Bulletin Daily Paper 08-02-14

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Serving Central Oregon since190375

SATURDAY August 2,2014

en or earns ISSnnSin nSS LITTLE LEAGUE• C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

JEFFERSON

Saving Bertha — The largest tunnel-drilling machine ever built has ground to ahalt beneath Seattle: a look at the plans to get it running.A4

From dinos tobirds —A new study traces theevolution of one group as it shrank over hundreds of millions ofyears. A3 Biotech —The latest area of research in cutting-edge drugs: your pets.C6

• As premiumcosts movetoward the middle, rates to risefor high-volumecarriers like Moda By Gosia Wozniacka The Associated Press

PORTLAND — Oregon

will see a much tighter range of premium prices in 2015 for individual and small employer health insurance plans, according to new rates

announced Friday by state regulators.

The Oregon Insurance Division says Moda, the company that captured nearly twothirds of the individual market share with some of the lowest

prices in 2014, will see a 10.6 percent rate hike on average. The increase places the

company in the middle of the pack in terms of premium pric-

es and will affect more than

70,000 Moda enrollees. Some of the smaller carri-

are converging in the middle and the price range is smaller.

ers will see rate decreases in

"We're moving toward a more competitive market,"

2015. Plans from Providence

Cali said.

Health and Trillium Commu-

The rates apply to plans that

nity Health will both drop by comply with the Affordable about 14 percent on average, Care Act, purchased both for example. through Cover Oregon and Overall, the lower premiums off the exchange. Separate will increase and the higher rateswere alsoreleased for premiums decreaseas a result

transitional and grandfathered

of the new rates, insurance Commissioner Laura Cali said, meaning premium prices

plans that existed before Jan.

County treasurer indicted on 36 counts By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Jefferson County Treasurer Deena Goss was indicted

on 36 counts of forgery,

1, 2014.

SeeRates/A4

theft and

Goss

Ebola update —Asthe

official

1nlsconduct Thursday,

U.S. puts its vaccine research on the fast track, two American patients are set to return.AS

no n a

MideaSt —The latest truce breaks down within hours.A2

a ir sunse

following an investigation by the Oregon Department of Justice. Goss has served as treasurer since

2003, when she was appointed to the post

And a Web exclusive-

to fill a vacancy. She was subsequently

In Japan, a hugeindoor farm aims to avoid waste to feed a booming global population. bentibunetin.com/extras

elected in 2004, 2008 and 2012.

County officials contacted the Justice Department earli-

er this year, when

EDITOR'SCHOICE

a county resident

reported that a $26 check written for a dog license appeared to have been altered and was cashed for $46.

Denver fair contests celebrate marijuana

The "2" written

on the check by the resident appeared to have been altered to a "4," a county investigation found,

while separately, $20 in cash recorded as received by the coun-

By Kristen Wyatt

ty on the same day was missing from the

The Associated Press

DENVER — Marijuana

county's deposit at U.S. Bank.

joined roses and dahlias Friday in blue ribbon events at

See Treasurer /A5

the nation's first county fair

to allow pot competitions. This weekend's Denver County Fair indudes a 21-and-over "Pot Pavilion"

where winning entries for plants, bongs, edible treats and clothes made from hemp are on display. There is no actual weed at the fairgrounds. Instead, fairgoers will see photos of the competingpot plants and marijuana-infused foods. A sign near the entry

Andy Tullis l The Bulletin

It may look like a tranquil weekday evening, but on Wednesday, you could hear fairgoers' screams of excitement as they tried out the whirling rides. Deschutes County's 95th annual fair, at the fairgrounds in Redmond, wraps up this weekend. Hours are 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. today, and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. See more photos from the fair's first day on Page B2.And, you can see the winners of the fair's talent show perform today; for more, seePage D1.

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

warns patrons not to con-

sume pot at the fair. A speed joint-rolling contest uses oregano, not pot. The only real stuff allowed at the event? Doritos, to be

used in the munchie-eating contest. Organizers saythem arijuana categories this year — which come with the

After sitting vacant for more than a

Walden deliversGOP'sweek address By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

leaving people behind, a debt big-

the House scrambled to pass GOP leaders pulled a previous version Thursday, fearing it

its own version Friday after

WASHINGTON — For the first time since 2010, House

ger than the size

debut of legal recreational

marijuana in Colorado-

Republicans tapped Rep. Greg

add a fun twist on Denver's

Walden, R-Hood River, to de-

Walden

humanitarian cridid not have the votes to pass sis a t our southern after members of the GOP's

already-quirky county fair, which includes a drag queen pageant and a con-

liver the weekly Republican address today.

test for dioramas made with

al Republican Congressional Committee, the party's election

border, the IRS targeting Americans for their political beliefs (and) the rolling disaster that is Obamacare."

Peeps candies. "We've been selling tick-

As chairman of the Nation-

tained that Obama continues

the public and 14 police, fire and medical emergency agencies. Previously, Reinke served as 911 direc-

Action for Childhood Arrivals

program.

promised to solve, but instead

he's become a part of them."

tor in Washington for Kittitas County

and the Valley Com-

The 2014midterm election offers voters the opportunity to

munications Center in Kent. Before

bill to deal with the massive influx of children from Central to the polls in less than 100 days. America on the United States' At the same time, he criticized southern border. The Senate President Barack Obama for left Friday for August recess

plan that has no chance of be-

hold Washington accountable, Walden said.

becoming anadmin-

presiding over "an economy

to pass "just so they can check a

without passing its own bill;

TODAY'S WEATHER

marijuana plants, not po-

tency or the merits of drugs produced by the plants. SeeMarijuana/A5

2, overseeing a department that is the interface between

At a news conference Friday,

address online that voters head

Denver County's first fair

Steve Reinke will start the lob Sept.

Obama accused House Republicans of advancing a symbolic

hearing they want to come

threeyears ago. This year's event is expected to draw 20,000 people. Judges considered only the quality of individual

filled.

row," he said. In his address, Walden main-

to deny his failures instead of learning from them. "He's disengaged when he should be leading," Walden said. "These are the problems he

right flank demanded that it include defunding the Deferred

director has been

Walden's remarks came after

the world, and we keep see the pot," said Dana Cain, who helped organize

of our economy, a

box before leaving town tomor-

year, the post of Deschutes County 911

a week during which Congress struggled to pass a funding

wing, Walden touted four GOP

candidates for the House as he reminded viewers in the video

ets to people from all over

New 911 director hired

b

Chance of storms High 89, Low 54 Pa g e B6

coming law. "They're not even trying to

"This is one of those moments

when Americans can seize the sage bill" that Republicans want initiative for ourselves," he said. solve the problem, this is a mes-

SeeWalden /A4

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Puzzles F3-4 Dear Abby 06 Obituaries B3 Community Life D1-6 Horoscope 06 Sports Ff-6 Crosswords F 4 L o cal/State Bf-6 TV/Movies

B5 C1-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 214,

30 pages, 5 sections

istrator Reinke was

a firefighter, paramedic and deputy sheriff. See911 /A5

l/l/euserecycled newsprint

IIIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329


A2

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By Jodi Rudoren and Isabel Kershner New York Times News Service

War POII —Three in four Americans think history will judge the wars in Iraq andAfghanistan as failures, according to anAssociated Press-GfK poll that shows that about the samepercentage think it was right to pull forces from the two countries. Americans surveyed in last month's poll were not optimistic about the chancethat astable democratic government will be established in either country. Seventy-eight percent said it was either not too likely or not at all likely in Afghanistan and 80 percent said thesameabout Iraq. Roughly three out of four Americans polled think that in hindsight, eachwar will be deemedas an outright "complete failure" or "more of afailure than success."

s

JERUSALEM — Palestin-

ian militants sprang from the ground and confronted Israeli soldiers Friday morning, as they have repeatedly in recent days. This time, Israeli officials said, one exploded a suicide belt while another unleashed machine-gun fire.

74

This time, two Israeli soldiers were killed and the militants

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apparently escaped with a third. The attack, at the start of

esctuies re

Israel said the attack from under a house near the south-

ern border town of Rafah took porary truce secured by the Obama administration and the United Nations, whose

leaderssquarely blamed the ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........54t-363-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337

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breakdown on Hamas.

curtailing a conflict that has tinians, many of them wom-

By Erica Werner The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — H ouse

Republicans passed legislation late Friday to address the crisis

on the U.S.-Mexico border by sending migrant youths back home without hearings, win-

ning over conservatives with a companion bill that could lead to deporting more than half a

and said he'd act unilaterally,

Bymail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outside Deschutes County: Onemonth: $18 E-Editien only: Onemonth: $13

pulled the border bill from the

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All Bulletinpaymentsareaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may be converted toanelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS A552-520, ispublished daily byWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicalspostage paid atBend,OR.Postmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,Po.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706.TheBulletin retainsownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymay not be reproduced withoutexplicit priorapproval.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnFriday nightare:

03®034037072OO The estimated jackpot is now $100 million.

put a cease-fire back together

again if Israelis and the infor the missing officer amid ternational community can't mounting pressure from Israe- feel confident that Hamas can li politicians and the public to follow through," President expand the military mission. Barack Obama said Friday at

rael, destruction of the tunfrom Gaza, and for Hamas,

the White House.

Both Secretary of State John Kerry and Ban Ki-moon, the secretary-general of the

United Nations, demanded an immediate and unconditional

Al'IZOll8 SXSCIltlOll —Lawyers for an inmate who wasexecuted last month by lethal injection said Friday that his executioners injected him with15 times the standard dose of asedative and apainkiller during a procedure that lasted nearly two hours before their client was decl areddead.Theexecutionoftheinmate,JosephW ood, renewed debateover the death penalty and prompted Arizona's attorney general to order a temporary halt to executions in the state. The Arizona Department of Corrections announcedFriday that it was seeking an outside investigator to conduct an independent inquiry. CantOr reSigning —Rep.Eric Cantor, R-Va., whoselast dayas House majority leaderwas Thursday, saidFriday that he would resign his seat effective Aug.18 in hopesthat his successor willbe able to participate in the lame-ducksession after the Novemberelections. He lost the Republican primary in his Northern Virginia district in June toDavid Brat, a little-known andmoreconservative candidate with tea party backing. Thenewsthat he would give uphis seat early was asurprise.

AmeriCanS in NOrthKOrea —TwoAmerican tourists charged

with "anti-state" crimes in North Koreasaid Friday they expect to be tried soon and pleadedfor help from the U.S. government to secure their release from what they saycould be long prison terms. In their first appearance since being detained morethan three months ago, Matthew Todd Miller andJeffrey Edward Fowle said they were in good health andwere being treated well. They also said they were allowed to take daily walks. Thebrief meeting was conducted under the condition that the specific location not be disclosed. Fowlesaid he fears his situation will get much worse once he goes ontrial.

release of the Israeli officer.

Ban described the attack as "a grave violation of the ceasefire" that called "into ques-

tion the credibility of Hamas' a ssurances to Nations."

t h e U n i t ed

Ukraine CraSh Site —Wearing gloves and carrying blue plastic buckets, international investigators finally begangathering up body parts and victims' belongings Friday in the fields where Malaysia Airlines Flight17 camedown.Artillery boomed in the distance as the 70-member team ofDutch and Australian experts painstakingly combed a patch of scrubland not far from the site of bloody clashes between Ukrainian soldiers and pro-Russian separatist rebels. The team's top priority: collecting the remains of asmany as 80victims that have beenlying out in the openfor more than two weeks because investigators were prevented by the fighting from reaching the scene. — From wire reports

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350 around Rafah alone as troops sealed the area to hunt

killed more than 1,600 Pales- nels and a halt to rocket fire

Home delivery and E-Editien:

TO PLACE AN AD

en and children, and plunged a score that can be leveraged Gaza into a h u m anitarian to change the social and ecocrisis. Israel responded with nomic conditions of Gaza's 1.7 an aggressive assault that million beleaguered people. "It's going to be very hard to killed 70 people and injured

Hamas' account was confused. One leader was quoted The events renewed comclaiming credit for the abduc- mand-and-control q u estions tion, then backtracked. 0thabout Hamas, a g uerrilla ers contended that the clash group torn by rivalries and unfolded at 7 a.m., before the communication snags becease-fire, although Palestin- tween its military and politiian reports of fighting near cal rulers in Gaza and abroad. R afah came three hours later. They also suggested neither What was clear was that the sideisready foran exitramp episodedimmed prospectsfor until its goals are met: for Is-

million immigrants whom the Obama administration granted temporary work permits. President Barack Obama condemned the Republican action

TO SUBSCRIBE

Israeli military prison near the West Bank city of Ramallah, Friday.

nates the Gaza Strip.

place at 9:20 a.m., soon after the 8 a.m. onset of the tem-

Si sil.Ae.

1

what was supposed to be a 72Maidi Mohammed /The Associated Press hour pause in the fighting, es- Palestinians run for cover during clashes with Israeli soldiers folcalated the deadly 25-day bat- lowing a protest against the war in the Gaza Strip, outside Ofer, an tle between Israel and Hamas, the Islamist faction that domi-

Obama On tOrture —The United States tortured al-Qaida detainees captured after the 9/11attacks, President Obamasaid Friday, in some of his most expansivecomments to dateabout acontroversial set of CIA practices that hebanned after taking office. "Wetortured some folks," Obamasaid at a televised newsconference atthe White House. "We did somethings that were contrary to our values." Addressing the impending release of aSenatereport that criticizes CIAtreatment of detainees, Obama said he believedthe mistreatment stemmed from the pressure national security officials felt to forestall another attack. He said Americans should not be too "sanctimonious," about passing judgment through the lens of aseemingly safer present day.

SATURDAY

came onwhatwasto havebeen ing the faster removal of the the first dayoflawmakers'five- Central A m erican m i g rant week summer recess, delayed youths. by GOP leaders after their vote Friday morning, as the full plans unexpectedly collapsed Republican caucus met in the on Thursday. Senators had Capitol, conservative lawmakalready left Washington after ers were declaring victory. "I'm very s atisfied," said killing their own legislation on the bordercrisis,so there was Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, the no prospect of reaching a final leading immigration hardliner deal. But three months before in the House.

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midterm elections, House Re-

publicans were determined to show that they, at least, could take action to address the crisis

involving tens of thousands of unaccompanied minors fleeing as best he could. violence and poverty in CenA day after GOP leaders tral America to cross illegally floor in a chaotic retreat, tea party lawmakers were enthusiastically on board with the

into South Texas.

fg

"It would be irresponsible and unstatesmanlike to head home for the month without

new $694 million version and passing a bill to address this a companion measure that serious, present crisis on the would shut off a program cre- border," said Rep. Hal Rogers, ated by Obama granting work R-Ky., chairman of the Appropermits to immigrants brought priations Committee. here illegally as kids. The secTo reach a deal, GOP leadond bill also seemed designed ers had to satisfy the demands t o prevent th e m or e t h an of a group of a dozen or more 700,000 people who've already conservative lawmakers who gotten work permits under the were meeting behind the program from renewing them, scenes with Sens. Ted Cruz, ultimately making them sub- R-Texas, and Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., and taking their cues ject to deportation. The spending bill passed from outside groups such as 223-189 late Friday, with only the Heritage Foundation that four Republicans voting "no" opposed earlier versions of the and one D e mocrat v oting legislation. "yes." The measure ending These lawmakers objected Obama's deportation relief to sending any more money program passed 216-192, with to Obama without a strong 11 Republican "no" votes and stance against his two-yearfour Democrats crossing party old deportation relief program, lines to vote in favor. which Republicans blame for "It's dealing with the issue causing the current border that the American people care crisis by creating the percepabout more than any other,

and that is stopping the invasion of illegal foreign nationals

tion that once here, young migrants would be allowed to

stay — a point the administra-

into our country," said Rep. tion disputes. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn. House GOP leaders agreed

"And we got to yes." But

O b am a sa i d

earlier in the week to hold no.

"They're not even trying to solve the problem," the president said. "I'm going to have to act alone, because we do not have enough resources." Obama saidhe would reallocate resources where he could, while making clear his options were limited without congressional action. The administration already has taken steps in-

a separate vote to

p r event

Obama from expanding the deportation relief program, as he's signaled he plans to do, but that didn't satisfy conser-

r

vatives who held out for stronger steps. Thursday night, those lawmakers huddled in the basement of the Capitol with new

House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., until coming up cluding re-ordering immigra- with a deal ending funding for tion court dockets and boost- the deportation relief program ing enforcement measures. as well as making changes to The moves in the House the border bill aimed at ensur-

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Saturday, August 2, the 214th day of 2014.There are 151 days left in the year.

SCIENCE

HAPPENINGS MideaSt talkS —Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbashassaid he will send a delegation to Cairo, despite the failure of a ceasefire. Lidya —The country's newly elected Parliament will open its first session amid violence there.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1964, the de-

stroyer USSMaddoxsuffered light damage during a skirmish with North Vietnamesepatrol torpedo boats in the Gulf of Tonkin. (This and analleged second incident two days later led to congressional approval of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution that propelled America deep into war.) In1776, members of the Continental Congress beganattaching their signatures to the Declaration of Independence. In1873, inventor Andrew Hallidie successfully tested a cable car he haddesigned for the city of San Francisco. In1876, frontiersman "Wild Bill" Hickok was shot and killed while playing poker at a saloon in Deadwood, Dakota Territory, by Jack McCall, who was later hanged. In1909, the original Lincoln "wheat" penny first went into circulation, replacing the "Indian Head" cent. In1923, the 29th president of the United States, Warren Harding, died in SanFrancisco; Vice President Calvin Coolidge becamepresident. In1934, German President Paul von Hindenburg died, paving the way for Adolf Hitler's complete takeover. In1939, Albert Einstein signed a letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt urging creation of an atomic weapons research program. President Roosevelt

Rendering by Davide Bonnadonna /Science viaThe Associated Press

The dinosaur lineage that evolved into birds shrank in body size continuously for 50 million years. From left are the ancestral neotheropod, the ancestral tetanuran, the

ancestral coelurosaur, the ancestral paravian andArchaeopteryx.

Scientists have constructed a "family tree" for theropod dinosaurs, whose descendants shrank progressively and survive today as birds, however improbable it seems. "They just kept on shrinking how steady and unusual thero- years ago, when some of the and shrinking and shrinking pod evolution was. The skele- creatures weighed about 360 WASHINGTON — S cien- for about 50 million years," tons of theropods changed four pounds, the shrinking became tists have mapped how a group said study author Michael Lee times faster than other types of fasterand more prolonged,the of fearsome, massive dinosaurs of the University of Adelaide dinosaurs, the study said. study said. In just 25 million evolved and shrank to the likes in Australia. He called them A few members of that dino years, the beasts were slimmed "shape-shifters." of robins and hummingbirds. family did not shrink, indud- down to barely 100 pounds. By Comparing fossils of 120 difLee and colleagues created ing T. rex, which is more of a 167 million years ago, 6-pound ferentspecies and 1,500 skel- a dinosaur version of the iconic distant cousin to birds than a paravians,more direct ancesetal features, especially thigh ape-to-man drawing of human direct ancestor, Lee said. tor ofbirds, were around. bones, researchers constructed evolution. In this version, the He said he and colleagues And 163 million years ago a detailed family tree for the lumbering large dinos shrink, were surprised by just how the first birds, weighing less class of two-legged meat-eat- getting more feathery and consistently the t h eropods than two pounds, probably ers called t heropods. That big-chested, until they are the shrank over evolutionary time, came on the scene, the study suborderof dinos survives to earliest version of birds. while other types of dinosaurs sald. this day as birds, however unFor a couple decades scien- showed ups and downs in body Paul Sereno, a dinosaur rerecognizable and improbable it tists have linked birds to this size. searcher at the University of sounds. family of dinosaurs because The first theropods were Chicago who wasn't part of The steady downsizing and they shared hollow bones, large, weighing around 600 this study, praised Lee's work elegant evolution of the thero- wishbones, feathers and oth- pounds. They roamed about as innovative. pods is detailed in the journal er characteristics. But the Lee 220 million to 230 million years The steady s iz e r e ducScience. study gives the best picture of ago. Then about 200 million tion shows "something very By Seth Borenstein

strange going on," Sereno said.

The Associated Press

"This is key to what went on at

the origin ofbirds." People may think bigger is better, but sometimes when it

comes to evolution smaller can be better because bigger creatures are more likely to go extinct, Sereno said.

And when the theropods started shrinking there weren't

many other small species that would compete with them, Lee sard.

"The dinosaur ancestors of birds found a new niche and a new way of life," Lee said. Sereno added, "When you are small, it's a totally differentballgame. You can fl y and glide and I think that's what drove it."

STUDY

signed the Hatch Act, which

prohibited civil service employees from taking anactive part in political campaigns. In1943, during World War II, U.S. Navy boat PT-109, commanded by Lt. (jg) John F. Kennedy, sankafter being rammed in the middle of the night by the Japanesedestroyer Amagiri off the Solomon Islands. Two crew members were killed. In1945, President Harry Truman, Soviet leader Josef Stalin and British Prime Minister Clement Attlee concluded the Potsdam conference. In1974, former White House counsel John Dean was sentenced to one to four years in prison for obstruction of justice in the Watergate coverup. (Dean ended upserving four months.) In1985,135 people were killed when aDelta Air Lines jetliner crashed while attempting to land at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. In1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait, seizing control of the oil-rich emirate. (The Iraqis were later driven out in Operation Desert Storm.) Ten years ago:President George W.Bush urged creation of a national intelligence director to coordinate the war on terrorism but without the sweeping powers for hiring, firing and spending recommended by the September11 commission. Five years ags:A mystery from the1991 Gulf War was finally solved as the Pentagon announced that the remains of missing Navy pilot Michael "Scott" Speicher had been found. One year ago: The United States issued anextraordinary global travel warning to Americans about the threat of an al-Qaida attack and closed down 21 embassies and consulates across the Muslim world for the weekend.

BIRTHDAYS

The virtues of lying: It canhelp relationships — in somecases By Sylvia Tippmann

ness in a society.

Special To The Washington Post

"Lying is a bad thing — this

"Lying is a bad thing — this is what mentors,

parents and teachers tell us. But there is no teachers tell us. But there is society without lies." is what mentors, parents and no society without lies." cist Rafael Barrio. And when

he and his colleague Kimmo Kaski from th e A a lto Uni-

s trengths and each i s

versity School of Science in Finland thought about this

signed a random opinion on a hypothetical topic. Their one-

blatant discrepancy, the two computational scientists set

o n-one i n t eractions m a k e their levels of trust weaker

out to simulate the effects

or stronger, depending on the type of lies these individuals

of lying in a virtual human population. Their r e sults, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, show that lying is essential for the growth of a cohesive social network. The key to understanding the discrepancy is realizing that all lies are not equal. "White lies" or fibs, are generally accepted. Their intention is to protect, benefit or help others, like reassuring children on their efforts to

play violin to motivate future improvement.

But some lies are selfish, such as when protecting oneself at the expense of another

person or even lying to hurt someone else intentionally.

as-

use and that changes the net-

work of the society bit by bit. Some individuals were proso-

cial liars whose actions have a higher probability of in- within the community and creasing trust, whereas some weak connections between are antisocial liars whose ac- the two big groups. These tions had a higher probability weak links are almost excluof decreasing trust. sively established by dishonThe researchers ran the est agents, which suggests model repeatedly for around that prosocial lying might ac200,000 interactions within tually enhance the cohesivethe population and recorded how the group structure

between social and antisocial

lying. In reality the tolerance to fibbing depends on the strength of the relationship."

the start of each simulation,

ISI I Q

V CI

O >N DEMA N D

541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com

evolves. Barrio n oted t h at "200,000 interactions is not

much. In the real world, this is something that happens between people in three to four days, the sort of thing

h

w hen there is some bit o f

Those kinds of lies are con-

news and everyone forms an

demned in most societies. In social psychology this behav-

opinion about it."

ior is characterized as "anti-

honesty and type of lying is fixed for each individual, but opinions may change. At

study is the differentiation

But it doesn't always take a when agents were random- computer model to work out ly assigned opinions, some whether lying is good or bad. were undecided. Barrio and Charles Darwin understood m odel succumbed to a n t i - his team observed that intro- the nature of lies almost 200 social lying it destroyed the ducing more fibbing in the years ago. He looked at his network structure and led to network reduced the number own son and concluded: "He complete isolation. of undecided agents and con- is a liar but a good chap." The effect offibs,orproso- cluded prosocial lying actualcial lies, did not destroy the ly helps people make up their See us for retractable fabric of the virtual society. mind. awnings, exterior solar Instead, the network split up Alistair Sutcliffe, an expert screens, shadestructures. into two large communities in systems engineering at Sun ehen youwantit, with strong social links of the University of Mancheslike-minded honest agents ter, said: "The novelty in this shade ehen Jouneedit.

— Rafael Barrio, theoretical physicist

So says theoretical physi-

In the model, the level of

Not surprisingly, in a population where everyone is

social" lying, while fibs are p erfectly h onest, t r ust i n referredto as "prosocial," as creases over time resulting they help to keep relations in in a well-connected group. good condition. But when Barrio decreased Between two people, this t he level of honesty in t h e classification is intuitive. But population by i n troducing how does a whole population either prosocial or antisocial react to different types of liars,he observed a different lies? This is the question Bar- change. rio and his team wanted to A ntisocial d eception l e d answer. They created a sim- to fragmentation of the netple virtual scenario, which work, forming small and could then be used to build tightly connected groups of computer models. honest individuals who are In their scenario, 200 virtu- weakly connected by disal individuals are connected honest agents. In an extreme by relationships of different case, when all agents in the

• I •

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

ACA-compliant plans INDIVIDUAL PLANS Average monthly premium for a silver plan for 40-year-old Portlander Company

2014 2 015 (es- Change' average: timated'): $ 293: $ 2 4 5 : -20.6% $278: : $2 66: : 2 . 0%

ATRIO Health Plans

BridgeSpanHealth Company Oregon, Inc Health Republic Insurance Company Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the fuW LifeWise Health Plan of Oregon Moda Health Plan, Inc. Oregon's Health CO-OP PacificSource Health Plans Providence Health Plan nn Regence ulueCross BlueShield of Crepon TimelnsuranceCompany Trillium Community Health Plan, Inc.

$ 215;

$ 2 34 ; 9 4 %

$256:

$ 2 51, : 8 . 0% 246

-4.1%

$248

$222

-11.3%

$221 $271 $252 $272 $270

$245: 10.6% $230: -9.9% $261 l 3.9% $233 i -14.0% $259 . 1.4%

$251 $329'

$273: 6 .8% $290: -1 4.5%

SMALI. GROUP Average monthly premium for a silver plan for 40-year-old Portlander

ATRIO Health Plans

Health Net Health Plan of Oregon, Inc Health Republic Insurance Company Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the NW

By Leslie Kaufman New York Times News Service

To most English speakers, "platform" is a noun. But

among news organizations, it is quickly becoming a verb. For publishers, the new meaning of "to platform" is something akin to: Take a tra-

Health Net Health Plan of

Company

More onlinepublisherslet readersfill the space

2014: :2015(es- Change' average ' timated'): $360 : ' $339: -5.6% $297 : ' $3 10: ; 4 . 9%

LifeWise Health Plan of

Oregon Moda Health Plan, Inc. Oregon's Health CO-OP PacificSource Health Plans Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon M Samaritan Health Plans, Inc. Trillium Community Health Plan, Inc. UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company UnitedHealthcare of Oregon, Inc.

ditional media company and magazines. At Time Inc., En- before." add technology that allows tertainment Weekly has teleNevertheless, "the chalreaders to upload digital con- vision fans posting updates lenge for journalists is to ortent as varied as links, text, on their favorite shows, and ganize and triangulate all this video and other media. The at Gawker, readers can en- input, to vet and verify and result is a "publish first" mod- gage with each other as well translate," he said. el in which a lightly filtered, or as with writers, completely P latforming i s n o t n e w . unfiltered, stream of material uncensored. Many digital publications, moves from readerto reader, There is broad range to just particularly those in niches with the publication acting as how much latitude readers like food or sports, have woahostand directing conversa- get. USA Today still screens ven material posted by their tion but not controlling it. all the posts on its read- audiences into their business Some media companies er-powered publishing plat- strategy from the start. The view it as a way to enhance form. But in whatever form it cookingand community web-

6 . 7%

$3 1 5 ; 6 . 3 %

289

2 86

this fall, a huge vertical shaft lined with 84 concrete

$306 $335 $358 $331 $310

$333: 290:

4 . 1%

will begin. The world's biggest tunnel-boring machine, nick-

-1 9.1%

$308, : -6.6% $299 -9.7% $302: 0 . 1% $302'

-13.0%

$298': -26.0%

$330 :'

$ 363

$323 .:'

9 . 9%

$356: 9 . 9%

Continued from A1

where rate proposals are confidential until released or until

leased Friday,comes a few plans are being sold. months ahead of open enIn many cases,regulators rollment, the shopping sea- trimmed the rates requested son, from Nov. 15 to Feb. 15, by insurance carriers. Moda, when customers can switch for example, asked for a 12.5 carriers. percent rate increase, but it Oregon officials say the was scaled down to 10.6 perrates are at best a starting cent.Pacific Source asked for point for consumers and more 15.9 percent and later revised detailed questions about the it to 10.6 percent, but was only plans' benefits should follow. approved for 3.9 percent. More information is expectOne reason: The reductions ed by mid-August when the reflected the smaller burden of Insurance Division will release charity, or free care, absorbed premium estimates for differ- by the companies since covent plans, ages and locations. erage was increased to hunUnder the federal health dreds of thousands of previcare overhaul, insurance com- ously uninsured Oregonians. "Most of the increases got panies can no longer deny coverage to people with pre-exist- knocked back a little from ing conditions. what was proposed," said A lso, Oregonians w h o Jesse Ellis O'Brien with the signed up for coverage via OSPIRG Foundation, a conCover Oregon will have to sumer group. "The insurance re-enroll come November, division took steps to protect because the state ditched its consumers from paying more glitch-filled exchange and than they should." is switching to the federal As of the end of M arch, exchange. about 195,000 Oregonians "The great news is that the were enrolled in individual way the market works, people health insurance plans, includhave options. They can look at ing transitional and grandfaother plans and change their thered plans, and 180,000 in minds," Cali said. small group plans. Together, Oregon officials say the they represent about 10 perrate-setting process was pub- cent of the state's population.

he was serving as the chair-

Continued from A1

Speaker-elect John Boehner, R-Ohio.

man of the transition team for President Franklin Roose-

velt initiated weekly radio adand begin to restore a govern- dresses to the nation, which he cency and the incompetence

called "fireside chats." Ronald

against us." Reagan revived the tradition Earlier this week, Walden in the 1980s, and every presitold reporters he intends to dent since has delivered weekseek another term as Nation- ly addresses. It has become al Republican Congressional traditional that the party that

November 2010. At the time,

f

-Psfh v

A worker enters the tunnel dug by Bertha, a

I

k

mid-December after only

1,000 feet of excavationis down there in the dark, awaiting what may well be the world's biggest industri-

does not occupy the White

House also delivers a weekly address, with rotating speak-

waterfront to new development.

paign. When things break, he added, "it all scales up, and it scales up the challenge as well that you have to overcome." On paper, the complex plan looks like a cross between a ballet and a monster-truck pull in its combi-

Bertha, as it moved forward on its 9,000-foot journey, is inbitter

major delays,

What exactly happened to dispute, with huge dollar totals at stake. The tunnel's contractor has argued that a buried

larger debate about the city's future, as the biggest building boom in at least a decade is reshaping the skyline and adding

not identified in the contract,

thousands of new residents-

er. That, he said, makes it the state's responsibility.

and their cars. But here is the hard truth about the tunnel: It is not be-

said Chris Dixon, the project manager at Seattle Tunnel Partners, the t u nnel b u ildBut the state has refused Se-

attle Tunnel Partners' request ing built to reduce vehide con- for $125 million to pay for Bergestion (improving safety is its tha's breakdown, m aintainmain goal) and it might actual- ing that the pipe's existence ly make traffic worse. was well known i n r eports A traffic study group created and studies that construction by the city and the state said in managers should have known M archthatupto 58,000drivers about if they had looked. a day could divert onto local Preedy said the contract isstreets or Interstate 5 depend- sueswere "a distraction"from ing on the toll structure and the central issue at hand, to get

8-inch diameter steelpipe in the machine's path led to problems of grit and rock infiltrating the seal and bearing system, but nation of delicate details and state transportation experts beheavy-torque engineering. lieve the pipe had nothing to do First, a rail-mounted crane with the trouble at all. rate imposed for the tunnel. will be inched up to t he The rescue operation (work- About 110,000 vehicles a day shaft's edge. Then, a 2,000- ers call it "the intervention") were using the viaduct before ton piece of the boring ma- began in late spring with con- the excavationbegan, free of chine's front assembly will struction on the shaft to reach charge, but the tunnel project be raised up and laid down Bertha. Workers have been hinged on a toll to pay for at on the waterfront. There it sinking pilings in a ring to pre- leastpart of its cost and upkeep. will be repaired under the vent the shaft from collapsing, Meanwhile, t h e fu l l -boil supervision of J apanese using 24,000 cubic yards of debate over the cause of Bermanagers from the compa- concrete — enough for a medi- tha's problems, not to mention ny that built it, reinforced um-size office building. Once the finger-pointing about who with 200 or so tons of new that ring is complete, digging should ultimatelypay for the resteel and slowly lowered on the shaft will start. pairs, has yet to begin. back down into the 120-footWhen the shaft is ready, BerThe steel pipe that the madeep pit. And then things tha, which is damaged but still chine struck in December was really get tricky. Project operational, willbe turnedback put there by the state in 2002 to managers liken reattaching on so she can chew through the monitor groundwater but was Bertha's front end to putting concrete pilings to reach the a rebuilt, souped-up engine center of the shaft. There, the machine will rest on a cradle

where workers can detach the front end and hoist it out.

weighs a certain amount, Beyond Bertha's problems, everything connects in a the tunnel plan itself has also certain way — now you're become intertwined with a going to put it back in the

the machinefi xed and back to

tunneling. "Those questions will be answered in time," he scud.

Dixon said the dispute was rather like Bertha herself, wait-

ing for its dayinthe sun. "It's lurking in the background, waiting to appear," he SBld.

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Join us for a $tree

Way Viaduct Replacement

Program, of which the tunnel is the biggest part. "So obviously they're doing a lot of planning and engineering work to ensure that g oes according

could resume next March, 16 months after tunneling was stopped. Until then, the

MS Educational Session From Biogen Idec, the leaders in multiple sclerosis research Date: Friday, August 8, 2014 Check-in time: 5:00 PM

rescue itself — the cost of which, along with delays, could surpass $125 million — has become its own dra-

Seminar time: 5:30 PM — 7:30 Plvl

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nel-boring machine ever built — about five stories

ers. Today's address marks the

across, or 57.5 feet — Bertha

third time since Obama was elected that Walden has deliv-

was designed to dig under

ered the Republican address.

the city to replace an aging viaduct. The project was given urgent priority after

— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbuifetin.com

rnahhin, that has seen

David Ryder New York Times News Service

tunneling at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Cham-

into the family Volvo. "An engine mounts in there a certain way, it

tunnel-boring

last week in Seattle.

o

"When you have such a bigmachine,you havea big an earthquake in 2001 revealed intervention," said Youssef instability in the elevated roadHashash, a professor of way, which was built in the civil and environmental 1950s. Tearing down the viaengineering who teaches duct will also open up the city's

to schedule, tunnel work

Walden

w eeklyRepublican address in

tentwas seenbymore readers.

a pipe and was damaged in

added. If all

Walden last delivered the

the simple tools of "likes" to ensure that better-quality con-

named Bertha — which hit

it will fit back in there," he

two years. Heading the party's election wing makes Walden the fifth-ranking Republican in the House.

sitehad successfullyemployed

al rescue operation.

$381'

lic and very transparentunlike in many other states,

Committee chairman, a position he has held for almost

co-founder of Food52, said her

back the slurry that defines

1.2 %

Rates

ment that works for us and not

the publications' reputations for reliability could be undermined easily. A manda H esser, t h e

underground Seattle, will

The Bulletin

cans can reject the compla-

it possible for outsiders to upload raw content for fear that

By Kirk Johnson

be finished, and a Mr. Fix-It operation unlike any other

3 Estimate is for Salem area 4 Estimate is for Eugene area Source: Oregon Insurance Division

"This N ovember, A meri-

But established publications have flinched at making

New York Times News Service

pilings, designed to hold $ 293:

ers very much like to see.

eanimain er a, ewor 's es unne- orin mac ine SEATTLE — Sometime

$ 269 : ' $2 97 ;

1 Estimate based on filed rates and approved average rate change. Final charged rates may vary slightly from estimate. 2 Approved rate change is an average, and changes on individual plans may vary.

The rate information, re-

their relationship with read- takes, the trend is seen as un- site Food52 has built a dataers while increasing content stoppable and full of risks. base of 29,000 recipes; about "Done well, this i s b oth production at minimal cost. 90 percent of them came from Conde Nast Publications, inevitable and wonderful," readers. plans to allow a select group said Tom Rosenstiel, execuEqually important, allowof writers to start posting tive director of the American ing readers to post is widely on its Traveler website in Press Institute. "Technology believed to make them more m id-August aspartofaseries offers the possibility for a loyal and keep them on the site of experiments involving its richer journalism today than longer — something advertis-

Seattle's waterfront to allow

Register today at MSLiveEvents.com or call 1-866-955-9999. biogenidec

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Treasurer

was unaccounted for.

account for inmates at the Jef-

Thursday, Goss was inContinued from A1 dicted on eight counts of secAdditional investigation by ond-degree forgery, 14 counts the county found 14 instances of third-degree theft and 14 between last September and counts of official misconduct. February in which cash was S he is scheduled to be ar missing from a day's depos- raigned inJeff erson County its, while corresponding alter- Circuit Court on Friday. ations to or irregularities with Goss was investigated by the same day's checks put the the Department of Justice in county's total daily receipts in 2011 following the disappearbalance. A total of $315 in cash ance of nearly $8,000 from an

ferson County jail, and by the

Marijuana

county commission in connection with the investment of $20

Continued from A1

million in county funds in cor-

c ompetition than a n y thing," said Russel Wise,

porate debt notes in violation

of county policy and state law. Both investigations conclud-

" It's more like a

r o se

a pot grower who entered

ed there was insufficient evi-

three plants and a marijuana-infused baklava treat.

dence to file criminal charges against her.

Other Colorado contests — patterned after Amster-

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com

dam's famed Cannabis Cup — gauge drug quality and flavor. Edible products did require tasting. A

E oavauine ossi e,

utman ou ts ersi st

s e c r et

panel of judges sampled brownies and other treats earlier this month at an uneating them all, but by the

end theywere really feeling it, so they just tasted them and spit them out," Cain

said with a laugh. "We ofThe winning brownie was made with walnuts

New York Times News Service

Even as federal health of-

and dark chocolate. Top

prize was $20 and a blue

f icials announced plans t o

speed development of an Ebola vaccine, scientists who

Brennan Linsley/The Associated Press

A visitor walks through the pot pavilion at the Denver County Fair, the nation's first county fair to allow pot competitions.

disclosed location. "At first the judges were

fered them cabs home."

By Roni Caryn Rabin

A5

ribbon. The fair already has a use," said judge Robert Folse, green ribbon — for environ- who works at a pot dispensary as a "budtender," sort of a som-

mentally conscious methods.

For the handmade bong melier for marijuana. It's too soon to say whethcontest, three industry insiders judged 17 entries for crafts- er marijuana contests will manship, creativity — and spread to other fairs. Colorado functionality. StateFairorganizers have ex"It has to be something spe-

pressed no interest in marijua-

cial, something you'd want to

na competition.

t

study the virus warned that

the task would be arduous and that success was hardly guaranteed. The Ebola virus is "a survivor," said John Dye, chief of the viral immunology branch

"They've done fabulous vice level both sides expect," work, but it definitely takes

Continued from A1 He has a master's in

at the U.S. Army Medical Re-

public administration from City University-Seattle and

search Institute of Infectious

a bachelor's in paramedical

Diseases. "It does what it can

health services from Cen-

to avoid the human immune system."

Frederick Murphy /CDC via New York Times News Service

The government plans to A colorized transmission electron micrograph image shows some fast-track development of a of the structure of the Ebola virus. vaccine shown to protect macaque monkeys, aiming to test it in humans as early as next month. If the vaccine proves effec-

tive, it may be given to health care workers and others at

high risk for infection sometime in 2015, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infec-

tious Diseases. But the development effort

depends on several contingencies: fast regulatory approval of the trial, the first of

its type in healthy humans; results proving the vaccine is safe and provokes an immune

response; and, perhaps most critically, attracting the interest and investment dollars of

the pharmaceutical industry. Assuming the necessary Food and Drug Administration approvals are obtained, Fauci said, about 20 volunteers will receive the experi-

mental vaccine beginning in mid-September. "You've got to be really careful," he said. "This is the first time this will be put in a human."

Some scientists have called the fast-track approach aggressive and optimistic, warning that human trials inevitably encounter stumbling blocks, including adverse reactions, and that it often takes many recalibrations to figure out the optimal dosages.

Strangely elusive Researchers have b een studying the Ebola virus for decades,and vaccine efforts have begun to bear fruit with

WHO:Edola outpacing efforts to control it

ABUJA, Nigeria — In anominous warning as fatalities mounted in West Africa from the worst known outbreak of the Ebolavirus, the head of theWorld Health Organization said Friday that the disease wasmoving faster than efforts to curb it, with potentially catastrophic consequences including a "high risk" that it will spread. The assessment wasamong the most dire since the outbreak was identified in March. Theoutbreak has been blamedfor the deaths of 729 people, according to WHO figures, and left more than1,300 people with confirmed or suspected infections. Dr. Margaret Chan,WHOdirector general, was speaking as she met with the leaders of the three most affected countries — Guinea, Liberia andSierra Leone — in Conakry, the Guineancapital, for the introduction of a $100million plan to deploy hundreds more medical professionals in support of overstretched regional and international health workers. "This meeting must marka turning point in the outbreak response," Chansaid, according to a WHOtranscript of her remarks. "If the situation continues to deteriorate, the consequences can becatastrophic in terms of lost lives but also severe socioeconomic disruption and ahigh risk of spread to other countries." She said the outbreak was "caused bythe most lethal strain in the family of Ebola viruses."

tral Washington University. The position has been a tough one for the county to

keep filled, with 17 directors cycling through in the

R e i nke said. "We then need to

them away fromtheir primary k n owthe costs and decidehow responsibilities and has made we can deliver the services as it harder to move 911 forward," efficiently and effectively as Anderson said. "We've possible. I can't tell you ". how important it is to been holding things in . ' ' 'll l " place for the last year, me that I engage with all but having Steve on ,' the stakeholders and we board will allow us to know where they want ~ move into th e f u ture us to go. I sincerely bebothinterms of techno- Reinke lie v e this is the public's logical advancements organization and we're and networking with t h e e n trusted with doing the job on agencies we serve." their behalf." .

,

~

.

past 20 years. The most recent, Robert Poirier, left in June 2013. A nderson said the county Rein k e ad d e d t h a t he County A d m i nistrator is eying "next gen" 911 tech- doesn't expect any difficul-

Tom Anderson said Friday nology, which would allow t y switching from a departthe delay in hiring was the county to receive not only ment in Washington to one in caused by other high-lev- calls, but also text messages Oregon. "Overtheyears,I'vegoneto el departures, including and videos. Beyond purchasthe personnel manager, fi- ing and operating the new a number of conferences and nance director, county legal technology, Reinke and his s poken with colleagues from counsel and health director. staff also would have to set all over the country, and the " Having to w ork o n up protocols for receiving and issues we face are pretty simmultiple ex e c utive-level processing the information. ila r ," he said. "It's even true for recruitments at the same Once in Bend, Reinke said d i ff erent sized centers. The time frankly l i mited our he will begin by assessing the personnel you hire have to be ability to go after 911," An- needs of both the communi- intelligent,dedicatedandcomderson said. ty and the agencies that rely m i t ted t o c u stomer service. Over the past year, long- on 911 for information and M anaging the technology is time 911 managers Sara coordination. a major part, too. You need to "We are the bridge between make sure the systems are roCrosswhite and Rick Silbaugh have helped to lead the community and the public bust and reliable." the department, Anderson safetyresponders, and weneed — Reporter: 541-633-2160, sard. to make sure we know the sertieeds@bendbuiletin.com

Americans with Edola returning to U.S. Two American ald workers seriously ill with Ebola will be brought from West Africa to Atlanta for treatment in one of the most tightly sealed isolation units in the country, officials said Friday. One is expected to arrive today, andthe other a few days later, according to Atlanta's Emory University Hospital, where they will be treated. Theyaredue to arrive in a private jet outfitted with a special, portable tent designed for transporting patients with highly infectious diseases. It will be the first time anyone infected with the disease is brought into the country. U.S. officials are confident the patients can be treated without putting the public in anydanger. Ebola ls spread through direct contact with blood or other bodlly fluids from an infected person, not through the air. The two Americans — Dr.Kent Brantly and NancyWritebol — worked for U.S. missionary groups in Liberia at ahospital that treated Ebola patients. TheState Department and theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention areassisting the groups in their transfer. — Bulletin wire reports

the development of several

strategies for priming the immune system to recognize and attack the v i ru s a f ter should receive it.

exposure. But Ebola is strangely elusive, raging through populations like wildfire before disappearing. Unlike viruses that

imation to a human. However, "Ebola is l ik e l ightning we are different from monstrikes," Dye said. "How keys, so we don't know exactly would you predict what area, how it would work," Dye said. what village, what country There are other unanswered

to vaccinate? Is it realistic to r e spiratory think we could vaccinate the system or only the gastroin- whole continent of Africa?" attack only t h e

testinal system, Ebola attacks almost every cell in the human

Human test ing

body. The vaccine to be tested in But it does not persist long- humans relies on a benign viterm in the bodies of the in-

fected, as does HIV. Since it was identified near-

ly 40 years ago, Ebola has infected fewer than 5,000 and killed fewer than 3,000 in Africa, home to 1.1 billion peo-

ple. By contrast, more than 35 million people worldwide are infected with HIV, and close

to 39 million have died of its complications.

Development of an Ebola vaccine should not be as challenging as developing an HIV vaccine, scientists say. Yet the unpredictable and sporadic nature of this infec-

questions, he

n oted. W h at

doses should be used'? How long would the protection last? Would people need booster shots'? Given the sporadic nature of Ebola outbreaks,some experts

believe a vaccine is not the anfrom the surface of the Ebola swer. Instead, they say, it would virus. The proteins help the vi- be more pragmatic to focus on rus penetrate human cells. drugs that canbe administered If the vaccine is successful, soon after people are exposed. the immune system will be One suchtherapy relies on trained to recognize the pro- antibodies drawn from monteins and to mount a strong re- keys that survived infections sponse should it encounter the with the Ebola and Marburg viruses in the laboratory. In "The immune system says, subsequent trials, other mon'Hey, we've seen this before.' k eys were treated with t h e The plans have been leaked," antibodies two days after Chandran said. exposure to the viruses and The initial human trial is in- survived. tended to evaluate the safety of Cocktails of antibodies from the vaccine and to see whether mice injected with an Ebola it induces an immune response protein have also protected similar to the one produced in monkeys. the monkeys. Efforts to develop vaccines rus that carries two proteins

tion has made an Ebola vaccine an unattractive goal for drugmakers. The i m munized a n imals and treatments to counter the "It's not really a good target were deliberately exposed to Ebola virus have been underfor a pharmaceutical compa- the Ebola virus and survived. way for more than a decade, ny," said Kartik Chandran, an

But human volunteers will not

but recent international alarm

associateprofessor of micro- be exposed to the virus, Fauci has infused new urgency into biology and immunology at sard. the research. the Albert Einstein College of

That means the protective value of the vaccine in the real

"The threat that this will go

Medicine in New York who researches Ebola. "It's not clear world may not be known for you could even earn back your many years, several scientists

from one country to another

investment." Even if an effective vaccine is developed, it is unclear who

exotic diseases are real," Fauci said. "This is a public health imperative."

noted.

"The monkey models that

we use are the closest approx-

has galvanized attention and a realization that these bizarre

Aaron MeyerRockViolinist And His Three Piece Band at Broken Top Club

THURSDAY, AUGUST 7 " 7:00 — 9:00 pm Doors oPen at 6:OOPm

• Sunrise Patio

General Admission Seating C oncert Rock V i o l i n i st A a ro n M e ye r p e r f o r m s c u t t in g e d g e o riginal m u si c an d a r r a n g e m e nts w i t h v i r t u o s it y an d p a s si o n . A aron b r i n g s hi s f r esh an d i n v i g o r a t in g i n s t r u m e n tal st yl e t o t he stage and g e n u i n el y c o n n e cts w i t h a u d i e n ces of al l a g e s .

Tickets on Sale Now $22 per person admission

Everyone is Welcome Food and beverage willbe available for purchase, upon admission Ticketscan be purchased by calling 541-383-8200 or emailing reception@brokentop.com


A6

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

samic ae's rua vi eossen Uganda anti-gay law struck down messa e o rienan o e a i e By Jeffrey Gettleman

headache for him. Uganda's vehement anN AIROBI, Kenya — A ti-gay movement began in Ugandan court on Friday 2009 after U.S. preachers struck down a punitive an- went to Uganda and worked ti-gay law that has strained closely with legislators there Uganda's relations with the to draft a bill that called for West, but the court ruled on putting gay people to death. narrow technical grounds, While the bill was being depreserving the possibilitythat bated, attacks against gay the measurecould be revived. Ugandans began to increase. In front of an overflow- In early 2011, David Kato, a ing courtroom in Uganda's slight, bespectacled man and capital, Kampala, a panel of one of the country's most outfive judges announced that spoken gay rights activists, the Ant i -Homosexuality was beaten to death with a Act, which punishes some hammer. homosexual behavior with As the international critlife in prison, was invalid be- icism grew, and Western cause it had been passed by countries prepared to cut Parliament without a proper millions of dollars in aid, quorum. the Ugandan government "We're very happy," said modified the bill to make SylviaTamale, a Ugandan "aggravated homosexuality" law professor who has sup- punishable by life in prison, ported gay rights despite although that hardly placated persistent threats and harass- Western donors. Parliament ment. "But it's unfortunate passed the bill in December, New Yorh Times News Service

By Mitchell Prothero

that the IS has brought sta-

McClatchy Foreign Staff

bility and honor back to the

IRBIL, Iraq — The Islamic State, the radical Islamist

community," Lister said. Opposition to the Islamic State may grow over time, Lister said, especially as public punishment for violating the group's harsh rules increases. "But for now," he added, "I think many people are simply 'going with the winner' and ensuring their own security."

group that now controls large swaths of eastern Syria and northern and central Iraq, posted another slickly produced video online this week that warns its religious and political rivals that they face brutal torture and execution

if captured.

Looking west

But the 36-minute film, "On

the Path of the Prophets," does much more than that, analysts

The Islamic State has long shown itself adept at commu-

said, and shows that the Is-

lamic State has a remarkably sophisticated understanding of messaging that makes it clear that the group is prob-

nications in the modern InterThe Associated Pressfile photo

net age. It doesn't operate its

A motorist passes by the flag of the Islamic State group at the

own Twitter account, Face-

entrance of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul.

book page or website — all of which Internet providers can take down or block. But it

ably the most tactically and strategically adept t errorist

loyalty," he said. who the rightful heir is to the Such pragmatism in select- Prophet Muhammad. everseen. ing targets — combining the B ut al-Tamimi s ai d t h e practical with the spectacular murder of perceived apostate Sophisticated propaganda — adds to the group's reputa- prisoners was part of an even The overall impression that tion for ruthlessness toward more cynical plan, an attempt analysts draw from the film friend and foe alike. The vid- to draw an equally brutal reis that far from being just a eos also help recruit adher- sponse from regime-aligned group of psychotic killers, the ents, despite the brutal nature forces and militias directed at Islamic State's leaders have of what they depict. the alienated Sunni popula"While such horrific bru- tion that has for the most part thought out carefully how to harness the group's brutality tality is abhorrent for the vast embraced the Islamic State, at to spread its influence. The majority of people, the IS is least so far. "They are hoping (enraged) group's targets aren't valu- also aware that it does in fact able just militarily but also on help recruit, too — one need Shiite militias will rear their a number of other levels that only scan over social me- heads and engage in ethnic underscore the Islamic State's dia ... to see the enthusiastic cleansing, which they can communications goals. responses such violence re- then advertise to Sunnis to " Executing several h u n - ceivesamong its supporters," say, 'You're being threatened dred men is one thing," said Lister said. by the Rafidites. We will proCharles Lister, an expert on Aymenn al-Tamimi, who tect you,'" he said. jihadi groups at the Brooking studies jihadi groups for the And that, according to ListInstitution's center in Doha, Middle East Forum, a Phila- er, plays on a major psychoQatar, referring to one of the delphia-based research orga- logical element that's been scenes that unfold in the vid- nization, agreed. m ostly overlooked i n th e "Around the world, recruiteo. "But to purposely film it success of the Islamic State's in high quality and release ing is something they have seizure of much of Iraq: Sunit precisely at the end (of the in mind," al-Tamimi said. "IS ni tribal pride, which sufholy month of Ramadan) ... is fan boys in particular go wild fered for years at the hands a very purposeful message." with all those killings of 'Ra- of the Shiite-led government "Not only is such a message fidites,'" he said, using a de- that was installed in Baghdirected towards its direct en- rogatory term for Shiite Mus- dad during the American-led emies — the Shiite, Alawite, lims derived from the Arabic occupation. "In the immediate term, I and Syrian and Iraqi armies word for "rejectionists." Rad— but it also intimidates com- ical Sunni M uslims accuse do think there has been some petitors and r ivals towards Shiites of being heretics for recognition among Sunni cisubmission and pledging of rejecting the Sunni view of vilians in Mosul, for example, organization the world has

does relyon a cadre oftrusted

supporters to circulate its videos and pronouncements. Those pronouncements are

often produced in several languages — the Ramadan message of its leader, Abu Bakr al Baghdadi, was distributed in languages that included English, German and Albanian — and the translations appear to have been done professionally, perhaps by native speakers. The first public appearance of Baghdadi, preaching at a mosque in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, was recorded in high definition, and the video, profes-

sionally edited with cutaways of the praying crowd, was made public within 24 hours.

Some videos have been pointedly directed at support-

ers in the West, indicating that the group well understands that it has both exter-

nal and internal audiences. "On the Path of the Prophets" has been removed by

most online hosting services because of its graphic depiction of what appears to be

hundreds of gruesome executions. But it remains widely circulated on forums fre-

quented by jihadis.

that the court did not deal

with advocates calling it an

venient cover and drop what

new development," a State

with the substantive issues "early Christmas gift." Muthat violate our rights." seveni publicly signed it into Uganda's g o vernment,law in February. At the time, which is tightly controlled by he said "homosexuals are President Yoweri Museveni, a nurtured but not natured," former guerrilla fighter who and said that he could not unhas ruled for28 years,did not derstand how gay men could immediately indicate if it was not be attracted "to all these going to appeal the court's beautiful women." ruling. The Netherlands, Norway, Even though the judges Denmark and the World enjoy a reputation of being Bank swiftly reacted, cutting somewhat independent from or postponing some of their Museveni, they avoided tak- aid to Uganda. In June, the ing a stand on gay rights and United States announced that chose to nullify the law in it was suspending some aid, such a way that Parliament imposing visa restrictions could pass it again. and canceling a regional milMuseveni has supported itaryexerciseasam essage to the anti-gay measure despite "reinforceoursupportforhuinternational outcry and cuts man rights of all Ugandans, in aid from several Western regardlessof sexual orientagovernments, and he may try tion or gender identity." to resurrect the law. He has It is not clear what impact called gays "mercenaries" the court's ruling will have and said they are more likely on U.S. aid to Uganda, which to get sexually transmitted totals hundreds of millions of diseases and stomach worms. dollars eachyear. "We will c onsider what Some Ugandan legal scholars were hoping Museveni would steps may be necessary to use the court's ruling as con- respond appropriately to this has turned into a diplomatic Department official said.

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BEND STORE:61455 South 3rd Street (Old Hwy. 97) • 541-330-1777 Sale prices valid through Saturday, August 2, 2014. All items limited to stock on hand. Closeout items subject to prior sale. Photos for illustration purposes. Actual items/finish may vary. See store for details. Oregon CCB ¹2734.



B2 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

«l

«'04'.«'

N

A Dog catching discs was a standout attraction at the fairgrounds. JD Platt, of Bend, tossed discs to his 5-yearold border collie, Bossko, during one of their daily perfor-

mances Wednesday, the first day of the fair. (This dog's impressive; his other claim to fame?"Bossko is myonly male dog," Platt said. "Amongst12 dogs.")

<Cutter Kluser,10, of Redmond, sits with

some older cowboys at the rodeo area of the fair.

Photos by Andy Tullis •The Bulletin

Wednesday was the first day of the Deschutes County Fair 8 Rodeo in Redmond. But the fun doesn't end till Sunday. For event and pricing information, visit http://expo.deschutes.org.

«

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A"The fair this year is fun because I finally found a Pikachu," says Elijah White, 10, with his

grandmother, Sandy Jantzen, both of Redmond, at the fair Wednesday afternoon. They also found some fair treats to enjoy.

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A Redmond sisters Rebekah Shotwell, 15, left, an d Hannah Shotwell,13, dIght, get a surprise visit from a stilted entertainer, Portland's Sarah Foster, while walking the booths at the fair. "That's cool!" Hannah says. "How does she stand on those?"

«

4 Pat Benatar-

'80s pop singer

and county fair extraordinaire — entertains the

crowd Wednesday

«

evening at the

Expo Center.

A Bend cowboy Wyatt Bloom holds on tight while competing in bareback riding in the rodeo arena onWednesday.

On eur website —More photos from the Deschutes County Fair lj Rodeo are online atQobenfjbulletin.com/fair •

Next week: the Crook County Fair.


SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON CANNON BEACH

AROUND THE STATE

nan oun • 13-year-old girl is injured; mother sought she's safe. He asked the public

The Associated Press

say how the 2-year-old died. Smith an d

S chermerhorn di d n o t a d h e r c h i l dren dress the marital status but

checked into the Surfsand

said police detectives were

R esort, which i s

talking to the father late Fri-

c l ose t o

the iconic Haystack Rock, covered an injured 13-year- 2007 Chevrolet Suburban with on Wednesday, police said. old girl and the body of her the Washington license plate, There was no sign of forced 2-year-old sister at an inn on APX3141. entry, and the housekeep"We don't know if she's er discovered the children the Oregon Coast on Friday, and police were searching for OK or where she would have at 9:40 a.m. There were no their mother. gone," he said. adults in the room. Cannon Beach Police Chief The 13-year-old was critiCourt records show Smith's Jason Schermerhorn said Jes- cally cut and flown to a Port- husband recently filed for disica Smith, 40, of Goldendale, land hospital, where she un- vorce according to Portland Washington, is a person of derwent surgery. Her name TV reports. The documents interest in the case and inves- has not been released. also say she was denied a retigators want to m ake sure Schermerhorn declined to straining order against him. A hotel housekeeper dis-

ArSOn arreStS —Medford Police say they nowhavetwo suspects in a series of arson fires andaretrying to figure out which is the culprit. Officers arrested Gregory William Stabile, 29, onarson and other charges Thursdayafter witnesses reported hehadstarted a fire at the back of a downtown Medford house;witnesses tried to put out the flames with a gardenhose. Fire crews finished the work after the blaze spread to afence andanoutbuilding. The city has19 unsolved arson fires since June25. Police said last weekthey considered a57-year-old homeless womanthe top suspect. Lt. Mike Budreausays investigators expect the fires to endnowthat two people are incustody.

to be on the lookout for a gold

day afternoon in Washington state. He did not label the hus-

ROg88 Rlvef dfOwhlhg —Searchers have recovered the body of a 7-year-old boy who drownedwhile playing in the RogueRiver near a Grants Pass park. Dakota Vincent, of Wimer, wasfound dead in about 8 feet water150 yards downstream of the park. Police said three people went underWednesdaynight, but bystanders wereable to get two out, a19-year-old womanandher 5-year-old sister.

band a person of interest or a

suspect. Schermerhorn said investigators were still t alking to guests to learn if anyone heard something. He did not

say if investigators believe the violence occurred shortly

POrtland Staddillg —Portland Police say they found the body of a 55-year-old man in ahouse where they'd gone to investigate a stabbing of a 65-year-old man, whowas in critical condition Friday. Wounded, the manfled the northeast Portland house Thursday afternoon to a motel across the street, and police werecalled. Officers spent two hours trying to coax the suspect, WayneDinayog Nabehet, 47, out of the house.Whenpolice got inside, they found the body. Police didn't describe the circumstances of the violence but said it appeared all three people kneweach other.

before the housekeeper dis-

covered the children or hours beforehand.

I(lamath careorganization reopensto new patients The Associated Press shortage of doctors. ath County were locked out of Oregon health o f ficials Oregon Health Authori- joining the network. Though say a network for Medicaid ty officials say the Cascade they were still insured, they

locked out of the network went to the ER. More than a dozen regional

patients in Klamath County

Health Alliance coordinated

had to find their own doctors.

has reopened. It had previously stopped accepting new pectedrush ofenrolleesand a

About 5,300 adults in Klam-

The CCO saw about a 30 percent increase in emergency room use as of January. Officials say it's likely those

coordinated care organizations operate in Oregon. Two

patients because of an unex-

care organization is again accepting new patients as of Friday.

EVZNT TODAY PANCAKE BREAKFAST: $8.50; 8-10:30 a.m.; VFWHall, 1503 NE Fourth St., Bend;541-389-0775. MADRASSATURDAYMARKET:9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, Seventh and B streets; 541-546-6778. SUNRIVERQUILTSHOW AND SALE:Outdoor show with more than 200 quilts on display; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.villageatsunriver. com,celsbree@chamberscable.com or 541-593-8618. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring local artists and crafters; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Downtown Bend Public Library, 600 NWWall St.;

ENm a 541-420-9015. DESCHUTESCOUNTYFAIR 5 RODEO:Carnival rides, games, rodeo and a free Theory Of A Deadman concert; $12 daily passes, $13-$22 season passes, $7 for children 6-12 and seniors 62 and older, free for children 5 and younger; 10 a.m.-11

p.m., concert at 7p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.j.mp/deschutescountyfair or 541-548-2711. JEWELRYANDMETALARTS SHOW:Annual show and sale with jewelry, gemstone cutters, sculptors and blacksmiths; free; 10 a.m.-9 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave.,

WSSt-SldS tllUhdefStOfmS —Overnight thunderstorms with frequent lightning toppled afew trees and knocked out power in places from Salemthrough the Willamette Valley to the Portland area. Portland General Electric said there weremore than 3,000 customers out of service Friday morning in sevencounties. Lightning set a tree on fire in Sherwood andfirefighters were nearly hit when it fell down. Lightning also started brushfires in Sherwood andForest Grove. The Portland bureau of theNational Weather Service says 850 cloud-toground lightning strikes weredetected overnight.

were closed to new patients af-

terMedicaid expanded under the Affordable Care Act.

