Serving Central Oregon since190375
SATURDAY January 4,2014
8 Clll
memnrieswi
Q f Prep basketba SPORTS • C1
COMMUNITY LIFE• D1
bendbulletin.com STARTING SUNDAY:TOO RISKY TO TRANSPLANT
A THREE-PART SERIES
Sunday:With the focus on survival rates,
Tuesday:Transplant centers react to tough regulations.
patien ts are beideni ngedtransplants.
TODAY'S READERBOARD
Wednesday: W hyviableorgans are being thrown out.
COVER OREGON
AbartiOh —With states restricting it, the SupremeCourt may take it up again.A4
Wood stoves —TheEPA
By Lauren Dake
moves to regulate newones, beginning in 2015.AS
The Bulletin
The 'plastisphere'How our garbagecreated a new home for bacteria in the ocean.A3
still as many as 15,000 people who have until 5 p.m. on
exchange has 125 people answering calls and the longest
need to choose a plan by Monday to receive benefits and qualify for a tax break in January. Consumers can use the state's website to pick a plan,
Monday to choose a private
wait time on the phone on
call Cover Oregon, or contact
insurance plan through the state's exchange and receive
Friday was 37 minutes. The approximately 15,000 people who are eligible still
a certified community partner or insurance agent for help. So far, Cover Oregon has
PORTLAND — There are
retroactive coverage dating
back to the first of the year. Cover Oregon Spokesman Michael Cox said the
enrolled about 18,000 people in private insurance.
In addition, 32,000 people w ere enrol ledthrough theOregon Health Plan, the state's
version of Medicaid. On Friday, the day after Cover Oregon Director
Rocky King stepped down
permanently, health insurance exchange officials told a consumer advisory committee in Portland they don't know when the website will
be working and the focus remains on enrolling people manually. SeeCover/A5
Meth iff China — Araid ona village nets tons of thedrug. Ao
JEFFERSON COUNTY
Chronically ill left with
And a Web exclusiveAt 95, pianist is still playing Las Vegas' tune. bendbulletin.com/extras
skimpy health plans
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Detroit's abandoned buildings draw tours
By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — For
workingpeoplemaking modest wages and struggling with high medical bills from chronic disease,
President Barack Obama's health care plan sounds like long-awaited relief. But the promise could go unfulfilled. It's true that patients with
By Alana Semuels Los Angeles Times
cancer and difficult conditions such as multiple sde-
DETROIT — He'd heard
stories of ruin and blight,
rosis or Crohn's disease will
but that didn't prepare
Oliver Kearney for what he saw:
be able to get insurance and financial help with monthly prerrnums.
Prostitutes roaming the streets at 8 a.m.,
But their annual out-ofpocket costs could still be
rubble-strewn parking lots overrun with weeds,
buildings taken over by bright pink graffiti, the message scrawled on blackboards in deserted schools: "I will not write in vacant buildings." He took 2,000 photographs his first day. "No other American
city has seen decline on this scale," Kearney said. "It's really a once-in-a-
lifetime thing you're going to see." And he saw it all on a
tour. Kearney, an 18-year-old aspiring architect, persuaded his father to travel with him from Britain to Detroit to participate in
one of the city's few burgeoning industries: tours of abandoned factories, churches and schools. Led by tour guide Jesse Welter, they crawled on their hands and knees to peek inside a train sta-
tion closed long ago; they squeezed through a gap in
sohighthey'llhavetrouble staying out of debt. You
Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
Lucas Schmidt, right, and Steve Hayes, background, from Terrebonne Electric, work on installing electrical outlet boxes outside kennels as a dog chews a bone at the Three Rivers Humane Society in Madras on Friday. Electricity is being installed to provide
couldn't call them unin-
sured anylonger. You might saythey're"underinsured." These gaps "need to be addressed in order to fulfill
heated water bowls andwarming pads for the kennels.
on roi ma in c anes
the intention of the Affordable Care Act," said Brian
Rosen, a senior vice president of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society ."There are certainly challenges for cancer patients."
a er a n overs e er
"Cost may still be an
issue for those in need of the most care," said Steven Weiss, spokesman for the
By Megan Kehoe
prove the facility. The Bulletin "The kennels always did a It's only been a month since good job of getting adoptions the Jefferson County Kennels out the door," said Stephen officially became the Three Drynan, executive director Rivers Humane Society, but of the humane society."We already significant change is have the same goal of getting underway. animals into suitable homes, Outdoor heating for the but we also want to up the kennels, dog-play areas, and adoptionrates." even a new building are all Central Oregon Animal either in the works or in the Friends, a nonprofitbased in planningstages for the new Jefferson County, officially took controloftheJefferson year, heralding the start of the nonprofit's efforts to imCounty Kennels on Dec. 1.
Jefferson County commissioners decided to entrust the
erating under a three-year
American Cancer Society
contract withthe county. The
formerlycounty-run kennels
county is providing the humane society with $40,000 a year for the first twoyears of the contract, and $34,000 for
Cancer Action Network. That "makes it critically im-
to a private organization in
portant for patients looking at premiums to also consid-
November after the resignation earlier in theyear of the kennels' only dog control ofthe third year. The nonprofit, ficer. The private nonprofit is which follows a no-kill polrun by Drynan, the former di- icy, also gets free rent in the rector of the Humane Society building, located on Southof the Ochocos in Prineville. east McTaggart Road in MaUnder the nonprofit, the dras. In return the humane kennels' name has been societyis expected to take in changed to the Three Rivers all strays fromthe county. Humane Society ,and isopSeeShelter/A5
er out-of-pocket costs when
choosing aplan." Out-of-pocket costs indude a health plan's annual deductible, which is the amount before insur-
ance starts paying, as well as any copayments and cost-sharing. SeeChronic/A5
a fence to climb the stairs
of what was once a luxury high-rise; they ducked under crumbling doorways to see a forgotten ballroom wheretheWho held its first U.S. concert. See Detroit /A5
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 42, Low 23 Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Puzzles F3-4 Dear Abby D5 Obituaries B3 Community Life D1-6 Horoscope D5 sports F1-6 Crosswords F 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies
AnIndependent
B5 c1-4 05
Q l/i/e userecycled newsprint
Vol. 112, No. 4,
5 sections 0
88 267 0 23 2 9
1
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
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- ai a rou caims conro o a ua By Liz Sly
to sustain the gains made by
The Washington Post
U.S. troops before they with-
and addressed the crowd, declaring the establishment of
drew in December 2011.
an "Islamic emirate" in Fallu-
BEIRUT — A r ejuvenated
al-Qaida-affiliated force as-
The upheaval also affirmed the soaring capabilities of ern Iraqi city of Fallujah on the Islamic State of Iraq and Friday, raising its flag over Syria (ISIS), the rebranded government buildings and de- version of the al-Qaida in Iraq claring an Islamic state in one organization that was formed of the most crucial areas that a decade ago to confront U.S. U.S. troops fought to pacify troops and expanded into before withdrawing from Iraq Syria last year while escatwo years ago. lating its activities in I r aq. The capture of Fallujah Roughly a third of the 4,486 came amid an explosion of U.S. troops killed in Iraq died violence across the western in Anbar trying to defeat desert province of Anbar in al-Qaida in Iraq, nearly 100 which local tribes, Iraqi secu- of them in the November 2004 rity forces and al-Qaida-af- battle for control of Fallujah, filiated militants have been the site of America's bloodiest fighting one another for days confrontation since the Vietin a confusingly chaotic three- nam War. way war. Events Friday suggested the Elsewhere in the province, fight may have been in vain. serted control over the west-
local tribal militias claimed
Dtsouies rr
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
"At the moment, there is no
they were gaining ground presence of the Iraqi state in against the al-Qaida militants Fallujah," said a local journalwho surged into urban areas
Si sil.rva
OR LD
ist who asked not to be named
from their desert strongholds because he fears for his safety. this week after clashes erupt- "The police and the army have ed between local r esidents abandoned the city, al-Qaida and the Iraqi security forces. has taken down all the Iraqi In Fallujah, where Marines flags and burned them, and it fought the bloodiest battle of has raised its own flag on all the Iraq war in 2004, the mil- the buildings." itants appeared to have the At Friday prayers, held outupper hand, underscoring the doors and attended by thouextent to which the Iraqi se- sands of people, a masked curity forces have struggled ISIS fighter took the podium
jah and promising to help residents fight the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Mali-
ki and his Iranian allies. "We don't want to hurt you. We don't want to take any of
your possessions," the man told the crowd, according to the prayers. "We want you to reopen the schools and institutions and return to your nor-
mal lives." The extent of the militants' control over the city was un-
clear,however. Some local tribes were challenging their presence, and there were scattered firefights, according to another Fallujah resident who also did not want to be named
becausehe isafraid.The Iraqi army fired shells into Fallujah from bases outside the city, killing at least 17 people, and most residents spent the day
hiding indoors, he said. In the provincial capital, Ramadi, tribal fighters have succeeded in ejecting al-Qaida loyalists, according to leader who fought alongside U.S. troops against al-Qaida in Iraq following the "surge" of U.S. troops in 2007.
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ISIISI uhd PSISStlhlulls —A Palestinian teenager died Friday after being wounded by Israeli gunfire near the Israel-Gazaborder a day earlier, according to medical officials in Gaza.TheIsraeli military said the teenager,AdnanAbu Khater,16, was one of a group of people who approachedthe border fenceand began "vandalizing" it Thursday. A military spokeswomansaid soldiers shot at the "lower extremities" of the "suspects" after they ignored warnings to move back. Later Thursday, a rocket was fired from Gaza,the Palestinian enclave run byHamas, into southern Israel, and Israel retaliated overnight with airstrikes on what the military said were three underground rocket launchers and a"terror facility."
AntarCtiC reSCue — An Australian icebreaker carrying 52 passengers who wereretrieved from an icebound ship in theAntarctic resumed its journey hometoday after it was halted for a second potential rescue operation. TheAurora Australis had beenslowly cracking through thick ice toward openwater after a Chineseship's helicopter on Thursday plucked thepassengers from their stranded Russian research ship andcarried them to an ice floe near the Australian ship. But on Fridayafternoon, the crew of theChineseicebreaker that had provided the helicopter said they wereworried about their own ship's ability to move through the ice.
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Syrian inSurgentS —Deadly clashes were reported Friday in northern Syria betweenSunni Islamist jihadists linked to al-Qaidaand insurgents in other alliances, punctuating a growing schism within the armed Syrian opposition over the powerexerted by its religiously radicalized members, many of them from other countries. Anti-government activists in the Aleppoareasaid that fighting had broken out near the Idlib province town of Atareb, west of Aleppo, pitting members of the Islamic State in Iraq andthe Levant, a powerful al-Qaida affiliate that includes foreign fighters, against an array of seven homegrown Syrian rebel groups.
Brain-dead girl —A judge said Friday that the mother of a 13-year-old girl who wasdeclared brain dead after tonsil surgery can remove her daughter from aCalifornia hospital if she assumesfull responsibility for the consequences. AlamedaCounty Superior Court Judge Evelio Grillo said Jahi McMath can betransferred under a deal with Children's Hospital Oakland that will hold Nailah Winkfield accountable for developments that could include Jahi going into cardiac arrest. The hospital has argued since before Christmas that Jahi's brain death meansshe is legally deadand she should be disconnected from the ventilator that has kept her heart pumping for 3t/a weeks.
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SOuth Sudah —With at least1,000 people killed in fighting between government and rebel forces, and with disturbing reports of ethnically motivated atrocities by security forces, Obamafaces the prospect that South Sudan could becomeAfrica's next failed state. Obamadoes not have many good options. With no plans for U.S. military intervention, the United States is frantically brokering peace talks between the warring factions while trying to fortify a U.N. peacekeeping force. TheWhite House hasthreatened to cut off aid to anyone who seizes power and is no longer training South Sudan's military, the SudanPeople's Liberation Army. Still, the fighting rages on.
Ahmed Abu Risha, a tribal
EGYPT CLASHES
HumanResources Traci Donaca .....................
Gull COlltl'Ol —President Barack Obamaannounced two new executive actions Friday that nudge his guncontrol agenda forward by making it easier for states to provide information about people with mental illness to the federal background checksystem. Last year, Obama failed to win support in Congress for tougher background checks for gun purchasesand newlimits on assault weapons. The president had madeboth changes top legislative priorities after the shootings at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.After the legislation failed, Obamavowed to take whatever steps his administration could through executive action.
the journalist, who attended
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Health law Challenge —The Obamaadministration urged the Supreme Court on Friday to reject a lawsuit filed by the Little Sisters of the Poor, anorder of RomanCatholic nuns challenging requirements for many employers to provide health insurance coverageof birth control or face penalties under the newhealth care law. The Justice Department said the requirements did not impose a"substantial burden" on the nuns' right to practice their religion becausethey could "opt out." OnTuesday night, Justice SoniaSotomayor temporarily blocked theObamaadministration from enforcing them with respect to the nunsandcertain other religious groups.
Heba Khamis/The AssociatedPress
A soldier walks Friday through heavysmokefrom clashes with supporters of Egypt's ousted Islamist President MohammedMorsi in Alexandria, Egypt. Riot police clashed with Morsi supporters on Friday, leaving 11dead in ongoing street battles where an increasing number of protesters are carrying firearms ahead of akeyreferendum they urge to boycott
laterthis month. Fighting spread through heavily populated residential areas in several cities and provinces including Cairo, Giza, Ismailia andFayoum, ashundreds of Muslim Brotherhood membersandtheir supporters threw rocks at security forces who respondedwith water cannons andtear gas.
ArCtiC alr —The weather warnings are dire: Life threatening wind chills. Historic cold outbreak. Winter is normally cold, but starting Sunday tundra-like temperatures are poised to deliver a rareand potentially dangerous sledgehammer blow to much of the Midwest, driving temperatures so far below zero that records will shatter. One reason? A"polar vortex," as onemeteorologist calls it, which will send cold air piled up at theNorth Pole down to theU.S., funneling it as far south as theGulf Coast. — From wire reports
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All Bulletinpaymentsareaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may be converted toanelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS A652-520,ispublished daily byWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777 S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR9770Z 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 without explicit prior approval.
Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
Court grantssecrecyfor memoon phonedata collection By Charlie Savage
on Jan. 8, 2010. A report later
New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — A feder-
that year by the Justice Department's inspector general
al appeals court ruled Friday
at the time, Glenn Fine, dis-
that the Obama administration may continue to withhold
closed the memo's existence and its broad conclusion that telephone companies may voluntarily provide records to the government "without legal process or a qualifying emergency," notwithstanding the Electronic Communications
a Justice Department memo that apparently opened a loophole in laws protecting the privacy of consumer data. The memo establishes the
legal basis for telephone companies to hand over customers' calling records to the government without a subpoena or court order, even when there is no emergency, according to a 2010 report by the Justice Department's inspector general. The details of the legal theory, and the circumstances in which it could be invoked, remain undear.
Privacy Act.
The FBI had asked for the memo as part of an investigation by Fine into problems with
the bureau's use of so-called exigent letters to obtain tele-
phone and financial records without following any legal procedures. T he bureau, w h ich
has
abandoned exigent letters, said The ruling, bythe U.S. Court that it did not employ the legal
trict Court judge ruled that the vestigative tactics deemed lememo fell into an exception gally permissible in the OLC to that law covering materials opinion." developedwhen the executive As a result, he added, the branch is deliberating inter- memo was covered in its ennally about what policy to se- tirety by the exception. By the lect, and a three-judge panel same legal reasoning, nearly on the appeals court agreed any Office of Legal Counsel Friday. memo would be exempt from The Office of Legal Coun- disclosure. "We are pleased with sel issues binding legal advice to the executive branch. If it the decision," said Andrew says something is permitted, Ames, a Justice Department officials who act on that advice spokesman. are essentially immune from The E l ectronic F r o ntier prosecution. Its power to adopt Foundation had argued that, secret legal theories has come because of the special role under greater scrutiny since played by Office of Legal a string of controversial opin- Counsel memos, they amountions it produced during the ed to the government's official Bush administration, includ- "working law" and should not ing signing off on warrantless fall into the category of delibwiretapping and on the brutal erative materials that are exquestioning of detainees. empt from disclosure. "Even if the OLC opinion David Sobel, a lawyer for describes the legal parameters
MEGA MILLIONS
of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, came down
theory outlined in the memo
Q22 Q 7oO O ®4Q2sQ4o
tion of the executive branch's
future. But Fine warned that
of what the FBI is permitted to do, it does not state or deter-
power to keep secret its interpretation of what the law permits it to do. The ruling may make it easier for the government to shield other memos by
the existence of the Office of
mine the FBI's policy," Judge
Legal Counsel's theory created
Harry Edwards wrote in the
the Justice Department's pow-
statute. Lawmakers have not
erful Office of Legal Counsel from disclosure under the
acted on that recommendation.
Freedom of Information Act.
Foundation filed a l awsuit in 2011 seeking to obtain the
The numbers drawnFriday nightare:
The estimated jackpot is now $15 million.
when using the letters and that on the side of a broad concep- it had no plans to use it in the
The document at issue is a classified memo issued by the Office of Legal Counsel
a "significant gap" in "account- decision Friday. "The FBI was ability and oversight," and he free to decline to adopt the inurged Congress to modify the The
E l ectronic F r o ntier
memo under theFreedom of Information Act. But a D i s-
WILSONSof Redmond
ing "troubling," describing the office's memos as a body of "secret law" that the public has
a right to know about. He said he hoped the ruling would reinvigorate efforts among some l awmakers to enact a
law
opening such memos to greater scrutiny outside the executive branch.
"It's kind of hard to imagine
how a different case inthe D.C.
Circuit is likely to have a different outcome in light of this
opinion," he said. Legal specialists said the ruling was in line with how other federal courts, notably the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in New York, have dealt with requests under the Freedom of Information Act
for Office of Legal Counsel memos in recent years.
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541-548-2066
COVERINGS
NED- IFT Also see usfor
158'TREss 686 NW York Drive, Ste.150 Bend, OR i 541-306-3263
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SATURDAY, JAN 4, 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, Jan. 4, the fourth day of 2014. Thereare361 days left in the year.
PHENOMENON
TRENDING
HAPPENINGS
Le aize pot: Frequently as e questions
SOuth Sudan — TheU.S. will stop providing consular services to any U.S.citizens in the country after most embassy workers havebeen evacuated.
Pot dispensary —Oneis set to open in Albany, but it faces legal challenges.03
HISTORY Highlight:In1964, Pope Paul Vl began avisit to the Holy Land, the first papal pilgrimage of its kind. In1821, the first native-born American saint, Elizabeth Ann Seton, died in Emmitsburg,
The "plastisphere," as scientist have dubbed it, is made up of microbes that
By Brady Dennis and Ariene EunjungChe The Washington Post
make their homes in our discarded plastic in the ocean.
This week, Colorado became the first state to allow
legal sales of marijuana for recreational use. Washington state will do the same later might follow suit. Here are
In1896, Utah was admitted as
Author-historian Doris Kearns Goodwin is 71. Rocksinger Michael Stipe is 54. Actor Dave Foley is 51.Comedian-actress Charlyne Yi is 28. — From wire reports
Department of Health and al symptoms are similar to
answers to some basic ques- those of withdrawal from tions about marijuana, its smoking and include irritaeffectson the body and the bility, sleep difficulties and interesting issues raised by anxiety. legalization:
the 45th state.
BIRTHDAYS
responsible for 4.5 million of the 7.1 million Americans dependent on or abusing illicit drugs, according to the 2010 National Survey on Drug Use and Health published by the
this year, and other states Human Services. Withdraw-
Md.
In1904, the SupremeCourt, in Gonzalezv. Williams, ruled that Puerto Ricans werenot aliens and could enter the United States freely; however, the court stopped short of declaring them U.S.citizens. (Puerto Ricans received U.S. citizenship in1917) In1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in his State of the Union address, called for legislation to provide assistance for the jobless, elderly, impoverished children andthe handicapped. In1943, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin appeared onthe cover of Time as themagazine's1942 "Man of the Year." In1944, Ralph Bunchebecame the first African-American officer at the State Department as hewasappointed to a post in the NearEastand African Section. In1951,during the Korean War, North Koreanand Communist Chinese forces recaptured the city of Seoul. In1960, author and philosopher Albert Camusdied in an automobile accident in Villeblevin, France, at age46. In1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson delivered his State of the Union address in which he outlined the goals of his "Great Society." In1974, President Richard Nixon refused to handover tape recordings anddocuments subpoenaed bythe Senate Watergate Committee. In1989,in an incident reminiscent of a1981 confrontation, two U.S. NavyF-14fighters shot down a pair of Libyan MiG-23 fighters in a clash over international waters off the Libyan coast. In2007,Nancy Pelosi was elected the first female speaker of the House asDemocrats took control of Congress. Ten years ego:In lowa, seven of the nine Democratic presidential hopefuls participated in a feisty, first debate of the election year. Afghans approved a new constitution. Georgians overwhelmingly elected Mikhail Saakashvili president, two months after he'd led protests that forced Eduard Shevardnadze to step down. Louisiana State University won college football's Sugar Bowl, defeating Oklahoma21-14. Five years ego:NewMexico Gov. Bill Richardson announced hewas withdrawing his nomination to be President-elect Barack Obama's commerce secretary amid a grand jury investigation into how some of his political donors had won alucrative state contract. (Prosecutors later declined to bring charges against Richardson.) A female suicide bomber struck Shiite pilgrims in Baghdad, killing 38. One year ego:The new Congress passed a$9.7 billion bill to help pay flood insurance claims to homeowners, renters and businesses damagedby Superstorm Sandy. No. 10Texas A&M beat No. 12Oklahoma, 41-13, in the Cotton Bowl.
dent on it. Marijuana was
Q
• How does marijuana
How does marijuana
Q •• work'?
• A greenish-gray mixA • ture of leaves, stems, seeds and flowers ofthe
• use affect the young?
• Nora Volkow, director • of the National Institute
on Drug Abuse, lamented recentlyon "The Diane Rehm
cannabis plant, marijuana's Show" that legalization of main active ingredient is del- marijuana in some states ta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, could make it easier for kids or THC. It binds to the surface
to access the drug. That's a
of nerve cells in high-density areas of the brain involved in feelings of pleasure, memory, thinking, concentration, coordination and movement, and sensory and time per-
serious problem, she said, in part because science has shown marijuana can have
was hoping to catch pieces of a trapped in these cyclonic dead eat may be spreading through mysterious marine ecosystem zones, plastic particles may the food web, Goldstein and
more profound effects in the brains of young people. "When you smoke mariception. THC stimulates this juana,you cannot memorize communication network, re- or learn as you should. And sulting in a marijuana"high." if you are at high school and you need to be educating What are its medicinal yourself, that's going to put • uses? you at higher risk for actu• About 20 states and the ally doing poorly at school," • District of C olumbia Volkow said. "The other isallow the use of marijuana sue is that, the younger you for medical purposes. Most start smoking marijuana, patients are seeking the drug the higher the risk not only to for controlling pain for med- becoming addicted to mariical issues including cancer, juana, but it also appears to nervous system diseases, increase the risk for addiction glaucoma and migraines. It is of other drugs in adulthood." also being used to treat nauVolkow added: "What we sea and improve appetites know about the marijuana, as
that scientists are calling the
Goodwin reported.
for people with HIV or other
well as other drugs, is that the
Fish that ingestplastic debris tend to accumulate hazardous
chronic illnesses.
effects of drugs in the human
Bob Chamberlim/Los Angeles Times
Students from the University of Sen Diego bring e carousel water collection device beck aboard their
ship to test its contents. Below, students use tweezers and aspoon to gather specimens. By Louis Sahagun
lets too. That finding led Gold-
Los Angeles Times
stein to speculate that some of the 256 barnacles that were
OFF THE COAST OF SAN DIEGO — E l izabeth Lopez
plastic-free when they were
maneuvered a massive steel claw over the side of a 134-
captured by researchers had probably eaten plastic at some
foot sailboat and guided its
point in their lives but cleared it
descent through swaying kelp and schools of fish 10 miles
from their systems. Since crabs prey on barna-
offthe coast of San Diego. She
cles, the plastic the barnacles
plastisphere. It starts with particles of degraded plastic no bigger than grains of salt. Bacteria take up residence on those tiny pieces of trash. Then single-celled animals feed on the bacteria, and larger predators feed on them. "We've created a new man-
persist for centuries.
The physiological effects of visible plastic debris on the fish, birds, turtles and marine
substances in their bodies and
mammals that ingest it are well-documented: clogged intestines, suffocation, loss of vi-
suffer from liver toxicity, according to a study published in
tal nutrients, starvation. The effects of the minuscule
Not only was the plastic itself
the journal Scientific Reports. dangerous, so too were the
pieces that make up the plas- toxic chemicals the plastic had m ade ecosystemofplastic de- tisphere are only beginning to absorbed. bris," said Lopez, a graduate be understood. The plastisphere isn't limitstudent at the University of Edward Carpenter, a pro- ed to oceans. In 2012, a team of San Diego, during the recent fessor of microbial ecology at researchers discovered microexpedition. San Francisco State Universi- plastic pollution in the Great The plastisphere was six ty, first reported that microbes Lakes — including high voldecades in the making. It's a could attach themselves to umes of polyethylene and polyproduct of the discarded plastic plastic particles adrift at sea in propylene "microbeads" used — flip-flops, margarine tubs, 1972. He observed that these in facial deansers. toys, toothbrushes — that gets partides enabled the growth swept from urban sewer sys- of algae and probably bacteria Describingthe microbes tems and river channels into and speculated that hazardous Other scientists, including the sea. chemicals showing up in ocean Mincer of the Woods Hole inWhen that debris washes animals may have leached out stitution and microbial ecolinto the ocean, it breaks down ofbits of plastic. ogist Erik Zettler of the Sea into bits that are colonized by Carpenter's discovery went Education Association, spent microscopic organisms that largely unnoticed for decades. three years coming up with scientists are just beginning to But now, the scientific effort the first comprehensive deunderstand. Researchers sus- to understand how the plasti- scription of microbial commupect that some of the denizens sphere influences the ocean nities that colonize plastic mamay be pathogens hitching environment has become a rine debris. long-distance rides on floating vibrant and growing field of The researchers used finejunk. study. From Woods Hole to the scale nets to skim plastic parScientists also fear that University of Hawaii, scientists ticles from more than 100 locreatures in the plastisphere are collecting seawater and cations in the Atlantic Ocean, break down chunks of poly- marine life so they can analyze f rom Massachusetts to t h e ethylene and polypropylene the types, sizes and chemical Caribbean Sea. Using scanso completely that dangerous compositions of t h e p l astic ning electron microscopes chemicals percolate into the fragments they contain. Their and gene-sequencing techenvironment. findings are shedding new niques, they identified more light on the ramifications of than 1,000 different types of 'Great concern' humanity's addiction to plastic. bacteria and algae attached to "We're changing the basic seaborne plastic, according to "This is an issue of great concern," said Tracy Mincer, a ma- rhythms of life in the world's their report in June in the jourrine geochemist at the Woods oceans, and we need to un- nal Environmental Science & Hole Oceanographic Institu- derstand the consequences Technology. tion in Massachusetts. "Mi- of that," said marine biologist of particular concern was crobesmay be greatly acceler- Miriam Goldstein, who earned a sample of polypropylene not ating the weathering of plastic her doctorate at UC San Di- m uch larger than thehead ofa debris into finer bits. If so, we ego's Scripps Institution of pin. Its surface was dominated aren't sure how zooplankton Oceanography by studying by members of the genus Viband other small creatures are plastic debris in the Great Pa- rio, which includes the bacteria responding to that, or whether cific Garbage Patch between that cause cholera and othharmful additives, pigments, Hawaii and California. er gastrointestinal ailments. plasticizers, flame retardants In October, Goldstein and These potential pathogens and other toxic compounds are oceanographer Deb Goodwin could travel long distances by leaching into the water." of the Sea Education Associ- attaching themselves to plasAbout 245 million tons of
ation in Woods Hole reported
plastic is produced annually that one-third of the gooseneck around the world, according to barnacles they collected from industry estimates. That rep- the garbage patch had plasresents 70 pounds ofplastican- tic particles in their guts. The nually for each of the 7.1 billion typical fragment measured 1.4 people on the planet, scientists
say.
millimeters across, not much
bigger than a piece of glitter, The waste gathers in vast according to their report in the oval-shaped ocean "garbage journal PeerJ. patches" formed by convergSome of the barnades had ing currents and winds. Once bits of plastic in their fecal pel-
tic debris that persists in the
oceanmuch longer thanbiodegradable flotsam like feathers and wood. The team is now comparing microbial communities on plastic debris collected in the North Pacific and North Atlantic oceans, trying to under-
stand the bacteria that feed on theirwasteproducts,and predators that feed on all of them.
Q•
A
brain are not the same when What's the difference
you take them as a child, adomo k i ng lescent or as an adult, and this marijuana or consuming it is because there are signifiin food, powders or liquid cant changes in the brain as extracts? we go in the transition from • When the leaves are childhood int o a d ulthood.
Q •• between s
• smoked, THC m o ves
And our brain continues to
almost immediately from changeeven asadults,butthe the lungs to the bloodstream largest amount of changes and to the brain. The effects reallyare occurring during can last one to three hours. If those developmental stages, it's eaten, say in brownies or which, of course, leads the cookies, it can take 30 min- brain to function in different utes to an hour to have an ef- ways and respond to stimuli, fect, but the high can last up induding drugs in different ways." to four hours. Volkow's comments are
Q•
based on mounting evidence. Last year, for example, Cana-
A• lead to a rapid heart
dian and American research-
What are the health ef• fects of marijuana use? • In the short-term, it can
rate, increased blood pres-
ers found strong indications that early marijuana use can
sure, red eyes, dry mouth, in- alter development and concreasedappetite and slowed tribute to mental health probreaction time. Long-term use lems later in life. has been linked to impaired thinking, memory problems, How does marijuana panic attacks and other psy• use affect driving? chological issues. There have • One of the key quesalso been studies about show• tions Colorado lawing a weakened immune sys- makers had to wrestle with in tem and, for those who smoke setting up a legal marijuana the drug, impaired lung market: When is someone too
Q•
A
function.
stoned to drive? The answer
isn't so simple. Prosecutors and some state • is safe to use'? Can you lawmakers have long pushed overdose from marijuana? for strict blood-level limits for • There are no recorded THC, the key ingredient in • cases of someone dying cannabis. Many marijuana from an overdose of marijua- advocates arguethat the drug na, but it has been a factor in affects people differently,
Q•
How much marijuana
A
accidents or medical issues that can lead to death. The concentration of THC
and that setting a hard limit
in seized samples of illegal marijuana has been increasing over the past 30 years, with the average potency more than doubling since 1998, leading to concern
that, unlike w it h
about the consequences on
could lead to wrongful DUI convictions. They also argue a l cohol,
traces of the drug remain in the bloodstream long after an
individual has smoked pot. Officials in favor of blood-level limits say tests exist that can pinpoint "active" THC in
young users. But scientists the bloodstream in the hours don'tknow much about the immediately after marijuana effects of higher concentra- usage. tion on the body and brain. Last year, Colorado lawmakers approved a bill that • Is it addictive? creates a "permissive inference" that someone with a • Yes, it can be. Long- certain level of THC in their • term use, especially by blood is impaired. Drivers those who start at a young suspected of driving high age, has been shown to lead generally would have to to addiction, with an esticonsent to have their blood mated one out of 11 people drawn, and they could lose who use it becoming depen- their license if they refuse.
A4
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
TODAY'S READ:REDEFINING A RIGHT
ccessoa o i on ain assaesenac imis By Erik EckholmeNew York Times News Service
Alabama, Mississippi, North Dakota and Wisconsin. Texas state
A three-year surge in anti-abortion measures in more than half the states has altered the landscapeforabortion access,w ith supporters
making it far more difficult in many regions to
vaster impact, set to take effect in September, imposes surgery-center standards for dinics, even those that perform onlythe safest early-stage procedures or n onsurgical medication abortions. The requirement could leave the state
one of many in recent years.
obtain the procedure.
Erich Schlegel / New York Times News Service file photo
Advocates for both sides restricted in the coming year
are preparing for new political or perhaps the pushback will campaigns and court battles begin," said Suzanne Goldthat could redefine the consti- berg, director of the Center for
"I think it is more difficult to
Advocates f o r abo r t ion get an abortion in the country rights, taking heart from re- today," she said. cent signs in Virginia and The new laws range from New Mexico that proposals the seemingly petty to the profor strong or intrusive controls found. South Dakota said that may alienate voters, hope to weekends and holidays could help unseat some Republican not count as part of the existing governors this year as well as 72-hour waiting period, meanshore up the Democratic ma- ing that in some circumstances jority in the U.S. Senate. women could be forced to wait Anti-abortion groups aim six days between their first to consolidate their position dinic visit and an abortion. in dozens of states and to Laws passed last year by push the Senate to support a Arkansas and North Dakota proposal adopted by the Re- to ban abortions early in pregpublican-controlled H o u se nancy, once a fetal heartbeat for a nationwide ban on most was detected, were hailed by abortions at 20 weeks after some as landmarks if quickly conception. rejected by federal courts. But "I think we are at a potential turning point: Either access to
bans on abortion at 20 weeks,
abortion will be dramatically
constitutional doctrine, remain
also an apparent violation of
and bans on insurance cover-
age, according to a new report by the Guttmacher Institute, a
w i t h p o tentially
with as few as eight abortion
centers,according to Planned Parenthood. "Any one o f
t h e r e stric-
tions passed in the last several years would be bad, but taken together, we are witnessing a catastrophe for Texas women," said Cecile Richards, President of the Planned Parenthood
Federation of America. imposed costly surgery-center Amid all the setbacks, aborstandards on abortion clinics, tion rights groups say they see sharply limited medication encouraging signs. A referen-
Gender and Sexuality Law at
right to abortion set by the 1973 Columbia University. in force in nine states. Roe v. Wade decision and later The anti-abortion groups, In Roe and later decisions, modifications by the Supreme for their part, feel embold- the Supreme Court said that Court. ened by new tactics that they women have a right to an aborOn Monday, in a clash that say have wide public appeal tion until the fetus is viable is likely to reach the Supreme even as they push the edg- outside the womb — at about Court,a federalappeals court es of Supreme Court guide- 24 weeks of pregnancy with in New Orleans will hear argu- lines, induding costly clinic current technology — and that ments on a Texas requirement regulations and bans on late any state regulations must not that abortion doctors have ad- abortions. place an "undue burden" on "I'm very encouraged," said that right. mitting privileges at local hospitals — a measure that caused Carol Tobias, president of NaIn 2013 alone, 22 states adone-third of the state's abor- tional Right to L i fe. "We've opted 70 different restrictions, tion clinics to dose, at least been gaining ground in re- including late-abortion bans, temporarily. cent years with laws that are a doctor and clinic regulations, stronger challenge to Roe." limits on medication abortions
A turning point
Davis begins a filibuster of a bill restricting abortion June at the Texas State Capitol in Austin. The bill passed,
are shutting some clinics, threatening others and
tutional limits for curbing the
Texas law
access last
and opponents agreeing that the new restrictions
Another provision of the
Sen. Wendy
pregnancy, based on a theory of fetal pain that has been rejected by major medical groups. Such laws violate the viability threshold and have been struck down in three
abortions and adopted a 20weekban.
dum to impose a20-week ban
quirement immediately forced
of the country's most stringent
in Albuquerque was defeated. The admitting privileges re- Although Texas adopted some
states, but proponents hope
that the Supreme Court will be about one-third of some 30 controls, state Sen. Wendy Daopen to a new standard. clinics in the state to stop per- vis' filibuster in June energized
The Supreme Court
forming abortions and l e ft much of South Texas without
women and led toher cam-
pealed successfully to the U.S.
contributing to his defeat in the
paign for governor. A partial test is expected any abortion clinics. A federIn Virginia, these groups this month, when the Supreme al judge called the rule medi- say, Attorney General Kenneth Court announces whether it cally unnecessary and halted Cuccinelli's strong anti-aborwill hear Arizona's appeal enforcement, but the state ap- tion stance became a liability, to reinstate its 20-week ban, which was overturned by fed-
Court of Appeals for the 5th governor's race. "I honestly believe we have Circuit to reinstate it pending
eral courts. Many legal experts expect
atrial.
research group that supports the court to decline the case, abortion rights. but this would not affect the Anti-abortion legislation in status of similar laws in effect
shifted the momentum," said
On Monday, thatappeals Ilyse Hogue, the president of court, in New Orleans, will NARAL Pro-Choice America. hear arguments. The c a se Hogue predicted that can-
in Texas and elsewhere. Still, against the rule, being argued major conservative gains in the those on both sides are watch- by groups including Planned 2010 elections, the report said, ing closely, because if the court Parenthood, the Center for resulting in m ore than 200 does take it, the basis of four R eproductive Rights a n d measures in 30 statesoverthe decades of constitutional law the American Civil Liberties last three years. on abortion could be upended. Union, was supported in a brief "If they take the Arizona by the American Medical AsAmericans United for Life, an anti-abortion group, has a case, it seems like at least four sociation and the A merican similar count, describing the of the justices are willing to re- College of Obstetricians and flood of new laws as "life-af- consider the viability line as the Gynecologists, which said it firming legislation designed to point at which states can ban served no valid purpose.
the states exploded after the
didates less hostile to abortion rights would put up strong races against Republicans running for governor in, for example, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Kansas.
"The other side is getting
more people activated, but so are we," responded Tobias, of
National Right to Life. The proliferation of state re-
strictions is re-creating a legal mann, an expert on reproduc- the requirement promoted patchwork. "Increasingly, access to Twenty-four states have tive rights at the City University safety and that any burdens on barred abortion coverage by of New York School of Law. women had been exaggerated. abortion depends on where the new health exchanges and The many strands of attack Some Supreme Court justices you live," said Jennifer Dalven, nine of them forbid private in- came together in Texas, which have said that they expect director of th e r eproductive surance plans, as well, from in a tumultuous special session eventually to hear the case. freedom project at the Americoveringmost abortions. in Julyrequired doctors perCourts have t e mporar- can Civil Liberties Union. A dozen states have barred forming abortions to have local ily blocked similar admitShe added, "That's what it most abortions at 20 weeks of hospital admitting privileges, ting-privilege requirements in was like pre-Roe." protectwomen from the harms inherent in abortion."
abortions," said Caitlin Borg-
Texas officials asserted that
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SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
EPA movesto regulate new wood stoves By Lenny Bernstein The Washington Post
The new rules do not apply to wood heaters already in
WASHINGTON The use or to residential fireplaces, Environmental Pr o t e ction backyard fire containers or
tured and sold in 2015. In places where wood is
commonly used for
proposed new standards, and h eat, both organizations noted that
communities are occasionally forced to issue mandatory
Agency moved Friday to curb firepitsused by campers and emissions of particles and oth- beachgoers. Nor do they apply or voluntary "no-burn" alerts er gasesfrom residentialwood to smokers, wood-fired barbe- when the c oncentration of stoves and other wood-fired cues or pizza ovens. particles in the air becomes " Particulate matter i s a too high. Utah banned the heaters built in 2015 or later, an effort to combat pollutants big health issue," said Alison use of wood-burning stoves in that can present a significant Davis, an EPA senior advis- five counties last month when health hazard in parts of the er. It has been linked to heart weather conditions led to high country. attacks and strokes and can levels of fine particles in the The proposed new rules aggravate asthma. A number air. Wood also is a popular would require manufacturers o f studies have linked it t o heat source in parts of New of wood stoves, wood pellet prematuredeath among peo- England, the upper Midwest stoves, forced-air wood fur- ple who suffer from heart and and the Northwest. naces,wood boilers,fireplace lung disease, she said. Clean air and lung health insertsand masonry heaters Other pollutants in wood advocates cheered Friday's to build a generation of devic- smoke include carbon mon- proposal. "This is a very imes that burn 80 percent more oxide and organic compounds portant step towards protectcleanly than current models. that contribute to smog. ing public health, particularly The rules would go into efS ome 11.5 m i l lion U . S . in areas where residential fect in 2015 and become more homes use wood for heat, ac- wood burning is widespread," strict after five years, though cording to the U.S. Energy said Frank O'Donnell, presthe EPA is asking whether
they should be phased in over eight years instead.
Information A d m inistration. The EPA estimates that 85,695
ciation said it welcomed the
ident of Clean Air Watch, a
nonprofit advocacy group. wood stoves will be manufac- The American Lung Asso-
it comes many years after the
EPA was required to update the original 1988 standards for
a common thresh-
and diabetes. But Pe a r son says that w o n 't
that EPA laboratory testing does notreflectthe way wood
stoves and heaters are used by consumers. Most particle pollutionoccurs because the ma-
jority of wood stoves are old and because consumers do not use wood that has been suffi-
ciently dried, he said.
The former Packard Automotive Plant is now in ruins in Detroit. The city's decline has given rise to
way," he said, moving toward the crumbling staircase that
prising farmers have turned
leads to the church's courtyard, which was littered with
are going to look at the ruins, they should then volunteer in the community, many Detroi-
He's not afraid of the author-
ters say. "The decay is not cool, not
ing paint and vast balconies. Welter, who is bearded and
slim, knows how to sneak into
toward the exit.
a rd Automotive Plant, t h e train station and t h e E a st Grand Boulevard Methodist Church, which features peel-
the churches so well that he
"Someone's pulling up out buildings closed to the public. He knows which neighbor- there; let's start walking this
into urban gardens. If tourists
soda cans and food wrappers.
ities — they're in short supply helped a young couple find in this cash-strapped cityan abandoned one in which to but of scavengers, vagrants conduct their wedding. and others who might take It's not legal, per se, to en- advantage of someone with an ter these buildings. Police will expensive camera. That's why give $225 tickets for trespass- he usually launches his tours ing if people enter schools, at 7 a.m., the best time to avoid Welter says, but have other- other humans, he says. wise told him they don't mind Next, he headed into a girls' him going into other buildings. school attached to the church, On a recent weekday morn- climbing the stairs to a hall ing, he brought a visitor to one of classrooms where rubble of his favorite spots, St. Agnes was everywhere, as if a bomb Catholic Church, a rotting had gone off. Some books and structure where graffiti vanmagazines dated to 1962 and dals have made their mark. told outdated stories of boys A beam of sunlight shone living on the prairie. A bird's through the windows, falling nest sat in one of the large on the one remaining pew in windows where a pane used the church, a haunting image to be. that illuminated the church's Locals use a derogatory destruction. Then W e lter term, "ruin porn," to describe heard a motor idling outside the phenomenon of people and quicklyushered hisguest gawking at the decay. They
of Detroit's most famously blighted structures: the Pack-
cha l lenges," she sald. Platinum
— Caroline
in
in financial protection. A Antonio Perez i Chicago Tribune file photo
hoods are plagued by packs of feral dogs, and which ramPhotographers have flocked shackle building contains a reto the city to capture the de- cording studio with equipment cline; two French photogra- still set up as if its occupants phers even produced a book, just left for lunch. He knows
hour tour and explore some
nlficant financial
line Pearson, who POPU/BPIOAS. tracks the health
or
Obama
admi n i stration
new online markets like s pokeswoman Joanne Peters HealthCare.gov can offer s aid the new system is still "night and day" from what fourlevelsofcoverage. All plans cover the same patients faced for years, bebenefits; the difference is c auseinsurerscannolonger
stood empty since 1988.
has really picked up this year. His clients pay $45 for a three-
costs," said Calo-
companies competing
have gone nowhere and it's
in late 2011, but the business
help people with high-cost illnesses. "Chronically ill P e oPle may still experience sig-
Pearson, Avalere gold coverage market research may be the better and c o nsulting option for peofirm. "While the ple with serious subsidies help, there still h e alth p r oblems. They'll may be access problems for pay more in premiums, but some populations." reduce exposure to out-ofUnder the law, insurance pocketcosts.
train station, into a casino and then into police headquarters
date the growing interest. Welter guided his first tour
r escr i p t i o n
+/ j/6 ~/ 6
care overhaul for Avalere Health, a
Central Depot, a once-grand tourists that don't always sit well with residents.
buy a 12-seat van to accommo-
p a tient
drugs and routine care for common chro n ic con d i t i ons such as high blood p r essure
old f o r be i ng SU t )SICfl6S underinsured. Q6/p ($6I 6 "Chronically ill V people are likely to be underinsured 56 BCC6SS and face extremely pppQ/6m S high out-of-pocket
The city says that 85 percent of its 142.9 square miles had "experienced population decline" over the last decade, and efforts to persuade investors to buy commercial buildings and rehabilitate them have been mixed, at best. For example,
W elter, 42, says he had to
h e alth c ar e mo r e than twice what work-
has m et their ann u a l d e ductible. Those ser v i ces can include prima r y care, some
s t andards
are overdue, but is concerned
can't afford.
a b andoned
Under th e
before a
public affairs for the Hearth,
demolishing each derelict residential building costs $8,000 — money the bankrupt city
town, near t h e train station.
Aval e r e f o und t hat t h e
ing $24,000 a year — about average annual deductible whatmanyservicejobspay. f o r s ilver plans is $2,567,
cial subsidies that CA I 'OI7ICB//Y the law provides /0 p6pp/6 gI 6 PeoPle with mod- /I g6/p' tp b6 ~ est incomes and high out-of-pocket Ufld6I IflSUI'6d costs. any PaCe p The $5, 2 00 " ~ w oukl b e mo r e than 20 percent tl l g l7 OUt:-Ofof the person's in- ppCk6$ COS/S come, well above
new proposal. John Crouch, director of
That's not p ossible here. T he city e s timates i t h a s 78,000 vacant structures, and
and-coming district of Cork-
s urance on the job and mak-
additional f i n an-
the first time under the EPA's
happened,you can really feel the history of a city," Kearney said. "In Europe, when things become derelict, they'll demolish them."
tors inquiring about the ruins. So have restaurants in the up-
c o sts are only available to
agrees that new
Devices other than wood
stoves would be regulated for
you can see traces of what's
ruptcy in July, hotels say they've seen an uptick in visi-
ry. Take someone under 65
with no access to health in- people who get a silver plan.
Patio and Barbecue Association, said his organization
delay led to lawsuits by a variety of groups.
Continued from A1 "In Detroit, you can relate,
"The Ruins of Detroit." But since the city declared bank-
keyed to a benchmark silver plan in each geographical Continued from A1 area. And the law's subsidies Afewnumberstellthesto- t o help with out-of-pocket
law, that person's premiums ers in employer plans curwould be capped below 7 r ently f ace. A dditionally, percent of his income, about many silver plans have high $130 a month. A stretch on a cost-sharing requirements tight budget, yet doable. for p r escriptions, particularBut if he gets really sick l y "specialty drugs" to treat or has an accident, his out- intractable conditions such of-pocket expenses could as severe forms of arthritis. go ashigh as $5,200 a year Some plans may offer in a worst-case scenario. limited relief by covering That's even with certain services
some wood stoves in 1996. The
Detroit
plans to turn th e M ichigan
Chronic
want visitors to see the positive parts of Detroit, such as
the vacant fields that enter-
Shelter
arty-farty," Jean Vortkamp, a community activist and one-
time mayoral candidate, said in an email. "I see the lady with bags and three layers of clothes on, and then I see a group of white young people climb out of their dad's cars
"Our thought was that a
nonprofit would be able to tap
Some Detroiters, including a group of urban explorers, have a beef with Welter in
particular. They scrawled a message on the walls of the St. Agnes Church, "Go Home Jesse ... We HATE you and your tour bus." Welter sayshe's opening visitors' eyes to the problems of Detroit, which could poten-
fundraising resources that people may not normally want said Jeff Rasmussen, Jefferson County Administrative Officer. "People pay taxes, and when theseplaces need more help, they may say 'Why didn't they (the government) do that'?'" So far, the new humane society has already succeeded at
Fence posts are being installed for play yards for dogs at Three It recently secured a grant of Rivers Humane Society in Madras on Friday. The play area will be $4,000 from 31 Paws of Bend, called Juli's Playce in honor of a recently-deceased donor. and also raised $2,800 in donations from the community. The moneyisgoingtoward the mane society. but Drynan said taking in cats "The dogs here never had a is part of the shelter's long-term kennels' improvement, which indudes running electricity play yard, so that'll be nice be- plan.
to the 20 outdoor kennels, and
cause it'll get them out of the
also building three fenced play areas for the dogs. The electricity will help keep the outdoor kennels warm during the cold months of winter, and will also keep the dogs' water bowls from freezing. The new upgradeisexpected to befunctioning by next week. The play areas are being built using money donated in memory of a Prineville dog shelter volunteer, who requested that in lieu of flowers, money be given to the hu-
kennels and into play groups," Drynan said. "And frankly, a tired dog is a quiet dog." But while improvements are underway to better the day-today lives of shelter dogs, the humane society still isn't accepting cats. This comes at the
" Between us
an d W a r m
Springs, feral cats are definitely a big problem," Drynan said. "Cats will eventually be on our radar." The Cat Rescue, Adoption & Foster Team, a Bend-based cat
rescue small dogs from other states ... but they never have room for cats." But while the Three Rivers
Humane Society doesn't yet accept cats, it is doing what it
can to ease the problem, which includes connecting owners wishing to get their cats adopted with prospective owners looking to adopt. Aside from building outdoor play areas, the humane society has big plans for the year ahead. Drynan said it is planning to construct an additional building to house more dogs
shelter, will continue to take on at some point this year. The many of the stray and feral cats facility also plans to focus on behest of the county, which re- inthe area. community involvement in the "It's always bad when there's coming months. quested that the humane soci"We really want this to be a ety become establishedbefore no resource for cats in a countaking on the feline population ty," said Janice Sershen, a community shelter," Drynan in Jefferson County. board member with CRAFT. said. The humane society will not
"Many shelters have territorial
be able to accept cats for ayear, boundaries and so they can't
s a i d Ron Pollack, executive
have been steered to gold d i rector of Families USA. "There will be some people plans. Silver, however, i s
the
wh o f eel that way. The over-
standard for most consum- whelming majority will be ers. The law's tax credits far better off, even if what to help with premiums are
t h e y have is not perfect."
Cover Continued from A1 King had been on medical leave since early December, but resigned Thursday. Bruce Goldberg, director of the state's health
McLane said. House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, and Senate Presi-
dent Peter Courtney, D-Salem, have both said they plan to
pass legislation to ensure Oregonians in the high-risk insurance pool, known as the Ore-
R-Powell Butte, maintained
us really want to help the cats around here," Bonnie wrote in an email. "The traditional shelters go out of their way to
tapping into these resources.
through the health care law
cats. groups other than (Humane Society of the Ochocos) and
Joe Kline i The Bulletin
co m e out ahead.
do not prioritize stray and feral
tially drum up political will to help the city. "People are going to do this anyway. Why not do it in a way that's going to be safer, easier for everyone?" he said.
"It is very frustrating that no
to donate to the government,"
t h e c l osest t o
"If the question is, will employer-provided coverage. Indeed, members of some peoplefind thatcoverCongress and staffers who age and care remain unafwill now get their coverage fordable, the answer is yes,"
authority, has been acting gon Medical Insurance Pool, as interim director of the will not lose health care while state's troubled health ex- the website isn't functioning. change. King's departure Oregon Health Authority has allows the Cover Oregon already granted temporary board to search for a per- relief to those in the high-risk manent replacement. pool, but legislation will likely Gov. Joh n K i t z haber be needed to approve funding said in December he would for the extension. like an independent review Cover Oregon is federally into what was behind the funded until the end of this state's health insurance ex- year. To be self-sufficient, it change's botched rollout. must attract enough enrollees, Despite a lot of fingers which is a big concern for Rep. pointed at the website's Jason Conger, R-Bend. "The thing that concerns main c ontractor, Oracle Corp., House Republican me is if people don't believe Leader Mik e M c Lane, it's going to work, and they
director of CRAFT, said many humane societies in the area
into volunteer resources and
plans are
with cameras that are worth so much."
take the cats from out there. Luckily, CRAFT isn't limited like that." Bonnie Baker, the executive
Continued from A1
tu r n away those with pre-ex-
bronze plan covers 60 per- isting medical conditions, cent of expected costs, silver and because the new plans covers70 percent,gold cov- cap out-of-pocket costs. ers80percent,andplatinum W hile that limits medical covers 90 percent. debt, it doesn't eliminate it. Bronze plans have the One o f the leading advolowest premiums but pro- c ates of the health care law vide less insurance. Gold says most people will still
— Reporter; 541-383-0354, mkehoe®bendbulletin.com
have no reason to think it will,
Cover Oregon officials and then they won't use it," Conger the governor share the said. "And if they don't use it, blame for the unsuccessful it won't be self-sustaining and I don't think we should continrollout. The state is still interviewing contractors and is
ue to pour money into it."
Cover Oregon officials said expected to announce the they will have a better idea of scope of the review and enrollment numbers at the end who will oversee it within of open enrollment in March. the next couple of weeks. They expect more people to "The governor has said sign up in the next couple of he's going to do an inde- months. pendent investigation and I Otherwise it would be in the hope it is truly independent hands of the governor, Legisand not just a whitewash," lature and the Cover Oregon McLane said. board to decide the next move. Lawmakers are also pre— Reporter: 541-554-1162, paring for the abbreviated Idake@bendbulletin.com legislative session slated to start in February. There
will likely be several hearings focusing on different aspects of Cover Oregon. "We need to do it before
the evidence gets stale,"
mplements 'Htae '3n,i e~le~J 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com
'
NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwe's'tcrossing.com
A6 T H E BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
The raid on China's an irin ran esa ea No. 1 meth village em aion ormea scaven ers By Julie Makinen Los Angeles Times
By David Zucchino
Afzal, 40,
Los Angeles Times
stan — In a country as poor as
walks on a firing range as he collects
Afghanistan, even the detritus
brush for
of war holds value — and often tragic consequences. Thousands of deadly unexploded artillery shells and mortar rounds littering military firing ranges fetch cash as scrap
cooking fires
GHAFOR KHIL, Afghani-
BEIJING — Call it "Break- 121,000 cases — were related ing Bad: C h ina E d ition." to meth.
in the village of Guli Kala, Afghanistan. Despite the
' 5 ' sc
dangers of
metal. Abdul Rahman, 19, an illiterate shepherd, was on the East
live ordnance
River firing range near the massive Bagram air base when he snatched up a piece of ordnance. The round detonated, shearing off Rahman's forearms and blinding his left eye.
es, Afghans take the risk
onranges near U.S. basto go about daily life. Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times
Rahman knew that his for-
ay involved grave risk. The range is marked with bold warning signs in Dari and Pashto. A painted logo depicts a man's foot being blown off, and mine-dearing groups had warned him about the range.
Rahman's ruinous gamble was all the more perplexing because his father, Zir Gol,
had lost his right leg just a few months earlier in an explosion at the site. Gol says he was
chasingrunaway sheep. "I tried to keep my son away from that place, but we don't
sad story," said U.S. Army Brig. said, they disputed her data. Gen. Michael Wehr, who helps But in recent months, she said, coordinate range cleanups as U.S.-led international forces deputy chief engineer for the have pledged to identify and coalition. help clean up ranges. Small-arms ranges have Coalition officials say they proved relatively easy to clear, are committed to clearing ev- Wehr said, because they conery small-arms range on the tain pistol and rifle bullets, 800 bases once occupied by co- which, unlike much larger aralition troops. They have also tillery and bomb shells, don't teamed with the U.N. and ci- produce potentially explosive vilian mine action groups on a duds.Small-arms ranges are long-term plan to map, register typically secured inside forand identify unexploded shells tresslike bases, but some baron 257 dangerous "large ord- riers have been torn down as nance" ranges, induding the basesare dismantled. one at Bagram. military authorities, Hartley
know where the dangerous places are and neither do our sheep," Gol, 43, a kuchi, or pas"I have to give them credit," toral nomad, said as he stood on an artificial leg beside his Hartley said of the coalition. son a few miles from the range. "They are now doing what they "We have to go where our should be doing." sheep go." The efforts have been complicated by the desperation of
Civilian casualties
As the U.S. military and its
allies shut down bases and ranges, the number of civilian casualties has risen sharply, according to Abigail Hartley, program manager for the independent United Nations Mine Ac-
tion Service in Kabul. She says 33 Afghan civilians were killed or wounded on U.S. or coalition rangeslastyear,up from 23 in 2012 and just one in 2011.
When she first confronted
Long-term cleanup
Larger, dud-producing ranges are typically outside security walls and are shared by several bases. Clearing them will take years because they
large ranges. "We're talking years down the road" before the job is completed, Wehr said. Contractors use GPS data mapping to identify range locations and boundaries. They also identify the amounts and types of ordnance on a site.
The information is logged into a database that will be consulted in coming years by the U.N. mine agency and other mine-clearing groups. "Our obligation is to leave
a good record ... to document what is where and acknowledge that the time required is
beyond our tenure" in Afghanistan, Wehr said. The scale of the job is enor-
mous: 200 million square metersoflargeranges,85 percent of them encompassing U.S. faitinerant Afghans who now are saturated with large shells cilities and the remainder split have easier access to the ord- — artillery and mortar rounds, among nine coalition nations. "It's a phenomenal amount nance because of the rapid rockets,aircraft missiles and drawdown of combat forces. bombs — that could explode. of stuff we're dearing," said Coalition troops remain on That means large-range Australian Squadron Leader fewer than 100 bases. And Af- cleanup is likely to continue Kelly Morris, who commands ghans, despite warning signs long after U.S. combat troops the Theater Mine Action Cenand education programs, con- depart at the end of 2014. The ter, which coordinates maptinue to forage for metal on U.S. has committed $62 million ping and cleanup. In his six open and closed ranges. to mapping and beginning to months here, Morris said, "These are marked loca- clear these ranges. teams under his supervision tions, but there are also civilAmerican and Afghan con- have disposed of 43,000 pieces ians desperate for scrap who tractors hired by the U.S. have of unexploded ordnance, with are losing limbs, and it's a sad, cleared only three of the 257 many more to go.
lI
jlI
percent of the total drug arrests — nearly 50,000 out of
More than 3,000 police offiZhang Yong-an, a profescers equipped with helicop- sor at Shanghai University ters and motorboats and ac- who studies illicit drugs, said companied by dogs descend- meth is increasingly popular ed on a southern Chinese among urbanyouth. In mavillage notorious for making jor cities such as Beijing and crystal meth, seizing 3 tons Shanghai, a single dose costs of the drug and 23 tons of $16 to $50, although the price raw materials and arresting can reach nearly $100 in ex182 people. clusive clubs, said Wu Jiang, The massive raid targeted a professor at Yunnan UniBoshe village in Guangdong versity's law school who also province, a difficult-to-reach studies drug issues. hamlet of 14,000 people near Once known for its lychee the city of Lufeng. Pictures fruit, Boshe village is an of Sunday's raid published insular — some would say on Chinese news websites backward — place where showed dozens of police all the residents are said to vehicles massed in the vil- share a single surname, Cai. lage of traditional-style, sinIn recent months, some gle-story tile-roofed homes inhabitants had taken to onseparated by narrow alley- line forums, complaining ways, many passable only by that the extensive meth-makbicycle or on foot. ing operations — a process Provincial anti-drug offi- that generates significant cial Qiu Wei told the state-run
Xinhua news agency that
amounts of noxious wastehad contaminated the water
and soil, rendering it imposlage's 2,000 households were sible to grow crops. Piles of connected to the drug trade waste reportedly littered the and that the town had been town, and residents openly providing a third of the crys- stored the raw ingredients tal meth made in China over beside their homes. the last three years. Other locals said the sigPolice said they seized nificant amount of electricity nine guns, a mmunition, needed for the meth-making a homemade bomb a n d laboratories had led to freknives. Three officers were quent power outages in the reportedly injured in the op- village, driving many resieration, including two who dents to buy generators. were shot and one who was E arlier attempts by a u struck by a car. thorities to stamp out drug Use and p r oduction of activity in Boshe reportedly crystal meth has been rising were thwarted by an extenrapidly in China. A study sive network of lookouts in published in November by the village's narrow streets, the U.N. Office on Drugs as well as even human barand Crime said of the more ricades of women, children than 2 million drug users and the elderly. who have come into contact Media reports identified with Chinese authorities, 29 Cai Lianghuo,42, as the maspercent were using amphet- termind of the meth operaamine-type drugs, up from tion. He was arrested in Nojust 9 percent in 2008. vember. His cousin and local Meth, in both crystal and party chief Cai Dongjia, who pill form, is the second most was arrested in this week's popular illicit drug in Chi- raid, was accused of trying to na, behind only heroin, the help free Cai Lianghuo from report said, and in 2012, 40 custody. more than one-fifth of the vil-
PECIRE
INRNCING ' VAIULSEE EEIVEIY .-s IL N of Redmond
o
'
.
MATTRESS',."::.".. • Gallery-Be nd
Calendar, B3 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014
BRIEFING Campaignnets DUII suspects Law enforcement agencies aroundCentral Oregon havecompleted a 21-day highvisibility enforcementcampaign, netting a total of 26arrests for driving underthe influence ofintoxicants, according to aBendPolice newsrelease. The campaignran fromDec.13to Jan.2. In part by using grant-fundedovertime hours, lawenforcement made thefollowing arrests: • Bend Police arrested two people onsuspicion DUII andonefor on suspicion of afelony. • Oregon State Police arrested eight peopleon suspicion of DUIIandare in the midst of investigating one fatal crashthat could bealcohol-related. • Redmond Police made 14arrests onsuspicion of DUII. • Prineville Police arrested onepersonon suspicion of DUII. For more information onthe campaign,with overtime funding provided by theOregonDepartment of Transportation, go to www.Stop impairedDriving.org.
rres e in onne icu, man Ives e as ome By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
A man arrested on New Years Eve in Connecticut, and held on an extradition warrant on suspicion of real
estate fraud, appearstohave a Bend connection. Police in Stonington,
Conn., arrested Thomas Clay Wilson, 59, at a home in the nearby town of Mystic on
Tuesday night, then charged him with being a fugitive from justice after discovering South Carolina authorities
had an active warrant out for his arrest. According to Stonington Police Capt. Jerry Desmond, Wilson told authorities he
lives, or used to live, in Bend. "There's not a lot I can say except for the fact that he was arrested on an extraditable warrant out of South
A spokesman for the state attorney general said he couldn't comment, as Wilson had not yet been served with the warrant.
lives at 1900 N.E. Third Street in Bend. The address is a commer-
Carolina," Desmond said, adding that Connecticut au-
Bend police don't have a recordforWi lson.
cial building that houses a Rite Aid, a health food gro-
By Shelby R. King The Bulletin
But according to New Lon-
The OregonGovernment
hold Wilson in custody until he could be sent to South
don, Conn.-based newspaper The Day, Wilson has been
Ethics Commission has de-
cer, a furniture and electron-
Carolina.
convicted in circuit courts
icsrentalstore and apackage shippingcompany, according
Desmond referred questions about Wilson's back-
and investigated by law en-
cided to waive a fine leveled against a former Culver Planning Commission member in
forcement on suspicion of
2010.
to Deschutes County proper-
ground and arrest warrant to
tyrecords,
the South Carolina attorney general' soffice.
running scams in multiple states. SeeArrest/B5
mission meeting, staff chose to
It's uncertain if Wilson
thorities were continuing to
2.2ICfine is waived by ethics council
SMALL BREWERY OPEN FORBIG RETURNS
In a Friday morning comwaive a $2,240penalty against Robert Page. Page received a bill for $2,240 for failure to file a statement of economic interest in 2009. Anyone holding a public office is required to fill out the form to disclose sources of income, property owned, expenses and shared business interests.
"He had no previous viola-
tions, so the staff recommend-
ed a letter of education for Mr. Page," said Commission Executive Director Ronald Bersin.
"Procedurally, the commission is lenient on a first offense." In March 2010, the Ethics
Commission reports it mailed a report to Page instructing
— Bulletin steffreport
him to file the form by April 15.
