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North Bend tops Brookings-Harbor, B1

SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 2014

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Pot dispensary moratorium gets county’s approval Coos County now has one year to get zoning regulated ■

BY EMILY THORNTON The World

By Alysha Beck, The World

Devin Hockema, owner of the Brandy, offloads his weekly crab catch to sell at Fishermen’s Wharf in Charleston on Friday. Oregon’s Dungeness crab fleet is one of several fisheries with financial obligations under the terms of a groundfish fleet buyback loan authorized by Congress in 2003.

Fleet looks to refinance loan Congressman trying to help get new deal to relieve burden on South Coast fishermen ■

COQUILLE — The Coos County Commissioners on Thursday passed a year-long moratorium on medical marijuana dispensaries, the 11th such county in the state to do so. The ordinance puts a hold on any more medical marijuana dispensaries from opening. It does not affect those already in operation. The decision came after listening to comments from a couple of residents who initially voiced concern over its passage, but later agreed with commissioners, who said it merely bought time for them to decide what kind of ordinances they wanted to place down the road. “That’s really what the moratorium’s doing, keeping it to where it’s under control,” said Waylon

Rosebear, a county resident. Paul Frasier, district attorney for the county, weighed in on the moratorium. “I think you folks need more time to structure zoning regulations,” Frasier said. Planning department director, Jill Rolfe, said it was a lot of work for her department to zone land. She said they had to mail notices to all residents. It would be followed by hearings, and could take at least three months. “The moratorium is very beneficial to us,” Rolfe said. The moratorium is effective until May 1, 2015, the maximum amount of time allowed under Senate Bill 1531, or until the commissioners pass another ordinance, whichever comes first. Other counties with ordinances include: Linn, Columbia, Deschutes, Douglas, Jackson, Lincoln, Malheur, Umatilla, Wheeler and Yamhill. Reporter Emily Thornton can be reached at 541-269-1222, ext. 249 or at emily.thornton@theworldlink.com or on Twitter: @EmilyK_Thornton.

Commissioners to seek lobbyist for Wagon Road land

BY THOMAS MORIARTY The World

BY EMILY THORNTON

Matt LeDoux weighs crab from fisherman Devin Hockema, owner of the Brandy, at Fishermen’s Wharf on Friday. Fish buyers like Fishermen’s Wharf are required to collect a fee on crab and some fish for payment on a groundfish fleet buyback loan. set up a system to receive the payments.” Brad Pettinger, who heads the Oregon Trawl Commission, said that buyback left the groundfish fleet saddled with a heavy financial burden. “It took us 8 years and $20 million to get down to the principal,” he said. SEE FLEET | A8

Health care enrollment surges

Police reports . . . . A2 What’s Up . . . . . . . Go! South Coast. . . . . . A3 Opinion. . . . . . . . . . A4

Still to be announced is what share of those enrolled were previously uninsured — the true test of Obama’s Affordable Care Act — and how many actually secured coverage by paying their first month’s premiums. “This thing is working,” a confident Obama said of his signature domestic achievement. The days of website woes and canceled policies seemed far behind. State-by-state statistics, expected as early as next week, will provide a much fuller picture.

Sports . . . . . . . . . . . B1 Comics . . . . . . . . . . C5 Puzzles . . . . . . . . . . C5 Classifieds . . . . . . . C6

DEATHS

INSIDE

WASHINGTON (AP) — A surge of eleventh-hour enrollments has improved the outlook for President Barack Obama’s health care law, with more people signing up overall and a much-needed spark of interest among young adults. Nonetheless, Obama’s announcement Thursday that 8 million have signed up for subsidized private insurance, and that 35 percent of them are younger than 35, is just a peek at what might be going on with the nation’s newest social program.

A key question is how many of those signed up were young adults, ages 18-34. They’re the health care overhaul’s most coveted demographic because they’re healthier than older adults and their premiums can help cross-subsidize care for the sick. That would help hold down future premium increases. According to the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation, young adults 18-34 represent about 40 percent of the people eligible to

Ralph Van Hoof, North Bend Marymae Johnson, North Bend Bonnie Foreman, North Bend Hazel Alvey, Coos Bay Melinda Basile, North Bend Wesley McCormick, Coos Bay

SEE SURGE | A8

COQUILLE — The Coos County Commissioners voted this week to seek a lobbyist to represent the county’s interests in Wagon Road lands in Washington, D.C. The decision came after commissioners comments at their regular meeting. Commissioner John Sweet discussed the federal timber funds in relation to Sen. Ron Wyden’s, D-Ore., bill, which he said wouldn’t expand the timber harvest enough. There are 18 O & C Land counties that would be

affected by the bill. Commissioner Bob Main agreed. “Wyden didn’t ask the counties what they thought at all,” Main said. Keith Chu, a spokesman for Wyden, said the lands had been combined for years. “For all practical purposes, the Wagon Roads lands have been treated as O & C lands for decades, which is why Sen. Wyden included them in his bill,” he said in an email. Sweet, Main and Commissioner SEE LOBBYIST | A8

Coos Bay pedestrian killed on Highway 101 THE WORLD COOS BAY — A 55-year-old Coos Bay man was killed Thursday night after being struck by a semi truck. According to the Coos Bay Police Department, witnesses told officers that Donald Darwin Johnson walked into southbound U.S. Highway 101 traffic near the intersection with Johnson Avenue shortly before 10:30 p.m. Police and medical personnel found Johnson lying dead in the roadway. Witnesses said two vehicles were able to avoid Johnson, but he was struck when he stepped in front of a semi truck.

Margaret Ball, Coos Bay Donald Bignell, Coos Bay Elizabeth Henze, North Bend Rodney Wisby, Myrtle Point Judith Spilman, Myrtle Point

Obituaries | A5-6

FORECAST

COOS BAY — Eleven years after the federal government handed local fisherman the bill for reducing the size of their fishing fleet, the South Coast’s congressman is saying enough is enough. Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Springfield, says chances are good that HR 2464, better known as the Pacific REFI Act, will make it out of committee and be voted into law. The bill would refinance a $36 million loan authorized by Congress in 2003 to reduce the size of the West Coast groundfish fleet. The fishery had been declared a disaster for three years by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “I’m cautiously optimistic we’re going to get this resolved,” he said, speaking by phone from Eugene on Tuesday afternoon. At the heart of the bill is the mounting interest on the loan. Although Congress authorized the buyback in 2003, it didn’t provide a mechanism for payments until 2005. “They acted like a payday lender,” DeFazio said. “They said you can’t make any payments until they

The World

The driver of the truck, 52-yearold Rene Hibbs of Coos Bay, hasn't been charged, and stayed at the scene to help the Coos County Crash Team with the investigation. The crash team is composed of the Coos Bay and North Bend police departments, Oregon State Police and the Coos County Sheriff’s Office, along with the district attorney and chief deputy medical examiner. The district attorney's office found no basis for criminal charges after a preliminary investigation. Police are asking anyone with information or questions regarding the investigation to contact Deputy Gil Datan at 541-396-7780.

Rain 59/45 Weather | A8


A2 • The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

South Coast Executive Editor Larry Campbell • 541-269-1222, ext. 251

Meetings MONDAY

TUESDAY

Bay Area Enterprise Zone Committee — 1 p.m., Coos Bay Public Library, 525 Anderson Ave., Coos Bay; regular meeting.

Oregon Employer Council South Coast — 7:30 a.m., Employment Department, 2075 Sheridan Ave., North Bend; regular meeting.

Bay Area Health District FinanceAudit Committee — 5 p.m., Bay Area Hospital, spruce conference room, 1775 Thompson Road, Coos Bay; regular meeting.

Reedsport Budget Committee — 7 p.m., City Hall, 451 Winchester Ave., Reedsport; regular meeting.

Coos Bay Public Schools — 6 p.m., Milner Crest Education Center, 1255 Hemlock Ave., Coos Bay; special meeting.

Carlson-Primrose Special Road District — 7 p.m., Montalbano’s residence, 94520 Carlson Heights Lane, North Bend; regular meeting.

North Bend Planning Commission — 7 p.m., City Hall, 835 California St., North Bend; regular meeting.

Coos Bay Budget Committee — 7 p.m., City Hall, 500 Central Ave., Coos Bay; regular meeting.

Myrtle Point RFPD Budget Com mittee — 7:30 p.m., Myrtle Point Fire Hall, Fourt and Maple, Myrtle Point; regular meeting.

Betty Schulz, formerly of Empire Beauty Salon has now moved to Broadway Hair & Nails at 2135 Broadway, North Bend. New and old customers, as well as walk-ins, are welcome.

For appointments call either 541-756-5800 or 541-808-4296.

theworldlink.com/news/local

Lighthouse Police Log COOS BAY POLICE school vote DEPARTMENT delayed

April 16, 11:42 a.m., disorderly conduct, parking lot on Second Street.

April 16, 2:26 a.m., prowler, 300 block of South Sixth Street.

BY TIM NOVOTNY The World

NORTH BEND — Lighthouse Charter School and the North Bend School District will have to wait a couple more weeks to learn whether or not Lighthouse will have a new building to call home. The 12-year-old charter school has been negotiating with the Coos County Airport District about a possible move to the former ACS/Xerox call center located on airport property. A decision was expected to be made at the airport district board meeting Thursday, but the board decided to table the issue until some of the numbers could get firmed-up between the two sides. The building, at 2675 Colorado Ave., in North Bend, would mean more building space and additional parking for the school. At the board meeting, with board members Helen Brunell Mineau and John Briggs in attendance and Joe Benetti and Jon Barton on the phone,it was decided that they needed some of the lease agreement numbers to be verified before they could make a decision. They agreed to hold, and publicize, a special meeting on the issue in two weeks. One of the issues still to be determined is whether or not the 18,000-square-foot building just needs new doorways created, or a more expensive sprinkler system, to bring it in line with state fire code. That, board members say, could also affect the lease agreement’s bottom-line. Alane Jennings, with the North Bend school district, said after the meeting that the delay was understandable. “We knew we needed a little more time to make sure the numbers work for everybody,” she said. Lisa LaGesse, with Lighthouse school, was also remaining optimistic, saying that the process was moving in a positive direction.

Easter Brunch Sunday, April 20

April 16, 12:11 p.m., woman cited in lieu of custody for littering near a roadway, East Anderson Avenue and South Bayshore Drive.

April 16, 8:26 a.m., fraud, 1000 block of Arago Avenue. April 16, 10:30 a.m., theft of cans, 400 block of Ingersoll Avenue.

April 16, 12:50 p.m., criminal trespass, East Anderson Avenue and South Bayshore Drive.

April 16, 10:53 a.m., disorderly conduct, parking lot on Second Street.

April 16, 1:17 p.m., violation of restraining order, 900 block of South Empire Boulevard.

April 16, 11 a.m., theft, 1100 block of Sanford Street.

April 16, 6:26 p.m., assault, 500 block of West Anderson Avenue.

April 16, 9:23 p.m., dispute, 500 block of South 12th Street. April 16, 10:04 p.m., criminal trespass, 200 block of South Schoneman Street. April 16, 10:32 p.m., dispute, 500 block of South 12th Street. April 16, 11:05 p.m., dispute, 500 block of South 12th Street. April 17, 2:34 a.m., dispute, 500 block of South Morrison Street. April 17, 12:08 p.m., theft, 600 block of Village Pines Drive. April 17, 1:01 p.m., dispute, 100 block of South 10th Street.

Felony Arrests Kurt B. Smith and Darrell Aroz — Smith and Aroz were arrested by North Bend police April 16 after a traffic stop near the intersection of Sheridan Avenue and Connecticut Street. Both are charged with possession of methamphetamine, and Aroz was charged with violating pro-

bation on charges of being a felon in possession of a restricted weapon. Kelly M. Cummings — North Bend police arrested Cummings on April 17 in the 2000 block of Sheridan Avenue on an Oregon State Parole Board warrant charging parole violation. Cum-

mings was also warned for tampering with drug records. Brent Elbert — Elbert was arrested by Coos Bay police April 17 in the 500 block of South Morrison Street on for possession of methamphetamine and a warrant charging failure to appear on a forgery charge.

Pets of the Week

BW

Tao

Willow

Callie

Pacific Cove Humane Society

Kohl’s Cat House

Pacific Cove Humane Society is featuring pets of the week, available for adoption through its “People-to-People” pet-matching service. ■ BW is a beautiful spayed, 6- to 8-month old, black and white, long hair “tuxedo” cat. She was a stray taken in by caring cat lovers that already have several. BW is looking for a new forever home where she can be pampered. Evaluation required. ■ Tao is a handsome 1-year-old, neutered, Catahoula mixed male with tan, white and black markings. He is smart, loving and has been in special training with lots of other dogs. He does well on a leash but is not good with cats or chickens. He loves to run and will need a fenced yard. Evaluation required. Evaluation required. For information about adoptions, call 541-756-6522.

The following are cats of the week available for adoption at Kohl’s Cat House. ■ Willow is an adult spayed female. She loves to lay in the sun, eat, sleep and play. She is looking for her own forever family and it just might be you. Call the cat house to set up a meeting if you're interested. Hope to see you soon! ■ Callie is an adult spayed female. She is a beautiful, affectionate and playful girl. She is hoping her perfect person will find her soon. Hope to see you soon! Volunteers don't always call the animals by the same name. Please be ready to describe their appearance. Kohl’s Cat House can be reached at 541-294-3876 or kohlscats@gmail.com. Visit them online at www.kohlscats.rescuegroups.org.

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Saturday, April 19,2014 • The World • A3

South Coast Executive Editor Larry Campbell • 541-269-1222, ext. 251

theworldlink.com/news/local

Orange Zone Coos and Curry County motorists can expect traffic delays at these road construction projects this week, according to the Oregon Department of Transportation and the Coos County Road Department:

Coos County ■ U.S. Highway 101 (Oregon Coast Highway), milepost 233.4 to 234.5, McCullough Bridge rehabilitation (north section) ($23 million): This five-year project will help prevent corrosion on McCullough Bridge by applying a cathodic protection treatment to the northern concrete arches of the structure. Watch for intermittent nighttime lane closures. Flaggers will provide traffic control as needed. The sidewalk on both sides of the bridge has been reduced to three feet in width during construction. NOTE: Due to construction activity and safety concerns, the access road at the northeast corner of the bridge is restricted. Only ODOT employees and contractors are permitted in this area. Please do not drive or park on the access road. ■ U.S. Highway 101 (Oregon Coast Highway), milepost 234-238, North Bend to Coos Bay paving, sidewalks and traffic signals

($6.5 million): Construction is mostly complete. Watch for intermittent lane, shoulder and sidewalk closures throughout the project area.

watch for intermittent shoulder closures. ■ U.S. Highway 101 (Oregon Coast Highway), milepost 211, Umpqua River and McIntosh Slough Bridge ($4 million): This two-year project will paint and make Curry County repairs to the bridge over the Umpqua River and McIntosh The ■ U.S. Highway 101 (Oregon Slough at the north end of Coast Highway), milepost 330Reedsport. Watch for lane clo331, Hunter Creek Bridge sures and brief delays. A cathodic protection ($3 million): Zone temporary traffic signal is in place. Watch for workers and equipment in Flaggers will provide additional traffic the roadway. A temporary traffic signal control as needed. The sidewalks on the is in operation. Flaggers will provide addibridge are closed until next year. tional traffic control as needed. ■ State Highway 38 (Umpqua Highway), Douglas County milepost 39, Elk Creek Tunnel rehabilitation ■ U.S. Highway 101 (Oregon Coast ($1.4 million): This three-month project will Highway), milepost 205-207, hazard tree install a liner on the walls and ceiling of the Elk Creek Tunnel, and make repairs to the removal. ■ U.S. Highway 101 motorists should road surface. The tunnel will be closed up to watch for lane closures and delays up to 20 five nights a week until the middle of May. Weekly schedule: The nighttime tunnel minutes between milepost 205 and 207 due to closures will be scheduled from Saturday hazard tree removal. ■ U.S. Highway 101 (Oregon Coast night to Thursday morning, 8 p.m.-6 a.m. Highway), milepost 210.3, rock fall hazard The tunnel may be open some Saturday mitigation ($600,000): At milepost 210.3, nights, though it will be closed Saturday north of the Umpqua River, motorists should night, April 19. Watch for message boards

ORANGE

and visit www.tripcheck.com for latest road and travel information. Detour: When the tunnel is closed, eastbound Oregon 38 traffic will detour from Elkton to Sutherlin on state Highway 138W, then north on Interstate 5. Westbound traffic will follow the same route in the opposite direction. Emergency service vehicles: During the nighttime closures, workers will only open the tunnel for emergency service vehicles. All other traffic must use alternate routes. During daytime hours, motorists should watch for intermittent single-lane closures and brief delays. Flaggers will provide traffic control as needed. ■ Interstate 5 (Pacific Highway), milepost 0-155, California border to Elkhead Road barrier and guardrail replacement: This project will repair or replace barrier and guardrail at several areas along Interstate 5 in Douglas, Josephine and Jackson counties. Watch for intermittent lane and shoulder closures on Interstate 5 in Douglas County. For more information, visit www.TripCheck.com or http://bit.ly/CoosRoads.

Co-op board nomination process announced The Coos-Curry Electric Cooperative is soliciting candidates for two board of directors seats. Current board members in the two seats are seeing reelection this year. They represent District 4, the Port Orford/Langlois area; and the Southern At-Large District 1 and 2 for Brookings/Harbor area.

All candidates — including incumbents — must file a written petition that contains at least 15 signatures of qualified cooperative members from the district for which they want to be elected. Petitions are now available and must be returned by 5:30 p.m. April 23, to the Port Orford office: P.O. Box 1268, 43050 Highway 101, Port Orford, 97465.

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Christ Lutheran School Honor Roll 3rd Quarter Perfect Attendance: Lexi Davis, kindergarten; Ellie Falk, kindergarten; Halle Goorhuis, kindergarten; Conner Wenbourne, kindergarten; Emma Wenbourne, kindergarten; Truman Rodrigues, first grade; Gavin Schmidt, second grade; Landen Bauer, third grade; Cooper Davis, third grade; Sienna Mahaffy, third grade; Rebecca Witharm, third grade; Dakoda Bauer, fourth grade; Levi Bossen, fifth grade; Spencer Rodrigues,

fifth grade; Madison Bauer, sixth grade; Ethan Jones, sixth grade; Aaron Prince, sixth grade. Honor Roll (3.0-3.49 GPA): Allison Coplin, 3.2 GPA, fifth grade. Principal's Roll (3.5-4.0 GPA): Karis Kohl, 3.9 GPA, fourth grade; Paige Frings, 3.9 GPA, fifth grade; Ella Thomas, 3.9 GPA, fifth grade; Alex Hernandez, 4.0 GPA, sixth grade; Ethan Jones, 3.6 GPA, sixth grade; Liam Webster, 4.0

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Things we want you to know: A new Retail Installment Contract and Shared Connect Plan required. Credit approval required. Regulatory Cost Recovery Fee applies (currently $1.57/line/month); this is not a tax or gvmt. required charge. Add. fees, taxes and terms apply and vary by svc. and eqmt. Offers valid in-store at participating locations only and cannot be combined. See store or uscellular.com for details. 4G LTE not available in all areas. See uscellular.com/4G for complete coverage details. 4G LTE service provided through King Street Wireless, a partner of U.S. Cellular. LTE is a trademark of ETSI. Contract Payoff Promo: Offer valid on maximum of two lines. Must port in current number to U.S. Cellular® and purchase new Smartphone or tablet through a Retail Installment Contract on a Shared Connect Plan. Submit final bill identifying early termination fee (ETF) charged by carrier within 60 days of activation date to uscellular.com/contractpayoff or via mail to U.S. Cellular Contract Payoff Program 5591-61; PO Box 752257; El Paso, TX 88575-2257. Customer will be reimbursed for the ETF reflected on final bill up to $350/line. Reimbursement in form of a U.S. Cellular MasterCard® Debit Card issued by MetaBank™ Member FDIC pursuant to license from MasterCard International Incorporated. This card does not have cash access and can be used at any merchant location that accepts MasterCard Debit Cards within the U.S. only. Card valid through expiration date shown on front of card. Allow 12–14 weeks for processing. To be eligible, customer must register for My Account. Also valid on business accounts for new lines up to 10 lines. Retail Installment Contract: Retail Installment Contract (Contract) and monthly payments according to the Payment Schedule in the Contract required. If you are in default or terminate your Contract, we may require you to immediately pay the entire unpaid Amount Financed as well as our collection costs, attorneys’ fees and court costs related to enforcing your obligations under the Contract. Kansas Customers: In areas in which U.S. Cellular receives support from the Federal Universal Service Fund, all reasonable requests for service must be met. Unresolved questions concerning services availability can be directed to the Kansas Corporation Commission Office of Public Affairs and Consumer Protection at 1-800-662-0027. Limited-time offer. Trademarks and trade names are the property of their respective owners. Additional terms apply. See store or uscellular.com for details. ©2014 U.S. Cellular


A4 • The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

Editorial Board Jeff Precourt, Publisher Larry Campbell, Executive Editor

Les Bowen, Digital Editor Ron Jackimowicz, News Editor

Opinion theworldlink.com/news/opinion

Slow and deliberate consideration Our view With just one shot to get this right, it’s good that our elected officials are going slow on the Community Enhancement Plan.

What do you think? The World welcomes letters. Email us at letters@theworldlink.com.

A series of events this week gives us reason to praise our elected officials for taking their time in considering the Community Enhancement Plan — the proposal to deal with the windfall revenues to come to our region should the Jordan Cove Energy Project’s LNG plant be built. Monday afternoon the CEP workgroup, comprised of representatives from the plan’s eventual sponsors, stopped short of approving an amended set of bylaws that would govern the South Coast Community Foundation. Within the plan, the foundation would be charged with distributing

half the revenues to local education needs, including establishing a trust fund for perpetuity. The bylaws have been through many revisions since first unveiled in January. The major changes have involved inserting far more public process into the establishment and operations of the foundation’s board of directors. The last revision came to the workgroup just moments before its 1 p.m. meeting; not enough time for the group to adequately digest the changes. So, instead of simply approving them, as had been planned, the group put

off a decision at least until their meeting this Monday. That action caused a domino effect on the agendas of the Coos County Commissioners and the Oregon International Board of Coos Bay, both of which were supposed to ratify the bylaws this week, too. Instead, those bodies also opted to wait. The county commissioners went a step further, though. They decided to also seek outside legal advice — a specialist, if you will. “It’s insurance,” Commissioner Melissa Cribbins told us. “We want someone who directly repre-

sents the commissioners and lets us know where we stand.” No harm in getting a second opinion. All of us need to know where the strengths and weaknesses are in the Community Enhancement Plan. We need to perform due diligence as never before, since this is our one shot at getting it right. With our futures in their hands, our elected officials are doing well to go slow. And that’s as it should be — the ones who are accountable to us should be making these most important decisions.

Cheers Jeers

&

No game for old men Rugby’s back in town. Kinda’ like football — kinda — without pads. The Bay Area Ruggers will introduce locals to the game, which haven’t seen a local team in 40 years. Lee Palmer started the squad after moving here a few years ago because he missed playing. After some pre-season action, the Ruggers begin the season in June and face teams all over the Pacific Northwest. You like contact sports? You gotta catch this!

Finger pointing In the continuing saga of the failures of Cover Oregon and the website, now comes the contractor, Oracle Corp., whose CFO says they provided “clear and repeated warnings” that the exchange site wouldn't be ready on time. That's not what state officials told us. No wonder folks like our own Congressman, Peter DeFazio, called the Cover Oregon fiasco a “national disgrace.” Wow!

Florence Nightingale #1 Congrats to Carma Erickson-Hurt, Project HOPE’s Volunteer of the Year. The local nurse and Navy veteran earned her silver medal for her work as a nurse in areas of the Philippines hit by Typhoon Haiyan last November. She spent some 1,400 hours volunteering last year and has been with the worldwide health care group since retiring in 2007. Talk about giving back in spades …

Florence Nightingale #2 Same to Nurse Karen — Karen Brown, named this year’s Oregon School Nurse of the Year by the Oregon School Nurses Association. Gotta love the school nurse; she always believed you when you said you were sick. But Karen’s more special. Her idea to get an Automated External Defibrillator for the Coos Bay School District grew to getting one for every school. A teacher’s life was saved by one last year. Good nursing, ma’am.

The smell of the sea This, from the AP wire: “SEASIDE — Visitors are being cautioned to stay well away from the carcass of a 40-foot gray whale that’s washing up on the beach. Seaside Aquarium general manager Keith Chandler describes the carcass as ‘really smelly’ and warns visitors they don’t want their pets rolling on it.” Oh, really?! The city finally buried the carcass Wednesday — not a moment too soon. Whew!

Remembering the fallen U.S. military death tolls in Afghanistan as of Friday:

2,177

Letters to the Editor Thanks to three local leaders First, I support the Jordan Cove Project and the South Coast Community Foundation. I would like to thank the three people who have donated their time and names to this cause. They are the true leaders of this county! They have donated thousands of hours of their personal time to try to put together a foundation for the community! While everyone else was sitting on the sidelines doing nothing, these individuals were out there trying to figure out how they could help everyone. Bill Lansing worked for Menasha Forest Products for 43 years. This company has deep roots in the community.He served as chief operating executive from 2000-2006. Menasha has employed a majority of the community at one point in their lives and has been a very giving company to our community. In 2012, Bill received the Citizen of the Year award. In his acceptance speech, he stated, “You really need to help your community ...

by giving back and not expecting anything in return.” He is most proud of the work he has done throughout his life promoting relevancy in education. Our own county would not be the same without Joanne Verger as an elected official, representing our community for 22 years. Joanne fought for our community to ensure that the state of Oregon didn’t forget about the South Coast. She was dedicated to fighting for education. Even today she is still out in our community trying to figure out how to help and make it better every day. John Whitty was born and raised in this very town we all call home. He went to college at University of Oregon, joined our U.S. Air Force, then returned home after his duties in the military, joining a law firm in 1959. John focuses on estate planning, trusts and probate, business agreements, business organizations and commercial real estate transactions. John has been a speaker and writer for the Oregon State Bar continuing legal education programs and publications, and is listed in The Best Lawyers

in America. This doesn’t even touch the surface of how they are outstanding citizens. I ask those who are badmouthing them, what have you done, besides complain, to help our community? Thank you again for standing up for our community and trying to make it a better place that we all call home. Rishia Mitchell North Bend

Pledging support for Beaman I have had the pleasure of knowing Cindi Beaman since 1999.I was her secretary while she was an assistant public defender with Southwestern Oregon Public Defenders in the Curry County office. I found her to be bright, energetic and dedicated to serving her clients. While at the public defender’s office, her caseload included criminal defense, juvenile matters, both delinquency and dependency, and also mental health cases. It has been my good fortune to

remain associated with Judge Beaman following our time at the public defenders’ office. I attended her swearing in and have watched her career with great interest. I am proud to think of myself as her friend. Her service to the citizens of Coos and Curry County as judge of the 15th District has been exemplary. It is my hope that the voters of Coos and Curry counties will agree with me and join me in voting for her. She deserves the opportunity to continue her excellent service in the capacity of Circuit Court Judge for the 15th Judicial District. Maureen Johnson Gold Beach

Write to us The World welcomes your letter. Write to letters@theworldlink.com, or P.O. Box 1840, Coos Bay, 97420. ■ Please use your real name. ■ 400 words maximum. ■ No defamation, vulgarity, business complaints, poetry or religious testimony. ■ Please list your address and daytime phone for verification.

Bay Area Chamber supports SCCF Your Views

BY PAM PLUMMER Annually, the board of directors of the Bay Area Chamber of Commerce meets to outline the strategic objectives for the coming year. One of those objectives is to create a strong local economy. The Chamber, through highly functioning committees, works towards that goal on a daily basis. The Chamber’s Business Development and Support Committee has been working diligently to educate our members about the Community Enhancement Plan proposal and specifically, the South Coast Community Foundation (SCCF). We are actively involved because our membership has given us the task to help Create a Strong Local Economy. Your business community and its leaders understand the critical connection between schools and a strong local economy. They have voiced their opinion on how schools effect their ability to hire qualified employees, effectively recruit needed positions within our healthcare industry, provide

the training needed for certain professional fields, and the educational opportunities they want for their own children. Without strong schools, current technological resources and adequate facilities, education suffers. Therefore business suffers. We have amazing people in our school systems working hard every day to provide a top notch education for our children. Yet their hands are tied by funding formulas, rising education requirements and escalating costs. What is the solution? Unfortunately the only solution thus far has been detrimental changes such as layoffs, reduced school hours, school closures and talks of reconfiguration. It is time to make a change. Local business understands that the benefits derived from this foundation will help workforce development, along with business and employee recruit-

ment, and business retention leading to a stronger local economy. This is why your Bay Area Chamber of Commerce has spent endless hours at community meetings in support of the SCCF. We want to show our ENTIRE community what an AMAZING opportunity the South Coast Community Foundation brings to our local schools and to realize the benefits that come along when you stand up for the betterment of your community. That is why the chamber board, through the work of our Team, Action Legislative recently adopted a position supporting the South Coast Community Foundation and strongly encourages each of the four Enterprise Zone sponsors (city of Coos Bay, city of North Bend, Coos County and the Oregon International Port of Coos Bay) to:

■ Become members of the SCCF so that the organization can be officially endorsed and created; ■ Approve the existing bylaws; and, ■ Ratify the three current founding members, John Whitty, Bill Lansing and Joanne Verger, as board members of the SCCF. The Bay Area Chamber of Commerce is 600 members strong, representing thousands of local employees and their families. A golden opportunity is in front of us that will enhance not only our local schools but our economy. The Bay Area Chamber of Commerce stands today to let you know WE MEAN BUSINESS! We ask the four Enterprise Zone sponsors to help “Create a Strong Local Economy” by doing what is right for our community. Our children are our future. Make this investment in our future by joining and perfecting the South Coast Community Foundation. Pam Plummer is 2014 president of the Bay Area Chamber of Commerce.


Saturday, April 19,2014 • The World • A5

Obituaries Ralph W. Van Hoof Oct. 4, 1930 – Feb. 13, 2014

A celebration of life for Ralph W. Van Hoof, 83, of North Bend will be held at 4 p.m. Aug. 10, at Loon Lake Resort (the old Duckets). Private services for the family will be Aug. 11, with Justin Franke performing the service. Cremation rites have been held at Ocean View Memory Gardens Crematory Ralph Van Hoof in Coos Bay. Ralph was born Oct. 4, 1930, in Duck Creek, Wis., where he lived on a farm with his parents, William and Alvera Van Hoof and his two sisters, Elaine and Betty. He enlisted in the U.S. Army Sept. 14, 1951, and was honorably discharged August 1953 after

Bonnie Mae (Post) Foreman July 12, 1931 – April 12, 2014

A celebration of life will be held for Bonnie Foreman, 82, of North Bend in August, at a time and location that is yet to be determined. A public visitation will be held from 1 to 6 p.m. Tuesday, April 22, at Coos Bay Chapel, 685 Anderson Ave. Private cremation rites will be held at Ocean View Memory Gardens in Coos Bay. Bonnie was born July 12, 1931, in Sanator, S.D., to Clinton R. Post Sr. and Mae Aleta (Todd) Post. She passed away peacefully April 12, 2014, in Bend at the home of her daughter. Bonnie was a homemaker until working for the The

Wesley Orian McCormick Dec. 8,1928 – April 14, 2014

A memorial service will be held for Wesley Orian McCormick, 85, of Coos Bay at 3 p.m. Saturday, April 26, at the Seventh-day Adventist Church, 2175 Newmark Ave., in North Bend, with pastor Ken Williams officiating. Everyone is invited to attend a reception at the church following the service. A public visitation will be held Tuesday, April 22 and Wednesday, April 23 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Coos Bay Chapel, 685 Anderson Ave., in Coos Bay. Private inurnment will be held at Ocean View Memory Gardens in Coos Bay. Wes was born Dec. 8, 1928, in Crawfordsville, Ore., to Cecil and Bessie (Fox) McCormick. He went home to be with his Lord and savior April 14, 2014, peace-

serving in Panama. On Nov. 13, 1954, this farmer guy married a city gal, Margaret (Yonny) Whitcomb. Ralph worked at Green Bay Food, Northwest Engineering Co. and Green Bay Paper Mill. Ralph arrived in North Bend on April 15, 1961. He started working at Menasha Paper Board Division on April 17, 1961. Ralph retired from WEYCO in April 1991. Ralph was a member of many clubs, the first of which was The Traveling Squares. He earned many badges with this club; the most fun was earning the “Idiot Pin.� Ralph then built a family sand bug and proceeded to join the Dune Dusters Club. He enjoyed camping in the dunes and hill climbing with his family. He won many trophies and his sand bug also was pictured in a national magazine. Ralph was very proud of his 1957 two-door hard top and

the 1957 four-door wagon. He won many trophies and the wagon was featured in a magazine. He was a member of the Sunset Classic Chevy Club for 24 years. Thanks to all members for your classic friendship. Ralph also was a member of the Moose Club and when it closed he joined the American Legion and later on became a lifetime member of the Eagles Club. Ralph bowled at Embico Lanes first and then later joined the ILWU bowling league at Bay Bowl. Ralph and Yonny traveled to many places with this league in Oregon and Washington and even went to Hawaii and Canada. Later they joined the Reno League at North Bend Lanes. During the summer time, Ralph enjoyed many weekends and vacations at Loon Lake with the family. They camped, swam, tubed, skied and picnicked with family and friends. During the win-

ters he would take the family to Diamond Lake for snowmobiling and inner tubing. They would go around the lake many times and then go for pizza. Ralph was a very good dancer and won many trophies with Margaret (Yonny) for dancing. Ralph also was a very good karaoke singer and sang every chance he could. Ralph was a volunteer with the North Bend Fire Department where he made many lasting friendships. One of the most memorable experiences with the fire department was helping with a big apartment house on Sherman Avenue by Engle’s Furniture store. Ralph made many friends at Ocean Terminals, Industrial Steel and Coastline Signs where he enjoyed learning about neon lights. He thought a lot of all of you. Ralph also enjoyed attending the races at

Lapping Stables and then later at Coos Bay Speedway. Thanks to our many friends who helped Ralph this past racing season. A special thanks to Chuck and Drake without whom we could not have attended this past season. Ralph is survived by his wife of 59 years, Margaret (Yonny) Van Hoof four children: daughter, Lynn Johnson and husband, Larry; daughter, Wendy Van Hoof and husband, Travis; son, Lawrence Van Hoof and wife, Michelle; son, Michael Van Hoof and wife, Beth Anne; grandchildren, JJ Johnson, Corrie Johnson, Jeffrey Wiwatowski, Ryan Van Hoof, April Van Hoof, Michael Van Hoof Jr., Kyle Van Hoof, Codey Van Hoof, Samantha Rogers, Neill Jacob Rogers, Mariah Rogers and Annabelle Van Hoof; great-grandchildren, Jesse Johnson, Paizley Van Hoof and Damien Shurman; his

World, The Hub and the North Bend Bus Company, in which she worked from 1969-1994. She served the Bay Area community by personally providing safe school bus transportation for 25 years. In 1981 the North Bend B u s Company Bonnie Foreman was recognized as the top school bus fleet for their outstanding school bus safety record in North Bend. Bonnie graduated from North Bend High School, Class of 1949. She married Elmar Foreman Sr. on Aug. 13, 1949. They would raise

two children and celebrate 52 years of marriage prior to his passing in October 2001. During her retirement years, Bonnie volunteered with SMART (Start Making A Reader Today) at Hillcrest Elementary and Blossom Gulch from 1994 to 2000, RSVP, North Bend Visitor Center and the Salvation Army. Her “late-in-life� hobbie was her weekly fun time with the senior’s bowling league. Bonnie is survived by her daughter, Volinda Foreman of Bend; son, Elmar Foreman Jr. of North Bend; sisters, Dora Watson of Caldwell, Idaho, Emile Elbert of Dallas, Ore., and Marlene Johnson of Ogden, Utah; brothers, John Post, Durwood Post and Clinton Post, all of Coos Bay,

and Darrell Post of Orlando, Fla.; granddaughters, Alisha Foreman, Sara Wilson-Niles and Melissa Wilson-Jolley; grandsons, Brent Foreman and James Verger; greatgranddaughters, Taylor McKenzie Buchanan, Wilson, Kyndal Jolley and Maddison Jolley; and greatgrandson, Kylar Niles. Bonnie was preceded in death by her parents, Clinton R. Post and Mae Aleta Post; and her husband, Elmar Foreman Sr. Arrangements are under the care of Coos Bay Chapel, 541-267-3131. Friends and family are encouraged to sign the online guestbook at www.coosbayareafunerals.com and www.theworldlink.com.