— From wire reports

Email events at least 10days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

Bend; www.cometalarts.com,

cometalartsguild©gmail.com or 541-382-8436. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERSMARKET: 10a.m.-2 p.m.; Northwest Crossing, Mt. Washington and NWCrossing

drives, Bend;www.nwxevents.com or 541-312-6473. VINTAGEFLEA MARKET: Vintage to re purposed goods in the gardens; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pomegranate Home & Garden, 20410 NE BendRiver Mall Drive, Bend; www.pomegranate-home. com, jantiques©bendcable.com or 541-383-3713. THORN HOLLOW STRINGBAND: Pioneer-inspired iigs of the frontier; free with admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum,

59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754.

readings; appetizersanddrinks

TWILIGHT CINEMA: An outdoor screening of "Despicable Me 2"; bring low-profile chair or blanket, no glass or pets; free; 7 p.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriver-direct.com or 541-585-3333. "QUEEN-IT' S A KINDA MAGIC": A theatrical creation of a Queen rock concert with live musicians and cast; $49-$59 plus fees; 8-10 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.

available; $10 suggested donation, reservations recommended; 6:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org, ticketing©cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.

NO RISKCOMEDYTOUR: Featuring nationally-touring comedians Lonne Bruhn, of Portland, and Chris Smith, of Philadelphia; $15; 8:30 p.m.; Volcan>cTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or

CASCADELAKESRELAY:A216-and 132-mile walking relay with a finish line party featuring music, beer

garden andfood; free; noon-8 p.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St., Bend; www.cascaderelays.com or 541-633-7174. CASCADESTHEATRICAL COMPANY'S SNEAKPEEK: Preview the upcoming season with

541-323-1881. THE PROPHETS OFADDICTION: The Seattle glam-rock band performs, with High Desert Hooligans; $6;9 p.m .;Big T's, 413 SW Glacier Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3864.

SUNDAY DESCHUTESCOUNTYFAIR 5 RODEO:Carnival rides, games,

rodeo andmore;$12daily passes, $13-$22 season passes, $7 for children 6-12 and seniors 62 and older, free for children 5 and younger; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.j.mp/deschutescountyfair or 541-548-2711.

Find It All

Online

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:40 p.m. July 25, in the1300 block of NW Constellation Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:12 p.m. July 25, in the1200 block of SE Third Street. DUII —Rodriguez ReyesSantos, 41, was arrested on susplclon of drlvlng under the influence of intoxicants at 3:55 p.m. July 26, in theareaof Driftwood andTerrace lanes. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:44 p.m. July 27, in the21000 block of Gardenia Avenue. DUII —Sunshine Lorraine Langs Joen, 21, wasarrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:03 p.m. July 29, in the area of SEThlrd Street and ReedLane. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:13 a.m. July 30, in the 60900 block of Snowbrush Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:32 p.m. July 30, in the 2100block of NE Eighth Street. DUII —Kevin William Trapman, 26, was arrested on susplclon of drlvlng under the influence of intoxicants at1:22 p.m. July 30, in the areaof Brookswood Boulevard andRockBluff Lane. DUII —Marcus Michael Jordan, 54, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:54 p.m. July 30, in the 900 block of NE Butler Market Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:28 p.m. July 30, In the 100 block of NW Franklin Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:43 p.m. July 30, in the 60700 block of Bristol Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:48 p.m. July 30, in the 100block of NW Franklin Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:32 a.m. July 31, In the63100 block of Nels Anderson Road. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:22 p.m. July 31, in the400 block of NW Riverfront Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 11 p.m. July 30, in thearea of NW

Portland Avenue.

PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:09a.m.July31, intheareaof NW Madras Highway. Theft —Atheft was reported at 11:40 a.m. July 31, in the area of SEElm Street.

CIVIL SUITS Filed July 8 14CV0495 —Discover Bank v. Jessica L. Bauer,complaint, $1 0,018.37 14CV0496 —Midland Funding LLC v. Rlchard Llnden, complaint, $12,038.80 Filed July 9 14CV0497 —Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.v. Daniel A. Mancino, Haley Ball as affiant of the estate of Holly C. Manclno, HaleyBall, individually, Nicholas D. Mancino, asaffiant of the estate of Holly C.Mancino, Nicholas D. Mancino, individually, and the state of Oregon, complaint, $131,998.00 14CV0499 —Umpqua Bank, as successor in interest by merger to Sterling Savings Bank v.Allen L. Lowery andEvonne K. Lowery, complaint, $137710.20 Filed July 11 14CV0500 —American Express Bank, FSB v. Roberta White-Harrell, complaint, $14,552.44 14CV0501 —Amerlcan Express Bank, FSB v. David Westalso knownas David P.West, complaint, $10,327.20 14CV0504 —Razor Capital LLC v. Troy Roe, complaint, $15,256.75 14CV0505 —Tina Oglev. Jason Burger, complaint, at least $14,000 Filed July 14 14CV0507 —JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association v. WayneE. Webber, Joellyn S.Webber, Genesis Futures LLC,Community First Bank, David B. Redwine, MD,individually and as David B.Redwine, M.D. Pension PlanandLaurel L. Redwine, complaint, $283,151.87 Filed July 15 14CV0508 —Central Oregon Irrigation District v. PacificCorp, complaint, at least $12,000 14CV0509 —Bayview LoanServicing LLC v. DianaSuzanneCondittand TD Bank USA,N.A., as successor In Interest to Target, complaint, $144,364.12

bendbulletin.com 14CV0510 —Nationstar Mortgage LLC,doing businessas,Champion Mortgage Company v.Theunknown heirs and devisees of Robert H. MacDougall, United States of America, State of Oregon, Mountain HighHOA and David Andresen, also known as, David Andresen, complaint, $271,649.53 plus Interests, costs andfees 14CV0511 —Michael Dotson, Sr. v. BrennanAnderson, complaint, $105,381.75 14CV0512 —David W.McMurray Revocable Trust, uadAugust 20, 2007 v. Bend InsuranceAgency Inc, also known as, BendInsurance Inc., doing business as Lumbermen's Insurance and Financial Services, complaint, at least $47,000 14CV0513 —Shannon Scharkey and Republic Fire Protection, LLC v.Robert T. Dodd andRepublic Fire Consultants, LLC,complaint,$500,000 Filed July16 14CV0514 —Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC v. SusanL.Battles,JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.andWells Fargo Bank, N.A., complaint, $316,130.16 plus interests costs and fees 14CV0516 —Steven Moffet v. St. Charles Health System, Inc., complaint, at least $175,000 14CV0517 —Hilary A. Renzv. Wei Lin Wang, complaint, $47,012.00 14CV0518 —Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. James S.Milliman, complaint, $10,281.63 Filed July 17 14CV0519 —U.S. BankNational Assoclatlon, as successor trustee to Bank of America, N.A., assuccessor by merger to Lasalle Bank, N.A., as trustee for Merrill Lynch First Franklin Mortgage LoanTrust, Mortgage Loan asset-backed certificates, series 2007-5 v. Russell W.Crawmer, RuthA. Crawmer andOracle Fundlng Group, complaint ,$366,099.69 14CV0520 —RayKlein, Inc., doing business as, Professional Credit Service v. Brandon E.Townsend, complaint, $12,215.90 Filed July 18 14CV0523 —FrankBettucci v. Stefan Hugh Dudley andBonnie J. Dudley, complaint, $34,114.88 14CV0524 —RayChapav. The Mt. Bachelor Village Association, Ski House II CondoAssociation of Mt. Bachelor and TheMt. Bachelor Village Association doing business asSki House II CondoAssociation of Mt. Bachelor, complaint, $155,910.50 14CV0526 —Pennymac Loan Services, LLCv. KyleHaron and Oregon Affordable HousingAssistance Corporation, complaint, $135,388.43

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

EDITO

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AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

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nee ouISu 0 t's been a long haul for the Boys 8r Girls Clubs of Cen-

Bsrss McCooz.

The Bulletin IM9E

Gonoon Bcnctt JonttCosTn RtcHstto Cos

Chairuoman Publisher

Editorin-Chief Editor o f Editorials

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tral Oregon, formed in 1996 when leaders of the original Bend and Redmond clubs decided fundraising might be

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easier as a single entity. Now they're preparing to undo their partnership and go their separate ways. In the 18 years since the Central Oregon organizationwas formed, the Boys 8 GirlsClubs have had both successes and difficulties. The successes come in the number of children they serve day after day, winter and summer. The difficulties all stem from one thing: money. In the early days the clubs expanded rapidly. The Bend club opened its doors in 1995, with Redmond following in 1997. Soon there were clubs in Terrebonne, Madras, Warm Springs, La Pine and Prineville. All required paid fulltime staff, and finding the money to keep all of them open proved impossible. By 2008 most had closed. Recently, the Boys & Girls Clubs have operated at two locations in Bend and one each in Redmond and Terrebonne. It's taken well over $1 million a year to keep the doors open even for four clubs, and raising that much has been difficult. Federal grants for such programs have dropped off dramatically in recent years, for one thing. Too, it always has and continues to be difficult to persuade donors in one community to put their money in a pot that feeds clubs in three. Club leaders hope the separation — Redmond and Terrebonne will

Club leaders hope the separation — Redmond and Terrebonne will be one unit, while the two Bend clubs will be the other-

will make fundraising easier. be one unit, while the two Bend clubs will be the other — will make fundraising easier. We hope so, too. Boys & Girls Clubs are a tremendous asset to the communities in whichthey operate. They provide hours of activities to schoolchildren through high school-age

five days a week, all year long. Kids can get help with homework, there's physical activity aplenty, arts programs and a host of activities designed to help children grow up well. Moreover, while the clubs are open to all, they're priced to allow children with limited financial means to participate fully. If the separation is to be successful, donors in all three communities must step up and give, generously. In doing so they will help make a better future for the children who are their future.

State shouldn't require a uselesspension report eports produced by Oregon government come in many shapes, sizes and shades of folly. Usually the facts are tethered to reality and folly is kept at bay. But then there are those reports like the "Economic Impact Study of the Oregon Public Retirees System." This is an annual report required by the state to explain the truism that billions of dollars in the

R

• $s

"PERS benefit payments have a significant, positive impact" ... The report has said that same thing year after year.

Is there really any question in anyone's mind that if you distribute billions of dollars in retirement benefits, that money goes into the economy are good. economy? We hope not. What might you guess it says? If Few people would challenge that you guessed that billions of dollars state employees are entitled to a rein the economy are good, you were tirement system. We certainly don't. right. The question is about the fairNonetheless the report comes ness of the PERS system. Is it the out every year, usually with the kind ofbenefit package that an emvery same three pictures, striking- ployee in the private sector could ly similar language and strikingly be expected to earn? Is there a jussimilar highlighted information. It's tification for making those benea list of all the many ways paying fits richer'? Will the state be able to billions in Public Employees Retire- meet its pension obligations even if ment System benefits is good. The the stock market dives'? Would it be only thing that really changes from better for the economy if less monyear to year are updated numbers. ey were spent on PERS and more Did you know, for instance, that in the pockets of Oregonians? "PERS benefit payments have a Oregonians don't need their significant, positive impact on Or- government tobe required to anegon's economy"? The report has nually republish the breathtakingsaid that same thing year after year. ly obvious.

err iscueesson aza Editor's note:This column was written before the short-lived U¹ U.S. brohered truce announced in

CHARLES

KRAUTHAMMER',t.

the middle of the night Thursday.

rental next door, our neighborhoods,

the United Arab Emirates and other Gulf states, and the Palestinian

Authority) intent on seeing Islamist

J

radicalism blunted and ultimately

lation (which it brilliantly achieves criticism from Israelis — left, in the Qatar-Turkey peace proposright and center — of his recent al). Hamas' radicalism has alienated cease-fire diplomacy. But that's only nearly all of its Arab neighbors. half of the story. More significant is • Egypt cut it off — indeed blockthe consternation of America's Arab aded Gaza — because of Hamas' partners, starting with the president support for the Muslim Brotherhood of the Palestinian Authority. Mah-

and terror attacks on Egyptian sol-

moud Abbas was stunned that Ker- diers in Sinai. ry would fly off to Paris to negotiate • Fatah, the main element of the with Hamas allies Qatar and Turkey Palestinian Authority, is a b i tter in talks that excluded the PA and enemy, particularly since its Gaza Egypt members were terrorized, kneeThe talks a lso u ndermined capped, expelled and/or killed when Egypt's cease-fire proposal, which Hamas seizedGaza in a2007 coup. • Hamas is non grata in Syria, Israel had accepted and Hamas rejected. "Kerry tried through his where it had been previously headlatest plan to destroy the Egyptian quartered, for supporting the anbid,n charged a senior Palestinian ti-government rebels. official quoted in the Arab daily • Hamas is deeply opposed by Asharq Al-Awsat — a peace plan Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf that the PA itself had supported. states who see it, correctly, as yet It gets worse. Kerry did not just another branch o f t h e I s l amist trample an Egyptian initiative. movement that threatens relatively It was backed by the entire Arab moderate pro-Western Arab states. League and specifically praised by Kerry seems not to understand Saudi Arabia. With the exception of that the Arab League backed the Qatar, the Arabs are unanimous in Egyptian cease-fire-in-place, which wanting to see Hamas weakened, if would have left Hamas weak and

defanged. Yet America's own secretary of state doesn't see it. Speaking of

Hamas-run Gaza, Kerry actually said in Paris: "The Palestinians can't have a cease-fire in which they think

the status quo is goingto stay." What must change? Gazans need "goods that can come in and out... a life that isfreefrom the current restraints."

But the only reason for those "restraints," for goods unable to

come in and out, is that for a decade Hamas has used this commerce to import and develop weapons for making war on IsraeL Remember the complaints that the heartless Israelis were not al-

lowing enough imports of concrete for schools and hospitals? Well, now we know where the concrete went-

into an astonishingly vast array of tunnels for infiltrating neighboring Israeli villages and killing civilians. Lifting the blockade would mean a flood of arms, rockets, missile parts and other implements of terror

for Hamas. What is an American secretary of state doing asserting emerge from this war strengthened. that Hamas cannot cease fire unless Why didn't Kerry just stay home it gets that'? Moreover, the fire from and declare unequivocal U.S. sup- which Hamas will not cease consists port for the Egyptian/Arab League of deliberate rocket attacks on Israeplan? Instead, he flies off to Paris and li cities — by definition, a war crime. sends Jerusalem a package of victoWhatever his intent, Kerry l eries for Hamas: lifting the blockade gitimized Hamas' war criminalifrom Egypt, opening the border with ty. Which makes his advocacy of Israel, showering millions of foreign Hamas' terms not just a strategic cash to pay the salaries of the 43,000 blunder — enhancing an Ameri(!) government workers that the can-designated terror group just near-insolvent Hamas cannot. when a wall-to-wall Arab front wants Forget about I s raeli i n terests. to see it gone — but a moral disgrace.

not overthrown. The cease-fire-in-

isolated, to ensure that Hamas didn't

place they backed would have denied Hamas any reward for starting this war, while what Kerry brought back from Paris granted practically all of its demands. Which is what provoked the se-

vere criticism Kerry received at home, including from (among others) the scrupulously independent columnist David Ignatius, who called Kerry's intervention ablunder. Kerry seems oblivious to the stra-

tegic realitythat Hamas launchedits rockets in the hope not of defeating Forget about Arab interests. The Israel but ending its intra-Arab iso- American interest is to endorse and

— Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for The Washington Post Writers Group.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

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IN MY VIEW

and especially those in close proximity to downtown and Drake Park, are owners made attempts to satisfy their in the leadership of both the feeling serious pressure. city tax liability, but strikingly, the River West and Old Bend NeighborIn the past few months the topic of audit also revealed that nearly half hood Associations, I advocated for vacation rental homes and their place of all vacation rentals had no permit protecting our neighborhoods and within the city has reached a new from the planning department to lepreserving their livability. Neighbor- fervor. I have heard firsthand from gally operate. hood character may actually be the neighbors who are virtually surVacation rentals may be an immost important and treasured aspect rounded by vacation rental by own- portant part o f B e nd's economic of our community, and in my mind ers (VRBOs) and about the challeng- vitality, and tourism is a key part of this "livability" is synonymous with es they say makes living next door our history and our future. After all, "quality of life," which is, as I see it, intolerable. families who stay in vacation rentals the true ethos of Bend. These critics also point to an au- may someday become residents here, Livability is a catchword that un- thorization process that is one of the or bring business here, but hearing derlies a variety of conversations most streamlined in the state, and the complaints as I have, I think it is Bend has had over the years, but re- that many vacation rentals don't have time we evaluate whether this ecocent complaints I've heard from citi- the right permits or don't bother to nomic vitality comes at an expense zens give me great concern: pay taxes. A recent city of Bend au- to our community that the citizens Whether it be speeding traffic on dit did reveal a small number of tran- of Bend feel is just too costly. For exresidential streets or the virtual con- sient room tax violations, and to their ample, it may very well be that part credit, most of these vacation rental

'

ohn Kerry is upset by heavy

efore elected to the Bend City Council, while working with-

veyor belt of visitors at the vacation

-

WASHINGTON-

J oin t e iscussion on nei o r By Douglas Knight

solidify this emerging axis of moderate pro-American partners gsrael, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia,

of the recent dearth of l ong-term

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth/In My View P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

o o iva iity

rental inventory may be attributed to

owners converting these homes into

meaningful data that the city will gather from cross-referencing va-

short-term VRBOs because of the enormous economic incentives to do so, and with this, our rental inventory and even the Bend rental market is

cation rental addresses with noise

now out ofbalance. This fall, the Bend Planning Commission will begin a review of Bend's residential district development standards. Individuals and neighborhood

The Bend Planning Division intends to fold this analysis and com-

associations will have an opportu-

and code violations, in the hopes of defining problems and finding true solutions. munity dialogue together into what I hope will be suggestions to refine our residential code as part of an amendment process. It will then be up to our

nity to express their concerns about residential livability issues from parking problems to noise and other issues associated with granny flats (accessory dwelling units) as well as

planning commission and the City

vacation rentals. The needs of eco-

track this issue and when the meet-

nomic development and affordable housing should also be a part of the

ings will be held. Bend's residential character and quality of life depends upon it.

conversation.

Council to make changes to the Bend

code that benefit us all. Please get involved. Go to the city website, www.bendoregon.gov, to

We can also incorporateother — Douglas Knight is a Bend city councilor.


SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES

enatecan i atess ar mateur imma erra ica over amacare, taxes c an e t e ocumenta By Jonathan J. Cooper

ritorial tax system, which she says would spur job creation but Merkley says would encourage companies to move

;.k 5-'r

The Associated Press

P ORTLAND — De m o cratic U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley wants to talk about taxes and

By David Colker Los Angeles Times

Robert Drew had no expe-

rience in filmmaking when he directed the 1960 documenta-

ry "Primary" that was radically different from the way TV documentaries were made at the time.

Drew's film, about relatively

unknown Sen. John F. Kenne-

"Most film documentaries were verbally based, and that creates two problems. First, it's deadly

dull, because a lecture on a living medium is always dull. Second, that approach obstructs any dramatic development that has the potential of unfolding. So I decided to kill the

knew how to tell a story with

manyOregonians, it's caused M e r k ley, meanwhile, a significant increase in cost." slammed Wehby's economic Wehby, a children's neuro- policies, saying they would surgeonfromPortlandmak- h urt the middle class. He ing her first run for elected called out her support for office, opposes the law's in- permanently extending Pressurance mandates for indi- i dent George W. Bush's tax viduals and businesses. She cuts and for supporting a ter-

Drew showed the film to Kennedy after his 1960 election victory. "I told him, 'What

we have here is a new form of history,'" Drew said in the T imes interview. The f i l m-

maker went on to make the documentary "Crisis" about the Kennedy administration's

Drew's last film about Ken-

ing the death of the assassinat-

ed president. Robert Drew was born Feb. 15, 1924, in Toledo, Ohio. The

family moved when he was young to Fort Thomas, Kenseaplane business and taught his son how to fly. He left high school shortly before graduation to join the Army and was posted to a combat squadron near Naples,

Italy. He flew 31 missions before being shot down behind enemy lines on Jan. 31, 1944,

at the age of 19. Drew survived

NSA bIII Continued from B1 The government's bulk collection of entire networks' worth of metadata was revealed last year in documents

leaked by former NSA con-

ly because people shared the scarce food they had.

The intelligence community has insisted that Snowden's said in a prepared statement. "Congress clearly intended leaks have hurt its ability to detect and track suspected this authority to be used to terrorists, but privacy advo- collect the communications

In addition to Lisa Drew,

who lives in Fairbanks, Alaska, Robert Drew is survived by two sons, a brother, a sister

and threegrandchildren. His second wife, Anne Drew, who

produced several of his films, died in 2012.

tractor E dward

S n owden.

cates have maintained that the government's domestic

of foreigners — not Amer-

surveillance has exceeded constitutional limitations by routinely collecting information on law-abiding citizens who are not suspects. As a longstanding member of the Senate Intelligence

National Intelligence recently confirmed that the NSA, CIA

Committee, Sen. Ron Wyden,

D-Ore., has long cautioned that the public would be s hocked to learn how t h e

government was interpreting classified portions of secret law. Together with fellow Intel-

ligence Committee member Mark Udall, D-Colo., he re-

Obituary policy

leased a statement praising Leahy's bill as a "vast im-

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Reward has six dogs to protect

m ultiple pastures o f goats and is not overly l o s ing

Missy will endanger his herd. W hoever

Bend, OR 97708

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,and by9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.

s h o t t he

dog could face charges of first-degree animal abuse. T o contribute to t h e reward fund, visit a Mid

Oregon Credit U nion branch and ask about the Missy M aremma Livestock Guardian Dog fund, account number 76667. To report i nformation about the shoot-

ing, contact the Crook County Sheriff's Office at 541-447-6398. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers®bendbull etin.com

p rovement" over th e

N SA

reform bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives. "While this progress is encouraging, this legislation unfortunately lacks important provisions that reform-

Continued from B1

On borderblaze, governorinvokesemergencypowers Buildings haveburned, but there are no reports of injuries from a wildfire that was touched off by lightning along the Oregon-California border and led to theevacuation of ranch families east of Ashland, a fire spokesmansays. Air crews over the fire reported the damageto multiple outbuildings, which could include barns, shedsand other uninhabited structures. There was noestimate of how many people fled. "It's not a whole lot of people becausenot awhole lot of people live out there," said Brian Ballou of the OregonDepartment of Forestry. The OregonGulch Fire, which erupted in theCascade-Siskiyou National Monument onThursday amid swirling winds anddry conditions, doubled since Thursday night to just over11,000 acres. Gov.John Kitzhaber invoked the state's EmergencyConflagration Act on Friday, requiring the state police and fire marshal to mobilize equipment, firefighters and other personnel from around the state. Ballou said Friday the wind died down a bit overnight, and firefighters made progress on containment lines. Thoseevacuated live along Copco Road, which leads south from Oregon66, known asthe GreenSprings highway. It links Ashland andKlamath Falls. Thefire location is north of the Copco damand reservoir in California. More than 2,000 lightning strikes in the region Wednesdaytouched off dozens of fires. — From wireyepolts

icans — yet the Director of and FBI conduct warrantless

with Washington." The statement called the bill, which

was backed by every Senate Democrat and opposed by all but one Republican, "an election-year gimmick."

Continued from B1 Examples of b u sinesses that discharge higher levels of waste into city sewers and that

might face higher costs under a new sewer rate structure in-

clude hospitals, restaurants, grocery stores, breweries and auto repair shops. Matt Thomas, co-owner of Subaru of Bend, is a member

co-sponsors — three Repub-

licans, 11 Democrats and independent Bernie Sanders of Vermont — on 'Itresday, the

day it was introduced. The following day, New Jersey Democrat Cory Booker also signed on. As o f

Fr i d ay , n e i ther

Wyden nor Merkley had of Americans that are swept joined as co-sponsors of the up under this authority." bill. Leahy's bill drew immediWyden and Udallpledged to work with Leahy to close ate support from the Amerithis loophole as the bill can Civil Liberties Union. In moves forward. a prepared statement, Laura Through his spokeswom- Murphy, legislative director an, Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., of the ACLU's Washington also commended Leahy's ef- office, praised Leahy's bill for forts to rein in what Merkley its significant constraints on called NSA overreach. the intelligence community's "I remain troubled, how- "out-of-control surveillance ever, that even under this authorities." "While this bill is not perdraft, the NSA would be able to search its databases for fect, it is the beginning of Americans' communications the real NSA reform that the without a court order. If the public has been craving since searches of communications

government wants to l o ok

the Patriot Act became law in

into an American's private 2001," she said in a prepared communications, it should go statement. "It is i mportant to a judge and get a warrant that the public understand — just like the Constitution

ers have proposed to end the promises," Merkley said. "I'll backdoor and warrantless keep working with Senator searches of Americans' per- Leahy, Senator Wyden, and sonal electronic communica- my colleagues on both sides tions under Section 702 of the of the aisle to add that protecForeign Intelligence Surveil- tion to this bill." Leahy's bill attracted 15 lance Act," Wyden and Udall

Rates

FIRE UPDATE

Continued from B1 Barnes said he still

concerned that

Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box6020

"This legislation perfectly encapsulates all that is wrong

Bill in COngreSS —S.2685, "The Uniting and Strengthening America by Fulfilling Rights and Ensuring Effective Discipline Over Monitoring Act of 2014.n Introduced Tuesday. Sponsor:Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.;16co-sponsors. What's next:Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar, but a date for floor debate andvote not scheduled. Online:Readthe bill at thomas.loc.gov/home/bills res.html

in the mountainous area for three and a half months, part-

Deathsof note from around the world: Warren Bennis, 89: Author and University Manny Roth, 94: Colorful club owner in of Southern California professor who advised Greenwich Village whose Cafe Wha? and its presidents and business executives on his acabasement-level stage was a rite of passage in demic specialty, the essence of successful leadthe 1960s for Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, Bruce ership. Died Thursday in Los Angeles. Springsteen and many others. Died July 25. — From wire reports

Phone: 541-617-7825

statement from the candidate:

tucky, where his father ran a

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

In hi s o w n n ews confer- to college. But those jobs are

choose the plan we want. For b e r isn't known yet.

in France, where it was show theatrically.

clash with A labama Gov. Hollywood movie — may have George Wallace over the govty to lookin on people's lives at not previously made a film. ernor's attempt to block black crucial times from which you But as a reporter and photo students from enrolling at the could deduce certain things editor for Life magazine, he University of Alabama. Drew, 90, died Wednesday pictures. And he felt television at his home in Sharon, Con- news was failing at that. "At the time, most film docnecticut. The cause was sepsis, said his daughter, Lisa Drew. umentaries w e r e v e r b ally Robert Drew produced and based, and that creates two directedscoresofdocumenta- problems," he said in a 1993 ry films, mostly for television, Los Angeles Times interview. during a career that spanned "First, it's deadly dull, because more than f our d ecades. a lecture on a living medium is Many were about politics and always dull. Second, that apcurrent issues. His film "The proach obstructs any dramatChair," for example, about a ic development that has the criminal scheduled to be exe- potential of unfolding. "So I decided to kill the narcuted, won a 1962 special jury prize at the Cannes Film Fes- ration and get the candid foottival. But Drew also focused age going." on the arts in documentaries With financing from Timesuch as "Jane" (1962), about Life, according to a Washingthe launching of a Broadway ton Post story, he oversaw the play starring Jane Fonda that engineering of a film/sound turned out to be a flop, and the unit that was technically porEmmy-winning "Man Who table, though it weighed 50 Dances" (1968), about the pounds and took two people sheer physical rigors endured to carry. The resulting hourby ballet star Edward Villella. long film, which captured He made several docu- Kennedy's vibrant energy and mentaries in Los Angeles, in- magnetism on the stump, was cluding "Fire Season," about turned down by NBC. It was a Latinogang member who eventually slashed to less than leaves his gang to join the Cal- a half-hour and shown on staifornia Conservation Corps tions owed by Time-Life and to fight fires, and "Warnings RKO, the Post said. But the from Gangland," about a gro- film got a far better reception

racethat'sabouttoheatup. A

focusedon thefacesofpeople — famous and not — mourn-

no interviews,

and see a kind of truth."

federal health care law. says its minimum insurance In dueling press events standards forcesomepeople Friday, both tried to advance to buy more coverage than their preferred narrative for a they want.

was an 11-minute short that

unknownsenator,John F.Kennedy,changed the medium

OBITUARY consin, had

could have been fodder for a

would love to talk about the

Merkley emphasized his family's blue-collar roots, saying his father's work as a millwright, homebuilder and mechanic provided enough income for the family to buy a home and send the children

nedy, "Faces of November,"

— Robert Drew, in a1993 interview; his1960film about a relatively

a 1962 interview with Alfred Norrins. "It would be the abili-

Wehby

conservative political group ence, Merkley acknowledged becomingtooscarce,hesaid. with ties to the bilthat the rollout of the He zeroed in on Wehiionaire Koch brothiaw owas a debacle," by's s tatements about a n gS, ers will go on the air ~ par ti cu l a rly i n Or- election-year bill b l ocked n ext week w i t h a egon, the only state Wednesday by Senate Repubthree-month adverNO V .4 tha t n ever was able licans. It would have limited tisingblitzthat'slike- E LE('TION t o l aunch an online taxbreaks for U.S. companies ly to boost Wehby, atmarketplace allow- that move operations overtack Merkley or both. ing people to sign up seas while creating incentives Ballots hit mailboxes in f o r insurance coverage. Ore- to bring jobs based in other October and are due Nov. 4. g o nians had to use a compli- countries to the United States. "A middle-wage job is a In a conference call with c ated and confusing old-fashreporters, Wehby said the i onedapplicationprocess. foundation for a f a mily," "What is clear is that de- Merkley said. "We need a lot health care law has failed to deliver on its goal of pro- spite folks having to go to pa- more of them, and this bill viding affordable, accessible per applications, the Afford- would have done a very poscoverage for everyone. able Care Act has had some itive impact in creating those "Really what it did was take enormously important im- jobs here." away Oregonians' choice," pacts in changing the predWehby declined to take a Wehby said of P resident atory practices of insurance position on the bill, saying she Barack Obama's health care companies," Merkley said. hadn't read it, but her camoverhaul,whichMerkleysup- Hundreds of thousands of paignhadpreviously criticized ports. "It's damaged the doc- uninsured Oregonians have it.After her conference call, tor-patientrelationshipsignifi- gained access to care, he Wehby's spokesman, Dean cantly. It's ruined our ability to said, although an exact num- Petrone, followed up with a

narration and get the candid footage going."

no correspondents — and just cer who fights back against the barest of narration. For the gang attacks. Both w ere most part, Drew and his crew shown on PBS in the 1980s. just turned on their cameras But it's likely that his most and filmed what happened i nfluential w or k w a s "Priin a documentary style that mary" with the pioneering, came to beknown as cinema unorthodox style that he was verite. to use throughout his career. "It would be theater without Drew — who was a high school actors; it would be plays with- dropout and fighterpilot whose out playwrights," he said in exploits during World War II

positions abroad.

the middle class. His Republican rival, Monica Wehby, Merkiey

Fall meetings The BendCity Council has scheduled two public meetings this fall to discuss its goals for the newrates. • First workshop:1-5 p.m. Sept. 24, Bend fire training center, 63377 Jamison St. • Secondmeeting:1-5 p.m. Oct. 14, fire training center.

of a citizen committee that

that there is much more work to be done to narrow the

government's overbroad surveillance authorities to bring them in line with our Consti-

tution and values." — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

businesses, including D eschutes Brewery, that has paid

higher sewer rates since the 1980s because the city identi-

fied them as producing more polluted wastewater. However, the program was never expanded to include the increasing number of businessesincluding such as hospitals, restaurants, grocery stores, breweries and auto repair shops — that sent more waste into the sewers.

"Now we need to make sure advised the city on how to reallocate sewer costs among to subsidize other business the rest of the business owners businesses. Thomas said that customers, the city "definitely are paying their fair share," because the existing sewer needed to fix it." Thomas said Thursday. rate structure relies upon resT homas said S ubaru o f — Reporter: 541-617-7829, idential customers and offices

Bend was one of a dozen Bend

hborrud@bendbulletin.com

Matt Thomas, co-owner of Subaru of Bend, isa member of a citizen committee that advised the city on how to reallocate sewer costs among businesses. Thomas said that because the existing sewer rate structure relies upon residential customers and offices to subsidize other business customers, the city "definitely needed to fix it."


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014

o

'

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH

LOW

""

59'

54'

'r Vw

A p.m. showeror thunderstorm around

I f' I

SUNDAY

ALMANAC

A t-storm in spots early; partly cloudy

MONDAY

""

89' 54'

Mostly sunny

'i T 7'

TUESDAY

90' 53'

EAST: A mix of clouds TEMPERATURE and sun andwarm Yesterday Normal Record with an afternoon 91 84 106' i n 1916 shower or thunder63' 49' 31 ' in 1963 storm.

/

city

Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 90/64/0.00 88/66/pc 90/67/pc 83/61/0.00 77/63/I 81/61/I

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

Bend/Sunriver Redmond/Madras Sisters ~ Prinevige La Pine/Gilchrist

High High Mode~rate High High

Source: USDA Forest Service

Th e

alifsx

3'

88/59

• Billings 92%2

eisma k

s VAP

o nto

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegss Lexington Lincoln

81/65/I 76/62/c

68/56/sh 83/70/pc

Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

77/69/I

93/69/pc 81/68/1 93/63/pc 87/69/pc 84/60/pc 98/71/pc 74/60/c

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA

77/66/c 80/60/I 81/61/1 79/56/c

86n48 80/66/I 88/66/pc 81/56/pc 83/64/pc 83/63/pc 78/58/pc 79/55/pc

OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Pooria Philadelphia Phoenix

ssn28

83/71/c 84/64/pc 78/57/c

96/73/pc 91/68/s 82/61/pc 86/62/pc 85/67/s

82/62/pc 78/56/I 83/67/c

72/53/pc 84/57/pc 67/52/I 83/62/pc

83/61/pc 81/66/1 79/63/I 81/62/c

91/58/pc 90/76/pc 90/73/pc 89/67/pc 82/62/s 85/68/pc 87n2/I

gongn 95n48

85ns/s 81/68/1 65/47/c 85/64/I 66/45/I 97/78/s

94n5/s

77/54/pc

9Onwpc 66/49/pc 65/49/sh 74/56/pc 73/41/s 92/83/I 87n58 81/62/s 65/42/s 68/56/pc 78/61/s 75/57/pc 87/61/s

84nr/r

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 71/47/0.00 70/49/s 68/53/pc 85/65/Tr 84/63/s 87/67/s 81/61/1.17 81/58/pc 81/60/pc 107/87/0.00 100n3/I 84/74/I 86/59/0.00 82/62/I 84/62/pc 86/64/0.00 88/64/s 91/66/s 82/69/0.13 86/67/pc 87/66/s 85/66/0.00 86/69/pc 84/67/c 87/60/0.00 86/65/I 87/66/pc 86/57/0.75 83/62/pc 83/64/pc 87nfrrr 88no/pc 88/69/s 91/79/0.00 88n7/I 88/77/I 83/64/0.59 79/61/pc 81/65/pc 87/65/0.00 85/67/s 86/64/pc 88/62/0.00 88/65/I 89/65/pc sgn7/D.oo 87n4/c 86/74/I 84/71/0.00 75/68/r 79/68/c 85no/o'.os 76/66/r 81/67/c 78n2/0.09 78no/I 79non 86/65/0.00 87/66/s 89/66/s 84/65/0.01 86/65/s 88/66/s

93/75/0.03 92//5/I 92/74/I 104/87/0.00 100n7/pc 95/80/I 85/66/0.64 84/64/pc 85/63/s 83/72/0.19 79/68/r 81/70/I 99/81/Tr 99//8/I 96/81/I Pittsburgh 82/58/0.00 76/61/I 77/62/I Portland, ME 78/61/0.00 73/57/sh 74/58/c Providence 80/64/0.00 69/61/r 77/62/c Raleigh 76/64/0.73 77/68/I 82/68/I Rapid City 89/54/0.03 87/57/s 89/59/pc Reno 95/66/Tr 97/63/pc 92/69/pc Richmond 79/71/0.26 79/69/I 82/69/I Rochester, NY 83/60/0.26 79/62/I 78/59/I Sacramento 104/66/0.00 99/61/s 93/65/pc Si. Louis 87/68/0.05 85/67/pc 87/66/s Salt Lake City 91/66/0.00 92/67/pc 91/66/I Ssn Antonio 95ng/o'.oo 92/74/pc 93/75/pc Ssn Diego 78/69/0.00 80n2/pc 81/71/I Ssn Francisco 72/60/0.00 76/60/pc 76/61/pc Ssn Jose 82/60/0.00 84/60/s 82/62/s Santa rc 74/56/0.03 70/55/I 74/55/I Savannah gfn4rr'r 88n3/I 87/73/I Seattle 84/59/Tr 85/60/pc 84/60/s Sioux Falls 84/53/0.00 84/63/s 86/64/pc Spokane 95/66/0.00 96/67/pc 94/65/s Springfield, Mo 83/62/0.00 85/64/s 85/62/s Tampa 93/77/0.00 91n6/I 89/76/I Tucson 92/73/0.69 89/73/I gon48 Tulsa 84/68/0.00 87/66/s 87/63/s Washington, DC sonsrri 78/69/I 83/72/I Wichita 92/61/0.00 87/64/s 89/66/s Yskima 99/67/0.00 100/64/pc 100/62/s Yuma 106/88/0.01 98//9/I 99/83/I

86/62/s

72/58/pc 93/75/s 58/46/r 113/79/s

Yesterday Today Sunday

City

o

Amsterdam Athens

75/61/0.00 81/63/c 10 8 7 95n7/0.00 89/75/s • 98ISS • Mil w Auckland 60/50/0.14 65/54/sh • Rap d Clty Detroa Baghdad 113/85/0.00 115/84/s 7 7 Ol Chev Bangkok 93/81/0.05 9Ong/r hiladolph 84/8 4 79/84 d d;%%Wv.W> seijing MT I 92n3/0.00 95n7/pc oLf c icag Q o ~v.v.v.v.v.v Beirut 84n7/0.00 87/76/s Precipitation: 3.43" n n a scc S a lt Lake ny Oms Oma 8 1 Cclu u 81. uis 9 2/67 X < • De n Berlin 80/58/0.00 82/70/pc 7SISO atAlbemarle NC ocw wwwv.v. v. t Bogota 64/46/0.01 64/49/I aom' t Louis K it Kansas ny Budapest 86/68/0.02 88/64/s 86ls 84/83 BuenosAires 72/61/0.02 74/57/I c 93/77/0.00 97/78/s Csbc Ssn Lucss Hsshvll Cairo 97n5/0'.00 97ns/s Oki maCHV o++V+ Calgary 81/57/Tr 79/57/I Csncun 90n2/0.00 90/74/pc orro < • Dsu Dublin 68/55/0.15 61/50/r ooa XW 'e Edinburgh 68/52/0.00 61/53/r %e Geneva 82/59/0.00 76/60/I XXXX eau 0 ua Hous ' o Hsrsre 75/45/0.00 74/44/s ~~~ 7 9 r 8 Hong Kong 94/83/0.94 93/83/I 4%V.~ / ok.kh kk 'e'e 'ek xxxxxxv.'v'4>kkwv.ww'e xa A.'cv.kv.v.hkkkkkv. Istanbul 88/77/0.00 86/74/I 'e'exxxxxwwwv.v.v.~ w'e x ff!mmxxwwwv.v.v.v.v.x Jerusalem 86/65/0.00 86/62/s v.wxx sfpvILv.xtvwywv.v.v.v.v. -x.eeexxxxwwy 'ev.Ykxx Qwwwv.v.v.% Johannesburg 69/46/0.00 67/42/s v v x '+ '+ 'v v '+ '+ v > ' v v v v '+ '+ '+ 'v '4 '+ x 'v Lima 64/58/0.01 68/57/pc Lisbon 73/66/0.00 75/63/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 75/59/0.03 75/55/r T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 84no/0.00 84/62/pc Manila 84/79/0.31 84/77/r aoi

M n

Plenty of sun

Yesterday Today Sunday

FIRE INDEX

+P Yt+

o

Hood River

Abilene Akron Albany 83/59/Tr 79/64/c Albuquerque 81/63/0.00 74/61/I Anchorage 66/56/0.00 68/55/s Atlanta 81/67/Tr 83/69/I Atlantic City 78no/0.36 76/68/r Austin 91n4/0.00 9OnO/pc Baltimore 81/70/Tr 76/66/I Billings 93/65/0.00 92/62/s Birmingham 88/68/0.00 85/68/I Bismarck 92/58/0.00 89/59/pc 0 a m 8 S e r a n R 6 d WEST:Sunshine and 9 1 /58 Today Sun. n 0 0 r9 U I 8 Boise 98/66/0.00 98/68/pc Yach 91/53 • John wu Sunrise 5:54 a.m. 5: 5 5 a.m. some cloudstoday. 90/54 Boston 73/62/r 63/53 • Prineville Day 53 tario Bridgeport, CT 82/65/0.00 Sunset 8:28 p.m. 8: 2 7 p.m. A seasonablywarm 82n2/0.00 73/64/r 94/56 • Pa lina 92/59 9 64 Buffalo 80/61/0.04 79/61/I Moonrise 12 : 36 p.m. 1: 3 8 p.m. afternoon. Mainly clearFloren e • Eugene ' Se d Srothers Valee 66/53 Burlington, VT 83/58/0.00 80/61/c Moonset 11: 33 p.m. none tonight. Su iuerw 89/54 98/64 Caribou, ME 78/54/0.00 79/58/sh Nysse • 8 9 / 2 • I.a pirte Ham ton MOONPHASES C e Charleston, SC 90n4/0.01 85/74/I untura 98/ 6 3 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 70/65/2.58 79/66/I First Fu l l Last • Burns J97/62 OREGON EXTREMES 90/54 /56 Chattanooga 88/66/0.01 84/66/I 65 3 • Fort Rock Riley 93/51 YESTERDAY l o d Cresce t • 89/51 Cheyenne 77/50/0.00 79/54/s 92/54 87/51 Chicago 85/62/0.15 84/61/pc High: 101' Bandon Ro seburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 84/59/0.00 80/61/I Aug 3 Aug 10 Aug 17 Aug 25 at Medford Jordan V gey 65/53 Beaver Silver 91/51 Frenchglen 92/60 Cleveland 81/61/0.09 77/61/I Low: 51' 92/60 Marsh Lake 94/56 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 71/53/0.00 76/53/pc 87/49 at Baker 90/51 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 84/61/0.01 85/62/pc T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley Columbia, SC 82n2/0.01 85/72/I • 95/60 Mercury 5:17 a.m. 8: 1 5 p.m. Chiloquin Columbus,GA 83/71/Tr 84non Medfo d 8 9 / 64 Gold ach 95 59 Rome Venus 4:03 a.m. 7: 1 6 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 85/64/0.00 81/63/I 66/ ,too/64 98/59 Mars 1:19 p.m. 1 1:36 p.m. Klamath Concord, NH 80/58/0.02 74/55/r Fields • • Ashl nd Falls Jupiter 5:20 a.m. 8 : 1 0 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 96n7/0'.00 94n48 Bro ings 95/59 95/5 92/53 Saturn 2:19 p.m. 1 2 :28 a.m. 67/5 92/52 94/60 Dallas 83/70/Tr 88/69/pc Dayton 84/60/0.00 81/61/I uranus 10:57 p.m. 1 1 :49 a.m. Denver 80/55/0.00 85/58/pc Yesterday Today Sunday Yesterday Today Sunday Yesterday Today Sunday Des Moines 85/63/0.00 84/64/s city H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W city Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 83/60/0.00 82/61/I 74/55/0.00 69/54/pc 69/53/pc La Grande 90/55/0.00 93/56/pc 94/55/I Portland 89/6 6/Tr 8 8 /59/s 8 9/60/s Duluth 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcris 77/54/0.01 81/61/pc Baker City 91/51/0.00 92/51/pc 92/51/pc La Pine 88/51/0.01 88/52/pc 89/51/s Prineviiie 95/ 6 0/0.00 94/56/pc 89/57/s 5 Paso 78/66/0.20 80/66/I 5 NI~ 7 ~ 7~ 5 5 Brcokings 65/53/0.00 67/56/pc 69/57/pc M edford 102/ 65/0.00 100/64/s 100/65/s Redmond 9 5 /56/0.05 92/52/pc 93/52/s Fairbanks 62/58/0.68 66/54/c The highertheAccuWesiherxmmuyIndex number, sums 92/52/0.06 93/51/pc94/53/pc Newport 6 1 /52/0.00 62/51/s 64/52/sRoseburg 95/ 6 5/0.00 92/60/s 93/60/s Fargo 84/59/0.00 87/62/pc the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 93/58/0.05 90/53/s 92/53/s North Bend 64/54/0.00 64/53/s 65/53/s Salem 92/64/0.15 91/56/s 92/57/s Flagstaff 75/52/0.52 74/51/I 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exlreme. Klamath Falls 94/56/Tr 92/53/pc93/57/pc Ontari o 96/60/0.00 99/64/pc 98/69/pc Sisters 89/58/0.00 92/51/pc 92/49/s Grand Rapids 85/61/0.00 83/58/pc Lskeview 91/54/0.03 92/52/pc93/54/pc Pendleton 100/67/0.00 100/65/pc 98/65/s The Dalles 1 0 0 /75/0.00 97/66/pc 96/64/s GreenHsy 81/56/Tr 81/59/pc Greensboro 68/64/1.45 77/65/I Weether(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstorms,r-rsin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwi-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data ascf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 81/63/Tr 75/63/c G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hsrffcrd, CT 87/65/0.32 74/60/r Moderate ~ Lo~w ~Lo~w Helena 94/57/0.00 91/59/pc Source: OregonAiiergyAssccistes 541-683-1577 Honolulu gon5/o'.oo 90/77/sh ~ os ~ f os ~ 2 0 8 ~ s g s ~ 40 8 ~ 50s ~ 6 0 8 ~ 708 ~ ags ~ggs ~ tOOs ~ffcs Houston ~ fgs ~ o s 87n3/1.11 88/73/pc Huntsville 88/66/Tr 85/67/I v, v,calga o Indianapolis 82/61/0.03 81/62/I As of 7 s.m. yesterday NATIONAL Queb n v Soa ~ 79/57 T nder Bay Jackson, MS 79/72/0.04 85/69/c Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES 85/so 7 Jacksonville 93n4/0.02 89/73/I YESTERDAY (for the

48 contiguousstates) National high: 111 at El Centro, CA National low: 34 at West Yellowstone,

51'

88' 50'

TRAVEL WEATHER

Umatilla 100/65 64/55 Rufus ~~ w ermiston Cannon /64 - lingtonj 4 Meac am Losti Portland 91/59 ne 63/55 0/5 95/6'O'Enten rlse • W co1 0/65 PRECIPITATION dl e t On92/5 • he Daa • • 93/59 Tdlamo • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL: Sunshine andy • • 1 /65 Mc innvie • 97/66 0.25"in 1976 and someclouds; an JosePh Record 7/58 Gove • He ppner Grande • nt • upi Condon 6/58 Cam • 94 93 56 M onth to date (normal) O.o ooo(0.02oo) afternoon thunderunion 56 Lincoln 81/ Year to date (normal ) 5.02 (6.30 ) storm developing over 66/54 Sale pray Granitew Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 4" the higher elevations. 91/ • 6/64 a 'Baker C Newpo 88/55 SUN ANDMOON /53 62/51 • Mitch 9 92/51

C rane Prairie 369 4 7 67% 43'yo Wickiup 85138 Crescent Lake 8 1 6 94 94% Ochoco Reservoir 22639 51% Prinevige 114950 77% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 409 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1540 Deschutes R.below Bend 130 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1940 Little Deschutes near LaPine 91 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 76 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 217 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 61 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 12

' '

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows.

ria Seasid

89'

Mostly sunny

A full day of sunshine

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

WED NESDAY

I

I

Mecca Mexico City

108/86/0.00 111/84/s 79/57/0.05 76/55/I Montreal 79/61/0.00 79/63/c Moscow 90/63/0.00 90/64/pc Nairobi 75/57/0.00 75/57/c Nassau 90/79/0.38 90/78/I New Delhi 97/84/0.05 95/80/I Osaka 93/78/0.25 86/76/r Oslo 73/52/0.00 75/58/sh Ottawa 81/57/0.00 80/57/pc Paris 82/61/0.00 75/60/I Ric de Janeiro 81/64/0.00 82/68/s Rome 82/66/0.00 84/68/s Santiago 75/43/0.00 62/44/pc Sso Paulo 79/57/0.00 80/61/s Ssppcrc 87/71/0.00 86/69/pc

Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei Tei Aviv Tokyo

Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw

95n5/o.oo ganr/r

111/85/s 74/53/I 79/61/c 86/63/pc 75/56/c

gfng/sh 91/79/r 87/77/I 67/60/r 80/60/c 75/56/pc 84/69/s 82/66/I 58/41/sh 81/62/s 88/74/c 85/76/r

64ns/I'.00 88/80/sh 94/81/pc 88/81/0.26 86n9/I 88/79/I 77/61/0.00 61/56/0.00 97/84/0.00 89/71/0.00 90/79/0.02 81/64/0.28 75/61/0.00 77/66/0.00 72/67/0.16

79/64/pc 84/66/I 60/45/pc 62/46/pc 98/80/I

94/80/I

89n2/s 86/72/s 92/79/I 92/79/pc 79/59/I 80/59/I 78/59/pc 77/62/s 85/68/I 81/65/I

90/65/s 90/66/s

B s a l l e t i x s, U M ' .a g a m i xse 8g Rohfh e r dsows Porcl P r e d dexst X Xo~ cio ~ m a . n ,ca, ~u,m. Ea.mai1y Ra~ & am ? Seracm, es a fa xn il y p h o t o ta 3 c e raira ee m t r a l O r e g o r a

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C4

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

WCL BASEBALL

Rogues take 9-5 win over Elks Medford jumped out to an 8-2 lead in the third inning and never looked back in a9-5 WestCoastLeaguevictory over Bend onFriday

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

LITTLE LEAGUE

Bend North starts slow, suffers

10-2 setbaek inregional opener Inside

By Landon Negri

• A breakdown of BendNorth and the Little League Northwest Regional,C4

For The Bulletin

night.

Bend starting pitcher Austin Guzzonstruggled as he threw 2 Ninnings but gave upeight runs (six earned) and six hits en route to the loss. Medford's David Peterson earned the victory.

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — The most

important lesson for Bend North Little League on Friday was to lessen the importance of the

final score. The positive? Manager Dan Ruhl felt his

and downed Bend North, 10-2, in both teams'

a chance to tie as late as the fifth inning. The negative? An early opposing home run

Little League Northwest Region opener Friday morning at Al Houghton Stadium. Evan Scalley hit a run-scoring triple and later scored on an error in the first inning, but

The Elks outhit the

sent the Oregon state champions into too much

that was the extent of the Bend offense, which

Ben Grant of LynnwoodPacific of Washington slides safely into

Rougues11-7, but also committed three errors on the night. ZachClose, Nick Osunaand Dalton Hurd each hadtwo hits for Bend (26-20). Hurd also had adouble. Joey Morgan hadtwo doubles for Medford (23-23). Game two of the series is tonight at 6:35 at Vince GennaStadium.

of a tailspin. Paced by a three-run, second-inning home run, the Pacific (Washington) Little League's 11-12 All-Star team scored 10 unanswered runs

could not keep up with Pacific's pressure attack that produced multiple base runners in five of the game's six innings.

third base as the ball eludes Bend North third baseman Hank Tobias during the first inning of Friday's Little League Northwestern

team did not play near its potential and still had

SeeBend North/C4

EricReed/For TheBulletin

Regional game in SanBernardino, California. Washington wonthe tournament opener, 10-2.

WRESTLING: GRECO-ROMAN

GOLF: MEN'SSTROKE PLAY CHAMPIONSHIP

Oregon

— Bulletin staff report

TRACK 8( FIELD

native seeks to revive U.S.

All-comersmeet slated Wednesday The Central Oregon Track Club will host an all-comers twilight meet Wednesday at Bend's Summit High School. Registration begins at 6 p.m. for the meet, which will include events for boys andgirls as young as 6years old as well as five events open to adults: 50-meter dash, 5,000-meter run, discus, pole vault and 4x400 relay. Other events on the schedule are the1,500 meters, 50-meter hurdles, 80-meter hurdles, 100-meter hurdles, 200 meters, softball throw, turbo javelin and high jump. Field events begin at 7 p.m., running events begin at 7:30. Ribbons will be awarded to the top three placers in eachevent. A liability form must be signed by all participants before competing (a parent or guardian must sign for participants under age18). A $5 donation is requested from all participants. For more information, visit the COTC website at www.centraloregontrackclub.com or email to centraloregoncheetahs©gmail.com.

program By Luke Meredith The Associated Press

There is hardly a sport in the world with a reputation more dull than Greco-Roman

wrestling. To many, it is just two guys in tights standing around and pushing each other in front of a puzzled crowd. A former mixed martial arts star, Oregon-born Matt

Lindland, is hoping to make Greco cool in America. Lmdland, the

Olympic silver medalist and retired MMA

fighter, this past spring became the first new U.S. Greco

coach in nearly 20 years. He is charged with bringing fresh energy to a program that had grown so stale that it finished without a medal at the 2012 Olympics, the first

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

such failure in 36 years.

Alex Fitch tees off on the10th hole while competing in the Oregon Men's Stroke Play Championship at Juniper Golf Course in Red-

mond Friday morning.

His task will not be easy.

— Bulletin staff report

GOLF PGAsayslt didn't discipline Johnson AKRON, Ohio — The

PGA Tour rebutted a published report Friday that Dustin Johnson has been suspendedfor failing a drug test. Johnson said in a vague statement issued by hi smanagement companythathewould take a leave ofabsence effective immediately to seek professional help for "personal challenges." The announcement Thursday brought an abrupt end to his PGA Tourseason. Golf.com reported Friday that the tour suspended Johnsonfor six months. It cited an unidentified source as saying Johnson failed a drug test for the third time. "With regards to media reports that Dustin Johnson has beensuspended by thePGATour, this is to clarify that Mr. Johnson hastaken a voluntary leave of absence and is not under asuspension from the PGA Tour," the tour's statement said. — The Associated Press

L inda l l

Freestyle wrestling — a close relative of the folkstyle discipline practiced in American high schools and collegeslikely will be the strength of the U.S. program. But Lindland's plan is to make the American Greco program enticing enough to catch the eye of both wrestling fans and young prospects who might have only thought about freestyle in the past. SeeWrestling/C4

• Redmond golfers welcome recent moveof OregonStrokePlayto Juniper Golf Club By Zack Hall

other than Emerald Valley Golf Club in

The Bulletin

Creswell.

"I thought it would be a lot of fun to

The move to Juniper obviously piqued would not be playing in the 62nd Oregon the interest of Fitch, a 24-year-old from Men's Stroke Play Championship if not Redmond, who has been a member at for one thing — the venue. the course for his entire life. "This has always been home for me," The 54-hole tournament teed off on Friday at Juniper Golf Club, marking said Fitch on Friday while sitting on the the first time since 2004 that this chamsun-drencheddeck oftheJuniper clubpionship has been played anywhere house moments after shooting a rusty REDMOND — Alex Fitch probably

Seattle Seahawks offensive tackle Walter Jones. Jim Bryant/The

Associated Pressfile

6-over-par 78. sign up and play and see how I fared," added Fitch, who currently works in finance in Portland, leaving little time

for golf. "It didn't go well today, but I still have some good shots in me and you never know what can happen.... I know

the course." See Home/C4

NFL: HALL OF FAME

Strahan expectsemotions to f ow at induction By John Wawrow The Associated Press

CANTON, Ohio — Michael Strahan is pleased

to know he is scheduled to go last during the Pro Football Hall of Fame induction ceremonies. That means the former New York Giants star

pass-rusher will not be the first to break down in tears when the seven-member 2014 class is inducted today.

"I am not going to be the first one to crack," Strahan pronounced with a f amiliar gaptoothed grin Friday. "But it'll be interesting. I just

told the guys, 'It's OK. If you're going to cry, this is the opportunity to cry where nobody can say anything to you.' " SeeInduction /C4

Nextup Pro Football Hall of FameInduction Ceremony When:Today, 4 p.m.TV:ESPN2, NFLNetwork

u

~ ~

MI

New York Giants defensive end Michael Strahan.

4

Bill Kostroun /The AssociatedPress file t.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

ON THE AIR

COHKBOARD

TODAY Time TV /Radie NASCAR,Sprint Cup, GoBowling.com 400, practice 6 a.m. E SPN2 NASCAR,Truck Series, Pocono, qualifying 7 a.m. FS1 NASCAR,Sprint Cup, GoBowling.com 400, practice 8:30 a.m. ESPN2 NASCAR,Truck Series, Pocono 10 a.m. FS1 NASCAR,Nationwide, U.S. Cellular 250, qualifyin g 1:30 p.m. ESPN NASCAR,Nationwide, U.S.Cellular 250 5 p.m. E S PN NHRA, Northwest Nationals 7 p.m. E SPN2 AUTO RACING

GOLF

PGA Tour,WGCBridgestone Invitational PGA Tour,WGCBridgestone Invitational Champions Tour,3M Championship PGA Tour, BarracudaChampionship SOCCER International Champions Cup,Milan vs. Roma MLS, Portland at LosAngeles ICC, Olympiacos vs. Manchester City ICC, Manchester United vs. RealMadrid ICC, Liverpool vs. Milan MLS, Seattle at SanJose

9 a.m. Golf 1 1 a.m. CB S noon Golf 3:30 p.m. Golf 10 a.m. FS2 11:30 a.m. NBC noon FS2 1 p.m. Fox 3:30 p.m. NBCSN 7:30 p.m. NBCSN

TENNIS

noon ATP, U.S.OpenSeries, Citi Open, semifinal WTA, U.S.OpenSeries, BOTWClassic, semifina I 2p.m.

ESPN2 ESPN2

BASEBALL

MLB, NewYork Yankeesat Boston MLB, Seattle at Baltimore

MLB, Milwaukee atSt. Louis EQUESTRIAN Horse Racing, Whitney Invitational Handicap

1 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m.

FS1 Roo t MLB

2 p.m.

NBC

9 45 p fn

HB O

BOXING

Diego Chavesvs. Brandon Rios FOOTBALL

AFL Premiership, Collingwood vs. Port Adelaide 11:30 p.m. FS2

SUNDAY SOCCER Emirates Cup,Arsenal vs Monaco NWSL, Houston at Portland

8:15 a.m. ESPN2

7 p.m.

E SPN2

9 a.m. 1 1 a.m. noon 4 p.m.

Golf CB S Golf Golf

GOLF

PGA Tour,WGCBridgestone Invitational PGA Tour,WGCBridgestone Invitational Champions Tour,3M Championship PGA Tour, BarracudaChampionship AUTO RACING

NASCAR,SprintCup,GoBowling.com 400 IndyCar Racing, HondaIndy 200 NHRA, Northwest Nationals

10 a.m. E S PN noon N B CSN 4 p.m. E SPN2

BASEBALL MLB, Seattle at Baltimore

10:30 a.m. Root

MLB,LosAngelesAngelsatTampaBay MLB, NewYork Yankeesat Boston

10:30 a.m. TBS 5 p.m. E S PN

TENNIS

ATP, U.S.OpenSeries, Citi Open noon E S P N2 WTA, U.S.OpenSeries, Bank of the West Classic 2 p.m. E SPN2 FOOTBALL

NFL Preseason, Buffalo vs. NewYork

5 p.m.

NBC

Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL GeOrgeSufferS SeriOuSleg injury in U.S. exhidition

— Indiana Pacers All-Star Paul Georgesuffered a gruesome right leg injury late in the U.S.national team's intrasquad scrimmageFriday night in LasVegas. George leaped to contest a fast-break layup by James Hardenwith 9:33 left in the fourth quarter and his leg smashed against the bottom of the backboard stanchion. Trainers immediately ran onto the floor andafter roughly10 minutes of stoppage, Georgewastaken out of the arena on astretcher. With players looking visibly upset, coach MikeKrzyzewski then announced to the crowd that the scrimmagewould not be finished. TheWhite team led George's Blue team81-71. Georgewas considered alock to make the final 12-man roster for the World Cup ofBasketball that starts later this month in Spain. TheAmericans planned to reduce the20-play pool to14 or15 players today, but put off those plans after George's injury.

SPurS Sign Parker to eXtenSiOn —TheSanAntonio Spurs have signed point guard Tony Parker to a multi-year contract extension. TheSpursmadetheannouncementonFriday.Terms of the deal were not immediately available. Parker averaged16.7 points and 5.7 assists in 29 minutes per gamelast season to help the Spurs to the franchise's fifth NBA title. Parker has spent all13 seasons of his career in SanAntonio and was due to make$12.5 million next season in the final year of his existing contract. But the Spurs made sure hewill stick around longer than that, locking up the 32-year-old Parker.

MOTOR SPORTS LarSOnWinSfirSt Career POleat POCORO —Kyle Larson set a track record of 183.438 mph to win his first career Sprint Cup poleFridayatPocono Raceway in Long Pond,Pennsylvania.Denny Hamlin had set the record of181.415 in June. Joey Logano joins Larson on the front row. Brad Keselowski, Kurt Busch and Jeff Gordon completed the top five. Gordon followed his fifth Brickyard 400 win with another strong qualifying run. Keselowski is pulling double duty this weekend and will also drive in the Nationwide Series race at lowa Speedway. Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch, Jamie McMurray, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Danica Patrick completed the top 10.

