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avor e ic<e a sceneSpringgolfingprimer SPORTS• B1
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
PORTLAND FOOD WASTE
Burns coming —Be
The odor will stay west of Cascades -fornow
warned: The Forest Service is
planning five of them for the area this week.A7
Your moneyor yourlife
— In a rough neighborhood, why some arechoosing to fight their attackers.A10
Powered bythe mind
• A COCC entrepreneurship classgives DeerRidgeinmates the skils to look forward
— The devices we might be able to control with a thought in the near future.A3
By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
NFL —The intrigue at a draft
A pair of planned composting facilities near Crescent and Christmas Valley won't be taking in comm ercial food waste from Portland, according to an official with the company handling the waste. Instead, the compost will
light on glamorous names.B1
be going toa company in
ln world news —with bags of cash, CIAseeks influence in Afghanistan.A2
And a Web exclusive"Star Wars," soon to be dubbed in Navajo.
bendbulletin.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Tsarnaevs lost sight of America's dream The Washington Post America, the golden door, had already welcomed two of his brothers when Anzor Tsarnaev crossed the ocean with his family in 2002. Anzor's brother Ruslan, who had immigrated just a few years earlier, already had a law degree and was on his way to an executive job and
a six-figure salary. And at first, Anzor, his wife, Zubeidat, and their two sons, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar, seemed as energetic and brimming with initiative as their relatives had been. Anzor, a mechanic, fixed up cars. His wife turned a cut-rate apartment in affluent Cambridge, Mass., into an improvised salon, offering facials at attractive prices. The boys — who authorities believe are the Boston Marathon bombers, responsible for killing four people and injuring more than 250 — took to their new home with gusto. The older one, Tamerlan, was sociable, even showy, dressing sharply, honing his body to become anOlympic boxer. He married an American WASP, daughter of a wellto-do Rhode Island family.
Roh Kerrr Ttte Bulletin
Inmate Kwajo Assuman, left, helps inmate Ross Hayward work on a lathe in the Deer Ridge Correctional Institution welding shop Thursday in Madras. Assuman completed a COCC entrepreneurship class and crafted a business proposal for a metal manufacturing business that he will use when he is released from prison next year.
By Lily Raff Mccaulou •The Bulletin
MADRAS-
f you close your eyes, Kwajo Assuman sounds like the consummate entrepreneur. He's confident. He can explain clearly how his business venture would stand apart from its competition. His pitch sounds sincere and well-researched, not gimmicky.
Dual compost plans
Don't open your eyes yet. Assuman, 23, will be wearing a prison uniform until February. Last summer, Assuman was one of 24 inmates at Deer Ridge Correctional Institution who completed a Central Oregon Community College class called "Launch Your Business." It was the first time the course had been offered in an Oregon prison. This month, the class is being offered a second time. And for the second time, it has full enrollment and a waiting list. Cody Yeager, director of education at Deer Ridge Correctional Institution, said that if she could raise enough money, she could fill three times as many seats in the course. That's likely because, according to the first class
of graduates, the course changed the way these men view their long-term futures. It gave them one of the rarest, most coveted commodities in prison: hope. "The class helps you think about a solution, rather than just sit and stew in the problem," Assuman said. Assuman moved to the United States from Ghana when he was 4 years old, settling with his family in the Portland area. His parents were supportive, he said, and good role models. When his mother drove him to school, she was always listening to recorded motivational talks, or books on tape that explained how
to start a business. "I've been blessed to have a lot of wise people around me," Assuman said. As a teenager, however, Assuman failed to absorb their wisdom. At age 16, Assuman and another 16 year old tried to rob a teen who had just cashed a $500 paycheck in Northeast Portland. Assuman told the teen to hand over his money, then pointed a loaded handgun at him. Assuman pleaded guilty to firts -degree armed robbery, and was sentenced to 90 months in prison. His father gave him some advice. "Don't think it's over," he said. "Your story doesn't end here."
Lane County for at least the next three years, said Dave Dutra, general manager for Recology Oregon Material Recovery. The company runs a compost facility in North Plains, a suburb west of Portland. Public outcry there about the odor of compost prompted Washington County to limit food waste coming in from the city, allowing residential but not commercial waste starting April l. Currently, Dutra said the commercial waste is going to compost facilities in Aumsville, Eugene and Hood River, as well as two more in Washington. Soon they'll be going to a Lane County company — which he declinedto name — under a contract that will run until at least 2016. The developmenthas not stopped theplans of Larry Morrison, a Tualatintrucker who wants to build compost facilities ofhis ownnear Cttescent and Christmas Valley. SeeCompost/A8
Education, behind bars Just over two years ago, Assuman was transferred to Deer Ridge Correctional Institution, which he said offersfarmore educational opportunities than the first two places he served — McLaren Juvenile Correctional Facility, in Woodburn, and Two Rivers Correctional Institution, in Umatilla. Shortlyafterhe arrived, he made friends with an inmate who was enrolled in the welding course, so Assuman decided to enroll, too. Today, Assuman works five days a week as a tutor in the prison welding shop. His friend has been released and is working as a welder in Eugene. See Prison class/A6
The Tualatin trucker planning to build a compost facility
near Crescent says hewill turn in an new permit application to Klamath County
next week. Healso has a permit application under review by Lake County for a similar operation near Christmas Valley. See detailed
maps inside.
Crescent E'R e gort Rock • ChriStmaS
Valley
I • Klamath Falls
r~ Source: Oregon Department of Environmental Quahty, Lake County Greg Cross i The Bulletin
Asian immigration transformingthe suburbsof L.A.
The younger boy, Dzhokhar, was almost instantly as American as they come: He fell for a blond beauty and won her over. He made the high school wrestling team and was popular and empathic enough to be named captain. He partied hard and studied when he had to. But over the past four years, even as members of their extended family found their piece of the American dream, the Cambridge Tsarnaevs' experience in their new land curdled. SeeTsarnaevs/A4
By Jennifer Medina New York Times News Service
SAN MARINO, Calif. — Beneath the palm trees that line Huntington Drive, named for the railroad magnate who founded this Southern California city, hang signs to honor families who have helped sponsor the
centennial celebration here this year. There are names like Dryden, Kirkendall and Ramsay, families that have lived here for generations. But there are newer names as well: Sun, Koo and Shi. A generation ago, whites made up roughly twothirds of the population in
Page B10
headquarters of the John Birch Society. The transformation illustrates a drastic shift in California immigration trends over the last decade, one that can easily be seen all over the area: More than twice as many immigrants to the nation's most populous state
INDEX
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 58, Low 21
this rarefied Los Angeles suburb, where most of the homes are worth wellover $1 million. But Asians now make up over half of the population in San Marino, which has long attracted some of the region's wealthiest families and was once home to the Western
Calendar A7 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6De ar Abby Comics/Puzzles C3-4 Horoscope
C4 Local/State A 7- 8 SportsMonday B1-9 A9 Movies A9 Sudoku C4 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9
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now come from Asia than from Latin America. And the change here is just one example of the ways immigration is remaking America, with the political, economic and cultural ramifications playing out in a variety of ways. SeeCalifornia/A10
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vaster scale, and with a far greater impact on everyday
the Iranians, it still is. U.S. and Afghan officials KABUL , A fgha n i stan governing. familiar with th e p ayments — For more than a decade, M oreover, there i s l i t t l e said the agency's main goal in wads of U.S. dollars packed evidence that the payments providing the cash has been to into suitcases, backpacks and, bought the influence the CIA maintain access to Karzai and on occasion, plastic shopping sought. Instead, some U.S. of- his inner circle and to guaranbags have been dropped off ficials said, the cash has fueled tee the agency's influence at every month or so at the ofcorruption and e m powered the presidential palace, which fices of Afghanistan's presi- warlords, undermining Wash- wields tremendous power in dent — courtesy of the Central ington's exit s trategy f r om Afghanistan's highly centralIntelligence Agency. Afghanistan. ized government. The officials "The biggest source of cor- spoke about the money only All told, tens of millions of dollars have flowed from the ruption in Afghanistan," one on the condition of anonymity. CIA to the office of President U.S. official said, "was the It is not clear that the United Hamid Karzai, according to United States." States is getting what it pays currentand former advisers to The United States was not for. Karzai's willingness to the Afghan leader. alone in delivering cash to the defy the United States — and "We called it 'ghost monpresident. Karzai a c knowl- the Iranians, for that matter ey,'" said Khalil Roman, who edged a few years ago that — on an array of issues seems served as Karzai's chief of Iran regularly gave bags of to have only grown as the cash staff from 2002 until 2005. "It cash to one of his top aides. has piledup. Instead of securcame in secret, and it left in At the time, in 2010, U.S. ing his good graces, the paysecret." officials jumped on the pay- ments may well illustrate the The CIA, which declined ments as evidence of an ag- opposite: Karzai is seemingly to comment for this article, gressive Iranian campaign to unable to be bought. has long been known to sup- buy influence and poison AfOver Iran's objections, he port some relatives and close ghanistan's relations with the signed a strategic partnership aides of Karzai. But the new United States. What they did deal with the United States last accounts o f off - t he-books not say was that the CIA was year, directly leading the Iranicash delivered directly to his also plying the presidential ans to halt their payments, two office show payments on a palace with cash — and unlike senior Afghan officials said. New Yorh Times News Service
Iraq unreSt —Iraqi authorities suspended the operating licenses of pan-Arab broadcaster Al-Jazeeraand nine Iraqi TV channels on Sunday after accusing them of escalating sectarian tension. The move signaled the Shiite-led government's mounting worries over
deteriorating security amid Sunni unrest and clashes that haveleft more than180 peopledead inlessthanaweek.Thesuspensions, which took effect immediately, appeared to target mainly Sunni chan-
nels known for criticizing Prime Minister Nouri al-Malik's government. Apart from AI-Jazeera, the decision affected eight Sunni and one Shiite channels.
Syria conflict —Republicans on capitol Hill took President Barack Obama to task Sunday for what they characterized as dan-
gerous inaction in Syria, while Democrats urged the White Houseto step up its humanitarian response to the 2-year-old civil war that has killed 70,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands more.
The lawmakers' comments came after revelations last week that the Syrian president, Bashar Assad, is believed to have used chemical
weaponsagainsthisownpeople. Italy ShuutiugS —Two military police officers and a passerby wereshotandwounded onSunday ina crowded squareoutside the office of Prime Minister Enrico Letta and near the presidential palace, where his new government was being sworn in. The shooting was broadcast live by the state broadcaster RAI, which
had a television crew in the square in front of Palazzo Chigi, where the ministers were to go after the ceremony at the presidential
palace. PakiStan dumdiug —Pakistani authorities say a suicide bomber targeting policemen has killed four people in the main northwestern
city of Peshawar. Liaqat Ali Khan, thecity's police chief, says the attack aimed at one of his patrol teams early today also wounded over
30 people. Thebomber detonated his explosives asthe patrol passed by. Suspicion is likely to fall on thePakistani Taliban. Thegroup has been waging abloody insurgency against the government for years and has stepped upattacks ahead of the May11 parliamentary election.
TimeS Square damd CaSe —A Brooklyn man hassaid that he will refuse to testify before afederal grand jury that is believed to be looking into the explosion of a homemade bomb in Times Square in 2008, setting the stage for a confrontation that could send him to jail
for contempt of court. A lawyer for the man,Gerald Koch, said that he
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The Associated Press
Mohammed Sohel Rana, center right, the fugitive
owner of an illegally constructed building that collapsed last week in Bangladesh, killing at least 380 people, is paraded by Rapid Action Battalion com-
mandos for the mediaalong with an unidentified alleged accomplice, left, Sunday in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Rana was arrested near the land border in Bena-
Rescue workers in Bangladesh havegiven up hopes of finding any more survivors in the rubble of a building that collapsed five daysago,and began using
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See us for FREELiteRise®
The illegally constructed eight-story Rana Plaza
pole in western Bangladesh, just as hewas about to
collapsed in aheaponWednesday morning along with thousands of workers in thefive garment factories in
flee into India's West Bengal state, said Jahangir Kabir Nanak, junior minister for local government.
the building. About 2,500 survivors are accounted for. — The Associated Press
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Pyongyangglitters, but rest of N. I(oreastill dark By Jean H. Lee
have-nots has only grown with
The Associated Press
Pyongyang's transformation.
PYONGYANG, North Korea — The heart of this city, once famous for its Dickensian darkness, now pulsates with neon. Glossy construction downtown has altered the Pyongyang skyline. Inside supermarkets where shopgirls wear French designerlabels,people with money can buy Italian wine, Swiss chocolates, kiwifruit imported from New Zealand and fresh-baked croissants. They can get facials, lie in tanning booths, play a round of mini golf or sip cappuccinos and cocktails while listening to classical music. More than a million people are using cell phones. Computer shops can't keep up with demand for North Korea's locally distributed tablet computer, popularly known here as "iPads." A shiny new cancer institute features a $900,000 X-ray machine imported from Europe.
Beyond the main streets of the capital and in the towns and
Pyongyang has long been a city apart from the rest of North Korea, a showcase capital dubbed a "socialist fairyland" by state media. A year after leader Kim Jong Un promised in a speech to bring an end to the "era of belt-tightening" and economic hardship in North Korea, the gap between the haves and
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villages beyond, life is grindingly tough. Food is rationed, electricity is a precious commodity andpeople get around
by walking, cycling or hopping into the backs of trucks. Most homes lack running water or plumbing. Health care is free, but aid workers say medicine is in short supply. And whilethe differences between the showcase capital and the hardscrabble countryside grow starker, North Koreans feel the effects of authoritarian rule no matter where they live. It's illegal for them to interact with foreigners without permission.Very few have access to the Internet. They calibrate their words. Most parrot phrases they've heard in state media, still the safest way to answer questions in a country where security remains terrifying. In 2010 and throughout 2011, as then-leader Kim Jong II was grooming son Kim Jong Un to
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succeed him, Pyongyang was a city under construction. Scaffolding covered the fronts of buildings across the city. Red banners painted with slogan "At a breath" — implying breakneck work at a breathless pace — fluttered from the skeletons of skyscrapers built by soldiers.
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MONDAY, APRIL 29,2013 •THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Monday, April 29, the119th day of 2013. There are 246 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Cabinet —President Barack Obama Monday is set to nominate Charlotte, N.C., mayor Anthony Foxx to be secretary
of transportation, according to McClatchy-Tribune News
Service. RICill — James Everett Dutschke, of Tupelo, Miss.,
appears in U.S. District Court charged in connection with
sending poison-laced letters sent to President Barack
CUTTING EDGE
RESEARCH
o esures,LlS OLll' rain as e con ro
For migraines, aspicy solution is explored
Soon, we might do everything from interacting with smartphones and computers to turning on lights by using our minds.
Obama and others. By Nick Bilton New York Times News Service
HISTORY Highlight:In 1913, Swedish-
born engineer GideonSundbackof Hoboken, N.J., received
a U.S. patent for a "separable fastener" — later known as the
zipper. In1429, Joan of Arc entered the besieged city of Orleans to lead a French victory over the English. In1861, the Maryland House of Delegates voted 53-13 against
seceding from the Union. In Montgomery, Ala., President Jefferson Davis asked the
Confederate Congress for the authority to wage war. In 1863, newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst was
born in SanFrancisco. In1916,the Easter Rising in
Dublin collapsed as lrish nationalists surrendered to British authorities. In 1945, during World War II, American soldiers liberated the
Dachau (DAH'-khowj concentration camp. Adolf Hitler married Eva Braun and designated Adm. Karl Doenitz (DUHR'-ni-
htz) president. In 1946, 28 former Japanese officials went on trial in Tokyo
as war criminals; sevenended up being sentenced to death. In 1968, the counterculture
musical "Hair" openedon Broadway following limited en-
gagements off-Broadway. In1974, President Richard
Last week, engineers sniffing around the programming code for Google Glass found hidden examples of ways that people might interact with the wearable computers without having to say a word. Among them, a user could nod to turn the glasses on or off. A single wink might tell the glasses to take a picture. But don't expect these gestures to be necessary for long. Soon, we might interact with our smartphones and computers by using our minds. In a couple of years, we could be turning on the lights at home just by thinking about it, or sending an email from our smartphone without even pullingthe device from our pocket. Farther into the future, your robot assistant will appear by your side with a glass of lemonade because it knows you're thirsty. Researchers in Samsung's
M. Nixon announced hewas
arms, all by simply thinking
releasing edited transcripts
about such actions. Before long, these technologies could well be in consumer electronics, too. Some crude brain-reading products already exist, let-
of some secretly madeWhite House tape recordings related to Watergate. In 1983, Harold Washington was sworn in as the first black
mayor of Chicago. In1992, rioting resulting in 55 deaths erupted in Los Angeles after a jury in Simi Valley, Calif.,
acquitted four LosAngeles police officers of almost all state charges in the videotaped
beating of RodneyKing. In1993, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II announced that for the first time, Buckingham Palace
would be opened totourists to help raise moneyfor repairs at fire-damaged Windsor Castle. In 2011, Britain's Prince William and Kate Middleton were
married in anopulent ceremonyat London's Westminster Abbey.
Ten yearsago:ThePalestinian parliament approved Mahmoud Abbas as prime minister, clearing the final obstacle to the
launch of a U.S.-backed "road map" to peace. Five yearsago:Democratic presidential hopeful Barack
Obamaangrilydenounced his former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, for what he termed "divisive and destruc-
tive" remarks on race. One yearago: Despite past
differences, President Barack Obama and former President
Bill Clinton began asummer fundraising blitz with an event in McLean, Va.Anout-of-con-
trol SUV plungedmorethan 50 feet off the side of a New
York City highway overpass and landed onthegrounds of the Bronx Zoo, killing all seven
people aboard, including three children.
BIRTHDAYS Disgraced financier Bernard Madoff is 75. Comedian Jerry
Seinfeld is 59. Actor Daniel Day-Lewis is 56. Actress Michelle Pfeiffer is 55. Actress
Uma Thurman is 43.Tennis player Andre Agassi is 43. — From wire reports
ting people play easy games or move a mouse around a screen. N euroSky, a comp a ny based in San Jose,Calif., recently released a Bluetooth-enabled headset that can monitor slight changes in brain waves and allow people to play conc entration-based games o n computers and smartphones. These includea zombie-chas-
ing game, archery and a game where you dodge bullets — all these apps use your mind as thejoystick. Another company, Emotiv, sells a headset that looks like a large alien hand and can read brain waves associated with thoughts, feelings and expressions. The device can be used to play Tetris-like games or search through Flickr photos by thinking about an emotion the person is feeling — like happy, or excited — r ather than searching by keywords. Muse, a lightweight, wireless headband, can engage with an app that "exercises the brain" by forcing people to concentrate on aspectsof a screen, almost like taking your mind to the gym. Car manufacturers are exploring technologies packed into the back of the seat that detect when people fall asleep while driving and rattle the steering wheel t o a w a k en them. But the products commercially available today will soon look archaic. "The current brain technologies are like trying to listen to a conversation in a football stadium from a blimp," said John Donoghue, a neuroscientist and director of the Brown Institute for Brain Science. "To really be able to understand what is going on with the brain today you need to surgically implant an array of sensors into the brain." In otherwords, to gain access to the brain, for now you still need a chip in your head. Last year, a project called
B(oomberg News
SAN FRANCISCO Chili peppers and migraines have traits in common, a fact scientists are exploiting to develop drugs capable of preventing the debilitating headache's painful symptoms before they attack. The link between how skin reacts when rubbed with chili oil and what happens in the brain during a migraine has attracted the world's largest biotechnol-
ogy company, Amgen Inc., and other companies seeking to create medicines for the more than 36 million Americans who suffer from migraines. Symptoms include nausea, vomiting, d i zziness and sensitivity to touch, yet treatment options are limited. Some pharmaceutical companies that have tried recently to develop migraine therapies, such as BristolMyers Squibb Co. and Merck & Co., have abandoned their efforts while the few drugs on the market are ineffective
for many people and carry G~DC 9
Emerging Technology Lab are testing tablets that can be controlled by your brain, using a cap that resembles a ski hat studded with monitoring electrodes, the MIT Technology Review, the science and technology journal of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, reported this month. The technology, often called a brain computer interface, was conceived to enable people with paralysis and other disabilities to i n teract w i th computers or control robotic
By Ryan Flinn
New YorkTimes NewsService
Eduardo Freire controls a toy helicopter with his mind using the a device made by Neurosky at the Game Developers Conference in
MarchinSan Francisco.Neurosky,acompany based inSanJose, Calif., recently released a Bluetooth-enabled headset that can monitor slight brain movements and allow people to play concentration-based games on computers and smartphones. BrainGatepioneered by Donoghue, enabled two people with full paralysis to use a robotic arm with a computer responding to their brain activity. One woman, who had not used her arms in 15 years, could grasp a bottleof coffee,serve herself a drink and then return the bottle to a table. All done by imagining the robotic arm's movements. But that chip inside the head could soon vanish, as scientists say we are poised to gain a much greater understanding of the brain, and, in turn, technologies that empower brain computer interfaces. An initiative by the Obama administration this year called the Brain Activity Map project, a decadelongresearch project,aims to build a comprehensive map of the brain. Miyoung Chun, a molecular biologist and vice president for science programs at the Kavli Foundation, is working on the project and although she said it would take a decade to completely map the brain, companies would be able to build new kinds of brain computer interface products within two
years. "The Brain Activity Map will give hardware companies a lot of new tools that will change how we use smartphones and tablets," Chun said. "It will revolutionize everything from robotic implants and neural prosthetics, to remote controls, which could be history in the foreseeablefuture when you can change your t elevision channel by thinking about it." There are some fears to be addressed. On the Muse website, an FAQ is devoted to convincing customers that the device cannot siphon thoughts
entists will have to determine if the person wants to search the Web for something in particular, or if he is just thinking about a random topic. "Just because I'm thinking about a steak medium-rare at a restaurant doesn't mean I actually want that for dinner," Donoghue said. "Just like G oogle glasses, which w i l l have to know if you're blinking because there is something in your eye or if you actually want to take a picture," brain computer interfaces will need to know if you're just thinking about that steak or really want to order it.
the dangerofserious side-effectsfor those at risk ofheat attack or stroke. " Migraines are an e x tremely common disorder, and it effects people really in the prime of their lives," Rob Lenz, who is leading Am-
gen's migraine drug development, said in an interview. Still, no drugs have been"developed specifically for the treatment of migraines," he said. "They were developed as anti-epileptics, or blood pressure lowering agents." That may soon change. Amgen, based in Thousand Oaks, Calif., and other biotechnology companies such as Alder Biopharmaceuticals
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from people's minds. Although we won't be flying planes with our minds anytime soon, surfing the Web on our smartphones mightbe closer. Donoghue of Brown said one of the current techniques used toread people'sbrains is called P300, in which a computer can determine which letter of the alphabet someone is thinking about based on the area of the brain that is activated when she sees a screen full of letters. But even when advances i n b r a i n-reading technologiesspeed up, there will be new challenges, as sci-
Inc.,Arteaus Therapeutics,and Labrys Biologics Inc., are targeting a chemical released during a migraine that carries a "pain" signal from nerve to nerve. By blocking a receptor from receiving themessage, these companies aim to create drugs that cut off developing migraines before symptoms start. Similar pain-signal transmission occurs when chili oil touches the skin. In that situation, the capsaicinin the pepper causes the body to release calcitonin gene-related peptides, or CGRP, leading to an increase in blood flow to the affected area. To show the Amgen drug works, researchers injected it under the skin of patients who had chili oil on their skin. The therapy blocked the CGRP that causes increased blood flow. "It sounds simple, but it's important — it tells us that our drug is getting into the body in relative concentrations that are generally well tolerated and that block CGRP," Lenz said. The new class of drugs under development are biologics, often delivered by injection, and are more complex, targeted and longer lasting in the body than the earlier failed attempts, Lenz sald. Amgen's AMG 334 and Alder's ALD 403 are being tested in the second of three clinical trials typically required for U.S. regulatory approval. "We'll have data on this before the year is out," Randall Schatzman, chief executive officer of closely held Alder, based in Bothell, Wash., said in an interview.
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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
Afamily onthe move After Soviet dictator Josef Stalin ousted nearly all Chechens in 1944, the grandparents of bombing suspects Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev settled in the town of Tokmok in Kyrgyzstan. The Brothers' parents, Anzor and Zubeidat, were born there in the 1960s and took their family on a circuitous route to and from the region. This chronology was pieced together from interviews and official documents. 1991 The family may have lived briefly in Chechnya.
Anzor Tsarnaev Zubei dat Tsarnaeva Tamertan Tsarnaev
Chechnya 2002 Some of the Tsarnaevs immigrate to the U.S., where Anzor applies for refugee asylum for his family. They settle in Cambridge, Mass.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
1906 Tamerlan is born in Kalmykia, a Russian republic that borders Dagestan. Anzor and Zubeidat met in the 1980s in college, where they studied law and married.
2003 Tamerlan and his two sisters join the family in Cambridge.
1993 Dzhokharis born in Kyrgyzstan, where the family moved to The family returns to Russia, settling in Dagestan.
1990
2000
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Kalmykia
Kyrgyzstan
Dagestan
Summer 2012------April 15-19, 2013 Zubeidat returns T a m erlan and to Dagestan and D z h okhar are reunites with Anzor, implicated in the according to Boston Marathon Anzor's sister. bomb i ngs. Tamerlan dies after a shootout. Dzhokhar is arrested.
201 2June 2010 Tamerlan marries Katherine Anzor becomes Russell of North Kingstown ill and returns to Dagestan. R.l. They move in with Tamerlan's parents in Cambridge and give birth to a daughter anuary 2012 Tamerlan visits the city of 2011 Makhachkala Anzor and in Dagestan, Zubeidat divorce apparently ' seeking his roots. y -
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United States
2010
2011
2012
2013
Source: Staff reports
The Washington Post
Tsarnaevs Continued from A1 Money grew scarce, and the family went on welfare. Zubeidat was accused of stealing from a department store. Anzor's business, never prosperous, faded. When the mother found solace in a deepening religiosity, the father, icy to such devotion and ill with cancer, went home to Dagestan, a place that was never really home to start with. And the boys underwent transformations so dramatic that some friends could barely recognize them: Tamerlan in his early 20s embraced a harsh, separatist brand of Islam and in a couple of years went from wishing his neighbor a merry Christmas to angrily attacking a Muslim grocer for advertising a T h anksgiving charity food collection. The change in Dzhokhar, no w a col l e ge sophomore, became apparent only in the past few weeks, and even thenseemed to be tacked on to his existing lifestyle rather than displacing it. Less than two weeks before the marathon, Dzhokhar, previously known to friends as a stoner always up for a beer and a blunt, told a college friend that he no longercared about his classes, that religion and God were the only true things in life. No manifesto accompanied the marathon bombings, and i nvestigators are o nl y n o w piecing together an accounting of the Tsarnaev brothers' path to terror. But in interviews with relatives, friends, neighbors and business associates in four states and three countries, a portrait emerges of a family in a losing battle against its people's troubled past, against its own internal dysfunction and discord, and against conflicting interpretations of its ancient faith.
into the night in the courtyard. The brothers were "just obnoxious teenage boys," Harel said, but the father, a short, beefy fellow, was a constant irritant who regularly threw his trash in neighbors' recycling bins despite being asked to stop, filled precious spaces in this parking-starved city with cars he was working on, and claimed a 10-minute loading zone as his all-day storage
space. The Salt Lake Tribune file photo
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, left, identified as a Suspect No. 1 in the Boston Marathon bombings, was an avid boxer, who trained without protection. A year after losing at the Golden Gloves championships in 2009, above, a new citizenship rule blocked him from competing.
restricted. The Chechens in Kyrgyzstan never had their own mosques, Alieva said. She doesn'trecall the Tsarnaevs going to mosque at all, though many Muslims prefer to pray at home. The Tsarnaevs, restless and homesick, briefly moved back to Chechnya in the early 1990s but soon returned to Tokmok, where Alieva recalled Tamerlan as a good student, both in academics at Gymnasium No. I and on the accordion at music school. As early as elementary school, Tamerlan was serious about boxing. He attended a sports academy and won several "degrees," or trophies. "He was always number one," she said. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the strictures of a totalitarian state vanished, and in the resulting vacuum, some young Chechen Muslims, brought up with stories about injustices inflicted on their people through the centuries, were drawn to a b l ack-and-white version of Islam imported via recorded lectures and sermons, mostly from Saudi Arabia. A Chechen upbringing But th e T s arnaevs were The Tsarnaevs are Chech- driven more by the quest for a ens, a Muslim people of the good living than by religious northern Caucasus, a moun- devotion, and when Ruslan imtainous region that has been migrated to the United States fought over through the cen- in 1995, he quickly built a life turies by the Russian, Persian that proved magnetic to the rest and Ottoman empires. In 1944, of his family. With a big house Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, on a cul-de-sac in Montgomery who suspected the Chechens of Village and a salary in 2005 of conspiring with the Nazis, ex- $216,000, plus stock options, pelled nearly the entire popula- according to Securities and tion of 400,000 to Central Asia; Exchange Commission filings, about 70,000 died. Many of Ruslan was a shining model of those who survived, including what an immigrant could do in the Tsarnaev clan, were forced America. 2,000 miles east to Kyrgyzstan. Seven years after Ruslan beT here, according to f a m- gan his U.S. adventure, Anzor ily members, the Tsarnaevs and family — they now had settled in a modest detached two sons and two daughters house in the small city of Tok- — left Central Asia and settled mok, where they and a small in Cambridge, where they had community of other Chechens friends. Within four days of held tight to memories of their landing in their new world, Anbeloved home. zor was busy fixing cars. He "Our nationality preserves told his brother he was making cultures and t r aditions, re- $10 an hour, even $100 a day gardless of where we l ive," — almost inconceivable money said Leila Alieva, 25, an ethnic to a newcomer from Russia. "He was excited," Ruslan reChechen schoolteacher who was a friend of Tamerlan Tsar- called. "He loved it." naev when they were children in Tokmok. "We're very strict Life in Cambridge about it." In Cambridge, both boys atChechen women generally tended CambridgeRindge and wear head scarves and eschew Latin School, a public school pants and short skirts. They with students from dozens of avoid being seen with men oth- countries. Classmates porer than relatives, and they are tray Tamerlan and Dzhokhar expected not to look a man in — known as "Jahar" — as fun the eyes. guys who soaked up American In Kyrgyzstan, the Tsar- pop culture and hung out with naevs raised cattle, goats and kids from sons of Harvard Unisheep. "We were pretty much versity alumni to grandsons of farmers in an urban area," said Portuguesefurnituremakers. Ruslan Tsarnaev, an uncle of Guive Rosen, 23, who was in Tamerlan and Dzhokhar who several classes with Tamerlan, lives in Montgomery Village, knew him as "a very goofy kid, Md., and goes by the name a gentle-giant sort of person.. Ruslan Tsarni. .. He liked to talk, always had Through more than seven his arm around your shouldecades of communist rule,re- ders." Rosen knew that Tamerligious practices were harshly lan was Muslim, but that was
by no means a defining part of his persona. "It was a very minute detail about him," Rosen said. "He didn't impose any religious things on you, never talked about it." When Uncle Ruslan visited Anzor's family in 2005, he chatted with Tamerlan about his future. The teenager talked about an engineering degree, perhaps followed by one in law. "He had everything in him for a happy life," Ruslan said. He and Tamerlan took a walk around the neighborhood, and the uncle was pleased to see
people all over happily greeting his nephew. A neighbor who lived next to the Tsarnaev family for five years said the older brother stood out in the early years for his flashy clothes and his devotion to fitness. "He used to be more dressed like a pimp, kind of Eurotrash," said the neighbor, who declined to be named, for fear of being associated with terrorists. "Trying to be fancy, but cheap looking" in pointy-toed shoes and matched track suits. The first t i m e K e ndrick Ball saw Tamerlan, at a fight in Lowell, Mass., three or four years ago, the boxer stood out in a way that could get someone hurt. "He had on these tight jeans and long trench coat,and a white shirt unbuttoned halfway down, and silver boots," said Ball, who runs a boxing club in Worcester. "I thought, either he's going to get picked on or he's a tough..." Ball watched Tamerlan box and decided it was the latter. He invited Tamerlan to spar at his club. Tamerlan accepted, but when he arrived to fight, he had no trainer and none of the gearboxers wear to protect sensitive parts. "No headgear, no mouthpiece and no cup," Ball said. When he offered to let Tamerlan borrow some, "He said, 'No, no, no. I don't need that stuff. I'm good.'" Tamerlan was an impressive fighter with a peculiar style: He kept his hands at his sides rather than up near his face to protect it. "He was cocky," Ball said. Even pitted against a top-ranked fighter, Tamerlan refused to don protective gear until after he was spitting up blood and holding his side. When he left his family's third-floor apartment on Norfolk Street, Tamerlan often
"No matter how many times people told him it wasn't right, he did it anyway," Harel said. "It was the difficult behavior of
abully." Anzor obtained cars in bad shape, made cosmetic fixes and then sold the vehicles for a profit. Sometimes, when he needed parts, he would show up at Nissenbaum's Auto, a nearby parts and repair shop. Several times, workers said, Anzor went into the parts yard to find a bracket or screw and emerged offering to pay a small sum for a handful of items. But employees would see his pockets stuffed. Confronted, they say, he admitted picking up a few other meager items.
Jahar'the joker' At Cambridge Rindge 8t: Latin, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was just Jahar — phonetically simpler, cooler, more in keeping with his new American persona. Jahar was 16 and learning to drive. He lusted after a blond classmate, and he would eventually boast to friends that he had made progress on that front. He studied just enough to fend off his parents, who by late in junior year were pressuring him to get organized with his college applications.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, known as Jahar, wrestled and had a reputation as a joker inhigh school.
creasingly fond
of other teenage rites: alc o hol and marijuana. Friends said Jahar's nights were spent blaring the rap of Drake and French Montana and driving around to quiet spots where the boys would roll blunts, laugh and talk about sex. "We smoked," said Peter Tenzin, Jahar's wrestling co-captain during senior year. "Ninety-five percent of our school smoked. People are looking down on that about him, but that's what we did." When Tenzin,now in college, thinks of Jahar, his mind fills with images of those long nights and so many fits of uncontrollable laughter. "Jahar was a joker," Tenzin said. Friends would tease Jahar, telling him that, given his
he would be seen around town in a refurbished green Honda Civic with signs of a hasty paint job. He drove with the windows down, even inthe New England tttdnter, music blaring, seat tilted
wayback.
A change inTamerlan If Jahar was not as studious as his parents wanted him to be, Tamerlan was the cause of more serious worries. His mother feared he was losing his way. In 2006, he started taking classes at Bunker Hill Community College, but over the next three years, he seemed more devoted to partying than
studying.
Zubeidat said she began to encourage her older son — who would come in late at night from parties smelling of smoke and alcohol — to take more of an interest in religion to give his life a healthier core. The two, mother and son, began to study the Koran together. In 2009, Uncle Ruslan heard that Tamerlan was no longer applying himself — academically or w it h w o rk. Ruslan called his nephew, and the c onversation quickly g r e w smoking and drinking, some tense. recent converts to Islam in his Continued on next page class were more Muslim than he was. "He'dcome back with a joke about blacks or Asians," Tenzin RTHWEs T said. aYou have to understand i CR O S S I N G i — identity is always an issue in Featured Business Cambridge." of theweek: When Jahar got his license,
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carried a bulky gym bag and headed to the yard between his building and the neighbor's. There, Tamerlan often spent afternoons doing dozens of pullups, using the arch of a grape trellis as his gym equipment. The Tsarnaev family was a neighborhood nuisance, said Rinat Harel, a longtime neighbor. She and other neighbors called police five years ago when the two brothers would hold loud parties and drink late
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MONDAY, APRIL 29,2013 •THE BULLETIN AS in search of his roots is beset by intrigue and contradiction. Makhachkala is Muslim but known for its cognac. Weekly shootouts produce a h eavy murder toll. Many Dagestanis are turning toward Salafism, a strict fundamentalist sect. Police gun down fundamentalists they say have turned militant. Police are methodically blown up with makeshift bombs. H abib M a g o medov, a member o f t h e Da g estan government's a n ti-terrorism committee, sai d T a m erlan did not come to official attention during his stay. "Maybe he is unusual in America," he said, "but there are many such
young people in Dagestan. Patimat Suleimanova via The Associated Press
In thIs Image taken from a vIdeo, an undated family photo provided by an aunt of the Boston Marathon bombing suspects, shows, from left, Anzor Tsarnaev, Zubeidat Tsarnaev holding baby Tamerlan Tsarnaev, and Anzor's brother Mukhammad Tsarnaev. Zubeidat Tsarnaev is drawing increased attention after U.S. officials say RussIan authorItIes Intercepted her phone calls, including one In whIch she vaguely dIscussed jihad with her elder son, and another, In whIch she was recorded talking to someone in southern Russia who is under FBI investigation in an unrelated case.
From prevlous page "What's up with you?" Ruslan recalled asking. Tamerlan responded in reli-
Homeland Security Committee said Sunday that the FBI is investigating in the United States and overseas to determine whether the
gious phrases, speaking about
suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing received training that
following God's will. "Inshallah," he kept saying. "God willing." To Ruslan, the term s eemed superficial, as if h i s nephew were reciting something learned by rote. "It's very simple," Ruslan told Tamerlan. "To be a good Muslim, start being useful to yourself" and your family. "No, you're forgetting about what is most important," Tamerlan replied. "The will of God." Another uncle, Alvi Tsarni, who also lives in Montgomery County, Md., heard about the tension between Tamerlan and Ruslan and called his nephew. "Why are you d oing this?" Alvi asked. "Your uncle is always helping you." Tamerlan responded aggressively, challenged Alvi to come to Massachusetts and said, "If you're so brave, we will fight." "Tamerlan, you're nobody to me from now on," Alvi replied. Meanwhile, Ruslan called a family friend in the Cambridge area and asked what was going on with Tamerlan. The friend told him about a young Armenian A m erican man, a recent convert to Islam who had befriended Tamerlan. "Tamerlan is absolutely occupied by him," the friend told Ruslan. "He's not listening to his own father." Years later, Ruslan spoke to another relative who had met the Armenian, whom he knew only as "Misha," at the Norfolk Street apartment in 2007. Misha was in the kitchen, talking to Tamerlan, deep into the night. After midnight, Anzor grew frustratedand asked his wife, "What is this person doing in our house so late?" "He's teaching wise things to your son," Zubeidat said.
helped them carry out the attack. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, is charged with joining with his older
Tamerlanrnarries Katherine Russell grew up in a sprawling house on a quiet cul-de-sac in North Kingstown, R.I., not far from the ocean. Her pedigree was New England blue blood: Her grandfather and father both attended Phillips Exeter Academy and Yale University. Her father is an emergency room doctor. Her mother is a nurse and social worker. Tall and fit, with long auburn hair, Russell graduated in 2007 from high school and soon left home to attend Suffolk University in Boston. She was interested in the Peace Corps and excelled at drawing, winning a state competition. In Boston, Russell met Tamerlan at a nightclub, according to her attorney. "She really fell for this guy," said a family intimate who declinedtobe named, because the Russells have told friends and relations not to give interviews. "He was tall, he spoke other languages, he was handsome and worldly — and that was that." In 2009, Tamerlan was living with another woman, who one day called 911 to report that he had beaten her. "Yes, I slapped her," Tamerlan told police. The case was laterdismissed for lack of prosecution. In 2010, when Tamerlan and Russell announced that they would marry, there was considerable consternation in the Russell family, which is nominally Christian. Aunts and uncles did notmuch care for Tamerlan, according to the person close to the family, as well as a relative. Few, if any, extended family members attended the wedding. Tamerlan Anzorovich Tsarnaevmarried Katherine Osborn Russell, who was soon to be the mother of their baby daughter,
InVBSilgatlOn COntlnllBS —Thechairman of the House
brother, Tamerlan, who's nowdead, in setting off the shrapnelpackedpressure-cookerbombs. Thebombs weretriggered by a remote detonator of the kind used in remote-control toys, U.S.
officials have said. U.S. officials investigating the bombings have told The Associated Press that so far there is no evidence to date of a wider plot,
including training, direction or funding for the attacks. "I think given the level of sophistication of this device, the fact that the pressure cooker is a signature device that goes back to
Pakistan, Afghanistan, leads me tobelieve — andthe waythey handled these devices and the tradecraft ...— that there was a trainer and the question is where is that trainer or trainers," said
Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, on "FoxNewsSunday." — The Associated Press
on June 21, 2010, in the Masjid al-Qur'aan mosque in Boston. Tamerlan is not known to have hadanyprevious orsubsequent ties to the mosque. But the wedding made some people notice that he was changing in important ways. Russell's family was startled when she dropped out of college, converted to Islam and began to cover her hair, legs and arms in a show of Muslim modesty. On Norfolk Street, neighbors noticed Russell chatting in the courtyard with other young women, wearing hijab, speaking in Russian or Arabic. A neighbor said Russell spoke directly to him only once. "I actually didn't think she was American," he said. "Her English was very good, but it seemed she spoke it very slow." Marriage changed Tamerlan, as welL Hedropped the flashy clothes, a change in look so drastic that his next-door neighbor at first thought the tall, athletic son had left town. Tamerlan now came out in the street in raggedy sweatpants and ratty T-shirts, sometimes with a bathrobe over his clothes. "I thought a different person had moved in," the neighbor
Ailina, 22, told reporters that she had been out of touch with
her family. Back in Cambridge, Tamerlan and Russell received welfare payments, just as his parents had in earlier years, the Massachusetts Health and Human
Services agency confirmed.
Finances were tight. Their landlord, Joanna Herlihy, who lived belowthem, tried to get the Tsarnaevs to move out, according to two neighbors. Zubeidat sentin rentchecks each month, even aftershe moved back to Russia. But Herlihy had tired of their constant bickering that the rent was too high, neighbors said. And in late January, the Tsarnaevs lost the Section 8 housing voucher that had subsidized their rent, according to someone in local government familiar with the case. The only steady income at the Norfolk Street apartment came from Russell, who, according to her family's attorney, worked 70 to 80 hours a week as a home health aide while Tamerlan stayed home with their daughter. "He wasn't really willing to work," the Russell family intimate said. "That in my mind made him an unsuitable husSBld. band. She worked like crazy for But T a merlan r e m ained him." friendly toward his shy neighbor, approaching him just after Jahar goes to college Christmas as they dumpedtheir After high school, Jahar trash. Tamerlan asked how his enrolled at the University of neighbor's holiday had been, Massachusetts campus at whereupon the neighbor asked Dartmouth, an hour south of about Tamerlan's Christmas. Boston. "Oh, no, I d on't celebrate He started in 2011 as an Christmas," Tamerlan said. Af- e ngineering s t udent, t h e n ter a pause, he added, "And you switched to b i ology, telling wouldn't either if you knew the f riends he wanted to b e a real truth." doctor. But Jahar's grades were Afamily unravels poor, and several people who First, his wife, who once knew him said he made no seteased her hair and wore dark cret about regularly smoking eyeliner, turned to religion and pot. "He was chill — I g u ess donned dark clothes and the hijab. Then his son, a boxer like that's kind of c liche to say himself, immersed himself in Is- about someone who smokes, lam and quit boxing. Anzor was right?" said Wiktor Tomkiecrushed, according to relatives. wicz, 20, a junior civil engiIn 2011, Anzor and Zubeidat neering major who met Jahar split up just a few months before at lunch with friends a few their 25th wedding anniversary. days before the bombings. Their divorce filing cites "an irFor atime, Jahar played on retrievable breakdown of the an intramural soccer team m arriage." The couple said they composed of students involved had no property, no pension, no with t h e c a m pus M u slim retirement fund. Student Association, accordAnzor, diagnosed with can- ing to Facebook groups and cer, returnedto Dagestan, east of teammates. Chechnya in Russia, saying that Jahar lived in the Pine Dale if he was going to die, he wanted dorm with a r oommate, acit to be in Russia. Zubeidat was cording to friends. Facebook, arrestedlastyear, accused of I nstagram and T w itter a r e trying to steal up to nine dresses filled with photos of him hangfrom a Lord & Taylor store in ing out at parties. Natick, Mass. The couple's two daughters, Bella and A i lina, Tamerlan's search for his moved to New Jersey, where roots Bella was arrested in DecemIn January 2012, Tamerlan ber, along with a man named arrived in Dagestan for what Ahmad Khalil, and charged would be a six-month visit. He with possession of and intent saw hisfather and other relato distribute marijuana. A man tives — his mother was still in who answered the intercom at Cambridge then; she returned Bella's apartment said she had to Dagestan in the summer moved out several months ago. and recently reconciled with From behind the door of her Anzor. apartment in West New York, The city Tamerlan came to
Here he would be a lot like many others." Accounts of Tamerlan's time in Dagestan remain spotty. His father told reporters that the son hung out, slept late, helped Anzor fix up his apartment, and said he was going to the gym. His great-aunt, Patimat Suleimanova, said Tamerlan prayed five times a day and sometimes talked to her about Islam. According to the father, Tamerlan went to a Salafist mosque, where he would have heard speakers rail against the West's treatment of Muslims. But if Tamerlan's radicalization was cemented or enhanced during his stay, evidence of that has not emerged. What is known is that Tamerlan came home from Dagestan with a full, dark beard, according to two neighbors. Within a few weeks of his return, he was beardless again. His passions,too, seemed to slip back and forth between his secular American world and his newfound devotion to the sermons of a hard-line Australian sheik and videos of lectures such as "The End is Near" and "Your Last Day on Earth." On YouTube, Tamerlan documented his transformation, his tastes morphing from hip-hop to songs such as "I Will Dedicate My Life to Jihad." Back in Cambridge, in November and again in January, Tamerlan disrupted sermons at the Islamic Society of Boston mosque a few blocks from the Tsarnaev apartment. Ismail Fenni, a volunteer imam, s aid Tamerlan h e ckled a speaker who preached that congregation members should celebrate the American holidays of Thanksgiving and July Fourth just as they marked the birthday of the prophet Muhammad. When Tamerlan yelled that no good Muslim would do such a thing, members told him to quiet down. The speaker tried to reason with Tamerlan afterward but made no headway. Two months later, Tamerlan yelled at a speaker who preached that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was a model to all people of faith. Tamerlan "took offense at that" and yelled that King represented American values, said Yusefi Vali, a mosque official. "But t he c o n g regation s i m p ly wouldn't tolerate him saying that, his intolerance." Again, members sought to calm Tamerlan, who this time grew quiet and stayed that way on his return visits over
the past few months.
harassing my neighbors." The brothers laughed it off and continued on their way.
Whither jahar? If Tamerlan's transformation was gradual, Jahar's path seems to have taken a turn only very recently. What actually happened between the brothers remains amystery: Didthe older brotherimpress hisyounger sibling into a violent strain of Islam in which the West was the cause of their sense of alienation? Did the brothers independently fall into the orbit of radical preachers? Did the family's troubles overwhelm the sons just as their parents left them and abandoned their adopted country? If there were hints along the way, they were scant. In 2010, Jahar urged a fellow Muslim classmate to join a little-known prayer group he attended in the empty classroom of a Moroccan math teacher, according to a student who participated and another who w itnessed the prayers several times. The lunchtime prayers lasted only a couple of months, and then Jahar returned to being the funloving stoner they had always known. Less than two weeks before the Boston Marathon, Jahar told a friend from both high school and college that he no longer cared about his classes and that religion and God were the only true things in life, according to a close friend of both men. Sanjaya Lamichhane, 22, said the mutual friend had recently had a surprising conversation with Jahar on the Dartmouth campus in which Jahar said that "it didn't matter if you are a doctor or engineer — everybody cheats... With religion and God, you can't cheat." But Jahar s t il l b e haved like Jahar and f r iends neither saw nor talked about any transformation. Near dark the night before the marathon, Jahar and Tamerlan walked down Norfolk Street carrying a pizza box, said Malisha Pitt, 42, who was sitting on her stoop. One of her relatives yelled out for a slice, and Pitt hushed him: "Stop
7ragedies happen' Onthe Tuesdaynight afterthe bombing, sometime after 8p.m., Jahar's friend Zach Bettencourt was at the gym and noticed Jahar sitting on a bench, listening to his iPod. Bettencourt brought up the bombings. "Tragedies happen," Jahar said. "Tragedies happen like this all the time." Two days later, just hours before the shootout that would end Tamerlan's life, he called Alvi, his estrangeduncle.Tamerlan said nothing about the bombings, Alvi recalled, but wanted to apologize. "I want to have an uncle, and I love you," Tamerlan said. "I love you, too, Tamerlan," Alvi replied. "Now we can just
be a family." Tamerlanasked forhis uncle Ruslan's number. "I just want to make peace with him," the nephew said. Ruslan said Tamerlan never called. Now Ruslan looks forward to visiting his nephew in prison; he would tell Jahar that there is still time for evil and hate to leave his body, that he is still loved. Ruslan believes his family is not so different from many others. "We all think we know each other," he said, "but in fact we don't." — This story was reported by Washington Post staff writers Aaron C. Davis, Jenna Johnson and Carol D. Leonnig In Boston, Tara Bahrampourin Massachusetts and New Jersey, Dan Morsein Washington, Michael S. Rosenu ald in Rhode lsland, Will Englund in Moscow,Kathy Lally in Dagestan and Stephanie McCrummen in Toronto.1t was written by Post staff writer Marc Fisher.