Marymae Feely Johnson

fully due to age-related causes. Wes spent his childhood years in the Sweet Home area. After attending Sweet Home High School, Wes joined the U.S. Navy and proudly served on the USS Sarasota in the Pacific Theatre during World War II. Wes returned home after the war and married his soul mate, Joyce Eileen Stephens May 10, 1947. They were married 55 wonderful years before Joyce passed away in 2003. Together they were blessed with nine children, with one of whom preceded them in death. Wes enjoyed the outdoors and worked as a logger falling timber most all of his adult life. Wes retired from Company Weyerhaeuser after falling timber on the “Allegany side� for 17 years. After retirement Wes and Joyce purchased a salmon troller in Charleston. He and Joyce operated the fishing boat for a couple of memo-

rable years together. Wes loved people and had a heart and ear for everyone, which he freely expressed with a hug or holding hands. After Joyce passed, he became a virtual full-time community volunteer for several years with a passion for serving the elderly. Wes was honored to have been awarded Volunteer Of The Year by a Coos Bay organization serving the elderly. Wes is survived by one sister, Anita Dixon and eight children: sons, Ron and Sue McCormick, Don and Jean McCormick, Bill McCormick, Jerry McCormick, Roger and Sue McCormick, and Scott and Janelle McCormick; and daughters, Tamara and Scott Larson, and Alisa and Roger Seaman. Wes’s family legacy also includes 26 grandchiland 37 dren great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his wife, Joyce; and daughter, Tanya Renee. In lieu of flowers, the fam-

ily has requested donations be made in Wes’s memory to South Coast Hospice, 1620 Thompson Road, Coos Bay, OR 97420. Arrangements are under the care of Coos Bay Chapel, 541-267-3131. Friends and family are encouraged to sign the online guestbook at www.coosbayareafunerals.com and www.theworldlink.com.

education in Bandon. She also lived in Allegany and Coos Bay. She married William J. “Jerry� Alvey June 30, 1942, in Bandon. Hazel was forman of the Coos County Election Board for many years and prided herself on getting her ballot tallies the into Hazel Alvey courthouse and first accurate. She was a member

of the Coos River-Catching Slough Pinochle Club for more than 40 years. She also was a member of the Daughters of the Nile. Her main hobbies were knitting, sewing, canning, cooking and caring for her children,grandand greatchildren grandchildren as well as providing care for many others in the community. Her sons-inlaw proclaimed her the “worlds� best pie maker. Birthdays,holidays and picnics were always grand occasions. She is survived by her husband, Jerry Alvey of Coos Bay; children, Krista Betz and husband, Fred of North Bend, Geri Lynn Glazier of Coos Bay, Clary Caswell and husband, George of North Bend, Doug Alvey and Colette Alvey both of Salem and Darin Alvey of North Bend; brother, Jay L.

Hess and wife, Dorene; sisters-in-law, Patricia Alvey and Charlene Hill; 13 grand32 children; great-grandchildren; numerous nieces, nephews; and dear friends. She was preceded in death by her parents, stepmother, Pearl Hess Tucker; son-in-law, Leonard Glazier; and grandson, William Allen Glazier. Contributions in her memory may be made to the Shriners Children’s Hospital, 3101 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR 972393009. Arrangements are under the direction of Coos Bay Chapel, 541-267-3131. Friends and family are encouraged to sign the on-line guest book at www.coosbayareafunerals.com and www.theworldlink.com.

Wesley McCormick

Sept. 5, 1935 – April 12, 2014

A memorial service for Marymae Feely Johnson, 78, of North Bend will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday, April 22 at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 3355 Virginia Ave., in North Bend with Bishop Matt Olander officiating. A private burial will be held at Ocean View Memory Gardens in Coos Bay. Marymae Feely Johnson was born Sept. 5, 1935, in Hannibal, Mo., to Eugene and Lucille Feely. She died April 12, 2014, at her home. Marymae graduated from Needles High School in California in 1953. She attended the University of Montana, and was active in the Alpha Phi Sorority, graduating in 1957 with a degree in education. She married the love of her life, Howard Johnson that same year in Missoula, Mont. Marymae taught in Salmon, Idaho, Butte, Mont., Hamilton, Mont., and Missoula, Mont., before teaching kindergarten in North Bend for 22 years at Roosevelt Elementary School. Marymae was an active member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, serving on a mission to Louisiana with her husband Howard in 1999. She was involved with the North Bend Booster Club. Marymae loved to knit and crochet. Her afghans can be found all over the northwest. She even made one for every coach at North Bend High School in brown and gold. She was known for her spe-

Melinda “Lindy� L. Basile Jan. 31, 1958 - April 15, 2014

Hazel Loraine Alvey Dec. 11, 1924 - April 12, 2014

A graveside service for Hazel Loraine Alvey, 89, of Coos Bay will be held at noon Saturday, April 19, at Sunset Memorial Park, 63060 Millington Frontage Road in Coos Bay. Pastor Don Berney, of New Beginnings Christian Fellowship, will officiate. Hazel was born Dec. 11, 1924, in Fresno, Calif., the daughter of Jacob C. and Leona (Carskaddon) Hess. She died April 12, 2014, in Coos Bay. Hazel completed 12 years of

Death Notices Margaret Ball — 84, of Coos Bay,passed away April 16,2014, in Coos Bay. Arrangements are pending with Coos Bay Chapel, 541-267-3131. Donald L. Bignell — 63, of Coos Bay,passed away April 16, 2014, in Coos Bay. Arrangements are pending with Coos Bay Chapel, 541-2673131. Elizabeth Ann Henze — 53, of North Bend, passed away April 16, 2014, in Coos Bay. Arrangements are pending with Coos Bay Chapel, 541-2673131.

Rodney Omer Wisby – 62, of Myrtle Point, died April 15, 2014, in Coquille. Arrangements are pending with Amling/Schroeder of Myrtle Point, 541-572-2524. Judith Ann Spilman — 69, of Myrtle Point, died April 16, 2014, in Myrtle Point. A celebration of life will be held at 4 p.m. Saturday, April 19, at the Foursquare Gospel Church, 534 Spruce St., Myrtle Point. Arrangements are under the direction of Amling/Schroeder Funeral Service, 541-572-2524.

Saturday, April 19 Gladys Eason, celebration of life memorial service, 11 a.m., Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, 1290 Thompson Road, Coos Bay. Luncheon to follow, church fellowship

hall. Neil W. Dorst, memorial service, 1:30 p.m., North Bend Church of God, 1067 Newmark St. Inurnment, Willamette National Cemetery, Portland.

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Marymae Johnson cial cinnamon rolls and chocolate chip cookies around the holidays. Marymae is survived by her three children: son, Michael Johnson of Eugene; son, Patrick Johnson of Coos Bay; daughter, Judy Johnson of North Bend; Terri Turi of North Bend, mother of Stephanie grandchildren, Cleary of Johnson Williamsburg, Virginia and Kyle Johnson of Sonoma, Calif.; grandchildren, of Johnson Adrienne Corvallis, and Jimmy Johnson of North Bend; Gigi Johnson of Coos Bay, mother of grandchildren, Ryan and Jordyn Johnson of North Bend; great-grandchildren, Tiernan Johnson of North Bend and Peyton and of Cleary William Williamsburg, Virginia. She was preceded in death by her husband, Howard; her son, Charlie and her parents. The family suggests memorial contributions to Hillcrest Elementary, North Bend School District Nov. 13, 1913 Meade St., North Bend, OR 97459. Arrangements are under the care of North Bend Chapel, 541-756-0440. Friends and family are encouraged to sign the online guestbook, send condolences and share photos at www.coosbayareafunerals.co m and www.theworldlink.com.

pets and family were most important, as was her longtime love, John Beckmeyer. She also was fond of the performing arts, including ballet. Lindy is survived by her parents, Joseph and Mary Cooney of Gold Beach; longJohn time partner, Beckmeyer of North Bend; son, Joseph Basile of Westfield, Mass.; daughter, Kathryn MacCasland of Springfield, Mass.; two sisters, Kate Gaudet of Nashua, N.H., and Carol Howell of San Diego, Calif.; and niece, Kyle Kathryn Holmgren of Portland. Arraignments are under the direction of North Bend Chapel, 541-756-0440. Sign the guestbook at www.coosbayareafunerals.com and www.theworldlink.com.

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A private family memorial service will be held at a later time for Melinda Basile, 56, of North Bend. Cremation rites were held at Ocean View Crematory in Coos Bay. Lindy was born Jan. 31, 1958, in Portland, the daughter of Joseph and Mary (McLean) Cooney. She died April 15, 2014, at home in North Bend. She had a zest for life and lived it to its fullest. She graduated from high school at Lajes Air Force base in the Azores of Portugal. She lived in North Bend and called it home and was where she spent her final days. She was a huge animal lover and her

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sister, Elaine Oryall; and many nephews, nieces and cousins in Green Bay, Wis. Ralph was preceded in death by his parents, William and Alvera Van Hoof; sister, Betty Gillis; and son, Allen Van Hoof. Ralph passed away very peacefully at home with his wife, Yonny and his family by his side. Rest in peace Dad, we love you and miss you. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to South Coast Hospice, 1620 Thompson Road, Coos Bay, OR 97420. Arrangements are under the direction of North Bend Chapel, 541-756-0440. Friends and family are encouraged to sign the online guestbook, share photos and send condolences at www.coosbayareafunerals.c om and www. theworldlink.com.

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A6 •The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

Nation and Obituary US puts off decision on Keystone XL pipeline WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration is putting off its decision on the Keystone XL oil pipeline, likely until after the November elections, by extending its review of the controversial project indefinitely. In a surprise announcement Friday as Washington was winding down for Easter, the State Department said federal agencies will have more time to weigh in on the politically fraught decision — but declined to say how much longer. Officials said the decision will have to wait for the dust to settle in Nebraska, where a judge in February overturned a state law that allowed the

pipeline’s path through the state. Nebraska’s Supreme Court isn’t expected to hear an appeal to that ruling until September or October, The Associated Press and there could be more legal maneuvering after the A sign reading "Stop the Transcanada Pipeline" in a field near Bradshaw, high court rules. So Neb. President Barack Obama will almost surely have ing to vulnerable Democrats ficing 42,000 jobs and biluntil after the November running this year in conser- lions in economic activity. In an ironic show of biparcongressional elections to vative-leaning areas. “This decision is irre- tisanship, Republicans make the final call about whether the pipeline carry- sponsible, unnecessary and joined Landrieu and other said Democrats like Sen. Mark ing oil from Canada should unacceptable,” Democratic Sen. Mary Begich of Alaska in immedibe built. condemning the Approving the pipeline Landrieu, who faces a diffi- ately before the election would cult re-election in oil-rich announcement — the latest rankle Obama’s allies and Louisiana. Landrieu said in a string of delays in a donors in the environmental Obama was signaling that a review process that has community, but nixing it small minority can tie up the dragged on for more than five could be politically damag- process in the courts, sacri- years.

SHALA

McKenzie

KUDLAC FOR CIRCUIT

COURT JUDGE

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Colorado deaths stoke worries about pot edibles DENVER (AP) — A college student eats more than the recommended dose of a marijuana-laced cookie and jumps to his death from a hotel balcony. A husband with no history of violence is accused of shooting his wife in the head, possibly after eating pot-infused candy. The two recent deaths have stoked concerns about Colorado’s recreational mari-

juana industry and the effects of the drug, especially since cookies, candy and other pot edibles can be exponentially more potent than a joint. “We’re seeing hallucinations, they become sick to their stomachs, they throw up, they become dizzy and very anxious,” said Al Bronstein, medical director of the Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center.

Obituary Margaret Mae (Guimon) Ball Dec. 2, 1929 – April 16, 2014

Private family services will be held at a later date for Margaret Mae Ball, 84, of Coos Bay. Private cremation rites were held at Ocean View Memory Gardens in Coos Bay. Margaret was born Dec. 2, 1929, in Merrill, Ore., to John Guimon and Frances Giraud. She passed away April 16, 2014, in Coos Bay. Margaret was a hair dresser and owned several salons in Wyoming and Oregon. She was president of the NHCA and took first place in the NHCA’s Fantasy Hair competition 1959. She had a great sense of humor, was creative and artistic and loved to paint, play music and was an excellent cook. She was very proud of her Shoshone heritage and instilled that pride in her

children. Margaret was involved in several different programs including: Indian Manpower Program in the Gold Beach/Brookings area; Indian Rights Movement; American Indian Movement; NAACP; in 1973, she was involved with Wounded Knee, South Dakota; she established Tillicum Indian Lodge and was involved in the restoration of several Oregon native tribes and worked for the Oregon I n d i a n Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse. Margaret is survived and will always be Margaret Ball loved and missed by her four children, Julie and Bryan Hudson, Linda and Mike Gibson, Gloria “Gogi” and Tim Lobato; son, John Smith; 14 grandchildren; 22 great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandchild; and nieces numerous nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents; sister, Gloria; husband, Jean Smith; grandson, Bernie Smith; and g r e a t - g r a n d d a u g h t e r, Cailyn. In lieu of flowers, contributions to St. Jude would be appreciated to St. Jude’s Research Children’s Hospital, P.O. Box 50, Memphis, TN 38101-9929. Arrangements are under the care of Coos Bay Chapel, 541-267-3131. Friends and family are encouraged to sign the online guestbook at www.coosbayareafunerals.com and www.theworldlink.com.

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He Is Risen It was early Sunday morning when Mary Magdalene and some other women went to pay one last respect for the man who had impacted their lives. They had heard Him speak, seen His power through the miracles He performed, and watched as others had their life changed by Him as well. They were prepared to follow through with one last heart felt action knowing full well that doing so would take some doing considering the weight of the stone that was put in the front of His tomb. Imagine their surprise when upon arrival, the stone was rolled back and the body was missing. It is hard to understand what was going through the minds of the women. We do know that Mary Magdalene couldn’t tear herself away from the scene. A voice spoke to her and she was expecting it to be another person. When she turned around, she immediately saw the one person who meant more to her than life itself. Jesus changed her life and many others. Mary did not need to see Jesus to know how He had done in her, but she did need to see Jesus in order for her to tell others He was risen. Jesus is still changing lives, and He can change yours. Come worship with us Sunday and see what Jesus can do for you.

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Saturday, April 19,2014 • The World • A7

World Earthquake shakes Mexican capital ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) — A powerful magnitude-7.2 earthquake shook central and southern Mexico on Friday, sending panicked people into the streets. Some walls cracked and fell, but there were no reports of major damage or casualties. The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake at about 9:30 a.m. was centered on a long-dormant fault line northwest of the Pacific resort of Acapulco, where many Mexicans are vacationThe Associated Press ing for the Easter holiday. A parked car suffered damage when an adobe wall collapsed on it after It was felt across at least a a strong earthquake shook Chilpancingo, Mexico, on Friday morning. half-dozen states and Mexico’s capital, where it collapsed several walls and “The hotel security was centered 22 miles northwest left large cracks in some excellent and started calm- of the town of Tecpan de facades. Debris covered ing people down. They got Galeana, and was 15 miles everyone to leave quietly.” deep. sidewalks around the city. The quake struck 170 miles Friday’s quake occurred Around the region, there were reports of isolated and southwest of Mexico City, along a section of the Pacific minor damage, such as fallen where people fled high-rises Coast known as the Guerrero fences, trees and broken win- and took to the streets, many Seismic Gap, a 125-mile secdows. Chilpancingo, capital in still in their bathrobes and tion where tectonic plates meet and have been locked, of the southern state of pajamas on their day off. “I started to hear the walls meaning huge amounts of Guerrero, where the quake was centered, reported a creak and I said, ‘Let’s go,”’ energy are being stored up power outage, but service said Rodolfo Duarte, 32, who with potentially devastating was restored after 15 minutes. fled his third-floor apart- effects, said USGS seismologist Gavin Hayes. In Acapulco, 59-year-old ment. Mexico City Mayor Miguel The last large quake that Enedina Ramirez Perez was having breakfast, enjoying Angel Mancera said there were occurred along the section the holiday with about 20 small power outages from fall- was a magnitude-7.6 temfamily members, when her en transformers but officials blor in 1911, Hayes said. were working to restore the He said scientists will be hotel started to shake. watching the area more “People were turning over service. The USGS initially calcu- intensely because moderate chairs in their desperation to lated the quake’s magnitude quakes such as Friday’s can get out, grabbing children, trampling people,” the at 7.5, but later downgraded destabilize the surrounding Mexico City woman said. it to 7.2. It said the quake was sections of seismic plate.

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Ferry captain arrested including 323 students from Danwon High School in Ansan. It capsized within hours of the crew making a distress call to the shore a little before 9 a.m. Wednesday. Only its dark blue keel jutted out over the surface. But by Friday night, even that had disappeared, and rescuers set two giant beige buoys to mark the area. Navy divers attached underwater air bags to the 6,852-ton ferry to prevent it from sinking deeper, the Defense Ministry said. The coast guard said divers began pumping air into the ship to try to sustain any survivors. Strong currents and rain made it difficult to get inside the ferry. Divers worked in shifts to try to get into the vessel, where most of the passengers were believed to have been trapped when it sank, coast guard spokesman Kim Jae-in said.

MOKPO, South Korea (AP) — The captain of a sunken South Korean ferry was arrested Saturday on suspicion of negligence and abandoning people in need, as investigators looked into whether his evacuation order came too late to save lives. Two crew members were also arrested, a prosecutor said. The disaster three days ago left more than 270 people missing and at least 29 people dead. As the last bit of the sunken ferry’s hull slipped Friday beneath the murky water off southern South Korea, there was a new victim: a vice principal of the high school whose students were among the was found passengers hanged, an apparent suicide. The Sewol had left the port of northwestern Incheon on Tuesday on an overnight journey to the holiday island of Jeju in the south with 476 people aboard,

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Stocks Thu.’s closing New York Stock Exchange selected prices: Stock Last Chg 36.04 — .06 AT&T Inc Alcoa 13.56 + .14 Altria 38.45 + .09 AEP 51.73 — .77 AmIntlGrp 50.82 + .43 48.51 + .23 ApldIndlT Avon 14.51 — .27 BP PLC 48.88 + .49 BakrHu 68.33 + 2.02 16.15 + .02 BkofAm Boeing 127.92 + 1.88 49.46 + .35 BrMySq Brunswick 43.16 + .13 Caterpillar 102.83 — .10 Chevron 123.68 + 1.85 Citigroup 48.22 + .04 40.72 + .13 CocaCola ColgPalm s 66.94 + .12 ConocoPhil 74.77 + .99 ConEd 56.50 — 1.09 63.61 + 1.00 CurtisWrt Deere 93.40 + .25 Disney 79.99 + 1.04 DowChm 48.72 + .22 66.98 — .74 DuPont 73.82 + .87 Eaton EdisonInt 56.38 — .51

ExxonMbl FMC Corp FootLockr FordM Gannett GenCorp GenDynam GenElec GenMills Hallibrtn HeclaM Hess HewlettP HonwllIntl Idacorp IBM IntPap JohnJn LockhdM Loews LaPac MDU Res MarathnO McDnlds McKesson Merck NCR Corp NorflkSo NorthropG OcciPet Olin

100.42 76.75 45.24 16.00 26.87 17.21 109.06 26.56 52.09 60.90 3.07 87.27 31.93 93.10 55.38 190.01 45.46 98.96 160.25 43.95 15.25 35.08 36.73 100.25 170.98 56.47 33.92 96.27 122.00 96.60 28.55

Financial snapshot

+ .48 — .06 + .04 — .07 + .23 — .13 + .88 + .44 — .17 + .40 — .04 + .73 — .56 — .20 — .77 — 6.39 — .04 + .21 + .81 — .12 — .14 — .24 + .26 — .58 + .98 + .21 — .34 + 1.02 + 1.40 + .79 + .06

Friday, April 18, 2014 WEEK’S CLOSE

WEEK AGO

YEAR AGO

0.11%

0.11

0.12

91-day Treasury Bill Yield

0.03%

0.03

0.05

10-year Treasury Bond

2.73%

2.63

1.71

137.68

136.40

Interest rates Average rate paid on banks money-market accounts (Bank Rate Monitor)

City of Coos Bay Fire & Rescue Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Oregon Coquille Indian Tribe Administration Coquille Indian Tribe Head Start Coquille Indian Tribe Community Health Center Coquille Indian Tribe Maintenance Shop Coquille Indian Tribe Plankhouse & Community Park Coquille Indian Tribe Police Department Cougar Eyecare Miller’s Furniture Restoration Oregon Coast Community Action Oregon Institute of Marine Biology ROSEBURG Staples The Mill Casino Umpqua Dairy Women’s Safety And Resource Center

PG&E Cp 44.87 — .75 Penney 7.50 + .24 PepsiCo 85.55 + .78 Pfizer 30.25 + .16 Praxair 131.86 + .31 ProctGam 81.76 + .11 23.50 + .02 Questar RockwlAut 127.02 + 1.32 97.13 — 1.23 SempraEn SouthnCo 45.12 — .70 Textron 39.54 + .65 3M Co 137.73 + .96 65.15 + .66 TimeWarn 59.61 + .13 Timken 20.06 — .02 TriContl UnionPac 189.59 + 1.44 Unisys 29.00 + .11 USSteel 27.04 + .13 VarianMed 80.28 — .61 VerizonCm 47.60 + .50 23.43 + .05 ViadCorp 77.66 + .44 WalMart WellsFargo 48.93 — .16 Weyerhsr 27.87 — .03 Xerox 11.43 — .07 YumBrnds 76.34 — .52

Commodities DJ UBS Commodities Indexes

131.51

Stocks Dow Jones Industrial Avg. 16,408.54 16,026.75 14,547.51 S&P 500

1,864.85

1,815.69

1,555.25

Wilshire 5000 Total Market

19,832.16

19,321.15

16,393.64 AP

of major stock indexes; 2c x 3 inches; stand-alone;

Skywest . . . . . . . . . . 12.58 12.77 Fri. p.m. Stock . . . . . . . . . staff; . Mon. ETA 5:30 . . . . . . . . 69.31 70.15 . . 5.58 Note: 5.89It isStarbucks Frontier . . . . . . . . .Editor’s mandatory to include all sources Fncl.when . . . . . repurposing 32.48 33.08or Industrial Mineralsthat 26.56 27.04 Sterling accompany this graphic editing it for publication Umpqua Bank. . . . . 18.16 18.58 Kroger. . . . . . . . . . . 44.58 44.28 Lee. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.00 4.20 Weyerhaeuser . . . . 27.89 27.87 Microsoft . . . . . . . . . 39.18 40.01 Xerox . . . . . . . . . . . . 11.36 11.43 Nike . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72.38 74.02 Dow Jones closed at 16,408.54 NW Natural . . . . . . 44.26 44.55 Provided by Coos Bay Edward Jones

© 2014 Pacific Power

NORTHWEST STOCKS SNAPSHOT Weekly snapshot Week’s action: Monday, Friday closings:041714: . . . . .financial . . . . 38.02 34.12 Safeway

Gift Cer tif Availablicates e


A8 • The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

Weather

South Coast SURGE

Oregon weather Today's Forecast

Under-35s are now enrolling

Hightemperatures | Low temps Underground Weather forecast for daytime April 19 conditions, low/high Forecast for Saturday,

WASH. Astoria 54° | 46°

Continued from Page A1

Newport 53° | 46°

buy coverage in the health care law’s new insurance markets. The White House says that group now accounts for 28 percent of those who have picked a plan in states where the federal government is running the insurance exchanges. Not perfect, but not bad either, said Larry Levitt, an insurance expert with Kaiser. “Enrollment among young adults ended up lower than their share of the target population but sufficient to keep the market stable in the vast majority of the country,” he said. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office is forecasting only a slight average increase in premiums for 2015. Some private insurance experts expect big differences around the country, predicting that insurers will seek noticeably higher premiums, around 6 percent to 8 percent on average. Republicans were having none of Obama’s celebration. A statement from the office of Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said he remains committed to repealing the law and replacing it. The president appeared in the White House briefing room to trumpet the new figures, which beat initial projections by 1 million people Following the disastrous rollout of the insurance exchanges in October, when HealthCare.gov was virtually unusable, Democrats have been hoping that higherthan-expected results could help their candidates reclaim the political high ground ahead of the midterm elections. Seven months out from Election Day, they’re seeking to turn the page on the law’s flawed debut — a strategy underscored last week when Obama announced that Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, who became the face of the rollout failure, was stepping down. Polling shows the law remains unpopular in much of the country, yet most Americans say they don’t expect it to be entirely repealed, but changed in some way. With the insurance markets looking increasingly and Obama viable, Democrats were hoping to move the political debate away from repeal and toward efforts to fix lingering issues. Republicans have been reluctant to pursue fixes for fear of tacitly embracing the overall law. Obama said that it’s “absolutely possible” to make improvements but that it would require a change of attitude from Republicans.

April 19 Saturday, City/Region

Portland 58° | 44°

Pendleton 67° | 37° Bend 58° | 40°

Salem 60° | 41°

IDAHO Ontario 77° | 37°

Eugene 59° | 43° North Bend Coos Bay 56° | 44° Medford 66° | 40°

Klamath Falls

CALIF. 60° | 36°

Cloudy Partly Cloudy

© 2014 Wunderground.com

Thunderstorms Showers

Ice

Flurries Rain

Snow Weather Underground• AP

South Coast Today: Rain likely. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 56. South wind 10 to 17 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%. Saturday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 44. Southwest wind 6 to 13 mph. Sunday: Patchy fog. Otherwise, partly sunny, with a high near 58. East southeast wind around 5 mph. Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 46. West wind around 5 mph. Monday: Showers likely. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 56. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 45. Northwest wind around 6 mph becoming calm.

Willamette Valley Today: Rain. High near 58. Southwest wind 5 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 24 mph. Chance of precipitation is 90%. Saturday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low near 41. West southwest wind 10 to 15 mph. Sunday: Patchy fog. Otherwise, partly sunny, with a high near 69. Light wind. Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 47. Northwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm.

Portland area

Curry County Coast

By Alysha Beck, The World

Matt LeDoux tosses crabs fresh off the boat Brandy in a tank at Fishermen’s Wharf on Friday.

FLEET Crabbers are almost paid off Continued from Page A1 In order to pay back the loan, fish sellers are required to collect 5 percent fees on groundfish and 0.55 percent fees on Dungeness crab, a corollary fishery also bound by the buyback terms. “If you take 5 percent off the top, half your net profits

are going to the loan,” Pettinger said. Support for the bill in Congress depends largely how much refinancing the loan would cost the government in revenue. “We have this thing in the House called the ‘pay-for rule,’” DeFazio said, adding that lower interest rates would likely cost the government very little. As of Feb. 14, the West Coast groundfish trawl fleet owed $27,514,456.31 on the loan principal and

$150,163.38 in interest. The Oregon Dungeness crab fleet owes $252,639.02 on the principal and $385.95 in interest. Hugh Link, executive director of the Oregon Crab Commission, said crab fisherman will likely have their balance paid off by next year. Reporter Thomas Moriarty can be reached at 541-2691222, ext. 240, or by email at t h o m a s . m o r i a rt y @ t h e worldlink.com. Follow him on T w i t t e r : @ThomasDMoriarty.

Planned crash by NASA robot CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA’s robotic moon explorer, LADEE, is no more. Flight controllers confirmed that the orbiting spacecraft crashed into the back side of the moon Friday as planned, avoiding the precious historic artifacts left behind by moonwalkers. LADEE’s annihilation occurred just three days after it survived a full lunar eclipse, something it was never designed to do. Researchers believe LADEE likely vaporized when it hit because of its extreme orbiting speed of 3,600 mph, possibly smacking into a mountain or side of a crater. No debris would have been left behind. “It’s bound to make a dent,” project scientist Rick Elphic predicted Thursday.

By Thursday evening, the spacecraft had been skimming the lunar surface at an incredibly low altitude of 300 feet. Its orbit had been lowered on purpose last week to ensure a crash by Monday following a successful science mission. LADEE — short for Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer — was launched in September from Virginia. From the outset, NASA planned to crash the spacecraft into the back side of the moon, far from the Apollo artifacts from the moonwalking days of 1969 to 1972. Scattered over the near side of the moon: the landing portions of six lunar modules, flags, plaques, rovers and more, not to mention those memorable first footprints by

Brain injuries common in jailed NYC youths NEW YORK (AP) — About half of all 16- to 18-year-olds coming into New York City’s jails say they had a traumatic brain injury before being incarcerated, most caused by assaults, according to a new study that’s the latest in a growing body of research documenting head trauma among young offenders. Experts say the findings, published this week in The Journal of Adolescent Health, could lead to better training for correction officers on how to deal with the possible symptoms of such trauma, which include problems with impulse control and decision-making. “You need to train the correction

officers to understand brain injuries so that when somebody may be acting rude or answering back or forgetting what they’re supposed to do, it’s not a sign of maladaptive misbehavior or disrespect, it’s a sign of a brain injury,” said Wayne Gordon, a brain injury expert. The study found nearly 50 percent of both boys and girls reported traumatic brain injuries that resulted in a loss of consciousness, amnesia or both. And they said 55 percent of those injuries were caused by assaults. Previous studies show the rate of traumatic brain injury among adolescents who aren’t incarcerated is about 15 to 30 percent.

Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. Apollo 12 had been projected to be closest — by several hundred miles. The last thing the LADEE team wanted was “to plow into any of the historic sites,” said project manager Butler Hine. LADEE completed its primary 100-day science mission last month and was on overtime. The extension had LADEE flying during Tuesday morning’s lunar eclipse; its instruments were not designed to endure such prolonged darkness and cold. But the small spacecraft survived — it’s about the size of a vending machine — with just a couple pressure sensors acting up. It will be at least a day or two before NASA knows where the spacecraft ended up.

LOBBYIST

Today: Rain likely. Partly sunny, with a high near 56. South southeast wind 8 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. Saturday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers. Partly cloudy, with a low near 44. West southwest wind around 5 mph. Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 60. North northeast wind 5 to 10 mph. Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 45. West northwest wind 3 to 8 mph.

Rogue Valley Today: A 20 percent chance of rain . Mostly sunny, with a high near 68. Light and variable wind. Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 37. West northwest wind 6 to 11 mph becoming light and variable. Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 76. Calm wind. Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 43. West northwest wind around 6 mph.

Today: Rain. High near 59. Light southeast wind becoming south 9 to 14 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. Saturday Night: Showers likely. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 43. Southwest wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain is 60%. Sunday: Patchy fog. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 68. Calm wind. Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 47. Calm wind.

North Coast Today: Rain. High near 54. South wind 10 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. Saturday Night: Showers likely. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 44. Breezy, with a southwest wind 17 to 22 mph. Sunday: Patchy fog. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 58. South southeast wind 5 to 11 mph. Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 47. Southwest wind 5 to 8 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Central Douglas County

Central Oregon

Today: A 40 percent chance of rain. Partly sunny, with a high near 64. Light south wind. Saturday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 40. West wind 6 to 11 mph becoming light and variable. Sunday: Patchy fog. Otherwise, mostly sunny, with a high near 73. Calm wind.

Today: Partly sunny, with a high near 59. Breezy, with a south wind 6 to 11 mph. Saturday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 30. West wind 16 to 21 mph. Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 67. Light southeast wind. Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 40. Northwest wind 3 to 7 mph.

Oregon Temps

Local high, low, rainfall

Temperature extremes and precipitation for the 24 hours ending at 5 p.m. Friday. Hi Lo Prec Astoria 57 40 0.06 Brookings 63 43 0.01 33 0.04 61 Corvallis 62 34 0.03 Eugene Klamath Falls 64 22 T 57 36 0.10 La Grande 71 45 0.01 Medford Newport 61 37 0.01 Pendleton 60 38 0.06 Portland 60 39 0.02 Redmond 60 27 T 66 42 T Roseburg 62 35 0.04 Salem

Thursday: High 59, low 48 Rain: 0.15 Total rainfall to date: 16.82 inches Rainfall to date last year: 12.16 inches Average rainfall to date: 28.87 inches

Extended outlook TODAY

SUNDAY

Rain likely 56/44

Partly sunny 58/46

MONDAY

TUESDAY

Rain likely 56/46

Rain likely 57/47

The Tide Tables To find the tide prediction for your area, add or subtract minutes as indicated. To find your estimated tidal height, multiply the listed height by the high or low ratio for your area. Tide ratios and variances based out of Charleston.

Location High time -0:05 Bandon -0:30 Brookings +1:26 Coos Bay +0:44 Florence Port Orford -0:18 +1:11 Reedsport Half Moon Bay +0:05

HIGH TIDE Date 19-April 20-April 21-April 22-April 23-April

LOW TIDE Date 19-April 20-April 21-April 22-April 23-April

ratio Low time ratio .92 +0:02 .94 .90 -0:23 .97 .96 +1:28 .88 +0:58 .80 .86 .95 -0:17 1.06 .88 +1:24 .80 +0:03 .96 .91

A.M.

P.M.

time ft. 3:03 7.9 3:52 7.6 4:51 7.2 6:02 6.8 7:21 6.5

time ft. 4:34 6.3 5:35 6.2 6:40 6.2 7:45 6.4 8:45 6.7

A.M.

P.M.

time ft. time ft. 9:53 -0.7 9:50 2.7 10:47 -0.4 10:51 3.0 11:47 -0.1 12:05 3.0 12:52 0.2 1:27 2.7 1:58 0.4 Sunrise, sunset April 17-23 6:32, 8:01 Moon watch Last Quarter — April 22

Continued from Page A1 Melissa Cribbins said the bill shouldn’t combine the Wagon Road lands and O&C lands, and that the Wagon Road lands were Coos County’s issue. The county has about 60,000 acres of Wagon Road lands. They came about after an 1869 Act of Congress, when a wagon road was constructed between Roseburg and Coos Bay. Commissioner Melissa Cribbins said she would compile a list of names and costs for a lobbyist. “I think we’re all frustrated,” Cribbins said. Reporter Emily Thornton can be reached at 541-269-1222, ext. 249 or at emily.thornton@theworldlink.com or on Twitter: @EmilyK_Thornton.

Temperatures indicate Friday’s high and overnight low to 5 p.m. Hi Lo Prc Otlk cdy 78 46 Albuquerque Anchorage 49 36 cdy Atlanta 54 53 .61 rn Baltimore 52 37 pcdy Billings 62 42 .17 clr Boise 62 47 .11 pcdy 42 31 clr Boston 54 31 pcdy Burlington,Vt. Casper 74 39 pcdy clr 51 40 Chicago Cincinnati 71 40 clr Colorado Springs 76 32 cdy Dallas-Ft Worth 76 55 .06 pcdy Denver 79 42 cdy 66 34 clr Des Moines 65 47 clr Detroit pcdy 53 31 Fairbanks Fargo 53 32 pcdy cdy 60 34 Flagstaff Green Bay 50 35 pcdy Honolulu 85 71 cdy Indianapolis 70 41 clr Jackson,Miss. 74 55 clr

68 33 clr Kansas City cdy 81 68 Las Vegas Lexington 71 45 clr 75 54 .01 pcdy Little Rock Los Angeles 73 61 pcdy Miami Beach 84 74 .08 cdy Milwaukee 43 36 clr Mpls-St Paul 52 26 cdy Nashville 69 52 clr 74 61 clr New Orleans 49 35 clr New York City Oklahoma City 76 43 pcdy clr 55 38 Philadelphia Phoenix 82 71 cdy Raleigh-Durham 63 38 rn Richmond 55 36 cdy Sacramento 80 56 clr 72 45 clr St Louis 68 62 cdy San Diego 63 53 pcdy San Francisco Seattle 58 43 .37 rn 54 36 .09 cdy Spokane Washington,D.C. 57 39 pcdy National Temperature Extremes High Friday 97 at Death Valley, Calif. Low Friday 7 at Crane Lake, Minn.


