers are a necessity. This posiProjects Manager with optimization of 1- 8 00-659-3440 I tion requires an understanding of basic ac3-pc display cabinet/curio I revenue opportunities at top-of-mind. counting, basic Excel and general office w/lightsi glass shelves, ~collectorsWest.com~ •Manage inner department editorial and functions. This is a part-time, 32-hour a week faux finish flooks like image to maximize excellent content and stone), end sections 70" Sig M400 e nhanced position. design on deadline. tall, middle section 80" $1200; Remington 12 Total Shop Sheet •Manages Special Projects on-line content tall; 72" width. $450 obo. We are seeking a team player with a positive a. mdl 11 , $ 400; Metal Equipment 541-330-8177 after 11 am attitude to join the accounting department with I.T. lock mdl 22, $450. 4' air shear; 6'x16ga 541-408-8850 If you feel you might be a fit for this po•Manages the Special Projects Image and Hand Brake; Pinspotter; team. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Special Projects Photographer positions 20ga w/Acme s ition please e-mail y our r e sume t o Search the area's most Wanted: Collector seeks Pittsburgh hwest@bendbulletin.com pr i or to May 1. within the department. Rolls', Manual Cleatcomprehensive listing of high quality fishing items bender No phones calls or resume drop-offs, please. 24"x20ga; Spot & upscale bamboo fly classified advertising... Must have reliable transportation. Able to lift 541-678-5753, Welder w/24" arms; Slip For qualifying employees we offer benefits inreal estate to automotive, rods.orCall 503-351-2746 roll (manual) 3'x2" dia; up to 40 lbs. Pre-employment drug screen merchandise to sporting Box & Pan Brake 48" x16 cluding life insurance, short-term 8 long-term required. EOE goods. Bulletin Classifieds 247 ga; Easy Edger (Bench disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. appear every day in the Drug test is required prior to employment. type)... will sell complete Sporting Goods Send resume to: print or on line. or by the piece. - Misc. The Bulletin, Martha Rogers, Call 541-771-1958 Call 541-385-5809 Special Projects Manager, www.bendbulletin.com serving central oregon since r903 Tent, 6 person, good Work benches for shop rnrgerrSbbnddbulltii.com c ond. $ 3 5 . Cal l $50 & $75. EOE/Drug Free workplace No phone ca//s please. The Bulletin Items for Free

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

ServingCentral Oregon since 19l8

541-279-1930.

541-280-4459

SALES

Daytime Inside Sales Will hire two sales people to work from the Bend Bulletin newspaper office for the Newspaper in Education sales campaign. This is a contractor position. This is not ad or subscription sales, however if you have previous experience in advertising sales, I will give you priority consideration. The average salesperson earns $400 to $700per week, for a27 hour work week. I'm looking for motivated, energetic, articulate people, with excellent communication skills. Call Melanie at

from thereadersview - not the seller's. Convertthe facts into benefits. Show the readerhowthe itemwil 541-383-0399. help theminsomeway. Safes - Retail This Immediate Opening for advertising tip motivated self starter, experience helpful but brought toyouby

The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregonsin<e lat0

not required. Apply in person only at Furniture Outlet, 1735 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

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, everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (1 1:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto palletsi bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

The Bulletin

ServinyCenrral Oregon sincer903

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon zince 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:

The Bulletin

c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller©bendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE

Job Hunting?

CheCk The Bulletin Classified

Classjfleds www.bendbulletin.com

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

C2 MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014•THE BULLETIN

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

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • • • • • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

•... . . . .

3 :00pm Fri.

• • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri •

Starting at 3 lines

Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad for only$15.00per week.

*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)

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

*Illlust state prices in ad

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 bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

Bsnjj &RaRs op©ggg [Pp

865

880

880

880

ATVs

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

ATV 2010 Yamaha 550 Grizzly. power steering, winch. ODO 775. Black, excellent condition. $5000 O.B.O. 541-593-7483

775

870

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Boats & Accessories

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished

on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

:e.

®

:00

12'1969 Sears aluminum fishing boat, low hours on new 8 hp engine, with trailer and extras. Good shape!$1600. 541-382-2599 14' Alumewelddrift boat with trailer and 8 HP Honda, Ready to fish! $1500 firm Cash. 541-410-9887 15'

850

Snowmobiles

%%%7M

National RV

Tropical, 1997,

Bigfoot Diesel 32' 2006, Su per C Duramax di e s el, Allison trans., only 37K mi., do u b le slide, 5500 Onan diesel gen., to many options to list. Vin¹ 534032, $79,995. Beaver Coach Sales& Service, Bend 541-914-8438

541-408-3811

15' fiberglas Sportsman, 75HP motor, trailer, good condition, $950. 541-389-1086 541-419-8034

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

DLR ¹3447

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

as • '

1971 Fishing

boat, full top cover, 35 H P Ev i n rude motor, trailer and spare tire, accessories, good condition. $1100 obo.

1989 Yamaha Exciter, 2,000 miles, original owner, always garaged, $600. 541-480-7517

G R E AT

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652

Navion IQ Sprinter chassis RV 2008, 25' Mercedes Benz diesel, only 24k miles, excellent condition, automatic rear slide-out w/queen bed, full bath w/shower, deluxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ no smoking.$69,500. 541-382-2430

Winnebago Adventurer 2005 35/a', gas, less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with a l l o p tions, $62,000 / negotiable. Call 5 41 -308-871 t or email a i kistu@bendcable.com