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
Prison class Continued from A1 Tucker Bauman, the welding instructor, says that when Assuman first showed up to class, he was "very young, very quiet." "He didn't seem to h ave much confidence in himself, but h e' s s m a rt," B a uman added. He threw himself into the class, wanting to learn every piece of equipment, to master every technique. Soon, he was enrolling in every class he could get into. He took a writing class and attended the c reative w r iting workshops offered by the Nature of Words. He joined Toastmasters to improve his public speaking. He studied math and blueprint reading. When the entrepreneurship c lass wa s a n n ounced, h e signed on right away. Maureen Quinn teaches at Central Oregon Community College's Small Business Development Center, in B end. Whenshewasfirstapproached about being one of three business instructors at the Madras prison, she felt nervous.
"People can see you from the time you wake up until you go to sleep.... It teaches you how to be honest with yourself. Living in a place like
this, if you say you're going to do something, everyone hears you say it, so you'd better do it." — Kwajo Assuman, inmate "You really feel like you're helpingthem because they are so eager to make this dream come true," she said. "Whatever it takes for this business, they're willing to do it."
shifted as she got to k n ow some of the inmates. "When I left, I felt like, in many respects,they are the forgotten ones. Because the attitude for most folks is, 'They did the crime, so they must pay.' But I see a lot of them who were very young when they were incarcerated," she said, "and they have grown up in there." Next year, Assuman will be released into a culture — and an economy — very different from what he left behind in 2006. When A ssuman e ntered prison, the iPhone did not exist. Touchscreens were rare. Facebook was open only to students at select colleges and high schools. "Social media" was not a household term, or a business requirement. Nobody spoke of tweets or apps. U nemployment wa s l e s s than 5.5 percent and real estatewas considered a sure bet. Today, unemployment is 8.2 percentand foreclosed homes and shortsales are the norm. To navigate this strange n ew world, A ssuman w i l l turn to the five-year plan he crafted alongside his business plan in the entrepreneurship class. He will begin by enrolling in C l ackamas Community College and working toward a degree in mechanical
chance to rub elbows with successful business owners. "It gave me insight into how entrepreneurs think, how successful people think," he said. It was reassuring, he said, to hear all of the instructors share 'Timeto make a change' stories of rejection. He had long For some, prison is just a imagined himself getting out of temporary inconvenience, a prison and hearing "No," "no," u t> pause before returning to a life no "Hearing them say that they of crime. In the 2'/ years he's spent at Deer Ridge Correction- got told 'no,' too, that really al Institution, Assuman says he helped," he said. has seen certain inmates get Now that he's less than a out and come back five or six year from his release, Assuman times. said he's starting to get nervous For others, prison is a seismic about being turned out into the jolt that forces them to rethink world. "It's just not a feeling that I'm their identities. "You're basically like a walk- used to," he said. In prison, "you ing billboard," Assuman said. have to try to suppress your "People can see you from the emotions to get through... the time you wake up until you go routine, the monotony of doing to sleep.... It teaches you how the same thing every day." to be honest with yourself. LivHe is focused on preparing ing in a place like this, if you say for college, which he views as you're going to do something, the first step toward starting "Many timesyou everyone hears you say it, so his own business. "My biggest challenge will you'd better do it." teach a class and According to Yeager, most be to surround myself with people show up and inmates who takeclasses are the type of people that I want engineering. they aren't prepared. highly motivated students. to become. I think you take on Assuman says that before "The guys that are here re- the characteristics of the people he took theentrepreneurship That was never the alize that it's time to make a around you," he said. class, he had a hard time becase here." change," she said. Assuman knows that it won't lieving he could launch his More than 200 inmates at a be easyto step out of prison and own business. — Maureen Quinn, "It wa s r e ally e ye-openCOCC teacher/prison instructor given time are enrolled in adult launch a successful business. basic education or a general ed- But that doesn't mean it can't ing how unbiased the people ucation diploma program. Ten happen. were who came in here (for the at a time are enrolled in weldclass)," Assuman says. "They "I had no idea who these men ing,an intensive course whose just came in and were really "A lot of people are would be," she said. graduates are halfway toward nice. They handed out their At a pr i so n o r i entation, earning an associate's degree. business cards. I had been really fascinated by Quinn was bombarded with Each class aims to build new imagining the stigma of getrules — don't wear scarves, skills that will help an inmate's our stories. And a lot ting out of prison, (and) they jewelry or denim, don't share chances of supporting himself of people are really really took that off." any personal information with afterhe's released. Even infor- fascinated by the They were not only kind to the prisoners — that made her mal classes can become critical the inmates, Assuman noticed, redemption concept." they were something else, too: even more nervous. lifelines, later on. She asked the i n structor For example, inmates who — Assuman curious about them. "A lot of people are really whether there would be any get involved in Toastmasters c onvicted murderers in h e r while incarcerated and then fascinated by our stories," he class. stay involved upon release have "It ali depends, I think, said. "And a lot of people are "He said, 'I don't know, but a 0 percent recidivism rate, on how sincere itis really fascinated by the reit's possible,"' she said. according to Yeager. In other demption concept." After the first class, however, words, nobody who has stayed and how good the This encouraged Assuman Quinn's fears evaporated. with the public speaking pro- product is. It isn't the further. There is a certain type "They were just so respectful gram has gone back to prison. of person, he realized, who story that makes (my and had such good manners," The entrepreneurship class go out of his or her way bread) taste good and would she said. "Better manners than was first funded by a grant to help an ex-felon start anew. most people out here — they from the nonprofit Partnership healthy." And so, in a sense, perhaps his called everyone 'Mister' or to End Poverty. The hope was criminal past could actually — Dave Dahl, be an asset. 'Miss.'" that some small business trainDave's Killer Bread ing could help those who, upon Dahl, of Dave's Killer Bread, Howto launch abusiness release from prison, struggle to believes it could be. "In my experience, obviousFor the most part, Quinn said find work. this class was identical to othCalvin Haskins signed up ly it has been an advantage. A success story ers she has taught. for the entrepreneurship class, But it al l depends, I think, She began by emphasizing "looking for a new lifestyle, beDave Dahl was a drug ad- on how sincere it is and how the difference between being cause my criminalcareer was dict who served four prison good the product is," he said. self-employed and being an en- not too prosperous," he said. sentences before rejuvenat- "It isn't the story that makes trepreneur. The latter involves Haskins, 55 , r e c ognized ing his family's bakery and (my bread) taste good and constantly working on a busi- that some of the skills he had launching a new line of sliced healthy." ness, but not necessarily work- learned on the streets might bread called "Dave's Killer Dahl said that because of ing in the business, Quinn said. come in handy in class and, Bread." The Portland-based his company name, he is often During the class, each inmate someday, in starting a business. company has earned as much asked whether he's a murderworked on a business plan un- For example, the instructors fame for Dave's notoriety as er. He is not. "It never even occurred to der the guidance of Quinn and told him that you can't just sell for its hearty product. two other instructors. investorson a business idea, A summary of Dave's story me that people would think Some had business ideas that you have to sell yourself, too. appears on each bag of bread that. I mean, the bread is kill"As a criminal, that's what the company sells. A more de- er," he said. "But the vast maseemed simple and familiar: an auto mechanic shop, for ex- you do," he said. "I mean, I've tailed version and a video ap- jority of people love the name ample. Others had more ambi- been doing business all my life. pear on the company's website, and it has been helpful betious ideas, such as developing In the criminal world, you do www.daveskillerbread.com. cause it's edgy, you know." "And telling my story was software and projection equip- business, too." Dahl said that h e d i dn't ment for virtual bowhunting Haskins was encouraged to have the option of taking an something that seemed natucompetitions. learn that every community entrepreneurship class in pris- ral and seemed necessary," As with any of her classes, college in the country has a on but he thinks it would have Dahl continued. "I was proud Quinn said some of the plans Small Business Development helped. of my t r a nsformation (and "I support giving inmates thought,) people need to hear seemed realistic, while others Center like the one Quinn runs did not. Rather than critique the in Bend. anything that will give them about it because it could make proposals, Quinn tried to enJohn Fine said it was helpful skills and help their transition a difference." courage the inmates to analyze just to identify a goal and the (out of prison) and make their Assuman isn't kidding himthe feasibility themselves. As steps needed to achieve it. lives more fulfilling," he said. self. He knows that he faces a "Despite ... the bad situausual, many students altered long, uphill battle. But he also their business ideas during the tion," he said of his incarcera- Looking ahead knows that a happy, law-abideight-week class. tion, "I don't want this to be a Of course, all of the Deer ing future is possible. In fact, The inmates stood out from waste of time." Ridge Correctional Institution some people are even rooting other students, however, intheir Once theygot to know each inmates, including Assuman, for him to achieve it. "Everybody," he said, "loves preparation and enthusiasm. other, classmates said they felt have committed crimes. But "Many times you teach a comfortable throwing out ideas inside the prison, where the an underdog." class and people show up and and offeringfeedback. The en- v ictims are nowhere to b e — Reporter: 541-617-7836; they aren't prepared," Quinn vironment remained positive seen, Quinn's perspective lraff@bendbulletin.com. said. "That was never the case and encouraging. here." Assuman saidthe instructors Quinn said she spent count- drove home the importance of less hours conducting research networking. The person you on behalf of the inmates, who chat with in the grocery checkdo not have Internet access to out line, they said, could turn ' ' 'Weber gives a vh<fual lifetime of tasty gr illing look up basic things such as out to be a banker willing to ex.C heap stuff destined for'o londfilj. Lasting" ' real estate rental prices. tend you a business loan. ::: quality is always the best value..;, "I had reams — l i terally, reams — of paper that I would 'I wouldbet onhim' bring up t h ere. Because I After learning to weld, Ascouldn't send them a link, so s uman grew i n t erested i n I had to actually download opening a machine shop. With everything and print it out," Quinn's help, he researched she said. "And they were so other machine shops in the appreciative." Portland area and identified I At the end of the course, busi- ways that he could make his ness leadersfrom around the own business stand out from community came in and the the competition. students held an event similar He plans to open a machine to the ABC show"Shark Tank." shop that specializes in manuEach inmate gave a five- or six- facturing high precision parts, minute pitch for his business with a special emphasis on cusidea. The leaders listened and tomer service. "I would bet on him," Quinn gave feedback asifthey were considering investing in each said of Assuman. "I would bet business. that he will be one of the suc22ZSEReed Market Road 541-388-002Z "";;, By the time it w a s over, cessful ones." hfon-Snt 9:30-5'30 -: Sun 10-5 -:,:,...~~r:„ : Quinn and the others were eaFor Assuman, one of the most PatiokVorldBehd.com ger to teach more inmates. valuable parts of the class was a
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IN FOCUS:SUSPICIOUS LETTERS
The longtime feud believed to be behind the ricin By Matthew Teague
wantedtoframehim. Itwouldn't be the first skirmish between Tupelo's most famous son and a karate man. In 1973, several men climbed on stage during a concert by Presley. The singer felt threatened and fought the
Los Angeles Times
TUPELO, Miss.— Federal agents of all sorts invaded northeast Mississippiseveral days ago, on a mission: Find the man who sent a poisonlaced letter to the president. But the United States government quickly found itself entangled, once again, in a misunderstood land dominated by squabbling tribes and petty vengeances. Agents first arrested an Elvis Presley impersonator, released him, and then on Saturday arrested his nemesis, a k a rate instructor. Gradually investigators concludedthatwhat theyhad descended upon was probably less about the president — or the U.S. senator and retired state judge who also received letters — than a serious case of indigenous bickering. That shocks no one here. "Tupelo is a kaleidoscope," s aid s o c iologist Ma r k F ranks, who grew up i n nearby Booneville. There are true geniuses walking the streets of Tupelo, he said, and incredibly wealthy, generouspeople. Butalso,"every wall-eyed uncle and 'yard cousin' — just referencing the local pejorative — makes it into Tupelo, Miss. It creates a peculiar culture." So people in the area were not surprised when the FBI, Secret Service and other agencies showed up looking for whomever sent letters laced with ricin to President Obama, Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and retired Mississippi Judge Sadie Holland. The a g e nt s qu i c k ly nabbed a man in nearby Corinth named Paul Kevin Curtis. He worked as an Elvis impersonator, spun wild conspiracies about the local hospital selling body parts and apparently signed the p oisoned letters with h i s own initials. But the FBI f ound no evidence of ricin in Curtis' home and no incriminating research on his computer. They decided he hadn't sent the letters after all and released him Tuesday. Within hours agents had raided the home of his archenemy: J. Everett Dutschke, karate instructor. Curtis claimed Dutschke
men, alongside his bodyguards. He felt sure the men had been sent by estranged wife Priscilla's new boyfriend, his own nemesis: Mike Stone, karate instructor. Curtis, 45, and Dutschke, 41, have intertwined for years, feuding over small-town grievances as l a byrinthine a nd intricate as any global conspiracy. They met in 2005, and were friendly for a time. When he wasn't t eaching k arate, Dutschke worked for Curtis' brother Jack at an insurance office. Both men knew Wicker, and both had connections to the 80-year-old Holland. It's unclear at what moment the hostilities began, but a few years ago Curtis, who worked at the local hospital, developed a theory that doctors were harvesting organs to sell on the black market. He wrote a book about it called "Missing Pieces." Dutschke published a l o cal newsletter at the time, and after some negotiations apparently rejected Curtis' writings. There was the question, too, of who had the bigger intellect. Dutschke was a member of Mensa, the club for people with high IQs. A few years ago, Curtis posted a fake Mensa certificate on h i s F acebook page, which sent D utschke into a rage. "I threatened to sue him for fraud for posting a Mensa certificate that is a lie," Dutschke told Tupelo's newspaper, the Daily Journal. "That certificate is a lie." "Aw, yeah. I don't know why Kevin did that," Curtis' father, Jack, said recently in Cleveland, Miss. "These boys were just after each other."
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MONDAY, APRIL 29,2013 • THE BULLETIN
A7
LOCAL 4 T A TE EVENT CALENDAR TODAY COWBOY JUNKIES:The
Canadian country folk-rock band performs; $36.50-$47.50 plus fees;7p.m.,doorsopenat6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 orwww. towertheatre.org. TUESDAY "CASCADIA: THE EARTHQUAKE
IN YOUR FUTURE?":OpenHouse and lecture byDonWebber, the
emergencyservices managerfor the DeschutesCounty Sheriff's Office, on thepotential for a large earthquakeoff the OregonCoast; free; 2 p.m., doors openat1:30 p.m.; BendSeniorCenter,1600S.E Reed Market Road;541-617-4663, ruthh©uoregon.edu orhttp://osher. uoregon.edu.
uners o;ano er a enin By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
A man was shot dead while rabbit hunting with his friends early Sunday afternoon near the Crooked River National Grassland south of Madras. Jefferson County Sheriff Jim Adkins said detectives are investigating the incident and questioned one of the men from the hunting group. The man fled the scene of the shooting, and deputies
tracked him down at Boyce Corral, a nearby site where locals ride horses and hold dog trials. The man was unarmed when deputies found him. "He's up at the Sheriff's Office being interviewed by my detectives," Adkins said. The Central Oregon Major Crime Team and Oregon State Police are assisting with the investigation. The Sheriff's Office would not release the names of the men involved.
"All the people involved are local boys," Adkins said Sunday afternoon. "They were out rabbit hunting, something happened. One boy shot the other boy, fled the scene, was arrested by my deputies about a mile away." Adkins described the scene as a "local shooting area" on South Adams Drive, near Southeast Holly Lane. "There were several people out here rabbit hunting," Adkins said. Someone at the scene called
9-1-1 around 1:30 p.m. Dispatchers initially called for an air ambulance but canceled it after law enforcement confirmed the victim was dead at the scene, Adkins said. Adkins said he believed the men in the shooting group were in their early 20s, and there were roughly half a dozen of them. "As far as I could tell, they were friends," Adkins said. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrudC<bendbulletin.com
MAY 21 ELECTION Events t „'' l
Another spring election is justahead.
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The May 21ballot carries
e'
contests extremely close to '
home, from school boards to parks and recreation directors
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to water districts. Bond mea-
rixy
sures andtax levies for new school buildings, fire equipment and emergency dispatch services are also atstake. The Bulletin will publish a dailycalendar of election-related events, including candiJoe Kline / The Bulletin
Framed by branches, Charmane Powers, of Bend, is among a group of hikers making their way through the Whychus Canyon Preserve outside of Sisters on Sunday. Deschutes Land Trust offers hikes with volunteers, who explain the area and the mission.
reservin C US: i eremin sw
off reception with presentation by KambizGhaneaBassiri on "Muslim Journeysandthe Making of American History"; free; 3:305:30 p.m., presentation at 4:30 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way,Bend;541-383-7412. STEP INTOSPRING FASHION
CELEBRATION:With a Mexican buffet, silent auction, live music and entertainment andraffle; sponsored
by Sisters HispanicCoalition; $20, $10ages12and under; 6-9 pm.; FivePine Lodge 8Conference Center,1021 Desperado Trail, Sisters; 541-549-2091 or www. sistersrecreation.com. THE UGLY DUCKLING:An
adaptation of HansChristian Andersen's tale about ahomely bird born deaf, signedandspoken simultaneously; recommended for ages 5-10;$12, $8children12 and younger, plus fees; 6p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. "SHOOTING STAR":Cascades Theatrical Companypresents the romantic comedyabout two former lovers whoreunite in an airport; $24, $18seniors, $12 students; 7:30p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. "WAIT WAIT ... DON'T TELL
ME! LIVE":A live screening of the National Public Radio news quiz hosted byPeter Sagal, with scorekeeperCarl Kasell; $22; 8 p.m.; Regal OldMill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347 or www. fathomevents.com.
in support from neighbor-
I
"BRIDGING CULTURES: MUSLIM jOURNEYS":Kick-
THURSDAY CINCO DE MAYO
flames, and dispatchers called
— Bulletin staff report
WEDNESDAY "IT'S IN THE BAG" LECTURE
humorist, author and showman performs aone-man comedy show kicking off National Preservation Month; $14 plus $1Historic Theatre Restoration fee; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.
the time of the fire. Wind whippedup the
a total loss, according to the press release.
internationaleventto promote awareness ofsexualassault; free; 7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,Campus Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7412.
CHARLES PHOENIX BIG RETRO SLIDE SHOW:The
burning through the homeand a garage, according to a press release from RedmondFire & Rescue. Noone was homeat
Firefighters remained onscene to deal with "smoldering material," but the home and its contents — with an estimated value of $450,000 — were
TAKE BACK THE NIGHT:An
Theatrical Companypresents the romantic comedyabout two former lovers who reunite in an airport; $24, $18seniors, $12 students; 7:30p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org.
ly after 10 a.m. When firefighters arrived, they found flames
to the scene, aswell as Central Electric Co-op.
A screening of the documentary film by MichaelO'Rourkeand presentation by Bill Murlin; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 orwww. mcmenamins.com. "SHOOTING STAR":Cascades Theatrical Companypresents Steven Dietz's romantic comedy; proceeds benefit Soroptimist International of Bend;$25; 7:30p.m.,reception6:30p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood Ave.,Bend; 541-3888505 or www.sibend.org.
"SHOOTING STAR":Cascades
Redmond Sundaymorning. The fire was reported short-
Sheriff's Office all responded
"ROLL ON, COLUMBIA: WOODY GUTHRIE AND THE COLUMBIA RIVER SONGS":
and environmental anthropologist Lucy Marino explores whatmakes Alaska irresistible; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3121033 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar.
stroyed a home northwest of
Rescue, the OregonState Police and DeschutesCounty
by Bob Boydabout skills and tools used in Alaska; free; 6 p.m.; DowntownBendPublic Library, Brooks Room,601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or lizgO deschuteslibrary.org.
THE IRRESISTIBLE PULLOF THE LAST FRONTIER:Cultural
Redmond Fire & Rescue is
investigating a blazethat de-
Rural Fire Protection District, Crooked River Ranch Fire &
FRONTIER":A presentation
SHOW:Afashion show, with live and silent auctions andfood; proceeds benefit BendArea Habitat for Humanity; $30 inadvance,$35 at the door; 5 p.m.auction, 6 p.m. show; BendGolfand Country Club, 61045 Country ClubDrive; 541815-2400, realestate©myragirod. com or www.centraloregonwcr.org.
Fire destroyshome near Redmond
ing agencies: TheCloverdale
MAKING A LIFEON THE "LAST
SERIES:Michael Giamellaro presents the lecture "Science: Out of the Classroom and lnto the Real World"; free; noon-1 p.m.; OSU-CascadesCampus,Cascades Hall, 2600 N.W .CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-322-3100, info@osucasades. edu or www.osucascades. edu/lunchtime-lectures.
BRIEFING
By Hillary Borrud
Whychus Canyon Preserve
The Bulletin
The trail was dry and dusty as a group of hikers set out Sunday morning to explore the Deschutes Land Trust's Whychus Canyon Preserve. Despitethe apparently parched earth,there were abundant signs of spring along the path. Sand lilies, gold stars and creeping phlox covered patches of ground alongside the trail. Mary Crow, a retired librarian who lives in Sisters, called out the names of some of the wildflowers as the group meandered through the preserve. Crow is a volunteer naturalist who leads hikes for the land trust and on Sunday, she led roughly a dozen people on the hike through the Whychus Canyon Preserve. Crow said her goal is to inspire others to be good stewards of the environment. The Deschutes Land Trust purchased the 450-acre parcel in 2010. In 2012, the organization completed a loop trail that is roughly 5 miles long and removed many of the young juniper trees in the canyon, where they were sucking up large quantities of water and might have crowded out ponderosa pines. SeeWhychus /A8
date forums andissue-related town halls. Are you planning
an event? Pleasesubmityour notice to bulletin©bendbulletin. com, or by conventional mail to P.O. Box 6020, Bend OR 97708-6020. To qualify for publication in The Bulletin calendar, the
event must beopento the general public by freeadmission. Fundraising events donot qualify, nor do strictly partisan gatherings.
Keydates • Tuesday: Last day to register to vote • May 3: Ballots will be mailed out
• May 21: Election Day Who's running
I/I/hychus Creek I
A complete list of candidates for Crook, Deschutesand Jef-
MVI wpolnt
$isters Goodrich Rd George Cyrus Rd.
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Trails
Whychus CBltlt0lt
Preserve Cascade military wagon road
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Trailhead Goodrich Rd. source: Deschutes Land Trust
www.bendbulletin.com/ may21candidates
Measures andlevies
Private
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MILES 0.5 Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
• Deschutes 911 • Madras Aquatic Center oper-
ating levy • Bend-La Pine School bond • La Pine Fire District operation
and equipment levies • Culver school bond • Crook County school bond Read ourstories Coverage leading up to the election isat www.bendbulletin.com/ election2013
Bend-La Pineseeking 96M; 5 burns setfor this week board candidatesunopposed west and south ofBend By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin
Voters will decide whether to approve or reject a Bend-La Pine school district bond measure this May that would fund the construction of two new schools in the district. Voters will also elect candidates running in five uncontested Bend La-Pine School Board races. The $96-million Bend-La Pine school bond request would fund 140 building, maintenance and safety-related projects, including the two new schools. If the bond is approved, the district would begin building a middle school with an estimated price tag of $36.9 million on district-owned land off of Shevlin Park Road, and a elementary school that will
May 21election Coverage leading up to the election is at www.
bendbulletin.com/ election2013
cost $15 million in an undetermined location. Other projects include the construction of a classroom wing at Bend High School, modernizing classrooms at Mountain View High School and making safety improvements at Buckingham Elementary School. The money will also fund smaller projects such as making buildings more energy efficient, installing more fire sprinklers and
fixing leaking roofs. If passed, the bond measure would not cause taxes to go
up because of the retirement of older bonds this year. It is projected to cost 36 cents per $1,000 of taxable value annually. If defeated, taxes would drop by about 26 cents per $1,000 of assessed value. Julianne Repman, communications director for the district, said the school district has seen a high growth rateover the past few years. Eleven of 14 Bend elementary schools are near or at capacity.From March 2012 to February 2013, the district gained close to 390 new students. The district also cites forecasts from Portland State University's Center for Population Research that predict another 3,000 students will enter Bend-La Pine schools in the next 10 years. SeeBend-La Pine/A8
Bulletin staff report Expect to see smoke billowing out of the Deschutes National Forest in several places in the coming week, forestofficials announced Friday. Five prescribed burns are planned should weather conditions prove favorable, according to forest spokeswoman Jean Nelson-Dean. The fires should create smoke plumes and smoky conditions on nearby highways and forest roads. Three burns are planned northwest of Sisters: two for an area south of Black Butte Ranch; a third in the Metolius River basin northwest of Camp Sherman. In south Deschutes County, two prescribed burns are planned: one west of
Sunriver and another east of La Pine. "People should be aware we're doing a lot of prescribed burning," said Nelson-Dean. "This is an excellent window to do prescribed burning, and there will be a lot of visible plumes." A prescribed burn last week along China Hat Road, though publicized, prompted a wave of calls to the Deschutes County dispatch center. This week, near Black Butte Ranch, forest officials plan a 135-acre burn called McCache North, two miles south of the ranch and one mile north of state Highway 242, according to the announcement. See Burns/A8
A8
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
Bend-La Pine
AROUND THE STATE A state microde? —The state Legislature is con-
Middle school graffiti —Salempolice arein-
sidering honoring brewer's yeast as the state microbe.
vestigating some lewd, racist graffiti that was found all over Judson Middle School this weekend. The
Resolut ionsponsorRep.MarkJohnsonsaysthere'sa craft brewery in every legislative district. But an inves- Statesman-Journal reports the graffiti was painted tigation by The Oregonian has found there are three districts that remain thirsty for a licensed brewery.
House District17, which covers Stayton, Lebanonand Scio; House District 47, which covers a large portion of East Portland; and House District 4, which covers Central Point, White City and Eagle Point, all lack a
over or scrubbed off by Sunday. Sgt. Alan Graham
says police found swastikas, phallic symbols, racial slurs and other derogatory words painted on the school.Graham says hedoesn'tthink anybody is in danger. He adds, however, that the principal was
mentioned.
licensed brewery. TheHouse hasalready approvedthe resolution and now the measure is before the Senate.
Fire reSCuer —A Portlandman is struggling to survive after saving sevenpeople from a duplex fire.
Vacant home squatters —Police in Albany
KATU-TV reports John Zeller is in intensive care in a Portland hospital. The volunteer with Clackamas
say squatters are taking up residence in local unoccupied homesand it's likely a sign of the economy. Linn County law enforcement officers tell the Albany Democrat-Herald that more homes are vacant lately
County Search andRescuehelped seven people escape a fire at a Southeast Portland duplex. His mom, aunt, uncle, sister, nephewand two neighbors all got
and they're getting more reports of squatting, vandal- away safely. Zeller can't breathe without help and his ism and thefts. body is badly burned.
Whychus I
Continued from A7 Crow said the land trust left old-growth junipers. Volunteersare also removing invasive weeds from the property and Ginny Elliott, a volunteer with the trust's "weed war-
P
riors" program, said they plan to pull spotted knapweed on May 7. T he t o u r on Su nd a y s kipped the portion of t h e loop trail that dips into the c anyon a n d f o l l ow s t h e c reek. Instead, th e g r o u p f ollowed a s e ction o f t h e Santiam Trail w agon r oad through federal land, then cut over t o t h e D e schutes Land Trust trail. The hikers eventually arrived a v i e wpoint with humongous boulders, where they could look down into the canyon and catch a glimpse of Whychus Creek. Then, the group followed the Deschutes Land Trust trail past the remains of an o l d h o m estead and back to the parking lot. Crow said the Deschutes Land Trust is trying to acquire a parcel of land adjacent to the preservethisyear.That would
Burns
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Linda Sewell, of Lake Oswego, photographs some wildflowers while on a hike in the Whychus Creek Preserve on Sunday outside Sisters. give the trust access to six continuous miles of Whychus Creek, where itcould restore natural pools and meanders that the Army Corps of Engineersremoved in the 20th century to stop flooding. Zak Boone, associate director ofthe Deschutes Land Trust, said the preserve is increasingly popular with hikers. "It's become a quick favorite with land trust members and folks that are out there,"
Continued from A7 The second burn, 178 acres and dubbed SAFR Northwest, should take place a half-mile south of the ranch and Graham Corral campground and I'/~ miles southwest of state Highway 20. A 167-acre burn designated 1425 is scheduled approximately I'/ miles northwest of Camp
Sherman/Metolius M eadows and a half-mile southwest of Jack Creek campground. In south county, a 167-burn called Sua i s p l anned two miles west of Sunriver near Besson Day Use Area. Another burn, on 62 acres 19 miles east of La Pine near Red Butte, is dubbed Mix 54. Precise dates are contingent on the weather.Some commercial clearing has already
Compost
Dual compost plans
Continued from A1 M orrison ha s s ai d f o o d waste would make up only a small portion, about 3 to 5 percent, of the waste brought into the operation he is planning near Crescent. While he said last week that he would have been willing to take in waste from North Plains, he wasn't counting on it. "It is just more or less a 'build-it-and-they-will-come'
The Tualatin trucker planning to build a compost facility near Crescent says he will turn in an new permit application to Klamath
County next week. Healso hasa
Boone said. "It underscores why we're trying to preserve these properties so we can get more folks out enjoying the land and protecting the special places of Central Oregon." The public is welcome to hike the W hychus Canyon Preserve.Dogs are allowed if they are on leashes. No bikes, horses or motorizedvehicles are permitted. — Reporter:541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
occurredinthe targeted areas. The object of all five burns is to minimize high-intensity wildfires by reducing forest fuel loads. "If we do get a wildland fire in that area, that fire would go down to the ground level, w here we c ould control i t much easier than if it got to be a crown fire," said Rod Dines, fire management officer for the Sisters Ranger District.
Proposed Crescent I compostin
QOPeralian
ning for Zone 4, his current seat in La Pine and the south county. He was appointed to the position last May. Jensen teaches photography at Central Oregon Community College and owns his photography business. He initially applied for the board after spending time volunteering and mentoring students at La Pine High School. Jensen said he hopes to help the district bring back more school days and add more teachers. He also would like to see technology play a central role in the education of Bend La-Pine students. "I think moving forward in technology will be a big focus," Jensen said. "I'd like to see classrooms utilizing t echnology that w o uld b e helpful for students." Nori Juba, 48, is running for hiscurrent seat as board member for Zone 7, which is an at-large position. He has served on the school board since 2005, and has a background in business and finance. He teaches at Central Oregon Community College. Juba said in his next term, he wants to seeteachers compensated based upon merit r ather than s eniority. H e would also like to see more advancement opportunities for teachers in schools. In addition, Juba wants to push for more technology in the classroom. "I think t h e big g est challenge is making sure students are getting a relevant education," Juba said. "We need to look at what is being taught in the classroom and how that compares to what students need to know to be s uccessful. Then w e h a ve to ask, 'Are we teaching the right things?'" Juba said there is plenty of work ahead for the board. " We're not going t o b e complacent," Juba said. "We haven't drunk the Kool-Aid. There's a lot of things we still need to better." — Reporter:541-383-0354, mlzehoe@bendbulletin.com
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet Cl™assifieds www.bendbulleun.com
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permit application under review by Lake County for a similar operation near Christmas Valley.
A CH E L O R ME M O R Y C A R E RESIDENCE
Can it really be different? Christmas
Valley
(project)," Morrison said. Dutra said Recology does use Morrison as one of its haulersforwaste, butthe company is not involved with his compost facility plans.
"(Hauling) is the only in-
volvement we have with (him) or his company," Dutra said. After learning of Morrison's plans in early February, people living in and near Crescent — a small town in far northern Klamath County — q uickly g athered opposition t o t h e project. Their concerns range from bad smells rising into the air to tainted water seeping into the ground. At a c ommunity meeting in early February, an official with the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality said the agency planned to hold a public meeting to address the concerns,but before it did so, the permit Morrison had with Klamath County lapsed. Now Morrison said he plans to turn in a new application with Klamath County planners for a redesigned compost operation, one based on bins to hold the waste, and he is waiting for Lake County planners to review his proposal for a pile-based compost facility near Christmas Valley. Lake County is set to host a public meeting May 21 in Christmas Valley about th e p r oposed compost facility there. Lake County officials want to learn more about what materials will be brought to the compost facility near Christ-
high school students in the classroom wit h r e al-world Continued from A7 skills and qualities that top "We're growing at a fast employers seek. "I'm excited to see how we and furious rate," said Repman. "In the next c ouple can incorporate these skills years, we may go from being in the classroom, and how we the seventh largest district in can embed it in the culture of the state to the fifth. People our schools," Helt said. don't realize how fast we're Helt also hopes to see the growing." district have money to hire Repman says a few school more teachers in the near buildings in the district are future. "We have p henomenal over 100 years old, and many others were built in the '60s teachers," Helt said. "We just and '70s. Money from the really need to have more of b ond measure w ould b e them." used to update and renovate Julie Craig, 38, is running classrooms. for her current position as If t h e b o n d me a sure board member for Zone 2, doesn't pass, schools may be in northeast Bend. She was forced to dip into the district's appointed to the position last operations funds to pay for June, and works for the City facility upgrades. of Bend as a code enforce"That couldmean a teach- ment technician. Craig said er or a person on staff," Rep- she wants to spend more time man said. "It would be an un- at schools in the district to fortunate trade-off." have a better understanding If the measure fails, modu- of how classrooms operate. lar classrooms may be an She sees planning as a key alternative to help ease over- factor for the school district crowding at some schools. in years to come. "It's important that we pre"My fear is that if it doesn't pass, modulars are just going pare for growth and stay one to start popping up around step ahead of it," Craig said. schools," said Andy H i g h, "We need to make sure we're school board member and ready." co-chair ofthe bond camAndy High, 34, is running paign. "And those aren't the for his current appointed pobest setting for learning." sition as board member for Repman said the district Zone 3, in southeast Bend. He would start planning conis the governmental affairs struction immediately if the director at Central Oregon measure passes. B uilders A ssociation, an d was appointed to the board School board position in February. He was In addition to th e b ond on the 2008 middle school measure, five seats on the boundary change committee, Bend L a Pi n e Sc h o ols' and said he wants to help the board are up for election this district better prepare for the May. None of the races are influx of students projected contested. in upcoming years. "Class sizes are the biggest Cheri Helt, 42, is running for her current position as issue," High said. "We have to board member for Zone I, reduce class sizes and reduce which covers west Bend. She the workload for teachers. is the co-owner of Zydeco We have to figure out how to Kitchen 8 C o c k tails, has manage growth." been on the board for the High said his other priorpast three years, and curity is to make sure that Bend rently serves as co-chair. Helt La-Pine students leave high looks forward to continuing school with a modern, global her work on a board project education. geared t oward p r o v iding Mike Jensen, 57, is run-
-,e~ ~yb
To La Pine
Prop o sed Ghristmas Valley
composting operation
gQ Source. Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, Lake County Greg Cross/The Bulletin
mas Valley, said Jennifer Stephens, code specialist with the Lake County Planning and Building Department. "There needs to be a little more information," she said. The compost facility near Crescent would be on the 70acre former site of the Glanville Box Co. lumber mill. The compost facility near Christmas Valley, a small agriculture community about a 90-minute drive from Bend, would be on the 40-acre former site of the Oil-Dri kitty litter plant. If Morrison earns approval from both counties, he'll still need to get the OK for the projects from the state. Once hopeful to start hauling compost to Crescent in June, he now said he didn't know when the composting would start near Crescent or Christmas Valley. "It all depends on the counties and DEQ," he said. Charles Nofziger, who owns the property where the compost facility would be located
near Christmas Valley, declined a telephone interview r equest Thursday with T h e Bulletin. He said he w ould rather speak with the paper in person next week. As Morrison's plan did in Crescent, the Christmas Valley plan is already drawing concern from people with land nearby. Tom McKinney, who owns land next to the land where the compost facility would go, said heis concerned about the odors the composting could put off and the effect it could have on groundwater. McKinney, who is in his 70s, lives in New Hampshire but owns more than 300 acres in Christmas Valley that he and other family members inherited. "I really worry about this, not only for our family and our property, but the people who live in Christmas Valley," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarlingC<bendbulletin.com
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MONDAY, APRIL 29,2013 •THE BULLETIN
A9
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT TV TODAY
c intoc awaits' are ouse'renewa TV SPOTLIGHT By Rich Heldenfels Alzron Beacon Journal
AKRON, Ohio — The Syfy series "Warehouse 13" is not currently in production. But there's still work to be done. E ddie M c Clintock, w h o plays investigator Pete Lattimer on the series, said in a recent telephone chat that "I've been working diligently on my Twitter and Facebook page to rally the troops for the coming premiere." That premiere is at 10 tonight on Syfy, and it comes with as big a mystery as the supernatural ones the show looks into: Why hasn't "Warehouse" been picked up for a fifthseason? The run of episodes beginning Monday is, according to Syfy, a continuation of the show'sfourth season. The first part began in July 2012 and ran for 10 episodes before the show went on pause from October until now, when 10 more episodes will air. When the network ordered those 20 episodes, it said the first 10 would be the fourth season and the others would be saved, presumably for a fifth. Now it's all one season. That could just be a moneysaving move; if the latest run was counted as a fifth season, the cast was due a raise. But it remains confusing for viewers, who had a long wait b etween telecasts, and t h e
r,, trtsff s
The Associated Press file photo
"You know how it is. It's a big guessing game," says Eddie McClintock about the future of the Syfy series "Warehouse 13," on which he plays investigator Pete Lattimer. people making the show, who face uncertainty after several secure seasons. The series, which follows a
are plenty more to come in the ensuing telecasts. "I feel like we're still doing great work," McClintock said. group collecting dangerously "I feel like there's a lot more powerful artifacts and storing to be done with the show. The them in a secret warehouse, dark tone that it took at the end has been solid entertainment, (of last year's telecasts) doesn't funny and touching, suspense- overpower thepremiere or the ful — and literate, with real following episodes." history tied to the artifacts. It has to honor what has M cClintock said l a s t y e ar gone before, some of which that the network considered is grim, he said. But it would the fourth season the show's never get too grim. "I think that the grim, dark strongest to date. Monday's telecast picks up where the stuff that we deal with also series left off, with a plague gives us license to have the unleashed on the earth and funny parts as well," he said. "It's why people love it. warehouse supervisor Artie (Saul Rubinek) stabbed. The Joanne (Kelly, who plays Pete's other members of the ware- partner Myka) and I were just house team will have to deal at a summer press day out in with those crises — but there Pasadena, and talking about
an episode that's coming up where Joanne and I do this s lapstick-comedy beat, a n d within three minutes of that beat we had some of the guys behind the c amera d r ying their eyes and going, 'Wow, what just happened'?' "That's what really makes me love the work I do. That I can still be the silly character I love to do.... But at the same time I can be a real actor and do some real work." Pete, he noted, "is not just some cutout of a wacky detective." He is good at his job and a recovering alcoholic; he "has dimension," McClintock said. As do othercharacters on the series. Still, Syfy and its corporate parents NBC Universal and Comcast have not given "Warehouse" a vote of confidence even as they have been renewing otherSyfy series. McClintock does try to be optimistic. "The writers are actually at work right now," he said. "NBC Universal has paid over a million dollars to get them in the room so that some scripts will be ready for the projected start date (of production on a fifth season), around mid-June. But until it's announced ... it's not official. "We thought back in February — Feb. 18 was the end of our contract — that they would announce," he said. The network did extend its hold on the cast, but without a full-season commitment. So the ratings beginning
econ an e-ci arette alm'? Dear Abby:I work in a small office with two former heavy smokers who have now transitioned to vapor/e-cigarettes. My concern is that they "smoke" their e-cigarettes in the office constantly, and I don't know what chemicals I am now breathing secondhand. DEAR Both of them are ABBY senior to me in rank and age, and they p ooh-pooh the n o tion that anything but water vapor is being exhaled. Should I be worried about this'? — Clean Air Dear Clean Air: You don't have anything to worry about, but your co-workers may. In 2009, the FDA announced the findings from a laboratory analysis that indicated that electroniccigarettes expose users to harmful chemical ingredients, including carcinogens. However, those elements were NOT detected in exhaled vapor. Dear Abby:The woman who collaborated with me on this letter is in her 80s and lives at an assisted-living facility. I am a caregiver and a senior
myself. We read your column on the days Icare for her.She loves itand
responds verbally to all the letters. Many times the situations spark good conversation, even though her short-term memory is failing. This is what she asked me to help her to communicate. — Kate fn Austin, Texas Dear Abby: I have been in assisted living for seven years. There are times when it can be lonely and boring. I'd like to meet some men for companionship, conversation and perhaps romance. The men here act so much older than me. They don't start conversations. They stay in their rooms and watch TV. It's hard because my memory isn't what it used to be. Do you have any ideas to make my life a little more interesting? — Lonely Woman Dear Lonely:Start by making sure you participate in all the activities your assisted-living facility offers. Shared mealtimes and celebrations also present opportunities to mingle. The trick is to find something you have in common with these men — sports, games, music, movies. Because long-term memory outlasts short-term memory, some of them
might find it easier to discuss their youth than the present. Encourage your caregiver, Kate, to take youplaces where you can meet other seniors. And while you're at it, why not invite some of the men to joinyou both duringyour Dear Abby sessions? It's a way to draw people out and get to know them better. Dear Abby: After a s i x-month separation, my husband and I are reuniting. We were married for 22 years. I know for a fact he has dated and slept with several women. He's adamant that he used protection each time, but the idea of STDs has m e preoccupied and worried.Ihave asked him to use protection with me until I get over my fear. How long do most of today's STDs incubate, and what is a safe time to wait to remove the "rain gear"? — Longing for Contact Dear Longing: Congratulations on your reunion. Rather than worry about this, ask your husband to schedule a doctor's appointment and be tested for any STD he might have contracted. Not all STDs have the same incubation period, but a blood test could resolve the issue and put your mind at ease. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
Sp.m. onH K3, "The Voice" — In the newepisode "TheKnockouts, Part1," each coachpits two of his or her teammembers against each other. Here's the catch: They don't find out until minutes beforehandwhotheir competition is. After eachsinger performs a song of his or her own choosing, the coachdecides who'll move on. CarsonDaly hosts.
Monday could yet determine "Warehouse's" fate, and McClintock has been lobbying fans and studying details like the ratings for Syfy series "Defiance," which is leading into "Warehouse." "You know how it is," McClintock said. "It's a big guess-
9 p.m. on (CW), "90210" —To help Mark (Charlie Weber) out, Jordan (Robbie Jones) calls in a favor from his mother (Robin Givens), but it'll cost him his relationship with Naomi (AnnaLynne McCord). Being included in Annie's (ShenaeGrimes) book has Liam (Matt Lanter) feeling betrayed. Michaela (Lyndon Smith) catches Adrianna andNavid (Jessica Lowndes, Michael Steger) in an intimate moment in the newepisode "You Can't Win 'EmAll."
ing game." But he added: "I don't want it to seem like I'm being ungrateful. I still have a job, and they have been very good to me." After all, as McClintock has noted before, "Warehouse 13" is his first series to last more than a season. "I'm not new to having a bad taste in my mouth when it comes to cancellations," he said. While he has always worked, and still p i cks up guest-starring roles on other shows, he has been part of s uch short-lived efforts a s "Holding the Baby," "Crumbs" and "A.U.S.A." Shock st ill creepsinto his voice when he recalls the demise of "Stark Raving Mad," a 1 9 99-2000 c omedy i n w h i c h h e c o starred with a p r e -"Monk" Tony Shalhoub and pre-"How I Met Your Mother" Neil Patrick Harris. That cancellation "came out of the blue," he said. "We won the People's Choice Award for best new comedy, we were in the top shows for the year, and we still got canceled. That's
9:30 p.m. on l3, "Mike & Molly" — Molly (Melissa McCarthy) learns that her mother (Swoosie Kurlz) is a talented artist who gave itupwhen shebecame aparent. Determined not to let that happen to her and Mike (Billy Gardell), shedecidesthey need totakeupa new hobby, andshe chooses roller skating. RenoWilson also stars in the newepisode "Mike Can't Read." 10 p.m. on SYFY,"Warehouse 13" —The series picks up from the midseason cliffhanger. Artie (Saul Rubinek) has infected the Warehouse team —and the world — with the BlackOrchidArtifact's deadly "sweating sickness." If Pete, Myka, ClaudiaandSteve (Eddie McClintock, JoanneKelly, Allison Scagliotti, Aaron Ashmore) can't reverse whatArtie hasdone, the world will be engulfed by the deadliest pandemic since theDark Agesin "The LivingandtheDead."
been by far the biggest gutp unch I've ever had in m y career."
10 p.m. onTRAV,"Red, White and New" —American ingenuity is the focus of this newseries showcasing newandinteresting creations such as apogo stick powered by compressedair, a wearable robotic exoskeleton, and a personal watercraft that looks like a sharkand can gounderwater. Steve Watson hosts.
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may beanadditional feefor 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movietimesare subject to changeafter press time. I
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347
• 42 (PG-13)12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 • THE BIGWEDDING(R) 1:40, 4:25, 7:35, 10:10 • THE CROODS (PG) 12:20, 3:20, 6:20, 9:20 • THE CROODS3-0(PG) 1: I5,3:50 • EVIL DEAD (R) 1:55, 4:50, 7:50, 10:25 • G.l. JOE:RETALIATION(PG-13) 12:15, 6:15 • G.l. JOE:RETALIATION3-0 (PG-13) 3:05, 9:05 • GIRL RISING(PG-13) 1:30, 7:15 • HOME RUN (PG-13) 1:45, 4:45, 7:45, 10:15 • THE HOST (PG-13) I:20, 4:15, 7:20, 10:10 • IDENTITY THIEF(R) 4:35, 9:45 • JURASSICPARK3-0 (PG-13) Noon, 3,6, 9 • OBLIVION(PG-13) 12:40, 3:40, 6:40, 7: IO,9:35, 10:05 • OBLIVION IMAX (PG- I3) 1, 4, 7, 10 • OLYMPUSHASFALLEN(R) 1:10, 4:10, 7:25, 10:15 • OZ THE GREAT AND POWERFUL (PG)3:15,9:15 • OZTHE GREAT AND POWERFUL 3-0(PG)12:05,6:05 • PAIN 8(GAIN(R) 12:50, 3:55, 6:55, 9:50 • SCARYMOVIE 5(PG-13) 2, 4:55, 7:55, 10:20 • Accessibility devicesareavailable forsome movies. I
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10:01 p.m. on H E3, "Revolution" — Nora andCharlie (Daniella Alonso, TracySpiridakos) rescue Miles (Billy Burke) after the tension between him andMonroe (David Lyons) comes to ahead over Emma (AnnieWersching). Things will never be thesamefor Aaron (Zak Orth) when he accompanies Rachel (Elizabeth Mitchell) on her journey to theTower in the new episode "Home." ©Zap2it
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APRIL 29, 2013:This year,youoften
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE
are concerned about key people in your By Jacqueline Bigar life. Once youdetach from the worry, you'll be able to see the big picture. This process leads you to success in various backfeelings. Expect a blow-up to occur fields of interest. if you choose not to change this pattern. Stars showthe kind If you are single, Tonight: Have along-overdue talk. ofdayyou'llhave someone could 21-Joly22) ** * * * D ynamic enter your life come CANCER (June ** * * P ositive su mmertime. The ** * * You could be confused aboutyour ** * A verage typ e of relationship long-term direction. Information that is forthcoming needs to beweighed before ** S o-so that emerges you make animportant decision. Feedback * Difficult could be very from others could be very pivotal in the different for you. decision-making process. Tonight: Go If you are attached, planning awonderful along with someone's suggestion. getaway with your significant other will keep your relationship on the right track. LEO (July23-Aug.22) CAPRICORN nearly always is conservative ** * You easily could be surprised by a yet successful. particular situation. You also might want to askyourself how you aregoing to cover all ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * Responsibilities could feel heavy of the ground thatyou must. You will get great practice juggling different concerns. on your shoulders. Don't worry so much You understand what needs to happen. — your creativity and energy will allow you to accomplish what is necessary. You Tonight: Takecare of yourself first. might try to cheer up adepressed friend, VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) but knowthat the decision is up to him or ** * * You might want to deal with her. Tonight: Till the weehours. a personal issue that you havebeen avoiding. Success will follow you if you TAURUS (April20-May20) tap into your imagination. The unexpected ** * * * K eep reaching out for more draws unusual results. Forthcoming news information. Play around with different could be exciting and also open updoors. facts and figures, and study them. Youare capable of changing your perspective, thus Tonight: Know when to call it a night. your attitude. You simply need to claim your LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22) power. Others will respond accordingly. ** * You might want to slow down. Tonight: Letyour mind wander. Personal matters take ahigher priority than GEMINI (May21-June20) you anticipated. Budget tightly, but leave some funds for excess. You'll want to pull ** * * O t hers have been giving you their opinions. You might want to tell someone back and think before acting. A partner acts up, which sets off a series of questions in off, but don't; instead, start the process of negotiating. Beware of atendency to hold your mind. Tonight: At home.