The ticker

It’s playoff time

SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 2014 • SECTION B

High School Baseball North Bend 1, Brookings-Harbor 0 North Bend 6, Brookings-Harbor 3 Sutherlin 9, Marshfield 5 Marshfield 14, Sutherlin 3 Reedsport 5, Glendale 4 Gold Beach 11, North Lake 0 Gold Beach 11, North Lake 1 High School Softball Marshfield 10, Sutherlin 0 Marshfield 9, Sutherlin 3 Brookings-Harbor 10, North Bend 0 Brookings-Harbor 8, North Bend 1

SPORTS

Blazers open against Houston. Page B4

Baseball, B2 • Scoreboard, B3 • NBA, B4 • Community, B4, B5

theworldlink.com/sports ■ Sports Editor John Gunther ■ 541-269-1222, ext. 241

Johnson pitches perfect game THE WORLD Marshfield’s Mackenzie Johnson pitched a perfect game in the first of two wins against Sutherlin on Friday. The Pirates shut out the Bulldogs 10-0 in the first game and won 9-3 in the second, improving to 5-4 as they hit their midway point of the Far West League season. Johnson went 15-up, 15-down on Sutherlin, striking out four before the 10-run rule ended the game after five innings. Johnson also threw a fiveinning no-hitter last Friday against North Bend. “She was on today,” Marshfield’s head coach Brooke Toy said. “Her demeanor was a lot different today. She went out there with a lot more confidence.” The closest Sutherlin came to a hit was in the first inning, when a girl hit the ball into the outfield, but Jade Chavez threw her out at first base. On offense, Khalani Hoyer, Katelyn Rossback and Chavez each had a double and two RBIs in the first game. Chavez went 4-for-4. In Game two, Marshfield kept rolling. Toy highlighted the Pirates aggressive baserunning and the fact they finished with seven stolen bases. Despite the nine runs, Marshfield only managed seven hits. Other than a double from Sidney Baarstad and a two-bagger from Hoyer that bounced off the outfield wall, Toy wasn’t too happy with how her team hit in the second game. “Seeing our bats fall off was something I didn’t expect,” Toy said. “Kudos to them for battling back and I think we stayed strong through the second game, but our bats just fell off.” The wins come just three days after Marshfield was nohit by South Umpqua’s Krystan Cook.

Local Recap

SEE RECAP | B2

Photos by Lou Sennick, The World

Brookings-Harbor’s Alec McBride, right, laid down a bunt in the second game of their doubleheader at North Bend on Friday afternoon. North Bend pitcher Hunter Jackson, left, got the ball and tossed to Jon Bennison for the out on the play.

North Bend maintains hot streak Bulldogs sweep Bruins to improve to 8-0 in FWL ■

BY GEORGE ARTSITAS The World

NORTH BEND — From 0-7 to over .500 in less than two weeks. North Bend took a stranglehold on the lead of the Far West League baseball standings, sweeping a doubleheader against BrookingsHarbor in a battle of unbeatens on Friday at Clyde Allen Field. The Bulldogs now stand at 8-0 in league and 8-7 overall after losing all seven preseason games. The Bruins came in 5-0 in league, but along with Siuslaw, now sit 2 1⁄ 2 games back of North Bend in the race for first place at 5-2. See related photos at North Bend won the www.theworldlink.com. opener 1-0 on a lastinning walk-off walk and took the nightcap 6-3 with timely hitting late. “Obviously it’s important for league standings,” North Bend head coach Brad Horning said. “It was something they were looking forward to and something we were looking forward to, and you knew it was going to be tight ball games, and it proved to be that way. We just happened to come out on the upper hand and score four more runs than they did.” Game one was a pitchers duel up until the final out. With two down in the bottom of the seventh

North Bend’s Cory Chatelle tags Wyatt Aldrich of Brookings-Harbor for an out at second base. and Jared Hampel on first base, BrookingsHarbor pitcher Justin Murray only needed one out to force extra innings. But Murray walked No. 9 hitter Tyler Laskey, Marshall Rice and Cory Chatelle as Hampel walked home with the game’s only run. The walks were more about North Bend’s patience than Murray’s inaccuracy. With two strikes, Laskey fouled-off three balls and Rice fouled-off two before walking on a full count and loading the bases. Then Chatelle was able to take a ball just outside with a full count to force in Hampel for the game-winner. “We just didn’t want to strike out,” Rice said. Rice’s defense at shortstop was instrumental in making sure Hampel was the winning run.

With Brookings-Harbor’s Chandler Dodd at second in the sixth inning, Rice was able to knock down a Brandon Chandler liner to keep the ball in the infield and keep Dodd at third. Rice said he practices making dives at practice just to goof off, but the extra reps ended up saving the Bulldogs on Friday. “At all the practices I’ll mess around doing that so in a game it’ll be instinct and it finally worked,” Rice said with a shiner under his left eye from an errant grounder in practice Thursday. “I felt awesome because I always wanted to do that. It was only the second time I’ve dove and got a ball so it was pretty great.” SEE BULLDOGS | B2

Brownell will swim for Pioneers BY JOHN GUNTHER The World

COOS BAY — Shaylyn Brownell will live out her dream of swimming in college after signing a letter of intent Thursday to compete for Cal State East Bay. Brownell finished a decorated career at Marshfield High School this winter with two individual school records, as well as a spot on a record-setting relay team for the Pirates. “She’s had a great, great career at Marshfield,” said Pirates coach Kathe McNutt, Brownell’s coach since she started club swimming as a 4-year-old. “She will make an impact at East Bay right away, but she is ready for so much growth.” Brownell said the school in Hayward, Calif., not far from Oakland, had a couple of big draws. “The coach is real nice,” she said. “He made me feel right at home. And the girls made me feel right at home.” Plus, the Pioneers use an outdoor pool, just like Marshfield. “She will feel right at home,” McNutt said. Cal State East Bay is an NCAA Division II school. Brownell chose

it over Fresno-Pacific and said she also considered Oregon State University. This year, Brownell took district titles in the 200-yard individual medley and 100-yard breaststroke before improving on her school records in each at state while finishing third in the IM and second in the breaststroke behind champion Cassie Dallas of North Bend. She also helped two Marshfield relays place at state. Brownell likely will focus on her two best events, the breaststroke and the individual medley, though in college the distances for those races can double. She’s looking forward to that. “The 200 breaststroke is my favorite event,” Brownell said. Like her coach at Marshfield, her parents are excited about her potential in the pool. “The best thing is to see what she can do at the next level,” said Matt Brownell, her father. “It’s going to be fun. She really wanted to swim in college.” “I’m excited to see her further her education,” he added. “They have a real good nursing program,” Shaylyn Brownell said of her planned major. Brownell followed in the foot-

steps of her sister, Kaley, first as a member of the Gold Coast Swim Team and then with the Pirates — Kaley graduated in 2007. The family has been a fixture at the Mingus Park Pool for two decades. “It’s been a long time at that pool,” Shaylyn’s mom, Connie, said. “My house smells like chlorine for 20 years, towels and swim suits hanging over every door knob.” Others who attended her signing ceremony Thursday thanked her for her dedication and how she inspired the other swimmers, from high schoolers down to the youngest kids on the club team. “I want to thank you for being a great role model,” said Grace Knutsen, who began her own swimming career at Mingus Park and is now one of the top club swimmers in the state for her age group. Despite the extreme dedication of swimming, including practice twice daily during the winter, Brownell always has kept a joyful attitude. “I’ve never had to force her to go to swim practice,” Matt Brownell said. “She always wanted to go. She likes to swim.”

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B2 •The World • Saturday,April 19,2014

Sports

Pujols clubs home run No. 497

Bulldogs earn tennis wins over Mustangs

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DETROIT — Albert Pujols hit his 497th home run and Howie Kendrick added two of his own to lead the Los Angeles Angels to an 11-6 win over the Detroit Tigers on Friday night. The Angels chased Detroit starter Drew Smyly (1-1) after three innings and then added seven runs off reliever Luke Putkonen. Los Angeles finished with 13 hits, 10 for extra bases. Kendrick hit two-run homers in the third and fourth, and Pujols lined a three-run shot to left field in the sixth to make it 11-1. Jered Weaver (1-2) allowed a run and three hits in six innings. He walked AL three and Recap struck out three. T h e Angels have won 10 straight against the Tigers, the longest active streak in the majors by one team over another. Kendrick and Ian Stewart both had three hits for the Angels, with Stewart falling a homer shy of the cycle. Mike Trout doubled twice. Rays 11, Yankees 5: James Loney drove in four runs and Tampa Bay overcame a four-run deficit to beat New York, stopping a four-game skid. Pinch-hitter Desmond Jennings had an RBI single before Loney’s two-run single off Adam Warren (0-1) in the seventh inning gave the Rays a 6-5 lead. Sean Rodriguez hit a tworun homer during a five-run

THE WORLD North Bend’s girls and boys tennis teams dominated visiting Hidden Valley on Thursday, each losing just one match. North Bend’s girls beat the Mustangs 7-1, with Hidden Valley’s only victory a threeset win at No. 1 singles by Sylvia Marr over Allie West. North Bend’s MacKenzee Scott, McKenna Reasor and Olivia Peck won their singles matches in straight sets. The Bulldogs swept the doubles matches with the teams of Hannah Schandelmeier-Lynch and The Associated Press

Los Angeles Angels' Albert Pujols (5) connects for a three-run home run during the sixth inning against the Detroit Tigers in Detroit on Friday. eighth that made it 11-5. Wil Myers, who finished with three RBIs, added a two-run single. Yankees reliever Cesar Cabral was ejected by plate umpire Joe West after hitting his third batter, Logan Forsythe, in the eighth after Myers’ hit. The left-hander earlier plunked Evan Longoria and Loney. Longoria had three hits and reached base in all five plate appearances. Jake McGee (1-0) got the win. Orioles 8, Red Sox 4: Jonathan Schoop went 4 for 5 with two doubles and two RBIs as Baltimore roughed up Boston starter John Lackey. Every Orioles starter had at least one hit except for Chris Davis. Baltimore got 10 of those hits off Lackey (2-2),

who allowed six earned runs over 5 1-3 innings. It was the second straight start in which Lackey gave up six runs and failed to make it out of the sixth inning. The first four-hit game of Schoop’s career extended his hitting streak to seven games. Rangers 12, White Sox 0: Martin Perez pitched a three-hitter for his first career shutout, Leonys Martin drove in four runs and Texas routed Chicago. Martin homered and was one of four Rangers batters with three hits apiece. Robinson Chirinos also went deep. Perez (3-0) retired his last 12 batters and struck out eight in his second complete game. Prince Fielder, who came in hitting .164, reached base all five times he batted,

including a run-scoring double. He also singled, walked twice and was hit by a pitch. Royals 5, Twins 0: Jason Vargas pitched seven sharp innings, Mike Moustakas cracked a two-run homer and Kansas City romped to a victory over Minnesota. Alcides Escobar had three hits and Omar Infante also drove in two runs for the Royals, who have won four straight after getting swept in Minnesota last weekend. Blue Jays 3, Indians 2: Melky Cabrera had four hits and scored the go-ahead run in the seventh inning on Edwin Encarnacion’s single, and Toronto held on to beat Cleveland. Carlos Santana hit a tworun homer for the Indians, who have dropped six of eight.

Lakers drop first two to Chemeketa THE WORLD The Southwestern Oregon Community College baseball team suffered its first sweep in the past few weeks when visiting Chemeketa beat the Lakers 5-4 and 4-2 on Friday. The Storm rallied to win the opener with three runs in the eighth inning, erasing a 3-2 deficit. All the runs came with two outs after the Storm had loaded the bases. Brenden Shaffer hit a tworun single and Gerhett Moser scored on an error. Hunter Combs had two hits for the Lakers and Taylor

RECAP From Page B1

Harang pulled with a no-hitter after seventh NEW YORK (AP) — Aaron Harang threw no-hit ball for seven innings but was pulled after 121 pitches, and reliever Luis Avilan gave up David Wright’s two-out single in the eighth as the Atlanta Braves beat the New York Mets 6-0 Friday night. As Harang’s pitch count increased on a chilly evening, it seemed doubtful manager F r e d i Gonzalez would let NL him go the Recap distance. Harang worked around six walks, including two in the sixth inning and another pair in the seventh. Harang (3-1) left for a pinch hitter during a long, four-run eighth. He was never in the on-deck circle — the decision had already been made that he was done. Jordan Walden completed the combined one-hitter. Brewers 5, Pirates 3: Kyle Lohse pitched effectively into the seventh inning and

Carlos Gomez homered to lead Milwaukee past Pittsburgh. Lohse (3-1) improved to 11-2 in his career against the Pirates, allowing one earned run in a win against them for the second time in six days. Reds 4, Cubs 1: Alfredo Simon lowered his ERA to 0.86, and Cincinnati won for the 16th time in its last 17 games at Wrigley Field. Making his third start, Simon (2-1) allowed an unearned run in six-plus innings and sent the Cubs to their fifth straight loss. Jonathan Broxton pitched a hitless ninth for his second save, completing a six-hitter as the Reds stretched their winning streak to a seasonbest three. Nationals 3, Cardinals 1: Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina’s throwing error combined with Michael Wacha’s wild pitch to allow two unearned runs in the seventh inning, breaking a tie and helping Gio Gonzalez and Washington get the win.

Gonzalez (3-1) allowed one run and four hits in seven innings, retiring the last 11 batters he faced. Padres 2, Giants 1: Tyson Ross held the San Francisco Giants to four hits and struck out nine in eight scoreless innings, and San Diego handed Matt Cain his third straight loss. Ross (2-2) beat Cain (0-3) five days after topping AL Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer and the Detroit Tigers. Rockies 12, Phillies 1: Troy Tulowitzki hit a threerun home run after No. 3 hitter Carlos Gonzalez was intentionally walked in front of him, Tyler Chatwood pitched seven strong innings for his first win of the season,

and Colorado routed Philadelphia. Tulowitzki went 3 for 3 on the night, drove in five runs.

BULLDOGS

that much. I just kept the ball low and kept on throwing it in the strike zone. Nothing really big was going through my head.” Game two offered much more offense, but late Bulldog hits pushed North Bend over the top. With the score tied 3-3 in the bottom of the fifth, North Bend creeped on top after a Murray error at shortstop on a Hunter Jackson grounder allowed Zach Inskeep to score and put North Bend up 4-3. In the next inning, an Inskeep single and Chatelle’s fielder’s choice were able to

score Rice and Hampel to put North Bend up 6-3. Coy Woods went 1-for-3 with a double in the second game for the Bulldogs only extra base hit on the day. After the game, Brookings-Harbor coach Keith Wallin declined comment. North Bend hasn’t lost since a 14-7 defeat at the hands of last year’s state runner-up Newport way back on April Fools day. Zach Inskeep was the only Bulldog to have multiple hits in a game on Friday. Inskeep struck out twice to start the second game before going 2-

for-2 in his last two at bats with a pair of singles, a run and an RBI. The way he explains moving on from the early strikeouts is a microcosm of the Bulldogs’ resilience this season. “I just went up there with the same approach every time. A strikeout is a strikeout, it’s only one at-bat so I wasn’t worried about it,” Inskeep explained, before expounding on the win streak. “It feels good,” he said. “I want it to keep going. I don’t plan on it stopping here and that’s the mind-set of everybody on our team.”

From Page B1 North Bend starter Jonathan Bennison was brilliant holding the Bruins bats in check all game. Bennison had 11 strikeouts and just one walk on the way to a complete game shutout. The Bruins only managed three hits off Bennison and Chandler was the only Brookings-Harbor runner to reach third base. “I felt pretty good. I felt like I was in the zone the whole time,” Bennison said. “Nothing really affected me

The Associated Press

Atlanta Braves' Aaron Harang delivers a pitch during the first inning against the New York Mets on Friday in New York.

INTERLEAGUE Marlins 8, Mariners 4: Giancarlo Stanton hit a grand slam with none out in the ninth inning, and Miami took advantage of an overturned call on a replay review to beat Seattle. Reed Johnson was called out on a force play following a bunt, but the umpires reviewed the ruling and determined third baseman Kyle Seager had juggled the ball. The Mariners then deployed five infielders, and Stanton cleared them all with a towering homer to the left of the home-run sculpture.

Marshfield has its bye for the first round of league play Tuesday and will head to Coquille for a nonleague doubleheader before taking on Douglas for a big twin bill at home Friday. The doubleheader against the Trojans promises to have serious playoff implications for the Far West League, with the Trojans in third place in the league standings at 5-2 with a game against secondplace Brookings-Harbor on Tuesday. Douglas suffered its first two league losses at the hands of South Umpqua on Friday. Bruins sweep North Bend: The Bulldogs struggled against Far West League foe Brookings-Harbor, getting swept in a doubleheader Friday. North Bend lost the first game 10-0 in six innings and the second by the count of 8-1. “We did better than I thought we were gonna do but not as good as we should’ve done,“ North Bend head coach Meghan Thomsen said. In game one Friday, North Bend only had one error, a big improvement from the 11 they had against Douglas on Tuesday. Thomsen also was pleased that the Bulldogs didn’t dig themselves into too deep a hole early, only giving up five runs in the first inning between the two games. The bigger issue for North Bend is offense. “We’re playing better; our bats are just killing us,” Thomsen said. North Bend only managed a single run and two hits between the two games. The only runner to cross home plate for the Bulldogs Friday was Alyssa Holder. Running for pitcher Patience Cook, Holder stole second and third and then was knocked in on a Kadie Forderer base hit. “We have to get our bats live,” Thomsen said. “That’s what’s preventing us from winning games right now.” North Bend will play next at Siuslaw on Tuesday.

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Taylor Cuzzort, Karen LaGesse and Bailey Lyon, Payton Smith and Raegan Spence, and Abbey Knight and Renee Thompson. For the boys, just three singles matches were contested and North Bend lost a total of three games among them in wins by Jacob Gage, Brigham Baker and Brant Hamner. In doubles, North Bend got wins by the pairs of James Jordan and Stewart Lyons, Steven Chan and Iman Abboud, and River Morse and Daniel Bennett. Hidden Valley got its lone win at No. 4 doubles.

Pirates split: Marshfield bounced back from a 9-5 loss in the first game at Sutherlin to beat the Bulldogs 14-3 in the nightcap. The Pirates had eight extra-base hits in the second game, including a home run by Anthony Ross. Victor Lahr and Austin Soria each hit two doubles and Andrew Sharp had a double and a triple. Lahr teamed with Tyler Campbell on a one-hitter in the second game as

Higgins scored two runs. In the nightcap, Chemeketa’s Martin Brown limited the Lakers to just two hits. Alejandro Barahas and Tyler Raskin scored on sacrifice flies by Taylor Raff and Garrett Rudy. The Lakers fell to 9-5 and dropped behind Clark (9-4) and Lane (8-4) in the NWAACC South Region standings. Clark swept Lane in another Friday doubleheader. The Lakers and Chemeketa play two more games today at SWOCC, starting at noon.

Marshfield improved to 2-7 in league play. “It was a good game, just because we were having fun,” Marshfield coach Scott Carpenter said. “That’s what we talked about between games, just go back to why you play the game of baseball.” Sutherlin’s Wyatt McKnight hit a three-run home run to give the Bulldogs the lead in the fourth inning of the opener Campbell, Ross and Drew James each hit doubles for the Pirates. Marshfield wrapped up the first half of its league schedule and will have its first bye of the league season Tuesday.

Class 2A-1A District 4 Reedsport 5, Glendale 4, 8 innings: Tyler Tresch brought in Shallon Zehe with the winning run as the Braves edged the Pirates. Zehe reached base when the Glendale catcher dropped a third strike with one out and moved to third on a double by Marquece Williams. Tresch then lined a single to left for the winning hit. Tresch also had another RBI single, while both Williams and Wade Doane had two hits, including a double. Williams also got the win on the mound, striking out three straight batters in relief of Griffin Kaufmann in the top of the eighth inning. The Braves host Lowell for a doubleheader today, weather-permitting.

Class 2A-1A District 5 Gold Beach sweeps North Lake: CJ Maxwell led off the game with a home run for the third time in four games and Gold Beach went on to sweep North Lake 11-0 and 11-1 in a pair of fiveinning games Friday. Maxwell also hit a home run in the third inning of the opener, going back-to-back with Jorge Ochoa. Maxwell also hit a double off the wall, finishing with four RBIs. Dakota Hensley and Jacob Carpenter each had two hits for Gold Beach. Dustin Carter struck out six batters over the first three innings and then Garrett Litterell struck out six straight in the final two. North Lake had just one hit. The Panthers cruised in the nightcap as well, as Carter sparked the team with a three-run homer in the first inning. Maxwell had two hits and Jacob Carpenter pitched a two-hitter with six strikeouts. The Panthers improved to 11-3 overall and 4-0 in league play. Gold Beach hosts Bandon on Tuesday.


Saturday,April 19,2014 • The World • B3

Sports Jimenez sets course record in Champions Tour debut THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DULUTH, Ga. — Miguel Angel Jimenez’s first round on the Champions Tour went quite well. After one eagle, five birdies and a tournament record, Jimenez proclaimed “I love it!” and then departed in search of a couple of his usual staples. So far, life is good for the Spaniard on the 50-and-over tour. Avoiding a post-Masters letdown, Jimenez shot a 65 on Friday to lead the cold, soggy Greater Gwinnett Championship by three strokes.

Golf Recap

“Very good start,” Jimenez said. “Now it’s time for a nice, warm shower, a nice fat cigar and a glass of Rioja. ... I’m desperate to find one of my cigars and have a glass of wine.” Jimenez, coming off a fourthplace finish in the Masters, was 6 under on his first nine holes, including an eagle on No. 18. He added another birdie on No. 2 and closed with seven straight pars at TPC Sugarloaf. Bernhard Langer set the previous tournament record with a 66 while winning the 2013 inaugural championship. Langer, Steve Pate and Kenny Perry are three strokes behind Jimenez.

Perry said he thought Jimenez might have a letdown after his strong finish in Augusta. “It’s funny, you go from the PGA to the Champions, it’s so much more laid back and relaxed over here,” Perry said. “The atmosphere is different. I actually didn’t know what he’d do today. Honestly, I didn’t think he would shoot 65. I thought he’d be more the other way, after a fourth-place finish, it’d be a letdown this week. “He’s amazing. He’s fun to watch. He’s a great player.” The 65 came six days after Jimenez shot the low round of the Masters, a third-round 66. Jimenez is focused on making the European Ryder Cup team

and may have limited time on the Champions Tour this year. Perry, the 2013 player of the year, said Jimenez will be good for the tour. “Yeah, we need guys like that out here,” Perry said. “I mean, he’s a huge fan favorite. He brings a lot of flair and class to golf and he just has a good time.”

Rain washes out PGA play HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. — The second round of the RBC Heritage was cut short because of rain Friday, with K.J. Choi shooting a 4-under 67 for a one-stroke lead over Robert Allenby. Allenby was among 65 players left on the course when the storm

hit Harbour Town Golf Links. Officials delayed the round shortly before 3 p.m. and then suspended it until Saturday morning after waiting through about 90 minutes of steady, heavy rain. Choi is at 5-under 137 after two rounds.

Stanford leads in Hawaii KAPOLEI, Hawaii — Angela Stanford shot a 5-under 67 on Friday to open a four-stroke lead after three rounds of the LPGA LOTTE Championship in breezy Hawaii. Stanford is 13 under going into the final round today, ahead of Hyo Joo Kim and Michelle Wie at 9 under.

Scoreboard On The Air Today NBA Playoffs — Brooklyn at Toronto, 9:30 a.m., ESPN; Golden State at Los Angeles Clippers, 12:30 p.m., ABC, Atlanta at Indiana, 4 p.m., ESPN; Memphis at Oklahoma City, 6:30 p.m., ESPN. Major League Baseball — Los Angeles Angels at Detroit, 10 a.m., Fox Sports 1; Seattle at Miami, 4 p.m., Root Sports; Arizona at Los Angeles Dodgers, 5 p.m., Fox Sports 1; Chicago White Sox at Texas, 5 p.m., WGN. Auto Racing — Fomula One Chinese Grand Prix, midnight, NBC Sports Network. Hockey — Playoffs, Chicago at St. Louis, noon, NBC; Columbus at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m., NBC Sports Network; Minnesota at Colorado, 6:30 p.m., NBC Sports Network. Major League Soccer — New England at Chicago, 1 p.m., NBC Sports Network; Portland at Real Salt Lake, 6 p.m., KEVU (replay at 10:30 p.m., Root Sports); Seattle at Club Deportivo, 12:30 a.m. (delayed) Root Sports. Golf — PGA Tour Heritage, 10 a.m., Golf Channel, and noon, CBS; LPGA Tour Lotte Championship, 3:30 p.m., Golf Channel; Champions Tour Greater Gwinnett Championship, noon, Golf Channel. Sunday, April 20 NBA Playoffs — Dallas at San Antonio, 10 a.m., TNT; Charlotte at Miami, 12:30 p.m., ABC; Washington at Chicago, 3 p.m., TNT; Portland at Houston, 6:30 p.m., TNT. Major League Baseball — Seattle at Miami, 10 a.m., Root Sports; Baltimore at Boston, 4 p.m., ESPN. Hockey — Playoffs, Philadelphia at New York Rangers, 9 a.m., NBC; Detroit at Boston, noon, NBC; Tampa Bay at Montreal, 4 p.m., NBC Sports Network; Los Angeles at San Jose, 7 p.m., NBC Sports Network. Golf — PGA Tour Heritage, 10 a.m., Golf Channel, and noon, CBS; LPGA Tour Lotte Championship, 3:30 p.m., Golf Channel; Champions Tour Greater Gwinnett Championship, noon, Golf Channel. Monday, April 21 NBA Playoffs — Memphis at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m., TNT; Golden State at Los Angeles Clippers, 7:30 p.m., TNT. M a j o r L e a g u e B a s e b a l l — Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m., ESPN; Houston at Seattle, 7 p.m., Root Sports. Hockey — Playoffs, Pittsburgh at Columbus, 4 p.m., NBC Sports Network, Anaheim at Dallas, 6:30 p.m., NBC Sports Network.

Local Schedule Note: Baseball and softball games might be postponed due to rainy conditions. Today High School Track & Field — North Bend, Bandon, Coquille, Brookings-Harbor, Pacific, Powers, Gold Beach, Myrtle Point and 16 other schools, at Prefontaine Rotary Invitational, Marshfield, 10:30 a.m. High School Baseball — Myrtle Point at Lost River (2), 1 p.m.; Lowell at Reedsport, noon; Illinois Valley at Bandon (2), noon. High School Softball — Myrtle Point at Lost River (2), 1 p.m.; Lowell at Reedsport (2), noon; Illinois Valley at Bandon (2), noon. High School Boys Tennis — North Bend vs. Sisters at Willamette, 10 a.m.; North Bend at Willamette, noon. High School Girls Tennis — Marshfield at Grants Pass, 1 p.m. College Baseball — Chemeketa at SWOCC (2), noon. College Softball — Clark at SWOCC (2), noon. College Track & Field — SWOCC at Cougar Open, Clackamas, TBA. Sunday, April 20 No local events scheduled Monday, April 21 High School Baseball — Oakland at Coquille, 4:30 p.m. Boys Golf — Far West League at Sandpines, Florence, 11 a.m. Girls Golf — Far West League at Sandpines, Florence, 11 a.m.

Yoncalla 4 Oakridge 1 Oakland 0 UVC 0 Crow 0 Friday’s Scores North douglas 10, Riddle 2

3 3 3 6 9

5 2 4 0 0

4 7 6 8 9

Overall W L 9 4 11 0 12 4 5 5 3 6 3 8 1 17

BASEBALL Far West League League W L 8 0 5 2 5 2 3 4 3 5 2 7 1 7

North Bend Brookings-Harbor Siuslaw Douglas South Umpqua Marshfield Sutherlin Friday’s Scores North Bend 1, Brookings-Harbor 0 North Bend 6, Brookings-Harbor 3 Sutherlin 9, Marshfield 5 Marshfield 14, Sutherlin 3 Douglas 8, South Umpqua 2 South Umpqua 12, Douglas 2 First Game

Overall W L 8 7 9 4 7 4 4 9 6 8 3 12 1 13

North Bend 1, Brookings-Harbor 0

North Bend 6, Brookings-Harbor 3 Brookings-Harbor 100 002 0 — 3 9 4 North Bend 100 212 x — 6 8 2 Chandler Dodd, Christian Edwards (6) and Izak Ehlers; Hunter Jackson, Tylan Corder (5) and Zach Inskeep. 2B—NB: Coy Woods; BH: Wyatt Aldrich, Brandon Chandler. 3B—BH: Dodd. First Game

Sutherlin 9, Marshfield 5 301 100 0 — 5 6 2 Marshfield Sutherlin 230 310 x — 9 7 1 Andrew Sharp, Victor Lahr (6) and Ben Martin; Braxton Beerbohm and Wryland McKnight. 2B— Mar: Drew James, Tyler Campbell, Anthony Ross. HR—Sut: Wyatt McKnight. Second Game

Marshfield 14, Sutherlin 3 326 001 2 — 14 14 2 Marshfield Sutherlin 000 120 0 — 3 1 3 Victor Lahr, Tyler Campbell (6) and Ben Martin, Braden Bennett (7); Dustin Eakin, Austin Kennedy (4), Thomas Ghasedi (5) and Wryland McKnight. 2B—Mar: Drew James, Andrew Sharp, Austin Soria 2, Lahr 2. 3B—Mar: Sharp. HR—Mar: Anthony Ross.

Class 2A-1A District 4 Overall W L 10 6 7 2 7 5 9 3 4 2 4 7 0 14

Reedsport 5, Glendale 4, 8 innings

High School Results

Glendale 001 001 20 — 4 5 3 Reedsport 300 100 01 — 5 9 6 Erik Moody and Mark Rodriguez; Griffin Kaufmann, Marquece Williams (8) and Shallon Zehe. 2B—Ree: Tyler Tresch, Williams, Wade Doane.

SOFTBALL

Class 2A-1A District 5

Far West League League W L 8 0 6 1 5 2 5 4 2 5 1 7 0 8

South Umpqua Brookings-Harbor Douglas Marshfield Siuslaw North Bend Sutherlin Friday’s Scores Marshfield 10, Sutherlin 0 Marshfield 9, Sutherlin 3 Brookings-Harbor 10, North Bend 0 Brookings-Harbor 8, North Bend 1 South Umpqua 7, Douglas 3 South Umpqua 8, Douglas 3 First Game

Overall W L 10 3 12 2 8 3 6 7 2 7 2 10 0 15

League W L Gold Beach 4 0 Prospect 1 1 Myrtle Point 1 3 0 0 Lost River Bonanza 0 0 North Lake 0 2 Friday’s Scores Gold Beach 11, North Lake 0 Gold Beach 11, North Lake 1 First Game

Marshfield 10, Sutherlin 0, 5 innings

000 00 — 0 1 4 North Lake 614 0x — 11 12 2 Gold Beach Henkel, Shumway (3) and Gilbert; Dustin Carter, Garrett Litterell (4) and CJ Maxwell. 2B— GB: Maxwell. HR—GB: Maxwell 2, Jorge Ochoa. Second Game

Gold Beach 11, North Lake 1, 5 innings 000 10 — 1 2 1 North Lake 434 0x — 11 6 0 Gold Beach McCord, Shumway (4) and Gilbert; Jacob Carpenter and Wes Turner. HR—GB: Dustin Carter.

TENNIS

Marshfield 9, Sutherlin 3 000 001 2 — 3 10 2 Sutherlin Marshfield 301 203 x — 9 7 1 Mackenzie Johnson, Paige Tavernier (5) and Abby Osborne, Khalani Hoyer (5); Karly Brewer and Ariel Taylor. 2B — NB: Sidney Baarstad, Hoyer. First Game

Brookings-Harbor 10, North Bend 0, 6 innings North Bend 000 000 — 0 1 2 Brookings-Harbor 302 221 — 10 15 1 Lindsay Henson and Sarah Merritt; Hannah Goergen and Alaura Marrington. 2B — BH: Jessica Yock, Hannah Baron. Second Game

Brookings-Harbor 8, North Bend 1 010 000 0 — 1 1 7 North Bend Brookings-Harbor 211 121 x — 8 11 1 Patience Cook and Katie Forderer; Courtney Kay and Alaura Marrington. 2B — BH: Hannah Baron, Hannah Goergen.

Class 2A-1A District 2 North Douglas Riddle Lowell Reedsport

League W L 8 0 6 1 5 1 4 2

Overall W L 11 3 1 6 2 6 2 6 0 10 0 5

Gold Beach 11, North Lake 0, 5 innings

Sutherlin 000 00 — 0 0 1 Marshfield 323 11 — 10 13 0 Mackenzie Johnson and Abby Osborne. Kaylea Knee and Megan Bradley. 2B — Mar: Khalani Hoyer, Jade Chavez, Katelyn Rossback. Second Game

Overall W L 12 1 11 3 8 3 6 4

FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) x-if necessary Today Brooklyn at Toronto, 9:30 a.m. Golden State at Los Angeles Clippers, 12:30 p.m. Atlanta at Indiana, 4 p.m. Memphis at Oklahoma City, 6:30 p.m. Sunday, April 20 Dallas at San Antonio, 10 a.m. Charlotte at Miami, 12:30 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 3 p.m. Portland at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Monday, April 21 Memphis at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Golden State at Los Angeles Clippers, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 22 Atlanta at Indiana, 4 p.m. Brooklyn at Toronto, 5 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 23 Charlotte at Miami, 4 p.m. Dallas at San Antonio, 5 p.m. Portland at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Thurday, April 24 Indiana at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Oklahoma City at Memphis, 5 p.m. Los Angeles Clippers at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 25 Toronto at Brooklyn, 4 p.m. Chicago at Washington, 5 p.m. Houston at Portland, 7:30 p.m.

NBA Draft Order

Brookings-Harbor 000 000 0 — 0 3 0 000 000 1 — 1 2 3 North Bend Ronnie Manley, Justin Murray (6) and Izak Ehlers; Jonathan Bennison and Zach Inskeep. 2B—BH: Ehlers. Second Game

League W L UVC 5 0 3 1 Oakland Reedsport 3 2 North Douglas 3 3 2 2 Yoncalla 1 4 Riddle Glendale 0 5 Friday’s Scores Reedsport 5, Glendale 4 Riddle 6, North Douglas 5

Pro Basketball NBA Playoffs

Class 2A-1A District 4 League W L Gold Beach 6 0 Prospect 4 0 Bonanza 2 0 Lost River 2 0 North Lake 2 2 Myrtle Point 2 4 Chiloquin 0 12 Friday’s Scores Gold Beach 1, North Lake 0, forfeit Gold Beach 1, North Lake 0, forfeit

Shelton, 8-0.