When Page failed to respond, the commission says on May 4, 2010, another letter was sent
advising Page of the May 18 final filing deadline. On May 21 they say an additional letter was mailed, advising Page of an accruing penalty. Page mailed a letter requesting a reduction in the penalty
STATE NEWS e///////////////
r/////////
e/// .
Portland it,a
Polk County
*'
/
in October 2010, according
to commission records. At that time, Page had not filed
sPigf'
• Polk County: Authorities are accusing a pair of men with the killing of an individual said to be an undercover informant,B3 • Portland:A complaint against software tycoon John McAffee has been dropped,B3
the form, so the commission
mailed a duplicate form with instructions and informed Page it would consider reducingthe penalty once he had filed. Andy Tullis / The Bulletin
blivion Brewing Co. co-owner and brewmaster Darin Butschy takes a break from brewing to skateboard through the brewery warehouse late last year. When not making beer at the new northeast Bend brewery, Darin Butschy enjoys skateboarding and snowboarding with his family. The brewery, too, is a family endeavor — Oblivion is a small husband-wife production brewery
Well shot!
with ales, porters, stouts and seasonals created in small batches. See a photo story on Page B2.
Reader photos
• We want to see your photos of snow for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the
Outdoors section. Submityour best work at hendbulletin.cem lsnow2014andwe'll pickthe best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphetes© bentfbulletin.cem and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Bersin said the commission
only forgives penalties if aperson has filed the statement of economic interest by the time
they ask for a waiver. The amount billed to Page was determined with a mathe-
matical equation, Bersin said. Once the final deadline has
passed, the penalty accrues at a rate of $10 per day for the first 14 days and $50 per day everydaythereafter. In December 2013 the commission says it received anoth-
er letter from Page asking for
SISTERS
3 projects focusedon citizen health, tourism By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
SISTERS — City of Sisters
north of U.S. Highway 20 a Deschutes County clinical could also open this summer. program supervisor, told SisAnd plans for a roughly ters councilors. 3,200-seat amphitheater on Deschutes County oper-
officials hope plans for a new school-based health clinic, a the north edge of town are public park and a communimoving forward. ty amphitheater can improve Deschutes County comthe health of area residents missioners and Sisters city while bringing more visitors councilors provided updates into town. on these community projThe three projects ects during a joint meeting are in planning stages. Thursday. But construction on the
2,700-square-foot health clinic next to Sisters High
School is likely to start in a few weeks and wrap up in July. A community park just
ates school-based health
clinics in Bend, Redmond, La Pine and Sisters, part
could start building this month."
Sisters officials updated the county on a pair of projects they hope will give community members more
of an effort to improve stu-
recreation options and boost tourism.
dents' physical and mental health.
theater near Locust Street
years — a setup that doesn't
grants will fund a half-time mental health therapist who
allow for much privacy. "We've got approval to go
formances at the Britt Festival Pavilion in Jacksonville,
will work with the Sisters School District, Linda Webb,
ahead" with the new clinic,
west of Medford.
In addition to the new school-based health clinic,
Webb said Thursday. "We
at all on my part," he wrote. "Sometimes things just get put in apile and forgotten as we scramble to make a living." Bersin said it is unlikely the
commission would waive a penalty were Page to fail to file a second time.
Elected officials are required to file annually. The instructions are typically mailed in March and are dueby April 15.
A large, outdoor amphiand Barclay Drive could give the city a premier concert venue,which might book acts comparable to the per-
But the Sisters clinic has
operated out of a two-room, modular building for several
awaiver. "I plead that you waive the fine, as there was no ill intent
SeeSisters /B5
— Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin/corn
"Procedurally, the commission ts lenient on a first offense." — Ronald Bersin,
commission executive director
BEND HaVe aStary idea or submission? Contact us!
Park board tomeet inannualworkshop andassesspriorities
The Bulletin
Bulletin staff report Bend Park 8z Recreation
Call a reporter
District has no shortage of
Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 LaPine..................541-383-03e7 Sunriver ................541-383-03e7 Deschutes.............541-e17-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 State projects...... 541-410-9207 Salem ....................54t-554-t t62 D.C....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-383-0360
work to do in 2014. At its board of directors
workshop from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Tuesday, Bend Park 8z Recreation District plans
to discuss, among other issues, its annual strategic action plan, which includes
hundreds of priorities for the 2013-14 fiscal year, many of which are already underway.
The board and parks of-
master planning for the Riley
a pavilion and ice-skating
park district allowed Sun
ficials are also expected to
Ranch Nature Reserve on 122
rink, and the architecture
Country Tours to rent water crafts, educate the public on
discuss the district's financial forecast and its capital im-
acres of riverfront land on Bend's north edge, which was provement plan for the next purchased for $2.75 million in five years. Thanks in part to a 2010. The land was previous$29 million bond approved by ly known as Gopher Gulch voters in 2012, the park disRanch and includes 7,125 feet trict has dozens of projects al- ofriverfrontage. ready underway or ongoing, Also underway is the including the completion of expansion of the Deschutes Millers Landing, Ponderosa River Trail, master-planning Park and Pine Nursery. The
of the new site on Simpson
park district has also begun
Avenue is expected to feature
and engineering work for the renovation of the Bend Senior
Center. Still to be decided is whether to seek naming rights for the pavilion on the Simpson
water safety and loan free life jackets to children. The board discussed the issue in August but no final decisions were made at that time.
discuss updating a 2010 pol-
The board workshop is open to the public and will take place in the Bend Park
icy that disallows sales or
& Recreation Administration
business operations on park property. Last summer, the
office at 799 S.W. Columbia
Avenue site. And the board will also
St.
B2 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
j
ik // 1
»I
»»:
Oblivion Brewing Co. owner and brewmaster Darin Butschy is one half of a small husband-wife production brewery — or nanobrewery. Among the newest and smallest operations in a region of
. 1v I
two dozen breweries, Oblivion brews ales as well as darker and seasonal brews, all in small batches. Here's how the Butschys do what they do.
•
•
•
•
»C» •
•
Photos by AndyTullls » The Bulletin Darin Butschy checks on a batch of beer at Oblivion Brewing Co. in northeast Bend. Years ago, Butschy made beer for a California brewery before moving to Bend in 1994. "The timing was finally right," he told The Bulletin in October.
Above, Darin Butschy looks over
whole-cone centennial hops. Oblivi•
on's brewmaster takes pride in what
'
4
goes into his beer. "I moved uphere in search of the good, clean water we have," he said. "We're right in the middle of where our ingredients are
grown. There's hop farmsjust over the mountains." One of the hoppybeers he makes is Backside IPA, named for the back side of Mt. Bachelor. At left, Butschy looks inside a fermentation tank to check its quality. It's
one of the new pieces of equipment
Meg Butschy takes care of the business side of the couple's upstart brewery, and husband Darin does the brewing.
Oblivion's purchased in anticipation of
expansion.
snn
0
Iil p:-"
E
»'
.'C
Work doesn't stop for Butschy, whonot only ownsand brews, but also delivers. Here, he delivers two
Oblivion Brewing Co. co-owners Megand Darin Butschy sample their Winter Warmer robust dark ale,
five-gallon kegs of freshly crafted beer to stock Oblivion's exclusive tap handle at the Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe on Pence Lane in Bend.
during a tasting session at Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe, the first place in Bend to offer their hand-crafted beer.
SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
ainmansai 0 e i n orman By Nigel Duara The Associated Press
Confronted with a murder accusation in the death of a
police informant, two men accused each other of being the one who punched the in-
formant repeatedly, tied him up and gagged him, stripped him naked and dumped his body in the woods behind a cemetery. What is certain, according
to a police affidavit unsealed Thursday, is that 29-year-old James Hawkes IV was work-
ing as a confidential informant when he approached Jimmy Dewan Fears in a con-
trolled drug buy overseen by the Polk County Interagency Narcotics Team, or POINT.
The affidavit doesn't reveal how Fears, 44, learned of Hawkes' role as an informant,
but on Dec. 11, Fears and Zachary Thomas Mersch, 24, met Hawkes at a Polk County motel.
EVZNT TODAY VFW BREAKFAST: A breakfast
of pancakes,eggs, sausageor ham; $8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFW Hall,1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.; HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information
Both Fears an d M e r sch arm helped to identify the are charged with aggravated body.
Krasik. "I have no information yet, because we're await-
Police started to get in touch ing to see what a grand jury death penalty, though each in- with Hawkes' associates and a does. sists he was a bystander and police officer in Independence An a t torney r epresentthe other man killed Hawkes. tracked down Mersch. ing Mersch was could not be "Mr. Mersch admitted that reached on Friday morning. Both men acknowledged being present while Hawkes he and Mr.Jimmy Fears beMersch apparently gave powas beaten, shocked with a came aware that Mr. Hawkes lice few problems during his stun gun, hogtied and gagged. was an i n formant working arrest, but Fears proved to be Though each pointed the fin- with POINT, and they con- another story. Police were tryger at the other, neither said fronted Mr. H awkes about ing to find him on an unrelatanother person was involved. this," Polk County Sheriff's ed warrant, and at his apartAuthorities say Hawkes Deputy John Williams wrote ment, they found Fears with was rolled in a blanket and in the affidavit. his 15-year-old daughter. stuffed in the bed of a pickup The Oregon State Medical A glitch in their computer truck — Fears and Mersch Examiner's Office has con- system stalled the officers, disagree on whether he was ducted an autopsy, but the who say they then watched still alive at this point — and Polk County District Attorney Fears run back into his apartthe pair drove around Polk Aaron Felton said Friday af- ment and lock the door. He County, looking for a place to ternoon the report was not yet emerged several minutes latdump the body. complete. He also said that he er, his daughter "yelling and On Dec. 29, someone spot- hadn'tyet decided whether he cussing" at the police. As ted Hawkes' bruised remains would release its results when he was being cuffed, Fears behindthe Pedee Cemetery in it is. tried to hand his wallet to his "These are always com- daughter, but police say they Polk County, about 70 miles southwest of P ortland. His plicated matters and that intervened. face was unrecognizable, but situation is developing," A trial for both men has tena shamrock tattoo on his right said Fears' attorney, Steven tatively been set for Feb. 19. murder, which could carry the
ENm a about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. LIVECOMEDY SHOW: Bend Comedypresentscomedian Lonnie Bruhn; $10; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.
bendcomedy.com.
IMPROV COMEDYNIGHT: Triage and Reality Benders improvisation
troupes makeup scenes and
characters from audience suggestions; $5; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-7713189 or www.bendimprov.com. DELTAHALOS:TheM edfordindiesoul and acoustic band performs; free; 8-9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing 8 Taproom, 24 N.W.
Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.
www.astroloungebend.com.
SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE:West Coast swing dancing for all ages; $5; 8-10 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-3881133 or www.bendseniorcenter.org. STAND UPCOMEDY SHOWCASE: Featuring Brad Knowles and Jake Woodmansee; $10; 8-10 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.j.mp/ComShow. TOM VANDENAVOND:The alt-folk singer-songwriter performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. Armour Road,Bend;541-389-7047 or www.riseupinternational.com. THE MONDEGREENS:The California folk-rock band performs; $3; 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or
SUMDAY
com.
NOTABLESSWING BAND:Featuring blues, Latin, rock-n-roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-728-8743 or www. notablesswingband.com. THE ARCHIVIST:Paul Merchant reflects on working with poet William Stafford; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. BLAZINGSONS AND QUIET CULTURE:Eugene's alternative rock band performs; free; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com.
XEws 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 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMEMT Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:07 p.m. Dec. 21, In the400 block of Northeast KearneyAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:53 p.m.Dec.27,inthe63400blockof North U.S. Highway97. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 3:36p.m. Dec.27,inthe900 blockof Northwest Bond Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 4:24 p.m.Dec.27, in the 20500 block of Scarlet Sage Way. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 8:06 a.m.Dec. 28, In the 3100 block of Northwest Fairway Heights Drive. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 9:31 a.m.Dec. 29, in the 60800 block of Brosterhous Road. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 3:08 p.m. Dec. 29, in the1600 block of Northeast Neff Road. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 7:38 a.m.Dec. 30, inthe1000 blockof Southeast Shadowwood Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:50 p.m. Dec. 31, Inthe 700block of Northwest Bond Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:36 p.m. Dec. 31, in the20300 block of Klahani Drive. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 3:46 p.m. Dec.31, in the 62700 block of Larkview Road. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:03 p.m. Dec. 31, in the700block of Northwest Florida Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:17 a.m. Dec. 24, in the61200 block of Columbine Lane. DUII —Tessa Jo Trass, 44, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of Intoxlcants at 5:16 p.m. Dec. 29, in the61300 block of Brosterhous Road. DUII —Patrick Christoffer Hall, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:15 a.m. Dec.30, in the 61500 block of South U.S. Highway97. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered anditems stolen at 9:02 p.m. Dec.31, in the900 block of Southeast SecondStreet.
Theft —A theft was reported at 5:38 p.m. Jan.1, in the area ofSimpson Avenue. DUII —SummerElizabeth Dearlng, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:13 p.m. Jan.1, in the area of Northeast Sixth Street and Northeast KearneyAvenue. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 8:54 a.m.Jan. 2, in the 20100 block of Crystal Mountain Lane. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:19 a.m. Jan. 2, in the2800 block of Northeast RedOakDrive. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:11 p.m. Dec.19, in the 63400 blockof North U.S. Highway97.
PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at tt:09a.m. Dec. 31, inthe area of Northeast Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at12:20 a.m. Jan. 1, Inthe area of Northeast Third Street. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 3:51 p.m. Jan. 2, in the area of Northwest Third Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 4:07 p.m. Jan. 2, in thearea ofSoutheast Idlewood Street.
OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 9:14 p.m. Dec.29, in the area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost 122 in Redmond.
BEND FIRE RUNS Monday 5:32p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 64639 Wharton Ave. 18 —Medical aid calls. Tuesday 11:34 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, area of Brookswood Boulevard. 18 —Medical aid calls. Wednesday 18 —Medical ald calls. Thursday 21 —Medical aid calls.
CIVIL SUITS Filed Nov. 5 13CV1519 —Connected Brands LLC v. Leah Powell, Thomas P.Nabor, Trade to Travel LLC,complaint,
$31,000 Filed on Nov. 26 13CV1492 —American Express Centurion Bank v.Gordon Zakett, complaint, $36,202.34 13CV1493 —Richard Drummond andGregoryDrummond v.PaulB. Forte, complaint, $100,000 13CV1494 —Alyssa A. Steele v. Mason P.Anderson, complaint, $125,000 Filed Nov. 27 13CV1495 —Wells Fargo Bank N.A., successor by merger to Wells Fargo Financial Bank, v. Elizabeth S. Boyer, complaint, $10,286.31 Filed Dec. 2 13CV1499 —PennyMac Loan Services LLC v.the unknown heirs of Daniel E. Conarty, Cathleen P.Conarty and the State of Oregon, complaint, $75,620.40 plus interest costs and fees 13CV1501 —Philadelphia Indemnity Insurance Company v.Joshua W. Blok, complaint, $22,000 13CV1502 —Property and Casualty Insurance Company of Hartford v. Plush HomesLLC,complaint, $18,177.04 13CV1503 —Rediscover Sunriver Village LLC v.Sandra R. Hartvickson, aka Sandra R.Hereford, and dba Styxx and Stones, complaint, $42,207.71 plus Interest, costs and fees Filed Dec. 3 13CV1504 —The Residence Club at Pronghorn Villas Condominiums Owners' Association v. Gregory C. Horsleyand Joel A. Horsley, complaint, $36,539.59 Filed Dec. 4 13CV1505 —Darlene Berry v. Vito I. Bartelottaand Julie Bartelotta, complaint, $45,000 Filed Dec. 5 13CV1506 —Diane Shrockv. Rene J. Figueroa, complaint, $126,203.96 13CV1507 —RayKlein, dba Professional Credlt Servlce, v. Jason M. Wilson and Jennifer Wilson, complaint, $16,240.17 13CV1508 —Hooker Creek Companies LLC v.Clint Decker and Decker Landscaping Company, complaint, $14,136.49 Filed Dec. 10 13CV1513 —Cavalry SPV I LLCv. Patrick Reimer, complaint, $12,577.34 13CV1514 —Cavalry SPV I LLC v.JasonR.Deney,complaint, $14,751.33 13CV1515 —Cypress Financial Recoveries LLC v.DeeSchmitz and Scott R. Schmitz, complaint, $10,692.38 13CV1516 —Capital One Bankv. Robert L. Rider andStephany S.
Rider, complaint, $16,480.08 Filed Dec. 11 13CV1517 —RayKlein Inc., dba Professional Credit Service, v. Erika R. Saul and KadeSaul, complaint, $ l7,023.84 Filed Dec. 12
13CV1620 —David B. Redwine M.D., as an individual, and David B.Redwine M.D. P.C., v.St. Charles Health System Inc., dba St. Charles Medical Center - Bend, andSt. Charles Health System Inc., dba St. Charles Medical Center, complaint, $4,052,000 Filed Dec. 13 13CV1523 —RayKlein Inc., dba Professional Credit Service, v. SeanP. Parent, complaint, $39,363.98 Filed Dec. 16 13CV1524 —RossConnell v. Ann Ford, complaint, $30,000 plus interest, costs and fees 13CV1525 —Beneficial Oregon Inc. v. Byron Bergstad, Karen L. Bergstad, Ray Klein Inc., dba Professional Credit Service, Crooked River RanchClub and MaintenanceAssociation and Metro Area Collection Service Inc., complaint, $186,387.74 13CV1527 —Leopard GPSLLC v. Geodigital International Corp., complaint, $68,300 plus interest, costs and fees Filed Dec. 17
13CV1528 —Andrea Banksv. Fox's Billiard Lounge LLC,complaint, $30,051.30 plus interest, costs and fees Filed Dec. 18 13CV1520 —Beneficial Oregon Inc.v. Arlen B.Momb,PeggyE. Ketteman, OregonAffordable Housing Assistance Corporation and the State of Oregon, complaint, $127,535.34 13CV1529 —State of Oregon, by and through its Department of Transportation, v. Roll Tide Properties Corp. 401(kj Profit Sharing Plan Trust, Michael D. King andMargaret E. King, complaint, $49,000 Filed Dec. 19 13CV1530 —Selco Community Credlt Unlon v. Llnda AJabson, akaLindaAThomas,complaint, $ I9,839.96 13CV1532 —U.S.BankN.A.v. Darrell V. Mallery and Sandra C.Mallery, complaint, $178,881.07 plus interest, costs and fees 13CV1533 —American Express Bank FSB v. Janette Eastep akaJanette M. Eastep, complaint, $12,678.47 13CV1535 —G. Frederlck Schroeder Jr.v. Elizabeth H.VonCleve, complaint, $190,000
Filed Dec. 20 13CV1536 —Michael Seltzer v. John E. Emmingham, complaint, $175,000
AROUND THE STATE Aldany pet ShOp — Albany's city attorney says he's not sure whether a medical marijuana dispensary that plans to opentoday will be legal. TheAlbany Alternative Health Solutions has announced plans to open in astorefront, offering kitchen spices the first day and marijuana to medical pot cardholders as soon asSunday. Greg Bechtel, a leader of the nonprofit, said the operation will follow Oregon's dispensary rules, which are underdevelopment andare all but final. The Legislature approved dispensaries last year, but businesses cannot apply for licenses until the state's registration system is in place, scheduled for March 3. City Attorney Jim Delapoer said City Council has asked for anamendment that would outlaw businesses offering drugs in violation of federal law, which includes marijuana. A $95M fix —The city of Portland's office tower leaks from the roof, windows, siding and grout. Officials warn amajor earthquake could ruin it. Workers complain about its sloping floors, small windows and lack of natural light. When built in the early1980s, The Portland Building next to City Hall drew attention for its post-modern design. It's also known for its "Portlandia" statue, and it's on the National Register of Historic Places. But complaints havebeen numerous, andmajor repairs have beenput off. A newcity estimate reportedly puts the cost of fixing it at $95 million, and thecost of rebuilding between$110million and $140 million. A spokesmansaid Mayor Charlie Hales hasunanswered questions about the building and wants to seemore alternatives. CaeeWefker DUI afl'eet —Police in Hillsboro say a state caseworker arrested on adrunken driving charge told them shewas on duty and responding to aNewYear's Evechild abuse complaint. The Oregon Department of HumanServices released astatement Friday stating the womanhadbeenfired. A spokesman, GeneEvans, declined to comment further. Lt. Mike Rouchessaid police stopped a car in the parking lot of the Hillsboro office of the state agencyafter a caller reported a possibly impaired driver. Hesaid the womantold police she was anon-call caseworker and was responding to an abuse case involving a child at aPortland hospital. Rouches identified her as 26-year-old Alysse Renee Carlson, of Beaverton. Slaying CaSe —The lawyer for a defendant in an Eastern Oregon killing case hasasked ajudge to put a lid on the case until the trial, excluding journalists and the public from pretrial hearings andsealing transcripts. That wasamong motions from DeanGushwa,who represents GeorgeWest Craigen. Craigen is accused of murder in the death of a neighbor. Themotions also seek to forbid shows of emotion from relatives and friends of Cecil "Rob" Carter, who wasshot in late 2011 at his plumbing business. Prosecutors said they would object to that, as well as to motions limiting the use ofautopsy and crime scenephotos and limiting the number of uniformed officers in the courtroom. Theytook no position on limiting access to the proceedings. — From wire reports
Complaint against McAfee is dismissed By Steven DuBois
near McAfee's home. McAfee
The Associated Press
has denied any involvement.
PORTLAND — A judge Hyde said in a November dismissed a civil stalking court filing that his involvecomplaint on Friday against ment with McAfee was limitan antivirus software entre- ed to nonpayment of rent. He preneur who reportedly left wrote, however, that McAfee Belize to avoid being ques- accused him of joining with tioned in a fatal shooting. the Faull family and others in The temporary protective a conspiracy against him. "Cooperate FULLY w i th orderagainst John McAfee was obtained in November by me, and I guarantee that your Connor Hyde, property man- name will never come up in ager of a high-end Portland any context in any action apartment building where that I take," McAfee wrote McAfee lived for a time. Hyde in a Nov. 10 email that Hyde daimed the evicted McAfee submitted as an exhibit in the had threatened him. case. "If you refuse, or if you The complaint was dis- continue to lie to me, then I missed by Judge Terry Han- promise you, I will considson after neither Hyde nor er you as an integral part of McAfee appeared in court what has happened to me." "You made a poor decision for a hearing on whether a permanent order should be in choosing to be involved in granted. this matter," the email stated. McAfee, 68, moved to Ore-
"Do not make another poor
gon last winter after leaving decision." the Central America nation where authorities reportedly
Hyde wrote in his court
filing that he has never been sought to question him as a part of a conspiracy and person of interest in the fatal was concerned for his safeshooting of Gregory Faull, ty because McAfee employs a U.S. expatriate who lived armed bodyguards.
UO resolvesdispute with a schoolover '0' The Associated Press The University of Oregon and an Iowa school district
Nike. The Oregon "0" has gained national recognition
have resolved a trademark
ball powerhouse known for its flashy uniforms.
dispute sparked by the use of a Nike-designed "0" emblem. Friday the Eugene university relented on its insistence that Okoboji schools, located in northwest Iowa, stop using
as the Ducks have built a footSuperintendent Gary Jans-
sen said Oregon had a legitimate concern and that the school district worked to resolve the matter.
"The Okoboji '0' was althe logo within ayear. School district officials had most identical to the Oregon said they couldn't afford to re- '0,' and they asked us to stop place allthe logos so quiddy. using their logo," Janssen "I think they had it on their said. "They were looking at uniforms, and that takes a lit- it as protecting their turf. We tle time to fix," said Nita Nic- did the right thing and creatkell, the university's assistant ed a new logo." director of m arketing and Okoboji's new logo, crebrand management. ated by a Des Moines, Iowa, Oregon contacted the dis- marketing firm that surveyed trict in December 2012 after parents andstudents,features becomingaware thatOkobo- a bearded pioneer wearing a ji's maroon "0" looked nearly raccoon-skin hat. He's backed identical to the university's by an "0" that doesn't have "0," which was designed by the University of Oregon's shoe and apparel company distinctive shape.
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The proposed measure for the May ballot is a temporary 5-year levy at 20 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value. It is estimated to raise $1.8 million in the first year of the levy beginning on July 1. Over five years, it is estimated that it will raise $10 million. The language under discussion says the money will be used to increase staffing and pay for additional training and equipment. Fire Chief Larry Langstonhas said inthe past that it may be possible to lower the response time in the city limits to within six minutes by adding two more ambulance crews. That would be a total of 14 employees to cover three shifts. The fire department currently responds to emergency calls in the city within nine minutes 80 percent of the time. From previous council discussions, there appears to be little doubt
the council will put the measure on the ballot. The question is if voters will support it. We all know minutes can be critical in a medical emergency. Langston believes the six-minute target is an"excellent" goal for Bend. In the case of a heart attack, time can make the difference in returning a patient to a normal, productive life. Cardiac arrest can mean the brain doesn't get oxygen, leading to brain damage. Minutes ticking can mean the death of more heart musde. Emergencyroom physicianDr. William Reed said in August that three patients died in the last year, because it took too long for fire departmentparamedics to arrive. No matterwhat taxrate is set and how many new ambulance crews are added, people are still going to die. Investing in the tax buys Bend residents better odds. Investing in the tax makes Bendbetter.
Evidenceshouldguide bealth care experiment
p
eoplewho can go to the emergency room for free do it more than those who might have to pay for it, according to a newly releasedstudy based in Oregon. That's hardly surprising, on the face of it, given that it fits with the basic economic principle that people use more of something when it costs them less. But it is at odds with one of the notions underpinning the Affordable Care Act: that expanding Medicaidcoverage would reduce expensive emergency room use because patients would seek less costly treatment in primary care settings. The study, published in the journal Science, took advantage of an unusual opportunity presented by a 2008 Medicaid expansion in Oregon, in which a lottery identified 30,000people for coverage out of a 90,000 pool of applicants. Researchers compared emergency room use among those who got the coverage and those who didn't. It was a rareopportunity for a randomized-controlled study of the causaleff ectofcoverage. Over an 18-month period,researchers found those with Medicaid coverage used emergency care
40 percent more than those without, including visits for problems that could be addressed in a primary caresetting. Some experts suggested patients relied on old habits of emergencyroom use, and their approach mightchange over a longer time frame, according to The New York Times. That type of change is the focus of a separate experiment now underway in Oregon, directed by Coordinated Care Organizations. The CCOs are exploring the effects of bundled payments for Medicaid patients that require providers to coordinate and share compensation. Care coordinators help patients get appropriate care, with the hope of keeping them healthy and preventing unneeded ER trips. The CCO experiment was not yet in effect during the time of this study on emergency room use, and it appears focused on the kind of education that could make a difference. A careful evaluation of its effectiveness will help clarify the meaning of this new evidence about emergency room use. Only by focusing on solid evidence, rather than ideology, will we be able to navigate the complexities of this massive experiment on health care.
NII
0
M 1Vickel's Worth Provide shooting facilities
Publish the number of suIcIdes
It's ironic that the artide, "Target
description that Bend City Council-
or Victor Chudowsky recently provided to The Bulletin of the Citizen's
shooting worries residents," is right I enjoyed John Costa's musing next to an artide about a trap range on Dec. 22, about Alysha Colvin's that was dosed due to the encroach- sad and tmgic suicide. An old friend ment of residential development. I'm of mine who is the chaplain for the sure the folks who are complaining in Sheriff's Office told me that suicides
United court decision and Move to Amend. His point of view rep-
Crooked River Ranch don't want the
in the county are very common. And
asked to support in essence says
shooters to move elsewhere, but to get rid of their firearms and take up plantingtrees inthe forest and communing withnature. I've met these people. There doesn't seem to be a cry to
yet this fact is kept from the public. that corporations are not peoWhile the public is deliberately edu- ple, and money is not speech.
stop the plans to shut down ranges,
Is it because the powers that be don't
such asRedmond Gun Club,which give shooters a place to participate in seveml different shooting disciplines; shotgun,rifle,handgun and archery. These displaced members have no
want the publictoknowhowsickand The amendment wouldleave in despairing our community is? I sus- place full protection for all types of pect this is the reason. speech.What would change, rathI believe they don't want us asking er, is the volume of speech. Corthe probing questions such as: Why porate and other special interest are families collapsing in America'? speech, driven since the Citizens Why is depression at an epidemic United decision by billions and level? Why are kids estranged from billions of dollars of untraceable theirparents in record numbers and "black money,"would once again husbands from wives'? Because if be regulated and restricted. we ask these questions, maybe we'll The bigmoney voices,w hich are discover that all is not well. Maybe far too loud, now drown out the we'll discover that it takes more than voices of real people like you and a village to raise a child. It takes a me. The unregulated flow of monstrong family. And it takes the fear ey into our political processes proand love of God. So, I call on The Bul- foundly corrupts the system of govletin to begin publishing the number ernment. Move to Amend would of sui cideseach year.M aybe thisisa level the playing field, finally. We problem our society can and should must return to governance that is "of the people, by the people and examine and address. John Shepherd for the people." Be proud that the Sisters state of Oregon had the wisdom to
choice but to go out to the forest and
other public lands to pursue their sport. You never hear anyone suggest that "a range" should be developed, so that everyone can share the forest
and other public lands together with a reasonable amount of safety and harmony for all. Shooters don't mind
sharing public lands with others, but the same courtesy doesn't seem to exlst. Shooters have the right to pursue
their sport on public lands, just like anyone else who enjoys such places. One answer to the problem would be to stop dosing existing shooting facilities and to encourage development of
cated about annual homeless counts,
don't have them.
understandamendment
Richard Weister LaPine
that Bend City Council has been
Chudowsky's statement that "the
we are deliberately kept in the dark United States needs to protect all about annual suicide numbers. Why'? types of free speech" clearly misses
Chudowskydoesn't
new shooting facilities in areas that
resents a clear misunderstanding. The constitutional amendment
the point.
pass a resolution in favor of Move to Amend this past July, the 16th state to do so.
John Rahm sisters
I observed, with some concern, the
Letters policy
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We welcomeyour 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.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
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Priest's 'show trial' is disgusting miscarriage of justice By Christine M. Flowers
Lynn is not an example of profound vengeance overrode the legal technimoral courage. He could have gone cality known as due process. eth Williams says he's "disgust- outside the chain of command and Ionceclerkedforthesuperiorcourt. ed" by the Pennsylvania Supe- brokenthe creeping, deadly silence It is not an easy thing to get three of rior Court's decision reversing that protected perverted creatures its judges to agree on what to have for the child endangerment conviction of and exposed innocent children to un- lunch, let alone a legal decision. It's Monsignor William Lynn. speakable harm. No one — not even much more common to get two votes Fair enough. He's probably a tad those who personally know Lynn and in the majority and a dissent, ranging peeved that his grand experiment attest to his kindness and humilityfrom the angryto the simplyresigned. in statutory interpretation, one that gives him a pass on his failure to act. In other cases you might get two votes ignored the meaning of "ex post facBut this does not make him a crimi- in the majority and a concurrence in to" in an effort to catch a priest, fell nal. It's clear that the law under which the result, with a difference in opinion apart. He is apparently "disgusted" he was convicted should never have on the legal analysis.
sional critique.
ternational sex abuse scandal. To see it crumble into unconstitutional dust must hurt. But what should hurt more is the vindictive persistence to hold onto
that "if the conviction is in question, is
that a man who was charged with
this ecclesiastical head. It is one thing to say you will appeal a verdict with which you disagree. It is quite another to say things like "it is 'disgusting' that (the church) would pay to free (Lynn)." Williams, using one of his favorite new words, was referring to the
victims. They tell me that if I had my
Philadelphia Daily News
S
been applied to him, as it was meant to
But in the Lynn case, they were
aiding and abetting the abuse of chil- coveronly peoplewho had immediate unanimous and of the same mind in dren gamed the legal system. supervisory control of children. The finding that the lower court essenWell, let me take a moment to tell law was amended in 2007 to include tially blew it, calling Judge Teresa you what leaves me "disgusted." I am people like Lynn, butyou can'tbe con- Sarmina's decision to convict "fun"disgusted" at the continuation of a victed of a crime retroactively. damentally flawed." Since Sarmina show trial that was flawed at the outWilliams is a very smart man, and had flatly rejected defense arguments set, one that exploited the public's le- he knows that. The fact that he was about the unconstitutionality of retrogitimate anger at the evil crimes com- "disgusted" with the superior court activity, the superior court essentialmitted against children by a minority ruling indicates that he either severely ly told Lynn's defense team that, yes, of Catholic men. I am also "disgusted" miscalculated the effect of that 2007 they were right. It's no surprise that at the hypocrisy of those who seek amendment or felt that public outrage Williams and his prosecutorial team justice by embracing injustice. and a communal sense of misdirected would be"disgusted" with that profes-
kept a man in jail for 18 months and The D.A.'s office will, of course, then try to block that man's release. deny that this is in any way a personIt is even more striking that the al crusade to preserve its historic vic- D.A.'s office would take such a dratory. The priestly collar it collected in conian posture in light of Sarmina's the Lynn case was the first time that a cleric of that rank and elevation
had been held responsible in an in-
comments in connection with her de-
cision to grant the $250,000 bail. In an admirable show of humility, she said not the punishment in question'?" Many readers have criticized me in the past for appearing to care more about Lynn's welfare than that of the own children I'd feel differently. I wouldn't. People should be punished for the crimes they commit, not for the crimes we want to hold them
responsible for. A wrongful conviction will not free the abused from their
personal prisons. It will only feed the helped the monsignor post bail, some- vengeful beast living within each of thing that the D.A.'s office also strenu- us, one that is only tamed by a blindously opposed. It takes unfathomable folded lady holding a scale. chutzpah to be told by an appellate — Christine M Flowers is a lawyer and court that your prosecution wrongly columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News. fact that the church is reported to have
SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
WEST NEWS
IDAHO NEWS
BITUARIES DEATHS
DEATH NOTICES Jimmie Nelsen Woods, of Madras Nov. 30, 1938 - Dec. 20, 2013 Arrangements: Bel-Air Colonial Funeral Home, Madras, OR. Services: A memorial will be held on Sat., January 11, 2014, at 1:00 p.m., at Living Hope Christian Center, 25 NE A Street, Madras, OR 97741. Contributionsmay be made to:
Living Hope Christian Center where a fund has been set up for Shadow
of His Wings Orphanage, Monjas, Guatemala.
Kimberly 'Kim' Rene Rarrick, of Klamath Falls July 31, 1969 - Dec. 19, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, La Pine, OR. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Kim's family will place her urn in a committal ceremony at Eternal Hills Cemetery, in Klamath Falls, today at 11:00 a.m.
ELSEWHERE
By John M. Glionna Los Angeles Times
George Goodman, 83: A
Utah wildlife experts be-
journalist, business author
lieve they have solved the mystery of what killed at least
The Beatles, early in their Brothers." And
ble Life Assurance Society, U . S . c ommercial
taken to the Wildlife Reha-
bilitation Center of Northern
Miami.
Utah, where most died within 48 hours. In a release, wildlife
John Dominie, 92: Longtime Life magazine photographer. Died Dec. 30 in New York. — From wire reports
States and Europe. They were inducted into the
we were right about that. You can mix the two but people said we couldn't."
In 1988, the brothers began hosting an annual homecomthe area.
Obituary policy
Fax: 541-322-7254
Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through 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 second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
contract fraud. The state is expected to begin running the 2,080bed Idaho Correctional Center, located just outside Boise, over the next sever-
al months, as its $29 million-a-year contract with the Corrections Corpora-
eagle population ..." — Leslie McFarlane,
tion of America expires on June 30. Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter made the announce-
the most probable culprit. Each year, 2 million grebes ly dead animals. Since all of infections and several other visit the region. Most years, a the eagles that have died have viruses. small percentage that visit the been within flying distance West Nile virus can live for Great Salt Lake die from avi- of the lake, McFarlane said a few days in the carcass of a an cholera,Leslie McFarlane, she believed the eagles might bird, so there's still a chance wildlife disease coordinator have contracted West Nile vi- that additional eagles will for the Utah Division of Wild- rus after eating grebes in the get sick and die, even after life Resources, said in a news area. the grebes leave. But the risk release. West Nile virus usually af- to eagles should decrease "Everytime grebes die,we fects birds, including eagles, quickly. "Even though it's difficult to send some of the dead birds during warmer months, when to a laboratory for testing. mosquitoes carrying the dis- watch eagles die," McFarlane Usually, avian cholera jumps ease are active. Officials say said,"the deaths thathave and out as the cause of death. This the sick birds do not pose still might occur won't affect year, though, the initial labo- a risk to either humans or the overall health of the bald ratory results were not as con- livestock. eagle population that winters clusive. That led us to believe Testing at the Utah Veteri- in Utah or the overall populathat something else might nary Diagnostic Laboratory tion in the United States." have killed the grebes this in Logan and the NationUtah rehabilitation centers year," McFarlane said. al Wildlife Health Center are still treating five sick eaBetween 750 and 1,200 bald in Madison, Wis., ruled out gles, which appear to be reeagles visit Utah in the winter, such possi ble causes as toxic sponding well to treatment, when the predators eat most- chemicals, poisons, bacterial the news release said.
ment Friday, saying he is
JACKSON COUNTY
advising the state Board
of Correction to shift focus from finding a new contractor to assuming control of the facility.
"In recognition of what's happened, what's happening, it's necessary. It's the right thing to do," said Otter, a longtime proponent of privatization, who
called the need to make the move "disappointing."
Arrest Continued from B1 They reportedly included a plan to con investors into giving him money to build greenhouses and grow vegetables on 35 acres of property near Aspen, Colo. The property actually belonged to Dean C ain, former star of t h e
Psychiatrist regretful for vandalizing
television series "Lois and
trails, looks to reconstitute practice
Wilson has been tied to other real estate-related scams in Idaho, Michigan, Ohio, Florida and Washington, according to vari-
By Teresa Ristow
vive, and we were right about
lawsuits and allegations of
Utah Division of Wildlife Resources
(Medford) Mail Tribune
Don Everly said in a 1986 interview that the two were
the deaths that have and still might occur won't affect the overall health of the bald
that has been plagued by understaffing, m u l t iple
of eared grebes that stop at Utah's Great Salt Lake was
Their breakup came dramatically during a concert at
hit records declined in the late ing benefit concert in Central 1980s, they made successful City, Ky., to raise money for
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com
privatization at a f acility
officials said a recent die-off
dence Records.
that. Country did survive, and
Phone: 541-617-7825
ing to the Utah Division of
real estate. Died Dec. 29 in
The two broke up amid quarreling in 1973 after 16
Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
tion of its largest prison from one of the nation's biggest corrections contractors, abruptly ending an experiment with
tors in
sity's founding family who, as an executive at Equita-
stincts. Rock 'n' roll did sur-
concert tours in th e United
infected after eating smaller birds with the disease, accord-
helped establish insurance companies as major inves-
descendant of Duke Univer-
between 1957 and 1962, the duo had 19 top 40 hits.
Although their number of
BOISE, Idaho — Idaho will take over the opera-
States, apparently b ecame
began finding the normally Steve Kohis I Brainerd (Minn.) Dispatch skittish raptors lying, listless, After farmers and hunters began to find bald eagles in the throes on theground. Many suff ered of death, some birds were taken to a wildlife center in Utah. from seizures, head tremors and paralysis in the legs, feet and wings. "Even though it's difficult to watch eagles die, Several ailing birds were
In all, their career spanned five decades, although they successful because "we never performed separately from followed trends. We did what 1973 to 1983. In their heyday we liked and followed our in-
1983, "sealing it with a hug," Phil Everly said.
The Associated Press
farmers acrossfive counties in northern and central Utah
B o b D y l an Knott's Berry Farm in Cali-
years of hits, then reunited in
By Rebecca Boone
The majestic birds, the national symbol of the United
Dec. 30 in Palm Springs, Calif. Benjamin Holloway, 88: A
once said, "We owe these guys fornia. Phil Everly threw his everything. They started it guitar down and walked off, all." prompting Don Everly to tell The Everlys' hit records the crowd, "The Everly Brothincluded th e t h e n-titilating ers died 10 years ago." "Wake Up, Little Susie" and During their breakup, they the universally identifiable pursued solo singing careers "Bye, Bye Love," each featur- with little fanfare. Phil also aping their twined voices with peared in the Clint Eastwood lyrics that mirrored the fatal- movie "Every Which Way but ism of country music and a Loose." Don made a couple of rocking backbeat more than records with friends in Nashupbeat pop. These sounds and ville, performed in local nightideas would be warped by clubs and played guitar and their devotees into a new kind sang background vocals on of music that would ricochet recording sessions. around the world.
month: West Nile virus.
Wildlife Resources. In December, hunters and
erly, who with his brother Don Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in formed an influential harmo- 1986, the same year they had a ny duo that touched the hearts hit pop-country record, "Born and sparked the imaginations Yesterday." of rock 'n' roll singers for deDon Everly was born in cades, including the Beatles 1937 in Brownie, Ky., to Ike and Bob Dylan, died Friday. and Margaret Everly, who He was 74. were folk and country music Everly died of chronic ob- singers. Phil Everly was born structive pulmonary disease to the couple on Jan. 19, 1939, at a Burbank hospital, said his in Chicago where the Everlys son Jason Everly. moved to when Ike grew tired Phil and Don Everly helped of working in the coal mines. draw the blueprint of rock 'n' The brothers began singroll in the late 1950s and 1960s ing country music in 1945 on with a high harmony that cap- their family's radio show in tured the yearning and angst Shenandoah, Iowa. of a nation of teenage baby Their career breakthrough boomers looking for a way to came when they moved to express themselves beyond Nashville in the mid-1950s and the simple platitudes of the signed a recording contract pop music of the day. with New York-based Cacareer, once referred to themselves as "the English Everly
of prison
29 bald eagles over the past
er, Frank Sinatra, to be both a hero and a villain. Died
Phil Everlyintertwined rock andcountry music LOS ANGELES — Phil Ev-
i e assume control
a me on es
the world:
FEATURED OBITUARY
The Associated Press
State will
Deaths of note from around
and award-winning television host who, under the pseudonym "Adam Smith," made economics accessible to millions of people. Died Friday in Miami. George Jacobs, 86: A former valet whose memoir revealed his longtime employ-
B5
MEDFORD — The former Jackson County psychiatrist who vandalized mountain
"He wanted jmountain bikersj to
have to deal with an impediment, but he biking trails in the Ashland never wanted to hurt watershed says he regrets his actions and is moving forward with a new psychiatry practice.
Jackson Tyler Dempsey, 58, was charged in August 2012 with fourth-degree as-
sault and two counts of recklessly endangering another person after he admitted to
anybody. He was really, truly heartsick to realize that anyone could get hurt or did get hurt."
instead Daniels was given restitution for the damage to his bike, he said. The O r egon M e dical Board reviewed Dempsey's case at its meeting in fall 2013, and while it called his
wife
across trails in the Ashland
watershed in summer 2012. own up to that mistake as Dempsey told a Forest Ser- soon as he could. He took revice arresting officer th at sponsibility and he's paid a he vandalized the trails be- really high price," said Bagi. cause he "did not like mounBagi said Dempsey's intain bikers," according to a tentions were to have mounForest Service report. tain bikers slow down when Dempsey said he apologiz- sharing trails with hikers. "He wanted [mountain es for any harm he caused to his family and the victims bikers] to have to deal with that have come forward with an impediment, but he never injuries. wanted to hurt anybody. He "I'm very sorry for what I was really, truly heartsick to did," said Dempsey. "It was realize that anyone could get never my intention to hurt hurt or did get hurt." anyone." Bagi s ai d s h e and Dempsey pleaded no con- Dempsey tried to mediate test to his charges in May with members of the moun2013 and was sentenced to 30 tain biking community, but days in jail, which he served the legal process would not as house arrest. He was or- allow direct communication dered to pay $2,400 in resti- with them. "He had always hoped tution and serve two years of probation, which includes to communicate how sorry staying off the trails in the he was from the whole beAshland watershed. ginning of the process," she D empsey recently d e - said.
ous media reports. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich®bendbulletin.com
actions "dishonorable" and "detrimental to th e com-
Sisters
munity," the
Continued from B1
b o ard c h ose
not to suspend or revoke Dempsey's medical license. The O r egon M e dical Board said Dempsey violat— Christina Bagi, ed the Principals of Medical
stringing nylon cord and laying nails and vegetation
Clark: The New A d ventures of Superman."
In November, the city
agreed to acquire two parcels of land to build the
amphitheater and a parking lot. Sisters officials
Ethics of the American Med-
hope to have the amphi-
ical Association, which state "a physician shall recognize a responsibility to participate in activities contributing to
theater open by late 2015 or early 2016, City Manager Andrew Gorayeb said. G orayeb said he r e cently spoke with Britt
the improvement of the community and the betterment
of public health." Although the board could have revoked Dempsey's license and fined him up to $10,000, it instead decided in
officials about their amphitheater. With 200 miles
separating Sisters from J acksonville, B r it t
offi-
cials say the two towns can book identical acts
October to only reprimand him and orderthat he be seen by a healthcare provider regularly, who will report on Dempsey's health to the
w ithout competing w i t h
board.
last year, he said. " Those people go t o dinner and stay at hotels in town," Gorayeb said. Building the amphitheater "can and will be a huge as-
By accepting the OMB's order, Dempsey waived his right to any further hearing, the order states.
A f o rmer
p s ychiatrist
for Jackson County Mental
Health, Dempsey left his employment there in October 2012, though county officials declined to elaborate on the circumstances.
Dempsey said he picked up work i n G rants Pass clined to comment on what Part o f t h e r e s t itution running his own practice, his intentions were while he Dempsey was ordered to pay Practical Psychology, a few was in the watershed, but was given to former Ashland months ago. "I think I've been approsaid he regretted his actions. residentJordan Daniels,who "I'm very regretful of said he struck a nylon cord priately punished and I'm what I put people through. It placed across a trail at neck glad to be working again," was quite difficult and very level during a ride down an Dempsey said. stressful for me and my fam- unauthorized wa t ershed Bagi said Dempsey genily," said Dempsey. "I think trail in summer 2012. uinely cares for his patients I'll leave it at that — that it Daniels was wearing a and is thankful to be practicwas never my intention to protective neck brace that ing again. "He really has so much harm anyone." may have prevented serious Dempsey's wife, Christina injury, but his bike frame compassion and care for his Bagi, said Dempsey has paid was destroyed from hitting patients," said Bagi. "He's rea high price for his actions. a tree. ally grateful that he's able to "He's a good person that He didn't receive medical continue to work and build a made a mistake. He tried to attention for his injuries, but practice."
each other, according to Gorayeb. About 6 0 ,000 p e ople watched shows at the Britt
setfor Sisters." The city is close to fin-
ishing a preliminary design for the amphitheater,
and plans to raise funds from the community to pay part of the project's cost. Sisters is also working on a design for a new community park near Main Avenue and
F i r S t r eet.
An Oregon Parks and Recreation
De p a r tment
grant will finance half of the $413,000 project cost.
The park could include a splash play area for kids, a small performance area,
picnic tables and other features. City o f f icials hope to open the park by mid- June, Gorayeb said. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided byWeather Central, LP ©2014.
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35/19
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Grovel 43/31 -
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53/28•
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41/22 P
31/I 2
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42/8 i
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36/6
41/28
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40li 9
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• Bearii
41/11
• Klamath II ~ Falls
• BrnnktngS
Brookings
36/10
Chiloquin
Medfdrd
• 56'
40/16
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•
35/t 5
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40I7
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Christmas
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Fields •
McDermitt
41/zt
36I7
Lakeview
39/1I
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
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(in the 48 contiguous states):
79/69
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41/28
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Houston 66/45 o
( 59/53•
•
lando
3/59
's'so Miami
77/69 Monterrey La Paz 70/56o 74/63 Mazatlan 84/68 Juneau 31/22 FRONTS
C'A LA SKA
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
47 30
47 30
BENDALMANAC
PLANET WATCH
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....8:09 a.m...... 4:54p.m. High/low.............. 5439 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*.. 0.00" Venus......7:55 a.m...... 5:38 p.m. Remrdhigh........62in1996 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Mars......1209 a m.....1148 a m. Remrdlpw......... -8in1949 Averagemonthtodate... 017" Jupiter......431 p.m...... 7:51 a.m. Average high.............. 40 Year tp date............ 0.00" Satum......321 am......1;19 pm. Average lpw...............23 Averageyeartpdate..... 0.17" Uranus....11:23 a.m.....11:49 p.m. Barometricpressureat4 pm3007 Remrd 24hours ...128in 2010
Sunrise today...... 7:40 a.m. MOOnphaSeS Sunsettoday...... 441 Prm First Fug Sunrisetomorrow .. 7;40a.m. Sunsettomorrow... 4:42 p.m. Mopnri isetoday....9:40a.m. Mponsettpday 917pm Jan.7 Jan.15 Jan. 3 Jan. 0
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
*Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLETINDEX
~SKI REPORT
IVIEDIUM HIISH 0
2
4
6
8
10
QOAD CONDITIONS Snow levelandroadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m.yesterday.Key:T.T. = Traction Tires.
Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 42 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland.................0.0...no report Mt. Bachelor...... . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .26-39 Mt. Hood Meadows...... . . . .0.0.. . . . .26-33 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl...... . . . . . . 1 ... . . . . .2-5 Timberline....... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 29 Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0...no report
JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
wv w o a a w
Yesterday's extremes
47 31
Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at CabbageHill.......... Carry chains or T.Tires Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .29-32 Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass ...... Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California.....0.0... . ..18-30 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Park City, Utah ....... . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 32 Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires Squaw Valley, California.......0.0... . . .19-21 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T. Tires Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .15-19 Hwy. 138 at DiamondLake .... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico....... . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .34-36 Hwy.242 atMcKenzi e Pass........Closed forseason Vail, Colorado....... . . . . . . . . 0.0.... ..34-38 For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.trip«he«k.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weatherPcp-precipitatipn, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clp uds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain,t-thunderstprms,sf-snpwflurries, sn snow,i-ice,rs-rain-snpwmix,w-wind,f-fpg, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
Yesterday's stateextremes
Jordan Iley
HIGH LOW
42 27
Astpria ........ 49/40/0.00.....48/35/s......49/34/s Baker City 38f23/0.00.....34/11/s......31/12/s Brpokings 56/40/0.00 .....57/40/s.....58/40/pc Burns.......... 47/21/0.00.....40/1 0/s......38/1 2/s Eugene 49/42/0.04.....44/31/s......44/32/s Klamath Falls ...55/19/000.....36/10/s......41/16/s Lakeview....... 54/1 8/0 00......36/7/s......47/19/s La Pine........ .45/34/NA.....40/1 3/s......44/1 7/s Medford 55/29/0.00.....41/23/s.....42/27/pc Newport 46/37/0.04.....51/37/s......52/39/s North Bend..... .50/39/NA.....52/29/s......56/35/s Ontario 29/25/0.00.....31/11/s......27/13/s Pendleton 48/37/0.02 .....39/22/s......35/18/s Portland 48/33/0.06.....44/30/s......44/32/s Prineville 45/35/0.00.....41/19/s......43/21/s Redmond 50/36/0.00.....39/1 6/s......39/1 7/s Roseburg 49f36/0.02 ..... 41/28/f...... 43/33/f Salem 49/42/0.03.....44/31/s......45/31/s Sisters......... 49/36/0.00.....42/1 9/s......44/1 9/s The Dages 50/41/0.01 .....41/26/s......37/24/s
tario
Lake p Crescent• Fprt Rpck
HIGH LOW
Mostly cloudy and mild
M
Yesterday Saturday Sunday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeandskin protection. Index is City Precipitationvaluesare 24-hourtotalsthrough4 pm for solar at noon.
yssa
Juntura
cloudy and mild
OREGON CITIES
Valeo
•
Cloudy with a chance of
Partly
2
Sunny and seasonable.
33/1 0
42/23
•
Sunny
EAST
34n 1
• John Day
Suni'iver Beiid
- 44/31
Coos Bay
Baker C
ina 34n2
Eugene•
330 9
30/t 5
I 38/22
• PrineVille 4in
52/39
Florence•
Madras
CampSherrmno
44/31 '
Sunny and seasonable.
27/12
33/19 Union
Granite
•
. Warmdpiings•
Newport , — „8',"y
La Grande•
• pray39/19
39/22
CENTRAL
Enterpris
• zani Jose osep
34/I 5
on
Wi ow ae
44/31•
•
• Meachana
• 41/25
•
2604
39/22
Ruggs
Maupiri
Government./
• PendletOn
40I25
4M3
47/32
Mctyfinnville
y
, oWsiscp
.
Tiilamook•,
I J
Cold W arm Stationary
CONDITIONS s +++4- 4
* * d 4 , ** * * * 4 d 4 '** * * *
44
4 a
*
Showers T-storms Rain F lurries S now I c e
Mone Matters
Yesterday Saturday Sunday Yesterday Sahirday Sunday Yesterday Saturday Sunday Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Ptp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hiltprig HiRo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hidtp/W City Hi/Lo/Ptp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene1X......59/28/0 00..64/24/pc .. 37/I7/s Grand Rapids.... 16/9NOO..31/20/sn.. 21/1/sn RapidCity.......52/21/0.03.. 22/4sn .. -3/-10/c Savannah...... 44/300.00 ..5045/pc. 65/47/sh Akron ..........1 2/1O N.04.. 30/22/pc.. 32/8/sn Green Bay......17/18/000 .. 25/5/sn..0/ tipc Renp...........59/24/0.00...44/2is .. 46/21/s Seattle..........47/38i.l 7... 42/34/s .. 43/35/s Albany........... 5/at/0.20... 22/11/s.343lsn Greensbprp......34/19/000...41/3Ns.42/3$sh Richmpnd.......36/22I 00...41/28/s. 5I37/sh Sioux Falls........30/CN.OO . 13/-9/sn.. -7/-20/c Albuquerque.....49/240.00... 55/23/s .. 45/22/s Namsburg.......21/11/001...28/14/s..36/32/rs RpchesiaNY......B/0/001 r, ..31/22/pc. 34n6/sn Sppkane........3f/3CN02..30/17/pc. 27/15/pc Anchorage......34/26/0.10 .. 29/25/sn. 32/26/sn Hartbrd,CT......16/7/0.01...23/15/s. 37/35/sh Sapamentp......66/34/0.00... 65/36/s.. 62/37/s Springfield MO ...34/2I.OO..42/15/pc ..18/-5/sn Atlanta .........36/21I.OO...45/37/s.52/27/sh Helena..........53/27/002...25/3/sn....9/4/c St. Louis..........30/4/000..42/lisn... I8/3/c Tampa..........58/43I.OO .. 72/62/pc. 77/59/sh AtlanticCity......25/8/4.67...33/30/s. 51/35/sh Honolulu........79/67/0.09... 79/69/s.81/70/pc Salt Lake City....33/15I.OO..30/11/pc .. 31/14/s Tucson..........76/45/000.. 72/43/pc.. 69/41/s Austin..........56/1SO00... 66/38/5.. 47/27/s Nevstpn ........54/31N.OO...66/45/5 .. 52/32/s SanAntenio .....57/28I.OO... 67/41/s.. 52/3ms Tulsa.......... Af/15/0.00 ..45/15/pc.. 23/Ipc Baltimore.......27/14/003... 33/21/s..4$33/rs Nuntsville.......33/1 7/000... 4434/5. 42/16/sh SanDiegp.......66/46/000..6$53/pc. 7I51/pc Washingten,DC..31/18/0 00... 34/24s..41/34/rs Billings ........ Jt/28/0 00... 21/3/sn ..5/12/sn Indianapolis.....17/ 3N00 ..32/25/pc..25/ 3/sn SanFrancism....64/44I.OO... 62/44/s.. 61/44/s iiiChit.........447/19.00 ..32/12/sn... 19/3/c Birmingham.....37/19/000...46/36/s. 53/22/sh Jackson,MS.....42/25N.OO... 59/46/s.59/23/sh SanJose........64/40I.OO...66/38ls.. 65/39/s Yakima.........52/30I.OO... 35/21/s.. 32/17/s Bismarck.........438il 03 .. 1/1Npc.-1 5/24/c Jacksonvile..... 46/31/0.00 ..59/49/pc. 72/5ish SantaFe.......A$21/000..45/14/pc.. 36/15/s Yuma...........rf/4IO00 ..75/51/pc .. 71/4is Boise...........33/23/0.00... 36/1 6/s.. 32/18/s Juneau..........37/34002 ..31/22/sn.31/25/sn INTERNATIONAL Bpstpn...........14/3I.20... 27/23/s .. 42/37/c Kansas City.......37/2/000... 31/8/Sn...I 2/ Ic Bridgeport,CT.....14/8/0.23...2$22/s. 4$38/sh Lansing........12/11N00... 3021/c.. 22/Isn Amsterdam......52/43/010...43/41/c. 44I40/sh Mecca..........88IEBI.OO .. 77/62/pc. 72/59/sh Buffalo ...........6/Om 00..31/24/pc. 34/14/sn LasVrqas.......61/41NOO...63/35/s.. 59/38/s Athens..........66/49/0.00..57/41/pc. 55/47/pc MeximCity......63/45/0.00..65/48/pc. 68/40/pc Burlingipn, VT... -3/-11I.02 ..19/16/pc.32/29/sn lexington........2$5/0.00... 39/26/s...41/4/rs Auckland........79/59/0.00..73/58/pc. 77/61/sh Montreal....... -2/11I05.. tt/tisf. 25/23/sn Caribou, ME.... 4J/-18/0.00..... 7/5/c. 23/22/sn Linmln...........38/4100.... 26/4c...I I/4yc Baghdad........5544/0 00 .. 23/22/sf. 32/23/sn ..61/48/pc.. 55/50/c Moscpw........3N25N.OO Charleston, SC...45/31I00..54/45/pc. 65/49/sh LittleRpck.......36/17/000..49/33/pc.36ltipc Bangkpk........91/66I.OO... 95/74/s .. 94/74/s Nairabi .........77/55N.OO...78/54/s.. 78/53/s Chariotte........36/21I.OO..41/31/pc.44/31/sh LpsAngeles......64/47/0.00 .. 68/54/tx. 7454/pc Beijing......... 4$28I 00...37/26/s.39/23/pc Nassau .........81/70N.02... 76/72/t. 79/72/sh Chattanooga.....32/I8/0 00... 43/32/5 ..47/22/rs Louisvile........25/1 2/000 ..4ll32/pc...359/rs Beirut ..........66/SSI.00..62/51/pc. 60/51/pc NewDdhi.......64/39I.II... 69/52/s .. 69/4IS Cheyenne.......50/33/0.00...20/7/sn...16/-5/c Madison, Wi....16/14/000.. 27/2/sn.. -1/2$c Berlin.......... 48/36I.OO ..42/36/pc. 42/32/sh Osaka..........52/32/0.00 ..5I33/pc. 46/33/pc Chicago........16/12/0 00 .. 31/14/sn...14/4yc Memphis........35/19N00..47/39/pc ..4I16/rs 8pgpta.........68/43I.OO... 73/SIc...63/5it Oslp............39/32I.39.. 35/34/rs.34I32/sh Cincinnati........17/3/0.00 ..35/28/pc...37/1/rs Miami..........73/62N.OO .77/69/sh. 83/7Nsh Budapest........39/27/0.00 -7/17I01 .. 19/IQSI.28/18/sn ..4I38/sh. 45/39/sh Ottawa ........ Ctweland........16/I0.01 ..31/26/pc.32/11/sn Milwaukae...... I 6/4/0.00... 30/6/Sn...i 1ic Buenos Aires...../5/521.59... 87/65/s .. 95/68/s Paris............57/48/0.00..49/35/sh.45/42/pc 1 2/23/c Colorado Springs.61/25/000... 26/8/sn .. 30Ipc Minneapolis.... 22/-1I000. 11/-19/pc. CabpSanLucas ..79/59/0.00... 77/62/s .. 83/6ic Rio de Janeiro...102/79I.OO... 88/74/t .. JJ4/72/t ColumbiaMO , ... 31/-2I.OO.. 38/1Irs ..1$4J/sn Nashvile........2I140.00...45/34/s...42/9/rs Cairo...........6450/0.00...65/49/c.65/49/pc Rome...........61/50/003.. 57/Sf/sh. 57/52/sh Columbia SC....41/28/0.00 , ..49/35/pc. 57/39/sh NewOrleans.....45/33N.OO... 59/53/s.66/33/sh Calgary.........37/19/018...1/15/sf... 4/4/5 Santiago........90/57/0.00... 94/68/s .. 91767/s Columbus GA...41/24I.OO... 51/38/s. 543lsh NewYork.......1510N 30...28/25/s. 44/34/sh Canrun.........81/70/0.05... 7%72/t...82I72/t SapPaulo.......95/75/O.OO ...75/67/1...77/6It Columbtra ON.....15/1I.OO..33/26/pc .. 36/4/sn Newark, Ni......19/1 ON .32... 27/23/s .. 42/35/c Dublin......... 46/39/O.t1 .. 38/32/rs.45/43/sh Sappprp ........32/27I 00 .. 26/1Isf. 27/19/sn Conmrd, NH...... 7/2I 16.... 23I/s. 33/3Nsn Norfelk,VA......42/24003... 40/33/s. 61/42/sh Edinburgh...... 46/41/0 00.. 38/36/rs. 4M8/sh Sepul...........45/25I.OO... 32/24/s .. 34/3is Corpus Christi....60/32I 00...66/50/s .. 57/39/s Oklahoma City...51/2IO00 ..41/16/tx. 18/11/pc Geneva........ 46/32/0.42... 39/32/r..34/JIrs Shanghat.......63/4EN.O O. 51/38/pc.. 47/40/s DallasFtWorth...52/25/000..6427/pc.. 36/22/s Omaha..........34/1/000... 25/2/pc...8/10/c Harare..........75/64I.11... 73/61/r. 7562/sh Singapore.......Bf/77I.00 ..85/76/sh. 85/76/sh Dayten .........14/-5/0.00 ..31/26/pc..33/-1Isn Orlando.........59/440.00 ..73/59/pc. 79/62/sh HongKong......73/64I.OO...69/59/s.67/62/pc Stackhplm.......41/37I 00 ..39/37/sh.36/34/sh Denver..........62/23/0.00... 26/9/sn .. 21/9/pc PalmSprings.....76/46/000 ..75/51/pc.. 74/49/s istanbul.........52/46I.02...45/39/c .. 51/47/s Sydne. y.........82//OI 00..75/60/sh.80/59/sh DesMoines...... 29/ 7/0 00... 24/1/pc...3/14/c Peoria.......... 20/u/000... 31/Isn.I0/ I I/sn Jerusalem.......59/45I.OO...57/44/c.57/43/pc Taipei...........75/64/0.00...62/54/s.59/5ipc Detroit..........12/ 5I 00... 2I24/6 .. 26/7/sn Philadelphia.....21/15N07... 27/21/s. 41/35/sh Johannesubrg....83/58I.OO..81/60/pc. 77/60/sh Tel Aviv.........66/45IO 00...66/50/c. 65/51/pc Duluth......... 16/17I 08. 10/20/pc.-9/ 25/pc Phpenix.........74/48/000... 71/47/s .. 7545/s Uma .. .........77/680.00...7467/c..77/68/c Tokyo.......... 46/41I Il .. 51/34/pc.45/3ipc El Pasp..........61/31I 00..67/36/pc .. 57/30/s Pittsburgh........16/6/0.00... 33/22/s..39/14/rs Usbpn..........59/540.00... 5$55/I .. 5$51/c Toronto......... 9/-11I.02 .. 30/28/sf. 32/28/sn Fairbanks.........16/2I.OO... 7/-7/pc...9/4/sn Fprtland,ME...... 9/5N20... 21/17/s. 35/31/pc Landon.........52/45/048... 47/30/I.49/47/sh Vancouver.......45/39I 29... 41/28/s.39/34/pc Fargo...........25/5I01 ..-2/26/pc.-t7/27/sf Prpvidance.......17/3N.1 0... 28/23/s .. 44/36/c Madrid.........55/52/0.05..48/37/sh. 44/33/pc Vienna..........37/3CN.02 .. 38/36/sh.. 46/37/c Flagstaff........53/1 7I 00... 47/17/s.. 45/17/s Raleigh........ 41/23/000..,43/33/s. 5I37/sh Manila..........8ty72/0.00..87/74/pc. 86/74/pc Warsaw.........41/37at4 .. 38/30th. 39/36/sh
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e u etin 5 4 1 - 3 8 2 - 1 8 1 1 I w w w . B E N DBULLETIN.COM
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2 College football, C3 NBA, C3
NFL, C3 Prep sports, C4 NHL, C4
College basketball, C4
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014
NFL
Manning picked as All-Pro again
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
rinevi ese o os a anesea -sars PREP WRESTLING
ByGrant Lucas
NEW YORK-
Peyton Manning has responded to a lost season the way hereacted to all of his great seasons. By having more great seasons. Manning was the onlyunanimous choice for the 2013Associated Press NFL All-Pro team Friday. It was his seventh time asa first-teamer, tying Hall of Famer Otto Graham for the most by aquarterback. The Denver star set NFL records this season with 55 touchdown passes and5,477 yards through the air. He was chosen onall 50 ballots from media members who regularly cover the NFL.Manning also was anAll-Pro for Indianapolis in 2003, '04, '05, '08 and '09 and last season made it as a Bronco. He's beenon the All-Pro team in both seasonssincemissing 2011 after several neck surgeries. Manning still has a ways to go to set the record for most All-Pro appearances atany position. Among the players ahead of him is Hall of Famereceiver Jerry Rice with 10. New Orleans tight end Jimmy Graham and Indianapolis outside linebacker Robert Mathis each drew49 votes. Philadelphia running back LeSean McCoy andSeattle cornerback Richard Sherman had48. Minnesota kick returner Cordarrelle Patterson was the only rookie on the squad. Eighteen NFC players and nine from theAFC made the team.Carolina and Philadelphia each had three: linebacker Luke Kuechly, center Ryan Kalil and fullback Mike Tolbert for the Panthers; NFL rushing leader McCoy, guardEvan Mathis and tackle Jason Peters for the Eagles. Only two members of the top teams ineach conference madethe All-Pro team. Joining Manning from the Broncos (13-3) was guard Louis Vasquez. Joining Sherman from theSeahawks (13-3) was safety Earl Thomas. — The Associated Press
The 14-wrestler Japanese team — which Davis says was contacted You do not have to travel far to find to 1963. The 2014 Exchange will pit steering committee, which is help- via USA Wrestling, America's govthe state with the oldest tradition of a Central Oregon all-star wrestling ing bring the Japanese team to the erning body for the sport — will wrestling culture exchange in the team — agroup of 18w restlersrepre- Northwest. make stops at three Oregon high "It should be a good showcase for schools before moving on to comcountry. senting six high schools — against an And you will not have to put too all-star squad from Japan. the sport of wrestling," says Crook pete in tournaments at two schools "The No. 1 purpose was to just pro- County coach Jake Huffman, one of in Washington. The Japanese begin many miles on the odometer to see history continue next week. mote a cultural exchange through four coaches for the Central Oregon the tour at Barlow High in Gresham On Tuesday at Crook County High sport — the sport being wrestling," team. "That's what it's all about, to get on Monday and onTuesday willbe School in Prineville, Restore College says Buck Davis, former l ong- people educated about the sport and in Central Oregon, where visiting Wrestling Oregon will present one time wrestling coach at Bend High to get people from different cultures players and coaches will stay with stage of the Wrestling Culture ExSchool and a member of the Restore to get to know each other and become host families. change, a tradition that dates back College Wrestling Oregon (RCWOR) great friends for a lifetime." SeeAll-stars/C4 The Bulletin
PREP BOYSBASKETBALL
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
Crook County
• Despite some hot shooting, LaPine suffers a65-51loss to North Marion
gets past Ontario
By Emily Oller The Bulletin
Bulletin staff report
LA PINE — In his first start at the varsity level,
PRINEVILLE — Kimmer Severance turned in
Taylor Brown made a lasting impression for La Pine.
a monster performance Friday night, recording 26
ik,X.h .
