Bulletin Daily Paper 03-23-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1

MONDAY March 23,2015

ru in rOu muC<iil Lllli'IYei' ALSO INSPORTS: UOMEN, OSUWOMENOUSTEDFROM THENCAA TOURNAMENT

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

MIRROR POND

Plus: Odesity —Doesour

Dam foes continue signature campaign

perception of obesity lead usto associate foul smells with it?A3

By Jasmine Rockow

' I I 7,000 Earths —Asingle

An occasional series of nighttime photos taken inBendand elsewhere in Central Oregonover the pastyearand using a variety of techniques.

exploding star could produce enough dust to form 7,000 Earths.A3

The Bulletin

Opponents of the plan to replace

Snowlesssno-parks-

the Mirror Pond dam continue to collect signatures for two initia-

Even if a sno-park has nosnow, you still need aparking permit — until April 30, anyway.A5

tives that would prohibit the city of Bend and the Bend Park & Recreation District from using funds on Mirror Pond without installing cer-

'Sky Hunters' —Birds of

tain environmental protections.

prey rule the roost at the High Desert Museum.AS

Foster Fell, chief petitioner and

author of FreeTheRiver.org, a website about the petition effort, said the park district petition is more

Sweet Briar shutdown-

likely to get enough signatures than the city petition. He estimates

A plan to abruptly close asmall liberal arts college in Virginia incites anger, activism.A8

that both petitions have about 1,000

signatures, but the park district petition needs another 4,000 to make it onto the May 2016 ballot. The city

TV sports packages-

petition needs an additional 6,000

A high-stakes court casecould mean the endof all-or-nothing TV sports packages.B1

signatures to make it on the same ballot, he said.

Fell circulated the petitions last fall but fell short of

s ignatures

needed for the November ballot.

And a Wed exclusive-

SeeDnm/A4

A peek inside the juicy world of meat raffles. bendbnlletin.cnrneetran

A setback for proposed development west of Bend

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Controversy brews over Confederate licenseplate

By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

A project to develop 50 homesites By Adam Liptnk

near Shevlin Park has been denied

New Yorh Times News Service

permits because of inadequate wildlife andwildfire managementplans.

WASHINGTON — The next great First Amendment battleground is just 6

Karen Green, a Deschutes Coun-

ty hearings officer, ruled last week that developers of the so-called Tree Farm project would MaP nee d to make the required on A4 pl ans more specificbefore approval of the overall project could be granted. Green's more than 100-page decision, however, did find the project to be in compliance with Deschutes County zoning code. The wildlife and wildfire plan deficiencies will likely be addressed in an appeal process to the Deschutes

inches high. It is a license plate bearing the Confederate flag. Nine states let drivers

choose specialty license plates featuring the flag and honoring the Sons of Confederate Veterans, which says it seeks to cel-

ebrate Southern heritage. But Texas refused to allow

the group's plates, saying the flag was offensive. Today, the Supreme Court will hear a challenge to that decision in Walker v. Sons of Confederate Veterans, No. 14-144, a case

that considers the limits of free expression and the

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

A Cars driving past the flaming chicken roundabout at NW 14th Street and NW

County Commission.

Galveston Avenue in Bend leave streaks of light in their path.

The proposeddevelopment, off Skyliners Road, is about 5 miles west of Bend's city center and

Hnw it wnsdone:This photo was taken using a15-second exposure with a tripod set almost flat to the ground. The photographer set his17 35mm/2 8 lens to 35mm on aNikon D3sDSLRcamera. Theexposure was set manuallyon IS0100 with a15-second shutter speed at f/22. Setting the lens at f/22 helped makethe streetlight behind the sculpture flare out like a sun.

just outside of the urban growth boundary. See Development/A4

meaning of a charged symbol that many associate with secession and slavery.

Texas has hundreds of specialty plates. Many are for college alumni, sports fans and service organizations, but others send messages like "Choose Life," "God Bless Texas" and "Fight Terrorism." The state almost never

rejects a proposed design. But the eight members of the board of its mo-

tor vehicles department deadlocked in April 2011

Dip in crime drawing homebuyers tourbanareas By Heather Perlberg, Prashant Gopnl nnd John Gittelsohn Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — LaTasha Gunnels was outbid four times

before she snagged a home in

cause of its reputation for drugs helped lift values 21 percent

single corner and nobody has

alld crune.

in the Anacostia area in 2014,

bothered me yet," Gunnels

rates, from Anacostia to New York's Bedford-Stuyvesant to

The 35-year-old nurse said the area, in a section of the

the biggest surge of any D.C. neighborhood, according to

city across a river from Capitol

data provider Real Estate Busi-

said. "What I'm paying for my mortgage, people are paying for one-bedroom apartments in otherparts of D.C." Across America, long-neglected neighborhoods known mainly for their high crime

South Central Los Angeles, are drawingbuyers as a more than 50-year low in the U.S. murder rate opens newpossibilities for singles and families who want tobecome homeowners. See Homebuyers/A4

Hill known for its historically Anacostia, the southeast Dishighmurder rates,ischanging trict of Columbia neighborhood rapidly. Buyers like Gunnels, that comes with a discountbe- priced out of costlier spots,

ness Intelligence. "I'm not going to sugarcoat it — crime is still there — but

police officersareon every

over whether to allow one

featuring the Confederate flag. By the time the board next considered the question, in November 2011,

TODAY'S WEATHER

civil rights groups had mobilized. See Plates /A8

b

Cloudy; showers High 45, Low33 Page BS

The Bulletin

INDEX Calendar A5 Crosswords Classified Cf - 6 D ear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope

AnIndependent

Q I/i/e use reclrcled newsprint

C4 Local/State A 5-6 SportsMonday B1-8 A7 Nation/World A 2

T elevision

A7

22 pages,

s sections

0

88 267 0 23 29

1


A2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015

The Bulletin HOW to reaChuS STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

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NATION Ee ORLD

oss 0 emen as ase am ers error i By Eric Schmitt

aircraft. Even after the withdrawal

gon in the past decade stitched together local spy networks

The

of U.S. troops, the CIA will

that provided information for

evacuation of 125 U.S. Spe-

still maintain some covert

drone strikes and occasional commando raids on al-Qaida

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON

-

Yemeni agents in the counYemen in the past two days is try. Armed drones will carry the latest blow to the Obama out some airstrikes from basadministration's c o unterteres in nearby Saudi Arabia or rorism campaign, which is Djibouti, as was done most struggling with significant recently Feb. 20. Spy satelsetbacks in S y ria, L ibya lites will still lurk overhead and elsewhere in the vola- and eavesdropping planes tile region, U.S. officials said will try to suck up electronic Sunday. communications. The loss of Yemen as a base But the loss of U.S. personfor U . S . c o u nterterrorism nel on the ground makes any training, advising and intelli- counterterrorism mission far gence-gathering carriesma jor more difficult. "We will h ave no i ntelliimplications not just there, but throughout a region that offi- gence footprint," Rep. Michael cials say poses the most griev- McCaul, R-Texas, chairman of cial Operations advisers from

ous threat to U.S. global interests and to the country itself.

the House Homeland Security

The rapid rise of the Is-

ABC's "This Week." "Good in-

lamic State has commanded the immediate attention of

telligence stops plots against

President Barack Obama and

ligence, we cannot effectively stop it."

Dtsouies rr

the homeland. Without intel-

has always been considered an imperfect substitute to having U.S. forces on the ground, training and advising military and security allies.

fighters after it declared the

formation of a caliphate, or religious state, in June. Counterterrorism analysts say it is us-

ing al-Qaida's franchise structure to expand its geographic reach, but without al-Qaida's rigorous, multiyear application process. It is a trend that U.S. coun-

terterrorism officials say they are struggling to understand and defeat. CIA Director John

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All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS ir552-520, is publisheddaily byWestem Communicationsinc.,1777 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster: Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, PO.Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not bereproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

birdshot from apolice shotgun during a march inCairo died because she was too thin, aspokesmanfor Egypt's medical examinersaid Saturday. Shaimaael-Sabbagh waskilled Jan. 24 whenpolice blasted the marchers with tear gasandbirdshot at close range. OnSaturday, the spokesmanfor the Medical Forensics Authority said that el-Sabbagh, 31,wouldnothavedied hadshenotbeensoslender."Shewasvery thin. She didnot haveany percentage offat," Hisham Abdel Hamid said. "So thesmall pellets penetrated very easily." KanSaS SChOOI fiiiIdiiig — Kansas'judicial and legislative branches are oncourse for a constitutional clash after a state appellate court suggested that it might block aschool financing plan that lawmakers passed. Theplan, championed bythe conservative-dominated Legislature and theRepublican governor, SamBrownback, cut tens of millions of dollars in aid intended toclosedisparities between rich andpoor districts. The measurepassedthis month evenas athree-judge panel hinted that it might stay themeasurewhile it determines whether the Legislature wasbreaching its financial obligations. Republican leaders have denouncedthe court as overstepping its bounds. Richard III wasslain on abattlefield near Leicester, England, acoffin containing his remainswasparaded through the city's streets Sunday ahead of areburial ceremony at Leicester's Anglican cathedral Thursday. Thecoffin traveled to the site of the Battle of Bosworth Field, where on Aug. 22, 1485, Richard, cast bymany inEngland asthe most brutal of English monarchs, waskilled by Henry Tudor's forces. Theday's events provided astunning contrast to the vilification that has been Richard's legacy, offering a redemption in thecity where hespent his last night.

— From wire reports

TALK TO A REPORTER

Health Tara Bannow.....................541-383-0304 Jeflerson County.............. 541-383-0367 La Pine..............................541-383-0367 Public Lands Dylan J. Darling.................541-617-7812 Public Safety Claire Withycombe............541-383-0376 Redmond ..........................541-617-7831

Egypt protester death — Apoetandactivist hit with a blast of

RuSSia right-wing aCtiviStS —A motley crew of representatives of fringe right-wing political organizations in Europeandthe United States used aconference in St. Petersburg, Russia, onSundayto denounce what theycalled the degradation of white, Christian traditions in the West. Railing against same-sexmarriage, immigration, NewYork financiers, radical Islam andglobalization, onespeaker after another lauded Russiaand President Vladimir Putin as apillar of robust, conservative, evenmanly family values.

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recent graduatesarethe latest Britons believed to havetraveled to Syria to work in territory controlled by Islamic State militants. Thefour women andfive men, whohadbeenstudying in Sudan, arethought to have enteredSyria aweekago, according to British media reports Sunday. Theyapparently kept their travel plans hiddenfrom their families, The Observer reported. Some of the students' family members have traveled to theTurkish-Syrian border to look for them. ABritish government spokesmansaid the students would not necessarily facecharges if they returned to Britain.

Richard III returns to Leicester —Nearly530years after King

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541-383-0356

All AgesMacMcLean......541-617-7616 Bendgovernmeui Tyler Leeds........................541-633-2160 Business Joseph Ditzler...................541-617-7615 StephenHamway..............541-617-7616 Calendar...........................541-383-0351 CrookCounty....................541-617-7831 DeschutesCounty Ted Shorack........................ 541-617-7820 Education Abby Spegman................... 541-617-7837 Fine Arls/Features David Jasper...................... 541-363-0349

Britishmed students iii Syria — Six medical studentsandthree

The Islamic State began at-

tracting pledges of allegiance from groups and individual

Brennan voiced deep conpast year. But U.S. officials T he U n ited S t ates h a s cerns this month over "the say al-Qaida's affiliate in Ye- worked around obstacles like emergence of a terrorist threat men still poses the most direct Yemen's turmoil before, nota- that is increasingly decenthreat to Americans at home, bly in Pakistan and Somalia, tralized, difficult to track and abroad or aboard commercial where the CIA and the Penta- even more difficult to thwart." other Western leaders in the

Si sil.rva

Committee, said Sunday on

militants. But that approach

U.S.-ISraeli tenSiOnS —Israel's president, ReuvenRivlin, called Sunday for reconciliation andhealing after a divisive election campaign that ended in a victory for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahubut inflamed domestic discord andworsened already rancorous relations between Netanyahuandthe Obamaadministration. Yet in what appeared to be an effort to counter President Barack Obama'scriticism of Netanyahu's contentious remarks on aPalestinian state and anElection Day warning about too manyArab voters, Netanyahuloyalists said the true cause ofthetensions with Washington was Israel's strong opposition to a nuclearaccord with Iran.

Weekly Arts & Entertainment I nside

••

I I

-

I

M AG A Z I N E

I Angerruanagement for printerse

TheBulletjn

Andrew Renneisen/The New York Times

Orthodox Jewish menwalk alongside one of the vehicles carrying the bodies of sevensiblings who died in a Brooklyn borough house fire in NewYork.

8

A malfunctioning hot plate started the fire, from which the mother andone15-year-old daughter escaped. Both are in critical condition.

I ' LIZ Wl et

enter

e irstto

appeal to the Christian con-

block funding for President

s ervatives who make up a

Barack Obama's health law

New York Times News Service

pivotal voting bloc in many in 2013. His tactics resulted in Republican primary states, a partial closure of the federal

The timing of Sen. Ted

the timing illustrates his ur-

2016 presidential field today is gent need to draw attention full of meaning as he seeks to to his candidacy, which has catapult to the forefront of an been widely expected. Cruz, increasingly competitive clus- 44, gained fame by trying to ter of conservatives vying for

government, a turn of events that made "Cruz" a four-letter

word to his party's leadership but endeared him t o m any

conservative activists.

the Republican nomination.

By becoming the first candidate to declare himself officially in the race, Republicans briefed on his strategy said, Cruz hopes to reclaim the af-

l64~94c8td ~f % 4 8

IeSi entia ie

By Jonathan Martin and Maggie Haberman Cruz's formal entry into the

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fection and attention of those

on the party's right wing who have begun eyeing other contenders, particularly Gov. Scott

Walker of Wisconsin. "It's the shiny object principle. He wants to be first, get in

the conversation, not show any doubt or hesitation," said Dave

Carney, a longtime Republican strategist. "There's an advantage to being first." Today's announcement by Cruz, a first-term senator from

Fiber Narleet Day

Texas, is to take place during the weekly convocation at Liberty University in Lynchburg,

S aturday March 2$, 20 I 5 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Virginia, a Baptist institution

that has served as a conservative backdrop for many Repub-

Crook County Fair Grounds

lican politicians over the years.

Prineville, Oregon

Cruz, himself a Baptist, arranged his announcement just days ago, bumping Gov. Terry McAuliffe of Virginia who was scheduled to speak, according

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MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015•THE BULLETIN

T TODAY

A3

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

It's Monday, March 23, the 82nd day of 2015. Thereare 283 days left in the year.

STUDY

RESEARCH

HAPPENINGS — Secretary of State John Kerry hosts Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah and other Afghan leaders at CampDavid.

Formany, at'ssti ma ma eso esi oll

Science fair —President

By Melissa Healy

Barack Obamahosts the White House ScienceFair.

Los Angeles Times

Afghan leadersvisit U.S.

HISTORY Highlight:In1965, America's first two-person spacemission took place asGemini 3 blasted off with astronauts Virgil Grissom and JohnYoungaboard for a nearly 5-hour flight. In1775, Patrick Henry delivered an address to the Virginia Provincial Convention in which he is said to havedeclared, "Give me liberty, or give me death!" In1606, explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, having reached thePacific coast, began their journey backeast.

Exploding stars pack quite the punch. A cloud produced by a supernova explosion 10,000 years ago contained enough dust to make 7,000 Earths.

BIRTHDAYS Comedian Marty Allen is 93. Sir Roger Bannister, the runner who broke the 4-minute mile in1954, is 86. Singer Chaka Khan is 62. Actor Richard Grieco is 50. Actor Randall Park (Film: "The Interview"; TV: "Fresh Off the Boat") is 41. Actress Michelle Monaghan is 39. Actress Keri Russell is 39. Actress Anastasia Griffith is 37. Gossip columnist-blogger Perez Hilton is 37.Actress Nicholle Tom is 37.Country singer Paul Martin (Marshall Dyllon) is 37. Actor Nicolas Wright (TV: "Manhattan Love Story") is 33. — From wire reports

ing they should smell something reported they smelled less pleasant odors when they viewed pictures of overweight and obese people than when they looked at trim in-

dividuals, new research has found.

The experimental exercise, conducted by psychology professors at the University of

California, Los Angeles, is a clever way to smoke out "implicit association" — or prejudice that lies beneath the level of conscious awareness. While s i milar

e x ercises

have been used to explore racialand other forms ofprejudice, heavy people in this case were shown to receive the stigma. The new findings "suggest

In1914, the first installment of

"The Perils of Pauline," the legendary silent film serial starring Pearl White, premieredin the greater NewYork City area. In1919, Benito Mussolini founded his Fascist political movement in Milan, Italy. In1933, the GermanReichstag adopted the Enabling Act, which effectively granted Adolf Hitler dictatorial powers. In1942, the first Japanese-Americans evacuated by the U.S. Army during World War II arrived at the internment camp in Manzanar,California. In1956,Pakistan becamean Islamic republic. In1973, before sentencing a group of Watergate break-in defendants, Chief U.S.District Judge John Sirica readaloud a letter he'd received from James McCord Jr. which said there hadbeen"political pressure" to "plead guilty and remain silent." In1983, President Ronald Reagan first proposed developing technology to intercept incoming enemymissilesan idea that came to beknown as the Strategic Defense Initiative. Dr. BarneyClark, recipient of a Jarvik permanent artificial heart, died at the University of Utah Medical Center after112 days with the device. In2011,AcademyAward-winning actress ElizabethTaylor died in Los Angeles atage79. Ten years ago: A federal appeals court refused to reinsert Terri Schiavo's feeding tube and the Florida Legislature decided not to intervene in the epic struggle over the brain-damagedwoman; Schiavo's parents then filed a request with the U.S.Supreme Court. An explosion at a BP oil refinery in TexasCity, Texas, killed15 people. Five years ago:Claiming a historic triumph, President Barack Obama signed a $938 billion health care overhaul, declaring "a new season inAmerica." President Obamaand Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met in anunusual pair of low-profile meetings at the White Houseamid a serious dispute about settlement construction. One year ago:During a visit to Beijing, U.S. first lady Michelle Obama told Chineseprofessors, students and parents that she wouldn't have risen to where she was if her parents hadn't pushed for her to get a good education.

Experimental sub j e cts who were tricked into think-

that the extent of negative By tracking cosmic dust, scientists have found it may be the star explosions called supernovas that push life-giving materials into

bias toward overweight individuals may be greater than previously assumed," the

galaxies.

authors of the study wrote.

NASA/ JPL Caltech I CXC / NOAO/AURA I NSF via The Washington Post

By Rachel Feltman

is a violent process, and they

Previous research, they noted, suggests that prejudice

The Washington Post

weren't sure whether enough

against the obese — in em-

If you're a fan of cosmic of the dust created by the excelebs Neil deGrasse Tyson plosion could also survive it. or Carl Sagan, you already They f o u n d th a t th e know that everything is made 10,000-year-old cloud of inof stardust: The fusion that terstellar dust had retained a churns inside stars turns small lot of the dust created by the elements (like hydrogen) into supernova — about 7 to 20 large ones gike carbon) that percent of it — after the hard go on to build planets. rebound that occurs when the Now, by tracking cosmic outward blast of a star explodust, scientists have found sion hits nearby interstellar evidence that it may be the gas and dust and turns back violent star explosions called inward. "Our observations reveal a supernovas that push these life-giving materials into fu- particular cloud produced by ture galaxies. a supernova explosion 10,000 In a study published last years ago contains enough week in Science, researchers dust to make 7,000 Earths," led by Cornell postdoctoral Lau said in a statement. That associate in astronomy Ryan surviving dust was f ree to Lau made the first direct observations of cosmic dust-

the smoky wisps of raw materials that cloud around stars

and build new ones along with planets — coming straight out of a supernova. Lau and his team used NA SA's Strato-

flow back

i n t o i n t erstellar

space and provide material for new galaxies. Lau credits the discovery to SOFIA, which sits on a modi-

fied Boeing 747SP jumbo jet. "We wereon a fl ying observatory traveling at 600 mph

spheric Observatory for In- at an altitude of 45,000 feet to frared Astronomy (SOFIA) to take images of a 10,000-yearclosely examine Supernova old supernova remnant loRemnant Sagittarius A East cated27,000 light-years away in infrared. from us at the center of our Scientists already knew galaxy," Lau told Space.com. that supernovas produced "No other currently operating enough dust to seed the uniobservatory other than the verse with new planets and Stratospheric Observatory for stars, producing lively galax- Infrared Astronomy could deies. But the explosion of a star

ployment, health care and education — is on the rise. They cited studies in which

overweight individuals have been found to provoke "more feelings of disgust than 12 historically stig m atized groups (homeless individuals, persons with mental illness,

etc.)." The latest research, published in t h e

I n ternational

Journal of Obesity, reflects the judgment of 245 under-

graduates who were asked to were themselves overweight sniff "scent samples" and rate or obese appeared to be the odor they were presented among the harshest judges of while also viewing various individuals who were heavy. images of people and things. Prejudice against the obese While the objects they saw may not be new. But as public in pictures were intended to health officials have escalated evoke neutral feelings — a their war on fat, they may be hammer, a wooden desk, a generating considerable coldoorknob — the object of the lateral damage among those researchers' interest was sub- they maintain they are trying jects' reactions to the people tohelp. pictured. Taken from "beHow does olfaction — our fore-and-af ter" sequences of sense of smell — reveal our very heavy people who had prejudices'? The authors of the lost a significant amount of new study note that neurosciweight, the photographs al- entists have found that what ternated between people of we see and what we smell, normal, healthy weight and when presented together, ofothers who were overweight ten get tied closely together or obese. in the hippocampus, a brain In fact, the "scent sam- region that plays a key role in ples" subjects were asked to learning and memory. rate had no smell at all: They Incollingo Rodriguez, the were made by mixing a fra- study's lead author, said while grance-free body lotion with some people are overtly bidifferent shades of food col- ased, others may not even be oring and brushing the result aware that they harbor negonto a card waved under a ative feelings toward heavy subject's nose. people. Told that e x perimenters But many believe the first w ere assessing factors relat- step toward addressing uned to appetite, subjects were conscious prejudice is to unasked to award 1 to 12 stars mask it: to make the implicit to each "scent" they were explicit. "This is the first step in presented — each time, while viewing a different image. proving that the consequencOn average, "scents" pre- es of weight stigma could be sented while subjects were very widespread in ways that viewing a slim person were we don't even know," said A. rated as significantly more Janet Tomiyama, an assispleasant than those present- tant professor of psychology ed while subjects looked at at UCLA and co-author of the pictures of a heavy person. paper. "There are no checks and Images of neutral objects prompted subjects, generally, balances on weight stigma in to rate a"scent" somewhere in the way you would see with between. racism, sexism or homophoIntriguingly, subjects who bia," Tomiyama said.

Enj™oy You~rNext l> <Advle~ntu~re j/N S~tyglle~

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tect this dust."

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SCIENCE

Mushroomglows in the dark like afungal firefly By Monte Morin

mushroom Neonothopanus

Los Angeles Times

gardneribecause itturns on its "exceptionally intense"

W hy o n

e a rt h w o ul d a

mushroom glow at night? The existence of bioluminescent mushrooms has

been noted since the time of the ancient Greeks, but less is known about why a small

percentage of fungi would feel the need to glow like fireflies. Or at least until now.

In research published last week in the journal Current

Biology, scientists said it's likely that the mushrooms

light at night and shuts it off during the daytime. " Regulation implies a n adaptive function for biolu-

0

Though there are more t han 100,000 k nown

s p e-

cies of fungi, N. gardneri is just one of 71 that can emit a ghostly green glow. It was believed that they all emitted this light around the clock in a p r ocess that i nvolved

oxygen and energy, but the tles, flies, wasps and other researchers noted that N. insects to help spread fungal gardneri had its own glow spores. schedule that was regulated "It appears that fungi make by temperature. light so they are noticed by N. gardneri, or what Brazili nsects who ca n h el p t h e ians call flor de coco (coconut fungus colonize new habi- flower), prefers to hang out at tats," said senior author Jay the base of young palm trees Dunlap, a biologist at Dart- in coconut forests, where mouth's Geisel School of there is little wind. ConseMedicine. quently, it needs some help Dunlap specializes in the spreading its fungal spores, study of circadian rhythms scientists reasoned. — biological processes that Mushroom spores can adrun according to a 24-hour here to the bodies of traveling clock. He and his colleagues arthropods and get deposited focused on t h e g l owing in other areas. are attempting to attract bee-

0

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A4 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015

Development Continued from A1 The Miller family, of Miller Lumber in Bend and developers of the NorthWest Crossing neighborhood, submitted applications and plans for the property last year. The developers have said the proposed community would be a less dense version of NorthWest

because of the potential danger from wildfires.

Planned development denied

posed development is also part of a winter deer range,

" It r e ally

ERr

B

d o esn't m a k e which requires landowners to sense to be building houses maintain habitat. The wildlife

out in the forest," said Paul Dewey, lawyer and founder of the group. "Given the recent history of

management plan proposes the removal of non-native

plant species and preservation of ponderosa pine trees and downed logs to maintain a desirable habitat for deer.

wildfires, we just don't think

it's appropriate to be building more homes out in the woods," Although Green found that he said. the plan has a"number ofhabiCrossing, with about 75 perGreen decided the wildfire tat mitigation and conservation cent of the 533 acres being left plan needs to describe how measures,"her decision states as open space. The property it would beenforced for res- the plan lacks detail and darGreg Cross / The Bulletin has been owned by the Millidents after developers hand ity. Green said the plan needs er family since the 1950s and off the subdivision to a home- to identify specific roles and rewas frequently harvested for fire safety standards for the owners association. The plan sponsibilities when enforcing timber. development. But Green want- alsoneeds a specific,m apped the conservation measures. A section of the property ed more details to be included. evacuation plan, she said, as The group of developers burned during the Awbrey A phone call to those work- well as be able to show how and opponents will have until Hall Fire in 1990. Portions of ing on the Tree Farm project residents would be informed the first week of April to apthe burned area have been re- was not immediatelyreturned. of firesafety requirements peal the decision. planted with trees. The wildfire plan outlines

Homebuyers Continued from A1 Coupled with falling crime rates is a g r owing desire among young Americansto live in cities to be near jobs and nightlife. They are moving to urban areas at a higher rate than any previous generation, according to a report last year bymarket researcher Nielsen. Crime in the United States

Central Oregon LandWatch

opposed the project primarily

wave ofbuyers. The neighborhood's transition is exemplified by the new

and the evacuation plan.

— Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorach@bendbulletin.com

The location of the pro-

Dam

support fish ladders. He worries

the city will spend a lot of money on something that won't work. "I personally don't think The initiatives would prohibit the city and park dis- there's alotpeoplecandointhe trict from spending money community, because the public o n th e M i r r or was purged from Pond project unthe process with less they support ~S aii the creation of the native redband ar l pqUated ad hoc c ommittee," trout habitat and ahl said. The com~ t create a way for mittee is made up of fish to pass in tj l f i lk BjXIUt repre sentatives of and out of the QU j/Qjrigdcfms the p a rkdistrict,the pond. The initiacity and the general . jt„ '> P tives would also public. It developed the pla n a pproved prohibit periodic Wjleii fAeg d redging of the Se ~ r I p by City Council on riverbed, as well Wednesday. as any restricHe continues to tions on accessFoeter Feli communicate with g th ri chief petitioner city officials and the recreation. Oregon Department The Bend City of Fish and Wildlife Council voted 4-3 Wednes- about fish passage feasibility day to explore the feasibil- and the cost of installing sluice ity of a plan to replace the gates that would provide flood 100-year-old Mirror Pond control and a way to flush seddam with a natural-looking iment, he said. Continued from A1

highest rates of violent crime, ting for such gritty films as

structure that will maintain

murders fell to 11in 2014 from 71 "Boyz n the Hood," Martinez

water levels while providing be removed so the river can run fish passage and a path for wild.

in 1990, according to New York is building a duplex with two City Police Department data. five-bedroom units.After facpopping up along streets still Bed-Stuy, once synonymous toring in rent from the second lined with liquor stores and withcrime and racialtension, as unit, a family could live there check-cashingspots offering portrayed in the 1989 Spike Lee for about $1,250 a month with payday loans. There's Olivia's movie"Do the Right Thing," has a $500,000 mortgage at today's Cupcakes, Big Chair Cafe Bar undergone a transformation low rates, he said. & Grill, urban-wear boutique since 2008, said Janece McFadA collapsed house is anothDistrict Culture and the Ana- den, a neighborhood native who er future duplex Martinez said costia Art Center, where "The returned four months ago after he couldresellfor more than Vagina Monologues" was play- living for six years in Georgia $500,000 after a $250,000 incontinues to decline. The rate ing recently. and North Carolina. vestment tobuy and rebuild the of murders and non-negligent structure. Andin Los Angeles ... manslaughters per 100,000 ln New York ... Median resale home pricpeople was 4.5 in 2013, the lowIn New Y ork's Brooklyn, Around Los Angeles, real es in South Central's 90003 est since at least 1960, accord- buyers priced out of neighbor- estate investment is radiating ZIP codejumped 25 percentto ing to FBI crime statistics. hoods likeFort Greene and into areas that made headlines $250,000 in the year through " Cities are safer and t h e Prospect Heights are head- for gang wars and race riots, February, compared with a Los economy is valuing cities in a ing to Bedford-Stuyvesant in such as the city's South Central Angeles County-wide increase way they didn't 30 or 40 years droves. district. of 12.4 percent to a median ago," said Alan Berube, depElaine Bodian, 24, a barista Rudy Martinez, a real es- of $489,000, CoreLogic Dauty director at the Brookings at Dail y Press,a cafeon Frank- tate investor and former star taQuick reported this week. Metropolitan Policy Program lin Avenue, moved to the area on the reality TV series "Flip Police welcome i nvestors in Washington. "Washington, about two years ago. this House," began focusing on like Martinez, who help reduce "I got priced out of Prospect buying fixer-uppers in 2013 in violence, gang activity and D.C. was the murder capital of the country 20 years ago. No- Heights," said Bodian. "The areas such as South Central af- drug-related crime by bringing body calls it that anymore." best part of Bed-Stuy is the ter gentrification drove up pric- in homebuyers with a stake Washington led the country young feeling. There are a lot of es in neighborhoods like Echo in the community, said Adam in annualhomicides eight times people moving in, and there's a Park, where he bought his first Moore, senior lead sergeant inthe 1980s and 1990s, accord- lot of energy." home in 1993. of South Central's 77th Street "I like South L.A. because it's Division. ingto the Pew Research Center. Prices in the neighborhood "This is the busiest division Ward 8, which includes Ana- where Myrtle Avenue was once affordable and there's opportucostia, had among the fewest referred to as "Murder Avenue" nity," Martinez, who estimates in the City of L.A., with more residents and led the city with jumped more than 44 percent he has traded 300 homes for homicides than a n ywhere," 20 percentof murders most of last year, compared with a 2.6 $100 million in his career, said said Moore, whose district had thoseyears. Now, as crime falls percent jump in Brooklyn as a as he drove his Audi Quattro 50 murders last year, down and prices soaroutofreach for whole,according to appraiser down streets tagged with gang f rom more than 150 in t h e all but the wealthy in much of Miller Samuel Inc. And while graffiti. "There's so much op- 1990s. "We believe in crime the rest of the nation's capital, the precinct that includes Bed- portunity if you look." reductionthrough economic Anacostia is drawing a new Stuy still has one of the city's In the neighborhood set- development." retail and community services

Fel l b elieves the dam should

kayaks and floaters. About 20 people testified at th e

"It's an antiquated notion t o e ven think about building

meeting. More than half opposedthe plan. The rest either supported the plan or expressedconcernsranging

d ams, especially when they serve no purpose,"Fell said. "They're expensive, create unhealthy river conditions and

from development issues to a r e costly to maintain." suggesting Pacific Power, — Reporter: 541-383-0354,

the utility that operates the dam, should be responsible for it, according to minutes from the meeting. Spencer Dahl, a critic of the plan and of the Mirror

jrochow@bendbulletin.com

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MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015•THE BULLETIN

CIVIC CALENDAR TODAY

DeschutesCounty Commission — The board of county commissioners is scheduled to meet at1:30 p.m.for a work session atthe Deschutes Services Building, 1300 NW Wall St., Bend.Thecommissioners areset to hear an update onlegislative priorities and todiscuss changes to its health services.

no- ar ermitssti re uire — eveni t ereisn'tan snow By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Even though sno-parks near Bend are snowless, the state is still requiring sno-park parking permits until the end of the April. "Technically, people who are going to park in the sno-park need to have those

Bend PlanningCom-

passes," said Lt. Josh Brooks,

miSSiOn —Thecommission is scheduledto meet at 5:30 p.m. atBend

A warm winter with light

City Hall, 710 NW Wall

St., for a regular meeting. The commission will hold a work session to discuss affordable housing code amendments.Afterward, the commission is scheduled tohold a hearing on theproposal, which includes creating a new cottagecodefor the city. TUESDAY

DeschutesCoung 911 board — The

board is expectedto meet at10 a.m. in room No. 300 atthe Deschutes County 911Services Building, 20355Poe Sholes Drive, Bend.The board will hear anupdate on a project to upgrade emergencyservice radios and discuss the2016 budget.

spokesman for the Oregon State Police in Salem. snowfall in Central Oregon has lef tthepopularsno-parks along Century Drive looking more like May than March. Regardless, it's the calendar

How togetapermit From Nov. 1 toApril 30, the state requires cars and trucks parked at sno-parks, such asthosealong Century Drive near Bend, to havesno-park parking permits displayed in their windshields, according to the OregonDepartment of Transportation. Sold at sporting good shopsandother outlets, the permits cost $25 for a season, $9 for three daysand $4 for a day. Parking without a permit could lead to a$30 fine. Go to www.oregon.gov/odot/dmv/pages/vehicle/sno park permits.aspx for more information.