GIRLS

North Bend 7, Hidden Valley 1 Singles: Sylvia Marr, HV, d. Allie West, 6-1, 3-6, 10-5; MacKenzee Scott, NB, d. Cody Porter, 6-0, 6-0; McKenna Reasor, NB, d. Shannon Murphy, 6-2, 6-3; Olivia Peck, NB, d. Jaya Black-Lazo, 6-3, 6-2. D o u b l e s : Taylor Cuzzort and Hannah Schandelmeier-Lynch, NB, d. McKenna Schermelhorn and Emma Murphy, 6-1, 6-0; Karen LaGesse and Bailey Lyon, NB, d. Haley Musaek and Joyce Black, 6-3, 6-1; Payton Smith and Raegan Spence, NB, d. Kennedy Henderson and Brianna Queasalda, 6-2, 6-1; Abbey Knight and Renee Thompson, NB, d. Misharmandra Schermelhorn and Hayley Kennedy, 6-2, 6-3. BOYS

North Bend 6, Hidden Valley 1 S i n g l e s : Jacob Gage, NB, d. Carmen MacDonald, 6-1, 6-0; Brigham Baker, NB, d. James Roiseris, 6-1, 6-1; Brant Hamner, NB, d. Jake Mcaffery, 6-0, 6-0. Doubles: James Jordan and Stewart Lyons, NB, d. Chance Gilbert and Carl McDonald, 6-1, 64; Steven Chan and Iman Abboud, NB, d. Forest Gobar and Matt Abel, 6-3, 5-7, 10-3; River Morse and Daniel Bennett, NB, d. Sean Roberts and Rigel Bloom, 6-2, 6-1; James McCaffery and Ronnie Blunt, HV, d. Sam Rodriguez and Bryce

Thursday, June 26 At New York First Round (Numbers in parentheses are chances for No. 1 pick) 1. Milwaukee (250 of 1,000) 2. Philadelphia (199) 3. Orlando (156) 4. Utah (104) 5. Boston (103) 6. L.A. Lakers (63) 7. Sacramento (43) 8. a-Detroit (28) 9. Cleveland (17) 10. b-New Orleans (11) 11. c-Denver (8) 12. New York (to Denver or to Orlando via Denver) (7) 13. d-Minnesota (6) 14. Phoenix (5) 15. Atlanta 16. Charlotte (to Chicago) 17. Brooklyn (to Boston) 18. Washington (to Phoenix) 19. Chicago 20. Toronto 21. Dallas (to Oklahoma City via Houston and L.A. Lakers) 22. Memphis 23. Golden State (to Utah) 24. Portland (to Charlotte) 25. Houston 26. Miami 27. Indiana (to Phoenix) 28. L.A. Clippers 29. Oklahoma City 30. San Antonio a-may be conveyed to Charlotte b-may be conveyed to Philadelphia c-may be conveyed to Orlando d-may be conveyed to Phoenix Second Round 31. Milwaukee 32. Philadelphia 33. Orlando (to Cleveland) 34 ⁄35. Boston (to Dallas) 34 ⁄35. Utah 36. L.A. Lakers (to Milwaukee via Minnesota and Phoenix) 37. Sacramento (to Toronto) 38. Detroit 39. Cleveland (to Philadelphia) 40. New Orleans (to Minnesota) 41. Denver 42. New York (to Houston) 43. Atlanta 44. Minnesota 45. Charlotte 46. Washington 47. Brooklyn (to Philadelphia via Dallas and Boston) 48. Toronto (to Milwaukee via Phoenix) 49. Chicago 50. Phoenix 51. Dallas 52. Memphis (to Philadelphia via Cleveland) 53. Golden State (to Minnesota) 54. Houston (to Philadelphia via Milwaukee) 55. Miami 56. Portland (to Denver) 57. Indiana 58. L.A. Clippers (to San Antonio via New Orleans) 59. Oklahoma City (to Toronto via New York) 60. San Antonio

Pro Baseball American League East Division W L Pct New York 10 7 .588 Baltimore 8 7 .533 Toronto 9 8 .529 9 .471 8 Tampa Bay Boston 7 10 .412 Central Division W L Pct Detroit 7 6 .538 8 7 .533 Kansas City Minnesota 8 8 .500 8 9 .471 Chicago .438 9 7 Cleveland West Division W L Pct Oakland 11 5 .688 Texas 10 7 .588 8 8 .500 Los Angeles Seattle 7 9 .438 12 .294 5 Houston Thursday’s Games Detroit 7, Cleveland 5 Minnesota 7, Toronto 0, 1st game Texas 8, Seattle 6 N.Y. Yankees 10, Tampa Bay 2 Minnesota 9, Toronto 5, 2nd game Boston 3, Chicago White Sox 1 Kansas City 5, Houston 1 Friday’s Games Toronto 3, Cleveland 2 L.A. Angels 11, Detroit 6 Baltimore 8, Boston 4 Tampa Bay 11, N.Y. Yankees 5 Miami 8, Seattle 4 Texas 12, Chicago White Sox 0 Kansas City 5, Minnesota 0 Oakland 11, Houston 3

GB — 1 1 2 3 GB — — 1 ⁄2 1 1 1 ⁄2 GB — 1 1 ⁄2 3 4 1 6 ⁄2

Today’s Games Toronto (Buehrle 3-0) at Cleveland (Kluber 11), 10:05 a.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 2-1) at Detroit (Scherzer 0-1), 10:08 a.m. Baltimore (B.Norris 0-1) at Boston (Doubront 1-2), 10:35 a.m. Minnesota (Correia 0-1) at Kansas City (B.Chen 0-1), 11:10 a.m. Houston (Oberholtzer 0-3) at Oakland (Kazmir 2-0), 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Nova 2-1) at Tampa Bay (Archer 1-1), 4:10 p.m. Seattle (Elias 1-1) at Miami (H.Alvarez 0-2), 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Quintana 1-0) at Texas (Lewis 0-1), 5:05 p.m. Sunday’s Games Toronto at Cleveland, 10:05 a.m. L.A. Angels at Detroit, 10:08 a.m. Seattle at Miami, 10:10 a.m. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 10:40 a.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 11:10 a.m. Chicago White Sox at Texas, 12:05 p.m. Houston at Oakland, 1:05 p.m. Baltimore at Boston, 4:05 p.m. Monday’s Games Baltimore at Boston, 8:05 a.m. Kansas City at Cleveland, 4:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. Texas at Oakland, 7:05 p.m. Houston at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.

National League East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 11 5 .688 — Washington 10 7 .588 11⁄2 New York 8 8 .500 3 Philadelphia 7 9 .438 4 1 4 ⁄2 10 .412 7 Miami Central Division W L Pct GB 12 5 .706 — Milwaukee St. Louis 10 7 .588 2 Pittsburgh 8 9 .471 4 1 Cincinnati 7 9 .438 4 ⁄2 Chicago 4 11 .267 7 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 10 6 .625 — 1 7 .588 10 San Francisco ⁄2 9 9 .500 2 Colorado 8 9 .471 21⁄2 San Diego Arizona 4 14 .222 7 Thursday’s Games Philadelphia 1, Atlanta 0 L.A. Dodgers 2, San Francisco 1 Colorado 3, San Diego 1 Pittsburgh 11, Milwaukee 2 St. Louis 8, Washington 0 Friday’s Games Cincinnati 4, Chicago Cubs 1 Milwaukee 5, Pittsburgh 3 Washington 3, St. Louis 1 Atlanta 6, N.Y. Mets 0 Miami 8, Seattle 4 Colorado 12, Philadelphia 1 Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, late San Diego 2, San Francisco 1 Today’s Games St. Louis (Lynn 3-0) at Washington (Zimmermann 1-0), 10:05 a.m. Cincinnati (Cingrani 1-1) at Chicago Cubs (E.Jackson 0-1), 11:20 a.m. Milwaukee (Garza 0-2) at Pittsburgh (W.Rodriguez 0-2), 4:05 p.m. Atlanta (E.Santana 1-0) at N.Y. Mets (Colon 1-2), 4:10 p.m. Seattle (Elias 1-1) at Miami (H.Alvarez 0-2), 4:10 p.m. Arizona (Bolsinger 0-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Haren 2-0), 5:10 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 0-1) at Colorado (Lyles 2-0), 5:10 p.m. San Francisco (Hudson 2-0) at San Diego (Stults 0-2), 5:40 p.m. Sunday’s Games Atlanta at N.Y. Mets, 10:10 a.m. Seattle at Miami, 10:10 a.m. Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 10:35 a.m. St. Louis at Washington, 10:35 a.m. Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 1:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Colorado, 1:10 p.m. San Francisco at San Diego, 1:10 p.m. Monday’s Games Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Miami at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. St. Louis at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. Arizona at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m. San Diego at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. Philadelphia at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.

Friday’s Linescores Blue Jays 3, Indians 2 Toronto 000 100 200 — 3 9 0 Cleveland 000 002 000 — 2 10 1 Hutchison, Delabar (6), Cecil (7), Wagner (8), Santos (9) and Navarro; Masterson, Rzepczynski (7), Allen (7), Atchison (8), Outman (9), C.Lee (9) and Y.Gomes. W—Delabar 1-0. L—Rzepczynski 01. Sv—Santos (5). HRs—Cleveland, C.Santana (1).

Angels 11, Tigers 6 Los Angeles 022 403 000 — 11 13 0 Detroit 001 000 500 — 6 11 0 Weaver, Wall (7), Jepsen (7), Kohn (8), Frieri (9) and Iannetta; Smyly, Putkonen (4), J.Miller (6), Coke (8), E.Reed (9) and Avila. W—Weaver 12. L—Smyly 1-1. HRs—Los Angeles, H.Kendrick 2 (2), Pujols (5).

Rays 11, Yankees 5 New York 040 000 100 — 5 8 0 Tampa Bay 000 201 35x — 11 16 1 Kuroda, Phelps (6), Thornton (7), Warren (7), Cabral (8), Kelley (8) and McCann; Bedard, Boxberger (4), McGee (6), Jo.Peralta (8), B.Gomes (9) and Hanigan. W—McGee 1-0. L— Warren 0-1. HRs—Tampa Bay, S.Rodriguez (3).

Orioles 8, Red Sox 4 Baltimore 103 020 101 — 8 15 0 Boston 000 120 100 — 4 11 0 Tillman, Matusz (6), O’Day (8) and Wieters; Lackey, A.Miller (6), Badenhop (7), Mujica (9) and Pierzynski. W—Tillman 2-1. L—Lackey 2-2. Sv—O’Day (1).

Rangers 12, White Sox 0 Chicago 000 000 000 — 0 3 0 Texas 207 101 10x — 12 18 0 Paulino, Putnam (4), Downs (7) and Flowers; M.Perez and Chirinos. W—M.Perez 3-0. L— Paulino 0-2. HRs—Texas, Chirinos (2), L.Martin (1).

Royals 5, Twins 0 Minnesota 000 000 000 — 0 8 0 Kansas City 002 012 00x — 5 11 0 Nolasco, Tonkin (6), Burton (7), Duensing (8) and K.Suzuki; Vargas, Crow (8), Coleman (9) and S.Perez. W—Vargas 2-0. L—Nolasco 1-2. HRs— Kansas City, Moustakas (2).

Marlins 8, Mariners 4 Seattle Miami

020 010 100 — 4 11 2 211 000 004 — 8 13 2

C.Young, Beimel (4), Wilhelmsen (6), Furbush (7), Medina (8) and Zunino; Eovaldi, M.Dunn (7), A.Ramos (7), Cishek (9) and Saltalamacchia. W— Cishek 1-0. L—Medina 0-1. HRs—Miami, Saltalamacchia (2), Stanton (6).

Reds 4, Cubs 1 Cincinnati 000 012 010 — 4 8 1 Chicago 000 000 100 — 1 6 2 Simon, LeCure (7), M.Parra (8), Broxton (9) and Mesoraco; Samardzija, Grimm (8), Russell (9) and Castillo. W—Simon 2-1. L—Samardzija 0-2. Sv—Broxton (2).

Brewers 5, Pirates 3 Milwaukee 000 311 000 — 5 10 4 Pittsburgh 101 000 100 — 3 6 0 Lohse, Thornburg (7), W.Smith (7), Henderson (8), Fr.Rodriguez (9) and Maldonado; Morton, Pimentel (7), Ju.Wilson (9) and R.Martin. W— Lohse 3-1. L—Morton 0-2. Sv—Fr.Rodriguez (5). HRs—Milwaukee, C.Gomez (5).

Nationals 3, Cardinals 1 St. Louis 000 100 000 — 1 5 3 Washington 001 000 20x — 3 5 0 Wacha, Rosenthal (8) and Y.Molina; G.Gonzalez, Clippard (8), Storen (8), R.Soriano (9) and Lobaton. W—G.Gonzalez 3-1. L—Wacha 21. Sv—R.Soriano (4). HRs—Washington, Rendon (3).

Braves 6, Mets 1 Atlanta 010 000 041 — 6 12 0 New York 000 000 000 — 0 1 1 Harang, Avilan (8), J.Walden (9) and Gattis; Niese, C.Torres (7), Germen (8), Rice (8), Familia (9) and d’Arnaud. W—Harang 3-1. L—Niese 0-2. HRs—Atlanta, Freeman (5).

Rockies 12, Phillies 1 Philadelphia 000 010 000 — 1 2 0 Colorado 430 101 12x — 12 18 1 Pettibone, Mi.Adams (5), Hollands (6), Manship (7), Rosenberg (7) and Ruiz; Chatwood, Bettis (8), Belisle (9) and Rosario. W—Chatwood 1-0. L—Pettibone 0-1. HRs—Colorado, Tulowitzki (2).

Athletics 11, Astros 3 Houston 000 030 000 — 3 10 0 Oakland 710 020 10x — 11 10 2 Cosart, Clemens (1), Albers (5), Valdes (7), Fields (7) and J.Castro; Gray, Abad (7), Cook (9) and Jaso. W—Gray 3-0. L—Cosart 1-2. HRs— Oakland, Callaspo (2), Reddick (1), Cespedes (4), Crisp (2).

Padres 2, Giants 1 San Francisco 000 000 001 — 1 5 0 San Diego 100 000 01x — 2 5 0 M.Cain, J.Gutierrez (8) and H.Sanchez; T.Ross, Street (9) and Rivera. W—T.Ross 2-2. L—M.Cain 03. Sv—Street (6). HRs—San Francisco, Belt (6). San Diego, Grandal (1).

Hockey NHL Playoffs (x-if necessary) FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) Thursday, April 17 N.Y. Rangers 4, Philadelphia 1, N.Y. Rangers lead series 1-0 St. Louis 4, Chicago 3, 3OT, St. Louis leads series 1-0 Colorado 5, Minnesota 4, OT, Colorado leads series 1-0 San Jose 6, Los Angeles 3, San Jose leads series 1-0 Friday, April 18 Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 1, Montreal leads series 2-0 Detroit 1, Boston 0, Detroit leads series 1-0 Anaheim 3, Dallas 2, Anaheim leads series 2-0 Today Chicago at St. Louis, noon Columbus at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Pittsburgh leads series 1-0 Minnesota at Colorado, 6:30 p.m. Sunday, April 20 Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 9 a.m. Detroit at Boston, noon Tampa Bay at Montreal, 4 p.m. Los Angeles at San Jose, 7 p.m. Monday, April 21 Pittsburgh at Columbus, 4 p.m. Colorado at Minnesota, 4 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Anaheim at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 22 Tampa Bay at Montreal, 4 p.m. Boston at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. San Jose at Los Angeles, 7 p.m. Wednesday, April 23 Pittsburgh at Columbus, 4 p.m. Anaheim at Dallas, 5 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago, 6:30 p.m.

Pro Soccer Major League Soccer EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Columbus 3 1 1 10 8 5 3 2 0 9 5 5 Toronto FC 2 1 2 8 5 4 Sporting KC D.C. United 2 2 1 7 5 6 New England 2 3 1 7 4 8 Philadelphia 1 2 4 7 9 10 New York 1 2 4 7 8 11 2 3 0 6 7 8 Houston Chicago 0 1 5 5 9 10 Montreal 0 3 3 3 6 10 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 4 1 1 13 15 9 Colorado 3 1 1 10 8 5 Seattle 3 2 1 10 12 10 Real Salt Lake 2 0 4 10 10 6 2 2 2 8 8 6 Vancouver Los Angeles 2 1 1 7 5 2 Chivas USA 1 2 3 6 7 11 Portland 0 2 4 4 8 11 0 2 2 2 5 7 San Jose NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Today Houston at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. New England at Chicago, 1 p.m. San Jose at Colorado, 3 p.m. Los Angeles at Vancouver, 4 p.m. D.C. United at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. Montreal at Sporting Kansas City, 5:30 p.m. Toronto FC at FC Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Portland at Real Salt Lake, 6:30 p.m. Seattle FC at Chivas USA, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 23 Houston at New York, 4:30 p.m. Saturday, April 26 Colorado at Seattle FC, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Montreal, 1 p.m. FC Dallas at D.C. United, 4 p.m. Sporting Kansas City at New England, 4:30 p.m. New York at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. Vancouver at Real Salt Lake, 6:30 p.m.

Chivas USA at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, April 27 Portland at Houston, noon

National Women’s Soccer League W L T Pts GF GA Seattle 1 0 0 3 3 0 Western New York 1 0 0 3 3 1 Portland 1 0 0 3 1 0 FC Kansas City 0 0 1 1 1 1 Sky Blue FC 0 0 1 1 1 1 Chicago 0 0 0 0 0 0 Houston 0 1 0 0 0 1 Washington 0 1 0 0 1 3 Boston 0 1 0 0 0 3 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Today FC Kansas City at Washington, 3:30 p.m. Western New York at Chicago, 3:45 p.m. Portland at Sky Blue FC, 4 p.m. Sunday, April 20 Houston at Boston, 3:30 p.m.

Transactions ATHLETICS U.S. ANTI-DOPING AGENCY — Announced distance runner Andrew Carnes has accepted a two-year period of ineligibility for purchase, possession and use of synthetic erythropoietin, retroactive to Oct. 25, 2013. BASEBALL MLB — Suspended Seattle 1B Ji-Man Choi 50 games following a positive test for a performance-enhancing substance. American League BOSTON RED SOX — Recalled INF Brock Holt from Pawtucket (IL). Designated INF Ryan Roberts for assignment. CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Selected the contract of RHP Zach Putnam from Charlotte (IL). Designated LHP Donnie Veal for assignment. DETROIT TIGERS — Recalled RHP Justin Miller from Toledo (IL). Optioned OF Tyler Collins to Toledo. HOUSTON ASTROS — Optioned LHP Kevin Chapman to Oklahoma City (PCL). Selected the contract of LHP Raul Valdes from Oklahoma City. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Placed OF Jarrod Dyson on the bereavement list. Recalled OF Jimmy Paredes from Omaha (PCL). Placed OF Lorenzo Cain on the 15-day DL. Recalled LHP Justin Marks from Omaha (PCL). LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Optioned LHP Jose Alvarez to Salt Lake (PCL). Recalled RHP Josh Wall from Salt Lake. MINNESOTA TWINS — Sent SS Jason Bartlett to Fort Myers (FSL) for a rehab assignment. Recalled INF Eduardo Nunez from Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Optioned RHP Shane Greene to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Agreed to terms with LHP Sean Doolittle on a five-year contract. SEATTLE MARINERS — Reinstated RHP Stephon Pryor from the 15-day DL and assigned him to Tacoma (PCL). TEXAS RANGERS — Placed RHP Tanner Scheppers on the 15-day DL. Selected the contract of LHP Aaron Poreda from Round Rock (PCL). Designated INF Andy Parrino for assignment. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Recalled OF Anthony Gose from Buffalo (IL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Reinstated OF Cody Ross from the 15-day DL. Designated LHP Ryan Rowland-Smith for assignment. ATLANTA BRAVES — Sent RHP Gavin Floyd to Mississippi (SL) and LHP Mike Minor to Gwinnett (IL) for rehab assignments. CHICAGO CUBS — Optioned LHP Zac Rosscup to Iowa (PCL). MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Placed 1B Lyle Overbay on the paternity leave list. Recalled INF-OF Elian Herrera from Nashville (IL). NEW YORK METS — Traded 1B Ike Davis to Pittsburgh for RHP Zack Thornton and a player to be named. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Named Drew Cloud executive vice president/chief sales and marketing officer. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Placed RHP Joe Kelly on the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Keith Butler to Memphis (PCL). Recalled RHP Eric Fornataro and RHP Jorge Rondon from Memphis. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Sent OF Denard Span to Hagerstown (SAL) for a rehab assignment. Optioned RHP Blake Treinen to Syracuse (IL). Recalled LHP Xavier Cedeno from Syracuse. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA — Suspended Memphis Grizzlies’ Nick Calathes without pay for twenty games for violating the terms of the NBA/NBPA Anti-Drug Program by testing positive for tamoxifen. FOOTBALL National Football League CLEVELAND BROWNS — Named James Voos, M.D. team physician. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed OL Joe Reitz. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Released LB Russell Allen. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed S Kurt Coleman. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — Re-signed WR Robert Meachem to a one-year contract. OAKLAND RAIDERS — Signed LB Kaelin Burnett. HOCKEY National Hockey League NHL — Fined Chicago coach Joel Quenneville $25,000 for inappropriate conduct during Thursday’s game. COLLEGE BUTLER — Announced freshman G Elijah Brown is transferring out of the basketball program. DUKE — Announced freshman F Jabari Parker will enter the NBA draft. Announced sophomore F Rodney Hood will enter the NBA draft. Promoted men’s assistant basketball coach Jeff Capel to associate head coach and men’s basketball special assistant Jon Scheyer to assistant coach. GEORGIA TECH — Named Mamadou N’Diaye men’s assistant basketball coach. KENTUCKY — Announced freshman G James Young will enter the NBA draft. MIAMI — Announced men’s basketball F James Kelly will transfer. MISSISSIPPI — Announced men’s basketball F M.J. Rhett is transferring from Tennessee State. NORTH CAROLINA — Announced women’s freshman basketball G Diamond DeShields will transfer. NORTHERN ILLINOIS — Agreed to terms with men’s basketball coach Mark Montgomery on a two-year contract extension through the 2017-18 season. TULSA — Named Frank Haith men’s basketball coach. WINSTON-SALEM STATE — Named James Wilhelmi men’s interim basketball coach.


B4 •The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

National/Community Sports Gymnasts learn from regional competition BY GEORGE ARTSITAS The World

The Associated Press

Portland’s Robin Lopez receives a high-five from fans as he leaves the court following a win over the Utah Jazz last week. Portland won nine of its last 10 games in the regular season.

Blazers surge into postseason

COOS BAY — A pair of Level 8 gymnasts from Coos Bay came back from regionals without a medal but with some valuable big-meet experience for next year. Payton Davidson and Grace Roderick competed in the Regional Gymnastic Championship in Helena, Mont. last weekend, facing some of the best gymnasts in the Pacific Northwest. Roy Lans, director of Gymnastic Plus, said that they didn’t have exact placings but that the two finished in the “middle of the pack” in Level 8. “They did good — very, very good — for first-year gymnasts going to a big meet,” Lans said. ”When you stand in line with those kids, everybody in the line is good. “They did beyond our expectation even to get there.” At the Oregon State Gymnastic Championships in March, Davidson and Roderick qualified for regionals by finishing in the top 60 percent of a roughly 200 person field. As well as they did there, regionals had 500 contestants and competitors from Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii. “If you’re not on that stage, you don’t know. We talked about it, but until you’re there, you can’t know what the feeling is,” Lans said. “They did great as far as I’m concerned.” Davidson and Roderick, who are considered the hardest workers on the team by their coaches, both are stu-

Lillard averages 20.7 points and 5.6 assists while Lopez, acquired last summer from New Orleans, averages 11.1 Best-of-7 points and 8.5 rebounds. Lopez has x-if necessary made 326 offensive rebounds this seaSunday, April 20 son, setting a new franchise record, and Portland at Houston, 6:30 p.m. he’s had a career-high 29 double-douWednesday, April 23 bles. Portland at Houston, 6:30 p.m. The Blazers are still considered Friday, April 25 underdogs to the Rockets, who also won Houston at Portland, 7:30 p.m. 54 games this season led by Dwight Sunday, April 27 Howard and James Harden. Houston at Portland, 6:30 p.m. “We don’t feel that way,” Lopez Wednesday, April 30 protested. “The media has its own x-Portland at Houston, TBD agenda. It portrays teams differently. In Friday, May 2 the locker room, I mean, we’ve beaten x-Houston at Portland, TBD just about every team. We feel we can win.” Sunday, May 4 x-Portland at Houston, TBD For comparison’s sake, Howard has averaged 18.3 points and 12.2 rebounds this season, while Harden averages 25.4 24-5 start this season, the best record in points and 6.1 assists. The Rockets claimed the season the NBA at the time. The addition of center Robin Lopez and the inspired series against the Blazers 3-1. The most play of LaMarcus Aldridge and Damian notable game came on March 9 in Lillard helped fuel the ascent. Both Houston, when Harden scored 41 points Aldridge and Lillard were named All and the Rockets rallied for a 118-113 win in overtime over Portland. Stars. But that loss came in the midst of The March swoon coincided in part with the absence of Aldridge, who Portland’s slump. The Blazers insist missed seven games because of a lower they’ve got renewed confidence from back contusion. His return steadied the their late-season surge. “We know what they’re going to do. team for the push toward the playoffs. Aldridge has averaged career highs We know what they’re about, they know THE WORLD this season in points (23.2) and what we’re about and it’s going to be a rebounds (11.1), his success bolstered by fight,” Matthews said. “It’s the playoffs. Gymanstics Plus had 12 the play of Lopez in the middle. He is The level increases and it’s about the litthe only Blazer besides Sidney Wicks tle things. It’s about taking care of the girls compete in the Matrix (1971-72) to average more than 23 points ball and not giving them easy points. Challenge at Grants Pass last weekend. That’s what we’ve got to do.” and 11 rebounds in a season. Katie Tellei finished fourth in the all-around competition for Level 3. In Level 4, Ella Thomas finished second on the uneven parallel bars, while the Hawks went to Jamie Foster, Kiana Thomas, Indianapolis and absolutely embarrassed the Pacers, running out to a 32-point halftime lead in one of the more stunning games of the entire NBA season. “There’s some good teams out there,” Pacers THE WORLD coach Frank Vogel said. “Every team in the playoffs Students in the Boys & have given us some prob- Girls Club of Southwestern lems. We’ve been able to win Oregon’s track program against them as well. But it’s competed in Reedsport last certainly shaped out to be a weekend for their third meet good conference.” of the season. No. 5 Washington won the Students from Coquille, season series over No. 4 Bandon, Coos Bay, North Chicago. Out West, the Bend and third-seeded Clippers and Reedsport sixth-seeded Golden State competed split four meetings. Memphis in runousted Oklahoma City a year n i n g , ago and those clubs meet in jumping and the first round. And San throwing events. Antonio’s quest to avenge Boys & Girls Club offilast year’s loss in the NBA cials thanked the following Finals starts against Dallas — volunteers for their help: the last team to beat Miami in Shellie Eacker, Fawn a seven-game series, winning Brandon, Regina Rochon, the title in 2011. Ron Frakes, Laura Brandon, So there are some good Gabby Analco, Jenny The Associated Press stories, and there’s intrigue Freeman, Matt Smart, Miami’s LeBron James passes between San Antonio’s Boris Diaw and with every first-round series. Eboney Vitek, Stacey That doesn’t mean every- Fitzgerald, LaRee Thornton, Manu Ginobili (20) during Game 4 of the NBA Finals last spring. Miami one in the league thinks it’ll Cody Schuttpelz, Hannah is trying to win its third straight title. be a year laden with surpris- Schuttpelz, Rod Brandon, happen, it’s not all that com- reached the finals. But Kidd es. Philadelphia coach Brett Eric Brandon, Mark Chaney, Brown put it simply — to Rhi Manicke, Amber mon to see bracket craziness sees reason for hope. — akin to a No. 7 and No. 8 “It’s always wide open,” him, the game changes in the Reynolds, George Reynolds, seeds Connecticut and said Kidd, the first-year playoffs, period. Susan, Hannah and Shawn “The regular season and Conley, Jill Mast, K im Kentucky playing for the coach of the Nets — a veterNCAA title earlier this month an-laden team put together the playoffs are like two dif- Solomon, Stuart Schuttpelz, — happening in the same to win a title this season. ferent sports,” Brown said. George Lichte, Jeremy Bond, NBA playoff season. “You guys sometimes limit it “If you put me in a bubble Chris Chavter, Jeff Vitek, “It is going to be tremen- to just two teams but guys and you drag me out in May, I Shauna Kahler, Brett Eacker, dous from a fans’ standpoint, that are playing on a daily can say this is different than Madysen Hannah and others watching,” Golden State basis in the Western the game I’m seeing in whose names they missed. coach Mark Jackson said. “It Conference and the Eastern November. It’s just entirely Hershey Meet going to be a lot of fun.” Conference feel like they’ve different.” That’s why Brown, a forBrooklyn’s Jason Kidd has got a chance.” The local Hershey Track plenty of postseason experiThis year, that doesn’t mer Spurs assistant, thinks and Field meet will be held there’s a very small number Sunday, April 27, at North ence as a player. He believes just seem like coach speak. the NBA championship is up Take the East. On paper, of teams capable of winning Bend High School. for grabs, but also probably the biggest mismatch is No. 1 it all. The meet begins at 1 p.m. “To be the last man Registration forms are availknows history doesn’t favor Indiana against No. 8 his sixth-seeded club. Atlanta, especially because standing is so ridiculously able at the Boys & Girls Club Since 1979, only five the Hawks are the only sub- hard,” Brown said. “People of Southwestern Oregon, 3333 teams seeded No. 4 or lower .500 team in the playoffs. have no idea what it’s like to Walnut Ave., in Coos Bay. in their conference have And just a couple weeks ago, play in June.” All boys and girls age 9-14

PORTLAND (AP) — After starting off as one of the hottest teams in the NBA, the Portland Trail Blazers wilted a bit after the All-Star break. The low point came March 25 when the Blazers fell 95-85 at Orlando. The loss capped a 4-9 stretch for Portland. But since then, the Blazers have won nine of their final 10 games and wrapped up the regular season with a five-game winning streak. It’s that rebound that gives coach Terry Stotts confidence for the playoffs. “In this league, you’re going to have rough patches,” he said. “It’s how you get through them. I was proud of the way we’ve fought through rough times ... I thought that it showed our mettle and you need that going into the playoffs.” Portland, the fifth seed in the West, faces the Rockets in the opening round of the playoffs with Game 1 set for Sunday night in Houston. The Blazers haven’t been to the playoffs since 2011, when they fell in six games to the Mavericks in the first round. Portland finished the regular season with 54 wins, the team’s most since the 2008-09 season, and bettered their record by 21 wins over last season for the biggest turnaround in franchise history. “We said before the season there was something special about this team. To get 54 wins after having 33 last year and being written off from the jump — we played with an edge all year,” guard Wesley Matthews said. The Blazers got off to a surprising

Portland vs. Houston

Athletes compete in Grants Pass event

Playoffs have a wide-open feel MIAMI (AP) — Before the season started, a poll suggested that the Miami Heat were the overwhelming favorite to win the NBA title, collecting a whopping 76 percent of ballots cast. The voters weren’t some know-nothings, either. No, this was a polling of NBA general managers. Things seem quite a bit different now. The Heat don’t seem like locks for a third straight title anymore. San Antonio and Indiana are top seeds. Brooklyn, Chicago, the Los Angeles Clippers, Oklahoma City, Golden State, Houston, Portland and the Heat all figure to have a legitimate chance at being the club to hoist the Larry O’Brien Trophy in a couple of months. Usually, the NBA playoffs aren’t so wide open. Things might change over the next couple of months. “There are 16 teams that have a chance to win it,” said Oklahoma City coach Scott Brooks, whose team is seeded No. 2 in the West. “If you’re in the playoffs, you have a chance. There are some good teams. Any team can beat each other. The West is deep. There are two teams that are really good that didn’t make it and had great years. It’s definitely open. There’s a lot of good basketball teams that are fighting for the championship.” For as good as San Antonio and Indiana were all year — well, for most of the year in Indiana’s case, before the Pacers faltered down the stretch — it’s never a certainty that the No. 1 seeds reach the NBA Finals. It’s happened that way only 11 times in the last 35 years. Then again, the last time that there wasn’t either a No. 1 or a No. 2 in the title series was 1978. So while upsets can

dents at Millicoma Intermediate School Davidson didn’t think she had her “best meet” and thought her struggles on the beam and bars torpedoed her chance at placing. As much as she thinks her nerves got to her, she’ll be better equipped to deal with it next year. “I am very proud that I made it there and next time I will have the experience so the nerves don't get to me,” Davidson said. “I think (nerves) is why I fell on bars and beam. I definitely think next time it will not be an issue. Next time I will know what to prepare for and what to expect.” Lans said the Gymnastic Plus program costs much less for students than some other programs around the state, primarily because it is part of the Boys and Girls Club of Southwestern Oregon. Gymnastics Plus doesn’t practice nearly as much as other teams, so just getting to regionals with some of its disadvantages is impressive. “Some of the gymnasts there practice eight hours a day, we practice two and a half,” Roderick said. “When I was about to compete at regionals all I wanted to do was have fun for my first time. I plan to try to make it to regionals again next year.” Roderick is a fiery competitor and isn’t taking her first loss at regionals lightly. For her, next season starts now. “I made it my goal to make it to regionals at the beginning of my meet season this year,” she said. “This time, I’m starting my road to regionals now. I worked hard. Now I’m going to work even harder.”

Roxy Day, Claire Patin, Aliyah White and Shelby Merritt all placed in the top 10 in at least one of the four events, also including the balance beam, floor exercise and vault. Results for all the girls are listed in today’s Community Scoreboard. Gymnastics Plus is part of the Boys & Girls Club of Southwestern Oregon.

Track and field athletes compete at Reedsport

Youth Sports

are eligible to participate in the free event. Events (some depending on age) include the 50 meter dash, 100 meter dash, 200 meter dash, 400 meter dash, 800 meter run, 1,600 meter run, 4x100 relay, standing long jump and softball throw. Local winners qualify for the state meet, which will be held June 28, at Hayward Field in Eugene. Winners at the state meet are eligible for the North American Final in Hershey, Pa., if their time or distance is the best in the Northwest region. The Hershey Track & Field Games have involved millions of youngsters from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and Canada. For more information on the local event, call 541-2676573.

Sportsmanship Awards Bay Area Sportsman’s Association sportsmanship and official awards for Boys & Girls Club of Southwestern Oregon spring soccer games played April 12. Sportsmanship Awards First Grade: Lighthouse Tsumani (Lighthouse), coached by Jeremy Chaney. Second Grade: Gas House Gang (Hillcrest), coached by William Faron. Third Grade: BASC, coached by Kendra Foltz. Fifth/Sixth Grade: NBMC Immediate Care (Coos Bay), coached by Toni Picatti. Officials Awards Professional: Ryan Carocci and Casey King. Hustle: Brian Villegas and Cody Eastwood.