And he made it early on
points and 19 rebounds to
Friday night. In the first quarter of the
lead Crook County past
Hawks' 65-51 Class 4A non-
ference girls basketball
conference boys basketball
action.
Ontario 51-46 in noncon-
loss to North Marion, Brown hit four 3-pointers, account-
"They failed to adjust," Cowgirls coach Mark Ma-
ing for 12 of La Pine's 14 points in the period. "Taylor has not played much varsity this year," Hawks coach Kent Wieber said about his junior guard. "He came with us to the Seaside tournament (two weeks ago) and played really well. I mean, he can shoot from anywhere."
lott said about the visiting
Tigers. "Our wing players did a great job of getting Kimmer the ball." Crook County (5-4), which has now won its last
three games, led 14-7 at the end of the first quarter and held a 30-19 advantage by halftime. The Cowgirls led by as many as 16 points late
+ 0/~//
Brown added another
in the fourth quarter before
3-pointer in the second quar-
Ontario's Riley Helmick
ter and finished with a team-
drilled three 3-pointers and
high 19 points. "This was my first (varsity) start," Brown said. "So I was pretty happy with how
nearly shot the Tigers back in the game. "We were in control the
whole game," Malott said. "Then they hit some 3s and
I did." "La Pine shot the ball," North Marion coach Chris
it got a little too close for
comfort." Crook County held on for the victory, though, in its final game before the
Parkinson said. "He (Brown) was amazing. I mean, holy mackerel. That boy can shoot."
start of Intermountain
Hybrid play next week. Kelsie Smith added nine points for the Cowgirls and
Samuel Wieberscored 11 points and tallied six
steals for the Hawks, while Tyress Turnsplenty totaled
Michaeline Malott contrib-
10 points to go along with six rebounds. SeeHawks/C4
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
La Pine's Samuel Wieber (31) drives the ball to the basket in an attempt to score during the first quarter of Friday night's game against North Marion in La Pine.
uted six points. Crook County hosts Summit on Tuesday.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
NFL
Beavs' Crichton going to IIIFL PORTLAND —Oregon State defensive end Scott Crichton has decided to forgo his final season of eligibility and enter the NFLdraft. The 6-foot-3,
265-pound junior announced his decision Friday in anemail sent by his attorney, Nelson Fraley. Crichton had 7'/~ sacks in 2013and forced a keyfumble in Oregon State's win in the Hawaii Bowl. — The Associated Press
Friday's games 12 Clemson 7 Ohio State
35 41
13 OklahomaState 31 • Story,C3
Today'sgames BBVA CompassBowl At Birmingham, Ala. Vanderbilt (8-4) vs. Houston (8-4), 10 a.m. (ESPN)
Packers-49ersgamedrawing comparisonst01967 Ice Bowl
Why all thebasketball mismatchesthis season? By Eric Olson The Associated Press
Conference play has arrived in men's college
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
The Associated Press
basketball, and that means NCAA Division I teams will
and possibly lose. Usually low-major programs round out the
GREEN BAY, Wis. — The Green Bay Packers' playoff game Sunday against San Francisco could be one of the coldest in National Football League history, rivaling the subzero
start picking on opponents
schedules of risk-averse
their own size. In the first two months
mid-majors and power-conference teams in November
of the season, seven games
and December. But there
temperatures of the 1967 Ice Bowl, so fans are
were decided by more than
taking plenty of precautions. Temperatures at Lambeau Field are expected to be a frigid minus 2 degrees when the Packers and 49ers kick off at 3:40 p.m. Central time. By the fourth quarter it is expected to be a bone-chilling minus 7, with wind chills approaching minus 30, according to the National Weather Service.
70 points — the most blowouts of that magnitude since
also are plenty of non-Division I teams willing to take
By Dinesh Ramdeand Genaro C. Armas
Temperatures at the so-called Ice Bowl in
at least 1996-97, according to STATS. No mismatch was
. ~~ j , ' .-i -
.
Green Bay, the 1967 NFL championship game in which the Packers beat Dallas to advance to Super Bowl II, got as cold as minus 13 degrees with a wind chill of minus 46.
A lot of Division I pro-
the seats at Lambeau Field on Friday in Green Bay, Wis., in preparation for Sunday's NFL football wild-card playoff game between the Green
grams have difficulty lining up home games against quality opponents. Southern, for example, is coming off an NCAA tournament appearance yet does not have a high enough RPI (ratings percentage index) to make it worthwhile for a name program to
Bay Packers and SanFrancisco 49ers.
travel to Baton Rouge, La.,
At temperatures like the ones expected Sunday, exposed skin can get frost-bitten in min-
utes and hypothermia can set in. Players will be Mike Roemeri The Associated Press moving around or huddling around giant heat- James Diedrick helps clear ice and snowfrom ers on the sidelines, but fans will have to take
extra safety measures, such as dressing in layers and sipping warm drinks. See Ice Bowl /C3
as great as Southern's 11612 win over tiny Champion Baptist this week. Thatoutcome begged the question: Why are games like that even scheduled'?
beatings to help meet their
budgets, give their players the experience of playing against big-time competition for a night and gain exposure. After all, before Southern did its number
on Champion Baptist, who in the sporting public had heard of the 100-student un-
accredited Christian college in Hot Springs, Ark.? "We've had hundreds of
people email us asking if they can come play for our school since this happened," said Eric Capici, who serves as head coach and school president at Champion Baptist. See Mismatches/C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER Time FA Cup, GrimsbyTown FCvsHuddersfieldTown FC 6:55a.m. 7 a.m. FA Cup, RochdaleAFCvs Leeds FA Cup, Arsenal FC vs Tottenham Hotspur FC 9 a.m. A-League, Central Coast vs. Melbourne 10 p.m. FA Cup, Nottingham Forest vsWest Ham 3:55 a.m.
TV/Ratlio
Fox Sports 2 Fox Sports1 Fox Fox Sports 2 Fox Sports 2
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Cincinnati at Memphis 9 a.m. ESPN2 Men's college, St. John's at Georgetown 10 a.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, Michigan State at Indiana 11 a.m. CBS Men's college, Connecticut at SMU 11 a.m. ESPNU Men's college, Washington at Arizona 11 a.m. Pac-12 Men's college, Butler at Xavier 11 a.m. Root Men's college, Cornell at St. Bonaventure 11 a.m. NBCSN Men's college, Creighton at Seton Hall noon Fox Sports1 M en's college, Duke at Notre Dame 1p . m . CBS Men's college, OklahomaSt. at KansasSt. 1 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Oregon State at Utah 1 p . m. Pac-12, 940-AM Men's college, Pepperdine atSan Francisco1 p.m. Root Men's college, Virginia at Florida State 2 p.m. ESPN2 Women's college, DePaul at Creighton 2 p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, Yale atSt. Louis 2:30 p.m. NBCSN Men's college, Colorado St. at NewMexico 3 p.m. ESPNU Men's college,W yoming atNevada 3 p.m. Root High school, Prime Prep (Texas) vs. Whitney Young (III.) 4 p.m. ESPN2 Women's college, West Virginia at OklahomaState 4 p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, Indiana State atEvansville 5 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Pacific at Gonzaga 5 p.m. Root Men's college, St. Mary's at Portland 7 p . m. Root NBA, Philadelphia at Portland 7 p.m. CSNNW, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM FOOTBALL
High School, U.S. ArmyAll-American Bowl 10 a.m. College, BBVA Compass Bowl, Houston vs. Vanderbilt 10 a.m. College, NCAADivision I, North Dakota State vs. Towson 11 a.m. NFL, AFC wild-card, Kansas City at Indianapolis 1:30 p.m. NFL, NFC wild-card, New Orleans at Philadelphia 5 p.m.
NBC ESPN ESPN2 NBC NBC
GOLF
PGA TourGolf, Tournament of Champions 11:30 a.m.
Golf
OLYMPICS
U.S. Olympic Trials, speedskating, s hort track, Women's & Men's 500
1p . m .
NBCSN
HOCKEY
College, Boston College vs. Notre Dame 4:30 p.m.
NBCSN
SUNDAY SOCCER FA Cup, Derby vsChelsea FA Cup, Manchester United vs SwanseaCity
Time 6 a.m.
TV/Radio Fox Sports1
10a.m.
ESPNU
10 a.m.
Root
10 a.m.
NBCSN
noon ESPNU Pac-12 noon noon Fox Sports1 noon NBCSN 1 p.m. Root 1:30 p.m. CBS 2 p.m. Pac-12 2 p.m. Fox Sports1, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Men's college, Washington State at Arizona State Women's college, Utah atUSC Men's college, Providence atVillanova Men's college, North Carolina at WakeForest Women's college, Colorado at UCLA
3 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7:30 p.m.
Pac-12 Fox Sports1 ESPNU Pac-12
NFL, AFC wild card, San Diego at Cincinnati 10 a.m. NFL, NFC wild card, San Francisco at GreenBay 1:30 p.m. Men's college,GoDaddy Bowl, Arkansas State vs. Ball State 6 p.m. High school, Semper FiAll-American Bowl, East vs. West 6 p.m.
CBS Fox ESPN
Fox Sports1
GOLF
noon 1 p.m. 5 p.m.
NBC
Golf
U.S. Olympic Trials, short track speedskating
1 p.m.
NBC
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible forlatechangesmadebyTV orradiostations.
www.gocomics.com/iothebleschers
w
V
HopmanCup
Friday At Perlh Arena Perth, Australia Purse: $1million (ITF Exhibition) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor RoundRobin Group B France 3,Spain0 Jo-WilfriedTsonga, France,def. Daniel Munoz-de la Nava,Spain,6-4, 6-7(7-9), 6-2. Alize Cornet,France,def. AnabelMedinaGarrigues,Spain,6-2,6-2 CornetandTsonga,France,def. MedinaGarrigues and Munoz -delaNava,Spain, 8-3. CzechRepublic 3, UnitedStates 0 Petra Kvitova,CzechRepublic, def. SloaneStephens,UnitedStates, 6-3, retired.. Radek Stepanek,CzechRepublic,def.JohnIsner, UnitedStates,walkover. KvitovaandStepanek, CzechRepublic, def. StephensandIsner, UnitedStates, walkover.
o S
p 0
Z
NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE
NFL Playoff Glance AU TimesPST Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 4 KansasCityatIndianapolis,1:35 p.m.(NBC) NewOrleansatPhiladelphia, 5:10p.m. (NBC) Sunday,Jan. 5 SanDiegoatCincinnati,10:05a.m. (CBS) SanFranciscoatGreenBay,1:40 p.m.(Fox) Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 11 GreenBay,San Franciscoor NewOrleansat Seattle, 1;35 p im, (Fox) Cincinnati, Indianapolis orKansasCity at NewEn-
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
AU TimesPST
EaslernConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA
gland,5:15p.m.(CBS)
Sunday,Jan. 12 Philadelphia,GreenBayor SanFrancisco atCarolina,
Boston
10:05a.m.(Fox) Indianapolis,KansasCity orSanDiegoat Denver,1:40 p.m. (CBS ) NFL Injury Reporl NEWYOR K — The updated National Football Leagueinjury report,asprovidedbytheleague: NEW ORLEANSSAINTS afPHILADELPHIA EAGLES — SAINTS: DUT:RB Pierre Thomas (chest).QUE STIONABLE: LBKeyunta Dawson (calf). PROBABLE: S RafaelBush (ankle).EAGLES:OUT: CJulianVandervelde (back). QUESTIONABLE: SEarl Wolff (knee).PRDBABLE: SColtAnderson(knee), WR JasonAvant(shoulder), CBBrandonBoykin (hip), LB MychalKendricks(knee). KANSASCITY CHIEFS at INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — CHIEFS: DUT:T Eric Fisher(groin, shoulder).QUE STIONABLE: LB Tamba Hali (knee). PROBABLE: T Branden Albert(knee),WR Dwayne Bowe(concussion), LBJustin Houston(elbow), CEric Kush(ankle),CBRonParker(finger, ankle). COLTS: QUESTIN OABLE: DTAubrayoFranklin (knee),DEFil Moala(knee). PROBABLE:SSergio Brown(groin), CB DariusButler(quadriceps),CBVontae Davis (groin), WR DarriusHeyward-Bey(hamstring), DTRickyJean Francois(foot), LBRobert Mathis (notinjury related), GMikeMcG lynn (elbow), DECory Redding (shoulder), CB GregToler(groin), LBBjoernWerner(ankle). SAN DIEGO CHARG ERS at CINCINNATI BENGALS — CHARGERS: QUESTIONABLE:DE Sean Lissem ore (shoulder), WREddie Royal (toe). PROBABLE: RB RyanMathews (ankle),DE Kendall Reyes (ankle). BENG ALS: DOUBTFUL: CBTerence Newman (knee). QUESTIONABLE: CKyleCook(foot), TE TylerEifert (neck),DEWallace Gilberry (concussion), TE JermaineGresham(hamstring). PROBABLE: 7 AnthonyCollins (ankle), SChrisCrocker(knee), WRA.J.Green(knee), CBDreKirkpatrick (ilness),LB VincentRe y(ankle), f AndreSmith (ankle), GAndrew Whitwodh (ankle). SAN FRANCISCO49ERS at GREEN BAY PACKERS— 49ERS:QUESTIONABLE:CBCarlos Rogers(ham string), LBDanSkuta(foot), CBEricWright (hamstring).PROBABLE: WRJon Baldwin(ilness), LB NaVorroBowman (wrist), CB Tarell Brown(ribs), WR MichaelCrabtree(quadriceps), CJonathanGoodwin (not injury related),RBFrankGore(knee), GMikelupati (knee), DTJustin Smith (shoulder). PAC KERS: DUT: LB ClaM yatthews(thumb). PROBABLE:LBBradJones (ankle), RBEddie Lacy(ankle), LBMikeNeal (abdomen), LBNick Perry (foot), DTRyanPicket (knee).
College Bowl Glance AU TimesPST Friday, Jan. 3 OrangeBowl At Miami Clemson 40,OhioState35 Cotlon Bowl At Arlington,Texas Missouri41,OklahomaState31 Today, Jan. 4 BBVACompassBowl At Birmingham,Ala. Vanderbil(8-4) t vs.Houston (8-4), 10a.m.(ESPN)
Sunday,Jan. 6 GoDaddy.comBowl At Mobile, Ala. ArkansasState (7-5) vs. Ball State(10-2), 6 p.m (ESPN) Monday,Jan. 6 BCSNational Championship Af Pasadena,Calif. Florida State(13-0) vs. Auburn(12-1), 5:30p.m (ESPN) Friday's Summary OrangeBowl
No. 12 Clemson40, No. 7 Ohio St. 35 Clemson Ohio Sl.
14 6 14 6 — 40 9 13 7 6 — 3 5 First Guarler
Clem—Boyd 48run(Catanzaro kick), 12:50. DSU —B.Miffer 33run(Basil kick),5:44. Clem—S.Watkins 34 passfrom Boyd (Catanzaro kick), 4:56. DSU—Safety, 2:25. SecondQuarter Clem —Bryant 3passfromBoyd(kick failed),6:16. DSU —Heuerman 57 passfrom B.Miler (kick failed),3:39. DSU —B.Miffer 3run(Basil kick),:12. ThirdQuarler DSU —Hyde1run (Basil kick),5;50. Clem—S.Watkins 30passfrom Boyd (Catanzaro kick, 2:47. lem—Bryant 3 passfrom Boyd(Catanzarokick), :32. Fourth Quarter DSU —Hyde 14 pass fromB,Miffer (passfailed),
Washington St. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —Clemson: Boyd20-127, McDowell 12-69,Davidson1-3, S.Watkins 1-3, Team2-(minus 4).Ohio Sf.:Hyde25-113, B.Miler 18-35, Wilson
3-24, Corey (Phily).Brown1-15, Heuerman1-6. PASSING — Clemson:Boyd31-40-2-378.Ohio St.:B.Miller16-24-2-234. RECEIVING —Clemson: S.Watkins 16-227, McDowel l4-32,Bryant3-28,Davidson3-27,Seckinger 2-14, Hopper2-7, Leggett 1-43. Ohio St.: Corey(Philly).Brown 8-116, Hyde2-39,Vannett 2-22, D.Smith2-5, Heuerman1-57, Wilson1-(minus5).
D.A. Points
36-36—72 36-36—72 36-37—73 36-40—76 38-41—79
Billy Horschel Jimmy Walker JonasBlixt DerekErnst
BASKETBALL Men's College
7
6
EAST
Standings Pacific-12Conference Au TimesPST
Arizona
Oregon Colorado
California Washington UCLA
usc utah
ArizonaState Stanford
Oregon St.
W 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
L 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1
TENNIS Professional Brisbane International Friday At QueenslandTennisCentre Brisbane, Australia Purse: Men,$511,825(WT250); Women, $1 million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Guarlerfinals RogerFederer(1), Swilzerland,def. MarinkoMatosevic,Australia,6-1,6-1. Kei Nishikori(2), Japan,def. MarinCilic, Croatia, 6-4,5-7, 6-2.
JeremyChardy(8), France,def. Samuel Groth, Australia,7-5,6-4. LleytonHewitt, Australia, def.MariusCopil, Romania, 6-4,6-2. Women Semifinals SerenaWiliams (1), UnitedStates, def. Maria Sharapova (3), Russia, 6-2,7-6(7). VictoriaAzarenka(2), Belarus, def.JelenaJankovic (4), Serbia1-6, , 6-3, 6-4.
Gatar Open
Friday At The Khalifa International Tennis ASquash
Complex Doha, Qatar Purse: $1.195million (WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals RafaelNadal(1), Spain,def. Peter Gojowczyk, Germany,4-6, 6-2,6-3. GaelMonfils, France,def. FlorianMayer,Germany, ChennaiOpen Friday At SDAT Tennis Stadium Chennai, India Purse: $459,140(WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Guarterfinals StanislasWawrinka(1), Switzerland, def.Aljaz Bedene,Slovenia,6-2,6-1. EdouardRoger-Vasselin(7), France,def. DudiSela, Israel,7-5,6-7(6), 6-0. VasekPospisil (5), Canada,def. YukiBhambri, India, 6-3,6-3. Marcel Granollers(6), Spain, def. Benoit Paire, France, 6-2, 3-6,7-6(5).
Friday's Games East GeorgeWashington 73,Georgia55 South CoastalCarolina86,CCSU67 High Point85,Lees-McRae78 MountSt. Mary's104,Norfolk St. 84 SouthCarolina82, SCState75 SouthernMiss. 66, Drexel49 VCU81,StonyBrook63 Midwest Ball St.94,Oakland City 58 Cent.Michigan127,Marygrove44 N. Illinois65,Bethune-Cookman51 Southwest Baylor80,SavannahSt.50
W 14 13 12 10 9 11 9 11 11 9 8
0 0 2 4 2
2 3
L
ShenzhenOpen Friday At Longgang Tennis Center Shenzhen,China Purse: $5OO ,OOO(Intl.) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Li Na (1),China,def. AnnikaBeck(8), Germany,
6-1,6-3. 5 4 4 5
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT PlsGF GA P ittsburgh 4 3 3 0 12 1 6 1 136 98 W ashington 41 20 15 6 4 6 125 123 P hiladelphia 41 20 17 4 4 4 106 113 N ewJersey 42 17 17 8 4 2 100 108 N .Y.Rangers 42 20 20 2 42 98 114 C arolina 41 1 6 1 6 9 4 1 100 121 C olumbus 41 18 19 4 4 0 111 117 N.Y.lslanders 42 14 21 7 35 110 140
Friday's Games
6-3,6-2.
Conference Overall Clem O SU
1
Women's College
PGA Tour HyundaiTournamentof Champlolls Friday At KapaluaResorl, ThePlantafi on Course Kapalua, Hawaii Purse: $6.7million yardage: T t452; Par (36-37 ) 73 First Round 33-33—66 Michae lThompson 33-33—66 Chris Kirk 34-32—66 JordanSpieth 34-32—66 WebbSimpson RyanMoore 32-35—67 31-36—67 KevinStreelman 30-37 — 67 JasonDufner ZachJohnson 33-34—67 Matt Kuchar 33-35—68 Sang-MoonBae 34-35—69 KenDuke 36-34—70 BrianGay 36-34—70 PatrickReed 32-38—70 HarrisEnglish 37-33—70 BrandtSnedekre 33-37—70 DustinJohnson 36-34—70 AdamScot 35-35—70 MartinLaird 36-35—71 ScottBrown 35-36—71 JohnMerrick 35-36—71 BooWeekley 34-37—71 Bill Haas 35-36—71 GaryWoodland 35-36—71 WoodyAustin 36-36—72 RusselHenl l ey 34-38—72
Clem —Seckinger5 passfromBoyd(passfailed),
24 27 36-198 48-193 3 78 23 4 31-40-2 16-24-2 0 10 3-37.7 5-48.2 1-0 2-2 1 5-144 6 - 60 27:09 32:51
0
Today'sGames Washington atArizona,11 a.m. OregonStateat Utah, 1p.m. Sunday'sGames USCat UCLA, noon Oregonat Colorado,2 p.m. WashingtonStateatArizonaState, 3p.m.
lona 69,Canisius 57 Marist 70,Manhatan 46 Betting line Monmouth (NJ)62, Fairfield 57,DT NFL NewHampshire 77,Brown74,DT Wild CardPlayoffs Niagara 78,St. Peter's 46 COLTS 2.5 1 Chiefs Quinnipiac71,Rider59 EAGLES 2.5 2.5 Saints SOUTH BENGA LS 7 7 Chargers Charlotte78,UNCWilmington57 49ers 2.5 2.5 PACKER S NCA&T60,William8Mary58 MIDWEST College Rli-Chicago 98, Roosevelt 68 Today, Jan. 4 RlinoisSt.80,Drake71 CompassBowl Indiana St. 60,N.Iowa53 Vanderbilt 3 2.5 Hous t on Wisconsin76,Rlinois 64,OT SOUTHWES T Sunday,Jan. 6 Rice72,IncarnateWord57 Go DaddyBowl FARWEST Ball St 8.5 7 Arkansas St California72,OregonSt. 63 Cal St.-Fullerton 63, Denver56 Monday, Jan. 6 Gonzaga 56, Portland 24 BCSChampionship Southern Cal55,Colorado45 F lorida St. 8. 5 8.5 Aubu r n Stanford96,Oregon66 UCLA55,Utah38 Washington 55,Arizona52 GOLF Washington St.85,ArizonaSt.78
6:16. A—72,080.
First downs Rushes-yards Passing Comp-Att-Int ReturnYards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
4 1 27 12 2 56 120 88 4 1 25 12 4 5 4 116 95 4 2 24 14 4 52 109 98 4 2 21 16 5 47 118 120 42 18 14 10 46 109 120 4 3 18 18 7 43 122 138 4 1 15 20 6 36 96 130 4 1 11 26 4 2 6 72 117
Tampa Bay Montreal Toronto Detroit Ottawa Florida Buffalo
11:35.
NBCSN
OLYMPICS
Purse: $250,000(lnfl.) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals AnaIvanovic(2) Serbiadef KirstenFlipkens(3) Belgium,6-0, 7-6(3). VenusWiliams,UnitedStates, def.JamieHampton (5), UnitedStates,walkover.
IN THE BLEACHERS
FOOTBALL
ESPNU
FOOTBALL
PGA Tour,Tournament of Champions PGA Tour,Tournament of Champions HOCKEY NHL, SanJose at Chicago
Today BoysbaskelbaU:Sisters vs.CresweffatSisters Holiday Tournam ent,2 p.m. Girls basketball: Redmond vs. Creswell at Sisters HolidayTournament, 4 p.m.; Sistersvs. Henley at SistersHolidayTournament, 10a.m. Wrestling:Redmond at Dallas Duals-Time,TBD; Madrasat RiddleTournament, 10a.m.; Culverat JosephHiTournament, 11a.msCrookCountyat Rollie LaneInvitational in Nampa, Idaho,TBD Swimming:Bendat Lebanon Invite, TBD;Summit, MountainView,Ridgeview, Sisters, Madrasat Jay RowanInvitational at CascadeSwim Center, 11 a.m. Nordic skiing:DHSN Dat Mt. Bachelor, Freestyle, 11 a.m.
8:30 a.m. Fox Sports1
BASKETBALL
Women's college, Vanderbilt at South Carolina Women's college, Virginia Tech atBoston College Women's college, George Washington at Saint Joseph's Women's college, Maryland at North Carolina Women's college, Oregon atCalifornia Men's college,USCatUCLA Women's college, Dayton at St. Louis Women's college, Kansas atBaylor Men's college, SanDiegoState at Kansas Women's college, OregonSt. at Stanford Men's college, Oregon atColorado
ON DECK
PengShuai(5), China,def.Vania King, United States,walkover. ASBClassic Friday At ASBBankTennis Centre Auckland, New Zealand
Chicago St. Louis Colorado Dallas Minnesota Winnipeg Nashville
WeslernConference Central Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA 44 29 7 8 6 6 165 121 40 28 7 5 6 1 144 93 4 0 25 11 4 54 116 101 40 20 13 7 4 7 119 119 43 21 17 5 4 7 101 110 4 3 19 19 5 43 117 125 4 1 18 18 5 4 1 97 122
Pacilic Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA Anaheim 4 3 3 0 8 5 65 142 108 SanJose 4 1 2 6 9 6 58 136 105 LosAngeles 42 25 13 4 54 110 88 V ancouver 42 23 12 7 5 3 113 101 P hoenix 40 2 0 1 1 9 4 9 120 122 C algary 41 1 4 2 1 6 3 4 96 128 E dmonton 44 1 3 26 5 3 1 112 153 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime
loss.
Friday's Games Chicago5, NewJersey3 Pittsburgh 5, N.Y.Rangers2 Tampa Bay2, Calgary0 Anaheim 5, Edmonton2 Today'sGames Winnipegat Boston, 10a.m. SanJoseat Colorado, noon NewJerseyatBuff alo,4p.m. N.Y.Rangersat Toronto, 4 p.m. Ottawa at Montreal, 4p.m. NashyilleatFlorida,4 p.m. Carolinaat N.Y.Islanders,4 p.m. Columbus at St.Louis, 5p.m. Detroit atDallas,5p.m. Washingtonat Minnesota, 5p.m. PhiladelphiaatPhoenix,5 p.m. Vancouver at LosAngeles,7p.m. Sunday'sGames Winnipeg at Pittsburgh,10a.m. NashvilleatCarolina, 4 p.m. SanJoseat Chicago, 5p.m. TampaBayatEdmonton,5p.m. Vancou veratAnaheim,5p.m
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L
AmericanLeague
TAMPABAYRAYS— Agreedto termswith 18 JamesLoneyonathree-yearcontract. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association DENVERNUGGETS— Rescinded the two-game suspensionofGAndreMiler. TORONTORAPTDRS— SentGDwightBuycksto the NBA D-League. FOOTBA LL National Football League BALTIMOR E RAVENS — Announced running backscoachWilbert Montgomery wil not returnfor the 2014 season. MINNESOTA VIKINGS— SignedWRJordenKamar and GJoshSamudato reserve/future contracts. PITTSBURGHSTEELERS — Firedoff ensive line coachJackBicknell, Jr. TENNESSEE TITANS — SignedK MaikonBonani, DE MarcusDixonandTEJason Schepler to reserve/ futurecontracts. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL — FinedToronto F Joffrey Lupul$10,000 for cross-checkingDetroit F Patrick Eavesin aJan. 1 game.SuspendedColumbusFDerekMacKenziethree gamesfor boardingPhoenix DOliver Ekman-Larsson during aJan.2game. BUFFALOSABRES— ClaimedFZenonKonopka off waiversfromMinnesota. DALLASSTARS— ReassignedFColtonSceviour to Texas (AHL). DETROITRED WINGS — Rec alled D Alexey Marchenko fromGrandRapids (AHL). FLORIDA PANTHERS— ActivatedDEdJovanovski frominjuredreserve. NEW JERSEYDEVILS — Pl aced RW Mattias Tedenbyonnon-roster waivers. ActivatedFRyanCarter frominjuredreserve. PlacedDAnton Volchenkov on injuredreserve,retroactive to Dec.27. Recalled F MikeSislofromAlbany(AHL). PHOENIXCOYOTES— AssignedFChrisBrown to Portland (AHL). COLLEGE CALIFOR NIA — Announced LBKhairi Forttwill entertheNFLdraft. FLORIDA — AnnouncedCBMarcusRobersonwill entertheNFLdraft. NORTHDAKOTA — NamedPaulRudolphoff ensive coordinator. NOTRE DAME— Announced the resignation of Randy Waldrumwomen'ssoccercoach. OREGONSTATE— AnnoucedDEScottCrichton will entertheNFLdraft. SOUTHCAROLINA— AnnouncedWR BruceEllingtonwil entertheNFLdraft.
SPORTS IN BRIEF GOLF
WINTER SPORTS
FOOTBALL
NeWCOmerSPart Of 4-Way tie at KaPalua — JordanSpieth
COISki and Smith win finalS at ShOrttraCk trialS —J.R. Celski
Strang eXPeCted to aCCePtTeXaSOffer —Aperson familiar
was among the newcomers who felt right at home Friday at Kapalua. Coming off a remarkable rookie season, Spieth made a12-foot birdie putt on the final hole for a 7-under 66 to share the lead after one round of the Tournament of Champions with Chris Kirk, Michael Thompson and Webb Simpson. Simpson is the only one of the leaders who has played in this winners-only event before. Kirk is playing for the first time since he wonthe McGladrey Classic at Sea Island. He birdied his last five holes, the last two into wind that required some of his best shots.
won the 'A' final of the1,500 meters at theU.S.Olympic short track trials, and Jessica Smith wonthe women's race in Kearns, Utah.Celski's final Friday night included falls byTravis Jayner andKyle Carr. Celski emerged unscathed, shaking his right hand intheair as hecrossed the finish line first. Smith won thewomen's1,500'A'final over Emily Scott. Theskaters were set to compete in asecond series of semifinal heats followed by A, Band C finals in front of apacked houseat the Utah Olympic Oval. Skaters earn points in eachracethat gotoward their cumulative totals, which helps decide the five-menandthree-women teamfor next month's Sochi Olympics.
with the searchtells TheAssociated Press that Texas hasoffered its head coaching job to Louisville's Charlie Strong and he is expected to accept. Thepersonspokeonconditionofanonymitybecausetheprocesswasbeing kept confidential andhadnot beencompleted. Texashas beenlooking to replace MackBrown, who steppeddown in Decemberafter16 seasons with the Longhorns. Strong is in his fourth year atLouisville andcoming off his second straight double-digit victory season. He took over aprogram coming off three straight non-winning seasonsand hasgone37-15. — From wire reports
SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
NBA ROUNDUP
io ae a s o emson Clippers rallypast Mavs;
The Associated Press
Corey Brown had 116 yards receiving for the Buckeyes.
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. For the second time in three -
Miller w a s i n t e rcepted twice in the final 3:12, doom-
years, Clemson fell apart at the Orange Bowl. Only this time, the Tigers found a way to recover. And thanks to Tajh Boyd, Sammy Watkins and plenty of others, the end result was Clemson's biggest win in a generation. Boyd threw for 378 yards
ing the Buckeyes. Boyd threw
Paul hurt, out for weeks The Associated Press
with a jumper, but Griffin sent
DALLAS — DeAndre Jordan and Blake Griffin found a way to win without Chris Paul.
the Clippers back in front for good on a three-point play. He
starting to get clicking at that point," Hyde said. "I
"They've got those two big The big men for the Los guys and I know it's a load, but Angeles Clippers are going we've got to do a better job," to have to keep it up because said Dallas guard Monta Ellis, their star guard will be out at who had 13 points and nine asleast a few weeks. sists. "That was a tough one." Jordan scored a career-high The Mavericks missed six 25 points to match Griffin, and of their last seven shots and the Clippers rallied to beat had two late turnovers, includthe Dallas Mavericks 119-112 ing one when Ellis dribbled off Friday night after losing Paul himself with Jordan guardwhen he separated his right, ing him and the Clippers up 115-112. shooting shoulder. Jordan and G r iffin c omAlso on Friday: bined for 10 points on a 16-2 Warriors 101, Hawks 100: game-closing run to wipe out ATLANTA — Andre Iguoda-
we got our butts kicked on
thought we could make it
a 110-103 deficit in the final 4
la hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer,
this field. And it has been a journey to get back. We're
happen." Also on Friday: No. 9 Missouri 41, No. 13
minutes. Jordan was 11 of 14 David Lee scored 23 points
an interception to give Ohio State the ball back, but Miller
was picked again — Stephone Anthony made the play for the Tigers — and Clemson ran out the clock. "It's going to sting for a while, probably a long while because we didn't finish," Meyer said. "It was r i ght
and five touchdowns, Wat-
kins had a r ecord-setting night with 16 catches for 227 yards, and No. 12 Clemson rallied to beat No. 7 Ohio
there."
The Buckeyes had a 29-20 lead in the third after Hyde
picked up 31 yards on 4thand-inches, then went air-
State 40-35 on Friday for the
school's first Orange Bowl win in 32 years. "We are Orange Bowl champs again," Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. "Hey, listen: Two years ago
borne to break the plane of
the goal line on the next play. "I felt like the offense was
I
(j
~ .
22-4 since that night. And we are the first team from the state of South Carolina to
ever win a BCS game." B oyd's 5-yard pass t o Stanton Seckinger with 6:16
Wilfredo Lee/The Associated Press
Clemson wide receiver Sammy Watkins makes a catch for a
sey ran for 92 yards and
Paul, who had 19 points at
three touchdowns, the last
halftime, will be out three to DeRozan scored 20 points, five weeks. Kyle Lowry outplayed John Coach Doc Rivers said Paul Wall with 19 points and 11 could be out longer and will assists, and Toronto won go to Los Angeles for evalua- its season-high fifth contion while the Clippers head secutive game by beating to San Antonio to face the de- Washington. fending Western Conference Pelicans 95, Celtics 92: BOSchampion Spurs tonight. TON — Anthony Davis had 23 "It changes for everybody," points and nine rebounds and said Darren Collison, who fig- Tyreke Evans scored 16 points ures to start in Paul's place and with a key basket late to lead had a season-high 22 points New Orleans over Boston. in his first game against the Rockets 102, Knicks 100: Mavericks after playing one HOUSTON — James Harden season in D allas. "Every- scored 37 points and Aaron body's got to step up and play Brooks made a pair of free big. But we'll be fine." throws with 17 seconds left to Dirk Nowitzki was a game- send Houston past New York. time decision with a sprained Nuggets 111, Grizzlies 108:
a 16-yarder with 3:08 left,
when they allowed 20 unan-
The former Big 12 and Big
Swinney said. "And listen, we made enough mistakes to probably lose the game tonight. But we kept picking
two more TD passes for the
each other up. Our defense
Eight rivals traded points on
COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP "It takes teams to w i n ,"
Tigers, who posted consec- was awesome." utive 11-win seasons for the Braxton Miller threw for first time in school history. 234 yards and Carlos Hyde
its
Oklahoma St. 31: ARLINGT ON, Texas — Henry J o-
and Missouri beat Oklahoma State in the Cotton Bowl.
on Friday night in Miami Gardens, Fla.
a nd Golden State won
bounds, while Griffin added eighth straight game with a 15 boards. victory over Atlanta. Then they found out that Raptors 101, Wizards 88:
remaining put the Tigers (11- touchdown over OhioState cornerback Doran Grant (12) and 2) ahead to stay on a night safety C.J. Barnett (4) during the second half of the Orange Bowl swered points in wasting an early 11-point lead. Watkins caught two scoring passes, plus became Clemson's careerreceptions leader and set an Orange Bowl record for yardage. Martavis Bryant caught
from the field and had 18 re-
was 11 of 13 on free throws.
six consecutive possessions in the fourth quarter until
ran for 113 more for Ohio Oklahoma State quarterback State (12-2), which led 29-20 Clint Chelf was sacked and in the second half but wound fumbled with a minute left. up losing its second straight Defensive lineman S h ane game — after having won Ray picked up the ball and each ofitsprevious 24 under rumbled 76 yards down coach Urban Meyer, whose the sideline in front of t he record in Bowl Champion- stunned Cowboys bench to ship Series games fell to 4-1. score.
l eft ankle but hit six of h i s
NFL: WILD CARD PREVIEW
W ASHINGTON —
D ENVER —
Ty
D e Mar
L aw s o n
Getting keyplayersback a must for NFLplayoffs
first seven shots and had 14 scored 18 points, including a points at halftime on his way key 3-pointer with less than to 24 for the Mavericks, who a minute to play, and Denver were up 13 in the first half snapped an eight-game losing and didn't trail until the third streak by beating Memphis. quarter. Lakers 110, Jazz 99: LOS
By Barry Wilner
After Shawn Marion put the Mavericks up 110-103, Grif-
hot, but who is healthy that
factor — unless you count the spot. They have concerns wear the defense down a little Saints' damaged pride about about 1,000-yard rusher Ryan bit." their inability to win on the M athews' ankle and receiver/ The C h iefs, r u n ners-up road. punt returner Eddie Royal's
matters in the NFL playoffs.
to Denver in the AFC West,
The fact that teams playing in the wild-card round
got off to a 9-0 start but then
The Associated Press
Sometimes it is not who is
must win an extra game to
get to the Super Bowl makes it even more difficult to avoid injuries. Yet those teams have
been successful: In seven of the past eight seasons, a Super Bowl qualifier played in the wild-card round. Six times in that span, the eventual champion did not get
aweekoff. Players returning from injury will be huge in Green Bay and Kansas City. For the Packers, the come-
backs of Aaron Rodgers and Randall Cobb for the regular-season finale not only provided a boost to the offense but got Green Bay into the postseason. Rodgers, back from a broken left collarbone, and Cobb, who was out with a knee injury, combined on a fourth-down, 48-yard touch-
down pass in the final moments at Chicago.
That touchdown gave the
plays run. We want to try to
They went8-0 at home but
toe. They have not been in the
have been mediocre away started getting hurt. Top line- from the Superdome, dropbackers Justin Houston and ping their last three. They Tamba Hali, tackles Branden have never won a road playoff Albert and Eric Fisher — the game. top overall draft choice last Still, they feel their expeyear — and receiver Dwayne rience in the postseasonBowe were sidelined or hob- many of the current Saints bled at various times, and won the 2009 championship Kansas City lost five of its last — will provide an edge. "We have been through seven games. "Big-time players want a lot together," quarterback to make big-time plays in Drew Brees said. "We know big-time games," Bowe said. t he expectation level. W e "These are the games you know the preparation. I think have to show up." there is a level of pride that Kansas City (11-5) at India- comes along with that — and napolis (11-5), today:The inju- accountability." ry list might be shorter for the Philly is fully invested in Chiefs, who lost to Indianap- first-year coach Chip Kelly's olis in Kansas City just two up-tempo offense and has an weeks ago. But the effective- improving defense. After losness of the returning players ing 10 in a row at home dating is in question, especially play- to last season, the Eagles won making linebacker Houston. their last four, never allowing He missed the final five more than 21 points. games with a dislocated right Holding New Orleans to so elbow and will wear a brace few points would be a good against Indianapolis. idea. The Eagles cannot wait
playoffs since 2009 and have only six remaining players
"The first two days it took
Packers the division title. Their reward: last season's
some time to get used to. After
NFC champions, the 49ers, coming to frigid Lambeau Field on Sunday. "Well, myself and Randall are back, that helps. We had a couple good connections on Sunday. It's doing the stuff we want to do," Rodgers said.
Indy is relatively healthy. The Colts won their last three games by a combined 78-20
"We want tobe an up-tempo
team. We want to get a lot of
that, it was OK," Houston said.
and committed the f ewest
turnovers (14) and fewest penalties (66) in the NFL. New Orleans (11-5) at Philadelphia (10-6), today: The one wild-card game in which injuries are relatively a non-
Ice Bowl
to try. "It's what's the next challenge and what's the next op-
portunity," Kelly said, "and the great thing about where we are right now is if you win, you get to play again." San Diego (9-7) at Cincinnati (11-5): The Chargers have not lost since Cincinnati beat them in San Diego, tak-
Continued from C1 during the week, but the team, continuThe Packers plan to pass out 70,000 ing a popular tradition, invited memhand warmers, packets that fit inside bers of the public to help shovel it for $10 gloves or boots and stay warm for hours. per hour. The team will also provide free coffee The 1967 game took a big toll on playand hot chocolate.
Kellie Kunz, a Packers fan and homemaker from Naperville, IIL, will be attending her first Green Bay game Sunday. She said the opportunity to see her team in a crucial playoff game was just too good to pass up. "We'll dress warm — down jacket, long underwear, fleece-lined tights," said Kunz, who grew up in Wisconsin. "I'm just hoping the game is going to be so exciting we won't even notice the freezing cold." Lambeau Field has a heating system buried beneath the turf to keep the field
from freezing, but it failed during the Ice Bowl, leaving the sod hard as cement. The system was upgraded in 1997 to include 30miles ofheatingpipes, so players on Sunday can expect softer landings. The field should be relatively clear
an assist from Jordan, and Jordan followed with a three-
point play. Nowitzki broke a 110-all tie
23 points and 17 rebounds, and the injury-riddled Los Angeles Lakers used their sixth different starting point guard of the season in a victory over Utah.
from that team.
Cincinnati, in the playoffs for a f r anchise-best third
NBA SCOREBOARD
straight year, lost its top de-
fensive player, tackle Geno Atkins, in midseason. Current injury worries include most of the offensive line and tight end Tyler Eifert (neck). The Bengals were 8-0 at
home. They have not won a playoff game since the 1990 season, tied for the sev-
enth-longest streak in NFL history. San Francisco (12-4) at Green Bay (8-7-1): Getting healthy on offense certainly bolstered the Pack, but
the defense has been a sieve and is missing its top player, linebacker Clay
M a t thews
(thumb). San Francisco, by far the healthiest bunch in the wild-
card round, also is the most versatile team playing this weekend.
"I think our players want to play winning football, no matter what the circumstances,"
Niners coach Jim Harbaugh said. "So, regardless of what's coming forward, it's not relevant. I think the most relevant thing is that we want to play, we want to coach and partic-
ipate in winning football no
ing their final four games to matter what the circumstancsneak into the final wild-card es, home or away."
Sunday, with no snow in the forecast. The stands had been filled with snow
fin had an alley-oop dunk on
ANGELES — Pau Gasol had
cold, and waterproof boots and gloves keep hands and feet dry. That is what 49ers fan Leon Perkins of Stockton, Calif., is counting on. The
30-year-oldtruck driver goes to every 49ers home game, and a visit to legendary Lambeau was on his bucket list. So ers, said Ed Gruver, the author of a book the minute he found out the 49ers were called "The Ice Bowl: The Cold Truth playing in Green Bay he jumped online About Football's Most U n forgettable and bought tickets. Game." Packers tickets can be notoriously Packers coach Vince Lombardi did hard to come by, so Perkins was pleasnot let most of his players wear gloves, antly surprised to pay only $147 apiece so several, including quarterback Bart for two. Ticket sales were uncharacterisStarr, suffered varying degrees of frost- tically slow because of the weather forebite, Gruver said. One Cowboys player cast, and the game did not sell out until had respiratory problems attributed to midday Friday. breathing in so much frigid air, he added, When Perkins found out he might be and Dallas quarterback Don Meredith's attending Ice Bowl II, his enthusiasm calls were inarticulate because his lips was dampened only briefly. "I'll be able to tell my kids and grandwere frozen. "Now players wear Under Armour. kids I was part of that game," said PerThey have gloves; they have these giant kins, who bought a hunting coat and heaters. They'll be OK," Gruver said. thick gloves in preparation. "I'm just hop"Back then, most of them just wore long ing my 49ers are gonna give me the opjohns." portunity to keep jumping up and down Improved clothing should help the and screaming and keeping the adrenafans, too. Modern down jackets fight the line pumping."
37-8917-24100.
Standings All TimesPST
d-Indiana d-Miami Atlanta d-Toronto Washington Detroit Chicago Charlotte Boston Cleveland Brooklyn Philadelphia NewYork Orlando Milwaukee
Eastern Conference W L Pd GB 25 6 806 24 8 750 1'/z 18 15 545 8 16 15 516 9 14 16 467 IO'/z I4 19 424 12 13 1II 419 12 14 13 11 0 0 10 10 7
20 20 21 21 21 22 22 25
Western Conference W L 26 7 25 7 25 8 23 I2 22 13 22 13 19 12 19 14 16 I6 15 16 15 17 14 18 14 19 Sacrame nto 10 21 Utah 0 25 d-divisionleader
d-Portland Oklahoma City d-San Antonio d-L.A.Clippers Houston GoldenState Phoenix Dallas Minnesota NewOrleans Denver Memphis LA. Lakers
412 12'I~ 394 13 344 14'/z 344 I4'/z 344 14'/z 313 15'I~ 313 15'/~ 219 18'/z
Pd GB 788 781 '/~ 758 I 657 4 629 5 629 5 613 6 576 7 500 9'/z 484 10 469 10'/z 438 11'/z 424 12
323 15
306 16'/2
Friday's Games
Toront0101,Washington88
NewOrleans95,Boston 92 Golden StateI01, Atlanta100 Houston102,NewYork1IIO LA. Clippers09, Dallas112 Denver111,Memphis108 LA, Lakers 110,Utah99 Today'sGames Miami atOrlando,4p.m. NewOrleansatIndiana, 4p.m. Cleveland atBrooklyn,4:30 p.m. AtlantaatChicago,5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Minnesota,5 p.m. LA. ClippersatSanAntonio,5:3II p.m. MilwaukeeatPhoenix, 6 p.m. Philadelphiaat Portland,7p.m. CharlotteatSacramento, 7p.m. Sunday'sGames MemphisatDetroit,1II a.m. GoldenStateatWashington, 3p.m. Indiana at Cleveland,3p.m. TorontoatMiami,3 p.m. Boston at OklahomaCity,4 p.m. NewYorkatDallas, 4:30 p.m. Denver at LA. Lakers, 6:30p.m.
Summaries Friday'sGames
Clippers119, Mavericks112
HOUSTON (102) Parsons6-13 4-5 17,Jones3-7 0-0 6, How ard 6-11 3-615, Lin 5-113-314, Harden10-1912-12 37,Brooks1-82-25,G.Smith0-00-00,Casspi2-3 O-O5,Garcia1-20-03.Totals34-74 24-28102. New York 24 23 34 19 — 100 Houston 20 28 25 29 — 102
Pelicans95, Celtics92 NEWORLEAss(95) Aminu2-8 0-0 4,Davis 9-12 5-8 23,Ajinca 0-2 0-00, Holiday2-110-04, Gordon3-76-612, Anderson 5-112-3 13, Evans8-130-0 16, Miler 0-0 0-0 0, Roberts3-64-411, stiemsma6-7 0-11z Totals 38-7717-22 95. BOSTON (92) Green5-12 4-616, Bass8-10 0-016, Sullinger 3-17 7-713, Crawford 2-141-1 5, Bradley7-154-4 22, Humphries2-63-4 7, OlynykO-I 3-4 3,Walace 2-31-2 5, Lee1-80-03, Pressey1-3 0-02. Totals 31-89 23-2892. Newerleans 22 2 7 24 22 — 95 Boston 17 26 29 20 — 92
Warrlors101, Hawks100 GOLDEN STATEI101) Iguodala3-5 0-0 7, Lee9-16 5-7 23,Bogut3-5 0-0 6, Curry7-15 7-8 22,Thompson8-17 2-2 21, Barnes4-120-19, Green0-30-2 0, Douglas 2-50-0 4, Bazem ore1-5 2-4 4, Speights2-41-1 5. Totals 39-87 17-25 101.
ATLANTA (100)
Carroll 5-81-212, Millsap3-146-612, Antic6-9 0-016, Teague 5-13 4-514, Korver2-7 0-05, Brand 3-5 0-06,Wiliams3-90-08, Mack6-8 2-215, Scott 4-73-412. Totals37-8016-19100. Golden State 2422 1837 — 101 Atlanta 21 25 26 28 — 100
Raptors101, Wlzards 88 TORONTO(101) Ross5-140-0 14,JohnsonIj-12 0-0 17,Valanciunas3-51-2 7, DeRozan 7-14 6-720, Lowry7-13 1-219, Salmons1-52-2 4, Pattersont-10 0-018, Hayes1-2 0-0 2, Vasquez0-4 0-0 0. Totals 40-79 10-13 101.
WASHING TON(88) Ariza 2-30-0 6, Booker4-70-0 8, Gortat 4-9 2-2 10, Wal4-153-311, l Beal6-160-012, Nene4-97-8 15, Webster3-7 4-412, Seraphin2-60-04, Temple 1-40-02, PorterJr.1-20-02, Vesely2-30-04, Singleton1-10-0z Totals34-8216-1788. Toronto 26 22 36 17 — 101 Washington 17 28 16 27 — 88
Nuggets 111, Grizzlies 108 MEMPHIS (108)
Prince5-9 2-213, Z.Randolph10-18 5-725, Koufos 4 63411,Conley8154 523, Allen3 64610, Bayless0-50-0 0, Johnson1-3 2-24, M.Miler 1-3 2-24, Davis1-53-65,Leuer4-62-211,Calathes0-0 2-22. Totals37-7629-38108. DENVER (111) Chandler3-100-0 8, Faried7-82-216, Hickson 3-9 1-27, Lawson6-12 5-6 18, Foye5-8 1-2 13, Mozgov7-9 2-216,Arthur 3-6 0-0 6, Fournier 4-8 3-3 12,Robinson5-102-4 15.Totals 43-80 16-21 111. Memphis 23 25 27 33 — 108 Denver 28 30 19 34 — 111
LA. CLIPPERS (119) Dudley3-9 0-2 7, Griffin 7-1II 11-1325, Jordan 11-143-725,Paul5-84419, Crawford6-1t 4-417, Barnes2-40-06,Collison6-1II8-820, Green0-20-Ij 0.Totals40-8230-38119. DALLAS I112) Marion 8-16 2-2 20, Nowitzki 10-17 0-0 24, Dalembert 2-55-69, Calderon4-100011, Ellis 6-12 Lakers110, Jazz 99 1-213, Blair3-50-06, Carter3-100-08, Wright6-8 0-012, Crowder 0-1 1-21, Larkin3-41-2 8. Totals UTAH(99) 45-8810-14112. Jefferson4-11 5-816, M.williams 5-10 1-2 0, L.A. Clippers 33 34 22 30 — 119 Favors 5-91-211, Burke 3-15 0-06, Hayward 8-16 Dallas 39 31 17 25 —112 2-2 22,Garrett1-20-03, Burks1-81-2 3, Evans5-6 1-1 11,Kanter 6 94616. Totals38861523 99. Rockets102, Knlcks100 L.A. LAKER S(110) Young6-144-6 16,Gasol10-17 3-4 23,Sacre 2-60-04, Marshal8-122-220, l Meeks6-143-318, NEWYORK(100) Anthony10-23 3-3 25, Bargnani3-10 1-2 7, Johnson5-50-011, Kelly1-2 3-4 6, S.Wiliams3-4 1-210, Hill1-70-02. Totals 42-81 16-21 110. Chandler4-55-713, Udrih5-13 0-010, Shumpert 9-14 2-2 26,Murry 1-41-4 3, J.Smith3-13 2-2 9, Utah ' 12 28 27 32 — 99 Stoudemir2-62-2 e 6, HardawayJr. 0-1 1-21. Totals LA. Lakers 30 22 31 27 — 110
C4
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
PREP ROUNDUP
La Pine's Zack Smith
pulls in a rebound during
ree-t row s ootin ea isters to tourne victor • Outlaws pick up first win of season
TERS — The Outlaws went into the second half with an
dogs 58-48 for its first victory
day Tournament loss. Jacobie
the first half against North
Marion in La Pine on Friday night. Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin
Banks 44, Sisters 38: SIS- jumped out to a 10-0 lead right away and never allowed the Grizzlies to within
18-17 edge, but Banks strung single digits en route to the Bulletin staff report together a quick run to jump Mountain Valley League SISTERS — Sisters kept in front by six points — a victory. V i c t ori a S a m ple Baker off the boards Friday margin Sisters could not re- paced Trinity Lutheran (1-0 night and held off the Bull- cover from in its Sisters Holi- MVL, 5-4 overall) with 12 of the season in the Sisters Petterson led the Outlaws (3Holiday Tournament. 5) with 11 points, and SavanC onnor Schaab had 2 1 nah Spear added eight. Sispoints and 17 rebounds, Jus- ters takes on Henley today at tin Harrer went for 11 points 10 a.m. in the tourney's thirdand nine boards, and Nate place game. Kaping boasted seven reLa Salle 90, Redmond 15: bounds and two points in Sis- SISTERS — The Panthers
points and four r ebounds,
and Emily Eidler added 10 points and six boards. Gilchrist (0-1, 1-3) was led by Sierra Shuey's 13 points and seven rebounds. North Lake 31, C e ntral Christian 11: SILVER LAKE — Karrah Davidson scored 10 points and Kend-
ters' victory.
fell to 0-6 with the Sisters
The Outlaws (1-7), who play Creswell today at 2 p.m. during the final day of the tourney, led 25-13 at halftime. Sisters sealed the win at the
Holiday Tournament loss. Redmond wraps up the tourney against Creswell today at 4p.m. North Marion 32, La Pine
ra Murphy had nine points and 14 rebounds to lead
free-throw line, converting
27: LA PINE — Leading 13-8
bounds and two steals for
24 of 32 foul shots.
after the opening period, the Cowgirls (6-3), who held the Hawks were outscored the Tigers to just two points 10-2 in the second quarter in the second half. Abigail and never recovered. "We Hannay scored five points couldn't buy a shot," La for Central Christian (3-2), Pine coach Kim Beer said and Kaylin McAfee had four about his team's scoring points and four rebounds for drought before halftime. the visitors.
In other Friday action: BOYS BASKETBALL
Western Mennonite 68, Culver 29: SALEM — The
Bulldogs dropped to 0-2 in Tri-River Conference play after falling behind 17-4 in the first quarter. John Slaght led Culver with 11 points and
Katie Mickel led the Hawks
bounds and six points. With
double-double with 10 points
(5-5) with 12 points, while Adam Knepp posted 10 re- McKenna Boen recorded a
the loss, the Bulldogs are now and 11 rebounds. Ashley 1-8 overall. Pierce added 10 boards and North Lake 40, Central two points for La Pine in the Christian 28: SILVER LAKE defeat. Ethan Murphy scored Cascade 64, Ridgeview 15 points and grabbed 12 42: TURNER — The Ravens rebounds to lead the host dropped to 6-3 on the seaCowboys past the Tigers son with the Class 4A nonin the Class 1A nonconfer-
conference loss against the
ence contest. Caleb Stewart scored 11 points and Jacob Biever added eight for Central Christian (0-5), which led 11-9 after the first quar-
Cougars. Western Mennonite 60,
ter. Caleb Reynolds had 11
n ever recovered on t h e i r way to the Tri-River Confer-
rebounds and seven points for the Tigers, and Stewart grabbed nine rebounds. North Lake (2-6) outscored
Culver 28: SALEM — The Bulldogs fell b ehind 2 3-4
after the first quarter and
North Lake to the Class 1A
n onconference win. K i r a Thomas added seven re1
,w~QjjLitt~
WRESTLING
Two Ravens unbeaten at West Albany: A LBANYTanner Boatman and Boomer Fleming b ot h f i n i shed
with perfect 5-0 records to lead Ridgeview at the West
Albany Duals tournament. Boatman pinned four of his opponents at 106 pounds, as
did Fleming at 195; both won a fifth match via forfeit. As a team, the Ravens placed fourth i n t h e i r f i v e-team
pool, beating Newport 54-36 before falling to Sweet Home
(52-27), eventual champion Thurston (48-15) and St. Helens (38-34). Ridgeview closed by beating Stayton,
Hawks
game in 13 days. I was hoping with them (the Huskies) being on the road it would work in
Continued from C1 our favor, but they came out ready to play and La Pine (5-5) used its man-to-man defense to we didn't." limit North Marion to seven points in the secKerry Cook paced North Marion (6-4) with a ond quarter, allowing the Hawks to climb to game-high 25 points, and Kyle Williamson conwithin two at the half. tributed 14 points. "We played well over all," Parkinson said. The Hawks, however, struggled defensively in the second half, giving up 22 third-quarter "We started a little sluggish. We were scoring points before suffering the nonleague loss. well, but defensively we weren't. But they fig"Overall I thought we were a little slug- ured it out." gish," Kent Wieber said. "We've been on — Reporter: 541-383-0375, Christmas break and we haven't played a eoller@bendbulletirt.com.
ence defeat. Alysha Fritz led the fourth-place team from Culver (0-2 TRC, 3-7 overall) the tournament's other pool, with 10 points, while Andrea 48-27. Other top wrestlers
Central Christian 11-3 in the third quarter to turn a 21-
Retano and Hannah Lewis
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Gilchrist 17: The host Saints
for the Ravens were Calvin
chipped in with six points Rodman (138 pounds), Clay 19 halftime lead to a 32-22 apiece. Hansen (145) and Colt Chrisadvantage. T rinity L utheran 5 1 , tiansen (182), all with records of 4-1.
PREP SCOREBOARD Girls basketball Sisters HolidayTottrttament Banks 44, Sisters 38
Banks(44) — Mary Schorn 10,Bunn8, Van-
Domele8, tt Hilger7, Sliska4, Birr 3,Soperz Totals 17 10-20 44.
Western Mennonite (60) —Individual scoring
not availableTotal . s 249-15 60. Culver 4 2 13 9 — 28 Western Mennonite 23 24 5 8 — 60 Three-poingoal t s— Culver: Fritz,Martinez;Western Mennonite:Fahndrich, Hull, Christenson.
Sisters (38) — Jacobie Petterson 11,Spear8,
All-stars
Burns. The dual meet — in which wrestler will
Continued from C1 compete in freestyle, rather than the folkstyle "It's more than just a competition," says typical of high school wrestling — is schedDavis, who as a graduated-senior wrestler uled to begin at 6:30 p.m. Admission is $6 for at BendHigh competed on the 1973 Oregon adults and $4 for students. All proceeds go team that went to Japan and later coached the to the RCWOR's Oregon College Wrestling Cuba- and Puerto Rico-bound Oregon group Start-Up Fund, which helps restore college of 1988. "That's a huge part of it, but it's a wrestling programs in Oregon. "The state of Oregon, in 1973, there were chanceforthese young men tosee ourcountry and hopefully see the best of our country 25 colleges that had wrestling," says Davis, and see the best of Central Oregon." who wrestled collegiately in the 1970s at the The Central Oregon All-Stars include University of Oregon, which in 2007 cut its Crook County's Trayton Libolt (110 pounds), wrestling program. "That's junior colleges, Kurt Mode (121), Grayson Munn (132), Tyler small four-year colleges, and the big Division I Berger (145), Collbran Meeker (145), Brendan schools. We had 25. Now, we have five.... Our Harkey (163), Clark Woodward (163), Trev- goal as Restore College Wrestling is to bring or Rasmussen (211), Gunnar Robirts (211) back some ofthese college programs and and Jason Williams (265); Redmond High's maintain the ones that we do have and creAustin Rystedt (121), Mitch Willett (132) and ate opportunity for some of our high school John Hickey (132); Madras' Ian Oppenlander athletes to continue on and wrestle after high (110) and Samuel Flores (132); Culver's Clay school." McClure (145); Bend High's Michael Hage— Reporter: 541-383-0307, man (211); and Seth Nonnenmacher (185) of glucas@bendbulletin.com.
