Bulletin Daily Paper 03-31-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

MONDAY March 31,2014

it,'a~akrace SPORTS • B1

LOCAL• A5

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Tee tn Green —Alocal golf group is putting together a summer tourney scene.B1

Climate —Warningfrom a U.N. panel: We face substantial risks without swift action.A2

ummi

ma e

case over, e ars oso o

• 3 co-ownersarein prison orabout to be,but investorsstill out $3.8M

gone to Sheridan yet. He's expected to at some point in early

U.S. CONGRESS

Economy looms large in racefor 2nd District

April, according to Assistant By Elon Glucklich

two of the defendants have

The Bulletin

reported to prison and the

Nearly nine months after a

federal judge convicted three co-owners of Bend-based

Finnl Four —Aquartet of

Summit 1031 Exchange on wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy charges,

other is expected to report in severaldays. But 73 Summit investors are

still owed more than $3.8million, and recovering the rest of their losses could take years.

Mark Neuman, of Bend,

and Timothy Larkin, of Redmond, reported to the Sheridanfederalprison near Salem on March 17, according to a U.S. Bureau of Prisons spokesman. Lane Lyons, of Bend, hasn't

U.S. Attorney Seth Uram, who co-prosecuted the Summit trial

last summer in Portland. But Uram wasn't sure of the exact

details, and Lyons' attorney didn't immediately return a phone call Friday. See Summit1031 /A6

big college programs with something to prove.B1

in world news —promises

By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — With

the 2014 midterm elections looming, Oregon's lackluster economic recovery remains a major issue for the candidates vying to represent Oregon's 2nd Congressional District in Congress. More than four years after the recession

of diplomacy but no breakthroughs in Ukraine talks.A2

ended, ployment

And a Wed exclusiveHealth and health care in the fictional world of "Gameof Thrones." bnndbulletin.com/nxtras

Oregon

bundbulletin. comielections

than the

national average, particularly in the rural com-

munities that make up the bulk of the 2nd District.

As they campaign ahead of the May 20 primary, incumbent Rep. Greg

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Walden, R-Hood River,

New fronts opening in health care battle

Republican challenger and Klamath County Commissioner Dennis Linthicum, and Bend businesswoman and for-

mer Cover Oregon board member Aelea Christofferson, who is seeking the Democratic nomination,

all expect to spend a lot of time discussing the economy. See2nd District /A6

By Juliet Eilperin, Amy Goldstei n and Sandhya Somashekhar The Washington Post

Sea bed where jet may be:flat, one trench

WASHINGTON — The first enrollment period

for the Affordable Care Act ends at midnight Monday, closing one chapter on President Barack Obama's landmark health care law and

paving the way for a new round of confrontations that could ultimately

determine the law's longterm prospects. Supporters face an array of political, financial and legal challenges in the coming months. Democrats andinsuranceindustryofficials are already seeking ways to blunt what maybe the next big

By Nick Perry and Justin Pritchard The Associated Press

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Two miles beneath the sea surface

controversy: an expected increase in monthly insur-

where satellites and planes are looking for debris from the missing Malaysian jet, the ocean floor is cold, dark, covered in a squishy

ance premiums next year

muck ofdead plankton and

— in a potential break for the search — mostly flat. The troubling exception is a steep, rocky drop ending in a deep trench.

for the health plans sold

through the federal and state marketplaces. See Health law/A6

The seafloor in this

swath of the Indian Ocean

TODAY'S WEATHER ~~

is dominated by a substantial underwater plateau

Cha nce of rain/snow High 52, Low 29 Page BB

INDEX Calendar A5 L ocal/State A5 C lassified Cf-6 Movies A 7 Comics/ Nation/World A2 Puzzles C3-4 Sports B f -8 Crosswords C4 Tee/Green 86-7 Dear Abby A7 Television A7 The Bulletin

An Independent Newspaper

Joe Kline 1The Bulletin

Owen Richardson, 6, of Bend, and his dad, Terry, ski Sunday at Virginia Meissner Sno-park west of Bend.Terry said it was Owen's fourth time cross-country skiing and "he's getting better every time." Sunday was the official last day of trail grooming at Meissner for the season.

known as Broken Ridge, where the geography would probably not hinder efforts to find the main body of the jet that disappeared with 239 people on board three weeks ago, according to seabed experts who have studied the area. SeeJet/A3

London skeletons reveal secrets of the BlackDeath

Voi. 112, No. 90,

22 pages, 3 sections

By Jill Lawless The Associated Press

Q i/l/e use recyc/ed newsprint

:'llllllllll III o

88 267 02329

LONDON — You can learn a lot from a tooth. Molars taken from skele-

tons unearthed by work on a new London railway line are

revealing secrets of the medieval Black Death — and of its victims. This week, Don Walker, an

tion workers under London's Charterhouse Square: He was

as alaborer,and died in early adulthood from the bubonic plague that ravaged Europe in

illuminating. "It's fantastic we can look

breast-fed as a baby, moved to

the 14th century.

al who died 600 years ago," Walker said. "It's incredible, really."

bones were found by construc-

osteologist with the Museum London from another part of of London, outlined the biogra- England, had bad tooth decay phy of one man whose ancient in childhood, grew up to work

The poor man's lifewas nasty, brutish and short,

but his afterlife is long and

in such detail at an individu-

See Black Death/A6


A2

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KOreah tSIISIOhS —South Korea early today returned fire into North Koreanwaters after shells from a North Korean live-fire drill fell south of the rivals' disputed western seaboundary, a South Korean military official said. No shells from either side werefired at any land or military installations, an official with South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said. He provided noother details and spoke on condition of anonymity because of office rules. Theexchange of fire followed Pyongyang's earlier, unusual announcement that it would conduct the drills, a moveseenas anexpression of Pyongyang's frustration at making little progress in its recent push to win outside aid.

By Seth Borenstein

GMillVSStlgltiOII —General Motors discussed two separate fixes for an ignition switch defect in 2005but canceledboth of themwithout taking action, according to amemo releasedSunday by the Housesubcommittee investigating GM'shandling of the defect and asubsequent recall. GM last month recalled 2.6 million small cars becausetheir ignition switches canmovefrom the "run" to the "accessory" or "off" position, which causesthe car to stall anddisables theair bags and power steering. GMsays the recall is linked to13 deaths. Therecall includes the Chevrolet Cobalt, Chevrolet HHR,Pontiac G5,Pontiac Solstice, Saturn lon andSaturn Skyfrom the 2003-2011 modelyears.

reduce greenhouse gases soon, the main authors of the report, risks will get out of hand. And said in an interview. YOKOHAMA, Japan — If the risks have already risen." After several days of latethe world doesn't cut pollution Twenty-first century disas- night wrangling, more than of heat-trapping gases, the al- ters such as killer heat waves in 100 governments unanimously ready noticeable harms of glob- Europe, wildfires in the United approved the scientist-written al warming could spiral "out of States, droughts in Australia 49-page summary — which is control," the head of a United and deadly fl ooding in M ozam- aimed at world political leaders. Nations scientific panel warned bique, Thailand and Pakistan The summary mentions the early today. highlight how vulnerable hu- word"risk" an average of about And he's not alone. The manity is to extreme weather, 5A times perpage. "Things are worse than we Obama White House says it according to the report from is taking this new report as the Nobel Mze-winning group had predicted" in 2007, when a call for action, with Secre- of scie ntists.The dangers are the group of scientists last istary of State John Kerry say- going to worsen as the climate sued this type of report, said reing "the costs of inaction are changes evenmore, thereport's port co-author Saleemul Huq, catastrophic." authors said. director of th e I nternational "We're now in an era where Centre for Climate Change and Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the Intergovernmental climate change isn't some kind Development at the IndepenPanel on Climate Change that of future hypothetical," said dent University in Bangladesh. issued the 32-volume, 2,610- the overall lead author of the "We aregoingto see more and page report here early today, report, Chris Field of the Car- more impacts, faster and soontold The Associated Press: "it negie Institution for Science in er than we had anticipated." is a call for action." Without re- California. "We live in an area The problems have gotten ductions in emissions, he said, where impacts from climate so bad that the panel had to impacts from warming "could change are already widespread add a new and dangerous levget out of control." and consequential." el of risks. In 2007, the biggest One of the study's authors, Nobodyisimmune, Pachauri risk level in one key summary Maartenvan Aalst, atop official and other scientists said. graphic was "high" and colored "We're all sitting ducks," blazing red. The latest report at the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Cres- Princeton University professor adds a new level, "very high," cent Societies, said, "If we don't Michael Oppenheimer, one of and colors it deep purple. The Associated Press

Alduquerque PrOteSt — TheAlbuquerque mayorsaid late Sunday that a protest over recent police shootings has turned from peaceful into "mayhem," as officers in riot gear clashed with protesters who blocked traffic, tried to get on freewaysand shouted anti-police slogans. Richard Berry said oneofficer was injured, rocks were thrown and at onepoint protesters trapped police in avehicle and tried to break the windows, the AlbuquerqueJournal reported. Berry didn't know of anyarrests, and multiple messages left for the police department weren't immediately returned. TaiwaneSe PrateSt —More than100,000 demonstrators took to the streets of Taipei on Sunday to protest efforts by the government to approve a tradepact with China and to showsupport for the students who haveoccupied Taiwan's Legislature for nearly two weeks. The police counted116,000 demonstrators, according to Taiwan's Central NewsAgency, while sometelevision stations put the number as high as700,000.Thetradepactwould open updozensofservice sectors in TaiwanandChina to cross-strait investment.

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

NSA data COlleCtiOn —A proposal backed by President Barack Obama to constrain the National Security Agency's systematic collection of Americans' telephonedata drew acautious welcome Sunday from a keycongressional intelligence leader, but she offered a few significant caveats. Sen. DianneFeinstein, D-Calif., chairwoman of the Intelligence Committee, appearing on theCNNprogram "State of the Union," welcomedseveral aspects of the plan, which was developed by theJustice Department and intelligence officials and endorsed Tuesday bythe president during his recent Europeantrip, but which still requires congressional approval.

21 NOW CONFIRMED DEAD IN MUDSLIDE

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JOurnaliStS Safe —TwoSpanish journalists held for six months by radical Islamist militants in northern Syria arrived safely in Madrid on Sunday, greeting friendsandfamily in anemotional scene atthe airport. The journalists, Javier Espinosa,thelongtime Middle East correspondent for El Mundo,andthe photojournalist Ricardo GarciaVilanova, had been trying to cross intoTurkey inSeptember after atwo-week reporting trip whenthey werekidnapped by militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and theLevant. It was unclear if the menhadescaped or if they had been freedthrough negotiations or becauseransom hadbeenpaid.

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ChineSe trial —A mining tycoon, his brother and 34 associates stood trial early today onallegations of running avast criminal gang in China's Sichuan province that gunneddown rivals, maintained fleets of Ferraris and bribed police to avoid prosecution. The trial centers around Liu Han,former multimillionaire chairman of energy conglomerate SichuanHanlong Group, with stakes in Australian and U.S. miners, in a casethat has exposedties between organized crime and Chineseofficialdom. — From wire reports

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Churchgoers comfort one another as they leave after the Sunday community service at the Oso Community Chapel."We may beknocked down but we're not knocked out," said Pastor Gary Ray in his sermon. Authorities say the number of people whohave been confirmed dead in amassive mudslide in the Oso, Wash., areahas increased from18 to 21.

JasonBiermann ofSnohomishCountyEmergency Management said Sundaythat15 victims have been identified by the Snohomish County medical examiner. Six haveyet to be identified. Biermann saysanother four bodies were found in the debris field Sunday.About 30 people remain missing. — The Associated Press

Find It All Online bendbuiietin.COm

Talks but nobreakthrough onUkraine By Michael R. Gordon and Neil MacFarquhar New York Times News Service

P ARIS — S e c retary o f S tate John K err y a n d h i s

Russian counterpart agreed Sunday that a political solu-

tion was needed for Ukraine and said they planned to continue discussing ways to de-escalate the crisis over the country's future and Russia's recent annexation of Crimea. But neither side claimed a

breakthrough, and Russia did not commit to pulling back the more than 40,000

troops the United States said are massed near Ukraine's

strategy in the four-hour meet- in the wake of the Crimean ing was to make the case that invasion. Ukrainian officials were alNATO foreign ministers are ready taking steps to address to meet Tuesday and WednesRussia's core concerns, which day to decide how to bolster include the rights of the Rus- the alliance's military posture, sian-speaking population, the reassure Eastern European demobilization of militias and members and assist Ukraine.

Sergey Lavrov. In a separate news con-

ference, Lavrov said he and Kerry had agreed to work on securing the rights of minori-

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appeared to be some acknowledgment of this on the Rus-

sian side, they said. Kerry said he had outlined

some ideas for Russian President Vladimir Putin to con-

e

sider that might lead to a reduction of the Russian forces near Ukraine. But it was far

from clear how Putin might respond, or what he might de-

The

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Campaign to Prevent Child Abuse

Ukraine and Western nations. Kerry and Lavrov have not set a date to meet again.

Kerry's meeting with his Russian counterpart was ar-

PiOL gnu, k~r 1N ... Research shows that teens whose parents have talked to them "a Iot" about online safety are less likely to considermeeting face-to-face with someone they met on the Internet.

ranged after Putin called Pres-

ties and "linguistic rights" in

identBarack Obama on Friday to discuss the latest U.S.

Ukraine, which has a large

proposal to resolve the crisis.

ethnic Russian p o pulation. The treatment of ethnic Rus-

For the Americans, even a hint of progress might pro-

sians is considered key be-

vide the time to search for a

political solution. For the Rusworried that it might serve as sians, the appearance of flexa rationale for military inter- ibility could aid their effort to vention in eastern Ukraine, stop the West from imposing where many Russian speakers tougher sanctions and to dislive. courage NATO's interest in U.S. officials said Kerry's taking more resolute steps cause Western officials have

HunterDoullas

constitutional reforms. There

border. "Both of us recognize the mand in return. importance of finding a diploNor was there headway matic solution and simultane- in resolving differences over ously meeting the needs of the Crimea, the Ukrainian penUkrainian people, and that we insula that Russia took over agreed on tonight," Kerry told despite vigorous protests from reporters after meeting with the Russian foreign minister,

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MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014•THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Monday, March 31,the 90th day of 2014. Thereare 275 days left in the year

SCIENCE Q&A

HAPPENINGS

ewaLiiSmreSearC am i emer eS

Climate — A U.N. scientific panel releases areport on the effects of climate change.A2

MiSSing jet — Thesearch intensifies, with10 planes and 10 ships expected to join in. A1

HISTORY Highlight:In1814, Paris was occupied by acoalition of Russian, Prussian andAustrian forces; the surrender of the French capital forced the abdication of Emperor Napoleon. In1889, French engineerGustave Eiffel unfurled the French tricolor from atop the Eiffel Tower, officially marking its completion. In 1914, Nobel Prize-winning Mexican poetOctavio Pazwas bornin Mexico City. In1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed theEmergency Conservation Work Act, which created theCivilian Conservation Corps. In1943, "Oklahoma!," the first musical play by Richard Rodgers and OscarHammerstein II, opened on Broadway. In1949, Newfoundland (now called NewfoundlandandLabrador) entered confederation as Canada's tenth province. In1953, Stanley Kubrick's first feature, a wardrama titled "Fear and Desire," premiered in New York. In1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson stunned the country by announcing hewould not seek re-election. In1976, the NewJersey Supreme Court ruled that Karen Ann Quinlan, whowas in a persistent vegetative state, could be disconnected from her respirator. (Quinlan, who remained unconscious, died in1985.) In1986, 167 people diedwhen a Mexicana Airlines Boeing 727 crashed in aremote mountainous region of Mexico. In1993, actor Brandon Lee, 28, was accidentally shot to death during the filming of a movie in Wilmington, N.C., when he washit by a bullet fragment that had beenlodged inside a prop gun. "Star Dust" lyricist Mitchell Parish, 92, died in NewYork. In1995, Mexican-American singer SelenaQuintanilla-Perez, 23, was shot to death in Corpus Christi, Texas, by the founder of her fan club, Yolanda Saldivar, who wasconvicted of murder andsentenced to life in prison. In2005, Terri Schiavo, 41, died at a hospice in Pinellas Park, Fla., 13 daysafter her feeding tube was removed in awrenching right-to-die dispute. Ten years age: Four American civilian contractors were killed in Fallujah, Iraq; frenzied crowds dragged the burned, mutilated bodies andstrung two of them from a bridge. Air America, intended as a liberal voice in network talk radio, made its debut on five stations. (The network folded in Jan. 2010.) Five years ege: President Barack Obamaarrived in London with his wife, Michelle, at the start of a trip to Europe, his first journey across the Atlantic since taking office two months earlier. Benjamin Netanyahu took office as Israel's new prime minister after the Knesset approved his government. Former Argentine President Raul Alfonsin died at age82. One year age: PopeFrancis marked Christianity's most joyous day at theVatican with a passionate plea for world peace as hecelebrated his first Easter Sunday aspontiff. The Houston Astros, coming off consecutive100-loss seasons, made an impressive debut in the American League, trouncing the TexasRangers 8-2 on opening night.

BIRTHDAYS Hockey Hall-of-FamerGordie Howe is 86. Actor Christopher Walken is 71. FormerVice President Al Gore is 66.Actor Ewan McGregor is 43. — From wire reports

It wasn't fated that this biochemist would radically change the way autism is being examined within the medical community. But Dr. Ricardo Dolemtsch's son was diagnosed with the developmental disorder, which led the investigator on a quest to sort out and to treat the malady. By Claudia Dreifus

look like the neurons of a human em-

New York Times News Service

bryo. If you could take skin cells from an autistic child and turn them into neu-

The biochemist Dr. Ricardo Dolmetsch has pioneered a major shift in

rons, we might be able to understand

autism research, largely putting aside behavioral questions to focus on cell biology and biochemistry. Dolmetsch, 45, has done most of his

what kind of autism the child has and what chemical fixes might help. For your research, you need chilQ ••dren with different types of au-

work at Stanford. Since our interviews — a condensed and edited version of

tism. How do you find them?

ganize an international team to develop

• Through social media. We're ofA • ten interested in groups or families who have specific kinds of muta-

autism therapies. "Pharmaceutical companies have fi-

tions. Some of them are rare — 5,000 people worldwide.

which follows — he has taken a leave to join Novartis, where his mission is to or-

nancial and organizational resources

So we have a committee that decides

what's the next mutation we're going to

permitting you to do things you might not be able to do as an academic," he Gretchen Ertl /The New YorkTimes said. "I really want to find a drug." Dr. Ricardo Dolmetsch, a biochemist at the Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Re-

work on. Then we find children with it. It used to be we'd spend half of our bud-

get locating people. Now, we go to the families with a Facebook page for peo-

search in Cambridge, Mass., set aside the traditional behavioral questions asso-

Did you start out your profession- ciated with autism to focus on cell biology and biochemistry, a major shift in the • al life studying the biochemistry direction of research.

Q•

ple with X, Y or Z mutation. Then I'll

post a call. Parents will come forward. The aim is to develop a database of

of autism'?

• No. In graduate school and as a

to help oncologists understand what the mutations we think are causative of specifi c canceryou have and what sort the neuropsychiatric diseases. If we can of treatments will work against it. get samples through stem-cell-derived

• postdoc, I'd done basic research

we can now identify gene mutations as-

on the ion channels on the membranes of cells. By my mid-20s, I had my name on some high-profile papers. Then, around 2006, my son, who was then 4, was diagnosed with autism. We

sociated with the neurodevelopmental diseases — there are about 800 differWhat's missing, in most cases, is an understanding of what the mutations do,

Q•

had suspected it. He didn't talk much,

so that we might then alter the molecu-

at the patient's genetics and order treat-

ent mutations associated with autism.

neurons and create a library of them,

With breast cancer, pathologists we could change the way the diseases • can biopsy diseased tissue to look are diagnosed.

was hyperactive, very moody. He as- lar biology of the nervous system's cells ments based on what they find. There's sembled huge towers based on the color to make them function more normally. no way to obtain brain tissue samples

do a lot of fieldwork with Q •• You actual patients — going to their

spectrum. He did all sorts of things that

homes, meeting them. That's unusu-

were very unusual.

The animal models — so effective in

from living children with autism. Is this

finding treatments for other types of diseases — are not always helpful here.

a stumblingblock for your research? al with an investigator doing basic • Yes. But there's a way around it. science. So fatechose your research topic For the best results, you need to study • Shinya Yamanaka (who won the • You get a lot of information when •foryou? actual human tissue. 2012 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Med• you actuallytalkto parents.... An• I don't believe in "fate." There was That got me thinking about canicine) hasbeen reprogramming human other thing: I find that meeting families • motivation. I started reading and cer, where there's been a revolution in skin cells to become stem cells and thus is motivating. There is a big difference realized the one big change that could treatment. When you getbreastcancer all kinds of other cells, including the between working on some sort of assogive autism research some traction was — which like autism isn't one diseasecells of the nervous system. Thanks to ciated mutation and actually meeting the genetics revolution. Because of it, the tumor is molecularly characterized him, we can now make nerve cells that somebody affected.

A

Q•

Jet

into the muck.

Continued from A1

it would squeeze between your toes, but it's not so soft that you

Australian officials on Friday moved the search to an area 680 miles to the north-

"The surface would be soft,

Ameriea Hears

would disappear like snow," Sager said. "Somethingbig like eastof a previous zone as the pieces of an airplane, it's going mystery of Malaysia Airlines to be sitting on the surface." Flight 370 continued to conSearchers will be hoping found. There is no guarantee that if the latest area turns out that the jet crashed into the to be where the plane crashed new search area. Planes that — and that remains educated have searcheditfor two days guesswork until searchers can have spotted objects of various put their hands on aerial debris colors and sizes, but none of sightings and check what it is the items scooped by shipshas — the fuselage did not go down been confirmed to be related to

'

HEARINO AIDS Helplny People Hear Better

I I ' e

on the southern edge of Broken

the plane. Ridge. That's where the ocean floor The zone is huge: about 123,000 square miles, rough- drops precipitously — more ly the size of Poland or New than 2~/ miles in places, acMexico. But it is closer to land cordingto Robin Beaman, a than the previous search zone, marine geologist at Australia's its weather is much more hos- James Cook University. It's pitable — and Broken Ridge not a sheer cliff, more like a sounds a lot craggier than it very steep hill that a car would really is. struggle to drive up. At the botAnd the deepest part is be- tom of this escarpment is the lieved to be 19,000 feet, within

narrow D i amantina t rench,

the range of American black which measurements put as box ping locators on an Aus- deep as 19,000 feet, though no tralian ship leaving Sunday for one is sure of its greatest depth the area and expected to arrive because it has never been prein three or four days. cisely mapped. Formed about 100 million

years ago by volcanic activity, the ridge was once above water. Pulled under by the spreading of the ocean floor, now it is more likea large underwater plain, gently sloping from as shallow as about 2,625 feet to about 9,843 feet deep. It got

Freedom SIE

$399;.;,

"Let's hope the wreck debris

Save $400!

has not landed over this escarpment — it's a long way to

$799 due at time of purchase.

the bottom," Beaman said. The D i amantina t r ench, named after a n A u stralian

navy vessel ,isone ofthe deeper sections of the parts of the

Rebates are processed 30 days after invoicing. Offers valid through March 31, 2014 or while supplies last. Call or visit for details.

oceans that surround Antarc-

its name because long ago the tica, according to Mike Coffin, movement of the Earth's tec- the executive director of the tonic plates separated it from

another plateau, which now sits about 1,550 miles to the southwest.

Much of Broken Ridge is covered in a sediment called foraminiferal ooze, made of plankton that died, settled and was compacted bythe tremendous pressurefrom thewater above.

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies at A ustralia's

University of Tasmania. The trench's rocky crags and crannies would make it difficult for ships using instruments like side-scanning sonar or multi -beam echo sounders to distinguish any debris from

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A4

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MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014•THE BULLETIN

A5

LOCAL Ee TATE "Whitewater kayaking is the only sport where the playing field is moving You havea dynamic medium and a dynamic athlete."

CIVIC CALENDAR

BRIEFING

Fire destroys camper, boat

— Bett Hinkley

WEDNESDAY

EconomicDevelopment for Central

The BendFire Department on Saturday responded to acamper fire in the 2400block of Lynda Lane,according to a news releasefrom Battalion Chief BobMadden. No injuries were reported, Maddensaid. The fire destroyed the camper and aboat parked nearby.Thefire appears to havebegun inside the camper,and the cause is underinvestigation. Total damages are estimated at$41,000. "On our arrival both the camperandboat were fully involved," he said. "Fire hadbroken the windows of the garage door andwas spreading into andalong the outside walls of the garage." Firefighters wereable to extinguish thefire before it spreadfurther, limiting thedamageto the garage ofthe homeonly.

OregOn —Anannual

luncheon will take place from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at TheRiverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, 3075 U.S.Highway 97, Bend.

Bend City Council — The council will hold a meeting beginning at 4:30 p.m. in council chambers at BendCity Hall, 710 N.W. Wall St.

On the agenda is afirst reading of an ordinance to amend the city code to extend the affordable housing feeand program, and the first reading of an ordinance to change the planand zone designation for 7.99 acres of land north of Southeast Reed Market Roadbetween Pettigrew Roadand Daly Estates Drive. The council will decide whether to changethe zone from residential urban standard density to residential urban medium density.

— Bulletin staff

STATE NEWS

Orelion State ijni-

VerSity —Atastate of the university speech from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the TowerTheatre,

• 'Portland Gaston Photos by Joe Kline I The Bulletin

Sam Drevo, left, and Claire Holman paddle through a gate Sunday on the course of the Riverhouse Rendezvous kayak slalom race.

835 N.W. Wall St. in

Bend, OSU-Cascades Vice President Becky Johnson andUniversity President Edward Ray will reviewthe progress and plans of the university and its addition of a four-year branch campus in Bend. contact:541-B83-0354, news©bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name end

number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.

EVENT

CALENDAR TODAY SUCCESS: The Seattle pop-punk bandperforms, with Western Settings and Tuck and Roll; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. TUESDAY NO EVENTSLISTED. WEDNESDAY CRAIGCAROTHERS: The Nashville singersongwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. THURSDAY REPAIR CAFE: Anevent to bring together people who like to fix things and people who have things that need fixing; bring broken items and a replacement part if you have it; visit website for full list; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. Armour Road, Bend;541385-6908ext. 14 or www. rethinkwasteproject.org. OREGON OUTDOOR SPEAKERSERIES: Featuring multimedia presentations highlighting outdoor sports and adventure related to the Bend community; proceeds benefit Bend Endurance Academy; $5 minimum donation suggested; 7 p.m., doors open at6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. "HELEN ONWHEELS": Cricket Daniei's play about a gun-totln', whiskey-drinkin' granny in Oklahoma; $19 J $16 for students and seniors;7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com. LIVE COMEDY SHOWCASE: Featuring Portland funny manWil Woodruff, with local comedians; $5; 8 p.m.;The Summit Saloon &Stage, 125 N.W.OregonAve., Bend;541-419-0111or www.bendcomeed.ccm. REBELUTION: The California reggaeband performs, with Common Kings; $22.50 in advance,

• Paddlers battled freezing rain to compete inSunday's RiverhouseRendezvouswith spectatorscheeringthemon

said. eYou have adynamic medium and a

dynamic athlete." Snider's wife, Connie Snider, who participates in the sport but didn't compete Sun-

9

day, said slalom racing presents particular challenges to kayakers because they're asked to deviate from the path of least re-

ocal paddlers and participants from

sistance down the river and guide their boats along more challenging routes. "It forces you to do things you wouldn't normally do on a downriver ride," she said.

around the Northwest celebrated

"I wouldn't have the skills I have today

By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

L

Central Oregon's kayaking culture

without having done slalom courses." Sunday'sevent consisted of separate dle Series race in Bend. morning and afternoon races. Hinkley About 30racers braved freezing rain, raced in the afternoon and acted as the raging water and a difficult course at the announcer during the morning races, sixth annual Riverhouse Rendezvous slarooting for paddlers over the loudspeaklom kayak race on the Deschutes River ers with words of encouragement like, behind the Riverhouse Hotel & Convention "Up, up, up, up. Paddle hard, paddle hard." Center in Bend. The race is a Junior OlymHinkley's wife, Dani Hinkley, said some pic qualifier. oftheracersarenewcomers, butmanyparSpectators lined the shore and leaned ticipants come backyear after year. "It's a small family of familiar faces," over the two walkingbridges spanning the course Sunday morning, watching men she said. "Racing is difficult. Like a lot of and women compete solo and in two-per- Philip Robert, of Bend, steers toward a gate things, it takes more patience and you have son kayaks while the freezing rain came while on the course of Sunday's Riverto work at those skills." down. house Rendezvous on the Deschutes River Bert Hinkley set up the course Friday, Bend's Bert Hinkley — who organizes in Bend. and he said many race participants run the the event, sets up the course and also comcourse several times in preparation for the petesinthe race — acted as the announcer Sunday event. during the 10 a.m. to noon segment. HinParticipants are challenged to maneuver The race is traditionally held in late kley, the Pacific Northwest representative their kayaks between poles hanging a few March because usually by mid-April, the of the National Whitewater Slalom Com- feet apart, called gates, which are set up at Central Oregon Irrigation District redirects mittee, called out the names and home- intervals along the course. The poles are the water in the Deschutes to farms via catowns of the racers as they maneuvered the striped either green and white or red and nals, reducing the water volume and makcourse. white. Racers pass through the green-and- ing this section of river unnavigable for "It's good to see you all here," he said to white striped gates while going downriver. kayakers until October, Hinkley said. spectators. "You never know when you They're required to pass through the redThe first iterations of the Riverhouse yourself might decide, 'Hey, I can do that.'" and-white striped gates while paddling up- Rendezvous started in the 1970s, Hinkley Greg Snider came from Medford to par- river a~ the c urrent. said. It went on for a few years but died ticipate in the event. It was his first slalom Racers are timed, with penalties handed out until 1994, when the race began again. race in 22 years. down for hitting a pole (two seconds added In 2002, organizers again stopped staging "It's a very good course," Snider said. to their time), or missing a gate altogether the race, he said. The Hinkleys took over in "The gates are set up, intentionally, in (50 seconds added), said Hinkley. 2009 and have been hosting ever since. "Whitewater kayaking is the only sport places that are not right where the river is — Reporter: 541-383-0376, flowing." where the playing field is moving," Hinkley sking@bendbulletin.com Sunday at a Northwest Cup Slalom Pad-

$25 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51N.W. GreenwoodAve.,Bend; 541-408-4329 or www. randompresents.com.

in advance, $12 atthe door, dinner available for additional purchase; 7 p.m., doors open6 p.m.; Bend SeniorCenter,1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-388-1133 orwww. bendparksandrec.org. FRIDAY "HELEN ONWHEELS": FIRST FRIDAYGALLERY Cricket Daniel's play; WALK:Eventincludes art $19, $16for students exhibit openings, artist and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; talks, live music, wineand food In downtownBendand 2nd Street Theater, 220 the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or p.m. throughout Bend. www.2ndstreettheater. AUTHORPRESENTATION: com. Bob Welch, author of HIGH DESERTCHAMBE R "American Nightingale: MUSICSERIES:The The Story of Frances Slanger, Forgotten Heroine Pasadena,Calif.-based Crown CityString quartet of Normandy," will give performs; $35,$10students a presentation of his and children18andyounger; work; free;5:30p.m.; 7:30p.m., doors openat Warm Springs Library, 6:30p.m.; TowerTheatre, 1144 WarmSprings St.; 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-475-3351. 541-317-0700 orwww. "RADIOSTAR":Sunriver highdesertchambermnsii. Stars Community com. Theater presents aplay BEATS ANTIQUE:The produced as aradio electro-world-jam band program; proceedsbenefit scholarships to Fastcamp performs; $20 plusfees in advance, $25at the door; for Three Rivers schools; 9 p.m., doors open 8p.m.; $5;6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Midtown Ballroom, 51N.W. Homeowners Aquatic GreenwoodAve.,Bend; 8 Recreation Center, 541-408-4329. 57250 Overlook Road; 541-593-4150 or www. sunriverstars.org. SATURDAY IMPROV COMEDY REDMOND HIGHSCHOOL NIGHT:Triage improv SOFTBALLPANCAKE troupe performs; $8 BREAKFAST: Featuring

unlimited pancakes, link sausage,syrup, butter and a beverage;proceeds benefit the RedmondHigh School Softball Team; $8; 8-10 a.m.; Applebee's Neighborhood Grill & Bar, 3807S.W. 21st St.; 541948-9501 or coachtom© bendbroadband.com. "THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: LABOHEME": Puccini's story of young love starring Anita Hartig; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; RegalOldMill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-2901. AUTISMWALK:Awalk, raffles, face painters, crafts, bounce house, entertainment andmore; $12-$14, $9-$11 for children ages2-12,free for children ages 2and younger, registration requested; 10a.m.-2 p.m.; Highland Baptist Church,3100S.W. Highland Ave.,Redmond; 888-288-4761 or www. autismsocietyoregon.org. JINGLE"SPRINGLE" BELLRUN/WALKFOR ARTHRITIS:Runners and walkers donholiday costumes for a 5Krun and walk, a one-mile walkand a kids'fun run;

rescheduled from 2013; proceeds benefitthe Arthritis Foundation; free for spectators and2013 registered participants, $25 for newparticipants; 10 a.m. kids' fun run, 8:30a.m. eventcheck in and newregistration; Pine Nursery Park, 3750 N.E. Purcell Blvd., Bend; 503-245-5695 or www. bendjinglebellrun.org. SPRINGBOOK SALE: The Friends of theBend Public Libraries hosts a sale featuring books, CDs, audio books andmore; free admission; 11a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-617-7047, foblibrary© gmail.com or FOBL.orgl booksales. "RADIOSTAR":Sunriver Stars Community Theater presents a play produced as aradio program;proceeds benefit scholarships to Fastcamp for ThreeRivers schools; $5, $25 for dinner theater;6p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-593-4150 or www. sunriverstars.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Diane Hammondspeaks and reads from herbook, "Friday's Harbor," followed

by a video clip of orca whales; $5;6:30p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866. BENDCOMEDY:Featuring Portland comedianWill Woodruff; $10; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive; 541-323-1881 orwww. volcanictheatrepub.com. GEORGE WINSTON: The California pianist performs; $23-$51 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at6 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. "HELENONWHEELS": Cricket Daniel's play; $19, $16for students and seniors;7:30p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com. ASPECIALSOLOSPEAK SESSION:Portland storyteller Lawrence Howard tells the tale of polar explorer Ernest Shackleton; appropriate for ages14 and older; $15in advance, $20 atthe door; 7:30p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; 503-860-5733 or www. solospeak.com.

AUTHORPRESENTATION: Bob Welch, author of "American Nightingale: The Story of Frances Slanger, Forgotten Heroine of Normandy," will give a presentation of his work preceded bya reception; free; 8 p.m., 7 p.m. reception; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-475-3351. DUSU MALIBAND:The Portland-basedAfrican blues-rock bandperforms; $8 in advance,$10at the door; 8 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; 541-815-9122 orwww. belfryevents.com. THE POLISH AMBASSADOR: The Bay Area eiectro-pop artist performs, with Liminus, Wildlight, Saqi andAyla Nereo;$12 plus fees in advance, $15at the door; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Domino Room,51 N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www.facebook.coml slipmattcience. THE BACK ALLEY BARBERS: TheOregon punkabilly band performs, with Avery Jamesand the Hillandales; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 orwww. volcanictheatrepub.com.