BASEBALL RedS-MarlinS Call right, took too lOng — Major eague I Baseball says it got the replay call right in ruling that the Miami Marlins catcher blocked the plate, but it took too long. Thedisputed play happened Thursday night in the Cincinnati Reds'3-1 victory over Miami. The scorewas1-1 in the top of the eighth. Initially, the plate umpire called Cincinnati's ZackCozart out. The 6-minute, 10-second review using the instant replay system overruled the call andextended the inning. RyanLudwick delivered atwo-run single to help the Reds win. MLBsaid the catcher "did not provide a lane tothe runner and hindered his path to the plate without possession of the ball." The statement addedthat the "exorbitant length" of the review was more than three times theseasonaverage and "must beavoided in the future." — From wire reports

BASEBALL

Stephen Gallacher RichardSterne

74-71 — 145 75-70 — 145

JasonDay 74-71—145 WCL MartinKaym er 77-68—145 Tim Clark 72-73 — 145 WESTCOASTLEAGUE PabloLarrazabal 71-74 — 145 AU TimesPDT DaisukeMaruyama 73-73—146 l a n Poul t er 73-73—146 Easl Division 73-73—146 W L Pcl GB Joost Luiten ScottStaffings 72-75—147 Y akima Valey Pippins 28 1 8 .609 Jonas Bl i x t 75-72—147 W enatchee AppleSox 25 2 1 .543 3 Steve Stri c ker 74-73—147 W alla WallaSweets 2 2 2 4 .478 6 76-72—148 Kelowna Falcons 14 31 .311 13'/~ DavidLynn LouisOosthuizen 75-73—148 South Division Kevin Streel m an 78-71 — 149 W L Pcl GB Mikko ff o n e n 75-74—149 CorvaffisKnights 30 16 .652 74-75—149 Yoshitaka Takeya BendElks 26 20 .565 4 79-71—150 GonzaloFdez-Castano MedfordRogues 23 23 .500 7 76-77—153 K lamath Falls Gems 12 3 4 .261 18 TanoGoya Wesl Division W L Pcl GB PGA Tour Bellingham Bell s 32 13 .711 BarracudaChampron ship C owlitz BlackBears 2 1 2 5 .457 11'/2 Friday V ictoria Harbourcats 21 2 5 .457 tt'/r At Montreux Gol f a ndCou ntry Club KitsapBlueJackets 2 0 24 ,455 11N Reno,Nev. Purse: S3million Friday's Games Yardage:7,472; Par72 Medford9,Bend5 SecondRound WallaWalla4, Kitsap2 Note: Unnderthe modifed i Slablelord format, Klamath Falls 9, Corvaffis6 players receive 8pointsfordouble eagle, YakimaValey 2, Kelowna1 8 lor eagle, 2 for birdie, Glorpar, minus-1 Wenatchee 6,Cowlitz 3 for bogeyand minus-3 for double bogeyor Victoria 4,Beffingham2 Today'sGames worse. 18-8 — 26 NickWatney Medfor datBend,6:35p.m. 16-7 — 23 GeoffOgilvy WallaWallaatKitsap,6:35p.m. W es Ro a ch 12-10—22 CorvaffisatKlamath Falls, 6:35p.m. TommyGainey 11-10—21 KelownaatYakimaValley, 7:05p.m. 16-5—21 Tim Wilkinson Cowlitz atWenatchee, 7;05p.m. 7-13 — 20 Jeff Overton Bellingham atVictoria, 7:11p.m. Bryce Mol d er 10-10—20 Sunday'sGames 9-11—20 BrendanSteele Bellingham atVictoria,1:05 p.m. 12-7—19 JohnHuh WallaWallaatKitsap,3:05p.m. 11-8—19 WoodyAustin Kelowna atYakimaValley,5:05 p.m. 10-8—18 Johnson W a gner CorvaffisatKlamath Falls, 5:05p.m. 7-11—18 Jason Allred Medfor datBend,5:05p.m. 9-9 —18 HudsonSwafford Cowlitz atWenatchee, 6;05p.m. 7-10 —17 Arjun Atwal 8-9 —17 Mark Wi l s on Friday's Summary 10-7 — 17 PadraigHarrington RodPam pling 11-5 — 16 Rogues 9, Elks 5 GregChalmers 3-13 —16 D.H.Lee 11-5 — 16 Medlord 308 G00100 — 9 7 1 KyleStanley 5-11 — 16 Bend G20 G10G20 — 5 11 3 KentJones 5-11 —16 Peterson,Loeffler (6), Cox(8), Shelton (8), Quar- DavidLingmerth 9-7 —16 terley(9)andMorgan.Guzzon, Bennet (3), Gomez(5) LeeJanzen 8-7 —15 Blackweff (7), Schnieder (8) andWildung, Ferguson JustinHicks 9-6 —15 W— Peterson.L—Guzzon. 28—Medford: Smith 10-5 —15 NicholasThompson Morgan(2); Bend:Hurd. ThorbjornOlesen 10-5 — 15 DannyLee 11-4 — 15 11-4 — 15 Eric Axl e y GOLF 7-7 —14 AndresRomero 10-4 — 14 RobertStreb Local 4-10 —14 MikeWeir 1 2-2 — 14 John Roffi n s 82ndOREGON MEN'S STROKE PLAY 7-6 —13 JonathanByrd CHAMPIONSHIP 11-2 — 13 54-Hole StrokePlay KevinLucas 4-9 —13 Aug. 1-3 BrianStuard 5-8 — 13 R etief Goos e n First Round 4-8 —12 Tim Herron al Juniper GolfCourse 10-2 —12 Tim Petrovic 7,186 yards, par72 3-9 —12 Billy Mayfair Open Division 13-(-1)—12 Chad Ca m pbe l Top10 andlocals 7-5 —12 ConnerKumpula, Albany 68 BenCurtis 10-2 —12 an RayRichards,Tualatin 70 Jim Herm 11-1 — 12 AustinLandis,Gladstone 70 DougLaBele II 6-5 —11 HaydenChristensen, BrushPrairie, Wash. 70 CharlieBeljan 0-11 —11 TaylorSchmidt,Boise, Idaho 71 DavidToms 7-4 — 11 KevinMurphy,RogueRiver 71 ChadCollins 10-1 — 11 Zachary Foushee, West Linn 71 MiguelAngelCarballo 6-5 — 11 J amie Love m ark SulmanRaza, Eugene 71 8-3 —11 DylanWu,Medford 72 Chris Smith 8-3 —11 BrettJohnson,Vancouver,Wash. 72 MichaelPutnam 12-(-1)—11 ChrisTedesco, Corvallis 72 KevinChappeff 5-6 —11 R icky Barne s Joel Johnson,Portland 72 DerekErnst 11-0 — 11 Locals 6-5 —11 TaylorGarbutt,Bend 73 MarcTurnesa 11-0 — 11 JustinKadin,Corvallis 73 PatrickRodgers (-3)-13 —10 DylanCramer,Bend 75 RorySabbatini 1-9 — 10 JaredLambert, Redmond 75 SteveFlesch 9-1 —10 RyanDecastilhos, Bend 77 Joe Duran t 11-(-1)—10 Alex Fitch,Portland 78 GeorgeCoetzee 6-3 — 9 JesseHeinly, Bend 79 Morgan Hoff mann 5-4 — 9 JasonBenson,Redmond 80 J.J. Henry 6-3 — 9 SamNielsen,Bend 81 lronsonLa'Cassie 8-1 — 9 AndyRodby,Redmond 83 KevinTw ay 4-5 — 9 MaxwelHi l glin, Bend 83 JohnMallinger 4-5 — 9 Master-40 Ryuji Imada 7-2 — 9 Top FiveandLocals CameronBeckman 13-(-4)—9 CodyPinkston,Eugene 71 Martin Laird 6-3 — 9 ScottCarver,Portland 72 OliverGoss (-1)-9—8 Jeff Ward,Bend 73 LenMattiace 2-6 — 8 73 D.J. Trahan ScottHval,Portland 7-1 — 8 GlenLuikart,Tualatin 74 TrevorImmelman (-2)-10 — 8 Masterdg Locals BriceGarnett 3-5 — 8 John Merri c k CharlieRice,Bend 76 5-3 — 8 JasonPigot,Redmond 81 TroyMatteson 8-0 — 8 AndrewLoupe Senior Division (6,803yards) Failed to ma kethecut Top10 andLocals 0-7 — 7 Scott Langl e y DonOrrell, Bend 69 72 GlenDay (-2)-9—7 ByronPatton,Tigard 3-4 — 7 Glover MichaelKloenne,West Linn 72 Lucas 0-7 — 7 Chris Hudson, Portland 72 RobertAffenby 2-5 — 7 PatO'Donneff ,HappyValley B obby W y a t 73 5-2 — 7 TomCarlsen,Bend 73 ToddHamilton 7-0 — 7 MarkBowler,Portland 74 BrianGay 4-3 — 7 TomPrevost, McMinnvile 74 D.A. Points Steve Mari n o (-1)-8—7 DennyTaylor, Gladstone 74 11-(-5)—6 Alex Foster,Beaverton 74 NathanGreen 6-0 — 6 StuartAppleby Senior Locals 5-1 — 6 CareyWa tson, Sunriver 75 EdwardLoar 5-1 — 6 Craig Barl o w TomStumpfig, Bend 77 8-(-3)—5 Michae lJackson,Redmond 82 DickyPride 4-1 — 5 JamiePunt,Bend 82 RichardH. Lee 7-I-2I -5 SteinSwenson,Bend 84 Matt Bettencourt Chris Ri l e y Kell yPaxton,Redmond 101 Justin Bolli 8-(-3) — 5 Full results:www.oga.org. Will Wilcox 6-(-1) — 5 BradFritsch 2-3 — 5 WGC TagRidings 7-(-3)—4 Alex Prugh 3-1 — 4 Bridgestone Invitational HeathSlocum 1-3 — 4 Friday AlexCejka 3-0 — 3 At FirestoneCountry Club,South Course 4-(-1) — 3 DavidGosset Akron, Ohio Davis Love III 2-1 — 3 Purse: Sgmilhon ' 0-3 — 3 ScottMccarron Yardage: 7,400;Par 70 0-3 — 3 RobertoCastro Second Rou nd 3-0 — 3 SergioGarcia 68-61—129 GuyBoros Joe Ogi l v i e JustinRose 65-67—132 Vegas MarcLeishman 64-69—133 Jhonattan RoryMcllroy 69-64—133 KenDuke RickieFowler 67-67—134 CharlieWi CharlSchwartzel 65-69—134 Skip Kendall 0-0 — 0 ter PatrickReed 67-68—135 JoshTea 0-(-1) — 1 Keegan Bradley 68-67—135 DeanWilson 3-(-4) — 1 GrahamDeLaet 67-69—136 PeterMalnati 2 — 2 Ted Purdy (-4 BrandtSnedeker 68-68—136 IHunterMahan 71-65—136 KevinFoley Jim Furyk 69-68—137 DanielChopra AdamScot 69-68—137 RichBeem Hahn Thomas Bjorn 69-68—137 James er HenrikStenson 71-66—137 Jim Renn Francesco Molinari 67-70—137 SebastianL Saavedra Matt Kuchar 71-66—137 Stuart LSmith GaryWoodland 70-68—138 DavidCarr J.B. Holmes 69-69—138 Alex Aragon HarrisEnglish 69-69—138 JohnPeterson RyanMoore 65-73—138 JesseSchutte (-6)-(-6)—12 Seung-Yul Noh 69-69—138 Chris DiMarco JamieDonaldson 68-70—138 JohnDaly MiguelA.Jimenez 69-69—138 AaronBaddeley BubbaWatson 69-70—139 PaulStankowski 5—WD TigerWoods 68-71—139 RichardS.Johnson 2—WD JimmyWalker 69-70—139 TyroneVanAswegen -1 —WD 69-71—140 DavidDuval Steven Bowditch 6—DQ ErnieEls 71-69—140 Y.E.Yang 70-70—140 ZachJohnson 71-69—140 Bill Haas Champions Tour 74-66—140 JohnSenden 69-71—140 SM Champion ship Branden Grace 69-71—140 Friday DavidHow ell 70-70—140 At TPC Twi n Ci ties Matt Jones 71-70—141 Blaine, Minn. KevinStadler 70-71—141 FabrizioZanotti Purse: S1.75million 72-69—141 Yardage:7,114; Par72(36-36) Brendon deJonge 73-68—141 First Round AngelCabrera 72-6M141 MarcoDa 32-31—63 WebbSimpson wson 71-70—141 RoccoMediate 33-31—64 JordanSpieth 70-71—141 Jeff Maggert 32-32—64 HidekiMatsuyama 71-70—141 31-33—64 GraemeMcDowell Vijay Singh 69-73—142 BernhardLanger 33-31—64 Chris Kirk 35-30—65 RusselHenl l ey 72-70—142 KennyPerry 74-68—142 GaryHallberg 31-35—66 Matt Every 72-70—142 32-34—66 BrianHarm an MikeGoodes 72-70—142 GeneSauers 32-34—66 VictorDubuisson 33-33—66 BenCrane 73-70—143 BobbyWadkins 31-35—66 AlexanderLevy 72-71—143 DougGarwood LukeDonald 73-70—143 PaulGoydos 34-33—67 72-71—143 ScottVerplank 34-33—67 LeeWestwood 35-32—67 Brendon Todd 74-70—144 Jeff Sluman JasonDufner 70-74—144 Kirk Triplett 34-33—67 KevinNa 71-73—144 Joel Edw ards 35-33—68 ThongchaiJaidee 70-74—144 PeterSenior 32-36—68 Phil Mickelson 71-73—144 DuflyWaldorl 35-33—68

Steve Elkington Dana Quigley RodSpittle Hale Irwin BobGilder JoseCoceres StevePate JoeySindelar ChienSoonLu BlaineMccallister KevinSutherland MarkO'Meara JohnCook Bart Bryant TomPerniceJr. DavidFrost Scott Dunlap Bill Glasson BradBryant WesShort, Jr. RussCochran Olin Browne TomKite FredFunk Willie Wood Colin Montgom erie TommyArmour RI Hal Sutton Jim Gallagher, Jr. JohnHarris WayneLevi BobTway Jeff Hart Nick Price LarryNelson BradFaxon JohnRiegger Jay Haas AndyBean StanUtley Billy Andrade SteveLowery TomByrum MorrisHatalsky MarkCalcavecchia Jim Rutledge LarryMize Scott Hoch MarkBrooks Rick Fehr Gil Morgan DonBerry JohnInman ChipBeck DanForsman MarkWiebe TomLehman EstebanToledo Bob Niger TomPurtzer CoreyPavin MikeReid CraigStadler

33-35—68 35-33—68 35-33—68 35-33—68 36-32—68 37-32—69 36-33—69 36-33—69 35-34—69 34-35—69 33-36—69 36-33—69 35-34—69 36-33—69 34-35—69 35-34—69 36-33—69 37-33—70 36-34—70 35-35—70 35-35—70 36-34—70 36-34—70 37-33—70 35-35—70 36-34—70 37-34—71 36-35—71 38-33—71 36-35—71 37-34—71 37-34—71 35-36—71 34-37—71 37-34—71 36-35—71 35-36—71 34-37—71 37-35—72 35-37—72 37-35—72 35-37—72 35-37—72 37-35—72 38-34—72 36-36—72 37-36—73 33-40—73 39-34—73 38-35—73 38-35—73 37-36—73 37-37—74 39-35—74 38-36—74 36-38—74 39-35—74 37-37—74 36-38—74 36-39—75 38-38—76 39-38—77 45-36—81

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup GoBowli ng.com 400Lineup After Fridayqualifying; race Sunday At PoconoRaceway Long Pond,Pa. Lap length: 2.5miles (Car number inparentheses) 1. (42)KyleLarson,Chevrolet, 183.438. 2. (22)JoeyLogano, Ford,183,408, 3. (2)BradKeselowski, Ford,182.7. 4. (41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,182.66. 5.(24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet, 182.611. 6.(4) KevinHarvrck, Chevrolet, 182.09. 7.(18) KyleBusch,Toyota, 182.02. 8. (1)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet,182.017. 9. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,181.741. 10. (10)DanicaPatrick Chevrolet 181.646. 11. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,181.605. 12.5) KaseyKahne, Chevrolet,181.28. 13.(11)DennyHamlin,Toyota,181.159. 14. (15)Clint Bowyer, Toyota,181.156. 15. (55)BrianVickers, Toyota,180.85. 16. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,180.716. 17. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,180.502. 18.20) MattKenseth,Toyota, 180.274. 19.I78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,180.133. 20. (47)AJAffmendinger,Chevrolet,179.986. 21. (31)RyanNewman, Chevrolet,179.878. 22. (51)JustinAffgaier, Chevrolet,179.412. 23. (17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,179.304. 24. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,179.069. 25.16) GregBiffle, Ford,179.169. 26.I99) CarlEdwards,Ford,178.998. 27. (9)MarcosAmbrose,Ford,178.916. 28. (43)AricAlmirola,Ford,178.912. 29. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,178.862. 30. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,178.049. 31. (98)JoshWise,Chevrolet,177.704. 32. (40)LandonCassil, Chevrolet,177.676. 33.26) ColeWhitt, Toyota,177.56. 34.(32)TravisKvapil, Ford,177.399. 35. (36)ReedSorenson, Chevrolet,177.354. 36.23) AlexBowman,Toyota,176.502. 37.I83) Ryan Truex,Toyota,Owner Points. 38. (7)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 39. (34)David Ragan, Ford, Owner Points. 40. 37)DaveBlaney,Chevrolet,Owner Points. 41. (66) JoeNemechek,Toyota, OwnerPoints. 42. (33)AlexKennedy, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 43. (93)JohnnySauter,Toyota,OwnerPoints.

BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'S NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION

AU TimesPDT

EasternConference Atlanta Indiana Washington NewYork Chicago Connecticut

W L 17 9

Pct GG . 6 54

13 14 . 481 4'/r 13 14 .481 4'/r

1 1 15 .423 6 11 16 .407 6'/r 1 1 17 .393 7

WesternConference W L Pct GB

x-Phoenix x-Minnesota SanAntonio

LosAngeles Tulsa Seattle x-clinched playoffspot

22 4 . 8 46 21 6 .77 8 1'/r 13 15 .464 10 12 15 .444 tg'/r 10 18 .357 13 9 20 . 310 14'/r

Friday's Game Connecticut89,SanAntonio79 Today'sGames MinnesotaatTulsa,5 p.m. Indianaat Phoenix, 7p.m. Sunday'sGames NewYorkatAtlanta, noon Connecticutat LosAngeles,12:30p.m. WashingtonatChicago,3 p.m. SanAntonioatSeattle, 6p.m.

TENNIS Professional WTABankof the West Classic Friday Al TheTaubeFamily Tennis Center Stanford, Calif. Purse: $71 0,000 (Premier) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles Ouarlerfinals AngeliqueKerber(3), Germany, def. Garbine Muguruza, Spain,6-2, 6-1. VarvaraLepchenko, UnitedStates, def. Sachia Vickery,UnitedStates, 6-1, 6-0. Andrea Petkovic(8), Germany, def. VenusWilliams, UnitedStates,6-1, 3-6, 7-5. SerenaWiliams(1), UnitedStates, def. AnaIvanovic (5),Serbia,2-6,6-3, 7-5. Citi Open Friday At William H.G.FitzGeraldTennis Center Washington Purse: Men,$1.4 million (WT500); Women,

S250,GOO (Intl.) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Guarlerlinals DonaldYoung,UnitedStates,def. Kevin Anderson (7), South Africa,3-6, 7-6(3), 6-2. Milos Raonic(2), Cana da, def. SteveJohnson, UnitedStates,7-6 (2), 6-2. Richard Gasquet(6), France,def.KeiNishikori(4), Japan, 6-1, 6-4. Vasek Pospisil(13), Cana da, vs. Santiago Giraldo (10),Colombia,6-7(4), 6-3,susp.,rain

Women Guarlerlinals MarinaErakovic,NewZealand, def. BojanaJovanovski,Serbia,6-4, 6-4. Kurumi Nara,Japan,def. Kristina Mladenovic, France,6-3,6-1. SvetlanaKuznetsova(6), Russia, def. VaniaKing, UnitedStates,walkover. EkaterinaMakarova(2), Russia, def. Anastasia Pavlyuchen kova(5), Russia,7-6 (3), 6-3.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AU TimesPDT

EaslernConference W L T P l s GF GA S porting KansasCity 11 5 6 3 9 32 20 D.C. 11 5 4 3 7 32 20 NewEngland 8 11 2 26 28 33 TorontoFC Columbus

7 7 5 26 27 28 6 7 8 26 25 27 5 6 1 0 2 5 33 32 8 9 24 34 36 3 5 1 2 2 1 27 33 5 11 4 1 9 22 40 3 12 5 1 4 21 37

NewYork Philadelphia 5 Chicago Houston Montreal WesternConference W L T P l s GF GA Seattle 12 5 2 3 8 35 27 RealSaltLake 8 4 9 33 32 27 Los Angele s 8 4 6 30 29 16 Colorado 8 7 6 30 31 27 FC Dallas 8 7 6 30 34 31 Vancouver 6 4 1 1 2 9 31 29 Portland 6 6 9 27 35 35 ChivasUSA 6 9 5 23 21 33 SanJose 5 8 5 20 22 20 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. Friday's Game SportingKansasCity1, Philadelphia1,tie Today'sGames Portlandat LosAngeles,11:30a.m. TorontoFCat Montreal,2 p.m. NewEnglandat NewYork,4p.m. Columbus atChicago,5:30p.m. RealSaltLakeat Colorado, 6p.m. Seattle FC at SanJose, 7.30p.m. Sunday'sGames D.C.Unitedat Houston, 5p.m. FC DallasatChivasUSA,7 p.m.

NWSL NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE AU TimesPDT

Today'sGames Chicag oatWashington,3:30p.m. Seattle FC atFCKansasCity, 5p.m. Sunday'sGames Houstonat Portland,2p.m. WesternNe wYorkat Boston,3:30p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL Major LeagueBaseball MLB —SuspendedMilwaukeeminorleagueRHP MarkWiliams(BrevardCounty-FSL) 50 gamesafter testingpositiveforanamphetaminein violation of the MinorLeagueDrugPreventionandTreatment Program. AmericanLeague BALTIMORE ORIOLES— Activated LHPAndrew Miller. DesignatedRHPRyanWebbfor assignment. Signed LHPJoeSaunderstoaminorleaguecontract. BOSTONREDSOX— ActivatedOFYoenisCespedesandOF/1BAllenCraig. Recaled OF/INFMookie Betts ,LHPTommyLayne,RHPAnthonyRanaudoand RHPAlexWilson fromPawtucket (IL). Activated3B Will Middlebrooksfromthe 15-dayDL.PlacedOF Shane Victorino onthe15-day DL,retroactive toJuly 31. DesignatedtB/OFMikeCarpfor assignment. CLEVELANDINDIANS — Designated RHPZach McAffisterforassignment. Recalled OFTyler Holt from Columbus (IL). HOUSTONASTROS— CalledupRHPMikeFoltynewicfrom z OklahomaCity (PCL). LOS ANGELESANGELS — Placed LHP Tyler Skaggsonthe15-day DL.Recaled LHPMichael Roth fromArkansas(Texas). NEW YORKYANKEES — Designated INF Brian Robertsfor assignment. Optioned INFZelousWheeler and OF Zoilo Almonteto Scranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). TEXASRANGERS — Purchasedthe contract of RHPPhil KleinfromRound Rock (PCL). Designated LHPRyanFeierabendfor assignment. National League MIAMIMARLINS—PlacedRHPHendersonAlvarez onthe15-dayDL, retroactiveto July30. Recalled LHPDanJenningsfromNewOrleans(PCL). PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES—Placed LHPCliff Lee on the15-dayDL.Recaled LHPCesar Jimenezfrom LehighValley(IL). ST.LOUI S CARDINALS— ActivatedRHPsJohn Lacke yandJustin Masterson.Recalled OF Shane RobinsonfromMemphis (PCL). OptionedRHPCarlos Martinezto Memphis. SANFRANCI SCOGIANTS— Sesignated28Dan UgglaandOFTyler Colvin forassignment. Caled INF Matt DuffyandOFJarrett Parker fromFresno(PCL). WASHING TON NATIONALS— Activated INFAsdrubalCabrera.Optioned RHPAaron Barrett to Syracuse (IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association DENVERNUGGETS— SignedGErickGreen. MIAMIHEA T—Signed FShawneWilliams. NEWYOR KKNICKS—SignedFCleanthonyEarly. SANANTONIOSPURS— SignedGTonyParkerto amultiyearcontractextension. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS—SignedLBDerrell Johnson. NEWYOR K GIANTS —SignedOTAdam Gress and CBChandler Fenner. PlacedOTTroy Kropogon injured reserve.Waived/injured CBTravis Howard. PDTSBU RGHSTEELERS— Signed KShaun Suisham to afour-yearcontract extensionthrough the 2018season. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — Placed TEAnthony McCoy andDTJesseWiliams oninjured reserve.ReleasedWRRandall Carroll. SignedLBMarcusDowtin and WR RonaldJohnson. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague MINNES OTAWILD— SignedDJustin Falkto a one-yearcontract. WINNIPEG JETS— Named Dr. CraigSlaunwhite director offitness.Agreedto termswith FTJ Galiardi on aone-yearcontract. SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer MLS —Suspended NewYork DJamisonOlave two games and fined himanundisclosedamountfor "violent" conducttowarda Real Salt Lakeopponent during a July 30game. FinedReal Salt LakeMFJavier MoralesandNewYork MFTim Cahil undisclosed amountsforviolating leaguepolicy onplacinghands on anopponent's head. COLLEGE MIAMI —Announcedlinebackers coachMicheal Barrow is taking asabbatical for the 2014season. NamedHurlie Brownlinebackers coach, TimHarris runningbackscoachandKevin Beard assistant director offootbaloperati l ons. PROVIDE NCE— NamedTim Brockmen' strack coach,men'sandwomen's crosscountry coachand women'assi s stant trackcoach. TENNE SSEE—Promoted GregHulento chief development officer. TENNE SSEETECH—NamedRonJirsa men'sassistant basketbalcoach, l MichaelCooperdirector of basketbaloperati l onsforwomens' basketball, Rebecca O'Shu rakwomen'sassistantcoachsoccercoachand JesseBunchmarketing andpromotions coordinator. PromotedCoreyBoydto women's full-time assistant soccercoach.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedon Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd WsUhd B onneville 22 6 44 1, 86 9 8 9 2 The Daffes 534 1 6 7 2 ,024 1,058 J ohn Day 46 1 19 4 1 , 155 6 2 4 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, jackchinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedonFriday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 298,431 51,707106,803 54,127 The Daffes238,479 40,218 55,621 30,511 John Day 207,625 36,096 34,455 17,563 McNary 192,123 31,962 27,433 13,919


SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

start the eighth.

OUT AT HOME

AN TimesPDT

San Francisco N e w York ab r hbi ab r hbi

AMERICANLEAGUE East Oivision W L Pct GB Baltimore 61 47 .565 Toronto 60 51 541 2'/t NewYork 55 53 .509 6 Tampa Bay 53 56 .486 8'/t Boston 49 60 .450 12'/t Central Division W L Pcf GB Detroit 59 47 .557 Kansas City 56 52 .519 4

Cleyeland Chicago Minnesota Oakland

LosAngeles Seattle Houston Texas

54 55 54 56 48 60

West Division W L

66 42 65 43 56 53 45 65 43 66

P encerf 4 1 1 3 Grndrsrf 3 0 0 0 MDuff y2b 4 0 1 1 DnMrp2b 3 0 0 0 Poseyc 4 0 1 0 DWrght3b 3 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 1 0 Duda1b 3 1 1 1 Morse1b 4 0 1 0 CYounglf 3 0 0 0 Ishikaw1b 0 0 0 0 dArnadc 3 0 0 0 J.Perezlf 4 1 1 0 Lagarscf 3 0 1 0

.495 6'/t .491 7 .444 12

Pct GB .611 .602 1 514 tg'/z ,409 22 ,394 23'/t

4a

Friday's Games

Baltimore 2, Seattle1 Cleveland12,Texas2 Detroit 4,Colorado2 L.A. Angel5, s Tampa Bay3 Boston4, N.Y.Yankees3 Chicago WhiteSox10, Minnesota8 Houston 3, Toronto1 Kansas City1, Oakland 0

Today'sGam es KansasCity (Vargas8-4) at Oakland(Lester 10-7), 1;05 p.m. N.Y.Yank ees (Greene 2-1) at Boston(Webster 1-0), 1:05 p.m. Seattle(Paxton2-0) at Baltimore(Mi.Gonzalez 5-5), 4:05 p.m. Texas(Mikolas 1-3)at Cleveland(House1-2), 4:05 p.m. Colorado (Matzek2-5) atDetroit (Porcello12-5),4:08 p.m. L.A.Angels(C.Wilson8-6) atTampaBay(Archer6-6), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota(Pino1-3) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Carrog 4-6),4:10p.m. Toronto(Dickey9-10) at Houston(Oberholtzer 3-7), 4:10 p.m. Sunday'sGames Texas at Cleveland,10:05a.m. Colorado at Detroit,10:08a.m. SeattleatBaltimore,10:35a.m. L.A. AngelsatTampaBay,10:40a.m. Minnesota at ChicagoWhite Sox,11:10 a.m. TorontoatHouston, 11:10a.m. Kansas CityatOakland,1:05p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat Boston,5:05 p.m.

Mark J. Terriii/The Associated Press

Los Angeles Dodgers' Adrian Gonzalez, right, is tagged out by Chicago Cubs catcher Welington Castillo, left, as he tries to score as home plate umpire Jim Wolf watches during the first inning of Friday

night' sgame in LosAngeles.TheCubs won 8-2. I'Oad.

Angels 5, Rays3

Thielbar Burton

1-3 0 0

0 0

0

1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Chicago Sale 6 8 5 4 1 7 D.WebbBS,1-1 1 2 1 1 0 0 Surkamp 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 GuerraW,1-2 2 3- 0 0 0 0 1 PetrickaS,7-8 1 3 1 1 0 2 HBP—byDarneff(J.Abreu), bySale(K.Suzuki). PBFlowers. T—3:47. A—28,060(40,615).

A.chapman S,25-27 1 1 0 Miami CosartL,0-1 51- 3 4 4 Hatcher 12-3 3 0 0 A.Ramos 1 0 0 Da.Jennings 1 1 1 WP — A.Ramos.PB— Saltalamacchia. T—2:58. A—20,410(37,442).

0 0

1

4 2 0 0 0 0 0

3 1 3 1

Phlllles 2, Natlonals1

GBlanccf 4 10 0 Tejadass 3 0 0 0 WASHINGTON — Marion Byrd hit Bcrwfrss 4 1 3 1 Niesep 2 0 0 0 V glsngp 2 1 0 0 Blackp 0 0 0 0 a tiebreaking home run in the sixth BAreuph 1 0 0 0 inning, Roberto Hernandezpitched Totals 34 5 9 5 Totals 2 7 1 2 1 San Francisco 020 OBB 300 — 6 eight strong innings andPhilaNew York OB B OBB 010 — 1 E—Niese(3). DP—San Francisco 2, NewYork delphia beat Washington. Grady 2. LOB —San Francisco 6, NewYork 0. 28—J.Perez Sizemore andCodyAsche hadtwo (3). 38 —Pence(7), B.crawford (9). HR —Duda(20). hits apiece for Philadelphia. S—Vogelsong. IP H R E R BBSO Philadelphia Washington San Francisco r hbi ab r hbi Vogelsong W6-8 9 2 1 1 1 5 R everecf ab 4 0 1 0 Spancf 4 0 1 0 New York Rollinsss 4 0 0 0 Rendon3b 4010 NieseL,5-7 8 9 5 3 0 4 U tley2b 4 0 0 0 Werthrf 4 0 0 0 Black 1 0 0 0 1 0 Howard1b 4 0 0 0 LaRoch1b 4 1 2 0 Niesepitchedto1batter in the9th. Byrdrf 4 1 1 1 Espinospr 0 0 0 0 HBP —byNiese(M.Duffy, Vogelsong). GSizmrlf 3 1 2 0 Dsmndss 4 0 2 1 T—2:06.A—28,905 (41,922). R uizc 3 0 0 0 Harperlf 4 0 1 0 Asche3b 3 0 2 1 Acarer2b 4 0 0 0 RHrndzp 2 0 0 0 WRamsc 2 0 0 0 Padres 10, Braves1 P apelnp 0 0 0 0 Fisterp 2 0 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 SAN DIEGO— RookieTommy McLothph 1 0 0 0 Medica had acareer-high five RSorinp 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 1 2 6 2 Totals 3 31 7 1 hits, including two two-run home Philadelphia 0 1 0 0 0 1 BOO —2 runs, and left-hander Eric Stults Washington 010 000 BOO — 1 E—Asche(10). DP—Philadelphia1. LOB —Philaand three relievers combined delphia 5,Washington6. 2B—G.Sizemore(6). HR on a four-hitter as SanDiego Byrd(21).S—R.Hernandez. IP H R E R BBSO beat Atlanta. Medica's previous career-high was four hits a week Philadelphia R.Hernandez W,6-8 8 5 1 0 1 3 earlier at Atlanta. This was his first PapelbonS,26-29 1 2 0 0 0 2 Washington four-RBI gameand hescored a Fister L,10-3 7 6 2 2 2 5 career-high four runs. Clippard 1 0 0 0 0 0 R.Soriano 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:28. A—28,410(41,408). Atlanta San Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi BUptoncf 4 1 0 0 Ecarerss 5 2 4 1 Interleague LaSte02b 4 0 0 0 Solartelf 3 0 1 0 FFrmn1b 4 0 0 0 Gyorko2b 5 1 1 1 Tigers 4, Rockies 2 J.Uptonlf 3 0 1 0 Medica1b 5 4 5 4 CJhnsn3b 3 0 2 1 Riverac 4 1 1 0 Lairdc 4 0 0 0 CNelsn3b 5 1 3 0 DETROIT — Justin Verlander ASmnsss 3 0 0 0 Francrrf 3 0 1 0 equaled his longest outing of R.Penass 1 0 1 0 Venaleph-rf 2 0 2 1 Bonifacrf 2 0 0 0 AAlmntcf 4 1 1 1 the season, pitching eight solid M inorp 1 0 0 0 Stultsp 3 0 0 0 Jaimep 0 0 0 0Vi ncentp 0 0 0 0 innings to lift Detroit to a victory over Colorado. Aday after the AL Gosselnph 1 0 0 0 Alonsoph 1 0 1 1 Halep 0 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 Central-leading Tigers added star Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 Amarstph 1 0 0 0 left-hander David Price to their Doumitph 1 0 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 1 4 1 Totals 4 1 10209 rotation, Verlander (10-9j showed Atlanta OBB 1BB 000 — 1 San Diego 203 0 0 1 3 1x — 1B signs that he might be rounding E—Francoeur (1), Gyorko (7). DP—Atlanta 2, into form. He allowed two runs SanDiego1.LOB —Atlanta9, SanDiego11. 28—C. and eight hits, striking out five Johnson (22), Gyorko(7), A.Almonte(1), Alonso(16). HR — Medica 2(6). SB—E.cabrera(14), Medica(2). without a walk. S—Minor, Solarte. IP H R E R BBSO Colorado Detroit Atlanta ab r hbi ab r hbi Minor L,4-7 5 9 5 5 2 1 Blckmnlf 5 0 1 0 RDaviscf-If 4 2 2 2 Jaime 1 2 1 1 0 2 CDckrsdh 4 0 0 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 2 1 Hale 2-3 6 3 3 1 0 Arenad3b 4 0 2 0 Micarr1b 3 0 1 0 D.Carpenter 11 - 3 3 1 1 0 3 Mornea 1b 4 1 1 0 VMrtnz dh 3 0 1 1 San Diego C Gnzlzrf 2 0 0 0 TrHntrrl 2 0 0 0 Stults W4-13 61 - 3 2 1 0 4 3 Barnesrf 2 1 1 0 JMrtnzlf 2 0 0 0 Vincent 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Stubbscf 4 0 1 0 D.Kelly3b 0 0 0 0 Quackenbush 1 1 0 0 1 0 Rosarioc 4 0 2 1 Cstllns3b 4 0 0 0 Thayer 1 1 0 0 0 0 Rutledgss 4 0 1 1 Carrercf 0 0 0 0 WP — Thayer. LeMahi2b 3 0 0 0 Holadyc 4 1 1 0 T—3:09.A—33,779 (42,302). Suarezss 4 1 1 0 Totals 36 2 9 2 Totals 3 0 4 8 4 C olorado 000 0 0 0 200 — 2 Brewers 7, Cardinals 4 Detroit 000 030 10x — 4 DP — Colorado 2, Detroit 1. LOB—Colorado 8, ST. LOUIS —Wily Peralta won his Detroit 8. 28 —Arenado (25), Rutledge(11), Kinsler (30), Suarez (7). 13th game to tie for the National

KansasCity Oakland ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Mike ab r hbi ab r hbi A okirf 3 0 1 0 Fuldcf 3 0 1 0 Trout and JoshHamilton homered L .cainrf 0 0 0 0 Jasoc 4 0 0 0 to help the LosAngeles Angels Infante2b 4 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 3 0 1 0 beat TampaBay.Trout hit his 25th A Gordnlf 4 0 0 0 Mosslf 4 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 0 0 0 homer of the season, atwo-run M ostks3b 4 0 0 0 Vogt1b 4 0 0 0 shot off Jeremy Hellickson (0-1) BButler1b 3 0 0 0 Reddckrf 4 0 3 0 during a three-run first that put Ibanezdh 3 1 1 1 Callaspdh 4 0 0 0 AEscorss 3 0 0 0 Sogard2b 2 0 0 0 the Angels up 3-0. Los Angeles National Lea ue JDysoncf 3 0 2 0 went ahead 4-1 onHamilton's solo Cubs 8, Dodgers 2 Totals 31 1 4 1 Totals 3 2 0 5 0 Kansas City 000 010 BOO — 1 homer in the third. Oakland 000 000 BOO — 0 LOS ANGELES— Kyle Hendricks LOB —Kansas City 4, Oakland 8. 28—Aoki (15), Los Angeles TampaBay NATIONALLEAGUE Fuld (11),Reddick(8). HR —Ibanez(5). SB—J.Dyson scattered four hits over seven ab r hbi ab r hbi East Oivision (22). Calhonrf 3 1 0 0 DJnngscf 5 0 0 0 innings, Starlin Castro had three W L Pct GB IP H R E R BBSO T routcf 4 1 2 2 Zobristff 5 1 2 0 Washington 58 49 .542 KansasCity hits and scored three runs, andthe Pujols1b 5 1 1 0 Joycedh 5 1 2 0 Atlanta 58 52 527 fr/t GuthrieW,7-9 6 3 0 0 2 6 JHmltndh 3 1 2 1 Longori3b 4 0 2 1 Chicago Cubs beat LosAngeles, Miami 53 56 .486 6 K.HerreraH,10 1 1 0 0 1 2 Aybarss 4 0 1 1 Loney 1b 4 1 1 0 NewYork 52 57 .477 7 snapping theDodgers'six-game W.DavisH,21 1 0 0 0 0 2 HKndrc2b 4 0 0 0 YEscorss 4 0 2 0 Philadelphia 49 61 .445 tgr/t G.HollandS,30-32 1 1 0 0 0 2 Freese3b 4 0 2 0 CFigur2b 3 0 2 1 winning streak. Making his fourth Central Division Oakland JMcDnl3b 0 00 0 JMolinc 3 0 0 0 major league start after being W L Pct GB GrayL,12-4 7 3 1 1 0 7 Shucklf 3 1 0 0 Guyerph 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 61 49 .555 O'Flaherty 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 l annettc 4 0 2 1 Kiermrrf 4 0 1 0 called up from Triple-A, Hendricks Pittsburgh 58 51 .532 2r/t Otero 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 34 5 105 Totals 3 7 3 122 (2-1) allowed oneearned run, St. Louis 57 51 .528 3 WP — Gray2. Los Angeles 301 001 BBB — 5 struck out three andwalked one. 1/2 Cincinnati 55 54 505 5 T—2:54. A—35,067(35,067). Tampa Bay 0 1 0 0 2 0 BBB — 3 Chicago 46 62 .426 14 E—Freese(4). DP—Tampa Bay1. LOB—LosAnWest Division Los Angeles geles 7, Ta mp a B ay 9. 28 — P u jols (25), Freese(12), Chicago W L Pct GB Astros 3, Blue Jays1 ab r hbi ab r hbi lannetta 2(15), Zobrist (21), Joyce(20), Longoria Los Angeles 62 48 .564 Alcantr2b 5 0 0 0 DGordn2b 4110 (18), Loney(22). HR —Trout (25), J.Hamilton (7). SanFrancisco 59 50 541 2r/t HOUSTON — Gregorio Petit's C oghlnlf 5 0 2 0 Puigcf 3110 C S — F r ee s e (2). SF — C .F igu ero a. SanDiego 49 60 .450 12'/2 IP H R E R BBSO R izzo 1b 4 2 1 0 Ethier cf 1 0 0 0 Arizona 48 62 .436 14 first career home run put Houston Scastross 5 3 3 0 AdGnzl1b 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles Colorado 44 65 .404 17r/t on top in the eighth inning and Shoemaker W,9-3 5 8 3 2 0 1 Valuen3b 5 1 2 2 VnSlyk1b 3 0 0 0 Sweenycf 5 2 2 1 HRmrzss 4 0 1 1 the Astros held on for a win over GrigiH,5 1 1 0 0 0 2 Friday's Games H,15 1 0 0 0 0 0 C astiffoc 3 0 1 1 Crwfrdlf 4 0 0 0 Philadelphi2, a Washington 1 the Blue Jays, snapping Toronto's Jepsen S chrhltrf 3 0 0 1 Kemprf 3 0 0 0 J.SmithH,10 1 1 0 0 0 Detroit 4,Colorado2 six-game winning streak. The StreetS,5-5 1 2 0 0 1 2 Hndrckp 3 0 2 1 JuTrnr3b 3 0 1 0 Cincinnati5, Miami2 Grimmp 0 0 0 0A.Eff isc 3 0 0 0 Tampa Bay game was tied at1-1 when Petit SanFrancisco5, N.Y.Mets1 HellicksonL,0-1 42-3 6 4 4 2 4 BParkrp 0 0 0 0 JWrghtp 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 7,St. Louis4 launched Aaron Loup' s first pitch Harenp 1 0 0 0 C.Ramos 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh9,Arizona4 C.Perezp 0 0 0 0 2-3 2 1 1 1 0 into the first row of the Crawford Yates SanDiego10,Atlanta1 Rojasph 1 0 0 0 Beliveau 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Chicago Cubs8, L.A.Dodgers2 Boxes in left field to give the Mahlmp 0 0 0 0 Jo.Peralta 1 0 0 0 0 3 Today'sGames IP H R E R BBSO BWilsnp 0 0 0 0 Balfour 1 1 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia(A.Burnett 6-10)atWashington (Zimmer- Astros the lead. JoseAltuve conButeraph-c 1 0 0 0 League leadand Aramis Ramirez Colorado —byBeliveau(J.Hamilton). mann6-5),4:05p.m. nected on the next pitch by Loup THBP Totals 38 8 136 Totals 3 1 2 4 1 powered Milwaukeewith a home F.MoralesL,5-6 6 6 3 3 4 2 —3:39.A—20,969 (31,042). Colorado (Matzek2-5) atDetroit (Porcello12-5),4:08 (3-3) for a ground-rule double Chicago 013 031 OBB — 8 Masset 1 2 1 1 2 0 run and RBI double off St. Louis p.m. LosAngeles 1BB BB1 OBB — 2 Logan 1 0 0 0 0 2 Cincinnati(Bailey8-5) at Miami(Eovaldi 5-6), 4:10 before stealing third base. lndlans12, Rangers 2 E—Castiffo (3), S.castro (12), Kemp (6). ace Adam Wai n wright. Jonathan Detroit p.m. DP —Chicago1.LOB— Chicago9,LosAngeles3. Lucroy's bases-clearing double VerlanderW,10-9 8 8 2 2 0 5 SanFrancisco(Peavy0-1) at N.Y. Mets(deGrom5-5), Toronto Houston 28 — Rizzo (16), S.castro (29). HR —Valbuena (9). NathanS,22-27 1 1 0 0 1 1 CLEVELAND — David Murphy 4:10 p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi SB — Coghlan (5), D.Gordon 2 (50). S—Hendricks. chased Wainwright (13-6j in a T—2:56. A—39,052(41,681). Milwaukee(J.Nelson 1-2) at St. Louis(Masterson Reyesss 4 0 0 0 Altuve2b 4 1 1 0 was 4 for 4 with two RBls against SF — Schierholtz. four-run sixth inning that put Mil0-0),4:15p.m. Mecarrlf 3 1 1 0 Grssmnrf 2 0 0 1 his former team, DannySalazar IP H R E R BBSO waukee up by Pittsburgh (Worley4-1) at Arizona(C.Anderson6-4), Bautistrf 4 0 1 0 Carterdh 4 1 1 0 six. The NLCentral Leaders Chicago allowed an unearned run in six 5;10 p.m. DNavrrc 3 0 1 1 MDmn3b 3 0 0 0 HendricksW2-1 7 4 2 1 1 3 leaders are three games ahead of Through Friday's Games Atlanta(E.Santana10-6) at San Diego(Kennedy8-9), Reimlddh 4 0 1 0 Guzmn1b 2 0 1 1 innings, and Cleveland routed Grimm 1 0 0 0 0 2 the Cardinals. AMERICANLEAGUE 5:40 p.m. CIRsmscf 4 0 1 0 Singltn1b 1 0 0 0 B.Parker 1 0 0 0 0 1 BATTING — Al t uv e, Houston, .339; Cano, Seattle, Texas. Murphy, who playedfor Chicago Cubs(Wada1-1) atL.A.Dodgers(Ryu12-5), Valenci1b 4 0 1 0 Corprnc 3 0 1 0 Angeles .331; Beltre,Texas,.327;Brantley, Cleveland, .320; 6;10 p.m. Kawsk3b 2 0 0 0 Mrsnckcf 3 0 0 0 Texas from 2007-13before signing Los Milwaukee St. Louis 4 1-3 8 7 6 2 3 HarenL,8-9 Gigaspie, Chicago,.319; VMartinez, Detroit, .319; Sunday'sGames S tTllsnph-3b1 0 0 0 Hoeslf 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 a two-year contract with the Indi- C.Perez Mecabrera, Toronto,.313. Colorado at Detroit,10:08 a.m. Goins2b 3 0 0 0 G.Petitss 3 1 1 1 CGomzcf 4 2 1 0 Mcrpnt3b 4 0 2 3 Mahol m 2 2 1 1 1 0 RUNS —Dozier, Minnesota, 75; Trout,LosAngeCincinnatiat Miami,10:10a.m. two-run Totals 3 2 1 6 1 Totals 2 83 5 3 ans in November, had a B.Wil s on 1 1 0 0 0 2 Lucroyc 4 2 2 3 Wong2b 5 0 0 0 l e s, 75; Brantl ey,Cleveland,72; Donaldson, Oakland, SanFranciscoat N.Y. Mets,10;10a.m. Toronto 100 000 BOO — 1 double in the fifth when Cleveland J.Wright 1 0 0 0 0 2 B raunrf 4 0 2 2 Hollidylf 4 1 2 1 72; Mecabrera,Toronto, 70; Bautista, Toronto,69; Philadelphia atWashington,10:35 a.m. Houston 000 100 B2x — 3 ArRmr3b 5 1 3 2 MAdms1b 3 0 0 0 HBP — by H are n (R izz o). W P — H a re n, C .P er ez , B .W i l Gardner, NewYork,68; Kinsler, Detroit,68. MilwaukeeatSt.Louis, 11:15a.m. E—G.Petit (1). DP—Houston 1. LOB —Toronto scored six times. KDavislf 4 0 0 0 JhPerltss 3 0 0 0 son. RBI — JAbreu,Chicago,84;Micabrera, Detroit, 81; AtlantaatSanDiego,1:10 p.m. 6, Houston4. 28—Valencia (7), Altuve(31). HR —G. GParralf 1 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 T—3:18. A—47,900(56,000). Ortiz, Boston, 78;Trout, LosAngeles, 78; Donaldson, Chicago Cubsat L.A. Dodgers,1:10 p.m. Petit (1). SB —Altuve (43). CS—Goins (1). SF —D. Texas Cleveland Overay1b 3 0 0 0 Taversrf 3 1 1 0 Oakland,76;Ncruz,Baltimore,75; Moss,Oakland,72. PittsburghatArizona, 1:10p.m. Navarro,Grossman. ab r h bi ab r h bi MrRynlph-1b1 0 0 0 Bourjoscf 3 1 1 0 HITS — Altuve, Houston, 152;Mecabrera, ToronPirates 9, Dlamondbacks4 IP H R E R BBSO Choorf 4 0 1 0 Kipnis2b 4 1 1 0 Segurass 4 1 2 0 Wnwrgp 1 0 0 0 to, 141;Cano,Seattle, 134;Brantley, Cleveland,131; Toronto DRrtsnpr-rf 1 1 1 0 JRmrz2b 0 0 0 0 EHerrr2b 4 1 2 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 AJones, Bal timore,128;Kinsler, Detroit,127; MarkaAmerican Lea ue Happ 7 3 1 1 2 6 Andrusss 4 0 2 1 Avilesss 4 2 2 3 WPerltp 3 0 0 0 Descalsph 1 0 0 0 kis, Baltimore, PHOENIX — Josh Harrison tri127. Loup L,3-3 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 Riosdh 5 0 0 0 Brantlycf 4 1 3 2 W Smithp 0 0 0 0 Mottep 0 0 0 0 OOUBLES —Micabrera, Detroit, 36; Altuve, Orloles 2, Marlners1 pled, doubled andscored twice Jenkins 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 ABeltre3b 2 0 2 0 RPerezc 1 0 0 0 Jeffrssp 0 0 0 0 SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 ouston,31; Kinsler,Detroit, 30; Trout,LosAngeHouslon Rosales3b 1 0 1 0 CSantn1b 3 1 1 1 and Pittsburgh erupted in the final RWeksph 0 0 0 0 M.Ellisph 0 1 0 0 H les, 30;Pedroia,Boston,29; Plouffe,Minnesota,29; BALTIMORE — Wei-Yin Chen McHugh 61-3 5 1 1 1 5 Adducilf 3 0 0 0 Chsnhll3b 5 2 2 1 Dukep 0 0 0 0 two innings to beat Arizona. The JAbreu, Chicago,28; Brantley, Cleveland,28; MeD.Downs 1 0 0 0 0 0 Arencii1b 3 0 0 0 Swisherdh 5 1 1 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 won his fifth consecutive start Toronto, 28. VerasW,1-0 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 LMartncf 4 0 0 0 YGomsc 3 1 1 1 Pirates scored the last nine runs, Totals 3 7 7 127 Totals 3 1 4 6 4 Cabrera, TRIPLES — Rios,Texas,8;Bourn,Cleveland,7; and had a season-high eight QuagsS,12-15 1 1 0 0 0 2 C hirinsc 4 1 2 0 T.Holtcf 1 0 0 0 including eight in the eighth and M ilwaukee 0 1 1 0 1 4 000 — 7 E aton, Chi cago,7;Gardner, NewYork,6; LMartin,TexOdor2b 4 0 0 1 DvMrprf 4 2 4 2 S t. Louis OB B 0 0 1 102 — 4 as,6; strikeouts to lead Baltimore to a T—2:46. A—19,576(42,060). D e A z a Chicago,5;BHolt,Boston,5;AJackson, ninth. Raburnlf 4 1 1 0 E—M.carpenter(10). DP—Milwaukee1, St.Louis Seattle, 5;Od,or, Texas,5; Trout, LosAngeles,5. victory over Seattle. Baltimore Totals 35 2 9 2 Totals 3 8 121610 1. LOB — M ilw auk ee12, St. Loui s 7. 28 — L ucroy (35), Red Sox4, Yankees3 HOME RUNS —JAbreu, Chicago, 31; Ncruz, Texas BOO B10 BB1 — 2 Braun2(23),ArRamirez(12), Taveras(4), Bourjos(7). Baltimore,29; Piilsburgh Arizona has won nine of its past11 En acion,Toronto,26; Ortiz,Boston, Cleveland 102 2 6 1 Bgx— 12 38 — M.carpenter (2). HR —ArRamirez(13), Hogiday 25;Trout,LosAncgarn ab r hbi ab r hbi eles,25;Donaldson,Oakland,23; games and remained atop the E—Dav.Murphy (3). DP—Texas 1. LOB—Texas JHrrsnlf-3b 5 2 2 0 Inciartcf 5 1 1 3 BOSTON—Anthony Ranaudo (11). — S Segura,W.Peralta, Wainwright. 10, Cleveland7. 28—Chirinos (11), Brantley (28), M ercerss 4 3 2 1 DPerltrl 4 1 2 0 IP H R E R BBSO Moss,Oakland,23. AL East. AnRBIsingle byManny pitched six solid innings in his STOLEN BASES—Altuve, Houston,43; Effsbury, Dav.Murphy 2(19). HR —Chisenhag(10). Milwaukee AMcctcf 4 2 2 1 A.Hill2b 4 0 0 0 Machado in the third snapped the major league debut and Dustin avis, Detroit, 25;AEscobar, Kansas IP H R E R BBSO GSnchz1b 3 0 1 1 MMntrc 4 0 1 0 W.PeraltaW,13-6 62-3 5 2 2 4 3 NewYork, 29;RD C ity, 23; JDyson, KansasCity, 22;Andrus,Texas, 21; Orioles' scoreless streak at19 Texas J uWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Trumolf 4 0 2 0 WSmith 13 0 0 0 0 1 JJones,Seatle, 20. Pedroia drove in two runs as J e.WilliamsL,2-5 4 13 1 0 10 3 2 PAlvrz ph 1 0 1 2 Pachec 1b 4 0 0 0 Jeffress 1 0 0 0 0 0 innings. PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit,13-3; Wchen,BalBoston snapped athree-game Adcock 1 1 1 1 1 0 Watson 2-3 1 2 2 2 1 p 0 0 0 0 Schultzp 0 0 0 0 Duke imore,12-3;Kazm ir, Oakland,12-3; Gray,Oakland, Klein 1 2 1 1 0 losing streak with a victory over Mrtnz ph-If 1 1 1 1 Gregrs ss 3 1 1 0 FrRodriguez S,32-36 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 t12-4; Seattle Baltimore Tana ka, Ne wYork,12-4; Porcello, Detroit,12-5; S.Baker 2 0 0 0 0 4 NWalkr2b 5 0 0 0 AnMart3b 4 0 1 0 St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi at11. the New YorkYankees. Ranaudo Cleveland R Martnc 3 1 1 1 Nunop 1 1 0 0 WainwrightL,13-6 51-3 9 7 7 3 5 7 tied AJcksncf 3 0 0 0 Markksrf 4 0 2 0 ERA —FHernandez, Seattle, 2.01; Sale,Chicago, SalazarW,4-4 6 4 1 0 3 4 GPolncrf 4 0 2 0 Kschncph 1 0 0 0 12-3 2 0 0 0 1 (1-0) allowed two runs and four Maness Ackleylf 4 0 1 0 Machd3b 4 1 3 1 2 .09; K a zmir,Oakland,2.37;Tanaka,NewYork,2. 51; 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 Morel3b 2 0 0 0 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Crockett Motte 1 0 0 0 2 1 Lester, Boston,2.52; Gray, Oakland,2.59; Kluber, Cano2b 3 1 2 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 0 0 hits, including a solo homerCar11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Sniderph-If 3 0 1 2 EDLRsp 0 0 0 0 A.Adams S .Freema n 1 1 0 0 1 0 KMorls1b 4 0 1 1 N.cruzdh 4 0 1 0 Cleveland,2.61. los Beltran hit into the NewYork Carrasco 1 2 1 1 0 0 Frierip 0 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 0 0 0 0 HBP —byWainwright (C.Gomez). Balk—Wainwright. Seager3b 4 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 Je.Williamspitchedto 5baters in the5th. T—3:14.A—45,306 (45,399). Volquezp 2 0 0 0 bullpen in the fourth. Ranaudo Denorfirf 4 0 0 0 JHardyss 2 0 1 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE HBP—byKlein(THolt), bySalazar(Arencibia). WPI.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 H artdh 4 0 0 0 DYonglf 3 1 1 0 walked four and struck out two, BATTING —Tulowitzki, Colorado,.340; Puig,Los Adcock.Balk—Klein. Totals 40 9 139 Totals 3 4 4 8 3 Z uninoc 3 0 0 0 Loughlf 0 0 0 0 A ngel e s, .319; Morneau, Col orado, .312;MaAdams, Reds 5, Marlins 2 T — 3: 2 3. A — 27,0 09 (42 , 4 87). Piilsburgh B B B BB1 036 — 9 and he scattered the few mistakes Taylorss 3 0 1 0 CJosphc 3 0 0 0 St. Louis,.311;Lucroy,Milwaukee, .308;AMccutchArizona BBB B48 OBB — 4 Schoop2b 3 0 0 0 he made well enough for Boston en, Pittsburgh,.307;Revere, Philadelphia,.306. E—R.Martin (2). LOB —Pittsburgh 9, Arizona7. MIAMI — Mat Latos pitched sevWhite Sox10, Twins B RUNS —Goldschmidt, Arizona, 75; Rendon, Totals 3 2 1 5 1 Totals 3 02 8 2 to hang on after taking a 2-0 lead 28 — J.Harrison (19), Mercer2 (18), A.Mccutchen en strong innings, RyanLudwick Seattle OBB 1BB 000 — 1 Washington,75;Pence, SanFrancisco,74; Rizzo,Chi(31), PAl v arez (12), M. M on t e ro (16). 38 — J.H arr i s on in the third. Baltimore 001 0 0 1 Ogx— 2 cago,74;Tulowitzki, Colorado,71; FFreeman,Atlanta, CHICAGO — Jose Abreu reached (5). HR —Inciarte(2). SB—D.Peralta(3). CS—Trum- drove in two runs, andCincinnati E—Taylor (1), C.Joseph(3). DP—Seattle 3. 70; Stanton,Miami, 70. bo (1). base five timeswhile extending beat Miami. Latos (3-3), who hails LOB —Seattle 6, Baltimore5. 28—K.Morales (13), New York RBI — Stanton, Miami, 74;AdGonzalez,LosAngeBoston IP H R E R BBSO Taylor(3), Machado(12), N.cruz(19), D.Young(8). ab r hbi ab r hbi les,71;Goldschm idt, Arizona,69; Desmond, Washinghis hitting streak to 21 games, and from nearby Coconut Creek, beat Piilsburgh SB — Ackley (4). ton, 65;AMccutchen,Pittsburgh,65; Braun,MilwauGardnrlf 3 0 0 0 B.Holtrf-lf 3 1 1 0 52-3 7 4 3 2 5 the Marlins for the first time in Volquez the Chicago White Sox scored four IP H R E R BBSO Jeter ss 4 1 1 1 Pedroia 2b 4 1 2 2 kee,63;Byrd,Philadelphia, 63; Howard, Philadelphia, 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 Ju.Wilson Seattle Ellsurycf 3 1 1 0 D.Ortizdh 4 0 1 1 runs in theeighth inning to beat 63; Morneau, Colorado,63; JUpton, Atlanta,63. WatsonW,8-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 eight career starts. He allowed 52-3 7 2 1 1 7 Teixeir1b 4 0 1 0 Napoli1b 3 0 0 0 Elias L,8-9 HITS — DanMurphy, NewYork, 131; Pence,San Minnesota. Abreu had three si n gles, Frieri 1 0 0 0 0 1 one run on five hits and four walks 21-3 1 0 0 0 0 B eltrandh 3 1 2 2 Craiglf 4 0 1 0 Wilhelmsen Francisco,128;McGehee, Miami,127; AMccutchen, Arizona scored twice anddrove in arun. while striking out five. Baltimore Pittsburgh,125;Goldschmidt, Arizona,122; DG ordon, Mccnnc 3 0 0 0 BrdlyJrcf 0 0 0 0 Nuno 6 3 1 1 2 5 W.chenW,12-3 7 1-3 5 1 1 1 8 Headly3b 4 0 0 0 Bogartsss 4 0 1 0 Los Angeles,122;Blackmon, Colorado,121. DelgadoH,2 11 - 3 23 3 1 2 A.MigerH,14 2 - 3 0 0 0 1 0 Drew2b 4 0 0 0 Mdlrks3b 3 1 1 0 Minnesota DOUBLES — G olds chm idt, Ari z ona, 39; Lucroy, Chicago Cincinnati Miami E.De La RosaBS,1-1 1 2 0 0 1 0 Z.BrittonS,22-25 1 0 0 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 2 0 1 0 D.Rossc 3 0 1 1 Milwaukee, 35;AMccutchen,Pittsburgh,31; DanMurab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi SchultzL,0-1 2-3 6 5 5 1 2 WP — Elias. Pradoph-rf 2 0 0 0 Vazquzc 0 0 0 0 D aSntncf 5 0 0 0 Eatoncf 4 2 2 1 HBP BHmltn cf 5 1 2 0 Yelichlf 3 0 0 0 phy, New York, 30; Puig,LosAngeles, 30;Scastro, — by V olquez (Nu no), by Fri e ri (Goldschmidt). T—2:29.A—39,487 (45,971). Chica g o, 2 9 ;Span,Washington,29. Bettscf-rf 3 1 1 0 Dozier2b 4 3 3 0 GBckh2b 5 0 1 0 Bruce rf 4 1 1 0 Vldspn2b 4 0 2 1 WP — Volquez. TRIPLES —DGordon, LosAngeles, 10;BcrawTotals 3 2 3 6 3 Totals 3 1 4 9 4 Plouffe3b 5 1 3 0 JAreu1b 3 2 3 1 Frazier 1b 4 1 2 1 Stantonrf 3 1 1 1 T—3:25. A—22,766(48,633). ford, SanFrancisco,9;Puig,LosAngeles,9;Pence, N ew York 000 1 0 1 B10 — 3 Wlnghlf 5 1 2 1 Konerkdh 5 0 2 1 Mesorcc 3 1 0 0 McGeh3b 2 0 1 0 Royals1, Athletics 0 San Francisco, 7;Braun,Milwaukee,6; BHamilton, Boston 002 100 10x — 4 Nunezpr 0 0 0 0 Viciedopr-dh 0 1 0 0 Ludwcklf 4 0 1 2 GJones1b 4 0 0 0 DP — NewYork 2, Boston1. LOB —NewYork 7, KSuzukc 4 1 2 3 AIRmrzss 5 2 2 2 Giants 5, Mets1 Cincinnati, 6;Segura,Milwaukee,6; Yelich, Miami, 6. RSantg 3b 0 0 0 0 Ozunacf 4 0 0 0 OAKLAND, Calif.— Raul Ibanez HOMERUNS —Stanton, Miami, 26;Rizzo,ChiBoston 5. 2B —Teixeira (8), Pedroia(29), Craig(1), KVargs1b 5 1 1 2 Giffaspi3b 5 0 1 1 Schmkr2b-If 3 0 0 1 Sltlmchc 4 0 0 0 Middlebrooks(4). 3B—B.Holt (5). HR—Jeter (3), Colaeffdh 3 0 0 1 Flowrsc 4 1 2 2 Negron 3b-2b4 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 1 2 0 cago,25;Byrd,Philadelphia,21; Tulowilzki, Colorado, homered to break his own franNEW YORK — Ryan Vogel s ong Beltran(13).SB—Gardner (18), Effsbury (29). S—B. Arciaph-dh 2 0 0 0 DeAzalf 5 1 2 1 Cozartss 4 0 0 0 Cosartp 1 0 1 0 21; Duda,NewYork,20; Frazier,Cincinnati,20; Goldchise record for oldest Royals Holt. P armelrf 4 1 1 1 Sierrarf 4 1 2 1 pitched a two-hitter for his second L atosp 3 0 1 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 schmidt,Arizona,19;JUpton, Atlanta,19. STOLENBASES—DGordon, Los Angeles,50; IP H R E R BBSO EEscorss 4 0 2 0 Broxtnp 0 0 0 0 KHrndzph 1 0 0 0 player to clear the fences, and career complete game,Hunter BHamilton,Cincinnati, 42;Revere, Philadelphia, 30; New York Totals 4 1 8 148 Totals 4 0 101710 Heisey ph 1 1 1 0 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 KansasCitybeatOakland.The Pence emerged f r om a deep f unk CapuanoL,1-2 6 1 -3 8 4 4 0 5 Minnesota BOB BOO 111 — 8 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 DJnngs p 0 0 0 0 EYoung,NewYork, 26; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 21;Roll42-year-old Ibanez connected in Kegey 0 1 0 0 0 0 Chicago B21 111 04x — 10 with a triple and three RBlsand RJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 ins, Philadelphia,21;Blackmon,Colorado,20; CGo2-3 0 0 0 0 0 E — K .V argas (1), Da r nel l (1). LDB — M inne so t a 8, Thornton Totals 35 5 8 4 Totals 3 1 2 7 2 mez, Milwaukee,20;Span,Washington,20. the fifth inning for his fifth homer, Warren San Francisco beat the NewYork 1 0 0 0 1 1 Chicago11.2B—K.Suzuki(21), KrVargas(1),E.EscoCincinnati OBB 103 001 — 5 PITCHING —Kershaw, LosAngeles, 13-2; WPgiving Jeremy Guthrie the lone Boston bar (27),AI.Ram irez (19), Giffaspie(25). 3B—Sierra Mets for its second straight win Miami OBB 010 010 — 2 eralta, Milwaukee, 13-6; Wainwright, St. Louis, 13RanaudoW,1-0 6 4 2 2 4 2 (2). HR —Parmelee(5), Flowers(7). CS—Sierra(1). E—Frazie(12). r DP — Cincinnati 2. LOB—Cin- 6; Ryu,LosAngeles, 12-5; Cueto,Cincinnati, 12-6; run he neededfor Kansas City's after a six-game skid. Vogelsong IP H R E R BBSO Ludwick (16), Heisey(13). Greinke,LosAngeles, 12-6;Simon,Cincinnati, 12-6; LayneH,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 cinnati 6, Miami7. 28 — first victory at the OaklandCol(6-8) faced 28 batters, one over Tazawa H,12 1 2 1 1 1 0 Minnesota HR — Stanton (26). S—Cosart.SF—Schumaker. Bumgarner,San Francisco,12-8. —Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1.71; Cueto,CinUeharaS,22-24 1 0 0 0 0 1 Darnell 4 5 4 4 4 4 the limit, allowing Juan Lagares' IP H R E R BBSO ERA iseum since April 10, 2012. The 1 2-3 5 2 2 0 2 Kegeypitchedto 1baterinthe 7th. Swarzak Cincinnati cinnati, 2.05;Wainwright,St. Louis,2.26; HAlvarez, Royals went1-5 against the A's 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 soft single leading off the sixth PB — Mccann. Duensing LatosW,3-3 7 5 1 1 4 5 Miami,2.48;Hamels, Philadelphia,2.55;TRoss, San Fien L,5-5BS,3-4 1-3 4 4 4 0 1 and Lucas' Duda's 20th homer to last season, including 0-3 on the T—3:03. A—37,782(37,499). BroxtonH,18 1 1 1 1 0 1 Diego, 2.60;Greinke,LosAngeles,2.65.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

GOLF ROUNDUP

Garcia fires 61, takes lead at Bridgestone The Associated Press AKRON, Ohio — Sergio Garcia doesn't know anything about being in a zone. He had no trouble identifying the best round of his career.