* ** You ser iousnesscomes throughin conversation after conversation. You might question whether the wayyou are heading is the best direction for you. Reachout to a closelovedonetogetsom efeedbackand perhaps a newperspective. Tonight: Head to the gym or go for awalk.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
** * When you look at a situation, you only see it through one filtering system. Getting feedback from people you respect can help you seethe big picture. Someof you might decide to use adifferent method to cut through someemotional heaviness. Tonight: How about some baseball?
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * * Though youareassured and efficient, your actions could makeothers feel insecure. Teachothers some of your more positive traits by being agood role model. You don'teven needto addany comments. You could besurprised at what happens! Tonight: Off doing your thing.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** What you believed was apossibility yesterday might need to beabandoned for now. Like it or not, a personal matter steals the limelight. Clear it up efficiently so that it doesn't rear its ugly headagain. Reach out to a trusted friend or adviser. Tonight: Avoid the grumpy people.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Today's meetings, calls and social networking might keepyou busy. Evenif you receive anegative response at first, you'll negotiate well. Your positive attitude creates ideas andsolutions that others will like but have not thought of. Tonight: Catch up on a friend's news. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
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A10 THE BULLETIN • M ONDAY, APRIL 29, 20'I 3
California
or cool to be Asian," he said. "The idea that the San Gabriel Valley could be the locus of some kind of cultural movement or identity is fascinating. They are asserting cultural capital to create Asian-American identity that wasn't there before, and one that is homegrown, not imported from Taiwan or Hong Kong." B ut the g rowth ha s n o t come without some backlash. While there is r arely overt tension in the area these days, there is a history of clashes over English-only ordinances, and some people still speak in hushed tones about Chinese immigrants taking over the
O®g
Continued from A1 The number of Latinos has more than doubled in many Southern states, including Alabama, Georgia and North Carolina, creating new tensions. Asian populations are booming in New Jersey, and Latino immigrants are reviving small towns in the Midwest. Much of the current immigration debate in C o ngress has focused on Hispanics, and California has for decades been viewed as the focal point of that migration. But in cities in the San Gabriel Valley — as well as in Orange County and in Silicon Valley in Northern California — Asian immigrants have become a dominant cultural force in places that were once largely white or Hispanic. "We are really looking at a different era here," said Hans Johnson, a demographer at the Public Policy Institute of California who has studied census data. "There are astounding changes i n wor k i n g-class towns and old, established, wealthy cities. It is not confined to one place." Asians have become a majority in more than half a dozen cities in the San Gabriel Valley in the last decade, creating a region of Asian-dominated suburbs that stretches for nearly 30 miles east of Los Angeles. In the shopping centers, Chinese-language characters are on nearly every storefront, visible from the freeways that cut through the area. Monterey Park, a m iddleclass city that began attracting Asian immigrants more than a generation ago, is still widely seen as the area's center and retail hub. But as the Asian immigrants have continued to arrive in Southern California, they have moved into some of the most exclusive cities in Los Angeles County, now making up morethan 60 percent of the population in San Gabriel and Walnut, along th e c ounty's eastern edge. Many of t h e i m m igrants come here from China and Taiwan, where they were part of a highly educated and affluent population.They have eagerly bought property in places like San Marino,where the median income is nearly double that of Beverly Hills and is home to
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1 Monica Almeida/ New YorkTimes News Service
David Fung, left, and Andrew Fung, both of whom have helped create a kind of local Asian ethnic pride, with Matthew Hui, center, at Hui's Fluff Ice shop in Monterey Park, Calif., earlier this month. Asians have become the majorities in more than half a dozen cities in the San Gabriel Valley in the last decade, creating a region of Asian-dominated suburbs that stretches for nearly 30 miles east of Los Angeles.
region.
More recently, there have been renewed complaints of "maternity tourism," a cottage industry that brings Chinese women here to give birth so that their children can have one of the highest performing who grew up in Seattle, were American citizenship. Resischool districts in the state. The surprisedto see the pervasive- dents, including Asian immilocal library now offers story ness of Chinese and Tawainese grants, have complained to lotime in Mandarin. culture in t h e Sa n G abriel cal officials about large houses But the wealth is not uniValley. that host dozens of pregnant form, andthere are pockets of After moving to the area women at a time. povertyinseveral ofthe area's a couple of years ago to try to Jay Chen, 34, a member of working-class suburbs, parbreak into the entertainment the Hacienda Heights school ticularly in V i etnamese and industry, the Fung brothers board in the San Gabriel ValFilipino communities. createdseveral hip-hop videos ley, recalled a 2010 controver"This is kind of ground zero celebrating what they termed sy over a plan to create a Chifor a new immigrant America," the "boba life," to embrace the nese-language class at a local said Daniel Ichinose, a demog- area where,as their lyrics ex- middle school. Last year, when rapher at the A sian Pacific plain, "kids drink more milk Chen challenged a longtime American Legal Center. "You tea than liquor." The videos Republican congressman, Ed have people speaking Manda- became so wildly popular on Royce, to represent a newly rin and Vietnamese and Span- the Internet that local leaders drawn district, he r eceived ishall livingtogether andfacing began showing them in official a handful of messages using many common challenges." meetings. anti-Asian slurs. "People here think it's nor"There's still this conservaThe children of the immigrants who began transform- m al, hanging out t o d r i n k tive element that said teaching ing the area a generation ago boba all day long, but this cul- Chinesemeantyou were teachare beginning to come of age, ture doesn'texist everywhere, ing communism," said Chen, becoming cheerleadersforthe and we're trying to tell them who lost the race. "Meanwhile, region, running for political to embrace it, to own it," said people are fighting to get into officeand creating businesses Andrew Fung, 26. "We've got our district so their children that cater to a distinctly Ameri- to teachourselves to be proud — of whatever ethnicity — can can-born audience. of who we are and tell others take these classes." There are countless stores about it." Food often draws outsiders that display signs in MandaThe Fung b rothers have to the region, which is packed rin, sell restaurant supplies helped create a local ethnic with m o m-and-pop r estauand Chinese herbs, or adver- pride that would have been un- rants where a feast can cost tise acupuncture or brokerage imaginable a generation ago, less than $20. services. But perhaps the most said Oliver Wang, a professor Last summer, Jonny Hwang, common storefront is the boba of sociology at California State 32, a son of Tawainese immitea shop, where young patrons University, Long Beach, who grants, created the 626 Night spend hours d r inking cold grew up in San Marino in the Market. (Its name is play on milk tea with jellylike tapioca 1980s and returned to the area the region's area code.) More balls. Nearly every one of the three years ago. The region than 15,000 people clogged the region's hundreds of strip malls could become to Asians what streets to get in. "It surprised boasts a cafe — or even twoEast Los Angeles is to Latinos everyone," Hwang said. "All of offering a dizzying number of or South Los Angeles is to Af- the sudden we had a commuvariations on the sweet drink. rican-Americans, he said. nity and something that even "It wasn't cool to be Chinese other people wanted." Andrew and David Fung,
IN FOCUS: CRIME
Ro e at
unpoint, some am ewit ives By J. David Goodman
2009 study of national victim surveys taken since 1993 found that not only w ere robberies becoming less frequent over time, they were also becoming more violent, in part because of what the authors describe as "victim hardening."
New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — The first armed robbery attempt was in October, on a residential Bronx block near an elevated train stop. The victim fought back. He was shot in the leg. The next came a month l ater and r oughly a m i l e away. Once again, the victim resisted and was shot. After the t h ird r obbery attempt, in February, two distinct patterns became apparent.The police suspected a single group was to blame, a group that cruised in cars and attacked lone men at night. But a more unusual pattern was seen among the three victims: When faced with a gun and a straightforward proposition — your money or your life — they h ad opted t o t a k e t h e ir chances with their lives. "Being held at gunpoint, for some people, is not that scary," said Brian Melford, 21, a Bronx y o uth a ctivist and student at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. "Around here, people think they're strong. They j u st say, 'I'm not going to give it
Precautions and perception "Softer victims take precautions," said Rajiv Sethi, a Barnard College economist and one of the study's authors. In addition, he said,
many people who may have become robbers inthe past may instead have gotten jobs as u r ban economies i mproved, l e aving m o r e hardened criminals to encounter more hardened victims onthe streets of certain neighborhoods. "You get more resistance in high-crime areas than low-crime areas," he said. "People who would not resist have leftthe areas. Those w ho stay can't a f ford t o leave or to give up the little property that they have in their possession." The general perception of
bad guys may have changed
as well. Decades ago, many harbored an understandable Criminologists have f or fear that a gun-wielding asd ecades studied t h e r e - sailant, fueled by drugs or sponses of victims to violent desperation, would shoot at crime. Robberies in particu- the smallest p r ovocation. lar became a topic of schol- But a spreading sense of arly research in the 1980s safety in many areas of the and 1990s, as random street city, fostered by the falling crime spread through urban murder rate, may lead some areas, with t h ose studies to doubt that a gunman these mostly confirming the obvi- days will pull the trigger. "It does sound plausible ous: Ifyou resist a robber, you are more likely to get that when you have less of hurt or, possibly, killed. a climate of fear, you have But with decade-long de- more resistance," said Sethi, clines in crime, some schol- though he c autioned that ars have noted a change in research has not been conthe nature of robberies. A ducted in this area.
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IN THE BACI4: WEATHER > Scoreboard, B2 MLB, B3 NBA, B4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
A rundown of games and events to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:
Today
Tuesday
Wednesday
Prep dasedali, Elmira at Sisters, 4:30 p.m.:TheSky-
NHL, StanleyCuppiayoffs: The lockout-shortened season
Em League-leading Outlaws
heads into the postseason. The favorites are the Western
(17-2 overall, 10-0 league) host the Falcons (10-8, 7-3), who are second in the conference standings. Sisters can clinch a share of the Sky-Em title with a win.
Friday-Sunday
Saturday
Saturday
Prep trackand field, Ridgeview Spring Paddiefest, Bend: at RedmondHigh,3p.m.:The Always wanted to try getting
SalmonRun,Bend, 9 a.m.: If you're doing the PolePedal
Horse racing, KentuckyDerdy, 3:25 p.m. (NBC):A full field of
first track version of the "R-Town
out on the water but never have? This is a great time to try.
Paddle running leg in a few weeks, this might be a good
20 horses is expected to run in the first leg of the Triple Crown,
The three-day event hosted by Tumalo CreekKayak &Canoe includeslessonsanddemos of kayaks,canoes andstand-up
warmup. Thereare half marathon with no heavy favorite. Jockey (9 a.m.), 10-kilometer (9:15 a.m.) Calvin Borel, famed for his rides and 5K (9:30 a.m.) options, along at Churchill Downs, went into with a fun run. racing's hall of fame this week
to get star Sidney Crosby back
paddleboards. More information
For more information, visit
soon. Seeschedule, B2.
at www.tumalocreek.com.
www.runsalmonrun.com.
Showdown" showcases oneof Conferece's top seed, the the better Class 5Aboys squads Chicago Blackhawks, who had (Redmond) and one ofthe top 4A the best record in hockey, and the girls teams (Ridgeview). Pittsburgh Penguins, who hope
and will go for another win.
NBC's coveragestarts at1 p.m.
• Central Oregon Blue skiesahead? The onlything Central Oregon Shootout, B7 • Pro roundup, B7 golferscanreally count on is unpredictablespringweather, B7 • Calendar,B9
TEE TOGREEN: INSIDE ONB7-B9 d.-
CYCLING
FroomeTourde France favorite? GENEVA — Chris
Froome of Britain completed a start-to-finish victory in the Tour of
Romandie onSunday,
PREP SPORTS
enhancing his status as the Tour de France
COMMUNITY SPORTS
favorite. Bradley Wiggins and Cadel Evans,the
BEAU EASTES
previous two Romandie champions, went on to win the Tour de France.
Districts
f
"It gives meconfidence," said Froome, who was second last year in cycling's biggest
!
event. "It's definitely a good omen, but the Tour is still two months away and I need to do a lot of hard training."
Froome placedthird
ere In
in the closing time trial
won by Germany's Tony Martin and extended his advantage overSlovakia's Simon Spilak in the
overall standings.
0
The Sky team leader
was seven seconds faster than Spilak on
he spring sports season is about to get a little shorter. Just six weeks after their first tournament of the year, boys and girls golf teams from Bend, Mountain View, Summit and Redmond high schoolsare preparing for their district championships this Thursday and Friday at Eagle Point Golf Course in Eagle Point. The spring athletic schedule has always been fairly compact, but the 2013 golf season is even more brief for the aforementioned area programs because of availability issues with the Southern Oregon course. Instead of having six days off between district and state competition — and one last tuneup tournament the weekend before district play — Central Oregon teams that qualify for the Class 5A state tourney will have nine days of rest after the 5A Special District 1 tournament — for better or worse. Of course, the early district tourney may have little effect on local teams, who last year produced one team champion (Summit girls), an individual winner (the Storm's Madison Odiorne) and three state runners-up (Summit boys in 5A, Bend girls in 5A and Crook County girls in 4A/3A/2A/IA). This Summit girls squad could actually be better than last year's team that won state by 28 strokes with Odiorne, Sarah Heinly and Maddy Mansberger all capable of shooting around par. And Bend High senior Heidi Froelich hopes to lead the Lava Bears back to the podium at state a year after they took second to the Storm at districts and the 5A state tourney. See Golf /B5
See additional prep photos from this past weekonline: denddulletin.com/preppics
O
the11.6-mile route on
lakeside roads. Hewon the six-day race by54 seconds and had a total time of19 hours, 24
minutes, 51 seconds. On Saturday, in a rainPhotos by Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Paul Greathouse, 65, back left, prepares for an overhead hit while playing pickleball with his wife Amelia Greathouse, 65, front left, against Joan Spongberg, 70, right, and Dick Low, 66, not pictured, last week at Bend's Larkspur Park.
swept mountain stage, he finished just behind Spilak to all but seal the
victory. Froomesays he is still learning to bea leader on the road. In the last Tour de France, un-
Central OregOn is a hOtbed fOra lat OfSPOrts and athletiCaCtiVitieS that aren't exactly mainstream — likethe growing tennis-like gameof...
der Sky orders, Froome deferred to Wiggins. "I think the biggest
thing I learned this week was how important it was to be able to deliver
(Saturday)," Froome said. "It really kept
everyone's morale high when they werepulling for me all week. Yester-
day they sawwas I able
By Elise Gross
to finish the job." —TheAssociated Press
The Bulletin
Roughly five years ago, A.J. Fraties picked up a pickleball paddle for the first time. Now, he can't put it down. Fraties, a retired Bend resident, says he plays pickleballa cross between tennis, badminton and pingpong — for about three hours a day, six days a week. "The more you play, the more strategic it gets," says Fraties, 67, who was introduced to the sport while living in Arizona. "It's a placement game, not a power game ... it's like chess." Pickleball is staged on a badminton-size court with a net that is 34 inches high at the center, according to the USA Pickleball Association. The game is typically played with a perforated plastic baseball (similar to a Wiffle ball) and wooden paddles that resemble those used in pingpong, only larger. The sport is relatively new. According to the USAPA, it was invented in 1965 by two Washington state men, Joel Pritchard and Bill Bell, and was named after Pritchard's cocker spaniel, Pickles. Over time, the fast-paced game caught on. By 2008, close to 1,500 individual pickleball courts peppered the U.S. and Canada, according to the USAPA. See Pickleball /B5
NBA PLAYOFFS
•
I 8
•
•
5
0
•
tI •
•
i • a S
Spurs Lakers • Spurs win series, 4-0
103 82
Heat Bucks • Heat win series, 4-0
88 77
• • 1 •
Bend Pickleball Club member Judi Scharf, 67, plays close to the net during a game at Larkspur Park in Bend last week.
Celtics 97 Knicks 90 • Knicks lead series, 3-1
BendPickledall Clud
Warriors 115 Nuggets 101 • Warriors lead series, 3-1
For information on court times, clinics and other events: Wedsite:www.bendpickleballclub.com
Email:bendpickleballclub©hotmail.com
Spurs, Heat finish sweeps With injuries galore, the Lakers leave the playoffs meekly,B4
NFL
Draft light on glamour, heavy on intrigue By Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press
Jason Decrow I The Associated Press
Florida State's E.J. Manuel was the only quarterback taken in the first round of the NFL draft — 16th overall by the Buffalo Bills.
Minnesota went all in with three first-round picks. Super Bowl champion Baltimore went for replacements for Ray Lewis and Ed Reed. The New York Jets added to their quarterback uncertainty by taking Geno Smith in the second round. Teams loaded up on linemen, making the big and beefy guys this year's stars. The 2013 NFL draft was light on glamour at the skill positions, but heavy on intrigue (when would Manti Te'o go?) and burly bodies able to either get after or protect all those pricey passers.
Denver Broncos boss John Elway called the draft "deep in the trenches." "It wasn't sexy, but there were a lot of good football players in this draft," he said. "It was deep in the otherthan-glitzy positions." The first round included 18 linemen, one quarterback and, for the first time since 1963, no running backs. "That's a lot of love for the big boys up front, which we usually don't get," said No. 1 overall pick Eric Fisher, an offensive tackle from Central Michigan taken by the Kansas City Chiefs. See Draft/B5
The Lakers' Pau Gasol, left, and Spurs' Tim Duncan battle for position on Sunday.
NHL
Playoff preview A look at the first round
of the posteason,B4
B2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER
Time
TV/radio
English Premier League,
Arsenal vs. Manchester United (taped) BASEBALL
2 p.m.
MLB, Washington at Atlanta MLB, Baltimore at Seattle
Root
ON DECK
4 p.m. 7 p.m.
ESPN Root
4 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
TNT NBATV TNT
5 p.m.
NBCSN
Baseball: NorthMarionat Madras,4 p.mzElmiraat Sisters,4:30p.m.; Culverat Regis, 4:30p.m.; Bend at CrookCounty 430pmzLaPineat Sweet Home, 4:30 p.m.;RidgeviewatSummit, 4:30 p.m.;Mountain View atRedmond,430 p.m. Soflbalh Madras at North Marion/St. Paul,4:30p.m., Sisters atElmira,4:30p.m.; Culverat Regis,4:30 p.mzSweetHomeat LaPine,4:30 p.m. Boys golf: Redm ond, Summit, Ridgeview,Mountain View,Sisters,CrookCountyat AubreyGlennCountry CiubInvitational, noon Girls golf: LaPine,Ridgeview, Srsters, CrookCounty, Madras at Quail Run,11a.m.
Today
BASKETBALL NBA, playoffs, Chicago at Brooklyn NBA, playoffs, Indiana at Atlanta NBA, playoffs, Oklahoma City at Houston
HOCKEY NHL, Draft Lottery
TUESDAY HOCKEY NHL, playoffs, Minnesota at Chicago NHL, playoffs, Los Angeles at St. Louis
Time 5 p.m. 5 p.m.
NHL, playoffs, Detroit at Anaheim
7:30 p.m.
TV/radio NBCSN CNBC NBCSN
BASEBALL 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB, Cincinnati at St. Louis MLB, Baltimore at Seattle
MLB Root
BASKETBALL NBA, playoffs, Golden State at Denver NBA, playoffs, Memphisat L.A. Clippers
5 p.m. 7:30 p.m.
TNT TNT
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL Ducks sweepCardinal-
straight finals after returning
from a kneeinjury that sidelined him since last summer.
Mitchell Tolman laid down a per-
fect squeezebunt in the ninth inning to score AaronPaynefrom
Czechwins in Romania
third and give Oregon a 4-3 win
— Lukas Rosol of the Czech Republic beat Guillermo Garcia-
over Stanford on Sunday atPK
Lopez of Spain 6-3, 6-2 Sunday
Park in Eugene for a three-game sweep. Tolman bunted the ball
in Bucharest, Romania, to win the BRD Nastase Tiriac Trophy toward third and Stanford pitcher for his first ATP title. Rosol made Sam Lundquist couldn't make quick work of things, winning the play, allowing Payne to finish in 67 minutes and converting a tvvo-run rally in the bottom of four of his nine break points in a clay-court final between two the ninth. Ryon Healy drove in the tying run earlier in the ninth unseeded players.
inning on anRBIdouble down SChiavOne WinS —Former led Oregon, going 2-for-3 with an French Openchampion FranRBI and tvvoruns scored. Jake cesca Schiavonevvonherfirst the left-field line. Brett Thomas Reed pitched eight innings for
title in nearly a year Sunday in
Oregon (33-10, 16-5 Pac-12) but gota no-decision, allowing just
Marrakech, Morocco, beating Lourdes DominguezLino 6-1,
three hits and three runs — one earned — while striking out
6-3 in the Grand Prix SAR final. The sixth-seeded Schiavone was
three. TheDucks playSeattle on the road onTuesday.
dominant in the first set, breaking the Spaniard twice and not facing a single break point.
BeaVS tOPTrOjanS again — Ben Wetzler scattered six hits and a run in eight innings to help
send OregonState to its first ever three-gamesweep of USC
MOTOR SPORTS Pedregontopsfield
at Goss Stadium inCorvallis.
— Cruz Pedregon becamethe first two-time FunnyCarwinner
Michael Conforto and Andy Peterson each had two hits and
this year Sunday in the D'Reilly Auto Parts NHRA Spring Nation-
Dylan Davis drove in two runs
als at Royal Purple Racewayin
for the Beavers, vvho swept USC for just the second time, as the
Baytovvn, Texas. The two-time
with a 6-1 win Sunday afternoon
1952 club downedthe Trojans
Funny Carseries champion beat Tim Wilkerson andmovedinto
in a tvvo-game series. It vvas the the series points lead ahead of Beavers' third Pac-12 Conference Matt Hagan, vvho lost in the first
sweep of the seasonand helped
round. BobVandergriff Jr. Yvon
DSU improve its overall record to 34-8 and 14-4 in the Pac-12. Dr-
Top Fuel, holding off Shavvn Langdon in the final round.
egon State hosts Calfor a three-
Jason Line vvonPro Stock and
game set starting Friday.
Hector Arana Jr. was victorious in Pro Stock Motorcycle.
TRACK & FIELD DuCk relayS Shine — Dre-
BASKETBALL
gon won the women's1,600-meter and the men's 4-mile relays
JOrdan marrieS —Michael
Saturday at the PennRelays in
weekend in front of afew hun-
Philadelphia. The women's team went to the lead at the opening
dred of his family and closest friends. The Charlotte Bobcats
gun and never relinquished it in
owner exchangedvowswith 35-
setting a meet record. The team of English Gardner, Chizoba
year-old former model Yvette Prieto on Saturday in Palm Beach,
Dkodogbe, LauraRoesler and
Fla., Jordan's managerEstee
Phyllis Francis won in 3:26.73. That vvas the fastest time in the
Portnoy told The Associated Press Sunday. The wedding took
NCAA this seasonandthe No.2
place at theEpiscopal Churchof
time in school history. The men's relay — Chris Brewer, Matt
Bethesda-by-the-Sea with nearly 300 guests in attendance, includ-
Miner, JeramyElkaimand Mac
ing Tiger Woods,Patrick Evving,
Fleet — won in16:17.57.
Spike Lee and Ahmad Rashad.
Jordan got married over the
Tuesday Baseball: LaSalleatMadras, 4p.m Softball: Madras at LaSalle, 4:30p.m. Track: Crook County, Gilchrist at Summit, 3:30p.m. Boys tennis: CrookCountyat Ridgeview,4 p.m.; Mountain View at Summit, 4 p.m.; Bend at Redmond,4p.m.; Madrasat Stayton,4 p.m. Girls tennis: Summit at MountainView, 4 p.m., Ridgeview at CrookCounty, 4 p.m.; Redmond at Bend 4p.m.;StaytonatMadras,4p.m. Boys golf: LaPineatTokatee,TBD Boys lacrosse: Harneyat Bend,6 p.m.; Sistersat Summit, 8p.m. Wednesday Baseball: Bend atCrookCounty430p mzRidgeview at Summit,4.30p.m..; MountainViewatRedmond, 4:30 p.m.;SistersatJunction City,4 30p.m; Culver at CentralLinn,2p.m.; LaPineat Elmira, 4:30p.m. Softball: CrookCounty atBend(DH), 3 p.mzSummit at Ridgeview (DH), 3 p.m.; Redmondat Mountain View (DH), 3p.mcJunction City at Sisters,4:30 p.mz Culverat Central Linn, 2 p.m.; LaPineat Elmira,4:30p.m. Track: Ridgeview atRedmond, 3p.mzMountainView at Bend,3:30p.m.; MadrasandMolagaat LaSalle, TBA Girls golf: Ridgeview, CrookCountyat Eagle Crest, I p.m4MountainViewatQuail Valley,TBD
SharapOVapreVailS — Ma-
FOOTBALL Big Tenchangesdivisions
ria Sharapova beat Li Na 6-4,
— No more "Legends." And no
6-3onSundaytosuccessfully defend her WTAPorsche Grand
more "Leaders." The Big Ten is
Prix title in Stuttgart, Germany, in a final between the past tvvo
ing a more conventional route for its division names. The con-
French Openchampions. The
ference is going with "East" and
giving them the boot and follow-
top-seeded Russian swept to her "West" instead and switching to second title of the year after win- a nine-game scheduling format
ning in lndian Wells, Calif. This was her 29th career title and 16th consecutive win on clay,
dating to Romelast year.
after presidents and chancellors approved the moves onSunday. The new division alignments will
begin in 2014when Rutgers and Maryland join the conference,
Nadal takeS title —Rafael Nadal won theBarcelonaOpen for the eighth time Sunday in
Barcelona, Spain, defeating Nicolas Almagro 6-4, 6-3 for his fourth title of the year. After trailing 3-0 in the first set, Nadal
found his form and broke his
meaning "Legends" and "Leaders" will be a thing of the past. That will probably come as good news for fans who have criti-
cized those namesever since the league unveiled them in 2010. To
many, theywereconfusingand didn't help identify where teams
fellow Spaniard in three of his
play, but that won't be an issue
next four service games to take command. Nadal hasmadesix
any more. — From wire reports
MIAMI (88)
James13-204-730,Haslem6-91-213, Bosh4-7 2-210, Miller2-70-05, Chalmers1-60-03, Allen 5-10 2-216 Battier 1-50-0 3,Andersen0-1 2-42, Cole1-3 2-2 4 Lewis1-5 0-0 2,Anthony0-00-00 Totals 34-7313-19 88. MILWAUKEE (77) Mbah a Moute2-7 5-6 9, Ryasova3-13 1-1 8, Sanders3-91-1 7, Ellis 10-200-221, Jennings1-7 0 03, Redic5-110 k 010, Dunleavy5-94 517,Udoh 1-40-02, Henson 0-1 0-00, Smith0-00-00, Ayon 0-00-00 Totals 30-8111-15 77. Miami 24 21 22 21 — 88 Milwaukee 17 24 21 15 — 77
Ceitics 97, Knicks 90(OTj NEWYORK(90)
Shumpert5-13 0 012, Anthony103516 20 36, Chandler2-31-2 5,Felton10-21 3-427,Prigioni1-6 1-23, Kidd0-30-00, Martin2 40 04,Novak130-0 3, Richardson 0 20 00 Totals 31-9021-2890.
BASKETBALL NBA
NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AU TimesPOT FIRSTROUND
(x-if necessary) (Best-of-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE Miami 4, Milwaukee0 Sunday, April 21:Miami110, Milwaukee87 Tuesday,April 23:Miami 98,Milwaukee86 Thursday, April 25:Miami104, Milwaukee91 Sunday, April 28.Miami88, Milwaukee77 New York 3,Boston1 Saturday, April 20:NewYork 85,Boston 78 Tuesday, April 23:NewYork87, Boston 71 Friday,April 26:NewYork90, Boston76 Sunday,April 28:Boston97,NewYork90(OT) Wednesday,MayI: Bostonat NewYork, TBA x-Friday,May3: NewYorkatBoston, TBA x-Sunday,May5: Bostonat NewYork, TBA Indiana 2, Atlanta1 Sunday, April 21:Indiana107,Atlanta 90 Wednesday, April 24:Indiana113,Atlanta98 Saturday, April 27:Atlanta90, Indiana69 Today,April 29:IndianaatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Wednesday,May1 Atlantaat Indiana,TBA x-Friday,May3: IndianaatAtlanta, TBA
x-Sunday,May5: Atlanta at Indiana,TBA Chicago 3, Brooklyn 1 Saturday, April 20:Brooklyn106,Chicago89 Monday,April 22:Chicago90,Brooklyn82 Thursday, April 25:Chicago79,Brooklyn 76
Saturday, April 27: Chicago142, Brooklyn134, 3OT Today,April 29:ChicagoatBrooklyn, 4 p.m.
x-Thursday,May2: Brooklynat Chicago, TBA x-Saturday,May4: ChicagoatBrooklyn, TBA
WESTERN CONFERENCE OklahomaCity 3, Houston0 Sunday, April 21:OklahomaCity120, Houston91 Wednesday, April 24: DklahomaCity 105, Houston 102 Saturday, April 27:OklahomaCity104, Houston101 Today,April 29:OklahomaCity atHouston,6:30 p.m. x-Wednesday, May1: HoustonatOklahomaCity, 5or 6:30 p.m. x-Friday,May3. OklahomaCity at Houston, TBA x-Sunday,May5: Houstonat DklahomaCity, TBA San Antonio 4, L.A. Lakers 0 Sunday, April 21:SanAntonio 91, LA Lakers79 Wednesday, April 24: SanAntonio102, L.A. Lakers
Friday,April 26:SanAntonio120, L.A.Lakers89 Sunday, April 28:SanAntonio103, L.A.Lakers82 Golden State 3, Denver1 Saturday, April 20:Denver97, Golden State95 Tuesday,April23: GoldenState 131,Denver 117 Friday,April26: GoldenState 110,Denver 108 Sunday, April28 GoldenState 115,Denver101 Tuesday,April 30:GoldenState atDenver, 5p.m. x-Thursday, May2: Denverat GoldenState,TBA x-Saturday,May4:Golden StateatDenver, TBA L.A. Clippers 2,Memphis2 Saturday, April 20:L.A.Clippers112, Memphrs91 Monday,April 22:L.A. Clippers93, Memphis 91 Thursday, April 25:Memphis 94,I..A. Clippers82 Saturday, April 27:Memphis104, L.A.Clippers83 Tuesday,April 30 Memphis at L.A Clippers, 730
p.m.
Friday,May3: L.A.Clippersat Memphis, TBA x-Sunday, May5: Memphis atL.A.Clippers, TBA
Ssnday's Summaries
Spurs 103, Lakers 82 SANANTO NIO(103) l.eonard 5-102-2 13, Duncan4-9 3-3 11,Baynes 36 0-0 6,Parker9-165 523,Green4 110-0 9,Bonner 1 4 2-2 5,Ginobili 2-6 4-6 8, Neal3-73-3 11, Blair 6-91-213,Joseph2-30-04, McGrady0-1 0-0 0, DeColo0-20-00, Mills 0-00-00. Totals 39-84 20-23 103. L.A. LAKERS (82) Clark 3-60-0 6, Gasol8-12 0-1 16, Howard 2-2 3-9 7, Goudelock7-17 0-0 14, Morris 3-12 2-2 8, Duhon4-100-011, Jamison5-9 0-012, Hill 4-70-0 8, Sacre 0-10-00. Totals 36-765-12 82. SanAntonio 26 26 26 25 — 103 L.A. Lakers 20 14 24 24 — 82
JohnTavares,NYIslanders Jeff Carter,l.osAngeles PatrickKane,Chicago Jiri Tlusty,Carolina Jonathan Toews, Chicago Chris Kunitz,Pittsburgh JakubVoracek,Philadelphia LoganCouture, SanJose Rick Nash,NYRangers James Neal, Pittsburgh PascalDupuis,Pittsburgh Phil KesselToronto , Thomas Vanek, Bufalo TroyBrouwer,Washington BlakeWheeler, Winnipeg Dustin Brown,LosAngeles Nazem Kadri, Toronto AndrewLadd,Winnipeg BradMarchand,Boston PA. Parenteau, Colorado ZachParise,Minnesota Eric StaalCarol , ina
DerekStepan,NYRangers Chris Stewart,StLouis JamesvanRiemsdyk,Toronto
BOSTON (97) Green 9-22 7-8 26,Bass 2-3 0-04,Garnett5-7 3-313, Pierce9-207-8 29, Bradley1-7 0-0 3, Terry 7 10 3 318,Crawford1-5 0 03,Wiliams0 21-21, Wilcox0-00-00 Totals 34-76 21-2497. N ewyork 17 1 830 19 6 — 9 0 Boston 22 32 14 16 13 — 97
Assists NameTeam Martin St.Louis,TampaBay SidneyCrosby,Pittsburgh NicklasBackstrom,Washington HenrikZetterberg,Detroit Mike Ribeiro,Wa shington ClaudeGiroux,Philadelphia Eric Staal Carol , i n a Warriors 115, Nug gets 101 PavelDatsyuk,Detroit RyanGetzaf, Anaheim DENVER (101) Iguodala7-113-419, Chandler3-6 0-06, Faried TaylorHall,Edmonton 3-6 2-2 8, Lawson11-204-5 26, Fournier 1-5 0-0 HenrikSedin,Vancouver 2, McGee1-32-4 4, Brewer3-9 5-814, A.Miger3-9 Kris Letang,Pittsburgh 5-712, Koufos0-02-2 2,Randolph1-I 4-4 6 Stone Joe Thornton,SanJose 0 0 2-2 2,Hamilton0-10-0 0.Totals 33-71 29-38 PatrickKane,Chicago Phil Kessel,Toronto 101. AnzeKopitar,LosAngeles GOLDEN STATE(115) Semin, Carolina Barnes2-90-04, Jack8-94-421, Bogut 6-90-2 Alexander 12, Curry10-165-531,Thompson5-101-213, Ezeli Chris Kunitz,Pittsburgh Matt Moul son,NYIslanders 0 0 0 0 0,Landry6 115617, Green5 81-213, BaLadd,Winnipeg zemore0-30-00, Jefferson1-30-2 2, Machado1-1 Andrew DanielSedin,Vancouver 0-02. Totals 44-7916-23115. Denver 21 23 28 29 — 101 StevenStamkos,TampaBay GoldenState 25 3 1 35 24 — 115 RyanSuter,Minnesota PK.Subban,Montreal Matt Duchene, Colorado HOCKEY Nazem Kadri, Toronto MikkoKoivu, Minnesota DerekStepan,NYRangers NHL
Thursday Baseball: MadrasatGladstone,5 p.m. Soflbalh Gladstone atMadras,4.30p.m. Boys golf: Class5ASpecial District1 tournamentat EaglePointGolf Club,11a.m..; Sisters,LaPineat GlazeMeadow,TBD Girls golf: Class5ASpecial District I tournamentat EaglePointGolf Club,11a.m.; Sisters at Tokatee MemoriaTBD l, Track: CulveratEastLinn inLebanon,4 pm. NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Boystennis:RedmondatRidgeview,4p.mzMounAll Times PDT tain View atBend,4p.m., Summit atCrookCounty, 4pm;EstacadaatMadras,4p.m. Eastern Conference Girls tennis: Bend at Mountain View, 4 p.m.; Atlantic Division Ridgeviewat Redmond, 4 pm.; CrookCounty at GP W L OT PtsGF GA Summit, 4p.mzMadrasatEstacada,4p.m. z-Pittsburgh 48 36 12 0 72 165 119 x-N.YRangers 48 26 18 4 56 130 112 Friday x-N.Y.lslanders 48 24 17 7 55 139 139 Baseball: CrookCountyat Bend,4:30p.m4Summit Philadelphia 48 23 22 3 49 133 141 at Ridgeview,4:30 p.m.; Redm ond at Mountain NewJersey 48 19 19 10 48 112 129 View,4:30p.m.;JunctionCity atSisters, 4:30p.m., Northeast Division CountryChristianatCulver, 4:30pm; Elmiraat La GP W L OT PtsGF GA Pine, 430p.m. y-Montreal 48 29 14 5 63 149 126 Softball: Bend atCrookCounty, 4:30 p.m.;Ridgeview x-Boston 48 28 14 6 62 131 109 at Summit4:30 , p.m.;MountainViewat Redmond, x-Toronto 48 26 17 5 57 145 133 4.30 p.m4 Sisters atJunctionCity,4:30 p.m.;Coun- x-Ottawa 48 25 17 6 56 116 104 try ChristianatCulver,4:30 p.m.;ElmiraatLaPrne, Buffalo 48 21 21 6 48 125 143 4.30 p.m. Southeast Division Track: Sisters, La Pine,Gichrist at Sisters Rotary GP W L OT PtsGF GA Invite, 2p.m.;Ridgeviewat LaPineTwilght, TBD y-Washington 48 27 18 3 57 149 130 MountainViewat DeanNice Invitational in Gresh- W innipeg 48 2 4 21 3 5 1 128 144 am, 2:15p.m.; BendatRobAllenInvite inLebanon, Carolina 48 19 25 4 42 128 160 4:30 p.m.;Summit, Redmondat NikefJesuit Relays, TampaBay 4 8 18 26 4 40148 150 2:30 p.m.;MadrasatStaytonTwilght, TBA Florida 48 15 27 6 36 112 171 Boys golf: Class5ASpecial District I tournamentat Western Conference EaglePoint GolfClub,11a.m. Central Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Girls golf: Class5ASpecial District1 tournamentat z -Chicago 4 8 3 6 7 5 7 7 155 102 EaglePoint GolfClub,11a.m. Boys lacrosse: Sistersat Harney,5:30 p.m.; Hood x -St Louis 4 8 2 9 17 2 60 129 115 x -Detroit 48 2 4 1 6 8 5 6 124 115 RiverValleyatSummit, 8 p.m. Columbus 4 8 2 4 17 7 55120 119 N ashville 48 1 6 23 9 41111 139 Saturday Northwest Division Track: Gilchrist atPLSIA TrackClassic at Portland GP W L OT PtsGF GA Christian, 11a.m. Girls tennis: MountainView,Sisters at BlackButte y-Vancouver 48 26 15 7 59 127 121 x-Minnesota 48 26 19 3 55 122 127 Toumame nt,10 a.m. E dmonton 4 8 1 9 22 7 45 125 134 Boys lacrosse: RexPutnamat Mountain View,I Calgary 48 19 25 4 42 128 160 p.m.; Hood River Valey atBend,2p.m. C olorado 48 1 6 25 7 39116 152 Pacific Division Sunday GP W L OT PfsGF GA Girls lacrosse: Roseburgat BendUnited (Summit y-Anaheim 4 8 3 0 12 6 66140 118 HS),2 p.m. x-LosAngeles 48 27 16 5 59 133 118 x-SanJose 4 8 25 16 7 57 124 116
91
TENNIS
Heat 88, Bucks 77
Power PlayGoals NameTeam AlexOvechkrn,Washrngton StevenStamkos,TampaBay Chris Kunitz,Pigsburgh James Neal, Pittsburgh JohnTavares,NYIslanders Thomas Vanek, Bufalo DustinBrown,LosAngeles Jeff Carter,LosAngeles PavelDatsyuk,Detroit
PatrickKane,Chicago AndreiMarkov,Montreal Matt Moulson,NYIslanders MichaelRyder,DAL-MON JakubVoracek,Philadelphia TroyBrouwer,Washington LoganCouture, SanJose ZachParise,Minnesota PK. Subban,Montreal GameWinning Goals NameTeam Jeff Carter,LosAngeles PavelDatsyuk,Detroit MarianHossa,Chrcago James Neal, Pittsburgh DerekStepan,NYRangers Plus/Minus NameTeam PascalDupuis,Pittsburgh Chris Kunitz,Pittsburgh
48 48 47 48 47
28 26 23 23 23
48 22 48 48 44 40
22 21 21 21
48 48 38 47 48 46 48
20 20 20 19 19 18 18
48 45 48 48 48 48 48 48
18 IB 18 18 18 18 18 IB
GP A 48 43 36 41 48 40 46 37 48 36 48 35 48 35 47 44 45 48 35 48 47 48 47 44
34 34 34 34 33 33 32 32 32 31
48 30 47 48 47 48 48 42 47 48 48 48
29 28 28 28 28 27 26 26 26 26
GP PP 48 16 48 10 48 9 40 9 48 9 38 9 46 8 48 8 47 8 47 8 48 8 47 46 48 47 48 48
8 8 8 7 7 7
42 7 GP GW 48 8 47 40 40 48
6 6 6 6
GP +/48 31 48 30 47 28 36 26 48 25
Jonathan Toews, Chicago SidneyCrosby, Pittsburgh DerekStepan,NYRangers PatriceBergeron,Boston 42 24 BradMarchand,Boston 45 23 TylerSeguin,Boston 48 23 PavelDatsyuk,Detroit 47 21 MarianHossa,Chicago 40 20 Franc oi sBeauchemi,Anaheim 48 19 HenrikSedin,Vancouver 48 19 Sheldon Souray,Anaheim 44 19 MarkFraser,Toronto 45 18 P hoenix 48 21 1 8 9 5 1 125 131 JasonGarrison,Vancouver 47 18 Dallas 48 22 22 4 48 130 142 MichalRozsival,Chicago 27 18 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime DennisSeidenberg, Boston 46 IB loss. x-clinched playoffspot Goals Against Ave rage y-clinched division NameTeam GPMINS GA AVG z-clinchedconference CraigAnderson,Otawa 24 1421 40 1.69 Sunday'sGame R ay Emery, Chicago 2 1 1116 36 I94 Ottawa 4, Boston2 Corey Crawford, Chicago 30 1761 57 1.94 End of regular season T uukka Rask Boston 3 6 2104 70 2.00 SergeiBobrovsky,Columbus 38 2219 74 2.00 NHLPlayoff Glance HenrikLundrtvist, NYRangers43 2575 88 2.05 All Times PDT CorySchneider,Vancouver 30 1733 61 2.11 FIRSTROUND Jimmy Howard, Detroit 42 2446 87 2.13 (Best-of-7) Jaroslav Halak, Stl.ouis 16 813 29 2.14 (x-if necessary) Antti Niemi San , Jose 43 2581 93 2.16 EASTERNCONFERENCE Viktor Fasth, Anaheim 25 1428 52 2.18 New YorkIslanders vs. Pittsburgh Martin Brodeur, NewJersey 29 1757 65 2.22 Wednesday,MayI: NY Islanders at Pittsburgh, 4:30 B rian Elliott, St Louis 2 4 1292 49 2.28 p.m. J onas Hiler, Anaheim 2 6 1498 59 2.36 Friday,May3. NYIslandersat Pittsburgh,4p.m. Marc-AndreFleury,Prttsburgh33 1858 74 2.39 Sunday,May5:Pitsburgh atNYIslanders9a.m. Pekka Rinne, Nashville 4 3 2444 99 2.43 Tuesday,May7: Pitsburgh at NYIslanders, 4p.m. Jonat hanQuick,LosAngeles 37 2134 87 2.45 x-Thursday,May9 NYIslandersat Pittsburgh, 4p.m. Tomas Vokoun,Pittsburgh 20 1029 42 2.45 x-Saturday, May11: PittsburghatNYIslanders, TBD x-Sunday,May12. NYIslandersat Pittsburgh, TBD TENNIS Ottawa vs.Montreal Thursday,May2: Ottawaat Montreal,4p.m. Friday,May3:Ottawaat Montreal, 4 p.m. Professional Sunday,May5:Montreal atOtawa, 4 p.m. BarcelonaOpen Tuesday,May7.Montreal atOttawa,4 p.m. Sunday x-Thursday, May9:Ottawaat Montreal, 4 p.m. At Real Club deTenis Barcelona x-Saturday, May11: Montreal atOtawa,TBD Barcelona, Spain x-Sunday,May12: Ottawaat Montreal, TBD Purse: $2.83 million (WT500) New YorkRangers vs. Washington Surface: Clay-Outdoor Thurs day,May 2:NY Rangers atWashington,4.30 Singles p.m. Championship Satur day,May4:NY RangersatWashington,9:30 RafaelNadal(2), Spain,def. NicolasAlmagro(4) a.m. Monday, May6:WashingtonatNY Rangers,4:30p.m. Spain,6-4, 6-3. Wednes day,May8.WashingtonatNYRangers,4:30 Nastase Tiriac Trophy p.m. Sunday x-Friday,May10: NYRangers at Washington, 4:30 At Progresul BNR Arenas p.m. Bucharest, Romania x-Sunday,May12: Washington atNYRangers, TBD Purse: $610,500 (WT250) x-Monday,May13. NYRangers atWashington, TBD Surface: Clay-Outdoor Toronto vs.Boston Singles Wednes day,MayI:TorontoatBoston,4p.m. Championship Saturday,May4: TorontoatBoston, 4p.m. Lukas Rosol , Czech Republic, def. GuigermoGarMonday,May6: BostonatToronto, 4 p.m. cia-l.opez,Spain,6-3, 6-2. Wednes day,May8:BostonatToronto,4p.m. x-Friday,May10:Torontoat Boston,4 p.m. PorscheGrandPrix x-Sunday,May12:BostonatToronto,TBD Sunday x-Monday,May13: Torontoat Boston,TBD At Porsche-Arena WESTERN CONFERENCE Stuttgart, Germany Minnesot avs.Chicago Purse: $795,707(Premier) Tuesday,April 30:Minnesotaat Chicago,5p.m. Surface: Clay-Indoor Friday,May3: Minnesotaat Chicago,6:30 p.m. Singles Sunday ,May5:ChicagoatMinnesota,noon Championship Tuesday ,May7ChicagoatMinnesota,6:30p.m. MariaSharapova(I), Russia,def. LiNa(2), China x-Thursday, May9: Minnesotaat Chicago,TBD 6-4,6-3. x-Saturday, May11: Chicagoat Minnesota,TBD x-Sunday,May12 Minnesotaat Chicago, TBD Detroit vs. Anaheim SOCCER Tuesday,April 30:Detroit atAnaheim, 7:30p.m. Thursday,May2: Detroit atAnaheim, 7p.m. MLS Saturday,May4: Anaheimat Detroit, 4:30p.m. Monday,May6:AnaheimatDetroit, 5 p.m. MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER x-Wednesday, May8:Detroit atAnaheim, 7p.m. All Times POT x-rnday,May10:AnaheimatDetroit, TBD x-Sunday,May12. Detroitat Anaheim,TBD Eastern Conference San Josevs. Vancouver W L T P t sGF GA Wednes day,May1:SanJoseatVancouver,7:30p.m. Montreal 5 I I 16 9 5 Frid ay,May3:SanJoseatVancouver,7p.m. NewYork 4 4 2 14 15 13 Sunday,May5:VancouveratSanJose, 7p.m. Houston 4 2 2 14 12 9 Tuesday,May7:Vancouverat SanJose, 7p.m. S porting KansasCity 4 3 2 1 4 10 8 x-Thursday, May9:SanJoseat Vancouver, 7p.m. Columbus 3 2 3 1 2 12 7 x-Saturday, May11: VancouveratSanJose, TBD Philadelphia 3 3 2 1 1 10 12 x-Monday, May13: SanJoseat Vancouver,TBD NewEngland 2 3 2 8 4 6 Los Angelesvs. St. Louis TorontoFC I 3 4 7 10 12 Tuesday,April 30.LosAngelesatSt. Louis,5 p.m. Chicago 2 5 I 7 6 14 Thurs day,May2:LosAngelesatSt.Louis,6:30p.m. D.C. I 6 I 4 4 13 Saturday,May4: St.Louis atLosAngeles, 7p.m. Western Conference Monday Ma ,y6:St.LouisatLosAngeles,7p.m. W L T P t sGF GA x-Wedne sday,May8:LosAngelesatSt.Louis,TBD FC Dallas 6 I 2 20 15 9 x-rnday ,May10:St.LouisatLosAngeles,TBD Los Angeles 4 I 2 14 12 4 x-Monday,May13: LosAngeles atSt.Louis, TBD Portand 3 I 4 13 14 11 ChivasUSA 3 3 2 11 12 11 NHL Leaders RealSaltLake 3 4 2 11 7 9 ThroughRegularSeason SanJose 2 3 4 1 0 8 11 Goals Vancouver 2 3 3 9 9 11 NameTeam GP G Colorado 2 4 3 9 7 9 Alex OvechkinWa , shington 48 32 Seattle I 3 2 5 3 5 StevenStamkos, TampaBay 48 29 NOTE: Threepoints for victory, onepoint for tie.
Sunday'sGame Houston1,Colorado1,tie Thursday'sGame NewEnglandatPortland, 7:30p.m. Saturday's Games Seattle FC atPhiladelphia, I p.m. NewYorkatColumbus,I p.m. Montreal at SanJose, I p.m. Toronto FC atColorado,6 p.m. Vancouverat RealSalt Lake,6 p.m. Sunday, May5 Chrvas LISAat Sportrng KansasCrty,2 p.m. Housto n atLosAngeles,8p.m.