Money brought in from permit sales covers the costs of clearing snow at sno-parks, said Sally Ridenour, spokeswoman for the Department of Transportation in Salem. Over the past three years, the de-

partment has sold an average of 154,000 sno-park parking permits, bringing in an average of $1.58 million a year. During years like this, with little snow, she said

mits should be on dashboards of cars and trucks parked at the sno-parks.

The state requires sno-park parking permits from Nov. 1

and not the snowpack that

until April 30 — snow or no

regulates when sno-park per-

snow.

The Oregon Department

ODOT saves up the money for a snowy sno-park season.

of Transportation sells the

"That carryover helps to cover

permits, and OSP handles enforcement, passing out warnings and citations for people parked at the sno-parks without them displayed properly.

those years when we have an incredible amount of snow," Ridenour said, "when it comes

early and stays later." SeePermits/A6

eser useum oers In cose encounerso

Call a reporter

Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver .................541-617-7831

k'.

'

Cll —The MadrasCity Council is expectedto S.W. ESt. The council will hold a public hearing on the city's water system master planandan amendment to thecity's urban growth boundary.

Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Contact: 541-383-0358

• Civic Calendarnotices:

Prineville City

" ~~

Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" in thesubject, andincludeacontactname and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

em Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

An audience chock-full of spring breakers watches a Harris' hawk fly through the room at a "Sky Hunters" show at the High Desert Museum on Sunday. The shows take place at11 a.m. and1:30 p.m. every day through Saturday.

City Hall, 387 NE Third

Commission — The commission is scheduled to meet at10 a.m.for a business meetingat the DeschutesServices Building, 1300NW Wall St., Bend.Commissioners areset to deliberate on aproposed amendment to permit piping existing irrigation systems in certain zones. The commissioners will also discuss aproposal to designate thePilot Butte Canal asahistoric resource. At1:30 p.m., the commissioners are scheduled to meetfor a work session. Thecommissionis set to discuss the GeorgeMillican Road project.

Alfalfa Fire District — The board of directors is scheduled tomeetat 6 p.m. at theAlfalfa Community Hall, 26155Willard Road.Thedirectors are set to offer anupdate on the hiring a of anew fire chief andpresent a draft budget. contact:541-383-0354,

news©bendbuueun.com. In emaiis, 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.

Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem .................. 406-589-4347 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business ............... 541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands 541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Submissions • Lettersand opinions:

meet at 6 p.m. at125

DeschutesCounty

A small animal caused power outages across southeast Bend Sunday, according to Pacific Power. Pacific Power spokesman BobGravely said there was areport "of a loud boom" Sunday afternoon at a substation located at the intersection of Southeast ClevelandAvenue and Fifth Street. An investigation by the utility company determined that a "raccoon-sized" animal caused fuses to blow at the facility. The noise from the event led to reports of an explosion. According to Pacific Power, approximately 8,614 customers were without electricity. Power was back onfor about half of those customers around 5:30 p.m. and the remainder by 5:55 p.m. "Typically, whenwe lose a whole substation, it's not as difficult as fixing a bunch of different little outages," Gravely said. "When we figure it out, we can close the breaker, and if it holds, it holds."

The Bulletin

Madras CityCoun-

WEDNESDAY

Animal causes power outage

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

Cll —The council is set to meetat6:30p.m. in council chambers at777 SW DeschutesAve.The council is scheduledto hear anannual report from RedmondFire & Rescue. Thecouncil will also discuss bids onADA improvement projects andasbestosabatement at the EvergreenElementary building.

St. The council is set to adopt new rules regulating the saleand cultivation of marijuana.

BRIEFING

— Bulletin staff report

RedmondCity Coun-

COunCil —Thecouncil will hold a meetingat 6:30 p.m. in council chambers at Prineville

A5

By Tyler Leeds

small auditorium.

The Bulletin

from the audience's younger members.

bit of speed," he said. Lilly Reynolds, 9, preferred

the largest bird to take flight

"It was a little scary," ac-

one of the more elegant birds

above the crowd. Before the creature was allowed to flap

knowledged Cainan Tracey,

on display, the barn owl, which is known for its silent flight.

The turkey vulture was

A swarm of meat-eating birds were let loose on a room fullofspring break revelers Sunday morning. Under the guidance of the steady, thick-gloved hands of the falcon wranglers at the High Desert Museum, no one was harmed. The vacationers

were there for the museum's "Sky Hunters" show, where four avian species swoop a few feet — and sometimes only a few inches — above the heads of onlookers, pass-

ing between four perches in a

its wide black wings, Assistant Curator Nickie Broesel warned the audience to re-

move any sunglasses and

11, who was visiting with his family from Beaverton.

The bird's rough outward appearance, Broesel noted, is a good indicator of its inter-

tuck them out of sight. "You have to watch out; for

nal toughness, as the vulture

some reason they have a really big affinity for them," she

anthrax and the bacteria that spawns botulism.

cautioned. "It must be some-

thing about the reflection." As the vulture lumbered

through the air, crisscrossing the room, soft screams came

can safely digest salmonella,

"I could only hear it a lit-

tle bit," said Lilly, who was visiting with her parents and younger sister from Boise. The museum will host "Sky Hunter" exhibits at 11

a.m. and 1:30 p.m. every day Tracey preferred the relathrough Saturday. Tickets are tively bite-size merlin falcon, $3 for members and $5 for which zipped across the room nonmembers plus admission. faster than heads could turn. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, "I like the ones with a little

tleeds@bendbulfetin.com

• Schoolnewsandnotes: Email newsitems and notices ofgeneral interest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academicac hievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Obituaries, DeathNotices: Contact: 541-617-7825,obits@ bendbulletin.com

• Communityevents: Email events tocommunitylife@ bendbulletin.comorclick on "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbulletin.com.Contact: 541383-0351

• Engagements,marriages, domestic partnerships, anniversaries, birthdays: Contact: 541-633-2117

EVENT CALENDAR TODAY "LIZ IN SEPTEMBER": A showing of the 2014 film about a young woman celebrating her birthday, presented by the LGBTStars and Rainbows; 6:30 p.m4 $5 suggested donation; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. "FOUR BLOODMOONS: SOMETHINGISABOUT TO CHANGE":A film based on the book by PastorJohn Hagee about the supernatural connection of certain celestial events to biblical prophecy; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents.com or 844-462-7342.

TUESDAY INTERNATIONALFLY FISHING FILMFESTIVAL: Featuring short and feature-length films produced by professional filmmakers from all corners ofthe globe, showcasing the lifestyle and culture of fly-fishing; 7 p.m 4$15 plus fees in advance, $17 atthe door; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 54 I-317-0700. METALACHI:TheLos Angeles band plays a combination of heavy metal and mariachi music; 9 p.m 4 $8plus fees in advance, $10at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. WEDNESDAY "REAR WINDOW":A

showing of the1954 Alfred Hitchcock film; 2and 7p.md $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. CRAIGCAROTHERS: The Nashville folk singer performs; 7 p.m4free; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. BUDDYWAKEFIELD: Thechampionslam poet performs; 7:30 p.m4$10; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. THURSDAY "THE BREAKFASTCLUB: 30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION":Aspecial showing of the popculture

classic featuring the brat pack; 7:30 p.m4$12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 844-462-7342. TOM VANDENAVOND: The Austin, Texas, country-folk musician performs, with Woebegone; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatre.pub or 541-323-1881. FRIDAY SPRINGBREAKOPEN GARDENWORKPARTY: Join us to help get the garden in shapefor the spring. Join us for anhour or the whole day; 10a.m4 The Environmental Center, 16 NW KansasAve., Bend; www.envirocenter.org or 541-385-6908 ext. 14.

AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Valerje Geary will read from and sign her newnovel "Crooked River," which is set in Terrebonne; 6 p.m 4 $5;Paulina Springs Books, 252 W.HoodSt., Sisters; 541-549-0866. POLECAT: The Seattle stomp-grass band performs, with the Eric Tollefson Duo; 9p.m4 $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. DECLASSIFIED:Local group Triage performs long-form improv; 9 p.m 4 $5; CascadesTheatrical Company, 148NW GreenwoodAve., Bend; www.bendimprov.com or 541-771-3189.

SATURDAY LLAMA O'RAMA:Vjsjt baby llamas courtesy of Central Oregon Llama Association, with baked goods;proceedsto benefit COCC Vet Tech Scholarship and llama rescue; 9 a.m4High Desert Ranch & Home Store, 350 NEAddison Ave., Bend; www. centraloregonllamas.net or 541-678-5328. THE SOLOSPEAK SESSIONS"WEALL HAVESTORIES":Join performers as theyshare personal stories from their lives; not appropriate for children; 2 p.m4$15 plus fees in advance, $18 atthe door; CascadesTheatre, 148 NWGreenwoodAve, Bend; www.solospeak. com or 503-860-5733. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Valerie

Geary will read from and sign her newnovel "Crooked River," which is set in Terrebonne; 6 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. IRIS DEMENT: Thesingersongwriter performs, with Pieta Brown; 8 p.m.; $30 plus fees in advance, $35 at the door; TheBelfry, 302 E. Main St., Bend. MOTHERS WHISKEY: The Portland rock band performs, with Shovelbelt and The Beerslayers; 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SEThird St., Bend; 541-306-3017. Contact: 541-383-0351, communitylife©bendbulletin. com or "Submit an Event"

online at www.bendbuueun. com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.


A6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015

OREGON NEWS

i e aan rainsnewes

c ee a o eanam assa or

Florence rnancited after trying to board planeto Taiwan with bear paws The Associated Press

By Kate Stringer

say they have issued a ci-

WINSTON — For the next

tation to an

six months, Sarah Roy will be waking up with a cheetah in her bed. That's because Wildlife Safari Carnivore Supervisor Roy, along with several other members of the carnivore

O r egon man

'. k1

earlier this month in plastic grocery bags in the luggage

n

and human u nmatched by

ence and was on his way to

possession of game parts. Chiou, who lives in FlorA trooper told detectives Taiwan, was also carrying a he had been investigating bottle containing bear gall, Chiou for the possible unherbs and whiskey. lawful sale of bear parts. Chiou told detectives he According to a study pub-

around the Northwest, visit-

ing schools, businesses and events and interacting closely with the public.

"If you're at an event and there's a huge boom or a loud Photos by Michael Sullivan I The News-Review sound — and as a trainer Wildlife Safari Carnivore Supervisor Sarah Roy holds cheetah cub Pancake at Wildlife Safari in Winyou're not (the cheetah's) com- ston. Pancake was born at Wildlife Safari on Feb. 28. fort zone — they're going to get out of there," Roy said. "(Sage) would have been a To reach the level of trust where trainers know every- good mom, too," Lead Cheething about their feline amtah Keeper Arielle Schepmoes bassadors'personalities re- said. "And she was a good mom," quires that trainers feed, play with and sleep with the chee- Roy said. tahs for the first few months Cheetahs have the potenof their lives. tial to be bad parents. Some Roy is converting the two eat their children, and others guest bedrooms of her home ignore their offspring, letting into a nursery for the chee- them suffocate in the birthing tah and a temporary motel sac after labor. for Wildlife Safari staff to Sage proved she was a nurtake turns keeping a 24-hour turing mother, cleaning the watch over Pancake. cubs and feeding them. During this time, trainers But after a few days, the could easily work 96-hour two cubs were losing weight, weeks or wake up with chee- which Roy said never happens tah poop in their hair. if the young cheetahs are con- Pancake will sleep with Roy for her first few months, creating a "It's like our team has a kid suming their mother's milk. bond between cheetah and trainer that will keep them both safe for six months," Roy said. "But Pancake's sister died sev- while touring the Northwest. we're excited to do it." eral days after birth from t

bassador cheetah," Roy said. "The goal with every litter is to have mom raise it. If that doesn't happen, then we have

receives bear parts from other people.

He was cited for unlawful

the Safari's other cheetahs. Ambassadorcheetahs travel

dors. Cheetahs are usually raised by their mothers at Wildlife Safari. "We never pulla cheetah from its mom to be an am-

himself but also

of Hong-Shiou Chiou at the

Eugene Airport, the Eugene Register-Guard r eported.

tahs can become ambassa-

know where he got the paws, or whether they were his, because he hunts

discovered the bear paws

cake, to be the next cheetah ambassador. This kind of training requires creating a relationship of trust between cat

The Safari currently has

Chiou also told detectives he did not

who tried to board an airplane with bear paws in his luggage. The Transportation Security Administration agents

team, will train the zoo's newest female cheetah cub, Pan-

two ambassador cheetahs: siblings Mchumba and Khayam, who are 3 years old. Only human-raisedchee-

According to a search warrant,

EUGENE — Authorities

The (Roseburg) News-Review

malnutrition. The Safari staff found h e r g a s t rointestinal kets, towels and toys.

i n 178 c heetahs since i t s

tract to be dry and learned Schepmoes said Pancake is that Sage wasn't producing more social than the Safari's enough milk. So they took past cheetah cubs. " She l i kes h e r be l l y Pancake into their own care to raise her. scratched,she likes her ears to Since then, her weight has

be rubbed,she likes to purr in

been steadily i n creasing, your face," Schepmoes said. Schepmoes said. When she's not purring, It takes about 18 months Pancake makes a bird-like until a cheetah is fully grown, chirping sound, c ommon Roy said. amongbaby cheetahs as a disHowever, Pancake will be

guised method to call to their

available for viewing long be- mothers without drawing atambassadors." fore then, about mid-April or tention from predators. Her P ancake is only a f e w May, the team estimates. fluffy light brown coat, also She's currently housed in a method of camouflage, will weeks old. Based on the positive parenting behaviors of the Safari's vet clinic, where soon fall out and be replaced Sage, Pancake's mother, the she spends part of her time by the iconic spots. Safari did not plan for Pan- in an incubator and the other The Safari is the largest cake to be an ambassador part prowling as best she can c heetah breeder i n N o r t h cheetah. across her savannah of blan- America, having u shered

inception. Wildlife Safari aims to have two to three cheetah litters an-

nually. The last cheetah birth was in May 2014.

Due to disease, the fact that people often keep cheetahs as pets and finicky breeding habits, cheetahs in captivity and the wild have little genetic

diversity. Even so, Pancake is considered a genetically valu-

is a hunter. He said he was

lished in 2008 for the An-

taking the bear paws overseas to be made into a necklace for his housekeeper. He said the whiskey drink was medicinal and helped him sleep. According to a search warrant, Chiou also told

imal Legal and Historical

detectives he did not know

gallstones, liver problems, heart disease and eye irr itation, according to t h e

report. It sells for $410 per kilogram in China, and a whole gallbladder sells for $10,000 in South Korea, according

he stores bear meat and oth-

er parts in a freezer at his barn, which he off ered to show police. Chiou could face additional charges after the search

to the report.

Bear paws are also conhome led police to find bear sidered a delicacy, the reheads and bear hides in the port states. According to the man's freezer. Bear hunting organization Big Wildlife, requires a hunting tag in one serving of bear paw Oregon,which Chiou could soup can fetch $1,400 in not produce. China.

warrant of Chiou's barn and

Permits

Weekly Arts &

Entertainment M ICAI I E

Continued fromA5 This winter wa s d efinitely not a year with that a mount of s now a t t h e

sno-parks. "In my book, winter ended back in February," said Chris Sabo, trails specialist for the Deschutes National

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closer to town along Century Drive, he said their trail conditions seem more like

25% to

May than March.Some of the sno-parks also serve

as trailheads for hiking or mountain biking and could

PENDLETON

By Phil Wright (Pendleton) East Oregonian

PENDLETON — A scuffle

green top hat sporting a sham- pushed him against the mailrock and banner that said, boxes ... and opened the door "Kiss me! I'm Irish." All of it,

over decorations on Pendle- they said, was about fun. ton's Jackson Sundown statue Saturday afternoon, though, has led a couple to petition the Harmon said she found somecity council for its approval one removed the decorations, to continue dressing up the so they replaced them. Mobronze. ments later, she spied a man So far, 29 people, including yanking them off again. Harthe couple who started the peti- mon threw open her window tion, have signed their support. and yelled at the man to stop, Pamela Harmon, 50, and her husband, Tim Becker, 39, live

she said, and he shouted back

the decorations were deseon South Main Street above crating the representation of the bronze of Sundown, born Sundown. Becker made for the Waaya-Tonah-Toesits-Kahn, downstairs door. "I went down the stairs bethe Nez Perce man who at the age of 53 won the Pendleton cause he had our hat, the St. Round-Up in 1916. Harmon Paddy hat, in his hand," Becksaid she is a fourth-generation er said. "I grabbed the hat and descendant of Sundown's, and she and her husband first deco-

40/o

see more users soon.

Decorations ordesecration?Scuffle overstatue

went back into the building."

The man followed Becker ratedthe statue last Halloween. inside and grabbed him by "We got a huge response," the back of the neck. Becker Harmon said. "And we did it said he wore a tank top, and again for Christmas and then the scar from his neck surgery for St. Paddy's Day." to removediscs iseasy to see. Theygraced the bronze with Becker said he reacted. "I used my forearm and green glasses, an oversized

with my other hand," Becker told the East Oregonian. "The

white with short gray hair and a short mustache, about 6 feet tall and thin.

Becker said he did not want to hurt the man, he only want-

Roberts also said no one was injured, and police are looking at a potential harassment case, not an assault.

ed him gone. When Becker

Becker said if police catch

guy was in his 60s or 70s."

returned u p stairs, t h ough, the man, he will press charges. Harmon saidthe man hadtheir He said his neck has ached other decorations and was since the fracas, but he has not

heading north on Main. gone to a doctor. They followed in a car and The couple said they wantcaught up to the man at the ed to find a way to make sure intersection o f Nor t h west that decorating the statues Fourth Street and Ellis Av- was OK. Becker said he called enue. Becker said Harmon PendletonCity Manager Robb bailedfrom the car before he Corbett over and over Monday stopped and confronted the until they spoke. Corbett recdecoration-taker. ommended a petition, Becker "He grabbed her by the wrist sald. "Within 24 hours we got all and swung her," Becker said, "and hit her with the bag in his those signatures," Becker said. left hand." The impact broke "We are reallypersistent in getblood vessels in her face, he ting this done." sald.

Harmon presented the peti-

The couple called police, but tion Tuesday night to the Pendofficers did not find the man. leton City Council. Pendleton police Chief Stuart

Robertssaid the suspect was

Harmon said the council

gave apositive response.

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bear parts. The bile, excreted by the bladder,is said to cure fever,

also receives bear parts from other people. He said

He said the only sno-

was born the same day as Pancake, Feb. 28.

illegal international trade of

cause he hunts himself but

park near Bend with snow on the ground is Dutchman

dog from San Francisco that

tional C h i nese m e dicine and there is a substantial

liver and stored in the gall-

lineagesare more separated will receive a companion animal: a Rhodesian ridgeback

University, bear bile is a prized ingredient in tradi-

where he got the paws, or whether they were his, be-

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MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015• THE BULLETIN

A7

ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT TV TODAY

un aman t e' a n

o r e w o ise'

• More TI/listingsinside Sports

TV SPOTLIGHT

gy trt. ttiL)tgy

"It's Me, Hilary: The Man Who Drew Eloise" 9 p.m. tonight, HBO

By Michael Schulman New York Times News Service

NEW YORK — A few years

from Eloise's digs at the Plaza, the character of Eloise sprang "I didn't have a lot of friends, like an impish inner child. D.D. and something I really con- Ryan, an editor at Harper's nected to in 'Eloise' was there was no relationship to other

Bazaar, introduced Thompson to Knight in the mid-50s, and

kids," she added. "I was the girl

together they captured Thomp-

downtown with weird feminist Barbie alternatives my mom

son's invention on paper. The f i r st "Eloise" book came out in 1955, and their intense collaboration lasted for

bought me and a hairless cat." When Dunham was given a diagnosis of obsessive-com- three sequels, until Thomppulsive disorder, a therapist son abruptly lost interest. A

0

ago, Hilary Knight, the illustrator best known for "Eloise," was

talking with abuilder he knows in East Hampton. The guy had just read a profile in New York Magazine ofLena Dunham,

asked her to picture a soothing

contract Knight had signed at

location. "I fully just imagined Thompson's behest prevented Eloise's home at the Plaza," she him from continuing to pro-

which mentioned she had an Eloise tattoo. "I was unaware

Charles Sykes i Invision via The Associated Press

d uce "Eloise" books on h i s

sald.

Executive producer Lena Dunhem, from left, director Matt Wolf and At 17, she was on a family of LenaDunham," Knight,88, subject Hilary Knight attend a screening of HBO's "It's Me, Hilary: road trip through New Mexsaid recently. The Man Who Drew Eloise" in New York last week. ico when she persuaded her He called up the publicity parents to let her get an Eloise department at Simon & Schustattoo on her lower back. "I reter and asked them to send have dinner around six o'dock, breich, the longtime personal member my dad saying to me, Dunham some signed "Eloise" which is really nice." shopper at Bergdorf Goodman. 'Though I wasn't sure whether books. She wrote back, "You By the end of the first night, "I've always loved talking to you should get a tattoo or not, I are the very fiber of mybeing." a cross-generational friendship people who have had a lot of think this image is a great piece Soon after, she came over had formed."It's very, veryrare life," Dunham said. of self-knowledge.'" to his apartment on East 51st that you instantly feel at home Aside from c h roniding Listening to the story in his Street, where he has lived for 55 with someone," Knight said. Knight's boundless creativity apartment, Knight interjected, Like many aspects of Dun- (one sequence shows him di- "You know, I have a tattoo." (A years, a boudoir-like fantasia festooned with Knight's draw- ham's life, it was not long be- recting a "frog opera" in his butterfly on his hip, which he ings, theatrical posters, pea- fore the bond turned into a pond in the Hamptons), the got in the Navy.) He was sitting cock feathers and gilded palm high-profile creative project. documentary features inter- below a gold Oriental screen trees. They ate Indian food and Along with the director Matt views with "Eloise" fans as paintedbyhis mother, the artist chatted for hours. They talked Wolf and JenniKonner, an varied as Mindy Kaling, Fran Katharine Sturges. "Partof what I find so compelabout Dunham's recent trip to executive producer of "Girls," Lebowitz and Tavi Gevinson. India and watched Knight's Dunham captured the friend- Dunham herself appears on ling about Hilary's story," Dunhome movies. Despite the six ship in a 35-minute documen- camera in the role of Knight's ham said, "is that his creative decades between them, they tary, "It's Me, Hilary: The Man interlocutor and devotee. control and his creative freedom "It's sort of like the old-fash- was challenged, and he continhad a lot in common. Who Drew Eloise," which airs "We both have parents who on HBO tonight. ioned equivalent of thinking ued to work in other ways." are artists," Dunham said. She Though she is nothing if not you're a Carrie — thinking The challenger was Kay was sitting in Knight's apart- au courant, Dunham,28, mesh- you're Eloise," she said, refer- Thompson, the famed enterment one recent Thursday, es easily with her elders. She ring to the zeitgeist-invading tainer, composer, godmother crunchingon crispy okra from and Konner are developing an heroine of "Sex & the City." to Liza Minnelli, cabaret singa bowl. "He and I both want to HBO series about Betty HalGrowing up far downtown er and eccentric, from whom

an si eine urin s orts ta

own. His combination of resentmentand reverence toward

his estrangedpartner, who died in 1998, became a prominent theme in the HBO film.

"It was discouraging to me," Knight said of the embargo, "only because I still loved drawing this little creature." ("Eloise

Takes a Bawth," based on his final collaborations with Thompson, came out in 2002.)

Though he recently suffered a minor stroke, Knight is tire-

lessly productive. In the course of conversation, he showed off his latest projects, induding a diorama of himself as an Indian prince and a portfolio of racy drawings depicting a burlesque revue that exists only in his mind. Another recent endeavor:

emailing, which he does, often at 3 in the morning, and frequently with his young friend. "He's one of the greatest emailers of all time," Dunham

ily does. Sometimes I'm left out

of conversations because of my lack of knowledge on the current stats, etc.

DFAR

preciate their acumen. It's sad that you haven't been

running, movies, dining or just hanging out. He leaves for work after I do and comes home before

able to let your father and broth-

I arrive.

want is someone to listen and ap-

ers know about the things that interest you, but has it occurred to you perhaps you should have s poken up m o r e a bout your p a s sions'? Not everyone

is the same; not everyone is interested

I have always refrained from speaking about the things I'm passionate about because of

anyone is more or less "manly"

lack of interest from them.

than someone else.

in the same things. It doesn't mean that

My issue is, if I want any time alone, I have to leave the house. I used to have alone time before

I met him, but now it's very rare. Abby, I need a little time for my-

self once in a while. I am very independent and don't need a companion every minute of every day.I' m becoming unhappy and depressed because I have no privacy. I have told Derrick what I need,

You're a military vet, so stop measuring yourself by anyone brothers and my dad because of else's yardstick because it isn't my apathy about sports. I served fair to you or to your family. eight years in the Army, with four Dear Abby: I just married a

but how do I realistically get him

deployments between Iraq a n d

trolling or weird or jealous, but I'm feeling smothered.

My good friend said maybe I'm considered less of a man by my

wonderful man. "Derrick" is lov-

Afghanistan, and was wounded ing, considerate, helpful, smart, twice. Not a man? hard-working, and he wants to This issue may seem childish, spend time with me as often as but it is something that affects possible. me to this day. Do you have any This is my second marriage. I suggestions? have five kids ages 11 to 15, work — Sitting on the Sidelines full-time and try to fit in regular Dear Sitting: Yes. Stop listening exercise. When my kids are with to the armchair analysis of that "friend." When sports enthusiasts

spout statistics, what they really

you have a new kind of energy that emanates from your creativity. You will discipline your imagination and become much more detail-oriented and efficient. The combination of these qualities will point you toward success. If you are single, you are likely to find your sweetie before winter 8tsrs show fhe kis)d 2015. Trust that of dsyyos'8 hsye this Person will ** * * * D ynamic appear on his or ** * * Positive he r own. If you ** * Average areattached, this

** So-so * Difficult

year could be

of friends, but he wants to spend his time with me. He isn't con— Needs Space in Nevada

their dad, Derrick is h ome ev-

Dear Needs: Suggest Derrick schedule some regular dates with his male friends — a golf game, card game, some other sporting event, etc. He might enjoy that, and it will give you the breathing room you need.

ery minute I'm there and we do a lot together — hiking, biking,

— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and /MAXmovies. • I//ovie times are subject to change after press time. I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 11:40 a.m., 2:50, 6, 9:15 • CHAPPIE (R) 12:05, 3:05, 6:50, 10:05 • CINDERELLA (PG)f 2:10, 12:40, 3:15, 3:40, 6:45, 7:15, 9:45, 9:55 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 11a.m., 2:30, 6:30, 9:30 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT3-0 (PG-f3) f f:30 a.m., 3, 7,10 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT IMAX3-D (PG13) noon, 3:30, 7:30, 10:30 • DO YOU BELIEVE? (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:45, 6:05, 9 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 12:50 • FOGUS (R) f 2:30, 3:f 0, 6:25, 9:05 • FOUR BLOODMOONS: SOMETHING ISABOUTTO CHANGE (no MPAArating) 7:30 • THE GUNMAN (R) 11:35 a.m., 3:20, 6:20, 9:40 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)12:15,3:45,7:35, IO:35 • THE LAZARUS EFFECT(PG-13) 3:50 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG)12:45, 3:55, 7:40, 10:40 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) 11:25 a.m., 2:15, 5, 7:45,10:25 • THE SECONDBEST EXOTICMARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 11:15 a.m., 2:40, 6:15, 9:10 • SELMA(PG-13) 6:10,9:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:10a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER 3-D(PG) 2:05 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •

9 p.m. on 6, "Scorpion" — While

TeamScorpion isona rescue mission to find some lost hikers, their helicopter crashes, leaving them stranded. Worse, theaccident ignites a massive wildfire that swiftly begins to close in onthem. As theflamesgetcloserand closer, Sylvester (Ari Stidham) desperately tries to figure out away to help their pilot, whose injuries make it impossible for him to climb to safer ground in the newepisode "Young Hearts Spark Fire." Elyes Gabel and Robert Patrickalso star.