Burglary athome

forsale —Awoman whose house isfor sale in southwest Portland arrived for ashowing Saturday afternoonand saw two meninside who weren't supposed tobe there. Shereported a burglary in progress. Police say arriving officers caught the menand recovered stolen property.

Deputy saves2 from durningcarAn off-duty Washington County sheriff's deputy pulled two unconscious men from acar that caught fire after acrash near Gaston.Sheriff's Cpl. Cheryl Crecelius happeneduponacrash scene Saturdaynight, The Oregonianreported Sunday. Thesheriff's office says in areport that a1994 JeepCherokee driven by MarkVanbleck, 23, was traveling ata high rate of speedand crashed. Therewere two others in theJeep: Christian Bandmann, 23, and JasonEaston, 25. All threeweretaken to the hospital for non-life-threatening injuries. Thesheriff's office said Vanbleck, 23,has been chargedwith driving under theinfluence of intoxicants, reckless driving andassault. — From wire reports

GIFT OFGAB:The hiphop artist performs, with Landon Wordswell with Tim Hoke, Northorn Lights and MoStafa with C-Legz; $10;10p.m.; Dojo,852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www. dojobend.com. SUNDAY

SPRINGBOOK SALE:The Friends of theBendPublic Libraries hosts abagsale featuring books, CDs, audio booksandmore;free admission, $5 pergrocerysized bag, larger bagscost more; 1-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-617-7047, foblibrary©gmail.com or FOBL.org/booksales. "RADIOSTAR":Sunriver Stars Community Theater presents a play produced as aradio program; proceeds benefit scholarships to Fastcamp for Three Rivers schools; $5; 2 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-593-4150 or www. sunriverstars.org. Contact:54t -383-0351, oommunitylifeObendbulletin.com or "Submit en Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.


A6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014

2nd District

GregWalden

Continued fromA1 Walden, the former own-

er of asmall chain of radio stations, is seeking his ninth t er m

i n C o n g ress,

having been first elected in 1998. Since then, he has risen through the Republican ranks, becoming the chairman of t h e

N ational

Republican C o n gressional Committee, the party's congressional c a mpaign wing, which makes him the fifth-ranking member of the House of Representatives. In a

r e c ent i n t erview,

Walden said he works hard to "take the heavy hand of federal government off the throats of w o r king Oregonians." H aving grown u p o n a cherry orchard in The Dalles before graduating from high school in Hood River, where he has lived since college, Walden said h e understands th e

Age:57 Residence: I.iood River Experience:Former member of Oregon Legislature; eight-term memberof Congress

the very sense of how ru-

ral Oregon functions and how small businesses function and what it t a kes to

grow a business and comply with all the rules and regulations," he said. "Yes there's a role for government, yes there's a role for

them ofaccess to the doctors they trust.

Continued fromA1 Republicans, meanwhile,

of the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation.

the new rates won't emerge

Several Democratic senators who voted for the law and

Monthly insurance preelections, which will decide miums almost always go up, whether the GOP wins control because costs typically rise. of the Senate. So the big questions are: How Combatants on both sides much will premiums increase debated the administration's f or next y e ar, ho w w i d e report last week that 6 mil- spread will the increases be, lion people had signed up and how will consumers be for private plans. "The law's affected? working," White House senior Many plans "low-balled" adviser David Plouffe said on prices for 2014 to attract cusABC's "This Week." He add- tomers. "It's like opening day ed: "And this was a seminal

Age:61 Residence: Bend I

rience: Former board member, Cover Oregon; past president, Sunriver Chamber of Commerce

DennisLinthicnm Age:58 Residence: Beatty Experience: Klamath County commissioner, Klamath County Republican Party precinct committeeman

mon-sense piece is missing ty Administration's bulk and you get overloaded with surveillance o f e l ectronic regulations that don't make communications. "It's really a mistake to a lot of sense." Walden pointed to his inthink you shouldn't be guidvolvement in passing a for- ed by principles, and I think estry management bill in we have to stand on these the House last September as principles for the economic an example of his champi- prosperity of America," he oning the culture and way of sard. life in rural Oregon through Aelea Christofferson, a thepreservation ofaccessto Bend businesswoman run-

achievement." But Republican Sen. John Barrasso, of Wyoming, expressed skepticism about the figure. "They are cooking the

build market share, others

In the months and years

ahead, other questions will loom: How will Americans react when they get fined next

year for not having insurance? Will more states expand Medicaid under the law? And will the federal courts make

future changes to the law, including barring the use of government subsidies to help pay for coverage in the federal marketplace?

The unresolved issues mean it is far too soon to know how President Obama's signature

domestic achievement — and one of the most polarizing pieces of U.S. social policy-

Some industry officials are

has been "a warm-up act for

predicting double-digit in-

Black Death

made at the local level, but

payments to forested counties, and Walden co-wrote — along with Reps. Peter DeFazio, D-Springfield, and Kurt Schrader, D-Canby

thinks the federal government's expertise and size

a cemetery for plague victims. The location, outside the walls

can create economies of

— a section that deals with more than 2 million acres of

federal government has the

I work across the aisle if I think that's the best way to

school districts must do, but

get something done for the benefit of the people, and I'll

to have done some of the sta-

continue to do that as I did on the forestry bill," he said. Linthicum, Walden's first

challenger in a

tistically driven research to help improve outcomes, she sard.

Christofferson i s the p r i mary founder and president of

since 2006, said that if elect-

ATL

Commu n i cations,

ed, he would vote on princi- which helps toll-free numple, not on party allegiance. bers reduce routing costs A self-described "constitut ional c onservative," L i n thicum believes the federal

and helps them re-establish

service following disasters. She is the former president of the Sunriver Chamber of

government has grown beyond the role established for Commerce, and until she it by the Constitution.

suspectedthebones came from of the medieval city, chimes with historical accounts. The

square, once home to a monastery, is one of the few spots in the city to stay undisturbed for

centuries. To test their theory, scientists took one tooth from each

summer or later. Increases in will face the electorate this premiums are likely to vary by fall — including Mark Begich, health plan and location. Alaska, and Mark Warner, Va. Even if premiums rise sub- — have suggested ways to imstantially, consumers who prove the law. But congressioget federal subsidies to help nal Republicans have shown buy insurance may not feel no interest in legislative fixes, the blow. The subsidies, avail- and National Republican Senable to people with incomes atorial Committee spokesman between 100 percent and 400 Brad Dayspring said Demopercent of the federal poverty crats have a major liability. "Obamacare is a vehicl e line, limit premium bills to a proportion of income. that drives home a bigger That doesn't help people p roblem D e m ocrats h a v e who aren't eligible for subsi- with voters: Either they didn't dies. Insurers say adding a understand the law that they cheaper level of coverage, as championed, which makes some Democratic s enators them inept, or they blatantly have proposed, would help to lied about what this law would attract healthier people who do, which makes them dishonmight not otherwise be moti- est," he wrote in an email. vated to buy coverage. In an interview, Begich said The political challenges for he thinks the law will be a Obama and the Democrats "neutral" factor in his race, in may be even moredaunting part because "Alaskans are than the policy dilemmasnot necessarily one-issue votand have a bigger effect on ers," and he added that the dethe health law's long-term fu- bate is shifting as more people ture. If the GOP does will in buy health plans. congressional races in the fall, Still, Democrats may be diswinning control of the Senate appointed if they expect the — and then the White House newly insured to emerge as a in 2016 — the law could be politically powerful constitudismantled. ency, as senior citizens did for Republicans and their allies Medicare. Robert Blendon, a already are using the health professor of health policy and law as a dominant theme. The

political analysis at the Har-

conservative group Americans for Prosperity is spending more than $30 million on ads alleging that the law will increase what consumers pay for insurance and deprive

vard School of Public Health, said polls suggest that nine of 10 people who vote in midterm

elections are insured. Thus, they are unlikely to benefit from the law.

Lefteris Pitarakis/The Associated Press

Don Walker, e human osteologist with the Museum of London, holds the scull of one

of the skeletons found byconstruction workers under central

of 12 skeletons, then extract- London's Cherterhouse Square. ed DNA from the teeth. They announced Sunday that tests

victims," said

J a y C a r ver, with antibiotics. Scientists want to know if the 14th-century disease is the to have killed at least 75 million same as the modern version, people, indudingmorethanhalf or whether the disease has

Crossrail's lead archaeologist. The Black Death is thought

of Britain's population, yet the burials suggest a surprisingly high degree of social orderat first. As the plague ravaged

had found the presence of the plague bacterium, Yersinia pestis, in several of the teeth, meaning the individuals had been exposed to — and likely

geophysics— more common- continental Europe — borne ly used in murder and war- westward by fleas on ratscrimes investigations — helped city fathers leased land for an locate more graves under the emergency burial ground. The square. Studying oxygen and burials were simple but orderly, died from — the Black Death. strontium isotopes in the bones the bodies wrapped in shrouds The findings didn't stop revealed details of diet and and laid out in neat rows, sealed with a layer of day. there. Archaeologists, histori- health. The laterskeletons, however, ans, microbiologists and physThese were, by and large, icists worked together to apply poor people. Many of the skele- show more signs of upper-body techniques from several scien- tons showed signs of malnutri- injuries, consistent with a petific disciplines tothe discovery. tion consistent with the "Great riod of lawlessness and social Radiocarbon dating and Famine" that struck Europe 30 breakdown. Archaeologists are planning analysis of pottery shards yearsbefore the Black Death. helped determine when the Many had back injuries sug- a new dig this summer to learn burials took place. Forensic gesting lives of hard labor. One how many bodies lie under the

evolved. Study of DNA from the teeth of skeletons discovered in the 1980s at another

London plague cemetery suggested the bug was largely unchanged, but the scientific jury is still out.

Brendan Wren, a professor of molecular biology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the new information could help scientists "understand how the

plague bacillus — and other nasty bugs — become so virulent to humans." "It is useful information that could warn and avert potential

epidemicsand pandemics," he sald.

announced her run for Con-

L inthicum grew up i n gress, a member of the CovSouthern California, where er Oregon board. he earned degrees from the Her critics have seized

Summit1031

kin and Lyons each received you can actually get a restitu-

University of California at

upon her involvement with

Los Angeles in econom-

Cover Oregon, trying to link

ics and Biola University in

her to the website's disastrous rollout. But they over-

Continued fromA1

look that Cover Oregon is part of a larger effort to help Oregonians' ability to improve their health, she said.

fighting to recover their funds it's still one of the largest open

Christian apologetics. He and Diane, his wife of 33 years, moved to Oregon in 1995, and he became a Klamath County commis-

"I don't deny that we have

sioner in 2010.

"Our economy is struggling here in Eastern Oregon, the federal government is exercising more and more authority over our d aily lives, and it's getting harder and harder to be an entrepreneur or start a business

a website problem. I don't deny that I was on the board

or make a living, and that's

on health care reform based

part of the reason why I want to jump from my coun-

on website issues makes me very angry."

ty commissioner seat," he

said. As a member of Congress, Linthicum pledged he would spearhead a movement to push the federal govern-

during the time that the web-

site problem became hugely difficult," she said. "To have many of the politicians in the country latch onto that and

try to restart the discussion

T he

A f f o r dable C a r e

Act's opponents, including Walden, have not tried to

help people get the health care they need, she said. "'No' is not a plan for how

to solve anything," she said. Christofferson f a u lted lic lands back to the state. The Endangered Species Congress for putting partisanship ahead of whether Act, the Clean Water Act and the Clean Air Act are an issue has merit. " Instead of l o o k ing a t allexamples offederaloverreach,he said.Instead of a each issue and deciding one-size-fits-all approach, what is good for the state ment to cede control of pub-

those issues are best decid-

ed on a local level. "I think 50 unique experiments in environmental pol-

and for the country, it's more based on, 'I have to vote with

the party,'" she said. Barney Spera, a retiree

icy, air policy, water policy from Ashland, and Frank would be fabulous because V ulliet, a n a t t orney a n d we would each f in d

until later in the spring, the

man became avegetarian late square. Carver says the numin life, indicating he may have ber appears to be in the "low entered an order of monks. thousands." Archaeologists were surAnd the teeth may not have prised to discover that the yielded all their secrets. Exskeletons lay in layers and perts in ancient DNA at Mcappeared to come from three Master University in Canada different periods: the original are working to sequence the Black Death epidemic in 1348- plague genome found in the 1350, and later outbreaks in teeth, in order to learn more 1361 and the early 15th century. about a disease that still in"It suggests that the burial fectsseveral thousand people ground was used agam and a year around the world. Most again for the burial of plague patients recover if treated early

Continued fromA1 The 25 skeletons were uncovered last year during work on Crossrail, a new rail line that's boring 13 miles of tun-

al forests to pay for timber

The point is not to have the government dictate what

probably will raise pricesperhaps to bolster profits or to compensate for getting a higher-than-expected percentage of older, expensive enrollees, analysts say. During the first five months of open enrollment, younger people signed up for health plans at a lower rate than older ones. But some insurance experts say they are getting m ore youngpeople than they expected; in any case, final demographic data are not in. The law provides some financial help for plans that end up with too many unhealthy customers.

will turn out. So far, the action

nels under the heart of the city.

s o l utions.

Enterprise Institute.

News Sunday."

Archaeologists immediately

resourcesto incorporate the federal forestland unique to Bill & Melinda Gates FounOregon. dation research on technolo"I bring c onservative gy and learning into a workvalues to this district and able curriculum, she said.

you're going to have a special," said Joseph Antos, a health policy analyst at the American Although some plans may continue to keep rates low to

ning for the Democrat nom-

scale. As an example, she cited education, where the

at the hardware store, and

books on this," he told "Fox

lic lands. The bill calls for ination, would also like to increased logging on nation- see more policy decisions

common-sense

Here's a road map of what

comes next:

incumbents in th e m i dterm

common-sense regulation, b ut too o f ten t h a t c o m -

natural resources and pub-

creases in premiums in some states, but information about

continue to use the law to at-

bur-

den that o ver-regulation poses for small Oregon businesses. "I have in my bloodstream

what lies ahead," said Larry Levitt, senior vice president

tack vulnerable Democratic

Aelea Christofferson

Expe-

Health law

t h at

sweet spot that would meet the needs of our communities," he said. For Linthicum, the sim-

plest way to end federal intrusion is to defund the

offending programs, such as the Affordable Care Act and the N ational Securi-

writer from Sunriver, have also filed to seek the Democrat nomination, but nei-

ther appear to be publicly campaigning or have any campaign finance filings with the Federal Election Commission. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbuIIetin.com

Summit dients have been since the company's December

4'/2-year sentences. tion amount back to victims," Even with th e r estitution Pounds said.

amount lowered to $3.8 million,

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

cases in the state, U.S. Attor-

ney's Office spokeswoman 2008bankruptcy. Summit 1031 once had a stel- Gerri Badden told The Bulletin lar reputation as an exchange in an email. accommodation bu s iness, For restitution cases, federwith several offices across the al law requires victims to be Western United States, help- repaid in full, without considing real estate investors offset erationof the defendants' ecosome capital gain taxes on new nomic situation. home purchases. But the defendants aren't But Neuman, Larkin, Lyons likely to repay the $3.8 million and anotherdefendant, Brian while in prison. Uram said they Stevens, funneled $75 million would each probably owe $250 from clients into nearly 100 per- a month after being released. sonal real estate investments A combination of factors from 1999 to 2008. The real led to "huge losses" for clients estate crash forced them into in the Summit case, said Van bankruptcy. Pounds, securities enforcement Uram said Summit dients chief with the Oregon Divilost nearly $28 million with sion of Finance and Corporate the 2008 bankruptcy. But half Securities. was recovered quickly through Neuman and Stevens had the sale of some of the Summit years ofexperience as certico-owners' properties, and the fied public accountants and losses were reduced to $13.7 deep connections with the million among 91 clients. Central Oregon real estate Today, "The Summit victims community. have received all but $3.8 milCombined with an unpreclion of their financial losses," edented real estate bubbleUram said. More than 20 have the Bend metro area led the been repaid in full, but 73 are country in home price apprestill owed amounts ranging ciation in 2006, only to lead in from $240 to $450,000, accord- pricedepreciation four years ing to court records. Many live later — the crash left invesoutside of Oregon. tors of all kinds with billions Neuman, Larkin and Lyons of dollars in losses across the pleaded not guilty following a High Desert. 2011 indictment, but Stevens

Pounds said it's not sur-

pleaded guilty. He was released shortly after testifying against the other three last summer. In December, a judge sentenced Neuman, who co-found-

prising that returning money

ed Summit with Stevens in 1991, to 6'/z years in prison. Lar-

dants' abilityto repay. "It all comes back to whether

to Summit clients has taken

years. Federal law requires full repayment, but how long that takes depends on the defen-

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MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014• THE BULLETIN

A7

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

' urse ac ie' ue oc ec ac insoon TV SPOTLIGHT

those episodes, then went on to

near-necessity; even then, the

telecast dates sometimes are released so relatively late, they

— Lynnie Angus, Bellaire, Ohio • The sixth season of Edie

orderthreemore rounds ofit. Since its end, cast member Michael Cudlitz joined AMC's "The Walking Dead," and Ben McKenzie has been cast as Detective James Gordon (long before he became Commissioner Gordon in the saga of Batman) in the forthcoming Fox series "Gotham."

will return on the strength of

Q •• firstthree episodes of

By Jay Bobbin zap2it

Will "Nurse Jackie" ever • return to Showtime? It's

Q•

been a long time since they showed a new episode.

A • Falco's series is scheduled to begin April 13, and it

some TV listings. Two of the most recent episodes were shown on con-

secutive nights — something of a miracle, given the erratic scheduling — shortly before the Academy Awards, and they featured sessions with two of th e n ominees: Amy actress in "American Hustle,"

enjoyed them. I saw that four

and Matthew McConaughey, new epiodes were released in who went on to win best actor January, and I was wondering for "Dallas Buyers Club."

and memorable acceptance

whether they have aired in the

speeches of recent times: "Thanks so much. Thank you so much. I gotta go. Bye."

U.S. and will be aired again.

liott has been doing since the end of "JAG." — Neva Musgrave, Vienna, WVa.

A next season, since he's made

Courtesy Newscom

"Nurse Jackie" star Edie Falco is looking forward to the sixth season of the Showtime series, scheduled to begin April 13.

and "Exploding Sun."

• The actor might be re• turning to series work

a comedy pilot for Fox, "Here's Your Damn Family," in which he plays a father of three who marries a woman played by "Malcolm in the Middle" alum

Jane Kaczmarek. Among other credits Elliott has accrued since "JAG"

ended in 2005 have been the shows "Close to Home," "Scoundrels" and "GCB," plus such made-for-TV movies as "Dad's Home," "Truth Be Told"

Q

• Where has Peter Rec-

• kell from "Days of our Clearfield, Pa. Lives" gone'? — Linda Kaufman, • Though they've run in • England already, that Columbus, Ohio — Jennifer Sheridan,

• I've been wondering • what David James El-

In the series "The SoQ •• pranos," when Uncle

Junior shoots Tony, he yells

A

• He's continued his work • in the serial drama field,

A though not quite as visibly, as

new Season 2 begins its PBS

airings April 13. A DVD set of it is slated to be released two days later, so if you so choose, to kill him, though Malanga you'll be able to see the rehad been dead for many years. maining three episodes before In his condition, Junior mis-

took Tony for him, leading to the shooting.

a cast member of the Internet

show "Venice: The Series." It's co-produced by fellow net-

they're broadcast here.

Chappell, who's also among

Q•

its stars, and a number of other broadcast soap alums have

been featured in it. Among

Q•

A ly translates into "(Take your

A

canceled the police drama afpick of d erogatory noun), ter giving it a reprieve when Malanga!" Malanga was the NBC gave it a pink slip just name of a mobster the con- before itssecond season was to fused Junior was sure wanted have started airing. TNT ran

them: Shawn Christian, Hillary B. Smith, Judi Evans, Mi-

A

chael Sabatino, Galen Gering, Lesli Kay, Jordan Clarke and

scheduled irregularly ... or frustratingly irregularly, as some people (Iike us) might say. To find it, keeping a close eye on Bravo's listings is a

interest via email to tvpipeline@ tribune.com. Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent.

Tina Sloan. — Send questions of general

only describe as an Internet addiction. He's literally online from the

Dear Second: May I be frank? First on your agenda should be to take care of yourself and your own emerging depression. If that means talking to a professional, then go

time I go to bed until I wake up to

for it.

take our kids to school. I checked

DEP,R

ABBY

Our relationship has taken a serious dive since I found out. I no longer trust him alone on the com-

I do not want to spend all of eternity with the same people I could not wait to have exit this Earth.

I am also not a big believer in You have every right to be angry this forgiveness thing — forgivabout what your hus- ing adults who do these things to band has been doing. children and expect them to forget It isn't harmless, and it isn't effective thera-

py for his depression ed him, he told me Much as you might he has no interest in wish to, you can't fix having an affair. He said he has his problem — which is trying to been depressedfor some time, and escape from reality. Only he can do it's his way of escaping reality. I that. Let's hope he'll find the courrecommended he talk to a thera- age to face what he's trying to espist, but he keeps trying to justify cape from while your marriage is his behavior by telling me I have no still salvageable. reason to feel hurt because it's all Dear Abby:I am not suicidal, but "make-believe."

able to do what I call the "last-minute redemption." With that in mind,

I do think about death, in the sense

about it. I sure haven't, and I never

will! Do you, or the clergy, think it's possible for God to just let some of

us sleep through eternity without meeting up with family on "the other side"'? — Owensboro, Ky., Reader

Dear Reader:Because I am more involved with what's going on in this life rather than the next, I took

your questio n to Rev.Canon Mark Stanger of Grace Cathedral in San

of what happens when one dies. I Francisco. He suggests that you believe in the heaven-and-hell the- stop thinking about heaven as a ory. Although I'm not sure I want

"place" or that you need a score-

puter. I am also no longer attracted to go to heaven, I AM sure I don't to him, and I no longer feel attrac- want to go to hell. tive. I don't know what I can do to My reason for not wanting to go be a supportive partner if he won't to heaven is because of the relatives admit he has a problem. Please who havegone before me. Icome help me. I'm at a total loss. from a very abusive family but, like — Second to a Screen Name so many, most of them have been

card to get there. He also said: "A merciful God will make heaven what you need — and in your case, heaven may be liberation from these troubled people."

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MON-

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

DAY, MARCH 31, 2014:Thisyear your libido energies peak to an unprecedented level. You seem to sleuth your way throughproblems and come up with remarkable solutions. Others will come to you for help more often; they admire your ingenuity. You will tend to be me-oriented this year, so try to temper any excessive egotism. If you are single, you could open up to a very intriguing

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

or feel pushed by someone else.You might want to put this person in his or her place. Keep your eye on the long term, and be more forthright with a loved one. Tonight: Perk up.

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

** * * D ive into work or a project With concentration and focus, you'll accomplish much more than you previously might have thought possible. As a side benefit, you will work off some frustration. Make a call to a new friend. Tonight: Your treat!

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dsc. 21)

** * * Y our playfulness and ability to CANCER (June21-July 22) honor a quick change will make all the person whoyou Starsshowthekind feel youhave a lot ** * * A ll eyes turn to you whenever difference in your choices. Re-evaluate what needs to happen between you of dayyou'Ilhave to learn from. The others question what to do next, as ** * * * D ynamic your leadership qualities are rather and a new flirtation. As always, every two of you could evident. You could be flattered thatyour bond has its limitations. Tonight: Ever ** * * Positive become quite the judgment is so valued. Understand what playful. dynamic duo. If might be needed to get past an immedi- CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) you are attached, ate hassle. Tonight: Find your friends. ** * * Y ou'll want to understand why your relationship LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) someone is behaving a certain way quality will de** * * R ealize what is happening with before you make a judgment. This perpend on your ability to remain sensitive those around you. One person seems to your sweetie. A fellow ARIES could son seems to be all over the place. Get become even more important to you this determined to have things go his or her feedback from a friend, but realize that way. This individual could push beyond you might not feel comfortable with all year. any normal level. If you see this behavof his or her opinions. Tonight: Make ARIES (March 21-April 19) it early. ** * * * S omeone is likely to sense ior setting up, detach. Tonight: How about a concert or jam session? your strength. As a result, this person AQUARIUS (Jsn. 20-Fsb. 18) will push you to get a reaction. You VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * * R each out to someone at a dismight decide to give him or her that ** * * D eal with a loved one directly. tance who might be searching for some reaction, just to catch him or her off You could want and need to rethink your feedback. Try to understand what is guard. From there, you can continue interactions with this person, as he or going on. Do not be adverse to picking with your day. Tonight: All smiles. sheseems tohavecopped an attitude up the phone and making some calls. as of late. Your sense of direction and You need more information. Tonight: TAURUS (April 20-Msy 20) knowledge will cause a positive change. Catch up on emails before deciding ** * You might prefer not to have to give explanations or deal with much. On Tonight: Getyour taxes done, then look what to do. at your budget. some level, you could beexperiencing PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) a knee-jerk reaction regarding what is ** * * * Y ou might be more sensitive LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) happeningaround you.Youalso might ** * You could be far grumpier than to a loved one than you usually would not feel a need to redefine or rethink you realize. Look around and note othdeem necessary. Your ability to underyour response. Tonight: Nap, then ers' reactions to you. Rather than growl standmood changesprobablycoul d decide. and grumble, root out what is really be applied here. Do not personalize a GEMINI (May 21-Juns20) going on with you. Only then will you be comment. Tonight: Treat a loved one to ** * * * Y ou feel destined to achieve able to get more control over your feela favorite dessert. certain goals. You could be a little tired ings. Tonight: Connect with a loved one. © King Features Syndicate

8 p.m. on (CW), "Star-Crossed"

—Emery(AimeeTeegarden) vows to supportGrayson(Grey

Damon) through his family turmoil and to put her relationship with Roman (Matt Lanter) on hold. A black cyper trap that Zoe(Dora Madison Burge) setfor Taylor (Natalie Hall) catches Lukas (Titus Malkin Jr), and he is rushed to the hospital. Romanand Drake(Greg Finley) race the clockto find the antidote that will save him. Malese Jowalso stars in the newepisode "To Seeka Foe."

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f

Dear Abby:I have been married for seven years and have two children. My husband has what I can

8 p.m. on 6, "How I MetYour Mother" —The series wraps up its nine-season run tonight and it's going to be legenwait for it! — dary. (Sorry, we had to.) If all goes well, Barney and Robin (Neil Patrick Harris, Cobie Smulders) will finally tie the knot, and Ted (Josh Radnor) will finally meet his children's mother (Cristin Milioti). Alyson Hannigan and Jason Segel also star in the hourlong series finale, "Last Forever."

work daytime veteran Crystal

Does Bravo still show "Inside the Actors Stusomething in Italian just before he shoots. What does he Will "Southland" be dio"? If so, when? • back on anytime soon? — Kelly Smith, yell, and what does it translate into in English'? — Bette Warner, Carroll, Ohio Grand Junction, Colo. — Louis Martini, Buhl, Idaho • Not u n less s omeone • The James Lipton-host• He shouts, "Cazzata, • chooses to repeat the • ed series still is turning • Malanga!" which rough- existing episodes, since TNT out new episodes, but they're

us an 'sonine ieisn'tt era and discovered many profiles he has made up on different dating sites. When I confront

5 p.m. on TCM, "Eva Marie Saint: Live Fromthe TCM Classic Film Festival"Turner Classic Movies invited the Oscar-winning star of "On the Waterfront" and "North by Northwest" — who's currently appearing in the romantic fantasy "Winter's Tale" — to be a special guest at its film festival last year. The interview she gave to host Robert Osborne during that visit is the centerpiece of this new special. A screening of "Waterfront" follows.

Adams, who was up for best

"The Bletchley Circle" and

Zoey. In the moment, she gave one ofthe more brief

Q

10 a.m. onESPN,"MLBBaseball" —A quintet of games marks ESPN/ESPN2's coverage of Opening Dayaround the major leagues, starting with this contest at Pittsburgh's PNCPark between the Pirates and theNational League Central rival Chicago Cubs. That's followed by aSt. Louis Cardinals-at-Cincinnati Reds tilt. Over onESPN2,the Boston Red Soxvisit the Baltimore Orioles, the Miami Marlins host the Colorado Rockies, and theSeattle Mariners drop in on the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.

don't make the deadline for

I recently watched the

an Emmy win for co-star Merritt Wever, alias the show's

TV TODAY

I

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9 p.m. on(CW), "TheTomorrow People" — Stephen (Robbie Amell) has hadenough of Jedikiah's (Mark Pellegrino) lies about his father and makes a decision about his alliances. He's eager to bring a break-out to Ultra to seeif anything has changed, but Cara (Peyton List) is unhappy about that. Stephen's brother (Jacob Kogan) goes missing in the new episode "SmokeandMirrors." Luke Mitchell also stars. © Zap2it

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014

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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Scoreboard, B2 Community Sports, B4 NHL, B8 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

The week ahea

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

Today

Wednesday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

Major league Baseball, Chicago Cubs at PittsburghPirates, 10 n.m. PDT (ESPN):It's opening day in the big leagues, with13 games ontap to get the 2014 season underway in earnest, starting with the Cubsand Pirates at PNC Park. Other featured gamesinclude the defending World Series champion Boston Red Sox atBaltimore (noon, ESPN2) and the Seattle Mariners at the LosAngeles Angels (7 p.m., ESPN2,Root).

Prep track andfield, Crook County at Bend, timeTBA;Mountain View at Redmond, 3p.m.; Summit at Ridgeview, 3:30 p.m.:Central Oregon's high school runners, jumpers andthrowers kick into dual-meet gear this week. The big invitational meets are onthe nottoo-distant horizon.

NBA basketball, PhoenixSunsat Portland Trail Blazers, 7 p.m. (Comcast Sports Net Northwest):In the final scramble for playoff position, the Blazers play five of their last six regular-season games at the ModaCenter, beginning with Phoenix. While Portland is almost a lock to makethe playoffs, the Suns are among ahandful of teams battling for a top-eight position in theWestern Conference.

College basketball, NCAA men's tournament semifinals, Uconnvs. Florida, 3:09 p.m. PDT(TBS), Kentucky vs.Wisconsin,5:49p.m.,PDT(TBS): UConn, a No. 7seed, faces overall No. 1 seed Florida, andNo. 8 seed Kentucky takesonNo.2W isconsinasthemen's Final Four unfolds at AT8TStadium in Arlington, Texas.Thesemifinal winners meet next Monday night for the national championship.

Horse Butte 10-mileTrail Run, 9a.m.: An early-season staple, theHorse Butte race starts and finishes attheHorse Butte trailhead southeast of Bend.Runners, who after the first half mile enjoy singletrack the rest of theway, headsoutheast on a clockwise looparoundtheArnold Ice Cave Trail before turning back onthe Coyote Loop Trail. Therace is limited to 200 runners, so if youareinterested, check out www.superfitproductions.com.

TEE TO GREEN

EQUESTRIAN Area teamsshine in district meet

COMMUNITY SPORTS

ummer tourne

REDMOND — Bend High, Sisters andTrinity Lutheran wereamong the team winners in the Oregon High School Equestrian Teams (OHSET)Central District meet, held over the weekend at theDeschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center. More than130 riders representing 15 teams took part in the threeday meet, the second of three Central District meets planned for this season, all at the fairgroundsin Redmond. The third district meet is set for April18-20, and the OHSETstate championships, also to be staged in Redmond, are scheduled for May

l

"t

ru

swIn

L.

l • tttt

A

• 26 golf courses will participate in the informal Central Oregon GolTrai f l By Zack Hall The Bulletin

The Central Oregon Golf Trail is betting that there

15-18.

is some growth to be had through competitive golf. The Trail, a marketing cooperative representing 26 area

Team and individual results from the second district meet are listed in Scoreboard,B2.

L;'e'w '

golf courses and the Central

— Bulletin staff report

Oregon Visitors Association (COVA), later this month will

0

0

ttf

launch the inaugural Central

Oregon Golf Trail Tournament Series.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

The idea is to offer a com-

petitive venue for men and women of nearly every skill level every two weeks during the meat of the golf season at a different Central Oregon course — including many of the region's elite private and semiprivate courses — all without the formality of a

membership. The goal is to attract ev-

eryday golfers, both locals and travelers, to a simple, fun tournament that is relatively informal.

"It's pretty simple," says

Louis Bennett, the head professional at Bend's Tetherow

By Beau Eastos The Bulletin

TUMALO — There is a lot to like about the new pedestrian-only trail system in the Tumalo Canal Historic Area between Tumalo and Redmond. per trees in and around 100-year-

old canals, remains of a failed reservoir project from the early 1900s. Trail runners and walkers

do not have to worry about mountain bikes or horses sneaking up

"What we've tried to do is to

on them, and the views showcase

create a lot of value where we are playing pretty much every golf course on the Trail, but you are playing it at an afford-

Cline Buttes and the Cascades. All good stuff.

win a little bit in the golf shop (winners will get golf shop credit)." SeeTourney/B6

CentralOregon Golf Trail Tournament Series What:Informal handicapped tournaments at16 area courses Cost:$80-$125 depending on the course Participating facilities: Aspen LakesGolf Course, Awbrey GlenGolf Club, Black Butte Ranch, Brasada Canyons Golf Club, Broken Top Club, CrookedRiver Ranch, EagleCrest Resort, Juniper Golf Club, Kah-NeeTa Resort Golf Course, Lost Tracks Golf Club, Meadow Lakes Golf Course, Pronghorn Club, Quail RunGolf Course, Sunriver Resort, Tetherow Golf Club, Widgi Creek Golf Club. For more information orto signup for anevent: www. centraloregongolftrail.com

Inside • Steven Bowditch claims the Texas Open,B6 • Masters qualifiers announced,Bl

But the solitude found on the

trails trumps everything. Located in the Bureau of Land Management's evolving 32,000acre Cline Buttes Recreation Area, the Tumalo Canal Historic

Area (TCHA) is a sister project of the Maston area that has quickly become oneofthem orepopular winter and spring mountain bike areas in Central Oregon. While Maston was designed with bikers, trail runners and equestrian riders in mind, the TCHA was created as a pedestrian-only network to

help preserve the historic canals. (There is also a smaller equestrian-only network within the TCHA

and a mountain bike and shared trail that both link the TCHA to

Maston.) "The Tumalo Canal Historic Area, that's been set up to recognizeand acknowledge the canal

MIDWEST REGIONAL

Sunday's Game Kentucky 7 Michigan 72

Nore information Printable map of theTumalo Canal Historic Area: www.blm.gov/ or/districts/prineville/recreationl cline/files/CBRA 03.pdf

Torrebonlno l:

EAST REGIONAL

Sunday's Game Connecticut 6

Sistors r Redme

Recrea Are

Nearly 9 miles of wide singletrack works its way through Juni-

Golf Club and one of the local pros organizing the series.

able price with a chance to

Men

Beau Eastes/The Bulletin

The Tumalo Canal Historic Aroa's trails offer joggors and hikers routes free of bikers, horses andmotor vehicles.

system and the history there," says Bill Dean, a natural resource spe-

FINAL FOUR

Florida

had some of the best remnants of the canal system, some of the most

3:09 p.m.