NHL ROUNDUP
DefenseleadsLightning to victory over Flames
Mann 6,Hensort5, Moore4, Horner ZTotals 14 9-11 38. Banks 10 7 11 16 — 44 Sisters 11 7 7 13 — 38 Three-poingoal t s—Banks:none; Sisters: Spear.
Class 4A Nottconlerence Crook County51, Ontario 46 Ontario (46) —RileyHelmick14, Murry8,Wayo 6, Saltureaui 6,AItders 6, Chafeld4,Marlow ZTotals
Class1A MountainValley League
Trinity Lutheran 51, Gilchrist17 Gilchrist (17) — SierraShuey13, Lowell 3, Longbo Iham1.Totals311-2617. Trinity Lutheran (51) — VictoriaSample 12, Eidler10, K.Murphy9, Clitt 6, Spencer6, Cowan 5, Martin 2, M. Murphyt. Totals243-1051. Gilchrist 6 2 5 4 — 17 Trini tyLutheran 15 11 15 10 — 51 Three-poingoal t s— none.
16 10-25 46.
Class1A Nonconferettce Sorlh Lake 31, CentralChristian11 central chrisrtan(11) — Abigail Hannay5, McAfee4, Biever2. Totals 51-611. crookcottnir 14 1 6 11 10 — 51 NorthLake(3I) —KarrahDavidsont0, Murphy Three-pointgoals—Ontario: Helmick4; CrookCoun- 9, Stockton 6, Harris 2, Hand2,ThomasZ Totals14 ty: none. 3-6 31. c entralchrisrtan 3 6 2 0 — 1 1 Class 4A 6 8 9 8 — 31 NorthLake Nonconterence Three-pointgoals —Central Christian: none;North NorlhMarion32, LaPine27 Lake:none. Sorlh Marion (32) —Kiley Florez9, Carlie Donnelly 9,Oliver 8, Meussen4, Henry ZTotals 13 4-6 32. Boys basketball La Pine(27) —KatieMickel 12, Boent0, Glenn Class 4A 3, Pierce Z Totals122-427. Sislers HolidayTournament N orthlarion 8 10 6 8 — 3 2 Baker (48) — Kline13,Band11, Srack9, LeeLa Pine 1 3 2 6 6 — 2 7 master5,Smith 3, Hays2.Totals1219-2648. Three-pointgoals—North Marion: Florez2; LaPine: Sisters (58) —CortrtorSchaab21, Halrel 11, Glenn. Gill 9, Martinez 8, Lewis7, Kaping2. Totals1624-
Crook County (51) — Kimme r Severance 26,
Smith 9, Malott 6, Ovens3, Bannon3, Martin 2, Thomas 2.Totals 1521-35 51. Ontario 7 12 10 17 — 46
Class 2A Tri-River Conterettce Western Mennonite60, Culver28 Culver(28) —AlyshaFritz10, Retarto6, Lewis6, Slaght 3, Martinez3.Totals106-11 28.
3z
Baker 9 4 10 25 — 48 Sislers 14 11 11 22 — 58 Three-poingoal t s:Notavailable.
Mismatches
Southern, whichbeat Champion Baptist 90-36 last season, set an NCAA record when it opened
Continued from C1
a 44-0 lead on Monday. Champion Baptist did not score until there was 5:10 left in the first half,
Utah and Charleston Southern each show up
and the Tigers made only three of 44 field-goal
Class 4A Nottconference Norlh Marion 65, LaPine51 Norlh Marion(65) —Kerry Cook25, Wiliamson12,Breshearst1, Umbenhower 6, Scartlan 3,Celastegui 2,CrumleyZTotals 268-14 65. La Pine (51) — TaylorBrowrtt9, Wieber11, Turnsplenty10,Smith6, Taylor 4, Ramirezt. Totals 14 13-20 51.
NorlhMarion 20 7 2 2 16 — 65 La Pine 14 11 13 13 — 51 Three-point goals — North Marion:Williamson, Scanlan,Cook;LaPine:Brown5, Turnsplenty.
Class 2A Tri-River Conference Weslern Mennonite 68,Cttlver 29 Culver (29) —JohnSlaght11, Knepp 6, Sledge 4, Bogart3, McDonald3, Mueller z Totals115-10 29. Western Mennonite(68) —Roth17,Armold9, Wisemen9,Pack8, Martirtez6, Dyer6,Gray5,Hess5, Louthan 2, Dejongt. Totals 29 8-1268. Culver 4 14 8 9 — 2 9 WesternMennonite 17 24 12 15 — 68 Three-point goals — Culver: Bogart, McDonald; westernMennonite: Rothz Class1A
sottcottference North Lake40, Central Christian 28
Central Christian (28) — CalebStewart11, Biever 8,Reynolds7, A. Bristow z Totals 11 4-6 28. NorthLake(40) —EthanMurphy15, McCord6, Henkel 6,Libolt 5, Gilbert5, Shumway2, McElhaton 1.Totals15 8-1340. C entral Christian 11 8 3 6 — 28 NorlhLake 9 12 11 8 — 40 Three-poingoal t s—Central Christian; Biever,Reynolds; NorthLake:Murphy, Gilbert.
MEN'5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Baylor takes easy victory
twice on the blowout ledger. The Utes own an 84-pointer against The Evergreen State College (Wash.) and a 73-pointer against St. Katherine (Calif). Charleston Southern beat St. Andrews Presbyterian (N.C.) by 82 points and Johnson University (Tenn.) by 79. Those Fightin' Firebirds of St. Katherine also lost by 83 to nationally ranked San Diego
not practice in the two weeks before the game
State the night before losing at Utah, and by 71 to Weber State. Coach Scott Mitchell, whose
because Capici wanted his players to be home with their families over Christmas break. The
WACO, Texas — Reserve Taurean Prince scored 12 of his 15 points in the first half,
attempts while earning $4,000 for their trouble. The 104-point margin did not threaten the
NCAA record of 117, set by Long Island University against Medgar Evers in 1997. Champion Baptist's players receive no scholarships, and most work full time. The team did
The Associated Press
went zero for 5 with the man
CALGARY, A l berta Ben Bishop made 19 saves in his fourth shutout of the sea-
advantage. Both goals in the second period came less than 10
son, sending the Tampa Bay Lightning to a 2-0 victory over the Calgary Flames on Friday night. Rookie forwards Ondrej
seconds after minor penal-
program is in its first season, is anything but
team took an eight-hour bus ride to Baton Rouge
leading No. 9 Baylor to an
ties to veteran Calgary for-
embarrassed.
andplayed two hours later. Southern, meanwhile, was playing its last
80-50 victory over Savan-
Palat and Nikita Kucherov
ward Mike Cammalleri had
expired. Also on Friday: Blackhawks 5, Devils 3:
scored for the Lightning, who NEWARK, N.J. — Patrick have gone 7-1-1 in their past Sharp scored three goals nine games to move within and Chicago avoided a rare two points of first-place Bos- second straight loss with a ton in the Atlantic Division.
Calgary ended its fivegame homestand with four straight losses in regulation. Since the Christmas break, the Flames have one goalby rookie Sean Monahan — in the past 245 minutes, 5 seconds.
The Flames got defenseman Dennis Wideman
victory over New Jersey.
Penguins 5, Rangers 2: PITTSBURGH —
S i d n ey
Crosby scored his 23rd goal and added two assists as Pittsburgh beat New York for its 11th straight home wm.
Ducks 5, Oilers 2: ANAHEIM, Calif. — Ben Lovejoy
scored two goals in the first
back after he missed 16 period, Jonas Hiller made 16 games with a broken hand. saves in his 10th consecutive
But even with his presence victory and Anaheim beat on the power play, Calgary Edmonton.
"I'd play Duke if I could," he said, "but I don't know what they would get out of beating up on game before its Southwestern Athletic Conferus e ence opener, and Jaguars coach Roman Banks Unaccredited St. Katherine opened three wanted to polish up some areas in which he years ago with 13 students and shares space in thought his team was deficient. He played his a San Diego-area office building with ayoga stu- starters 20, 22, 24, 27 and 29 minutes in the dio and optometrist. Mitchell's day job is as an 40-minutegame. account executive for YP.com, the online yellow Banks was criticized for letting the game get pages. He recruitedoneofhisplayers,a 34-year- so far out of hand, but Capici said he had no old freshman, after he saw him working out at a complaints. Southern athletic director William 24 Hour Fitness. Broussard said game officials declined when St. Katherine athletic director Mike Scolinos they were asked to use a running clock in the said the school has applied to join the NAIA for second half. "So do you ask your players to miss shots or 2014-15, and the hope is to be an NCAA Division I member in 10 years. deliberately turn the ball over?" Broussard said. "Some people would call that ridiculous," he "No specific action was taken on our part to said. "As the saying goes, if you don't dream it, cause embarrassment. At the same time, it's unyou're not going to do it, and that's our goal." fortunate it happened." Champion Baptist has no visions of granCapici said Banks called him Wednesday to deur. The Tigers are content in the Association make sure he was not mad about the outcome. of Christian Collegiate Athletics, where they Before hanging up, Banks asked Capici if he have won three national championships in seven wanted to line up a game next season. "Would I do it again?" Capici said."Yeah." years.
The Associated Press
nah State on Friday night. Cory Jefferson had 13 points for Baylor (12-1), and Isaiah Austin and Rico Gathers each scored 11 as Baylor won its 12th consec-
utivehome game. Joshua M o n tgomery made four 3-pointers and
scored 14 of his 15 points in the first half for Savannah State (2-12). Baylor improved to 25-9 in January since 2009-10.
Both teams struggled after halftime. Baylor scored just five points in the first 5 minutes. Savannah State
was held scoreless until Jeremiah Hill's jumper in the lane with 14:12 left. At
that point, Baylor held a 5132 lead.
C5 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014
16,489.9 "9
+'
4,131.91
Todap
1,640.0 "
A rise in petroleum exports is helping to narrow the U.S. trade
10 YRTNOTE ~ 3.00% ~
1,831.37
1,880 "
Shrinking deficit
"
16,600"
MtP 500 "
"
Close: 1,831.37
"
Change: -0.61 (flat)
1,800 " ""' 10 DAYS " "
'
"
The trade deficit fell in October to $40.6 billion, with the nation's energy boom helping to lift overall exports to an all-time high of $192.7 billion. Economists expect the Commerce Department will report Tuesday that the trade gap shrank again in November. A smaller trade deficit can boost economic growth.
A
S
0
1,750 " 1,700 "
17,000 " 16,500"
"
15,000 "
1,600
N
.
StoryStocks
D
General Motors
GM Close:$39.57 V-1.38 or -3.4% The autcmaker said its U.S. sales fell 6 percent in December as its tcp-selling pickup truck came under pressure from competition. $45 40
14 500
HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. 16518.74 16439.30 16469.99 +28.64 DOW Trans. 7356.20 7297.20 7327.37 +39.50 DOW Util. 483.72 479.05 481.40 -1.48 NYSE Comp. 10323.28 10279.93 10296.77 +1 3.35 NASDAQ 4152.96 4124.96 4131.91 -11.16 S&P 500 1838.24 1829.13 1831.37 -0.61 S&P 400 1336.14 1329.32 1333.78 + 5 .55 Wilshire 5000 19602.58 19507.61 19541.73 + 7 .89 Russell 2000 1157.76 1151.21 1156.09 + 5 .34
%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD 40.17% L L -0.64% -0.99% 40.54% L L -0.31% L -1.87% -1.00% 40.13% L L -0.27% L L -1.07% -0.03% L L -0.92% -0.65% 40.42% L L 40.04% L L -0.83% -0.65% 40.47% L L
DOW
NYSE NASD
.20
"
D O N 52-week range $26.19~ $4 1.65
Vcl.:41.4m (1.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$54.96b
NorthwestStocks est. -39.8
2013
Source: FactSet
Eye on consumers The Federal Reserve issues a report Wednesday on how much credit U.S. consumers took on in November. Consumers boosted their borrowing in October by $18.2 billion to a seasonally adjusted $3.08 trillion. The increase was driven by growth in auto and student loans, as well as the biggest rise in credit card debt in five months.
HOLIDAY j SALE
Jobless rate report Employers have added an average of 200,000 jobs a month in the past four months, a big improvement from the summer. Those gainshave helped cutthe national unemployment rate in November to 7 percent, a five-year low. Economists anticipate that data out on Friday will show the nation's jobless rate held steady in December.
NAME
Q P ~ •
Unemployment rate 7.4
est.
7.2
7.0%
7.0
Delta Air LineS (DAL) F
6.6
Price-earnings ratio (Baeed on trailing 12 month results):12 1-YR return:134% 3-YR *: 33% 5-YR *: 19%
A
S
0
N
D
Source: FactSet
+1.6 - 0.8 +5.4 +1.2 0.8 .
W W V L V L V
V V
v V W V W V L V W T V V
v V
v V W V W V W V W
.
.
+67 . 5 80 5 1 2 0. 8 0 +18.3 4 2 9 1 8 1 . 2 2 +34 . 1 124610 22 0 .04 +1 44.6 40 38 0.72f +79 . 8 3 0 86 24 2 . 92f -23.8 19 5 +48.0 1 3 1 2 3 0 .44f +4 9.0 9 7 28 1. 0 0 f +17.3 1273 2 5 1 . 24 +1 2 5.1 3 5 cc 425.6 7 2 5 1 9 0 . 3 6 +87. 9 12604 11 0 . 5 8
AP
52-WEEK RANGE
rida y 's close: $29.23
Total returns through Jan. 3
AmdFocus
$12
Market value:$25.0 billion *Annualized
Source: FactSet
SelectedMutualFunds FAMILY
PE: 13.4 Yield:...
D 0 N 52-week range $5.49~ $ 11.47
Vcl2 25.5m (1.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$39.09 b
P E: . . . Yield: ...
22
20 0
N
O
D
52-week range $1.26~
Vclc54.8m (2.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $5.01 b
N
D
52-week range $6 .15 $14.67 PE: 1 6 .1 Vcl2 2.5m (1.9x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$4.11 b
La-Z-Boy
LZB Close:$30.97L0.79 or 2.6% A Raymond James analystraised his price target on the furniture seller's stock tc $34.50 from $29 saying sales may rise. $35
$23.74 PE:37.6 Yield: ...
Delta Air Lines DAL Close:$29.23 L1.53 or 5.5% The airline said that a key measure of revenue rose a bigger-than-expected 10 percent in December because of the late Thanksgiving. $30 28
30
25 20
0
N
D
0
52-week range
N
D
52-week range
$14.76 $31.22 $12.55 $29.44 Vcl.: 523.4k (1.3x avg.) PE: 27.2 Vclc19.1m (1.5x avg.) P E: 1 2 .1 Mkt. Cap:$1.63 b Yie l d: 0.8% Mkt. Cap:$25.01 b Yie l d: 0.8%
Finisar
FNSR Close:$23.72%0.46 or 2.0% A Raymond James analystupgraded the optic component supplier's shares tc a "Strong Buy" on pcssible higher demand for its products $30
Real Goods Solar RSOL Close:$3.35 %0.16 or 5.0% The company said that it was working with solar energy company BlueWave Capital tc build four solar projects in Massachusetts. $5
25
4
20 0 N D 0 N D 52-week range 52-week range $12.17~ $2 6.66 $6.61 ~ $ 7.17 Vol.:3.1m (1.2x avg.) P E: 43 . 1 Vol28.9m (2.3x avg.) P E: .. . Mkt. Cap:$2.28 b Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$121.73 m Yield : ...
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
SU
HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 3 percent Friday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
29
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 2 4.27 0.6 +19.2 +12.5+14.0 A A A CaplncBuA m 57.93 -.66 1.1 +12.5 +9.2+11.1 C A C CpWldGrlA m 44.78 -.67 1.2 +21.6 +10.4+13.6 C C D EurPacGrA m 48.47 -.68 1.2 +17.3 +6.6+12.7 C C 8 BkofAm 1246101 16.41 +.31 FnlnvA m 51. 4 8 - .64 0.9 +27.6 +14.1+17.1 C C 8 iShEMkts 811126 40.12 -.07 GrthAmA m 42.60 -.67 0.9 +29.7 +14.6+17.3 C C C S&P500ETF 724491 182.89 -.04 Janus EatrprsT JAENX IncAmerA m 20.49 +.61 0.8 +15.9 +11.3+13.8 8 A A PlugPowrh 618338 2.61 +.28 InvCoAmA m 36.30 -.69 1.1 +28.1 +13.8+15.3 C C D SiriusXM 533846 3.57 + .07 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m37.26 +.63 0.8 +23.8 +11.7+16.2 8 8 8 RiteAid 528056 5.47 + .43 WAMutlnvA m39.10 +.62 0.8 +28.2 +16.1+15.6 C A C FordM 457463 15.51 +.07 VangEmg 444538 39.65 -.05 Dodge & Cox I ncome 13. 5 5 ... + 0 . 1 + 0.9 +4.5 +7.2 A 8 8 GenMotors 413795 39.57 -1.38 IntlStk 42.42 + . 6 1 -1.4 +22.7 +7.9+15.6 A A A Facebook 376845 54.56 -.15 Stock 167.5 0 + .25 -0.8 +36.0 +17.2+18.6 A A A Fidelity Contra 95.20 - . 6 9 -1.0 +29.9 +15.2+17.9 C 8 C Gainers GrowCo 1 1 8 .74 -.29-1.0 +33.0 +17.0+21.8 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 49.34 +.22 -0.2 +32.2 +16.2+21.1 B A 8 Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg 64.90 -.62-0.9 +28.1 +15.3+17.0 C 8 8 ChinaNRes 10.80 +5.80 +116.0 $-15.89 + 38.6 500ldxlostl 64 . 90 -.62 -0.9 + 28.2 N A N A C FireEye n 57.02 «C RadioOneD 5.10 +1.04 + 2 5.6 62 FraakTemp-Frank li o IncomeC x 2.42-.61 -0.8 +11.5 +9.1+14.2 A A A Radio0ne 5.08 +1.01 + 2 4.9 IncomeA x 2.4 0 -. 6 1 -0.4 +12.2 +9.8+14.9 A A A Pixelwrks 5.82 +1.05 + 22.0 Intl I Co Oakmark 26.63 -.63 -1.1 +25.7 +12.2 +20.1 A A A ChiAutL rsh 4.32 +.69 + 1 9.0 RisDivA m 19 . 54 +.61 -0.9 +23.4 +13.1+13.7 E D E Moroingeiar OwnershipZone™ Oppeoheimer LCA Vis 4.65 +.71 + 1 8.0 RisDivB m 1 7.49 +.61 -0.9 +22.3 +12.1+12.7 E D E ChiFn0nl 6.51 +.98 + 1 7.7 OeFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 17.38 +.61 -0.9 +22.4 +12.2+12.8 E D E ChyronH 2.49 +.35 + 1 6.4 average of stock holdings SmMidValA m43.97 +.13 -0.9 +33.8 +11.2+18.4 8 E D PingtanM 3.49 +.49 + 1 6.2 • Represents 75% ollund's stock holdings SmMidValB m 37.66 +.11 - 0.9 +32.6 +10.2+17.4 8 E E Losers CATEGORY Mid-Cap Growth T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.57 +.63 -0.8 +25.8 +14.0+16.0 D C 8 NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR GrowStk 51.99 -.16 -1.1 +34.5 +17.0+21.3 A A A RATING™ * ** * c t HealthSci 57.60 +.68 -0.3 +46.7 +29.7+27.2 8 A A -2.02 -22.8 RF Inds 6.84 Dolan pfB 12.30 -2.20 -15.2 ASSETS $1,131 million Vanguard 500Adml 168.82 -.66 -0.9 +28.1 +15.4+17.0 C 8 8 -.60 -14.6 ChelseaTh 3.50 500lnv 168.82 -.66 -0.9 +28.0 +15.2+16.9 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 0.96% InovioPhm 2.50 -.37 -12.9 CapOp 45.96 +.65 -0.5 +39.0 +16.0+20.3 A A A MANAGER Brian Demai n -2.05 -12.8 Trovag un 14.00 Eqlnc 29.46 +.62 -1.0 +26.1 +17.1+16.2 D A 8 SINCE 2007-11-01 IntlStkldxAdm 27.59 -.62 -1.5 +12.1 +4.4 NA E E RETURNS 3-MO +7.6 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 29.82 +.11 -0.6 +37.6 +18.6+21.5 A A B YTO -0.6 -0.6 +13.8 +9.0+12.2 A A B TgtRe2020 26.95 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +26.6 Tgtet2025 15.65 +.61 -0.6 +15.9 +9.6+13.0 8 8 C Paris 4,247.65 + 20.37 + A S 3-YR ANNL +14.1 TotBdAdml 10.57 +0.1 -1.6 +3.2 +4.5 D D E London 6,730.67 +12.76 + . 19 5-YR-ANNL +21.0 Totlntl 16.50 -.61 -1.5 +12.1 +4.4+11.2 E E C Frankfurt 9,435.15 +35.11 + . 37 TotStlAdm 46.29 +.62 -0.9 +29.3 +15.5+17.9 8 8 A Hong Kong22,81 7.28 -522.77 -2.24 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT -.29 Verisk Aoalytics, Ioc. TotStldx 46.28 +.62 -0.8 +29.1 +15.3+17.8 8 8 A Mexico 42,064.97 -1 23.48 3 Milan 19,112.65 +1 83.02 +.97 USGro 28.43 -.64 -0.9 +31.2 +16.0+18.2 8 8 C Tokyo 16,291.31 +112.37 + . 69 Sensata Technologies Holding N.V. 2.75 Welltn 37.73 +.62 -0.6 +17.5 +11.4+13.2 8 A 8 2.7 Stockholm 1,325.12 + .77 + . 06 Dresser-RandGroup, Inc. Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -17.80 -.33 Varian Medical Systems, Inc. 2.55 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,350.10 Zurich 8,270.46 +67.48 + . 82 TE Coimectivity Ltd 2.49 redemption fee.Source: Morntngstar.
This fund rose more than 30 percent in 2013, but trailed 80 Marhetsummary percent of its peers; Morningstar Most Active notes its relative returns were NAME VOL (60s) LAST CHG previously quite consistent. A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP
10
RAD WhiteWave Foods w wAV Close:$5.47%0.43 or 8.5% Close:$23.68 A1.11 or 4.9% The drugstore chain said that sales The maker of Silk soy milk and at stores open at least a year grew Land O'Lakes creamers closed its nearly 3 percent during the month of $600 million acquisition of organic December. food maker Earthbound Farm. $7 $24
-1.8 -0.3 -1.5 +0.7 - 3.6 +1.3 +1. 1 +15.0 16 89 0.24 -0.7 +24.8 2571 3 14 0 .90 -0.7 +53.8 5542 1 5 0 . 22 -1.1 +51.3 2786 1 3 0 .66f - 1.6 +33.7 5 5 4 7 7 -0.9 -7.4 221 7 11 -1.7 +41.3 3 3 2 4 6 0 .71f - 1.7 +37.5 4 9 5 2 7 0 . 1 8 -1.3 +38.1 29945 14 1 . 12 -0.8 +52.6 2756 2 7 0 .96f +0.6 +17. 8 80 5 17 1. 2 0 -1.5 -2.0 10 2 2 0 1 .84f -0.9 +29.4 1060 19 0.80a -1 6 +714 43 dd - 0.4 + 5 . 8 6 9 9 2 9 1 . 7 6 - 0.6 +37.6 3 7 0 2 5 0 . 1 2 -0.8 +81.1 2381 18 0 . 80 - 1.8 + 6 . 1 2 7 2 d d 0 . 7 5 - 0.4 +17.7 4 0 3 2 5 2 . 00 -1.7 +76.6 1 1 1 1 4 1 . 10f -1.8 +41.9 3241 34 1.04f -0.2 +62.3 1338 dd -2.2 +55.4 8 2 6 2 0 0.60a -0.8 + 2 3.7 4 430 1 3 0 . 9 2 - 0.3 +37.0 4 3 0 1 6 0 . 40 -0.1 +31.7 14421 12 1 . 20 -0.7 +10.1 1928 2 7 0 . 88
Delta Air Lines was one of last Qemppny prices. Delta surged 131.4 year's best stocks, and it rose $potiight percent last year, more than again on Friday after reporting quadruple the rise of the encouraging revenue for December. Sta n dard 8 Poor's 500 index. Stocks across the airline industry On Friday, Delta said that a key were long notorious for disappointing me a sure of its revenue rose 10 investors: Losses were common, and p e r cent in December from a year ago so were bankruptcy filings. Too many T h a t's better than the 7 percent to 9 airlines were chasing after customers, p e rcent increase that Delta was which led to lower fares. Fuel prices, for e casting a month ago. The airline meanwhile, rose with the price of oil. cre d ited strong travel around ThanksBut several big mergers across the g i v ing. The measure looks at how industry mean the surviving airlines much revenue the airline gets from have more power to hold the line on fly i ng one seat one mile.
6.8
6.4 J
L V L L L +
Dividend Footnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c -Liquidating dividend. 5 -Amount declared or paid inlast12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent 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 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittuticn date. PE Footnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
h
Close:$9.94 V-0.46 or -4.4% A Stifel analyst downgraded the wireless carrier'e stock rating on doubts it will be able to pull off a takeover of rival T-Mobile. $15
Rite Aid
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Alaska Air Group ALK 42.63 ~ 78.53 74 . 5 2 +1.34 +1.8 L L Avista Corp A VA 23.52 ~ 29.26 27.9 6 +. 1 1 +0 .4 V L Bank of America B A C 1 0 .98 — o 16.16 16.41 + .31 +1.9 L L L Barrett Business BB S I 3 7.40 — o 98.00 93.82 -.88 -0.9 L Boeing Co BA 7 2 .68 ~ 142. 0 0 13 7.62 + . 95 +0.7 L L Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .85 ~ 7.18 5.23 +. 0 4 +0.8 L L Columbia Bokg C O L B 17.69 tt - 28.37 27.60 -.20 -0.7 W L Columbia Sportswear COLM 47.72 — o 79.48 78 .48 + . 1 7 +0.2 W L Costco Wholesale CO ST 96.51 ~ 126.1 2 11 7.29 -.52 -0.4 V W C raft Brew Alliance BREW 6.15 ~ 18.70 16. 5 3 +. 1 4 +0.9 L L FLIR Systems F LIR 21.81 ~ 33.82 2 9. 6 2 -.09 -0.3 V W HewlettPacKard H P Q 13 . 60 — o 28.70 28 .34 + . 6 8 +2.5 L L Home FederalBocp ID HOME 10.84 ~ 1 6.03 15.66 +.10+0.7 L W L Intel Corp INTC 20.10 — o 26.04 25 .78 -.01 . . . L L Keycorp K EY 8 .29 ~ 13.55 13. 3 2 +. 0 3 +0.2 V L Kroger Co K R 2 5 .20 ~ 43.85 3 9. 1 0 -.18 -0.5 V V Lattice Semi LSCC 3.82 ~ 5.77 5.40 ... ... L w LA Pacific LPX 14.51 ty— 22. 5 5 18 . 34 + . 0 9 +0 .5 V L MDU Resources MDU 20 .73 — o 30.97 30 .04 + . 0 5 +0.2 W L MentorGraphics M EN T 13.21 — o 24.31 23 .65 -.05 -0.2 V L Microsoft Corp MSF T 2 6.28 t t- 38.9 8 36 . 91 -.25 -0.7 W W Nike Ioc 8 NKE 50.59 — o 80.26 78.03 -.21 -0.3 V V NordstromInc JWN 52.07 t t- 63.7 2 62. 1 7 + . 2 2 + 0 .4 L L Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ 46.55 42.1 8 +. 0 4 +0 .1 V L PaccarIoc PCAR 44.22 — o 60.00 58.63 + . 12 +0.2 L L Planar Systms P LNR 132 ~ 2 75 2 50 -.02 -08 T W Plum Creek P CL 42.95 ~ 54.62 46. 3 4 +. 0 5 +0.1 V L Prec Castparts PCP 180.06 — o 27 1 .99267.79 +2.41 +0.9 V L Safeway Ioc S WY 17.08 ~ 36.90 3 2. 3 1 -.15 -0.5 v w Schoitzer Steel S C HN 23.07 ~ 33. 32 32.09 -.37 -1.1 L L Sherwin Wms SHW 150.32 ~ 195. 3 2 182.80 + .39 +0.2 L w Staocorp Focl S FG 35.83 ~ 66.80 6 5. 1 5 -.19 -0.3 V L Starbocks Cp SBUX 52.39 t t- 82.5 0 76 . 9 5 -.22 -0.3 W W Triquiot Semi TQNT 4.31 ~ 8.98 8.32 +. 0 1 + 0.1 L L Umpqua Holdings UMP Q 11.45 t t- 19.6 5 18 . 72 + . 0 6 +0.3 W L US Baocorp USB 31.51 — o 40.83 40 .06 + . 17 +0.4 V L WashingtonFedl WAF D 15.79 — o 24.00 23 .21 + . 23 +1 .0 W W WellsFargo & Co W FC 3 3 .71 — o 45.64 45 .34 + . 3 2 +0.7 V L Weyerhaeuser WY 2 6.38 ~ 33.24 31 . 3 4 + . 0 7 +0.2 L L
Sprint
35
.30 .40
- .OOSS
The Standard & Poor's 500 index was nearly flat Friday, pushing the index to its first weekly loss in the last three. Seven of the 10 sectors that make up the S&P 500 fell on Friday. Telecommunications stocks had the steepest declines after several analysts raised skepticism about a possible merger deal between Sprint and T-Mobile. Rumors about a combination had helped to lift the stocks earlier. Energy stocks, meanwhile, fell with the price of oil. Crude settled below $94 per barrel for the first time in a month amid signs that supplies of oil and petroleum products are healthy. Financial stocks were among the few to mark gains.
"
.
-1' .4 8 '" " '/ 1.3598
Close: 16,469.99 Change: 28.64 (0.2%) .
"
$93.96
Dow Jones industrials
15,500
"
Vol. (in mil.) 2,734 1,633 Pvs. Volume 3,007 1,696 Advanced 1988 1580 Declined 1 100 9 6 4 New Highs 96 114 New Lows 13 4
-10
"
16,000 "
"
1,650.
N
"
' """'" /
+.Os
$20.18
16,120 ' ""'"10 DAYS
'
StocksRecap
Trade (goods and services) In billions of dollars J
1,800 "
GOLD $1,238.40 ~
01
"
1.636E+4 "
1,850
gap.
J
+
S&PBOO
NASDAQ ~ -11.16
Saturday, January 4, 2014
0
O» Tc look upindividual stocks, gotc bendbugetin.ccm/business.Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 6 .06 ... . 0 8 .0 9 -0.01
52-wk T-bill
.11
.11
...
~
2-year T-note . 4 0 .38 + 0 .02 5-year T-note 1.74 1.72 +0.02 10-year T-note 3.00 2.99 +0.01 30-year T-bond 3.93 3.92 +0.01 V
BONDS
V T
L L L
.07 .11 .13
L L L L
L .27 L .82 L 1.91 L 3.11
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.74 3.73 +0.01 W L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.15 5.14 +0.01 L L
L L
2.69 4.10
Barclays USAggregate 2.50 2.48+0.02
YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
L L 1.79 w w 5.96 M oodys AAA Corp Idx 4.55 4.57 -0.02 w w w 3. 7 7 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.92 1.89 +0.03 L L L 1.07 Barclays US Corp 3.26 3.26 . . . W L W 2.7 4
Commodities
FUELS
PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.62 5.64 -0.02 w RATE FUNDS
Crude fell below $94 per barrel to its lowest settlement price in a month amid signs that supplies of oil and petroleum products are ample. Natural gas also fell.
Foreign Exchange The dollar was mixed against other major currencies. It barely moved against the
Japanese yen, rose modestly against the euro and fell against the Canadian dollar.
55Q QD
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -4.5 93.96 95.44 -1.55 2.00 1.98 + 0.61 + 4 . 8 2.94 2.99 -1.58 -4.5 + 1.8 4.30 4.32 - 0.39 2.65 2.70 -1.71 -4.9
CLOSE PVS. 1238.40 1225.00 20.18 20.10 1411.50 1401.90 3.41 3.43 730.30 729.35
%CH. + 1.09 + 0.42 + 0.68 -0.74 + 0.13
%YTD + 3 .0 + 4 .4 + 3 .0 -1.0 + 1 .8
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.36 1.36 + 0.50 + 1 . 3 Coffee (Ib) 1.16 1.11 + 4.44 + 5 . 1 Corn (bu) 4.24 4.21 + 0.71 + 0 . 4 -2.0 Cotton (Ib) 0.83 0.84 -1.31 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 356.80 353.30 +0.99 -0.9 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.39 1.37 + 1.50 + 1 . 6 Soybeans (bu) 12.89 12.87 +0.17 -1.8 Wheat(bu) 6.06 5.97 + 1.47 + 0 . 1 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6424 +.0001 +.01% 1.6107 Canadian Dollar 1.0 6 16 -.0046 -.43% . 9 874 USD per Euro 1.3598 -.0055 -.40% 1.3062 -.03 -.03% 8 7 .18 JapaneseYen 104.66 Mexican Peso 13. 0898 -.0717 -.55% 12.7726 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5084 +.0175 +.50% 3.7590 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1472 -.0277 -.45% 5.5801 South African Rand 10.6473 -.0429 -.40% 8.5755 Swedish Krona 6.5 2 0 3 + .0043 +.07% 6.5263 Swiss Franc .9048 +.0040 +.44% . 9 260 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1146 -.0081 -.73% . 9544 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.0508 -.0001 -.00% 6.2335 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7544 +.0003 +.00% 7.7509 Indian Rupee 62.195 -.030 -.05% 54.485 Singapore Dollar 1.2662 -.001 5 -.12% 1.2248 South KoreanWon 1055.52 +4.82 +.46% 1063.87 Taiwan Dollar 2 9.97 + . 0 2 +.07% 2 9.01
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014
BRIEFING
'Benefit' business initiated in Oregon
BEND
Real estate license revoked The Oregon RealEstate Agency hasrevoked a Madras woman's license to managerental property. Ardith Chancellor agreed to not contest the revocation, which the agency ordered based on allegations she mismanaged rent payments and security deposits, according to a final order in October. According to the agency, which licenses and regulates real estate brokers in Oregon, Chancellor failed to hold $90,784 in rent and security deposits in a trust account and shorted one property owner $10,000 in rent payments. Shealso reportedly used trust fund accounts on repairs without authorization, failed to collect rent on a regular basis andallowed tenants to remain in units without paying rent, according to an agency letter to Chancellor dated Aug. 8.The agency listed the revocation in the December edition of the Oregon Real Estate News-Journal, which was distributed Tuesday. Chancellor conducted business as Madras Property Management, 83 S.W. KSt. She agreed to waive an agency review of her license revocation. She may not reapply for a real estate license in Oregon. — Bulletin staff report
,0>8 -" E R S
The Associated Press PORTLAND — Oregon
has become the 20th state to
TUESDAY • Introduction to Finding Funders:Free workshop for nonprofits seeking ways to find funding; 9-11 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541312-7089 or jennyp@ deschuteslibrary.org • Three Things inThree Years: Whatare Bend's Priorities:BendChamber of CommerceTown Hall; registration required; $15 for members, $20 for nonmembers; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive; 541-382-3221, bonnie© bendchamber.org or www. bendchamber.org. • General Certificate in Brewing informational meeting:Learn about the new exam-preparation course to earn the Institute of Brewing andDistilling General Certificate in Brewing; registration required; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. WEDNESDAY • OregonAlcohol Server Permit Training:Meets the Oregon Liquor Control Commission minimum requirements to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; RoundTable Pizza, 1552 N.E.Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining. com. • Business Startup Class:Learn to reach your customers, where to find funding, how much you need to start and legalities involved; registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • Managing Dayto Day Performance: Identify ways to improve productivity in the workplace; registration required; $95; 8 a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeWa y, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Building YourBusiness for Success, TheSmart
allow formation of "benefit"
e
corporations, an alternative business structure that allows
/
companies to consider a wider
range of goals as part of their mission, instead of focusing on shareholders' demands for short-term profits.
At least 29 companies registered Thursday under the new
lawwith Secretary of State Kate Brown, who held a cele-
S
r
bration for them.
r
Vr
L
Among the companies were Equilibrium Capital, Neil Kelly Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
of Portland, the Rogue Cream-
ery and Eugene-based Good
Robberson Ford plans to tear down its existing showroom, offices and customer support areas at the dealership on Northeast Third Street in Bend and rebuild them.
Clean Love, which offers sexual health products.
The new status is intended
o erson or o inves in eaers i remo e By Rachael Rees
to help companies that want to make a profitbut"also want to
use theirbusinesses to tadde social and environmental
problems," Brown said. Bill Campbell, co-founder of Equilibrium Capital, cited the flexibility allowed benefit cor-
porations and said they could turn out to be more profitable
inthe long run as theypursue policies that, for example, at-
where it was." A little more than 10,000
The Bulletin
ed a $5 million project to update the 43-year-old Bend dealership and keep up with the company's growth. "We have been looking off and on, for probably the last 10 to 12 years, whether to remodelhere orrelocatethe
WEST ELEVATION
28,500 square-feet. The application for the showroom work was sub-
mitted to the city of Bend on
SOUTH ELEVATION
Dec. 27. Robberson hopes to start demolishing the
A rendering showsthe proposed design of Robberson Ford on
building in the second week
that it would be in our best
Northeast Third Street in Bend.
of March and said construction should take six to seven months. sYou think about Bend in 1971 and Bend in 2014, our
Courtesy of BBT Architects
interest to stay here," said Jeff Robberson, owner of The dealership has been at 2100 N.E. Third St. in Bend
since 1971 when his father, Gordy Robberson built it. At the time, he said, Third
a program where it would pay part of the cost. The project will be handled in three phases and is anticipated to be completed by fall, he said. In total, Rob-
Street ended at the dealership, but over the years
the city has grown around it making it a central and convenient location for his
customers. "Onceyou have thatidentity, reputation and location, I think it's fairly important,"
he said. At the same time he was
exploring remodeling options, Robberson said, Ford Motor Company announced
ATRT courting consumers
tomer supportareas nearly
And we finally made the decision about two years ago
Robberson Ford of Bend and Prineville.
tract better employees.
additional square feet is being added, he said, making the sales showroom, administrative offices and cus-
Robberson Ford has start-
facility to another location.
BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR
> N
berson expects the project to cost about $5 million, and the dealership will remain open throughout construction. The first phase is remodeling Robberson Quicklane, which offers oil changes, battery tests and tire changes. Construction to enlarge the
waiting room began in December and is expected to be completed in mid-February. For about two years, he said, Robberson Ford has been working with the city to
vacate the portion of Northeast Vail Street between its
By Cecilia Kang
customer base has grown
The Washington Post
hugely," he said. sHow we market and sell the vehicles
T-Mobile customers up to $450
city water and sewer lines to
has changed dramatically with the big presence of the
in incentives to switch carriers, the latest salvo in a fierce indus-
Northeast Fourth Street will
Internet market, and the fa-
trybattle that is creating fresh opportunit iesforconsumers.
Ford and Mazda showrooms. He said the process was finalized last month, and excavation to relocate the
AT8rT on Friday offered
begin in February, when the cility is not very customer or Quicklane work is complete. employee friendly. "We've made it work; Then, he said, "the granddaddy" phase — remodeling we're coming off a record the Ford dealership — will year, but it's time to modbegin. ernize and move forward. "This is going to be really We've always believed in painful because my dad dereinvesting in our own busisigned it all himself," he said. ness, and it's time to step up "We're essentially going to and do that and take it to the tear down everything with next leveL" the exception of the service
department and rebuild it
AT8rT said the immediate
offer includes $200 for each T-Mobile wireless phone line and $250fordevicetrade-ins. Customers who switch can choose a no-contract plan or the moreexpensive annual
contracts, which indude bigger data and voice limits. The offer comes ahead of
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.corn
expectations that T-Mobile will soon announce similarplans to steal AT&T and Verizon Wire-
less customers bypickingup their penalty fees for breaking
"We have been looking off and on, for probably the last 10 to 12 years, whether to remodel here or relocate the facility to another location, and we finally made the decision about two years ago that it would be in our best interest to stay here."
long-term contracts.
— Jeff Robberson, owner of Robberson Ford of Bend and Prineville
Approach:Part of the Bend Chamber of Commerce Master Series, which will be presented in three modulesthrough March. First topic: Business Development — Understanding You; registration required; call Bend Chamberfor pricing; 1 p.m.; Smart Sales Solutions Inc., 123S.W. Columbia St., Suite110; 541-382-3221, bonnie© bendchamber.org or www. bendchamber.org. JAN. 10 • CCB LicenseTest Preparation Course:Twoday course approved by the OregonConstruction Contractors Board;fee includes required current edition of the Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual; registration required; $305; 8:30 a.m.6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7290 or ccb© cocc.edU. JAN. 13 • Bend Area Habitat for
Humanity affordable housing information session:For families interested in becoming homeowners; 5:30 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541385-5387 ext. 103 or djohnson©bendhabitat. Ol'g.
• iDS AppDevelopment1 -FoundationSkills: Learn to create your first iOS app; first of three classes, Mondays andWednesdays through Jan. 27; registration required; $169; 6-8 p.m.; COCC - Crook County OpenCampus, 510 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7270. • MTA Server Fundamentals: Preparation class for the MTA exam inservers; Mondays andWednesdays Until Feb. 3; registration required; $299; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Crook County Open Campus,510S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7270.
JAN. 14 • ManagingBusiness Social Media Presence: Learn to handle online marketing through social media and notloseaday doing it; two sessions; registration required; $69; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Serious Success Motivational Series for Women:Final of four parts; topic is Risk vs. Reward; noon-1 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-617-0340, diane@ eloquentexpressions.com or www.facebook.coml events/ l83253898537357/ ?Source=1 • ComputerEssentials for the Workplace:Learnto feel comfortable with the different technology and basic software packages; one of two sessions; registration required; $69; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600
N.W.CollegeWay,Bend; 541-383-7270. • Project Management Information Meeting: Learn about project management skills, which are growing in demand, andbenefits of certification; registration recommended; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; CDCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 54 l-383-7270. • Membership101Driving YourMembership: Hosted by theBend Chamber of Commerce: learn about benefits available through the chamber; registration required; free; 10a.m.; Charles Schwab &Co., 777 N.W.Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-382-3221, shelley©bendchamber.org or www.bendchamber.org. • For the complete calendar, pick UpSunday's Bulletin or visit hendhugetin.cem/hizcal
The sudden effort to woo subscribers highlights the challenge of wireless carriers to growtheirbusinesses in a saturated market.
PEOPLE ONTHEMOVE /
Klaassen
Hunter
• Dan Kiaassenhas joined TheShelter Studio Inc.asassistant project coordinator. Klaassen recently completed his computer aided drafting certificate in Juneand has previously worked as a subcontractor for JCD Design. • Brittaine Hunterhas joined Juniper Insurance asan account manager. Hunter, who hasa Bachelor of Science in aviation management and flight operations, will focus on personal and commercial accounts, as well as marketing for business. • Ellen Mitchenerhas joined the BrokenTop Clubasthe special events
Mellon
Fiehick
and activities coordinator. Mitchener will focus on wedding inquiries, coordination of special events and membership social functions. • Paula illieiionhas joined Better HomesandGarden Northwest Livingasa broker. Mellon haspast expenence in marketing. • Gary A. Ftebtck,
principal broker at John L. Scott in Bend, has achievedemeritus status from the National Association of Realtors. To earn this status, one must hold a membership for a cumulative period of 40 years. Fiebick has been worklng in real estate since1973, and joined John L. Scott in 2007.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Support groups, D2 Religious services, D2-3 Volunteer search, D4 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
Twins rise from the streets to
SPOTLIGHT
Meeting on Bend's future Volcanic Theatre Pub (70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend)will host a meeting Tuesdayonthe topic "What's Brewing In Your Community? Three Things in ThreeYears." The discussionpresentedbythe Bend Chamber ofCommerce — will center aroundthe questions: "What three things are themost important for Bend(to do) in the next threeyears?" and "Where doyou want to see Bendby December 31, 2014, primarily within business andeconomic development?" The meeting runs from 5 to 6:30p.m.and costs $15 toattendfor chamber membersand $20 for nonmembers. Register at bend chamber.org/chamberevents/whats-brewingbends-town-hall-tbd.
Scouts collecting Christmas trees Local BoyScout troops will collect and recycle Christmas trees in Central Oregontoday and Sunday. A $5donationis requested; more iswelcome.Allmoneygoesto the troops for activities, community service projects and replacement of camping andoutdoor gear. Residents of Bend and Redmond donot need to call for pickup. Troops will post door fliers specifying which days they will pick up trees in your neighborhood. Treesshould be cleaned of all decorations and placed in a visible location by the street. Checksshould be madeoutto"BoyScouts of America" or asspecified onthe door flier, placed in a plastic bag and secured to the tree with a rubber band. For more information or special assistance, call the number for yourarea: • Southwest Bend (west of Third Streetand south of Newport/Greenwood): 541-385-3977 • Northwest Bend (west of Third Streetand north of Newport/Greenwood): 541-385-2692 • Northeast Bend(east of Third Streetand north ofGreenwood/U.S.Highway 20): 541-385-2672 • Southeast Bend(east of Third Streetand south ofGreenwood/U.S.Highway 20): 541-385-3942 • La Pine: 541-3853971
• Redmond: 541-3853989 • Sisters: 541-3852640
• Sunriver: 541-3853935.
Girl Scouts tohold openhousetoday Learn moreabout Girl Scouts atan openhouse from10 a.m. to 2p.m. today at BendService Center, 908 N.E.Fourth Street, Suite 101. The public event is for girls, their families and any adults interested in volunteer opportunities. Activities include aGirl Scout song sing-a-thon with NancyStevens, a tandem cyclist, skier, rock climber, entrepreneur andmusicianwho has beenblind since birth and is alifelong Girl Scout. Attendeeswill also have anopportunity to chat with staff andlocal volunteers aboutmembership, volunteerism, the Girl Scout Leadership Experienceandmore. Visit www.girlscoutsosw. org for more information. — From staff reports
normalcy By Colleen Mastony ChicagoTribune
CHICAGO — On a recent morning, twin
brothers Frank and Anthony Nowotnik
sat in a Starbucks in Uptown Chicago, sipping coffee and talking about the past. Anthony was
i tI/l' -
clean-shaven and
4j
dressed in jeans and a black leather jacket. Frank looked more
casual, with stubble across his chin, wearing a brown cap and a puffer jacket. Both smelled of soap
Kristina Barragan, the regional coordinator for the Alzheimer's Association's Central Oregon office, watches as the people in her first Mem-
and mouthwash. The little details about the menfrom their recent
ories in the Making watercolor workshop paint pictures.
haircuts, to their
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
clean clothes — were
not-so-small miracles for the now 45-yearold brothers, though you wouldn't know
it if you didn't know their story.
Three years ago, the men were homeless, living under a bridge at California Avenue and the Ken-
nedy Expressway, and uncertain about almost everything in their lives.
Now, they are "still trying to get rid of the past," said Anthony.
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Margo Alexander puts the finishing touches on a picture of a blue butterfly she painted during a
Memories in the Makingwatercolor workshop.
But they have made great strides since they were profiled in articles that ran in
the Tribune beginning in 2010. And they said they will be forever grateful to the social workers who
helped them escape
• Memories in theMakingworkshop offersthose with Alzheimer's, otherformsof dementia anartistic outlet
the streets. "The ones who met
By Mac McLean •The Bulletin
opying a picture she held in her right hand, Margo Alexander traced the outline of two penguins holding hands onto a piece of heavy art paper taped in front of
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Margo Alexander drew this picture of penguins.
have now lived for more than two years,
her at the Alzheimer's Association's office in downtown Bend. iy~' '
When she finished the draw-
ing, she sat back so Kristina Barragan, the association's regional coordinator for Central Oregon,
could remove it from the table and display it next to several other pictures created last month as
part of the office's Memories in the Making workshop. "I just saw this picture and de-
cided to draw it," Alexander said after she completed the work, which hung next to a picture of a
blue butterfly she painted in an earlier session. SeeMemories/D4
Ifyougo What:The Alzheimer's Association is kicking off its second Memories in theMaking watercolor workshop series next month When:1to2:30p.m.onTuesdaysfrom Feb. 4 through March11
"people aren't giving up either," added Frank. "They really got some patience."
i$, ',t'
The brothers lived on the streets
4tJI4 'jE'"tttl)II<tV'-
for nearly 30 years, when they were first
4'4<'' g+~X!W ttt34'~~":~
Where:777 N.W. Wall St., Suite104, in
Bend Cost:$60 for the full six-week session, scholarships areavailable Contact:Call Kristina Barragan at541-3173977 or email kbarragan©alz.org
us under the bridge," Anthony said. "They're the ones who saved us. They didn't give up." At Pathways Safe Haven, a housing program for the formerly homeless where the brothers
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Margo Alexander crafted this abstract drawing.
profiled by the Tribune in December 2010. That fall, An-
thony had been hit by a car and, because of his injuries, had been offeredaplaceto stay by a program for the most vulnerable
homeless. Despite the offer, Anthony had refused to go inside
i+j;:' JtP/j
without Frank, who
couldn't get housing for several more weeks.
Margo Alexander painted this picture "Honey, Leaves
and Tree."
That December, the brothers lived un-
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
der the bridge, waiting for the day when Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Christine Jones painted this picture titled "God's Work."
Frank's room would
become available and they could move
inside together. When that day did arrive, however, it didn't solve their
problems. Both are alcoholics who have
been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and
Martha Robinson painted this picture titled "Sand Dunes."
a host of other health
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
problems. Within four months of moving into the Lake View YMCA, the brothers were kicked out for t/IhIL~
ho % lA~
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
A Marlene Hagen painted these twopictures —one of a tree and onewith a harvest pumpkin theme.
drunkenness and unruly behavior. SeeBrothers/D4
D2 THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
VOICES OFFAITH
Acloser look at Ecclesiastes The Kansas City Star Ecclesiastes 1:18 says:"For in much wisdom is much grief, and he that increases
knowledge increases sorrow" What does this mean?
A'knOVVing'angSt Rabbi Avi Wei n s tein, Hyman B r an d H e b rew Academy, Overland Park, Kan.: In Jewish tradition, King
Pope Francisstressesstrength,
courage,hopein the newyear By Frances D'Emilio VATICAN CITY — Pope
Francis, laying out his hopes Wednesday for the just-begun year, urged people to work for a world where everyone accepts each other's
differences and where enemies recognize that they are brothers.
"We are all children of one heavenly father. We belong to the same human
Solomon is the author of
family and we share a common destiny," Francis said, speaking from his studio window overlooking St. Peter's Square, jammed with
Ecclesiastes, and nobody's
tens of thousands Of faithful,
wisdom is more heralded
tourists and Romans. "This brings a respon-
than that of Solomon. Stunning, isn't it, that he would
sibility for each to work so
be dismissive of the gift for which he has received so
that the world becomes a
much acdaim. What is it
respect each other, accept each other in one's diversity,
about wisdom that brings grief and sorrow? An ancient rabbinic com-
mentator, Rabbi Shmuel Bar Yitzchak, offered the following analogy: "7wo people walk into a restaurant. One eats bread from unrefined flour, while the other
eats bread that is from flour finely sifted with oil, meat and fine wine. The former
feels no ill effects from his
8':~<xi- -.
The Associated Press
community of brothers who and take care of one anoth-
er," the pope said. Setting aside his prepared text for a moment, he ex-
pressed impatience with violence in the world. "What is happening in the heart of man? What is happening in the heart of humanity?" Francis asked. "It's time to StOP. He told the crowd this
Andrew Medichini/The Associated Press
Pope Francis leaves after celebrating the Angelus noonprayer
reflection was inspired by a letter he received from a man — "maybe one of you"
from the window of his studio overlooking St. Peter's Square
an end to itself is the most frustreting of activities. The
— who lamented that there
share a commondestiny," Francis said, as tens of thousands
more one explores,them ore questions arise, and it often
wars in the world." "I, too, believe that it will
feels that no Progress is being made. A simple idea, all
be good for us to stop ourselves in this path of vio-
Francis has charted a path
ing, he gains much pleasure from "knowing," but at the
In his first year as pope, cates Jan. 1 to the promotion of world Peace, and St. Pelence and search for peace," for what he calls a "poor" ter's Square, just as the pope Francis said. church a t tentive t o th e appeared, marked the end of In his remarks to the of- needy. While offering new a peace march by thousands ten-applauding crowd, he year's wishes to the crowd in of people. also expressed hope that the square, Francis pressed The marchers included "the gospel of brotherhood his campaign on behalf of Lula Teclehaimanut from
same time it will certainly
speak to every conscience
the downtrodden.
challenge matters that he believes to be true. It might
and knock down the walls
even shake the entire foun-
recognizing that they are brothers." Earlier, during his homily at New Year's Mass in
food, while the latter gets se-
riously ill." Intellectual inquiry as
of a sudden, is not so simple,
and one is left with more questions than answers. While the person is eat-
dation of what he may believe. Such a trauma could certainly sicken one's heart,
that impede enemies from
St. Peter's Basilica, Francis
ventures in that direction
spoke of humanity's journey in the year unfolding and
tes offera remedy for over-
indulgence in rich inquiry: "The end of the matter when all is said and done,
fear God and keep his commandments: for that is the whole duty of man." —Distributed by MCT InformationServices
heavenly father, we belong to the same human family and we
are "so many tragedies and
while the one who never maybe simple but blissful. The lastlines of Ecclesias-
at the Vatican onWednesday. "Weare all children of one of faithful, tourists and Romans jammed St. Peter's Square.
"We are also called to see
Eritrea.
"The pope is truly our hope, not just for the Eritrepresent in so many parts of an population but for the the world, and which can- whole world, I believe," she not leave us indifferent and said, recalling Francis' call immobile," Francis said. for refugees to be welcomed the violence and injustices
"There is the need for the commitment Of all to build
and treated humanely.
The refugees who risk a society that is truly more their lives to flee to Europe, invoked what he said were just and united." many of them by boat, "words of blessing," explainHearing "the cry of peace include some from her ing that they are "strength, from peoples who are op- homeland. courage andhope." pressed by war and by vioAmong themany nation"Not an illusory hope," lence," Francis prayed that al flags waved by the peace he added, "based on frail "the courage of dialogue and marchers was that of Syria, human promises, or a naive reconciliation prevail over with several Syrians among hope which presumes that the temptation for vendetta, the participants expressthe future will be better sim- arrogance, corruption." ing hope that peace reaches plybecause it is the future." The Catholic church dedi- their country.
RELIGIOUS SERVICES To submitservice information or announcements for religiousorganizations, email bulletinobendbulletin.com or call 541-383-0358. ANTIOCH CHURCH:Sr. Pastor Ken Wytsma; "ASpecial Biography of Grace"; Sunday at9:30 a.m. ReduxQ-and-A after; Bend HighSchool, 230 N.E. Sixth St., Bend. BENDCHRISTIANFELLOWSHIP: Bil Martin; Sundayat10a.m.; 4twelve youth group; Wednesdaysat 7 p.m.; 19831 Rocking HorseRoad,Bend. BENDCHURCHOFTHENAZARENE: Pastor Virgil Askren; "SeekingHisWil to beAccomplished";Sundayat1015a.m., 1270 N.E.27th St., Bend. CROSS CHURCH:Pastor EdByrnes; "Let's Get REAL: Evaluating TheCost", todayat 6:30p.m.;64N. W .FranklinAve.,Bend. EASTMONT CHURCH:Pastor John Lodwick; "Eastmont's VisionandCore Values: Part1," based onselected scripture; Sundayat 9and1045 a.m.;62425Eagle Road, Bend. FATHER'SHOUSE CHURCH OF GOD: Associate Pastor GuyDrescher; "Saving a City," as part of the series, "An Uncertain Journey to a Promised Land"; Sunday at 9 and10:45 a.m.; Youth Group; Wednesdays at7 p.m.;61690 Pettigrew Road, Bend. FIRSTPRESBYTERIANCHURCH:Pastor Jenny Warner; "Living Well: Living Prayer"; Sundayat9am.,1045a m.and 5:01pm;230 N.E.Ninth St., Bend. FIRSTUNITED METHODISTCHURCH: The Rev. ThomLarson; "FollowYourStar," basedonMatthew 21-12;Sundayat9and 11 a.m;680 N.W.BondSt., Bend. FOUNDRY CHURCH:Pastor SydBrestel; "Failing to Finish Well," based onthe life of Solomon and aspart of the series, "The Story"; Sunday at10:15 a.m.; 60 N.W. OregonAve., Bend. GRACE FIRSTLUTHERANCHURCH: Pastor JoelLiaBraaten; "WhichCalendar Bringsyou Joy?";CindyHossick;"Santa Marta"; Sundayat9:30a.m.;2265N.W. Shevlin ParkRoad,Bend. JOURNEY CHURCH:Pastor Keith Kirkpatrick; anewseries called, "TheBIG 10," basedonthe10commandments; Sundayat10a.m. and6:30p.m.;70N.W. Newport Ave.(Intheformer Liquid Lounge space),Bend. NATIVITYLUTHERANCHURCH:Pastor Chris Kramer; Sundayat9and11 a.m.; Bible study;Wednesdaysat10a.m.;60850 BrosterhousRoad,Bend. NEWPORTAVENUECHURCH OF CHRIST: Minister DeanCatlett; "Beautiful Isle of Someday,"basedon II Corinthians 61-2; Sundayat10: 45a.m.;554N.W .Newport Ave., Bend. SPIRITUALAWARENESSCOMMUNITY OFTHE CASCADES:Potluckandopen discus sion;Sundayat515 p.m.;heldatThe Old StoneChurch,157N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend. SPRINGS OFLIFEMINISTRIES: Evangelist andBibleteacher EddieCienda; Wednesdaysat7 p.m.;ongoing;TheSound Garden Studio,1279N.E.SecondSt.,Bend. TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH: Sundayat 9a.m.; St.FrancisChurch,2450N.E.27th St., Bend. UNITARIANUNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP OF CENTRALOREGON: TheRev.Alex Holt;"The FourGreat Questions: WhoAm I?"; partone ofafour-part sedesabout WayneMuller's book,"How,Then,Shall We Live?"; Sundayat11a.m.;atthe OldStone
Church,157N.W.Franklin Ave.,Bend. WESTSIDE CHURCH:Pastor SteveMickel; "AudaciousFaith"; todayat6:30 p.m.and Sundayat8,9and1045am.; 2051NW. Shevlin ParkRoad,Bend. WESTSIDE SOUTHCAMPUS:Pastor Steve Mickel; "AudaciousFaith"; Sundayat10:30 a.m.; 1245S.E.Third St., Bend. WESTSIDE SISTERS CAMPUS:Pastor Steve Mickel;"AudaciousFaith"; Sundayat 10:30a.m.;442Tiinity Way,Sisters. WESTSIDEONLINE CAMPUS:PastorSteve Mickel;"Audacious Faith";todayat6:30 pm. andSundayat9and1045am.; www. westsidelive.org. WESTSIDE RADIOCAMPUS:Pastor Jim Stephens;"Thankful", todayat8:30a.m.; Heirborneradioshowon KBND,AM1110. COMMUNITYPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Pastor Rob Anderson; "Will You Recognize Jesus in 2014?" basedon John11-18;Sundayat9and11 am.;529 N.W.19th St.,Redmond. EMMAUS LUTHERANCHURCH:The Rev. David Poovey;"ShowingForth," basedon Matthew2:9-11;Sundayat10:30a.m.; 2175 S.W. SalmonAve., Redmond. GRACELUTHERANCHURCHATEAGLE CREST: Pastor RandyVanMehren; "Christ ComesWith HisGifls of Life, Hope,and Salvation inHisWordandSacraments"; Sundayat10:30a.m.;7525FalconCrest Drive, Redmond. ST. PAUL'SANGLICANCHURCH: Father JohnPennington; "Three Gifts of Worship," in celebration of thefeast of the Epiphany ofOurLord; Sundayat10:30 a.m.; 1108 W.Antler Ave., Redmond. ZIONLUTHERAN CHURCH:Pastor Eric Burtne ss;"Moses:TheMurdererGodUsed," as partofthe series,"RebootYourLife: SecondChancesfor DiscouragedBelievers"; Sundayat830and11am.;1113BlackButte Blvd., Redmond. SHILOHRANCH COWBOY CHURCH: Pastor Jordan Weaver; Sundayat 9and 10:30a.m. ,Mondayat7p.m.;Men'sBible study; Thursdaysat7a.m.; in thecafeof The RimRockRiders Equestrian Facility, BrasadaRanch,17037S.W.Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte;541-241-4220for directions. VERTICAL CHURCH OFGOD:Pastor JeremySeibert; Sundayat10:30a.m.;youth night; W ednesdayat6 p.m.;52460Skidgel Road, LaPine. COMMUNITYBIBLE CHURCHAT SUNRIVER: Pastor GlenSchaumloeffel; "Introductionto Hebrews,"as part of the new series, "Better"; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; 1 Theater Drive, Sunriver. CONCORDIALUTHERAN MISSION:The Rev. Willis Jenson;"Salvation is Certain becausethe Gospelof Salvation was Establishedbeforethe Foundation of the World," based onEphesians1:4; Sunday at11 a.m.; held atTerrebonneGrangeHall, 828611th St.,Terrebonne. TAIZECHOIR OFCENTRAL OREGON: Meditative nondenominationalTaizemusic and silenceat monthlyecumenical service; 7p.m.Thursday;St. Francis CatholicCenter (St. ClareChapel),2450 N.E.27th st., Bend; 541-383-4179orelnhammond@gmail.com. TEMPLEBETHTIKVAH'S "ATASTEOF JUDAISM"LECTURE SERIES:Rabbi JohannaHershenson;"RhythmsofJewish Living"; $6,highschool studentsand youngerarefree;7p.m.Jan.13,20and 27; St. CharlesBendevent room;2500 N.E Neff Road, Bend;AnnRosenfield at541388-8826or www.bethtikvahbend.org/ education/adult-education.