Ffeefwood Discovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, Providence2005 Winnebago Aspect satellite 2 TV's W/D Fully loaded, 35,000 2009- 32', 3 slidemiles, 350 Cat, Very etc., 32,000 m iles. Arctic Cat 580 1994, outs, Leather inteWintered in h e ated clean, non-smoker, EXT, in good rior, Power s eat, shop. $84,900 O.B.O. 3 slides, side-by-side condition, $1000. locks, windows, 541-447-8664 refrigerator with ice Aluminum wheels. Located in La Pine. 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, maker, Washer/Dryer, 17" Call 541-408-6149. Flat Screen, inboard motor, great Generator Kubota 3500 Flat screen TV's, In Surround s o u nd, cond, well maintained, qas, 60 h rs, $1000 motion satellite. 860 PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction camera, Queen bed, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 CASH. 541-923-5960 $95,000 Foam mattress, Awis needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Itiotorcycles & Accessories 541-480-2019 to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these ning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party RV Air leveling, Moon Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. CONSIGNMENTS roof, no smoking or WANTED p ets. L i k e ne w , 476 476 476 We Do The Work ... $74,900 Employment Employment Employment You Keep The Cash! 541-480-6900 KOUNTRY AIRE 2007 Winnebago 2005 HD Super Glide On-site credit Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities 1994 37.5' motorOutlook Class "C" custom, fuel injected approval team, home, with awning, 31', solar panel, Cat. 7k mi, newtires, like and one slide-out, web site presence. heater, excellent TeacheriPreschooli Sales new cond. $9500 We Take Trade-Ins! Only 47k miles condition, more exCobblestone 541-639-9857 Free Advertising. and good condition. tras. Asking $58K. Children's Center caution when purBIG COUNTRY RV CBR 1000RR 2004, 15k WINNEBAGO $25,000. < • a Ph. 541-447-9268 • • • chasing products or I is accepting applicaBend: 541-330-2495 miles, exc. cond, lots 541-548-0318 Can be viewed at BRAVE 2003 tions for Head Preservices from out of e Redmond: of e x t ras, $5,600. (phoro aboveis of a 627 Western Recreation school Teacher with l the area. Sending 541-548-5254 • 34D, 2 slides 541-771-6585 similar model & not the Toyota-Scion Auto (fop of hill) 2 yrs. exp., 5 day c ash, checks, o r Vacation Rentals • Tires 80% actual vehicle) Sales. Great earnin Prineville. work week, 7:30 am l credit i n f ormation • Just completely & Exchanges ing potential, bo- 2:30 pm. Starting l may be subjected to serviced n uses, 401k a n d FRAUD. pay $12/hr. Must (2) 10' Kayaks; Old benefits. Qualifying Ocean front house, • 39,000 miles have Criminal HisFor more informa- I Town Otter, Ocean e xp. e l igible f o r each walk from town, tion about an adver- • • No trades tory Report, Food Frenzy Si t -on-top, guarantee 90 d ay 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, Handlers License, l tiser, you may call both with p a ddles, • $48,000 firm salary. Full service Fireplace, BBQ. $95 the Oregon State CPR and First Aid $225/ea. 541-815-3150 FXSTD Harley facility pro v iding Certified. Call Debi l Attorney General's per night, 3 night MIN. 541-593-6053 Illlonaco Lapalma, TIFFIN ALLEGRO training and support. 208-369-3144 Davidson 2001,twin Office C o n sumer e at 541-318-5455. 2002, 34'10' - WorkBUS 2010 - FULLY cam 88, fuel injected, Must pass criminal Ads published in the Protection hotline at l 630 horse 8.1i Less than LOADED 40QXP Vance & Hines short • a I background check, "Boats" classification J I 1-877-877-9392. 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan Powerglide Chassis / shot exhaust, Stage I Rooms for Rent clean DMV and drug include: Speed, fishgen., 2 slides, 4 dr. 425HP Cummings with Vance & Hines screen. A p ply at TELEFUNDRAISING LThe Bulletin ing, drift, canoe, refrig w/icemaker, Engine / Allison 6 fuel management Thank you St. Jude & Beautiful golf c o urse Toyota-Scion of house and sail boats. micro/convection Spd Automatic Trans system, custom parts, Sacred H e ar t of home, all furn., owner Bend, 61430 S. Hwy For all other types of Tele-funding for oven, water purifier, / Less than 40K miles extra seat. $10,500 absent 90% of time. Jesus. i.d. 97, Bend, Oregon. watercraft, please go Looking for your next hydraulic jacks, power / Offered at $199K. OBO. Call $600, share util. avail •Meals On Wheels employee? to Class 875. pilot seat+ more opToo many options to Today 4/20.. 541-279-9538. •Defeat Diabetes 541-385-5809 Place a Bulletin help Want to impress the tions. Exceptionally list here! For more 541-516-8684 Foundation wanted ad today and information go to clean. $59,900/make TiCk, TOCk relatives? Remodel Just too many •Veterans (OPVA) reach over 60,000 e offer.541-504-1008 ~ servin central ore on since 1903 your home with the collectibles? readers each week. alle obus.co ~ Tick, Tock... Harley Davidson 2009 help of a professional Your classified ad or email Seniors and ali Super Glide Custom, Call The Bulletin At from The Bulletin's ...don't let time get will also appear on trainwater157O Sell them in Stage 1 Screaming others we/come. 541-385-5809 g Bil.GD bendbulletin.com "Call A Service Eagle performance, away. Hire a The Bulletin Classifieds which currently Place Your Ad Or E-Mail or call858-527-8627 too many options to Mon-Thur. Professional" Directory professional out receives over 1.5 list, $8900. At: www.bendbulletin.com 4:30-8:30 p.m. million page views 541-388-8939 of The Bulletin's 541-385-5809 $9.10/hour. every month at "Call A Service Chaparral 2130SS no extra cost. 632 Call 541-382-8672 Clean, well m ainProfessional" Bulletin Classifieds Apt JMultiplex General tained 21 ' f a m ily Get Results! Directory today! ski/wakeboard Call 385-5809 CHECKYOUR AD open-bow runabout or place with new Barewest PURCHASING MANAGER your ad on-line at Call54I 385dl09 te promoteyeurteirice • Advertise for 28dali stortingcttl4! Ittarrrrat~ag trrtrt arrtrttr s rarrrrtrtal tower/Bimini. Great bendbulletin.com sound system, new Experienced buyer needed to purchase raw Harley Davidson dual battery system. materials for inventory, equipment, machinery, 2011 Classic LimStored under cover, supplies and other services. Responsibilities ited, Loaded! 9500 fresh water use only, Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care include vendor negotiation and management Rmjjlal on the first day it runs miles, custom paint 2nd owner. J u st of the inventory. to make sure it is cor"Broken Glass" by ® Ãmlijjim NOTICE: Oregon Landb ought a lar g e r NOTICE: Oregon state rect. "Spellcheck" and Nicholas Del Drago, law requires anyone scape Contractors Law Chaparral! $16,000. who Re uired ualifications include: human errors do ocnew condition, con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all 541-419-9510 • 3 yrs. experience as a buyer/purchasing cur. If this happens to heated handgrips, Zoped gua/rtI construction work to businesses that adagent for a manufacturing company your ad, please conauto cruise control. be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Zavr/< gifr e I,. • 2 yrs. experience with a computerized tact us ASAP so that $32k in bike, Enclosed raft t r ailer, Construction Contrac- More Than Service Landscape Construcpurchasing/inventory management system corrections and any 12'x7', pulley system tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: only $20,000or best Peace Of Mind • Knowledge of purchasing practices, adjustments can be offer. 541-318-6049 to help load, wired for active license p lanting, deck s , terminology and contract obligations 528 made to your ad. 12 volt a i r p u mp. means the contractor fences, arbors, • Mechanical background with the ability to Spring Clean Up 541-385-5809 is bonded & insured. water-features, and inLoans & Mortgages $750. 