Kentucky

obvious canals."

While friends of mine found

vs.

Wisconsin 5:49 p.m.

Tumnlo

the trailhead and network a bit

confusing earlier in the year, everything seemed to be in order and

Women LINCOLN REGIONAL

was well marked as of last week.

Bend

Traveling from Bend on U.S. Highway 20, head toTumalo and turn north on the Cline Falls Highway as if you were going to Maston or Eagle Crest Resort. About 5 miles

I TuinaleCanalHistoricArea iilannedtralls

Today's Game No. 3 TexasA&M No. 1 UConn 6:30 p.m. NOTRE DAME REGIONAL

north of Tumalo turn left on Barr

Road — a sharp left about half a mile before Newcomb Road and

Today's Game No. 1 Notre Dame vs. No. 2 Baylor 4:30 p.m.

Hiking trails:,:,

the impossible-to-miss Maston

Trailhead sign. Do not be alarmed as Barr Road turns to dirt as it curves north. Stay on Barr until

I

STANFORD REGIONAL t

you reach the bright yellow cattle guard. I parked in a small pullout

Sunday's Games Stanford 8 Penn St. 57

right before the cattle guard, but

thereisalsoa good-sized open dirt area just past it that is the official TCHA trailhead. (The BLM expects to build a parking area

54

Saturday's Games vs. Connecticu

elail

cialist with the BLM. "That area

Michigan St.

Trailhea

Horse trydo,' '-, I

I I

similar to Maston's at the TCHA

this summer.)

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

SeeTrail IB4

ort aro lna S outh Carolina 58 Tuesday's Game N o. 2 Stanford vs . North Carolina 6p.m. LOUISVILLEREGIONAL

Sunday's Games Maryland 7 Tennessee 62

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL

FearsomeFoursomeheaded to Texas By John Marshall The Associated Press

David J. Phillip/The Associated Press

Kentucky's Aaron Harrison iscongratulated by teammates Julius Randlo and Dakari Johnson (44) after making a thrm-point basket in the

final seconds ofSunday's winover Michigan.

Jones' billion-dollar stadium on Saturday will be Connecticut, back near the

The road to redemption goes through North Texas for a fearsome Final Four of power programs with something to prove. Florida, the top overall seed, returns to the Final Four for the first time since

top of the bracket under Kevin Ollie

winning consecutive titles in 2006-07, this time without all those first-round

knows the Final Four — even if his

NBA picks.

time.

Waiting for the Gators at Jerry

after beingbarred ayearagoforacademicproblems. Wisconsin and coach Bo Ryan

will be there, too, finally in the Final Four after so many near-misses. Bo father won't be there to join him this SeeFoursome/B5

Loui ' le LSU

7 47

Tuesday's Game No. 4 Maryland No. 3 Louisville 7 p.m. All Times PDT

NBA

Blazers endskid Portland beats Memphis 105-98,B3


B2 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY BASEBALL

MLB, ChicagoCubsat Pittsburgh MLB, Boston at Baltimore

Time TV/Radio 10 a.m. E S PN noon E S PN2, 940-AM

MLB, St. Louis at Cincinnati MLB, Colorado at Miami MLB, Seattle at LosAngeles Angels

1 p.m. E S PN 4 p.m. E SPN2 7 p.m.ESPN2,Root

BASKETBALL

Women's NCAA Tournament, regional final, Baylor vs. Notre Dame High School, 2014 PoweradeJamfest Women's NCAA Tournament, regional final, UConn vs. Texas A8M

6:30 p.m. ESPN 4:30 p.m. NBCSN 7 p.m. NBCSN noon

N B CSN

TUESDAY SOCCER UEFAChampions League, quarterfinal, Manchester United vs Bayern Munich UEFAChampions League, quarterfinal, Barcelona vs ClubAtletico de Madrid CONCACAFChampionsLeague,semifinal, Alajuelense vsToluca CONCACAFChampionsLeague,semifinal, Club Tijuana vsCruzAzul

Time TV/Radio 11:30 a.m. FS1 11:30 a.m. FS2 5 p.m.

FS2

7 p.m.

FS2

7 p.m. 7 p.m.

P a c-12 Roo t

4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m.

E S PN E SPN2 TNT

BASEBALL

College, Stanford at California MLB, Seattle at LosAngeles Angels BASKETBALL

Women's college, NCAA Tournament, regional final: Maryland vs. Louisville Men's college,NIT,Clemsonvs.SMU NBA, Houston at Brooklyn Women's college, NCAA Tournament, regional final: Stanford vs. North Carolina Men's college, NIT,Florida State vs. Minnesota NBA, Portland at LosAngeles Lakers HOCKEY NHL, Philadelphia at St. Louis

Today Baseball: LaPineatMadras,4p.mcCulveratSt.Paul, 4:30 p.m. Sofibaii:Madrasat LaPine, 4p.m.; CulveratToledo, 4:30 p.m.

PREPS Equestrian

4:30 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. E SPNU

HOCKEY

NHL, Florida at NewJersey NHL,MinnesotaatLosAngeles SOCCER EPL, Sunderland vsWest HamUnited

ON DECK

6 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E SPN2 7:30 p.m. T NT 5 p.m. NBCSN

Listings are the most accurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby Tvror radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

OregonHighSchool Equestrian Teams Central DistrictMeet At Redmo nd, March28-Se TeamResults LargeTeam(12+ riders) — Bend541, Redmond 456, CrookCounty 230. MediumTeam(7-11 riders) — Sisters459,Madras376,Ridgeview324,Summit 243,Pendleton210, The DallesWahtonka171. Small Team (4-6 riders) —Trinity Lutheran317, MountainView212,HoodRiverValley108. Mini Team(1-3 riders) —Dufur 57, Sherman29, La Pine13. IndividualEvents Hunt SeatOverFences— 1, Olivia Chandler, Sisters. 2,Ellie Chandler, Sisters.3, Briley Johnson, Ridgeview. Dressage —1 (tie), Olivia Chandler, Sisters,and Ellie ChandleSi r, sters. 3, AutumnSanders, Sisters. 4, KarlynnMcCarthy, Redmond. Hunt SeatEquitation —1, CammiBenson, Sisters. 2,GeorgannIreland, Bend.3, Karlynn McCarthy, Redmond. SaddleSeatEquitation —1,RegionHayden,Redmond. 2,Georgann Ireland, Bend. 3, Olivia Chandler, Sisters. Showman ship —1, Karlynn McCarthy, Redmond. 2, Cammi Benson, Sisters. 3, JaycieHaynes, Trinity Lutheran. WorkingRancher— 1, Cammi Benson, Sisters. 2, Jacob Palin, Madras.3,Katie Quire, CrookCounty. Trail Equitation— 1, TaraAnnSmith, Summit. 2, KathleenMitchell, Bend.3, MalloryWalters, Pendleton. In Hand Trail — 1, Region Hayden, Redmond. 2, HannahSimmons, TheDales Wahtonka. 3, Jaycie Haynes, Trinity Lutheran. Western Horsemanship—1, CammiBenson, Sisters. 2,JaycieHaynes, Trinity Lutheran.3,JamieKelly, MountainView. Driving —1, RegionHayden, Redmond. Reining — 1,Camm i Benson, Sisters. 2,Jamie Kelly,MountainView.3, Madison Lilesve,Bend. Break-away Roping—1,McKenzieKing,Sisters,1 catch,5.48r2,DeborahDial, Ridgeview,1catch,7.56. 3, KatieQuire,CrookCounty,1catch,28.36. Steer Daubin— g 1, MadisonLilesve, Bend,2 daubs, 5.15.2,KateCampbell,Bend,2daubs,5.19. 3, Lakota Jenson, Madras,2daubs, 6.22. Barrels — 1, KateCam pbell, Bend,14.48. 2, Savannah Geist, Ridgeview,14.86. 3, MeganFoster, Summit,14.96. PoleBending— 1, MeganFoster, Summit,21.76. 2, DeborahDial, Ridgeview, 21.82. 3, Alexandria Shaver,MountainView,22.10. Keyhole — 1,Olivia Chandler,Sisters, 8.12. 2, JannaDavis, Madras,8.5. 3, Annie Kam perman, MountainView,8.52. Figure 8 —1, KateCampbell, Bend,10.67.2, SavannahGeist, Ridgeview,10.72. 3,Alexandria Shaver, MountainView,10.83. IndividualFlags—1, Region Hayden, Redmond, 8.74. 2,JacobPalin, Madras,9.44. 3, RileighBaker, Ridgeview, 9.46. TeamEvents In HandObstacleRelay— 1, Trinity Lutheran

(Lauren Curl,JaycieHaynes, Taylor Mccabe,Lauren

BASEBALL BeaverS take SerieS frOm ArizOna — Stakedto a4-0 lead before throwing his first pitch, Oregon State's JaceFry overpowered Arizona with seven hitless innings to lead theBeavers to an11-0 Pac12 Conference rompSunday at Hi Corbett Field in Tucson, Ariz., and a series win over the Wildcats. Fry, a junior left-hander from Beaverton who threw a no-hitter against Northern lllinois on March 8, struck out five and walked two through seveninnings. Heleft the gameafter yielding a single to Willie Calhoun to openthe eighth inning, but by then the Beaverswere in commandwith a10-0 lead. Michael Conforto, Kavin Keyesand Michael Howard singled in runs in OSU's four-run first inning. Conforto had three hits, scored three runs anddrove in two to lead the Beavers (6-3 Pac-12,21-Boverall), who won the series opener11-2 on Friday night and lost to the Wildcats (2-7, 12-18) by the samescore on Saturday. Oregon State plays anonconference game Tuesday atthe University of Portland; gametime is 3 p.m.

DuCkS Salvage One win at StanfOrd — Oregonerupted for seven runs in the second inning Sundayandrolled to a 9-2 Pac-12 Conference victory over Stanford at the Cardinal's SunkenDiamond. The Ducks, who lost both games of aFriday doubleheader to the Cardinal, were led byTyler Baumgartner, whose three RBls included a two-run single in the big second inning. Baumgartner had two hits for Oregon (6-3 Pac-12, 19-8 overall), as did ShaunChase, who belted a solo home run in the eighth. Jeff Gold wasthewinning pitcher for the Ducks, allowing two runs onseven hits over 6/s innings to improve to 7-0 for the season. Oregon finished with nine hits against Stanford (3-3,10-11j, which usedeight pitchers. TheDucks return to action Tuesday in the first of a two-gameseries at Gonzaga inSpokane, Wash. Gametime is 6 p.m.

DOdgerS Set PayrOII reCOrd at $234M —Astudy of big league contracts by TheAssociated Press shows the LosAngeles Dodgers set a record with an opening-day payroll of $234 million Sunday. TheNewYork Yankeeswere adistant second at $199 million, ending their streak of six straight openers abovethe$200 million mark. TheYankees hadtopped the opening-day salary list for15 straight years andhadset the previous mark of $230 million last season. The Dodgers spent more than five times the total of the Houston Astros, who at $45 million were last for the second straight year but vastly above their $27 million outlay on opening daylast season.

FanS aSk GOd tOkeeP WatCh OnTigerS — Detroit Tigers fans have faith in Miguel Cabrera. But just in case, dozensareasking a higher power to keep aneyeontheir favorite team. A prayer service for the Tigers was heldSunday at St. John's Episcopal Church near Comerica Park.Theseasonopenstoday.TheRev.StevenKellyled the service, which included ablessing, prayers and hymns. Heasked God to help the players play to the best of their abilities.

TENNIS Djokovic beats Nadal towin4th KeyBiscayne titleNovak Djokovic won his fourth KeyBiscayne title in Florida, while Rafael Nadal failed again trying for his first. Djokovic dominated from the start and closed out the victory by winning a remarkable exchange to beatNadal6-3, 6-3 Sunday in the final of the Sony Open. Nadal fell to 0-4 in finals at KeyBiscayne, one of just three ATPMasters1,000 events he hasyet to win. Only six-time champion Andre Agassi has wonthe men's event more than Djokovic. Djokovic erased the only break point he faced, committed just15 unforced errors and won a scrambling, 30-shot rally on the final point.

BASKETBALL Cal COaChMOntgamery weighing retirement — Cal(forn(a coach Mike Montgomery is scheduled to meetwith athletic director Sandy Barbour today to let her knowwhether he plans to retire. Barbour, attending the NCAA women's basketball Stanford Regional, confirmed Sundaythey would meet in Berkeley to discuss the future. The Golden Bears lost Wednesday in thequarterfinal round of the NIT, 67-65 to SMU, to finish an up-and-down season at21-14. The 67-year-old Montgomery, who coachedStanford for 18 years then two disappointing seasons asheadcoach of the NBA'sGolden State Warriors, has a677-317 overall record in 32 years in college. — From wire reports

Walley). 2,BendA(KathleenMitchell, November Burling, MallorySilvey,Georgann Ireland). 3, Redmond A (ShelbyFish,RegionHayden, Karlynn Mccarthy, Hannah Mils). WorkingPairs — 1,Trinity LutheranA (Lauren Curl andLaurenWalley). 2, Pendleton8(ElizaWagner

andShaeWatkinds). 3, BendA(Georgann Irelandand BaileyStevenson). FreestyleFoursDril — 1,Redmond(KelseyTobin, KayceeHansen, Bilie Richardson, Region Hayden, Amie Simpson). 2,Bend(Kathleen Mitchell, Lacie Brant,Kaitlin Cam pbell, MadisonLilesve,RiannCornett). 3,TheDalles Wahtonka(JacobRichman, MackenzieUrness, CarsenCordel, HannahSimmons). Madras A(AlyssaBooren, LakotaJensen,Skyla Booren, JannaDavis). Freestyle6+Drill — 1, Bend(Lacie Brant, Alexis Wallace,November Burling, MeganHandiford, Madison Irwin,Mallory Silvey,GeorgannIreland, Bailey Stevenson). TeamPenning — 1, Bend A(Kate Cam pbel, MadisonLilesve,BaileyStevenson), 3 pens,7 cows, 191.00. 2,Trinity LutheranA (Lauren Curl, Lauren Walley,Taylor Mccabe),3 pens,5 cows, 190.37. 3, Madras C(LakotaJensen,JannaDavis, AmethystGibson, Riata Green), 3 pens, 5cows,207.79. CanadianFlags—1,RedmondA(KayceeHansen, Billie Richardson,KelseyTobin, RegionHayden), 36.93. 2,RidgeviewA(SavannahGeist, SerronLarsen, RachelBlomquist, EmilyGeist, RileighBaker), 39.35. 3, Mountain ViewA(JamieKelly, DelaneyHood, Annie Kamperm an,Alexandria Shaver,Alexis Lee),41.42. Birangle — 1,BendC(Lacie BrantandShyanne Bighaus),26.07. 2, MadrasA (Alyssa Boorenand LakotaJensen), 26.13.3, Madras8 (JannaDavis and JessieFerguson), 26.7.

BASKETBALL Men's college NCAATournament All TimesPDT EASTREGIONAL At NewYork RegionalChampionship Sunday'sGame Uconn60,MichiganState54 SOUTHREGIONAL At Memphis,Tenn. RegionalChampionship Saturday'sGame Florida62,Dayton 52 MIDWESTREGIONAL RegionalChampionship Sunday'sGame Kentu cky75,Michigan72 WEST REGIONAL

At Anaheim,Calif. RegionalChampionship Saturday'sGame Wisconsin64,Arizona63 (OT) FINALFOUR At ATILT Stadium

Arlington,Texas NationalSemifinals Saturday'sGames Uconn(30-8) vs.Florida(36-2), 3:09p.m. Kentucky (28-10)ys. Wisconsin(30-7),5:49 p.m. NationalChampionship Monday,April 7 Semifinalwinners,6:10p.m. National InvitationTournament All TimesPDT At NewYork Semifinals Tuesday's Games Minnesota(23-13)vs.FloridaState(22-13), 4p.m. Clemson(23-13) vs.SMU(26-9), 6:30p.m. Championship Thursday'sGame Semifinalwinners,4 p.m.

CollegeBasketball lnvitational All TimesPDT

Championship Series (Best-of-3) (x-if necessary) Today'sGame Siena(18-17)at FresnoState(20-16), 7p.m. Wednesday'sGame FresnoStateat Siena,7p.m. Saturday'sGame x-FresnoStateatSiena,TBA

Wo m en's college NCAATournament All TimesPDT LINCOLNREGIONAL

RegionalSemifinals At Lincoln,Neb. Today'sGame RegionalChampionship Uconn(37-0) vs.TexasA&M(27-8), 6:30p.m.

STANFORDREGIONAL

RegionalSemifinals At Stanford,Calif. Sunday'sGames Stanford82, PennState57 NorthCarolina65,SouthCarolina 58 RegionalCham pionship Tuesday'sGame Stanford(32-3)vs.NorthCarolina(27-9), 6p.m. NOTREDAMEREGIONAL

At NotreDame,Ind. RegionalCham pionship Today'sGame Baylor(32-4)vs.NotreDame(35-0), 4:30p.m. LOUISVILLE REGIONAL

RegionalSemifinals At Louisville, Ky. Sunday'sGames Maryland73,Tennessee62 Louisville73,LSU47 RegionalCham pionship Tuesday'sGame Maryland(27-6)vs. Louisville (33-4), 4p.m. National InvitationTournament All TimesPDT

Quarterfinals Sunday'sGames

$105,133. 25. (36) LandonCassill, Chevrolet, 500, 56.2, 0, $79,950. 26. (39)DavidGililand, Ford,499,49.5,18, $102,058. 27. (28) Kyle Larson,Chevrolet, 498, 62.7, 17, $108,420. 28. (24)David Ragan, Ford, 497,50.7,16, $99,322. 29. (35)ColeWhitt, Toyota,497,38.4,15,$78,500. 30. (38)RyanTruex,Toyota,496,43.9,14, $82,875. 31. (40) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 495,38.5, 13, $81,225. 32. (10) DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 494, 52.4, 12, $88,575. 33. (29)Travis Kvapil, Ford,493,35.8,12, $77,850. 34. (42) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 492,36.1, 10, $77,725. 35.33)JoshWise,Chevrolet,492,34.7,9,$77,675. 36. 19)AlexBowman,Toyota,488,46.3,8,$77,625. 37. (32)MichaelMcDowell, Ford,brakes,474,35.9, 7, $77,527. 38. (14)BradKeselowski, Ford,469,46.6,6,$118,508. 39. (37) DavidStremme,Chevrolet, 440, 29.1, 5, $69,100. 40. (30) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,409, 49.8, 4, $100,925. 41. (41) ParkerKligerman, Toyota, 408, 25.1, 3, $66,500. 42. (9) JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 396, 80.9, 2, $94,314. 43.(43)JoeNemechek,Toyota,accident,310,26.4,0, $61,600.

I

SouthDakotaState76, Indiana64 SouthFlorida60, Mississippi St.58

Today'sGames Rutgers(25-9) atBowling Green(30-4), 4 p.m. Washington(20-13)atUTEP(27-7), 6p.m.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT

Eastern Conference Atlantic Division

GP W L OT Pts GF GA 75 52 17 6 110 241 158 7 6 43 26 7 93 199 189 7 5 41 25 9 9 1 223 201 75 35 26 14 84 202 213 7 6 36 32 8 80 220 239 74 31 29 14 76 216 249 7 5 27 40 8 6 2 179 244 7 4 20 45 9 4 9 142 222

y-Boston Montreal TampaBay Detroit Toronto Ottawa Florida Buffalo

MetropolitanDivision

GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Pittsburgh 75 48 22 5 101 232 185 N .Y.Rangers 76 42 30 4 88 205 183 P hiladelphia 74 39 27 8 8 6 213 210 C olumbus 74 3 8 30 6 8 2 208 200 Washington 75 34 28 13 81 217 226 NewJersey 74 31 28 15 77 178 192 Carolina 7 4 3 2 3 2 10 74186 208 N.y.lslanders 74 29 35 10 68 206 247

x-St. Louis x-Colorado x-Chicago Minnesota Dallas

Nashyile Winnipeg

WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 74 50 17 7 107 74 47 21 6 100 76 42 19 15 99 75 38 26 11 87 74 36 27 11 83 76 33 32 11 77 7 5 33 33 9 75

IndyCar FirestoneGrandPrix ofSt. Petersburg

Sunday

At St. PetersburgStreet Circuit St. Petersburg,Fla. Lap length:1.8 miles

(Stariingpositioninparentheses} 1. (4)Wil Pow er, Dallara-chevrolet,110, Running. 2. (3)RyanHunter-Reay, Dallara-Honda,110, Running. 3. (10) Helio Castrone ves, Dallara-chevrolet, 110, Running. 4. (5)ScottDixon,Dallara-chevrolet,110, Running. 5. (14)SimonPagenaud, Dallara-Honda,110, Running. 6. (2)TonyKanaan, Dallara-chevrolet,110,Running. 7. (1)TakumaSato, Dallara-Honda,110, Running. 8. (16)JustinWilson,Dallara-Honda,110, Running. 9. (22)JosefNewgarden, Dallara-Honda,110, Running. 10. (9)RyanBriscoe,Dallara-chevrolet,110, Running. 11. (11)Sebastian Saavedra, Dalara-chevrolet, 110, Running. 12. (15)MikhailAleshin,Dalara-Honda,110,Running. 13. (13)Seba stien Bourdais, Dallara-chevrolet, 110, Running. 14. (21)GrahamRahal, Dallara-Honda,110, Running. 15. (18)JuanPablo Montoya,Dalara-chevrolet,110, Running. 16. (12)MikeConway, Dallara-chevrolet,110, Running. 17. (7)CarlosMunoz, Dallara-Honda,110,Running. 18. (17)CarlosHuertas,Dallara-Honda,110, Running. 19. (19)JamesHinchcliffe, Dallara-Honda,109,Running. 20. (20)CharlieKimball, Dallara-chevrolet,108,Running. 21. (8)JackHawksworth, Dallara-Honda,83, Contact. 22. (6)MarcoAndretti, Dallara-Honda,82,Contact.

240 168 227 202 248 200 186 189 214 212 190 229 208 220

PacificDivision GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Anaheim 74 48 18 8 104 239 187 x-San Jose 76 47 20 9 103 232 184 L os Angeles 75 44 25 6 9 4 189 159 Phoenix 75 3 6 2 7 12 84206 212 Vancouver 76 34 31 11 79 184 206 C algary 75 3 1 3 7 7 6 9 192 223 E dmonton 7 5 2 6 40 9 6 1 184 249 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. x-clinchedplayoffspot y-clinched division Sunday'sGames Boston4, Philadelphia3, SO Nashville 4,Washington3,SO Ottawa 6, Calgary3 Detroit 3,TampaBay2 Pittsburgh 4, Chicago1 N.Y.Rangers 5,Edmonton 0 Today'sGames CarolinaatOttawa,4:30 p.m. FloridaatNewJersey,4:30 p.m. WinnipegatAnaheim,7p.m. Minnes otaatLosAngeles,7p.m.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesEDT

Eastern Conference W L T P i s GF GA Columbus 3 0 0 9 7 2 S porting KansasCity 2 1 1 7 5 4 Houston 2 1 0 6 6 2 TorontoFc 2 1 0 6 3 4 Philadelphia

1 1 2 5 4 4 NewEngland 1 2 1 4 2 6 Chicago 0 1 3 3 6 7 NewYork 0 1 3 3 4 7 Montreal 0 3 1 1 3 7 D.C. 0 2 1 1 2 6 WesternConference W L T P i s GF GA Fc Dallas 3 0 1 10 9 5 RealSaltLake 2 0 2 8 8 4 Vancouver 2 0 2 8 7 3 Seattle 2 2 0 6 5 4 ChivasUSA 1 1 2 5 6 7 Colorado 1 1 1 4 5 4 Portland 0 2 2 2 3 6 Los Angele s 0 1 1 1 1 2 SanJose 0 2 1 1 4 6 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie.

Sunday'sGame NewYork1, ChivasUSA1, tie Saturday'sGames SeattleFcat Portland, noon NewYorkat Montreal,1 p.m. PhiladelphiaatChicago,2 p.m. TorontoFcatColumbus,3p.m. ColoradoatVancouver,3:30 p.m. NewEnglandat D.c. United,4p.m. Fc DallasatHouston,5 p.m. RealSaltLakeat Sporting KansasCity,5:30p.m. Sunday,April6 Los Angeleat s ChivasUSA, noon

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR SprintCup STP 600 Sunday At MariinsvilleSpeedway Mariinsville, Va. Lap length:.626 miles (Stari positioninparentheses) 1. (22)KurtBusch, Chevrolet,500 laps,115.8rating,47 points,$147,210. 2. (4) JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 500,140.9, 44, $180,546. 3. (26)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 500,116.8, 42, $114,210. 4. (3)JoeyLogano,Ford, 500,121.2,41,$142,476. 5. (17) MarcosAmbrose, Ford, 500, 110.2, 40, $128,265. 6. (6)MattKenseth,Toyota,500,95.8,39,$137,456. 7. (18) Kevin Harvick,Chevrolet, 500, 98.9, 38, $127,053. 8. (20)AricAlmirola, Ford,500,93.8,36,$126,106. 9. (12)ClintBowyer Toyota,500,1085,36,$123461. 10. (21) Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 500, 83.3, 34, $116,384. 11. (15) A J Allmendinger,Chevrolet, 500,90, 34, $105,458. 12. (5)JeffGordon,Chevrolet, 500,82,32,$129,811. 13. (8)CarlEdwards,Ford,500, 98.1,31,$101,975. 14. (1)KyleBusch, Toyota,500, 79.2,31,$136,491. 15. (34)AustinDilon,Chevrolet,500, 72,29,$133461. 16. (13)BrianVickers,Toyota, 500,90.9, 28,$117,900. 17. (7) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 500, 72.4, 27, $120,158. 18. (11)GregBiffle, Ford,500,82.7,27,$125,450. 19. (2)DennyHamlin,Toyota,500,81,25,$94,475. 20. (16) RyanNewman, Chevrolet, 500, 78.5, 24, $93,325. 21. (31) MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, 500,60.6, 23, $111,708. 22. (27) KaseyKahne, Chevrolet, 500, 70.4, 22, $99,375. 23. (25) Justin Allgaier,Chevrolet, 500, 57.1, 21, $107,433. 24. (23) CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 500, 63.4, 20,

MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

All TimesPDT

NewYork Philadelphia Washington Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee Pittsburgh St. Louis SanDiego Los Angeles Colorado SanFrancisco Arizona

NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L

Pct GB

Central Division W L

Pct GB

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

1 2 0 0 0

0 1 0 0 2

West Division W L

000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000

Pct GB

1.000 .667 .000 '/r .000 '/2 .000 t'Ir

Sunday'sGame SanDiego3, LA. Dodgers1 Today'sGam es ChicagoCubs(Samardzija 0-0) at Pittsburgh(Liriano 0-0),10:05a.m. Washington(Strasburg0-0) at N.Y.Mets(Gee0-0), 10;10arm. Philadelphia(Lee0-0) at Texas(Scheppers0-0), 11:05 a.m. Atlanta(Teh eran 0-0) at Milwaukee(Galardo 0-0), 11:10a.m. St. Louis(Wainwright 0-0)at Cincinnati (Cueto0-0), 1:10p.m. Colorado (DeLa Rosa0-0)at Miami (Fernandez 0-0), 4:10p.m. SanFrancisco(Bumgarner 0-0) atArizona(Mccarthy 0-0), 6:40p.m.

Baltimore Boston NewYork TampaBay Toronto

Chicago Cleveland Detroit Kansas City Minnesota Houston Los Angeles Oakland Seattle Texas

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

.000 .000 .000 .000 .000

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

.000 .000 .000 .000 .000

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

.000 .000 .000 .000 .000

Central Division W L

West Division W L

1 1 1

College Pac-12Standings All TimesPDT Washington UCLA OregonState Oregon Stanford ArizonaState WashingtonState USC California Arizona

ConferenceOverall 8 -1 6 -3 6 -3 6 -3 3-3 6-4 3-3 3 -6 3 -3 2 -7 0 -9

utah

20- 5 16 - 10 21- 6 19- 7 10 - 11 15 - 11 11 - 14 13 - 13 14 - 11 12 - 18 9-1 7

Saturday'sLateGame California 5,Utah4

Sunday'sGames Washington State4,SanJoseState3 California 8,Utah7 OregonState11,Arizona0 Oregon9,Stanford2 ArizonaState6, UCLA5 Washington8,USC3 Tuesday'sGames OregonStateatPortland, 3p.m. Oregon atGonzaga,6p.m. LongBeachStateatUSC,6p.m. UCLAatLoyolaMarymount,6p.m. Stanfordat California, 7p.m.

TENNIS Professional SonyOpen Sunday At TheTennisCenter at CrandonPark Key Biscayne,Fla. Purse:Men,$6.66 million(Masters1GGO); Women,$6.43 million(Premier) Suriace:Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Championship NovakDjokovic(2), Serbia,def.Rafael Nadal (1), Spain,6-3,6-3. Doubles Women Championship MartinaHingis,Switzerland,andSabine Lisicki, Germany,def. Ekaterina Makarovaand ElenaVesnina (2), Russia4-6, , 6-4, 10-5.

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague

BASEBALL

Atlanta Miami

A.Torres 1-3 0 0 0 0 ThayerW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 StreetS,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 B.Wilsonpitchedto 5baters inthe8th. WP—A.Torres. T—2:49.A—45,567(42,302).

Pct GB

Pct GB

Sunday'sGames No games scheduled Today'sGam es KansasCity (Shields0-0)at Detroit(Verlander0-0), 10:08a.m. Philadelphia (Lee0-0) at Texas(Scheppers0-0), 11:05 a.m. Boston(Lester0-0) at Baltimore(Tilman0-0), 12:05 p.m. Minnesota(Nolasco0-0) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Sale 0-0),1:10p.m. Toronto(Dickey0-0)atTampaBay(Price0-0),1:10 p.m. Cleveland (Masterson0-0) atOakland(Gray 0-0), 7:05 p.m. Seattle(Hernandez 0-0) at L.A.Angels (Weaver 0-0), 7:05p.m. Sunday'sGame

Padres 3, Dodgers1 LosAngeles San Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi Crwfrdlf 4 0 1 1 Ecarerss 2 1 0 0 Puigrf 3 0 0 0 Denorfirf-If 4 0 2 2 HRmrzss 4 0 0 0 Headly3b 4 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 4 0 0 0 Gyorko2b 3 0 0 0 Ethiercf 4 0 0 0 Alonso1b 4 0 0 0 Uribe3b 4 0 1 0 Medicalf 3 0 1 0 A .Ellisc 3 0 2 0 Streetp 0 0 0 0 DGordn2b 2 1 0 0 Venalecf-rf 3 0 1 0 R yup 3 0 0 0 Riverac 2 0 0 0 BWilsnp 0 0 0 0 S.Smithph 1 1 1 1 C.Perezp 0 0 0 0 Amarstcf 0 0 0 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Cashnrp 1 0 0 0

Vincent p 0 0 0 0 ATorrs p 0 0 0 0 Thayer p 0 0 0 0 Grandl ph-c 0 1 0 0 Totals 31 1 4 1 Totals 2 7 3 5 3 LosAngeles Oee Ote 000 — 1 San Diego Oee Oee 03x — 8 E—Ad.Gonzalez (1), B.Wilson (1). DP —Los Angeles 2.LOB— LosAngeles6,SanDiego6.HR— S. Smith(1).SB—Grandal(1). S—E.cabrera, Cashner. IP H R E R BBSO LosAngeles Ryu 7 3 0 0 3 7 B.WilsonL,0-1BS,1-1 0 2 3 2 1 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 C.Perez P.Rodriguez 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 San Diego Cashner Vincent

BALTIMOR E ORIOLES — Placed INFsMichael Almanza rand Manny Machado and OFs Francisco Peguer oandNolanReimoldonthe15-dayDL;Machado and Peguero retroactive to March21, Almanzar to March 23andReimoldtoMarch26.PlacedRHPEdgmerEscalonaonthe60-dayDL.Selectedthecontracts of OF DelmonYoungandRHPEvanMeekfromNorfolk (IL). DesignatedLHPMike Belfiore for assignment.

Reass ignedLHPJohanSantanatominorleaguecamp. CHICAGO WHITESOX— PlacedINFsGordon Beckham and Jeff Keppinger onthe15-dayDL,retroactiveto March21. CLEVEL ANDINDIANS— Selected the contracts of RHPScott Atchison, DHJason GiambiandOF Nyjer Morganfrom Columbus(IL). PlacedGiambi and OFMichael Bournonthe15-day DL,retroactive to March21. Designated RHPs Preston Guilmet and FrankHerrmannandLHPColt Hynesfor assignment. Reassigned OFMatt CarsonandINFRyanRohlingerto minorleaguecamp DETROIT TIGERS— Placed OFAndy Dirkson the15dayDLandSSJoseIglesiasandRHPBruce Rondononthe60-day DL.Selectedthecontract ofOF TylerCollinsfromErie (EL). HOUSTONASTROS— PlacedRHPsAlexWhite, JesseCrainandAlex Wojchiechowski onthe15-day DL, retroactiveto March21. KANSAS CITY ROYALS— Sold thecontract of LHP EverettTeaford to the LGTwins (South Korea). PlacedRHPs Louis Colemanand LukeHochevar on the15-day DL;Coleman retroactive to March 24 and Hochevar to March21. Assigned INFJason Donald to minor leaguecamp.ReleasedCRamonHernandez. LOSANGELESANGELS— OptionedLHPJoseAlvarez ,28GrantGreen,RHPCoryRasmusandOFJ.B. Shuck toSaltLake(PCL). PlacedLHPsSeanBurnett and Brian MoranandRHPsDaneDeLaRosaandRyan Brasier onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to March21. Selectedthecontract of 38lanStewart fromSalt Lake. NEWYOR KYANKEES—Agreedtotermswith RHP AlfredoAcevesonaminor leaguecontract. TAMPABAYRAY S — Placed RHPsJeremy Hellickson andJuanCarlos Oviedoand INFTimBeckham onthe15-dayDL TEXAS RANGERS— Selected the contract of INF JoshWilsonfromRound Rock(PCL). DesignatedINF AdamRosales for assignment. PlacedRHPYu Darvish, INFJuricksonProfar andLHPMatt Harrison on the15-dayDL;Darvishretroactiveto March21,Profar to March 23and Harrison to Saturday.PlacedCGeovanySotoonthe60-dayDL. TORONTOBLUEJAYS— PlacedRHPCaseyJanssen onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to Saturday.Recalled CErikKratzfromBuffalo (IL). AssignedOFMatt Tuiasosopo outright toBuffalo(IL). NationalLeague ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Selected the contr actsofRHPDanielHudsonandLHPRyanRowland-SmithfromReno(PCL). PlacedLHPPatrick Corbin andRHPs David Hernandezand Hudsonon the 15-dayDL;Corbin retroactiveto March19 and Hernandez to March 27. Optioned SSDidi Gregorius andRHPBoSchultz to Reno. CHICAG OCUBS—Selectedthe contracts of RHP BrianSchlitter,INFEmilio Bonifacio, OFRyan Kalish and CJohnBaker fromlowa(PCL). Optioned LHP ChrisRusinto lowa.Designated RHPAlberto Cabrera for assignment. PlacedRHPsKyuji FujikawaandJake Arrieta onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to March21, and RHPJamesMcDonaldonthe60-dayDL. CINCINN ATI REDS—Placed LHPsAroldis ChapmanandSean Marshall, RHP sMat Latos andJonathan Broxton,CDevin MesoracoandINF/OFSkipSchumaker on the15-daylist; Chapman, Latos,Marshall andMesoracoretroactiveto March21, Broxton andSchumaker to March 22. PlacedINFJackHannahanand RHPBrett Marshall on the60-dayDL.Designated RHPPedro Beatofor assignment. ReassignedOFJasonBourgeois, RHPJumbo Diaz, LHPJeffFrancis, CCorkyMiler and INF/OF Kristopher Negronto Louisville (IL).Recalled C TuckerBarnhart andRHPCurtis PartchfromLouisvile. Selectedthecontractsof RH PTrevor Bel, OFRoger Bernardina andINFRamonSantiagofromLouisvile. LOSANGELESDODGERS— PlacedLHPClayton Kershawonthe15-day DL,retroactiveto March23. OptionedRHPJoseD


MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014• THE BULLETIN

NBA ROUNDUP

B3

MLB

ii e e s e a

aze rs ovi 0

The Associated Press PORTLAND — A healthy LaMar-

cus Aldridge makes a world of difference for the Portland Trail Blazers.