BASEBALL College Pac-12 Standings All Times POT
Conference Overall
W L OregonState 14 4 Oregon 16 5 ArizonaState 11 7 UCLA 11 7 Arizona 9 9 Stanford 9 9 Califomia 9 12 SouthernCal 8 13 WashingtonState 7 11 Washington 6 12 Utah 5 16 Sunday's Games ArizonaState9, Utah6 WashingtonState4, UCLA3 x-Arizona18, AabamaState3 Oregon State6, USCI Oregon 4, Stanford 3 California 6,Washington5 Tuesday's Games x-USCat Pepperdine, 3p.m. x-Saint Mary'sat Stanford, 5:30p.m. x-UC IrvineatUCLA,6 p.m. x-ArizonaStateatArizona, 6 p.m. x-California atPacific, 6p.m. x-OregonatSeattle, 6 p.m. x=nonconference
W L 34 8 33 10 28 12 27 13 28 14 23 15 20 23 16 26 20 20 14 28 16 23
MOTOR SPORTS NHRA NATIONALHOT ROO ASSOCIATION O'ReUly NHRA Spring Nationals Results
At Royal PurpleRaceway Baytown,Texas Sunday Final finish order
TOP FUEL I, BobVandergriff. 2, ShawnLangdon.3, Khalrd alBalooshi. 4,MorganLucas. 5,Larry Dixon.6, Spencer Massey.7, DougKalitta. 8, TerryMcMigen.9, David Grubnic 10, TonySchumacher. 11, J.R.Todd.12, AntronBrown.13, TJ. Zizzo. 14,TroyBuff. 15,Steve Torrence.16,BrandonBernstein. FUNNYCAR I, CruzPedregon.2, TimWilkerson. 3, Alexis DeJoria. 4,RonCapps. 5,JackBeckman. 6,JohnnyGray. 7, BobTascaRI.8, JohnForce. 9, Robert Hight. 10, BlakeAlexander 11, DelWorsham.12, TonyPedregon. 13,JeffArend. 14,Terry Haddock. 15, Courtney Force.16,MagHagan. PRO STOC K I, Jason Line. 2,ShaneGray. 3, GregStanfield. 4, Jeg Coughlin. 5,VincentNobile. 6, RickieJones. 7, Allen Johnson.8, EricaEnders-Stevens. 9, Mike Edwards.10, Rodger Brogdon. 11, Larry Morgan.12, GregAnderson. 13,Matt Hartford.14, ChrisMcGaha. 15, Steve Kent. 16,V.Gaines. PRO STOCKMOTORCYCLE I, Hector Arana Jr. 2, Scotty Polacheck 3, John Hall. 4, MichaelRay. 5, Hector Arana. 6, Andrew Hines. 7, LE Tonglet. 8, Angie Smith. 9,AdamArana. 10, ShawnGann. 11, Chip Ellis. 12, EddieKrawiec. 13, JimUnderdahl.14,Matt Smith.15,SteveJohnson.16, KatieSullivan.
DEALS BASEBALL American League BALTIMOR EORIOLES—Placed CTaylor Teagarden onthe15-day DL.Recalled CLuis Exposito Irom
Norfolk(IL). BOSTONRED SOX — OptionedC RyanLavarnway to Pawtucket(IL). ReinstatedRHPJohn LackeyIrom the15-dayDL CHICAGOWHITESOX— PlacedRHP GavinFloyd on the15-dayDL RecalledRHPDeunte Heath from Charlotte(IL).OptionedOFBlakeTekote to Charlotte. CLEVEL ANDINDIANS—PlacedCLouMarsonon the15-dayDL,retroactiveto April 25.Recalled CYan Gomes andLHPScott BarnesIromColumbus(IL). KANSASCITY ROYALS Recalled LHP Wil
Smith Irom Omaha(PCL). OAKLANDATHLETICS — Reinstated OF Yoenis
Cespedes fromthe15-day DL.Designated OFCasper Wells forassignment. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Reinstated OFJason Kubelfr
MONDAY, APRIL 29,2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Boston 18 7 NewYork 15 9 Baltimore 15 10 TampaBay 12 13 Toronto 9 17 Central Division W L Kansas City 13 9 Detroit 13 10 Minnesota 11 10 Chicago 10 14 Cleveland 9 13
West Division W 16 14 11 9 7
Texas Oakland Seattle Los Angeles Houston
L 9 12 16 15 18
W eeks2b 3 0 1 0 Ethierrf 3 0 0 0 CGomzcf 3 0 I 0RHrndzc 3 0 0 0 Y Btncr3b 3 0 0 0 Uribe3b 3 0 1 0 Maldndlb 3 0 0 0 Segersss 3 0 0 0 Lohsep 2 0 0 0 Kershwp 2 0 0 0 KDavisph 1 0 0 0 HrstnJrph 1 0 0 0
MARINERS WIN SERIES
AH TimesPDT
Pct GB .720 .625 2'/z .600 3 480 6 .346 9'/r
McGnzlp 0 0 0 0 Leaguep 0 0 0 0
T otals 3 0 0 4 0 Totals 3 02 6 2 M ilwaukee 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 0 Los Angeles 1 0 0 0 1 0 Ogx— 2 DP — Los Angeies 1. LOB—Milwaukee 3, Los
591 .565 '/z .524 1H .417 4 .409 4
LohseL,1 2 Mic.Gonzale z 1
West Division
Arizona
Colorado SanFrancisco Los Angeles San Diego
W 15 15 13 12 9
L 10 10 12 12 15
7
5 2 2 0
4
1 0 0 0 I Los Angeles Kershaw W,3-2 8 4 0 0 0 12 LeagueS,8-9 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:21.A—49,003(56,000).
Pct GB .640 .538 2H .407 6
Pirates 9, Cardinals 0
.375 6'/r .280 9
ST. LOUIS — Rookie Jeff Locke pitched seven innings of three-hit ball and Russell Martin had two of Pittsburgh's four home runs in a victory over St. Louis that gave the Pirates a series win and the
Sunday's Games N.Y.Yankees3,Toronto 2 Boston 6, Houston1 KansasCity9, Cleveland0,1stgame Tampa Bay8, ChicagoWhite Sox3 Minnesota 5, Texas0 Oakland 9, Batimore 8, 10innings Seattle 2 L.A. Angels1 Detroit 8,Atlanta3 Cleveland10,Kansas City 3,2ndgame
NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 15 9 Washington 13 12 Philadelphia 12 14 NewYork 10 13 Miami 6 19 Central Division W L Pittsburgh 15 10 St. Louis 14 10 Cincinnati 14 12 Milwaukee 12 11 Chicago 9 15
NL Central lead. Joneshadthree
Pct GB .625 .520 2'/z .462 4 435 4
1/2
.240 9'/r
Pct GB .600 .583 '/z .538 1H .522 2 375 51/2
Pct GB .600 .600 .520 2 .500 2'/r 375 5
1/2
Sunday's Games Miami 6,ChicagoCubs4 Philadelphia5, N.Y.Mets1 Cincinnati 5,Washington 2 Pittsburgh9, St.Louis0 Arizona4,Coorado2 L.A. Dodgers 2, Milwaukee0
hitsand John McDonald added an RBI double for Pittsburgh, which ended rookie Shelby Miller's Elaine Thompson I The Associated Press
Seattle Mariners' Michael Morse hits a home run against the Los Angeles Angels in the eighth inning of Sunday's game in Seattle. The solo homer led the Mariners to a 2-1 win over the Angels. It was the third victory for Seattle in the four-game series.
out nine in winning for the first time this season, Ben Zobrist hit a go-ahead RBI single in a three-run eighth spurred by Alex Rios' error
third base while lowering his ERA to 2.23.
and TampaBay beat Chicago. Price (1-2) allowed three runsand
Kinsler 2b 4 0 I 0 Dozier 2b 4 0 2 I A ndrusss 4 0 1 0 Mauerc 4 0 0 0 Brkmndh 3 0 0 0 Wlnghdh 2 2 0 0 Beltre3b 4 0 0 0 Mornealb 4 1 2 2 P rzynsc 4 0 1 0 Parmelrf 3 0 1 1 N cruzrf 4 0 0 0 Arcialf 4010 DvMrplf 4 0 0 0 Hickscf 3I I 0 M orlndlb 3 0 2 0 EEscorss 3 I 0 0 LMartncf 3 0 2 0 Carro03b 3 0 2 1 Totals 3 3 0 7 0 Totals 3 05 9 5 Texas 0 00 000 000 — 0 Minnesota 000 1 0 2 2 0x — 5 DP —Texas1. LOB —Texas7, Minnesota4. HR-
SanDiego6, SanFrancisco4 Today's Games N.Y. Mets(Harvey40) at Miami (Fernandez0-2),
TampaBay Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi
4:10 p.m.
Washington(Strasburg1-4) at Atlanta(Teheran 1-0), 4:10 p.m. SanDiego(Richard0-2)at ChicagoCubs(Samardzija 1-4), 5:05p.m. Pittsburgh(WRodriguez2-0) at Milwaukee(Gagardo 2-1), 5:10p.m. Cincinnati(Latos1-0) at St. Louis(Wainwright 4-1), 5:15 p.m. SanFrancisco(M.cain 0-2) atArizona(Kennedy1-2), 6:40 p.m. Colorado(Chatwood0-0) at L.A Dodgers(Ligy 0-0), 7:10 p.m. Tuesday'sGames N.Y.Metsat Miami,4:10p.m. Philadelphiaat Cleveland,4:10p.m. Washington atAtlanta, 4:10 p.m. San Diego atChicagoCubs,5:05 p.m. PittsburghatMilwaukee,510 pm. Cincinnati atSt.Louis, 5:15p.m. San Francisco atArizona, 6:40p.m. Colorado at L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m.
American League
Mariners 2, Angels1 SEATTLE — Jason Bay and Michael Morse hit solo home runs and Seattle took three of
four from Los Angeles to earn its first series victory of the year. Bay tied it in the seventh with his
second homer, connecting on the first pitch of the inning from
Jason Vargas (0-3). Morse put Seattle ahead in the eighth against Vargas, hitting his seventh home run into the Angels' bullpen.
0 0
3 1 1 0 0
3 0 0 0 0
I 1 1 0 0
I 0 0 0 0
streak of14 scoreless innings at home to start the season. The Pirates have won nine of12 overall, leapfrogging St. Louis for first place.
homered twice and drove in four runs, helping Miami avert a four-
game series sweep atthe hands of Chicago. Ricky Nolasco (2-2) gave up three runs in seveninnings and retired the final15 batters he faced. The Marlins improved to 6-
19, still worst in the majors. Chicago
Miami ab r hbi ab r hbi D eJesscf 3 2 1 0 Pierrelf 4 I 1 0 Scastross 4 0 2 2 Coghlncf 3 1 0 0 Rizzolb 3 0 2 1 Stantonrf 3 3 3 4 ASorinlf 4 0 0 0 Dobbslb 3 0 0 0
Schrhlt rf 3 0 0 0 DSolan 2b 4 0 1 1 I -lairstnph-rf 1 0 0 0 Brantiyc 4 0 0 0 DNavrrc 4 1 1 1 NGreenss 3 1 1 1 Valuen3b 4 0 0 0Valaika3b 3 0 I 0
Barney2b 4 0 0 0 Nolascop 2 0 0 0 Viganv p 2 1 1 0 Kearns ph 1 0 0 0 Sappeltph 1 0 0 0 MDunn p 0 0 0 0 Loe p 0 0 0 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 Borbon ph I 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 4 7 4 Totals 3 06 7 6 Chicago 1 02 000 001 — 4 Miami 200 002 11x — 6 LOB Chicago 5, Miami 3. 28 S.castro (5), Rizzo(3),Valaika(4). HR —D.Navarro (3), Stanton2 (3), N.Green (1). SB—Pierre(6). CS—Dobbs(1). Chicago IP H R E R BB SO ViganuevaL,1-1 6 4 4 4 3 8 Loe 2 3 2 2 0 0 Miami NolascoW,2-2 7 4 3 3 2 2 M.DunnH,4 1 2 0 0 0 0
Rosalesss 5 1 2 0 s as City 6. —B 28 utler (2), Moustakas(4), Kottaras Houston 9, Boston 6. 28 Ankiei (3), Nava(4), Totals 4 2 8 158 Totals 3 9 9 128 (1) 38 Acabrera(1),Y.Gom es(2).HR Aviles(2) Pedroia (6), D.Ortiz (5), Carp(5). 38 Drew (2) 8 SB — C.Santana(1) SF—Swisher, Aviles, Stubbs, CS — Baltimore 000 410 111 0 EIsbury (1). Pittsburgh St. Louis O akland 000 004 202 1 9 L Cain. Houston IP H R E R BB SO ab r hbi ab r hbi No outswhenwinning runscored. Cleveland IP H R E R BB SOB.Norris L,3-3 6 9 5 3 2 6 SMarte cf 5 1 2 0 Mcrpnt 2b 4 0 0 0 E—Machado (2). DP—Baltimore 1, Oakland Kluber W,2-0 7 7 2 2 0 6 Cisnero 2 2 1 1 0 3 T abatalf 4 I 1 1 Beltranrf 3 0 0 0 1. LOB Baltimore 5, Oakland10. 28 McLouth Pestano 1 1 1 1 2 0 Boston G Jonesrf 4 2 3 1 Jaycf 0000 (7), Machado (9), A.Jones(10), CDavis (8), Crisp C Perez 1 0 0 0 0 2 LackeyW,l-l 6 5 1 1 2 4 G Snchzlb 5 0 0 1 Hogidylf 3 0 1 0 2 (10), Donaldson(10), Rosales(1). HR—C.Davis Kansas City Mortensen 1 0 0 0 0 0 P Alvrz3b 4 1 1 2 Craiglb 4 0 1 0 I I 0 0 0 0 (9), S.Smith(3), Cespedes(4). SB—McLouth (8). W.Smith L,O-I 4 7 6 4 1 5 Uehara R Martnc 5 2 3 3 YMolinc 3 0 0 0 Cishek S3-4 I 1 1 1 0 0 CS — Hardy(1). S—Crisp. SF—Wieters. B.chen 3 3 2 0 0 4 A.Bailey 1 I 0 0 0 0 Inge2b 3 1 1 0 T.cruzph 1 0 0 0 T 2:39 A 19 817(37,442). Uehara. Balk—Cisnero. Baltimore IP H R E R BB SO J.Gutierrez 2 4 2 2 0 1 WP — JuWsnp 1 0 0 0 Freese3b 3 0 0 0 T — 2:56. A — 36,52 7 (37, 0 71). Mig.Gonzale z 51 - 3 7 4 4 2 4 W.S mith pitched to 1bater inthe5th. JMcDnlss-2b4 0 I I SRonsncf-rf 3 0 0 0 PattonBS,1-1 1 1 2 2 1 0 HBP b y B.chen (Brantl PB ey).Kottaras. Lockep 2 0 0 0 Kozmass 3 0 1 0 O'Day 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 T—2:56. A19,831 — (37,903). Barmesss 1 1 1 0 SMiiierp 1 0 0 0 Interleague National League MatuszBS,I-I 12- 3 3 2 2 0 1 S alasp 0 0 0 0 1-3 I 1 0 1 1 Strop L,0-1 C urtis ph I 0 0 0 Boggs p 0 0 0 0 Tigers 8, Braves 3 Padres 6, Giants 4 Colo 6 9 5 5 0 3 Twins 5, Rangers 0 Rzpczy p 0 0 0 0 Cook 1 2 1 1 0 1 T otals 3 8 9 I 3 9 Totals 2 9 0 3 0 Doolittle 1 2 1 1 0 0 MINNEAPOLIS — Kevin Correia DETROIT —Miguel Cabrera's SAN DIEGO— ChaseHeadley, P ittsburgh 010 0 1 1 1 0 5 — 9 Balfour I 2 I 1 0 I St. Louis 0 00 000 000 — 0 three-run homer in theseventh pitched eight sharp innings, Justin Nick Hundley and Alexi Amarista BlevinsW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 E—Locke (1). DP—Pittsburgh 1, St Louis 2. Morneau homered andMinnesota homeredoffRyanVogelsongand open, Strop pitchedto 3baters in the10th. LOB —Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 6. 2B —G.Jones inning broke the game WP —Cook. sent Texas to a second straight (7), R.Martin (6), Jo.McDonald (1). HR —Tabata and Detroit finished off a threeSan Diego beatSanFrancisco for T 3:22. A 27,475(35,067). (1), G.Jones(2), R.Martin 2 (5). SB S Marte(7). game sweep of Atlanta. Austin loss for the first time this season. its first three-game sweep of the S—S.Mil er. Correia (3-1) gave up six hits, Pittsburgh IP H R E R BB SO Jackson and Omar lnfante also Giants since May 2010. Headley Rays 8, White Sox3 LockeW,3-1 7 3 0 0 2 4 struck out two and walked one. He had three hits andAmarista homered for the Tigers, and Doug Ju Wilson 2 0 0 0 1 0 CHICAGO — David Price struck allowed only one runner to reach scored three runs for the Padres, Fister (4-0) struck out eight in Sl. Louis
six hits in seven innings. The 2012 AL Cy Young Award winner walked two and threw119 pitches.
Detroit 8,Atlanta3
62-3 5 1-3 2 2-3 2 Rice 1-3 0 Parnell 1 0 T—2:55. A—28990(41,922).
0 0 0 0 0 0
Marlins 6, Cuds4 Angeles 4. 28 —Weeks (5), C.Gome z (5). HRC.Crawford 2(4). Milwaukee IP H R E R BB SO MIAMI — Giancarlo Stanton
Pct GB
Today's Games Houston(Harreg2-2) at N.Y.Yankees (Petitte 3-1), 4:05 p.m. Minnesota(Pelfrey 2-2) at Detroit (Scherzer2-0), 4:08 p.m. Cleveland(U.Jimenez0-2) at KansasCity (W.D avis 2-1), 5:10p.m. L.A. Angels(Hanson2-1) at Oakland(Straily 1-0), 7:05 p.m. Baltimore(Britton 0-0) at Seattle (J.Saunders1-3), 7:10 p.m. Tuesday'sGames Houstonat N.Y.Yankees, 4:05pm. Minnesota at Detroit, 4:05p.m Bostonat Toronto,4:07 p.m. Philadelphiaat Cleveland,4:10p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxatTexas, 5:05 p.m. Tampa Bayat KansasCity,5:10 p.m. LA. Angelat s Dakland,705p.m. BaltimoreatSeatle, 7:10pm.
Mi.Adams Papelbon New York NieseL,2-2 Atchison Lyon
J nnngscf 3 2 1 0 DeAzalf 4 1 1 0 Joycerf 3 3 1 2 Greene2b 3 0 0 0 Zobristss 5 I 3 2 Riosrf 4 I I 0 Longori3b 4 0 I 1 Konerk dh 3 I 1 2 Loney lb 5 0 0 0 A.Dunn lb 2 0 1 1 RRorts2b 4 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 1 0 KJhnsn dh 4 0 0 0 Gigaspi 3b 4 0 1 0 L oatonc 4 1 1 1 Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 S Rdrgzlf 3 I I 0 Wisecf 3 0 0 0 F uldlf 10 0 0 T otals 3 6 8 8 6 Totals 3 03 6 3
T ampa Bay 0 0 1 0 0 2 032 — 8 Chicago 1 02 000 000 — 3 E—Rios (1), Gilaspie (1). DP—Tampa Bay 2 LOB— TampaBay6,Chicago4.2B— Jennings(7), Longoria(4). HR—Joyce (4), Lobaton(2), Konerko (4). SB —DeAza (4), Rios(5), Ai.Ramirez(3). CSJennings(3).
Tampaeay
PriceW,1-2 Jo.PeraltaH,5 Rodney
Chicago Axelrod
N.JonesL,0-2
Thornton Crain
Texas
ab r hbi
Minnesota ab r hbi
Morneau(2). SF—Parmeiee. Texas IP H R OgandoL,2-2 6 4 3 J Ortiz
Frasor R.Ross Minnesota
1-3 3 2 0 1 0 I 2-3 I 0
CorreiaW,3-1 8 6 0 Fien 1 1 0 Frasorpitchedto1 batterin the7th. T—2:35. A—35,751(39,021).
Heath WP —N.Jones. T—3:09. A—22,677(40,615).
3 1 0 0 2
1 2 0 0 2
3 1 0 1 1
Yankees 3, BlueJays 2
go-ahead, two-run homer in the seventh inning and New York
completed a four-gamesweep of Toronto. Brennan Boesch homered
in the second off Dickey (2-4), pitching in NewYork for the first
since getting his 20th win for Royals 9, Indians 0 (First Game) time the New York Mets last September. KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Mike
Aviles hit a three-run homer and finished with a career-high five RBls, and Cleveland beat Kansas City10-3 to split the first day-night doubleheader in Kauffman Stadium history. The
Royals' Jeremy Guthrie shut down Cleveland in a 9-0 victory in the opener, but Will Smith (0-1)
Toronto
New York
Pablo Sandoval had anRBIsingle among his career high-tying four hits for the defending World Series
champion Giants, who lost their season-high fifth straight game. San Francisco S a n Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi Pagancf 4 1 1 0 Evcarrss 5 0 1 0 S cutaro2b 4 0 0 0 Venalerf 3 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 5 1 4 1 Denorfiph-rf 1 0 0 0 Poseyc 4 1
1 2 Headiy3b 3 1 3 1
Pencerf 4 1 2 0 Alonso lb 2 0 0 0
B elt lb 3 0 1 0 Blankslf 4 0 0 0 GBlanclf 3 0 1 0 Gyorko2b 4 1 1 0 Milares p 0 0 0 0 Amarst cf 3 3 2 2 E R BB SO N oonanph 1 0 0 0 Hundlyc 4 I 2 2 3 2 3 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 Marrlusp 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 B crwfrss 2 0 0 1 Brachp 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 V glsngp 2 0 0 0 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Torreslf 2 0 0 0 Kotsayph 1 0 0 0 S treetp 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 T otals 3 4 4 104 Totals 3 2 6 9 5 0 0 1 S an Francisco 010 010 020 — 4 San Diego 120 2 0 1 Ogx— 6 DP San Diego2. LOB San Francisco9, San
IP H R E R BB SO NEW YORK — Lyle Overbay sent 7 6 3 3 2 9 a knuckleball from R.A. Dickey I 0 0 0 I I 1 0 0 0 1 2 into the right field bullpen for a 6 4 3 11 - 3 23 13 0 0 1-3 0 0 1 2 2
who have won four straight.
ab r hbi ab r hbi Lawrie3b 4 0 1 0 ISuzukicf-rf 3 0 0 0 R asmscf 4 0 1 0 Cano2b 3 0 0 0 B autistrf 4 1 1 0 VWegslf 4 0 0 0 E ncrncdh 4 I I 0 Hafnerdh 4 I I 0 M ecarrlf 4 0 1 0 Boeschrf 3 I 1 1 L indfb 3 0 1 1 Gardnrcf 0 0 0 0 M lzturs2b 4 0 1 1 J.Nix3b 3 0 0 0 HBiancc 3 0 0 0 Overaylb 3 1 2 2 Bonifacph 1 0 0 0 Nunezss 2 0 0 0 K awskss 3 0 I 0 CStwrtc 3 0 0 0 Arencii ph 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 5 2 8 2 Totals 2 83 4 3 Toronto 0 00 101 000 — 2 N ew York 010 0 0 0 2 0 x — 3 LOB —Toronto 7, NewYork 4. 28—Bautista (3),
S.MigerL,3-2
52- 3 7 3 3 3
21-3 2 1 1 1 Salas 2-3 2 3 3 1 Boggs 1-3 2 2 2 0 Rzepczynski T—3.02.A—41,470(43,975).
7 2 1 1
Reds 5, Nationals 2 WASHINGTON — Tony Cingrani struck out a career-high11-
including four in one inningwhile pitching two-hit ball through the sixth, and Cincinnati avoided a
four-game series sweep.Brandon Phillips had a two-run single as
the Reds (14-12) improved to a major league-worst 2-9 on the road.
PHOENIX — Gerardo Parra
tripled and scoredtwice, and Josh Wilson had arun-scoring double to help lead Arizona to a win
over Colorado. RockiesAll-Star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki was lifted in the bottom of the third inning
because of astrained left shoulder.
Detroit
ab r hbi ab r hbi JSchafrcf 5 0 0 0 AJcksncf 3 2 1 3 P stmck2b 5 0 1 0 TrHntrrf 4 1 1 0 J.Uptonlf 2 1 I 0 Micarr3b 4 2 2 3 FFrmnlb 3 1 0 0 Fielderlb 3 0 1 0 CJhnsn3b 4 1 2 1 VMrtnzdh 3 0 0 1 Gattisc 4 0 1 1 JhPerltss 4 0 0 0 Uggladh 3 0 0 1 Tuiassplf 3 0 1 0 R Jhnsn rf 3 0 0 0 D.Kegylf I 0 I 0
Smmns ss 4 0 1 0 B.Pena c 3 1 0 0 Infante2b 4 2 2 1
T otals 3 3 3 6 3 Totals 3 28 9 8 Atlanta 0 00 300 000 — 3 Detroit 003 001 40x — 8 LOB —Atlanta 8, Detroit 4. 28—Pastornicky (1),
C.Johnson(6), Mi.cabrera(6). HR—A.Jackson(2), Mi.cabrera(3), Infante(2) SF—VMartinez. Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO Gearrin Avilan
Detroit FisterW,40 Alburquerque
62-3 6 6 6 2 0 2 2 2 0 1 13 1 0 0 I
6 0 I
7
8
6 3 3 0
I 0 0 0 2 3 Valverde 1 0 0 0 0 0 Aburquerquepitchedto2 batters inthe9th. Gearrinpitchedto 2baters in the7th. HBP by Fister (FFreem an,J.Upton), by Alburquerque (R.Johnson).WP—Alburquerque2. T—2:40. A—33,469(41,255).
Leaders ThroughSunday'sGames
AMERICANLEAGUE BATTING —CSantana,Cleveland,.388 TorHunter, Detroit,.375; Micabrera,Detroit,.375; AJones,Baltimore, .352;McLouth,Baltimore,.351; CDavis, Baltimore, .349;Lowrie,Oakland,.344. RUNS —AJackson, Detroit, 25; Crisp, Oakland, 22; AJones,Batimore,22; McLouth,Baltimore, 21; 28 — Votto (3), Espinosa(7), Desmond(10), K.Suzuki Jennings,TampaBay, 20;Micabrera, Detroit,18; Eils(4). S—Cingrani. SF—Cozart. bury, Boston,18;Gordon,KansasCity,18. Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO RBI — CDavis, Baltimore,28; Napoli, Boston,27; CingraniW,2 0 6 2 0 0 1 11 Micabrera,Detroit, 26; Fielder, Detroit, 22;AJones, Lecure I3 2 1 1 I I Baltimore,20; Ncruz,Texas,19; MarReynolds, CleveMarshall H,2 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 land,19;Zobnst,Tampa Bay,19. Broxton 1 1 1 1 1 1 HITS—AJones, Baltimore,37; Micabrera,Detroit, ChapmanS,5-5 1 0 0 0 1 1 36; TorHunter,Detroit, 36; Altuve,Houston,33; GorWashington don,KansasCity,32;Lowrie,Oakland,32;Machado, Detwiler L,1-2 5 11 4 3 1 3 Baltimore,32. Stammen 2 0 0 0 0 2 DOUBLES —Napoii, Boston,13; Crisp, Oakland, HRodriguez 1 3 0 1 I 3 0 10; Donaldson,Oakland,10 AJones,Baltimore, 10; 12-3 0 0 0 0 I Mattheus Lowrie, Oakland,10;Seager,Seattle, 10; Machado, WP — Cingrani. Baltimore,9. T 3:27. A 36,457(41,418) TRIPLES —Ellsbury, Boston,3; 10tiedat2. HOMERUNS —CDavis, Baltimore,9; Arencibia, Toronto, 8;Bautista,Toronto, 7; Cano,NewYork, 7; Phillies 5, Mets1 Encarnacion,Toronto, 7; Morse,Seatle, 7; MarReynolds, Cleveland,7. NEW YORK — Ryan Howard STOLEN BASES—Egsbury,Boston,11; McLouth, snapped a seventh-inning tie with Baltimore,8; Crisp,Oakland, 7;Pedroia, Boston, 6;10 tied at5. a pinch-hit double, Cole Hamels PITCHING —MMoore,TampaBay, 5-0; Buchholz, earned his first win of the season Boston,5-0; Fister,Detroit, 4-0; Lester, Boston, 4-0; Texas,4-1; Sabathia, NewYork, 4-2; Masterand Philadelphia took advantage Darvish, son, Cleveland, 4-2. of a crucial New York Mets error to STRIKEOUTS — Darvish,Texas,49;FHemandez, Seattle, 44; Dempst er,Boston,43;AniSanchez,Definish a three-game sweep. Freddy troit,41; BuchholzBost , on,39; Masterson,Cleveland, Galvis homered, Chase Utley 39; Peavy,Chicago,39.
Arizona ab r hbi ab r hbi couldn't do the sameafter getting EYonglf 4 I 3 0 GParracf-If 4 2 2 0 Fowler cf 4 1 1 1 C.Ross rf 4 0 1 1 recalled from Triple-A Omaha for T iwtzkss 1 0 0 0 Kubeilf 3 0 0 0 M.lzturis (2). HR —Boesch (2), Overbay(3). SBthe nightcap. JHerrrss 3 0 0 0 Poliockph-cf 1 0 0 0 H amltnrf 4 0 0 0 Morserf 4 1 2 1 Bautista(1). T rumolb 4 0 0 0 Shppchc 4 0 I 0 Toronto IP H R E R BB SO Rosarioc 4 0 1 0 Gdsch1b 4 1 1 0 Cleveland Kansas City HKndrc2b 3 0 1 0 JMontrdh 3 0 0 0 DickeyL,2-4 7 4 3 3 I 4 C uddyrrf 4 0 2 0 MMntrc 2 0 I 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi lannettc 3 0 0 0 Ackley2b 3 0 1 0 Delabar 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 Pacheclb 4 0 2 0 Erchvz3b 3 0 1 0 Brantlylf 4 0 0 0 Gordonlf 4 1 2 2 3b 3 0 0 0 JoWiisn 2b 3 0 1 1 LJimnz3b 3 0 0 0 Baylf 3111 Cecil 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Arenad Kipnis 2b 3 0 0 0 AEscor ss 5 2 1 2 Rutiedg2b 4 0 0 0 Pnngtnss 2 1 1 0 AnRmnss 3 1 1 0 Andinoss 2 0 0 0 New York Acarerss 4 0 3 0 Butlerdh 4 1 0 0 T otals 3 1 1 4 0 Totals 3 12 6 2 PHughes 6 7 2 2 1 9 G arlndp 2 0 0 0 Corbinp 1 0 0 0 L os Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 1 000 — 1 Swisherdh 3 0 0 0 Hosmerlb 5 0 I I LoganW,l-l 1 1 0 0 0 2 Torrealph 1 0 1 0 MtRynlp 0 0 0 0 MrRynllb 3 0 0 0 S.Perezc 3 0 0 0 Seattle 000 000 11x — 2 D.RobertsonH,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Outmnp 0 0 0 0 AMarteph I 0 0 0 had an RBI single and Hamels 4 0 2 0 Mostks3b 1 2 1 1 0000 E—H.Kendrick(4), Andino(2). LOB —LosAngeles CSantnc RiveraS,9 9 1 0 0 0 0 1 C Gnzizph 1 0 0 0 Begp NATIONALLEAGUE aburn rf 4 0 1 0 Francrrf 4 1 2 1 T—2:29 A—36,872(50,291). Putzp 0000 (1-3j overcame six walks, which 4, Seattle 7.28—Bourjos (2), H.Kendrick (3), Shop- R BATTING —CJohnson, Atlanta, .387; Harper, C hsnhil3b 4 0 2 0 Dyson cf 4 0 2 2 Totals 3 5 2 101 Totals 2 8 4 8 2 pach(4).HR Morse(7), Bay(2). S Bourjos matched his career high. The Washin gton,.360;MYoung,Philadelphia,.352;Setubbscf 4 0 0 0 Getz2b 3 2 1 0 Colorado 0 00 002 000 — 2 LosAngeles IP H R ER BB SO S gura, Milwaukee,.349;Choo,Cincinnati,.344; MElis, 3 39 I 0 9 Red Sox 6,Astros1 Arizona 002 110 Ogx — 4 left-hander held the Mets to two VargasL,0-3 8 6 2 2 2 7 Totals 3 3 0 8 0 Totals Los Angel es,.342,CGomez, Milwaukee,.338. C leveland 000 00 0 0 0 0 — 0 DP — Colorado 3. LOB—Colorado 7, Arizona Seattle RUNS —Mcarpenter, St Louis,21;JUpton,AtKansas City 0 2 0 1 1 0 3 2x — 9 3. 28 — E.Young 3 (6), Cuddyer(6), Jo.Wilson(1). hits and struck out eight over six Iwakuma 6 3 1 0 0 8 BOSTON — John Lackey returned DP — Cieveland1, KansasCity l. LOB —Cleveland 38 — G.Parra(2). CS—E.Young(4). S—Corbin. innings in his fourth consecutive lanta, 21; Ccrawford,LosAngeles,20; CGonzaiez, CappsW,2-1 2 1 0 0 0 3 from the disabled list and pitched Colorado,20; Choo,Cincinnati,19; Pagan,SanFranIP H R E R BB SO solid outing. All-Star catcher Colorado WilhelmsenS,B 8 1 0 0 0 0 1 9, KansasCity 7. 28 A.cabrera(3), C.Santana(8), cisco, 19; 5tied at18. Francoeur(4), Dyson(3). HR —Gordon(3), AEscobar six solid innings, David Ortiz drove GarlandL,2-2 6 8 4 3 2 4 T—2:31.A—20,638(47,476) Carlos Ruiz went1-for-4 with a RBI —Philips, Cincinnati, 24; Buck, NewYork, (3). SB —Dyson (5). CS—Kipnis (I) Outman 2 0 0 0 0 0 23; Tulowitzki, Coorado,22; Braun,Milwaukee,21; Cleveland IP H R E R BB SO in two more runs and Boston Arizona double in his return to the Phillies Frazier,Cincinnati,19, Rizzo,Chicago,19; Sandovai, Athletics 9, Orioles 8 MastersonL,4-2 6 1-3 9 7 7 4 9 matched a team record with CorbinW,3-0 62 - 3 9 2 2 0 5 from a 25-gameamphetamine San Francisco,19;DWright,NewYork,19. Albers 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Mat.ReynoidsH,l 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 (10 innings) its18th win in April by beating HITS — Choo, Cincinnati,32; SMarte, Pittsburgh, SBarnes 1 1 2 2 1 0 Bell H,l 1 0 0 0 0 1 suspension. 32; GParra,Arizona,32; Harper, Washington, 31; KansasCity Houston for a four-gamesweep. PutzS,5-8 1 1 0 0 1 1 SandovalSan , Francisco,31; MYoung, Philadelphia, OAKLAND, Calif.— Third G uthri eW,3-0 62-3 6 0 0 3 5 Stephen Drew hit a two-run triple WP — Garland,Corbin PB—Rosario. Philadelphia New York 31; 5 tiedat29. Collins H,3 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:33. A—24,852(48,633). baseman MannyMachadomade ab r hbi ab r hbi DOUBLES —Desmond, Washington, 10; GParra, Hochevar 2 2 0 0 0 5 and Ortiz had two hits, extending Rogins ss 5 1 1 0 RTejadss 3 1 2 0 a throwing error on a bunt in Arizona, 9;Pollock,Arizona,9; Rogins,Philadelphia, HBP—byAlbers (S.Perez). WP—Masterson. his hitting streak to 20 games Frndsn 1 b 3 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 4 0 0 0 Dodgers 2, Brewers 0 T 2:44 A 22,001(37,903). 9; Schierholtz,Chicago,9; Mcarpenter,St. Louis,8; the 10th inning and Oakland Howard ph-lb2 1 1 2 DWrght3b 3 0 1 1 dating to last season. Ortiz has ,St.Louis,8;DeJesus,Chicago,8;Mccutchen, Utley2b 5 0 1 1 Buckc 4 0 0 0 Craig completed its comeback to snapa LOS ANGELES — Clayton 11 RBls and is batting .516 in MYong 3b 3 0 1 0 Dudalf 3 0 0 0 Pittsburgh,8. TRIPLES —DWright, NewYork, 3; EYoung,Colofour-game skid and keep Baltimore lndians10, Royals 3 Ruizc 4 0 1 0 Byrdrf 3000 eight games since returning to the Kershaw retired 18 consecutive rado, 3; SMarte,Pittsburgh, 2; Nelson,Colorado, 2; (SecendGame) Brown rf-If 4 I 1 0 I.Davislb 3 0 0 0 from a four-gamesweep.Down 5batters and struck out12 in eight lineup last weekend. GParra, Arizona, 2; Segura,Milwaukee, 2; Utiey, Mayrry cf 4 0 1 1 Lagarscf 2 0 0 0 0 in the sixth, the A's tied it at 8 on Cleveland Philadelphia,2. KansasCity dominant innings, Carl Crawford Galvis If 3 1 1 1 Atchisnp 0 0 0 0 HOME RUNS —JUpton, Atlanta, 12; Harper, ab r hbi ab r hbi Boston Yoenis Cespedes' two-run homer B rantlylf 4 2 2 0 Gordonlf 4 0 0 0 Houston Bastrd p 0 O OOLyonp 0000 homered twice against Kyle Lohse ab r hbi ab r hbi Carrerph-rf 1 0 0 0 Ricep 0 0 0 0 Washington,9; Buck,NewYork, 8; Rizzo,Chicago,8; with one out in the ninth. Braun,Milwaukee,7; Fowier, Colorado,7;5 tiedat6 Acarer ss 5 2 2 1 AEscor ss 3 0 2 0 and the LosAngeles Dodgers Grssmn cf 5 0 0 0 Eilsurycf 4 0 0 0 Hamels p 2 0 0 0 Parnegp 0 0 0 0 STOLEN BASES —Ecabrera, San Diego, 7; Swisherlb 3 2 1 1 EJhnsnpr-ss 0 1 0 0 Altuve 2b 4 0 0 0 Navarf 4320 beat Milwaukee. Kershaw (3-2j LNix ph-rf 2 1 1 0 Baxterph 1 0 0 0 SMarte, Pittsburgh, 7; Segura,Milwaukee,7; McBaltimore Oakland MrRynl3b 5 1 2 0 Butlerdh 3 0 1 0 Jcastro c 3 1 1 0 Pedroia2b 3 1 1 1 MAdms p 0 0 0 0 Niesep 2 0 0 0 Cutchen,Pittsburgh, 6; Pierre, Miami, 6; DWright, ab r hbi ab r hbi CSantndh 5 1 4 1 Hosmerlb 4 0 1 0 scattered four hits and didn't walk Papeln p 0 0 0 0 Cowgigcf 1 0 0 0 C.Pena lb 3 0 2 0 D.Ortizdh 4 0 2 2 NewYork,6; Revere, Philadelphia, 5; Rutedge,ColoMcLothIf 5 4 4 0 Crisp cf 422 1 A viles2b 4 I I 5 L.caincf 3 0 0 I Rceden dh 4 0 2 1 Napolilb 4 0 1 0 a batter while lowering his ERA Vldspnph 1 0 0 0 rado,5 Machd3b 5 1 4 2 Jaso c 301 0 Raburnrf 5 0 I 0 Mostks3b 4 0 I 0 FMrtnzlf 4 0 0 0Carplf 3121 T otals 3 8 5 9 5 Totals 3 0 I 3 I to 1.73. PITCHING — Lynn,St.Louis,4-0;Harvey, New Markksrf 51 1 0 DNorrsph-c 2 1 1 0 Y Gomsc 5 1 1 0 Francrrf 4 1 1 0 Dmngz 3b 4 0 1 0 JGomslf 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia 000 010 31 0 — 5 A.Jonescf 5 1 2 2 S.Smithdh 5 2 1 3 Stubbs cf 3 0 0 1 Kottars c 4 1 1 0 4-0; Zimmerma nn, Washington, 4-1; WainA nkielrf 4 0 1 0 Sltlmchc 4 1 1 0 New York 1 00 000 000 — 1 York, C.Davis lb 5 1 2 3 CespdsIf 5 2 2 2 G etz2b 4 0 1 2 Milwaukee Los Angeles MGnzlss z 4 0 0 0 Mdlrks3b 4 0 1 0 E—Buck(1), D.Wright(1),Niese(1). LOB—Phila- wright, St.Louis,4-1; 11tied at3. Wietersc 4 0 1 1 Moss lb 3 0 1 0 T otals 3 9 10149 Totals 3 3 3 8 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi STRIKEOUTS —AB urnett, Pittsburgh, 48; D rewss 4 0 I 2 deiphia 7, New York 8 28 — Howard (7), Ruiz(I), Kershaw, Hardyss 5 0 1 0 Dnldsn3b 3 0 1 2 C leveland 203 10 0 2 2 0 — 10 T otals 3 5 1 7 1 Totals 3 4 6 116 A okirf 4 0 0 0 Crwfrdlf 4 2 2 2 Los Angeles, 47; Harvey,NewYork, 39; Mayberry(7), R.Tejada (7). 2 HR—Galvis (2). Flahrty2b 4 0 0 0 CYoung rf 3 0 0 0 K ansas City 0 0 0 2 0 0 010 — 3 Houston Samardzi i a, Chi c ago, 39; Wainwright, St. Louis, 37; 1 00 000 000 — 1 Segurass 4 0 1 0 Punto2b 4 0 3 0 Philadelphia IP H R E R BBSO Reimlddh 4 0 0 0 Reddck ph-rf 1 0 0 0 E—Getz (1), Moustakas(5), Hosmer(2). DPBraunlf 4 0 1 0 AdGnzllb 4 0 0 0 HamelsW,1-3 Angeles, 34; Bumgarner, SanFrancisco, 34; Boston 100 220 10x — 6 6 2 1 1 6 8 Ryu, Los Sogard2b 5 1 1 0 Cleveland1, KansasCity l. LOB—Cleveland 7, KanL ucroyc 3 0 0 0 Kempcf 3 0 0 0 E Ma Gonzalez2 (3), Mortensen(1). LOB Bastardo H,3 1 1 0 0 0 0 Hamels,Philadelphia,34;Lynn,St. Louis, 34. Los Angeles Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi Bourjos cf 3 0 2 0 Enchvz cf 4 0 1 0 Troutlf 4 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 0 0 0 Pujolsdh 4 0 0 0 KMorlslb 4 0 0 0
Colorado
Atlanta
Minor L,3-2
Cincinnati Washington ab r hbi ab r hbi C hoocf 4 0 0 0 Spancf 5 0 0 0 Cozart ss 3 1 2 2 Espinos 2b 4 0 1 0 V ottolb 5 1 2 1 Harperlf 3 1 0 0 P higips2b 5 0 1 2 Werthrf 3 0 0 0 Diego 7.28—Pence(4), Headley 2 (3), Gyorko(6) 5 0 1 0 Dsmndss 4 1 2 1 HR — Posey (3), Headley(2), Amarista(I), Hund- Frazier3b 5 0 2 0 LaRoch lb 4 0 0 0 ley (2) SB —Pagan (3), Ev.cabrera(7), Blanks(1). Brucerf Paullf 4 0 1 0 Rendon 3b 2 0 I 0 S—Marquis. SF—B.crawford. 0 0 0 0 KSuzukc 4 0 1 I Sanrrancisco I P H R E RBB SO Broxtnp C hpmnp 0 0 0 0 Detwilrp 1 0 0 0 VogelsongL,1-2 5 8 6 5 3 6 CMigerc 3 2 1 0 TMooreph 1 0 0 0 Mijares 2 1 0 0 1 1 Cingrnp 2 I I 0 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 Kontos 1 0 0 0 0 2 Lecurep 0 0 0 0 Lmrdzzph 1 0 0 0 San Diego Marshgp 0 0 0 0 HRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 MarquisW,2-2 6 2 - 3 6 2 2 4 3 DRonsnph-I f0 0 0 0 Matthsp 0 0 0 0 1-3 3 2 2 0 0 Brach JSolano ph 1 0 0 0 GregersonH,5 1 0 0 0 1 0 Totals 3 6 5 11 5 Totals 3 3 2 5 2 StreetS,5-5 1 1 0 0 0 1 C incinnati 210 1 0 0 0 10 — 6 Brachpitchedto3 baters inthe8th. W ashington 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 10 — 2 Vogelsongpitchedto 2baters inthe6th. E—Paul (1), Espinosa(2), Rendon(3). DPWP — Gregerson. PB—Posey. Washi n gton 2. LOB — Cincinnati 10,Washington8. T—3:09. A—33,722(42,524).
Diamonddacks 4, Rockies 2
seven innings on arainy night at Comerica Park.
B4
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
NBA PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP
ursearn our- ameswee a erroutin La ers The Associated Press L OS A N GELES — F o r fo u r straight games, the San A n tonio . -i"~ef~i1l'0!. I g Spurs showed off all the teamwork and tenacity that the Los Angeles Lakers lacked all season long. And when the Lakers' tumultuous season finally collapsed Sunday night, the smooth Spurs rolled right past them to the second round. Tony Parker scored 23 points, and San Antonio completed its first-round sweep of the injury-plagued Lakers with a 103-82 victory in Game 4. Tim Duncan had 11 points and six rebounds for the second-seeded Spurs, who will face the winner of Denver's series with Golden State in the second round. They'll get plenty of rest after flattening the Lakers, who staggered through back-to-back blowout losses at home without three Mark J. Terrill /The Associated Press regular starters in their first opening- San Antonio Spurs guard Manu Ginobili, left, shoots as Los Angeles Lakers cenround exit since 2007. ter Jordan Hill defends during the second half of Sunday's playoff game in Los "Obviously, it wasn't a fair fight," Angeles. The Spurs won 103-82 and swept the Lakers in the four-game series.
Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. "When you're a competitor, you want to compete on an even basis, and the Lakers weren't able to do that.... Even though it wasn't a fair fight, we still want to win the series, and I'm glad we did. Our focus was great." San Antonio never trailed in the clincher, leading by 25 points in one more businesslike effort against the seventh-seeded Lakers, who provid-
ed their usual drama right down to their last gasp. In his final game before unrestricted free agency, Dwight Howard scored seven pointsbefore getting ejected early in the third quarter for arguing. Pau Gasol had 16 points for the Lakers, who were swept from the postseason for the second time
in three years despite a late courtside appearance by Kobe Bryant on crutches. "It was just a weird feeling," Parker said. "Obviously, I am happy we won, but it was just weird. They were miss-
ing a lot of guys, so we're just happy to go to the next round." Howard said the season was "like
a nightmare. It's like a bad dream, and we just couldn't wake up from it. That's what it felt like." The Los A ngeles Lakers gave away thousands of white towels to their fans Sunday, and they acquired an unfortunate symbolism: In the final game of a season that began with championship aspirations, the Lakers couldn't keep up without injured starters Bryant, Steve Nash and Metta World Peace. They had just nine available players in uniform for the final minutes. "I'm proud of them, because they fought," Lakers coach Mike D'Antoni said. "It was kind of a year that was all upside-down, but I appreciate the effort to get us into the playoffs. We just didn't have it." After Duncan led the Spurs' blowout in Game 3, Parker took the lead in the clincher, scoring 15 points in the first half while exploiting the Lakers' hastily assembled backcourt. Los Angeles' top four guards are out with injuries, including backups Steve Blake and Jodie Meeks, and Parker was merciless against the third-stringers. "What I was pleased about our team was that we kept our focus every night," Popovich said. "We played hard, followed the game plan and were veryactive and energetic every night, and sometimes that's hard to do when your opponent is wounded."
In other games on Sunday: Heat 88, Bucks 77: MILWAUKEELeBron James scored 30 points, Ray Allen had another big game against his old team and Miami advanced to the Eastern Conference semifinals with a victory over Milwaukee. It's the first time the Heat have swept a playoff series since James and Chris Bosh joined Dwyane Wade in Miami three years ago. And the Heat didn't even need Wade to do it. The guard missed only the second postseason game of his career, and first since 2005, with three bone bruises on his right knee. Warriors 115, Nuggets 101: OAKLAND, Calif. — Stephen Curry shook off a sore left ankle to score 22 of his 31 points in the third quarter, leading Golden State past Denver for a commanding 3-1 series lead. Jarrett Jack added 21 points and nine assists and Andrew Bogut broke out in the first half with 12 points and five rebounds for thesixth-seeded Warriors,who can close out the Nuggets in Game 5 on Tuesday night in Denver. Celtics 97, Knicks 90: BOSTON — Jason Terry scored Boston's last nine points as the Celtics weathered a strong comeback by New York and avoided being swept with an overtime win. Paul Pierce led the Celtics with 29 points as they forced a fifth game in the series, but it was Terry who provided the finishing touches.
