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problem TODAY'S READERBOARD A record dlizzard?Update on the Northeast storm that could make history.A2
Stroke therapy —Research is raising new doubts about a popular form of treatment that aims to snatch a blood clot from a patient's brain and restore vital blood flow before
DESCHUTES
Tren s aremixe or Juniper Go Course Interim chief By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin
Winter has been a mixed blessing for Juniper Golf Course this year. The number of rounds played at the Redmond municipal course plummeted during a record cold snap in
January, but a serious marketing effort brought more than 30 events to its clubhouse in December alone. "This business is so weather-dependent," said Steve Bratcher, Juniper general
manager. "Early January was so cold the ice and snow
would just not melt, then it warmed up and we hit our greens number." That kind of roller coaster ride is familiar to managers of the 60-year-old course, which over the decades has suffered fire, eviction and, most recently,fiscalwoes severe enough
to require a city bailout. "The last numbers I saw showed Juniper was holding its own," said Redmond Mayor George Endicott. "If that trend continues we'll eventually get to the point we won't have to help them." SeeJuniper /A4
wants tOP jOb
serious damage isdone.A3
NOT YOUR AVERAGE FOOD TRUCK
Gun rights —Support for background checks is
By Ben Botkin
gathering bipartisan steam.
The Bulletin
Also: A profile on Harry Reid, a gun-owning Democratic leader
Tom Anderson, the interim Deschutes County administrator, wants to drop the "interim" part of his title. Anderson, temporary chief executive since Oct. 29, said he plans to apply for the permanent position. Anderson's interest in the job will give county officials an internal candidate who has worked for the county since 1998. The County Commission announced Wednesday it has started seeking applicants for the job, which has been without a permanent administrator since the commission fired Dave Kanner in August 2011. Kanner was paid just under $157,000 annually at the time. "It's all been very interesting work and a wide variety of tasks and something that I feel that I have done an adequate job and would like to continue," Anderson said Thursday. Anderson started working for the county as a senior management analyst and operations manager in community development before his promotion to community development director in 2005. This is the county's third attempt to fill the top job since then. It failed to find viable candidates in a first pool of applicants in March 2012. On the second try, two candidates got offers in fall 2012. One withdrew and the other failedto reach an agreement with the county. See County/A4
in a tough spot.AS
In Salem —Gunowners rally at the Oregon Capitol.B3
In businessnews —A brighter future for U.S. trade, but more bad news for the Postal Service.C6
And aWedexclusiveThe most powerful man inChina has a secret Internet admirer. Is the Great Firewall of China
finally showing somecracks? bendbulletin.com/extras
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Health law to smokers:
Time topay
And Captain Jonny's no average joe. The former commercial fisherman has traveled the country by bus for 17 years, selling fish that he buys in bulk from large coastal seafood processors. "I'm a sailor on the highway," he said Friday.
By Randy Tucker Cox Newspapers
DAYTON, Ohio — Smokers hoping to breathe a little easier under health care reform, which prohibits insurers from discriminating based on health conditions, might get choked up when they discover the tobacco penalties included in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The federal law, which prevents health insurers from rejecting people with pre-existing conditions, still allows insurers to charge higher premiums based on risk factors such as age, location and family composition and tobacco use. And tobacco use carries the heaviest penalties, allowing insurers to charge premium rates as much as 50 percent higher for smokers than non-smokers under the law. "Why smoking?" asked Nathaniel Kesting, a 33year-old Bellbrook, Ohio, student. "If you smoke,
somebody's always trying to tax you. I don't know much about the health care law, but I thought it was supposed to be affordable. Isn't that the name of it? Why do they want to tax smokers and nobody else'? I think there's a little bit of discrimination there." SeeSmokers/A5
His "Red Dog" bus, parked temporarily on a lot near the Bend Walmart on U.S. Highway 97, is a former Montana school bus that holds around one and a half tons of fish (before, he drove an old Portland transit bus). Captain Jonny plans to sell fish in 5- and 10-pound quantities in Bend for a week before hitting the Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
road again.
Supporters maketbe casefor a secret dronecourt By Scott Shane New York Times News Service
Since 1978, a secret court in Washington has approved national security eavesdropping on U.S. soil — operations that for decades had been conducted based on presidential authority alone. Now, in response to broad dissatisfaction with the hidden bureaucracy directing lethal drone strikes, there is an inter-
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 42, Low 20
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est in applying the model of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act court — created by Congress so that surveillance had to be justified to a federal judge — to the targeted killing of suspected terrorists, or at least of American suspects. "We've gonefrom people scoffing at this to it becoming a fit subject for polite conversation," said Robert Chesney, a law professor atthe Univer-
sity of Texas. He said court approval for adding names to a counterterrorism kill list — at least for U.S. citizens abroad — "is no longer beyond the realm of political possibility." A drone court would face constitutional, political and practical obstacles, and might well prove unworkable, according to several legal scholars and terrorism experts. But with the war in Afghanistan
Court approval for adding names to a counterterrorism kill list — at least for U.S. citizens abroad - "is no longer beyoncf the realm of political possibility." — Robert Chesney, University of Texas law professor winding down, al-Qaida fragmenting into hard-to-read offshoots and the 2001 terrorist attacks receding into the past, they said, it is time to consider
4 P Weijse recycled newsprint
INDEX Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 DearAbby D6 Obituaries Calendar B3 CommunityLife Dt-6 Horoscope D6 Sports Classified E 1 - 6Crosswords E4 Lo cal & State B1-6 TV/Movies
how to forge a new, trustworthy and transparent system to govern lethal counterterrorism operations. See Drones/A4
AnIndependent
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to actually get to the polls and said states alone should decide President Barack Obama vote," said Jim Manley, a for- how to proceed. "There are no and congressional Democrats, mer aide to Senate Majority one-size-fits-all solutions." citing long lines and hours- Leader Harry Reid now at the Still, vivid pictures of votlong waits at pollingplaces last lobbying firm Quinn Gillespie ers waiting for hours buttress November, want to change the 8 Associates. calls for early balloting and narrative on voting rights. The effort has yet to draw other changes, said Lawrence Democrats are urging man- any support f ro m R epubli- Norden, deputy director of datory early-voting periods cans, who control the House. the democracy program at and same-day r egistration, They question the necessity New York University's Brentrying to shift the focus to for the federal government to nan Center for Justice. "Voting making it easier to cast bal- tell states how to run elections. shouldn't be that difficult or lots from Republican efforts And while Obama cited voting complicated," he said. to curb alleged fraud, which rights in his inaugural address Democratic constituencies studies show is virtually aband may promote the issue were the ones most affected sent. Rep. John Lewis of Geor- in his upcoming State of the last November, surveys show. gia, a civil rights icon, is chief Union speech, his budget, gun Black and H i spanic voters, sponsor of legislation backed control and immigration will who cast 93 percent and 71perby more than 80 percentof compete for time and attention. cent of their respective ballots House Democrats. House Administration Com- for Obama in 2012, waited an "This is an attempt to change mittee Chairwoman Candice average of 20.2 minutes. The t he debate away f ro m s o - Miller, a M ichigan Republi- wait for whites, who backed called voter fraud, where little can and aformer secretary of Mitt Romney by 59 percent, exists, to empowering people state who oversaw elections, averaged 12.7 minutes.
OUR ADDRESS Street Mailing
177 7 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Po. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708
Cold trail in California manhunt — Thesearchfor theformer Los Angelespolice officer wanted inthree killings continued throughout the day Friday, even as a blizzard covered the California mountains with
a foot of snow.But asnonewtraces of thesuspect werefound, the authorities wondered if hehadsomehowslipped through their fingers. Law enforcement agencies from across Southern California had been on a regionwide manhunt since early Thursday for 33-year-old Christo-
pher Dorner. Butthey havebeenunable to turn upany new clues. Super Bowl dlackout —Entergy NewOrleans, the company that supplied electricity to theSuperBowl, took theblameFriday for the power outage that brought the big game to a halt at the Superdome, explaining that a device designed specifically to preventa blackout failed
and plungedthegameinto darknessfor more thanhalf an hour. Bushes hacked —The Secret Service said Friday it is investigating the theft of numerous personal emails from members of the Bush family, after an apparent hacker leaked the emails and Bush family photos to the Smoking Gun news website. The report, posted
late Thursday, included excerpts from emails in which the children of former president GeorgeH.W.Bush discussed his severe illness in December andmadeplans for a possible funeral. (He has since recovered.) Thesite also posted paintings made by George W.Bush. The family confirmed the hacks but made no other statement.
Amish verdict —The leader of a dissident Amish sect was sentenced Friday to15 years in prison for a series of bizarre beard- and hair-cutting attacks on other Ohio Amish that drew national attention. Samuel Mullet Sr., 67, was sentenced in U.S. District Court in Cleveland for coordinating assaults that prosecutors argued were motivated
by religious intolerance. Fifteen followers weregiven lesser sentences, fromoneyearandonedaytosevenyears.Thebreakaway Amishwere
A BLIZZARD FOR THE RECORDBOOKS
convicted last year of multiple counts of conspiracy and hate crimes.
Flu SeBSOn flZZleS —The worst appears to be over. The number of states reporting intense or widespread flu dropped again last week, U.S. health officials said Friday. The season started earlier
CeorSd0AVL
umoooAw.
than normal, spiking first in the Southeast and then spreading. But now, by some measures, flu activity has been ebbing for at least four weeks in much of the country, and flu and pneumonia deaths have
Desciiurt,sRe
been dropping for two weeks. Still, it's been nineyears since aconventional flu season started fast like this one.
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337
Bnif Scnuts Bnd gn(s —A leak from inside the BoyScouts of America last month about discussions on possibly ending its national ban on gay members changed the debate itself by creating an im-
pression that changewas imminent, according to Scouting officials and taped comments from a meeting of Scouting's executive board obtained by The New York Times. Those apparently false expecta-
DEPARTMENT HEADS
tions were dasheddays later when the board, under intense scrutiny
Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 Circulation andOperations Keith Foutz .........................541-385-5805 Finance Holly West...........541-383-0321
it had never intended, deferred action until the annual meeting in May.
Human Resources Traci Donaca ......................
assassination this weekstirred fears throughout the Arabworld that
Tunisia turmoil — In a show of anger atTunisia's Islamist-led government, tens of thousands of people filled a cemetery in the capital Friday to bury Chokri Belaid, an opposition politician whose political violence could subvert the uprisings born in Tunisia two
years ago. Mourners marched for miles through acity quieted by the largest labor strike in decades, which wascalled in Belaid's honor.
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business ............................541-383-0360 City DeskJosephOitzler.....541-383-0367 Community Life, Health
Clashes outside the cemetery interrupted the proceedings for a time, Robert 6 Bukaty/The Associated Press
"This is a storm of major proportions," Boston
sending tear gasandsmoke from a torched car wafting amongthe mourners, but the funeral remainedoverwhelmingly peaceful.
Julie Johnson.....................541-383-0308 Editorials Richard Coe ......541-383-0353 Family, At Home Alandra Johnson................541-617-7860
leaving his car in a parking lot during a driving ban on Friday in Portland, Maine. The ban was just one
GO!Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 News Editor Jan Jordan....541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey......541-383-0366
measure governments across the region wereenforc-
home." The wind-whipped snowstorm mercifully arrived at
Eij dudget accord —European Union leaders Friday agreed to a budget worth nearly1 trillion euros to support farming, transporta-
ing during a vast snowstorm, one that forecasters warned could be a blizzard for the history books,
the start of a weekend, which meant fewer cars on the road and extra time for sanitation crews to clear the
tion and other infrastructure, as well as big research projects for the 27-nation bloc. After two days of marathon negotiations, the Union's
with a potential for up to 3 feet of snow. Thestorm
mess before commuters in the NewYork-to-Boston
27 leaders agreed to aslightly smaller communal budget for the next
clobbered the New York-to-Boston corridor on Friday, grounding flights, sending office workers home
region of roughly 25 million people have to go back
seven years — the first decrease in its history.
early, knocking out power to half a million custom-
indoors. In New York, Mayor Michael Bloomberg told people to stay home and warned them not to "panic
Ifnq dnmdlngs —A series of explosions across Iraq killed at least
the memory of Hurricane Sandy in October was still
with Sunnis and others saying that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his political bloc are seeking to monopolize power before provincial
Sporls Bill Bigelow.............541-383-0359
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226 N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address.... Po. Box788 Redmond, OR97756 .................................541-504-2336 .................................541 -548-3203
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If youknow ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0358.
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A man battles fierce winds as heclimbs a hill after
ers across the Northeast — and reopening the old
wounds of Hurricane Sandy. By Friday night, more than18.5 inches of snow had fallen in parts of central Connecticut, and more than16 inches covered parts of Mansfield, Mass., a half-hour drive southwest of Boston. Throughout the Northeast, mor ethan 500,000 homes and businesses lost electricity as wet, heavy snow, freezing rain and
Mayor Thomas Menino said. "Stay off the roads. Stay
to work. But it could also mean aweekend cooped up
buy" gasoline becausethesupply was plentiful. But
so raw that manyacross the region went on buying sprees anyway,emptying store shelves andfilling ex-
elections in April. The blasts fit the pattern of deadly attacks on markets on Fridays, when they are typically crowded with people.
Earlier, as meteorologists warned of the impending blizzard conditions, shoppers from New Jersey
to Maine crowded into supermarkets and hardware
playful senseamongsome in New England,where
lante violence against people accused of sorcery and to revoke acon-
stores to buy food, snow shovels, flashlights and gen-
the prospect of new snow thrilled skiers. But in most
troversial sorcery law. The U.N. human rights office in Geneva said it was disturbed by the killing of the woman, Kepari Leniata, 20, who
howling winds causedhavoc.
erators, something that became aprecious commodcities and towns, Friday waslargely a day of preparing ity after Superstorm Sandy in October. Others gassed for the worst. With hurricane-force winds, the Nationup their cars, another lesson learned all too well after
Sandy. AcrossmuchofNew England,schoolsclosed well ahead of the first snowflakes.
al Weather Service expects flooding along the Atlantic Coast that could affect up to 8 million people. — From wire reports
Witchcraft response —Spurred by the killing this week of a young woman accused of witchcraft in Papua New Guinea, the United Nations on Friday called on the country to address increasing vigi-
was stripped, tortured, doused in gasoline andset on fire Wednesday as hundreds of spectators watched.
HOrSe meat StirS furOr —Discoveries ofhorse meatin hamburgers, starting in Ireland last month, has now touched producers and potentially millions of consumers in at least five countries — Ireland,
Britain, Poland, FranceandSweden. It has raised questions of food
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Oregon Lottery results Ae listed at www.orcgonlouery.org
MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn Friday night are:
The estimated jackpot is now $13 million.
recent political turmoil and witnessed bombings onseven consecutive Fridays. Thebombings comeamid worsening sectarian tensions,
tra containers of gasoline in addition to their car tanks. "I don't think it's going to be as bad as they're saying, but I said that with Sandy too," said Lavel Samuels, 42, as she filled her tank at a gas station in Queens. That grim mood contrasted sharply with a more
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26 people Friday, continuing a spate of violence that has marked
l
Arming Syrianrebelslikely a no-go Bulletin wire reports ln his f i rst news conference as secretary of state, John Kerry said Friday that the United States is evaluating new options to halt Syria's civil war, but he refused to weigh into administration debates over whether to arm the rebels fighting President Bashar Assad's regime. B ut Pr e s ident Ba r a c k Obama is unlikely to shift his stance against the expansion of a U.S. role in Syria's civil war, despite a death toll topping 60,000 and acknowledgment that key members of his national security staff favored a plan first proposed in June to arm the Syrian rebels. The White House on Friday defended its decision not to endorse a CIA plan to arm the Syrian rebels, saying it was worried that U.S. weapons could "fall into the wrong hands." In his remarks, press secretaryJay Carney specifically mentioned danger to "our ally Israel" as one of the reasons Obama rejected providing lethal aid to rebels fighting to topple the regime of Syrian PresidentBashar Assad. Critics have assailed the administration for not sending arms to the rebel fighters, but Carney noted there is "no shortage of weapons in the country."
Refugee CriSiS —Syria's conflict is driving 5,000 people out of the country eachday in an increasingly desperate scramble for safety, the U.N. refugeeagency said Friday as it reported a
safety and oversight, as well as the possibility of outright fraud in an industry with a history of grave, if episodic, lapses despite similarly epi-
sodic efforts at stricter regulation andreform. Already, tens of millions of hamburgers from several suppliers havebeenrecalled. Thegrowing scale of the problembecameclear this week. Meatfrom horses is no more harmful than that from cattle, though therewerefears that phenylbutazone, a veterinary drug, could find its way into the food chain. — From wire reports
surge in their numbers to nearly 800,000. "This is a full-on crisis," Adrian Edwards, a spokesman for the agency, told journalists
in Geneva. Hesaid the number of registered Syrian refugees in neighboring countries had risen about 25 percent last month alone. Another U.N. agency, UNICEF,said in a new assessment
that Syrian civilians in conflict zones hadonly one-third the water supplies of pre-crisis levels. U.S. officials said the issue was shelved in October after an extended "red team" analysis by the CIA concluded that the limited-range weaponry the administration was comfortable providing would not have "tipped the scales" for the opposition. Syrian opposition forces already had sufficient quantities of light weaponry from other outsidesources and raids of government depots, the analysis determined. The question of providing shoulder-launched missiles to shoot down government aircraft, officials said, was never considered. It remained unclear whether senior officials who backedthe plan, first proposed during the summer by then-CIA director David Petraeus, were comfortable with Obama's decision not to move ahead with it. Some U.S. and outside experts
have argued that the provision of weapons toselected rebel groups, even if they are superfluous, could help empower and build loyalty among proWestern factions. D efense Secretary L e o n P anetta an d G e n . M a r t i n Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress Thursday they had backed the proposal to arm the rebels. Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton was also said to be in favor of the plan. U.S. officials, who spoke on the condition of a nonymity about internal administration deliberations, said the subject has not been revisited since the decision was made and that there were no plans to reconsider it, even though the division exposed by Panetta and Dempsey was rare among the tight circle of Obama national security advisers.
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Saturday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 2013. There are 325 days left in the year.
NEED TO KNOW HAPPENINGS NOrtheaSt —A vast storm system continues to pummel the northeastern U.S., bringing high winds, deepening snow
and threats of flooding.A2 IriSh bailOut —Trade unionists plan marchesacross Ireland, protesting the continuing high cost of the country's crip-
The threat of automatic federal budget cuts that are scheduled to kick in March I already has some agencies watching costs. If the cuts do go into effect, some employees in a federal force that's almost 2 million strong could face furloughs.
pling bank-bailout program. By Eric Yoder
HISTORY Highlight:In 1943, the World War II battle of Guadalcanal in the southwest Pacific ended with an Allied victory over
Japaneseforces. In1773, the ninth president of the United States, William
Henry Harrison, was born in Charles City County, Va. In1825, the House of Representatives elected John Quincy
Adams president after no candidate received a majority of electoral votes. In1861, Jefferson Davis was
elected provisional president of the Confederate States of
America at a congress held in Montgomery, Ala. In1870, the U.S. Weather Bu-
reau was established. In1933,the Oxford Union Society at Oxford University debated, then endorsed, 275-153, a motion "that this House will in no circumstances fight for its King and Country," a stand widely denounced by Britons. In1942, daylight-saving "War Time" went into effect in the United States, with clocks
turned one hour forward. In1950, in a speech in Wheel-
ing, WVa., Sen.Joseph McCarthy, R-Wis., charged the State Department was riddled with Communists. In1963, the Boeing 727 went on its first-ever flight as it took off from Renton, Wash. In1964, The Beatles made their first live American televi-
sion appearance on"The Ed Sullivan Show," broadcast from New York on CBS. In1971,a magnitude 6.6
earthquake inCalifornia's San Fernando Valley claimed 65 lives. The crew of Apollo 14 returned to Earth after man's
third landing on the moon. In1983, in a dramatic reversal
from fifty years earlier (see above), the Oxford Union rejected, 416-187, a motion "that this House would not fight for
Queen andCountry." In 2002, Britain's Princess Margaret, the high-spirited and
unconventional sister of Queen Elizabeth II, died in London at
age 71. Ten years ago:President George W.Bushtold congressional Republicans at apolicy conference in West Virginia that Iraq had fooled the world for more than a decade about its banned weapons and the
The Washington Post
would be the painful impact on the federal workforce and certain
government assistance programs if "large andarbitrary" scheduled government spending cuts are allowed to take placebeginning March1. They include layoffs or furloughs of "hundreds of thousands" of federal workers, including FBI agents, U.S. pros-
many federal programs.
ecutors, food safety inspectors and air traffic controllers, said
It's still to b e determined whether those cuts will happen starting in March, whether they will be delayed again as President Barack Obama has proposed, or whether they will be called off entirely. But even with t hat u ncertainty, some beltsalready are being tightened. Below are questions and answers about what's happening.
White House budget officials at a briefing and in a fact sheet that included these examples of what the cuts would mean: • About 70,000 young children would be kicked off Head Start, 10,000 teacher jobs would be put at risk and up to 2,100 food safety inspections might have to be canceled. • Up to 373,000 "seriously mentally ill adults and seriously emotionally disturbed children" would go untreated, up to1,000
• What s teps i n volving • federalemployees have agencies taken already'? The D efense D epart• ment, the largest federal department, has taken the lead in disclosing its plans, ordering a civilian hiring freeze in its components with just a few exceptions,and cuts in expenses such as conferences, travel and training for its employees. The Office of Management and Budget meanwhile has prepared similargovernmentwide guidance telling agencies to scrutinize costs such as travel, training, facilities, and supplies. Both the Pentagon and OMB have raised the possibility of furloughing employees if sequestration happens.
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Stephen Crowley/The New YorkTimes
Sen. Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire speaks with her Republican colleagues on sequestration alternatives at the Capitol this week. At issue are $1.2 trillion of additional spending cuts over the next 10 years, including about $85 billion this year. Senate Democrats are discussing ways to raise new revenues, but Republicans have said no, that so-called sequestration cuts will come into force on March 1 unless Democrats agree to equivalent spending cuts — hence, the stalemate.
A•
Q•
A
Q•
agencies to decide whether they need to furlough employees and if so, when and for how many days. Agencies would look for savings elsewhereincluding in grants, contracts and other expenses — but salaries are a big part of the overhead accounts that would be hit by sequestration. In addition, some agencies are more labor-intensive than others. Again, the Defense Department has been the most transparent, with both the Army and Navy telling their components toprepare for the possibility of furloughing nearly all their employees by one day a week, starting around April 16. would hit Q •. inIf aesequester arly M a rch, w hy would furloughs be delayed into April? • Federal personnel poli• cies guarantee that employees who will be furloughed must receive 30 days of notice. In addition, where employees are represented by unions, certain bargaining rights apply. These rights, which the various memos have said will be honored, include negotiating over the timing of furloughs.
A
the cost of federal employees in some other way?
. There are many pos. sibilities. The last such delay, from January to March lastyear, prompted a series of
By David Brown
in units that were closer to the
front lines than everbefore.
BIRTHDAYS Television journalist Roger Mudd is 85. Actress Janet
Suzman is74. Singersongwriter Carole King is71. Actor Joe Pesci is 70. Singer Barbara Lewis is 70. Author
Alice Walker is 69.Actress Mia Farrow is 68. Singer Joe Ely is 66. Actress Judith Light is 64.
Actor Charles Shaughnessyis 58. Jazz musician Steve Wilson is 52. Country singer Travis Tritt
is 50. Actress JulieWarner is 48. Country singer Danni Leigh
is 43. Actor JasonGeorge is 41. Actor-producer Charlie Day is 37. Actress Ziyi Zhang is 34. Actor David Gallagher is 28.
Actress Marina Malota is 25. Actor Jimmy Bennett is 17. — From wire reports
by state agencies working with the Centers for DiseaseControl and Prevention and some100,000 formerly homeless people, and emergency shelter programs. — The Associated Press
budget cuts and assumptions about raising tax revenues by authorizing r etirement savings plans to allow participants to change the tax status of their investments at the cost of paying a tax up front. V arious p r oposals h a v e been circulated, including one featuring a mix of spending cuts and revenue increases and another endorsing the recommendations o f t he Simpson-Bowles Co m m i ssion. However, the House leadership recently refused to call the former up for a vote, and full House rejected the latter as part of a budget-related bill. ARepublicanproposalintroduced in Congress on Wednesday calls for cutting the federal workforce by 10 percent by attrition, filling only one of every threevacancies that occur.Another idea that has been considered would apply a reduced inflation adjustment to various benefit programs, including Social Security, veterans benefits and federal retirement annuities.
scope of work in others, said Alan Chvotkin, executive vice president and counsel for the Professional Services Council, a trade association of government contractors who provide information technology, systems engineering, l ogistics support and similar services. Plans announced by the Defense Department to cut back on depot level maintenance, m odernizing f a cilities a n d
general operating expenses
further will i mpact contractors, who perform much of that work, he added. "They're not hiring except for existingrevenue-generating contracts," Chvotkin said. "They're not opening new offices. They're basically trying to hang on to what they have." Chvotkin said the association has no count of job losses in the contracting community due to the sequestration threat. But the group says that "tens of thousands" of contractor positions already have been eliminated as government spending on service-type contracts has fallen from $340 billion in I s t h e pa i n be i n g 2009 to $325 billion in 2011. . shared by government contractors? HFrlgldaire • In anticipation of a se. quester, agencies have delayed awarding some contracts that were due for renewal and have cut back on the
Immediate Care 541-388-7799
requirements of the No Child Left Behind education law. The
Pentagon formally opened thousands of jobs to women
125,000 low-income renters put at risk of losing governmentsubsidized housing. • Approximately 424,000 fewer HIV tests could be conducted
RESEARCH
from some of the toughest
Barack Obama freed10 states
business loans denied, workplace safety inspections curtailed, federally assisted programs like "Meals onWheels" slashed and
the sequester is deQ •• Iflayed, would it come at Q •
Hopeful newtreatment for stroke may be nobetter thanthe old one
One year ago:President
12,000 scientists and students could be threatened, many small
Mountain Medical
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built science lab, docked with the international space station.
National ScienceFoundation research grants affecting some
including veterans, would be removed from their current housing
termine which of those positions are m i ssion c r itical," a spokeswoman said in a n email. "We've ... started the ongoing process to terminate s ome temporary an d t e r m employees. At this point in the process, we don'thave specific information on how many positions will be terminated." Similarly, a Marine Corps spokesman said in an email: "The Marine Corps, as of now, has not issued guidance to commands to release term employees prior to expiration of their term. However, the looming threat of sequestration and/ Doesn't the government or a year-long continuing reso• have a lot of temporary lution could create a budget employees? Are they being shortfall where we would have laid off? to enact belt-tightening mea• Through S ept e mber sures. There remains much • 2012, t h e exec u tive uncertainty at the moment." b ranch — o utside the U . S An Air Force planning docuPostal Service, which is self- ment, first reported by the Air funding and not t hreatened Force Times on Wednesday, by sequestration — employed estimates the loss of temporary 1,942,528permanent employ- and term employees at up to ees and 167,675 temporary em- 3,200. Similarly, a Navy memo ployees, according to Office of estimated the loss of 3,000 poPersonnel Management data. sitions at shipyards by laying For purposes of that count, off temporary employees and "temporary" includes certain maintaining its civilian hiring specialty categories such as freeze. employees hired for a limited What's the latest on postime, called term employees. The Defense Departmenthas • sible unpaid furloughs? raised the prospect of laying off . The OMB guidance says temporary employees but the . agencies may "have to impact to date is uncertain. consider placing employees F or example, in t h e A i r on temporary furlough, or takForce, commands "are curing other personnel actions, rently reviewing temporary shouldsequestration occur." and term employees to deIt would be up to individual
United Nations wasnowfacing ing SaddamHussein. Five yearsago:Spaceshuttle Atlantis, carrying a European-
Whlt0 HOUS8 d0tBIIS CUtS —Trying to ratchet up pressure on Congress, the White House onFriday detailed what it said
F ederal e m ployees a n d agencies — as well as federal contractors and their employees — are in hurry-up-andwait mode on sequestration, the threat of automatic cuts in
The Washington Post
StrOke StatS —Stroke is the fourth-leading cause of death
Three long-awaited studies have shown t hat m echanically removing a blood clot from a stroke patient's brain is no more useful than the older treatment of giving an IV dose of a clot-dissolving drug to the whole body. The results of the clinical trials, presented this week at a meeting in Hawaii, shocked and surprised stroke physicians. Many had already adopted the more aggressive strategy over the last decade. "For the stroke field this is a really big deal," Walter Koroshetz, deputy director of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, said of the findings, which were presented over three days at the International Stroke Conference in Honolulu. NINDS paid for two of the trials, one of which cost $27 million. One study took eight years to complete because it was so difficult to enroll pa-
in the United States. About 800,000 people suffer a stroke each
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year, and about130,000 die. Nearly 90 percent of strokes occur when a clot blocks an artery in the brain, starving the region downstream of blood and oxygen. If flow isn't restored quickly,
brain tissue andthefunctions it controls — movement, speech, cognition — are damaged or die. tients willingto take the chance they'd be randomly assigned to get the older treatment. P ractitioners h oped t h a t "endovascular treatment," in which a catheter is threaded into a blocked artery and the clot pulled out, would do for stroke patients what it has done for heart attack patients. In them, going after clots with angioplasty balloons and stents is clearly more effective than
giving clot-dissolving drugs through a vein in the arm. "We did this study with the s trong expectation that w e would find a positive benefit. We were surprised," said Joseph Broderick of the University of Cincinnati Neurosci-
ence Institute, who headed one of the studies. His view was echoed by Alfonso Ciccone, a neurologist from Milan who led a clinical trial in Italy: "We were surprised. We wanted the superiority o f e n dovascular treatment." Whether the findings will cause physicians to abandon the practice is uncertain. Insurance companies and Medicare, the health insurer for the elderly, already cover the endovascularprocedure. It costs about $23,000 compared with $11,000 for acute stroke treatment using intravenous
clot-dissolving lytic") drugs.
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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
Juniper Continued from A1 "The way I look at it," Endicott continued, "golf is a luxury, and when the economy improves, things should be better." Juniper has struggled to remain solvent since it moved to its new location in 2006. The move was prompted by a Federal Aviation Administration clampdown on its rules regarding fair market rents for airport lands; the city leased the former Juniper site for $1
ayear. The city backed the $5.9 million in bonds issued to pay for relocatingthe course, expecting revenues the course generated would eventually pay down that debt. For fiscal year 2011-12, the city covered $418,000 of Juniper's $473,000 bond debt. Projections for 2 012-13 indicate t h a t t h e city should only need to pay $370,000ifcurrenttrends continue. City Finance Manager Jason Neffsupervised the refinancing of Juniper's debt in 2012, which caused a drop of $54,000 in annual payments. "Whether you agree with city-backed debt or not, we still have to pay it," Neff said. "We need to make the best of a bad situation from a debt perspective; that's why we brought in CourseCo." The city contracted with CourseCo, a ma n a gement company, to run Juniper in 2010, the same year it commissioned a full operations review and formed a citizen advisory board. The goal was to steer the course back into f iscal solvency. The operational review by the National Golf Foundation, a Jupiter, Fla.-based firm that specializes in the economics of golf, contained multiple suggestions for getting Juniper back ontrack,from de-emphasizing its m embership/semi-
k
— Steve Bratcher, Juniper general manager
1952:Juniper's first nine
holes open. 1987:Second nine opens. 1996:FFA gives Juniper a 10-year deadline to move.
2005:New Juniper opens, near the fairgrounds.
REDMOND
Locationsince2005
2009-10:The city of Redmond forms a citizen advisory board and
Photos by Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin
ttttt4~j
orders an operational review. 2010:The city hires CourseCoto manage Juniper. 2012:Juniper operates in the black and pays a portion of debt.
First, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., chairwoman of the Continued from A1 Senate Intelligence Commit"People in Washington need tee,said she would review proto wake up and realize the legal posals for establishing such a foundations are crumbling by court.Her remark gota strong the day," Chesney said. That second from Sen. Angus King realization seemed evident at of Maine, an independent. "Having the executive being Thursday's confirmation hearingfor John Brennanas CIAdi- the prosecutor, the judge, the rector, which became a raucous jury and the executioner all forum for complaints about the in one is very contrary to the expansion of counterterrorist traditions and the laws of this strikesand the procedures for country," King said. deciding who should die. Brennan then made a strikSen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., ing disclosure: The Obama adwas one of those who com- ministration had held internal plained he could not get the talks on the feasibility of such administration to even list the a court. "I think it's certainly countries where lethal strikes worthy of discussion," Brennan have been carried out. Sen. said. "What's that appropriate Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., said balance between the executive, he thought killing had become legislative and judicial branch a dubious substitute for cap- responsibilities in this area?" ture. A program that began in An administration official the shadows was dragged for who spoke of the White House the first time into the spotlight deliberations on the condition of congressionaldebate. of anonymity said President Today, with al-Qaida's core Barack Obama had asked his in Pakistan hugely diminished security and legal advisers a and Osamabin Ladendead,the year ago "to see how you could terrorist threat is far more dif- have anindependent review" of fuse than it was a decade ago. planned strikes. "That includes Most drone-fired missiles now possible judicial review." kill not h i gh-level terrorists The FISA court was creplotting to attack the U.S., but a ated in 1978 after revelations of mixed bag of midlevel militants widespread eavesdropping on and footsoldiers whose focus Americans by the National Seis often more on the Pakistani curity Agency and the FBI conor Yemeni authorities than on vinced Congressthe executive the U.S. And since a 2011 drone branch had proved incapable s trike deliberately k i lled a of properly policing itself. U.S. citizen who had joined alEleven judges from around Qaida in Yemen, the legal and the country sit on the court, moral rationale for such strikes but one is on duty at a time, has been hotly debated. hearing cases in a special highEven if they are glad Anwar security courtroom added to al-Awlaki is dead, many Ameri- Washington's federal courtcans are uneasy thatapresident house in 2009. In 2011, accordcan use secret evidence to label ing to the most recent statistics, a citizen as a terrorist and order the court approved 1,745 orders his execution without a trial or for electronic surveillance or judge's ruling. Hence the idea of physical searches, rejecting court oversight for targeted kill- none outright but altering 30. ing, which on Thursday, unexA drone court would have pectedly, got serious discussion the same appeal, bringing in from senators and Brennan. an independent arbiter. But it
is likely there would be serious limitations to its jurisdiction. Most experts say judges do not have the alacrity or expertise to rule on a frantic call from the CIA every time a terrorism suspect is in its sights. A better approach would be to have thecourt rule on whether the government had sufficient evidence against a suspect to place him on the kill list. But if the new court's jurisdiction extended to every foreign terrorist suspect, even some proponents believe, it might infringe on the president's constitutional role as commander in chief. King, for instance, said he thought the court would pass constitutional muster only if it were limited to cases involving U.S. citizens. With such limits, however, a drone court would not address many of the most pressing concerns, including decisions on which foreign militants should be targeted; how to avoid civilian deaths; and how to provide more public information about strike rules and procedures. "In terms of the politics and the optics, aren't you in the same position that you are now?" said William Banks, a national security law expert at Syracuse. "It's still secret." Indeed, Hina Shamsi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's national security project, said a drone court would be a step backward, and that extradition and criminal prosecution ofsuspected terrorists was a better answer. Nor are judges clamoring to take up the challenge. At an American Bar Association meeting in November, a retired FISA judge, James Robertson, rejected the idea. "My answer is, that's not the businessofjudges," Robertson said, "to decide without an adversary party to sign a death warrant for somebody."
Drones
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debtand someoperating costs.
cantsisscheduled forMarch 3, Kropp said. Before commissioners appointed Anderson as the interim administrator, Kropp filled that role. But he's not applying for the job himself. "For 14 months I was trying to do both positions and it wears you down after a while," Kropp said. "I was happy to fill in as interim administrator, but I'm also happy to focus on
Unger said Anderson is a "great internal candidate who
(
2009:Juniper unable to cover
seems to be working out well." "Hopefully, Tom ... will go through the interview process, and we'll see where that goes." The county hired a recruiting firm, The Prothman Company of Bellevue, Wash., to aid in the process last year. Failure to find an administrator won't cost the county any more in fees paid to the firm, county officials said. Prothman has an $18,500 contract with the county and will continue assisting in pre-screening candidates, said Erik Kropp, deputy county administrator. The firm and county have the job posted on their websites. The next review of appli-
got."
ht,
DeschutesCounty Fair 8 ExpoCenter
report. Endicott agrees that Juniper's best bet may be found in the visitor population. Marketing the course by offering discounts to attendees at large events at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center or to anyone displaying a current boarding/landing pass from Redmond Airport are a few ideas, he said, and there are plenty more that would encourage tourism. Juniper food and beverage manager Carol Burnett has been working both the visitor and local angle in marketing the clubhouse. For the first time sincethe course opened in its new location, a Juniper r epresentative, Burnett, a t tended the Central Oregon Wedding Expo. "We're amoderate-sized facility; our max is 125 guests,
Continued from A1 Commissioner Alan Unger attributed the county's difficulties thus far to the economic climate, such as the difficulty a new administrator would face relocating and trying to sell a house. "There's lots of reasons, and some of it just has to do with the times we're in today, where people are kind of hesitant to let it be known they're looking for a job," Unger said. "They want to keep the job they've
Members of the Redmond Kiwanis Club listen to a speaker during a meeting Wednesday in the clubhouse at Juniper Golf Course. A renewed marketing effort has brought several dozen events to the Juniper clubhouse.
, ' S d SIGN
private aspect, to lowering fees in order to encourage volume, to beefing up marketing of the course and the clubhouse. According t o Br a t c her, m embershiphas remained flat the last two years. "We see this pattern at all courses like this, membership goes up, then it goes down. Last year we had 60 new members, but we also lost 59," he said. The report by N G F suggested that the best operational model for Juniper was to transition from a semi-private course to a premier municipal destination course. "When membership starts to fall, for any reason, it can be very difficult to gain the needed market share in the daily fee segment against competitors that have been competing aggressively in this segment for many years," stated the
County
"I think the biggest thing for us has been word of mouth; people are hearing that we have a really great venue out here."
but we've been getting a lot of interest in weddings here, it's so beautiful," said Burnett. She also promotes the clubhouse for private parties, group meetings,fundraisers and tournaments. "I thinkthe biggest thing for us has been word of mouth; people are hearing that we have a reallygreat venue out here," said Bratcher. Thesmall clubhousehasbeen a problem forthe new Juniper course since the beginning. It had originally been planned to be much larger,but construction overruns for the course left a dramaticaDy decreased budget for the clubhouse. It doesn't deter B u rnett, however. "I'm out there all the time pushing the facility, and I think people see us getting more professional and finding our niche," she said. It's a balancing act, she said, to pay the bills with extra bookings while still honoring the needs
of Junipermembers. As for the golf side, CourseCo has followed the recommendations of NGF in terms of moreaggressive marketing but thus far has not lowered greens fees no r i n c reased pricebreaks forlocalsbeyond the $10 off a round of 18 holes that was already in place in 2010. A weekday round of 18 holes during peak periods was $49 in 2010; today it is $60. The number of rounds played has continuedto drop, from 35,858 in 2008-09 to 32,700 in 2012. If Juniper has bolstered its bottom line, that comes from careful m a nagement, s a id Bratcher. "We really watch our labor costs, and if there's something we really don't have to have, we don't get it. Our pro and
difficult, said Neff, because prior to CourseCo's management contract, the golf course was not included in the city budget report. The NGF report stated that Juniper's balanced budget was $1.7 million in 2009; the 2012-13 city budget report put Juniper at the same figure. NGF projections, assuming all of its recommendations were i m plemented, assumed Juniper r evenues would i n crease t o n e a r ly $2 million by the end of this fiscal year. "Initially we were thinking that three to five years was the goal for Juniper to pay its own way but now it looks like it will be longer than that," said Neff. "It's built into our budget; we can continue (to help Juniper with debt) but that
(greens) superintendent are
money comes from our gen-
great about helping by watching costs." Gauging fluctuations in operating revenue for Juniper is
eral fund and could certainly go elsewhere." — Reporter: 541-548-2186, lpugmire@bendbultetin.com
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate • • •
TheBulletin
Da
one job." He added: "I wasn't an applicant in the previous rounds, and I won't be an applicant in this round either."
OetatNaY ~I
— Reporter: 541-977-7185, bbotkin@bendbulletin.com
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
AS
IN FOCUS:GUN CONTROL
enaorssee a a on ac roun c ec By Alan Fram The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A cornerstone of President Barack Obama's drive to check gun violence is gathering bipartisan steam as four senators, including two of the National Rifle Association's congressional champions, privatelyseek compromise on requiring far more firearms purchasers to undergo background checks. The talks are being held even as Obama's call to ban assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines, the two other major pillars of his plan, are hitting rough waters on Capitol Hill. An agreement among the four senators to expand background checks would add significant impetus to that high-profile proposal by gettingthe endorsement of a group that ranges from one of the Senate's most liberal Democrats to one of its most conservative Republicans. "We'll get something, I hope. I'm
praying for it," said Sen. Joe Manchin, D-WVa., one of the participants. Manchin, a moderate Democrat, is an NRA member who aired a 2010 campaign ad in which he literally shot a hole through Democratic environmental legislation that he pledged to oppose. Also involved is Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., another NRA member with a strong conservative record but occasional maverick impulses; No. 3 Senate Democraticleader Charles Schumer of New York, a liberal; and GOP Sen. Mark Kirk of Illinois. The senators' talks have included discussions about how to encourage states to make more mental health data available to the federal system
Current law —Background checks are required only for sales by the nation's 55,000 federally licensed gun dealers, but not for private purchases like those at
gun shows, online or in person. There are few indisputable, up-todate statistics on how many guns
change handswithout background checks, but a respected study using 1990s data estimated that 30
percent to 40 percent of gun transactions fit into that category.
cluding transactions involving relatives or people with licenses to carry for checking gun buyers' records, concealed weapons according t o p e ople wh o s p oke People involved in the talks would anonymously because they were not share little about their substance. In authorized to describe the private ne- one of the few public remarks about gotiations. They are also considering the talks by participants, Schumer potential exemptions to expanded said last week that the talks have background check requirements, in- been productive and said the pack-
age they were seeking "will not limit your ability to borrow your Uncle Willie's hunting rifle or share a gun with your friend at a shooting range." Congress has been focusing on guns since the December massacre of 20 first-graders and six adults at a school in Newtown, Conn. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., wants his panel to approve gun control legislation in the next few weeks and has voiced strong support for u n iversal background checks for firearms purchases. While an expansion of background checks is expected to be a key part of any gun control bill Leahy produces, a version of that provision with bipartisan support could give the entire
GOP-run House are planning to see what, if anything, the Senate passes before moving on gun legislation. In an AP-GfK Poll last month, requiring more background checks got overwhelming public support, compared to just over half who backed bans on assault weapons and highcapacity ammunition magazines. The political impact that the four senators could have by r e aching agreement stems largely from who they are. If Coburn embraces an agreement, that could help win over other conservative Republicans at a time when the GOP is responding to its White House and congressional election losses of last November by trying to broaden its national appeal. Manchin's support could make it easier to win backing from other Democratic senators from GOP-leaning states, many of whom face re-election next year and who have been leery of embracing Obama's proposals.
package a boost. It is likely that any gun-control bill will need 60 votes to pass the 100member Senate. Democrats have 55 votes, including two Democraticleaning independents.Leaders ofthe
eein e u o o saean saesmans i
On the issue of gun control, Senate Majority Harry Reid — pictured with other Democratic leaders Dick Durbin, D-lll., left, and Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-NY.— must balance conflicting views between voters in his home state of Nevada and the party leadership.
By Anita Kumare McClatchy Newspapers
At Wild West Guns in Las Vegas, where stuffed caribou and Dall sheep adorn the walls, customers know Harry Reid as someone who understands guns. They can tell you he received a B rating from the National Rifle Association. That he helped secure land and money for one of the world's largest shooting ranges. And that he once carried a gun as a police officer. But now — amid enormous p ressure, f r u s trated gu n owners say — the longtime Democratic U.S. senator from Nevada has started to waver on an issue that has divided American societyfordecades. "He's in a tough spot," said Dana Seleznoff, 50, as he wandered through the store on a break from his job as manager at a mobile billboard company. "He was born and raised here." It's simple, says Seleznoff, the owner of 102 guns: If Reid votes against gun control, the senator is voting with Nevada. If he votes for gun control, he's voting with Washington. T he Senate already h a s launched hearings on gun control. Reid, the majority leader who likes to talk about how he used to hunt jackrabbits for his grandmother's stew, not only gets a vote, but he controls what bills make it to the floor for avote.He said he expects a series of bills on gun control to come to the floor for a vote in the coming months. As he weighs his allegiance to his president with his Nevada roots, his support so far for the proposals has been tepid. "He's under incredible pressure right now because he's got his ownbeliefs," NRAPresident
Smokers
David Keene told reporters at a recent roundtable interview. "He's got the views and the demands of his constituents on the one hand, and the pressure he facesfrom party leaders and his president on the other. So where Harry Reid ends up in this debate is anybody's guess, and I think that's one of the
ber controlled — barely — by Democrats. "He's more concerned with the Democratic Party than the country," said Don Chism, 62, a commercial real estate agent browsing Wild W est G u ns who says he owns eight or ninefirearms. Reid has always been a guessing games that's going on staunch ally to Obama on his around Washington now." policy proposals, including the Reid declined to comment equally contentious issue of for this story. But in an inter- health care. But this time helpview Sunday on ABC he said ing the president may hurt vulhe supports expanding back- nerableDemocrats in the Senground checks, though he was ate, even himself, although the noncommittal on all other pro- 73-year-old Reid doesn't face posals. That includes the as- re-election until 2016. sault weapons ban, which he His primary goal is to protect previously voted against and 21 Democratic-held seats up for has said would be unlikely to election in 2014, and allowing a pass a divided Congress. vote on gun control bills could "We're going to have votes hurt his colleagues who have on all kinds of issues dealing to face voters in red states. with guns," he said on "This In places like North CaroliWeek with George Stepha- na, Alaska and Louisiana, the nopoulos." "And I think evright to keep and bear arms eryone would be well-advised stems from the states' earliest to read the legislation before traditions. The same is true for they determine how they're Reid's home state of Nevada. going to vote for it." Considered a conservative In the coming weeks, Reid's state on certain issues like gun decisions on the contentious control, Reid's home has teeissue will help determine the tered back and forth between outcome of one of Obama's top Republicans and Democrats. second-term goals, as well as Obama won the state twice, the future makeup of a cham- in part because of a boom-
insurance in the first year under the law, rather than paying Continued from A1 thousands of dollars in premiBeginning next year, some- ums they cannot afford. "The smoking surcharge one such as Kesting, who is single, unemployed and un- can be a lot of money for some insured, will be required to people, and that has prompted buy an individual health in- a debate in some states about surance policy independently whether they will allow the or through a new state-based s moking surcharge for t h e health care exchange expect- very reason that they expect ed to go online Jan. 1. it to keep a lot of people from W ith i n c ome o f ab o u t getting covered," said Karen $15,600 a year in unemploy- Pollitz, a health policy analyst ment benefits, Kesting's premi- at Kaiser. um would beabout $3,800, but Most people with employeegovernment subsidies provid- sponsored coverage won't face ed for low-income individuals such a dilemma because the in the health care law would individual market operates difcover almost 90 percent of that ferently than the large group premium, based on calcula- market in w h ich employers tions using the Kaiser Family pay most of the premium to Foundation's online Health Re- provide coverage for t h eir form Subsidy Calculator. workers, said Mike Suttman, The m a ximum s m oking president of the Dayton-based penalty, however, would tack employee benefitsbrokerage on another $1,916 to his premi- McGohan Brabender Inc. um — or more than 10 percent In general, t obacco u se of his total income. At the high isn't used to determine rates end of the spectrum, penalties in most large-group plans, alcould total more than $5,000 a though employers can impose year for smokers 60 or older, their own penalties as a matter according to Kaiser, which has of policy, Suttman said. Wal-Mart, for example, said a website devoted to health care reform. last year it would charge toAnd since most smokers bacco usershigher premiums tend to be low-income resi- but also offer free smokingdents, the surcharge could cessation programs, w h ich price many smokers out of the would allow employees who market andencourage them to smoke to avoid the penalty. pay the less-than-$100 penalty Still, employer surcharges for not signing up for health for smoking are rarely en-
The Associated Press
ing Hispanic population, but its governor and second U.S. senator are Republicans. But residents of all stripes take their guns seriously: for protection, for target practice, f or hunting. A m a jority o f Nevadans — 51 percent to 43 percent — believe it's more important to protect the right to own any gun they want than to control ownership, according to a SurveyUSA poll released this week. "There's no political advantage for Harry Reid in the state to take on gun control," said Eric Herzik, chairman of the political science department at the University of Nevada, Reno. In Las Vegas, gun shops dot the blocks around the flashy casinos on the world famous Strip. Shooting ranges advertise on billboards. Gun dealers fill the yellow pages. At Wild West Guns, owner Jim West, clad in jeans and a shirt bearing the name of his stores in Las Vegas and Anchorage, Alaska, predicts no future gun law would be able to prevent a mass shooting like the one in Newtown, where 20year-old Adam Lanza walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School with his mother's le-
lie to an insurance company." W hile it w o uld b e d i f f icult for insurers to determine whether new enrollees lied about their tobacco use on an application for coverage, once they're admitted to a hospital oremergency department with a smoking-related illness, insurers could simply deny coverage and even prosecute them for fraud, Pollitz said. "My guess would be that insurers in the health exchanges are going to be on the lookout for that kind of f r aud, and those cases will probably be investigated," she said. Bruce Barcelo, who manages a smo k i ng-cessation program in Ohio, said the financial burden of the tobacco penalty may ultimately have a silver lining. "I think the trend will be very much what we've seen wheneverfederal or state charge for smoking, and one taxes go up on tobacco prodonly charges 20 percent, all the ucts; there's always a decline smokers will run to that car- in usage," said Barcelo, who rier," Suttman said. "It would pointed out several national be difficult not to charge the surveys that show the majority full premium, otherwise you of tobacco users say they want would be a d estination for to quit. "The question is what's smokers. Ultimately, it's a busi- going to motivate them and ness decision forthe carrier." help them quit," he said. "For Faced with such high costs some, the financial incentive is for coverage, some smokers an important factor." seeking health insurance unStill, despite w i despread der the new health care law cessation campaigns and the might simply deny their tohigh cost of tobacco products, bacco use. But Kaiser's Pollitz statistics suggest that tobacco warned: "It's always scary to use hasn't waned.
gally bought guns. Sitting in a backroom where employees were noisily repairing guns, West said the only way to stop the massacres is to allow teachers and principals to arm themselves and to restrict media from information about shooters, so they can't become instant celebrities who others might want to mimic. "Whenever you make more laws, you're legislating lawabiding citizens," he said. This is the N evada Reid grew up in — just 50 miles from the glitz and glamour of Vegas in the tiny town of Searchlight, population 500, in a small cabin without indoor plumbing. His father was a hard rock miner and his mother a laundress. As a boy, he hunted doves and jackrabbits. As an adult, he carried a gun — working his way through law school as a Capitol police officer, prosecutor and head of the powerful Nevada Gaming Commission. As a senator, the NRA gave him money and
a respectable rating, though neveritsendorsement. Sometimes, i n ex p l a ining his familiarity with guns, Reid mentions that his father killed himself with a shotgun. Reid no longer hunts, though he says he still owns guns for sentimental reasons. Steve Sebelius, a columnist for the Las Vegas ReviewJournal, said those who live outside Nevada may consider Reid just another liberal. But on some issues — gun control perhaps more than any other — the senator is not what he may appear. "They look at him and think he's a liberal and a water boy for the Democratic agenda," Sebelius said. "But he's not the liberal Democrat people think he is."
Q NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
Aceard-cuinning
neighborhood on Bend's westside.
EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. s41-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
forced, Suttman said. "There are provisions that allow the employer to charge a smoker surcharge," he said. "But employers are kind of hesitant to do that in that it might affect a key employee that they don't want to lose." The individual market raises no such considerations and, in fact, is likely to encourage insurance carriers to charge the maximum penalty allowed so their plans don't become magnets for smokers, whose high healthcare costs can drive up rates for everyone. Last year, tobacco use resulted in $96 billion in direct healthcare expenditures and $97 billion in lost productivi ty, according to t h e C e nters for Disease Control and Prevention. "If all the carriers but one charge the full 50 percent sur-
www.northwestcrossing.com
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MATTR E SS' Store
www.mjacobsfamilyofstores.com Bend River Promenade 541-382-5900 • Toll Free 1-800-275-7214 Open Mon.-Fri. 10AM to 7PM • Sat. & Sun. 10AM-6PM **
$999 or more. *icomfort beds excluded
Calendar, B3 Obituaries, B5
Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
BRIEFING
Franklin Avenue underpasswork The Franklin Avenue underpass in Bend will
be closed Sundaynight while crews work on storm drain mainte-
nance. The closure will start at11 p.m. and last until 6 a.m. Monday. A detour
www.bendbulletin.com/local
Boar in s no co ict in Mirror Pon ea By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
Members of an oversight committee say they see no problem with Mirror Pond project manager Jim Figurski's prior connection to the company favored for a consulting contract.
Figurski, a former principal with GreenWorks, a Portland firm, appears to present no conflict of interest under Oregon law, and Figurski disclosed to the Mirror Pond Steering Committee his connection to the company before reviewing contract proposals.
The committee could award GreenWorks a contract later this month. Committee member Bill Smith, of William Smith Properties Inc., said the committee discussedFigurski'sprevious employment with GreenWorks and at least one other
firm that submitted a proposal for the project. "We discussed that at length," Smith said. "Jim made all the disclosures." Figurski worked at GreenWorks, a landscape architecture and environmental design firm, for more than a de-
cade and was a principal there when he retired in February 2011. Figurski said Friday that he held stock in the company worth less than $40,000 when he retired, and he receives a payout that is amortized over five years. SeePond/B6
will be in place around the construction zone.
Barricades, signs, and cones will also be in place to maintain traffic in the area.
Dog's water dish sparks fire A heated water dish
placed too close to straw and wood shav-
ings in a dogkennel ignited a fire southwest of Redmond Friday af-
e ea e as a n e ...inour a e ree
ternoon. Redmond Fire and Rescue units were summoned to 7263 S.W.
McVey Avenuejust before 4:30 p.m. Arriving firefighters found a
srs
Crews wereable to ex-
in Ben sa in Bulletin staff report Deschutes Circuit Judge Stephen Forte on Friday ordered David Ryan's body released to his family. Forte's ruling came the morning after a Deschutes County grand jury indicted Luke Anton Wirkkala, 32, of Bend, on a murder charge stemming from Ryan's death early Feb. 4 from an apparent gunshot wound. Wirkkala's attorneys had moved to have Ryan's body held for a second autopsy or until they could review the preliminary autopsy report and other information collected by Bend police during the investigation into Ryan's death. "Mr. Ryan's remains are a central piece of evidence to what and how things happened," said defense attorney Terry Rahmsdorff. But Forte declined the request and ordered Ryan's body released to his family at noon Monday, provided Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty provides the information and records sought by the defense. See Slaying/B5
fire burning along the outside wall of a metalsided shop building.
Sus ect in icte
tinguish the fire quickly with minimal dam-
age, however, a large wooden dog housewas destroyed in the fire.
No one wasinjured in the fire, and a dollar estimate of the losses
has not yet beendetermined. — From staff reports
UPCOMING Ring the Bells/Sound
the Alarm forClimate Ghange:A local rally to coincide with the national event to address
the issue of global warning; Sunday, Feb. 17; 12:30 p.m., Troy Field, N.W. Bond St., Bend;
some signs will be provided, but participants
are encouraged to bring their own; participants
are also encouragedto bring bells; 541-3229702. — Contact: 541-383-0354, news@bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write "Civic Calendar"in the subject line. Include a contact name andnumber.
Bray loses medical license
STATE NEWS
Salem Corvallls
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
• Salem:Protesters rally for Second Amendment at Capitol. • Gnrvallis:Seniors make blankets for
Hurricane Sandy victims.
• Elsewhere:Josephine Chris lngersoll I The Bulletin
County looks at tax
increase for law enforcement, andmore. Stories on B3, B5
Correction
This bald eagle was spotted Friday atop an AT8 T cell tower disguised as a pine tree at The Bulletin offices at the corner of Chandler Avenue and Mt. Washington Drive. And, yes, the bird is real.
PHOTO STORYINSIDE
In a story headlined "Finding a fix for Mirror
By Dylan J. Darling
Pond," which appeared Thursday, Feb. 7,on
The Bulletin
Page B1, the date of the
next meeting on howto deal with silt in Mirror Pond was misstated. The meeting will be at 6:30 p.m. Feb.12at the Bend Park 8 Recreation District offices, 799 S.W. Columbia St. The Bulletin regrets the error.
'Most PhOtO graPhed bird' in Bend
Ryan Brennecker The Bulletin
The barred owl living at Bend's Riverbend Park has attracted a loyal following. The bird seems almost tame, allowing people to get close to it. See our photographer's take on Page B2.
A barred owl making Farewell Bend Park its haunt in recent weeks sure isn't shy in front of an audience. The bird can be seen out in the daytime — perching,
flying and hunting — all while people cluster nearby with cameras in hand. "I'm surprised he's not intimidated by all the people
See video coverage
on The Bulletin's website: O bendbulletin.com/barredowl and noise," said Meisha Wiitanen, 12, of Bend. The barred owl isn't the first to be seen close to or in Central Oregon towns, said SherriePierce,president of the East Cascades Audubon Society. The annual Christmas Bird count turned up
one near Redmond and one in Sisters. But the barred owl at Farewell Bend has chosen a location that makes it perhaps the most visible given the stream of joggers, walkers and other park-goers. But it seems uninterested in the human commotion around it. "They are kind of fearless," Pierce said. SeeOwl /B5
The Oregon Medical Board formally suspended Thomas Bray's medical licenseThursday, five months after the former anesthesiologist and Central Oregon Community College instructor was sentenced to 25 years in prison for rape. Bray, 39, went on trial last summer for the rape of two Bend women in early 2011, one a student in the anatomy class he taught at COCC, the other a woman he metthrough the online dating site Match.com. Bray was acquitted on the charges involving the former student,but was found guilty on all charges relating to the woman he met through the dating site — two counts each of first-degree rape and sodomy, one count of fourthdegree assault and one count of strangulation. Bray was sentenced Sept. 29, and is currently serving his sentence at the Two Rivers Correctional Institution in Umatilla. See Bray/B5
B2
TH E BULLETINâ&#x20AC;˘ SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
Photos by Ryan Brenneckeâ&#x20AC;˘ The Bulletin Leah Ginsparg, from left, Maddie Reitz, and John Hart are among many people who have photographed the barred owl often seen around Farewell Bend Park.
i
i
i
*
r
The barred owl takes flight from its perch while hunting at dusk in Farewell Bend Park.
Barred owls are large owls that are between 17and 20 inches long. They have a wingspan between 39 and 43 inches and can weigh between 1and2 pounds. They have dark markings in the form of bars that run horizontally across their chest and vertically down the front.
A The barred owl scans the grassy banks along the Deschutes River for prey as the sun sets.
P The barred owl eats a small rodent shortly after catching it along the Deschutes River. Barred owls are opportunistic hunters and can sometimes be seen at dusk waiting high on a perch to swoop down on their prey. They usually swallow smaller prey whole, but bigger catches are carried back to a perch before being consumed.
g Many owl species have feathered feet to protect them from cold weather. The feathers may also serve to sense contact with prey, and to protect against prey that might bite when seized. An owl's foot has four toes; when perched or clutching prey, a unique flexible joint in the outer front toe can swivel to face the rear.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
Gun rights protesters rally at Capitol
AROUND THE STATE Tlmder Coulltg taXOS — Josephine County commissioners will give voters another chance to raise their taxes to restore money cut
from law enforcementwhen alongtime federal subsidy for timber By Jonathan J.Cooper
Jones said, standing in a corThe Associated Press ridorbetween offices for senaSALEM — H u n dreds of tors. "If we want our represendemonstrators, many armed tatives to represent us, we have with high-powered rifles, de- to tell them what we want." scended on the Oregon CapiThe state police had extra tol on Friday in response to troopers on hand, and signs on calls for stiffer gun restrictions the Capitol's revolving doors in the wake of recent mass warned visitors that firearms shootings. are prohibited without a conProtesters said they wanted cealed-carry permit. to show state lawmakers that Protecting g u n-ownership they're peaceful, law-abiding rights is critical to ensuring the gun owners and will fight new government doesn't become gun-control laws. tyrannical, said Andy Harris, "We'reoutthere,w e're going 45, of Beaverton. "Thankfully we haven't had to fight, and we're not going to lay down and take it," said Arin to worry about that, but we don't know what the future will Forrest,a 33-year-old Portland man who clutched an Ameri- hold," said Harris, who carried can flag, an AR-15 rifle slung a home-built AR-15 rifle over over his shoulder. "If they're his shoulder and a Glock 19 going to take our rights, they pistol on his hip. need to look us in the eye and Some Democratic legislators tell us why." have introduced various bills Under Oregon law, it's legal requiring background checks to openly carry a weapon in for private gun sales, banning public, and people with con- certain rifles and high-capaccealed handgun licenses can ity magazines or prohibiting c arry their weapons in t h e firearms in schools. Democrats Capitol. Most of the demonstra- control the House and Senate, tors kept their protest across but legislative leaders have said the street from the statehouse, gun-control measures wouldbe but a handful brought their a tough sell with Republicans weaponsindoors. and centrist Democrats whose Craig Jones, 28, of Bend, support would be needed. "It's ludicrous that it's being explored the Capitol with two friends, all three carrying high- shoved down our throats that powered rifles. we don't have the right to pro"I felt it's important for us tect ourselves," said Richard to voice our concerns as tax- Hannan, of Gresham. "The payers and registered voters," government is out of control."
EvENT
541-317-0700 ortowertheatre.org. "TWELFTHNIGHT": Cascades Theatrical Company presents SENSATIONAL SATURDAY:Learn Shakespeare's comedy about about hummingbirds and discover mistaken identities and merry how their body parts are designed rogues; $24, $18seniors, $12 for an active lifestyle; included in the students; 7:30 p.m .;Greenwood price of admission; $12 adults, $10 ages 65and older, $7ages 5-12, free Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. ages 4and younger;10a.mr3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. cascadestheatrical.org. Highway 97, Bend;541-382-4754 or ARCHAEOLOGYFESTFILM SERIES: www.highdesertmuseum.org. A screening of the best films from the 2011 TheArchaeology Channel WRITE NOW!:Brainstorm, play word International Film andVideo Festival, games and more in a casual setting, including "The Fate ofOld Beijing" to help creative writing; free;1 p.m.; and "Bitter Roots"; $6; 7:30 p.m., Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1081 or www. doors open 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. CHINESENEW YEAR CELEBRATION: Center,2600 N.W.CollegeWay, Bend; 541-345-5538 or www. Featuring live performances, archaeologychannel.org. traditional Chinesegames, ping-pong and dumplings; free admission; 4-7 BEND COMMUNITY p.m.; OregonTai ChiWushu, 2115 CONTRADANCE:Featuring caller N.E Highway 20, Bend; 541-639Ron Bell-Roemer andmusic by 8898 or www.oregontaichi.com. Scottish Heart; $7; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys 8 VALENTINESPAGHETTI DINNER: A Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W.Wall St.; meal of spaghetti, salad and bread; 54 I-330-8943. proceeds benefityouth camps and conferences; $5, $20 per family; 4:30- JAMES APOLLOAND HISSWEET 7:30 p.m.; Holy RedeemerCatholic UNKNOWN: The gospel-folk artist Church,16137 Burgess Road, La performs; $5-$10; 8 p.m., doors open Pine; 541-536-1992. at7 p.m.; The Belfry,302 E Main BEND GAME NIGHT: Playavailable Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. board games or bring your own; free; belfryevents.com. 6 p.m.-midnight; East BendPublic TOM VANOENAVOND: TheTexasLibrary, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 541based folk musician performs; $5; 318-8459. 8 p.m.; The HornedHand, 507 N.W. SWEETHEART BALL:Featuring a Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 dinner and adance; $15, $5 for dance or www.reverbnation.com/venue/ only; 6 p.m .,7 p.m .dance;Eagles thehornedhand. Lodge & Club, 235 N.E Fourth St., JIVE COULIS:The funk-rockact Prineville; 541-447-7659. performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver BENEFITCONCERT:Featuring a Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. performance byTexas-based Kevin Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388Russell of TheGourds, with Pitchfork 8331 orsilvermoonbrewing.com. Revolution; proceeds benefit Shine Global; $25; 7-11 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. SUNDAY Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or acstuermer©me.com. CHILI COOK-OFF:Eatchili and watch competitors compete for the HOTTUNA:The bluegrass rock band best recipe; proceeds benefitThe performs; $41 and$53 in advance, $46 and $58 day of show, plus fees; Education Foundation for Bend-La 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.;Tower Pine Schools; $10, $5 ages6-11, Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; free ages 5andyounger; 12:30
NEws OF REcoRD
The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department Burglary —A burglary was reported at 9:32 a.m. Jan. 28, in the 900 block of Southeast Third Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 12:43 p.m. Jan. 28, in the100 block of Northwest GreenwoodAvenue. Theft — Atheft was reported at4:49 p.m.Jan.28,inthe63400blockofU.S. Highway 97. Unauthorizeduse—Avehicle was reported stolen at6:31 p.m. Jan. 28, in the 300 block of Southeast Third Street. DUII —Courtney Brianna Coodey,25,
was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:32 p.m. Jan. 30, in theareaof Northeast Eighth Street andNortheast Hawthorne Avenue. Unauthorized use— Avehicle was reported stolen at11:52a.m. Feb.1, in the63000 blockofSherman Road. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at1:22 a.m. Feb. 6, inthe 900 block of Northwest BondStreet. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at4:46 p.m. Feb.6, in the 61000 block of Larkspur Loop. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported enteredat4:51 p.m. Feb. 6, in the19900 block of Porcupine Drive.
ration of a timber revenuessafety net left a $12million budget gap, and
OMy
voters refused to raise their taxes to fill it. The latest proposal would raise $9 million with a tax rate increase of $1.48 per $1,000 valuation.
Whistledlower lawsuit —A former state employee hasfiled a $6.7 million whistleblower lawsuit against the Oregon Department of
Human Services, saying shewas mistreated and eventually lost her job after pointing out financial irregularities. The Oregonian reports the suit was filed by Victorina Mata, who worked in communica-
tions and marketing for the OregonHealth Authority. Shesays she complained that department officials were using inflated enrollment figures to describe the success of the Healthy Kids program. And she
also complained of irregularities in paying for billboards, such asnot goingthroughstandard bidprocedures.Shesaysshewaspassed over for promotion, not invited to critical meetings and harassed. She
was laid off in April. State lawyers wouldn't comment. Zoo dugS elePhau'tS —TheOregon Zoo has paid a California company $400,000 to own two elephants that live at thezoo. Zoo officials say the payment from the zoo's foundation was meant to reassure the public the animals wouldn't be leaving for the elephant
rental company, HaveTrunk Will Travel of Perris, Calif. Thepayment covers Tusko and Lily. Questions about ownership arose after Lily
was born last year. She isone of two offspring of Tusko and Rose-Tu. Under a breeding contract, HaveTrunk Will Travel ownedthe calf, but zoo officials said shewould live out her life at the zoo.Tuskowas on
.c ai
long-term loan.
MediCal pOt fire —Jackson County firefighters say a fire has scorched the attic of a garageused togrow medical marijuana. The Ashland Daily Tidings reports a neighbor sawsmoke rolling from Jonathan J.Cooper/The Associated Press
Arin Forrest of Portland holds an AR-15 rifle at a pro-gun rally Friday outside the State Capitol in Salem. Hundreds of armed demonstrators carried weapons in a peaceful protest to demonstrate their Second Amendment rights in response to calls for stiffer gun laws in the wake of recent mass shootings.
A L E NDAR
TODAY
POLICE LOG
counties expired last year. The Grants Pass Daily Courier reports the board voted unanimously Thursday to put the question on the May 21 ballot. Commissioner Simon Hare said he didn't want to do it, but didn't know what else to do. The county had to make deep cuts to the jail, sheriff's patrols, prosecutors, and other law enforcement after the expi-
the fire Friday morning and reported it. Firefighters say it took them 15 minutes to put it out, and they kept it from burning into the main
level of the building. Fire Chief DanMarshall says the site is registered under Oregon's medical marijuana program. He says firefighters are looking into the cause. — From wire reports
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulfetin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive; 541-355-5660 or education.foundation©bend.k12. ocus. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: Fiddle music and dancing; donations accepted;1-3:30 p.m.; VFWHall, 1836 S.W.Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-647-4789. "TWELFTHNIGHT": Cascades Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18seniors, $12 students; 2p.m .;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. KNOW CLUE:CLUEING IN TO YOUR INTUITION:Learn an exercise to develop the practical skill of intuition from Karen GraceKassy; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1034 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. SECONDSUNDAY:Lily Raff McCaulou reads from aselection of her work, followed by anopen mic; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-3121032 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. SPAGHETTIFEED:Proceeds will send World War II veteransto Washington, D.C;$10;4 p.m .;Jake's Diner,2210 N.E U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-0118. SHAWN MULLINS: The folk-rock artist performs; $26 and$37.50 in advance, $31 and$42.50 day of show,plusfees;7 p.m.,doorsopenat 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.
Campus Center, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7412.
TUESDAY "THE FUTURE OFFOOD": A screening of the 2004 documentary investigating the truth behind unlabeled, patented andgenetically engineered foods; followed by a discussion; free; 4:30-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way,Bend;541-383-7786 or www.cocc.edu/. SHROVE TUESDAYCOMMUNITY PANCAKE SUPPER: Featuring pancakes,ham,eggs,applesauce and drinks; proceeds benefit the St. Andrew's Discretionary Fund for community outreach; donations accepted; 5-7 p.m.; St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, 807 E First St., Prineville; 541-447-5813. FLYFISHING FILM TOUR: A screening of a film collection that showcases anglers; $15 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. HISTORYPUB:Learn about sage grouse conservation; free; 7 p.m., doorsopen at6 p.m.;McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. NICKIBLUHM 8 THE GRAMBLERS: The San Francisco-based country soul act performs, with Echo Still; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 atthe door; 8p.m .;Liquid Lounge,70 N.W . Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999 or www.bendticket.com.
WEDNESDAY
MONDAY CONVERSATIONSON BOOKS AND CULTURE: Readand discuss "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age ofColor Blindness" by Michelle Alexander; followed by a discussion; free; noon to1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,
MOVIENIGHTAND POTLUCK:A screening of the documentary film, "Nothing Like Chocolate," with a potluck; donations accepted; 6-9 p.m.; CascadeCulinary Institute, 2555 N.W.Campus VillageW ay,Bend;877541-2433 or slowfoodhighdesert@ gmail.com.
"THE LASTPIRATEOFTHE CARIBBEAN":Children's Theater Company presents a murder mystery dinner theater; registration requested; $15; 6:30-9 p.m.; TheBridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W.Antler Ave., Redmond; 541-460-3024 or www. childrenstheatercompany.net. FLY FISHINGFILM TOUR: A screening of a film collection that showcases anglers; $15 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. YOU, ME 5 APOLLO: The Coloradobased indie-rock group performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. THE GHOSTOF MICHAEL CLARK: The Colorado-based soul artist performs, with Cy Erickson; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation.com/venue/ thehornedhand. IRATION:The California-based alternative-reggae act performs, with Passafire and Pacific Dub; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 atthe door; 8:30 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. bendticket.com.
THURSDAY THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Read and
discuss"The Swerve" by Stephen Greenblatt; free; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7084 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Read and discuss"The Swerve" by Stephen Greenblatt; free; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1055 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. "CAN WOMEN OUTPERFORM MEN INENDURANCE SPORTS?":Health and human performance professor John Liccardo talks about male and female differences in sports performance; free; 6-8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E Main Ave., Sisters; 541815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com.
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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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he burden for the Bend City Council on the Bridge Creek pipeline project is that even as members of the council and city staff have been studying the issue for years, they are constantly told they don't understand it and are ramming an unwanted, untenable project through without enough public input. The councilvoted 4-3 Wednesday to move ahead with the plan for a new pipeline and intake facility. It's part of a larger vision to serve Bend's water needs for the future by ensuring surface water continues to flow and using wells, too. The outvoted councilors and critics of the project argued again for adifferent project or for another round of public input. But we don't see how anyone could argue that the council and the city staff have not listened to the public. They have. For years. The city could have put more effort into involving the community at the beginning. You can't say the community has not been involved more recently. Voters even had an opportunity in November to elect a new majority of the council. Voters only supported three councilorswho clearly had deep concerns about the project: Jim Clinton, Sally Russell and Doug Knight. The fourth, Victor Chudowsky, was not so devoted to transforming the water project as he was to investigating
options. And that he did. The real issue for critics is not that there has not been enough public input. They don't like the plan. But there, again, nobody is putting insightful, new alternatives on the table. At the Wednesday meeting, councilors Knight and Russell offered repackaged variations of old ones. Would another round of reconsideration minimize the chance of lawsuits and appeals? No. Should councilors quail b ecause lawsuits and challenges are likely? No. More meetings don't solve a problem. They create delays for the project and simply delay the nearly guaranteed filing of lawsuits and appeals. The city should continue to engage the public on the project. It should continue to hunt for the best alternatives for filtration and decide if hydro makes sense. But it shouldn't have to pretend that it has not listened or that more delays on replacing the pipeline make sense.
Councilors get a needed lesson in opengovernment end City A t torney Mary Winters gave members of the City Council a short course on part of the state's public records law at the council's meeting this week. The point she made was well taken. Councilors who forward constituent emails to others must forward the full email, including the name of the sender. As she noted, in most circumstances all emails to and among public officials are a matter of public record, even if they're sent by private citizens.
ing able to find out, who lobbied in favor of something — or against it — gives the public a critical tool to judge how well its government is functioning. It's all too easy these days to find reasons not to make information public. In the case of public pension beneficiaries, the argument is that one's retirement income, even that supplied by public tax dollars, is no one else's business. In the case of bedbug infestations, hotel owners would be hurt if reports of infestations included the names There are good reasons for that. of places where those infestations occurred, though surely would-be From a councilor's point of guests have a right to such inforview, the requirement assures that every member of the body receives mation. In the case of lottery winthe same information and can ners, knowing who won can help judge it accordingly. That's impor- assure the public that the game tant: Knowing who favors or op- isn't being rigged. poses something like a proposed Finally, when it comes to city increase in the transient room tax business, even something as seemmay give councilors a better sense ingly minor as the name of the of the proposal's impact on differ- sender of an email is important. ent segments of the community. Without that name, the sender is More importantly, members of anonymous and the publiccanthe public have a right to expect not judge either his motives or their government to do their busi- his connection to the person he's ness in the open. Knowing, or be- addressing.
B
M Nickel's Worth Consider president's actions, or inaction In response to the Jan. 30 letter, "Sheriff can't make up rules for Crook County" by Alan Pachtman and those others who feel the Crook County sheriff is making up rules as he goes along: Let's try using the
same logic on our "campaigner-inchief." Our leader has arbitrarily refused to enforce the Defense of Marriage Act,our borders, marijuana laws (federal trumps state law in Washington and Colorado) just to name a few. Let us not chastise the sheriff, rather, let us commend him for following the law as written and not the self interpretation as is being done by our president — interpret the law as you see fit depending on the situation at hand. Let us not be bothered with that thing called the Constitution or for that matter existing laws. Our president seems to think both just get in the way at times. Gee, maybe he's right. After all he is a constitutional lawyer. However, his actions sometimes make me wonder what constitution. Mike FItzsimons Redmond
Enforcing the law On Jan. 17, Larry Blanton was quoted, "when it comes to enforcing the law laid out by the U.S. attorney general, if you can't comply as a law enforcement officer, it's time to seek another line of employment." If that is true, our chief law enforcement officers President Obama and Eric Holder should seek another line of
work as welL They have refused to enforce or prosecute existing laws and encouraged lawlessness among certain classes of people by refusing to prosecute immigration laws, securetheborders, protectlandowners, and by ignoring the Defense of Mar-
has also chosen to ignore historically reliable projections on the number of inmates the Oregon prison system will be dealing with in the coming 10 years and advocates planning for approximately one-eighth the projected number of inmates. Any extra burriage Act. They have smuggled guns den on the state system will simply into Mexico. They have selectively be dumped on the counties, in spite enforced other laws when it was po- of the fact that the state has prison litically effective, or not when incon- facilities that are built and paid for by venient, as in the new Black Panther votermandate but never used. voter intimidation case and dragging Is it becoming the norm for our their feet in regard to the Fort Hood elected officials to ignore the people shooter. Now they are "laying out and dictate to them what will be done the law," when it is not their job to do in their city, county, state or country? so. This, sorry to say, is the people's These offi cials need to be reminded job through their r epresentatives that they are not the last word but in "Congress" which is the opposite rather the conduit by which the wishof "progress." I applaud the sheriffs es of the people are implemented. who do have the guts to truly serve We should never be intimidated by and protect the citizens of this coun- the politicians or the process. When try and uphold the Constitution, not that happens, we will realize too some deluded politician who thinks late that we are no longer operating he is king. In regard to the proposed as a democracy but taking the first gun regulations, and the trickery of step on a short journey to a dictatowordsmithing, please consider: what rial government. This has happened weapon did Cain slay Abel with? time and a gain t h roughout the That's right, an "assault" weapon. All world. History can't lie, it can only be weapons have been "assault" weap- manipulated by those who need you ons in the theater of war from the be- to forget. ginning of human conflicts. Gregory Pluchos Andre PInette Redmond Redmond
Ignoring the people First President Obama circumvents the legislative process by his edicts, and now our governor tries to change the laws in Oregon that were voted on by the electorate re-
Someone pulls the trigger
I would like to address Harlie Peterson's letter from Feb. 5 stating that
guns kill people. There has to be action behind the arms. In short, a person has to do all this action with the pistol and rifle.
garding criminal sentencing on
Bruno Baer
Measure 11 crimes. The governor
Bend
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Social values must be considered in managing forest R
By Kreg Lindberg
Outcome Y, which is preferred? The relative desirability of the two is an issue of social values, not science. If we assume Forest Service experts are omniscient (know every citizen's preference for X versus Y) and unbiased (impartially integrate preferences to arrive at a decision), then we might leave decisions to them. However, experts have biases, as well as limits on (and public policy generally) involves their ability to obtain and process intwo fundamental components. formation, just like all humans. First, there is the scientific or techniCongress passed laws, including the cal component. For example, if we take National Environmental Policy Act Action A, then Outcome X will occur. and the National Forest Management Alternatively, if we take Action B, Out- Act inpartbecause experts were makcome Y will occur. As the D-Bug case ing decisions that were inconsistent illustrates, the science on these rela- with important social values. This is iltionships is not always clear, but there lustrated by the Monongahela case. As are reasonably good processes for de- summarized on the Society of Ameriveloping, critiquing and modifying the can Foresters website, local residents science. protested the use of clear-cutting pracSecond, there is the social values tices in the Monongahela National component. Between Outcome X and Forest, based on concerns regarding ecent editorials have h i ghlighted controversy regarding the D-Bug timber sale project on the Umpqua National Forest. One comment was headlined HLet Forest Service expertsmanage our public lands." When considering the desirability of this approach, it helps to remember that public land management
IN MY VIEW
form of government except all those other forms that have been tried." We aesthetic impacts and loss of habitat tried leaving both science and social forhunted turkeys and squirrels.Find- values to the experts, and the Mononing the Forest Service unresponsive gahela case illustrates that it did not to their concerns, residents sought always work welL Genuine public recourse through the courts. NFMA participation is not easy, but I believe was one result of the Monongahela it is the best option for managing lands controversy. that are collectively owned by us as These laws do not guarantee genu- citizens. ine public participation, but they at There are Central Oregon examples least provide an opportunity for ex- thatillustrate collaborative approaches pression of social values and alter- for "working through" differing social nate views of relevant science. The values and scientific uncertainty, rath"Citizen's Guide to NEPAH notes that er than litigating after a decision has two major purposes of NEPA are "bet- been made. These include past vegter informed decisions and citizen etation projects on the Sisters Ranger involvement." District and the current Deschutes NEPA is imperfect; I would like Collaborative Forest Project spanning to see i t b ot h s t rengthened and the area between Sisters, Bend and the streamlined. However, the present Three Sisters Wilderness. debate leads me to a modification of More broadly, common concepts Churchill's famous quote: "public-re- that some view as the domain of exsponsive decision making is the worst perts, including "sustainability" and
"managing for the good of the land," in fact have substantial social value components and cannot by resolved solely with technical knowledge. As Martin Luckert notes in a Journal of Forestry article "one only need examine the current ... shifts toward sustainable forest management to realize that what is good for forests is subjectively determined by society." That determination includes the diverse views expressed in recent Bulletin editorials. "Wicked problems" exist in public lands management, and Luckert stresses that they "require careful consideration of social values, inclusive decisionmaking processes, and professional and scientific judgments on alternative forest management
approaches." There clearly is a role for experts, but decisions cannot be left to them alone. — Kreg Lindberglives in Bend.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES
FEATURED OBITUARY
Michael "Mike" W. Woodard, of Bend
Collins
July 23, 1941 - Jan. 29, 2913 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life is taking place Saturday, February 9, 2013, at Jake's Diner, located at 2210 NE Hwy. 20 in Bend at 1:00 PM. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Virginia Leah Day, of Redmond Sept. 11, 1919 - Feb. 6, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook
www.redmondmemorial.com
Services: A graveside service will be held Sat., Feb. 9, 2013 at 11:00 am at Redmond Memorial Cemetery with a memorial to follow at Pleasant Ridge Community Hall 7076 SW Canal Blvd., Redmond, OR.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted 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. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: James DePreist, 76: Former music directorof the Oregon Symphony who was among the early A f r ican-American conductors of a major orchestra and a National Medal of Arts winner. Died Friday in Scottsdale, Ariz. Peter Hauri, 79: a psychologist who was among the first researchersto study the mysterious mechanics of a good night's sleep, and who established widely used guidelines for avoiding insomnia without drugs. Died Jan. 31 in Rochester, Minn. Mark Palmer, 71: Forceful and influential diplomat who served as U.S. ambassador to Hungary during the collapse of communism; he was a chief author of P resident Ronald Reagan's 1982 speech declaring that Marxism was headed toward "the ash heap of history." Died Jan. 28 at his home in Washington. John Karlin, 94: Industrial psychologist at Bell Labs who was responsible for the r esearch that led to the design of the keypad on touch-tone phones in the mid-20th century. Died Jan. 28 lra Rubin, 82:Mathematician and computer programmer
who played bridge at the highestlevelfor four decades and was regarded as one of the great theorists of the game. Died Wednesday. — From wire reports
BS
re on seniors o er warm o urricane an survivors By Theresa Novak Corvallis Gazette-Times
wcIS ci
longtime memberof Congress By William Yardley New York Times News Service
C ardiss Collins, who r e luctantly ran for a C h icago congressional seat left vacant when her husband died in a plane crash and went on to become Illinois' f irst b lack congresswoman, serving for nearly 25 years as a voice for racial and gender equality and expanded health care for the poor, died on Sunday in Arlington, Va. She was 81. Her death was confirmed by Rep. Danny Davis, who succeeded her in 1997 after she retired from Congress. Collins' husband, George Collins, had served two years when he was among 45 people killed in the crash of United Airlines Flight 553 near Midway Airport in C hicago on Dec. 8, 1972. Local Democrats, led by Mayor Richard Daley, quickly endorsed Cardiss Collins to succeed him. Collins, then 41 and an auditor for the Illinois Revenue Department who was worried about the couple's 13-year-old son, Kevin, was wary of running but eventually agreed to do so. She campaigned little but e asily won th e p r imary i n April an d c r u ised t hrough the general election in June with 92 percent of the vote. Six years later, and after some
early struggles in office — she had never considered a political career before she was thrust into one — she became chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus. For much of the 1980s, she was the only black woman in Congress. "In the last six years, my biggest roadblock has been s hyness," Collins t old T h e Washington Post in 1979. "I was basically an i n t rovert, but once people learned I had something to say, I g a ined confidence." Collins was openly critical of President Jimmy Carter, questioning his commitment to social programs and minorities. She did not i n vite him to speak at the caucus' annual fundraising dinner in 1979, although he had spoken there in previous years, and s he expressed support f o r Sen. Edward Kennedy when he signaled that he would run against Carter for the Democratic nomination in 1980. When Ronald Reagan was elected that fall, she was no easier on him when he proposed cutting social programs. "Mr. President, if you promise me you won't hurt the poor I'll sit down right now," she said at a meeting in March 1981 after challenging Reagan's description of welfare cheating. Collins, who rose to leading roles on a range of congressional committees, was also a steady supporter of equity in college athletics, pressing the NCAA to honor the requirements of Title IX and requiring colleges to disclose more details about how they spent federal money. She was particularly assertive on affirmative action and minority employment issues, criticizing various agencies and industries for what she called theirpoor records of hiring minorities. The Smithsonian Institution and the airline industry were among her targets. She pushed through legislation in 1990 expanding Medicare coverage for mammography screening for older and disabled women and i n troduced resolutions designating October National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. She wrote laws increasing safety labeling on toys, setting safety standards for bicyclehelmets and expanding childcare services for federal workers nationwide. She also sponsored several measures to make air travel safer.