I

10:01 p.m. on5,8, "The Night Shift" — Topher (Ken Leung) implements a quarantine and locks down the ERwhen a patient exposed to deadly amounts of radiation is brought in. Meanwhile, TCand Jordan (Eion Macken, Jill Flint) use an unconventional procedure as they desperately try to save a police officer who was part of a multi-victim car accident. 10:02 p.m. on A8 E,"The Returned" — As Jack and Claire (Mark Pelligrino, Tandi Wright)

conside rmovingawaysothey

won't have to explain the reappearance of their daughter, Camille (India Ennenga) pretends to be their cousin so she can leave

the house.Elsewhere, Lena(So-

phie Lowe, "Once Upon aTime in Wonderland") discovers a strange scar, while Victor (Dylan Kingwell) has an unpleasant runin with a nosy neighbor. O Zap2it

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•3

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015: Thisyear

out of the house so I can have some time to myself? He has a lot

8 p.m.on 10,"The Following"While Mark, Kyleand Daisy (Sam Underwood, Hunter Parrish, Ruth Kearney) areabsorbed in planning an attack on Ryan(Kevin Bacon), a tip leads theFBIto a covert location, giving them aleg up in the case, in the newtwo-hour outing "Home/A Hostile Witness." Ryan has to turn to a former enemyfor helpwhen someone goes missing on the day of animportant trial, forcing his team to split up. Valerie Cruz guest stars; JamesPurefoy and ShawnAshmore also star.

said. "He uses a lot of caps."

f

Dear Abby: My family is big on sports and discusses them at every gathering, big or small. I played sports growing up, but I don't care to follow them in my adult life like the rest of my fam-

gp.m. on5,8, "The Voice"The competition moves into anew phase in the new episode"The Knockouts Premiere," which spotlights the strongest members on each team whoare still standing following the battle rounds. Once again, each artist is paired against ateammate, but during this stage, each competitor chooses his own song to perform. Ultimately, judgesAdam Levine,BlakeShelton and Christina Aguilera select who on their team will move on tothe live shows.

YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

day-to-day life. Tonight: Practice your vanishing act.

CANCER (Juoe 21-July 22) ** * * * You can count on your supporters, especially as you will be focused on achieving certain results. You could be overwhelmed by everything that you want to clear out. Defer to a close friend or loved one if you're feeling confused. Tonight: At a favorite spot.

one of the most LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) romantic years of your life. TAURUS often serves as an ** * * Y our positive approach will anchor for you, especially when you lose affect how events turn out. Brainstorm with others who might have similar yourfocus. concerns. Touch base with someone ARIES (March 21-April 19) whom you care alot about. Recognize ** * * You will decide to share your that a problematic situation could be the thoughts with friends and loved ones result of you not being realistic. Tonight: whose opinions you care about. What could seem strange to you is that others Outlate. simply are continuing on different paths, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) and they might not even hear you. To** * Take an overview of a particular night: Be the master of your domain. aspect of your life. You will see things from a totally different perspective. UnTAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * * A l l eyes look to you for advice derstand that someone who cares a lot about important issues. No matter what about you could be somewhat secretive your status might be, you'll have several about who he or she really is. Tonight: admirers who can't seem to get enough Take in new vistas. of you. Follow your intuition, and focus LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) on the long term when making deci** * * You could have a different persions. Tonight: Decide who and what. spective from most of your associates. Relate to each individual in your life GEMINI (May 21-June 28) ** * Know when you need to pull back. directly, and everyone will feel more Timing will be important. When you are appreciated as a result. You might be less assertive, others will step up to the waffling over a decision you are about plate, and you will learn a lot more about to make. Tonight: Make the most of the night. the people whosurround you inyour

** * * D efer to someone whom you would like to get to know better. Encourage this person to come out of his or her shell and ask questions. On some level, you might seem like opposites, but your bottom lines will be similar. Tonight: Listen to others' suggestions.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * * Y ou will be more direct than you have been in a while. Consider taking

avacation, especially if you havenot

been on one in years. Planning it could be just as fun as experiencing it. Be careful with a family member who could be distorting the truth. Tonight: Do for you.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * * Y our creativity will surge. The thought of spring and romance is likely to make your heart soar. Consider what you expect from a relationship at this point in your life. Put yourself in the right place to meet Mr. or Ms. Right. Tonight: Be open to spontaneity.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * S tay close to home, as you will be happiest there. Be aware that a friend might have a different idea of whatyou should do and likely will want to change your plans. Stand your ground and do what you want. Tonight: Make the most of the moment.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ** * * S peakyour mind. You are capable of conducting successful negotiations. Tap into your imagination, but be aware that you could be wearing

rose-colored glassesandperhaps might not be as realistic as you need to be. Tonight: Meet a pal at a mutually favored spot. © King Features Syndicate

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AS

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015

IN FOCUS:SWEET BRIAR COLLEGE

Anger and activism over plan

to close a liberal arts college By Sheryl Gay Stolberg New York Times News Service

rl'

S WEET BRIAR, V a . Here at bucolic Sweet Briar

College, equestrians awaken

r

at dawn and trek to the sta-

bles to ride on 18 miles of trails through wooded countryside, fields and dells. Women study on the boathouse dock at sunset as geese squawk over a

r

g~ 4!I ',lI gl

r f

i

lake. Pearls are still in fash-

f

ion, and men must have escorts. Students call it"the pink bubble." Now, all of a sudden, the bubble has burst. The abrupt decision early Travis Dove /The New York Times this month by the Sweet Briar Lydia Lewis, a senior, part of the school's final graduating class, board to close the 114-year-old hugs a fellow student at Sweet Briar College in Virginia, where an women's liberal arts school abrupt decision two weeks ago by the Sweet Briar board to close at the end of this term "as a the school has transformed the tranquil community into a hotbed result of i nsurmountable fi- of activism. A new alumnae group, Saving Sweet Briar, has raised nancial challenges" — with no $3 million and is threatening legal action. advance warning to students, parents,alumnae or professors — has transformed this vania. "We're at a liberal arts or so studying overseas — is tranquil community into a hot- college that empowers wom- playing out against a backbed of anger and activism. en. Now we're finding ways to drop of wrenching changes A new alumnae group, Sav- use that education to empower for small liberal arts schools, ing Sweet Briar, has raised $3 ourselves." especiallythoseinruralareas, million and intends to demand How far they will get is an and women's colleges, which this week t hat t h e s c hool open question. A lawyer for face particular challenges in make its finances public — or the alumnae, citing a simi- recruiting. face legal action. The faculty lar uprising that derailed the Fifty years ago, there were voted unanimously last week threatened closing of Wilson 230 women's colleges in the to oppose the "unilateral de- College in Pennsylvania in United States, according to the cision" to close the school and 1979, said there was a legal Women's College Coalition, demanded to meet with the road map to keep Sweet Briar a nonprofit group. Last year, board. Students, fresh from open. there were 46. But Chatham spring break, plastered their College administrators are University in Pittsburgh is set cars with a rallying cryholding firm. to admit men this fall, drop"The school is going to ping the number to 45. WithP SaveSweetBriar — i n t h e school colors, pink and green. close," the school's interim out Sweet Briar, there will be "I now know more about president, James Jones Jr., de- 44. nonprofit law than I feel I clared flatly. Jones says he understands "the emotion" and "the hype," know about chemistry — and The drama at Sweet Briar I'm a chemistry major," said — a tiny school, with just 532 but he insists that the camLeah Humenuck, a senior students on a sprawling 3,250- paign to save Sweet Briar is from New Freedom, Pennsyl- acre campus, and another 170 going nowhere.

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a former commander of the

heritage group's Texas division. "They had preachers. It was a circus."

Among those who spoke up against allowing the Conf ederate symbol

Rev. George Clark, 82, an

Texas Department of Motor Vehicles via The New York Times

African-American m i n i ster. "It saddens me," he told the

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear a challenge to a decision by the

board, "that the possibility even exists that I might still

plate with a Confederate flag. Nine other states have allowed such

board of Texas' motor vehicles department not to allow a license

T he b o ar d t h e n v o t e d unanimously to reject the li-

cense plate. In the process, it weighed in on a part of Civil War history that continues to

reverberateacross thenation, from a fraternity at the Uni-

versity of Oklahoma to South Carolina's state Capitol, 150 years later.

"A significant portion of the public," the board explained, "associates the Confederate

flag with organizations advocating expressions of hate directed toward p eople or

groups that is demeaning to those people or groups." The Sons of Confederate Veterans filed a First Amend-

ment challenge, winning in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, in New Or-

leans. The court said Texas had discriminated against the

group's view that "the Confederate flag is a symbol of sacrifice, independence and Southern heritage." Ben J ones,

a

n at i o nal

spokesman for the group, described its mission. "It's a heritage organization," he said. "It's not a bunch of racists. It's

Jones, who three decades tion in all facets of life, from ago played the mechanic the voting booth to the wedCooter Davenport in the CBS ding chapel." television series "The Dukes But censorship, the group o f Hazzard," said that t h e said, was not justified. "However reasonable this Confederate flag had been featured without controver- distaste for a symbol of racsy on top of the General Lee, ism," the brief said, "the Conthe orange Dodge Charger stitution does not permit the featured in the show's chases state to discriminate against and stunts. messages in a forum it has Today, the flag appears on createdforprivate speech." license plates in Alabama, A brief from the libertarGeorgia, Louisiana, Mary- ian Cato Institute, the satiland, Mississippi, North Caro- rist P.J. O'Rourke and three lina, South Carolina, Tennes- prominent advocates for free see and Virginia. expression — Martin GarSherrilyn Ifill, president of

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the NAACP Legal Defense Strossen — urged the court and Educational Fund, said to protect caustic speech at the Confederate flag has only a time when it is under atone fundamental meaning. tack around the w orld. "It "It's a powerful symbol of the would be offensive to the First oppression of black people," Amendment to allow Texas to she said in an interview. tell us what is offensive," the Texas has mounted a vig- brief said. orous defenseof its decision Texas responded that stateto reject the plates. "Our fun- ments on specialty license damental right to free speech plates, which typically cost must be protected, but that an extra $30, are the governright does not include compel- ment's speech, not that of the ling the state of Texas to ap- car's owner. If that is correct, prove any image on state-is- the Supreme Court has said, sued license plates," said Cyn- the First Amendment largely thia Meyer, a spokeswoman drops out of the analysis, as for the state's attorney gener- the government is free to say al, Ken Paxton.

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a group that longs for reconIn 2011, not long before the Texas said it should not be ciliation and progress but will motor vehicles department required to endorse all sorts not forget the past." rejected the plates, Gov. Rick of distasteful messages. "A state is fully within its Jones, a Democrat who Perry indicated he supported served two terms in Congress such a move. "We don't need rights to exclude swastikas, representing Georgia, said to be scraping old wounds," sacrilege and overt racism the Confederate flag "rep- he said. from s t a te-issued l i c ense resents the independent spirit Civil liberties groups and plates that bear th e state's of the South, no matter what First A m e ndment s p ecial- name and imprimatur," the race you are." ists have filed briefs in the state's brief said. "Likewise, H is group says it h a s Supreme Court supporting a state can exclude less per30,000 members and is open the Southern heritage group. nicious but still-controversial to "any male descendants The briefs acknowledge that symbols such as the Confedof any veteran who served the flag is offensive to many erate battle flag." honorably in the confederate people. It said the Sons of Confed"The armed forces." Confederate bat- erate Veterans should convey "There are black members, tle flag was the banner for its views on bumper stickers, Hispanic members, Jewish those who supported slavery window decals or paint jobs. "States that i ssue 'Fight members and Native Amer- and sought to break our naican members," Jones said, tion apart," a brief filed by Terrorism' specialty plates adding that he could not pro- the American Civil Liberties are notrequired to offerspevide numbers and doubted Union said. "It later served as cialty plates with messages that such b reakdowns are a rallying sign for those seek- that praise terrorist organizakept. ing to maintain racial separa- tions," the state's brief added.

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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W NFL, B4 NHL, B6

THE BULLETIN •MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015

O

The week ahea

ww w .bendbulletin.com/sports

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

Nonday/Tuesday

Tuesday

Friday/Saturday

Saturday/Sunday

Sunday

High scboolsoftball, Central Oregon Spring BreakTournament ioBend: Sixteen-team brackets areset for both days of action at Skyline Sports Complex. Local teams in the field include Ridgeview, Redmond, CrookCounty,Madras,Sisters, La Pineand host Bend High. Game times both days are9:30 a.m., 11:45 a.m., 2 p.m. and4:15 p.m.; eachteam plays two gameseachday.

RBA basketball, PortlandTrail Blazers vs. GoldeoState Warriors, 7:30 p.m. (THT):Trying to pull out of a tailspin, the Blazers face the winningest team in the NBA. Portland has lost a season-high four in a row going into this game, its onlyhome dateina15-dayspan.Games atUtahonW ednesdayandatPhoenix on Friday round out the weekfor the Blazers.

Track and field, multi-event meet at Summit High io Bend:Young athletes from around the state will represent their clubs (or compete unattached) in a twoday decathlon (boys)/heptathlon (girls) event hosted by theSummit High School track program. Competition in this inaugural developmental meet gets underway both days at11 a.m. Admission for spectators is free.

College rugby,Pacific Coast Regionalio Bend:Central OregonCommunity College hosts the National SmallCollegeRugby Organization ChallengeCuptournament at MazamaField. At noon Saturday, COCCtakes onPacific, and at 2 p.m. San Francisco facesPoint LomaNazarene.On Sunday, thethird-place gameis scheduled for10 a.m., followed bythe championship game at noon.Admission is free.

Whitewater racing, RiverhooseRendezvoosSlalomio Bend,10 a.m.:Kayak enthusiasts from around theworld are expected for the seventh annual Rendezvous, which will be staged on aquarter-mile stretch of the Deschutes River near the RiverhouseConvention Center and Hotel. Spectators are welcometo watch from bridges or from the banksof the river.

NCAA TOURNAMENT

ALPINE SKIING MBSELskier wins at U16 regionals

COMMUNITY SPORTS

Bend's MinamCravens is first in the slalom and first overall at the U.S. Ski andSnowboard Association U16 Western Region alpine championships,B4

TEE TO GREEN

Nati Harnik/The Associated Press

Orogon's JosephYoung is consoled by his parents, Tena and Mike Young, following Oregon's 72-65 NCAA tournament loss to Wisconsin on Sunday in

r

Omaha, Nebraska.

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Matt Every celebrates a putt to take the lead.

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Every wins2nd straight BayHill

Sunday for the state

Matt Every wins Arnold Palmer Invitational for the second straightyear, making an18-foot birdie putt on the last hole to beat Henrik Stenson. Golf roundup,Bl

t&'.:.

Also

• Ducks' comeback comes upshort against Wisconsin

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The Associated Press

consin in the NCAA tourna-

ment's round of 3 2.Ay- " g .

gers in the same round.

"He's meant a tremendous

Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Melissa Payfer-Lockling washes off in the fire hose shower after finishing the Sunriver Mudslinger Spring Break MudRun in Sunriver on Sunday.

• Nearly1,000 people participate in the 3rd annual Sunriver Mudslinger

eWichita Stat e

upsets Kansas. Rou ndup, B3

amount," coach

Dana Altman said. "The amount of pressure we put on him this year to perform game in and game out ... He shouldered a lot of responsibility." See Ducks/B3

By Victoria Jacobsen •The Bulletin

UNRIVER — In the days leading up to the Sunriver Mudslinger, race organizer Emily Savko said she was hoping warm and sunny weather would tempt more runners to come out and wade through the 1.5 miles of muck and obstacles Sunday. Instead, she woke to a

-'NV ,

'

' .

~

breezy, overcast morning, anddrovethroughsnow

Beavsmiss out on 1st Sweet16 berth since '83

end to what was a record-setting women's basketball season soon hit all of

the Beavers hard. No. 11 seed Gonzaga, paced

s~

I1

5

Q ss

But she need not have worried. For those who have de-

• Community sports events, news and results,B4-5 photoson O © Seeadditional The Bulletin's website:

cided a jaunt through the mud sounds like a fun idea, rain is

from a downpour as they

not much of a deterrent, and

crossed the finish line. The

scoresoffam iliesandteams poured onto the obstacle

I.

course near Sunriver Marina,

many decked out in matching neon T-shirts or costumes.

James Navemakes hisway through the muddy army crawl.

prised. We're just happy it's not acomplete downpour." But most finishers looked

like they had just emerged

Russell Westbrook has 12 points, 10 rebounds and 17 assists for his 10th triple-double of the season, leading Oklahoma City to a 9375 win over Miami. NBA roundup,B6

MOTOR SPORTS Keselowski holds off Harvick Brad Keselowski roars past Kurt Busch onthe final lap and holds off streaking Kevin Harvick to win at Fontana,BS

COLLEGE BASKETBALL EAST REGIONAL M ichigan S . 6 Virginia 54

participants had to scale

Oklahoma Dayton

walls, cross balance beams,

Loulsvl e

hop over fallen logs and — of course — army crawl through the mud, but a fire engine from the Sunriver Fire Department was on hand to hose down the runners as

they completed the race. SeeMudslingerIB5

N. lowa

7 66 53

SOUTH REGIONAL Duke San Diego St.

6 49

Gonzaga lowa

8 68

MIDWEST REGIONAL ichita St.

MEDIA

Kansas

Lawsuit couldendall-or-nothing TVsports packages

Maryland

by Emma Wolfram with a

career-high 17 points, held off a furious late rally by Oregon

By Larry Neumeister

State on its home court for a

76-64 victory in Spokane regional second-round game. SeeBeavers/B3

NBA Westdrook has 10th triple-doudle

Inside

bendbonetin.com/sports

underway, the number of par- ber we were hoping forticipants easily oustripped the we're probably close to 1,000 800 who entered last year. people," Savko said during "We've surpassed the num- the race. "We're very sur-

B3

~

9;.

By the time the event was

Oregon State senior Ali Gibson ran off the floor, and before reaching the bench, she was • Roundup, intears.

.

r

showers on her way to Sunriver.

The Associated Press

CORVALLIS — With less than a minute to play Sunday,

-

s

By Nick Daschel

The sudden

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OMAHA, Neb. — Joseph

he scored 29 in a l oss to the Bad-

.

d-"P

By Eric Olson Young could carry Oregon only so far. The Pac-12 player of the year scored 30 points Sunday night in a 72-65 loss to Wis-

• Local golf news, results and upcoming events,Bl

Fans have long asked for tailored options to view

NEW YORK — A highstakes case playing out in federal court could lead to

pro sports TV packages that force fans to buy hundreds of live games from around the league instead of just those involving their favorite

the end of the all-or-nothing

teams.

League Baseball's Extra

The Associated Press

live games on TV and other

devices, saying leaguewide packages such as Major

Innings, the NFL's Sunday Ticket and the NHL's Center Ice offer more games than

they want or can possibly watch.

SeeTelevisionIB4

7 65

est ll'glnla 59

WEST REGIONAL isconsin 7 Oregon 65


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY BASEBALL

MLB preseason, N.Y.YankeesatNationals MLB preseason, OaklandatCleveland College, SanDiego at Stanford MLB preseason, Cincinnati at Texas

Time TV/Radio 1 0 a.m. ML B 1 p.m. MLB 1 p.m. P a c-12 6 p.m. MLB

BASKETBALL

Women's NCAA tournament, Florida St. vs. Florida Gulf Coast Women's NCAA tournament, whiparound Men's NIT, LouisianaTechat TexasA&M Men's NIT, lllinois St. at Old Dominion Men's NIT, Murray St. at Tulsa Women's NCAA tournament, whiparound

3 p.m. E SPNU 3:30 p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. E S PN 5 p.m. E SPNU 6 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E SPN2

SOFTBALL

College, Stanford at OregonSt. College, Florida at Alabama College, UCLA at Washington

4 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m.

P a c-12 SEC SEC

TUESDAY BASEBALL

MLB preseason, Philadelphia at Atlanta MLB preseason, L.A. Angels atTexas MLB preseason, Detroit at N.Y.Yankees College, SanJose St. at Oregon St.

10a.m. ESPN 1 p.m. MLB 4 p.m. MLB 5:30 p.m. KICE 940-AM

Pac-12

College, BYUat Utah SOFTBALL

College, Nebraska at lowa (DH) College, South Alabamaat LSU

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

Big Ten SEC

2 p.m.

Pac-12

BEACH VOLLEYBALL

College, Pepperdine at Southern Cal BASKETBALL

Men's NIT, Miami at Richmond NBA, SanAntonio at Dallas Men's NIT,Vanderbilt at Stanford NBA, GoldenState at Portland

4 p.m. ESPN 5 p.m. TNT 6 p.m. ESPN 7:30 p.m. TNT, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM

HOCKEY

NHL, Los Angeles atN.Y.Rangers

4 p.m.

NBCSN

TRACK AHDFIELD

College, Washington St., Long BeachSt. at UCLA 4 p.m.

Pac-12

Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletinis notresponsible forlate changesmadebyTVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

ON DECK Today Baseball: Milwaukie at Mountain View(DH), noon; Redmond atHermiston(DH),11 a.m. BoflbalhCentralOregonSpring BreakSoftball Tournamentat Skyline Sports Complex:Bendvs. Sherwood,11:45a.mcRidgeviewvs. Marshfield, 11:45 a.m.;Redmondvs. North Salem,11:45a.m.; Crook Countyvs. Corbett,9:30a.m.; Madrasvs. Regis, 9:30 a.m.;Sistersvs. Brookings,9:30a.m.;LaPine vs. Vernoniat a Bend High (DH), noon;Summit vs. Dayton at CanbyTournament, 3:15 p.m.;Culvervs. Irrigon atIrrigonSpringBreakTournament, 2p.m.; Culver vs.PortlandChristian/ColumbiaChristian at IrrigonSpringBreakTournament, 4 p.m. Boys lacrosse:Bendat Berkeley(calif.),5 p.m.

— Trever Morrison's one-out double in the bottom of the 11th inning Sunday afternoon sent OregonState to a2-1win overWashington State and asweepof thethree-game series in Corvallis. It was Morrison's third hit of the gamefor the Beavers (18-5 overall, 4-2 Pac-12). Luke Heimlich (1-2) relieved starter Travis Eckert and pitched 5'/ innings of two-hit ball with six strikeouts. DuCkS Snap 2-game Skid —Matt Eureste hit a two-run triple to highlight a three-run second inning, andOregonheld on to beat Arizona State 5-1 onSundayafternoon in Eugene. Starter Cole Irvin (1-1) struck out five in 5'/ innings for the Ducks (15-8 overall, 2-4 Pac-12), who snapped atwo-game losing streak. Jakob Goldfarb andScott Heineman eachhadtwo hits for Oregon.

SOFTBALL ClutChhitS giVe BeaVerSWin OVerStanfOrd — Kori Nishitomi drove in the game-tying run with two outs in the bottom of the seventh inning, andNatalie Hampton drove in the winning run with two outs in the eighth to give OregonState a7-6 win over Stanford on Sunday in Corvallis. Hampton also drew awalk with the bases loaded and hit a two-run home run to leadthe Beavers (21-9 overall, 2-3 Pac12). Bev Miller (13-6) pitched acomplete game, allowing six runs on seven hits through eight innings. DuCkS hOmer paSt Utah —Jenna Lilley hit two of Oregon's five home runs in a15-9 win over Utah onSunday afternoon in Salt Lake City. Lilley hit a solo shot in the top of the sixth to give the Ducks(253 overall, 5-0 Pac-12) an11-7 lead, andshehit a two-run homer in the seventh for a15-7 lead. Koral Costa hit a two-run homer in the fourth, her team-leading eighth of the season, andHailey Decker and Danica Mercado also hadhomeruns. Oregon starter Geria Ann Glasco (5-0) allowed six runs on give hits in 4'/ innings.

SKIING Hirscher wins4th straight overall World CuptitleMarcel Hirscher celebrated his fourth straight World Cup overall title in style with a commanding win in aslalom race in the final race at the season-ending finals Sunday in Meribel, France.The25-year-old Austrian also clinched the slalom title for the third straightyear and won his eighth race of the season, his third in slalom. Only Austrian great Annemarie Moser-Proell won moreoverall titles in a row —five in the early1970s.

Fenninger seals 2nd straight overall World CuptitleAustrian racer AnnaFenninger withstood a strong challenge from rival Tina Maze tosuccessfully defend her World Cupand giant slalom titles after winning the season-ending GSrace Sunday in Meribel, France. World giant slalom champion Fenninger finished 22 points ahead of Olympic champion Maze, of Slovenia, in the overall standings and sealed the trophy in style with a commanding performance on the Roc deFercourse. Fenninger finished.38 seconds ahead of countrywoman Eva-Maria Brem —heronly rival for the GStitleand.46clearofMaze,theWorldCupchampiontwoseasonsago.

TENNIS

Thursday Baseball: Bend vs. Silver Creek(Colo.) atCoachBob Invitational inPhoenix, Ariz., 9a.mcCrookCounty, Madras,LaPineat Madras Tournament, TBD; Sisters atArizonaChandler PrepTournament, TBD; Summitvs. Reynoldsat Salem-Keizer Volcanoes Tournam ent, 2 p.m.; Culvervs.Joseph/Enterprise at LesSchwab Icebreaker Tournament, 1:30p.m. Friday Baseball: Bendvs.Boulder Creek(Ariz.) at Coach Bob Invitationalin Phoenix, Ariz., 3:30p,mcDallas at MountainView, 11 a.m.; Dallasat Ridgeview, 4 p.m.; Redm ond at SouthMedford (DH), noon; Summivs. t SouthEugeneat Salem-Keizer VolcanoesTournament, 11:30a.m.; Summit vs.Marist Catholic atSalem-Keizer VolcanoesTournament, 4:30 p.mcCrookCounty,Madras,LaPineatMadrasTournament, TBD;Sisters atArizonaChandler PrepTournament, TBD;Culvervs. Estacadaat Les Schwab IcebreakerTournament,1:30 p.m. BoflbaU: LaPineatSisters, noon Track andfield: MountainView,Redmond, Summit, Sisters, LaPineat Decathlon/Heptathlon at Summit,11 a.m. Saturday Baseball: TheDallesat Ridgeview(DH), noon; Sisters at ArizonaChandler PrepTournament, TBD; Summit atSalem-K eizer VolcanoesTournament, TBD; Culvervs. UmpquaValley Christian at Les Schwab IcebreakerTournament,11a.m. SoflbaR: SouthMedfordat Ridgeview,2:30 p.m.; South MedfordatRedmond,noon Track andfield: MountainView,Redmond, Summit, Sisters, LaPineat Decathlon/Heptathlon at Summit,11 a.m.

BNP ParibasOpenResults Sunday atIndianWells, Calif.

Men Championship NovakDiokovic(1), Serbia,def.Roger Federer (2), Switzerland,6-3,6-7(5), 6-2. Women Championship SimonaHalep(3), Romania, def. JelenaJankovic (18), Serbia 2-6, , 7-5,6-4.

BASKETBALL Men's college NCAAtournament AU TimesPDT EASTREGIONAL Round of32

Sunday'sGames MichiganSt.60,Virginia 54 Oklah oma72,Dayton66 Louisville66,N.Iowa53 Regional Semifinals Friday's Games N.c. State (22-13)vs.Louisville (26-8),4:37p.m. MichiganSt.(25-11)vs. Oklahoma(24-10), 7:07p.m. SOUTHREGIONAL

Round of32 Bunday'sGames

Duke68, SanDiegoSt.49 Gonzaga87,lowa68 Regional Semifinals

Friday's Games UCLA(22-13)vs.Gonzaga(34-2), 4:15p.m. Duke(31-4) vs.Utah(26-8), 6:45p.m. MIDWESTREGIONAL

Round of32 Sunday'sGames

WestVirginia69, Maryland59 WichitaSt. 78,Kansas65 Regional Bemifinals

Thursday'sGames WichitaSt. (30-4)vs.NotreDame(31-5),4:15p.m. Kentucky(36-0)vs.West Virginia (29-6), 6:45p.m. WEST REGIONAL

Round of32 Sunday'sGame Wiscon si n72,Oregon65 Thursday'sGames Wisconsin(33-3)vs. North Carolina (26-11), 4:47 p.m. Arizona(33-3)vs.Xavier (23-13),7:17p.m.

Sunday'sSummary

W isconsi n72,Oregon 65 OREGON (26-10)

Bell 4-5 0-0 8,Cook1-80-0 2,Brooks2-70-0 4, Young12-254-430, Abdul-Bassit 4-6 0-012, Ben-

iamin 3-60-0 8, Benson0-10-0 0, Rorie 0-1 1-31. Totals 26-595-7 65. WIBCONBI(33-3) N Hayes4-95-814, Dekker6-122-417, Kaminsky 6-13 4-516, Gasser1-4 2-2 4,Koenig2-77-812, Showalter2-20-05, Dukan1-41-24. Totals 22-51 21-29 72. Halftime —Wisconsin 31-28. 3-Point Goals—Oregon 8-19(Abdul-Bassit 4-5,Benjamin 2-4, Young2-6, Benson 0-1, Brooks0-3), Wisconsin 7-23(Dekker 3-8, Showalter1-1,Koenig1-3, Dukan1-3, Hayes1-5, Gasser0-3).FouledOut— None.Rebounds— Oregon34 Benjamin8),Wisconsin32(Kaminsky 7).Assistsregon 13 (Young4), Wisconsin 11(Gasser 4). Total Fouls—Oregon20, Wisconsin13. A—17,563. National Invitation Tournament AU TimesPDT

Bunday'sGames

Djokovic deats Federer in 3sets to win at Indian Wells

— Novak Djokovic defeated RogerFederer 6-3, 6-7 (5), 6-2 to win his fourth BNPParibas Openon Sunday, tying him with Federer for the most titles in the desert after winning for the second straight year. Theworld's top two men's players met for the 38th time, second-most among rivalries in the Open era. Federer leadsthe series 20-18 and hadwonthree of their last four meetings going into the final. Djokovic also won in threesets last year.

HaleP getS diggeSt Win Of Career — SimonaHalepbeat Jelena Jankovic2-6,7-5,6-4towintheBNP ParibasOpenonSunday, giving the Romanian the biggest title of her career and a WTA Tour-leading third tournament victory of the year. Halep improved to 6-0 in three-set matches this year, smacking a crosscourt forehand winner off Jankovic's weakvolley return on match point. Theworld's third-ranked player advanced to the final whenSerenaWilliams withdrew before their semifinal because of asprained right knee. — From staffand wire reports

In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/rnthebleachers

Wednesday Baseball:Bendvs. GreenMountain(Colo.)atCoach Bob Invitational in PhoenixAri , z., 10 a.m.; Ridgeview at NorthMarionTournament, TBD;Madras Tourn ament:Madrasvs.Banks,TBD;CrookCounty vs. LaPine,9a.m.

Professional

BeaVerS need eXtra inningS toSWeePWaShingtOn St.

MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL AU TimesPDT

Tuesday Baseball:Bendvs. Ponderosa(Colo.) at CoachBob Invitational inPhoenix, Ariz., 9 a.m.;Ridgeviewvs. NorthBendat North MarionSpring BreakSeries, noon BoflbalhCentralOregonSpring BreakSoftball Tournament at Skyline Sports Complex:Bendvs. North Salem,11:45a.m.;Redmondvs. Sherwood,11:45 a.m.;Ridgeviewvs. Nampa(Idaho),11:45a.m.; La Pine vs.Corbett,9:30a.m.; Madrasvs. Vernonia, 9:30a.mcCrookCountyvs.Mazama,9:30a.m.; Sistersvs.Regis at BendHigh(DH), noon;Summit vs. ParkroseatCanbyTournament,11;45a.m.; Culver vs.Irrigonat IrrigonSpringBreakTournament, 10 a.m.;Culvervs. PortlandChristian/Columbia ChristianatIrrigonSpring BreakTournament, noon

TENNIS

BASEBALL

MLB preseason

IN THE BLEACHERS

Temple 90,GeorgeWashington77 Richmond 76, ArizonaSt.70 Stanford74,RhodeIsland66

Today'sGames Louisiana Tech(26-8) atTexasA8M(21-11), 4 p.m. l linois St.(22-12)at OldDominion (25-7),5 p.m. MurraySt.(28-5) atTulsa (23-10), 6 p.m. College Basketball Invitational AU TimesPDT Ouarterfinals Today'sGames La.-Monroe (22-12) at Mercer(19-15),4 p.m. Radford(22-11)vs.Vermont (19-13), 4 p.m. OralRoberts (19-14)atLoyolaofChicago(20-13)5p.m. Colorado(16-17)atSeattle (17-15), 7p.m.