Saturday,April 19,2014 • The World • B5

Community Sports Hutton sets record in Salmon Creek Run

Students succeed at national tourney

THE WORLD

THE WORLD A pair of students from Coquille Martial Arts had success at two recent martial arts events. During spring break, 9-year-old Luke Donaldson of Coquille and 10year-old Jes-C Tessman of Myrtle Point traveled to Las Vegas for the United States Karate Alliance national tournament. The United States Karate Alliance is the largest national tournament circuit, focused on traditional events. To qualify, students have to place third or better in a recognized state tournament. Donaldson and Tessman qualified at the Oregon State Tournament in Bend last October, said co-instructor Karen Saxton. The events averaged more than 30 competitors in each division. Donaldson placed fourth in kubodo (weapons) and second in the grand champion round of kumite (sparring). He also placed fifth in kata (forms) and Ippon and Chanbarra, events he had not previously attempted. Tessman placed fifth in kobudo and second in kata. He also competed in kumite, losing his first match in a tiebreaker. One week after their trip to Las Vegas, Tessman and Donaldson competed in the Oregon State Taekwondo Championships at Mount Hood Community College in Gresham. This tournament included different protocols for presenting forms, different rules and equipment for the Olympic-style sparring and different categories, including breaking and team poomsae forms, Saxton said. “It was both more relaxed and more formal at the same time,” she said. “The two boys created some excitement in the weapons division, as they were the only ones using kama and bo.” Tessman finished first in poomsae,

POWERS — Sailor Hutton of Bandon set a new women’s course record in the annual Salmon Creek Run in Powers earlier this month. Hutton, age 14, finished the 10-kilometer race in 41 minutes and 18 seconds, more than five minutes faster than the previous record. The overall winner of the 10K was Brent Hutton, Sailor’s father, who finished in 35:53 to set a new agegroup record for the 40-49 division. Two other Hutton family members set age-group records, with Hunter, Sailor’s twin brother, setting the mark in the boys 14-19 age group with his time of 41:12 and mom Tricia setting the 5-kilometer mark for women in the 40-49 age group with her time of 26:23. Thom Hallmark of Coquille was second overall in the 10-kilometer race with a time of 39:55, the morning Contributed Photo after running both the 1,500 Luke Donaldson, left, and Jes-C Tessman pose with their medals from the recent Oregon State and 3,000 in the Coquille

Twilight Meet. Hunter Hutton was third, with Jerry Roberts of Myrtle Point finishing fourth and setting a new 60-69 age group record with his time of 41:47. Kyla Schneyder finished second among women and set a 60-69 age group mark with her time of 57:17. Alice Pruett was third in 57:33. Carter Brown of Langlois, age 9, was the overall 5K winner in 22:36 while Tricia Hutton finished first among women. Race director Joe Hallett extended thanks to Plum Creek Timberlands for use of their road, Charlie Possee for setting up and taking down the water station, and Colt Bessey and Wendell Stauffer for help with registration and awards. A total of 21 runners and walkers participated in the event. The winners of the races received cans of smoked salmon. Results are listed in today’s Community Scoreboard.

Taekwondo Championships. weapons and creative poomsae and third in jumping side break. Donaldson finished second in poomsae, weapons, creative poomsae and sparring. The students and their families now must decide whether to travel to Colorado Springs for the USA Hanmadang. “Competition is not mandatory at Coquille Martial Arts, although we encourage it as a way to improve one’s skills and confidence,” co-instructor Jim Saxton said. The day after the state event, Tessman and Donaldson participated in the Pacific Martial Arts Conference at Best Martial Arts Institute in Eugene. The event is designed for students 13 and older, and younger students need their instructor’s recommendation. Pac Mac teaches mini lessons ranging from how to kick better to sword work and self defense.

“It is a way for all styles to come together and recognize how similar they are, rather than how different,” Karen Saxton said. “Many times, people get caught up in their own ideas and this is a way of sharing and increasing mutual respect.” It was a good experience for the students, Saxton said. “Both boys enjoyed themselves and were extremely focused on each lesson and respectful to all around them,” she said. “This gave them a break from competition training and a wider view of martial arts.” Later this month, Donaldson and Tessman will join fellow students from Coquille Martial Arts in a tournament at Chip Wright’s in Medford before competing in the Pacific Jewel Nationals. For more information on Coquille Martial Arts, visit the school’s website www.coquilletkd.com.

Pre registration begins THE WORLD Online registration has started for the 35th annual Prefontaine Memorial Run, scheduled for Sept. 20 in Coos Bay. Printed race applications will be mailed to all people who participated in the past three races, and those who want to sign up early can visit the race website at www.prefontainerun.com. The 10-kilometer race begins at 10 a.m. at the corner of Fourth Street and Anderson Avenue in downtown Coos Bay. An OSAAsanctioned high school race will start 15 minutes earlier. For the first time, the race

will be computer chiptimed by Eclectic Edge Racing of Eugene, which will facilitate quicker results processing, with custom printouts available for each runner, according to Bob Huggins, the run’s executive director. The race got its start in 1980, when a group of Coos Bay citizens decided it was time that Steve Prefontaine’s hometown did something to honor the legendary runner. The race covers one of Pre’s favorite training routes and finishes at the track at Marshfield High School that bears his name. For more information, call Huggins at 541-269-1103.

Scoreboard Bowling North Bend Lanes April 7-13 HIGH GAME Young at Heart Seniors — Larry Zimin 235, Bob Hidaka 230, Jim Sanders 225; Nancy Lauth 195, Betty Pruitt 186, Lue Dyer 184, Judy Farrar 184. Monday Juniors — Jayse Morgan 237, micheal Villers 212, Jake Gerhardt 187; Arianna Campbell 257, Regan Foxworthy 171, Emily Adams 165. M e n ’ s C o a s t — Bill Springfels 247, Rick Surprise 244, Ron Cress 244. Tuesday Senior Boomers — James Hatfield 209, Mike Ash 181, Michael King Sr. 177; Judy Cutting 192, Kathy Keyes 169, Marilyn Evans 169. Bay Area Hospital — Karl Daniel 243, Tom Crawford 194, Lloyd Lorenz 193; Tina Chambers 195, Julene Gerami 186, Janet Christensen 186. Cosmo — Shyla Sanne 216, Shannon Weybright 213, Debbie Pense 211. R o l l i ng P I n s — Lindas Nichols 222, Pat Richardson 205, Robin Blackwell 188. Primers Too Seniors — Robert Mast 236, Don Bomar 226, Denny Klum 224; Linda Nichols 234, Gloria Surprise 220, Nancy Lauth 200. Cash Classic — Bryan Robertst 268, Trevor Sanne 266, Robert Warrick 265; Stacey Nelson 245, Toni Smith 205, Shannon Weybright 204. Thursday Bumpers — Jaydin Jones 142, Lane Michael 123, Cougar Roy 120; Mayci Hubbard 109, Zaidee Quinn 89, Sierra Bell 82. Varsity — Raymond Hacker 265, George Lake 265, Mike Hoyt 259. Silver Tip Seniors — Berrel Vinyard 255, Bud Grant 255, Larry Zimin 247; Linda Nichols 203, Thelma Fairchild 195, Nancy Lauth 193, Maxine Rowling 193. Friday Bumpers — Jake Williams 121, Jayce McDonald 108, Albert Self 104; Carole Guzzardi 94, Chloe Wintjen 90, Faith Gage 84. Timber — Ronnie Silva Jr. 257, Karl Daniel 244, Tom Crawford 233; Cindy Daniel 200, Dawnella Michna 160, Laura Devine 158. Jack-n-Jill — John Dixon 219, Ray Holladay 202, Jeff Bearden 199, Brian Fletcher 199; Molly Schroeder 191, Merri Lang 180, Gail Nordstrom 169. Sunday Reno — Robert Taylor 236, George Leary 235, Michael Andrade 226; Lisa Duryee 193, Sandy Tammietti 187, Jessica Fellows 151. HIGH SERIES Young at Heart Seniors — Nathan LaRue 589, Larry Zimin 576, Chuck Parks 572; Lue Dyer 530, Nancy Lauth 526, Sally Curtis 503. Monday Juniors — Jayse Morgan 578, Jake Gerhardt 517, Micheal Villers 490; Arianna Campbell 649, Regan Foxworthy 483, Bryanna Decker 446. Men’s Coast — Karl Daniel 663, Berrel Vinyard 638, Bryan Roberts 631. Tuesday Senior Boomers — James Hatfield 579, Michael King Sr. 503, Mike Ash 496; Judy Cutting 460, Lucy Hoffman 453, Marilyn Evans 446. Bay Area Hospital — Karl Daniel 673, Tom Crawford 574, Mehrdad Gerami 560; Tina Chambers 558, Lisa Wooley 499, Julene Gerami 483. Cosmo — Shyla Sanne 581, Shannon Weybright 581, Kathy Blohm 518. Rolling Pins — Linda Nichols 596, Karyn Swinderman 493, Robin Blackwell 484. Primers Too Seniors — Robert Mast 627, Don Bomar 619, Chuck Parks 590; Gloria Surprise 570, Linda Nichols 568, Nancy Lauth 549. Cash Classic — Bob Nelson 716, Robert Warrick 693, Bryan Roberts 668; Stacey Nelson 670, Toni Smith 573, Robin Blackwell 465. Thursday Bumpers (two-game series) — Jaydin Jones 256, Lane Michael 217, Chase Sparkman 213; Mayci Hubbbard 190, Zaidee Quinn 168, Sierra Bell 162. V a r s i t y — Mark Mattecheck 689, David Warrick 681, Scott Lathrom 681. Silver Tip Seniors — Larry Zimin 671, Berrel Vinyard 637, Bud Grant 625; Linda Nichols 582, Nancy Lauth 523, Maxine Rowling 511. Friday Bumpers (two-game series) — Jake Williams 231, Alber Self 195, Jayce McDonald 188; Carole Guzzardi 174, Chloe Wintjen 173, Faith Gage 167. Timber — Karl Daniel 685, Tom Crawford 610, Larry Huffman 605; Cindy Daniel 599, Dawnella Michna 449, Hanna Britton 428. Jack-n-Jill — John Dixon 599, Brian Fletcher 538, Gary Williamson 533; Molly Schroeder 490,

Gil Nordstrom 448, Merri Lang 448. Sunday Reno — Jason Hoffman 631, Robert Taylor 616, George Leary 591; Lisa Duryee 548, Sandy Tammietti 466, Jessica Fellows 398.

Track & Field Boys & Girls Club meet April 12 At Reedsport Athletes from Coos Bay, Coquille, North Bend and Reedsport

Fourth Grade Girls 50 Meter Dash — 1. Heat 1: Charlise Stark, NB, 8.31; 2. Emily West, CB, 8.75; 3. Hailie Keith, Ree, 9.16; 4. Emily Finley, Coq, 9.19; 5. Cally Smith, CB, 9.84; 6. Keara Miller, Coq, 10.25. Heat 2: 1. Caitlin Hite, CB, 8.25; 2. Faith Hite, CB, 9.12; 3. Alli Storts, Coq, 9.69. 1,600 Meter Run — 1. lli Storts, Coq, 7:05.22; 2. Aryanna Mill, CB, 7:29.47; 3. Grace Wright, Coq, 7:33.03. 100 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Charlise Stark, NB, 16.34; 2. Emily West, CB, 17.12; 3. Jaylyn Rayevich, Coq, 17.44; 4. Hailie Keith, Ree, 17.66; 5. Emily Finley, Coq, 17.72; 6. Caitlin Hite, CB, 19.38. Heat 2: 1. Riley Chard, CB, 16.66; 2. Payton Marshall, NB, 16.69; 3. Bailey Higgins, Coq, 17.25; 4. Faith Hite, CB, 18.41; 5. Cally Smith, CB, 18.59; 6. Keara Miller, Coq, 20.15. 400 Meter Dash — 1. Payton Marshall, NB, 1:25.91; 2. Riley Chard, CB, 1:36.81. 800 Meter Run — 1. Alli Storts, Coq, 3:18.81. 200 Meter Dash — 1. Jaylyn Rayevich, Coq, 36.94; 2. Riley Chard, CB, 38.84; 3. Charlise Stark, NB, 39.22; 4. Caitlin Hite, CB, 42.28; 5. Keara Miller, Coq, 46.40. 400 Meter Relay — 1. Coquille (Bailey Higgins, Grace Wright, Alli Storts and Jaylyn Rayevich), 1:15.47; 2. Coquille (Hunter Layton, Ailis Higgins, Keara Miller, Emily Finley), 1:19.91. Shot Put — 1. Bailey Higgins, Coq, 14-7; 2. Keara Miller, Coq, 12-9; 3. Hailie Keith, Ree, 101 11 ⁄2; 4. Cally Smith, CB, 9-9; 5. Grace Wright, Coq, 9-0. High Jump — 1. Ayrana Mill, CB, 3-6; 2. Jaylyn Rayevich, Coq, 3-2; 3. Emily West, CB, 3-0; 4. Payton Marshall, NB, 3-0. Also: Charlise Stark, NB; Alli Storts, Coq; and Faith Hite, CB, NH. Long Jump — 1. Bailey Higgins, Coq, 9-63⁄4; 2. Cally Smith, CB, 8-8; 3. Hailie Keith, Ree, 8-8; 4. 3 Aryana Mill, CB, 8-4 ⁄4; 5. Emily Finley, Coq, 81 1 4 ⁄4; 6. Faith Hite, CB, 7-6 ⁄2; 7. Caitlin Hite, CB, 751⁄2; 8. Riley Chard, CB, 7-3; 9. Grace Wright, Coq, 6-11; 10. Keara Miller, Coq, 5-9. Softball Throw — 1. Jaylyn Rayevich, Coq, 6310; 2. Keara Miller, Coq, 55-0.

Fourth Grade Boys 50 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Cael Church, Coq, 8.34; 2. Brycen Creamer, CB, 8.47; 3. Grady Diefenbaugh, NB, 8.50; 4. Elias Frakes, Ree, 8.78; 5. Jack Waddington, CB, 9.16; 6. Avery Brandon, Ree, 9.22. Heat 2: 1. Kevin Jones, NB, 8.54; 2. Gavyn Tatge, NB, 9.06; 3. Logan Conley, Ree, 9.13; 4. Aaron Solomon, Ree, 9.22; 5. Braxtin Manicke, Ree, 9.50; 6. Indiana Delgado, CB, 9.66. 1,600 Meter Run — 1. Gavin Tatge, CB, 6:39.31; 2. Carter Brown, Ban, 6:42.88; 3. Jack Waddington, CB, 6:54.53; 4. David Luna, Coq, 6:55.31. 100 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Cael Church, Coq, 16.62; 2. Aaron Solomon, Ree, 17.35; 3. Hunter Layton, Coq, 18.06; 4. Logan Conley, Ree, 18.88; 5. Indiana Delgado, CB, 19.19. Heat 2: 1. Miguel Velazquez, Ree, 15.31; 2. Jarrett Sinclair, Coq, 1.78; 3. Kevin Jones, NB, 16.63; 4. Adam Solomon, Ree, 17.53; 5. Zac Roelle, Ree, 18.12. 400 Meter Dash — 1. Luke Rhodes, CB, 1:25.22; 2. Avery Brandon, Ree, 1:28.94; 3. David Luna, Coq, 1:29.38; 4. Michael Miller-Poole, CB, 1:37.00; 5. Ethan Ward, NB, 1:38.79; 6. Caden Stewart, CB, 1:41.44. 800 Meter Run — 1. Braxtin Manicke, Ree, 3:05.75; 2. Elias Frakes, Ree, 3:13.54; 3. Brock Willis, Coq, 3:14.85; 4. Luke Rhodes, CB, 3:38.47. 200 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Cael Church, Coq, 34.88; 2. Brycen Creamer, CB, 37.62; 3. Hunter Layton, Coq, 38.50; 4. David Luna, Coq, 39.44; 5. Logan Conley, Ree, 39.85; 6. Indiana Delgado, CB, 40.38. Heat 2: 1. Jarrett Sinclair, Coq, 32.62; 2. Miguel Velazquez, Ree, 33.41; 3. Grady Arriola, Coq, 36.34; 4. Luke Rhodes, CB, 36.81; 5. Adam Solomon, Ree, 36.84; 6. Brock Willis, Coq, 37.97. 400 Meter Relay — 1. North Bend (Kevin Jones, Aiden Lucas, Ethan Ward, Grady Diefenbaugh), 1:11.75; 2. Coquille (David Luna, Brock Willis, Jaron Hyatt, Cael Church), 1:15.38;

3. Coos Bay (Gavyn Tatge, Jacob Clavert, Caden Stewart, Brycen Creamer), 1:18.78. Shot Put — 1. Kevin Jones, NB, 18-6; 2. Miguel Velazquez, Ree, 17-1; 3. Avery Brandon, Ree, 163 6 ⁄4; 4. Luke Rhoes, CB, 14-2; 5. Ian Stevenson, NB, 13-9. High Jump — 1. Cael Church, Coq, 3-8; 2. Brycen Creamer, CB, 3-2; Grady Arriola, Coq, 3-2. Also: Jacob Calvert, CB, and Michael MillerPoole, CB, NH. Long Jump — 1. Jarrett Sinclair, Coq, 10-81⁄4; 2. 1 Aiden Lucas, NB, 10-3 ⁄2; 3. Miguel Velazquez, Ree, 10-11⁄2; 4. Grady Diefenbaugh, NB, 10-11⁄2; 5. Aaron Solomon, Ree, 9-83⁄4; 6. Grady Arriola, 1 3 Coq, 9-5 ⁄2; 7. Zac Roelle, Ree, 9-2 ⁄4; 8. Brock 1 Willis, Coq, 9-1 ⁄2; 9. Ethan Ward, NB, 8-11; 10. David Luna, Coq, 8-91⁄2; 11. Gavin Tatge, CB, 8-91⁄4; 12. Braxtin Manicke, Ree, 8-9; 13. Avery Brandon, Ree, 8-81⁄2; 14. Elias Frakes, Ree, 8-81⁄4; 15. Jack 1 Waddington, CB, 8-4 ⁄2; 16. Hunter Layton, Coq, 8-4; 17. Adam Solomon, Ree, 8-21⁄4; 18. Michael Miller-Poole, CB, 7-10; 19. Caden Stewart, CB, 71 1 7 ⁄4; 20. Ian Stevenson, NB, 5-3 ⁄2. Softball Throw — 1. Grady Diefenbaugh, NB, 102-11; 2. Aiden Lucas, NB, 89-10; 3. Braxtin Manicke, Ree, 87-6; 4. Carter Brown, Ban, 77-0; 5. Ethan Ward, NB, 71-101⁄2; 6. Adam Solomon, Ree, 70-7; 7. Aaron Solomon, Ree, 69-11; 8. Logan Conley, Ree, 69-2; 9. Jacob Calvert, CB, 62-11; 10. Jack Waddington, CB, 62-8; 11. Caden Stewart, 1 CB, 60-9 ⁄2; 12. Jarrett Sinclair, Coq, 56-4; 13. Ian Stevenson, NB, 47-4; 14. Zac Roelle, Ree, 42-8.

2. Jared Smith, Coq, 17.91. 400 Meter Dash — 1. Quaid Brandon, Ree, 1:20.53; 2. Elijah Buchanan, NB, 1:39.63. 800 Meter Run — 1. Zach Holt, CB, 2:50.94; 2. Konrad Hoyer, CB, 3:16.06; 3. Alden Johnston, NB, 3:21.06; 4. Jaron Hyatt, Coq, 4:10.90. 200 Meter Dash — 1. Christian Solomon, Ree, 32.96. 400 Meter Relay — 1. Coos Bay (Jimmy Powers, Konrad Hoyer, Sydney Trendell, Zach Holt), 1:06.34; 2. North Bend (Paige Frings, Cutter Woodworth, Alden Johnston, Jericho Bingham), 1:12.43. Shot Put — 1. Cutter Woodworth, NB, 21-8; 2. Konrad Hoyer, CB, 20-8; 3. Jaron Hyatt, Coq, 1211; 4. Tommy Wolford, Ree, 11-1. High Jump — Sebastian Blaney, Coq; Jericho Bingham, NB; and Alden Johnston, NB, NH. Long Jump — 1. Zach Holt, CB, 12-5; 2. Jensen 3 Mast, Ree, 12-0; 3. Konrad Hoyer, CB, 10-6 ⁄4; 4. Quaid Brandon, Ree, 10-5 1⁄ 2; 5. Christian Solomon, Ree, 10-01⁄2; 6. Cutter Woodworth, NB, 1 9-2 ⁄2; 7. Jimmy Powers, CB, 9-1; 8. Elijah 3 Buchanan, NB, 8-4; 9. Jared Smith, Coq, 8-1 ⁄4; 10. Jaron Hyatt, Coq, 7-7. Softball Throw — 1. Christian Solomon, Ree, 106-1; 2. Cutter Woodworth, NB, 105-2; 3. Quaid Brandon, Ree, 102-3; 4. Jericho Bingham, NB, 98-7; 5. Jensen Mast, Ree, 91-10; 6. Elijah Buchanan, NB, 67-9; 7. Jared Smith, Coq, 62-3; 8. Tommy Wolford, Ree, 34-10.

Fifth Grade Girls

80 Meter Hurdles — Heat 1: 1. Kendallyn Bond, Ree, 17.3; 2. Lexi Dowling, NB, 17.91; 3. Anella Willis, Coq, 17.94. Heat 2: 1. Kaylee Delzotti, CB, 16.06; 2. Haili Martin, NB, 18.31; 3. Kiara Conway, NB, 18.72. Heat 3: 1. Autumn Morrison, Coq, 18.16; 2. Maria Knight, NB, 18.94; 3. Jordan Denbo, NB, 19.18. 50 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Autumn Morrison, Coq, 7.97; 2. Kambel Eunice, Ree, 8.54; 3. Lexi Dowling, NB, 9.35; 4. Ashley Schuttpelz, Ree, 10.03; 5. Ailis Higgins, Coq, 10.37. Heat 2: 1. Zoey Acker, NB, 7.91; 2. Carlee Gederos, Coq, 8.19; 3. Morgan Baird, Coq, 8.84; 4. Jessica Harvey, Ree, 9.16. 1,600 Meter Run — 1. Carlee Gederos, Coq, 6:43.21; 2. Lauren Jones, NB, 7:00.88; 3. Jordan Denbo, NB, 7:41.44. 100 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Chelsea Howard, NB, 14.03; 2. Kaylee Delzotti, CB, 14.78; 3. Haili Martin, NB, 16.06; 4. Kendallyn Bond, Ree, 16.37. Heat 2: 1. Zoey Acker, NB, 14.69; 2. Autumn Morrison, Coq, 16.44; 3. Jordan Denbo, NB, 17.50; 4. Lexi Dowling, NB, 18.41; 5. Ailis Higgins, Coq, 21.31. 400 Meter Dash — 1. Kambel Eunice, Ree, 1:20.00; 2. Kiara Conway, NB, 1:22.50; 3. Jessica Harvey, Ree, 1:30.25. 800 Meter Run — Heat 1: 1. Lauren Jones, NB, 3:17.31; 2. Kiara Conway, NB, 3:28.97; 3. Jordan Baarstad, CB, 3:30.88; 4. Anella Willis, Coq, 3:32.32; 5. Morgan Baird, Coq, 3:33.44; 6. Maria Knight, NB, 3:55.97. Heat 2: 1. Carlee Gederos, Coq, 3:00.50; 2. Ashley Schuttpelz, Ree, 3:31.00. 200 Meter Dash — 1. Chelsea Howard, NB, 29.93; 2. Anella Willis, Coq, 35.19. 400 Meter Relay — 1. North Bend (Randee Cunningham, Haili Martin, Zoey Acker, Chelsea Howard), 1:02.37. Shot Put — 1. Morgan Baird, Coq, 28-101⁄2; 2. Lauren Jones, NB, 20-3; 3. Kendallyn Bond, Ree, 16-7. High Jump — 1. Autumn Morrison, Coq, 3-6; 2. Jordan Denbo, NB, 3-6. Also: Maria Knight, NB, and Kiara Conway, NB, NH. Long Jump — 1. Chelsea Howard, NB, 11-6; 2. Kaylee Delzotti, CB, 10-101⁄2; 3. Anella Willis, Coq, 1 10-5 ⁄2; 4. Lauren Jones, NB, 10-3; 5. Zoey Acker, NB, 9-10; 6. Haili Martin, NB, 9-5; 7. Jordan Baarstad, CB, 9-0; 8. Kendallyn Bond, Ree, 8-7; 9. 1 Kambel Eunice, Ree, 8-5 ⁄2; 10. Lexi Dowling, NB, 1 8-3 ⁄2; 11. Jessica Harvey, Ree, 7-9; 12. Ailis Higgins, Coq, 7-8; 13. Ashley Schuttpelz, Ree, 701⁄2. Softball Throw — 1. Morgan Baird Coq, 131-1; 2. Jessica Harvey, Ree, 75-8; 3. Maria Knight, NB, 69-7; 4. Jordan Baarstad, CB, 66-0; 5. Kambel Eunice, Ree, 53-9.

80 Meter Hurdles — Heat 1: 1. Marli PIcking, Coq, 16.50; 2. Carmen Samuels, CB, 18.06; 3. Taylor Waddington, CB, 18.16; 4. Alexis Hampton, NB, 22.09. Heat 2: 1. Sydney Trendell, CB, 16.97; 2. Maliyah Lockwood, Coq, 17.32; 3. Heather Grant, CB, 18.87. 50 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Savanna Vitek, Ree, 8.32; 2. Drew Wilson, Coq, 8.50; 3. Aby Chavez, CB, 8.53; 4. Melanie Jones, NB, 8.78; 5. Keegan Fry, CB, 9.56. Heat 2: 1. Yesenia Velazquez, Ree, 8.04; 2. Carmen Samuels, CB, 8.53; 3. Randee Cunningham, NB, 8.72; 4. Paige Frings, NB, 8.72; 5. Taylor Waddington, CB, 8.91. 1,600 Meter Run — 1. Elsa Frakes, Ree, 6:55.44; 2. Madalyn Hampel, Coq, 8:07.09. 1 0 0 M e t e r D a s h — Heat 1: 1. Yesenia Velazquez, Ree, 15.78; 2. Melanie Jones, NB, 16.44; 3. Savanna Vitek, Ree, 16.63; 4. Taylor Waddington, CB, 17.41. Heat 2: 1. Marli Picking, Coq, 15.78; 2. Sydney Trendell, CB, 15.81; 3. Paige Frings, NB, 17.50. 400 Meter Dash — 1. Randee Cunningham, NB, 1:24.44; 2. Alexis Hampton, NB, 1:34.22. 800 Meter Run — 1. Alexis Hampton, NB, 3:32.28. 200 Meter Dash — 1. Yesenia Velazquez, Ree, 33.25; 2. Elsa Frakes, Ree, 34.59. 400 Meter Relay — 1. Coquille (Maliyah Lockwood, Sebastian Blaney, Madalyn Hampel, Marli Picking), 1:12.38; 2. Coos Bay (Keegan Fry, Aryana Mill, Emily West, Aby Chavez), 1:12.63. Shot Put — 1. Aby Chavez, CB, 18-9; 2. Drew Wilson, Coq, 17-9; 3. Madalyn Hampel, Coq, 17-8; 4. Savanna Vitek, Ree, 12-6. High Jump — 1. Maliyah Lockwood, Coq, 3-8; 2. Carmen Samuels, CB, 3-6. Also: Paige Frings, NB, and Heather Grant, CB, NH. Long Jump — 1. Randee Cunningham, NB, 104; 2. Maliyah Lockwood, Coq, 10-1; 3. Yesenia 1 Velazquez, Ree, 9-9; 4. Drew Wilson, Coq, 9-6 ⁄2; 3 5. Savanna Vitek, Ree, 9-4 ⁄4; 6. Elsa Frakes, Ree, 9-4; 7. Marli Picking, Coq, 9-31⁄2; 8. Melanie 1 1 Jones, NB, 9-1 ⁄2; 9. Alexis Hampton, NB, 8-11 ⁄2; 1 10. Taylor Waddington, CB, 8-6 ⁄2; 11. Heather Grant, CB, 8-6; 12. Sydney Trendell, CB, 8-11⁄2; 13. 1 Paige Frings, NB, 6-11 ⁄2; 14. Keegan Fry, CB, 51 9 ⁄4. Softball Throw — 1. Marli Picking, Coq, 97-6; 2. Drew Wilson, Coq, 85-6; 3. Melanie Jones, NB, 83-11; 4. Aby Chavez, CB, 63-0; 5. Madalyn Hampel, Coq, 58-9; 6. Keegan Fry, CB, 45-3.

Fifth Grade Boys 80 Meter Hurdles — 1. Zach Holt, CB, 16.31; 2. Jimmy Powers, CB, 17.78; 3. Sebastian Blaney, Coq, 21.06. 50 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Jericho Bingham, NB, 8.00; 2. Quaid Brandon, Ree, 8.28; 3. Jimmy Powers, CB, 8.44; 4. Sebastian Blaney, Coq, 9.72. Heat 2: 1. Jensen Mast, Ree, 8.31; 2. Christian Solomon, Ree, 8.53; 3. Jared Smith, Coq, 9.71; 4. Jaron Hyatt, Coq, 10.93; 5. Tommy Wolford, Ree, 13.54. 1,600 Meter Run — 1. Alden Johnston, NB, 6:44.97; 2. Luke Brown, Ban, 7:04.65. 100 Meter Dash — 1. Jensen Mast, Ree, 15.69;

Sixth Grade Girls

Sixth Grade Boys 80 Meter Hurdles — Heat 1: 1. Dalton WIlson, NB, 16.12; 2. Tucker Godfrey, Coq, 17.78; 3. Gage Brandon, Ree, 18.31. Heat 2: 1. Cooper Forrester, NB, 17.81; 2. Evan Melton, Coq, 19.98. 50 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Ricky Nelson, Ree, 7.71; 2. Brady Dexter, Ree, 8.15; 3. Tyler BeyerSmith, Coq, 8.63; 4. Ean Smith, Coq, 9.03; 5. River Lichte, Ree, 9.43. Heat 2: 1. Dallas McGill,

Ree, 8.25; 2. Jayden Parker, Ree, 8.35; 3. Ryan Dove, Ree, 8.56; 4. Nolan Wilkes, Ree, 8.59; 5. Chase Jones, NB, 9.63. 100 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Ammon Smith, CB, 13.84; 2. Coel Stark, NB, 14.00; 3. Nolan Wilkes, Ree, 16.63; 4. Chase Jones, NB, 18.03. Heat 2: 1. Javier Analco, Ree, 15.03; 2. Devante Byers, NB, 15.28; 3. Jordan Ward, NB, 16.50; 4. Christiaan Lockwood, Coq, 17.04; 5. Ean Smith, Coq, 19.28. Heat 3: 1. Ricky Nelson, Ree, 14.66; 2. Dalton Wilson, NB, 14.72; 3. Jayden Parker, Ree, 16.53. Heat 4: 1. Tyler Thornton, Ree, 14.47; 2. Dallas McGill, Ree, 15.81; 3. Matthew Parren, NB, 16.11. 400 Meter Dash — 1. Cooper Forrester, NB, 1:17.41; 2. Tyler Beyer-Smith, Coq, 1:20.78; 3. Tucker Godfrey, Coq, 1:22.41; 4. Austin Manicke, Ree, 1:30.34; 5. Ean Smith, Coq, 1:40.69. 800 Meter Run — 1. Ryan Dove, Ree, 3:03.32; 2. Brady Dexter, Ree, 3:03.37; 3. Gage Brandon, Ree, 3:29.31; 4. River Lichte, Ree, 3:42.18. 200 Meter Dash — Heat 1: 1. Ammon Smith, CB, 29.31; 2. Tyler Thornton, Ree, 29.53; 3. Coel Stark, NB, 29.66; 4. Austin Manicke, Ree, 38.44. Heat 2: 1. Javier Analco, Ree, 31.50; 2. Devante Byers, NB, 31.56; 3. Ean Smith, Coq, 39.62. 400 Meter Relay — 1. North Bend (Devante Byers, Dalton Wilson, Coel Stark), 1:02.53; 2. Coquille (Morgan Baird, Tucker Godfrey, Tyler Beyer-Smith, Autumn Morrison), 1:06.88. Shot Put — 1. Javier Analco, Ree, 31-4; 2. Ricky Nelson, Ree, 28-11; 3. Dallas McGill, Ree, 27-11; 4. Ean Smith, Coq, 26-3; 5. Tyler Thornton, Ree, 262; 6. Tyler Beyer-Smith, Coq, 24-101⁄2; 7. Brady Dexter, Ree, 23-7; 8. Christiaan Lockwood, Coq, 23-1; 9. Gage Brandon, Ree, 18-2; 10. Austin Manicke, Ree, 17-101⁄2; 11. Ryan Dove, Ree, 16-4; 12. River Lichte, Ree, 16-4. High Jump — 1. Ammon Smith, CB, 4-6; 2. Tucker Godfrey, Coq, 4-0; 3. Cooper Forrester, NB, 3-8; 4. Christiaan Lockwood, Coq, 3-8. Also: Chase Jones, NB; Ean Smith, Coq; and Matthew Parren, NB, NH. Long Jump — 1. Ammon Smith, CB, 13-7; 2. 1 Tyler Thornton, Ree, 12-9 ⁄2; 3. Coel Stark, NB, 118; 4. Tucker Godfrey, Coq, 11-51⁄2; 5. Devante 1 1 Byers, NB, 11-1 ⁄2; 6. Dalton Wilson, NB, 11-0 ⁄2; 7. 1 Jordan Ward, NB, 10-4 ⁄2; 8. Chase Jones, NB, 1041⁄2; 9. Brady Dexter, Ree, 10-33⁄4; 10. Christiaan Lockwood, Coq, 9-103⁄4; 11. Nolan Wilkes, Ree, 9101⁄2; 12. Evan Melton, Coq, 9-101⁄4; 13. Cooper Forrester, NB, 9-101⁄4; 14. Austin Manicke, Ree, 971⁄2; 15. Ryan Dove, Ree, 9-31⁄2; 16. Gage Brandon, Ree, 8-11; 17. River Lichte, Ree, 7-113⁄4. Softball Throw — 1. Javier Analco, Ree, 150-9; 2. Dallas McGill, Ree, 148-9; 3. Tyler Beyer-Smith, Coq, 111-8; 4. Matthew Parren, NB, 101-1; 5. Nolan Wilkes, Ree, 98-3; 6. Jordan Ward, NB, 928; 7. Evan Melton, Coq, 77-5.

Running Salmon Creek Run April 5 At Powers

10 Kilometers Women — 1. Sailor Hutton, 41:18 (new course record); 2. Kyla Schneyder, 57:16 (new 60-69 age-group record); 3. Alice Pruett, 57:33; 4. Alyssa Scott, 63:53. Men — 1. Brent Hutton, 35:53 (new 60-69 age group record); 2. Thom Hallmark, 39:55; 3. Hunter Hutton, 41:12 (new 14-19 age group record); 4. Jerry Roberts, 41:47 (new 60-69 age group record); 5. John Gunther, 43:32; 6. Doug Veysey, 45:34; 7. Tom Bedell, 47:45; 8. Chandler Pruett, 49:10; 9. Tom Brown, 49:30; 10. Jamie Sanderlin, 55:25; 11. Richard Haas, 55:37; 12. Shaun Henesey, 63:45. 5 Kilometers Women — 1. Tricia Hutton, 26:23 (new 40-49 age group record); 2. Myra Lawson, 60:31; 3. Twila Veysey, 60:32. Men — 1. Carter Brown, 22;36; 2. Jim Lawson, 31:13.

Gymnastics Region 2 Championships At Helena, Mont. April 11-14 Gymnastics Plus results

Junior A Vault: Payton Davidson, 8.2. Bars: Davidson, 7.55. Beam: Davidson, 6.75. Floor: Davidson, 8.675. All-Around: Davidson, 31.175.

Child B Vault: Grace Roderick, 8.125. Bars: Roderick,

6.95. Beam: Roderick, 8.95. Floor: Roderick, 9.225. All-Around: Roderick, 33.25.

Matrix Challenge April 12 At Grants Pass Gymanstics Plus results, listed by age group, with scores for vault, uneven parallel bars, balance beam, floor exercise and all-around.

Level 3 Vault: 10. Katie Tellei, 9.200; 15. Emily Ryan, 8.900; 18. Natalie Fish, 8.800. Bars: 5. Tellei, 9.100; 23. Fish, 8.200; 33. Ryan, 7.100. Beam: 5. Tellei, 9.275; 19. Fish, 8.500; 31. Ryan, 7.000. Floor: 4. Tellei, 9.200; 20. Fish, 8.500; 31. Ryan, 7.800. All-Around: 4. Tellei, 36.775; 20. Fish, 34.000; 31. Ryan, 30.800.