CORVALLIS — In an apartment full of books, handcrafts and memories, Eleanor Otley
is making a gift for a stranger. The machine-stitched quilt of lavender and blue is ready now for the batting — the filling sewn between the quilt's top and its backing. It's what gives the quilt its loft and warmth. They are hung over railings at The Regent, an apartment complex for seniors on Elks Drive where Otley has lived since 2001. The quilt under construction in her apartment is the sixth that she has made in recent months. "There are f ive f i nished large quilts, two afghans and two baby quilts," she said. Others made the a fghans, inspired by her generosity in reaction to Hurricane Sandy. The Category 2 storm destroyed portions of the Caribbean before slamming into some of the most populated sections of th e M i d-Atlantic and Northeastern United States in late October. In its wake, it left 253 people dead and damage estimated at more than $65.6 billion. Otley's heart went out to them. At 91, her fingers no longer are capable of intricate stitching, but she wanted to create something warm, colorful and pretty for people who'd suffered losses. "I really felt for those people," she said. "They lost all their household goods. How can you make do?" She did more than make do; she and her late husband, George, worked hard during their 53-year marriage so that
Slaying Continued from B1 Bend police arrested Wirkkala about 14 hours after the 2:30 a.m.report of someone shot that brought them to 20753 Will Scarlet Lane. There they found Ryan, 31, a software engineer for G5 Search Marketing, of Bend, dead. Forteordered Wirkkalaheld without bond in the county jail in Bend, and at the defense
Bray Continued from B1 Under Oregon law, a medical license is automatically suspended if the licensee is an inmate in a penal institution. A graduate of the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Bray did his residency at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. Upon completing his residency in June 2005, Bray stayed on at Johns Hopkins, working as an anesthesiologist at the university
Owl Continued from B1 Meisha was out in the park with her brother and stepdad on Feb 1. What has become a regular scene, centered on the owl, ensued. As the owl perched atop a lamppost, onlookers circled below, jockeying for the best vantage point from which to snap a photo of the big bird. After minutes of seemingly posing for them, the owl took flight. After a quick stop on a street sign he flew again to another lamppost. Then a repeat of the first drill. Several minutes of the owl swiveling its head atop its perch and cameras clicking below. It then flew along the footbridge over the Deschutes River and landed on a sign. More head rotation and more ignoring its fans. It took flight again, swooping down from the sign and into the brush on th e r i verbank. It emerged with a mouse in one of its talons and stood on a rock below the crowd gathered on the bridge. The bird apparently doesn't mind an audience when it eats. "I thought he was flying
Amanda Cowanl Corvallis Gazette-Times
Eleanor Otley, resident of The Regent in Corvallis, works on a quilt. Otley is one of handful of seniors using their sewing skills to create blankets for survivors of Hurricane Sandy. their family was provided for. Until his death in 2000, they lived near Baker and Richland, Ore., ("Not the one in Washington") where George worked in s a wmills w h ile she taught grade school for 30 years and they brought up their children. It was unusual for a woman to continue working after marriage back then, but Otley said she always was practical and frugal. Although she was a busy wife, mother and teacher, she always enjoyed quilting. An intricately hand-sewn star quilt f rom t hose days decorates her bed. Quilted pillows make her sofa comfortable; some of her handiwork is framed.
The large quilt top t h at she's working on takes up two shoved-together library-style tables in her living room. It features a "Sunbonnet Sue" design and flowers — perfect for a girl whose favorite color is lavender. Other residents at the Regent who heard about her Hurricane Sandy project turned their talents to the task as well. Some crocheted afghans; others helped to tie the yarn knots that secure the layers of the quilt together. When the last one is finished, Otley will ship the lot to a quilters' organization in New Jersey that will distribute the gifts through the Red Cross. She is a little concerned
a bout the c o st. Sh e a l so shipped handmade quilts to the victims of Hurricane Katrina, and she had help making them from the Philomath Quilt Guild. "And t hat t i me , s o m e anonymous donor stopped in and paid for the postage; it is expensive!" This time, she bought the batting — herself, at a cost of more than $100 for a large roll. Although sending the package will be tough on her budget, she is moving ahead. "I put a label on the back and sewed it on," she said. That way, the quilt's new owner will know that someone in Oregon cared and wanted to
request, scheduled his next court appearance March 12. Wirkkala did not enter a plea at his Friday arraignment, appearing via video teleconference from the county jail, his face on a wide-screen television hung prominently in the courtroom. He said nothing during the 10-minute hearing. In court, Rahmsdorff told Forte that Flaherty's office had not provided copies of the preliminary autopsy re-
port or a copy of the affidavit in support of the warrant to search the Will Scarlet property. Ryan was a guest there the night he died, according to police. Flaherty delivered to Rahmsdorff in court compact discs with recordings of witness interviews, satisfying part of the defense request, Rahmsdorff said. Flaherty obj e cted to Rahmsdorff's request to hold Ryan's body, telling Forte a
second autopsy would provide "no forensic value whatsoever." He suggested in court that if Rahsmsdorff wanted to know what happened that night, Wirkkala is the best source. W irkkala's attorneys i n terviewed a pathologist who performed the autopsy, but Rahmsdorff said the i nterview did not provide the information he expected from a written report.
hospital until October 2007. According to officials with the Oregon Anesthesiology Group in Portland, Bray applied for a job in 2006 and was offered a position, but declined the job. Bray took a job as a part-time instructor at COCC in late 2010, and was nearing the end of his first term at the school when he was arrested. Bray was once licensed to practice medicine in Maryland, Arizona, California and Oregon, but by the time of his
arrest in Februa ry 2011, h i s Maryland and Arizona licens-
was technically ineligible to practice in California as a result of a physical disability. According to the order issued by the Oregon Medical Board Thursday, Bray's license willremain suspended until he can demonstrate he is nolonger incarcerated, and that the board "is satisfied with due regard to the public interest that License's privilege to practice medicine may be restored."
.'~t,$ )
es had lapsed. Bray
In Mar c h 2 011, due t o the charges f i led a g ainst him i n D e schutes County, Bray agreed to voluntarily withdraw f r o m p r a cticing medicine at the request of the Oregon Medical Board. The California M e dical B o a rd suspended Bray's license in April 2011, although Bray
"People ask me how ta find him and I tell them, 'Look for the group of people who are looking at the owl.'"
help.
— Reporter: 541-383-0387; shammers@bendbulletin.com
why the owl is out hunting during the day, but Robin Bown, a fish and wildlife biologist with the U.S. Fish and — Bob Johnson, longtime Bend birder Wildlife Service in Portland, said that's not unusual for a barred owl. "They w il l h u n t s o m eaway," said John Hart, a pho- animal. The two owl species times during the day," she tographer from Redmond. "I have different habitat and said. "Particularly, if they are didn't know he was actually food needs, with spotted owls hungry." hunting for something." more picky about where they Whether the owl will stay Hart is among the many roost and what they eat. at Farewell Bend Park r ebirders who have migrated to Scientists say neither owl mains an unanswered questhe parksince the barred owl species minds being around tion. Bown said the owl could was first reported there on people. That is definitely true be looking to nest there, but Jan. 20 on a Central Oregon of the barred owl at Farewell it would need to find a mate birding Listserv. A c o usin Bend Park. It tolerates people and make sure enough food is of the northern spotted owl, coming within just several available to support the coubarred owls were once found feet as they try to capture a ple and their offspring. "It may be looking for a only in the eastern U.S. close-up photo. Crowds of But about a century ago about 20 people at times fol- home range, but whether it something changed and the lowing the bird around the will settle there is hard to tell," owls started moving west park is a pretty wild phenom- she said. and into parts of C anada. enon, said Bob Johnson, 64, a While the owl is putting up Since the 1970s, barred owls birder in Bend since 1975. with people for now, a nesting "It i s t h e m o s t p h oto- pair likely wouldn't want to have been found in Oregon, Washington and even parts graphed bird in the history of be near the people and dogs of California. Bend, I'll tell you," he said. that frequent Farewell Bend, While the spotted owl has He said the owl's comfort said John Goodell, curator of been listed under the E naround people makes it easy natural history at the High dangered Species Act for 20 to locate. Desert Museum. "People ask me how to find "My guess is they would years, the barred owl is not considered endangered unhim and I tell them, 'Look for choose a nest site that is a der state or federal law. It is the group of people who are little more secluded than the protected under the Migrato- looking at the owl,'" Johnson park area," he said. ry Bird Treaty Act of 1918 and satd. — Reporter: 541-617-7812; isn't a state-regulated game Passersby often w o nder ddarling@bendbulletin.com
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2013. • •
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Tijuana S5/43
Os os 10s
•
•
I
m
osaltcaker
• v~ Los Angeles, 57/45 '<
o CD
27/14
G BBay ,~ Green
JDes Moines.
San Francisco 57/45~
w
/28/25
Q ~
® +,.xn.
alifax 25/19 ortland
20s
under Bay
Bismarck h I 27/16
34/23
Boise 37/19 +
Presque Isle Maine
.%j
tos
Winnipe 25/18
33/12
B illings
ortland 44/35
• -22'
81/67
39/25
46/34
Kendall, Fla.
• 3.91
Qcalgary Saskatoon
43/34
• Seattle x
• 85'
HIGH LOW
50 27
47 25
Monterrey Mazatlan 79/67 •
Juneau 40/36
A LA S K A
FRONTS Cold
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 712 a m Moon phases Sunsettoday...... 5 27 p.m New First F u ll Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:11a.m Sunset tomorrow... 5:28 p.m Moonrise today.... 6:27 a.m Moonsettoday .... 5:17 p.m Feb.9 Feb.17 Feb.25 Mar. 4
Pi •
PLANET WATCH
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:53 a.m...... 6:53 p.m. Venus......6:47 a.m...... 4:25 p.m. Mars.......7:53 a.m...... 6:42 p.m. J upiter 1130am 23 2 a m Satum.....12;10 a.m.....10:33 a.m. Uranus.....8:55 a.m...... 9:13 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low..............37/19 2 4hoursendmg4pm*. .000" Record high........ 62 m 1954 Month to date.......... 0.00" Recordlow........ -14in1929 Average month todate... 034" Average high.............. 43 Year to date............ 0.70" Average low .............. 24 Average year to date..... 1.87" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.07 Record 24 hours ...0.85 in1960 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
S K IREPORT
Yesterday Saturday Sunday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
for solar at noon.
Astoria ........48/26/0.00.....49/35/c.....47/35/pc Baker City...... 36/1 5/0.00.....35/1 9/c.....37/1 6/pc Brookings......52/33/0.00....49/39/pc.....52/38/pc Burns..........36/18/0.00....33/11/pc......33/9/pc Eugene........45/37/0.00.....44/33lf.....45/32lpc Klamath Falls .. 39/14/000 ....39/15/c ...41/13/pc Lakeview.. MM/MM/0.00 ...29/12/pc..... 34/6/pc La Pine........36/17/0.00....39/16/pc.....38/13/pc Medford.......48/33/0.01 ....45/38/pc.....47/29/pc Newport.......46/32/0.00.....47/36/c.....48/38/pc North Bend......48/30/NA.....50/41/c.....50/38/pc Ontario........47/33/0.00....38/18/pc.....37/16/pc Pendleton......41/28/0.00.....43/26/c.....44/26/pc Portland.......45/30/0.00.....44/35lc.....46/34lpc Prineville....... 38/1 6/0.00....39/21/pc.....43/20/pc Redmond....... 41/1 4/0.00.....39/22/0.....41/1 8/pc Roseburg....... 48/36/0.00.....44/37/c.....48/35/pc Salem ....... 45/33/000 . . 43/33/f . . .45/33/pc Sisters.........43/20/0.00....40/1 9/pc.....42/1 9/pc The Dages...... 50/24/0.00.....46/29/c.....49/29/pc
Snow accumulation in inches
1
Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . . . 68 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 -0 . . . . . .70-77 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . 71-109 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . .101-117 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 98 Mt. HoodSkiBowl...........0-0......58-59 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . .122-126
L 0
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires. Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ........ . . . . .0-0.. . . . .42-92
Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . 0-0. . . . . .24-28 Mammoth Mtn., California...... 2 . . . . .92-184 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .44-58 Squaw Valley, California..... .. . 4 . . 2 6 - 97 Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . . 1 ... . . .24-47 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .45 55 Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . .31-33 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to thelatest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 l.egend:ts/-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partialclouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn-snow,i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace
Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday's extremes
HIGH LOW
45 2 6
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
38/18
A few highlevel clouds, comfortable.
HIGH LOW
EAST
ntario
34/1 6
• Paulina 35nr
42/20
A warm and above average day.
40 21
OREGON CITIES
Mostly cloudy to partly sunny skies.
Mitchell 41/22
•
ge
HIGH LOW
cloudy with valley fog early.
33/20
Warm Sprin95•
43/33•
Florence•
41/26
•
CENTRAL Partly to mostly
330 8
44/24
Albany
47/36
Ruggs
Maupin
nsae
wallowa • Pendleten 3203 • Enterprisrl J 43/26 • Meacham sinn
47/29
oWaSCO 43/27
43/33•
NeWpurt
•
•
CamP 3uzzh
S~l~m
•
The Blggs 8;
Governmentv
•
Lincoln City 46/35
River
H'Rsboo Port and ~~ nn/35 43/33 • Sa n dy • 43/34 McMinnville J 43/33
Umatilla nn/28 • HermiStun ns/27 Da g eenn/27 &nkrlington
Hood
Seasideo oCannon Beach Tigamook•
Warming up.
More sunshine, staying cool.
3
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:5TATE I,
I
ge
•
CONDITIONS n4
.+++Q . 4 4 4 •++++ ' 1 4 4 4 x
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain
* *
* * n* ' * ** * * * +*
F l urries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Saturday Sunday Yesterday Saturday Sunday Yesterday Saturday Sunday Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......63/32/0 00...69/46/t. 67134lpc GrandRapids....34/25/0.15..30/I8/pc...40/32/i RapidCity.......45/27/000... 33/20/c. 29/I6/sn Savannah.......64/48/000...64141ls.66/52/pc Akron ..........39/25/0.21..27/18/pc. 41/35/sh Green Bay........27/9/0.01..30/22/pc.. 36/31/c Reno...........37/24/000 ..38/20/pc. 41/19/pc Seattle..........46/36/000... 46/34/c. 47/36/pc Albany..........31/19/012...24/0/w ..28/I8/s Greensboro......57/35/0 23...50/27/s. 52/40/pc Richmond.......50/37/1.02... 46/26/s. 50/37/pc Sioux Falls.......31/20/000 ..43/32/sh..34/20/rs Albuquerque.....57/35/0.00..49/25/w .42/23/pc Harasburg.......39/32/0.1I..33/18/pc.. 36/28/s RochesterNY....36/19/074 ..23/11/pc.. 33/30/s Spokane........38/32/003 ..37/24/pc. 36/22/pc Anchorage......32/27/005..33/27/sn...37/20/i Hartford,CT.....32/26/016...24/6/sn .. 33/19/s Sacramento..... 57/36/trace... 56/31/s .. 59/36/s Springfield, MO ..47/32/0.00.. 53/42/pc. 61/32/sh Atlanta.........55/46/000...60141/s. 60/51/sh Helena..........42/20/0.00...36/20/c. 25/13/snSt. Louis.........39/35/000... 50/39/s...58/36/t Tampa..........78/60/000... 76/56/s. 80/62/pc AtlanticCity.... An/34/I 98..38/18/w.. 39/32/s Honolulu........83/69/000..81I67lpc..81167/s Salt Lake City....43/19/003 .. 33/20/sn. 2711 2lsn Tucson..........68/44/000 ..53/31/pc. 53/34/pc Austin..........70/45/0.00 ..70/63/pc...76/51/t Houston........71/55/0.00 ..70/62lpc...75/55lt SanAntonio.....71/50/000... 71/63/t...78/52/t Tulsa...........51/34/000..54/49lsh...64/33/t Baltimore .......43/33/024...38/22/s. 40/32/pc Huntsville.......50/39/0 38... 55/41/s...5551/t SanDiego.......56/49/018..58/46/pc.. 56/46/s Washington DC.44/34/020...40/26/s. 43/35/pc Billings.........43/25/000...34/23/c. 29/14/sn Indianapolis.....38/30/0 00... 39/30/s...50/39/t SanFrancisco....52/41/011...55/42/s .. 55/42/s Wichita.........47/27/000..53/48/sh. 54/29/pc Birmingham.....54/42/004 ..61/43/pc. 62/58/t Jackson,MS.... 59/50/000. 64/53/pc...70/56/1 SanJose........52/4/008.. 56/37/s 60/38/s Yakima.........53/24/000..43/26/pc 45/25/pc Bismarck........28/19/000..27/16/pc.24/10/sn Jacksonvile......67/55/000...67/44/s. 71/55/pc SantaFe........48/32/000 ..44/19/pc 35/18/pc Yuma . . . . .66/52/000 ..63/44/pc.. 63/46/s Boise.......... 44/25/006...37/I9/c.37117/pc Juneau..........38/36/084 ..40/36lrs...40/34lr INTERNATIONAL Boston..........34/28/0.15...25/9/sn .. 32/20/s Kansas City......42/28/0.00 ..52/42/pc...56/30/t Badgepoit CT....33/28/I 04..29/11/sn .. 32/24/s Lansing.........29/21/028...28/14/s...37/32/r Amsterdam......41/28/018 37/27/c 32/24/pc Mecca..........93/73/000 . 93/73/s. 95/73/pc Buffalo.........36/19/049 ..25/10/pc. 36/32/pc LasVegas.......55/47/000...53/35/c. 54/36/pc Athens..........55/48/000 60/50/sh .. 55/44/c Mexico City .....77/50/000... 74145ls.. 73/45/s Burlington, VT.....25/8/049...16/2/w .. 24/14/s Lexington.......48/33/012...44/31/s...54/45/t Auckland........75/59/000..77/6vpc. 77/63lpc Montreal.........12/1/035...19/I/sf..15/7/pc Caribou,ME..... 8/19/000 .. 15/ I/sn... 23/2/s Lincoln..........39/26/000 ..52/38/pc. 46/25/pc Baghdad........69/51/0.00... 77/56/s. 76/60/pc Moscow........30/27/0.03... 32/29/c .. 32/29/c Charleston, SC...65/48/007...60138/s. 62151/pc Little Rock.......56/440.01..55/48lpc...65/43/t Bangkok........93/79/000 ..95/77/pc. 94/77/pc Nairobi.........81/57/000... 80/57/s .. 80/57/s Charlotte........61/39/003...55/32/s. 56/44/pc LosAngeles......53/48/007..57/45lpc..58146/s Beiyng...........27/7/000 ..27/I0/pc. 21/17/pc Nassau.........84/72/000 ..76/66/pc. 71/67/pc Chattanooga.....57/41/008... 56137/s...59/48/t Louisville........54/36/013...45/34ls...56/45/t Beirut..........70/54/000 ..67/55/pc. 65/52/pc New Delh/.......68/45/000 ..71/53/pc .. 73/53/s Cheyenne.......48/16/000 ..34/18/sn.. 26/5/sn MadisonWI.....25/I6/0 01..33/24/pc..40/30/rs Berlin...........32127/000...32/25/c.30/19lpc Osaka..........37/32/000..41/36/pc. 46/31/pc Chicago.........33/23/007 ..35/28/pc ..43/37/rs Memphis....... 58/41/019 57/471pc .. 63/45/1 Bogota.........68152/014... 66/48/t...69/44/t Oslo.............23/9/000 ..24/22/pc.. 20/15/c Cincinnati.... 51/35/001 ...42/28/s. 54/42/r Miami . . . . 85/68/000 79/66/s 79/68/Pc Budapest........37/21/000...34/27/c .. 32/21/c Ottawa..........16/0/016... 21/3/sf.. 15/6/pc Cleveland.......42/26/023...27/15/s. 40/35/sh Milwaukee..... 26/23/001 ..32/27/pc..39/33/rs BuenosAires.....88/72/000...91/72/s. 93/72/pc Paris............43/30/006.. 38/33/sf. 34/33/sh Colorado Spnngs.51/19/000 .. 43/23/rs .. 34/17/c Minneapol/s.....23/16/0.00..35/28/pc..34/26/rs CaboSanLucas ..77/55/0.00 .. 73/63/pc.. 68/63/s Rio deJaneiro....88/73/0.00... 85/74/t...85/73/t Columbia,MO...36/31/000 ..52/40/pc...60/32/t Nashville........52/38/009... 53/40/s...60/50/t Cairo...........72/54/000...71/51/s .. 72/51/s Rome...........52/36/000...47/35/s .. 52/36/s Columbia,SC....64/45/000...60/34/s. 63/50/pc New Orleans.....69/53/0.00..66/57/pc...76/64/t Calgary.........41/25/000 .. 39/25/sf. 26/I6/pc Santiago........84/66/000... 80/62/s.82/63/pc Columbus, GA...59/50/0.00...62143/s. 65/54/sh New York.......34/30/0.76.. 31/15/w .. 37/26/s Cancun.........84/66/000..82/73/pc. 82/75/pc SaoPaulo.......79/66/000... 77/66/t...78/66/t Columbus, OH....46/29/0.18...35/25/s. 49/40/pc Newark, Nl......36/30/0.56.. 33114lw.. 37/25/s Dublin..........45/37/000...43/41/c. 40/34/sh Sapporo ........30/27/000.... 30/7/c ..28/2/pc Concord,NH.....21/16/030 .. 19/2/sn .. 29/10/s Norfolk VA......52/43/204...45/27/s. 49/36/pc Edinburgh.......43/32/0.0040/36/sh .. .. 36/28/sf Seoul............16/3/0.00... 25/19/c. 26/I5/pc Corpus Christi....75/58/000 ..69/69/pc. 80161/pc Oklahoma City...56/30/0.00... 56/48/t. 62/34/pc Geneva.........37/25/000...29/17/c. 32/29/sn Shangha/........32/28/001 ..40/36/pc. 43/39/sh DallasFtWonh...65/41/000..62/55/pc...71/41/t Omaha.........33/26/000..49/38/pc.47/25/pc Harare..........79/63/1.37... 73/59/t...73/61/t Singapore.......86/75/038... 86/77/t...85/76/t Dayton .........50/31/010...35/27/s. 50/41/sh Orlando.........81/64/000...76/53/s. 80/57/pc HongKong......68/55/001 ..67/56/pc.68/56lpc Stockholm.......32/28/000.. 34/23/sf.. 27/19/c Denver..........51/23/0.00 .. 45/19/rs. 36/20/c PalmSprings.... 60/47/0.02. 61/42/pc.. 63142ls Istanbul.........59/48/023 ..56/45/sh. 56146lsh Sydney..........88/68/000 ..84/66/pc. 75/66/pc Des Moines......29/25/000..44/35/pc. 4712 7/pc Peoria..........34/25/0.00...44/33/s...48/32/t lerusalem.......63148/000..65149lpc.67/47lpc Taipei...........61/55/000...60/60lc.65164lpc Detroit..........32/26/027...26/17/s. 33/33/sh Philadelphia.....39/34/0.29 .. 35/15/w.. 39/27/s Johannesburg....81161/003...80/61/t...74159/1 Tel Aviv.........$9/50/000 ..71/54/pc. 70/52/pc Duluth..........20/2/003...32/24/c. 31/25/sn Phoenix.........68/51/000..56/40/pc. 58/40/pc Lima...........84/73/0.00...81I69lc .. 79/68/c Tokyo...........45/36/0.00 ..45/34/pc.. 52/36/s El Paso..........70/42/000 ..65/39/pc .. 54/31/s Pittsburgh.......38/27/011 ..30/18/pc. 46/36/pc Lisbon..........59/46/000 5I42/s 55147/shToronto.........21/16/079 27/14/pc.. 26/25/c Fairbanks......... 4/-3/000...17/I/sn... 24/1/c Portland,ME.....17/10/0.50..19/10/sn.. 29/18/s London.........43/34/000..48/37/sh. 46/34/sh Vancouver.......45/32/000...43/34lc. 41/37/pc Fargo...........25/12/000 ..29/21/pc. 29/18/sn Providence......34/23/0 50... 24/9/sn .. 34/23/s Madrid .........50/30/000 ..50/31/pc.. 51/31/c Vienna..........39/30/000..33/25/pc..32/23/sf Flagstaff........40/27/000..29/10/sn.32112/pc Raleigh.........55/39/061...50/27/s.53/40/pc Manila..........90/75/000..86/75/pc. 87/74/pc Warsaw.........32/23/022...31/26/c.. 30/21/c
Idaho state senate advancesmeasure opposing marijuana use The Associated Press
ing marijuana use in any form.
then it's left to the states to do it.
BOISE, Idaho — State Sen. Chuck Winder has a simple message forstates that have relaxed laws on the use of marijuana: Not here in Idaho. The Senate State Affairs Committee voted unanimously Friday to introduce and hold a hearing on a resolution pitched bythe Boise Republican oppos-
The measure also u rges President Barack Obama and the U.S. Department Of Justice to enforce existing federal laws tied to moving drugs across state lines. "It's kind of like the immigration issue," Winder said. "If (the federal government is) not enforcing the immigration issue,
All we're saying is, (marijuana)
Pond
"In terms of whether I have a financial interest, the money that's paicf to me as a retirement is basically a stock payout, and is independent of whether GreenWorks continues to make a profit or not. I am, in essence, another creditor."
Continued from B1 "In terms of whether I have a financial interest, the money that's paid to me as a retirement is basically a stock payout, and i s i n dependent of whether GreenWorks continues to make a profit or not," Figurski said. "I am, in essence, another creditor." The contract is to develop and illustrate with drawings a set of alternatives to manage sediment in Mirror Pond. Sediment has piled up in the pond, which was created by a dam at Newport Avenue in Bend. The price range for the contract was advertised as $75,000 to $100,000, and Figurski said he hopes to take a contract to the park district board for approval Feb. 19. The city of Bend and the park district have pledged $200,000 toward finding a solution for Mirror Pond. Figurski said th e P acific Northwest landscape architecture and environmental design community is small, and he worked at or with nearly all of the firms that submitted proposals for the Mirror Pond project. Two members of the Mirror Pond Steering Committee, an interagency group that overseesthe search for a solution for the pond, also said they did not see a problem with Figttrski's connection to GreenWorks. Under Oregon law, public officials who undertake actions or decisions that affect businesses with which they are associated may have a conflict of interest. This includes a business in which a public official owned stock or had another form of equity interest worth at least $1,000 in the last calendar year. This does not appear
is causing problems to the cities and jurisdictions, so please enforce federal law as it comes to transportation of illegal drugs." Last fall, voters in Washington state approved an initiative allowing adults over 21 to have up to an ounce of pot. Colorado voters approved a similar initia-
tive in November. Washington is expected to begin issuing licenses to marijuana growers, processors and retail stores, and the state's Liquor Control Board is develop-
ing rules for the fledgling marijuana industry. Sales in Washington are set to begin late this
year. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee
and AttorneyGeneral Bob Ferguson met with U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder last month, but were given no guidance on how the federal government will respond to plans in Washington and Colorado to set Ltp legal markets for marijuana. Winder said lawenforcement officials along Idaho's western border are already dealing
with drug trafficking due to the legalization of marijuana for medical use in Oregon, or with Idahoans crossing the border to obtain medical marijuana cards in Oregon or Montana. Winder said he hopes the federalgovernment takes steps to oppose Washington's law and to help states battle illegal trafficking of the drug.
— Jim Figurski, Mirror Pond project manager
Oberst also said the committee discussed Figurski's ties to firms that submitted proposals for the project. "He's been around for so long, he's worked for almost all of these companies," Oberst said. "He's a veteran of this kind of environmental analysis. He's 30 years into it.u Committee members wondered aloud whether Figurski's history with the f i r ms was an issue. Oberst said it was his understanding that Figurski is completely retired from GreenWorks and does not have a financial interest in the company. It would be good for the consultant to get an early start on the work this year, because it does require scientific analysis that could require the contractor to work in the river, Oberst said. The proposed options for the pond must be based on information about fisheries and hydraulic actions of the river, Oberst said. Figurski said he hopes the visioning process brings some clarity to the future of Mirror Pond. "I think really what I'm ultimately looking forward to getting to is ... having a definite direction that we can move sheet, I made (GreenWorks) forward with," Figurski said number one and I didn't know Friday. "I think it's been missthat he had worked for them," ing before, knowing from the Smith said. nHe told us he community what direction we doesn't have any f i n ancial Want to ga.n interest there. That one is as — Reporter: 541-617-7829, pure as Caesar's wife." hboi rudC<bendbufletin.com
II B III FITQNg FIIII,QE RDIICI/ION I FOIINDII ION
to apply in Figurski's case, because he took a stock payout from GreenWorks more than a year before working on the Mirror Pond contract. Figurski wrote the request for proposalsthat described the project for potential bidders, said Bend Director of Community Development Mel Oberst, a steering committee member. uWe made a lot of changes to it, and then he sent it out, u Oberst said. "We're having Jim negotiate the price within the limits we set." The s teering c o m mittee evaluated and scored each firm'sproposal. The steering committee includes officials from the city and the park district, as well as Smith, whose company owns the dam at Colorado Avenue upstream from the pond. The committee also includes a representative of Pacific Power, which owns the dam that created Mirror Pond, and a member of Bend 2030, a civic group. "The second-placefirm also had the same kind of fuzz on their tennis ball," Smith said, referring to the fact that Figurski had worked for more than one of th e c ompanies that sought the contract. "When I made my ranking
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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2 Prep sports, C3
NBA, C4
Golf, C4 Tee to Green, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
COLLEGE BASEBALL
OSU, UO picked 3-4 in Pac-12 poll Oregon State is ranked No. 3and Oregon is No. 4 in a
preseason polling of the Pac-12's baseball coaches, the conference announced Friday. The poll lists Stanford as the league favorite, with five first-place votes and a total of 93 points. UCLA, a 2012
conference co-champion, is second with 90 points and two first-
place votes. Oregon State, which tied for fourth place in the Pac-12 last season,
tormra to eat Pant ers Bulletin staff report Summit trailed by eight points to visiting Redmond High at the half. The Storm needed a spark, and Summit coach Ryan Cruz said Christina Edwards provided that shot of energy in the third quarter. "She was coming off the flu and was brilliant," Cruz said of his freshman guard, who did not play in the first half. "She started the third quarter, got a couple deflections and a couple steals. That really set us up for the second half." The Storm puttogether a 9-0 run to open the third and hit eight of 12 free throws down the stretch Friday night to pick up a 48-44 Intermountain Conference girls basketball win. Emily Hasenoehrl paced Summit (15-5 overall, 4-3 IMC) with D points, two of which came with about a minute to go with the
I
Storm trailing by one point, Cruz said. When Hasenoehrl rebounded a missed 3-pointer and hit a lay-in to put Summit ahead for good. Raja Char and Sarah Heinly added nine and eight points, respectively. The Panthers, who visit Mountain View on Tuesday, were led by Chantel Dannis' 18 points, but she was held scoreless in the second half. Redmond (9-12, 0-7) was outscored 26-14 in the third and fourth quarters. Kendall Current contributed with nine points. "The great thing about our second half is that despite our poor shooting, we still found a way to win," said Cruz, whose team hosts Ridgeview on Tuesday. "I couldn't be more proud of our effort."
BOYS PREP BASKETBALL
place votes. Oregon, vers in the preseason poll with 73 points.
Arizona, co-champion of the Pac-12 with UCLA last year and the n
65 points. Rounding out the
preseason poll are Arizona State (58 points), California (40), USCand Washington State (32 apiece), Washington (28) and Utah (12).
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Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
Golf instructor Mike Lewis, right, works on an approach/setup drill for student Stephen Drgastin, 18, Wednesday at the new Tetherow Academy facility on the Tetherow Golf Course range in Bend. The building, filled with fitness equipment, analytical electronics and a variety of golf clubs, has doors that open up to the practice range.
• After years ofplanning, state-of-the art Tetherow Academyis openfor business
Both the Beavers and the Ducks open the 2013 season on Friday.
By Zack Hall The Bulletin
Oregon State starts a four-day tournament
in Palm Springs, Calif., against Utah Valley. Oregon kicks off with the first game in a four-
game series against Hawaii in Honolulu. — From wireservice reports u
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
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No. 19 Oregon reeling after loss
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third in the conference in 2012, follows the Bea-
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GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL
ranks third in the poll with 87 points and the remaining three first-
winning streak and had broken into the top10 in The Associated Press poll for the team's high-
TEE TO GREEN
Photos by Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Redmond's Matt Dahlen (2) scores off a layup during the first half of Friday night's game against Summit in Redmond.
(15-7, 5-5) scored the final eight points of the
game for a 48-47 upset, the Buffaloes' first vic-
Mike Lewis never cared much for life on the road. It is a big reason why he never really pursued a career as a professional golfer, he says. Yet for more than two years the local golf instructor has been traveling back and forth from Bend to Utah, his native state, from which he had generated most of his clientele. "It's ironic that I have found myself traveling so much," says Lewis, who had been the director of instruction at the Jack Nicklaus Academy at Pronghorn Club since 2006 before the Bend golf club struck a deal with the PGA Tour Academy in 2010 to re-brand its teaching arm. (Pronghorn re-branded again in 2012 to the Troon Golf Academy.) "That," he says of the excessive travel, "is hopefully going to come to an end." Lewis, a 44-year-old married father of three daughters, all of whom still live in Bend, could get his wish with the opening the Tetherow Academy this week. The Tetherow Academy, a state-of-the-art indoor facility at semiprivate Tetherow Golf Club in southwest Bend,
For moreinfo Tetherow Golf Club: tetherow.com
Junior Golf Performance Academy: jpga.org Mike Lewis: 541-410-3434
or mlewis©tetherow.com Adam Huycke: 541-610-3011 or adamh@ tetherow.com brings together a couple of dreams: Lewis' aspiration to re-establish himself in Central Oregon with a facility that caters to the public (especially to junior golfers), and Tetherow's longtime desire to open an academy and do the same. "It is the dream coming true," says Lewis, who was named Tetherow's director of instruction in August 2010 but has spent most of his time since then at the TaylorMade Performance Lab in Draper, Utah. The Bend facility features many of the same characteristics as that TaylorMade facility, such as computer and video analysis that can dissect any golf swing with pinpoint precision for instruction or custom-fitting equipment. See Academy/C4
tory in Eugene since 1955.
The loss snapped Oregon's 20-gamewin-
PREP SWIMMING
ning streakat home, the third-longest in school history. It also dropped the Ducks out of first place in the Pac-12 standings.
Oregon now rests in a tangle for second with
Arizona State (18-5, 7-3) and UCLA(17-6, 7-3) behind No. 7 Arizona
(20-2, 8-2). "We cannot have these losses weigh us down," Ducks senior forward E.J. Singler, said after the loss. "We have
to keep playing andget back into a momentum." Oregon hosts Utah tonight at 5 p.m. (Pac-12
Network). The Utes (1012, 2-8) are coming off an 82-64 loss to Oregon State (12-11, 2-8) on Wednesday night. — The Associated Press
NBA
Blazers fall to Rockets, 118-103 Harden scores 35 points to lead Houston to a win over Portland, C4
Summit, Bend post top times at districts
• Matt Dahlen scores 28 points as the Pantherstop Summit in Intermountain Conferenceplay By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
REDMOND — A we e k i n t o F ebruary, Redmond High is starting to look like a team ready to make a run deep into March. The Panthers notched their 11th consecutive boys basketball win Friday night, topping Summit 59-46 to move to 16-4 overall and 7-0 in Intermountain Conference play. Redmond guard Matt Dahlen continued to make a case for Class 5A player-of-the-year honors, scor-
ing a game-high 28 points while also recording nine rebounds, six assists and four steals in the home victory. The current IMC leaders, who are fourth in the most recent Oregon School Activities Association 5A rankings, defeated the Storm (9-11 overall, 1-5 IMC) for the third time this season. "Dahlen was outstanding," Summit coach Jon Frazier said about the Panthers' 6-foot-6 senior point guard. "We felt like we did a pretty good job guarding everyone else, but we didn't have an answer for him. He makes everything look easy." See Redmond/C3
s
)I' Summit's Nick Moyer (12) fights to pull in a rebound during the first half against Redmond on Friday night.
Bulletin staff report Summit swam the fastest times in nine of the 16 individual preliminary events Friday night at the Class 5A Special District I swim meet at Bend's Juniper Swim 8t Fitness Center. Storm swimmers posted the top qualifying times in five events in the girls meet — which includes Bend High, Redmond High,Mountain View and Ashland — with Madi Brewer and Mackenzie Halligan taking the top spots in two events apiece. Brewer qualified first in the 100-yard backstroke and the 100 freestyle, while Halligan was the fastest swimmer in the 200 freeand 500 free.AliEpple was the top qualifier in the 200 individual medley. For Bend, Bella Wiener led qualifying in the 50 free, while Brooke Miller took the top spot in the 100 butterfly. Mountain
View's Phoebe Weedman was the fastest qualifier in the 100 breaststroke. The Lava Bears have the most swimmers competing in today's championship finals, with 24 qualifiers. Summit advanced 22swimmers to the finals. In the boys meet, Summit posted the top times in four of the eight events. Tommy Brewer led qualifying in the 200 IM andthe 100breast, while John Hartmeier was fastest in the 100 free and 100 back. Bend High's Ben Brockman qualified first in the 200 free. Ashland swimmers took the top spots in the other three events. Summit led boys qualifying with 22 swimmers in the finals, and Bend was close behind with 20. The finals for both individual and relay races will begin today at 12:15 p.m. at Juniper.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 20'I3
ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY SOCCER 4:30 a.m.:English Premier
League, Tottenham Hotspurvs. Newcastle United, ESPN2.
GOLF 6 a.m.:European Tour, Joburg Open, third round, Golf Channel. 10a.m.: PGATour, Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, third
round, Golf Channel. Noon:PGATour, Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, third round, CBS. 3:30 p.m.:Champions Tour, Allianz Championship, second round, Golf Channel.
BASKETBALL 8 a.m.:Men's college, Temple at Dayton, ESPNU.
9 a.m.:Men's college, Michigan at Wisconsin, ESPN.
9 a.m.:Men's college, Florida State at Wake Forest, ESPN2.
9 a.m.:Women's college, Nova Southeastern at Florida Southern, CBSSN.
10 a.m.:Men's college, Mississippi at Missouri, CBS. 10 a.m.:Men's college, Akron at Miami (Ohio), ESPNU. 11 a.m.:Men's college, North Carolina at Miami, ESPN.
1 p.m.:Sevens World Series: Las Vegas, NBC. 4 p.m.:Sevens World Series: Las Vegas, NBCSN. SWIMMING Noon:Women'scollege,USCat Cal (taped), Pac-12Network. WRESTLING 1 p.m.:College, Arizona State at Oregon State, Pac-12 Network.
SUNDAY GOLF 6 a.m.:European Tour, Joburg Open, final round, Golf Channel. 10a.m.: PGATour, Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, final round, Golf Channel. Noon:PGATour, Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, final round, CBS. 4 p.m.: Champions Tour, Allianz Championship, final round, Golf
Channel.
North Carolina at Georgia Tech, ESPNU. 10 a.m.: NBA, Los Angeles Clippers at New York Knicks, ABC.
10 a.m.:Men's college, Indiana
ESPN2.
10 a.m.:Women's college,
11 a.m.:Men's college, Delaware atGeorgeMason,
Houston at Rice, Root Sports.
10:30a.m.:W omen'scollege,
CBSSN.
Georgia at LSU, ESPNU.
Noon:Men'scollege,South
11 a.m.:Women's college,
Florida at Villanova, ESPNU.
Michigan State at Penn State, ESPN2.
Oklahoma, ESPN.
1 p.m.: Men'scollege, Valparaiso at Cleveland State, ESPN2.
1 p.m.: Men'scollege, Pepperdine at Portland, Root
Sports. 1 p.m.:Men's college, Memphis at Southern Miss, CBSSN.
2 p.m.:Men's college, Texas AB M at Georgia, ESPNU.
3 p.m.:Men's college, Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, ESPN.
3 p.m.:Men's college, lowa State at Kansas State, ESPN2. 3 p.m.:Men's college, Idaho at
Denver, Root Sports. 3 p.m.: Men'scollege,Fresno State at San Diego State, CBSSN.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Stanford at Arizona State, ESPNU.
5 p.m.:Men's college, LSU at Alabama, ESPN2. 5 p.m.:Men's college, Utah at Oregon, Pac-12 Network.
5 p.m.: Men'scollege,Loyola Marymount at Gonzaga,Root Sports. 5 p.m.:Women's college, San Diego State at Fresno State, CBSSN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Louisville at Notre Dame, ESPN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, New Mexico at UNLV, NBCSN.
at Ohio State, CBS.
Noon:Men'scollege,St.John's at Syracuse, ESPN. Noon:Women's college, Oregon State at Utah, Pac-12 Network.
Noon:Women's college, Tulane at Tulsa, Root Sports. 12:30 p.m.: NBA, Los Angeles Lakers at Miami Heat, ABC.
12:30p.m.:W omen'scollege, DePaul at Connecticut, ESPNU.
1 p.m.:Women's college, Kentucky at Vanderbilt, ESPN2.
7 p.m.: Men'scollege, Washington State at UCLA, Pac12 Network.
8 p.m.: Men'scollege,Fresno State at San Diego State, ESPNU.
WINTER SPORTS 10a.m.:Luge, World Cup, Lake Placid, N.Y., teamrelay (taped), NBCSN.
11 a.m.:Skiing, USSAFreestyle International (taped), NBC. Noon:Skiing, alpine world championships (taped), NBC. 1 p.m.:Skiing, International
Dual Moguls (taped), NBCSN. 3 p.m.:Biathlon, world
championship, men's sprint (same-day tape), NBCSN.
BASKETBALL 5 p.m.:Men's college, Utah at Oregon, KBND-AM 1110.
BASKETBALL
2 p.m.:Women's college, Oklahoma State at Oklahoma, Root Sports. 3 p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail
Blazers at Orlando Magic, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.
3 p.m.:Men's college, Dukeat Boston College, ESPNU. 3 p.m.:Boys high school, Chester (Pa.) at NeumannGoretti (Pa.), ESPN2. 4 p.m.:Men's college, Calat Arizona, Pac-12 Network.
5 p.m.:Men's college, Drake at Evansville, ESPNU. 5 p.m.: NBA, San Antonio Spurs at Brooklyn Nets, ESPN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Colorado at Oregon State, Pac-12 Network.
7 p.m.:Men's college, Washington at USC, Root
Sports. HOCKEY 9:30 a.m.: NHL, Los Angeles Kings at Detroit Red Wings, NBC. 4:30 p.m.: NHL, New Jersey Devils at Pittsburgh Penguins, NBCSN.
Los Angeles 9 3 4 2 8 20 28 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. Friday's Game Dallas 3,AnaheimI
Today'sGames
Pittsburghat NewJersey,10a.m. Carolinaat Philadelphia,10a.m. Edmontonat Detroit,11 a.m. WinnipegatOtawa,11a.m. Phoenixat SanJose, 1p.m. TampaBayat Boston, 4p.m. Buffalo atN.Y.Islanders,4 p.m. Florida atWashington, 4p.m. Torontoat Montreal, 4p.m. AnaheimatSt. Lours,5 p.m. Nashville atMinnesota,5 p.m. Calgaryat Vancouver, 7 p.m. Sunday's Games Los AngelesatDetroit, 9:30a.m. Edmontonat Columbus,3p.m. Bostonat Buffalo,4 p.m. TampaBayat N.Y. Rangers, 4:30 p.m. NewJerseyat Pittsburgh, 430 p.m. ChicagoatNashvile, 5 p.m.
Friday's Games East Dartmouth 60, Columbia57 Harvard67,Corne 65 Princeton63, Brown46 Yale 68,Penn59 South Lipscomb 76, N Kentucky 58 UNCAsheville 90,VMI79 Far West Hawaii94,LongBeachSt. 73 UtahSt. 63, SanJoseSt. 36
PGAT OUr
Second Rountf
Pacific-12 Conference All Times PST
Conference Arizona Oregon ArizonaSt. UCLA Colorado Stanford California Washington SouthernCal Oregon St. WashingtonSt Utah
W 8 7 7 7 5 5 5 5 5 2
L 2 3 3 3 5 5 5 5 5 8
2 2
7 8
Today's Games Stanford atArizonaState, 4 p.m. Utah atDregon,5p.m. Washington Stateat UCLA, 7p m Sunday's Games Califomia atArizona,4 p.m. Coloradoat OregonState, 6 p.m. Washingtonat USC,7 p.m.
Overall W L 20 2 18 5 18 5 17 6 15 7 14 9 13 9 13 10 10 13 12 11 11 12 10 12
Women's college Friday's Games East Siena54,Manhattan51 South Duke62,Virginia 41 Maryland73,WakeForest 63 VirginiaTech63, Georgia Tech61 Midwest lginois St.81,Drake57 IndianaSt. 58,Creighton41 Missouri St. 91Bradley86 Wichita St.57,N. Iowa47 Far West California66, ArizonaSt.53 Colorado 61, OregonSt. 47 Stanford73,Arizona43 UCLA65,Washington 61 Utah67,Oregon47 Washington St.57, SouthernCal54
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPST
Pittsburgh NewJersey
Eastern Conference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA
1 1 8 3 0 16 39 26 1 0 6 1 3 15 27 22 N.Y.Rangers 1 0 5 5 0 10 24 26 N.Y. Islanders 1 0 4 5 1 9 30 34 Philadelphia 1 1 4 6 1 9 25 30 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Boston 9 7 1 1 15 26 20 Ottawa 1 1 6 3 2 14 31 22 Montreal 1 0 6 3 I 13 31 24 Toronto 1 1 6 5 0 12 28 31 Buffalo 1 1 4 6 1 9 35 41
Southeast Division
TampaBay Carolina Florida Winnipeg Washington
Chicago Nashville St. Louis Detroit Columbus
David Lingmerth
Pebble Beach Nafional Pro-Am Friday Pebble Beach , Calif. Purse: $6.5million p-Pebble BeachGL; 6,816 yards; par 72 m-MontereyPeninsulaCC, ShoreCourse; 6,838yaI'rls;par70 s-Spyglass HillGC; 6,953 yards; par 72
GP W L OT Pts GF GA 1 0 6 4 0 12 42 27 9 5 4 0 10 25 26 1 0 4 5 1 9 25 35 1 0 4 5 1 9 29 37 1 1 2 8 I 5 25 41
Western Conference Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA
1 1 9 0 2 20 39 25 1 0 5 2 3 13 23 21 1 0 6 4 0 12 33 30 1 0 5 4 1 11 28 29 1 1 3 6 2 8 23 36 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vancouver 1 0 6 2 2 14 28 23 Edmonton 1 0 4 3 3 11 24 27 Minnesota 1 0 4 5 I 9 22 28 Calgary 8 3 3 2 8 24 28 Colorado 1 0 4 6 0 8 21 26 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 1 0 7 2 1 15 33 26 SanJose 1 0 7 2 1 15 34 21 Dallas 1 2 6 5 1 13 26 28 Phoenix 1 1 4 5 2 10 31 33
TedPotter,Jr. BrandtSnedeker FredrikJacobson John Merrick HunterMahan PatrickReed PatrickCantlay Nick O'Hern James Hahn
JasonDay RussellKnox Chris Kirk Justin Hicks RetiefGoosen SeanO'Hair Matt Every Pat Perez Ryuji Imada KevinStreelman AaronBaddeley KevinSutherland Alistair Presneg LukeGuthrie Bob Estes KevinStadler LeeWestwood KevinNa Brendon deJonge Seung-YulNoh MattJones JamesDriscoll TommyGainey JimmyWalker Billy Horschel Jim Herman RichardH.Lee BillLunde WilliamMcGirt Scott Brown Joe Durant HeathSlocum MikeWeir GregOwen Scott Gardiner Kelly Kraft JordanSpieth CameronTringale J.B. Holmes CharlieWi Phil Mickelson RobertGarrigus Jeff Maggert Jeff Gove Brendon Todd ShawnStefani BenKohles PadraigHarrington CaseyWittenberg KenDuke J.J. Henry TagRidings RodPampling Tim Clark Brian Harma n Brian Stuard StuartAppleby JasonGore Troy Kelly JasonBohn LeeWiliams Jim Furyk CharlieBeljan CamiloVigegas NealLancaster DustinJohnson ToddHamilton Scott Langley JasonKokrak DougLaBege8 ChezReavie WoodyAustin Josh Teater Brad Fritsch Vaughn Taylor WebbSimpson CameronPercy Eric Meierdierks Morgan Hoff mann NickWatney BryceMolder John Maginger Dicky Pride Erik Compton Tim Petrovic HenrikNorlander JohnsonWagner D.A. Points
KevinChappeg SteveFlesch CameronBeckman
AndresRomero DonaldConstable RobertKarlsson FabianGomez AlexandreRocha Vijay Singh StevenBowditch RickyBarnes Alex Cejka DarronStiles Chris Stroud Justin Bolli Arjun Atwal SamSaunders AndrewSvoboda DerekErnst RyanPalmer GeoffOgilvy
Scott Mccarron Si WooKim RobertStreb
GOLF
Men's 4:ollege
Arizona State at Stanford, Pac1 2 Network.
67p-67m—134 66m-68s—134 71 s-66p —137 68p-67m—135 66p 69m 135 68s-69p—137 66m-70s—136 70p-66m—136 71p-65m—136
68m-68s—136
64m-73s—137 71 s-68p —139 71s-68p 139 71s-68p—139 70p-67m—137 67p-70m—137 69m-69s—138 65m-73s—138 69p-69m—138 69s-71p—140 70p 68m 138 68s-72p —I 40 68p-70m—138 69s-71p—140 69p-69m—138 68p-70m—138 68s-72p—140 67m-71s—138 67s-73p 140 69s-72p—141 72m-67s—139 71s-70p—141 68m-71s—139 70s-71p—141 71s-70p—141 68m-71s—139 71s-70p—141 72s-69p—141 72p-68m—140 71p 69m 140 69p-71m—140 75p-65m—140 65m-75s—140 73s-69p —142 69m-71 s—140 70m-70s—140 71s-71p —142 72s-70p 142 70m-70s—140 69m-71s—140 71m-69s—140 67m-73s—140 69p-71m—140 68m-72s—140 72p-68m—140 69p-72m 141 72s-71p—143 70s-73p —143 71 s-72p —143 72s-71p—143 69m-72s—141 71 m-70s —141 76s-67p —143 68m-73s 141 69p-72m —I41 70p-71 m—141 71 s-72p —143 73p-68m —141 71 p-70m —141 66m-76s—142 75s-69p—144 69s 75p 144 67m-75s—142 67m-75s—142 73m-69s 142 71s-73p—144 65m-77s—142 70p-72m—142 69s-75p—144 70p-72m—142 75s-69p—144 70m-72s—142 69m-73s 142 70s-74p—144 71 m-71 s—142 74p-68m—142 68m-74s—142 70p-72m—142 68m-75s—143 71m-72s—143 68m-75s 143 69p-74m —I 43 71m-72s—143 68m-75s—143 71p-72m—143 71s-75p—146 68m-76s—144 74p-70m—144 75p-69m 144 70p-74m —I 44
SteveLeBrun RobertoCastro GaryChristian BobbyGates Jerry Kelly NathanGreen LeeJanzen PeterTomasulo NicholasThompson John Daly Jin Park RorySabbatini Chris Riley DanielSummerhays Matt Bettencourt ChrrsDrMarco Billy Mayfair MichaelBradley BrianDavis Luke List MichaelLetzig RafaelCabreraBello D.J. Trahan HarrisEnglish DavidDuval Joe Ogilvie SteveMarino AndresGonzales AaronWatkins Billy Andrade Bret Nutt TomGigis Mitch Lowe Paul Hale8 y
74p-70m 144 74s-72p—146 74p-70m—144 73p-71m—144 72p-72m—144 72p-72m—144 76p-68m—144 71m-74s—145 70p-75m—145 72p-73m—145 78p-67m—145 70m-75s—145 69p-76m—145 76s-71p—147 75m-70s—145 74s-73p—147 72m-73s—145 73s-74p—147 75s-72p—147 75s-72p—147 73s-74p—147 70m-75s 145 74s-74p—148 71p-75m—146 75p-71m—146
76s-72p—148
73m-73s 146 72s-76p —148 77s-71p—148 71m-75s—146
73s-76p —149
77p-70m 147 73m-74s—147 74s-75p—149 73m-74s—147 74m-73s—147 71m-76s 147 72p-76m—148 73s-77p—150 73m-76s—149 73p-76m—149 73m-76s 149 73s-78p—151 73s-79p—152 73p-77m—150 75m-75s—150 79s-73p 152 76p-74m—150 77p-74m —I51 77p-74m —151 78s-76p —154 79s-75p 154 74m-78s—152 71m-Bls—152 77p-77m—154
78s-82p—160
Cham pions To LIr Allianz Championship Friday At The OldCourse at BrokenSound Boca Raton, Fla. Purse: $1.8 million Yardage:6,807; Par: 72 (3 6-36) First Round TomPerniceJr. 31-35 66 BernhardLanger 34-32 — 66 Scott Simpson 34-33 — 67 Bart Bryant 33-34 — 67 Fred Funk 33-34 — 67 CoreyPavin 33 34 67 RogerChapman 34-33—67 RoccoMediate 34-33—67 Jim Gallagher,Jr. 35-33—68 MichaelAllen 34-34—68 John Huston 36-32 68 DavidEger 35-33—68 John Cook 35-33—68 DanForsman 33-35—68 TomLehman 36-32—68 Dick Mast 36-32 68 33-35—68 Mark Mouland 34-35—69 PeterSenior BlaineMccagister 35-34—69 Mark O'Meara 34-35—69 Larry Nelson 32-37 69 Brad Faxon 35-34—69 35-34—69 Larry Mize 36-33—69 Kirk Triplett 37-32—69 Joe Daley AndrewMagee 35-35 70 35-35—70 John Harris 35-35—70 SteveJones 34-36—70 Brad Bryant 34-36—70 David Frost 36-34 70 TomKite 33-37—70 KennyPerry 38-32—70 Mark McNulty 35-35—70 RussCochran 35-35—70 Esteban Toledo 35-36—71 Jim Thorpe 35-36—71 ChienSoonl.u 34-37 — 71 Bob Tway 35-36 — 71 PeterJacobsen 37-34 — 71 SteveLowery 36-35 — 71 DanaQuigley 34-37 — 71 Joey Sindelar 36-35 — 71 SteveElkington 34-37 — 71 Bill Glasson 37-34 — 71 Willie Wood 35-36 — 71 Olin Browne 34-37 — 71 Jeff Sluman 35-36 — 71 GaryHalberg 35-37 — 72 Gil Morgan 33-39 — 72 StevePate 37-35 — 72 Morris Hatalsky WayneLevi 38 34 72 39-33—72 Mike Hulbert 36-36—72 Bob Gilder 34-38—72 Jay DonBlake 36-36—72 Hale Irwin 35-37 72 BruceVaughan 36-37—73 Craig Stadler 38-35—73 JoelEdwards 37-36—73 SandyLyle 37-36—73 Jay Haas D A Weibring 35-38 73 34-39—73 GeneJones 36-38—74 Mike Goodes 37-37—74 Mark Brooks 37-37—74 Duffy Waldorf Hal Sutton 37 37 74 Ben Crenshaw 38-36—74 39-36—75 TomPurtzer 37-38—75 Mark Calcavecchia Lee Rinker 39-36—75 34-41 75 SonnySkinner Chie-HsiangLin 37-38—75 Warren Jurkowitz 37-38—75
TommyArmour RI FuzzyZoeger Jim Rutledge Allen Doyle AndyBean BobbyWadkins MarkWrebe
38 38 76 40-36—76 39-37—76 38-39—77 38-39—77 39-39—78 39-39—78
TENNIS Professional VTR Open Friday At ClubNaval deCampoLas Salinas Vina del Mar, Chile Purse: $467,800(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Quarterfinals RafaelNadal(I), Spain, def. DanielGimeno-Traver (7), Spain6-1, , 6-4. HoracioZebagos, Argentina, def.Albert Ramos(5), Spain,6-1,5-7, 7-6(6). JeremyChardy(3), France,def. PaoloLorenzi (6), Italy, 6-2,6-3 CarlosBerlocrf(8), Argentina,def. GuilaumeRufin, France,retired.
OpenSuddeFrance Friday At Arena Montpellier Montpellier, France Purse:$638,050(WT250) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Quarterfinals MichaelLlodra,France,def.JanHajek, CzechRepublic, 7-6(3), 6-1. JarkkoNieminen,Finland,def. Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine,4-6,6-3, 7-6(2). Benoit Paire(8), France, def.GigesSimon(4), France, 7-5,7-6(4). RichardGasquet(3), France,def.Julien Benneteau (6), France, 6-1,4-6,6-1. Zagreb Indoors Friday At Dom Sportova Zagreb, Croatia Purse:$638,060(WT260) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Ouarterfinals JurgenMelzer(4), Austria, def.LukasRosol, Czech
Republic, 6-4,6-4. RobinHaase,Netherlands, def. Philipp Petzschner, Germany, 6-4, 3-6,6-0.
MikhailYouzhny(3),Russia, def.IvanDodig, Croa-
tia, 6-3, 6-2.
Marin Cilic(1), Croatia,def. BlazKavcic, Slovenia, 6-3, 7 6(5).
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMOR EORIOLES Agreedto termswith RHP
JimJohnsonandRHPJason Hammelonone-year contracts. National League ARIZONADIAMO NDBACKS Agreed to terms with 28AaronHil on afour-year contract. MIAMIMARLINS—Agreedto termswith 38 Chone Figgins on aminor-league contract. NEWYOR K METS—Agreed to termswith RHP BrandonLyononaone-yearcontract. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Agreedto termswith 38 DavidFreeseonaone-yearcontract. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association MIAMI HEAT —Signed F-C Chris Andersenfor
remainder ofseason.
MINNESOTATIMBERWOLVES— Waived F Lou Amundson.SignedF Mrckael Gelabaleand F Chris Johnsonfortheremainder oftheseason. FOOTBALL National Football League CAROLINA PANTHERS— SignedDT ColinCole. PHILADE LPHIAEAGLES—NamedDave Fipp special teams coordinator. CanadranFootball League SASKATCHEWAN ROUGHRIDERS Resigned DB EddiR euss. SignedOLXavier Fultonto acontract extension HOCKEY
NationalHockeyLeague
CALGARY FLAMES—Placed G Miikka Kiprusoff and CMikaelBacklundoninjured reserve.Recalled C BenStreetfromAbbotsford (AHL).ActivatedDAnton Babchuk. DETROIT RED WINGS— Recalled F Joakim AnderssonfromGrandRapids (AHL). PlacedGJonas Gustavsson oninjured reserve. EDMONTONOILERS— Recalled C Chris VandeVeldefromOklahomaCity (AHL). LOSANGELESKINGS—AcquiredDKeaton Egerby from Floridafora2013fifth-round draft pick.Assigned DAndrewCampbell to Manchester (AHL). DTTAWASENATORS— ReassignedDMarkBorowiecki toBingham ton(AHL) SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer COLORADO RAPIDSRe-signed MF Jamie Smith. COLUMBUS CREW—Agreed to termswith MF MatiasSanchez. NEW YORKRED BULLS— Signed MF Ruben IzCuielrio. COLLEGE CASTLETO N STATE—Named John O'Connor men'ssoccercoach. DELAW ARE—Named Tim Weaver as defensive coordinator,SeanDevine offensive coordinator and John Perrypassinggamecoordinator/wide receivers
coach.
FLORIDA INTERNA TIONAL— Named Morgan Turnerassistantfootball coach. MIAMI Named BlakeJamesathletic director, removing the "acting" tagoff histitle. MICHIGAN STATE—NamedRon Burton defensive line coach. OHIO STA TE—Announced cornerbacks coach Kerry Coombswill also coach the team'sspecial teams.
WINTER SPORTS 10 a.m.: Snowboarding, Air and
Style, Innsbruck (taped), ESPN2. Noon:Skiing, alpine world championships (taped), NBC. 2 p.m.:Luge, World Cup, Lake Placid, N.Y.,women (taped), NBCSN.
3 p.m.:Biathlon, world championship, men's pursuit (same-day tape), NBCSN. RUGBY 11 a.m.:Sevens World Series: Las Vegas, NBCSN. 1 p.m.:Sevens World Series: Las Vegas, NBC.
ON THE AIR:RADIO TODAY
Today Boys basketball: Gilchrist atTriad,5:30p.m4Central Christian atSouthWasco County, 3:30p.m.; Prospectat Trinity Lutheran,4p.m. Girls basketball: CrookCountyat LaSale, 6 p.m., Gilchrist atTriad,4pmxCentral ChristianatSouth WascoCounty,2 p.m4ProspectatTrinity Lutheran, 5:30 p.m. Swimming: Bend, Redmond,Summit, Mountain View regionals in Bend at Juniper Swim 8 FitnessCenter,12:15p.mzSisters andRidgeview at regional inAlbany,TBD;Madrasat regional in La Grande, TBD Alpine skiing: OSSA at Mt.Bachelor, GiantSlalom, Ed'sGarden,TBD Nordic skiing: OISRA classic andbiathlon racesat Walt Haring Sno-parknearChemult,11:30a.m. Wrestling: Redmond,Mountain View,Bendand Summit at Regionals in Eugene, TBD; Gilchrist, Cu verat Pre-District in Culver,9a.m.; Madrasat Ridgeview,I p.m.
2 p.m.:Women's college,
6 p.m.: Men'scollege,Penn State at Nebraska, ESPNU. 7 p.m.:Men's college, lllinois State at Creighton, ESPN2.
ON DECK
BASKETBALL 8:30a.m.:W omen'scollege,
11 a.m.:Men's college, St. Joseph's atMassachusetts,
1 p.m.: Men'scollege,Kansasat
COREBOARD
RUGBY 11:30 a.m.:Sevens World Series: Las Vegas, NBCSN.
SUNDAY BASKETBALL 3 p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Orlando Magic, KBND-AM 111 0, KRCO-AM 690.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Colorado at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940, KRCO-AM 690. Listings are the mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis notresponsible for late changes made by TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF HOCKEY Stars beat Ducks inNHLaction
— Trevor Daley andJamie Bennscored powerplay goals, Loui Eriksson added athird-period
behind in third to earn Austria its first medal at
center Greg Oden a two-year contract with a
its home worlds. Julia Mancusowasthe top
team option for a third year after the Feb. 21 trade deadline passes, according to a league source, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the negotiations. The Cavs haveabout $4 million in cap space,
American finisher in eighth place, while Bend's Laurenne Ross took 1 1th place with a time of 2:43.88.
score and the Dallas Stars beat the Anaheim Ducks 3-1 on Friday night in Dallas. Eriksson
gave the Stars somebreathing room when he corralled Alex Goligoski's cross-ice pass and fired a wrist shot past Anaheim goaltender Vik-
tor Fasth with 7:14 remaining. Goligoski, who was ahealthy scratch Wednesday in Edmon-
which they are preserving now for potential
MOTOR SPORTS Wallace calls induction digday
— Rusty Wallace touched on his early days trying to make it as a professional race car
trades. Teamsaround the league don't want to sign Oden until after the trade deadline. Oden has visited with the Boston Celtics and could
meet again with the Cavaliers in the coming weeks, his agent said Friday. His agent, Mike
ton, added two assists for Dallas (6-5-1), which driver, the lessons he learned from NASCAR's earned its third consecutive win. Nick Bonino pioneers and his relentless push to drive for scored for the Ducks (7-2-1), who hadwon four Roger Penske in anenergetic acceptance into
Conley Sr., said last weekOdenhas beento see the Cavaliers a couple of times already,
in a row. It was the first regulation road loss
the Hall of Fame. Then Wallace, winner of 55
capacity.
this season for Anaheim.
races and the 1989 championship, called Fri-
butwas evasive when pressed as to w hat
day night's induction in Charlotte, N.C., "the
WINTER SPORTS
biggest day of my driving career." Wallace was the headliner of the fourth Hall of Fame
SOCCER
class, which included innovative mechanic
TimderS' Dike to undergOSurgery
HOefl-RieSCh WinSWOrld title — Olympic champion Maria Hoefl-Riesch of Germany
and crew chief Leonard Wood, former series champions Buck Bakerand HerbThomas and
— The Portland Timbers announced that
bounced back from a disappointing World Cup season to win the super-combined at the skiing
former car owner Cotton Owens. Wallace and Wood are the only two living members of this
a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee. The 26-year-old striker sustained the injury in
world championships onFriday in Schladming,
year's class.
Bright Dike will have surgery Monday to repair Tuesday's preseasonmatch against Seattle.
Austria. Hoefl-Riesch was fourth after the downhill portion before posting the secondfastest time in the slalom to finish in 2 minutes, 39.92seconds.Sh e beatTina M aze ofSlovenia by 0.46. Former overall champion Nicole Hosp
Dike, who represents Nigeria internationally, saw considerable action in the second half of
CaValierS to Offer Oden COntraCt-
was fastest in the slalom andwasone second
The Cavaliers are expected to offer free-agent
BASKETBALL
last season, scoring five goals in 12games. The Timbers openthe regular season March 3 against New York. — From wire reports
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
PREP ROUNDUP
Bulletin staff report Bend High's J.J. Spitler scored 23 points Friday night, and the host Lava Bears dug out of a couple of holes to claim a 76-64 Intermountain Hybrid boys basketball home victory over Ridgeview. Jack Bowman's nine points helped the Ravens to a 24-18 first-quarter lead, but Bend rallied to go on top 34-32 by halftime. After the break, Ridgeview scored the first nine points of the third quarter — on two 3pointers by Justin Alvarez and another by Tanner O'Neal— to grab a 41-34 lead before the Lava Bears called a timeout. "We got our guys refocused on the defensive end," Bend assistant coach Scott Baker sard. Then the Lava Bearsregained command, overtaking the first-year Ravens to take a 5147 lead into the final period. Bend outscored Ridgeview 25-17 in the fourth quarter to win going away. Spitler's game-high point total included three 3-point baskets. Connor Scott scored 17 points for the winners, and David Larson added 15. Larson had a team-best eight rebounds for the Lava Bears, Jaylin Robinson had six rebounds, and Wyatt Beaumarchais was credited with four steals. Bowman finished with 15 points to lead the Ravens, who also got 11 points each from Coleman Aamodt and George Mendazona. Both teams play at home on Tuesday night: Bend (8-11 overall) entertains Crook County, while Ridgeview (4-17) takes on Summit. In other Friday action: BOYS BASKETBALL Mountain View.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 C rook County.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Ments Haugen led four Cougars in doubledigit scoring, finishing with 13 points to go along with six assists in Mountain View's Intermountain Hybrid victory. Grant Lannin recorded 12 points and six rebounds for the host Cougars, who used a 22-9 third quarter to turn a six-point halftime lead into a 19-point advantage heading into the fourth. Mitch Modin and Matt Logan added 10 points apiece for Mountain View (16-3 overall). Crook County
The Cougars held a 22-15 halftime advantage but poured in 12 in the third quarter to build lead. "We just played really good defense all night," Mountain View coach Steve Riper said. "It was a complete game for us." Megan McCadden scored 14 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead Mountain View (14-5 overall), while Emma Platner added 11 and Rhiannon Alexander chippedin 10.Kimmer Severance scored ll points and grabbed 17 rebounds to lead the Cowgirls, who fell to 9-10 overall. Crook County plays at La Salle in Milwaukie today. Mountain View hosts Redmond on Tuesday. B end.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 R idgeview.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 REDMOND — Mekayla Isaak scored a game-high 12 points to lead a balanced Lava Bears scoring effort in an Intermountain Hybrid win. Marissa Hayes was also in double figures with 10 points, and Heidi Froelich chipped in nine points for Bend, which improved to 14-5 overall. The Lava Bears held a 14-4 advantage after one quarter and a 24-7 lead at halftime. Chloe Ross scored a team-best six points for the Ravens, who fell to 1-20 overall. Hosanna Wilder and Kendal Durre added five points apiece. On Tuesday, Ridgeview travels to Summit to take on the Storm, while Bend is scheduled to face Crook County in Prineville. M adras.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 M olalla ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 MOLALLA — In what coach Mike Osborne called"her best game of the season," Teneasha Adams scored a game-high 21 points and contributed three rebounds and three steals to lead Madras to victory. The Buffs jumped out to a 15-4 advantage after the first quarter and led 29-11 at the intermission. With the win, they improved to 11-10 overall and 5-2 in the Tri-Valley Conference. Despite being doubleteamed and suffering from what Osborne described as flu-like symptoms, Mariah Stacona scored nine points and dished out nine assists. Inez Jones added eight points and six rebounds, and K i ana A dams had seven points and five rebounds for Madras, which hosts TVC leader La Salle of Milwaukie on (7-13) was led by Troy Benton's game-high 14 Tuesday. points and Jacob Mahurin's 11 points. Moun- E lmira.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 tain View visits Redmond High on Tuesday, L a Pine..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 the same day Crook County travels to Bend LA PINE — Trailing just 35-27 after three High. quarters, the Hawks gave up 22 points in a Elmira.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 foul-plagued final period and fell to the FalLa Pine ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 cons. Katie Mickel led La Pine with 16 points, LA PINE — Elmira's five-point offensive and Holli Glenn was also in double figures trip with 2:30 to play thwarted a La Pine with 11 points. Makenzie Huddleston added comeback attempt i n a S k y -Em L eague eight points and 10 rebounds for the Hawks, showdown. The Hawks had whittled an 11- who fell to 6-15 overall and 2-6 in Sky-Em point deficit to start the fourth quarter down League play. In its final home contest of to four points. But the Falcons hit a 3-pointer the year, La Pine hosts Junction City on and a foul was called separately from the Tuesday. scoring play. Elmira stretched the lead to nine J unction City..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 after hitting two free throws. La Pine (10-12 S isters .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 overall, 4-4 Sky-Em) tallied 20 steals, but that JUNCTION CITY — T h e O u tlaws rewas offset by Elmira shooting 28 of 54 from bounded from a two-point first quarter to get the field. The Hawks hit 21 of 45 field goals, to within one at the half, but Junction City, but converted just two of 13 3-point attempts. undefeated in the Sky-Em League, staved off Cameron Kraft and Josh Ramirez each Sisters en route to the conference win. Taylor scored 11 points for La Pine, and Sam Wieber Nieri led the Outlaws with a game-high 16 scored 10 points to go along with eight assists points, and Cassidy Edwards finished with and six steals. La Pine hosts Junction City on nine. Sisters (5-15 overall, 3-4 Sky-Em), which Tuesday. saw its three-game winning streak snapped, M olalla ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 travels to Cottage Grove on Tuesday. M adras ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1 T rinity Lutheran ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 MADRAS — Cold shooting doomed the G ilchrist... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 White Buffaloes in their matchup with TriGILCHRIST — The Saints picked up their Valley Conference co-leader Molalla. "We fourth straight win and moved into fourth missed some free throws (12 out of 27 at- place in the Mountain Valley League thanks tempts), some shots around the basket," said in part to a game-high 17 points and four asMadras coach Allen Hair. "You can't shoot 29 sists by Katie Murphy. Abbey Carpenter percent (17 for 59 from the field) and expect to added 10 points and four blocks, as Trinity Luwin against a quality opponent." Molalla, led theran (12-9 overall, 7-6 MVL) pulled to withby the 29 points of Ryan Potter, avenged its in a game of third-place Butte Falls with three only previous league defeat, a 54-46 home loss contests remaining in the season. Ashley to Madras three weeks earlier. Jered Pichette James poured in 14 points for the Grizzlies, scored 18 points to lead the White Buffaloes, who fell to 7-11 overall and 5-8 in league play. and Jhaylen Yeahquo had 16 points and 16 Both teams return to action today, with Trinrebounds forMadras. The Buffs (13-8 overall, ity Lutheran hosting Prospect and Gilchrist 4-3 TVC) play at the league's other co-leader, visiting Triad in Klamath Falls. La Salle of Milwaukie, on Tuesday. l one.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 Junction City..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 C entral Christian ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 S isters .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 1 REDMOND — D esi D uke and K aylin JUNCTION CITY — Junction City scored McAfee led the Tigers with 12 points apiece, 15 of its 39 points in the fourth quarter and but it was not enough to lift Central ChrisSisters could not get its offense going in a Sky- tian to a Big Sky League victory. The Tigers Em League road loss.Justin Harrer scored (3-17 overall, 1-11 BSL) played the Cardinals 10 points to lead the Outlaws. Sisters (5-14 to a 12-12 score in the first quarter before overall, 2-6 Sky-Em) visits Cottage Grove on Ione started pulling away. Central Christian Tuesday. concludes its season at South Wasco County Gilchrist... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 today. Trinity Lutheran.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 T riad ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 GILCHRIST — The Grizzlies improved to N orth Lake...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 10-9 overall and 7-6 in the Mountain Valley SILVER LAKE — Flu-plagued North Lake League with a 30-point win against the visit- struggled to keep up in the Mountain Valley ing Saints. Gilchrist's Brendon Wolf led all League contest. Noelle Fine scored 10 points scorers with 14 points, while Hunter Nelson to lead the host Cowgirls (3-14 overall, 1-12 and Tucker Boone chipped in with 13 and MVL), who play at Rogue Valley Adventist 10 points, respectively. Nate Carpenter and tonight. Shu Akiyama paced Trinity Lutheran (1-18 WRESTLING overall, 0-12 MVL) with eight points apiece. Redmond leads at districts Gilchrist travels to Klamath Falls to take on EUGENE — Redmond took the early lead Triad today. The Saints return today as well at the two-day Class 5A Special District 4 rewith a home contest against Prospect. gional meet at Churchill High. The Panthers l one.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 scored 194.5 points, giving them a healthy lead C entral Christian ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 over second-place Eagle Point (152 points). REDMOND — Isaac Bryant led the Tigers Mountain View is in fourth place with 110.5 with 10 points in a Big Sky League loss, while points, while Summit is eighth (46 points), and Steven Sibley scored four points. Central Bend is 10th (43 points) in the 11-team field. Christian (1-17 overall, 0-13 BSL) wraps up its Redmond leads all teams with 17 wrestlers in season at South Wasco County today. the championship semifinal brackets, MounGIRLS BASKETBALL tain View has eight wrestlers still vying for Mountain View.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 regional titles, while Summit advanced three Crook County..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 to the semifinals. The top four placers from PRINEVILLE — Mountain View outscored each weight class will earn berths to the 5A Crook County 27-14 in the second half to state championship tournament at Memorial cruise to an Intermountain Hybrid road win. Coliseum in Portland in two weeks.
C3
Redmond Continued from C1 Trevor Genz added 13 points for Redmond, and Mason Rodby contributed nine points and eight rebounds despite being in foul trouble for most of the night. The Panthers led 28-16 at halftime before the Storm sprang to life after the break and n a r rowed R e dmond's lead to five points, 30-25, midway through the third quarter. Dahlen took over from that point, though, and scored 17 points in the game's final 12 minutes. "We definitely wanted to take care of business," Dahlen said about the league victory. "They're a good team, especially with Austin (Peters) back
(from injury). In that third quarter we took a lot of really quick looks, but we calmed down and our second and third options (on offense) wore them down. Ahead 42-34 at the start of the fourth quarter, Redmond outscored Summit 17-12 during the final eight minutes to remain undefeated in 2013. The Panthers' last defeat was a 61-39 loss to Class 6A South Medford on Dec. 28. "We've been in that situation before and it seems like we're getting better at it," Redmond coach Jon Corbett said about his team's play in close games. "At the start of the year we'd take leads and make them smaller. Now we're making
them bigger." Cade Cattell hit four 3-pointers en route to a team-high 16 points for the Storm. Peters, who was in his second game back from a kneeinjury,added 11 points, and Nick Moyer battled through illness and chipped in nine points.
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Summit's Cade Cattell (10) shoots over a Redmond defender to score during the third quarter at Redmond High on Friday night. " I was pleased with t h e way we came back in the second half," said Frazier, whose squad is back in Redmond on Tuesday at Ridgeview. "We just expended too much energy getting it to (five points). We didn't have anything left after that." Using a 2-3 zone for much of the game, with Dahlen, the 6-7 Rodby and the 6-4 Genz anchoringthebase ofthe defense, the Panthers contested almost every shot in the paint on the rare occasions when the Storm were lucky enough to even get
the ball down low. Redmond converted 15 of 20 free throws Friday night w hile Summit was just four of eight from the foul line. "I'm not a zone guy," lamented Corbett, whose team can wrap up the IMC title on Tuesday with a home victory over Mountain View, "but when you've got those three back there, and guys like Derek Brown and Nate Powell up top ... it's a great tool to have." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbulletin.com.
PREP SCOREBOARD Girls basketball Friday's results Class 5A IntermountainConference REDMOND (44) Chantel Daniis18,Current9, Beigum8,Wilson8 BakerzTotals187NA44. sUMMIT(48I — Emily Hase noehrl 13,Char9, Heinly 8,Cuniff 6,Trejo3, Dugast 3, Edwards2, Cai. Nichols 2,Car.Nichols 2, Manley.Totals 1415-25 48. Redmond 1 317 7 7 — 4 4 Summit 13 9 14 12 — 48 Three-pointgoals — Redmond Wilson;Summit: Heinly,Trejo, Dugast.
Intermountain Hybrid MOUNTAIN VIEW(49) —MeganMcCadden14, Platner11,Aexander10, Waldrup6, Reeves4, Bailey 3, Johnson 1,Farnsworth, Warren, Cant, McCarlhy. Totals 18 11-3349. CROOK COUNTY(29) Kimmer Severance11, ovens 10,wood5, undburg 2, Malott 1,Apperson, BentonSmith.Totals 910-1529. Mountai nView 14 8 12 15 — 49 Crook County 10 5 5 9 — 29 Three-pointgoals—Mountain View:Platner,Bailey; CrookCounty: Ovens. BENDI65) — MekaylaIsaak12, Hayes10,Froelich 9,McClay8, Crook6,Burnham4,Howard4,Evert 3, Maloiiey 2,Jackson2, Kramer2, Matox 2, Wheeler 1, LundyTotals 278-1765. RIDGEVIEW(20) — ChloeRoss6, H. Wilder5, Durre 5,D.Wilder 2, Hidalgo2, Whitt, Russell,Martin, Wilcox,Stroup.Totals 7 3-3 20. Bend 14 10 16 25 — 65 4 3 4 9 — 20 Ridgeview Three-pointgoals Bend:Evert;Ridgeview:Durre. Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference
MADRAS(49) —TeneashaAdams21,Stacona9, Jones8, K.Adams7, J Adams2,Suppah2, Esquivel, Sloan Totals 186-849. MOLALLA (34) — Skilings 11, Hagler6, Rieskamp6, partlow5, Hendrickson 4, petiNaz Totals12 10-18 34. Madras Molalla
15 14 7 13 — 49 4 7 11 12 — 34
Three-poingoal t s— Madras: Adams 4, Stacona; Mola la:none. Sky-EmLeague ELMIRAI57) — Ingram20,sink 12,Keslind 11, Lay 4,Robbins4, Messman2, Palmer 2, Heitzman2, Culbertson.TotaIs 19 16-2757. LA plNE(38) — Kat>eM>cke 16, Glenn0, Foreman 8,Huddleston3, Haigler, Pierce,Smith, Conklin. Totals 1113-NA38. Elmira 13 14 8 22 — 57 La Pine 10 3 14 11 — 38 Three-pointgoals — Elmira: Ingram4; La Pine: Mickel,Glenn,Foreman. SISTERS(33) — TaylorNieri 16, Edwards9, Pettersoii 6,Rowe2, Henson, Mann, Spear. Totals 9 14-21 33. JUNCTIONCITY(38) — ChristinaPuderbaugh 12, Bowers8,Gambee7, Slaeker6, Straiibe 3,Nord2, Bolton,DevoIak,Norris, Day.Totals1410-21 38. Sisters 2 13 8 10 — 33 JunctionCity 10 6 10 1 2 — 38 Three-poingoal t s— Sisters:Nieri; JunctionCity: None
Craveiis Totals 2115-20 59. Summit 11 5 18 12 — 46 Redmond 16 12 14 17 — 59
Three-poingoal t s— Summit: Catell 4, Ritchey2; Redmond:Dahlen, Genz. Intermountain Hybrid CROOKCOUNTY(48) Troy Beiiton14, Ma hiirin11,Dean6 Bartels 5, Kessi 5, Dees4,Lee2,Cooper1, Rutz, Washechek, Sohch. Totals1413-2448. MOUNTAINVIEW(69) — MentsHaugeii 13, Lannin12, Modin10, Logan10,Carroll 7, Webb6, Roth 3,Corrigan2, Johnson 2, Siefken2, Wilcox2, Haney,Whitsett, Hjelm, Kiirzynowski.Totals 24 1522 69. C rook County 10 8 9 21 — 4 8 Mountain View 1 01 4 22 23 — 69
Three-pointgoals — CrookCounty:Benton3, Mahurin 3, Kessi;MountainView:Haiigen2, Web b
2,Logan z
RIDGEVIEW (64) — Jack Bowman15,Aamodt 11, Mendazona 0, Alvarez 8, 0'Neal 7, Rolms 6, Johnson3, Stiles2, Albrecht I, Stanton.Totals 21 14-22 64. BEND(76) —J.J. Spit er23,Scott17, Larson15, Beaumarchai6, s Parsons6, Johnson4, Robinson 3, Bicker 2, VanaseIi. Totals 24 24-38 76. Ridgeview 24 8 15 17 — 64 Bend 18 16 17 25 — 76 Three-poingoal t s— R<dgeview:Bowman2, Alvarez 2,Aamodt2, O'Neal, Mendazona; Bend: Spiler 3, Larson. Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference M0LALLA (60I — RyanPotter 29, Hagaman14, Marqiiardt 7,Hull 6,Green4, Lushenko, Ramos, Burke. Totals 2019-21 60. MADRAS (51) — JeredPichette18, Yeahqu016, Haugen 8,Spino3, Wolte 3,T.Smith 3,Fine,Sullivan Totals 1t 15-27 51. Molalla 15 12 15 18 — 60 Madras 9 12 15 15 — 51 Three-poingoal t s— Molala Marquardt; Madras: Pichette,T.Smith.