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. ABILITREE YOUNG PEER GROUP: 541-388-8103 ext. 219. ABILITREEBRAIN INJURY SUPPORT GROUP:541-388-8103. ADHD ADULT SUPPORT GROUP: 541-420-3023. ADOPTIVEPARENTSUPPORT GROUP: 541-389-5446. ADULTCHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS: 541-633-8 I89. AGE WIDEOPEN (ADULT CHILDREN SUPPORT GROUP): 541-410-4162 or www.agewideopen.com. AIDSEDUCATION FOR PREVENTION, TREATMENT,COMMUNITY RESOURCES ANDSUPPORT (DESCHUTESCOUNTYHEALTH DEPARTMENT):541-322-7402. AIDSHOT LINE: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. AUTISMRESOURCE GROUP OF CENTRAL OREGON:541-788-0339. BENDATTACHMENTPARENTING: 541-385-1787. BEND S-ANONFAMILY GROUP: 888-285-3742. BEND ZENMEDITATION GROUP: 541382-6122 or 541-382-6651. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORTGROUPS: 541-382-5882. BEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP/ADULTSAND CHILDREN: 541-383-3910. BEYOND AFFAIRS NETWORK: A peer group for victims of infidelity, baninbend©yahoo.com. BRAININJURY SUPPORT GROUP:
541-382-9451. BRAINTUMOR SUPPORT GROUP: 541-350-7243 BREAKUPSANDDIVORCE SUPPORTGROUP:541-610-3060 or phoenixcounsein lgbend©gmail.com. CANCERFAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. CANCER INFORMATION LINE: 541-706-7743. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-536-7399. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-610-3060 or phoenixcounsein lgbend©gmail.com CELEBRATE RECOVERYBEND: Faith Christian Center, 541-383-5801; Westside Church, 541-382-7504; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATE RECOVERYLAPINE: Grace Fellowship, 541-536-2878; High Lakes Christian Church, 541-5363333; Living Waters Church, 541-5361215; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATERECOVERYMADRAS: Living HopeChristian Center,541475-2405 or centraloregoncr.org. CELEBRATERECOVERYREDMOND: Redmond Assembly of GodChurch, 541-548-4555 or centraloregoncr.org. CENTRALOREGON ALZHEIMER'S/ DEMENTIACAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-504-0571. CENTRALOREGONAUTISM ASPERGER'SSUPPORTTEAM: 541-633-8293. CENTRALOREGONAUTISM SPECTRUM RESOURCEAND FAMILY SUPPORTGROUP:541-279-9040. CENTRALOREGON COALITION FOR ACCESS(WORKING TO CREATE ACCESSIBLE COMMUNITIES): 541-385-3320. CENTRALOREGONDEPRESSION AND ANXIETYGROUP:541-420-2759 CENTRALOREGON DISABILITY SUPPORTNETWORK:541-548-8559 or www.codsn.org. CENTRAL OREGON FAMILIESWITH MULTIPLES: 541-330-5832 or 541-388-2220. CENTRALOREGON LEAGUE OF AMPUTEESSUPPORT GROUP (COLA):541-480-7420 or www. ourcola.org. CENTRAL OREGONRIGHT TO LIFE: 541-383-1593. CHILDCAR SEAT CLINIC (PROPER INSTALLATIONINFORMATION FOR SEATANDCHILD): 541-504-5016. CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION:
541-330-3907. CHRISTIANWOMEN OF HOPE (WOMEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP):541-382-1832. CLAREBRIDGEOFBEND (ALZHEIMER'SSUPPORT GROUP): 541-385-4717 or rnorton1© brookdaleliving.com. CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS BEND:541-610-7445. CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS REDMOND:54l-610-8175. COFFEEAND CONNECTION CANCER SUPPORT GROUP:541-706-3754. COMPASSIONATEFRIENDS (FOR THOSE GRIEVINGTHE LOSS OF ACHILD): 541-480-0667 or 541-536-1709. CREATIVITY AWELLNESSMOOD GROUP: 541-647-0865. CROOKEDRIVERRANCHADULT GRIEF SUPPORT: 541-548-7483. DEFEATCANCER: 541-706-7743. DESCHUTES COUNTYMENTAL 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: 541-6 I7-0543. DIABETICSUPPORT GROUP: 541-598-4483. DISABILITY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-8103. DIVORCE CARE:541-410-4201. DOUBLE TROUBLERECOVERY: Addiction and mental illness group; 541-3 I7-0050. 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. FAMILYRESOURCECENTER: 541-389-5468. GAMBLERSANONYMOUS: Redmond 541-280-7249,8end 541-390-4365. GAMBLINGHOT LINE:800-233-8479. GERIATRICCARE MANAGEMENT: info@paulbattle.com or 1-877-867-1437.
GLUCOSECONTROL LOW CARB DIET SUPPORTGROUP:kjdnrcd©yahoo. com or 541-504-0726. GLUTENINTOLERANCE GROUP (CELIAC):541-389-1731. GRANDMA'SHOUSE:Support for pregnant teens andteen moms; 54 I-383-3515. GRANDPARENTSRAISING OUR CHILDREN'SKIDS:541-306-4939. GRANDPARENTSSUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-385-474 I. GRIEFSHAREGRIEF RECOVERY SUPPORTGROUP:541-382-1832. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-3066633, 541-318-0384 or mullinski© bendbroadband.com. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-548-7483. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUPS: Forthe bereaved; 541-771-3247. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-447-2510. GRIEFSHARE (FAITH-BASED) RECOVERYCLASS: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: 541-390-2174 or ctepper@bendcable. com. HEARTS OF HOPE:Abortion healing; 54 I-728-4673. IMPROVEYOUR STRESS LIFE: 54 I-706-2904. LA LECHE LEAGUEOFBEND: 54 I-3 I7-59 I2. LIVING WELL (CHRONIC CONDITIONS):54l-322-7430. LIVING WITHCHRONICILLNESSES SUPPORTGROUP:541-536-7399. LUPUS BFIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP:541-526-1375. MADRAS NICOTINEANONYMOUS GROUP:541-993-0609. MATERNAL/CHILDHEALTH PROGRAM(DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTHDEPARTMENT): 541-322-7400. MEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. MENDED HEARTSSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-4789. MISCARRIAGESUPPORT GROUP: 541-514-9907. MOMMY ANDMEBREASTFEEDINGSUPPORT GROUP: Laura,
541-322-7450. MULTIPLESCLEROSIS SUPPORT GROUP:541-706-6802. NARCONON: 800-468-6933. NARCOTICSANONYMOUS (NA): 541-416-2146. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESSOF CENTRAL OREGON (NAMI):541-408-7779, 541-504-1431 or email: vonriedlpn©yahoo.com. NAMI BEND - EXTREMESTATES: 541647-2343 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 REDMONDCONNECTIONS: 541-382-3218 or 541-693-4613. NEWBERRY HOSPICEOFLA 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. OI'g.
OVEREATERSANONYMOUS: 541306-6844 or www.oa.org. PARENTS/CAREGIVERSOF CHILDRENAFFECTEDBYAUTISM SUPPORT GROUP:541-771-1075 or http:I/coregondevdisgroupaso.ning. com. PARENTS OFMURDEREDCHILDREN (POMC)SUPPORT GROUP: 541-410-7395. PARISH NURSESANDHEALTH MINISTRIES:541-383-6861. PARKINSON'SCAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP:541-317-1188. PARKINSON'SDISEASE SUPPORT GROUP:541-280-5818. PARTNERS IN CARE:Home health and hospice services; 541-382-5882. PAUL'SCLUB:Dads and male
caregiver support group; 541-548-8559. PFLAGCENTRAL OREGON: For parents, families and friends of lesbians andgays; 541-317-2334 or www.pflagcentraloregon.org. PLAN LOVINGADOPTIONS NOW (PLAN):541-389-9239. PLANNEDPARENTHOOD: 888-875-7820. PMS ACCESS LINE:800-222-4767. PREGNANCYRESOURCECENTERS: Bend,541-385-5334; Madras,541475-5338; Prineville, 541-447-2420; Redmond, 541-504-8919. PULMONARY HYPERTENSION SUPPORTGROUP:541-548-7489. RECOVERINGADDICTS IN THE ADDICTIONFIELD:541-610-3060 or phoenixcounsel ingbend©gmail.com. SAVINGGRACE SUPPORT GROUPS: Bend, 541-382-4420; Redmond, 541-504-2550, ext. 1; Madras, 541-475-1880. SCLERODERMA SUPPORTGROUP: 541-480-1958. SEXAHOLICSANONYMOUS: 541-595-8780. SOUPANDSUPPORT:For mourners; 541-548-7483. STEPMOM SUPPORTGROUP: 541-325-3339 or www. insightcounselingbend.com. SUPPORTGROUP FOR FAMILIES WITH DIABETICCHILDREN: 541-526-6690. SURVIVORSOF SUICIDELOSS SUPPORTGROUP:541-610-3060 or phoenixcounsel ingbend©gmail.com. TOBACCO FREEALLIANCE: 541-322-7481. TOPS OR: Bend, 541-388-5634; Culver, 541-546-4012; Redmond, 541-923-0878. TYPE 2DIABETES SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-4986. VETERANSHOTLINE: 541-408-5594 or818-634-0735. VISIONNW:Peersupport group; 541-330-0715. VOLUNTEERSINMEDICINE: 541-330-900 I. WOMEN'SRESOURCE CENTER OF CENTRALOREGON:541-385-0747 WOMEN SURVIVINGWITH CANCER SUPPORTGROUP:541-706-5864. YOUNGPEOPLEWITH DISABILITIES PEER GROUP: 831-402-5024. ZEN MEDITATIONGROUP: 541-388-3179.
SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN "Ce)hc Cross" Christianity
"The Wheel of Dharma" Buddhism
"Star of David" Judaism
•
REAL LIFK CHRISTIAN CHURCH 0
Like Hymns? We've Got 'em!
0
at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th 0
Sunday Services 8 am
0 0
(No child care) 10:00 am Contemporary Worship Service
You Are The Most lmportafkt PartofOur Services
(Full children's ministry) Sunday Night Church 6:30 pm For information, please call ... Senior Pastor - Mike Yunker - 541-312-8844 Associate Pastors
Mike SweeneyS Jeff Olson
•
•
TEMPLE BKTH TIKVAB
is a member of the Union for Reform Judaism. Our members represent a wide range of Jewish backgrounds. We welcome interfaith families and Jews by choice. Our monthly activities include: Services, religious education for children 8 adults, Hebrew school, Torah study, social action projects and social activities
BKND CHURCH OF THK NAZARKNE
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS
1270 NE 27 St.• 541-382-5496
Senior Pastor Virgil Askren
OF CKNTRAL ORKGON "Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship"
SUNDAY
We are a Welcoming Congregation
9:00 am Sunday School for all ages 9:00 am Hispanic Worship Service 10:15 am Worship Service
"The Four Great Questions: Who Am I?" — Rev. Alex Holt, Interim
Nursery Care 8 Children's Church
Minister
ages 4 yrs-4th grade during all
This is the first of four services based on
Worship Services
the book by Wayne Muller,
Friday, January 10, 6:00 p.m. Family Shabbat Services
"Courageous Living" on KNLR 97.5 FM
How, Then, Shall WeLive? The question of
8:30 am Sunday
"self" is a powerful one that we
www.real-lifecc.org •
"Omkar" (Aum) Hinduism
"YIn/Yang" Taoist/ Confuaanism
"Star 8 Crescent" Islam
•
KASTMONT COMMUNITV SCBOOL "Educating and Developing the Whole
struggle to understand. How can we
Saturday, January 18, 9:00 a.m.Munch & Torah Study, Torah Services
WEDNESDAY
•
•
Friday, January 24, 7:00 p.m..Kaballat Shabbat Services
FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTKR
HOIV RKDKEMER CATHOLIC PARISH
1049 NE 11th St.• 541-382-8274
Fr. Theodore Nnabugo, Pastor www.holyredeemerparish.net
This Sunday at Faith Christian Center,
Pastor Mike Johnson will share his message titled "Believe" on Sunday beginning at 10:30 AM.
Parish Office:541-536-3571 HOLV RKDKEMKR, LA PINK
16137 Burgess Rd Tuesday, Wednesday 8 Friday Mass
Childcare is provided in our Sunday moming service. Restored Youth Ministries and Family Night is on Wednesdays at 7 pm. A numberof Faith JoumeyGroups
A Taste of Judaism-Rhythms of Jewish Living Monday evenings -7:00p.m, to 8;30 p.m ., St. Charles Medical Center Principal Lonna Camahan Discover the rhythms embedded in Jewish www.eastmontcommunityschool.com practice for the purpose of making our time on the planet more meaningful: special days of the week, month, and year; life FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST cycle passages, and the thematic structure of the Jewish prayer service. 1551 NW First St.• 541-382-6100 January 13-Seasonal wisdom (South of Portland Ave.) January 20-Life passages Church Service 8 Sunday School: 10 am January 27-Patterns in prayer Wed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm For the complete schedule of Childcare provided. ServicesS Events go to: www.bethtikvahbend.org Reading Room:
9:00 am
Sunday Mass — 10:00 am Confessions: Saturdays — 3:00-4:00 pm BOLV TRINITV,SUNRIVKR
18143 Cottonwood Rd.
please contact the church for details and
Thurs. Mass 9:30 am;
115 NW Minnesota Ave. Mon. through Fri.: 11 am - 4 pm
times. The church is located on the comer
Sat. Vigil Mass 5:30 pm
Sat. 12 noon - 2 pm
of Greenwood Avenue and NE 11th Street.
Sunday mass 8:00 am
www.bendfaith.com
Confessions: Thurs. 9:00 - 9:15 am
REDMOND ASSEMBLV OF GOD
OUR LADV OF THE SNOWS, Gilchrist
1865 W Antler• Redmond
120 Mississippi Dr
541-548-4555
Sunday Mass — 12:30 pm
SUNDAYS
Confessions: Sundays 12:00 -12:15 pm
Moming Worship 8;30 am F 10:30 am
Life groups 9 am Kidz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am Evening Worship 6 pm
KCRANKAR
ReHElon of the
541-388-8826
near ChristmasValley
Coming in 2014: Oregon Regional Seminar,
57255 Fort Rock Rd
"Travel the Road to Spiritual Freedom"
(St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession
March 7-9 at the Unity Center of Portland
XXVIII.8, 10
Spiritual Experiences/Beyond Meditation.
HOLY FAMILY,
Sunday Mass — 3:30 pm
and the Portland Eckankar Center.
CATHOLIC CHURCH
www.eckankarorg
Celebrate Recovery
Rev. Julian Cassar
www.eckankar-oregon.org
Wednesday NITE Live Kids
Rev. Joseph K. Thalisery
541-728-6476
Youth Group
541-382-3631
For More Information
•
•
•
Pastor Duane Pippitt
NEW CHURCH
TRINITV EPISCOPAL CHURCH
www.redmondag.com
2450 NE 27th Street
469 NW WallSt.•541-382-5542
www.trinitybend.org
Masses •
Saturday - Vigil 5:00 PM
UndeniableWays"
Sunday 730 AM, 10:00 AM Domingo 12:30 PM - Misa en Espanol Christmas Day Masses 7:30 AM, 10:00 AM
Sunday Schedule 8:00 am and 10:15am Historic St. Francis Church, 494 NW Lava St. at Franklin, Bend, OR
10 am Sunday School 11 am Divine Service The Rev. Willis C. Jenson, Pastor 8286 11th St. (Grange Hall) Terrebonne, OR
www.lutheransonline.com/ condordialutheranmission Facebook: Concordia Lutheran Mission Phone: 541-325-6773
62425 Eagle Road, Bend Reconciliation
www.eastmontchurch.com
We are grateful to the community for the outpouring of help
Saturday 3:00 PM - 4:45 PM The Rev. Roy D. Green, Interim Rector
Sunday Services Classic (Blended) Service 9:00 am
HISTORIC DOWNTOWN CHURCH
Comer of NW Franklin 8 Lava
Allarewelcome
Contemporary Service 10:45 am
Masses
through our red doors
Hispanic Service
6:00 pm
Saturday 8:00 AM Monday - Friday 7:00 AM 8 12:15 PM
ministries for the whole family, contact541-382-5822 oremail
InfoCeeastmontchurch.com FOUNDRV CHURCH (FORMKRLV FIRST BAPTIST)
"A Heart for Bend in the
Monday-Friday after 7:00 AM Mass to 6:00 PM
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP
Tuesday (Family Holy Hour)
541 NE Dekalb
Pastor Syd Brestel
Sunday School 9:45 am Children 8 Adult Classes
Reconciliation Tuesday 7:30 AM - 8:00 AM ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCB
SundaySchoolclasses are at9:00 am and
1720 NW 19th Street
our Worship Service at 10:15 am
Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-923-3390
Worship Service —11;00am Major's Robert S Miriam Keene NKW BOPK KVANGKLICAL
20080 Pinebrook Blvd.• 541-389-3436 Celebrate New Life at New Hope Church!
This Sunday at Foundry Church,
Father Todd Unger, Pastor
As part of "The Story", Syd Brestel will
Mass Schedule:
present a message on the life of Solomon
Weekdays 8:00 am
Saturday 6:00 pm
entitled "Failing to Finish Well."
(except Wednesday) Wednesday 6:00 pm
Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am,
High School activities
Saturday Vigil 5:30 pm
Pastor Randy Myers
Call 541-382-3862
First Saturday 8:00 am (English)
www.bendchurch.org
Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am (English)
For Kldztown, Middle School and
•
•
12:00 noon (Spanish)
WKSTSIDK CHURCH
HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH, SBC
Confessions on Wednesdays from
Westside Church invites you to join us at
3100 SW Highland Ave.,
5;00 to 5:45 pm
any of our weekend services. No matter
Redmond • 541-548-4161
and on Saturdays from 4;30 to 5:15 pm
what your expectations are, we hope your
Sunday Worship Services:
to understanding, knowing and growing
8;00 am, 9:30 am, 11:00 am
CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF RKDMOND
in a relationship with Jesus Christ. In our
Sunday Bible Fellowship Groups
536 SW 10th, Redmond
9:30 am F 11:00 am
541-548-2974
January 4 & 5, 2014 at Westside Church-
Dr. Barry Campbell, lead pastor
www.redmondchristian.org
WEST Campus, Pastor Steve Mickel will
Sunday Worship 9:00 am 8 10:45 am
share the message "Audacious Faith" at
www.hbcredmond.org
CALVARY CHAPKL BEND
Phone: (541) 383-5097 Web site: ccbend.org
opinion, that's what really matters.
6:30pm tonight and at 8, 9 and 10:45am
Sunday School for all ages Kidmo• Junior Church
Sunday at Westside Church, 2051 NW
Greg Strubhar, Pastor
January 5, 2014 at Westside Church-
Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor
SOUTH Campus, Pastor Steve Mickel will
20225 Cooley Rd. Bend POWELL BUTTK CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Cowboy Fellowship Saturdays
Shevlin Park Rd, Bend.
share the message "Audacious Faith" at
157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND •
•
•
.
Maih PO Box 428, Bend OR 97709
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SOVKRKIGN GRACK CHURCH
www.uufco.org
Meeting at the Golden Age Club
(541) 385-3908
40 SE 5th St., Bend
Just 2 blocks SW of Bend High School Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sovereign Grace Church is dedicated to
worshiping God and teaching the Bible truths recovered through the Reformation. Call for information about other meetings
I •
•
•
21720 E. Hwy. 20• 541.389.8241
Sunday Morning Worship 8;45 am F 10:45 am
Wednesday Mid-Week Service
love and open hearts. All Peoples meets on the first
and third Sundays of each month. Find us at our new worship site in the meeting room of
436 SW6th in Redmond (across from Diego's). Worship with us Sunday, January 5th at 11 a.m.
Nursery Care Provided for All Services
Come early at 10 a.m. for Bible
Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur
adult discussion time.
Bookworms21720 E. Hwy. 20 541.389.8241
www.clcbend.com
On January 19th, All Peoples meets again.
For details and
possible help with car-pooling, email: a))peop)esuccCwgmail.com
Redmond, OR 97756
FIRST UNITED MKTHODIST CHURCH
(541) 548-3367
(In the Heart of Downtown Bend)
Women'sBible Study,Tuesday 9:15 a.m. Men's Bible Study, Wednesday 7:30 a.m. Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Evangelical Lutheran Church in America www.gracefirst)utheran.org XION LUTHERAN CHURCH ELCA
529 NW 19th Street
(3/4 mile north of High School)
Sunday Worship Services at 8:30 am & 11:00 am Sunday School for all ages 10:00 am
•
•
•
680 NW Bond St. /541.382.1672 Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor
Everyone isWelcome!
9 00 am Contemporary Worship
Rev. Thom Larson
9:00 am Nursery Care
Sermon Title: "Follow Your Star"
9;15 am Children F Youth
Scripture: Matthew 2:1-12
Sunday School
9:00 am Contemporary Service
9:30 am Adult Education
Sunday School during 9am service
11:00 am Traditional Worship
11:00 am Tradrtrona; Servoce Childcare provided
Youth Groups High School - Sunday 11:00am-12:30pm MiddleSchool -W ednesday 6:00-730pm
Children's Room available during services Come Experience a warm, friendly family of worshipers. Everyone Welcome - Always. A vibrant, inclusive community. A rich and diverse music program for all ages Coffee,snacksangfeflowsfup a Jtereacfiservice M-W-F Women's Exercise 9:30 am Wed. Bible Study at noon 3rd Th. Women's Circle/Bible Study I:00 pm 3rd Tues. Men's Club 6:00 pm, dinner Youth and Family Programs Active Social Outreach
Mondays 6:30 pm Centering Prayer
*During the Week: Women's Groups, Men's
Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting,
Wednesdays
Small Groups Meet Regularly
(Handicapped Accessible) Please visit our website for a complete
listing of activities for all ages. www.redmondcpc.org FIRST PRKSBVTKRIAN CHURCH
1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 - 541-923-7466 Pastor Eric Burtness www.zionrdm.com
(Across Ninth St. from Bend High) 230 NE Ninth, Bend
All Are Welcome, Always!
Bear Creek Center 21300 Bear Creek Rd. Bend, OR. 97701 Our Shabbat Services are on Saturday momings at 10:00 a.m. Our ministries
Lead Pastor LIVING WELL
Preacher: Pastor Jenny Wamer 9:00 a.m. contemporary 10:45 a.m. traditional
5:01p.m. relaxed Sunday School: 3 years to 6th Grade Nursery-care provided.
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
February 22, 9:00 a.m.- 4:00 p.m.
A way to understand oneself and to compassionately relate to others. Led by Eileen and Michael Heaton
Wednesday Noon Worship followed by 12:30 pm Contemplative Prayer Youth Events
M usic and the Word 7 pm
SISTERS Campus, Pastor Steve Mickel will
YouthGroup: Wednesday 7 pm
Sunday Worship Services
share the message "Audacious Faith" at
Child Care provided
8:30 am - 10:15 am - 11 am
10:30am on Sunday at the Westside Sisters Campus, 442 Trinity Way, Sisters.--
Women's Ministry, Youth Ministry are
Pastors: Chris Blair, Trey Hinkle, Ozxy
January 4 8 5, 2014 at Westside Church
available, call for days and times.
Osborne and Glenn Bartnik
— ON THE RADIO Pastor Jim Stephens
13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte
"Teaching the Word of God,
541-548-3066
will share the message "Thankful" on the Heirbome radio show at 8:30am Sunday
Book by Book"
www.powellbuttechurch.com
moming on KBND — AM 1110.
I I
CHURCH & SVNAGOGUE DIRECTORY LISTING EffectiveMay 1, 2013
Worship/Dance - StudyFood/Fellowship Hebrew Roots Fellowship worshipping in Spirit and Truth 541-410-5337
Children Welcome www.livingtorahfellowship.com
4 Saturdays and TMC: $115 5 Saturdays
and TMC: $138 The Bulletin: Every Saturday on the church page.
$23 ENNEAGRAM WORKSHOP
www.facebook.com/bendyouthcollective
Wednesday Night Study: 7 pm
Rev. Thom Larson firstchurchCebendumc org
Rev. Dr. Steven H. Koski HOUSK OF COVKNANT 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:
LIVING TORAH FKLLOWSHIP Cw La Roca Church 1155 SW Division, ¹D8, Bend Saturday (030 am - 2 pm
January 5, 2014 at Westside Church-
Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors.
5:30 pm Prayer Service
or contact us at 541-385-5439
Potluck 6 pm
'
the Still-Speaking God.
Children F Youth Programs 7:00 pm
Visit us on the web at www.houseofcovenant.org
I
hope and a renewed sense of
The GreenPlow Coffee Shop,
Campus, 1245 SE 3rd St., Bend,
I ' I
Welcome to a brand New Year filled
May we reach out to others with
www.sovereigngracebend.com
• •
ALL PKOPLES
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
Sunday Worship 930 a.m. (Child Care Available) Sunday School 10:20 a.m. Education Hour 10:45 a.m.
10:30am on Sunday at the Westside South
Sundays: 8;30 8 10:30 am
Nursery 8 Children's Church
www.bendnaz.org
COMM U NITV PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
time spent with us brings you a little closer
For complete calender:
Meeting place: THE OLD STONE CHURCH
Music 8 Fellowship
541-389-8888
Exposition 8 Benediction
Heart of Bend" 60 NW Oregon, 541-382-3862
THK SALVATION ARMV
541 NE DeKalb Ave., Bend
5:00 PM - 6:00 PM
listing of activities for all ages.
Worship in the Heart of Redmond
Sunday 430 PM
For more information about weekly
Pre-K through Grade 8.
GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH 2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend 382-6862
and 12:30 PM - Misa en Espanol 541-382-5822
Life Groups Please visit our website for a complete
CHRISTIAN LIFK CENTKR
Ught and Sound of God
ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI
"DisplayingtheReafity oI Christ in
Religious Education for
541-420-1667
Adult Classes
KASTMONT CHURCH
Education programs, call Kathy Schindel at 541-388-8826 All services are held at the First United Methodist Church 680 NW Bond Street
FAMILY NIGHT 7 PM
•
For information about our Religious
CONCORDIALUTHKRAN MISSION (LCMSJ Themissionaf theChurch is ia forgive sinstfiroufh the Gaspe(and Ihereby graa( eternal Jife.
Confessions: Sundays 3:00-3:15 pm
WEDNESDAYS
toddlers.
WEEKLY
62425 Eagle Road, Bend• 541-382-2049
meet throughout the week in small groups,
Nursery Care is available for infants and
THURSDAY
10:00 am 50+ Bible Study
Pre K - 5th Grade
•
understand it in spiritual terms?
6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study
Child for the Glory of God" •
January 5, 2014 at 11:00 a.m.:
Tuesday, January 7, 7:00 p.m.Adult Education, call for information -
Loving people one at a time."
D3
Choirs, music groups, Bible study, fellowship and ministries every week
Copy Changes: by 5 PM Tuesday CO Marketplace: The First Tuesday of
each month. $23 Copy Changes: by Monday 1 week prior to publication
Call Pat Lynch
230 NE Ninth Street, Bend
www.bendfp.org
>4i-383-0396
www.facebook.com/bendfp
PlynCh®bendbtllletin.COm
541-382-4401
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
VOLUNTEER SEARCH
p
~
l
Volunteer Search is compiled by the Department of Human Services Volunteer Services. The organizations listed are seeking volunteers for a variety of tasks. To see afull list, and for additional information on the types of help needed, go online to www. bendbulletin.com/volunteer. Changes, additions or deletions should be sent to 1300 N.W.Wall St., Suite 103, Bend 97701, email Therese.M.Helton@state.or.us or call541-693-8988.
e
SENIORS
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Thanks to the Alzheimer's Association's Memories in the Making workshop, Steve Thorp and his wife, Margo Alexander, are have reconnected through painting — something the couple used to do together but stopped when Margo started developing signs of dementia about three years ago. Through art, the
workshop gives people with Alzheimer's or other forms ofdementia a chance to express themselves.
Memories
tweaked this program to focus on people who have just Continued from 01 been diagnosed with the disFor nearly 30 years, the Alz- ease or are in its early stages, heimer's Association's Mem- she said. The group began ofories in the Making work- fering the workshops in Portshops have given people with land a year and a half ago. "We found it gives them Alzheimer'sdisease or other forms dementia a chance to confidence and encourages express themselves and re- socialization," Edwards said, cord their memories by paint-
oping dementia they can get quiet and introverted," Thorp
said. "They lose interest in doing some of the things they used to love to do."
Reaching out f o r
signed his wife up for its first s eries of M emories in t h e
Making workshops that ran from November through December. The Central Oregon
two attributes that can help
ing with watercolors in a sup- someone dealing with the portive environment. And in some cases, these workshops
h e lp,
Thorp got in touch with the Alzheimer's Association and
disease.
She said the program also also give people like Alex- gives people who are caring ander a chance to reconnect for someone with early-stage with an a ctivity t hey once dementia achance to come loved but stopped because of togetherand sharetheirexpetheir disease and the stress it riences, either by taking part put on their lives. in the workshop or by waiting outside the class. The ability
office will start its second six-
week set of watercolor workshops on Feb. 4 (see "If you
go")
"Margo was the first per-
son in t hi s w o rkshop who
really just sat down and started painting," Barragan said, The program to have this type of discussion, looking over some of the According to the associa- even if it's just for five minutes 68-year-ol d's works from the tion's website, Memories in while having a cup of coffee, first session. She said one picthe Making started in 1986 can be as helpful as the pro- ture — a sketch of some leaves, when an a r t ist i n O r a nge gram itself, Edwards said. a twig and a smear ofhoney"For many people, just get- stood out in her mind because County, Calif., set out to find a way her mother and other ting a diagnosis can be over- Alexander painted it without people with Alzheimer's dis- whelming," said Barragan, any instruction or help, as if it ease or otherforms ofdemen- who has managed the Central was something she had done tia could express themselves Oregon office at Wall Street many times before. That's because it was. through the fine arts. and Franklin Avenue since it The association's national opened on Aug. 29. When Thorp saw the paintofficesaw the success of her ing hanging on a wall in the effort and worked with its Or- The painting office's conference room, he ange Countychapter to develAlexander's hus b and, said it looked exactly like op program manuals and vol- Steve Thorp, said his wife a painting the two of them unteer training workshops so was o nc e a n exu b erant, worked on together six or sevthe program could be copied cheerful and energetic wom- en years ago. He was blown by other chapters across the an who loved to paint with away that his wife could recountry. watercolors and work on art member the image and signed The original Memories in projects around their house. up for the workshops himself the Making workshops were But when she started hav- so he and his wife could savor targeted toward people who ing problems remembering one memory of the past they have late-stage dementia and things three years ago, she thought the disease had taken problems communicating ver- slowly became more passive away. "This has been wonderful," bally because of their condi- and withdrawn and she no tion, said Shellie Edwards, the longer wanted to paint. She Thorp said. "We're painting Oregon Chapter's outreach was diagnosed with dementia again." and program director. about six months ago. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, "When someone is develBut the Oregon chapter mmcleanibendbulletin.com
The next
big thing in social
I8 3
networking'? By Jasmine Maki Grand Forks (N.DJ Heratd
Looking for the next big thing in social networking? The free app Circle may be just that. The fairly new social me-
dia app connects its users with others in their area. With cate-
gories such as trending, local news, events, sports and nightlife, it appears that the app's focus is spreading community news. Whether it's an update on a local high school hockey game, an invite to an exhibit open-
ing at the art gallery or news about the weather forecast, the
app allows its users to share relevant i n formation a bout their community. Users can also post questions like, "Are there any parties tonight?" or "Where's the best place to grab
a burger?" Before posting the question, users can select a cat-
egory for their post. Although there is a random category, where people can share any random fact or thought, the app encourages users toshare useful information about events and news.
Like almost all social media apps, there is the ability to
"follow" another user or "cirde" them. Once two users are following one another, they will have the ability to message each other.The diff erence between this app and most social
media apps is a user doesn't need to follow another user to see her posts on their feed.
Chris Walker/Chicego Tribune
Formerly homeless twins Anthony, left, and Frank Nowotnik walk last month in the Uptown Chicago neighborhood surrounding the apartment building where they have lived for a year with help from Heartland Alliance.
Brothers
huge victory," said Ed Stellon, a program officer at
Continued from 01
Heartland.
Over the past two years, them a second housing pro- the staff has been "elated" at gram, but the twins were the twins' progress, Stellon soon kicked out of t h ere, said. "Not only are they taking too. In fall 2011, they entered their medication every day, Pathways, a program run they're also going to our by the nonprofit Heartland primary care health center," Health Outreach and one Stellon said. "It's all about that is unusual because it these small steps and little seeks to put the homeless victories." into housing but does not reFour months ago, Anthoquire them to stop drinking ny checked himself into a or using drugs in order to 28-day alcohol treatment stay. program. After waking up The approach is called one morning choking on "housing first." The idea is blood, he decided it was to put a roof over a person's time. He hasn't had a drink head, and then to address since, Anthony said. the problems that might Getting sober was " t he S ocial w o r k er s
f o und
have led to homelessness in the first place. Requirements
hardest thing in the world,"
in the Pathways program
I can comprehend better. I can listen."
are few, on the theory that
he said. "I feel much better.
you can't force someone As for Frank, he is still to stop drinking or using drinking. But he is inspired clrugs. by his brother's sobriety. He For the b r others, "just said he has been drinking the fact that they've moved less and hopes to give up alfrom outside to inside is a cohol too.
AARP:www.aarp.org/money/ taxaide or 888-687-2277. ASPEN RIDGEALZHEIMER'S ASSISTEDLIVINGAND RETIREMENTCOMMUNITY: 541-385-8500. BEND SENIORCENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. CASCADEVIEW NURSING AND ALZHEIMER'SCARECENTER: 541-382-716 I. CENTRALOREGON COUNCIL ON AGING(COCOA) AND MEALS ON WHEELS:www.councilonaging.org or 541-678-5483. LA PINE SENIORACTIVITY CENTER:KarenWard, 541-536-6237. LONG-TERMCARE OMBUDSMAN PROGRAM:Nancy Allen, 541-312-2488. PILOTBUTTE REHABILITATION CENTER:541-382-5531. PRINEVILLESOROPTIMIST SENIORCENTER: Melody, 541-447-6844. TOUCHMARK ATMT. BACHELOR VILLAGE:541-383-1414. UNITED SENIORCITIZENSOF BEND (USCB):uscb©bendtel.net or 541-323-3344. VOLUNTEERSINACTION: 541-548-7018.
CHILDREN, YOUTH AND EDUCATION SERVICES ADULT BASICSKILLS DEPARTMENT(COCC): Margie Gregory, mgregory@cocc.edu or 541-318-3788. AFS-USA:www.afsusa.org or Caitlin Krutsinger, 503-419-9514. ALYCEHATCHCENTER: Andy Kizans, 541-383-1980. BEND PARKItRECREATION DISTRICT:Kim, 541-706-6127. BIG BROTHERS BIGSISTERS OF CENTRALOREGON:541-3126047 (Bend), 541-447-3851, ext. 333 (Prineville) or 541-325-5603 (Madras). BOY SCOUTS OFAMERICA: Paul Abbott, paulabbott©scouting.org or 541-382-4647. BOYS It GIRLS CLUBS OF CENTRAL OREGON: www.bgcco.org, info© bgcco.org or 541-617-2877. CAMP FIREUSACENTRAL OREGON: campfire©bendcable.com or 541-382-4682. CASA (COURT APPOINTED SPECIALADVOCATES): www. casaofcentraloregon.org or 541-389-1618. CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: Julie Bibler, 541-330-3907. CIRCLE OFFRIENDS: Beth, beth© acircleoffriendsoregon.com or 541-588-6445. DESCHUTES COUNTYSHERIFF'S OFFICE— CENTRAL OREGON PARTNERSHIPS FORYOUTH: www.deschutes.org/copy, COPY© deschutes.org or 541-388-6651. FOSTERGRANDPARENTS PROGRAM:Steve Guzanskis, 541-678-5483. GIRL SCOUTS: 541-389-8146. GIRLS ONTHE RUN OF DESCHUTES COUNTY: www. deschutescountygotr.org or info© deschutescountygotr.org. GRANDMA'SHOUSE: 541-383-3515. HEALTHYBEGINNINGS:ww w. myhb.org or 541-383-6357. HIGH DESERTTEENS VOLUNTEER PROGRAM: www. highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4757. IEP PARTNERS:Carmelle Campbell at the Oregon Parent Training and Information Center, 888-505-2673. J BAR JLEARNINGCENTER:Rick Buening, rbuening@jbarj.org or 541-389-1409. JUNIPER SWIM8t FITNESS CENTER:Kim, 541-706-6127. KIDS CENTER:Lisa Weare, Iweare@ kidscenter.org, 541-383-5958. LA PINEHIGHSCHOOL:Jeff Bockert, jeff.bockert©bend.k12. or.us or 541-355-8501. MEADOWLARK INDEPENDENT LIVING PROGRAM:Teal Buehler, 541-617-9576. MOUNTAINSTARFAMILY RELIEF NURSERY:541-322-6820. NEIGHBORIMPACT: 541-548-2380, ext.115. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY EXTENSIONSERVICE:541548-6088, 541-447-6228 or 541-475-3808. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY MASTERGARDENERVOLUNTEER PROGRAM:http://extension. oregonstate.edu/deschutes or 541-548-6088. READ TOGETHER: 541-388-7746. REDMOND HIGHSCHOOL: 541-923-4807. REDMOND LEARNINGCENTER: Zach Sartin, 541-923-4854. REDMOND YOUNGLIFE: 541-923-8530. SCHOOL-TO-CAREER PARTNERSHIP:KentChild, 541-355-4158. SMART(STARTMAKING A READER TODAY):www.getsmartoregon.org or 541-355-5600. TRILLIUM FAMILYSERVICES: 503-205-0194. VIMA LUPWA HOMES:www. lupwahomes.org or 541-420-9634. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON: 541-385-0470.
ANIMALS AND ENVIRONMENT BEND SPAY 8t NEUTER PROJECT: 541-617-1010. BRIGHTSIDEANIMAL CENTER: volunteer@brightsideanimals.org or 541-923-0882. CAT RESCUE,ADOPTION8E FOSTERTEAM(CRAFT): www. craftcats.org, 541-389-8420 or 541-598-5488. CHIMPS, INC.:www.chimps-inc.org or 541-410-4122. DESCHUTESLANDTRUST: www.deschuteslandtrust.org or 541-330-0017. DESCHUTESNATIONALFOREST: Jean Nelson-Dean, 541-383-5576. EAST CASCADES AUDUBON SOCIETY: www.ecaudubon.org or 541-24 I-2190. THE ENVIRONMENTALCENTER: www.envirocenter.org or 541-385-6908. EQUINEOUTREACH HORSE RESCUE OFBEND:www. equineoutreach.com or joan© equineoutreach.com or 541-419-3717. HEALINGREINS THERAPEUTIC RIDING CENTER: Darcy Justice, 541-382-94 I0. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL OREGON: Jen, jennifer©hsco.org or 541-382-3537. HUMANE SOCIETYOF THE OCHOCOS: 541-447-7178. JUNIPERGROUP SIERRA CLUB: 541-389-9115. PRINEVILLE BLM:www.blm.gov/or/ districts/prineville/recreation/host. php or 541-416-6700. STEWARDSHIPFOR SUSTAINABLE BAGGING:LexaMcAllister, Imcallister©cocc.edu or 541-914-6676. SUNRIVERNATURECENTER lt OBSERVATORY: 541-593-4442. VOLUNTEERCAMPGROUND HOST POSITIONS: TomMottl, 541-416-6859.
HEALTH AMERICANCANCER SOCIETY: CharlieJohnson,541-434-3114. AMERICANREDCROSS: 541-749-4 I1 I. THE BLOOMPROJECT:www. thebloomproject.org or Heidi Berkmanath.berkmanO thebloomproject.org or 541-241-8845. DESCHUTESCOUNTYHEALTH DEPARTMENT: Tuesday Johnson, Tuesday Johnson@co.deschutes. or.us or 541-322-7425. HOSPICEOF REDMONDSISTERS:www.redmondhospice. org or Volunteer Coordinator at 541-548-7483. MOUNTAINVIEW HOSPITAL:JoDee Tittle, 541-475-3882, ext. 5097. MOUNTAINVIEW HOSPITAL HOSPICE:541-460-4030 or Tori Schultz, tschultz©mvhd.org or 541475-3882, ext. 5327. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESS— CENTRAL OREGON: Eileen White, namicentraloregon@ gmail.com. NEWBERRYHOSPICE: 541-536-7399. PARTNERS IN CARE:www. partnersbend.org or SarahPeterson at 541-382-5882. RELAYFORLIFE: Stefan Myers, 541-504-4920. ST. CHARLES INBENDAND ST. CHARLESINREDMOND: 541-706-6354. VOLUNTEERS INMEDICINE: Kristi, 541-585-9008.
ARTS, MUSIC, CULTURE AND HERITAGE 88.9KPOV, BEND'S 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. CASCADESTHEATRICAL COMPANY: 541-389-0803. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY ASSOCIATION:Julie, 541-383-7779. DES CHUTESHISTORICAL MUSEUM:541-389-1813, 10a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdaythrough Saturday. DESCHUTESPUBLICLIBRARY SYSTEM:541-312-1032. FRIENDS OFTHE BEND LIBRARIES: www.fobl.org or Meredith Shadrach at 541-617-7047. HIGHDESERT CHAMBER MUSIC: www.highdesertchambermusic. com or Isabelle Senger at info@ highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-306-3988. HIGH DESERTMUSEUM: 541-382-4754. LA PINEPUBLICLIBRARY:Cindylu, 541-317-1097. LATINOCOMMUNITY ASSOCIATION:Brad, volunteer© latca.org or 541-382-4366. THE NATUREOFWORDS: www.thenatureofwords.org or 541-647-2233. REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY:541-312-1060. REDMONDINTERCULTURAL EXCHANGE (R.I.C.E.): Barb, bonitodia©msn.com or 541-447-0732. TOWER THEATREFOUNDATION: 541-317-0700.
HUMAN SERVICES ABILITREE:volunteer@abilitree. org or 541-388-8103, ext. 217. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL:Philip Randall, 541-388-1793. ASSISTANCELEAGUEOFBEND: 54 I-389-2075. BEND COMMUNITYCENTER: volunteer©bendscommunitycenter. org or 541-312-2069.
BETHLEHEMINN: www. bethleheminn.org or 541-322-8768. BRIDGINGGAPS: bendbridginggaps©gmail.com or 54 I -314-4277. CENTER FORCOMPASSIONATE LIVING (PREVIOUSLYPEACE CENTER OFCENTRAL OREGON): www.compassionatecenter.org or Beth Hansen, 541-923-6677. CENTRALOREGONVETERANS OUTREACH:covo.org©gmail.com or 541-383-2793. DEPARTMENT OFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEER SERVICES:Therese Helton, Therese.M.Helton©state,or.us or 541-693-8988. DEPARTMENT OFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES CROOKCOUNTY:Valerie Dean, 541-447-3851, ext. 427. DISABLEDAMERICAN VETERANS (DAV):Don Lang, 541-647-1002. FAMILY KITCHEN:Cindy Tidball, cindyt@bendcable.com or 54 I-610-651 I. FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER: 541-389-5468. HUMAN DIGNITY COALITION: 541-385-3320. HUNGERPREVENTION COALITION:Marie, info© hungerpreventioncoalition.org or 54 I -385-9227. LA PINECOMMUNITY KITCHEN: 54I-536-I3I2. NEIGHBORIMPACT:chrisqO neighborimpact.org or 541-5482380, ext. 106. PEACEBRIDGES, INC., BEND: www.abridgetopeace.org or John C. Schwechten at 541-383-2646. PFLAG CENTRALOREGON: www.pflagcentraloregon.org or 541-317-2334. RONALD MCDONALD HOUSE: Teresa, 541-318-4950. SAVINGGRACE:541-382-9227 or 54 I -504-2550. SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL OF BEND:www.sibend.org, president©sibend.org or 541-728-0820. ST. VINCENT DEPAUL SOCIAL SERVICES:541-389-6643. VOLUNTEER CONNECT:www. volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977. WINNING OVERANGER 8t VIOLENCE:www.winningover.org or 541-382-1943. WOMEN'S RESOURCECENTER OF CENTRALOREGON:541-385-0750.
HABITAT FOR HUMANITY AND THRIFT STORES BEND AREAHABITATFOR HUMANITY:jbarry@bendhabitat. org or 541-385-5387. HABITATRESTORE:Di Crocker, 541-312-6709. HUMANE SOCIETYOFCENTRAL OREGON THRIFT STORE:Jen, jennifer@hsco.org or 541-382-3537. NEAT REPEAT THRIFT SHOP:Peg, 541-447-6429. NEWBERRYHABITATFOR HUMANITY:54 I-593-5005. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFT STOREOFBEND: 541-389-0 I29. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFTSTORE OF REDMOND: 541-548-5288. REDMOND HABITATFOR HUMANITY:Scott or Warren, 541-548-1406. REDMOND HABITATRESTORE: Roy, 541-548-1406. SISTERSHABITATFOR HUMANITY:541-549-1193. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL— LAPINE: 541-536-1956. ST. VINCENTDEPAULREDMOND:541-923-5264.
GOVERNMENT, CITY AND COMMUNITY THE CITI ZEN REVIEW BOARD (CRB):crb.volunteer.resources@ojd. state.or.us or 888-530-8999. CITY OFBEND:Cheryl Howard, choward©ci.bend.or.us or 541-388-5505. DESCHUTESCOUNTY VICTIMS' ASSISTANCEPROGRAM: Diane Stecher, 541-317-3186 or 541-388-6525. DESCHUTESRIVER WOODS NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION: www.drwna.org or Barbara at info© drwna.org or 541-382-0561. JEFFERSON COUNTYCRIME VICTIMS' ASSISTANCE PROGRAM: Tina Farrester, 541-475-4452, ext. 4108. JEFFERSONCOUNTYVOLUNTEER SERVICES:Therese Helton, 541475-6131, ext. 208. LA PINERURAL FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT:Volunteer Coordinator, 541-536-2935. ORCHARDDISTRICT NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION: www.orcharddistrictneighborhood. com. SCORE:Bruce Michalski, www. scorecentraloregon.org or 541-316-0662. SUNRIVERAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE: 541-593-8149. VISIT BEND: www.visitbend.com or 541-382-8048.
MISCELLANY CENTRALOREGON LOCAVORE: www.centraloregonlocavore.com or Niki at info@centraloregonlocavore. com or 541-633-0674. HIGHDESERT SPECIAL OLYMPICS: 541-749-6517. OREGON ADAPTIVESPORTS: www.oregonadaptivesports.org, info©oregonadaptivesports.org or 541-306-4774. SACRED ARTOF LIVING CENTER: 541-383-4179. TUMALO LANGLAUFCLUB:Tom Carroll, 541-385-7981.
SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D5
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
josh Hollowayfindsnew kind of 'Intelligence' TV SPOTLIGHT
ing tech center, executive pro-
v .III(: '
By Kate O'Hare Zap2it
away, but in the meantime,
el's ability to use his chip to es-
the possibility of the wife out sentially invade everybody's there keeps the damper on privacy to solve a crime. We any sexual tension between don't use warrants with GaGabriel and Riley. "Which is great," says Holbriel's chip. During the pilot, Seitzman loway, "because I hate when considered having a Foreign there's two people who should Intelligence Surveillance Act be together, but they're not. Court judge as a series regu- There's no reason. Eventually
cial Forces operative Gabriel
Vaughn (Josh Holloway), who has a supercomputer microchip in his brain. Chris Helcermanas-Benge/CBS Entertainment Eyeing him is one of the po- Josh Holloway and Meghan Ory star in "Intelligence," premiering tential targets, a tech executive Tuesday on CBS. named Bryce, who has a big
lar, to oversee Gabriel's activ-
that will work itself out, but it
ities. In the end, though, Seitzman decided against it. "We stopped w o r r ying about it," he says. "We thought, "Don't let too much reality get in the way of a good reality." It's a good adage." In playing Gabriel, Hollo-
might take a long time." Holloway's also enjoying doing stunts, shooting guns and blowing things up, even if it results in a couple of broken bones in one hand. " I just
how we are dealing as a soci- security agency. Assigned legal niceties of the situation ety now. to protect him from outside as he is in getting to the heart threats and his own reckless-
It's now; i t's v ery c u r rent; and hack into any data cenit's the relationship between ter. Supporting him is Lillian
ents some ethical questions. Sitting in a white leather
ness isSecret Service Agent Riley Neal (Meghan Ory). A lso o n
h a n d a r e Dr .
Shenandoah Cassidy (John B illingsley), creator of t h e chip, and his son, Nelson (P.J. Byrne). Of course, in this age of concerns over NSA snooping on citizens, having a government agent who can hack databases with his brain pres-
Strand (Marg Helgenberger), airline seat in a partial set for the director of an elite cyber- a luxury jet doubling as a fly-
b r oke t hem t w o
weeks ago," he says, looking at his hand. "I had to throw a guy into a windshield. It was late; I forgot to let go. So I smashed him onto my hand,
way isn't as interested in the
"I liked the fact that the man Gabriel still is, and Gabriel assures him he's very hu- character was more human man. Bryce is skeptical, and than machine, and he had a when Gabriel asks the exec hidden agenda for volunteerwhat he thinks he is, Bryce re- ing for this program. He was plies, "The future." desperate to find his wife." Taking a break in another The missing wife may be corner of the set, Holloway dead or alive, and if alive, — in his first TV series since may have espionage agendas playing Sawyer on "Lost"of her own. While he searchsays, "When I read this mate- es, Gabriel solves cases using rial, it was like, 'This is some- his ability to connect directly thing that is very interesting.' to the global information grid
technologyand our humanity, how that is changing daily,
Well, perhaps not right
Our show depends on Gabri-
"Intelligence," premiering Tuesday on CBS, looks at the new gray area where man meets machine. In the set for a high-tech government facility built on the Disney lot in Burbank, Calif., evidence is examined in hopes of catching someone targeting scientists. Leading the analysis is former Spe-
interest in the intersection of the organic and the electronic. He wonders just how hu-
I asked was, "OK, when's the wife die?re
ducer Michael Seitzman says, "We ride this line all the time.
of the character.
"He's a soldier," he says. "I like things to have some fun.
and then we had t o f i n ish
fighting another two hours, so
It is a heavy thing, but he's a cocky bastard. That's why I
it was fantastic. "So it's fun to fight when
y ou're nauseous with break."
love the balance of the fact
that he is very much in love with his wife, and he has this
a
Holloway's not the only one
having fun. "At first I w a s reading, "Last episode," says Ory, 'God, where is his human "I have an M4 around a guy's side? He's just a cocky bas- neck. I break his neck, then tard; where's his depth? Does I turn around and shoot a he have another dimension?" bunch of people — and I shot And, boom, there it was. I was people while I had the gun like, "Oh, that's awesome." strangling him. It was pretty "However, the first question fun." real human side.
Woman resemblesbo riend's mom
MOVIE TIMESTODAY
Dear Abby:I met a guy I think is it Dad on his days off from work. perfect for me on a dating website. Mom cheatedon Dad, and the We have gone on several dates and man she cheated with lives with us. I don't have a good relationship they have been great. He respects my morals and even has some of with her boyfriend. We don't have his own, which isn't easy to find. much in common, and when he The problem: He says I am exact- drinks, he gets angry for no realy what he has been son and takes it out looking for except on me or Mom, and for one thing. I look i t puts t h e w h o l e DEAR like his mother. He household i n an ABBY says he really likes awkward position, s ometi m e s lasting me and would like L «'~ to keep dating to see for days. When he's if he can get past this issue. I like sober, he can be fun to be around. him very much. Is there something I have talked with m y m o m I can do, short of plastic surgery? about this. She promises she'll — Dead Ringer in Arizona talk to him and things are going Dear Dead Ringer: Before to change, but they never do. She changing anything,you need to doesn't want to break up with him explore more closely what he's because she can'tafford to pay saying. Ask to meet his mother, the mortgageon her own. Ihave then judge for yourself how strong thought about moving in with my the resemblance is. It's possible dad, but I don't want to upset her. the similarity is less physical and What do I do? — Wants to Move In With Dad more about your personality or mannerisms. Dear Wants:Your mother hasn't You should not alter your image assertedherselfwith her boyfriend to please anyone but yourself. because she's financially depenKeep in mind that many men DO dent on him. She's afraid if she
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 47 RONIN(PG-13) 3:50 • 47 RONIN3-D (PG-13) 12:55, 6:45, 9:45 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) Noon, 3, 6:10,9:25 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 1:25, 4:20, 6, 7:05, 9:55 • THE BOOKTHIEF(PG-13) 1:05, 4:40, 7:45 • FROZEN(PG)12:35, 3:40, 6:20, 9:05 • GRUDGEMATCH(PG-13) 12:25, 3:10, 6:15 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:25, 6:55, 9:10 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG IMAX 3-D (PG-13) 12:10, 4, 7:35 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 3, 6:10, 9:25 • JUSTIN BIEBER'3BELIEVE(PG)9:15 • NEBRASKA (R) 3:30, 9:30 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEMARKED ONES (R)1:35, 4:50, 7:50, 10:15 • PHILOMENA(PG-13) 1,7:10 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-13) 12:45, 4:30, 7:20, 10:10 • THESECRET LIFE OFW ALTER MITTY (PG)12:05,3:05, 6:50,9:35 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG)1:15, 3:35, 6:30 • THE WOLFOFWALLSTREET(R) 12:20, 2:15, 4:10, 8, 9 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
• There may be an additional fee for 3-D andIMAXmovies. • iNovie times are subject to change after press time. f
is willing — that's what you should do. You should not have to tolerate abuse in order not to "upset" your mother. It's OK to t ake care of
yourself. Dear Abby: I'm a 32 - yearold woman. My boyfriend of 11 years passed away almost three years ago. I loved him very much and miss him every day. Some well-meaning friends and family m embers have suggested a dating site.
Abby, when does someone know if it's time to move on'? I haven't been on a date in 13 years. I'm
scared of putting myself out there again and getting hurt. Any advice would be great. — Scared in Oregon
Dear Scared:If the only reason you haven't reached out before is fear of rejection, then it's time to
move on. Ask your friends and family to help you write a profile, and then consider what happens next as an "adventure." While there are no guarantees
you'll immediately find a relationship like the one you had, you marry women who resemble their insists he do something about his might find someone who is commothers in some way — wheth- drinking, he will leave her. patible. And if you don't, you could er it's conscious or not — and the The affair and the boyfriend still make some friends. marriagesare often successful. were her choice, not yours. If you Nothing v entured, n othing Dear Abby:My parents divorced want to move in with your father gained. many years ago, and ever since, I to avoid being around a verbally — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com have lived with my mother and vis-
abusive drunk — and your father
or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 (PG)11:15 • ENDER'3 GAME (PG-13) 2 • OUT OFTHEFURNACE(R) 9 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)6 • After 7 p.m., showsare2f and older only.Youngerthan 21 may attend screeningsbefore 7 p.m.ifaccompanied by alegal guardian.
** * * * When you feel spontaneous,
happier for the experience. Tonight: A force to be dealt with.
you reveal more of the mischievous child within yourself. A loved one delights in your company when you are this expressive. Whatever the two of you plan to do, it will be enjoyable and fun for both of you. Tonight: Add spice to the moment.
CANCER(June21-July 22)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
YOURHOROSCOPE
DAY, JAN. 4, 2014:This yearyou have an unusual capacity to visualize
By Jacqueline Bigar
your goals. Youalso might developyour sixth sense to the extent that you know who is calling even without looking at the caller ID. You seem to be more in tune with your environment than in the past. If you are single, you will know when you meet the right Stars showthe kind person. Have the of day you'll have courage to remain ** * * * D ynamic unattached until that point. If you are attached, your intuition allows you to read your sweetie in a new way. PISCESencourages you to break past conventional thinking.
ARIES (March21-April19) ** * You could have the intention of accomplishing certain errands only to toss that idea to the wayside. You might resist the urge to take the day off, but even at work you still might be found daydreaming. Head out early, if you can. Tonight: A quiet night at home.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * S ee beyond the obvious. In a discussion, others will share what they really would like to do. Listen well. Encourage a friend to take a risk and go for what he or she wants. This person will appreciate your feedback. Tonight: Off with friends and loved ones.
GEMINI(May21-June20) ** * Take time to share your plans and get feedback from an important friend or loved one. Schedule some time with a special person in order to get to know him and her better. Both of you will be
** * *
Understand what is going on
** * You'll finally land at home, and with someoneyou don't seeregularly. you might decide to enjoy a very quiet You might decide to take the time to go day. Consider going for a walk or getting visit this person. Don't forget the imporsome exercise. Schedule the day for you tance of maintaining eye contact. You and your well-being. Others will benefit will understand much more when you are when they interact with the new, revitaltogether. Tonight: Use your imagination. ized you. Tonight: Order out.
LEO (July 23-Aug.22)
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)
** * * Reach out to a dear friend or lovedone.Thisperson seems to have a twinkle in his or her eye and a general sense of what to do. You naturally lead, but can you naturally follow? That ability could be the path to enjoying a friendship even more. Tonight: Continue the theme.
** * * You might want to reach out to someoneyou careabout,as this person makes a difference to you. Make plans to catcha movietogether.You have been entertaining everyone else, and now it is time for you to have some fun. Tonight: Share some dinner with this person.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
** * * Keep your cellphone handy. It will seem as if nearly everyone you know
iscallingyou,andperhapsevensome people you don't know. Screen your calls and cut the texting. Happiness could
surround aspecial person in your life. Tonight: Say"yes" to an invitation.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * Know thatyou do need to keep working to get through a lot of errands and paperwork. You might want to take off; however, it seems as though you can't afford to do this just yet. Keep at it, and you will find some free time. Tonight: Use your imagination when making
plans. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
** * * A llow yourself to make that purchase you really wanted for Christmas but did not get. Make sure your budget can sustain the cost, though. In fact, you might discover something else that seems more appealing. Consider what bells and whistles you need. Tonight: Dinner out.
1:30 p.m. on 5 8, "NFL Football" — NFL playoff action begins with two wild-card games, starting with this AFC contest between the Kansas City Chiefs and the homestanding Indianapolis Colts. In the nightcap, it's an NFCclash as the Philadelphia Eagles host the New Orleans Saints. The winners here, along with those from tomorrow's two games on CBS and Fox, advance to the divisional round next weekend. NBC's NFL broadcast team includes Al Michaels and Cris Collinsworth Sp.m. onTCM, Movie:"The Bad and the Beautiful" —Following a reversal of fortune, a ruthless Hollywood producer
(Kirk Douglas) is forced to turn for help to a director (Barry Sul-
livan), anactress (LanaTurner)
and a writer (Dick Powell) — all of whom loathe him for the callous way he used and discarded people during his successful years. The 1952 drama also stars Gloria Grahame and Walter Pidgeon. 8 p.m.on 2 9, Movie:"Over theHedge" — "Me likey cookie!" This 2006 CGI film is stolen by Steve Carell as the voice of Hammy, a hyper squirrel with an addiction to sugar and caffeine. The main plot revolves
around a cunning raccoon
(voice of Bruce Willis) who uses naive forest residents to steal food from humans to replenish the stash he took from a hungry bear (voice of Nick Nolte). Additional voices include Garry Shandling, Wanda Sykes and William Shatner. Bp.m. onTNT, Movie:"Inglourious Basterds" — Boasting a distinctive title spelling, writer-director Quentin Tarantino's revision of a1978 war adventure casts Brad Pitt as the leader of a Jewish-American military unit that targets Nazi officers in particularly brutal
ways. In the course of carrying out their self-styled vengeance, they cross paths with a teen
(Melanie Laurent) whoseoperation of a movie theater provides the means for her to achieve her own aims while helping Pitt's character. Sp.m. onHBO, Movie: "Admission" — Tina Fey is serviced well by director Paul Weitz ("About a Boy") and screenwriter Karen Croner ("One True Thing") in this comedy about a college admissions officer who's in for some big surprises during a recruiting trip. A former classmate turned teacher(Paul Rudd) pushesfor her to consider one of his students (Nat Wolff) — who might
have more of aconnection to her than she initially suspects. Co-star Lily Tomlin nearly steals the show as Fey's mother. © Zap2it
EVERGREEN Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THEARMSTRONGLIE(R)3,9 • BLUEIS THEWARMEST COLOR (NC-17)5:30 • THE SECRETOF KELLS(noMPAArating) 1 I
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSATUR-
I
TV TODAY
I
In-Home Care Servlces
Care for loved ones. Comfort forall. 541-389-0006
www.evergreentnhome.com
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • 47 RONIN(PG-13) 11:15 a.m.,1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)11 a.m., 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • FROZEN(PG-13) 11:15a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:15, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 1:30, 4:15,7:15 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)2, 4:45, 7:30 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-13) 1:45, 4:30, 7 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)2:45,6:30
lESSCNNM
BEST TIRE IAI.IIE PRONIIE t
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i
makes youhappy. © King Features Syndicate
'
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Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • 47RONIN(PG-13) 2:05, 4:40, 7:20, 9:50 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) 6:40, 9:15 • GRUDGEMATCH (PG-I3)1:50,4:25,7,9:30 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) Noon,6:30 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG 3-D(PG-13) 3:10, 9:45 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEMARKED ONES (R)1:05, 3:05, 5:05, 7:10, 9:10 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG)12:35, 2:40, 4:45 •
Plae Well, Retire Well
775SW Bonne Way,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0321 ewww.elevationcapital.biz
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THE BOOKTHIEF (Upstairs — PG-13) 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 • The upstairs screening room (UP) haslimited accessibility.
BOSCH Dishwasher Step up to Bosch with this great valuel Stainless steel 4 wash cycles
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * I f youfeel as ifyou aretop dog today, you are right-on. Ask for what you want, and do whatyou want. Some of you will enjoy reading or watching a movie at home, while others will opt to socialize with friends. Tonight: Only what
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GB! Magazine
Holds 14 place settings
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• Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at bendbulletiLcom/mevies
rrsHE43RLsijc
gSS79 l i miisd quantilres
~S ON TV.APPLIANCE
D6 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014 L
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U MAGAZINE CENTRALOREGON'8 WOMEN'8 AND FAMILY MAGAZINE •
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They raise families, focus on their careers and still manage to find time to make a difference in their communities. They are the women of Central Oregon. U Magazine is a bright, intelligent and inspiring magazine with a focus on family, health, and spirit which features topics of interest to today's women and their families. From subjects such as health, style and
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INSPIRED BY RZAVTRR QR FRRH@3
PIIBLISHINQSIX EDITIONSAVEAR • Saturday, February 15 • Saturday, April 12 • Saturday, June 7 • Saturday, July12 • Saturday, September 6 • Saturday, October 18 •
professional success to personal goals and
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THE PUBLICATIONFOR CENTRAL OREGON'S SENIORSAND BABV BOOMERS
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Central Oregon is the perfect place to live life to its fullest, and Ageless Magazine highlights individuals who are doing just that. The Central Oregon Council On Aging (COCOA) and The Bulletin have partnered to produce Ageless — a dynamic publication with content developed specifically for the largest and fastest growing segment of our community — those over 40 years of age. Ageless Magazine features locally written content that is engaging and informative with topics ranging from lifestyle and hobbies to health, legal and financial topics relevant to retirement and aging.
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AGELESS
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PUBLISHINGSIX EDITIONSAYEAR • Saturday, January 25 • Saturday, March 15 • Saturday, May 17 • Saturday, July 26 • Saturday, September 20 • Saturday, November 15
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CENTRAL OREGON LIVING
CELEBRATING HOME BlTHE HIGH DESERT LIFESTYLE
CENTRALOREGON'S ORIGINAL HOME ANDLIVING MAGAZINE One of The Bulletin's premier publications, this award-winning magazine features the lifestyle we
enjoy and some of Central Oregon's most unique people and places. It also features gardening in the high desert, local expert columnists and more. This publication celebrates individuality and appreciation for the natural surroundings that inspire us.
W HEN TOLOOK POR IT: PUBLISHINQFOUREDITIONS AYHLR • Saturday, March 1 • Saturday, June 28 • Saturday, October 4 • Saturday, December 6
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dlrrlll. HHH A FOCUS CN MNNE OEHGN Mlr NOHIHWHN CHOSSING HOME IS SMrll ENEHMHNICIE
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For homes online WWW b e n d h o m e S . C Om
THE BULLETIN
SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014
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ADVERTISING SECTION E
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New Homes Starting at $134,990! Nestled in t h e
Cascade Views Both Directions
h eart o f R e d m ond, c lose
The only thing better than enjoying a view of
to schools and shopping, lives Hayden
the Cascades through your bedroom window is having a cascading waterfall virtually right i n y ou r b a ckyard. A t T r i pleknot
Homes' newest community: Emily Estates.
Families will love the smart floor plans and luxuriously large lots in this charming and
Townhomes in the community of Tetherow, you can have both. One and two-story floor plans deliver the ultimate in serenity, while
peaceful new home neighborhood. Come tour our Model Home to learn more today!
541-516-4309. Hayden-homes.com
HAYDEN HOMES WWW.HAYDEN-HOMES.COM 541-516-4309
the maintenance-free lifestyle provides the utmost in activity. Priced from the mid $500,000s. Take Century Drive to Tetherow, turn right on Meeks Trail. Call Judy at 541-390-1411 or Natalie at 541-508-9581.