CoUegelnsider.com Tournament AUTimes PDT SecondRound Today'sGames ClevelandSt.(25-8)at NJIT(19-11), 4p.m. Evansville(20-12)at E.Illinois (18-14),5p.m. KentSt.(22-11)atTexasA&M-CC(20-13),5 p.m.

Sunday'sGames Toronto3, TampaBay0 Minnesota5,Miami3 Detroit(ss) 7,Washington7,tie Boston7, Philadelphia6 St. Louis 8Baltimore6 Houston14,Pittsburgh2 Atlanta 5, Detroit (ss)3 N.Y.Mets6, N.Y.Yankees0 Milwaukee13,ChicagoWhite Sox4 Cleveland 4, LA. Dodgers2 Cincinnati 4,Oakland3 Kansas City4, SanFrancisco (ss)2 SanDiego6, Chicago Cubs1 Seattle 8,Texas0 LA. Angels3,SanFrancisco(ss) 2 Colorado6,Arizona0 Today'sGames Minnesota vs. Philadelphiaat Clearwater, Fla.,10:05a.m. Pittsburghvs. TampaBayat Port Charlotte, Fla., 10:05 a.m. N.Y.Yankeesvs.WashingtonatViera, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Atlantavs.Houstonat Kissimmee, Fla.,10:05a.m. St. Louisvs.Bostonat Fort Myers, Fla.,10:05a.m. N.Y.Metsvs.Miamiat Jupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxvs. SanDiegoat Peoria,Ariz., 1:05p.m. Oakland vs.Clevelandat Goodyear, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. KansasCity vs. SanFrancisco at Scottsdale,Ariz., 1:05p.m. Arizonavs.L.A.DodgersatGlendale,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Milwaukee vs. Coloradoat Scottsdale, Ariz.,1:10 p.m. Seattlevs.LA.Angels atTempe Ariz. 1:10p.m. Cincinnativs.Texasat Surprise, Ariz.,6:05p.m.

HOCKEY

"Don't be a fool, Dewey! It's just a mirage!!"

NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AU TimesPDT

Women's college

MOTOR SPORTS

NCAAtournament AR TimesPDT

NA!aCAR Sprint Cup

ALBANYREGIONAL

SecondRound Bunday'sGames Texas73,California 70 Dayton99,Kentucky94 Today'sGames Rutgers(23-9) vs.Uconn(33-1), 6p.m. Louisville(26-6)vs.SouthFlorida (27-7), 6p.m. Regional Semifinals Saturday'sGames Rutgers-Uconnwinnervs. Texas(24-10),TBA Dayton(27-6)vs.Louisvile-South Floridawinner,TBA BPOKANEREGIONAL SecondRound

Sunday'sGames Gonzag a76,OregonState64 Duke64,Mississippi St.56 Today'sGames Princeton(31-0)vs.Maryland(31-2), 3:30p.m. Tennessee (28-5) vs. Pittsburgh(20-11), 3:30p.m. RegionalBemifinals Saturday'sGames Princeton-Maryland-winner vs. Duke (23-10), TBA Gonzaga(26-7)vs.Tennessee-Pittsburghwinner,TBA Sunday'sSummary

Gonzaga76, OregonSt. 64 GONZAG(26-7) A Stirton 2-53-4 7, Greinacher6-15 0-012, Albanez 4-74-412, Tinkle4-7 5-714, Cheslek2-30-04, Water s0-00-00,Bosch0-00-00,Sullivan0-00-0 0, Wolfram 7-14 3-5 17,Niges1-2 0-0 3, Sherbert 1-31-1 3,Stach2-20-04. Totals 29-5816-2176. OREGON BT. (27-5) Gibson3-61-210, Weisner7-156-8 24,Wiese 2-10 2-3 7,Hunter4-63-512, Ham blin 4-71-2 9, Sieuner0-00-00, Hanson 0-40-00, Orum 0-10-0 0, Gulich 1-20-0 2, Hill 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 21-61 13-20 64. Halftime —Gonzaga37-34.3-Point Goals—Gonzaga 2-9(Niles1-2, Tinkle1-2,Sherbert 0-1,Stirton 0-1, Wolfram0-1, Albanez0-2), OreqonSt.9-27 (Weisner 4-10,Gibson3-4, Hunter1-2, Wiese1-9,Hanson0-2). Foule dOut— Hanson.Rebounds— Gonzaga37(Tinkle 7, Oregon St. 30(Hunter 10). Assists—Gonzaga 10 lnkle3), OregonSt.13 (Wiese6). Total Fouls—Gonzaga14,OregonSt.19. A—5,071. OKLAHOMA CITY REGIONAL

SecondRound Bunday'sGames NotreDam e79, DePaul 67 lowa88,Miami 70 Baylor73,Arkansas44 Today'sGame Oklahoma (21-11) vs.Stanford (25-9),3:30p.m. RegionalSemifinals Friday's Games NotreDam e(33-2) vs.Oklahoma-Stanford winner,TBA lowa(26-7)vs.Baylor (32-3), TBA GREENSBOROREGIONAL SecondRound

Sunday'sGame SouthCarolina97, Syracuse68 Today'sGames FloridaGulfCoast (31-2) vs.FloridaSt.(30-4),3 p.m. OhioSt.(2410)vs.NorthCarolina(25 8),330p m. UALR (29-4) vs.ArizonaSt.(28-5), 6 p.m. RegionalSemifinals Friday's Games SouthCarolina(32-2)vs.OhioSt.-UNCwinner,TBA UALR-Arizona St, winnervs. FloridaGulfCoast-Florida St. winner,TBA National Invitation Tournament AR TimesPDT SecondRound Bunday'sGames Villanova 71,OldDominion66 Temple61, Penn56 St. John's77,Fordham63 South ernMiss77,TCU72,OT Missouri67,KansasSt.48 MiddleTennessee70,ArkansasSt. 60 N.C.State69,East Carolina65 UCLA63,SanDiego58 E.Michigan69,Tulsa59 Mississippi63,Georgia Tech48 N. Colorado 59,SouthDakota58 Today'sGames Michigan(17-14)at Toledo(19-13), 4p.m. E. Was hington(21-11)vs.SacramentoSt.(17-15),7pm Fresno St.(23-9) atSaint Mary's(Calif.) (21-10),7p.m Tuesday'sGames Hampton (19-12)atWest Virginia (19-14),4 p.m. Richmond (19-13) at Duquesne(22-10),4 p m. Third Round Wednesday'sGame E. Michigan (24-12) atSouthern Miss (24-10), 5 p.m Thursday'sGames St. John's(23-10)atVilanova(21-13), 4p.m. N.C.State(18-14) atTemple (18-16),4 p.m. Mississippi(19-13)atMiddleTennessee(23-9),5 p.m N. Colorado (22-12) at UCLA(15-18), 7p.m. Women'sBasketball Invitational AR TimesPDT SecondRound Bunday'sGames

Siena69,Xavier 49 Mercer73,Marshall 71

Today'sGame OralRoberts(17-15)at NewMexico (21-12), 9 p.m.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AR TimesPDT

Bunday'sGames NewYork2, D.c.United0 SanJose2, Chicago1 Saturday'sGames SanJoseat NewEngland,noon OrlandoCityat Montreal,1 p.m. Los AngelesatD.C.United,4p.m. SportingKansasCity atNewYorkCity FC,4 p.m. NewYorkatColumbus,4:30p.m. PortlandatVancouver, 5p.m. Seattleat FcDalas, 5:30p.m. ColoradoatHouston, 5:30 p.m. Sunday,March29 PhiladelphiaatChicago,5p.m. TorontoFCat Real Salt Lake,7p.m.

Auto Club400Results SundayatAutoClubSpeedway,Fontana, Calif. Lap length: 2 miles (Starl position in parentheses) 1. (8) BradKeselowski, Ford,209laps, 47points $357,781. 2.(2) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 209,43,$260,130. 3.(1) KurtBusch,Chevrolet, 209,43, $205,055. 4.(11) PaulMenard, Chevrolet, 209,40,$158,505. 5. (9) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 209,39,$156,305. 6. (17) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 209, 38 $132,045. 7. (13)JoeyLogano, Ford,209,37, $155,803. 8. (12) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 209, 37 $136,240. 9. (14) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 209, 35 $150,831. 10. (7)Jeff Gordon,Chevrolet,209,35, $149,406. 11. (23)AricAlmirola, Ford,209,33, $141,546. 12. (31) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 209, 32 $135,168. 13. (15)CarlEdwards, Toyota, 209, 32,$98,110. 14. (20)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 209,30,$128,474 15. (27) Ricky StenhouseJr., Ford, 209, 29 $109,560. 16. (21)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,209,28,$136,696 17. (19)KaseyKahne, Chevrolet, 209,27,$113,160 18. (4)DavidRagan,Toyota, 209, 26,$145,051. 19. (22) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 209, 25 $105,760. 20. (33)ChrisBuescher, Ford,209, 0, $93,860. 21. (26) Jamie McMurray,Chevrolet, 209, 23 $126,451. 22. (30)BrettMoffitt, Toyota,209, 22,$122,974. 23. (37)CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 209,21,$119218 24.32Cole Whitt,Ford,209, 20,$108,493. 25.I40 LandonCassill, Chevrolet,209,0,393,610 26. (5)KyleLarson,Chevrolet,209,18, $120793. 27.(25) Brian Scott, Chevrolet,209,0,$103,843. 28. 6) Denny Hamlin,Toyota,209, 17,$106,485. 29. 36) TrevorBayne, Ford, 209, 15, $132,835. 30. 10) ClintBowyer, Toyota, 209,14, $125,668. 31. 3) MattKenseth,Toyota, 209, 14,3128,746. 32.(29) Greg Biffle, Ford,209,12,$121,143. 33. (28)AlexBowman, Chevrolet, 208,12,$96,932. 34. (18) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 208, 10 $105,185. 35. (43)DavidGigiland, Ford,208,9, $94,960. 36. (35)JoshWise, Ford, 207,8, $86,820. 37.41 J.J. Yeley,Toyota, 206,0, $86,549. 38. 24 Michael Annett, Chevrolet,206,6, $80,803 39. 34 JebBurton,Toyota,205,5,378,240. 40.39 MikeBliss,Ford,205,0,$72,740. 41. (38) BrendanGaughan, Chevrolet, 205, 0 $68,740. 42.(42) MattDiBenedetto, Toyota,203, 2, $64,740. 43.(16) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 155,1,$87,585.

I

Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 140.662 mph. Time ofRace:2hours,58 minutes,18seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.710seconds. Caution Flags: 7for 31laps. Lead Changes:19among9drivers. Lap Leaders:K.Busch1-5; K.Harvick 6-24; A.Bowman25;M.Kenseth 26-31;D.Hamlin 32-61; J.Gor don 62;D.Hamlin 63-88;M.Kenseth 89-94; K.Busch95-99; M.TruexJr. 100-104;K.Busch105137; C.Edwards138; K.Busch139-143; K.Harvick 144-154; M.Kenseth155-185; K.Harvick186-189; K.Busch190-200;J.Gordon201-202; K.Busch203208; B.Keselowski209. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, LapsLed):K.Busch,6 timesfor 65laps; D.Hamlin, 2timesfor 56laps;M.Kenseth, 3 timesfor 43 laps; K.Harvick, ti3mesfor34 laps; M.TruexJr.,1 timefor 5 laps;J.Gordon,2timesfor 3 laps; B.Keselowski,1 time for 1 lap;C.Edwards, 1 timefor 1 lap; A.Bowman,1 time for1 lap. Wins: K.Harvick,2; J.Johnson,1; B.Keselowski, 1; J.Logano,1. Top 16 in Points: 1. K.Harvick,225; 2. J.Logano, 197; 3.M.TruexJr., 192; 4. D.EarnhardtJr., 164; 5. B.Keselowski,163; 6. R.Newman, 162; 7. J.Johnson,159;8. K.Kahne,159; 9. P.Menard, 152; 10. A.Almirola, 138; 11. A.Agmendinger,137; 12. C.Mears,132; 13.M.Kenseth,127; 14. D.Hamlin, 125; 15.D.Ragan, 124;16. J.McMurray, 120.

BASEBALL College

EaslernConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA

Montreal

Boston Ottawa Florida Toronto Buffalo

73 46 20 7 73 45 21 7 71 39 21 11 73 36 25 12 71 36 24 11 72 33 25 14 73 27 40 6 72 20 45 7

99 193 159 97 238 188 89 204 190 84 193 190 83 207 188 80 177197 60 192 235 47 135 241

Calgary LosAngeles SanJose Edmonton Arizona

72 39 27 6 71 34 23 14 72 35 29 8 72 20 39 13 73 21 44 8

84 211 189 82 189 179 78 199 201 53 172 247 50 149 242

Tampa Bay Detroit

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.Y. Rangers 71 46 18 7 99 217 163 N.Y.lslanders 73 44 25 4 92 225 203 Pittsburgh 72 40 22 10 90 200 178 Washington 73 39 24 10 88 212 180 Philadelphia 74 29 29 16 74 192 215 NewJersey 72 31 30 11 73 163 183 Columbus 72 33 35 4 70 193 225 Carolina 7 1 2 6 35 10 62 164 196 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA St. Louis 73 45 21 7 97 223 180 Nashville 73 44 21 8 96 208 176 Chicago 71 43 22 6 92 203 162 Minnesota 72 40 25 7 87 207 181 Winnipeg 72 37 23 12 86 201 189 Colorado 71 33 26 12 78 191 198 Dallas 72 34 28 10 78 224 230 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Anaheim 74 46 21 7 99 216 206 Vancouver 72 42 26 4 88 206 193

Sunday'sGames

Detroit 2,St.Louis1, OT Tampa Bay5, Boston 3 N.Y.Rangers 7,Anaheim2 Vancouver 3,Arizona1

Today'sGames Los Angeleat s NewJersey,4p.m. ChicagoatCarolina,4 p.m. MinnesotaatToronto, 4:30 p.m. SanJoseatOttawa,4:30p.m. BuffaloatDallas,5:30 p.m. ColoradoatCalgary,6 p.m. Winnipeg at Edmonton,6:30p.m. Tuesday'sGames MinnesotaatN.Y.Islanders, 4p.m. Los Angeleat s N.Y.Rangers,4 p.m. St. Louisat Pittsburgh,4p.m. AnaheimatColumbus,4 p.m. ArizonaatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Florida atTampaBay,4:30 p.m. Montrealat Nashvile, 5 p.m. Winnipegat Vancouver, 7p.m.

SKIING World Cup Final overall sfandings Men 1. MarcelHirscher,Austria, 1448points. 2. Kietil Jansrud,Norway,1288. 3. Alexis Pinturault, France, 1006. 4.Felix Neureuther, Germany,838. 5. Fritz Dopfer, Germ any,797.6. HannesReichelt, Austria,760. 7. DominikParis,Italy, 745.8. HenrikKristoffersen,Norway, 729.9. MatthiasMayer, Austria, 717.10.Carlo Janka,Switzerland, 643. United Statesfinisbers 11.TedLigety,560.26.StevenNyman,346.29. Travi sGanong,294.40.Andrew Weibrecht,203.47. MarcoSullivan, 158.60. TimJitloff, 122. 70.David Chodounsky,85. 72.JaredGoldberg, 82. 115.Wiley Maple,23.118.Tommy Ford, 18. 130.Wil Brandenburg,13.142.ThomasBiesemeyer, 6.

Women

1. AnnaFenninger,Austria, 1553points. 2. Tina Maze,Slovenia,1531.3. LindseyVonn,United States, 1087. 4.MikaelaShiffrin, UnitedStates, 1036.5. Nicole Hosp, Austria, 684.6. FridaHansdoter, Sweden, 679. 7.KathrinZettel, Austria, 646.8. ElisabethGoergl, Austria,638.9.LaraGut,Swilzerland,623.10. Tina Weirather,Liechtenstein,603. Other UnitedStatesfinisbers 21.Julia Mancuso,331. 26. LaurenneRoss, 293. 34.Stacey Cook,207.56.Alice McKennis,109.65. Resi Stiegler,75.97.Jacqueline Wiles,16. 114. Me-

ganMcJa mes,5.

Pac-12 AR TimesPDT

California UCLA SouthernCal Oregon St. Arizona ArizonaSt. Oregon Utah Washington Washington St Stanford

Conference Overall W L Pct. W L Pcb 5 5 2 4 4 4 2 2 1 1 0

1 1 1 2 2 2 4 4 5 5 3

.833 18 5 .783 .833 17 5 .773 .667 19 5 .792 .667 18 5 .783 .667 19 6 .760 .667 15 7 .682 .333 15 8 .652 .333 7 15 .318 .167 13 10 .565 .167 12 10 .545 .000 9 11 .450

Sunday'sGames

Oregon 5, ArizonaSt.1 Southern Cal8, CalPoly 2 California12,Washington2 UCLA11,Utah2 Arizona 6,Stanford0 Oregon St. 2,Washington St.1

Today'sGame SanDiegoatStanford,1 p.m. TuesdayisGames SanJoseSt.atOregonSt.,5:35p.m. Washi ngtonatGonzaga,6p.m. UCLAatSanDiegoSt.,6p.m. BYUatUtah,6p.m. Oregonat UCRiverside, 6p.m. PepperdineatSouthernCal, 6p.m. Wednesday'sGames Oregonat UCRiverside, 3p.m. Washi ngtonatGonzaga,5p.m. SanJoseSt.atOregonSt.,5:35p.m. Californiaat FresnoSt., 6:35p.m. Friday's Games Californiaat Utah,5p.m. SouthernCalatWashington, 5p.m. Cal PolyatOregonSt.,5:35 p.m. UCLA atWashington St.,6 p.m. SanfordatArizonaSt., 6:30p.m. OregonatArizona, 7p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague KANSASCITYROYALS— OptionedRHPMichael Mariot,RHPYohanPino,CFranciscoPena, INFCheslor Cuthbertand OFReymondFuentesto Omaha(PCL) and LHPBrandonFinneganto Northwest Arkansas (Texas)andOFTerrance Goreto Wilmington (Carolina) Reassigned CParker Morin andOFBrett Eibnerto their minor leaguecamp. OAKLANDA'S— ReassignedLHPsBradMigsand RyanVerdugo,RHPs FernandoRodriguez and Kevin Whelan,0CarsonBlairand INFsMattolson andJoey Wendletotheir minorleaguecamp.

TEXASRANGERS—Agreedto termswith INFTyler Pastornickyonaminor leaguecontract. National League COLORADOROCKIES— Released RHPJhoulys Chacin. MIAMI MARL INS — Agreed to termswith OF ChristianYelichonaseven-yearcontract. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association WASHIN GTONWIZARDS—SignedGToure' Murry to asecond10-daycontract. FOOTBAL L National Football League PITTSBURGHSTEELERS — Si gned LB James Harrisonto atwo-yearcontract. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL —FinedNashvile F Craig Smith $5,000for high-stickingBuffaloFJerry D'Amigo during aMarch 21 game. LOSANGELESKINGS— RecalledFMikeRichards

fromManchester (AHL).

COLLEGE BRADLEY— Firedmen' sbasketballcoachGeno Ford.


MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015• THE BULLETIN

B3

MEN'S NCAA TOURNAMENT ROUNDUP

Wichita State shocksKansasin long-awaited matchup The Associated Press about this rivalry with Kan12, helping his team advance OMAHA, Neb. — The boys sas," VanVleet said, "but real- to Cleveland for a Midwest from Wichita State had been ly, it's all about the fans. What Regional semifinal against hearing it in text messages better story is there for Wichi- third-seededNotre Dame. "We don't have McDonald's from friends and on social ta State?" media from total strangers: The Shockers have tried All-Americans, we don't have Don't let the chance to stick it for years to schedule a game guys that have been in the to Kansas slip away. against Kansas, but the dom- spotlight and been given that The Shockers would never inant school in the Sunflower pedestal," VanVleet said. "We dream of it. State has always refused, ar- work for everything we've got, Finally getting a chance to guing it would have nothing to from managersto coaches to play the school that continu- gain from it. our preacher to, you know, ally spurns them, Fred VanAfter the beating they got whoever. We've scrapped and Vleet and the rest of the Mis- Sunday, it's no wonder the Jay- fought our whole lives." souri Valley champs rolled hawks never want anything to They didn't stop on Sunday. to a 78-65 victory over the do with Wichita State. If anything, they scrapped second-seeded Jayhawks on Tekele Cotton scored 19 harder. "We'd been playing anySunday, earning a trip to the points for the seventh-seeded Sweet 16 in the sweetest way Shockers (30-4), and VanVleet body else, it would have meant possible. finished with 17. Evan Wessel the same, advancing to the "There's so much to be said hit four 3-pointers and scored Sweet 16," Kansas coach Bill

Ducks

Self said. "It just so happens points and 10 rebounds, and we played an in-state team to fifth-seeded West V i rgingo where we wanted to go, and ia advanced to a Sweet 16 they were much better than showdown with undefeated us. Kentucky. As the final few m inutes

(Kansas State, Florida and UNLV) to the Sweet 16. Louisville 66, Northern lowa 53: SEATTLE — T erry Ro-

their Kansas counterparts be-

54: CHARLOTTE, N.C.

gan to cheer. "I'm speechless," Cotton said. "Like I heard Fred say in the locker room, this feeling is unreal, and he was right about

TravisTrice scored 23 points, South Region and seventh-seeded Michigan Duke 68, San Diego State 49: State knocked No. 2 seed Vir- CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Jahginia out of the NCAA tourna- lil Okafor scored 18 of his 26 ment for the second straight

that."

year. half for top-seeded Duke. Oklahoma 72, Dayton66: Gonzaga 87, lowa 68: SE-

Also on Sunday:

C OLUMBUS, Ohio —

Midwest Region West Virginia 69, Maryland 59: COLUMBUS, Ohio — Devin W i l liams had 16

points in a dominating first

J o r - ATTLE — Kyle Wiltjer scored 13 of his 24 points during the

dan Woodard had 16 points and Buddy Hield scored 15 to help No. 3 seed Oklahoma

advance. Sooners coach Lon

first half, helping Gonzaga advance to the round of 16 for the first time since 2009.

end. The Badgers had trouble dealing with Oregon's athlet-

~~'tV$"

icism. Exhibit A :

f r eshman

Dillon Brooks going baseline and dunking over 7-foot Frank Kaminsky. Then there was Jordan B el l s w atting

tournament opener.

He started slowly against Wisconsin (33-3), missing his

awaytwo of Kaminsky's shots and one of Dekker's before half. Oregon, which shot 55 percent against Oklahoma State

first five shots. By the time he

warmed up, the Ducks (26-10) were down by double digits. "We're a young group, and there was a lot of adversity from the beginning of the year," Young said. "I'm really proud of these guys. I really commend Coach forkeeping us composed in this game." The Ducks trailed until

on Friday, shot 44.1 percent

and needed some time to get its offense going. Young had a couple shots rim out and

missed his first five, and Elijah Cook couldn't finish what should have been an easy dunk off a Young lob. Once Young started connecting, the Ducks were right back in it. "Oregon made their run to fight back," Dekker said, "just as a good team always does. And good teams respond to

Dwayne Benjamin tied it at 52

with a high-arcing 3-pointer from in front of his bench with 5:27 left. The Badgers took the

lead right back, though, with Sam Dekker's reverse layup and 3-pointer to make it 58-52.

"We had ourselves in a position against an experienced, well-coached and very good

those runs. We settled in, and

guys weren't going to get too riled up. We got a big 6-0 run

team," Altman said. "I'm sor-

ry we couldn't get it finished off for these guys so we could Charlie Neibergall I The Associated Press keep playing." Oregon's Jordan Bell, left, shoots over Wisconsin's Frank Kaminsky during the second half of an NCAAtournament game Sunday in Dekker scored 17 points O maha, Nebraska. That Ducks lost 72-65 and led four Wisconsin players in double digits, and the No. 1-seeded Badgers are Jalil Abdulu-Bassit had y e ars. much of an advantage at all. had four blocks to Wisconheaded back to the Sweet 16.

coach to take four schools

ticked away, all those Shock- East Region zier scored 25 points to lead ers fans that felt slighted by Michigan State 60, Virginia fourth-seeded Louisville.

,itp i ~ i , '

Continued from B1 Young had scored 27 points on Friday to carry the Ducks past Oklahoma State in their

Kruger became the second

12 points for the Ducks, who

The si z e a d vantage that

They will play North Carolina were trying to get to the Sweet Wisconsin was supposed to on Thursday in Los Angeles. 16 for the second time in three enjoy against Oregon wasn't

Oregon outrebounded the

sin's three. The Ducks came

there and opened up the lead

and held on from there. It's a game of runs, and you've got to respond at the right time."

Young tied Terrell Brandon for most points in a season

by an Oregon player, with 745, and Bell finished the sea-

Badgers 34-32, outscored back from an 11-point deficit

son with a school-record 94

them 30-24 in the lane and

blocks.

to hang around almost to the

WOMEN'S NCAA TOURNAMENT ROUNDUP

Dayton fliespast secondseed I(entucky to reachits first Sweet 16 The Associated Press

in a row andyou don't get out of we were down 10. They knew the first weekend (the first five we were gonna win the game." is still dancing. times), and you start doubting Kelley Austria made four The seventh-seeded Flyers yourself a little bit. What am I free throws in the final 21 secadvanced to the Sweet 16 for doing wrong and what can we onds and added 17 points for the first time in school history do better'?" Dayton coach Jim Dayton (27-6), which hit 11 with a 99-94upset of No. 2 seed Jabir said. "Our team is very, 3-pointers to help overcome 24 Kentucky on Sunday. very resilient. They really be- turnovers. Her 3-pointer with LEXINGTON, Ky. — Dayton

Ally Malott scored 28 points

lieved that we could win this

1:09 left broke a 87-87tie.

"Every time we needed a big and Amber Deane added 23 to game. We worked really hard keep theschool around after to put them in a place where bucket, someone contributed bowing out w ith f i rst-round mentally that they b elieved and it wasn't the same person defeats in their five previous they could. every time," Malott said. "We "I really think that was the had contributions from everyappearances. "It's funny — you go to the difference. I really do. They one — everyone did their job." NCAA Tournament six years never faltered. In the timeouts, Also on Sunday:

Albany Regional

cruised to its third Sweet 16 in

Texas 73, California 70: BERKELEY, Calif. — Ima-

four years.

the top-seeded Lady Bears reached the Sweet 16 for the

seventh year. lowa 88, Miami 70: IOWA Notre Dame 79, Depaul 67: CITY, Iowa — Bethany Doolitfifth-seeded Texas advanced SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Mitle scored 22 points, Ally Disto the program's first Sweet 16 chaela Mabrey scored 19 terhoft had 15 and third-seed-

ni McGee-Stafford had 20 points and 11 rebounds, and

Oklahoma City Regional

in 11 years.

points, hitting five 3-pointers, ed Iowa earned its first trip to and Taya Reimer and Brianna

Greensboro Regional

the Sweet 16 since 1996.

Turner added 14 points each SpokaneRegional South Carolina 97, Syracuse for top-seeded Notre Dame. 68: COLUMBIA, S.C. — TiffaBaylor 73, Arkansas 44: Duke 64, Mississippi State ny Mitchell and Alaina Coates WACO, Texas — Nina D a- 56: DURHAM, N.C. — Fresheach scored 14 points and No. vis scored 21 points, Niya man Azura Stevens had 22 1 seed South Carolina built

Johnson had 12 assists to tie

points and 10 rebounds to lead

a 28-point halftime lead and

Baylor's career record and

fourth-seeded Duke.

Beavers

p'.'f

there, going on a 13-2 run to take a 15-14 lead. During one 10-minute stretch, the Bull-

Continued from B1 Oregon State (27-5) had hopes to extend a season that included a first-ever Pac-12 championship and a school record for wins. Instead, the third-seeded

h

dogs hit 13 consecutive shots on the way to a 37-34 halftime.

lead. Rueck said two turnovers

immediately after O regon State took a 9-2 lead helped change momentum.

Beavers had their season end

"You knew they were com-

in back-to-back years with a second-round loss. "We gave great effort today, and this team had an unbelievable season, and once again,

ing, and we helped them a lit-

It, ~'A

tle bit right there. We relaxed a little there, and they capital-

ized," Rueck said.

was supported in an incred-

Ali Gibson's 3-pointer tied

ible way. My overwhelming emotion is gratitude.... I'm sorry it had to end today," Oregon State coach Scott Rueck said. Junior guard Jamie Weis-

Photos by Timothy J. Gonzalezirhe Associated Press

ner led Oregon State with 24

it for Oregon State to open the second half but Gonzaga took control from there, going up 47-38 on consecutive layups from Elle Tinkle.

points on 7-of-15 shooting. But the Beavers had quiet games

LEFT: Gonzaga's Shelby Chelsea, left. tries to take the ball from Oregon State's Ruth Hamblin during the Beavers' 76-64 NCAA tournament loss Sunday in Corvallis.ABOVE: Gonzaga's Elle Tin-

lead to 53-43 on Greinacher's jumper with just under 12 min-

from two of their top scorers in

kle gets a kiss from herfather (and Oregon State men's basketball

utes to go.

Sydney Wiese and Ruth Hamblin. Wiese scored only seven

coach) Wayne Tinkle after the game.

Despite the loss, the future remains brightfor Oregon

points after shooting just 1 of

9 from 3-point range, while

of today's game in Knoxville the 6-foot-6 Hamblin had nine between Tennessee (28-5) and points and four rebounds. Pittsburgh (20-11). The Bull"Shots just didn't drop to- dogs were also the No. 11 seed night. It wasn't my day. I'd love in 2011, and also playing in the to hit shots on days like this to Spokane Regional, when they get a win, but I'm proud of how made a stunning run to the reeveryone battled," Wiese said. gional finals before losing to Gonzaga (26-7) advances to top seed Stanford. the Sweet 16, heading home The Beavers have never to Spokane to face the winner

made it to the Sweet 16 in the

NCAA tournament's current format. In 1983, the Beavers beat UCLA to advance to the

points th e

B e avers w ould shot-clockbuzzer-beater "the

score as Gonzaga had the game's final 12 points. second round when the field Sunny Greinacher's layup was 32 teams. put the Zags back in front beGonzaga led by as many as fore Keani Albanez's layup 12 points midway through the just beat the shot clock to

shot of the game," adding that "I didn't like the response it

The Bulldogs stretched the

State, which loses only Gibson from its current roster.