Level 4 and 5 Vault: 7. Jamie Foster, 9.000; 9. tie-Roxy Day and Claire Patin, 8.800; 13. Kiana Thomas, 8.700; 16. Caitlyn Anderson, 8.600; 18. Shelby Merritt, 8.400; 21. tie-Ella Thomas and Lorelei Martin, 8.200; 24. Aliyah White, 8.100. Bars: 2. Ella Thomas, 9.450; 5. Kiana Thomas, 9.250; 8. White, 9.100; 9. Day, 9.000; 12. Patin, 8.850; 17. Foster, 8.750; 22. Matin, 8.450; 24. Anderson, 8.250; 27. Merritt, 7.500. Beam: 4. Merritt, 9.500; 8. Foster, 9.400; 11. Ella Thomas, 9.375; 16. White, 9.250; 19. Day, 9.075; 21. Anderson, 8.875; 22. Kiana Thomas, 8.800; 24. Patin, 8.500; 26. Martin, 8.200. Floor: 3. Kiana Thomas, 9.200; 12. tie-Foster and Anderson, 8.800; 16. Patin, 8.600; 20. Day, 8.350; 24. Martin, 7.500; 25. Ella Thomas, 7.000; 27. White, 6.700; 28. Merritt, 6.600. All-Around: 9. tie-Foster and Kiana Thomas, 35.950; 13. Day, 35.225; 19. Patin, 34.750; 20. Anderson, 34.525; 21. Ella Thomas, 34.025; 22. White, 33.150; 24. Martin, 32.350; 26. Merritt, 32.000.

Golf Bandon Crossings Casual Fridays April 11 Individual Low Gross — Alfonso Powers 73. Low Net — Dewey Powers Sr. 66, Dewey Powers Jr. 72, Dave Kimes 72, Johnny Ohanesian 72, John Johnston 72, Forrest Munger 73, Brian Boyle 73, Al Greenfield 74, Kelly Hoy 74, Jack Hammerstrom 75, Ed Atkinson 76, Dick Wold 76, Daniel Graham 77, Mitch McCullough 77, Tom Gant 77, Christo Schwartz 78, Phil Bennett 78, Dave Sampson 80, Mark Nortness 80, Mike Shields 81, Ron Cookson 81, Ed Yelton 82, Larry Grove 82, Leigh Smith 82, Val Nemcek 82, Ray Fabien 88, Bob Webber 96. Closest to Pin — Daniel Graham (No. 6), Christo Schwartz (No. 9), Alfonso Powers (No. 11).

Road Runs Upcoming Road Races on the South Coast For more information on upcoming road races and for photos from past events, those interested can log on to the South Coast Running Club’s Web page at www.southcoastrunningclub.org. Boardwalk to Beach Run — Saturday, May 24, starting at 10 a.m. on the boardwalk in downtown Bandon. Events include 10-kilometer and 5-kilometer runs that include pavement, sand and beach stairs and a 1-mile kids run on a flat course. The entry fee with a beach towel is $13 for those who sign up by May 18. After May 18, the fee increases to $17. The fee for a family of four or more is $45. The fee without a towel is $5. For more information, call Tricia Hutton at 541-347-6512 or 541-260-3337. Coquille Rotary River Run — Saturday, June 7, starting at 9 a.m. at Sturdivant Park in Coquille. Events include a 10-kilometer run and a 3-mile run/walk. Walkers are encouraged to participate. The fee is $12 with a T-shirt for people who sign up early and $15 on race day. The fee is $5 without a shirt. Raceday registration runs from 7:30 to 8:45 a.m. in the park’s gazebo. Entry forms are available at the Coquille Chamber of Commerce and Coquille Century 21.


B6•The World • Saturday,April 19,2014

Sports

Gonzaga signs son of former Blazer Sabonis THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SPOKANE, Wash. — Gonzaga has signed 6-foot10 forward Domantas Sabonis, the 17-year-old son of former NBA center Arvydas Sabonis. The Bulldogs on Thursday announced Sabonis has signed a letter of intent. He joins an incoming class that includes The Associated Press guards Josh Perkins, Silas Darrell Wallace Jr., right, winner of Saturday's NASCAR Camping World Truck race, smiles as he listens to Melson and Bryan Alberts. Coach Mark Few said Wendell Scott Jr. during a news conference after Wallace won a race last October at Martinsville Speedway. Sabonis is a skilled basketball player who should make an immediate impact on the program. Sabonis was born in Portland when his father played for the Trail Blazers.

Sports Shorts

Wallace wants to be the Tiger Woods of NASCAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Darrell Wallace Jr. was the first black driver to win a NASCAR race since the 1960s when he took the checkered flag in a Truck Series race at Martinsville last year. The 20-year-old Wallace, who goes by Bubba, has openly talked of becoming the Tiger Woods of NASCAR — the great black star who can transcend the sport and prove people of all colors can race. He rebounded from a crash in the season-opening Truck race at Daytona to finish second at Martinsville last month. “We’re trying to carry that momentum from Martinsville on to Kansas, so it’s a little tough,” Wallace said. “But I’m trying to have fun as much as I can, getting in and out of the shop as much as I can, checking on the progress of all the trucks that are being built.” Wallace drives the No. 54 Toyota for Kyle Busch Motorsports, which has perks. He can learn from one of the best drivers across all three NASCAR series. But the

Tulsa hires Frank Haith drawback is that Busch usu- front office. He was also part away from Missouri ally dominates when he jumps down to the Truck Series. Busch won five times last season, has one win this year and 36 in his career. “The most frustrating thing about last year is looking back at how many races we were faster than Kyle,” Wallace said. “Every race it seemed like we wrecked out, he would win. So there were a couple of races that we should have had on our win list. But that’s just part of the rookie blues and the rookie stripes. So I definitely know what I have to do now this year and use that as motivation to go out there and perform better. I’m using our motto. It’s just better every finish from last year.” NASCAR has initiated several pushes toward boosting the number of minorities in the sport. There’s a Drive for Diversity program that paid some dividends with Wallace and Kyle Larson after struggling to find racers for the top series. The program is 11 years old and was designed to attract minorities and women to the sport in all fields, from the track to the

of NASCAR’s “Next” class of up-and-coming drivers. “You get to do so many things that you didn’t think you’d be able to do,” Wallace said. “It’s just a lot of fun to be able to race with your peers and be along with them. And at such a young age group, you get to have a lot of fun.” LIVE QUALIFYING: Live, from Talladega, it’s NASCAR qualifying on network TV. The May 3 NASCAR Sprint Cup knockout qualifying session from Talladega Superspeedway will be aired on Fox — believed to be the first time the session will be televised live on network TV other than the Daytona 500. “This move is a direct result of the double-digit ratings gains NASCAR’s new knockout qualifying format is delivering every weekend,” said Bill Wanger, executive vice president of programming, research & content strategy. “We are thrilled to be able to highlight this new format on Fox, and what more exciting place to do that than Talladega Superspeedway.”

TULSA, Okla. — Tulsa has hired Frank Haith as its men’s basketball coach after he spent the past three years at Missouri. The 48-year-old Haith said Friday that the move came quickly. He says he was contacted Thursday and got more and more interested, particularly by the school’s upcoming move to the American Athletic Conference. Haith was 76-28 at Missouri, which plays in the SEC. He replaces Danny Manning, who left for Wake Forest after two seasons in Tulsa.

Duke loses two players to early entry in NBA DURHAM, N.C. — Duke sophomore Rodney Hood is entering the NBA draft. Hood said in a statement Friday that playing for the Blue Devils and Mike Krzyzewski “helped me grow and develop as a player and a person” to prepare him for the NBA. The 6-foot-8 Hood averaged 16.1 points, 3.9 rebounds and 2.1 assists after sitting out last year following

his transfer from Mississippi State. He was part of a 1-2 scoring punch with freshman Jabari Parker, who declared for the draft Thursday as a strong candidate for the No. 1 overall pick.

Kentucky freshman Young enters NBA draft LEXINGTON, Ky. — Kentucky guard James Young will enter the NBA draft, becoming the first of the Wildcats’ heralded freshmen to turn pro. The 6-foot-6 Young led Kentucky with 82 3-pointers last season. The Wildcats’ second-leading scorer averaged 14.3 points and 4.3 rebounds.

Butler loses fourth player to transfer INDIANAPOLIS — Freshman guard Elijah Brown is transferring out of Butler’s basketball program. The son of Cleveland Cavaliers coach Mike Brown was one of the prized recruits in Butler’s freshman recruiting class. The 6-foot-4 guard is the fourth Butler player to transfer since mid-February, following freshmen Nolan Berry and Rene Castro, and sophomore Devontae Morgan.

Chad Johnson will play for Montreal in the CFL MONTREAL — Former NFL and Oregon State star Chad Johnson will make his return to the gridiron in the Canadian Football League. The veteran receiver signed a two-year deal with the Montreal Alouettes after impressing team officials at a minicamp in Vero Beach, Fla. He last appeared in an NFL game during the 2011 season with New England.

A sideline reporter famous for his brightly colored suits, Sager’s sense of humor was intact in a statement released by Turner Sports on Friday. Sager described the postseason as “my favorite time of year - city to city, round by round, 40 games in 40 nights.” He said that “a dramatic turn has matched me with acute myeloid leukemia. From the sidelines to being sidelined, 40 veins and 40 electrolytes.”

Jazz will have fourth best chance for top pick NEW YORK — The Utah Jazz have won a tiebreaker with the Boston Celtics, giving them a chance for a better pick in the NBA draft. Both teams finished with 25-57 records. The Jazz will now be slotted fourth in the lottery, with a 10.4 percent chance at the No. 1 pick, while the Celtics will have a 10.3 percent chance. If they or no teams behind them move up, Utah will pick No. 4 and Boston at No. 5. Boston also will have the No. 17 pick after a tie was broken between Brooklyn and Washington, both 4438. The Nets owe the pick to the Celtics from last summer’s trade that landed them Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett.

NBA suspends Memphis point guard for 20 games

NEW YORK — Memphis Grizzlies point guard Nick Calathes has been suspended for 20 games for violating the NBA’s anti-drug policy. The league said Friday night in a release that Calathes tested positive for tamoxifen. The suspension begins tonight when the Grizzlies take on Oklahoma City in Game 1 of their first-round playoff Sager will miss playoffs series. Yahoo Sports was the first for leukemia treatment to report the suspension. ATLANTA — TNT analyst Calathes, a 25-year-old Craig Sager will miss the NBA rookie reserve, averaged 4.9 playoffs as he undergoes points and 2.9 assists in 71 games this season. treatment for leukemia.

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Business

Real Estate | C2 Comics | C5 Classifieds | C6

C

SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 2014

theworldlink.com/business • Digital Editor Les Bowen • 541-269-1222, ext. 234

Phone apps remind you about meds LINDA A.JOHNSON AP Business Writer

By Lou Sennick, The World

Both Sterling Bank locations in Coos Bay, along with branches in Bandon, Coquille North Bend and Riddle are being purchased by Banner Bank based in Walla Walla, Wash.

6 South Coast Sterling Banks sold to Banner BY CHELSEA DAVIS The World

COOS BAY — Sterling Bank customers will notice a lot of changes in the coming months. Early this summer, Walla Walla, Wash.-based Banner Bank will finalize its $7 million purchase of Spokane, Wash.-based Sterling Bank’s branches in Bandon, Coquille, North Bend, Riddle and two branches in Coos Bay. “The six branches Banner is purchasing from Sterling Bank is really due to antitrust concerns,” said Cara Coon, Sterling Financial Corporation’s vice president of communications and

public affairs director. Portland-based Umpqua Bank’s $2 billion merger with Sterling was finalized Friday. All Sterling branches began operating as Umpqua Saturday morning. But that would have put 12 Umpqua branches on the South Coast. That’s way too many, according to federal regulations. “(Banner Bank’s purchase) is related to the merger, but it’s a separate transaction,” Coon said. “Really, what it boils down to is we’re both in those markets, Sterling and Umpqua, and there’s a threshold of the market share (in Coos and Douglas counties). We would have exceeded that if we

Purchase overlaps with, but separate from, Sterling Bank, Umpqua Bank merger both operated in those markets.” The six South Coast Sterling branches being sold to Banner will be rebranded as Banner, not Umpqua. Sterling customers can continue to use their checks and debit cards without interruption until they receive new ones from

Banner early this summer. Passwords and PINs will stay the same, as will online features and services. Umpqua Bank currently has branches in Coos Bay, North Bend, Coquille, Myrtle Point, Bandon and Reedsport. makes This merger Umpqua the largest community bank on the West Coast. In addition, a $10 million community foundation will be formed. All other Sterling customers will see the Umpqua brand now that the merger is complete. “We do anticipate some consolidation but we’ve not made any decisions at this time,” Coon said of the

Sterling-Umpqua merger. “There’s many, many, many decisions yet to be made, including the timeline around our systems conversions.” Once the two systems are integrated, customers may see changes, but that’s still a year away, Coon said. For more information, stop by your local branch or call customer care at 800650-7141. Reporter Chelsea Davis can be reached at 541-2691222, ext. 239, or by email at chelsea.davis@theworldlink.com. Follow her on Twitter: @ChelseaLeeDavis.

Mentors help minority companies accelerate growth BY JOYCE M. ROSENBERG AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Mel Gravely says his construction company might not exist today if he didn’t have mentors to guide it. Gravely’s company, TriVersity, joined a program called a minority business accelerator even before he bought a controlling interest in the Cincinnati-based company in 2006. It helped the company get started and win contracts that have helped Triversity’s revenue double. “I don’t make any move at all without getting the input of the accelerator,” Gravely says. Minority business accelerators have launched in a handful of metropolitan areas in recent years as local businesses, chambers of commerce and economic development groups work to create more jobs and improve the quality of life in their regions. The Cincinnati accelerator, created by the Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber in 2003, has inspired officials and business people in the Greenville, S.C.; Charlotte, N.C., and Newark, N.J. areas to start similar programs. A key goal of the accelerators is to help minority

AP Photo/Al Behrman

In this Jan. 22, 2014 photo,Tillie Hidalgo Lima, chief executive officer of Best Upon Request, a concierge services provider, left, works with marketing director Jessica Lima Bollin in their offices in Cincinnati.A mentoring program created by the Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber called a minority business accelerator has helped Lima get contracts with Fifth Third Bank Corp. and the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. owned-companies win contracts with large companies. Despite the rapid growth in the number of minorityowned businesses — over 45 percent between 2002 and 2007, according to the Census Bureau — they struggle to get business with major companies. Many don’t have the ability to fulfill million-dollar contracts, something the accelerators aim to change. But there’s also a lingering perception that minority companies can’t do the job or can’t do it

well, according to business owners and professors who study minority business. And although many minority companies can fulfill a contract, there’s still resistlarge at many ance companies to taking risks with a new supplier, no matter who owns it. “Most people are not racist. They just don’t like to change,” says Crystal German, vice president of economic inclusion at the Cincinnati Chamber. Accelerators help compa-

State sees largest monthly job gain in 8 years In March, Oregon had the largest monthly job gain in more than eight years, thanks in large part to the construction industry. The state’s seasonally adjusted monthly job gain was 7,500 in March, the highest since 9,300 jobs were added in November 2005. The Oregon Employment Department attributes the increase to rapid gains in construction employment and an end to overall government job declines. Seasonally adjusted construction employment broke through 80,000 in March, the first time since January 2009. That’s close to construction employment levels in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Total construction employment shot up by

1,800 in March alone, following a gain of 1,300 in February. Last month, most construction job gains were in building equipment contractors, which added 1,400 and was up 2,600 in the past 12 months. That industry is made up of electrical, plumbing, and heating, ventilation and air conditioning contractors. Other major industries also added around 1,000 jobs in March. Leisure and hospitality bounced back from a onemonth dip, adding 2,100 in March. Retail trade financial activities, professional and business services, private educational services, and health care and social assistance each added around 1,000 jobs.

The only industry showing a large loss in March was wholesale trade, which shed 1,000 jobs. Seasonally adjusted nonfarm payroll employment grew by 46,300 jobs (2.8 percent) since March last year. Within the private sector, construction grew at the fastest pace, having added 7,800 jobs (10.8 percent) since March 2013. Oregon’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was 6.9 percent in March, essentially unchanged from 6.8 percent in February and significantly below 8 percent in March 2013. Oregon’s labor force increased for the fifth consecutive month in March, following nearly two years of monthly declines.

nies speed up growth. The programs focus on a small number of companies that have shown potential to succeed and create jobs. To be in the Cincinnati program, a company must already be well-established, have annual revenue of $1 million or more and have a business plan that shows it can grow significantly in the next two to five years. The goal is to help small companies grow into bigger ones so they can make a greater contribution to local economies.

“The theory is that the largest companies have the greatest potential to employ people, generate tax revenues, make charitable contributions and overall drive the economy,” German says. Mentors at the accelerators act as advisers, meeting with company owners, helping them improve operations and build strategies. They also connect owners with big customers. Large corporations provide contract opportunities, mentoring or both. In Cincinnati, Fortune 500 members Macys Inc. and Procter & Gamble Co. are among those that have given more business to minority companies. “What we do is try and not only provide counsel for the accelerator, but also connect the dots, the needs of our company with those of suppliers that are coming up in their ability to deal with P&G and Macy’s,” says Amy Hanson, a Macy’s vice president and head of the accelerator’s leadership council. In Greenville, Ava Smith has enrolled in the accelerator there because she’s being approached by companies all over the U.S. and she wants to be sure she can handle all the new business that comes her way. The program is in its first year.

More job vacancies, but fewer applicants this winter Oregon businesses reported 32,700 job vacancies this winter — 10,000 more than they did last year. The Oregon Employment Department recently completed the Job Vacancy Survey. Employers reported that more than half of their vacancies were difficult to fill. In turn, many began offering higher average wages to attract more applicants. The average wage offer for a vacancy this winter was $16.05, 74 cents higher than the prior year. There are more vacancies, but there are also fewer unemployed competing for those jobs. In January, 146,600 Oregonians were unemployed, which equates to around four unemployed people for each private sector vacancy. A year ago, that ratio was 8-1. This spike in job vacancies occurred in businesses with fewer than 100 employees. Businesses with 100 or more employees had essentially the same number of vacancies as they did last winter. Food preparation and serving workers and production workers topped the list of occupations with vacancies, with more than 4,000 apiece. Every region of Oregon had more vacancies this year than last.

Medicine only helps if you take it properly. And adhering to an exact schedule of what to take, and when, can be challenging for patients who are forgetful or need to take several medications. Doctors warn about the consequences and urge patients to use various techniques, such as using divided pill boxes or putting their pill bottles beside their toothbrush as a reminder to take their morning and bedtime medicines. Still, only about half of patients take medication as prescribed, resulting in unnecessary hospital admissions and ER visits that cost the U.S. health care system an estimated $290 billion a year. To help combat the problem, many doctors are trying a more high-tech approach: recommending They’re smartphone apps that send reminders to patients to take their medications and record when they take each one. “I think it’s going to become pretty standard” for doctors to recommend them, said Dr. Michael A. Weber, a cardiologist at SUNY Downstate Medical Center. Weber began apps to recommending patients a few months ago and already has seen better lab results from a few using them. "Some people say, ‘That’s a great idea,’” Weber said. “Even ones who claim they’re conscientious, like the reminders.” He said the apps are particularly helpful for patients with symptomless conditions, such as high blood pressure or high cholesterol. Those patients are less likely to regularly take their medications than someone with pain or an infection. “I don’t think they’re going to change the world,” Weber said, though he recognizes benefit of apps. Even so, he said smartphone apps won’t do much to help people who simply don’t like taking medicine, fear side effects or can’t afford their prescriptions.

Small businesses in limbo again on tax breaks JOYCE M. ROSENBERG AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Small businesses are in limbo as they wait for Congress to make decisions that could save them a lot of money. Bills in Congress would extend tax deductions widely used by small businesses making equipment or property purchases. One, known as the Section 179 deduction, has shrunk to a maximum $25,000 this year from $500,000 in 2013. Another, called bonus depreciation, expired at the end of last year. The deductions are a big deal for small companies, saving them thousands or even millions of dollars on capital investments. But because Congress decides every year how big the deductions will be, owners can’t plan their equipment budgets until lawmakers vote. And in recent years, worried about the ballooning federal deficit, Congress has put off those votes, sometimes until late in the year. The annual uncertainty hurts small businesses looking for a break when their combined federal and state tax rates run as high as 40 percent, says Doug Bekker, a certified public accountant with the firm BDO in Grand Rapids, Mich. They don’t know if they should make the purchase in the current year or defer it. And as the economy gets stronger and businesses are more profitable, they’re concerned about tax bills. “If you talk to the typical small business out there, there’s a very high level of frustration,” Bekker says.


C2 •The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

Bulbs, yes, but no food for deer See Page C3

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White walls? The trick is choosing the right white BY BETH J. HARPAZ The Associated Press

NEW YORK — So you want to paint a room white. Sounds easy, until you go to the hardware store to buy paint and discover there are dozens of whites to choose from. Many have familiar yet poetic names that conjure up ever-so-slightly different hues: cream, pearl, vanilla, snow, chalk, ivory, jasmine, bone. But the closer you look, the more confusing the choices are. You want a plain, basic white, but the purest white on the color chart looks a little harsh next to all those soft shades with just a hint of something else — beige, gray, peach, rose, yellow or the palest-ever blue or green. Often people default to white because they don’t want strong colors in their home. But as it turns out, “it’s harder to choose white than any other color,” said Sharon Grech, a color design expert at Benjamin Moore Paints. She says Benjamin Moore alone offers more than 150 whites, and “when people are choosing white, I see more people unhappy or making a mistake or being shocked at the color than when they choose other colors.” And watch out if you go with a pure white untinted by any other hue. Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute, which maintains color standards, says “the purity and cleanliness” of the purest whites “can also make them feel very sterile and cold. And you can literally get eyestrain from too much dazzling white. So you’ve got to be cautious. Most people don’t want to live with hospital white.”

The Associated Press Photos

The grayed undertone in the wall color adds a cooling effect to balance the warmth in the gilded accessories A room painted with several different shades of white, with a warmer and antique wood furnishings. Consumers often say they want to use white paint in order to avoid strong colwhite on the wall inset to punctuate the classic trim detail and add to ors, but there are dozens of whites available, making it a challenging color to use. the formal feel of the space. the ceiling, a semi-gloss or high gloss can look “spectacular” in the right space, It’s harder to choose white than any she said. James Martin is an archiother color. tectural color consultant Sharon Grech whose company, the Color color design expert at Benjamin Moore Paints People, designs colors for buildings. He says “if you’re going to have white, you want to use a warm white — More so than with other The paint sheen makes a yellow white, peachy white, colors, whites are also more difference too, whether rosy white. Anything you live influenced by colors around matte — a flat paint — or a with, you want it to be them, so Grech says it’s cru- shiny high-gloss. One rec- warm.” It’s especially imporcial to try a sample to see ommended mix is a tant in an old house: “If you how it looks in the room. Buy semi-gloss trim with matte use a warm white, you’ll see a pint and paint a 2-by-2- on the walls. all the wonderful details in foot board that you can move And don’t forget the ceil- the surrounding woodwork your home. ing. “More people are much better,” he said. around “Sometimes the sun hits it thinking of the ceiling as a He adds that “white kills one way or another at differ- fifth wall,” Grech said. art. When you put a piece of ent times of day, or it looks “Think about it in terms of art against a white wall, it different against the rug, or all the rooms that white is isolates the painting so it you realize it’s got a lot of going to be flowing through becomes like a postage pink in it or green in it,” she on the ceiling.” stamp — a thing in a box. If said. “It might look totally Most people want flat you put the same painting different in the morning paint on the ceiling, but if against a colored wall, it than at night.” you want to bring focus to eliminates those boundaries,

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the hues around it. And if you’re color-challenged and unsure whether the white you’re eyeing is more on the rosy side or the orange side, follow it in the fan deck from its palest iteration to its deepest, to see its true undertone. Warm tints include red, orange, yellow, and offshoots like peach and apricot, but if you want to cool a room off, go for colors like blue and purple. In between are the neutrals — taupe, gray, beige. And don’t get overwrought about the choices. “I think most people have more judgment than they think they do,” Eiseman said. “You look at something, you have a doubt about it because your eye is telling you something is off here. Or you look at it and it pleases you. In the end, it’s your eye and your comfort level.”

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pulls the colors out of the painting, and brings the painting to life.” Martin doesn’t like white walls, though he’ll use offwhite in a ceiling. He cautions that bright white trim and a bright white ceiling will make other colors look brighter than they would if you were using an off-white. What can work, he says, “if you really like white,” is to choose a warm white for walls in a flat sheen, then high-gloss trim the same color. “It’s a very sexy, subtle thing to do,” he said. Don’t pick colors online, advises Martin, because they can be distorted. But there is an art to studying the paper fan deck of paint colors in the store. Bring a white piece of paper with a square cut out so you can focus on the color you’re considering without being influenced by

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Saturday, April 19,2014 • The World • C3

Real Estate-Finance

Reverse mortgages: Legitimate or scam? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Are reverse mortgages a smart way to enjoy your golden years or a scheme to line the pockets of unscrupulous companies? Some senior citizens have found the latter to be true, which is reason enough to arm yourself with more information on the topic. Reverse mortgages allow homeowners 62 and older to borrow money against the value of their homes and not pay it back until they move out or pass away. The number of these loans continue to decline, but the rate of default is at a record high 9.4 percent, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. And the default is attributed, in some cases, to dishonest lending practices. Know the ins and outs of reverse mortgages and their potential impact on your finances before deciding

explaining the risks. Others leave widows without a home after pressuring them to leave their name off the deed-only to face foreclosure after their spouse passes away.

whether or not to pursue one.

The facts Reverse mortgages are low-interest, federally regulated loans that allow senior homeowners to convert a portion of the value of their home into tax-free cash. Seniors can opt for a lump sum payment, monthly payments, a line of credit or a customized plan to fit their needs. Although reverse mortgages require no monthly payments, they still leave the homeowner responsible to maintain the home, pay real estate property taxes and carry homeowners insurance for the life of the loan.

Don’t be wooed Some unscrupulous lenders are swaying seniors into risky mortgage deals through persuasion. Be on the lookout for deceptive sales pitches and high-pressure tactics. If you are considering a reverse mortgage and feel pressured by your lender to take prompt action, step back and consult with a housing specialist. These professionals, as well as regulators and elder-care advocates, can help walk you through your options. It’s always best to make major financial decisions at a slow, thoughtful pace. If you feel pressured to make a quick decision, that’s a bad sign.

The scam Some lenders who offer reverse-mortgages attach fees to them that many seniors find difficult to take on. Some offer false hope of financial freedom without

Put your money in dumb luck Looking back on it, I realize all my best investments have been accidental. Take real estate. I’ve doubled my money on every house I ever bought — not because they were especially astute investments, but because of sheer dumb luck. OK, it was a little astute. I always looked for houses that were underpriced because they were fixeruppers (sometimes VERY fixer-uppers) and had what the real estate folks call “motivated sellers.” They wanted out, and they wanted out now! The truth is I never would have been happy with a house that already had been fixed. Where’s the handy fun in that? I never even looked at “finished” houses. As far as I’m concerned, a house is just a great big toy — each carpeted floor wants to be hardwood, each kitchen and bath cries out for updatlandscape each ing, languishes from unimaginative design and benign neglect. So a lot of the money I made at resale was the result of what I consider play. The rest was thanks to inflation. Not spending money is the same as earning it in my book. Consider something as simple as my garden tools. I got most of them cheap at a Saturday afternoon house auction the spring after I bought the old-old house. They all work just as well now as on the day I brought them home 30 years ago. I haven’t spent money on rakes or shovels since. I got a similar return on a garden cart I built from a pink kiddie bicycle I picked up at a police auction. The unhappy little girl whose dad lost out to my higher bid never knew I wanted it only for the wheels and tires. I pulled them off and mounted them on a 1⁄4 inchthick plywood box with a handle and immediately sentenced the cart to a life of hauling around topsoil, gravel and wood chip mulch. Again, it’s 30 years later, and the cart and I are still rolling along. The leftover plywood, by the way, wound up as a three-piece bed liner for my pickup. Although I had to modify those parts some when I replaced that original truck, I’m still using them whenever I need to haul

blood’s high iron content, but there’s no going back. Finally, behind the glass doors of my bookcases are my dragons — glass dragons, wooden dragons, crystal dragons, brass dragons, tin dragons, plastic dragon toys that wind up and lumber around. I’ve been collecting them since I was in high school. As a matter of fact, I’ve been collecting them since I bought a little bronze helmet with a dragon crest for 50 cents at a house auction (yes, I used to go to a lot of auctions) just because I thought it was cute. Years — and many, many dragons — later I learned my little 50-cent bronze had been a pre-war Japanese naval award. And it was worth $265. That’s a 530 percent return on what was a purely accidental investment. If I ever sell it.

something that might scratch the bed. Cooking is my main nonwoodworking hobby, and I w e n t through HOUSE several sets of pots and pans before I got to cast-iron cookware. It’s been more than 40 years since that STEVE nine-piece set came in BATIE the mail (for $29.95, if I remember right!). I’ve had them hanging in the kitchens of a dozen apartments and all the houses I’ve owned. Twice I had to build special racks to accommodate them.

WORKS

My doctor warns they’re probably what’s behind my

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The Associated Press

Bulbs, yes, but no food for deer Many small bulbs are deer proof

BY LEE REICH The Associated Press

Actually, once you segue over into the world of small bulbs, you open the door to a slew of flowers that both naturalize and are passed over by hungry deer. Some are also the first harbingers of spring: Snowdrop and glory of the snow often bloom right through the snow, the former with white blossoms, the latter in white, pink or blue. Each of winter aconite’s yellow blossoms, also appearing in very early spring, is cradled in handshaped leaves, decorative in their own right well after the blossoms dry up. After this early show subsides, striped squill, also known as puschkinia, could share the stage with muscari, both blooming fairly early. The loose, pale blue clusters of striped squill won’t do for the garden what Darwin tulips do — or would do if the deer wouldn’t eat them — but they are welcome nonetheless. Crown imperial is a deerproof bulb that could provide the elegance of tulips. The stalks shoot skyward 2 to 3 feet and then are capped by a tuft of leaves encircled below by a “crown” of downwardpointing red or yellow flowers. Crown imperial’s relatives, Persian lily and guinea hen flower, are also passed over by deer and are beautiful in a more relaxed rather than regal manner. English bluebells and

Chomping down on a rosette of freshly emerging tulip leaves is just the thing to drive away winter doldrums — for deer. Crocuses probably taste almost as good to them. There’s no need, though, for us humans to forsake the blossoms of spring bulbs; there are plenty that don’t appeal to deer. Daffodils, for example. Deer won’t eat them. So plant daffodils to your heart’s content without any worry that their tops will be chomped off before the flowers even unfold. Hyacinths also don’t particularly appeal to deer. Although hyacinths were among the most fashionable flowers in the 18th century, they’re not among the most popular bulbs now. Perhaps it’s because they’re a little stiff and formal, so don’t blend well with currently popular naturalistic landscapes. Still, if you’ve got a place for them, go ahead and plant them and don’t worry about deer upsetting your design. Equally deer proof and, in this case, easily integrated into naturalistic plantings, are grape hyacinths, or muscari. These tiny bulbs are impervious to cold, and spread to eventually blanket the ground with popsicle sticks packed with pure white, violet, or deep blue flowers.

Oregon Coast Home Finder A weekly advertising supplement published by The World Advertising Department

C O N TA C T U S The World Newspaper PO BOX 1840 Coos Bay, OR 97420

HOW TO PLACE ADVERTISING Phone: 269-1222 Fax: 267-0294

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE: All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise” any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people who have security custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on and equal opportunity basis.

Enjoy Springing Into a New Home! REDUCED!

2054 Stover Ln.,, Myrtle y Point Completely remodeled 2 bedroom, 1 bath, large windows, newer roof, new electrical, new flooring. g Comfortable and inviting home, lots of room for garden. Hillside setting with valley view, located across from greenbelt on quiet, dead end street. Nice garden/shop. Appliances included in sale. MLS#13204565

CLASSIC COLONIAL!

$99,000

1855 McPherson, North Bend 4 bedroom, 1½ bath, th, 1760 sqft. solid old 2-story Colonial next to the North Bend Post Office. Has original flooring, bay view and nice secluded back yard. Would make a great professional office.

MLS#13342142

$119,000

1923 Broadway,North Bend

BARGAIN!

Nice, clean lean 1768 sqft. 4 bedroom, 1½ bath near the airport and 7-11 in North Bend. 2 bedrooms upstairs and 2 in the daylight basement. Garage and covered patio with nice,, mostly fenced backyard. Detached garage/shop. Walk to Safeway, Pony Village and Rite-Aid.

93152 Southport Ln., Coos Bay $225,000

MLS# 14371634

Even as spring rolls into summer, there are colorful bulbs that can make deer look elsewhere for a meal. Flowering onions — alliums — fill this time slot, mostly appearing as pastel pompoms atop slender stalks. If you’re unfamiliar with the ornamental, flowering onions, take a look at chives when they come into bloom. Now imagine those blossoms in deep blue, or in pink, even yellow. And rather than golfball size clusters of flowers, imagine flower heads the size of volleyballs, or baseballsize clusters sending out thin streamers of male flowers like fireworks. These are some of the variations on the basic allium flower theme. This sampling of bulbs should be sufficient to convince you that deer need not reduce your spring landscape to a monochrome of green. After once watching deer munch the leaves off a friend’s garlic plants, I do hesitate to recommend any plant as completely deerproof. Still, planting the above-mentioned bulbs generally sends out the signal: No food here, deer.

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

1110 Alabama Street, Bandon, OR 97411 Office: (541) 347-9444 or toll free: 1-800-835-9444 Website: www.bandonhomes.com

Peaceful setting overlooking your own wetland! Detached garage along with an RV/woodworking shop with lots of work space. Fruit trees, garden plots, blueberries. Come enjoy the country!

Deer also don’t enjoy onions

Contents are prepared by the Advertising Department with contributions from local housing industry representatives. Opinions expressed by contributors belong to the writers and may not represent official views of their employers or professional associations. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced in any manner without the specific written permission of the publisher.

Fred Gernandt, Broker Cell: (541) 290-9444

10 Acres Close to Town!

wood hyacinth, both botanically squills, share midseason bloom with crown imperial. These two squills are perfect for naturalizing and brightening the dappled shade of a midspring woodland.

E.L. EDWARDS REALTY II, INC. MLS#14518177

$119,900

Now serving Bandon, Coquille & Myrtle Point.

Randy Hoffine principal broker

Donna Opitz broker

791 Commercial Ave., Coos Bay • (541) 269-5263 www.PacificPropertiesTeam.com

Mark Hodgins, Licensed Oregon Real Estate Broker  Cell: 541-297-3404 Kelly Walton, Licensed Oregon Real Estate Broker  Cell: 541-294-2844 Property Management & Real Estate Sales Kris Thurman, Principal Broker - Owner 2707 Broadway, North Bend, OR Buy, Sell, Rent, We do it all... with great results!


C4 •The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

Header

Renew your faith this Spring

WORSHIP DIRECTORY Share your message 541-267-6278 Christian

Grace International

Pentecostal of God

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH

EASTIDE CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY

LIGHTHOUSE TEMPLE PC OF G

Rev. Betty and Russell Bazzell, Pastors

Church 541-888-6114 Pastor 541-888-6224

Assemblies of God FAMILY WORSHIP CENTER Building a Christ Centered Family Sunday School............................................9:30 am Sunday Morning Worship..........................10:30 am Wednesday Kid’s Program/Youth/Adult ......7:00 pm P.O. Box 805  2050 Lincoln St., North Bend 541-756-4838  www.nbtwc.org

2420 Sherman, North Bend  541-756-5555 Sunday School............................................9:30 am Praise and Worship...................................10:45 am Ladies Bible Study .........................Thurs. 10:00 am Children’s Worship and Nursery Care

190 D Street, Coos Bay  541-808-0822

Morning Worship ......................................10:30 am Wednesday Bible Study (Youth & Adult)......6:30 pm

South Empire Blvd. & Olesan Lane

Pastor Ivan Sharp

Sunday School ................................................ 9:30 am Sunday Morning Worship .............................. 10:30 am Sunday Evening Worship ................................. 6:00 pm Monday Men & Women’s Meeting ................... 6:30 pm Tuesday SAFE Meeting .................................... 7:00 pm Wednesday Teen Meeting................................ 7:00 pm Thursday Mid-Week Services.......................... 7:00 pm

Pastors Sharon Kay & Jim Womack

“We preach the Gospel as it is to people as they are.”