CASCADE SOTHEBY'S INTERNATIONAL REALTY JUDY MCCOMBS —NATALIE VANDENBORN, BROKERS TRIPLEKNOTTOWNHOMES,COM
Paid Advertisement
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Industr Leaders: 2014 COBA President r
Paid Advertisement
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by Kari Mauser, The Bulletin Advertising Department C e n t ra l O r e g on according to Campbell.
The n e w
Schermerhorn said he was surprised that the Portland compa-
she said. "He goes outofhisw ay "He has an easygoing demean- to make sure COBA's associate or that makes having a conver- members feelvery special. He sation with him enjoyable," said will definitely help COBA, its Campbell. members and their companies "I love people, and I work well learn and grow." with people. That was my focus As president, Schermerhorn for 15 years as executive vice said one of his goals for 2014 is president for A d air H o mes in membership growth for the orPortland," Schermerhorn said. ganization. "We've had a g ood d r ive Schermerhorn spent 25 years
ny was not initially well known
with Adair Homes before retir-
in Central Oregon. That lack of customer knowledge about the
ing atage 55.Four years later, bership back to where it was in the building professional grew 2010 when it declined because bored being in retirement. people were barely holding on," "I didn't know what I was go- he said. "Members are returning to do, but in 2000, at 59 years ing now, and we are getting new old, Neil Kelly hired me as a members, so that needs to be a
Builder's Association (COBA) 2014 president, Chuck Schermerhorn, spent 67 years in Portland before relocating to Bend to help
open a new branch of Neil Kelly in 2008.
As the general manager for Neil Kelly's Bend operations,
company's local grand opening immediately inspired him to become actively involved with COBA. He joined COBA's Remodelers Council, now known as the Remodelers Forum, meeting with
the group on a monthly basis. After a year, he was asked to join the COBA Board of Directors. "In Portland, I had been on the board of the Oregon Remodelers Association for six years, and in addition, I was on the steering committee for the Portland Metropolitan Home Builders Association," Schermerhorn said. COBA First Vice President Jay Campbell said Schermerhorn's
lately, but I w ant t o get mem-
sales recruiter and trainer, and in 2001, Neil's son, Tom, asked me to take over the corporate s ales management, a s w e l l ," Schermerhorn said. "Then, in 2007, we started talking about
opening an office in Bend, and I volunteered to go."
easy for us as board members. "2013 has seen a robust rebound in new construction and
along w it h
h i s d e m onstrated
leadership and considerable industry experience, make him an
remodeling," Schermerhorn excellent choice for president. continued. "With that, as president, I want to see us at COBA
increase our focus on green and s ustainable practices an d
on
energy conservation issues. I definitely see continued growth for 2014 because Bend has been, and continues to be, a destination spot." Immediate past COBA President, Walter R. Miller, Jr., said Schermerhorn's positive outlook,
" With C huck a t t h e h e l m , COBA can look forward to further a c hievements i n 20 1 4,"
Miller said. "I routinely relied on him in the performance of my own duties during 2013. With membership on therise, Chuck will have the support he'll need to maintain success of this great association. Chuck is a terrific
guy and will do great things for COBA."
focus." Schermerhorn said his focus
on membership growth ultimately means focussing on the benefits COBA offers its members.
"There's a smorgasbord of educational classes and opportunities we offer to the member-
Debbie Baldwin, p r incipal
b roker fo r C e n t ur y 2 1 G o l d ship." Country Realty, has served on Schermerhorn explained that COBA's board of directors with members have accessto classes Schermerhorn for several years. such as lead-based paint identifi-
She said that while she enjoys his cation training and building and positive attitude and great sense
remodeling to enable their cus-
leadership experience, both locally and in Portland, gives him
of humor, she really believes his tomers to remain in their homes leadership skills are what will as they age — known in the invaluable perspective on l o c al benefit COBA significantly. dustry as "aging in place." " Chuck's commitment to t h e and statewide building issues. Additionally, S c h ermerhorn That, in addition to his personal- building and remodeling trade said he wants to see COBA conity, makes him an asset to COBA, is, without a doubt, rock solid," tinue developing and advancing its plan and bid center as well as continue its involvement in the
community, particularly with nonprofit organizations such as First Story and Habitat for Hu-
manity. "Being involved on the board •
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of COBA has been such a great experience," Schermerhorn said.
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"I have to say, we are blessed by •
a tremendous staff that makes it
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Chuck Schermerhorn, general manager of Neil Kelly in Bend, will serve as 2014 president for COBA. Photo by Nicole Werner.
If you are a Rental Property Owner, Iin vite you to call me. • •
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P e aceful,Nl isheldtt yfum 10SFhome!AIC,covjnd t ontporctIQ tchenfeaturesglmslovetop,unique centeristsd tbreakfaslbar Livingrcomhasatas lireplacet tuitinbookcase.Mashrtldrcom8tuesl bedro omMpatttsjbyofliceforprivacy.ONcehas hardw oodIIIorsadbuilt irs.MastertsItoomhas spaciuo swalkindIset,mashrbathwi2sirdrs.Large backd eck,doublecargarage.Ijwnerm ainlainsyad.
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2 beds, 2baths. Charming homewith lots of natural light. Singlecargarage,gas fireplace.ADAaccessible. Privatebackpatio 8 partialy fencedbackyard.
RiverCanyonEsbrteswilhNeof pool,tennis courts, fitnessroomt slate4-the-art clubho use.Kitchenislight&brightw/ island t upgradedcabineh,woodllooring. G asfirep laceingreatroom.INlityroomw/ hookups .Maslerbedroomw/walk-incloset. G as,forced airheat,Doublecar garage,Fully fencedb ackyardw/palio.
a M iller Heigtsh,3bed,2 bath.Vaulted - ceilings ceilingfans neutral paint Fullyappliancedkitchen.Gastiled fireplace inlivingroomandW/D provided. Fullyfencedbackyardwith ' raisedgarde nbeds.Bonusomce room. Doublecargarage.
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3 beds, Z5baths 2-story home.Masteron main. Endof a
culde-saconalargefencedlot. Gas fireplace.1617sq. ft. 2-car attached garage.Laundryroom with W/D hookups.All utilities ~ & landscapingmaintained by tenant.
4 beds, 4baths. 2private offices, family roomw/vaulted ceilings. Chers kitchenfeatures awine refrigerator, butler's pantry, bay window&dual ovens. Hardwoodflooring, bonusroomw/ hardwoodfloors. Mudroomw/baywindow& laundry roomwl sink &W/Dhook-ups. Formaldining room,surround soundwired. Hot tub,attacheddoublecar garage, detachedsingle cargarage, RV par king&storageshed.Fencedyard.Spaciousbackdeckw/3 separateareas,coveredfront porch,andpets considered.
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2 beds, 2 baths. 1208sq. ft. Recessed living andkitchen
area. Fully applianced. Washer/dryer hook-upsin utility room.Quaint patio off kitchen area.Water &sewer paid. Tenantpays other utilities andmaintains yard.
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I pledge to strongly represent your management interests and surpass your expectations ... Always. You have my word on it.
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E2 SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Houses for Rent Redmond
732
740
745
CommerciaV!nvestment Properties for Sale
Condo/Townhomes for Sale
Homes for Sale
745
• H o mes for Sale
Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
Big River Meadows Re $104,900 I One Acre In $335,000 I Steps From A LIFE IN • j A c r e s. River. 3 bed, 3 bath, PARADISE! ! Quiet country setting PRIME COMMERCIAL 3 bdrm, 2~/~ bath, 1871 sort Home Backs Big Vandervert 1948 SF, 2 m aster2 Bdrm, 1 bath, 800y w/amazing views. 1 bdrm PROPERTY, this sq. ft. condo in Eagle Commons! $349,000. 1440 SF, 3 b ed, 2 bath. Huge shop with suites, 2 decks, Bo- Sq.ft., rustic cottage 1 bath, 672 sq ft home in charming Ma d ras Crest resort. Owner AD¹1022 bay door. Turn-around nus room. on a 2.99y acre parNE Redmond. $600/mo+ building is updated, added upgrades in- TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty driveway. One acre 541-390-6123 Dave cel. Come view this security dep. Taking ap- located on Hwy. 97, cluding central vac, 541-312-9449 corner lot. , 1734 SF. Lewis, Broker a mazing piece o f plications - 541-419-1917 Cat 5 wire system, whole house www.BendOregon Double car garage. 541-388-0404 paradise on the outhardwood floors & off stereo/amp to each RealEstate.com Large bac k yard. Windermere C e n tral skirts of R edmond. st. parking. $119,900. room & outdoor patio, RENTALS Greatroom floor plan. Oregon Real Estate Built on the curve of Houses for Rent MLS¹ 201305319 Pam new Italian d i ningTumalo Home on 5 AC, 541-639-6307 Secily 603 - Rental Alternatives the Deschutes River, Lester, Principal Bro room lights, top of the Sunriver 604 - Storage Rentals Incredible Mtn Views! Luse, Broker $400,000 - 18 Modoc, this p erfect s m all ker Century 21 Gold line Hunter Douglas $489,000. AD¹1042 541-610-5672 Sunriver. Newly Re- home has amazing 605 - Roommate Wanted Country Realty, Inc. s ilhouette blin d s TEAM Birtola VILLAGE PROPERTIES Garmyn Veronica Theriot, Bro- m odeled Home. 3 views of the moun616- Want To Rent w/remote control 8 Sunriver, Three Rivers, 541-504-1338 High Desert Realty master suites, exten- tains and the river. ker 541-388-0404 627- VacationRentals & Exchanges the list goes on! UnLa Pine. Great 541-312-9449 Windermere Central sive remodel in 2011. Detached garage has 630- Rooms for Rent Selection. Prices range 51487 HWY 97 1 . 64 believable High End www.BendOregon 1902 SF owner occu- a studio-type room Oregon Real Estate Acre commercial lot Furnishings & Furni631 - Condominiums & Townhomes for Rent $425 - $2000/mo. RealEstate.com pied o r vac a tion with an extra bath and on Hwy. $675,000. ture Packaqe is InView our full 2241 NW Awbrey Rd., r ental. Close to a l l 632 - Apt./Multiplex General shower att a ched. High Lakes Realty & cluded! $2 6 5 ,000. inventory online at Spacious 1810 SF 3 Bend. Hand crafted 634- Apt./Multiplex NE Bend has to offer. $425,000 Property M a n age- MLS 201 3 07064. bed, 2 bath Corner home with attention to Sunriver Village-Properties.com 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend ment 541-536-0117 John L Scott Realty, Unit Condo. $139,400 detail on a l l f i nish 541-410-8084 Susan MLS¹201309622 1-866-931-1061 Pitarro, Broker Bobbie Strome, 638- Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 541-548-1712 AD¹1202 work. This is a must 541-388-0404 Principal Broker 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend Find exactly what TEAM Birtola Garmyn preview pro p erty. Windermere Central John L Scott Real 745 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond High Desert Realty you are looking for in the Solid fir doors, cusOregon Real Estate Estate 541-385-5500 Homes for Sale 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 541-312-9449 tom clear vertical fir CLASSIFIEDS www.BendOregon 648- Houses for Rent General cabinets 8 ceiling fans $475,000 I River Front Pristine Large Family RealEstate.com in all rooms. Great Condo, 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend D o w ntown TURN THE PAGE 500 sq. It. upstairs C ommercial Lots I n Home or V a cation For More Ads 652 - Houses for Rent NW Bend office on NE side of Crooked River Ranch: Getaway. $399,900 Single Level-Built 2004, room floor plan with Bend. • Open floor wood floors & a firetown, private bath, all Great opportunity to AD¹1062 Fresh p a int. The Bulletin 654- Houses for Rent SE Bend 4 Bedroom, $165,000. place surrounded by plan. Granite counters. Two util. paid. $500 month start a b usiness or TEAM Birtola Garmyn 656 - Houses for Rent SW Bend AD¹1492 cabinetry. 3 bedroom, balconies. Detached plus $500 d e posit. relocate an existing High Desert Realty TEAM Birtola Garmyn 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 2.5 bath, large mas- garage. 541-771-1168 Aspen Rim ( $429,900 541-480-4744 High Desert Realty business. Near res541-312-9449 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver t er b e droom w i t h Eric Andrews, Broker • 3030 sq.ft. Renaistaurants, hotel and www. BendOregon 541-312-9449 walk-in sance built 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine Commercial Space at closet, 541-388-0404 www. BendOregon golf course. Owner RealEstate.com • 4 bedroom, 3 bath Eagle Crest Resortbuilt-ins & bath with all Windermere 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville C e n tral RealEstate.com AvaiTable 3/1/2014. Can terms avail. Business • Earth Advantage Certhe extras. M ature Oregon Real Estate 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters Check out the Circle, Lot 82:- 1.05 accommodate corp. landscaping with tified I mmaculate & W e l l 663 - Houses for Rent Madras classifieds online acres, $25,000. Lot 50 office, medical, dental, paver paths. Close to $615,000 - Tuscany • MLS 201310605 664- Houses for Rent Furnished - 1.30 acres & Lot 51- www.bendbulletirbcom Maintained SW Bend, downtown law/accounting office, Bend 8 has Style i n Br a detichDawn Ulrickson, Broker, $225,000 AD¹1092 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent banking, architects, engi- 1.23 acres still availUpdated daily CRS, GRI, CHMS plenty of parking for Park. 2910 S q .ft., TEAM Birtola Garmyn neering, recreational able at $35,000 each 675 - RV Parking uests & toys. Single level living, 2 541-610-9427 High Desert Realty retail, etc. 8000+ sq ft. or purchase both for 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, Almost 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 479,000 master suites, .46 541-312-9449 541-480-1199 $60,000 1600 sq.ft. Nestled in MLS¹201308330 Acre lot, g orgeous 682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage www.BendOregon Juniper Realty the Pines, $164,900 s Bobbie Strome, Kitchen. 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease RealEstate.com 541-504-5393 AD¹1672 Principal Broker Eric Andrews, Broker 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent Birtola Garmyn John L Scott Real Bsnll RuimRs Downtown Investment TEAM 541-388-0404 MORRIS High Desert Realty REAL ESTATE Estate 541-385-5500 Windermere Tick, Tock REAL ESTATE IRP ©xh P roperty 5 un i t s 541-312-9449 705 - Real Estate Services Central Oregon Real IA p Mmly~ M O~ d across from the river www. BendOregon 1.56 acres, Estate 713- Real Estate Wanted Tick, Tock... $229,000 on 1st St. & 1509 NW 1620 sq.ft. Tastefully RealEstate.com 719 - Real Estate Trades The Bulletin 2nd S t . Ori g inal done spacious home. 63080 STENKAMP ...don't let time get vintage 1917 home 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, View of 726 - Timeshares for Sale Home sitting on the To Subscribe call away. Hire a DRIVE Black Butte, on .33AC remodeled in 2007. 3 rim, double car ga- Affordable 730 - New Listings horse prop- 541-385-5800 or go to BR, 3 bath, gourmet $215,000. AD¹1082 professional out rage with a ttached erty - 1,700 sq.ft., 3 www.bendbulletin.com 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale kitchen, h a rdwood, TEAM Birtola Garmyn tack room and horse Bdrm, 2 bath home 726 of The Bulletin's 738 - Multiplexes for Sale granite & 4-l e v el High Desert Realty stall. Located off a Awbrey Butte ( Timeshares for Sale some TLC & "Call A Service 541-312-9449 740 -Condominiums 8 Townhomes for Sale elevator. Main living p aved r oad. M L S needs updating, 2 stalls, tack $998,700 www. BendOregon with vacation rentals 201309151 744 - Open Houses Professional" $10,000 I Sun r iver which will p roduce room 8 hay storage. • Expansive Cascade RealEstate.com Linda Lou Day-Wright. 745 - Homes for Sale 2.4 acres with under- Mountain views Condo. Si x weeks most Directory today! income. 541- 771-2585 746- Northwest Bend Homes per year (t/8 share). Attached Property & Per ground irrigation near • 3856 sq.ft. va c a tionRetail Crooked River Realty fect Exposure on Hwy thousands of acres of • 3 bedroom, 3 bath Fully furnished. Close rental is 1 BR, 1 bath, 747- Southwest Bend Homes Residential or Commer to SHARC. 2 bed, 2 7, $155, 9 0 0 cial Poss i bilities, $229,000 I Seller Will BLM land for riding. • MLS 201306785 748 - Northeast Bend Homes great room & huge 9 Michael J Hopp, Broker bath, 13 4 6 SF. deck, $269,900. AD¹1162 Consider Tra d e s. $219,000 separate AD¹1572 749 - Southeast Bend Homes 541-390-0504 541-639-6307 Secily TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn Rare 6 AC River Rim www.DavidFoster.Biz/ entrance, heating, etc. 750 - Redmond Homes Stenkamp Luse, Broker MLS ¹ High Desert Realty 20 1 309397. High Desert Realty lot, private well drilled 541-312-9449 541-610-5672 753 - Sisters Homes 541-312-9449 8 septic approved. David Foster, Broker $1,500,000. www. BendOregon 541-322-0034 Veronica Theriot, Bro- Call Ainslie Reynolds, www.BendOregon Area of nice homes. 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 541-213-9950 ker 541-388-0404 RealEstate.com RealEstate.com Crooked River Ranch Principal Broker 756- Jefferson County Homes John L. Scott Windermere Central amenities. Consider MORRIS ReMax Key Properties. 757 - Crook County Homes emodeled Hom e , Custom Home with Big trades i n Oregon Real Estate Real Estate, Bend 541-410-1054 Cell R+400 an o ther REAL ESTATE sq.ft. O ffice/ Shop on Fenced 1.4 state. 541-480-7777 762 - Homes with Acreage www.johnlscott.com 541-728-0033 Offi ce I&g M Q y ~ ~ 0~ 4 S hop on 1 . 4 A C , Acres! $265 , 000 Diana Barker, Broker 763- Recreational Homes and Property Call a Pro $169,900. AD¹1582 AD¹1522 Office building + home 541-923-4633 764 - Farms and Ranches BEACH VACATION Take care of Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn Whether you need a + s hop. $ 178,000. TEAM Windermere GETAWAY 771 - Lots High Desert Realty High Desert Realty your investments fencefixed,hedges 16480 William Foss, Central Oregon Real • 2 bedrooms, 1 bath 541-312-9449 773 - Acreages 541-312-9449 La Pine. High Lakes Estate • 1146 sq.ft. condo trimmed or a house with the help from BendOregon www.BendOregon 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes Realty 8 Pr o perty www. • Pool, hot tub, tennis RealEstate.com built, you'll find RealEstate.com Call The Bulletin At The Bulletin's Management 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land www.Jackson-Anderprofessional help in 541-536-0117 541-385-5809 "Call A Service son.com Large 4700 sq.ft., 7 Gorgeous Custom Built 648 Candice Anderson, Bdrm, 7 B ath p lus Home on 3 3 AC Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Professional" Directory The Bulletin's "Call a Houses for 738 Broker 541-788-8878 Bonus Rooms, 4.77 w/Views! $1,990,000 At: www.bendbulletin.com Service Professional" John L. Scott Acres! $49 4 ,900. AD¹1632 Rent General Multiplexes for Sale Directory Real Estate, Bend AD¹1132 $259,000 I River Can- $694,000 - Near Smith TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.johnlscott.com yon Estates TownRocks, gorgeous 3 PUBLISHER'S 541-385-5809 2 bdrm, 2 bath duplex TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 1000 sq. ft. each side. High Desert Realty home. 3 bed, 2 bath, b edroom, 3 ba t h , NOTICE 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 1734 SF. Double car 3880 s q . ft . MLS BEAUTIFUL All real estate adver- $7,900-$40,000 Enjoy landscaped & fenced www. BendOregon DECORATOR HOME yard, $179,900. www. BendOregon garage. Large back- 201300784 tising in this newspa- Eagle Crest all year RealEstate.com 541-280-1746 RealEstate.com yard. Greatroom floor Linda Lou Day-Wright. • 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths per is subject to the as a fractional owner. 541- 771-2585 • Gas fireplace 8 A/C F air H o using A c t Benefits of being an Remarkable Deschutes plan. 5 4 1-639-6307 River View CondoMt DUPLEX Crooked River • Fully fenced yard which makes it illegal Eagle Crest Owner at R iver & Can y o n Secily Luse, Broker 630 • NE Bend, single level Bachelor Village, 20% 541-610-5672 • $375,000 Realty to a d vertise "any a "fraction" of the cost. Views! $ 1 ,200,000. Rooms for Rent Equity Share, • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths 8 Veronica Theriot, BroTheresa Ramsay, preference, limitation Home-ID FRAC AD¹1222 2 bdrms, 2 baths $59,000. AD¹1542 Broker 541-815-4442 ker 541-388-0404 or disc r imination TEAM Birtola Garmyn Eagle Crest Properties Room fo r re n t in based on race, color, 866-722-3370 Say "goodbuy" • Fenced yards & 2-car TEAM Birtola Garmyn Windermere Central John L. Scott High Desert Realty top-notch, b e a utiful tandem garages High Desert Realty Real Estate, Bend Oregon Real Estate sex, handi541-312-9449 to that unused area $500/mo. + part religion, 541-312-9449 www.johnlscott.com cap, familial status, People Look for Information • $309,900 www. BendOregon utilities. 541-279-9538. item by placing it in www.johnlscott.com www. BendOregon $299,000 - Custom with marital status or naRealEstate.com About Products and RealEstate.com Cascade views, Co/4402 tional origin, or an in- Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Classifieds Need help fixing stuff? 632 Kellie Cook, Broker rian, Vac, bayed winWonderful 2002 Built tention to make any Call A Service Professional The Bulletin Clsssifieds River Meadows Resort 541-408-0463 dows, d b l -attached pre f erence, pt./llilultiplex General such find the help you need. Home Chalet! Home on a creage! garage, 20x24 shop John L. Scott 541-385-5809 limitation or discrimi$199,000. AD¹1342 www.bendbulletin.com $194,900. AD¹1352 with overhead door, Real Estate, Bend nation." Familial staTEAM Birtola Garmyn CHECKYOUR AD N e w Listings www.johnlscott.com TEAM Birtola Garmyn hot tub room, large High Desert Realty tus includes children • High Desert Realty f enced area. M L S 70+ acres of seclusion Beautiful 8 under the age of 18 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 on Bi g D e schutes 201305717 Spacious. www.BendOregon living with parents or Northwest Crossing ( Garage Sales www. BendOregon River with private har- Beautiful property with Nancy Popp, $389,000 legal cus t odians, RealEstate.com RealEstate.com bor. Lodge style home comfortable spaces Principal Broker pregnant women, and • 1668 sq.ft. townhome Garage Sales with expansive 40x40 for varied family inter541-815-8000 • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath Craftsman 5 bdrm, 3 people securing cusCustom Frame B uilt great room overlook- ests. Exquisite teakon the first day it runs tody of children under • Hardwood floor, cusCrooked River bath, River Canyon Oarage Sales Home on Almost 2 Estates, $ 4 1 5,000. ing river, harbor, pvt 3 wood flooring in foyer, to make sure it is cor- 18. This newspaper tom cabinets Realty Acres! $125 , 000 acre lake 8 gorgeous living area and gourrect. "Spellcheck" and will not knowingly ac- • MLS 201310994 AD ¹1052 Find them AD¹1512 human errors do ocCascade Mtn. views. met kitchen. Kitchen Jen Bowen, TEAM Birtola Garmyn Just too many cept any advertising TEAM Birtola Garmyn in MLS¹ 201 3 05184. has granite countercur. If this happens to for real estate which is Broker, GRI High Desert Realty High Desert Realty collectibles? $1,395,000. your ad, please con- in violation of the law. The Kelleher Group tops, large i s land, 541-312-9449 The Bulletin 541-312-9449 Call Ainslie Reynolds, tact us ASAP so that 541-280-2147 planning desk and www. BendOregon O ur r e aders a r e www. BendOregon Principal Broker corrections and any Classifieds Sell them in numerous oak cabiRealEstate.com hereby informed that RealEstate.com ReMax Key Properties. adjustments can be nets. Master b e dThe Bulletin Classifieds all dwellings adver541-385-5809 541-410-1054 Cell made to your ad. 0 room on main level Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 Big Home on Big Acre tised in this newspa541-728-0033 Off i ce 541-385-5809 BLM! with luxurious bathb ath Ranch on A l Backing are available on 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified per room an d pr i vate 740 MORRIS most 1 Acre, $125,000. AD¹1662 an equal opportunity $92,000 I Walking Dis- deck. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Large REAL ESTATE $350,000. AD¹1002 basis. To complain of Condo/Townhomes High Desert Realty $ 319,000 I Cu s t om tance To Everything f amily/media r o o m 634 TEAM Birtola Garmyn d iscrimination ca l l for Sale In Madras. 2 bed, 2 541-312-9449 Home - 5 A cres and game/rec room. High Desert Realty Apt./Multiplex NE Bend HUD t o l l-free at www.BendOregon Near BLM. 3 bed, 2 bath. Sliding doors to $542,500 MLS¹ 541-312-9449 1-800-877-0246. The Attn. Outdoor Enthusipatio. Fenced & landRealEstate.com bath. Knotty hickory 201303078. www. BendOregon toll f ree t e lephoneCommercial/Investment asts. Fully furnished 1 Call for Specials! scaped ba c kyard. Bobbie Strome, cabinets. Vau l t ed RealEstate.com number for the hear- • Properties for Sale Limited numbers avail. bdrm, 2 bath condo. 2100 S q.ft., C l assic ceilings, formal dining. Double car garage Principal Broker ing im p aired is 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Easy resort living with with storage. Across Home on Edge of Large master bedJohn L Scott Real Best Priced Home in 1-800-927-9275. W/D hookups, patios 1352 NE 2nd St., Bend. everything you need. DRW, Redu c ed! Canyon, $ 1 79,900. room suite. 2 3X23 from park & near open Estate 541-385-5500 or decks. MLS¹ Beautiful commercial $69,000. AD¹1412 $184,999 AD¹1110 attached gar a ge. land. 5 4 1 -480-7777 MOIJNTAIN GLEN, Just bought a new boat? o ffice b u ilding i n 201300532. Call TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn 541-480-9883 Audrey Diana Barker, Broker Look at: 541-383-9313 Sell your old one in the Bend. $599,000 High Paula Mellon, Broker. High Desert Realty Broker 541-923-4633 High Desert Realty Cook, Bendhomes.com Professionally classifieds! Ask about our Lakes Realty & Prop- 541-977-4009 54'I -312-9449 Windermere 541-312-9449 541-923-4663 Super Seller rates! managed by Norris & for Complete Listings of erty Man agementCentral Oregon Realty www.BendOregon www.BendOregon Windermere C e n tral Central Oregon Real Stevens, Inc. 541-385-5809 Estate Area Real Estate for Sale 541-536-0117 Group, LLC RealEstate.com RealEstate.com Oregon Real Estate •
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SUN 2PM - 4PM Award winning builder, Structure Development NW! Great Room with extensive use of hardwood floors, built-ins, 3 sided fireplace between dining area. Kitchen with quartz slab island 5 commercial style range/hood. Private master suite on main 2306 NW Floyd Lane floor. Master bath with walkDfrectiossr West on 5kyliners in tile shower, tile counters 5 floor. Bedroom/den & full bath Road, right on XW Lemh/Passinto on main floor. Bonus room, 2 Mr crossing. Right on Floyd Lane. bedrooms K bath upstairs. Amazing detail throughout!
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THURS. - SUN. 12PM - 4PM
SATURDAY 11AM - 1PM
Don't miss this brand-new Pahliscb Home in The Bridges! 2270 sf, 3 bdrm, 3 bath, master on the main. Beautiful mountain views, overlooking open space, on a cul de sac, 20807Tamar Lane, with an inviting water feature. Bend Amazing community amenities include a clubhouse, pools, Direciiosrrfrom the parkway, east hot tub, full gym and game on Reed/ilarfet, south on 15th, then room, and more! follow signs.
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Hosted & Listed by: Listed and Hostedby:
EDIE DELAY
CINDY BERG-WAGNER
Principal Broker
Broker
541-280-2580
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R 5 A
L T 0 R 5
541-506-0939
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windows looking to backyard. Home s on tberight. 206578eaumontDr. Home sits on a quiet street, close to shops R parkway access.New exterior paint last year.
Hosted 6 Lrrted by:
R 8 A L T 0 R 8 •
kitchen is great for entertaining on CooleyRoad, Turn Le ft on NEHigh w/eating bar K corner sink w/ Standard Dr., Left on Beaumont Dr,
RHIANNA KUNK1ER
541-420-2950
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A nice covered porch welcomes you to this well cared for home, it backs to covered canal making a park-like setting Overhead storage area in two car garage. The open great room features a 20657 Beaumont Dr. cozy gas fireplace for those chilly Bend evenings. Vaulted open Directions: From Hwy97 go east
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22954 MOSS ROCK • BEND
66105 PRONGHORN ESTATE DR. • BEND
23040 BRUSHLINE CT. • BEND
3 bed, 3.5bath, 3556 SF home features Cascade Mtn. views from upper level, gourmet kitchen, moss rock fireplace, 4 zone AC/heat & master on main. Wonderful outdoor living with sweeping backyard backing BLM. $1 ,1 95,000
3 Bed, 3.5 Bath, 4225 SF open fl oor plan with high vaulted beamed ceilings. Includes rock fireplace & gourmet kitchen with top-of-the-line appliances plus a large master 8r second bedroom on main. Enjoy a fire pit & hot tub. $1,587,500
3 Bed, 3 Bath, 5500 SF Tuscan estate on second hole of Jack Nicklaus Course. Smart Wire home offers Venetian plaster walls, 2-story circular foyer, master suite with fireplace, gourmet kitchen fk great room with Telluride Gold stone fireplace. $ 1.,899,000
Homes start under 1200,000. Brand new homes is Bend with the quality Pahtisch is known for - s t ainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with under20781 NE Comet I,ane mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention given DirectiossrNorth on Boyd Acres, to allow for tons of natural Right on Sierra, Le f( on BlackPo~der,
light a much more. come Right on Cometlane.Lookfor signs. by the madel home for more information and plans.
Hosted & Listed by:
statting under
$200,000
RHIANNA KUNKLER Broker
541-306-0939
PahlischHomes
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THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY JANUARY 4 2014 E3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745
Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
BEND PARK Park-like Dream Acreagel setting. Main dwelling $299,000 plus guest • Smith Rock & Cashouse/rental on a to- cade Mtn views tal of 0 .55y acres. • 2.97 acres Main dwelling floors • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath are engineered hard- • MLS 201304520 wood in living, dining, Jim Moran, Broker & bedrooms. Mitsub541-948-0997 ishi electric heating & c ooling syst e m . Kitchen has fantastic cabinets with Corian countertops. Adjacent MORRIS guest house and main REAL ESTATE h ome together f o r I&~ w~ ~ op d $510,000 MLS¹201309647 Elkai Woodsl Bobbie Strome, $497,750 Principal Broker • 2586 sq.ft. townhome • 3 bedroom, 3 bath John L Scott Real Estate 541-385-5500 • Overlooks Widgi Creek 18th fairway FIND IT! • MLS 201208996 DQT ITI Deborah Benson PC, Broker, GRI, SELL IT! Preview Specialist The BulletinClassifieds 541-480-6448 BREATHTAKING CASCADE VIEWS • Neil Hudson Designed Home • 4015 SF+1040 SF MORRIS shop & wine rooms REAL ESTATE • 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths l~ y~ ~ O» d • Fantastic Entertaining Elkhorn Ridgel Home $385,000 Danielle Snow, Broker • 2245 sq.ft. home 541-306-1015 • 4 bedroom, 3 bath John L. Scott • Landscaped,fenced Real Estate, Bend yard www.johnlscott.com • MLS 201308088 Bring your toys! AdorBrandon Fairbanks, able Contemporary on Broker, SRES, 1 a cre, b e autifully GRI, CDPE landscaped lot. 1628 541-383-4344 sq ft., master on the main with 2 b a ths, open floor plan, 25 ft. ceilings, custom woodwork and cabinMORRIS etry, 2 baths down REAL ESTATE upstairs loft, bedroom, I& p ~» y ~ ~ o~ d office half bath with geothermal h e ating ENJOY EAGLE CREST and cooling. 2 car gaLIVING! rage plus extra ga- • Wonderful home on rage/shop with one Golf Course door, half bath, oil • 281 8 sq.ft. heat, tons of storage • 3 bedrooms, 3 baths and work space. 2 • $515,000 RV hook ups, tons of www.johnlscott.com parking!! MLS¹ /20002 201310429 Faye Phillips, Broker $249,900 541-480-2945 Call Ainslie Reynolds, John L. Scott Principal Broker Real Estate, Bend ReMax Key Properties. www.johnlscott.com 541-410-1054 Cell Just bought a new boat? 541-728-0033 Off ice Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our CABIN IN THE Super Seller rates! WOODS! 541-385-5809 • 4 bedrooms, 2 baths • 5 Acres For the Horse Lover in • Oversized 2-car gaBend. End of the road rage privacy and close to • $199,000 town. 1620 sq.ft., 3/2, www.johnlscott.com 5 stall barn w/shop /28599 and storage, 3 acres Ellen Clough, Broker, irrigated. $350,000. ABR, CRS Scott McLean, 541-480-7180 Principal Broker John L. Scott 541-408-6908 Real Estate, Bend Realty Executives www.johnlscott.com •
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Keystone Ter r ace.Mountain High Luxury NE Bend l $649,000 Three fully occupied $ 524,000. This i m - • Custom 2152 sq.ft. 3182ysf tri-plexes lo- maculate custom-built • 3 bedroom, 2 bath cated just a few home features 3586 • 3.59 acres, 3600 sq.ft. blocks from shopping sf, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 shop & the facilities of Juni- baths, formal dining 8 • MLS 201306453 per Park. Exterior of living rooms, family Greg Miller PC, buildings have vinyl room, bonus room Broker, CRS, GRI siding and are neat w/wet bar, office/den, 541-408-1511 and attractive. master bed r oom $325,000 for each w/private balcony, 3 triplex gas fireplaces, vaulted MLS¹201309427, ceilings and triple car 201309433, garage. Gated comMORRIS 201309444 munity incl u d es REAL ESTATE Bobbie Strome, swimming pool, clubPrincipal Broker house/ rec room and John L Scott Real tennis courts. 20388 NE Redmond l Estate 541-385-5500 Buttermilk Ct., Bend. $145,000 MLS 201300259 La Pine l $129,900 • 1148 sq.ft. Remington Real Estate • 1922 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath LLC 541-330-8929 • 3 bedroom, 2 bath www.remingtonrealtore.com • Landscaped front yard • 1 acre with sprinklers • MLS 201304830 Where can you find a • MLS 201310603 Darryl Doser, Ray Bachman, helping hand? Broker, CRS Broker, GRI 541-383-4334 From contractors to 541-408-0696 yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service MORRIS MORRIS Professional" Directory REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE l~ y~ ~ O» d MOUNTAIN VIEWS! •Single level home La Pine l $154,900 Northwest Crossingl • 1704 sq.ft. •2.43 acres $725,000 • 3 bedroom, 2 bath •Between Bend & Sis• 3572 sq.ft. custom • 1 acre, near La Pine ters home •Many upgrades State Park • 4 bedroom, 5 bath • MLS 201310343 www.Jackson-Ander• Marble counters, Rachel Lemas, Broker son.com cherry floors 541-383-4359 Barbara Jackson, • MLS 201310012 Broker 541-306-8186 541-896-1263 Jan Laughlin, Broker, John L. Scott Real Es t ate, B end ABR, CRS, GRI, CSP 541-350-6049 www.johnlscott.com
CRYSTAL CLEAR MTN VIEWS! • 38+/- Acres with 37+/-
Irrigated
• Beautiful 2608 sq.ft.
home
• Barn with stalls
Jean Nelsen, Broker
Get your business
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Homes for Sale PARK-LIKE SETTING WITH RV PARKING • Single level home in SE Bend • 1312 sq.ft. • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths • $233,000 Shelley Arnold, Broker 54'I -771-9329 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscott.com PERFECT STARTER OR INVESTMENT •Like new - complete remodel •3 bdrm, 2 bath in quiet neighborhood •Huge fenced yard •A/C, 2-car g a rage, $155,000 www.johnlscott.com
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John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscott.com Powell Buttel $299,900 • 1846 sq.ft., 4.79 acres • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • Barn, 2 stalls, next to BLM land • MLS 201309898
Gary Rose,
RRI
541-213-9950
John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscott.com Advertise your car! Add A Picture! HALF-ACRE LOT! Reach thousands of readers! • Single level in a Call 541-385-5809 park-like setting The Bulletin Classifieds • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1420 sq.ft. Detroit Lake - Stunning c ustom-built 201 0 • Garden area & room for RV parking Detroit Lake h o me • $249,900 that's perfect for large gatherings, quiet es- www.johnlscott.com/cyn dirobertson capes or year-round living. A short walk Cyndi Robertson, Broker 541-390-5345 from the marina, town John L. Scott or lake. This home b oasts s o man y Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscott.com amenities that photos won't do i t j u stice!Historic Van d evert MLS¹201308216 Ranch - $1,795,000 $549,000. Call Deb- Luxury lo g h o m e, bie McCune, Princi- 8225 SF, 5 bedrooms, pal Broker b aths, s e parate ReMax Key Properties. 6 guest quarters, his/her 541-647-0052 Cell offices, media room, 541-728-0033 Offi ce exercise room w /Endless Pool & Downtown Bendl much more! Stunning $699,000 views of Mt. Bachelor • 2593 sq.ft. from almost e very • 2 master suites room! Private gated • Historic charactercommunity, equesrenovated trian facilities, fly fish• MLS 201301793 ing lake, rich natural Diane Robinson, landscape, 8 miles of Broker, ABR ranch trails, 2 mean541-419-8165 d ering miles of t he Little Desc h utes River. 55975 Hashknife Rd, Bend. MLS Realtors
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HOMES PRICED FROM
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2203 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. • Central courtyard • Large greatroom • Master on main level • Bright interior • Priced at$649,900 DIRECTIONS: West on Shevlin Park Rd., left on NWCrossing Dr., left on NW
Lemhi PassDr.
2175 NW Lolo Dr. • Elegant & spacious • Main floor abovestreet • Master on main level • Central courtyard • Priced at$739,900 DIRECTIONS: West on Skyliners Rd., right on Mt. Washington Dr., right on MW Lolo Dr.
2123 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. • Exceptional finishes • Front paverpatio • Open greatroom • Bright island kitchen • Priced at$449,000
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DIRECTIONS: West on Skyliners Rd., right on MWLemhi PassDr. 'V
A LL A R O U N D
Bend R. Central Oregon
541-420-3927
Hasson Company
Count on our group of local real estate professionalsto help you navigate.
Kathy Denning, Broker
Move-in Ready$259,000 - Fantastic ture trees surrounding b uy! This 2 188 s f • Water & el e c trical MORRIS h ome f eatures 3 hookups present REAL ESTATE • Single car garage on USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! bedrooms, 2 baths, large l iving r o o m, property dining area, spacious • Ready for your double Door-to-door selling with itchen w it h ne w wide! fast results! It's the easiest k Just too many stainless appliances, Colleen Dillingham, way in the world to sell. laundry room, bonus collectibles? Broker 541-788-9991 room, deck, new inteJohn L. Scott The Bulletin Classified rior & exterior paint, Real Estate, Bend Sell them in 541 485-5809 tile counters, flooring, www.johnlscott.com f ixtures an d l a n d-The Bulletin Classifieds Ready fo r t h e 4H LAZY RIVER SOUTH scaping. m o u ntain Project, Bend. 5.75 R emodeled 353 5 y views from living & 541-385-5809 acres, 3318 sq.ft., 4 S q.ft. home with 4 master bed r oom, bdrm, 3.5 baths, 5.16 bdrm + offic e and 3 large private backacre irrigated, RV gabaths. Master bath yard, conveniently loNOTICE: with large jetted tub & cated t o sc h ools, All real estate adver- rage/Shop, + income. Scott McLean, new tile shower. Me- shopping and medi- tised here in is subPrincipal Broker dia room, family room, c al f a cilities. T h is ject to th e F ederal 541-408-6908 h uge kitchen w i t h home is m ove-in Fair Housing A c t, Realty Executives handcrafted cabinets ready! 1682 NE Di- which makes it illegal & granite counters, ablo Way, Bend. MLS to advertise any pref- Ridge At Eagle Crest l walk-in pantry, sun- ¹201310127 limitation or $234,000 r oom with hot t u b. Remington Real Estate erence, discrimination based • 1419 sq.ft. townhome Home has cedar eves LLC 541-330-8929 race, color, reli- • 2 bedroom, 2 bath with copper accents. www.remingtonreaitore.com on ion, sex, handicap, • On the creek E xterior siding o n jamilial status or na- • MLS 20'I 302108 home, garages & NE Bendl $279,000 tional origin, or inten- Diane Lozito, Broker storage bldg have just • 2151 sq.ft. tion to make any such 541-548-3598 been painted. Watch • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath preferences, l i mita541-306-9646 the wildlife from the • .17 acre corner lot tions or discrimination. wrap-around deck or • MLS 201308521 We will not knowingly go to your private acMinda McKitrick, accept any advertisc ess to 300y f t o f Broker, GRI ing for real estate Little Deschutes River 541-280-6148 which is in violation of MORRIS frontage for fishing, this law. All persons REAL ESTATE swimming or floating. are hereby informed IA» A t l y ~ M O~ $495,000 that all dwellings adMLS¹¹201309267 vertised are available People Lookfor Information Bobbie Strome, MORRIS on an equal opportuAbout Products and Principal Broker REAL ESTATE nity basis. The Bulle- Services Every Daythrough John L Scott Real tin Classified The Bulletin ClassiNeds Estate 541-385-5500
GOLF COURSE & John L. Scott MOUNTAIN VIEWS Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscott.com .4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, 3-car garage Wrap-around deck for BBQs Need to get an ad •Floor-to-ceiling stone in ASAP? fireplace www.johnlscott.com/92 357 Fax It to 541-322-7253 Peggy Lee Combs, Broker 541-480-7653 The Bulletin Classifieds John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscott.com Custom luxuryhome on Tetherow's 12th fairway with m ountain Call a Pro v iews of N o rth & Whether you need a South Sister, Broken Top and peek-a-boo fence fixed, hedges of M t . Ba c helor. trimmed or a house Single level living with built, you'll find two guest suites upprofessional help in stairs. Featuring exquisite detail, custom The Bulletin's "Call a finishes, sep a rate main level den/office, Service Professional" Directory open custom kitchen to great room with 541-385-5809 butler pantry, separate main level activ- GREAT HOUSE IN NE ity room (with butler BEND, MOVE IN pantry pass through) READY! opens to large stone • Open living area patios and o utdoor w/fireplace entertainment area, • Built in 2007, enclosed breezeway 2207 sq.ft. access from o ver• 3 bedrooms, sized triple car ga2.5 bath+ loft rage to mudroom with • $249,900 pet area. www.angiecox.johnlscot Karen Malanga, t.com Broker Angie Cox, Broker 541-390-3326
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RRRI
RR EiR
Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809
745
I1900IINW I KMonterey Pines Dr. x H
• Charming cottages • 2 & 3 bedroom plans • High end finishes • Central location • Homes pricedfrom$329,900
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DIRECTIONS: West on NWNewport Ave./NW Shevlin Park Rd., right on NW Pence Ln., left on NWMonterey Pines Dr. Property on right.
There's nothing quite like a home when it comes to inspiration.
1472 NW Portland Ave. • Bright southern exposure • Thoroughly remodeled • View of city, Paulinas • Large lot w/ RV parking • Priced at$463,000 DIRECTIONS: From Parkway exit Revere Ave. westbound, south on NW Wall St., right on MWPortland Ave.
19138 Baker Rd. • Wooded 0.9-acre lot • 4 BR plus bonusroom • Lots of storage space • Tile kitchen surfaces • Priced at$299,900
I At EVergreen Home LOanS, We're PaSSiOnate abOut hOme
fnancing.We know your home ismuch more than a roof i over your head — it's the place where memories are made. • We're a local, direct lender focused exclusively on home loans
, , gE.
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glaECTIO¹S:FromHwy.97south take Baker/Knott Rd. exit, right on BakerRd., continue past Brookswood Blvd.
1201 NW Albany Ave. • Enlarged mill bungalow • Near SW amenities • Master bath en suite • Room for RVparking • Priced at$349,000
• Full range Of PrOduCtS inCluding thOSe tO helP firSt-time homebuyerS
• We originate, fund and service home loans in neighborhoods near you
DIRECTIONS: From Parkway exit right on Colorado Blvd., right on SW Simpson Ave., right on SW Columbia St., left on NW AlbanyAve.
Two locations serving all of Central Oregon
19504 Century Dr.
Bend l 541-318-5500
• Striking architecture • Master on main level • 11-ft great room ceiling • On road to Mt. Bachelor • Priced at$524,900
685 SE 3rd Street, Bend, OR 97702 ML-3213-10
Prineville l 541-416-7480 220 NW Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville, OR 97754 ML-3213-5
EVERGREEN' NMLS 3182
O 2013EverqreenHomeLoansisaregistered tradenameof EverqreenMoneysourceMortqaqe Company'NMLS ID3182.Trade/service marksaretheproperty of Evergreen HomeLoans.All rights reserved.Licensedunder:OregonMortgageLending LicenseML-3213.11/13.
DIRECTIONS: From Parkway exit right on Colorado Blvd., left on SW Century Dr., watch for frontage road on right.
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Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
Ridge at Eagle Crest SE Bend Duplex ( Level, nearly 0.6 acre $219,000 parcel with utilities at • 848 sq.ft. units the street. HOA fee • 2 bedroom, 2 bath includes al l E a g le each Crest amenities: 3 • Fenced backyards sports centers, pools, • MLS 201309180 t ennis c ourts, r e - Jerry Stone, Broker duced golf fees, use 541-390-9598 of restaurant, road and common ground maintenance. Large lot with golf course view. You must preMORRIS view this p r operty. REAL ESTATE Eagle Crest o ffers I&~ dy~ ~ ap d easy access to Bend, Redmond & Sisters. Tick, Tock The lot sits on the tee box of the 4th hole of Tick, Tock... t he R i d g e Gol f Course! $1 4 9,900 ...don't let time get MLS¹ 201308967 away. Hire a Bobbie Strome, Principal Broker professional out John L Scott Real of The Bulletin's Estate 541-385-5500 "Call A Service Take care of Professional" Directory today! your investments with the help from Single Level [ The Bulletin's $499,000 • 2896 sq.ft. "Call A Service • 3 bedroom, 3 bath Professional" Directory • 5 acres • MLS 201304836 Jane Strell, Broker, RIVERSIDE CONDO ABR, GRI ON BEND'S 541-948-7998 WESTSIDE • Wonderful home on Golf Course • 2818 sq.ft. • 3 bedrooms, 3 baths MORRIS • $515,000 www.johnlscott.com/ REAL ESTATE 20002 hd~& 4 y ~ ~ ~ d Faye Phillips, Broker Sisters [ $169,900 541-480-2945 • 1920 sq.ft. John L. Scott • 4 bedroom, 2 bath Real Estate, Bend acre, fenced backwww.johnlscott.com • .17 yard • MLS 201309690 Good classified adstell Johnson, Broker the essential facts in an Debbie 541-480-1293 interesting Manner.Write from the readers view not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will MORRIS help them insomeway. REAL ESTATE This •
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
• H o mes for Sale •
SW Bend ( $249,900 • Deschutes River & Pilot Butte views • 3 bedroom, 2 bath manufactured • .37 acre lot • MLS 201307954 Bonnie Savickas, Broker, EPRO, SRES 541-408-7537
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South Deerfield Park ( $264,900 • Franklin Brothers 1800 sq.ft. • New construction, single level • Landscaped front & back • MLS 201308645 Darrin Kelleher, Broker The Kelleher Group 541-788-0029 •
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Garage Sales Garage Sales
Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
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SW Bend ( $224,900 • 1702 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • .84 acre lot • MLS 201309806 Kelly Neuman, Principal Broker 541-480-2102
IIIIIIII MORRIS REAL ESTATE
Three Rivers South [ $171,100
• 1700 sq.ft.