"It hurts right now, for sure," Wiese said."But we won a Pac-

12 championship, and that's some energy right there. We pretty incredible. We should didn't fight like you have to; a appreciate the good moments little doubt crept in." and the bad moments, but it's second half, but Oregon State make it 68-64 with 1:26 left The Beavers jumped out to important to go into the offtied the game at 64 on Weis- a nd time ra n o u t f o r t h e a 9-2 lead, following a pair of season to remember the bad ner's 3-pointer with 3:30 to go. Beavers. moments a little more to give baskets from Hamblin. But T hat would b e t h e l a s t Rueck called A lbanez's Gonzaga took control from us the fuel." brought out of us. We lost


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015

ALPINE SKIING

Television

games nationwide." And he said it was also challenging Continued from B1 the league's efforts to use its A Boston baseball fan liv- a l l-team packages to monoping in Los Angeles, for exam-

MBSEFracer wins U16regional slalom

o l i ze the out-of-market distri-

ple, would currently have no bution of games. choice but to order hundreds

Beth W i l k i nson, a lawyer

of games from across the f o r t heleague,toldScheindlin league just to see the Red Sox the plaintiffs had failed to play. The Extra Innings pack- show injuries, let alone the age, offering up to 80 out-of- kind of common injuries that market games a would qu a l i fy week, is advertised large groups of by cable providers people as a class. "The only injuf or $195 a season. p g pS / p g A three-day trial y + S 6 y+// f++ ry t he y are claimt hat ended this past . . ing is that these . week in a packed /l yl~g I~ ~OS guys — the putaManhattan court- g g g 6 /6S fp y tive cl a ss memroom leaves a judge bers should to decide whether a pay less for the lawsuit brought by WOU/d p ackage," s h e several fans against CUp6gg/y Qgy6 said. MLB and the NHL J anusz O r d o flp Chp/C6 can be considered ver, a New York a class action. The bU ~ ~p Old6I' Unive r sity e conoutcome of the lit- /7 UAdf6dS Of omist c a l led a s igation could set a n e xpert b y f„ a p recedent fo r ~ baseball, said a broadcast r i g hts aC r OSS the change i n r u l e s for other sports as /6 6 gU6 j US$$ p w o u ld likel y well, including footcause the price of ~ ~ " " d ball and basketball. a league package U.S. Dis t r ict S OX P/8 > T/76 to g o up, if it conJudge Shira Ext r a / n n i n gS tinu e dto exist at Scheindlin already all. He said some ruled last year that teams might debaseball c a n not Of f6 I 'lAgUP cide th e y do not use its antitrust ex- fp 80 OUg pf want to lic e nse emption to evade their games for 8" S a leagu e p a ckthe lawsuit because television b r o a d- 8 W66 k , I S age because they c asting rights are g d y 6 +/S6d would consider it "a subject that is not a threat to the inY C6 central to the busicome they would ness of baseball." Prpyid6rS receive as fans L awyers for f py $$95 6 buy only t h eir team's games. baseball and hockey warned that if Phil Miller, ecofans prevail, prices nomics p r ofeswill likely go up for sor at Minnesota the all-league packState University, ages, or they might no longer Mankato, said he buys the be sold at all. baseball league package each The plaintiffs say that is y ear but would welcome the not true. They say prices will c hange. "Personally, I think i t's a likely drop as fans buy only teams they are interested in good thing for consumers," ~

and maintain that th e

Bulletin staff report

MULTI SPORTS RAPRD tOhOStLittle SPOrtS StarS —Kidsages3to 5can sign up for this half-hour class, which introduces the basics skills needed to play several different sports. Classes areheld at the RAPRDActivity Center from 2-2:30 p.m. on four consecutive Thursdays, beginning March16. The program costs $17.

SPring Swim leSSOnS Starting at BPRD —Anewslate of Bend Park 8 Recreation District swim lessons begins at Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center during the week ofMarch 30. Thefive-week sessions

he s aid, likening the situation

Bowling Lava Lanes,Bend Leagueleadersandhigh scores March 9-15

v e r sities to sell their football

CASINOFUN— Too ManyShots;Ray Camacho 256/718;EdieRoebuck187/501 GUYSAND GALS — Whoops;Mike Garrison 247/668;Margaret Donohue1t0/516 LAVALANESCLASSIC— Cannon Bowlers; Terry Lussie r237/613;MoniqueMcCleary209/566 TEATIMER S —It's 50'Clock Somewhere;Sharon Groshong 189/565 LATECOMERS— NoThreat;JulieHughes227/534 FREEBREATHERS — Wreak Ahead; John Scot 233/645 ;NinaLadd19O/488 GREASEDLIGHTENING— LonesomeDove;Eddie Owens215/523;DedeNichols171/452 HIS AND HERS— Environmental Controls; Mark Hanken 247/69O;MaryStratton204/566 REJECTS — AllyOops!;DavidPete227/590;Jamie Felipeli 213/583 WEDNE SDAY INC— Cheerleaders; AmandaAldridg e265/682;TedBiggs246/691 TNT — Threesa Crowd; KenFisher225/608; Shauna Larsen194/530 PROG RESSIVE—ThomasWorld Dentistry; David Johns233/648 TG IF.—1Shot,2Shot,HereWeGo;BryanMeeker 243/695; JoyReeves215/561 NEVADA FUN — Dolls with Balls; Ken Fisher 215/617;DawnHathaway158/438

s o l d b y t h e N CAA. "They broke up the cartel. k n o w h o w m a ny collegefoot-

t h e plaintiffs may still need to

t i a t ing television contracts.

"The reasoning of Conmotional," he said. "The act of putting sports on television gressinpassingthe SBAwas naturally enhanced the value

t h a t c o l lective negotiations

of sportsand increased de- and even revenue distribumand for live attendance." tio n s would lead to increased E dward Diver, alawyer for

c o m p etitive balance in t h e

the plaintiffs, said the lawsuit Big 4 sports leagues," he said, is challenging "the territorial a dding: "The classic behavior restraints, the systems that

o f a s p o rts league cartel is

prevent the individual teams to charge half as many fans from b r oadcasting t h ei r t w i ce as much."

2:10.60, and Katie Hensien of the Intermountain Division

finished second in 2:12.89. Other MBSEF finishers in Sunday's women's race were

Sophia Sahm (28th, 2:21.09), Lili Bouchard (36th, 2:23.67), Addison B easley (47th, 2:27.10), and Elena Klonsky (53rd,2:28.85).

include classes designed for everyone from small children to adults. Fees andmeeting times vary by class. For more information, visit the Juniper Swim andFitness Center page at www.bendparksandrec.org.

RUGBY Bend BlueS drOP rOad COnteSt —TheBendBlues high school

Eugene RugbyClub19-19 on March14. Kevin Baker,Gareth Griffes and James Brinegar eachscored atry, while Zack Heath scored two conversions. BendRugbyClub improved to 4-1-2 in the Division 3 Pacific Northwest Rugby Leagueand 5-2-2 overall. — Bulletin staffreports

COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD

opposite effect, enhancing overcome the Sports Broadthe value of the game and c asting Act of 1961, which driving even more people to exempts all four major proballparks. fessionalsports leagues from "For the most part, the a n titrustviolations fornegobroadcasting of sports is pro-

the giant slalom winner, in

Bend Rugdy Clud draw in Eugene — TheRoughriders tied with

SWIMMING

noted fears by leagues in the ball games there are. There's 1950s when television first t o ns of consumer choice out grew in popularity that fans t here," he said. would stopgoing to games, John Vrooman, a Vanderbut it was soon discovered bilteconomicsprofessor,said that televised games had the

of the Far West Division was

rugby team lost17-5 to the Linn Benton Lions in aSaturday match played in Albany. KeeganBloss scored the only try for the Blues, for the BendPark & Recreation District summer activities and camps whose record slipped to 2-2 in RugbyOregon's Club Championship open today. Outdoor andovernight camps, sports clinic and manyothDivision. On March14, the Blues dominated two games in Pendleton, er activites for children will run throughout the summer. A full listing of beating Pendleton 29-0 andWest Linn 39-0. Bloss led the Blueswith activities is available online at www.bendparksandrec.org. Registration 13 points on one try and four conversions. Nolan Holmgren, Isaiah is available online at register.bendparksandrec.org or in person during Felton, Dominic Teagleand Michael Hagemaneach hadtwo tries regular business hours at the District Office, Juniper Swim & Fitness apiece for Bend. Center and BendSenior Center.

viding more options for fans What happened? Today, you would not harm sports. He

slalom Sunday with a time of 2:13.70. Keely Cashman

BPRD SummerCamPregiStratian OPenStOday — Signups

versity economics professor games rather than have them called as an expert for th e plaintiffs, testified that pro-

third in the women's giant

COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF

leaguepackages would prob- to a court case in the 1980s ablybecheaperthantheyare t hat cleared the way for innow. dividual colleges and uniRoger Noll, a Stanford Uni-

weekend he wa s d eclared

Sunday by a narrow margin, the men's overall regional posting a two-run combined champion. He and MBSEF time of I minute, 35.65 sec- t eammates Walter L a f k y , onds on t h e T h u nderbird who won the super-G, and and Snowboard Association r un. Winston Pretti of t h e Erin Smith, who posted topU16 Western Region alpine Far West Division was sec- six finishes on all three days, championships, which con- ond in 1:35.68, and Devon To- qualified for the USSA U16 cluded their three-day run ribio of the PNSA was third national championships, to Sunday at Mt. Bachelor ski in 1:35.81. be held March 30 to April area. Cravens finished ninth in 4 at Sugarloaf Mountain in Cravens, representing the Friday's super-G and second Maine. Mt. Bachelor Sports Educa- in Saturday's giant slalom, S mith, wh o w a s t h i r d tion Foundation and the Pa- and based on World Cup overall among the womcific Northwest Ski Associ- points accumulated over the en for the weekend, placed

~

a ll -

ation, won the men's slalom

M OUNT BA CH E L O R — Bend's Minam Cravens was first in the slalom and first overall at the U.S. Ski

RimrockLanes, Prineville Week28 GrizzlyMountainMen'sLeague Team highs—Scratchseries: NoBoundaries, 3O86;Scratchgame:Prineville Reservior Resort, 976; Handicapseries: Environmental Controls, 3123;Handicapgame:TheUdder Guys, 1083. Men's highs —Scratchseries: ColbyHawes, 7OO;Scratchgame:AlanAnderson,263.Handicap series; AndySeiver,731; Handicapgame: Dale Asher,284.

Week22 Friday NightSpecial Team highs — Scratch series: Bowling Stones,2181;Scratchgame:Nothin But Trouble, 775; Handicapseries: Sandbaggers, 2652; Handicap game: A&AEnterprises,945. Men's highs —Scratchseries: RickyMayers, 652; Scratchgame;GeneMcKenzie,246;Handicap series: JoeHughes, 716; Handicapgame:Buck Buck,259. Women's highs—Scratchseries: Julie Mayers,529;Scratchgame: Chris Gray,197.Handicap seri es:JordanRachor,755;Handicapgame:Angie Dodd,268. Week23 Friday NightSpecials TeamHighs—Scratch series: Bowling Stones, 2134; Scratchgame: Alley Katz:734; Handicap seri es:whatElse?,2592;HandicapGame:A sA Enterprises,918. Men'sHighs—Scratchseries: BuckBuck,588; Scratchgame:RickyMayers,231; Handicapseries: Jason Kilthau,7O1;Handicapgame:DonBabcock, 258. Women'sHighs—Scratch series: Ari Mayers, 543; Scratchgame:Julie Mayers,196;Handicap seri es:Ramona Freeman,726;Handicap game: TobieSloan,253.

ASSURANCE

10.O(3rdj, 9.6(t-3rdj, 9.9(t-4th), 9.3(6thj, 9.9(3rd), 10.1(2ndj,58.8(3rd). Level5Boys—Ma thewBorne,7-8,9.1 (9th),9.0 (t-1(NIIj, 9.0(13IIj, 9.5 (t-ehj, 9.4 (t-nI1),7.6(14th), 536(12thj.JordanKe nnedy,9-1O,93(21stj,91(19th), 9.2 (18th), 10.1(1st), 8.8 (20thj, 9.6 (t-12thj, 56.1 17th). Marcos Ngo, 9-1O,8.8 (26thj, 9.4(16th),8.0 31stj,9.4(t-18thj,9.3(12th),9.1(21stj,54.O(23rdj. Level 6 Boys —Zachary Miler, 7-8, 7.6(5th), 4.1 (5thj,7.3(5th), sr (3rd), 8.4(5th), 8.9(4th), 46.0 (5thj. Zane Viles, 9-10,r.r (Bthj, 9.O(t-8thj, 8.9(3rd), 9.4 (t-6th),10.1(2nd),9.3(5thj, 54.4(5thj. AlexGarza, 9-10,9.8(t-2nd), 7.6(10thj, 5.0(15th),9.3 (t-10thj, 9.3 5th),92(t Bthj,502(7th).JoelMcLaughlin,9-10,83 eII),8.7 (H3I1),7.8(8tI1),9.5(t-5tI1),6.8(13thj,9.1 (t-8thj, 50.2(10thj. MateoGarza, 13+, 9.6(1stj, Q.o (eII), t7(8<IIj,11.3(7tIIj,85(6III),69(7tII),530(7tII). Level 8Boys—Travis Fields, 15-18,10.7(7thl, 8.2 (7thj, 8.9(7th),12.0(2ndj, 10.8(6th), 11.1(4th), 61.7(7tIIj. Level 9Boys—BlaineDavis,13-14,13.0(3rd), 11.O(6thj, 10.2(t-10thj, 13.1(2nd), 12.7(t-3rd), 12.6 (2ndj,72.6(4th). Qualifiers forRegionalMeetin Vancouver, Wash., April u: Davis,Fields,Garza,viles, Ngo,Borne,Kennedy.

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NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE

Sam among 105 'vets' eyeing elusive NFLjob By Barry Wilner The Associated Press

T EMPE, A r i z . The strain and sweat on their fac-

es showed just how much one more chance in the NFL means to Michael Sam and 104

others. Except for pro days for college players entering the draft, March is not usually a time for running sprints and drills before scouts. Then again, these

"veterans" will take any opportunity to prove their worth.

the game and I am healthy, you'll continue to see me trying to play in this league. I am very confident I willbe playing football somewhere."

"Out of sight, out of mind.

That's why this is great for me," he said. "To show I am still alive and here and want

anotherchance. "If it's possible my passion Sam didn't rule out Canada, either: "If that's the opportuni- for the game is probably stronty, I'll take it. I'm a fighter and ger. When you have to watch I'm going to keep fighting." something you love and have Many of the players in Tem- been doing all your life, it's pe have played extensively difficult." in the NFL and were among These veterans — at least more than 1,800 applicants for

the ones who have had a true taste of the NFL — understand

,'fl • I'

just how much it takes to remain there. It's even tougher to

get back there. "Yeah, this shows people I

4

P.

am still around," said 30-year-

old running back Michael Bush, a six-year vet who last

played in the league with Chicago in 2013. "Put me in pads. I always get the job done."

this combine. Whether they were released or,quite often,

~P

Pr

yr

"Whoever wants me," Sam injured, they could not — or said Sundaywhen asked about would not — come to grips returning to the field for the with their NFL careers being S41 382-6447 i 2090 NE wyatt Court i Suite 101 initial NFL veterans combine. over. Bend OR 97701i bendurology.com S~sndUrolo The first openly gay player Carriker, f o r e x a mple, drafted did not make it with missedthe last two seasonsbethe Rams last year, cut at the cause of a torn quadriceps and end of training camp. He land- then a setback in his recovery. 0 ed on the Cowboys' practice The Rams' f irst-rounder in The Bulletin is in the process of compiling a list OfSummer Camps in squad for a few weeks before 2007 (13th overall), he played Central Oregon. Pleasefill Out this form to verify information in order to being released. two seasons in St. Louis before "If the Rams or Cowboys being traded to Washington. camps, programs,andactivitiesforchildren ofallages. be considered for Publication in the SummerYouth Activity Guide. want me, I'm on the first flight He spent his last four seasons +®~~~ 5~4~~ 3®2 ~@~ ~ out," he said. with the Redskins but has not Emailinformation to:summercamps@bendbulletin.com To reserve your ad space in e Unlike many of the others been in a game since 2012. Summer Youth Guide Mgj/ fpp~ tp. on hand, including a variety of During recent workouts, PubiishesFriday, Aprii17 2 15 former first-round draft picks Carriker said he was outrunThe Bulletin, Attn: Martha RpgarS, po. BpX6020, Bend, OR97Q2 such as Brady Quinn, Felix ning defensive backs, which Adv riising ~eadlin:. Friday, April, 15 . Cam P HOSt: Jones, Jamaal Anderson and gave him a huge boost toAdam Carriker, Sam really ward a c o meback. Several ~itgtocation: has a blank NFL resume. But teams contacted his agent and he's certain he'll get a shot at a said they'd watch him work website: roster spot. Sunday. " Absolutely, I t h ink m y The defensive end even volPhone: chances are high," the 25-year- unteered to lift weights, someold defensive end said. "As thing not on t his combine's Deadline to submit: April 3, 2015 The Bulletin ~ long as I have that will to play agenda.

. yo~pjyH ATTENTIQNGENTRAL QREGQN sUMMER GAMPs

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;


MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015• THE BULLETIN

O M M U N IT Y

PORTS

CYCLING

MULTI SPORTS

PRINEVILLEBIKEPARKSKILLS CLINIC: Saturday; Join cycling professional Chad Cheeneyand wifeAnnie Cheeney foran all-levels bike clinic. This clinic is about fun, and the skills and drills will be aimed at helping local cyclists learn how to play on their bikes. Includes a postclinic barbecue; Noon-4 p.m.; $25, preregister at Good Bike Co. by Friday;Good BikeCo.,284 NE 3rd St., Prineville; 541-903-0509. BEND BIKE SWAP:April10-11; Bike sale to support Central Oregon nonprofits that support the local cycling culture; Noon-7 p.m. April10and 9a.m.-3p.m. April11; Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend;www.boneyardcycling.com/ bendbikeswap.

UP THECROOKED RIVER DUATHLON: April 25; Participants may choose between a 5K run, 40K bike, 5K run; or the 2-mile walk, 10-mile bike, 2-mile walk. These two events are held simultaneously along the same routes. Award ribbons are given to the top three places or both the run and walk events. Awards are by age group, male and female and by team. This is a fun event held along the scenic Crooked River. Participants should be in average physical condition. Each finisher is awarded a customized finisher's medal; 10 a.m.; $35 - $70 ($35 per individual, $60 per team, $5 increase on April13); Crooked River Park, Prineville; 541-416-0455, www.normsextremefitness. com. SMITH ROCK SPRINGSTING: April 26; Listed in Men's Journal as One of the 52 Best Races to Enter in 2015, this is the perfect race for beginners as well as more experienced racers who are looking for a shorter race. Featuring the beautiful terrain of Smith Rock State Park and using multiple disciplines including trekking, mountain biking, paddling and orienteering, this race will get you ready for the adventure race season; 8 a.m .-4 p.m.;$100;Smith Rock State Park, 9241 NECrooked River Dr., Terrebonne; 415-656-9765; bendracing. com/smith-rock-spring-sting-april-26th.

EQUESTRIAN TRAIL COURSEPLAY DAYFUNDRAISER: April 4; Fun event for getting together with

your horse, mule orpony.Training your

equine to maneuver through and around obstacles will teach him to calmly negotiate natural obstacles found on the trail; 10 a.m.2 p.m.; $10 donation suggested; Rolling M Ranch, 69516 Hinkle Butte Dr., Sisters; 541306-9957orwww.mustangstotherescue. org/event/trail-course-april/. DIANE'S HORSEBACK RIDING: Saturdays in April; Redmond Area Park and Recreation District horseback riding for ages 7-18 years. RUNNING In the beginning horseback riding class, PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP WITH students will learn the basics of horseback MAX KING:Tuesdays; interval-based riding using Diane's horses and tack. Each running group. Locations vary; free; 5:30 class begins with the participants learning p.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; 541the proper skills and knowledge on how 317-3568ormax©footzonebend.com. to maintain and properly care for a horse. REDMOND RUNNING GROUP:Tuesdays; Once propercarefor ahorse is taken, you Group runs in Redmond. Meet at 314 SW11 will learn how to cinch saddle and prepare St.; all abilities welcome; free; 6:30 p.m. to ride. The intermediate class is all about teaching riders to become more proficient NOON TACO RUN: Noontaco run on with subtle "aides" to communicate with Wednesdays from FootZone. Order food the horse in more advanced maneuvers;1-2 from the Taco Stand and it will be ready p.m. and 3-4 p.m.; $100 for four sessions; upon your return; free (tacos not included); Diane's Riding Place, 65535 Cline Falls noon;FootZone,842 NW WallSt.,Bend; Highway, Bend; 541-548-7275; www.raprd. 541-317-3568 or teague@footzonebend.

or'g.

com.

END

FLEETFEETWEDNESDAY RUNS:FleetFeet's Run this Town runs, usually 3-5 miles; free; 6 p.m.; Fleet FeetSports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601. MOMS RUNNINGGROUP:Thursdays; rain or shine, 3-4.5 miles; free; 9:30 a.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or

angela©foo tzonebend.com. GROWLER RUN:LastThursdayofeach month; group run of 3-5 miles from Fleet Feet. Share a growler of beer from Growler Phil's after the run; free; 6 p.m.; Growler Phil's, 1244 NW Galveston Ave.,Bend;541-390-3865 or scott.whiteIIfleetfeet.com. RORKSATURDAYRUNS: Weekly run or walk with the Redmond OregonRunning Klub at 8 a.m. Email DanEdwards for more info; free; 8 a.m.; downtown Redmond; rundanrun19@ yahoo.com or www.raprd.org. SATURDAYA.M. RUNS: Meetat Fleet Feet Sports in Bend. Various routes. Mostly trail. We will car pool to a trailhead if necessary. Expect longer runs 4-8 miles of beautiful local routes; free; 8 a.m.; FleetFeetSports,1320 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601. GOINGTHE DISTANCE — BRINGING OUT THE BESTIN DISTANCE RUNNERS: April2; Carol and Jim McLatchie arecurrently Summit High's track coachesbut havelong histories in the global running community both as competitors and coaches ofworld champion and Olympic athletes. Join them atFootZone foratalkonhowtobringoutthe bestin distance runners atany level. RSVPonline; 7:00 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend;541317-3568; www footzonebend.com/events. HORSE BUTTE10MILER:April4;TheHorse Butte10 miler is the race that has become a classic early season event here in Bend Oregon; 9 a.m.; Horse Butte, Bend; www. superfitproductions.com/. FOOTZONE'SPUB RUN TO BRIDGE 99:April 6; Meet at FootZone at 5:30 p.m. and run to Bridge 99, a newbrewery in Bend's north end. Every runner's first beer will be sponsored by Cascade Relays, producers of the BendBeer Chase. Small appetizers will also beavailable from Wubba's BBQ. IDbracelets will be handed outat FootZone, but pleasealso bring your ID along with you to the brewery. RSVP online; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St.,

B5

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.com/comsportscal.

Bend; 541-317-3568, www.footzonebend. com/events/. SALMONRUN:April12; Kick off the 2015 race season with a true Bendtradition. One of the first half-marathons of the year in the Northwest, it has long beencentral to the localracing scene;7a.m .;Downtown Bend Library, 601 NWWall Street, Bend; www.

runsalmonrun.com

SALMON RUN— LITTLE FRY RUN:April 12; Part of the KidsRockthe Racesseries, encourage your little fry to join the salmon migration and festivities. Ages3-4 run100 meters,5and 6race500meters,andages8 through10 run1,500 meters. All participants will receive afinisher's ribbon; Noon; $5 or free with adult entry; Meet in parking lot of Tumalo Creek Kayak 8Canoe,805 SW Industrial Way, Bend; www.runsalmonrun.com. LIGHT OF HOPE SUPERHERO RUN/WALK: April19; This family friendly 5Kand10K walk/ runbegins and ends at beautiful Riverbend Park in Bend's Old Mill District. Dress as your favorite superhero to walk or run for the benefit of the more than 325 foster children in Deschutes, Crookand Jefferson counties. Presented by BendUrology and Columbia Bank, the event benefits CASA ofCentral Oregon. Registration includes asuperhero cape; 9:30 a.m.; $30 adults, $15 children12 8 under, $40 late registration; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia, Bend; 541-389-1618; www.casaofcentraloregon.org/light-of-hope. BEND MARATHON AND HALF:April 26; The inaugural Bend Marathon andHalf will be an awesome experience that captures all that is truly great about Bend; 8a.m.; Starting and ending at10 Barrel Brewing Company,Bend; www.bend-marathon.com.

SNOW SPORTS SHOES,BREWS AND VIEWS SNOWSHOE TOUR:April1, 8 and15; snowshoe offtrail

to enjoy agorgeousviewof theCascade

Mountains; 1:30 p.m.; $70; Wanderlust Tours, 61535S. Hwy97, Suite 13, Bend;www. wanderlusttours.com. MOONLIGHT5 STARLIGHT SNOWSHOE TOURS:April 3, 10, 17; snowshoe by the light of the moon; 7 p.m.; $70; Wanderlust

Tours, 61535 S. Hwy97,Suite13, Bend; www. wanderlusttours.com. SNOWSHOE TOURS:April 4, 7, 11, 14, 18and 21; snowshoe offtrail and awayfrom crowds into the CascadeMountains; 9a.m.; $60; Wanderlust Tours, 61535 S.Hwy97, Suite13, Bend; www.wanderlusttours.com. BONFIREON THE SNOW SNOWSHOE TOURS:April17; snowshoe with your Wanderlust Tours guide to aquiet spot in the snowy forest to bask ata glowing bonfire in the middle of anamazing amphitheater handcarved into the snow; 7 p.m.; $85; Wanderlust Tours, 61535 S. Hwy97,Suite 13, Bend; www. wanderlusttours.com/.

TABLE TENMS TABLETENNIS EVENING: Mondays;evening play hosted by BendTable Tennis Club; $3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; 6-9 p.m.; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 NWWall St.; www.bendtabletennis.com.

VOLLEYBALL OVA SPRINGBREAK VOLLEYBALL CAMP:April 23-24; Oregon Volleyball Academy Spring BreakVolleyball Camp for all fourth- through eighth-graders. Staff includes current OVAand high school coaches. Space is limited; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; $75; Cascade Indoor Sports, 20775 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend; 541-419-1187; www. oregonvolleyballacademy.com.

WATER SPORTS RIVERHOUSERENDEZVOUS:Sunday; The seventh annual Riverhouse Rendezvous Slalom will take place in theDeschutes River behind the Riverhouse Convention Center and Hotel in Bend. Throughout the day, paddlers dividedbyage group, type ofboatand gender will test their skills and endurance on the quarter-mile whitewater course; 10a.m.;

$10- $15 ($10entry for AmericanCanoe

Association competitors, $15 for all other competitors); Riverhouse Convention Center and Hotel, 3075 US-97 BUS,Bend, 541317-9407; www.tumalocreek.com/events/ riverhouse-rendezvous-2015.

Mudslinger Continued from B1 Although the vast majority of participants ran (or, in some cases, were carried) inuntimed waves, there were a few competitive souls on hand, particularly in the timed first heat.

"I like the competitiveness and creativity of using the mud," said Ryan Kerson, 28, whowonthe competitive timed vh 'H

heat. "I've done one half marathon, andI at the end of that I

thought, 'I don't really want to

pP»: '

just run.'"

.1

Pierson, a California native who now lives in La Pine, said he has competed in25 to 30

mud runs. "I do a lot of CrossFit stuff, not just lifting weights but cardio and circuit training," Pierson explained. "It's more than just run-

ning,

s i nce

"It'S funny, you have to thOugh, p~ Y' "'. s '~ Up over things

V7e fleld

and do a lot

jg Ippked

of cr a wling. It takes a lot of

eBSQ

des and core work."

yU~baCk WOOdS

there'S SCBQ/ B/Uff"

shoulder musOther s, l ike A m a n da P]untze, a

2 5-yea r - o l d f om B end, said they did no t r aining whatsoev Robert Ray swimsunder the log obstacles during the Sunriver Mudslinger Spring Break MudRun in Sunriver on Sunday. er. Even so, Pluntze, who

Photos by Meg Rousaos1The Bulletin

r

— Annie crossed the M uske- finish lin e Dukes-Drlggs with h er s andals i n hand, said the course was manageable aside from the scaling walls, where

i,fu

t

5~

the footholds were so slick with mud that participants had to

A"

boost each other up to be able

/

to climb over the top. "It was so f tm . I t's f t m-

ny, though, out on the field it looked fairly easy, but back in the woods there's some scary stuff," said Annie MuskeDukes-Driggs, 31, of Bend. "There's a lot of crawling, and a lot of sliding back down into the mud pits." Savko, the event director,

saidthe organizers and Sunriver Public Works department

needed two to three weeks to build the course, which included several new and redesigned obstacles. "We tried to make everything muddier, and I think based on what I'm seeing from people finishing we've suc-

ABOVE: Steven Carrell, right, walks carefully across the balance beams. TOP RIGHT: Lindsey Vaternick, 12, climbs over the mud pit. BOTTOM RIGHT: Gayle Vanderford make her way through the

pinwheel obstacle.

wooden beams as spokes that But aside from that and a resembled a racing revolv- few shivering youngsters at One of the new elements was ing door, but the contraption the finish, most of Sunday's hit or miss — literally. Several moved fast enough to knock mudslingers insisted they had runnerssaid they enjoyed the over some of the younger and a good time. "pinwheel," a large circle with slower participants. "It was way muddier this ceeded in that," Savko said.

year," said 54-year-old McMinnville resident Jan Adams, a

three-year participant who ran with her 8-year-old granddaughter, Lidia Jacobsen, of Bend, for the second time.

"Last year they had to hose it dOWI1.

But will they be coming back next year?

"If she'll do it," said Adams, as Lidia smiled and nodded. — Reporter: 541-383-0305, vjacobsen@bendbulletin.com



MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015• THE BULLETIN

T EE TO

B7

R EEN

ROUNDUP

GOLF IN BRIEF

Eve s the man at Bay Hill for 2nd straight year

Local pro Vijarro seeks

The Associated Press

m issed that putt, that w a s

the No. 1 thing on my mind:

ORLANDO, Fla. — Matt

Every had a tongue-in-cheek

'You're already in. Miss it — I

response when he heard Ti-

need to get in.'" Also on Sunday: Hyo Joo Kim wins Founders Cup: PHOENIX — Hyo Joo

ger Woods was not ready to play the Arnold Palmer Invitational this year. He said

he told Woods, "Don't worry, man, I'll hold it down for you until you get back."

SON, Ariz. — Marco Dawson won the 'IIrcson Conquistado-

res Classic for his first Champions Tour title, breaking a tie with a 20-foot birdie putt on

the par-4 16th hole and closing

eight holes to outlast Stacy

with two pars for a two-stroke

He did that and more.

Lewis at Desert Ridge in the LPGA Tour's JTBC Founders

victory. The 51-year-old Dawson shot a 3-under 69 to finish

Every was dressed in a blue

Cup. The 19-year-old Kim

at 13-under 203 in the firstyear event at Tucson National,

closed with a 5-under 67, hol-

sure looked familiar on the 18th green Sunday at Bay

ing a 10-foot birdie putt on

Hill. He made an 18-foot bird-

the par-4 18th to beat Lewis by three strokes for her sec-

ie puttfora 6-under 66, gave an abbreviated fist pump and

ond title. Projected to jump from eighth to fourth in the

Reinhold Matay/The Associated Press

sional golfer Andrew Vijarro is seeking local backing to help him achieve his goal of reaching the PGA Tour. Vijarro, 25, graduated from BendHigh School in 2008, when hewas a Class 5Astate co-champion. He went on to asuccessful college career at Oregonand turned pro in 2012. Hehas played the last two years on PGATour Canada,cutting last season short to overhaul his swing. Now he is looking to generate support that will allow him — along with his caddie, former BendHighteammate Joel Salmond — to return to PGATour Canada.Vijarro is hopeful that the Canadian tour will serve as asteppingstone to the PGATour. To learn more about Vijarro or make adonation, go to www.gofundme. com/n97o1c.