Garcia one-putted the final 11 holes and made birdies on his last seven holes Friday in the Bridgestone Invitational

to tie the course record at Firestone with a 9-under 61 and take a three-shot lead into the

weekend. He had a birdie putt on ev-

ery hole on the back nine, missing only a 15-footer from the fringe at No. 11. Garcia

shot 27 on the back nine, a course record. "Just one of those moments

that you love and you enjoy, and you wish there were no

end," he said.

It matched the tournament

"Having a tournament of pleted his college golf career this caliber at this course at Hawaii Pacific UniversiContinued from C1 not only brings a better rep- ty, added that there is also a Fitch is one of seven Red- utation to the course, but it disadvantage. "I feel like there is a little mond golfers in the field of brings in the best players to 158 at the Stroke Play Cham- the area," says Andy Rodby, more pressure, because I pionship, which each year a 22-year-old Redmond High feel like it's my home course attracts an elite group of School graduate who shot an and I am probably expectamateurs from Oregon and opening-round 83. "It's quite ed to do a little better than I beyond. an honor to have this held would somewhere else," he Albany's Conner Kumpu- here. said. "That feeling is a little "Moving it to this course different." la, who plays college golf at Oregon State, shot a 4-unis pretty big for the area and Fitch, who counted Rodby der-par 68 Friday to grab the pretty big for the course." as a teammate at Redmond first-round lead. R edmond tends t o g e t High, agreed. Bend's Don O rrell, shot overshadowed by Bend, said Fitch was among the naa 3-under 69 to take early Jared Lambert, a 21-year-old tion's best NCAA D i vision control of the tournament's who was a teammate at Red- III golfers when he played at Senior Division. And Cody mond High with Rodby. Linfield College, but Friday "The only thing we are marked just the fifth round Pinston, of Eugene, leads the Master-40 Division at 1 known for is the (Redmond) he has played since early under. Airport, and that's it," Lam- May. That is a familiar plight For some in the Redmond bert said with a laugh. for young adults who join the contingent, though, there is Lambert, who shot a first- professional world and strugmore to this tournament than round 75, said that hosting a gle to find the time for golf. simply who shoots the best prestigious golf tournament Still, he once shot a 66 at score. helps Redmond better estab- Juniper. And it is hard to This is the first year of a lish its own identity. escape the thought that he "I like seeing 'Redmond' could do it again. four-yearcourse rotation for "It changes your expectathe Stroke Play Champion- up on the OGA website," said ship, one of two major am- Lambert, who plays college tions a little bit," said Fitch of ateur tournaments hosted golf at Corban University in playing at his home course. annually by the Oregon Golf Salem. "I feel like I am being "But I would say it is more Association. If all goes well, represented a little bit." fun. There are a lot of memothe tournament will likely Rodby said playing at a ries, good and bad. So it's just return to Juniper in 2018, ac- course he knows so well has good to play and try to keep cording to the OGA. advantages. up with some of these people And having Redmond's For one, there is nothing who are playing at a really municipal course in the Ore- that could surprise him at the high level." gon golf limelight is a source course. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, ofprideforsome. But Rodby, who just comzhall@bendbulletin.com.

Hp~q

record held by Tiger Woods,

Eric Reed /For The Bulletin

who shot 61 in 2000 and 2013,

Bend's Drew Steeihammer records the out at first base during

and Jose Maria Olazabal, who

Friday's game against Lynnwood Pacific of Washington in San Bernardino, California. Washington won 10-2.

shot his 61 in 1990. Woods went on to win by 11 shots in

2000 and seven shots last year. Olazabal won by 12 in the World Series of Golf. Garcia still has work to do. He was at 11-under 129, three shots clear of J u stin Rose, who had a 67. British

Open champion Rory McIlroy birdied his last two holes for a 64 and joined Marc Leishman of Australia (67) at four shots out of the lead. McIlroy played in the group b ehind Garcia, an d

c ould

hear what was going on if he couldn't see it. "Every time I

l o oked, he

was putting a ball in the hole and the crowd was cheering," McIlroy said. "I knew that he

was making a fewbirdies." Garcia was five shots out of the lead when he had to scram-

ble to save pars on back-to-

Induction

ended after helping the Gi-

Continued from C1

2008 Super Bowl. He set the league's single-season record

Bend North

with 22 ~A sacks in 2001, and

Continued from C1

ceremony. The former Buffalo Bills receiver was having trouble keeping his emotions in check Friday after meeting

he ranks fifth on the all-time

It was Bend North's first postseason loss after nine consecutive wins.

a former teammate, quarter-

that made and lost four con-

back Jim Kelly, who is battling cancer.

secutive Super Bowl appearances in the early 1990s. He

"The thing that disappointed me today was being down and not being able to rebound," Bend North man-

r anked fourth in th e N F L

ager Dan Ruhl said, "at least

with 13,198 yards receiving

emotionally." Playing in the first game

If that is the case, Andre Reed might not make it to the

of beat a bit faster when I saw

him." There will be plenty of emotions, given the vari ed backgrounds of t h e inductees. It is a group that includes two first-time ballot selec-

ordinary round. Two good

offensivetackle Walter Jones.

swings on the 10th hole led to a 20-footbirdie putt. He hit 8-iron

Then there are A r izona/St. Louis defensive back Aeneas

to 2 feet on No. 12 and 3 feet on

Williams and Oakland's Ray Guy, the first full-time punter

Nick Watney increased

his lead to three points in the Barracuda C h ampionship, scoring eight points in the modified Stableford event at

Derrick Brooks and Seattle

inducted. And do not forget Atlanta/

Philadelphia defensive end Claude Humphrey, who waited 28 years to hear his name called. "It's a great moment," said

the 70-year-old Humphrey, who earned six Pr o B owl

selections during a 13-year

Montreux to push his two-day

career. "It came at a time in

total to 26. Geoff Ogilvy was second. Wes Roach was third at 22, and Tommy Gainey and

my life where there wasn't

Tim Wilkinson had 21.

Qualifier tops Champions Tour field: BLAINE, Mi n n .

(AP) — 'Iltesday qualifier Marco Dawson shot a 9-under 63 to take the lead in the Champi-

ons Tour's 3M Championship, leaving Bernhard Langer a stroke back five days after the

German star's record-breaking victory in the Senior British Open.

Kelly-quarterbacked team

cried," Reed said. "Three months ago, we didn't know if (Kelly) was going to be in Canton. Yeah, my heart kind

tions: Tampa Bay linebacker

had all day, and those turned out to be the start of his big run. Also on Friday: Watney takes three-point lead in Reno: RENO, Nev.

sacks list with 141'/z. Reed was a member of the

"I almost broke down and

back holes to close out the front nine on what seemed to be an

No. 13 for the easiest birdies he

ants beat New England in the

a whole lot of other things

going on. It gave the career I worked so hard on a little rejuvenation."

Humphrey brings the history and Strahan the buzz,

at the time he retired after the 2000 season. The Associated Press file

Oakland Raiders punter Ray Guy kicks against the Phiiadeiphia Eagles in Super Bowl XV in New Orleans in 1981.

Guy was selected to the NFL's 75th anniversary team.

He helped change the punter position by introducing terms such as "hang time" into the vernacular.

Williams was an eightis a part of them, too, because time Pro Bowl selection I am now representing every w ho finished with 5 5 i n one of them." terceptions, plus six in the At 64, Guy also holds a postseason. special place among memJones is regarded as one bers of his induction class. of the game's best tackles "I remember watching during a 12-season career in games, and he had this hang Seattle. time," Williams said. "I was And then there is Brooks, able to go to the restroom, an 11-time Pro Bowl selecget some food, and the ball tion. Though comparably w ould still b e i n t h e a i r . undersized at 6 feet and 232 That's what Ray Guy means pounds, he helped anchor in terms of his influence on the Buccaneers' defense that the game of football." keyed a Super Bowl run in Plenty of eye-popping stats 2002 and ranked among the are shared among a class NFL's best for more than 10 that has a combined 55 Pro years. "I'm e xcited about o u r Bowl selections. And they are all consid- class, being part of history," ered equals, no matter their said Brooks, who then listed positions. the accomplishments of each "This is the Hall of Fame. and every one of his fellow It's not about one player or inductees. one person and what they've He ended with Guy, noting done," Strahan said. "Plain the punter's long wait to be and simple, you've got to mducted. "To hear Ray talk about humble yourself because everybody here has had their him going in, he doesn't

in havingbecome a commercial pitchman and talk-show host. And Guy is bringing a moment." 20-member punter posseto Strahan had plenty of help him celebrate. memorable moments in es"It's bigger than me," said tablishing himself as one of Guy, who is being inducted the NFL's top pass rushers 28 yearsafter he retired."It over a 15-year career that

talk about the wait. He talks about the fact that he's here,"

Brooks said. "And that's what I'm going to talk about, not 20 years ago, but talking about what we're doing now."

of the tournament at 8:30

a.m., Pacificscored four times in the second inning a nd then five runs in t h e

sixth to break open a fairly close game. B end had a shot in t h e

fifth, getting the tying run to the plate. But Pacific reliever Logan Kruse threw what

might have been the pitch of the game when he struck out Scalley, the No. 3 hitter, on

a curveball with runners at second and third to end the fifth inning and preserve the

three-run Washington lead. "Our heads were down after they hit that home run,"

Bend North's Dylan Ruhl said. "And in the fifth inning — we just couldn't get the momentum back." The mild loss of composure — and not the loss on the field — bothered Dan

as a senior, before switching to Greco-Roman for international competition.

His recruiting pitch?

Persuading wrestlers — who by naLindland won silver at the 2000 Sydney ture can be a stubborn bunch — to stop Olympics and at the world champion- beating each other up for limited freeships the following year before pursuing style spots and give Greco a try instead. a full-time career in MMA. Nowhere is that freestyle mentality Lindland wa s a s t a ndout m i ddle- more evident than at 74-kilogram free-

weight fighter for years. He also runs a style. The U.S. has at least four potengym, Team Quest in Portland, and has tial world champions, including former helped coach more than 20 fighters who Penn State star David Taylor, four-time later competed in the Ultimate Fighting national champion and Cornell graduate Championship. Kyle Dake, and rising prospect Andrew Lindland began drifting back into Howe, a four-time All-American at Wis-

to compete in and watch — will attract

promising freestyle converts. "It's about having a great energy and having an excitement about the sport and building the team unity that we had when I was on the team," Lindland said.

"A big part of that is having fun. Wrestling is such a tough, difficult sport. It's so demanding and it's such a grind that, if you don't love it, you might as well get out because it's too hard ... it is a lot of

work, but within that you've got to learn to have fun, too."

Little LeagueNorthwest Regional baseball tournament. Friday:Washington10, Bend North 2

Today:BendNorth vs. Wyoming, 7 p.m. Sunday:Nogame Monday:Bend North vs. Alaska, 11 a.m. Tuesday:Bend North vs. Montana, 8:30 a.m. • After pool play ends Wednesday, the top four teams in the six-team tournament field will

advance to Thursday's semifinal round. Thursday:No. 2 seedvs. No. 3 seed, 2 p.m.; No. 1seedvs. No.4seed,6 p.m. Saturday(Aug. 9):Championship game, 1 p.m.

Pool play standings The top four teamsafter pool play advance to the semifinals. W LRA

Washington 1 0

ing on out there, and that's

Wyoming 0

not like my team," the Bend North manager said. "You know, stuff like pounding the bat in the dirt, hitting

their h e lmets, w a l king somebody and raising their arms — that's not normally my team. "I think, you know, they wanted to perform at a high level knowing that they were on TV (online)." The talent level of the opponent had something to do Pacific racked up 10 hits

f e w consin and Oklahoma. years ago, coaching the U.S. team at the All of those guys are behind 2012 Continued from C1 worlds in Budapest in 2013. Olympic champion Jordan Burroughs, "The biggest challenge will be changIn May, USA Wrestling made Lind- perhaps the world's finest pound-foring the mindset of the wrestling com- land just the fourth coach of the Greco pound wrestler. "The key to t hat i s t o s how t hese munity to understand that wrestling is program. "He's a winner. He's a guy that's been blue-chip athletes that are coming out wrestling," Lindland said. "Just because we don't touch legs in Greco-Roman successful at every level of the sport," of college that there's just as much and doesn't make it a foreign sport. Funda- USA Wrestling executive director Rich possibly more opportunities in Greco," mentally and principally, it's the same Bender said. "As a country, Greco-Ro- Lindland said. "There's more opportuniconcepts." man hasn't been our most successful ties to make a team, get on a medal stand In Lindland, USA Wrestling appears discipline internationally. But we needed in Greco-Roman than freestyle because to have found an inspired choice to re- someone ... that had that kind of men- they don't have a depth problem like we place longtime coach Steve Fraser. tality that (Fraser) had. Which is, 'We're do." Though Fraser led the U.S. to a world going to win and we're going to believe Though the program boasts of curtitle in 2007, the Americans followed in the bottom of our belly that we can,' rent world medal contenders like Andy that with just one medal, a bronze, in and could recruit other believers in that Bisek, Spenser Mango and Justin Lester, their past two Olympic tournaments. idea." Lindland does not have much time to The 44-year-old Lindland grew up in Recruiting is the most important part build up the depth he is looking for with the Portland area, where he blossomed of Lindland's job. the 2016 Olympic Trials about a year and into a junior college national champion He knows he needs to quickly stock a half away. at Clackamas Community College. He the roster with more talent to have a betBut Lindland is hopeful that a new aptransferred to Nebraska, becoming the ter shot at getting the Americans back proach — along with new international top-ranked wrestler in his weight class on the medal stand in Rio in 2016. rulesdesigned to make Greco more fun

schedule at the 2014

"There was too many negatives and nonverbals go-

a nd d re w t he Greco-Roman community a

A look at BendNorth's

Ruhl the most.

with it, too.

Wrestling

Schedule

s e ve n w a l k s

against six different Bend pitchers - an offensive performance, Washington manager Robley Corsi Jr. said, that was nothing new

for his ballclub. "We've been doing this all year," Corsi said. "As a team, we have guys who step up, and we put guys in places where they normally don't hit, and they become

heroes." Colton Walsh snatched the early momentum away

from Bend when he took a 2-2 curve — a pitch he later said he did not feel like he hit all that hard — over the

center-field wall, turning Oregon's 2-1 lead into a 4-2 deficit and ultimately chasing Bend North starting pitcher Drew Steelhammer a f t er

two innings. "They punched us in the gut a little bit," Dan Ruhl said, "and I don't think we everrecovered."

2 0

0

Oregon(Bend) 0 1 10 RA: Runs against Friday's Games Washington10, Bend North 2

Montana13, Idaho 7 Friday's Summary

Washington 10, Bend North 2 Washington040 105 — 1010 2 BendNorth 200 000 — 2 5 1 Michael,Kruse(4) andCorsi; Steelhammer,Scalley(3), Ruhl(4j, Murphy

(5), Tobia(6), s Logan(6)andF.Lovejoy. W—Michael. t —Steelhammer. 2BWashington: Kruse, Turcotte, Walsh. 3B— BendNorth:Scalley.HR— Washington:Walsh.

Onthe air TV:none. Online:Many Little

League regional tournament gamesareavailable to watch online at ESPN3.

Viewers must iog in to their account with a cable provider (for example, BendBroadband) that offers the programming. On the web:www.llbws. org/llbbws/northwest. htm

of time to earn a semifinal berth. Its next game, the second of four in pool play, is at 7 p.m. today against Cody, Wyoming. "I just told them that I've

Bend North s t ruggled neverfeltso good afteraloss against Pacific starter Ian because I do know that we M ichael, who s t r uck o u t can beat (Pacific)," Dan Ruhl eight in 3 ' / 3 innings and said. " I do know that w e earned the victory. were one pitch away from While Bend North falls a tying that game. "We got the jitters out," he game back in the standings, the team still has plenty added. "We'll be back."


C5 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 NASDAQ ~

O» To look upindividual stocks, gotc bendbugetin.com/business.Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

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S&P500

>7 >3

4,352.64

Todap 1 g40.

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$20.33

$1,293.60

S8tP 500

Dow Jones industrials

..... Close. 1,925.15

Close: 16 493.37 Change: -69.93 (-0.4%)

Saturday, August 2, 20t4

Just a blip?

+

10 YR T NOTE 2.49%

1,925.15

Change: -5.52 (-0.3%) Falling demand for military and 1,880' " ""'10 DAYS transportation equipment 2,000 " contributed to a drop in U.S. factory orders in May. Despite that decline, U.S. 1,920 " factories have been registering monthly gains in orders most of 1,840 " this year, reflecting an expansion in manufacturing that hit its 13th 1,760 straight month in June. Economists expect that the Commerce Department will report on Tuesday 1 680 F M A that factory orders rebounded in HIGH June. StocksRecap "

"

16,400" ""' 10 DAYS " "

17,500"

"

"

"

16,000

15,500

Bally Technologies

15,000

LOW CLOSE 16584.75 16437.07 16493.37 DOW Trans. 8178.30 8058.44 8120.86 DOW Util. 545.49 537.89 540.69 NYSE Comp. 10756.06 10642.88 10692.17 NASDAQ 4385.05 4324.02 4352.64 S&P 500 1937.35 191 6.37 1925.15 S&P 400 1373.34 1356.23 1367.20 Wilshire 5000 20477.87 20247.03 20346.01 Russell 2000 1123.94 1107.31 1114.86

Factory orders

NYSE NASD

seasonally adjusted percent change

2%

1.5

1

est.

08

0 -1.6

07 -0.5

Vol. (in mil.) 3,729 1,993 Pvs. Volume 4,164 2,199 Advanced 1 156 9 6 0 Declined 1961 1721 New Highs 21 20 New Lows 1 12 1 3 6

CHG. %CHG. WK MO -69.93 -0.42% -20.89 -0.26% +1.39 $.0.26% -34.26 -0.32% -17.13 -0.39% -5.52 -0.29% -3.50 -0.26% -64.80 -0.32% -5.21 -0.47%

QTR YTD T -0.50% +9.73% T +10.22% L +2 .81% L +4 .22% +4.15% L +1 .84% +3.25% -4.19% T

NorthwestStocks -2

NAME J

F

M A 2014

M

J

Alaska Air Group A LK 28.04 ~ 50.49 44. 4 5 +. 4 8 +1.1 T T T +21. 2 +4 5 .6 1 653 10 0 . 5 0 Avista Corp A VA 25.55 ~ 33.60 31.3 0 +. 2 7 +0 .9 T T T +11.0 +12 .1 2 8 0 1 6 1. 2 7 Source: Factaet Bank of America BAC 13 . 60 ~ 18.03 1 4. 9 8 -.27 -1.8 T T T -3.8 + 4 .7113667 18 0 .04 BarrettBusiness B BS I 41 . 96 ~ 102.2 0 55. 42 - 1 .66 -2 .9 L L L -40.2 - 17.8 7 4 23 0. 7 2 Boeing Co BA 101.77 ~ 144. 5 7 12 0.38 -.10 -0.1 T T T -11.8 +16.9 5793 1 8 2 . 92 Eye on trade Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .11 ~ 6.50 5.35 -.07 -1.3 L L L +2.3 -8.6 94 5 The nation's trade gap has T T ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.17 ~ 3 0.3 6 25.12 -.37 -1.5 T -8.6 +4 . 3 16 8 1 8 0 . 56f gradually widened this year, ColumbiaSportswear COLM 55.58 ~ 8 9.9 6 74.45 -.31 -0.4 T T T -5.5 +17.5 6 8 24 1.12 hitting a two-year high of $47 Costco Wholesale CO S T 109.50 ~ 1 26.1 2 11 7.88 + . 34 $.0.3 L L L -1.0 + 1 . 5 2 019 2 6 1 . 42 billion in April. Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 8.58 ~ 18.70 11. 4 3 +. 2 1 + 1.9 L T L -30.4 +2 4.7 4 3 60 That trend reversed in May, FLIR Systems F LIR 27.91 ~ 37.42 3 2. 9 8 -.30 -0.9 T T T +9.6 +3.7 710 24 0. 4 0 helped by a surge in exports of Hewlett PacKard HPQ 20 . 25 — 0 36.21 35 .19 -.42 -1.2 T L L +25.8 +41 .0 11734 12 0 . 6 4 petroleum products and a slight Intel Corp INTC 21.89 ~ 34.83 3 3. 7 4 -.14 -0.4 T L L +30. 0 +4 9 .1 30845 17 0 . 90 decline in imports. The June trade Keycorp K EY 11.05 ~ 14.70 1 3. 3 5 -.19 -1.4 T T T -0.5 +12.1 8338 13 0 . 26 deficit figure is due out WednesKroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ 51.49 49. 2 5 +. 2 7 +0.6 T T T +24. 6 +2 6 .4 2 025 17 0 . 6 6 day. Economists predict it Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 9.19 6.86 +. 0 2 + 0.3 T T T +25. 0 +3 2 .6 1 095 3 3 declined further to $43.6 billion. A LA Pacific LPX 13.43 o — 18.9 6 13 . 4 8 -.06 -0.4 T T T -27.2 -16.7 3151 20 MDU Resources MDU 25 . 94 ~ 36.05 3 1. 3 4 -.17 -0.5 T T T +2.6 +14 . 9 89 9 2 1 0. 7 1 lower trade deficit boosts overall Mentor Graphics MEN T 19.14 ~ 24.31 19. 8 2 + . 0 7 +0.4 T T T -17.7 -2.9 751 1 6 0. 2 0 economic growth when it shows L +14.6 +38 .9 30288 16 1 . 1 2 MSFT 30.84 ~ 45.71 4 2. 8 6 -.30 -0.7 T L U.S. companies are earning more Microsoft Corp Nike Ioc B N KE 62.25 ~ 80.26 7 6. 7 8 -.35 -0.5 T T T -2.4 +24.1 2879 2 6 0 . 96 in their overseas sales. T L + 11.6 +15 .1 1 0 23 1 9 1. 3 2 Nordstrom Ioc J WN 54.90 ~ 70.71 6 8. 9 5 - .28 -0.4 L Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39.96 ~ 47.50 4 3. 0 7 -.15 -0.3 T T T +0.6 +2.5 93 20 1.84 T T + 3.9 +13. 7 2 2 49 1 8 0.88 PaccarIoc PCAR 53.07 ~ 68.81 6 1. 4 7 - .80 -1.3 T Planar Systms PLNR 1.75 ~ 2.93 3.19 +. 5 0 +18.6 L L L +25. 6 +4 7 .0 7 1 2 5 3 Plum Creek PCL 40.57 o — 50.0 8 41. 1 7 -.20 -0.5 T T T -11.5 -11.6 1104 3 5 1 . 76 Prec Castparts PCP 210.79 ~ 275. 0 9 22 9.25 + . 45 +0.2 T T T -14.9 + 3. 2 1 181 1 8 0 . 12 Safeway Ioc SWY 21.90 ~ 36.03 34. 4 6 ... ... T L L +18.2 +52 .9 1 3 59 3 0.9 2 f T L -18.5 +7 . 0 22 6 d d 0. 7 5 Schoitzer Steel SCHN 2 4.13 ~ 33.32 2 6. 6 4 -.07 -0.3 T Sherwin Wms SHW 166.32 ~ 215 . 62 20 4.76 -1.47 -0.7 T T T +11. 6 +19 .6 8 7 3 2 6 2. 2 0 StaocorpFocl S FG 51.98 ~ 69.51 6 0. 1 8 -.16 -0.3 T T T -9.2 +15.7 3 2 1 1 2 1 .10f StarbucbsCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 82.50 7 6. 9 8 -.70 -0.9 T T T - 1.8 +10.4 3812 3 0 1 . 04 Triqoiot Semi TQNT 6.80 — o 18.86 18 .37 + . 38 +2.1 L L L +120 .3 + 125.3 3297 c c umppuaHoldings UM PQ 15.56 ~ 1 9.6 5 16.58 -.34 -2.0 T T T -13.4 +4 . 0 1 4 26 24 0 . 6 0 US Bancorp U SB 35.69 ~ 43.92 4 1. 3 3 -.70 -1.7 T T T +2.3 +15 . 1 7 0 93 1 4 0 . 98f WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.53 ~ 2 4.5 3 20.69 -.27 -1.3 T T T -11.2 -1.7 66 7 1 3 0 .44f Pullback on borrowing? WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 0.07 ~ 5 3.0 8 50.35 -.55 -1.1 T T T +10. 9 +1 9 .9 18399 12 1 . 40 T T Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6 .64 ~ 33.75 3 1.2 3 -.09 -0.3 T -1.1 + 1 3.4 5 615 27 0 . 8 8 The Federal Reserve issues a report Thursday on how much credit Americans took on in June. Consumers eased back on DividendFootnotes:8 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last 12 months. f - Current credit in May after driving annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i - Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I - Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent borrowing April to the fastest pace dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximatecash this year. Increased household value on ex-distrittution date.pEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no p/E ratio shown. cc —p/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months. borrowing can drive stronger consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of economic activity in the U.S. Economists project that consumBurger King Worldwide reported a 19 percent million, or 18 cents per share. increase in second-quarter earnings Friday. Revenue declined 6.1 percent to $261.2 million. That ers pulled back on credit use in June. Lower costs and growth overseas helped boost the was below the $263.3 million analysts expected, fast-food chain's results. according to Zacks Investment Research. Consumer credit For the quarter, Burger King said The company has more than 13,000 gggbrt't seasonally adjusted monthly change locations globally, compared with more profit increased to $75.1 million, or 21 g g g)ltt $30 billion cents per share. Adjusted for one-time than 35,000 for McDonald's. Burger King 26.1 gains and costs, earnings came to 25 executives have said that gives them cents per share, which was two cents considerable room for expansion around 196 19 6 est 20 the globe, particularly because Burger 17.5 above what Wall Street expected. A 15.9 year ago, the company earned $62.9 King is such a well-known brand.

Burger King profit rises ,':.;;;, .","

10

Burger King Worldwide (BKW) Friday's close: $26.25 Price-earnings ratio: 36

52-WEEK RANGE

$1 9 J

F

M

A 2014

M

J

AP

Source:Fectael

28

Fidelity GNMA

CBD Enn HutchT BallyTech Planarsy IntervestB CallularBio Imperva ElectSci TandemD n SpiritAero

L AST CHG 3 .80 +1 . 4 3 2 .88 +.66 7 7.70 + 1 7.53 3 .19 +.50 9 .40 +1 . 4 2 2 2.99 + 3 .26 2 5.25 +3 . 0 8 6 .77 +.79 1 4.12 + 1 .63 3 6.84 + 4 .27

Losers

1-YR

FGMNX

LIMITED MODERATE EXTENSIVE

Do

%C H G +6 0 .3 +29 . 7 +2 9 .1 +18 . 6 CD +1 7 .8 +1 6 .5 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +1 3 . 9 +13 . 2 Vertical axis represents average credit +1 3 .1 quality; horizontal axis represents +1 3 . 1 interest-rate sensitivity

1 5.5% 34.4% .7 15.5

32. 6 % 21.1

Source: FactSet

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 24.9 4 - . 0 6 +3.0 +10.6 +12.5+13.1 8 A A CaplncBuA m 59.92 -.24 +4.8 +10.7 +10.1+10.5 8 A 8 CpWldGrlA m 46.38 -.29 +3.6 +14.1 +12.0+11.8 8 8 D EurPacGrA m 49.48 -.26 +0.8 +12.4 +7.1 +8.9 8 8 C FnlnvA m 52. 7 1 - .17 +2.9 +14.2 +14.9+15.1 C D C GrthAmA m 44.61 -.17 +3.7 +15.6 +15.8+15.0 C 8 D IncAmerA m 21.39 -.06 +5.2 +11.9 +12.2+13.2 A A A InvCoAmA m 38.68 -.20 +6.2 +17.4 +16.5+14.9 A 8 C NewPerspA m37.99 -.12 +1.1 +12.0 +12.1+13.0 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m40.59 -.17 +3.9 +13.3 +16.3+16.3 8 8 A Dodge &Cox Income 13.87 +.01 +4.4 +6 .2 +4.4+5.9 A A 8 IntlStk 45.84 -.16 +6.5 +19.8 +11.3+12.1 A A A Stock 176.39 -.70 +5.6 +18.1 +19.6+17.7 A A A Fidelity Contra 97.72 - . 1 9 +2.7 +15.7 +15.2+16.6 C 8 8 ContraK 97.7 1 - . 18 +2.8 +15.8 +15.3+16.8 C 8 B LowPriStk d 50.82 -.21 +2.7 +12.7 +15.9+17.6 C C C Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 68.35 -.20 +5.3 +15.1 +16.8+16.7 8 8 A FraakTemp-Franklio Income C x 2. 5 3 -. 02 +6.3 +12.1 +10.3+12.0 A A A IncomeA x 2.5 0 -. 02 +6.7 +12.4 +10.8+12.6 A A A Oakmarb Intl I 25.89 -.19 - 1.6 + 7 . 4 +12.3+13.4 E A A Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 25 -.08+3.0 +11.6 +13.1+13.5 E E E RisDivB m 18 . 10 -.07+2.6 +10.7 +12.1+12.5 E E E RisDivC m 17 . 98 -.07+2.6 +10.8 +12.3+12.6 E E E SmMidValA m45.64 -.20 +3.2 +11.0 +12.1+14.4 D E E SmMidValB m38.40 -.17 +2.8 +10.1 +11.2+13.4 E E E T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.55 -.12 +3.2 +10.7 +15.7+15.4 D C C GrowStk 53.53 -.14 +1.8 +18.3 +16.8+17.8 A A A HealthSci 64.53 +.02 +11.6 +25.2 +29.7+26.5 8 A A Vanguard 500Adml 177.82 -.51 +5.3 +15.1 +16.9+16.7 8 8 A 500lnv 177.81 -.51 +5.3 +15.0 +16.7+16.6 8 8 8 500Sgnl 146.89 -.42 +5.3 +15.1 +16.9+16.7 8 8 A CapOp 49.66 -.12 +7.5 +18.0 +19.9+16.9 8 A 8 Eqlnc 30.70 -.11 +4.6 +11.8 +17.6+17.2 D A A IntlStkldxAdm 28.52 -.14 +3.7 +13.6 +5.9 NA A D StratgcEq 31.80 -.01 +6.0 +17.8 +19.2+20.6 A A A TgtRe2020 28.27 -.03 +4.3 +10.6 +9.6+11.2 A A B Tgtet2025 16.43 -.02 +4.3 +11.4 +10.4+12.0 A A B TotBdAdml 10.81 +.03 +4.0 +4.6 +3.0 +4.5 D D D Totlntl 17.05 -.08 +3.6 +13.5 +5.9 +8.5 A D C TotStlAdm 48.41 -.14 +4.6 +14.5 +16.6+17.1 C 8 A TotStldx 48.39 -.14 +4.5 +14.3 +16.5+17.0 C 8 A USGro 29.70 -.10 +3.5 +17.5 +16.1+15.9 8 8 C Welltn 39.43 -.06 +5.2 +11.1 +12.5+12.4 A A A FAMILY

L AST 5.03 9.15 8.02 2.42 20.12

+.0038

Procter & Gamble PG Close:$79.65 L2.33 or 3.0% The consumer products company reported a boost in quarterly profit on a series of cost cuts, topping Wall Street expectations. $85 80

60

M J J 52-week range $56.5D ~ $84.66

Vol.:18.9m (20.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.05 b

M J J 52-week range $73.61 ~ $ 85.82

PE : 24.6 Vol.:18.1m (2.5x avg.) PE: 2 1 .4 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$215.53b Yi e ld: 3.2%

LNKD Close:$201.78 %21.14 or 11.7% The professional networking service reported a second-quarter loss, but the results still beat Wall Street expectations. $250 200 150

Spirit AeroSystems

SPR

Close:$36.84%4.27 or 13.1% The commercial aircraft parts maker reported better-than-expected quarterly profit and increased its full-year guidance. $40 35

M

J

J

M

52-week range

52-week range

$136.62~

$25 7.56

Vol.:10.5m (4.6x avg.)

P E: . . . Vol.:7.8m (6.0x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap: $4.78 b

Mkt. Cap:$21.24 b

Web.com

WWWW Close:$20.12 T-6.43 or -24.2% The Internet services company said its quarterly revenue fell short of expectati ons and announced an online directory acquisition. $40 30

$22.25~

$3 7. 18

P E: .. . Yield: ...

Tesla Motors

TSLA Close:$233.27L9.97 or 4.5% The electric car maker reported better-than-expected quarterly results and delivered more vehicles than it previously forecast. $250 200

M J J 52-week range $73.36~ $37.72 V ol.: 9.7m (11.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.04 b

PE: . . Yield:..

M J J 52-week range $ 116.18~ $ 265 .86 Vol.:11.9m (2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$28.95 b

P E: . . . Yield: ...

Expedia

EXPE SunPower SPWR Close:$84.46%5.04 or 6.3% Close:$34.36 T-2.37 or -6.5% The online travel company reported The solar energy systems company better-than-expected quarterly profit reported a drop in quarterly profit and revenue results on higher hotel and set a wide range for profit and and flight bookings. revenue guidance. $90 $45 40

80 70

35

M J 52-week range

$45.69 Vol.:7.6m (4.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$9.88 b

J

M J J 52-week range $2D.57~ $4 2.67

$84.85 PE:3 6 . 6 Vol.:5.4m (1.9x avg.) Yie l d : 0.7% Mkt. Cap: $4.49 b

PE:2 6 . 6 Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.49 percent Friday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

*

CATEGORY Intermediate C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * * * * -2.09 -29.4 Bacterin rs VoceraCm -3.42 -27.2 ASSETS $6,674 million -2.94 -26.8 Autobytel EXP RATIO Government Biota -.79 -24.6 MANAGER 0.45% -6.43 -24.2 Web.com SINCE Franco Castagliuolo RETURNS3-MO +0.9 Foreign Markets YTD +4.2 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +5.5 -43.36 -1.02 Paris 4,202.78 3-YR ANNL +2.5 London 6,679.18 -50.93 -.76 5-YR-ANNL +4.4 Frankfurt 9,21 0.08 -1 97.40 -2.10 Hong Kong24,532.43 -224.42 -.91 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 43,986.11 +1 68.42 +.38 2009-12-15 Milan 20,362.41 -208.39 -1.01 21.39 -.63 GNMA 3.5% Tokyo 15,523.11 -97.66 16.36 Stockholm 1,361.44 -18.43 -1.34 GNMA 4% Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -75.50 -1.34 Ginnie Mae3% 30Year 16.3 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,547.60 Zurich 8,41 0.27 -87.11 -1.02 GNMA 4.5% 12.68 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar. NAME

70

2-YR

SelectedMutualpunds

Gainers NAME

S& P 500 5

YTD

*annualized

AandFocus

Fidelity GNMA has a superb long-term track record and Marhetsummary also carries Morningstar's top Most Active gold-medal analyst rating for NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG expected performance. 192.50 -.59 14.98 -.27 44.06 +.24 33.01 +1.47 110.68 -.51 94.67 -.35 3.31 -.07 22.22 -.19 96.13 +.53 72.36 -.29

(Based on trailing 12 month results)

Tot a l returns through August 1

AP

S&P500ETF 1591050 BkofAm 1136673 iShEMkts 1018873 8 iPVix rs 821695 iShR2K 654724 PwShs QQQ 577550 SiriusXM 515006 SPDR Fncl 474307 Apple Inc s 466357 Facebook 422303

Total return

evi

Close:$77.70%17.53 or 29.1% The gambling equipment maker is being bought by rival Scientific Games in a deal worth $5.1 billion, including debt. $80

Linkedin

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV

+

1.3428

Stocks finished lower Friday, weighed down by lingering concerns over geopolitical tensions, the possible fallout from Argentina's debt crisis and troubles surrounding one of Portugal's biggest banks. Investors moved money into investments traditionally seen as having lower risk, such as U.S. government bonds, gold and utility stocks. Energy stocks fell after Chevron reported weaker oil and gas production. The market's losses were held in check by a relatively strong July jobs report. Seven of the 10 sectors in the S&P 500 index declined, led by telecommunication stocks. All told, the market closed out its worst week in two years.

"

.

DOW

+ -.29 '

StoryStocks

"

17,000"

16,500"

'

$97.88

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3 -month T-bill 6 -month T-bill

. 0 2 .0 2 . 0 4 .0 5 -0.01 T 52-wk T-bill .10 .11 -0.01 2-year T-note . 4 8 .5 3 -0.05 T 5-year T-note 1.66 1.75 -0.09 T 10-year T-note 2.49 2.56 -0.07 L 30-year T-bond 3.28 3.32 -0.04 L ~

BONDS

L .33 T 1.49 T 2.71 T 3.76

3.52 5.06

Barclays USAggregate 2.33 2.33 ...

2.34 6.11 4.3 8 1.58 3 24 .

L L

MoodysAAACorpldx 4.15 4.15 . . . T Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.92 1.99 -0.07 Barclays US Corp 2.98 2.99 -0.01 L

Commodities

FUELS

The price of gold rose Friday, as traders moved money into investments traditionally seen as less risky. Oil slid to the lowest level since Feb. 6. Wheat, corn and soybeans also fell.

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)

h5Q HS

~

T T T T

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.11 3.14 -0.03 L T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.53 4.53 . . . L T T

YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

The dollar retreated against the euro and yen, but gained versus the British pound. The ICE U.S. Dollar index, which compares the dollar's value to a basket of key currencies, fell.

~

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.70 5.44 +0.26 L L RATE FUNDS

Foreign Exchange

.04 .07 .11

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

L L T T T L T L

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -0.6 97.88 98.17 -0.30 2.09 2.08 - 0.10 + 9 . 2 2.87 2.89 -0.82 -6.9 3.80 3.84 -1.12 -10.2 2.74 2.83 -1.88 -1.5

CLOSE PVS. 1293.60 1281.30 20.33 20.37 1463.30 1465.20 3.21 3.22 865.50 874.65 CLOSE

PVS.

1.57 1.58 Coffee (Ib) 1.92 1.95 Corn (bu) 3.53 3.57 Cotton (Ib) 0.62 0.62 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 324.10 324.40 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.39 1.41 Soybeans (bu) 12.15 12.25 Wheat(bu) 5.34 5.30

%CH. %YTD + 0.96 + 7 .6 - 0.20 + 5 . 1 - 0.13 + 6 . 7 -0.51 -6.8 -1.05 +20.6

%CH. %YTD -0.39 +1 7.0 -1.38 +73.8 -1.26 -1 6.5 +0.64 -26.2 -0.09 -10.0 - 0.96 + 2 . 1 -0.78 -7.4 +0.75 -11.7 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6831 -.0052 -.31% 1.5122 Canadian Dollar 1.0 921 +.0019 +.17% 1.0344 USD per Euro 1.3428 +.0038 +.28% 1.3215 -.29 -.28% 9 9 .51 JapaneseYen 102.55 Mexican Peso 13. 1967 -.0147 -.11% 12.8348 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4196 -.0064 -.19% 3.5651 Norwegian Krone 6 . 2648 -.0246 -.39% 5.9465 South African Rand 10.6766 -.0395 -.37% 9.9616 Swedish Krona 6.8 5 80 -.0414 -.60% 6.6081 Swiss Franc .9059 -.0026 -.29% . 9364 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0739 -.0021 -.20% 1.1190 Chinese Yuan 6.1803 +.0061 +.10% 6.1350 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7501 +.0001 +.00% 7.7562 Indian Rupee 60.855 +.01 0 +.02% 60.566 Singapore Dollar 1.2468 -.0005 -.04% 1.2763 South KoreanWon 1034.21 +5.96 +.58% 1125.19 -.05 -.17% 3 0.08 Taiwan Dollar 30.03



IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Religious services, D2-3 Volunteer search, D4 Support groups, D2 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT

Event supports Equine Outreach Equine Outreach and Naked Winery plan a "Rockabilly Hoedown" from 5 to 9 p.m. today at Equine Outreach, 63220 Silvis Road, Bend. Soul dance music will be provided by Bend's Soul Benders and barbecue is from Lil Bit o Texas. Wines from Naked Winery and beer from10 Barrel will also be available. Kids' activities and games are scheduled, and for adults there's an art raffle and classic car display. Visitors can also see the horses and donkeys rescued by Equine Outreach, which takes in abused andneglected equines. Tickets are $65 for the full event, $25 for music and party only and $20 for kids (kids get in free with an adult for music only). They are available at www. EquineOutreach.com or emailing Adopt© equineoutreach.com. Tickets are not available at the door. Contact: 503-8332866.

Appraisal show coming up The Assistance League of Bendis hosting Kollectible or Keepsake, anantiques appraisal show where people can get averbal appraisal for their antique jewelry, Native American artifacts, firearms, art work, quilts, etc., from one of seven well-known appraisers. The event will be from 9a.m.to5p.m.Sept. 15 at the Deschutes County fairgrounds in Redmond. For more information about the event, which costs $40 per item, visit Kollectible-or-Keepsake. com or call 541-420-

By AlandraJohnson • The Bulletin atching the talent show at the Deschutes County

Fair is a little slice of down-home fun. More than 20acts performed on stage Wednes-

the audience. There were original singer-songwriters and those belting out familiar tunes, from Alanis Morissette to Lee Ann Womack.

day under the packed food court tents. There was While fairgoers today won't be able to catch all of the acts, the 81-year-old singing in public for only his second time (his they will be able to watch performances from the judges' four first performance was at a recent family reunion). There was favorites (see "If you go.") Each of these four acts will play an the third-grader who played riffs on his guitar and ended his approximately 15-minute set and each earned $150. performance on his knees and throwing his guitar pick out into The four acts performing today are: Shantae Enoch, 25, Redmond, nnd Simeon Purkey, 24, Bend

This pair wowed the crowd with their version of David Foster's "The Prayer." The duo

first began singing together after working alongside one another in a production of "Sweeney Todd." Purkey said, "It was kind of amazing. Our voices blend together so well." Enoch had performed at the talent show before on

her own, but they decided to

Watch the top performers on The Bulletin's website: hendhnlletln.com/fnlrtnlent

by Ignacy Jan Paderewski on

Ifyou go

the piano. The crowd stayed

team up this year. The two can also be seen in an upcoming producion of "Les Miserables" at the Tower Theatre, in which Purkey

this because of it varies between loud and soft, fast and

What:Talent show winners perform at the Deschutes County Fair When:3 p.m. today Where:Food court stage at Deschutes County fair-

silent listening to Owen perform thepiece. He says he was drawn to

will play a student and Enoch

will play Cosette.

slow.

Owen has been playing piano for nine years and enjoys it greatly. "There's unlimited mu-

sic you can play out there," Owen Hucke, 16, Redmond Owen performed "Minuet"

Owen said. See Talent/D4

glounds

Cost:$12 adults, $7 ages 6-12 and 62and older, free age 5 andyounger Contact:www.expo.deschutes.org or 541-548-2711

The finalists of the Deschutes County Fair talent show are: Simeon Purkey, 24, of Bend, end Shnntne Enoch, 25, of Redmond (mnn end woman singing); Owen Hucke, 16, of Redmond (keybonrdist in white shirt); Delos Erickson, 15, who attends Ridgeview High School (keyboardist wearing hat); and the Silverado Quartet, consisting of, from left, Sharon Leutschaft, 75, of Redmond, Debi Fooks, 63, of Redmond, Hope Bridges, 58, of Terrebonne, nnd Rebecca Wagner, 71, of Powell Butte. Photos hyAlandra Johnson/Theeulletim

3387.

Donations sought for local animals Petco is hosting a donation drive for the Humane Society of Central Oregon. The event runs 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday through Aug. 9 at Petco, 3197 N U.S. Highway 97, Bend. Items needed include cat litter, heavy-duty 39-gallon garbage bags, peanut butter, kitten milk replacer, cat toys,shredded paper, white copy paper and many other items and services. Individuals can see a wish list of items to help local animals at Petco or the Humane Society website, www.hsco.org. Contact: 541-382-

L

m

t

0510. — From staff reports

Contact us with your ideas Have a story idea or event submission? Contact us! • Community events: Email event information to events@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351.

• Story ideas: Email communitylife@bendbulletin.com.

Buil inga rame or igitalart By Jenna Worthnm New York Times News Service

Jake Levine, an entrepreneur in New York, likes the

He considered his options. Yes, digital picture frames

an inexpensive monitor

were inexpensive and wide-

Raspberry Pi. The display was controlled by a simple

kind of art that tends to be

ly available, but they tended to be small and unsophisti-

popular on the Internet-

cated. And it seemed waste-

cleverly Photoshopped pictures, and animated images

ful to hang a tablet or an

like GIFs — and wanted a

expensive monitor on a wall — where it would be tempt-

way to get it off his computing to use the device for er and onto a wall, alongside web browsing or watching more traditional works like movies instead of enjoying a photographs and paintings. piece of art. But how do you hang pixels Eventually, he put togethon a wall? er a digital canvas by using

and a computer called a web app that allowed him to

select images online and to change them instantly, with a click. It was promising enough that Levine decided to quit his job as the general manager of Digg, a news site, and to focus on building these screens full time. See Digital art/D5

Tina Fineberg i New York Times News Service

Guests mingle at a launch party for Electric Objects, with one of the compeny's display screen devices visible in the background. Electric Objects nims to produce screens that provide n simple,

inexpensive way to display high-quality digital artwork.


D2 THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

RELIGIOUS SERVICES To submit service information or announcements for religious organizations, email bulletin@ bendbulletin.com or call 54l-633-21I7.

"God Incarnate is Only Recognized with the Eyes of Saving Faith through the Word," based on Romans 9:5; 10 a.m. Sunday

Pastor Ron Werner; "The Deep End: Community," based on Galatians 3:28; 10 a.m. and 5:01 p.m. Sunday; 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; 541-382school, 11 a.m.service Sunday; 4401 or www.bendfp.org. Terrebonne Grange Hall, 828611th FOUNDRYCHURCH:Al Hulbert; SERVICES St., Terrebonne; 541-325-6773 "I Am the True Vine," part of the "I or www.lutheransonline.com/ AM" series; 10:15 a.m. Sunday; 60 ANTIOCHCHURCH:Don Jacobson; concordialutheranmission. NW Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-382"Waiting on the Lord"; 9:30 a.m. DISCOVERY CHRISTIANCHURCH: 3862 or www.foundrybend.org. worship, 11:30 a.m. Redux and Minister Dave Drullinger; "Restoring GRACE FIRSTLUTHERAN Q-and-A; youth group 7 p.m. Shalom," based on Exodus19:1W ednesdays, church office;Bend CHURCH:Pastor Joel LiaBraaten; 11; 9 a.m. prayer group, 10 a.m. High School, 230 NE Sixth St., "Jesus In a Selfie" and "Been morning worshipSunday;334 NW Bend; www.antiochchurch.org. Thirsty Lately?"; 9:30 a.m. Sunday; Newport Ave., Bend; 541-382-2272 2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, BEND CHURCHOFTHE or www.discoverychristianchurch. Bend; 541-382-6862 or www. NAZARENE:Special Speaker Stan com. gracefirstlutheran.org Reeder; 9 a.m.(Hispanic service) EASTMONTCHURCH:Pastor and 10:15 a.m. Sunday; 1270 NE HOLY COMMUNION EVANGELICAL Blaine Braden; "REAL CHURCH: 27th St., Bend; 541-382-5496 or CATHOLICCHURCHOFBEND: Stiff-necked or Soft Heart?," based Bishop James Wilkowski and Father www.bendnaz.org. on Acts 7:38-53; 9 a.m. (classic) James Radloff; 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. COMMUNITY BIBLECHURCH and 10:45 a.m.(contemporary) Sunday; Bend Senior Center,1600 AT SUNRIVER:Pastor Glen Sunday; 62425 Eagle Road, SE Reed Market Road, Bend. Schaumloeffel; "The Truth about Bend; 541-382-5822 or www. Addictive Substances" from the JOURNEYCHURCH: Pastor Keith series "The Bible 8 Modern Ethics"; eastmontchurch.com. Kirkpatrick; "God the builder!," EMMAUS LUTHERANCHURCH: 9:30 a.m. Sunday; 1 Theater Drive, part of the series "Summer in the Pastor David Poovey; 9:15 a.m. Sunriver; 541-593-8341 or www. Psalms"; 10 a.m.and 6:30 p.m. Bible study, 10:30 a.m. worship; cbchurchsr.org. Sunday; 70 NW Newport Ave., 2175 SW Salmon Ave., Redmond; Bend; 541-647-2944 or www. COMMUNITY OFCHRIST: 541-548-1473. journeyinbend.com. Evangelist Carolyn Brock; "Be FATHER'S HOUSECHURCHOF Generous," based on Matthew MISSION CHURCH:Pastor Scott GOD:Kevin Harris; 'V7: Stepping 14:13-21; 10 a.m. (continental Regester; "The Great Exchange breakfast),10:20 a.m. (praise Out of Bounds," part of the series — Trading Fear for Faith"; 5:30 "The Law of Love"; 9 and10:45 singing), 10:30a.m. (worship) tonight; 9 and10:45 a.m. Sunday; Sunday; 20380 Cooley Road, Bend; a.m. Sunday; youth group, 7 p.m. online at same times at www. 541-388-1011 Wednesdays; 61690 Pettigrew experiencethehighlife.tv; 2221 NE Road, Bend; 541-382-1632 or www. Third St., Bend; 541-306-6209 or COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN fathershouseinbend.com. www.experiencethehighlife.com. CHURCH:Rev. Don Shaw; "Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread," based on THE FELLOWSHIP ATBEND: MOST SACRED HEART,ROMAN Isaiah 55:1-5 and Matthew14:3-21; Pastor Loren Anderson; "God is CATHOLICCHAPEL: Father 9 and11 a.m. Sunday; 529 NW19th Trinity," based on Genesis1:1-3;10 Bernard; Traditional Latin Mass; St., Redmond; 541-548-3367 or a.m.Sunday;Summit High School, 8:30 a.m. (confessions) 9 a.m. www.redmondcpc.org. 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; Sunday; 1051 SW Helmholtz Way, www.tfab.com Redmond; 541-548-6416. CONCORDIA LUTHERAN MISSION:The Rev. Willis Jenson; FIRST PRESBYTERIANCHURCH: NEWPORTAVENUECHURCH

OF CHRIST:Youth Minister Tyler Boorman; "God's Symphony," based on John 4:23-24; 10:45

a.m. (morning service); 6 p.m. adult Bible class Wednesday; 554 NW Newport Ave., Bend. 541-382-5242 or www. churchofchristbendoregon.com. REAL LIFECHRISTIAN CHURCH: Pastor Mike Yunker; "The Crucifixion," based on Matthew 27:31-56; Sunday at 8 a.m., 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.; 2880 NE 27th St., Bend; 541-312-8844. SHILOH RANCHCOWBOY CHURCH:Pastor Jordan Weaver; "Life as God sees it"; 9 and10:30 a.m. Sunday, 7 p.m. Monday; Men's Bible study 7 a.m. Thursday; 15669 SW Bussett Road, Powell Butte; 971-678-9513 or www.shilohranch.

com. SPIRITUAL AWARENESS COMMUNITY OFTHE CASCADES: Steve Meyers; "Community Circle"; 5:15 p.m. Sunday, potluck at 6:45 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-639-1393 or www. spiritualawarenesscommunity.com ST. PAUL'SANGLICANCHURCH: FatherJohn Pennington;"Whose Slave Are You?," based on Romans 6:19-23; 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 1108 W. Antler Ave., Redmond; 541-604-1029. TRINITY LUTHERANCHURCH: Rev. David Carnahan; "Watering the Garden," based on Isaiah 55:1011; 8:15 a.m. (education hour), 9:30 a.m. worship; 2550 NE Butler Market Road; 541-382-1832 or www.trinitylutheranbend.org. WESTSIDE CHURCH:Pastor Steve Mickel; "Ephesians: Last

Man Standing"; 6:30 tonight; 8, 9 and 10:45 a.m. Sunday; 2051 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-3827504 or www.westsidechurch.org. WESTSIDESOUTH CAMPUS: Pastor Steve Mickel; "Ephesians: Last Man Standing"; 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 1245 SEThird St., Bend. WESTSIDESISTERS CAMPUS: Pastor Steve Mickel; "Ephesians: Last Man Standing"; 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 442 Trinity Way, Sisters. WESTSIDEONLINE CAMPUS: Pastor Steve Mickel; "Ephesians: Last Man Standing"; 6:30 tonight and 8, 9 and10:45 a.m. Sunday; 2051 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend; www.westsidelive.org. WESTSIDERADIO CAMPUS: Pastor Corey Parnell; "Ephesians: Stand by Me"; 8:30 a.m. Sunday; Heirborne radio show on KBND, AM 1110. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Eric Burtness; "Moses at the Red Sea" part of the series "Fear Not: God's Promises that Overcome Fear"; 10 a.m. Sunday; 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; 541923-7466 or www.zionrdm.com.

EVENTS, MEETINGS

or www.westsidevbs.org. WEIRD ANIMALSVACATION BIBLE SCHOOL:Bible stories,

videos, games,science,musicand snacks for preschoolers and K-5th graders, children must be pottytrained, Monday through Friday; free; 9 a.m.-noon; Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 SE Brosterhous Road, Bend; 541-388-0765, childrensministry©nativityinbend. com or www.nativityinbend.com. TUESDAY GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: A screening of the award-winning documentary"The House I Live In" about human rights and the war on drugs; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. THURSDAY "GOD ANDTHE UNIVERSE" SUMMER CLASS:"OurConnection With God" neighborhood children's class presented by Bend Baha'i children, open to children ages 8 to 12; free; 10 a.m.-noon; Compass Park, 2500 NW Crossing Drive, Bend; 830-708-9802. SATURDAY7 AUG. 9

MADRAS OREGON AGLOW MEETING:Speaker is Pastor Tucker Nsubuga from Uganda; 9:30 a.m.

(social) 10 a.m.(meeting); Madras

MONDAY WEIRD ANIMALSVACATION BIBLE SCHOOL:Vacation bible school for children entering kindergarten through fifth grade, crafts, games andteachingvalues,M onday through Thursday, registration required; free; 9 a.m.-noon; Westside Church, 2051 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-382-7504, bmcmurray©westsidechurch.org

Oregon Aglow, 25 NE ASt.; 541771-8844 or brengeo@cbbmail. com. THURSDAY, AUG. 14 "GOD ANDTHE UNIVERSE" SUMMER CLASS:"W hatis a Human Being" neighborhood children's class presented by Bend Baha'i children, open to children ages 8 to12; free;10 a.m.-noon; Compass Park, 2500 NW Crossing Drive, Bend; 830-708-9802.

SOUP AND SUPPORT:For mourners; 541-548-7483. STEPMOM SUPPORT GROUP: 541-325-3339 or www. insightcounselingbend.com. SUPPORT GROUPFOR FAMILIES WITH DIABETICCHILDREN: 541-526-6690. TOBACCO FREEALLIANCE: 541-322-7481. TOPS ORWEIGHT LOSS SUPPORT GROUP:Bend, 541-633-7399; Culver, 541-546-4012; Redmond, 541-923-0878. TYPE 2 DIABETESSUPPORT GROUP:541-706-4986.

VETERANSHOTLINE: 541-4085594 or 818-634-0735. VISION NW:Peersupport group; 541-330-0715. VOLUNTEERSINMEDICINE: 541-330-9001. WOMEN'S RESOURCECENTER OF CENTRALOREGON:541-385-0747 WOMEN SURVIVINGWITH CANCERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. YOUNG PEOPLEWITH DISABILITIES PEERGROUP: 831-402-5024. ZEN MEDITATIONGROUP: 541-388-3179.

SUPPORT GROUPS The following list contains support group information submitted to The Bulletin. Submissions must be updated monthly for inclusion. To submit, email relevant details to communitylife©bendbulletin.com. ABILITREEPEER GROUP FOR PERSONSAFFECTEDBYA DISABILITY:541-388-8103. ABILITREEYOUNG PEER GROUP: 541-388-8103 ext. 219. ABILITREEBRAIN INJURY SUPPORTGROUP: 541-388-8103. ADHD ADULTSUPPORT GROUP: 541-420-3023. ADOPTIVE PARENT SUPPORT GROUP:541-389-5446. ADULT CHILDRENOF ALCOHOLICS: 541-633-8189. AGE WIDEOPEN (ADULT CHILDREN SUPPORT GROUP): 541-410-4162 or www.agewideopen.com. AIDSEDUCATION FOR PREVENTION, TREATMENT, COMMUNITY RESOURCES AND SUPPORT(DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTHDEPARTMENT): 541-322-7402. AIDS HOTLINE:800-342-AIDS. AL-ANON:541-728-3707 or www. centraloregonal-anon.org. ALCOHOLICSANONYMOUS (AA): 541-548-0440 or www.coigaa.org. ALS SUPPORTGROUP: 541-977-7502. ALZHEIMER'SASSOCIATION: 541-548-7074. ALZHEIMER'SASSOCIATION CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-330-6400. ALZHEIMER'S/DEMENTIA CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-948-7214. AUTISM RESOURCEGROUP OF CENTRALOREGON:541-788-0339. BEND ATTACHMENTPARENTING: 541-385-1787. BEND 8-ANONFAMILY GROUP: 888-285-3742. BEND ZENMEDITATION GROUP: 541-382-6122 or 541-382-6651. BEREAVEMENT SUPPORTGROUPS: 541-382-5882. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORT GROUP/ADULTSAND CHILDREN: 541-383-3910. BEYOND AFFAIRSNETWORK: A peer group for victims of infidelity, baninbend©yahoo.com. BRAININJURY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-382-9451. CANCER FAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. CANCER INFORMATIONLINE: 541-706-7743. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-536-7399. CELEBRATE RECOVERYBEND: Faith Christian Center, 541-383-5801; Westside Church, 541-382-7504; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATERECOVERYLA PINE: Grace Fellowship, 541-536-2878; High Lakes Christian Church, 541536-3333; Living Waters Church, 541-536-1215; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATERECOVERYMADRAS: Living Hope Christian Center, 541475-2405 or centraloregoncr.org. CELEBRATERECOVERYREDMOND: Redmond Assembly of GodChurch, 541-548-4555 or centraloregoncr. org. CENTRAL OREGONALZHEIMER'S/ DEMENTIACAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP:541-504-0571. CENTRAL OREGONAUTISM ASPERGER'S SUPPORT TEAM: 541-633-8293. CENTRAL OREGONAUTISM SPECTRUMRESOURCEAND FAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: 541-279-9040. CENTRAL OREGONCOALITION FOR ACCESS (WORKINGTO CREATE ACCESSIBLECOMMUNITIES): 541-385-3320. CENTRAL OREGONDEPRESSION

AND ANXIETYGROUP: 541-420-2759. CENTRAL OREGONDISABILITY SUPPORT NETWORK:541-5488559 or www.codsn.org. CENTRAL OREGONFAMILIESWITH MULTIPLES:541-330-5832 or 541-388-2220. CENTRAL OREGONLEAGUE OF AMPUTEES SUPPORTGROUP (COLA):541-480-7420 or www. ourcola.org. CENTRAL OREGONRIGHT TO LIFE: 541-383-1593. CHILDCAR SEAT CLINIC (PROPER INSTALLATIONINFORMATION FOR SEAT ANDCHILD): 541-504-5016. CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: 541-330-3907. CHRISTIANWOMEN OF HOPE (WOMEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP): 541-382-1832. CLARE BRIDGEOFBEND (ALZHEIMER'8SUPPORT GROUP): 541-385-4717 or rnorton1@ brookdaleliving.com. CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS BEND:541-610-7445. CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS REDMOND:541-610-8175. COFFEEAND CONNECTION CANCER SUPPORTGROUP:541-706-3754. COMPASSIONATEFRIENDS (FOR THOSE GRIEVINGTHE LOSS OF A CHILD):541-480-0667 or 541-536-1709. CREATIVITY &WELLNESSMOOD GROUP:541-647-0865. CROOKEDRIVER RANCHADULT GRIEF SUPPORT:541-548-7483. DEFEATCANCER: 541-706-7743. DESCHUTESCOUNTY MENTAL HEALTH24-HOUR CRISISLINE: 541-322-7500. DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR SUPPORT ALLIANCE:541-549-9622 or 541-771-1620. DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR SUPPORT:541-480-8269 or suemiller92@gmail.com. DEPRESSIONSUPPORT GROUP: 541-617-0543. DIABETESEATFORLIFE!: 541-306-6801, www. centraloregonnutrition.com or Ibrizee@centraloregonnutrition.com. DIABETICSUPPORT GROUP: 541-598-4483. DISABILITYSUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-8103. DIVORCECARE:541-410-4201. DOUBLETROUBLERECOVERY: Addiction and mental illness group; 541-317-0050. DYSTONIASUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-2577. ENCOPRESIS(SOILING): 541-5482814 or encopresis©gmail.com. EVENINGBEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP:541-460-4030 FAITHBASED RECOVERY GROUP: Drug and alcohol addictions; pastordavid@thedoor3r.org. FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER: 541-389-5468. GAMBLERS ANONYMOUS: Redmond 541-280-7249, Bend 541-390-4365. GAMBLINGHOT LINE: 800-233-8479. GERIATRICCARE MANAGEMENT: info©paulbattle.com or 1-877-867-1437. GLUCOSE CONTROLLOW CARB DIETSUPPORT GROUP: kjdnrcd@ yahoo.com or 541-504-0726. GLUTEN INTOLERANCE GROUP (CELIAC):541-390-2399. GRANDMA'SHOUSE:Supportfor pregnant teensand teenmoms; 541-383-3515. GRANDPARENTSRAISING OUR CHILDREN'S KIDS:541-306-4939. GRANDPARENTSSUPPORT GROUP:541-385-4741. GRIEFSHAREGRIEF RECOVERY SUPPORTGROUP:541-382-1832.

GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-3066633, 541-318-0384 or mullinski@ bendbroadband.com. GRIEFAND LOSS SUPPORT GROUP:541-508-4036 or www. gohospice.com, GRIEFSHARE(FAITH-BASED) RECOVERY CLASS: 541-389-8780. HEALINGENCOURAGEMENT FOR ABORTION-RELATEDTRAUMA (H.E.A.R.T.): 541-318-1949. HEALTHYFAMILIESOF THE HIGH DESERT:Homevisits for families with newborns; 541-749-2133 HEARINGLOSS ASSOCIATION: 541390-2174 or ctepper©bendcable. com. HEARTS OF HOPE:Abortion healing; 541-728-4673. IMPROVE YOURSTRESS LIFE: 541-706-2904. INFERTILITY SUPPORT GROUP (RESOLVE):541-604-0861. LA LECHELEAGUEOFBEND: 54 I-317-59 I2. LIVING WELL(CHRONIC CONDITIONS):541-322-7430. LIVING WITH CHRONICILLNESSES SUPPORT GROUP:541-536-7399. LUPUS SFIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP:541-526-1375. MADRAS NICOTINEANONYMOUS GROUP:541-993-0609. MATERNAL/CHILDHEALTH PROGRAM(DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTHDEPARTMENT): 54 I -322-7400. MEMORY CARESUPPORT GROUP: 541-848-4144 or acs@touchmark. com. MEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. MENDEDHEARTSSUPPORT GROUP:541-706-4789. MISCARRIAGESUPPORT GROUP: 54I-5I4-9907. MOMMY AND MEBREASTFEEDINGSUPPORT GROUP: Laura, 541-322-7450. MULTIPLESCLEROSIS SUPPORT GROUP:541-706-6802. NARCONON: 800-468-6933. NARCOTICSANONYMOUS (NA): 541-416-2146. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESSOFCENTRAL OREGON (NAMI): Email: namicentraloregon©gmail.com or www.namicentraloregon.org. NAMI BEND —EXTREME STATES: 541-647-2343 or www. namicentraloregon.org NAMI BENDCONNECTIONS: 541480-8269, 541-382-3218 or www. namicentraloregon.org NAMI BENDFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP:whitefam@bendcable.com or www.namicentraloregon.org. NAMI MADRASCONNECTIONS: For peers, 541-475-1873 or NAMlmadras©gmail.com. NAMI MADRASFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP:541-475-1873 or NAMlmadras©gmail.com. NAMI MADRASFAMILY-FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP:541-475-3299 or www.namicentraloregon.org NAMI REDMOND FAMILYSUPPORT GROUP:namicentraloregon@gmail. com. NAMI REDMOND CONNECTIONS: 541-382-3218 or 541-693-4613. NEWBERRY HOSPICEOF LA PINE: 541-536-7399. OREGON COMMISSIONFOR THE BLIND:541-447-4915. OREGON CURE: 541-475-2164. OREGON LYMEDISEASE NETWORK:541-312-3081 or www. oregonlyme.org. OVEREATERSANONYMOUS: 541306-6844 or www.oa.org. PARENTS/CAREGIVERSOF CHILDRENAFFECTEDBYAUTISM SUPPORTGROUP: 541-771-1075 or http:I/coregondevdisgroupaso. ning.com.

PARENTS OFMURDERED CHILDREN(POMC) SUPPORT GROUP: 541-410-7395. PARISH NURSESAND HEALTH MINISTRIES:541-383-6861. PARKINSON'SCAREGIVERS SUPPORTGROUP:541-317-1188. PARKINSON'SDISEASE SUPPORT GROUP:541-280-5818. PARTNERS INCARE:Home health and hospice services; 541-382-5882. PAUL'S CLUB:Dads and male caregiver support group; 541-548-8559. PFLAG CENTRALOREGON: For parents, families and friends of lesbians and gays; 541-728-3843 or www.pflagcentraloregon.org. PLAN LOVINGADOPTIONS NOW (PLAN):541-389-9239. PLANNEDPARENTHOOD: 888-875-7820. PMS ACCESS LINE: 800-222-4767. PREGNANCYRESOURCE CENTERS:Bend, 541-385-5334; Madras, 541-475-5338; Prineville, 541-447-2420; Redmond, 541-504-8919. PULMONARY HYPERTENSION SUPPORTGROUP:541-548-7489. SAVINGGRACE SUPPORT GROUPS: Bend, 541-382-4420; Redmond, 541-504-2550, ext. 1; Madras, 541-475-1880. SCLERODERMA SUPPORT GROUP: 541-480-1958. SEXAHOLICSANONYMOUS: 54I-595-8780.

Find Your Dream Home In

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Class information: Thursday, August 14. 1pm or 6pm Shilo Inn: 3105 O.B. Riley Road Bend, OR 97701

Real

Estate •

Oregonlutah: $80 (validin wA)

Oregon only: $45 firearmtrainingnw©gmail.com

360-921-2071

TheBulletin

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN • •

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You Are The Most lmportant Part of Our Services

+

ege "Omkar" (Aum) Hinduism

FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER 1049 NE I ITH STREET BEND, OR 97701 382-8274

This Sunday at Faith Christian Center Pastor Brian Mercer - interim pastor will share his message titled "The Three Stages of Church Life" in the Sunday moming service beginning at 10:30 AM. Childcare is provided. FCC Youth Ministries and Family Night is on Wednesdays at 7 pm.

A number of Faith Joumey Groups meet throughout the week in small groups, please contact the church for details and times. The church is located on the corner of Greenwood Avenue and NE 11th Street. www.bendfaith.com REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD

1865 W Antler• Redmond 541-548-4555 SUNDAYS Moming Worship 8:30 am 8 10:30 am

Life groups 9 am Kidz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am Evening Worship 6 pm WEDNESDAYS FAMILY NIGHT 7 PM

Adult Classes Celebrate Recovery Wednesday NITE Live Kids Youth Group Pastor Duane Pippitt

www.redmondag.com •

"Star 8 Crescent" Islam

"Yin/Yang" Taoist/ Confuaanism

HOLY COMM U N ION CHURCH

'1n the Evangelical Catholic Tradition" Rev. JamesRadloff, Pastor

Sunday Mass Schedule 9 a.m.and 5p.m.atthe Bend Senior Center 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road Info@holycommunionbend.org •

You are invited to attend a Worship Service Listen to a reading, Experience a HU song and quiet contemplation, followed by a talk and discussion, refreshments and fellowship

HOLY REDEEMER ROMAN CATHOLIC PARISH

Fr. Theodore Nnabugo, Pastor www.holyredeemerparish.net Parish Office:541-536-3571

"The Creative Power of Soul" Saturday, August 9, 2-3pm at the Sisters Public Library 110 N. Cedar St., Sisters

HOLY REDEEMER ROMAN CATHOLIC, LA PINE

16137 Burgess Rd Tuesday, Wednesday 8 Friday Mass 9:00 am Sunday Mass - 10:00am Confessions: Saturdays •3:00-4:00 pm HOLY TRINITY ROMAN CATHOLIC, SUNRIYER 18143 Cottonwood Rd.

"Offering hopethroughthe prodamation of the gospel" JOIN us for WORSHIP

Sunday (downtown at the Boys8 Girls Club, 500 NW Wall St.) 9:30 AM — Bible Study 9:30 AM — Children's Class 10:30 AM — Worship Service 10:30 AM — Primary Class Wednesday (up the hill from the Old Mill, 500 SW Bond St.) 7:00 PM — Prayer Meeting 8 Growth Groups 7:00 PM — Kids 4 Truth www.centraloregonbaptistchurch.org 541-617-2814 EASTMONT CHURCH

"Displaying theReality ofChrist in UndeniableWays" 62425 Eagle Road, Bend 541-382-5822

For more information about weekly ministries for the whole family, contact 541.382-5822 or email info@eastmontchurch.com FOUNDRY CHURCH (FORMERLY FIRST BAPTIST) "A Heart for Bend in the Heart of Bend" 60 NW Oregon, 541-382-3862 Pastors Mike Coughlin F AI Hulbert

MISSION (LCMS) "If you can achieve an improvement ThemissionoftheChurch isIo forgivesins over yesterday, even if it's small, you throughtheGospelandthereby have gained significantly. You are taking grant eternal life. charge of your own world. You are becoming a creator." (St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession Harold Klemp "Language of Soul"

OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS

HOLY FAMILY ROMAN CATHOLIC,

near Christmas Valley 57255 Fort Rock Rd Sunday Mass - 3:30 pm Confessions: Sundays 3:00-3:15 pm ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH

For KIdztown, Middle School and High School activities Call 541-382-3862 www.bendchurch.org HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH, SBC 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond• 541-548-4161

Sunday Worship Services; 8:00 am, 9:30 am, I I:00 am Sunday Life Groups 9:30am F 11:00am Saturday Worship 7:00 pm Dr. Barry Campbell, lead pastor For complete calender: www.hbcredmond.org

The Rev. Willis C. Jenson, Pastor 8286 11th St. (Grange HaIl) Terrebonne, OR

TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH All are welcome through ourred doors

Sunday Services 8 am and 10:15 am in St. Helens Hall, 231 NW Idaho Ave www.trinitybend.org I 541.382-5542 (Mail: 469 NWWafl St.) Bend, OR 97701

20225 Cooley Rd. Bend Phone: (541) 383-5097 Web site: ccbend.org Sundays: 8:30 8 10:30 am WednesdayNight Study:7pm YouthGroup: Wednesday 7pm Child Care provided Women's Ministry, Youth Ministry are

www.lutheransonline.com/ concordialutheranmission Facebook: Concordia Lutheran Mission Phone: 541-325-6773

Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. (Child Care Available)

THE SALVATION ARMY

NEW CHURCH 2450 NE 27th Street Masses Saturday - Vigil 5:00 PM Sunday 7:30 AM, 10:00 AM Domingo 12:30 PM - Misa en Espanol

Reconciliation Saturday 3:00 PM• 4:45 PM

541 NE DeKalb Ave., Bend 541-389-8888 SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP

541 NE Dekalb Sunday School 9:45 am Children F Adult Classes Worship Service —I:00 I am Major's Robert 8 Miriam Keene

HISTORIC DOWNTOWN CHURCH

NEW HOPE EYANGELICAL

Corner of NW Franklin 8 Lava MASSES Saturday 8:00 AM Sunday 4:30 PM Monday-Friday7:00AM812:15PM

20080 Pinebrook Blvd.• 541-389-3436

Exposition 8 Benediction Monday-Friday after 7:00 AM Mass to 6:00 PM Tuesday (Family Holy Hour)

Saturday 6:00 pm Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am, Pastor Randy Myers

5:00 PM-6:00 PM

to understanding, knowing and growing Redmond, Oregon 97756 in a relationship with Jesus Christ. In our 541-923-3390 opinion, that's what really matters. Father Todd Unger, Pastor Mass Schedule: Weekdays 8:00 am Contact us at 541-382-7504 or (except Wednesday) www.westsidechurch.org Wednesday 6:00 pm Saturday Vigil 5:30 pm August 2 8 3, 2014 at Westside ChurchFirst Saturday 8:00 am (English) WEST CAMPUS Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am(English) Pastor Steve Mickel will share the 12:00 noon (Spanish) m essage"Ephesians:LastM an Confessions on Wednesdays from Standing" at 6:30pm on Saturday and 5:00 to 5:45 pm and on Saturdays from 4;30 to 5:15 pm at 8, 9 and 10:45am Sunday at Westside Church, 2051 NWShevlin Park Rd, Bend.

www.redmondchristian.org SundayWorship 9:00am 8 10:45am

August 3, 2014 at Westside ChurchSOUTH CAMPUS

Pastor Steve Mickel will share the m essage"Ephesians:LastM an Standing" at 10:30am on Sunday at the Westside Church South Campus, 1245 SE 3rd St., Bend.

Sunday School for all ages Kidmo• Junior Church Greg Strubhar, Pastor Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor POWELL BUTTE CHRISTIAN CHURCH

August 3, 2014 at Westside Church-

SISTERS CAMPUS 8:30 Worship Center Pastor Steve Mickel will share the 10:30 Contemporary Service m essage "Ephesians:LastM an Worship Center Standing" at 10:30am at the 10:30 Traditional Sersrice Historic Chapel Nursery 8 Children's Church Westside Church Sisters Campus, Pastors: Chris Blair, Trey Hinkle, 442 Trinity Way, Sisters. and Ozzy Osborne 13720 SWHwy 126, Powell Butte 541-548-3066 www.powellbuttechurch.com August 2 8 3, 2014 at Westside Church-

Like Hymns? We've Got 'em! at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th Sunday Services 8 am (No child care) 10:00 am Contemporary Worship Service (Full children's ministry) Sunday Night Church 6:30 pm Forinformation, please call... Senior Pastor• Mike Yunker-

"Teaching the Word of God, Book by Book"

Mike Sweeney & leff Olson "Loving people one at a time." www.real-lifecc.org

August 3, 2014 Westside ChurchON THE RADIO

Pastor Corey Pamell will share the message "Ephesians: Stand by Me" on the Heirbome radio show at 8:30am Sunday moming on KBND — AM 1110

• •

Nursery Care8 Children's Church ages 4 yrs-4th grade during all Worship Services "Courageous Living" on KNLR 97.5 FM

WEDNESDAY

6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study THURSDAY

10:00 am 50+ Bible Study WEEKLY Life Groups Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.bendnaz.org •

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.

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Meeting at the Golden Age Club 40 SE 5th St., Bend

541-420-1667

www.bendfp.org http://www.facebook.com/bendfp

ALL PEOPLES UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST

Summerworshipcallsfor a breakin traditional schedules. Join with progressive,openandaffirming Christians.Wewelcomeall who welcome alL All Peoples meets on the first and third Sundays of each month. Worship with us at 11 a.m, or come early at 10 a.m. for Bible Bookwormsadult discussion time. On August 3rd, All Peoples gathers in the meeting room of the Green Plow Coffee Roasters 436 SW 6th Street in Redmond. On August 17th, find us in the Juniper Room of St. Charles Hospital, Redmond. Come check out our new location. For details, directions and possible help with car-pooling, email: allpeoplesucc@gmaiLcom

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS OF CENTRAL OREGON

Sovereign Grace Church is dedicated to worshiping God and teaching the

"Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship" We are a Welcoming Congregation

Bible truths recovered through the

August 3 at 10:00am "Mindfulness; The Practice of Compassionate Presence" — Lay-Led Service, Wendy Howard speaking

www.sovereigngracebend.com • •

I •

CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER 21720 E. Hwy. 20• 541.389.8241

"Transformed.Romans 12:2" This Summer at CLC

Summer Sundays Schedule 9:30 AM in the Amphitheater Wednesday Mid-Week Service 7:00 pm Nursery Care and Children's Programs Provided for All Services Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur 21720 E. Hwy. 20 541.389.8241

www.clcbend.com

One way that science and spirituality are intertwined is through the practice of mindfulness. Our brains continue to evolve and are shaped by our patterns of attention throughout our lifespan. This talk will be both informational and experiential as Wendy shares stories and skifls of mindfulness and how being present in our lives benefits our physical, emotional and spiritual health. Mindfulness practice is valuable for children, youth and adults. Practicing mindfulness helps us to enrich our life with more vitality, joy and compassion. Religious Education continues their weekly Summer Fun Days exploring the many aspects of creativity: this week, the creativity of WORDS.Childcare for infants and toddlers is provided downstairs.

Meeting place: THE OLD STONE CHURCH 157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND Mail:PO. Box 428, Bend OR 97709

www.uufco.org (541) 385-3908 email: allpeoplesucc@gmail.com

www.zionrdm.com

CHURCH S COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN

Messianic Synagogue Est.1994 We provide a congregational setting for Jews and Christians alike. If you're interested in learning the Bible from a Hebrew perspective, come join us at: Bear Creek Center 21300 Bear Creek Rd. Bend, OR. 97701 Our Shabbat Services are on Saturday momings at 10:00 a.m. Our ministries include: • Davidic dance and worship • Children's ministry and nursery • Hebrew classes • Home groups • Teaching from the Torah and the Brit Hadashah (New Testament) • Biblical Feasts • Lifecycle Events • End-times prophecy

ONLINE CAMPUS

Join us at our online campus where Pastor Steve Mickel will share the m essage "Ephesians:LastM an Standing" at 6:30pm Saturday and at 8, 9 and 10:45am on Sunday atW estside Church, 2051 NWShevlin Park Rd, Bend.

Youth Events http://www.facebook.com/ bendyouthcollective

541-382-4401

Sunday Worship Services at 10:00 am

HOUSE OF COVENANT

CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND 536 SW 10th, Redmond 541-548-2974

Rootbeer 8 Hymns Sunday, August17,lOam 01'Tyme Hymn Sing followed by Rootbeer float picnic in front of First Presbyterian

230 NE Ninth Street, Bend

other meetings

1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 — 541-923-7466 Pastor Eric Burtness

Summer Worship One morning worship at 10am Coffeeand donutsat9:30am One evening worship at 5:01pm A great opportunity to try something new, meet new friends, and live into the beauty of a Central Oregon summer. Nursery care is provided at both services.

9:00 am Sunday School for all ages 9:00 am Hispanic Worship Service 10:15 am Worship Service

Worship in the Heart of Redmond

3rd Tues. Men's Club 6:00 pm, dinner Youth and Family Programs Active Social Outreach

10:00am combined 5;01pm peaceful 8 prayerful Nursery care available at both services.

Choirs, music groups, Bible study, fellowship and ministries every week

Reformation. Call for information about

M-W-F Women's Exercise 9:30 am Wed. Bible Study at noon 3rd Th. Women's Circle/Bible Study I:00 pm

The DeepEnd:Community Sunday, August 3 Ron Werner leads the service

SUNDAY

ZION LUTHERANCHURCHELCA

Coffee,snacksandfellowship after eachservice

(Across Nrnth St. from Bend H>gh) All Are Welcome, Always!

Senior Pastor Virgil Askren

Just 2 blocks SW ofBend High School Sunday Worship 10:00 am

Come Experience a warm, friendly family of worshipers. Everyone Welcome - Always. A vibrant, inclusive community. A rich and diverse music program for all ages

WESTSIDE CHURCH Invites you to join us at any of our weekend services. No matter what your expectations are, we hope your time spent with us brings you a little closer

ST. THOMAS ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH 1720 NW 19th Street

available, call for days and times.

1270 NE 27 St.• 541-382-5496

Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Evangelical Lutheran Church in America www.gracefirstlutheran.org

Children's Room available during services

Celebrate New Life at New Hope Church!

Reconciliation Tuesday 7:30 AM• 8:00 AM

541-312-8844 Associate Pastors

BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH

2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend 382-6862

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 230 NE Ninth, Bend

Kits For Kids Community project providing hygiene kits for homeless kids and youth. Help us build and fill 1000 kits by the start of the school year. Learn howyou can help at www.bendfp.org

SOYEREIGN GRACE CHURCH

Rev. Julian Cassar Pastor Rev. Joseph K. Thalisery 541-382-3631

REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH CALVARY CHAPEL BEND

Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors. Rev. Dave Beckett flrstchurch@bendumc.org

8:30 am Sunday

541.728.6476

ROMAN CATHOLIC, Gilchrist 120 Mississippi Dr Sunday Mass - 12:30 pm Confessions: Sundays 12:00• 12:15 pm

FIRST UNITED METHODIST

10 am Sunday School 11 am Divine Service

SundaySchoolclassesare at9:00am and our Worship Service at 10:15 am This Sunday at Foundry Church, Al Hulbert will continue in the I AM series with "I Am the True Vine."

Unless otherwise noted, all services are held at the First United Methodist Church 680 NW Bond Street 541-388-8826

CONCORDIA LUTHERAN

For more information www.eckankar.org www.eckankar-oregon.org

Thurs. Mass 9:30 am; Sat. Vigil Mass 5:30 pm Sunday mass 8:00 am Confessions: Thurs. 9:00- 9:15 am

www.eastmontchurch.com Sunday Services Classic (Blended) Service 9:00 am Contemporary Service 10:45 am Hispanic Service 6:0 0 pm

For the complete schedule of Services F Events go to: www.bethtikvahbend.org

XXVIII.8, 10

CENTRAL OREGON BAPTIST CHURCH

W ednesday, August27at7:00pmRosh Chodesh Elul At Gan Shalom Cemetery

LIKIut and Sound of God

TEMPLE BETH TIKYAH

is a member of the CHURCH Union for Reform Judaism. (In the Heart of Downtown Bend) Child for the Glory of God" Our members represent a wide range of Pre K - 5th Grade Jewish backgrounds. 680 NW Bond St. / 541.382.1672 62425 Eagle Road, Bend• 541-382-2049 We welcome interfaith families Everyone isWelcome! Principal Lonna Camahan and lews by choice. www.eastmontcommunityschool.com Our monthly activities include: Rev. Dave Beckett Services, religious education for children "Worship Is" (Part 2) 8 adults, Hebrew school, FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scripture: Exodus 32:1-6; I Corinthians Torah study, social action projects SCIENTIST 11;23-25 (Communion) and social activities 1551 NW First St.• 541-382-6100 9:00am - Contemporary Service (South of Portland Ave.) Rabbi Johanna Hershenson Sunday School during 9am service Church Service 8 Sunday School: 10 am 11:00am • Traditional Service SERVICES Wed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm Childcare provided Childcare provided. Saturday, August 16 at 9:00 amTorah Study Reading Room: *During the Week: Saturday, August 16 at 10:30 am1563 NW First St. Women's Groups, Men's Groups, Torah Service Mon, through Fri.: 11 am - 4 pm Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting, Sat. 12 noon - 2 pm Friday, August 22 at 7:00 pmMusic 8 Fellowship Shabbat service ECKANKAR RELIGION OF THE

D3

• •

EASTMONT COMMUNITY SCHOOL "Educating and Developing the Whole

0

Visit us on the web at www.houseofcovenant.org or contact us at 541-385-5439

CHURCH 529 NW 19th Street (3/4 mile north of High School) Redmond, OR 97756

SYNAGOGUE DIRECTORY LISTING

(541) 548-3367

Effective May 1, 2014 Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor

9;00 am Contemporary Worship 9:00 am Nursery Care 9:15am Children8 Youth Sunday School 9:30 am Adult Education I I:00 am Traditional Worship Youth Groups High School - Sunday 11:00am-12;30pm

MiddleSchool-W ednesday 6;00-7:30pm

4 Saturdays and TMC: $120 5 Saturdays and TMC: $144 The Bulletin: Every Saturday on the

church page. $24 Copy Changes: by 5 PM Tuesday CO Marketplace:

Mondays 6:30 pm Centering Prayer

The First Tuesday of each

Wednesdays 5:30 pm Prayer Service

Copy Changes: by Monday

Small Groups Meet Regularly

Call Pat Lynch

month. $24

LIVING TORAH FELLOWSHIP

@La Roca Church 1155 SW Division, gD8, Bend Saturday 12;00- 3:00 pm Worship/Dance - StudyFood/Fellowship Hebrew Roots Fellowship worshipping in Spirit and Truth 541-410-5337

Children Welcome www.livingtorahfellowship.com

(Handicapped Accessible) Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.redmondcpc.org

I week prior to publication

541-383-0396 plynch@bendbulletin.com


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

Talent

oo i eta es i rar ont eroa

Continued from D1 Silverado QuartetSharon Leutschaft, 75, Redmond, Debi Fooks, 63, Redmond, Hope Bridges, 58, Terrebonne and Rebecca WAgner, 71, Powell Butte These four ladies, dressed in matching outfits, stood

By Marwa Eltagouri ChicagoTribune

Keiler Roberts sat with her

6-year-old daughter, Xia, last Alandra Johnson/The Bulletin

abreast and began singing a cappella the opening bars to "Mr. Sandman." They quickly stopped singing, howev-

Riley Mulder, 9, of Bend, performs "I Could Have Danced All Night." As the top child performer, she will advance to the Oregon State Fair and

er, and decided to redo the

perform there.

song but instead dedicated to something they really love. Starting over, they t r ans-

formed the classic into "Mr. Schwan Man"and implored him to "bring me ice cream." Bridges penned the light parody, which included the line "I only love you for your Eskimo pie." The performance got big laughs from the audience and hearty applause for its originality. "We love it. We like to make people laugh," said Bridges.

week on the short stone ledge

at a playground in Chicago's north suburb of Evanston, their backs to the whir of a

game of hide-and-seek. On Roberts' lap was a library book, "Thumbelina," on Xia's, two Barbie dolls sit-

ting positioned to listen along Enoch and Purkey won the adult category; Hucke won the youth category; and Riley Mulder, 9, won the

child category. Riley performed "I Could Have Danced All Night" from "My Fair Lady." While Riley said she had never tried out for the talent show

before and felt nervous, she has experience performing on stage. She will play young Cosette in the upcoming"Les Miserables" performance. The three judges for the contest were Redmond May-

Delos Erickson, 15, Redmond Delos played an original piano piece for the crowd. or George Endicott, 2014

to the tale. As Roberts turned

the page to reveal a glowing illustration, Xia's eyes widened, her lips forming an "oh" of surprise. "Wouldn't that be something?" Roberts said, "if you opened up a flower and a little girl was inside?" The Roberts were among ston Public L i brary's n ew tachment filled with about 50

books of various genres. The bike, ridden by librarian Jill

Deschutes County

R o deo

the spot," said Delos of his up-tempo, high-energypiece. "I like to playjazzy, smooth, complicated music," said

Queen Maddie Smith and

of the community sign up for

Bob Eberhard, whose com-

library cards, check out books

pany Eberhard's sponsors the Food Court Stage.

and register for programs on the spot.

Delos, He is attracted to fastpaced musicfrom the 1950s

Jim Erickson, fair director on grounds entertainment,

competition.

— Reporter: 541-617-7860, aj ohnson@bendbulletin.com

Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

book bike, a motorized bicycle Onyx Lo, 3, second from right, and Alarik Raij, 2, right, read books they checked out from the new with a bright yellow cart at- Evanston Public Library book bike after visiting it along the lakefront in Evanston, III.

" I sort of m ade it u p o n

form at the Oregon State Fair

1~

parkgoers delighted by Evan-

Skwerski to parks and community centers, lets members

and likes music with melody. enjoys putting together the Delos has been playing pi- talent show each year. "I am ano since he was 4 or 5 and a musician myself. I love plays every day. He loves the music. It's fun to give people way the piano sounds and those kind of opportunities," the "energy of it." said Erickson. He enjoys seeing the "vulnerability and Topads courage" of the people takThree top acts were cho- ing the stage. Most, he says, sen in each age group. Those leave with a reward of "feelwinners will advance to per- ing affirmed and proud."

$t

The cart's books include

popular authors such as Malcolm Gladwell, John Green and James Patterson, as well

as titles on politics, history and self-help books. The cart has a more playful selection, too: children's fairy tales, the "Animorphs" series and "The Hunger Games" novels. "I've also got this," Skwerski said, tugging a book out from the cart. "I promised my

daughter I'd bring along the One Direction book."

The process is fast and simThe library hopes the book ple, especially for families who bike will increase outreach to already have library cards. the community by reaching When 6-year-old Sophie Levy nonusers, particularly on the peered into the cart of books, south and west sides of Evanshe instantly caught sight of ston, which have the lowest her favorite book, "Happy Pig numbers of cardholders, SkwDay!" by Mo Willems, and told erski said. "The more people hear Skwerski how much she loved it.

the cart.

Other possible adjustments include a shelf to display books, so that people can recognize the book bike from severalfeetaway, a cover for the

cart and a docking station to charge phones and electronic devices, she said.

Parkgoer Margaret Lo's excitement it can generate," two sons, Onyx and Alarik, she said. ages 3 and 2, respectively, The bike was donated to the also checked out Mo Willems library by Evanston Bicycle books. Lo said the bike is an Club's Benjamin Schapiro, a easier option for her than a library trustee. The initiative trip to the library. "They're constantly in deis still new, and from its first about the book bike, the more

Sophie's mom, Christine, then pulled out a library card and gave it to Skwerski, who took out her laptop, set it on

the seat of the bike, entered the card number and had So-

phie read aloud the book's call number. In less than a minute, So-

phie was able to return to the playground with her prized book.

few runs, Skwerski said she

mand of new books," she said

realized the bike needs some as her sons clambered onto a adjustments — such as a ledge tire swing. "I love going to the or stool for young children to library, but I'm afraid they'll stand on in order to see into

tear it apart."

volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977. WINNINGOVER ANGER & VIOLENCE: www.winningot/er.org or 541-382- I943. WOMEN'SRESOURCE CENTER OF CENTRAL OREGON:541-385-0750.

SERVICES: Therese Helton, 541-4756131, ext. 208. LA PINERURAL FIREPROTECTION DISTRICT:Volunteer Coordinator, 541-536-2935. ORCHARDDISTRICT NEIGHBORHOODASSOCIATION: www.orcharddistrictneighborhood. com. SCORE:BruceMichalski, www. scorecentraloregon.org or 541-316-0662. SUNRIVERAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:541-593-8149. VISIT BEND: www.visitbend.com or 541-382-8048.

VoLUNTEER SEARGH Volunteer Search is compiled by the Department of HumanServices VolunteerServices. The organizations listedareseeking volunteers for a variety of tasks. Toseeafull list, and for additional informationonthetypes of helpneeded,goonline to www. bendbulletin.comit/olunteer.Changes, additionsor deletionsshould besent to1300 NWWall St., Suite103, Bend 97701,emailTherese.M.Helton© state.or.usor call 541-693-8988.

SENIORS AARP:www.aarp.orglmoney/taxaide or 888-687-2277. ASPEN RIDGEALZHEIMER'S ASSISTEDLIVING AND RETIREMENT COMMUNITY: 541-385-8500. BEND SENIORCENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. CASCADEVIEW NURSING AND ALZHEIMER'SCARECENTER: 5/I1-382-7161. CENTRALOREGONCOUNCILON AGING(COCOA)AND MEALS ON WHEELS: www.councilonaging.org or 541-678-5483. LA PINESENIOR ACTIVITY CENTER: KarenWard, 541-536-6237. LONG-TERMCARE OMBUDSMAN PROGRAM: Nancy Allen, 541-312-2488. PILOTBUTTE REHABILITATION CENTER:541-382-5531. PRINEVILLESOROPTIMIST SENIOR CENTER:Melody, 541-447-6844. TOUCHMARK ATMT. BACHELOR VILLAGE: 5/I1-383-1/I14. UNITEDSENIORCITIZENSOF BEND (USCB): Uscb©bendtel.net or 541-323-3344. VOLUNTEERSINACTION: 541-548-7018.

CHILDREM, YOUTH AND EDUCATION SERVICES ADULTBASICSKILLS DEPARTMENT (GOCC):Margie Gregory, mgregory© cocc.eduor 541-318-3788. AFS-USA:www.afsusa.org or Caitlin Krutsinger,503-419-9514. ALYCE HATCHCENTER:Andy Kizans, 541-383-1980. ASSE INTERNATIONAL STUDENT EXCHANGE PROGRAM:www.asse. comor Wendy Larson, 541-385-8177. BENDPARK& RECREATION DISTRICT:Kim, 541-706-6127. BIGBROTHERS BIG SISTERS OF CENTRAL OREGON:541-312-6047 (Bendj, 541-447-3851, ext. 333 (Prinet/ille)or 541-325-5603 (Madras). BOY SCOUTSOF AMERICA: Paul Abbott, paulabbott@scouting.orgor 5/I1-382-4647. BOYS It GIRLS CLUBS OF CENTRAL OREGON: www.bgcco.org, info@ bgcco.orgor 541-617-2877. CAMP FIRE USA CENTRAL OREGON: campfire@bendcable.comor 541-382-4682. CASA(COURTAPPOINTED SPECIALADVOCATES): www. casaofcentraloregon.orgor 541-389-1618. CHILDREN'S VISION FOUNDATION: JulieBibler,541-330-3907. CIRCLE OFFRIENDS: Beth, beth© acircleoffriendsoregon.com or 541-588-6445. DESCHUTES COUNTYSHERIFF'S OFFICE — CENTRALOREGON PARTNERSHIPSFORYOUTH: www.deschutes.org/copy, COPY© deschtttes.orgor 541-388-6651. FOSTERGRANDPARENTS

PROGRAM:SteveGuzanskis, 541-678-5483. GIRL SCOUTS: 541-389-8146. GIRLSON THE RUN OF DESCHUTES GOUNTY: www.deschutescountygotr. orgor info@deschutescountygotr.org. GRANDMA'SHOUSE:541-383-3515. HEALTHYBEGINNINGS:ww w.myhb. orgor 541-383-6357. HIGH DESERTTEENSVOLUNTEER PROGRAM: www.highdesertmuseum. orgor 541-382-4757. IEP PARTNERS:Carmelle Campbell at theOregonParent Training and InformationCenter, 888-505-2673. J BAR JLEARNINGCENTER: Rick Buening, rbuening@jbarj.org or 541-389-1409. JUNIPERSWIM & FITNESS CENTER: Kim,541-706-6127. KIDS CENTER:Lisa Weare, Iweare© kidscenter.org, 541-383-5958. LAPINE HIGH SCHOOL:Jeff Bockert, jeff.bockert@bend.k12.or.us or 541-355-8501. MEADOWLARK INDEPENDENT LIVING PROGRAM: Teal Bttehler, 541-6! 7-9576. MOUNTAINSTARFAMILY RELIEF NURSERY:541-322-6820. NEIGHBORIMPACT: 541-548-2380, ext. 115. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY EXTENSIONSERVICE:541-548-6088, 541-447-6228or 541-475-3808. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY MASTERGARDENERVOLUNTEER PROGRAM:http://extension. oregonstate.eduideschutes or 541-548-6088. READ TOGETHER: 541-388-7746. REDMOND HIGHSCHOOL: 541-923-4807. REDMOND LEARNINGCENTER:Zach Sartin,541-923-4854. REDMOND YOUNG LIFE: 541-923-8530. SCHOOL-TO-CAREERPARTNERSHIP: KentChild,541-355-4158. SMART (STARTMAKING A READER TODAY):www.getsmartoregon.org or 541-355-5600. TRILLIUM FAMILYSERVICES: 503-205-0194. VIMA LUPWAHOMES:www. lupwahomes.orgor 541-420-9634. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON:541-385-0470.

ANIMALS AND ENVIRONMENT BEND SPAY8rNEUTERPROJECT: 541-617-1010. BRIGHTSIDEANIMAL CENTER: t/olunteer@brightsideanimals.orgor 541-923-0882. CAT RESCUE,ADOPTION ItFOSTER TEAM (CRAFT):www.craftcats.org, 541-389-8420or541-598-5488. CHIMPS, INC.:www.chimps-inc.org or541-410-4122. DESCHUTESLANDTRUST: www.deschuteslandtrust.orgor 541-330-001 7. DESCHUTESNATIONALFOREST: JeanNelson-Dean, 541-383-5576. EASTCASCADESAUDUBON SOCIETY:www.ecaudubon.org or 541-241-2190. THE ENVIRONMENTALGENTER: www.ent/irocenter.org or 541-385-6908. EQUINEOUTREACH HORSE RESCUE OF BEND: www.equineoutreach. com or joan©equineoutreach.comor 541-419-37! 7. HEALINGREINS THERAPEUTIC

RIDINGCENTER:www.healingreins. orgor Darcy Justice, 541-382-9410. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL OREGON: Jen, iennifer©hsco.org or 54! -382-3537. HUMANE SOCIETYOFTHE OCHOCOS: 541-447-7178. JUNIPERGROUP SIERRA CLUB: 541-389-9115. PACIFICCREST TRAIL ANGEL: 541-604-4494. PRINEVILLE BLM:www.blm.got/ior/ districtslprinevillelrecreation/host.php or541-416-6700. STEWARDSHIPFOR SUSTAINABLE BAGGING: LexaMcAllister, Imcallister@cocc.eduor 541-914-6676. SUNRIVERNATURECENTER & OBSERVATORY: 541-593-4442. VOLUNTEERCAMPGROUND HOST POSITIONS: TomMottl, 541-416-6859.

highdesertchambermusic.com or 54! -306-3988. HIGH DESERTMUSEUM:

HEALTH

HUMAM SERVICES

AMERICANCANCER SOCIETY: CharlieJohnson, 541-434-3114. AMERICANREDCROSS: 541-749-4111. THE BLOOM PROJECT:www. thebloomproject.org or HeidiBerkman at h.berkman@thebloomproject.orgor 54 I-24I-8845. HEART 'N HOME HOSPICE It PALLIATIVE CARE:www.gohospice. com. HOSPICEOF REDMONDSISTERS:www.redmondhospice. orgor Volunteer Coordinatorat 541-548-7483. MOUNTAINVIEW HOSPITAL:JBDee Tittle, 541-475-3882, ext.5097. MOUNTAINVIEW HOSPITAL HOSPICE: 541-460-4030 or Tori Schultz, tschultz©mt/hd.orgor 541475-3882,ext. 5327. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESS— CENTRAL OREGON: Eileen White, namicentraloregon@ gmail.com. PARTNERS IN CARE:www. partnersbend.orgor Melanie Price, 54! -382-5882. RELAYFORLIFE: Stefan Myers, 541-504-4920. ST. CHARLESIN BENDAND ST. CHARLESIN REDMOND: 54!-706-6354. VOLUNTEERS IN MEDICINE: Kristi, 541-585-9008.

ABILITREE:t/olunteer@abiliiree.org or 541-388-8103, ext. 217. AMNESTYINTERNATIONAL:Philip Randall, 541-388-1793. ASSISTANCE LEAGUEOFBEND: 541-389-2075. BEND COMMUNITYCENTER: volunteer©bendscommunitycenter. orgor 5/I1-312-2069. BETHLEHEM INN: www. bethleheminn.org or541-322-8768. BRIDGINGGAPS:bendbridginggaps© gmail.comor 541-314-4277. CENTERFOR COMPASSIONATE LIVING (PREVIOUSLY PEACE CENTER OFCENTRAL OREGON): www.compassionatecenter.org or BethHansen,541-923-6677. CENTRALOREGONVETERANS OUTREACH: covo.org@gmail.com or 541-383-2793. DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES: Therese Helton, Therese.M.Helton@ state,or.ttsor 541-693-8988. DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES CROOK COUNTY: Valerie Dean, 541447-3851, ext. 427. DISABLEDAMERICANVETERANS (DAV):Don Lang, 541-647-1002. FAMILYKITGHEN:Cindy Tidball, cindyt@bendcable.com or 54 I-610-65!1. FAMILYRESOURCECENTER: 541-389-5468. HUMAN DIGNITYCOALITION: 541-385-3320. HUNGERPREVENTION COALITION:Marie, info© hungerpret/entioncoalition.orgor 541-385-9227. LA PINECOMMUNITY KITCHEN: 541-536-1312. NEIGHBORIMPACT: chrisqO neighborimpact.orgor 5/I1-548-2380, ext. 106. PEACEBRIDGES, INC., BEND: www.abridgetopeace.orgorJohn C. Schwechten at 541-383-2646. PFLAGCENTRALOREGON: www.pflagcentraloregon.orgor 541-317-2334. RONALD MCDONALDHOUSE:Teresa, 541-318-4950. SAVINGGRACE:541-382-9227 or 541-504-2550. SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL OF BEND:www.sibend.org, president© sibend.org or 541-728-0820. ST. VINCENTDEPAULSOCIAL SERVICES: 541-389-6643. VOLUNTEER CONNECT: www.

ARTS, MUSIC, CULTURE AMD HERITAGE 88.9KPOV,BEND'3 COMMUNITY RADIO STATION: info©kpov.org or 541-322-0863. ART COMMITTEEOF THE REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY:Linda Barker, 541-312-1064. ARTS CENTRALSTATION: 541-617-1317. CASCADES THEATRICAL COMPANY: 541-389-0803. CENTRALOREGON SYMPHONY ASSOCIATION:JUlie, 541-383-7779. DES CHUTESHISTORICAL MUSEUM: 541-389-1813, 10a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. DESCHUTESPUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM:541-312-1032. FRIENDSOF THE BEND LIBRARIES: www.fobl.orgor Meredith Shadrach at 541-617-7047. HIGHDESERT CHAMBER MUSIC: www.highdesertchambermusic. comor Isabelle Sengerat info@

541-382-/I75/I.

LA PINEPUBLICLIBRARY: Cindylu, 54! -317-1097. LATINOCOMMUNITY ASSOCIATION: Brad, volunteer©latca.orgor 541-382-4366. THE NATUREOFWORDS: www.thenatureofwords.orgor 541-647-2233. OREGON PARTNERSOF AMERICA: www.oregonpartners.net or Ed Vickrey, 541-350-3152. REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY:541-312-1060. REDMONDINTERCULTURAL EXCHANGE (R.I.C.E.): Barb, bonitodia©msn.comor 54!-447-0732. TOWER THEATREFOUNDATION: 541-31 7-0700.

HABITAT FOR HUMANITY AND THRIFT STORES BEND AREAHABITATFOR HUMANITY:jbarry©bendhabitat.org or 541-385-5387. BRIGHTSIDEANIMAL CENTER THRIFT STORE: 541-504-0101. HABITAT RESTORE:Di Crocker, 541-312-6709. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL OREGON THRIFT STORE:Jen, jennifer©hsco.org or 541-382-3537. NEATREPEATTHRIFT SHOP:Peg, 5/I1-447-6429. NEWBERRYHABITAT FOR HUMANITY:54!-593-5005. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFT STORE OFBEND:541-389-0129. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFT STORE OF REDMOND: 541-548-5288. REDMOND HABITATFOR HUMANITY: Scottor Warren, 541-548-1406. REDMOND HABITAT RESTORE: Roy, 541-548-1406. SISTERSHABITATFOR HUMANITY: 5/I1-549-1193. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL— LA PINE: 541-536-1956. ST. VINCENTDEPAUL—REDMOND: 541-923-5264.

MISCELLAMY CENTRALOREGON LOCAVORE: www.centraloregonlocat/ore.com or Niki atinfo@centraloregonlocat/ore. comor 541-633-0674. HIGH DESERTSPECIAL OLYMPICS: 541-749-6517. OREGON ADAPTIVESPORTS: www.oregonadaptIvesports.org, info@oregonadaptit/esports.org or 541-306-/I774. SACREDARTOF LIVING CENTER: 541-383-4179.

0

s

0

GOVERNMENT, CITY AND COMMUNITY THE CITIZENREVIEWBOARD(CRB): crb.volunteer.resottrces©ojd.state. or.us or 888-530-8999. CITY OFBEND:Cheryl Howard, choward©ci.bend.or.us or 541-388-5505. DESCHUTESCOUNTY VICTIMS' ASSISTANCEPROGRAM: DianeStecher, 541-317-3186or 541-388-6525. DESCHUTESRIVER WOODS NEIGHBORHOODASSOCIATION: www.drwna.org or Barbara at info© drwna.org or541-382-0561. JEFFERSONCOUNTY CRIME VICTIMS' ASSISTANCEPROGRAM: Tina Farrester, 541-475-4452, ext. 4108. JEFFERSON COUNTYVOLUNTEER

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Digital art Continued from D1 L evine named hi s

com-

pany Electric Objects and raised $1.7 million through a seed round of venture fi-

"If we look to the future, screens will be seen as a dominant medium like the canvas was for centuries. It's what we create with these tools

like Twitter and Current TV,

launch party for Electric

Objects, a company he

— Yugo Nakamura, co-founder and creative director of FRM, a slower, more t h oughtful

a digital display company nancing in April to rent an office and hire employees. To generate feedback, he also used the money to build displayed in their homes and checking email, for example. and send out a hundred pro- tochoosetodisplaythesame Fo r S l oan, who has also totypes to

Jake Levine attends a

the screen's minimalist nature is what makes it so appealing: It allows only one image to be shown at a time. "It actually insists upon

that will be remembered most."

founded that

pace" of cultural consump-

creates a way

tion, he said. That's exactly the kind of

to display digital artwork.

retro-futuristic e x perience that Levine hopes people w o r k e d at media companies will be willing to pay for.

o t her e n trepre- images. But it w o n't a l lo w

D5

Tina Fineberg New York Times News Service

neurs and artists. He plans to sell a polished version of his prototype for $299 later this year. T he f i rst t i m e I h e a r d about the company, I wasn't

R ID E S • AR I K A L S • E X H I B I T S • POO D • G A K E S • K O R E

sure that the concept had broader m a rket a p peal, largely because I'm not convinced that people would

~-E- ~/

want more screen devices in their h o mes. A s s ome-

Iekbnx

one who owns a tablet, a smartphone and a laptop, I

A screen-fi lled future

'wa *~p

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t

I

Enjoy Old-Fashioned Fnn Every Day

8 014

PAIBE NATAR6 NEIL6IRALBB 7 pml WefhleNChy, Jely3O

preneur who sees a market here. Several c o mpetitors,

Jm1y 3oth thromgh h

servicefor creators and fans

Come and enjoy the old-hshioned American tradition ofyour countyIair. Look for a wide variety of fun

of visual culture. "If we look to the future,

adivities andbooths Irom The Bulletin Family Fun Zone,camel rides, FarmYardFun, K9IGngs, go

s een as a

©

FRM, based in Tokyo, said he saw his digital frame as a

s creens will b e

auaaau

4 •

' I

1

D e s eh u t e s C o u n t y

i ncluding I n stacube a n d FRM, are working on similar approaches to digital installations for the home. Yugo Nakamura, co-found-

I

,,!r,

Rt The Fair!

POWER P R O DUCTS

~ r a a a n 4 a 4 Xaa

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i

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Levine isn't the only entre-

er and creative director of

®

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Cee for CentralOregon

definitely didn't. I have even

resisted buying a television. But after seeing a prototype, I was impressed by the simplicity of the machine. And if people are willing to buy stand-alone gadgets to play music, monitor their health and help manage their homes, why not purchase one for culture and art'?

I

JOSH TURNER WITHSPECIALGUEST LEAH TURNER

, g u alh 3rcL ,ti .

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cartcourse,the rodeo,anim als,4-H and open classexhibits,carnivalgames,plusfood,food,food!

Spxn Thttesfiay, Ztt1ygs

dominant medium like the canvas was for centuries," he said in an email. "It's what we

create with these tools that will be remembered most."

He said people would be d rawn to t h e ar t t h a t t h e screen fosters, and not only to the device itself. The hard-

WEDNECIDAY THRQVSH SATURDAY!

ware is secondary to the art.

"I'm not sure if our experiment will ' r ule the future'

ELI YOUN GBAND I WITH SPE CIALGUES OLDDO MINION

Fair admission notincluded.

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so to speak, but the timing seems right," he said. Both Levine and Nakamu-

ra plan to cultivate networks of artists who create works

exclusively for the screens, which people could b uy

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larger goal is not simply to reproduce famous photos and paintings, but to support a growing community of artists who create computer animations and images. "The reason people aren't paying for digital art is be-

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cause the experience doesn't feel viable," Levine said. "It

mostly feels like taking the offline art world and porting

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Zoe Salditch, a curator who has experience work-

ing with experimental and new-media artists, is developing the network of artists

at Electric Objects. She said t hat using screens to

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consumers. nYou see this kind of device in a hacked version in

galleries all the time," she said. But it can be difficult and expensive for art aficio-

nados who don't have a hardware and software background to recreate it.

"This device makes it an

all-in-one," and available at

a much lower price, she said. Salditch is working on building an "artists in residence" program through the company that supplies a stipend and a prototype of the

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screen to a number of digital

artists, to encourage them to create pieces designed specifically for the device. Robin Sloan, author of a futuristic novel called "Mr.

The Bulletin

Penumbra's 24-Hour Book-

store," has been playing around with an Electric Objects prototype. He says that

these kinds of devices play to

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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

For'T eKi in,'cosure ees e uncto TV SPOTLIGHT

Danish crime series seemed Last year, Netflix announced to further the network's brand that it would air these six final for darkly intense character episodes. dramas, its mismatched but A strange life span, even still haunted detectives poised by today's form-proliferating to become TV's new prestige standards. power couple. Over the years, a few series Then the first season finale have been famously brought

"The Killing" AvailableonNetflix By Mary McNamara Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Form

trumps function in the final six episodes of the critically divisive "The Killing," which landed on Netflix on Friday.

ended with a last-minute, oh-

Many less beset and trou-

bled shows have been canceled without benefit of conclusion or coda over the years, but shifts in viewer expectation,

coupled with the recent rise of streaming services and platform migration, make all things possible. Just as it resurrectedfan favorite "Ar-

rested Development," Netflix is testing the Just to Wrap Up waters.

Nefflix, Inc./Submitted photo

Unfortunately, w h atever satisfaction might be derived

Joel Kinnaman and Mireille Enos star in "The Killing." The final six episodes of series are now available on Netflix.

from seeing "The Killing" intentionally conduded is overget their story straight. Not even the presence of by a sense of melancholy: Even The story toggles between Joan Allen as the crazy, great the most forgiving fan will find their (not very convincing) head of a military academy "The Killing" a shadow of its cover-up and a new case while (Yes, the show is reaching into formerself. wildly attempting to gather "Citadel" territory) can keep In the Season 3 finale, De- up all the various themes and viewers from wishing it would tective Sarah Linden (Mireille narrative loose ends like a just conclude already. Enos) ruthlessly shot her fel- contestant in a timed shopping Watching, one feels several low officer/lover when he spree. Linden, whose alabaster degrees of sadness; in many turned out to be the serial kill- stillness was once so revelato- ways, the show was a victim of er she was hunting. The fourth ry, is now such a mess that one the same set of circumstances "season" picks up just after she fears for Enos' actual physical that might have turned it into and her partner, Stephen Hold- well-being — was she always another Emmy-winning hit. er (Joel Kinnaman), have ap- that thin? — while Holder has When it debuted on AMC parently disposed of the body, lost almost all his easygoing in 2011 to swooning reviews, as they clean up and attempt to hipster-grubby charm. Veena Sud's adaptation of a whelmed almost immediately

The show never recovered.

nus episodes on the Web. But

Driven more by a need to placatethan explore,the second

neverbefore has one platform

season devolved into a much more standard, though still

of a show that appeared on another.

well written and hypnotically performed police drama. Gone was the one day/one episode structure, gone was

provocative event in television history. Obviously, Netflix is exploring its creative poten-

the attempt to tell the story of

tial — what can it do that oth-

Dear Abby:I'm 16 and so is my ing a teenage girl is that it can preboyfriend. He's wonderful. We're vent her from acquiring the necesvery much in love and intend to be sary social skills she will need later together for the rest of our lives,

to make mature judgments. It's

but my mother is causing major problems in our relationship.

important that your mother realize this, and please tell her I said so. Dear Abby:My wife and I disagree on whether it is OK for me to have

We're not allowed to see each oth-

Even if

DFP,R

s omeone

will be watching us the whole time, Mom says she's afraid we're going to "make out." We won't, and it's very distressing. She says she trusts me, but clearly she doesn't. She also says she approves of my boyfriend, but obvi-

a secret I do not wish to share with her. It

naturally seem to enjoy yourself. You love to get into heavy discussions, butyou also relish a healthy flirtation. You are quick-witted, and you nearly always have a response. If you are single, you attract people who are younger than you. You are in the first year of a12-year luck cycle. The firstyear generally is the most fortunate. If you are 8tsfs show the Idsd attached, you love of dsyyou I hsve exchanging ideas ** * * * D ynamic with your signif** * * Positive icant other. Your ** * Average com m unication will be pivotal this ** So-so year, as you both * Difficult are likely to make some important life decisions. SCORPIOcan drag you down.

At 16, you are at an age whenyou should be starting to date. Many teens start by going out in groups, which lessens the opportunity for "make-out" situations.

saw you tear up and asked what

ally told her what it was about. There was a popular movie

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

portant. Once more, you seem to have too much energy for your own good. Tonight: M ake hay wh ilethesun shines.

** * If you want to spend the afternoon just lounging around, do. If you want to go shopping, why not indulge yourself? Remember to remain reasonable with regard to how far overboard you go. Make time for a nap to recharge your batteries. Tonight: Nap, then decide.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21)

By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * * T ry a new approach. Do something very differently regarding your home and family, as variety is always appreciated. Curb a tendency to get too aggravated by an unexpected demand or request. You will find a way to handle this issue. Tonight: Stay close to home.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * * You might be more forthright than you realize. If someone seems to have an adverse reaction to something you say, you might want to think twice about the words you chose. A family ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * Your loved ones naturally seem member will let you know what he or she thinks. Tonight: Visit with friends over to gravitate toward you. A child will be very excited to be with you, and he or she dinner. might want to play a game. Expect to do a VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) lot of explaining. Someone might be more ** * Keep track of your expenses, sensitive than you realize. Tonight: Let the so that you have no surprises. Don't good times continue. decide to do more than you have already agreed to do. A disagreement could TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * You understand a lot more than ensue with a neighbor or sibling. You both tend to argue to let off steam and you might want to share. Keep your feelings to yourself for now. On the other tension. Tonight: Curb a tendency to go hand, if holding in your feelings turns you to extremes. into a powder keg, make apoint to share LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) in a way that the other party will hear you. ** * * You are easygoing, and you have Tonight: Do not push too hard. a tendency to smile a lot as a result. A GEMINI (May 21-June 20) money disagreement or a problem with ** * * * Y our imagination is likely to go plans couldcauseamomentaryupset. on wild flights of fancy ata mere sugges- You might wonder how to come to an tion. Might you be too distracted? Try to agreement in aparticularly chargedatmostay grounded when doing anything imsphere. Tonight: Treat time.

is the recognition of a new set

of expectations. Though the between mutual aid and code- vast audience is splintered, pendency.The through line of its diversifying members are troubled kids stretched a lithighly invested — they don't tle thin, the grim romance of want to be cut off mid-thought. the glowering skies became Viewers long for, especially oppressive. when binge-watching — and AMC canceled it at the end increasingly expect — personof the second season. Netflix al dosure. intervened and it came back As with a film, or a novel or to AMC for a third season, a play, we now need the stories only to be canceled again. of television to truly end.

ation 40 years ago, Dear Disagreeing: Would your long before we met. After we got wife have felt better if, when she

YOURHOROSCOPE

an evolving business model

as their relationship wavered

was wrong, you had responded honestly and told her it was someabout the same situation. Whenev- thing personal, painful and none of er it came on TV and I watched it, I her business? ously that's not the case, either. would get teary-eyed, and my wife What you did wasn't lying; What can I do to convince her would ask me what was wrong. I it was protecting yourself from that we are trustworthy? would say I didn't know because having to discuss something you — Distressed Teen in Texas I wanted to keep the reason to weren't ready to reveal. And when Dear Distressed Teen: Not myself. you did, instead of being symNow I'm accused of having lied pathetic, she attacked you. Well, knowing your mother, it's hard to say what will ease her worries. to her about it. My wife is adamant now that you have shared your However, at 16, you are at an age that spouses should have no se- secret and are being punished when you should be starting to crets whatsoever from each other. for it, are you more comfortable date. Many teens start by going out The issue was something signifi- with the idea of telling her "all"? (I in groups, which lessens the oppor- cant and private to me. We would doubt it.) tunity for "make-out" situations. appreciate your comments. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com — Disagreeing in Maryland or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069 The problem with overprotect-

DAY, AUG. 2, 2014:This yearyou

But more important than

The story increasingly focused on Linden and Holder,

doesn't affect her.

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSATUR-

It is both a pragmatic and

tional and actual fallout.

It pertains to a situinto an argument about it, I eventu-

provided a formal final act

a crime by examining the ev- er platforms can't, and is that er-widening ripples of its emo- worth doing.

een wants ermission to ate er outside of school. Neither of us has a driver's license, and we're not g etting them anytime soon.

back from the dead, either

wait-we-got-the-wrong-guy through fan outrage ("Cagney twist, outraging many who felt 8 Lacey," "Chuck," "CommuSud had reneged on her "prom- nity") or creator interest ("Dr. ise" to wrap up the murder Who"). More recently, shows investigation. Social media ex- floundering on one network ploded with invective, reveal- ("Cougar Town," "Damages") ing a new truism of the rising have found refuge on anothage of television: There is no er. Many shows now offer fury like a super-fan scorned. connectivenarrative and bo-

** * * Find your friends and join them. You can't go wrong hanging with good company. Recognize that you might be hearing too much abouta certain situation and could be closing down as a result. Tonight: Know when to agree to disagree with someone.

CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * Not surprisingly, you naturally will assume the lead with a project. Even if you havedecided to throw aspontaneous party, your signature style and efforts will be seen. A friend might be unusually irritating. Tonight: Not until late will you start to enjoy yourself.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb.18) ** * * Wherever you are, you'll march to a different beat. Friends or loved ones often follow you, because you seem to be having such a good time. Curb the need to argue with someone to whom you must answer. Know when you have had enough. Tonight: Opt for a new experience.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * A loved one can't seem to get closeenough to you.You m ighthave plans to take off on a mini day-trip. You will have to make your excuses if you do not want this person to join you. Be careful not to cause hurt feelings. Tonight: Enjoy a slow, easy dinner with a loved one. © King Features Syndicate

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

I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 1:05, 3:45, 7:25, 10:05 • AMERICA(PG-13) 6:45, 9:30 • AND 80 IT GOES (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:05, 4:30, 6:55, 9:20 • DAWN OFTHE PLANETOF THE APES (PG-13)3:15,6:15 • DAWN OFTHE PLANETOF THE APES 3-D (PG-13)11:20 a.m., 9:10 • GETONljP(PG-13)11am.,210,630,940 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)12:30,3:30,3:55, 7,9:45, 10:15 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY3-D (PG-13)1,7:30 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY IMAX3-D (PG-13)Noon, 3, 6:30, 9:15 • HERCULES (PG-13) 2, 9:50 • HERCULES 3-D (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 7:15 • HOW TOTRAINYOURDRAGON2(PG) 11:10 a.m., 1:40, 4:05 • LUCY(R) 11:30a.m., 1:30, 1:50, 4:10, 5, 6:40, 7:55, 9, 10:10 • MALEFICENT (PG) 11:50 a.m., 2:30, 4:55 • AMOST WANTED MAN (R)11:15a.m.,3:05,6,9:05 • PLANES:FIRE8 RESCUE(PG) 1:20, 3:40, 7:10 • PLANES:FIRE8 RESCUE3-D (PG)11:05a.m. • THE PURGE: ANARCHY(R) 1:10, 3:50, 7:45, 10:15 • SEXTAPE(R)7:35, 10 • TRANSFORMERS:AGEOFEXTINCTION (PG-13) 11:55 a.m.,4:20,8 • WISH I WAS HERE(R) 9:25 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

I

TV TODAY • More TI/'listingsinside Sports 5 p.m. on TCM, Movie: "The Pink Panther" —The title of this1964 comedy actually refers

to a very raregemsought by a sophisticated international jewel thief. This "pink panther" turned into a cash cow for writer-director Blake Edwards, thanks to the magical alchemy that occurred when Peter Sellers was cast as bumbling Inspector Clouseau. David Niven and Robert Wagner also are featured, as is Henry

Mancini's incomparablescore. 8 p.m. on 58, "Crossbones" — The series ends its run as its final two new episodes air back-to-back. Blackbeard (John Malkovich) sets out to sea in "Crossbones," planning to implement a scheme that will force the members of his crew to determine how loyal they are to him. Then, as fire rains down on Santa Campana, Blackbeard goes all in as he tries to rebuff Jagger's (guest star Julian Sands) furious attack in "Blackbeard." 8p.m.onNICK,Movie:"A Fairly OddSummer" — The third entry in the live-action film series inspired by the hit Nickelodeonanimated comedy finds most of the main cast returning to their familiar roles. In this new story, Timmy Turner (Drake Bell) hopes to bid aloha to his worries as he and his fairies head off for a summer vacation in Hawaii. Unfortunately, that vacay is likely to turn totally cray-cray, sincehis nemeses Vicky,Foop and Crocker (Devon Weigel, Eric Bauza, David Lewis) are hot on his trail and all the magic in Fairy World stands at stake. Daniella Monet, Daran Norris and Susanne Blakeslee co-star. 9p.m. onAMC, "Hell on Wheels" — As the Western series returns for a13-episode fourth season, longtime fans are likely focused mainly on one big question: Did Elam (Common) survive his battle with an enormous bear in the Season 3 finale? Signs point to the affirmative, but one of the show's executive producers recently told Entertainment Weekly that we "will be surprised to see the manner in which he survives." Well, all righty, then. At least Cullen's (Anson Mount) back, although you're not losing your mind: Yes, that IS a different lady (Canadian singer-actress MacKenzie Porter) playing Cullen's bride, Naomi, this season. © Zap2it

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Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • DAWN OFTHE PLANETOF THE APES (PG-13)1:10,4, 6:50, 9:40 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)4:15,7 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY3-D (PG-13)1:30,9:45 • HERCULES (PG-13) 12:10, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:25 • LUCY(R)1, 3, 5:10, 7:20, 9:30 • PLANES:FIREIft RESCUE(PG) 12:45, 2:50, 5, 7:05 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13)9 •

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E2 SATURDAY AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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New Listings

Boonesborough (

Sundance ( $365,000 • 1534 sq.ft., 3 bed$425,000 • 2180 sq.ft. single-level room, 2 bath • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • 2.39 acres • 3.9 acres, backs to • Insulated shop, pond BLM • MLS 201406175 • MLS 201406868 Michael J hopp, Broker Lester Friedman PC, The Kelleher Group 604 Broker, ABR, CSP, 541-390-0504 Storage Rentals EPRO, S.T.A.R. 541-330-8491 32'x36' shop for rent between R e dmond and Terrebonne. RV, MORRIS boat, storage, workREAL ESTATE shop? $ 300/month. MORRIS 541-419-1917 REAL ESTATE 630 SW Redmond ( I I ~ ml y O $153,000 Rooms for Rent • Cute 3 bedroom, 2 Cascade View bath Estates [ $484,800 Room for rent in Red• Updated flooring & mond, $450, incl utilities. • 2904 sq. ft., 3 bedwood-stove No smokinq. Mature, re- room, 3.5 bath sponsible, & stable. Call • Den and bonus area • RV parking • MLS 201406501 • Gorgeous mountain Jim, 541-419-4513 Debbie Hershey, views 632 Broker, CRS, GRI • 3358 SW 35th Street 541<20-5170 Apt./Nlultiplex General Karin Johnson, Broker 541-639-6140 CHECK yOUR AD MORRIS REAL ESTATE

MORRIS REAL ESTATE

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 TheBulletin Classified Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily Month-to-month lease, check it out! Call 541-318-0450 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. NOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

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New Listings

20 Private Acres [ $625,000 • 2397 sq.ft. SW style home • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • Shop, pond, garden area • MLS 201405664 Diane Lozito, Broker 541-548-3598 541-306-9646 •

MORRIS REAL ESTATE

.46 Acre in SE Bend ( $425,000

• 2641 sq.ft. custom

home • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath • Master suite with mountain views • MLS 201406812 Sherry Perrigan, Broker 541-410<938

740

CommerciaNnvestment CommerciaNnvestment Properties for Sale Pro p erties for Sale

Commercial Building ( $375,000 • 1927 sq.ft.