Sky-EmLeague ELMIRA(68) — MikahReed17, TravisBoggs17, JessepFay17, Curtis 6,Admire 5 Messmen4, H>ghberger2,Gabica,Upton, Bryant.Totals 287-968. LA PINE(59) — Cameron Kraft11, JoshRamirez 11, Wieber10,Boeii9, Parsons8,Gacke6,A.Ramirez 4, Syres,Tumsplenty. Totals 21 15-22 59. Elmira 16 12 22 18 — 68 La Pine 8 14 17 20 — 59 Three-poingoal t s—Elmira. Fay2,Boggs2,Reed, La Pine:Kraft,J. Ramrez. SISTERS(31) — Justin Harrer10 Adams6, C. Moore 6,H. Moore5, I.ullaff 2, Gil 2 Totals 13 3-7 31.
JUNGTI0NGITYI39) Taylor coats13, cota 10, walker6, vanRas 3, Galt 3, osbum3, seitz z
Totals 917-25 39. Sisters 6 9 5 1 1 — 31 J unctionCity 3 13 8 15 — 3 9 Three-poingoal t s—Sisters: Hair,H. Moore,Junction City:Coats2, Cota, Osburn. Class1A Mountain Valley League
TRINITYLUTHERANI29) — Natecarpenter 8,
Shu Akiyama 8, Diinn 3, Law2, Kruger2, D. Knaiiss 2, Olano 2,N>hei 1, C. Knauss 1, Atnip. Totals 10 9-30 29. GILCHRIST (59) — BrendonWolf14, Nelson13, Booiie10, Link 6, Koch5, Getchell 3, Bernabe2,Wible 2, D. Lowel2, l t Lowell. Totals 247-13 59. T rinity Lutheran 4 5 7 13 — 2 9 Gilchrist 21 15 20 3 — 59 Three-point goals — tr<n<tyLutheran: None; Gilchrist:Nelson3, Gechel.
Big SkyLeague 10NE (76) Evan Rietmann22, K.Haguewood 14,Jobes14,B.Hagiiewood0, Neal5,patton4,King 2, Doherty2, Peterson 2, Snyder,Aquiar,Juarez. Totals 32 4-5 76. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN(19) — IsaacBryant10, sibley 4,stewart3, Eells z poole,Koo,Kriise, Roberts, Davis Totals 8 3-1119. lone 28 23 8 17 — 76 C entralChristian 0 2 1 3 4 — 19 Three-poingoa t s—lone:K.Haguewood2, Jobes 2, B Hagiiewood2, Rietmann2. Central Christian: None.
Nordic skiing Oregon HighSchool Nordic At HoodooNight Race Thursday's results
Girls Team scores— Summit6,Bend 29,SouthEugene 41 (with ghost),Redmond45 (with ghost), Crescent Valley46, St. Mary'sAcademy48, North Eugene 50, Corvallis73. Individual (top10) — 1, Emily Hyde,S,13:03.7. 2, Emma Su,S, 13:13.z 3, Dlivia Moehl,S, 13:18.3. 4, AnneJarvis, S, 13:41.1. 5, PhaceliaCramer, SE, 13:57.5. 6,JesicaAas, R, 14:43.7. 7, HelenCutting, NE, 15:17.t B Siena Brody-Heine, B, 15:17.4. 9, Ashley Bruce, B,15:18.3. 10,Samantha Scholz, R, 15;29.9. Boys Teamscores— Bend9 Summ>t14,Redmond 48, Corvallis57,CrescentValley59.
Individual Itop 10) — 1, casey shannon,
S, 11:10.8. 2, PeterSchwarz, B, 11:17.5. 3, Steven Dougherty B u346 4 Jackwidmer B 11397 5 TeddyWidmer,B, 11:40.4. 6, ZebediahMilslagle, S, 11:41.z 7, SkylaKenna, I S,11:43.3. 8, RyanSmallwood, s, 11:438. 9,NicoGiannoses, s, 0:588 10,
Mathew Hecker, s,12:Ozt
15?H ANN; :VERSARY SALE
Class1A Mountain Valley League TRINITY LUTHERAN (50I — KatieMiirphy17, Carpenter12, Eidler10, Sample4, Martin 3, Clift 2,
spencer z Totals 234-7 50. GILCHRIST(28) — AshleyJames14, Krohnke 6, Longbotham 4, C.James2, Shuey2, Archer,Lowell, JohnsonTotals 132-8 28.
Trinity Lutheran 1 0 1 3 15 12 — 50 Gilchrist 6 9 6 7 — 28 Three-point goals None.
Big SkyLeague 10NEI60) — shadowKendrick20, Havorsen15, Thompson12, Flynn4,Taylor3, E.Holland2,Hasbell 2, Jiiarez 2,R.Holland. Totals2213-15 60. CENTRALCHRISTIAN(33) Desi Duke12, McAfee12,i annay5, Stealey 4, Allen, A. Brunoe,S. Briinoe.TotaIs 10 10-3033. lone 12 9 25 14 — 60
CentralChristian 1 2 0 1 1 10 — 33 Three-pointgoals—lone: Halvorsen, Taylor, Kendrick. Central Christian: Duke,McAfee,Stealey.
Boys basketball
15-80% tjFF
Friday's results Class 5A IntermountainConference SUMMIT (46) — CadeCattell 16, Peters 11, Moyer 9,Ritchey6,Lucas,Rasmussen2,Mullen,Higlin, Menetee. Totals184-846. REDMOND(59) — Matt Dahlen28, Genz13, Rodby 9,Thomas4, Powell 2, Bordges2 Brown1,
541.3III.61 88 0~W -:'NIUSTtuiL WIIV4150
C4 TH E BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
NBA ROUNDUP
8 azers can't stopHar en as Rockets roll tovictory The Associated Press HOUSTON — James Harden put on an All-Star performance just before the real thing comes to Houston. Harden had 35 points and 11 assists, Chandler Parsons scored 20 and the Rockets beat the Portland Trail Blazers 118103 on Friday night. Harden went 13 for 16 from the field and four of five from 3-point range, a near-perfect night in the last game at the Toyota Center before it plays host to th e N BA's A ll-Star weekend. Acquired by Houston in a stunning trade with Oklahoma City just before the season, Harden was chosen as a reservefor the West squad, making h i s f i r s t A l l - Star team. "I'm just focused on rallying these guys together, every single game," Harden said. "If I'm
leading and showing my work ethic, they'll follow." L aMarcus A l d ridge, a n other All-Star reserve for the West, scored 31 points and grabbed 11 rebounds for Portland. The Blazers had won the previous two meetings this season in overtime, rallying from double-digit deficits in both. Not this time. Houston preserved a comfortable lead for most of the second half, and Harden finished off Portland with a fadeaway jumper from the wing with just under 4 minutes remaining. In other games on Friday: Heat..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
Clippers........ . . . . . . . . . ..89 MIAMI — L eBron James scored 30 points in another efficient performance, Dwyane Wade added 20 and Miami dominated the m i ddle two quarters on the way to an easy win over the Los Angeles
AM)tf/
— Kevin Durant scored 21 points, Thabo Sefolosha had a season-high 18 and Oklahoma City rode a g i gantic thirdquarter run to a victory over Phoenix. G rizzlies.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 9 W arriors.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 3 MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Marc G asol scored six of h i s 2 0 points down the stretch to help Memphis beat Golden State. Pistons.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
Spurs ......... . . . . . . . . . ..109
Pat Sullivan /The Associated Press
Portland Trail Blazers' Nicolas Batum (88) tries to shoot over Houston Rockets' Chandler Parsons (25) in the first half of Friday night's game in Houston.
A UBURN H I L LS , M i c h . — Greg Monroe had26 points and 16 rebounds as Detroit snapped San A ntonio's 11game winning streak with a victory over the short-handed Spurs. Raptors..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Pacers.......... . . . . . . . . . ..98
INDIANAPOLIS — Rudy Gay scored 17of his 23 points Clippers. in the fourth quarter and overB ulls... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 3 time, rallying Toronto past J azz..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 9 weary Indiana. SALT LAKE CITY — CarW izards ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 9 los Boozer scored 19 points, N ets..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 i ncluding 11 straight in t h e WASHINGTON — Washfourth quarter, and Chicago ington held Brooklyn w ithclosed out a six-game road trip out a field goal for nearly 9 with a victory over Utah. minutes during the first half, Lakers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 withstood a second-half slump B obcats ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 and held on for its latest win CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Kobe over a team near the top of the Bryant shrugged off a score- standings. less first half to finish with 20 Hornets..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 points, eight assists and seven Hawks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 rebounds and Lo s A n geles ATLANTA Greivis overcame a 20-point second- Vasquez had hisfirst career half deficit to beat Charlotte. triple-double and Eric Gordon Knicks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 scored 27 points, leading New T imberwolves..... . . . . . . . . . 94 Orleans over Atlanta to give M INNEAPOLIS — C a r - the last-place Hornets a rare melo Anthony had 36 points winning streak. and nine rebounds, scoring 12 Cavaliers... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 points down the stretch to rally Magic ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 New York over Minnesota. CLEVELAND Kyrie Thunder.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 Irving scored 24 points and S uns... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 Cleveland sent Orlando to its O KLAH OM A CITY 12th straight loss.
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
Knicks 100, Timberwolves 94
NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATIDN All Times PST
Eastern Conference d-Miami d-New York d-Indiana Chicago Brooklyn Atlanta Boston Milwaukee Philadelphia Detroit Toronto Cleveland Washington Orlando Charlotte
W L 33 14 32 16 31 26 3D 2D 29 21 27 22 26 23 25 23 21 27 19 32 16 32 16 34
14 35 14 36
Portland LA. Lakers
Dallas Minnesota NewOrleans Sacramen to Phoenix d-divisionleader
667 1r/t
6DB 4 6DD 4r/t 5BD Br/t 551 7
531 6 521 6'/~ 436 12'/~ 373 16 36D 16'/z 32D 16'/~ 266 20 2BD 2gt/t
11 36
224 23
W L 39 12 36 12 35 17 32 16 31 16 3D 26 26 23 26 24 25 25 24 27 21 26 16 29 17 33 17 33 17 34
Pct GB 765
Western Conference
d-SanAntonio d-Dklahoma City d-L.A.Clippers Denver Memphis GoldenState Utah Houston
Pct GB 762
76D r/t 673 4'/t 64D 6r/t
633 7 6DD 6'/t
549 11 536 1'I'/t 5DD 13'/t
471 15 429 17 363 19 34D 2tr/t 34D 21t/t
333 22
Friday's Games L.A. Lakers1DD, Charlotte 93 Toronto106,Indiana96, DT Washington 69, Brooklyn74 NewDrleans111,Atlanta10D Cleveland119,Drlando166 Detroit119,SanAntonio169 Houston116,Portland163 Memphis99,GoldenState 93 Newyork1DD,Minnesota94 Oklahoma City127, Phoenix96 Miami111, LA Clippers 69 Chicago 93, Utah69
Today's Games Denverat Cleveand,4:3Do.m.
NEWYORK(100)
Shumpert6-2D-D0,Anthony13-26 6-936, Chandler 2-3 1-4 5, Kidd2-5 2-2 7, Fetton4-11 2-2 11, Smith 6-141-115,Stoudemire5-7 t-t 11, Novak4-9 1-1 11,Thomas23604, Prigioni 61 DD D.Totals 38-81 16-20 100.
MINNESOTA (94) Gelabale 0-1 D-D0,Wriliams6-173-4 19, Pekovic 6-19 4-516,Rubio6-14 5-916, Ridnour9-15 2-226, Cunningham 3-72-3 6, Shved3-1D2-3 6, Barea2-6 1-1 5,StiemsmaD-DD-D6,JohnsonD-DO-DD.Totals 37-80 19-27 94. New York 25 27 18 30 — 100 Minnesota 23 22 31 18 — 94
Grizzlies 99, Warriors 93 GOLDEN STATE(93) Barnes2-6 2-4 6, Lee10-166-6 26, Bogut3-3 1-2 7, Curry11-226-6 32,Thompson4-14 D-D9, JeffersonD-DD-DD, Jenkins D-DD-2 D, Biedrins D-1 D-D D,Green2-4 D-D4, Landry 2-3D-D4, Bazemore 2-4D-D 5,EzetiD-D D-D D.Totals 36-75 15-20 93. MEMPHIS(99) Prince3-12D-D6, Randolph4-13 6-816, Gasol 9142-2 26,Conley2-72 2 7, Allen 7-6 2-417, Bayless 4123414,Arthur246 04, Davis1-21-23, Daye 4 61 112 Totals 36-7819-23 99. Goldenstate 24 3 220 17 — 93 Memphis 32 31 14 22 — 99
Thunder 127, Suns 96 PHOENIX (96) TuckerD-3D-D0, Scota3-9D-D6, Gortat 1-2D-D 2, Dragic6-151-1 19,Dudley1-3 D-D3, Brown2-7 1-45, Morris3-91-1 7,Beasey1D-162-225, D'Neal 5-6 2-2 12, Marshall 2-5 D-D5, Telfair 2-3 4-5 6, Johnson1-2 D-D2, Zeter 1-3D-D2. Totals 39-83 11-15 96. OKLAHOMA CITY(127) Durant5-117-721, Ibaka3-6 2-2 9 Perkins 6-9 1-217, Westbrook6-14 0-217, Sefolosha7-11D-D 16, Martin5-103-416, Jackson1-2D-D2, Collison 2-4D-D4 Liggins1-3O-D3,Thabeet2-30-D4,Jones 3-50-66,Maynor3-36-1 6,Drton2-40-64. Totals 50-87 13-18 127. Phoenix 27 23 20 26 — 96 OklahomaCity 3 32 2 36 36 — 127
Charlotte atPhiladelphia, 5 O.m.
GoldenStateat Dallas, 5:30p.m. Detroit atMilwaukee,5:3Dp.m. Utah atSacramento, 7p.m. Sunday'sGames L.A. ClippersatNewYork, lga.m. L.A. Lakers at Miami,12:3Dp.m. Minnesotaat Memphis, 3p.m. Denverat Boston,3p.m. NewDrleansatToronto, 3p.m. Port andat Drando,3p.m. Oklahoma City at Phoenix,5 p.m. SanAntonioatBrooklyn, 5p.m. Houstonat Sacramento, 6p.m.
Summaries Friday's Games
Rockets 118, Blazers 103 PORTLAND (103)
Batum7-12 6 624, Aldridge14-23 3-531, Hickson 6-11D-D12, Lilard 7-132-316, Matthews1-9002, LeonardD-31-21, N.Smith2-72-2 6, Claver2-6 D-D 5,Babbitt1-3 D-D3, BartonD-11-21, Freeland D-DD-D0.Totals 40-88 15-20 103.
HOUSTON (118) Parsons6-14D-D2D,Patterson 6-110-616, Asik 3-9 3-4 9,Lin6-1D2-416, Harden13-165-6 35,Aldrich 3-3D-D6, DouglasD-DD-DD, Morris 2-4O-D 5, Delfino 2-7D-D5, AndersonD-DD-DD, Beverey 0-2 2-2 2,G.Smith2-2 O-D4, Motiejunas D-1D-DD. Totals 47-79 12-16 118. Portland 28 25 27 23 — 103 Houston 34 28 33 23 — 118 3-PointGoals Portland B26(Batum4 6, Lilard 2-5, Babbitt 1-3, Claver1-3, BartonD-l, Matthews 0-6), Houston12-26(Harden4-5, Parsons4-6, Lin 2-3, Morris 1-1, Deifino 1-5, Motiejunas6-1, Patterson D-l, BeverleyD-2). FouledDut—None. Rebounds —Portland 45 (Aldridge 11), Houston44 (Asik13). Assis— ts Portland 21 (Lilard 6), Houston 27 (Harden 11). Total Fouls—Portland 12, Houston 19. Technical— s Houston delay of game, Houston defensivethreesecond.A—15,655 (16,023).
Raptors100, Pacers 98(OT) TORONTO (100)
Gay9255-623,A.Johnson7120D14,Gray12 D-2 2,Lowry1-4D-D2, DeRozan7-17 7-9 22,)/atanciunas6-1D2-214, AndersonD-1D-D0, Bargnani 710 D-D 14,Ross1-5 D-D3, Lucas3-1DD-D6. Totals 42-96 14-19 100. INDIANA(98) George6-195-626, West11-26 8-1030, Hibbert 3-9 D-D6, Hill 3-6 2-49, Stephenson4-111-211, T.Hansbrough1-1 1-23, D.Johnson1-4 1-23, Mahinmi 3-46-06 Green D-1D-DD,Augustin1-11-24. Totals 35-7819-28 98. 26 19 20 26 10 — 100 Toronto Indiana 26 25 21 18 8 — 98
Cavaliers119, Magic 108 ORLANDO (108)
Harkless 4 5 11 9, Nicholson 913 3 5 21, Vucevic 12-191-125, Nelson5-16 1-1 15, Afflalo 9-17 3-3 23,Moore1-6D-D2, D'Quinn 2-6 1-26, D.Jone s0-1D-DD,McRoberts3-4D-DB.Totals4586 10-13 108. CLEVELAND(119) Gee2-82-2 6, Thompson 7-0 2-2 16, Zeller DD 7-10 7, Irving 9-175-7 24, Waiters6-1D3-415, Livingston3-42-2 6, Speights3-1312-1218, Miles 3 4 D D 6Walton 1 2D-D3, Ellington 5-111-214. TotaIs 39-80 34-41 119. Orlando 24 32 24 28 — 108 Cleveland 24 32 29 34 — 119
Hornets 111, Hawks 100 NEWORLEANS(111) Aminu 0-1O-D0, Davis 4-11 D-D6, Lopez6-12 1-6 17,1/asquez7-15 4-521, Gordon16-19 6-627, Anderson7-111-219, Rivers1-5D-D2, Roberts 2-3 D-D5,Ja.smith4-5 D-D 6,Mason 2-4 D-D4,Henry
Snedeker,Potter battle at Pebble Beach The Associated Press PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Brandt Snedeker went into this weekend at Pebble Beach with another chance to win, this time without
GOLF ROUNDUP Mickelson, going after a record-tying fifth
golf's biggest stars in his way. win in the event, was easing his way into conSnedeker played bogey-free at tough Spy- tention until he made three bogeys in a fourglass Hill on Friday for a 4-under 68, giving him a share of the lead with Ted Potter Jr. in the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Potter three-putted his final hole at Monterey Peninsula for a 67. Hunter Mahan was among those one shot behind. With one more round before everyone has played all three courses in the rotation, the leaderboard was a big traffic jam. Three dozen players were within five shots of the lead. Snedeker, who was at 8-under 134, felt he was at an advantage because he goes to Pebble Beach for the final two rounds. And there's one other edge for his psyche — Tiger Woods isn't playing, and defending champion Phil Mickelson is six shots behind. "Keep running into guys who are or who are going to be in the Hall of Fame," Snedeker said at the start of the week.
hole stretch along the ocean at Spyglass Hill for a 71. In other Friday events: Langer, Pernice tied for Champions lead BOCA RATON, Fla. — Bernhard Langer and Tom PerniceJr.each shot 6-under 66totie for the first-round lead at the Allianz Championship. Defending champion Corey Pavin, Roger Chapman, Fred Funk, Scott Simpson and two players making their Champions Tour debuts — Rocco Mediate and Bart Bryant — werea shot back after 67s.
Fisher Jr., Sterne top Johannesburg leaderboard JOHANNESBURG — Trevor Fisher Jr. shot a 9-under 62 and Richard Sterne had a 65 to share the lead after the second round of the JoburgOpen.George Coetzee (64)was three shots back, and two-time winner Charl Schwartzel (65) trailed the leaders by five strokes.
GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomes contributions to ner/blinddraw,129.3, DanBroadley/Jerry Votf/Gary its weekly local golf results listings and Jackson/PeterBrown,133.4 (tie), RonWolfe/Don events calendar. Clearly legible items Wyatt/AllanFatco/BobHocker,134; JoePerry/Roger should be faxed to the sports department, Palmer /LeeRoehlke/RayDuPuis,1346,RandyMy541-385-0831,emailed to sports@benders/JohnBoynton/ChrisWiliams/BobReed,136. bulletin.com, or mailed to P.D. Box 6020; Bend, DR 97708.
MEADOW LAKES
Club Results CROOKEDRIVERRANCH Men's Golf Club, Feb. 5
Stroke Play A Flight (0-14 handicaps) — Gross: 1, Mac Kitgo,76. 2, Paul Nemitz,79. 3, GaryOlds, 61. 4, WylieHarrell, 62. Net: 1 (tie), Terry Papen, 70; DennisGlender,7D;Ron Fitzpatrick, 76.4, Herb Parker,71. B Flight (15 andhigher) — Gross: 1(tie), Jerry Harris,63;TerryHunter,B3 3, CalvinMobley, 64. 4,JoeGriffin, 66 Net:1, CarlUhrich,64.2(tie), Len Johnson,67; EddieMaroney,67. 4 (tie), Dale Monroe,69; HerbKoth, 69. DESERTPEAKS
ThursdayMen's Club, Jan. 31 Net ThrowDut OneHole 1, )/at Paterson,60. 2, DonGish, 62. 3,Gerry
Ellis, 64.
SundayGroupPlay, Feb.3 Stroke Play Gross:1, JimWyzard, 71.2(tie), GaryHopson, 75; FranciscoMorales, 75.Net: 1, SpudMi ler, 67 2, Al Dupont,66.3 (tie), BobRingering, 71; Denny Story, 71;MikeGardner, 71;RichVigil, 71. KP — FredBiackman. LD — FranciscoMorales. EAGLECREST
Men's Club, Feb. 6 at ChallengeCourse Two LowNet, Three LowNet, Etc. 1(tie), RaySchadt/Jim Kety/Ken Wettman/Steve Gould, 129; TimSwope /Peter D'Reiliy/Matt Con-
Central Oregon Winter Series, Feb. 1 Triple Sfx 1st Flight —Gross:1, CharieRice/Tim Cecil, 63. 2 (tie), Louis Bennett/ReynoidsMaxwell, 67; RogerEichorn/DonDrrell, 67. 4,Scott Barton/Ryan Smith, 66. 5,ZachLampert/Jeff Brown,7D.6 (tie), Ron Seals/HarryPaik,72; DanDstrin/Ed Carson, 72. Net: 1, RosieCook/MarkMatthews,62.5. 2, Bob Stir ing/TimBooher, 64. 3 (tie), SeanRemer/ Rigo Montes,66;JasonPigot/Mac Kilgo, 66;Pat D'Gorman/LesBryan, 66. 6, Vert Steppe/Dennis Neveras,66.5. 2nd Flight — Gross: 1, DeweySpringer) GeorgeLienkaemper, 7D.2 (tie), TimJohnson/Tom Wimberly, 73 TomMacDonald/Jim MacDonald, 73. 4, BrettMorelock/CraigJohannesen,77. 5(tie), GrantKemp/KimBradshaw,79; MarkHoward/Steve Wienke,79;Bill Boos/Neil Pedersen, 79. Net: 1, HowardZangari/Dennis Brockman,57. 2, Matt Burgess/Mark Garcia, 61.3(tie), DaveBarnhouse/Steve Spangler, 635; Dennis Glender/ChuckGlender, 63.5. 5, PaulAdams/JohnMitchell, 64.5. 6, J.W. Miller/MikeClose,66. KPs —D-12Handicaps: MarkGarcia, No.1D;13
and higher:JayWiggins, No.1. Skins — Gross:Eichorn/Drrell, No.3; Zangari/ Brockman,No. 14 Net: Burgess/Garcia, No.1D; Larsen/Jakse,No. 11; Springer/Ltenkam eper, No. 12; Zangari/Brockman, No.14; Pigot/Kilgo, No.15; Ryder/ArcheyNo.16. Super BowlScramble, Feb.2 Scramble Gross: 1, Charlie Rice/TimCeci/Noah l.emas/Br ianStephens,56.2,DaveBarnhouse/Steve Spangter/TimMcCab e/Jared George,61. 3, t/ert Steppe/DennisNevaras/MikeHumphrey/KentWickham, 63Net: 1, CurtPeterson/Tyrell Peterson/Bart
Jones/RogerEverett, 54.2(tie), TerryLussier/Jamie Dahlke/Wiil Piland/MartyHeard,55; Troy York/Jeremyyork/BrandonYork/Terry Lucas,55 4 (tie), Clay Smith/Kim Bradshaw /Britton Coffer/Mark Jones, 56; RosieCook/Bruce Burson/Chuck Swenson/Tom Hatch,56.
KPs —JonWilber, No.4, DeweySpringer, No.
17.
Long Putt —KimBradshaw,No 9 Gross Skins — ClaySmith/KimBradshaw/Britton Coffer/MarkJones,No.13; CurtPeterson/Tyreil Peterson/Bart Jones/RogerEverett, No.14.
Hole-In-One Report Feb. 2 CROOKEDRIVERRANCH Patrick Fahey,Portland No. 4............135 yards........... 6-iron
Calendar CLINICSDRCLASSES Saturdays —Seriesof tune-ungolf clinics for ladiesatCentral OregonIndoorGolf insoutheast Bend. Bob Garza,director of instructionat LostTracksGolf Club inBend,wil teachshort game(Feb. 2), irons(Feb. 9), hybridsandfairwaywoods (Feb. 16), anddrivers (Feb.23).Eachclinic beginsat1p.m.andcostis $65to attendali fourlessons. Formoreinformationorto register: Anna Robbins atskisrar@bendbroadband.com. TOURNAMENTS Feb. 22 —CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at CrookedRiver Ranch. Aggregateshamble begins with an 11a.m.shotgun. Two-oerson teamswith no more thanoneprofessional allowedper team.Cost is $30 for professionals$50 , for amateurs. Cost includes grossand netskins competitions. Cart costsextra.Ail playersmust signupbynoononthe Thursdaybefore theevent. Toregister or formoreinformation,call PatHuffer, headproat CrookedRiver Ranch, at541-923-6343or email him atcrrpat@ crookedriverranch.com .
Academy D-DD-D0. Totals 46-8612-18111. ATLANTA (100) Tolliver 2-40-05, JoSmith9-192-223, Horford 4-11 4-6 12,Teague7-0 3-4 21, Korver6-142-2 17, Harris1-2 D-D 2,Jenkins 2-42-3 6, Pachuiia 2-4 2-2 6, Johnson2-5 2-4 6. Totals 35-74 1723 100. New Orleans 26 2 5 29 32 — 111 Atlanta 26 29 16 29 — 100
Pistons 119, Spurs109 SAN ANTONIO (109) Leonard6-132-316, Diaw2-7D-D4, Splitter 46 2-31D,Parker10-1611-12 31,Green5-6 6-015, Bonner3-60-D 6, Neat 3-72-29, Blair D-45-65, Jackson 3-9349, DeColo 1-2 DD2,Mils 0-10D 0, Baynes D-DD-DD. Totals 37-8125-30109.
DETROIT (119) Singter 6-111-1 14, Maxiell 3-71-1 7, Monroe 9-16 6-1D 26, Calderon3-6D-D7, Knight1D-21 2-3 24, Vittanuevay-152 221,Bynum4-61-1 9,Stuckey 4-7 2-211. TotaIs 46-89 17-20119. San Antonio 23 2 926 31 — 109 Detroit 31 34 30 24 — 119
Lakers 100, Bobcats 93 L.A. LAKERS (100)
WorldPeace5-141-111, Clark7-142-317, Howard474612,Nash6123317,Bryant6156 620, Jamison 3-62-4 9,Meeks5-7 D-D14,BlakeD-5 D-D D Totals 36-80 20-25100. CHARLOTTE (93) Kidd-Gilchrist 1-6 2-4 4, Mullens6-16 3-3 20, Biyombo4-5 D-D6, Walker 7-153-416, Henderson 6-174-6 20,Sessions5-121-212, Gordon4-13D-D 9, Taylor1-2D-D2,HaywoodD-2D-D0. Totals 3889 13-19 93. L.A. Lakers 20 21 28 31 — 100 Charlotte 30 23 25 16 — 93
Wizards 89, Nets 74 BROOKLYN (T4) Wallace2-5 1-2 5, Evans3-73-6 9, Lopez3-11 7-913, Williams7-263 42D,Johnson6-121-1 14, Blatche2-91-6 5,Humphries1-2 D-O2, Bogans 1-3 D-D3,BrooksD-3D-D D,Watson D-3 D-DD,Teletovic D-1D-D D,TaylorD-O 3-4 3.Totals 25-76 19-32 74. WASHINGTON (89) Webster6-91-216, Nene9-13 2-2 2D,Dkafor 36 D-D 6,Wall6-173-315, Temple1-4 D-D2, Price 2-5 D-D 6,Beal1-5O-D3, Seraphin 1-22-2 4, Ariza4-9 DD 9 Singleton27226 Vesety11 DD 2.Totals 36-80 10-11 89. Brooklyn 20 11 22 21 — 74 Washington 21 30 14 24 — 89
Heat111, Clippers 89 L.A. CLIPPERS (89) Butler3-61-1 6, Griffin 5-73-413, Jordan7-11 3-717, Paul1-56-03, Bittups2-52-27 Bledsoe2-6 2-2 7, Crawford6-150-613, DdomD-3D-DD,Barnes 4-9 D-D10,Hoilins 2-21-1 5, Green2-5 D-D4, Turiaf D-l 2-2 2.Totals 34-77 14-19 89. MIAMI (111) Battier 4-5D-D12,James9-11 6-113D,Hasem 33DD6, Chalmers593-316, Wade 6-16462D, Cole 2-5D-D4, Andersen1-4 6-6 6, Miler D-4D-D D, Lewis3-7 3-4 10, AnthonyD-DO-DD, Jones 13 D-D 3,VarnadoD-1D-DD. Totals 36-68 24-32 111. L.A. Clippers Miami
Bulls 93, Jazz89 CHICAGO (93) Deng6-143-4 15, Boozer6-157-6 19,Noah3-6 6-6 12, Robinson7-17D-D16, Hamilton 3-7D-D6, Gibson7-9D-D14,Belinelii 4-6 D-D9,TeagueD-DD-D D, ButlerD-l D D0.Totals 36 7916 18 93.
UTAH(89) Ma Williams1-6 0-2 3, Mi Isan 6-14 5-5 21, Jefferson 15-22 2-5 32, Tinsley6-2 0-0 0, Foye 4-11 4-514, Favors3-6D-D6, Carroll 2-5 D-D4, Burks 2-6 D-D 5, Kanter2-4 D-D4. Totals 37-78 11-17 89. Chicago 31 27 11 24 — 93 utah 27 23 19 20 — 89
the processof creating the Junior Golf Performance Academy, a nonprofit aimed at providContinued from C1 ing the same services to golfers of less-affluThe academy building rests just east of ent families. "The idea is to make this a talent hotbed," Tetherow's clubhouse and has two expansive roll-up doors that open up to Tetherow's vast says Lewis, who says a junior package costs practice range. $100 for a month and includes four lesson ses"It's a picture frame out there, even this sions and coursetime. "We want to develop time of year," Lewis says as he looks out onto junior golfers, we want to drive kids to colthe mountain-framed range from an open bay lege scholarships, and we want to do it for not dool; much money." A hybrid of sorts, Tetherow Academy douThe very future of the game depends on the bles as a gym run by Adam Huycke, a physi- development on new golfers, says van der Velcal trainer who is certified in golf fitness for de. And the Tetherow Academy can be used both adults and children by the Titleist Perfor- as a tool for that development. "The two segments of golf that are growmance Institute. The reason is simple: The academy's aim is ing are women's golf and kids' golf," says van to be all-encompassing, and to be accessible to der Velde. "So I am really big on both of those as many golfers as possible. things, and I am glad that Mike sees things "It's a pretty dynamic and well-rounded the same way. It's what I think is going to keep academy," says Chris van der Velde, Teth- the game alive in the next 25 or 30 years." erow's managing partner and a former EuroVan der Velde — who has been involved pean tour pro. "It's going to be for beginners with Tetherow in numerous capacities since all the way to some tour professionals. So its inception — was once Tetherow's director that's kind of cool." of instruction before he formed a partnership In a way, Lewis and Tetherow — especially to buy Tetherow in 2009, a year after the club van der Velde, who has spent years as an in- opened. structor and works with the Dutch national For him, the academy represents a move golf team and European pros — are a perfect toward his initial vision. The academy is the marriage. first of several planned additions to begin this A view shared by both Lewis and van der year, including an events center and TethVelde is a need to create avenues for kids to be erow's first hotel rooms. "We've beenbusy the last three years putintroduced to golf and then develop their skills over the long term. ting out fires and staying alive," van der Velde Tetherow has already started a formal ju- says. "Now we're moving forward and that nior golf program combining instruction and feels great. It was a pretty awesome feeling to fitness — the program drew nearly 100 kids have that thing open last weekend." last summer. And Huycke and Lewis are in — Reporter: 541-617-7868,zhallC<bendbufletin.com.
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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
"'"' + 1,517.93
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NorthwestStocks Spotlight on retailers The Commerce Department reports retail sales data for January on Wednesday. Economists expect that sales improved slightly last month, excluding autos. The latest tally of 20 major U.S. retailers by the International Council of Shopping Centers showed that revenue at stores open at least a year rose 5.1 percent. That's the highest reading since August, when the figure rose 6 percent.
NAME
ALK 31.29 — A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 6 . 72 — BBSI 15.68 — BA 66. 8 2 CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 CascadeCp CASC 42.86 Columbia Sporlswear COLM 45.37 CostcoWholesale C OST 81.98 ~ Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 ~ FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 ~ Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 ~ Home Federal Bncp ID HOME 8.67 ~ 1 Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~ Retail sales Keycorp K EY 6 . 80 Seasonally adjusted monthly Kroger Co KR 2098 — percent change Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 LA Pacific L PX 7 , 66 — MDU Resources MDU 19.59 Mentor Graphics MENT 12,85 — Microsoft Corp M SFT 26.26 ~ 0.8 Nike Inc 8 NKE 4 2.55 ~ NordstromInc JWN 46.27 ~ Nwst NatGas NWN 41.01 ~ OfficeMax Inc OMX 4. 10 ~ Q.3 est PaccarInc PCAR 35,21 — 0.2 ~ 0 . 2 % Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 Plum Creek PCL 35.43 — • - Q . t• Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 — Safeway Inc SWY 14.73 Schnitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 A S 0 N D J Sherwin Wms SHW 96,96 — source: Factset Stancorp Fncl S FG 2874 ~ StarbucksCp S BUX 43.04 ~ Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30
Factory output U.S. factory production grew in November and December as manufacturers made more autos, electronics and other goods. The back-to-back gains suggested manufacturing could be picking up after struggling through most of 2012. Factory output is the
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McDonald's(MCD ) Friday's close:$94.87
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McDonald's has been struggling amid intensifying competition and challenging economic conditions around the world. Late last year, the company ousted the head of its U.S. business after the sales figure dropped for the first time in nearly a decade. CEO Don Thompson, who took the top spot this summer, has vowed to add business by emphasizing value while planning a series of new limited-time offers to attract customers.
52-WEEK RANGE
Price-earnings ratio (trailing 12 months): 18
Market value: $95.7 billion
a n n ualized
SOURCE: FactSet
SelectedMutualFunds
+38 . 1 +2 3 . 8 «C +22 . 0 00 +21 . 8 «C +2 1 . 3 470 +1 9 . 6 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +19 .5 +16 . 8 O o Fund target represents weighted +16 . 5 average of stock holdings +1 3 . 5 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings
CHG %CHG -1.58 -24.3 -1.42 -20.1 -2.32 -19.5 -4.55 -18.5 -3.54 -17.6
Foreign Markets
CATEGORY Large Blend MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * * * y y ASSETS $3,493 million EXP RATIO 1.07% MANAGER William Nygren SINCE 1996-11-01 RETURNS3-MO +14.9
YTD +8.0 LAST CHG %CHG 1- YR +19.5 +48.45 +1.35 3,649.50 3-YR ANNL +17.3 London 6,263.93 $ -35.51 $ . 5 7 5-YR-ANNL +9.2 Frankfurt + 61.29 + . 8 1 7,652.14 Hong Kong 23,215.16 + 38.16 + . 1 6 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico + 70.34 + . 1 6 Discovery Communications Inc 45,089.55 Milan 16,630.50 +229.94 +1.40 Tokyo -203.91 -1.80 Capital One Financial Corp 11,153.16 Stockholm 1,175.05 + 9.34 + . 8 0 TE Connectivity Ltd Sydney + 33.63 + . 6 8 JPMorgan Chase & Co 4,989.40 Zurich 7,395.97 + 58.92 + . 80 TRW Automotive Holdings Corp
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The world's biggest hamburger chain says a key sales figure dropped again in January. McDonald's is facing continuing weakness in Japan and sales in China were hurt by a food scare and the timing of a holiday. Global sales at restaurants open at least 13 months dropped 1.9 percent for the month. The figure is a key metric because it strips out the volatility of newly opened andclosed locations. After years of outperforming rivals,
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PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 21.26 +.08 $ 4.2 +12.8 $-12.6 +5.7 A A A 1 2.8 6 - 0 5 +4 0 +5 8 +3 8 D D E 54.33 +.21 + 3.0 +12.0 +10.6 +3.3 A B C 38.69 +.27 + 4.0 +14.6 +10.5 +2.3 8 C C 42.61 +.27 + 3.4 +11.7 +8.5 +1.6 8 B A FnlnvA m 43.0 9 + .24 + 5.7 +14.6 +13.7 +4.0 8 C C GrthAmA m 36. 32 +.30 + 5.7 +15.5 +13.1 +3.9 A D D IncAmerA m 18 . 65 +.06 $ 3.3 +11.8 $-12.4 $5.3 A A 8 InvCoAmA m 31 .73 +.21 + 5.2 +13.3 +11.9 +3.6 C D D NewPerspA m 32.84 +.19 $ 5.1 +15.5 $-12.5 $4.3 A B 8 WAMutlnvA m 32.70 +.12 + 4.8 +12.7 +14.5 +4.4 D B 8 Dodge &Cox Inc o me 1 3.86 .. . 0.0 +5 . 6 + 6.2 +6.7 8 C 8 IntlStk 36.17 +.29 + 4 .4 + 14.2 + 9.2 +1.6 A B A Stock 130.73 +.94 + 7 .2 + 19.2 +14.0 +3.1 A B C Fidelity Contra x 81.25 - . 15 + 5 . 7 + 13.7 +15.2 +5.7 8 B 8 GrowCo 98.02 + .62 + 5 .1 + 10.4 +17.4 +7.4 D A A LowPriStk d 41 . 84 +.19 + 5 .9 + 13.7 +16.0 +7.6 C C 8 Fidelity Spartan 50 0ldxAdvtg 5 3 . 84 +.30 + 6.6 +15.0 +15.2 +5.0 B A B FrankTemp-Franklinlncome A m 2.2 8 ... +2. 8 + 1 1.9 +11.5 +5.8 A A 8 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 18.5 3 +.10 +6 .5 + 11.3 +13.7 +4.4 D C C RisDivB m 16.7 9 +.10 + 6 .4 + 10.3 +12.7 +3.5 E D D RisDivC m 16.7 1 +.10 + 6 .4 + 10.5 +12.8 +3.7 E D D SmMidValA m 35.54 +.25 + 9 .7 + 11.6 +12.1 +1.3 E E E SmMidValB m 29.98 +.21 + 9 .5 + 10.7 +11.2 +0.5 E E E PIMCO TotRetA m 11.1 9 . .. -0.3 + 7 .0 + 6 .6 +7.1 A B A T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 28.17 +.11 + 6 .5 + 15.9 +14.5 +4.4 8 B 8 GrowStk 39.77 +.34 +5 .3 + 13.4+ 16.2 +6.4 8 A 8 44.72 +.14 $.8.5 +27.0 $.23.3$.13.2 A A A HealthSci Vanguard 500Adml 140.10 +.79 +6.6 +15.0 +15.2 +5.0 8 A 8 500lnv 140.09 +.79 +6.6 +14.9 +15.1 +4.9 8 A 8 Capop 36.90 +.27 +9.8 +18.6 +12.7 +6.1 A D 8 Eqlnc 25.70 +.11 +6.4 +15.8 +17.3 +6.1 8 A A GNMAAdml 10.84 -.02 -0.4 $-1.7 +5.0 +5.6 C A A MulntAdml 14.41 +0.5 $-4.3 +5.7 $5.2 8 8 8 STGradeAd 10.83 +0.2 +3.6 +3.6 +3.8 8 B 8 StratgcEq 23.32 +.15 +8.7 +15.5 +19.0 +5.8 8 A C -0.6 $3.1 +5.3 $5.4 D D C TotBdAdml 11.00 Totlntl 15.39 +.08 $2.7 +9.0 +8.0 +0.2 D C 8 TotStlAdm 38.15 +.23 +7.0 +14.8 +15.8 +5.6 8 A A TotStldx 38.13 +.22 +7.0 +14.7 $-15.7 $5.5 8 A A USGro 22.78 +.19 $7.1 +13.8 +14.9 +6.2 8 B 8 Welltn 35.24 +.11 $4.1 +11.6 +11.7 +6.1 A A A WelltnAdm 60.87 +.20 $4.1 +11.7 +11.8 +6.2 A A A
Longtime manager Bill Nygren FUND added a couple new co-managers FAMILY American Funds BalA m at this highly rated fund in late Most Active BondA m January. Win Murray and Tony CaplncBuA m VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG Coniaris are replacing the CpWldGrlA m 1204144 11.76 —.08 recently retired Henry Berghoef. EurPacGrA m
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most important component of industrial production. The Federal Reserve is expected to report Friday that industrial production increased slightly in January.
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LNKD
Close:$150.48L26.39 or 21.3% The online professional-networking service reported results for the fourth quarter that exceeded Wall Street analysts' projections. $200
AOL
AOL Close:$33.72%2.31 or 7.4% The Internet company said its quarterly revenue grew for the first time in eight years, helped by strength in worldwide advertising. $40
150
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100
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$18.80 ~
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Moody's
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Stocks rose Friday, and the Standard & Poor's 500 index climbed to its highest level since November 2007. Stronger-than-expected reports on corporate earnings drove the gains. Linkedln reported higher revenue and earnings than financial analysts expected for the seventh straight quarter. AOL also reported stronger revenue, and stocks in the technology industry had some of the market's biggest gains. The Standard & Poor's 500 index climbed to a weekly gain for the sixth straight time, and it is now within 3 percent of its record high set in October 2007. The Dow Jones industrial average fell modestly over the week.
14,000
1,400
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14,400
1,500
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$31.43
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1,550
concerns over sugary drinks appears to be working. The world's biggest beverage maker is trying to sell more of its drinks in emerging markets. It's also taking steps to evolve its stable of products in the U.S. The strategy helped lift Coca-Cola's sales in the third quarter. Investors find out on Tuesday whether sales continued to improve in the fourth quarter.
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MCO Activision ATVI Close:$43.37 V-3.62 or -7.7% Close: $13.41 A1.35 or 11.2% The ratings agency's fourth-quarter The video game publisher posted net income rose, but shares fell on sharply higher earnings and revenue expectations it will be the target of in the fourth quarter, surpassing Wall the Justice Department. Street's expectations. $60 $14 50
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$99.88~
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$10.48 ~
F $19.94
Vol.:16.2m (5.8x avg.) PE: 1 5 .7 Vol.:54.6m (6.0x avg.) PE: 1 7 .4 Mkt. Cap:$9.67 b Yiel d : 1. 8% Mkt. Cap:$14.92 b Yiel d : 1. 3%
Apollo Global Mgmt.
APO
Close:$22.69%0.54 or 2.4% The private equity firm said that it generated more profit during the fourth quarter as the value of its in-
vestments rose.
RadioShack RSH Close:$3.42 %0.31 or 10.0% The electronics retailer said that Walgreenexecutive Joseph Magnacca will become its chief executive officer on Monday. $4
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F $29.98
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Coinstar
CSTR Close:$48.47 V-3.63 or -7.0% The owner of the Redbox DVD kiosks said that its fourth-quarter profit fell 27 percent due to poor performance at its new ventures. $55 50
Neurocrine Bio. NBIX Close: $10.84 %0.61 or 6.0% The drug developer's fourth-quarter earnings rose on more revenue from elagolix, its experimental treatment for endometriosis pain. $12 10
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SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 1.95 percent Friday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.
. 07 .07 . 1 0 .11 .14 .14
2 -year T-note . 25 .25 5 -year T-note . 83 .83 10-year T-note 1.95 1.96
30-year T-bond 3.16 3.17
BONDS
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NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
Barclays Long T-Bdldx 2.75 2.75 ... W L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.02 4.02 . . . L Barclays USAggregate 1.89 1.90 -0.01 W L PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.01 5.97 +0.04 L L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.88 3.90 -0.02 W L YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.11 1.10 +0.01 W L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2 .81 2.82 -0.01 W L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities Heating oil rose as blizzard warnings and cold temperatures enveloped New York, Boston and much of the Northeast. Crude oil dipped modestly, while copper rose.
L W L W L L L
2.66 4.60 2.09 7.27 3.91 1.08 3 3.8
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 95.72 95.83 - 0.11 + 4 . 3 Ethanol (gal) 2.41 2.41 -0.12 + 10.0 Heating Oil (gal) 3.24 3.20 + 1.22 + 6 . 4 -2.4 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.27 3.29 -0.40 Unleaded Gas(gal) 3.06 3.00 + 1.96 + 8 . 8 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1666.00 1670.40 31.43 31.39 1714.70 1722.30 3.75 3.72 751.10 750.05
%CH. %YTD -0.26 -0.5 + 0.12 + 4 . 2 -0.44 +11.4 + 0.90 + 3 . 1 + 0.14 + 6 . 9
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -2.7 1.26 1.28 -0.86 1.41 1.40 +0.53 -1.9 7.09 Corn (bu) 7.11 - 0.25 + 1 . 5 Cotton (Ib) 0.83 0.81 +1.56 +10.0 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 387.80 382.80 + 1.31 + 3 . 7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.21 1.21 - 0.45 + 3 . 9 Soybeans (bu) 14.53 14.87 - 2.30 + 2 . 4 Wheat(bu) 7.56 -2.8 7.56 +0.03 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
Foreign Exchange The yen halted its fall against the dollar after the Japanese finance minister reportedly said that its decline may have been too fast. The yen had been falling steadily since autumn.
h5N4 QG
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5797 +.0084 +.53% 1 .5814 Canadian Dollar 1.00 3 1 + .0048 +.48% . 9 9 60 USD per Euro 1.3363 —.0038 —.28% 1.3254 —.69 —.74% 77.01 Japanese Yen 92.83 Mexican Peso 12. 7 337 —.0167 —.13% 12.7066 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6897 —.0084 —.23% 3.7158 Norwegian Krone 5.5400 +.0208 +.38% 5.7581 South African Rand 8. 8982 —. 0177 —. 20% 7.5723 6.4487 +.0359 +.56% 6.6512 Swedish Krona 0009 —. 10% Swiss Franc . 91 72 —. .9131 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9696 -.0028 -.29% . 9 265 Chinese Yuan 6.2364 -.0006 -.01% 6.2966 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7555 +.0004 +.01% 7 .7536 Indian Rupee 53.596 +.370 +.69% 4 9 .150 Singapore Dollar 1.2383 -.0012 -.10% 1.2465 South Korean Won 1092.80 $-2.50 $-.23% 1117.98 Taiwan Dollar 29.74 + .09 +.30% 29 . 48
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
BRIEFING
Sources: Airlines close to merger DALLAS — The boards of American Air-
lines parent AMRCorp. and USAirways could decide early next week whether to merge their
two companiesand create an airline rivaling the world's biggest.
People close tothe matter said Friday that the AMR board
is scheduled tomeet Monday, and directors of
US Airways plannedto meet over theweekend or Monday.Theysay that under the deal tak-
ing final shape,AMR shareholders would own slightly more than
• . ra e By Don Lee Tribune Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — In an
encouraging sign for the American economy, the U.S. trade deficit fell sharply in December as exports grew at a solid pace while imports of oil and many other goods shrank from the prior month, the Commerce Department reported Friday. The big drop in the deficit, to $38.5 billion in December from $48.6 billion in November, indicates that the trade picture was not as bleak at year's end as previously thought. And that should push up the fourth-quarter change
u re ri
in gross domestic product into positive territory from the 0.1 percent decline in the government's initial estimate. For all of 2012, America's trade deficit of goods and servicesdipped 3.5percentto $540.4 billion — reversing two straight years of double-digit percentage gains in the deficit. U.S. exports rose 4.5 percent last year from 2011, with strong increases particularly of cars and auto parts, and capital goods such as airplanes, electronics and engines.Imports grew 3 percent last year, mostly behind shipments of a wide range of
capital goods.
ene in
What made the big difference last year, though, was that the U.S. imported a lot less commodities: The dollar value of imports of crude oil, natural and liquefied petroleum gases fell by a combined $27 billion from 2011, partly reflecting America's increased
Williamson, chief economist at Markit, a financial information services company. Still, Williamson noted that with China's exports surging in the past two months and some leading European countries showing signs of a pick-up in trade, the data are "starting to confirm the message from the worldwide business surveys that global economic growth is reviving at the start of 2013, assisted by rising trade flows, with the U.S. acting as an important driver of the revival." The U.S. trade deficit of goods and services hit a peak of $753.3 billion in 2006, and
production of energy. Analysts were surprised by the big fall in December's trade deficit; on average, they were expecting the deficit to narrow just a little from November's number, to about $46 billion. Some of the slide in December imports could suggest weakening American consumer demand, said Chris
70 percent of thenew company's stock, but US Airways leaderDoug Parker would beCEO.
Postal
Dell shareholder opposes buyout
Service posts loss
Dell Inc.'s bold bid to
go private mayleadto a proxy war after thepersonal computer maker's largest institutional shareholder said Friday it
plans to opposethe deal. Dell shares traded up
Qt 1.3B
nearly1 percent to close at $ i 3.63 —putting the stock on par with the price offeredbythe
By Ron Nixon
private-equity deal sponsored byfounderand
New York Times News Service
CEO Michael Dell.
Southeastern Asset Management, which
owns 8.5 percent of Dell's sharesoutstanding, senta letter Friday
saying: "Wearewriting to express ourextreme disappointment regard-
ing the proposed goprivate transaction, which we believegrossly undervalues thecompany." — From wire reports Joe Khne / The Bulletin
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Oregon alcohol server permit training: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; RoundTable Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining.com. MONDAY • Are You Smarter Than the Experts?: CAI-CORC annual kickoff event; CAICORCprovides educational opportunities throughout the year for homeowner association volunteers and managers; registration was required byThursday; free; 5:30 p.m.; TheOxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www.caioregon.org. • Downtown Urban Renewal Advisory Committee: Overview of the renewal plan and project; free; 6 p.m.; Redmond City Hall, 716 S.W. EvergreenAve.; 541 -923-7710. TUESDAY • Howto Take Control of Your Time andGet More Out of Life!: Online webinar with strategies and solutions to boost productivity and efficiency.; hosted by SIMPLIFY; registration required; $65; 8-9:30a.m.; Camp Sherman; 503-2608714 or info@sImplifynw. com. • Experience China info session: DianaHaffner will talk about the Bend Chamber of Commerce trip to China. Shewill discuss the itinerary, business conference in Beijing, required documentation, registration, details of the trip and answer questions; register at http:I/bendchamber.org/ chamber-events/chinatrip; free; 4-5 p.m.; Bend Park 8 Recreation District Office, Community Room, 799 S.W. Columbia St.; 54 I-389-7275. To find freeincome tax preparation help, visit the Events Calendar at www. bendbuitettn.comlevents.
For the complete calendar, pickup Sunday's t3ulietin or visit bendbulletin.comlbizeal
it fell to $379.2 billion in 2009 when the economy was still in recession, before starting to rise again, Commerce Department figures show. Last year's narrowing of the trade deficit, to $540.4 billion, was thanks to sharply lower imports of oil. The American deficit in goods trading with OPEC countries fell to $98.9 billion last year from $126.9 billion in 2011. Meanwhile, the U.S. shortfall in trade with China edged higher, to $315 billion from $295.4 billion in 2011, while the deficit with Europe also ticked up, to $125.9 billion in 2012 from $119.7 billion the previous year.
Nicolle Timm, executive director and founder of Central Oregon Locavore, holds some of the products available at the group's new storefront in Bend on Friday.
WASHINGTON — Holiday shipping and the 2012 election helped the Postal Service stem its losses, but the agency's financial woes continued in the first quarter, which ended Dec 31. The Postal Service posted a $1.3 billion loss in the first quarter, compared with a $3.1 billion loss over the same period last year. The agency said the first quarter has traditionally been one of its strongest periods. Total mail volume continued to decline, however. Mail volume was 43.5 billion piecesforthe quarter, accord-
ing to agency officials.
ews ore ron rin s o ca ro ucs o e n By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
Residents have a new place to shop in Bend for locallysourced products with the
opening of Central Oregon Locavore's market. "The ease of access is huge," said Nicolle Timm, the nonprofit's executive director. "I know lots of community members who are committed to local food ... They're driving all over the place to get the food. Now they can just come to one place." Locavore has operated an online market since April 2010. But after receiving requests from the community, Timm decided last spring to open a brick-and-mortar
store. Months of fundraising brought in $10,000 to put towards purchasing a location for Locavore. Timm said the new 3,200square-foot building at 1216 N.E. First St. will operate year-round. It will also serve as a distribution point for online orders and offer event space for local groups to rent. The market opened Jan. 30, and nearly 200 Central Oregon producers have their
products for sale, ranging from Fields Farm and DD Ranch toSara Bella Upcycled and Phat Matt's Brewing
Company. "When we're looking to fill the market, it starts here in Central Oregon, what grows
here ... or what's produced here," she said. "Then we'll move out from there and find the closest sustainable source, and we'll bring that in." In addition to offering consumers a convenient outlet for locally sourced food, Timm said the store lightens the burden for farmers. "This allows them to get their product out there to the community in a way that does not require them to do active marketing, distributing," she said. "They need to be working on the farm ... If we can helpthem by marketing, educating, distributing, having a place they can just bring their product, they can maximize their productions
on the farm and focus on that." Mike Duggan, owner of the DD Ranch, said having his products at Locavore's store will increase his sales and make buying his meat, vegetables and other items easier for customers who don't necessarily want to drive to his ranch in Terrebonne. "We have all this beef out there ready to sell, hogs and lamb ... We sell honey, lots of potatoes and during the season, we do the corn, onions and garlic, carrots and (other) produce," he said. "I bring it to one spot, and it works out real good for me." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
Revenue from first-class mail, which provides the bulk of the revenue for the Postal Service, declined $237 million, or 3.1 percent, from the same period last year, with a decreasein volume of 834 million pieces, or 4.5 percent. Revenue from advertising mail increased $141 million, or 3.1 percent, in the first quarter compared with the same period last year on a volume increase of 783 million pieces, or 3.6 percent. The increase is largely attributable to official election mail and political campaign advertising.
The agency's shipping and packaging business increased by $154 million, or 4.7 percent, over 2012 firstquarter results, fueled by the growth of online shopping and the continuing success of Postal Service marketing campaigns to promote shipping services. The agency also said that it cut its operating costs to $18.9 billion from $20.9 billion over the same period last year, a decrease of 9.8 percent.
PEOPLE ON THE MOVE • Myrna Dow, of High Desert Frameworks! in Bend,won aJudges Award for BestUseof Fabric in the finals of the Professional Picture Framers Association International Framing Competition, held Jan. 27-30 in Las Vegas.This is the secondtime she has received this award. • Stephen Wymer has beennamed Central OregonAreaManager for OnPoint Community Credit Union. Wymer hasmorethan 15years of financial services experiences and was most recently the director of memberbusiness lending and memberbusiness services at Northwest Community Credit Union. He has abachelor's degree in business and economicsfrom OregonState University and is agraduate of Northwest Credit Union Association Hyperion BusinessLending and Pacific Coast BankingSchool. • Clarine Landes, of Bend, has released Simply Missy, anappfor iPad, Android and Kindle. Theebookgame app isdesigned for children ages1-5. • Thomas and Andrea Gray, of
Wymer
G yorgyfalvy
Rup p
Redmond, arenewmembers of the American AngusAssociation. • Robin Gyorgyfalvy was recently elected to theCouncil of Fellows of the American Society of Landscape Architects. Shewas alsoelected chairperson ofthe HighDesert Chapter of ASLAand onthe executive committee of ASLAOregon in Portland. Shehasalso been invited to speak at an international forum onthe development of national forest parks in Changsha,HunanProvince, China. Gyorgyfalvy isthe Deschutes National Forest LandscapeArchitect and Scenic BywaysProgramLeader.She is also a boardmemberfor Bend 2030 and the DeschutesCultural Coalition of the OregonTrust. • Michael Rupp, afinancial consultant at D.A. Davidson & Co.in Bend,
Johnson
DeClerck
has received the2012Bragg Lewis Knutson Community ServiceAward. This is the firm's highest honor and is given annually in recognition of outstanding volunteerism. Ruppisa memberofthe Mt. Bachelor Rotary Club and anadvocate andboard presidentfor Grandma'sHouseof Central Oregon. • Leanne Johnson, of Coldwell Banker Mayfield Realty in Redmond, was the top selling agent for January. • Cec Declerck, of Coldwell Banker Mayfield Realty in Redmond,wasthe top listing agent for January. • Russ White has joined Hunter Properties in Bend asabroker. • Lynn Johns, a broker at Central Oregon Resort Realty, has joined the Women's Council of Realtors Central
White
Wilson
Wettsteln
Oregon Chapter.Johnshasbeena Realtor for eight years. • Janda Pacheco, Superior School's vice president of training, hasjoined the Women'sCouncil of Realtors Central OregonChapter. Pacheco has more than12 years ofexperiencein real estate andheadsthe education committee for WCR. • Mike Wilson, of Hunter Properties in Bend, wasthetop producing agent for January. • Lisa Wettstein has joined Bend Premier RealEstate as abroker. Wettstein previously owned a catering business andwas anoffice manager for a large orthodontic practice in California. • The United Wayof Deschutes County has announcedthe election of11 new
volunteers to its board of directors. Joining the board for athree-year term are: Todd Dunkelberg, Deschutes Public Library; Brenda Finkle, St. Charles Health System; Tyler Friesen, SchmidMalone;Jose Galvan, OnPoint Community Credit Union; Craig Jorgensen, Nativity Lutheran Church; Scot Langton, Deschutes County; Dave Markham, Central Electric Cooperative; Chip Reeves, Bank of theCascades; Summer Sears, SummerSears CPA; Ray Spreier, Mid OregonCredit Union; and Tamara Weber, RobbersonFord. Those serving asecond three-year term are: Jan Even, Smith RockFarm; Cheryl Howard, city of Bend; Dennis Lynn,OSU-Cascades;Greg Pollack, G. Pollack Financial; John Salzer, Sunriver Community Volunteer; Todd Shields, St. Charles Health System and Stan Turel, HelpingYouTax& Accounting. Theboard elected the following officers to serve aone-year term: President John Salzer; First vice-president Corky Senecal; Second vice-president Sean Watt; and Treasurer Lisa Ihander.
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Religious services, D2-3 Volunteer Search, D4
© www.bendbulletin.com/community
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
C
=
SPOTLIGHT
JULIE JOHNSON
Taste somechili andhelp schools A chili cook-off from 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday at the Athletic Club of
Toys don't make the boy M y son has apinktoy. And you know what? This doesn't make him any less of a boy. But the fact that he was hesitant to express his desire for the toy — even though he clearly wanted it — leaves me perplexed and more than a little concerned about what we teach boys about gender. A few weeks ago, my son, who is 7, saw a TV commercial for the toy. The ad — clearly targeted toward tween girls — was for the Password Journal, an electronic, locking journal made by a subsidiary of Mattel. The journal is voice-controlled, requiring a spoken password to unlock.Kids can record their own passwords, as well as alertmessages,
Bend will raise moneyfor the Education Foundation for Bend-LaPine Schools. The event will feature
chili from someof Central Oregon's bestchefs. Tickets, available at the
door, are$10for ages 12and older, $5forages 6-11 andfreefor ages 5 and younger.Bottled water and beer from local donors will be available
for purchase.
Pup Crawl begins Tuesdayin Bend The first installment of The Humane Society of
Central Oregon's second annual PupCrawl, a fundraiser for homeless pets, will be from 4 to 8
p.m.TuesdayatGoodLife King The Kld members, from left, Ricky Ficarelli, David Michael Frank and jose Mostajo stand outside the Broken Top home where they recorded their debut, "Start Something."
him any less of a boy. — Julie Johnson is the features editor at The Bulletin. 541-383-0308, jj ohnson@bendbulletin.com
With the purchase ofa custom pint glass from the Humane Society of
greetings and goodbye messages. I say kids can do these things because even though the toy is meant for girls — it's part of a line called GirlTech — it has appeal to kids of either gender. Who wouldn't want to write their thoughts and ideas in a journal where a nosy older brother couldn't read them? The journal also has a special invisible-ink pen and a light that makes its writing appear. Oh, and a secret compartment at the back for storing little treasures. My son Jack saw the commercial for this item and said to me, his voice dripping with disappointment, "I would want to have that if it wasn't just for girls." It broke my heart a little bit. Here was a sweet kid interested in a cool, creative toy that would encourage him to write and explore his own imagination, and he was afraid of wanting it because it was "for girls." What makes it for girls? For starters, I suppose, its shocking pink color. And its advertising, which features smiling young girls with bouncy pony tails and frilly skirts successfully thwarting brotherly attempts to read their secrets. Other than those arbitrary social constructs, there is nothing "girly" about this toy. Boys write, too. Boys like having control over their secrets, too. Boys also like invisible ink and magic lights and high-tech gadgets. That my son had interpreted the Password Journal as a toy for girls is understandable — everything about the commercial telegraphs that message, and I don't fault the company for marketing it this way. I imagine girls respond enthusiastically to such advertising, and that probably sells a lot of journals. What really saddened me about Jack's reaction is that he saw wanting a girls' toy as something shameful. For all the advancement in the past 40 years toward gender equality and erasing the limitations of rigid traditional gender roles, Jack still got the message that it's inappropriate for boys to like "girl" things. Girls can like traditionally boys' toys — Legos, Hot Wheels, G.I. Joes — despite the fact that they are marketed almost exclusively to boys. But put a pink Password Journal in front a little boy, and he's ashamed to want it. Just a toy? Doesn't matter? I'd believe that, too, if not for the marketing bombarding our children with sexist messages about what it means to be a girl (Cook! Raise babies! Be beautiful!) and what it means to be aboy (Wage war! Build stuff! Be strong!). While girls can outgrow this (women have made inroads in almost every traditional male career field), boys mostly don't (just 6.6 percent of nurses nationwide are m en, as are lessthan 3 percent of preschool and kindergarten teachers). It's OK to be a girl who's into boy things; it's shameful to be a boy who's into girl things. I don't want this gender-shaming to define for my sons what it means to be a boy, or a girl. So the same day Jack told me about the Password Journal, we went to the store and I bought it for him. It's pink. Its password is the name of Jack'sfavorite video game character. He loves it, and it doesn't make
Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, in Bend.
Central Oregon,participants will receive a ticket to fill it with a free bever-
age of their choice. The Pup Crawl contin-
ues from 4-8 p m. onthe following datesat these Bend locations:
Wednesday:Deschutes Brewery Public House, 1044 N.W. Bond St.
Feb.19:Cascade Lakes Brewing Co.,70 S.W. Century Drive.
Feb. 20:10Barrel
• From its Broken Topheadquarters, I(ing TheICidlooks to launchits musical reign
Brewing Co., 1135 N.W. Galveston Ave.
By David Jasper •The Bulletin
Worthy Brewing Co., 495 N.E. Bellevue Ave.
Feb. 21:Thursday,
n September, while their friends back in Los Angeles tended to the everyday matters of their lives, the three members of the power trio King The Kid loaded their gear and quietly left L.A. and drove to Bend. Once here, they spent the fall holed up in the vacation home of singer and bassist David
Contact: www.hsco. org or 541-382-3537.
Make a Valentine's date with a book No date for Valentine's Day? The Deschutes
Michael Frank's parents, where they did anything but keep quiet. The three effectively
Public Librarysystem suggestsagoodbook
turned the house into one large recording studio: drums were set up in the living room, guitar
instead with its"Blind Date with a Book" event
on Thursday.
amplifiers in closets, their computer and other gear in the master bedroom. "It works really well for a studio environment, because the living room's very large," Frank says. "The acousticsare great,and we have the house pretty much wired up with multiple sound booths, so I can isolate guitar amps. And then in the basement we can rehearse." "It's beautiful," guitarist Jose Mostajo says. "From the day we got here, we just had the camera out. Just looking out the balcony, you've got mountains and trees everywhere. In L.A., you forget — you have the beach, but after that, you just have city, city, city." With monkish discipline and a steady diet of cheap food, "We put our nose to the grindstone and wrote, produced andmixed an album by
ourselves of 10 original songs and ... launched our completely independent band, King The Kid, in around two months," they wrote in their initial email to The Bulletin announcing their presence and the release of their debut album, "Start Something." And it's true. With a strong social m edia presence and access to allthe equipment they need to record an album themselves, King the Kid is using 21st-century means to go it alone, without the assistance of a record label. Tomorrow, the three — bassist and lead vocalist Frank, 22; drummer Ricky Ficarelli, 19; and guitarist Mostajo, 23 — will play their first live show as King the Kid at Seattle's
Each local branch will
El Corazon. They are one of several bands on the bill for the all-ages show. Last week, The Bulletin sat down to learn more about the band with
big hair, big pop-punk hooks and big ambitions. Their close quarters have rendered them able to finish each other's sentences, and their music skills — all three are multi-instrumentalists
— make them capable of playing one
another's parts on their small but growing number of songs. Ficarelli, originally from South Florida, says he was a "big band nerd" during his school days. He moved to Los Angeles in 2011 at age 17 to pursue music and finished high school online. SeeKing The Kid/D5
have adisplay of books wrapped inpaper,according to anewsrelease.The front of thebookwill give people ageneral ideaof whatthe bookisabout
(topic, theme,genre, etc.). In keeping with the blind
date theme,patrons won't know what bookthey have until after checkout. The books were hand-
picked bythe library staff and include a wide variety
of topics. Contact: Liz Goodrich, 541-312-1032.
Grants available for public gardens The Central Oregon In-
King The Kid members rehearse a song at their Bend home Wednesday. King The Kld ls, from left, David Michael Frank, 22, on vocals and bass, Ricky Ficarelli, 19, on drums, and jose Mostajo, 23, on guitar.
I
•
tergovernmental Council is offering grants for local
public community gardens in CentralOregon. Grants of up to $2,000 are available. The goal is to strengthen food security in the area. Grant applications are due March 5. The
grants arepart of COIC's Cultivating Local Food, a projectfunded bythe Meyer Memorial Trust. Contact: http://coic2.
org/community-develop ment/food-systems or
t 0[> rrvi
email Katrina Van Dis at
kvandis@coic.org. — From staff reports
Photos by
Andy Tullis The Bulletin
"The acoustics are great, and we have the house pretty much wired up with multiple sound booths, so I can isolate guitar amps. And then in the basement we can rehearse." — David Michael Frank, bassist-singer, King The Kid
Contact us with your ideas Community events: Email event information to events@bendbulletin
.com or clickon "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Story ideas:Email
communitylife©bend bulletin.com.
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
CHICAGO'S PRAETORIUM
RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Ac urc ort e earin im aire
To submit service information or announcementsfor religious organizations, email bulletin© bendbulletin.com or call 54 I-383-0358.
By Lolly Bowean
ANTIOCH CHURCH:Senior Pastor Ken Wytsma; "Lovethe LordYour God with All Your Heart, Mind and Soul"; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; Redux Q-and-A after the service; BendHigh School, 230 N.E.Sixth St., Bend.
Chicago Tribune
CHICAGO — In American Sign Language, there is a finger combination for the word "love." There's also a sign for the word "God." And when M elinda Gerstein beats her hand harshly against the wooden lectern as she's teaching from the Bible, her movement needs no interpretation. When she holds her arms out straight in front of her chest, her palms facing the audience of Praetorium Sign
Pastor Carole Clemons-Clark, left, signs during a worshp service at the Praetorium Sign Language Church in Chicago.
) Pastor Carole Clemons-Clark, right, speaks and signs with Erinie Ray, left, and Katherine Oatis before a service. remains a struggle," VanGilder said. "As many denominational bodies cutbackontheirbudgets, in the wake of lessened giving in a struggling economy, ministries that are supported primarily by special giving efforts or apportioned funds experience a reduction in funding." That could be why, as some churches trim t h eir i n vestment in ministries that accommodate the deaf, Praetorium is growing in membership. The church w a s s t arted in 2005, some years after Clemons-Clark began learn-
"I saw deaf people would come to church, and no one would talk to them," she said. "They weren't involved in ministries. In church, sometimes their view would get blocked. God placed it on my heart to createa place forthem." After becoming ordained as a minister in 2004, ClemonsClark started her church, she said. At first she ministered outdoors — taking her few initial members to parks and street corners to sign, so others would see them. Outside, they would gather in a circle
ing sign language at her
and sign songs and pray.
own South Side church, she said. Once she became good enough, she began volunteering to translate the church services for members who needed it. As she worked and learned more about her deaf and hardof-hearing Christian clients, she realized they didn't feel free to join into the worshiping and they were slightly disconnected from the full Christian experience.
By the t im e t h e c h urch m oved i n doors i n 200 7 , there were deaf and hard-ofhearing ushers, deacons, Sunday school teachers and ministers to lead the services. "The deaf person wants to look at the speaker and understand what they are saying," Clemons-Clark said. "At our church, it's not mandatory that a deaf person sit in front to see the interpreter. If they want to
sit with their friends, they can and still see." Felicia Thomas, 54, learned about the church through word of mouth, she said. She was working as a sign-language interpreter in the church where Praetorium also holds its servicesina separate sanctuary. As the mother of a deaf son, she was looking for p laces where he could connect with otherminority deaf and hard-ofhearingpeople. She also wanted her son, Kyle Jackson, involved in a church where he could have the values she was teaching him reinforced, she said. At Praetorium, she and her son, Kyle, now 18, could attend together, and they didn't have to depend on each other for understanding, since they both sign. Now he's a member of the choir,and he signs Scriptures in church. "He wants to be in control of his world," Thomas said. "He is not ashamed. He wants to
The Rev. Pat Rush, Visitation Church ofKansas City, Mo.: Because there is so much about Jesus's personal l i fe that is untold by the gospels, we refer to this as his "hidden life." Since the earliest times, people have tried to imagine details about that period. Early examples of this are found
in the apocryphal gospels, works that did not make it into the Christian New Testament canon. A first reason for Christians' concern about theories of Jesus being married is that the New Testament Scriptures provide us w i t h a b solutely no evidence of a wife, and we take our Scripture very seriously and want to always defend against adulteration. Similarly, from the Catholic perspective, a second reason is the seriousness with which we take the teaching tradition of our church. Catholics hold as a second sourceforour faith our church's consistent teachings
Teachings are more important The Rev. Duke Tufty, Unity Temple on the Plaza, Kansas City: If Jesus had a w ife, then what? What if they had children? What if there are people of Jesus's bloodline alive today? What if they came forward and claimed the assets of the church? What if people thought since Jesus wasn't celibate, then priests shouldn't have to be celibate? What if by being married,
our panels of religion columnists to Darryl Levings at The Star, f729Grand Blvd., Kansas City MO, 64108. Send email to levingskcstar com.
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Eric Burtness; "The Viewfrom Mt. Nebo," as part of the series "The Life of Moses: Being aLeader Wherever You Are"; Sunday at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.; 1113 Black Butte Blvd., Redmond.
JOURNEY CHURCH: PastorKeith Kirkpatrick; "Finding Redemption in Wreckage," as part of the series "Ruth"; Sunday at 9 a.m. and10:30 a.m; 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend.
AGAPE HARVESTFELLOWSHIP: YouthgroupWe dnesdayat7 p.m .; 52460 Skidgel Road, La Pine.
CONCORDIALUTHERAN MISSION: The Rev. Willis Jenson; "The Central Message of All of Scripture is Christ and Him Crucified for the Sins of All Men," based onLuke9:31; Sunday at 11 a.m.; held at Terrebonne Grange Hall, 828611th St., Terrebonne. ANNUALSHROVETUESDAY COMMUNITY PANCAKESUPPER: Open to the public; donations accepted; 5-7 p.m. Tuesday; St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, 807 E. First St., Prineville; contact 541-447-5813.
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people began to think Jesus was human and not divine? What if? What if? What if? The mind goes into a frenzy. But when we take a deep breath, calm down, and think deeply about what it w ould mean if Jesus were married, the truth slowly rises like the morning sun. We realize that it wouldn't make any difference at all. Jesus' height, weight, physical appearance, marital status and even lineage are simple historical facts that have little importance. What he said; the revelations he pronounced; his inspiring message of hope, peace, love and joy; his direction for living a good life and being a beneficial presence in the world is what matters. If Jesus were married, good for him. I am happy for him. If Jesus were not married, good for him. I am happy for him. Either way, I give heartfelt gratitude for his words of wisdom. — Send your questionsfor one of
GRACEREFORMED PRESBYTERIANCHURCH:Pastor Dan Dillard; "God, Workand Rest," based onGenesis 2:1-3; Sundayat 10:30 a.m.; 62162HambyRoad, Bend.
NEW HOPECHURCH:Pastor Randy Myers; "The Word of Forgiveness," as part of the series "When Grace Speaks"; today at 6 p.m.and Sunday at 9 and10:45 a.m.; 20080 Pinebrook Blvd., Bend.
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through the centuries, consistent teachings beyond Scripture but founded on Scripture and guided by the Holy Spirit. Our church tradition includes no teaching that Jesus was married. A third reason is Jesus' own teaching in Matthew 19:10-12 on the value of celibacy for witnessing to th e K i ngdom of God. Celibacy witnesses to the Kingdom of God's love and justice for all people, not just for a few or for a particular individual. As such, the Christians have consistently considered celi bacy a most appropriate state of life for God's son.
GRACELUTHERANCHURCH AT EAGLE CREST:Pastor Randy VanMehren; "JesusHealsThose W ho Know andReadilyConfessto Being Blind Beggars"; Sundayat 10:30 a.m.; EagleCrest Banquet and Conference Facility,1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond.
NATIVITY LUTHERANCHURCH: Pastor Craig Jorgensen; "Stuck with Jesus," based on Luke9:2836; Sunday at 9a.m. and11 a.m.; Sunday at 6 p.m.; AshWednesday service 7 p.m.Wednesday; 60850 Brosterhous Road,Bend.
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EMMAUS LUTHERANCHURCH: The Rev. David Poovey; "Use the Miracle," based onLuke5:1-11; Sunday at10:30 a.m.; 2175S.W. Salmon Ave., Redmond.
FIRSTUNITED METHODIST CHURCH:The Rev.Thom Larson; "Why Not Stay?," based on Luke 9:28-43; Sundayat 9and11 a.m.; 680 N.W. Bond St., Bend.
he is understood. It can be very lonely in the deaf community. (But) there's nothing broken about them. They are fine the way they are."
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COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH:Pastor RobAnderson; "How DoYou Copewith Mountain Top Experiences?," based onLuke 9:28-36; Sunday at 9a.m. and11 a.m.; 529 N.W.19th St., Redmond.
FIRST PRESBYTERIANCHURCH: PastorJenny Warnerand Ron Werner; "There's Hope for Christianity," as part of the series "A New Resolve for a NewWorld"; Sundayatthe9a.m.,10:45a.m.and 5:01 p.m. services; 230 N.E.Ninth St., Bend.
speak his language, go where
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WESTSIDESOUTH CAMPUS: Pastor Scott McBride; "Signs of Life, Part 2 — Healing the Official's Son"; Sunday at 9 a.m.and10:30 a.m.; 1245 S.E. Third St., Bend.
FATHER'SHOUSECHURCHOF GOD: Pastor Randy Wills; "Followers Forgive," as part of the series, "Are You Crazy"; Sunday at10 a.m.; 61690 Pettigrew Road, Bend.The youthgroup meetsW ednesdayat 7 p.m.
Photos by Anthony Souffle I Chicago Tribune
VOICES OF FAITH
Scriptures are taken seriously
WESTSIDECHURCH:Pastor Steve Mickel; "Signs of Life, Part 2 — Healing the Official's Son"; today at 6:30 p.m. andSunday at 8, 9and 10:45 a.m.; 2051 N.W.Shevlin Park Road, Bend.
EASTMONT CHURCH:Pastor John Lodwick; "Omnipresent," from the series "God Is" based onPsalm 139:7-18 and Matthew 28:20; Sunday at 9 and10:45 a.m.; 62425 Eagle Road, Bend.
3&th Annual
The Kansas City Star
UNITARIANUNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP OFCENTRAL OREGON: The Rev.Alex Holt; "What the Heart Hears in Love"; Sunday at11 a.m.; at the OldStone Church, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend.
COMMUNITY OF CHRIST: Elder Leonard Glenn; "Listen to Jesus," based on Luke9:28-43; Sundayat 11 a.m., following 10:45 a.m. praise singing; 20380 Cooley Road, Bend.
places of worship offer sign language interpreters or even captioning on screens for members who need it. Some have even installed magnetic systems to make sound quality better for worshippers who wear hearing aids. But more rare are churches like P r aetorium, w here the deaf and hard of hearing preach thesermons, teach the classes, sign songs as a choir and serve as ushers, deacons and leaders in the church. At Praetorium, the i nterpreters are there to voice the activities for the hearing members and visitors. "The deaf want to see their language and they want to praise i n t h e i r l a n guage," said Carole Clemons-Clark, t he pastor an d c r eator o f the church. "At Praetorium, they get the service in their language, and they are able to p articipate. They d o n 't have to worry about behaving a certain way, or being misunderstood. There are no statistics on how many deaf-only religious servicesthere are in the country, or i n C h icago, experts said. But there is a growing effort among religious bodies to evangelizeand reach the deaf and hard of hearing, said Kirk VanGilder, a professor of religion at Gallaudet University, a college for the deaf and hard of hearing in Washington, D.C. "In nearly all Christian denominations, funding for deaf and hard-of-hearing ministry
SPRINGS OFLIFEMINISTRIES: Evangelist and Bible teacherEddie Cienda; Wednesdays at7p.m.;The Sound GardenStudio,1279 N.E. Second St., Bend.
BEND CHRISTIANFELLOWSHIP: Pastor Dave Miller; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 4twelve youth group: Wednesday at 7 p.m.; 19831 Rocking Horse Road,Bend.
Language Church of Chicago in a gestureof surrender, the meaning is understood. "Teaching is my passion. It's in my blood," said Gerstein, who was born deaf but has learned to use her voice and read lips. "God had a calling on my life to be a pastor, and here I can do that. I waited for years, but God led me here." Gerstein,55, is one of dozens of deaf and hard-of-hearing residents who dutifully file week after week into Praetorium, aChristian church especially for believers who can't hear. The congregation on Chicago's West Side recently celebrated its eighth anniversary, impressive for a church that started out holding services on street corners and in public parks. Hundreds of churches, synagogues, mosques and other
SPIRITUALAWARENESS COMMUNITY OF THE CASCADES: Guest speakerAndy Harrison; Sunday at 9 a.m.; held at TheOld Stone Church, l57 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend.
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U.S. BANK POLE PEDAL PADDLE THEGUIDETOTHELARGEST SINGLE SPORTINGEVENTIN CENTRAL OREGON. The Pole Pedal Paddle is a tradition in Bend that serves as a fundraiser for Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEF). MBSEF is the leading nonprofit sports training organization dedicated to promoting positive core values to the Central Oregon youth community. The guide includes the schedule of events, descriptions of the race legs, course maps, and highlights of this signature event.
CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC THEGUIDETOTHESTAGESAND COURSESOFTHELONGEST STANDING CYCLINGSTAGERACEIN AMERICA . The Cascade Cycling Classic is a six-day event with a long list of American cycling stars among its past winners. Staged in Bend,The Cascade Cycling Classic serves as a fundraiser for the Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEF). This guide provides information on race stages and locations.