Condensedseasonresults in reshuffling of playoff deck By Helene Elliott Los Angeles Times
L OS ANGELES — T h e S tanley Cup p l ayoffs w i l l h ave a d i f ferent look t h i s season and not only because the Los Angeles Kings, for the first t im e i n f r a nchise history, are t h e d e fending champions. This condensed seasonproduced a lot of injuries and a lot of dramatic playoff races. There was also a shift in power inboth conferences, highlighted by th e D etroit Red Wings' struggle to squeeze into the top eight in the West. Hampered by injuries and the retirements of d e fenseman Nicklas Lidstrom and feisty forward Tomas Holmstrom, the Red Wings didn't clinch their 22nd straight postseason berth until their season finale. E lsewhere i n t h e W e s t , the Anaheim Ducks had a great start but had to fight through a lull to hold the No. 2 seeding and return to the
Senatorswin, grad No. 7 seed
HOCKEY
The Phoenix Coyotes, a BOSTON — Jean-GaWest f i nalist l as t s e ason, briel Pageauscored the missed the playoffs. So did tiebreaking goal with 3:34 last season's No. 4 seed, the to play and the Ottawa N ashville P r edators. B o t h Senators beat Boston 4-2 t eams lacked the depth t o on Sunday night in the withstand injuries, and the NHL's rescheduled regularPredators never got over losseason finale. ing defenseman Ryan Suter The victory gave the to free agency. Senators the seventh seed In the East, the defending for the Eastern Conference champion New Jersey Devils playoffs and amatchup were undone by injuries and with Montreal. The Bruins, an offense weakened when who could have won the Zach Parise joined Suter in Northeast Division and Minnesota. Philadelphia, the earned a No. 2 seed with No. 5 seed last season, also a win, finish fourth; they fell far short and not only bewill play Toronto in the first cause of injuries to their deround. fense. Goalie Ilya Bryzgalov — The Associated Press could be an amnesty buyout. The absence of some familiar teams opened the door to more gracefully by goalies some teams that hadn't made R oberto Luongo and C o ry the playoffs in a while. The Schneider than by the media. New York Islanders got in for Late-charging C o l umbus the first time since 2007, and barely missed a playoff berth the Toronto Maple Leafs qualplayoffs after a year's ab- but gave its fans hope for the ified for the first time since s ence. Vancouver, No. I i n future. The Minnesota Wild 2 004. Montreal went f r o m the NHL last season, settled stumbled to the f i nish and last in the East to nearly the for the No. 3 West seeding had to win its finale to clinch top, but the New York Rangand survived a goaltending its first playoff berth since e rs — who ranked No. I i n controversy that was handled 2008. the East last season — barely
squeezed in this time
Postseason notes • Tampa Bay's Martin St. Louis, who will be 38 in June, became the oldestplayer to win the NHL scoring title. He took overthe lead Wednesday from Sidney Crosby, who had held it since suffering a broken jaw on March 30. St. Louis finished with 17 goals and 60 points in 48 games, three points ahead of teammate Steven Stamkos (29 goals, 57 points). St. Louis previously won th e scoring title in 2003-04. Undrafted, cut by two NHL teams, written off as too small, he's a great lesson
m perseverance. • The West playoff teams and seedings w er e d eterm ined S aturday, bu t t h e NHL delayed releasing the fullpostseason schedule until Sunday. The final game, between Boston and Ottawa, was postponed in the aftermath of th e B oston Marathon bombings and had an
mplements
impact on the East standings. But West teams — and fans — should have gotten their schedule sooner.
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NHlplayoffs, at a glance A look at the first-round series in the NHL playoffs:
•
~
•
EASTERNCONFERENCE No. 1 PittsdurghPenguins(36-12-0) vs. Na. 8 NewYorkIslanders (24-17-7)
WESTERNCONFERENCE No. 1 ChicagoBlackhawks(36-7-5) vs. Na. 8 Minnesota Wild(26-19-3)
ONLINE:
Outlook:The Penguins were 23-4 in their final 27
Outlook:The Blackhawks tore through the Western Conference and claimed the Presidents'Trophy for the second time. But what the Original Six team really wants is its second Stanley Cup title in four years after going 49 without one. The Wild secured
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games but will need to be on their game to avoid a third straight first-round exit. The Islanders are in the playoffs for the first time since 2007 and will be
looking for their first series win since they reachedthe conference finals in1993. The Islanders are ready for the playoffs, but not quite ready to knock off playofftested Pittsburgh. PengUins in 5.
No. 2 AnaheimDucks(30-12-6) vs. Na. 7 Detroit Red Wings it24-16-8)
season whenOttawa knocked off the Bruins in
Pacific Division champion Ducks would likely be the
matchup. Thisbackyardbrawlcouldgobackand forth for quite a while. Ottawa will be still standing at the end. Senators in 7.
Na. 3 WashingtonCapitals (27-18-3) vs. No. 6 New Yark Rangers (26-18-4) Outlook:Alex Ovechkin fueled the Capitals' surge to their fifth Southeast Division title in six years by leading the NHL with 32 goals. New York entered the
final day of the regular seasonwith the possibility of finishing anywhere between sixth and eighth in the
East. Theseteamswentsevengames lastseason, with the final two being decided by2-1 scores. Expect more of the same. Rangers in 7.
Na. 4 BostonBruins (28-14-6) vs. No. 5 TorontoMaple Leafs (26-17-5) Outlook:The Bruins squandered a chance to win the Northeast Division and claim the No. 2 seed in the
East by losing in overtime atWashington on Saturday and at home to Ottawa on Sunday in the regularseason finale. The Maple Leafs lost four of their final
six and were outscored 20-15 in that stretch. Boston outlasts Toronto in a matchup of skidding clubs. Bruiits in 7.
PHONE:
but first since 2008, when they beat Colorado in
Outlook:With help from their division rival, and now first-round opponent, the Canadiens won the Northeast title for the first time since the 2007-08
the New York Rangers in the No.1 vs. 8first-round
ampyraseminars.com
the regular-season finale. If Chicago is going to be seriously tested on theway to the finals, it won't be by the Wild. Blackhawks in 5.
playoffs last year. TheSenators moved up onespot from last year whenthey lost in seven gamesto
•
their fourth playoff appearance in their12 seasons,
No. 2 Montreal Canadiens(29-14-5) vs. No. 7 OttawaSenators (25-17-6)
Boston on Sunday. Montreal didn't qualify for the
•
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Outlook:If not for the Chicago Blackhawks, the odds-on favorite to represent theWestern Conference in the Stanley Cupfinals. It wasn't easy but the Red Wings managed to get into the playoffs for a 22nd straight season, clinching their spot with a win in
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the season finale. TheRedWings returned to the postseason again, but won't stick around too long. Ducks in 6.
Speaker: No. 3 VancouverCanucks(26-15-7) vs. No. 6 SanJose Sharks(25-16-7) Outlook:The Canucks enter the playoffs as the Northwest Division champion for the fifth time in six seasons. The Sharks will have to quickly figUre out how to win on the road — at least once in this series
— if theyare going to advance.Theywere17-2-5 at home butonly 8-13-2 on the road.SanJose is Used
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in the final month also put them into a matchup with
perhaps their biggest nemesis. TheKings won the franchise's first Stanley Cuptitle last year, and they did it from the No. 8 seed. Los Angeles is ready for another lengthy playoff stay. It starts here. Kings in 7. — The Associated Press
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to long playoff runs. Its success overVancouver continues into the playoffs. Sharks in 6. No. 4 St. LouisBlues(29-17-2) vs. Na. 5 LosAngeles Kings(27-16-5) Outlook:The Bluessurged in April to secure homeice advantage in the first round, but their11-2 mark
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MONDAY, APRIL 29,2013 • THE BULLETIN
Golf
Lookingahead
Draft
have some huge cleats to fill. San Francisco's ll-player Continued from B1 haul included defensive back Here's a breakdown: Eric Reid, defensive end Tank Carradine and tight Valiant Vikings end Vance McDonald, but Nobody made more noise the most intriguing pick was in this year's draft than the that of fourth-rounder MarVikings. cus Lattimore. The South Coming off a surprising Carolina running back sufrun to the playoffs spear- fered a c a reer-threatening headed by MVP Adrian Pe- right knee injury last season terson, they became the first just one year after tearing team since the Rams in 2001 ligaments in his left knee. to have t h ree f i r st-round San Francisco took a simipicks. They traded four se- lar gamble several years ago lections to New England to when it spent a third-round move up and take Tennessee selection on F r an k G o re, receiver Cordarrelle Patter- who had suffered torn ligason after grabbing Florida ments in each of his knees a defensive t a ckl e S h a r r if year apart at the University Floyd and Florida State cor- of Miami, but has made the nerback Xavier Rhodes. Pro Bowl four times and is That's pushing all y o ur the franchise's all-time leadchips into the center of the ing rusher. "I love the aggressive mentable. Minnesota served notice that they're coming after tal approach he has taken Aaron Rodgers and every- through this whole process, one else in 2013. but we're going to slow down
QB conundrum The Jets are testing out the old sayingyou canneverhave too many quarterbacks. After B uffalo s urprised
nearly everyone by picking Florida State's EJ Manuel as the only QB in the first round (at No. 16), the Jets pulled off their own stunner by selecting West V i rginia's Geno Smith in the second round, at No. 39. Coach Rex Ryan's three-ring circus at QB now includes a half dozen passers. The others are Mark Sanchez, David G a r rard, Tim Tebow, Greg McElroy and Matt Simms. "I hope they're all thinking, 'Hey, I have an opportunityto go win ajob,' " Jets offensivecoordinator Marty Mornhinweg said. Smith certainly is. "My goal is to be a franchise quarterback," he said. "But as of now, there's lots of work to be done."
Super selections Will the Harbaugh broth-
ers be making plans for another family reunion in February? Both Baltimore and San Francisco restocked for another Super Bowl run. Ravens GM Ozzie Newsome launched a defensive makeover after Lewis retired and Reed led a free agency exodus following their title, signing with Houston. Newsome used his first four picks and six of 10 selections on defenders, beginning w i th safety Matt Elam and linebacker Arthur Brown, who
COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF
Lookingdack
Continued from B1 Athlete of the week: While the Summit girls Redmond sprinter a re heavy f a v orites t h i s Kiersten Ochsner reset week at districts, the boys two of her own school tournament should be more records Saturday. The competitive. The Storm are Panther junior won the the team to beat, but Bend 100-meter dash in 12.44 High and Redmond both are seconds and the 200 in strong enough to compete 26.50. for the district title if SumContest of the week: mit has a couple of off-days. Summit's girls tennis Individually, Panther senior team went 4-0 on Mason Rodby heads into the Friday and Saturday district tournament playing to win the Class 5A some of the best golf of his Dual Championship in career, having either won Sunriver. The Storm outright or shared medalist topped Sherwood, a 5A honors at three events last title contender, 5-3 in the week. championship final. The rest of the state, including Central O r egon's s maller schools, start t h e postseason next M o n day and Tuesday, for the most THURSDAY part. Th e C r ook C o unty Gladstone at Madras boys host the Greater Orsoftball, 4:30 p.m.:The egon L e ague c h a mpionWhite Buffaloes, who ships at Meadow Lakes Golf are tied for third in the Course, and the Trinity LuTri-Valley Conference theran, Sisters, Ridgeview, standings, look to get Crook County and La Pine back on track andsecure girls teams all s tay n ear one of the league's three home at Brasada Ranch for play-in berths. Gladstone the 4A/3A/2A/lA S p ecial leads the TVCstandings, District 5 district tourney, but their only conference which the Saints of Bend loss this year came host. (The La Pine boys also against Madras. host their district champiTHURSDAY onship, the Sky-Em League AND FRIDAY tourney, not at their home Boys andgirls Class course of Quail Run Golf Course but at Tokatee Golf SA Special District1 Club in McKenzie Bridge.) golf championshipsin Eagle Point:Summit, The boys and girls state tournaments arescheduled Bend,Mountain View and Redmond high schools t o start tw o w e eks f r om send their boys and girls today on May 13. The 5A b oys tournament w il l b e golf teams to Southern Oregon for district play at Trysting Tree Golf Club with Eagle Point and in Corvallis, while the 4A Ashland. Only the top boys play at Emerald Valtwo teams from each ley Golf Club in Creswell. tournament advance to Quail Valley Golf C ourse the state tourneys on May in Banks, which is approxi15 and16. mately 25 miles northwest of Portland, hosts the 5A girls tourney, and Central Oregon's own Eagle Crest girls championship. Resort Ridge Course is the — Reporter:541-383-0305, site of t h e 4 A / 3A/2A/1A beastes@bendbulletin.com.
the aggressive physical things and make sure Marcus is 100 percent healthy before he goes out there on the field," 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh said. "If he doesn't playthis year, then he doesn't play this year."
Remaking rosters The heavy turnover after last season — eight new c oaches and s even n e w general managers — meant there were plenty of newbies making draft decisions. Led by the Chiefs' new brain trust of coach Andy Reid and GM John Dorsey, eight of the top 11 picks were made byteams that had turnover at the decision-making positions as t h e J a guars, Eagles, Browns, Cardinals, Bills, Jets and Chargers also had a first-year coach and/or general manager. Of t h ose, t h e b i g gest splash was made by the Bills when GM Buddy Nix gave new coach Doug Marrone a new QB by trading out of the eighth spot and selecting Florida State's Manuel. "If we can develop this guy, he has the talent to take you to the dance," Nix said. Other than the decision to take a chance on Manti Te'o in the second round, the Chargers' rookie tandem of GM Tom Telesco and coach Mike McCoy added right tackle D.J. Fluker of Alabama with the 11th pick and Cal wide receiver Keenan Allen in the third round, two players who should help embattled QB Philip Rivers right away.
BS
CYCLING Volunteers needed — Organizers of the 2013 Bend Don't
Brake road race,scheduled for May 25 in southeast Bend,are
programs for youth, juniors and adults. For more information or to
hockey, and herteam, theAnaheim Lady Ducks, recently won the
sign up as avolunteer, visit www.
Senior B division of the USANa-
benddontbrake.com or call Brenna Warburton at 541-678-3865.
tional Senior Women's Ice Hockey Championships in Oakland, Calif.
Rackleff hails from Bendand cur-
seeking volunteers. The event fea-
tures six racing categories ranging from 29.7 miles for theWomen's Masters and Juniors categories to 69.3 miles for the Men's Pro Cat
finisher. For results, see Commu-
nity Sports Scoreboard below.
RUGBY BlueS fall —The BendBlues
rently resides in Irvine, Calif.
saw their three-game winning
INLINE HOCKEY National teamselection-
streak come to anendwith a 42-7 loss to undefeated Clark County
MULTISPORT
Jetta Rackleff was recently named
Bend athletes win —Apair of
1/2 division. Volunteers areneeded to the USAwomen's senior nationto serve ascourse marshals and al inline hockey team. Rackleff, 21,
(Wash.) in a RugbyOregon Club Championship division high schoolboysmatchinCamas,
and her teammates will compete
local competitors won the Up the Crooked River Duathlon on Sunday Wash., on Saturday. Jacob Fritz
registration, set-up andcleanup.
in the Federation Internationale
in Prineville. Bend's JasonAdams
scored all of Bend's points on a
Half-day volunteer shifts (morning
de Roller Sports World Inline Cup
try and a conversion for the Blues.
and afternoon) include lunch. A portion of event proceedswill ben-
Championship, scheduled for July 14-22 in Anaheim,Calif. Thegoal-
was the top overall finisher out of 26 participants in the race, which
efit Bend Endurance Academy, a local nonprofit that offers cycling,
tender helped the women's senior national team to a silver medal at
nordic skiing and rockclimbing
last year's event. Shealso plays ice
drivers and to help with event
The Blues (4-3) play their final home game onSaturday at1:30
consisted of a 5-kilometer run, a 40K bike ride and another 5K run.
Bend's JeanneEastwood was second overall and thetop women's
p.m. at Central Oregon Community College. — Bulletin staff reports
COMMUNITY SPORTS SCOREBOARD Tea Timers — Griffith Tile; Shari Hamet, 202/548. TNT — OldGuysRule;DaveSwander,300/710; LydiaSmith,183/449.
Mark Dramen, 235 Men'sscratchseries: RickyMay ers, 635.Wom en's scratch game:Chris Gray,212. Women'scratch s series: Jutie Mayers,553.
Addison, 2:42:20,Sisters 19, ChadTorrell, 2 4309, Bend.20,Lori Engdatt2:44:51, Sandy. 21, Shelly Patrick, 248:02, Gresham.22, Hal Hockema,2.48:40, Bend.23, Kelly Layng,2:52:22, April 8-14 Latecomers (feague champions) — No Boring. 24, Toui Starrhope,3:0308, Fairview. 25, Multisport Casino Fun(feageechampions) — HiLows, Threat;DebRosenthat, JaneSupnet. MarronBeatty,3:26:26, Portland.26, BarbaraDalton KrystatHighsmith,BradClore, DanMcDonald. Progressive (feagee champions) — Y's Up the CrookedRiver Duathten 3:28:21,Prinevitte. Have-A-Baft Iteague champions) — Team Guys; JohnnyYbarra, ZachYbarra, TonyYharra, At Sunday 2-mile walk, 10-mile bike, 2-mile walk 8; Aiexrs Hiii-Gruenberg,eaytey Hum phrey, Louis Larson,AllenHeirrey,Keith Hilard Ie Pnaevrlle 1, Lynn Kettas1:50:35, Dama scus. 2, Colette McCoy. Free Breathers(feaguechampions)—Spare Towett ,2:03:58,Bend.3,DouglasHerinckx,2:06:52, His aad Hers — Go Ducks, Kerst Bosma, None; JBBayeur, Shirley Kitpatrick,DoneMoye. 5K run, 40Kbike, 5K rua Prieevitte. 4, CassySykes,2:08:14, Prinevitte. 5, 268/733;SherrieWidlund, 205/586. T.G.I.F. (teaguechampions) —SuckEmup; 1,Jason Adams,1 hour,47 minutes,38 secSamanthaHerinckx, 2:08.14, Prinevitte. 6, Shelly Greased Lightning — DirtyPonies;GaryDe- WayneTrinque,Rick Beckwith, DaveWhitson, Bryan onds, Bend. 2,Jeanne Eastwood,t:47:38, Bend.3, Marsh, 2:13:43, Prinevitte. 7, Monique Davis, Bemardi 222/601VounieGreen,183/472 Meeker. Kevin l.air, 201:03, Bend.4, DanBroyes,2:02:01, 213:44, Prieevit e 8, FritzEngdatt,2:14:32, Sandy. Guys aadGals—Kelly D'sSports Bar;BurtGetDraft Iteague champions) — Piu Crushers Redmond. 5, BrandonBrasher,2:07:28, Prinevitte. tling, 253/698;KimberlySoto,200/540. — Mike Waltosz,JeremyCrandatt, Patt>Sundrta, 6, Bill Cooley, 2:09:22, Prinevitte. 7, TomMalin, 9, Rick Hilton, 2:14:32,Gresham.10, CraigBlair, Rejects Ifeague champions) — TheWild SteveWilson. 2:20:20, Bend.8, WendyAlexander, 2:13:18,Bend. 2.20:06,Portland. 11, Karen Sullivan, 2:20:18, Bend. 12, Jutie Bunch; VicJohnson,Shirley King,Sue Snedden, 9, Brian Pew,2:13:47, Prinevitte. 10, Larry Weber, Hockema, 2 2508, Bend.13, JudyShiprack, 22626, DavidPete. League highscores 2:21:53,Bend. Lava Lanes Classic — HobblinAlong; Norm Rimrock Lanes,Prieeville 11, DavidKidd,2:23:28,Bend.12, AmyNortrom, Portland.14,Marilyn Martiusen,2:35:50,Prinevitte. Edmunson, 242/604;JannaHillier,207/548. Week 31 2:30:03, Bend. 13, Mary Carrel, 2:30:34, Bend. 15, DianeBlair 2:53:48, Portland. Wednesday Inc. — Dynamic CleaningSoTeam 5Krua, 40Kbike, 5Krua RimrockLeague 2012-2013 — Team scratch 14, DaveDallas, 2:31:24, Bend.15, Bill Miutieus, tutions; Travis Holmes, 276/751; Terry Lussier, game:StrykersProShop, 983. Teamscratch series: 2:31:50,Prinevitte.16, KristaCooley,2:32.01, Prine1, Team Akerherg,f:47r54, Priuewiie,2, TeamUn289/738. OregonVision Center,2,813. Men'sscratch game: ville. 17, JohnMarsh2:27:19, Prtrrevitte. 18, Kim ruh/Paulsom 2:14:52, Priueville audPortland.
Bowling
League highscores Lava Lanes, Bend
Pickleball
and hollering," adds Sifferman, 69. Many teammate relationships go beyond the court, says Bend Pickleball Club treasurer Christie Gestvang. A fter joining th e c lub a little more than a year ago,
Continued from B1 In the past two years, the sport has gained significant traction in Central Oregon. Its growth can be attributed in part to the Bend Pickleball Club, founded by Fraties and nine other l ocal p i ckleball players in summer 2011. "We decided that in order for the sport to grow in Bend there needed to be a f ocus point, so we gathered together and started the club," says F raties, who serves as the club's president. Since then, the public pickleball club ha s m ore t h an doubled in s ize t o i n clude a pproximately 1 2 0 a c t i v e members. A handful of smaller area pickleball clubs also exist in private resorts, athletic clubs and r e sidential c o m munities such as the Athletic Club
she says she regularly gets
together with teammates to share books or have lunch. Those friendships — along with the athletic challenge of action-packed games — are what Gestvang, 58, says she loves most about pickleball, which she calls a " l ifestyle Rob Kerr /The Bulletin sport." Dick Low, 66, hits a backhand during a pickleball game at Larkspur Like Fraties, she says she Park in Bend last week. usually picks up a paddle six days a week. Laughing, she adds: "I'm most local players are 55 or says his c l u b p e r iodically one of those addicted folks." older. hosts t o u r naments "that — Reporter: 541-383-0393, "There's a lot of health ben- bring private and public clubs egross~bendbulletin.com. efits, it keeps seniors active," together." says Fraties in regard to pickThose clubs tend to play leball's draw. pickleball in large groups (it is AUOiOLOGY of Bend, Sage Springs Club C ompared w i t h ten n i s common for players to rotate & HEARING AID CUNK 8r Spa in Sunriver and Bro- courts, he s ays, pickleball in and out of games). "Three ken Top Club in Bend. While courts are small and theretennis players will come over www,centraloregonaudiology.com these clubs are exclusive, they foreare easierforaging bod- and ask what's going on when Bend• Redmond• P-ville • Burns are often open to the public ies to cover. "(Older players) they see 20 picklers hooting 541.647.2884 through social membership still h ave r e flexes, (some) don't have the wheels to go on or dailycourt usage fees. A Free Public Service Based on local tournament a big court, but they can get 0 p< Orerron Newspaper ublisharr. Assocratian Q~+ p attendance and club rosters, around a pickleball court just Fraties estimates that, over- fine." I all, Central Oregon is home to Dozens of pickleball playabout 600 regular pickleball ers are expected to flock to players. B end next summer for t h e So many, in fact, that those 2014 Oregon Senior Games. players cannot find enough The 14-sport event that inOver 80 Oregon Newspapers, courts on which to play. cludes pickleball is presented from 36 Counties, Currently, the only public, by Visit Bend, the city's tourregulation pickleball court in ism agency. all of Bend is located at Quail The Senior Games, for ages 'e I Park, on the city's west side. 50 and older, may also proSeveral times each week, says mote interaction between recr ©K55) [93jIEQ7I33 i5 or use the Fraties, the Bend Pickleball gional pickleball clubs. "It's cy QjjEg©3K65) service Io be Club sets up makeshift courts a bout bringing t h e at locations such as the Boys community t ogether," says automatically emailed of notices 8e Girls Clubs of Central Or- Tom Sifferman, president of that match your needs. Qa egon, the Bend Senior Center the 30-member Broken Top and Summit High School. Pickleball Club of Bend. He M~ 5mEld tk r m Along w i t h as s embling portable nets, club members frequently use tape to mark temporary 20-by-44-foot pick0 g a leball boundary lines on area basketball or tennis courts. That might change soon, thanks to a partnership announced last f al l b e t ween Bend FC Timbers Former U of 0 the Bend Pickleball Club and the Bend Park & Recreation has been chosen Women's District. by the Portland Head Coach, The parties plan to split the construction cost of eight Timbers as their Tara Erickson, regulation pickleball courts Central Oregon now at Pine Nursery Community Alliance Club. Technical Director Park in Bend. To date, the club has raised$37,000 toward its for Bend FC $100,000 goal, according to Timbers. Fraties. Exciting Partnership! The public courts, which Fall Unified Soccer League are slated for construction in with the Bend June, would provide playing Park tr Recreation space for club and community members alike. W HAT W E O F F E R
1
I
•
"We recognize (pickleball)
is a r apidly growing sport that has a lot of local interest," says Matt Mercer, the park district's recreation director, who has been working on the
project. Mercer says pickleball appeals to Bend's older population in particular. Bend Pickleball Club's Fraties backs that observation, noting that
• Junior Academy • Futsal League • Competitive Academy •Women's PremierSoccerLeague
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• Future Stars Academy • Bend Premier Cup, Soccer Tournament • College Advisory Program R
• Annual Casino Night Fundraiser • Annual Golf Tournament • Winter Speed tf Agility Training • Alliance Select Teams
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B6
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
O M M U N IT Y BASEBALL ADULT BASEBALL LEAGUE:Teams forming for 2013 season of the Deschutes National Adult Baseball Association; competitive wood-bat league for ages 40-older; season runsJune-August;Michael McLain, 541-410-2265, trailrun50@gmail. com. PRIVATE INSTRUCTION:With former Bend Elks and minor league player Dave McKae; pitching and hitting instruction; video analysis optional; $40 for 40-minute lesson or $55 for1-hour video analysis; 541-480-8786; pitchingperfection© gmail.com. PRIVATELESSONS:With former Bend Elk Ryan Jordan; specifically for catching and hitting but also for all positions; available after 3 p.m. weekdays, open scheduling on weekends; at Bend Fieldhouse or agreed-upon location; $30 per half hour or $55 per hour; discounts for multiple players in a single session, referrals or booking multiple sessions; cash only; 541-788-2722, rjordan©uoregon.edu.
CLIMBING BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY COMPETITIONTEAM: Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays through June 27;4-6 p.m.; ages 10-18; age and skill appropriate training for climbers wishing to compete in local, regional and national competitions; must have previous climbing experience; mike@ bendenduranceacademy.org; bendenduranceacademy.org. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY DEVELOPMENT TEAM:Mondays and Wednesdays throughJune 27;4-6 p.m.; ages10-18; age and skill appropriate instruction for beginner to intermediate climbers; a program for those that want a fun, safe introduction to competitive climbing and for those looking to see if a competitive team is the right fit for them; must have previous climbing experience; www. bendenduranceacademy.org; info@ bendenduranceacademy.org.
CYCLING BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY JUNIOR TEAM:Roadand mountain bike training four-five days each week, now through August; dates, times vary; ages 12-18; enrollment open at www. bendenduranceacademy.org. AFTER SCHOOLCYCLING:Session presented by Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, in Bend, May15-June 5;three groups, including Trail Groms (ages 8-10), Trail Shredders (11-14) and Trail Masters (15-18); $75; to register or for more information, go to www. mbsef.org/programs/cycling or call 541-388-0002. DIRT DIVASMOUNTAIN BIKE PROGRAM:Women-only rides held twice per month on Mondays and based out of Pine Mountain Sports in Bend; next ride isMay 13;5:30 p.m.; free rentals available (show up 30 minutes early if taking out a rental); free; all ability levels welcome; 541-385-8080; www. pinemountainsports.com. MINIGROMS AFTER SCHOOL CYCLING:Sessions presented by Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundati on,in Bend,We dnesdays, May1, 8, 15, 22;ages 6-7; MBSEF coaches will pick up participants at their school 2-2:30 p.m.; rides are 2:45-4 p.m.; riders will return to MBSEF office by 4:30 p.m.; $75; to register or for more information, go to www.mbsef.org/programs/ cycling or call 541-388-0002. MOUNTAIN BIKINGGRIT CLINICS FOR WOMEN:Presented by Pine Mountain Sports in Bend, series of two two-day clinics for beginner and intermediate female mountain bikers;May4-5 and June15-16; registration now open at Pine Mountain Sports; cost $250 per two-day clinic; www.GritClinics. com, or email to info©GritClinics. com. BEGINNINGBICYCLE REPAIR AND MAINTENANCECLINIC:Learn how to properly repair and maintain your bike; various Tuesdays of each month, first clinicMay 7;7:30 p.m.; free; Pine Mountain Sports, 255 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; advance sign-up required; 541-385-8080; www.pinemountainsports.com. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL MOUNTAIN BIKING:Sessions presented by Bend Endurance Academy, Wednesdays, May 8-June 5; ages 6-12; $75; to register or for more information, go to www. bendenduranceacademy.or g/cycling or call 541-335-1346. Middle School Mountain Biking: Sessions presented by Bend Endurance Academy,Wednesdays, May8June 5;grades 6-8; $75; to register or for enrollment details, go to www. bendenduranceacademy.or g/cycling or call 541-335-1346. BEGINNERJUNIORROADBIKE CLINIC 2:Road bike handling clinic presented by Bend Endurance Academy,May 9and June25; 4-6
Email events at least lodays before publication to sports@bendbuttetin. com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.com/comsportscab
P OR TS
p.m. ages10-18; $15 per clinic; to register or for enrollment details, go to www.bendenduranceacademy. org/cycling or call 541-335-1346. CASCADECHAINBREAKER:May 11;11 a.m.; Bend; 16th annual cross-country mountain bike race; mix of singletrack and double-track trails and dirt roads; $15-$35; obra. OI'g.
BEND BICYCLEFILM FESTIVAL: May 22;7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; locally produced bicyclerelated short films, proceeds benefit Bend Endurance Academy; $12 in advance through Tower Theatre box office or at www.towertheatre. org, $15 at the door; for more information, call Bill Warburton at 541-335-1346 or email info© bendbicyclefilmfestival.com. DIRT DIVASMOUNTAINBIKING W OMEN'S IN-STORE CLINIC:May 26;7 p.m.; Pine Mountain Sports, Bend; a presentation by mountain biker Juli Furtado of Santa Cruz Bicycles, with a Q&A; free; to register or for more information, call 541-385-8080. DIRT DIVASMOUNTAINBIKING WOMEN'S IN-STORECLINIC: May 28; 7 p.m.;Pine Mountain Sports, Bend; learn about basic bike maintenance, such as how to fix a flat tire; free; to register or for more information, call 541-385-8080. DIRT DIVASMOUNTAINBIKING W OMEN'S IN-STORE CLINIC:May 29; 7 p.m.; Pine Mountain Sports, Bend; learn about mountain biking gear from Tori of Trek Bicycles; free; to register or for more information, call 541-385-8080. FIX-A-FLAT CLINIC: Learn how to repair a punctured mountain- or road-bike tire; 10 a.m.Sundays; Sunnyside Sports in Bend; free; 54 I-382-8018. BEND BELLA CYCLISTS: Weekly women-only group road and mountain bike rides; see website for additonal dates and meeting times; bendbellacyclists.org. INDOOR CYCLINGCLASSES: At Powered by Bowen, Bend; limited to eight riders per class; classes based on each rider's power output for an individual workout in a group setting; all classes 60 minutes except for Saturdays (85 minutes) and Sundays (180 minutes); at noon onMondays;at 6:30 a.m., 9:30 a.m., 4:45 p.m. and 6 p.m.on Tuesdays; at 6:30 a.m., 9:30a.m., noon and 5:30 p.m. on Wednesdays;at 6:30 a.m., noon, 4:45 p.m. and 6 p.m. onThursdays; at 9:30 a.m. onFridays; at8:30 a.m. onSaturdays;at 8 a.m. on Sundays; $18 or15 points on Power Pass per class; www.poweredbybowen.com, 541-585-1500. TRINITY BIKESRIDE:Group road bike ride starting in Redmond at Trinity Bikes;Mondays; 6 p.m.; casual pace; 541-923-5650. PINEMOUNTAIN SPORTS BIKE RIDE:Twice-monthly guided mountain bike rides hosted by Pine Mountain Sports and open to all riders; 5:30 p.m. on thefirst and third Wednesdays of eachmonth; free; rental and demo bikes available at no charge (be at the shop at 5 p.m.); meet Pine Mountain Sports in Bend; 541-385-8080; www. pinemountainsports.com. WORKING WOMEN'SROAD RIDE: Casual-paced road bike ride for women,90 minutes-2 hours;5:30 p.m., Mondays; m eetatSunnyside Sports in Bend; 541-382-8018. EUROSPORTS RIDE: Group road bike ride starting in Sisters from Eurosports;Saturdays, Tuesdays, Thursdays;check with the shop for start time; all riders welcome; 541549-2471; www.eurosports.us. HUTCH'SNOON RIDE:Group road bike ride starting in Bend from Hutch's Bicycles east-side location, at noon onMondays, Wednesdays, Fridays;and from Hutch's westside location at noon onTuesdays, Thursdays;pace varies; 541-3826248 or www.hutchsbicycles.com. HUTCH'S SATURDAY RIDE: Group road bike ride begins at10 a.m. Saturdaysin Bend from Hutch's Bicycles east-side location in Bend; approximately 40 miles; vigorous pace; 541-382-6248; www. hutchsbicycles.com.
HORSES TRAILCOURSE PRACTICE:May 4;10 a.m.-3 p.m.atthe posse clubhouse, 65432 Deschutes Pleasant Ridge Road, east of U.S. Highway 97 and north of Deschutes Market Road; includes acres of obstacles set into natural terrain and numerous man-made challenges; $15 suggested donation per horse to ride all day; John Cox; 541-647-7613.
Bend; to register, email mdeweese@ reboundoregon.com or call 541-322-9045. STEEL STAMPEDE:May 4-5; Crooked River Ranch; vintage motorcycle rally, trials (obstacle course) and motocross competitions; general admission $10per day; Hope Johnson,541923-2679; www.st eelstampede.org. ACROVISIONTAEKWONDO:Age 6 and older;Tuesdays, Thursdays, May 7-30;7-8 p.m.; RAPRD Activity Center, Redmond; students will learn about Korean culture, selfdefense, discipline and fitness; uniforms required and will be available for purchase the first day of class for $35; classes are ongoing and nonsequential; $69; 541-5487275 or raprd.org. RESTORE PROPERMOVEMENT YOGA:Restorative yoga for athletes such as cyclists, runners and triathletes already training; Sundays;4:30 p.m.; Powered by Bowen,Bend;60 minutes;5 points on Power Pass or $5 per class; 541-585-1500. REDMOND COMMUNITYYOGA: 7 p.m.on Mondays, Wednesdays; $49 per six weeks, drop-in available, beginner-intermediate levels; Rebound Physical Therapy, Redmond; 541-504-2350. SPRING FENCING:High Desert Fencing in Bend offers competitive training and fitness for youths age 10 and older and adults; lessons now available with French master fencing coach Mondays through Thursdays,5:30-7 p.m.; Randall, 541-389-4547;Jeff,541-419-7087. BABY BOOTCAMP:Wednesdays at 10 a.m. at Fleet Feet Sports Bend; bridget. cook@babybootcamp.com. ADULT OPEN PLAYROLLER HOCKEY:Sundays, 6:30-8 p.m.; $5;CascadelndoorSports,Bend; www.cascadeindoorsports.com; 541-330-1183. OPEN ROLLER SKATING: For all ages and ability levels; $5 per skater (includes skate rental), children under 5 are free;Tuesdays, 12:303:30p.m.; Wednesdays, 1-4 p.m.; Fridays,2-5 p.m. and6-9 p.m.; Saturdays,1-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.; Sundays,1-4 p.m.; 541-330-1183; callie@cascadeindoorsoccer.com; www.cascadeindoorsports.com. COWBOY ACTIONSHOOTING: Pistols, rifles, shotguns; hosted by Horse Ridge Pistoleros at Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association, U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 24; on thefirst and third Sundaysofeach month at10 a.m .; 541-923-3000 or www.hrp-sass. com. BEND TABLETENNIS CLUB: Eveningplay Mondays;6-9 p.m . (setup 30 minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost $60; at Boys & Girls Club of Bend; drop-in fee, $3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; Jeff at 541-480-2834; Don at 541-318-0890; Sean at 267-6146477;bendtabletennis@yahoo.com; www.bendtabletennis.com.
MULTISPORT YOUTH TRIATHLON:For kids in kindergarten through eighth grade; May11;Athletic Club of Bend; swim in club's outdoor pool; bike and run on club's campus; bike helmets mandatory; race distance varies by age; entry forms available in club's front lobby and at www. athleticclubofbend.com; $25-$30 (increases by $10 on May 3); 541-322-5200, ext. 120; susan© athleticclubofbend.com. MINI PPP:Registration open for 2013 U.S. Bank Kid's Mini Pole Pedal Paddle onMay19; afundraiser for the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation in which teams of six, grades1-6, compete in river rafting (with a guide), biking, an obstacle course and a run; online registration available at http://www.mbsef.org/ events/minippp/; also, registration forms available at all Central Oregon U.S. Bank locations, at the MBSEF office, and at local elementary and middle schools; registration deadline May10; molly©mbsef.org or 541-388-0002. DESCHUTESDASHWEEKEND SPORTS FESTIVAL:July13-14; Olympic triathlon and duathlon; sprint triathlon and duathlon; kids triathlon; kids splash 'n' dash; 10K and 5K runs; $22-$106.50 per person; www.deschutesdash.com.
consistent program and achieve goals; $75; 541-317-3568; angela© footzonebend.com; footzonebend. com/events/weekly runs. RUN YERBUTTEOFF: 5Krun/ walk and1-mile fun run;May 5; 9:30a.m.; Black Butte School, Camp Sherman; $25 individuals; $40 families, $15 students; 541-549-4357. TRAINING 201 CLINICWITH MAX KING: May 8;7 p.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend; in-depth examination of specific training functions; free, but sign up at footzonebend.com/events/training201-clinic-with-max-king. MILESFOR MOTHERS: May11; 9 a.m.; American Legion Park, Redmond; 10K, 5K and 1K fun runs; $10-$30; for more information or to register, visit events.time2race.com or call 541-390-4751. FOOTZONE PUBRUN: May13; 5:30 p.m.; a 3-mile group run starting at FootZone in downtown Bend; finishing at Broken Top Bottle Shop, where runners will be offered a special deal on beer and complimentary chips and salsa; for all paces and running levels; footzonebend.com or 541-317-3568. PLANTARFASCIITIS CLINIC: May 15;7 p.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend; with physical therapist Steve Leary of Hands Dn Physical Therapy; learn well-rounded approach to treating this injury; free; 541-317-3568; footzonebend.com. SAM JOHNSON PARKPROJECT FUN RUN:5Kand 10K family fun runs/walks, proceeds benefit Sam Johnson Park Improvement Project; May18;10 a.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Redmond; $15 individuals; $20 families; $20 couples; for more information or to register, visit familyfunrun.eventbrite.com. HAPPY GIRLSHALF: May26; Riverbend Park, Bend; half marathon, 5K and Happy Little Kids 1.5K runs; $25-$100, depending on event and date of registration; 541-323-0964; www.happygirlsrun. com. ASK THEEXPERTS: Tuesdays; 6 p.m.; atFootZone,downtown Bend; informal, drop-in Q-and-A session with a physical therapist; teague@ footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. YOGA FORRUNNERS: Wednesdays
at 7 p.m.; at Fleet Feet Sports Bend; $5 per session or $50 for12 sessions; focuses on strengthening andlengthening muscles and preventing running injuries; 541-389- I601.
MBSEF FREERIDESPRINGSHRED SESSIONS:Weekends nowthrough Mayat Mt. Bachelor; contact 541388-0002, mbsef©mbsef.org, or www.mbsef.org. NORDIC SKATEPRE-POLE PEDAL PADDLECLINICS: In preparation for the Pole Pedal Paddle on May 18; now accepting enrollments for one-, three- and five-day clinics; 541-388-0002; mbsef@mbsef.org; mbsef.org. PRE POLEPEDALPADDLE NORDIC RACE: May 5at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; race the same course used for PPP; contact 541-388-0002, mbsef©mbsef.org, or visit www. mbsef.org.
trained in adaptive aquatics and instruction techniques for patrons with developmental disabilities; Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays through May10; 6-6:30 p.m.; CascadeSwim Center,Redmond; $33.75; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. ADULT STROKE CLINIC: Age 16 and older; focus on stroke enhancement and ability to swim short distance segments; Mo ndays,W ednesdays and Fridays throughMay10; 6 p.m.-6:30 p.m.; $33.75; 541-5487275; raprd.org. AQUA KIDSSWIM LESSONS: Ages 3-5 and 6-11; next session is Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays throughMay10; 5:30 p.m.6 p.m.and 6 p.m .-6:30 p.m.options; CascadeSwim Center,Redmond; $33.75; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. REDMONDAREAPARKAND RECREATIONDISTRICT FAMILY SWIM NIGHT:7:25-8:25 p.m., Tuesdays,Cascade Swim Center, Redmond;adultmustaccompany anyone under age18; $10 per family; 541-548-7275, raprd.org.
SOCCER
VOLLEYBALL
SOCCEROPENPLAY(ADULT): Age14-older; no cleats, but shinguards required; $7;Friday nights; coed 7-8:30 p.m .,m en 8:30-10 p.m.; Cascade Indoor Soccer, Bend; 541-330-1183; callie@cascadeindoorsoccer.com; cascadeindoorsports.com.
JUNIOR SANDVOLLEYBALL LEAGUE:Oregon Volleyball Academy sand volleyball teams forming for female players in grades six through12, held at the sand courts in Bend's Old Mill District; two five-week seasons, first season starts in May, second season in July; 4 p.m .to dusk Mondays and Tuesdays, beginning in M ay; $50 registration fee; registration required byApril 29; for more information or to register, visit www.oregonvolleyballacademy.com or call 541-419-1187.
SNOW SPORTS
SWIMMING ADAPTIVESWIM LESSONS: All ages; for swimmers with disabilities; instructional staff is
Pa/t o 8'or "Early Bird Special" Fxtra discount on 2013 orders for Spring Delivery
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PADDLING SPRING PADDLEFEST: May3-5; Old Mill District, Bend; schedule includeslessonsand demos of kayaks,canoes and stand-up paddleboards; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe; 541-317-9407; www. tumalocreek.com.
MISCELLANEOUS R U NNING BIOMECHANICSLAB OPEN HOUSE: May 2; 7-9 p.m .;Learnaboutthe Rebound Excellence Project and biomechanics lab, with speakers Jay Dicharry, Stephanie Howe and MaxKing;Rebound Physical Therapy, 1160 S.W. Simpson Ave.,
LEARN TO RUN: Four-week program on Mondays and Wednesdays startingApril 29; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend; for beginning runners and fitness walkers; learn to avoid injury, run properly, develop a
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GATTORNEY o a oAToLAWwI FP e sL . sr s A M ILY LAW SPECIALIST
D ESC H U T ES VETERINARY C LINIC
MONDAY, APRIL 29,2013 • THE BULLETIN B7
T EE TO
R EEN COMMENTARY
CENTRAL OREGON SHOOTOUT
'sno awa s sunn or en ra re on o ers • While the weather has been great this spring, conditions canchangequickly at areagolf courses ZACK HALL
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Photos by Joe Khne/The Bulletin
Eugene's Jack Pennington tees off on the17th hole during the Central Oregon Shootout on Sunday at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters. Pennington and teammate John Pennington, also of Eugene, won the gross division.
Vl • Golfers from Prinevile andBend played for winningteamsin net divisions atthe three-daytournament Bulletin staff report Three Central Oregon golfers won their divisions Sunday at the Central Oregon Shootout. Prineville's Les Bryan partnered with David Garwood of Bingen, Wash., to shoot a net 68.75 in a finalround Chapman Sunday at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters. That was enough to beat second place by nearly five strokes to win the event's first net division. In the second net division, Bend teammates Kyle Jensen and Simon Mudahogora fired a 66.5 in the final round at Eagle Crest Resort's Resort Course in Redmond for a come-from-behind win. The Shootout, a three-day amateur tournament played at Aspen Lakes, Black Butte Ranch's Big Meadow course,and Eagle Crest,featured more than 300 golfers playing in two-person teams from around the Northwest and beyond. Eugene duoJohn and Jack Pennington cruised to a gross division win. Chris Head, of Portland, and Carl Suchy, of Gresham, teamed to win the third net division. Bill Siebers and Ken Hutchinson, both of Springfield, won the fourth net division. In the ladies division, Holly Nelson, of Salem, and Kim Wood, of Central Point, shot the low gross, and Sue Hunter, of Portland, and Julie Veley, of Tualatin, took home the net title. The Central Oregon Shootout featured three days of team golf. The format for the first round was a twoperson scramble, which was followed with a round of best ball Saturday. The tournament concluded with a Chapman format on Sunday, and each flight played a different course each day.
hat a weekend it was for golf in Central Oregon. T he past f e w w a r m , sunny days have been what golfers crave all winter. But with the nice weather comes one simple Central Oregon truth: In this region, nothing changes faster than the spring weather. Veteran golfers in this region know that despite a run of nice days, the chill of winter can be just around the corner. "Spring in Central Oregon you get about everything," says Zach Lampert, the head professional at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville who also coaches Crook County High School's boys golf team. "We've had tournaments with snow, rain, wind and sunshine. You never know what you are going to get. We definitely check the weather forecast before we head out, but we prepare for everything. "We pack heavy and use what we need." If it sounds like Lampert is describing a hiking trip across some unforgiving backcountry terrain r ather than a round of golf, well, welcome to a Central Oregon spring. Lampert, 24, and Broken Top Club head professional Louis Bennett both grew up and played their high school golf in Central Oregon, where the prep golf season begins in March. Few would know better of the travails of golfing here in the early portion of the golfseason, where iffy weather is a real threat through late June. It's why I asked them for some tips in dealing with the unpredictable golf conditions this time of year. "To me, the most important thing
"To me, the most important thing is obviously when the weather is less than ideal that you warm up. When the weather is cooler, your body reacts a little bit differently, so if you go straight to the first tee without properly warming up, you kind of find yourself
in some misery." — Broken Top Club head professional Louis Bennett is obviously when the weather is less than ideal that you warm up," says Bennett, a 27-year-old Bend High Schoolgraduate."When theweather is cooler, your body reacts a little bit differently, so if you go straight to the first tee without properly warming up, you kind of find yourself in some misery." OK, so that should be fairly obvious for most of us. Nobody wants to walk up to the first tee feeling like the Tin Man. But spring also can present conditions that can be particularly harsh this time of year. That includes a gift from nature that tends to blow in often in the spring months. "The wind is probably the biggest factor in the spring because it can really blow, especially in (Prineville)," says Lampert, who lists relatively tree-less courses such as Tetherow in Bend, Brasada Ranch in Prineville and Juniper in Redmond as other facilities susceptible to the wind. To combat the wind, he forces his Crook County team to practice punch shots often to produce a lower ball flight. See Weather /B8
GOLF ROUNDUP
Horschel gets first PGA Tour win at ZurichClassic The Associated Press AVONDALE, La. — Billy Horschel sensed the time had come for him to win his first PGA Tour event. This could explain the composure he displayed in the face of two final-round weather delays and a 27-foot putt he had to make on the final hole to avert
a playoff.
Prineville's Les Bryan hits a shot out of a bunker on the back nine during the Central Oregon Shootout on Sunday at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters. Bryan and teammate David Garwood, of Bingen, Wash., won the first net division of the Shootout.
Horscheltied a course record at the TPC Louisiana with an 8-under 64 in the final round of the Zurich Classic on Sunday, which was good enough to win by one stroke over D.A. Points. Points putpressure on Horschel by hitting out of a bunker to set up a 5-foot birdie putt on the par-5 18th. Then Horschel rolled in his long victory-sealing putt, pumping his arms and letting out a triumphant yell before sinking into a crouch and briefly pulling his cap over his face as the crowd roared. "I hadn't made a long one all week
and I said, 'I'm due,'" Horschel said. "I was like, 'If it's my time, this putt needs to go in.' Soon after, he saw a video replay of his celebration. "I know it was pretty intense," he said. "There was a lot going on. It's celebration time now." The 26-year-old former Florida Gator began the day two shots behind third-round leader Lucas Glover and surged into the lead with six straight birdies after the first weather delay. He finished at 20 under, narrowly h olding off P oints, who won t h e Houston Open last month by a stroke over Horschel and Henrik Stenson. " When a p l ayer goes out a n d shoots 8 under and birdies the last hole to win, hats off to Billy," said Points, who had a 65. "He's played great all year. He was one shot shy of me at Houston and I'm a shot shy of him here. It's just the way it goes." See Horschel/B8
Central Oregon Shootout results Money winners from the three-day event, held Friday through Sunday at Aspen Lakes (Sistersj, Black Butte Ranch's Big Meadow
course, and EagleCrest Resort's Resort Course (Redmondj. Sundaywas aChapmanformat; Saturday was best ball, and Friday was a two-person scramble: Gross — t,JohnPen-
nittgton/JackPennington,
197. 2(tie), RobertKumpula/MattDuvall, 210;Gregg Com/Vittcettt Jimenez,210.
4, C intWiliams/BrianBell, 212. 5,SteveWood/Bryan Schlafke,137.
First Net Flight —1,LesBryan/David Gatwood,190.t5.2,Ron Marshall/Eddy Page,t95.25. 3, DavidClement/Btet Mackay19775.4, Trent Thompson/Brian Thompson, 198.25. 5,DrewVanCleave/ Joel Gilliland,198.75.6, DougFranke/Brent Griffiths, 199. 7, ScottTumet/Andtew
Hockman,199.25.8. Joe Slye/Steve Turcotte, 200.9. DarrelLawrence /Kyle Grove, 203. 10,LeeShehorn/Lane Harris,203.75.11(tie), GregMiler/RileyMchugh, 20425.DavidMettashe/ M>ke Mackin, 204.25.