• Recent remodel • Excellent visibility • MLS 201403245

Paula Vanvleck, Broker 541-280-7774

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MORRIS REAL ESTATE

C ommercial Lots I n Crooked River Ranch: Great opportunity to start a b usiness or relocate an existing business. Near restaurants, hotel and golf course. Owner terms avail. Business Circle, Lot 82:- 1.05 acres, $25,000. Lot 50 - 1.30 acres & Lot 511.23 acres, still available at $35,000 each or purchase both for $60,000. Juniper Realty 541-504-5393

744

Condo/Townhomes for Sale

Condo/Townhomes for Sale

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BULLETINCLASSIFIE08 Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin Serving Central Oreyonsince 19N

Homes for Sale

OPEN HOUSE Saf 10am-2pm. Madras Industrial Site Elkai Woodsat Fairway Vista t ownlocated close to airWidgi Creek home in Eagle Crest 20533 Sun Meadow Way port with possible BEST Value! with garage. 10th tee r ail access. O l d box resort c ourse, $309,000 wooden grain stor2 Bdrm, 2.5 Bath 1447 sq. ft., dbl. gaage building to CLA. with separate studio. rage, golf course and Call for details. MLS 1703 sq.ft. Open, light. mtn. views. 3 bdrm, Won't Last Long! 201401462 $50,000 2bath. $280,000. MLS 4 Bdrm, 2.5 baths. Call Virginia, Princi201307174 approx. 2330 sq.ft. pal Broker 3 Bdrm, 3 Bath, Lynn Johns, Principal $449,000. 541-923-0855 Red$475,000 Broker, 541-408-2944 541-749-0546 mond Re/Max Land Great Room + Office Wes Johns, Broker 541 to schedule an appt. & Homes Real Es408-2945 Central Orand Bonus tate. Gated with exquisite egon Resort Realty views of the New Listing, .88 acre Sat. 12-3 ONLY available lot 13 Green & 14th Vogt Road, Bend commercially zoned at Widgi Creek Level, 63426 Fairway Room for toys on .78 p roperty wit h t w o Pines .4 acres acres, 2 bdrm, 1 bath, s tick-built home s $189,500 3 Bdrm, 3 Bath, ewly painted N e w rented at $575 and Overlooks the pond and n $485,000 floor coverings, single $850. You also get an 2nd & 7th fairways. Builder's Own garage w/shop area. additional tax lot in the Mara Stein, Residence $167,500. deal. This location is Principal Broker, Large stone fireplace, Grossman & Assoc. off of the Madras Hwy 541-420-3400 bamboo flooring 541-388-2159 in Prineville, and there have been some new Alder cabinets, granite, Pamir Properties, inc. EXTRAS! b usinesses i n th e Townhome o n the Sat/Sun., Aug. 2 & 3 Large corner lot. area. Asking Creek in Eagle Crest. 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Hot Tub. $ 210,000. Agen t 3 bdrm, 2r/~ bath, 20604 WildGoose Ln. 2 Decks overlooking owned property. 1471 sq. f t. , m a in Bend OR 97702 the 15th Green Heather Hockett, Brolevel master, backs to 3 bdrm/2 bath 1620 sq ker, 54 1 - 420-9151 Creek and w a lking ft, corner lot, central Nara Stein, C entury 2 1 Gol d path. Luxury upgrade air & heat, fenced Principal Broker, Country Realty. package. $ 2 54,900 front & backyard, and 541-420-3400 MLS¹201400034 much more. A MUST Own a Piece of History Pamir Properties, inc. Lynn Johns, Principal - Fort Rock Tavern & SEE! $260,000. Broker, 541-408-2944 541-388-4686 Grill. Recently remodCentral Oregon FOR SALE BY OWNER eled. 4 p o ker m aResort Realty chines and lottery, full bar, pool table and much more. 4 full RV hookups f o r RV. $200,000. MLS201306884 Duke Warner Realty

20250 Birdsong Lane, one of a kind Tumalo home on 5 acres and views. Ad ¹1602 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com $650,000• Pine Mt. Ranch ~755 Acre off-grid •3/2, newer home •Big shop and corrals horse heaven •Ride, hike and s t ar gaze. Kathy Neal, Broker 541-420-4978 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate $625,000 • Smith Rock •4 Bdrm, 3 bath, 3618

sq.ft. ~4+ acres near Smith Rock •30'x48' dream shop Diana Barker, Broker 541-480-7777

Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate

Find exactly what Terrebonne [ $519,900 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! you are looking for m the • 3 Sisters & Smith Deschutes Riverfront ( Rock views Door-to-door selling with CLASSIFIEDS $450,000 fast results! It's the easiest • 3646 sq.ft., 6 bed• 2496 sq.ft. Iog home room, 4.5 bath way in the world to sell. • 2 bedroom, 2 bath • Large deck, .72 acres • 6.99 acres, shop, irrigation The Bulletin Classified • MLS 201405814 • MLS 201405194 Jack Johns, 541-385-5809 Gary Rose, Broker, GRI Broker, MBA 541-480-9300 D owntown Of fic e 541-382-8262 541-588-0687 Building - 1456 sq ft r emodeled off i c e.Perfect for owner user 7000 sq ft commer- total of 4 condo indus cial zoned lot. Excel- trial units. Each is ap MORRIS lent parkway expo- prox. 2250 sq.ft. with MORRIS sure. 4 park i ng 1 2x11 o ffice a n d REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE spaces inc l uding 12x12 overhead door. h andicap spa c e. Can be sold sepa rately. Easy access to $435,000. Investment Land ( Three Rivers South ( t he a i r port, fa i r MLS¹201404318 $1,330,000 $99,900 rounds and Hwy 97. Call Larry Jacobs, • 14.47 acres inside • 1456 sq.ft. manufac499,000. MLS 541-480-2329 proposed UGB tured 201309345 Duke Warner Realty • Preliminary plat with • 2 bedroom, 2 bath Call Carolyn Emick at 541-382-8262 95 lots • .60acres, 2-car 541-419-0717 • Home 8 covered garage with shop Excellent Commercial Duke Warner Realty arena • MLS 201405518 541-382-8262 L ocation! O n 1 1 t h • MLS 201406200 Darryl Doser, Street between HighMatt Robinson, Broker 738 Broker, CRS land 8 G l a cier in 541-977-5811 541483-4334 Redmond. Perfect for Multiplexes for Sale s mall business o r $285,000• Duplex continue to lease with .2 Bdrm, 2.5 bath, spa current tenant. Cute boutique-style build- cious units MORRIS MORRIS ing would be great for •100% occupied and REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE C4 zone b usiness p rofessionally m a n aged d~ A professional, hair sa- •Large yard, multi- level lon, b arber s h op, NE Bend ( $214,900 flowers, coffee shop. living • 1262 sq.ft. single-level Hunter, Broker Commercial/Investment Separate garage or Christin • 3 bedroom, 2 bath 541-306-0479 storage building. With • Properties for Sale • • Fenced yard on Windermere a little TLC this propcul-de-sac Central Oregon • MLS 201406978 1352 NE 2nd St., Bend. erty and location can Real Estate for you! Beautiful commercial work Jim & Roxanne $125,000 Duplex! Convenient o ffice b u ilding i n Cheney, Brokers location. NE B end Bend. $579,000 High ¹201404633 541-390-4050 single level, 3 bdrm, 2 Lakes Realty & Prop- Dennis Clark, Principal 541-390-4030 erty Ma n agement Broker, 541-771-8730 bath, /2 bdrm, 2 bath. Century 21 541-536-0117 Fenced Yard and 2 Gold Country Realty car tandem garages. 16629 Burgess Road, $ 309,900. Kell i e La Pine. 3820 sq. ft. 6 Fully Rented, L ong- Cook, Broker MORRIS rooms, 7 rest rooms. Term Leases - Great 541-408-0463 REAL ESTATE $579,000 High Lakes income p r o ducing John L. Scott h d y R~ y ~ M ~ Realty & Pr o perty property. 2 buildings, Real Estate, Bend Management main b u i lding is johnlscott.com/51631 541-536-0117 19,429 sq ft with very River Canyon Estates 740 large parking lot. Seci $279,900 Office Space! 1352 NE ond building is 6420 Condo/Townhomes • 1746 sq.ft. 2nd St., Bend. Beau- sq ft. Great location. • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath for Sale tiful commercial office $1,500,000. • South facing great b uilding i n Be n d . Call Candy Yow at room Bend Riverside - fully 1 5 yr fixe d = 3.375% APR- 3.668% P&I pmt = $1984.53 $579,000 High Lakes • MLS 201405628 541-410-3193. furnished 425 sq. ft. Realty & P r o perty MLS201304214. Lynne Connelley, ground end unit with Management Duke Warner Realty Broker, CRS 30 yr fiXed= 4.250% APR-4.426% P8II Pmt = $1377.43 full bath, Kitchen ap541-536-0117 541-382-8262 541-408-6720 pliances, view of the PRIME COMMERCIAL Investor Opportunity! 4 Deschutes River. In Jumbo 30 yr = 4.375% APR- 4.583% PRI pmt = $3195.43 PROPERTY. Charm- rented homes plus 2 rental pool. $79,000. ing updated Madras lots in La Pine, OR. Kathy Caba, Principal Purchaseprice $350,000,20% down, Loan amount $280,000,30yearfixed. building, located on Broker 541-771-1761 $124,900. High Lakes Jumbo purchaseprice /value $800,000 — 20% down /equity,$640,000 loan amount. MORRIS Hwy. 97, Cat 5 wire John L. Scott 8 Pr o perty Real Offer valid as of 06/13/2013, restrictions may apply. Rates/fees subject to change. OnApproved Credit. system, h a rdwood Realty Estate, Bend REAL ESTATE Management floors 8 o ff s t r eet 541-536-0117 h d y R~ y ~ M ~ Creekside Townhome parking. $ 1 29,900. Crest, 3 bdrm, ¹ 201305319 Pam John Day car Wash, Eagle Shevlin Ridge ( bath, 1871 sq. ft., Lester, Principal Bro- built in 1995, 1908 sq. 2~/~ $935,000 room floor plan. I I i I ' ker Century 21 Gold ft., one automatic bay, great • 3715 sq.ft., Earth Adlevel master. Country Realty, Inc. 2 h andwash bays, main vantage MLS 2014 0 4647 541-504-1338 • 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath one with catwalk, 2 $252,900. Lynn Johns • Radiant floor heat & v a c uums, Principal Bro k e r, People Look for Information canister solar energy 541-408-2944, Wes paved lot, Hwy 395 About Products and • MLS 201406507 mechanical J ohns, Broker 5 4 1 Services EveryDaythrough frontage, 1 Scott Huggin, n room with private re- 408-2945, Central OrBroker, GRI The Bulletin Classineds stroom. Owner will egon Resort Realty ou re never a&ne u hen we re doiny your Paan ... 541-322-1500 with $ 30,000 Crest lakefront 16480 William Foss, carry down. $140,000. Call Eagle La Pine. $ 177,000. townhome 2 bdrm, 2 Duke Warner Realty, bath sq. ft., sgl H ome + O f fice + Dayville. 541 - 987- level.1410 shop. Hi g h Lakes 2363. Great room floor MLS Realty & P r o perty 201006647 MO RTG AGE CORPORATION Duke p lan, Lakefront & MORRIS Management Smith Roc k v i e w. Warner Realty REAL ESTATE 541-536-0117 $215,900 MLS¹ IA ~ m lyo 201401507 Lynn Casey NMLs 189449 jennifer NMLs 288550 5 1487 HWY 9 7 , L a La Pine Storage 98 Johns, Principal BroJust bought a new boat? Pine. 1.64 Acre com- units, 100% occupied, ker, 5 4 1 -408-2944, CORPOR LI C I tfL 2421 CORPNMLSI!3113 Sell your old one in the mercial lot. $594,900. gated. $875,000. High Johns, Broker classifieds! Ask about our High Lakes Realty & Lakes Realty & Prop- Wes 541 408-2945 Super Seller rates! erty Man agement Property M a n ageCentral Oregon ,= 541-536-0'I 17 541-385-5809 ment 541-536-0117 Resort Realty

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Open Houses

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541-323-2191

Q(®® QgfdemymO<tgpge.ZPI L-? 371 SW UpperTerrace Dr.,Suite 1,Bend,OR 97702 I I

SAT. Sr. SUN. 12PM - 3PM

SAT. 4 SUN. 12PM - 4PM

V ery special h o m e . Everyone will love this fenced backyard. Deck & beautifully landscaped. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, builder owned, so many 684 SE Gleneden Place upgrades. New interior Directions:East on Reed Market paint & carpet. Great value! Road, left on SE 5th, right on Gleneden Pl. HOS/ed byr

DEBBI McCUNE

541-647-0052 VIRGINA ROSS

541-480-7501

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Homes starting in the Iow

1200,000s. Brand new homes in Bend with the quality Pahlisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with

20781 NE Comet Lane

under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention Directfoss:North on Boyd Acres,

given to allow for tons of Right on Sierra, left on /f/rrc/rPouder, natural light a much more. Right on Comet Lane.Lookforsigns. Come by the model home for statting in the low more information and plans.

HOS/ed & LiSted byr

$200,000s

Desirable King's Forest, 5 bedroom, 3 baths, 2522 sf home on .79 acres.Well maintained updated home w/formal living 8 f amily room. Spacious kitchen, large 61244 King SolomonLane backyard w/oversized deck, RV parking, circular driveway, Directions: Ferguson/King mature landscape. Backs to Solomon carul and walking path.

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GREGG HAYDEN R E A t. T 0 R

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wainscoting, tile accents. C ome view t h i s g r e at home in the most popular east side neighborhood, 2989 NE Hope Dr. O ak View! This i s t r u e Directions: From 27/h St,, east quality!

HOS/ed byr RACHEL KAHLER

Broker 541-815-5658

Broker

RHIANNA KUNKLER

541-306-0939

$407,000

BRAD WHITCOMB 541-550-5449

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Homes Starting Mid-$200s

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Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot denGatePlace,Bend tub, sports center, 5 miles 20878SEGol of walking trails. Tour a Directions:From theparkway, east variety of single level asd on ReedMarket,south on 15th,then 2 story plans. fo/leu signs.

HOS/ed & LiSted byr

$237,900

Principal Broker

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LiS/ed byr BECKY BREEZE Principal Broker

541-408-1107

Great home in a great neighborhood. 3 bedroom,

2.5 bath. 1948 sq, fL fenced yard with RV parking. 3015 NE Stanton Ave Directi ons: Easton Neff,south on

on WellsAcres, south or right on Hawkvierrlfo//ow signs toHopeDr.

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$280,000 Hosted 6 Listed by:

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THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY AUGUST 2 2014 E3 I

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Ho m es for Sale•

745

745

745

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

$123,000• Snowberry Gorgeous home with Custom home. O u t- $230,000• Greens at $290,000• Single Level Village upgraded f i n ishes standing CASCADE Redmond •5 Car garage with •L ovingly cared f o r throughout. 3 bdrms, VIEW! 1878 sq. ft. 3/2 •Great starter of retire- epoxy floors 8 cabinets home 2~/~ baths, great floor- + bonus room (not in- ment home •3 Bdrm, 3 bath and '3 Bdrm, 2 bath, large plan with gas f irec luded in s q . f t . ) •1460 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 1674 sq.ft. kitchen with lots of granite cherry cabi nets, bath •Granite counters and place, • Private backyard, exstorage counters and hickory hardwood 8 sl a t e, stainless appliances •Finished 2 car garage cabinets, s t a inless Oversized g a rage, tra parking •Landscaped and patio with shop area a ppliances, tile d adjacent t o p u b lic•Central Air Rinehart, Dempsey Susan Pitarro, Broker baths, dis t ressed land. $279,900 MLS Dee Baker, Broker 8 Phelps 541-410-8084 541-977-7756 541-388-0404 h ardwood floo r s, 201402871 Call Pam Bell, Broker beautiful fenced and Nancy Windermere Windermere Popp, 541-848-7590 l andscaped ya r d . 541-815-8000 Central Oregon Central Oregon Windermere home is in immacu- Crooked River Realty Real Estate Real Estate Central Oregon l ate condition a n d $225,000 • Cute 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 2456 $719,900• Golf Course Real Estate move-in ready. •3 Bdrm, 2 bath sq.ft. with 14.66 acre Home Text •Move-in ready, quiet and 13.2 acre COI ir- •3 Bdrm, 3.5 bath, open $609,900• Farewell Dr. $287,000. VIEW7871TO 878787 ~3021 sq.ft. on Awbrey then call Tina Rob- are, mature landscap rigation, bonus room floor plan ing with separate entry, •Gourmet K Butte, private, 4 bdrm, erts, itc h e n, Broker, • .27 acre lot, 3 car ga solar design gener- wood floors, outdoor 2.5 bath 541-419-9022 rage. ates 20 % e l ectric. kitchen '2 fireplaces, formal din Total Property ing room 3 car Nessa Segoviano, MLS 2014 0 3830 Mike Everidge, Broker Resources Broker $488,888. Call Pam garage 541-390-0098 541-233-8993 Michelle Witt, Lester, Principal BroWindermere $199,000• La Pine Windermere ker Century 21 Gold Broker Home Central Oregon 541-974-4750 Central Oregon Country Realty, Inc. Real Estate •3 bdrm, 2 bath Real Estate 541-504-1338 Windermere •1 702 sq.ft, 9 7 a cre $425,000 • NW Bend Central Oregon lot, private well 70' RV parking! New 3 •6 Bdrm, 3.5 bath 14266 Whitewater Real Estate • MLS ¹201404817 Lane, northwest bdrm, 2 bath 1590 sq. •Master with p r i vate Steve Walterscheid, Deschutes riverfront ft. home coming soon! deck and hot tub $272,000• Big home, Broker home. Ad ¹1592 Pick your colors! Gas •2450 sq.ft. and 3 car big lot 541-480-0376 TEAM Birtola Garmyn fireplace, upgraded garage .2615 sq.ft. single story Windermere High Desert Realty appliances and cabi- •Large lot home Central Oregon 541-312-9449 nets, t i l e flo o r s, Dave Disney, Broker •1/2 acre lot, RV parkReal Estate www. BendOregon f enced an d l a n ding, 3 bath garage 541-410-8557 RealEstate.com scaped, and more! Windermere Central with shop 2 3190 R ickard R d . , •lots of storage Oregon Real Estate Custom home on pri- $495,000• Lava Ridges $289,000. too new for Bob Ahern, Broker vate 5 a c res w i th ~4 Bdrm, 2.5 bath and MLS¹201400132 17892 Kodiak Lane, Pam Lester Principal 541-420-3891 great Cascade views. 3054 sq.ft. large custom home Broker, Century 21 Windermere Ad ¹1232 •C ustom home w i t h Gold Country Realty, on 1+ acres backing Central Oregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn many upgrades. private wildlife. Inc. 541-504-1338 Real Estate High Desert Realty •Private office, p a tio Ad ¹2042 541-312-9449 with awning 55809 Lost Rider Lp. 23475 Hwy 20 East. 3 TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.BendOregon • Community pool Large River Meadow 36 acre estate - Bend High Desert Realty RealEstate.com Rinehart, Dempsey Home on .5 acre lot! Cascadia Nursery. 541-312-9449 & Phelps Ad ¹1302 Ad ¹1122 www. BendOregon $439,000 ~ Willow 541-388-0404 TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com Creek Windermere High Desert Realty High Desert Realty •2437 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 541-312-9449 16755 Derringer Dr. Central Oregon 541-312-9449 bath Real Estate www. BendOregon Builder's own custom www. BendOregon •Granite counter, wood single level home. RealEstate.com RealEstate.com $439,000 ~ Willow and tile floors AD¹1572 •New roof, furnace and Creek Loop 2074 NE Hollow Tree TEAM Birtola Garmyn $249,900• Shows Ln. Quality, views, hot water heater, 2 •2437 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 Like New High Desert Realty bath and space all in town. years •Private backyard with 541-312-9449 • Granite countertops Ad ¹1312 JML Realty Group, water feature www. BendOregon 'Wood and tile floors TEAM Birtola Garmyn 541-480-6790 •Comes with r e c ent RealEstate.com 541-480-0448 •New roof, furnace and High Desert Realty home inspection 541-312-9449 Windermere hot water heater $164,999• Great ~3 bdrm, 2 bath, gas Pam Bell, Broker www. BendOregon Central Oregon Investment fireplace 541-848-7590 Real Estate RealEstate.com •4 Bdrm, 2 bath Gail Rogers, Susan Pitarro, Broker • 1 834 sq.ft. b u ilt i n Broker $247,000• Gated $499 900 • 541-410-8084 1995, .36 acre lot 541-604-1649 Community Crestridge Windermere Tony Levison, Windermere .2 bdrm + den •5 Acres and a great Central Oregon Broker Central Oregon • Open floor plan, wide Redmond location. Real Estate 541-977-1852 Real Estate hall, tile roof and cov•Open living and great Windermere 2002 NW Perspecitve ered patio room $228,700 • Mtn views Central Oregon h uge Dr. Frank Loyd Wright •HOA managed land•Huge open floor plan •Landscaped, Real Estate inspired design. scaping deck, 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath •Gas fireplace Awbrey Butte home. Diana Barker, Broker NW Bend .33 acre lot Mike Wilson, Broker •Large kitchen w i t h Ad ¹2132 541-480-7777 541-977-5345 gently sloping, lonewer appl. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Windermere cated in the desirable Windermere •Bonus8 2 bdrm upper High Desert Realty Central Oregon Central Oregon NW Bend neighborfloor, master on main 541-312-9449 Real Estate hood of Shevlin Real Estate Bea Leach, Broker www. BendOregon Ridge. Bring your own 541-788-2274 15016 Fall River Dr., $1,400,000 • 2897 RealEstate.com Builder or have the Spectacular Fall River Windermere Horizon Dr. seller who is a builder, Central Oregon $495,000 • Tumalo Home. Ad ¹1662 •On the Tour of Homes •Builders build for you. Easy home; great TEAM Birtola Garmyn Real Estate •Newly constructed and room style access to hiking and and mtn High Desert Realty beautifully designed views 2046 NW Perspective bike trails and nearby 541-312-9449 541-771-1383 Dr. Looking for qual- home built by Award •Landscaping 8 4 acres Shevlin Park. www. BendOregon winning R.D. Building Windermere ity, views and loca$139,000. of irrigation RealEstate.com and Design Central Oregon tion. This is the Place! Tina Roberts, Broker, mile to Deschutes 4212 NW Sawyer Ct., •Panoramic mtn views •Half Real Estate Ad ¹1172 541-419-9022 River and expansive fin- Bill gorgeous Deschutes Birtola Garmyn Total Property Kammerer, Broker 1635 Whitetail Lane. 3 TEAM ishes throughout High Desert Realty River and River CanResources 541-410-1200 Bdrm, 2 bath, Almost •4731 sq.ft., 2 master yon views. AD¹1222 541-312-9449 Windermere 1600 sq.ft. Nestled in suites, 2 b drm, 3.5 TEAM Birtola Garmyn 18759 Chocktaw Rd. www. BendOregon Central Oregon the Pines, AD¹1672 Well built and impecbath, wine room, gym, High Desert Realty RealEstate.com Real Estate TEAM Birtola Garmyn Theater room, family 541-312-9449 cably cared for home High Desert Realty $212,950• on 1 acre. Ad¹2002 and great room $389,000• 1st Time on www. BendOregon 541-312-9449 Deschutes Dr. TEAM Birtola Garmyn •Designer kitchen with Market RealEstate.com www. BendOregon •SW Bend High Desert Realty Viking appl. pkg. •Custom Built h o m e Bring Your horses! 3 RealEstate.com ~4 Bdrm, 2.5 bath 541-312-9449 JML Realty Group, with great mtn views bdrm, 2 bath, 1635 •Large room upstairs www. BendOregon 541-480-6790 •5 bdrm, 3 bath $549,000• Close to Old ~3 car garage, sq. ft. home with in541-480-0448 •great and family rooms credible RealEstate.com Mill mou n tain Tony Levison, Windermere plus office .4 Bdrm, 3 bath, 2628 views, 9.74 acres with 53709 River View Dr., Broker Central Oregon • 3 car garage. sq.ft. acres of COI irrigaNW Chalet with pic541-977-1852 Real Estate Barbara Myers, Broker 6 •Backs to canal, large tion, 2 2x48 s h o p, ture perfect river Windermere 541-923-4663 or lot with water feature 24x24 garage, h ot views. Ad ¹2152 Central Oregon $529,900 • Best views 541-480-7183 •Quiet cul-de-sac, min tub, MLS ¹201404593 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Real Estate in Central Oregon Windermere Central utes to Old Mill High Desert Realty •Spectacular views in all $329,999. Call Pam Oregon Real Estate 310 Willis Lane, Kendall Comey, 541-312-9449 Lester, Principal Brodirections Broker incredible NW style •3400 sq.ft. and quality 2809 SW 25th St., ker Century 21 Gold www. BendOregon 541-576-4742 estate on almost 90 Single level charmer Country Realty, Inc. RealEstate.com throughout Windermere acres. Ad ¹1362 54'I -504-1338 with RV area. •Light, bright and beau 5066 Snow Goose Rd. Central Oregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn AD¹1352 tiful $385,000• Move-in Custom cedar chalet Real Estate High Desert Realty •Low maintenance 6.76 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Ready on the river and shop. 541-312-9449 High Desert Realty . 2840 sq.ft. a n d 1 acres 16707 Old Military Dr., Ad ¹2142 www. BendOregon 541-312-9449 • Gated entrance and in custom built, owner TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com www. BendOregon a very private location spectacular views, •Heat pump, solar 8 2 High Desert Realty RealEstate.com Bill Kammerer, complete privacy. $55,000 • 17780 Wilt gas fireplaces 541-312-9449 Broker Ad ¹1032 Rd • Hardwoods, built-ins $229,000 • Picture Perwww. BendOregon 541-410-1200 TEAM Birtola Garmyn •11.25 acres, secluded fect and granite tile RealEstate.com Windermere High Desert Realty parcel near Sisters •4 Bdrm, 3 bath, 2110 ~4 Bdrm, 2.5 bath Central Oregon 16180 Lava Dr. 541-312-9449 •Recreational property sq.ft. •Landscaped & views. Real Estate Better than new www. BendOregon off the grid •Master has j a c uzzi Shera Felde, craftsman home on 1+ RealEstate.com •Please call listing bro- $859,000 3158 Shevlin shower and fireplace Broker acres. Ad ¹2062 ker for directions. •Backyard, d eck, 541-639-9309 Meadows, Bend 3166 NE Elizabeth Ct. Bill Kammerer, Broker TEAM Birtola Garmyn greenhouse 2 car ga Windermere •R.D. Building 8 design Beautiful home in NE High Desert Realty 541-410-1200 rage and RV hookup Central Oregon • Newly completed conBend w/enormous 541-312-9449 Windermere Rinehart, Dempsey Real Estate struction yard. Ad ¹2162 www. BendOregon Central Oregon 8 Phelps • 3553 sq.ft. & 42x16 RV TEAM Birtola Garmyn $225,000 • Dream Yard RealEstate.com Real Estate 541-388-0404 garage High Desert Realty •1526 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 Windermere 541-312-9449 $395,000 • Pristine $147,000 - $167,000• • 3 Bdrm, 2 full baths b ath & . 1 4 ac r e Central Oregon and 2 half baths, boTownhome www. BendOregon Desirable Condos fenced yard. Real Estate nus room plus office • Old Mill District •1 0 Bend W condo's •Oversized patio with RealEstate.com Jake Moorhead, Broker 2545 SW 43rd. Luxuri•4 bdrm, 3 bath '2 bdrm, 1 bath, 680 cover $399,900 • Amazing 541-480-6790 •Master on main floor sq.ft. ous home with stunYou will have to see Home John Taylor, Carol Armstrong, •Professionally manning views. Ad ¹2102 this one! •3224 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 3 aged and maintained. Broker Broker TEAM Birtola Garmyn Clair Sagiv, Broker bath 541-480-0448 54'I -390-2328 541-419-8758 Jake and Loretta High Desert Realty •Office and bonus, Moorhead, Brokers Windermere 541-312-9449 Windermere Windermere kitchen with granite, Central Oregon Central Oregon 541-480-6790 www. BendOregon Central Oregon .41 acres lot fenced Real Estate 541-480-2245 Real Estate RealEstate.com Real Estate JML Realty Group, Windermere 541-480-6790 Central Oregon 541-480-0448 Real Estate Windermere Central Oregon $524,900• Investors Real Estate Opportunity .Well main t ained 714 NW Ogden Ave. craftsman style NW downtown Bend four-plex, 1262 sq.ft. cottage with garage. units. Ad ¹2022 .2 bdrm, 2.5 bath with TEAM Birtola Garmyn attached single car 0 • High Desert Realty garages 541-312-9449 •Professionally m an www. BendOregon ages and tenant oc RealEstate.com cupied Christin Hunter, $344,000 • 2160 Broker Osprey 541-306-0479 •E agle Crest, 2 2 1 7 Windermere sq.ft., 4 bdrm, 3 bath Central Oregon •H ardwood and f i r e • e Real Estate place • .49 acre lot, 2 car ga Check out the rage classifieds online •On the 11th green www.bendbulletin.com JML Realty Group, 541-480-6790 Updated daily 541-480-0448 21920 Obsidian Ave. Windermere Bend 30+ acre Central Oregon paradise with huge Real Estate Cascade views. $64,900 • View Lot Ad ¹1552. •Okay for m a n u facTEAM Birtola Garmyn tured home High Desert Realty •Fabulous views, .33 541-312-9449 acres, water and elec www. BendOregon tric at street RealEstate.com Bea Leach, $365,000 • SandalBroker wood Dr. 541-788-2274 ~4 Bdrm, 3 bath, 2367 Windermere sq.ft. Central Oregon •Large backyard on .22 Real Estate acre lot 2330 NW Torsway St. •Quartz kitchen counter Perfect NW Bend fam- tops with s t ainless ily home on big appl .3 acre lot. Ad ¹2112 JML Realty Group, TEAM Birtola Garmyn 541-480-6790 A A A • Ig High Desert Realty 541-480-0448 541-312-9449 Windermere www. BendOregon Central Oregon RealEstate.com Real Estate $575,000• Two Dwellings •35 Acres with 27 acres of irrigation rtwo nice dwellings •Cascade mtn views •Barn, corrals and ma chine shed •North of Terrebonne Barbara Myers, Broker 541-480-7183 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate 60345 Cinder Butte Rd. 2000 sq.ft., Custom SW Bend home. AD ¹1052 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.com Price Reduced! 65440 Tweed Rd., Bend. Immaculate 20 acre estate w/Cascade views and guesthouse. Ad ¹1102 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.com $240,000• Stonehedge • Redmond, 4 bdrm, 3 bath •S ingle story, h u g e fenced lot •Canyon access, Clubhouse. Diane Barker, Broker 541-480-7777 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate $324,999• Tanglewood •SE Bend home located on a cul-de-sac •3 Bdrm & 3 bath •Updated kitchen, split level home on .17 acre lot Tony Levison, Broker 541-977-1852 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate 60360 Sunset View Dr. Custom single level home in Sunset View Estates. Ad ¹2032. TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.com $224,500 • Turnkey •2 Bdrm, 2 bath and 1168 sq.ft. •double car garage •Eagle Crest townhome •9th fairway and mtn views. Jeanette Brunot, Broker

NorthWestCrossing 2433 IW Droulllanl Ava • The Commonsmodel home • 1 & 2 8R duster cottages • Energy-efficient construction • landscapedcommonarea • Homes priced fromQ31,100 DIBECTIONS:Weston Skyliners Rd., right on

NW I mhi PsssDr.,right onNWDmuilard Ave.

roun en 1897 NW Monterey News

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• Cottage condominium • HOA covers yard work • Decorator finishes • Near NewportAve.shops • Priced at$349,$00 I'

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DIRECTIONR West on Newport Ave./Shevlin Park Rd.,righton NW Pence I ., Ielton MW MontereyPines,right onNWMonterey Mews.

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61076 Ruby Peak Ln. • Mid-Century Modern • Zero energydesign • Sustainable materials • Stylish decorator finishes ~ ILLS~ • Priced at$388,900

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DIRECTIONS: South on Brosterhous Rd., left on MarbleMountain I ., Ieft on Ruby Peak Ln.

20783 Hollls Ln. • Optional den or formal DR

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DIRECTIONS: FromParkway exit Reed Market Rd.eastbound, right on SE15th St., right on SE Hollis Ln.

20378 Penhollow Ln. • Elegant finishes • Tall vaulted ceiling • Traverlne masterbath • Three-car garage • Priced at$481POO DIBECTIONS: From SE3rd St., east on

Murphy Rd.,left onCouotry Club Dr.,right on AberdeenDr.,left on Penhollow Ln. PRINEVILLE

61263 Nornlng Tide Pl. • Granite tile counters • Stainless appliances

• Immaculate landscaping • Neighborhood pool &park • Priced at$325,000 DIBECTIOMS: South on Brosterhous

Rd., right onSunMeadowWay, right on Moming TidePl.

61163 Halley St. • Large patio, fenced yard • Island kitchen • Corner fireplace • Close to Old Mil • Priced atM1,fiOO DIBECTIONS: South on Brool'wood Blvd., I'

right on I dgepoleDr.,left on Galileo Ave., home sbsigl" ahead.

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413 IW Flagline Dr. • Two masler suites • Ground levelbelow main • Vaulted living room • Upper & lower decks • Priced at$48OWO OIBECTIOMS: West on Skyliners Rd., left on NW Flagline Dr.

19571 Blue Lake Lp. • In the Woods at BrokenTop • Bright intedor, large windows • 2 of 3 bedrooms ensuite • Deck facesmountainview • Priced at$61 $,000

DIBECTIOMS: FromSWCentury Dr.southbound, right onMt. WashingtonDr., left on Metolius Dr., left onDevil's Lake Dr., right on Blue lake Lp.

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• Hand crafted finishes • Formal living room • Cabinets built in place • Heat pump with AC • Priced at$28SPOO 3rd St. (Hwy.26), left on NEJuniper St., right on NEIsughlin Rd., left on NE Hudspeth Rd.

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1471 IE Hudspeth Rd.

DIRECTIONS: East through town on ME

• Enclosed bonus room • Open great room plan RE E D P0I N TE • !$!and kit bsn • Priced at$31$,$OO

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19482 Century Dr. • St¹king architecture • 11.5-ft great room ceiling • Master on mainlevel • Frontage road newly paved • Priced at$4$$,$00 DIRECTIOMS: From Bend Parkway, exit ColoradoAve westbound lefton SW Century 0r., continuetoward Mt. Bachelor,

watch for front ge roadon right past CampbellWay.

The Garner Group Real Estate

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E4 SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

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• Heavily treed, private acreage • Collins/Couch Market Road area • Readyaccessto parkand government land • Filtered mountain views • Irrigation rights might be available • Possible owner terms MLS¹2013095008

New Master-Planned Tawnhome Development in Midtownl • 3 bedroom townhomes starting at $257,500 • 4 units now under construction • Price includes custom level finishes with full landscaping, slab quartz countertops and energy efficient construction • Locationsupportsthe active Bend lifestylewith easyaccessto parks, trails, river and downtown

www.sthstreetCottages.com

Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker, Director of Lot Sales Call Ron Davis, Principal Broker j 541-480-3096

Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker j 541-408-3912

www.OregonRanchandHorse.com

541408-3912 j brian©bendpropertysource.com

brianObendpropertysource.com

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• CL Zone duplex • Allows for owner occupied living & business use • Great cap rate • 4 bedrooms, 2 baths • 1211 SF each unit, 0.32 acre

• Adjacent property at 354 Lee also available MLS¹201406979

Call or Text Jane Flood, Broker J 541-350-9993 JaneFlood00@gmail.com

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g • Only 7 minutes from downtown • Tetherow is a planned 700 acre community backing tonational forest and isthe perfect home base for discovering the best of Central Oregon from biking and hiking, rafting and kayaking, or dining and shopping Contact Brian for more information or a private tour. www. Tetherow.com

8THCOTTAGES STREET

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I III • Build your dream on this 1.52 acre Westside home sitefeaturing mature landscape & impressive Cascade Mountain views • Generous oversized lot offers privacy & flexibility for many design options • Situated in a cul-de-sac location with expansive views • Close proximity to river trail, neighborhood park & downtown Bend

• True 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths • Large .96 acre lot w/RV parking • Open kitchen & dining area • Large fenced yard + greenhouse • Front waparound deck

Call Shelly Swanson, Broker j 541-408-0086

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• Downtown living at its best • Charming single level • Hardwood floors • Beautifully maintained inside & out • Finished attic area • Fully equipped guest cottage

Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker j 541408-3912

Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker j 541-408-3912

brian@bendpropertysource.com

brian@bendpropertysource.com

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• 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths + office • Behind the gates on the 14th green • Open fioor plan • Newer furnace & air conditioning • Great entertainment deck MLS¹201404235 Call CJ Neumann, Broker 541410-3710 or Lisa Lamberto, Broker 541-610-9697 www.CJLisa.com

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• 3357 SF, great room concept with main on level master suite • 3 bedroom, 3 bath bonus room plus additional flex space • Wonderful primary home or investment/ rental property • Close proximity to river trail, The Village at NW Crossing, schools, restaurant & downtown Bend

1705 Mountain Ouail Drive

63168 Peale Street, Bend • Don't miss this wonderful one owner Craftsman home in quality neighborhood • No HOA's • 3 bedrooms, with a nice office/den with built-ins, 2.5 bath, 2293 SF • RV/ boat parking, open floor plan, granite counters, wood fioors, huge backyard, open great room • Storage shed and so much more • Call for rivate showin ! MLS¹201405529 Call Mary Stratton, Broker, j 541-419-6340 maryselhms©gmail.com

Call Shelly Swanson, Broker j 541408-0086

• 53557 Kokanee$490,000 Stunning custom home and lot with panoramic/river views. Large shop. MLS¹201304072 • 53610 Brookie - $420,000 Mature forest setting, private river access. Eco-conscious, Scandinavian inspire d home.MLS¹201303936 • 14234 Whitewater Lp - $425,000 Quality custom home with incredible workmanship: hickory cabinets, oak rails & floors. MLS¹201305640

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• Open floor plan & large .58 lot • Beautiful knotty pine accent • 4 beds, 3.5 baths+ loft • Great for residence or vacation rental • Peek-a-boo views of Mt. Bachelor • Two master suites • Abundant Sunriver entertainment MLS¹201407216

Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker j 541-408-3912

Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker j 541-408-3912

brianObendpropertysource.com

brian@bendpropertysource.com

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u • 3743 SF, 4 bedroom, 3 bath • Large well designed kitchen w/slab granite • Extensive hardwood flooring and mahogany cabinets • Master on main, spacious bonus room • Private fenced yard w/water feature • Friendly, desirable neighborhood • Only minutes from downtown MLS¹201407220 Call Myra Glrod, Principal Broker j 541-815-2400 or Pam Bronson, Broker j 541-788-6767 m ra. amteam©cascadesir.com

• Stunning Shevlin Ridge one level home, large 3-car garage • 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 3456 SF • Mountain inspired custom home • Upscale popular neighborhood • Gorgeous craftsm anship • Large kitchen, living space • Expanded deck & landscaping for rear privacy MLS¹201310941 Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker j 541-408-3912 www.bendpropertysource.com• brian@bendpropertysource.com

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60699 Golf Village Loop • 3672 SF on 1.04 acre • 4 bedrooms, 3 full & 2 half baths • Large office, bonus room • Two living areas • Floor to ceiling stone fireplace • Australian cypress hardwood flooring • Well maintained • 5-car garage MLS¹201400563 all Silvra tg t, roker.

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Eagle Crest ( $219,500

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• Eagle Creek chalet • Sold furnished

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541-7884861 j bendluxuryhomes©gmail.com

• Backs to common area

' • Nice upgrades • Good rental potential • 2 bed, 2 bath, 1361+ SF MLS¹201402559

• 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3167 SF • Rooftop terrace Cascade View • Gourmet kitchen, built-ins • Walking access to town/trails • Upgrades throughout • 2-car garage, personal elevator MLS¹201311003 see video at http://www.36swwallstreet.com/

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7991 SF 2.8 acres with 400' of private river frontage 800 SF guest cabin 4 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, indoor lap pool River & golf front property Adjacent 3.49 acre lot available at $799,000

www.crosswaterriverretreat.com

Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker j 541-408-3912

Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker j 541-408-3912

vhvw.bendpropertysource.com• brian@bendpropertysource.com

brianObendpropertysource.com

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• 3 bed, 4 bath, 3718 SF • Floor to ceiling rock FP, maple wood fioors 8 vaulted ceilings • Open country kitchen w/ newer appliances • Office w/built-ins, large master w/FP & loft • Private guest suite with separate entrance • Multiple outdoor areas for entertaining • Skylights for natural light MLS¹201407518 De ebbs, roker resident debtebbsgroup@ bendluxuryhomes.com(www.debtebbsgroup.com

17940 Parkway Lane ( $330,000 • Permitted GP building w/living quarter/loft • Bath, laundry area, septic, well 8 pumphouse • RV hookups inside & out, 100 amp breaker in shop • Great location between Sisters & Bend • Build your dream home while you live in loft area Or your Rv

MLS¹201301490

Call Ken Renner, Principal Broker j 541-280-5352

Call Joanne McKee, Broker j 541-480-5159

ken.renner©sothebysrealty.com

www.joanne©joannemckee.com

Broken Top Townhome ( $354,500

Close To Town Country Living ~ $815,000

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61771 SW Metolius Dr. • 3 beds, 3.5 baths, 1846 SF • Open floor plan • Light and bright • Master up or down • Gas fireplace • Plumbed for gas BBQ & hot tub

• 4 bed, 3 bath, 3381 SF • 10 irrigated acres w/wheel line • Cascade views • Shop, one 2-car garage+ office Ik den • Shop, 2- 5 car garage • 2 pollds

MLS¹201308637

MLS¹201405198

Call Ken Renner, Principal Broker j 541-280-5352 ken.rennerOsothebysreaIty.com

Call Bobby Lockrem, Broker j 541-480-2356 blockremOgmail.com


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY AUGUST2 2014 E5

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

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On the Dry Canyon - Redmond ~ $249,000 • Single level 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1618SF • All on 1/2 acre, openfloor plan • Sunroom areaoffliving room • Great deck for entertaining • Oversized 2-cargarage and room for the RV ' " MLS¹201405908 Call Rod Hatchell, Broker l 541-728-8812 "

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1903 SE Bronzewood Ave. ( $350,000

• Beautifully established Tanglewood neighborhood • Completely updated and I I ~ central A/C • 3 beds, 3 baths, den and bonus room • 2 levels of decks for

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rodhatchell@gmail.com

Snap Shot Loop ~ $479,750 •2completed luxurytownhomes • 4 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms • 2540 SF &2-car attachedgarage • Granite, hardwood &tile throughout • Easyliving in aparklikesetting • OwnerprivilegesatSeventh Mountain Resort • Next to WidgiCreek&the Dexhhttes RiverTrail MLS¹201307670

Call Jordan Grandlund, Principal Broker 541-420-1559 or Stephanie Ruiz, Broker 541-948-5196 www.Pointswestaend.com

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Peaceful Sunriver Location ( $398,880

Old Mill Townhome / $379,900

• 17613 (¹10)SparksLane, Sunriver • 4 bedroom,2.5 bath, 1810SF •Decksonlevelsaedlotsofpaved parking area • Charming greatroomdesign • Lava rockRreplace, vaulted wood ceiling • Close to SHARC aquatic & the

659 SW Peak View Place, Bend • Desirable location overlooking the Old Mill • 2-car garage • Hardwood & tile Roors • Near neighborhood trails • 3 bedroom, 3 bath, 1763 SF MLS¹201400889

outside living

• Large yard, shed and RV parking

river

Call Natalie Vandenborn, Broker l 541-508-9581

The Norma DuBoisand Julie Moe Team, Brokers

Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222

Nvandenborn@gmail.com

541-312-4042 l www.TeamNormaAndJulie.com

www.gregsellscentraloregon.com

2968 Chianti ) $499,000

3185 NW Fairway Heights Dr. ( $724,900

SingleLevel Home On Acreage ~$950,000 • 4bedrooms 35baths 2942SF • 2009 Sun Forest remodel

• 3 beds, 3.5 baths, 3316 SF • .47 acre private lot • 3-car garage fk 82 woodwrapped windows •TrueCraftsm an style . i • • Incredible quality throughout!! MLS¹201402349

• 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2679 SF • Large bonus room • 4-car garage • Meticulously maintained MLS¹201404719 Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222

Call Jodi Kearney, Broker l 541-693-4019

www.gregsellscentraloregon.com

jodirebroker@hotmail.com

• 2 master suites

• 10 stall barn w/tack & washroom • 95x190 outdoor arena, loafing sheds & paddocks •Rideoutto DeschutesNational Forest MLS¹201406186

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Call Carol Osgood or Korren Bower, Brokers 541-419-0843 www.carolosgood.com

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• Rivers Edge Village gated community • Awesome views of the signature hole, pond • 1921 SF, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths

• Custom Pahlisch built • Shop/RV garage

• Large remodeled gourmet kitchen with hardwood floor • Just minutes from river trail, golf and downtown Bend • Pool, spa and tennis courts

• No HOA's

MLS¹201407357

• 5 bedroom • Close to CE Lovejoy's Shopping Center

5 4 1-350-9993

JaneFlood00©gmail.com

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• Amazing finishes, not a drive by • Office/den or guest suite on main level • Bonus room or 5th bedroom • 10 ft. coffered ceilings in the great room MLS¹201402348

• Priced to sell Ca or Text Jane F oo, Bro er

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Situated on a private, flat lot Backs Anderson Ranch 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths 2828 SF on .23 acre 2-car garage with storage

5 4 1-350-9993

JaneFlood00©gmail.com

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MLS¹201401895

Ca or Text Jane F oo, Bro er

• Top quality finishes throughout

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65683 Swallows Nest Lane

• This magnificent villa at Pronghorn comes fully furnished including membership to Central Oregon's premiere golf community Pronghorn at that tim e

• Convenient, desirable location Call Silvia i g h t , r o k er, B R, SF , Green 541-788-4861 l bendluxuryhomesegmail.com

Ca or Text Jane F oo, Bro er

2355 SF on .53 acres 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths Oversized 3-car garage 2 living areas and a sunroom Lake and golf course views at Widgi Creek! This private, turnkey residence has been primarily used as a vacation home and is in immaculate, move-in condition! Priced to sell!

5 4 1-350-9993

I I Silvia night, r o k er, B R, SF , r e e n 541-788-4861 l bendluxuryhomesegmail.com

JaneFlood00@gmail.com

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• Other homes will be available for viewing in

• Private outdoor hot tub

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Ca Ke y Horton, Bro er l 541-508-9163 kellyebendluxuryhomes.com

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• 3602 SF, 4 bedroom, 3 bath+ bonus i study • Breathtaking Cascade Mountain views • Incredible attention to detail • Custom touches throughout • Projection home theater system • Luxurious upgrades • htt: vimeo.com 101758561 MLS¹201407422 Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker l 541-408-3912 brianebendpropertysource.com I

• 4 bedrooms (2 main level suites), 3 baths • 3299 SF, .24 acre • One owner custom home with many quality features • Open, inviting great room, additional family room • 3-car tandem garage /2 with storage • Surround sound, radiant in-floor heat, heat pump, central A/C, wired for security. Call for more info! MLS¹201400474

C all Silvia i g h t , r o k er, B R, SF , r e e n 541-788%861 l bendluxuryhomesegmail.com

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• NW Contemporary design built by Madrone Construction LLC • Situated on an elevated homesite with mtn. views

• StunningCascade Mountain views • Custom home 3718 SF, 3 bed, i

2.5 bath • Quality finishes: knotty alder cabinets ,granite countertops, two fireplaces, birch wood & tile floors • Bonus room, office, security system, 3-car garage • Landscaped, sprinkler system, patio • Club amenities included with membership MLS¹201402950

Cal Pam Mayo-Phillips, or Brook Havens, Pnnopal Brokers 541-923-1376 l www.desertvalleygroup.com

• Designed as a 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath with main level master suite • Bonus room plus a triple car garage • Close proximity to clubhouse, trails and downtown Bend C llf d d i t i Id r i l d p i i g

Call Shelly Swanson, Broker l 541-408-0086

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• Built by Timberline Construction of Bend • Designed by Brandon Olin • This contemporary home features 3 bedrooms, 3 baths • Complete with a bonus room and den/office • Built to Earth Advantage and Energy Star standards • Triple car garage • Near clubhouse, trails and downtown Bend • Call for additional details

• Situated on Broken Top's 12th fairway • Beautiful custom cherry wood finishes • Vaulted great room w/floor-toceiling fireplace • Elegant main level master suite • Den/office with custom built-in shelving • 4 bed, 4 bath, 3553 SF MLS¹201407410

Call The orma u ois and Pulie oe eam, ro ers

Call Shelly Swanson, Broker l 541-408-0086

541-312-4042 l www TeamNormaAndJulie.com

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• Stunning design reminiscent

of the Hamptons JI • Open floor plan, fabulous kitchen • Master suite & den on main level • Light & airy, casual yet elegant • 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 3834 SF,.38 acre • On the 7th fairway at Widgi Creek MLS¹201404299

Listed by San y Ko moos, Bro er, CRS 541-408-4309 www.bestbendhomes.com

Call or Text Jane Flood, Broker l 541-350-9993

• Outstanding Cascade Mountain views • Dramatic vaulted living room • Gourmet kitchen with gas fireplace • Lush landscaping and extensive decking • Gardener's dream 13x13 greenhouse • 4 bed, 6 bath 4549 SF MLS¹201407359 The Norma DuBois an Ju ie Moe Team, Bro ers

JaneFloodODOgmail.com

541-312-4042 l www.TeamNormaAndJulie.com

• Spectacular mountain views • Ultimate quality, immaculate throughout • Located at The Ridgeat Indian Ford • Gated community with irrigated greenways • 3 bedroom, 4 bath, 3296 SF, 1.87 acres • Private equestrian center located in 100+ acresof common area

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• Stunning majestic Cascade Mountai nviews • World famous for livestock prodvctloh • 345 acreswith 339acres PoleCreekirrigation water rights •Ranchstylehome,3704SF,3bedrooms,3.5baths • Two barns- 53stals, officesandshop area •Two additionalhomes,4stockedponds,3holegolfcourse • Adjoins NationalForestandSisters UBG T lya e-ot-a-H dpoperty MIS¹2|X406179

pam Mayopheps,541 Astl1513 or Brook HI ens, 541-6044788, Principal Brokers l www.desertvalleygroup.com


E6 SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN Homes for Sale $229,000

Eagle Crest Chalet •Fully Furnished •On Ridge Course •3 Bdrm, 2 bath ~Turn Key ready Bea Leach, Broker 541-788-2274 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate $659,000• 39 Acre Gem in Powell Butte •S pectacular mtn 8 Smith Rock views •39 Acres fenced and cross fenced and 38 acres of irrigation •3 Bdrm, 2 bath home and 1530 sq.ft. •Six stall barn, hay loft, tack room and pasture •Ponds, green house, outbuildings and chicken coop Christin Hunter, Broker 541-306-0479 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate $175,000• Close to Canyon •Old Town Redmond •3Bdrm, 1.5 bath •Large lot, alley access, close to schools Diane Barker, Broker 541-480-7777 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate $129,500• 1.49 Acre Homestead •3 Bdrm, 2 bath •Private master bdrm ~Wrap around decks •Large kitchen and dining area ~Turn around driveways Dave Disney, Broker 541-410-8557 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate $248,000• NE Redmond •Large lot with separate fenced in are for dogs and RV parking •Landscaped with sprinkler system ~4 bdrm, 2.5 bath Tony Levison, Broker 541-977-1852 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate $595,000 • Sisters •End of the road privacy •Open kitchen, dining area and deck •Large barn/shop •Horse property, 2 mi. to Sisters airport Bill Kammerer, Broker 541-410-1200 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate $659,000• Spectacular Views .4152 sq.ft., 4 bdrm, 3 bath •huge master upstairs with deck •Formal living and din ing room •Great room and base ment •Completely furnished. Bea Leach, Broker 541-788-2274

Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate 118 Acre Ranch j 1,249,500 • 2 homes, 91 acres irrigation • Hay barn, corrals, shop • BLM out the gate • MLS 201406'I 05 Steve Payer, Broker, GRI 541-480-2966

MORRIS REAL ESTATE dyyy ~

Homes for Sale

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1.8 Acres with Cas- 3 b edroom 2 ba t h 59+ Acres Fenced 60523 Seventh Mt 9560 SW Geneva View A Must See Home - Beautiful home in desir- Beautiful log home on 3 cade Mtn Views manufactured home Irrigation, adjacent to Drive. 10% equity Rd, Terrebonne. Nice, Spacious 3bd/3bath able Greens subdivi- acres. 1718 sq.ft., 2 $ 189,900. 3 bed - on 1 acre. Property is g overnment lan d . shares, 3 bdrm, 3 level 1-acre building well main t ained sion with golf course b drm, 1 b a th, d e rooms, 2 bathrooms, just off State Recre- Open concept living bath. $58,500. lot w/many trees is 3550sf home with re- & c l ubhouse v ery tached 28x50 1716 sq ft. New con- ation Road and backs with 3 bed r ooms, Mara Stein, perfect for b u ilding c ent u pgrades t o close! 3 bedroom, 2 garage/shop, RV struction, interior color up to BLM Land, close den/office, 2.5 baths, Principal Broker, your dream home or kitchen & bathrooms. bath, 1469 sq ft. Ex- storage, full hookup, 541-420-3400 Pamir package options avail. t o th e L i t tle D e s- & sun room, plus nice vacation home. Come Neatly l a n dscaped tremely low mainte- park setting, 1 buildMLS¹201401007. chutes. Det a ched 2 bedroom apartment. Properties, Inc. enjoy all that Crooked with sprinkler system. nance and move-in able lo .t MLS Call Gail Day, double car garage. 4 8x60 hay barn + River Ranch has to 4.6 acres with 4 acres ready. Open f l oor ¹201404378. 541-306-1018 Home is currently on horse barn w/7 stalls, 60552 Elkai Woods Dr. offer - Golf, tennis, of COI. 36x36 shop/ plan, gas fireplace, $279,900. Pam Central Oregon Realty the rental market, or 10 pens, triple garage, 3 Bdrm, 3 bath, ex- swimming, hik i ng, barn. Horse property vaulted ceiling, gran- Lester, Principal BroGroup, LLC RV hoo k -ups. quisite oak floors, pri- fishing, disc golf, and with plenty of fencing ite kitchen counters, ker, Century 21 Gold purchase it for your 3 vate, deck, overlook- all home . $889,000. the wild l ife. & c r os s f e n cing. new interior/exterior Country Realty, Inc. 190 Acre Horse Prop- p ersonal ing g o l f co u rse. $34,950 ¹201405922 MLS Amazing C a scade paint, tile bathroom 541-504-1338 erty - Less than 1 mile $119,500 $478,000. John L. Scott Real ¹201400593 Mtn views. Motivated counters, bonus room from city limits. 2160 MLS¹201405962. Mara Stein, Principal Dennis Haniford, Estate 541-548-1712 Karin Powers, Broker, seller. $515 , 000. and/or office above sq ft 2 bedroom, 2 Broker, 541-420-3400 541-410-0234 Principal Broker, ¹201403502 garage. New air con- Beautiful, luxurious 2 bath home. Several 5 A cres w /Mountain Pamir Properties, Inc. 541-536-1731 Century 21 Gold John L. Scott Real ditioning. $194,000 bedroom 3 bath 2911 - 3 b drm, 2 outbuildings including Views sq ft home features Country Realty Estate 541-548-1712 ¹201401863 barn wit h o u tdoor Cascade Realty bath, 1620 sq ft, irri- 60691 Golf Village Lp. extensive rock exteJodi Clark, Principal arena. 3 tax lots, 120 4.77 Acres in Tumalogated, 36x40 shop, 3 Bdrm, 3 bath, 3281 Affordable High Desert B ANK OWNED! 3 . 4 Broker, 541-771-8731 rior. Large waterfall in acres in the Urban Green ex t e nsive sq.ft., master suite retreat. Custom knotty pas t ures, fenced, f ront yard w it h 3 Century 21 acres, 3 bdrm, 2.5 Reserve. $495,000. sys t e m. w ith f ireplace a n d mountain views, pond, sprinkler ponds. Slate entry, pine cabinetry, gran bath, 2 bonus rooms, Gold Country Realty Call Kris Warner at M LS¹ 2809 2 2 5. barn & lovely home. gym, vaulted ceilings, ite tile c o untertops granite counters, tile cathedral ce i l ings, 541-480-5365 $265,000. Pam Highly desirable locamaple inlaid f l oor, and slate floors is in floor, bdrm + office on walnut floo r ing, Look at: MLS¹201206667 Lester, Principal Brotion. $569,000. magnificent rock wall hickory cabinets. exeasy-care 3 bdrm, main level, 2810 sq.ft., Bendhomes.com Duke Warner Realty ker, Century 21 Gold fireplace, s p acious this Call Kit Korish at posed pillars, arched bath, 1402 sq. ft. built in 2 002, 1764 541-382-8262 Country Realty, Inc. light kitchen, central 2 541-330-2120 walkways, d o u blehome. Easy access to sq.ft. shop w/full guest for Complete Listings of 541-504-1338 MLS¹201308768 Area Real Estate for Sale i sland e ating b a r , 191 Highland Meadow sided see-thru fireS unriver, th e C a s quarters. MLS Lp., Eagle Crest Re- Duke Warner Realty seating for 6. Tile roof Call The Bulletin At cade Lakes and Mt. 201406015 $368,800. place. Beautiful mtn 541-382-8262 Beautiful irrigated propsort, 2321 sq. ft., 3 paver driveway, triple views, ultimate floorBachelor $ 2 15,000. Pam Lester, Principal 541-385-5809 bdrms, 2y/~ baths, of- 4 bedroom, 3 b a t h, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail garage with plenty of MLS¹201401536 Call Broker, Century 21 erty- 32x36 shop, lush ing in garage, wet bar, ou t d oor theater room, s u rstorage, decks look- Bill fice and formal dining. 2496 sq ft in great loPan t o n at Gold Country Realty, pastures, arena. Bring y o ur round-sound speakGreat room plan. All c ation with lots o f At: www.bsndbulletin.com ing out over 11th tee 541-420-6545 Inc. 541-504-1338 animals! 1584 sq ft. 3 ers, fenced, sprinkler P r i vateDuke Warner Realty premium fi n ishes. room for your pets & 5 Acres w/shop, well and l a ke . 2 bath, $397,097. Lynn toys! Large spacious and septic installed, fenced paved patio. 541-382-8262 system. $43 9 ,500 Beautiful Family Home- bedroom, Candice Anderson, Johns, Principal Bro- home with separate C ascade mt n a n d Golf membership in¹201403611 4 bedroom, 3 bath on Broker, 541-788-8878 ker, 5 4 1 -408-2944, living 8 family rooms, Smith Rock v iews. cluded. $797,500. Jodi Clark,Principal A LIFE IN over 4 acres. Double John L. Scott Wes Johns, Broker vaulted ceilings and Broker, 541-771-8731 PARADISE! attached plus doubled 1 200 s q .ft. sh o p Mara Stein, Principal Real Estate, Bend 541 408-2945. CenBroker, 541-420-3400 2 Bdrm, 1 bath, 800y Century 21 w/1 3x13 RV d o ors detached garage and www.johnlscottbend.com spacious kitchen. This tral Oregon Resort reverse living floor Gold Country Realty Sq.ft., rustic cottage large shop. Beautiful and 400 amp service. Pamir Properties, Inc. Realty on a 2.99y acre par- yard, country living Re d mond/Tethplan has forced air in Log Home in cel. Come view this c lose to town, Beautiful Cros s ing. 607 Golf Village Lp. 20 Acres j $599,000 heating and air condi- erow CRR - $350,000. 3 Bend Park - 3 bed, 2 Best Lot. 4 acres a mazing piece o f $214,000. MLS $465,000. • 4 bedroom, 3 bath tioning with additional oversized bedrooms, bath, 2114y sf home Call with pond. $199,000. paradise on the outMLS¹201304219 home bedrooms and living ¹ 201405423. 2.5 bathrooms, 2060 in park-like setting. Mara Stein, skirts of R e dmond. Call Candy Yow, • Horse property, barn, space d o w nstairs. Pam Lester, Principal sq ft, s everal out- Main dwelling plus Principal Broker, Built on the curve of 541-410-3193 irrigation Large w r ap-around Broker, Century 21 541-420-3400 Pamir buildings, main floor guest house/rental on the Deschutes River, Duke Warner Realty Gold Country Realty, • Off grid features deck, storage a nd m aster Ko i p o n d. a total of 0.55 acre. Properties, Inc. this p erfect s m all 541-382-8262 • MLS 201405935 double garage. 30x36 Inc. 541-504-1338 MLS¹201402993 T he 1440 N E 1 0 t h Michelle Tisdel PC, shop; fenced pasture 60462 Elkai Woods Dr. 817 NE Shoshone Dr., home has amazing Call Jeanne Scharlund, dwelling has e n giviews of the mounDesert Skies j Broker, ABR, E-pro area. $224 , 0 00 3 Bdrm, 3 bath, build- Redmond - Hard to 541-420-7978 neered har d wood tains and the river. 541-390-3490 $339,000 ¹201404040 ers own bamboo Central Oregon Realty find 4bd/2ba home. All floors in living, dining Detached garage has • 3110 sq.ft. Dennis Clark, Principal floors, lots of extras. kitchen appliances in- a studio-type room • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath Group, LLC & bedrooms; MitsubBroker, 541-771-8730 $495,000. cluded, even refrig- with an extra bath and • Landscaped yard, ishi electric heat 8 Century 21 Mara Stein, erator & fre e zer. shower Beautiful log home on 3 cool system (along att a ched. planter boxes Gold Country Realty Principal Broker, a cres! 1718 sf , 2 with other heating opVaulted ceilings & $425,000 • MLS 201405448 541-420-3400 Pamir MORRIS many large windows MLS¹201309622 bdrms, 1 bath, de- tions); and fantastic View of the Cascades. Mark Valceschini PC, Properties, Inc. tached 28x50 garage/ cabinets REAL ESTATE to 1st in the light. well w / C orian 3 bdrm, 3 bath, 3713 Bobbie Strome, Broker, CRS, GRI maintained & beautishop, RV storage/full c ountertops i n t h e IM~& m ly ~ d~ 4 sq. ft. home on 1.15 Principal Broker 541-383-4364 60504 Seventh Mt hookup, park setting. fully lan d scaped. kitchen. Adj a cent acre. 2 bonus rooms John L Scott Real Drive. 2 Bdrm, 2.5 20 Acres In Sisters j 1 bu i ldable lo t . guest house & main Nice, quiet neighbor- Estate 541-385-5500 and wine cellar! MLS bath, slate and tile, 714,900 hood in NE Redmond. $279,900 home together for 201405016. • 2272 sq.ft. farmhouse end unit, e A must see! MLS¹201404378 Call $510,000. Colleen Dillingham, • 3 bedroom, 2 bath extra yard. $319,000. TURN THE PAGE Pam Lester, Principal $152,000. MLS¹201309647 Broker 541-788-9991 • Breathtaking Cascade Mara Stein, MORRIS MLS¹201404758 Broker, Century 21 For More Ads John L. Scott Real John L. Scott views Principal Broker, REAL ESTATE Gold Country Realty, John L. Scott Real Estate 541-548-1712 Real Estate, Bend • MLS 201307141 541-420-3400 Pamir The Bulletin Estate 541-548-1712 Inc. 541-504-1338 johnlscottbend.com Becky Brunoe, Broker Properties, Inc. 541-350-4772

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2.49 Acres In Tumalo j $649,000 • 2817 sq.ft. remodeled • 4 bedroom, 3 bath • Cascade Mountain views • MLS 201405709 Greg Langhaim, Broker 541-316-5903 •

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9AM- I I AM

MORRIS REAL ESTATE IM yw yyy~~

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Larry Jacobs

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26 acres with Timber - 4 b edroom, 2 bat h , 2464 sq ft home with

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4-car garage.