Marco Dawson wins Tucson Conquistadores Classic: TUC-

Kim birdied five of the last

shirt, not red, but the moment

Suppert — Bendprofes-

the longtime home of the PGA Tour's defunct Tucson Open. He opened with consecutive

67s to take a one-stroke lead into the final round. Madeira Islands Open can-

held onto the trophy for one

Matt Every acknowledges the gallery after sinking a putt for birdie

world, Kim finished at 21-un-

more year with a one-shot

to take the lead snd win the Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando

victory over Henrik Stenson. "You watch tournaments on

on Sunday.

der 267 at Wildfire Golf Club. She won theEvian Championship last year in France for her first major title and has eight victories on the South

celed: SA NT O A N T O N IO DA SERRA, Portugal — Or-

Korean tour. Kim is the fifth South Korean winner in the first six events this year and the other wi nner, top-

statement on th e E uropean

lication lists — Several

Zealand, was born in South

Tour website, chief operating officer Keith Waters said "we are already in discussions with the club and the sponsors to reschedule the event for an-

Korea.

other week" later this season.

Central Oregon golf courses appear in rankings released recently by two prominent golf publications. Golf Digest has announced its Best In State rankings for 2015-16, and five Central Oregon courses are among the 15facilities listed. They include: Bend's Pronghorn (Fazio) at No. 6and Pronghorn (Nicklaus) at No.7, Crosswater in Sunriver at No. 9, TetherowinBendatNo.10, and Aspen Lakes inSisters at No.15. Of the five, all but the Fazio course at Pronghorn are open to the public. Golfweekmagazinehasincluded four Central Oregon courses among its list of 10 State-byState CoursesYouCan Play in Oregonfor 2015. At No. 5is Pronghorn (Nicklaus), No. 6 is Tetherow, No. 8 isCrosswater, and No. 9 is AspenLakes.

TV and guys make a 20-footer on the last and everybody goes nuts," Every said. "It's

This one was even sweeter.

Every came from three shots behind Sunday by

Palmer and another trip to the Masters.

cool to close one out like that." Every rallied from a four- matching the low score of the shot deficit last year for his final round, and he was nevfirst career victory, helped in er seriously close to bogey

playoff, Stenson was wide left on a 20-foot putt at the 18th.

part by Adam Scott's collapse in the final round.

about his return to A u gusta National. "When Henrik

on the back nine on his way to another handshake with

Needing a birdie to force a "It feels great," Every said

ranked Lydia Ko, from New

ganizers canceled the Madeira Islands Open because of continuing bad weather. In a

Area courses make pub-

GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its weekly local golt results listings and events calendar. Clearly legible items should be fatted to the sports department, 641-3850831, emailed to sports©bendbuffetfn.com, ormailedtoP.O.Box6020;Bend,OR97708.

Club Results OESERTPEAKS

ThursdayMen's Club, March12 9 Nard Holes 1, KurtOcker,39. 2, Dean Hunt, 40.5. 3(tie), Joe Stanfield,41.5;AlDupont,41.5. KP — DeanDitmore Long Drive—Kurt Ocker Friday NightCouples, March13 Chapman 1, BobRingerIngandBetty Cook, 35.9.2, Dean DitmoreandJuanita Hawkins,36.4. 3,JimWyzard and Phyllis Rice, 36.6.

SundayGroupPlay, March15 Gross andNet Gross:1, Spud Miler, 70.2,JimWyzard, 76.Net: 1, RussSchog,65. 2,Al Dupont, 68. KP —Russ Scholl LongDrive—Rich Vigil EAGLECREST Men's Club, March18 3 Net BestBalls, Ridge Course 1, PredDuysings,JimJohnson, Larry Bell, Terry Black,187. 2, TimSwope,Bob Mowlds, Bill Flinn, blind draw,188.3, AndrewLesko, RaySchadt, David Drake,Billy Balding, 190.4, RonWolfe, KenMurrig, SamPuri, NedOngaro, 194.5 (tie), RandyMyers, Jay BakewellMike , Thurlow,MacHeitzhausen, 197; Rick Lindgren,SteveAustin, GaryJackson, BobReed,197.

the region.Seriesis opento anyone50andolderwith a GHIN t. Cost is$165for the seasonplus $5 per event.Seasonbegins March30.For moreinformation: TedCarlinat541-604-4054or vptcarlin@yahoo.comr Aprff11:Executive"Every"Woman'sGolf Association,CentralOregonchapter Annual "KickOff"event at JuniperGolf CourseRedmond, 9:30 a.m.to noon. Breakfastbuffet,sponsorexpo, short gameor woodsand-ironsclinics,1 p.m.teetimeat EWGAspecial rate. Open toagwomen, all levels, whojust wantto play golf. RegisterbyApril 8. Forinfo, email MicheleBahr at michefe.bahr©gmaif.comor call 425-444-4026, www.ew gaco.com. TOURNAMENTS ANDEVENTS

March 28:CrossCountry tournament atMeadow LakesGolf Coursein Prinevile. Individualstroke-play tournament forcesgolfers to takea newpath around Meadow Lakesover 12holes.Teetimesbeginat8am. Flightedfield includesbothgrossandnet payoutsand KP compe titions. Costis$20plusreducedgreenfee of $15. Formoreinformation or to register,call the Meadow Lakespro shopat541-447-7113. March 28:ThirdAnnualSpringInvitational Bestball atBendGolf andCountry Club.Teambest ball is open tothepublic andbegins with10 a.m.shotgun. Two-personteamscaninclude oneprofessional and teamma tescannot havemorethana10-strokespread betwee nhandicapindexes.Bothmenandwomenare welcome. Costis $120perteam,andincludesgolfcart for the first 34teamto RSVP,prizesand hostedbeer. Deadlinetoenter is March15 andfield is limitedto 46 teams.For moreinformation orto register: 541-3822878,bendgolfshop@bendgoffcfub.com, or www. hendgolfcluh.com.

March 30:Central OregonSenior Golf Organiza-

tion event at EagleCrest RidgeCourse in Redmond. 10 a.m.shotgun.Theformat is individualgross and net, aswell asteambest bal. Cashprizesawarded at eachevent.Tournament series is opento anyone50 and olderwitha GHINtr. Costis $165for theseason plus a $5 per-event fee.Formore information, contact CROOKED RIVERRANCH TedCarlinat541-604-4054or vptcarlin@yahoo.com. Men's Club, March17 May 31:The16thAnnual Golf ForeKids at Mead4 Man 3Best Net Golf CourseinPrinevigeis sponsoredhythe Teamscores—1(tie) GaryOlds,JimAnderson, ow Lakes K iwani sClubof Prinevile. Four-personteamscramble Scott EberleFl, oydShulkey,183; RigoMontes, Bob Wright,GaryMolder, JerryMorrison,183. 3, Bil Daw , beginswithnoonshotgun. Costincludesrangebals, cart, lunch,teeprize, flightedgrossandnet payouts DarrellWells,VeneDunham,EdElliot,189.4(tfe), Bil and additionalprizesandgames. Thefield is limited Hume,Roger Ferguson,TedCarlin, CarlDewing,195; MontyModrell, DennisCooper, Nick Trudeau, Eddie to the first 25teams,andthe deadline to register is May 24.Formoreinformation or to register: www . Maroney,195. prinevillekiwanis.orgorcontact MeadowLakesat 541447-7113 orzach©meadowlakesgc.com. Hole-In-One Report April 3: CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at P ronghorn Club'sNicklausCoursein Bend.Shamble March18 tournament beginswithan11a.m.shotgun. Two-perTHE GREEN SAT REDMOND son teams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowed Alan Williams,Sisters team. Costis $30forprofessionals, $50foramaNo.1..........................130yards.......................7-iron per teurs.Costincludesgrossandnet skins competitions. Cart costsextra.Agplayers must signupbynoonon March19 the Wed nesdaybeforetheevent. Toregister orfor more LOSTTRACKS information, call PatHuger, headpro atCrookedRivMarlha Wysor,Bend er Ranch,at 541-923-6343oremail himat crrpat@ No. 16 ...........109yards......... pitchingwedge crookedriverranch.com . April 18-19: TheIcebergOpenat CrookedRivMarch 20 er Ranch is a two-personscramble onSaturday and LOSTTRACKS two-personbestball on Sunday. Gross andnetdiviRandyWebster, Bend sions alongwith closest-to-the-pin andlong-drive No. 16........................109 yards....................... 9-iron contests. 9a.m.shotgun bothdays. Entry feeis $300 per teamandincludes greenfees,lunch, cart, range balls andraffleprizes.Practice roundFridayfor $40, Calendar including cart. Formoreinformation, call theCrooked The Bulletin welcomescontributions te lts RiverRanchpro shopat541-923-6343 weekly localgolf eventscalendar. Itemsshould April 20: CentralOregonSenior Golf Organization be mail edteP.O.Bex6020,Bend,OR 97708; eventat Kah-Nee-TaResort near WarmSprings. Shotfaxed to the sports department at 641-385- gun at9:30a.m.Theformat is individualgrossand 0831; eremailedtosports@bendbutfettn.com. net, aswell asteambest hall. Cashprizes awardedat eachevent.Tournament series is opento anyone50 PUBLICLEAGUES and olderwitha GHINt. Costis $165for theseason March 23: "WineandNine Night" at Central plus a$5per-eventfee.Formore information, contact OregonIndoorGolf, 5:30to 7:30p.m.Sponsoredby TedCarlinat541-604-4054orvptcarlin@yahoo.com. Executive"Every" Wom an's Golf AssociationEWGA April 24-26: TheCentral OregonShootout is and COIG. Eventis limitedto 8-10eachnight. $15. a two-personteamevent held at AspenLakes Golf Opento agwomen, ag levels, whowant to playgolf. Coursein Sisters,BlackButte Ranch andEagleCrest For info, contactDianeKirpachat Dianekirpach@ Resort in Redmond.The tournament will feature hotmail.com,www.ewgaco.com,www.coigbend.com. scramblebest , ball andChapman formats. Cost is March 28: Executive"Every" Womans' Golf As- $600 perteamandincludes greenfees, carts, range sociation,18-holeSaturdayeventat CrookedRiver balls, teegift, continentalbreakfastandlunch. DeadRanch,11 a.m.teetime. Opentoagwomen,all levels, line to registerisApril16 orfirst180 teams.Formore whowantto playgolf, in asmaller lowkeygroup. For informationorto requestanentry form, contact541info, contactDeloresMcCann at dmccann©bend- 549-4653 or rob©aspenfa es. kcom, 541-595-5884 broadhand.comorwww.ewgaco.com. or tbaker@hlackhutteranch.com, or 541-923-4653 March 30: "WineandNine Night" at Central or kevins©eagfe-crest.com;orvisit www.aspenfakes. OregonIndoorGolf, 5:30to 7:30p.m.Sponsored by com,blackbutteranch.com,orwww.eagle-crest.com. Executive"Every" Wom an's Golf AssociationEWGA April 25:19th AnnualCrookCounty HighSchool and COIG. Eventis limited to 8-10eachnight. $15. Golf Team Benefit tournament at MeadowLakes Golf Opento agwomen, ag levels, whowant to playgolf. Course inPrinevige. Four-personscramble teesoff For info, contactDianeKirpachat Dianekirpach@ with a noonshotgunstart. Cost is$280 perteam hotmail.com,www.ewgaco.com,www.cofgbend.com. and includesgolf, cart,dinner,awards, contests and March 31:Com plimentary brunchatJuniper Golf rossandnetteamprizes.Proceedsgotowardfunding Club fortheLadiesof theGreenswomens' golf club rookCoun ty's boysand girlsgolf teams. Formoreinat 10 a.m.TheLadies of theGreensplay nine-hole formationorto register,call ZachLampert at541-480tournaments at TheGreensat Redmond golf course 0110 ortheMeadowLakesproshopat 541-447-7113. weekl yonTuesdaysthroughOctober.New members April 25: Season opener at Juniper Golf Course are welcome.Formoreinformation, call Nancyat541- in Redmond.Four-personscramble divided into 923-8213. two-coupleteams.Shotgun start at 10a.m.Cost is Central Oregon Senior Golf Organization: $150 perteam.Toregister, call theJuniper proshop Meets onaMondayeachmonthatgolfcoursesacross at 541-548-3121or downloadentry format www .

69-66-73-65—273 MarkCalcavecchia,$17,971 Sei Young Kim, $38,330 73-71-68 —212 70-66-71-66—273 Joe Durant, Na Yeon Choi, $38,330 $17,971 73-69-70—212 LydiaKo,$38,330 66-69-69-69—273 MarkMcNulty,$17,971 70-71-71—212 SandraGaf,$26,875 68-70-67-69—274 KennyPerry,$17,971 74-68-70—212 LizetteSalas,$26,875 73-65-67-69—274 RodSpittle,$17,971 72-71-69—212 JanePark,$22,241 67-72-67-69—275 DuffyWaldorf,$17,971 70-72-70—212 68-69-68-70—275 GregBruckner,$17,971 AmyYang,$22,241 69-72-71—212 Ha NaJang,$22,241 68-68-68-71—275 MichaelAllen,$12,623 71-67-75—213 Kim Kaufm an,$22,241 66-67-70-72 —275 70-70-73—213 BradBryant,$12,623 Ai Miyazato, $17,137 70-69-71-66—276 JohnCook,$12,623 73-71-69—213 QBaek,$17,137 69-69-71-67—276 Scott Dunlap,$12,623 69-71-73—213 JessicaKorda,$17,137 72-66-71-67—276 DavidFrost,$12,623 67-71-75—213 Professio nal AngelaStanford,$17,137 67-70-71-68—276 JohnHuston,$12,623 71-72-70—213 MoriyaJutanugarn,$17,137 67-69-70-70—276 SteveJones,$12,623 PGA 71-71-71—213 Ariya Jutanuga rn, $17, 1 37 69-66-70-71—276 Bay Hill 67-73-73—213 StevePate,$12,623 Xiyu Lin, $17,137 71-66-68-71—276 Sunday atBay Hill ClubandLodge, Orlando,Fla. 71-71-72—214 Willie Wood, $10,200 HaruNomura, $13,641 69-70-70-68—277 Stephen Yardage:7,419; Par: 72 Ames, $9,010 69-78-68—215 YueerCindyFeng, $13,641 73-66-69-69—277 MikeGoo Final des, $9, 0 10 69-74-72—215 — Bulletin staff reports 69-70-69-69—277 PaulGoydos,$9,010 Matt Every (500), $1,134,000 68-66-69-66—269 JayeMarieGreen,$13,641 70-74-71—215 Cheyenne W o ods, $13, 6 41 70-70-67-70—277 HenrikStenson(300), $680,400 68-66-66-70—270 70-73-72—215 Esteban T ol e do, $9 , 0 10 70-70-63-74—277 Matt Jones (190), $428,400 71-65-67-68—271 AlisonLee,$13,641 70-75-70—215 72-70-70-66—278 BobTway,$9,010 Morgan Hoff mann(135),$302,40066-65-71-71—273 JennyShin,$11,195 72-72-72—216 Alena Sha rp, $11, 1 95 68-72-69-69—278 Jim Carter,$7,480 BenMartin(110), $252,000 68-67-68-71—274 J ose Coc er es, $7 , 4 8 0 72-71-73—216 Prz.re. &777JA.6 t"O. 69-68-71-70—278 Kiradech Aphiharnrat, $211,050 70-71-65-6M275 PaulaCreamer, $11,195 Jesper Pa rn evi k , $7, 4 80 71-74-71—216 Brittany Li n ci c ome, $11, 1 95 70-67-71-70—278 67-71-65-72—275 JasonKokrak(92),$211,050 72-72-72—216 70-69-68-71—278 LorenRoberts,$7,480 Kevin Na (92), $211,050 67-70-69-69—275 CarlotaCiganda,$11,195 71-73-73—217 $6,290 Piler, $9,490 68-72-73-66—279 Jeff Coston, ZachJohnson(78), $176,400 71-71-68-66—276 Gerina 74-72-71—217 Webb,$9,490 67-70-73-69—279 LeeJanzen,$6,290 LouisOosthuizen(78), $176,40069-68-70-69—276 Karrie Hal Sutton, $6,290 73-70-74—217 Bend Yang,$9,490 72-68-69-70—279 RoryMcgroy(68),$151,200 70-66-71-70—277 Julie Tommy Ar m our III, $5,100 71-73-74—218 Choi,$7,590 71-69-70-70—280 Hudson Swafford(68),$151,200 75-66-68-68—277 Chella Redmond TomByrum,$5,100 73-73-72—218 Mika Mi y aza to, $7, 5 90 69-71-70-70—280 DanielBerger(57),$118,125 73-68-68-6M278 HeeYoungPark, $7,590 76-69-73—218 73-67-69-71—280 BradFaxon,$5,100 John Day ErnieEls(57),$118,125 71-67-72-68—278 72-77-69—218 Jay Haas, $5,100 Johnson,$7,590 69-69-70-72 —280 DavidLingmerth(57),$118,125 69-67-73-69—278 Jennifer Mark Brooks, $4,080 73-72-74—219 ClaireSchreefel, $7,590 67-70-71-72 —280 Burns BrandtSnedeker(57), $118,125 68-74-66-70—278 Dewi CraigStadler,$4,080 71-72-76—219 69-70-68-73 —280 JasonDay(53), $91,350 69-71-71-68—279 KatieBurnett,$7,590 Lakeview 76-72-71—219 In Gee C hun, $7, 5 90 67-69-71-73 — 28 0 lan Woosn am , $4,080 Danny Lee(53), $91,350 72-64-71-72—279 75-70-75—220 Icher,$7,590 66-70-70-74—280 RogerChapman, $3,570 Francesco Molinari(53),$91,35070-71-69-69—279 Karine La Pine 70-72-73-66—281 MorrisHatalsky,$3,570 75-72-73—220 D.A.Points(53),$91,350 70-70-67-72—279 Eun-HeeJi,$5,461 Tiffany Joh, $5, 4 61 66-75-72-68—281 Tom Wa t s on, $3, 5 70 76-72-72—220 ZacBlair(47),$59,141 73-67-71-69—280 541.382.6447 Kerr,$5,461 72-68-72-69—281 FredCouples,$2,890 72-75-74—221 CharlesHowell III (47),$59,141 71-68-70-71—280 Cristie bendurology.com Tam ulis, $5,461 70-72-70-69—281 Jeff 76-75-70—221 Gallagher,$2,890 HidekiMatsuyam a(47), $59,14170-72-70-68—280 Kris 73-69-70-69—281 Bill Glasson$2890 76-75-70—221 71-70-69-70—280 AyakoUehara, $5,461 CarlosOrtiz(47), $59,141 Karin Sl o din, $5,461 71-69-71-70—281 75-73-73—221 SteveLowery,$2,890 67-70-71-72—280 lan Poulter(47), $59,141 eonHwaLee, $5,461 69-71-70-71—281 JoeySindelar,$2,890 69-80-72—221 Shawn Stefani(47), $59,141 70-71-69-70—280 S Julieta Gran a da, $5 , 4 61 70-70-69-72 — 28 1 DanForsman,$2,125 75-75-72—222 CamiloVilegas(47),$59,141 69-72-67-72—280 SooBinKim,$5,461 68-69-71-73 —281 BobGilder,$2,125 78-70-74—222 GaryWoodland(47), $59,141 71-69-71-69—280 MinaHarigae,$4,300 69-73-70-70—282 Larry Mize, 72-78-72—222 $2,125 HarrisEnglish(40), $40,058 68-66-72-75—281 Thidapa Su w ann apura,$4,300 68-72-72-70—282 DonPooley,$2,125 75-74-73—222 RickfeFowler (40),$40,058 71-71-70-69—281 JodiEwa r t Sh a d o ff , $ 4 , 3 0 0 71-71-68-72—282 Olin Browne, $1, 6 49 72-77-74—223 RusselKnox l (40), $40,058 74-68-67-72—281 NatalieGulbis,$4,300 72-67-71-72—282 TomPurtzer,$1,649 74-76-73—223 SeanO'Hair (40), $40,058 69-68-68-76—281 DemiRunas,$4,300 69-73-67-73—282 Jim Rutledge, $1,445 78-76-70—224 SamSaunders(40), $40,058 70-71-67-73—281 JenniferSong,$3,648 71-71-73-68—283 MarkWiebe,$1,445 77-76-71—224 DannyWigett, $40,058 71-70-70-70—281 SiminFeng,$3,648 68-70-76-69—283 Jim Thorpe, 76-76-73—225 $1,292 KenDuke(33), $29,098 67-74-73-68—282 GiuliaMolmaro,$3,648 70-72-72-69—283 Bobby W adk i n s, $1, 1 90 75-75-76—226 George McNeil (33),$29,098 69-69-73-71—282 BrookePancake, $3,648 71-69-73-70—283 Frank Esposito, $1,088 71-79-77—227 NickTaylor(33),$29,098 76-65-70-71—282 Sydnee Mi c ha el s , $3, 6 48 69-69-72-73—283 ScottVerplank,$1,088 76-78-73—227 NicholasThompson(33), $29,09870-71-69-72 —282 MorganPressel,$3,188 71-71-73-69—284 77-80-71—228 JohnPeterson(33),$29,098 67-71-70-74—282 MariaHernandez,$3,188 69-72-73-70—284 GrantWaite, $986 76-75-78—229 Carl Pettersson (33),$29,098 71-71-68-72—282 Ji YoungOh,$3,188 69-71-73-71—284 JKKim,$918 68-73-69-72—282 Tom Ki t e $816 76-83-73—232 AdamScott (33), $29,098 Sarah Jane S m ith, $3, 1 88 70-67-76-71—284 83-74-75—232 Brendan Steele(33), $29,098 71-67-68-76—282 Michege Wie, $3,188 73-69-71-71—284 Scott Simpson,$816 SandyLyle,$731 79-83-79—241 Erik Comp ton(26), $20,202 70-69-72-72—283 Min Lee,$3,188 71-66-74-73 —284 DavidHearn(26), $20,202 69-73-69-72—283 MarinaAlex,$3,188 71-71-67-75—284 Billy Horschel(26), $20,202 68-71-72-72—283 AshleighSimon,$2,891 70-72-70-73—285 Ryo Ishikawa (26), $20,202 70-69-69-75—283 Mariaiourihe,$2,891 69-67-75-74—285 Martin Laird(26) $20202 68-72-71-72—283 SophiaPopov,$2,891 66-76-68-75—285 WebbSimpson(26), $20,202 69-69-72-73—283 CarolineMasson,$2,800 72-69-72-73—286 SUN FoREsT Blayne Barber(20),$15,393 72-65-74-73—284 RyannO'Toole,$2,800 70-69-74-73—286 Keegan Bradley(20), $15,393 68-70-69-77—284 MarissaLSteen,$2,748 CoNSTRUCTION 70-71-73-73—287 PadraigHarrington(20),$15,39368-71-71-74—284 Mirim Lee,$2,713 74-66-72-76—288 RusselHenl l ey(20), $15,393 69-71-71-73—284 Se RiPak,$2,644 70-70-74-75—289 KevinKisner(20),$15,393 69-71-69-75—284 AmyAnderson,$2,644 70-71-72-76—289 JustinThoma s(20), $15,393 69-71-73-71—284 Mo Martin,$2,644 71-67-75-76—289 73-69-72-71—285 Kelly W JohnHuh(16), $14,427 Shon, $2,577 72-70-71-77—290 DESIGN 1 BUILD 1 REMODEL Serving Central Oregon DanielSummerhays(16), $14,42773-69-71-72—285 AmeliaLewis,$2,544 68-74-78-71—291 PArNT HunterMahan(14), $14,175 68-74-69-75—286 HeeKyungSeo,$2,511 for over 22 years! 74-68-78-72—292 71-70-76-69—286 Vilay Singh (14),$14,175 803 SW Industrial Way, Bend, OR JasonBohn(11),$13,860 71-70-73-73—287 ChampiensTour WilliamMcGirt (1t), $13,860 70-72-75-70—287 TucsonConqufstadores Classic SteveWheatcroft (11), $13,860 70-69-75-73—287 Sunday atOmniTucsonNational, Catalina StevenBowditch (8),$13,482 72-70-71-75—288 Course, Tucson,Ariz. 141 SE 3rd • Bend Branden Grace,$13,482 70-72-72-74—288 Yardage. 7,143,Par 72 Alex Prugh (8), $13,482 71-71-73-73—288 Final Spencer Levin(6), $13,167 70-70-75-74—289 MarcoDawson(255), $255,000 67-67-69—203 DavisLoveIII (6), $13,167 69-71-77-72—289 Bart Bryant(150),$149,600 68-67-70—205 ChessonHadley (4), $12,915 72-68-73-77—290 MarkO'Meara(122), $122,400 71-69-66—206 KevinStreelman(4), $12,915 75-67-74-74—290 TomPerniceJr.(gt),$90,950 69-70-68—207 Freddie JacobsonI2), $12,762 71-71-74-75—291 WesShort,Jr.(gt),$90,950 6 9-66-72—207 RussCochran(61),$61,200 69-71-68—208 LPGA ScottHoch(61),$61,200 70 - 71-67—208 JTBCFoundersCup Jeff Sluman(61),$61,200 7 0 -71-67—208 Sunday at JW Marriott Phoenix DesertRidge BernhardLanger(41),$40,800 69-71-69—209 Resort tkSpa,Wildfire Golf ClubCourse, Jeff Maggert(41),$40800 70-70-69—209 Phoenix Colin Montgom erie (41), $40,800 67-72-70—209 Yardage:6,601;Par.72 GeneSauers(41), $40,800 7 0-70-69 —209 Final JerrySmith(41), $40,800 6 5 -71-73 209— HyoJooKim,$225,000 6 5 -69-66-67—267 Billy Andrade, 69-70-71 —210 $29,750 StacyLewis,$135,414 64 - 71-67-68—270Jay Don 71-69-70 —210 Blake, $29,750 lheeLee,$78,463 69-67-70-66—272 KevinSutherland,$29,750 7 1 -70-69 210— PornanongPhatlum, $78,463 68-71-66-67—272 Kirk Tripfett,$29,750 68-73-69 —210 Mi HyangLee,$78,463 7 0 -66-68-68 —272 TomLehman,$23,857 72-72-67—211 AnnaNordqvist, $38,330 72-67-70-64—273 RoccoMediate, $23,857 74-68-69 —211 68-72-71—211 Austin Ernst,$38,330 68- 67-73-65 273 — CoreyPavin,$23,857 with 1-year minimum

pfayjuniper.com. April 30: Central OregonGolf Tour individual strokeplaytournament at Brasada Ranch in Powell Butte.TheCentral OregonGolf Touris a competitive golf seriesheldat golf coursesthroughout Central Oregon.Grossandnet competitions opento all amateur golfers ofagabilities. Prizepoolawarded weekly, and membership notrequired.Formoreinformation orto register:541-633-7652,541-350-7605,orwww.centraloregongolftourcom.

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

C2 MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015•THE BULLETIN

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

476

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Employment Opportunities

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

PINNACLE 1990 30', clean. Rear walk-around bed. No smokers, no mildew, no leaks. $8500. 541-306-7268

Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water 8 sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR.

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

Tele-funding for •Meals On Wheels •Defeat Diabetes Foundation •Veterans (OPVA) Seniors and a/I others welcome. Mon-Thur. 4:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. $9.25/hour.

Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise 7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00 *fllfust state prices in ad

Garage Sale Special 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

Call 541-382-8672

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I chasing products orI • services from out of • Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad l the area. Sending foronly$15.00per week. c ash, checks, o r l credit i n f ormation OVER'500 in total merchandise • may be subjected to 4 days.................................................. $18.50 I FRAUD. 7 days.................................................. $24.00 For more information about an adver14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50 l tiser, you may call the Oregon State !call for commercial line ad rates) l Attorney General's a Office C o n sumer a

l l l l l l

I

l Protection hotline at l

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

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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 476

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Equipment Operators needed for u nderground utility work b ased out o f o u r our caring B end office. C D L memory ca re preferred. Competic ommunity. A l l tive pay and local shifts a v ailable. work. Benefits and Must be reliable. 401k avai l able. Pre-employment drug Also needed part screen, physical & t ime c hef. F o r background c h eck more in f o rma- required. C-2 Utility tion, or any Contractors, LLC is questions, an Equal Opportunity Employer. Mail r eplease call sumes to: C-2 Utility 541-385-4717 Contractors, PO Box 7585, B e nd, OR 97708 o r f a x to Construction Laborers & Dump Truck 541-389-8445. drivers needed f or underground u t i lity work based out of our What are you B end o ffice. C D L preferred. C ompetilooking for? tive pay & local work. You'll find it in Benefits 8 401k available. Pre-employment The Bulletin Classifieds drug screen, physical 8 background check required. C-2 Ut ility 541-385-5809 Contractors, LLCis an Equal Op p ortunity E mployer. Mail r e sumes to: C-2 Utility Contractors, PO Box 7585, B e nd , OR 97708 o r f a x to Bend Park 5r 541-389-8445. Recreation

Caregivers w anted t o

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Health Department Manager Grant County Public Health in John Day, Oregon is seeking a full-time Health Department Manager. Requires O r egon registered nurse licensure, degree in nursing from an accredited university, and p r ogressively responsible experience in a p u blic health agency. Salary ra n g e is $60-$90,000/yr. DOE. Exc e l lent benefits. For more details, go to http://www.work-

Nfedicaf Billing Supervisor We are a busy Medical Clinic with multiple providers looking to welcome a Billing Supervisor to our team. S t rong billing background with exceptional org anizational an d customer s e rvice s kills required. I n addition to oversight of our billing team you will be responsible for monthly reporting / analyzing

I 1-877-877-9392.