Aldridge scored 28 points in his third game back from injury and the Trail Blazers extended their winning streak to three games with a 105-98

Padresbeat Dodgersfor strong start to season By Bernie Wilson The Associated Press

victory over the Memphis Grizzlies on Sunday night.

SAN DIEGO — For one day at least, the moder-

"Whether he's scoring or not, just

getting him touches has a big effect on the game, has a big effect on how the

ate-payroll San Diego Padres are in first place in

defense reads our offense,"Blazers

the NL West, ahead of the

center Robin Lopez said of Aldridge. Reserve Mo Williams added 17

big-spending Los Angeles Dodgers.

\:;

points and Wesley Mathews had 15 for

Seth Smith hit a tower-

theBlazers,who avoided athree-game sweep in the season series. "LA coming back has brought us back to what we do and how we do

ing drive for a tying homer leading off the eighth and Chris Denorfia singled home two runs to give the Padres a 3-1 victory against the rival Dodgers in base-

, Cij,

it," Williams said. "With LA, we know what we need to do and where we need

I

to go, where we get our shots, and when to be aggressive." Portland opened a two-game lead over Golden State for fifth place in the Western Conference playoff race and

ball's

I

Smith's first hit with the

Padres came on a 2-0 pitch

pulled within 2t/2games of No. 4 Hous-

I

ton with seven games remaining. Zach Randolph scored 21 points and Marc Gasol had 20 for the Grizzlies,

a half-game behind idle Dallas for the West's eighth and final playoff berth. The Blazers shot 52.0 percent (39 of

an estimated 360 feet into Greg Wahgstephens/The Associated Press

Memphis' Tayshaun Prince, left, defends against Portland's Nicolas Batum during the first half of Sunday night's game in Portland. The Blazers took a105-96 victory over the Grizzlies.

75) and had five players score in double figures. Aldridge, who missed seven games with a back contusion, was the catalyst on offense, making 10 of 20 shots from the field and going 8 for 8 at the free-

"We knew exactly what they were going to run," Grizzlies guard Tony Allen said. "It was a great game plan defensively, and they executed." Mathews and Aldridge combined

throw line.

had eight lead changes and six ties

The Grizzlies were determined to play Aldridge straight up defensively and not double, as they had in their two wins over Portland. Memphis looked

before Will Barton followed his own

for 13 points during a first quarter that

miss to score and give the Blazers a 2523 lead. The Grizzlies, making their third mostly to R andolph, their 6-foot-9, stop on a five-game swing, made 3 of 260-pound power forward, to go toe-to- 14 shots in the first six minutes of the second quarter and were outscored

the right-field seats. It was his seventh career pinch-

hit homer. He was acquired in an offseason trade with Oakland for reliever Luke

reeled off six quick points to open their Raptors 98, Magic 93: ORLANDO, largest lead of the second quarter, go- Fla. — DeMar DeRozan had 28 points, ing up 49-34 when Damian Lillard set Jonas Valanciunas added 20 points

Gregerson. Wilson (0-1) w alked

up Thomas Robinson for a transition

and nine rebounds, and Toronto es-

Grandal, who advanced

layup with 3:58 to play in the half. Also on Sunday: Nets 114, Timberwolves 99: NEW

caped with a victory over Orlando.

when the veteran reliever couldn't handle Everth Cabrera's bunt for an er-

YORK — Paul Pierce scored 22 points after another sensational start, and

reer-high 33 points in the fourth quarter and Chicago held off slumping

ror. Grandal stole third and

Brooklyn moved to the brink of a play- Boston. off spot by beating Minnesota for its Knicks 89, Warriors 64: OAKLAND, franchise record-tying 13th straight Calif. — J.R. Smith scored 21 points,

differencebefore Denorfia hit a bouncer up the middle

home victory.

Bulls 107, Celtics 102: BOSTON — D.J. Augustin scored 15 of his ca-

Carmelo Anthony added 19 points and

nine rebounds and New York moved 16-6 as the Blazers extended the lead LAND — D i o n W a iters scored 19 within one game of the final playoff said. "He's what makes them go, so to 41-29 on two free throws by Aldridge points, Luol Deng added 15 and Cleve- spot by beating undermanned Golden anytime you've got your best player out with 5:59 left in the half. land kept its playoff push going with State. "We matched Memphis' physicality," a win over Indiana, which is losing its there, it makes a difference." Lakers 115, Suns 99: LOS ANGEPortland dominated the second Blazers coach Terry Stotts said. "Our grip on the No. 1 seed in the Eastern LES — Chris Kaman had 28 points quarter, making 10 of 16 shots (62.5 shooting lineup gave us some sepa- Conference. along with 17 rebounds while starting percent) and getting eight points from ration in the first half. We got a lot of Thunder 116, Jazz 96: OKLAHOMA at center for the vertigo-stricken Pau both Aldridge and Williams to extend good eff ortoffthebench,too." CITY — Kevin Durant had 31 points Gasol, Jodie Meeks scored 22 points, a two-point lead at the end of the first Mike Conley's 3-pointer pulled the and nine assists to help Oklahoma City and the Los Angeles Lakers snapped quarter to a 57-45 halftime advantage. Grizzlies within 43-34, but the Blazers defeat Utah. Phoenix's six-game winning streak. toe with the Blazers' All-Star. "LaMarcus is their horse," Randolph

from Brian Wilson, who started the e ighth a f ter

Hyun-Jin Ryu threw seven scoreless innings. It sailed

I

who lost back-to-back games for the first time since Feb. 3-5 and dropped

N o r t h A me r i can

opener Sunday night.

Cavaliers 90, Pacers 76: CLEVE-

p inch-hitter

Yasma n i

Cabrera took second on into bring them both in.

"They're all just one game, but when you're facing a team like the Dodgers, full of great players, Brian Wilson, a guy who knows how to get it

done in those situations, it's not easy to do what our hitters did," said Hus-

ton Street, who pitched a perfect ninth for the save. "To come back and get three right there in t h at situation, especially after

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings All TimesPDT

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

Nt L 52 22 50 22 42 31 41 32 39 33 38 35 35 38 31 41 31 43 30 45 26 47 23 50 21 53 16 57 14 59

Pst GB .703 .694 1

W L 57 16 54 19 52 22 49 23 48 27 45 28 44 30 44 30 43 30 36 36 32 41 32 41 25 48 25 48 23 51

Pst GB .781 .740 3 .703 5'/z .681 7'A .640 10 .616 12 .595 13'A .595 13'A .589 14 .500 20'A .438 25 .438 25 .342 32 .342 32 .311 34'/z

WesternConference

x-SanAntonio x-Oklahoma City x-LA. Clippers Houston Portland GoldenState Dallas Phoenix Memphis Minnesota NewOrleans Denver LA. Lakers Sacramen to

utah x-clinchedplayoffspot y-clinched division

Toronto98,Orlando93 Brooklyn 1I4, Minnesota99 Chicago107, Boston102 NewYork89, Golden State84 Portland105,Memphis98 L.A. Lakers115,Phoenix 99

Today'sGames SanAntonioatIndiana,4 p.m. 575 91/2 WashingtonatCharlotte, 4p.m. ,562 10'A Torontoat Miami,4:30 p.m. .542 12 Milwaukee at Detroit, 4:30p.m. .521 13'A Philadelphia atAtlanta,4:30 p.m. .479 16'A Bosto natChicago,5p.m. .431 20 L.A. Clippersat Minnesota, 5p.m. .419 21 Sacramento at NewOrleans,5 p.m. ,400 22'A Memphisat Denver,6 p.m. .356 25'/z NewYorkat Utah,6p.m. .315 28'A Tsesday'sGames .284 31 Houstonat Brooklyn, 5p.m. .219 35'/z Golden StateatDalas, 5:30 p.m. 192 37ta Portlandat L.A.Lakers, 7:30p.m.

Ssnday'sGames

Oklahoma City116, Utah96 Cleveland 90, Indiana76

Summaries Sunday'sGames

Blazers105, Grizzlies 98 MEMPHIS (98) Prince2-3 0-0 4, Randolph 10-171-2 21,Gasol 8-114-6 20,Conley6-192-416, Lee3-5 0-06, Allen 2-50-04, Miller5-90-0 12,Koufos1-40-02, Calathes 0-20-00, Davis1-23-45, Udrih0-10-00, Johnson3-51-2 8. Totals 41-89 11-1898. PORTULND (105) Batum5-110-0 10,Aldridge10-20 8-828, Lopez 36 33 9, Lillard 41034 13,Matthews49 55 15, Robinson 4-40-18, Wiliams7-92-217, Barton2-5 004, Wright 01 1-21.Totals 3975 2225105. Memphis 23 22 25 28 — 98 Portland 25 32 29 19 — 105 3-PointGo als—Memphis5-17(Miler 2-5,Cotley 2-6, Johnson1-3, Gasol 0-1, Prince0-1, Lee0-1), Porlland

5-15 (Matthew s2-4, Lilard 2-5,Wiliams1-3, Wright 0-1, Batum 0-2).FouledOut— None.Rebounds— Memphis50

Bulls107, Celtics102

Raptors 98, Magic 93

CHICAGO (107) Dunleavy3-u 5-5 u, Boozer 7-100-014, Noah 3-6 7-1013,Hinrich4-91-211, Butler5-122-415, Atigustin 10-1410-10 33, Gibson3-6 0-0 6, Mohammed 1-1 0-0 2, Snell 1-1 0-0 z Totals 37-70 25-31 107. BOSTON (102) Green6-170-016, Bass6-12 0-012, Humphries 4 56814, Rondo 7 I31-217, Bradley312 22 8, Bayless5-91-1 12, Stillinger 6-112-316, Olynyk3-4 0-0 7,Johnson0-40-00. Totals 40-8712-16102. Chicago 25 26 27 29 — 107

(Randolp7), h Porland44(Lopez10). Assists—Memphis 28 (Coiley9), Portland23(Battim6). Total Fouls—Memphis19, Portland16.Technicals—Williams. A—19,994 (19,980).

TORONTO (98) Ross3-50-0 7, Johnson2-5 0-0 4, Valanciunas 6-8 8-8 20, DeRo zan 6-14 15-16 28, Lowry6-18 2-216, Hansbrough 0-1 0-00, Salmons1-10-02, Vasquez 2-61-1 5,Fields2-30-04, DeColo2-50-0 4, Novak3-50-08, Hayesg-20-00. Totals33-73 26-27 98. ORLANDO (93) Harkless6-91-314, O'Quinn0-20-0 0, Vucevic 10-132-222,Afflalo3-91-2 8, Nelson6-112-216, NicholsonO-I 0-00, Oladipo7-120-016, Dedmon 1-1 0-02, Moore O-I 1-11, Lamb0-10-00, Harris 5-93-414.Totals38-6910-1493. Toronto 27 30 16 25 — 98 Orlando 22 16 26 29 — 93

Nets114, Timberwolves 99 MINNESOT A(99) Brewer 9-133-421, Love5-143-414, Pekovic 5-7

3-513, Rtibio2-73-47, Martin9-162-421, Mbaha

Moute 0-40-00,Dieng2-41-25,Budinger2-62-26, Cunni ngham3-40-06,Barea2-61-26,Hummel0-1 000, Muhammad01 000,Shved000 00.Totals 39-8318-27 99. BROOKLYN (114) Johnson 8-132-319, pierceB-u 1-222, plumlee 4-7 5-6 13,Wiliams1-93-4 6, Livingston4-5 5-6 13, Blatche 7-110-1 14,Thornton 2-60-05, Teletovic 3-1000 7, Anderson 5-100013, Collins0000 0, Gutierrez1-40-0 2,Teagtie 00 0-0 0.Totals 43-86 16-22 114.

Minnesota Brooklyn

27 27 28 17 — 99 30 29 26 29 — 114

Bostott

26 24 27 25 — 102

Cavaliers 90, Pacers76 INDIANA (76)

George5-13 2-315, West6-162-214, Hibbert 2-9 2-3 6,G.Hill 3-9 2-4 9, Stephenson4-91-211, Mahinmi0-11-2 1,Turner2-5 0-04, Sloan2-60-0 5,Scola3-60-06,Copeland2-30-05,Allen0-00-0 0, S.Hill 0-0 0-0 0,Butler 0-1 0-00. Totals 29-78 10-16 76. CLEVELAND (90)

Deng6-123-515, Thompson4-104-412, Hawes 5-9 2-213, Jack4-11 2-211, Waiters9-200-019, Dellavedova 3-63-411, Varejao2-32-26, Zeller 1-3 1-2 3,Gee0-2 0-00.Totals 34-7617-21 90. Indiana 20 16 22 18 — 76 Cleveland 25 24 24 17 — 90

Durant 9-139-9 31, Ibaka7-133-4 17,Adams 4-6 0-0 8, Westbrook 5-11 9-919, Roberson0-2 0-0 0, Thabe et I-1 0-0 2, Lamb3-81-2 8, Fisher 1-4 1-2 4, Collison 4-50-0 8, Butler 5-8 0-0 15, R.Williams1-20-0 2,Jonest-I 0-0 z Totals 4174 23-26 116. Utah 9 31 37 19 — 96 Oklahoma Cit y 2 6 3 3 33 24 — 116

Knicks 89, Warriors 84

leaving guys on base early, that's what this team is going to have to do to win. We're going to have to battle all year long." The Dodgers set a record

with an opening-day payroll of $234 million. The Padres are 23rd at just under

$90 million. Dale Thayer (1-0) pitched a perfect eighth for the win.

sEW YORK (89)

Anthony7-215-6 19,Stoudemire 5-14 5-6 15, Chandler3-60-06, Felton0-32-22, Smith8-172-2 21, Shump ert1-50-03, Prigioni2-20-06, Hardaway Jr. 6-120-015,Brown0-02-2z Totals 32-801618 89. GOLDEN STATE(84) Iguodala1-49-1012,Speights2-80-04, O'Neal 3-7 2-2 8,Curry10-216-8 32,Thompson6-18 0-015, Green2-5 0-04, Barnes2-71-2 5, Blake 0-4 0-0 0,Crawford2-5 0-0 4. Totals 28-79 1822 84. New York 22 34 18 15 — 89 GoldenState 32 12 22 18 — 84

Lakers115, Suns99 PHOENIX (99)

Tticker2-8 0-04, Frye1-7 0-02, Plumlee3-4 0-0

6, Bledsoe 1-9 8-1I 10, Dragic6-I6 3-5 17,Mark. Morris 5-12 5-616, Green8-193-322, Marc.uorris 6-111-215, Smith2-3 0-0 4, Len0-0 0-00, Randolph1-t 1-1 3,Christmas0-10-0 0, Goodwin0-0 Thunder116, Jazz96 g-0 0. Totals 35-9121-2899. L jt. LAKERS (115) UTAH (96) Jefferson6-12 2-217, Favors3-122-3 8, Kanter Bazemore 3-75 512, Hill 3 600 6, Kaman1319 2-2 28,Marshall 6-9 1-1 13,Meeks6-9 9-10 7-13 4-518,Burke1-70-0 2, Hayward 5-13 6-616, MWilliams3 62 29, Burks5102-612, Garrett1-4 22, Johnson 0-40-0 0, Sacre3-5 0-06, Kelly6-12 4-122-311. Totals 44-83 22-24 0-02, cark2-40-05, Gobert1-1 0-02, Rush0-2 3-317, Young 0-0 0, Evans1-1 0-02, LticasIII 1-10-0 3. Totals 115. 36-86't8-24 96. Phoenix OKLAHOM ACITY(116) LA.Lakers

Lenny Ignelzi I The Associated Press

San Diego third baseman Chase Headley makes a running throw for the final

out in Sunday's victory over the L.A. Dodgers.

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Kurt Buschhangsonfor victory at Martinsville, bestsJohnson tinsville Speedway, in some ways, was like his career

helped him learn the value of

team-wise and personally. Australian was never really "You've got to put life in per- challenged again. spective, andyou have to learn Hamilton leads Mercedes from your mistakes and you 1-2 at Malaysian GP: SEPANG,

better team communication.

can't just sit there and try to

wrapped into one afternoon. It started with a pit r oad confrontation with Brad Keselowski, one that had Busch

Celebrating in Victory Lane also was emotional, too, be-

muscle your way individually

Malaysia — Lewis Hamilton led a one-two finish for the

through certain situations," he

Mercedes team at the Formu-

sard. Also on Sunday: Power opens IndyCar season with win in St. Pete: ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Will Power has picked up right where he left off last season.

la One Malaysian Grand Prix. Hamilton beat teammate Nico

The Associated Press MARTINSVILLE, V a . Kurt Busch's Sunday at Mar-

my team owners," Busch said, adding that having Tony Stewart as a team owner has

cause he got to do it for the first time with girlfriend Patri-

threatening over his radio to cia's son, Houston. "It was pretty emotional. To rearrange Keselowski's face when the race was finished, see him starry eyed and not and ended with Busch ending knowing what he needed to do an 83-race victory drought. and I was directing him where The victory was his f irst he needed to stand and where In Victory Lane. Power won for Stewart-Haas Racing, in he could see it all better and the season-opening IndyCar just their sixth race together, put him up on stage,'" Busch Series race through the streets suggesting that it could prove said, his voice cracking. "And Mike McCarn/The Associated Press of St. Petersburg with a doma very productive partner- to have him break down in Kurt Busch drives through turn four as Marcos Ambrose follows inating run. It continues a ship, and one that a reflective tears, it got me crossed up be- during Sunday's NASCAR Sprint Cup race in Martinsville, Va. streak he started last season Busch said he has learned to cause I've been trying to delivby winning three of the final approach with a more mature er for him ... It kind of took it to five races, including the final attitude. a new level." go and holding off the eight- Cup-level victory, and that it two. He passed pole-sitter Ta"I ran a lot of my early part Busch did it by passing Mar- time winner to win at the track came in the most unlikely of kuma Sato for the lead with an of my career as an individual tinsville master Jimmie John- for the first time since October p l aces suggested to Busch that outside move headed into the and I didn't respect my team, son for the lead with 10 laps to 2002. It was his 25th career h e 's finally in the right place, second turn on Lap 31, and the

Rosberg by 17.3 seconds at the Sepang International Circuit, with defending world champion Sebastian Vettel of Red Bull third.

Female NHRA racers win: LAS VEGAS — Alexis DeJoria won in Funny Car and Erica Enders-Stevens topped t he Pro Stock field i n t h e S ummitRacing.com N H R A Nationals for the second fe-

male double in NHRA history. Enders-Stevens and Courtney Force also accomplished the feat in th e 2012 Northwest Nationals.


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014

O M M U N IT Y

kickoff meeting;Aprii10, 6:30 p.m.; at Pine Mountain Sports; www.bendbellacyclists.

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

PORTS

com.

WOMEN'S RIDES:Starting April 3, 5:30

p.m., women'sgroup roadride; Thursdays; meet at Sunnyside Sports; casual pace, 25 miles to start; led by Wenzel coaches Karen Kenlan and Anne Linton.

9 a.m.-noon for grades5-9; $55 for younger grades and$85 for older girls; ryan.cruz© bend.k12.or.us.

CLIMBING

NORDIC SKI

MIDDLE &HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAMS: Bend Endurance Academy;Wednesdays, through April 23,1:30-6 p.m.; $200; designed for beginners to intermediate levels; transportation to school and back provided by BEA; www. bendenduranceacademy.org.

COMPETITIVE NORDIC PROGRAM:For athletes 14 and over; five or six days a week; $2,200; or $1,500through May1; www.

bendenduranceacademy.org.

MIDDLE ANDHIGH SCHOOL PROGRAMS: Bend Endurance Academy;Wednesdays in April,1:30-4:15 p.m.; transportation to school and back provided by BEA; $80;

www.bendenduranceacademy.org.

CYCLING YOUTH PROGRAMS:After-school program; Wednesdays,beginning April 9;elementary school kids, 2-5 p.m.; middle school kids, 1-4:30 p.m.; MBSEF;$75; mollycimbsef.org, 541-388-0002. CASCADE TRIPLE CHALLENGE:Three-day weekendofroad cycling,hosted by Bowen Sports Performance;June 20-22; June 20, 50-mile ride on Crater Lake Loop; June 21, 73-mile ride on Aufderheide Scenic Drive to Belknap Hot Springs; June 22, 49-mile ride from Belknap Springs up Three Creeks Sno-park; $375; full supported, cost includes lodging, meals and transportation; bowensportsperformance.com or 541-977-1321. WOMEN'S CYCLING GROUP:Bend Bellas, a women's cycling group, holds its spring

MULTI-SPORT PPP TRAINING:Specific training for the Pole Pedal Paddle; Wenzel Coaching; www.wenzelcoaching.com/ pole-pedal-paddle-training-program/.

E

ND

salsa; RSVP to angelacifootzonebend.

runs of 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome;

com.

free; pia©runaroundsports.com;

MADRAS MUDRUN:Movin' Mountains Mudslinger 5K fun run or walk;April 12,9 a.m.; starts at the Madras Aquatic Center; free for Movin' Mountains and Family Fitness Challenge participants, $5 for in-district residents and $10 for outof-district competitors; 541-35-5001 ext. 4200. ROBE RUN:Bath robe/pajama costume fun run;Thursday, April 24,5:30 p.m.; free; leave from FootZone and finish at Crow's FeetCommons; freedoughnuts and chocolate milk for participants; RSVPat www.footzonebend.com. SISTERS "BETTERHALF" MARATHON:Third annual half marathon and quarter marathon;April 26, 9 a.m.; in Sisters; $25 for quarter marathon, $40 for half marathon, $60 for relay teams; www.sistershalfmarathon.com, ruandracesistersjNgmail.com. ADVENTURE RUNNING: Runs from 3.5 to 5 miles long over trails, roads, parks at10- to12-minute-mile pace;first and third Wednesdays of eachmonth,6

541-639-5953. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30p.m.on Tuesdays;w ith Max King; locations vary; interval-based; all ability levels; maxcNfootzonebend.com; 541-317-3568.

p.m.; run location changes,email laura©

RUNNING MOM'S RUNNING GROUP: Rain or shine, 3-4.5-mile runs;Thursday, April 3, 9:30 a.m.; outside FootZone; lisa.nasrcNme.com, angelacifootzonebend.com. PUB RUN TOBBC: Jog 3-5 miles from FootZoneto the Bend Brewing Company; Monday, April 7,5:30 p.m.; free run; $1 off one pint at BBC and free chips and

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

footzonebend.com. for locations; dress warm and bring a headlamp. REDMOND OREGON RUNNINGKLUB (RORK):Weekly run/walk; Saturdays at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for more information and to be added to a weekly email list, email Dan Edwards

at rundanorunt9©yahoo.com;follow Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook. REDMOND RUNNINGGROUP: Weekly runson Tuesdays at6:30 p.m.;m eetat 314 S.W. Seventh St. in Redmond for

SPRING SKIING:Spring skiing for high school and middle school students; earlyrelease Wednesdays; transportation from school provided;April2, 9,16, 23, 30; $80;

www.bendenduranceacademy.org.

SOCCER

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

ALPINE SKIING/ SNOWBOARDING FREESKIERAND SNOWBOARD PROGRAMS:MBSEFfull-time program for freeskiers and snowboarders;through April; www.mbsef.org.

Trail

LOCAL YOUTHLEAGUE: Bend FC Timbers spring developmental league; school-based, divided byage and gender;games Saturdays and Sundays;mid-March-May19; www. BendFCTimbers.com or 541-749-0462.

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

TENNIS MIXED DOUBLESTOURNEY: Sage Springs Club and Spa Mixed Doubles Tournament; April 26-27;NTRP combined 6.5,7.5, 9.0; bharrington©destinationhotels.com, 541-593-7890. SUMMIT CLINIC:Youth clinic for ages 6-14; at Summit High tennis courts;July 7-10; 8:30-9:45 for ages 6-9 and 10-11:45 for ages 10-14; coed; $65; ryan.cruz©bend.k12.or.us.

COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD

Continued from B1 The benefits of driving a short distance north from

Skiing

Bend for a late-winter run were

immediately obvious. I had left a classic Bend rain/snow t

March shower, but I was greet-

f,

ed by one of those 300 days of sunshine that Visit Bend likes to boast about when I got out of my car at the TCHA trailhead.

Starting on the southernmost part of the trail network, I opt-

ed foracounterclockwise loop of about 5 miles. My first thought while jogging north at a blistering 10-minute-mile (or so) pace was how the area reminded

MBSEF's Mini WorldCup 2014 seasonoverallstandings Top 5 U10boys —Kany on Wieche, 400; JakeFarwig, 320;JackRosell, 250;Hamish Reinhart, 245; ParkerMeredith,205. U10 girls — SequoyahGingold Walther, 400; SophieCauble,300;ReecePorino Walther, 280; MaliaLockrem,199;AnnaKleinsmith, 186. U12boys— Maxi musNye,360;com r RedlichColgan,360;Thoma s Sickler, 300;Peter Ford,1in. JohnFrancis Schiemer, 171. U12boys— OliviaO'Shaughnessy,350;Alice Bouchard,340;TigerGingoldWalther, 280;Carley PorinoWalther, Zre; SheaCampbell, 175. U14boys— JonathanWimberly,345;Morgan Tien, 320;LazGlickman,290;MagnusSchmidt, 220; Riley O'Brien,187. U14 girls —AddieBeasley, 400; AvaLiley, 280; AshleAl yder,191; Keely Buchanan,f68; Parker Campb ell,160.

Bowling

me of the Badlands east of Bend. If you do not appreciate the rugged beauty of juniper trees and lava rocks, the

Leagueleadersandhigh scores Lava Lanes,Bend March 10-16

TCHA pedestrian trails prob-

ably are not for you. Most of the trails at the TCHA are in

canal remains, which gives Beau Eaates/The Bulletin the paths a meandering river- Newly placed markers dot trail junctions making navigation on the network simple. like flow that makes for easy running. On my jog, I trekked north about 2 miles to a rem- to love. (The old canals are to my car was some kind of trip was a welcome respite, nant the BLM labeled "Canal about as wide as a classic dou- former structure made entire- well w o rt h t h e 2 0 - minute Raceway Structure," which bletrack or old jeep trail, just ly of lava rock — House'? Fire drive from town. turned out to be probably the without the two tracks.) The lookout'? Irrigation office?If you go, though, do it soon, best-preservedcanal section contrasting trails mi x w e l l, along a small ridge. The inner as the TCHA is ideal for coolin the tr ail n etwork. From and joggers and hikers can 12-year-old in me could not er temperaturesbut probathere I continued my loop easily design loops that high- stop thinking about how this bly will not be so fun during back toward th e t r a ilhead, light either style. would be the greatest fort of warmer weather as the trail using a section of connector Heading south on the sec- all time. (The super fort sits becomes dustier. Even last trails that were built specifi- ond half of my jog I climbed a about halfway between trail week, parts of the trail were cally to unite the old canals for few hundred feet in elevation, markers No. 4 and No. 5.) fairly sandy. hikersand joggers.Where the which opened up some gorIn all, I spent almost two That being said, the Tumacanal trails are fairly straight geous views of the Cascade hours running, taking photos lo Canal Historic Area seems with gradual turns, perfect for Range. Visibility was a bit lim- and exploring side trails in the destined to become a winter making good time and real- ited when I was at the TCHA, new Tumalo Canal Historic trail running gem, similar to ly striding out, the connector but I imagine a bluebird day Area and did not see another what Horse Butte and Horse trails feature sharper angles, would showcase the T hree souL Having spent too many Ridge have grown into for 10more inclines, and are more Sisters, Broken Top and 0thlate evenings trying to jam in cal mountain bikers. of the true singletrack Central er mountain peaks nicely. An a run on the Deschutes River — Reporter: 541-383-0305; Oregon runners have come added bonus on the way back Trail with the rest of Bend, this beastes@bendbulletin.com.

CASINOFUN — TheGang; MikeyMoldenhauer 236/664;EdieRoebuck181/526 Hls AND HERs— Ican't believeit's notGutter ;JaymeDahlke 289/737; Carolyn WiIth212/556 GUYS ANDGALS—TheWeakest Link; Tobycundell 275//68;MargaretDonohue266/6/8 LAVALANESCLASSIC— Team 8;Dave Grimes 269/699;MoniqueMccleary 216/610 TEATIMERS—BendVFW; Debbie Smith 215/610

LATEcoMER S — No Threat; Jane supnet

193/527 FREEBREATHERS — Mixed Nuts;Gary Davis 247/71 9;sandiDavis190/532

DRAFT— IFLP;Wilie Sernett 234/638; Susan Waltosz165/436 HAVE-A-BALL — Team 6; Ryan Pierce 245/677; AlexisHil-Gruenbergf90/566 GREASED LIGHTENING — MarkitDude;Rueben Pierce225/638 SusanBenson202/526 REJECT S—Wild Bunch; David Pete258//01; Gail Kirk 220/612 WEDNESDAY INC— SplitHappens;JaymeDahlke 290/760 ;DaveGrimes279/799 TNT — Big Dog-Little Dog; JesseWhitson 280/743 ShannonGrimes184/512 PROG RESSIVE —Hil's Horseshoeing; Bryan Meeker264/719 T.G.I.F.— RedHots;BryanMeeker 269/716; shari Hamel236/6818

RimrockLanes, Prineville Week 29 Grizzly MountainMen'sLeague Team highs — Scratchseries: CarsonOil, 2949;Scratchgame: TheUdder Guys, 990;Handicap series:Killer WhaleAudio, 3275;Handicap gameJandLAuto1134 Men's highs —Scratchseries: MarkHanken, 73t; Scratchgame:Matt Griffin, 265; Handicap series:JackHamilton, 751; Handicap game: Jake McClennen,271. Week 28 50+

Team highs — Scratchseries: Hot Shots, 19t1; Scratchgame: Rusty Relics, 598;Handicap series:Easy4, 2392; Handicapgame: A &A Enterprises,832. Men's highs — Scratchseries: BobCollins, 613; Scratchgame:RickMayers,204;Handicapseries: ChrisWorthington, 659; Handicap game: Buzz Stringer,220. Women's highs —Scratchseries: Iris Carlson, 494;Scratchgame: Stela Oia,160; Handicap seri es:RubyGroshong,613;Handicapgame:Darlee Stringer,209.

COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF SKIING LOCal maSter winS internatianal event —Bend'sTim Hil, who trains with the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Fund's masters program, won the slalom at the FISMasters World Championships in Gostling, Austria, on March 27.Hill, an orthopedic physiatrist at The Center, competed in the 'A' class. — Bulletin staff report

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

WINTER SPORTS COMMENTARY

IS MOVING TO BEND!

U.S. figureskating flop notthe endof the world By Philip Hersh Chicago Tribune

Let's get the worst news out of the way

munds, 15, took eighth. Good news: Wagner, still just 22, finished her rocky season with a solid fourth in the free skate, and Edmunds

Olympics, is indisputably the top U.S. woman heading into a new Olympic quadrennium that will not include the

Bad news: Aii three U.S. women fin-

likely will not include Asada and 2014 Olympic and world bronze medalist Carolina Kostner of Italy, both among the best in the world since 2005. But the

right now. For the first time since 1994 and just was fifth. the second inthe past 50 years, Team

USA came home from the World Figure Skating Championships without a medal. This time, at the meet and season that

ended Saturday in Saitama, Japan, with homey Mao Asada decisively winning her third world singles title, the U.S. performance wasn't quite as bad as 1994. Twenty years ago — coincidentally, also a post-Olympics worlds in Japanthe highest U.S. finish was sixth in pairs. S aturday, Gracie Gold and th e i c e

danceteam ofMadison Chock and Evan Bates wound up fifth.

ished behind two 15-year-old Russians, Yulia Lipnitskaya (second) and Anna Pogorilaya (fourth). And Russian Olympic champion Adelina Sotnikova, 17, didn't even compete. Three other Russians — one 15, two 14 — swept the 2014

world junior podium. disciplines since 2008. ed theirrecord worlds medal drought to eight years. The longest such gap in the previous 75 years was three seasons

— the three immediately after the 1961 three world spots in women's singles plane crash that killed the elite of U.S. and danceeven without Olympic cham- skating. Gold's was among the generally unpions Meryl Davis and Charlie White, who moved on to "Dancing With the derwhelming performances in the womStars," after having regained a third in en's final Saturday, with a fall and a men's singles. popped double axel giving her seventh Two-time U.S. champion Ashley Wag- in the free skate. Yet Gold, 18, fourth a t

t h e S ochi

On the corner of Bridgeford & wilson

debate over Kim's loss to Sotnikova at

cabiy chosen by U.S. Figure Skating for the Olympics but not the worlds, seems ready to inherit the mantle as his coun-

Bad news: The U.S. women extend-

924 wllso", s"'te F

the Olympics will keep Queen Yuna in the discussion. Good news: Jason Brown, 19, inexpli-

Good news: Next year will be the first time the U.S. has three spots in three

Good news: The U.S. held on to its

ner was seventh overall, and Polina Ed-

world's top skater of the past six seas ons, South Korea's Yuna K im , a n d

PUlQPean CQr CQre

try's leading man. Nathan Chen, 14, third at this year's world juniors, could

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Actually, here is the very worst news: Next year vocal music will be allowed in

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MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014• THE BULLETIN

WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT

B5

FINAL FOUR At AT&TStadium Arlington, Texas

Maryland upsets top seeded Tennessee

NATIONALSEMIFINALS Saturday, April 5 UConn (30-8) vs. Florida (36-2), 3:09 p.m. Kentucky (28-10) vs. Wisconsin (30-7), 5:49 p.m.

! I

NATIONALCHAMPIONSHIP Monday, April 7 Semifinal winners, 6:10 p.m.

The Associated Press LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Maryland coach Brenda Frese wanted her Terrapins to send a

Foursome

reminder that they're still playing too. They did just that by sending home an eight-time

Continued from 61 Facing the Badgers in the other

national champion and putting themselves a

win away from a Final Four. Alyssa Thomas scored a career-high 33 points and grabbed 13 rebounds as fourth-seededMaryland upset No. 1 seed Tennessee 73-62 on Sunday in the Louisville Region semifinal. Maryland celebrated with a brief message ona board in the lockerroom: "THEY

national semifinal will be all those

Kentucky kids, once written off as too young and inexperienced to play for a title before they head off to the NBA.