Second Net — 1,Kyle Jensen /SimonMudahogora, 191.5. 2,JonFranks/Richard Catlson,t94. 3,DanTuritt/RandyWalczak,194.75.
4, Dewey Springer/Patrick AItdrade,195.5.5, Jerry Langbraaten/Chhs Halpitt, 197.5 6,JakeVanCleave/ LeroyVanCleave,200.75. 7, RandyNaetsreg Mathews, 203 8, Tom Rattch/Karl Hallstrom,203.25.9, John Lyda/GritfAproberts,205.5. 10, Dwayne Flores/Terry Souza206.
Third Net — t, Chris Head/CarlSttchy,191.75. 2, Steve Speckman/Bil Pickett, 194.75.3, Darren Pierce/Dana Pierce,196.
4, GregSimanson/Stan Itaoka,197.25.5, Duane Nance/DarrylNance,197.75. 6,JohnTipping/Kris Fay, 199.25. 7(tie), Bill Cox/Gary Wright, 20025; RonBatematt/LanyBatematt,20025.
9, DennisGotley)scott Biles, 200.5 10(tie), Tad Weigel )GaryJones,200.75, GregMiler/PaulDaskalos, 200.75 12,TimVeley/Lance Hunter,201.5.
Fourth Net — 1, Bil Siebers/Ken Hutchison, 191.75.2,Les Grove)MichaelWade, 194. 3,BobTamttra/Stan Kirk,t95. 4,Gregory Saulsbttty/JertyShriner, t96. 5,JetfJohnson/Ross Gordon,196.5.6, Frank Shafer/GatySuchy,196.75.
Ladies —Gross:t, Holly Nelson/KimWood, 346 2, DarciTrimmer/Kelly Jenkins,358.Net:t, Sue Hunter/JulieVeley,196.5. 2, MaryLott Milne/Phyllis Hughes,197.5.3, Carol Nicolai/KarinRoss,199. 4, MissySmith/Robin Hamilton,200.75.
7, EdwinJenkitts/Mike Bell,
202. 8,MikeSt. Clair/Ed Myets, 202.25. 9Bil Poppie/Steven Brotts, 202.5. 10, JonOllerenshaw/Myron Lee,202.75.
Gerald Herbert/The Associated Press
Billy Horschel tees off on the12th hole during the final round of the PGA Tour's Zurich Classic in Avondale, La. He won the tournament.
BS THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
Horschel
GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its weekly local golf results listings and events calendar. Clearly legible items should be faxed to the sports department, 541-3850831, emailed to sportsObendbulletin.com, or maiel dtoP.O.Box6020;Bend,OR97708.
Club Results AWBREYGLEN
Saturday Men'sGame,April 20
Net Better Ball 1, Tom LaBissoniere/DaveMorton, 59. 2, Joe Gayer/Gary Peters, 61. Men's Opener,April 24 Two NetShamble 1(tie),MarkAmberson/GaryMack/BobJakse/Duane Warner,111;JohnManiscalco/KenWaskom/Michaei Mount/EdHagstrom,111. 3,DaveMorton/Hai Cowan/ Roy Fuilerton/DennisBaird,112.4, EddyYoung/John Reed/Ron Fishman/TomLaBissoniere,N/A. KPs —0-14handicaps:LoganGomez, No.8; Hai Cowan,No.11.15 or higher:RoyFulerton, No.6; DennisBaird,No.13. Women'sSweeps,April 24 Nine-Hole Scramble 1, LorchidMacri/MarilynMonahan /Donna Baird/ Juiie Haas,40 2, DaniegeSnow/Jean Pedelty/Ruth Jenkin-Mack/LisaWalsh, 41.3, KayBemard/Sandra Honnen/Bev Murphy, 42. Cbip-ins — BevMurphy, No.2; DarleneWarner, No. 6. BENDGOLFANDCOUNTRY CLUB
Men's Oay,April11 Best Nine First Flight (9 handicap or less) — Gross: 1, CharlieRice,29.2 (tie), TimCecil, 30,Scott Holmberg, 30.Net: 1, Bill Degree,26.5 2, MikeSmolich, 28 3, Brad Patrick, 285 4, BrianMikkeiborg, 29.5
Second Flight (10-14) — Gross: 1, Pete Nielsen, 30. 2, Larry Patterson 32. 3 (tie), Craig Smith, 34;Jerry Mattioda,34. Nek 1, JayBennet, 26.5. 2,BobbyLockrem,27. 3,GaryPaddock, 27.5.4 (tie), Frank Putnam,28.5; MacRyder, 28.5. Third Flight 915 and higher) — Gross: 1, Scott Hakaia33. , 2, RodStrickland, 34. 3 (tie), Ron Tokuyama,37;EdChernoff,37. Net:1, BobThye,26 2, Chip Cleveland,27. 3, EdWiliams, 27.5. 4(tie), Rich Gagne, 28.5,JohnCox,28.5; SidSmith, 28.5. Ladies' Golf Association, April17 Best Nine Gross: 1,NancyHakala, 44. 2, LindaB)orvik, 49 Net: 1, AnitaBrown,32.5.2, Julie Bennett, 37. Nine-Hole Division —Gross:1, MaryHanson, 52. Net:1, RileyHelmstetter,42. Men's Daily Game, April18 Best Ball First Flight (10r5 handicaps or less) — Gross: 1, CharlieRice/TimCecil, 66. Net: 1, Bill De Gree/Tom Riley, 62.5. 2, Bill DeGree/Mike Binns, 65.5.
Second Flight (11 andhigher) — Gross:1,
Tom Riley/MikeBinns, 77.Net: 1, Mac Ryder/Don Thomburg,61.5. 2 (tie), Scott Hakala/RichGagne, 62.5; KevinFreihoefer/AndyBialkowsky,62.5. CROOKEDRIVERRANCH
Iceberg Open,April 20-21 Scramble First Flight —Gross:1, TimCecil/Charlie Rice, 126. 2,PhilBarricklow/EricWilsey,127.3, SteveBennett/GarrickWells, 131. 4,RosieCook/MarkCrose, 134. 5 (tie), HectorVi)arro/BobSnyder,135;Mark Matthews/Bob Dkain,135; JeffWard/Conrad Krieger, 135. Net:1, RogerDavidson/Jon Gardner,119 2, Jeff Templeton/Joe Templeton, 119.6. 3, Doug Shelton/ RyanBrown,1198.4, CraigChastain/StevePriborsky, 120. 5 (tie),CrisRodriguezIII/Kevin Kaufman,122.4; Tim Swope /Chris Ferrara,122.4 Second Flight —Gross:1, TerryPapen/Patrick
JohnFowler/BeauJohnson,77;Woody Kinsey/Mike DavidToms(19), $16,159 72-68-73-68 —281 Reuter,77; RichardSchieferstein/Dan O'Connell, 77. ChadCampbell (11), $14,520 68-71-72-71—282 8, Bill Cole/DieterHaussler, 78 9, ClarencePope/ Chris DiMarco (11), $14,520 68-70-75-69—282 DaveBryson,86.10, Bil Anderson/FrankSpernak,88. JasonKokrak(11),$14,520 68-71-73-70—282 Net: 1, Anderson/Spem ak, 60. 2, KeithWood/Norm J.J. Henry(9), $14,256 68-72-72-71 283 Brookhart, 61. 3 (tie), Schieferstein/O'ConneI, 62; Jeff Maggert(8), $14,124 70-67-73-74—284 Drake/Callantine,62. 5(tie), Geschke/Bean, 63;Cole/ GaryWoodland(7), $13,992 68-70-73-74—285 Haussler,63; Dick Carroll/Flip Houston,63. 8, David StevenBowditch (5),$13,728 73-67-71-75—286 Biack /AiDerenzis,64.9,W.Johnson/Depue,65.10 GregChalmers(5), $13,728 70-71-71-74—286 (tie), Fowler/B.Johnson,67;Kinsey/Reuter, 67. TrevorImmelman(5), $13,728 68-73-71-74—286 KPs —Flip Houston,No.5; RichardSchieferstein LeeWiliams(3), $13,464 70-71-73-73 287 No. 16. Colt Knost (2), $13,332 72-68-74-74—288 JonasBlixt (1),$13,200 71-69-74-75 —289 MEADOW LAKES a-Guan Tianlang 72-69-77-74—292 Crook CountyGolf TeamBenefit, April 20 Scramble LPGATour Gross: 1, WellsFargo of PrinevigeClaySmith/ North TexasShootout Jim Montgome ry/Rob Dudley/ZachLampert, 57.2, Sunday Prineviile Golf Club-GrantPatterson/lravis Holmes/ At Las ColinasCountry Club JoeNewton/Tom MacDonald,59.3,Prinevige Sand Irving, Texas 8, Gravel-PatO'Gorman/Dwain Storm/Jeff Storm/Todd Purse: $1.3 million Goodew,59. 4, MeadowLakes Golf Course-JW. Yardage:Bz410;Par:71 Miller/SteveReynolds/Britton Coffer/ShaneDigavou Final 60. Net:1, BigDawg-Jeff Hunter/MarkHoward/Stacy InbeePark,$195,000 67-70-67-67—271 Smith/Steve Wienke, 54.6. 2,SMAF-Travis Rutz/Frank CarlotaCiganda,$118,649 66-70-66-70—272 Sykes /RogerCasey/BryanMullins,54.7.3,Facebook- SuzannPetersen, $86,072 70-70-68-66—274 JoshuaCrass/JamesSwensen/Jay Smith/Rich Boi- HeeYoungPark,$60,088 68-70-73-64 —275 tano, 55.2.4,FriendsofCCGolf-Dan Crofcheck/Kevin So Yeon Ryu, $60088 71 - 68-68-68 —275 Donham/EricOvens/Jeff Lowenbach, 55.6. I K. Kim,$43,848 70-71-67 68—276 KPs —50/50:TonyHammock,No.4.Men Travis StacyLewis,$31,019 72-70-69-66—277 Rutz,No.13.Women: DeeLampert, No.13. Shanshan Feng,$31,019 71-67-70-69—277 LDs — Men:Justin Cleveland, No. 7.Women: Karinelcher,$31,019 71-69-67-70—277 RistineWiliams, No.7. Na Yeon Choi,$31,019 70 - 69-66-72—277 Long Putt —RichBoitano, No.6. PaulaCreamer,$22,102 7 3 -69-69-67—278 High DesertSeniors, April 22 Cristie Kerr,$22,102 70-73-67-68—278 Two NetBestBalls DewiClaireSchreefel, $22,102 75-70-65-68—278 1, George Lienkaem per/Dennis Glender/Richard ChristinaKim,$22,102 6 8 -72-67-71 278— Carroll/TonyBailey,121. 2, GregWatt/Jeff Lewis/Jim Giulia Sergas,$17,842 7 3 -68-72-66 —279 67-74-70-68—279 Hipp/DaleHouston,128. 3, TomDePue/Jim Wegock/ Mo Martin, $1 7,842 TerryDahlquist/RichardNikl,130. CarolineMasson,$17,842 64-71-69-75—279 Senior Men's League,April 23 JanePark,$15,233 72-69-73 66 —280 Best Ball JulietaGranada,$15,233 70-70-71-69 —280 Gross: 1,TomCook/Boyd Joyce,42. Net: 1, Ron CheliaChoi,$15,233 71-69-70-70 —280 Poweg/JohnTraven,30. Lexi Thompson, $15,233 71-71-68-70 —280 KPs —NelsonHaas, No.4 AlanJones, No.8. 70-71-73-67—281 Jiyai Shin,$12,667 Men's League,April 24 LizetteSalas,$12,667 71-70-72-68 —281 Nine-Hole StrokePlay AngelaStanford,$12,667 69-70-72-70—281 Gross: 1,BrottonCoffer,33. 2, ToddGoodew, 36 KathleenEkey, $12,667 7 0 -67-73-71 281— 3, Jeif Storm,37.Net:1, JohnJones,30. 2,RonMer- JennilerJohnson,$12,667 71-69-70-71—281 edith, No.32. 3, MarkJones,33 4 (tie), J.W.Miler, Hae)iKang,$12,667 69-72-69-71—281 34; JimmyGeorge, 34. 6(tie), LesBryan,35; Dwain Azahara Munoz,$9,448 6 9 -75-70-68—282 Storm,35; JohnNovak,35. ChristelBoeljon,$9,448 7 1-71-71-69—282 KPs — AFlight JohnNovak, No13; BrottonCofJodiEwartShadoff,$9,448 72-69-72 69 282 fer, No.17. B Flight: BobElsea,No.13; LarryConklin, RebeccaLee-Bentham,$9,448 72-68-73-69—282 No. 17. Moira Dunn,$9,448 69-71-70-72 —282 Mindy Kim,$9,448 72-69-69-72 —282 QUAIL RUN MoriyaJutanugarn,$9,448 71-66-72-73—282 Men's Club, April 24 BrittanyLincicome,$9,448 70-68-71-73 —282 Stroke Play YaniTseng,$9,448 69-69-71-73 282 Flight 1 — Gross: 1 (tie), JoshDay 82; Pete Momokot)eda,$6,918 7 3 -70-71-69 —283 Knaupp82.Net: 1, KellyO'Neill, 72. Sandra Gal, $6,918 75-69-69-70 —283 Flight 2 — Gross:1, JosephMaes, 88. Net:1 Eun-Hee Ji, $6,918 72-73-68-70—283 (tie), GaryDyer,72, Dennis Haniford, 72; MattKoski, RyannO'Toole,$6,918 71 - 73-69-70—283 72. AlisonWalshe,$6,918 7 4 - 69-69-71 —283 Flight 3 — Gross:1, AiWakefield,93 Net:1, JessicaKorda,$6,918 69 - 69-72-73 283 MauriceWalker, 69.2, DickJohnson, 72 AnnaNordqvis, $5,635 7 3 -70-69-72 —284 KPs —JimDexter, No.10;JosephMaes, No.14. HeeKyungSeo,$5,635 7 0 -69-73-72—284 Women's Club, April 25 MiJungHur,$5,635 67-73-70-74—284 Bingo Jee YoungLee,$5,635 72 - 68-67-77—284 Flight A — Bingos: 1, DebAiken, 3. Xs: 1, VickyHurs,$4,839 70-72-71-72—285 PennyScott,20 2, CathyHayter,19. Becky Morgan,$4839 73 - 67-73-72 285 Flight B — Bingos: 1, BettyQuinn,3. Xs: 1, LindseyWrigh,$4,839 7 3 -69-71-72 —285 Bev Ciaypool,17. 2(tie), ThelmaJansen, 16;Gwen Kristy McPherson,$4839 67-73-71-74 —285 Duran,16. ReigeyRankin, $4,418 77 - 67-70-72 286—
SUNRIVER ChampionsTour Men's Club,April 25 Legends ofGolf Tee it ForwardTwoNetBest Ball Sunday 1, BrianGuiloyle/GregCoton/Don Hardman/Blind At The Club atSavannahHarbor Draw.2, GaryJohansen/yirgil Martin/Don Larson/Eric Savannah,Ga. Saukkonen. 3, BrianHolmes/DaveHennessy/Big PhilPurse: $2.7 million Gleason.4, Scott Lucas/DonWright/Randy Yardage:Tz087; Par:72 Papen,138. 2,MikeBooth/Charlie White,139. 3,Ray brook/Tom E gertson/Gary C apps Final LeFrancois/MikeJohnson, 140. 4 (tie), Kory CalIndividual StrokePlay (Charles SchwabCupPointsin parentheses) lantine/DaveRatzlaff, 146;Julio Garcia/ZachSkipper, Gross: 1, ScottBrown,72. 2, BrianGuilfoyle 75. B.Faxon-J.Sluman(230),$230,00062-66-65—193 146. Net: 1,WyiieHarrell/Jerry Harris,116 2, Herb FFunk-M.Goodes(123),$123,000 66-65-63—194 Parker/JudyParker,116.2. 3,BrookBaker/DaveEider, Net:1, EricSaukkonen,62. 2, GregCotton, 64. Skins K.Perry-G.Sauers(123),$123,000 66-66-62—194 119. 4,JoePerry/Jay White,119.8. 5, MarieOlds/Ni0-18 handicaps —Gross: ScottBrown2,Greg M.Agen-D.Frost(57),$57,125 67-62-66—195 co e Spreadborough, 120.2. Cotton 2,RobertHill, DaveHil, JimRobertston. Net: B.Bryant-T.Purtzer(57),$57,125 66-65-64 195 SaturdayHoneyPot, April 20 FCouples-J.Haas(57),$57,125 66-64-65—195 First Flight — Gross:1, TimCecil/Charlie Rice, Don Wright 2,Robert Hill, GregCotton2, MikeSulM.D'Meara-E.Toledo(57),$57,125 66-63-66—195 l i van, Brian Hol m es, Ch arl i e We i l n i t z. 60. 2, Phil Barricklow/EricWilsey,61. 3, HectorVi19-35 — Net: Eric Saukkonen3, DonLarson Calcavecchia-Senior(57),$57,125 65-64-66—195 Iarro/BobSnyder,64. 4 (tie), Mark Matthews/Bob L.Mize-H.Sutton(57), $57,125 65-65-65 —195 Okain, 65; Steve Bennett/Garrick Wells, 65; Tim RussPorter,GaryBrooks. KPs —Gre g Cotton,No.4;DonHardman,No.8; A.North-TWatson(57),$57,125 64-64-67—195 Swope/ChrisFerrara,65 Net:1, RogerDavidson/Jon Bill Philbrook, No.13; Dan Frantz, No.16. C.Stadler-K.Triple(57), tt $57,125 64-64-67 195 Gardner.56.2, Craig Chastain/StevePriborsky,57. 3, D.Eger -M.McNulty,$32,500 66-63-67 — 196 DaveSaimon/DavidKeams, 58.4, Jelf Templeton/Joe S.Elkington-R.Mediate,$32,500 65-65-66—196 Templeton, 58.6. 5,JasonPigot/Lyle Zurflu, 59. Hole-In-One Report J.Gagagher,Jr.-S.Hoch,$28,250 67-61-69—197 Second Flight — Gross:1, TerryPapen/Patrick B.Langer-T Lehman,$28,250 63-65-69—197 Papen,65. 2(tie), ChuckGiender/Dennis Giender,68 April18 J.D.Blake-R.Cha pman,$22,250 66-61-71—198 Joe Perry/JayWhite, 68; MikeBooth/Charlie White, WIOGICREEK D.Forsman-S.Simpson, $22,250 70-63-65 198 68; DavidWooldridge/Pamela Wooldridge, 68 Net: Bill Piper, Bend alsky-D.Pooley,$22,250 68-64-66— 198 1(tie), Tom Gseg/Laurie Gseg, 56; BrookBaker/Dave No. 15............ 136 yards........... 8-iron M.Hat W.Levi L.Nel s on, $22,250 67 - 66-65 198 — Elder,56. 3(tie), AnitaJohnson/Matt Johnson,57.2 TPernice Jr.-B.Tway,$22,250 67-63-68 —198 Herb Parker/JudyParker,57.2. 5, TimJohnson/Len April 20 TKite -G.Morgan,$22,250 64-67-67 — 198 Johnson58. DESERTPEAKS B.Glasson-S.Pate,$17,500 6 5 -65-69 —199 SaturdayKPs— Women:Rosie Cook,No 16 Bob Ringering, Madras J.Cook-C.Pavi n$15,500 , 69 - 65-66 200— Men. 0-14 handicap,Dave Saimon,No.7;15 and No.6............. 172 yards........... 5-iron PJacobsen-DA Weibring, $15,500 66-64-70—200 higher,JayWhite, No 4. S.Lyl e-l.Woosnam,$15,500 65-69-66 — 200 Saturday LOs — Women:Nicole SpreadborApril 20 B.Giider-B.Wadkins,$14,000 66-67-68 —201 ough, No. 8.Men:0-14handicap: Charlie Rice,No. BENDGOLFANDCOUNTRYCLUB J.Daley-S.Jones, $13,250 68 - 68-67 203— 6;15 andhigher,MattJohnson,No.14. Kent Franklin, Bend $13,250 66-69-68—203 Saturday LPs—HerbParker, No 17 No.6.............180yards........... 5-iron G.Hagberg-J.Rutledge, A.Doyie-B.Vaughan, $12,000 68 69-67 204 SundayHoneyPot, July 21 J.Jacobs-FZoeger,$12,000 6 9 -66-69—204 First Flight — Gross:1(tie), SteveBennet/GarApril 21 L .Robe r t s M. Wi e b e , $12,000 69-67-68 — 204 rick Wells, 66; Phil Barrickiow/EricWilsey, 66; Tim EAGLECRESTRESORT COURSE A.Bean-C.S.Lu, $11,000 69-68-69 —206 Cecil/CharlieRice,66.4(tie), RosieCook/MarkCrose, William Cole, Redmond 68; JeffWard/ConradKrieger, 68.Net: 1, DougShelNo.16............ 162 yards............ driver M.Brooks-WWood,$10500 7 0-69-70 —209 ton/Ryan Brown, 60. 2 (tie), CrisRodriguezIII/Kevin Kaufman,61; Jeff Templeton/JoeTempleton, 61. 4 Professional (tie), PaulNemitz/SelmaCusick, 62; CraigChastain/ StevePriborsky. 62. PGATour SecondFlight —Gross:1, RayLeFrancois/Mike Zurich Classic Johnson,70. 2, MikeBooth/Charlie White,71.3,Julio Sunday r Garcia/ZachSkipper,72.4 (tie), DavidGreig/Suzanne At TPC Louisiana Greig, 76;Kory Callantine/DaveRatzlaff, 76. Net:1, Avondale, La. Wylie Harreil/Jerry Harris, 55. 2, HerbParker/Judy Purse: $5.6 million Parker,59. 3(tie), TerryPapen/Patrick Papen,61;Scot Yardage:7,425; Par: 72 Herrmann/EariByers,61.5 (tie), TomBrown/Dennis Final Brockman,62 JerryMertens/AnnieMertens, 62. a-amateur Sunday KPs—Women: Marie Olds, No.4. Men Billy Horschel(500),$1,188,00067-71-66-64—268 014 handicaps,JoePerry, No.11;15 andhigher, Bob D.A. Points(300),$712,800 66-68-70-65—269 Kogmar,No. 16. Kyle Stanley(190),$448,800 72-67-65-67—271 SundayLDs— Women:RosieCook,No.1.Men BobbyGates(123),$290,400 67-70-70-66—273 0-14 handicaps,Charlie Rice,No. 14; 15andhigher LucasGlover(123) $290,400 65-67-70-71—273 handicaps,BobbyBrunoe,No.6. Harris English(95), $229,350 68-70-69-67 274 Sunday LPs—Bil Broms,No.5, BooWeekley(95), $229,350 65-68-73-68—274 Men's Club, April 23 NicolasColsaerts(70), $165,00070-68-70-67—275 Stroke Play LukeGuthrie(70),$165,000 67-71-69-68—275 A Flight (0-18 handicaps) — Gross:Wyiie D.H. Lee(70),$165,000 7 0-70-68-67—275 Harreg,74. 2, RonFitzpatrick, 77. 3(tie), Bill King, JohnPeterson,$165,000 71-67-70-67—275 80; George Mitchener, 80.5(tie), GaryOlds, 82;Scot KevinStadler(70),$165,000 68-72 65-70 275 Eberie,82.Net: 1 (tie), CalvinMobley,63; Neil Rice, JimmyWalker (70), $165,000 67-71-66-71—275 63 3, MontyModreg,64.4, RichRandag,66. 5(tie), AaronWa tkins (70), $165,000 71-69-70-65—275 GuyCrapper,67;NickHughes,67. ErnieEis(54), $102,300 6 7-69-72-68—276 I 8 Flight (19 and higher) — Gross: 1, Jim HenrikNoriander(54), $102,30071-70-65-70—276 Platz 76. 2,LenJohnson 86. 3 (tie), WesPrice, 88 JustinRose(54), $102,300 68-69-70-69—276 John Bearden, 88. 5, BobBengston, 89. Net: 1, Cari PeterTomasulo(54), $102,300 73-67 68 68 276 Dewing,61. 2 (tie), DennisCooper,65; JohnCress, Nick Watney(54), $102,300 69-69-69-69—276 65. 4, JohnFrey, 68.5 (tie), Bill Burt, 70;DougWy- BubbaWatson (54), $102,300 73-65-72-66—276 ant,70. KenDuke(46), $58,740 7 0 -69-68-70—277 RetiefGoosen(46), $58,740 71-70-68-68—277 DESERTPEAKS DavidHearn(46),$58,740 71-69-68-69—277 ThursdayMen's Club, April18 Morgan Hoff mann(46),$58,740 66-69-73-69 277 Net ThrowOutOneHole BrandtJobe(46), $58,740 70-70-69-68—277 1, DickPliska,61.2,CoreyBrowne,62 3(tie), Ken Chris Kirk(46),$58,740 6 7 -72-69-69—277 Southwick,64; MikeFunk, 64. SteveLeBrun(46), $58,740 70-68-72-67—277 KP — DickWilson RichardH.Lee(46), $58,740 70-69-69-69—277 Friday Night Couples, April 20 KenLooper,$58,740 73-66-67-71—277 Chapman JoeySnyderlll(46),$58,740 72-67-72-66 277 1, MikeFunk/Juanice Schram,35.2. 2, Bruce Luke List(40),$42,900 7 1 -70-68-69—278 Houck/ JeanetteHouck,35.8.3,DeanDitmore/Juanita Stephen Ames(35),$33,528 67-72-69-71—279 Hawkins,36.7. BrianDavis(35),$33,528 68-69-73-69—279 SundayGroup Play, April 21 Matt Every(35), $33,528 68-72-71-68—279 Blind Draw RickieFowier(35), $33,528 67-73-71-68—279 Gross:1, Bob Ringering/JohnathanSharp,150. 2, TommyGainey(35),$33,528 6871-73-67 279 FranciscoMorales/CoreyBrowne,155 3, MikeGard- FabianGomez(35), $33,528 71-70-68-70—279 ner/GaryGruner,159.Net: 1 (tie), ChuckSchmidt/ Matt Jones(35), $33,528 67-71-73-68—279 Vicki Moore,134; RobEamest/Denny Story, 134.3, DougLaBegeII (35), $33,528 70-67-73-69—279 Rich Vigg/AlDupont,135. RyanPalmer(35), $33,528 70-70-69-70—279 KP — Ken Black. BrendanSteele(35),$33,528 70-71-70-68—279 LO —FranciscoMoraies. RickyBarnes(27), $23,100 64-76-66-74 280 Scott Brown(27), $23,100 69-71-72-68 —280 EAGLECREST JasonDufner(27),$23,100 70-71-67-72—280 Women'sGroup,April 23 Jeff Dverton (27), $23,100 73-68-69-70—280 at Resort Course RodPampling(27), $23,100 71-70-67-72—280 Better Nine StuartAppleby(19), $16,159 70-70-71-70 281 Flight A — 1,KathleenMooberry, 31.5. 2, Deb- JasonBohn(19), $16,159 68-71-73-69 281 -~ ~ l l >b bie Hehn,32 3, KatWidmer, 34. 4, MargaretSturza, RobertoCastro(19),$16,159 71-70-68-72—281 34.5. GrahamDeLaet (19), $16,159 68-71-74-68—281 Flight 8 —1(tie),SandyAustin,32; BettyStearns, DerekErnst(19), $16,159 73-67-70-71—281 32. 3,TeddieCrippen,335. 4,JoeyDuPuis,345. HunterHaas(19), $16,159 72-69-70-70—281 serv>nv central oregon since 1903 Flight 0 — 1,JoanMathews,33.2, Carole Flinn, Jerry Kelly (1 9), $16,159 70-67-71-73 —281 33.5. 3,SharonMadison, 34.4, DarleneNash, 34.5. MichaelLetzig(19), $16,159 72 68-72-69 281 Men's Club, April 24 GeorgeMcNeili (19),$16,159 74-67-70-70—281 at ResortCourse SeanO'Hair(19), $16,159 70-70-70-71—281 One LowGrossfrom A-BPlayers, AndrewSvoboda(19), $16,159 70-70-69-72—281 One LowNetfrom C-OPlayers 1, Nate Wilhiie/Mike Narzisi/Ted Moore/Cliff Shrock,137. 2, Cal Hamreus/Dennis O'Donneil/Ken Wegman/Tince Timm, 129. 3, HankMcCauley/Bili Martin/SamPuri/Jim Madison, 140. 4 (tie), Dan Broadley/HenryRogers(Terry Black/Matt Conner,143 RogerEdgerly/Jerry Volf/Jerry Decoto/Chuck Scrogin, 143.
Ei
first round. Glover, the 2009 U.S. Open winner who was looking for his first Tour victory in nearly two years, took a two-shot lead into the final round, but he wound up finishing tied for fourth with Bobby Gates, five shots off the lead. Also on Sunday: Park wins in Texas: IRVING, Texas — Inbee Park shot a bogey-free 4-under 67 to win the inaugural North Texas LPGA Shootout by a stroke over Carlota Ciganda. Park, the world's No. 1 women's player, finished at D-under 271 for her third victory this season and fifth in her past 18 starts. The 24-year-old South Korean sank a 4-foot birdie putt on the par-5 18th after Ciganda also birdied the hole even after a drive into the right rough. Sluman, Faxon win: SAVANNAH, Ga. — After finishing second twice, Jeff Sluman finally won the Legends of Golf with a new teammate. Sluman, a two-time runner-up with Craig Stadler at the Champions Tour's team event, partnered with Brad Faxon for a one-stroke victory at the Club at Savannah Harbor. The duo had five birdies in a seven-hole stretch in the middle of their round to get to 23-under and made par on their final four holes to hold on for the win. Aussie tops field in Korea: SEOUL, South Korea — Australia's Brett Rumford eagled the first hole of a three-way playoff to win the Ballantine's Championship. Rumford was leading by two shots when he double-bogeyed No. 17. He holed a 10-foot par putt at the last to finish at 11-under 277 and force a playoff with Marcus Fraser of Australia and Peter Whiteford of Scotland.
Continued from B7 The second delay, for lightning, happened before Horschel could take his second shot on the 18th hole, giving him 52 minutes to reflect on what was at stake — $1.19 million and a two-year exemption. It didn't really faze him. He said he tends to relax during delays, and almost always plays well after them. "For some reason it puts me at ease a little bit," Horschel said. "You don't know how long your delay is going to be so you've just got to go with it and just wait it out.... It wasn't easy, but it wasn't as hard as it could have been." Kyle Stanley shot a 5-under 67 to finish third, while 14-year-old amateur Guan Tianlang of China finished 71st after making his second cut in two PGA events, the first coming at the Masters. Although Horschel had never won on the Tour, he had been playing the best golf of his young career lately, with three top-10 finishes in his past three tournaments — tying for second in Houston, tying for third in San Antonio and tying for ninth in Hilton Head Island, S.C.,
a week ago. "I played well. It just wasn't my t ime," Horschel said of his recent top-three finishes. "It was nice that today was my time." He has also made a PGA Tour-leading 23 straight cuts, and had already earned $1.3 million this year. Now he has nearly doubled that, thanks to a final round that tied a course record that has been matched several times, including by Rickey Barnes in Thursday's
Weather Continued from B7 To do it, he says place t he ball farther back i n your stance and push your weight more toward the front foot in your stance. The backswing should be just short of full, and not a full follow-through, pointing the club toward the target. And on the tee on breezy days, Bennett reminds us that the wind can wreak havoc on a ball in flight. "The harder you swing, typically th e m or e s p in you're going to put on the ball," says Bennett. "And wind amplifies spin. When you are going straight into the wind, any side spin or backspin, the wind is going to double it." Lampert agrees, and uses three common phrases to remind himself just how to play the breeze. "When it's breezy, swing
that are set at higher elevations tend to come out of winter later and generally get up to speed later than our more low-lying facilities. And if the greens are slow? "The nice thing is you can be a little bit more aggressive with your puttssince the greens are slower," Bennett says. "Read less break and hit it firmer." S anded greens f r o m a course's aerification can also be hazardous. "You have to take the extra time to really make sure the ball is clean," Lampert says. As a coach, he often sees players knock first putts on sanded greens to within a foot and in a rush to tap in, forget to clean the ball. That can be a
mistake. "The ball Iust doesn't go anywhere, and they miss a short one," he says. The weather can turn quickly, too, so Lampert suggests bringing everything you could need, including towels, umbrellas and extra gloves to keep dry in case of rain, and layered clothing to keep warm. And if it snows? "Snow is an interesting one that we get in the spring," Lampert says. "But there isn't much you can do for that." Well, there is one thing a golfer can do — stay home. But after a long winter, who wants to do that? — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletirz.com.
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easy," he says.
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Hitting into th e w i n d, Lampert suggests "Tee it low and let it go." And downwind'? "Tee it high and let it fly." It sounds a bit corny, "But it is true," he says.
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Spring also brings inconsistent, sometimes bumpy, and often slower greens. Something to remember: Central Oregon's courses
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LOSTTRACKS Men's Club, April 24 Best Ball Gross: 1 (tie), BobDrake/Kory Caliantine, 76 Wayne Johnson/fomDepue,76. 3(tie), HectorVijarro/Dav e Fiedler,77;Chuck Geschke/RogerBean,77,
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FRIDAY 12-6 SATURDAY 10-6 SUNDAY 10-5
MONDAY, APRIL 29,2013 • THE BULLETIN
T EE TO PUBLIC LEAGUES ASPEN LAKES MEN: The Men's Club at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters plays on Tuesdays through the golf season. New members are welcome. For more information, call Aspen Lakes at 541-549-4653. BLACKBUTTERANCHWOMEN: Black Butte Ranch Women's Golf Club accepts women golfers of all levels for Tuesday tournaments each week. For more information or to register, call the Big Meadow golf shop at 541-595-1500. CENTRAL OREGONSENIOR MEN: The Central Oregon Senior Golf Organization meets on a Monday each month at golf courses across the region. Series is open to men's club members of host sites. Cost is $150 for the season plus $5 per event. For more information: Ted Carlin at 541-604-4054. CENTRAL OREGON GOLF TOUR: A competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. centraloregongolftour.com. DESERTPEAKSLADIES: Ladies Club at Desert Peaks in Madras. Times vary each Wednesday. For more information, call Desert Peaks at541-475-6368. EXECUTIVEWOMEN'S GOLF ASSOCIATION:The Central Oregon Chapter of the Executive Women's Golf Association meets multiple times each week — including weeknight leagues and Saturday play — during the golf season. Events are open to anyone interested in joining the EWGA. For more information or to join the EWGA: Eileen Haas at edhaas@ bendbroadband.com or visit www. ewgaco.com. JUNIPER LADIES:Juniper Ladies Golf Club meets weekly on Wednesday morning. All women players welcome. For more information visit www.juniperladies. com. LADIES OF THE GREENS: Ladies of the Greens women's golf club at The Greens at Redmond golf course playsweekly on Tuesdaysfrom May through October. New members are welcome. For more information, call the Greens at Redmond at 541-923-0694. LADIES OF THE LAKES: Ladies of the Lakes golf club at Meadow Lakes Golf Course is a weekly women's golfleague. All women players welcome. For more information, call the Meadow Lakes pro shop at 541-447-7113. LOST TRACKS LADIES: The Ladies League at Lost Tracks Golf Club in Bendplaysweekly onTuesdays.All women golfers are welcome. For more information, call the pro shop at 541-385-1818. LOST TRACKSMEN:M en'sclub at Lost Tracks Golf Club holds weekly events on Wednesdays and Thursdays throughout the golf season. For more information, call Lost Tracks at 541-385-1818 or visit www.losttracks.com. MEADOWLAKESMEN: Men's Golf Association at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville plays weekly on Wednesdays. All men are welcome. For more information, call Zach Lampert at 541-447-7113. IlUAIL RUNWOMEN:Quail Run Golf Course women's18-hole golf league plays at 8 a.m. during the golf season. Interested golfers are welcome. For more information, call Penny Scott at 541-598-7477. RIVER'SEDGE MEN: The Men's Club at River's Edge Golf Course in Bend plays weekly tournaments on Tuesday. Members ofthemen'sclub and other interested River's Edge Golf Club men with an established USGA handicap are invited to participate. For more information or to register, call River's Edge at 541-389-2828. RIVER'SEDGE WOMEN: The Women's Club at River's Edge Golf Course in Bend plays each Wednesday during the golf season. M embers arewelcome and should sign up by the preceding Saturday for the tournaments. For more information, or to register, call River's Edge at 541-389-2828. SUNRIVER RESORT MEN: Men's club at Sunriver Resort plays Wednesday tournaments at the Meadows or Woodlands courses with shotgun starts around 9 a.m. Cost is $55 for annual membership. For more information, email Robert Hill at rhill©taftcollege.edu or visit www.srmensgolf.com. SUNRIVERRESORT WOMEN: Women's club at Sunriver Resort plays Wednesday tournaments at theMeadows orWoodl ands courses with shotgun starts approximately 9 a.m. There are both nine-hole and18-hole groups. For more information on nine-hole group: Vicki Doerfler at vickilynn49@ yahoo.com or call 541-598-8467; 18-hole group: Shenny Braemer at sbraemer4©gmail.com or call 541-593-4423.
R EEN
WIOGI CREEK MEN: Widgi Creek Men's Club at Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend is a weekly golf league. For more information, call the Widgi Creek clubhouse at 541-382-4449. WIOGI CREEK WOMEN: Widgi Creek Women's Golf Association at Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend is a weekly golf league. For more information, call the Widgi Creek clubhouse at 541-382-4449.
CLINICS OR CLASSES APRIL 29, 30, MAY 6, 13ANO 14:Get Golf Readyat Juniper Golf Course in Redmond is afive-clinic program designed for those with little or no golf experience. Each session will focus on the various golf skills you will use while playing as well as etiquette and rules training. Clinics begin at 5 p.m. each day. Cost is $99 for five lessons. Golf clubs, balls and other equipment will be provided for those without. For more information or to register: visit www.playgolfamerica.com/ggr or email Bruce Wattenburger at bwattenburger@playjuniper.com. MAY7-11:GetGolfReadyatAspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters is for ladies only and consists of five one-hour classes. Clinic will cover everything from putting to driving, etiquette and rules. Class times will be 4 to 5 p.m. on the weekday sessions and1 to 2 p.m. on Saturday. Option to play nine holes after class at a special rate. Class participants will receive 25 percent off on the pro shop to use toward apparel or equipment. Cost is $99 and the class size is limited to six. For more information or to register: 541-549-4653 or visit www. playgolfamerica.com/ggr. MAY11:Swing into Spring golf clinic at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville is designed to teach beginning golfers fundamentals and seasoned golfers to sharpen their golf skills. Taught by PGApro Vic Martin, class is scheduled for 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. and costs $5. Clubs available for those who need them. For more information or to register: 541-447-7113. MAY16, 23 ANO 30: Adult golf education for beginners at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend offered by the Bend Park & Recreation District. Three-day clinic runs from 5 to 6:30 p.m.each day.Classesaretaught by PGA professional Tim Fraley and his staff. Clinics include lessons on etiquette, rules, putting, chipping, pitching, mid-irons and full swings. Equipment will be provided for those students without their own. Cost is $ l49 for residents of the Bend Park 8 Recreation District. Price includes three return trips after graduation to Awbrey Glen's learning center and its five-hole loop course. To register, call 541-389-7275 or visit www. bendparksandrec.org. MAY17, 31 ANO JUNE7: Youth golf lessons for children ages 9 to12at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend offered by the Bend Park 8 Recreation District. Three-day clinic runs from 4 to 5:30 p.m. each day.Classesaretaughtby PGA professional Tim Fraley and his staff and are designed for beginners. Clinics include lessons on etiquette, rules, putting, chipping, pitching, mid-irons and full swings. Equipment will be provided for those students without their own. Cost is $79 for residents of the Bend Park & Recreation District. To register, call 541-389-7275 or visit www. bendparksandrec.org. MAY 21-22:Two-day beginner and intermediate Rules of Golf workshop at Bend Golf and Country Club. From 8a.m.to 5 p.m. each day, participants will learn detailed information about the Rules of Golf from the Oregon Golf Association's director of rules education, Craig Winter. Cost is free for current OGA volunteers, $40 for OGAand PNGA Members, or $75 for all others. Class is limited to10 participants. For more information or to register: visit www.oga.org, email cwinter© og.org or call 503-981-4653. MONDAYS: Junior golf clinic at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville will run every Monday from10a.m.to noon from June 24 through July15. Meadow Lakes PGA teaching professional Vic Martin will be lead instructor for the clinic. Cost is $25 per golfer. Advancesign-up and payment is required. For more information or to register, call 541-447-7113.
TOURNAMENTS MAY2:Chippin' In for Bend Area Habitat tournament at Brasada Ranch Golf Club in Powell Butte. Four-person scramble begins with a10 a.m. shotgun. Cost is $125 per golfer and includes, golf, cart, range balls, awards luncheon and tee prize. Proceeds benefit the Bend Area Habitatfor Humanity. For more information or to register: 541-3855387 or rcooper©bendhabitat.org. MAY4-5:Two-man best-ball tournament at Prineville Golf Club. Two-day gross and net payoffs, with optional side games. Friday
practice round also available. For more information or to register, call Prineville GC at 541-447-1354. MAY7-9:Central Oregon Senior Spring Tour Pro-Am is for teams and individuals through the Oregon Chapter of the PGA.This threeday event is held at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond, Crooked River Ranch and Eagle Crest Resort in Redmond. Golfers will compete in a net Stableford, gross and net stroke play and one gross and two net formats. Golfers must be 50 years old or older. Cost is $960 per team. Contact: 800-574-0503 or www. orpga.com. MAY 9:Central Oregon Golf Tour individual stroke play tournament at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. centraloregongolftour.com. MAY11-12:42nd annual Tee Pee Chapman at Kah-Nee-Ta High Desert Resort near Warm Springs. 36-hole couples Chapman begins eachdaywith a9 a.m .shotgun start. Cost is $200 per couple and includes golf, range balls, dinner banquet and buffet. Special room rates and a Friday practice round are also available. For more information or to register, visit www.kahneeta. com or call 541-553-4971. MAY12:Oregon Golf Association Tour individual series tournament at Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend. Tee times begin at 9 a.m. OGATour events are open to any golfer with aUSGA handicapand include open and senior divisions. Cost for this event is $79 for OGAmembers and $99 for nonmembers. Deadline to enter is May 5. For more information or to register, visit www.oga.org or call the OGA at503-981-4653. MAY13:Oregon Golf Association Tour partner series tournament at Bend Golf and Country Club. Tee times begin at11 a.m. OGATour events are open to any golfer with a USGA handicapand includeopen and senior divisions. Cost for this event is $79 for OGAmembers and $99 for nonmembers. Deadline to enter is May 6. For more information or to register, visit www.oga.org or call the OGAat 503-981-4653. MAY13:Central Oregon Seniors Golf Organization event at Crooked River Ranch. The format is individual gross and net best ball, as well as team best ball. Cash prizes awarded at each event. Tournament series is open to men's club members at host sites and participants must have an Oregon Golf Association handicap. Cost is $150 for the season plus a $5 pereventfee. For more information, call Ted Carlin at 541-604-4054. MAY17-19:29th edition of the Juniper Chapman at Juniper Golf Coursein Redmond. Open to any two male golfers with a maximum handicap differential of eight strokes between partners. Cost is $250 per team for the two-day, 36-hole tournament with gross and net divisions and includes a practice round. To register, call the Juniper pro shop at 541-548-3121 or download entry form at www. playjuniper.com. MAY18:The Museum at Warm Springs presents The Boomer Classic Benefit Golf Tournament, a four-person team scramble at Kah-Nee-Ta High Desert Resort. Tournament begins with 9:30 a.m. shotgun. Cost is $75 per person and includes lunch, contests and prizes. Proceeds benefit community educational programs of The Museum At Warm Springs. For more information or to register: call 541-322-5753, emaildstacona© museumatwarmsprings.org, or visit www.museumatwarmsprings.org. MAY18:Men's League Invitational at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville is a three-person scramble tournament. Event tees off with a 9 a.m. shotgun and is open to the public. Cost is $75 per team plus green fees. For more information or to register, call the Meadow Lakes pro shop at 541-447-7113. MAY19:Lions Club of La Pine Scramble for Sight golf tournament at Quail Run Golf Club in La Pine. Four-person scramble begins with 1 p.m. shotgun start and uses a modified scoring system. Cost $75 per person or $40 for Quail Run members, includes golf, range balls and meal. Proceeds support the La Pine Lions Club and the Oregon Lions Sight8 Hearing Foundation. For more information or to register, call 541-536-2911 or 541-408-6167. MAY 20-24:Central Oregon Junior Golf Association new-member qualification at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend. Teetimes can be madebyappointment.New members are required to attend. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653 or visit www.cojga.com. MAY24:Central Oregon Golf Tour
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The Bulletin welcomes contributions toits weekly local gotf events calendar. Items should be mailed to PO. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; faxed to the sports department at 541-385-0831; oremailed to sports@bendbulletin.com.
individual stroke play tournament at Brasada Ranch in Powell Butte. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. centraloregongolftour.com. MAY25:Wildland Firefighter Foundation Benefit Golf Tournament at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters. Four-player scramble begins with 8 a.m. shotgun. Cost is $320 per team or $80 for an individual; includes 18 holes of golf, cart and barbecue. For more information or to register, contact the Redmond Hotshots at 541-5047350 or cbuhrig©fs.fed.us. MAY 26:Central Oregon Junior Golf Association new-member qualifier at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend. Tee times begin at 3:30 p.m. New members are required to attend. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653 or visit www.cojga.com. MAY 28-29:Oregon Chapter of the PGA pro-am tournament. Format for both days is a net Stableford. This two-day event is held at Bend Golf and Country Club and Pronghorn Club's Nicklaus Course near Bend. Cost for amateurs is $200 per golfer. Contact: 800-5740503 or www.pnwpga.com. MAY31-JUNE2:Duffers & Dolls Chapman Tournament at Desert Peaks Golf Club in Madras. Cost is $120 per couple and includes Friday practice round, two days of tournament golf, KP and long-drive competitions and a team best ball on Saturday and Sunday. Optional nine-hole kicker competition during Friday practice round is $5. There will also be a hosted dinner at Geno's Italian Grill in Madras. For more information or to register, call the clubhouse at 541-475-6368 or visit www.desertpeaks.com to download a registration form. JUNE1:Pro-Junior 23 at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend is fundraiser golf tournament for the Central Oregon Junior Golf Association. Four-person, 23-hole golf tournament begins with a 2 p.m. shotgun start. Teams will play shambleand scramble and play Awbrey Glen's regulation course and five-hole loop course. Each team will consist of three junior golfers between the ages of10 and16 and one golf professional. Space is limited to10 teams. Cost is $100 per team and includes golf, lunch, drinks and prizes. For more information or to register, call Awbrey Glen head professional Tim Fraley at 541-388-8526 or email him at tim@awbreyglen.com. JUNE1:2013 Scrimmage on the Links benefit golf tournament at Lost Tracks Golf Club. Four-person scramble begins with two shotguns, at 7:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Entry fee: $100 per person or $400 per team and includes lunch, beverages, gifts and prizes. Benefits the Bend, Mountain Viewand Summit high school football teams. To register or for more information, visit www. scrimmageonthelinks.com. JUNE1:Ochoco Open at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville is an "individual scramble" tournament. Cost is $25 per golfer plus green fees. For more information or to register, call the Meadow Lakes pro shop at 541-447-7113. JUNE1-2:The 29th annual Riverhouse Golf Tournament at River's Edge Golf Course in Bend is a 36-hole, four-person scramble tournament that benefits the Every Kid Fund. Begins at8a.m. with a shotgun start each day. Gross and net prizes awarded in each division along with awards for closest to the pin, longest drive and a Robberson Ford hole-in-one prize. Cost is $198 and includes green fees, cart, lunch both days, tee prizes and awards dinner Saturday night. Field limited to the first136 golfers. For more information or to register, call 541389-3111 or visit www.riverhouse. com/tournament. JUNE1-2:Ladies Marmot at Prineville Golf Club is a two-person team event stretched over two days and 36 holes. For more information or to register, call Prineville GCat 541-447-6658. JUNE 2:Swings for Strings at Sunriver Resort's Woodlands course is a fundraising tournament hosted by the Sunriver Area Chamber of Commerce and the Sunriver Music Festival. The scramble tournament will begin with a1 p.m. shotgun. Cost is $125 per player and includes cart, barbecue lunch, driving range and putting green challenges, par-3 competitions, Nike demo day and tee prizes and awards. A reception after play is also included. Deadline to enter is May 24. For more information, call the Sunriver Chamber at 877-593-8149 or 541-593-1084, email info@ sunriverchamber.com, or visit www.sunriverchamber.com. JUNE 2:Bend FCTimbers Soccer Golf Tournament at Tetherow
Golf Club in Bend is a four-person scramble. Tournament begins with a1:30 p.m. shotgun. Cost is $150 per player and includes green fees, cart, dinner and awards. Event, contest and hole sponsorships available. Proceeds benefit the Oregon Rush scholarship fund and field developmentfund. For more information or to register, visit www.oregonrush.com, or email at shore©bendbroadband.com. JUNE 6:Central Oregon Golf Tour individual stroke play tournament at Sunriver Resort's Crosswater Club. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. centraloregongolftour.com. JUNE 7:Ronald McDonald House Charities Central Oregon Open is a four-person scramble tournament at Sunriver Resort's Meadows and Woodlandscourses.Tournament begins with 9 a.m. at both courses. Cost is $135 per player or $500 per team and includes green fees, cart and barbecue lunch. Deadline to register is June 5. Sponsorship opportunities available. All proceeds benefit Ronald McDonald House Charities of Central Oregon. For more information or to register: 541-318-4950 or www. rmhcofcentraloregon.org. JUNE 8:Kah-Nee-Ta Junior at KahNee-Tah High Desert Resort near Warm Springs is an Oregon Golf Association junior tournament. For more information or to register, call the OGA at 866-981-4653 or visit www.oga.org. JUNE 8-9:Prineville Heritage Tournamentat Prineville Golf Club and MeadowLakesGolfCoursein Prineville. Two-day, two-person team tournament includes a round of scramble at Prineville GC and18 holes of best ball at Meadow Lakes. Cost is $135 per player and includes tee prize, flighted gross and net payouts and additional prizes and games. For more information or to register, visit www. prinevillekiwanis.org or contact Meadow Lakes at 541-447-7113 or zach@meadowlakesgc.com. JUNE 9:The RexUnderwood Memorial Golf Tournament at Quail Run Golf Club in La Pine. Four-person scramble begins withan8 a.m .shotgun.Proceeds benefit the Gilchrist Booster Club and Gilchrist High School student activities, sports and clubs. Quail Run members pay $25, all others $55 and price includes green fees, lunch, KP and long-drive contests and prizes. Deadline to register is May 31. For more information: contact Lynne Underwood-
Murray at 541-390-4221 or at lynnectravel@aol.com or Gilchrist High at 541-433-2295. JUNE 9:Fifth annual United Way Golf Classic at Sunriver Resort's Crosswater Club. Scramble begins with a noon shotgun start. Cost is $175 per player or $700 per foursome and includes golf, cart, lunch and awards barbecue. Sponsorships also available. Proceeds benefit the United Way of Deschutes County. For more information or to register, contact Darleen at 541-389-6507 or darleen@deschutesunitedway.org. JUNE10:Central Oregon Seniors Golf Organization event at Desert Peaks in Madras. The format is individual gross and net best ball, as well as team best ball. Cash prizes awarded at each event. Tournament series is open to men's club members at host sites and participants must have an Oregon Golf Association handicap. Cost is $150 for the season plus a $5 perevent fee. For more information, call Ted Carlin at 541-604-4054. JUNE10-12:The 48th Bend Ladies' Invitational at Bend Golf and Country Club is a 36-hole individual amateur stroke-play tournament. Practice round is June10, with the tournament played with shotgun starts on June 11 at 9:30 a.m. and June12at8:30 a.m.Nonmember entry fee is $180 and includes 36 holes of stroke play, practice round, breakfast and lunch for two days. Awards will be given for the overall best gross and net scores, with gross and net payouts for four flights. All female players age 18 and over with a handicap of 32 or better are welcome. For more information or to register, call Vicki Taylor at 541-550-7960, or Bend Golf and Country Club 541-3822878. Entry forms also available online at www.bendgolfclub.com (click the "Tournaments" tab). JUNE11-13:Oregon Open Invitational at Juniper Golf Club in Redmond is an annual Pacific Northwest PGA event that features 52 teams of two professional golfers and two amateur golfers competing in 36 holes of team competition and in a 54-hole individual strokeplay tournament. After the second round, field is cut to low 70 players. Competition handicap of18 (although players may have higher handicaps). Admission and parking are free for spectators. For more information on the tournament or sponsorship opportunities, visit www.pnwpga.com or call the Pacific Northwest PGA at360-456-6496. I
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TOURNAMENT '
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Presented by Ewanis Club of Pnneville • Sponsored by St.Charles Health System
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deliciousmeals great courses June 8 - Prineville Golf Club Two person scramble, 60% of average of total team handicap with lunch provided
June 9 - MeadowLakesGolf Course Two man better ball, full USGA handicap with dinner provided
Tee prize, flighted with gross andnet payouts, all for $135 per player. Open to the first 50 teams of two. Tournament will include - Optional Skins Game, Honey Pot, KP's, Putting Contest, Accuracy and LongDrive. For entry or additional information contact Meadow Lakes Golf Course• 541-447-7113 ZaCh@meadoWlakeSgC.Com Or WWW.PrineVillekiWaniS.org Find uS On
FaCebOok RegiStratiOn deadline May 31, 2013 Maximum handicap 36 men-40 women Ten stroke team handicap differential TITLE SPONSOR:
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Johns: Linda Shelk Chet petersenInsurance, Inc.