LThe Bulletin g

24' Mercedes Benz Prism, 2015 Model G, Mercedes Diesel engine, Snowmobiles 18+ mpg, auto trans, fully loaded with RV double-expando, CONSIGNMENTS and only 5200 miles. WANTED Perfect condition We Do The Work ... only $92K. You Keep The Cash! Call 541-526-1201 On-site credit or see at: 4-place enclosed Interapproval team, 3404 Dogwood Ave., state snowmobile trailer web site presence. in Redmond. w/ RockyMountain pkg, We Take Trade-Ins! $8500. 541-379-3530 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the BIG COUNTRY RV YAMAHA 700 2000 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 classifieds! Ask about our Bend: 541-330-2495 Super Seller rates! Redmond: Polaris Fusion 900, 541-385-5809 541-548-5254 only 788 mi., new mirrors, covers, custom skis, n e w rid e -on r ide-off t r ailer w i t h Want to impress the spare, + much more. relatives? Remodel $6,995. Call for d eyour home with the tails. 541-420-6215 help of a professional Allegro 32' 2007, like 860 new, only 12,600 miles. from The Bulletin's ltotorcycles & Accessories Chev "Call A Service 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual ex- Professional" Directory haust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driyer door Harley Dyna Wide Glide w/power window, cruise, 2003 custom paint, exhaust brake, central extras, 13,000 orig vac, satellite sys. Asking RV PACKAGE-2006 miles, like new, health $67,500. 503-781-8812 Monaco Monarch, 31 ', forces sale. Sacrifice Ford V10, 28,900 miles, $10,000 obo. auto-level, 2 slides, 541-633-7856. queen bed & hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, conv microwave, 2 TV's, tow HDFatBo 1996 package,$66,000. OPTION - 2003 Jeep Fleetwood D i scovery Wranglertow car, 84K 40' 2003, diesel, w/all miles, hard & soft top, 5 options - 3 slide outs, speed manual,$1 1,000 541-815-6319 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 34,000 m iles. Completely Wintered in h e ated Tioga 24' Class C Rebuilt/Customized shop. $78,995 obo. Bought new in 2000, 2012/2013 Award 541-447-8664 Winner currently under 21K miles, exc. shape, Showroom Cond. new tires, profesMany Extras sionally winterized Low Miles. every year, cut-off $15,000 S~~ switch to b a ttery, 541-548-4807 plus new RV batt eries. Oven, h o t Four Winds 32' water heater & air cond., seldom used; 2010 Triton V-10 with just add water and it's r eady to g o ! 13,000 miles. Large slide, Sleeps 7. Lots $22,000 obo. Serious inquiries, only. of storage. 5000lb HD Fat Boy 2002 Stored in T errebhitch. Like new. 14,000 orig. miles. onne. 541-548-5174 $51,900 Exc. cond. Vance & 541-325-6813 Hines exhaust, 5 spoke HD rims. Detachable luggage rack ~ I ~~ t : . , % with back rest. Many other extras. Must 850

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

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Loans & Mortgages

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WARNING The Bulletin recomsee to appreciate. mends you use cau$10,500. Iocated in tion when you proCrooked River Ranch. vide personal Call 530-957-1865 process; p o licies information to compaand pr o cedures; nies offering loans or 865 e valuate and i m credit, especially ATVs prove met h ods. those asking for adsourceoregon.org, Positive communivance loan fees or 2010 Polaris Sportsman J ob L i s ting ID : cation and leadercompanies from out of 850XP EPS, fully loaded, 1335732. If i n t er- s hip skills are a state. If you have $6950. 541-318-0210 e sted, pleas e must. We offer a full concerns or ques870 download an applibenefit package. If tions, we suggest you cation at www.comyou are interested in consult your attorney Boats & Accessories munitycounselingbeing a part of our or call CONSUMER solutions.org, positive team oriHOTLINE, forward it with cover ented w o rkplace, 1-877-877-9392. letter and resume to please send your reBANK TURNED YOU ladawn.fronapel©go sume to DOWN? Private party bhi.net. EOE. medpracbend will loan on real esOgmail.com tate equity. Credit, no 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Call a Pro problem, good equity Wakeboard Boat fyfedicaf Certified is all you need. Call I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Whether you need a Coder Oregon Land Mort- tons of extras, low hrs. fencefixed,hedges We are a busy Medigage 541-388-4200. Full wakeboard tower, cal Clinic with mullight bars, Polk audio trimmed or a house Is Accepting LOCAL MONEY:Webuy speakers throughout, tiple providers lookGet your Applications For: built, you'll find secured trust deeds & completely wired for ing to welcome a note,some hard money amps/subwoofers, unbusiness - Swim Instructors professional help in Certified Coder to loans. Call Pat Kellev derwater lights, fish - Lifeguards our team. S t rong The Bulletin's "Call a 541-382-3099 ext.13. finder, 2 batteries cus- Youth Rec. Leaders billing background, a ROW I N G - Cougar Camp Leaders Service Professional" tom black paint job. exceptional organiDirectory $12,500 541-81 5-2523 zational and comFor completej ob with an ad in munication skills ac541-385-5809 announcements c ompanied wit h The Bulletin's or toapply go to detail and accuracy bendparksandrec.org "Call A Service Maintenance orientation. You will Equal Opportunity Professional" Whispering be responsible for Employer coding Ho s pital, Winds Directory ASC an d c l i nical Retirement charges; w o rking is seeking a full-time 2007 Bennlngton with providers remaintenance tech. 687 Pontoon Boat g arding cod i n g Wages DOE. Must Commercial for 2275 GL, 150hp challenges and imThe Bulletin is seeking a resourceful and have some basic Honda VTEC, less Rent/Lease provements; monthly self-motivated full-time employee to assist a electrical, plumbing, than 110 hours, analyzing and r elarge staff and write daily clerical reports. This carpentry and original owner, lots porting of c o ding 4700 sq. ft. shop and person should like working in a fast-paced enpainting experience. of extras; Tennes2500 sq. ft. office on trends. We offer a vironment and be able to meet tight deadlines Apply in person at see tandem axle full benefit package. 1.53 acres for lease on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial expe2920 NE Conners trailer. Excellent in NW Bend, quiet If you are interested rience preferred. Ave., Bend., condition, $23,500 in being a part of our area, excellent conPre-employment 503%46-1 804 struction, perfect for positive team o riOrganization, flexibility, and a high level of drug test required. ented w o r kplace, electronic assembly computer proficiency are essential. A solid plant. Lots of parkplease send your reknowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typBayllner 185 2006 sume to ing. Was auto shop. ing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. open bow. 2nd owner Marketing Sales Call 702-526-0353. medpracbend — low engine hrs. Manager ©gmail.com Shop can be leased Ability to work for long periods doing detail-ori— fuel injected V6 Experience in the separate from office — Radio & Tower. ented work is necessary. This person must health care field space. understand the importance of accuracy and Rental Assistance Great family boat preferred, but not Program Coordinator thoroughness in all duties. Priced to sell. Check out the required. Must be $27,842-$39,158 $11,590. classifieds online outgoing and perFull Benefits 541-548-0345. Excellent customer service and interpersonal wvfNv.bendbutfetin.com Non- Mgt., Regular, skills are required. Must enjoy working with the s onable. Mus t Updated daily Full-Time public. College degree or previous office exhave reli a ble KAYAKS perience preferred. The Bulletin is a drug-free Two Wilderness transportation. This position is workplace and equal opportunity employer. Pongo kayaks, For more i nforlocated in Chiloquin Pre-employment drug screening is required Banl &RnRs 12' and 10', like new m ation, o r a n y prior to hiring. + 2 Werner paddles VKP MQ questions, please For more information Retail $1808, call 541-385-4717 contact: To apply, please send a resume and any writnow $950. The Klamath Tribes ing samples to: nolson Obendbulletin.com. 541-306-4181 PO Box 436 No phone inquiries please. TURN THE PAGE Chiloquin, OR 97624 875 obs@klamathtribes.com For More Ads Watercraft The Bulletin 738 541-783-2219 x 113 Serving Central Oregonsince f903 Multiplexes for Sale 0

S 1

Newsroom Assistant

The Bulletin

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 $9.25 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 pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e 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. servinacentral oregon since 19IB

Heartland P rowler 2012, 29 PRKS, 33',

like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & l a r ge closet. Large enough to live in, but easy to tow! 15' power awning, power hitch & stabilizers, full size queen bed , l a r ge shower, porcelain sink 8 toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571 Pefjasus 27' 2005 FQS, 14 slide, lots of extras and plenty of storage inside & out. Pantry next to frig. Always stored in heated garage when not in use. $15,750. 541-526-1361

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

Tent Trailer Rockwood 2 012 12' b ox , 2 7 ' open, 1.9 c.u. 3-way f ridge, furnace. 4 8 " front ATV rack; 15" Mud Rover tires HD w/spare. Dry weight 2275. Extras. $10,500 541-536-3045 882

Fifth Wheels

11

Freightllner 1994 Custom Motorhome

Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077

Ready to makememories! Keystone Everest 5th Top-selling Winnebago Wheel, 2004 31 J, original owners, non- Model 323P - 3 slides, smokers, garaged, only rear island-kitchen, 18,800 miles, auto-levelfireplace, 2 TV's, ing jacks, (2) slides, upCD/DVR/VCR/Tuner graded queen bed, bunk w/surround sound, A/C, beds, micro, (3) Tvs, custom bed, ceiling fan, sleeps 10! Lots of stor- W/D ready, many extras. age, maintained, very New awning & tires. clean!Only $67,995! ExExcellent condition. tended warranty and/or fi$19,750.More pics nancing avail to qualified available. 541-923-6408 buyers!541-388-7179

Call54I 3853809 teprOm OteyeurteiriCe• AdVertiSefOr28daySStOrtingdttl4) ftfarfrrratfarttg trrrrtarrtrer s rarrrrtrfaf

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The Bulletin

541-604-5993

Pressman

The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with experience in the Printing industry. Two years of prior web press experience is beneficial, but training can be provided. At The Bulletin you can put your skills to work and make our products and services jump off the page! In DUPLEX by owner SE addition to printing our 7-day a week newspa- Bend. 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath per, we also print a variety of other products ea., 14yrs old. Great for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 cond. $219,900 .karent/a tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman michellen Ihotmail.com. 541-815- 7707 must become knowledgeable and familiar working with. 748 We put a premium on dependability, timeliness, having a positive attitude and being a Northeast Bend Homes team player. We offer a competitive compensation plan and career growth opportunities. Big .20 acre lot, 3/2.5, 1692 sq.ft., RV parkThis position primarily works nights, with a 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. i ng, m t n v ie w s , If you are interested in fostering your talent as $259,900. P r incipal Broker I Joh n L a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourScott, 541-480-3393. age you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, at 775 anelson@wescom a ers.com with your resume, references and salary hisManufactured/ tory/requirements. No phone calls please. Mobile Homes Drug testing is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is a drug free work place and List Your Home EOE. JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers The Bulletin Get Top Dollar Serving Cenrral Oregonsince 1903 Financing Available. 541-548-5511

16' Cata Raft

Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for construction work to be licensed with the Zd pedQua/ry Construction ContracZa~< Pdr er,. tors Board (CCB). An active license Full Service means the contractor Landscape is bonded & insured. Management Verify the contractor's CCB l i c ense at Spring Clean Up www.hirealicensed•Leaves contractor.com •Cones or call 503-378-4621. •Needles The Bulletin recom•Debris Hauling mends checking with the CCB prior to conWeed Free Bark tracting with anyone. Some other t rades &Flower Beds also req u ire additional licenses and Lawn Renovation certifications. Aeration - Dethatching Overseed Compost Computer/Cabling Install Top Dressing Computer training, set Landscape up & repair from the comfort of your own Maintenance home.Dirk (y541) 647- Full or Partial Service 1341 or 619-997-8291 •Mowing ~Edging •Pruning ~Weeding Water Management Debris Removal

JUNK BE GONE I Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107

Courier Service We will distribute locally in C.O. or do line hauls between C.O. and PDX area. Looking for loads for our 26' Freightliner Box truck (26,000 GVW) with 4K l ift ate. Lic. 8 Bonded. ontact Bill at wsdahl I bendbroadband.com.

2 Ouffitter oars, 2 Cataract oars, 3 NRS 8" Ouffitter blades and ateretde Ces . vee Ce l ots of gear, all i n "very good to exc." condition plus custom camp/river tables and bags, more!. $2,700 541 318 1322. Additional information Where can you find a and photos on helping hand? request, too! From contractors to 880 yard care, it's all here Motorhomes in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Handyman 2007 Winnebago

Outlook Class "C" 31', clean, nonsmoking exc. cond. More info. $49,900 541-447-9268

I DO THAT!

Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768

Fertilizer included with monthly program Weekly, monthly or one time service.

Manag!ng Central Oregon Landscapes S!nce 2006 Senior Discounts

541-390-1466 Same Day Response

NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o p e r form Landscape Construction which includes: p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be l icensed w it h th e Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers c ompensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcbistate.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing lan d scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i cense.

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway. This

advertising tip brought toyou by

The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since 1909

Aerate/Thatchlng Weekly Service and Spring Clean-ups! Free estimates!

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

Sprinkler Activation/Repair Back Flow Testing Malntenance

~Thatch & Aerate • Spring Clean up .Weekly Mowing & Edging •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly Maintenance •Bark, Rock, Etc.

~Landsca in •Landscape Construction ~Water Feature Installation/Maint. •Pavers •Renovations •Irrigations Installation

Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759

COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca/i 541-480-9714 CPR LANDSCAPING Weekly maintenance, cleanups. Lawn repairs. Quality at an a ffordable pric e . 978-413-2487

Free Aeration! Aerate /Thatching. Free Estimates on Weekly Service! (541 ) 383-1997

abovealllawnservice.com

Painting/Wall Covering

KC WHITE PAINTING LLC Interior and Exterior Family-owned Residential & Commercial 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts 5-vear warranties SPRING SPECIAL! Call 541-337-6149 CCB ¹20491 8


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

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

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, MAR 23, 2015

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB M-~y,M;23,2015

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Will SIIprtz

Bergen's learning tools By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Marty Bergen is known as one of the most original bidding theorists of his generation. Bergen retired from an outstanding career as a competitor to focus on writing and teaching. Among the excellent materials he has produced is a series of 36 booklets,

most on good bidding judgment, some on play. One Bergen dictum is "Thou shalt not get overruffed." After coming in with four spades, today's South wins the diamond lead with the ace and sees only two club losers.

NORTH 4K7 99 0AQ543 4 10 8 7 4 3

TRUMP QUEEN "As long as you can ruff your low hearts," Bergen advises, "you can afford to lose to the trump queen. W hat you c a n' t d o i s h a v e a n opponent overruff you with the queen and lead a trump." South must take the ace of hearts at Trick Two, ruff a heart with the king of trumps, ruff a diamond with the ace and ruff his last heart. His game is safe. For information on Bergen's many publications and price discounts, see martybergen.com or call (800) 3867432. Mention this column with an order, receive a gift.

DAILY QUESTION

WEST 4bQ2 9 KQ J876 53

30Veal 31 French market town 32 Poet William Butler 34 -rayDisc 35 National Medal of (honor bestowed by the president) 36 Many a Lawrence Welk dance tune 37Cleared,as a garden 38 N.FL.'s Manti 39 Jack who played Napaloni in "The Great Dictator" 40 Way overcharge 41 Compel observance of, as laws 43 Like "All the President'8 Men," originally, per the M.PA.A.

44 Idle drawing in a margin 45 Lip-puckering, as kraut 47 Sushi eggs 48 Japanese cartoon art 49 Many an Israeli 52 Six-time Tony winner McDonald 54 Flirt with disaster S6Primp 57 kwo n do 58 1%-ers 59 Eagles and such 60 Subtract's opposite 61 Apportioned, with "out"

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Note: The last names of eight U.S. presidents are hidden in this puzzle's completed grid, reading across, back, up, down and diagonally, word-search style. Can you find them all? ACROSS 1Fuddof certoondom 6Site of the 1968 Democratic convention, informally 9 Foster of "Taxi Driver" 14"That's cool!" 1SCampaigned 16Nobles above viscounts 17Imprint on a dirt I'oad 19Nearly vertical, as a cliff 20 Instrument for Bill Clinton, informally 21 Lacking taste 22 P art y (modem political

heart, you rebid two diamonds and he tries 2NT. What do you say? ANSWER: You can't accept a notrump contract with this hand. Bid three clubs, suggesting six diamonds, four clubs and minimum values. If you had a stronger 6-4 hand, your second bid would have been two clubs or t hree diamonds. Partner must heed your warning. He must not persist with 3NT. West dealer Both sides vulnerable

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE J A V I HA M A I I SO

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C O N E

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

No. 0216

A S C D N O DE N L A T E K E SW E S CH E D RO M M ED S O EA E L NT R E I G A R S D I C K OR M I LL E N

R I P T ID EA FO R M E P E A P EX U I R E U R G E O O ED T R O P E A N O R D S N E D E T A R A T E C E B O X I X ON T

M O O T

A S N E G R R I YA B L P I P T RO A D R S T D E C T C HO C A K A P E

S L E E P Y E Y E D

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2 "Star Wars" princess 3 Harpo, Zeppo or Groucho 4 Summer in Somme 5Goingbad, as fruit 6Solve,as a code 7 Political (partisan sorts) 8 Jet-black 9 Entertainers for kings 10Westerns, in old lingo 11Havefantasies of 12Suffix with percent 13 Mind-reading skill, for short 18Tirade

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PUZZLE BY DAVID J. KAHN

23 OpposIte of theirs 36Tempo 24 Polling figures, 37 Winter frost e.g. 39 N ew, s i t e 25 State without of the 1988 proof Republican convention 26 Eulogized 27 Quieted down 40 Shook hands with, say 28 Oscar-winning Rita 42 Scented 29 Not working 43 Where a horse's tail is 30 Concoct 32 Oxen connector 4SGolf'8 Sam 33 Lil l y & Co. 46 Pointed, as a gun

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Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:

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By Mary Lou Guizzo ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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03/23/15


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

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY MARCH 23 2015

882

932

935

Fifth Wheels

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles

Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,

hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

Suzuki SX4 2011

Buick Electra 225 1964Classic cruiser with rare 401CI V8. Runs good, needs interior work, 168K miles. $7,995. Donated to Equine Outreach. Call Gary 541-480-6130

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

Redmond: 541-548-5254 885

Canopies & Campers

Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., qreat condi-

Must see! 541-598-7940

& Service

LICCCLII ~

~

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

cleanest in town, seriously, ¹086315 only $9,998 ROBBERSON Co ~

maaaa

541-312-3986

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5 975

Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 155 K m i les, $11,500. 541-549-6407

VW CONV.

908

ROBBERSON

1965 Mustang

C

Aircraft, Parts

4x4 with great gas mileage ¹301851 $11,977

Toyota RA V4 2003

tion. I12,500.

Adventurer 2013 86 FB truck camper, $18,800. 2205 dry weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 deep cycle batteries, LED lights, full size q ueen bed. n i c e floorplan. Also available 201 0 Chevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 360-774-2747 No text messages!

1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswaqen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-382-0023

Automobiles

Buick LeSabre 2005 custom, exc. cond., tires 40%, 3800 Series II 3.8 V-6, 69,300 mi., 2nd owner. $7700 obo 541-430-7400 or 541-815-8487

A Lot of car for

$6,977!

Vin¹133699

Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

ROBBERSON

Financing available.

933

www.robberson.com

$125,000

Pickups

Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

2005 crew cab great

Fiat5002012, in good

1/3 interestin

Columbia400,

(located O Bend) 541-288-3333

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www. N4972M.com HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville.

Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500 Tom, 541.788.5546

looking! Vin¹972932

$19,977 ROBBERSON y LIIICCLC ~

~

541-447-5184.

~

541-312-3986

condition with good gas mileage, front wheel drive, automatic, 45,894 miles asking $10,000. 541-504-4408

G ALL ct Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac en g i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.

Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available, $13,000. Call 541-706-1780

LICCCLII ~

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15

TODAYA

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at

F ord Ranger X L T 1997, 4x4, 5 spd., 4 cyl, tow pkg, runs great, $5200. 541-385-4790.

2003 inspected & ready Vin 028759 $7,977 ROBBERSON ~ ~n

541-312-3986

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/15

HondaAccord 2005

Gorgeous and Priced to sei/! ¹018628 $11,977

ROBBERSON LINCOLN ~

935

Sport Utility Vehicles

maa a

I M ROQ

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15

H nda Ac or LX

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. 925

Utility Trailers

Covered utility trailer. 5'x8'. Street legal. Spare tire. $450. obo. 541-280-0514 F latbed t r ailer w i t h ramps, 7000 lb. capacity, 26' long, 8'6" wide, ideal for hauling hay, materials, cars, exc.cond. $2800. 541-420-3788 931

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories Goodyear GW3 Ultra

Grip snow tires (4), 235/50R18,

1300

miles. Pd $850, sell $400. 541-382-2463 932

Antique & Classic Autos

BMW X3 35i 2010

Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170

1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop BEND 541-382-8038

1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167$4,977 ROBBERSON LIcccLC~

CCCCI

CL

541-3'I 2-3986

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15

fI/fercuqr Mariner II

2010. Only 56k mi.. Vin ¹J20929 16,977 ROBBERSON LIIICCLC ~

~

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything,

grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond.

A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

Mountaineer 1999

VM/BUG 1971

4x4 and ready for fun! Vin ¹J28963

A Private Collection

C5

Bargain Corral price $4,998

Fully restored Vin ¹359402

$5,977

ROBBERSON y

ROBBERSON

LI II C 0 L C ~

LINCOLN ~

I IIR K R

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

I M ROQ

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 03/31/1 5

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to made by Joyce D. Caffey, single woman, convey at the time of as grantor, to Law- t he e x ecution b y yers, as trustee, in fa- grantor of the t rust vor of Mortgage Elec- deed, together with tronic R e g istration any interest which the Systems, Inc. solely grantor or grantor's as nominee for Real successors in interest Estate Mortgage Net- a cquired after t h e work, Inc., its succes- execution of the trust sors and assigns, as deed, to satisfy the b eneficiary, da t e d foregoing obligations 02/04/10, r e c orded thereby secured and cos t s and 03/09/10, in the mort- the gage records of Des- expenses of s a le, chutes County, Or- including a egon, as 2010-09910 reasonable charge by and subsequently as- the trustee. Notice is s igned t o Hom e - further given that for bridge Financial Ser- reinstatement or quotes vices, In c . by payoff Assignment recorded requested pursuant to as 2014-032071, cov- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d ering the following de- 86.789 must be timely scribed real property c ommunicated in a situated in said county written request that c omplies with t h at and state, to wit: A parcel of land situ- statute addressed to ated in a portion of the trustee's "Urgent Block 145 and an ad- Request Desk" either by personal delivery jacent portion of the vacated 16th Street, to the trus t ee's Townsite of Hillman, a physical offices (call subdivision located in for address) or by first the Southeast Quar- class, certified mail, ter of the Southeast return receipt Quarter (SE 1/4 SE requested, addressed to the trustee's post 1/4) of Section 16, Township 14 South, officebox address set Range 13 East of the forth in t his n otice. Willamette Meridian, Due to potential conDeschutes County, flicts with federal law, Oregon, being more persons having no l e ga l or particularly described record as f o llows: C o m- equitable interest in mencing at a 3/4" pipe the subject property monumenting the SE will o n l y re c eive corner of Block 145, information the Townsite of Hillman, concerning the initial Point as well lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid as the true Point of Beginning; t h e nce i nformation is a l s o a t the North 8 9 de g rees available 53'27 c West along the trustee's web s ite, South line of Town- www.northwesttrustee site of Hillman, 299.64 .com. Notice is further feet to the East right given that any person of way of the Burling- named in ORS 86.778 ton Northern-Santa Fe has the right, at any (Oregon Trunk) Rail- time prior to five days road; thence North 14 before the date last set for the sale, to degrees 36'51c East have this foreclosure along said right of proceeding dismissed way, 127.56 feet to the prolongation of the and the trust deed South line of the North reinstated by payment 275.00 feet of s a id to the beneficiary of Block; thence Southc the e ntire a m ount then due (other than 89 d egrees 4 3 '35 East along said pro- such portion of the l ongation and s a id principal as would not South line, 2 67.74 then be due had no feet to the East line of default occurred) and said Block; thence by curing any other Southc 0 0 d e g rees default complained of 07'54 West along herein that is capable said East line, 122.72 of being cured by feet to the Point of tendering the B eginning. P R O P- performance required ERTY AD D RESS: under the obligation or 8035 17th Street Ter- t rust deed, and i n rebonne, OR 97760 addition to paying said Both the beneficiary sums or tendering the and the trustee have performance elected to sell the real necessary to cure the property to satisfy the default, by paying all obligations secured by costs and expenses the trust deed and a actually incurred in the notice of default has enforcing been recorded pursu- obligation and t rust ant to O regon Re- deed, together with vlsed Statutes trustee's and 86.752(3); the default a ttorney's fees n ot for which the foreclo- exceeding the sure i s m a d e i s amounts provided by grantor's failure to pay said OR S 8 6 .778. from when due the follow- Requests ing sums: monthly p ersons named i n payments of ORS 8 6 .778 for $1,661.06 beginning reinstatement quotes 0 5/01/1 4; plus l a te received less than six charges of $ 6 6.44 days prior to the date each month begin- set for the trustee's ning 05/16/14; plus sale will be honored prior accrued l ate only at the discretion charges of $0.00; plus of the beneficiary or if advances of $ 0.00; required by the terms together with title ex- of the loan In pense, costs, trustee's documents. construing this notice, fees and attorney's fees incurred herein the singular includes by reason of said de- the plural, the word fault; any further sums "grantor" includes any advanced by the ben- successor in interest eficiary for the protec- to the grantor as well tion of the above de- as any other person scribed real property owing an obligation, and i t s int e rest the performance of therein; and prepay- which is secured by ment penalties/premi- said trust deed, and the words "trustee" ums, if "beneficiary" pplicable. By reason and include their respecof said default the beneficiary has tive successors in if any d eclared al l s u m s interest owing on the Without limiting the obligation secured by trustee's disclaimer of the tru s t deed representation or immediately due and warranties, O r egon payable, said sums l aw r e quires t h e being the following, to trustee to state in this wit: $214,032.85 with notice that some resiinterest thereon at the dential property sold rate of 5.25 percent at a t r ustee's sale per annum beginning may have been used 04/01/14; plus l a te in manufacturing charges of $ 6 6.44 methamphetamines, each monthbeginning the chemical compo05/1 6/1 4 until paid; nents of which are plus prior accrued late known to b e t o xic. charges of $0.00; plus Prospective advances of $0.00; purchasers of r e siprop e rty t ogether w it h ti t l e dential expense, costs, should be aware of t rustee's fees a n d this potential danger attorneys fees b efore deciding t o place a bid for this i ncurred herein b y reason of said default; property at the a ny f u rther s u ms trustee's sale. T he t rustee's r ules of advanced b y th e be b eneficiary fo r t h e auction m a y at protection o f the accessed above described real www.northwesttrustee a nd are property an d its .com interest therein; and incorporated by this reference. You may prepayment penalties/premiums, if a lso a ccess s a l e status at www.northapplicable. WHEREFORE, notice westtrustee.com and hereby is given that www.USA-Foreclothe undersigned sure.com. For further trustee will on June 1, information, p l ease contact: Bre a non 2015 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in Miller Nort h west Trustee Services, Inc. accord w i t h the Box 997 s tandard o f tim e P.O. WA established by ORS Bellevue, 187.110, at the 98009-0997 following place: inside 425-586-1900 Caffey, the main lobby of the J oyce D . (TS¹ Deschutes C o u nty 7367.22154) Courthouse, 1164 NW 1002.277430-File No. Bond, in the City of B end, C ounty o f LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7367.22154 R e f e rence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d

available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to Dorning and Kimberly five days before the A. Do r ning, as date last set for the grantor, to F i delity s ale, to h av e t h is National Title Insur- foreclosure proceedance Company, as ing dismissed and the trust deed reinstated trustee, in favor of Wells Fargo Bank, b y payment to t h e N.A., as beneficiary, beneficiary of the endated 04/21/08, re- tire amount then due (other than such porcorded 04/23/08, in the mortgage records tion of the principal as would not then be due of DESC H UTES had no default ocCounty, Oregon, as 2008-17894, covering curred) and by curing t he f o llowing d e - any o t he r d e f ault scribed real property complained of herein situated in said county that is capable of being cured by tenderand state, to wit: Lot 99 of Village Pointe, ing the performance required under t he Phases 4-7, City of Redmond, Deschutes o bligation o r tr u st County, Ore g o n. deed, and in addition PROPERTY AD- to paying said sums DRESS: 3169 South- or tendering the perw est A ntler L a n e formance necessary Redmond, OR 97756 to cure the default, by Both the beneficiary paying all costs and and the trustee have expenses actually inelected to sell the real curred in enforcing the property to satisfy the obligation and trust obligations secured by deed, together with and the trust deed and a trustee's notice of default has a ttorney's fees n o t the been recorded pursu- exceeding ant to Oregon Re- amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .778. vlsed Statutes 86.752(3); the default Requests from perfor which foreclosure sons named in ORS is made is grantors' 86.778 for reinstatefailure to pay when ment quotes received due th e fo l lowing less than six days sums: monthly pay- prior to the date set ments of $ 1,316.41 for the trustee's sale beginning 0 4 /01/13 will be honored only at and $1,346.46 begin- the discretion of the ning 4/1/14; plus prior beneficiary or if reaccrued late charges quired by the terms of of $276.96; plus ad- the loan documents. vances of $2,111.00 In construing this nothat represent paid tice, the singular inforeclosure fees and cludes the plural, the costs; together with word "grantor" intitle expense, costs, cludes any successor t rustee's fees a n d i n interest t o t h e a ttorney's fees i n - grantor as well as any curred herein by rea- other person owing an son of said default; obligation, the perforany further sums ad- mance of which is sevanced by the benefi- cured by said trust ciary for the protec- deed, and the words tion of t h e a b ove "trustee" and cbenefidescribed real prop- ciary" include their reerty and its interest spective successors therein; and prepay- i n interest, if a n y. ment penalties/premi- Without limiting the ums, if applicable. By trustee's disclaimer of reason of said default representation or warranties, Oregon law the beneficiary has d eclared all s u ms requires the trustee to owing on the obliga- state in this notice that tion secured by the some residential trust deed i mmedi- p roperty sold at a ately due and pay- t rustee's sale m a y able, said sums being have been used in the following, to wit: manufacturing meth$181,797.03 with in- a mphetamines, t h e chemical components terest thereon at the rate of 5.875 percent of which are known to per annum beginning be toxic. Prospective purchasers of r esi03/01/1 3; plus prior prop e rty accrued late charges dential of $276.96; plus ad- should be aware of vances of $2,111.00 this potential danger b efore deciding t o that represent paid foreclosure fees and place a bid for this property at the costs; together with title expense, costs, t rustee's sale. T h e trustee's fees and at- trustee's rules of auctorneys fees incurred tion may be accessed ww w .northwestherein by reason of at said default; any fur- trustee.com and are incorporated by this ther sums advanced by the beneficiary for reference. You may the protection of the also access sale staabove described real tus a t ww w . northproperty and its inter- westtrustee.com and est therein; and pre- www.USA-Foreclosure.com. For further payment penalties/premiums, if information, p l ease applicable. WHERE- contact: Kathy TagNorth w est FORE, notice hereby gart is given that the un- Trustee Services, Inc. dersigned trustee will P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 on June 17, 2015 at the hour o f 1 0 :00 425-586-1900 Dorno'clock, A.M. in acing, Brian P. and Kimcord with the stanberly A. (TS¹ 7023.111468) dard of time established by ORS 1002.274281-File No. 187.110, at th e f o llowing place: inside LEGAL NOTICE the main lobby of the TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Deschutes C o unty OF SALE File No. Courthouse, 1164 NW 7777.02145 Re f e rBond, in the City of ence is made to that Bend, County of DE- c ertain t rust d e e d SCHUTES, State of made b y Ma r c el Oregon, sell at public Lange, and Michelle auction to the highest Lange, as grantor, to bidder for cash the Northwest T r u stee i nterest in th e d e - Services, as trustee, scribed real property in favor of Mortgage which the grantor had Electronic Registraor had power to con- tion Systems, Inc. as vey at the time of the nominee for U nion execution by grantor Federal Bank of Inof the trust deed, to- dianapolis, its succesgether with any inter- sors and assigns, as est which the grantor b eneficiary, da t e d or grantor's succes- 09/28/05, r e c orded sors in interest ac10/03/05, in the mortquired after the ex- gage records of Desecution of the trust chutes County, Ordeed, to satisfy the egon, as 2005-66816 foregoing obligations and subsequently asthereby secured and signed to The Bank of New York M e llon, the costs and expenses of sale, in- f/k/a The Bank of New cluding a reasonable York, successor in charge by the trustee. interest to JPMorgan Notice is further given Chase Bank, N.A. as that for reinstatement Trustee fo r S t r ucor payoff quotes re- tured Asset Mortgage quested pursuant to Investments II I n c., O RS 8 6 .786 a n d Bear Stearns ALT-A 86.789 must be timely Trust, Mort g age communicated in a Pass-Through Certifiwritten request that cates, Series 2005-10 complies with t h at by Assignment restatute addressed to corded as the trustee's "Urgent 2012-05799, covering Request Desk" either t he f o l lowing d e by personal delivery scribed real property to the trustee's physi- situated in said county cal offices (call for ad- and state, to wit: Lot d ress) or b y fi r st 42 of Juniper Glen class, certified mail, North, City of Redr eturn r e ceipt r e - mond, Des c hutes Ore g on. quested, addressed to County, the trustee's post ofPROPERTY A Dfice box address set DRESS: 2822 SW Inforth in t his n otice. dian Circle Redmond, Due to potential con- OR 97756 Both the flicts with federal law, b eneficiary and t h e trustee have elected persons having no record legal or equi- to sell the real proptable interest in the erty to satisfy the oblisubject property will gations secured by only receive informa- the trust deed and a tion concerning the notice of default has lender's estimated or been recorded pursuactual bid. Lender bid ant to Oregon Rei nformation is a l s o vlsed Statutes LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7023.111468 Reference is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d m ade by B r ian P .