This Final Four contains no upstarts or mid-major party crashers,

just big boys with big chips on their shoulders.

KNOW OUR NAME NOW!"

"Maybe people will start talking about Maryland and what Maryland's accomplished," Frese said. "We have a story too.

Frank FranklinII /The Associated Press

Connecticut's Ryan 6oatright celebrates after his team defeated Michigan State 60-54 in a regional final at the NCAA tournament, Sunday in New York.

We have tradition. I'm so proud of how these kids fought." The Terrapins (27-6) reached their ninth regional final and first since 2012. They did it against a program the Terps had beaten only four times previously and never be-

onn es eu se

fore in the NCAA tournament. Maryland

improved to 5-10 against Tennessee (29-6) with a little revenge for their previous tour-

nament loss in the 1989 Final Four. Guard Katie Rutan said Frese fired them

up before tipoff. "No one has really been talking about us all year," Rutan said. "Just to come out and throw that punch, show them that we're

here, we are Maryland and we are going down fighting no matter what. We're going to come out on top."

The Lady Vols' self-titled "GrindFor9" in their chase for a ninth national champion-

ship is over. They will miss the Final Four for a sixth straight season. This hurts even more with the national championship game being played April 8 in Nashville just 179 miles from their home in Knoxville. "We're Tennessee, and we're not happy

that we're not playing for a national championship," Tennessee coach Holly Warlick said. "That's in our DNA."

Thomas scored the most points allowed to a single player by Tennessee this season, and she also extended her school record with

her 65th career double-double. Lexie Brown added 14 points, Laurin Mincy had 11 and Shatori Walker-Kimbrough 10. But Warlick said Thomas hurt them the most with Tennessee unable to find a way to stop her.

Also on Sunday: Louisville 73, LSU 47: LOUISVILLE, Ky.

— Shoni Schimmel scored 19 points, Tia Gibbs added five 3-pointers and third-seeded Louisville rolled seventh-seeded LSU to

reach the regional final of the NCAA tournament. Facing an injury-riddled Tigers squad that dressed just eight players, the Cardinals (33-4) rung up another rout highlighted by a season-best 12 3-pointers with the two seniors leading the way. Schimmel

was 3 of 5 from beyond the arc and three other Cardinals contributed. Stanford 82, Penn State 57: STANFORD,

Calif. — Chiney Ogwumike had 29 points and 15 rebounds, Mikaela Ruef produced a career performance on both ends, and sec-

ond-seededStanford reached the regional final on its home floor. The Cardinal (32-3) built a big first-half lead and rolled against the third-seeded Lady Lions to move into Tuesday night's regional final against No. 4

• The EastRegionalsgoto the Huskiesafter beating Michigan St. By Rachel Cohen

MEN'5 COLLEGEBASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT from the floor.

The Associated Press

Trailing 51-49 with more than two minutes left,

Michigan State had a chance to tie or take the lead. He couldhave transferredwhen academic sanc- Payne threw the ball away, and Napier drilled a tions barred the Huskies from the NCAA tourna- jumper on the other end. ment his junior season. But the guard wanted to After Payne's free throws pulled the Spartans payback the school for the joy of a national title his back within two, Keith Appling was whistled for freshman year, for his struggles as a sophomore. a foul — the fifth on Michigan State's other senior Napier sure did that Sunday, carrying UCo- starter — for contact with Napier on a 3-point atnn back to the Final Four in front of thousands of tempt. Napier extended the lead to 56-51, and after roaring Huskies fans at Madison Square Garden. Travis Trice missed a 3, Phillip Nolan slipped free He scored 17 of his 25 points in the second half in a for a dunk that clinched the victory. "We got what we deserved today," Izzo said. "I 60-54 upset of fourth-seeded Michigan State. The East Regional's most outstanding player tried to tell these guys that, when you get to the hit three huge free throws with 30.6 seconds left, tournament, you got to bring it every second. And making clutch shot after clutch shot just as Kem- today Connecticut did, and we just kind of weren't ba Walker did when Napier was a freshman. as good as we have been." The Huskies (30-8) rallied from a nine-point secRyan Boatright made four steals as Michigan ond-half deficit to become the first No. 7 seed to State committed 16 turnovers. Some were caused reach the Final Four since the tournament expand- by UConn's quickness, others by poor decisions ed to 64 teams in 1985. by the Spartans. Izzo thought his team, a popu"His will to win — you could just see it," said lar pick to win it all after finally getting healthy in NEW YORK — Shabazz Napier owed UConn.

Gary Harris, who led Michigan State with 22 points. "He wasn't going to let his team lose."

The Spartans' seniors become the first four-year

March, looked tired. DeAndre Daniels shut down Branden Dawson, who scored 24 points in Michigan State's Sweet 16

players recruited by Tom Izzo to fail to make a Final Four.

win over top-seeded Virginia. Dawson attempted just three field goals, making one, to finish with

North Carolina 65, South Carolina 58:

That changed when the ferocious

Gators (36-2) rode their chomping defense through a 30-game winning streak capped by Saturday's 62-52 win over bracket darling Dayton. "We didn't start off the exact way that we should have, but coach Donovan continued to remind us and

humble us and help us see that, in order to get where we want to get to,

the end goal, we have to continue to chase greatness every single day and stay in the moment," Florida for-

ward Patric Young said. To win another title, the Gators

will have to go through the last two teams to beat them this season (UConn and Wisconsin) or their biggest SEC rival (Kentucky). The Huskies won the 2011 nation-

al title with coach Jim Calhoun and one-man show Kemba Walker.

Things went sour in Storrs after that. Calhoun retired in 2012 and UConn was barred from the NCAA

tournament last season for failing to meet the NCAA's academic progress measure.

UConn's upperclassmen decided to

through," Ollie said. Then there's Bo.

run behind another do-it-all-player, former Walker understudy Napier. With their 60-54 win over Michigan

State on Sunday, the Huskies (30-8) became the first No. 7 seed to reach the Final Four since the tournament

expanded to 64 teams in 1985. UConn beat Florida 65-64 way back on Dec. 2, the Gators' last loss

this season. "We play a great Florida team and we're going to be well prepared, because I know about these

Wisconsin's tell-it-like-it-is coach

Late shot lifts I(entucky overMichigan pion and runner-up out of the same tournament.

INDIANAPOLIS — The shot

For this game-winner, Harri-

had been a regular at the Final Four, taking his father, Butch, to every one since 1976 as a birthday gift. Bo had a hard time getting there with his team, though, winning over 700 games, playing in the NCAA tournament 13 straight years and reaching the Sweet 16 six timesand not one trip to the Final Four.

came from NBA range, and if things play out as expected, Aaron Harrison and a lot of those Kentucky kids will be playing in that league soon enough. First, they're heading to the Final Four — a trip to Big D cour-

son took a handoff from his twin brother, Andrew, in the corner

Bo and Badgers (30-7) get their chance now after pulling out an

and dribbled three times to the

emotional 64-63 win over top-seeded

top left of the arc. He was standing a good three feet behind the

Arizona in the West Regional final

tesy of Harrison's unforgettable

on the hand from the Michigan

teams that he had of kids and their

big shot.

guard ashe shot.No matter.The ball rattled in.

first championships and how they acted and just the joy," Ryan said. "These guys have had some others,

2.3 seconds left Sunday to lift the Wildcats and all those freshmen to a 75-72 win over Michigan

and the program's 16th trip to the Final Four.

He backpedaled slowly, almost expressionless, after ball hit twine. Teammates Dakari Johnson an d J u l iu s R a ndle

line when he elevated over Caris LeVert and took a bit of contact

Aaron Harrison scored 12 points off four 3-pointers over

the last 8:05 and was Calipari's obvious choice to take the David J. Phillip/The Associated Press Kentucky's Andrew Harrison nnd game-winner. "I've been around guys who Michigan's Caris LeVert go after a loose ball during the second half make these kind of plays," Caliof Sunday's game in Indianapolis. pari said. "I've always said, 'You cannotbe afraid to miss.'He's not afraid to miss. That's the whole

chased him down. basketball." "Making that shot and seeing The Wolverines (28-9) ended my teammates so happy and their season one win shy of a turning toward me, it's the best second straight Final Four. feeling in the world," Harrison What a ride this has been for SBld. this group of Wildcats, an allMichigan's Ni k S t auskas new collection of McDonald's missed a desperationheave at the buzzerand then, itwas Har-

All-Americans who were touted

rison's turn on the bottom of a dog pile. Make that a puppy pile. Eighth-seeded Kentucky is the first all-freshman starting line-

0, then dismissed out of hand when the bad losses and bad

up to make the Final Four since the Fab Five at Michigan in 1992.

The Wildcats (28-10) will play Wisconsin next Saturday outside of Dallas at AT&T Stadium.

during the first half of Sundny's game in Louisville, Ky.

past three seasons.

guys' heart, and that's what got us

The 6-foot-6 forward made a 3-pointer from about 24 feet with

Timothy D. Easley/The Associated Press

lost in the regional final each of the

give the Huskies the lead for good.

The Associated Press

Maryland forward Alyssa Thomas(25) shots against Tennessee forward Cierra 6urdick

Donovan continued to produce

winning teams at Florida, but the biggest wins eluded the Gators. They

er when Daniels completed a three-point play to

By Eddie Pells

on the NCAA tournament stage.

changed his mind after the introductory news conference.

11 for 29 from behind the arc. Harris was 4 for 9 on 3s, but his teammates were a combined 10 for 32

Rountree converted a pair of free throws

victory against the Gamecocks with another

with the NBA's Orlando Magic, then

stick it out instead of transferring and put together another magical bracket

with 1:14 left and two more at the 36.4-sec-

ond markto help seal it for the No. 4 seed Tar Heels (27-9), who backed up their December

he acceptedthe head-coaching job

"As the game got closer and closer to ending, it five points. The 6-foot-10, 245-pound Payne hit two long was on my mind a lot, every huddle," said big man Adreian Payne, who had 13 points and nine re- jumpers to put Michigan State up 32-23 less than bounds but was repeatedly pushed to the perime- four minutes into the second half. But Napier startter by UConn's defenders. ed driving, getting the bigger Appling in foul trouThe undersized Huskies matched Michigan bleand UConn back inthe game. "When Coach looks at me a certain way, I just State's physical play box-out for box-out, holding the Spartans (29-9) to just six offensive rebounds know I got to be more aggressive," said Napier, and six points in the paint. who passed Ray Allen for fourth on the Huskies' "We're physical, too," said second-year coach all-time scoring list with 1,925 points. Kevin Ollie, who is now 4-0 in the NCAA tournaAfter hitting four straight free throws to tie the ment after replacing mentor Jim Calhoun. "Don't score at 32 with 12:38 left, Napier was struck in the get it mixed up. We are predators out there." face by Harris — the UConn guard was called for a UConn dared Michigan State to shoot 3-point- foul on the play — and left the court with his nose ers, and the Spartans nearly made enough, going gushing blood. He was back less than a minute lat-

seed North Carolina. STANFORD, Calif. — Diamond DeShields escaped two close calls with injury to score 19 points, leading North Carolina. Brittany

Donovan won a pair of national titles in Gainesville with Joakim Noah, Corey Brewer and Al Horford, all top-10 NBA picks in the 2007 NBA draft. After that second title,

"They made a great shot,"

said Stauskas, who led the sec-

ond-seededWolverines with 24 points. "I thought we did a pretty good job contesting it. It's part of

as the team that could go 40basketball piled up in January and February. Coach John Calipari got things turned around by March, and for the second straight game

thing about making those kind of plays. And if he does miss, he's going to shoot it again." It wasn't al l

H a r r ison, of

course. While he was being shut down early, it was Marcus Lee — surprisingly — keeping the Wildcats in the game. Lee, another of the McDonald's

"Ican remember some ofthegreat

but that's all I wanted to see."

Rounding out this foursome could be the most fearsome bunch of the

bracket. Kentucky won the 2012 national

championshipbehind coach John Calipari's get-the-best-players-nomatter-how-long-they-stay philosophy. Cal brought in another heralded group of one-and-doners and they were touted as the team to beat, ranked No. 1 in the preseason.

After a string of losses, including three in five games, the kid Cats were out of the polls and supposedly out of contention. Well, look at them now. S howcasing t h ei r t a l ent a n d

All-American freshmen on Cali-

depth, the Wildcats (28-10) are playing with a cohesiveness and confi-

pari's roster, had scored a total of

dence that wasn't there earlier in the

ninepoints since thebeginning of January,relegated to the bench

season, racing into the Final Four after pulling out a last-second victory over Michigan.

after an early season illness.

In this one, he got minutes that would have normally gone to the rison made the shot that gave injured Willie Cauley-Stein, and the Wildcats the lead for good. finished with 10 points and eight On Friday, he made the key 3 in rebounds. Eight of those points Kentucky's 74-69 win over Lou- came on put-back dunks that isville. Kentucky is the first team were part of Kentucky's 18 ofto knock the defending cham- fensive rebounds. in the Midwest Regional, Har-

on Saturday, which would have been Butch Ryan's 90th birthday.

"I can't believe it; we went through so much," said Kentucky's Aaron Harrison, who hit a 3-pointer with

2.3 seconds left in the 75-72 win over the Wolverines. "We went through

a lot of ups and downs, and we're blessed to be going to the Final Four." They are not alone.


B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014

T EE TO

R EEN

cose so orte a o

a me

By Doug Ferguson

two shrines in sports. The explanation

The Associated Press

ORLANDO, Fla. — No one should

from Jack Peter, the chief operating officer of the World Golf Hall of Fame, was

have been more thrilled than Vijay Singh

bordering on offensive, if not ridiculous.

to hear about the voting changes for the

"We believe it puts the decision-mak-

World Golf Hall of Fame. Singh is already in. He was elected in 2005 with 56 percent

Hall of Famer," he said. Some of the administrators — mayappreciation and sense of history than

as player of the year. He is among the greats in the game. In sweeping changes announced Sunday, a 16-member panel with a majority Nick Wass/The Associated Press file of golf administrators now decides who Would Vijay Singh be going to the Hall of gets in the Hall of Fame. Imagine them Fame under the newvoting system? debating the merits of a guy who has

some writers who once had a ballot. But, for the most part, they're not in the business of chronicling the game, but to make money off it. The induction ceremony long ago be-

COMMENTARY

ing policy. trators, which includes the Ryder Cup

Commissioner Tim Finchem said. "But director for Europe, the head of public we like this one better." services for the USGA, the communicaThat would suggest the old system tions director of the PGA of America and was working fine. And if something isn't the vice chairman of IMG. Six are Hall of broken, did it really need to be fixed? Fame members. Two are writers.

than a celebration of greatness when it lowered the minimum vote required for election from 75 percent to 65 percent,

That would suggest that Dan Jenkins, in-

everything to do with who attended the vote." A candidate has to receive 75 peri nduction ceremony, which now w i l l cent (12 votes), and there can be no more be everyother year.At recent ceremo- than five members of an induction class. nies, the chatter was increasingly louder The co-chairs of that panel are Arnold about how few Hall of Fame members Palmer, Gary Player, Nancy Lopez and bothered to show up. Annika Sorenstam. So that's four people Last May, only eight members were who will be expected at the next inducthere, all of them women. That wasn't a tion ceremony in May 2015, along with surprise. The LPGA Hall of Fame, which the six Hall of Famers from the nominatexisted before it was morphed into the ing panel (Curtis Strange, Johnny Miller,

ducted two years ago, has never covered a college football game.

World Golf Hall of Fame, was seen as the

Karrie Webb, Carol Mann, Beth Daniel

highest honor for its players. The men caremore about green jacketsand claret jugs than a plaque and a concrete slab with their signature on the walkway at the World Golf Village in St. Augustine.

and Peter Alliss).

Golf writers now have been minimized. There was little, if any, consulta-

C

The rest of the voting panel includes the heads of the PGA Tour, LPGA, Eu-

ropean Tour, PGA of America, The

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example, they would get a ballot only

Tourney

if theycovered 250 tournaments or 50

Continued from B1

minimum requirement for writers. For

majors.

Though the schedule is still

tion over the changes. It should be noted that the World Golf Foundation board — which now has sev-

Masters, the USGA, the R&A, the Japan LPGA and the Sunshine Tour in South

en of the 16 votes — once was in charge

now: A20-member subcommittee will meet

Africa. They are joined by three writers.

They selected former President George H.W. Bush, presumably because he was

this spring to nominate five male and

player. All of them on both panels were good choices. Missing from the process is the independent voice of the writers. That's how it works in baseball and football, the best

No one understandsgreatness like a

Ocn GKEij" sd Onlj

OLFCOURSE'

The solution would have been simple.

If there are minimum requirements for players to be nominated (15 wins or two majors), there could easily have been a

Here's how the voting process works

20 committee members are adminis-

Vo

He also said the media landscape was

panel that will "discuss the merits and

people from the Veterans and Lifetime Achievement categories. Twelve of those

r

CK BUTTE RANCHc

most votes over 50 percent would get in.

Peter said the previous voting body of 300 people was getting "a bit unwieldy."

~C"i.f-,-t

OUNTY f,

and then created a loophole that said if no one received 65 percent, whoever had the

changing (true) and that writers were under pressure to cover other sports.

five female players, along with three

JE FERSQN' ~.

came more about a celebration of golf

The nominations go to the 16-member

What was wrong with the old system had nothing to do with who voted, and

r.

a as..

be evenmost ofthem — have a greater

ey titles and one Jack Nicklaus Award

"We liked the old system," PGA Tour

WarmSprings

ing of who gets into the Hall of Fame in the right hands — individuals who know the history of the game, have a passion for the game, who know the players, who understand the qualities that make up a

of the vote from a panel that consisted mainly of golf writers, most of whom the big Fijian had blown off over the years. By then,Singh had 25 PGA Tour victories, three majors, two PGA Tour mon-

an active and very acrimonious lawsuit against the PGA Tour over its anti-dop-

ttt © KAH-N E.TA RESO +; =,i------

of the Lifetime Achievement category. honorary chairman of The First Tee and

the Presidents Cup. He loved golf, and he was known to play it quickly. And voting for the Hall of Fame is now

in the right hands?

GOLF ROUNDUP

'e

member courses.

"Right now we have pretty much every golf course that is on the Trail committed to

fluid as organizers work out

doing an event at some point during the season," Huffer tournamentevery other week says. "The pricing is pretty during the golf season at 16 darn good. Even the higher-end golf courses want to Trail facilities. The single-day tourna- go ahead and make it affordments will be played either able and just try to fill the golf on Tuesdays, Wednesdays or course up." Thursdays through October; In fact, Bennett sent a surf ormats will v ar y an d w i l l vey about the series to the be determined by th e host other Trail member courses course. The entry fee for each earlier this year and says he tournament will range from got an overwhelmingly affir$80 to $125, which includes mative response. "Avid golfers love to comgreen fee and prize purse. In some cases, such as at pete and the Golf Trail tour Tetherow, which will charge is a great way to keep peo$100 for its event, the entry ple engaged in the game fee represents a significant throughout the season," says discount off the course's usu- Alana H ughson, COVA's al peak rates. president and CEO. "The G olfers wil l b e a b l e t o Central Oregon Golf Trail sign up for each tournament does a great job of creating through the Golf Trail's web- programs like the Golf Trail site, www.centraloregongolf- players card (a discount card Trail.com. sold each spring by the Trail) A series of tournaments and the Golf Trail Tournaa round th e r e gion i s n o t ment Series, providing COVA details, the plan is to host a

new. In fact, the Golf Trail

terrific product to market to

series borrows from a run

our visitors who have a passion for golf."

o f tournaments during t h e

winter months organized by Pat Huffer, the head pro at Crooked River Ranch.

"It's basically going to mir-

ror what I do with the Central Oregon Winter Series,

only do it during the (regular golf) season," Huffer says.

For the series to be success-

ful, though, it ultimately will have to appeal to golfers both at home and from out of the

area. That is still the unknown. Bennett, for one, thinks it

will happen. "Huffer is getting 120 guys in his Central Oregon Winmember facilities in that it ter Series and they're paywill allow them to generate ing rates that are similar, alsome rounds during the week though obviously a little bit when they might not other- less," Bennett says. "If we can wise fill the golf course." get 120 guys for a tournament The new series has three in the dead of wi nter, why essential goals, according to couldn't we do the same for "Now it will be somewhat of an additional benefit to the

k

i,

Bennett: create a competitive

4 '

Eric Gay/The Associated Press

Steven Bowditch hits out of the rough on the second hole during the final round of the Texas Open on Sunday in San Antonio.

BIG

wherever ourtarget markets

Texas win givesBowditch Masters berth The Associated Press SAN ANTONIO — Steven Bowditch held on to win the Texas Open in windy

Other golf news • A list of qualifiers for the 2014 Masters in Golf Scoreboard,B7

conditions Sunday for his first PGA

Hadley, the Puerto Rico Open winner,

Tour victory and a spot in the Masters.

needed at least a sixth-place finish, but

The 30-year-old Australian bogeyed ing a green shirt. "And it happened a lot the par-5 18th for a 4-over 76 for a one- today."

closed with an 80 to tie for 56th at 5 over. Palmer needed a top-three finish and

stroke victory.

"I'm over the moon. I really can't believe it," said Bowditch, who attempted suicide in 2006 and has fought depression throughout his career. It was the highest closing score by a winner since Vijay Singh finished with

Bowditch, based in Dallas, entered the had an 82 to also tie for 56th. week 339th in the world and had only Bowditch played the front nine in two top-10 finishes in eight years on the 3-over39,m aking adoublebogey on the tour. He won once on the Australasian par-4 fourth. He countered a bogey on circuit and twice on the Web.Com Tour. the par-3 13th with a birdie on the par-5 "He's been a battler. He's gone through

on 18.

onship, and the highest in a non-major

Championship two weeks ago.

Onthepar-3 16th, he gotup-and-down after missing the green. He pushed his drive on the par-4 17th, hit his approach on the green and two-putted, then pulled his tee shot left on 18, recovered with

Bowditch finished at 8-under 280 at TPC San Antonio and earned $1,116,000.

is by raising more funds for The idea has not been tough to sell for the Trail's

Senden waited about an hour after his

round to shake Bowditch's hand. "That last putt wasn't his best, but to

finish it off he was as cool as a cucumber "Every time I got out of check, looking really," Senden said. "I'm proud to be his a shot to the fairway and reached the ahead to the Masters and winning golf mate." green in three. "I just drew back on some experieventsand making my speeches before Will MacKenzie and Daniel SummerI was finished, I had to pull myself in hays tied for second. MacKenzie shot 70, ence," Bowditch said. check every time," said Bowditch, wear- and Summerhays had a 71. SeeRoundup/B7

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a 4-over 76in the 2004 PGA ChampisinceFred Couples had a 5-over 77 in the

might be," Bennett says. "The way we're going to be able to the Trail."

Chesson Hadley and Ryan Palmer missed chances to get into the Masters through the top 50 in the world ranking.

the middle of summer?

"We think it is a pretty cool environment to give golfers a reason to play a particular concept." Central Oregon course, fill — Reporter: 541-617-7868, up tee sheets during a weekzhaliibendbulletin.com. day, and ultimately help raise funds for the Central Oregon Golf Trail's marketing camLittle ad paigns outside the region. "The goal really is to make Central Oregon as attractive a place as we possibly can to savings!

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B7

GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its weekly local golf results listings and events calendar. Clearly legible items should bo faxed to the sports doparlment, 641-8850881, emailed to sportsObendbulletin.com, ormailedfoP.D.Box6020;Bend,OR97708.

Dosorl PeaksLadies: LadiesClubat Desert PeaksinMadras.Timesvaryeach Wednesday.For moreinformation,call DesertPeaksat541-475-6368. Every Women'sGolf Association: TheCentral

OregonChapter of theEvery Women'sGolf Association meetsmultiple timeseachweek — including weeknightleaguesandSaturday play —during the golf season.Eventsareopento anyoneinterested in Club Results joining the EWGA. For more information orto join the EWGA;EileenHaasatedhaasO bendbroadband.com EAGLECREST or visit www .ewgaco.com. Men's Club,March19 JuniperLadies:Juniper LadiesGolf Clubmeets at RidgeCourse weekly onWednesday morning. All womenplayers Throe NotBestBalls .juniperla1(tie)RogerEdgerly/Jerry Volf/JohnBoynton/Mac welcome.For moreinformation, visit www dies.com. Heitzhausen,193;HelmutBloo/ReedSloss/SamPuri/ Ladies of The Greens: Ladi e s of the Greens Cliff Shrock,193.3, TimSwope/SteveAustin/Mike Bessonette/Billy Balding, 194. 4, MarkScott/Mike women'sgolf club at TheGreensat Redmond golf Stearns/PatMoore/Bill McCugough, 197. 5, Jerry course playsweeklyonTuesdays through October. Coday/ Don Nash/Terry Black/SteveGould,199.6, Newmembersarewelcome.For moreinformation, call TheGreensatRedmondat541-923-0694. Jim Hawesk/RonWolfe/AngeloRadati/Bob Reed,201. Ladies of the Lakes:Ladiesof theLakesgolf Men's Club, March27 club atMeadowLakesGolf Courseis aweekly womaf ChallengeCourse en's golfleaguethatplays onThursdaysat9 a.m.SeaTwo-ManScramble A Flight — 1, Joe Perry/ReedSloss, 55. 2, Jim son runsthroughSeptember. Agwomen playerswith Trench/JimKelly, 56. 3 (tie), DanBroadley/Hank aGHINhandicapwelcome.For more information: call Cavender, 57; HelmutBloo/Bill Radanof, 57.5 (tie), JeanGregerson at 541-475-6595 orthegolf shopat DennisRector/KenWellman, 58; Randy Myers/Steve 541-447-7113. LoslTracksLadies:TheLadiesLeagueatLost Gould, 58.Jim Hawkes/BobHocker,58. B Flight — 1,JohnBoynton/Michael Mooberry, TracksGolfClubin Bendplays weekly onTuesdays. Ag women golfers arewelcome.For moreinformation, 57. 2 (tie),Bill Fffnn/JimO'Neil, 58;MikeReynolds/ Biff McCullough, 58. 4,Jerry Rogers/Peter Brown,59. call theproshopat 541-385-1818. Locl Tracks Men:Men's club atLostTracks Golf 5, DonWyat/Bill Balding,60. Club holdsweeklyeventsonWednesdaysandThursdays throughoutthegolf season.For moreinformaPRONGHO RN tion, call LostTracksat 541-385-1818or visit www . Central OregonWinter Series, March21 losttracks.com. at NicklausCourse MeadowLakesMen: Men'sGolf Association at Scramble MeadowLakes Golf Coursein Prineville playsweekly First Flight —Gross:1, JasonPigot/DonOrrell, o n Wednesdays.Costfortheleagueis$32andyou 62. 2 (tie),ZachLampert/Chuck Wilcox, 63;BobGar- must haveanOGAhandicap(total costwith handicap za/Elruce Neelands, 63.4, JeffWard/Elrad Patrick, 64. is$65).Thepublic iswelcome.For more in5, MikePalen/MikePatron, 65. Net:1, Scott Brown / services DonOlson,58.5.2,PatO'Gorman/LesBryan,59.7.3, formation:541-447-7113. Meadow LakesSenior Men:For golfers age60 MichaelJackson/MattPinkerton,60.4.4, MarkScott/ ndolder,theleagueplaysonTuesdaysatMeadow Roger Palmer,62.7.5,JeffFought/BradRossa,62.9. a Golf Coursein Prinevige. Costfor theleagueis 6,PatHuff er/MarcBeebe,63.1.7,RosieCook/Bob Lakes $17 andyou must havean OGA handicap(total cost Stirling, 63.3. w ith handi cap seryicesis $50). Thepublic is welcome. SecondFlight — Gross:1 (tie), DeweySpringmoreinformation:541-447-7113. er/GeorgeLienkaemper, 71; LyleZurflu/ToddGood- ForQuail Run Women: Quail RunGolf Course ew, 71; EdCarson/Allen Heinly, 71.4, MikeReuter/ women's18-hol e golf leagueplaysat 8 a.m.during Ken Schofield,72.5, MarkGarcia/Matt Burgess,73. the golfseason. golfers arewelcome.For Net:1r Gary Johnson/Billy Rom aine, 55.3. 2, Howard moreinformation,Interested call PennyScott at 541-598-7477. Zangari/DenniBrockm s an,58.1. 3, Bil Beckley/Scott River' s Edge Men:The Men'sClubatRiver' s Hakala,58.8.4, JohnBearden/Dennis Cooper, 59. 5, Edge fCoursein Bendplays weekly tournaments JerryHarris/FranklinEarls,59.4.6, EdHagstrom/Ron onTuGol e s d a y . Me mb e r s o f t h e me n ' s c l u b a n d o t h e r Lemp,59.6.7,BillDaw/VeneDunham,60.9. River's EdgeGolf Clubmen with anestabKPs —0-12handicaps: JasonPigot, No.3; Ed interested ishedUSG Ahandicap areinvited to participate.For Carson ,No.17.13andhigher:Biff Beckley,No.7; lmore informationor to register, call River's Edgeat GaryJohnson,No.13. 541-389-2828. Skins —Gross:O'Gorman/Bryan, Nos.2, 16; River' s Edge Women: TheWomen' s Club at Garza/Neelands,No. 8. Not: Warren/Goldner, No. River' sEdgeGolf Coursein Bend playseachWednes1; Zangari/Brockm an, No.7; Garza/Neelands, No.8; day during golf season.Members arewelcome Baker/Palmer,No.9; Bearden/Cooper, No.15; O'Gor- and shouldthe signupbythepreceding Saturdayfor the man/Br yan,No.16;Johnson/Romaine,No.17;Daw/ tournaments. For moreinformation, orto register, call Dunham, No.18. River'sEdgeat541-389-2828. SunriverRosorlMon:Men'sclubat Sunriver ResortplaysWednesdaytournamentsatthe Meadows or Woodlandscourseswith shotgunstarts around9 a.m. Cost is$55for annualmembership. For more information,email Robert Hil at rhig©taftcollege.edu or visitwww.srmensgolf.com. Sunrivor Resorl Women:Wom en's club at SunriverResort playsWednesdaytournamentsat the Meadows or Woodlands courseswith shotgunstarts approximately 9a.m.Thereare bothnine-hole and 18-holegroups.For moreinformation onnine-hole group: VickiDoerfler atvickilynn49@ yahoo.comor call541-5988467;18-holegroup: ShennyBraemerat sbraemer4@ gmail.com or call 541-593-4423.

Widgi CreekMenandWomen: Widgi Creek Men'sClubandWomen's Golf Associationat Widgi CreekGolf Clubin Bendareweekly golf leaguesthat play each Wednesday. For more information, callthe Widgi Creek clubhouseat 541-382-4449.

includingcart. Formoreinformation, call theCrooked RiverRanchpro shopat541-923-6343. April 21:Central OregonSeniors Golf Organization eventat Kah-Nee-TaResort nearWarmSprings. Theformatis individual grossand netbest ball, aswell as teambestball. Cashprizes awarded ateachevent. Tournamentseries is opento men's clubmembers at host sites,andparticipants musthavean OregonGolf Associationhandicap. Cost is $150for theseasonplus a $5 per-eventfee. Formore information, contactTed Carlin at541-604-4054or vptcarlin@yahoo.com. April 26:18th AnnualCrookCounty HighSchool Golf Team Benefit tournament at MeadowLakesGolf Course inPrinevige.Four-personscramble teesoff with a noonshotgunstart. Cost is$280perteam and includesgolf, carttri-tip dinner,awards,contests and grossandnetteamprizes. Proceedsgo toward fundingCrookCounty's boysandgirls golf teams. For moreinformation orto register, call ZachLampert at 541-480-0110 or theMeadowLakes proshopat 541-447-7113. April 28:Seasonopener atJuniper Golf Course in Redmond.Four-personscramble divided into two-coupleteams.Shotgun start at 10a.m.Cost is $140perteam.To register, call theJuniperproshop at 541-548-3121or downloadentry format www. playjuniper.com. April 26:WarmSprings Boys& Girls ClubGolf Scramble at Kah-Nee-Ta Resort nearWarmSprings. Four-personscramble begins with 10a.m, shotgun. Cost is $75perpersonor $280per foursomeand includes greenfees, cart, rangeballs, lunch,andKP , long-drive,andlong-putt contests. Proceeds benefit the Boys andGirls Clubof WarmSprings. Formore informationorto register: contactJuneSmith at 541553-232 3orjsmith@bgcsc.com. April 28-27:TheCentral OregonShootout is atwo-personteamevent held at AspenLakes Golf Coursein Sisters,BlackButte Ranchand Eagle Crest Resort in Redmo nd. Thetournament will feature scramblebest , ball andChapman formats. Cost is $580 perteamand includesgreenfees, carts, range balls, teegift, continentalbreakfastandlunch. Deadline toregisteris April16 or first180teams.Formore information or to requestanentry form,call 541549-4653,541-595-1294or 541-923-4653; or visit www.aspenlakes.com,blackbutteranch.com, orwww. eagle-crest.com. May 1: CentralOregonGolf Tour's seasonopener is anindividualstrokeplaytournament at Brasada CanyonsGolf Clubin Powell Butte. TheCentral Oregon GolTour f is a competitive golf seriesheld at golf coursesthroughout Central Oregon.Grossand net competitionsopento all amateurgolfers of all abilities.Prizepoolawarded weekly, andmembership notrequired.Formore information orto register:541633-7652, 541-350-7605, orwww.centraloregongolftour.com. May 2: Chippin' Infor BendAreaHabitat tournament atBrasadaCanyonsGolf Clubin Powell Butte. Four-person scramblebegins with a10a.m.shotgun. Cost is $125pergolfer beforeMarch20 and $150 after. Priceincludes,golf, cart, rangeballs, awards luncheonandtee prize. Proceedsbenefit the Bend AreaHabitatfor Humanity. Formore information orto register:541-385-5387orrcooper@bendhabitat.org. May 8-4: Two-manbest-ball tournamentat PrinevilleGolf Club.Two-day grossand netpayoffs, with optionalsidegames. Friday practice roundalso available.For moreinformation or to register, call Prineville GC at 541-447-1354. May 6-8: CentralOregonSenior SpringTour ProAm is forteamsandindividuals throughtheOregon Chapter ofthe PGA.Thisthree-dayevent is heldat CrookedRiver Ranch, theRidgeCourseat EagleCrest Resort inRedmond, and GlazeMeadowat BlackButte Ranch. Golferswil competeina net Stableford, gross and netstrokeplayandonegrossandtwo netformats. Golfersmust be50years old or older.Costis $960 perteam.Contact:800-574-0503orwww.orpga.com. May 1011:43rdannualTeePee Chapmanat Kah-Nee-Ta Resort nearWarmSprings. 36-holecouples Chapmanbeginseachdaywitha9a.m.shotgun start. Cost is$200per coupleandincludes golf, range balls, dinnerbanquet andbuffet. Special roomrates and a Fridaypracticeroundarealso available. For more informationor to register,visit www.a khneeta. com orcall 541-553-4971. May 12: HospitalityCupat BlackButte Ranch's GlazeMeadowcourse. Eachteamin four-person scramble tournament must consist of four employees from thesameCentral Oregonrestaurant, hotelorother hospitality business. Tournament begins with a10 a.m.shotgun.Costis $150perteamandincludescart, barbecue lunch, prizesandawards. Formore information or toregister;email bbain©blackbutteranch.com, call 541-595-1292orvisit www.blackbutteranch.com/ golf/golf-events. May12:CentralOregonSeniorsGolf Organization eventat CrookedRiverRanch. Theformat is individual grossandnet best bal, aswell asteambest ball. Cash prizesawardedat eachevent. Tournament seriesis open tomen'sclub membersathost sites, andparticipantsmusthavean OregonGolf Associationhandicap. Cost is$150fortheseasonplusa$5per-eventfee. For moreinformation,contactTedCarlin at541-604-4054 or vptcarlin@y ahoo.com. May 12:OregonGolf AssociationTourpartner seriestournament at BendGolf andCountry Club.Tee timesbeginat 8:30a.m.OG ATour eventsareopen to anygolferwith aUSGAhandicapand includeopen andseniordivisions.Costfor this eventis$79for OGA membersand$99for nonmembers. Deadline to enter is May 5.Formoreinformation or to register, visit www.oga.org orcall theOG Aat 503-981-4653. May 13: OregonGolf AssociationTourpartner seriestournament at theMeadowsCourseat Sunriver Resort.Teetimesbegin at10:30a.m. OG ATour events are opento anygolfer with aUSGA handicapandincludeopenandsenior divisions. Costfor this event is $79 forOG A members and $99 for nonmembers. Deadlinetoenteris May6. Formoreinformation or to register,visit www.oga.org orcall theOG Aat 503981-4653.