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PublishingDate: Wednesday, Saturday, July 13
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN "Celtic Cross" Christianity
"The Wheel of Dharma" Buddhism
"Star of David" Judaism ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH 1720 NW 19th Street Redmond, Oregon 97756 541 -923-3390
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You AreTheMost Important Part of OurServices
Father Todd Unger, Pastor MassSchedule: Weekdays 8:00 am (except Wednesday) Ash Wednesday Services: 10:00 am, 12:10 pm and 6:00 pm Wednesday 6:00 pm Saturday Vigil 5:30 pm First Saturday 8:00 am (English) Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am (English) 12:00 noon (Spanishl Confessions on Wednesdays from 5:00 to 5:45 pm
and on Saturdays from 4:30 to 5:15 pm
"Omkar" (Aum) Hinduism
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FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER 1049 NE 11th St.' 541-382-8274 SUNDAYS:
9:30am Sunday Educational Classes 10:30 am Morning Worship This Sunday at Faith Christian Center,
Pastor Mike will be sharing his message, "The Big Give" in the Sunday service, beginning at 10:30 am. Childcare is provided in our Sunday morning service. On Wednesdays "Restored Youth" service begins at 7:00 pm A number of Faith Journey Groups meet
throughout the week in small groups, please contact the church for details and times. The church is located on the corner of Greenwood Avenue and NE 11th Street.
www.bendfaith.com REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD
1865 W Antler • Redmond 541-548-4555 SUNDAYS Morning Worship 8:30 am F 10:30 am Life groups 9 am Kidz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am Evening Worship 6 pm WEDNESDAYS FAMILY NIGHT 7 PM
Adult Classes Celebrate Recovery W ednesdayNITE Live Kids Youth Group Pastor Duane Pippitt
www.redmondag.com
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"Yin/Yang" Taoist/ Confumanism
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EASTMONT CHURCH
NE Neff Rd., I/2 mi. E. of St. Charles Medical Center Sundays 9:00 a.m. F 10:45 a.m,
Worship Services Sundays 6:00 p.m. Hispanic Worship Service Weekly Bible Studies and Ministries for all ages Contact: 541-382-5822
Pastor John Lodwick www.eastmontchurch.com FOUNDRY CHURCH (FORMERLY FIRST BAPTIST) "A Heart for Bend in the
Heart of Bend" 60 NW Oregon, 541-382-3862 Pastor Syd Brestel SUNDAY
9:00 AM Sunday School for everyone 10: 15 AM Worship Service
This Sunday at Foundry Church, Bryon Mengle will share a message on the importance of having strong relationships. For Kidztown, Middle School and High School activities Call 541-382-3862 www.bendchurch.org HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH, SBC
3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond • 541-548-4161
Crescent"Islam
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COMM U N ITY BIBLK CHURCH AND CHRISTIAN PRESCHOOL 541-593-8341 Beaver at Theater Drive, PO Box 4278, Sunriver, OR 97707
"Transforming Lives Through the Truth of the Word" All are Welcome! SUNDAY WORSHIP AND THE WORD - 9:30 Am.
Coffee Fellowship - 10:45 am Bible Education Hour - 11: 15am Nursery Care available Pastor Glen Schaumloeffel of the Community Bible Church will preach a message from I Corinthians 14:1-19 entitled, "The Priority of the Gifts in the series titled "Growing Up God's Way" at the 9:30 am service tomorrow. The church is located at Beaver and Theater Drives in Sunriver Everyone is welcome. •Women'sBibleStudy -Tuesdays,10 am • Awana Kids Club (4 yrs - 6th gr.) Sept.- May • Youth Ministry (gr. 7-12) Wednesdays 6: 15 pm • Men'sBibleStudy -Thursdays9 am • Home Bible Studies are also available Preschool for 3 8 4 year olds Call for information Senior Pastor: Glen Schaumloeffel Associate Pastor: Jake Schwarze visit our Web site www.cbchurchsr.org Listen to KNLR 97.5 FM
at 9:00 am. each Sunday to hear "Transforming Truth" with Pastor Glen.
CALVARY CHAPKL BEND
20225 Cooley Rd. Bend Phone: (541) 383-5097 Web site: ccbend.org Sundays: 8:30 S 10:30 am Wednesday Night Study: 7pm YouthGroup:Wednesday 7 pm Child Care provided Women's Ministry, Youth Ministry are available, call for days and times. "Teaching the Word of God, Book by Book"
HOLY REDEEMER CATHOLIC PARISH
Fr. Theodore Nnabugo, Pastor www.holyredeemerparish.net Parish Office: 541-536-3571 16137 Burgess Rd Tuesday, Wednesday 8 Friday Mass 9:00 am Sunday Mass — 10:00 am Confessions: Saturdays — 3:00-4:00 pm HOLY TRINITY, SUNRIVER
18143 Cottonwood Rd. Thurs. Mass 9:30 am; Sat. Vigil Mass 5:30 pm Sunday mass 8:00 am Confessions; Thurs. 9:00-9:15 am OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS, Gilchrist 120 Mississippi Dr Sunday Mass — 12:30 pm Confessions: Sundays 12:00 - 12: 15pm HOLY FAMILY,
near Christmas Valley 57255 Fort Rock Rd Sunday Mass — 3:30 pm Confessions: Sundays 3:00-3:15 pm ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CATHOLIC CHURCH
Pastor Rev. James A. Radloff Parochial Vicar Rev. Juan Carlos Chiarinoti 541-382-3631 NEW CHURCH 2450 NE 27th Street
Masses Saturday - Vigil 5:00 PM Sunday 7:30 AM, 10:00 AM F 7:00 PM Domingo 1230 PM - Misa en Espanol Reconciliation / Reconciliacion Saturday3:00 PM - 4:45 PM - English Thursday 6:00 PM - 7.00 PMEnglish o Espanol Domingo 11: 15 AM — 12:15PM —Espanol
Sunday Worship Services:
CAPILLA DE SANTA CLARA
Jueves 7:00 PM - Misa en Espano
For complete calender:
www.hbcredmond.org
I • BERKAN BIBLE CHURCH In Partnership with American Missionary Fellowship
Near Highland and 23rd Ave. 2378 SW Glacier Pl. Redmond, OR 97756
We preachtlie goodnewso(JesusChrist, singgreat hymnsof JaitJi,
ASH WEDNESDAY MASSES: School Mass 8: 15 AM Youth Mass 5:30 PM M isa en Espanol 7:00 PM
Stations of the Cross Friday 7:00 PM - English HISTORIC DOWNTOWN CHURCH
Corner of NW Franklin S Lava Masses Sunday 4:30 PM Monday - Friday 7:00 AM 6 12. 15 PM Saturday 8:00 AM Exposition F Benediction Monday after 7 00 AM Mass - 6 00 PM Tuesday 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM Wednesday after 7:00 AM Mass6:00 PM Thursday after 7.00 AM Mass6:00 PM Friday 9:00 AM — 6:00 PM
andsearch IfieScripturestogether.
Sunday Worship Service - 10:30 am Bible Study - Thursday, 10:30 am
Reconciliation Tuesday 7:30 AM — 8:00 AMEnglish o Espanol Saturday 8:30 AM - 9:30 AMEnglish o Espanol
Teaching from the KJV and NKJV Bible Pastor Ed Nelson 541-777-0784
www.redmondbbc.org
Sunday School for all ages Kidmo • Junior Church Greg Strubhar, Pastor Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor POWELL BUTTE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Cowboy Fellowship Saturdays Potluck 6 pm Music and the Word 7 pm Sunday Worship Services 8:30am- 10:15 am-11 am Nursery F Children's Church Pastors: Chris Blair, Trey Hinkle, Ozzy Osborne and Glenn Bartnik 13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte 541 -548-3066 www.powellbuttechurch.com
ASH WEDNESDAY MASSES: 7:00 AM, 12:15 PM, 7:00 PM
Estaciones de la Cruz Viernes 7:00 PM - Espanol
THE RIVKR MENNONITK CHURCH
TEMPLE BETH TIHVAH
Temple Beth Tikvah is a member of the Union for Reform Judaism. Our members represent a wide range of
Jewish backgrounds. We welcome interfaith families and lews by choice. Our monthly activities include social functions, services, religious education, Hebrew school, Torah study, and adult education
Church Office: 541-389-8787 E-maih theriver®mailshack.com Send to: PO Box 808, Bend OR 97709 www.therivermennonite.org
Rabbi Glenn Ettman
HOUSE OF COVENANT
Friday, February 22 at 6:30 pmShabbat Service Saturday, February 23 at 9:00 amTorah Study Saturday, February 23 at 10:30 amTorah Service Sunday, February 24 adult education (call for information) Sunday, February 24 — Purim Carnival 11:30 am — I:30 pm Come in costume!
Central Oregon Community Sunday School Congregation Shalom Bayit 21555 Modoc Lane, Bend For the complete schedule of Services F Events go to: www.bethtikvahbend.org
541 -388-8826
(St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession XXVIII.8, 10) 10 am Sunday School U am Divine Service
Reading Room: 115 NW Minnesota Ave. Mon. through Fri.: 11 am - 4 pm Sat. 12 noon - 2 pm
ECKANKAR
Religion of the Light andSound of God Experience an Eckankar Community HU Learnhow tosing HU, a love song to God: a loving, uplifting, Spiritual Exercise. HU, pronounced like the word hue, is sung for about 20 minutes and is followed by a brief period of sacred contemplation. Followed by a discussion. Regardless of your beliefs or religion, singing HU can bring you greater happiness, love, and understanding. Singing HU can draw us closer in our state of consciousness to the Divine Being. It has helped people of many different faiths open their hearts more fully to the uplifting presence and security of God's love. Singing HU can help you experience: • Comfort, peace, joy • Expanded awareness • Inner light and/or sound • A subtle sense of Divine Love • The healing of a broken heart • Solace during times of grief • A release offears • Answers to your questions For more information please visit www.eckankar.org or www.miraclesinyourlife.org or call 541-728-6476. •
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TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH 469 NW Wall St. • 541-382-5542 www.trinitybend.org
Sunduy Schedule 8 am Holy Eucharist 9:15 am Education for All Ages 10:15 am Holy Eucharist
(w/nursery care F Godly Play) 5 pm Holy Eucharist (in St. Helens Hall) The Rev. Roy D. Green, Interim Rector
THE SALVATION ARMY 755 NE 2nd Street, Bend 541 -389-8888 SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP 541 NE Dekalb
Sunday School 9:45 am Children & Adult Classes Worship Service - 11:00 am Major's Robert F Miriam Keene NEW HOPE EVANGELICAL
20080 Pinebrook Blvd. 541-389-3436 Celebrate New Life at New Hope Church! Saturday 6:00 pm Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am, Pastor Randy Myers www.newhopebend.com
February 10, 2013 at 11:00am: Rev. Alex Holt:
Est. 1994
Day in advance of February 14th. Several volunteers will speak on how
Bear Creek Center 21300 Bear Creek Rd. Bend, OR. 97701 Our Shabbat Services are on Saturday mornings at 10:00 a.m. Our ministries include:
particular love songs helped cement their most important romantic relationships from the 1940's to the 1990's. Portions of
those songs will be played as well. Childcare and religious education for children is available.
• 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
See our website for more information
Visit us on the web at www.houseofcovenant.org or contact us at 541-385-5439
www.uufco.org
www.uufco.org
Meeting place: THE OLD STONE 157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND
Maih PO Box 428, Bend OR 97709
(541 ) 385-3908
Gos(zeiaiid (iiereby grant eternal life
0 Celebration Church 63830 Clausen Rd Ste 102, Bend Saturday 10:30 am - 2 pm Worship/Dance-StudyFood/Fellowship Hebrew Roots Fellowship worshipping in Spirit and Truth 541-410-5337 Children's Program www.livingtorahfellowship.com
UNITY COMMUNITY
OF CENTRAL OREGON Join the Unity Community Sunday 10:00 am with Rev. Jane Meyers
Youth Program Provided
2/17: Divine Service: The Festival of Ash WednesdayIObserved). 1.00 PM. 2/24: Vespers. I:00 PM 3/3: Vespers. I:00 PM. 3/10: Vespers. I:00 PM. 3/17: Vespers. I:00 PM. 3/28: Divine Service: The Festival of Maundy Thursday 7:00 PM. 3/29: Divine Service: The Festival of Good Friday. I:00 PM.
BKND CHURCH OF THK NAZARENE 1270 NE 27 St..• 541-382-5496 Senior Pastor Virgil Askren SUNDAY 9:00 am Sunday School for all ages 9:00 am Hispanic Worship Service 10:15 am Worship Service
Nursery Care 8 Children's Church ages 4 yrs-4th grade during all Worship Services "Courageous Living" on KNLR 97.5 FM 8:30 am Sunday
GRACK FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH 2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend 541 -382-6862
Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. (Child Care Available) Sunday School 10:20 a.m. Education Hour 10:45 a.m. Women's Bible Study Tuesday 9: 15 a.m.
(near Bend Airport) Learn more about the Unity Community of Central Oregon at www unitycentraloregon com
or by calling 541-388-1569 •
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FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
THURSDAY 10.00 am 50+ Bible Study WEEKLY
In the Heart of Down Town Bend)
Life Groups Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.bendnaz.org
Everyone isWelcome!
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680 NW Bond St. / 541-382-1672
Sermon Title: "Why Not Stay?"
SOVKREIGN GRACE CHURCH
Meeting at the Golden Age Club 40 SE 5th St., Bend Just 2 blocks SW of Bend High School Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sovereign Grace Church is dedicated to worshipping God and teaching the Bible truths recovered through the Reformation. Call for information about other meetings 541-420-1667
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www.sovereigngracebend.com
Men's Bible Study Wednesday 7 30 a.m.
62855 Powell Butte Hwy
6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study
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
The Unity Community meets at
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(South of Portland Ave.) Church Service 8 Sunday School: 10 am W ed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm Childcare provided.
We are a Welcoming Congregation
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:
WEDNESDAY
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIKNTIST 1551 NW First St. • 541-382-6100
OF CENTRAL OREGON "Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship"
LIVING TORAH FKLLOWSHIP
All services are held at the First United Methodist Church 680 NW Bond Street
Sunday Services 8 am Traditional Service (No child care for 8 am service) 9:30 am Contemporary Service with full child care 11 am Service (Full child carel For information, please call ... Minister - Mike Yunker - 541-312-8844 Associate Pastors Don Henderson & Mike Sweeney "Loving people one at a time." www.real-lifecc.org
EASTMONT COMMUNITY SCHOOL "Educating and Developing the Whole Child for the Glory of God" Pre K - 5th Grade 62425 Eagle Road, Bend• 541-382-2049 Principal Lonna Carnahan www.eastmontcommunityschool.com
UNITARIAN UNIVKRSALISTS
This morning we will celebrate Valentine's
Messianic Synagogue
For more information about our education programs, please call Kathy Schindel at 541-388-8826.
MISSION (LCMS) The niissionofIheChurch is Joforgive sinsthrough lfie
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Sunday, 3 pm at the Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend Sunday School 2 years - 5th grade Nursery 0-2 years Visitors welcome
"What the Heart Hears in Love":
CONCORDIA LUTHERAN
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REAL LIFK CHRISTIAN CHURCH Like Hymns? We've Got 'em! at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th
HOLY REDKEMER, LA PINE
8:00 am, 9:30 am, 11:00 am Sunday Bible Fellowship Groups 9;30 am 8 11:00 am Dr. Barry Campbell, lead pastor
CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND 536 SW 10th, Redmond 541-548-2974 www.redmondchristian.org SundayWorship 9:00 am F 10:30 am
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Scnpture: Luke 9:28-43 9:00 am - Contemporary Service
Sunday School during the 9 am Service 11.00 am - Traditional Service
Childcare provided on Sunday
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*Durlng the Week: Women's Groups, Men's CHRISTIAN LIFE CKNTER 21720 E. Hwy. 20• 541.389.8241
Pastor loel LiaBraaten Evangelical Lutheran Church in America www.gracefirstlutheran org
Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting, Music 8 Fellowship
Sunday Morning Worship 8:45 am 8 10:45 am Open Hearts. Open Minds. WednesdayMid-Week Services Children f Youth Programs 7:00 pm
NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 60850 Brosterhous Road at Knott, 541 -388-0765 Come worship with us.
Nursery Care provided for all services.
Sermon title "Stuck with lesus" Luke 9:28-36 By Interim Pastor Craig Jorgensen
Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur 21720 E. Hwy. 20 541.389.8241 www.clcbend.com
9 am Informal Service 9: 15 Junior Church 11 am Formal Service
COMM U N ITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
529 NW 19th Street (3/4 mile north of High School) Redmond, OR 97756 (541) 548-3367
Ash Wednesdy on February 13, 2013 at 7:00 pm — All Are Welcome Bible Study at 10 am on Wednesdays
Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor
(Child care provided on Sundays.) www.nativityinbend.com Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
9:00 am Contemporary Worship 9:00 am Nursery Care 9:15 am Children S Youth Sunday School 9:30 am Adult Education 11:00 am Traditional Worship
TRINITY LUTHKRAN CHURCH S SCHOOL LCMS 2550 NE Butler Market Road Bend, OR 97701 541-382-1832
Youth Groups High School — Sunday 11:00am- 12:30pm MiddleSchool — Wednesday 6:00-7:30pm
Mondays
Open Doors. Rev. Thom Larson firstchurch@bendumc org
CHURCH & SYNAGOGUE DIRECTORY LISTING EffectiveMay 1, 2012 4 Saturdays and TMC: $110
6:30 pm Centering Prayer
SUNDAY WORSHIP 8 am Guitar Led Worship
Wednesdays 5 30 pm Prayer Service
9:30 am Education Hour for all ages 11 am Organ/Piano Led Worship
Small Groups Meet Regularly (Handicapped Accessible) Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.redmondcpc.org
Church Website: www.trinitylutheranbend.org School Website: www.saints.org Pastors: Rev. David Carnahan Rev. Patrick Rooney Principal: Mrs. Hanne Krause
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 230 NE Ninth, Bend (Across Ninth St. from Bend High)
KION LUTHERAN CHURCH ELCA Worship in the Heart of Redmond
All Are Welcome Always!
Sunday Worship Service 8:30 am Contemporary Ii:00 am Liturgical Sunday School for all ages at 10:00 am 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
on the church page. $22 Copy Changes:
"There's Hope for Christianity" Rev. Jenny Warner and Ron Werner 9:00 am contemporary 10:45 am traditional 5:01 pm relaxed Sunday School: 3 yrs to 6th grade Nursery care provided
CO Marketplace:
"God, Jews F History" Rabbi Jay Shupack 3:00 pm - Sundays Continues through March 10 Wednesday Noon Silence 8 Supper Worship 12:30 pm Contemplative Prayer Youth Events See Youth Blog: http://bendfp.org/youth/
Choirs, music groups, Bible study, fellowship and ministries every week 230 NE Ninth Street, Bend www.bendfp.org 541-382-4401
•
Every Saturday
by 5 PM Tuesday
after eachservice
1113 SWBlack Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 — 541-923-7466 Pastor Eric Burtness www.zionrdm.com
The Bulletin:
Rev. Dr. Steven H. Koski Lead Pastor
Coffee,snacksand fellowship M-W-F Women's Exercise 9:30 am Wed. Bible Study at noon 3rd Th. Women's Circle/Bible Study 1.00 pm 3rdTues.Men's Club 6:00 pm, dinner Youth and Family Programs Active Social Outreach
5 Saturdays and TMC: $132
I
• g •
The First Tuesday c)f
each month. $22 Copy Changes: by Monday I week prior to
publication
Call Pat Lynch
541-383-0396 PlynCh@bendbulletiFLCOm
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
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. ABILITREE PEER GROUP FOR PERSONSAFFECTED BYA DISABILITY: 541-388-8103, ext. 203. ABILITREE YOUNG PEER GROUP: 541388-8103 ext. 207. ADHDADULTSUPPORTGROUP: 54 I-420-3023. ADOPTIVEPARENT SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-389-5446. AGE WIDEOPEN (ADULT CHILDREN SUPPORTGROUP): 541-410-4162or www.agewideopen.com. AIDSEDUCATION FOR PREVENTION, TREATMENT, COMMUNITY RESOURCESAND SUPPORT (DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTH DEPARTMENT):541-322-7402. AIDSHOT LINE:800-342-AIOS. AL-ANON: 541-728-3707 or www.centraloregonal-anon.org. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS (AA):541548-0440 orwww.coigaa.org. ALS SUPPORT GROUP:541-977-7502. ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION: 54 I-548-7074. ALZHEIMER'S/DEMENTIACAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP:541-948-7214. AUTISMRESOURCE GROUP OF CENTRALOREGON:541-788-0339. BENDATTACHMENTPARENTING: 541-385-1787. BENDS-ANON FAMILYGROUP: 888-285-3742. BENDZENMEDITATION GROUP: 541382-6122 or 541-382-6651. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORT GROUPS: 54I-382-5882. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORT GROUP/ADULTSAND CHILDREN: 541-383-3910. BEYONDAFFAIRSNETWORK: A peer groupfor victims of infidelity, baninbend@yahoo.com. BRAININJURY SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-382-9451. BRAINTUMOR SUPPORT GROUP: 541-350-7243 BREAST-FEEDINGSUPPORT GROUP: 541-385-1787. CANCERFAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. CANCERINFORMATION LINE: 54 I-706-7743. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-536-7399. CAREGIVERSUPPORTGROUP: 541-706-6802. CELEBRATE RECOVERY:NewHope Church, Bend,541-480-5276; Faith Christian Center,Bend,541-382-8274; RedmondAssembly of GodChurch, 541-548-4555;WestsideChurch, Bend, 541-382-7504, ext. 201;Metolius Friends Community Church,541-546-4974; Agape HarvestFellowship, LaPine, 54 I-536-4384. CENTRALOREGON ALZHEIMER'S/ DEMENTIACAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP: 54I-504-057I CENTRALOREGON AUTISM ASPERGER'S SUPPORTTEAM: 541-633-8293. CENTRALOREGON AUTISM SPECTRUMRESOURCEAND FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP:541-279-9040. CENTRALOREGON COALITION FOR ACCESS(WORKING TO CREATE ACCESSIBLE COMMUNITIES): 541-385-3320. CENTRALOREGON DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY GROUP:541-420-2759 CENTRALOREGON DISABILITY SUPPORT NETWORK:541-548-8559 or www.codsn.org. CENTRALOREGON FAMILIESWITH MULTIPLES: 541-330-5832 or 54 I-388-2220. CENTRALOREGON LEAGUE OF AMPUTEESSUPPORT GROUP (COLA): 541-480-7420 or www.ourcola.org. CENTRALOREGON RIGHTTO LIFE: 541-383-1593. CHILDCAR SEATCLINIC(PROPER INSTALLATIONINFORMATION FOR SEATANDCHILD): 541-504-5016. CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: 541-330-3907. CHRISTIANWOMEN OFHOPE (WOMEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP):541-382-1832. CLAREBRIDGEOF BEND(ALZHEIMER'S SUPPORT GROUP): 541-385-4717 or rnorton1©brookdaleliving.com. COFFEEAND CONNECTION CANCER SUPPORT GROUP:541-706-3754. COMPASSIONATEFRIENDS (FOR THOSEGRIEVINGTHELOSS OFA CHILD):541-480-0667or541-536-1709. CREATIVITY &WELLNESSMOOD GROUP: 541-647-0865. CROOKEDRIVERRANCH ADULT GRIEF SUPPORT: 54 l-548-7483. DEFEATCANCER: 541-706-7743. DESCHUTES COUNTY MENTALHEALTH 24-HOURCRISIS LINE:541-322-7500. DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR SUPPORTALLIANCE: 541-549-9622 or 54 I-771- I620. DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR SUPPORT: 541-480-8269 orsuemiller92@gmail. com. DEPRESSIONSUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-617-0543. DIABETIC SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-598-4483. DISABILITYSUPPORTGROUP: 54 I-388-8103. DIVORCE CARE:541-410-4201. DOUBLETROUBLERECO VERY: Addiction andmental illness group; 541-317-0050. DYSTONIASUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-2577. ENCOPRESIS (SOILING): 541-548-2814 or encopresis@gmail.com. EVENINGBEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-460-4030 FAITHBASED RECOVERYGROUP: Drug and alcoholaddictions; pastordavid@ thedoor3r.org. FAMILYRESOURCECENTER: 541-389-5468. GAMBLERSANONYMOUS:Redmond 541-280-7249,Bend541-390-4365. GAMBLINGHOT LINE:800-233-8479. GLUCOSECONTROL LOWCARB DIET SUPPORTGROUP:kjdnrcd© yahoo.c om
or541-504-0726. GLUTENINTOLERANCEGROUP (CELIAC):541-389-1731. GRANDMA'S HOUSE:Supportfor pregnant teensandteenmoms; 541-383-3515. GRANDPARENTSRAISINGOUR CHILDREN'S KIDS:541-306-4939. GRIEFSHAREGRIEFRECOVERY SUPPORTGROUP:541-382-1832. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-3066633, 541-318-0384 ormullinski@ bendbroadband.com. GRIEFSUPPORTGROUP: 541-548-7483. GRIEFSUPPORTGROUPS:Forthe bereaved;541-771-3247. GRIEFSUPPORTGROUP: 54 I -447-2510. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-420-8673. GRIEFSHARE (FAITH-BASED) RECOVERYCLASS:541-389-8780. HEALINGENCOURAGEMENT FOR ABORTION-RELATEDTRAUMA (H.E.A.R.T.): 54I-318-1949. HEALTHYFAMILIESOFTHEHIGH DESERT: Homevisitsforfamilies with newborns; 541-749-2133 HEARINGLOSS ASSOCIATION: 541-848-2806 orhlaco24ogmx.com. HEARTS OFHOPE:Abortionhealing; 54 l-728-4673. IMPROVEYOUR STRESS LIFE: 541-706-2904. LA LECHE LEAGUEOFBEND: 541-317-5912. LIVINGWELL(CHRONICCONDITIONS): 541-322-7430. LIVINGWITHCHRONICILLNESSES SUPPORT GROUP:541-536-7399. LUPUS &FIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP:541-526-1375. MADRAS NICOTINE ANONYMOUS GROUP: 541-993-0609. MATERNAL/CHILD HEALTH PROGRAM (DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTH DEPARTMENT): 541-322-7400. MEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I -706-5864. MOMMYANDMEBREASTFEEDING SUPPORTGROUP: Laura, 541-322-7450. MULTIPLESCLEROSIS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-6802. NARCONON: 800-468-6933. NARCOTICSANONYMOUS (NA): 541-4 l6-2146. NATIONALALLIANCEON MENTAL ILLNESSOFCENTRAL OREGON (NAMI):541-408-7779, 541-504-1431 or email: vonriedlpnw eyahoo.com. NAMI BENDFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-480-8269,namicentraloregon© gmail.com orwww.namicentraloregon. org. NAMI MADRASCONNECTIONS:For peers, 54'I-475-'l873 orNAMlmadrasO gmail.com. NAMI MADRASFAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: NAMlmadras@gmail.com. NAMI REDMONDFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: namicentraloregon@gmail.com. NEWBERRY HOSPICE OF LAPINE: 541-536-7399. OREGONCOMMISSION FORTHE BLIND:54I-447-4915. OREGON CURE:541-475-2164. OREGON LYMEDISEASE NETWORK: 541-312-3081 orwww.oregonlyme.org. OVEREATERSANONYMOUS: 541-306-6844. PARENTS/CAREGIVERSOF CHILDREN AFFECTEDBYAUTISM SUPPORT GROUP:541-771-1075 or http:// coregondevdisgroupaso.ning.com. PARENTS OFMURDEREDCHILDREN (POMC)SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-4 I0-7395. PARISHNURSESANDHEALTH MINISTRIES: 541-383-6861. PARKINSON'S CAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-317-1188. PARKINSON'S DISEASE SUPPORT GROUP:541-280-5818. PARTNERS INCARE:Homehealth and hospice services;541-382-5882. PFLAGCENTRALOREGON: For parents, familiesandfriends of lesbians and gays;541-317-2334 orwww. pflagcentraloregon.org. PLAN LOVINGADOPTIONS NOW (PLAN):541-389-9239. PLANNEDPARENTHOOD: 888-875-7820. PMS ACCESS LINE:800-222-4767. PREGNANCYRESOURCECEN TERS: Bend, 541-385-5334; Madras,541475-5338; Prineville, 541-447-2420; Redmond,541-504-8919. PULMONARY HYPERTENSION SUPPORTGROUP:541-548-7489. RECOVERING COUPLES ANONYMOUS (RCA):541-389-0969 or www. recovering-couples.org. SAVINGGRACE SUPPORT GROUPS: Bend, 541-382-4420;Redmond,541504-2550, ext.1; Madras,541-475-1880. SCLERODERMASUPPORTGROUP: 54 l-480-1958. SELF-ESTEEMGROUP FOR WOMEN: 541-389-7960. SEXAHOLICS ANONYMOUS: 541-595-8780. SOUPAND SUPPORT:Formourners; 541-548-7483. SUPPORTGROUP FOR FAMILIESWITH DIABETIC CHILDREN:541-526-6690. TOBACCO FREEALLIANCE:541-3227481. TOPS OR: Bend, 541-388-5634; Culver, 541-546-4012; Redmond, 541-923-0878. TYPE2DIABETES SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-4986. VETERANSHOTLINE: 541-408-5594or818-634-0735. VISIONNW:Peersupportgroup; 541-330-07 I5. VOLUNTEERSIN MEDICINE: 541-330-900 I. WOMEN'SRESOURCE CENTER OF CENTRAL OREGON: 541-385-0747 WOMEN'SSELF-ESTEEM GROUP: 541-389-7960. WOMEN'SSUPPORT GROUP FOR ANGER,ANXIETY,ORDEPRESSION: 541-389-7960. WOMEN SURVIVINGWITH CANCER SUPPORTGROUP:541-706-5864. YOUNGPEOPLEWITH DISABILITIES PEER GROUP:831-402-5024. ZEN MEDITATIONGROUP: 541-388-3179.
VOLUNTEER SEARCH 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, goonline to www. dendbulletin.com/volunteer. Changes, additions or deletions should be sent to1300 N.W.Wall St., Suite 103, Bend 97701, email Lin.H.Gardner@state.or.us or call 541-693-8988.
SENIORS AARP:www.aarp.org/money/ taxaide or 888-687-2277. ASPEN RIDGEALZHEIMER'S ASSISTED LIVINGAND RETIREMENTCOMMUNITY: 541-385-8500. BEND SENIORCENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. CASCADE VIEWNURSING AND ALZHEIMER'SCARECENTER: 541-382-7161. CENTRALOREGON COUNCIL ON AGING(COCOA)AND MEALS ON WHEELS:www.councilonaging. org or 541-678-5483. LA PINESENIORACTIVITY CENTER:Pat Potter, 541-536-6237. LONG-TERM CAREOMBUDSMAN PROGRAM:NancyAllen, 541-312-2488. PILOTBUTTE REHABILITATION CENTER:541-382-5531. PRINEVILLESOROPTIMIST SENIORCENTER:Melody, 541-447-6844. TOUCHMARK ATMT. BACHELOR VILLAGE:541-383-1414. VOLUNTEERS IN ACTION: 541-548-7018.
CHILDREN, YOUTH AND EDUCATION SERVICES ADULTBASICSKILLS DEPARTMENT (COCC): Margie Gregory, mgregory©cocc.edu or 54'I-318-3788. ALYCEHATCHCENTER:Andy Kizans, 541-383-1980. BEND PARK& RECREATION DISTRICT:Kim, 541-706-6127. BIGBROTHERS BIGSISTERS OF CENTRALOREGON:541-3126047 (Bend), 541-447-3851, ext. 333 (Prineville) or 541-325-5603 (Madras). BOY SCOUTSOF AMERICA: Paul Abbott, paulabbott@scouting.org or 541-382-4647. BOYS &GIRLS CLUBS OF CENTRALOREGON:www. bgcco.org, info@bgcco.org or 541-617-2877. CAMP FIREUSACENTRAL OREGON: campfire@bendcable. com or 541-382-4682. CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION:Julie Bibler, 54 I -330-3907. CIRCLE OF FRIENDS: Beth, beth© acircleoffriendsoregon.com or 54 I-588-6445. DESCHUTESCOUNTYSHERIFF'S OFFICE— CENTRAL OREGON PARTNERSHIPSFORYOUTH: www.deschutes.org/copy, COPYO deschutes.org or 541-388-6651. FOSTERGRANDPARENTS PROGRAM:SteveGuzanskis, 541-678-5483. GIRLSCOUTS: 54 I-389-8 I46. GIRLSON THE RUN OF DESCHUTESCOUNTY:www. deschutescountygotr.org or info© deschutescountygotr.org. GRANDMA'SHOUSE: 541-383-35 I5. HEALTHYBEGINNINGS:www. myhb.org or 541-383-6357. HIGH DESERTTEENS VOLUNTEERPROGRAM: www. highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4757. IEP PARTNERS:Carmelle Campbell at the Oregon Parent Training and lnformation Center, 888-505-2673. J BAR JLEARNINGCENTER: Rick Buening, rbuening©jbarj.org or 541-389-1409. JUNIPERSWIM & FITNESS CENTER:Kim, 541-706-6127. KIDS CENTER:Rachel Kane, 541383-5958, ext. 274. LA PINEHIGHSCHOOL:Jeff Bockert, jeff.bockert©bend.k12. or.us or 541-355-8501. MEADOWLARK MANOR:Peggy Kastberg, 541-382-7025. MOUNTAINSTARFAMILY RELIEF NURSERY:54I-322-6820. NEIGHBORIMPACT:541-5482380, ext. 115. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY EXTENSIONSERVICE:54I548-6088, 541-447-6228 or 541-475-3808. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY MASTERGARDENER VOLUNTEERPROGRAM: 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-CAREERPARTNERSHIP: Kent Child, 541-322-3261. SMART (STARTMAKING A READER TODAY):www.getsmartoregon.org or 541-355-5600. TRILLIUM FAMILYSERVICES: 503-205-0 I94. VIMA LUPWAHOMES:www. lupwahomes.org or 541-420-6775. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON:541-385-0470.
Brad, volunteer©latca.org or 54 I-382-4366. THE NATUREOFWORDS: www.thenatureofwords.org or 54 I-330-4381. REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY:541-312- I060. REDMONDINTERCULTURAL EXCHANGE (R.I.C.E.): Barb, bonitodia@msn.com or 541-447-0732. TOWER THEATREFOUNDATION: 54 I -317-0700.
ANIMALS AND ENVIRONMENT
HABITAT FOR HUMANITY AND THRIFT STORES
BEND SPAY&NEUTERPROJECT: 541-617-1010. CAT RESCUE,ADOPTION & FOSTER TEAM (CRAFT):www.craftcats.org, 541-389-8420 or541-598-5488.
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 CASCADESAUDUBON SOCIETY:www.ecaudubon.org or 541-241-2190. THE ENVIRONMENTALCENTER: 541-385-6908. EQUINEOUTREACH HORSE RESCUE OF BEND:www.equineoutreach. com or joanIgequineoutreach.com or 541-419-3717. HEALINGREINS THERAPEUTIC RIDINGCENTER:Darcy Justice, 541-382-9410. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL OREGON:Jen, jennifer@hsco.org or 541-382-3537. HUMANE SOCIETYOF THE OCHOCOS:54I-447-7 I78. HUMANE SOCIETYOF REDMOND: volunteer©redmondhumane.org or 541-923-0882. JUNIPERGROUP SIERRA CLUB: 541-389-9115. STEWARDSHIPFOR SUSTAINABLE BAGGING:LexaMcAllister, Imcallistermococc.edu or 541-9 I4-6676. SUNRIVERNATURECENTER& OBSERVATORY:541-593-4442. VOLUNTEERCAMPGROUND HOST POSITIONS:TomMottl, 541-416-6859.
HEALTH AMERICANCANCER SOCIETY: Charlie Johnson, 541-434-3114. AMERICANREDCROSS: 541-749-41 I1. DESCHUTESCOUNTYHEALTH DEPARTMENT:Tuesday Johnson, Tuesday Johnson©co.deschutes. or.us or 541-322-7425. FRIENDSWITH FLOWERS OF OREGON: www. friendswithflowersoforegon.com or 541-480-8700. HOSPICEOF REDMONDSISTERS:www.redmondhospice. org or Volunteer Coordinator at 541-548-7483. MOUNTAIN VIEWHOSPITAL:JoOee 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 INCARE:www. partnersbend.org or SarahPeterson at 541-382-5882. RELAYFORLIFE:Stefan Myers, 541-504-4920. ST. CHARLESIN BENDAND ST. CHARLESIN REDMOND: 541-706-6354. VOLUNTEERS IN MEDICINE: 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 FRIENDS OFTHE LIBRARY: Linda Barker, 541-312-1064. ARTS CENTRALSTATION: 541-617- I3 I7. CASCADESTHEATRICAL COMPANY: 541-389-0803. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY ASSOCIATION:Julie, 541-383-7779. DES CHUTESHISTORICAL MUSEUM: 541-389-1813, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. DESCHUTESPUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM:541-312-1032. FRIENDS OFTHE BEND LIBRARIES: www.fobl.org or Meredith Shadrachat 541-617-7047. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC:Isabelle Senger, www. highdesertchambermusic.com, info© highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-306-3988. HIGH DESERTMUSEUM: 541-382-4754. LA PINE PUBLICLIBRARY: Cindylu, 541-317- I 097. LATINOCOMMUNITY ASSOCIATION:
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
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TheBulletin
BEND AREAHABITATFOR HUMANITY:541-385-5387. HABITATRESTORE:Di Crocker, 54 I-3 I2-6709. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL OREGON THRIFTSTORE: Marcy Hosket, 541-388-3448. NEAT REPEAT THRIFT SHOP:Peg, 54 I -447-6429. NEWBERRYHABITAT FOR HUMANITY:541-593-5005. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFT STORE OF BEND:541-389-0129. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFT STORE OFREDMOND: 541-548-5288. REDMOND HABITATFOR HUMANITY: Scott or Warren, 541-548-1406. REDMOND HABITATRESTORE: Roy, 54 I-548-1406. SISTERSHABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 54 I -549-1193. ST. VINCENTDEPAUL— LAPINE: 54 I-536-1956. ST. VINCENTDEPAUL— REDMOND: 54 I -923-5264.
HUMAN SERVICES ABILITREE: volunteer@abilitree.org or 541-388-8103, ext. 208. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL:Philip Randall, 541-388-1793. ASSISTANCELEAGUEOF BEND: 54 I -389-2075. BEND COMMUNITYCENTER: Sherry Fisher, volunteer@ bendscommunitycenter.org or 541-312-2084. BETHLEHEM INN: www. bethleheminn.org or 541-322-8768. CENTERFOR COMPASSIONATE LIVING (PREVIOUSLYPEACE CENTER OFCENTRAL OREGON): www.compassionatecenter.org or Beth Hansen, 541-923-6677. CENTRALOREGONVETERANS OUTREACH: covo.org©gmail.com or 541-383-2793. DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES: Lin Gardner, 541-693-8988. DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES CROOK COUNTY: ValerieDean,541447-3851, ext. 427. DISABLEDAMERICANVETERANS (DAV):OonLang, 541-647-1002. FAMILY KITCHEN: Cindy Tidball, cindyt@bendcable.com or 54 I -610-651 I. FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER: 541-389-5468. HUMAN DIGNITYCOALITION: 54 I-385-3320. HUNGERPREVENTION COALITION:Marie, info@ hungerpreventioncoalition.org or
541-385-9227. LA PINE COMMUNITY KITCHEN: 541-536-1312. NEIGHBORIMPACT: chrisq© neighborimpact.org or 541-548-2380, ext. 106. PEACEBRIDGES, INC., BEND: www.abridgetopeace.org or JohnC. Schwechten at 541-383-2646. PFLAG CENTRALOREGON: www.pflagcentraloregon.org or 541-3 I7-2334. RONALD MCDONALDHOUSE:Teresa, 541-318-4950. SAVING GRACE: 541-382-9227 or 541-504-2550. SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL OF BEND:www.sibend.org, president© sibend.org or 541-728-0820. ST. VINCENTDEPAULSOCIAL SERVICES:54I-389-6643. VOLUNTEER CONNECT:www. volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977. WINNINGOVER ANGER & VIOLENCE: www.winningover.org or 541-382-1 943. WOMEN'S RESOURCECENTER OF CENTRALOREGON:541-385-0750.
GOVERNMENT, CITY AND COMMUNITY THE CITIZENREVIEWBOARD(CRB): crb.volunteer.resources@ojd.state. or.us or 888-530-8999. CITYOF BEND:Cheryl Howard, choward@ci.bend.or.us or 541-388-5505. COURT APPOINTEDSPECIAL ADVOCATE (CASA): www. casaofcentraloregon.org or 541-389-1618. 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, 541-4756131, ext. 208. LA PINERURAL FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT: Volunteer Coordinator, 541-536-2935. ORCHARDDISTRICT NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION: www.orcharddistrictneighborhood. com. SUNRIVERAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:541-593-8149. VISIT BEND: www.visitbend.com or 541-382-8048.
MISCELLANY CENTRAL OREGONLOCAVORE: www.centraloregonlocavore.com or Niki at info©centraloregonlocavore. com or 541-633-0674. HIGH DESERTSPECIAL OLYMPICS: 54 I -749-6517. OREGON ADAPTIVESPORTS: www. oregonadaptivesports.org or Kendall Cook at 541-848-9390. SACRED ARTOF LIVING CENTER: 541-383-4179. TUMALO LANGLAUFCLUB:Tom Carroll, 541-385-7981.
Bend Park p Recreation
Position Open: Board of Directors The Bend Park 8 Recreation District Board of Directors will appoint a board member to serve in a vacant position until June 30, 2013. The Board is composed of five memberswhoserve four-year terms. Each member represents the district at-large rather than separate precincts. Position Requirements: 1. Reside within the district boundaries.
2. Be a registeredvoter. 3. Attend regularly scheduled and other periodic meetings. 4. Candidates must be willing to run for the seat in the May 2013 election for the term ending june 30,2015.
5. This is a volunteerposition anddoesnot receive compensation. To apply, submit a letter of interest to: Chairman Scott Asla Bend Park & Recreation District 799 SWColumbia,Bend,OR 97702 Or email to boardibendparksandrec.org.
Epplication deadline: Friday, February 1$, 2013 Applicants to answer questions and make a 3 - 5 minute presentation to the Board at the Tuesday, February 19th,4:00 pm board meeting. Board appointment effective immediately on February 19th. Contact Paula Lowery at (541) 706-6110 or paula@bendparksandrec.org formore information.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
King The Kid
ESSAY
Continued from D1 "My parents were r eally awesome and supportive. I was like, 'I want to chase the dream,' and they let me chase the dream," he says. Frank and Mostajo arrived in Los Angeles not long after Ficarelli. Mostajo, who's from Peru by way of Atlanta, headed that way after completing his studies at the University of Georgia. Frank hails from Seattle and attended the University of Oregon.
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Birth of The Kid Upon arriving in Los Angeles. "I met tons of musically talented young people," Frank says. "Jose was sort of one out of this giant crew of people that I s t arted collaborating w ith, but right when I m e t Jose, it was instant jam success. It was like, 'OK, we can both play guitar in a complementary way.' So it just turned into us all jamming." Adds Ficarelli, "Me and David met, and David was friends with Jose. We were just in the mood to jam one night, just kind of for fun ... and we needed another guitar player, so David called Jose. And that's really how we met." O ver thecourse of a year,the three played both together and separately with other acts. "It was pretty much a year of finding out who we are, and then we moved here to really get started," Ficarelli says. T he three settled on K i n g the Kid — a name, they say, that's meant to be something of a statement of purpose or independence. " The name is kind of a l l about ... being independent and, even if you're young, taking life into your own hands," Ficarelli says. "A lot of our fan base is
young people trying to figure out who they are as they go through life issues and prob-
lems, good things, bad things," says Frank. "We are sort of role models in a way for taking life into your own hands." They came to Bend to record because, Frank says, "I went to University of Oregon and I was familiar with Bend because I love snowboarding. My parents ended up buying property here ... and they were kind enough to let us stay here and pay rent." "Bend is good because we can really focus, which is why
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Andy Tullie / The Bulletin
King The Kid members gather round the kitchen table at their Bend home to work on their laptops. "If I'm going through my Twitter feed and I see someone I've never replied to before, (I) reply to that person," says Ricky Ficarelli, right. You make every person feel like they're important." w e came here rather than stay in Los Angeles. We had no distractions. It was literally the three of us," he says.
Social media presence Now, there's no publicist to call. No manager. No label. King the Kid are doing all of this themselves, their eyes set firmly on the future. "But because we're such a new band, we don't have
the credibility (with) booking agents to prove to them we have fans," Frank says. What they do have going for themselves is "a dedicated fan
base," he says. The band's YouTube presence and ability to network v ia social m edia c an't b e overstated. From the day they left Los Angeles, the group has posted on their YouTube channel a series of 8- to 15-minute video diaries of t h eir adventures. While they haven't exactly gone viral, two of the videos have been viewed more than 8,000 times. "By interacting through all the social media, we're able to develop and empower our fans," explains Frank, who studied business and entrepreneurship at Oregon. "None of us said anything about going out this morning (to be interviewed), but they pretty much know where we are at all times. The term is 'fandom,' and we're creating a fandom that's united."
"We really, really go out of our way to try and reply to everybody," Ficarelli says. "If I'm going through my Twitter feed and I see someone I've never
replied to before, (I) reply to that person. You make every person feel like they're important. We're such a small band, yet our fans are so awesome because — whether it's replying to every single Facebook wall post or going through your tweets 24 hours a day, or replying to Tumblr mes-
sages — we really go out of our way to make everyone feel important."
First single On Dec. 15, they released their first single, "We Are the Ones." There are scenes of Smith Rock and snippets of Deschutes National Forest blanketed in snow in their video for the song, a pop-punk earworm worthy of Blink-182, one of their musical heroes. When a viewer commented "Who are you g uys?'?" the band's official reply was this: "King The Kid. Composed of Ricky, David and Jose. David wears colorful pants, Ricky is like a teddy bear, and Jose is Peruvian." "It's obviously rare" for an act to have such a dialog with fans via Y outube, Ficarelli says. "Why not'? It takes two seconds, and you make some-
one's day."
Following tomorrow's show in Seattle, they'll play an un-
plugged set broadcast live at noon Feb. 16 on StageIt.com. On March 1, they'll embark on a cross-country living room tour, playing acoustic shows for the fans they've cultivated through social media.
Going on tour "Our fans are coming into another fan's home, which is
very cool, and we're playing 32 cities. We're going to be out for two months, and we're going over 10,000 miles in my Toyota," Frank says. Their destination is Orlando, where they'rescheduled to perform at Playlist Live, in late March. "It's a big convention for a lot of YouTube-based talent," Ficarelli says. "It's going to be awesome, because that will
(draw) thousands of people." T hey hope the tour w i l l unite the discreet fans they've made headway with through social media, and gain them credibility in the eyes of book-
ing agents. "Hopefully, we come back," Ficarelli says. "It's a chill vibe." But he wouldn't mind staying on the road forever. "I want to be somebody that stays for a while," says Mostajo. "You want to push and be relevant. I don't want to make
Bloomberg News
In one corner sat a house built with 300 used aluminum cat-food cans, each stuffed with in s u lation. A n o t h er house, made from discarded foam panels and wood, looked like Swiss cheese. These were some of the entrants in the "Architects for Animals: Giving Shelter" contest, held in New York. Leslie Farrell, who works for Francis Cauffman Architects, founded the contest three years ago to raise awareness and funds for the half million or so cats that live outdoors in the five
boroughs. "No animal should have to live on the streets," Farrell said. "They need food, shelter, medical care." The a r chitects, w o r king with caretakers for feral-cat colonies, came up with designs for practicality, aesthetics and cat-friendliness. Zimmerman Wor k s h op built its entry out of a cooler wrapped in sheet moss held together with chicken wire, designed to blend in with a garden environment. M Moser Associates' "Cat Coop" is a series of elevated pods of birch plywood, insulated with compressed foam and carpet. The Mike DiPaolo I Bloomberg News contest winner gets no prize, Adam Zimmerman, of Zimmerman Workshop, shows a cat shelter only gratitude and "bragging made out of a cooler wrapped in sheet moss. The design was part r ights," Farrell said. All t h e of the "Architects for Animals: Giving Shelter" contest in New York projects will find a place some- for feral cats. where in New York City's gardens, parks or backyards. York's parks an d g a rdens. door cats, then return them A video camera will air a live feed of the eventual feline The Mayor's Alliance says the outdoors. Cats are vaccinated inhabitants,for researchers number of "community cats," for rabies and "ear-tipped," in and general-public voyeurs. a population that includes fe- which the left ear is painlessly "I grew up with animals and ral as well as domesticated trimmed so the specimen is really value them," said Far- abandoned felines, is between easily identified i f t r a pped rell, who became more aware 500,000 and 1 million. again. "They are adept at hiding of urbanferalcats after movThe designs in the contest ing to an upper Manhattan and they are adept at repro- will provide some lucky cat neighborhood. She discovered ducing," said alliance Presi- colonies with w a rm , c lean the nonprofit Mayor's Alliance dent Jane Hoffman, adding homes. The entry from Pilot for NYC's Animals, a rescue that two cats can produce 62 Projects is a simple schematic group that offers advice on liv- cats in just two years. for constructing "cat forts" out ing with feral cats humanely. The alliance's Feral Cat Ini- of materials found in Central No one seems to know how tiative helps with programs to Park, such as tree branches many feral cats roam New trap and neuter or spay out- and discarded plastic bags,
By Mari-Jane Williams
get upset that she had a limit (when girls around us were My daughter, 6,spentmore trotting around with personmoney on a h a i rstyle for al shoppers, multiple dolls her doll last weekend than I and arms full of clothing for spend on a shampoo, cut and themselves and their dolls), dry for her at the local salon. but instead, she checked out It was hard to watch, but also the store, asking about the really sweet to see her care- price of different outfits or fully open up her pink plastic accessories. princess wallet and count out S he spent lots o f t i m e her birthday money at the weighing her options and cash register for something frequently commented that that she really wanted. she couldn't believe the cost Still, it ' s emb a r rass- of some things, or that the ing. Talk about first-world cute hat that went with the problems. outfitcostextra. "That's just crazy," she told We were at the American Girl store in Tysons Corner, me. I agreed with her and Va., for lunch, shopping and noted that the doll outfits a trip to the doll salon. I had cost more than what I would made a deal with her: I would generally spend on an outfit pick up the cost of lunch, but for her. any shopping she wanted to We had a lot of fun on our do had to come out of part of little girls-only excursion. It's her birthday money. kind of like a trip to Disney I could do w i t hout t he World. If you go, you have intense marketing and the to resign yourself to the conconstant barrage of catalogs sumerism and just enjoy the in my mailbox, but there are time with your child. also things that I love about I think my daughter enAmerican Girl. It's whole- joyed the Sprite and milksome, and the books teach shake she had at lunch (rare history and how girls' lives treats) more than anything have changed over time. The about the store. She also historical girls are spunky seemed contentto have me and smart. to herself for a few hours, I was braced for a battle at which doesn't happen often. the store, though. American So next time, I think we'll Girl stuff is pricey, and my have a tea party at home daughter was on a budget. with her dolls. Or a trip to the I knewher money wouldn't burger place for a milkshake. go very far, but I wasn't sure She'll be just as thrilled with that she did, even though I the activity, and we will have had prepared her for the lim- more money in our pockets itations. I thought she would at the end of the day. The Washington Post
'Identity Thief' expected to be No. 1 atboxoffice By Amy Kaufman
a splash and disappear."
Los Angeles Times
"The rest of my life, I would like to make an album, tour and then chill somewhere nice like this," Ficarelli says.
LOS ANGELES — "Identity Thief" will make a name for itself this weekend as the comedy is poised to easily pocket the No. I spot at the box office. The film, co-starring Melissa McCarthy and Jason Bateman, is set to debut with a strong $25 million, according to those who have seen pre-release audience surveys. The only other movie hitting theaters this weekend, Ste-
— Reporter:541-383-0349 djasper@bendbulletin.com
Thanks to contest, feral catsget designershelters ByMikeDIPaola
My American girl, dolls and dollars
"No animal should have to live on the streets. They need food, shelter, medical
care." — Leslie Farrell, Francis Cauffman Architects based on A m erican Indian shelters. Pilot Projects spokesman Scott Francisco wouldn't say exactly where the cat tepees will be placed because the Parks D epartment d o esn't want to draw attention to the shelters, fearing they might encourage humans to abandon more cats. Francisco said the shelters, designed to be built by children, are meant to not only help cats but also mitigate "the over-digitization of childhood life." The younger generation is being dulled by virtual realities rather than real ones, he said. The cat project is "a small opportunity to give kids a chance to break out of that
Bateman and director Seth Gordon, who first w orked together on the raunchy 2011 hit "Horrible Bosses." "Identity Th i e f, " cofinanced by distributor Universal Pictures and Elliot Inc. for roughly $35 million, will also open this weekend in five small foreign markets, including Taiwan and Croatia. "Side Effects," meanwhile, is the last movie Soderbergh has said he will direct for the big screen. Though an HBO movie he directed about Liberace will air this month on the cable network, the prolific filmmaker recently told the New Yorker he is readyto depart the movie business at 50 because he wants to paint. If the film indeed is his last, Soderbergh is going out on a high note, as "Side Effects" has received high critical praise. As of Wednesday, the movie featuring Jude Law and Rooney Mara had notched a 81 percent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes. The film follows a young woman (Mara) who is severely depressed and seeks clinical help from a psychologist (Law). Her therapist prescribes antidepressants to ease her pain, but a number of the medications give her troubling side effects.
ven Soderbergh's psychological thriller "Side Effects," will start off with a far lower sum of about $12 million. "Identity Thief" marks the first major feature film role for McCarthy, who gained massive popularity after her Oscar-nominated s u pporting turn in 2011's comedy "Bridesmaids." Though she has appeared in a number of filmsovertheyears and stars in the CBS sitcom "Mike & Molly," this year is the first that the 42-year-old actress will be able to prove she has box office clout. In the movie, McCarthy plays a big-haired criminal on the run from Bateman's character, whose identity she has stolen. The film marks the second collaborationbetween
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and engage in the physical world." The "trap, neuter, return" program is touted as an efficient solution because with with neutered and spayed cats there's less fighting and caterwauling and no smelly marking of territories. For those who don't mind living near an o utdoor cat colony, there's an upside. "You are not going to have a vermin problem," Hoffman said. "There's a reason why the ancient Egyptians let cats live in their granaries."
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With our extreme low level of homes currently available, I have several buyers still looking: Buyer ¹V2: Budget $250,000 SW/Old Mill/West Areas - Single FamilyHouse Buyer ¹M1: Budget $750,000 WestSide - Newer Single Family or Townhome,View Buyer ¹H2: Budget $450,000 WestSide — Single Family Home, Main Floor Master Buyer ¹R2: Budget $150,000 Downtown West -Vacant Lot orHouse Buyer ¹52: Budget $200,000 Open - Single Family Homefor Investment f •
Brian L a d d, Principal Broker Learn more atBendPropertySource.com ~ 541.408.3912
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Disclaimer: This data is as of 1/24/2013 from Trendyidon based en all residential homes under $1,000,000 in the 97701 and 97702 zip codes. If you are a seller and currently have an agency agreement with an agent please disregard this notice or have your agent contact us to discuss our current portfolio of buyers.
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Enjoy a spectacular 5-night French Polynesia vacation courtesy of Pleasant Holidays,
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Chesapeake AKC pups, 202 shots, good lines/hips parents on site $500, Want to Buy or Rent 541-259-4739. Wanted: $Cash paid for vintaqe costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist
Help needed NOW to spay/neuter stray/feral cats before kitten season! Too m a ny cats & no t e nough homes! Rescue group needs people to hu- Solid oak dining table, 68 6 highback chairs, manely trap in all ar- x2 48, mos. new! $950 obo, eas, plus funds for cash only. 541-549-1089 addtl. humane traps & spay/neuter vet bills. W hirlpool washer & Make a big difference dryer pair, good cond, in your area 8 help $350. 541-389-1086 animals at the same time. Lv. msg. at 541 3 89 8420, o r v i s it The Bulletin recommends extra www.craftcats.org 8 e-mail if you can help. I p a pp. p e . p. chasing products or • Husky-Wolf female, 3 services from out of I mos, beautiful blue eyes! t the area. Sending t $250. 541-977-7019
Dachshund, AKC mini black/tan female, $250. 541-633-3221 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the Elizabeth,541-633-7006 classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 I It e ms for Free Diamond Country Value 40 lbs. - $17 Free baggedleaves, Quarry Ave. Hay 8 for garden/compost? You haul. 541-548-5667 Feed. 541-923-2400 Labrador Pups, AKC www.quarryfeed.com Chocolate/Yeliow/White Loveseat, m u lti-color, Hips OFA guaranteed. good condition, free! You People Lookfor Information $300-$400. About Products and pickup. 541-848-7525 1-541-954-1727 Services Every Day through Just bought a new boat? The Bulletin ClessiBeds Labradors, AKC, Males Sell your old one in the Black and Chocolate classifieds! Ask about our Donate deposit bottles/ S o s w e et ! $5 5 0 Super Seller rates! cans to local all vol- 541-410-0588 541-385-5809 unteer, non-profit respuppies ador cue, to help with cat Papillion spay/neuter vet bills. able tri-colored, $350 Pets & Supplies Excellent references Cans for Cats trailer 541-350-1684 at Sheriff's parking lot, Hwy, 20 W, 2/11-22, Queensland Heelers The Bulletin recomPetSmart 2/2 3 -25. standard & mini,$150 & mends extra caution up. 541-280-1537 when purc h as- Donate M-F @ Smith Signs, 1515 NE 2nd; rightwayranch.wording products or seror at Tumalo sanctupress.com vices from out of the ary a nytime. I n fo: area. Sending cash, Rodent control experts 541-389-8420; checks, or credit in(barn cats) seek work www.craftcats.org. f ormation may b e in exchange for safe subjected to fraud. shelter, basic care. DO YOU HAVE For more i nformaFixed, shots. We detion about an adverSOMETHING TO liver! 389-8420. SELL tiser, you may call Scottish Terrier puppies, the O r egon State FOR $500 OR LESS? AKC, male & female, 1st Attorney General's Non-commercial shots, wormed, 8 weeks, Office Co n s umer ready to go now! Call advertisers may Protection hotline at 541-317-5624 1-877-877-9392. place an ad with our Shiba Inu Reg'd male "QUICK CASH SPECIAL e
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$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355
Beautiful and healthy H AVANESE PU P P Y 4' t angerine m i l k AKC, Dewclaws, UTD snake. 6' tank and ac- s hots/wormer, n o n cessories. Bargain at shed, hypoallergenic, GENERATE SOME ex$500. (541) 610-2363 citement i n your $850 541-460-1277. neighborhood! Plan a BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! garage sale and don't The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are forget to advertise in still over 2,000 folks in our community without classified! permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift 541-385-5809. camps, getting by as best they can. NEED TO CANCEL The following items are badly needed to YOUR AD? help them get through the winter: The Bulletin @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ Classifieds has an New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. "After Hours" Line Call 541-383-2371 e WARM CLOTHING: 24 hrs. to cancel Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. your ad! PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER Roper washer, electric 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. d ryer, $100 for t h e PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. pair. 541-389-1086
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Antiques wanted: furniture, marbles, beer cans, early B/W photography, old hardware/ fixtures. 541-389-1578 Divorce Liquidation Autographed guitar collection: Clapton, McCartney, Eagles, others. Valued over $2500 each; asking $475 each, with authenticity & appraisal. Call cell, 561-880-7352.
Rc cztts home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron, Bend 541-318-1501
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entines w i t h our freshly dipped strawberries, dec a dent truffles and hand-crafted sweets! SAVE 20 percent on qualifying gifts over $29! Visit www.berr ies.com/enticing o r Call 1-888-718-8479.
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WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'
• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species and cost per cord to better serve our customers.
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Screened, soil & compost m i x ed , no rocks/clods. High humus level, exc. for flower beds, lawns, gardens, straight s creened to p s o il. Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul. 541-548-3949.
The Bulletin Offers Musical Instruments Free Private Party Ads Lost 8 Found • 3 lines - 3 days S pinet piano, g o od • Private Party Only Found black 8 white cat condition, $150 obo. • Total of items adveron Pinehurst in TuCall 541-604-4694 tised must equal $200 m alo. L i ke s mi l k ! or Less 541-389-9062. 260 FOR DETAILS or to Misc. Items PLACE AN AD, Found I-Pod on Zenith Call 541-385-5809 Ave., Redmond. Call 288 Wood suit h angFax 541-385-5802 to I.D., 541-504-7033 ers, with w i shbone p ant c l asp. $ 1 7 5.Wanted- paying cash 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Found piece of silver, SE for Hi-fi audio & stu541-447-4567 $190/cord. Multi-cord Bend, call to identify; will equip. Mclntosh, discounts, & t/s cords hold u n t i l 4/3 0 /13. Advertise V A CATION dio J BL, Marantz, D y available. Immediate 541-639-7767 SPECIALS to 3 m i lnaco, Heathkit, San- delivery! 541-408-6193 lion P acific N o rth- sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Found; Sunday, skatewesterners! 30 daily board near Congress All Year Dependable newspapers, six Call 541-261-1808 states. 25-word clas- WHEN YOU SEE THIS Firewood: Seasoned St., Call to i dentify. Lodgepole, Split, Del. 541-480-3122 sified $525 for a 3-day Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 Found tiny white dog, NE a d. Cal l (916) Oo ~ for $335. Cash, Check 18th 8 2 88-6019 o r vis i t Mor n ingstar, or Credit Card OK. morning of 2/3. www.pnna.com/advert Call to 541-420-3484. On a classified ad ising pndc.cfm for the identify, 541-419-1575 go to Pacific Nor t hwest Daily Con n ection. www.bendbulletin.com Split, Dry lodgepole, Lost: Cardigan Corgi feto view additional red fir, cedar and ju- male, from Pine Nursery (PNDC) niper, $200/cord, photos of the item. Dog Park, Fri 2/1, blue Bend's Indoor Swap delrvery included! merle very cute, $500 Meet - A Mini-Mall full 541-923-6987, Iv msg. reward. 541-633-9056 or 263 of Unique Treasures! 541-788-2849 Tools 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. Tamarack seasoned 2 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. years, $225 cord. REMEMBER: If you 541-977-2040 Buying Diamonds Craftsman 10" Table have lost an animal, Saw, $199; Yamaha don't forget to check /Gotd for Cash 2600 Portable GenThe Humane Society Saxon's Fine Jewelers erator (never used) 541-389-6655 in Bend 541-382-3537 Gardening Supplies $450; Craftsman Redmond, BUYING rotating bench, $75. & Equipment • 541-923-0882 Lionel/American Flyer Mike, 541-923-2953. Prineville, trains, accessories. P oulan rider 42" c ut 541-447-7178; 541-408-2191. 18'/s hp, $650 obo. OR Craft Cats, 541-389-9268. BUYING & SE L LING 541-389-8420. All gold jewelry, silver • Building Materials and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, Bend Habitat class rings, sterling silRESTORE ver, coin collect, vin- Building Supply Resale tage watches, dental Quality at LOW gold. Bill Fl e ming, PRICES
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puppies, ready now, vet checked, 1st shots, $600 People Look for Information each. 541-388-5418 About Products and Siberian Husky females: Services Every Daythrough 10wks, $300; 15 mo AKC The Bulletin Clussifieds
Adult companion cats www.bendbulletin.com SpringerSpaniel Pups FREE to seniors, disready 2/17,Champion abled & ve t e rans! $400. Now taking Tame, altered, shots, Foster homes needed lines, dep, 541-604-6232 for the upcoming kitID chip, more. Will alten season & for spe- Yellow Lab AKC male ways take back for any reason. 541-389- cial needs cats. Res- 14 wks, basic obed. all 8420. Visit S at/Sun cue provides food, shots. 541-771-6687 1 -5. P h otos, i n f o : supplies, vet support; e4 www.craftcats.org. you provide safe, loving care. Need to be • pf s p Alaskan Malamute AKC able to commit to 3-6 Yorkie/Chihuahua puppy, pups, ready to g o. wks, Also n eeded, 1st shots, $180, cash. F irst shots & d e w - foster home trainers/ 541-678-7599 ormed. $ 7 0 0-$800. coordinators. Lv. msg, 541-410-7563. 541 389 8420, or see Yorkie pup, male. All www.craftcats.org & shots 8 neutered, $350 Alaskan Malamute e-mail if you can help. cash. 541-536-7770 pups, 2M 3F, $400 each. 541-771-9255. Yorkies! Everlasting love Find exactly what in time for ValenAmerican Eskimo, 5 you are looking for in the just tines, 3 puppies left. mo. old male, pure 541-777-7743 CLASSIFIEDS white, AKC/UKC reg., $800. 541-610-2286 210 Furniture & Appliances
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. ,• B e n d
208
00
Adopt a nice CRAFT cat or kitten from Tumalo sanctuary, Pet S mart, o r Pet c o ! Fixed, shots, ID chip, t ested, m ore! 3 8 9 8420. Photos, i nfo: www.craftcats.org & like us on Facebook.
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The Bulletin
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or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809
www.bendbulletin.com
M orePixatBendbuletin.com
541-382-9419. DISH Network. Starting
740 NE 1st 541-312-6709
at $19.99/month (for Open to the public. 1 2 mos.) 8 Hi g h Speed Internet start282 GUN SHOW Feb. 23rd & 24th, 2013 ing at $14.95/month • Heating & Stoves Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bendi Deschutes Fairgrounds (where av a i lable.) Buy! Sell! Trade! S AVE! A s k A b o u t Const. propane heater, ESTATE/ MOVING www.redeuxbend.com SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 SAME DAY Installa- 250,000 Btu $90 obo. ** FREE ** SALE. $8 Admission, t ion! C A L L Now ! 541-410-4596 Garage Sale Kit 12 8 under free! Large Awbrey Butte 1-866-947-7995. Pendleton vintage plaid OREGON TRAIL GUN "Knock-about' 1950's, sz EdenPURE® Portable home! Quality items Place an ad in The (PNDC) include 2 sofas, Barca Bulletin for your gaSHOWS, 541-347-2120 Infrared Heaters. Join Med, $75. 541-475-1091 GENERATE SOME or 541-404-1890 Lounger recliners, oak rage sale and rethe 3 million beating EXCITEMENT diningset, oak coffee ceive a Garage Sale Secretary, drop front, the cold and winter IN YOUR 8 end tables, wicker & Kit FREE! mahogany, w/chair, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! heating bills. SAVE NEIGBORHOOD. dinette sets, babied & beautiful! $229 on our wooden Plan a garage sale and furniture, Mid KIT I NCLUDES: Door-to-door selling with A steal a t $ 2 5 0 . EdenPURE® Model wicker don't forget to adverCentury Modern Teak • 4 Garage Sale Signs 541-322-6281. fast results! It's the easiest 750. C A L L NOW • $2.00 Off Coupon To tise in classified! dining tab l e/sidewhile supplies last! way in the world to sell. 541-385-5809. board/tile top & glass Use Toward Your The Bulletin reserves 1-866-906-6902. top tables, side chairs, Next Ad the right to publish all The Bulletin Classified GET FREE OF CREDIT (PNDC) lots of books, pictures • 10 Tips For "Garage ads from The Bulletin CARD DEBT NOW! 541-385-5809 8 a r t work, d e cor, Sale Success~" newspaper onto The Cut payments by up Find exactly what lamps, TVs & e lecBulletin Internet webto half. Stop creditors H & H FIREARMS you are looking for in the tronics, kitchenware, site. PICK UP YOUR from calling. Dell computer 8 o fBuy, Sell, Trade, GARAGE SALE KIT at 866-775-9621. CLASSIFIEDS fice items, glassware Consign. Across From The Bulletin 1777 SW Chandler (PNDC) 8 collectibles, jewelry, Servtpg Central Oregon epce l903 Pilot Butte Drive-In Highspeed Internet EVNOTICE TO BBQ, canoe & kayak, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 541-382-9352 ADVERTISER camping 8 s p orting The Bulletin ERYWHERE By SatAK-47 rifle NIB, items, garage 8 outellite! Speeds up to Since September 29, Coins & Stamps • MRM asking $1100 o bo. 12mbps! (200x faster 1991, advertising for door, lots misc! 541-771-9902. than dial-up.) Starting used woodstoves has Fri. & Sat., 9-4. NumNeed help fixing stuff? been limited to modbers issued Fri. 8 a.m. Call $49.95/mo. CALL One week only! 30 Rnd. at A Service Professional Mt. Washington Dr. to NOW & G O F A S T! els which have been find the help you need. AR-15 Magazines $40 c ertified by th e O r Summit to Farewell, 1-888-718-2162. www Oendtpulletin com Each. While they last. left on Lawrence Ct. egon Department of (PNDC) 541-601-7858 Bend Environmental Qual- to 1779 NW O'Kane Pots, pans 8 k i tchen- ity (DEQ) and the fed- Ct., Bend. Ruger SR9 (2) 17 rnd w are, 10 p i eces I HELP YOUR AD Sales Other Areas eral En v ironmental clips, new in box, $750 $5-$10ea. 541-383-4231 stand out from the Protection A g e ncy Attic Estates 8 obo. 541-475-3272 rest! Have the top line ProFlowers - Enjoy 60 Appraisals NOTICE (EPA) as having met in bold print for only Ruger Super Single-six, percent off T e nder smoke emission stan- www.atticestatesanRemember to remove $2.00 extra. pre-warninq, star Hugs and Kisses with dards. A cer t ified dappraisals.com your Garage Sale signs model, SgS,9.5 bbl, Chocolates for your w oodstove may b e 541-350-6822 (nails, staples, etc.) The Bulletin NEW NEVER FIRED valentine! Site price: Ser np reprea oregon rpre lpcp identified by its certifh after your Sale event orig. box & m anual. 286 $49.99, you pay just cation label, which is is over! THANKS! 541-385-5809 $700 firm, cash. ask for $19.99. Plus take 20 permanently attached Sales Northeast Bend From The Bulletin Steve 541-389-8215. percent off other gifts to the stove. The Buland your local utility Private collector buying over $ 29 ! G o to letin will no t k n ow- 8th Street Artisans companies. p ostage stamp a l Wanted: Collector www. Proflowers.com/f ingly accept advertis- Saturday Market, 10-4 bums & c o llections, seeks high quality abulous or call ing for the sale of The Bulletin world-wide and U.S. fishing items. every Sat. 1036 NE ServingCentral Oregon spce 1903 1-888-721-9617. 573-286-4343 (local, Call 541-678-5753, or uncertified 8th St., Bend behind cell ¹) 503-351-2746 woodstoves. 7-11 on Greenwood. www.bendbulletin.com (PNDC)
E2 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5e00 pm Fri •
Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mone Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tuese
476
476
870
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Boats & Accessories
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Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Sunday. • • • •
a
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
*Must state prices in ed
C®X
The Bulletin
1st quality grass hay, 70- Ib bales, barn stored, $250/ ton. Also big bales! Patterson Ranch, Sisters, 541-549-3831
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809
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 bendbulietin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Ciassifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbuiietin.com Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Farmers Column 10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS
for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. 541-617-1133. CCB ¹173684.
kfjbuilders@ykwc.net Rafter L F Ranch & Farm Svcs.- Custom Haying 8 Field Work Call Lee Fischer, 541-410-4495 376
Meat & Animal Processing
You know what they say about one man's trash".
el e
541-389-0435
W atercraft
•
2007 SeaDoo 2004 Waverunner, excellent condition, LOW hours. Double trailer, lots of extras.
The Bulletin
r
The Bulletin PO Box 436 Chiloquin, OR 97624 I Recommends extra obs©klamathtribes.com caution when purchasing products or I 541-783-2219 x 113 services from out of •
541-385-8090 or 209-605-5537
l
Monaco Dynasty 2004, loaded, 3 slides, diesel, Reduced - now $119,000,
5 4 1 -923-
8572 or 541-749-0037I
Southwind 35.5' Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Bought new at $132 913 asking $93,500. Call 541-419-4212
Tioga Class C 23', 2000, 25 500 mi, Onan gen, $15,900. 541-419-9229
Look at:
I
Winnebago 30A Sightseer 2012, 31 ft., all options, 2 sli d e s,
WOIN
Lead Forester
362HP V10, 10K mi.,
mint cond., $105,900.
541-330-5516
Bendhomes.com
$43,691 - $61,595 Full Benefits Prof-Mgmt, Regular Full-Time
• «~I
l the area. Sending l for Complete Listings of c ash, checks, o r l credit i n f o rmationl Area Real Estate for Sale i may be subjected to HD Screaming Eagle
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I
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I
Independent Contractor
•
•
•
© Call Today ©
programs.
Duties include, but are not limited to, setting
up/preparation for spring term Organic Chemistry and Biology labs, assisting in Organic Chemistry lab development and execution of the lab courses. Required qualifications include a familiarity with chemistry laboratory techniques including handling chemicals, making solutions, handling glassware and equipment. Preferred qualifications include experience with lab instrumentation (e.g., IR, GC, and HPLC) and sterile technique as well as a demonstrated commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity.
I 541-382-7053 or The closing date is 2/15/13. OSU is an AA/EOE.
We are looking for a full-time employee that is resourceful and self-motivated to assist a large staff and write daily clerical reports. This person should like working in a fast-paced environment and be able to meet tight deadlines on a daily basis. Organization, flexibility, writing skills and a high level of computer proficiency are essential. A solid knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typing speed of at least 50 WPM is required.
Clissifieds t
860
541-948-2310
Newspaper Delivery
Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office experience preferred.
.
• Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, $1750. • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1250. • Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
++++++++++++++++++
Ability to work for long periods of time doing detail-oriented work is necessary. This person must understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties.
•
$5000. 541-221-5221
Used out-drive parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995.
Operate Your Own Business
There's a whole pile of "treasure" here!
Thousands ofadsdaily in print andonline.
2007 Ski-Doo Renegade 600 w/513 mi, like new, very fast! Reduced to
•
Clerical/Office
n
Serving Central Oregon smce 1903
Sn o wmobiles
X0000
541-475-7479
Where buyers meet sellers
The Bulletin •
32' Fleetwood Fiesta '03, no slide-out, Triton eng, all amenities, 1 owner, perfect, only 17K miles, 476 476 $21,500. 541-504-3253 Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' FRAUD. Employment Employment Electra Glide 2005, n motor, two tone For more informa2004, only 34K, loaded, Opportunities Opportunities 103 too much to list, ext'd tion about an adverThis position is candy teal, new tires, warr. thru 2014, $54,900 located in Chiloquin l tiser, you may call 23K miles, CD player DRIVER Dennis, 541-589-3243 the Oregon State Automotive Techni- CDL Driver/Service Rep hydraulic clutch, exl Attorney General's l cian N eede d . cellent condition. needed for local envi- For more information Office C o n sumer a Highest offer takes it. Mopar exp. desired. contact: ronmental s e r vices Protection hotline at l Chrysler ce r t ified company. Submit reTravel Trailers 541-480-8080. Beaver Marquis D iaand ASE certificaThe Klamath Tribes l 1-877-877-9392. mante, 1 of 20, '98, prissume to: 865 t ion are a m a j o r CHunter@tnermofluids.com PO Box 436 tine, 44K mi, garaged, 23' Wanderer, 1997, ex421 p lus. V er y b u s y Chiloquin, OR 97624 LThe Bulletin g $119,900. 541-771-3030 cellent condition, f u ll ATVs No calls, please. Schools & Training bath, roll-out awning. shop. Hard worker obs 0 klamathtribes.com $5800. 541-546-9395 541-783-2219 x 113 and attention to de2008 Polaris Ranger 500 A IRLINES AR E H I R - tail. Will be reqarded Call The Bulletin At Looking for your next Fl, 76 total hrs. Incl Warn ING - Train for hands with top pay. RV CONSIGNMENTS 541-385-5809 employee? Just too many winch & s n o w p l ow, WANTED on Aviation MaintePlace a Bulletin help $6200. 541-536-6081 Send replies to: Place Your Ad Or E-Mail collectibles? nance Career. FAA We Do The Work ... wanted ad today and PO Box 6676 At: www.bendbulletin.com You Keep The Cash! approved p r ogram. reach over 60,000 Bend, OR 97708 Econoline RV 19 8 9, On-site credit Financial aid if qualiSell them in readers each week. fully loaded, exc. cond, fied - Housing availapproval team, FARM FOREMAN Your classified ad The Bulletin Classifieds 35K m i. , R e duced web site presence. able. Call Aviation In- Carpeting, Vinyl and (Bio Science Research will also appear on Tile Installers $15,250. 541-546-6133 We Take Trade-Ins! stitute of Tech 2 ) Cen t r al bendbulletin.com Looking for full-time in- Oregon A g r icultural 541-385-5809 Maintenance. Free Advertising. which currently stallers to start work Yamaha Banshee 2001, 1-877-804-5293. BIG COUNTRY RV R esearch Cen t e r receives over 1.5 Four Winds Class immediately. Work will custom built 350 motor, (PNDC) A 32' H u r ricane Bend 541-330-2495 (COARC) M a dras,H ome Cleaning crew million page views be in both the Tri-Citrace-ready, lots of extras, 2007. CAN'T BEAT Redmond: 541-548-5254 OR. member, w e ekdays every month at $5500/obo 541-647-8931 THIS! Look before ATTEND CO L LEGE ies and Walla Walla, Primary r e sponsibility only. No weekends, no extra cost. ONLINE 100%. WA areas. Require- for al l f a rming/crop evening or holidays. you buy, b e low Bulletin Classifieds 870 ments include reliable management opera- 541-815-0015. *Medical, *Business, market value! Size Get Results! transportation & valid Boats & Accessories *Criminal Jus t i ce, 8 mileage DOES tions, equipment upCall 385-5809 driver's license; priManager *Hospitality, *Web. matter! 12,500 mi, the or place vately owned tools are keep/repair a t 12' Aluminum, 06 Nis Now Hiring at Juniper all amenities, Ford Job placement assis- a plus. Vinyl installers COARC Madras locayour ad on-line at Motel i n Mad r as. san, 6hp, 4 cycle V10, Ithr, c h erry, tance. Comp u ter should be proficient in tion. Must be highly bendbulletin.com trailer, extras, $995 Looking fo r l i v e-in slides, like new! New Springdale 2005 27', 4' self-directed, k nowlavailable. F i n ancial cove welding or willing slide in dining/living area, 541-977-9971 ma n ager. low price, $54,900. Aid if qual i fied. to become so. Contact edgeable of farming full-time sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 541-548-5216 Position includes 3 SCHEV a u thorized. Brian o r practices and able to Jim at obo. 541-408-3811 bdrm, 2 b ath home 17' 1984 Chris Craft Call 86 6 - 688-7078 Benjamin's work in collaboration REEHSQ Ca r p et and living expenses. Scorpion, 140 HP www.CenturaOnline.c with other staff and One, Richland, WA; 5 DiEflRMQ om (PNDC) research faculty. Re- For information call inboard/outboard, 2 509-946-4506 depth finders, trollquires CDL l i cense 541-639-9936. within 3 months and ing motor, full cover, Check out the Dental Assistant Ass i stant EZ - L oad t railer, • with EFDA needed. Send Pesticide Applicator Medical 9 I 9 i classifieds online t Full-time, 6 mo. min. License w i t hi n 6 $3500 OBO. www.bendbulletin.com resume & cover letter to exp. Pick up appli541-382-3728. Box 20277396, c/o The m onths. Ap p l y a t cation/job descripUpdated daily Bulletin, PO Box 6020, http://oregonstate.edu pkg at office. 528 Bend, OR 97708. /jobs/ posting tion MadrasMedical TRUCK SCHOOL 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, ¹0010181. For assisLoans & Mortgages Group www. IITR.net 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 tance, call 76 NE 12th St., DO YOU NEED • • I Redmond Campus i hp Bowrider w/depth (541) 475-71 07. WARNING Madras, OR. A GREAT Student Loans/Job finder, radio/CD player, The Bulletin recomWaiting Toll Free EMPLOYEE rod holders, full canmends you use cau1-888-387-9252 RIGHT NOW? vas, EZ Loader trailer, Meet singles right now! Independent Contractor tion when you proNo paid o perators, Western Washington Call The Bulletin exclnt cond, $14,500. vide personal Guy seeks gal 48-65, 707-484-3518 (Bend) just real people like before 11 a.m. and 454 information to compayou. Browse greetslim/average build, to get an ad in to pub* Supplement Your Income* Looking for Employment nies offering loans or share quiet times; ings, exchange meslish the next day! si s l rt si s credit, especially sages and connect trips, walks, nature, 541-385-5809. Would love to do child those asking for adlive. Try it free. Call moon-light, cuddling! VIEW the care or in-home adult vance loan fees or now: 8 7 7-955-5505. Greg, PO Box 3013 20.5' 2004 Bayliner Classifieds at: c are, p a r t tim e . companies from out of 205 Arlington, WA 98223. (PNDC) www.bendbulletin.com Run About, 220 541-383-2851 state. If you have HP, V8, open bow, concerns or questions, we suggest you exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, Lab Assistant (Organic Chemistry & consult your attorney lots of extras incl. or call CONSUMER Biology), Temporary, Part-time. tower, Bimini & HOTLINE, custom trailer, 1-877-877-9392. Oregon State University - Cascades, Bend has $19,500. a temporary, part-time employment opportuBANK TURNED YOU 541-389-1413 Ca/I 54 I -385-5809 nity. The ideal applicant functions as a memDOWN? Private party ber of the OSU-Cascades upper division Gento romote our service will loan on real esWe are looking for independent coneral Science (Organic Chemistry and Biology) tate equity. Credit, no
Grain-fed beef $2.88/lb. hanging weight, half or whole to be pro- T he salary rate i s $ 1 1.82/hour and t h e cessed m i d-march. anticipated start date is March 1, 2013. $500 deposit. To apply for this position, please submit a Half Hog Sale, $190 inresume and/or a temp job application cludes cutting wrap(http://oregonstate.edu/ ping and cure. admin/hristeam/forms/TS901.doc) WHILE THEY LAST! to Jeff .Gautschi@osucascades.edu or via fax 541-573-2677 Lambs corn-fed, taking orders now for March delivery.
rage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.
ethic and excellent Motorcycles & Accessories customer se r v icePainter Full time position, exp. skills are essential. in all phases of paintCRAMPED FOR $10,000 Must be 21 or over CASH? 541-719-8444 ing req. Call Chuck at as you will be ex- 541-948-8499. Use classified to sell pected to be able to those items you no Need help fixing stuff? tend bar periodically. Plumber, Journeymen longer need. needed for new conCall A ServiceProfessional Hours may v a r y. Call 541-385-5809 struction. Start immedi find the help you need. Pays minimum wage ately! Call Gary, www.bendbulletin.com and tips. Apply on541-410-1655 line at w ww.cityofHarley Davidson SoftAds published in aWaprineville.com TURN THE PAGE Tail De luxe 2 0 0 7, tercraft" include: KayFor More Ads white/cobalt, w / pasaks, rafts and motorForester ized personal senger kit, Vance & $39,166 - $56,075 The Bulletin Hines muffler system watercrafts. For Full Benefits "boats" please see Prof-Mgmt, Regular & kit, 1045 mi., exc. Remember.... Full-Time ond, $16,9 9 9 , Class 870. A dd your web a d - c541-389-9188. 541-385-5809 dress to your ad and This position is readers on The Harley Heritage located in Chiloquin. Bulletin' s web site Softail, 2003 Serving Central Oregon since l903 will be able to click $5,000+ in extras, For more information through automatically $2000 paint job, contact: to your site. 30K mi. 1 owner, Motorhomes • For more information The Klamath Tribes please call
QO~O I
325
Motorhomes
Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires,under cover, hwy. miles only,4 door fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, Interbath tub 8 shower, 50 amp propane gen & more! $45,000.
GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a ga-
The Bulletin
bendbulletin.com
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call ua immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
Hay, Grain & Feed
oQ00
FLOORING Experienced Hardwood Finish in Place Installers
Medical Assistant in Bend. Full-time, 40 hr./4 day work week Looking fo r ex p eri- at a b usy internal medicine p ractice. enced craftsmen to start work i m medi- Recent MA experience with EMR req. ately. Work will be in both the Tri-Cities and Great benefit packWalla Walla, Wash- age; salary DOE. Fax resume includington areas. V a lid i ng references t o driver's license and reliable transportation 541-389-2662 Attn: are required. Contact Clinic Administrator. Brian o r Jim at Benjamin's Ca r p et /Clerical One, Richland, WA; Medical Excellent o p portu509-946-4506 nity with b e nefits, strong com p uter Food Service skills required, up Meadow Lakes Golf t o $ 1 5/hr. D OE. Course is looking for a w ait s t aff e m - Contact: HR Dept. at ployee. Good work 855-357-6311.
Q
To apply, please send a resume to: Box 20281649, c/o The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708
tractors to service home delivery routes in:
* Terrebonne * Must be available 7 days a week, early morn-
ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle.
Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or apply vja email at online © bendbulletin.com
OOO
problem, good equity is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200. LOCAL MONEyrWe buy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.
Building/Contracting
20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO.
NOTICE: Oregon state law req u ires anyone who co n t racts for construction work to be licensed with the C onstruction Con -
541-379-3530
573
Business Opportunities
The Bulletin
A Classified ad is an EASY W A Y TO 22' Custom Weld Jet, REACH over 3 million 2002, 350 Vortec, 210 Pacific Northwestern- hrs, garaged, loaded. ers. $5 2 5 /25-word 541-923-0854. RollTender c lassified ad i n 3 0 daily newspapers for Ads published in the "Boats" classification 3-days. Call the Painclude: Speed, fishcific Northwest Daily Connection ing, drift, canoe, (916) 2 88-6019 o r e m a il house and sail boats. Are you interested in learning the entry For all other types of elizabeth@cnpa.com level basics of being a pressman? atercraft, please see for more info (PNDC) Class 875. The Bulletin has an immediate opening for a Extreme Value Adver541-385-5809 full time p r essroom Roll T e nder. T h is tising! 30 Daily newsentry-level position is responsible for the loadpapers $525/25-word ing of newsprint rolls and the operation of the classified, 3-d a ys. Servtng Central Oregon since 1903 reel stands on the press. The work schedule Reach 3 million Pawill consist of 4 days at 10 hours per day, from cific Northwesterners. 3:30 PM to approximately 2:30 AM, on a For more information rotating schedule that will allow for every other YOURBOAT ... i call (916) 288-6019 or i with ou r sp e c ial weekend being 3 days off. Starting rate is email: rates for selling your I $10.00 per hour DOE. elizabeth@cnpa.com for the Pacific North- ~ boat or watercraft! The right person for the job must be able to west Daily Connecmove and lift 50 lbs. or more on a continuing / Place an ad in The tion. (PNDC) B ulletin w it h ou r basis. The position also requires reaching, standing, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, / 3-month p ackage kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. Learn~ which includes: ing and using proper safety practices will be a primary responsibility. I *5 lines of text and a photo or up to 10 For more information or to submit a resume, I l ines with no photo *Free online ad at please contact:
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CI'he Bulletin
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GarageSales
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Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, aneison@bendbuiletin.com Applications are also available at the front desk at The Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave., Bend, OR. For consideration all resumes/applications must be received prior to February 22nd. Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE
GarageSales I bendbulletin.com *Free pick up into Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!
[ I
~ The Central Oregon ~
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f Nickel ads.
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tractors Board (CCB). A n active lice n se means the contractor i s bonded an d i n or 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured s ured. Ve r ify t h e contractor's CCB CCB¹181595 c ense through t h e Margo Construction CCB Cons u m er LLC Since 1992 Website • Pavers• Carpentry www.hireaticensedcontractor. • Remodeling • Decks com • Window/Door or call 503-378-4621. The Bulletin recom- Replacement • Int/Ext Paint • CCB 176121 mends checking with 541-480-3179 the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. Some other t r ades Landscaping/Yard Care also req u ire additional licenses and N OTICE: O RE G O N Landscape Contraccertifications. tors Law (ORS 671) r equires a l l bu s i Debris Removal • nesses that advertise t o p e r form L a n dJUNK BE GONE scape C o n struction I Haul Away FREE which incl u des: For Salvage. Also p lanting, dec k s , Cleanups & Cleanouts fences, arbors, Mel, 541-389-8107 w ater-features, a n d installation, repair of E xcavating • irrigation systems to be licensed with the Levi's Dirt Works Landscape Contracfor all your dirt & excavat ors B o a rd . Th i s tion needs. Concrete, 4-digit number is to be Driveway Gradingincluded in all adverLow cost! ccb¹ 194077 tisements which indi541-639-5282 cate the business has a bond, insurance and Handyman workers c ompensation for their employI DO THAT! ees. For your protecHome/Rental repairs tion call 503-378-5909 Small jobs to remodels or use our website: Honest, guaranteed www.lcb.state.or.us to work. CCB¹151573 check license status Dennis 541-317-9768 before co n t racting b u s iness. Just bought a new boat? with t h e Persons doing landSell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our scape maintenance Super Seller rates! do not require a LCB license. 541-385-5809 •
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 'IO, 2013
Impact
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 daysbeforepublication date to business@bendbulletin.com or click on"Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323
TODAY FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507.
MONDAY AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church of God, 51491 Morson Street, La Pine; 541-536-6237. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; appointments requested; free; 4-7 p.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary School, 1314 S.W. KalamaAve., Redmond; 541-389-6507. DOWNTOWN URBAN RENEWAL ADVISORYCOMMITTEE:Overview of the renewal plan and project; free; 6 p.m.; Redmond City Hall, 716 S.W. Evergreen Ave.; 541-923-7710.
OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30p.m .; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. EXPERIENCECHINA INFO SESSION: Diana Haffner will talkabout the Bend Chamber trip to China. She will share photos of her recent trip, discuss the itinerary, business conference in Beijing, required documentation, registration, details of the trip from flight service to optional tours and answer any questions you may have; register at http:I/bendchamber.org/chamberevents/china-trip; free; 4-5 p.m.; Bend Park 8 Recreation District Office, Community Room, 799 S.W. Columbia St.; 541-389-7275. SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCORE business counselors will be available every Tuesday for free oneon-one small business counseling; no appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www.score centraloregon.org.
WEDNESDAY
BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789. THEARTOF CONTENTMARKETING, ENGAGING YOURAUDIENCE: Kelly Walker, creative director and senior copywriter for Intrepid Marketing, will discuss howto develop written content that builds brand loyalty and leads your readers to action, including content development best practices, principles for getting attention that converts to sales and tailoring content to different marketing media; TUESDAY registration requested; free; 7:30 a.m.; HOIN TOTAKE CONTROL OF YOUR Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W. TIME ANDGET MORE OUT OF LIFE!: Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389Online webinar with strategies and 0803 or www.bendchamber.org. solutions to boost productivity and AARP FREETAXPREPARATION efficiency; hosted by SIMPLIFY; SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; registration required; $65; 8-9:30 appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.; Camp Sherman; 503-260-8714 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, or info@simplifynw.com. 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 54 I-706-6234. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: appointments requested; free; Demonstration on accessing, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, downloading and transferring library 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; digital books to eReaders; 9:30541-706-6234. 11 a.m.; Sisters Public Library, CENTRAL OREGONIRRIGATION 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070. DISTRICT BOARD MEETING: Free; FREE TAXPREPARATION 9 a.m.; Central Oregon Irrigation SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; District Office, 1055 S.W. Lake appointments requested; free; Court,Redmond;541-548-6047. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend KNOW EXCEL BUDGETS: Learn Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; to create a monthly budget 54 I-389-6507. spreadsheet; 2-3:30 p.m.; KNOW COFFEE,KNOW EBOOKS: Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 Learn about eReaders and how to N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. download eBooks and audiobooks OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2:30-4p.m .; from Deschutes Public Library; East Bend Public Library, 62080 eReaders are available or bring your Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3760. own; free; 1:30-2:30 p.m.; Bellatazza
Coffee, 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-617-7083. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; appointments requested; free; 4-7 p.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary School, 1314 S.W. KalamaAve., Redmond; 541-389-6507.
541-383-0187, coordinator© centraloregonmediation.com or www.centraloregonmediation. com. AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREE TAXPREPARATION THURSDAY SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; appointments requested; free; AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; Family Resource Center, 1144 appointments requested; free; Warm Springs St.; 541-553-1626. 9a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; PUBLICMEETING OF THE 541-706-6234. STATEWIDETRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENTPROGRAM: AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION Region 4"super-ACT" meeting; SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; free; 10 a.m.-noon; Deschutes appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church of County administration building, God, 51491 Morson Street, La Pine; 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend. 541-536-6237. TAX FILINGCLINICS: With Spanish language interpreters; AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Becky SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; Johnson Center, 412 S.W.Eighth appointments requested; free; St., Redmond; 541-617-4798. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs Family Resource Center,1144 Warm KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: Springs St.; 541-553-1626. Demonstration on accessing, OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2-3:30 p.m.; downloading and transferring library digital books to eReaders; Downtown Bend Public Library, 10:30a.m.; Redmond Public 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes BUSINESSNETWORK Ave.; 541-312-1050. INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CENTRALOREGONREAL CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: ESTATEINVESTMENTCLUB: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, 541-480-1765. Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. KNOW EXCELBUDGETS: Learn to create a monthly budget FRIDAY spreadsheet; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. PERS REFORM 5IMPACTS ON Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. LOCAL GOVERNMENT: Town hall forum; discussion of PERS reform, its impact on local government and what the future will hold; a panel of SATURDAY speakers will discuss ways to ensure public employees aretaken care of, BASIC MEDIATIONTRAINING: reasonable solutions and howthose See Friday's listing; registration solutions will impact public safety and required; $495; 8:30 a.m.education; registration required; $30 5 p.m.; Deschutes Children's for members, $40 for nonmembers; Foundation EastCampus, 7:30a.m.; BendGolf 8 Country Club, 2125 N.E. Daggett Lane, Bend; 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382541-383-0187, coordinator© 7437 or www.bendchamber.org. centraloregonmediation.com or BASIC MEDIATIONTRAINING: www.centraloregon This four-day training includes mediation.com. theory and practice in interestFREE TAXPREPARATION based negotiation and provides SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; the tools to navigate and intervene free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Prineville when conflicts arise; the training COIC Office, 2321 N.E. Third St.; meets the requirements for 541-447-3260. mediators set out in the Oregon Revised Statutes and in the Oregon DESIGN WORKSHOP:New homes, new products, cooking Administrative Rules; successful andappliance demo and bath completion of this training will remodeling; 9:30 a.m.; Neil enable participants to mediate Kelly, 190 N.E. Irving Ave., Bend; as a volunteer at Central Oregon 541-382-7580. Mediation Inc. as well as many other community mediation centers FREE TAXPREPARATION in Oregon; registration required; SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; $495; 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Children's Foundation East Campus, Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. 2125 N.E. Daggett Lane, Bend; Wall St.; 541-389-6507.
Continued from E1 But its findings about skier participation, d emographics and other topics do not necessarily reflect Mt. Bachelor, the area with the largest number of skiable acres in the state, according to several websites. Its market, said President and General Manager Dave Rathbun, goes beyond the state of
Oregon. "I don't look at any other Oregon mountain," he said. "The Sun Valleys and resorts down in Lake Tahoe, they are more indicative of t h e c ustomers we're trying to attract." The Oregon skier profile, prepared by the University of Oregon's Community Service Center an d E C ONorthwest for industry organization Ski Oregon, studied skier partici-
pation, demographics, spending and other topics through a survey of 874 skiers and snowboarders at Oregon ski areas. It's the first look at the state's snowsports industry since the 1988-89 season, when the industry had an estimated 1.5 million skier visits and generated $152 million in direct economic impact, equal to about $282 million in 2012 dollars. In the 2010-11 season, Oregon ski areas recorded about 1.9 million visits, which created $311 million in direct economic impact, according the latest report. When researchers added indirect spending — retail and equipment purchases and personal income of the industry's workers — the total economic impact rose to nearly $482 million. Day visitors represented the majority, 78 percent, of total skier visits in Oregon. However, destination skiers, those who stayed one or more nights and two or more days away from home, each spent about $300 per day, more than three times what day skiers spent. Skier visits in Oregon grew at a faster rate than those for the nation as a whole, in the two decadesbetween industry reports:nearly 27 percent for Oregon andcloseto 14 percent nationwide, according to data from the National Ski Areas Association. "The snowsports industry ... has maintained growth despite the economic downturn," the Oregon skier profile report said. W hile s k ier v i s its h a v e grown, the report warns the ski and snowboard population is aging, and the participation rate for young people is declining. Rathbun said Mt. Bachelor deviates from the findings suggested in the report. For example, he said, Mt. Bachelor has received national
DEEDS Deschutes County • Alex A. Arrache to Michael andTeresa Godfrey, Ridgepointe, Lot12, $161,000 • Christopher M. and Lisa L. Griffin to Mike E. andAthena V.Alvarez, Summit Crest, Phase1, Lot13, $249,000 • Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporationto Nichole M.Davisson, Centennial Glen, Lot 21,$185,000 • Nancy A. andClark W.Simons to Ricky W. andRita E.Ryser, Woodside Ranch, Phase 5,Lot10, Block 9, $4I9,000 • Lands Bend LLC to Robert and Monica L. Standen, South Deerfield Park, Lot11, $199,400 • COCC Foundation Property LLC to Michael S.andTracy L. Bennett, trustees for MichaelandTracy Bennett Family1996 RevocableTrust, Cedar Village, Phases1, 2and3, Lot13, Phase 2,$150,000 • Fred J. and Kimberly A. Fischbach to Elaine V.Remy,Parks at BrokenTop, Phase 2, Lot 69, $372,000 • Edward D. and Judith L. Mori, trustees for Edward D.Mori Living Trust, to John A. andJoy R.Fetters, trustees for 1992 John AllanFetters andJoyRae Fetters RevocableTrust, Orion Estates, Lot 26, Block 5, $285,000 • Pahlisch Homeslnc. to JeremyJ. and Karen E.Lind, Bridges at ShadowGlen, Phase1, Lot74, $300,402 • Oregon Joy LLC to Hayden Homes LLC, Antler Ridge, Phase 2,Lots 25, 28, 29, 30 and 89,Partition Plat 2008-43, Parcel 3, $442,200 • RoyW. Geigerto RoyW. Geigerand John A. Farley III, Township18, Range 12, Section12, $160,000 • Deutsche BankNational Trust Companyto L. ColleenHanlon, Township17, Range12, Section14, $27I,050 • Sharrell E. Bunger,trustee for Sharrell E. BungerRevocableTrust, to Joan and Malcolm Buxton, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 6, Lot172, $507,500 • John Gilmore to JamesM.and Maya H. Gauvreau, Kenwood, Lots12-13, Block 1, $165,000 • David and Marie Torrance to Christopher M. andLisa M. McCoy, Ridge at EagleCrest 45 Lot 4, $225,000
• Thomas A. andLaura C.Poole, trustee for Thomas A.Pooleand Laura C. Poole RevocableTrust, to Douglas S. and Laurie A.Jackson, Majestic Ridge, Phases1-2, Lot16, $356,000 • Pacific Coast Construction lnc. to Kendall E.and Lucille I. Loving, West CanyonEstates, Phase1, Lot 2, $200,000 •HaydenHomesLLCtoJamesM.and Paula J.Sansburn, AspenRim No. 2, Lot 208, $255,568 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC to Jack Beye, ForestMeadow,Phase2, Lot1, $264,950 • Hayden HomesLLCto Robert Halderman,AspenRim,Lot 47, $197,959 • William J. Miller Revocable Trustto Lauri L. Thomas,Ridgeat EagleCrest 57, Lot 155, $200,000 • David M. Frank and Melanie L. Brown to Nichole A.Thurner andJoyce Gallacher, Chestnut Park, Phase1, Lot 21, $155,752 • Karen L. Smith to David M. Feldman, Diamond A, FirstAddition, Lot1, Block 3, $368,000 • BC WestLLCto Spotted Goats LLC, Pasco lndustrial Park, Lot 2, $750,000 • Melvin McDougalto AlanNunes, Island Park, Lots 20-35, $330,000 • Melvin McDougal to RandiAdams, Island Park, Lots 9-19,$300,000 • NorthWest Crossing Condominium Development LLC toShari Winicki, NorthWest CrossingCondominium, Unit 8, $169,000 • Merrit and AnnaQuarumto Aaron A. and Elina Budrevich, Mountain Village East2,Lot4, Block8,$258,000 • Honeysuckle of BendLLCto Jay G.ClarkandJacquelynThompson, Township17, Range13,Section 4, $155,000 • Richard E. andMarianne M.Arnold, trustees for Arnold FamilyTrust, to Wade W.and Karen M. Watson, Crosswater, Phase3, Lot 59, $700,000 • Benjamin Nicholsto Pamela J. Wilson, Woodcrest, Phase 4,Lot 22, $151,000 • 4951 Eight Mile Rd.LLCto Thomas S. O'Neil, Mill Addition to Bend,Lot17, Block 4, $200,000 • Myrlie B. Evers-Williams, trusteefor Myrlie Evers-Williams RevocableTrust,
to Rachel M.DutcherandPierpont E. Meadow, Lot16, Block5, $415,000 Dutcher IV, BoonesBorough I, Lots 3 • Nicholas M. andStephanie D. and 4, Block1, $339,000 Kohler to Donald D.and Jackie L. • R. Joan Worrell to SusanF.Becker, Looney, Partition Plat 2003-74, Starwood, Lot 8, Block 7,$185,450 Parcel 2, $305,000 • Thomas E.Martin to Julia Coburn, Eastbrook Estates, Phase1, Lot1, $160,000 Mountain Medical •RonJ.andJacquelineA.Schmid, trusteesfor Ron J.Schmid Revocable Immediate Care Trust, Gayle P. Ishima and Thomas C. 541-388-7799 Zimmerman toThomasC.Zimmerman, Fairway Island, Lot1, Block5, $380,000 1302 NE 3rd SPB%d • Paul and Debora Crippato Alan F. www.mtmedgr.com ScheideggerandMarti A. Ayers, Sage
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recognition for its efforts at growing interest in the sport. "We're strategically engaged in focusing on driving skier and rider development ... and we have proof that we're having success," he said. Last year, M t . B a chelor won the National Ski Areas Association's Conversion Cup Challenge, an award for turning beginner skiers and riders into repeat customers. To attract the next crop of skiers and snowboarders, he said, Mt. Bachelor has focused its ski-school programs, developed terrain parks and added events at the mountain. "Our whole focus on our destination has been around the family and youth market," he sard. Unlike the survey results, Rathbun said, Mt. Bachelor attracts more destination than day skiers, with about 60 percent staying overnight. However, he said, while the national and statewide visitation numbers have been climbing, Mt. Bachelor's haven't. Bachelor, like the majority of O regon ski resorts,operates on public land administered bythe U.S.ForestService.That leaves few opportunities for base-area development, the report said. Mt. Bachelor hasn't added any new lifts or terrain since 1996, unlike other resorts in the region and nation, Rathbun said. That makes Mt. Bachelor less competitive. "We were a market leader and innovator in t h e e arly '80s and '90s," he said, noting Mt. Bachelor had b etween 525,000 to 600,000 skier visits a year. "(But) the industry caught up, and Mt. Bachelor stayed the same. There's been a shift where people in the Northwest ski and ride." Rathbun said Mt. Bachelor is counting on an expansion plan that includes lift improvements and year-round recreation activities to attract more skier visits. It's waiting for a decision from the Forest Service. Despite Mt. Bachelor's lack of new infrastructure, those surveyed for the Oregon skier profile ranked it as their favorite destination out of Oregon's 12 ski resorts. It was also the second-most commonly visited in the state, just behind Mt. Hood Meadows, according to the "Oregon Skier Profile an d E c onomic I mpact Analysis." "It is already a great place to ski," according to a comment included at the end of the report. "Mt. Bachelor has wonderful long, wide-groomed runs." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulfetin.com
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E4 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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02/09/13
THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL
Pickups
Travel Trailers
•
Springdale 29' 2 0 07, slide,Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $ 1 6 ,900, 541-390-2504
908
8 Service
©
'DDU
The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
Spo r t Utility Vehicles
•
Automobiles
Auto m o biles
Chevy Sil v erado 2000, 1/2 ton, V-8, 8' box, bed liner, std cab, auto, 4x4, 54k mi., e xc . co n d ., $9000. Jeep Wrangler Unlim- BMy Little Red Corvette" Scion XB 2006, 5 dr., 541-977-6653 ited 2008, Hard top, FWD, tinted windows, 1996 coupe. 132K, lift, S weet ! V in¹ Clean. Vin¹ 060269. 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. 572535. Now $1 2,500 541-923-1781 Now $9688. $23,988.
•
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
Aircraft, Parts
•
eeeer '
Ford 250 XLT 1990,
1966 GMC, 2nd owner, 1/3 interest in Colum- too many extras to list, bia 400, located at $8500 obo. Serious buySunriver. $ 1 38,500. ers only. 541-536-0123 Call 541-647-3718
6 yd. dump bed, 139k, Auto, $5500. 541-410-9997
©
S UBA R U .
BUBARUOlBRtlDCOM
2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
BUBARUOBBRNO COM
2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Ford Taurus wagon 2004, very nice, pwr everything, 120K, FWD, good tires,
NL%®"w~
S UB A R U .
Toyota Camrys: 1984, $1200 obo; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car, $500. Call for details, 541-548-6592
$4900 obo. 541-815-9939
Legal Notices
•
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E C I RCUIT C OURT O F T H E STATE O F ORE GON FOR T H E COUNTY OF DESCHUTES FEDERAL N A T IONAL M ORTGAG E ASSOCIATION,
(FNMA), Plaintiff, vs. THOMAS
C omplaint i s th e f oreclosure of t h e property located at 21163 Copperfield Avenue, Bend, OR 97702. Date of First Publication: February 9, 2013. McCarthy & H o lthus, LLP, Robert Hakari, OSB¹ 114082, 920
SW 3r d A v enue, First Floor, Portland, OR 97204, Phone: Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 Nissan Armada 2007, 29', weatherized, like (877) 369-6122, Ext. 4x4, tow pkg., pw, pl. 3370, Fax: ( 5 03) n ew, f u rnished & V in¹ 7 0 0432. N o w Ford F350 Super Duty 694-1460, ready to go, incl WineToyota Corolla 2004, King Ranch 20 0 4, $13,988. Chevy C-20 Pickup rhakari Omccarthyard S a tellite dish, auto., loaded, 204k Deisel, loaded. Vin¹ 26,995. 541-420-9964 1/3 interest i n w e l l- 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; miles. orig. owner, non holthus.com. Of At4@ S U BUBMtUOBBBND B A R U. A34788. COM equipped IFR Beech Bo- auto 4-spd, 396, model torneys for Plaintiff smoker, exc. c ond. Defendants. C ase Now $23,788. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend nanza A36, new 10-550/ CST /all options, orig. $6500 Prin e ville No.: 12C V 1 129. LEGAL NOTICE 877-266-3821 tit- I ' ~ I I prop, located KBDN. owner, $22,000, 503-358-8241 4ij® SU B ARU. SUMMONS BY NOTICE OF PUBLIC Dlr ¹0354 $65,000. 541-419-9510 541-923-6049 PUBLICATION. To: HEARING WHEN YOU SEE THIS NE Hwy 20 • Bend '55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn 2060877-266-3821 Thomas Grande IV. Deschutes County Mercedes Benz 2005 Toyota 4Ru n ner PROJECT car, 350 You are hereby reWeekend Warrior Toy CLK-Class, silver, Dlr ¹0354 ~OO 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , small block w/Weiand quired to a p pear A public hearing will Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, only 39k mi., $15,995 4WD, V6, 5 speed, dual quad tunnel ram FORD RANGER XLT a nd d e fend t h e fuel station, exc cond. b e held b y D e s t ow pkg., plus 4 On a classified ad with 450 Holleys. T-10 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 C omplaint file d sleeps 8, black/gray chutes County on studs tires on rims, 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, speed, with car alarm, go to against you in the i nterior, u se d 3X , Wednesday, FebruOregon Weld Prostar whls, www.bendbulletin.com above entitled CD player, extra tires r uns g reat. W a s a ry 13, a t 1 00 0 $24,999. 1/5th interest in 1973 $ 5500, no w o n l y AutoSreurce extra rolling chassis + to view additional 541-389-9188 cause within thirty on rims. Runs good. a m., in the Cessna 150 LLC extras. $6000 for all. Clean. 92,000 miles $4000.541-659-1416 ¹125811 541-598-3750 photos of the item. (30) days from the Commissioners' 150hp conversion, low 541-389-7669. aaaoregonautosource.com date of service of on m o tor. $ 2 6 00 H earing Roo m , Looking for your time on air frame and Toyota Landcruiser, thissummons upon OBO. 541-771-6511. 1300 N W Wall Looking for your next employee? engine, hangared in 2000, 85K mi, leather, you, and in case of S treet, Bend, Ornext employee? Place a Bulletin help Say Ugoodbuy Bend. Excellentpertow pkg, beautiful! your failure to do so, egon. The purpose Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and formance & afford$17,700. 541-389-3769 to that unused for want t h ereof, of the hearing is to wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 able flying! $6,500. Plaintiff will apply to consider the adopreach over 60,000 item by placing it in readers each week. 541-382-6752 I nternational Fla t the court for the retion of a change to each week. Your classified ad Bed Pickup 1963, 1 The Bulletin Classifieds readers Chevy Wagon 1957, lief demanded in the t he C ounty F e e Your classified ad will also appear on AIRPORT CAFE 4-dr., complete, ton dually, 4 s pd. Complaint NOTICE Schedule. Fee s will also appear on bendbulletin.com (Bend Municipal Airport) trans., great MPG, TO D E F ENDANT: $7,000 OBO, trades. and charges are rebendbulletin.com which currently re5 41 -385-580 9 Novv open 7 days/tNk! could be exc. wood Please call READ THESE PAviewed and considwhich currently receives over 1.5 mil• Daily Specials hauler, runs great, 541-389-6998 PERS CAREered on the basis of ceives over 1.5 million page views ev• New Management La n d cruiser new brakes, $1950. Toyota FULLY! You m ust the actual cost of lion page views ery month at no Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe 541-41 9-5480. 2000, A u to , 4x4 , OPEN DAILY, 8-3 "appear" in this case providing services. every month at extra cost. Bulletin 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, leather. Vin¹ 214783 Call 541-318-8989 Vehicle? or the other side will All interested parno extra cost. BulleClassifieds Get Reauto. trans, ps, air, Now $18,788. Call The Bulletin win a u tomatically. ties may appear and tin Classifieds sults! Call 385-5809 Location, Location, frame on rebuild, reand place an ad toTo "appear" you b e heard a t t h e ggbSUBARU. Get Results! Call or place your ad painted original blue, day! Location! m ust file with t he hearing. 385-5809 or place original blue interior, on-line at Executive Hanqar Ask about our 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend court a legal paper your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com at Bend Airport (KBDN) original hub caps, exc. "Whee/ Deal"! 877-266-3821 called a "motion" or Copies of the probendbufletin.com 60' wide x 50' d eep, chrome, asking $9000 for private party "answer." The BmoDlr ¹0354 posed fee change w/55' wide x 17' high bi- or make offer. advertisers tion" or "answer" (or RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L may be inspected at 541-385-9350 fold dr. Natural gas heat, FIND IT! "reply") hemiV8, hd, auto, cruise, m ust b e I The Bulletin recoml t he office o f t h e Fifth Wheels offc, bathroom. Adjacent BVY IT! am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. given to the court Board of Commismends extra caution i to Frontage Rd; great 541-420-3634 /390-1285 SELL IT) when p u r chasing I clerk or administrasioners, 1300 NW visibility for aviation busitor within 30 days of Wall Street, Bend, The Bulletin Classifieds i products or services ness. 541-948-2126 or Chrysler SD 4-Door the date of first pubfrom out of the area. Oregon, b e tween email 1jetjock@q.com 1930, CD S Royal spe c i fied the hours of 8 a.m. m 4I i Sending cas h , lication 8-cylinder, Toyota 4x 4 Pi c kup, ~ ~ i herein along w ith Piper A rcher 1 9 80, Standard, checks, or credit inand 12 noon, and 1 body is good, needs 1983, 8000-Ib Warn the required filing based in Madras, alp.m. and 5 p . m., formation may be I some r e s toration, winch, 2 sets of tire Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 fee. I t must be in ways hangared since runs, taking bids, Monday thr o ugh i subject to FRAUD. chains, canopy, 22R by Carriage, 4 slidep roper form a n d new. New annual, auto 541-383-3888, F riday. Plea s e For more informamotor, 5-spd transouts, inverter, satelhave proof of serpilot, IFR, one piece 541-815-3318 contact Chr i stina Nissan Sentra 2012, i tion about an adverlite sys, fireplace, 2 mission, $2495 obo. Toyota Tacoma 2011, 12,610 vice on the plaintiff's windshield. Fastest ArEdleston, Accountmi, full warranty, tiser, you may call 4x4, lift, very clean. 541-350-2859 flat screen TVs. cher around. 1750 toing Technician, at I the Oregon State I a ttorney or, if t h e V in¹ 0 1 5638. N o w PS, PB, AC, & more! $60,000. tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. Attorney General's t p laintiff does n o t (541) 385-1412 with $16,000. 541-788-0427 935 541-480-3923 $26,988. 541-475-6947, ask for Office C o n sumer have an a ttorney, questions. proof of service on Rob Berg. Sport Utility Vehicles i Protection hotline at CHECK YOUR AD gQbSUBARU. the plaintiff. If you Good classified ads tell 1-877-877-9392. have questions, you the essential facts in an 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Get your should see an attorinteresting Manner. Write 877-266-3821 FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, SerVing Central Oregan MOCBt903 ney immediately. If from the readers view - not business Dlr ¹0354 door panels w/flowers you need help in the seller's. Convert the 8 hummingbirds, finding an attorney, 940 Porsche 911 1974, low Want to impress the facts into benefits. Show white soft top & hard you may call t he Please check your ad Vans mi., complete motor/ the reader how the item will top. Just reduced to Buick Enclave 2008 CXL relatives? Remodel Oregon State Bar's on the first day it runs trans. rebuild, tuned help them in someway. $3,750. 541-317-9319 AWD, V-6, black, clean, your home with the Lawyer Ref e rral to make sure it is corsuspension, int. & ext. or 541-647-8483 This mechanicall y sound, 82k 96 Ford Windstar & Service at rect. Sometimes inhelp of a professional (503) refurb., oi l c o o ling, advertising tip miles. $20,995. 684-3763 or toll-free 2000 Nissan Quest, structions over the With an ad in shows new in & out, from The Bulletin's Call 541-815-1216 brought to you by both 7-passenger in Oregon at (800) p erf. m e ch. c o n d. phone are mis"Call A Service 452-7636. The r eThe Bulletin's vans, high miles, low Much more! understood and an error The Bulletin Professional" Directory l ief sought in t h e can occur in your ad. prices, $1200 & $28,000 541-420-2715 $2900, and worth If this happens to your "Call A Service every cent! ad, please contact us Ford Galaxie 500 1 963, 541-318-9999 the first day your ad Professional" 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, appears and we will 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & be happy to fix it Directory radio (orig),541-419-4989 Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, i • as soon as we can. Chevy Astro most options, new paint F ord Model A 1 9 2 8 & tires, 159K mi., $4250. If we can assist you, Cargo Van 2001, 916 Roadster pic k u p,Call 541-233-8944 please call us: pw, pdl, great cond., runs, titled, project car 541 -385-5809 Trucks & business car, well B from So. Cal, no rust, maint'd, regular oil The Bulletin Classified Heavy Equipment I not a rat rod. $4000. changes, $4500. 541-876-7237, leave Please call msg, or call after 6pm. 541-633-5149 II I' II I Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, Dodge Durango 2004, Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 It I 7 -pass. v a n wit h V8, automatic, great Limited, leather, tow shape, $9000 OBO. p ower c h a i r lif t , Fleetwood Wilderness pkg. Vin ¹ 1 4 2 655. Diamond Reo Dump 530-515-8199 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, $1500; 1989 Dodge Now $9988 Truck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 Turbo Va n 7 - pass. rear bdrm, fireplace, 'B I B I ' B I yard box, runs good, has new motor and AC, W/D hkup beauFord Ranchero S UB A R U . t rans., $1500. I f i n tiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. $6900, 541-548-6812 ' Bl I I B I I979 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend terested c a l l Ja y 541-815-2380 with 351 Cleveland Bl ' 877-266-3821 503-269-1057. B I I modified engine. E+K E A T Dlr ¹0354 Body is in I ' ' B ' I B I I 975 excellent condition, Automobiles I B I Hyster H25E, runs $2500 obo. 541-420-4677 well, 2982 Hours, I ' 'I I B $3500, call Kia Optima EX 2004 2.7L V6, all power options, moonroof, spoiler, leather, Infinity AM/FM/CD, alloys, Michelin & studded tires, meticulously maintained, $6250. Bend, 760-715-9123
GRANDE IV; STATE O F OREGON D E P ARTMENT O F EMPLOYMENT; O CCUPANTS O F THE P R OPERTY,
BUBARUOBBBNO COM
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exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $37,500.
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Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 eng, power everything, new paint, 54K original NuWa 297LK H i tchHiker 2007,3 slides, Peterbilt 359 p o table miles, runs great, ex32' touring coach, left water t ruck, 1 9 90, cellent condition in & 5hp out. Asking $8,500. kitchen, rear lounge, 3200 gal. tank, B hoses, 541-480-3179 many extras, beautiful p ump, 4 - 3 c ond. inside 8 o u t , camlocks, $ 2 5,000. f $32,900 OBO, Prinev- 541-820-3724 ille. 541-447-5502 days 925 & 541-447-1641 eves. M AB Utility Trailers 541-420-3250
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Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awning, excel-
lent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629
So~ dwr/ Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed,
F ord E x p lorer X L T 2 006, 4x4 , cl e a n .BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. V in¹ A 1 8448. N o w owner, exc. c o n d. $7,988. 101k miles, new tires, loaded, sunroof. S UB A R U . $8900. 541-706-1897 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend ~QO
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877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
F ord F reestyle S E L 2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, front 8 side airbags, 25 mpg, 3rd row seating, pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, GMC ye ton 1971, Only traction control, new tires Sf 9,700! Original low & brks, maintained exmile, exceptional, 3rd t remely well, runs 8 drives exlnt,148K hwy mi, owner. 951-699-7171 $7200. 541-604-4166
7'x16', 7000 lb.
GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or
Jeep Comanche, 1990, oriqinal owner, 1 67K, 4WD, 5-spd, tags good GMC Envoy 2002 4WD 929 till 9/2015, $4500 obo. $6,450. Loaded, Leather, Heated Automotive Wanted 541-633-7761 seats, Bose sound system. Ext. roof rack Pilgrim In t e rnationalDONATE YOUR CAR(218) 478-4469 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, Fast Free Towing 24 Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 hr. Response - Tax Fall price $ 2 1,865. Deduction. U N ITED BREAST C A NCER 541-312-4466 F OUNDATION P r o- Plymouth B a r racuda viding Free Mammo- 1966, original car! 300 grams & Breast Can- hp, 360 V8, centercer Info lines, (Original 273 GMC Envoy 2005, 4x4, 888-785-9788. eng & wheels incl.) running boards, tinted 541-593-2597 (PNDC) window. Vin¹ 260943. PROJECT CARS: Chevy Now $12,688. 931 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Automotive Parts, Chevy Coupe 1950 4j@SUBARU. 8 ce Service & Accessories rolling chassis's $1750 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, 877-266-3821 (4) Hankook studded complete car, $ 1949; Dlr ¹0354 tires, 20 5 / 65R15S,Cadillac Series 61 1950, e xc. c o n d . $30 0 2 dr. hard top, complete w /spare f r on t cl i p ., 541-388-5152 BUBARUOBBBNO COM
Where buyers $3950, 541-382-7391 studded tires on rims, meet 4Merc Sable, 205/75x14, sellers $10 ea. 541-475-1091 • Pickups Take care of 3/4 ton 4x4 1971 new trans, 2 Classifieds your investments Chevy new t i r es , ne w •
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with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
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Buick Lucerne CXL 2009, $12,500, low low miles; 2003 LeSabre, $4000. You'll not find nicer Buicks One look's worth a thousand words. Call
OO<
Bob, 541-318-9999.
CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions over t h e phone are misunderstood and a n e r ror can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as s oon a s w e ca n . Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, please call us: 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Chevy Cobalt 2 0 05, white, 4-dr, 2.2L, 108K miles, over 35mpg, auto trans, AC, CD player, dual airbags, manual locks 8 windows, good cond in/out, runs/drives great, non-smkr, always maintained. $4950. Call 541-350-9938
ONE-STOP SHOPPING FOR HOMEOWNERSLOOKING FOR INSPIRATION The Central Oregon Builders Association (COBAj presents the Remodeling Design
for an appt. and take a drive in a 30 mpg car!
GMC yu kon D e n ali LISE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 2 005, loaded, v e r y clean. Vin¹ 169789. Door-to-door selling with Now $15,477 fast results! It's the easiest brakes, 2nd owner, r uns/drives g o o d . S UB A R U . way in the world to sell. BUBARUOBBBND COM Make good w ood NE Hwy 20• Bend truck. $2395 OBO 2060877-266-3821 The Bulletin Classified 541-350-2859 541-385-5809 Dlr ¹0354
©
REMODELING DESIGN & OUTDOOR LIVING SHOW
BUBARUOlBRNO COM
541-280-7024.
Thousands of adsdaily in print and online.
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8 OutdOOr LiVing ShOW juSt in time fOr
PublishingDate: Tuesday, August 20
autumn and winter home improvements. This guide features information about the vendors at the show, and is a handy resource for finding local home improvement experts and products for the home throughout the year.
THE NATURE OF WORDS
NOV
THEGUIDETOCENTRAL OREGON'S PREMIER LITERARYEVENT TheNatureofWordsannualliteraryfestival celebrates the literary arts in Central Oregon during a multi-day event each autumn. The event features authors, seminars, workshops and contests. Throughout the year, The Nature of Words, as an organization, supports creative writing t hrough o utreach programs for both students and adults in Central Oregon. The Nature of Words guide is distributed to all Bulletin readers
•
as well as those who attend the annual PubliShing Date: literary event.
Friday October 25
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8
E6 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
EVENT
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$
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Let your heart lead the way to the Subaru True Love Event. Get a great deal on a 2013 IIHS Top Safety Pick Subaru with Symmetrical All-Wheel Drive. Now through February 28.
©
B UB A R U .
C onfi d e n c e i n M o t i o n
FORESTERS 0.0% FINANCING UP TO 63 MONTHS 2013 S u b a r u Out b a c k 3 .6 R L imited 5A T
2013 S u b a r u Im p r e z a 2 .0 i Sport Premium CVT
Power Moonroof, Auto-Dimming Rear View Mirror w/Integrated Rear Vision Camera 8 Homelink
Auto-Dim Mirror/Comp/Homelink, Bumper Applique, 5-Door, Cargo Tray, 5D All Weather Floor Mats, Seat Back Protector
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Alloy Wheel Package: 16" Alloy Wheels, Roof Rails Black Finish, Cargo Tray
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Automatic MSRP $35,023. VIN: D2264228. Cap reduction $3,099.62. Cap Cost $28,420. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 52% $18,211.96. No Security Deposit. Includes $1,000 Subaru Lease Cash. *Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down paymentis cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit.
2013 S u b a r u Fore s t e r 2 .5 X 5MT
MSRP $23,147. VIN: D2828154, Cap reduction $2,126.54. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 58% $13,425.26. No Security Deposit. *Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. IL doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit. DLK-01
MSRP $23,157. VIN: DG431651. Cap reduction $2,076.49. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 54% $12,234.78. No Security Deposit. *Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit. DFA-21
Automatic MSRP $29,067. VIN: DH407964. Cap reduction $2,564.08. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 54% $15,696.18. No Security Deposit. Includes $450 Subaru Lease Cash.*Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. & doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit. DFM-01
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2013 S u b a r u Fore s t e r 2 .5 X T P remium 4 A T
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2013 S u b a r u Trib e c a 3 .6 R L imited 5A T
Standard Model. Rear Seat Back Protector.
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2013 S u b a r u Fore s t e r 2 .5 X T P remium 4 A T StandardModel.Rugged Package ¹f. Aero Cross Bars. Rear Bumper Cover. Luggage Compartment Cover.
Power Moonroof. Auto-Dimming Mirror, Rear Vision Camera, Roof Rails. Front Bumper Underguard. Rear Bumper Cover. 7 Passenger
Lease
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Automatic MSRP $29,067. VIN: DH407591. Cap reduction $2,564. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 54% $15,696.18. No Security Deposit. *Tier I linancing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. 8. doc, and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit. DFM-01
Manual MSRP $24,764. VIN: D1262653. Cap reduction $2,273.93. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 55% $13,620.20. No Security Deposit. *Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. IL doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit. DDA-01
3,095:":.-. Subaru Certified Pre-Owned
2,799:-":.- .
Automatic MSRP $35,729. VIN: D4400115. Cap reduction $3,258.52. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 45% $16,078.05. No Security Deposit. Includes $450 Subaru Lease Cash. *Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic.IL doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit.DTD-04
Automatic MSRP $28,942. VIN: DH408392. Cap reduction $2,562.53. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 54% $15,628.68. No Security Deposit. *Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit. DFM-01
3,899:-":.".
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NEW!! 7-YEAR,100,000-MILE POWERTRAIN WARRANTY Every Certified Pre-Owned Subaru offers: • 7-year/100,000-mile Powertrain Coverage • $0 deductible
• Factory-backed coverage • 152-point safety inspection
• CARFAX® Vehicle History Report • 24/7 roadside assistance
2 011 S u b a r u O utbac k W a g o n 2 .5i L i m i t e d
2 012 S u b a r u F oreste r 2 . 5 X T Yurbo
2 012 S u b a r u I mpreza 5 - D o o r S port L i m i t e d
CVT Transmission, Leather, Moonroof, Premium Sound, Low Miles
Automatic, Moonroof, Alloy Wheels, Low, Low Miles!
Moonroof, Leather, Heated Seats, Alloy Wheels, Multi-Disc
2 012 S u b a r u I mpreza W R X 5 -Door P r e m i u m
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$
VIN:83338847
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VIN: CH239954
VIN:CH437255
VIN: GG225848
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
UNDAY DRIVER
'Check engine' light might mean a disaster, or not By Brad Bergholdt McClatchy-Tribune News Service
• I r e member you s aid • there can be dozens, if not hundreds, of reasons my "check engine" light m i ght come on. And since there's no way for me to know which one it is without it being checked by a repair shop, how do I know it's a serious problem or not? I think I heard somewhere the gas cap being loose is a common cause; what others are there? . Aside from a flat tire or . dead battery, an illuminated "check engine" lightalso known as a malfunction indicator lamp, or MIL — i s probably the most d readed and common automotive quirk to wreck someone's day. This amber lamp indicates the emission control system, engine or transmission has incurred a fault that will cause exhaust emissions to rise above allowable values. In many cases, the vehicle will drive flawlessly. In other cases, misfiring, stalling or other drivability symptoms can lead to bigger problems. In most cases, a continuously glowing MIL with normal engine and transmission performance canbe prioritized as a sometime-this-week visit to a technician. A flashing MIL is a different story; the vehicle should be driven as tenderly and briefly as possible, as a severe engine misfire is occurring, which can damage the catalytic converter, among other issues. If the lamp stops flashing and misfire symptoms, such as shuddering or a thumping engine, abate, one may tread further. According to the California Bureau of Automotive Repair, the most common "check engine" lamp causes and diagnostic trouble codes are as follows: • "Catalyst system efficiency below threshold" (P0420): This means the catalytic converter is no longer functioning efficiently and probably requires r eplacement. This w i l l n o t adversely affect vehicle operation, but exhaust emissions aren't being properly treated. • "System too lean" (P0171 or P0174): Lean means the engine is not receiving enough fuel or is admitting too much air, and may be indicated by stumbling, pinging or a loss of power. Engine damage is slightly possible with this situation, if the vehicle is driven under demanding conditions. "Exhaust gas recirculation flow insufficient detected" (P0401): This can cause combustion temperatures to rise excessively, leading to rattling, knocking sounds or pinging. Reducing speed and avoiding hills and hot-weather driving can help mitigate possible engine damage prior to repair. "Random/multiple cylinder misfire detected" (P0300). If noticeable engine shuddering or reduced power is evident, get this fixed as soon as possible. Engine misfire causes ahost of problems, as noted above. "Evaporative emission control system leak detected" (P0442, P0455, o r P 0 440): This means fuel tank or vapor storage canister vapors are escaping to the atmosphere. Check for a loose gas cap, but remember that it ma y t a k e several days for the lamp to go out. Vehicle performance is unaffected. • "02 sensor heater circuit" (P0135 or others): In this case, a faulty heater in one of the •
Not uietor uic utitscootsoversnow By Christopher Jensen New Yorh Times News Service
Anyone who lives where an 8-inch dump of snow doesn't raise a frost-covered eyebrow knows that all-wheel drive isn't enough: If you want to get through deep snow you need ground clearance, too. T hat is the point of t h e 2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek, which is basically a modified Impreza compact hatchback operating at,
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level. While the Impreza has 5.7 inches of ground clearance, t he Crosstrek SV h a s 8 . 7 inches. That's nearly as much as the Chevrolet Tahoe, a conventional SUV. Those extra 3 inches seriously reduce the chance of
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bogging down in deep snow, whether on an unplowed road or while clambering over the mounds left by s nowplows in front of side roads and driveways. The Crosstrek isn't intended for serious off-roading, but its higher stance gives it a better chance of handling rutted, rough roads without damaging the parts down under. While the XV is based on the Impreza, it has a different body style with jaunty, assertive styling. The biggest mechanical changes, Subaru says, involve borrowing some components from the Forester SUV for the higher-riding suspension. The Crosstrek's cabin is virtually identical to the Impreza's in appearance and dimensions. The interior has an economy-car look but is practical and comfortable enough for four adults — assuming nobody is much over 6 feet tall or feels entitled to stretch-out legroom. Subaru says there's 22 cubic feet of space behind the back seat. Plop that seat down and you create a huge 52-cubic-foot cargo hold. I spent about a week with a Limited with the continuously variable transmission, followed by a Premium with the manual. The manual allows more involvement, but t here are two downsides. One is a mile-
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The 2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek rides as high as many SUV's and despite its economy look, the interior is comfortable.
2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek Base price:$22,805 As tested:$25,305 Type:An elevated lmpreza with a rakish roofline, a rear hatch and sporty trim. Engine:A 2-liter flat 4
(148 horsepower) and either a 5-speedmanual or a continuously variable automatic transmission; all-wheel drive is standard. Mileage:Automatic
25 mpgcity,33 mpg highway; manual23 mpg city, 30 mpg highway
age rating that's 2 mpg lower in town and 3 lower on the
highway. T he other i s n o i se. A t highway speeds the engine — working hard just to maintain 70 mph — adds to the already considerableracket from the road and the wind. Life is quieter with the vari-
able automatic, which allows the engine speed to drop considerably, reducing the racket. And the CV T c omes with some underhood soundproofing that isn't in the manual. A spokesman said soundproofing would be made available for installation on the manual Crosstrek.
the Subaru changes direction quickly and th e body lean is nicely controlled. It is also possible, by lifting off the gas in the middle of a quick turn, to get the tail to move slightly to the outside, helping to change direction. On rough surfaces, the ride can be a bit jolting. One question for poOf course, you pay a price tential buyers is whether the in performance for the good Crosstrek is worth its price fuel economy. Acceleration is premium over the Impreza. just acceptable, at best, with For the budget-minded who either the manual or the vari- don't need the extra ground able automatic. The testers at clearance, yet want all-wheel Consumer Reports clocked drive and good fuel economy, a CVT model at a leisurely the cheapest Impreza with a 9.7seconds from a stop to 60 manual transmission is about mph. $3,600 less than the entry-levWhile the manual shifter el Crosstrek. But that's a misis slightly notchy, the CVT leading comparison because works well. And because the the Crosstrek has a lot more transmission lets the engine standard equipment. operate at p eak e f ficiency The closest apples-to-apmost of the time, it's a big fac- ples comparison would be the tor in fuel efficiency. XV Crosstrek Premium with The Crosstrek makes up the Impreza Sport Limited, for its casual approach to ve- which has similar upscale fealocity with an energetic de- tures like heated seats. Those meanor on a two-lane road. two models are each just unDespite the high ride height, der $24,000.
Buying the XV Crosstrek also means a slight loss in fuel economy. The Impreza h atchback wit h t h e a u t omatic is rated at 2 mpg more in town and 3 more on the highway. The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that the Impreza would consume $100 less in gasoline in a year, based on 15,000 miles of driving with a fuel price of $3.36 a gallon. The Crosstrek comes with all of the important safety features, including electronic stability c ontrol. It is rated a Top Safety Pick by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety for its performance in front and side-impact crashtestsand for roof strength. A thoroughly likable and practical crossover, the XV Crosstrek is impressive not for its speed but for its ability to adapt to driving conditions, whether meandering along a mountain road or slogging t hrough deep s now. A n d wherever it travels, it goes easy on the finances.
Automakersscorebig with SuperBowl commercials By Brent Snavely
cials were ranked among the top five. USA Today ranked Ram's ode to the American farmer with still photos and legendary radio broadcaster Paul Harvey third behind Tide's "Miracle Stain" commercial and Budweiser's Clydesdale commercial with Fleetwood Mac's " Landslide" a s t h e soundtrack.
Detroit Free Press
The automotive industry had a strong showing in Super Bowl XLVII as eight car brands blitzed the commercial breaks with 13 game time ads. Five of those commercials were ranked by USA Today's Ad Meter in the top 10 and both of Chrysler'scommer-
Chrysler's tw o- m i nute commercial illustrating Jeep's p artnership wit h t h e U . S . military that wa s n arrated by talk-show host and media
mogul Oprah Winfrey was ranked fifth by USA Today after a Doritos commercial. John Kovac, vice president of consumer marketing for AutoTrader.com said the automotive industry also has
a history of using the Super Bowl to energize its market-
aired during the Super Bowl instantly sparked a surge in ing campaign and doesn't of- search traffic on AutoTrader. ten make the mistake of using com's Web site, Kovac said. the big game as a once-andOn AutoTrader's site, the done opportunity. b iggest winners w ere t h e That's important, K ovac Hyundai Santa Fe, Kia Forte said, since Super Bowl com- and Kia Sorento. Search acmercials cost, on average, tivity surged for those models almost $4 million for a 30-sec- by 1,004 percent, 750 percent ond spot. and 531 percent respectively, Every automotive ad that Kovac said.
O~~A Oregan Hewapeper
A Free Public Service
Publishera Assaeiath ii
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Over 80 OregonNewspapers, from 36 Counties I
oxygen sensors is prolonging sensor warm-up or allowing cool-down. V ehicle p e rformance is unaffected. A neighbor with an inexpensive OBD-II scan tool or code reader can safely retrieve the stored diagnostic trouble code, and a q u ick I nternet search of the code will yield sufficient information to allow repair prioritization. — Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@earthlink.net.
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
ADVERTISING SECTION F
Impressive Remodel-Addition <~+.'
Quality and attention to d etail i s e v ident throughout this custom built home overlooking Broken Top's 10th Fairway. This Northwest ~t contemporary residence features over 2900 sq. ft. of main level living. Inspiring kitchen designed for entertaining. The great room features a wall of windows bringing the outside in. Master bedroom, guest suite and den/office are located on th e m ain fl o or. Wonderful indoor and outdoor living areas offering both privacy and ample sunlight. MLS ¹201206249 $945,000 www.BrokenTopClassic.com
CASCADE SOTHEBY'SINTERNATIONAL REALTY SHELLY SWANSON,BROKER 541.480.0086
~ ~ + 4 klhfk
New Homes Starting at $129,990!
S S S S S N +
Hayden Homes newestcommunity, North Village. Available new homes are under construction now. Conveniently located in NE Bend with mountain views & easy access to highway 97, North Village continues the Hayden Homes tradition of offering signature quality homes at an exceptional value. With six well-appointed home plans available, you are certain to find the one to call your own. Homes will be similar to photo shown. Directions: From HWY 97: E. on Cooley Rd, N. on Hunters Circle. Call 541-516-1530 or find us on the web at www.hayden-homes.com
HAYDEN HOMES WWW.HAYDEN-HOMES.COM 541-516-1530
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Increases in the costprivate mortgage insurance maylIe seen as steep, however lower incomehomebuyers mayfind it's still worth the cost. by Christopher L. Ingersoll, The Bulletin Advertising Department To understand what private m ortgage i n s u rance ( P M I ) is, you have to go back many years ago to a time when lenders would not grant a h o me loan unless the buyer put down at least 20 percent of the purchase price. Homeownership was reserved for only t h ose who could come to the table with a sizable chunk of cash to put toward the purchase of a home. According to Larry Wallace, a mortgage banker and broker with Mortgage Express, LLC in Bend, i n surance companies changed who could buy homes. After years of the same loan underwriting guidelines, along came theinsurance companies — experts at calculating risk — who offered private mortgage insurance. Insurance companies understood the risks involved with granting mortgages. They developed PMI as a way to protect banks when mortgagees
didn't make their p ayments. Banks can recoup a portion of their investment if the mortgagee pays for mortgage insurance. With a private mortgage insurance policy guaranteeing part of the loan, banks began making loans for more than 80 percent of the value of the home, which opened up opportunities for more people to purchase homes. "Owning a home is a huge part of the American dream, and that dream wasn't really possible for most people until private mortgage insurance," Wallace said. Eventually, the federal government decided they wanted to get involved in th e m ortgage insurance business, and i t developed FHA , V A a n d USDA home loans. With federally backed loans and federal m ortgage i n s urance, m o r e people have been able to buy homes than ever before, with mortgages covering as much as 97 percent of the value of a home. In addition, while only those with very high credit ratings
could get approved for loans, f ederally b a cked l o an s b e came available to those with less-than-perfect credit. "FHA loans really a l lowed for people that don't have great credit to still be able to buy a house, albeit at higher rates," said Rob Moore, president of Arbor Mortgage Group. While FHA loans are great for certain buyers, there are some changes coming in April that will alter the nature of how mortgage insurance works for FHA loans. Currently, a homeowner with an FHA loan that is 80 percent or more of the value of their home had the option of dropping their insurance once they paid down 20 to 22 percent of the loan. In other words, someone with an FHA loan of $200,000 with an interest rate of 3.5 percent could have a mortgage insurance rate of 1.25 percent. Each month, that person pays toward their principal balance, interest and PMI. However, once $40,000 to $44,000 is paid on the pr inciple amount, the mortgagee
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In April, however, new regulations will not only increase the cost of mortgage insurance for FHA loans, but buyers will also be required to pay for the insurance for the full l if e of the loan. FHA loans will become more expensive for homeowners who do not qualify for conventional loans. Before assuming this makes owning a h o m e i m p ossible, consider this: Interestrates are the lowest they have been in our country's history, and home prices are also lower since the housing bubble burst in 2007. So, while it seems like a disadvantage if you choose an FHA mortgage that requires PMI to be paid over the life of the loan, buying a home while rates are low is still advantageous. Although PM I i s an o t h er added expense among many when buying a home, without it, the American dream of homeownership would not even be an option for many.
"Owning a home is a huge part of the American dream, and that dream wasn't really possible for most people until private mortgage insurance."
$1 79,500
$ 259 , 5 0 0
corner lot...
and like new appliances. Large bonus room with bnilt-ins and wet bar.
SUSAN PITARRO, BROKER
Sun Meadows Th>squal<ty Craftsman homeboasts of culturedstoneaccents. Largekitchen with walk-inpantry,tile, hardwoodfloors andgasfireplace.SurMeadowshas its own community pool, parkandi/2 court. Mustseeto believe.
MIKE EVERIDGE,BROKER
541 -41 0-8084 OR 541-389-7910
541 -390-0098 OR 541-389-7910
TONY LEVISON,BROKER
$ 338 , 9 0 0
$ 180 , 0 0 0
$ 159 , 5 0 0
$ 109 , 0 0 0
Desirable Living in Starwood! Amazinvigewsof theCascadeMountains!!!
New On The Market!
Thishom efeatures2fireplaces& separationofmasterbedroom.Kitchenhas like new appliances&newcounter tops, hardwood floors, bonusroom&largeTrex deckforentertaining.
community...Light&bright, vaulted ceilings,skylights,air conditioning& largedeck.Amenities includefront yard
Country Living Close to Town Open floor plan lends itself to casual living. Formal living
&commonareamaintenance,pool, sportscourt,clubhouse&snowremoval.
room and spacious family room. Access from Knott Road to the back of yard for RV parking.
Traditional Sale! Country living bnt just minutes to Bend... New carpet, new stove, and vaulted ceilings.
SUSAN PITARRO, BROKER
SUSAN PITARRO, BROKER
DEBBIE TALLMAN, BROKER
541 -41 0-8084 OR 541-389-791 0
541-41 0-8084 OR 541-389-7910
541 -390-0934 OR 541-389-7910
Extensive remodel... Price reduction $425,000 unfurnished, $433,000 furnished South 97 to Cottonwood exit. Left on S. Imnaha,left on Modoc Extensive remodel, ea alarge •
could drop the PMI portion of their monthly payment, bringing their m o nthly p ayments
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New On The Market Light and bright home that features upgraded kitchen with a center island, skylight
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Charming,well caredfor homein agated
541-977-1852 OR 541-389-7910
Relax on your deck overlooking your very private acre lot... MIKE WILSON,BROKER
541-977-5345 OR 541 -389-791 0
F2 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 730
732
745
Houses for Rent Redmond
New Listings Commercial/Investment Homes for Sale Homes for Sale Homes for Sale Homes for Sale Properties for Sale 835-837 NW 3rd Rivers Edge Village ( 1 6206 H a wk s La i r . 61250 King Solomon 51863 Fordham GorBuilders Own Custom Updated Kings Forest Investment property, geous Craftsman, 3 $574,900 Eagle Crest - B ehind • 3116 sq.ft. Multiple Business Home w/Garage + 3 Bedroom Home. High Traffic Location, bdrm + office loft, the gates. Beautiful Opportunity! $200,000 Shop. $399,000 $285,000 $300,000 $179,900 2100 s q .ft., 3 / 2 .5, • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath Great business opporTEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn Reverse living. Large • Many Custom Featunity w/separate liv- TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn tures High Desert Realty High Desert Realty garagetworkshop. Hot • MLS ing quarters facing Prudential High Desert Prudential High Desert 201300471 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 Realty 541-312-9449 Realty 541-312-9449 tub. $1400/mo. Lease city park. Shop previDavid Gilmore, Broker www. BendOregon www. BendOregon www. BendOregon www. BendOregon option. $36 5 ,000. ously used as me541-312-7271 RealEstate.com RealEstate.com RealEstate.com RealEstate.com Sec/dep. 541-923-0908 c hanic s h op , h a s RENTALS We never stop moving: 541-480-7863 many options. G i ft 603 - RentalAlternatives 19717 Mt. Bachelor 3546 SW 35th. Large 640 Sage Country, Check out the shop etc. Clean & Recently Updated Mt. 4000+ S F Home 604 - Storage Rentals classifieds online Amazing Furnished & 659 cozy rooms. Will conBachelor Village w/Wine Cellar. 605 - RoommateWanted Finished Creek Side www.bendbullefin.ccm sider Trades. Houses for Rent Condo, $169,900 $481,703 Townhome. $230,000 616- Want To Rent Jett Blackburn Real Updated daily TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn Sunriver 627 Vacation Rentals & Exchanges Estate, 541-573-7206 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Prudential High Desert High Desert Realty MORRIS 630 - Roomsfor Rent 16010 Green Realty 541-312-9449 Realty 541-312-9449 VILLAGE PROPERTIES 541-312-9449 738 Forest Remodeled 4 631 - Condominiums &Townhomes for Rent REAL ESTATE www. BendOregon www. BendOregon Sunriver, Three Rivers, www. BendOregon bdrm home, Owner Multiplexes for Sale 632 - Apt./Multiplex General I d p ndently~ d w d Op u<ed RealEstate.com RealEstate.com La Pine. Great RealEstate.com Financing, $159,000 634- Apt./Multiplex NEBend Selection. Prices range 14 Golden Eagle, TEAM Birtola Garmyn SE Bend ( $190,000 Investment Opportunity! 17360 Brandt. L arge People Look for Information $425 - $2000/mo. 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend High End Resort High Desert Realty • 1844 sq.ft. Duplex! $166,000 About Products and View our full 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 1/2 Acre Lot near Big Rental, River & Mtn 541-312-9449 NE Redmond duplex, • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath Services Every Daythrough inventory online at Deschutes. $242,900 640 - Apt./Multiplex SW Bend Views $899 000 www. BendOregon • .21 acre lot single level 1250 sq. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Village-Properties.com The Bulletin Classifieds 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com • MLS 201300384 ft., 2 b d r m, 2 b ath Prudential High Desert 1-866-931-1061 High Desert Realty 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished each, gas fireplace. TenBroek - Hilber 20355 Murphy. BenRealty 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 60235 Ridgeview, Single car g arage, www. BendOregon Group, LLC 648- Houses for RentGeneral efits of Lrg Country 671 Woodside Ranch www. BendOregon landscaped,fenced 541-550-4944 650 - Housesfor Rent NEBend Lot w/City Amenities. RealEstate.com Mobile/Mfd. RealEstate.com Home, 2.3 Acres, Paula Mellon We never stop moving $114,900 652 - Housesfor Rent NWBend Shop. $340,000 for Rent 541-977-4009 TEAM Birtola Garmyn 1045 Golden Pheasant TEAM 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 6 0818 W i ndsor. S E Birtola Garmyn Central Oregon Prudential High Desert Bend Home on 1/2 Eagle C r e s t Gol f 656 - Housesfor Rent SW Bend High Desert Realty Cute, Cozy 2 Bdrm/1 Realty Group, LLC Realty 541-312-9449 cs Course T o wnhome. Acre. $150,000 541-312-9449 658 - Housesfor Rent Redmond Bath Mfd. home in www. BendOregon $125,000 NW Redmond Duplex. TEAM Birtola Garmyn www. BendOregon DRW. G ood use o f 659 - Housesfor Rent Sunriver RealEstate.com TEAM Birtola Garmyn 3 bdrm/2~/~ bath, 1305 Prudential High Desert RealEstate.com space. W/D included. 660 - Housesfor Rent La Pine MORRIS Realty 541-312-9449 59774 Cheyenne Re- Prudential High Desert sq. ft., attached single Well & septic system. 661 - Housesfor Rent Prineville www. BendOregon Realty 541-312-9449 16354 Big Buck, Covered parking. 2 REAL ESTATE garage, landscaped, modeled 4 bdrm 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters RealEstate.com www. BendOregon I d p d d yO d dOp r d Private Cottage in the storage sheds. Pellet fenced. $15 9 ,000 home in Bend, RealEstate.com 663 - Housesfor Rent Madras Pines Near the River. Stove. $600.00 mo. MLS 201208215 $164,900. 664- Houses for RentFurnished SE Bend ( $265,000 Pam Lester, Princ. Bro- Just bought a new boat'? TEAM Birtola Garmyn $80,000 KOZAK Property 903 NW Newport. Great • 2015 sq.ft. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Management Co. ker, Century 21 Gold Sell your old one in the 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent High Desert Realty Bend Westside Locaclassifieds! Ask about our • 4 bedroom, 3 bath 541-382-0053 High Desert Realty Country Realty, Inc. 675 - RV Parking 541-312-9449 Super Seller rates! tion on L arge Lot. • Cul-de-sac location 541-312-9449 541-504-1338 www. BendOregon 676 -Mobile/Mfd.Space 541-385-5809 $150,000 • MLS 201300386 675 www. BendOregon RealEstate.com 682 - Farms, Ranches andAcreage TEAM Birtola Garmyn Sue Conrad, 740 RealEstate.com RV Parking 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease Horsell. 120 Pri- 12445 Rainbow. P r i- Prudential High Desert Broker, CRS Condo/Townhomes 26720 Realty 541-312-9449 18920 Baker Custom vate Acres of Central v ate Setting o n 5 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent 541-480-6621 RV space for rent Tufor Sale www. BendOregon O regon Beau t y . Acres Backing Public Milled Log Home Near malo. 30 amp + water We never stop moving: REAL ESTATE RealEstate.com $420,000 the River, $289,000 Land. $348,800 & sewer. Gravel lot. 705- Real Estate Services Price Reduced! Won- TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn Avail. 3/1. $350 mo. 713 - Real Estate Wanted derful townhome in Prudential High Desert Prudential High Desert Find exactly what High Desert Realty cx 541-419-5060 Fairhaven neighborRealty 541-312-9449 719 - Real Estate Trades 541-312-9449 Realty 541-312-9449 you are looking for in the hood. Tile counters, www. BendOregon www. BendOregon 726 - Timeshares for Sale www. BendOregon 687 CLASSIFIEDS Hickory cabinets, gas RealEstate.com RealEstate.com RealEstate.com MORRIS 730 - New Listings Commercial for fire place, & vaulted REAL ESTATE 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale ceilings. Near comRent/Lease I dcpc dc tlyO cdmdOpcwtcd munity park, close to 738- Multiplexes for Sale schools & centrally lo3000 sq. ft. commercial 740 -Condominiums & Townhomes forSale Sisters ~ $647,000 c ated n ea r N o l an space I 30C sq. ft. 744 - Open Houses • 3650 sq.ft. Town Center, Red61510 (¹120) 745- Homes for Sale • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath American Lane. mon. $119,900 • Protected Cascade 746- Northwest BendHomes Call 530-305-0104 Aaron Boehm, Broker Mtn views 541-647-8851 747 - SouthwestBendHomes • MLS 201300193 Ryan Whitcomb, Bro748- Northeast BendHomes Shelly Hummel, Broker, ker 541-639-1151 749- Southeast BendHomes CRS, GRI, CHMS Hunter Properties LLC 750 - RedmondHomes 541-383-4361 People Helping People Buy Homes Since 1987 753 - Sisters Homes We never stop moving: $195,000 Come relax and enjoy as you sip 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes your favorite bever756 - JeffersonCountyHomes age on the paver back cx 685 SEThird St, Bend, OR 97702 ~ 541-318-5500 ~ NMLSII89511/ML-3213-10 757 - CrookCountyHomes patio! This 3br/2.5ba 762 - Homeswith Acreage 1871 sq. f t . t o w nI I I home has upgrades $ I I 763 - Recreational Homesand Property MORRIS I I 730 which include Slate 764- Farms andRanches REAL ESTATE New Listings entry, slate surround 771 - Lots IndcpendenrlyChmcdandOpcn<ed fireplace, tile floor in 773 - Acreages Broken Top ( $259,000 the master bath and South Deerfield Park ( granite til e k i tchen • .41 acre lot 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes $235,000 • Broken Top 8 South counter tops. 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land • New Construction Home-ID 962 Sister view 1500 sq.ft. • Flat, easy to build Eagle Crest Properties • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • MLS 201300497 866-722-3370 Houses for • Model Home Shelly Hummel, Broker, P'mtikR Rent General • MLS 201300465 $259,900 Rarely used CRS, GRI, CHMS Darrin Kelleher, Broker & never rented, like 541-383-4361 PUBLISHER'S The Kelleher Group new 3 bedroom, 2.5 We never stop moving: NOTICE 541-788-0029 bath Creekside townAll real estate adverhome. Backs to comWe never stop moving: tising in this newspamon area/BLM with per is subject to the Cascade M o u ntain F air H o using A c t v iews. Great r o o m cx which makes it illegal 630 floor plan, master on MORRIS to a d v ertise "any the main, 2 additional Rooms for Rent REAL ESTATE preference, limitation bedrooms, loft area & Loan Officers Available 7 Days a Week MORRIS or disc r imination 1 dcpc daeyo cd a dopcmicd full b a t h up s tairs. Studios & Kitchenettes REAL ESTATE based on race, color, By Appointment Tons of upgrades & Furnished room, TV w/ Indcpendcntly &mcd and Open<ed NE Bend ~ $185,000 very private setting. cable, micro & fridge. religion, sex, handi- • 1825 sq.ft. cap, familial status, Home-ID 837 Utils & linens. New SW Bend [ $307,900 Eagle Crest Properties owners. $145-$165/wk marital status or na- • 4 bedroom, 2 bath • 2190 sq.ft. tional origin, or an in- • .17 acre lot 541-382-1885 866-722-3370 • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath tention to make any • MLS 201300518 • Near River Trail such pre f erence, Lisa Campbell, Broker Price Reduction! This 634 • MLS 201300429 541-419-8900 or discrimicondo will make for a Apt./Multiplex NE Bend limitation Darrin Kelleher, Broker nation." Familial staWe never stop moving g reat g e taway o r The Kelleher Group tus includes children smart inv e stment. 8 GREAT wINTER e 541-788-0029 under the age of 18 Close to d o wntown 'Evergreen HomeLoans is a registered trade name of Evergreen Moneysource Mortgage Company. NMLS ID 3182 DEAL! We never stop moving: living with parents or and the ever popular 2 bdrm, 1 bath, legal cust o dians, Old M i l l Dis t r ict. $530 & $540 w/lease. pregnant women, and Amenities inc l ude Carports included! cx people securing cuspool, tennis c ourts MORRIS FOX HOLLOW APTS. tody of children under and trails accessing REAL ESTATE 18. This newspaper the Deschutes River. (541) 363-3152 I dcpc dc <lyO cd d o pc rcd will not knowingly acMORRIS Only $99,900! Cascade Rental cept any advertising Grant Ludwick, Broker Management. Co. REAL ESTATE NE Bend ~ $264,900 for real estate which is • 1451 sq.ft. 541-633-0255 or I dcpc dc tlyO c d d O p c <cd to the LOan OffiCerS of EVergreen in violation of the law. 541-389-791 0 BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS • 2 bedroom, 2 bath O ur r e aders a r e • .59 acre lot Hunter Properties Home Loans for being the ¹1 retail 732 Search the area's most hereby informed that comprehensive listing of • MLS 201300499 Commercial/Investment all dwellings adver745 MOrtgage Banker in DeSChLlteS & Greg Miller, P.C., classified advertising... tised in this newspaProperties for Sale Homes for Sale real estate to automotive, per are available on Broker, CRS, GRI Crook Counties for 2033. 541-408-1511 merchandise to sporting an equal opportunity - View beauti23475 Hwy 20 East, goods. Bulletin Classifieds basis. To complain of We never stop moving $29,900 (information based on purchaseunits fundedper county recordings.) ful C r ooked R i v er 36+ Acre Bend appear every day in the discrimination cal l C anyon from y o ur Cascade Nursery. print or on line. HUD t o l l-free at new business. Build to $749,000 Cg Call 541-385-5809 1-800-877-0246. The suit needs. 1-acre flat TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.bendbulletin.com toll f re e t e l ephone We look forward to continuing commercial lot. High Desert Realty number for the hearMLS¹201207341 Call 541-312-9449 to exceed your expectations The Bulletin MORRIS ing im p aired is Nancy Popp www. BendOregon Serv>ngCentral Ovegon s<nce l903 1-800-927-9275. REAL ESTATE Broker, 541-815-8000 RealEstate.com from our new location! I dcpc dc llyO c d dO p c i cd Crooked River Realty Call for Specials! 533 NE Shoshone, Stop by and see us! Limited numbers avail. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Business Opportunity 4 Bedroom Home on NE Bend ~ $375,000 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Possible OWC 2 Lots, Landscaped. W/D hookups, patios Door-to-door selling with • Two Duplexes rental history Bend's upscale award $199,000 or decks. fast results! It's the easiest •• Excellent winning, full service TEAM Birtola Garmyn Close to hospital MOUNTAIN GLEN, way in the world to sell. salon l o c ated in High Desert Realty • MLS 201300512 541-383-9313 downtown's O x f ord 541-312-9449 Scott Huggin, Professionally The Bulletin Classified Hotel at street level www. BendOregon Broker, GRI managed by Norris & w /parking, 2000 + 541-385-5809 541-322-1500 RealEstate.com Stevens, Inc. loyal data base and We never stop moving: walk-in traffic. Apprx 3456 NE 45th Country 636 Rented your propcap rate 2 9 %/ACR Living Close to erty? The Bulletin Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 59%. Call Alex RobDowntown Redmond. Classifieds ertson 541-280-2117 $149,999 Kevin Pangle Linda Fisher-Berlanga Mark Long has an "After Hours" Small studio close to lior Ga i l Rog e r s TEAM Birtola Garmyn NMLSII89521 Line. Call NMLSII210118 NMLSII208965 brary, all util. pd. $550, 541-604-1649 High Desert Realty MORRIS 541-383-2371 24 $525 dep. No pets/ Bend/Redmond 541-312-9449 John L. Scott Bend/Redmond Bend/Redmond smoking. 541-330hours to REAL ESTATE Real Estate, Bend www. BendOregon 9769 or 541-480-7870 c~a cei o a d . ' I dcpc dcnly 0 c d d Opc <cd www.johnlscott.com RealEstate.com •
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immuniza ions he Internet has flooded us with information, but it doesn't always help us distinguish the valuable from the misleading. In health care, one disturbing result
ITED STATE!
TALSERVI(
is the low rate of immunization among our children. Legislation pending in Salem would attempt to assure that parents have accurate information, and it deserves support. The problem is acute in Bend, where several schools have so many unimmunized children that they're at risk for outbreaks of diseases that have become rare, as reporter Heidi Hagemeier detailed Thursday in The Bulletin's Health section. Statewide, more kindergartners lack immunizations than anywhere else in the nation. Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the notion that vaccines cause more harm than good has taken hold among a group of parents, prompting them to take advantage of Oregon's relatively lax process to gain exemption from immunization requirements. The risk is not just an abstraction. Already, reports show a resurgence of measles and pertussis, also known as whooping cough. And low rates of immunization mean that so-called herd immunity — where high rates of vaccination prevent the spread of disease — is being lost. Whooping cough can be fatal to infants too young to be immunized, but herd immunity can protect them. Current Oregon law allows students to attend school without vaccinations if parents sign a form stat-
ing they have a religious objection, no details required. The proposed legislation would remove the religious reference and add an education component. Parents would need to complete an online education program or get a physician signature. They could then exempt their children by signing a form. The idea, say supporters of the bill, is to be sure parents base their decision on accurate information. Lake Oswego pediatrician Jay Rosenbloom, who has worked on the proposal, said some parents won't vaccinate their children no matter what, but others could be swayed by valid science. He said a blanket ban on unvaccinated children in school could be seen as violating civil rights and lead to challenges. The hope is that education will increase rates enough topreserve or re-establish the protections of herd immunity. Ann Stone, executive director of the Oregon Pediatric Society, said similar legislation enacted in Washington state in 2011 reduced immunization exemptions by 25 percent the following year. That's good evidence and clearly supports giving this approach a try. Legislators shouldbe ready, though, to go further if this method doesn't make a sufficient difference.
Bill would enhanceand redefine DUII enforcement regon's law governing driving under the influence of intoxicants is likely pretty typical. It defines intoxicants as alcohol, controlled substances and inhalants — and leaves it at that. It is a definition that, unfortunately, does not recognize the ability of modern chemists to create intoxicating substances that are none of those three things. Such drugs as "spice," "bath salts" and "herbal incense" can impair drivers every bit as effectivelyas booze or cocaine.According to the National Office of Drug Control Policy, spice is a synthetic marijuana, while bath salts mimic amphetamines. Their ingredients may include plants and chemicals, and they're illegal in both Oregon and Washington. Yet in Oregon today it may be illegal to possess spice, but it is not illegal to drive under its influence. That's true of a whole variety of chemical creations designed to imitate other illegal substances, as well. State lawmakers no doubt rec-
O
ognized the problem when they created a task force in 2011 to look into the issue. Hearings on the four bills that resulted began Monday. One of the four, HB 2114, would expand the state's definition of intoxicants to include synthetic drugs or any other substance that "affects a person's physical or mental faculties to a noticeable degree." That presumably i n cludes over-thecounter medications that can have a disorienting effect on some users. The proposed definition provides a no-nonsense approach to an increasingly large problem. Though bath salts and some other synthetics are now illegal under federal as well as state law, manufacturers have become increasingly adept at changing formulas to skirt current legal definitions. Oregon's proposed definition based on symptoms rather than chemical composition gives police the ability to get a group of impaired drivers off the road that might otherwise go free. That, in turn, makes Oregon's highways safer. It's difficult to oppose that.
M IVickel's Worth Demand Abedini's release
most undervalued and luxurious indulgence bid even higher by this decision. God bless Saeed Abedini, a selfless, brave American.
forests, we maintain a strong recreation program, complete with 24 On Jan. 27, Iran strengthened its miles of well-maintained trails, as attempt to humiliate America: Rev. our contribution to the health and Saeed Abedini, 32 years old and an happiness of the local community. American citizen, was sentenced Wayne Mayo It is very important to us to offer to eight years in Iran's most cruel Scappoose high quality opportunities to mounprison for "threatening the security tain bikers. However, it is necessary It's a federal highway of Iran." for us to clearly articulate uses that His crime? Still unclear, but acare not allowed on the forest. For excording to sparse news reports, Dear fellow Bendites: I think that ample, we do not allow people to use "unauthorized" trails located on the Abedini met with fellow Christians some are forgetting why we have n in homes over six years encourag- U.S. Highway 97, which bisects forest, which are created directly by ing them in their faith." He was not Oregon. users, do not meet our standards for plotting terrorism, smuggling guns This major federal highway used design, construction or maintenance or bombs, promoting public dissent, to connect businesses as well as and can cause damage to resources. or organizing protests. handle hugetrucks and commerce Our dusk-to-dawnclosureisposted on The president an d C o n gress of all kinds between Klamath Falls all official entry points and enforced should demand Abedini's immedi- and the Columbia River. by Benton County Sheriff's Office. ate release. No chit should be ofHow foolish and self-centered we Visitors may find themselves faced fered, no accolades for compliance; are to thinkthat, inorder for a few with some hefty trespassing fines for just a reminder that only insecure businessesto be more accessible,we entering the forest after dark. governments are threatened by drag all of Central Oregon's through Come visit us during daylight ideas. Especially when that idea in- traffic (north/south) onto yet anoth- hours, and we'll show you some cludes a much needed orphanage in er "Third Street." spectacular views a n d t h r i l ling Iran, no less. This is a national-federal highway trails! For more information about Juxtaposed to Iran, the West's re- — not just another "through street"! our trails, visit our website at: www sponse to differing religions except Char Kolzow .cof.orst.edu/cf/. when they violate law seems lackBend John Mann ing in conviction, but it's not. Rather Director of OSU College Forests, than threaten to imprison others, Forest closed at night Corvallis Western policy reflects antiquity's Biblical teaching to, "bear with This letter is in response to the Guns and bullets great patience those who oppose us recent article "Night riders" by Zach "Guns don't kill etc...." Whenever hoping that God will grant them re- Urness, published Jan. 23, which pentance unto life." identified the McDonald Forest as a I see this familiar anti-gun-control So you can understand America's prime location for after-dark riding. slogan, I think of Charlton Heston's practice of g overnment through We want to let your readers know comment to pal Tom Selleck at a Fair civil debate, printed and broadcast that all OSU College Forests are ac- Play For Russian Roulette fundraiser: "Guns don't kill people, bullets kill dissent, noisy and messy public pro- tually closed to visitors from dusk tests — all that public discourse in- until dawn for safety reasons. people — and, for that matter, only cludes. We may appear gridlocked, The College Forests include the the teeny little tips at the end." incoherent, certainly not offering McDonald and Dunn forests near Right on target, Charlton! And rethe ease of definition and execu- Corvallis and are owned and manmember, if nobody had guns, everytion Iran's totalitarian government aged by the OSU College of Forbody would have to throw bullets. enjoys. Westerners are offered estry. While outdoor recreation is David Fahrner freedom of thought; apparently a not part of the official mission of the Terrebonne
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Progressive income tax is more than just a bad idea By Jonathan KahnoskI rogressive income taxes are bad policy, divisive and immoraL You don't hear that often, so let me say it again. Progressive income taxes are bad public policy, socially divisive and immoral. Let's explore each in turn. Bad public policy:Taxing higher incomes at higher rates and lower incomes at lower rates (or not at all), convinces a lot of people they can vote themselves government services but have someone else (nthe rich," nmillionaires and billionairesn) pay for those services. It creates the illusion there is a free lunch, or at least someone else is buying lunch. However, according to IRS numbers for 2009 (last year that statistics are available), just under 237,000 tax returns reported $1 million or more
in adjusted gross income, and just over 81 million tax returns reported adjusted gross income between $25,000 and $1 million. The middle class always ends up paying the bill. No surprise, the wealthy seek to escape steep tax rates by lobbying Congress and state legQEW islatures for deductions a nd subsidies. All t h i s lobbying is why we have so many tax breaks for the rich. The result is our politics and tax codes have become corrupt and the rich don't pay the high tax rates anyway. Bad social policy: Progressive income tax rates divide us based upon incomes — thewealthy versus everyone else. Politicians and social critics demonize the wealthy for not paying their "fair share" and tell everyone else they are being cheated. This is called the zero-sum game — the
wealthy earn more money causing everyone else to make less. No matter how the wealthy earned their money — most wealthy people are first generation wealthy; they didn't inherit it. More i m p ortant, t a x in g the wealthy more doesn't make anyone else better off. The poor and middle class are still poor or middle class, just more dependent upon government bureaucrats for handouts. The politicians benefit, however, because they use all that tax revenue for their own vote buying schemes. Here again, the end result is not a growing economy benefiting everyone, but political corruption. Immoral: Since the Declaration of Independence, it has been a fundamental American principle that "all men are createdequal."Perhaps the worst part of progressive income taxes is that they violate this principle.