541-593-6053 •Leaves interpret mechanical drawings The Bulletin Classified HDFatBo 1996 Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir• Excellent oral and written communication •Cones 875 CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be WARNING • Needles skills www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e The Bulletin recomTake care of Watercraft • Experience using MS Excel and Word • Debris Hauling contractor.com Landscape Contracmends you use cau• College degree in business preferred your investments or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit tion when you proAds published in "Wa Weed Free Bark The Bulletin recomnumber is to be inwith the help from vide personal tercraft" include: Kay Pre-employment drug screen is r equired. information & Flower Beds mends checking with cluded in all adverto compaaks, rafts and motor the The Bulletin's Equal Opportunity Employer. CCB prior to contisements which indinies offering loans or Completely Ized personal tracting with anyone. Lawn Renovation cate the business has "Call A Service credit, especially Rebuilt/Customized watercrafts. Fo Excellent benefit package includes group Some other t rades a bond, insurance and Aeration Dethatching those asking for ad- Professional" Directory "boats" please se 2012/2013 Award medical/dental insurance, vacation, PTO, also req u ire addiOverseed workers c ompensavance loan fees or Winner Class 870. tional licenses and tion for their employ401(k) plan and Flex. Spending Account. Compost companies from out of Showroom Condition 541-385-5809 634 certifications. ees. For your protecTop Dressing state. If you have Many Extras Submit resume with salary requirements to tion call 503-378-5909 concerns or ques- Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Low Miles. Just bought a new boat? or use our website: hrOfuelsafe.com. serving central oiegonsince 1903 Landscape tions, we suggest you Sell your old one in the $17,000 www.lcb.state.or.us to 2 story, 2 master consult your attorney Maintenance classifieds! Ask about our 541-548-4807 check license status Aircraft Rubber fi/fanufacfuring, lnc. suites, all appliances, 880 or call CONSUMER Super Seller rates! Full or Partial Service before contracting with dba FuelSafe Systems w/s/g pd., no pets/ HOTLINE, •Mowing Edging Motorhomes 541-385-5809 the business. Persons 1550NE Kingwood Ave. smoking. $750 mo. 1-877-877-9392. •Pruning ~Weeding Say "goodbuy" doing lan d scape 541-389-7734 Redmond, OR 97756 Custom Remodel & Tile Sprinkler Adjustments maintenance do not 30' Class A MotorWhere can you find a to that unused T. Schellworth, Gen. r equire an LC B l i 648 home 1988 in exContractor/Builder Fertilizer included helping hand? item by placing it in cense. Houses for cellent c o n dition. CCB ¹188631 with monthly program Reception/Administration From contractors to The Bulletin Classifieds Low mileage, owner 541-588-0958 Rent General Aeration/Dethatching c onfined t o re s t yard care, it's all here 1-time or Weekly Services Weekly,monthly Front Desk Reception home, must sacriPUBLISHER'S in The Bulletin's Debris Removal or one time service. Ask about FREEadded 541-385-580 9 fice at $5,500. fully svcs w/seasonal contract! NOTICE The Bulletin "Call A Service equipped with genBonded & Insured. All real estate adverJUNK BE GONE EXPERIENCED Professional" Directory erator, & a c cess. COLLINS Lawn Maint. tising in this newspaThe right person for this position will be the iniCommercial I Haul Away FREE Call 916-712-9684 Ca/i 541-480-9714 per is subject to the & Residential tial face and voice of The Bulletin for employ- BANK TURNED YOU For Salvage. Also F air Housing A c t ees and customers coming into the building or Cleanups & Cleanouts DOWN? Private party which makes it illegal Allen Reinsch Yard contactingthe company by phone. The posiMel, 541-389-8107 Maintenance & Mowing will loan on real es- to a d vertise "any Senior Discounts tion includes managing the phone system, (& many other things!) tate equity. Credit, no preference, limitation routing all calls to various departments/per541-390-1 466 Call 541-536-1294or BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS problem, good equity or disc r imination sonnel, greeting employees and guests to the 541-815-5313 is all you need. Call based on race, color, Triumph Daytona Search the area's most Same Day Response building, processing and routing all mail to Oregon Land Mort- religion, sex, handi- 2004, 15K m i l e s, comprehensive listing of various departments, management of the cash bike, needs gage 541-388-4200. classified advertising... Painting/Wall Covering cap, familial status, perfect register, recording and preparing receipts for Vin real estate to automotive, Alfa See Ya 2006 marital status or na- nothing. customers placing classified ads, daily recon¹201536. Excellent condition, 1 merchandise to sporting WESTERN PAINTING Find exactly what tional origin, or an inciliation of the newspaper, managing incoming $4995 owner, 350 Cat diesel, goods. Bulletin Classifieds CO. Richard Hayman, and outgoing Federal Express. This position you are looking for in the tention to make any Dream Car 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, appear every day in the a semi-retired paintsuch pre f erence, Serving Central requires some knowledge of general office CLASSIFIEDS icemaker, gas stove, Auto Sales print or on line. ing contractor of 45 limitation or discrimiOregon Since 2003 functions and procedures. 1801 Division, Bend oven, washer/dryer, years. S mall Jobs nation." Familial staResidental/Commercial Call 541-385-5809 non-smoker DreamCarsBend.com i 3 slides, LOCAL MONEY:We buy Welcome. Interior & tus includes children www.bendbulletin.com We are looking for a team player with a posi541-678-0240 generator, invertor, secured trust deeds & under the age of 18 Sprinkler Exterior. c c b¹5184. tive, professional attitude and strong customer leather interior, satelnote,some hard money living with parents or Dlr 3665 Activation/Repair 541-388-6910 The Bulletin service skills. The right person will be prompt, loans. Call Pat Kellev lite, 7'4" ceiling. Semng Cenlral Oregon irnce19te legal cus t odians, Back Flow Testing reliable, and comfortable with operating a 541-382-3099 ext.13. Clean!$77,500. pregnant women, and Tree Services small variety of software as well as the Inter541-233-6520 Maintenance Handyman net. Must be able to communicate well both Real estate investor loan people securing cus~Thatch & Aerate needed. Investor will tody of children under MR. STUMP BUSTER verbally and in writing with customers and • Spring Clean up I DO THAT! Professional Stump & Tree co-workers. This is a full-time, entry-level popay 7% on a $40,000 18. This newspaper .Weekly Mowing Home/Rental repairs Removal• 24 yrs exp. to $60,000 loan se- will not knowingly acsition. Hours are from 7:30-4:30 M-F. & Edging Small jobs to remodels •Bi-Monthly Insured - Free estimates! cured by First Trust cept any advertising 8 Monthly Honest, guaranteed Call 541-213-9103 deed. 541-771-4414 for real estate which is If you are interested in joining our accounting Maintenance in violation of the law. Victory TC 2002, work. CCB¹151573 t eam, please e -mail y ou r r e sume t o • Bark, Rock, Etc. O ur r e aders a r e 4 0K m i . , ru n s Dennis 541-317-9768 hwest@bendbulletin.com prior to May 1st. Have an item to Call a Pro hereby informed that great, stage 1 kit, No phones calls or resume drop-offs please. ~Landsca in sell quick? Beaver Marquis, Whether you need a all dwellings adver- n ew tires, r e a r ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape 1993 tised in this newspaSERVICES. Home & Construction If it's under fence fixed,hedges For qualifying employees we offer benefits in40-ft, Brunswick per are available on b rakes 8 m o r e. Commercial Repairs, ~Water Feature cluding life insurance, short-term & long-term '500 you can place it in trimmed or a house H ealth for c e s an equal opportunity floor plan. Many Carpentry-Painting, disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Installation/Maint. $5,0 0 0 . built, you'll find basis. To complain of s ale. extras, well mainPressure-washing, •Pavers The Bulletin Drug test is required prior to employment. d iscrimination cal l 541-771-0665 Honey Do's. On-time •Renovations tained, fire supprofessional help in Classifieds for: HUD t o l l-free at promise. Senior pression behind •Irrigations Installation The Bulletin's "Call a 1-800-877-0246. The Discount. Work guarrefrig, Stow Master Check out the '1 0 - 3 lines, 7 days Service Professional" toll free t e lephone anteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts 5000 tow bar, Serving Central Oregonsince t903 classifieds online number for the hearor 541-771-4463 '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Bonded & Insured Directory $24,995. www.bendbulletin.com i m p aired is Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 EOE/Drug Free workplace 541-383-3503 541-385-5809 (Private Party ads only) ing 1-800-927-9275. Updated daily CCB¹181595 LCB¹8759 t