Broker

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54 I -480-2329

$419,000. MLS20120827 Call Duke Warner

Realty Dayville at 541-987-2363

2 Master Suites, 1 up/1 down, 4 BR, 3.5 BA, 2369 SF, hardwood floors, granite counters, RV parking, fenced & landscaped. Pick y ou r c o l ors! $279,000. MLS¹201406397 Call Pam Lester, Principal Broker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338

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WHAT IS THE VALUE OF YOUR HOME IN TODAY'S MARKET? STOP IN &VISIT ONE OF OUR REAL ESTATE EXPERTS TO FIND OUT!

360' BREATHTAKING

VIEWS! Sisters, Or13240 SW Horny Hol- egon. 105 acres borlow Trail, Terrebonne der BLM. Bring offers- Nice acreage with $649,000 5-stall 36x48 horse johnlscott.com/ 51631 barn and plenty of Kellie Cook, B r oker riding area. Separate 541-408-0463 runs & foaling stall, John L. Scott rubber matted floors & Real Estate, Bend aisle w/cross ties, johnlscottbend.com large tack room, up- 360' M t n a n d Smith stairs loft & hay stor- Rock views, p a ve age, plenty of storage 4.92 acres in for toys in the 24x36 road, metal pole barn/shop Tetherow Crossing, fees approved. w/concrete flo o rs. septic MLS ¹ 20 1 404802. $149,950. $189,999. Call Pam MLS¹201403194 Lester, Principal BroKarin Powers, Broker, ker, Century 21 Gold 541-410-0234 Country Realty, Inc. Century 21 Gold 541-504-1338 Country Realty 13439 SW Chipmunk 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, Rd, Terrebonne. Very 2492 sq ft. Rare 2.58 well kept 3 BD, 2 BA acre ranchette with acres irrigation; home on 5.25+ acres. 1.5 Home sits back from fenced 8 cross-fenced irrigation pond, road for privacy and with offers outstanding mtn 36x36 shop with 3 and 12-ft door, views. Large kitchen bays w/walk-in pantry, large 12x26 lean-to. Farmwas e ntirely master suite, family house room w/fireplace and r emodeled in 2 0 07 and has uplarge covered porch. grades & many amenities. Fenced yard, deerfloor m aster, fenced garden area, Main living & famplenty of space for separate rooms, lots of storyour horses! $225,000 ily age n e w ex t erior MLS¹201403719 decking, large Karin Powers, Broker, mud/laundry r o o m, 541-410-0234 white vinyl fencing. Century 21 Gold $359,000 Country Realty ¹201404392 137233 Mohawk Drive, Dennis Clark, Principal Crescent. Very moti- Broker, 541-771-8730 vated seller! AssumCentury 21 able loan at 4%. 2.6 Gold Country Realty acres with 3 bed/2 ba, 3 bedroom, 2 b a th, 1664 sf, attached ga- 1906 sq ft. Outstandrage, 3 RV sites, parmountain views tially fenced. Great lo- ing a c ustom built cation, lots of privacy and that you will fall $229,000.. MLS home in love with! Enjoy 201401156 Central Oregon eveCall Kerry nings while relaxing ,541-815-6363 on the 2000 sq ft redCascade Realty wood deck, plumbed 173 Highland Meadow with gas for your BBQ Lp. Eagle Crest Re- and extensive accent sort. 2321 sq. f t.,3 lighting inside and out. ca b inetry, bdrm, 2y/~ bath, office Custom and formal d ining. high-end appliances, Great room plan. All fireplace, central vac premium fi n i shes. system, even a built-in MLS¹ 201300723 dog house under the $410,713. Lynn Johns, entry stairs! $296,400 Principal Bro k e r, ¹201403366 541-408-2944, Wes Dennis Clark, Principal J ohns, Broker 5 4 1 Broker, 541-771-8730 408-2945, Central OrCentury 21 egon Resort Realty Gold Country Realty

f

CHARMING WESTSIDEBUNGALOW

PERFECT STARTER HONE

WEST HILLS JEWEL

3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1396sq.ft. with new . wood, tile, carpet andwainscotting. Master has vaulted ceiling, walk-in-closet. New: roof,fenced backyard,hot tub and RV::

parking. $195,000CALLJASENCHAVEZ::

3 bedrOOm, 3 bath, 2768 Sq.ft. homeOn.34 of an acre in the upper Westhills. Hillside setti ng in the trees. Also has private guest quarters over the garage. $469,000 CALL KIM KAHLAT 541-480-1662. MLS:

AT 891-54'j6. NLS:201407349

201407092

BEAUTIFUL CRAFTSMAN

HOME ON NICE LOT

Recentl y remodeled 2 bedroom,2 bath home 3 bedroom,2.5 bath,2416sq.R.homeinAwbmy Older home onlot with well andseptic. City with greatroomfloor plan,olce/den. $389,000 Village. Mature landscaping,open floor plan water and seweralso to lot. Buildable and CALL TERRY SK jERSAA AT 541-3831426 andvaulted ceilings.$474, 900 CALLBROOK dividable. Adjoininglot for salealso. $52,500 NLI:201406942 CRIAZZO AT 541-550-8408 OR AUBRECALL CANDY YOW AT 541-410-3193.

BEAUTIFULSADDLEBACKLOGHONE

CHESHIR EAT541-598-4583. NLS:201405950

MLi: 201405916

AMAZING SUNSETS!

LIYING AT ITS BEST

PEACEFUL COUNTRY LIVING

THE PRICE IS RIGHT!

Beautiful customhome,approx.. 3253sq.ft. on 4.5 acres with.5 acmirrigation. Privatewell, pond„ close in privateandsecludedwith too many extrasto mentions.$672,900.CALLCAROLYN ENICKAT541-419-0717. NLS:201304783

Single level 3 bedroom, 2bath,slab granite„ AC, gas, fenced yard, nice neighborhood. Seller is motivated. $238,900 CALL CAROLYN EMICK AT 541-419-0717. MLi: 201406773

WEST HILLS HOME AND LOT STUNNING MOUNTAIN YIEWS

On 2.4 acres, minutes from the heart of Bend.. Big Cascade Hountains and Deschutes River Located in the heart of the Old Mill Distylct. 3 bedroom, 3 bath custom home with 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1850sq. R.home on 3bedroom,3.5bath, bonusroom,ILRand sunroomand views. 5.89acreswith 2 aczs irrigation. Property 3 master suites, 3.5 baths,3070 sq. R.with views adjoining .26 lot Open spacewith views. almost 5 acres. Irrigated pastures with 2650sq.R.$474,900 CALLMICHELEANDERSONAT borders Tumal o StatePark.Room foreveryoneand of the river and mountains. Stand-alone unit $725,000 CALL jAYNEE BECK AT pond. Great horse property. $569,000

541-633-9760ar IACQUIESEBULSKYAT 280-+H9. everything. $1,295,000 CALLJAYNEEBECKAT $819,000 cALL IAYNEE BEcKAT 541-480-0988 IILS:201%6438 MLS:201400102 541880-0988.MLS:201303572

541-511-480-0988 ORPETEVAN DEUSEN CALL KIT KORISH AT 541-330-2120. AT 541-480-3538.NLS:201406052 NLS:201308768

•8 •5

CLOSE TO OLD MILL DISTRICT

ELKHORN ESTATES

PRIVATE BROKENTOP ESTATE

CUL.DE.SACLOTIN BROKENTOP PANORAMICMOUNTAIN YIEWS

3 bedroom,lbath,1506sq.R.home.Frenchdoors 4 bedroom, 3bath, 2176sq.R, uving andfamily Custom built, 3 bedroom,3.5bath, 3541sq, Just over half an acre, this heavily treed, 5 bedroom, 5bath, garden paradiseperfect to private dining room. Custom moldings,A/C, rooms, pnvate backyard with hot tub. Fiyy.place R. home with open great room floor plan eleva ted lotfeaturespeek-a-boo mountainand for entertaining. Open flowing floor plan large master bedroomwith Jacuzzitub. Beautiful in family room. Short distance to Old Mill, nver andradi ant floorheat, $949,900 CALL golf courseviews. Quiet street with tons of with chef'skitchen,vaulted ceilingsand secret

landscaping. $260,000 CALL LARRYIACOBS trails, parks and shopping. $324,900 CALLLARRY TAMMY SETTLE MIER AT 541-410-6009. AT 541-480-2329.MLS:201005037 IAcOBs AT541-480-2329. MLs:201406882 NLS:201300357

privacy.$273,500 CALLTAMMYSETTLENIER rooms. $1,500000 CALLTERR Y SKjERSAA AT 541-410-6009.MLS:201403100 AT 541-383-1426.MLS:201406002


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 E7

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

For homes online WW W b e n d h o m e S . C o m

THEBULLETIN i SATURDAY, AUGUST2,2014 745

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Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

ADVERTISING SECTION E — II

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Cascade Views I Custom Cra f tsmanDarling Home in Quiet Elegant, Private Living- Fantastic Sisters set- Great home in very deKnock your socks LAZY RIVER SOUTH setting. Main dwelling Style Home - Large NW Neighborhood - 3 Immaculately de- ting. Custom 2177 sq. sirable location at the off views! R emodeled 3535 y $425,000 plus guest • 2736 sq.ft. Iog home 1/4 acre corner lot in bedrooms, 2 baths, signed an d m a i n- ft. 3 b drm, 2 b a th base of Pilot Butte. 3 •38 acres, irrigated Sq.ft. home with 4 house/rental on a to- • 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath SW Redmond. 2200 1483 SF . F r e shly tained 3 bedroom, 2.5 home on an acre lot bedroom 1 bath 1050 •Beautiful 2600 s q.ft. bdrm + offic e and 3 tal of 0 .55y acres. • 4.49 acres, backs sf home features 3 painted, o v e rsized b ath home sits o n with a 2 4 x40 shop sq ft. Extensive cushome baths. Master bath Main dwelling floors state land bedrooms, 3 baths, master suite, all appli- 0.96 acres on Awbrey that includes a 600 tom tile work includ- •120x64 barn with shop with large jetted tub & are engineered hard- • MLS 201401158 m aster o n mai n , ances included. Large Butte. Spacious floor sq. ft. guest quarters. ing granite tile kitchen and stalls new tile shower. Mewood in living, dining, Robert Farrell, Broker beautiful custom me- corner lot, fully land- plan is perfect for en- $419,000. dia room family room MLS and bath countertops ~20 minutes to Bend & bedrooms. Mitsub541-948-9606 dallion t i l e en t r y, scaped, raised gar- tertaining. $735,000. 201404876. Kim and backsplash, cus- www.johnlscott.com/74 h uge kitchen w i t h ishi electric heating & Warner 541-410-2475 tom t i l e flo o ring 510 handcrafted cabinets g ranite kitch e n den beds. $182,500. Call Terry Skjersaa, 541-383-1426. MLS cooling syst e m. counters, slate floors, MLS¹201403742. Duke Warner Realty t hroughout most o f Jean Nelsen, Broker & granite counters, Kitchen has fantastic Cherry cab i nets, Julie Fountain, 201402446 home, large pantry 541-420-3927 walk-in pantry, sun541-788-2519 cabinets with Corian stainless appliances, Duke Warner Realty French Style river view back deck, f e nced John L. Scott r oom with hot t u b. countertops. Adjacent radiant floor h e at, Central Oregon Realty 541-382-8262 Real Estate, Bend Home has cedar eves Extensive parkMORRIS Home w/River-Bank yard. www.johnlscottbend.com with copper accents. guest house and main media room w/surGroup, LLC ing w it h d e tached REAL ESTATE Equestrian Facility on Setting! Exquisite ach ome together f o r round sound, overg a rage/shop, E xterior siding o n IM p W dy~ ~ a~ 4 4+ acres. 3 bdrm, 2 coutrements: Granite, 2-car $510,000 sized 3-car garage, Corner lot location. 3 a ttached 1 ca r g a - Large 0.48 acre fenced h ome, garages & bath, 1950 sq ft cushardwood, m a rble, Close to Old Mill DisMLS¹201309647 RV parking, and the bdrm, 2~/~ bath 1712 tom home w/features rage & carport, RV with plenty of room storage bldg have just Venetian plaster, parking. $ 2 18,000. lot trict. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, list Bobbie Strome, goes on! sq. ft., master on mail, in every room makes tile, for your family and been painted. Watch stone & st a i nless. 1506 sq. ft . h ome. Principal Broker great room down with this very comfortable. Wood-burning f i r e- ¹201310366 $337,900. MLS¹ their hobbies. Living the wildlife from the French doors to pri- 201402637 bonus room upstairs. John L Scott Real Clark, Principal room with 2 skylights, wrap-around deck or hay storage and place, top line appli- Jodi vate d i ning r o om. John L. Scott Real Estate 541-385-5500 fenced yard with fire Barn, Broker, 541-771-8731 family room has a gas go to your private ac36x36 shop. $386,000 ances, metal c l ad Custom m ouldings, Estate 541-548-1712 pit area. 21 f ireplace w it h ti l e c ess to 300y f t o f MLS¹201400240. windows and so much GoldCentury C anyon Creek, 1 3 A/C, large m aster Candice Anderson, Country Realty hearth 8 s u r round. Little Deschutes River Call Candy Yow, Acres - View elk and bdrm with Jacuzzi tub. C ustom h om e w i t h Broker 541-788-8878 more! Listen to the Seller will give credits frontage for f ishing, 541-410-3193 tranquil ripple of the deer from your living MLS 201405037. Call beautiful views in a John L. Scott Advertise your car! for new dishwasher & swimming or floating. Duke Warner Realty room with breathtak- Larry river below. while enJ a cobs at desirable location just Real Estate, Bend Add A Pfcture! $495,000 new range/oven at 541-382-8262 joying this Exquisite Reach ing views of Canyon 5 41-480-2329 D u k e minutes from town & thousands of readers! c lose o f esc r o w MLS¹¹201309267 M tn from t hi s s e - Warner Realty home. $65 9 ,000. Call 541-385-5809 Tumalo! 3 bedroom, 2 D esirable SW B e n d FIND IT! Bobbie Strome, Storage buildMLS201404694. cluded, newer 5 bedbath, 1694 sq ft. PriNeighborhood - 3 The Bulletin Classlfieds (CLA). Principal Broker BUY IT! ing & dog pen inroom, 3 bath home Copper Canyon - 3 vate well, 3000 sq ft of b edroom, 2 Nancy Popp, Principal bat h , John L Scott Real cluded. Fresh interior SELL IT! Broker 541-815-8000 Home o n nestled in the timber. b drm, 2~/~ bath i n deck with c o vered $49,900. 1485 sq ft, ac r eage paint. Estate 541-385-5500 $295 , 000. 3 acres irrigated and 2350y sf. Nice, newer area, upgraded cabi- corner Crooked River Realty lot, The Bulletin Classifieds backs t o Na t ional MLS¹201404338 detached ga r age/ home in SW Bend. nets, custom t r im, MLS¹201404474. Forest. 3 Bdrm, 1472 Like new and vacant, 2 John L. Scott Real Expansive C a s cade shop. $399 , 999. The Old Mill, river, v aulted e r , Teresa Brown, Broker, Mountain Views - 3 Go On Vacation! 5 bed- sq. ft., 4.9 acres of Estate 541-548-1712 bdrm, 2 bath, 1262 parks, recreation and arched w amast MLS¹201305978 l k-ways, 541-788-8661 large ponderosas. Dbl sq.ft., built in 2001, shopping are a short built-in BBQ, p ellet bedrooms, 2 baths, room home in Sunri- car Call Duke Warner John L. Scott garage. $219,500. clean, well cared distance away. Great stove, g a rage/shop Real Estate, Bend 1440 SF. U p dated ver. Great rental hisLarge triple wide home, very Dayville, johnlscott.com/42385 for home on corner En j o y the room living that is light and carport, chicken www.johnlscottbend.com interior, double ovens tory. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, dbl 541-987-2363 Ellen Clough, ABR, lot, island k i tchen, & bright. Gas log fire- coop/dog house & in kitchen, large bay SHARC pool and all car garage. Family pantry, double CRS, Broker g athat Sunriver offers. place with slate sur- f lowerbeds windows. 1.52 acres, Need help fixing stuff? room, living r oom, lo c ation. w/ d r ipDowntown 541-480-7180 rage, central air, rain Warm inviting colors. Call A Service Professional round. Kitchen has system. Fully fenced Present owners have huge w r a p-around $399,000. John L. Scott large deck. slate floor, h ickory with electric g ate. loved living here for deck, 2-stall b a rn, Call Jacquie Sebulsky Large covered patio gutters, find the help you need. Real Estate, Bend MLS ¹ 20 1 405419. at 541-280-4449 or cabinets, fully appli- $293,000 ¹20140814 fenced/x-fenced. area. Big mtn. views. $127,900. www.bendbulletin.com the past 33 years. 5 Call P a m Michele Anderson at anced and a pantry. Jodi Clark, Principal $148,000 Near the golf course Lester, Principal bdrm, 4 bath, 4987 Bro541-633-9760. I ncredible Cus t o m and firehall. Come MLS¹201405436. Canyon Creek - Execu- Large open loft family Broker, 541-771-8731 sq. ft. $968,000. ker, Century 21 Gold Home on AcreageMLS201310062 Gail Day, enjoy everything the Country Realty, t ive home o n t i m - room (currently used Call Kit Korish, Century 21 Inc. Duke Warner Realty This home is made ranch has to offer. 541-306-1018 bered acres just south as a bedroom by ten- Gold Country Realty 541-480-2335 with love and custom Priced to sell. MLS 541-504-1338 541-382-8262 Central Oregon of John Day. 3 bed- ants). Larger fenced Duke Warner Realty f eatures i n ev e r y Realty Group, LLC room, 2.5 bath, 2801 rear yard for enter- Cute 8 A ffordable 541-382-8262 Like new immaculate r oom. Looking f o r 201405066. sq ft, bonus room, taining, kids & pets. Corner Lot! 3 b e dMLS¹201402653 Extremely rare opportu- Great home in the heart lodge-style home sur- $249,900. Call Linda home. 4 Bdrm, 3.5 Lou Day-Wright. loads of storage and Chain link fence dog room, 2 bath, close to of town, with updated n ity to ow n a s e rounded by w i ldlife541- 771-2585 Crooked bath, 2237 sq.ft., dbl sm a l l attached gar a ge. e nclosure 8 & shopping, Easy living close to the cluded 40-acre farm in interior within the past garage, mtn views, is it. 4 bedroom, River Realty s torage shed t o o . schools $419,000. great for first time Old Mill District. En- Bend with 29 acres of 4 years. 3 bedroom, 2 this hardwood floors, tile 2.5 bath, $899,900. $270,000. MLS¹ MLS¹20130408. home buyer or invesjoy your mornings in i rrigation an d j u s t bath 1232 sq ft home counters, huge masCall Candy Yow, 201401159. B o bbie Call Duke Warner tor. $155,000. Call the light and bright Mountain High I from Costco! features newer carpet, ter bdrm, on main, 541-410-3193 Strome, Principal Bro- Charlie or V i rginia, kitchen of this 3 bdrm, minutes Dayville, 2 houses, rustic barn/ paint, stainless steel $320,000 and formal MLS 201304445 ker John L Scott Real Principal 541-987-2363 Bro k e r, 2 bath, 1459 sq. ft. 4 covered stalls, tack kitchen a p pliances, Duke dining-room. MLS Warner Realty • On the Fairway Estate 541-385-5500 541-350-3418 home. The living room room, corral, large water heater, h eat • 2 bedroom+ den, 2 541-382-8262 ¹201404328. Cascade Mountain Crescent Lake Home Redmond Re/Max Land is open to the kitchen shop with 12-ft roll-up pump with air condibath $229,500. Call Pam Views I $600,000 will give back many & Homes Real Estate. with hickory flooring. door & attached ga- t ioning, dec k w i t hJ ust Completed - 3 • Gorgeous neighborLester, Principal Bro• 3052 sq.ft. Iog home fond memories of Beautiful paver patio covered patio. Good hood rage, a l l fa r ming ker, Century 21 Gold • 3 bedroom, 3 bath bedroom, 2.5 b ath, • MLS 201404656 Exceptional Acreage family gat h erings. is perfect for enterequipment included location with easy acCountry Realty, Inc. • 1.76 acres 1 510 sq f t h o m e. Estate inspired by taining. $3 2 5 ,000. w/acceptable o ff er. cess to all parts of minutes from mounJulia Buckland, 541-504-1338 • MLS 201402213 Great room floor plan Frank Lloyd Wright. 4 tain s k iing, h i king MLS 201406184. Call Extensive Broker, ABR, ALHS, wi l d life, town. Perfect investSue Conrad, Bdrm, 3.5 bath, 5004 Bill Pan to n at COID canal behind ment property, ten- with laminate wood trails. Come see it toCRS, GRI Broker, CRS floors, crown molding Need to get an sq.ft., 4.75 acres. Ofday! Tom Roth, Bro541-420-6545. 541-719-8444 h ouse, fenced 8 ants want to sign at throughout. 541-480-6621 Nice fered at $830,000. Duke Warner Realty ker, BPOR, EcoBroleast a 2-year lease. ad in ASAP? cross-fenced with 4 master with full mtn ker. 541 - 771-6549 Call Tarris Rogers, separate p a stures. $117,500 You can place it views. $219,900. Broker FSBO - Seeking serious $635,000 John L Scott, Bend ¹201403977 Call Jaynee Beck, online at: 541-390-7878 motivated buyer for 3 ¹201402376 Jodi Clark, Principal 541-480-0988 The Bulletin Becky Breeze bdrm, 2 bath, with a Broker, 541-771-8731 www.bendbulletin.com Jodi Clark,Principal MORRIS MLS¹201401864 To Subscribe call Company Real Estate backyard sanctuary! MORRIS Broker, 541-771-8731 Century 21 REAL ESTATE Duke Warner Realty www.BendSunriver Quality home at a quality 541-385-5800 or go to REAL ESTATE Gold Country Realty Century 21 541-385-5809 541-382-8262 price! 541-279-8783 RealEstate.com l~ ~ dOp mB Gold Country Realty www.bendbulletin.com BEND PARK Park-like

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Built 201 3,single level on a private 2.50 acre jo! in prestigious Sunset ViewEstates. Stackedstonefireplace, 3 bed, 2.5 bath, 2823 sq. (t., 3+ garageextras!! www.20145RedSky.hasson.com

Remarkable Pahjisch Home in NW Bend. 3535 sq. ft. Amazing upgraded features! 3,236 sq. ft., 5 bedrooms Main level jiving with fantastic lower guest quarters & 3 baths. Great roomwith fireplace, spacious kitchen & dining bonus area. Full easterly views, ajj the bells 8 whistles! Large master & bonus room. Guestsuite on main floor. www.3384eighteenthfairway.hasson.com www.60321sagestone.hasson.com

This 4 Ixxj/3 bath home boasts a luxurious owner suits w/ deck, gourmet kitchen, large patio 8 hot tub. Consistently occupied w/great rental income! Maury Mtn. Ln., Sunriver www.buccojagroup.com/jistings

Melody Luelllng

J u l ie Burgoni

Ry a n Buccola

541-948-3107

541-306-8927

C i n dy Berg-Wagner

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The Bridges in SEBend. One year NEW - Move-in NOW. You'jj quickly feel ot home when you see this lovely 2545 Upgraded, RV side yard access. Adjacent to open space, sq. jt. home on huge jo! backing open space! The feel of 4 bedrooms+ office. Window coverings, W/D included. privacy is a treat! 3 beds, 2.5 baths w/bonus, den & office. www.61151manhae.hasson.com www.20173stonegate.hasson.com

New construction by award winning Pahjisch Homeson Bend's westside atthebaseof college hill. Priced in the$350's. Only 6 left! Terrific 2ndhomeor investment property.

www.2368debton8.hasson.com

Featurecl in 2004 Tour of Homes™ . 3 jxxj /2.5 balh features 2-story rock fireplace, designer lighting, slate, tile & hardwood floors. Frenchdoor off eating area lo oversized yard. www.234422nd.hasson.com

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Ka r e n Malanga

Ma r y Leagjeld

541-420-2950

Va l e rie Nelson

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541-390-332S

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Popular Conifer plan features 2088 sq. ft., 2-car garage, Just completed. 4 brand new iownhomesbeing built in NW 3 beds, 2.5 baths with large loft vps!oirs ond open concept Redmond.Quartz counters inkitchen&baths, opengreat roomw/ on the main level. Home will be ready around end of August. fireplace, 3BR,2.5 bath, loft, 2-car garage, jg fencedbackyard. www.2078Tsmokestack6l.hasson.com www.3023antjer.hasson.com

Almost complete 1,450 sq. ft., 3 beds, 2.5 baths, open loft, 2-cor garage, open light ond bright. Qvor!z counters in kitchen 8 bath, stainlessappj. Visit model Sa!. 8 Sun. 12-4. www.336428th.hasson.com

Rhlanna Kunkler

Mi c helle Gregg

541-306-0939

Ml c helle Gregg

541-604-4002

541-604-4002

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ES SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

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

Ho m es for Sale•

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745

Homes for Sale

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Move-in Ready - Clean Newer home near park. Like New - Located on Location Location, LoMidtown Bend j NW Redmond j Picture Perfect Home- Rare Metolius River- Spacious and afforda dead end street, 3 c ation! 5 B d rm, 2 3 bedroom, 2 bath 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, + in Stonehedge West! front property with a ble living! 2 b e d$259,750 $219,900 b edroom, 1.5 b a t h bath, 1 6 0 0 sq . f t.• Single level home mobile only. Vaulted den or 4th bdrm, 2382 • 1898 sq.ft. Beautifully u p dated cabin in Camp Sher- room, 2.6 bath, 1416 refurbished home on manufactured home • Two tax lots, RM ceilings in living & sq.ft., built in 2008, • 3 bedroom, 2 bath including Travertine man, w/paved roads. sq ft home has gas large lot. Plenty of RV with add-on's nestled zoned, .28 acre master, fenced yard, master on main level, • Fenced yard, covered tile flooring, granite 1 bdrm, 1 bath plus fireplace, vaulted parking, fenced, land- on 6.5 acres. Living • Fenced back yard storage shed, land- island kitchen w/gran- deck countertops with tile loft, sleeps 6, granite ceilings, slate in the • MLS 201406363 • MLS 201405892 scaped, priced right! room, dining room, scaped w / s prinkler ite counters, hardbacksplash, GE Pro- counters huge deck guest bathroom and kitchen and master Megan Power, Broker, system, carport. wood floors, water Patti Geraghty, Broker file appliances, gas u nobstructed r i v e r tiled cou n tertops. $253,900. MLS¹201404023 suite hav e n e w er GRI, CDPE Community park & feature and pond, RV 541-948-5680 range, gor g eous views & access. Fully Master bedroom has Call Carolyn Emick, laminate flo o ring. 541-610-7318 clubhouse. $43,000. parking fenced. MLS knotty alder trim & furnished. $399,000. private access to the 541-419-0717. Ideal for starter home, Kathy Denning, Broker ¹ 201405423. doors, designer paint, MLS 201402947 outside an d l a r ge Duke Warner Realty rental property, tem541-480-4429 updated fixtures & Pam Lester, Principal bathroom with plenty $245,000. Call Pam 541-382-8262 porary home, while John L. Scott Lester, Principal Brolighting, granite tile Broker, Century 21 of closet space. Great building a new home. Real Estate, Bend ker, Century 21 Gold surround f i replace. Gold Country Realty, floor plan includes a MORRIS Like New, U pgraded A great private county www.johnlscottbend.com Country Realty, Inc. V aulted ceilings i n Inc. 541-504-1338 double attached gaMORRIS Home - 3 bedroom, setting. Shared well, 2 REAL ESTATE living room, custom rage. Large patio over REAL ESTATE Must See Widgi Home- 541-504-1338 2.5 bath in Crescent storage buildings, 400 l&~ m ly~ ~ ~ Remodeled Contempo- the garage is w e ll blinds, large m a in Completely r e modNorthwest Crossing j Creek. C o mpletely AMP service to home rary Style - Located in One of a kind! Beauty, level master s uite the Old Mill District, 4 shaded in the aftereled, located on 17th upgraded throughout. and 100 AMP service $249,900 noon for entertaining. Mirada j $319,900 artistry an d c r a fts w/access to the rear b edroom, 3 f airway o f Wid g i • 971 sq.ft. condo Hickory floors & cabi- to pump house. This • NEW bat h , $119,900 Franklin Brothmanship, a t t ached deck. New interior & 2098 sq ft. $330,000. Creek Golf Club. Call • 2 bedroom, 2 bath, n ets, slate and SS is a m ust p review ers built ¹201404958 guest quar t ers, exterior paint. Paver John St e mbridge, carport appliances, $219,000. property, if you do, • 1851 walkway. Call Aubre Chesire, Dennis Clark, Principal sq.ft, 3 bedroom, Broker, 541-601-8881 • Vaulted media/bonus room, back ceiling, tile Call Candy Yow, 541-598-4583 or you will see its poten- 2.5 bath Broker, 541-771-8730 secluded b ackyard, $239,750. John L. Scott 541-410-3193. floor Brook Criazzo at tial. $189,000. MLS • Quartz counters, SS ¹201405465 Century 21 Real Estate, Bend minutes to downtown. • MLS 201406357 MLS¹201402864 541-550-8408, ¹201400038 John L. Scott Real Gold Country Realty appliances MLS 301405713 www.johnlscottbend.com David Gilmore, Broker Duke Warner Realty MLS¹201403010 Bobbie Strome, Estate 541-548-1712 • MLS 201400554 Marci Schoenberg, 541-312-7271 541-382-8262 Duke Warner Realty Spacious SE H o me Principal Broker NE Bend j $349,500 Lisa McCarthy, Broker 541-610-7803 541-382-8262550 2545 sq, ft. 4 bdrms, John L Scott Real • 2300 sq.ft. Broker, ABR Live in one, rent the John L. Scott Pristine country setting 2~/e baths . Mtn views. • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath 541-419-8639 other. Two separate Estate 541-385-5500 Real Estate, Bend Just bought a new boat'? with beautiful r ock $310,000. MLS • One year home warSell your old one in the units on one tax lot. Looking for a home with johnlscottbend.com outcropping & valley Call ranty classifieds! Ask about our 201406104. Unique p e rsonality secluded tranquility? views. 3 bedroom, 1 Jaynee B e c k at MORRIS • MLS 201404531 Opportunity Knocks! 5 Super Seller rates! homes. Front home Well look no further! bath, 1134 s q ft 541-480-0988 or Pete REAL ESTATE Susan Agli, Broker, units on one lot, all single-level home is 541N85-5809 has street access, 2 Custom home is surVan D e u se n at ABR, ALHS rented out. They are on a large, immacubedrooms; and rear rounded by mature MORRIS Duke 541-408-3773 all man u factured lately landscaped lot, Room for Family and 541-480-3538. home is a one bdrm. pine trees, 3/4 mile off REAL ESTATE Warner Realty Hobbies. Large .48 NOTICE: homes, on city serBoth have f e nced main road. BLM on 2 has tons of char- acre fenced lot with All real estate adver- vices. $289 , 900. and yards i n W e istoria sides & no neighbors acter. Ne w pa i nt, plenty of room for Spectacular view of the tised here in is sub- ¹20'I403281. Modern Architecture + Addition. $ 2 40,000. f or about a m i le. great shop with car- your family and their Cascade range and ject to th e F ederal John L. Scott Real MLS 201400486 Vaulted ceilings, all Quaint Farmhouse port, finished front hobbies. Living room the Deschutes canFair Housing A c t, Estate 541-548-1712 Call Jason Chavez at appliances included, Rastra block c o nMORRIS deck, covered back with 2 skylights. Fam- yon wall and beautiful which makes it illegal 541-891-5446. Enioy the extensive tiled floors, struction, passive soREAL ESTATE to advertise any pref- Panoramic m o untain patio, fire pit, mature ily room has a gas farmlands. Duke Warner Realty new pellet stove, sky- lar, 4 b e droom, 3 l andscaping. O n l y f ireplace w it h ti l e deer as they meanerence, limitation or views. 5 bdrm, 5 bath, 541-382-8262 der the trail that borlights, huge covered bath, 2954 sq ft. Rablocks to P r ineville Cu s to m 3 discrimination based garden paradise per C ountry Club a n d hearth and surround. ders the home. This is with hot tub, diant floors and re- New on race, color, reli- fect for entertaining. minutes from the res- Seller will give credits reverse living at its Live in Redmond's fa- porch Bdrm/2.5 Bath, 2024 cycled timbers keep feature w i th for new dishwasher vorite neighborhood, water sex, handicap, Open flowing floor large front deck, t his h o m e eco - sq.ft., home on large gion, $132 , 000 and a new range/oven best, upstairs a large familial status or na- p lan w i t h che f ' s ervoir. Canyon Rim Village. pond, lot w/R V p a rking. friendly. Sits on nearly floor plan, with ¹201404713 patio, fenced, at close of escrow open tional origin, or inten- kitchen, vaulted ceil With 3 bedrooms, 2.5 paver kitchen an d l i v ing sys t e m, 19 acres of Cascade Granite slab counter tion to make any such ings, a n d Jodi Clark, Principal (CLA). Storage buildse c r et baths, 2429 sq ft, this sprinkler professions seroom perfect for enBroker, 541-771-8731 ing and dig pen in$262 , 5 00 view pastoral farm- tops, desirable home shop. land. $899 , 000. ries SS appliances, preferences, l imita- rooms. $ 1,500,000. tertaining. A great vaCentury 21 cluded. The home has tions or discrimination. MLS 201406002. Call boasts an awesome ¹201307111 pantry, wood & tile MLS¹201404611 Gold Country Realty Clark, Principal fresh interior paint. cation or retirement floor plan, including Jodi floors, gas Fireplace, We will not knowingly T erry Skjersaa a t Call Terry Skjersaa, $325,000. Call Broker, 541-771-8731 MLS ¹ 20' I 404338 home. accept any advertis- 541-383-1426 D uke the master suite on fenced & central air. 541-383-1426 Linda Lou Day-Wright, Century 21 ing for real estate Warner Realty $295,000 the main floor and Private Sanctuary on $225,900 Duke Warner Realty Broker, 541-771-2585 Bobbie Strome, which is in violation of extensive upgrades Gold Country Realty Deschutes River - 70+ MLS¹201402794 541-382-8262 Crooked River Realty Peaceful Living BeauPrincipal Broker this law. All persons throughout. Slate tile, L ovely acres on the Big Desho m e w i t h Pam Lester, Principal are hereby informed tiful custom home ap- c hutes R iver w i t h John L Scott Real hardwood floors, cof- beautiful fini s hes Sunriver j $469,900 Illlountain High j Broker, Century 21 3253 sq ft on 4.5 Cascade M o untain Estate 541-385-5500 • 2369 sq.ft. Earth Adfered ceilings, gas throughout. 3 bdrms, Gold Country Realty, that all dwellings ad- prox $314,900 acres, with .5 acre irvertised are available fireplace, h i gh-end 2~/~ baths, 2063 sq. ft. • 1894 sq.ft. v iews. 5000+ sq f t vantage home Inc. 541-504-1338 on an equal opportu- rigation. Private well, log-style home fea- RV Parking! Large Lot! • 4 bedroom, den, 3 window t r eatments, o pen great r o o m• 2 bedroom, den, 2 3 bedroom, 2 bath pond, close-in, prinity basis. The Bulleextensive landscap- f loorplan with g a s bath tures 4 0x40 g r eat bath Find It in vate and s e cluded room, 2 master suites home, Northeast side • .22 acre, paver patio, tin Classified ing. Attention to detail fireplace, office/den • Large deck, backs of town. $185,000. with too many extras The Bulletin Classifieds! shines inside & out! with b u ilt-in b o o k- common area on main level, gourhot tub NW Bend j $749,900 to mention. $672,900. met kitchen, u nfin- MLS 201405258; Call • MLS 201402327 541-385-5809 $292,000 shelves on main level, • MLS 201405630 • 4105 sq.ft. custom Don Chapin, Broker, MLS¹201304783. ¹201306626 custom knotty Alder ished rooms in a dayPat Palazzi, Broker Marci Bouchard, home 541-350-6777. Call Carolyn Emick, Dennis Clark, Principal light basement. Triple Redmond 541-771-6996 cabinets, gra n ite Broker, CRS, SRES New Custom Home- • 4 bedroom + office, Re/Max Land 541-419-0717 Beautiful finishes, 9' Broker, 541-771-8730 countertops and 541-977-1230 car garage with stor- & Homes Real Estate. 3.5 bath Duke Warner Realty Century 21 ceilings, Crown moul- • City & easterly views stainless appliances, age above. A t ruly 541-382-8262 ding thro u ghout.• MLS 201403887 Gold Country Realty t iled b a ths, B i r ch beautiful pr o perty! SE Bend j $237,900 hardwood floors, cenMaster suite has sev- Dana Miller, Principal Peace 8 Quiet - 3 bed- $'I,395,000. • 1639 sq.ft. Living at its Besteral custom features tral air conditioning, • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath MORRIS Broker, ABR, AHWD room, 2 bath, 1344 sq MLS¹201404855 Located in the heart of covered porch and and nice mtn views. Ainslie Reynolds • Paver deck, landMORRIS REAL ESTATE 541-406-1466 ft home on 10 acres the Old Mill District. 3 lovely Landscaped, fenced la n dscaped REAL ESTATE Principal Broker scaped with oversized deck in I&q W w~ ~ ~ d m aster suites, 3 . 5 yard. $379,900. Text yard, gutters & 8' gaReMax Key • MLS 201405087 front and back, and baths, 3070 sq ft with VIEW7873TO 878787 rage door. $219,900. Properties. Virginia Ross, Broker, People Lookfor Information underground s p rinviews of the river and then call Tina Rob- Mountain Views - Enjoy MLS¹201401861 541-410-1054 Cell ABR CRS, GRI, Eco About Products and klers. $320 , 000. mountains. S t a n d- erts, Broker, t he Mt Hood to M t Call Jaynee Beck at 541-728-0033 Off ce i Broker, Previews MLS¹201403958. Services Every Daythrough alone unit. $829,000. 541-419-9022 MORRIS 541-480-0988 Bachelor views from 541-460-7501 Call Karolyn Dubois, MLS¹201400102 The Sulletin flfassiffeds Duke Warner Realty REAL ESTATE Total Property this custom 2892 sf 541-390-7863 Q uaint Home N e a r CallJaynee Beck, 541-382-8262 Resources 3 bd/3.5 b a ho m e The Ridge a t E a gle Duke Warner Realty S hopping 2 b e d 541-480-0988 W i l lowNew Custom Solar/ADA NW homes with unob54'I -382-8262 Crest. Perfect vacarooms, 1 bath, 1118 Duke Warner Realty Mid-Century modern in overlooking tion getaway. 1822 North Rim. 3 b drm, Creek Canyon - only 2 Home - 3 master s tructed v iews. 3 SF. M a ture l a n d541-382-8262 MORRIS sq.ft. home, 3 bdrm, 2~/~ bath, 3432 sq. ft. miles from downtown suites, 3.5 ba, 3022 bdrm, 2~/e bath with P rivate Broken T o p scaping, fenced backMadras, 8 a d j oins Estate Custom built, Pick Your Colors - New home on 1.5 acres. 2.5 bath, w/triple tansf, 0.5 AC i n g o lf offic e/den and bonus yard, newer siding & REAL ESTATE BLM land. Property 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, home on 0.15 AC in dem garage, open Work with builder to course comm., sun- room, master on main windows, newer aphas 3360 sf s h op, 3541 sq ft home with living space with lots private neighborhood. customize this home room, spa, wood 8 tile level, open great room pliances, zoned C-4 76x144 hay shed, 2nd open great room floor Single story with RV 1425 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 t o and awesome views. of windows to enjoy yo u r tas t e . floors, RV park, mtn for limited commerbath 8 2-car garage. $1,140,000. & more. $479,000. MLS plan and radian floor cial use. $133,900. parking, 3-car garage, the sunrises. M LS MLS home, irrigation pivot view $949 , 900. MLS¹201406064. $139,900. Call heat. p rofessional l a n d - ¹201404270. 201305601. Call 8 wheel line along $469,000. MLS 201405950. MLS¹201402233 scaping, 3 bdrms, 2 $334,222. Call Pam Michele An d erson w/60 acres of NUID 201302802 B rook C r iazzo a t MLS¹201300357. Call Larry Turner, baths and den. KoPam Lester, Principal 541-633-9760 or Tammy S e ttlemier, Lester, Principal Broor water rights. 70 acres Pam Lester, Principal 541-550-8408 541-279-1139 deeded. ¹201206931 541-410-6009. Broker, Century 21 rina Chinchen, Broker, ker, Century 21 Gold Broker, Century 21 Aubre Cheshire at Central Oregon Realty Jacque John L. Scott Real Duke Warner Realty Gold Country Realty, 541-280-4449. Duke CIAS 5 4 1-788-6154 Country Realty, Inc. Gold Country Realty, 541-598-4538. Duke Group, LLC Estate 541-548-1712 541-382-8262 Inc. 541-504-1338 John L. Scott, Bend 541-504-'I 338 Warner Realty Inc. 541-504-1338 Warner Realty •

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2989 NE HOPE - $299,900 3 Bedrooms, 2 ~/i Baths

Stainless Appliances Hardwood Floors Huge Bonus Room

2750 Great Horned Place - $264,900 EST. COMPLETION -Oct. 2014 HOme Will be Similar to hOme PiCtured. • Master On Main • 3 Bedrooms, 2 Y* Baths • Hardwood Floors •

Coming Soon! Home will be similar to home pictured. • 3 Bedrooms, 2 Y* Baths • Bonus Room Upstairs • Hardwood Floors

2000 SE Fairwood - $359,900 This floor plan lives large with 4 bedrooms,spacious open kitchen and family room. Bjg deck for entertaining, fenced yard. Becky Breeze, Principal Broker 541-408-1107

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3678 SW Cascade Vista Dr • 2852 Square Ft • 4 Bedrooms, 2.5 Bath • Hand Troweled Venetian Plaster • Luxurious Master with private patio and gas fireplace • Triple Car Garage

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16136 Mountain Sheep $139,900 Getaway cabin or full-time

3188 NW Shevlin Meadow Dr. - $895,000 This home is perfect - single level, incredible quality throughout, oversized corner lot, fenced yard and close

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tO the Shevlin Park trailS. The great rOOm With 8 flOOr-tO-

bed, 1 bath+ Loft. N mile from deeded river access. Rachel Kahler, Broker 541-815-3658

ceiling fireplace is the gathering place for friends and family, while the outdoor living space js ideal for yearround use. Shelly Hummel, Broker 541-480-8523 •

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Becky Breeze, Principal Broker 541-408-1107

$67,500 • 53460 Old Lake Rd, Sil ver Lake 4 Beds, 2 Baths • 1728 Sq ft • 17 .27 Acres $92,469e 24865 Elk Lane, Bend 3 Beds, 2 Baths • 1026 Sq ft • 4.9 Acres

$92,554 • 52674 SE Ammon Rd, LBPine • 4 Beds, 2 Baths • 1728 Sq ft

2191 SW Condor - $449,900 Gorgeous one level home on 1 acre manicured lot on the 14th green of Eagle Crest Resort golf course. Solid granite counter tops, newer Pecan hardwood wide plank floors, newer driveway, newer furnace and A/C unit. Newer carpet and paint. Oversized double car garage. So many upgrades you must see to appreciate. Cascade Mountain Views, gated community inside Eagle Crest. Becky Breeze, Principal Broker 541-408-1107

59990 Cheyenne Rd $139,900 Great price on this manufacturedhome jn Deschutes River Woods. New tile and laminate floor throughout. Large garden area with several fruit trees.

$94,221 • 1334 Hackett Dr, LBPine • 3 Beds, 2 Yz Bathse 1782 Sq Ft

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$98,114 • 1890 West Pierce St, Burns • 3 Beds, 2 Baths • 1218 Sq ft $140,000 • 56282 Marsh Hawk, Bend • 3 Beds, 2 Baths • 1454 Sq ft Please Visit HUDHomstore.com for more info and availability.

Rachel Kahler, Broker 541-815-3658

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THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY AUGUST2 2014 E9

TO PLACE ANAD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

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$270,000 I RAREINVESTMENT •

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$225,000 I 2545 7TH LANE,REDMOND

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541-771-1383 JEANETTEBRUNOT BROKER

$244,900 I 63109 WATERCRESS WAY, BEND

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• Cute as a button! • Custom built home on 0.18 AC lot • Beautifully maintained inside & out • Exceptional upgrades • Landscaped & fenced

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541-306-0479 CHRISTIN HUNTER BROKER

• Beautiful home that backs to a park • 3bed,2.5bath & $237,500IRIMROCK WAY 2075 SF • Beautifulfenced backyard & covered patio • Large master ensuite • Kitchen features wood floors & tile counters • Quiet neighborhood in NE Redmond I I

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$369,000INEED A LARGE HOME?

• Two homeson onelot in Midtown • Tenant occupied & professionally managed • Long term rental history • 3bed,1bath &2bed, 1.5 bath

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• Enter the gates to this terrific lot • Across from the 13th

• 17 acres openspace • Only $15 per month

• Street lined with custom

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$579,900 I 21420 BELKNAP DRIVE, BEND

$249,900IACREAGE 0 PRIVACY GALORE

$369,000I2675 SW BENTWOOD DRIVE,REDMOND

• 2124 SF homeon 4.89 AC • 3bed &2bath • Family room, sunroom & huge dining area • 30X48 heated shop • 24X36 barn

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$129,900IFABULOUS FLOOR PLAN

• Incredible value • 2840SF,4bed &2.5 bath • Close to shopping, services, park & canal • Earth Advantage home with solar • Cascade views & lovely backyard • 1 owner & in pristine condition

541-639-9309 SHERA FELDE BROKER

$485,000IBEAUTIFUL HOME IN LAVA RIDGES • 4 bed, 2.5 bath & 3054 SF • Custom homewith MANY upgrades! • Private office off master suite • Patio with awning backs to lava flow • Community pool

$785,000ICUSTOM HOME WITH VIEWS!

$659,000 I SPECTACULAR VIEWS

541-788-2278 LISA HART BROKER

541-788-2274 BEA LEACH BROKER

$235,000IA LOVELY PLACE TO LIVE

$429,000IONE LEVELCONTEMPORARY, EAGLE CREST

• Spectacular views in all directions •3400+SFandquality throughout • Light, bright & beautiful • Low maintenance 6.76 AC • Gated entrance & very private location

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, 541-410-1200 BILL KAMMERER BROKER

$312,000I1625 NW TEAKWOOD LANE, REDMOND

541-410-7434 CHERYLTANLER BROKER

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• Located on a cul-de-sac 3be d &3bath • Updated kitchen • Split level home • Large lot 0.17

$248,000ILARGE NE REDMOND HOME • 3 bed, 2.5 bath • 3030 SF of living space • Large 7500 SF lot • Downstairs office or 4th

bedroom

541-974-4750 MICHELLEWITT BROKER $360,000IBEAUTIFUL HOME IN SW BEND

$209,000IA MUST SEE GEM • 4 bed • 2.5 bath • 2067 SF • Bonus room • Triple car garage • 2917 SW Deschutes

• 5 bed & 3 bath • 2655 SF

—:,aII tlm:.=-gfj geN5jt= • Great neighborhood

. I llljJI,'-u t,541-728-4499 AARON BALLWEBER BROKER

• Near Pine Ridge Elementary • Close to trails & amenities • Call Aaron for more details

$145,000IGORGEOUS VISTA OF DESCHUTES RIVER • 6.4AC in Crooked River Ranch • Private setting on a cul-de-sac • Bring your builder • Borders BLM land • Septic feasibility approved

• 40 acres • Borders governmentland

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• 3 bed, 3.5 bath • Open floor plan • Gourmet kitchen • Wood floors • Outdoor kitchen

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Rinehart, Dempseg 8 Phelps

• 2 bed, 1 bath each • 1834 SF total • 0.36 AC lot • Fully rented duplex • 2731 SW Umatilla Court, Redmond

$315,000IGREAT SE BEND HOME IN TANGLEWOOD • Inviting home in Redmond • Built by Pahlisch homes • Gas fireplace, 3 bed & 2.5 bath • Overlooks canal & pathway • Pool, park & playground

$719,900I3316 NW FAIRWAY HEIGHTS DRIVE, BEND • Golf course home

• 3bed&2bath • 2624 SF • Beautiful landscaping .

$164,999IGREAT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY

$182,500 I PARKSIDELIVING

• 3bed &2bath • 1977 SF

• Open concept floor plan • Den with French doors • Granite countertops • Hardwood floors • 2-car garage with tandem 3rd bay • Beautifully landscaped vard • New exterior paint

541 771 1168 ERIC ANDREWS BROKER

541-390-0098 MIKE EVERIDGE BROKER

gS , ' 541-280-1543 LORI SCHNERINGER BROKER

$529,900IBEST VIEWS IN CENTRAL OREGON

• Up to 2.87 acres available • 2 bed, 2 bath eachside • Single garages • Open floor plans • Adjacent to rental home on1.18 acres • Adjacentto vacant.55 acre parcel • Multi-family zoning in place

• Park-like setting • 4 bed & 3.5 bath • Quality features throughout • Triple garage with Pebble Tec flooring • Fabulous outdoor living space

• 3 bed plus den • 2yt bath • 10 & 11 foot ceilings • Formal & casual dining • Wonderful mature landscaping • Three car garage

541-480-9883 AUDREYCOOK BROKER

$189,900ISWEET SINGLE LEVELDUPLEX 001.10ACRES

• 4152 SF of openliving space • Custom homeoffers 3 levels of high end finishes • Formal dining & living room • Huge great room • Massive master suite with deck

$549,500 I NORTHWEST BEND

• Immaculate & beautifully appointed home • Backs to community park in a quiet neighborhood • Manicured yard with large arbor coveredpatio • 2075 SF, 3 bed, 2.5 bath, Living, dining & family room • An amazing price for this home!

$549,900ILOG HOUSE, 40 ACRES 0 MTN VIEWS!

garage/shop • Level & nicely treed parcel • 1512 SF fixable manufactured home • Art studio • Circular drive

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• Maintenance free

• 4 bed, 3 bath & 3,915 SF • Big Cascademtn views! • Majestic great room with lots of light • Gourmet kitchen with granite plus birch cabinets

• Horse property near public lands

• 2.56 acres with 1574 SF

garage • Brick patio 8 BBQ area • 1904SF,3 bed & 2 bath • Fish pond

• 3 bed • 3 full baths • 1576 SF • Reverse living • Great community

541-604-1649 GAILROGERS BROKER

$364,500 I 61733 DARLAPLACE, BEND

$110,000IA TETHEROW CROSSING OPPORTUNITYI

• On top of the hill •CascadeMountainviews • 1344 SF (28'X48') RV

541-610-4006 BOB BLEILE BROKER

• Tuscany style luxury in Bend • 2910 SF • Single level living • Stunning kitchen • Two master suites • 0.46 AC fencedlot • Gorgeous openfloor plan

Y ' 541-771-1168 ERIC ANDREWS BROKER

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541-788-2274 BEA LEACH BROKER

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541-977-5345 MIKE WILSDN BROKER

• Insulated detached garage • Privacy fenced • Close to state parks • Fresh paint and carpets • Immaculate condition • Open floor plan • MLSf201306933

homes

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Estates • Great location & open living • Vaulted ceilings & great room • 3-car garage with shop & storage • Professionally landscaped • Deck, 3 bed & 2.5 bath

• Single levelliving • Stunning kitchen • Two master suites • 0.46 AC fenced lot • Gorgeous openfloor plan

green

541 480 7183 BARBARAMYERS BROKER $449,900I1640 NW 77TH STREET, REDMOND • 5 acres in Crestridge

• 2910 SF

$180,000INEWER HOME ON AN ACRE

$229,000 I ASPENLAKESLOT • 4bed,3bath &2089SF • Over '/» acre lot • HOA with clubhouse plus

541-480-7777 DIANA BARKER , BROKER

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541-390-2328 CLAIR SAGIV BROKER

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541-977-7756 DEE BAKER BROKER

$579,900 I TUSCANY STYLELUXURYIN BEND

• Two master bedrooms • 2940 SF Almost one acre • Beautifully landscaped • Cascade mountain & city views • Mew wraparound Trex deck • RV parking • Beautiful garden

541-480-9883 AUDREYCOOK BROKER

541-610-5672 VERONICATHERIOT BROKER

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541-977-1852 TONY LEVISON BROKER

$369,000 1873 AUTUMNWOOD COURT,BEND

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$214,000IGARDENSIDE TOWNHOME

Patty Dempsey • 541-480-5432 Andrea Phelps 541-408-4770 Cleme Rinehart 541-480-2100 WWW.RINEHARTDEMPSEY.COM

$219,000IPERFECT FOR YOU!