They make it lawful to treat Americans differently solely based on what they earn. We don't expect a wealthy person to pay more for the same loaf of bread a poor person buys because the wealthy can afford to pay more. We don't insist the A students give some of their grade point averages to the D students to make things "fair." Imposing such unequal treatment in prices or grades would be considered un-American, taking by force of law from those who have more just because they have more even if they earned it by working harder. The same is true for tax rates. You wouldn't demand your neighbor who has a better-paying job give you some of his money just because you want it. Why is it moral for the government to demand it for you? The answer, of course, is that it isn't.
The progressive income tax isn't about fairness. What is someone's "fair share" anyway? We are never told how much someone must pay to pay their "fair share." No, the progressive income tax is about the greed of nI have less; you have more; you should have to give me some," routed through the government, of course. Bad public policy, socially divisive, and immoral — the progressive income tax cannot be justified. In theory, all Americans have an equal responsibility to pay for government, implying everyone should pay the same flat rate on income and no loopholes/deductions for anyone. Of course, we must stop expecting the federal and state governments to fix every problem. Why that is a good idea is a topic for a future column. — Jonathan Kahnoski lives in Sunriver.
THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY FEBRUARY 9 2013 F3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745
Homes for Sale 17075 Oxnard Wonderful 2002 Built Home on 1/2 Acre, $214,000 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449
www. BendOregon RealEstate.com 20067 Birchwood, Overlooking Woodriver Park, 2 Lots w/2 Homes. $450,000 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty
Homes for Sale
Awbrey Glen j $599,000 • 2516 sq.ft. new construction • 3 bedroom, den, 2.5 bath • .40 acre lot • MLS 201209414
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www. BendOregon RealEstate.com 161 Acre Ranch j $1,100,000 • Cascade Mountain views • 3777 sq.ft. home • 3 bedroom, 4.5 bath • MLS 201206445 Diane Lozito, Broker 541-548-3598 541-306-9646
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Awbrey Glen Beauty Live in b eautiful Awbrey Glen situated on the 17th fairway! 4 b edroom, 3 b ath + den. 2625 sq. ft. 3567 NW McCready, Bend. $559,000. MLS ¹201207007 www.johnlscott.com/d Call We never stop moving Jeanne Scharlund, aniellesnow Principal Broker, Danielle Snow, Broker 541-420-7978 541-306-1015 ca Redmond RE/MAX John L. Scott Land & Homes Real Estate, Bend Real Estate www.johnlscott.com MORRIS
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Do you love to p lay Millbrook Estates j g olf? H o w abo u t $224,900 walking out your back • 1605 sq.ft. new cond oor o n t h e 1 0 t h struction g reen of Glaz e • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath M eadow a t Bl a c k • Close to Old Mill DisB utte Ranch? T h is trict immaculate 3738 SF • MLS 201209384 home offers many Darrin Kelleher, Broker amenities, a gas ?reThe Kelleher Group place in t h e l i v ing 541-788-0029 room, wonderful am- We never stop moving bient lighting in every room, built-in speaker system, intercom 8 ca security sys t ems, abundant st o rage, wonderful views of the MORRIS beautiful Ponderosas REAL ESTATE & surrounding landI dcpc dc tlye c d de p c t cd scape. $998,000 John L. Scott Real EsMountain High j tate 541-548-1712 $410,000 • 2996 sq.ft. Fabulous mou n tain• 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath views, rural property • .50 acre lot 3479 sq. ft. 3 bdrm. • MLS 201201006 2 .5 baths. Lots o f Kelly Neuman, Broker shop area! $495,000. 541-480-2102
745
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Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
Pointswest j $549,000 SW Bend j $315,000 • 3035 sq.ft. townhome • 2044 sq.ft. • 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath • Close to River trail • Easy access to trails • MLS 201203181
MORRIS REAL ESTATE
Gorgeous home! Private backyard gett dcpc dc tlye wcda dOpcmtcd away! .21 Acre Lot, 2 NE Bend j $185,000 bdrm, 2 bath w/pond/ den/office, 1758 sq. • 1502 sq.ft. ft.,a 3 -car g a rage• 3 bedroom, 2 bath • .15 acre lot w/shop. $199,900
• MLS 201202442
Debbie Johnson, Broker 541-480-1293 We never stop moving
TenBroek - Hilber Group, LLC
541-550-4944 We never stop moving
MORRIS REAL ESTATE t dcpc de tlye cd
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Powell Butte j$169,000 • 19.62 acres • Beautiful Cascade Mountain views
• Gently sloped property
MORRIS REAL ESTATE
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Indcpcndcntly &mcd and Operatcd
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• MLS 201205095 Carolyn Priborsky, P.C., SW Bend j $465,000 Broker, ABR, CRS • 2500 sq.ft. 541-383-4350 • 3 bedroom, 3 bath We never stop moving • Widgi Creek town-
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MORRIS REAL ESTATE
• MLS 201300263 Jackie French, Broker 541-480-2269 We never stop moving •
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Prineville j $154,900
• 1876 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath
MORRIS
REAL ESTATE 20.39 Acres j $525,000 bend and beyond real estate • Near Meadow Lakes 20967 yeoman, bend or I dcpc dc dye cd d e p c ted • 2334 sq.ft. Golf Course • 3 bedroom, 3 bath Cabin in the woods• MLS 201207946 TERRANGO GLEN • Steven Van Sant deLa Pine. Darryl Doser, • MLS 201208886 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths MLS¹201208130 signed F urnished t u r n ke y Broker, CRS Ray Bachman, in 2 276ysf o n a Call Virginia, • MLS 201207288 rental opportunity or 541-383-4334 Broker, GRI 13,500ysf lot. Tiered Principal Broker Dawn Ulrickson, 2nd home. See vrbo¹ We never stop moving 541-312-4044 landscape & stairs to 541-350-3418 Broker, CRS, GRI, SFR 3 56290. 4 b d rm , 2 Canal level gathering Redmond RE/MAX We never stop moving 541-610-9427 bath, large living room area w/firepit 8 picnic Land & Homes We never stop moving + loft. Wood stove for Real Estate grove. Open 2 story c ozy n i ghts. 1 . 0 5 floor plan with great ca acres. Fully fenced. Great Family Home room living space that Cg Shop w/1 bay. L o- B eautiful MORRIS home i n a is light 8 bright with cated in heart of C.O. great n eighborhood. m any w indows 8 REAL ESTATE MORRIS recreation & less than Spacious kitchen, tile custom lights. Granite I d p d t l y e d d ep t d MORRIS 1 hour from Mt. Bach- c ountertops. H u g e REAL ESTATE tile countertops, elor REAL ESTATE I dcpc dc ttye c d d e p c t cd master suite w/soakPrineville j $99,000 stainless steel appliMarci Schoenberg, I dcpc dc tlye c d de p c t cd ing tub & s e parate NE Bend j $192,000 • 2.04 acres ances 8 porcelain ceBroker 541-610-7803 shower. Large fenced • 1206 • Cascade Mountain ramic tile. Gas firesq.ft. John L. Scott 3 Bedroom 2 bath, 1092 backyard. M o v e-in• 2 bedroom, 2 bath views place with s t acked Real Estate, Bend sq. ft. frame home in ready with all appli• Crooked River views rock surround, wood • Turn key property www.johnlscott.com W heeler Ranc h . ances. Call Barbara • MLS 201204680 • MLS 2704850 mantle & buil t - in H ome was b uilt i n for more information. JJ Jones, Broker Cascade Mountain b ookcases & c a b iAmy Halligan, Broker 2004, h a s va u lted Views Barbara Jackson, Bro541-610-7318 nets on either side. 541-410-9045 ceilings, gas fireplace, Beautiful single l evel ker 541-306-8186 541-788-3678 L arge m a i n fl o o r We never stop moving tile and appliances. home, 3/2 with upJohn L. Scott master bedroom 8 We never stop moving Double attached gaReal Estate, Bend graded kitchen. Debath. Formal dining r age, front yard i s www.johnlscott.com room & guest powder tached o ffice/studio. landscaped and Landscaped, freshly room too. Loft family decorative fence, very painted, Hidden Gem On room w i t h bu i l t-in spa r kling clean, must see. Awbrey Butte c lean 8 move - i n computer/desk unit. MORRIS $93,000 This home has it all! 4 ready. $315,000 MLS MORRIS MLS¹ 201209339 BR, 2.5 baths, den REAL ESTATE Candice Anderson, ¹201209150 REAL ESTATE Cascade Realty, and a bonus room. Indepcndcntly 0 ctcd and Opetatcd Bobbie Strome, Broker, 541-788-8878 tndcpendcntlytnntcd and Opetated Dennis Haniford, Huge 4+ garage with John L. Scott Principal Broker Princ. Broker bonus storage space. NE Bend j $200,000 Real Estate, Bend John L Scott Real • 19.68 acres Rivers Edge Village j 541-536-1731 Large lot. R ecently www.johnlscott.com Estate 541-385-5500 $80,000 remodeled. Beautiful! • Mt Jefferson & Three Sisters views • .47 acre lot 60674 Rocking $589,000 Three Rivers South j • Golf course & eastern Horse Ct. Call a Pro Sheila Balyeat, Broker • 18 acres irrigation $75,000 • MLS 201001946 views Traditional sale! Nestled Whether you need a 541-280-5964 acre lot • Easy access to Hwy •• .45 in the pines this home Steve Payer, John L. Scott Backs Deschutes Nafence fixed, hedges Broker, GRI 97 offers a great open Real Estate, Bend tional Forest • MLS 201204299 floor plan, 3 bdrm, 2 trimmed or a house 541-480-2966 www.johnlscott.com • Big Deschutes River Jerry Stone, Broker • MLS 201209006 bath, 1639 sq. ft. with We never stop moving built, you'll find 541-390-9598 12 ft. ceilings. Newer Historic District j Kathy Powell, Broker professional help in v inyl windows a n d $649,000 We never stop moving 541-383-4342 Trane heat p u mp. The Bulletin's "Call a • 2119 sq.ft. English We never stop moving Spacious .34 acre lot Service Professional" cottage with plenty of room for • 3 bedroom, 2 bath ca Directory RV parking and a ll • Across from Drake MORRIS ca 541-385-5809 your toys. A definite Park REAL ESTATE must see!. • MLS 201205806 MORRIS t dcpc dcntlye ctcda dOpcmtcd Maralin Baidenmann, Close-in Acreage j Greg Miller, P.C., REAL ESTATE MORRIS Broker 541-325-1096 $410,000 Broker, CRS, GRI NEW LISTING! t dcpc dc tlyO eda depcmtcd John L. Scott • 2428 sq.ft. 541-408-1511 REAL ESTATE Spacious single-level 3 • 4 bedroom, 2 bath Real Estate, Bend t dcpc dcndyO cda depewtcd or 4 bdrm on .88 acre Shevlin Ridge Beauty We never stop moving www.johnlscott.com • 4.78 acres, pond pine-treed lot. Boasts West side custom • MLS 201206420 Tri-plex j $379,500 oversized double ga- Skyline Ranch Rd. - 4 $89,500 Christy Hartmanrage and rear deck. bed/3 bath, 2900 SF, • 2 or 3 bedroom units ca Smart Investment! • Each has 1-car garage DeCourcey, Broker Photos: Stainless steel, gran- • SW Redmond This spacious Condo 541-312-7263 www.johnlscott.com ite, cherry cabinets. home boasts of deco- We never stop moving 2904198 /96127 Courtyard off master, • MLS MORRIS rator paint, wood look Sydne Anderson, Peggy Lee Combs, huge bonus room. laminate flo o r ing. REAL ESTATE Broker, CRS, WCR, Broker 541-480-7653 Ed Green, Broker C omfortable liv i n g t dcpc dc tlyO cd» depcmtcd CDPE, GREEN John L. Scott 541-598-5666 area w/fireplace & 541-420-1111 Real Estate, Bend John L. Scott large windows make Home w/a Guest We never stop moving www.johnlscott.com Real Estate, Bend Cottage! $98,900 t his home l i ght & MORRIS www.johnlscott.com bright. 2 master suites Loads of character & Northcrest j $229,947 charm, 3 bd, 1398 sf • 1802 sq.ft. upstairs w/w a lk-in REAL ESTATE Sisters j $824,000 ca I dcpc dc tlye c d d e p c t cd closets. Fenced yard home has hard wood • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • 3216 sq.ft. Floors, fire p lace,• New construction with m a ture t r e es. Call The Bulletin At • 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath T his c omplex f e abuilt-in cabinets. 528 • MLS 201208393 • 20 acres MORRIS 541-385-5809 sf guest cottage w/ all Don Kelleher, Broker • MLS 201200880 tures a private indoor REAL ESTATE The Kelleher Group pool/spa, well main- Place Your Ad Or E-Mail the comforts. Great Brandon Fairbanks, Indcpcndcntly Ontcd and Opecatcd 541-480-1911 tained common area. At: www.bendbulletin.com location on dead end Broker, SRES, HOA covers water, street w/ view of the We never stop rnoving GRI, CDPE Close to the River! Tumalo j $275,000 valley. sewer, garbage, land541-383-4344 • 5 acre parcel s caping, snow r e - 2002 MH, .98 acres Jett Blackburn Real We never stop moving • Cascade Mountain Estate, 541-573-7206 moval, pool & exterior w/garage/shop, water views feature, fi r e pit, maintenance. • Flat lot with CUP New Landscaping, f e nced Debbie Tallman, Broker greenhouse. • MLS 201200062 flooring - t r avertine, dog area, c overed 541-390-0934 or MORRIS tile, d o ors, l i g hts, r ear d e ck . Cathy Del Nero, Broker 1 4 x20 541-389-7910 REAL ESTATE 541-410-5280 sinks, paint & MORE! screened party room Hunter Properties I dcpc dc tlye c d de p c t cd Call f or deta i ls! with BBQ, 15x20 work MORRIS We never stop moving $136,900! Lisa M cAttractive Home Inside or craft shop (unfinREAL ESTATE NOTICE: Carthy, Broker, SRES & Out $156,000 ished), 24x50 3-bay Indcpcndcndy~ d c d Opented 541-419-8639 3 b d rm , 1t/a bath shop with upper stor- All real estate adverJohn L. Scott beauty, sunny remodage. Home has 4 bed- tised here in is sub- Where can you find a Real Estate, Bend eled Kitchen & baths. room, 3 baths, large ject to t h e F e deral helping hand? F air H o using A c t , www.johnlscott.com Tile & Pergo floors. open living area, ofMORRIS which makes it illegal From contractors to Colorful, sequentiallyfice or den off living Coming Soon! REAL ESTATE to advertise any prefblooming flower Beds. Spacious s i ngle-level room. Al l b u ildings yard care, it's all here I dcpc dc tlye c d do p c t cd Open floor plan, con- 3 + bdrm on .23 Ac have metal r o ofs. erence, limitation or in The Bulletin's discrimination based temporary l i g hting. t reed lo t w i t h R V Horse property on Very clean home, fresh on race, color, reli"Call A Service Environmentally paved road. parking, fenced yard, paint, wood stove and gion, sex, handicap, Professional" Directory friendly heating. $269,900 a fireplace. Private lot, raised garden beds. familial status or naMLS¹ 201207419 Jett Blackburn Real L arge r e c roo m , large sh o p/garage tional origin, or intenEstate, 541-573-7206 Cascade Realty, Village ¹127 with 10' doors, added double garage, large tion to make any such Snowberry Dennis Haniford, $90,425 rear deck. Photos: storage building, on preferences, l i m itaAwbrey Butte j Princ. Broker bedrooms, 2 baths, just under an acre. www.johnlscott.com tions or discrimination. 2 1404 $750,000 541-536-1731 sq. ft. 2000 Sil/25796 R ear d e ck , s o m e We will not knowingly • 3524 sq.ft. Large great landscaping. New Peggy Lee Combs, • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath Large craftsman style accept any advertis- vercrest. Broker 541-480-7653 ing for r ea l e s tate room, bay w i ndow pump installed in Jan. • Cascade Mountain home. 2703 sq. ft. 4 area. Front & 2012. Sale subject to John L. Scott views bedroom 3 ba t h s. which is in violation of dining Real Estate, Bend this law. All persons back decks. Laundry third party approval. • MLS 201208795 $159,000 + 2-car garage. $104,000 www.johnlscott.com Sue Conrad, MLS¹201203228 are hereby informed room MLS¹ 201205574 that all dwellings ad- Sold tastefully f u rBroker, CRS Custom Home In Three Call Don Chapin, Bronished. Cascade Realty, 541-480-6621 vertised are available Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, ker, 541-350-6777 Pines. Dennis Haniford, on an equal opportuRedmond RE/MAX We never stop moving Immaculate 3529 sq. ft. 541-322-9954 Princ. Broker Land & Homes nity basis. The Bulle4 bdrm, 3 bath home John L. Scott 541-536-1731 tin Classified Real Estate close to Shevlin Park. Real Estate, Bend G reat r o o m wit h ca Village Wiestoria j NW Bend j $495,000 www.johnlscott.com in Seneca, OR. • 40 Rogue River s tone 2Located acres $425,000 bdrm cute home w/ all fireplace, Br a z ilian Sundance j $329,000 • 3163 sq.ft. • Tumalo Creek flows the necessities. MORRIS cherry wood f l oors Knotty pine, newer through property • 4 bedroom, 3 bath • 3 bedroom, 3 bath and 2 7 ' ca t h edral • Custom Built • Borders National For- • 2274 Sq.Ft. REAL ESTATE siding 8 v i nyl w i nceiling. Chef's kitchen dows. Covered front & est • 2.96 flat acres • MLS 201208464 Indepcndently 0 ctcd and Opetatcd with SS G E M o no• MLS 201209541 201209443 Deborah Benson, side deck. F e nced • MLS gram appliances. 2 Jim Moran, Broker Craig Long, Broker P.C., Broker, GRI yard, garage, Plus 2 Need to get an master suites, t a n541-948-0997 541-480-6448 541-480-7647 dem 3-car g arage. storage sheds. Only We never stop moving ad in ASAP? We never stop moving We never stop moving $45,000! Jett Blackold MLS¹201208803 You can place it burn R ea l E s t ate, $634,900 541-573-7206 online at: Shelley Arnold, Broker ca ca ca 541-771-9329 www.bendbulletin.com Lots of pos s ibilities John L. Scott h ere! 0 .2 6 L o t , 3 Real Estate, Bend MORRIS MORRIS 541-385-5809 MORRIS Bdrm, 1 Bath, freshly www.johnlscott.com painted interior, wood REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE floors, R5. $99,000 Indcpendcntly ~ d and Opecatcd Awbrey Butte Lot j Desert Skies j Indcpc dcntly 0 ttcd and Opccatcd I dcpc dc tlye d d epc t c d MLS¹201208899 $108,000 $269,000 Perfect Vacation Home Call Virginia, • .75 acre lot • 3110 sq.ft. West Hills j $434,900 SW Bend j $174,900 Great open floor plan • 1704sq.ft. Principal Broker • 3214 sq.ft. • Pilot Butte 8 city views • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath with exposed beams. 541-350-3418 • 4 bedroom, 3 bath • Near trails • .13 acre lot • 3 bedroom, 2 bath Spacious kit c h en• .62 acre lot Redmond RE/MAX • .29 acre lot • MLS 201203022 • MLS 201106138 w /dual o vens a n d • MLS 201208852 Land & Homes • MLS 201209333 Minda McKitrick, Jane Strell, pantry. 3-sided wood Nicolette Jones, Broker Real Estate Craig Smith, Broker Broker, GRI Broker, ABR, GRI f ireplace. Tons o f 541-322-2417 541-280-6148 541-948-7998 541-241-0432 Lots to Offer! $29,900 windows to let in lots We never stop moving We never stop moving We never stop moving We never stop moving Property needs some of light. Hot tub and TLC but lots of Possifire pit fo r r elaxing. b ilities. 3 b d rm , 1 Across the street from ca ca ca ca b ath, 1162 sq . f t . . the river. Wood floors, l a rge Barbara Jackson, living area, located on Broker 541-306-8186 MORRIS MORRIS MORRIS MORRIS corner lot next to park. John L. Scott REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE Jett Blackburn Real Real Estate, Bend t dcpc dc tlye cda depcmtcd I dcpc dc tlyO cda depcmtcd Estate, 541-573-7206 www.johnlscott.com t dcpc de tlye cda depcmtcd t dcpc dc tlyO cda depcwtcd •
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Also inquire about other listings we have in each neighborhood. Knowledgeable brokers are on site
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20536 Gloucester Ln. $179,950 '' J • Greenbuildingfeatures '
• Open great room • Convenient island kitchen Dtrecttons. From Bend Parkway, east on Empire Are., left on Boyd Acres Rd., left on Gloucester Ln.
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20729 Kilbourne Lp. • Large family home $324,900
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• Master on main level • Premium finishes Directions: From Hwy 97 north, east on Cooley Rd, left on NEHigh Standard Drn left on Beaumont Dr., left on Nokes Pln left on Kilbourne Lp
1496 NE Saddle Rock Ct. • Freshly painted inside $235 5fig • Den/office & flex room • Vaulted ceilings, skylights
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Directions:From NE3rd St. (Business 97),easton NE Olney Ave.(becomes NE Penn Ave., then NENeff Rd.), left on NE Parkridge Dr., left on NEDaphneDr., right into NE Saddle Rock Ct.
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63410 Overtree Rd.
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• 58R home,2.5acres $579,000 •Cascadem ountainviews • Two master suites
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Directions:From Bend Parkwayexit Empire Ave. eastbound, left on NE Purcell Blvd., right on Yeoman Rd., left on Overtree Rd.
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20125 Cirrus Ct. • Large den/office $279,500 • Two gas fireplaces • Superb features & finishes Directions:FromBend Parkway,west on j Powers Rdn right on Blakely Rd., right on Reed Lnn right on Duncan Ln n right on Cirrus Ct.
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620 NW StI1 St. PRINEVILLE • Completely remodeled$139,000 • New paint, new appliances • Heat pump and A/C
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Directions: From Bend/Redmond, enter Prinevilleon Hwy 26/126, lefton NW Harwood St., right on NW 5th St.
lots, lots,
lots.
Custom homelots andacreage parcels available in many desirable locations including Awbrey Butte, Three Pines and Rimrock Village. Mountain, river and forested terrain views. Choices range from residential lots to 40 acres. Whether your dream location is in the center of urban activities or a secluded spot in the country, we can show you avariety of building sites.
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Visit our Sales Office at
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NorthWest Crossing.
Open Weekdays 9-5 Saturday & Sunday 12-4
2762 NW Crossing Drive
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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OMMENTARY
mmi ration re orm is inco erent othing about illegal immigration quite adds up. Conservative c o r p orate employers still support the idea of imported, cheap, non-union labor — in a strange alliance with liberal activists who want the larger blocs of Latino voters that eventually follow massive influxes from Latin America. Yet how conservativearebusinesses that in the past flouted federal law — and how liberal are activists who undermined the bargaining power of American minimum-wage, entry-level workers, many of them minorities? The remedies for illegal immigration under discussion are just as incoherent. If the government now plans to offer some foreign nationals a pathway to citizenship, does it also suddenly have the will to determine who among illegal immigrants does not qualify for citizenship? Millions of illegal immigrants have resided in the United States for some time. They have not been convicted of crimes. And they have been hardworking and self-supporting. But if the majority deserves a chance to obtain legal residence and begin the process of citizenship, what about others who would not qualify under those same considerations'? There is also talk of reforming legal immigration as well. From now on we would select most immigrants for citizenship not by their place of origin, or by the fact of their prior illegal residence in the United States, but on the
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON basis of needed skill sets and education, and their willingness to wait in
line legally. Yet are loud proponents of "comprehensive immigration reform" really willing to embrace the reforms they boast about'? It might spell the end of privileging millions from Latin America to enter the United States without requisite concern about legality, education, English fluency or particular skill sets. Massive illegal immigration is not ethnically blind or based on education. For decades it has favored more proximate Latin American arrivals who can easily cross the U.S.-Mexican border over those from distant Asia, Africa or Europe who simply cannot. The politics of immigration are just as weird. Democrats, buoyed by the two election victories of Barack Obama, now welcome large pools of new Latino citizens to vote in bloc fashion for Democratic candidates. But if the border were actually closed and immigration returned to a legal, systematic process, then in time Latinos — inthe pattern of Greek-, Italianand Armenian-Americans — would follow most other ethnic minorities and decouple their ethnic allegiances from politics.
Republicansseem more confused. After needlesslybombastic talk in the 2012 presidential primaries, they have gone to the other extreme of emphasizing amnesties instead of enforcement — largely in efforts to pander to growing numbers of Latino voters. Here, too, paradoxes abound. Various polls suggest that immigration was not the primary reason why Latinos voted overwhelmingly for Barack Obama. When the Pew Research Center recently surveyed Latinos and asked whether they preferred high taxes and big government or low taxes and small government, they preferred high taxes and big government by a 75-19 margin. And they usually see liberal Democrats as far better stewards of redistributionist government, and Republicans more as h eartless advocatesof a capricious free market. Stranger still, Asian-Americans, for whom illegal immigration is not really an issue, voted for Democrats by about the same margins as did Latinos — and perhaps for similar perceptions of minority-friendly big government. Moreover,the largest concentrations of Latino voters are in Southwestern blue states like California, New Mexico and Nevada, where Republicans usually lose anyway, and for a variety of reasons other than immigration. Ironically, the best longterm strategy for Republicans would be to close the border and allow the
forces of upward mobility, assimilation and the natural social conservatism of Latinos to work. Everyone talks grandly of passing bipartisan comprehensive immigration reform as if the present system had not sprung up to serve the needs of all sorts of special interests that certainly have not gone away. We forget that too many employers still want the cheap labor of foreign nationals. The Mexican government still promotes illegal immigration as a political safety valve and a valuable source of cash remittances. Too many ethnic activists, whose supportderives from large numbers of under-assimilated Latinos, don't want to deport anyone and do not welcome legal immigration redefined by ethnically blind, skill-based criteria. Democratic politicos don't want closed borders, only to see the melting pot someday turn their loyal supporters into independent voters. And panicky Republicans simply have no idea what they want — other than to cater to as many constituencies as they can. The present system of immigration is far too often illegal and immoral. But it is also weirdly rational in the way that it serves so well so many lobbies — and so poorly the shared public interest at large. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution,
Stanford University.
THOMAS FRIEDMAN
The power, possibilities of youth NEW DELHIt's hard to escape a visit to India without someone asking you to compare it to China. This visit was no exception, but I think it's more revealing to widen the aperture and compare India, China and Egypt. India has a weak central government but a really strong civil society, bubbling with elections and associations at every level. China has a muscular central government but a weak civil society, yet one that is clearly straining to express itself more. Egypt, alas, has a weak government and a very weak civil society, one that was suppressed for 50 years, denied real elections and, therefore, is easy prey to have its revolution diverted by the one group that could organize, the Muslim Brotherhood, in the one free space, the mosque. But there is one thing all three have in common: gigantic youth bulgesunder the age of30,increasingly connected by technology but very unevenly educated. My view: Of these three, the one that will thrive the most in the 21st century will be the one that is most successful at converting its youth bulge into a "demographic dividend" that keeps
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Drones have the least negative effects By Michael W. Lewis Los Angeles Times
residentObama's second term begins amid intense criticism of the drone strikes being conducted by the United States in Pakistan. Much of this criticism is based on claims that drones are doing more harm than good. A recent Stanford/NYU study concluded that drones cause excessive civilian casualties and frequently fail to hit leadership targets, and thatthe presence of drones spreads fear and anxiety among the civilian population, disrupts civilians' daily lives, limits public gatherings and disrupts access to education. Other critics cite the Taliban's detention and execution of suspected "spies" who assist drone targeting. Like many such studies, the NYU/ Stanford one did not attempt to interview a single member of the U.S. military. Had it done so, it might have learned that (at least in Afghanistan) therehave been instances ofTaliban or al-Qaida forces killing civilians and placing their bodies at the site of drone attacks to increase civilian casualty counts. Yet the study's only attempt to gain the government's perspective was a letter requesting a meeting with the National Security Council. Because the council did not reply within a month, the U.S. government'sperspective was excluded from the report. The report's discussion of civilian casualties adopts the highest estimate offered by any of the three sources that compile such information — the Bureau of Investigative Journalism. And it consistently describes civilian casualties in the ag-
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gregate since the beginning of the drone program rather than examining recenttrends. Even the bureau estimates that only seven civilians have been killed in about 60 strikes conducted over the last 13 months. These same strikes are estimated to have killed 250 to 400 militants. A ny a lternative use o f f o r c e against Taliban or al-Qaida forces would be likely to cause many more civilian casualties. Even if drones continue to cause some civilian casualties and have other negative effects, the question of whether continuing the drone campaign is a good policy decision cannot be answered without carefully considering the alternatives available. There are four obvious options for dealing with th e Taliban/al-Qaida presence in the federally administered tribal areas of Pakistan. One is to accept their presence and control of that area and cease operations against them. But this course of action wouldn't address most of the concerns about drones. T aliban control w ould b e f a r more disruptive to the daily lives of those living in the tribal region than drones are. Public meetings, unless authorized by the Taliban, would be rare and extremely dangerous. The Taliban's shooting of a 14-yearold girl for attending school speaks volumes about access to education under Taliban rule. And the detention and execution of undesirable individuals would continue, albeit under theguise ofheresy rather than spying. Also, ceding the territory to Taliban control would provide the Afghan Taliban with a safe haven from which to continue its opera-
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any guide, using ground troops would result in as many or more civilian casualties than the current drone
campaignand would bemore deeply
tions against American and Afghan forces across the border. The second option would be for Pakistan's military to assert control over the region. However, its last serious attempt to do so — the Swat Valley campaign of 2009 — utilized armored vehicles, artillery and airstrikes to try to dislodge about 5,000 Taliban fighters. This resulted in the displacement of more than I million civilians who fled the army's indiscriminate firepower. Last year, mere rumors that the Pakistani military was planning a campaign in Waziristan caused thousands to flee. Pakistan lacks both the desire and the capacity to pursue another campaign to gain control of the tribal areas, and any attempt to conductsuch a campaign would be a humanitarian nightmare for the civilians who live there. The third option would be for the United States to use ground troops and special forces to conduct counterinsurgency operations in the tribal areas. Even if Pakistan were willing to publicly consent to American ground forces on its territory, an issue that it has carefully finessed in the context of drone operations, it is unlikely that this option would alleviate any of the frequently voiced concerns about the use of drones. If operations in Afghanistan are
unpopular in Pakistan — not to mention that it would result in higher U.S. casualties. Ground operations in territory controlled by the Taliban would still rely heavily on drone surveillance, and most raids would occur at night. Such operations in Afghanistan were so unpopular and disruptive of daily life that President Hamid Karzai insisted that continued Afghan cooperation with the United States was contingent on Afghan control over night raids. The final option is the continued use of drones. Even according to the leastfavorable numbers presented by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, drones have effectively disrupted the leadership structure of the Taliban and al-Qaida in Pakistan by killing scores of senior leaders and operationalcommanders. And the drones'constant presence continues to deny the Taliban a safe haven in which it can train and organize its forces for operations in Afghanistan. Most important, drones have done this while consistently improving their accuracy and reducing civilian casualties. After examining the alternatives, it is clear that drones remain the best option available to minimize the negative effects of the conflict on civilians while continuing to disrupt the Taliban and deny it control of territory in the tribal areas. — Michael W. Lewis teaches international Iaw and the Iaw of war at Ohio Northern University's College of Law.
The evil that purrs nearby — and stalks its prey By Charles Lane
mammal slaughter. Scientific though it may be, the reormer President George W. port is not irony-free. It brands cats Bush's dog Barney has gone to an "invasive" species, imported to that great kennel club in the sky. North America by humans and unBut I'll bet Barney died smiling. He checked by natural predators. Yet lived to see the day when humans fi- three of the 11 most-victimized bird nally acknowledged that cats are a species in the study are also invasive: menace. the house sparrow, the rock pigeon In f a ct , g o v ernment-affiliated and the European starling. scientists have produced statistical In my book, that means every time proof of feline perfidy, in a new study a cat takes out one of those winged showing that cats stalk and kill 2.4 pests, it's a case of justifiable avicide. billion birds and 12.3 billion mamBut never mind that. "Scientifimals in the United States each year, cally sound conservation and policy give or take a few billion. This "kill intervention is needed to reduce this rate" is two to four times higher than impact," the study notes. I don't think they're talking about previously believed, and worse than that attributable to windmills, cars federally subsidized tummy rubs. and other "anthropogenic" threats. Some environmentalists t h i nk The victims include not just rats that euthanasia may be the only way and mice but also songbirds, chip- to prevent an uncontrolled killermunks and other valued wildlife cat population from ravaging wildspecies, according to The New York life, given the absence of a natural Times. predator. Feral — "stray" — cats, which numOthers recoil at mass cat-killing to ber 80 million or so, are the main cure mass bird-killing. Some animal culprits, the study concluded. But the welfare advocates think the solution nation's 86.4 million domestic cats ac- is to sterilize feral cats and then recount for about 29 percent of cat-on- lease them. A variant is to rehabilibird killings and 11 percent of cat-on- tate freshly neutered or spayed stray The Washington Post
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felines as "working cats," who keep rats out of human hangouts, including — in one actual case — a Los Angeles police station. But it has been rightly noted that the life of a stray is pretty miserable, what with the constant threat of cars and disease. Useful as mousers may be, the supply of working cats will probably always exceed demand. Our f r ontier a ncestors surely would have marveled at a society so civilized and affluent that it can indulge in such quarrels. And arguments don't crop up only in the context of cat vs. bird. Controversy rages in the Washington, D.C., area about how to control Rock Creek Park's population of white-tailed deer. For my part, I don't have a dog in any of these fights. My only semiserious point is that it is much easier to declareone's concern foranimals, their welfare and even their rights than to act on that concern in a logical, consistent manner. When it comes to moral reasoning about animals, we're all sort of chasing our tails. Science can help describe issues and inform debate. But it still takes
human judgment, leavened by instinct and intuition, to balance the interests of the various species affected — homo sapiens included. Even The Times, in an earnest editorial on the feline "superpredator" study, conceded that, while restocking suburbia with coyotes would help control cats — just as Australia got results by siccing dingos on them — "most Americans will never put
up with a burgeoning coyote population." So much for that otherwise promising idea. Mietzi, our long-haired Norwegian forest cat, is not allowed out. She spends hours each day crouched against the window, glaring at birds and squirrels as they impudently hop by. Her tail twitches. How she longs to springatherprey,as herancestors did among the pines of Scandinavia! But the glass — that incomprehensible transparent hardness — frustrates her every time. Mietzi feels better when we feed her tuna, ground up and packed into a little can with a convenient pop-top lid. I'm pretty sure it's dolphin-safe. — Charles Laneis a member of The Washington Post's editorial board.
a "demographic bomb" that keeps going off every decade. That will be the society that provides more of its youth with the education, jobs and voice they seek to realize their full potential. This race is about "who can enable and inspire more of its youth to help build broad societal prosperity," argues Dov Seidman, the author of "How" and CEO of LRN, which has an operating center in India. "And that's all about leaders,parents and teachers creating environments where young people can be on a quest, not just for a job, but for a career — for a better life that doesn't just surpass but far surpasses their parents." Countries that fail to do that will have a youth bulge that is not only unemployed but unemployable, he argued. "They will be disconnected in a connected world, despairing as they watch others build and realize their potential and curiosity." If your country has either a strong government or a strong civil society, it has the ability to rise to this challenge. If it has neither, it will have real problems, which is why Egypt is struggling. China leads in providing its youth bulge with education, infrastructure and jobs, but lags in unleashing freedom and curiosity. India is the most intriguing case — if it can get its governance and corruption under controL "India today has 560 million young people under the age of 25 and 225 million between the ages of 10 and 19," explained Shashi Tharoor, India's minister of state for human resource development."So forthe next 40years we should have a youthful workingage population" at a time when China and the broad industrialized world is
aging. According to Tharoor, the average age in Chinatoday is around 38, whereas in India it's around 28. In 20 years, that gap will be much larger. So this couldbe a huge demographic dividend — "provided that we can educate our youth — offering vocational training to some and university to others to equip them to take advantage of what the 21st-century global economy offers," said Tharoor. "If we get it right, India becomes the workhorse ofthe world. If we get it wrong, there is nothing worse than unemployable, frustrated" youth. So there is now a huge push here to lure poor kids into school. India runs the world's biggest midday lunch program, serving 250 million free school lunches each day. It's also doubled its number of Indian Institutes of Technology, from eight to 16, and is planning 14 new universities for innovation and research. But this will al l b e f o r n aught without better governance, argues Gurcharan Das, the former CEO of Procter 8 Gamble India, whose latest book is "India Grows at Night: A Liberal Case for a Strong State." "The aspirational India has no one to vote for, because no one is talking the language of public goods. Why should it take us 15 years to get justice in the courtsor 12 years to build a road? The gap between ((youth)) aspirations and government performance is huge. My thesis is that India has risen despite the state. It is a story of public failure and private success." That is what Das means by India grows at night, when government
sleeps. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.
F4 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9 2013 • THE BULLETIN 745
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Homes for Sale
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Southwest Bend Homes Northeast Bend Homes
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DESCHUTES Traditional Sale! 3 $374,900 Extraordinary $750,000 Ex t r emelyBeautiful custom home Great Home - Terrific Newer S ingle S t o rySW Redmond 3 bdrms., RIVER WOODS bdrm, 1 b ath, 1092 view of Mt Jefferson private s e t ting in all on 1 level. Large Condition! $167,500. h ome, 3 b d rm, 2 . 5 2 baths, 1120 sq. ft., cul-de-sac, this 3 windows 3 bedroom, 1.75 bath in sq. ft., l a ndscaped, centered thru wall to for Corner Lot, 2016 sq. bath, office, sunroom, clean, turn-key single When buying a home 1329 sq. ft. custom fenced RV gate/parkwall windows. This b edroom 2. 5 b a t h light/bright c o m fort. ft., 3 bdrm, 2.5 baths, 2260 sq.ft, 60 acre, story home, fenced, 83% of Central home on DRW acre. ing on 9148 sq. ft. Iot. 4bd 2079 sq ft home 3275 sq. ft. home can Huge master s uite open floor plan, fam- mtn & S m ith R o ck shed. Traditional sale, Oregonians turn to Great room floor plan $129,900 MLS features knotty pine, only be described as w/vaulted ceilings 8 ily room, living room, views. $279,000. MLS T oo new fo r M L S. with vaulted ceiling. 201208880 rock fireplace, cuse legantly cas u a l, skylights. Cozy family patio lan d scaped ¹ 201206306 Pa m $119,900 All kitchen appliances Pam Lester, Principal tom cabinets, double w/paver w a l kways, room w/gas fireplace fenced RV area. Lester, Principal Bro- Pam Lester, Princ. BroSererntr Central Qreqen srnre l903 are included. Both re- B roker Century 2 1 oven! Home-ID 974. front and rear deck. open t o kit c hen. Jim Hinton ker, Century 21 Gold ker, Century 21 Gold Call 541-385-5809 to cessed & under cabi- Gold Country Realty, Eagle Crest Wonderful b ackyard $209,900 541-420-6229 Country Realty, Inc. Country Realty, Inc. place your 541-504-1338 541-504-1338 net lighting in kitchen. Inc. 541-504-1338 Properties that i s ex t e nsively MLS¹201208542 Central Oregon Realty Real Estate ad. Laundry room w/sky866-722-3370 landscaped with waJohn L. Scott Real Group, LLC 3086 N E Wav e r ly Newly renovated home THE FALLS at Eagle lite and large pantry. t er feature 8 fu l l y Estate 541-548-1712 in the heart of down- Crest Resort WINDANCE Garage is heated and Court, Bend. Clean 8 $ 199,900 Enjoy t h i s equipped greenhouse. Investment Opportunity ran c h b eautiful view f r om Home-ID 954 Redmond, close Central Oregon's Pre3 bedroom, 2.5 bath in f inished w/wor k c omfortable Beautiful home in Great 3 b d rm, c h a rming town to dry canyon trails, mier 55 an d O l der 1673 sq. ft. home on bench. Super fenced style home on a large the Sisters to Smith Eagle Crest condition $184,900 Bungalow style home, C entennial Park & Resort C o mmunity. a 8276 sq. ft. Lot. Pri- yard w/mature Ponde- lot in a great neigh- Rock on the deck of Properties™ Single level, 3 bdrms, 2 in d owntown R e damenities. Live the Central Orthis townhome. This 2 vate setting with a rosas, storage build- borhood. Home fea866-722-3370 baths, office, 1792 sq. mond. Detached ga- downtown tures a fenced yard, refurbished egon lifestyle you've view of P ilot Butte. ing. SHORT S A LE bdrm, 2 b ath, 1419 ft. , NEW Stainless rage, lot of off street Features skylights, sp r i nkler pine hardwood floor- always dreamed of at sq. ft. townhome fea- $ 158,000. Earth A d - steel appliances, large p arking. Zoned f o r Close t o sc h o ols, WITH APP R OVED wall-to-wall vantage Home! Main parks, & s h opping. PRICE $166,000. system, mature trees, tures, home office, residen- ing, laminate flooring THE FALLS at Eagle kitchen with e a ting RV parking, attached windows, built- in enthe kitchen & dinCrest. Residents of Property backs Juni- MLS¹2802056 living with exten- bar. New blinds, fresh t ial, could b e c o n - in double garage, lami- tertainment ce n t er, floor ing room, new paint THE FALLS enjoy exper T r ail. F e nced Bobbie Strome, verted to commercial s ive upgrades. A n paint in & out. nate flooring, walk-in propane fireplace and open floor plan with inside & out, master clusive use of t heir backyard with p a vPrincipal Broker Jim Hinton use. $99,900. c loset, m ai n f l o o r large great room for large entry, slate, red s eparation, din i ng own clubhouse (picered patio. RV parkJohn L Scott Real 541-420-6229 MLS¹201206148 master, formal dining entertaining. area and formal din- tured), access to three ing. Large Double car Estate 541-385-5500 oak hardwood floors. Central Oregon Realty Call Kelly Starbuck, room 8 bre a kfast ing room, a b o nus golf courses, and all Home-ID 796 garage. Tile counter Principal Broker, breakfast bar, c onGroup, LLC nook. Location offers Eagle Crest Properties r oom/solarium, n ew t he rest o f E a g le tops, Pergo flooring in Estate In Gated Golf crete counters a nd 541-350-3419 quick access to the landscaping, fenced Crest's ame n ities. kitchen. Bu i l t in 866-722-3370 Redmond RE/MAX Birch cabinets. Rear EAGLE CREST behind Cascade hospital and Costco is back yard, RV parkHomesites start at just speaker system, Community Land & Homes views with 2.5 acres, a short distance from $264,500 Bright, open entry garage. Mike gates & on 11th fairing, alley access, de- $47,500 and lots on vaulted ceilings with 4bdrm, with his/hers the Real Estate Wilson, Broker way. Great room open nei g hborhood- Great Room plan w/ tached garage w/shop the Challenge Course l ighting. Forced a i r 541-977-5345 or to dining w/covered master suites on main MLS ¹ 201209073 area & storage along a re a v ailable. W e floor to ceiling win- 541-389-7910 gas heating. $192,900 level. 3 gas fireplaces, Large Lot In SW Reddeck access 8 cook's John L. Scott Real Esw/ central heat/AC. have several PREdows, gas fireplace & MLS¹201209315. Hunter Properties kitchen w/alder cabinmond. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, roomy kitchen, wrap tate 541-548-1712 Call Today! $189,900 FERRED BUILDERS built-in buffet opens to SHORT SALE WITH 2 etry, granite counter 1108 sq.ft, 9148 sq.ft. around wind o ws, MLS¹201208379 that are ready to asa large deck over- 1742 N W LENDERS tops & tile floor, over- lot, hot tub, sprinkler John L. Scott Real Es- s ist you wood floors, & 3 car w it h y o ur looking the first green P lace. C l eaKni n gwood Bobbie Strome, Take care of a n d looking golf course & system, greenhouse. garage. Golf cart bay tate 541-548-1712 complete hom e of t h e Cha l lenge Comfortable c r a fts- mtn. vistas. Spacious $106,000. Principal Broker w/ 1560 s / f c o a ch your investments building needs; evCourse. 4 bedroom, man style home within master suite & luxury MLS¹201207599. John L Scott Real Opportunity Knocks Will house complete with from p lan3.5 bath, 2074 sq. ft. Estate 541-385-5500 close distance of the bath w/see-thru firePam Lester, Principal You Answer? Corner erything shop. Sp e ctacular with the help from ning to moving in. To Home-ID 951 B roker, Century 2 1 The Bulletin's Dry Canyon and West place 8 deck access Lot, .27 acre, close to landscaping, p o n d, rrange for a p e r Eagle Crest Properties C anyon Ri m Wyndermere j Ci t y to hot tub. Indoor/out- Gold Country Realty, all Central O regon a streams & waterfall all "Call A Service sonal tour please call 866-722-3370 $649,900 Park. 4 bedrooms with door speakers, inter- Inc. 541-504-1338 has to o f fer. Smith Eagle Crest Properset w i t hin f e n ced • 3450 sq.ft. Professional" Directory Stick built home with a a large master, upRock & beyond City area. $1,200,000 com, central vac 8 ties at (866) • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath stairs u t ility, o v e r- solar hot water sys- NE Redmond, 3 bdrm, views... Rem o d el 722-3370. Or, better Ryan Whitcomb, Broview and double ga• .70 acre lot s ized d o uble at tems. Finished baseker 541-639-1151 New On The Market! 2 bath, 1360 sq. ft., s tarted... Just a d d rage. $125 , 000. t ached drop by our office • MLS 201206583 gara g e , ment, bonus r o om triple garage, office, your personaltouches yet, Aaron Boehm, Broker Charming well cared for MLS¹ 2905473 l ocated next to t h e Sherry Perrigan, Broker laminate wood floorabove 1 06 0 s q . ft. for th e c o mpletion! 541-647-8851 h ome i n a gat e d bay f r ont w i n dow, Ridge Pro Shop. Call Linda Lou 541-410-4938 i ng throughout t h e triple garage. large patio, mature 1440 sq.ft, 3 bdrm, 2 Hunter Properties community. Light & Day-Wright, We never stop moving main level, a g reat MLS¹201203992 Bright, vaulted, sky- Broker, 541-771-2585 landscaping, fenced bath, office and open room design, fenced $529,900 lights, air conditioning Crooked River Realty yard. $128,000. MLS living/dining/ kitchen. Looking for your next Near Old Mill District 3 emp/oyee? backyard, central heat John L. Scott Real Es- 201207127 D etached sgle g a & large deck. Amenibdrm, 2 t/2 bath, 2398 Cg and AC, large kitchen tate 541-548-1712 rage. Ne w pr i ce: Place a Bulletin help include front yard Pam Lester, Principal sq. ft . , cou n t ry ties n wanted ad today and with island, exc. storc o mmon a r e a B roker, Century 2 1 $69,500! MLS Say ngoodbuy kitchen, maple cabi- & reach over 60,000 age, blinds through- FANTASTIC VIEWS m aintenance, p o o l , Gold Country Realty, ¹201208907. nets. 6970 sq. ft. Iot. to that unused readers each week. John L. Scott Real EsMORRIS sports court, 8 snow out, and great curb Inc. 541-504-1338 of city and Smith $180,000. MLS ¹ Your classified ad appeal. Call t o day! Rock. Large h o me tate 541-548-1712 removal. $180,000. item by placing it in REAL ESTATE 201208231 will also appear on MLS ¹ 201209498 Susan Pitarro, Broker with huge great room. New Construction 3 t depe ste tlyO ed d O t n sed Pam Lester, Principal The Bulletin Classifieds John L. Scott Real Esviews! Great bendbulletin.com 541-410-8084 or Easy access to Bend bdrm, 2 b ath, 1548 Panoramic B roker Century 2 1 location 3 miles NW of which currently retate 541-548-1712 541-389-7910 and Sisters. $205,000 s q.ft., vaulted, g a s Gold Country Realty, Redmond. Views of ceives over Just too many Hunter Properties LLC MLS¹201201489 5 41-385 -5 8 0 9 furnace-range-water Inc. 541-504-1338 Rock & 1.5 million page 2 -Story home in N W Call Travis Hannan, heater, fenced, land- Smith collectibles? chocos. Cus t o m views every month Squeaky clean large 3 Redmond. Large 1705 Principal Broker, scaped. $1 6 2 ,900 O built 2478 sq. ft. home bdrm, 2t/2 bath, 1980 O wner wi l l car r y ! sq. ft., 3 bdrm, 2 bath. at no extra cost. One-of-a-kindhome on 541-788-3480 MLS ¹ 20 1 2 08875 Sell them in on 4.74 acres. Bulletin Classifieds 2 lots Cascade Mtn. & s q. ft., B e nd, O R $ 599,900 VIE W S , Knotty alder cabinets, Redmond RE/MAX Pam Lester, Principal sq. ft. shop w/RV1800 bay. home. spacious living VIEWS, VIEWS!! This Get Results! The Bulletin Classifieds golf course v iews. SS appli a nces, Land 8 Homes B roker, Century 2 1 MLS201202726 Call 385-5809 or Master suite w/ fireroom w/gas fireplace g orgeous cus t o m front/back landReal Estate Gold Country Realty, home offers the kind scaped with irrigation. $397,000 J oh n L. place your ad on-line place & mul t i ple $185,900 Inc. 541-504-1338 541-385-5809 Scott R ea l E s t ate at decks. Elevator, priMLS¹201280332 of views that we all $187,900. Jim Hinton Fieldstone crossing, 4 541-548-1712 Jim Hinton live here for! Loaded 541-420-6229 bendbuffetin.com vate oval office, & 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2130 NEW Construction! 3 541-420-6229 car with upgrades, this Central Oregon Realty sq.ft., gas fireplace, bdrm, 2 b ath, 1700 South Heights 3 bdrm, garages, 747 Central Oregon Realty h ome f e a tures 2 Group, LLC $1,950,000. tile countertops, slate sq.ft, 23 acre lot, tile 2 bath, 1611 sq. ft., 755 Southwest Bend Homes Aaron Boehm, Broker Group, LLC master suites + 2 adentry, hardwood, huge floors, tile backsplash, blinds thr o ughout, Sunriver/La Pine Homes ditional be d r ooms,Beautiful 2-Story 541-647-8851 3 park-like setting, 2-Story Nice house with Ryan Whitcomb, Brod eck, f e nced, R V landscaped, fenced. 749 3569 sq. ft. bdrms, 3 baths, 1918 area. $179,900. MLS $169,900 f enced . 4 7 acr e , 50040 Darlene Way H UGE 1120 sq . f t . ker 541-639-1151 Southeast Bend Homes Home -ID 820 sq. ft., stainless appli¹ 2012059483. P a m MLS201209125 sprinkler system. 10 a c res , ca b i n, shop on almost an Hunter Properties Eagle Crest ances, gas fireplace. Lester, Pnncipal Bro- Pam Lester, Principal $170,000. MLS acre. Slate tile foyer, bunkhouse, $179,900. Properties™ $274,500. P r id e Of Landscaped with irri201208179 ker, Century 21 Gold B roker, Century 2 1 t ile counters in t h e High Lakes Realty & 866-722-3370 O wnership! Gre a t gation $191 , 900. Country Realty, Inc. Gold Country Realty, Pam Lester P rincipal kitchen, reverse floor Traditional Sale! Coun- room floor plan with 3 Property Ma n agetry living but just minMLS¹201208280 541-504-1338 B roker Century 2 1 Inc. 541-504-1338 plan, wood stove in ment 541-536-0117 $550,000 One of Sage b edrooms, 2 b a t hs Jim Hinton, Gold Country Realty, the living room, wood utes to Bend. New and d en . C u stom Builders award win541 -420-6229 Inc. 541-504-1338 152232 Long Prairieflooring, tile in baths, carpet, ne w s t ove, features include tile, Gorgeous mou n tainNew construction! SW ning homes. Facing Central and vaulted ceilings. Oregon Realty bonus room 8 office views! 36y acres Irri- Redmond $161,900 SW Redmond 3 bdrm, 2 Home, 4-car s h op, east and on the ¹17 faucets and an insustorage, $ 1 4 9,900. Group, LLC downstairs, treed lot, Relax on your deck gated w/small cabin, 1 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 1466 heated garage. fairway of the Chal1304 sq. ft., gas High Lakes Realty & e xtra a s phalt, d e - overlooking your very lated/ bedroom, 1 bath, pos- sq. ft. 2-story home, bath, l enge Course. L o Low mai n tenance fireplace w/tile surs ecluded acr e l o t ! Property Ma n agetached garage + decity views from sible OWC! $225,000. gas fireplace in great r ound, natural g a s landscape with a trex cated behind the pri- Beautiful tached hobby room/ This DRW home also deck this 2 60 0 s q . ft. MLS ¹ 20 1 2 01125. room. L a n dscaped forced air, c o vered ment 541-536-0117 vate security gate as & the back of the o ffice. P r ivate y e t s its back f rom t h e home is located next you enter the Ridge. 3bd/2.5 bath E agle Call Charlie, Desig- with sprinkler system porch, fenced. New 50760 South Fawn close to town. road. $109,000 Broker, MLS¹201207534 Offers 3 b e drooms, Crest home. H u ge nated to greenway. listing. $113,000. Top of the line 3-bd, Mike Wilson, Broker $215,000. 541-350-3419 Jim Hinton 3.5 baths, 3376 sq. ft. price reduction! MLS¹ Debbie Tallman, Broker Pam Lester, Princ. Bro- shop, $169,000. High 541-977-5345 or MLS¹201205655 201206886 $449,000. Redmond RE/MAX 541-420-6229 Home-ID 941 541-390-0934 or ker, Century 21 Gold Lakes Realty 8 Prop541 -389-791 0 D&D Realty Group LLC Land & Homes Central Oregon Realty 541-389-7910 Eagle Crest Properties John L. Scott Real Eserty Man a gement Country Realty, Inc. Hunter Properties LLC 866-346-7868 tate 541-548-1712 Real Estate Group, LLC 866-722-3370 Hunter Properties 541-504-1338 541-536-0117
FOR SALE
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THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY FEBRUARY 9 2013 F5
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Ponderosa Pines, La Pine ) $48,000
Seventh Mountain Resort ~ $28,000
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• Sleeps 6 • Full sized kitchen
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• Excellent rental income
MLS¹201208552
I nn of the 7th Mtn Condo ~ $89,500
Great Valueat Brasada Ranch ~$59,900
• Wonderfully treed1.28acrelot • Perfect spotto build yourdream home orjust hangout in yourRV • Enjoy tranqui setting & proximity to all of C.O.'srecreationopportunities • Water, e ectric, septic alreadyonsite • One lotfrom pavedN. Ponderosa Way foreasyin/out access • 14812 N.SugarPineWay MLS¹201208377
• 8 weeks/year or trade with RCI! • 2 bedroom, 2.5 bath Loft
• Gently sloping .63 acre • Excel ent view corridors to the Cascades • Easterly vistas of Batt e Butte • Gatedcommunityw/athletic center, pools, tennis • Private 18-ho e golf course • World class equestrian facility MLS¹201200869
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• Fully renovatedcondooffer quality • Travertine floors, rock fireplace • All new appliances • Murphy bedoffersadditional sleeping room • Very comfortable w/balconyviews of forest lk river MLS¹ 201107707
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Call Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRSl 541-408-0406 Resort Properties Specialist
Call Ken Renner, Principal Brokerl 541-280-5352
Call Sandy Kohlmoos, Broker, CRSl 541-408-4309
ken.rennerOsothebysrealty.com
www.bestbendhomes.com
Call Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRSl 541-408-0406 Resort Properties Specialist
685 NW 5th Street, Prineville ( $98,900
Beautiful Deschutes River Lot ) $99,900
Gem in the Rough( Three Rivers South J$165,000
16869 Downey Rd. ( $174,900
• 3 bedroom, 2 baths • New carpet throughout • New interior paint • 1399 SF • Back deck & fenced yard • Close to downtown shopping MLS¹201300025
• Three Rivers South • Approx. 1.60 acres • Bonus Mt. Bachelor view • Well and Septic • Well maintained gravel road • 54653 Silver Fox Dr. MLS¹201209514
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Call C.J. Neumann, Broker, CRSl 541-410-3710 Lisa Lamberto, Brokerl 541-610-9697 www.CJLisa.com
3153 SW 35thSt.,Redmond ~ $212,000
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time living in the woods • Desirable development • Close to the Big Deschutes MLS¹201206233
• His & Her closets in master
• Surrounded by recreational activities
MLS ¹201209322
Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222 l
Call Jordan Haase, Principal Brokerl 541-420-1559
www.gregsellscentraloregon.com
www jordanhaase.com
7 Muskrat Lane, Sunriver ~ $229,000
19777 Astro Place ) $249,900
LovelyTownhome On River ( $285,000
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• Cute Sunriver cabin • 2BD/2BA,1090SF • New furnace, windows & roof • Excellently located near
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' P ) I lly p H ) d i ) • Upgraded baths • Great backyard for entertaining w/freshly stained decks, nicely landscaped. MLS¹ 201300742
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www.gregsellscentraloregon.com
~ I) I • 1867SF
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• 3 bed, 2 bath, 1224 SF • Very comfortable home for weekend getaways or full
Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222 l
• Meticulously cared for home in Cascade View Estates »' • 3 bed, 2.5 bath, 3-car garage
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• 3 bdrm, 2 bath, plus office • 1695 SF w/open floor plan • .57 acre lot with RV parking • Fenced yard w/sprinkler system
• 55149 Forest Lane
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SHARC • 2 decks, carport MLS¹201209274
Call Kelly Winch, Broker l 541-390-0398
Pronghorn Lot
Single Level Tumalo Home( $325,000
kwinch@sunriverdream.com
• Lovely townhome onthe Deschutes River minutes fromSunriver andclose to Mt. Bachelor
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Call Melanie Maitre, Broker ABR, SRES, ePRO 541-480-4186
• Desirable SW area, near Old Mil, River Trail, onquiet cu-de-sac •4 bed/2.5 bath,4th bdrm ishuge & wou d makeaperfect bonus rm • 2124 SF w/separate living & famiy • Master bath w/soakingtub & walk-in shower • Kitchenw/woodfoors & tile counters MLS¹201300594
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MLS¹201300277
Call Rhonda Garrison, Principal Brokerl 541-279-1768
Call Natalie Vandenborn, Broker l 541-508-9581
UpgradedLuxuryTownhomein BrokenTop f$365,000
One-of-a-Kind Tetherow Homesite( $375,000
• 3 bdrms, 2 baths, 1800 SF • Great room floor plan • Kitchen with pantry • Front & rear landscaping w/sprinklers • Mountain views from front
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• In the Bridge Creeksection on BrokenTop's9thfairway == "" " " - '" m g'g""' n g " ' • Slab granite, cherryhardwood floors andcabinets • Master on mainal , bedrooms
• Expansiv e,one acre homesite • Elevated, overlooking ¹3, ¹4, ¹5 & ¹6 fairways • Fabulous mountain, water, and terrain views • Unique site offering exceptional privacy • Gated area - end of cul-de-sac
are suites
bedrooms • Room to build a shop MLS¹201300339
• Large deck for entertaining • 3bed, 3.5 bath,1876SF MLS¹201300771
• Original price $710,000.
Call Kelly Horton, Brokerl 541-508-9163
Call Carol Osgood/Korren Bower, Brokersl 541-504-3839
Call The Norma DuBois and Julie Moe Team,
kelly©bendluxuryhomes.com
korren@bowerteam.com
Brokersl 541-312-5151 www TeamNormaAndJulie.com
Call Judy McCombs,Broker l 541-390-1411 jmccombsbend@gmail.com
Everything Done Right!
17940 Parkway Lane ~ $399,000
SE Bend Small Acreage ~ $399,900
Luxury Townhomes( Offered from $414,750
• Permitted GP Building w/llvlng quarter/loft • Bath, laundry area, septic, well a pumphouse • RV hookups inside & out,100 amp breaker ln shop • Great location between Sisters & Bend • Build your dream home while you live ln loft area or your RV MLS¹201105898
• Stunning home on the river • 4773 SF, 3 bdrm, 4 bath • Top-quality horse facilities; — Large covered arena - 4-stall barn w/turn-outs -Easycattle handling • Huge shop • Quality manager's home • 105 acres, 40 acres irrig MLS201207170
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• Singlelevel,3 bd/2ba,2468 SF " • Remodeledin 2009 • Huge great room
• 1.21 acre, fully fenced, dog
www.joanne@joannemckee.com
Call Myra Girod, Principal Brokerl 541-815-2400 or Pam Bronson, Broker l 541-788-6767
10 Aquila Lodge, Sunriver ( $450,000
1700 NW lowa ( $460,000
West Side Park-like Setting ( $495,000
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• West Hills contemporary home in the pines '~ • 3180 SF ondouble a lot • Contemporary floor plan and finishes
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• Waterfeatures,inside and out
• Mature old growth pine trees, beautiful landscaping. Must see! MLS¹201208025
Call Deb Tebbs Group, Brokersl 541-419-4553
floor plans • 2-4 bedroom, 2.5-4.5 baths • 1960-2956 SF
Judy McCombs &Shelly Swanson,Brokers l 888-274-2317 www.tripleknottownhomes.com www.pointswestbend.com
Hea r t of NorthWest Crossing ~ $569,000
• Desirable community of Rimrock West • Community access to the Deschutes River • 1904 SF lodge style home • Upstairs loft can be studio or 3rd bedroom • Wrap-around deck to enjoy thesound ofthe river MLS¹201300623
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rive r views. Two distinct Westside communities • Offering one & two story
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Call Joanne McKee, Brokerl 541-480-5159
• Upscale lodge style living • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2250SF • Large master bedroom onmain level • Beech hardwood & slate floors • Gorgeous slabgranite, log & iron railings • Paver patio, hot tub & double car garage MLS¹201101706
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www.OregonRanchAndHorse.com
Call Ron Davis, Principal Broker, GRIl 541-480-3096
• With Fairway, mountain and
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• 3bed/2.5 bathlocated onCompass Park lnheart of NWX • Charming 2734SFbuilt byGregWelch • Den/office onmainfloor off formalentry • 3bedrooms upalong w/open bonus area & laundryroom • Master bathw/soakingtub, wak-in shower & large closet • Front porch overlooks CompassPark
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MLS ¹201209457
Call Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRSl 541-408-0406 Resort Properties Specialist
Call Bryan Hilts, Brokerl 541-771-3200
Call Chris Sulak, Broker l 541-350-6164
cloudnine@bendcable.com
chrissulak@bendbroadband.com
AbsolutelyStunning Setting ( $579,900
Custom Home & Shop ) $595,000
Private Country Estate ) $599,900
PointsWest Rare Offering ) $629,000
• 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths • 3088 sq. ft. • 2.47 acres, 1 acre irrigation • Located right in heart of Bend! • Tastefully updated • Incredible landscape front & back • Master on the main floor MLS¹201207139
• Terrebonne • 2897 SF, 3 bed, 2.5 bath
DebTebbsGroup j Like us onR andfollowuson© www.debtebbsgroup.com
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• 4.7 ac w/3.6 ac of irrigation
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Redmond 10 ac w/3.5 ac irrigation Mtn & Smith Rock views 3452 SF, 4 bedroom, 3 bath • Insulated shop MLS ¹ 201208855
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• Huge shop, guest quarters
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• Cascade Mtn. views • Horse/livestock property
MLS¹ 201300375
Call Mary Stratton, Brokerl 541-419-6340
Desert Valley Groupl 541-923-1376
Desert Valley Groupl 541-923-1376
maryselhms©coinet.com• maryselhms©gmail.com
www.desertvalleygroup.com
www.desertvalleygroup.com
26 NW Skyliner Summit Loop) $664,900
New Tetherow Home ~ $675,000
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• Westside home w/Cascade Mtn views! • 4bedrooms,2.5 baths,3443SF • Expansivegreat roomopensto kitchenanddining room • Main levelmasterw/deckaccess • Master bath includeshis/hei closets & jetted tub
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This Property Has It All ( $849,900
• Overlooking the 3rd green • Great room living, light & bright
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MLS¹201201307
baths, currently under construction
Striking Single Level in BrokenTop / $750,000
• 2860 SF,3 bdrm,den,loft • Main floor master suite with patio • Huge lot w/gas firepit backingto common space • Call for a private showing anytime MLS¹201209235
,
• Seamlessintegration of indoor and outdoor space,openfloor p an • Private courtyard and covered back patio w/mountainviews • Energy efficient Earth Advantage • Aflex room &study allowfor maximum versatility
www.bendpropertysource.com• brianebendpropertysource.com
2012 COBATour House inTetherow ( $699,500
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• 2956 SF luxurytownhome f • 4 s uites, beautifully appointed • Master on the main level • Extensive hardwoods, granite, rockwork • Situated on 15th fairway of Widgi Creek
• Brand new single level 3bedroom, 3.5
. • Can be shownwith short notice, call Brian! • 3bedroom, bonus, loft,3-car
MLS¹201206848 Call Brian Ladd, Brokerl 541-408-3912
DebTebbsGroup j Like us onR andfollowuson© www.debtebbsgroup.com
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• Main level living 8i master suite • Three outdoor terraces and indoor/outdoor living ' cl;:i j<,'.;",.'-', • Large lot (16,91sq. 5 ft.j
Call Deb Tebbs Group, Brokersl 541-419-4553
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Private Elegance ( $899,500 • 6792 SF, 6 bed, 4.5 bath
• Just minutes to medical,
shopping, & schools
• Elegant wet bar, extensive built-ins
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• Ch ef's kitchen w/slab granite, l a rge island & stainless pkg. • Media rm, den, 3 fireplaces, hot tub • 3 bed, 4 bath, 3285 SF MLS¹201300744
+ • 20 acres w/4 irrigated
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Single level, open great room Great for entertaining Private setting, borders BLM Separate entrance for home office • Formal dining/living, chef's kitchen
• Athletic field w/barn • Mountain views c
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• Teak gazebo • Beautiful water feature MLS¹201204343
Call Brian Ladd, Brokerl 541-408-3912
Call The Norma DuBois and Julle Moe Team,
Call Mary Stratton, Broker l 541-419-6340
Call Bobby Lockrem, Broker l 541-480-2356
www.bendpropertysource.com• brian@bendpropertysource.com
Brokers l 541-312-5151 www TeamNormaAndJulie.com
maryselhms@coinet.com • maryselhms@gmail.com
blockrem@gmail.com
Luxury Single Level in BrokenTop ( $1,150,000
15631 SW Mecate Lane ( $1,545,000
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• Overlooking 10th fairway & green • Custom home completely remodeled in 2004-05 by Melrose Construction • Kathy & Karol Niemi interior plan/ design with quality & detail - 4476 SF • 5 bed, 5.5 bath,main levelmaster • Great room design. Wonderful indoor and outdoor living spacious, quiet cul-de-sac location
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• Brasada Ranch • 5400 SF onflat .75 acre! • 5 fireplaces! • Green built, efficient solar system • Finely crafted Gary Norman built custom
• 5 bedroom, 4 baths, 5116 sq. ft. • Overlooking Broken Top's 12th fair way and green • One level with upstairs guest suite and private office • Privacy with southern exposure • Bonus & exercise room • 3 car garage w/shop area
• Stunning finishes • Unobstr ucted mountainviews
MLS¹201207027
Call Shelly Swanson, Brokerl 541-408-0086 Call Shelly Swanson, Brokerl 541-408-0086 j www.brokentopclassic.com
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F6 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
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Sunriver/La Pine Homes Sunriver/La Pine Homes Jefferson County Homes
Homes with Acreage
Homes with Acreage
Homes with Acreage
Homes with Acreage
H o m es with Acreage H o m es with Acreage
52375 Ammon Road. 15234 Deer Ave. C ompletely fen c e d West Powell Butte Es12250 NW Dove Rd 16310 Blacktail Lane- $83 500 - S t ick built Complete Package! LOG HOME o n 4 . 85 Modified A- F rame, La Pine I $159,900 property! 13665 SW t ates. $ 4 49,999 6 Custom cedar s i ded Bend Huge Shop, 9226 SW Great place 15 miles acres, home has had huge shop. $269,900. Hideaway in the woods Cinder. $84, 9 0 0. bdrm, 3.5 bath home h ome with f loor t o Large home with family Meadow Rd., CRR from town for somemuch remodeling esHigh Lakes Realty 8 across from the Little MLS¹201207581 o n 2 0 a c re s w i t h c eiling windows t o room and den. Sep. MLS¹201206589 o ne w/ h o rses o r pecially the kitchen. Property Ma n age- Deschutes River in La C all M e lody C u r ry shop, 2 master suites, take in the mtn. views. bldg can be game, Call Melody Curry small herd of cattle. Barn with 3 stalls with ment 541-536-0117 P ine. 1617 sq. ft. + 541-771-1116 4-car garage, water Immaculate 1841 sq. craft, party room or 541-771-1116 160 acres with 158 p ads a n d wat e r , 576 sq. ft. unfinished Crooked River Realty feature, gated com- f t., 3 b d rm, 2 b a t h easy conversion into a Crooked River Realty acres g oo d n a t ive washing spot, t a ck 53610 Brookie, attic space. Granite munity. MLS¹ with tongue & groove garage. Shop & dog 8996 SW Panorama Rd p asture w / bu n c h room. Barn is 36x40, $380,000 Custom counters, wood floors Gorgeous Mountain 201207133 Pam vaulted ceilings, gas house, too, on 1 acre. C ustom 2034 sq ft , 4 grass. Nice 3 bdrm, 36x40 shop. Fenced 2500 sq. ft. + guest Views. 12649 SW 8 .48 acre lot. AmazLester, Principal Bro- free-standing s t ove, $99,000 Short Sale. cro s s-fenced. b edroom, 2. 5 b a t h 1 ~A bath M H w i t h and suite. High Lakes Re- ing vacation or perPeninsula Dr. ker, Century 21 Gold wood accents. New MLS¹201206446 nicely lan d scaped L andscaped hu g e home built i n 2 0 06 alty & Property Man- manent home. MLS¹201205061 Country Realty, Inc. h ardwood floors & Faye Phillips, Broker w ith Mtn v i ews o n yard. 1200 sq.ft. shop pond. $299,900 agement $162,900 541-504-1338 541-480-2945 www.johnlscott.com new swimming pool. 240 sq.ft. ofMLS 201206125 1.53 acres. Many up- w/new 541-536-0117 Call Melody Curry /14252 On completely fenced John L. Scott fice 8 lean-to. 3 bay Cascade Realty, graded features in3 bdrm, 2 bath horse 541-771-1116 4.81 acres. $385,000 Real Estate, Bend machine shed with 2 Dennis Haniford, 11728 S u n Fo r e st, Kathy Caba, Principal clude: hickory cabiproperty w/barn and Crooked River Realty Broker, ABR MLS¹ 201101447 www.johnlscott.com stalls & lean-to, Princ. Broker 2 Bdrm, 1104 sq.ft., nets, granite counter horse incredible views. 541-771-1761 541-536-1731 Juniper Realty, corrals with holding Bunkhouse. $129,000 t ops, alder t ri m 8 1 6751 SW Dove R d . Great Investments! $139,000 John L. Scott 541-504-5393 $265,000 High Lakes Realty 8 B eautiful cust o m doors, hardwood 8 tile pens. Two family/investment MLS¹201203441 Nearly 2-acres, Mt view, Jett Blackburn Real Property Ma n age- Real Estate, Bend floors. Th e m a ster 2,500 sq.ft. Iog home homes in quiet area of Call Julie Fahlgren, www.johnlscott.com 12851 SW Deer location in CRR ment 541-536-0117 bath has a garden tub Estate, 541-573-7206 great Culver. Spacious floor Broker, 541-550-0098 Crossing. Remodeled on 4.9 acres. Gourwith v e r y li v eable with tile surround 8 $435,000. Sunriver met kitchen w/cherry plans w/stainless ap- Crooked River Realty 15430 Pine Ct - 1 782 3 bedroom, 2 b ath, home. $64, 9 0 0. separate tile shower. Gem! Extensive Rec abinets, gran i te p liances, gran i t e 8 6890 Golden L n Find It in sq. ft., 3 bdrm, 30x80 MLS¹201208697 1440 sq. ft. home on counters, & farmer's $250,000 counters & pantry in garage. $ 2 2 9,500. model! Large corner 2.29 acres. Granite sink. Great room has The Bulletin Cfassifieds! C all N a nc y Po p p MLS¹ 201208347 lot., 3 full master kitchen. 3 bedrooms, $95,000. G o rgeous c ounters, High Lakes Realty & 541-815-8000 hick o ry views, 40 acres. High 541-385-5809 suites, 3.5 baths. Juniper Realty, floor to ceiling win2.5 baths, 1800 sq. ft. Property Ma n agec abinets, bam b o o dows w/mtn v iews. Crooked River Realty Lakes Realty & Prop541-504-5393 Price reflects fully fur2 car garage & auto ment 541-536-0117 erty Man a gement wood f loors, v i nyl Hickory hardwood 8 9.33 acres in P owell nished at $447,000. sprinklers. windows, the list goes tile f l oors. R a diant Custom built home with New Construction - 3 541 -536-01 1 7 Look at: Gorgeous furnishings. MLS¹201201161 & Butte - 4 bdrm, 2.5 hardwood floors, upbdrm, 2 bath, 1748 on. Garage, carport floor Unfurnished at heating. Bendhomes.com 201201162 b ath, 1928 s q . f t . , The Bulletin and R V cov e r ed graded lighting and sq.ft., on 1.49 acres, $435,000. Call Susan Kathy Denning, Broker MLS 3-car garage, barn, $499,999 for Complete Listings of appliances. Recently granite counters, SS parking. $1 0 9 ,000 201208751. J u niper To Subscribe call for a private showing! 541-480-4429 shop, with RV door. Ir- painted an d n i c ely appliances, fireplace MLS 201204401 Area Real Estate for Sale 541-385-5800 or go to Susan Pitarro, Realty, 541-504-5393 John L. Scott rigated. $35 9 ,000 maintained home on with custom mantel. Juniper Realty, Broker Real Estate, Bend www.bendbulletin.com 15194 Ponderosa Lp. MLS ¹ 20 1 2037129 2+ acres. Watch the 541-504-5393 $349,000 MLS 541-410-8084 or www.johnlscott.com 1.41 acres ready for Pam Lester, Principal sunset an d w i ldlife ¹ 201209128 Pam 3 bdrm, 2 bath, custom 541-389-7910 you! $55,000. High B roker, Century 2 1 f rom y o u r dec k ! Lester, Principal Brohome, huge shop, Hunter Properties O utstanding Val u e ! Want to impress the Lakes Realty 8 PropGold Country Realty, MLS¹201208145 ker, Century 21 Gold $299,000 Over 3000 sq. ft. 2 erty Man a gement relatives? Remodel Inc. 541-504-1338 $237,000 Country Realty, Inc. 756 MLS¹201203307 level house that has 541-536-0117 D&D Realty Group LLC 541-504-1338 your home with the Jefferson County Homes great potential and is Julie Fahlgren, Broker, 866-346-7868 541-550-0098 help of a professional 360 View / Top of Butte Get your A must see, borders in very good condiNW REDMOND 3 in Terrebonne. Home, g ov't l a n ds . Th i s Home is in the 100 year tion. Daylight base- Crooked River Realty from The Bulletin's business bedroom, 2.5 b a t h. shop, mansion building Gorgeous 4.68 acres home has many nice flood plain. It needs ment. Huge possibili- 87479 N. Star Lane. 40 "Call A Service site. 2% to broker. See: with 4 acres of irriga- Built-ins, tile kitchen features including a some TLC but sits on ties. $158,800 MLS acre horse property. Professional" Directory http://bend.craigslist.org/ a ROW I N G t ion. F e nced a n d counters, gas f i r esunroom that f aces a wonderful lot and 201207709 reo/3599168220.html High c ross fenced s h o p place in t h e l i ving south, great place for could make a g ood John L. Scott Real Es- $149,900. Lakes Realty & Prop- 12-peak HUGE C as- 5.950 acres with home tack room. Spectacu- room. $126,500 a Jacuzzi. Covered i nvestment o r fi r s t tate 541-548-1712 with an ad in MLS¹201209508 erty Man a gement c ade v i ews. G o r - & large 72x60 shop. in lar Smith Rock Views. b ack deck t hat i n - home. Possible owner 541-536-0117 Call TRAVIS HANNAN, The Bulletin's $173,000 $40,0 0 0 Priced to Sell! Affordcludes walkway to the t erms. geous Crooked River CRR $265,000. Principal Broker, MLS¹201207126 "Call A Service oversized 2-car ga- MLS¹201209476 a ble l i v ing, g r e at 2 bedroom, 2 bath on Ranch home w/ knotty MLS¹201209007 541-788-3480 Call Travis Hannan, rage with p r opane D&D Realty Group LLC starter or investment. pine ceilings and sunCall Linda Lou 1.12 acres. $129,000 Professional" Redmond RE/MAX Pnncipal Broker, 866-346-7868 heater. 3 b e drooms $59,000 s plashed roo m s . Day-Wright, Broker, MLS¹201203821 Land 8 Homes Directory 541-788-3480 with walk in closets. N ewer home w ith 4 MLS¹201208170 Plenty of room with 541-771-2585 Call Linda Lou Real Estate Redmond RE/MAX D&D Realty Group LLC $68,000 4.98 acres. $249,000 Crooked River Realty Day-Wright, Broker, large bdrms, 2 baths, 866-346-7868 BETWEEN BEND & Land & Homes MLS¹201200073 MLS¹201206906 541-771-2585 split floor plan, large Powell Butte! 10 Acre! REDMOND Real Estate $50,000 - Close to Cascade Realty, Crooked River Realty Gail Day 541-306-1018 workable kitchen, and Wonderfully Views! $799,900 Prineville Reservoir Terrific location - 4 loc a ted Dennis Haniford, Central Oregon Realty plenty of room for a bdrm, 1 bath in Great Country home Spacious 3863 sq. ft. Older manufactured Princ. Broker Madras home with a Equestrian 5-a c res, Group, LLC large family. Nice size commanding home on 1+ ACRE 2,888y sq.ft. home on has fenced property custom home, g o rview of 541-536-1731 36x48 6-stall b arn, yard t oo . $ 7 6,000 Mt. Jefferson and the cross-fenced, groom5.75y acres. A for animals. Wonder- geous kitchen, 560 LOT, Idleway Acres. 14198 SW Nine Peaks Call Virginia, Country feel but close ful location and a nice sq. ft. office, RV bldg., 15990 Falcon L a ne, MLS¹201202015 s urrounding are a . ing stall, wash rack, Pl Mtn views from to t ow n a m e nities. shop area. Ready for shop, & more. Ask for Oversized garage, RV D8 D Realty Group LLC B eautiful well k e p t hay barn, mare barn t his 1960 sq. ft., 3 Principal Broker 866-346-7868 Extensive Fe a t ure 541-350-3418 Super fireplace w/rock a family wanting to hookup. $1 1 9,700. home with spacious w/foaling stalls. 2004 bedroom, 2 bat h surround for a m bi- live on acreage and Sheet $799,900. High Lakes Realty & Redmond RE/MAX rooms. $23 9 ,000 3 bdrm, 2 bath home. home on 1.16 acre. Need help fixing stuff? MLS¹201106428 Land 8 Homes a nce, plus a L o p i have room to spread Property Ma n age-Call A Service Professional MLS¹201206924 $298,500. Call Nancy U pdated wit h n e w Call Virginia, Woodstove that can ment 541-536-0117 Real Estate out. MLS¹201209328 Realty Group LLC Popp, Broker, carpet & vinyl flooring find the help you need. D8D866-346-7868 heat the whole house. Pnncipal Broker $249,900 541-815-8000 and interior has been FIND ITl 51350 Anchor Way www.bendbulletin.com 541-350-3418 Great room floor plan D&D Realty Group LLC Crooked River Realty freshly painted. 936 Cabin on 1.25 acre SUY IT! Redmond RE/MAX w/living r oom & WOW! Look at t hese 866-346-7868 sq. ft. garage has a A truly charming getw/city water, $59,900 Land & Homes kitchen having SELL IT! views! Cascade mtns $249,900 - 5-Cascade shop area, 2 bays & away property t hat High Lakes Realty 8 wide-plank floors of Horse property with a Real Estate co m pletely from your living room. View acres borders 50 amp power for an The Bulletin Classifieds Property Ma n age- comes reclaimed pine. DisHome has been upBLM, 3 bdrm, 2 bath spectacular mountain Just bought a new boat? furnished. It is cozy R V. Separate R V 5 Acres In Paradise ment 541-536-0117 tressed maple caba home, dbl gar covered storage and view. Surrounded by Sell your old one in the yet has room for ex- dated with newer heat custom Acres - $425,000 nets in Kitchen with 1 large farms and sets classifieds! Ask about our 52970 Walker Way tended family gather- p ump and al l n e w + 2 shop areas. 2 strg carport. $139,500 1 /2 thi c k slat e Perfect small acreage propane heat MLS¹ 201208272 atop a knoll in Ma$184,000. 3 bd, 2 ba, ings. Out s tanding floors as well. Great bldgs, Super Seller rates! counters. If you like a stove, granite, tile. just outside of Burns. dras area. You can attached garage. High deck with grand views ranch-style home with Juniper Realty, 541-385-5809 3 bdrm, 2 bath beaucozy country f e el. lots of room to play. Call Nancy Popp 541-504-5393 forever! Shop has Lakes Realty & Prop- of t he Cas c a de You've got it!! Beau- see t iful n e we r h o m e. Broker, 541 815-8000 $179,000 stalls 8 plenty of room Priced to Sell $199,900 erty Man a gement M ountain and c o n Crooked River Realty 1620 s q .ft. w e l l-ap- Cathedral archways 8 tiful Cascade Moun- f or hay & t a ck. Or Spacious 541-536-0117 v erging r ivers t h a t MLS¹201208213 3 bdrm, 2 y~ vaulted ceil i ngs. tain Views. 2 corrals, D&D Realty Group LLC bring your toys that make up Lake Billy bath home in High10 A C R ES/CUSTOM pointed CRR home Hardwood flo o r s, pond, shared lake, 3 445 Bonner - 720 sf 866-346-7868 don't require f ood! Chinook. $ 2 6 9 ,000 land Ranch Estates HOME/ S HO P in adjoins 90-acre pas- Solid hickory cabin- acres of irrigation, 2 cabin, shop, .28 acre, MLS¹201204144 W ith over 6 a c r es on 1.08 acres. SpecPowell Butte! Unique ture with 2-mile walk- etry. Dble car garage stall barn. $375,000 $40,000. High Lakes D&D Realty Group LLC 762 there's plenty of room. ing track. Heat pump, tacular view. M a ny floor plan w / indoor w/ extra room & workMLS ¹201205878 Realty & Pr o perty866-346-7868 This custom b right updates Homes with Acreage wi n d ows spa room, wide hall- propane free-stand- bench area. Also a Bobbie Strome, Management home has many up- hardi-plank siding & stove, oversized 40 x 60 shop w/ office, Principal Broker 541-536-0117 Close to schools! Nice 3 5 2916 Old L ak e R d ways, single l evel. ing grades, great f loor metal roof. Nice patio dbl gar + bonus rm. bathroom, 3 lofts. Full $365,000. MLS John L Scott Real bdrm home in town plan, large r o oms, o ff th e h u g e r e c . $199,000. Two 1848 Lg kitchen, covered . 201108648 Call Vir15640 Woodgreen - 3 RV hookup. Fenced Estate 541-385-5500 Landscaped with a fireplace & so much q.ft. h omes, t w o ginia, Principal Bro- decks. $13 9 ,900. pasture for your aniroom. D bl. garage bdrm, 1540 sq. f t ., fenced y a rd , RV s20-acre Advertise your car! more. $220 , 0 00 plus 20x36 shop 8 3 parcels. High ker 541-350-3418 MLS¹20120766 landscaped, $241,900 parking too! $79,900 mals. Property that Add A Picture! MLS¹201105983 Lakes Realty 8 PropC all N a nc y Pop p has it all! bay carport. High Lakes Realty & Redmond RE/MAX MLS¹201106963 Reach thousands of readers! D8 D Realty Group LLC Ma n agement, 541-815-8000 Jett Blackburn Real Property Ma n age- D&D Realty Group LLC erty Land & Homes Jett Blackburn Real Call 541-385-5809 866-346-7868 541-536-0117 Crooked River Realty Estate, 541-573-7206 ment 541-536-0117 Real Estate 866-346-7868 Estate, 541-573-7206 The Bulletin Classif!eds
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F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
From previous page
"Maybe he's walking on the beach or something." They got ready to leave before Rick Fee stopped. "Wait a minute," he said. "I didn't check the closet."
that contains no amphetamines and, therefore, is neither a controlled substance nor particularlyprone to abuse.Hisrecords make no mention of the Adderall prescription Richard filled on Sept. 21; they do note, however, "Fathersays thathe iscrazy and abusive of the Adderall — has made directives with regard to giving Richard anymore stimu-
"He was pitching me very well — I was asking him very specific questions, and he was very good at telling me the answers in a very specific way," Parkerrecalled.He added later, "I do feel partially responsible for what happened to this kid."