May 15: Central OregonGolf Tour individual strokeplaytournament atTetherowGolf Clubin Bend. The CentralOregonGolf Tour is a competitive golf seriesheldat golf coursesthroughoutCentral Oregon. Gross andnet competitions opento agamateur golfers ofagabilities. Prizepoolawardedweekly, and membership notrequired.Formoreinformation orto register:541-633-7652,541-350-7605,orwww.centraloregongolftour.com. May 16:Ronald McDonaldHouseCharities CentralOregonOpen is afour-personscrambletournamentat BlackButte Ranch's BigMeadowandGlaze Meadow courses. Tournament begins with 9a.m.at both courses.Cost is $135per player or$500per teamandincludes greenfees, cart andlunch. Sponsorshipopportunities available. All proceedsbenefit RonaldMcDonaldHouse Charities ofCentral Oregon. For moreinformationorto register; 541-318-4950or www.rmhcofcentraloregon.org.

May 17:CrookCountyHigh SchoolWrestling benefit tournam entat Prineville GolfClub.Three-person scramblb eeginswith a10a.m.shotgun. Proceeds to benefithe t CrookCountry wrestling program.For more informationorto register: call JakeHuffmanat 541-829-1109.

May 17-18:OregonEmb roidery Scramble at Kah-Nee-TaResort nearWarmSprings. Two-person scrambleCost . is $300perteamand includes golf, rangeballs, dinnerbanquetand bufet. Special room rates anda Friday practice roundarealso available. For moreinformationorto register, visit www.kahneeta.comorcall 541-553-4971. May17-18: 30thedition oftheJuniper Chapman at JuniperGolf CourseinRedmond. Open to anytwo malegolferswith amaximumhandicap differential of eight strokes betweenpartners. Costis $250per team for the two-day,36-holetournament with grossandnet divisionsandincludesa practice round.Toregister, call theJuniperproshopat 541-548-3121 or download entryformatwww.playjuniper.com. May 20-24:Central OregonJunior Golf Association new-mm eber qualification at AwbreyGlenGolf Club inBend.Tee timescanbemade byappointment. Newmembersarerequired to attend. Formore information,call COJG A president Neil Pedersenat 541480-6288, email cojgagolf@ho tmail.com, or visit www.cojga.com . May 26:Memorial DayFlag Daytourname nt at PrineyilleGolf Club. Flagtournament. Formore information or toregister,call Prineville GCat 541447-1354.

May 27-28:OregonChapterof thePGApro-am tournament.Formatfor bothdaysis a net Stableford. This two-dayeventis heldat BendGolf andCountry Club and PronghornClub'sNicklausCoursenear Bend.Costfor amateurs is $200pergolfer. Contact: 800-574-0503 orwww.pnwpga.com. May 27:OregonGolf Association Tourindividual seriestournament attheRidgeCourse at EagleCrest Resort in Redm ond. Teetimes begin at 8:30 a.m. OGAToureventsareopento anygolfer with a USGA handicapandinclude openand senior divisions. Cost for this eventis $79for OG Amembers and$99 for nonmem bers. Deadlineto enteris May20. For more informationorto register, visit www.oga.org orcall the OGAat503-981-4653.

May 28:OregonGolf Association Tourindividual seriestournament at theResort Courseat EagleCrest Resort in Redm ond. Teetimes begin at 8:30 a.m. OGAToureventsareopento anygolfer with a USGA handicapandinclude openand senior divisions. Cost for this eventis $79for OG Amembers and$99 for nonmem bers. Deadlineto enteris May21. For more informationorto register, visit www.oga.org orcall the OGAat503-981-4653. May 29:CentralOregonGolf Tourindividual stroke playtournament at BlackButte Ranch's Big Meadow.TheCentral OregonGolf Touris acompetitive golseri f esheldatgolf coursesthroughoutCentral Oregon.Grossand net competitions opentoall amateur golfersofall abilities. Prizepoolawardedweekly, and mem bership notrequired. Formoreinformation or to register:541-633-7652,541-350-7605,orwww. centraloregongolftourcom. May 31: WildlandFirefighter FoundationBenefit Golf Tournam ent at TheGreensat Redmond. Four-playerscramblebeginswith8:30a.m.shotgun. Cost is$60pergolfer andincludes18 holesof golf, cart and barbecue.Proceeds benefit the Wildland FirefighterFoundation, whichhelpsfamilies of kiled or injuredfirefighters. Deadlineto enter is May24. For more information or to register, contact the RedmondHotshots at 541-504-7350or cbuhrig@ fs.fed.us. May 81: 2014Scrimmage on the Links benefit golf tournamentat LostTracksGolf Club.Four-person scramble beginswith 2p.m. shotgunstart. Entry fee: $100perpersonor$400perteamand includes refreshme nts, beverages, barbecuedinner, gifts and prizes.BenefitstheBend, Mountain ViewandSummit high schoolfootball teams. Toregister or for more information,visit www.scrimm ageonthelinks. com. May 81: TheMuseumat WarmSprings presents TheBoomer Classic Bene fit GolfTournament, a four-personteamscramble at Kah-Nee-TaResort. Tournamentbeginswith 9:30 a.m. shotgun. Cost is $75 perpersonandincludes lunch,contestsand prizes.Proceedsbenefit community educational programsof TheMuseumAt WarmSprings. Formore information or toregister: call 541-322-5753,email dstacona©m useumatwarmsprings.org, orvisit www . museum atwarmsprings.org. May 81-une J 1:The30thAnnualRiverhouse Golf Tournam ent at River's EdgeGolf Course in Bend is a 36-hole,four-personscramble tournament that benefits theEveryKidFund. Begins at 8 a.m.with a shotgunstart eachday. Gross and net prizesawarded in eachdivision alongwith awardsfor closest to the pin, longestdriveandaRobbersonFord hole-in-one prize.Costis $198andincludesgreenfees, cart, lunch both days, teeprizes andawards dinner Saturday night. Fieldlimitedto thefirst136 golfers.For more informationor to register,call 541-389-2828orvisit www.riverhous.ceom/tournament. May31-Juno1:Duff ers8 DollsChapmanTournamentat Desert PeaksGolf Club in Madras. Costis $120 percoupleandincludes Fridaypractice round, two days of tournament golf, KPand long-drive competitions,teambestball onSaturdayandaCalcutta on Sunday. Optional nine-holekicker competition during Fridaypracticeroundis $5.Formoreinformation orto register,call the clubhouseat 541-475-6368orvisit www.desertpea ksgolf.comto downloada registration form. June 1: Pro-Junio23 r at AwbreyGlenGolf Club in Bendis afundraiser golf tournament for theCentral OregonJunior Golf Association.Pour-person,23hole golf tournam ent beginswith a2 p.m.shotgun start. Team swil playshambleandscrambleand play AwbreyGlen'sregulationcourseandfive-hole loop course.Eachteamwil consist of threejunior golfers between theages of10 and16 andonegolf professional.Spaceis limitedto10 teams.Cost is $100per teamandincludesgolf, lunch, drinksandprizes. For moreinformationorto register,call AwbreyGlenhead professionalTimFraley at541-388-8526oremail him at tim©awbre yglen.com. June 2: Oregon Golf Association Tourpartner seriestournam entat GlazeMeadowat BlackBute Ranch. Teetimesbeginat8:30a.m. OGATourevents areopen to anygolferwith aUSGAhandicapandinclude open and seniodi rvisions. Costforthiseventis $79for OGA members and$99 for nonmembers. Deadline to enter is May26.Formoreinformation or to register,visit www.oga.org orcall theOG Aat 503-981-4653. June 3:OregonGolf Association Tourpartner series tournamentat Big Meadowat BlackButte Ranch.Teetimes beginat 8:30a.m.OG ATour events are open to anygolfer witha USGAhandicapandincludeopenandsenior divisions. Costforthis event is $79 forOGAmembers and$99 for nonmembers.

Deadline toenter is May27.For moreinformation or to register,visit www.oga.orgor call theOG Aat 503-981-4653. June 8-5: The Pacific NorthwestGolfAssociation SeniorandSuperSenior Men's AmateurChampionship at Brasada CanyonsGolf Clubin Powell Butte. Competitorswil play54holesof strokeplay.Entrants must be55yearsofageorolderbyJune3andhave aUSGA HandicapIndexof26.4 orless. Costis $280 and thedeadlineto enter is May20. Formoreinformation or to register,visit www.thepnga.org orcall the PNGA at800-643-6410. June7-8:LadiesMarmot at Prinevile GolfClub is a two-person teamevent stretchedover twodays and 36holes.Formore information orto register,call PrineviffeGCat 541-447-6658. June 8:SixthannualUnitedWayGolf Classic at SunriverResort's Crosswater Club.Scramblebegins with a1 p.m.shotgunstart. Costis $175perplayer or $700perfoursomeand includesgolf, cart, lunch and awardsbarbecue. Sponsorships also available. Proceeds benefit theUnitedWayof DeschutesCounty. For more information orto register,contact theUnited Way ofDeschutes County at 541-389-6507orvitoO deschutesunitedw y.o arg. June 8:OregonAmateur Championship qualifying tournament at Widgi CreekGolf Club in Bend.Event is opento maleamateurs with a handicap indexof 5 or lower.Topfinishers qualify for the105thOregon AmateurChampionship to beheld June16-21 atOGA Golf CourseinWoodburn. Deadline toenter is May21. Download aregistrationformatwww.oga.organdclick on the"Championships" link. June 8:Kah-Ne e-TaJunior atKah-Nee-TahResort nearWarmSprings is anOregonGolf Association juniortournam ent. Formoreinformation orto register, call theOG Aat866-981-4653oryisit www.oga.org. Juno 9: CentralOregonSeniors GolfOrganization eventatDesert PeaksGolf Clubin Madras.The format isindividualgrossandnetbest ball, aswell as team best ball. Cashprizesawardedateachevent. Tournamentseries is opento men'sclub members at hostsites,andparticipants musthavean Oregon Golf Associationhandicap. Costis $150for theseason plus a$5per-event fee. Formoreinformation, contactTedCarlin at 541-604-4054or vptcarlin@ yahoo.com.

Professional PGATour Valero TexasOpen Sunday At TPCSanAntonio San Antonio Purse: $6.2million Yardage:7,435;Par. 72

Final S. Bowditch(500), $1,116,000 69-67-68-76—280 Will MacKenzie(245), $545,60069-72-70-70—281 D. Summ erhays(245), $545,60072-68-70-71—281 Matt Kuchar(123),$272,800 70-72-65-75—282 AndrewLoupe(123), $272,800 67-70-70-75—282 Jim Furyk(89), $200,725 70-74-68-71—283 ZachJohnson(89), $200,725 70-71-70-72—283 Jerry Kelly(89), $200,725 71-71-70-71—283 Brendon Todd(89), $200,725 71-76-68-68—283 JordanSpieth(75), $167,400 75-70-68-71—284 Charl ye Hoff man(63),$136,40070-75-70-70— 285 Kevin Na(63),$136,400 70-70-69-76—285 Geoff Ogilvy(63),$136,400 74-69- 69-73— 285 Pat Perez (63), $136,400 68-71-69-77—285 Justin Hicks(56), $111,600 69-73-72-72—286 Stephen Ames(51), $78,740 74-71-68-74 —287 MartinFlores(51),$78,740 71-71-73-72—287 JamesHahn(51), $78,740 71-70-76-70—287 BrianHarman(51), $78,740 70-72-75-70—287 FreddieJacobson(51), $78,740 70-70-73-74—287 Seung-YulNoh(51), $78,740 69-76-71-71—287 Carl Pettersson(51),$78,740 70-73-71-73—287 WesRoach(51), $78,740 75-66-72-74—287 MichaelThom pson(51), $78,74070-75-71-71—287 JimmyWalker(51), $78,740 76-71-71-69—287 ChadCollins(43), $45,880 71-66-73-78—288 RussellKnox(43), $45,880 74-70-71-73—288 AndrewSvoboda(43), $45,880 73-73-67-75—288 Bo VanPelt(43), $45,880 69-73-71-75—288 Johnson Wagner(43),$45,880 73-73-71-71—288 BriceGarnett(38),$36,766 70-73-71-75—289 Trevorlmmelman (38),$36,766 70-71-74-74—289 JasonKokrak(38),$36,766 71-71-77-70—289 Justin Leonard (38),$36,766 76-69-71-73—289 WilliamMcGirt(38), $36,766 72-71-72-74—289 CameronBeckman (33), $28,57269-70-77-74—290 Scott Brown(33),$28,572 70-74-73-73—290 BrendondeJonge(33), $28,57273-72-71-74—290 JamieLovemark(33), $28,572 73-72-72-73

fied and areexpectedto compete inthe78th Masters, to be playedApril 10-13 at AugustaNational Golf Club. Playerslisted in onlyfirst categoryfor which theyareeligible. Onespot remains openfor thewinner of theShell HoustonOpenif notalreadyeligible. Masters cham pions:Adam Scott,BubbaWatson, CharlSchwarlzel, Phil Mickelson,AngelCabrera, TreyorImm elman, ZachJohnson,TigerWoods, Mike Weir,VijaySingh,JoseMariaOlazabal, MarkO'Meara, Ben Crensh aw, Bernhard Langer, FredCouples, lan Woosnam,SandyLyle, Larry Mize,Craig Stadler,Tom Watson. U.S. Open champions (fivo years): Justin Rose, WebbSimpson,RoryMcff roy,GraemeMcDoweff, LucasGlover. British Openchampions(fivo years): Ernie Els, DarrenClarke, LouisOosthuizen,Stewart Cink. PGA ChampionsIfive years): JasonDufner, KeeganBradley, Martin Kaymer, YE. Yang. Players Championships champions (fhree years): MattKuchar,K.J. Choi. U.S. Amateur championand runner-up: a-MattFitzpatrick,a-OliverGoss. BritishAmateurchampion:a-Garrick Porteous. U.S. AmateurPublic Linkschampion:a-Jordan Niebrugge . U.S. Mid-Amateurchampion: a-MichaelMcCoy. Asian Amateurchampion:a-LeeChang-woo. Top 12and ties-2013 Masters:JasonDay, Marc Leishm an, Thorbjorn Olesen,Brandt Snedeker, SergioGarcia, LeeWestwood,TimClark, JohnHuh. Topfour and ties-2013 U.S. Open:Bily Horschel,HunterMahan. Top fourandties-2013 BritishOpen: Henrik Stenson,lanPoulter. Top fourandties-2013 PGAChampionship: Jim Furyk,JonasBlixt. PGAToureventwinners since2018Maslers full FedEx cup points awarded): DerekErnst, ang-MoonBae,BooWeekley,HarrisEnglish,Ken Duke,Bill Haas,JordanSpieth, Patrick Reed, Jimmy Walker,RyanMoore, DustinJohnson,ChrisKirk,Scott Stallings,KevinStadler, Russell Henley,JohnSenden, Matt Every,StevenBowditch. Field from the 2013 Tour Championship: SteveStricker,Roberto Castro, NickWatney, Brendon de Jonge,LukeDonald, GaryWoodland,Kevin Streelman,D.A.Points, GrahamDeLaet. Top 50 from final world ranking in 2013: HidekiMatsuyama,Thomas Bjorn, JamieDonaldson, Victor Dubuisson,Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, Miguel AngelJimenez, FrancescoMolinari, RickieFowler, MatteoManassero, David Lynn,ThongchaiJaidee, PeterHanson,Joost Luiten,BrandenGrace. Top 50 from world ranking on march30: Stephen Gallacher.


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75/sg

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4'2/17

Juneau 46'/28

91/62

CONDITIONS

FRONTS

ALASKA

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53/40 r 50/27 sh 53/38 r 45/26 8 5587 r 45/27 8 45/25 8 43/27 8 56/38 sh 52/40 r 56/41 sh 59/36 r 58/35 sh 56/41 r 52/27 sh 51/29 8 56/40 sh 55/38 r 49/27 II 6538 sh

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HIGH

Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulati ons in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakm..................... 0" ...................... 63" Hoodoo................................ 2" ...................... 48" Mt. Ashland......................... 0" ...................... 66"

ROAD CONDITIONS

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS 4 OS ~35 ~2 5

PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION Tomorrow Rise Set Yesterday through 4 p.m. at BendMunicipal Airport Mercury..... 903Pm..... 825am. High/Low..............46'/28' 24hoursendingripm*.. PPP" Venus......... 7:49p.m..... 6:23a.m. Remrdhlgh 0,40" 76 In 1 964 Mpnthiodate Mars.........1059a m....10170m Remrdlow.........10'in1954 Averagemonthtodale... 064" Jupiter........ 225am..... 546pm. Averagehigh.............. 57' Yeariodate............ 353 Saturn........1:41 pm....ll:36p.m. Averagelow............... 27' Averageyeartodate..... 2.26 Uranus....... 9:42 p.m....10:27 a.m. Barometricpressure4 p.m. 29.92" Remrd 24hours .. 0.25 in 1994 *Melted liquid equivalent

Mt. HoodMeadows.............5"....................136 Snow level and road conditions representing condiM t. Hood Ski Bowl...............4"......................26" tionsat5 pm. yesterday. Key: TT. =Traction Tires. T i m berline............................5"......................73" Willamette Pass................... 2" ...................... 26" Pass Conigtions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit..............Carry chains, T. Tires 1-84 at CabbageHill................. Carry chains, T. Tires p" Aspen CO Hwy. 20atsantiamPass..........Carrychains, T. Tires Mammpth Mtn CA 9' 5p Hwy.26ateovernmentcamp.carr ychains,T.Tires ParkCiiy, UT........................p".................--.81 Hwy. 26 at OchocoDivide........ Carry chains, T. Tires S q uaw Valley, CA...............20" ...................... 30" Hwy. 58 atWillamette Pass......Carry chains, T. Tires S u n Valley, ID.......................4"......................41" Redmond Rpiehurg Hwy.138atDiamond Lake......Carrychains,T.Tires Taos, NM.............................0".................„„,52" Sale Hwy.242 atMcKenziePass..........Closedforseason VaiL CO------....................p"......................73" Sisters For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The pages www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.onthesnow.com Luiend:W-weather,Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,shehowers,r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snpwflurries,sn-snpw, i-ice, rs-rain-snpwmix,w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace Ia Pine Iakeview Medford Newport North Bend Onlanp Pendleton Pprriand Prinevige

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53/43 0.22 4$30 0.00 51/42 0.09 5529 O.IN 5440 0.02 42/29 0.19 43/27 0.03 42/29 0.00 5439 0.03 51/42 0.03 61/45 0.04 55/41 0.01 56/34 0.00 54/42 0.07 47/31 0.00 47/23 0.02 55/40 0.19 53/41 0.11 4!/29 0.02 55/34 0.00

Eugene Klamalh Falls

Yesterday's stateextremes

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54 32

Yesterday Monday Tuesday The higher the UVIndex number, the greater City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W the need for eyeand skin protection. Index is for solar at noon. Precipitationvaluesare24-hpur totaIs through 4 p.m

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Sunrisetoday...... 6:48 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday...... 7:31 p.m F irst F u l l Las t Sunrisetomorrow .. 6:46 a.m Sunsettomorrow... 7:32 p.m Moonrisetoday....7;12 a.m. Moonsettoday....8:59 p.m. Apr7 Apr15 Apr22 Apr 29

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Yestenlay Monday Tuesday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/WHi/Lo/W City

YesterdayMonday Tuesday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/WHi/Lo/W City

YesterdayMonday Tuesday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hilto/yy Hilto/yy

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Pc Billings, iur 45/35 037 36IZ6 sn 40/ZS II Indianapolis IN 55/240.00 67/50 pc 8543 PC Sm Jose, CA 63/47 0.09 62/48 ls 61/47 ls Wichita, KS 77/460.00 75/Jspc 58/ui pc Birmingham,AL 67/40 0.00 7550 s 77/52 PC Iaduon,iriS 71/380.00 8552 PC80/59 pc Sanla Fe, NM 68/32 0.0061/32 Pc 67/JZ PCYakima,WA 59/280.00 5$31 pc 62/34pc Blslluldk, No 5431 O.OD Zo/7 in zsno pc IacksonviaaFt TZISO0.00 75/48 s 8551 pc Savannah, GA 7/V49 0.00 7//48 s BZISO i Yvma, AZ +0,00 8455 pc 78/54 pc Boise, Ip 53/39 0.18 54I36 pc SZ/34 r Juneau, AK 49/ZZ 0.00 4428 PC 42/30 pc Boslon MA 43/39 2.68 40/IZ 4SI35 PC KansasCity, Mp 75/me.ea 75/31ls 55/45 PC Burialo, NY 4zlzs o.zeull32 pc 6436 sh lansing, iul 4VZ30.00 BQI38 pc 50/29 sn Amsterdam 68/ul 0.00 69/48 s 6$46 PcMecca 95/78 0.00 NVTS s 100/77 s 36/33 0.71 40/ZS 43/34 pc Las Vegas,NV 71/570.00 7450 PC 66I49 Pc Athens Burii~,Vr 57/ul 0.00 59/48 62/50 pcMexico Cily 73/35 1.95 73/SI u 80/SS s Caribou, ME 29/270.34 35/16 4$9 s lexington, KV 55/JZ 0.12 68/49 PC 70uz pc Audrianri 71 /53 0.00 7155 pc 73/53 pcMontreal 33/300.003ZI30in 41/26 s casper,wv 64/30 0.00 zal/4ln 45/zs 8 lincoln, NE 77/490.00 68IZS PC 4!/34 Pc Baghdad 73/57 0.00 77/44 ls 62/48 s Moscow uvz40.00 48/26 pc 39/26pc Charleston,SC 7549 0.00 75/47 s BI/49 s liuk Rock, AR 6442 0.00 73/53 ls 72/60 pc Bangkok 96IBZ 0.00 96/80 pc seleo pcNairobi TBI600.00 82/80 pc BZ/80 cd Charlotte, NC 59/44 0.02 744I s 7$49 Pc los Angeles,CA 67/57 0.00 6454 pc 63/52 sh Beijing 78/44 0.00 75/SI pc 73/44 rd Nassau 84/710.00 84laa ls 8588 Pc Owuanooga,TN 65/42 0.00 76/49 Pc 78ISO PC louisville,KV 58/33 0.01 71/52 PC 72/47 Pc Beirut 62/570.00 solul s BZI57 PCNew Delhi 86I620.00 87/66 pc 89I84 s cheyenne,wv 6433 0.00 42/26 pc4mzs Madison, Wl 57/260.00 63/32 sh 43/27 PC Bulin 66/420.00 64I42 s 6541 Pc Osaka 64IS70.00 59/37 s 62/41 Pc Chicago, IL S/RS 0.00 65/37 ls 47/34 Pc Memphis,TN 66I370.00 75/57 PC 75%8 Pc Bddgd dud 69/42 0.00 71/ul ls 6$48 Pc Oslo 48I420.08 53/ul pc 5548 cd Cinrinnali,OH 5429 0.02 68/48 Pc70/42 ih tuami, FL BOI690.28 78/65 PC80/67 s Budapest 68/32 0.00 66/M l 69/39 i Ottawa 37/300.00 37IZ4 in 42/26 i Clevelan4OH 41/30 OAI 53/33 PC63/36 sh Milwaukee,Wl szm o.oe5438pc 4435 PC BuenosAires 75/az 0.00 75/SS ls eauz i Paris salui O.OD 68ISO Pc 68/48 Pc colo. Spgscp 66/36 0.00 57/Zz PC56/29pc Minneapolis, MNBOI360.00 62/26 ls 37/24 sn Cabo SanIvou 84I66 0.00 Bzm s Bzm s Rio deJaneiro 87/750.00 87/73 al 8$75 Pc Columbia, Mp 71/32 0.00 75/37is SBI47 pc Nashville, TN 63/390.00 72/53 Pc 7453 pr Cairo 73/57 0.00 75/57 s 78IS7 s Rome 69/440.00 69/46 al 69/41 s Columbia, SC Br/46 0.00 77/42 i BZ/50 pc New Orleans,IA 70/53 0.00 75/59 Pc zr/61pc Calgary 23/I 0 0.00 24/6 sn 2415 pc Santiago 69/53 0.00 66I42 s 71/42 cri Columbus,GA 7544 0.00 76/47 i 78/49 Pc Nwd VoriCNV 49/441.78 SZ/36 r 59/43 PC cmcuh 86/69 0.05 86//I ls 8571 li sao paulo 84/690.00 8468 ii 77/88 ls dvuxS 1.91 54/34 r 59/41 PC Dublin Columbus,OH 48/JI O.ZS Q/44 Pc 68/38 pc Newark, NI Ss/4I 0.00 SZ/44 l 53/41 I Sapporo 37/370.00 39/32 pc 42/30 s Concord, NC 38/JS 1.17 39IZB smsp Nor/vlk, VA 67/44 0.04 60/43 Pc 6$47 pc Edinburgh 4442 0.00 57/41 PCSS/41 PCSeoul BF/48 0.00 68/48 pc 71/48 s CorpusChristi,IX 78/ss 0.00 8568 pc 8569 I Okla. 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Pc El Paso,TX 85/53 0.00 79/55 pc BZI60 PC Pittsburgh, PA 48I32 0.55 5541pc 6//40 pc Lisbon SBI44 0.00 6$51 r 5//53 r Vanmuver 53/420.00 48I39 r 53/41 pc Fairidmkr, AK 32/-l 0.00 35/IZ PC sr/5 pc Porllaldri ME 38//5189 37/30 44/ZB PC lxn40h 68I44 0.00 6$51 PCsz/42 PCVienna 69/41 0.00 uv41 i 69/41 s Fargo, No 50/34 0.00 Zs/IZ sn 23/8 Pc Providence,nl 48I41 430 43/33 r 49/34 Pc Madrid 57/44 0.00 8542 pc 62/44 pc Warsaw 59/30 0.00 59/35 i ss/35 s Flagstaff, AZ 56/32 0.00 54/31 pc 49/26 PC Raleigh, NC 62/42 0.27 71/42 s 77/47 Pc Manila 9480 0.00 93/rs s 93/73 s

Abilene,TX

Akron,Pu

INTERNATIONAL

NHL ROUNDUP u Prg

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Gene J.Puukar/The Associated Press

Pittsburgh's Sldney Crosby (87) works the puck In thecorner against Chicago's Peter Regin (12) during Sunday's game In Pittsburgh. Crosby scored twice to lead the Penguins to a 4-1 win.

CrosbyhelpsPenguinspull away fromBlackhawks The Associated Press PITTSBURGH —

jury but is expected to return S i dney soon.

Crosby had two goals in the final five minutes, helping the Pittsburgh Penguins to a 4-1 victory over the injury-riddled Chicago Blackhawks on Sunday night. Already playing without Patrick Kane, the Blackhawks lost captain Jonathan Toews

to an upper-body injury in the second period. Toews was hit hard by Penguins defenseman Brooks Orpik and was holding his left arm on the bench before heading down t he runway. James Neal and Lee Stempniak also scored for the Pen-

The injury to Toews galva-

. c"'

td

nized the Blackhawks, who

dominated play in the third period. But Fleury held up just fine. Also on Sunday: Bruins 4, Flyers 3: PHILADELPHIA — Patrice Bergeron

scored the go-ahead goal in the second period and also tallied in th e shootout to

8

j

help Boston to a victory over

Philadelphia. Red Wings 3, Lightning 2: DETROIT — David Legwand had a goal and an assist, and Detroit held off Tampa Bay to

move into seventh place in the

/

8

guins, who won their second Eastern Conference. straight and snapped a threeSenators6, Flames 3: OTgame home losing streak. TAWA, Ontario — Milan MiMarc-Andre Fleury made 25 chalek and Kyle 'TI2rris had savesin his 36thvictory ofthe two goals apiece, leading Ottaseason. wa to the win. Orpik drilled Toews in the Rangers 5, Oilers 0: EDcorner with 6:30 remaining in the second period while

MONTON, Alberta — Backup Cam Talbot stopped 26

the two went for a loose puck. Toews got up slowly and did

shots for his third career shutout and Rick Nash and

not return.

Mats Zuccarello scored two

It's been a rough stretch goals apiece to lead New for injuries for the defend- York to its sixth win in seven ing Stanley Cup champions, games. who will be without star forPredators 4, Capitals 3: ward Kane for the rest of the NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Craig regular season due to a low- Smith scored the only goal in er-body injury. Bryan Bickell the shootout to lead Nashville is out with an upper-body in- over Washington.