Baptist

Christian Science

Jewish

Presbyterian

EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY

CONGREGATION MAYIM SHALOM

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, N. BEND Harrison & Vermont St. (East side of Pony Village Mall

282 W 6th St., Coquille

444 S. Wall, Coos Bay  541-888-3294

Sharing Life!

Sunday Service & Sunday School.............10:00 am

Shabbat Friday, June 19th, 7:00 pm.

Sunday School............................9:30 am Worship.....................................10:45 am

Christian Science Reading Room

Led by Rabbi Jackie Brodsky

Adjacent to church - Open after services, or by Appt.

541-751-9059

541-396-2921 ∙ www.ebccoquille.org Pastors Mark Elefritz & Aaron Finley

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH You are invited to join us in celebrating the resurrection from the dead of Jesus Christ.

First Baptist Church 1140 S 10th Street, Coos Bay Sunday, April 20, 2014 10:00am Worship (Left at 10th and Johnson to the top of the hill)

541-267-2439 Preaching from the Word of God *Readers Theater * Children and Adult Tone Chime Choir * EASTER MESSAGE

For more information call 541-266-0470

Pastor J. L. Coffey 2080 Marion Ave., North Bend  541-756-6544

www.firstbaptistnb.org Sunday School................................................. 9:45 am Sunday Worship Service...............11:00 am & 6:00 pm Wednesday SAFE Addiction Recovery Program ...... 6:30 pm Wednesday Bible Study ................................... 7:00 pm

Lutheran

COOS BAY CHURCH OF CHRIST

SKYLINE BAPTIST CHURCH

Sunday School........................ 9:00 am & 10:30 am Sunday Worship...................... 9:00 am & 10:30 am Wednesday AWANA.....................................6:30 pm

Reformed

“Building the Church you read about in your Bible” Bob Lentz, Minister (541) 267-6021 775 W. Donnelly Ave. Bible School Classes .............................................................9:45 am Evening Worship ...................................................................6:00 pm Morning Worship..................................................................10:45 am Wednesday Prayer & Study ...................................................7:00 pm Thursday Night Youth Group .................................................7:00 pm

CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH & SCHOOL 1835 N. 15th, Coos Bay  541-267-3851

Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod Pastor Quintin Cundiff Sunday Worship (Spring/Summer).........................................8:30 am Sunday Bible study for all ages ...........................................10:00 am Good Friday Service ..............................................................7:00 pm

Signing for Hearing Impared *** Also, Nursery Avialable

2761 Broadway, North Bend  541-756-4844

Our school now enrolling preschool through 7th grade

HOPE COVENANT REFORMED CHURCH Pastor: Ron Joling  541-396-4183 580 E. 9th St., Coquille, Oregon

Sunday School...................................9:45 am Morning Service ..............................11:00 am Afternoon Service ..............................4:30 pm

www.clcs-cb.org

Sunday Bible Study................................................................9:30 am Sunday Worship...................................................................10:30 am Sunday Life Group .................................................................6:00 pm Wednesday Bible Study .........................................................7:00 pm

FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH

Where You Can Find A Friend

Salvation Army

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 2741 Sherman, Ave., North Bend Pastor Sue Seiffert 541-756-4035

SOUTHERN BAPTIST

“A Christ Centered, Biblically Based, Family Oriented, Dynamic Fellowship” 3451 Liberty St., North Bend  541-756-3311 (1 block off Newmark behind Boynton Park) www.sbcnb.org David Woodruff, Sr. Pastor - Tim Young, Adult & Family Ministries Josh Kintgh, Youth & Children, Brenda Langlie - Childrens Director

Sunday School............................................9:15 am Sunday Morning Worship..........................10:30 am Men & Woman’s Breakfast Bible Study (Friday) ....6:30 pm Combined Youth Group (Sunday) .... 6 pm - 7:30 pm

Church of Christ

CHURCH OF CHRIST

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF NORTH BEND

See details at www.mayimshalom.us

123 Ocean Blvd., Coos Bay

541-756-4155

Community Churches

Office Hours ............................................Mon. - Fri. 8:45 - 11:45 am Sunday School.......................................................................9:15 am Adult Study ............................................................................9:00 am Worship (childcare provided)...............................................10:30 am faithlutheran-nb.org Home of Cartwheels Preschool ~ faithlutheran_nb@frontier.com

HAUSER COMMUNITY CHURCH 69411 Wildwood Dr., 7 Miles North of North Bend Staff: John Adams, Bill Moldt, Rob Wright, Rob Douglass, Nancy Goodman Radio broadcast Sunday @ 8:30 am (K-LIGHT 98.7 fm)

Sunday Worship Celebration... 9:00 am & 11:00 am Sunday School............................................9:00 am Nursery provided for all services. Affiliated with Village Missions

541-756-2591

Eckankar

GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN ELCA

THE SALVATION ARMY Worship & Service Center

1155 Flanagan, Coos Bay  541-888-5202 Lieutenants Kevin and Heather Pope, Corps Officers

NEW SCHEDLUE Free Kids Meal............................................9:00 am Christian Worship .......................................9:30 am Sunday Morning Worship..........................10:45 am

1290 Thompson Rd., Coos Bay (5 Blocks East of Hospital) Pastor Jon Strasman - 541-267-2347

6:30 AM - Sunrise Warship @ Sunset Beach 11:00 AM - Festive Easter @ Gloria Dei

Seventh-Day Adventist

All are Welcome (Nursery available for all services)

COOS BAY SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST 2175 Newmark, Coos Bay

541-756-7413

Easter Celebration Service

ECKANKAR

Sunday, April 20th 9am & 10:30am Sunday School Classes for all ages Nursery/Toddler Care Available

“How can I tell God is Listening to me?”

Methodist

Sabbath School Bible Class ........9:30 am Worship Service........................10:45 am

Special celebration of the Light and Sound of God Sunday, April 13th, 11:00 am - Noon Coos Bay Library, Cedar Room

Catholic

Pastor Ken Williams

Call 541-756-2255 ∙ 1-888-LOVE-GOD www.eckankar.org

THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCHES of North Bend and Coos Bay First UMC, North Bend

Episcopal

123 Ocean Blvd. SE Coos Bay, OR 97420 (541) 756-6959 fumcnorthbend@gmail.com  northbendumc.org

HOLY REDEEMER -NORTH BEND

2250 16th St.  541-756-0633 (West off Broadway) Saturday Vigil..............................................4:00 pm Sunday Mass .......................... 8:00 am & 12:00 pm Confessions: Saturday 3-3:45 pm or by appointment Daily Mass: Wednesday ................................. 5:00 pm Thursday & Friday........................................... 9:00 am

Sunday Worship..........................................9:30 am

EMMANUEL EPISCOPAL CHURCH 4th & Highland, Coos Bay  541-269-5829 Rev. Stephen A. Tyson, Rector

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST (S.C.U.U.F.) DIVERSE BELIEFS -ONE FELLOWSHIP

First UMC, Coos Bay

Sunday Services........................... 7:30 & 10:00 am Sunday School Classes ..............................9:45 am Holy Eucharist with Healing................. 12 pm Noon

Unitarian Universalist

123 Ocean Blvd. SE Coos Bay, OR 97420 (541) 267-4410 officemanager@coosbayumc.org www.coosbayumc.org

Liberal Religious Organization 10:00 am Sundays at 580 Newmark Ave., Coos Bay

Sunday Worship........................................11:00 am

541-266-7335 for more information and childcare arrangements

Children’s Sermon & Nursery Care

ST. MONICA - COOS BAY 357 S. 6th St.

Foursquare

Saturday Vigil..............................................5:30 pm Sunday Mass .......................... 8:30 am & 11:00 am Spanish Mass .............................................1:00 pm Confessions: Saturday 3:30 - 5 pm or by appointment Daily Mass: Tues: 5:30 pm Wed - Fri: 12:00 pm

BAY AREA FOURSQUARE CHURCH

NAZARENE - BAY AREA

UNITY BY THE BAY

466 Donnelly (across from the new Coos Bay Fire Station) Glorifying, Proclaiming and Showing Christ to all Pastors: David & Marilyn Scanlon

Located in North Bend at 1850 Clark St. (Behind Perry Electric) Sr. Pastor Ron Halvorson

“Honoring diversity and the many paths to God. A spiritual community to come home to...”

HOLY WEEK:

(541) 269-1821

Sunday Celebration Service......................10:00 am

Holy Thursday Services ..............................7:00 pm Good Friday Services..................................7:00 pm Easter Vigil Services SATURDAY .................8:00 pm

Sunday School....(all ages through Adult)............. 9:00 am - 9:45 am Sunday Worship....(Nursery & Children’s Church Provided).......10:00 am

Sunday School.......................................................................9:30 am Sunday Morning Worship.....................................................10:45 am Sunday Evening Worship .......................................................6:00 pm

MASSES:

Holy Redeemer Catholic Church

Nazarene

We also have small group ministries meeting throughout the week. E-mail: Ba4@ba4.org Website: www.ba4.org

2250 16th St. (off Broadway), North Bend 541-756-0633 - Parish Office & Fr. Jim Graham

Unity Worldwide Ministries

NURSERY • CHILDREN’S CHURCH • YOUTH PROGRAMS BIBLE STUDIES • CARE GROUPS For information or directions call 541-756-2004

April 12th & 13th Palm Sunday Masses: Saturday 4:00 pm Sunday 8:00 am and 12 noon Sacrament of Penance

Tuesday, April 15th 7:00 pm

2100 Union ~ North Bend  541-751-1633 Office/Bookstore M-W-F 10:00 am to 2:00 pm Call Yellow Cab for a $1 (each way) ride to Unity By The Bay.

April 17th Holy Thursday Mass: 7:00 pm April 18th Good Friday 12:00 pm - Ecumenical Service at Gloria Dei Lutheran 3:00 pm - Station of the Cross 7:00 pm - Good Friday Service

April 19th Easter Vigil Mass: 8:00 pm (No 4 pm mass) April 20th Easter Sunday Mass: 8:00 am & 12:00 noon


Help available for family through a difficult time Dear Mary: I have been a fan for more than 15 years. Thanks to following your advice over the years, we have paid off our house, and we are currently two car l o a n s f r o m EVERYDAY CHEAPSKATE bc eo imn -g pletely d e b t f r e e . Recently m y teenage daughter was diagnosed Mary with carcinoid Hunt c a n c e r, and the bills are piling up. We are having to travel back and forth to Vanderbilt hospital in Nashville, and we live in South Carolina. Do you know where we can get help with these expenses? There are only a few doctors that treat this kind of cancer. I appreciate your help and advice. Thanks, and God bless. — Barb, email Dear Barb: Take a look at “Local Organizations and Funds” (childrenshospital.vanderbilt.org/services.php?mid= 7786) at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital website. You’ll find many resources for families in your situation, including Jade’s Fund, which helps families of children undergoing cancer treatment at Children’s Hospital with everyday living expenses that typically fall behind when a child is diagnosed with a lifethreatening illness, requiring a parent to stop working. Hopefully these resources will help you hope and help as you face this challenging time. I am so sorry you are facing this challenge. My prayers are for your daughter’s soon and full recovery from this horrible disease. Thanks for being such a loyal follower. Dear Mary: I read in this column about Adella in Minn., whose daughter is looking for college scholarships and loans. I admire anyone who is working two jobs and getting a college education at the same time. Could you give her my email, if shed like to contact me? I am a member of a philanthropic organization that helps to empower women to get an education. She may qualify, and I’d love the chance to help her. Thanks for all you do. I’ve learned so much! — Bev, email Dear Bev: What a wonderful offer. I’ve forwarded your message and address to Adella, encouraging her to contact you. I hope that she does. I am impressed by your organization’s mission and would love to know more about it when you get an opportunity. Thanks for reaching out to this young woman and her mom. Dear Mary: It’s tax time, and it turns out that for the first time ever I will owe the IRS a lot of money. Should I use my savings to pay my taxes or is there a way to make payments without it being overly, well, taxing? I’ve been planning to use that money to pay off my highinterest credit cards. — Cheryl, Ohio Dea r Ch eryl: While the IRS claims to set up payment plans in certain situations, if there is any way you can avoid that, you should. The last person you want to owe money to is Uncle Sam. Trust me on this. Your taxes should take top priority. Then do whatever it takes (extreme measures as necessary) to immediately and quickly replenish your savings. This is not a lesson you want to ever have to learn again. Mary invites questions at mary@everydaycheapskate.c om, or c/o Everyday Cheapskate, P.O. Box 2099, Cypress, CA 90630. This column will answer questions of general interest, but letters cannot be answered individually. Mary Hunt is the founder of www.DebtProofLiving.com, a personal finance member website. To find out more about Mary and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

Saturday,April 19,2014 • The World • C5

DILBERT

FRANK AND ERNEST

THE BORN LOSER

ZITS

CLASSIC PEANUTS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

ROSE IS ROSE

LUANN

GRIZZWELLS

MODERATELY CONFUSED

KIT ’N’ CARLYLE

HERMAN


C6• The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

Classifieds Theworldlink.com/classifieds

Employment FREE 200 $5.00

201 Accounting $7.00

Payroll - Finance Assistant Salary $3,634 - $4,532 per mo. Applications at 500 Central Ave. 541-269-8912 www.coosbay.org Closes 5pm 5/6/14 EOE

SOUTH COAST LUMBER COMPANY Staff Accountant Immediate opening for highly motivated self starter it fill the Staff Accountant job opening at South Coast Lumber Co. The position involves: account reconciliations, fixed asset management, performing, various analysis, assisting with month-end close, supporting the CFO and Chief Accountant as well as other duties as assigned. Accuracy, confidentiality and comfort using systems are a must. The ideal candidate will have a 4 year accounting degree with a minimum of two years past-college accounting related experience. Experience in the wood products industry is a plus but not required. Pay is commensurate with experience and qualifications. South Coast Lumber offers a very attractive benefits as well as a retirement package. EOE. Send resume’ to South Coast Lumber. Attn: HR Manager. P.O. Box 670, Brookings, OR. 97415

206 Customer Service

207 Drivers

Classified Advertising Customer Service Representative. The primary responsibility of this position will be to advance the success of digital, commercial employment and private party advertising for our daily and weekly newspapers, and our website www.theworldlink.com. Through outbound calling, this position requires someone with the ability to secure advertising while maintaining positive client relations for the long-term. Additional responsibilities will includes, an aptitude to work independently within a supportive team dynamic is a distinction we seek in a candidate for this responsibility. If you possess initiative, are detail-oriented, punctual and have a demonstrated history of effectively meeting deadlines in a timely and accurate manner, then we’d like to hear from you. Position Requirements: Previous sales support, or related field of work. Excellent phone manner, proper grammar/writing skills. Type 30-35 wpm or better. Solid computer aptitude - especially with database programs. The successful candidate must have reliable transportation, a valid drivers’ license, proof of auto insurance and a clean driving record. Cross training and traveling to our weekly newspapers is required. We offer an hourly wage, plus a commission plan, and a benefit package including medical, dental, vision, 401(k), and paid time off. Please apply online at http://www.lee.net/careers.

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE

$12.00 Resumes will be accepted until $12.00 April 30, 2014, for the position of dump truck driver. Resume’ $17.00 includes copies of valid Class A CDL, current medical card and print out of Oregon Driver Record, both work and non-work related. The successful applicant will have a minimum of one year verifiable experience on 12 yard rock truck with at least 6 months pulling trailer; be able to operate a front end loader on occasion; and possess written and oral skills in English. Off-Highway hauling and experience spreading rock; and demonstrated ability to perform other duties and responsibilities related to truck maintenance and safety should be on the resume’. Successful applicants will be contacted to fill out a standard job application. Mail to: Coos Bay Timber Operators, Inc., PO Box G, North Bend, OR 97459; email to cbto.inc@frontier.com; or fax to 541-756-7895

208 Education

The World is seeking another member for our great team of sales professionals. We are looking for an experienced, outgoing, creative, detail-oriented individual to join our team of professional advertising representatives and creative staff. As a sales consultant with The World you will handle an established account list while pursuing new business. You will manage the creation, design and implementation of advertising campaigns as well as identify, create and implement product strategies. You will make multi-media presentations, work with the public and must have a proactive approach to customer service. As part of Lee Enterprises, The World offers excellent earnings potential and a full benefits package, along with a professional and comfortable work environment focused on growth opportunities for employees.

We are an equal opportunity, drug-free workplace and all applicants considered for employment must pass a post-offer drug screen and background/DMV check prior to commencing employment. Please apply online at http://www.lee.net/careers.

211 Health Care Care Giving 225 FULL TIME Accounts Payable Clerk Southern Coos Hospital Experience required. Great work environment, wages, benefits. hrsupport@southerncoos.org 541-347-4515 EOE, Vet Pref & Tobacco-Free

Coquille Valley Hospital is currently taking applications for the following positions. Coder - FT Respiratory Therapist- FT Home Health Manager -FT Home Health Nurse- FT Dietary Aide/ Cook- FT Payment Processing Clerk- FT CNA II- PT

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitations or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

541-267-6278

SALES CONSULTANT

Education Coordinator Coos Historical & Maritime Museum Visit our website www.cooshistory.org for all the details. Check under “Museum News” at the bottom right of the website home page. Applications due by April 22, 2014. No calls please.

Southwestern Oregon Publishing Company a division of Lee Enterprises, is seeking a qualified candidate for a full-time position as a

Commercial Value501Ads

215 Sales

Dump Truck Driver

227 Elderly Care HARMONY HOMECARE “Quality Caregivers provide Assisted living in your home”. 541-260-1788

Business 300 306 Jobs Wanted Interest List for future openings: Independent Contract Newspaper Carrier. Contact Susana Norton at 541-269-1222 ext. 255

ONCE A WEEK DELIVERY The World Link- Free Paper. Contact Susana Norton at 541-269-1222 ext. 255

Please visit our website at www.cvhospital.org or contact Margie Cooper at 541-396-1069 or Fax 541-824-1269 margiec@cvhospital.org

Notices 400

504 Homes for Sale FOR SALE: Coos Bay 3 bdrm 1 bath home on corner lot. Appliances included. New flooring, carpet and kitchen counters plus much more. $119,000. OWC w/ good credit. Call 541-297-4750

510 Wanted NEEDED 2 bed home. Able to pay $600 mo.and Sec. 8 approved. I have a Med. size dog and 2 cats. Call 541-602-9703 or 541-217-8553

Rentals 600 601 Apartments APARTMENTS AVAILABLE Studio Apt. C.B. $395 Lg Studio N.B. $465 2 bedroom C.B. $550 No pets/ no smoking Call for info.

541-297-4834 Willett Investment Properties Coquille: 1 bed 1 bath Apt. $600mo. includes utilities, No pets/smoking. First/last and deposit required. 541-396-1858

601 Apartments

701 Furniture

North Bend One bed. close to shopp$35.00 ing & schools. W/G incl. No $15.00 pets/smoking. $505/$400 dep. 1189 Virginia #3 541-267-0125 or $45.00 541-297-6752

70’s Style Hutch glass doors on top. Storage on bottom $150. 3 Glass Top Tables, 1 Coffee, 2 End Tables $25 set. $15.00 Floral print couch $75. Small entertainment center $25. Small Dining room table w/2 chairs, $25. Large computer chair, $25. Call 541-260-4398

$20.00

5 DAYS CLASSIFIED$55.00 PUBLISHING IS BACK!! Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, $59.95 Thursday & Saturday

FREE: extra long queen foam mattress with a frame that fits a pull-down track in a toy box trailer. 530-515-3870.

5 DAYS CLASSIFIED PUBLISHING IS BACK!! Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday & Saturday

Real Estate/Rentals (Includes Photo)

Merchandise Item

Good

Good

6 lines -5 days $45.00

5 lines - 5 days $8.00

Better

Better

6 lines - 10 days i $55.00

5 lines - 10 days $12.00

Best

Best

(includes boxing) 6 lines - 20 days $69.95

(includes a photo & boxing) 6 lines -15 days $17.00

All ads will appear in The World, Bandon Western World, Umpqua Post, The World link, theworldlink.com and Smart Mobile.

All ads will appear in The World, Bandon Western World, Umpqua Post, The World link, theworldlink.com and Smart Mobile.

Townhouses in a park like setting. Close to lake, swocc & shopping Stove/Fridge/Drapes. W/D Hook ups W/G pd. 3- Bed $490 3-Bed $530. Apply at 324 Ackerman 541-888-4762

604 Homes Unfurnished WANTED: 2 bedroom single level house or duplex.Need a home now, moved in from out of state. Call with any possibilities. 541-808-4114

612 Townhouse/Condo BAYFRONT TOWNHOMES Wooded setting, fireplace, decks, view of bay and bridge. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. Tamarac 541-759-4380

Other Stuff 700 701 Furniture 26ft. Aluminum free standing wheel chair ramp with side rails, deck and hardware. $1900. Electric hospital bed with trapeze and mattress. Like new $1200. 541-572-5974 MY MISTAKE - Queen Mattress, used only 6 days. Very firm, $100 OBO. 541-347-4345.

709 Wanted to Buy Wanted:10 cords of Fir or Hardwood Firewood. Call 541-808-4411

710 Miscellaneous FREE pick up and Recycle old Printer & Computers in North Bend and Coos Bay. Call 541-294-9107 30 Yards of Dark Blue Upholstery. $50. Call 541-269-9075. SMALL BUFFALO HIDE, tanned, very soft, good condition. $100. 530-515-3870.

Recreation/ Sports 725 734 Misc. Goods GUN SHOW North Bend April 19th and 20th North Bend Community Center, 2222 Broadway, NB. Buy-Sell-Trade. Sat. 9am-4pm, Sun.10am-3pm. Admission $5.00. 12 and under free. Info 541-347-2120

402 Auctions Public Auction FULL TIME Surgical Technologist Southern Coos Hospital is growing! Come join our Surgical team. Great work environment, wages, benefits. Moving allowance available hrsupport@southerncoos.org 541-347-4515 EOE, Vet Pref & Tobacco-Free

Storage/Shipping Container Contents 1690 Ocean Blvd SE Coos Bay, OR May 10, 2014 10:00 am, Preview 8:00 a.m. WD AUCTION COMPANY (541)290-7330 or 541-290-0990

403 Found 5 DAYS CLASSIFIED PUBLISHING IS BACK!!

213 General

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday & Saturday

Merchandise under $200 total 4 lines - 3 days - Free Southern Coos Hospital Dietary Dept. needs: 1-Full-time Cook 1-Full-time Dishwasher Great work environment, wages, benefits. hrsupport@southerncoos.org 541-347-4515 EOE, Vet Pref & Tobacco-Free

Found & Found Pets 5 lines - 5 days - Free

Lost & Lost Pets

www.theworldlink.com Your online source for employment & more!

Equal Opportunity Employer/Drug Free Workplace

5 lines - 5 days All free ads will appear in The World, Bandon Western World, Umpqua Post, The World link, theworldlink.com and Smart Mobile.

Diesel Truck Mechanic 5+ yrs exp, Swing Shift. Wage DOE plus benefits. Pick up an application at 400 N. Front St. Coos Bay

404 Lost City Kitty still lost. Last seen off Radar Road. Scared, shy. Please feed & call 297-4497. May be trying to go back to N.Bend

Four Mile Logging, Inc. is seeking a

Processor Operator Health Ins. & retirement available. Please call for application: 541-396-2713. The Oregon Laborers Apprenticeship Program is looking for new applicants interested in a career in construction. These jobs have excellent starting pay, benefits and free trade-related training. Program orientations are scheduled for Monday, April 7th at 6:00 PM and Tuesday, April 8th at 8:00 AM at the Bay Area Labor Center, 3427 Ash St., North Bend. On the web at www.osilaborerstraining.org and facebook.com/orlaborersapprenticeship

Services 425 430 Lawn Care Rod’s Landscape Maintenance Gutter Cleaning, Pressure Washing, Tree Trimming, Trash Hauling and more! Lic. #7884 Visa/MC accepted 541-404-0107

Real Estate 500

Serving Oregon’s South Coast Since 1878 HOME DELIVERY SERVICE: For Customer Service call 541-269-1222 Ext. 247 Office hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-Friday. If your World newspaper fails to arrive by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday or 8 a.m. on Saturday, please call your carrier. If you are unable to reach your carrier, telephone The World at 541-269-9999. RURAL SUBSCRIBERS: Due to The World’ s expansive daily delivery area, rural or remote motor route customers may receive regular delivery later than the times above. Missed deliveries may be replaced the following delivery day. To report missed deliveries, please call 541-269-9999.

an advertising proof is requested in writing and clearly marked for corrections. If the error is not corrected by the Publisher, its liability, if any, shall not exceed the space occupied by the error. Further, the Publisher will reschedule and run the omitted advertisement at advertiser’s cost. All claims for adjustment must be made within seven (7) days of date of publication. In no case shall the Publisher be liable for any general, special or consequential damages.

ADVERTISING POLICY The Publisher, Southwestern Oregon Publishing Co., shall not be liable for any error in published advertising unless

To learn more or to find the right person for your job, visit your local partner at theworldlink.com/jobs 8-27-12


Saturday, April 19,2014 • The World • C7

Market Place 750 753 Bazaars

801 Birds/Fish

901 ATVs

909 Misc. Auto

5 DAYS CLASSIFIED PUBLISHING IS BACK!!

5 DAYS CLASSIFIED PUBLISHING IS BACK!!

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday & Saturday

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday & Saturday

5 DAYS CLASSIFIED PUBLISHING IS BACK!!

Good

Good

5 lines - 5 days $12.00

6 lines - 5 days $15.00

Better

Better

5 lines - 10 days $17.00

(includes photo) 6 lines - 10 days $20.00

Garage Sale / Bazaars Good

Best (includes boxing) 6 lines - 15 days $25.00

Better

Best (includes boxing) 6 lines - 3 days $20.00

All ads will appear in The World, Bandon Western World, Umpqua Post, The World link, theworldlink.com and Smart Mobile.

802 Cats

All ads will appear in The World, Bandon Western World, Umpqua Post, The World link, theworldlink.com and Smart Mobile.

754 Garage Sales Coos Bay: Estate sale, 1209 Embarcadero Circle (Porta Vista Mobil Estates) Sat from 9-4pm. Hunting, Fishing Equip. Camp gear, Antiques and Collectables, Freezer, lots of Misc!

Pets/Animals 800

Auto - Vehicles Boats -Trailers

Kohl’s Cat House Adoptions on site. 541-294-3876

808 Pet Care Pet Cremation 541-267-3131

Your daily classifieds are ON-LINE AT www.theworldlink.com

Best (includes photo & boxing) 6 lines - 15 days $25.00

$6,990

2004 Montana model 2980 RL 5th Wheel, three slide outs. No smoking or pets, $17,500. Call 541-756-3640

$7,990

All ads will appear in The World, Bandon Western World, Umpqua Post, The World link, theworldlink.com and Smart Mobile.

SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS: Find your niche here! Tell them what your business has to offer on the Bulletin Board. Affordable advertising customized just for you! Call

541-269-1222 Ext. 269 to get started today.

1995 19ft. Nash, very clean,easy lift hitch, power tongue jack, new tires, lots of cabinet space. must see to appreciate, $6500. Call 541-267-0871

2004 Honda Civic Hybrid 4dr, Auto, Great Fuel Economy. #B3483A/195417

1996 Honda Accord EXL 4dr Auto, V6, Moonroof, Leather, 55K Miles, 1 Owner. #13287A/212077

$8,990 2008 Toyota Yaris LE Auto, Well Equipped. #B3392D/617466

$11,990

916 Used Pick-Ups 2000 Ford F650 Flatbed Truck, Cumins Engine, 6 Speed, Air Breaks. 26,000 GVWR. $12,800. Call 541-269-5175

$6,990

Pets (Includes a Photo)

(includes boxing) 5 lines - 2 days $15.00

HONDA WORLD

2000 Honda Civic EX 4dr 54K Miles, 5sp, Moonroof. #1400A1/319410

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday & Saturday

5 lines - 1 day $12.00

911 RV/Motor Homes

914 Travel Trailers 1993 CAMPER. Self contained. Indoor/outdoor shower, Electric furnace, Electric jacks, very clean, $4900 OBO. 541-756-1739

915 Used Cars 2006 BMW 3 series. 4 door, Auto, Air, Moon Roof, Stereo, Cruise. Grey w/ Black Leather interior. 86k. $10,995.Call 541-756-5123 or 541-404-8813

‘79 CHEVY HALF TON short bed, lowered, new brakes, transmission, shocks, alternator, battery, upholstery. Very good condition. $4,250 541-366-1293.

O ! UTSMART YOUR COMPETITION Place your ad here and give your business the boost it needs. Call

541-269-1222 Ext. 269 for details

2005 Jeep Liberty 4x4 Low Miles, Auto. #B3495A/216042

$11,990 2007 Toyota Camry LE Auto, 4cyl, Clean. #14063A/218032

! o G

$18,990 2003 Ford F250 4x4 HD Short Wide Crew Cab, V8, Low Miles, XLT. #B3516/B43244

$25,990 2007 Lincoln Navigator L 7 Pass, 4x4, 1 Owner, Luxury, Low Miles. #B3514/319047s

HONDA WORLD 1350 Ocean Blvd., Coos Bay HondaWorld.com 541-888-5588  1-800-634-1054

Your daily classifieds are ON-LINE AT www.theworldlink.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 2014 Aim to reach goals that you can achieve without having to rely on others. In the end, your skills and drive will lead to success. If you are conservative in your spending habits, you will have a very prosperous year. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Don’t waste your time waiting for someone to carry you to victory. You will have to mastermind your own plan and see it through to the end. Persistence will pay off. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — It’s likely that one of your unusual ideas will result in a lucrative business. Use your powers of persuasion to present your case to those in a position to help you advance. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — Don’t let problems at work interfere with your home life. Once you are off the job, make your loved ones your No. 1 priority. They deserve your attention, too. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Don’t make excuses regarding your career. If you don’t remind your superiors of your qualifications and abilities, you may not be considered for promotion. Speak up and be noticed. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Implementing minor changes to your daily habits could reignite your zest for life. If you make the adjustments gradually, you will notice a vast improvement. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — You need to be extremely alert. If you are careless or disorganized, it could result in a minor injury or argument. Pay attention to what you are doing, and avoid unnecessary mishaps. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — You can’t hide your true feelings for long. Get in touch with a trusted friend and have an honest dialogue about your concerns. The longer you wait, the more miserable you will be. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — Fear, doubt and indecision are holding you back. Have faith in your skills and ability. You will get a posi-

tive response if you share your ideas with forward-thinking individuals. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Refrain from putting demands on others. Selfishness and control issues on your part will damage relationships with people you care about. Consideration and mindfulness will be required. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — You have an impressive social conscience, and helping others is an important facet of your personality. Your generosity will attract positive attention. An important relationship is in the offing. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Make a concerted effort to expand your business profile. Organize a function that highlights your abilities. You will maximize your career opportunities if you mingle and network with potential associates. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — Guesswork and speculation will not help you get ahead. Professional changes will be profitable if you make use of input offered by colleagues with a great deal of experience. MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014 Your curiosity will be working on overdrive this year. Items and investments that will improve your future will be made available to you. Your instincts will enable you to make prudent choices. Financial opportunities will come your way, but refrain from making a major investment in someone else’s venture. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — After working hard, you deserve some downtime to relax with friends. A movie or concert could lift your spirits; a day of pampering would help prepare you for your next challenge. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Don’t take unnecessary risks. A joint moneymaking scheme may tempt you, but you should hold back. You will do better by sticking to conservative investments that aren’t dependent on other people. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — Let someone special know how you feel. Miscommunication can cause hurt feelings, but a truthful dialogue will strengthen your relationship. Work as a team.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You will be pleasantly surprised if you choose to join a serious-minded organization.Your long list of accomplishments and hard work will make you understandably proud and will impress your cohorts. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Look before you leap. Although you may have several interests in common with a new acquaintance, you should take time to explore possible problems before you make a promise. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Some family members will try your patience. Avoid unpleasant confrontations. Opt to spend time with peers and to accomplish goals that will build your confidence and brighten your future. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Your curiosity will be stimulated by exotic destinations. Even if a trip is not currently possible, there are many cultural activities you can undertake to quench your thirst for knowledge. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — Don’t let another’s opinion be the reason for a change in your career direction. Do what’s best for you. Consider all of your options and follow your instincts. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Turmoil is likely to disrupt your personal life. Take a step back and re-evaluate your current situation. An objective view will be required to avoid regret. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — You will have a much better chance of reaching your goal if you keep your plans secret.While it’s natural to want to share your ideas, wait until you are fully prepared. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Focus on social or humanitarian events that you feel passionate about. Your persistence and dedication will enable you to persuade others to join the cause you are championing. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You may be frustrated, but don’t let problems at work interfere with your home life. Whatever the issue, do your best, act professionally and keep your two environments separate.

ing fun. h t y r e v ide to e d World n e k e Your gu e in The W s y a d r u t Sa


C8• The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

Legals 100 Coos Bay-North Bend Water Board North 8th Street Main Replacement Project Bids Due: May 20, 2014, 2:00 p.m. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed Bids for construction of North 8th Street Main Replacement Project located in Coos Bay, Oregon, addressed to the Coos Bay-North Bend Water Board, Attention: Rob K. Schab, General Manager, P.O. Box 539, 2305 Ocean Boulevard, Coos Bay, Oregon 97420 will be received until bid closing time, 2:00 p.m., local time, on the 20th day of May, 2014, at which time the bids will be publicly opened. Any bids received after the specified closing time will not be considered.

able payment of $25. Return of the Bidding Documents is not required. Questions may be referred to Matt Whitty, P.E., Engineering Supervisor at (541)267-3128. This project is a Public Improvement Project under Oregon law, and no person shall be employed for the Work as described herein in violation of any wage and hour laws and no person may be employed in violation of any provision of ORS 279C.520 and ORS 279C.540. Dated this16th day of April, 2014. COOS BAY-NORTH BEND WATER BOARD By Order of: Rob K. Schab, General Manager PUBLISHED: The World: 2014.

April 19,

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF COOS No. 14PB0063

The Work to be done under this Contract consists of the following: Furnish and install 2005 feet of 16-inch diameter Ductile Iron water main and appurtenances, and final tie-ins to existing mains with 14-inch and 6-inch diameter Ductile Iron water main and appurtenances and 2-inch diameter PVC water main and appurtenances, and all service line connections and hydrant relocations as shown and described in the contract drawings and specifications. All labor, materials, plant, equipment and tools, as required for the installation of the water main and appurtenances shall be included. Contractor shall meet the highest standards prevalent in the water utility industry. Bidders are not required to pre-qualify for this work, but shall submit written evidence with their bid to demonstrate their qualifications pursuant to Article 3 of the Instructions to Bidders. Following the issuance of a Notice to Proceed, the successful bidder shall have 130 days to achieve substantial completion and 150 days to achieve final completion of the project. Failure by the Contractor to perform the scope of work or meet established performance standards within the specified time will result in the assessment of liquidated damages of $600 per day for every day in excess of 130 contract days from Notice to Proceed. Once substantial completion is achieved, failure to achieve final completion will result in the assessment of liquidated damages of $300 per day for every day in excess of 150 contract days from Notice to Proceed. One copy of the Bidding Documents, including Plans and Specifications, may be obtained at the Water Board office upon receipt of a nonrefund-

NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS In the Matter of the Estate of ALLEN J. KELLEY, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative. All persons having claims against the estate are required to present them, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned personal representative at Hernandez and Associates, LLC, P.O. Box 979, Bandon, OR 97411, within four months after the date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the court, the personal representative, or the lawyers for the personal representative, Hernandez and Associates, LLC. Dated and first published on April 05, 2014. PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Thomas McGann 280 Grosse Pointe Blvd. Grosse Pointe Farms, MI 48236 (313)886-9537 LAWYER FOR PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Hernandez and Associates, LLC Manuel C. Hernandez, OSB # 874123 P.O. Box 979 Bandon, OR 97411 (541) 347-2911 Fax: 347-3656 email: lawtalk@visitbandon.com PUBLISHED: The World- April 05, 12 and 19, 2014 (ID-20250337)

COOS COUNTY FAIR BOARD MEETING PUBLIC HEARING- FEE INCREASES Coos County Fair Board will hold a Public Fee Hearing from 6:30 to 7:00 pm at the Coos County Fair grounds, Myrtle Point, Ore. Davenport Building with regular Board meeting to follow. AGENDA PUBLIC HEARING CREASES.