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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, APR 21, 2014

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD w'll Sbpltz

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B Monday,Apri121,2014

Hot Water

ACROSS LAce of spades, e.g. 5 Room under the roof 10OldRussian autocrat 14Lothario's look

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

In the club lounge, Cy the Cynic was musing about random topicsnot unusual for him. "I can't believe," Cy told me, "that some people actually get into the s hower before they t urn o n t h e water." " Sounds l i ke a p oten t i a l government study." No matter how you shower, your timing as declarer must be precise. At 3NT South took the ace of clubs and let the jack of hearts ride, hoping for three heart tricks plus two in every other suit. East took the queen and returned a club, and South won the third club and cashed the A-K of diamonds. West's queen showered down, but after South took the jack, he couldn't get back for the good diamonds. When he led a heart, West produced the ace — and two good clubs. DIAMONDS

diamonds and he rebids two spades. What do you say? ANSWER: If y o u're a notrump hog, you might shoot out 3NT, but partner would pass with A K 8 6 4 2, 6 5, Q 4, K 6 2 , and the contract would be in grave danger. Bid three clubs. If p artner next bids three diamonds or three hearts, try three spades. If he bids four clubs or rebids three spades, go to four spades. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

15 The middle

Corleone brother 16 Six: Prefix 17"Dies " (Latin hymn) 18Poacher's nemesis 20 Guitarist Lofgren of the E Street Band 21With it

NORTH 4 8AK6 2

22 In o f 23 Idaho's nickname

QK984 0 J64

25 Muslim pilgrim's destination 28 Pringles container 29 Witness 31 Young 'un

494 WEST

EAST 45 J873

4Q94 9A53 0 Q5

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4 J1076 3

South turned up the hot w ater when he led hearts. He must instead cash the top diamonds. When the queen falls, he takes the jack, comes to the queen of clubs and runs the diamonds for nine tricks. If the queen of diamonds didn't S outh fall, South could finesse in hearts. 1O 1 NT DAILY QUESTION 3 Q

AK82

H A K E

9 J102 0 AK 872

4AQ5 Nor t h 19 2 NT 3 NT

S A C S

Eas t Pass Pass All P a ss

S T P A T

You hold: 4 5 10 5 9 J 10 2 Open i n glead — A6 0 A K 8 7 2 4 A Q S. Y o u r partner opens one spade, you b i d t w o (C ) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridga.org. BIZARRO

61 "Assuming that's true..." 62 Round hammer

some skin 3$ Gung-ho 39 Regulations 40 Streets: Abbr. 41 Mayberry resident who became a Marine 43 Lifeless 44 Beat by a hair 45Oldwhat'sname 46 Picnic pest 47 Hersey's "A Bell for 49 Round candy in a vending machine 54 Stow, as cargo 56 Burma's first prime minister 57 Campbell'5 product 5$ Sport that includes the pommel horse and parallel bars

part 63 Most accessible seating choice 64 Grub 65Out of kilter 66 " Gold" (Peter Fonda film) 61 Eye woe

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

SOUTH 49105

We s t P ass Pas s Pass

32 College concentration 35 Request for

OL M E S I TA B L A N I S S Y F A ST S E N T I L E UB WA Y LA I N H EN T WA EA T M A T N E U T E MA R T E D I P I A R AEA N B TE I T I A L L S B

A N T B C E A R C E MA T H A I H O R N S ER I F U MA N R R PS E E S P E R D O Z A A R E B U M S OD A C I R I S HM E EK E E

A P P L E S A U C E

R E L E T

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PUZZLE BY JOHN LIEB

34 Orioles Hall-of42 "The Mary Tyler Fame pitcher who Moore Show" modeled Jockey spinoff underwear 43 Bach'6 "Mass 35 Fellas Minor" 46 Makes laugh 36 Not well 46One minding the 37 Excursions to baby la-la land 49 False front 39Schoolin Troy, 50"I give up!" N.Y.

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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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to form the surprise onowoa ao suggested by the above cartoon. 4-21

HEROOAN~ o laughingstock Inlernaoonal Inc., Doo by Universal Uclok for UFo, 2014

(Anoworo tomorrow)

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5 Repairs, as a lawn's bare spot 9 On the higher side 14 Fictional lab assistant 15 Be certain 16 Garbo of the

silver screen 17 Man-made organic pump 20 Take care of

21 Start of Caesar'8 incredulous question 22 Gl rations 23 1040 publisher: Abbr. 25 Prefix meaning

WijMO 4/21

4 4

J umbles: WHILE FL I N T IND U C T HAR D E R Answer. Ho wasn't exactly sure what wao wrong with the violin and needed to — FIDDLE WITH IT

6 It may be enough 43 Cowboy's hat 7"Just ": Nike 45 Reason for an slogan Llmp's safe call 8 Try to whack, as 47 Emmy winner 48 Arctic expanse 49 It means nothing to Juan

56 Mark from a surgical procedure 57 Having no doubt 59 Occurrlng as you watch it 60 Huckleberry Hound, for one

52 Inferiors of cpls.

61 Songstress

a fly

9 "Gross!" 10 Logical proposition 11 Apple relative 12 To be, to Brigitte 13 "Peanuts"

phooey

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53 Tombstone

Murray

lawman

63 Conclusion

54 Burn-soothing substance

18 Tuning 19 Break in the

action

64 Plant gathering information

ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:

24 Break in the action 26 Word with tube or D Q pattern AU 27 Florida C A metropolis E D 28 Vision-related

B L I Z Z A R T O D E A L E U S E A S T I S A L U I F LO M O 29 Game with Skip "high" cal'ds A C M E T R A S 27 Dish not made 30 Mathematical D O O M R A S P from the reptile comparison D M V P Y M R it's named for 31 Wee hr. E E E E A G E 34 Kissing pair 32 Grammarian's 3 5 Out l i m b S A L A D D A Y concern 36 Get a feeling 33 Lizards and A L C A T R A Z about snakes, for some M A R I S A E L 37 Feed bag morsel 34 Do nothing A T O N G E T I 38 Like a soloist on 38 Use FedEX a dark stage U L T R 39 Comical Costello S E S E 41 Fill up on P L E A 40 Clouseau's rank: S R S 42 Barn-raising sect Abbr. xwordeditor@aol.com 44 Electrified particle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 45 Falls behind 46 Pseudonym 15 16 50"The Lord of the Rings," e.g. 17 18 79 51 Encouragement "on the back" 20 21 52 Bog fuel 55 Capone nemesis 23 24 25 26 Eliot 58 Triangular Greek 27 28 29 30 letter 62 Finger-pointing 34 35 se

D M R T I R E R U M T A T O R C H T A L I S E A F G S A R S P O O L E O I M N S H A A S O U S E R I

I L L T A K E O N E

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perjury 65 Sing like Bing 66 50+ org. 67 Company with bell ringers 68 Shell out 69 Zebras, to lions 70 Actor Hackman DOWN 1 Narrow inlets 2 Folklore monster 3 Carryall with handles 4 They give films stars 5 Slalom item

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By David W. Cromer (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