0

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~ &• A 8


ON PAGES 3%4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin

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THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014 246

210

Furniture & Appliances 0

Gun s , Hunting & Fishing

• Chandelier,

p0

22" diameter x 170

IOI fT NISSTAI

high, 12 lights, bronze & crystal, has 6 arms (2 lights on each arm), $300 obo. 541-923-7491

202

Want to Buy or Rent

Wanted: $Cash paid for People Lookfor Information vintage costume jewAbout Products and elly. Top dollar paid for Services EveryDaythrough Gold/Silver.l buy by the The Bvlletin Classilleris Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Cherry 6-sided island, Formica top, 36"H, 208 $50. 541-390-7649

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advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 Ol'

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Dining table include price of The Bulletin recomBeautiful round s~it e 'te of 5500 mends extra caution oak pedestal table or less, or multiple when purc h aswith 4 matching items whose total ing products or serchairs, table is 42" does not exceed vices from out of the in diameter and in $500. area. Sending cash, brand new condichecks, or credit intion, as are the Call Classifieds at f ormation may be chairs. Priced at 541-385-5809 subjected to fraud. www.bendbulletin.com $400. 541-447-3342 For more information about an advertiser, you may call Dining table, glass & Find exactly what brass, glass pedestal, you are looking for in the the O regon State 60 0x40". $450. Call Attorney General's CLASSIFIEDS 11 a.m. Office C o n sumer after 541-330-8177. Protection hotline at Fishing camp on North 1-877-877-9392. Dining table w/3 chairs, 10 Mile Lake. See ad $45. 5 4 1 -388-1256 in Recreation ProperThe Bulletin after 7pm. Sarsiao CentrefOnooa since 7805 ties .541-404-7595. G ENERATE SOM E Adopt a rescued cat or EXCITEMENT in your ErK E A T teen kitten! F ixed, neighborhood! Plan a I RK T f shots, ID chip, tested, garage sale and don't more! 65480 7 8th, forget to advertise in Large amount of Tumalo, T h urs/Sat/ classified! 12-gauge reloadSun 1-5, 3 8 9-8420 541-385-5809. ing equipment, www.craftcats.org including: Oak hutch, removable MEC 9000G Aussie Mini AKC par- top, 3 t o s ell, $40 reloader, lead, powents on site. Shots/ each. 541-390-7649 der, primers, hulls, wormed. Sta r t ing wads & electric $350. m/f blue merle The Bulletin scale. Retail for over 541-598-5314 recommends extra $2000; Cairn Terriers, 8 wks, 1st I o aotfo o e po selling for$1200. shot, wormed twice, $500 chasing products or • 541 -420-3474 cash. 503-501-0462 or services from out of I 541-419-8676 the area. Sending I~ cash, checks, or • f credit i n f ormation may be subjected to

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/ FRAUD. For more/

about an s I information advertiser, you may I

Oregon / Left Handed Stag Atto r ney ' Arms AR15, Model / General's O ff ice S tag 15, L-3 E OM$500/ F8600 Consumer Protec- • Tech ESPS2 red dot 541-598-7417 tion h o t line at I scope w/quick deJust bought a new boat? i 1-877-877-9392. tach mount, over Sell your old one in the 2000 rounds of high classifieds! Ask about our i TheBulletin i quality Federal 62 Ssreog Central Oregonrrore 7805 Super Seller rates! g rain g r ee n ti p 541-385-5809 5 .56/223 am m o . 212 $2500. Donate deposit bottles/ 541-350-7017 cans to local all vol., Antiques & non-profit rescue, for Collectibles feral cat spay/neuter. Cans for Cats trailer Dark oa k 2 - d rawer at Bend Pet Express dresser, curved front, E; or donate M-F at Smith Sign, 1515 NE $250. White wicker 2nd; or a t C RAFT, baby crib, u n ique Tumalo. Call for us to $250. Large dark oak top desk, $800. pick up large quant- roll tr a nsit New 70-pound ites, 5 4 1-389-8420. Surveryor's Compound 1930-1940, orig. box www.craftcats.org Liberty Bow $350. CASH Free barn/shop cats, 541-923-5960 with 29.9 draw and fixed, shots. Will decase. Asking $400. The Bulletin reserves liver! 541-306-4519 Iv Call 541-771-2080 the right to publish all msg. if interested. ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet web- Remington 770 cf rifle, cal. .308 win. Brand e site. new in box. Black The Bulletin synth. stock, stainEereiaeCentral Oregon slaoa7205 less steel barrel, bore HAVANESE PUPPIES s ighted scope. I n 215 AKC, Dewclaws, UTD cludes owner's shots/wormer, non-shed, Coins & Stamps manual. $250. Conhypoallerqenic, $850 tact: 541-419-5696 541-4 0-1277. Private collector buying postagestamp albums 8 Ruger SR9 9mm, (3) Labrador Puppies, $300 collections, world-wide 17-rnd clips, case, & $350. 1st shots. vet and U.S. 573-286-4343 clean, excellent cond, checked. 541-416-1175 (local, cell phone). $400. Ruger 10/22, s imulated stoc k , Labrador, yellow unfixed 242 Simmons 3x9 scope, male, 1 yr, free to good $150. 541-419-0438 home w/lots of room. Exercise Equipment 541-977-7439, 3:00 p.m. Wanted: Collector seeks Pilates XP297; Pilates high quality fishing items Looking to buy 4 or 5 chair, fluidity bar, call white doves for out- for info. 541-408-0846 8 upscale bamboo fly rods. Call 541-678-5753, d oor a v iary. C a l l ProForm 380CSX staor 503-351-2746 541-382-2194 tionary bike, all digital 253 read-out, like new, $200 obo. 541-548-0324 ~TV, Stereo & Video Mini Aussie Toy pups, 243 AM/FM cassette player/ toy size, assorted colSki Equipment turntable, retro style, $35. o rs, $ 3 3 0 ca s h . 541-388-1256 541-678-7599 Helly Hansen ski suit, 266 Norwich rare AKC male men's Med., green, exlnt pup, 11 wks, house cond, $75. 541-388-0811 • Computers raised; 37/2-year-old 245 Norwich male, house T HE B ULLETIN r e r aised & g ood o n Golf Equipment quires computer adleash. $1800 each. vertisers with multiple 541-487-4511, or CHECK YOURAD ad schedules or those sharonm@peak.org selling multiple systems/ software, to disPOODLE pups, toy. close the name of the 12-20 wks. $175-$250 business or the term & up. 541-475-3889 "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisQueensland Heelers on the first day it runs Standard & Mini, $150 to make sure it is cor- ers are defined as 8 those who sell one & up. 541-280-1537 rect. Spellchecke and www.rightwayranch.wor human errors do oc- computer. dpress.com cur. If this happens to 267 DACHSHUND PUPS I c all t h e State AKC Mini lonqhaired

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I

210

Furniture & Appliances

your ad, please con-

tact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

266

269

Heating & Stoves

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

476 o o

pp ~ p p

Employment Opportunities

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Add your web address Since September 29, BarkTurfSoil.com to your ad and read1991, advertising for ers on The Bulletin's used woodstoves has PROMPT DELIVERY web site, www.bendbeen limited to mod54i-389-9663 bulletin.com, will be els which have been able to click through certified by the Or308 automatically to your 470 egon Department of For newspaper Farm Equipment website. Domestic & Environmental Qualdelivery, call the & Machinery ity (DEQ) and the fedIn-Home Positions Circulation Dept. at Auto Parts eral E n v ironmental 541-385-5800 CounterpersonProtection A g e ncy To place an ad, call (4) 5'x12' horse panels, Companion Care for Some automotive and t oms, 1 4 snare $75/ea. Assorted wa(EPA) as having met 54'I -385-5809 - Do you need computer experience ter and feed tubs, call Senior drum, $800. Both in smoke emission stanhelp with transportation, required. We can train or email for excellent condition. prices. shopping/errands, light from dards. A cer t ified claooified@bendbulletin.ccm there. Starting 541-410-4983 541-923-9758 w oodstove may b e housekeeping, meals & pay based on experiidentified by its certifiN ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 med reminders? Call ence. Send resume to cation label, which is swather, 14' header Stephanie,541-408-6190 PO Box 960, La Pine, 260 permanently attached with conditioner, cab OR 97739. Or drop off 270 Misc. Items to the stove. The Bulheat/A/C, 1300 orig. Immediate opening for at Napa Auto Parts, Lost & Found letin will not knowhrs. $29,000 obo. careglver in the Sisters 51477 Hwy 97, in La ingly accept advertis1486 International, cab area. 541-598-4527 Pine. 2012 Sim p licity ing for the sale of LOST Cat 3/12, white & heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1000 Gusto Hepa canisray/tan male, OB Riley/ Pto, 3 sets remotes, uncertified BANKING 476 ter va cuumwith len Vis t a-Cooley? nice tractor. $18,000. woodstoves. Employment attachments, extra Bingo is missed! Call 541-419-3253 filter and bags, exc. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 541-531-3699 Opportunities 325 cond. Retail $1500, Lost Kitty, 6 mo. recently COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION Asking $700. Door-to-door selling with neutered male,"Scooter," Hay, Grain & Feed CAUTION: 971-221-8278 (cell) fast results! It's the easiest black & white, blind in left is seeking a dynamic Ads published in 6 mi out Juniper Mixed Grass Hay, 1st and service-driven way in the world to sell. eye. "Employment O p Canyon, Prineville 3/16. quality, big bales, 3'x3'x8', individual to fill a Buylng Diamonds portunities" include REWARD! 541-447-9866 barn stored, $230/ton. Full-time Teller The Bulletin Classified or iGotd for Cash employee and inde541-604-1994 Patterson Ranch Sisters, role in our Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-3II-5809 pendent positions. 541-549-3831 541-389-6655 Ads fo r p o sitions Bend South Branch. 267 that require a fee or To view the fulljob Check out the Call a Pro REMEMBER:If you upfront investment Fuel & Wood description and to classifieds online have lost an animal, Whether you need a must be stated. With apply, please visit www.bendbulletin.com don't forget to check any independentjob fence fixed, hedges our website at: The Humane Society Updated daily WHEN BUYING opportunity, please www.on ointcareers.com trimmed or a house Bend i nvestigate tho r FIREWOOD... BUYING 541-382-3537 built you'll find oughly. Use extra Caregiver Lionel/American Flyer To avoid fraud, Redmond c aution when a p professional help in Prineville Senior care trains, accessories. The Bulletin 541-923-0882 plying for jobs onh ome l ooking f o r 541-408-2191. The Bulletin's "Call a recommends payProe ftte line and never proCaregiver for multiple ment for Firewood 5 4t-447-ttt a ; Service Professional" BUYING & S ELLING vide personal infors hifts, part-time t o All gold jewelry, silver only upon delivery or Craft Cats mation to any source full-time. Directory Pass inspection. 54t-382-8420. and gold coins, bars, • and you may not have criminal background A cord is 128 cu. ft. 541-385-5809 rounds, wedding sets, researched and check. 541-447-5773. 4' x 4' x 8' 286 class rings, sterling sildeemed to be repuSales Northeast Bend ver, coin collect, vin- • Receipts should table. Use extreme Looking for your include name, tage watches, dental c aution when r e - EMPLOYMENT next employee? gold. Bill Fl e ming, phone, price and s ponding to A N Y Now taking applications! kind of wood Place a Bulletin 541-382-9419. ** FREE ** online employment A newBehavioral purchased. help wanted ad ad from out-of-state. Garage Sale Kit Health Centeris Milkshake blender, old • Firewood ads today and We suggest you call opening in the Bend/ Place an ad in The style, $10. Toaster, MUST include reach over the State of Oregon La Pine area. All posiBulletin for your ga$10. 541-388-1256 species & cost per 60,000 readers Consumer Hotline tions available, including: rage sale and record to better serve • Counseling Staff each week. at 1-503-378-4320 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS ceive a Garage Sale our customers. Your classified ad For Equal Opportu- • Dietary Kit FREE! Search the area's most nity Laws contact • Housekeeping will also comprehensive listing of The Bulletin KIT INCLUDES: Oregon Bureau of • Maintenance appear on classified advertising... EerefaeCentral Oregonsfase Iote • 4 Garage Sale Signs Labor & I n dustry, • Support staff bendbuiietin.com real estate to automotive, • $2.00 Off Coupon To Civil Rights Division, • Clencal which currently merchandise to sporting All yearDependable Competitive benefits and Use Toward Your 971-673- 0764. receives over goods. Bulletin Classifieds Firewood: Seasoned; Next Ad wages. Please email appear every day in the 1.5 million page • 10 Tips For "Garage your letter of interest and Lodgepole 1 for $195 The Bulletin print or on line. views every resume to or 2 for $365. Cedar, Sale Success!" 541-385-5809 month at no Emil Okleancenter.com Call 541-385-5809 split, del. Bend: 1 for www.bendbulletin.com $175 or 2 for $325. extra cost. PICK UP YOUR 541-420-3484. Bulletin GARAGE SALE KIT at The Bulletin Classifieds Ssniag Central OrsOoasince7802 Clerical/Office Dry, split Juniper, 1777 SW Chandler Get Results! $190/cord. Multi-cord- Ave., Bend, OR 97702 We are looking for a full-time employee that is Call 541-385-5809 discounts, 8 3/2cords resourceful and self-motivated to assist a Natural gas Ruud or place your ad The Bulletin avail. Immediate delarge staff and write daily clerical reports. This tankless water Te sioo Central oregonsince 1207 on-line at livery! 541-408-6193 person should like working in a fast-paced heater, brand new! bendbuiietin.com environment and be able to meet tight dead199 Btu, $1800. Seasoned Juniper Moving sale everything lines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial Also brand new 80 $150/ cord rounds; must go - furniture, 341 experience preferred. gal. electric water $170/ cord split. kitchen supplies and heater, $500. Delivered in Central more. Fri-Mon, 10-6, Horses & Equipment Organization, flexibility and a high level of In Sunriver area. OR, since 1970! Call 341 NE Isaiah Dr. ¹4 computer proficiency are essential. A solid 530-938-3003 eves, 541-420-4379 or call 541-610-3784 AUSTRALIAN SADDLE m isc. t a ck , $ 2 4 5; knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. 541-548-0875 DRUM SETS: Ludwig drum set, d rums only, n o hardware, 26" base drum, 13", 16", and 18 0 toms, 14 0 snare, $500. REMO Master Touch drum set, drums o nl y no hardware, 22" base drum, 8", 10", 12", 1 3", 1 6 2 and 18" e

The Bullein

OnPO!nt

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Sunvision Pro 28LX Tanning Bed Has only 300 hours, (lamps have average life of 800-1000 hours of effective tanning usage). 1 owner, great condition, includes manual, goggles & head pillow. $900. Call toseei 541 485-9318in Bend Wanted: crew members to sail Winchester Bay, OR to San Francisco and return, approx. 3 wks this summer. Call Mark, 541-233-8944

Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio 8 studio equip. Mclntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808

tf3stNN

Administrative Assistant Provides administrative support to the IS department. Duties include data entry; answering phones; responding to questions and request for information; accounts payable; education and travel coordination; scheduling meetings and taking minutes; assisting with vendor communication and contracts; office organization; and maintaining records. Requires 3 years administrative experience; knowledge of Microsoft Office; experience making education and travel arrangements; strong written and verbal communication skills; excellent customer service skills; ability to work independently, ability to manage time and multiple priorities; and ability to work with all staff levels.

Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the Northwest. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus. Please go towww.lesschwab.com to apply. Applications will be accepted through April 9, 2014. No phone calls please. EOE

261

Medical Equipment

The Bulletin

345

Livestock & Equipment FREE Saanen Buck, 7 m o., for b r eed o r butcher, 541-390-5211

Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com

Ability to work for long periods of time doing detail-oriented work is necessary. This person must understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties.

Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office experience preferred. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring.

To apply, please send a resume to: Box 20473443, c/o The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 EOE

541-385-5809

irin

I ut u s t o w o r k f g I e y+Q f i l ' s t

The Bulletin delivers your "HELPWANTED"ad to 70,000 print readers and20,000 online visitors a day. The Bulletin, local, hassle-free, worry-free advertising.

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

Home Delivery Advisor Flatscreen Magnifier Optlec Clearview+ viewer, magnifier for reading, writing and viewing for those who have vision loss. $900 obo. (otheritems listed previously havebeen so/d) In Bend, call 541-480-6162

Musical Instruments

3 piece display cabinet w/lights, glass shelves, faux finish looks like stone, end I s ections 7 0 " tal l , Hard t r avel c a ses, middle section 80" tall, Datrek and SKB $50 Beautiful Lowrey 72" width. $450. Call each. 541-815-0213 Adventurer II Organ after 11 a.m. Absolutely perfect 246 541-330-8177. condition, not a Guns, Hunting scratch on it, about & Fishing 4-feet wide, does A1 Washers&Dryers everything! Includes $150 ea. Full warCASH!! a nice bench, too. ranty. Free Del. Also For Guns, Ammo 8 wanted, used W/D's $1600 obo. Reloading Supplies. 541-280-7355 541%85-5685 541-408-6900.

257

Musical Instruments

265

Building Materials La Pine Habitat RESTORE

Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 52684 Hwy 97 541-536-3234 Open to the public .

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

The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. S t rong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. C o mputer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we believe in promoting from within, so advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:

The Bulletin

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

Get 7 consecutive days F OR ONLY s2 1 .4 3 A D A Y ! ~ And get $31 in ad upgrades for FREE! BASED ONA 2" AD SPACE

Classifieds 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9 "It'S SimPle. The Bulletin iS eaSy to wOrk with, alwayS

make good suggestions and the price for the ads are decent. Circulation of your newspaper coversOIir area of interestilI drawing good candidates for the positions we have open at the time." Mike Throop, Jefferson County HumanResources


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

C2 MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014•THE BULLETIN

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

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

648

870

Houses for Rent General

Boats & Accessories

880

Moto r homes

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

•I ~ • -]ig, All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Monaco Lapalma, F air H o using A c t 2007 Winnebago 2002, 34'10" -Work850 which makes it illegal Outlook Class "C" horse 8.11 Less than to a d vertise "any Snowmobiles 31', solar panel, Cat. 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan preference, limitation heater, excellent genr, 2 slides, 4 dr. or disc r imination condition, more exrefrig w/icemaker, based on race, color, tras. Asking $58K. micro/convection religion, sex, handiPIl. 541-447-9268 oven, water purifier, cap, familial status, Can be viewed at hydraulic jacks, power marital status or na1989 Yamaha pilot seat+ more opWestern Recreation tional origin, or an inExciter, tions. Exceptionally (top of hill) tention to make any clean.$59,900/make 2,000 miles, in Prineville. such pre f erence, original owner, offer.541-504-1008 limitation or discrimialways garaged, ds published in the nation." Familial sta$600. "Boats" classification tus includes children G R E AT 541-480-7517 include: Speed, fishunder the age of 18 ing, drift, canoe, living with parents or house and sail boats. National RV legal cus t odians, Arctic Cat 580 1994, For all other types of pregnant women, and Tropical, 1997, EXT, in good watercraft, please go people securing cus35-ft, Chevy Vortec condition, $1000. Place a photo inyourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES to Class875. tody of children under Located in La Pine. engine, new tires, foronly$15.00par week. 541-385-5809 Starting at 3 lines 18. This newspaper Call 541-408-6149. new awnings, 12-ft will not knowingly ac*UNDER '500in total merchandise slide-out, queen OVER'500 in total merchandise cept any advertising 860 erta'ng Central Oregon since 1909 bed, Italian leather 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 for real estate which is Motorcycles & Accessories couch and recliner, Wanted: crew mem14 days................................................ $16.00 in violation of the law. 7 days.................................................. $24.00 excellent condition. bers to sail Winchester O ur r e aders a r e *iiiiust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 Ready to travel„ Bay, OR to San Franhereby informed that 28 days .................................................$61.50 cisco and return, aptowing hitch inGarage Sale Special all dwellings adverprox. 3 wks this sumcluded. $19,900. 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 lcaii for commercial line ad rates) tised in this newspamer. Call Mark, 541-815-4811 per are available on 541-233-8944 an equal opportunity basis. To complain of A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: 875 d iscrimination ca l l FXSTD Harley Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Watercraft HUD t o l l-free at Davidson 2001,twin 1-800-877-0246. The cam 88, fuel injected, BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) ds published in eWa toll f ree t e lephone Vance & Hines short REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well tercraft" include: Kay number for the hear- shot exhaust, Stage I aks, rafts and motor with Vance & Hines ing i m p aired is as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Navion RV 2008, fuel management Ized personal 1-800-927-9275. Sprinter chassis 25'. bendbulietimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at watercrafts. Fo Mercedes system, custom parts, Benz diesel, "boats" please se extra seat. $10,500 any time. is located at: 654 24,000 miles, pristine OBO. Call lass 870. Houses for Rent cond., quality through1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Today 41-385-5809 out, rear slide-out w/ SE Bend 541-516-8684 Bend, Oregon 97702 queen bed, deluxe captain swivel front N ewer 4 b d r m S E , seats, diesel generator, master main l evel, Harley Davidson 2009 PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction awning, no pets/ 880 2100 SF, large yard, Super Glide Custom, is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right no smoking. very n ice. $ 1 595. Stage 1 Screaming Motorhomes to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these $75,500. 54f-480-9200 Eagle performance, newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party 541-382-2430 too many options to Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. list, $8900. Garage Sales

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

,

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

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

880

Motorhomes

• . 3:00pm Fri.

mxrvx

• • 5:00 pm Fri •

ghe Bulletin

WINNEBAGO BRAVE 2003 • 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% • Just completely serviced • 39,000 miles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150

Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243 881

Travel Trailers Euroway by Fleetwood 1996 27' trailer,

excellent condition, 5 new tires, electric lift, A/C, micro, aluminum construction, fiberglass exterior always garaged. $5100. 541-549-0805

The Bulletin

MX

The Bulletin

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Livestock Truck Driver Must have CDL, 2yes exp., progressive co., 401k, $50,000/yr, insurance 541-475-6681

Rmtmas SITjekZCm ®D

I

Where can you find a l helping hand? • From contractors to I yard care, it's all here

I l

"Call A Service Professional" Directory l

I I

l l l l l l I

541-447-4805

Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

The Bulletin

l

in The Bulletin's

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help chasing products or I wanted ad today and services from out of • reach over 60,000 the area. Sending readers each week. c ash, checks, o r Your classified ad will also appear on credit i n f ormation may be subjected to bendbulletin.com FRAUD. which currently For more informareceives over 1.5 tion about an advermillion page views tiser, you may call every month at the Oregon State no extra cost. Attorney General's Bulletin Classifieds Office C o n sumer a Get Results! Protection hotline at l Call 385-5809 or place 1-877-877-9392. your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

541-388-8939

Garage Sales

528

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 541-385-5809 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by 687 Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, Commercial for heated handgrips, Rent(Lease auto cruise control. in bike, Fenced storage yard, only$32k $20,000or best building and o ffice trailer for rent. In con- offer. 541-318-6049 venient Redmond location, 205 SE Railroad Blvd. Reduced to HDFat Bo 1996 $700/mo. Avail. now. 541-923-7343.

Sales We are looking for experienced Sales professional to Join Central O r egon's Call The Bulletin At 693 541-385-5809 l argest new c a r Just too many Office/Retail Space dealer Subaru of Place Your Ad Or E-Mail for Rent collectibles? Completely Bend. O fferingAt: www.bendbulletin.com 1-877-877-9392. 401k, profit sharing, Rebuilt/Customized Office s pace a v ail. TRUCK DRIVER Sell them in medical plan, split BANK TURNED YOU 300-500- sq. ft., pri2012/2013 Award WANTED s hifts, an d pa i d Winner The Bulletin Classifieds DOWN? Private party vate bath and conferMust have doubles Showroom Condition training. Please apwill loan on real es- ence room, all util. endorsement. ply at 2060 NE Hwy tate equity. Credit, no paid. $300-$450 mo. Many Extras Local run. 541-385-5809 Low Miles. 20, Bend. problem, good equity + dep. C all Jim at Truck is parked in is all you need. Call 541-480-4744 $17,000 Madras. 541-475-4221 Oregon Land Mort541-548-4807 gage 541-388-4200.

LTheB~g

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Handyman I DO THAT! Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151 573 Dennis 541-317-9768 ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home &

Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting, Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On-time promise. Senior Discount. Work guaranteed. 541-389-3361 or 541-771-4463

Bonded & Insured CCB¹t St 595

Back Flow Testing Maintenance

«Thatch & Aerate

• Spring Clean up .Weekly Mowing & Edging •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance •Bark, Rock, Etc. ~Landaca in •Landscape Construction eWater Feature Installation/Maint. •Pavers •Renovations •Irrigations Installation

Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759

Tree Services MR. STUMP BUSTER Professional Stump & Tree Removal• 24 yrs exp. Insured - Free estimates! Call 541-213-9103

BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 19te

632

Apt JMultiplex General CHECKVOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. eSpellcheckn and

Nice bike, $2900.

745

NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon LandGet your law requires anyone scape Contractors Law business who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all Zope~Qua/rep businesses that adconstruction work to be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Za~<da Construction ContracLandscape Construc- a ROWI N G Than Service tors Board (CCB). An More tion which includes: Peace Of A/find active license p lanting, deck s , with an ad in means the contractor fences, arbors, The Bulletin's Spring Clean Up is bonded & insured. water-features, and in•Leaves "Call A Service Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir•Cones CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be Professional" •Needles www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e Directory •Debris Hauling contractor.com Landscape Contracor call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit Weed FreeBark The Bulletin recomnumber is to be in& Flower Beds mends checking with cluded in all adverthe CCB prior to contisements which inditracting with anyone. Lawn Renovation cate the business has Some other t rades Aeration - Dethatching a bond, insurance and also req u ire addiOverseed workers c ompensational licenses and tion for their employCompost certifications. ees. For your protecTop Dressing tion call 503-378-5909 or use our website: Custom Remodel & Tile Landscape www.lcb.state.or.us to T. Schellworth, Gen. 604 Maintenance check license status Contractor/Builder Storage Rentals Full or Partial Service CCB ¹188631 before contracting with •Mowing .Edging 541-588-0958 the business. Persons •Pruning eWeeding doing lan d scapeFor rent, 8'x20' container Sprinkler Adjustments maintenance do not in secure facility. Dry, only $90/mo. Call USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI r equire an LCB l i - clean, 9th Street RV Storage Fertilizer included cense. Center, 541-420-6851. Door-to-door selling with with monthly program Aeration/Dethatching fast results! It's the easiest 630 1-time or Weekly Services Weekly, monthly way in the world to sell. Rooms for Rent or one time service. Ask about FREEadded svcs w/seasonal contract! The Bulletin Classified Large mstr bdrm, priBonded & Insured. EXPERIENCED 541-385-5809 COLLINS Lawn Maint. vate b a th , w a l k-in Commercial closet, use of house & Ca/I 541-480-9714 & Residential appliances, f e nced Debris Removal Allen Reinsch Yard backyard for p ets. Maintenance & Mowing $500. 541-815-1171 Senior Discounts (& many other things!) JUNK BE GONE 541-390-1466 Call 541-536-1294 or Good classified adstell I Haul Away FREE Same Day Response 541-815-5313 the essential facts in an For Salvage. Also interesting Manner. Write Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Villanueva Lawn Care. from the readers view not Mel, 541-389-8107 Maintenance,clean-up, the seller's. Convert the thatching + more! facts into benefits. Show Free estimates. Domestic Services the reader howthe item will 541-981-8386 help them insomeway. Serving Central Home is Where the Dirt Is Oregon Since 2003 Just bought a new boat? This 9 yrs exp. in housekeepResidental/Commercial Sell your old one in the advertising tip ing. Refs & rates to fit classifieds! Ask about our brought toyouby your needs. Julie 8 Sprinkler Super Seller rates! Hovana, 541-410-0648 Activation/Repair 541-385-5809 The Bulletin or 541-728-1800 Saving Central Oregon since1%8

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $24,995.

541-383-3503

Homes for Sale

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit Bigfoot Diesel 32' approval team, 2006, Su p er C web site presence. Duramax d i e sel, We Take Trade-Ins! Allison trans., only Free Advertising. 37K mi., do u b le BIG COUNTRY RV slide, 5500 Onan Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: diesel gen., to many 541-548-5254 options to list. Vin¹ 534032, $79,995. Beaver Coach n Sales 8 Service, Say egoodbuy Bend 541-914-8438 to that unused DLR ¹3447 item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds

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

750

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 763

Recreational Homes 8 Property

Fishing camp: dock wave breaks, electric to dock, f ully f u rnished, extra bunks in pump house, by water only on North 10 Mi e l Lake . 541-404-7595.

for Complete Listings of Yamaha 750 Maxum, Area Real Estate for Sale 1983, 19K, exlnt cond, 50mpg, shaft drive, $1395. 541-279-7092 870

Boats & Accessones

14'6n LUND alum.

boat, 15 HP Merc m otor, E Z L o ad trailer. Never been in water due to illness i n fam i ly. $6500. 541-617-0846

775

Manufactured/ human errors do occur. If this happens to Mobile Homes your ad, please contact us ASAP so that FACTORY SPECIAL corrections and any New Home, 3 bdrm, adjustments can be $46,500 finished made to your ad. on your site. 541 -385-5809 J and M Homes The Bulletin Classified 541-548-5511

541-447-8664

V ictory TC 2002, runs great, 40K mi., Stage 1 Generator Kubota 3500 gas, 60 h rs, $1000 Performance Kit, n ew tires, r e a r CASH. 541-923-5960 brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. Look at: 541-771-0665 Bendhomes.com

12'1969 Searsaluminum fishing boat, low hours on new 8 hp engine, with trailer and extras. Good shape!$1600. 54'I -382-2599

AIR

18'Maxum skiboat,2000,

inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755

TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles / Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more information go to

Fleetvvood Discovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all e ~ options - 3 slide outs, asa onos.co ~ satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, or email etc., 32,000 miles. trainwater157O Wintered in h e ated gaaoo shop. $84,900 O.B.O. or call858-527-8627

Forest River Sunseeker Class C, 24-ft -Double bed, roomy bath/shower, lots storage, oak wood, dining area slide-out w/ new awning. Micro, air, new flat screen TV & RV batt. On-board gen/low hrs, arctic pkg, full cover. Ford 450 V10, 36,300 mi, tow pkg, leather seats, no smoking/pets, sleeps 5-6 $31,500. 9 2 ci 541-419-6176

Redmond Homes

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

Orbit 21' 2007, used

only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,51 1 OBO. 541-382-9441

54$ -385-5809

NOTICE

All real estate adver- Triumph Daytona tised here in is sub- 2004, 15K m i l e s, ject to th e F ederal perfect bike, needs F air Housing A c t , nothing. Vin which makes it illegal ¹201536. to advertise any pref$4995 erence, limitation or Dream Car discrimination based Sales on race, color, reli- 1801Auto Division, Bend gion, sex, handicap, DreamCarsBend.com familial status or na541-678-0240 tional origin, or intenDlr 3665 tion to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. Take care of We will not knowingly your investments accept any advertising for r eal e state with the help from which is in violation of The Bulletin's this law. All persons are hereby informed "Call A Service that all dwellings advertised are available Professional" Directory on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified

Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

HONDA XR650L 2002 541-480-4744.

LOCAL MONEY:Webuy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13. Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Call54 I385580f to promoteyourservice• Advertise for 28delt startingat' lfg ptis Sec ttftattateisnatavailableaneareefatei

KeystoneLaredo 31' RV 20 06 with 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking$1 8,600

Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1988 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, 4000W generator, w heelchair lift avail. Good cond. $11,500 obo 541-447-5504

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

541-548-0318 (phofoaboveis of a

similar model & not the actual vehicle)

Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011 Mdl P 27RL 31', 15' Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries LED lighting always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $28,000. Call Bill, 541-480-7930 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

Redmond: Tioga 24' Class C 541-548-5254 Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, I ~ - gprofessionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batterSPRINGDALE 22' 2010 ies. Oven, hot water Exlnt cond, Q-bed+ diheater 8 air condinette/small bed; bathtioning have never room w/tub/shower (not a ewet e bathroom), ceramic been used! $24 000 obo Serious toilet; AC, gas heat, gas inquines, please. cook stove w/oyen; gas Stored in Terrebonne. water heater; micro, large 541-548-5174 115v AC/gas fridge/ freezer; 2 hanging closets, 2 mirrors; cable TV& rooftop antenna hookups; stereo CD/radio,Ig rear window; roller awning; load level hitch. By owner$10,000. 541-647-8214(Sisters) Winnebago Adventurer 2005 35/a', gas, less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with a l l o p tions, Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walk$69,000 / negotiable. Call 5 4 1-306-8711or around queen bed, email a i kistu©bend- central air, awning, cable.com 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121

a•

Winnebago Aspect 2009 - 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, win d ows, Aluminum wheels. 17a Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L i k e ne w , $74,900 541-480-6900

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1 5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com


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

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Cy the Cynic, the man to whom everything bad happens, says that if you ask him, the grass is brown on both sides of the fence. Playing at four hearts, Cy won the first spade with the king and let the ten of trumps ride — though East had opened the bidding and held most of the missing honors. Sure enough, East took the king and led the queen of diamonds, and t he grass was also brown on t h e diamond sideof the fence. When Cy put up the king, West took the ace, and the defense got another diamond and the ace of clubs. Down one.

ANSWER: You have an awkward problem. If y o u r h and had been slightly weaker, you m i ght h ave solved it by not opening. Bid 1NT, promising (if not quite delivering) b alanced pattern a n d m i n i m um values. A rebid of two clubs would suggest longer clubs, and a bid of two hearts would be a "reverse," showing much more high-card strength. East dealer Both sides vtdnerable

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E MA P A N I N S C H E P O L G R O O M F E E D L I M A K T I G M A RO T S L A N T U I T A L S V I D E S E N S E 03/31/1 4 11

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By Ed Sessa (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

03/31/14


TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 882 932 Fifth Wheels 0 Antique &

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, MARCH 31 2014 933

935

975

975

975

975

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Ford Bronco 1990,

Cadillac Deville DHS 2000. Most options, exc. cond. 93,000 mi.. New tires. $4,800. 541-233-8944.

C5

Classic Autos

Alpenlife 29' 1993, with go o s eneck. $4500 obo. Needs new ref r igerator 541-306-1961. Leave message.

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

908

engine, power every-

Ford Ranger 1990 K ing Cab, g o o d cond, new motor, tinted windows, bed liner, 2 sets tires, dual pipe. Must see to appreciate. $4000

thing, new paint, 54K obo. 541-948-9061 orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 Advertise your car! Add A Picture! obo. 541-480-3179 Reach thousands of readers! Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Claseifieds

Aircraft, Parts

& Service

Need help fixing stuff?

5.9 351, 134k miles,

exc. cond. inside and out. $3,295 or make offer. 541-550-6328

Call A Service Professional

Corvette 1979

find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com CHECK YOUR AD

L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never damaged or abused.

1/3interest in

$150,000

(located @ Bend.) 541-288-3333 on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that 1/3 interest in wellcorrections and any equipped IFR Beech Boadjustments can be nanza A36, new 10-550/ made to your ad. prop, located KBDN. 541-385-5809 $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com The Bulletin Classified

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

541-323-1898

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

~

933

2004 CH34TLB04 34'

172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. Exceptionally clean & economical! $13,500. Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773

2012 Chevrolet Silverado LT 4x4-

fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. inside & out. 27" TV dvd/cd/am/fm e n tertain center. Call for more details. O nly used 4 times total in last 5ys years.. No 1974 Bellanca pets, no smoking. High 1730A retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in 2160 TT, 440 SMO, your truck. Call 8 a.m. 180 mph, excellent to 10 p.m. for appt to condition, always see. 541-330-5527. hangared, 1 owner

5.3 V8, Flexfuel, 14K

miles, Extended Cab, tow pkg, Performance 20" wheels, Sirius XM, OnStar, bedliner, Snug Top, like new! $28,500. 541-923-8868

'i f„'

Q

• $"

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

2005 Diesel 4x4

$28,000

541-419-3301

Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826

In Madras, call 541-475-6302

Cessna 182Q, 1977, mid-time engine/

541-420-3250

prop, custom panel,

S-Tec 30+ altitude hold, Garmin 430, GPSS, oversized tires, digital fuel flow, excellent paint & interior. Must see to appreciate. Asking $68,000. Bill, 541-480-7930

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new!

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com 916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

541-419-0566

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h oses, camlocks, $ 25,000. 541-820-3724

(located in Bend)

GMC Sonoma 2001 4x4 Ext Cab, 4.3L V6, 87,650 miles, very good cond. $5500. 541-388-1714

940

Ford Thunderbird 2002 c o nvertible with brand new tonneau cover, white with grey i nterior, loaded, 88,600 low miles, choice condition, everything works. Great fun car to d r ive. I l l ness forces sale $13,950 cash. C all Bi l l 541-604-9307

Vans

Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside out, one owner, nonsmoker,. loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

Honda Odyssey

I nternational Fl a t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.

1999. Very good cond. Runs well, Two sets of tires on rims - summer and winter. $2500.

with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

541-593-2312

or 541-977-7588 975

Automobiles

935

Sport Utility Vehicles

Kia Souf+ 2012

Corvette Coupe BMW X3

Dodge Ram 1500 SLT uadcab 1999

5 .2L V8 1 43,659 mi. Vin ¹628726

auto . , RWD

Bargain Corral. $5,977 ROBBERSON

2 0 07, 99K

2.0L 4 cyls, FWD, automatic, 43k miles, 28 MPG Hwy, vin¹438072 $12,977 ROBBERSON y

1996, 350 auto,

135k, non-ethanol miles, premium packfuel/synthetic oil, age, heated lumbar supported seats, pangaraged/covered. oramic moo nroof, Bose Premium Gold Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- system. Orig. owner non headlights, tan & manual. Stock! black leather interior, $10,500 OBO. n ew front & re a r Retired. Must sell! brakes @ 76K miles, 541-923-1781 one owner, all records, very clean, $1 6,900. 541-388-4360 Buick LacrosseCX 2008

LIIICOLN ~

~

541.312.3986 DLR ¹0205

Mazda3 2012

~msms

541.312.3986 DLR¹0205

Dodge Ram 2500 2008 Diesel, exc. towing vehicle, 2WD, 55,000 miles. New batteries, rear air bags, Roll-n-lock bed cover, spray-in liner. 5th wheel hitch available, too. $19,000. 541-604-1285

BMW X3 2011 black

Sport, 5 spd, leather seats, hatchback, FWD. 68,398 mi. vin¹532282 $17,977

FWD automatic, 4-Spd, 75,999 mi. Vin¹343933 $9,977 ROBBERSON

on black, sport/prem packs, leather, 3.5i turbo, nav., 20k miles, 19" wheels, cold weather pkg, Xenons, warranteed to 9/2015.$38,000 One owner,

LlllcoLN~

ROBBERSON

III R K R

LIIICOLII ~

541.312.3986 DLR ¹0205

503-789-9401

(Portland)

~

541.312.3986 DLR ¹0205

FIND IT!

2006SuperCab

f ~~

Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully ser-

2.5S 4cyl., FWD, CVT, 76k mi., 32 mpg„Tuscan Sun Metallic, vin¹443778 $11,997 ROBBERSON ~

viced, garaged,

looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647

ssrsea ~

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

X)

in here.

Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928 ToyotaCelica Convertible 1993

GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t i res, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. i nside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! $5995. R edmond. 541-504-1993

:

wwN'.bendbuttetin.com

a~ c -

- WHAT A DIFFERENCE

A DECADEMAKES

.E.

IJl

- -

,

pkgs, new tires, more! $6775 obo.541-330-5818 Find It in

The Bulletin Classiffeds! 541-385-5809

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Community College

LEGAL NOTICE CENTRAL OREGON COMMUNITY COLLEGE REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS RFQ 1432-13-A Aviation Flight

District created within

Instruction Providers The College is soliciting qualifications from flight providers for the purpose of providing student flight training that is in accordance with Central Oregon Community C ollege curriculum guidelines, the requirements of the state of Oregon, a ccreditation s t andards contained in NASC, and the requirements of the appropriate FAR(s). A complete set of RFQ documents may be obtained from the Purchasing Coordinator Office, located at N ewberry H a ll, Room 118, 2600 NW College Way, Bend, OR 97701 o r by emailing: jmosier@cocc.edu Sealed qualifications for RFQ 1432-13-A Aviation Flight Instruction Providers for Central Oregon Community College will be accepted by Julie Mosier, P u rchasing Coordinator, in the CFO department, Newberry Hall, Room 118, 2600 NW College Way, Bend, OR 97701. Providers who qualified for the current academic year (2013-14) need only submit a renewal request on the forms provided by the College.

the context of Oregon Revised Statutes, is an Equal Opportunity Employer. M i n ority and Women-Owned Businesses are encouraged to participate in this solicitation.