The Fees decided to go to a documentary screeing and panel discussion, "ADD and Loving It?!" in October 2012. The event was sponsored by the local chapter of Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorder (CHADD), the na-
Shock and questions
Friends and former baseball teammates flocked to Richard 'Paranoid and psychotic' Fee's memorial service in VirThe 911 operator answered lants — bringing up charges — I ginia Beach. Most remembered the call and heard a young man explained this to Richard." only the funny and gregarious screaming onthe other end. His Prescription records indiguy they knew in high school ,j=. parents would not give him his cate that Richard did not fill the and college; many knew absopills. With the man's language Matthew Eich / NYT Strattera prescription before lutely nothing of his last two scattered an d in c r easingly Dr. Charles Parker was one of the doctors who saw Richard Fee, returning to E l lison's office years. He left no note explainthreatening, the police were who committed suicide in 2011. "I do feel partially responsible for two weeks later to ask for more ing his suicide. sent to the home of Rick and what happened to this kid," Parker said. stimulants. At a gathering at the Fees' Kathy Fee. Ellison never saw Richard house afterward, Rick Fee told The Fees told officers that again. Given his patterns of them about Richard's addiction "He told me it was normal Richard was addicted to Adderordinary conversation. As he abuse, friends said, Richard to Adderall. Many recalled how all, andthat afterhe received his procedure and not 90 days at looked at Richard he saw two probably took his last Adderall they too had blithely abused the most recent prescription, they one time," Rick Fee recalled. "I images flickering ontop of each pill in early October. Because drug in college — to cram, just allowed him to fill it through flipped out on him: 'You gave other — the boy he had raised he abruptly stopped without like Richard had — and could his mother's insurance plan on my son 90 days of Adderall? to love school and baseball, and the slow and delicate reduc- not help but wonder if they had the condition that they hold it You're going to kill him!'" the desperateaddict he feared tion of medication that is rec- played the same game of Rusand dispense it appropriately. Rick Fee said he and Ellison that boy had become. ommended to minimize major sian roulette. "I guarantee you a g o od Richard was now demanding discussed voiding the two outBefore he left, Rick Fee made psychological risks, especially his next day's pills early. standing scripts. Rick Fee said as loving a demand as he could for instant-release stimulants, number of them had used it for Richard denied his addiction he was told that it was possible, muster. he crashed harder than ever. studying — that shock was def"Please. Give them to me," and threats. So the police, not- but that should Richard need On Nov. 7, after arriving initely there in that room," said ing that Richard was an adult, emergency medical attention, Rick Fee said. home from a weekend away, a Greensboro baseball teaminstructed the Fees to give him it could keep him from getRichard looked his father Kathy Fee heard a message on mate, Danny Michael, adding the bottle. They said they would ting what would otherwise be dead in the eye. the family answering machine that he was among the few who "I destroyedthem," he said. "I from Richard, asking his par- had not. comply only if he left the house propercare or medication. Rick for good. Officers escorted Fee confirmed that with a phar- don't have them. Don't worry." ents to call him. She phoned Almost every one of more Richard off the property. macist and decided instead to back at 10 that night and left a than 40 ADHD experts interA few hours later Richard drive to Richard's apartment A tragic ending message herself. viewed for this article said that called his parents, threatening and try to persuade him to rip R ichard g enerally f i l l ed Not hearing back by the fol- worst-case scenarios like Richto stab himself in the head with up the prescriptions. his prescriptions at a CVS on lowing afternoon, Kathy Fee ard Fee's can occur with any "I know that you've got these Laskin Road, less than three checked Richard's cellphone medication — and that people a knife. The police located him and took him to the Virginia other prescriptions to get pills," miles from his parents' home. records — he was on her plan who do have ADHD, or parents Beach Psychiatric Center. Rick Fee recalled telling Rich- But on Aug. 23, he went to a — and sawno calls ortexts. At 9 of children with the disorder, Described as "paranoid and ard. "You're doing so good. different CVS about 11 miles p.m. the Fees drove to Richard's should not be dissuaded from psychotic" by th e a dmitting You've got a job, you're work- away, closer to Norfolk and far- apartment in Norfolk to check considering the proven benefits physician, Dr. John Riedler, ing. Things with us are better. If ther from the locations that his on him. The lights were on, his of stimulant medication when Richard spent one week in the you get them filled, I'm worried father might have called to alert car was in the driveway. He did supervised by a r e sponsible hospital denying that he had about what will happen." them to the situation. For his not answer. Beginning to panic, physician. "You're right," Rick Fee said Sept. 21 prescription he trav- Rick Fee found the kitchen any psychiatric or addiction Other experts, however, cauissues. He was placed on two Richard replied. "I tore them up eled even farther, into Norfolk, window ajar and climbed in tioned that Richard Fee's expemedications: Seroquel and the and threw them away." to get his pills. through it. rience is instructive less in its antidepressant Wellbutrin, no Rick Fee spent two more On Oct. 3, Richard visited He searched the apartment ending than its evolution — that stimulants. hours with Richard making Ellison for a n a p pointment and found nothing amiss. it underscores aspects of ADHD "He isn't here," Rick Fee said treatment that are mishandled Unwelcome at home after his relative small talk — increas- lasting 17 minutes. The doctor discharge from the psychiat- ingly gnawed, he recalled later, prescribedtwo weeks of Strat- he told his wife. every day with countless pa"Oh, thank God," she replied. tients, many of them children. ric hospital, Richard stayed in by the sense that this was no tera, a medication for ADHD cheap motels for a few weeks. His Adderall prescription from Parker expired on July 26, leaving him eligible for a renewal. He phoned the office of Ellison, who had not seen him in four months.
tion's primary advocacy group for ADHD patients. They wanted to attend the question-andanswer sessionafterward with local doctors and community college officials. The evening opened with the local CHADD coordinator thanking the drug company Shire — the manufacturer of several ADHD drugs, including Vyvanse and extended-release Adderall — for partially underwriting the event. An hourlong film directed and narrated by two men with ADHD closed by examining some"myths" about stimulant medications. Sitting in the fourth row, Rick Fee raised his hand to ask a question to the panel, which was moderated by Jeffrey Katz, a local clinical psychologist and a national board member of CHADD. "What are some of the drawbacks or some of the dangers of a misdiagnosis in somebody," Rick Fee asked, "and then the subsequent medication th at goes along with that?" Katz looked straight at the Fees as he answered, "Not much." Adding that "the medication itself is pretty innocuous," Katz continued that someone without ADHD might feel more awake with stimulants but would not consider it"something that they need." "If you misdiagnose it and you give somebody medication, it's not going to do anything for them," Katz concluded. "Why would they continue to take it?" Rick Fee slowly sat dovm, trembling. Kathy Fee placed her hand on his knee as the panel continued.
Increased concerns The 2:15 p.m. appointment went better than Richard could have hoped. He told Ellison that the pre-psychotic and metaphoric thinking back in March had receded, and that all that remained was his ADHD. He said nothing of his visits to Parker, his recent prescriptions or his week in the psychiatric hospital. At 2:21 p.m., according to Ellison's records, he prescribed Richard 30 days' worth of Adderall at 50 milligrams a day. He also gave him prescriptions postdated for Aug. 23 and Sept. 21, presumably to allow him to get pills into late October without the need for follow-up appointments. (Virginia state law forbids the dispensation of 90 days of a controlled substance at one time but does allow doctors to write two 30-day prescriptions in advance.) Virginia is one of 43 states with aformalPrescription Drug Monitoring Program, an online database that allows doctors to check a patient's one-year prescription history, partly to see if he or she is getting medication elsewhere. Although pharmacies are required to enter all prescriptions fo r c o n trolled substances into the system, Virginia law does not require doctors to consult it. Ellison's notes suggest that he didnot check the program before issuing the three prescriptions to Richard, who filled the first within hours. About a week later, Richard called his father with more good news: A job he had found overseeing storm cleanup crews was going well. He was feeling much better. But Rick Fee noticed that the more calm and measured speech that Richard had regained during his hospital stay was gone. He jumped from one subject to the next, sounding anxious and rushed. When the call ended, Rick Fee recalled, he went straight to his wife. "Call your insurance company," he said, "and find out if they've filled any prescriptions for Adderall." A n insurancerepresentative confirmed that Richard had filled a prescription for Adderall on July 25. Rick Fee confronted Ellison in the Dominion Psychiatric parking lot. Rick Fee told him that Richard had been in the psychiatric hospital, had been suicidal and had been taking Adderall through June and July. Ellison confirmed that he had written not only another prescription but two others for later in August and September.
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385
Homes with Acreage
-5809
Recreational Homes & Property
THE BULLET IN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9 2013 F7 771
771
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Acreages
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Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
BUI L D ! Price Reduction!!! PanN orth P o w el l B u t t e$45,000 - Owner will R EADY T O SW Chinook Dr. oramic Views! Great Crescent Lake - 1313 Acreage 3 LOTS! c arry, fantastic 1 / 2 5.07 acres, flat l ot, Crooked River, Smith Snowberry Village ¹70 Snowberry Village ¹119 CHECK YOUR AD location 3 miles NW of 3 buildable, rare, North acre l o t w/v i ews. mature trees, paved Please check your ad Rock 8 mou n tain Cut Off Rd. • 3 bedrooms, 2.5 $69,500 Redmond. Views of T ucked away off t h e P owell Butte C a s - MLS¹201008725 road, 1/3 interest in on the first day it runs views. Owner terms • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, baths, 1920 sq. ft. Smith Ro c k & main road this 5+ acre cade Mountain views. Call Julie Fahlgren well, applied for stan- to make sure it is cor- available. 6.9 acres attached 2-car garage • 2000 Silvercrest - TriO chocos. Cus t o m p arcel has l ot s o f Quiet area. Call 541-550-0098 dard septic. $99,900. rect. Sometimes in- with septic, power 8 • 1248 sq. ft. 1993 Sil- plewide built 2478 sq. ft. home storage. This 3 bed/2 Vicci Bowen Crooked River Realty MLS¹ 20 12 0 4695 s tructions over t h e w ell i n stalled. I n - vercrest • Living room, family on 4.74 acres. 1800 b ath home i s o v e r 541-410-9730 Pam Lester, Principal phone are misunder- cludes custom home • Large living room, Canyon City, Oregon room, dining room sq. ft. shop w/RV bay. 1700 sq. ft. of living Central Oregon Realty Investment opportunity. B roker, Century 2 1 plans. $189,000 stood and a n e r ror dining area • Remodeled kitchen, 4.74 a c r es . MLS Group, LLC Gold Country Realty, MLS¹ 201008671 • can occurin your ad. space. Fenced yard 4 city tax lots totalling Vaulted c e i lings, w/breakfast bar ¹201202726 Juniper Realty, If this happens to your for pets, walking trails Lot 500 Su n F orest. 14.07 acres. Zoned Inc. 541-504-1338 Sunny windows • Private master suite 541-504-5393 $397,000! ad, please contact us • FA heat & heat pump w/walk-in closet meander through the R1. It's possible to di- Nice mountain views, John L. Scott Real Es- back of the property. 1.27 wooded acres in vide the lots further. the first day your ad • Master bath w/garden 3.09-acres. $95,950. (A/C) North Klamath SW Chipmunk Rd. tate 541-548-1712 appears and we will Level Large shop plus an Power, city water & MLS¹201101554 5.19 acres with • Front porch and large tub 8 double shower County. $10,000. be happy to fix it as separate 2 car g a- High Lakes Realty & • Gas FA heat PLUS sewer at the paved Call Linda Lou mountain views. Well back deck Remarkable Riverfront s oon as w e c a n . treed w it h s e v eralCall Marilyn R ohaly, AC 8 fireplace r age. Ideal for b i g street. Mtn. & valley Day-Wright, Broker, Home Property ManageDeadlines are: Week- possible equipment and plenty views. Many possible 541-771-2585 River front home with ment 541-536-0117 buil d ing Broker, 541-322-9954 • Immaculate - too days 11:00 noon for sites. b uilding s ites. L o - Crooked River Realty many upgrades to list! o utstanding rive r of room for snowmoCom m unityJohn L. Scott Real next day, Sat. 11:00 Bend $129,900 cated in the city limits G randfathered-in R V water & power avail- Estate, v iews i n a gat e d biles, quads and other 1 4738 Birds Eye, L a a.m. for Sunday and www.JohnLScott.com Call Marilyn Rohaly, community! Beautiful recreational toys. Pine, Acre with power of Canyon City near lot, come camp or able at t h e s t reet. Monday. $265,000 Broker, 541-322-9954 John Day. (Sellers are b uild y o u r & water. $45,000. Santa Fe home, 3 Owner terms availdr e a m 541-385-5809 MLS¹ 201207823 licensed Oregon Real John L. Scott Real High Lakes Realty & masters, triple garage, able. $69,000 MLS¹ home. Septic/Power/ Find exactly what Thank you! Call Kerry at Estate, Bend Estate brokers). Property 201106095 huge s hop, 1 3 . 46 W ater. $57,9 0 0 541-815-6363 The Bulletin Classified you are looking for in the www.JohnLScott.com Management $99,900 acres. A must see! Juniper Realty, MLS¹201207367 Cascade Realty, 541-536-0117 Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 CLASSIFIEDS MLS201010467. Linda Lou Day- Wright, Snowberry Village ¹16 Dennis Haniford, 541-504-5393 $850,000. Mountain Views! Broker, 541-771-2585 Enjoy the carefree lifPrinc. Broker 1 6261 Pine D r o p SW D O V E R D . M t. Bring an offer! in place. 7981 Crooked River Realty $103,000 estyle at Bend's pre541-536-1731 Washington & Three N icely c l eared & Driveway Suntree Village ¹94 Kellie Cook, Broker 3.39 acres with crazy SW High Cone. mier 55+ community fenced acre. $35,000 Three acres flat prop- mountan Sisters views from this $44,500 541-408-0463 $29,900. Crescent Lake - 19821 n ear m edical a n d High Lakes Realty 8 erty perfect to build Owner will carry.views! 6.1 acre property with • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths John L. Scott MLS¹201003931 shopping. Immacu¹504 Hwy 58 Property Ma n age- Call Melody Curry on. $59,900. power installed. Close • 1661 sq.ft. Fuqua Real Estate, Bend MLS¹201100748 vacation retreat. ment 541-536-0117 late 3 b e d room, 2 MLS¹201205386 to t h e Des c hutes • Extensively updated www.johnlscott.com Perfect 541-771-1116 Call Travis Hannan, bath features sepaLocated at the WilCall Julie Fahlgren, River and Steelhead • All new paint-in and Crooked River Realty Principal Broker, lamette Pass Inn this r ate d i ning r o o m, $99,900 You won't beFalls. $99,500 MLS¹ Serenity and Privacy on Broker, 541-550-0098 out! 541-788-3480 huge kitchen with iss t u nning HAGER MOUNTAIN 4.62 acres. Comfort- c halet has RV a n d lieve th e Crooked River Realty 201205646 • Newer heat pump Redmond RE/MAX boat parking. It is 1 views from this .45 of ESTATES Juniper Re a l ty,• Newer wood laminate land, master suite with able 3 b edroom, 2 acres adjoins public Land 8 Homes b ath home an d a bedroom plus loft and an acre lot. Cascade 4 lots, $30,000 each lo- 5 land 541-504-5393 floors 8 n e w v i nyl, g arden t u b , sta l l over Deschutes Real Estate Mountain views, plus cated in Silver Lake. 30x40 shop with over- 1 bath. Renaii heatn ew s h ower a n d shower, Vaulted ceilRiver. Short walk to SW Geneva View Rd. ings, wood laminate sized RV door. Build ing with covered en- Smith Rock and Black Underground power more! river. $74,900. The Bulletin's T errebonne. L e v e l floors, FA heat & AC. • Vaulted ceilings-new your custom home tertainment deck. Put Butte views! Home-ID and conduitfor phone MLS¹201102328 "Call A Service in rental pool at WPI 1.14 acres that will be C overed dec k s . 987 with brea t htaking and internet. Views of w~ndows Call Linda Lou easy to build on. Well Call Marilyn Rohaly, Professional" Directory $94,500. Call Marilyn Hager Mountain. Sepviews of the Cascade or enjoy exclusively. $83,500 G reat MounDay-Wright, Broker, treed with an abunR ohaly, Brok e r , $159,000 tain View .4 4 a c re tic feasibility for stanmtns. or enjoy as is. is all about meeting Broker, 541-322-9954 541-771-2585 dance o f wil d life John L. Scott Real MLS¹ 201105408 home site. Avoid bank d ard s y stem. T h e 541-322-9954 $249,000 yourneeds. Crooked River Realty passing thro u gh. John L. Scott RE Call Kerry at c losing c o sts; t h e area is a sportsman's MLS¹201205440 Estate, Bend $41,500 MLS¹ 541-815-6363 seller is offering exparadise. 1 0 ACRES, well i n Call on one of the D&D Realty Group LLC www.JohnLScott.com 201102002 Cascade Realty, c ellent terms t o a stalled, large pines. 866-346-7868 Bobbie Strome, professionals today! Garage Sales Juniper Realty, Dennis Haniford, q ualified buyer . Principal Broker $ 120,000. 1560 7 Snowberry Village ¹98 541-504-5393 Princ. Broker People Look for Information Home-ID 619 Deedon Rd., La Pine. NW Dove Rd., TerrebJohn L Scott Real $79,500 Garage Sales 541-536-1731 About Products and $65,000 N i cely treed Estate 541-385-5500 High Lakes Realty & onne. Private w ell, Good classified ads tell • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. and fairly level .40 Property Ma n ageServices Every Daythrough p ower 8 septic i n - the essential facts in an • 1 4 04 s q. f t . 1 9 9 9 Garage Sales Get-away acre with acre lot with view of Nice flat lot in Terreb- ment 541-536-0117 stalled! L e ve l 5 . 12 Silvercrest The Bulletin Classirreds FOUR RV hookups!. interesting Manner. Write C line Butte t o t h e onne, .56 a c res, Find them p aved street, a p - 32.42 Acres in Urban acres with s e veral from the readers view - not • Vaulted ceilings $65,000. 15675 south. This lot is loSingle level on 1 acre, 3 building sites with Mtn designer colors Growth Bou n dary, proved f o r ca p -fill in Kasserman Dr., La cated on a street with septic, utilities are at the seller's. Convert the • Gas heat and A/C. bdrm, 2 b ath, 1716 Adjacent t o The views. All it needs is High Lakes Re- very nice high end facts into benefits. Show The Bulletin sq.ft., master separa- Pine. your dream h ome. Elevated corner lotlot line. $42,000. Greens, kitty corner to alty 8 Property Manc ustom homes . the tion, office, fenced, MLS¹ the reader how the item will nice views MLS 32 0 1 2001172 new Ridgeview High $96,500 Classifieds agement Home-ID 980 f lower garden, R V help them in someway. • Attached 2-car gaPam Lester, Principal School. $59 9 ,000. 20120135 541 -536-01 1 7 Eagle Crest Properties parking. $ 1 4 5,000. Juniper Realty, This rage + shop area B roker, Century 2 1 MLS ¹ 201 2 03193 541-385-5809 866-722-3370 MLS ¹ 201 0 07848. Yellow Jacket Cabin 541-504-5393 advertising tip • Front deck and rear Gold Country Realty, Pam Lester, Principal Pam Lester, Principal brought to you by patio $295,000 Inc. 541-504-1338 B roker, Century 2 1 780 Redmond $97,000 B roker, Century 2 1 Just short drive from Lot 17 L a newood Call Marilyn R ohaly, Be a u tiful,The Highlands at Bro- Gold Country Realty, 2.59 acres close to The Bulletin Mfd./Mobile Homes Gold Country Realty, Burns, OR this com- $25,000. Broker, 541-322-9954 Inc. 541-504-1338 treed, 1.75 a c res. ken top, 10 a cres, t own. O w ne r wi l l Inc. 541-504-1338 John L. Scott Real with Land pletely rem o deled High Lakes Realty & gated, private well, 4 .38 Acre v i e w l o t carry. Bend cabin ha s it ali! Property SW River Rd. Exc. view Estate, Ma n age- utilities at lot, applica- backs BLM, Cascade Spectacular views of MLS¹201100751 www.JohnLScott.com from top of property. $84,900 - 3 b d rm, 2 Comes co m pletely ment 541-536-0117 the Cascade Mtns & tion for cap-fill septic. mtn & S m ith Rock Call Travis Hannan, sf, 2 2.79 acres w alking bath, 1.03 acres, gaD eschutes Riv e r . furnished, 1030 MLS views. Corner lot, apPrincipal Broker, $535,000. distance to the Desrage, woodstove, Snowberry Village Custom home s itu- bd plus loft, ~/4 bath. 208 2nd Ave, Culver 541-788-3480 ¹ 201200937. Pam proved for standard chutes River 8 Steelvaulted ceil i n gs. ¹46. ated on 2 . 3 a c res Sleeps 11. Propane Level city lot in the Lester, Principal Bro- septic. $199,000. MLS Redmond RE/MAX head Falls. Hike, bike, plus Stone fire- heart of Culver. All $88,900. 3 b d r ms, MLS¹201208375 w/300' of river front- heat ker, Century 21 Gold ¹2809381 Pam Land 8 Homes ride horses, fly fish. 2 baths, 1600y sq. ft. Call Melody Curry a ge. 2937 s q . f t . place. Large covered u tilities ar e a t t h e Country Realty, Inc. Lester, Principal BroReal Estate Quiet & natural set541-771-1116 1994 Silv e rcrest. w/hardwood, c r o wn deck. Solar power. street ready to be in541-504-1338 ker, Century 21 Gold SW Canyon Dr. ting is ideal for vaca- Living room, separate Crooked River Realty moulding, w ainscot- Located on 1.5 acres. stalled. This lot just Three 9148 sq.ft. FLAT Country Realty, Inc. tions or year round needs y o u r new 1.13 acres with access dining room 8 large ing & m uch m ore! Rare opportunity to 541-504-1338 own this kind of rec- home. $38,200 lots, cul-de-sac, utilifrom two streets pro- living. $49,000 MLS¹ kitchen with e a ting 5 ACRES with mounMLS¹201208388 ties stubbed into PUE, $49,900 5-Acre cor201009429 r eational retreat o n MLS¹ 201203505. v iding y o u man y area. Pellet s tove, tain views. 3 bdrm, 2 $699,000 J o h n L. b ath, 1 62 0 h o m e, close to West Canner lot. Perfect loca- building site options. Juniper Realty, Juniper Realty Huge covered BBQ Scott R ea l E s t ate Yellow Jacket Reseryon Rim Park and ac- tion for equine enthu- Owner terms avail541-504-5393 voir! 541-504-5393 deck. Large laundry 36x40 shop, fenced, 541-548-1712 Jett Blackburn Real cess to the Dry Cansiasts. Near p ublic able. $58,500 oom a n d 2-c a r irigated, ext. sprinkler SW Shad Rd. Located rattached system. $2 7 9 ,000. land & De s c hutes MLS¹ 201106385 Estate, 541-573-7206 $ 75,000 - N i c e m t n. yon trail. $35,000, to garage. View Property on a p a ved street. Call Marilyn Rohaly, MLS 2809225. Pam views. Located in a $50,000. MLS¹ river. Level for buildJuniper Realty, 2.49 acres between This 2.7 acre parcel Lester, 541-504-1338 764 cul-de-sac. 201207687, 92 and ing. Neighboring well 541-504-5393 Broker, Bend & R e dmond, has Mt. Jefferson & C entury 2 1 , Go l d 94. Pam Lester, MLS¹2609088 depth 310'. Power to 541-322-9954 1998 home, dbl gaFarms 8 Ranches SW Chinook Dr. Smith Rock v i ews. John L. Scott Real County Realty Call Lin d a Lou Principal Broker, Cenproperty. rage, insulated heated Crooked R i v e r 8 The lot is level with Day-Wright, tury 21 Gold Country MLS¹201109114 /cooled office/ work- Gentlemen farm & reEstate, Bend Gigantic views! mountain views from many building sites. Realty, Inc. Call Nancy Popp, room with full bath www.JohnLScott.com t irement. Cus t o m Broker, 541-771-2585 $129,000. Quality Fut his 5.68 a cres l o Crooked River Ranch 541-504-1338 541-815-8000 separate from house, home ove r lookingCrooked River Realty qua home, 3 bdrm, 2 c ated on a p a v ed water and power is Crooked River Realty Concrete RV pad and Willow Creek w/CasTwo-acre mt. view lot SPECIAL bath, 1572 sq. ft., street. Num e rous available at the street. FACTORY s everal hook - u p cade Mtn. views. 2892 $39,900 - Lot 141 SW New Home, 3 bdrm, with septic, pwr lines, 51366 Riverland, Shop + greenhouse trees & many building Septic was previously spots. $180,000 SF 1-level home w/in- C rater Loop. W e l l water lines installed to $46,500 finished La Pine. 1 acre, MLS¹ 201200450 sites. $225,000 MLS¹ approved. $78,500 T reed Lot ! MLS ¹ MLS¹201205184 door pool, 3360 SF on your site. building site. $68,000 garage, w/ non livGail Day 541-306-1018 201106408 MLS¹ 201208266 Call Kelly Starbuck, J and M Homes shop, 2nd home & C201105162 MLS ¹20100858 able trailer. $28,000. Central Oregon Realty Juniper Realty, Juniper Realty, all M e lody C u r ry Call Nancy Popp Principal Broker, 541-548-5511 o ther b l dgs. 6 9 . 8 541-771-1116 541-659-1416 541-504-5393 541-504-5393 Group, LLC 541-350-3419 acres w/62 acres of Crooked River Realty 541-815-8000 S W P a norama Redmond RE/MAX irrig. Home has too Crooked River Realty 8589 Road. 1.169 a cres, Land & Homes many features to list. mtn. views and close Real Estate Adjoins BLM. Public Notice to pasture. $40,500. MLS¹201206931 Notice is hereby given that the State of Well maintained 3 bed- $795,000 J o h n ,500 MLS¹201105165 L. Oregon through its Department of Administraroom, 2 bath manu- Scott R e a l C all M e l ody Cu r r y E s t a te tive Services, proposes to sell the following f actured home t h at 541-548-1712 541-771-1116 described property AS IS located in Bend, Crooked River Realty sits on 20 acres of seOregon: cluded land. Vaulted Horse property - 7085 9.89 acres possibly diceilings, den and a Ken Lane, Culver. 39 vidable. $89,900. l arge k itchen w i t h acres w/37 acres of Bend Telecoms site 1300 Circle Bar, La Map Tax Lot: pantry. Tons of pri- NUID w a te r r i g h t. Pine. High Lakes Revacy that is still close Flood irrigated from a 181206D 00400, Deschutes County, Oregon alty & Property to town. $153,000 Ig. pond w/gated pipe. Management MLS¹ 2011 07445 1 782 S F man u f . The property is located at 1008 y2 Emkay 541-536-0117 Cascade Realty, h ome. 4 b d / 2 b a . Drive, Bend, Oregon. The parcel is 0.17 acres Dennis Haniford, (7554 SF). This was formerly the State's teleShop, barn 8 4-stall Princ. Broker barn. Outside arena communications hub for central Oregon. The Need to get an ad 541-536-1731 telephone equipment asbeen removed and w /attached pen s . in ASAP? the building is empty. The site includes a 24' x c anyon Wonderful acr e age Mountain & $360 , 0 00 14' concrete block building built about 1989. set-up for horses with views. Also included is a separate 60kW 3-phase MLS¹201207831. Fax it to 541-322-7253 round p en . 4 - s tallJohn Scott Real Es- generator, and parking for 3-4 vehicles on the barn w it h c h i cken tate L. access road. It is currently zoned Light Indus- The Bulletin Classifieds 541-548-1712 coop, hay storage and trial (LI. complete bunk house. What are you 40x60 s h o p/garage Minimum acceptable proposal to purchase is Breathtaking Views finished with b a t h. $30,000.00 for the land and building alone, 105+ acres with 360 looking for? Hothouse, 2 ponds, and $42,000 including the generator set. The degree views of CasYou'll find it in landscaped. M o u nterms of the sale will be cash. Each bid procade Moun t ains, tain 8 meadow views. posal receivedmust be accompanied by a Smith Rock and Can12 frost free faucets, The Bulletin Classifieds security deposit in favor of the State of yon Rim views from wrap-around decks on Oregon through its Department of Administrathe t o p of this h ome a n d muc h tive Services, of not less than 10% of the one-of-a-kind Sisters 541-385-5809 more. $375,000 amount of such bid proposal. The Department a creage! Listed a t MLS¹ 201207852 shall reserve the right to accept or reject any $ 699,000. Bring a n Ranch in Powell Butte Cascade Realty, bid proposal and for good cause, all proposals. offer! $925,000. Pride of Dennis Haniford, www.johnlscott.com ownership/Borders Princ. Broker In accordance with ORS 273.780, the sale of /kelliecook BLM. Feed Lot, hay 541-536-1731 this property does NOT include the mineral Kellie Cook, Broker Barn, Equip. Shed rights. Separate application to the Department 541-408-0463 MLS¹201206082 763 of State Lands must be made for the mineral John L. Scott Vicci Bowen Recreational Homes rights. Real Estate, Bend 541-41 0-9730 www.johnlscott.com 8 Property Central Oregon Realty For more information or to submit Group, LLC Cascade Views in Tera bid proposal, please contact: $179,900 - Chalet on rebonne. $192,500 Department of Administrative Services 5.98 acres. Finished Turn-key ranch. CasBreathtaking views, DeFred Lord daylight b a s ement, cade mtn views, built Purchaseprice$350,000,20% down, Loan amount $280,000,30 yrfixed. schutes River CanFacilities Division, Statewide Property Services wood fireplace, forced in 1993, 38+ acres yon, and farming val1225 Ferry Street SE, U100 air heat, deep garage, with 26 + i r r igation, ley below, 5 usable Salem, Oregon 97301-7210 private, park-like set- barn, shop, hay shed, acres with well Ideal ting. Perfect vacation fenced. $5 5 0 ,000. building site with unPhone number (503) 373-7063 home. MLS ¹ 201 0 03925 o bstructed view s Fax number (503) 373-7210 MLS¹201209404 Pam Lester, Principal MLS¹201205208 Web site: Call Nancy Popp B roker, Century 2 1 Gail Day 541-306-1018 Broker, 541 815-8000 Gold Country Realty, http://www.oregon.gov/DAS/FAC/real property Central Oregon Realty Jumbo purchaseprice /value$800,000— 20% down /equity,$640,000 loan amount. sales.shtml Crooked River Realty Inc. 541-504-1338 Group, LLC Offer valid as of date of ad, restrictions may apply. Rates/fees subject to change. ,
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Casey NMLS 189449
541-323-21$1
Jennifer NMLS 288550
www.academymortgage.com 371 SW Upper Terrace Dr., Suite 1, Bend, OR 97702 CORPORLlc.f ML-2421
CORPNMLS¹3113
FS SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
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MORRIS REAL ESTATE I' I
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THREE PINES i $595,000 VIRGINIAROSS, BROKER,ABR, CRS,GRI • 541-480-750
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NORTH WESTCROSSINGi $384,900
• 3488 sq.ft. Greatroom plan
DAVIDGILMORE, BROKER
• 3 bedroom, 4.5 bath • 19016 Mt. Shasta • MLS 201300652
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• Mt. Bachelor Views
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• 1345 sq.ft. • 2 bedroom, 2 bath
DANAMILLER, BROKER
• Sun Forest built
541.408-1468 • MLS 201300668
541-312-7271 • MLS 201300676
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RIDGE ATEAGLECREST i $219,900
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• 1574 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom pluoffi s ce, 2 bath
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AWBREY BUTTELOT i $172,500
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SHELL YHUMMEL, g
SISTERS i $169,000 • 1682 sq.ft. townhome • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath • Convenient location
BROKER,CRS, GRI,
KELLY NEUMAN, BROKER
541.383-4361 g •MLS 201300606
541-480-2102 • MLS 201300538
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Ij • WIDGI CREEKi $499,000 pEBORAH BENSON ' PC, BRpKER GRI 541.480.48448
SOUTH DEERFIELDPARKi $224950
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• 2586 sq.h. townhome • 18th fairway 3 pond view
DARRINKEL LEHE, BROKER
• 1500 sq.ft. New Home • 3 bed«li», 2.5 bath
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• MLS 201208996
CASA MARIPOSAi $3,990,000 • 8676 sq.ft. MEGAN POWER, BROKER,GRI, CDPE• 7 bedroom, 7,5 bath
STEVEPAYER
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541-610-7318 • MLS 201106412
541 480 2966 ' MLS 201206492
3.68 ACRES i $1,350,000
REDMONDi 2,500,000 • Established Car Wash • Central location • Consistent sales 8, profit
BRpKFRGR j
• Bachelor to Jefferson views
Miles court miiilslmeel •• 60955 MLS 201207629
• 60567 Seventh Mountain Drive
IJULIABUCKIAHD, BROKER ,ABR,ALHS, 3 bedroorn, 2.5 bath • Deschutes Riverfront in Bend CRSGR 'I MLS 201202960 541 719 8444 '
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000KRN100 i 81,155000
• 3299 sq,ft. • 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath 541-383-4338 • Gary Norman built home 541-408-3773 • MLS 201206604
PAVIPGILMORE, BROKER
• 3811 sq.ft. • 4 bedroom 3.5 bath
Jppy MEY ERS
SANAGLI, BROKER,SRES
• 3 bedroom plus den, 3 bath • Golf Course Views 541-312-7271 • MLS 201204424
I LISACAMPBELL,
AWBREY BUTTEi $899,000
AWBREY BUTTEi $1,065,000 BROKER, GRI, CR
NER EDMOND i $890,000 • Development oppportunity
BROKER
• Mountain and cityviews
541-480-1922 g0 MLS 201204524
• Near parkway B shopping
541.41g.Bgpp • MLS 201300631
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AWBREY BUTTEi $875,00Q • 4293 sq.ft. ROS EMARYGOODWIN, • 4 bedroom, 4 bath BROKER , CERTIFIED • Beautiful landscaped lot • EGOTIAO TR 541-706-1897 I • MLS 201208244
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SISTERS i $824,000 BECKYBRUNOE • 3216 sq.ft. , 4 bed(oorn 4.5 bath • 20 acres 41.35Q 4772 0 MLS 201200880
HISTORIC DISTRICTi $696,0PP • SCOTT HUGGIN, • BROKER, GRI • 541-322-1500 •
BONNIESAVIC KASP • ' 4batfh 04b ed room, BROKER '
• Deschutes River frontage
41-408-753
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• MLS 201009509
HISTORID CISTRICTi $649,000
39+ ACRE RANCH i $695,000
3872 sq.ft. 5 bedroom, 3 bath One block from DrakePark MLS 201206543
LYNNECONNELLEY
• 3 bedroom, 3 bath
• • 5 minutes to Costco
• 2119 sq.ft. English cottage LESTER FRIEDMAN, • 3 bedroom, 2 bath P.C., BROKE R • Across from Drake Park
541-330.8491i • MLS 201205806
541.4pB 672p g •MLS201204031
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TUMALO i $600,000 KARIN JOHNSO, BROKER
' Beautifuily updated • 6.18 acres, 3 irrigated
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• 3035 sq.ft. townhome • 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath • Close to the river trail
541-639-6140 • MLS 201203181
• 541.480.5501 ' M15201100074
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SISTERS i $549,000
POINTSWESTi$549,000
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VIRGINIAROSS, BROKER, ABR,
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ROOKIEDICKENS, BROKER, GRI, CRS, e 'oo"(3 city views ' •4Eastern ABR • MLS 201209345 541.815.0436 '
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NW BENDi $750,000
4-PLEX i $425,000 • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath umts • Prime NE location • Excellent rental history
ANA MILLE R, BROKER
541.41p.528p i ' MLS 201300043
541-408-1468 • MLS 201208263
• 0 Earth Advantage
DAWNULRICKSON, • 3 bedroorn, 3 b«h BROKER,CRS, • Steven VanSantdesigned GRI SFR ' 541.61p.g427 • MLS 201207288
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CATHY DELNEROR • 4 bedr«rn, 2 bath ' 2818 Sq.Ft. BROKFR '
AWBREY BUTTEi $469,000
g 20.39 ACRES i $525,000
MARK VALCESCHINI • 3 bedroom, 2bath p( BROKER ( RS • 6.75 acres, barn 541.383.4364 • MLS 201205094
MICHELL ETISDEL, ' 4 bed«ir», 2 both ABR,PC,BROKER
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• 4.78 acres, pond
541-39p-349Q • MLS 201206420
541 948 gpgp g •MLS201203099
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CROSSWA TERi $395,000
CLOSE.IN ACREAGEi $410,000
JOHN SHIPPEH, BROKER, MBA,ABR , CRS,GRI 541 312 7273 g0 Panoramic river B city views
• .42 of an acre lot
BRAH DOHFAIRBANKS, • On the 4th hole BROK ER,SRES, GRI, • Views of the Paulinas CDPE 541.728-864 • MLS 201300149
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BROKE NTQPTQWHHQMEi $369,000
RIVER CANYONESTATESi $325,000 JIM IL ROKAHHECHEHEY • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath BROKER S
SHELLY HUMMEL, BROKER , CRS, G, CHMS ~ • Bro ken Top 9th fairway 541.383.4361 • 0 MLS 201300566
541.3gp.4p5 541.39p.4p3
• Near Deschutes River Trail
• MLS 201300617
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SWBENDi $315,000
RIVERF RONT CABIN i $299,000
TENBR OEK- HILBER
CRAIGSMITH, BROKER
• I bedroorn, I bath • 1.26 acres 541.322-2417 • MLS 201204647
GROUP , LLC g • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath Easy access to tr«ils BROKE'S R 541-550.4944 g • MLS 201202442
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SUECONRAD BROKFR S ' CR •
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SE BEND i $265,000
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DOBBINACRES i$275,00Q YD E DERSO N, • 1987 sq.ft. BROKER , CRS, WCR, • 4 bedroom, 3 bath • 2 2 acres I 5 acres irngation CDPE,GREEN 541-420-1111 • MLS 201202322
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• 4 bedroom, 3 bath 0 Cul-de-sac location
• Convenient Westside
54'1.48p.6621 • MLS 201300386
NE BENDi $204,900
PENDING IN I DAY i $250,000
MARGO DE GRAY,• 1036 sq,ft. RpKLR ABRC' • 3 bedroom, I bath
541-480-7355 • MLS 201300302
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AIVIYHALLIGAN, BROKER
• 3 bedroom, 2 bath • Sits high on .13 of an acre 541-948-5880 • MLS 201300131 '
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NW REDMOND i $169,900
NE BEND i $192,000
PAITIGERAGHTY, BROKER
• 1206 sq.ft. • 2 bedroom, 2 bath • Turn key property
541-410.9045 • MLS 201204680
DEBBIE HERSHEY, BROKER,CRS , GRI
• 3-car tandem garage
541.420-5170 • MLS 201200354
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POW ELL BUTTE i $169,000
CAROLY NPRIBORSKY, P.C.,BR OKER,ABR, ' Beautiful CascadeMountain views • Gently sloped property + 41.383-435q • MLS 201205095
NE BEND i $165,000 PATPALAZZI, BROKER
441-771-699
• 1456 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • Gated community
• MLS 201209338
I DARRYL DOSER, BROKFR CRS'
PRINEVILLE i $154,9QQ • 3 bedroom, 2,5 bath • Near MeadowLakesGolf Course
• 541 383.4334 • MLS 201207946
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BUSINES SOPPPRNITYi $149,000 • PAULAVANVLECK • BROKER • •
Tropical Beach Tanning NW Bend, near COCC Established clientle MLS 201205145
THREE RIVERSSOUTHi $97,500 SHERR YPERRIGAN • .86 acre lot • I block from BigDeschutesRiver • Near La Pine State Park
41-41 -49
• MLS 201207525
ON PAGE 2 NYT CROSSWORD ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbL! Iletin.com THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
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Beautiful and healthy Springer Spaniel Pups 4' t angerine m i l k H AVANESE PU P P Y ready2/17,Champion snake. 6' tank and ac- AKC, Dewclaws, UTD lines, $400. Now taking cessories. Bargain at s hots/wormer, n o n - dep, 541-604-6232 $500. (541) 610-2363 shed, hypoallergenic, Taste of the Wild, $850 541-460-1277. 30lbs - $38. Dachshund, AKC mini Quarry Ave. Hay & black/tan female, $250. Help needed NOW to spay/neuter stray/fe- Feed. 541-923-2400 541-633-3221 ral cats before kitten www.quarryfeed.com Donate deposit bottles/ season! Too many Yellow Lab AKC male cans to local all vol- cats & n o t e n ough 14 wks, basic obed. all unteer, non-profit res- homes! Rescue group shots. 541-771-6687 cue, to help with cat needs people to huy =4 . - i spay/neuter vet bills. manely trap in all arV ai e a~e Cans for Cats trailer eas, plus funds for at Sheriff's parking lot, addtl. humane traps 8 Yorkie/Chihuahua puppy, Hwy, 20 W, 2/11-22, spay/neuter vet bills. $180, cash. erence 1st shots, PetSmart 2/2 3 -25. Make a bigdiff 541-678-7599 Donate M-F @ Smith in your area & help Signs, 1515 NE 2nd; animals at the same Yorkie pup, male. All or at Tumalo sanctu- time. Lv. msg. at 541 shots & neutered, $350 ary a nytime. I n fo: 3 89 8420, o r v i s itcash. 541-536-7770 www.craftcats.org & 541-389-8420; e-mail if you can help. Where can you find a www.craftcats.org. helping hand? Husky-Wolf female, 3 mos, beautiful blue eyes! From contractors to DO YOU HAVE $250. 541-977-7019 SOMETHING TO yard care, it's all here SELL Labrador Pups, AKC in The Bulletin's FOR $500 OR Chocolate/Yellow/White "Call A Service LESS? Hips OFA guaranteed. Professional" Directory Non-commercial $300-$400. 1-541-954-1727 advertisers may Yorkies! Everlasting love 208 place an ad with Labradors, AKC, Males, just in time for ValenouI Pets 8 Supplies Black and Chocolate. tines, 3 puppies left. "QUICK CASH S o s w e et ! $5 5 0 . e 541-777-7743 0 SPECIAL Adult companion cats 541-410-0588 The Bulletin recomFREE to seniors, dis- 1 week 3 lines 1 2 210 k atk Papillion puppies adormends extra caution ~a abled & vet e rans! able tri-colored, $350. Furniture & Appliances when purc h as- Tame, altered, shots, Ad must include Excellent references, ing products or serprice of single item ID chip, more. Will al541-350-1684 vices from out of the of $500 or less, or ways take back for A1 Washers&Dryers multiple items area. Sending cash, any reason. 541-389$150 ea. Full warchecks, or credit inwhose total does 8420. Visit S at/Sun ranty. Free Del. Also f ormation may b e 1 -5. P h otos, i n f o : not exceed $500. used W/D's I Want to Buy or Rent P eople g i ving p e t s wanted, subjected to fraud. www.craftcats.org. 541-280-7355 away are advised to Call Classifieds at For more i nformaWanted: $Cash paid for tion about an adver- Alaskan Malamute AKC be selective about the 541-385-5809 vintage costume jew- tiser, you may call new owners. For the p ups, ready to g o . www.bendbulletin.com elry. Top dollar paid for the O r egon State protection of the aniF irst shots & d e w Gold/Silver.l buy by the Attorney General's mal, a personal visit to ormed. $ 7 00-$800. Estate, Honest Artist Office f!ttvuz< Foster homes needed the home is recomCo n s umer 541-410-7563. Elizabeth,541-633-7006 for the upcoming kitmended. Visit our HUGE Protection hotline at Just bought a new boat? ten season & for spehome decor 1-877-877-9392. 205 Sell your old one in the cial needs cats. Resconsignment store. Serving Central Oregon since l903 classifieds! Ask about our cue provides food, Items for Free New items Super Seller rates! Seo op Ceot al 0 epoe t ote tpttk supplies, vet support; Queensland Heelers arrive daily! 541-385-5809 standard 8 mini,$150 & Free baggedleaves, 930 SE Textron, you provide safe, lovup. 541-280-1537 for garden/compost? ing care. Need to be Bend 541-318-1501 rightwayranch.wordYou haul. 541-548-5667 Adopt a n ice C RAFT Alaskan Malamute www.redeuxbend.com able to commit to 3-6 pups, 2M 3F, $400 or kitten from Tupress.com wks, Also n e eded, Just bought a new boat? cat each. 541-771-9255. maio sanctuary, pet foster home trainers/ Rodent control experts GENERATE SOME exSell your old one in the mart, o r Pet c o ! merican Eskimo, 5 coordinators. Lv. msg, (barn cats) seek work citement i n your ciassifieds! Ask about our S Fixed shots, ID chip A mo. 541 389 8420, or see in exchange for safe Super Seller ratesl old male, pure neighborhood! Plan a t ested, m ore! 3 8 9 - white, AKC/UKC reg., www.craftcats.org & 541 385 5809 shelter, basic c are. garage sale and don't 8420. Photos, i nfo: e-mail if you can help. Fixed, shots. We de- forget to advertise in Loveseat, m u l ti-color, w w w.craftcats.org & $800. 541-610-2286 classified! liver! 389-8420. good condition, free! You like us on Facebook. 541-385-5809. pickup. 541-848-7525 BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! Scottish Terrier puppies, There are over 2,000 folks in our community AKC, male 8 female, 1st Need help fixing stuff? BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! without permanent shelter, living in cars, shots, wormed, 8 weeks, The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are A Service Professional make-shift camps, getting by as best they can. ready to go now! Call Call still over 2,000 folks in our community without find the help you need. 541-317-5624 The following items are badly needed to permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift www.bendbulletin.com help them get through the winter: camps, getting by as best they can. Shiba Inu Reg'd male e CAMPING GEARof any sort: e puppies, ready now, vet NEED TO CANCEL The following items are badly needed to New/used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blanchecked, 1st shots, $600 YOUR AD? help them get through the winter: each. 541-388-5418 The Bulletin kets. e WARM CLOTHING: @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: s Classifieds has an Rain Gear, boots, Gloves. Siberian Husky females: New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. "Alter Hours" Line 10wks, $300; 15 mo AKC s wARM CLOTHING: PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS Call 541-383-2371 $400. 541-977-7019 24 hrs. to cancel Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. AT THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER 1036 NE 5th St., Bend, Just bought a new boat? your ad! PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT Sell your old one in the Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER W hirlpool w asher 8 classifieds! Ask about our 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. dryer pair, good cond, Super Seller rates!
The Bulletin
• B en d
208
F.;"fW; ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
A v e .
The Bulletin
$350. 541-389-1086
541-385-5809
I
I ' ll
I
oe
products or • I chasing services from out of I y the area. Sending y ' cash, checks, or I I credit i n f o rmationI may be subjected to I FRAUD. For moreI information about an s I advertiser, you may I
I call t h e ' State
Ore g onI Attor ney '
I General's O f f i ce I
Room loft area. Ttvo-car
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?
ings, glass, sculpture, 'prints, c ards a n d more. At the Lahaina Gallery space in the Old Mill District. Call 541-385-9144 for more information
I
Antiques & Collectibles
Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 or
Antiques wanted: furniture, marbles, beer cans, early B/W photography, old hardware/ fixtures. 541-389-1578 Divorce Liquidation Autographed guitar collection: Clapton, McCartney, Eagles, others. Valued over $2500 each; asking $475 each, with authenticity & appraisal. Call cell, 561-880-7352. Pendleton vintage plaid "Knock-about' 1950's, sz Med, $75. 541-475-1091
Computers T HE
B U LLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.
~ae eke aot
Ad must include price of et e ; t e o t $500 ~ or less, or multiple items whose total does notexceed $500.
Call Classifieds at
541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
Musical Instruments I
Secretary, drop front, mahogany, w/chair, babied & beautiful! A steal a t $ 2 5 0.
GUN SHOW
Feb. 23rd 8 24th, 2013 S pinet piano, g o od condition, $150 obo. Deschutes Fairgrounds Call 541-604-4694 Buy! Sell! Trade! SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 $8 Admission, 12 & under free! Misc. Items OREGON TRAIL GUN SHOWS, 541-347-2120 Advertise V A CATION
541-322-6281.
The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The or 541-404-1890 SPECIALS to 3 m i lBulletin Internet website. lion P acific N o rthM&M AK-47 rifle NIB, westerners! 30 daily asking $1100 o b o. newspapers, six Sererog Ceatret Oregonetece tpttt 541-771-9902. states. 25-word clasOne week only! 30 Rnd. sified $525 for a 3-day Cal l (916) AR-15 Magazines $40 a d. Crafts 8 Hobbies vis i t Each. While they last. 2 88-6019 o r www.pnna.com/advert Rockhound Equipment 541-601-7858 Bend ising pndc.cfm for the - Saw, grind, sand 8 Pacific Nor t h west p olish. L o rtone & Daily Con n ection. Highland Park Bend. Largest 3 Day (PNDC) Info 541 280-5574 GUN & KNIFE Buying Diamonds SHOW 242 /Gofd for Cash February 15-16-17 Saxon's Fine Jewelers Exercise Equipment Portland Expo 541-389-6655 Center Wesco Treadmill, Just bought a new boat? 1-5 exit ¹306B good condition, $200. Sell your old one in the Admission $10 Call 541-388-6846 classifieds! Ask about our Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, Super Seller rates! Sun.10-4
The Bulletin
r-„-...-„,;a
541-385-5809
I 1- 8 00-659-3440 I I CollectorsWest.co im
AK-47 Pro-mag 30-rnd maqazines, brand new, 9 @ $35 ea. 541-788-8852
BUYING
Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories.
Ruger SR9 (2) 17 rnd clips, new in box, $750
541-408-2191.
BUYING 8(
obo. 541-475-3272
SE L LING
All gold jewelry, silver AR-15 DPMS Sportical Ruger Super Single-six, and gold coins, bars, star rounds, wedding sets, NIB w/2 30-round clips pre-warninq, model, SgS,9.5 bbl, class rings, sterling sil$1200. 541-480-9912 NEW NEVER FIRED ver, coin collect, vinBend local pays CASH!! orig. box 8 m anual. tage watches, dental for all firearms & $700 firm, cash. ask for gold. Bill Fl e ming, ammo. 541-526-0617 Steve 541-389-8215. 541-382-9419.
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4 bedroom, 3.5 bath,
ee aa aa •
61168 Lot 75 Sydney Harbor Dr, Bend Directions; From the Parku'ay,
$511,500
4100 sf home. Master on .'s.. main & 2 upstairs. House I featuresan elevator, theater room, office, rec. rnom with bar & 414 Nyft Hagttnc D< kitchenette. Hardwood Directioptsp SkV/int r Summitfloors, granite counter
tops & y car garage. Hosted Saturday byp
rurn e ax r o n F l pt at /'tnv Mc wasbington Dt'.
MELANIE MAITRE) Broker
off
S
541-480-4186 Hosred Sunday byp JOANNE MCKEE, Broker
EDIE DEIAY
541-420-2950
Tumalo Art Company Artists are cleaning out
541-408-6900.
SAT R SUN 12PM — 3PM
541-480-5159 R E A
Best Fine Art Sale Ever!
LThe Bulleting
Hosted t" Listed by Principal Broker
CASH!! For Guns, Ammo 8 Reloading Supplies.
their studios! Sat. Feb.16, 9am-3pm Fabulous deals! Paint-
garage, fenced yard. Just easton Reed Marke/ ,south on 15th d own th e s t r eet f r o m ft (easr/. the amazing community 5/ree/, to community on le amenities.
Cell 541-639-6162
DON'T MISSTIIIS
cozy fireplace, kitchen huge walk-in closet. Big g uest rooms a B o n u s
503-351-2746
Consumer P rotec- • ho t l in e at I I 1-877-877-9392.
SAT 8r. SUN Brand neW 2162 kq. ft . P ahlisch home i n T h e Bridges! Great room with
Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, or
Browning B-80 Semie Auto Shotgun. 2-3/4 with a modi f ied c hoke. In gre a t condition, perfect for skeet, trap and bird hunting.$375 OBO.
I t ion
NOON — 4PM
with stainless appliances. Large master suite with
p -I
( ascatle
Li.sted byp
L T 0 R s
C7
DEB TEBBS, Broker/Pres.
Sothebys INtaataATIONALaektet
Cj
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 SUNDAY FEBRUARY 10 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T HE N E W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D A WHIFF OF COLOGNE By Dan Schoenholz / Edited by Will Shortz
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6 Divi s io n of a h o u se
10 They may be running in a saloon
8 Schreiber who won a Tony for "Glengarry Gl en Ross"
5 1 Either end of a n
8 5 Puppet of ol d T V
9 Place for a Dumpster
87 French Champagne
1 0 Vaudevill e s i n g e r ' s
edge, in graph
17 Sun, in Verd u n
theory
18 Thin ice, e.g. 19 Survey A lternat iv e t o w h i t e
23 How ov e r head photos may be taken 2 4 "That ' s
4 5 Di c k , co-c r e a t o r 79 Like many a of "Saturday Ni g ht f raternity p a r t y Live" 8 0 Insect's opening f o r 49 Tangle air
52 Ph.D. hurdles
88 Make a call
54 Diamond stat
8 9 Mason's tr o u g h
5 5 Worked the soil , i n a way
90 Noodle
5 6 "A Cl o c k w o r k
excuse
2 5 Like St. L o ui s v i s - a vis New O r l e ans
Orange" hooli g an
57 Actress Loughlin of "90210"
27 Name
5 8 Soda fountai n option
28 End to end?
5 9 Spriteli k e
29 Torn
6 0 Skater M i d o r i
30 Inexperienced
61 Cool
31 See 67-Across
6 2 Roosevelt ' s successor
33 Kind of ta pe 3 4 "How I M e t Y o u r Mother" n a r r a t o r
67 With 3 1 - A c r o s s, f avor, as a ball o t measure
38 Booth, e.g.
41 Sphere
6 8 1952 Brando ti t l e role
69 Enzyme ending 70 Fairbanks Daily News7 1 Geraint's w i fe , i n Arthurian l e gend
42 Suit size: Abbr. 43 PC component
7 2 European coin w i t h a hole in i t
44 Target of minor surgery
73 Sex partner?
For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
stars?
92 Baseball c ommissioner B u d 93 Homey 94 Bushel or barrel: Abbr.
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1 3 Old New Y o r k p aper, for shor t
17 Peloponnesian War winner
96 Potter' s pedal
105 Playwright Joe w ho wr ot e " W h a t
the Butler Saw"
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22 Paavo , 1920s Finnish Olympic hero
104 Noble rank
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102 Low grade?
6 5 Shade provi d e r
37 Like Vi r g i ni a among s tates to rat if y t h e C onstituti o n
9 1 Group of br i g h t
99 Tousles
36 Who said "Familiarity breeds contempt — and children"
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12 Show over
98 Language related to Tahitian
35 Put out
9
West" phot o g r apher
95 Chem
6 4 Roosevelt ' s successor
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prop 11 "In the American
ctty
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30 It's a blessing
1 06 Tessellati o n
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32 Customizable character in a computer game
107 Clipped 108 Cool 109 Pass Down I Alternatives to combovers
2 Ingredients in some candy bars
75 Fraternit y m e m b er
3 Move, as a plant
77 Theologian's subj.
4 Level
78 Actress Dennings of "The 40- Year-Old Virgin"
5 Camera type, briefl y 6 Hidden
37 Los mosqueteros
67 Goes off on a tangent 7 0 Small bi t
49 Big media to-do
39 Confi d ent testtaker's cry
5 0 Info r mal so c i a l gathering
4 0 Some "Bourne" f i l m characters
51 Inexperienced
74 Mark of 7 6 Discuss lightl y 79 Big
41 Ring event
5 3 Caught at a 4 1Down
44 R apper?
55 Went after
45 Inner
5 8 St. Peter's Basil i c a feature
46 Forceful advance
7 Alan of " A r g o "
63 More pink, maybe 66 All' s p a r t ner
47 Depressed at the poles 48 Jungle vine
33 Cougar's prey 36 E-mail f o r er unner
61 Snookums
80 Ill - h u m o r ed 81 set ( t oo l assortment)
82 Jumbled 83 Cheap, as housing
84 Trim 85 Time's second A fri c an- A m e r i c an Person of the Year 8 6 Primates wit h t a i l s
95 Mother of C a stor
87 Scold 8 8 Mark of a r i f l e ' s laser sight
100 Word missing
and Pollux 97 Gaelic ground
98 Principal
t wice in t h e Beatles' "
Said
9 1 Conductor K u r t 92 Present-day p e r s o n aI i t y?
1 01 One on fo o t ,
93 Alfalf a's love in " The Li t t l e Rascals"
103 Verizon forerunner
Said"
i n f o r m a I yI
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday .. . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .
Starting at 3 lines "UNDER'500in total merchandise
... 5:00 pm Fri ... . Noon Mon Noon Tues .. . Noon Wed ... Noon Thurs ... 11:00 am Fri ... 3:00 pm Fri ... 5:00 pm Fri
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place aphotoin your private party ad for only $t5.00per week.
A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since t903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
OVER'500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50
The Bulletin
Garage Sale Special
C©X
4 lines for 4 days... . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
PLEASE NOTE; Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday. 260
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Misc . Items
Misc. Items
Heating & Stoves •
267
267
Fuel 8 Wood
Fuel & Wood
DISH Network. Starting ProFlowers - Enjoy 60 Wanted- paying cash EdenPURE® Portable WHEN BUYING at $19.99/month (for percent off T e nder for Hi-fi audio & stu- Infrared Heaters. Join 1 2 mos.) & Hi g h Hugs and Kisses with dio equip. Mclntosh, the 3 million beating FIREWOOD... Speed Internet start- Chocolates for your J BL, Marantz, D y the cold and winter To avoid fraud, ing at $ 14.95/month valentine! Site price: naco, Heathkit, Sanheating bills. SAVE The Bulletin (where ava i lable.) $49.99, you pay just sui, Carver, NAD, etc. $229 on our recommends payS AVE! A s k Ab o u t $19.99. Plus take 20 Call 541-261-1808 EdenPURE® Model ment for Firewood SAME DAY Installa- percent off other gifts 750. C A L L NOW only upon delivery t ion! C A L L Now ! over $29! G o to while supplies last! and inspection. I -866-947-7995. www.Proflowers.com/f • Tools I -866-906-6902. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. (PNDC) abulous or call (PNDC) 4' x 4' x 8' 1-888-721-9617. Craftsman 10" Table Just bought a new boat? • Receipts should (PNDC) TURN THE PAGE include name, Saw, $199; Yamaha Sell your old one in the 2600 Portable Genclassifieds! Ask about our phone, price and For More Ads Need help fixing stuff? Super Seller rates! kind of wood purCall A Service Professional erator (never used) The Bulletin $450; Craftsman 541-385-5809 chased. find the help you need. rotating bench, $75. • Firewood ads www.bendbulletin.com NOTICE TO GENERATE SOME Mike, 541-923-2953. MUST include speADVERTISER EXCITEMENT cies and cost per SHARI S BERRIES Since September 29, IN YOUR cord to better serve Delight all of your valNEIGBORHOOD. 1991, advertising for our customers. w i t h our • Building Materials• used woodstoves has Plan a garage sale and entines freshly dipped strawbeen limited to moddon't forget to adverberries, dec a dent REDMOND Habitat els which have been Serving Central Oregon since reaa tise in classified! truffles and c ertified by the O r 541-385-5809. RESTORE hand-crafted sweets! Building Supply Resale egon Department of I cord dry, split Juniper, GET FREE OF CREDIT SAVE 20 percent on Environmental QualQuality at $190/cord. Multi-cord qualifying gifts over CARD DEBT NOW! LOW PRICES ity (DEQ) and the feddiscounts, 8 t/z cords Cut payments by up $29! Visit www.bereral En v ironmental available. Immediate 1242 S. Hwy 97 ies.com/enticing o r to half. Stop creditors rCall 54f -548-1406 Protection A g e ncy delivery! 541-408-6193 1-888-718-8479. from calling. Open to the public. (EPA) as having met (PNDC) 866-775-9621. smoke emission stan- All Year Dependable dards. A cer t i fied Firewood: Seasoned (PNDC) The Bulletin Offers Find It in w oodstove may b e Lodgepole, Split, Del. Free Private Party Ads The Bulletin Classifieds! Highspeed Internet EV- • 3 lines - 3 days identified by its certifi- Bend: I for $175 or 2 541-385-5809 ERYWHERE By Sat- • Private Party Only cation label, which is for $335. Cash, Check ellite! Speeds up to • Total of items adverpermanently attached or Credit Card OK. 12mbps! (200x faster tised must equal $200 to the stove. The Bul- 541-420-3484. than dial-up.) Starting or Less letin will no t k now- Split, Dry lodgepole, Heating & Stoves at $49.95/mo. CALL FOR DETAILS or to ingly accept advertis- red tir, cedar and juNOW & G O F A ST! PLACE AN AD, Const. propane heater, i ng for the s ale of niper, $200/cord, 1-888-718-2162. uncertified Call 541-385-5809 250,000 Btu $90 obo. delivery included! (PNDC) 541-410-4596 woodstoves. Fax 541-385-5802 541-923-6987, Iv msg. •
The Bulletin
ow ou r
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Los t 8 Found
Tamarack seasoned 2 Found black 8 white cat on Pinehurst in Tuyears, $225 cord. 541-977-2040 m alo. L i ke s mi l k ! 541-389-9062. 269 Found I-Pod, on Zenith Gardening Supplies Ave., Redmond. Call to I.D., 541-504-7033 & Equipment TURN THE PAGE For newspaper For More Ads delivery, call the The Bulletin Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800
To place an ad, call 541-385-5809
or email
claaaified@bendbulletin com
The Bulletin
Ser ing Central Oregon rmce 1903
Found piece of silver, SE Bend, call to identify; will hold u n t i l 4/3 0 /I 3.
541-639-7767
Found; Sunday, skateboard near Congress St., Call to i dentify.
Estate Sales
•
Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of everything in The Bulletin's daily
garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious consumers. And if you're planning your own garage or yard sale, look to the classifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place for bargains! Call Classifieds:
Sales Northeast Bendl
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-
rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!
KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To use Toward Your Next Ad
• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Successi" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler 541-385-5809 or 541-480-3122 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 email P oulan rider 42" c u t Found tiny white dog, NE classified@bendbulletin.com 18yz hp, $ 6 5 0 obo. 18th & Mor n ingstar, 541-389-9268. morning of 2/3. Call to Get your identify, 541-419-1 575 Prompt Delivery Rock, Sand 8 Gravel Lost: Cardigan Corgi febusiness Good classified ads tell Multiple Colors, Sizes male, from Pine Nursery the essential facts in an Instant Landscaping Co. Dog Park, Fri 2/I, blue 541-389-9663 merle very cute, $500 interesting Manner.Write reward. 54f -633-9056 or from the readersview -not 541-788-2849 SUPER TOP SOIL the seller's. Convert the www.hetehe eonandbatk.com R EMEMBER: If you facts into benefits. Show Screened, soil & comWith an ad in have lost an animal, the readerhowtheitem wil post mi x ed , no don't forget to check rocks/clods. High huhelp them insomeway. The Bulletin's The Humane Society mus level, exc. for This in Bend 541-382-3537 flower beds, lawns, "Call A Service advertising tip Redmond, straight gardens, 541-923-0882 brought to you by s creened to p s o il. Professional" Prineville, Bark. Clean fill. De541-447-7178; liver/you haul. Servng Central Orrgon sincefSOS Directory OR Craft Cats,
The Bulletin
8RowlNG
The Bulletin
541-548-3949.
541-389-8420.
u . e
o ur
u .
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds. Full Color Photos For an additional '15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *
fy
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
('Special private party rates apply to merchandise and automofive categories,)
We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.
QUAINT CABIN ON t0 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
' . a i 'i i i e To
p la c e
y o u r
a d , v is it w w w .b e n d b u ll e t in .c o m
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4,
and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
s o r
c a l I 5 4 1-3 8 5 -5 8 0 9
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
I
0 0
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' II O Beaver Marquis D ia- Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 mante, 1 of 20, '98, pris- 29', weatherized, like tine, 44K mi, garaged, n ew, f u rnished & $119,900. 541-771-3030 ready to go, incl Winef+4 ~ ard S a t ellite dish,
929
932
933
Automotive Wanted
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
DONATE YOUR CARFast Free Towing 24 hr. Response - Tax Deduction. U N ITED BREAST C A N C ER F OUNDATION P r o viding Free Mammo-
(PNDC)
9~&w Econoline RV 19 8 9, fully loaded, exc. cond, Weekend Warrior Toy 35K m i. , R e duced Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, $15,250. 541-546-6133 fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray Four Winds Class i nterior, u se d 3X , A 32' H u r ricane $24,999. 2007. CAN'T BEAT 541-389-9188 THIS! Look before you buy, b e low Looking for your market value! Size next employee? 8 mileage DOES Place a Bulletin help matter! 12,500 mi, wanted ad today and all amenities, Ford reach over 60,000 V10, Ithr, c h erry, readers each week. slides, like new! New Your classified ad low price, $54,900. will also appear on 541-548-5216 bendbulletin.com which currently reGulfsfream Scenic ceives over 1.5 milCruiser 36 ft. 1999, lion page views evCummins 330 hp dieery month at no sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 extra cost. Bulletin in. kitchen slide out, Classifieds Get Renew tires,under cover, sults! Call 385-5809 hwy. miles only,4 door or place your ad fridge/freezer iceon-line at maker, W/D combo, bendbulletin.com Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp pro882 pane gen & more! Fifth Wheels $45,000.
with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo. 541-420-4677
888-785-9788.
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. Call 541-647-3718
1/3 interest i n w e l lequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510
Automotive Parts, • Service & Accessories
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Ford Ranchero 1979
grams & Breast Cancer Info
26,995. 541-420-9964
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RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L
hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. 541-420-3634/390-1285
WOW!
Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Toyota 4x 4 Pi c kup, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 1983, 8000-Ib Warn winch, 2 sets of tire At: www.bendbulletin.com
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1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
GMC PPBton 1971,Only
mechanicall y sound, 82k miles. $20,995. Call 541-815-1216
541-382-6752
541-948-231 0
$19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171
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AIR PORT CAF E
(Bend Municipal Airport)
Now open 7 days/wk! • Daily Specials • New Management
Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 OPEN DAILY, 8-3 Chevy C-20 Pickup Monaco Dynasty2004, by Carriage, 4 slideCall 541-318-8989 B a r racuda 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; Plymouth loaded, 3 slides, dieouts, inverter, satel1966, original car! 300 auto 4-spd, 396, model sel, Reduced - now lite sys, fireplace, 2 Location, Location, hp, 360 V8, centerCST /all options, orig. $119,000, 5 4 1 -923flat screen TVs. lines, (Original 273 Location! owner, $22,000, 8572 or 541-749-0037 $60,000. eng 8 wheels incl.) Executive Hanqar 541-923-6049 541-480-3923 l 541-593-2597 at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, '55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn CHECK YOUR AD PROJECT CARS: Chevy P ROJECT car, 3 5 0 w/55' wide x 17' high biFB 1949-(SOLD) & fold dr. Natural gas heat, small block w/Weiand 2-dr Coupe 1950 offc, bathroom. Adjacent dual quad tunnel ram Chevy with 450 Holleys. T-10 rolling chassis's $1750 to Frontage Rd; great ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, visibility for aviation busi- 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Southwind 35.5' Triton, ness. 541-948-2126 or Weld Prostar whls, complete car, $ 1949; 2008,V10, 2 slides, Duextra rolling chassis + Cadillac Series 61 1950, Please check your ad email 1jetjockOq.com pont UV coat, 7500 mi. dr. hard top, complete on the first day it runs extras. $6000 for all. 2 Bought new at w /spare f r on t cl i p ., $132,913; to make sure it is cor- Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, 541-389-7669. $3950, 541-382-7391 based in Madras, alasking $93,500. rect. Sometimes inways hangared since Call 541-419-4212 structions over the 933 new. New annual, auto phone are misTioga Class C 23', 2000, Pickups pilot, IFR, one piece understood and an error 25,500 mi, Onan gen, can occur in your ad. windshield. Fastest Ar$15,900. 541-419-9229 cher around. 1750 toIf this happens to your Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 ad, please contact us tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. Chevy Wagon 1957, 1971 new trans, 2 541-475-6947, ask for the first day your ad 4-dr., complete, new t i r es , ne w Rob Berg. appears and we will brakes, 2nd owner, $7,000 OBO, trades. be happy to fix it Please call r uns/drives g o o d . as soon as we can. 541-389-6998 Make good w o od Trucks & If we can assist you, truck. $2395 OBO Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe Winnebago 30A Sightplease call us: Heavy Equipment 541-350-2859 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, seer 2012, 31 ft., all 541-385-5809 auto. trans, ps, air, options, 2 sli d es, The Bulletin Classified frame on rebuild, re- Chevy 362HP V10, 10K mi., Sil v erado painted original blue, 2000, 1/2 ton, V-8, mint cond., $105,900. original blue interior, 8' box, bed liner, std 541-330-5516 original hub caps exc cab, auto, 4x4, 54k chrome, asking $9000 mi., e xc . co n d ., or make offer. Diamond Reo Dump $9000. Truck 19 7 4, 12 -14 541-385-9350 541-977-6653 Fleetwood Wilderness 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, ard box, runs good, 6900, 541-548-6812 bdrm, fireplace, Winnebago Suncruiser34' rear 2004, only 34K, loaded, AC, W/D hkup beauChrysler SD 4-Door too much to list, ext'd tiful u n it! $30,500. G K E A T warr. thru 2014, $54,900 541-815-2380 1930, CD S R oyal Dennis, 541-589-3243 Standard, B-cylinder, body is good, needs Hyster H25E, runs some r e s toration, Ford 250 XLT 1990, well, 2982 Hours, runs, taking bids, 6 yd. dump bed, Travel Trailers $3500,call 139k, Auto, $5500. 541-383-3888, 541-749-0724 541-410-9997 541-815-3318 23' Wanderer, 1997, excellent condition, f u ll MONTANA 3585 2008, bath, roll-out awning. exc. cond., 3 slides, $5800. 541-546-9395 king bed, Irg LR, IB Arctic insulation, all RV CONSIGNMENTS options $37,500. WANTED 541-420-3250 We Do The Work ... Peterbilt 35 9 p o table You Keep The Cash! Nu Wa 297LK Hi tch- water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Ford F350 Super Duty Hiker 2007, 3 slides, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp On-site credit Ranch 20 04, door panels w/flowers King 32' touring coach, left p ump, 4 - 3 B hoses, Deisel, loaded. Vin¹ approval team, & hummingbirds, kitchen, rear lounge, camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. web site presence. A34788. white soft top 8 hard many extras, beautiful 541-820-3724 Now $23,788. We Take Trade-Ins! top. Just reduced to cond. inside & o ut, Free Advertising. $3,750. 541-317-9319 gQ)SU BARU. $32,900 OBO, PrinevBIG COUNTRY RV or 541-647-8483 ille. 541-447-5502 days Bend 541-330-2495 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend & 541-447-1641 eves. Redmond: 541-548-5254 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
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S UB ARU. SUBIRUOPSSNDCOU
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, most options, new paint Jeep Comanche, 1990, & tires, 159K mi., $4250. 1966 GMC, 2nd owner, original owner, 1 67K, Call 541-233-8944 too many extras to list, 4WD, 5-spd, tags good $8500 obo. Serious buy- till 9/2015, $4500 obo. ers only. 541-536-0123 541-633-7761
I%%.JM
SUBSRUOPBRND CON
Springdale 2005 27', 4' slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 obo. 541-408-3811
Pilgrim 27', 2007 5t h wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629
Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed, 7'x16', 7000 lb.
GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024.
FORD RANGER XLT 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5
Ford Galaxie500 1963, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & radio (orig),541-419-4989 F ord Model A 1 9 2 8 Roadster pic k u p, runs, titled, project car from So. Cal, no rust, not a rat rod. $4000. 541-876-7237, leave msg, or call after 6pm.
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: Springdale 29' 2 0 07, Pilgrim Ford Mustang Coupe In t e rnational slide,Bunkhouse style, 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, www.bendbulletin.com 1966, original owner, sleeps 7-8, excellent Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 V8, automatic, great condition, $ 1 6 ,900, Fall price $ 2 1,865. shape, $9000 OBO. 541-385-5809 541-390-2504 530-515-8199 541-312-4466
speed, with car alarm, CD player, extra tires on rims. Runs good. Clean. 92,000 miles o n m o t or . $ 2 6 0 0 OBO. 541-771-6511.
I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 -Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 935
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles F ord Freestvle S E L
i!@ S
U BA R U . SUSSRUOPBSND CON
GMC Envoy 2002 4WD
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
$6,450. Loaded, Leather, Heated seats, Bose sound system. Ext. roof rack (218) 478-4469
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REMODELING DESIGN 8 OUTDOOR LIVING SHOW
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2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
Cessna 150 LLC engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500.
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2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, front & side airbags, 25 mpg, 3rd row seating, pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, traction control, new tires Dodge Durango 2004, F ord Explorer X L T 8 brks, maintained exremely well, runs & leather, tow 2006, 4 x 4, cle a n . tdrives Buick Enclave 2008 CXL Limited, exlnt,148K hwy mi, pkg. V in ¹ 1 4 2 655. V in¹ A 1 8448. N o w AWD, V-6, black, clean, Now $9988 $7200. 541-604-4166 $7,988.
1/5th interest in 1973
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and
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BOATS &RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent
chains, canopy, 22R (4) Hankook studded motor, 5-spd t ranstires, 20 5 / 65R15S, mission, $2495 obo. e xc. c o n d . $30 0 541-350-2859 541-388-5152 935 Sport Utility Vehicles 4 studded tires on rims, 935 Merc Sable, 205/75x14, Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 eng, power everything, Sport Utility Vehicles $10 ea. 541-475-1091 new paint, 54K original miles, runs great, excellent condition in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179
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ONE-STOP SHOPPING FOR HOMEOWNERSLOOKING FOR INSPIRATION The Central Oregon Builders Association (COBAj presents the Remodeling Design 8 Outdoor Living Show just in time for autumn and winter home improvements. This guide features information about the vendors at the show, and is a handy resource for finding local home improvement experts and products for the home throughout the year.
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PublishingDate: Tuesday, August 20
THE NATURE OF WORDS THEGUIDETOCENTRAL OREGON'S PREMIER LITERARYEVENT
NOV 7-11
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TheNatureofWordsannualliteraryfestival celebrates the literary arts in Central Oregon during a multi-day event each autumn. The event features authors, seminars, workshops and contests. Throughout the year, The Nature of Words, as an organization, supports creative writing t hrough o utreach programs for both students and adults in Central Oregon. The Nature of Words guide is distributed to all Bulletin readers as well as those who attend the annual Friday, October 25 literary event.
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THIS WEEK'S BEST BETS
CENTRAL OREGON'S TELEVISIONMAGAZINE
February 9 — 15, 2015
'55th Annual Grammy Awards' Jay-Z is a nominee at the 55th Annual Grammy Awards, airing Sunday at
8 p.m.on CBS.
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'Whitney' Whitney Cummings stars in "Whitney"Wednesdays at
8 p.m. on NBC.
Anthony Edwards stars in "Zero Hour," premieringThursday at8 p.m. on ABC. 'Paper Heart' Michael Cera (left) and 8 •
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Charlyne Yi star in "Paper Heart" Friday at 8 p.m. on The CW.
THE BULLETIN w SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
PAGE 2 • TV
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HowtoetaaSudokuiedh Fivesconsistsottive reduiarSudokuOridssharindonesetots bx 3boxes. Eachrowcolumnandsetots bs3boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 8 without repetition. The numbers in any shared set of 3-by-3 boxes apply to each of the individual Sudokus.
LAST WEEK'S SOLUTIONS
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S H A K E N I N O A D V I I D D O
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Guide to the
TV grids
TV Ratings: 'G': Generalaudience 'Y': Young children '7': Childrenover7 '14': Childrenover14 'PG': Parentalguidance 'M': Matureaudience only
Solution to last week's puzzle.