04/21/14



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

C6 MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014•THE BULLETIN

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trolled su b stances CIARY A DVANCES through and someone n ew owner i f y o u or payoff quotes re- been recorded pursu- trustee's and PUBLIC NOTICE (ORS Chapter 475). attorney's fees not Suspense Cre d it: n ew will o w n t h i s would like to stay. If The Bend Park & Rec- quested pursuant to ant to O regon ReTOTAL: p roperty. After t h e t he n ew owne r reation District Bud- O RS 8 6 .757 a n d vlsed Statutes exceeding the $0.00 IN THE MATTER OF: $11,190.25 ALSO, if sale, the new owner is accepts rent from you, get Committee and 86.759 must be timely 86.735(3); the default amounts provided by required to p rovide signs a new communicated in a for which the foreclosaid OR S 8 6 .753. you have failed to pay district staff will tour (1) US Currency in taxes on the property, you w i t h co n tact r esidential ren t a l several district parks written request that s ure i s m a d e i s Requests from perthe am o un t of provide insurance on information and notice agreement with you or and facilities on Tues- c omplies wit h t h a t grantor's failure to pay sons named in ORS 2 ,190.00, Case N o the property or pay t hat the s a l e t o o k does not notify you in day, April 22, from statute addressed to when due the follow- 86.753 for reinstate1 4-074508 se i z ed other senior liens or place. The following writing within 30 days 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. the trustee's "Urgent ing sums: monthly ment quotes received March 12, 2014 from encumbrances as re- information applies to after the date of the The district's Budget Request Desk" either payments of less than six days James Shank. quired in the note and you only if you are a foreclosure sale that Committee consists of by personal delivery $4,347.75 beginning prior to the date set you must move out, to the trustee's physid eed of t r ust, t h e bona f i d e te n a nt the Board of Direc12/01/09; and monthly for the trustee's sale LEGAL NOTICE of will be honored only at beneficiary may insist occupying and renting t he n e w own e r tors and five citizens cal offices (call for ad- payments NOTICE TO that you do so in or- t his property as a becomes your new that are appointed by dress) or b y f i r st $4,386. 1 8 beginning the discretion of the INTERESTED der to reinstate your residential d w elling l andlord and m u s t the Board. The Bud- class, certified mail, 06/01/2010; and b eneficiary or if r e PERSONS ccount i n goo d under a le g itimate maintain the property. get Committee annu- r eturn receipt r e - monthly payments of quired by the terms of The undersigned has a The benefi- rental agreement. The Otherwise: o You do ally tours district facili- quested, addressed to $,464.93 b e ginning the loan documents. been appointed Per- standing. not owe rent; o The t ies prior t o t h e i r the trustee's post of- 12/01/2010; may require as a information does not and In construing this nosonal Representative ciary ondition t o re i n - apply to you if you new owner is not your d eliberation of t h e fice box address set monthly payments of tice, the singular inof the Estate of Doris c landlord and is not forth in this notice. that y o u own this property or if d istrict's budget i n $4,386.51 beginning cludes the plural, the Jean S c ott , De- s tatement for May. for more infor- Due to potential con- 12/01/2011; plus prior word "grantor" inreliable writ- you are not a bona responsible ceased, by the Circuit provide the mation contact Lind- flicts with federal law, accrued late charges cludes any successor ten evidence that you fide residential tenant. maintaining C ourt, State of O rpaid all senior If the foreclosure sale p roperty o n you r s ey L o mbard, F i - persons having no of $6,667.68; plus ad- i n i nterest t o th e egon, County of Des- have record legal or equi- vances of $ 138.05; grantor as well as any iens o r enc u m- goes through, the new b ehalf; and o Y o u n ance Director a t chutes, Probate No. lbrances, table interest in the together with title ex- other person owing an p r o perty owner will have the must move out by the 541-706-6109. 14-PB-0028. All per- taxes, and hazard subject property will pense, costs, trustee's obligation, the perforin- right to require you to date the new owner sons having claims surance p remiums. out. Before the specifies in a notice to LEGAL NOTICE only receive informa- fees and attorney's mance of which is seagainst the estate are These requirements move you. The new owner new o w ne r can TRUSTEE'S NOTICE tion concerning the fees incurred herein cured by said trust required to p resent for rei n statement require you to move, may offer to pay your OF SALE File No. estimated or by reason of said de- deed, and the words t heir c l a ims w i t h should be confirmed the new owner must moving expenses and 7 827.20557 Re f e r- lender's actual bid. Lender bid fault; any further sums "trustee" and "benefiproper vouchers by contacting the un- p rovide yo u ence is made to that i nformation is a l s o advanced by the ben- ciary" include their ret h any other costs or within four m o nths dersigned Trustee. By written notice wi a t the eficiary for the protec- spective successors t h at amounts you and the c ertain t rust d e e d available from this date, to the web s ite, tion of the above de- in interest, if any. The of said default, specifies the date by new owner agree on made by Frederick R. trustee's undersigned, or they reason beneficiary has which you must move in exchange for your Russell, as grantor, to www.northwestscribed real property trustee's rules of aucmay be barred. Addi- the eclared al l s u m s o ut. If you d o n ot agreement to l eave Amerititle, as trustee, trustee.com. Notice is and i ts inte r est tion may be accessed tional information may d the premises in less further given that any w w w .northweston the obliga- l eave b e fore th e in favor of Financial therein; and prepay- at be obtained from the owing tion secured by said move-out date, the t han 9 0 d a y s o r person named in ORS ment penalties/premitrustee.com and are reedom Sen i o r court records, the un- trust deed i mmedi- new owner can have before your fixed term F Funding Corporation, 86.753 has the right, ums, if applicable. By incorporated by this dersigned, or the atdue and pay- the sheriff remove you lease expires. You a subsidiary of Indy- at any time prior to reason of said default reference. You may torneys named below. ately also access sale stasaid sums being from the property after should speak with a Mac Bank, F.S.B., as five days before the the beneficiary has Dated and first pub- able, f ollowing: U Nto full y b eneficiary, ww w .northa court hearing. You lawyer da t e d date last set for the d eclared all s u ms tus a t lished: April 14, 2014. the understand your rights 10/1 2/07, r e c orded sale, to h ave t h is owing on the obliga- westtrustee.com and PRI N C IPAL will receive notice of KEITH SCOTT, PER- PAID OF the court h e aring. before making any 10/18/07, in the mort- foreclosure proceed- tion secured by the www. USA-ForecloSONAL REPRESEN- BALANCE 41,427.89, PL U S PROTECTION FROM decisions regarding gage records of Des- ing dismissed and the trust deed i mmedi- sure.com. For further TATIVE c/o STEVEN $ interest thereon at E VICTION IF Y O U your tenancy. IT IS trust deed reinstated chutes County, Orately due and pay- information, p l ease H. LEVENTHAL, OSB 4.500% per a nnum ARE A BONA FIDE UNLAWFUL FOR egon, as 2007-55707 by payment to t he able, said sums being contact: Nanci Lam¹023653, ATTORfrom 2/5/2013, until TENANT A NY PERSON T O and subsequently as- beneficiary of the en- the following, to wit: bert Northwest NEY-AT-LAW, 231 Trustee Services, Inc. paid, together with O CCUPYING A N D TRY TO FORCE YOU signed to OneWest tire amount then due $540,000.00 with inSCALEHOUSE THIS TO LEAVE Y OUR a d vances, RENTING B ank, FSB by A s - (other than such por- terest thereon at the P.O. Box 997 BelleLOOP, SUITE ¹203, escrow UN I T signment recorded as tion of the principal as rate of 7.375 percent vue, WA 98009-0997 f oreclosure co s t s, P ROPERTY AS A D WELLING Bend, OR 97702. trustee fees, attorney RESIDENTIAL W ITHOUT FI R S T 2013-48374, covering would not then be due per annum beginning 425-586-1900 YOU t he f o llowing d e - had no default ocfees, sums required DWELLING, YOU GIVING 11/01/09; plus prior Schlam, Stephen M. LEGAL NOTICE for the protection of HAVE THE R IGHT WRITTEN N O TICE scribed real property curred) and by curing accrued late charges and Carol A. (TS¹ TO INTERESTED the property and addi- TO CONTI N UE A ND G O ING T O situated in said county any o t her d e fault of $6,667.68; plus ad- 9047.20032) PERSONS THI S COURT TO E VICT and state, to wit: Lot complained of herein vances of $ 138.05; 1002.265416-File No. Albert E. Shrum has tional sums secured L IVING I N Two (2), The Willows that is capable of be- together with title exbeen appointed Ad- by the Deed of Trust. PROPERTY AFTER Y OU. FOR M O R E THE FORECLOSURE INFORMATION LEGAL NOTICE Phase I, Deschutes ing cured by