• 3 bedroom, 2 bath • 1 acre lot • MLS 201310807 JackJohns, Broker, GRI 541-480-9300
MORRIS REAL ESTATE l~
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Tillicum Village [ $275,000
• 1682 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath
• .36 acre lot • MLS 201306049 Amy Halligan, Broker 541-410-9045
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MORRIS STUNNING EXECUREAL ESTATE TIVE HOME • 3546 sq.ft., 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths • Den, family, living, Want to impress the fully furnished relatives? Remodel • Great rental history your home with the • Golf course help of a professional Korina Chinchen, from The Bulletin's Broker 541-788-6154 "Call A Service John L. Scott I&~ dy~ ~ ap d Real Estate, Bend Professional" Directory Sisters Horse Property. www.johnlscott.com 10.8 acres w/8+ acres irrigated pas t ure, STYLE 8 QUALITY VIEWS OF THE RIVER large home w/sepa- •Style & q ua l i ty • 4 bedrooms, 2 baths rate guest quarters. $339,900 • 2392 sq.ft., 1.5 acres Mt. Views, p rivate •3 bedroom, 2.5 baths, • 3 separate tax lots double garage setting and g a ted. • Motivated seller! •Pool, spa & amenities www.Jackson-Ander$675,000. www.johnlscott.com Scott McLean, son.com /1 2841 Principal Broker Candice Anderson, Peggy Lee Combs, 541-408-6908 Broker 541-788-8878 Broker 541-480-7653 Realty Executives John L. Scott John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend SNOWBERRY Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscott.com VILLAGE www.johnlscott.com • Single level home in Sunriver [ $320,000 NE Bend Have an item to • Light 8 cheerful • 1404 sq.ft. sell quick? • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • 1526 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath If it's under • $62,500 Marilyn Rohaly, Broker • MLS 201303490 '500 you can place it in Jackie French, Broker 541-322-9954 541-480-2269 John L. Scott The Bulletin Real Estate, Bend Classifieds for: www.johnlscott.com
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The Bulletin RVers dream in Bend. $550,000. 2.5 acres, 2682 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 1200 sq.ft. guest house, RV garage and shop. Scott McLean, Principal Broker 541-408-6908 Realty Executives
SE Bend ( $319,900
• 2496 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 3 bath
• .19 acre, fenced yard • MLS 201309521 Craig Long, Broker 541-480-7647
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West Hills. 4 Bdrm, 3.5 WINDANCE Nice Orchard District C ANYON R I M V I LThe Greens at Redbath, in 4040y sq.ft., 3 Bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1500 sq ft single-level LAGE. $300,000 mond. Large bonus delighfful w e s tside 1673 sq.ft., 19 acre home. 3 bedroom, 2 Open floor plan fea room, canal v iews. home with panoramic parcel an a p rivate bath on ~/4 acre. tures gas appliances, Golf comm u nity C ascade and c i t y setting with a view of RV parking; close to hardwood floors, cen $279,000. MLS¹ views on a spacious Pilot Butte, close to shopping 8 hospital. tral air w/heat pump 201308079 lot with high desert s chools, p arks & $250,000. 1811 NE and good separation Vicci Bowen natural landscaping. s hopping. Light & Shepard Rd. By owner, between master and 541-410-9730 541-610-5702 Two gas fireplaces, bright with many winother bed r ooms. Central Oregon Realty one in living room and dows 8 custom lights, Built-in desk, upstairs Group, LLC one in master bed- fenced back yard with bonus room, vaulted room. Master bed- pavered patio & large • Redmond Homes ceilings, covered The Bulletin room has c offered double garage. Built in porch, underground To Subscribe call ceiling and slider to speaker sys t em,$199,900 - One of the sprinklers, raised gar 541-385-5800 or go to upper deck with hot vaulted ceilings with finest chalets at Eagle den b eds, e x c ep www.bendbulletin.com tub. Master bath has recessed lighting & Crest. Beautiful views tional l a n dscaping. deep soak tub, large RV parking. $264,000 of the 14th fairway on MLS 201304759 Gorgeous T u r n-key t iled s h ower a n d • MLS¹201308272 the Ridge Course. John L. Scott Real home. Pan o ramic double sinks. Great Bobbie Strome, Has never been in the Estate 541-548-1712 Cascade M o untain room is light and airy Principal Broker rental pool. Freshly This home fea with expansive city John L Scott Real painted exterior and The Washington, NW Views. new paint inside and Cascade views. Estate 541-385-5500 newly stained decks. Redmond. Main floor tures master suite w/sitting & out, a newly remod Kitchen is efficiently MLS¹20'l309403 kitchen w/ gran laid out with granite Eagle Crest room, walk-in closets eled Need to get an ad in all rooms, 3 bed, ite counters & SS ap tile counters, newer Properties pliances, b a m boo 2.5 bath, 2147 sq ft. appliances, p a ntry 866-722- 3370 in ASAP? hardwoods, slate, & MLS¹201310072. and hardwood floorExtremely well m a in $ 297,900. Call J i m high end carpet floor ing. Triple garage with ing, a great room lay tained 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Hinton, 541-420-6229 Ultimate floor. Wired Fax it te 541-322-7253 1190 sq.ft., s ingle Central Oregon Realty out, a n e n ormous for security system. m aster suite w/ p r i home built 2005. Group, LLC Wired for stereo with The Bulletin Classifieds level Dbl. garage, large pa vate balcony, large s peakers on m a in guest bedrooms w/ tio, fenced, park set Need help fixing stuff? floor i n 4 zon e s. ting w/picket fence, Jack 8 Jill bathroom, 5-zone heating sys748 Call A Service Professional utility room, spacious roses, lilacs & more! tem. Two levels of ce- Northwest Bend Homes MLS¹ find the help you need. 2013 0 9238 bonus room w/ fire d ar d e cking p l u s www.bendbulletin.com surround Pam place, paver patio. Plumbed S tunning Ranch o n $149,999. 8 built in TV 8 in humidification sys- Awbrey Butte - 4 BR, Lester, Principal Bro Updated! Owner w i ll sound, the home is wired for ker Century 21 Gold t em. $610, 0 00 3 bath home w/open Country Realty, Inc. carry - 3 b d rm, 2 a backup generator. MLS¹ 201301639 bath, 1440 sq.ft., on great room design. The deck has great 541-504-1338 Bobbie Strome, .34 acre. Large deck views 8 covers a dbl Close to river, trails, Principal Broker and oversized garage/ downtown, NW TURN THE PAGE arage 2 0 1309010, John L Scott Real shop. $119 , 900. 230,000 C rossing 8 mo r e ! Estate 541-385-5500 For More Ads Formal dining area, MLS¹ 20'I 3 08373John L. Scott Real Pam Lester, Principal Estate 541-548-1712 beautiful stone The Bulletin B roker Century 21 f ireplace opens t o FIND YOUR FUTURE breakfast a re a & 70' RV parking! New 3 Gold Country Realty, $185,000 - 3562 SW HOME INTHE BULLETIN gourmet kit c hen, bdrm, 2 bath 1590 sq. Inc. 541-504-1338 Reindeer, Redcherry cabi n ets, ft. home coming soon! mond. 3 bedroom, Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou're looking granite, hardwood & Pick your colors! Gas $359 900 Reverse liv 2 .5 b a ths, o v e r 6-burner for a hat or aplace to hangit, gas fireplace, upgraded ing floor plan thought 2500sq ft. Some of The Bulletin Classified is stovetop. Very private appliances and cabi fully designed to cap the best views in with mountain views. nets, t i l e flo o rs, ture gorgeous views Redmondl your best source. m o untains MLS¹201201489. MLS ¹ 20 1 309435 f enced a n d lan d of th e Every daythousandsof $750,000. Call Debbie scaped, and more! landscape & tree tops Call Travis L. Hanbuyers andsellers ofgoods McCune, P r i ncipal $189,900. too new for Quality construction, nan, Principal Broand services dobusinessin Broker MLS¹ P a m Lester, g racious rooms 8 ker, 541-788-3480 these pages.Theyknow fin i shes Redmond RE/MAX ReMax Key Properties. Principal Broker, Cen beautiful you can't beatTheBulletin MLS 541-647-0052 Cell tury 21 Gold Country throughout. Land & Homes Classified Sectionfor ¹201309730 541-728-0033 Office Realty, Inc. Real Estate selection andconvenience Eagle Crest 541-504-1338 541-771-7786 - every item isjust a phone Properties 748 call away. 8 Pr i vate! 866-722- 3370 $189,000 - Wonderful Northeast Bend Homes Spacious $154,500. Sun-filled, c halet w i t h gr e a t The Classified Section is expansive deck, 2.31 Exceptionally main easy to use.Everyitem Super nice. Well cared acres. Large kitchen, tained single story 3 views of 2 fairways & the mountains. Wood is categorizedandevery for 3 bdrm, 2 bath, impressive m a ster bdrm, 2 bath 1847 sq. burning fireplace, ex cartegory is indexed onthe 1502 sq.ft. This one bathroom. ft. home on large lot. pansive deck 8 knotty section's front page. owner home has new MLS¹201310389. Open floor plan with pine finishes through carpet, interior paint, Whether youarelooking for Call Gail Day, vaulted ceilings, RV out. MLS¹ 201307239 light fixtures, sink fau a home orneeda service, 541-306-1018 parking and triple car Eagle Crest cets, high quality dis Central Oregon Realty your future is inthepagesof garage. $ 2 39,900. Properties tressed ha r dwood The Bulletin Classified. Group, LLC MLS 20130344. Pam 866-722- 3370 laminate in k i tchen, Lester, Principal Bro dining & utility rooms. Call The Bulletin At ker, Century 21 Gold FIND IT! The Bulletin Nice t i le d k i t chen 541-385-5809 Seneng Centrel Oregonsince 19N Country Realty, Inc. counters, tiled floors SUY IT! 541-504-1338 and counter in bath Place Your Ad Or E-Mail SELL IT! West Hills Beautyi r ooms. Nice w o r k At: www.bendbulletin.com $229,000 - Turnkey The Bulletin Classifieds $499,000 bench and cabinets in Corner lot 1380 sq. ft., 3 Home In NW Red• 3109 sq.ft. garage. Extraordinary bdrm, 2 bath, vaulted mond. 3 bed, 2 bath, $189,500 - Wonderful • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath landscape & w a ter ceilings, gas heat, and plus family r o om. golf & mountain view. • Cascade Mountain feature in vinyl fenced double car garage. Added insulation for Many new features views back yard. U n der $156,900. MLS coziness. 1/3 AC ce- including new carpet, • MLS 201305542 ground sprinklers front 201309158 privacy fencing. stove, bath r oom Craig Smith, Broker and b a c k . MLS Pam Lester, Principal dar Garage 8 s t orage flooring, roof and Trex 541-322-2417 ¹201308584 B roker Century 2 1 building. Meticulous decking. Cheerful deJohn L. Scott Real Gold Country Realty, e stablished lan d - cor, r ental h i story Estate 541-548-1712 Inc. 541-504-1338 scaping. available, rare oppor541-480-7777 Diana tunity. 3 bdrm 2 bath, 1258 sf, Look at: Barker, Broker MLS¹201308367 upgrades, vaulted, culdeMORRIS Bendhomes.com 541-923-4633 Eagle Crest sac. 2574 NE Cordata Pl. REAL ESTATE Windermere Central Properties $192,000. 541-815-3279 for Complete Listings of Oregon Real Estate 866-722- 3370 or 541-815-3241 Area Real Estate for Sale
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Sunriver/La Pine Homes Jefferson County Homes Homes with Acreage j
S u nriver/La Pine Homes
$260,000 -
Beautiful $265,000 I Greens At C ascade mountain view Ready to move into, 3 The Jefferson - NW Gorgeous 3 bdrm, 2 51765 Pine Loop Drive, Want to move in and Overlooking the u pgraded cha l e t Redmond. G o l fing form this charming 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1248 Redmond - $299,000. b ath 1 4 5 6 s q . f t . La Pine. 1950 sq. ft. enjoy life? This Ma Crooked River Gorge, w/double garage lo community. S i n g le bedroom, 2 bath sq. ft. h o me, f ully Desirable NW neigh- home, 2 acres with home + 1000 sq. ft. dras home is loaded Immaculate home on cated on the 18th hole level with bonus room. home on .51 acres. fenced lot. R aised borhood, single level, shop! 1 204 Cheryl apt. + Shop $399,950 with upgrades. Well the rim features a of the R idge Golf 1850 SF, 3 b ed, 2 Good cond i tion. garden beds, 2 stor- 3 bdrm, 2. 5 b a th, D r., in La Pi n e . High Lakes Realty & maint. and boasts a spacious & open great Course at Eagle Crest bath, R V sp a c e. $194,300. M a n age- large tiled entry way, room design, a large MLS age sheds, insulated 2020 sq ft. $174,900. High Property in Central Oregon. Backs to 5th tee box. 201308901. John L. a nd h e ated. G a s MLS¹201306374 Lakes Realty & Prop- ment 541-536-0117 ceiling fans, recessed bonus room with a full MLS ¹201301534. 5 41-977-7756 D e e Scott Rea l E s tate stove in t h e g reat Call Ji m H i n ton, erty Man a gementIf you are looking for a l ighting, large l o f t bath, a spacious mas 541-536-0117 Eagle Crest Baker, Broker 541-548-1712 room. covered car- 54'I -420-6229 a master bdrm t er, l a r g e gu e s t very unique home area, Properties 541-923-4663 port an d g a r age.Central Oregon Realty with w a lk-in closet, bdrms, newer paint, with awesome views, Charming cottage with 145241 C o r ra l Ct . 866-722- 3370 Windermere Central $164,900. MLS Group, LLC window cov e rings carpet and flooring in hardwood floors, cozy 201310530. John L. $149,000. La P i ne, you must check this throughout. Garage is side and new exterior Oregon Real Estate $349,900 - Beautiful fireplace, RV parking, Scott Rea l E s tate BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS OR 3/2, 1620 sq.ft., one out. Beautiful 3 with ceiling paint, a circular drive, turn-key townhome in $279,000 - 5.82 acres, mature landscaping. 541-548-1712 bdrm, 3.5 bath, 3528 finished mfd home on 1.65 Search the area's most storage rack and you immac. landscaping Forest Ridge. 2 mas 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1580 $124,900. a cre, s hop. H i g h sq.ft., 1 .8 6 a c r es, have great views from with irrigation system, MLS¹ comprehensive listing of ters, 1 on main level, sq. ft., large 28x32 sq. 201308245. Call Lakes Realty & Prop- vaulted ceilings, living the back deck. VA as a fenced and irrigated Roomy single l e vel classified advertising... both w/king beds & ft. shop, double car Vicci Bowen erty Man a gement family, dining, game sumable if e l igible. garden area, chicken home on large lot in real estate to automotive, master bath w/garden garage, fenced f or room & lau n d ry 541-410-9730 541-536-0117 S tonehedge. O p e n merchandise to sporting coop, attached ga MLS¹ rooms. Great decks in $124,500 tub & s h ower. 3rd horses. Near the en- Central Oregon Realty floor plan with vaulted goods. Bulletin Classifieds 201304344 rage with shop space, b drm w / bunks & trance to the ranch. the front and back. Group, LLC living room, f a mily appear every day in the USE THE CLASSIFIEDB! Pond with a waterfall. Heather Hockett, PC, central heat, p ellet trundle. MLS MLS¹ 20130955 print or on line. r oom, kitchen f e a Century 21 stove and excellent 201308059. Call Linda Lou-Wright, Custom Home on 5.91 tures Landscaped 8 sprin- Broker, Door-to-door selling with plenty of cabin Country Realty, privacy. MLS Call 541-385-5809 Eagle Crest 541-771-2585. Ac, P o well B u t te. kler system. Attached Gold fast results! It's the easiest 541-420-9151 eating counter, www.bendbuffetin.com ¹201308441 Properties Crooked River $ 339,900. 36x4 0 etry, 2-car garage, 40'x52' large pantry, dining John L. Scott Real way in the world to sell. 866-722- 3370 shop, woodstove & detached shop and Realty Estate 541-548-1712 The Bulletin Jacuzzi tub, main floor area with access to storage bu i ldings. Serving Central Oregon sinceSgtg Get your $439,000 - Sun Forest $320,000 4.77 the huge back deck. The Bulletin Classified master suite. MLS ¹ 20 1 306582. 16751 SW DOVE RD. is a 36 year old em acres, 1 acre of irriMaster bed r o omT he W i ndsor, N W business MLS¹201307493 Call 541-385-5809 $525,000 One level 2500 sq. ft. ployee-owned design/ gation. Pond, shop separation from addi Redmond Main floor Bowen, tional two bedrooms. Cascade Realty, custom loghome on b uild firm that h a s and 1 60 0 s q . ft. Vicci den/4th bedroom, lots 541-410-9730 Old Mill Road, La 541-536-1731 4.9 acres.Floor to ceil been chosen by over house. MLS¹ Two offices or hobby of natural light, eating 15970 e ROW I N G Central Oregon Realty Pine. $187,000. Reing windows w/views 500 custom home cli 201307143 Cal l rooms. Landscaped bar in kitchen, land- modeled 3 bdrm, 2 Group, LLC Need to get an of the Mtns. Hickory ents in Central Or Travis L. Hannan, front and back with scaping, 3 bedroom, b ath, 1844 s q . f t . with an ad in hardwood 8 tile floors. ad in ASAP? egon. PC, Principal Brofenced back yard that 2.5 baths, 2235 sq ft. home. H i g h Lakes Need to get an The Bulletin's $499,999 MLS MLS¹ 201309468. ker 541-788-3480 has lots of trees for $305,000. You can place it Realty & Pr o perty 201208751 ad in ASAP? Eagle Crest Redmond RE/MAX "Call A Service privacy. Forced air Call Jim Hinton, online at: Management, Juniper Realty, Properties Land & Homes gas with central air You can place it 541-420-6229 Professional" 541-536-0117 541-504-5393 www.bendbulletin.com 866-722- 3370 Real Estate cond. $199,900. MLS Central Oregon Realty online at: Directory 541-771-7786 2 01310177 John L . 2bdrm, 1t/g bath, 1354 Motivated Seller! Nice Group, LLC BULLETIN CULSSIFIEDS www.bendbuffetin.com Scott Real E s tate 541-385-5809 ft. home, on 1.37 3 bdrm ranch- style Search the area's most $349,500 - Small Too many upgrades to sq. 541-548-1712 757 $89,900. 16404 house with a nice floor list! in this 1946 sq. ft. acre. comprehensive listing of acreage with i rrithis old home541-385-5809 Burgess Rd., La Pine. Make country kitchen, gated pasture overclassified advertising... 3 b d rm, 2t/g bath stead, located right Crook County Homes plan, S ingle s t ory h o m e High Lakes Realty & nice brick fireplace, home. Landscaped, Property M a n age- o ff Hwy 9 7 , y o u r real estate to automotive, l ooking pond 8 Huge home in desired loaded wit h up nestled on 4+ acres r e modeled, fenced pas t u re merchandise to sporting in a q u i et ment 541-536-0117 et-away ret r eat.Recently SW location. 3 bdrm, grades. 1550 sq.ft., 3 fenced, clean and well laid out Powell Butte q u iet cul-de-sac. $239,900. goods. Bulletin Classifieds ready for horses or rig. home, garage bdrm, 2 bath, plus an 2.5 bath, 2880 sq.ft. level home on a country lane. Fenced, appear every day in the other critters. DeMLS 201 3 10535.16445 White Buck, 4 and storage shed built single den. L a n d Huge deck, fenced, o ffice/ very private 4.6 acre corral, shed, s h op tached garage shop Pam Lester, Principal in 1940. Very clean, print or on line. Bdrm, 2/g bath, 2900 scaped with garden s prinklers & ya r d , New paint in and area, along with stor w/storage. possible horse prop- lot. sq.ft., on 2 t/g acres. Call 541-385-5809 area. $169,900 MLS¹ Broker, Century 21 move-in ready. out, newwer laminate, age rooms. 2 acres ir MLS¹201307823. Gold Country Realty, erty on 1.63 acres 201308225 Pam $299,900. High www.bendbuffetin.com Call Don Chapin, $ 215,000. MLS ¹ & fl o oring, rig., mtn and Smith MLS carpet Lakes Realty & Prop- $75,000. Pam Lester, Principal Bro Inc. 541-504-1338 Stainless appliances, Rock views. Local Principal Br o k er 201209154 erty Ma n agement ¹201300544 The Bulletin ker Century 21 Gold Lester, Principal Bro Very motivated seller. 541-923-0855 centra heat, l a rge small Powell B utte Sernng CentralOregon sincetglg Cascade Realty, ker Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. Beautiful home in SW 541-536-0117 concrete patio. Fully Charter School. Cen Redmond RE/MAX 541-536-1731 Custom L and & 541-504-1338 $449,000 Country Realty, Inc. Redmond with very 2611 sq.ft., 5 acres, 3 landscaped yard, at- tral location commut Hom e s home on large, peace Real 541-504-1338 motivated seller. This bay shop. 1716 Tertached double garage ing distance to Bend, Estate Call a Pro ful corner lot with up 541-771-7786 4 bedroom, 2 bath and detached shop Prineville & Redmond. ret Rd , $ 3 5 4,000. Needs some TLC! 3/2, Want to impress the grades galore and home is ready for its High Lakes Realty & Whether you need a with large atached Not a bad package at 1136 sq. ft . s ingle relatives? Remodel wonderful views of the $399,900 - Single new owners. Small Property M a nage- fence fixed, hedges 1052 5 carport/RV area, stor- $ 279,900! story home on almost Cascades! Master on level, vaulted ceilyour home with the F leming Rd. Cal l shop with hot tub and ment 541-536-0117 age shed on top of 1/3 acres lot, vinyl help of a professional mail level with heated ings, 4 large bedtrimmed or a house gazebo in backyard. Heather Hockett, PC, 5000 g al . p o t able windows, dbl. garage, t ile f loor a n d t i l e r ooms, 2 bat h , from The Bulletin's MLS 201308103 3 bdrm, 2 t/g bath, 2139 built, you'll find water concrete cis- Broker, Century 21 plenty of room for RVs shower i n m a s ter master b e d room John L. Scott Real sq. ft. home, 3-car ga- professional help in t ern. Al l o n fu l l y Gold Country Realty, "Call A Service $99,999. MLS bath. separation, 2 , 157 Estate 541-548-1712 rage. $229 ,000. fenced lot with auto- 541-420-9151 201310719. Pam Professional" Directory MLS¹201310100 sq.ft. 3-car garage. The Bulletin's "Call a 16524 Charlotte Day matic gate. $215,000. Lester, Principal Bro People Lookfor Information Eagle Crest MLS¹201308350 Dr., La Pine. High Service Professional" MLS 201309890 Garage Sales ker, Century 21 Gold Properties Call Kelly Starbuck, About Products and Lakes Realty & PropJohn L Scott Realty, Home in The Directory Principal Br o k er Country Realty, Inc. Spacious 866-722- 3370 Services Every Day through erty Ma n agement 541-548-1712. Cliffs I $ 2 79,000 Garage Sales 541-504-1338 541-385-5809 $474,900 - Brand new 541-771-7786 Light 8 bright interior, The Bvlletin Classmeds 541-536-0117 Redmond RE/MAX Good classified ads tell to be built Craftsman L and & Garage Sales CONS T RUC huge walk-in pantry, Hom e s NEW Bdrm, 3 bath, bonus Move in ready! Very the essential facts in an in sought after Vista Real TION! Split master three car tandem ga- Looking for your next 3 room, well cared for with a shop. 15951 Find them Rim n e ighborhood. 541-771-7786 Estate rage. MLS interesting Manner. Wri t e floor plan, 3 bedroom, emp/oyee? Tallwood Ct. La Pine. lot of extra improve- from the readers view -not High-end finishes in 2 bath, 1640 sq.ft., tile ¹ 201308975. Cal l Place a Bulletin help in ments. Living Room $229,000. High Lakes clude wood flooring, 3 b d rm, 2t/g bath Bowen, wanted ad today and floors/backsplash. RV Vicci Realty & Pr o perty plus a large Bonus the seller's. Convert the The Bulletin granite kitchen, ex 3005 sq. ft. home to parking. $ 1 84,900. 541-410-9730 reach over 60,000 facts into benefits. Show R oom, 2 Mas t e r Management posed timber framing, be built. Includes day MLS¹ 2013 0 1880 Central Oregon Realty readers each week. Classifieds Bedrooms, 1 on each the reader howthe item will 541-536-0117 more. light basement, office, Pam Lester, Principal Group, LLC Your classified ad help them insomeway. level. Elect. F/A and MLS¹201309834. family & bonus rooms, B roker Century 2 1 will also appear on 51275 Dianne Rd. La w oodstove. 541-385-5809 Com This Eagle Crest upgraded c a binets, Gold Country Realty, bendbulletin.com Pine $149,900. MH pletely l a n dscaped advertising tip What are you Properties near new high school Inc. 541-504-1338 which currently rewith shop and RV ra- with deck, covered 3214 sq. ft. Custom 4 brought to you by 866-722- 3370 & more! $ 349,000. looking for? ceives over mada on 5 a c res. p atio and f i r e p i t . bdrm, 4t/g bath home New construction 3 Too new for MLS¹ 1.5 million page High Lakes Realty & $290,000. The Bulletin on 2t/g acres. Triple $103,000 - 3.39 acres MLS You'll find it in bdrm, 2 bath, 1705 Serving Cel trelOlegrn slllce tgtg Pam Lester, Principal views every month Property M a nage- 201304282 Cascade garage, 36x40 shop r eady f o r you r sq. ft, 23 acre lot, tile The Bulletin Classifieds Broker, Century 21 at no extra cost. ment 541-536-0117 with tow 14' overhead Realty, Dennis HaniHOME! MLS¹ floors, tile backsplash, 762 Gold Country Realty, Bulletin Classifieds doors, Cas c ade 201100749 Call ford, Princ. B roker landscaped, fenced. Inc. 541-504-1338 52314 Ponderosa Way. 541-536-1731 Get Results! Homes with Acreage views, large deck & Travis L. Hannan, $179,900. MLS¹ 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1922 Call 385-5809 or 541-385-5809 patio. $429,900. PC, Principal Bro201209125 Pam sq.ft., 1 .1 3 a c r es. Real Estate Auction Two 1848 sq.ft. 4 bdrm, place your ad on-line MLS¹ 201304473 Get your ker 541-788-3480 Lester, Principal Bro Jan. 18th O 1pm $249,000. High Lakes at 2 bath homes on 40 Call Nancy Popp Redmond RE/MAX Davis, NW Redbusiness ker Century 21 Gold The Realty & P r o perty Open House/Preview bendbulletin.com a cres. 5 2916 O l d 541-815-8000. mond - Open great Land & Homes Country Realty, Inc. Management Sun., Jan. 12, 1-4 L ake Rd., Sil v e r Crooked River Realty Real Estate room, tons of cabinet 541-504-1338 541-536-0117 8 Elk Lane, Sunriver Lake, OR. $199,000. 541-771-7786 space in kitchen, 2nd 753 a ROW I N G Home w/ master bdrm High Lakes Realty & 6653 SW Daly Lane, New construction in NW floor laundry room, 3 Cabin on 1.24 acre, Sisters Homes $1,190,000 - Spaon main level, Property M a n age- Culver. Mtn. v iews Redmond. $182,900. bed (den or 4th bedpole barn, city water ciouscustom home, from this 4 bdrm, 2 with an ad in 1 bath, 800 sq. ft., ment, 541-536-0117 3 /2, 1556 s q . f t . , room), 2.5 bath, 1929 Aspen Lakes 3366 sq. and sewer. $69,000. 4652 sq.ft. Check wood-burning stove, bath, 1992 sq.ft. home The Bulletin's Stainless appliances, sq ft. $291,000. out our Virtual Tour ft. Fabulous home! on 51377 Walling Ln., Storage for wood, skis built in 2008 on 4.77 Call Jim Hinton, "Call A Service pantry, plumbed for Find exactly what golf course $829,000 La Pine. High Lakes acres. Borders farm at http://www.circland toys. 541-420-6229 AC, fully landscaped, MLS 201309707.John Realty & Pr o perty www.StuartRealty you are looking for in the land. $195,000 epix.com/home/FVV Professional" sprinkler sys t e m, Central Oregon Realty L. Scott Real Estate Management Juniper Realty 7WQ Grouplnc.com CLASSIFIEDS Directory oversized garage door Group, LLC 541-548-1712 541-536-0117 541-504-5393 MLS¹201303060 503-263-7253 w /opener. MLS ¹ Call Charlie or Vir- $430,000 - Ultimate 201305675. J eanne ginia, Principal Brofamily home, 4 bedScharlund, B r oker, kers 541-350-3418 room, 3 bath, over 7 541-420-7978 Redmond RE/MAX acres, 20x40 heated Central Oregon Realty L and & Hom e s MLS pool. Group, LLC Real Estate
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Call Travis L. Hannan, New Construction Single story 3 bdrm, PC, Principal Bro$127,500 - Great ker 541-788-3480 2bath, 1724 s q ft place to have your family, 3 bedroom, 2 Redmond R E / MAX move-in ready! Land L and 8 Ho m e s scaped with s p rin bath, 1008 sq.ft. klers an d fe n ced. Real Estate MLS¹201308704 541-771-7786 $189,900. MLS¹ Call Travis L. 201304779 Pam Hannan, - Between $459,000 Lester, Principal Bro PC, Principal Broker Bend & R e dmond. ker, Century 21 Gold 541-788-3480 D elighfful 4.85 A C Country Realty, Inc. Redmond RE/MAX property, Single level 541-504-1338 Land 8 Homes open concept home, Real Estate Fenced for animals, Newer large home on 541-771-7786 3.6 AC of COI, with almost 1/4 acre. 3000 $ 149,900 I 6 5 5 S W pond. 541-923-3371 sq.ft., 3 b d rm, 2 .5 2 3rd S treet, R e d- Windermere Central bath, landscaped & Oregon Real Estate mond. 3 bed, 2 bath. fenced with RV gates. Covered front porch. $500,000- The Ridge MLS¹ 2 0 1 304622 Forced air furnace 8 Pam at Eagle Crest. Cas- $299,900. AC. 2 R V p a rking cade & Smith Rock Lester, Prin c ipal spaces. 541-480-9883 B roker Century 21 views, Exceptional Audrey Cook, Broker Gold Country Realty, second home, 2 541-923-4663 Inc. 541-504-1338 master suites, 2 bedWindermere C e n tral room w/ bonus room, NEW HOME, 3 bdrm, Oregon Real Estate Very private. 2.5 bath + office, 1936 541-923-3371 sq. ft., gas heat, gas Need to get an Windermere Central range, gas fireplace, ad in ASAP? Oregon Real Estate fenced, insulated ga You can place it rage door w/opener. $519,000 - Gated $229,900. MLS¹ online at: community! 4 bed201309300 Pam ba t h , www.bendbuffetin.com r oom, 3. 5 Lester, Principal Bro 3208 Sq.ft.. Private ker Century 21 Gold resort living, 541-385-5809 Country Realty, Inc. year-round or 2nd 541-504-1338 $159,000 - Clean As A home. Whistle. New on the MLS¹201305107 N ice and q uiet NW Charlie or Virmarket in SW Red- Call Redmond property. 3 ginia, Principal Bromond. Recently refur- kers 541-350-3418 bdrm, 2 bath, 1576 bished; new s inks, Redmond RE/MAX sq. ft. on 2.8 acres. c ounters, ligh t s , Beautiful mature land and & Hom e s flooring, s p r inklers, L scaping and yard. 48' Real Estate 1279 SF, 3 b ed, 2 x 24' two bay insu 541-771-7786 bath. 5 4 1-8'I 5-9446 lated and heated shop Janelle Christensen, $564,000 I F a bulous w/220V. Recent paint Broker 541-923-4663 Home In SW Red- too! Plenty of room for Windermere Central mond. 4730 SF home h orses, RV's a n d Oregon Real Estate MLS on 4.32 AC. 6 bed, 5 toys! bath. Ou t s tanding ¹201308783 $179,900 - 1657 sq. John L. Scott Real mountain views. Very ft. Newer 3 beroom versatile home. Rid- Estate 541-548-1712 + den, master suite High School w/walk-in cl o set, geview bought a new boat? district. 541-480-7183 Just slider to back patio. Sell your old one in the Barbara Myers, BroLiving room w/gas classifieds! Ask about our ker 541-923-4663 fireplace Super Seller rates! Windermere C e n tral MLS¹201309588 541-385-5809 Oregon Real Estate Call Kelly Starbuck, Quiet Location on P rincipal Bro k e r $754,900 - Knockout 541-771-7786 mountain vi e w s! Cul-de-sac -$182,500. t h roughout, Redmond RE/MAX 3863 sq.ft. custom Updated large fenced lot w/ RV L and & Ho m es home. Office,outaccess. Open kitchen Real Estate buildings and shop. 541-771-7786 MLS¹ 2 0 1 106428 2/natural light, easy access to Bend. MLS Call Charlie or Vir¹201310316. Find It in ginia, Principal BroJim Hinton, 541-350-3418 The Bulletin Classifieds! kers 541-420-6229. Redmond RE/MAX Central Oregon Realty 541-385-5809 L and & Hom e s Group, LLC Real Estate $249,900 - 2236 541-771-7786 Sq.ft., 5 bdrm home Have an item to w/master suite on 80' RV parking! 1616 sell quick? each level. Living sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath room w/gas f i reh ome with dbl. g a If it's under place. RV parking & rage, gas fireplace, unique gar d e n. pantry, split bedroom '500 you can place it in MLS¹201306110 floorplan with great The Bulletin Call Kelly or V i rroom concept. Classifieds for: ginia, Principal Bro$179,900. MLS kers 541-923-0855 201309527 Pam '1 0 - 3 lines, 7 days 786 Redm o nd Lester, Principal Bro R E/MAX Land 8 ker, Century 21 Gold '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Homes Real EsCountry Realty, Inc. (Private Party ads only) tate 541-771-7786 541-504-1338 541-771-7786
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Start Your HOME SEARCH At
www.JohnLScottBend.com BREATHTAKII CASCADEYIEW
HALF-
LOT!
CRYSTAL CLEA
SNOWBERRYYILLAGE
• Neil Hudson Designed Home • 4015 SF +1040SFshop & wine rooms • 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths •FantasticEntertaining Home
• Single level in a park-like setting • 3 bedrooms,2 baths, 1420SF • Garden area & room for RV parking
Danielle Snow, Broker 54I.306.I0I5
Cyndi Robertson,Broker 54I.390.5345 jean Nelsen, Broker 54I.420-3927
ENJOY EAGLE CRESTLIYING!
• $249,900
• 38+/- Acres with 37+/- Irrigated •Beautiful2608 SF home • Barn with stalls
• wwwjohnlscotr.com/cyndirobertson
GREAT SE BEND,II~O Y gQ
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STUNNING EXECUTIYE HOME
• Single level home in NE Bend • I404 SF • 3 bedroom,2 bath • $62,500 Marilyn Rohaly,Broker54I-322-9954 C ABIN IN TH
ODS !
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• 3546 SF,3 bedrooms,2.5 baths • Den, family, living, fully furnished •G reatrentalhistory • Golf course
• 4 bedrooms, 2 baths • 5 Acres • Oversized 2-car garage • $I99,000 • www.johnlscott.com/28599
Angie Cox, Broker 54l-2I3-9950
Korina Chinchen,Broker54I-788.6I54
Ellen Clough,Breker,ABR,CRS5414807180
63080 STENKAMP DRIYE
DUPLEX
RARELOT- ROMAINEYILLAGE
Affordable horse property - 1,700 SF, 3 BR, 2 bath home needs some TLC & updating, 2 stalls, utck room & hay storage. 2.4 acres withunderground irrigation near thousands of acres of BLM land for riding.$219,000 www.DavidFoster Biz/Stenkamp
• NE Bend, single level • 3 bedrooms,2 baths & 2 bdrms,2 baths • Fenced yards & 2-car tandem garages • $309,900 •www.johnlscott.com/4402
•Niceflatlotwithmaturetreessurrounding •W ater& electricalhookupspresent
• Wonderful home on Golf Course • 2818 SF • 3 bedrooms,3 baths • $515 000 • www.johnlscott.com/20002
• Open living area w/fireplace • Built in 2007,2207 SF • 3 bedrooms,2.5 bath + loft • $249,900 • www.anglecox.johnlscott.com
Faye Phillips, Broker 54I-480-2945 RIYERSID ECONDO ON BEND'5WESTSIDE
• 653 SF,Ibedroom + Studio • 2 baths
• $95,000 • NLS¹ 201307899 Teresa Brown,Broker 54l-788-866 I
David Foster, Broker 541-322-0034
PERFECTSTARTEROR INYESTMENT PARK.LIKESETTINGWITH RYPARKING
Kelli e Cook,Broker54I-408-0463
Colleen Dillingham,Broker 54I.788.9991
YIEWS OF THE RIYER
MOUNTAIN YIEWS!
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• Single cargarageon property • Ready for your double wide!
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• Like new - complete remodel •3bdrm,2bath inquietneighborhood • Huge fencedyard • A/C,2-car garage,$155,000 • www.johnlscotLcom/44446
• Single level home in SE Bend
• 13I2 SF • 3 bedrooms,2 baths • $233,000
Kathy Denning, Broker 54I.480.4429
ShelleyArnold, BI0ker54l.77l.9329
OLF COURSE & MOUNTAINYIEWS
STYLE 8g QUALITY
• 2392 SF, 1.5acres •3 separatetax lots • Motivated seller! • wwwjackson-Anderson.com
• Single level home • 2.43 acres • Between Bend & Sisters • Many upgrades • www jackson-Anderson.com
CandiceAnderson, Broker 54I.788-8878
Barbarajackson,Broker 54I-306.8I86
• 4 bedrooms,2 baths
BEAUTIFUL DECORATOR HOME Ii
• 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, 3-car garage • Wrap-around deck for BBQs • Roor-to-ceiling stone fireplace • www johnlscotr.com/92357
•Style& quality -$339,900 • 3 bedroom,2.5 baths, double garage • Pool, spa & amenities • www.johnlscott.com/12841
• 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths • Gas fireplace & A/C • Fully fenced yard • $375,000
PeggyLeeCombs,Broker 54I-480-7653
PeggyLeeCombs,Broker 54I-480-7653
Theresa Ramsay, Broker 54I-SI 5-4442
• 2 bedrooms, I bath • I I46 SF condo • Pool, hot tub, tennis • www Jackson-Andersonrcom
CandiceAnderson, Broker 54I-788.8878
E6 SATURDAY JANUARY 4 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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~ Expansive northeasterly views of the Ochoco Mountains and Pilot Butte
• .29 of acre lot in Rivers Edge ~ This homesite offers 120 feet in widt h
providing opportunity for many design options
• Near river trail, golf, shopping and schools
Call Shelly Swanson, Broker i 541-408-0086
• Only 7 minutes from downtown • Tetherow is a planned 700 acre community backing tonational forest and is the 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
New Master-Planned Townhome PahllschHomes Development in Midtowni • 3 bedroom townhomes starting at $245,000 •Two unit smove-inready • Price includes custom level finishes with full landscaping, slab quartz countertops and energy efficient construction • Locationsupportsthe active Bend lifestyle with easyaccessto parks, trails, river and downtown www.gthgtreetCottages.com
Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker i 541%08-3912
R Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker j 541-408-3912 R
Call Silvia Knight, BrokJPABR, SFR,Green i 541-788-4861
brian@bendpropertysource.com
brian@bendpropertysource.com
bendluxuryhomesOgmail.com
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• 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1724SF,.11 acre • Fully fenced, landscapedbackyard • Located within walking distance of Pine Ridge Elementary • Well maintained home comes turn-key with washer/dryer & all major kitchen appliances • Situated on a corner lot with beautiful landscaping that has been professionally maintained • Home feels light 8 bright and is move-in ready!
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• This desirable single level home is located in Mountain High • Spacious open floor plan with wonderful golf course views • The living room features large view windows and cozy gas fireplace. • The kitchen is light and bright with a wonderful breakfast nook/sitting area • Expansive outdoor living space is perfect for entertaining MLS¹20131118
• 2 bedroom suites+ powder bath • Excellent incomepotential or second home • Common area and expansive outdoor decking • Marbled granite andstainless steel appliances • Dark slate tile floors • Vaulted ceilings • 2 bedroom, 2 bath,1703SF
MLS¹201311091
Call The Norma DuBois and Julle Moe Team,
Call Shelly Swanson, Broker j 541-408-0086
• Just completed at the Ridge at Eagle Crest • 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath with 2 living areas, 2475 SF ,s • Views of fairway from great room, deck and master • Huge garage - room for all the toys, bikes, etc. • Close to pool, sports center and golf MLS¹201303546 Call Myra Girod, B k 541 - 8 15-2400 o Pam Bronson, Broker i 541-788-6767
Brokers i 541-312-5151 www. TeamNormaAndJulie.com
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myra. amteam©cascadesir.com
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• Don't miss this stunning end unit townhome in NW Crossing - hasonly beenused asasecond home •Lotsofupgradeshave beenaddedto makethisawarm inviting homefor the demanding buyer • Master on mainlevel, 2 nice sized bdrms &full bath upstairs • Home has ample storage and a nice oversized 2-car garage •NW Cross ing hasnice parks,easyaccessto schools& downtown MLS¹20131103D 2499 NW Crossing
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Lll Nestled in tall Ponderosa Pines within an hour of Bend & Mt. Bachelor & only 20 min. from Championship Golf & Sunriver. • 53557 Kokanee Way, $490,000:Thisbright& open custom-built 1998 home directly overlooks the river • 53610 Brookie Way, $420,000: Beautiful Scandinavian inspired design w/hand blown glass, ironwork & sauna • 53510 Brookie Way, $425,000: Hand-scribed Canadian Spruce log home w/covered porches,backs to N. Forest
Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker i 541-408-3912 brian©bendpropertysource.com
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• 4 bedrooms, 3 baths • 3040 SF, immaculate condition • Built-ins and upgrades • Huge loft area • 2 patios, fire pit & water feature • Community pool 8z park MLS¹201310897 Call CJ Neumann, Broker 541-410-3710 or Lisa Lamberto, Broker 541-610-9697 www.CJLisa.com
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• Gorgeous Historic Bend Remodel • All 3 bedrooms on main I floor • Spectacular master suite • Period details throughout, including custom fir built-ins, farmhouse sink and push-button lighting • Large irrigated and fenced corner lot • Desirable schools MLS¹201310748 Call Dave Holland, Principal Broker i 541-306-1649 Call Scott Cruikshank, Broker i 541-350-9023 www.BendLivlng.com
• Custom home w/ lovely finishes • Open floor plan with spacious kitchen & great room, living, & main level master suite • 3 car garage w/shop & storage! • Views of Rivers Edge Fairway & mtns • Private decking & manufactured gardens MLS¹201 308552 Carmen Ann Cook, Licensed Oregon Broker j 541-480-6491 carmsells@att.net
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f8 • Modern, upgradedhomein WhisperRidge • Fabulous 18th fairwayviews • 3 bedroom suites • Tile floors throughout main level • Upgraded kitchen,vaulted ceilings • Main level master suite • 3bedroom,3.5bath, 2199SF MLS¹201311032
Call T N
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• Beautiful 3107 SF custom Prairie Style home on a .64 acre lot • Mt. Hood, Jefferson, Eastern mtns & city views • Slab granite, hardwood floors & windows galore • Lovely wrap-around cedar deck • Don't miss this incredible home!
DuBo i s d J u lie Moe Te
11 Unit Apartment Complex Near St. Charles • Great rental history • Terrific investment • 90% occupied MLS¹201310762
• 84 acres, 10 acres irrigation
• Spectacular Cascade Mountain views • Barn, hay barn, shelters, office • Well • 2 septicsystem s • 600 amp electrical • Operating goat dairy, cheese factory • Potential for variety of uses • Horse/Alpaca/small animal breeding???
Call Natalie Vandenborn, Broker j 541-508-9581
Call Kelly Horton, ro er i 541-508-9163
Call Ron Davis, Princzpal Brokeri 541-480-3096
NVandenborn@gmail.com bendluxuryhomes.com
kelly@bendluxuryhomes.com
www.OregonRanchAndHorse.com
Brokers i 541-312-5151 www TeamNormaAndJulie.com
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•StunningNW stylewithhighend finishes • Open great roomfloor plan, comfortable,yetelegant • Master & den Onmain level, 3additional bedroomsup • Oversized3-cargarage& 3outdoor living areas •Gatedcommuni tyw/tenniscourts,clubhouse&trailsMLS¹201303701
Sandy Kohlmoos, Broker, GRI, CRSi 541408-4309 www.bestbendhomes.com
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• 3beds, 3.5baths, 3556SF • Sweeping backyardbackingto BLM; CascadeMtn. viewsfrom upperlevel • Impeccable landscapingperfect for entertaining pluswater feature • Gourmet kitchen w/granite, Wolf range, Alder floors & cabinetry • Grand Moss Rockfireplace, built-in wine racks&fridge in loft •Masteronmainw/sauna;4zoneAC/heat MLS¹201205571 Deb Tebbs, Broker/President i 541419-4553 debtebbsgroup@ bendluxuryhomes.com jwww.debtebbsgroup.com
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• Fabulous 10acre lot in The Highlands z • 6637 SF, 4 bedrooms, 5.5 baths • ICF Construction, passivesolar • Radiant heated travertine flooring downstairs • Beautiful finishes andpremiumappliances • Bordering National Forestyet only 2 milesto downtown MLS¹201200864 Sandy Kohlmoos, Broker, GRI, CRSi 541M84309
Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker, Director of Lot Sales
www.bestbendhomes.com
541408-3912 i brian©bendpropertysource.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
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shop/garage • Patio s,decks,landscaped to enjoy the outdoor living • Fly fish or float from your front yard! MLS¹201302701
Call Pam Mayo-Phillips, Principal Broker 541-923-1376
Stunning North Rim Home( $1,155,000
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• Stunning Shevlin Ridge • One levelhome • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3456 SF • Mountain inspiredcustom home • Upscale popular neighborhood • Gorgeous craftsmanship • Large kitchen, living spaces • Large 3-car garage
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• 3412 NW Greenleaf Way • Private riverfront setting - 10 acres •5544SF custom home 4 bed,3 bath • Quality finishes - hardwood floors, granite countertops, 2 masters • 3-car garage and detached 2220 SF
www.bendpropertysource.com • brian¹¹bendpropertysource.com
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• 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3167 SF • Rooftop terrace Cascade View • Gourmet kitchen, built-ins • Walking access to town/trails ik c • Upgrades throughout • 2-car garage, personal elevator MLS¹201311003 Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker l 541-408-3912
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Views in Every Direction
• 4 bed, 4.5 bath, 5294 SF • Chef's dream kitchen with Dacor & Thermador appliances
• Opportunity to build on the highest point overlooking Prinavilla • Just $3200anacre-over 500 acres available • Largest block of land zoned for 5 acre minimumsthis close to Prlnavllla • Abuts larger parcels andBLM
• Two master suites on main
• Big media/bonus room • Heated floors "'I,".' • • 3-car garage with workshop MLS¹201310071
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Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker l 541-408-3912
Call Susie Helfer, Broker, GRI l 410-3114
Call Laina Ryan, Broker l 541-419-7540
www.bendpropertysource.com • brian¹¹bendpropertysource.com
www.Bendluxuryhomes.com
www.laina©landranchhomes.com
Breathtaking Views on 1 Acre ~ $189,000
Sparkling Clean!!! SE side of Bendf $194,500
• Unique place only minutes to Sisters • Home offers 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, open kitchen & comfortable living area a Detached 2-car garage w/plenty of storage space to • Low maintenanceyard makes thisan idealvacation getaway • MLS¹201303858
• ALL NEW interior flooring • Fresh new interior paint • Shows AWESOME! • Central air for those HOT days • Gas fireplace for cold days • 3 bdrms, 2.5 baths, 1461SF • Great location! WON'T LAST! MLS¹201307187
Gem in the Rough( Three Rivers South( $149,900
Sunstone Solar Townhomes ( $165,000
• Uniquetownhomeoffering passive solardesign • Contemporary style with privatesun deckandfencedbackyard • Open kitchen andliving areawith south facing orientation • Hardwood floors andvaulted ceilings • 3bd, 3ba,doublecarattached garagewithspaciousdriveway • Near Costco,Medicalandschools CallShelly Swanson, Broker l 541-408-0086
• 55149 Forest Lane • 3 bed, 2 bath, 1224 SF • Very comfortable home for weekend getaways or full time living in the woods • Desirable development •Closetothe Big Deschutes MLS¹201206233
Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222 www.gregsellscentraloregon.com
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Call Chris Sperry, Principal Broker l 541-749-8479 www.chrissperry.com
69322 Hackamore ( $236,500
Lot in Super Hot Tetherow ( $235,000
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Lot 33 on Cozy Dryer Court • Flat, easy to build lot is tucked into the eastern edge of Tatharow, called The Glen, allowing for privacyand q u iet but close enough to all the amenities Tatharow has to offer • Tatharow community is more than an award winning golf course, it offers open spaces, miles of trails and direct access to Daschutas National Forest just minutes from downtown Bend! MLS¹201310156
• Great home in Tollgate in Sisters, OR • 3 bedroom,1466SFsingle level home • New roof, new flooring, new windows, largegreat room,new septic onwonderful lot that backs to National Forest • Community offars clubhouse,pool, baskatballcourts&endlasstrails MLS¹201304627
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20321 Aberdeen Dr, Bend ( $298,999
Whispering Pines! ( $299,000
• Serene 2272SFhome ona large .2 acre lot •Locatedsouth ofBend in
• 4bedroom,3 bath, 2394SF • Large entertainment areadownstairs • 2.5 acres fenced&crossfenced • 10x20storageshed&loafing shed • ConcreteRVpad &alarge driveway • Bring thehorsesor4-Hprojects MLS¹201303981
• 9' doors, open floor plan and massive bonus/family room • Hardwood floors, oak cabinets, forced air & central AC • Fenced yard,storage shed,auto sprinklars &pergola deck •Clo seto shopping/schools MLS¹201310976
Call Chris Sulak, Brokerl 541-350-6164
Call Melanie Maitre, Broker ABR, SRES, ePRO
Call Chamese Christianson, Broker l 541-279-9879
Call Rod Hatchell, Broker l 541-728-8812
chrissulak¹¹bendbroadband.com
541-480-4186 l melanie¹¹melaniemaitre.com
http://chamesechristiansonbroker.com/
rodhatchell¹¹gmail.com
63430 Ledgestone Ct, Bend ( $315,000
19836 Copernicus Ave, Bend ~ $345,000
17940 Parkway Lane ( $350,000
60481 Coffee Ct. ( $464,750
•3bad,2.5bath,fabulousmove-in ready home with officeonmain • Open kitchen,dining &living room looking out to thenicely landscaped backyard • Upstairs is mastesui r tew/vaulted ceiling &large bathroomw/doubla sinks, soakingtub, shower&dream closet. • 2 additional bedrooms upconnecting to a full bath MLS¹201308648
• Custom built w/2 master bedrooms • Third bedroom downstairs w/access to apatio & fullbath •A chef'sdream wi than enormous isla nd,pantry,gasrange/oven, plenty ofcounter& cabinetspace • Slate Ik wood flooring throughout • Backs up to 37 acrepark & next
door is a community garden MLS¹201308286
Call Chris Sperry, Principal Brokerl 541-749-8479
Call Chris Sperry, Principal Brokerl 541-749-8479
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• Permitted GP Building w/llvlng quarter/loft • Bath, laundry area, septic, wall & pumphousa • RV hookups inside& out,100amp breaker ln shop
• New construction,luxurytownhome • 4bedroom3 5bathroom • 2540 SF &2-carattached garage • Granite, hardwood&tile throughout
• Great location between Sisters & Bend
• OwnerprivilegesatSeventh Mountain Resort • Nextto WidgiCreek&theDeschutes RiverTrail MLS¹201307670
• Build your dream home while you live ln loft area or your RV • MLS¹201105898
chris@chrissperry.com www.chrissperry.com
www.joanne@joannemckee.com
19661 Harvard Place ( $478,000
Pilot's Dream Neighborhood! ( $510,000
Timeless Prairie-Style in NWX ( $550,000
Nvandenborn¹¹gmail .com
Perched Above The River ( $655,990
2782 SE Pilot Drive, Prineville • 2500 SF barely lived inhomewith beaut ifulhardwoodsandwoodwork throughout thehome • 3beds,2bathsall onthe main floor with abonusroom abovedouble car garage • 2000 SF hangar andptivate airstrip in the neighborhood • Planeisalsoavailable
Call Natalie Vandenborn, Broker l 541-508-9581
,
Call Jordan Grandlund, Principal Broker 541-420-1559 or Stephanie Ruiz, Broker
Call Joanne MCKee, Broker l 541480-5159
chris@chrissperry.com www.chrissperry.com
• Like new Renaissancehome in Aspen Rim, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths ' 3056 SF,beautiful hardwoods, slab granite, stainless steel appliances, mud room andopen floor plan • 1 block to pool and park Call Natalie Vandenborn, Broker l 541-508-9581
• Easyliving in apark-like setting
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541-948-5196 www.PointswestBend.com
On the Rim Whychus Creek "Sisters" ) $645,000
• Open greatroomwith lots oflight • Gourmetkitchenwith SSappliances • Largemainlevel master&bath • Office/flex space upsbtirs • Hardwoods,carpet, andtile • Two-caroversizedgarage • Fencedwith lowmaintenance ~ ~ land scape • 3beds,2.5baths,2284SF,0.14 acre lot
•Cus tom home,3bed,2.5bath • Single level2773SF • Open floorplanw/upgrades • Stunningviews,2.5 acres • Largebackdeck-turn keyproperty • Oversized 2-cargarage MLS¹2013102 75
Call Rod Hatchell, Broker l 541-728-8812
Call Ken Renner, Principal Broker l 541-280-5352
Nvandenborn@gmail.com
ken.renner¹¹sothebysrealty.com
rodhatchellCtgmail.com
Close to Town Country Living ( $815,000
1265 NW Remarkable Dr. ( $829,900
New Home in Tetherow! ( $869,000
• 4 bed, 3 bath, 3381 SF • 10 irngated acres w/wheel hne • Cascade views • Shop 1 - 2 car garage+ office & den • Shop2-5cargarage • 2 ponds MLS¹201308637
• 2708 SF single level • 3 bed, 2.5 bath • Gourmet kitchen • Master suite w/fireplace • .40acre on the River Rim • 3-car tandem garage MLS¹201310197
•
• RemarkableAddress... Rem arkable View • 3524SF,4bad, 3bathhomasitsoatopof the worldwith a180degreeviewof the CentralOregonHigh Desert g , • Tr avertineleent ads ryupto expansiveviews ,mc -g; • IGtchan w/charrycabinetry&aformal diningarea • Outsideiswrap-aroundfrontdeck • Masteronma inlevel withsoakertub
• 3,078 SF., 3-car garage • Backs to 12th fairway w/ private and treed yard • Includes full membership to Tetherow a
• Downstairsareawith bararea
• January completion
c
•3-cargarage,fencedbackyardw/hottub
Call Rhonda Garrison, Principal Brokerl 541-279-1768
Call Bobby Lockrem, Broker l 541-480-2356
Call Chris Sulak, Brokerl 541-350-6164
Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker l 541-408-3912
rhondagarrison14¹gmall.com
blockrem©gmail.com
chrissulak¹¹bendbroadband.com
www.bendpropertysource.com• brian¹¹bendpropertysource.com
58529 Hoodoo Lane, Sunriver J$389,000
8 Quail - Sunriver ) $515,000
Stones Throw to River ( $539,900
Located on Mirror Pond! ( $1,299,000 • Stones throw from downtown Bend • Elegant finishes, 5 bedrooms, 4 baths
• Remodeled down to studs in 2006 • 10 NW Drake Rd. • MLS¹201306173 Call for a Personal Tour!
• 1906 SF 3bed, 2bath homein Sunriver • Great location near Fort RockPark, golf courses,swimmingpools and SHARC • Updated wood floors andgranite countertops • Ochocostonefireplace wall • One levelhomewith private backyard and hot tub • Perfect to call home, vacation or inves tmentproperty.MLS¹201306603
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•
Call Jodi Kearney, Broker l 541-693-4019 jodirebroker¹¹hotmail.com
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Call Chamese Christianson, Brokerl 541-279-9879 Desert Valley Group
•
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• Dramatic foyer & living area • Exquisite master suite • 3346 SF • Beamed cathedral ceilings & loft • 4 bedrooms, 2 full, 2 half baths • Beautiul f extensive decks • Top end hot tub • 26 Siskin Lane MLS¹201304990
• Great room • Sun room • Master on Main Level • Hardwood
• SS Appliances • 2 decks, patio, hot tub • Terrific rental history -' • MLS¹201303390
Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222
Call Ken Renner, Principal Broker l 541-280-5352
www.gregsellscentraloregon.com
ken.renner¹¹sothebysrealty.com
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ES SATURDAY, JANUARY 4 2014 • THE BULLETIN 762
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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• H o mes with Acreage Recreational Homes Lots Lots Acreages Acreages Manufactured/ Mfd J M o bile Homes & Property Mobile Homes with Land 12250 NW Dove Rd. 8579 SW P anorama, $50,000 - Fairhaven, Shevlin Commons Lot 7965 SW River Rd. West Powell Butte Es CRR. Custom cedar- C RR. W el l m a i n-123741 Surveyor Road. an established 2.79 acres, near the tates, gated commu 20784 Valentine - 1998 $199,900 - Nearly 7/2 j $239,000 sided home with floor tained 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Crescent Lake. Imneighborhood, has 5 • .25 acre lot Deschutes River. nity, mtn. views, pri 2 bedroom + office acres with Cascade & to ceiling windows. 1404 sq. ft., view of maculate chalet lobuilding lots avail- • Cascade Mountain vate well, paved roads (den), very open floor Deschutes River can$49,000 MLS Immaculate 1841 sq. mtns. Insulated shop cated on a n a c re. able! See online at view 201009429 with access to BLM. plan. Attached double yon views. 3 bdrm, 2 f t. 3 b drm, 2 b a th w ith power 8 c o n- Gravel drive, covered NWELMLOTS.com • Close to Shevlin Park Juniper Realty $169,000 MLS garage, turn-key and bath, with extensive • MLS 201301093 541-504-5393 home with tongue 8 crete floor. A c ross porch, wood stove, Call Frank, 2 01305077 . Pa m move-in c o n dition. decks. Double gathe street from the 541-480-9327 Don Kelleher, Broker, Lester, Principal Bro $56,550. groove cat h edral slate hearth, spiral rage and workshop. Beautiful and peaceful ker Century 21 Gold ceilings, gas comm. park & trails. staircase to sleeping Redmond RE/MAX 541-480-1911 Cascade Village MLS 201307097 waterfront p r operty, Country Realty, Inc. free-standing stove, $134,000. Land & Homes MLS loft. 2 bdrms on main Homes N.W. LLC Nancy Popp, 21 acres with Cas 541-504-1338 wood floors. S pa¹201308611 Real Estate floor and util. room. 541-388-0000 Principal Broker cade m t n vi e w s. c ious k i tchen i n Juniper Realty, 541-771-7786 541-815-8000 Hickory cabinets, gar$450,000. MLS 541-504-5393 cludes Corian Need help fixing stuff? den window, plenty of Lot ¹ 5 Crooked River Ced a rwood, 201310537. John L. counters, b reakfast Manufactured/ MORRIS Call A Service Professional storage. Minutes from Realty 1.12 acre flat Scott Rea l E s tate bar and separate prep BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Willamette Ski Pass, $17,000. REAL ESTATE Mobile Homes find the help you need. b uildable lot . H i g h 541-548-1712 island. Large decks to Search the area's most 4.95 acres with 1755 C rescent & Od e l l www.bendbulletin.com Realty 8 Prop~ y~ ~ ~ d enjoy the views. All of comprehensive listing of Lakes, and the Little Lakes sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath erty Man a gement $139,900 864 sq.ft. TURN THE PAGE SHEVLIN RIDGE this on 4.81 acres. classified advertising... $144 , 900. D eschutes Riv e r . 541-536-0117 f inished shop w i t h $ 75,900 3 bdr m / 2 home. 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apFor More Ads $385,000 MLS real estate to automotive, $169,000. 15451 Sixth St., La baths owner will carry MLS heat, RV pad w/dump, Fenced acre with water proved plans. More 201101447 merchandise to sporting The Bulletin 201302230. Call 3 bdrm, 2 bath, beau- with a good down. Pine. High Lakes Reand sewer. $28,500. details and photos on Juniper Realty, goods. Bulletin Classifieds Kerry 541-815-6363 tifully appo i nted New paint, newer car- alty 8 Property Mancraigslist. $149,900. 54700 W o l f St., 541-504-5393 appear every day in the Cascade Realty, Build your dream home home. Enclosed, gar- pet. Located off a agement 541-389-8614 n orthwest La P i n e print or on line. On this 5.3 acre par den w/raised beds, paved road. Near the 541-536-0117 The Bulletin's 141038 Crescent Moon area. High Lakes ReCall 541-385-5809 cel just a few minutes dynamite C a scade community park. MLS 50760 South Fawn, La "Call A Service Dr., Crescent Lake. alty & Property Man- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! south of P r ineville. views. 1-acre MLS 201303870 www.bendbuffetin.com Pine. Top-of-the-line 3 agement Professional" Directory S eller willing to i nV iews of t h e C a s 201309296 Linda Lou Day-Wright. Door-to-door selling with bdrm 2 bath, 2100 sq. The Bulletin clude the lot next door 541-536-0117 541- 771-2585 is all about meeting cades and easy ao Nancy Popp, Principal Serving Central Oregonsinct f9N ft. home with shop, at the right price. 3 $39,900 - 1.71 acres, fast results! It's the easiest cess off Davis Loop. Broker 541-815-8000 Crooked River Realty your needs. $169,000. 1.13 acres. Extremely well main- bdrm, 2 bath home septic approved way in the world to sell. Septic approved and Crooked River High Lakes Realty & Call on one of the available. tained 3 bdrm, 2 bath sleeps 6 comfortably power and water at power Realty Take care of Property M a nageThe Bulletin Classified with a detached ga2208 sq. ft . s i ngle the s t r eet. ML S 201302249 $35,750 professionals today! ment 541-536-0117 your investments Look at: 541-385-5809 John L. Scott Real story home on 4.9 flat r age plumbed f o r 201307972 14198 SW Nine Peaks acres. rock fireplace, bathroom with an ex- Linda Lou Day-Wright. Estate 541-548-1712 Bendhomes.com with the help from Beautiful, well cared for 541- 771-2585 773 Pl., CRR Mtn. views dbl. garage, gas fire- tra garage door for for Complete Listings of 3 bdrm 2 bath mfd. Lot 21 SW Chipmunk The Bulletin's snowmobiles. Make from this 1960 sq. ft., Crooked River Realty place, central air & home on 1~/~ acre Acreages Area Real Estate for Sale Rd. 5.16 acre, coman offer. $ 299,000 3 bdrm., 2 bath home more! "Call A Service $365 , 000. c orner lot close to - 2.59 acres. munity water installed. $139,900 on 1.16 acre. 936 sq. MLS201310722 Pam MLS 201302853. Call $97,000 Nearly Wra p eady t o bu i l d. Lot 16 SW Shad Rd. $60,000 MLS Professional" Directory p avement, ft. garage has a shop Lester, Principal Bro- Linda (541) 815-0606 R 2-acres, 3 bdrm, 2 2.7 acres, Mt. Jeffer around kitchen with MLS¹201100751 201300800 area plus 2 bays. RV ker, Century 21 Gold Cascade Realty bath, 864 sq.ft. shop lots of counter and son & S mith Rock Call Travis L. HanJuniper Realty covered storage & Country Realty, Inc. w/power, c o n crete FACTORY SPECIAL views. $78,500 MLS c upboard spa c e , nan, PC, Principal 541-504-5393 $239,900 Cabin on New Home, 3 bdrm, carport. $13 9 ,500 541-504-1338 floor 8 14' overhead laundry r oo m o ff 201208266 D eschutes! 2 be d Broker $46,500 finished MLS 201208272 Lot 39 Big Sky Place, d oor, concrete R V Juniper Realty kitchen has back door 541-788-3480 Great horse property, 4 cabin overlooking Deon your site. Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 CRR. 4.12 acres, mtn pad w/water, power, to garage area. with stall loafing shed with schutes river w/sepa- Redmond RE/MAX J and M Homes 541-504-5393 views, border public sewer. MLS sliding glass door to Land & Homes 541-548-5511 auto watering, opens rate guest quarters & 13601 SW Canyon Dr. 201309627 near Deschutes cover deck. Nice dinWhere can you find a Real Estate to fenced area, ap- d bl g a rage. M L S 1.13 acres, Mt. Jeffer- land, canyon. $89,000. Nancy Popp, Principal ing area. $ 154,900 LOT MODEL 541-771-7786 prox. 40x80 shed for 201308238. N a n cy son views, owner will helping hand? Broker 541-815-8000 MLS 201309688 MLS 201303530 LIQUIDATION hay or what have you. Popp, Principal Bro- E state living in T h e carry. $58,500 MLS Juniper Realty, Crooked River Realty From contractors to Cascade Realty, DenPrices Slashed Huge Fenced and c ross ker 541-815-8000 201106385 Highlands at Broken 541-504-5393 nis Haniford, Princ. Savings! 10 Year yard care, it's all here f enced wit h m a n y Crooked River Juniper Realty Top 10 acres, gated, Just too many Broker 541-536-1731 conditional warranty. s eparate areas. 2 Realty 541-504-5393 Prineviffe j $99,000 in The Bulletin's private well, utilities at Finished on your site. collectibles? bdrm, 2 bath with sky• 2.04 acres lot, app for cap-fill The Bulletin "Call A Service 10 acres. $ 9 9,900. ONLY 2 LEFT! lights, walk-in closets, Good classified ads tell septic. $53 5 ,000. Owner financing avail. • Cascade Mountain To Subscribe call Redmond, Oregon Professional" Directory dining area with built the essential facts in an views Sell them in MLS¹ 201 2 00937 1 5805 Sixth St. L a 541-385-5800 or go to 541-548-55'I 1 in hutch. Large living interesting Manner.Write • Crooked River views Pam Lester, Principal Pine. High Lakes ReThe Bulletin Classifieds 4 bdrm, 3~/~ bath, 2498 room and wood stove. from the readers view - not JandMHomes.com www.bendbulletin.com 2704850 Broker Century 21 alty & Property Man- • MLS sq. ft. on 2~/~ acres, $179,900 MLS JJ Jones, Broker the seller's. Convert the Gold Country Realty, agement Rent /Own 21886 Rincon Ave., 201108032. Cascade Must see to appreciate 541-610-7318 541-385-5809 Inc. 541-504-1338 541-536-0117 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Bend. $429,500 High Realty, Dennis Hani- facts into benefits. Show very clean move-in 541-788-3678 the reader howthe itemwill Hager Mountain Estates $2500 down, $750 mo. Lakes Realty & Prop- ford, Princ. Broker ready 3/2, 1512 sq. ft. 16160 SW Dove Rd. $159,900 - 1980 sq.ft. OAC. J and M Homes mfd home. New int. help them in someway. erty Man agement 541-536-1731 4 lots, $25,000 each lo- 6.1 acre corner lot, home, newly updated This 541-548-5511 541-536-0117 cated in Silver Lake. Mtn. views, near Despaint, laminate floorkitchen, fenced/gated, Just finished advertising tip ing, slate entry, tiled Underground power chutes River. $89,900 2 bdrm, 2 bath home, Reduced!! huge bonus r oom, 760 4 b drm, 3 brought to you by floors. Mstr b edrm and conduit for phone MLS 201205646 36x40 shop, sheds country w/separate entrance, Mfd./Mobile Homes MORRIS b ath h o me o n 2 + separation. Front and and internet. Views of on 5 acres I 145040 acres. New H ardi- The Bulletin Juniper Realty natural light. 1-acre. REAL ESTATE back decks, garage. Hager Mountain. SepSer 'ng CentmtO~nsince 19N with Land Hwy 31, L a P i n e, 541-504-5393 MLS 201308329 plank siding, interior $124,999. MLS tic feasibility for stan$135,000. High Lakes doors and knobs, ga Nancy Popp, SW Chinook Dr. 201300412. Cascade Realty & Pr o perty rage doors and more! Luxury at it s F inest. d ard system. T h e 16535 1146 Linda Drive, La Principal Broker Where can you find a 5.68 acres, River Home in Pronghorn area is a sportsman's Pine. 3/2 1188 sq. ft. Realty, Dennis HaniManagement 541-815-8000 views, owner will BLM access close to a vailable fo r 5 0 % paradise. helping hand? Princ. Broker 541-536-0117 double wide, 2 car ga- ford, Crooked River carry. $225,000 MLS p roperty f o r tra i l Bobbie Strome, Excellent From contractors to rage, shop on 1 acre. 1-541-536-1731 Realty $339,000 I His t oric riding. The kitchen is ownership. 201106408 Principal Broker wonderful $98,000. High Lakes W ow! County s a y s yard care, it's all here Ranch On 9 AC, all new with custom condition, Juniper Realty John L Scott Real Call Kelly Hor1994 Marlette 2 bdrm, 1 Realty & Pr o perty 1512 sq. ft. however Bend. 3-4 bed, 2 bath, cabinets, tile counter views. 541-504-5393 in The Bulletin's Broker, for more Estate 541-385-5500 bath, excellent shape, Management 1959 SF, 36X28 3 bay tops, bamboo floors, ton, there is an air condi"Call A Service new furnace & air condi- 541-536-0117 541-508-9163. Nice flat lot in Terrebtioned 11.5'x14' boshop building. 24X25 new light f i xtures, info. Have an item to tioning, no n -smoker. Cascade Sotheby's onne, .56 a c res, Professional" Directory equipment c a rport. bathrooms have new room. Plus den, $1 4,000. 541-526-5920 $159,900 - 4-bdrm nus International Realty sell quick? p aved street, a p Completely f e nced tile. Recent carpet beautifully appointed util. room, 2-mo.-old Tumalo j $309,000 20711 Farenuff Placeproved fo r c a p -fill with corals. Borders throughout and w in If it's under heat pump with coolhome, nearly 1900 sq. Check out the septic, utilities at lot '500 you can place it in • Deschutes Riverfront BLM,MLS¹201306096 dows are recent as This house sits on ing, water heater is 2 ft., dbl garage + shop, classifieds online • 1.47 acre line. $42,000. MLS 5 41-410-8557 D a v e one of the most pri fenced-in garden, new yrs old, 36x36 shop well as interior paint. • Build your dream The Bulletin Disney, Broker Covered porch, triple www.bendbulletirLcom ¹ 2012001172 P a m vate lots in the park. flooring t h roughout. h as two 1 0 ' d o o r home Lester, Principal Bro541-388-0404 Updated daily Huge windows allow 1.23-acres. a car attached garage MLS w/openers an d Classifieds for: • MLS 201303902 ker, Century 21 Gold 12x16 door. Add-on in Windermere C e n tral and a p ull through the view of trees and 20'I308379 Carolyn Priborsky PC, Country Realty, Inc. Oregon Real Estate shop. Ext. of home is green belt into your Nancy Popp, Principal back is 16x36 with 10' '10- 3 lines, 7 days Broker, ABR, 541-504-1338 door plus wood storhome. Open p lan, Broker 541-815-8000 to be painted. Prop CRS, GREEN ' 1 6 3 lines, 14 days with wra p -around Crooked River Realty age. Fenced chain erty is agent owned. Call The Bulletin At 541-383-4350 link with gate to govdecks. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Only $289,900 but will $25,000 - $65,000. (Private Party ads only) 541-385-5809 2-car garage, heat $199,900 - Home with ernment lands. Plus entertain offers. S pectacular lots i n storage. pump a n d Pe l l et 4300 sq.ft. shop on boat 22837 Abilene Ct., Yarrow s ubdivision, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 16685 SW Chinook Dr. stove, over 1500 sq ft 5 .95 a c res. M L S $159,900. MLS Bend. Heather Hock the newer develop- At: www.bendbulletin.com 6.9 acres, River 20134458 Cascade of space. $59,950. 201209007 ett, PC, Broker, Cen ment in the east hills Ridge At Eagle Crest j 360' View/Top of Butte views, all utilities inMORRIS Cascade Village Linda Lou Day-Wright. Realty, Dennis Hanitury 21 Gold Country of Madras. Very near in Terrebonne. Home, stalled, owner carry. $99,900 541- 771-2585 Homes N.W. LLC ford, Princ. Broker, Realty, 541-420-9151 REAL ESTATE the new aquatic Cen- • .38 acre lot shop, mansion building $189,000 MLS 541-536-1731 541-388-0000 Crooked River Realty l&~ m ly~ ~ ~ site. 2% to broker. See: Views Galore! Smith ter, middle school and • Views to north and 201008671 bend.craiqslist.org/reo/ COCC campus. Home east Juniper Realty Rock views on a quiet 4230611585.html Eagle • Close to upper ath541-504-5393 dead-end co u ntry ID YARROW Prop e rties letic facility $ 389,900 I Ranc h road. Spacious 2700 Crest $195,000 I 6 . 5 AC 866-722-3370 • MLS 201307552 House, Barn, Shop. sq. ft. home boasts 3 C ontract Term s , 6.39 AC, zoned for 2 bdrms, 2 baths, huge Bend. Level acreage FOR SALE AC lots. 3 AC irriga- country kitchen, din ADLOTS with old growth juni¹1892 - 'I/2 AC tion & mtn views. 5 ing area, large util. Central pers & Mtn. views. Oregon's Best s tall barn & 6 0 f t . r oom and a b a s e $15,500 Scattered historic rock round pen, 210X105 ment which i s in D ¹1902 - 0 . 6 A C croppings. 20% down, arena. Oversized ga- cluded in the sq. ft. A Across other terms n e gorage & large shop. Also has extra area $25,000from R iver tiable. 440X648' lot • 541-480-9883 Audrey upstairs and all bdrms AD ¹1912 - .50 AC Sep REAL ESTATE MLS¹201304442. Cook, Broker are on the main level. tic App & U t i lities 541-410-8557 Dave 541-923-4663 The dbl. garage is $35,000 Disney, Broker Ridge At Eagle Crest j Windermere Central large. This property is AD ¹1622 - 5 AC Room 541-388-0404 $99,900 Oregon Real Estate 1.5 acres with 1 acre for Horses & T oys Windermere C e n tral • Cascade Mountain Oregon Real Estate $399,000 I Home - 40 irrigation, fenced and $69,999 views h o rses.AD ¹1762 - 1.4 AC un • .32 to .36 acre lots Acres - Barn. One ready fo r 3.18 acres g randfalevel, 2052 SF ranch $5000 allowance to er $100, 0 00• Golf, pool, tennis & thered in. Septic and at closing with d house. Great room buyers $99,900 w ater o n t h e l o t , of fer. A D ¹1772 - 4 . 4 A C trails floor plan. 2 master accepted • MLS 201301147 power at the road. s uites, 150X 2 85 $289,900. 12333 NW H orse Prop & M t n Christy HartmanMLS 2012 0 8989 arena & 40X52 barn. 10th St., Terrebonne. Views $100,000 DeCourcey, Broker $79,900. Call Heather Hockett, 39.10 AC & mountain A D ¹1732 - 1 . 7 A C 541-312-7263 Crooked River Realty views. 541-480-9883 PC, Broker, Century Backs River & Septic Call L ind a Lou Audrey Cook, Broker 21 Gold Country Re App $115,000 541-771-2585 alty, 541-420-9151 541-923-4663 AD ¹1852 - .21 AC Lot 32.42 Acres in Urban Windermere C e n tralWonderful acreage set in A wbrey V i llage Growth Bo u ndary, Oregon Real Estate $139,900 up for horses with MORRIS Adjacent t o The round pen, 4 - stallAD ¹9912 - .19 AC Well 4 Bdrm, 5 bath, 3500 REAL ESTATE Greens, kitty corner to Treed 8 Quiet barn with c h icken sq.ft., 2 shops, barn, dOp ~ new Ridgeview High $169,000 3-car garage w/guest coop, hay storage AD School. $7 5 0,000. ¹1872 - .59 AC quarters, located on 5 and complete bunk Stunning MLS ¹ 201 2 03193 Mtn Views Tick, Tock house. 40x60 shop/ acres in middle of Pam Lester, Principal $249,900 Smith Rock. garage finished with AD Broker, Century 21 ¹1782 - 19 AC of Tick, Tock... bath. Hot house. 2 $440,000. MLS¹ Gold Country Realty, Gorgeous Mtn Views 201304982 Pam ponds. l andscaped. ...don't let time get Inc. 541-504-1338 $279,000 Lester, Prin c ipal mountain & meadow AD ¹1882 1 AC North away. Hire a views. 12 f rost-free 5.5 acres, septic, power B roker Century 2 1 Comm u nity and water installed. Gold Country Realty, faucets, wrap around Rim professional out decks on home and $389,900 Located near the enInc. 541-504-1338 of The Bulletin's more. $375,000 MLS TEAM Birtola Garmyn trance of the Ranch. High Desert Realty The Bulletin's 201207852 Cascade "Call A Service MLS 201104846 Call 541-312-9449 "Call A Service Realty, Dennis HaniL inda L o u Day Professional" www.BendOregon ford, Princ. B roker Wright. 541- 771-2585 Professional" Directory RealEstate.com 541-536-1731 Directory today! Crooked River Realty EII M , 0 is all about meeting
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your needs. Call on one of the professionals today! 4 Bdrm, 2 bath 1836
sq.ft., 1018 Chapman St., Gilchrist, Oregon, on 2.84 acres, shop. $214,900. High Lakes Realty & Pr o perty Management 541-536-0117 $579,900 I Powell Butte Home On Acreage. 3275 SF home. Private 30 Acres. 4 bed, 3 b ath, 2 ma s ter suites. Incredible outdoor living. 4 0X60 shop. 541-480-7183 Barbara Myers, Broker 541-923-4663 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate 5 ACRES with mountain views. 3 bdrm, 2 b ath, 1620 sq . f t . home, 36x40 shop, fenced, irrig., sprinkler sys. $279,000. MLS 2809225. Pam Lester, 541-504-1338 C entury 21 , G o l d County Realty 6760 S W B u c kskin, Crooked River Ranch. new carpet & paint r eady to move i n . Q uiet l o cation, 3 bdrm, 2 bath on 5.16 fenced acres. Private w ell, close t o g o l f course. $ 1 85,000. MLS 201310512. Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393
Show Your Stuff. Sell Your Stuff. In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.
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4.625o/o 4.767o/o 3.75o/o 3.981o/o Purchas eprice$350,000,20% down,Loanamount$280,000,30yearfixed.
FORDF150XL2005. Thistruck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES and a tough VB engineWill get ,QUAINT CABIN ON 10ACRES!, We are three adorable, loving the job done on the ranch! I Modernamenitiesandall the quiet j
puppies looking for a caring home. Please call right away.
Jvmeoaoyearfixee 5.125% APR 5.276% Jumbo purchaseprice /valueSs00,000 — 20% down /equity,S640,000 loan amount. Offer valid as of date of ad, restrictions may apply. Rates/fees subject to change. On Approved Credit.