FEE

IN-

PUBLISHED: The World- April 12 and 19, 2014 (ID-20250173) Public Notice The Libby Drainage District will meet Saturday April 26th at the Coos Bay Library at 10:00am. PUBLISHED: The World- April 05, 12 and 19, 2014 (ID-20249080) TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to O.R.S. 86.705 et seq. NOTICE TO BORROWER: YOU SHOULD BE AWARE THAT THE UNDERSIGNED IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND THAT ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust made by, Jerome L. Taylor and Lisa J. Taylor, as grantors, to Fidelity National Title Company, as Trustee, in favor of Katrina B. Lytle, as beneficiary, dated 7/27/05, recorded 7/28/05, under Instrument No. 2005-11217, records of Coos County, Oregon. Said Trust Deed encumbers the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Beginning at a point on the East boundary of the Cape Arago section of thestate highway through Section Thirty (30), Township Twenty-five (25) South, Range Thirteen (13) West of the Willamette Meridian, from which point theSouthwest corner of said Section 30 bears South 33 21 ½’ West, 5120.74 feet; thence North 36 43’ East along the Easterly boundary of said state highway, 102.71 feet to an iron pipe (formerly given as North 37 05’ East 02.85 feet); thence South 66 26’ East, 119.75 feet to an iron rod; thence South 27 24’ West, 100.24 feet to an iron rod; thence North 66 26’ West, 136.41 feet to the point of beginning, and being a portion of the E. J. Foley Donation Land Claim No. 40 in Section 30, Township 25 South, Range 13 West of the Willamette Meridian, Coos County, Oregon. The street address or other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 92606 Cape Arago Hwy, Coos Bay, Oregon, 97420. Beneficiary has appointed Patrick M. Terry as successor trustee. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said

trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor’s failure to pay when due, the following sums: Ad Valorem Property Taxes due for the tax year 2008 and interest in the amount of $1,694.58; Ad Valorem Property Taxes due for the tax year 2009 and interest in the amount of $2,462.94; Ad Valorem Property Taxes due for the tax year 2010 and interest in the amount of $2,245.00; Ad Valorem Property Taxes due for the tax year 2011 and interest in the amount of $2,021.77; Ad Valorem Property Taxes due for the tax year 2012 and interest in the amount of $2,021.96; plus property tax foreclosure fees in the amount of $569.99; plus the cost of foreclosure report; attorney’s fees; together with any other sums due or that may become due under the Note or by reason of this foreclosure and any further advances made by Beneficiary as allowed by the Note and Deed of Trust

BRIDGE Samuel Johnson, an 18th-century English essayist, said, “The two offices of memory are collection and distribution.” One of the offices of success at the bridge table is collection of information, which might involve hand distribution — as in this deal. South is in four hearts after East opened one club. West leads his lowest club. East wins with his king, cashes his ace, and continues with a third round to declarer’s queen. How should South continue?

South’s leap to four hearts has two ways to win: The contract might make, or he might talk his opponents out of a higher-scoring contract. South seems to have 11 tricks: two spades, seven hearts, one diamond and one club. And that will be true if hearts are 2-1. But when declarer learns that clubs are 3-3, what must East’s hand distribution be? There is only one answer: 4-3-33. (If he had four diamonds, he would have opened one diamond, not one club.) So South does not have a trump entry to the board. And surely East has the diamond king for his opening bid. What can declarer do? There is a clever solution. After winning the third trick, South should cash two top trumps, then sacrifice a heart trick by leading a low heart. East takes the trick with his jack, but what can he do now? Nothing! East has to lead a spade or a diamond, which gives declarer access to the dummy. Note that East cannot play his heart jack earlier, because dummy’s eight would become an entry.

and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee.

in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words “trustee” and “beneficiary” include their respective successors in interest, if any. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same.

ALSO, if you have failed to provide insurance on the property or pay other senior liens or encumbrances as required in the note and deed of trust, the beneficiary may insist that you do so in order to reinstate your account in good standing. The beneficiary may require as a condition to reinstatement that you provide reliable written evidence that you have paid all senior liens or encumbrances, and insurance premiums. These requirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the undersigned Trustee. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following: UNPAID PRINCIPAL BALANCE OF $58,633.50, together with accrued interest in the amount of $1,050.95, together with interest thereon at the rate of 8% per annum from December 2, 2013, together with all escrow advances, foreclosure costs, trustee fees, attorney fees, sums required for the protection of the property and addition sums secured by the Deed of Trust. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee, will on June 18, 2014, at the hour of 10:00 AM, in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at THE FRONT ENTRANCE OF THE COOS COUNTY ANNEX, 1975 McPHERSON, North Bend, County of COOS, State of OREGON, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the interest in the said described property which the grantor had, or had the power to convey, at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured

Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee’s and attorney’s fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word “grantor” includes any successor

Trustee: Patrick M. Terry, OSB#025730 Attorney at Law PO Box 547 North Bend, OR 97459 DATED: February 21, 2013 PUBLISHED: The World- April 05, 12, 19 and 26, 2014 (ID-20248960)

CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Let The World help you place your ad.

541-269-1222

HWY 101 - 2001 N. BAYSHORE DR. • 1-877-251-3017 • WWW.COOSBAYTOYOTA.COM


Saturday, April 19,2014 • The World • D1


D2•The World • Saturday, April 19,2014


Saturday, April 19,2014 • The World • D3

GOOD THRU APRIL 30, 2014

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NORTH BEND 3025 BROADWAY 541-756-2091

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D4 •The World • Saturday, April 19,2014

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Billy Crystal 700 Sundays: The title of Billy Crystal’s Tonywinning one-man show refers to the time he had with his father, Jack, who died when Crystal was 15. While the father-son relationship is a big part of the show, though, it’s about more than that. It’s a portrait of the actor and comedian as a young man, incorporating his love of jazz and the New York Yankees as well as his family. Sunday 7 p.m. on WGN-A Salem: The witches were real. That’s the premise of this intense new drama series set in 17thcentury Massachusetts. Janet Montgomery (“Downton Abbey”) stars as Mary Sibley, the town’s most powerful witch, whose life is turned upside down when her presumed-dead first love (Shane West) reappears. Monday 8 p.m. on CW30 Star-Crossed: A hurricane traps everyone inside the school in this new episode. Teri

7:00 KEZI ABC KCBY CBS KCBY IND KOBI NBC KMCB NBC KOAC PBS KLSR FOX KTVC IND KEVU MNT CW30 A&E AMC BRAV CNBC COM DISC DISN E! ESPN FAM FOOD FS1 FX FXM HBO HGTV HIST LIFE NBCSN NICK ROOT SYFY TLC TNT TOON USA WGN-A WTBS

Tuesday 9 p.m. on CW30 Supernatural: Sheriff Mills (Kim Rhodes) kills a vampire who attacked one of her prisoners (Katherine Ramdeen), then calls the Winchester brothers (Jensen Ackles, Jared Padalecki) for help. They learn that a family of vampires has kidnapped the prisoner to use as bait for humans in the new episode “Alex Annie Alexis Ann.” Wednesday 10 p.m. on KEZI Nashville: The new special episode “Nashville: On the Record” is based on the drama’s companion Web series. Cast members perform songs from the show, and the songs’ writers share the process of bringing their work to television. Participants include stars

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Vikings: Ragnar’s (Travis Fimmel) warriors march to King Ecbert’s (Linus Roache) villa and are surprised by a vicious welcome party. After the inevitable battle, both sides must lay out some new terms in the new episode “The Choice.” Donal Logue also stars. Friday 8 p.m. on CW30 Whose Line Is It Anyway?: Young actor Nolan Gould (“Modern Family”) guest stars in this new episode, joining Wayne Brady and Colin Mochrie in a series of improvisational games prompted by audience suggestions. Jeff Davis and Greg Proops are the guest comedians. 10 p.m. on SYFY Continuum: Kiera (Rachel Nichols) tries to help a college student who’s caught up in a police coverup, which leaves her with many questions about the police’s behavior. Carlos (Victor Webster) discovers that the department has come under the influence of Liber8 in the new episode “A Minute Changes Everything.”

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

7:30

8:00

April 23, 2014 8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

Extra (N) Million. Middle Suburg. Mod Fam Mixology Nashville (N) (CC) News J. Kimmel Jeopardy! Inside Ed. Survivor (N) (CC) Criminal Minds ’ CSI: Crime Scene News (N) Letterman ›› The Maiden Heist (2009) (CC) ›› Diggstown (1992) James Woods. (CC) California Split (CC) Ent Insider Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU (:01) Chicago PD ’ News (N) J. Fallon Big Bang Big Bang Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU (:01) Chicago PD ’ News J. Fallon PBS NewsHour (N) Nature (N) ’ NOVA (N) ’ Your Inner Fish (N) Oregon Oregon Fox News Simpsons American Idol “Top 6 Finalists Perform” ’ News Arsenio Hall Mod Fam Amazing Prayer Revelation of Jesus Asian Aid Bible The Book of John Words Melody Dr. Phil ’ (CC) The Dr. Oz Show ’ Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Portland 30 Rock Seinfeld Rules Arrow “Seeing Red” The 100 (N) (CC) Rules Seinfeld Commun Commun Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. (5:00) Windtalkers ›› U.S. Marshals (1998) Tommy Lee Jones, Wesley Snipes. (CC) We Were Soldiers Housewives/OC Million Dollar Listing Million Dollar Listing Flipping Out (N) Happens Million NHL Hockey American Greed American Greed Money Talks Sleep Paid Colbert Daily Key South Pk South Pk South Park (CC) Triptank Daily Colbert Survivorman (CC) Dual Survival (CC) Dual Survival (N) Ice Cold Gold (CC) Dual Survival (CC) Liv-Mad. Jessie ’ Let It Shine (2012) Tyler James Williams. ’ Good Win, Lose Austin Dog E! News (N) Ryan Seacrest Total Divas The Soup The Soup Chelsea E! News 30 for 30 SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) Olbermann (N) (CC) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Melissa Melissa Melissa Daddy ›› Sister Act (1992) Whoopi Goldberg. The 700 Club (CC) Restaurant: Im. Save My Bakery (N) Restaurant: Im. Restaurant: Im. Diners Diners The Ultimate Fighter FOX Sports Live (N) MLB Whiparound (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live Captain A ››› Thor (2011) Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman. The Americans (N) (:11) The Americans (6:30) ››› Rango (2011) (CC) FXM ›› The Rocker (2008) Rainn Wilson. (CC) Final Destination Silicon Silicon Silicon Veep ’ ››› The Way, Way Back ’ Neigh Real Time, Bill Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Hunters Hunters Property Brothers American Pickers ’ American Pickers ’ American Pickers ’ Down East Dickering (:02) Vikings (CC) Bring It! (CC) Bring It! (CC) Preachers’ Bring It! (N) (CC) (:01) Bring It! (CC) NHL Hockey: Blues at Blackhawks NHL Rivals Premier League Rev. NHL Top NHL Top Sponge. Sam & Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends MLB Baseball Houston Astros at Seattle Mariners. Mariners Mariners MLB Baseball Jim Henson’s Jim Henson’s Jim Henson’s Jim Henson’s Jim Henson’s Women of Homicide 48 Hours: Hard Evid. Women of Homicide Deadly Women ’ Women of Homicide (6:30) NBA Basketball Teams TBA. (N) Inside the NBA (N) Castle ’ Castle “Ghosts” ’ Steven Regular King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy NCIS “Broken Bird” NCIS (CC) (DVS) NCIS “Shiva” ’ NCIS “Canary” ’ NCIS: Los Angeles Salem “The Vow” Witches Rules Parks Parks Salem “The Vow” Witches Sunny Seinfeld Family Guy ’ (CC) Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Deal With Conan (CC)

Friday Evening 7:00 KEZI ABC KCBY CBS KCBY IND KOBI NBC KMCB NBC KOAC PBS KLSR FOX KTVC IND KEVU MNT CW30 A&E AMC BRAV CNBC COM DISC DISN E! ESPN FAM FOOD FS1 FX FXM HBO HGTV HIST LIFE NBCSN NICK ROOT SYFY TLC TNT TOON USA WGN-A WTBS

Thursday 10 p.m. on HIST

Extra (N) Million. Dancing With the Stars (N Same-day Tape) (:01) Castle (N) ’ News J. Kimmel Jeopardy! Inside Ed. Broke Girl Friends Mike Big Bang NCIS: Los Angeles News (N) Letterman ›› Loser (2000) Jason Biggs. (CC) ››› Things Change (1988) Don Ameche. Tennessee Nights Ent Insider The Voice Twelve artists perform. ’ (CC) (:01) The Blacklist ’ News (N) J. Fallon Big Bang Big Bang The Voice Twelve artists perform. ’ (CC) (:01) The Blacklist ’ News J. Fallon PBS NewsHour (N) Antiques Roadshow Oregon Oregon Independent Lens “Muscle Shoals” (N) ’ Fox News Simpsons Bones (N) ’ (PA) The Following (N) News Arsenio Hall Mod Fam Anchors of Truth Revelation of Jesus Better Life On Tour ASI Convent.-2012 Books Battles Dr. Phil (N) ’ (CC) The Dr. Oz Show (N) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Portland 30 Rock Seinfeld Rules Star-Crossed (N) ’ Tom People Rules Seinfeld Commun Commun Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck Dynasty (CC) Bates Motel (N) ’ (:02) Bates Motel ’ (5:30) ›› Invincible ›››› Jaws (1975, Horror) Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw. (CC) ›› Jaws 2 (1978) Housewives/Atl. Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Southern Charm Happens OC NHL Hockey Money Talks American Greed American Greed Paid Paid Colbert Daily Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert Fast N’ Loud (CC) Fast N’ Loud (CC) Fast N’ Loud (N) ’ Car Hoards Fast N’ Loud (CC) Liv-Mad. Jessie ’ I Didn’t Dog Liv-Mad. Austin Good Win, Lose Austin Dog E! News (N) The Fa Chrisley Chrisley Secret Societies Of Chelsea E! News Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) Olbermann (N) (CC) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) ›› Hop (2011) Voices of James Marsden. ›››› Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) The 700 Club (CC) Guy’s Games Rewrap. Rewrap. Kitchen Casino (N) My. Din My. Din Diners, Drive MLB Whiparound (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (5:30) Contraband ›› Step Brothers (2008) Will Ferrell. Archer Archer Archer Tomcats ››› Fargo (1996) Frances McDormand. ›› Hereafter (2010, Drama) Matt Damon. (CC) FXM Trouble-Curve Billy Crystal 700 Sundays ’ (CC) ›› The Heat (2013) Sandra Bullock. ’ Love It or List It Love It or List It Love It or List It (N) Hunters Hunters Love It or List It Swamp People ’ Swamp People ’ Swamp People (N) Down East Dickering America’s Book Hoarders (CC) Hoarders (CC) Hoarders (CC) Hoarders (CC) (:01) Hoarders (CC) NHL Hockey: Ducks at Stars NHL Premier League Manchester Mondays Premier Sponge. Sam & Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends MLB Baseball Houston Astros at Seattle Mariners. (Live) Mariners MLB Baseball (6:00) Men in Black Metal Metal Warehouse 13 (N) ’ Warehouse 13 (CC) Warehouse 13 (CC) Untold Stories of ER Untold Stories of the Sex Sent Me to the Tattoos Tattoos Sex Sent Me to the Basket NBA Basketball Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) Inside the NBA (N) Castle “Watershed” Clarence Uncle King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Fam. Guy Boon American Fam. Guy NCIS: Los Angeles WWE Monday Night RAW (N Same-day Tape) ’ (CC) Chrisley Chrisley Salem “The Vow” Witches Mother Parks Parks Parks 30 Rock 30 Rock Sunny Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Bam Conan (CC)

7:00 KEZI ABC KCBY CBS KCBY IND KOBI NBC KMCB NBC KOAC PBS KLSR FOX KTVC IND KEVU MNT CW30 A&E AMC BRAV CNBC COM DISC DISN E! ESPN FAM FOOD FS1 FX FXM HBO HGTV HIST LIFE NBCSN NICK ROOT SYFY TLC TNT TOON USA WGN-A WTBS

Hayden Panettiere, Charles Esten, Clare Bowen, Sam Palladio, and Lennon and Maisy Stella, as well as songwriters Trent Dabbs and Caitlyn Smith.

April 21, 2014 8:00

Wednesday Evening

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

Extra (N) Million. Grey’s Anatomy ’ Grey’s Anatomy (N) Black Box ’ (CC) News J. Kimmel Jeopardy! Inside Ed. Big Bang Millers Two Men Bad (:01) Elementary (N) News (N) Letterman ››› Gator (1976) Burt Reynolds. (CC) › Conflict of Interest (1993, Action) (CC) The Maiden Heist Ent Insider Parks/Recreat Saturday Night Live “SNL Digital Shorts” News (N) J. Fallon Big Bang Big Bang Parks/Recreat Saturday Night Live “SNL Digital Shorts” News J. Fallon PBS NewsHour (N) Art Beat Field Midsomer Midsomer Murders (:34) Father Brown Bletchley Fox News Simpsons Hell’s Kitchen (N) American Surviving News Arsenio Hall Mod Fam (6:00) 3ABN Today Revelation Gospel Life To Table Talk 3ABN Today (N) Dr. Phil ’ (CC) The Dr. Oz Show (N) House ’ (CC) House ’ (CC) Portland 30 Rock Seinfeld Rules The Vampire Diaries Reign “Toy Soldiers” Rules Seinfeld Commun Commun The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (N) ’ Beyond Scared Beyond Scared (5:00) U.S. Marshals ›› Pearl Harbor (2001, War) Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett. (CC) Mission: Imp. 3 Atlanta Housewives/Atl. To Be Announced Happens TBA NHL Hockey: Avalanche at Wild American Greed American Greed Paid Paid Colbert Daily Chappelle Chappelle Sunny Tosh.0 Review Tosh.0 Daily Colbert Deadliest Catch ’ Naked and Afraid ’ Naked and Afraid ’ Dual Survival (CC) Naked and Afraid ’ Liv-Mad. Jessie ’ Judy Moody-Summer Austin Good Jessie ’ Win, Lose Dog E! News (N) Eric & Eric & Total Divas Total Divas Chelsea E! News Baseball Tonight (N) SportsCenter (N) Olbermann (N) (CC) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) ›› Sister Act (1992) Whoopi Goldberg. ›› Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit (1993) The 700 Club (CC) Chopped America’s Best Cook Chopped Canada (N) Beat Flay Beat Flay Diners Diners MLB Whiparound (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (6:30) ›› Contraband (2012, Action) Saint Anger (:02) ›› Contraband (2012, Action) Dragonball: Evolution (6:30) ››› Crazy, Stupid, Love. (2011) › What Happens in Vegas (2008) (CC) (6:15) ››› Pacific Rim (2013) Fight Veep ’ Silicon Game of Thrones ’ Real Sex ’ (CC) Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Rehab Hunters Hunters Fixer Upper (N) Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Vikings (N) ’ (CC) (:02) Vikings (CC) Wife Swap ’ (CC) ››› Something’s Gotta Give (2003) Jack Nicholson. (CC) (:01) Devious Maids Hockey NHL Hockey San Jose Sharks at Los Angeles Kings. NHL World Challenge Sponge. Sam & Instant See Dad Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Wm. Lacrosse Women’s College Lacrosse UFC Reloaded “UFC 92: Evans vs. Griffin” ›› Hostel (2006, Horror) Jay Hernandez. ›› Jeepers Creepers (2001) Gina Philips. › Saw 7 (2010) (CC) Gypsy Wedding Gypsy Wedding Gypsy Wedding Gypsy Sisters (CC) Gypsy Wedding (6:30) NBA Basketball Teams TBA. (N) Inside the NBA (N) Castle ’ Castle ’ Teen Johnny T King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy ››› Bridesmaids (2011, Comedy) Kristen Wiig. (CC) (DVS) Sirens (N) Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Salem “The Vow” Witches Mother Parks Parks Salem “The Vow” Witches Sunny Seinfeld Family Guy ’ (CC) Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (CC)

(Chelsea Gilligan) drugs Roman (Matt Lanter), making him angry and paranoid and causing him to lash out at Emery (Aimee Teegarden). After Taylor (Natalie Hall) talks Drake (Greg Finley) into going public with their relationship, Grayson (Grey Damon) blackmails Drake into breaking up with her.

Monday Evening

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

Extra (N) Million. S.H.I.E.L.D. Gold Trophy Celebrity Wife Swap News J. Kimmel Jeopardy! Inside Ed. NCIS “Better Angels” NCIS: Los Angeles Person of Interest News (N) Letterman ›› The Gate (1987) Stephen Dorff. (CC) The Hessen Conspiracy (2009) Billy Zane. ›› Stonebrook Ent Insider The Voice ’ (CC) AboutFisher Chicago Fire ’ News (N) J. Fallon Big Bang Big Bang The Voice ’ (CC) AboutFisher Chicago Fire ’ News J. Fallon PBS NewsHour (N) Pioneers, Television American Masters Frontline (N) (CC) Wilderness-Grt Fox News Simpsons Glee (N) ’ New Girl Mindy News Arsenio Hall Mod Fam Gospel Journeys Revelation of Jesus Waves Bible Signs Mission ASI Video Presc. Dr. Phil ’ (CC) The Dr. Oz Show (N) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Portland 30 Rock Seinfeld Rules The Originals (N) ’ Supernatural (N) ’ Rules Seinfeld Commun Commun Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Brandi Storage Storage Storage Jaws 2 ›› Next of Kin (1989) Patrick Swayze. (CC) Game of Arms (N) Game of Arms (CC) Housewives/NYC Housewives/Atl. Housewives/NYC Couch Matchmkr Happens Maria NHL Hockey Shark Tank (CC) Money Talks American Greed Paid Paid Colbert Daily Amy Sch. Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Amy Sch. Daily Colbert Deadliest Catch ’ Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch The fleet works harder. ’ Deadliest Catch Liv-Mad. Jessie ’ › Avalon High (2010) ’ (CC) Austin Good Jessie ’ Win, Lose Dog E! News (N) Giuliana & Bill ›› Maid in Manhattan (2002) Chelsea E! News 2014 Draft Academy SportsCenter (N) Olbermann (N) (CC) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Who Framed ››› Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007, Fantasy) The 700 Club (CC) Chopped “Wasted!” Chopped Chopped Chopped (N) Chopped MLB Whiparound (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live Step Brot ››› Captain America: The First Avenger (2011) Fargo (N) (:15) Fargo Man of the House ›› Batman (1966) Adam West. (CC) FXM ›› Batman (1966) Adam West. Real Time, Bill Game of Thrones ’ Silicon Veep ’ REAL Sports Gumbel Game of Thrones ’ Hunt Intl Hunters Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Hunters Hunters Flip It to Win It (N) Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars American American American American Dance Moms (CC) Dance Moms (N) Dance Moms (N) True Tori (CC) (:01) True Tori (CC) NHL Hockey San Jose Sharks at Los Angeles Kings. NHL English Premier League Soccer Sponge. Sam & Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends MLB Baseball Houston Astros at Seattle Mariners. (Live) Mariners MLB Baseball Face Off Face Off “Cry Wolf” Face Off Jim Henson’s Face Off Couple Couple 19 Kids-Count 19 Kids 19 Kids Couple Couple 19 Kids 19 Kids Basket NBA Basketball Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) Inside the NBA (N) Castle ’ Uncle Clarence King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Chrisley Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Salem “The Vow” Witches Mother Parks Parks Salem “The Vow” Witches Sunny Seinfeld Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (CC)

Thursday Evening

Saturday 9 p.m. on HBO

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

The Easter Beagle Once Upon a Time In My Dreams (2014) Katharine McPhee. News (N) Sports 60 Minutes (N) (CC) The Amazing Race The Good Wife (N) The Mentalist (N) ’ News (N) Paid Stargate SG-1 (CC) Stargate SG-1 (CC) The Outer Limits The Outer Limits ›› Buster (1988) Dateline NBC (N) ’ Dream Builders Believe (N) ’ Crisis (N) ’ (CC) News Hiring Dateline NBC (N) ’ Dream Builders Believe (N) ’ Crisis (N) ’ (CC) News Big Bang Antiques Roadshow Call the Midwife (N) Masterpiece Classic The Bletchley Circle Pioneers, Television Burgers American Simpsons Fam. Guy Cosmos-Space News Two Men Arsenio Hall Table Talk Revelation of Jesus Revelation Spk Secrets Unseal Celebrating Life SAF3 “Father’s Day” Dog Dog Alien File Alien File Burn Notice “Pilot” Portland Futurama (6:00) Top Secret! ›› The Net (1995) Sandra Bullock. (CC) Seinfeld Seinfeld King King Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. (6:00) The Shawshank Redemption (1994) TURN (N) ’ (CC) Mad Men (N) (CC) (:04) TURN ’ (CC) Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Married to Medicine Matchmaker Happens Fashion American Greed Marijuana- Am. Marijuana: Industry American Greed Paid Paid Bill Cosby: Far Kevin Hart: Grown Kevin Hart: Laugh Tracy Morgan Tosh.0 Amy Sch. Naked and Afraid ’ Naked and Afraid ’ Naked and Afraid: Naked and Afraid (N) Naked After Dark (N) I Didn’t I Didn’t ››› Monsters, Inc. (2001) ’ Jessie ’ Good Jessie ’ Dog Austin Total Divas Total Divas Total Divas (N) Eric & Chrisley Total Divas SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) (5:57) Tangled (2010) ›› Hop (2011) Voices of James Marsden. ›› Hop (2011) Voices of James Marsden. Chopped Food Court Wars (N) America’s Best Cook Cutthroat Kitchen (N) Kitchen Casino UFC Countdown (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live FOX Sports Live FOX Sports Live Rise of Apes ›› Contraband (2012, Action) Mark Wahlberg. (:33) ›› Contraband (2012) (6:00) ››› Marley & Me (CC) ››› Marley & Me (2008) Owen Wilson. FXM Marley & Me (:10) ››› The Way, Way Back (2013) ’ Game of Thrones (N) Silicon Veep (N) Game of Thrones ’ Hunters Hunt Intl Carib Carib Beach Beach Alaska Alaska Hunters Hunt Intl Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn No Man’s Land (N) (:02) No Man’s Land Devious Maids Devious Maids Devious Maids Devious Maids (:02) Devious Maids NHL Hockey Los Angeles Kings at San Jose Sharks. NHL Match of the Day Running Sam & Sam & Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Miami Marlins. Mariners World Poker Poker ›› Paul (2011) Simon Pegg. (CC) ››› Men in Black (1997), Will Smith ››› Sin City (CC) Couple Couple Medium Medium Medium Medium My Five Wives (N) Medium Medium (6:30) NBA Basketball Teams TBA. (N) Inside the NBA (N) ›› Watchmen (2009, Action) Billy Crudup. Clarence Tom/ Venture Venture Chicken Burgers Burgers Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken He’s Just Not That Into You ››› Bridesmaids (2011) Kristen Wiig. (CC) (DVS) Law & Order: SVU Salem “The Vow” (:06) Salem (CC) (:12) Bones ’ (CC) Salem “The Vow” (:06) Salem (CC) Madea Goes to Jail Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Big Happy Family Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Big Happy Family

Tuesday Evening KEZI ABC KCBY CBS KCBY IND KOBI NBC KMCB NBC KOAC PBS KLSR FOX KTVC IND KEVU MNT CW30 A&E AMC BRAV CNBC COM DISC DISN E! ESPN FAM FOOD FS1 FX FXM HBO HGTV HIST LIFE NBCSN NICK ROOT SYFY TLC TNT TOON USA WGN-A WTBS

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

››› The Ten Commandments (1956, Historical Drama) Charlton Heston, Yul Brynner. ’ Paid Criminal Minds ’ Mike Millers Criminal Minds ’ 48 Hours (N) (CC) News (N) CSI Remo Will ››› Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) (CC) Art of War II: Betrayal (2008, Action) (CC) Entertainment ’Night Dateline NBC ’ (CC) Saturday Night Live News (N) SNL Big Bang Big Bang Dateline NBC ’ (CC) Saturday Night Live News SNL Travels Steves Globe Trekker ’ Doc Martin ’ (CC) New Tricks ’ (CC) Masterpiece TMZ (N) ’ (CC) Middle Fam. Guy Mod Fam Mod Fam News Two Men Animation Dom Revelation of Hope His Voice Waves GP Worship Hour Special Feature Generation of Youth MLS Soccer McCarver White Collar (CC) Da Vinci’s Inquest Portland Futurama › The Mod Squad Cheaters (N) (CC) Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Rules Rules Commun Commun Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds ’ (:02) Criminal Minds (5:00) Forrest Gump ›››› Forrest Gump (1994) Tom Hanks, Robin Wright. (CC) Forrest Gump (1994) Medicine Million ›› The Princess Diaries (2001) (CC) ›› The Princess Diaries (2001) (CC) Buried Treasure ’ Buried Treasure ’ Suze Orman Show American Greed SHARK! Paid South Pk South Pk ››› Role Models (2008), Paul Rudd (CC) Katt Williams: Pimp Kevin Hart: Laugh Last Frontier Last Frontier Timber Kings (CC) Timber Kings (N) ’ Epic Home Builds ’ Dog Austin Jessie ’ I Didn’t Liv-Mad. Dog Mighty Kickin’ It ANT Farm Austin Secret Societies Of Blue Crush 2 (2011) Sasha Jackson, Elizabeth Mathis. Total Divas Divas Basket NBA Basketball Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) The Little Mermaid ››› Tangled (2010), Zachary Levi (:03) ›› The Prince & Me (2004) Diners Diners Unwrapped Unwrapped Unwrapped Restaurant: Im. MLB Baseball FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (4:30) ››› Avatar ››› Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) ›› Green Lantern (2011) Benjamin Button FXM ››› The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008) Brad Pitt. FXM (:15) ››› The Way, Way Back (2013) Billy Crystal 700 Sundays (N) ’ (CC) Boxing Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl (6:00) The Bible ’ The Bible ’ (CC) The Bible ’ (CC) Madea’s Family A Day Late and a Dollar Short (2014) (CC) A Day Late and a Dollar Short (2014) (CC) NHL Hockey: Wild at Avalanche NHL NASCAR Formula One Racing F1 Prer Sam & Sam & Sam & Cat ’ (CC) Haunted Thunder Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Mariners MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Miami Marlins. MLS Soccer ›› Piranha (2010, Horror) Elisabeth Shue. ›› Big Ass Spider! (2013) Premiere. Bigfoot (2012) (CC) Hoard-Buried Sex Sent Me to the Sex Sent Me to the Outrageous 911 ’ Sex Sent Me to the X2: X-Men United ›› I, Robot (2004) Will Smith. Premiere. (CC) (DVS) (:32) ››› X2: X-Men United The Wizard of Oz King/Hill King/Hill American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Boon Boon Space Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Chrisley Chrisley MLB Baseball Witches Rules Rules Rules 30 Rock 30 Rock Sunny Sunny Raymond Raymond Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Deal With Bam

Sunday Evening

Critic’s Choice

7:30

April 25, 2014 8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

Extra (N) Million. Last Man Last Man Shark Tank (N) ’ (:01) 20/20 ’ (CC) News J. Kimmel Jeopardy! Inside Ed. Unforgettable (N) ’ Hawaii Five-0 (N) ’ Blue Bloods (N) ’ News (N) Letterman The Death and Life of Bobby Z (2007) (CC) ›› Into the Blue (2005) Paul Walker. (CC) ››› The Deep Ent Insider Dateline NBC (N) ’ Grimm (N) ’ (CC) (:01) Hannibal (N) ’ News (N) J. Fallon Big Bang Big Bang Dateline NBC (N) ’ Grimm (N) ’ (CC) (:01) Hannibal (N) ’ News J. Fallon PBS NewsHour (N) Wash Charlie DCI Banks Policeman’s murder. Frankie ’ (CC) Classic Fox News Simpsons Kitchen Nightmares (N) (CC) (DVS) News Arsenio Hall Mod Fam It Is Mission Feature Pres. Better Life On Tour A Sharper Focus Variety Thunder Dr. Phil ’ (CC) The Dr. Oz Show (N) Monk ’ (CC) Monk Scouting trip. Portland 30 Rock Seinfeld Rules Whose? Whose? Hart of Dixie (N) ’ Rules Seinfeld Commun Commun The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) (:02) The First 48 ’ (5:00) Pearl Harbor ››› Gladiator (2000) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. (CC) Blood Dia The Bourne Identity ›› 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) Paul Walker. ›› 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) Paul Walker. Car Car Car Car Car Car Car Car Paid Paid Colbert Daily Futurama Futurama Key Key Tosh.0 Tosh.0 South Pk South Pk Boss Hog ’ (CC) Sons of Guns: Sons of Guns (N) ’ Boss Hog Boss Hog Ice Cold Gold (CC) Liv-Mad. Jessie ’ ›› Cars 2 (2011) Voices of Owen Wilson. Jessie ’ Win, Lose Liv-Mad. Jessie ’ E! News (N) Giuliana & Bill Fashion Police (N) Hello Chrisley Chelsea E! News Basket NBA Basketball Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) ›› Liar Liar (1997, Comedy) Jim Carrey. ›› Bruce Almighty (2003) Jim Carrey. The 700 Club (CC) Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners MLB Whiparound (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live Mother Mother ›› Just Go With It (2011) Adam Sandler, Jennifer Aniston. ›› Just Go With It (6:00) ››› Star Trek (2009) FXM ››› Live Free or Die Hard (2007) Bruce Willis. (CC) FXM (6:15) Bowfinger ’ Game of Thrones ’ Game of Thrones ’ Real Time, Bill VICE (N) Real Time Hunt Intl Amish Amish Amish Amish Amish Hunters Hunters Hunt Intl Hunt Intl American Pickers ’ American Pickers ’ American Pickers ’ American Pickers ’ American Pickers ’ Wife Swap ’ (CC) Celebrity Wife Swap Celebrity Wife Swap Relative Insanity (:01) True Tori (CC) Hockey NHL Hockey Dallas Stars at Anaheim Ducks. ’ (Live) NHL Auto Racing The Grid The Wild Thornberrys Movie ’ Sponge. Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners. (Live) Mariners MLB Baseball Jeepers Creepers WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) (CC) Continuum (N) Metal Metal Gown Gown Randy Unveiled Say Yes Randy Gown Gown Say Yes Randy Supernatural (CC) ››› 300 (2007, Action) Gerard Butler. (CC) (DVS) (:33) ›› Clash of the Titans Adven Regular King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Sirens Mother Mother Mother Mother Parks Parks Parks 30 Rock 30 Rock Sunny Seinfeld Fam. Guy ››› X2: X-Men United (2003) Patrick Stewart. Premiere. (DVS) Lara Croft Tmb


Saturday, April 19,2014 • The World • D5


D6•The World • Saturday, April 19,2014


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