tender- pense, costs, trustee's ministrator of the es- W HEREFORE, n o YOUR County, Ore g o n. ing the performance fees and a t torneys TRUSTEE'S NOTICE tate of Billy Eugene tice hereby is given SALE FOR: • TH E ABOUT OF RIGHTS, YOU MAY PROPERTY AD- r equired under t h e fees incurred herein OF SALE File No. Shrum, deceased, by that the undersigned REMAINDER tr u st by reason of said de- 7827.20554 R e f e rthe C i rcuit C o urt, trustee, will on July YOUR FIXED TERM WISH TO CONSULT DRESS: 2438 North- o bligation o r LEASE, I F YOU A LAWYER. If you east Snow W i llow deed, and in addition fault; any further sums ence is made to that State of Oregon, Des- 22, 2014, at the hour A FIX ED believe you need legal Court B e nd , OR to paying said sums advanced by the ben- c ertain t rust d e e d chutes County, Case of 11:00 AM, in ac- HAVE N o. 14PB0020. A l l cord with the stan- TERM LEASE; • AT assistance, c o ntact 97701 Both the ben- or tendering the per- eficiary for the protec- made by Arthur D. DAY S the Oregon State Bar eficiary a n d the formance necessary tion of the above de- Westbrook and persons having claims dard of time estab- L EAST 9 0 b y ORS F ROM THE D A T E at 800-452-7636 and trustee have elected to cure the default, by scribed real property Wanda V. Westbrook, against the estate are lished ask for the l awyer to sell the real prop- paying all costs and and MAI N YOU ARE GIVEN A i ts inte r est as tenants by the enrequired to present 1 87.110, a t referral service. If you erty to satisfy the obli- expenses actually in- therein; and prepay- tirety, as grantor, to them, with vouchers ENTRANCE TO THE WRITTEN do not have enough curred in enforcing the TERMINATION gations secured by ment penalties/premi- First American Title attached, to the un- DESCHUTES money to p a y a the trust deed and a obligation and t rust ums, if a p plicable. Insurance Company dersigned A d minis- COUNTY J USTICE NOTICE. If the new lawyer a n d are deed, together with CENTER, 1100 NW owner wants to move notice of default has W HEREFORE, n o - of Oregon, as trustee, t rator at 2 5 0 N W STR E ET, i n an d u s e th i s otherwise eligible, you been recorded pursu- trustee's and tice hereby is given in favor of Financial Franklin Ave n u e, BOND a b l e to ant to Oregon Re- a ttorney's fees n ot that the undersigned F reedom Sen i o r Suite 402, Bend, Or- BEND, County of DE- property as a primary may b e receive legal vlsed the trustee will on July 2, Funding Corporation, residence, the new Statutes exceeding egon 97701, within SCHUTES, State of assistance for free. 86.735(3); the event amounts provided by 2014 at the hour of at owner can give you a subsidiary of Indyfour months after the OREGON, s el l abo u t of default under the said OR S 8 6 .753. 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in Mac Bank, F.S.B., as date of April 14, 2014, public auction to the w ritten notice a n d I nformation whom to contact for Requests from pern ote and d eed o f accord with the stan- b eneficiary, da t e d the first publication of h ighest bidder f o r require you to move t his notice, o r t h e cash, the interest in out after 90 d ays, free legal assistance t rust, p ursuant t o sons named in ORS dard of time estab- 11/08/06, r e corded may b e ob t ained 86.753 for reinstatethe said d e scribed even though you have Section 9(a)(i) of the lished by ORS 11/14/06, in the mortclaims may be barred. a fixed term lease with through Safenet at Deed of Trust, which ment quotes received 187.110, at the folgage records of DesAdditional information property which t he 800-SAFENET. provides that, "Lender less than six days lowing place: inside chutes County, Ormay be obtained from grantor had, or had more than 90 days t he records of t h e the power to convey, l eft. You must b e Without limiting the may require immedi- prior to the date set the main lobby of the egon, as 2006-75392 C o u nty and subsequently ascourt, the A dminis- at the time of the ex- provided with at least trustee's disclaimer of ate payment in full of for the trustee's sale Deschutes or all sums secured by will be honored only at Courthouse, 1164 NW signed to OneWest trator, or the lawyer ecution by him of the 90 days' written notice representations warranties, O r egon the discretion of the this Security InstruBond, in the City of B ank, FSB b y A s for the Administrator, said trust deed, to- after the foreclosure gether with any inter- sale before you can l aw r e quires t h e ment if... .Borrower beneficiary or if r eBend, County of Des- signment recorded as Patricia Heatherman. est which the grantor be required to move. trustee to state in this dies and the Property quired by the terms of chutes, State of Or2014-004444, coverLEGAL NOTICE or his successors in A bona fide tenant is a n otice t ha t so m e is not the principal the loan documents. egon, sell at public ing the following deIn construing this no- auction to the highest scribed real property TRUSTEE'S NOTICE interest acquired after residential tenant who residential p r operty residence of at least OF SALE Pursuant to the execution of said is not the borrower sold at a trustee's sale one surviving Bor- tice, the singular in- bidder for cash the situated in said county O.R.S. 86.705 et seq. trust deed, to satisfy (property owner) or a may have been used rower". Default date of cludes the plural, the i nterest in t h e d e - and state, to wit: Lot 6 and O.R.S. 79.5010, the foregoing obliga- child, s p ouse or in manufacturing 09/26/2013 and pay word "grantor" i nscribed real property in Block 2 of Cascade et seq. Trustee's Sale tions thereby secured parent of the methamphetamines, the following sums: cludes any successor which the grantor had View Allotment, City and the costs and exthe chemical i n interest t o t h e No. 09-XFH-130012 borrower, and whose principal balance of or had power to con- of Redmond, DesN OTICE TO B O R - penses of sale, inrental agreement: o Is components of which $123,372.60 with ac- grantor as well as any vey at the time of the chutes County, OrROWER: YOU cluding a reasonable the r esult o f an are known to be toxic. crued interest from other person owing an execution by grantor egon. P R OPERTY Prospective SHOULD BE AWARE charge by the trustee. arm's-length 08/26/2013; together obligation, the perfor- of the trust deed, toADDRESS: 106 THAT THE UNDERNotice is further given transaction; purchasers of with title e xpense, mance of which is se- gether with any inter- Northwest C a nyon 0 SIGNED I S AT- t hat a n y per s on Requires the payment residential p roperty costs, trustee's fees cured by said trust est which the grantor Drive Redmond, OR TEMPTING TO COL- named in ORS 86.753 o f rent that i s n o t should be aware of and attorney's fees deed, and the words or grantor's succes- 97756 Both the ben"trustee" and "benefi- sors in interest acLECT A DEBT AND has the right, at any substantially less than this potential danger i ncurred herein b y eficiary a n d the THAT ANY INFOR- time prior to five days fair market rent for the b efore deciding t o trustee have elected reason of said default; ciary" include their re- quired after the exMATION OBTAINED before the date last property, unless the place a bid for this any further sums ad- spective successors ecution of the trust to sell the real propWILL BE USED FOR set for the sale, to rent is r educed or property at the vanced by the benefi- in interest, if any. The deed, to satisfy the erty to satisfy the oblitrustee's sale. ciary for the protec- trustee's rules of auc- foregoing obligations gations secured by THAT PUR P OSE. have this foreclosure subsidized due to a Reference is made to roceeding dismissed federal, state or local DATED: 3 / 1 9/20'l4 tion of t h e a b ove tion may be accessed thereby secured and the trust deed and a REGIONAL ww w .northwest- t he costs an d e x - notice of default has that certain Deed of and the trust deed subsidy; and o Was described real prop- at Trust made by, TROY reinstated by payment entered into prior to TRUSTEE erty and its interest trustee.com and are penses of sale, in- been recorded pursuSERVICES CORPOincorporated by this cluding a reasonable ant to Oregon ReR B E TCHER, a s to the beneficiary of the d a t e of the therein; and prepaythe entire a mount RATION Trustee By: ment penalties/premireference. You may grantor, to FIDELITY f oreclosure sal e . charge by the trustee. vlsed Statutes NATIONAL TITLE IN- then due (other than ABOUT YOUR MELANIE BEAMAN, ums, if applicable. By also access sale sta- Notice is further given 86.735(3); the event SURANCE CO., as such portion of the TENANCY AUTHORIZED reason of said default, tus a t ww w . north- that for reinstatement of default under the Trustee, in favor of principal as would not B ETWEEN NOW AGENT 6 1 6 1st the beneficiary has westtrustee.com and or payoff quotes re- n ote and d eed o f FIRST TENNESSEE then be due had no AND THE Avenue, Suite 500, d eclared all s u ms www.USA-Forecloquested pursuant to trust, pursua Seattle, WA 9 8 104 owing on the obliga- sure.com. For further O RS 8 6 .757 a n d BANK NAT I ONAL default occurred) and FORECLOSURE A SSOCIATION, a s by curing any other SALE: RENT Y OU Phone: tion secured by said information, p l ease 86.759 must be timely Bre a non c ommunicated in a b eneficiary, da t e d default complained of SHOULD CONTINUE (206)340-2550 Sale trust deed i mmedi- contact: herein that is capable TO PAY RENT TO Information: Nort h west written request that 3/24/2003, recorded ately due and pay- Miller 5/12/2003, under In- of being cured by YOUR L A NDLORD http://www.rtrustee.co able, said sums being Trustee Services, Inc. c omplies with t h a t A-4448637 the following, to wit: strument No. t endering the p e r - UNTIL THE m P.O. Box 997 Belle- statute addressed to 2003-31518, records formance r e q uired PROPERTY IS SOLD 03/31/2014, principal balance of vue, WA 98009-0997 the trustee's "Urgent 4 25-586-1900 R u s of DESC H UTES under the obligation or OR UNTIL A COURT 04/07/2014, $123,372.60 with inRequest Desk" either County, O R EGON. t rust deed, and i n TELLS YOU 04/1 4/2014, terest thereon at the sell, Frederick R. (TS¹ by personal delivery The beneficial inter- addition to paying said OTHERWISE. IFYOU 04/21/2014 note rate o f 1 . 