Iyou will need.Roomto grow in,' ,'your own little paradise! Callnow.,' •
Add a Border For an addifional '2.00 per day
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A CADEMY , := MORTG AGE CORPORATION
BSSl 1C S To PlaCe yOur ad, ViSit WWW.bendbulletin.Com Or 541-385-5809
Casey NMLs 189449
541-323-2191
je nnifer NMLs 2ee550
WWW.aCademymartgage.COm «ffp «Ls¹s«8 371 SW Upper Terrace Dr., Suite 1, Bend, OR 97702
THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY JANUARY 4 2014 E9
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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$400,000 118 Modoc, Sunriver
$329,900 I Don't Miss This AmazingHome!
541 $41 0 $808 4 • Beautiful 2590 SF loghomewith Cascade views on 1.87 AC lot • Large open indoor & outdoor living spaces • Expansive decking • Great for entertaining & living the Central Oregon lifestyle • Newer roof, heat pump & furnace
$235,000 IRedmond FamilyHome • 2570 SF • 4 bed, 2.5 bath
•3mastersuites • Extensive remodelin 2011 • 1902 SF owner occupied or vacation rental • Close to all Sunriver hasto offer
• Pride in ownership throughout this home! • Large double carport with shop area,W/220 & a lot of storage • RV parking space with 110/220 hookups •A MUST SEE!SELLER ISM OTIVATED!
• Open floor plan • Great room • 3 car tandem garage • Bonus room upstairs
SUSAN PITARRO, BROKER
$459,000 I Tumalo
376SW38th Street Former Model Homes
• Small acreagein Tumalo
• 1 bedroom at $86,500 • 2 bedroom at $121,700 • 3 bedroom at $137,950
with mountain views
• Horse property, ride to BLM
l5l
5 41. 6 0 4
$1
97 1 $ 221. 8 8 6 1
649 GAIL ROGERS, BROKER
LAURAGIBONS, BROKER
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541 8 4 8
3 bed, 3 bath, 3088 SF • 11.80 AC with 5 AC of irrigation
7 5 9 0 PAM BELL, BROKER
$189,000 I 4 Bedrooms,yaAcre lot •
• 4 bed, 2 bath • Vaulted ceiling • Large masterbedroom • Fenced • Mountain views
541 4 8 0
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Rinehort, Dempseti 0 Phelps
541 $419 $7858
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I am so happy to be affiliated with the Windermere Bend office! The positive atmosphere, environment of training and teamwork is something that I am able to take with me into the marketplace each day as I work with buyers and sellers!"
9 8 8 3 AUDREY COOK,BROKER
Wake upto SteensMt. every day! • 163 AC spread, 4 bed, 4 bath &questquarters • Shop & 3 wells • LOP tags easy ride to Nat'I Forest $ 4978
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"Change is never easy; but the change to Windermere is one that I am happy to have made. Myself and the other brokers in the Redmond office are committed to raising the standards in our industry through our hard work and dedication to professionalism."
• 3 bed, 2 bath • Greatroom • 12X20 bonusroom • 31X23 attached 3 cargarage • 22X48
$
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concrete RV
parkmg 54 1 $ 48 0 . 9 8 8 3
KATHY NEAL, BROKER
• Incredible familyroomarea Outst anding mountai views n •SW Redmond, close to it all
AU DREY COOK, BROKER
$259,000 I River CanyonEstates Townhome
253 $740 $2418
• 4730SF home on4.32AC • 6 bed, 5 bath
541 4 8 0
w ww.rine h a r t d e m p s e y . c o m
541 $891 $9441
$564,000 I Room For Everyone
I
Cleme Rinehart 541-480-2100 Patty Dempsey 541-480-5432 Andrea Phelps 541-408-4770
$259 1900 I 2074SF Home With RVParking
$995,000 I Dreaming Of Ranching?
54 1 $420
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"As a new licensee I searched for a company that would provide me with the best in education and training. Windermere offered that and more! I am so happy with the decision to affiliate with the Redmond office and
• 3 bed, 2 bath • 1734 SF
• Double cargarage • Large backyard • Greatroomfloor plan
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look forward to years and years of serving the needs of buyers and sellers in Central Oregon."
7 1 8 3 BA RBARA MYERS, BROKER
$185,000 I AGreat Home InLa Pine!
$599,900 I 21420Belknap Drive
• Open floor plan • Fully fenced acre • Circular driveway • Large garage • Parklike setting • MLSd 201306933
$319,000 I Custom Home, 6 AC, Near BLM
• 2910 SF
• Single level living • Stunning kitchen • Two master suites • 0.46 AC fenced lot • Gorgeous open floor plan
• 3 bed, 2 bath • Knotty hickory cabinets • Vaulted ceilings • Formal dining room
LUSE THERIOT T EAI1 541 $610 $5672
• Large
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VERONICA THERIOT, BROKER
m a ster bedroom suite
541 $839 $6307 SECILY LUSE, BROKER
541 48 0 9 8 8 3 AUDREY cooK, BRQKER $475,000 I Riverfront Condo, DowntownBend
$180,000 I A Great Home In SWRedmond
• Open floor plan • Fresh paint • Granite counters • Two balconies • Detached garage
• 1305 SF • Single level living • Fenced lot • Community park • MLSfr 201310729
541 $771 $1 168 ERICANDREWS, BROKER
Enjoy The Beautiful Boulder BrooksCommunity
$1 25,000 I On Acre In Bend!
Time toenjoylife & comeenjoy BoulderBrookswell maintained community. Ifyouwantto travel or just sit &enjoythebeautiful Central Oregon sunsets comecheck us out.
541 $41 0 $808 4
$143,000 1Cozy Home, Greenhouse, Large Lot
5 4 1 $977 $5345
MIKE WILSON, BROKER
$349,900 I Acreage With 3 Homes
• 2.21 AC backs to public land • 4613 SF, 5 bed, 4.5bath • Extraordinary features • Gourmetkitchen • Colonial
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illnlllg
room • Exercise room
s228 , 0 0 0
541 4 2 0
3 4 2 3 PE TE RENCHER, BROKER
$256,470 I Desirable Neighborhood
• 3 bed, 2 bath
• 4 bed, 2.5 bath
• Attacheddouble cargarage • 7y2Xf 7greenhouse • 60X23 gardenspot
• Open floor plan • Extra large lot • 3 car garage
—n
• MLSfr 201303071
- ilj 541 48 0 9 8 8 3 AUDREY cooK, BRQKER $265,000 I Greens At Redmond
> ' I'I„„,
• Golfing community • Single levelwith bonus room • 1850 SF,3 bed, 2 bath • RVspace • Backs to
541 $788 $902 7
sH ANNQN HALL, BRQKER
$145,000 I Bends Westside
box trees
,
5 4 1 $42 0 . 3 8 9 1
• A4.65 ACparcel in NEBend •1836SFmanufacturedhome built in 2007 • Property has1.5 AC of COI irrigation & several small outbuildings
BILL KAMMERER, BROKER,
•Commerci aluseapproved • 5 car parking • Updatedinterior • Low downpayment& financing available • Vacant & ready to move in
201400011
• 3.84 AC,2ACirrigated • Paved circular driveway • Cottagesrent for $500EA • Mainhome is1764SF,3 bed,3 bath • Variety of
BO B AHERN, BROKER
I 64004 Deschutes Market Road $579,900,000 I Single level Powell Butte Home
541 $410 $1200
3 8 9 1 BO BAHERN, BROKER
• Move-in ready • New carpet,stove &deck • Two car parking • NOT a short sale!
SU SAN PITARRO, BROKER i
GRANT LUDWICK, BROKER
$' gu:-
541 4 2 0
$175,000 I Professional Office In Redmond
• 4 bed, 3 bath • 2217 SF with bonusroom • 2 storagesheds • Fencedbackyard with patio • Many ceiling fans MLSI 201310934
• Built in 1995 • 3 bed, 2 bath
$999,999 I Woodside Ranch
54 1 . 6 3 3 - 0 2 5 5
$255,000 I Large Home, Quiet Neighhorhood
• 3275 SF,4bed,3 bath • Private 30 AC • 2 mastersuites • 40X60 shop • Incredible outdool living
~)
5 4 1 $480 $718 3
BA RBARA MYERS, BROKER
541 $97 7 . 7 7 5 6
DE E BAKER, BROKER
$829,000 I Shevlin Ridge Stunner • R.D. building & design • New construction • 3553 SF &42X16 RVgarage • 3 bed (2 full) & 2.5 bath • Bonus room plus office
I 541 $480 $044 8
JO HN TAYLOR, BROKER
• 2 renovated 2 bedcondos • High end finishes • Stack W/D & stainless appliances • Excellent rental history • Professionally managed • Well maintained
541 $388 $0404
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$ I
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014 • •
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contact us:
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Pets & Supplies
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TV, Stereo 8 Video
Misc. Items
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Hovv to avoidscam and fraud attempts
REDMOND Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale
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Labradors AKC2 chocolate males left! Shots, wormed, health/ hip guar. 541-536-5385 www.welcomelabs.com
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AGATE HUNTERS
Pelishers • Saws •
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HANCOCK& MOORE SOFA Salmon/Coral chenille fabric with diamond pattern. Traditional styling with loose pillow back, down-wrapped seat cushions, roll arms, skirt, two matching p illows an d a r m covers. L i ke new condition. $1 000. 541-526-1332
241
Bicycles & Accessories
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial
Ret a i ler. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed I nternet starting a t $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-308-1563
YBe aware of international fraud. Deal locally whenever possible. sr Watch for buyers who offer more than your asking price and who ask to have money wired or handed back to them. Fake cashier checks and money orders are common. HNever give out personal financial information. sfTrust your instincts and be wary of someone using an escrow service or agent to pick up your merchandise.
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Call a Pro (PNDC) Heating & Stoves The Bulletin advertisers may sersin9 Centrel Onsen sinceisle Whether you need a 265 place an ad NOTICE TO 541-420-5640 fence fixed, hedges with our Computers ADVERTISER 270 trimmed or a house Just bought a new boat? "QUICK CASH Since September 29, Lost & Found Sell your old one in the SPECIAL" built, you'll find T HE BULLETIN r e 1991, advertising for classifieds! Ask about our 1 week 3 lines 12 used woodstoves has Found Haro Mountain quires computer adprofessional help in Super Seller rates! of' vertisers with multiple been limited to mod- Bike on Black Butte. Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin's "Call a 2005 Maverick ML7 ~ee eke 2t e els which have been to identify, 541-923-7286 ad schedules or those Mountain Bike, 15" Ad must selling multiple syscertified by the Or- after 4pm. Wanted: $Cash paid for Service Professional" frame (small). Full include price of egon Department of vintage costume jewtems/ software, to disDirectory suspension, Maverick le te ni 2520 s~ elry. Top dollar paid for close the name of the Environmental Qual- Found: Necklace on 541-385-5809 s hock, SRAM X O or less, or multiple USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Gold/Silver.l buy by the business or the term ity (DEQ) and the fed- Butler Mkt Rd., Call drivetrain 8 shifters, 9 items whose total to Estate, Honest Artist "dealer" in their ads. eral E n v ironmental 541-617-8598 speed rear cassette, Door-to-door selling with does not exceed Elizabeth,541-633-7006 QueenslandHeelers Protection A g ency identify. Private party advertisStandard 8 Mini, $150 fast results! It's the easiest 34-11, Avid Juicy disc $500. ers are defined as as having met The Bulletin (EPA) Wanted: Oak bedframe/ brakes. Well t aken 8 up. 541-280-1537 serkin9 Central Oresen since19IB smoke emission stanthose who sell one Say egoodbuy" headboard for reg. or www.rightwayranch.wor way in the world to sell. c are o f. $950 . Call Classifieds at computer. dards. A cer t ified waterbed mattress. to that unused 541-788-6227. 541-385-5809 * REDUCE YOUR dpress.com woodstove may be The Bulletin Classified 541-408-0846 www.bendbulletin.com CABLE BILL! Get an identified by its certifi267 item by placing it in Rodent issues? Free 541 485-5809 Find exactly what All-Digital Sa t e llite cation label, which is Musical Instruments 205 The Bulletin Classifieds adult barn/ shop cats, system installed for permanently attached f ixed, s h ots, s o m eWasher/dryer, 1 y ear you are looking for in the Items for Free H & H FIREARMS FREE and program- to the stove. The BulCLASSIFIEDS friendly, some not. Will old big barrel on both, m ing s t arting a t letin will not k now- 541-385-5809 Buy, Sell, Trade, Free Piano - M Schulz & deliver. 541-389-8420 paid $1500, will sell $ 24.99/mo. FRE E ingly accept advertisConsign. Co. upright, made in Chi- Wolf-Husky pups, beau- $800. 541-514-1744 242 HD/DVR upgrade for ing for the sale of Across From Found set of keys w/ cago, highest quality & tiful, gentle, $400 ea. Pilot Butte Drive-In new callers, SO CALL uncertified Exercise Equipment charms Awbrey Butte tone, ivory keys. Was in 541-382-9352 NOW (877)366-4508. 541-977-7019 woodstoves. Old Portland Hotel. You entry mailbox complex. Get your (PNDC) Golds Gym Elliptical, 1 haul. 541-317-8991 & Hamlin Call The Bulletin At 541-480-1037 210 business yr. old. Iike new. $200. Tra ers & Hunters! Mason Baby Grand Piano. REDUCE YOUR 541-516-8695. 541-385-5809 208 Furniture 8 Appliances Ray Driscoll will be at Beautiful black lacCABLE BILL! * Get a Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Pets & Supplies City Center Motel on quer finish. Still une ROW I N G whole-home Satellite At: www.bendbulletin.com REMEMBER: If you 3rd St. in Prineville. der warranty. A1 Washers8 Dryers system installed at have lost an animal, Sunday, Jan. 5th. A great Christmas $150 ea. Full warNO COST and prowith an ad in don't forget to check The Bulletin recom267 Buying all raw fur. Gift! $25,000 ranty. Free Del. Also ramming starting at mends extra caution The Humane Society The Bulletin's Es eciall co ofes. (orig. $47,000) Fuel & Wood wanted, used W/D's 1 9.99/mo. FRE E when purc h asBend swingroll61 ©gmail. 541-280-7355 "Call A Service 541-891-2217 cell, HD/DVR Upgrade to ing products or ser541-382-3537 com 541783-2450 home new callers, SO CALL Life Fit R91 Professional" vices from out of the Redmond 541-312-2425 WHEN BUYING NOW Recumbent Bikearea. Sending cash, People Look for Information 541-923-0882 Directory FIREWOOD... 1-866-984-8515. Absolutely like new 249 checks, or credit inP I e Ille About Products and with new battery(PNDC) To avoid fraud, f ormation may be 541-447-7175; Services Every Daythrough Art, Jewelry operates perfectly! The Bulletin subjected to fraud. or Craft Cats Tick, Tock The Bulletin Clean, always & Furs Check out the recommends payFor more informa- The Bvlletin Classifleds recommends extra 541-389-8420. housed inside home. classifieds online ment for Firewood tion about an adverTick, Tock... I ce ten ee n 2 I $2100 new; 282 tiser, you may call www.t9endbuffetin.com only upon delivery chasing products or I selling for $975. ...don't let time get and inspection. the O r egon State Sales Northwest Bend services from out of I Updated daily Great Christmas gift! /J Corittgl CoticaPt • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Attorney General's away. Hire a ]Jastfpi l the area. Sending l 541-647-2227 4' x 4' x 8' Office C o n sumer Garage Sale at 637 NW Visit our HUGE ' cash, checks, or The Bulletin Offers professional out Receipts should Protection hotline at Compass Lanethis Sat., home decor FreePrivate Party Ads • include l credit i n f o rmation of The Bulletin's name, 9-3. Outdoor clothing, 1-877-877-9392. consignment store. may be subjected to • 3 lines - 3 days Nordic Trac A2350. phone, price and kitchen ac c essories, 14-kt white gold "Call A Service • Private Party Only New items l FRAUD. For more Presents beautifully. kind of wood sport equipment & more. The Bulletin arrive daily! ladies wedding band • Total of items adverinformation about an t Hardly used. A sersin9 Centrel Onsen sinceisat Professional" with a bright polish 930 SE Textron, advertiser, you may l tised must equal $200 • purchased. perfect holiday gift. 286 Firewood ads Directory today! Bend 541-318-1501 l call t h e finish, 1.66 carat or Less Ore g on l $350.00 MUST include Sales Northeast Bend A dog sitter in NE Bend. www.redeuxbend.com ' State diamond Hearts and Atto r ney ' Cash and carry. FOR DETAILS or to Loving home w/no cages, species & cost per 260 541-390-1713. arrows, round cut, PLACE AN AD, l General's O f fi ce $25day. Lindaatnew cord to better serve Sl -1 Clarity, F color. Consumer Protec• Call 541-385-5809 Misc.ltems S OME number - 541-576-4574 G ENERATE ** FREE ** our customers. Appraised at tion h o t line at l Fax 541-385-5802 EXCITEMENT in your 245 Garage Sale Klt $15,000. Very Adopt a rescued kitten or neighborhood! Plan a i 1-877-877-9392. Auto Accident Attorney The Bulletin Place an ad in The unique piece. cat! Fixed, shots, ID chip, garage sale and don't Golf Equipment INJURED I N AN WHEN YOU SEE THIS seralns Central Oresen sincetste Bulletin for your gaAsking $9500. l tested, more! Rescue at forget to advertise in l TheBulletin AUTO A C CIDENT? serkrns Central Oregon since f909 541-281-7815 rage sale and re65480 78th St., Bend, CHECK YOUR AD Call InjuryFone for a classified! 1 cord dry, split Juniper, ceive a Garage Sale Thurs/Sat/Sun, 1-5, free case evaluation. 541-385-5809. $200/cord. Multi-cord Kit FREE! 541-389-8420. 212 Never a cost to you. On a classified ad discounts, & t/9 cords www.craftcats.org Don t wait, call now! Antiques & Garage Sales go to available. Immediate KIT INCLUDES: Loveseat very nice 1-800-539-9913. Bichon Frise reg. AKC mauve, $150; 2 rewww.bendbulletin.com delivery! 541-408-6193 • 4 Garage Sale Signs Collectibles (PNDC) Garage Sales • $2.00 Off Coupon To puppies and also a c liners $ 100 f o r to view additional 6 -mo.-old male f o r both; Large desk, on the first day it runs Use Toward Your photos of the item. All Year Dependable Antiques wanted: tools, Buylng Dlamonds Garage Sales Ad sale. 541-953-0755 $75. All in very good sure it ise corFirewood: Seasoned; •Next furniture, marbles,early to make 5 /Gofd for Cash 10 Tips For "Garage or 541 - 9 12-1905. cond. 541-382-6625 rect. Spellcheck and Cedar, Sp l i t, D el. B/W photography, old Saxon's Fine Jewelers Need to get an Find them rwellette@yahoo.com human errors do ocBend: 1 for $175 or 2 Sale Success!" sports gear, cowboy 541-389-6655 cur. If this happens to ad in ASAP? for $325. Lodgepole items. 541-389-1578 in your ad, please con1 for $195 or 2 for You can place it BUYING PICK UP YOUR The Bulletin tact us ASAP so that $365. 541-420-3484. The Bulletin reserves Lionel/American Flyer GARAGE SALE Kll at online at: corrections and any the right to publish all Classifieds trains, accessories. www.bendbulletin.com 1777 SW Chandler Log truck loads of adjustments can be ads from The Bulletin 541-408-2191. Lodgepole Firewood, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 made to your ad. newspaper onto The 541-385-5809 delivered. 541-385-5809 Bulletin Internet webBUYING & SE LLING 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Dachshund mini pieMaytag Bravos Call 541-815-4177 Serving Central Oregon since 19tu The Bulletin Classified All gold jewelry, silver bald male, $400. Call Washer & Gas Dryer site. and gold coins, bars, 541-508-0386 for info. Owner moving. 4 years 246 263 rounds, wedding sets, The Bulletin 292 Pine & Juniper Split old, but only used Guns, Hunting class rings, steriing silTools Donate deposit bottles/ Sales Other Areas once per week. ver, coin collect, vincans to local all vol., Top-of-the-line quality. & Fishing DELIVERY 216 tage watches, dental Airco welder/generator PROMPT non-profit rescue, for fe542-389-9663 Always in home, gold. Bill Fl e ming, 300 amp, Super HorNOTICE Coins & Stamps ral cat spay/neuter. Cans 8-pc king size bed in a never in garage. 541-382-9419. Remember to remove for Cats trailer at Bend net, $200. Oil painting by bag, gray/purple, exlnt, Paid $1500 new; your Garage Sale signs Petco; or donate M-F at selling $40. 541-504-3833 noted NY artist Julie Craftsman lawn mower 541-389-2636. Just too many pair for $475. Smith Sign, 1515 NE (nails, staples, etc.) Heffernan, 22nx18 541-647-2227 IC Gold, 12.5 hp, 42"; collectibles'? after your Sale event 2nd; or at CRAFT, TuCASH!! framed, $500. Craftsman snowblower is over! THANKS! malo. Call for Ig quantity NEED TO CANCEL For Guns, Ammo & New in box, 541-548%675 10 hp, 4 spd, 36" $300 pickup, 541-389-8420. or nearly new From The Bulletin Reloading Supplies. Sell them in YOUR AD? both. 541-389-2636 www.craftcats.org 54'I -408-6900. and your local utility Craftsman Tools: The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin 2 companies. • 10 Stationary Classifieds has an HELP YOUR AD 253 Good classified adstell BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Have an item to radial arm saw, "After Hours" Line stand out from the essential facts in an The Bulletin TV, Stereo & Video Search the area's most 541-385-5809 Model ¹315.220100, rest! Have the top line inthe ienlns Central Oregon sincetsta Call 541-383-2371 sell quick? teresting Manner.Write comprehensive listing of $375. 24 hrs. to cancel in bold print for only from 2 D irec TV - O ve r 1 4 0 www.bendbulletin.com the readers view not If it's under classified advertising... • 10 Stationary table your ad! $2.00 extra. 269 channels only $29.99 '500 you can place it in the seller's. Convert the real estate to automotive, saw w/guide rails, a month. Call Now! Gardening Supplies Take care of merchandise to sporting Pecan dining room table, The Bulletin facts into benefits. Show model ¹315.228590, sereins CentraiOresen since 19ie Triple savings! The Bulletin & Equipment goods. Bulletin Classifieds rectangular, 2 leaves, 4 the reader howthe item will $325. your investments 2 541-385-5809 $636.00 in Savings, appear every day in the padded chairs on rollers. • 6-1/8 Jointer help them in someway. Classifieds for: Free upgrade to Gewith the help from print or on line. $499. 541-536-5067 planer "Professional" This nie & 2013 NFL SunBarkTurfSoil.com Private collector buying model ¹351.227240, Call 541-385-5809 advertising tip The Bulletin's '10- 3 lines, 7 days 18.1 cu.ft. postagestamp albums & day ticket free!! Start www.bendbulletin.com Refrigerator $250 obo. brought to you by O utpoint with t o p saving today! '16 - 3 lines, 14 days "Call A Service collections, world-wide Call 541-504-6413 PROMPT DELIVERY freezer, new in crate and U.S. 573-286-4343 1-800-259-5140 The Bulletin daytime hours. 542-389-9663 The Bulletin (Private Party ads only) Professional" Directory ienine Centntl Cre9en sincefete Serving Central Oregon since19le $425. 541-549-6639 (local, cell phone). (PNDC) CASH for dressers, dead washers/dryers
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F2 SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad for only$15.00per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER'500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
lcall for commercial line ad rates)
*illfust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 325
Hay, Grain & Feed
325
Hay, Grain & Feed First quality Orchard/Timothy/Blue Grass mixed hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Patterson Ranch Sisters, 541-549-3831 •
•
Meet singles right now! No paid o perators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 8 7 7-955-5505.
(PNDC) Western Washington Guy seeks gal 48-65, slim/average build, to share quiet times; trips, walks, nature, moon-light, cuddling! Greg, PO Box 3013 Arlington, WA 98223.
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletln.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletln.com Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
LOST DOG! On 12/31/1 3 "Dino" Is a reddish brown Pit B ull with a wh i t e c hest. He i s v e r y fearful and NOT aggressive. Last seen in SE La Pine on Thatcher Road (south of Hwy 31) He will be frightened and don't try to approach, as this may make him run. If you see him or have any info about him. Please call (253) 509-2488Immediately!
341
• Horses & Equipment
2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H slant Shilo, great c ondition. $ 5 900 obo. 541-317-0988. 476
Employment What are you Opportunities looking for? You'll find it in Add your web address to your ad and readThe Bulletin Classifieds ers on The Builetin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be 541-385-5809 able to click through automatically to your 375 website. Mest & Animal Processing Natural, grass-fed extra TURN THE PAGE For More Ads lean ground beef, family raised, $5/lb. The Bulletin 541-382-8941 Pressroom
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C al l 5 4 I -385-5809 to
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Building/Contracting
Handyman
NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY law requires anyone SERVICES. Home 8 who con t racts for Commercial Repairs, construction work to Carpentry-Painting, be licensed with the Pressure-washing, Construction ContracHoney Do's. On-time tors Board (CCB). An promise. Senior active license Discount. Work guarmeans the contractor anteed. 541-389-3361 is bonded & insured. or 541-771-4463 Verify the contractor's Bonded & Insured CCB l i c ense at CCB¹181595 www.hirealicensedcontractor.com Advertise your car! or call 503-378-4621. Add A Picture! The Bulletin recomReach thousands of readers! mends checking with Call 541-385-5809 the CCB prior to con- The Bulletin Classifleds tracting with anyone. Some other t rades also req u ire addi-Home Repairs, Remod tional licenses and els, Tile, Carpentry certifications. Finish work, Mainte nance. CCB¹168910 Debris Removal Phil, 541-279-0846.
JUNK BE GONE
I Haul Away FREE
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Prepress Systems Analyst The Bulletin is seeking a Prepress Systems Analyst. This person works with staff members in day-to-day production of The Bulletin's products, and with Commercial Print customers, to ensure efficient prepress processing and successful runs on press. This position requires knowledge of computer hardware, software and operating systems, as well as in-depth experience with litho plate production and offset printing. The right candidate will have an understanding and background in graphic arts workflow, and a thorough knowledge of prepress layout software. This is a hands-on position, involving work with Commercial Print customers during job planning, production, and with troubleshooting as required. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an equal opportunity employer. Send a resume with qualifications, skills, experience and past employment history to:
The Bulletin
1777 SW Chandler Ave. PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 Attention: James Baisinger by Friday, January 9,2014.
Loans & Mortgages
The Bulletin
lted, LOADED, 9500
WARNING
COACHMAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 Pristine - just 23,390 milesi Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14 sitde, ducted furn/ AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ smkg. 1 ownera must see! $52,500.
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Motorcycles & Accessories
Protection hotline atl 1-877-877-9392.
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Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384
Providence 2005 Honda TRX 350 FE Fully loaded, 35,000 2006, 4 wheel drive, miles, 350 Cat, Very electric start, electric clean, non-smoker, s hift, n e w tir e s , 3 slides, side-by-side $2500, 541-980-8006. refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, 870 Flat screen TV's, In Boats & Accessories motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019 Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of 18' Maxum ski boat, 2000, Area Real Estate for Sale inboard motor, great cond, well maintained, $8995obo. 541-350-7755
Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 21' Sun Tracker Sig. se541-388-8939 ries Fishin' Barge, Tracker 50hp, live well, fish fndr, new int, extras, exc cond, Utility Worker 1 $7900. 541-508-0679 The City of La Pine is accepting applications ds published in the for a full time Utility Worker 1. This position "Boats" classification performs a variety of public works mainteinclude: Speed, fishnance activities and projects. ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. Qualifications: A high school diploma or GED For all other types of equivalent; Water Distribution level 1, Wastewatercraft, please go water Collections level 1 o r W astewater to Class875. Treatment 1 Certifications preferred. Valid Or541-385-5809 egon Driver's license with acceptable driving record. Skill or ability in the operation of tools errin CentralOre an since 1903 and equipment that include backhoe, dump truck, septic pumping truck, etc. Live within 30 875 minutes of La Pine for after-hours emergenWatercraft cies. $14-$18 per hour with benefits. ds published in aWa To apply submit a resume and also an tercraft" include: Kay Employment Application form that is online at aks, rafts and motor www.ci.la-pine.or.us Ized personal watercrafts. Fo Deadline to apply is Jan. 29, 2014 "boats" please se at noon. Mailing Address: Class 870. City of La Pine, 41-385-5809 PO Box 2460 La Pine, OR 97739.
Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991Ideal for camping or hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, automatic levelers, Onan generator, king-size bed, awning. Nice condition Sell or trade? $8700. 541-815-9939
Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388
Orbit 21' 2007, used
only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441
he Bulletin
The Bulletin
Inquiries: (541) 536-1432 or contact sperkins@ci.la-pine.or.us
Landscaping/Yard Care
For Salvage. Also Auto Renew Coordinator Cleanups & Cleanouts NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law Mel, 541-389-8107 opening in The Bulletin Circulation (ORS 671) requires all Immediate department for a full time Auto Renew Coordibusinesses that adDomestic Services vertise t o pe r form nator. Job duties primarily encompass the proLandscape Construc- cessing of all subscriber Auto Renew payA ssisting Seniors a t through accounting software, data entry tion which includes: ments Home. Light housel anting, deck s , of new credit card or bank draft information, keeping 8 other ser- ences, arbors, and resolution with customers of declined Auto v ices. L icensed 8 water-features, and in- Renew payments. Other tasks include mainBonded. BBB Certi- stallation, repair of ir- taining accurate spreadsheets for account balfied. 503-756-3544 rigation systems to be ancing purposes, transferring funds from subl icensed w it h th e scriber accounts for single copy purchases, A ssisting Seniors a t Contrac- dispatching of all promotional items associHome. Light house- Landscape tors Board. This 4-digit ated with new subscriptions and upgrades, as keeping & other ser- number is to be in- well as tracking/ordering Circulation office vices. Licensed & cluded in all adver- supplies. Bonded. BBB Certi- tisements which indified. 503-756-3544 cate the business has Responsibilities also include month-end billing bond, insurance and for several I/I/ESCOMpapers and back up to Kathy's Housecleaning a workers compensa- the CSR and billing staff. Ability to perform all long term openings tion for their employ- these tasks accurately and with attention to available, flat rates, refFor your protec- deadlines is a must. Work shift hours are erences. 541-389-8315 ees. tion call 503-378-5909 Monday throughFriday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. or use our website: Handyman www.lcb.state.or.us to Please send resume to: check license status ahusted©bendbulletin.com I DO THAT! before contracting with Home/Rental repairs the business. Persons Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape Serving Central Oregon since ina Honest, guaranteed maintenance do not work. CCB¹151573 r equire an LC B l i EOE/Drug free workplace Dennis 541-317-9768 cense.
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Lim-
Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174
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The Bulletin
528
880
Motorhomes
miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by The Bulletin recomNicholas Del Drago, mends you use caunew condition, tion when you proheated handgrips, ends, eves or holidays. vide personal auto cruise control. 541-815-0015 information to compa$32,000 in bike, nies offering loans or only $20,000 obo. Sales credit, especially 541-548-4969 541-318-6049 those asking for adg e SMA R T vance loan fees or W IR E L E S S companies from out of HDFafBo 1996 state. If you have 2014 is our 5th year concerns or quesOregon's 100 B e st Companies To Work tions, we suggest you For! - W e h ire the consultyour attorney or call CONSUMER " Smartest an d th e Fleetwood D i scovery Winnebago Aspect HOTLINE, Brightest" salespeople 40' 2003, diesel mo- 2009- 32', 3 slide1-877-877-9392. that are capable of deCompletely torhome w/all outs, Leather intelivering an exceptional BANK TURNED YOU options-3 slide outs, rior, Power s eat, customer experience. DOWN? Private party Rebuilt/Customized windows, 2012/2013 Award satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, locks, S mart Wireless i s will loan on real eswheels. Winner etc. 32,000 m i les. Aluminum a seeking full time Retail tate equity. Credit, no Showroom Flat Screen, Condition Wintered in h eated 17 Sales associates to be problem, good equity Many Extras shop. $84,900 O.B.O. Surround s o u nd, part of our high per- is all you need. Call camera, Queen bed, Low Miles. 541-447-8664 formance sales team Oregon Land MortFoam mattress, Aw$17,000 for our AT&T Red- gage 541-388-4200. ning, Generator, In541-548-4807 mond location. Hourly verter, Auto Jacks, base + commission,LOCAL MONEyrWe buy Air leveling, Moon excellent benefits insecured trust deeds & H onda E l it e m o t o r roof, no smoking or cluding medical, den- note,some hard money scooter with 6 , 205 p ets. L ik e n ew, miles, Asking $250. tal, vision, tuition reimloans. Call Pat Kellev $74,900 541-382-3099 ext.13. 541-389-2636 bursement and 541-480-6900 Gulfstream S u ne mployee dea l e rS TRUGGLING W I TH sport 30' Class A phone program. 1988 new f r idge, Apply at: www.smart YOUR M O R TGAGE and worried about TV, solar panel, new wireless.com/jobs foreclosure? Reduce refrigerator, wheelchair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W your mortgage 8 save Bt&t money. Legal loan g enerator, G ood Aueetraed Retailer modification services. condition! $12,500 Triumph Daytona obo 541-447-5504 Free co n sultation. Winnebago Suncruiser34' SALES PERSON Call Preferred Law 2004, 15K m i l es, 2004, 35K, loaded, too perfect bike, needs Local floor coyering store 1-800-335-6592. much to list, ext'd warr. nothing. Vin has immediate need (PNDC) thru 2014, $49,900 Den¹201536. for F-T salesperson. nis, 541-589-3243 • Must possess com$4995 Need to get an ad puter knowledge; have Dream Car 881 sales & design experiAuto Sales Travel Trailers in ASAP? ence 1801Division, Bend • Knowledge of carpet, DreamcarsBend.com KOUNTRY AIRE Fleetwood Wilderness vinyl, tile, hardwood & Fax it to 541-322-7253 541-678-0240 1994 37.5' motorN.W. Edition 26' 2002, natural stone. Dlr 3665 home, with awning, 1 shde, sleeps 6, • Responsible for show- The Bulletin Classifieds and one slide-out, queen bed, couch, room coverage, manOnly 47k miles The Bulletin's stove/oven, tub/ agement of individual and good condition. shower, front elec. "Call A Service accounts for c lients We are looking for first $25,000. jack, waste tank heatworking on remodel mortgage pri v ate Professional" Directory 541-548-0318 e rs, s t abilizers, 2 and/or new construc- money. Duplex has (photo above is of a prop. t a nks, no tion. Material selec- good equity and loca- is all about meeting similar model & not the your needs. smoking/pets, wintertions, estimates, sales tion. In search of a actual vehicle) ized, good c o n d. agreements, ordering loan with reasonable Call on one of the $8500 OBO product, i n stallation interest. If interested professionals today! 541-447-3425 work orders and invoicing. Actively pur- please contact us at sue new accounts and (831) 688-6391 rospects. wf' ages based on experience. Email resume and cover letter to: N avion R V 200 8 , wall 70@hotmail.com Sprinter chassis 25'. Mercedes Benz diesel, KeystoneLaredo 31' Victory TC 2002, 24,000 miles, pristine RV 20 06 with 1 2' runs great, many cond., quality through- slide-out. Sleeps 6, out, rear slide-out w/ queen walk-around accessories, new queen bed, d e luxe bed w/storage undertires, under 40K chasing products or I captain swivel f ront Tub 8 shower. miles, well kept. seats, diesel generator, neath. services from out of • 850 2 swivel rockers. TV. l the area. Sending $5000. awning, no pets/ smokAir cond. Gas stove 8 Snowmobiles c ash, checks, o r 541-771-0665 ing. $78,500 o b o . refrigerator/freezer. l credit i n f ormation Ready to deal! Financ- Microwave. Awning. 1994 Arctic Cat 580 • may be subjected to ing avail. Outside sho w er. 865 EXT, in good I FRAUD. 541-382-2430 Slide through storcondition, $1000. ATVs For more informaa ge, E a s y Lif t . Located in La Pine. tion about an adver$29,000 new; Call 541-408-6149. l tiser, you may call Asking$18,600 the Oregon State 541-447-4805 860
Night Supervisor The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon, is seeking a night time press supervisor. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon and two in California. Our ideal candidate will l manage a small crew of three and must be I able to l e arn o u r e q uipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for our 3t/~ tower KBA press. Prior management/ leadership experience preferred. In addition to our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. We offer a competitive wage and opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude, are able to manage people and schedulesand are a team player,we would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great place to live and raise a family, let us hear from you. Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at anelson@wescom a ers.com wit h your complete resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
880
Motor h omes
® lRIARCQ©
Healthcare Jobs. Now hiring: RN's, LPN's/LVN's, CNA's, Med Aides. $2,000 Bonus - Free Gas. Call AA C O @ 1-800-656-4414 Ext. 42. (PNDC)
Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Housekeeper - Private cleaning team Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. homes member needed, week days only. No weekFriday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Motorcycles & Accessories
General CROOK COUNTY EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
Crook County Health Department Public Health Nurse II $46,294- $47,693 DOE Full time w/benefits Closes: January 17, 2014 at 5:00 p.m. The Public Health Nurse II provides the Nurse Family Partnership Program in Crook County and serves as the supervisor for the Healthy Families Program. Position requires: a current Oregon Registered Nurse Licensure; a current Oregon Driver's License; and thorough knowledge of maternal child health and child development as they relate to home visiting. A Bachelor's degree in n u rsing with e xperience in public/community health preferred. Applications and full job description can be found at www.co.crook.or.us .
Please apply at the Crook County Treasurer's/Tax Office 200 NE 2 St. Prineville, OR97754 541-447-6554 EOE
TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $125,900. 30,900 miles, new Michelin tires, great cond! Dishwasher, w/d, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
MECHANIC FOR FORKLIFT SHOP Bright Wood Corporation in Madras is seeking an EXPERIENCED mechanic to work in our forklift shop. The most qualified candidates will possess a minimum of 2 years experience working with hydraulic plumbing, automotive electrical wiring, possess strong diagnostic/ troubleshooting skills and be familiar with diagnostic equipment or have the ability to learn. A valid Oregon driver's license and good driving record is required. Applicant must be able to lift 50 pounds, have your own tools, possess good people skills, be selfmotivated and be able to work independently and as a team player. A high school diploma or GED equivalent is required. Position is full-time 40 hours or more a week with flexible hours to meet the demands of production. We offer a competitive hourly wage and benefits package (after your introductory period) that includes medical, life insurance, vision, vacation, holiday and profit sharing. We are a drug free workplace and equal opportunity employer.
A clean pre-employment drug screen is mandatory. Qualified candidates should apply in person at:
Bright Wood Corporation, Personnel Dept., 335 NW Hess St., Madras OR97741.
WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearancein good condition. Smoke-free. Tow with t/a-ton. Strong suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593%266
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1 5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, JAN 4, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sbprtz
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B saturday,Janu~y4,2014
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Tribune Content Agency
In a penny game at the club, South was the notoriousJoe Overberry, who thinks it's nobler to go down in pursuit of overtricks than to make his bid. Joe drives his partners crazy, especially when money is at stake. At 3NT, Joe won the first heart with the king and saw a chance for three glorious overtricks. He let the eight of diamonds ride next. East took the queen and led a heart to dummy's ace. Joe found himself with only eight tricks. If he forced out the ace of diamonds, the defense would take three hearts. So Joe tried a spade to his jack, and West won, ran the hearts and cashed the ace of diamonds. Down two!
he bids two clubs. The opponents pass. What do you say? A NSWER: T h i s p r o blem i s uncomfortable. The disciplined call is a return to two diamonds. Partner's b idding suggests at l e ast f i v e diamonds, and if he passes, you'll be at a playable spot. If you prefer to bid 2NT, I ha v e s o m e s y mpathy. Nevertheless, that bid would promise more strength. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH
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"That's the worst yet," N orth m oaned. "Theman is a lock for 600 points, and he costs himself — and me — 800 points trying to be plus 690." For nine tricks, Joe could win the first heart with the king, cash a high club, then lead the ace and jack of spades. He could win the heart return in dummy and take the queen of spades to assure his game.
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Opening lead — 9 6 (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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By FRANK STEWART
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By Bsrry C. Silk (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
01/04/14
THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY JANUARY 4 2014 F5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
8
Sufioku High Fives
3
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The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since f903
9
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Automobiles
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fphoto for illustration only)
(photo forillustration only)
extra caution l I mends when p u rchasing I I products or servicesI from out of the area. I S ending c ash ,I q checks, or credit in- q
Ford Fusion SE2012, 4 Subaru Impreza OutCyl., 2.5 Liter, auto, back Sport Wagon I FWD, power seats, 2009, 4 Cyl., 2.5 liter, I alloy wheels, a uto, A WD , re a r Vin¹418211 spoiler, roof rack, al- I $15,888 loy wheels, Vin¹824283 I S UBA R U $16,888 aeasaeosaaen.oon O 20132013 UFS, Dist. Is Univ. Uciick for UFS 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ® s u a A Ru
882
882
908
932
935
975
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
®
877-266-3821
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Dlr ¹0354
Audi A4 2001 1.8T 4 dr
rebuilt trans, newer I clutch, brakes, mani~ + Iiai I fold, etc. High-performance. Extras, receipts, excellent mpg. BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K $5700. 541-390-6004 GMC Sierra 1977 short miles, premium packSuperhatfvkheated lumbar A udi A4 Quattro wgn bed, exlnt o r iginal age, Only 1 Share seats, pancond., runs & drives supported Available oramic mo o nroof, great. V8, new paint Economical flying Bluetooth, ski bag, Xeand tires. $4750 obo. in your own non headlights, tan & 541-504-1050 IFR equipped black leather interior, Cessna 172/180 HP for I n ew front & re a r only $13,500! New brakes O 76K miles, 541-598-3750 one owner, all records, www.aaaoregonautoGarmin Touchscreen iv very clean, $16,900. source.com avionics center stack! 541-388-4360 Exceptionally clean! Audi TT 2005 like new Hangared at BDN. 33k, always garaged Call 541-728-0773 Jeep CJ5 1979, $18,500. 541-280-1746. Original owner, 87k The Bulletin miles, only 3k on new To Subscribe call 258 long block. Clutch 541-385-5800 or go to package, Warn hubs. www.bendbulletin.com Excellent runner, very Chevy Suburban dependable. North1500 LT 2009 916 man 6trtJ' plow, Warn 5.3L V8 Flex fuel. Trucks & 6000¹ winch. $7900 4wd Heavy Duty tow BMW M-Roadster, or best reasonable pkg., Cargo Racks, Heavy Equipment 2000, w/hardtop. offer. running boards, $19,500 541-549-6970 or leather interior, 57,200 miles, 541-815-8105. power locks, XM Titanium silver. Not satellite, OnStar many M-Roadsters Model T Touring 1923 multi-disc MP3, available. (See Good cond. $ 10,500 Bluetooth. Summer Craigslist posting id L obo. 503-559-6618 or and new studded ¹4155624940 for Peterbilt 359 p otable madsenm1 I comcast.net tires. 81,000 highwater truck, 1 990, additional details.) 3200 gal. tank, 5hp way miles. $25,000 Serious inquiries OBO. 541-480-8231 pump, 4-3 e hoses, only. 541-480-5348 camlocks, $25,000. 541-820-3724
formation may be I subject toFRAUD. For more informa-
tion about an adver-I tiser, you may call
the Oregon StateI
General's l I Attorney I Office C o nsumer I Protection hotline atI 1-877-877-9392. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since1933
I•
Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 58, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MAN™ V features! Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call or text541-325-1956.
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2/Vcs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 or best offer. Call Peter,
CHECK YOUR AD
3
on the first day it runs to make sure it isn corn rect. 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
307-221-2422,
VIIILL DELIV/R
Qoo 908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
aargr
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located
© Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, O $400/mo.
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. 'tia • • & eI
]f
929
Transporter
Low miles, EFI 460,
4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500. Ask for Theo, 541-260-4293
ffi u
• •
Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34'
fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide & out. 27" TV dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5tr2 years.. No pets, no smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527.
000 1000
541-598-3750 fphoto for illustration only)
H onda F i t Spo r t Hatchback 2009, 4 Cyl., VTEC, 1.5 Liter, a uto, F WD , re a r spoiler, alloy wheels, Vin¹040086 $13,988
®
CLASSIC
•
For Sale 1990 5th Wheel
Whether you need a (photo for illustration only) Subaru Impreza WRX fence fixed, hedges with hard & soft top, Limited 2006, 4 Cyl., trimmed or a house silver with black Turbo, 2.5 liter, 5 spd, built, you'll find interior, AWD, moon roof, rear all original, spoiler, pre m i um professional help in very low mileage, wheels, Vin¹508150 The Bulletin's "Call a in premium condition $15,888 Service Professional" $19,900. 702-249-2567 © s u a A Ru Directory (car is in Bend) 541-385-5809 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Subaru STi 2010, Door-to-door selling with 16.5K, rack, mats, cust o (I fast results! It's the easiest snow whls, stored, oneRjjCol LI)NC C owner, $29,000, way in the world to sell. 541.410.6904 The Bulletin Classified Toyota Avalon XL 2008 4dr, only 49k mi, 541-385-5809 19/28 mpg. ¹273190. $15,795
S UBA RU Plymouth B a r racuda aeasaeosaaen.oon 1966, original carl 300 Chevy Tahoe 2001 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-948-2963 5.3L V8, leather, hp, 360 V8, centerDONATE YOUR CAR877-266-3821 air heated seats, lines, 541-593-2597 FAST FREE TOWDlr ¹0354 fully loaded, 120K mi. Buick Lacrosse CXS ING. 24 hr. Response 933 $7500 obo 2005 loaded, new batTax D e duction. 541-460-0494 tery/tires, perfect $7995 Pickups UNITED BR E AST firm! 541-475-6794 CANCER FOUNDATION. Providing Free Advertise your car! & 1/3 interest i n w e ll- M ammograms Add A Plcture! equipped IFR Beech Bo- Breast Cancer Info. Reach thousandsof readers! Lincoln LS 2001 4door nanza A36, new 10-550/ 888-592-758'I. 1966 Ford F250 Call 541-385-5809 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, prop, located KBDN. (PNDC) The Bulletin Clessifieds sport sedan, plus set Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989, of snow tires. $6000. $65,000. 541-419-9510 P/S, straight body, 932 auto, high miles, runs 541-317-0324. runs good. $2000. good. $1700. 541-410-8749 Need help fixing stuff? Antique & 541-633-6662 Call A ServiceProfessional Classic Autos find the help you need. Chevy 1986, long bed, www.bendbulletin.com four spd., 350 V8 rebuilt, custom paint, Buick Regal S Cusgreat t i r e s and 1921 Model T Mazda Miata 1997 tom 1994, 6 1,752 wheels, new t a gs, Delivery Truck M-edition $5000 obo. (photo forillustration only) mi., exc. cond., V6, Mica Green, S-spd, Restored & Runs 541-389-3026 Nissan Pathfinder SE 3.1 L, fuel injected, original inteffior & $9000. 1997, V6, auto, 4WD, 4 dr., FWD, exc. all extenor. All power 541-389-8963 roof rack, moon roof, season tires, new options, leather, 1/5th interest in 1973 running boards, alloy battery and alternaconvertible boot, tor, very clean, exc. Cessna 150 LLC wheels. Vin¹136692 Tonneau Cover a/c and heater, pb, 150hp conversion, low $4,988 114K miles, synpw and s t eering. thetic time on air frame and oils, new tim® s u s A Ru $4000. 541-419-5575 engine, hangared in aeaseeosaeen.con ing belt @ 81K, Ford Supercab 1992, Bend.Excellent per& more! $5995. brown/tan color with 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. formance & afford541-548-5648 877-266-3821 m atching full s i z e able flying! $6,000. Buick Skylark 1972 Dlr ¹0354 CHECK YOUR AD anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 541-410-6007 Matchless! 17K original c Please check your ad miles! Sunburst yeltow/ over drive, 135K mi., on the first day it runs Need tosell a white vinyl/Sandalwood. full bench rear seat, Vehicle? to make sure it is cor15 factory options includ- slide rear w i ndow, rect. Sometimes inCall The Bulletin ing A/C. 'Sloan docu- bucket seats, power and place an ad s tructions over t h e seats w/lumbar, pw, mentation." Quality rephone are misundertoday! paint. COMPLETELY ori- HD receiver & trailer Ask about our stood and an error inal interior & trunk area brakes, good tires. (photo forillustration only) 'Wheel Deal"! g' com- Good RISTINE). Engine cond i tion.Nissen Pathfinder SE can occur in your ad. for private party 1974 Bellanca partment is VERY MUCH $4900. 541-389-5341 2005, V6, auto, 4WD, If this happens to your advertisers 1730A original. No r ust, no roof rack, moon roof, ad, please contact us leaks, evervthintt works! t ow pk g . , all o y the first day your ad appears and we will $19,900. 541-3Z3-1898 2180 TT, 440 SMO, wheels. Vin¹722634 be happy to fix it as 180 mph, excellent FIND ITl $12,988 s oon as w e c a n . condition, always BUV lTF © s u a A Ru Deadlines are: Weekhangared, 1 owner 12:00 noon for SELL IT! 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. days for 35 years. $60K. next day, Sat. 11:00 FORD XLT 1992 The Bulletin Classifieds 877-266-3821 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 3/4 ton 4x4 Dlr ¹0354 In Madras, Chevy 1955 PROJECT 12:00 for Monday. If matching canopy, call 541-475-6302 car. 2 door wgn, 350 we can assist you, 30k original miles, small block w/Weiand please call us: possible trade for fphoto for illustration only) quad tunnel ram 541-385-5809 classic car, pickup, Dramatic Price Reduc- dual Nissan Aitime Hybrid with 450 Holleys. T-10 The Bulletin Classified motorcycle, RV tion Executive Hangar 2009, 4 Cyl., 2.5 Liter, 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, $13,500. at Bend Airport (KBDN) Weld Prostar wheels, auto, FWD, leather, In La Pine, call 60' wide x 50' deep, rear spoiler, a lloy extra rolling chassis + (photo forillustration only) w/55' wide x 17' high bi928-581-9190 wheels, Vin¹102916 extras. $6500 for all. Toyota RAV4 Sport fold dr. Natural gas heat, 541-389-7669. $12,988 2007, 4 Cyl., 2.4 Liter, offc, bathroom. Adjacent auto, 4WD, tow pkg., S UBA Ru to Frontage Rd; great avasaeonareooon a lloy wheels, r o of visibility for aviation busi2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. rack, Vin¹066992 ness. 541-948-2126 or I nternational Fl a t Corvette 1979 877-266-3821 $15,988 email 1jetjockoq.com L82- 4 speed. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 Dlr ¹0354 ® s u a A Ru 85,000 miles ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Garaged since new. Nissan Altima SL 2007 Ford Model A 1930 I've owned it 25 sedan. moon/leather. could be exc. wood 877-266-3821 Coupe, good condition, hauler, runs great, years. Never dam¹182659 $ 1 3,395 Dlr ¹0354 $14,000. 541-588-6084 new brakes, $1950. aged or abused. For the avid flyer, 541-419-5480. 975 $'12,900. Madras Airport Hanger for sale, Dave, 541-350-4077 Automobiles $8000. Call for info. 541-598-3750 541-419-8583 www.aaaoregonautoPrice Reduced! source.com Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, power everyPorsche Carrera 911 thing, new paint, 54K 2003 convertible with orig. miles, runs great, (photo for illustration only) hardtop. 50K miles, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 Toyota Tacoma XtraCorvette Coupe new factory Porsche CORVETTE COUPE obo. 541-480-3179 cab Pickup 2000, 4 1996, 350 auto, motor 6 mos ago with Glasstop 2010 Cyl., 2.7 liter, auto, 18 mo factory warSave money. Learn 135k, non-ethanol Grand Sport - 4 LT 4WD, tow pkg., alloy ranty remaininq. to fly or build hours loaded, clear bra wheels, be d l i n er. fuel/synthetic oil, $37,50(X with your own airgaraged/covered. hood & fenders. Vin¹648820 541-322-6928 Bose Premium Gold c raft. 1968 A e r o New Michelin Super $10,988 Commander, 4 seat, system. Orig. owner Sports, G.S. floor manual. Stock! 150 HP, low time, S UBA R U mats, 17,000 miles, Find It in full panel. $23,000 GNfC Y ton 1971, Only $10,500 OBO. Crystal red. obo. Contact Paul at $1 0,500! Original low 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Retired. Must sell! The Bulletin Classifieds! $42,000. mile, exceptional, 3rd 877-266-3821 541-447-5184. 541-923-1781 503-358-1164. 541-385-5809 owner. 760-985-4016 Dlr ¹0354 Automotive Wanted
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MONTANA 3585 2008,
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566
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Call a Pro
Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible
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Toyota Ceiica Convertible 1993
GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t ires, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. inside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993
Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF P R OPOSED BANK MERGER - Notice is h ereby given t h at B ank of t h e C a scades, 1100 NW Wall Street, Bend, Deschutes County, Ore gon 9 7 701, h a s made application to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation for its written consent to merge with Home Federal Bank, located at 500 12th A venue South ,
Nampa,
Can y on
County, Idaho 83651. The merger will be c ompleted i n tw o steps. First, Cascade Bancorp, Bend, OrBULLETINCLASSIFIEDS egon, t h e pa r e nt Search the area's most company of Bank of comprehensive listing of the Cascades, will acclassified advertising... quire Home Federal real estate to automotive, Bancorp, Inc., Nampa, merchandise to sporting Idaho, th e p a r ent goods. Bulletin Classifieds company of H o me appear every day in the Federal Bank, pursuprint or on line. ant to the merger of Call 541-385-5809 Home Federal Banwww.bendbulletin.com corp, Inc. with and into Cascade BanThe Bulletin corp, with Cascade San>ng CentralOregonsince lala Bancorp as the survivor. Immediately foll owing t he firs t merger, Home Federal Bank will merge with and into Bank of the Cascades, with (photo forillustration only) B ank of t h e C a sToyota Yaris Sedan cades as the surviv2010, 4 Cyl., 1.5 Liter, i ng institution. T h e FWD, home officeand exauto, Vin¹066953 isting branch offices of $8,888 Home Federal Bank become branch © s u a A Ru will offices of Bank of the 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Cascades i m medi877-266-3821 ately following the Dlr ¹0354 merger. The existing branch off ices ofBank of the Cascades will remain as branch offices of Bank of the Cascades i m mediately following the merger. Volkswagen This notice is p ubTouareg 2004 l ished pursuant t o Meticulously mainSection 18(c) of the tained. Very clean Federal Deposit Ininside and out. V6. surance Act. Any perRecently servicedson wishing to com60 point inspection ment on this sheet.$7200 application may file Call 541-480-0097 his or her comments in writing with the reWHEN YOU SEE THIS gional director of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation at its regional office, MOreP iXatBendbljletin.CO m 25 Jessie Street at On a classified ad Ecker Square, Suite go to 2300, San Francisco, www.bendbulletin.com CA, 94105-2780, not to view additional later than January 9, photos of the item. 2014. The non-confidential portions of the application are on file Looking for your in the regional office next employee? and are available for Place a Bulletin help i nspection dur i ng wanted ad today and regular bus i ness reach over 60,000 hours. Photocopies of readers each week. the n on-confidential Your classified ad portions of the apphwill also appear on c ation file w il l b e bendbulletin.com made available upon which currently rerequest. P U BLICAceives over 1.5 milT ION DATES: D e lion page views cember 10, 2013, Deevery month at c ember 23 , 2 0 1 3, no extra cost. BulleJ anuary 4 , 201 4 . tin Classifieds BANK OF THE CASGet Results! Call CADES - BEND, OR385-5809 or place EGON, HOME FEDyour ad on-line at E RAL B A N K bendbuiietin.com NAMPA, IDAHO.
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F6 SATURDAY JANUARY 4 2014 • THE BULLETIN / e
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fZXXgl2014XV CROSSTREK HYBRID TOURING
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/ '/ NEW 2014 Ford F150 EXT. CAB 4X4 3.7 Y6, PowerLocks, Power Windows, SYNC MSRP ........... $35,290 TSS Discount ....-$3461 $31,829 Ford Retail Customer CaSh Redate.... -$1000
Leather, Navigation, Noonroof and Nore! ER/-01 CI
®
Re s idual $20,B21 10,000 miles per year viN A47517
CaSh PurChaSe $30,829
$2 9 67
S UB A R U .
C onfid e nc e in M o t i o n
36 Msnth
Lease
$3500Cash orTlade Dueat Signiltg onApprovgdcr0dil.
NEW 2013 Ford F150 Super Crew Long Box 4x4 menP-------------- eut,»u PowerEquipmenl ruo Oisssuet .....................ee,ere graup, Cluiee
— -
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Control, Ford Retail CustomerCash.... -$1750 Ford Credit BonusCash.........-$1500 COmmuniCatiOn Pkg. 5.0L Special Rebate.............. -$500 FinancethroughFMCC.On Retail Trade-in Assistance .....-$1500 Must Approved Credit. VIN:E07923 $29 745
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NEW 2014 Ford Focus SE NEW 2014 Ford Expedition 4-Door, Auto, satellite Radio,I'. Locks/windows /Qng RanclT
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Sale Price ..........$16,258
$259ee FMCCfinancing,4.99% APR On Approved Credit. VIN:200003
NEW 2014 Ford Explorer 4-Door, 4WD
".""""". $59,195 Leather, Navigation, """"""" $4665 RemoteStart,2ndRow $54,530 HeatedSeats, Load Ford Retail Cuslomer Level Suspension FinancelhroughFMCC Cash Rebate ............... -$2000 Must Ford Credit Bonus Cash...-$1500 On Approvud Credit. IN: Fo9495 Sale Price ..............$51,030
NEW 2014 Ford F250 4x4
MSRP .............. $33,140 TSS Discount .......-$1645 Ford Retail Customer
$1500CaShPl' Tl'ade DUeat Signing
$g g Q QQ 36 Mon ease
Manual vIN: EG006972.EIA-01
MSRP.............. $35,275 TSS Discount .......-$2131 FordRetailCustomer Cash..................-$1500 FMCC Financing.... -$1500$2PPPCashorlrada.FMCCFinancing Special Package ...-$1000 72months4g4.49% APR
0429
10K MilesPerYeur Residual $18,558.40 Credit. VIN:A85481 OnA rovedCredit.VIN:A75499 Sale Price ..........$29,144 On Approved
NEW 2014 Ford Fiesta SE NEW2014Ford F3504x4Diesel Automatic, 4-Door
POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS, ALLOY WHEELS
MSRP $19,190. Subaru of Bend Discount $691 VIN: E9219363.ELA-01 Tttle, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included
p,'.'. 0 1 8 54'99
2014Subaru XV Crosstrek 2.0i Premium CVT
20 14 S u b a r u L e g a c y 2.5i Premium CV T De-icer, Heated Side Mirrors, Rear Bumper Applique,
Popular Package¹2. Seat BackProtector, Auto-DimMirror/Comp/Homelink Rear Bumper Cover, SplashGuard, AllWeather FloorMats
Auto-Dim Mirror/Comp/Homeiink, 4 Aii-Weather Floor Mats, Cargo Tray Standard Destination Charge
POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS, ALLOY WHEELS
F;
P OWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS, ALLOY WHEELS
Automatic
MSRP $24,487.Subaru ofBend Discount $999 VIN:E8221633.ERB-u1 Title, lic. 8.doc. and dealer installed options not included
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2014 S ub a r u I m p r e z a 2.0i 5MT Option Package 01: Standard Model, Standard Destination Charge
'.;:. 0~17,999
Automatic
5th WheelFeed,SYNC, Long Box, CrewCab
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Manual
Title, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included
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C ome check i t out today!
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POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS, ALLOY WHEEIS
MSRP $18,690. Subaru of Bend Discount $691
Trailer Tow Value Package, Automatic
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Model DWO-11Tangerine Orange Exterior Color. Orange stitching on seats, shift boot, door arm rest and floor mats. Black headliner and upper interior trim. Black finish 17-inch alloy wheels, mirror housings and fender garnish. Exterior graphics. Sport Performance 1A, STI Short Throw Shift5M/r, STI Shift Knob, Center Armrest. Dim Mirror/Com w/ Homelink. Black rear cup holder. SPT Perf Calback Exh System. Sirius Satellite Radio. Security Syst Shock Sensor. All Weather floor mats. SPT Carbon Fiber Trunk Trim. Black cargo tray.
201 4 S ubaru I m p r e z a 2.0i 5MT Option Package 01: Standard Model, Standard Destination Charge MSRP .............. $20,280 TSS Discount .......-$1022 Ford netail Cuslomer Cash..................-$2000
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P',.'.'$ 23
5488
MSRP $24,913. Subaru of Bend Discount $1,414 VIN: E3016031.EAD-02 Title, lic. 8 doc. and dealer installed options not included
;;:. 023,499
etbts
MSRP.............. $17,735 TSS Discount .........-$740 Ford Retail Customer Cash $500
$' I '7 '7 00 36 I
$1995CaShOrTrade Be
10K MilesPerYear. Residual$9,754.25
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Due atSlghlhg
OnApprovgdCreditVIN:125403 .
MSRP .................. ANsl': TSS Discount ......... VIN: A67243Ford Credit* .. . . . . . . . . *Must Finance Special Package..... through FMCC Ford Retail Cash .....
.... $49,960 ......-$4214 ....... $1500 ......-$1000 ......-$1500
CHECKOUT OUR LARGE SELECTION OF CERTIFIEOPRE-OWNEO YEHICLES!
041,746 Sale price
7m YEAR,100,000mMII.E POWERTRAIN WARRANTY
Every Certified Pre-Owned Subaru offers: mDoor 2004 Hyundai Elantra 4
2007 FordFocusSE
Auto, CD, Great Condition,94K Miles
PremiumWheels
.,$7,495
VIN:913521
VIN:295281
2004 VW Touareg AWD
4-Door,Auto, Only55,000Niles
WeatherPkg.90KMiles
,$10,995
,$13,995
VIN: 003041
,~16,995 >259
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2006 FordF250CrewCab 5.4V8
2011Subaru Forester
XLT, VeryLean
eem Miles
e18,999 2010Subaru Outback 2.5 Wagon CVT Very Nice VIN 3380973
.,$18,765 vin:328528
Vlm:400063
2007FordExpedition 4x4Eddie Bauer 2006Dodge35005.9Diesel!QuadCab Luaihur, Narlgation,DI ,Healed Seats, LouNlles,ExcellentCond
-Ituugg~
LongBe d,434,Lu athuiHavigaiiou, Heated Seats,ExcellentCo nt.
~$22,995
,$24,995
VIN:A86345
VIN:779585
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Sale endsJanuary 6, 2014
Low Miles, VIN:CG240220
e1 8,999
72ma64NIAPIOo torepgalifig:247333
.,$16,995
I II
VIN: 03040019
333Milee, Auio,guct¹htnt Cnn¹uon
Leather,Moon Roof, 8.1Liter VB
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2012 Subaru Impreza 2.0i Premium 5-Door Wagon
2006 Ford Mustang GT
,$16,395 2005 Chevy25004x4 LT3I4 Ton
2012Subaru Legacy 2.5i Premium Sedan
VIN: 060028
71KMiles
VIN:768177
• 152-point safety inspection • CARFAX® Vehicle History Report • 24/7 roadside assistance
2010 HondaCivic LX
Leather,Noonroof,Cold
mv
• 7-year/100,000-mile Powertrain Coverage • $0 deductible • Factory-backed coverage
4-Door, Auto,
,$4,695
2006 JeepWrangler SE4x4
S UBA R U .
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