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013. 4 • •
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CONDITIONS
FRONTS
s yALA S K A
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 63/37 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........86m1987 Monthtodate.......... 0.30" Record low......... 16 in 1975 Average month todate... 0.73" Average high.............. 60 Year to date............ 2.57" Average low .............. 32 Average year to date..... 4.08" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.13 Record 24 hours ...0.31 in1943 *Melted liquid equivalent
FIRE INDEX
WATER REPORT
Redmond/Madras........Low Prinevine..........................Lpw Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme
a service to irrigatprs and sportsmen.
Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 51,175...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 187,207..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 74,508 . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 32,972......47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 148,089..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 252 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,180 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 10 L OW MEDIU HI G H Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 83.8 0 2 8 10 D eschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . . 9 2 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,834 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res..... . . . . 172 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 226 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 62.6 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 83.8 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
IPOLLEN COUNT
.OY„.
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
o www m (in the 48 contiguous states):
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:38 a.m...... 6:59 p.m. Venus......6:24 a.m...... 8:51 p.m. Mars.......5:53 a.m...... 7:50 p.m. Jupiter......7:57 am.....1112 pm. Satum......737 pm...... 614am. Uranus.....4:53 a.m...... 5:24 p.m.
Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday's extremes
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Astoria ........56/49/0.09....53/43/pc.....58/43/pc Baker City......64/35/0.00....58/28/pc......51/26/s Brookings..... 70/41/trace....68/46/pc......75/52/s Burns..........69/39/0.00....60/24/pc......53/24/s Eugene........68/44/0.00....61/35/pc......65/35/s Klamath Falls .. 69/34/0 00 ...65/32/pc ... 62/30/s Lakeview.......72/34/0.00 ....67/33/s..... 60/33/s La Pine........65/30/0.00....55/35/pc......57/28/s Medford.......77/43/0.00....69/39/pc......68/35/s Newport.......55/48/0.02....53/42/pc......57/42/s North Bend...... 59/50/NA....56/43/pc......59/43/s Ontario........73/56/0.00....70/38/pc......60/35/s Pendleton..... 66/51/trace....64/33/pc......57/32/s Portland ...... 67/52/trace....60/39/pc.....64/39/pc Prineville.......61/39/0.00..... 55/40/......56/28/s Redmond.......65/42/0.00....59/29/pc......55/27/s Roseburg.......72/44/0.00....66/42/sh......66/38/s Salem ....... 66/51/0 00 .62/37/pc ... 64/36/s Sisters......... 67/36/0.00.... 56/38/sh...... 54/26/s TheDages..... 68/53/trace....61/33/pc......61/37/s
• 77'
70/29
61/32
• Klamath
• Brookings
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
Yesterday's state extremes
60/28
Frenchgle
Paisley
Chiloquin
EAST
60/39
Jordan Valley
57/38
Ne w Fi r st Full
PLANET WATCH
Yesterday Monday Tuesday Bend,westpiHwy97.....Low Sisters..............................Lpw The following was compiled by the Central Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastoiHwy.97......Low LaPine...............................Lpw Qregpn watermaster and irrigation districts as
65/30
56/37
l.ast
OREGON CITIES
Nyssa
64/28
rants Pass
0
76 39
partly sunny and cool.
•
• Brothers 55/35
Silver l.ake
53/33
Port Orford
• 56/45
54/29
Christmas Valley
Chemult emu
66/42
HIGH LOW
74 37
Sunset tomorrow... 8:08 p.m. Moonrise today........none Moonsettpday .... 9:23a.m. May2 May9 May17 May 24
Cloudy to partly sunny with isoOntario lated thunder70/38 showers. Valee
53/34
48/29
Roseburg
58/28
Unity
ine 55/35— Hampton • • La P 53/36 • I. Crescente Ri Crescent • Fprt Rpck 5N37 Lake
56/42 •
Baker City
58/25
58/39
58/2i
Oa k ridge
Coos Bay
•
ele
RedmOnd •
56/38
Sunriver Bend
55/29
0
e Mit c hell57/41
V ,p i
Sisters'
Cottage
HIGH LOW
64 34
SunsettodaY.... 8 07 P.m.
51/29
• Sprayen28
Camp Sherman
54/42
• Bandon swed
58/2
61/44
61/3 5
HIGH LOW
•
Granite
Sunny.
56 28
Sunrise today...... 5:59 a.m. MOOn phaSeS
CENTRAL Mostly cloudy to
55/33
La Grand
Condon
Warm Springs ~e
~/36
Enterprise
• Mea r spf
Ruggs
Willowdale
Albany~
•
64/33
5 /3 2
esu4
Yachats• ~ 56/42 ~
eW asco
Maupin
•
COrValliS'
Florence•
i 1
• 59/36
ez/37•
Newport
64f37
The Biggs
Government Campduze
•
S~l~m
•
Umatilla
Hood
Seasidee 53/45 • Cannon Peach
Sunny.
HIGH LOW
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
WEST Partly to mostly cloudy with isolated showers.
As t oria
54/di
Sunny.
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:5TATE
Tigamook•
ge
Sunny.
3
LOW
sho wers.
58 I,
I
ge
•
Cold
d 4
: ++++ . 4 4 4 . ++++x 3 4 d
36 xs
x
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain
Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......89/54/0 00..86/64/pc. 87/63/pc GrandRapids....64/53/0.00..,73/55/t. 79/59/pc RapidCity.......71/45/000..71/42/pc.. 51/32/c Savannah.......78/59/0 00...76/61/t...81/60/t Akron ..........58/52/0.37..69/53/pc.. 74/53/c GreenBay.......72/41/0.00...63/51/t...77/53/t Reno...........85/49/0.00...86/49/s.. 71/42/s Seattle..........59/50/0.01..56/39/pc. 57/41/pc Albany..........74/39/000...66/47/c.. 68/44/c Greensboro......57/53/1.14...68/56/t. 71/56/sh Richmond.......66/45/0.01... 65/58/t .. 68/56/c Sioux Falls.......85/53/0.00 .. 72/52/pc. 63/37/sh Albuquerque.....80/48/0.00...85/55/s.. 87/55/s Haresburg.......69/42/0.01..62/50/sh. 64/49/sh Rochester, NY....75/44/000 ..65/52/pc.. 71/51/c Spokane........61/43/000 .. 59/30/pc. 56/31/pc Anchorage ......41/26/0.00...45/31/c.. 45/33/c Hartford,CT .....68/41/0.00...68/44/c.. 69/41/c Sacramento......92/52/000...90/57/s .. 87/54/s Springfield, MO ..71/49/000 ..81/Slpc.. 81/56/s Atlanta .........75/57/0.19...77/60/t.80/60/pc Helena..........64/46/0.00...56/31/t..42/28/rs St Louis.........58/53/001 ..83/63/pc.86760/pc Tampa..........87/69/000... 84/69/t...84/69/t Atlantic City.....65/37/000..56/50/sh. 60/46/sh Honolulu........81/70/0 00..87772/pc.. 85/72/s Salt Lake City....76/51/000 ..76/46/pc. 59735/pc Tucson..........95/59/000...97/62/s .. 95/62/s Austin..........85/58/0.00..82/60/pc.84/65/pc Houston ........82/64/0.00..82763/pc.82/66/pc SanAntonio.....83/60/000..81/62/pc. 83766/pc Tulsa...........79/48/000..85/62/pc. 82/62/pc Baltimore .......68/41/000 ..60/53/sh.. 64/54/c Huntsville.......68/60/1.65..76/55/pc. 80/58/pc SanDiego.......68/59/000..67/60/pc. 65/60/pc Washington,DC.68/51/000 ..61/55/sh.. 65/56/c Bitings.........65/54/000... 66/34/t. 45/32/sh Indianapolis.....61/53/0.31 ..73/56/pc. 79/59/pc SanFrancisco....71/47/000... 72/50/s.. 77/53/s Wichita.........81/43/000 ..85/60/pc. 83/56/pc Birmingham.....70/60/088 ..77/55/pc. 80/61/pc Jackson,MS.... 76/66/0.31. 81/57/pc.. 84/61/t SanJose........80/53/000.. 86/53/s 85/56/s Yakima.........71/37/000 63/33/pc.. 57/34/s Bismarck........66/50/000... 70/39/t. 50/30/pc Jacksonvile......82/60/000... 80/62/t...81/63/t SantaFe........77/38/0.00... 78/46/s. 80/49/pc Yuma..........103/65/0.00..104/69/s. 100/69/s Boise...........71/50/000..69/34/pc.. 57/31/s Juneau..........37/31/057...44/26/s .. 44/32/s INTERNATIONAL Boston..........63/44/000 ..65/47/pc.63/43/pc Kansas City......74/39/0.00 ..83/62/pc. 82/57/pc BedgeportCT....63/44/000...59/46/c. 63/43/sh Lansing.........60/50/0 04..72/57/pc. 79/59/pc Amsterdam......52/36/000 53/39/sh 51/36/pc Mecca.........100/84/000 .97/78/pc .. 96/77/t Buffalo .........72/51/0.02..63/53/pc.. 71/53/c LasVegas.......97/65/0.00...98/69/s.. 97/68/s Athens..........80/50/0.00...77/60/s .. 82/62/s MexicoCity .....81/59/000... 75/50/t.. 77/50/s Burlington,VT....73/35/000..68/47/pc. 73/45/pc Lexington .......68/54/055..70/53/pc. 76/57/pc Auckland........70/61/000...70/59/c.70/57/pc Montreal........70/39/000..61/52/pc.64/54/sh Caribou,ME.....67/30/000..69/39/pc. 71/39/pc Lincoln..........82/44/0 00..79756/pc.73/46/pc Baghdad........95/62/000..101/77/s101/80/pc Moscow........48/39/050... 56/39/s .. 61/49/c Charleston,SC ...78/58/0 00...74/61/t...81/60/t Little Rock.......73/53/000..81761/pc. 80/60/pc Bangkok........95/82/003 ..97/80/sh. 100/83/t Nairobi.........73/63/000... 74/56/t...76/61/t Charlotte........59/55/1.86...70/56/t.73/57/pc LosAngeles......67/58/0.00..68759/pc.65/58/pc Beiyng..........68/52/000... 87/56/s. 88/61/pc Nassau.........81/73/000 ..81/71/pc...82J73/t Chattanooga.....62/57/1.87..77/51/pc.81/57/pc Louisvile........68/55/0.06..74/54/pc.81/5ipc Beirut..........90/77/000...86/74/s ..87/74/s New Delhi.......99/73/000 105/81/pc107/83/pc Cheyenne.......73/41/0.00..72/40/pc...47/28/t Madison, WI.....71/37/0.00...68/57/t...80/56/t Berlin...........57/43/000..62/40/pc.59740/pc Osaka..........68/48/000..70756/sh.63/44/sh Chicago...... 65/53/0.03...72/59/t. 83/58/pc Memphis....... 67/58/0 00 82/59/pc 83/61/pc Bogota .........66/50/000...66/55/t...67/54/t Oslo............50/27/000 ..46732/sh. 45/32/sh Cincinnati.......70/55/0.07..72/53/pc.79/54/pc Miami..........84/74/0.00...85/74/t...85/74/t Budapest........77/55/001...81/59/s ..84/61/c Ottawa.........73/36/000..57/50/sh. 64/48/sh Cleveland.......58/48/0.19..64/51/sh. 70/51/pc Milwaukee......63/46/0.00...66/54/t. 78/57/pc BuenosAires.....72/59/3.14...70/56/s. 72/55/pc Paris............55/41/000...61/35/c..59/42/c Colorado Spnngs.78/41/000..76/47/pc. 75/37/pc Miuneapolis.....81/54/0.00..71/55/pc.. 70/42/c CaboSanLucas ..90/63/0.00... 86/64/s. 84/61/pc Rip deJaneiro....82/66/0.00... 79/66/c .. 81/69/s Columbia,MO...65/50/000 ..83/61/pc. 85/58/pc Nashvite........70/57/0.12..76/55/pc. 82/57/pc Cairo...........95/64/000..99/65/pc 98/62/pc Rome...........75/59/000... 73/66/s. 76/60/pc Columbia,SC....73/58/0.33... 73/59/t...80/57/t New Orleans.....76/64/1.53... 81/63/t...82/65/t Calgary.........61/36/000 .. 46/25/sf..34/19/sf Santiago........72/43/000... 69/58/c.. 72/57/s Columbus, GA... 83/65/trace... 80/60/t. 82/61/pc New York.......69/51/0.00 ..60/49/sh. 61/47/sh Cancun.........84/77/0.00... 85/77/t. 85/78/pc SaoPaulo.......75/57/0.00... 78/61/c. 80/62/sh Columbus, OH....65/54/069 ..71/54/sh. 77/54/pc Newark, Nl......69/46/0.00..62/49/sh. 62/47/sh Dublin..........54/39/0.04... 51/33/c. 53/34/pc Sapporo ........45/39/0.30 ..50/34/sh. 48/34/pc Concord,NH.....71/31/000..69/38/pc. 72/40/pc NorfolkVA......67745/000...65/60/t. 67/56/sh Edinburgh.......52/37/000...46/32/c. 51/32/sh Seoul...........72/45/000 64/46/sh .. .. 68/43/s Corpus Christi....80/68/004 ..78/66/pc. 79/67/pc Oklahoma City...81/44/0 00..87762/pc.. 84/60/s Geneva.........50/36/0.04 ..57/48/sh.60/50/sh Shanghai........81/63/0.00... 76/49/r...77/50/t DallasFtWprrh...81/52/000..85/61/Pc.87/64/Pc Omaha.........82/47/000..7I57/Pc. 73/47/Pc Harare..........75/46/000... 75/50/s. 70/50/pc Singapore.......81/75/081 ..87/80/sh...89/81/t Dayton .........65/54/0.16 ..71/53/pc. 78/55/pc Orlando.........83/65/0.00... 86/67/t...86/67/t HongKong......79/70/000..78/69/pc...80/70/t Stockholm.......52/30/000 ..50736/sh. 54/39/sh Denver..........78/49/000 ..80/53/pc. 69/33/pc PalmSprings....106/67/0.00..102/67/s .. 99/66/s Istanbul.........81/57/0.00... 76/57/s .. 69/55/s Sydney..........84/57/0.00 79/63/pc. .. 75/61/pc DesMoines......76/45/000..74/60/pc...79/51/t Peoria ..........68/52/0 00... 78/59/t. 83/59/pc lerusalem.......85/70/0.00...88/69/s .. 91/71/s Taipei...........77/70/0.00..82/65/pc.. 85/64/c Detroit..........55/50/024..66/52/pc. 72/53/pc Philadelphia.....71/48/000..59/51/sh. 63/51/sh Johannesburg....84/68/000...70/47/s .. 67/47/5 Tel Aviv.........99/75/000...97/71/s .. 99/73/s Duluth..........68/44/000 ..46/38/pc. 63/37/sh Phoeeix........100/69/0.00..102/73/s. 100/73/s Lima...........73/61/0.00..75/66/pc.74/66/pc Tpkyo...........66/54/0.00...69/57/c. 68/46/sh EIPas0..........86/56/000...90/62/s.. 93/63/s Pittsburgh.......61/53/017..69/51/pc. 72/53/pc Lisbon..........57/45/000 61/49/c64/49/pc Toronto.........68/43/000 5552/sh .. 66/52/c Fairbanks.........35/2/000...38/19/c .. 41/22/c Portland,ME.....61/34/000 ..62/41/pc. 62/39/pc London.........54/34/002...58/35/c. 57/34/pc Vancouver.......57/45/010 ..52/43/pc.. 57/41/s Fargo...........63/50/000..66/48/pc. 57/32/pc Prpvidence ......62/38/0.00..67745/pc. 67/42/pc Madrid .........48/37/000..57/44/sh.61/45/sh Vienna..........70/52/000..81/51/pc. 79/52/pc Flagstaff ........74/27/0.00...75f38/s..73/40/s Raleigh.........62/56/0.10...66/58/t...72/57/t Manila..........95/81/066..94/81/pc. 94/77/pc Warsaw.........50/37/1.00...65/47/c. 54/46/sh
PACIFIC FURNITURE DEALERS
HaveNeyotiated
-PP
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~OiNS'El!EcT
See Store forDetails Since 1962
•'.IL~SONSofRedmond
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Wilson's Olive Garden
•
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G allery-Be n d
ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
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T h e
B u l l~ t i n : •
j
t 7 7 7
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su,.VV.
C h a n ct l e r
A v e .
,
210
246
261
Furniture & Appliances
Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing
Medical Equipment
• B en d
O r e g o n
9
Q7~
269
•
Gardening Supplies & E q uipment
P ower chair with a t $325 . Remington Wingmaster t achments, For newspaper Model 8 7 0L W 20 541-388-3789 loeto ne p delivery, call the ITEMS FORSALE 264-Snow RemovalEquipment gauge shotgun, $250. chasing products or • 263 Circulation Dept. at 201 - NewToday 265 - Building Materials Eric services from out of I Call Tools 541-385-5800 202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves for y the area. Sending y 541-639-7740 To place an ad, call 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood pictures/details. I cash, checks, or ' 541-385-5809 421 204- Santa's Gift Basket 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers I credit i n f o rmation Wanted: Collector or email Farm Equipment • Schools 8 Training 205- Free ltems may be subjected to seeks high quality claaaibed@bendbullebn.com 269- GardeningSupplies & Equipment & Machinery • 208- Pets and Supplies I FRAUD. For more fishing items. 270 - Lost and Found Oregon Medical TrainThe Bulletin information about an s Call 541-678-5753, or 210- Furniture & Appliances gernng Central Oregon rrnre tgta ing PCS - Phlebotomy GARAGE SALES 503-351-2746 1959 John Deere 420 advertiser, you may 211 - Children's Items classes begin May 6, 275 - Auction Sales i call t h e Ore g oni Winchester 300 mag- Troy-bilt 24" s n ow Husqvarna s e lf-prop. crawler, brush rake, 9' 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 2013. Registration now snow blade, c anopy, 280 Estate Sales ' State Attor ney ' n blower, u s e d 3 num Mdl 70 with 3x9 215- Coins & Stamps P 21 cut, like new, used $3500; can be seen April I General's O f f i ce 281 - Fundraiser Sales medicaltrainin .com Redfield scope and 5 times. $300. Dave 240- Crafts and Hobbies 4 hours, $340 firm. 27th. 541-312-2137 Consumer P rotec• © 541-948-2216. 541-343-3100 boxes of shells, $675 282Sales Northwest Bend 541-548-8500 241 - Bicycles and Accessories t ion ho t l in e at I firm. 5 4 1 - 771-5861 284- Sales Southwest Bend 316 242 - ExerciseEquipment SUPER TOP SOIL 476 I 1-877-877-9392. after 4 p.m. 265 286- Sales Northeast Bend www.herahe aotlandbark.com 243 - Ski Equipment Irrigation Equipment Employment Screened, soil & com244 - Snowboards 288- Sales Southeast Bend Building Materials Opportunities post mi x ed , no Irrigation pipes, 3" han290- Sales RedmondArea 245 - Golf Equipment Hot Tubs & Spas rocks/clods. High hu- dlines, $35, $45 and La Pine Habitat 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 292- Sales Other Areas mus level, exc. for RESTORE $55; Pipe trailer $500; DETAILER 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. Beautiful almost new FARM MARKET Building Supply Resale flower beds, lawns, Hesston SP swather, InteriorFull-time Antiques & large 6-person spa, 248- Health andBeautyItems Detailerneeded straight $2000. 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery gardens, Quality at paid $6000. $2500 you 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs Collectibles s creened to p s o i l .Prineville 541-419-9486 for Bend location. Com316 - Irrigation Equipment LOW PRICES haul. 541-548-5667 petitive pay and benefits. 251 - Hot TubsandSpas Bark. Clean fill. De52684 Hwy 97 325- Hay, Grain and Feed Apply in person at 63500 Antiques wanted: furni253 253- TV, StereoandVideo liver/you haul. 541-536-3234 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies N. Hwy 97, Bend, OR. ture, marbles, beer 541-548-3949. 255 - Computers Open to the public . Hay, Grain & Feedi TV, Stereo 8 Video 341 - Horses and Equipment cans, early B/W pho256- Photography tography, old hardware/ Flat screen 32" WestPrineville Habitat 345-Livestockand Equipment DO YOU NEED 1st quality grass hay, 257- Musical Instruments fixtures. 541-389-1578 • Lo s t 8 Found A GREAT 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 70-lb. bales, barn stored, inghouse, low hours, BuildingReStore 258 - Travel/Tickets Supply Resale $250/ton. Also big bales! 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers The Bulletin reserves $200. 541-350-1201 EMPLOYEE 259- Memberships 1427 NW Murphy Ct. FOUND 80 l b . b l ack Patterson Ranch, the right to publish all RIGHT NOW? 358- Farmer's Column 260- Misc. Items 255 541-447-6934 dog in vicinity of Food Sisters, 541-549-3831 ads from The Bulletin Call The Bulletin 375- Meat and Animal Processing 261 - MedicalEquipment Open to the public. 4 Less, Bend. He is Computers before 11 a.m. and newspaper onto The 383 - Produce andFood wearing brown collar, 262 -Commercial/Office Equip. Bulletin Internet webget an ad in to pubJust bought a new boat? Looking for your no tags. He has white 263- Tools T HE B U LLETIN r e - Sell your old one in the site. lish the next day! next employee? quires computer ad- classifieds! Ask about our spot in back of neck 541-385-5809. Place a Bulletin 208 and a little on front vertisers with multiple Super Seller rates! The Bulletin VIEW the help wanted ad ter ng Central Oregon t nte tgg3 chest. He has no tail. Pets 8 Supplies ad schedules or those 541-385-5809 Classifieds at: today and Very friendly. If you selling multiple syswww.bendbulletin.com 0 245 reach over 266 think you know who Adult barn/shop cats, Pet gate/partition for tems/ software, to disGolf Equipment the owner is, please 60,000 readers f ixed, s h ots, s o m e vehicle, $60 close the name of the Heating 8 Stoves Driver call 541-848-7813 each week. friendly, others not so 541-350-1201 business or the term Local moving comYour classified ad much. No fee 8 free de- POODLE AKC Toys. Electric Back C addy, "dealer" in their ads. NOTICE TO People Look for Information pany looking for exp. u sed t w ice, $ 3 7 5 Private party advertislivery. 541-389 8420 will also ADVERTISER Loving, cuddly com- OBO. 541-389-9804 About Products and class A & B drivers. appear on ers are defined as Since September 29, Cat (Gray Tabby)- Free panions. 541-475-3889 Must be clean, reli1991, advertising for Services Every Daythrough bendbulletin.com to good home, 6 yrs. Queensland Heelers Titleist carry bag, $70. those who sell one able & h av e r eferTheBulletin C/assifieds computer. used woodstoves has which currently Taylor RBZ irons, 4-P, old, friendly and cute. Standard & Mini, $150 e nces. Top pa y 8 been limited to mod- FOUND: bike on Butler i Want to Buy or Rent $375. Taylor R11 3 wood, receives over Call 541-306-9055. B enefits. C al l Bi l l & up. 541-280-1537 els which have been $120.Taylor R11S driver, 1.5 million page Market Road, 541-383-3362. c ertified by the O r - 541-504-8967. Old barn wood needed! Chihuahua puppies, (2) www.rightwayranch.wor $275. Ping i15 irons, 3-W Musical Instruments views every really c ute! $ 2 5 0. dpress.com plus 52', 56' 8 60', $425. egon Department of Call Marge, Check out the month at no 541-771-2606 Environmental Qual- FOUND key on Sunday 541-593-0146 Shih Tzu mix, very tiny, Cleveland 588 wedges, classifieds online extra cost. 4/21 on leather cord, 50', 54' 8 5 8 ' , $ 225. ity (DEQ) and the fedBulletin www.bendbulletin.com Wanted: $Cash paid for Donate deposit bottles/ gorgeous. $300 each. 541-388-6854 (Iv msg) eral E n v ironmental at Bend Pine Nursery vintage costume jew- cans to local all volun- 541-977-0035 Classifieds Updated daily park near dog area. Protection A g e ncy elry. Top dollar paid for teer, non-profit rescue, to Siberian puppies AKC Get Results! Call to iden t i fy (EPA) as having met EDUCATION Gold/Silver.l buy by the help w/cat spay/ neuter Ready now! $1000 Call 541-385-5809 smoke emission stan- 541-382-0173. Black Butte Estate, Honest Artist vet bills. Cans for Cats 541-306-0180 Rare Chickering Player dards. A or place your ad cer t ified BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS School District 41 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 trailer at Ray's Food, Piano. Solid oak conon-line at w oodstove may b e Sisters thru 4/29, then Good classified ads tell Blended Grade WANTED: Tobacco struction. Exc. cond., identified by its certifi- Search the area's most bendbulletin.com Petco Redmond (near 500 rounds of 7.62x39 the essential facts in an pipes - Briars and 70+ piano rolls plus cation label, which is comprehensive listing cf Elementary/Middle Wal-Mart) until 5/20. Do- interesting Manner. Write ammo, $250. smoking accessories. nate Mon-Fri O Smith accessories. Asking permanently attached classified advertising... School Teacher 541-480-9912 341 from the readers view - not Fair prices paid. $2800 OBO. Call Tom to the stove. The Bul- real estate to automotive, ApplicationDeadline Signs, 1515 NE 2nd; or Call 541-390-7029 the seller's. Convert the AR-15 Colt .223-.556 rifle at 541-410-2662 Horses & Equipmentg Date: May 3, 2013 CRAFT, Tumalo any letin will no t k n ow- merchandise to sporting between 10 am-3 pm. at Start Date: 2013-2014 time. 541-389-8420; Info: facts into benefits. Show w/3 mags, scope. NIB, ingly accept advertis- goods. Bulletin Classifieds Free R eg . 260 Qu a rter School year the reader how the item will $1275. 541-647-8931 appear every day in the www.craftcats.org i ng for the s ale o f Misc. Items Horse, older but good Black Butte School is a help them in someway. print or cn line. uncertified Bend local pays CASH!! Items for Free K-8 rural school lotrail horse, to good This Call 541-385-5809 DO YOU HAVE for all firearms & Bakers rack, black metal woodstoves. cated in Camp Sherhome. 541-923-1766. advertising tip www.bendbulletin.com SOMETHING TO ammo. 541-526-0617 w/brass trim, cstm glass FREEZER - FREE! 16 man, Oregon. We are 267 brought to you by SELL MINIATURE DONKEYS cubic f oo t up r ight shelves, 80x60x16, beauseeking applicants for CASH!! The Bulletin Fuel & Wood FOR $500 OR r egistered, bred f o r tiful cond, very elegant. a full time teacher of style. 541-382-2054 renng Centrei Oregon sincetgta The Bulletin For Guns, Ammo 8 LESS? confirmation and grades 4- 8 $900. 541-923-5089 in a Stone Lodge R etireReloading Supplies. Found rifle, near WoodNon-commercial self-contained classshow. 541-548-5216 541-408-6900. BOXESGreat for movment home is looking WHEN BUYING chip Lane in LaPine. Call advertisers may room with an enrollfor a donation of a $25 cash. Brian, 541-601-3900 I.D. FIREWOOD... 345 place an ad with ment of approximately C Z 0/ U 1 2 G a u ge ing/storage, Call 541-318-4577. bird bath and feeders oul' Shotgun R e d head FOUND ring downtown Livestock & Equipment 10-15 students (may To avoid fraud, for their garden area. "QUICK CASH be adjusted due to enBuying Diamonds Deluxe. $550. Bend parking lot 4/9. The Bulletin If interested please r Tea c her SPECIAL" 541-81 5-9291 /Gofd for Cash Please email to identify Feeder Calves 400-900 rollment). recommends paycall 5 41 - 383-2059; 1 week 3 lines 12 would be expected to Saxon's Fine Jewelers foundrin inbendor2013 ment for Firewood lbs.l vaccinated, del. SPRING PUPPIES. ask for Bill. build leadership skills or g~eeke gpt 541-389-6655 Ohotmail.com avail. 541-480-1719. only upon delivery DON'T MISSTIIIS Frenchtons. Put dethroughout the first two Ad must include 208 with subject line, RING. and inspection. posit down for MothBUYING ears (with guidance) price of single item • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Find exactly what Pets & Supplies ers Day. $700 to Lionel/American Flyer Lost Boston Terrier, 6 yr eading to the possibilof $500 or less, or 4' x 4' x 8' DO YOU HAVE $800. 541-548-0747 trains, accessories. male, "Sammy." Had red you are looking for in the ity of Head Teacher multiple items • Receipts should SOMETHING TO 541-408-2191. KI More Pixat Bendblllletin.ct collar, 4/18 on Canal Rd r ole in year 2-3. A CLASSIFIEDS whose total does The Bulletin recominclude name, SELL off SE 55th Place, in detailed job descripBUYING 8( SE L LING phone, price and not exceed $500. mends extra caution 210 FOR $500 OR tion is available on our Redmond. 541-815-0285 All gold jewelry, silver kind of wood purwhen purc h asReady to work! LESS? website at www.blackFurniture & Appliances Call Classifieds at and gold coins, bars, Lost prescription eye ing products or serRegistered y e a rling Non-commercial and the 541-385-5809 rounds, wedding sets, •chased. glasses, a t par k ing Angus bulls, gentle, butte.k12.or.us vices from out of the Firewood ads v acancy has b e e n advertisers may www.bendbulletin.com class rings, sterling sil- MUST pull-out on Mt. Washingood disp o sition. area. Sending cash, A1 Washers&Dryers include speposted on Edzapp at place an ad ver, coin collect, vin- cies and cost per ton Dr., B end, 4/21. opular, proven blood- htt s://blackbutte.cloud checks, or credit in$150 ea. Full warwith our tage watches, dental Please call 541-350-7273 lines, $1400 each, def ormation may b e ranty. Free Del. Also German Shepherd AKC "QUICK CASH to better serve .talentedk12.com/hire/I gold. Bill Fl e ming, cord livery available. subjected to fraud. wanted, used W/D's our customers. . cp Puppies, great temLost three banded gold 541-480-8096, ~n«. SPECIAL" 541-382-9419. Madras 541-280-7355 For more i nforma- peraments, amazing filled. First review of 1 week3lines 12 w edding r in g w i t h tion about an adverCemetery Lawn Vault a pplications will b e b loodlines. $80 0 . OI' The Bulletin diamonds and rubies. Replacement-quality M ay 6, 2013. gewing Central Oregon rrnte tgte tiser, you may call Designed for 2, located Any Emily, 541-647-8803 GENERATE SOME exg k ga S entimental va l u e. purebred y e arling ~ the O r egon State at Deschutes Memorial. questions or applicacitement i n your Ad must Reward. Angus heifers, Final Today's cost, $1650; will AH Year Dependable tions can be directed Attorney General's Labradoodles - Mini & neighborhood! Plan a 541-678-0709 include price of Answer and Danny sell for $1450. (Never Black Butte School Office Co n s umer med size, several colors garage sale and don't t $500 Firewood: Seasoned Lost white gold wed- Boy bloodlines. Good to: 541-504-2662 District, P.O. Box 150, used!) 541-771-4800 Protection hotline at forget to advertise in or less, or multiple Lodgepole, Split, Del. ding band in alley on disposition. Raised in Camp wwwnnlpen-ridge.com OR 1-877-877-9392. classified! Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 herd. 97730 /Sherman, items whosetotal Coveralls Carhartt sz Metolius in Red- long-established 541.595.6203 / Labradors AKC, black 8 541-385-5809. does notexceed 3 8-40, never w o r n for $335. Cash, Check SW $1000ea Del avail mond. Reward. 541-480-8096 Madras severeide@blackbutte.k The Bulletin yellow, ready to go $500. $50 ea. 541-350-1201 or Credit Card OK. Serving Central Oregon since 1903 12.or.us 541-318-6337 Need help fixing stuff? 541-420-3484. May11. Mom & Dad on Single cemetery plot in site. 541-350-2495 or Call A Service Professional Call Classifieds at R EMEMBER: If you HOUSEKEEPERAdopt a nice cat from Bend's Deschutes Memo269 find the help you need. 541-390-1607 541-385-5809 have lost an animal, Farmers Column • HEAD POSITION Tumalo sanctuary, rial Gardens, $800 obo. Gardening Supplies www.bendbulletin.com www.bendbulleun.com don't forget to check Full-time. Must be able P etSmart, o r Pe t c o !Miniature Pinscher AKC (paid $1100) 541-447-2784 The Humane Society 10X20 STORAGE to work weekends and & Equipment Fixed, shots, ID chip, puppies, red males only. Kenmore washer 8 dryer, in Bend 541-382-3537 BUILDINGS holidays. Experience tested, more! Sanctuary Champion b l oodlines, large capacity, about 5 Never fired, new KAHR Wanted- paying cash Redmond, for protecting hay, required. Prefer bilinopen Sat/Sun 1-5, other vaccinated 8 w ormed. yrs old, with warranty, compact carry 9mm, for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. Mclntosh, BarkTurfSoil.com 541-923-0882 firewood, livestock gual. Please apply in days by a ppt. 65480 $400. Call 541-480-0896 $550. 541-350-1201 $500 541-771-7021 J BL, Marantz, D y Prineville, etc. $1496 Installed. person at th e B e st 78th, Bend. Photos, map 30-0 6 , naco, Heathkit, San541-447-7178; 541-617-1133. Western Ponderosa at www . craftcats.orgPet carrier Xtra Irg w/ Maytag drying center, R emington PROMPT D E LIVERY 541-389-8420, or like us water bottle, not used great cond, $ 3 50. model 742 semi-auto sui, Carver, NAD, etc. OR Craft Cats, CCB ¹173684. Lodge, 500 Hwy 20 54i-389-9663 on Facebook. 541-350-1201 Call 541-261-1808 541-389-8420. kfjbuilders O ykwc.net $100. 541-350-1201 $500 541-771-7021 W, Sisters, OR 97759 •
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C2 MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013• THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
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Employment Opportunities
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Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • I chasing products or II services from out of area. Sending Tuesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mon. I the c ash, checks, o r I credit i n f ormation I Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess II may be subjected to FRAUD. I more informaThursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • No on Wed. I For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I Fri d a y . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. the Oregon S tate I Attorney General's I C o n sumer f Saturday Real Estate • •• • • •• • • • • 11:00 am Fri • I Office Protection hotline at l I 1-877-877-9392. Saturday • • • • 3:00 pm Fri. LThe BiillettTt g I Sunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri• Tile / Flooring Installer Experience necessary. Full-time, local work. Startimmediately! Call Brian, 541-719-8889
Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
*Must state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
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CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
The Bulletin bendbulletin.com
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
PLEASE NOTE: Check your 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 more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
Transportation Maintenance Specialist 2 - Adel ODOT is searching for an experienced
person to join us as member of a maintenance c re w t o p erform an y re quired manual labor or equipment operat ion necessary t o maintain, repair and/ or reconstruct roadway/highway, freeway, bridges and/or rest area facilities. $2662-$3838/month + excellent benefits. For details on minimum qualification re quirements, how to apply and supplemental requ i rements, please visit www.odotjobs.com or cal l (866) ODOT-JOBS (TTY 503-986-3854
t he
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
ocean front house,
each walk from town, 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV,
Fireplace, BBCL $85 per night, 2 night MIN. 208-342-6999
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional' Directory 541-385-5809 630
Rooms for Rent Studios 8 Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & l inens. New 631
Condo/Townhomes for Rent Furnished 1 Bdrm condo O Inn of 7th Mtn, utils + cable 8 Wifi pd, deck, pools, $700 + dep. No smkg/pets. 541-979-8940
Get your business
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Shipping Dept. Loader
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BRIGHT WOOD CORPORATION
Application and required supplements must be received by 11:59 p.m. PST: May 1, 2013. ODOT is an AA/EEO Employer, committed to building workforce diversity.
Bright Wood Corporation in Madras Oregon is seeking an experienced forklift driver/loader to help in our growing deLooking for your next 476 mand. A valid driver employee? license is required. Employment Place a Bulletin help Good a t t endance Opportunities wanted ad today and and a safe driving reach over 60,000 record are a must. readers each week. Starting wage DOE. OFFICE Your classified ad Full-time position, Please apply in the will also appear on Personnel D e partInsurance Billing/ bendbulletin.com ment at the address Collections in Mawhich currently below. Benefits indras dental office. receives over 1.5 clude medical/denDental experience million page views tal/life insurance. Vievery month at preferred, but will s ion a n d Afl a c no extra cost. train for long-term a vailable t o pu r Bulletin Classifieds c ommitment. A t chase. EOE/On site Get Results! tractive ben e f it pre-employment Call 385-5809 package o f fered. drug screening reor place Job re f erences/ quired. your ad on-line at letters req u ired Bright Wood Corp., bendbulletin.com with resume. Fax 335 Ntfy Hess St., to 541-475-6159 Madras, OR 97741.
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RENTALS 603- Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636- Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638- Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Housesfor Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675- RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
owners. $145-$165/wk 541-382-1885
ODOT13-0342OC.
Can be found on these pages :
FINANCEANO BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans and Mortgages 543- Stocks and Bonds 558- Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities
627
Vacation Rentals & Exchanges
paired) for Announcement
JJT~ ' tT'r'rWi/J'ttt/i~ EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
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Real Estate Services Boise, ID Real Estate
For relocation info, call Mike Conklin, 208-941-8458 Silvercreek Realty 745
Homes for Sale 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, view. By owner, ideal for extended family. $590,000. 541-390-0886
AptJMultiplex NE Bend
Need help fixing stuff?
**No Application Fee **
Call A Service Professional find the help you need.