130 7827.20557) to the trustee's physiest under said Trust sums or tendering the DO NOT PAY RENT, percent per annum 1002.265379-File No. cal offices (call for adbeginning 08/26/2013; Deed and the obliga- performance YOU CAN BE dress) or b y f i r st tions secured thereby necessary to cure the EVICTED. BE SURE People Lookfor Information together with title exLEGAL NOTICE class, certified mail, About Products and are presently held by default, by paying all TO KEEP PROOF OF pense, costs, trustee's TRUSTEE'S NOTICE r eturn r eceipt r e FIRST TENNESSEE costs and expenses ANY PAY M E NTS Services EveryDaythrough fees and attorney's O F SALE File N o . quested, addressed to BANK NA T I ONAL actually incurred in MAKE. The Bulletin Classineds YOU fees incurred herein 9047.20032 R e f er- the trustee's post ofASSOCIATION. Said enforcing the SECURITY DEPOSIT by reason of said de- ence is made to that fice box address set Trust Deed encum- obligation and trust You may apply your fault; any further sums c ertain t rust d e e d forth in this notice. bers the following de- deed, together with security deposit and PUBLIC NOTICE advanced by the ben- made by Stephen M Due to potential contrustee's any rent you paid in eficiary for the protec- Schlam and Carol A flicts with federal law, scribed real property and NOTICE OF BUDGET situated in said county a ttorney's fees n o t advance against the COMMITTEE tion of the above de- Schlam, as Husband persons having no and state, to-wit: LOT exceeding the current rent you owe MEETING scribed real property and Wife and Jeffery record legal or equiSEVEN (7), BLOCK I, amounts provided by y our l a ndlord a s and i st inte rest W Rank and Carol L table interest in the DESCHUTES RIVER said ORS 86.753. In provided i n ORS A public meeting of therein; and prepay- Rank, as H usband subject property will WOODS, DES- construing this notice, 90.367. To d o t h is, the Budget Commit- ment penalties/premi- and Wife, as grantor, only receive informaCHUTES COUNTY, the masculine gender you must notify your tee of the Bend Metro ums, if a p plicable. to Western Title, as tion concerning the OREGON. The street includes the feminine landlord in writing that Park and Recreation W HEREFORE, n o - trustee, in favor of lender's estimated or and the neuter, the District, D e s chutes tice hereby is given Mortgage Electronic actual bid. Lender bid a ddress o r ot h e r you want to subtract common designation, singular includes the the amount of your County, State of Or- that the undersigned Registration Systems, i nformation is a l s o if any, of th e r eal p lural, t h e wor d s ecurity deposit or egon, to discuss the trustee will on July 2, Inc. solely as nomi- available a t the property d e scribed "grantor" includes any prepaid rent from you budget and the Capi- 2014 at the hour of nee for Group One trustee's web s ite, above is purported to successor in interest rent payment. You tal Improvement Plan 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in Lending, a Division of www.northwestb e: 5 9 9 3 4 MIN - to the grantor as well may do this only for for the fiscal year July accord with the stan- Northwest Mortgage trustee.com. Notice is NETONKA CIRCLE as any other person the rent you owe your 1, 2014 to June 30, dard of time estab- Group, Inc, as benefi- further given that any BEND, OR 97702 The owing an obligation, current landlord. If you 2015 will be held at lished by ORS ciary, dated 12/13/06, person named in ORS the performance of do this, you must do the D i strict O ffice, 187.110, at the folundersigned Trustee recorded 12/15/06, in 86.753 has the right, disclaims any liability which is secured by so before the forec- Riverbend Commu- lowing place: inside the mortgage records at any time prior to for any incorrectness said trust deed, and l osure s a le . Th e nity Room at 799 SW the main lobby of the of Deschutes County, five days before the of the above street the words "trustee" business or individual Columbia Str e e t, Deschutes C o u nty Oregon, as date last set for the "beneficiary" who a ddress o r ot h e r and bu y s this Bend, OR. The meet- Courthouse, 1164 NW 2006-82029 and sub- sale, to h ave t h is common designation. include their property at the ing will take place on Bond, in the City of sequently assigned to foreclosure proceedBoth the beneficiary respective successors foreclosure sale is not the 12th day of May Bend, County of Des- Wilmington Savings ing dismissed and the and the trustee have i n interest, if a n y . responsible to you for 2014 at 5:30 pm. The chutes, State of OrFund Society, FSB, trust deed reinstated elected to sell the said Anyone having any any deposit or prepaid purpose of the meet- egon, sell at public Not In Its Individual by payment to the real property to sat- objection to the sale rent you paid to your ing is to receive the auction to the highest Capacity But Solely beneficiary of the enisfy the o bligations on a n y gr o unds l andlord. ABO U T budget message and bidder for cash the As Trustee Of The tire amount then due secured by said trust w hatsoever will b e YOUR TEN A NCY to receive comment i nterest in t h e d e - Primestar-H Fund I (other than such poran AFTER THE from the public on the scribed real property Trust by Assignment tion of the principal as deed and a notice of afforded default has been re- opportunity t o be FORECLOSURE budget. A copy of the which the grantor had recorded as would not then be due corded pursuant to heard as t o t h ose SALE The new owner budgetdocument may or had power to con- 2014-004723, cover- had no default ocOregon Revised Stat- objections if they bring that buys this property be inspected or ob- vey at the time of the ing the following de- curred) and by curing utes 86.735(3); the a lawsuit to restrain at the foreclosure sale tained on or after May execution by grantor scribed real property any o t her d e fault default for which the the same. NOTICE may be willing to allow 2nd at the District Of- of the trust deed, to- situated in said county complained of herein foreclosure is made is TO RE S IDENTIAL y ou to s tay a s a fice, 799 SW Colum- gether with any inter- and state, to wit: Lot that is capable of begrantor's failure to pay TENANTS: The t enant i n stead o f bia Street, Bend, OR, est which the grantor 2, Block 1, Long Butte ing cured by tenderwhen due, the follow- property in which you requiring you to move between the hours of or grantor's succes- Tracts, D e s chutes ing the performance ing sums: Amount due are l i ving is in out after 90 days or at 8:00am and 5:00pm. sors in interest ac- County, Ore g o n. r equired under t h e as of March 19, 2014 foreclosure. A the end of your fixed PROPERTY AD- o bligation o r tr u st quired after the exDelinquent Payments f oreclosure sale i s term lease. After the This is a public meet- ecution of the trust DRESS: 4752 South- deed, and in addition from February 05, ing where deliberato paying said sums scheduled for July 22, sale, yo u sh o uld deed, to satisfy the west Quarry Avenue 2013 1 payments at 2014. The date of this receive a wri t t en tion of th e B udget foregoing obligations Redmond, OR 97756 or tendering the permay be notice informing you Committee will take thereby secured and Both the beneficiary formance necessary $632.60 each $632.60 sale 1 3 p a yments a t postponed. Unless the t hat the s a l e t o o k place. Any p erson t he costs an d e x - and the trustee have to cure the default, by $746.52 each lender w ho is place and giving you may appear at the penses of sale, in- elected to sell the real paying all costs and $9,704.76 (02-05-13 f oreclosing on t h i s the n e w own e r's meeting and discuss cluding a reasonable property to satisfy the expenses actually inthrough 03 - 1 9-14) property is paid before name and c o ntact the proposed procharge by the trustee. obligations secured by curred in enforcing the Late Charges: t he sale date, t he information. You grams with the Bud- Notice is further given the trust deed and a obligation and t rust that for reinstatement notice of default has deed, together with $852.89 BEN E FI- f oreclosure will g o should contact the get Committee.


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