86.752(3); the default formance necessary for which foreclosure to cure the default, by is made is grantors' paying all costs and failure to pay when expenses actually indue th e f o l lowing curred in enforcing the sums: monthly pay- obligation and trust ments of $908.56 be- deed together with and inning 06/ 0 1/1 0, trustee's 826.53 b e g inning a ttorney's fees n ot exceeding the 11/1/10, $779.70 bei nning 4/1/1 1 , amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .778. 685.93 b e g inning 4/1/12, $700.26 beRequests from perinning 5/1/1 2, sons named in ORS 686.46 b e g inning 86.778 for reinstate5/1/13 and $679.77 ment quotes received beginning 1 1 / 1/13; less than six days plus prior accrued late prior to the date set charges of $672.78; for the trustee's sale p lus advances o f will be honored only at $2,383.00 that repre- the discretion of the sent paid foreclosure beneficiary or if refees and costs, prop- quired by the terms of erty inspections and the loan documents. brokers price opinion; In construing this notogether with title ex- tice, the singular inpense, costs, trustee's cludes the plural, the fees and attorney's word "grantor" infees incurred herein cludes any successor by reason of said de- i n interest t o t h e fault; any further sums grantor as well as any advanced by the ben- other person owing an eficiary for the protec- obhgation, the perfortion of the above de- mance of which is sescribed real property cured by said trust and i st inte r est deed, and the words therein; and prepay- "trustee" and cbenefiment penalties/premi- ciary" include their reums, if applicable. By spective successors reason of said default i n interest, if a n y. the beneficiary has Without limiting the d eclared al l s u m s trustee's disclaimer of owing on the obliga- representation or warranties, Oregon law tion secured by the trust deed immedi- requires the trustee to ately due and pay- state in this notice that residential able, said sums being some the following, to wit: p roperty sold at a t rustee's sale m a y $117,295.97 with interest thereon at the have been used in rate of 6.375 percent manufacturing methper annum beginning a mphetamines, t h e 05/01/10; plus prior chemicalcomponents accrued late charges of which are known to of $672.78; plus ad- be toxic. Prospective vances of $2,383.00 purchasers of r esithat represent paid dential prop e rty foreclosure fees and should be aware of costs, property i nthis potential danger spections and b ro- b efore deciding t o kers price opinion; to- place a bid for this the g ether w i t h titl e property a t expense, costs, t rustee's sale. T h e trustee's fees and at- trustee's rules of auctorneys fees incurred tion may be accessed ww w .northwestherein by reason of at said default; any fur- trustee.com and are incorporated by this ther sums advanced by the beneficiary for reference. You may the protection of the also access sale staabove described real tus a t ww w . northproperty and its inter- westtrustee.com and est therein; and pre- www.USA-Foreclosure.com. For further payment penalties/premiums, if information, p l ease applicable. WHERE- contact: Kathy TagNorth w est FORE, notice hereby gart is given that the un- Trustee Services, Inc. dersigned trustee will P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 on June 23, 2015 at the hour o f 1 0 : 00 425-586-1900 Lange, o'clock, A.M. in acMarcel and Michelle cord with the stan- (TS¹ 7777 . 02145) dard of time estab- 1002.278241-File No. lished by ORS 187.110, at th e f o lLEGAL NOTICE lowing place: inside IN T H E C I R CUIT the main lobby of the COURT O F THE Deschutes C o unty STATE OF OREGON, Courthouse, 1164 NW I N AND FO R T H E COUNTY OF DESBond, in the City of Bend, County of Des- CHUTES. U.S. Bank National Association, chutes, State of Oregon, sell at public as Trustee, succesauction to the highest sor in interest to Bank bidder for cash the of America, National i nterest in th e d e - Association, as scribed real property Trustee, successor by which the grantor had merger to L a Salle or had power to con- Bank National Assovey at the time of the ciation, as Trustee for execution by grantor Merrill Lynch M ortof the trust deed, to- gage Investors Trust, gether with any inter- Mortgage Loan est which the grantor Asset-Backed Certifior grantor's succes- cates, Series sors in interest ac- 2007-HE1, P l aintiff, quired after the ex- vs. FRED E RICK UNecution of the trust ANDERSON; deed, to satisfy the DERDOG C O FFEE foregoing obligations OF LEBANON, LLC; thereby secured and UNITED STATES OF the costs and ex- AMERICA; ARROW penses of sale, inF INANCIAL SER cluding a reasonable VICES, LLC; charge by the trustee. MICHELLE ANDERNotice is further given S ON; STATE O F that for reinstatement OREGON; PARTIES or payoff quotes re- IN P O S S ESSION, quested pursuant to Defendants. No. O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 14CV1002FC. CIVIL 86.789 must be timely SUMMONS. TO THE c ommunicated in a DEFENDANTS: written request that Michelle A n derson. complies with t h at NOTICE TO DEFENstatute addressed to DANT: READ THESE the trustee's "Urgent P APERS CAR E Request Desk" either FULLY! A lawsuit has by personal delivery been started against to the trustee's physi- you in the above-encal offices (call for ad- titled Court by U.S. d ress) or b y fi r s t Bank National Assoclass, certified mail, ciation, as T rustee, r eturn r e ceipt r e - successor in interest quested, addressed to to Bank of America, the trustee's post of- National Association, fice box address set as Trustee, succesforth in t his n otice. sor by merger to LaDue to potential con- Salle Bank National flicts with federal law, Association, as persons having no Trustee fo r M e rrill record legal or equi- Lynch Mortgage Intable interest in the vestors Trust, Mortsubject property will gage only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the s ale, to h a v e t h is foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated b y payment to t he beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t he r d e f ault complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under t he o bligation o r tr u s t deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the per-


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

C6 MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015•THE BULLETIN

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married man on property commonly known as 1928 NW Awbrey Road, B e nd, OR 97701 and legally described as: Lot Eight, Block Nine, AUBREY H EIGHTS, Cit y

of Bend, Des c hutes County, Oregon. The complaint seeks to foreclose and terminate all i nterest of Michelle A n d erson and all other interests in the property. The "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") must be given to t h e c ourt clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein a long with th e r e quired filing fee. The date of first publication of the summons is March 9, 2015. If you are in the active military service of the United States, or believe that you may be entitled to protection of the SCRA, please contact our office. If you do not contact us, we will report to the court that we do not believe that you are protected under the SCRA. If you h ave questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral S ervice o nline a t www.oregonstatebar. org or by calling (503) 684-3763 ( in t h e Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. Attorneys for Plaintiff, SHAPIRO & SUTHE RLAND, LLC, / s / Mary Hannon. Mary Hannon ¹ 131 0 74 [mhannon© logs.com] , 7632 SW Durham R oad, S uite 3 5 0 , Tigard, O R 9 7 2 24 (360)260-2253; Fax (360)260-2285. LEGAL NOTICE IN THE C IRCUIT C OURT OF T H E S TATE O F OR EGON FOR T HE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES. Case No. 1 3DS0042. S U M M ONS. KARI L . HUTCHENS, Petitioner v. BRANDON BYERS, R e spondent. TO: Brandon B yers. YOU A R E HEREBY

RE-

QUIRED to appear and defend the petition filed against you in th e a b ove-entitled cause within thirty (30) days from the date of first publication s p e cified herein, and in case of your failure to do so, for want thereof, Petitioner will apply to the court for relief demanded in the petition. SUMM ARY O F S U I T FILED HEREIN: A

Lawyer Re f e rral S ervice online a t www.oregonslatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 fin the Portland metrop olitan area) o r toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 4 52-7636. Joel J . Kent, OSB ¹963262, A ttorney for Petitioner, 158 NE Gre e nwood A ve., Bend, O R 97701, Telephone: 541-318-9115. Date of First Publication: March 16, 2015. LEGAL NOTICE N OTICE T O I N TERESTED P E RSONS. Dawn Will iams ha s b e e n appointed as Personal Representative of the Estate of Daniel Darrel Williams, deceased, by the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Deschutes, Probate No. 14PB0124. All p ersons hav i n g claims against the estate are required to p r esent t h eir claims with proper vouchers, w i t h in four months from the date of first publication of this notice, as stated below, to the undersigned at the given address below, or they may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the p roceedings m a y obtain ad d itional information from the court records, the Personal R e p resentative, or the attorney for the Personal Representative. Dated and first published: March 23, 2015. Per s onal Representative: Dawn Williams c/o Law Office of Mikel R . Miller, PC, 2 6 NW Hawthorne Ave nue, Bend, O R 97701,

(541)388-9819, Attorney for Personal Representative: Mikel R. Miller, OSB ¹914754, Law Off ice of M i kel R . Miller, PC, 26 NW Hawthorne Avenue, Bend, OR 97701. LEGAL NOTICE OREGON WATER WONDERLAND UNIT II SANITARY DISTRICT

NOTICE OF BUDGET COMMITTEE MEETING

A public meeting of the Budget Committee of t h e O regon Water W o nderland Unit II Sanitary District, Desc h utes County, State of Oregon, to discuss the budget for the fiscal year July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016, will be held at the District's o ffice, l o cated a t 55841 Swan Road, Bend, Oregon 97707. The meeting will take place o n T u esday April 7th, 2015 at 1:30

P ETITION C O N FIRMING PATERNiTY, C U S TODY AND CHILD SUPP ORT has b e en filed in the above-entitled matter. Petitioner seeks a Judgment deterp.m. mining paternity and e stablishing R e - The purpose of the spondent as the mimeeting is to receive nor Child's father, the budget message awarding custody, and budget d ocucare and control of ments. A copy of the the parties' minor budgetdocument may Child to Petitioner, be obtained on or afwith no p arenting ter April 2nd, 2015 at t ime awarded t o the District Office at Respondent, 55841 Swan Road, awarding Child supBend Oregon 97707, port pursuant to the between the hours of Oregon State Child 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 Support Guidelines, p.m. and for such other and further relief as This is a public meetmay be just and ing where deliberaproper, i n c luding tion of t h e B udget Petitioner's attorney Committee will take fees, costs, expert place. Any person tees and disbursemay appear at t he ments incu r red meeting. herein. NOTICE TO LEGAL NOTICE RESPONDENT; USDA - Forest Service READ THESE PAOchoco National PERS CAREForest Service FULLY! You may be Lookout Mountain liable for attorney Ranger District fees in this case A judgment of attor- Bailey Butte Fire Project Environmental ney fees can be Assessment entered against you 30-day Comment as provided in ORS Period Chapter 107 should P etitioner i n t h i s The Bailey Butte Fire case prevail, You Project environmental must "appear" in assessment (EA) is t his case o r t h e available for public reother side will win view and comment. a utomatically, T o The Lookout Moun"appear" you must tain Ranger District of f irst file w it h t h e the Ochoco National court a legal paper Forest proposes to called a 'motion" or h arvest about 4 . 0 "answer' ior "reply'). "motion" MMBF of f i re-killed The timber from the 2014 or"answer' (or "reBailey Butte fire area. ply") must be given Harvest would occur to the court clerk or on up to 900 acres loadministrator within cated entirely on the 30 days of the date Lookout Mo u ntain of first publication specitied he r e in Ranger District. About 886 acres would be along with the replanted with a mix of quired filing fee, It conifer species. must be in proper T hese actions a r e form and have proof necessary to improve of service on t he human safety, to rePetitioner's attorney cover the economic or, if the Petitioner value of fire killed timdoes not have an b er and t o m e e t a ttorney, proof of Ochoco Forest Plan service on the Petiobjectives i n the tioner, If you have p roject area. T h e any questions, you p roject area i s loshould see an attorcated north of the city ney immediately. If of Prineville, Oregon. you need help in finding an attorney, This EA is subject to you may contact the notice and comment Oregon State Bar's

porate advances of $1,865.50; t o gether with title e xpense costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees i ncurred herein b y reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of t h e a b ove described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has supporting reasons for d eclared all s u ms the responsible offi- owing on the obligacial to consider (36 tion secured by said CFR 218.2). trust deed i mmediately due and payAn Emergency Situa- able, said sums being tion De t ermination the following, to wit: (ESD) was requested $367,227.04 with infrom the USDA For- terest thereon at the est Service Washing- rate of 4.625 percent ton office (36 CFR per annum beginning 218.21). An ESD al11/01/2012; plus late lows relief from haz- charges of $ 8 5.17 ards threatening hueach month beginman health and safety ning 12/16/2012 until and avoids loss of paid; plus servicer adcommodity value suf- vances of $75,728.27; ficient to j eopardize plus corporate adthe agency's ability to vances of $1,865.50; accomplish p r oject together with title exobjectives directly re- pense, costs, trustee's lated t o res o urce fees and a t torneys protection or restora- fees incurred herein tion (36 CFR 218.21 by reason of said de(a)(b). If the ESD is fault; any further sums approved, the project advanced by the benshall not be subject to eficiary for the protecthe predecisional ob- tion of the above dejection process and scribed property and implementation of the its interest t herein; selected a lternative and prepayment penmay proceed as fol- alties/premiums, if lows: Immediately af- applicable. WHEREter notification when FORE, notice hereby the decision is docu- is given that the unmented in a Decision dersigned trustee will Notice ( 36 C F R on June 16, 2015 at 218.21 (d)(1)). t he hour o f 1 0 : 00 o'clock, A.M. in acThe EA can be found cord with the stanat the following URL: dard of time estabhttp://data.ecosystem- lished by ORS management.org/ne187.110, at the folpaweb/nepa project lowing place: inside exp.php? project=4573 the main lobby of the 9. If you would like a Deschutes C o u nty hard copy of the EA, Courthouse, 1164 NW p lease contact t he Bond, in the City of Lookout M o u ntain Bend, County of DesDistrict office chutes, State of Or(541-416-6500). egon, sell at public Submit your c o m- auction to the highest ments to: Bailey Butte bidder for cash the Fire Project, District i nterest in t h e d e Ranger Slater Turner, scribed real property 3160 NE 3rd Street, which the grantor had Prineville, O r e gon, or had power to con97754. E-mail com- vey at the time of the ments should be sent execution by grantor to: c o mments-paci- of the trust deed, toficnorthwest-ochoco@ gether with any interf s.fed.us. Thos e est which the grantor submitting electronic or grantor's succescomments must do so sors in interest aconly to the e-mail ad- quired after the exdress listed above, ecution of the trust must put the project deed, to satisfy the name in the subject foregoing obligations line, and must either thereby secured and submit comments as t he costs and e x part of t h e e - mail penses of sale, inmessage or as an at- cluding a reasonable tachment only in one charge by the trustee. of the following three Notice is further given formats: Mi c rosoft that for reinstatement Word, rich text format or payoff quotes re(rff), o r Por t able quested pursuant to Document Fo r m at O RS 8 6 .786 a n d (pdf). For further in- 86.789 must be timely formation about the communicated in a comment p r ocess, written request that please contact Marcy c omplies with t h a t Anderson, E nviron- statute addressed to mental Coordinator, the trustee's "Urgent Ochoco National For- Request Desk" either e st, 3160 N E 3 r d by personal delivery Street, Prineville, Or- to the trustee's physiegon, 97754, (541) cal offices (call for ad416-6463, marcelle- dress) or b y f i r st andersonImfs.fed.us. class, certified mail, r eturn r eceipt r e LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE quested, addressed to the trustee's post ofO F SALE File N o . 7590.20014 R e f e r- fice box address set in this notice. ence is made to that forth c ertain trust d e ed Due to potential conflicts with federal law, made by Brian Morhaving no ton, Leana Morton, as persons record legal or equiTenants by the En- table interest in the tirety, as grantor, to subject property will First American Title Insurance Co. of OR., only receive informaconcerning the as trustee, in favor of tion Mortgage Electronic lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid Registration Systems, i nformation is a l s o Inc. solely as nomiavailable a t the nee fo r Su n Trust trustee's web s ite, M ortgage, Inc., i t s successors and as- www.northwestNotice is signs, as beneficiary, trustee.com. given that any dated 09/25/07, re- further person named in ORS corded 09/28/07, in has the right, the mortgage records 86.778 of Deschutes County, at any time prior to Oregon, as five days before the 2007-52728 and sub- date last set for the sale, to h ave t h is sequently assigned to foreclosure proceedWilmington Savings ing dismissed and the Fund Society, FSB, trust deed reinstated not in its i ndividual payment to the capacity but solely as by Trustee f o r the beneficiary of the entire amount then due PrimeStar-H Fund Trust by Assignment (other than such porrecorded as tion of the principal as 2014-018494, cover- would not then be due no default ocing the following de- had scribed real property curred) and by curing any o ther d e fault situated in said county complained of herein and state, to wit: Lot is capable of be34, Ridg e Water, that P hases 1 a n d 2 , ing cured by tenderthe performance P.U.D., D e s chutes ing County, Ore g o n. r equired under t h e tr u st PROPERTY AD- o bligation o r DRESS: 20917 deed, and in addition to paying said sums R idgewater Cou r t or tendering the perBend, OR 97702 Both formance the beneficiary and to cure thenecessary default, by t he t r ustee h a v e all costs and elected to sell the real paying actually inproperty to satisfy the expenses in enforcing the obligations secured by curred obligation and t rust the trust deed and a deed, together with notice of default has trustee's and been recorded pursua ttorney's fees n ot ant to Oregon Rethe vised Statutes exceeding provided by 86.752(3); the default amounts for which the foreclo- said OR S 8 6 . 778. from pers ure i s m a d e i s Requests named in ORS grantor's failure to pay sons 86.778 for when due the follow- ment quotesreinstatereceived ing sums: monthly than six days payments of less prior to the date set $2,134.55 beginning for trustee's sale 12/01/2012; plus late will the be honored only at charges of $ 8 5.17 discretion of the each month begin- the ning 12/16/2012; plus beneficiary or if r equired by the terms of servicer advances of the loan documents. $75,728.27; plus cor- In construing this nopursuant to 36 CFR 218. The EA will have a 30-day public comment period (36 CFR 218.24(4)). The 30-day public comment period will begin on the date of t he publication of this legal notice in The Bulletin (Bend), t he newspaper of record. Comments should be within the scope of the proposed action, have a direct relationship to the proposed action, and m us t i n c lude

tice, the singular in- Bond, in the City of 00 degrees 17' 07" PUBLIC NOTICE cludes the plural, the Bend, County of Des- NEW BANK BRANCH West for a distance of word "grantor" in- chutes, State of Or40.00 feet to the point OFFICE cludes any successor egon, sell at public NOTICE IS HEREBY or origin. PROPERTY i n interest t o t h e auction to the highest GIVEN that Summit A DDRESS: 16 2 3 7 grantor as well as any bidder for cash the Bank, a n O r e gon RIATA CT SISTERS, other person owing an i nterest in th e d e - state-chartered com- OR 97759 Both the obligation, the perfor- scribed real property mercial bank, pro- b eneficiary and t h e mance of which is se- which the grantor had poses to file with the trustee have elected cured by said trust or had power to con- Federal Deposit Into sell the real propdeed, and the words vey at the time of the surance Corporation erty to satisfy the obli"trustee" and "benefi- execution by grantor an Application to Es- gations secured by ciary" include their re- of the trust deed, to- tablish a Branch Of- the trust deed and a spective successors gether with any inter- fice (the "Application") notice of default has i n interest, if a n y. est which the grantor to open a branch of- been recorded pursuWithout limiting the or grantor's succes- fice at 560 SW Co- ant to O regon Retrustee's disclaimer of sors in interest acStatutes lumbia Street, Bend, vlsed representation or war- quired after the ex- Oregon,97702. 86.752(3); the default ranties, Oregon law ecution of the trust Any person wishing to for which foreclosure requires the trustee to deed, to satisfy the comment on this Ap- is made is grantors' state in this notice that foregoing obligations plication may file his failure to pay when some residential thereby secured and or her comments in due t h e fo l lowing p roperty sold at a the costs and ex- writing with the Resums: monthly payt rustee's sale m a y penses of sale, in- gional Director of the ments of $ 2,004.06 have been used in cluding a reasonable Federal Deposit Inbeginning 04/01/09, manufacturing meth- charge by the trustee. surance Corporation $2,125.47 beginning a mphetamines, t h e Notice is further given ( "FDIC") at i t s r e - 5/1/09, $2,255.98 bechemicalcomponents that for reinstatement gional o ff ice, inning 5/1/1 0, 25 of which are known to or payoff quotes re- Jessie Street at Ecker 2,396.28 beginning be toxic. Prospective quested pursuant to Square, San F ran5/1/11, $2,351.53 bepurchasers of r esi- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d cisco, CA 94105 not ginning dential prop e r ty 86.789 must be timely later than Tuesday, /1/12, $2,8 2 3.03 should be aware of communicated in a A pril 7, 2015. T h e beginning 5/1/12 and this potential danger written request that $2,829.28 beginning non-confidential porbefore deciding to complies with t h at tion of the Application 5/1/13; plus advances place a bid for this statute addressed to is on file at the San o f $ 8 ,075.16 t h a t property a t the the trustee's "Urgent Francisco FDIC office represent paid t rustee's sale. T h e Request Desk" either and is available for in- foreclosure fees and trustee's rules of auc- by personal delivery spection during regu- costs, prop e rty tion may be accessed to the trustee's physi- lar business hours. inspections and at w w w .northwest- cal offices (call for ad- P hotocopies of t h e property v a l uation; trustee.com and are d ress) or b y fi r st nonconfidential por- t ogether w it h ti t l e incorporated by this class, certified mail, tion of the Application expense, costs, reference. You may r eturn r e ceipt r e - f ile will b e m a d e t rustee's fees a n d also access sale sta- quested, addressed to a vailable upon r e - attorney's fees tus a t ww w .north- the trustee's post of- quest. Date of Publi- i ncurred herein b y westtrustee.com and fice box address set c ation: March 2 3 , reason of said default; www.USA-Forecloforth in t his n otice. 2015. a ny f u rther s u m s sure.com. For further Due to potential conadvanced b y the The Bend Bulletin information, p l ease flicts with federal law, TheRegister Guard b eneficiary for t h e contact: Bre a non persons having no protection o f the LEGAL NOTICE Miller Nort h west record legal or equiabove described real TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Trustee Services, Inc. table interest in the property a n d its P.O. Box 997 Belle- subject property will OF SALE File No. interest therein; and 7236.25760 R e f e rvue, WA 98009-0997 only receive informaprepayment ence is made to that penalties/premiums, if 425-586-1900 Morton, tion concerning the c ertain t rust d e e d Brian and Leana (TS¹ lender's estimated or applicable. By reason Dou g of said default the 7590.20014) actual bid. Lender bid made b y 1002.277792-File No. i nformation is a l s o Stevens, as grantor, beneficiary has available a t the to Western Title and d eclared al l s u m s LEGAL NOTICE Escrow Company, as web s ite, owing on the TRUSTEE'S NOTICE trustee's trustee, in favor of www.northwestobligation secured by OF SALE File No. Mortgage Electronic Notice is the tr u s t dee d 8251.20390 R e f e r- trustee.com. Registration Systems, ence is made to that further given that any Inc. as nominee for immediately due and named in ORS payable, said sums c ertain t rust d e e d person American Home being the following, to made b y Ro d olfo 86.778 has the right, Mortgage Ac c e p- wit: $551,527.12 with at any time prior to Perez, a Single Man, five days before the tance, Inc., its suc- interest thereon at the as grantor, to NONE last set for the cessors and assigns, rate of 5.507 percent GIVEN, as trustee, in date as beneficiary, dated favor of Chase Bank s ale, to h av e t h is 03/26/07, r e c orded per annum beginning foreclosure proceedplus USA, N.A., as benefi- ing dismissed and the 03/30/07, in the mort- 03/01/09; of ciary, dated 08/09/06, trust deed reinstated gage records of DE- advances $8,075.16 that reprerecorded 08/14/06, in by payment to t he SCHUTES C o unty, sent paid foreclosure the mortgage records as fees a n d of the en- Oregon, co s t s, of Deschutes County, beneficiary 2007-18843 and subOregon, as tire amount then due sequently assigned to property inspections property 2006-55522 and sub- (other than such por- Wilmington Trust, Na- and sequently assigned to tion of the principal as tional Association, as valuation; t o g ether would not then be due with title e x pense, Christiana Trust, A successor trustee to costs, trustee's fees Division of Wilming- had no default ocC itibank, N.A., a s and by curing and attorneys fees ton Savings Fund So- curred) o t he r d e f ault trustee for structured i ncurred herein b y ciety, FSB, as Trustee any Asset Mortgage Incomplained of herein of said default; for Normandy Mort- that is capable of be- vestments II T r u st reason gage Loan Trust, Se- ing cured by tender- 2007-AR6, Mortgage any f ries 2013-18 by As- ing the performance Pass-Through Certifisignment recorded as cates Series 2014-01889, covering required under t he 2007-AR6 by Assigntr u s t t he f o llowing d e - o bligation o r and in addition m ent recorded a s scribed real property deed, 2013-012441, coversituated in said county to paying said sums ing the following detendering the perand state, to wit: Lot or necessary scribed real property Twenty-three (23), formance cure the default, by situated in said county Block JJJ, Deschutes to and state, to wit: ParRiver Woods, Des- paying all costs and cel 1 consisting of the expenses actually inchutes County, Or- curred in enforcing the North 208 feet of the egon. P R OPERTY East 208 feet of the A DDRESS: 6 0 0 9 8 obligation and trust West Half of the West Agate Road Bend, OR deed, together with Half of the Northwest and 97702 Both the ben- trustee's Quarter of the Northeficiary a n d the a ttorney's fees n o t east Quarter (W 1/2 the trustee have elected exceeding W 1/2 NW 1/4 NE 1/4 to sell the real prop- amounts provided by ) of Section 10, Townsaid OR S 8 6 .778. erty to satisfy the obli- Requests from per- ship 15 South, Range gations secured by named in ORS 10 East of the Wilthe trust deed and a sons lamette Meridian, Denotice of default has 86.778 for reinstate- schutes County, Orquotes received been recorded pursu- ment egon; Together with a ant to Oregon Re- less than six d ays strip of land, contiguto the date set vlsed Statutes prior ous to Parcel 1 and 86.752(3); the default for the trustee's sale owned by grantors, will be honored only at for which the foreclo- the discretion of the more fully described s ure i s m a d e i s as follows: A tract of or if r egrantor's failure to pay beneficiary land beginning at the when due the follow- quired by the terms of Northwest corner of loan documents. ing sums: m onthly the Parcel 1 as above deof In construing this no- scribed; thence South payments the singular in$1,514.51 beginning tice, 88 degrees 57' 13" plural, the 07/01/10; plus prior cludes the West for a distance of "grantor" inword accrued late charges cludes any successor 57.24 feet; t h ence of $194.37; plus ad- i n interest t o t h e South 00 degrees 18' vances of $5,561.99; grantor as well as any 19" East for a d i stogether with title experson owing an tance of 248.00 feet; pense, costs, trustee's other thence North 72 defees and attorney's obligation, the perfor- grees 13' 43" East for of which is sefees incurred herein mance a distance of 138.99 by reason of said de- cured by said trust feet; thence South 88 deed, and the words fault; any further sums "trustee" and "benefi- degrees 57' 13" West advanced by the ben- ciary" include their re- for a distance of 75.44 eficiary for the protec- spective successors feet; thence North 00 tion of the above den interest, if a n y. degrees 17' 07" West scribed real property iWithout for a d i stance of limiting the and i st inte rest disclaimer of 2 08.00 feet t o t h e therein; and prepay- trustee's point of origin. Save ment penalties/premi- representation or war- and except that porranties, Oregon law ums, if applicable. By requires the trustee to tion of said lot dereason of said default in this notice that scribed as f o llows: the beneficiary has state residential Beginning at a point d eclared all s u ms some roperty sold at a 40 feet North 00 deBULLETINCLASSIFIEDS owing on the obliga- p grees 17' 07" West of Search the area's most tion secured by the t rustee's sale m a y the Southeast corner have been used in comprehensive listing of trust deed i mmedi- manufacturing meth- o f said P arcel 1 ; classified advertising... ately due and paymphetamines, t h e thence 138.98 feet real estate to automotive, able, said sums being a South 72 degrees 13' merchandise to sporting the following, to wit: chemicalcomponents 43" West to a point on of which are known to goods. Bulletin Classifieds $202,599.25 with inthe Southern Boundbe toxic. Prospective appear every day in the terest thereon at the P a r cel 1 ; of r esi- a ry o f print or on line. rate of 6.125 percent purchasers thence 132.56 feet dential prop e r ty per annum beginning should be aware of Call 541-385-5809 North 88 degrees 57' 06/01/10; plus prior this potential danger 13" East t o www.bendbulletin.com the accrued late charges Southeast corner of b efore deciding t o of $194.37; plus ad- place a bid for this The Bulletin Parcel 1, thence North Serving CentralOregan since1%8 vances of $5,561.99; a t the together with title ex- property rustee's sale. T h e pense, costs, trustee's ttrustee's of auc~ E P U R LI C fees and a t torneys tion may rules be accessed fees incurred herein at w w w .northwestIIICÃFICES by reason of said de- trustee.com and are fault; any further sums incorporated by this I M P CSRT~ ~ advanced by the ben- reference. You may eficiary for the protecaccess sale station of the above de- also ww w .northAn important premise upon which the principle of scribed real property tus a t westtrustee.com and and i st inte rest www.USA-Foreclodemocracy is based is thatinformation about therein; and prepaysure.com. For further government activities must be accessible in order ment penalties/premi- information, p l ease ums, if a p plicable. contact: Nanci Lamfor the electorate to make well-informed decisions. W HEREFORE, n o - bert Northwest Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo tice hereby is given Services, Inc. that the undersigned Trustee citizens who want fo know more about government P.O. Box 997 Belletrustee will on June WA 98009-0997 activities. 25, 2015 at the hour vue, of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. 425-586-1900 Perez, Rodolfo (TS¹ i n accord with t he Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin standard of time es- 8251.20390) classifieds or go fowww.bendbullefin.com and 1002.278231-File No. t ablished b y OR S 187.110, at the folclick on "Classi%ed Ads". lowing place: inside Look at: Or go to www.publicnoticeoregon.com the main lobby of the Bendhomes.com Deschutes C o u nty for Complete Listings of Courthouse, 1164 NW Area Real Estate for Sale

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