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705- Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750 - RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764 - Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 745
763
Homes for Sale
Recreational Homes & Property
NOTICE
All real estate advertised here in is sub- Cabin in forest, hunting, ject to t h e F e deral f ishing, stream, 7 5 F air H o using A c t , miles. 541-480-7215 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or 771 discrimination based Lots on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or na- Veteran seeking to buy t/a tional origin, or inten- to 1-acre size utilitybuildable lot, in or tion to make any such ready preferences, l i m ita-near Bend, from private tions or discrimination. party. 951-255-5013 We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r ea l e s tate Garage Sales which is in violation of Garage Sales this law. All persons are hereby informed Garage Sales that all dwellings advertised are available Find them on an equal opportuin nity basis. The Bulletin Classified The Bulletin 746 Classifieds Northwest Bend Homes 541-385-5809
2 bdrm, 1 bath, www.bendbulletin.com $530 & $540 w/lease. Carports included! FSBO - $249,500. Su- Bend OR Awbrey Glen, FOX HOLLOW APTS. per cute home in NE single story, 3 bdrms, 775 Bend. Nice neighbor- 2 master suites, 2.5 (541) 383-3152 Manufactured/ Cascade Rental hood, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, baths, 3 gas fireplace, Management. Co. 1614 sq.ft., big quar- 3-car garage, 2384 Mobile Homes ter lot, space for RV sq.ft., built 1999, out636 or boat, and much d oor li v i ng , gol f FACTORY SPECIAL Apt./Multiplex NW Bend more. 541-728-0399. course views New Home, 3 bdrm, $570,000 $46,500 finished Fully furnished loft Apt Good classified ads tell 541-325-1876 on your site. o n W a l l S t reet i n the essential facts in an J and M Homes Bend, with parking. All interesting Manner. Write 762 541-548-5511 u tilities p a id . C a l l the readers view - not Homes with Acreage 541-389-2389 for appt from the seller's. Convert the Small clean Studio facts into benefits. Show Baker City - 3 Bdrm, 3 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Downtown area, $495 the reader how the item will bath, 3 100+ s q . ft. Dcor-to-door selling with semi secluded home, mo.; $475 dep. all help them in someway. on 5 acre lot w/many fast results! It's the easiest utilities paid. No pets, This no smoking. 541- 330p onderosa pin e s . way in the world to sell. advertising tip 9769 or 541-480-7870 45'x24' Morton built brought to you by The Bulletin Classified insolated metal shop, Look at: $395,000. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Bendhomes.com 541-523-2368 for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
Housekeeping Laborer Part-time p o s ition, BRIGHT WOOD some hotel resort CORPORATION cleaning exp. preHiring for entry level ferred. Must be able positions in all proto work weekends. ductions plants at Call 541-923-356 ask our corporate headfor Dennis or Tammy quarters location in Madras. Looking for individuals with good Call The Bulletin At a ttendance and a 541-385-5809 strong work ethic. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Please apply in perAt: www.bendbulletin.com son at 335 NW Hess S t. M a dras Or . Starting wage 541-475-7799 $10.00 per hr. BenCAUTION READERS: e fit p a ckage i n - Remember.... med i cal, A dd your we b a d Ads published in "Em- cludes ployment Opportuni- dental and life insurdress to your ad and TURN THE PAGE t ies" i n c lude e m - a nce. Vision a n d readers on The 646 ployee and A flac available t o Bulletin' s web site For More Ads Houses for i ndependent po s i - purchase. EOE/On will be able to click Rent General site pre - employ- through automatically The Bulletin tions. Ads for positions that require a fee ment drug screento your site. Call54I 385 5809totramote yourservice'Advertise for 28daysstarting at ' I4) tnrr spec ialpackogerr raraailaile onar we bsirei PUBLISHER'S or upfront investment ing required. 526 NOTICE must be stated. With Bright Wood Corp., Loans 8 Mortgages All real estate adver335 Nyy Hess St., any independent job A CUSTOMER SERVICE A tising in this newspaopportunity, p l ease Madras, OR 97741. per is subject to the Building/Contracting L andscaping/Yardcare Landscaping/Yardcarel 541-475-7799 REPRESENTATIVE WARNING investigate thorF air H o using A c t The Bulletin recomoughly. Immediate o p ening i n the Cir c ulation Nelson mends you use cauwhich makes it illegal NOTICE: Oregon state department for a full time entry level Customer req u ires anyto a d v ertise "any law Landscaping & tion when you proUse extra caution when Livestock Truck Driver Service Representative. Looking for someone one who co n t racts vide personal preference, limitation Maintenance applying for jobs on- Must have CDL,2yrs exp, to assist our subscribers and delivery carriers Zorfdtz gaaErip disc r imination for construction work Serving Central line and never pro- progressive co., 401k, with s u bscription t r ansactions, a c count information to compa- or to be licensed with the Zacug gas.e, ~,. nies offering loans or based on race, color, Oregon Since 2003 vide personal infor- $50,000/yr, insurance questions and delivery concerns. Essential: Con - More Than Service religion, sex, handi- C onstruction credit, especially Residental/Commercial mation to any source NW only. 541-475-6681 Positive a t t itude, s t r on g se r v ice/team tractors Board (CCB). those asking for adcap, familial status, Peace Of Mind orientation, and problem solving skills. Must you may not have relice n se Sprinkler marital status or na- A n active vance loan fees or searched and deemed have a ccurate t y ping, c o mputer e n t ry Activation/Repair Manager companies from out of tional origin, or an in- means the contractor Spring Clean Up experience and phone skills. Most work is to be reputable. Use i s bonded an d i n tention to make any Back Flow Testing state. If you have •Leaves extreme caution when Now hiring Quality done via telephone so strong professional Ve r if y t h e concerns or quessuch pre f erence, s ured. communication skills and the ability to multi •Cones r esponding to A N Y Assurance Manager contractor's CCB Maintenance tions, we suggest you limitation or discrimi• Needles online e m p loyment for m a n ufacturing task in a fast paced environment is a must. •Thatch 8 Aerate company in Sisters, consult your attorney nation." Familial sta- c ense through t h e Work shift hours are Tuesday thru Friday 8:00 • Debris Hauling ad from out-of-state. Cons u m er •Spring Clean up Oregon. Experience tus includes children CCB or call CONSUMER a.m. to5:00 p.m., and Saturday 6:00 a.m. to •Weekly Mowing Website Str o ng noon with an occasional Sunday shift and HOTLINE, under the age of 18 www.hirealicensedcontractor. Weed Free Bark We suggest you call r equired. 8 Edging 1-877-877-9392. living with parents or 8 Flower Beds the State of Oregon communication skills holidays required. com •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly n eeded (oral a n d legal cust o dians, or call 503-378-4621. Send resume to: PO Box 6020, Bend OR, Consumer Hotline at BANK TURNED YOU Maintenance written), a b l e to women, and The Bulletin recom- Lawn Renovation 1-503-378-4320 97708, attn: Circulation Customer Service Mgr. DOWN? Private party pregnant manage a team of people securing cus- mends checking with Aeration - Dethatching •Bark, Rock, Etc. or e-mail to ahustedObendbulletin.com will loan on real es- tody of children under For Equal Opportunity 3-4 employees and EOE/Drug free workplace Overseed tate equity. Credit, no 18. This newspaper the CCB prior to con~Landsca in maintain a constant L aws: Oregon B utracting with anyone. Compost •Landscape problem, good equity state of control as will not knowingly acreau of Labor 8 InTop Dressing Some other t r ades Construction is all you need. Call cept any advertising Customer Service dustry, C i vi l Rights outlined in 21 CFR req u ire addi•Water Feature Oregon Land Mort- for real estate which is also 111 8 U S P 1 0 75, HIGH DESERT MUSEUM Division, tional licenses and Landscape Installation/Maint. gage 541-388-4200. 795. Please send The High Desert Museum is seeking an in violation of the law. certifications. 971-673-0764 •Pavers Maintenance resume to enthusiastic individual to j oi n o u r V i sitor LOCAL MONEY:We buy O ur r e a ders ar e or Partial Service •Renovations wendy@metabolic Services team. hereby informed that USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Full secured trustdeeds 8 If you have any ques• Irngations Installation •Mowing ~Edging maintenance.com tions, concerns or note,some hard money all dwellings adver• Pruning «Weeding for further informaFull-time position available fo r c u stomer tised in this newspa- Door-tc-docr selling with loans. Call Pat Kellev Senior Discounts comments, contact: tion regarding this service oriented individual to work with the 541-382-3099 ext.13. per are available on fast results! It's the easiest Sprinkler Adjustments Classified Department Bonded & Insured full-time position with public in the unique setting of The High Desert an equal opportunity 541-815-4458 The Bulletin Fertilizer included 558 benefits' p a ckage, Museum. One year experience in retail sales basis. To complain of way in the world tc sell. LCB¹8759 541-385-5809 with monthly program after 90-day review or customer service preferred. Ability to work Business Investments discrimination cal l The Bulletin Classified period. flexible hours, including weekends and stand HUD t o l l -free at BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Weekly, monthly The Bulletin for long periods. M u st have a p ositive, $ To Lend? Fast grow- 1-800-877-0246. The 541-385-5809 Search the area's most se ng cent a o~on rnce lrte or one time service. welcoming attitude w it h a pro f essional ing local business seek- toll f ree t e lephone comprehensive listing of Drywall Services presence. ing loan to grow inven- number for the hearclassified advertising... Accounting EXPERIENCED tory. Please call Jamie ing im p aired is Remodels 8 Repairs. No real estate to automotive, job too small, free exFor more information please visit our website for info, 541-788-3400 Commercial 1-800-927-9275. merchandise to sporting act quotes. CCB¹ & Residential at www.highdesertmuseum.org. T o a p ply, goods. Bulletin Classifieds 177336 541-408-6169 e-mail c o ve r le t t e r 8 resu m e to appear every day in the Serving Central Oregon s/nce 1903 jobs@highdesertmuseum.org o r fax to Web Developer print or on line. Child Care Services Senior Discounts Accounting Position Available 382-5256 Attention: Human Resources. Call 541-385-5809 Reports to the Controller No calls, please. Are you a technical star who can also commu541-390-1466 ALL ABOUT KIDS nicate effectively with non-technical execuSame Day Response www.bendbugetin.com CHILD CARE has tives and employees? Would you like to work Reception/Accounts Receivable Clerk The Bulletin openings newborn to N OTICE: OREGON servtngcentral omgon since r903 hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recage 12. Licensed, Landscape Contracreation capital of the state? Then we'd like to The right person for this position will be the First Aid & CPR, 6 yrs tors Law (ORS 671) SPRING CLEAN-UP! talk to you. initial face and voice of The Bulletin for exp. 541-777-7489 r equires a l l bu s i - Aeration/Dethatching Advertising Account Executive employees and customers coming into the nesses that advertise Weekly/one-time service Our busy media company that publishes nubuilding or calling by phone. This accountDebris Removal to p e r form L a n d- avail. Bonded, insured. merous web and mobile sites seeks an experiThe Bulletin is looking for a professional and ing department position includes various Free Estimates! scape C o nstruction enced developer who is also a forward thinker, driven Sales and Marketing person to help our administrative duties as well as the posting which incl u des: COLLINS Lawn Maint. JUNK BE GONE creative problem solver, excellent communicustomers grow their businesses with an and reporting of a c counts receivable, Ca/i 541-480-9714 p lanting, deck s , cator, and self-motivated professional. We are I Haul Away FREE expanding list of broad-reach and targeted deposit preparation and management of the fences, arbors, redesigning all of our websites within the next For Salvage. Also ALLEN REINSCH products. This full time position requires a cash r egister. T hi s p o s ition r e quires w ater-features, a n d couple of years and want you in on the ground Cleanups & Cleanouts Yard maintenance 8 background in consultative sales, territory installation, repair of experience in basic accounting, Excel and floor. Mel, 541-389-8107 clean-up, thatching, management and aggressive prospecting skills. irrigation systems to general office functions. plugging 8 much more! be licensed with the Two years of media sales experience is Fluencywith PHP, HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and Handyman Call 541-536-1 294 Landscape Contracpreferable, but we will train the right candidate. We are looking for a team player with a JavaScript is a must. Experience integrating t ors B o a rd . Th i s Just bought a new boat? positive, professional attitude and strong third-party solutions and social media applicaI DO THAT! 4-digit number is to be Sell your old one in the The position includes a competitive tions required. Desired experience includes: Home/Rental repairs customer service skills. The right person included in all adver- classifieds! Ask about our compensationpackage including benefits,and XML/JSON, MySQL, Joomla, Java, respon- Small jobs to remodels will be detail oriented, great at multi-tasking, tisements which indiSuper Seller ratesi sive web design, Rails, WordPress. Top-notch Honest, guaranteed rewards an aggressive, customer focused and able t o a d apt t o u s in g m u ltiple cate the business has 541-385-5809 skills with user interface and graphic design an work. CCB¹151573 salesperson with unlimited earning potential. computer software applications as well as a bond, insurance and added plus. Dennis 541-317-9768 the web. Must be able to communicate well FULL-TILT CLEAN-UP workers c ompensaEmail your resume, cover letter and salary both verbally and in writing with customers Soil - Bark - Gravel ERIC REEVE HANDY tion for their employBackground in the media industry desired but history to: and co-workers. This is a full-time position Debris Hauling SERVICES. Home & ees. For your protecnot required. This is a full-time position with Jay Brandt, Advertising Director with benefits. Mon.-Fri., 7:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Commercial Repairs, tion call 503-378-5909 6-yard Dump Truck benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a jbrandt@bendbulletin.com CALL 541-419-2756 Carpentry-Painting, or use our website: cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample If you are interested in joining our Pressure-washing, www.lcb.state.or.us to links a n d/or re p ository ( GitHub) t o or drop off your resume in person at Honey Do's. On-time check license status Painting/Wall Covering( accounting team, please e-mail your resumeOwescompapers.com. 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; promise. Senior before co n t racting resume to hwest@bendbuHetin.com Discount. Work guar- with t h e bu s iness. • Interior/Exterior Painting Or mailto PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; prior to May 1, 2013. This posting is also on the web at www.bend• Deck Refinishing anteed. 541-389-3361 Persons doing landNo phone inquiries please. bulletin.com Services or 541-771-4463 scape m aintenance • Handvman No phone calls or resume drop-offs please. CCB¹t 639t4 Bonded & Insured do not require a LCB Sage Home Maintenance EOE/Drug Free workplace EOE / Drug Free Workplace EOE/Drug Free Workplace CCB¹181 595 license. Call 541-508-0673
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C4 MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DAILY B R I D G E C LU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
NEw YORK TIMES CROSSwORD will sho rtz
29,2013 M onday,Apri l
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ACROSS a "Saturday Night Live" segment s On vacation 9 Skirts for Scots a4 Goals as Valentine's Day flower ao Pricey car from Honda az Recipe holders ao Father, biblically 2o Govt.-issued ID a man with seven wives" 22 Epoch when mammals arose 23 Irregular trial venue 2o Liquors for pirates
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
"Who does your taxes?" I asked Unlucky Louie. "My CPA is so good he has a loophole named after him," Louie said. "When he saw my records, he said he could save me a lot of time if he did my taxes." "How much time?" "Twenty years to l i f e," L o u ie shrugged. Louie's gross income would go up if he didn't play too fast. As today's declarer, Louie took the queen of diamonds and saved time by drawing trumps. He nextcashed the ace of diamonds.
diamonds. South in today's deal bid two hearts next. Do you agree with that call? ANSWER: The issue is whether to treat the hand as a minimum (so a t wo-spade rebid would l i mi t i t s strength) or as better than minimum (intending to bid hearts, then rebid the spades later). I think most experts would like the hand enough to bid two hearts. South dealer N-S vulnerable
When East discarded, Louie took the K-J of diamonds and ruffed a d iamond. He threw a c l u b f r o m dummy on theace ofspades,ruffed a spade and cashed the good sixth diamond and the ace of clubs, but dummy had a club loser. Louie needs a 3-2 trump break but not a friendly break in diamonds. He can ruffa spade at Trick Two, take the K-A oftrumps and ruffa spade. He ruffs a diamond and takes the queen of trumps and the ace of spades, pitching dummy's low clubs. Dummy wins the rest with the ace of clubs and good diamonds.
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G ON N A SN O O K I W A P R E D D I C I A R EA L S E N S EE D
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Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
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By Paui Varoi (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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04/29/13
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Boats & Accessories •
Mot o r homes
THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013 C5 •
RV Tow car 2004 Honda Civic Si 5 spd set up for flat towing with base plate and tow brake, 35k mi, new tires, great cond. $11,000. 541-288-1808
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Travel Trailers •
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
908
932
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
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Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, based in Madras, always hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 to- Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. $7,000 OBO, trades. 541-475-6947, ask for Please call Rob Berg.
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts andService 916 - Trucks andHeavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - MotorcyclesAndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats &Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies andCampers 890 - RVs for Rent
18' Larson Classic 1971 Tri- hull with 165 Chev/ Mercruiser, 4.5 Snowmobiles HP outboard, dinette/ Where can you find a sleeper plus standup (2) 2000 A rctic C at helping hand? canvas for camping. 541-389-6998 Z L580's EFI with n e w From contractors to Fish f inder. covers, electric start w/ Eagle 916 Chrysler 300 C o upe reverse, low miles, both $2400 541-382-7515. yard care, it's all here Trucks & 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, excellent; with new 2009 in The Bulletin's Heavy Equipment Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, auto. trans, ps, air, "Call A Service frame on rebuild, redrive off/on w/double tilt, or place your ad lots of accys. Selling due Professional" Directory painted original blue, on-line at to m e dical r e asons. original blue interior, bendbulletin.com $6000 all. 541-536-8130 original hub caps, exc. chrome, asking $9000 Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Pickups Sport Utility Vehicles or make offer. short track, variable inboard motor, g r eat 541-385-9350 exhaust valves, elec- cond, well maintained, Fifth Wheels • Diamond Reo Dump tric s t art, r e verse,$8995 obo. 541-350-7755 Truck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 G MC Sierra S L T manuals, rec o rds, 2006 - 1500 Crew yard box, runs good, Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. new spare belt, cover, Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. Tick, Tock 28K miles, 2 slides, Du$6900, 541-548-6812 heated hand g rips, ramax diesel, 1 owner, cond., 82 k m i les, nice, fast, $999. Call Tick, Tock... excellent cond, $89,995; $19,900. G K E A T Tom, 541-385-7932, 541-408-0763 Trade? 541-546-6920 I D odge Dura n g o ...don't let time get • Yamaha 750 1999 Oldsmobile Alero 2004, Limited 20 04, 4x 4 , Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 FAST 66 Ranchero! away. Hire a Mountain Max, $1400. classic 4-dr in showroom Loaded, leather, 3rd by Carriage, 4 slides, Hyster H25E, runs $7500 invested, • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 condition, leather, chrome row seat. professional out inverter, satellite sys, well, 2982 Hours, sell for $4500! EXT, $1000. wheels 1 owner low Vin ¹142655. fireplace, 2 flat screen $3500, call Call 541.382.9835 of The Bulletin's • Zieman 4-place miles. $7500. I nternational Fla t $9,988 TVs. $54,950 541-749-0724 "Call A Service 541-382-2452 trailer, SOLD! Bed Pickup 1963, 1 541-480-3923 All in good condition. ton dually, 4 s pd. 4 @ S U SUBARUOPBEHD B A R U. Monaco Dynasty 2004, Professional" COM Located in La Pine. loaded, 3 slides, dietrans., great MPG, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Directory today! Call 541-408-6149. could be exc. wood • sel, Reduced - now 877-266-3821 hauler, runs great, $119,000, 5 4 1-923860 Dlr ¹0354 new brakes, $1950. 8572 or 541-749-0037 Motorcycles & Accessories FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, 541-419-5480. Advertise your car! Peterbilt 359 p o table door panels w/flowers Add A Picture! RV Plymouth B a r racuda Laredo 2009 30' with 2 water t ruck, 1 9 90, 8 hummingbirds, Reach thousands of readers! CONSIGNMENTS 1966, original car! 300 slides, TV, A/C, table 3200 gal. tank, 5hp Isuzu 1981 diesel white soft top & hard Call 541-385-5809 WANTED & c h airs, s a t ellite, pump, 4-3" h oses, top. Just reduced to hp, 360 V8, centerpickup, good tires, The Bulletin Ctassifieds 1996 Seaswirl 20.1 We Do The Work ... Arctic pkg., p o wer camlocks, $ 2 5,000. $3,750. 541-317-9319 lines, 541-593-2597 good motor & transCuddy, 5.0 Volvo, exc You Keep The Cash! awning, Exc. cond! 541-820-3724 mission, bad rear end, Land Rover Range or 541-647-8483 cond., full canvas, one On-site credit $28,000. 541-419-3301 PROJECT CARS: Chevy $350. 541-220-6330. Rover2012 Evoque owner, $6500 OBO. 931 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & 1988 ATK 406, refurapproval team, Prestige ¹619141 541-410-0755 Chevy Coupe 1950 bished by American Dirt web site presence. .~4gjs Automotive Parts, $47,988 rolling chassis's $1750 Bike, 1 hour running time > I > I t l > I We Take Trade-Ins! Service & Accessories on complete overhaul. ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Free Advertising. complete car, $ 1949; $1495. 541-504-7745 BIG COUNTRY RV Oregon (4) P195/60R-15 Optimo Cadillac Series 61 1950, AuroSource Bend: 541-330-2495 20.5' 2004 Bayliner BMW Dual Sport 2012, H727 tires on wheels, 2 dr. hard top, complete Ford Gaiaxie 500 1963, Redmond: 541-598-3750 F650GS, ABS, 3700 mi, 205 Run About, 220 MONTANA 3585 2008, $400. 541-706-9347 cl i p .,N issan Pickup 1 9 91 aaaoregonautosource.com 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, w/spare f r on t 541-548-5254 like new. Skid plate, oil HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond., 3 slides, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & $3950, 541-382-7391 2WD/4Cyl Auto. Runs filter guard, low & high exc. cond with very 932 king bed, Irg LR, radio (orig),541-419-4989 great. Extras. $3700. seats, center s tand, low hours, lots of Arctic insulation, all Antique & 541-316-1367 hand guards, 3000 mile extras incl. tower, options $35,000. Ford Mustang Coupe Classic Autos IoOIMore Pix at Bendbulletin.o service com p leted. Bimini 8 custom 541-420-3250 1966, original owner, $11,400. 541-231-8613 trailer, $17,950. V8, automatic, great NuWa 297LK H i tchL ,~ , I ' 541-389-1413 shape, $9000 OBO. B MW K100 L T 1 9 8 7 Hiker 2007, 3 slides, 530-515-81 99 52k miles, b r onze, Ford Expedition XLT 32' touring coach, left Southwind 35.5' Triton, VW BUG 1972 rebuilt extra wind s hield, kitchen, rear lounge, 2004, 4x4, low miles, 1921 Model T 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dutrailer hitch, battery eng, new paint, tires, clean. many extras, beautiful pont UV coat, 7500 mi. Ford Ranchero Delivery Truck chrome whls, 30 mpg, charger, full luggage Vin ¹B41370 c ond. inside 8 o u t, Restored & Runs Bought new at 1979 hard bags, manuals 20.5' Seaswirl Spy$3800. 541-233-7272 Ram 2500HD 2003 hemi, $9,988 $132,913; $32,900 OBO, Prinevwith 351 Cleveland $9000. 2WD, 135K, auto, CC, and paperwork. Al- der 1989 H.O. 302, ille. 541-447-5502 days asking $91,000. modified engine. am/fm/cd. $7000 obo. ways garaged. $3200. 285 hrs., exc. cond., 541-389-8963 & 541-447-1641 eves. Call 503-982-4745 S UBA RU. Body is in 541-680-9965 /390-1285 SUBARUOFBEND COM Don, 541-504-5989 stored indoors for Pickups excellent condition, • 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. life $11,900 OBO. Have an item to Hariey Davidson Soft$2500 obo. 877-266-3821 Tail De luxe 2 0 0 7, 541-379-3530 541-420-4677 sell quick? Titan 2 0 0 7 4 x4 ANTIQUE Dlr ¹0354 white/cobalt, w / pasOff-Road, beautiful If it's under 1921 Model T senger kit, Vance & 21' Crownline 215 hp inside and out, meI FIND Iy'1 e n g i ne Delivery Truck Hines muffler system in/outboard '500you can place it in tallic black/charcoal 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' SUY IT! 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. Restored & Runs leather, loaded, 69k 2004, on1y 34K, loaded, The Bulletin cond, $16, 9 9 9, sleeps 2/3 p eople,too much to list, ext'd SELL IT! $9000. mi., $19,995 obo. portable toilet, exc. warr. thru 2014, $54,900 541-389-9188. Dodge R a m 15 0 0 541-410-6183. Classifieds for: 541-389-8963 The Bulletin Classifieds cond. Asking $8,000. Dennis, 541-589-3243 2006, Mega cab, 4x4, Harley Heritage OBO. 541-388-8339 loaded, leather. '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Ford Explorer Limited Softail, 2003 1988 T - BIRD S p o rt Vin ¹221645 Ads published in the $5,000+ in extras, 2006, R V T o w V e coupe, 34,400 orig. Take care of $27,888 "Boats" classification • T r avel Trailers • (p ' a t e part ads onl ) miles, A/C, PW, PL, $2000 paint job, hicle, Exc. Cond. Flat include: Speed, fish30K mi. 1 owner, your investments Tow, Remote S tart new tires, b r akes, ©~ S U BARU. For more information ing, drift, canoe, BUBARUOWBKNll COM M&G Air Tow Brake hoses, belts and exFord T-Bird, 1966, 390 with the help from house and sail boats. please call Hwy 20, Bend. System, Lights Wired hausts. Tan with tan engine, power every- 2060 NE 541-385-8090 For all other types of 877-266-3821 The Bulletin's Breakaway s w i tch, interior. I mmaculate! thing, new paint, 54K t or 209-605-5537 watercraft, please see Dlr ¹0354 Roadmaster Tow $ 5295. C a l l da y s original m i les, runs "Call A Service Class 875. Hitch 3M Clearguard, 5 41-322-4843 e v e s great, excellent condi541-385-5809 Professional" Directory 541-383-5043 Always Garaged, 32k tion in & out. Asking Flagstaff 30' 2006, with mi., Camel Leather $8,500. 541-480-3179 Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th slide, custom interior, like I nterior $17, 9 9 5. Chevrolet Cameo n ew. Reduced - n o w wheel, 1 s lide, AC, .-c 541-480-7837 Pickup, 1957, TV,full awning, excel$10,000. 541-598-7546 l
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lent shape, $23,900.
Harley Limited 103 2011, many extras, stage 1 & air cushion seat. 18,123 mi, $20,990. 541-306-0289
RV CONSIGNMENTS Beautiful h o u seboat WANTED $85,000. 541-390-4693 E We Do The Work ... www.centraloregon Fleetwood 31' W ilder- You Keep The Cash! n ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' houseboat.com On-site credit slide, 2 4 ' aw n ing, approval team, queen bed, FSC, outweb site presence. HD Fat Boy 1996 side shower, E-Z lift Completely customized s tabilizer hitch, l i ke We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. Must see and hear to new, been stored. BIG COUNTRY RV appreciate. 2012 $10,950. 541-419-5060 Bend: 541-330-2495 Award Winner. Boat loader, elec. for Redmond: 17,000 obo. pickup canopy, extras, 541-548-5254 541-548-4807 $450, 541-548-3711 HD Screaming Eagle GENERATE SOME exElectra Glide 2005, citement in your neig0 103" motor, two tone
borhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.
candy teal, new tires, 23K miles, CD player, Keystone Sprinter hydraulic clutch, ex31', 2008 cellent condition. King size walkHighest offer takes it. around bed, electric 541-480-8080. servingcentral oregon since19re awning, (4) 6-volt batteries, plus many HD Screaming Eagle 875 more extras, never Electra Glide 2005, Watercraft smoked in, first 103" motor, two tone owners, $21,500. candy teal, new tires, Ads published in "Wa23K miles, CD player, tercraft" include: KayCall 541-410-5415 hydraulic clutch, exaks, rafts and motorcellent condition. Ized personal Highest offer takes it. 190 F Q watercrafts. For P ioneer 2 3 ' 541-480-8080. "boats" please see 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. 541-548-1096 Class 870. 541-385-5809 ATVs
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Yamaha Banshee 2001, custom built 350 motor, race-ready, lots of extras, $4999/obo 541-647-8931 IBoats & Accessories
14' 1982 Valco River Sled, 70 h.p., FishFinder. Older boat but
price includes trailer, 3 wheels and tires. All for $1 5 00 ! Cal l 541-416-8811
17' Boston Whaler, & t railer, $ 6 ,750. I n Bend. 619-733-8472 r
T
low hrs., must see, $15,000, 541-330-3939
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/CD player, rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond, $13,000. 707-484-3518 (Bend)
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Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model GMC Vaton 1971, Only CST /all options, orig. $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner, $19,950, owner. 951-699-7171 541-923-6049
8UBMtUOPBRND COM
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877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
935
Sport Utility Vehicles Ford F-150 XL 20 07, very clean, low miles. Vin ¹B50639 $11,588
Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-boltposi, S UB A R U . Weld Prostar wheels, Mercedes 450SL, 1977, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend extra rolling chassis + 113K, 2nd owner, ga877-266-3821 extras. $6500 for all. r aged, b o t h top s . Dlr ¹0354 541-389-7669. $11,900. 541-389-7596
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9UBARUOl BRMD COM
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Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, most options, new tires, 159K miles, $3750. Call 541-233-8944
J eep Patriot 2 0 08 4x4, 60k mi., single owner, 5-spd, 30 mpg, new tires, exc. cond. $11,900 541-604-0862
& Service
FOR ONLY
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 located @ Sunriver. H o urly
PRIS RNUÃ0/
THIS! Look before you buy, b e low market value! Size & mileage DOES Weekend Warrior Toy matter! 12,500 mi, Hauler 28' 2007,Gen, all amenities, Ford fuel station, exc cond. V10, Ithr, c h erry, sleeps 8, black/gray slides, like new! New i nterior, u se d 3X , low price, $54,900. $19,999 firm. 541-548-5216 541-389-9188
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Aircraft, Parts
541-548-5254
32' Fleetwood Fiesta 2003, no slide-out, Triton engine, all amenities, 1 owner, perfect, only 17K miles, Springdale 2005 27', 4' $21,000. 541-504-3253 slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 Four Winds Class obo. 541-408-3811 A 3 2 ' Hurricane 2007. CAN'T BEAT
GMC 1966, too many extras to list, reduced to $7500 obo. Serious buyers only. 541-536-0123
Dodge R a m 2500 2006, 4x4, dsl, t ow pkg, bed liner. Toyota T u ndra D b i Vin ¹716973 Cab 2006, matching $17,788 shell, tow Pkg, 4x4. GMC yu kon D e n aii Vin ¹511451. S UBA RU. 2003, Pre m i um 8UBhRUOPBI!ND COM $19,988 wheels, loaded. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Vin ¹222168. 877-266-3821 S UBA R U . $11,988 Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ifqN S UBA R U . 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
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rental rate (based upon Wilderness 16.5' Kayak, approval) $775. Also: yellow, compass, spray cover, day pack, paddle Prowler 2009 Extreme S21 hangar avail. for & paddle float, PDF, s ale, o r l e ase O dition. Model 2 7 0 $15/day or $ 325/mo. rack, lots o f s t orage, E RL, 2 slides, oppos541-948-2963 used very little. $800 obo. 541-389-7749, after 6pm. ing in living area, ent. center, sep. bedroom, The Bulletin 2 ne w e x tra t i res, - ~ A a ee hitch, bars, sway bar To Subscribe call included. P r o-Pack, 541-385-5800 or go to anti-theft. Good cond, www.bendbulletin.com 'til c lean. Req . 4/20/1 5. $19 , 900. 1 /3 interest i n w e l l880 equipped IFR Beech Bo541-390-1122 Motorhomes nanza A36, new 10-550/ skslraOmsn.com prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 RV CONSIGNMENTS Just too many WANTED collectibles? We Do The Work ... k~ You Keep The Cash! Sell them in 2003 Fleetwood DisOn-site credit covery 40' diesel moapproval team, The Bulletin Classifieds torhome w/all web site presence. options-3 slide outs, We Take Trade-Ins! 541-385-5809 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Free Advertising. etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. BIG COUNTRY RV Wintered i n h e a ted Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: shop. $89,900 O.B.O. 541-447-8664
18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Volvo Penta, 270HP,
disassembled, frame powder coated, new front sheet metal, cab restored. $9995 firm. Call for more info, 541-306-9958 (cell)
541-350-8629
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541-382-6752
Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN)
60' wide x 50' d eep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great visibility for aviation business. Financing available. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjock@q.com
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ff!I • Dyrt 2004- ~LOADED! solid Features includ e counters, 4-dr rface sur micro, Irid g, e, convection m' bui!t-in washer/drye, ramic tile floor TU DUD sate!lite dish, air leveling, storage ass-through king size bed da' tray, an - A!Itor only $149,000 541-000-000
ggpfR Njt.t.f< PFC~IAI Ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months (whichever comes first!)
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Little Red Corvette
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2004 Corvette Convertible
Coupe, 350, auto with 132miles, gets 26-24 mpg Add lots more description and interesting facts for $ 9' Look how muclf un a girl could have in »weet car Iikethjs f
$12,MO 541-OOO-OOO
Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold italics headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, read by over 76,000 subscribers. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace — DELIVERED to over
31,000 non-subscriber households • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads - 15,000 distribution throughout Central and Eastern Oregon
* A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party merchandise ads only, excludes pets, real estate, rentals, and garage sale categories.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
C6 MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013• THE BULLETIN 975
~Sport Utility Vehicles S p ort Utility Vehicles •
Vans
Automobiles •
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Nissan Quest 2000, 7-passenger mini van, red, new tires & •P license, decent cond., lowprice of Toyota F J Cru i serVolkswagen Ti g u an $2495.check this one out. 2007, 6 speed, 4x4, SEL 2011, 4-motion, 541-318-9999 low low miles, very AWD, loaded. clean. Vin ¹512879 Vin ¹074880 $26,888 $27,488 S UBA R U . Automobiles S UBA R U . 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 940 BUBBBUOPBBMD OOM
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Automobiles Toyota Corolla 2004, auto., loaded, 204k miles. orig. owner, non smoker, exc. c o nd. $6500 Prin e ville 503-358-8241
Little Red Corvette1996 VW Jetta 1995, runs gd, conv. 350 auto. body/interior needs TLC, 132K, 26-34 mpg. $12,500 541-923-1781 sPecial tires/wheels,5-spd $750. 541-771-6266
9UBBBUOPBBBD OOM
Vans
Say Ugoodbuyn
to that unused
item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds 5 4 1 9385-5809
Chevy Astro Cargo Van2001, pw, pdl, great cond business car, well
Ford Taurus wagon 2004, very nice, pwr everything, BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. 120K, FWD, good tires, owner, exc. c o n d.$4900 obo. 541-815-9939 101k miles, new tires, loaded, sunroof.
maint'd, regular oil changes,$4500. Please call 541-633-5149
Find It in
The Bulletin Gless!f! edsf 541-385-5809 Toyota Highlander 2007 AWD, 3. 3L V6 DOHC 24V, 4-dr, power win- Ford 1-ton extended van, dows, cruise, moonroof, 1995, 460 engine, set-up AM-FM radio / CD, 18 f or c o n tractor w i t h mpg town, 24 mpg hwy. shelves & bins, fold-down Auto trans. 4 mounted ladder rack, tow hitch, Michelin studless snow 180K miles, new tranny 8 tires. Very good cond, brakes; needs catalytic 81,200 miles. M a i nt./converter & new windCarfax records available. shield. $2200. This won't last long at 541-220-7808 $14,800. C a l l Ro n , 541-598-0643. Ford Aerostar 1994
Eddie Bauer Edition Fully Loaded, Mint Condition! Runs Excellent! $3000. 541-350-1201
9•
$7900. 541-706-1897
Looking for your next employee?
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Place a Bulletin help MorepjxatBeodbojjetio,com wanted ad today and Nissan Sentra 2012 reach over 60,000 Full warranty, 35mpg, readers each week. 520 per tank, all power. Your classified ad $13,500. 541-788-0427 will also appear on bendbulletin.com Buick Invicta 1959! Porsche 944 Turbo 1987 which currently re2 door hardtop, 99.9% 108k, white/maroon, gaceives over 1.5 milcomplete in & out. raged. 541-926-1412 for lion page views Asking $16,000. appt., runs & looks great, every month at 541-504-3253 $7,000. 541-526-1412 no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Buick LeSabre 1996. Get Results! Call Porsche Carrera 911 Good condition, 385-5809 or place 2003 convertible with 121,000 miles. your ad on-line at hardtop. 50K miles, Non-smoker bendbuiietin.com new factory Porsche $2600 OBO. motor 6 mos ago with 541-954-5193. 18 mo factory warranty remaining. The Bulletin recoml $37,500. mends extra caution l 541-322-6928 when p u r chasing ~
f products or servicesf Camry 1 992, from out of the area. Chevy Ma!!bu 2009 Toyota tune it up & drive it, or J S ending c ash , 43k miles, loaded, studs on rims/ Asking $12,900. 541-610-6834.
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parts car. Transmission & checks, or credit inengine work; body rough, formation may be I good i nterior. $ 450. J subject to FRAUD. 541-771-6266 For more informaf tion about an advertiser, you may call
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Lumina Van 1 99 5 , Chrysler Sebring 2004 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. X LNT c o nd., w e l l84k, beautiful dark gray/ 877-266-3821 cared for. $2000 obo. brown, tan leather int n $5995 541-350-5373 541-382-9835. Dlr ¹0354
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NATIONAL
CITY
answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i t h in 30 days along with the required filing fee. It must be i n p r o per form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n at t o rney, proof of service on the plaintiff. The object of t he complaint is t o foreclose a deed of trust dated April 22, 2004 and recorded as Instrument No. 2004-26097 given by Byron Jones and Lorette Simonet Jones on property c o mmonly known as 63366 Saddleback Place, Bend, OR 97701 and legally described as: Lot Three (3) i n B l ock T hree (3) o f S a ddleback, D eschutes County, Oregon. The c omplaint seeks t o foreclose and terminate all i nterest of Byron Jones and all other interests in the property. The "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") must be given to the court clerk or The "motion" or
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administrator w i t h in this case or the other 30 days of the date of side will win automati-
first publication specified herein along with the required filing fee. The date of first publication of th e s u mm ons is A p ri l 1 5 , 2 013.lf y o u ha v e 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 Service o n line at 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. Attorney for Plaintiff, /s/ J ames A . Cra f t . J ames A. Craf t ¹090146
[jcraftOlogs.com],
B ANK; STATE O F SHAPIRO & S UTHO REGON, O T H E R ERLAND, LLC, PERSONS OR PAR- 1499 SE Tech Center P lace, S u it e 25 5 , TIES, including OCWA CUPANTS, UN- Vancouver, KNOWN C LAIMING 98683, ANY RIGHT, TITLE, ( 360)260-2253; F a x LIEN, OR INTEREST (360)260-2285. S&S IN THE PROPERTY No. 09-102067. DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT LEGAL NOTICE HEREIN, Defendants. IN T H E CIR C U IT No. 12CV1287. CIVIL COURT O F T HE SUMMONS. TO THE STATE OF OREGON DEFENDANTS: FOR THE COUNTY Byron Jones. NOOF DES C HUTES. TICE T O D E F EN- U.S. Bank N ational DANT: READ THESE Association, as P APERS CARE - Trustee, successor in FULLY! A lawsuit has i nterest to B ank o f been started against America, National Asyou in the above-en- sociation as Trustee titled Court by Wells a s s u ccessor b y
Fargo Bank, NA as T rustee fo r W a M u M ortgage Pass Through Certificates Series 200 4 - PR1 Trust, Plaintiff. Plaintiff's c l ai m is stated in the written Complaint, a copy of which is on file at the Deschutes Co u n ty Courthouse. You must "appear" in this case or the other side will win automatically. To "appear" you must file with the court a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer." B
BSSl 1C S
merger t o La s alle Bank, National Association as Trustee for WaMu Mor t gage Pass-Through Certificates Series 2 006-AR7 Trus t , P laintiff, vs . M A R K DICKENS
A KA
MARK L. D ICKENS A KA M AR K L A N E DICKENS AKA MARK A. DICKENS; PORT-
FOLIO RECOVERY ASSOCIATES, LLC; MABEL RODRIGUEZ; STATE OF OREGON, OTHER P E RSONS O R P A RTIES, i n cluding OCCUPANTS, UNKNOWN
cally. To "appear" you must file with the court
a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or Banswer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i t h in 30 days along with the required filing fee. It must be i n p r o per form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n at t orney, proof of service on the plaintiff. The object of t he complaint is t o foreclose a deed of trust dated April 14, 2006 and recorded as Instrument No. 2006-29739 given by M ark D i ckens o n property c o mmonly k nown as 2 8 N . W . Allen Road, Bend, OR 97701 and legally described as: Lot ThirtySix, B l oc k Ei g h t, Highland Add i tion, Deschutes C o unty, O regon. The c o mplaint seeks to foreclose and terminate all interest of M a rk Dickens and all other interests in the property. The "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date o f f i rst publication specified herein along with the required filing fee. The date of first publication of the summons is April 15, 2013. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an a t torney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service onl i n e at 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. Attorney for Plaintiff, /s/ J ames A . Cra f t . J ames A. Craf t ¹090146
CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, O R I NTEREST I N
[jcraftO logs.com],
tional Association, as Trustee, successor in i nterest to B an k o f America, National Association as Trustee a s s u ccessor b y merger t o La s a lle Bank, National Association as Trustee for WaMu Mor t gage Pass-Through Certificates Series 2 006-AR7 Trus t , Plaintiff. Pla i n tiff's claim is stated in the written Complaint, a copy of which is on file at the Deschutes County C ourthouse. You must "appear" in
Association, as Trustee, successor in i nterest to B an k o f America, National Association as Trustee a s s u ccessor b y merger t o La s a lle Bank, National Association as Trustee for WaMu Mor t gage Pass-Through Certificates Series 2 006-AR9 Trus t , Plaintiff, vs. SANDRA JOHNSON; JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N ATIONAL A S S OCIATION, SUCCESSOR IN I NTEREST BY PURC H A SE
SHAPIRO & S UTHERLAND, LLC, THE PROP E RTY 1499 SE Tech Center P lace, S u it e 2 55, DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT Vancouver, WA HEREIN, Defendants. 98683, No. 13CV0232. CIVIL ( 360)260-2253; F a x SUMMONS. TO THE (360)260-2285. S&S DEFENDANTS: Mark No.09-102822. Dickens. NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: READ LEGAL NOTICE T HESE PAP E R S IN T H E CI R CUIT CAREFULLY! A lawCOURT O F THE suit has been started STATE OF OREGON a gainst you i n t h e FOR THE COUNTY above-entitled C ourt OF DE S C HUTES. b y U.S. B ank N a - U.S. Bank N ational
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Toyota Camrysr 1984, SOLD; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car only one left! $500 Call for details, 541-548-6592
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LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R C UIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DES C HUTES. Wells Fargo Bank, NA as Trustee for WaMu Mortgage PassThrough Certificates Series 200 4 - PR1 T rust, P l aintiff, v s . LORETTE SIMONET J ONES AK A L O R E TTA SIMOE T J ONES AK A L O R ETTA SIM O NETJ ONES AK A L O R ETTE SIM O NETJ ONES AK A L O R ETTE SIM O NET; BYRON JONES AKA BYRON W. JONES;
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•
F ROM T H E
FED -
ERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION AS RECEIVER
OF
W ASHINGTON M U TUAL BANK, OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES, including OCCUPANTS, UNKNOWN C LAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THE
COMPLAINT HEREIN, Defendants. No. 12CV1312. CIVIL SUMMONS. TO THE DEFENDANTS: Sandra Lee Johnson. NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: READ THESE P APERS CARE FULLY! A lawsuit has been started against you in the above-entitled Court by U.S. Bank National Association, as T r ustee, successor in interest to Bank of America, National Association as Trustee as successor by merger to Lasalle Bank, National Association as T rustee fo r W a M u M ortgage Pass Through Certificates Series 200 6 - AR9 Trust, Plaintiff. Plaintiff's c l ai m is stated in the written Complaint, a copy of which is on file at the Deschutes Co u n ty Courthouse. You must "appear" in this case or the other side will win automatically. To "appear" you must file with the court a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer." B The "motion" or an-
swer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i t hin 30 days along with the required filing fee. It must be i n p r oper form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n at t o rney, proof of service on the plaintiff. The object of t he complaint is t o foreclose a deed of trust dated May 25, 2006 and recorded as Instrument No. 2006-37111 given by Sandra Johnson on property c o mmonly known as 1968 N.W. Vicksburg A v e nue, Bend, OR 97701 and legally described as: Lot 11 in Block 5 of Fifth Addition to West Hills, Desc h utes County, Oregon made a part hereof. The c omplaint seeks t o foreclose and terminate all i nterest of Sandra Lee Johnson and all other interests in the property. The "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") must be given to t h e c o u rt clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein a long with t h e r e quired filing fee. The date of first publication of the summons is April 15, 2013. If you have questions, y ou should see a n attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an a ttorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's
1-877-877-9392.
I f
~T
o a dvertise, call 385-5809
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since1903
Lawyer Referral Service onl i n e at 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. Attorney for Plaintiff, /s/
Rhonda Adams, as t enants by t h e e n tirety o n pr o perty commonly known as 57691 Towhee Lane, Sunriver, OR 97707 and legally described as: Lot 9 in Block 2 of RIVER VILLAGE Deschutes C o unty,
Cra f t . Oregon. The c o mCraf t plaint seeks to fore¹090146 close and terminate [jcraft@logs.com], all interest of Rhonda SHAPIRO & S UTHAdams and D anny ERLAND, LLC, Adams and all other 1499 SE Tech Center interests in the propP lace, S u it e 2 5 5 , erty. The "motion" or Vancouver, WA "answer" (or "reply") 98683, must be given to the ( 360)260-2253; F a x court clerk or administrator within 30 days (360)260-2285. S&S No. 11-106187. of the date of f i rst publication specified LEGAL NOTICE herein along with the IN T H E CI R CUIT required filing fee. The COURT O F THE date of first publicaSTATE OF OREGON tion of the summons FOR THE COUNTY is April 15, 2013. If OF DE S C HUTES. you have questions, Deutsche Bank Nayou should see an tional Trust Company, attorney immediately. as Trustee for Long If you need help in Beach Mortgage Trust finding an a t torney, 2006-4, Plaintiff, vs. you may contact the D ANNY ADA M S ; Oregon State Bar's R HONDA ADA M S Lawyer Referral Seronl i n e at A KA R H ONDA L . vice A DAMS; MO RT - www.oregonstatebar. GAGE ELECTRONIC org or by calling (503) 684-3763 REGISTRATION ( in t h e S YSTEMS, INC4 Portland metropolitan G MAC M O R T G AG E, area) or toll-free elseLLC DBA where in Oregon at DITECH.COM; (800) 452-7636. AtUNITED STATES OF torney for Plaintiff, /s/ AMERICA; THE J ames A . Cra f t . Craf t S UNRIVER O W N - J ames A. ERS ASSOCIATION, ¹090146 OTHER P E RSONS [jcraft@logs.com], O R P A RTIES, i n - SHAPIRO & S UTHLLC, cluding OCCU- ERLAND, PANTS, UNKNOWN 1499 SE Tech Center P lace, S u it e 2 55, CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, Vancouver, WA 98683, O R I NTEREST I N THE PROP E RTY ( 360)260-2253; F a x DESCRIBED IN THE (360)260-2285. S&S COMPLAINT No. 09-103099. HEREIN, Defendants. No. 12CV1286. CIVIL LEGAL NOTICE SUMMONS. TO THE IN T H E CI R CUIT DEFENDANTS: COURT O F THE Rhonda Adams and STATE OF OREGON Danny Adams. NOFOR THE COUNTY TICE T O D E F EN- OF DE S C HUTES. DANT: READ THESE J PMorgan Cha s e P APERS CARE - Bank, National AssoFULLY! A lawsuit has ciation, Plaintiff, vs. been started against VALERIE HUNT AKA you in the above-en- V ALERIE G . S I M S titled Court by Deut- AKA V A LE RI E G. sche Bank National KELLY AKA V A L ETrust Company, as RIE SIMS; BRYAN T rustee f o r Lon g KELLY AKA BRYAN Beach Mortgage Trust W. KELLY, OTHER 2006-4, Plai n t iff. PERSONS OR PARPlaintiff's c l ai m i s TIES, including OCstated in the written CUPANTS, UNComplaint, a copy of KNOWN CLAIMING which is on file at the ANY RIGHT, TITLE, Deschutes Co u n ty LIEN, OR INTEREST Courthouse. You IN THE PROPERTY must "appear" in this DESCRIBED IN THE case or the other side COMPLAINT will win automatically. HEREIN, Defendants. To "appear" you must No. 12cv1075. CIVIL file with the court a le- SUMMONS. TO THE DEFENDANTS: gal paper called a "motion" or "answer." Valerie Hunt. NOB The "motion" or an- TICE T O DE F E Nswer e must be given DANT: READ THESE to the court clerk or PAPERS CAREadministrator w i t h in FULLY! A lawsuit has 30 days along with the been started against required filing fee. It you in the above-enmust be i n p r oper titled Court by JPMorform and have proof gan Chase Bank, Nao f service o n t h e tional Ass o ciation, plaintiff's attorney or, Plaintiff. Pla i ntiff's if the plaintiff does not claim is stated in the have a n at t o rney, written Complaint, a proof of service on the copy of which is on plaintiff. The object of file at the Deschutes t he complaint is t o County Courthouse. foreclose a deed of You must "appear" in trust dated March 15, this case or the other 2006 and recorded as side will win automatiInstrument No. cally. To "appear" you 2006-18750 given by must file with the court D anny Adams a n d a legal paper called a J ames A . J ames A.
1000
Legal Notices
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"motion" or "answer."
The "motion" or
Ban-
swer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i t hin 30 days along with the required fmng fee. It must be i n p r o per form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n at t o rney, proof of service on the plaintiff. The object of t he complaint is t o foreclose a deed of trust dated April 24, 2009 and recorded as Instrument No. 2009-17812 given by Bryan Kelly and Valerie Hunt not as tenants in common but with right of survivorship o n pro p erty commonly known as 2536 S W Vo l cano Avenue, R e dmond, OR 97756 and legally described as: Parcel 3 of Partition Plat No. 2 001-027, Being a portion of Lot One (1), Block Four (4), Dana Butler Recorded May 11, 2001, in Cabinet 2, Page 179, Deschutes County, Oregon. The complaint seeks t o f o r eclose and terminate all interest of Valerie Hunt and all other interests in the property. The "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") must be given to t h e c o u rt clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein a long with t h e r e quired filing fee. The date of first publication of the summons is April 15, 2013. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an a t torney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Serv ice onl i n e at 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. Attorney for Plaintiff, /s/ J ames A . Cra f t . J ames A. Craf t
date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All p e rsons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain additional information f rom the cour t records, the Personal Representative, or the attorneys for the Personal Representative named below. Dated and first p ublished: April 22, 2013 . GLENN J. VAN CISE a nd LYNN M. V A N CISE, C o - Personal R epresentative c / o C.E. FRANCIS, OSB ¹77006, FRA N C IS HANSEN & MARTIN L LP, 1148 N W H i ll Street, B e nd , OR 97701.
LEGAL NOTICE
S . A MANDA M A RSHALL, OSB ¹95347, United States Attor-
ney District of Oregon, TIM SIMMONS, OSB ¹92461, t im. s i mmons@usdoj.gov, A ssistant Unit e d States Attorney, 405 E. 8th A v e., S u ite 2 400, Eugene, O regon 97 4 0 1-2708, Telephone: 5 41-465-6740, F a c simile: 541-465-6917,
Attorneys for United S tates. UNIT E D STATES D ISTRICT COURT DISTRICT O F O R E GO N EUGENE
DIVI S ION.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, v. THE UNK N O WN HEIRS,
D E VISEES,
S UCCESSORS I N INTEREST AND CLAIMANTS TO THE
E STATE O F H ANN ELORE E . HI L L , D ECEASED, et a l .
Legal Notices of 2.5 percent computed daily and compounded annually after Iudgment u n t il paid, and the further sum of $2,099.75 for costs and disbursements therein taxed, plus the costs of and u pon t hi s w r i t ; HEREBY
C E R TIFY
that I have levied on all the right, title and interest of the above-named Defend ants in and to t h e following-described real property situated in Deschutes County, Oregon, to-wit: Lot 6, Block 1, H l C O UNTRY ESTATES, City
of Redmond, Deschutes County, Oregon. NOW, THEREFORE, by virtue of said Writ of Execution and i n c o m pliance with the commands of said Execution, I will on Thursday, May 23, 2013, at 1:00 p.m. on the steps of the Deschutes County Courth ouse, 1 16 4 N . W . Bond Street, Bend, Oregon, sell at public auction all of the right, title and interest of the Defendants in and to the real property described above, or any part thereof, to satisfy execution costs and indebtedness set forth a bove. Sa i d r e a l property will be sold to the highest bidder for c ashier's check o r certifiedBcheck payable to U.S. Marshal Service" for ten percent (10%) at the time of the bid and the balance to be paid by the end of the business day on the day of the sale which will be deposited with the Clerk of the United States D istrict Court. S a i d ten percent bid will be forfeited to the United S tates i f t h e su c cessful purchaser fails to pay the balance of the bid, by cashier's check o r cer t ified check, at the end of the business day on the day of the sale. The purchaser is entitled t o exc l usive possession of the real property from and after the date of sale and is entitled to such remedies a s are available at law to secure possession, including a writ of assistance, if defendant[s], or any of them or a n y o t her party or person shall refuse to s u rrender p ossession to t h e purchaser i m m ediately on the purchaser's demand for poss e ssion. DATED this 16th day of April, 2013. RUS-
Defendants. Civil No. 6:12-cv-00180-Tc. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL P R O PERTY. By virtue of a Writ of Execution date d February 14, 2013, for the sale of real property issued out of the above-entitled Court in the above-entitled cause, to me directed a nd pursuant to a General Judgment of Foreclosure entered i n s ai d C o urt o n January 23 , 2 0 1 3, ¹090146 w herein it wa s d e [jcraft© logs.com], creed that a c e rtain SHAPIRO & S UTHreal estate deed of ERLAND, LLC, trust held by Plaintiff 1499 SE Tech Center be foreclosed and that P lace, S u it e 2 5 5 , the real property subWA Vancouver ject to the lien of said 98683, real estate deed of ( 360)260-2253; F a x trust be sold, which (360)260-2285. S&S Writ o f Exe c ution No. 12-109222. c ommanded me t o sell that real property LEGAL NOTICE to satisfy the indebtNOTICE TO edness set forth in INTERESTED said decree, in favor PERSONS of P l aintiff U n ited The undersigned has States of America and S EL E . BUR G E R been appointed per- against the real essonal representative tate described in the United States Mars hal, District of O r of the Estate of Oliver deed of trust in the R . Van C i se, D e - sum of $126,532.69 egon. ceased, by the Circuit $52,882.80 principal, C ourt, State o f O r 12,335.53 i n t e rest Have an item to egon, County of Des- accrued through Ocsell quick? chutes, Probate No. tober 6, 2011, plus If it's under 13-PB-0032. All per- $57,625.46 s u bsidy sons having claims subject to recapture, '500 you can place it in against the estate are and $3,688.90 adThe Bulletin required to p r esent ministrative fees and them, with vouchers interest) with interest Classifieds for: attached, to the accruing thereafter at Co-Personal Repre- the d a ily r a t e o f '10 - 3 lines, 7 days sentatives at the ad$13.0396 j u dgment '16 - 3 lines, 14 days dress below, within and interest thereaffour months after the ter at the annual rate (Private Party ads only)