• 3 bed, 2.5 bath & 1290 SF • Open floor plan

III~II!I II III I ij II„ 541 -390-0934 DEBBIETALLMAN BROKER

• Gas fireplace • Granite countertops • Art Deco backsplash • Close to park/playground

• 3bed,2bath&1656SF

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541-480-7777 , i DIANA BARKER ' BROKER

• Covered front porch • Generous backdeck • Raised garden beds • Three solar tubes • Gas fireplace

• Great new listing in Tanglewood! • 2663SF,4 bed & 3 bath • Master on main level • New stainless steel appliances • Fenced 0.26 acre lot & 3-car garage

jmILi RFAITYAaoua

JAKE MOORHEAD . 541-480-6790 MICHELLE WHITE 541-390-5286 LORETTAMOORHEAD 541-480-2245



THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2 2014 E11

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 762

Homes with Acreage

H o mes with Acreage •

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B eautiful Harn e y $90,000 • 561'I 9-56135 Breathtaking mtn views Great opportunity to 1 5805 Sixth St., L a 7.175 Unique acres lo- C ascade Mt . Vie w Lot 21 SW Chipmunk County Home on 40 Solar Dr. from 2-acre lot short build your home on Pine, 10 Acres ready cated on a paved road Property - Ready to Rd, CRR. 5.16 level Acres - Wide open •1.24 acres on channel distance from Des- this 1.52 acre lot. 2 for your dream home! Power and water at Build. 9.90 Acres off acres, with 2 storage • 19.55 Acre property views from this cus- of t h e De s chutes chutes River, Steel- tax lots being sold $89,000. High Lakes the r oad. L o cated Gribbing Rd. Ready s heds. Partial m t n with 12 irrigated acres tom 3 b e droom, 2 River head F a ll s and with an entrance on Realty & Pr o perty near Steelhead Falls. for a home, horses view. community wa•Updated 2052 s q.ft. bath, 2384 sq ft home •Community park and world-renowned fish- either Cres c ent Management ter installed. $60,000 $106,500. MLS and toys. Backs to C ut-Off or E l k D r . 541-536-0117 ranch style home in built in 2006. Open boat ramp (1 block) ing. Secluded build201106739 c ounty l and, t h e n ¹201300800 cludes 3 bdrm, 2 bath, floor plan with hard- •Less than 4 miles to ing site. $79,900 MLS Each tax lot has a Linda Lou Day-Wright. BLM. Avion water, Juniper Realty 541- 771-2585 541-504-5393 stainless appl., new wood floors, vaulted Sunriver Resort 2013107'IO septic and member- 16160 SW Dove Rd. power at property and furnace and new sep ceilings, s u n room,Bill Kammerer, Broker Nancy Popp Principal ship to Crescent Wa- 6.1 acre corner lot w/ Crooked River Realty approved for s tan- 20 acres off Beal Road 541-410-1200 access from paved tic attached garage and Broker, 541-815-8000 ter - just needs to dard septic. Beautiful $74,900. Has wells, •Gorgeous mtn views s o m u c h mo r e . Windermere Crooked River Realty have meters installed. st., power installed, 7965 SW R iver R d. land and outstanding 18x36 bldg. 2.79 a cres, g r eat •Horse property; 5/6 terrific mtn. & green $345,000. Central Oregon $45,000 views. MLS septic, Broken Top cul-de-sac High Lakes Realty & views near the Desvalley views, n ear stall barn, arenas & Call Duke Warner Real Estate MLS¹201404462 ¹201401000. lot, just over I~ acre, Property M a nageSteelhead Falls and chutes River. and ter- $199,900. outbuildings Realty Dayville, Dennis Haniford, h eavily t r eed, e l ment 541-536-0117 D eschutes Riv e r . rific fishing at SteelJML Realty Group, 541-987-2363 Need help fixing stuff? Principal Broker, Ainslie Reynolds, evated lot f eatures 54'I -480-6790 541-536-1731 $79,900 MLS head Falls. $49,000 MLS¹201401285 Call A Service Professional peek-a-boo mtn and Principal Broker View of the Cascades. ¹201009429 201205646 541-480-0448 Cascade Realty ReMax Key find the help you need. B uild y ou r d r e a m olf course views. Juniper Realty Juniper Realty Windermere Properties. Just too many www.bendbulletin.com home on 6.85 acres, FIND IT! uiet street with tons 541-504-5393 541-504-5393 Central Oregon 541-410-1054 Cell near Brasada Ranch collectibles? of privacy. $273,500. BUY IT! ce Real Estate 13601 SW Canyon Dr. MLS and Pronghorn. Call 9040 SW S a ndridge 541-728-0033 Offi 201 4 0 3'I 00. 16535 SW Chinook Dr. SELL IT! 1.13 acres in CRR, Tammy Fiebick Broker. 7273 S W Swa l l ow S e t tlemierThe Bulletin Classifieds 5.68 acre rim lot w/ Rd. Ready to build, Eastern Oregon land Gary Sell them in Jefferson views, 541-410-6009. Duke 1.12 acre lot in CRR. available Canyon City, 541-771-6549, John Road, Crooked River The Bulletin Classifieds Mt. amazing Smith Rock, Access to the prop- Warner Realty Ranch. Great room Hager Mountain Estates Crooked River & mtn. Power and water at OR. 14 acres zoned L. Scott, Bend. erty from 2 streets exwith free-standing gas 4 lots, $25,000 each lo- views Located on the the street with some Residential, currently Views! Views! Views! Cascade Mt. view proppands the possible stove, mtn views from 541-385-5809 cated in Silver Lake. pavement close to the Cascade mtn views. divided into 4 tax lots $149,900. Flat, open, erty - Ready to Build. building sites. owner ¹ 20 1 4 03978. $99,900 l arge w indows, 2 Underground power e ntrance of C R R . MLS MLS buildable 9.7 acres in will carry. $ 58,500 Large corner lot in SW master suites each Cinder Butte Estates and conduit for phone owner w il l 201207884 J u niper Powell ca r r y. $37,900. Butte. Redmond ready for ¹201106385 Juniper Realty, with entrances to out- on 4.9 acres with and internet. Views of $225,000. Realty 541-504-5393 ¹201310923. D a v id MLS your dream home. Juniper Realty 541-504-5393 side, on e i n cludes mtn v iews. S p lit Hager Mountain. Sep- 201106408. Juniper Franke, 541-420-5986 Great neighborhood, 541-504-5393 40 acres, great views. Central Oregon Realty kitchenette and fire- level home with uptic feasibility for stan- Realty 541-504-5393 schools and views. All Amazing Sunsets! Big $22,500. Rock House place. 864 sq. ft. shop per 8 lower living 1247 Birchwood, La d ard system. T h e Group, LLC utilities. MLS with attached green- space. $ 3 45,000 Pine - $28,500 one area is a sportsman's 16685 SW Chinook Dr. Cascade Mountain & road Christmas Val¹201403757. D eschutes Rive r ley High Lakes Realty Where Deer & Elk house, 5.64 a c res MLS 201401983 paradise. CRR. 6.9 acres with acre RV set-up with $42,950. views. 5.89 acres with & Property Manage- Roam - 320 acres lofenced and c r oss Call Don Chapin, Bobbie Strome, Crooked River a nd well and septic. High Ainslie Reynolds, 2 a cres i r rigation. ment 541-536-0117 cated u p B e l shaw f enced, 672 sq. f t . Principal Principal Broker Smith Rock views, all Br o k er Lakes Realty & PropPrincipal Broker Property borders TuCreek e a s t of loafing shed. 1566 sq. 541-350-6777 John L Scott Real util. installed. owner erty Man agement ReMax Key Land in Madras Prime m alo S t at e P a r k . Dayville, OR and west ft. h a y sto r age. Redmond RE/MAX Estate 541-385-5500 will carry. $189,000 Room for everyone and ready to b uilt, 541-536-0117 Properties. of Mt. Vernon, OR. $279,000. MLS L and & MLS 201008671. Hom e s 541-410-1054 Cell Stunning view acreage and ever y thingl 2.44 acres located in Water guzzler with 201406013 Juniper Realty 1483 Trail Creek Court 541-728-0033 Off Real Estate ce i of surrounding buttes, $1,295,000. an area of nice homes 1000 gallon trough for 54'I -504-5393 Juniper Realty, .39 acre lot in Eagle Culver a g r icultural and conveniently near wildlife. MLS¹201303572 Add i tional 541-504-5393 The Bulletin Ready for Your Toys! Crest with Cascade fields, Crooked River 20.44 Acres - If you Call Jaynee Beck, town. Lot is easy to acreages available. 3 bdrm, 2 bath over mtn. views and end of To Subscribe call Land in Crooked River canyon. With water, want privacy and your 541-480-0988 develop with w ater Owner w il l c a r ry. c ul-de-sac/ Flat l o t 541-385-5800 or go to R anch. Ready t o 2000 sq. ft. on 2 power at paved road own get-away retreat, Duke Warner Realty and power nearby. $172,000. that backs to B LM. www.bendbulletin.com move in. 3 Bdrm, 2 acres. $ 1 85,000. and septic approval. t his property i s i t . 541-382-8262 Owner terms may be Call Duke Warner 20 1 4 02162 Bring you builder or bath home o n a MLS 1 .77 f l a t acr e s . Breathtaking views of available. $ 6 4 ,950 Realty Dayville, Han n an, use ours! $175,000. Close to La Pine State $59,900. cul-de-sac located in Travis MLS the Cascade Moun- Badlands Wilderness¹201303181 541-987-2363 Br o k er MLS ¹201403407 Park and the DesOut your back door! the heart of CRR on 1 Principal 201402224 Jodi Clark, Principal MLS¹201301683 Lynn Johns, Principal chutes River. Build Nancy Popp Principal tains. Electricity is on 20 acre homesite with Broker, 541-771-8731 acre. Large garage/ 541-788-3480 property. CUP and mountain Broker, 541-408-2944 your dream home on Broker, 541-815-8000 the shop which provides Redmond RE/MAX 775 Century 21 $144,000. Land & Homes Wes Johns, Broker 541 this nicely wooded lot. Crooked River Realty views. $18 0 ,000. Gold Country Realty privacy. $1 2 9,900 Manufactured/ MLS¹201309974 Real Estate 408-2945 Central OrSeptic feasibility has P ossible term s . MLS ¹201404446. Call Karolyn Dubois, egon Resort Realty 773 Mobile Homes been approved. Land in Powell ButteMLS¹201304808. Juniper Realty, Ultimate family home, 541-390-7863 $29,950. MLS Call Kit Korish, 480 acres, very rural 541-504-5393 Acreages 4 bdrms, 3 baths on 1.71 acres, septic ap- 201403668 Call Jasen Duke Warner Realty 54'I -0480-2335 setting yet minutes to New DreamSpecial 54'I -382-8262 8479 SW High Cone over 7 acres, 20x40 proved power and Chavez, 3 bdrm, 2 bath Duke Warner Realty Bend, Redmond and $450,000 • River heated pool. 4005 water at the street. Drive. Large 4 bdrm, 2 541-891-5446 D u ke $50,900 finished 541-382-8262 Prineville Wide open Frontage NW Helmholtz Way, 30 acres, views, electric, on your site. bath located in t he $39,900 ¹201307972 Warner Realty views in all directions, .Amazing view of Des septic feasibility irrigaMLS Linda Lou Day-Wright. J and M Homes heart o f Cro o ked $399,000. B eautiful 20-A c r e and contiguous to chutes River Fenced 2 acre lot that tion rights. 12 min east, Cal l 541- 771-2585 541-548-5511 River Ranch on 1.20 2 01305932 homesite w/1 0 acres thousands of acres of has a 1978 2 bed- •Gated subdivision $135K. 760-835-3185, Crooked River Realty acre. Wonderful out- TRAVIS HANNAN, irrigation. $349,900. BLM lands. Prineville ~21 Acre private loca 780 room, 1 bath manuor 541-31 7-0184 Br o k er door area for enter- Principal Call Tammy Settlemier, Reservoir 6 m i l es. Serene setting on 1.386 factured home with a tion Mfd JIIIobile Homes taining or r e laxing. 541-788-3480 541-410-6009 $495,000 Bea Leach, Broker 3.18 acres g randfaacre lot, looking out Ramada roof. Carport Oversized 2-bay shop Redmond RE/MAX MLS¹201401808 541-788-2274 ¹201303656 with Land thered in. Septic and Duke Land & Homes over 90 acre pasture, and outbuildings. Low ith s t orage a n d Warner Realty Jodi Clark, Principal Windermere w ater o n t h e l o t , cated at the end of the Real Estate walking trails, and rec541-382-8262 plenty of room to keep Broker, 541-771-8731 Great little starter or first Central Oregon r oad. $47,9 0 0 power at th e r oad. reational park. Bethe toys out of t he Century 21 time buyer home, on Real Estate MLS 2012 0 8989 Build Your Home Here! 763 yond the park are MLS¹201405760 weather. $ 1 43,000. Gold Country Realty 1.02 acres. 2 bdrm, 1 Dennis Haniford, miles and miles of 5 acres adjacent to irri- $79,900. Call Linda 5 acres, outstanding mls 201300653 Recreational Homes Lou Day- W right Cascade Mtn views, L evel, u s able 5 . 6 4 bath, 910 sq. ft. very Principal Broker, public land adjoining gation canal. $60,000 Juniper Realty, clean and i ncludes & Property 541-536-1731 the Deschutes with 541-504-5393 Lot ¹12 Mabel Drive. 541-771-285 Crooked power at lot line & acres w/s t unning cute studio out back River Realty views of snow-capped Cascade Realty High Lakes Realty 8 septic feasibility apCascade views. and a large 864 sq. ft. 8886 SW Pasture Ct. Cabin hidden in woods Cascades. Septic inM a n ageproved capping fill. Community/ w a t er, shop. Near commuon trout stream, 637 Full time or vacation Property Custom built 960 sq. 32.42 Acres in Urban $79,900. stalled. Underground ment 541-536-0117 power avail.. 10 min. nity park and not far to Treed .64 Acre acres, 75 mi. from Growth B o u ndary, $201406415. ft. vacation home on power on lo t l i ne. Living. Pam to Terrebonne shop- BLM.. $115,000. MLS Bend, $695k. lot just a b lock off 20+ ACRES in West 1.25 acres bordering Adjacent t o The MLS Foster Road, close to $67,500. Principal Bro- ping and highway ac- Linda Lou Day-Wright. 541-480-7215 Powell Butte Estates, Greens, kitty corner to Lester, community pasture in 201310707 ker, Century 21 Gold cess. $59,900. MLS Broker 541- 771-2585 Deschutes River, skigated co m munity, Crooked River Ranch. new Ridgeview High Nancy Popp Principal ing, fishing, La Pine mtn. views, private Country Realty, Inc. 20'I400715 764 Crooked River Realty School. $7 5 0 ,000. 541-504-1338 It is currently being Broker, 541-815-8000 Nancy Popp Principal State Park and recre- well, paved roads with MLS Farms & Ranches remodeled so there is ¹ 201 2 03193 Crooked River Realty It's called Big Sky for a Broker, 541-815-8000 ation. $22,500. access t o BLM. Pam Lester, Principal Land in Prineville - 20 Crooked still time to pick out reason! 3 bdrm, 2bath River Realty Call Becky Ozrelic, $169,000 MLS some of the finishes. 40 acres, 39 irrigated. 914 Highland View LP. Broker, Century 21 acres, very p rivate 1950 sq. f t . t r iple 541-480-9191 201305077. Gold Country Realty, setting with amazing Lot 20 SW Chipmunk wide, solid oak cabi720 sq. ft. garage/ 7851 sq. ft. home with Eagle Crest, .44 acre 8 bdrms, 6~/~ baths Pam Lester, Principal Inc. 541-504-1338 shop with bathroom, lot with p anoramic MLS ¹201403352 views looking over the R d L e v e l 5. 1 4 nets, reading room, Warner Realty B roker Century 2 1 office and canninq plus separate apartCascade Mtn views, Duke valley below. Power is acres, Views of the living room, jetted tub, 541-382-8262 ment. 20x60 shop. Gold Country Realty, 5.17 acres. 65694 Old near, but not on the Smith Rocks $75,000 walk in closets, large room. $149,000. MLS back to BLM, Bring Sisters School Dist. Bend/Redmond Hwy. property. Great build- MLS 201406095 201406253 your builder or use SW Quail Rd. Crooked Inc. 541-504-1338 deck with hot tub and mtn views. Mtn view, power, wa- ing site on top of the Lot 1 SW Shad Rd Juniper Realty, ours. $134,900. MLS River Ranch. huge views. Double Beautiful 2 acre build541-504-5393 johnlscott.com/82910 ¹201307060 $110, 0 0 0 3 .09 a c r e s wit h car garage, 3.19 priElevated 5.77 acre view ing s ite, $ 3 9,900. ter, septic approved. h ill. Barbara Jackson, Lynn Johns, Principal O.B.O. Caii ¹201404078 amazing Mtn views. vate acres near BLM. lot. $90,000. 15656 Seed Road, La $174,000 Look at: Broker 541-306-8186 Brad 541-419-1725, Jodi Clark, Principal Broker, 541-408-2944 MLS $204,999. Call Linda $78,500 Mara Stein, Pine. High Lakes Re- or Bendhomes.com John L. Scott Deb 541-480-3956. Wes Johns, Broker 541 Broker, 541-771-8731 201402733 Principal Broker, Lou Day-Wright, Broalty & Property ManReal Estate, Bend 408-2945 Central Ordebra©bendbroad for Complete Listings of Century 21 Juniper Realty 541-420-3400 Pamir agement ker, 541-771-2585 johnlscottbend.com egon Resort Realty band.com Gold Country Realty 541-504-5393 Area Real Estate for Sale Properties, Inc. 541-536-0117 Crooked River Realty $541,000 • 3867 NorhtWest Way, Redmond

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5 bdrm. 3.5 bath,4828 SF 3.93 acres in NE Bend Chef's kitchen w/ SS appliances

4+car garage w/ shop area II

Htn.views, on the canal Badlands Wilderness I/2 mile

Laura Hilton, Broker 54 l-306-I 800

Cus t o m built in 20I I

Gregg Hayden,PrincipalBroker 54 I-390-6I39

$399,900

$407,000

• Horse property!

• Awbrey Glen Golf Community • 3 bedrooms - 3.5 baths • 2558 sq. ft. - built I 998 • .48 acre on 2nd fairway • Hulti-level decks - hot tub • Gourmet kitchen

• Red oak cabinets/granite counters • 1.30 acres, quiet hillside location

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• 2818 sq. ft., 3 bed & 2.5 barh • Less than I year old • Granite,tile and solid oak finishes • 2.07 acres & 1.43 acre common area • Gated golf community

Danlelfe Snow, Broker 54f-306-fgl5

$389,900

Cyndi Robertson, Broker 54I-390-5345

$300,000

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• 3 bedrooms - 2.5 baths • 2212 sq.ft.- bonus room • Tons of upgrades • Hardwood flooring - SS appliances • Professionally landscaped w/ drip irrigation • Water feature & paver patios

Shelley Arnold, Broker 54I -77 I -9329

$250,000

• Copperstone Community • 3 bedrooms - 3 baths • 2275 sq. ft.- built 2004 • Master on main floor • H uge kitchenw/ center island • Low maintenance yard

Bonus room (4~ bed) New carpet & interior paint Formal dining or den

Many custom touches

Ben Shank, Broker 54f-280-0066

• Pricereduced 3 tax lots • Updated new master

4 beds/2 baths, 2250 sq. ft. • 4-car garage, RV parking Wood fireplace • Solarium / greenhouse

Theresa Ramsay, Broker 54I -8I 5-4442

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• Almost I/2 acre at end of cul-de-sac • Backs to Pilot ButteAirstrip • 2262 sq. ft. with 3 bed & 2.5 bath • Bonus room w/ wet bar & gas fireplace • Features include granite & tile finishes • 42'x30' shop w/ office Cyndi Robertson, Broker 54I-390-5345

DavidKing,Broker 54f-876-75l3

$205,000

$249,000

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2170 sq. ft.,3 bed,2.5 bath

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• 5 bedrooms,3 baths • 2522 sq. ft. with family room • .79 acres, parklike setting • D esirableKing'sForest • Open floor plan, master on main • RV parking, backs to canal/trail • www.johnlscott.com/71200 Gregg Hayden,Principal Broker 54f-390-6f39

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• 4+ acres in gated community

3 bedroom, I bath Great room floor plan Granite countertops Hardwood floors RV parking Close to downtown

• Paved streets • All utilities at street • Mtn. views & Deschutes River nearby • River Springs Estates

• Buildyour dream home Kathy Dennlng, Broker 54 f -480-4429

Barbara Jackson, Broker 54f-306-Sf86

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E12 SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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BEND TOWNHOMEI S689 000

• 3048 sq.ft. luxury townhome • 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath 541-548-3598, • 150 NW Phils Loop

DIANELOZITO BROKER

541-306-9646 • MLS 201406439

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DOWNT OWNBENDI $1$49$00

HILLSIDE PARK I $1,149,000

' 1900 sq.ft., 2 bedroom, 2 bath • .38acre next to BendGolf Club • 20468 SE WhistlePunkRoad 541-480-1911 • MLS 201406526 DON KEL LEHER, BROKER

COREY CNARONpE, ' 3732 sq.ft. NormanBuildersbuilt • 5 bedroom +of fi ce,3.5 bath BROKER

GREG MILLERKI BROKER CR S' •

541-280-5512 • MLS 201404977

541-408-1511 • MLS 201402624

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• .88acre, city views

0 4132sq.ft. remodeledhome

5 bedroom, 4 bath • .21acre, I block from river

WOODSIDE RANCH I$829,000 GRANTLUDWICK, ' 46» sq ft • • 5 bedroom, 4.5 bath BROKER •

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2.21 acres, Mt Bachelor v>ew

541-633-0255 • MLS 201405872

T RIVER FRONTAGEI $799,900 CATHY DELNERO, • 2700 sq.ft. brick home • 3 bedroom, 2 bath BROKER , CSP

8.8 ACRES I $690,000

2.24 ACRE ESTATE I $165,000 AMYHALUGAN • 3187 sq.ft. remodeled home • 4 bedroom, 4 bath BROKER • Shop, detached garage 541-410-9045 • MLS 201405875

• I block from downtown

541-410-5280 • MLS 201403384

pARIN K[LL EHER • 1778 sq.ff. single level • 3 bedroom,2.5 bath BROKER C I I ,lp 541-188-0029 • MLS 201406661

MNOR AINCCASCADEVINSI S674900 iMMORAN • ' 5 004 sq R 4 bedroom BROKER ' • 0 Go urmet kitchen, theater room • Below AppraisedValue 541-948-0991 • MLS 201400616

SUNRISE VILLAGE I $635,000 0 Remodeled3705 sq.ft. OEB OEJLNEENMNK • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath BRQKERGRI PREV IEWSPECIALISl Offtce 541-480-6448 • MLS 201306633 '

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JERRY STONE BROKER

PARK-LIKE SHTING I $569,000 DIANE RONNSON • 2813 sq.ft., 3 bedroom,2.5 bath '

• Pilot Butte 8 Deschutes River view

541-390-9598 • MLS 201407365

BROKER,ABR

• Bonus loom & den • .41acre culole-sac lot

541-419-8165 • MLS 201405335

SUNDANCE I $525,000 BRAN OONFAIRBANKS, BROK ER,SRES,GRI, CDFE 541-383-4344

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• 3744 sq.ft. • 5 bedroom, 3 bath • 2.29 acres • MLS 201406043

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SUNRIVER I $499,000 JACK JOHNS, • ' BROKERGRi •

CUSTOMHOME I $499000

0 Beauttful 3439 sq.ft. JANE STRELL • BROKER, ABR, GRI

04 bedroorn 3 5 bath • .30acre

• I acre

541-480-9300 • MLS 201400042

541-948-1998 • MLS 201402295

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PRINEVILLE I $449,000

• 2993 sq.ft, custom home • 3 bedroom,2,5 bath • 4.75 acres, mountain views

KEILYNEUMAN PRINCIPAL BROKER

541-480-2102 • MLS 201407014

STONEHA VEN I $399~

=,.1 NORTHWEST CROSSING I$395,000

NW BEND I $399,000

MINDAMCKITRICK,

• 4 bedroom,2.5 bath • Hardwood floors, leadedglasswindows 541-280-6148 • MLS 201407028 '

BROKER,GRI

0 2086 sq.ff • 4 bedroom, 3 bath • Front & back decks 541-322-2411 • MLS 201407252

CRAIGSMITH BRQKER

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CUFF FBNGOLp • 0 1383 sq.ft. Tudorstyle home BRpKER ' • 0 2 bedroom, 2.5 bath, loft • Arched doorways,hardwoodfloors

541-480-8196 • MLS 201406534

SUNMEADOW I $385 900 DARR YLOOSER,I '3054sq" BROKER , CR S •'

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OUAILCROSSING I $359ANO • New 1853 sq.ft. constructton • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • 23 acre RV parking

GREG FLOYDK , BROKER

541-390-5349 • MLS 201404914

9.55 ACRES I $345,000

MIRADAI $319,900

CIIRO LTNFRIBORIKTPC • SE Bend BROKER , ABR, CRS • Cascade Mountain views • Close to BIM land GREEN 541-383-4350 • MLS 201404734

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• 4 89 ACRES I $299,000 NRKYAL CEKNINIK '

BROK ER,CRS, I

1584 sq.ft. manufactured

• 3 bedroom, 2 bath • 2 acres Cpl trngatton

NE BENDI $289,000 CRAIGLONG BROKER '

• 1967 sq.ft. craftsman • 4 bedroom,2.5 bath • Fencedback&side yard

541-480-1641 ' MLS 201405631

541-383-4364 • MLS 201405380

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NEW Fanklin Brothersbullt • 1851 sq.ft, 3 bedmom, 2.5 bath • Quartz counters, SS appliances 541-556-1804 • MLS 201400554

KIRKSANpBURG BROKER

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SW BEND DUPLEX I $2874600 OAVVN UIRICKSON • 3 bedroom,2.5 bath unit • 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath unit BRpKERCRS • Close to Old Mill 8 river trail GRI, ABR 541-610-9421 • MLS 201402883 '

LOCAT IONI LOCA ION' T I $219I OOO JACIOE FRENCH • 2 bedroom,west side bungalow • Close to parks, trails, restaurants BROKER • Good investment or fun living 541-480-2269 • MLS 201405528 '

GARYROSE, BROKER MBA

SUNRIVER I $215,000 ' »94 sq ft. ' 5 bedroom 3 bath • Sold completely furnished

541-588-0681 • MLS 201405848

4.5 ACRE SINLAPINEI $250~

• 1620 sq.ft. manufactured •3 bedroom + ofice,2 bath • 2 car garage PLUS shop 541-896-1263 • MLS 201406879

CHEL LEMAS, BROKER '

THREE PINESLOT I $249,900 JANIAUGNUN, BROKE RABRCRS GRICSP

• .20ame lot ' Easy trall access • Pine trees and tranquility

541.350.6049 • MLS 201407324

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NE BEND I $249,000 "l " DEBBIE JOHNSON, • 3 bedroom, 2 bath BROKER • Mature landscape, fenced,shed 541-480.1293 • MLS 201406035 '

BROKEN TOPLOTI 229,000 CHRISNHAR TMAN- ' 44 acre loton cul-d~sac • Partial golf course view OECOU RCEY

JJ JONE S, BROKER

541-312-1263 • MLS 201402848

541-188-3618 • MLS 201406409

PRINCIPAL BROKER • Levelsite with pine trees

1.3 ACRE SINLAPINEI $199,000 • 1660 sq.ft. chalet • 2 bedroom + loft, 2 bath • On Little Deschutes,mtn views

MT.BA CHELORVILLAGEI SI89,500 BONNIE SAVICKAS, BROKER, EPRO, • SRES 541-408-1531

• 840 sq.ft. ski house • 2 bedroom, 2 bath, endunit • Vaulted ceilings, alder cabinetry

• MLS 201407321

• THREERIVERSSOUTH I $85,000 51 acre MICNE LLEIISPELK BROKER, ABR, • '

Private well, sand filter septic

• Bxl2 storage, water tank shed E.PRp 541-390-3490 • MLS 201405350



F2 SATURDAY, AUGUST 2 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

Employment Opportunities

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We are hiring for dishwashers, line cooks & prep cooks. Please submit app lications at o u r Bend Pub located at 1 044 N W Bon d Street, Bend. Preemployment drug testing is required.

Log Truck Drivers

(Long & Short) for logging company in Florence, OR. Experience preferred. CDL and current medical card. Great pay and benefits. Year-round, longterm employment. Caii 541-997-8212 MECHANIC

Sisters School District has an opening for a permanent, Full-time Mechanic/Transportation Supervisor Qualifications: • Minimum of three years experience in repair and management of motorized vehicles and 3 years experience in management, combined expenence of at least 5 years desired. • Current CDL license and be ODE certified or be willing to obtain. Salary: $38 , 000. $40,500. depending on experience. See website for details O www.sisters.k12.or.us Call Leland at 549-8521 ext. 4017 if you have questions.

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S UBA R U .

Sales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon's l a r gest new ca r de a ler Subaru of B e n d. Offering 401k, profit sharing, me d ical plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Experience or will train. 90 day $1500 guara ntee. Dress f o r success to work in our drug free work place. Please apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or

Devon. TRUCK DRIVER WANTED Must have doubles endorsement. Local run. Truck is parked in Madras. 541-475-4221 Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS •

Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange mes-

sages and connect

live. Try it free. Call now: 877-955-5505. (PNDC) Western Washington Guy seeks gal 50-66, slim/average build, to share quiet t i mes; trips, walks, nature, moon-light, cuddling! Greg, PO Box 3013 Arlington, WA 98223.

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Loans & Mortgages

Motorcycles & Accessories

BANK TURNED YOU

DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

LOCAL iyfONEyrWe buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.

Say "goodbuy" to that unused

880

870

Motorcycles & Accessories Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

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Food 8 Beverage

860

FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $18,000 or best offer. 541-318-6049

12' Aluminum boat Allegro 32' 2007, like HD FXSBI 2006 new with trailer, 3hp motor, new, only 12,600 miles. cond., low miles, good cond, $1200.. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Stage I download, ex503-307-8570 transmission, dual extras, bags. $8900. haust. Loaded! Auto-lev541-447-0887 eling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, slide-outs with aw12' aluminum fish- 2nings, rear c a mera, ing boat, t r ailer, trailer hitch, driyer door motor, fish finder, w/power window, cruise, accessories, $1200. exhaust brake, central HD Sportster, 2001 exc 541-389-7234 vac, satellite sys. Asking cond, 1 owner, maint'd, $67,500. 503-781-8812 new t i res, cu s tom chrome, leather saddle 13.5' Bayliner Capri 1985, bags, 32,400 mi, $4200. 50hp Force motor, trailer, Tom, 541-382-6501 very clean, low hrs, accys, $2275. 541-306-1317

541-447-6554

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General

CROOK COUNTY EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

CROOK COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE

Criminal/PatrolDeputy Salary: $3,280.78 - $4,719A3 Closing:August 22,2014 I 5:00 pm (Nfustuse Sher/ff's Office Application) Crook County Sheriffs Office is seeking a Criminal/Patrol Deputy. Requirements: 21 YOA, US Citizen, HS Diploma/GED, ODL with good record, No criminal record; Must pass POST test, ORPAT, background and physiological exams. Successful candidate will have strong interpersonal skills, be able to analyze situations quickly and objectively with respect of individual rights. Contact Human Resources or Crook County Treasurer's Office at 200 NE 2nd St., Prineville, OR 97754, (541)447-6554 for an application and full position announcement, or visit our web site at www.co.crook.or.us to download the application.

JaycoJay Feather LG7 25Z 2005 LR slide, central air, micro, AM/FM/CD stereo, TV antenna with booster, queen walk around bed, s l eeps 4-6, outside grill, entertainment center and shower, awning, power hitch, ne w g a s/elec water heater. All new tires, includes spare. Clean, Great Shape. $1 1,200 541-389-8154

ATVs

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

2 Vance & Hines pipes, $12,500. 541-306-0166

RR

Please apply at the Crook CountyTreasurer's/Tax Office 200 NE 2 St. Prineville, OR 97754

541-548-5174

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865

HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 &

item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds Harley Davidson 2003 Anniversary Road King, HDFatBo 1996 Stage 1, pearl white, ex541-385-5809 Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' cellent condition, lots of bed, with ramps. $700 chrome & extr a s. obo. 541-549-4834 or PRIVATE MONEY for $13,999. 541-279-0846 541-588-0068 short term 1st mortgage loans. Strong Completely security 541-480-1670 Want to impress the Rebuilt/Customized relatives? Remodel 2012/2013 Award 573 your home with the Winner Business Opportunities Showroom Condition help of a professional Many Extras D a vidson from The Bulletin's Business Opportunity Harley 2006 FXDLI Dyna Low Miles. "Call A Service j $60,000 Low Rider, Mustang $15,000 • Turn-key business Professional" Directory seat with backrest, 541-548-4807 • Built-in clientele new battery, wind• MLS 201403478 shield, forward con• Other businesses trols,lots of chrome, General available The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturEagle exRookie Dickens, Broker, Screamin' haust, 11,360 miles. day night shift and other shifts as needed. We GRI, CRS, ABR currently have openings all nights of the week. Well maintained! 541-815-0436 Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts $8,650 in La Pine start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and (928) 581-9190 end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Check out the Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a classifieds online MORRIS minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts www.bendbulletin.com are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of REAL ESTATE loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackI&~ e~ ~ Op d Updated daily ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we General offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, CROOK COUNTY short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Crook County/Wellness & Education Board of Central Oregon (M/EBCO) Please submit a completed application attenQualityProgram Coordinator tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Salary Ranger I70,553 - $74,883DOE at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanFull-time with benefits dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be Closes: August 12, 2014 at 5:00 p.m. obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). WEBCO is a governmental non-profit agency No phone calls please. Only completed applithat acts on behalf of Local Mental and Public cations will be considered for this position. No Health Authority for Crook, Deschutes and resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reJefferson Counties. This position develops, quired prior to employment. EOE. implements and c oordinates the q uality improvement system and p rograms for The Bulletin WEBCO. Requires Master's degree and prior Serving Central Oregonsince 19tO work experience as a Licensed Clinical Social Worker or other clinical licensure experience. Work is performed in our Redmond office and Accounting frequent tri-county travel is required.

Applications and full job description can be found at www.co.crook.or.us .

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionally winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater 8 air conditioning seldom used; just add water and it's ready to go! $22,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne.

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Accounts Receivable Specialist Responsible invoicing, posting payments, resolving payment issues and maintaining customer account information. Duties include performing billing and collection activities, reconciling accounts, posting cash receipts, monitoring accounts for payment delinquency, making collection calls, and investigating and resolving customer issues.

Requires 3 years prior accounts receivable, billing or general accounting experience; an understanding of accounting principles and business to business accounts receivable; proficiency with M icrosoft Excel; strong organizational and customer service skills, good verbal and written communication skills. Experience in a customer service focused environment a plus. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the western United States. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus.

17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-81 5-2523

The Bulletin

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Bigfoot 29 2003,sleeps 5, walk-around queen Winnebago Advenbed, 57K mi, 7.3L power turer 2005 35y2', gas, stroke t u rb o di e sel than 20,000 miles, w/Banks power pak incl less condition, 2 auges, torque lock & excellent 18.5' Sea Ray 2000 ake brakes. Power ev- slide-outs, work horse 4.3L Mercruiser, low erything, auto leveling chassis, Banks power hrs, 190 hp Bowjacks, air ride w/90psi brake system, sleeps rider w/depth finder, compressor, 3.6kw pro- 5, with a l l o p tions, radio/ CD player, rod p ane gen set. V e r y $62,000 / negotiable. holders, full canvas, clean, no pets, no smkrs, Call 5 4 1-306-8711or EZ Loader trailer, araged. N o sl i des. email a i kistu@bendcable.com exclnt cond,$9500. 29,500. 541-548-3985 707-484-3518

(Bend)

„s

1997 Reinell 18.5 ft. ski boat, in/out Volvo eni ne, e x c . co n d . 8000. 541-389-6256

19' Pioneer ski boat, 1983, vm tandem trailer, V8. Fun & fast! $5800 obo. 541-815-0936.

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-280-3146 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

Keystone Laredo 31' RV

20 06 w i th 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600 54'I -4947-4805

Pnce Reduced! Komfort Pa c i fic Ridge 27 ' Like NEW deluxe NW des ign, 15 ' Su p e r Slide, private bdrm, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt, led lights, always stored inside. A MU S T seei $23,500 obo! Call Pam 541-788-6767 or Bill 541-480-7930

Winnebago Aspect 2009 - 32', 3 slideouts, Leather inte-

rior, Power s eat, locks, win d ows, Aluminum wheels. 17" Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900 541-480-6900

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

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

Ads published in the Redmond: "Boats" classification 541-548-5254 include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. 882 For all other types of Fifth Wheels watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809 Fleetwood Discovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/ail options - 3 slide outs, Serv>n Cenfral Ore on since 1903 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Winnebago C 22' etc., 32,000 m iles. 2002 - $30,500 Wintered in h e ated Big engine, heavy 5th Wheel Transshop. $82,000 O.B.O. port, 1990 duty, many extras, 541-447-8664 Low miles, EFI 460, 21,000 miles, like 4-spd auto, 10-ply new. Please call for tires, low miles, aldetails Chaparral 2130SS most new condition, 541-280-3251 Clean, well m ainSell for $3500. tained 21 ' f a m ily OR For Hire Winnebago Sightseer ski/wakeboard Call for quote FLEETWOOD 27' 2002. workhorse open-bow runabout Ask for Theo, PACE ARROW, 1999 gas motor, Class A, with new Barewest 541-260-4293 Updated interior, 36', 2 8' slide living rm/ditower/Bimini. Great 42,600 miles, V10 nette, new tires. spare sound system, new siides, as, 5000 watt generator, tire carrier, HD trailer dual battery system. ydraulic levelers, auto hitch, water heater, Stored under cover, steps, back-up camera, micro/oven, generafresh water use only, washer/dryer, vac, tor, furn/AC, outside 2nd owner. J u st ice m aker, central l o aded, shower, carbon dioxb ought a lar g e r excellent condition. & smoke detector, Arctic Fox 24.5' 2005, Chaparral! $14,000. $27,500 541-620-2135 ide fiberglas ext., elect. axles are turned, stored in 541-419-9510 (SeeCraigsiist step, cruise control, garage, 1 slide, all new ¹4470374489) CB radio, 60k miles, tires, 1 owner. $11,900. 875 awning, TV antenna w 541-633-0520 or booster, flat screen 541-389-2087 Watercraft 23" TV. A M/FM/CD stereo. $2 7 ,500. TURN THE PAGE 541-548-2554

The Bulletin

Please go towww.lesschwab.com to apply. Applications will be accepted through August 7, 2014. No phone calls please. Equal OpportunityEmployer

$23,995.

541-383-3503

Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago 31J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers!541-388-7179

16' Old Town Canoe, spruce, cedar & canvas, Lake model, 1 owner, very good cond, w/extras. $1000. 541-388-3386

The Bulletin Circulation department is looking Ads published in "Wa for a District Representative to join our Single tercraft" include: Kay Copy team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week aks, rafts and motor Call 54! 385 580f io promoteyourservice• Advertise for 28doysstarting at'l40 phisspsmlpackogeisMiawilableonI reMcl position. Overall focus is the representation, Ized sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspa- watercrafts. personal Fo per. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, "boats" please se special events and news dealer outlets. Daily Class 870. Aggregate Domestic Services L a ndscaping/Yard Care responsibilities include driving a company vehicle to service a defined district, ensuring 541-385-5609 Home is Where the Dirt Is Vic Russell Const. Inc. Aeration/Dethatching newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, 9 yrs experience in 1-time or Weekly Services managing newspaper counts for the district, Aggregate 8 Paving Servmg Cenfral Oregon since 1903 housekeeping. Refs & Ask about FREEadded Res. & Comm. building relationships with our current news rates to fit your needs. svcs w/seasonal contract! CB¹31 500966MDI dealer locations and growing those locations 880 Call Julie 541-410-0648 Bonded & Insured. 541-536-3478 new outlets. Position requires total ownerMotorhomes or 541-410-1 136 COLLINS Lawn Maint. with ship of and accountability of all single copy eleCa/i 541-480-9714 ments within that district. Work schedule will be Baths & Kitchens 1997 Bounder 34' through Monday withTuesday and w/slide. $17,900. CARLSENG DESIGNS Thursday W ednesday off . Requi r es good communicati o n Excellent condition, Reid Construction Landscape Design, Handyman skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift Bathroom & Kitchen must see! Ford 460 Consultation 8 Garpounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to remodel specialists! w/Banks, new tires, dening. 541-610-6961 45 I DO THAT! multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong Daniel, 541-788-4676 dual A/C, rear camHome/Rental repairs Tanya Carlsen service/team orientation, sales and problem CCB¹200883 era, triple axle, Onan Small jobs to remodels solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: Allen Reinsch Yard gen, 63k miles. Honest, guaranteed circulation©bendbulletin.com 541-306-9897 work. CCB¹151573 Maintenance& Mowing Building/Contracting (& many other things!) Dennis 541-317-9768 Applications are available at the front desk. Call 541-536-1294 or NOTICE: Oregon state Drop off your resume in person at 541-815-5313 law requires anyone • g sm I - 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; 1 who con t racts for No phone inquiries please. YARD NIAKEOVERS construction work to Landscaping/Yard Care Pre-employment drug testing required. Better,cheaper, be licensed with the EOE/Drug Free Workplace Bigfoot Yards Construction Contrac- NOTICE: Oregon LandMust be insurable to drive company vehicle. 541-633-9895 tors Board (CCB). An scape Contractors Law 2007 Winnebago active license Outlook Class "C" 671) requires all ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT means the contractor (ORS 31', solar panel, Cat. that adMasonry is bonded & insured. businesses vertise t o pe r form heater, excellent LAKE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT ff7 Verify the contractor's Landscape Construc- Ellingson Masonry condition, more exLAKEVIEW, OREGON CCB l i c ense at tion which includes: Custom stone work, tras. Asking $58K. www.hirealicensedl anting, deck s , lic. bonded, insured. Ph. 541-447-9268 LCSD ¹7 is looking for a full-time ADMINIScontractor.com ences, arbors, Can be viewed at CCB¹ 157238 or call 503-378-4621. water-features, and inTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SUPERINWestern Recreation 541-480-9512 The Bulletin recom- stallation, repair of irTENDENT AND SCHOOL BOARD. Must have (top of hill) mends checking with rigation systems to be high school diploma or equivalent, and 2 years in Prinevi//e. the CCB prior to con- l icensed w it h th e Painting/Wall Covering of administrative support experience or tracting with anyone. Landscape Contracequivalent education. Associate Degree and/or Some other t rades tors Board. This 4-digit equivalent preferred. Salary commensurate to ALL AMERICAN also req u ire addi- number is to be inPAINTING experience. In addition to salary, the district tional licenses and cluded in all adverInterior and Exterior provides an insurance cap, district paid PERS certifications. Family-owned retirement, annual leave, paid holidays, sick tisements which indiResidential & Commercial leave, and bereavement leave. This position is cate the business has R&TCustom Const. 40 yrs exp. • Sr. Discounts located in Lakeview, OR. a bond, insurance and 5-year warranties Allegro 31 tt., 2006 Fine and Finish Carworkers compensaSummer Special! original owner, 2 pentry. CCB ¹17991 4 tion for their employPick up complete application packet & job Call 541-337-6149 slides, Ford V-10, Ron & Tammy Berg, ees. For your protecdescription at Lake County School Dist. ¹7, CCB ¹193960 28,000 miles, satellite 541-647-8701 tion call 503-378-5909 1341 S. First St. or www.lakeview.k12.or.us. TVs, queen bed, or use our website: To be considered for this position please WESTERN PAINTING sleeps 6, lots of storwww.lcb.state.or.us to provide a cover letter, resume & completed Debris Removal age, stored under check license status CO. Richard Hayman, district application by fax or in person. Applicacover, A/C, electric before contracting with a semi-retired paint- tions sent via email will not be accepted. JUNK BE GONE awning, 5.5 KW genthe business. Persons ing contractor of 45 I Haul Away FREE erator, auto leveling, doing lan d scape years. S mall Jobs For more information contact Sean Gallagher For Salvage. Also no smokers, no pets, maintenance do not Welcome. Interior & at 541-947-3347. EOE. This position closes Cleanups & Cleanouts r equire an LC B l i - Exterior. c c b¹51 84. at 4:00 pm on August 11th, 2014. $52,900. cense. 541-388-6910 541.390.9932 Mel, 541-389-8107

HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEW TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008

I'

For More Ads The Bulletin

CHECK YOUR AD

Winnebago Sightseer 30' 2004 with liying

room slide, 48k miles, in good cond. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.

$27,900

Call Dick at 541-408-2387

The Bulletin

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

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

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

541-548-5254

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809 881

Travel Trailers Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water 8 sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $28,500 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, Or.

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.

541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. Call Dick, 541-480-1687. FLEETWOOD Wilderness 2000 28' 1 slide, good cond with awning. and A/C, shower, queen bed, nice condition. $8775. 541-548-0875

206-715-7120

TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles / Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more information go to ~www.m new ~alle robus.com or email trainwater1 57© gmail.com or call858-527-8627

Holiday Rambler Heartland P r owler Alumascape 28' 2012, 29PRKS, 33', 2003, 1-owner. like new, 2 slides-livSelf-contained, i ng area & l a r ge 13' slide, 80W solar closet, 15' power awpanel, walkaround ning, power hitch 8 sofa/bed, s tabilizers, 18 g a l . queen+ loads of storage water heater, full size throughout. Excellent queen bed, l a rge cond., licensed 2015. shower, porcelain sink Must see!$13,700. & toilet. $2 6 ,900 541-389-9214 541-999-2571


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DAILY B R I D G E

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wjll $bprtz

C L U B s aturday,August2,2014

Coughing up some cash By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency C y the C y ni c h a d b een t o a physician for hi s annual checkup, which he has under protest. "How did it go?" I asked. "The doctor grabbed my wallet and said 'Cough'," Cy growled. Cy hates to spend money, but he coughed up some cash in today's deal. He was declarer at four spades, and West led the ten of diamonds. The Cynic won and led a trump, and East took the ace and returned a dlamond. Cy was beyond help, medical or otherwise. When he led a second trump, West won, led a club to East's ace andruffed the diamond return for down one.

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opens one heart, you respond one spade, he bids two clubs and you try 2NT. Partner next bids three clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: Y o u r pa r t ner h a s minimum values with at least five cards in both hearts and clubs. He is trying t o s i g n o f f b e l o w g a m e. Nevertheless, you have four valuable honors. Bid four hearts. Partner will be a favorite for 10 tricks if he has no m orethan4,A J 8 7 5 , 7 4 , A J 1 0 7 5 . South dealer Neither side vulnerable

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A P P L A U D S N AK E D E Y E

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Findfive gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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26 Construction worker 27 Sore loser's comment 28 Source of many orders

J E L O H Y K U M Y E D E E S A W I B R D I N C R O M E L A D E D P R E N A T S T T O S C A N C E L B I A S A R O B ON E M A C Q U I T P S A xwordeditor(Naol.com

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By Barry C. SIlk (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

45 51

08/02/14


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY AUGUST 2 2014 F5

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

SutIoku High Fives

2 6 8 5 6

1 1

Sudoku High Fives consists of five regular Sudoku grids sharing one set of 3-by-3 boxes. Each row, column and set of 3-by-3boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 9 without repetition. The num-

2 5

7 9 3 1

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The Bulletin

9 1

8 19

6 7 1 5

2

6 4 9 9 2 5 7 3 6 5 1 4 6 3 5

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6 4 3 9 7 2 4

3 O JFS/KF

2 1 8 4

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4 7 6 3 2 8 9 5 1

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9 1 4 2 5 7 3 6 8 4 2 7 9 1 5 3 7 2 4 6 8

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882

908

932

933

935

940

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Vans

Fsr-14

Laredo 30' 2009

$25,979

® s um au

rr. "':

tgt/

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

$25,500

541-419-3301

MONTANA 3585 2008,

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

Jeep Wrangler 2005 4 cyl. soft top, totally gone through by auto shop. Have papers. $9,600. 541-815-7408

(photo forillustration only)

Frontier 2013, 1/3 interest in wellBuick Skylark 1972 Nissan SV model, Crew cab, equipped IFR Beech Bo- 17K miles. No rust, no nanza A36, new 10-550/ leaks, eyerything works. 4x4, 5 speed trans., pw, pdl. (exp. 8/3/14) Amazing originality! prop, located KBDN. VIN ¹715664 $65,000. 541-419-9510 Photos at hemmings.com Stock ¹44326A www.N4972M.com $20,900. 541-323-1898

1/5th interest in 1973 Corvette Coupe 1964 530 miles since frame Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low off restoration. Runs time on air frame and and drives as new.

engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always

hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

Satin Silver color with black leather interior, mint dash. PS, PB, AC, 4 speed. Knock offs. New tires. Fresh 327 N.O.M. All Corvette restoration parts in & out. Reduced to $57,950. 541-410-2870

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 T OYOTA TA C O M A LIMITED 19 9 8,Ext ended cab , d a r k g reen, V6, 4 x4, 5 speed automatic, TRD off road, silver Snug top, one owner, high mileage, ca r e fully maintained, runs well. $7,250. 541-576-2030

541-377-0040

$22,500.

541-419-5980

Mazda CX 7 s 2010 Touring awd 25.9k mi. ¹031410 $19,995

Volkswagen 1981 diesel pickup, 5-spd, great gas mileage, canopy, SeriFord Bronco 1972 "One ous inquiries only $3600 of a Kind", totally custom. obo. 541-420-0366 $79,995. Call Jack

Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside 8 out, one owner, nonsmoker,. loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.

JEEP WRANGLER 2009 hard top 18,000 miles. auto-

matic, Ac, tilt 8 cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.

-

-

.

Vin ¹019106. Stock ¹43981A

s u aAau $24,999

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821

Chrysler 200 LX 2012, pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. (exp. 8/3/14) VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014

©

s u a A Ru.

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

LIIICOLN ~

932

Antique & Classic Autos

Honda Ridgeline RTL Crew Cab ~

2005 AWD Minivan Room for everyone!

: : j~

WQS '~

$18,977 ROBBERSON ~

r'a

/a/rsr

1/3interest in

Columbia400,

Financing available.

$150,000

(located O Bend) 541-288-3333

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969,was a special order, has all the extras, and is all original. Seeto believe! Reduced to $10,000, firm. 541-923-6049

Extra nice 4x4, great mpg. Vin¹541238 $19,977 ROBBERSON ueeoar~

~~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 pricing good thru 08/15/14

GMC TERRAIN SLT 2010 AWD Power

and efficiency.

Features sunroof, leather interior, garaged, It's loaded and only 57k miles. $19,900. (760)-275-5407 (in Bend)

541.312.3986 DLR¹0205 pricing good thru 8/1 5/1 4

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

7 6 9 1 3 8 2 4 5

4 8 5 2 9 7 3 1 6

8 3 6 4 7 2 9 5 1

1 5 4 3 8 9 7 6 2

9 7 2 5 1 6 4 3 8

Ia s s s a

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 8/1 5/1 4

Corvette Cpe 2004 Two-tops (glass & painted), auto., only 44k mi. pewter/black, CD, tinted windows, local Bend car, showroom cond., CD, tires 80%, clear title, everything works! Won't last! $20,995 obo 928-210-8323 More photos at www.bendbulletin.com

Subaru Outback 3.6R Limited 2011, moon r oof, AWD, pw, p l , leather,(exp. 8/3/14) Vin ¹381548 Stock ¹44184A

B nz

©

2008 Nearly perfect - a true must see! $14,998 Vin ¹050612 ROBBERSON ~

$23,979

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

nsaoa ~

r-.:.,;,;,.a Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today!

I A s k about our

(PNDC)

I

"Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers

L'"" '" " Dodge Avenger 2013, pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. (exp. 8/3/14) Vin ¹535474 Stock ¹83015

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,

power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

I

VWGOLF 2012 JL. ~..

J hatchback,

Subaru Legacy 2008 2.5i Special Edition 56k mi. ¹213869

$14,979

®

s u a A Ru.

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 8/1 5/1 4

Washington with just one phone call. For a FREE adv e rtising network brochure call 916-288-6011 or email ceceliaocnpa.com

Automobiles

ROBBERSON y LIIICOLN ~

S uaARu . eusaauovrmm coM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

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

541-598-3750

www.aaaoregonautosource.com

gas

hater. VIN ¹273107 $14,988 ~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 (Special pricing good thru8/15/14)

VW Jetta GL 1988, 28+

mpg, sunroof, air, 5-spd,

Subaru Outback 2006, 1 owner, all svc records, Limited, leather, 2 sets tires/wheels. $975 5spd, pw, pdl, tilt. obo. 541-382-6258 (exp. 8/3/14) WHEN YOU SEE THIS VIN ¹361575 Stock ¹44255A

©

$12,979

SuaARU NexxeorrtxxD.ODII

. Im.

MorePixatBendbuletin.com

On a classified ad go to 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. www.bendbulletin.com 877-266-3821 to view additional Dlr ¹0354 photos of the item.

~

4

M

Hyundai Accent GL 1999, auto, CD. (exp. 8/3/14) VIN ¹584982 Stock ¹44383B

$4,999

©

s u a A Ru.

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

cuit Court of the State 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. LEGAL NOTICE 877-266-3821 The undersigned has of Oregon probate Dlr ¹0354 been appointed per- number 1 4 PB0081. sonal representative All persons having of the Estate of John claims against t he Logan Maxwell, Jr., Estate are required to Deceased, by the De- present them, with vou c hers, schutes County Cir- proper cuit Court of the State within four (4) months of Oregon, probate after the date of first Iphoto for illustration only) of this noHyundal Elantra 2011, number 1 4 PB0074. publication Touring, leather, auto, All persons having tice to t h e u n dersigned or the claims c laims against t h e CD, pw, pdl. estate are required to may be barred. All (exp. 8/3/14) present the same with persons whose rights Vin ¹090677 vouchers may be affected by Stock ¹82995 proper within four (4) months the proceedings may $13,979 after the date of first obtain additional inS uaARu . publication to the un- f ormation from t h e eusaauovrmm coM dersigned or they may records of the Court, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. be barred. Additional the undersigned or 877-266-3821 the attorneys for the information may be Dlr ¹0354 o btained fro m t h e undersigned. DATED court records, the un- and first p u blished dersigned or the at- July 19, 2014. Jeffrey torney. Date first pub- P. Boggess c/o Thol ished: A ugust 2 , mas J. Sayeg, Kar2014. Lisa Eastman, nopp Petersen LLP, Personal Representa- 1201 N.W. Wall St., t ive c/o S ea n M . Suite 200, Bend, OrInfiniti I30 2001 egon 97701, T E L: N eary, Attorney a t great condition/ Law, F i t c h Law (541) 382-3011, FAX: well maintained, Group, Pc, 210 SW (541) 383-3073, Of 127k miles. A ttorneys fo r P e r 5th Street, Suite 2, Chevy Malibu 2012, sonal Representative. $5,900 obo. Redmond OR 97756. Lots of options; sun541-420-3277 roof, 6 speed trans LEGAL NOTICE with manual option, TO INT E RESTED bluetooth, o n Star, PERSONS. NOTICE What are you Sirius satelite, IS HEREBY GIVEN Need to get an ad heated seats, pw, that the undersigned looking for? in ASAP? pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech has been appointed You'll find it in engine, 20 MPG city, Personal Representa35 MPG hwy, USB tive of the Estate of The Bulletin Classifieds port, Ipod r e ady, Fax it te 541-322-7253 Rita E. Boggess, De$14,900 OBO. The Bulletin Classifieds ceased, by the Des541-504-6974 c hutes County C i r 541-385-5809 LIIICOLII ~

908

2 1 3 6 5 4 8 7 9

Subaru Outback 2012 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, auto. trans., AWD, leather heated seats, AWD, power moon r oof, a n d mo r e ! 25,600 miles. Below KB © $2 7 ,500 541-344-5325 annie2657Oyahoo.com

Well cared for, only 18k miles. Bring your suncreen! $18,977 Vin ¹208304 ROBBERSON

$14,979

975

LIIICOLII ~

Aircraft, Parts & Service

o JFS/KF

975

935

00

4 5 3 2 1 9 5 8 7 6 9 1 6 4 2 7 8 3

Automobiles

read a N ewspaper print copy each week? Toyota Sienna 2011, Discover the Power of Mercedes Benz e320, LE model, 7 passen- PRINT N e wspaper 1999 wagon, white ger, stow-n-go seat- Advertising in Alaska, 120k mi., incl. studing alloy wheels. Idaho, Montana, Or- ded tires, exc. cond., Iexp. 8/3/14I egon, U t a h and $4500. 541-318-4502.

Audi A6 Quattro MGB 1973 convertible, Sport Utility Vehicles 4-cyl, 2-barrel carb, new manifold, new alternator In Madras, 8 rotor assembly, call 541-475-6302 brilliant red with black (photo forillustration only) top, beautiful little car! Mercedes ML3502003, $3995 obo. 3300 sq.ft. Hangar 2008 AWD, OPEN ROAD 36' 541-410-9942 AWD, moonroof, pw, automatic. 2005 - $25,500 Prineville Airport Ready to Blillw X3 2 007, 99K pdl, power seats. 60'wide by 55' King bed, hide-a-bed 933 go for only miles, premium pack(exp. 8/3/14) sofa, 3 slides, glass deep with 16' age, heated lumbar $24,977 Pickups Vin ¹414134 shower, 10 gal. waVin¹055921 supported seats, panbi-fold door. Stock ¹44376A ter heater, 10 cu.ft. oramic moo n roof, Upgrades include, ROBBERSON y $6,979 fridge, central vac, Bluetooth, ski bag, XeT-6 lighting, t LINCOLII~ I asm a s atellite dish, 2 7 " non headlights, tan & © s u a ARu. skylights, windows, v4 Tv/stereo syst., front black leather interior, 14' side RV door, 541-312-3986 front power leveling n ew front & re a r 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. infra-red heating, Dlr ¹0205. special brakes @ 76K miles, 877-266-3821 jacks and s cissor and bathroom, stabilizer jacks, 16' one owner, all records, Dlr ¹0354 pricing thru 8/15/14 awning. Like new! $155,000, Call Bill very clean, $1 6,900. 2005 Diesel 4x4 541-419-0566 541-480-7930 541-388-4360 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, Cadillac CTS2011 Hangarfor sale at tow pkg., brake conRV Redmond Airport - not troller, cloth split CONSIGNMENTS a T Hangar - $38,000. front bench seat, WANTED 541-420-0626 only 66k miles. fphoto for illustration only) We Do the Work, Very good condition, Ie Nissan Murano 2012, You Keep the Cash! Original owner, AWD, auto, cloth, CD, Chevrolet Trailblazer On-site credit AWD luxury, get $34,000 2008 4x4 pw, pdl. approval team, or best offer. there in style! Automatic, 6-cylinder, (exp. 8/3/14) web site presence. Vin ¹116768 541-408-7826 tilt wheel, power winVin ¹229346 We Take Trade-Ins! $32,977 Stock ¹83013 dows, power brakes, Free Advertising. Save money. Learn air conditioning, keyBIG COUNTRY RV $16,979 ROBBERSON y to fly or build hours less entry, 69K miles. Bend: 541-330-2495 with your own air© s u a ARLL Excellent condition; Redmond: c raft. 1968 A e r o tires have 90% tread. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-548-5254 541-312-3986 Commander, 4 seat, $11,995. Dlr ¹0205 pricing 877-266-3821 150 HP, low time, Call 541-598-5111 good thru 08/15/14 Ext. Cab 1991 Dlr ¹0354 full panel. $23,000 Chevy 885 with camper shell, obo. Contact Paul at Canopies & Campers Toyota 2005 4runner good cond., $1500 541-447-5184. OBO. 541-447-5504. SR5, 66k mi. -moon Chevy Cavalier 1995 Lance Camper, ¹051206 $18,995 T-Hangar for rent 11.3 ft., sleeps 6, self at Bend airport. contained, very lightly Call 541-382-8998. used, exc. cond., Tv, Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, VCR, micro, oven, 916 AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, fridge, 3 burner stove, 541-598-3750 clean title, 12/15 tags, Trucks & q ueen o ve r ca b , $5995. 541-610-6150 aaaoregonautosource.com Ford F250, 1997 heavy 2000 Inspected & Heavy Equipment $8000. 541-389-6256 duty 4x4 Supercab, 7.5 L Readyl Vin¹239718 C J5 1 9 7 8 V-8 , engine, auto, 111K mi, Bargain Corral Camper for short p/up Toyota Highruns g r eat, $ 3 750. Lockers, new soft $3,977 box, 68x80 cab height lander 2002 541-848-7295 /389-8690 top, power steering, $200 541-416-0970 e oversized h e ater, ROBBERSON y many extras. $6,000 obo. 541-519-1627 Peterbilt 359 p o table 541-312-3986 water t ruck, 1 9 90, Dlr ¹0205 pricing 3200 gal. tank, 5hp god thru 08/15/14 Dod e Nitro Heat Limited and AWD pump, 4-3" h oses, Ford F250 4x4 1996, come see! ¹065241 camlocks, $ 2 5,000. f Eagle Cap 850, 2005 x-cab, long wheel base, $14,988 with slideout, AC, micro, 541-820-3724 brush guard, tool box, Get your frig, heater, queen bed, 925 $3000. 541-771-1667 or ROBBERSON arr wet bath, exlnt cond, business 541-633-3607 Utility Trailers I I NC 0 LI ~ I ss s s s $16,900. 541-388-3477 leave message. 2011 Be cool and 541.312.3986 e ROW I N G practical in this 4x4. DLR¹0205 pricing Vin ¹ 520014 good thru 08/15/14 17.977 with an ad in 00 ROBBERSON The Bulletin's Ford F350, 1999 7.3 LINCOLII~ Is s ss s Toyota Sienna "Call A Service 16' open bed utility Diesel 4x4, Lariat XLE Limited trailer with large gear extended cab, short box, Professional" 541-312-3986 box, new wheels and clean! Plus extras. Dlr ¹0205. Special Directory t ires, $ 70 0 O B O . $15,000. 541-593-6053 pricing good thru 541-548-3761 8/1 5/1 4 nr

8 6 7 3 4 2 9 5 1

975

lphoto for illustration only)

Dlr¹0354

541-598-3750

1 5 2 4 9 8 3 6 7

Automobiles

DID YOU KNOW 144 million U.S. A d ults

©

3 8 6 1 5 7 2 4 9

975

Mr Kit Companion '94 26' with one slide, new stove/fridge, comes with gen. reduced to $4000. 541-389-5788

2 8 3 1 7 6 4 5 9

7 9 4 6 2 3 1 8 5

Mazda Miata2010

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Automobiles

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F6 SATURDAY AUGUST 2 2014 • THE BULLETIN 9

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

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44p to 63 .months On all 34314 Outbacks'4

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2014 FORD FUSION SE

O n Approved CreditTier 1 Financing on 720 Beacon orbetter

Nav. System, SE Tech Pkg., 18" Premium Wheels vIN: 178242 MSRP ......................... $27,530 TSS Discount .................-$1,400 $26,130 Retail CustomerCash.......-$1,500 Bonus Cash ..................... -$500 Bonus Cash ..................... -$500 Ford Credit* .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -$1,000

$22,630

*Must Finance throughFMCC. OnApprovedCredit.

2014 FORD F150 EXT. CAB 4X4

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VIN: A45809

MSRP ......................... $32,980 TSS Discount.................-$1,500 $31,480 Retail CustomerCash.......-$1,500 Trade-In Assistance* * . . . . . . . . -$750 Ford Credit* .................. -$1,000

$2Q 9%h wp ly rmw%pmp

Huge Sa~lngs!

*Must FinancethroughFMCC. OnApprovedCredit.

** Musttradeina'95 ornewer.

on

2014 FORD EXPEDITION VIN:F40447

MSRP ............

.... $51,490 .....-$3,495 $47,995 -$3,500 -$750 .....-$1,750

TSS Discount ... Ford Cash.. Bonus Cash Ford Credit'

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$95495 Off NSRP!

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$41,995

2014 FORD F250 XLT CREW CAB 4X4 Running Boards, Diesel vIN: B35580 MSRP ......................... $51,995 TSS Discount .................-$3 740 $48,255 Retail Cash ...................-$4,000 Ford Credit* .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -$1,000

$43,255 2011FOR DF150SUPERCREI LARIAT4X4 DualPowerSeats, Meonrool, PowerWindows &Locks, Tilt & Cruise,FullyLoaded, Exlra Clean Only12KMiles vtn: D32979 Ksffeyelseeook

Low Miles, Excellent Condition!

$39,275

VIN: A31238

'34,995

'44I'

4

$448" permonthfor &4monthsI 3.99%A.P.R. $2500TradeEquity Or CaehDOWn. OoApprovedCredit.

2004CH EVYTAHOE4X4

5.3 y&,QuadSeating, LeatherInterior, Meonreol,RearA/C,Fully Loaded With 3rdRewSeating, LowMiles Vln: R229 931

$297$$

$207" permonthfor 72monthsI 399RAPR.93999TradeEqallT Or CaehDOWn. OnApprovsdCredit.

2008 JEEP WRANGLER Soft Top, V6, 6 Spd, Tow Pkg. Only 60K Miles. Real Clean

$20,995

$249 permonthfor 84monthsO 3.99%A.PR.$2500TradeEquity or CaehDO Wn. OoApprovsdCredit.

$249

Power Windows & Locks, Tilt, Cruise, AM-FM w/CD Very Clean!

'27,995

Caeh DO Wn.04ApprovodCredit.

2013 FORD ESCAPESEL4X4 Leather, BackupCamera, Heated Seats

$i7,495

$22,875 $' ' ',

3

$259permonthfor 84monthsO3.25% A.PR.$25007radeEquityor Cash

'

Down. On ApprovedCredit.

Excellent Condition

V-10, Only 26K Miles, Must See!

VIN: 138061

VIN: D53582

$199

CaehDO Wn. OnApprovsdCredit.

Homelink, RearVision Camera.Navigation System w/AhaInfotainment, Sirius XMNavTrafficw/4 MonthFreelrial, Voice Activated Control, AccessoryValue Pkg.Rear Seat BackProtector, Wheel Arch.

MSRP$36,261. VIN:¹E2311715 EDK-39 Subaru ofBend Discount $3,735.

201 S u b a r u O ut b a c k 2 . 5 i L imited CV T

MoonroofPkg., PowerMoonroof, Auto-DimmingRearViewMirror w/Homelink, RearVisionCamera, Navigation Systemw/AhaInfotainment, Sirius XMNavTrafficw/4 MonthFreeTrial, VoiceActivated Control, Popular Pkg.¹3, Wheel LockKit, Splash Guards.

SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE

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2015 S u ru O ut b a c k 2 . 5 i P remium C V T

$21,995

$399;

FDD-11 Subsru of Bend

PowerMoonroofPackage,Auto-DimmingRearViewCompass Mirror w/Homelink,PowerRearGatew/Memory

FDD-12 Subaru of Bend

Discount $1,860.

$3OIP'permonthfor 72months@ 3.99%A.PR.$2500TradeEquity or

2015 S u b a r u O ut b a c k 2 . 8 i P remium C V T

MSRP $30,743. VIN: ¹F3204853

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SALE PRICE

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2 u a ru F ore s t e r 2 . 5 i 6MT StandardModel

CaehDO Wn. OnApprovsdCredit.

2010FORDMUSTANGGTPREMIUM 2008 FORD ESCAPE XLT4X4

Discount $2,096

SALE PRICE

PowerMoonroof,Auto-DimmingRearView Compass Mirror w/Homelink,NavigationInformation System,Voice-Activated Control NaviAudi , osystem&HVAC, Power Rear Gatew/Memory

MSRP$23,045. VIN: ¹FG464889

MSRP $30,973. VIN:¹E2311715

VIN: 117492

VIN: 650217

FFA-01 Subsru of Bend

, '~ FDD-13 Subaru of Bend

Discount $546.

Discount $2,179.

'239

$12,795 $239 permonthfor 84months@ 3A9%A.PR.$1995TradeEquity OrCaehDOWn. OnApprovsdCredit.

$199permonthfor 58months 432.99% A.PR.$1495TradeEquity orCashDown

$199

ORAppro vedCredit

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SALE PRICE

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SALE PRICE

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u bar u O ut b a c k 2 . 8 i P remium C V T

Leather, Moon Roof, Premium Wheels

$19 875

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Suharuleuacsa,OuSack

Leather, Shaker Premium Sound, PremiumWheels, Spoiler, Excellent Condition Keuey Blue Book 822,682

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MSRP$33,732. VIN:¹E3323704 EDF-39 Subaru of Bend Discount $3,535

MSRP$28,910. VIN: ¹F3200947

2011 FORD TAURUSAWDSEL 2004 FORDF250SUPERCABXLT4X4 Power Windows & Locks, Tilt & Cruise, A/C,

$199 permonthfor 72months0! 2.99%A.PR.$1800TradeEquity or

SALE PRICE

Exterior interior HLMirrors, ExtAutoDimMirror wRight, Mirror Compassw/Homelink,RearBumper Cover All Weather Floor Mats, Rear SeatBackProtector

CaehDO Wn. OnApprovedCredit.

$14,985

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$353" permonthfor &4months I 3999APR.93399TradeEqallTar

$35371"

VIN: A48845

$216

MSRP $32,261. VIN:¹E3312749 EDF-04 Subaru ofBend Discount $3,365.

2012FOR DF250SUPERCABXLT4X4

VIN: 525567

$216 permonthfor 84months I 3.99%1LPR.$2000 TradeEquity or

MoonroofPkg.,Auto-DimmingRearViewMirror w/Homelink,RearVision Camera

As low as 0% up to 63Months OnApproved Credit.

VIN: B62966

$14,995

PowerMoonroof,Auto-DimmingRearView Mirror wff-lomelink,RearVisionCamera,RearSeatback Protector As low as 0% up to 63Months OnApproved Credit.

2014 S u b a r u O ut b a c k 8 . 6 R Limited 5AT Option Pkg., 39.PowerMoonroof, Auto-DimmingRearViewMirror w/

2007FOR DF250EXT. CABLONG4X4

u arusE 2014 u ba ru O ut b a c k 2 . 8 i L imited CV T

SALE PRICE

*Must Finance throughFMCC.OnApprovedCredit.

S UBA R U .

C onfi d e n c e i n M o t i o n

201 S u a r u O ut b a c k 2 . 8 i Limited CV T MSRP$32,362 VIN: ¹E3312680 EDF-04 Subsru of Bend Discount $3,295.

*Must FinancethroughFMCC.OnApprovedCredit.

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4WZR,XW OF BEND ygew

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Sale endsAugust 5, 2014

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