The Purchasing Coordinator is the sole point of contact for t his solicitation.

All

c ommunication b e tween the P rovider and the College regarding this solicitation shall be in writing, submitted by email, to the Purchasing Coordinator at the email listed above. Email inquiries s hall be identified in the subject lines as "RFQ 1432-13-A inquiry". Providers are to rely on written statements issued exclusively by the Purchasing Coordinator. A n y o t her communication will be considered unofficial and non - binding. Communications directed to other then the Purchasing Coordinator will have no legal bearing on this RFQ or the resulting contract(s). Julie Mosier Purchasing Coordinator Published, March 31, 2014 Bend Bulletin, Bend OR Daily Journal of Commerce, Portland OR

interest to do so.

=.:- The BuHetin ==

V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 AWD, sunroof, lux/winter

Legal Notices

that it is in the public

Shouldn't VOU he looking V to placeanad,call 541-3854801

541-322-9647

1000

T he College m a y waive any or all informalities and irregularities, may reject any submittal not in compliance with all prescribed public procurement procedures and re q uirements, and may reject for good cause any or all s ubmittals upon a finding of the College

There's GOOD stuff

Classifieds

Garaged, p e rfect condition, $59,700.

Legal Notices

For providers not currently app r oved, qualification p a perw ork must b e r e ceived by2:OOPM, local time, A p ril 1 5 , 2014 in order to be considered for provision of services for t he 2 0 14-15 A c ad emic y e ar . Re sponses s u bmitted after that date will be reviewed, and if qualif ied, firms w il l b e added to the Provider List for the 2015-16 Academic year.

Ford F-250XLT

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 931 6.0L V8, auto.,diesel, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 Automotive Parts, 4WD Vin¹D74407 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 Service & Accessories Barqain Corral g A/Cs, entertainment $18,977 center, fireplace, W/D, American Racing wheels garden tub/shower, in ROBBERSON cast aluminum dish great condition.$36,000 (4), style, 15x7, 5 lug, 4.5" LIIICOLII ~ ms m a obo. Call Peter, spacing. $250. 307-221-2422, 541-604-0963 541.312.3986 ( in La Pine ) DLR¹0205 WILL DELIVER Michelin P225/45R-18 low profile radials mounted on 5 spoke, 5 Ford F-350 4x4, RV lug Chevy rims, $600 CONSIGNMENTS obo. 541-647-2640 WANTED We Do the Work, 932 You Keep the Cash! Antique & On-site credit Classic Autos approval team, 2006 XLT 4-door web site presence. Crew Cab We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. 6.0L Turbo diesel, full BIG COUNTRY RV power, a u tomatic, Bend: 541-330-2495 1921 Model T 6-disc CD, cruise, fog Redmond: Delivery Truck lights, running boards, 541-548-5254 Restored & Runs tow pkg, bedliner, grill $9000. guard, folding rear 541-389-8963 seat. Tan cloth inte885 rior, metallic tan exteCanopies & Campers rior. 91,400 miles. Ford F150 1983, Nice, original Thunderbird Priced to sell $21,500 2009 9 t/s' Arctic Fox, loaded, gen., excellent, canopy. needs motor 541-350-6925 $24,900. 541-410-1312 $350. 541-410-3425 •

541-548-5648

1996, 73k miles,

BUY ITI SELL ITr The Bulletin Classifieds

Pontiac Grand AM SE1 2003

DLR¹0205

707-484-3518

with camper shell, ood cond., $1500 BO. 541-447-5504.

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

2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HPi Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, and battery, Bose p remium sou n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras.

541-389-9377

rrases ~

Chevy Ext. Cab 1991

Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, 2 slides, AC, recliners, walk-around queen bed, sliding glass door closet, new tub & 10-gal water heater, good tires. Brand Hangarfor sale at new 20' screen room Redmond - not available. Super clean, 1 a T HangarAirport - $39,000. owner, n o n -smokers. 541-420-0626 $11,999. 541-447-7968

MONTANA 3585 2008,

GMC 2500 2003 HD SLE Crew Cab 4-wheel drive, 6.6 liter V8 Turbo Diesel Duramax engine, Allison transmission, many options, 107,000 miles. Very good condition, $21,500.

PMf Ã!

for 35 years. $60K.

Laredo 30'2009

Olds 98 Regency 1990 exc. shape, runs as new, one owner, 20 mpg in town. New battery, stud snow tires. $2000.

541.312.3986

Pickups

Keystone Challenger

Mazda Miata 1997 M-Edition Mica Green, 5-spd, All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover, synthetic oils, small alum. trailer, extra set tires and rims $5995.

Plymouth B a rracuda Ford Bronco II 1966, original car! 300 4x4, 1989hp, 360 V8, center- Ford Supercab 1992, Automatic, power Mercedes Benz lines, 541-593-2597 brown/tan color with steering, stereo C220 1996 $12,900. m atching full s i z e upgrade, set-up to FWD, V6 auto., 90k Dave, 541-350-4077 canopy, 2WD, 460 mi., 29 mpg Hwy, tow, runs good. over drive, 135K mi., Vin¹572987 $1700. full bench rear seat, Bar ain Corral 541-633-6662 slide rear w i ndow, 6,977 bucket seats, power ROBBERSONi Rolls Royce 1992 Sil2.2L 4 cyl. auto, seats w/lumbar, pw, Nissan Murano 2010 104k miles, 29 MPG ver Spur II, excellent! HD receiver & trailer SEL AWD Nav., prem. Midnight Blue exterior, brakes, good t ires. pkg. ¹102642 $23,988 Hwy, Gray, 541-312-3986 Parchment leather inte- Good Vin¹391666 cond i tion. CORVETTE COUPE DLR ¹0205 rior, 15-inch chrome RR $4900. 541-389-5341 Glasstop 2010 $5,998 wheels, Alpine Sirius Grand Sport - 4 LT ROBBERSON i DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS loaded, clear bra navigation system, hood & fenders. Want to impress the 77,200 miles, dealerwww.aaaoregonautoNew Michelin Super ship maintained, al541-312-3986 relatives? Remodel source.com Sports, G.S. floor ways garaged. New, DLR ¹0205 your home with the mats, 17,000 miles, about $250,000; sell Crystal red. help of a professional Toyota Landcruiser $19,500. 541%480-3348 FORD XLT 1992 $42,000. from The Bulletin's Nissan Altima 2007 3.5 VX 1999 3/4 ton 4x4 503-358-1164. WHEN ONLY THE SL. - mocha 58,500 "Call A Service matching canopy, BEST WILL DO! mi., $16,988. ¹440752 Professional" Directory 30k original miles, Ford Fusion SEL 2010, possible trade for leather, AWD, ¹ classic car, pickup, 277998 $16,988 motorcycle, RV Porsche 911 541-598-3750 $13,500. 4.7L V8, 4WD, auto., Carrera 993 cou e In La Pine, call www.aaaoregonauto16 mpg Hwy, Vin¹ 928-581-9190 source.com Buick Skylark 1972 66902 Bargain Cor17K orig. miles. Please 541-598-3750 ral $11,977 see Bend Craiglist for www.aaaoregonautoNissan Altima2010 source.com details. $18,900. a ROBBERSON

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

Porsche 911 Turbo

The College is not res ponsible fo r a n y costs of any Providers i ncurred w hile submitting qualifications; al l P r oviders who respond to solicitations do so solely at their own expense. C entral Oreg o n Community College, a

The "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i thin 30 days along with the required filing fee. It must be i n p r oper form and have proof o f service on t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n a t t orney, proof of service on the plaintiff. The object of t he complaint is t o foreclose a deed of t rust dated July 1 , 2004 and recorded as B ook 2004, P a g e 40773 given by Dino Sargentini, Kim Sargentini on p roperty commonly known as 16031 Park Drive, La Pine, OR 97739 and legally described as: LOT 2 IN BLOCK 92 OF DES C HUTES R IVER RECR E ATION HOMESITES, UNIT 8, PART11, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Manufactured Home Info. Year 2004 Make FUQUQ MODEL: MAPLETON. ¹ORE455780, ORE455779, ORE455778.

The complaint seeks to foreclose and terminate all i nterest of Dino Sargentini and all other interests in t he p roperty. T h e "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") must be given to t h e c o urt clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein a long with the r e quired filing fee. The date of first publication of the summons is March10 2014 If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an a ttorney, 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. Attorneys for Plaintiff, SHAPIRO & SUTHERLAND, LLC, / s /. J ames A . Cra f t . J ames A. Craf t

LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E C I R CUIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DE S CHUTES. Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC, Plaintiff, vs. DINO SARGENTINI; KIM SARGENTINI; D E SCHUTES R IVER RECR E ATION HOMESITES PROPERTY O W NERS ASSOCIATION, OTHER P E RSONS O R P A RTIES, i n cluding OCCUPANTS, UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, O R INTEREST I N THE PRO P E RTY DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT ¹090146 HEREIN, Defendants. [jcrafto logs.com], No. 13 C V 1019FC. 7632 S W D u r ham CIVIL SU M MONS. R oad, S u ite 3 5 0 , TO T H E DE F E N- Tigard, OR 9 7 224, DANTS: D i no Sar- (360)260-2253; Fax gentini. NOTICE TO (360)260-2285. DEFENDANT: READ T HESE PAP E R S LEGAL NOTICE CAREFULLY! A law- NOTICE OF SEIZURE suit has been started FOR CIVIL a gainst you in t h e FORFEITURE TO ALL above-entitled Court POTENTIAL by Bayview Loan Ser- CLAIMANTS AND TO vicing, LLC, Plaintiff. ALL UNKNOWN P laintiff's c laim i s PERSONS READ THIS stated in the written CAREFULLY Complaint, a copy of which is on file at the If you have any interDeschutes C o unty est in t h e s e ized Courthouse. You property d e s cribed must "appear" in this below, you must claim case or the other side that interest or you will will win automatically. automatically lose that To "appear" you must interest. If you do not file with the court a le- file a claim for the gal paper called a property, the property "motion" or "answer." may be forfeited even


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

C6 MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2014•THE BULLETIN

1000

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1000

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1000

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

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Legal Notices

if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, The w r itten claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will a c cept f u ture m ailings f ro m t h e court and f orfeiture counsel; and (3) A s tatement that y o u have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture cou n sel named below is 21 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more i nformation: D a ina Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 N E T hird Street, Prineville, OR

good standing. The beneficiary may require as a condition t o r e i nstatement that you provide reliable written evidence that you have paid a l l senior liens or encumbrances, p roperty taxes, and hazard insurance p r e miu ms. These r e quirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the undersigned Tru s tee. The street or other common designation if any, of the real property des cribed above i s purported to be: 2718 NE 6TH DRIVE, REDMOND, OR 97756 The

undersigned Trustee d i sclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the a bove street o r other common designation. By 97754. reason of said deNotice of reasons for fault, th e b e nefiForfeiture: The prop- ciary has declared erty described below all sums owing on was seized for forfei- the obligation seture because it: (1) cured by said Constitutes the pro- Trust Deed immediceeds of the violation ately due and payof, solicitation to vio- able, said sums belate, attempt to vio- ing the following, to late, or conspiracy to wit: Principal violates, the criminal $290,51 7.06, tolaws of the State of gether with interest Oregon regarding the as provided in the manufacture, distribu- note or other intion, or possession of strument s e cured controlled substances from 04/1 3 /12, (ORS C hapter475); plus subsidy recapand/or (2) Was used ture in the sum of or intended for use in $23,126.76 and fees committing or facili- a ssessed i n th e tating the violation of, amount of solicitation to violate, $3,984.99, plus acattempt to violate, or crued interest due conspiracy to violate thereon, and such the criminal laws of other costs and fees the State of Oregon are due under the regarding the manu- note o r o t her infacture, distribution or strument secured, possession of c o n- and as are provided trolled su b stances by statute. (ORS Chapter 475). WHEREFORE, notice is hereby given IN THE MATTER OF: t hat t h e und e r signed trustee will, (1) US Currency in on May 2, 2014, at the am o un t of the h o ur of 10:00 $1,221.00, Case No A.M. in accord with 13-180484 se i z ed the Standard Time, August 25, 2013 from as established by Brent Odom. ORS 187.110, INLEGAL NOTICE OREGON T RUSTEE'S N O TICE OF SALE T.S. N o: L544262 O R Unit Code: L Loan

SIDE T H E M A IN L OBBY O F T H E DESCHUTES

COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1164 NW B OND, B END C ounty o f DE S CHUTES, State of OREGON, (which is the new date, time a nd place set f o r said sale) sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the Grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of the said T r ust Deed, together with any interest which the Grantor or his successors in interest acquired a f ter t he execution of said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obli g ations thereby secured and the c o sts and ex-

construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the f eminine and t h e neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as a n y other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is s ecured by s a i d T rust Deed, a n d the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in i nterest, i f any . The Beneficiary may b e attempting t o collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for th a t purpose. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of m o nies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If a vailable, the e x pected opening bid and/or p o stponement i n f ormation may be obtained by calling t h e following telephone number(s) on the day b efore th e s a le: (714) 480-5690 or you may a ccess sales information at salestrack.tdsf.com DATED: 1 2 /1 9/1 3 CHRISTOPHER C. D ORR, OSBA ¹ 992526 By CHRISTOPHER C. DORR, A T T O RN EY AT LAW D I RECT INQUIRIES

TO: T.D . S E RVICE C O MPANY FORECLOSURE DEPARTMENT 4000 W. Metropolitan Drive Suite 400 Orange, CA 92868 (800) 843 - 0260 TAC¹ 968117 PUB: 03/1 7/1 4, 03/24/1 4, 03/31/1 4, 04/07/1 4 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to O.R.S. 86.705 et seq. and O.R.S. 79.5010,

et seq. Trustee's Sale No. 0 9 -XFH-130012

NOTICE TO B O RROWER: YOU SHOULD BE AWARE THAT THE UNDERNo: SIGNED I S AT80280108/HALE TEMPTING TO COLA P ¹ 1: 257 1 7 2 LECT A DEBT AND Title ¹ : 839 0 204 THAT ANY I NFORReference is made MATION OBTAINED to that certain Trust WILL BE USED FOR THAT PUR P OSE. D eed made b y M ICHELLE H A L E Reference is made to as Grantor, to RUthat certain Deed of RAL HOU S I NG Trust made by, TROY SERVICE OR ITS R B E TCHER, a s SUCCESSOR grantor, to FIDELITY AGENCY as NATIONAL TITLE INTrustee, in favor of S URANCE CO., a s UNITED S T ATES Trustee, in favor of OF AMER I C A FIRST TENNESSEE ACTING THROUGH BANK NA T IONAL THE RURAL A SSOCIATION, a s H OUSING S E R b eneficiary, da t e d V ICE O R SU C 3/24/2003, recorded CESS A G E NCY, 5/12/2003, under InUNITED S T ATES strument No. DEPARTMENT OF 2003-31518, records AGRICULTURE as of DESC H UTES Beneficiary. Dated County, O R EGON. June 9, 2008, ReThe beneficial interc orded June 1 3 , penses of sale, inest under said Trust 2008 as Instr. No. cluding a r easonDeed and the obliga2008-25474 in Book able charge by the tions secured thereby -- Page -- of Offitrustee. N o t ice is are presently held by cial Records in the further given that FIRST TENNESSEE o ffice of th e R e any person named BANK NAT I ONAL c order o f DE S in O.R.S.86.753 has ASSOCIATION. Said CHUTES C ounty; the right, at any time Trust Deed encumO REGON REAMprior to f i ve days bers the following deORTIZATION before the date last scribed real property AGREEMENT set for the sale, to situated in said county WITH EFFECTIVE have this f orecloand state, to-wit: LOT DATE OF 4/1 3/1 2 sure p r oceeding SEVEN (7), BLOCK I, covering the followdismissed and the DESCHUTES RIVER ing described real Trust Deed r ein- WOODS, DESproperty situated in stated by payment CHUTES COUNTY, to the beneficiary of s aid county a nd OREGON. The street s tate, to wit: L O T the entire amount a ddress o r oth e r ONE H U N DRED then due (other than common designation, SIXTY SIX ( 166), such portion of the if any, of th e r eal DIAMOND BAR principal as would property d e scribed RANCH, PHASE 4, not then be due had above is purported to RECORDED MAY no default occurred) b e: 5 9 9 3 4 MIN 1, 2007, IN CABIand by curing any NETONKA C I RCLE other default comNET H, PAGE 317, BEND, OR 97702 The DESCHUTES plained herein that undersigned Trustee COUNTY, ORis capable of being disclaims any liability EGON. B o t h t he cured by tendering for any incorrectness the performance reof the above street beneficiary and the trustee have elected quired u n der the a ddress o r oth e r to sell the said real o bligation of t h e common designation. property to satisfy Trust Deed, and in Both the beneficiary and the trustee have the obligations seaddition to paying cured by said Trust said sums or tenelected to sell the said Deed and a Notice dering the p e rforreal property to sato f D e f ault ha s mance necessary to isfy the o b ligations been recorded purcure the default, by secured by said trust suant t o O r e gon paying all costs and deed and a notice of Revised S t a tutes expenses actually default has been re86.735(3); the deincurred in encorded pursuant to fault for w hich the forcing the obligaOregon Revised Statforeclosure is made tion and Trust Deed, utes 86.735(3); the is Grantor's failure together with default for which the to pay when due, trustee's and foreclosure is made is the following sums: attorney's fees not grantor's failure to pay 20 PYMTS FROM exceeding the when due, the follow05/1 3/1 2 TO amounts provided ing sums: Amount due 12/1 3/1 3 I by sa i d ORS as of March 19, 2014 Delinquent Payments 1,203.95 86.753. I t w i ll be $24,079.00 TOTAL necessary for you to f rom February 0 5 , LATE C H ARGES contact the under2013 1 payments at $345.96 Sub-Total signed prior to the $632.60 each $632.60 of Amounts in Artime you tender re1 3 p a yments a t rears:$24,424.96 instatement or $746.52 each Together with any payoffso that you $9,704.76 (02-05-13 default in the paymay be advised of through 03 - 1 9-14) ment of r ecurring the exact amount, Late Charges: obligations as they including t rustee's $852.89 BEN E FIbecome due. costs and fees, that CIARY ADVANCES ALSO, if you have y ou wil l b e r eSuspense Cre d it: failed to pay taxes TOTAL: q uired t o pay . $0.00 on th e p r operty, Payment must be in $1 1,190.25 ALSO, if the full amount in provide insurance you have failed to pay on the property or the form of cashier's taxes on the property, pay o t her senior or certified check. provide insurance on liens o r en c u m- T he effect of t h e the property or pay brances as required sale will be to deother senior liens or i n the n ot e a n d prive you and all encumbrances as reT rust Deed, t h e those who hold by, quired in the note and beneficiary may through and under d eed of t r ust, t h e insist that you do so beneficiary may insist you of a l l interest in order to reinstate in the property dethat you do so in ory our account i n scribed above. I n der to reinstate your

under a l e g itimate maintain the property. erty to satisfy the obli- expenses actually incurred in enforcing the rental agreement. The Otherwise: o You do gations secured by information does not not owe rent; o The the trust deed and a obligation and t rust new owner is not your apply to you if you notice of default has deed, together with own this property or if landlord and is not and been recorded pursu- trustee's for ant to O regon Reattorney's fees not you are not a bona responsible fide residential tenant. maintaining the vlsed Statutes exceeding the yo u r 86.735(3); the event amounts provided by If the foreclosure sale p roperty o n goes through, the new b ehalf; and o Y o u of default under the said OR S 8 6 .753. owner will have the must move out by the n ote and d eed o f Requests from perright to require you to date the new owner t rust, p ursuant t o sons named in ORS move out. Before the specifies in a notice to Section 9(a)(i) of the 86.753 for reinstaten ew o w ne r ca n you. The new owner Deed of Trust, which ment quotes received require you to move, may offer to pay your provides that, "Lender less than six days the new owner must moving expenses and may require immedi- prior to the date set p rovide y o u wit h any other costs or ate payment in full of for the trustee's sale written notice t h at amounts you and the all sums secured by will be honored only at specifies the date by new owner agree on this Security Instru- the discretion of the which you must move in exchange for your ment if... .Borrower b eneficiary or if r e o ut. If yo u d o n o t agreement to leave dies and the Property quired by the terms of l eave b efore t h e the premises in less is not the principal the loan documents. t han 9 0 d a y s o r residence of at least In construing this nomove-out date, t he new owner can have before your fixed term one surviving Bor- tice, the singular inthe sheriff remove you lease expires. You rower". Default date of cludes the plural, the from the property after should speak with a 09/26/2013 and pay word "grantor" into full y the following sums: cludes any successor a court hearing. You lawyer will receive notice of understand your rights principal balance of i n i nterest t o th e before making any grantor as well as any BALANCE OF the c ourt h e aring. $123,372.60 with acPROTECTION FROM decisions regarding other person owing an $ 41,427.89, P L U S crued interest from i nterest thereon a t E VICTION IF Y O U your tenancy. IT IS 08/26/2013; together obligation, the perfor4.500% per annum ARE A BONA FIDE UNLAWFUL FOR with title e x pense, mance of which is seANY PERSON TO from 2/5/2013, until TENANT costs, trustee's fees cured by said trust TRY TO FORCE YOU and attorney's fees deed, and the words paid, together with O CCUPYING A N D "trustee" and "benefiescrow a d v ances, RENTING THIS T O L EAVE Y O UR i ncurred herein b y f oreclosure co s t s, P ROPERTY AS A D WELLING UNI T reason of said default; ciary" include their reW ITHOUT FI R S T trustee fees, attorney RESIDENTIAL any further sums ad- spective successors YOU GIVING YOU vanced by the benefi- in interest, if any. The fees, sums required DWELLING, N O T ICE ciary for the protec- trustee's rules of aucfor the protection of HAVE THE R I GHT WRITTEN the property and addi- TO CONT I N UE A ND G O ING T O tion of t h e a b o ve tion may be accessed w w w .northwesttional sums secured LIVING I N THIS COURT TO E VICT described real prop- at by the Deed of Trust. PROPERTY AFTER Y OU. FOR M O R E erty and its interest trustee.com and are W HEREFORE, n o - THE FORECLOSURE INFORMATION therein; and prepay- incorporated by this tice hereby is given SALE FOR: • THE ABOUT YOUR ment penalties/premi- reference. You may RIGHTS, YOU MAY that the undersigned REMAINDER OF ums, if applicable. By also access sale statrustee, will on July YOUR FIXED TERM WISH TO CONSULT reason of said default, tus a t ww w .northwesttrustee.com and 22, 2014, at the hour LEASE, I F YOU A LAWYER. If y o u the beneficiary has of 11:00 AM, in ac- H AVE A FIXE D believe you need legal d eclared al l s u m s www. USA-Foreclocord with the stan- TERM LEASE; • A T assistance, c o ntact owing on the obliga- sure.com. For further DAY S the Oregon State Bar tion secured by said information, p l ease dard of time estab- L EAST 9 0 Bre a non lished by ORS F ROM TH E D A T E at 800-452-7636 and trust deed i mmedi- contact: 1 87.110, a t MA I N YOU ARE GIVEN A ask for th e l awyer ately due and payMiller Nort h west referral service. If you Trustee Services, Inc. ENTRANCE TO THE WRITTEN able, said sums being DESCHUTES TERMINATION do not have enough the following, to wit: P.O. Box 997 Bellem oney to p a y a principal balance of vue, WA 98009-0997 COUNTY J U STICE NOTICE. If the new 4 25-586-1900 R u s CENTER, 1100 NW owner wants to move lawyer a n d are $123,372.60 with inB OND ST RE E T, i n a n d u s e thi s otherwise eligible, you terest thereon at the sell, Frederick R. (TS¹ a b l e to note rate of 1 .130 7827.20557) BEND, County of DE- property as a primary may b e receive legal percent per annum 1002.265379-File No. SCHUTES, State of r esidence, the n e w O REGON, sel l a t owner can give you assistance for f ree. beginning 08/26/2013; I nformation ab o u t together with title expublic auction to the w ritten notice a n d LEGAL NOTICE h ighest bidder f o r require you to move whom to contact for pense, costs, trustee's TRUSTEE'S NOTICE cash, the interest in out after 9 0 d a ys, free legal assistance fees and a ttorney's O F SALE File N o . the said d escribed even though you have may b e ob t a ined fees incurred herein 9047.20032 R e f e rproperty which t he a fixed term lease with through Safenet at by reason of said de- ence is made to that fault; any further sums c ertain trust d e ed grantor had, or had more than 90 days 800-SAFENET. the power to convey, l eft. You m ust b e Without limiting the advanced by the ben- made by Stephen M at the time of the ex- provided with at least trustee's disclaimer of eficiary for the protec- Schlam and Carol A ecution by him of the 90 days' written notice r epresentations o r tion of the above de- Schlam, as Husband said trust deed, to- after the foreclosure warranties, O r egon scribed real property and Wife and Jeffery gether with any inter- sale before you can l aw r e quires t h e and i ts inte r est W Rank and Carol L est which the grantor be required to move. trustee to state in this therein; and prepay- Rank, as H usband so m e ment penalties/premi- and Wife, as grantor, or his successors in A bona fide tenant is a n otice t ha t interest acquired after residential tenant who residential p r operty ums, if a p plicable. to Western Title, as the execution of said is not the borrower sold at a trustee's sale W HEREFORE, n o - trustee, in favor of trust deed, to satisfy (property owner) or a may have been used tice hereby is given Mortgage Electronic manufacturing that the undersigned Registration Systems, the foregoing obliga- child, s p ouse or in tions thereby secured parent trustee will on July 2, Inc. solely as nomiof the methamphetamines, chemical 2014 at the hour of and the costs and ex- borrower, and whose the nee for Group One penses of sale, in- rental agreement: o Is components of which 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in Lending, a Division of cluding a reasonable the r esult o f an are known to be toxic. accord with the stan- Northwest Mortgage Prospective charge by the trustee. arm's-length dard of time estab- Group, Inc, as benefipurchasers of lished Notice is further given transaction; 0 by ORS ciary, dated 12/13/06, that a n y per s on Requires the payment residential p r operty 187.110, at the folrecorded 12/15/06, in should be aware of named in ORS 86.753 o f rent that i s n o t lowing place: inside the mortgage records has the right, at any substantially less than this potential danger the main lobby of the of Deschutes County, time prior to five days fair market rent for the b efore deciding t o Deschutes C o u nty Oregon, as before the date last property, unless the place a bid for this Courthouse, 1164 NW 2006-82029 and subproperty a t the Bond, in the City of sequently assigned to set for the sale, to rent is r educed or have this foreclosure subsidized due to a trustee's sale. Bend, County of Des- Wilmington Savings roceeding dismissed federal, state or local DATED: 3 / 1 9/2014 chutes, State of OrFund Society, FSB, and the trust deed subsidy; and o Was REGIONAL egon, sell at public Not In Its Individual TRUSTEE reinstated by payment entered into prior to auction to the highest Capacity But Solely to the beneficiary of the d at e o f the SERVICES CORPO- bidder for cash the As Trustee Of The the e ntire a m ount foreclosure sale. RATION Trustee By: i nterest in t h e d e - Primestar-H Fund I then due (other than ABOUT YOUR MELANIE BEAMAN, scribed real property Trust by Assignment AUTHORIZED such portion of the TENANCY which the grantor had recorded as NOW AGENT 6 1 6 1st or had power to con- 2014-004723, coverprincipal as would not BETWEEN then be due had no AND THE Avenue, Suite 500, vey at the time of the ing the following dedefault occurred) and FORECLOSURE Seattle, WA 9 8 104 execution by grantor scribed real property by curing any other S ALE: RENT Y O U Phone: of the trust deed, tosituated in said county default complained of SHOULD CONTINUE (206)340-2550 Sale gether with any inter- and state to wit: Lot Information: herein that is capable TO PAY RENT TO est which the grantor 2, Block1, Long Butte of being cured by YOUR L A NDLORD http://www.rtrustee.co or grantor's succes- Tracts, D e s chutes A-4448637 sors in interest act endering the p e r - UNTIL THE m County, Ore g o n. formance r e q uired PROPERTY IS SOLD 03/31/2014, PROPERTY ADquired after the exunder the obligation or OR UNTIL A COURT 04/07/2014, ecution of the trust DRESS: 4752 Southt rust deed, and i n TELLS YOU 04/1 4/2014, deed, to satisfy the west Quarry Avenue addition to paying said OTHERWISE. IF YOU 04/21/2014 foregoing obligations Redmond, OR 97756 DO NOT PAY RENT, thereby secured and Both the beneficiary sums or tendering the PUBLIC NOTICE performance YOU CAN BE The t he costs an d e x - and the trustee have Bend Park & Recnecessary to cure the EVICTED. BE SURE reation District Board penses of sale, in- elected to sell the real default, by paying all TO KEEP PROOF OF of Directors will meet cluding a reasonable property to satisfy the PAY M ENTS in a w ork session charge by the trustee. obligations secured by costs and expenses ANY actually incurred in YOU MAKE. Notice is further given the trust deed and a A pri l 1 , that enforcing the SECURITY DEPOSIT Tuesday, for reinstatement notice of default has 2014, beginning at obligation and t rust You may apply your 5:30 at the district of- or payoff quotes re- been recorded pursuant to Oregon Redeed, together with security deposit and fice, 799 SW Colum- quested pursuant to trustee's and any rent you paid in bia, Bend, Oregon. O RS 8 6 .757 a n d vised Statutes a ttorney's fees n ot advance against the The board will r e- 86.759 must be timely 86.735(3); the default exceeding the current rent you owe ceive a volunteer re- c ommunicated in a for which the forecloamounts provided by y our l a ndlord a s port, a senior center written request that s ure i s m a d e i s said ORS 86.753. In provided i n ORS omplies with t h a t grantor's failure to pay scope and dis- cstatute construing this notice, 90.367. To d o t h is, project addressed to when due the followcuss potential finanthe masculine gender you must notify your cial impact of capital the trustee's "Urgent ing sums: monthly includes the feminine landlord in writing that project expenditures. Request Desk" either payments of and the neuter, the you want to subtract A regular meeting will by personal delivery $4,347.75 beginning singular includes the the amount of your begin at 7:00 p.m. to the trustee's physi- 12/01/09; and monthly p lural, t h e wor d s ecurity deposit o r of board will con- cal offices (call for ad- payments "grantor" includes any prepaid rent from you The dress) or b y f i r st $4,386.18 beginning sider approval of a successor in interest rent payment. You certified mail, 06/01/2010; and development su- class, to the grantor as well may do this only for new r eturn r eceipt r e - monthly payments of pervisor position. as any other person the rent you owe your quested, addressed to $,464.93 b e ginning owing an obligation, current landlord. If you T he a genda a n d the trustee's post of- 12/01/2010; and the performance of do this, you must do s upplementary r e - fice box address set monthly payments of which is secured by so before the forec- ports are posted on forth in this notice. $4,386.51 beginning said trust deed, and l osure s a le . Th e Due to potential con- 12/01/2011; plus prior district's website, flicts the words "trustee" business or individual the with federal law, accrued late charges www.bendparksan"beneficiary" who and bu y s this drec.org. For more persons having no of $6,667.68; plus adinclude their property record legal or equi- vances of $ 138.05; a t the information call respective successors foreclosure sale is not 541-389-7275. table interest in the together with title exin interest, if a n y. responsible to you for subject property will pense, costs, trustee's Anyone having any any deposit or prepaid LEGAL NOTICE only receive informa- fees and a ttorney's objection to the sale rent you paid to your TRUSTEE'S NOTICE tion concerning the fees incurred herein on a n y gr o unds l andlord. ABOU T O F SALE File N o . lender's estimated or by reason of said dew hatsoever will b e YOUR TEN A NCY 7827.20557 R e f e r- actual bid. Lender bid fault; any further sums afforded an AFTER THE ence is made to that i nformation is a l s o advanced by the benopportunity t o be FORECLOSURE c ertain t rust d e e d available a t the eficiary for the protecheard as t o t h o se SALE The new owner made by Frederick R. trustee's web s ite, tion of the above dethat buys this property www.northwestobjections if they bring Russell, as grantor, to scribed real property a lawsuit to restrain at the foreclosure sale Amerititle, as trustee, trustee.com. Notice is and i st inte r est the same. NOTICE may be willing to allow in favor of Financial further given that any therein; and prepayTO RE S I DENTIAL y ou to s tay a s a F reedom Sen i o r person named in ORS ment penalties/premiT ENANTS: The t enant i nstead o f Funding Corporation, 86.753 has the right, ums, if appl property in which you requiring you to move a subsidiary of Indy- at any time prior to are l i ving i s in out after 90 days or at Mac Bank, F.S.B., as five days before the foreclosure. A the end of your fixed b eneficiary, da t e d date last set for the term lease. After the 10/12/07, r e corded sale, to h ave t h is f oreclosure sale i s scheduled for July 22, sale, y o u sh o u ld 10/18/07, in the mort- foreclosure proceed2014. The date of this receive a wri t ten gage records of Des- ing dismissed and the sale may be notice informing you chutes County, Or- trust deed reinstated postponed. Unless the that the s ale t ook egon, as 2007-55707 by payment to the lender who is place and giving you and subsequently as- beneficiary of the enf oreclosing on t h i s the n e w ow n er's signed to OneWest tire amount then due property is paid before name and c o ntact B ank, FSB b y A s - (other than such porinformation. You signment recorded as tion of the principal as the sale date, the f oreclosure will g o s hould contact t h e 2013-48374, covering would not then be due through and someone n ew owner if y o u t he f o llowing d e - had no default ocn ew will ow n t h i s would like to stay. If scribed real property curred) and by curing t he n e w own e r situated in said county any o t her d e fault p roperty. After t h e sale, the new owner is accepts rent from you, and state, to wit: Lot complained of herein required to p rovide signs a new Two (2), The Willows that is capable of beyou w i t h co n tact r esidential rent a l Phase I, Deschutes ing cured by tenderinformation and notice agreement with you or County, Ore g on. ing the performance t hat the s a l e t o o k does not notify you in PROPERTY ADr equired under t h e tr u st place. The following writing within 30 days DRESS: 2438 North- o bligation o r information applies to after the date of the east Snow W i llow deed, and in addition you only if you are a foreclosure sale that Court B e nd , OR to paying said sums bona f i d e te n a nt you must move out, 97701 Both the ben- or tendering the peroccupying and renting t he n e w own e r eficiary a n d the formance necessary t his property as a becomes your new trustee have elected to cure the default, by residential d w elling landlord and m u st to sell the real prop- paying all costs and

a ccount i n goo d standing. The beneficiary may require as a c ondition t o rei n s tatement that y o u provide reliable written evidence that you have paid all senior liens o r enc u mbrances, pr o p erty taxes, and hazard insurance p r emiums. These requirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the undersigned Trustee. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by said trust deed i mmediately due and payable, said sums being the f ollowing: U NPAID PR I NCIPAL


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