TV Crossword Mos-
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© 20 1 3 UFS, Dist. by Univ. Uclick for UFS
Cogrgnyn symbols: A: In stereo «; Closed captioning iTV: Interactive TV program N: Program is new PA: Parental advisory DVS: Descriptive vldeo service El: Educational/ instructional D: Dialogue L:Language S: Sexual situations V: Violence HD scheduling, please note: Schedulesarebased on standard-definition (SD) channels. High-definition (HD) channelsmay vary by threehours when aWestCoast programming feedis not available toyourTV provider. Please refer to your provider's interactive TV guidefor detailed HD channelschedules
THE BULLETIN
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TV • PAGE 3 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013
SATURDAY MORNING 2/9/13 •
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Jack Hanna's Wild OceanMysteries Born to Explore Recipe Rehab (N) Food for Thought Sea RescueRed Alert (N) 'G' (ABC) Countdown W i t h Jeff Corwin (N) n (El) 'PG' n (El) 'G' The Chica Show Pajanimals (El) 'Y Poppy Cat (N) Justin Time (El) 'Y' LazyTown n (El) Noodle and S k i ing USSAFreestyl Visa eInternational KTVZ O O O O Today Thelatestonthenor'easter. (N) n cc 'Y' cc (EI) 'Y' (NBC) (N)(EI)'Y' Doodle (El) 'Y' From Deer Valley,Utah.n (5:00) CBSThis Morning: Saturday Doodlebops (El) Doodlebops (El) Busytown Myster Busytown Myster Liberty's Kids n NCAA March Mad- College Basketball Mississippi at Missouri (N)(Live) « KBNZ "l' cc 'Y' cc (EI) 'Y7' (CBS) (N) n cc ies n (El) 'Y' ies n (El) 'Y' ness Good Morning America (N) « Jack Hanna's WildOcean Mysteries Born to Explore Sea RescueRed Recipe Rehab (N) Food for Thought Steel Dreams Cars.TV SEMA KOHD O O O O D ermaWand'G' AnimalAdven 'G' cc tures With Jeff Corwin (N) n (El)'PG' Alert(N)'G' (ABC) Countdown n (El)'G' Show (N)'PG' Adven. Wild About Ani- Jack Hanna's Into Eco Companyn Teen Kids News Paid Program Take it to the Max!10 Minute Tramer Cindy Crawford's Nutrisystem Suc KFXO IIg IEI @ IEI Paid Program Derm Exclusive! Awesome 'PG' mals 'G' cc (El) 'G' cc (N) 'G' cc (FOX) tures'G' the Wild 'G' cess Curious George 'Y' Cat in the Hat Super Why! n (El) SciGirls n 'G' cc Cyberchase n 'Y' Fetch! With Ruff The Victory Gar P. Allen Smith's Sewing With Sew It All n 'G' « KOAB ~ gy ~ gy SesameStreet(N) n'Y' «(DVS) 'Y' cc cc(DVS) cc(DVS) (PBS) Kno w s a Lot Ruff man 'Y' den Dry 'G' Garden Home Nancy 'G' « NewsChannel 8 atSunrise at 6:00 NewsChannel 8 atSunrise at 7:00 AM(N) « LazyTown n (El) Poppy Cat (N) Justin Time (El) 'Y' Fishing MajorLeagueFromChautauqua Skiing USSAVisa Freestyle International KGW 'Y' cc (EI) 'Y' From DeerValley, Utah.n (NBC) AM(N) « Lake, N.Y. n « Justice League Dragon Ball Z Kai WWESaturday Yu.Gi-Oh! n Yu.Gi-Oh! Zexal KTVZDT2 Q Q Q Q Paid Program Paid Program Rescue Heroes n Rescue Heroes n Sonic X n 'Y7' cc Sonic X n 'Y7' cc Transformers 'Y7' cc (El) 'G' cc (El) 'G' cc Prime 'Y7' Unlimited 'Y7' Morning Slamn 'Y7' cc (N)n cc (CW) OPBPL 175 17 3 B B C Newsnight Washington Asia Biz Great Decisions Scully: World I n side Wash'ton McLaughlin Tru th-Money WealthTrack B i z Kid$ n 'G' A merican Experience 'PG KATU
TheCelebrity Bucket List The Rifleman 'G' «The Rifleman 'AMC Legacy 'PG' *ANPL 68 50 26 38 BigCatDiary'G' BigCatDiary'G BRAVO 137 4 4 Kat hy Griffin: Seaman 1st Class CMT 190 32 42 53 CMTMusicn'PG CNBC 54 36 40 52WeightLoss SayNotoPain CNN 55 38 35 48 Sat. Morning Y o u r Bottom Insanity! COM 135 53 135 47 Zumba Fit COTV 11 (5:30) City Club of Central Oregon CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (4:00) Washington Journal 'DIS 87 43 14 39Octonautsn'Y' MickeyMouse *DISC 156 21 16 37 PaidProgramn Weightlossfast! *E! 136 2 5 Cin dy Crawford Supersmile *A&E 130 28 18 32 top PortableCook'G'
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Pool Puppies 'PG' cc Too Cute! n'PG' cc Kathy Griffin: Kennedie Center To p Chef: Seattle '14 Top Chef: Seattle Chefs atSea'14' Top Chef: Seattle '14' Top Chef: Seattle '14 CMT Music n 'PG CMT Music n 'PG CMT Social Hour n 'PG CMT Music 'PG' Crossroads n 'PG' cc Hot 20 Temp-tations T otal Gym Pai d Program Derm ExclusiveZumba Fit WEN Hair Care CleanHome Pa i d Program I nsane Bodies! Jillian Michaels CNN SaturdayMorning (N) CNN Newsroom(N) Your Money(N) CNN Newsroom The Grammys *** "C/ue/ess" (1995,Comedy) Alicia Silverstone, StaceyDash. cc Paid Program Insane Bodies! Comedy Central Tom Papa: Live in NewYork City Legally Blonde Desert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW High School Basketball Ridgeview atBend Paid Program History of TelecomDeregulation (N) (8:45) State ofthe StateVermont State of State (10:15) State ofthe State House Majority LeaderEric Cantor ** "TheGamePlan" (2007)n Doc McStuffins Mickey Mouse Never Land Sofia the First Phineas, Ferb Gravity Falls 'Y7 Good-Charlie G ood-Charlie WEN HaiCare r Cindy Crawford DeepClean P90X n cc Africa Sahara n 'G' cc Africa TheFuture(N) n 'G' cc Doomsday Bunkers n '14' cc E!Special '14' E! Special Killer in theFamily '14 E! Special '14' The Soup '14 E! News(N) Fashion Police (N)'14' SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc College GameDay(N) (Live) cc College Basketball Michiganat Wisconsin (N) (Live) College Basketball SportsNation « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « College Basketball FloridaState atWakeForest (N)(Live) College Basketball *** "TheJackie RobinsonStory" (1950) « 30 for 30 cc 30for30 cc Secret Gamecc 30for30 cc H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex SportsCenter « SportsCenter « SportsCenter s«a ** "lce Princess" (2005,Comedy-Drama)JoanCusack, Kim Cattrall Boy MeetWorld Boy MeetWorld ** "Mean Girls 2" (2011)MeaghanMarti n, MaiaraWalsh.'PG Bulls and Bears Cavuto/Business Forbes on FOX Cashin' In (N) America's NewsHeadquarters (N) America's NewsHeadquarters (N) Journal Editorial FOX News Guy's Big Bite Best- Made Be s t Thing Ate Best Dishes B'foot Contessa Giada at Home Unwrapped B e s t Dishes Pioneer Wo Trisha's Sou. ** "Extract" (2009,Comedy)Jason Bateman, Mila Kunis How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met UFC Primetime Two/Half Men Disaster DIY 'G' Leave-Bryan Buying and Selling 'G' « Property Bro P r operty Bro B a th Crashers Bath CrashersYard Crashers Kitchen Crash. PickedOff'PG'« Picked Off RadioFight 'PG' « Picked Off 'PG' « Picked Off Outsidethe Box'PG Picked Off CageyStrategy 'PG' Drop Lbs! Muf f in Top? 'G' CleanHome Z u mba Fit Cindy Crawford Dancer's Body Paid Program WEN Hair Care "ThePregnancyPact" (2010) 'PG' Melissa Harris-Perry (N) Weekends With Alex Witt (N) MSNBCLive (N) Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness BUCKWILD n '14' Snooki & JWOWW Ncw What? '14' Snooki Odd Parents O d d Parents SpongeBob S p ongeBob Spongegob S p ongeBob SpongeBob S p ongeBob Teenage Mut. Teenage Mut Dr. Phil n 'PG' « Dr. Phil Biggestlovemistakes. 'PG' Home Made Simple n 'G' « Shocking Family Secrets n '14' Shocking Family Secrets n '14 Paid Program Paid Program Drop Lbs! Dancer's Body P90X Back Pain Relief Paid Program Workout Drop Lbs! Sup erFood Paid Programn EasyMeals Insane Bodies! Paid Programn Xtreme 4x4'G' Horsepower TV Trucks! 'G' « M u s cleCar 'G' SavageDiggers Savage Diggers ** "Open Graves"(2009) Paid Program CleanHome DeepClean Save-CarMD Ghost Hunters n '14' « Ghost Hunters n « Mary.Hopkins Lassie 'G' cc D a vey I Goliath Ishine Knect 'G' Insp. Station VeggieTales 'Y' 3-2-1 Penguins! Come onOver God Rocks! 'Y Monstertruck Home Improve- Home Improve Tyler Perry's Tyler Perry's MeetAre WeThereYet? According to Jim Rules of Engage- King of the NerdsSupernerdsA contro- *** "Charlle's 'PG' n 'PG' cc ment 'G' cc ment 'G' « House of Payne the Browns ment '14' versial ruling is given. '14' Angels" (7:15) *** "CarmenJones"(1954) DorothyDandridge,Harry Belafonte.Two (9:15) *** "Pinky" (1949,Drama)JeanneCrain, EthelBarrymore. Alight-skinned ** i NoyyayOut" (1950) RichardWid workers vie for love at anArmyparachuteplant. « black womanreturns to her Southern home. cc mark, LindaDarnell. cc Dish W/Tara 'G' TRIA Jillian Michaels Say No to Botox! Four Houses n « Four Houses n 'PG' cc Four Houses ...and aFerry n 'PG Law & Order CriminalLawDetectives Law & Order Acid VanBuren searches Law & Order BibleStory Religioustem- Dallas Sins of the FatherAnntakes ac- Monday Mornings Pilot Dr. Sydney probe randommurders. '14' for a killer. n '14' pers flare. '14' «(DVS) tion against Ryland. '14' « Napur solves abaffling case.'14' Jackson&theOlympians Scan2Go(N) Johnny Test'Y7' Beyblade:Metal Pokemon:BW Ben 10 Star Wars: Clone Green Lantern Young Justice "Percy When Vacations Attack 'PG' « Mys t eries at the Museum 'PG City Swappers (N)'G' « TopTenCaribbean Beaches'PG' Bourdain: NoReservations 3's Company 3's Company 3's Company 3's Company Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Happily Divorced Happily Divorced Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' *** "The40- Year-OldVirgin Paid Program Zumba Fit Dee p Clean Say No to Botox!Necessary Roughness '14' « White Collar EmpireCity 'PG Jump Start n 'PG' Jump Start n 'PG' Top 20 VideoCountdown (N)'PG' Top 20 Video Countdown (N) 'PG' Best Week Ever Sat. Night Live
* "CI/%frd"1994 Martin Short. n 'PG' « ** "Multiplicity" 1996, ComedyMichael Keaton. n 'PG-13' « ** "Laws olAttraction" 2004 PierceBrosnan. « 106 401 306401 (5:10)"TheBourne Supremacy *** "Laura" 1944GeneTierney. 'NR' « ** "Vicki" 1953 JeanneCrain. 'NR' « ** "Dam/en:OmenII" 1978, HorrorWiliamHolden. 'R' acc 104 204104120(5:00) **"FallenAngel" 1945 34 UFC Insider U F C PrimetimePinks - All Out 'PG' PassTime'PG' Pass Time'PG' UFC ReloadedUFC135:JonesvsRampageJonesvsJackson;HughesvsKoscheck
28 301 27 301 EuropeanPGATour Golf JoburgOpen,Third RoundFromJohannesburg, South Africa
Golf Central
P G A Tour Golf
HALL 66 33 175 33 ILove Lucy'G' I LoveLucy'G I Love Lucy 'G' I Love Lucy 'G' I Love Lucy 'G' I Love Lucy 'G' The Golden Girls The Golden Girls The Golden Girls The Golden Girls HBO 425 501 425501 "Blrders: TheCentral Park Effect ** "Jungle 2 Jungle"1997 TimAllen. n 'PG' cc (8:45) *** "X-Men: First Class"2011, ActionJamesMcAvoy. n 'PG-13' cc IFC 105 105 (4:15) * "Batman 8Robin" 1997 Three Stooges Three Stooges Three Stooges Three Stooges Three Stooges Portlandia '14' Portlandia '14' Comic Book Men *** "Intolerable Cruelty" 2003GeorgeClooney. MAX 400 508 508 Kiss Before (6:35) ** "Jetsons:TheMovie" 1990 n 'G' cc (9:40) ** "Paparazzi" 2004Cole Hauser. 'PG-13 NBCSN 27 58 30 209 Bill Dance Bass 2 Billfish Saltwater Fish Hunt/Big Fish Saltwater Exp. Into the Blue 'G Charlie Moore Wild Skies Luge Wicked Tuna GoFish! '14 Hard TimeJudgementDay'14' Hard Time Jail Mom '14' NGC 157 15 7 M u dcats: Down and Dirty '14 Wicked Tuna'14 NTOON 89 115189115 SupahNinjas 'G' Supah Ninjas 'G Power Rangers Power Rangers NFL RushZone Wild Grinders n Wild Grinders n Planet Sheen n Planet Sheen n Dragonball GT
OUTD 37 307 43 307 Zona's Show P e nn's Big Trevor Gowdy Velvick's Eyes SHO 500 500 (6:15) *** "The Mighty"1998SharonStone. Premiere. 'PG-13' SPEED 35 303125303 Gearz 'PG' Hot Rod TV 'PG Hot Rod TV '14' Guys Garage
Spanish Fly H o o k.N-Look Inside the NFL n 'PG' cc Auto Racing STARZ 300 408300408 (5:40) "Whena Stranger Calls" n (7:10) **"Think Like aMan"2012Michael Ealy. n 'PG-13' « *** sMy WeekWith Marilyn" 2011 n 'R' « TMC 525 525 (5:35) ** "Islander" 2006Thomas Hildreth. 'R' « *WE 143 41 174118 Zumba Dance Tracy Anderson WeddingDav.:Unveiled WeddingDav.:Unveiled
Golf Central *** "Cupid"(2012) 'G' « * "Wrath ol the Tltans" 2012n ComicBook Men ComicBook Men (11:05) *** t My CousinVlnny The Whistle 'G' Rugby Hard TimeLoveBehindBars'14 Avatar: Air. Ava tar: Air.
Gold Fever Alaskan Alaska Outdoors Major LeagueFishing ** "Red"2010, ActionBruceWilis, John Malkovich. n 'PG-13' « *** "The Game"1997 'R' « NASCARHall of Fame The Hendrick Racing Story (9:15) *** "UndertheTuscanSun" 2003 DianeLane. 'PG-13' e«s Ghost Rider: Spirit" Black Filmmaker *** "White Fang 2:Myth ol theWhite Wolf" 1994Scott Bairstow TwoFamily WeddingDav.:Unveiled W eddingDav.:Unveiled Roseanne'PG' Roseanne 'PG
THE BULLETIN 0 FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
PAGE 4 • TV
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Fishing MajorLeagueFromChautauqua Derm Exclusive! Paid Program 'PG' Lake, N.Y.n cc Exploration Wi Explore the North Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program CBS Evening (CBS) Jarod Miller west News (N) cc The Taste ComfortFoodComfort food ESPNSports Saturday (N) Sports Stars of Today's Hom- KEZI 9 Newsat ABC World News KOHD O O O O Portable Cook- Paid Program top 'G' Tomorrow 'Y7' eowner (ABC) dishes; elimination. '14' « 5:00 (N) « Best Sex Ever 'PG' Boost Your En *** "Deja Vu" (2006,Suspense) Denzel Washington, Val Kilmer, Jim Caviezel. A time-foldingagent Ten Minute Work CSI: Miami Backfire Murdervictim's KFXO IIg IK! @ g) Entertainers: With ByronAllen (N) n 'PG' cc out 'G' (FOX) ergy! falls in lovewith a murdervictim. spirit haunts Calleigh. 4r '14' cc Rough CutHometime (N) Ask This Old This Old House n The Lawrence KOAB ~ gy ~ gy Fons & Porter's Quilting Arts n Simply Ming n America's Test Sara's Weeknight MotorWeek(N) n Woodwright's 'G' cc 'Q' cc 'Q' cc 'Q' cc 'Q' cc Kitchen Shop 'G' cc Welk Show 'G' (PBS) Love of Quilting Meals 'G' Woodworking House 'G' cc FIS Alpine Skiing WorldChampionships RugbyUSASevens FromLasVegas. (N) rt (Live) « Say No to Botox! Noodle and T h e Chica Show Pajanimals (El) 'Y NewsChannel 8at NewsChannel8at KGW 'PG' From Schladming,Austria. n Doodle (El) 'Y' (N) (El) 'Y' (NBC) 5PM (N) « 5:3 0 PM (N) Tyler Perry's T y ler Perry's Tyler Perry's Meet Tyler Perry's Meet ** "Killing EmmettYoung"(2002, Suspense)Scott Wolf, TimRoth, KhandiAlex KTVZDT2 Q Q Q Q ChatRoom (N) n On the SPot(N) n Star Wars: TheClone Wars'PG (El) 'G' cc (El) 'G' cc House of Payne House of Payne the Browns the Browns ander. A dyingdetective hires a hit man to kill him. « (CW) OPBPL 175 173 (11:00) American Experience 'PG' Wild! n 'G' cc Nature Tigercub's last days.'PG' TheMysteryofChaco Canyon'G' Richard Bangs'Adventures Essential Pepin Cooking Class Hoarders AVictorian homeis deluged Intervention TiffanyYoungwoman Intervention AndrewAn 18-year-old has Intervention SeanAlcoholic blacks out with stuff. 'PG' « shuns motherhood for heroin. '14' an eating disorder. '14' cc andhasseizures 14 cc (11:27) TheWalk- (12:26) The Walking DeadShaneis (1:26) TheWalking DeadShanemakes (2:26) TheWalking Dead Chupacabra (3:29) TheWalking DeadGlennthinks (4:29) The Walking DeadSecretsare (5:28) The Walking 'AMC '14' cc Dead '14' ing Dead trapped in aschool. '14' cc a deadly sacrifice. '14' cc he knowstoo much.'14' told and revealed. '14' cc *ANPL 68 50 26 38 TooCute! Puppiesn'PG'cc Too Cute! n 'G' cc Too Cute! KittenCottonballs 'PG Too Cute! n 'G' cc Too Cute! PuppyLove n 'G' cc Too Cute! n 'PG' cc BRAVO 137 4 4 Th e Real Housewives of Atlanta T h e Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta Big Rich Atlanta 'PG' VanderpumpRules '14' VanderpumpRules '14' *** "Biazing Saddles" (1974)CleavonLittle, Gene Wilder. rr « CMT 190 32 42 53 (11:30) Hot 20Countdown (N) n 'PG' cc My Big RedneckVacation n 'PG' My Big RedneckVacationn 'PG' CNBC 54 36 40 52 ZumbaFit Insane Bodies! Cindy Crawford Paid Program WEN Hair Care Fat Buster! Paid Program Paid Program Money in Motion How I, Millions Ultimate Factories Winnebago 'G' CNN 55 38 35 48 (11:30)Showbizat the Grammys(N) Sanjay Gupta CNN Newsroom(N) The Situation Room CNN Newsroom(N) Her Destiny Wh i tney Houston COM 135 53 135 47 (11:30) ** "Legally Blonde" (2001,Comedy) cc Futurama 'PG' Futurama 'PG' Futurama n '14' South Park '14' South Park '14' South Park '14' South Park 'MA' South Park '14' South Park '14' COTV 11 Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Joy of Fishing Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW City Club of Central Oregon CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (12:05) Federal BudgetOutlook(N) Afghanistan (2:15) Pakistani Ambassador to theU.S (N) Communicators Gov. GaryHerbert (R.Utah) (N) Ed Koch Funeral Press-Dinner 'DIS 87 43 14 39 (11:00)**"The GamePlan"n Shake It Up! 'G' Shake It Up! 'G Shake It Up! 'G' Good-Charlie Good-Charlie Good-Charlie A.N.T. Farm'G' A.N.T. Farm 'G Good-Charlie D og With a Blog *DISC 156 21 16 37 DoomsdayBunkersn'14' cc Doomsday Bunkers n '14' cc Moonshiners n '14' cc Moonshiners n '14' cc Moonshiners n '14' cc Moonshiners n '14' cc *E! 136 2 5 Th e E! True Hollywood Story '14' Kourtney and KimTake Miami '14' Kourtney and KimTakeMiami '14' Kourtney and KimTake Miami '14 E! News Kourtney and KimTake Miami '14' ESPN 21 23 22 23 College Basketball College Basketball Kansasat Oklahoma(N) (Live) College Basketball Pittsburghat Cincinnati (N) (Live) College GameDay(N) (Live) cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 CollegeBasketball College Basketball Valparaiso atClevelandState (N)(Live) College Basketball lowaStateat KansasState (N) (Live) College Basketball ** "A.K.A.CassiusClay" (1970) « ESPNC 23 2512325 (11:30)30for30 AliRapcc 26 Yrsz DeweyBozella 30 for 30 cc Black Magic (Part 1 of 2)cc ESPNN 24 63 124203 SportsCenter « SportsCenter « SportsCenter « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « ** "A Walk to Reme mber"(2002)ShaneWest, MandyMoore ** "TheLast Song"(2010,Drama)Miley Cyrus. FAM 67 29 19 41 **"Raising Helen"(2004, Comedy-Drama)KateHudson, JohnCorbett, JoanCusack. FNC 57 61 36 50 Stossel America's NewsHeadquarters (N) America's NewsHeadquarters (N) FOX Report (N) Huckabee(N) *FOOD 17762 98 44 Chopped Sugar Dome Alien Invasion (N) Re s taurant: Impossible Restaurant Stakeout Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Iron Chef America f * * * Ro/e Mode/s" (2008, *** "Forgetting SarahMarshall" (2008,Romance-Comedy)JasonSegel, KristenBell FX 131 Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Comedy)SeannWiliam Scott, PaulRudd * Grown Ups HGTV 176 49 33 43 House Crashers House Crashers Love It or List It 'G' cc Love It or List It 'G' cc Love It or List It Mark &Desta'G ' L o ve It or List It 'G' « Love It or List It 'G' « *HIST 155 42 41 36 PickedOff'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc American Pickers OddFellas'PG' ***"The MemoryKeeper's Daughter" (2008, Drama) 'PG' « *** "Mother andChild" (2009, Drama)NaomiWatts, Annette Bening. « LIFE 138 39 20 31 (11:00)"ThePregnancy Pact"'PG' FamdyPreys MSNBC 59 59 128 51 (11:00) MSNBCLive(N) Caught on Camera Caught on CameraOut of Control Caught on CameraOverboard! Lockup: IndianaAnonymoustip. MTV 192 22 38 57 Snooki 10 on Top 'PG' BUCKWILD n '14' Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness NICK 82 46 24 40 TheAdventuresof JimmyNeutron Power Rangers SpongeBob Odd Parents O d d Parents Odd Parents O d d Parents Kung FuPanda: Legends SpongeBobSquarePants n 'Y7' Disappeared n 'PG'mc DisappearedRoyalSecrets n 'PG' DisappearedFavoriteSon n 'PG' Disappeared n 'PG' cc Disappeared n 'PG' cc OWN 161 103 31 103 Disappeared n 'PG' cc ROOT 20 4528*26 Pai d Program WCC Pregame College Basketball Pepperdineat Portland(N) (Live) College Basketball Idahoat Denver(N)(Live) College Basketball SPIKE 132 31 34 46 SavageDiggers Savage Diggers SavageDiggers Savage Diggers Savage Di ggers Savage Diggers ** "The Punisher"(2004,Action) ThomasJane, JohnTravolta, Will Patton. n (5:31)Fighting ** "Roadki/I" (2011)Diarmuid Noyes,KaceyBarnfield. '14' « * "Mothman" (2010)'14 SYFY 133 35 133 45 (11:00) ** "OpenGraves"(2009) Scream ofthe Banshee" (2011)LaurenHolly, Lance Henriksen. « TBN 205 60130 Paws & Tal Chr. World News Belle & the Beast: A Christian Romance The Book and Gaither: Precious Memories In Touch With Dr. Charles Stanley es Heroes &LegendsofBible 'TBS 6 27 11 2 8 (11:30)***"Char/ie'sAnge/s"(2000,Action)CameronDiaz,**"Char/ie'sAnge/s:Fu(i Throttle"(2003)CameronDiaz,DrewBarrymore.Pri-EverybodyLovesFriendsn'14'« F riendsn'PG'« Friends 'PG' cc Friends 'PG' cc Drew Barrymore,Lucy Liu. « vate detectives try to retrievecryptic information. « Raymond i (11:00) ** No WayOut" (1950,Drama) ** "Decision BeforeDawn" (1951) RichardBasehart, GaryMerrill. Germanpris (3:15) *** "Titanic"(1953)Clifton Webb,Barbara Stanwyck. Premiere. People **** "Viva Zapata!" (1952)Marlon TCM Richard Widmark. « oner joins U.S.officer as spy behindenemylines. « mingle andcouple bicker ondoomed1912 luxuryliner. Brando, JeanPeters. « *TLC 178 34 32 34 Four Housesn 'PG'acc Hoarding: Buried Alive 'PG' « Hoa r ding: Buried Alive n « Hoarding: Buried Alive 'PG' « Hoar ding: Buried Alive 'Pac G' c Hoarding: Buried Alive '14' « Impossible iii" (2006, Action) TomCruise, Philip SeymourHoffman,Ving Rhames.Agen *** "TheBourne Law & Order FamilyFriend Anofficer ** "ConAir" (1997, Action)NicolasCage, JohnCusack, John Malkovich. Vicious *** "Mission: *TNT kills a murdersuspect. rt '14' convicts hijack their flight. « Ethan Huntfacesthe toughest villain of his career. « identity" *TOON 84 Percy Jackson &theOlympians Incredi bleCrew JohnnyTest'Y7' JohnnyTest' Y7' JohnnyTest' Y7 Wrld, Gumbaff Wrld, Gumbaff Wrld, Gumbaff Wrld, Gumbaff * * * "Robots" (2005,Comedy) *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Manv.Food Ma n v .Food Man vFood Man v Food Edge of America Man v.Food'G Exposed 'PG' Exposed 'PG' S t ate Fair Competitions 'G' « State Fair Foods 'G' « TVLND 65 47 29 35 Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' The CosbyShow ** "He'sJust NotThatlnto You"(2009) BenAffleck, Jennifer Aniston. « *"The Ug/yTruth" (2009)Katherine Heigl, GerardButler. « USA 15 30 23 30 (11:00) *** "The 40-Year-0/d Virgin" (2005) « *** "(500) Daysoi Summer"(2009) JosephGordon-Levitt. n VH1 191 48 37 54 Sat. Night Live (12:40) SaturdayNight Live rc '14' (1:45) Saturday Night Live rr '14' cc (2:50) SaturdayNight Live n '14' *A&E 130 28 1 8 32 Flipping VegasUnwantedguests in an Hoarders A hoarder's homemaybe abandonedhome.'PG' cc condemned. 'PG' cc
*** "TheBourne Supremacy"2004 MattDamon.rc'PG-13'« (3:50) ** "Pirates ofthe Caribbean:OnStranger Tides"2011 'PG-13' *** "Cast Away" 2000'PG-13 ** "TheDa VinciCode"2006 TomHanks. Areligious mysterycould rockfoundations ofChristianity. « 104204104120 ** "Premonition" 2007, Suspense Sandra Bullock. 'PG-13' « 34 World MMAAwards '14 UFC Primetime UFC Tonight B o xing FromVegas Las Boxing FromSept. 14,2002. 'PG' The Ultimate Fighter n '14 Best of PRIDEFighting 28 301 27 301 Greatest GameEver Played Top 10 Golf Central (N) PGA Tour Golf Champions:AllianzChampionship,SecondRound FromBoca Raton, Fla *** "Your LoveNeverFails HALL 66 33 175 33 (11:00) *** "Cupid"(2012) 'G TheMakeover" (2013)Julia Stiles, David Walton. 'PG' « Meet MyMom" (2010) Lori Loughlin, JohnnyMessner. 'PG' « f *** "TheGirl" 2012 TobyJones. n « HBO 425 501 425501 lyrath-Titans * * * MeaMaximaCulpa: Silencein theHouseof God" 2012 'NR' (12:45) *"ThisMeansWar" 2012ReeseWitherspoon. n 'PG-13' ncc *** "Lethal Weapon 3" 1992 IFC 105 10 5 C o mic Book Men Comic Book Men ComicBookMen ComicBook Men ComicBook Men (2: 45)** "BachelorParty"1984,ComedyTom Hanks,TawnyKitaen,AdrianZmed.'R *** "Speed" 1994 n 'R' cc MAX 400 508 508 (11:05) *** "My Cousin Vinny" (1:05) ** "The BigYear" 2011Steve Martin. 'PG' (2:45) *** "TheBlues Brothers"1980, MusicalComedyJohn Belushi. n 'R' cc NBCSN 27 58 30 209 Rugby FIS Freestyle Skiing NFL Turning Point 'PG Biathlon Rugby SevensWorld Series: LasVegas(N)(Live) Hard TimeTruth andLies (N) '14' Alaska StateTroopers'14 Alaska StateTroopers '14' NGC 157 157 H a rd Time Running theJoint'14' Hard Time '14 Hard Time Inmatesvs. Officers '14' NTOON 89 115 189 115 Avatar: Air. Ava t ar: Air T.U.F.F. Puppy T.U.F.F. Puppy Back, Barnyard Back, Barnyard Wild Grinders n Planet Sheen n T.U.F.F. Puppy T.U.F.F. Puppy Odd Parents O d d Parents OUTD 37 307 43 307 Fishing Univ. L i ndners Fish Hook-N-Look B uccaneers Bottom Feeders Familiar Waters Outdoors Flyrod Outdoors Team Journal Outdoors Ste v e's Outdoor SHO 500 500 (11:00) *** "TheGame" 1997 (1:10) *** "Ransom"1996,SuspenseMel Gibson. n 'R' « (3:15) ** "Lara Croft Tomb Raider: TheCradleoi Life" 2003 'PG-13' (5:15) *** "TheRock" 1996'R SPEED 35 303125303 Ultimate Street Car Invitational Dreams Dreams Monster Jam Monster Jam(N) On the Edge(N) On the Edge Superbik eFam. SuperbikeFam STARZ 300 408 300408 "Ghost Rider: Spirit (12:50) *** "Theides ofMarch" 2011 n 'R' cc (235) **"ThinkLikea Man"2012MichaelEaly. n 'PG13' « (4:45) ***"KillBill: Voi. I"2003 UmaThurman i TMC 525 525 (11:20)"TwoFami/y House"2000 (1:15) ** "Sabrina"1995, Romance-Comedy Harrison Ford,Julia Ormond. rr 'PG' « * * * MYWeekWi th Marilyn"2011 rt 'R' « (5:15) ** "Cocktail" 1988 n 'R *WE 143 41 174 118 Roseanne'PG' Roseanne n 'G Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG ENCR FMC FUEL GOLF
106401 306401(12:05) *** "TheThomasCrownAffair"1999 Pierce Brosnan. rc 'R'
THE BULLETIN «FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013
TV • PAGE 5 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
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Me" (2010)Voices of SteveCarell. Premiere. Animated.Three KATU Newsat 11 Castle Anatomy of KATU Newsat 6 Paid Program Jeopardy! 'G' « Wheel of Fortune Be My Valentine, Charlie Brown 'G' « *** "Despicable 'Q' cc orphans challengeoneof Earth's greatestvillains. n « a Murder 'PG' (ABC) (N) n cc (N)n cc Saturday Night Live Adam Levine; Ken NewsChannel 21 (11:29) Saturday KTVZ O O O O NewsChannel21NBCNightly NewsJeopardy! 'G' cc Wheel of Fortune American NinjaWarrior Competitors Chicago Fire Underthe KnifeCasey 'Q' cc (NBC) at 6 (N) cc (N) cc face an obstaclecourse. 'PG' deals with family issues. '14' drick Lamarperforms. n '14' at11 (N) « Nig h t Live '14' Burn Notice RoughSeas Modern New Adventures New Adventures NCIS: Los Angeles Hetty's leadership The GrammysWill Go On: ADeath in 48 Hours DesperateMeasures Amar KOIN Local 6at11 (11:35) Baggage KBNZ '14' cc (CBS) pirates. '14' cc of Old Christine of Old Christine comes underquestion.'PG' the Family (N) n « ried couple ismurdered.(N) n (N) cc *** "Despicable Me" (2010)Voicesof SteveCarell. Premiere. Animated.Three KEZI 9 Newsat Paid Program Be My Valentine, Charlie Brown 'G' cc KOHD O O O O KEZI9Newsat KEZI9Newsat Entertainment Tonight (N) n cc orphanschallengeoneof Earth's greatestvillains. n « (ABC) 6:00 (N) « 6:3 0 (N) « 11:00 cc Hell's Kitchen 17Chefs CompeteA Theteam Cops Wild and Cops Caught in a The Following Predicting anew News Channel 21 Two and aHalf KFXO III IEI IEI IEI BonesAsoccermomisblownupinher Criminal Minds Profiling 101 (FOX) minivan. n '14' cc talks to a collegeclass. '14' Crazy No. 2'14' Lie (N) n 'PG' follower's actions. '14' «(DVS) First on FOX M en '14' cc challengeand adinner service. '14' My Family It's As Time Goes By New Tricks Unexplaineddeath linkedto Masterpiece Mystery! International KOAB ~ gy ~ gy (5:30)TheLaw- LastoftheSum Art Wolfe's Trav- Rick Steves' Eu- Globe Trekker White-handedgibbon 'PQ' cc Training Men (PBS) rence WelkShow mer Wine n 'G' els to the Edge rope 'G' cc orangutan. 'G' cc(DVS) drug rapes. n cc political cover-up. n 'PG' cc NBC Nightly News Straight Talk Inside Edition Grants Getaways American NinjaWarrior Competitors Chicago Fire Underthe KnifeCasey Saturday Night Live Adam Levine; Ken NewsChannel 8 at (11:29)Saturday KGW 'PG' Weekend 'PG' drick Lamarperforms. n '14' Night Live '14' (NBC) (N) cc face anobstaclecourse. 'PG' deals with family issues. '14' 11(N) cc Cops Little Rock, Cops Cleveland That'70s Shown That'70s Show The Jeremy Kyle ShowMomwants her KTVZDT2 IEI ~ Q @ * "Nailed" (2001, Drama)HarveyKeitel, Brad Rowe, Rachel Blanchard. Aman Cheaters (N) n '14' cc 'PQ' cc risks family supportwhenhis gets his loverpregnant. « Arkansas n '14' Ohio '14' « Van Stock 'PG' ex to paychild support. 'PG' (CW) *** "My Man Godfrey" (1936)Wiliam Powell. OPBPL 175 17 3 M i dsomer Murders 'PG' « Underground Underground Xerox Rochester Intl. Jazz Festival Austin City Limits (N) 'PG' cc My ManGodfrey KATU
Flipping Vegas Ahomehasfrightening Flipping Vegas Nastysurprises await in Flipping Vegas Amodest homehas an Flipping Vegas Scott's charitableact (11:01) Flipping VegasAnunholy problems. 'PG' cc a filthy condo. 'PG' cc unsavory past. 'PG' cc comes at acost. (N)'PG' cc stench won't goaway. 'PG' cc (5:28) TheWalking (6:28) TheWalking DeadRick, Hershel (7:28) The Walking DeadRickand (8:27) TheWalking DeadRick and (9:27) TheWalking DeadSomeonemayThe Walking DeadRick andCarl find (11:29) TheWalk 'AMC Dead '14' and Glenntry to survive. '14' Shane are inconflict. '14' « Shane sharesides. '14' cc be loosenearthefarm. '14' the farm injeopardy. '14' « ing Dead *ANPL 68 50 26 38 TOOCute! Cuddly KittenS'G' cc TO O Cute! Fluffy Puppy Party n 'G' TOO Cute! EXtra SpeCial PetSn 'G ' Pit BOSS The BOiling POint(N) 'PG Pit Bulls and Parolees(N) n 'PG' Pit Boss The Boiling Point n 'PG BRAVO 13 44 Van derpump Rules '14 VanderpumpRules '14 ** "American Pi2" e (2001, Comedy)Jason Biggs. Premiere ** "American Pi2" e (2001)JasonBiggs, ShannonElizabeth CMT 190 32 42 53 (6:15) ** "Overboard"(1987)Goldie Hawn.Anamnesiac milionairess is dupedby acunning carpenter. n My Big RedneckVacation (N) 'PG' SwampPawnCajun Mystery Meat My Big RedneckVacation n 'PG' CNBC 54 36 40 52 TheSuzeOrmanShow(N) « Princess « Princess Leanna Ultimate Factories Winnebago'G' The SuzeOrmanShow « Princess cc Princess Leanna Quit Your Job! Peak Fit CNN 55 38 35 48 Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom Her Destiny Whitney Houston Piers MorganTonight CNN Newsroom Her Destiny Wh i tney Houston COM 13 53 135 47 South Park '14' South Park '14' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' South Park '14' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' COTV 11 Talk of the TownLocal issues Desert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Journal Get Outdoors V i sions of NW The YogaShow The Yoga Show Talk of the TownLocal issues. CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (6:15) NewsPolitics and Public Affairs Ed Koch Funeral Press-Dinner (9:10) NewsPolitics and Public Affairs Federal IncomeTax (N) 'DIS 87 43 14 39 Austin & Ally 'G' Shake It Up! 'G' Jessie n « Jess ie n « A.N.T. Farm'G' Jessie n « Phineas, Ferb Shake It Up! 'G' A.N.T. Farm 'G' Jessie n « Austin & Ally 'G' A.N.T. Farm 'G' *DISC 15 21 16 37 MOOnehineren'14' cc Moonshiners APrice to Payn '14 Moonshiners n '14' cc Monster Squid: It Lives (N) n cc Monster Squid: It Lives n cc *E! *** «Sex andthe City" (2008, Romance-Comedy)SarahJessica Parker, KimCattrall, Chris Noth 13 25 Kou rtney and Kim Take Miami '14' Kourtney and Kim Take Miami'14' Fashion Police '14 ESPN 21 23 22 23 CollegeBasketballLouisvilleatNotreDame(N) (Live) SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 College Basketball College Basketball lllinois State atCreighton(N) (Live) Basketball NBA Tonight (N) World Series of Poker Europe Final TableFromCannes, France. « ** "A.K.A.CassiusC/ay" (1970) « ESPNC 23 25 123 25 (5:00) BlackMagic cc Black Magic Coaches,basketball playerswhoattended black colleges. (Part 2 of 2) « 30for30 cc H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex ESPNN 24 63 124203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « Highlight Express(N) (Live) **"Twilight" (2008, Romance)Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Billy Burke. Premiere ** "Twilight"(2008, Romance)Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Bily Burke FAM 67 29 19 41 (4:30) ** "The LastSong" (2010) FNC 57 61 36 50 Justice With JudgeJeanine(N) Geraldo at Large n 'PG' cc Journal Editorial FOX News Jus t ice With Judge Jeanine Geraldo at Large n 'PG' cc Red Eye *FOOD 17 62 98 44Rachaelvs.GuyCook-Off Chopped Own It! 'G Chopped Fourfirefighters battle. Ch o pped Chop Through on 'G ChoppedChocolateChallenge'G' Iron Chef America ** "The A-Team" (2010) LiamNeeson, Bradley Cooper. FormerSpecial Forcessoldiers form arogue unit. FX 131 (5:30) * "GrownUps" (2010, Comedy)AdamSandler, KevinJames. Anger Totally Biased HGTV 17 49 33 43 House Hunters Hunters Int'I H ou s e Hunters Renovation 'G Love Itor Listlt'G' « Love It or List It 'G' « House Hunters Hunters Int'I House Hunters Hunters Int'I *HIST 15 42 41 36 American Pickers Boys'Toys'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' LIFE 13 39 20 31 (5:30) **"Tyler Perry's theFamilyThat Preys"(2008) Kathy Bates. "Twist of Faith" (2013,Drama)Toni Braxton.Premiere. 'PG' « "Abducted: TheCarlina White Story"(2012) AunjanueEllis. 'PG' « MSNBC 59 59 128 51 Lockup: Indiana Cutting. Lockup: Indiana Lockup: Indiana Lockup: Indiana Lockup: Pendleton Angryteens. Lockup Special Investigation MTV 192 22 38 57 Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob S p o ngeBob SpongeBob S p ongeBob Marvin Marvin Supah Ninjas 'G' Drake & Josh n 'Y7' cc See DadRun n The Nanny 'PG Friends n 'PG' (11:33) Friends Disappeared n 'PG'eccs Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal '14' Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal '14 Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal '14' Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal '14 OWN 161 103 31 103 Disappeared n 'PG' cc ROOT 20 45 28* 26 College Basketball College Basketball Pepperdineat Portland College Basketball LoyolaMarymountat Gonzaga College Basketball Idaho atDenver *** "Kick-Ass" (2010,Action) AaronJohnson. Anordinaryteen decidesto becomeasuperhero. n SPIKE 132 31 34 46 (5:31) ** "Fighting" (2009)ChanningTatum, Terrence Howard. n (10:50) *** "Kick-Ass"(2010) SYFY 13 35 133 45 (5:00) * "Mothman" (2010) '14 TasmanianDevils" (2013,Suspense) DanicaMcKellar, Apolo Ohno Heebie Jeebies" (2013)Robert Belushi, Michael Badalucco.Premiere Boogeyman"(2012)'14' « TBN 205 60 130 Hour of Power Billy GrahamClassic Crusades ** "Love Begins" (2011,Drama)Wes Brown. 'PG ** "Love's ResoundingCourage" (2010)'PG Live at OakTree Virtual Memory The King of The King of The King of Family Guyn The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang King of the NerdsSupernerdsAcontro 'TBS Queens n 'PG' Queens n 'PG Queens n 'PG' 'PQ' cc Theory n '14' Theory n 'PG' Theory n 'PG' Theory n '14' Theory n 'PG Theory n '14' versial ruling is given. '14' *** "The Robe"(1953, Historical Drama)Richard Burton, JeanSimmons,Victor Mature.Premiere. Th *** "Three Coinsin the Fountain" (1954,Romance)Clifton Webb.Premiere. "The ThreeFaces TCM 101 44101 29 Marlon 5r00****"Vrva Zapata!"(1952) Brando. « story of theRomantribune ordered to executeChrist. Three Americanwomenmakewishes for romancein Rome. ol Eve" *TLC 17 34 32 34 Hoarding: Buried Alive 'PG' « Untold Stories of the E.R. n '14' U n t old Stories of the (N) E.R. 'PG' Untold Stories of the E.R. (N) '14' U ntold Stories of the E.R. n '14' U n t old Stories of the E.R. n 'PG (5:30) *** "The BourneIdentity" (2002, Suspense) Matt Damon.An amnesiac *** "The BourneUltimatum"(2007,Action) Matt Damon,Julia Stiles, Joan Allen. JasonBourne contin- ** "Con Air" (1997,Action) Nicolas Cage,JohnCusack. Vi *TNT agent is markedfor death after a botched hit. «(DVS) ues to lookfor clues tounravel his true identity. «(DVS) cious convicts hijack their flight. « *TOON 84 *** "lc eAge"(2002)VoicesofRayRomano,JohnLeguizamo. (5:00) *** "Robots" (2005) Venture Bros. Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Cleveland Show Black Dynamite The Boondocks *TRAV 17 51 45 42 Hot Dog Paradise 2 'PG' « Chili Paradise 'PG' « Ghost Adventures 'PG' « GhostAdventures 'PG'« Ghost Adventures 'PG'« Ghost Adventures 'PG'« Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King ofQueens TVLND 65 47 2935 TheCosbyShow TheCosbyShow TheCosbyShow TheCosbyShow TheCosby Show TheCosbyShow Love. ** "Couple sRetreat"(2009,Comedy)VinceVaughn,JasonBateman,JonFavreau.m ** "Couples Retreat" (2009) USA 15 30 2330 * "TheBack-upPl an"(2010,Romance-Comedy)JenniferLopez,AlexO'Loughlin.« VH1 191 48 37 54 JennyMcCarthy BestWeekEver 40FunniestFails'14 40 Funniest Fails '14' MobWrvesn 14 cc Mob Wives BadBoys n '14' cc Jen ny McCarthy Best Week Ever **A&E
ENCR FMC FUEL GOLF
13 28 18 32 FIIPPtn9 Ve9as Ahu9e hornecreates huge pains. 'PG' cc
** "The Lost World: Jurassic Park"1997 Jeff Goldblum.'PG-13' « 106401 306401(615) ** "GrumpyOld Men"1993Jack Lemmon. n 'PG13' « (10:15) *** "AirForceOne"1997Harrison Ford. n 'R' « FXM Presents *** "Cast Away"2000,DramaTom Hanks,HelenHunt,NickSearcy.'PG-13'ss FXM Presents * * " Premonition" 2007 'PG-13 104204104120(5:00) *** "Cast Away"2000TomHanks.'PG-13' 34 UFC Unleashed UFC ReloadedUFC135: Jonesvs RampageJones vsJackson; Hughesvs Koscheck. UFC: Brownevs. Bigfoot 28 301 27 301 PGATour Golf PGA Tour Golf ATIT Pebble BeachNational Pro-Am,Third Round FromPebble Beach, Calif. cc
Golf Central (N) PGATour Golf
** "The Lost Valentine" (2011)Jennifer Love Hewitt. 'PG' « HALL 66 33 175 33 (5:00) "your Love Never Fails" Be My Valentine" (2013,Romance)Wiliam Baldwin. Premiere. 'G' « Be My Valentrne (2013) G « HBO 425501 425501(6:15) *"DreamHouse" 2011, SuspenseDaniel Craig. n 'PG-13' « ** "Battleship" 2012Taylor Kitsch. Premiere. n 'PG-13' « (10:15) *** "X-Men:FirstClass" 2011James McAvoy. 'PG-13' « ** "Lethal Weapon4"1998, Action Mel Gibson, DannyGlover, JoePesci. Premiere. 'R' IFC 1 0 1 0 5 (5:00) *** "Lethal Weapon 3"1992 Mel Gibson. (10:15) ** "Leatherface: The Texas ChainsawMassacre ili"1990 'R ** "I, Robot" 2004, ScienceFiction Will Smith. n 'PG-13' cc MAX 400508 508 (5:00) *** "Speed"1994 n 'R Banshee TheKindred'MA' cc DragonEyes" 2012Jean-Claude VanDamme. 'R Girls in Bed NBCSN 27 58 30 209 College Basketball NewMexicoat UNLV(N) (Live) NFL Turning Point 'PG Biathlon Luge World of Adventure Sports n 'PG' Alaska StateTroopers'14' Alaska State Troopers '14' Alaska StateTroopers'14' Alaska StateTroopers '14 NGC 157 157 A l aska State Troopers '14' Alaska State Troopers '14 NTOON 89 115189115 Legend-Korra Legend-Korra W ild Grinders n Planet Sheen n Robot, Monster Odd Parents SpongeBob S p ongeBob Legend-Korra Legend-Korra Dragon Ball Z I ron Man: Armor OUTD 37 30743 307 Wild Skies Trophy Quest Best of West Expedition Saf Heartland Bow Speargun Hunter Ted Nugent Am e rican Archer Furtakers Tracks, Africa Magnum TV Best of West SHO 500 500 60 Minutes-Sp. (5:15) *** "TheRock" 1996SeanConnery. n 'R (7:45) ** "Red" 2010,ActionBruce Wilis. n 'PG-13' eccs (9:45) ** "Faster" 2010,Action DwayneJohnson. n 'R' « SPEED 35 303125303 Superbike Fam. National Arenacross Series Racing AMA Supercross RacingSanDiegoFromQualcommStadium in SanDiego, Calif. (N) (Live) Superbik eFam. AMA Supercross Racing * "That's My Boy"2012AdamSandler. Premiere. n 'R' « STARZ 300408300408Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (6:40) *** "Kill Bill:Vol. 2" 2004,Action UmaThurman, David Carradine. n 'R' « Ghost Rider:Spirit * "Legendary" 2010Patricia Clarkson.Premiere. n 'PG.13' « ** "Creep" 2004 FrankaPotente. Premiere. 'R TMC 525 525 (5:15) ** "Cocktail"1988 n 'R' HillsideCannibals" 2006HeatherConforto. n 'NR' *WE
14 41 174118CyndiLauper CyndiLauper Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' CyndiLauper Cyndi Lauper Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne n 'G'
THE BULLETIN «FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
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Your Voice, Your NBA Countdown NBA Basketball LosAngelesClippers at NewYork Knicks FromMadisonSquare Vote (ABC) (N) (Live) Gar den in New York. (N) (Live) « KTVZ 0 Q H Q Paid Program Paid Program Today WestminsterKennelClub Dcg Meet the PressRep.Eric Cantor; Sen The Chris Mat- NHL Hockey LosAngeles Kingsat Detroit RedWings FromJce Louis Arena in Detroit. (N) n (Live) cc (NBC) Show. (N) n cc Dick Durbin. (N) « thews Show'G' Gary Lewis' Ad- CBS NewsSunday Morning Singer JohnMayer; actress Face the Nation (N) n cc Monster EnergySupercross: RyanVil College Basketball Indiana atOhio State (N)(Live) « KBNZ venture Journal Naomi Watts. (N) n cc (CBS) lopoto - Champion(N) cc Good Morning America (N) « This WeekWith GeorgeStephanopou Today's Hom- NBA Countdown NBA Basketball LosAngelesClippers at NewYork Knicks FromMadisonSquare KOHD Q C) gl Q PaidProgram Paid Program eowner (ABC) los (N) 'G' « (N) (Live) Garden inNewYork. (N) (Live) « Animal Rescue n The RealWinning FOX NewsSunday With Chris Wallace Paid Program Boost Your En- Outdoorsman/ Whacked Out I mprove Memory The Sprinkle Diet KFXO II0 IE) @ IE) Paid Program Paid Program n 'PG' cc (El) 'G' cc Edge 'G' ergyl (FOX) Buck McNeely Sports n 'PG' Thomas & Friends Bob the Builder 'YRick Steves' Eu- Art Wolfe's Trav Nature Humansaffect the natural world. NOVAReplicas of Egyptian royalchari KOAB ~ gy ~ gy Betsy's Kinder Angelina Ballerina: Mister Rogers' Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood Neighborhood n Y cc(DVS) rope 'G' cc ots. n 'PG' « (PBS) garten Next els to the Edge 'PG' cc(DVS) NewsChannel 8 atSunrise (N) « NewsChannel 8 atSunrise at 7:00 AM(N) « Meet the Press NHL Hockey Los Angeles Kingsat Detroit RedWings FromJoe Louis Arenain Detroit. (N) n (Live) « KGW (NBC) (N) cc Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program I n Touch With Dr. Charles Stanley Key of David P a id Program P aid Program Animal Science n Elizabeth's Great KTVZDT2 (E)Q Q Q Fast One-Pot 'PG' « (El) 'G' cc Cooking Finding peace inthe Holy Spirit. 'G' Big World (CW) OPBPL 175 173 o r ganic-michele Changing SeasThe Aviators 'G' Saving-Ocean Between, Lines The Back Page Just Seen It 'PG' *** "Meet JohnDoe" (1941) GaryCooper, BarbaraStanwyck. Masterpiece KATU
Criminal Minds Thebodyof a kid Criminal Minds Pursuing akiler who Criminal Minds Theteam must solve a Criminal Minds Theteam investigates Southie Rules Southie Rules 30 28 1 8 32 Cindy Crawford Gymfor '14' cc '14' cc ageless skin on$Total 1 4.95 'G' napped womanis found. '14' cc targets women. n '14' cc home invasion. '14' cc disappearances. 14 cc (5:57) TheWalking DeadSecrets are (6:56) TheWalking DeadRickand (7:57) TheWalking DeadRick, Hershel (8:55) TheWalking DeadRick and (9:55) TheWalking DeadRickand (10:55) TheWalking Dead Better 'AMC told and revealed. '14' cc Glenn followHershel intotown. '14' and Glenn tiy to survive. '14' Shane are in conflict. '14' « Shane sharesides. '14' « Angels '14' « *** "Oceans" (2009) Narrated by PierceBrosnan.n cc *ANPL 68 50 26 38 MostExtreme MostExtreme Weird, True W e i rd, True Un t amed and Uncut n '14' cc Wild Kingdom n 'PG' cc BRAVO 137 4 4 Th e Kandi Factory What Happens The Millionaire Matchmaker '14' The Millionaire Matchmaker '14 The Millionaire Matchmaker '14' T h e Millionaire Matchmaker '14' CMT 190 32 42 53 CMTMusicn'PG' CMT Music n 'PG' VJ for a Day:TimMcGrawn 'PG' CMT Music n 'PG' CMT Music 'PG' Crossroads n 'PG' cc Hot 20 CNBC 54 36 40 52 Paid Program Pretty Woman TRIA CleanHome M o ntel Williams DeepClean Paid Program Zumba Fit Paid Program Derm Exclusive! Insane Bodies! Jillian Michaels CNN 55 38 35 48 StateoftheUnion Fareed ZakariaGPS(N) Reliable Sources(N) « State of the Union Fareed Zakaria GPS CNN Newsroom The Next List (N) *** "Ferris Bue//er'sDayOff" (1986)MatthewBrcderick. « Paid Program Insane Bodies! Zumba Fit COM 135 53 135 47 HOPE Fit (10:15) Futurama (10:45) Futurama (11:15) Futurama (11:45) C/ue/ess COTV 11 (5:30) City Club of Central Oregon Desert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Journal Get Outdoors V i sions of NW Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (4:00) Washington Journal Newsmakers W ashington ThisW eek W ashington ThisW eek 'DIS 87 43 14 39 Octonautsn'Y Mickey Mouse Doc McStuffins Mickey Mouse Never Land Sofia the First Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Good-Charlie J e ssie n « Jessie n cc Jessie n cc *DISC 156 21 16 37 BetterH20 Key of David Paid Programn Michael Youssef Joel Osteen 'PG' (8:27) In Touch Bering Sea Gold n '14' cc Bering SeaGold NoSnivelin' '14' GoldRush BedrockBlowout'PG' *E! *** "Sex andthe City" (2008) SarahJessica Parker, KimCattrall. 136 2 5 Cin dy Crawford Paid Program Sex and the City 'MA' cc Fashion Police '14' E! News(N) ESPN 21 23 22 23 OutsideLines Sports Reporters SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc Bowling PBATour LeagueQualifier, Round 2FromAllen Park,Mich ESPN2 22 24 21 24 SportsCenter(N) « Best of the NFL Sport Science Best of the NFL College Football All-Star Challenge Snowboarding Women's College Basketball ESPNC 23 25 123 25 30for30 « 3rd and aMile The Fab Five cc 30 for 30 cc Announcement H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex ESPNN 24 63 124203 H-Lite Ex. NBA Tonight SportsCenter H - Lite Ex. SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « ** "Honey, / Blew Upthe Kid" (1992,Comedy) FAM 67 29 19 41 Joseph Prince Sunday Mass Boy MeetWorld Boy Meet World Boy MeetWorld *** "Honey, / ShrunktheKids" (1989) RickMoranis, MattFrewer. FNC 57 61 36 50 (3:00)FOXandFriendsSunday(N) News HQ Housecall (N) America's NewsHeadquarters (N) America's News Headquarters (N) Fox NewsSunday *FOOD 17762 98 44 WENHairCare Cindy Crawford Rachael Ray'sW eekinaDay'G' Sandra LeeChocolate Pioneer Wo Best Dishes Not My Mama Guy's Big Bite Sandwich King Best- Made f * "Old Dogs"(2009,Comedy)JohnTravclta, Robin Wiliams * * * Rc/e Mode/s" (2008, FX 131 TRIA Say No to Pain Smarter Smarter Comedy)SeannWiliam Scott, PaulRudd HGTV 176 49 33 43 WENHairCare Cindy Crawford Buying and Selling 'G' « Buying and Selling 'G' cc Buying and Selling 'G' cc Buying and Selling 'G' cc Property Brothers'G' cc *HIST 155 42 41 36 PaidProgram Save-CarMD Modern Marvels PowerPlants 'G' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' LIFE 138 39 20 31 Nopaleawith Perfect Bra In Touch With Dr. Charles Stanley Hour of Power David Jeremiah Joel Osteen 'PG' Cindy Crawford Old Christine O l d Christine TheHoustons Remember Wh itney MSNBC 59 59 128 51 (5:00) UpW/Chris Hayes(N) Melissa Harris-Perry (N) Weekends With Alex Witt (N) Meet the Press cc MTV 192 22 38 57 Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness NICK 82 46 24 40 Rugratsn'Y' R u gratsn'Y' Odd Parents O d d Parents PowerRangers SpongeBob SpongeBob S p ongeBob Sp ongeBob Sp ongeBob TeenageMut. Kung Fu Panda Dr. Phil n 'PG' « Dr. Phil n 'PG' « Dr. Philn'PG' « OWN 161 103 31 103 Dr. Phil Online dating. 'PG' « Super Soul Sunday n 'PG' « Super SoulSunday(N) n 'PG ROOT 20 45 28* 26 SuperFood Workout Paid Program Fat Loss Drop Lbs! Say No to Pain HawgQuest(N) Paid Program Women's CollegeBasketball Houstonat Rice(N) (Live) SPIKE 132 31 34 46 PaidProgramn Total Gym EasyMeals Zumba Fit Paid Programn Insane Bodies! Xtreme 4x4 'G Horsepower TV Trucks! 'G' « MuscleCar 'G' Bar Rescue BottomlessPit n 'PG' SYFY 133 35 133 45 Paid Program DeepClean Paid Program SuperFood Paid Program Paid Program Total Blackout Total Blackout Total Blackout Slargate:TheArkof Truth" (2008) BenBrowder TBN 205 60 130 Kingdom Conn David Jeremiah Kenneth Hagin Winning Walk Miracle For You Redemption 'G' Love/Finding In Touch 'PG' PowerPoint It Is Written 'G' Bayless Conley Best of Praise Married... With Married... With Friends n 'PG' cc Friends n 'PG' cc Friends n 'PG' cc Friends 'PG' cc Cougar Townn Friends n '14' cc Friends 'PG' cc Friends TheOnein Friends TheOnein Friends n 'PG' cc 'TBS n 'PG' Children n 'PG 'PG' cc Vegas 'PG' Ve g as 'PG' ) ** "Can-Can" (1960,Musical) (7:15) *** "PeytonPlace" (1957,Drama)LanaTurner, HopeLange,Arthur Kennedy. GraceMetalious' steamytale cf life in *** "Those Magnificent Menin Their FlyingMachines" (1965,Comedy)Stuart TCM 101 44 101 29Frank 5i00 Sinatra. Premiere. a New Englandtown. « Whitman.Sabotageefforts damagean international air race. *TLC 178 34 32 34 PaidProgramn HairRestoration Faith-Dr. Frederick K.C. Price Paid Program n Insane Bodies! Four Weddings n 'PG' « Four Weddings n 'PG' « Four Weddings n 'PG' « Law & Order A TVshowlures susLaw & Order Abody-armorexecutive is Law & Order In VinoVeritas Policepull Law & Order ReleaseChris Drakefinds Law & Order Deadlock Amassmurdere Law & Order Remainsof the DayA *TNT pected pedophiles. n '14' gunneddown. n '14' over a drunkencelebrity. '14' his friend dead. n '14' escapes. n '14' tabloid queen'ssondies. n '14' *TOON 84 Looney Tunes Looney Tunes Dragons: Riders NinjaGo: Mstrs Beyblade: Metal Pokemon: BW Ben 10 Star Wars: Clone Green Lantern Young Justice Tom & Jerry: Robin Hood-Merry *TRAV 179 51 45 42 PaidProgram Max! When Vacations Attack 'PG' « Myst eries at the Museum 'PG Off Limits SanFrancisco'PG' Dangerous Grounds Haiti 'PG' Mys t eries at the Museum 'PG' TVLND 65 47 29 35 TheCosbyShow The CosbyShow (7:12) TheCosby Show'G' cc The CosbyShow The Cosby Show Roseanne'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' USA 15 30 23 30 PaidProgram DeepClean Paid Program David Jeremiah Atmosphere J o e l Osteen 'PG Suits Hardman returns. '14 NCIS Driven n 'PG' « NCIS CoverStory n 'PG' « VH1 191 48 37 54 JumpStartn'PG' Jump Start n 'PG Top 20 VideoCountdown n 'PG' Top 20 VideoCountdown n 'PG' Best WeekEver T.l. and Tiny B l ack Ink Crew n '14' *A&E
North and South n (Pait 1 of 6) 'PG'cc North and South *** "FrancisofAssisi"1961, Biography Bradford Dilman. 'NR' acc 34 AMA Supercross RacingAnaheimFromAngels Stadium in Anaheim,California. Boxing Answers UFC: Struve vs. Miocic 28 301 27 301 EuropeanPGATour Golf Jcburg Open,Final RoundFromJohannesburg, SouthAfrica Golf Central P G A Tour Golf Golf Central HALL 66 33 175 33 ILove Lucy'G' I LoveLucy'G ILoveLucy'G' I LoveLucy 'G' I Love Lucy'G' I LoveLucy'G' The GoldenGirls The Golden Girls The Golden Girls The Golden Girls "TheMakeover" (2013)'PG' « HBO 425501 425501TheBirdcage 'R' Making: Hop Breaking the Huddle: Integration * * "D iary aofWimpyKid: Rodrick Rules" 2011n 50 First Dates (9:45) ** "Hcp" 2011Voicesof JamesMarsden. n 'PG' cc IFC 105 10 5 W h itest Kids Di l bert n 'PG Dilbert n 'PG' D i lbert n 'PG' D i lbert n 'PG' D i lbert n 'PG Portlandia '14' Portlandia '14' Portlandia '14' Portlandia '14 SpongeBobSquarePants" *** "Spanglish" 2004AdamSandler, TeaLeoni. n 'PG-13' cc MAX 400 508 508 (5:35) *** "Live!" 2007 'R' cc (7:10) *** "OperationDumboDrop" 1995DannyGlover. 'PG' cc (11:15) ** "Fled"1996'R' cc NBCSN 27 58 30209NorthtoAlaska SportFishing Fishing/Martin Outdoor Secrets FLW Outdoors 'G Tour DownUnder Highlight Show International Auto Show(N) Rugby Wicked Tuna: Hooked Up'14 NGC 157 15 7 W i cked Tuna: Hooked Up '14 Wicked Tuna '14' LockdownFemaleFelonsn '14' Lockdown Inmat eU 'PG Lockdown Chaos inCalifornia '14' NTOON 89 115189115 NFLRushZone Dragonball GT Power Rangers Power Rangers Wild Grinders n Wild Grinders n Planet Sheenn Planet Sheenn Monsuno n 'Y7' Dragonbal lGT Avatar: Air. Ava tar: Air. OUTD 37 30743 307 Lindners Fish. L.L. Bean Guide Spanish Fly Bi l l Dance Salt Facts of Fishing American Archer The Choice W a rdens Operation Trespass Buckmaster Clsc Trophy Hunt M a gnum TV SHO 500 500 Inside the NFL n 'PG' « 60 Minutes Sports '14' Keep a Child Alive (6:15)"TheLastPlay at Shea"2010Narrated byAlec Baldwin. n 'NR' (11:15) *** "TheOthers" 2001 SPEED 35 303125303Guys Garage My ClassicCar My Classic Car Chop-Rebuild GermanTouring Cars(N) GermanTouring Cars(N) SEMALasVegas'PG' Superbik eFam. SuperbikeFam. ** "Dup/ex" 2003BenStiller. n 'PG-13' « * "That'sMy Boy"2012'R' « STARZ 300 408 300408 (5 50) *** "TheIdesof March" 2011 n 'R' « (7:35) ** "Click" 2006,ComedyAdamSandler. n 'PG-13' « ** "Real Steel" 2011,ActionHughJackman. n 'PG-13' « TMC 525 525 (6:05) ** "TheCanlervi//e Ghost" 1996 'PG' « (7:40) *"TheThreeMusketeers" 2011 Matthew MacFadyen.'PG-13' Dear LemonL. *WE 143 41 174118 Pretty Woman Zumba Dance Planet Earth Cyndi Lauper Mary Mary Onthe Brink Mary Mary Ericagives birth. Mary MaryRoadTest Mary MaryBacheloretteParty ENCR FMC FUEL GOLF
106401 306401(5:00) ** "Grumpy0/d Men"n
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(6:50) *"TheBenchwarmers" 2006 David Spade. (8:20) ** 'IMmbfedon" 2004Kirsten Dunst. 'PG-13' ** "Damisn: Omenii"1978, Horror WiliamHolden. 'R' « " M ark cf theDevi/" 1985 Dirk Benedict. 'NR
THE BULLETIN
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FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013
SUNDAY AFTERNOON 2/10/13 •
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This WeekWith George Stephanopou KATU Newsat 5 ABC World News 'PQ' cc (ABC) los (N) 'G' « (N)n cc Paid Program Hometime Side Trout TV 'G' The Outdoors- Castle TwowomenIDa body in a gar KTVZ man'G' (NBC) Porch 'G' « bage chute. n 'PG' « Exploration W/ Explore the North-Paid Program Paid Program CBS Evening KBNZ (CBS) Jarod Miller west News (N) cc JudgeJudy n Judge Joe Brown Inside Edition omg! Insider (N) KEZI 9 Newsat ABC World News KOHD gy gy gy gyNBA Basketball NBA Basketball Los AngelesLakersat MiamiHeat Fromthe AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami. (N) 'PQ' cc n 'PG' Weekend 'PG' cc (ABC) (Live) « 5:00 (N) « KFXO gi) (Ef @ (E) "Air Buddies"(2006,Comedy)Patrick Cranshaw,Voices ofMichael Clarke Dun- ** "Nightat the Museum:Battle ol lhe Smithsonian" (2009, Comedy)BenStiler. Say No to Botox! Portable Cook CSE MiamiMeltdownAjewelry heist 'PG' top'G' (FOX) can. Five talkingpuppiesmust savetheir kidnapped parents. Exhibits cometo life at oneof the world's largest museums. endsmmurder n 14 cc KOAB ~ gy ~ gy Shakespeare Uncovered Hamlet With ShakespeareUncovered Mysterious In Search of ShakespeareDeathof his BBC Newsnight European Journal Religion & Ethics To the Contrary Moyers & CompanyHigh-speedIntern 'G' cc n'G' cc David Tennant n 'PG' world of "TheTempest." 'PG' son. n (Part 3 of 4)'PG' cc Newsweekly With Bonnie (PBS) net access;VietnamWar. n 'G' FIS Alpine Skiing WorldChampionships Rugby USA Sevens (N)n (Live) « Paid Program Smarter Than a Private Practice Maya'sshockingan NewsChannel 8 at5PM(N) cc KGW From Schladming,Austria. n 6th Grader? no u ncement. n '14' « (NBC) Made in Hollywood **** "Glory" (1989,Historical Drama)MatthewBroderick, DenzelWashington, MorganFreeman.Col. ** "Charlotte Gray" (2001, Drama) Cate Blanchett, Billy Crudup. AScotswoman KTVZDT2 (ElQ Q Gc! Live Lifeand Win! Madein Holly 'PQ' cc (N) 'G' wood: Teen Robert G.Shaw trains, then leads anall-black Civil War regiment. « goes undercover as acourier in WWIIFrance. « (CW) Cook's Country Test Kitchen OPBPL 175 173 (11:33) Masterpiece classic Downton Abbeyn 'PG' Bo l d visions Growing Bolder My Generation Burt Wolf Stev es' Europe Globe Trekker n 'G' cc (DVS) KATU
Shipping Wars Shipping Wars
*A&E
Shipping Wars Shipping Wars
Shipping Wars Shipping Wars
30 28 1 8 32 Barter Kings Kings upfor a smal 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc fear. 'PG' cc Steveconfronts hisbiggest Barter aircraft. 'PG'Trading cc (11:55) TheWalking DeadRickand (12:57) TheWalking DeadSeedLori's (1:57) The Walking DeadSick Alife (2:57) TheWalking DeadAndreaand (3:56) The Walking DeadKiler Within (4:57) The Walking DeadRickstruggles 'AMC Carl find thefarm injeopardy. '14' pregnancy advances. '14' hangs in thebalance. '14' « Michonnefind survivors. '14' The group issevered.'14' after another loss. '14' *ANPL 68 50 26 38 WildKingdomn'G'cc Gator Boys n 'PG' cc Gator Boys n 'PG' cc North Woods Law n 'PG' cc North WoodsLaw n 'PG North WoodsLaw n 'PG BRAVO 137 4 4 The Face '14' Shahs of Sunset '14' Shahs of Sunset '14' Shahs of Sunset'14' Shahs of Sunset '14' Shahs of Sunset '14' ** "Overboard" (1987,Comedy) Goldie Hawn,Kurt Russell, Edward Herrmann.n CMT 190 32 42 53 (11:30) Hot20Countdownn'PG' cc My Big RedneckVacation n 'PG' Days of Thunder CNBC 54 36 40 52 Insanity! DropLbs! BlastFatin10! SuperFood WE N HairCare JohnDenver Paid Program Insane Bodies! Princess Kim n On the Money Dog Show CNN 55 38 35 48 YourMoney(N) CNN Newsroom(N) CNN Newsroom(N) CNN Newsroom(N) CNN Newsroom(N) Pictures Don't Lie ** "Legally Blonde" (2001)ReeseWitherspoon, LukeWilson. cc COM 135 53 135 47 (11:45) *** "C/ue/ess" (1995)Alicia Silverstone. (1:45) *** "FerrisBueller's DayOlf" (1986)MatthewBroderick, Alan Ruck. cc COTV 11 Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Joy of Fishing Adv Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW City Club of Central Oregon CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (11:00) Washington ThisWeek Newsmakers Washington ThisWeek Q&A 'DIS 87 43 14 39 A.N.T.Farm'G' A.N.T.Farm'G' A.N.T. Farm'G' Jessien « Jessie n « Jessie n « A.N.T. Farm'G' Dog With a Blog Jessie n « Sha k e It Up! 'G'Good-Charlie G ood-Charlie *DISC 156 21 16 37 Shipwreck Menn'14' cc Moonshiners n '14' cc Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Property Wars Property Wars *E! 136 2 5 Th e Soup '14' C h asing The F a s hion Police '14' Countdown to the RedCarpet: The Live From theRedCarpet: The 2013Grammy Awards (N) (Live)'PG' To Be Announced ESPN 21 23 22 23 College Basketball St. John's atSyracuse(N) (Live) Basketball SportsCenter (N)(Live) « NBA Basketball: Spurs atNets ESPN2 22 24 21 24 Women'sCollegeBasketball Women's College Basketball Kentucky at Vanderbilt (N)(Live) High School Basketball 30 for 30 cc ESPNC 23 25 123 25 (11:30) TheAnnouncement 'PG' y e ar of the Quarterback cc SEC Storied Content of Character 30 for 30 cc Black Magic (Part 1 of 2)cc ESPNN 24 63 124203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N) SportsNation E : 60 SportsCenter ©c *** "Big"(1988, Fantasy)TomHanks, Elizabeth Perkins ** "Rai singHelen"(2004,Comedy-Drama)KateHudson,JohnCorbett,JoanCusack. ** "Charlie Sf. C/oud" (2010) FAM 67 29 19 41 Honey-Blew FNC 57 61 36 50 Journal Editorial FOX News Ame rica's News Headquarters (N) Fox NewsSunday FOX Report(N) Huckabee(N) *FOOD 17762 98 44 Chef Wanted With Anne Burrell Bobby's Dinner Battle Chopped Fourfirefighters battle. Ch o pped Chop Through on 'G ChoppedChocolateChallenge'G' Mystery Diners Mystery Diners *** "Forgetting SarahMarshall" (2008,Romance-Comedy)JasonSegel, KristenBell. * "Grown Ups"(2010,Comedy)AdamSandler, KevinJames,Chris Rock. ** "The A-Team" (2010,Action) FX 131 HGTV 176 49 33 43 LoveltorListlt'G' « House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters HouseHunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters Castles on Camera *HIST 155 42 41 36 Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' LIFE 138 39 20 31 *** "Waiting lo Exhale" (1995,Comedy-Drama)Whitney Houston, Angela Bassett. « Murder on the13thFloor" (2012)SeanPatrick Thomas. « ** "TylerPerry's theFamilyThatPreys" (2008) MSNBC 59 59 128 51 MSNBCLive(N) Caught on Camera IntheAct Caught on Camera Caught on CameraFury Caught onCamera UpinFlames MTV 192 22 38 57 Ridiculousness (12:45) Ridiculousness n 'PG' Rid i culousnessRidiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness (4:15) Ridiculousness n 'PG' Ridiculousness Ridiculousness *** "Rugralsin Paris:TheMovie" (2000) n « NICK 82 46 24 40 Kung FuPanda SpongeBob S p ongeBob Sp o ngeBob The Fairly OddParents n 'Y' cc Monster High:Ghouls Ru/e" n lyanla, Fix My Life n '14' « lyanla, Fix My Life n 'PG' cc lyanla, Fix My Life n 'PG' cc lyanla, Frx MyLife n 'PG' acc OWN 161 103 31 103 TheBest of the Oprah Show 'PG' The Best of the Oprah Show 'PG ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Women's College Basketball Tulane atTulsa (N)(Live) Women's CollegeBasketball OklahomaState at Oklahoma(N) (Live) Tennis ChampionsSeries: AtlantaCourier vs. McEnroe SPIKE 132 31 34 46 BarRescueOntheRocksn'PG' Bar Rescue n 'PG' Bar RescueMurphy's Mess'PG' Bar Rescue n 'PG' Bar RescueBottomlessPit n 'PG' Bar Rescue Onthe Rocksn 'PG' *** "Star Trek lll:TheSearchfor Spock" (1984,Science Fiction) Wiliam Shatner. « ** "Star Trek V:TheFinal Frontier" (1989) Wiliam Shatner, LeonardNimoy. « SYFY 133 35 133 45 Sfargale: Ark ** Outlander TBN 205 60 130 King Is Coming KingdomConn. John Hagee MarriageToday Joseph Pri nce Jakes'G' Joyce Meyer Leading theWay TheBlessed Life JoelOsteen'PG' KerryShook Gregory Dickow T.D. Friends 'PG' cc Friends n 'PG' cc Friends n 'PG' cc Friends n 'PG' cc Friends 'PG' cc Friends 'PG' cc ** "Va/entine'sDay" (2010,Romance-Comedy)Jessica Alba, KathyBates,Jessica Biel. LosAngeles 'TBS 27 residents wend their wayinto andoutof romance. «(DVS) (12:45) *** "Norma Rse" (1979, Drama)Sally Field, RonLeibman. Unionman (2:45) *** "Cocoon" (1985,Fantasy)DonAmeche, Wilford Brimley,Brian Dennehy. Premiere. Florida *** "Hello, Dolly!"(1969) BarbraStrei TCM 101 44 101 29Men" "Those Magnificentfrom upNorthrecruits milworker downSouth. « retirees feel youngagain after swimmingamongalien pcds. sand Walter Matthau cc *TLC 178 34 32 34 Four Weddingsn'PG' « Borrowed, New Borrowed, New Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes Law & Order Murderprobecenters cn Law & Order Talking PointsSomeonein Law &Order ChurchPastor accusedof *** "Ocean's E/even" (2001, Comedy-Drama)George Clooney, MattDamon,Andy Garcia. A suave ** "National Trea*TNT ex-con assembles ateamto roba casino vault. «(DVS) sure"(2004) adopted baby. n '14' a crowdfires agun. n '14' murder. '14' «(DVS) *TOON 84 ** "Hoodwinked!" (2005)Voices ofAnneHathaway, GlennClose Tom & Jerry * * * " Robots" (2005) Voices ofEwanMcGregor, HalleBerry Open Season3" (2010) SteveSchirripa, CiaraBravo *TRAV 179 51 45 42 The Layover with Bourdain Hotel Impossible After Anthony Bi z arre Foods Celebrates'P 100 G Bizarre Foods America 'PG' « Biza rre Foods America Mia'Pmi G' Bizarre Foods America 'PG' « TVLND 65 47 29 35 Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland USA 15 30 23 30 NCISRecoiln'14' « NCIS Family n '14' cc NCIS Stakeout n '14' « NCIS Internal Affa>rs n '14' cc NCIS Theteamhunts a kiler. '14' NCIS JudgmentDay'14' « VH1 191 48 37 54 Love & Hip Hop Family Matters'14' Love & HipHopLife Support'14' L o ve & Hip Hop n '14' Mob Wives (N) n '14' cc Tiny Tonight! The VSpecial '14' B e s t Week Ever Jenny McCarthy ENCR FMC FUEL GOLF
106 401 306401(11:33) North andSouth 'PG' cc
(1:07) North andSouth n (Part 3 of 6)'PG' cc (2:40) North andSouth n (Part 4 of 6) 'PG' cc (4:14) North andSouth n (Part 5 of 6)'PG' cc *** "Menc/ Honor" 2000 'R ** "Invincible"2006, BiographyMarkWahlberg. 'PG' « 104 204104120 ** "The Da VinciCode"2006TomHanks. A religious mystery couldrockfoundations of Christianity. « 34 (11:00) UFC:Struve vs. Miocic UFC Insider U F C Primetime AMA Supercross Racing SanDiego FromQualcommStadium in SanDiego, Calif 28 301 27 301 Greatest GameEver Played U.S. OpenGolf Highlights Golf Central (N) PGA Tour Golf Champions:Allianz Championship,Final Round ** "TheLost Valentine" (2011) Jennifer LoveHewitt. 'PG' « HALL 66 33 175 33 (11:00)"TheMakeover" 'PG' « "BeMy Valentine" (2013)Wiliam Baldwin, Natalie Brown.'G' « TheMakeover (2013) PG « HBO 425 501 425501 (11:30) ** "50First Dates" 2004 I d ** "Fast Five" 2011 Vin Diesel. n 'PG-13' cc e n tity Thief R e a l Time With Bill Maher n 'MA' ** "Water for Elephants" 2011ReeseWitherspoon. n 'PG-13' « ** "Event Horizon"1997, ScienceFiction Laurence Fishburne. 'R *** SinCity IFC 105 10 5 S p ongeBob (12:45) ** "Lethal Weapon 4"1998, ActionMel Gibson, DannyGlover, Joe Pesci. 'R MAX 400 508 508 (11:15) ** "Fled"1996 'R' cc (12:50) **"TheBoneCollector"1999 Denzel Washington. 'R' cc (2:50) *** "Contagion" 2011Marion Cotillard. cc (4:40) **** "Titanic"1997 LeonardoDiCaprio. n NBCSN 27 58 30 209 Rugby Motorsports Hour '14 Luge Biathlon NHL Live (N) NHL Hockey: Devils atPenguins Wicked Tuna:Hooked Up(N) '14' NGC 157 15 7 L o ckdown '14' Russia's Toughest Prisons '14' W o r ld's Toughest Prisons '14' Inside: 21st Century Warship 'PG NTOON 89 115 189 115 Avatar: Air. Ava t ar: Air. T.U.F.F. Puppy T.U.F.F. Puppy Back, Barnyard Back, Barnyard Wild Grindersn PlanetSheenn T.U. F.F.Puppy T.U.F.F.Puppy Odd Parents O d d Parents OUTD 37 307 43 307 Buccaneers S p eargun Hunter Bottom Feeders Major LeagueFishing The Bass Pros Tracks, Africa Mathew's Dom Mathews TV T h e Crush Hunt Adventure Wildgame Nation *** "TheRock"1996, ActionSeanConnery, Nicolas Cage,EdHarris. n 'R *** "Muriel'sWedding" 1994 ToniCollette. n 'R SHO 500 500 (11:15) *** "TheOthers" 2001 (5:15)"TheWoma nin Black" 2012 SPEED 35 303125303 National Arenacross Series Racing AMA Supercross RacingSanDiego FromQualcommStadium in SanDiego,Calif SPEED Center (N) (Live) Dreams Dreams ***"21 JumpStreet"2012, ComedyJonahHill. n 'R' « STARZ 300 408 300408 (11:00) * "That's My Boy" 2012 (2:50) *** "Kill Bill:Vol. 2" 2004,Action UmaThurman. n 'R' « (5:10) ** "Click"2006 'PG-13 TMC 525 525 (11:40) "DearLemonLima"2009 (1:10) ** "The WalkingDead"1995 Allen Payne (2:40) *** "Tabloid"2010 n 'R' « (4:10) * "ALowDownDirty Shame"1994KeenenIvory Wayans. 'R *WE 143 41 174118 Mary Mary BoyfriendDrama Mary Mary All NlghtWrong Mary MaryAlanais getting married. Mary Mary TheShowdown Mary MaryPregnantPause Mary MarySoloOpportunity
THE BULLETIN «FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
PAGE 8 • TV
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America' sFunniestHomeVideos(N) Once UponaTimeCoraunleashesthe Revenge UnionAmandaandJack's (10:02) Revengefor Real Amilionaire KATU News at 11 (11:35) Castle 3XK 'PQ' cc rr 'PG' cc wedding. (N) n 'PG' « kidnapped by his protege. (N) (ABC) giant onStorybrooke. (N)'PG' (N)o cc Chris Hansen's investiga- Betty White's 2nd Annual 90th Birth. Saturday Night Live in the '80s: Lost and Found n '14' cc (11:08) NewsChan-Everybody Loves KTVZ O O O O NewsChannel 21NBC Nightly News Dateline NBC (NBC) at 6 (N) cc (N) cc tions. (N) o « daySpecraln PG cc nel 21 at11 Ra ymond Burn Notice RoughSeas Modern 60 Minutes The alQaedaattack in The 55th Annual GrammyAwards Festivities at StaplesCenter in LosAngeles honor excellence inthe recording industry. (N) n 'PG' « KOIN Local 6 SpeKBNZ Algeria. (N) n « cial Edition (CBS) pirates. '14' cc (10:02) Revengefor Real Amilionaire KEZI 9 Newsat Portable CookKOHD O O O O KEZI 9 News at KEZI 9 Newsat America's Funniest Home Videos (N) Once Upon aTime Coraunleashesthe Revenge UnionAmandaandJack's top 'G' rr 'PG' « wedding. (N) n 'PG' « 11:00 (N) cc (ABC) 6:00(N) « 6:30 (N) « giant onStorybrooke. (N)'PG' kidnapped by his protege. (N) The Big Bang The Big Bang KFXO I I IE} IE) IEI Bones Astormchaser mayhavebeen Bob's Burgers n The Cleveland The Simpsons (N) Bob's Burgers (N)Family Guy(N) American Dad MaxNewsChannel 21 Two and a Half (PA) 'PG' (FOX) murdered. n '14' cc Show (N) n '14' n 'PG' n14 n 14 Jets (N) '14' Fir st on FOX M e n '14' cc Theory n 'PG' Theory n '14' Antiques RoadshowBostonA1950 Himalaya With Michael Palin Leaping Masterpi eceClassicDowntonAbbey,Season3Changeaff ectsmanyatDownton Shirley Temple: America's Little Dar KOAB ~ gy gy gy OregonArt Beat Oregon Field rr 'G' cc Tigers, NakedNagas'G' cc ling n 'PG' cc (PBS) Guide « Selmer alto saxophone.'G' cc Abbey. (N) n 'PG' « NBC Nightly NewsThe Chris Mat- Dateline NBCChris Hansen's investiga- Betty White's 2nd Annual 90th Birth Saturday Night Live in the '80s: Lost and Found n '14' cc (11:08) NewsChan-(11:43) TheChris KGW thews Show 'G' tions. (N) n « daySpecraln PG « nel 8 at11 Mat t hews Show (NBC) (N) cc Are We ThereYet? Are WeThere Yet? TheKing of * * * " i gby Goes Down"(2002,Comedy)Kieran Culkin, SusanSarandon. A Seinfeld TheCafe Seinfeld TheTape Rules ofEngage. RulesofEngage. KTVZDT2 S Q B Q ( 4:00) ** 'PG' 'PG' 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc ment 'PG' ment 'PG' ioffe Gray" Queens rr 'PG' wealthy youth's upbringingleaves himscarred for life. « (CW) OPBPL 175 17 3 D o c Martinn'PG' cc Local Color 'PG' Pendleton Round-Up-West Moyers & Company n 'G' « American Experience Black-studentprotests in 1960and 1961. 'PG' KATU
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'14' *ANPL 68 50 26 38 WildWestAlaskan'14' cc Wild West Alaska n '14' cc Wild WestAlaska(N) n '14 Gator BoysScaredSnakeless'PG' Finding Bigfoot (N) n 'PG Gator BoysScaredSnakeless'PG BRAVO 13 The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta Shahs of Sunset (N)'14' The Real Housewives of Atlanta W h at Happens Housewives/Atl. 44 Sha hs of Sunset '14' CMT 190 32 42 53 (5:45) ** "Days of Thunder" (1990, Action) TomCruise, Robert Duvall. rr « (8:20) MyBigRedneckVacation (9:20) Swamp Pawnn (10:20) ** "Days ofThunder" (1990)TomCruise CNBC 54 36 40 52 (5:00)DogShow Dog Show136thWestminster KennelClubDogShow:Closing Night TRIA Zumba Fit CNN 55 38 35 48 Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom(N) Pictures Don't Lie Piers MorganTonight CNN Newsroom Pictures Don't Lie *** "/ Loveyou,Man"(2009)PaulRudd,JasonSegel.« Tosh.0 '14' Wor kaholics South Park 'MA' Futurama '14' COM 13 53 135 47 ** "OfficeSpace" (1999)RonLivingston, Jennifer Aniston. cc COTV 11 Talk of the Town Local issues. Des e rt Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Adv Journal Get Outdoors Visions ofNW The Yoga Show The Yoga Show Talk of the TownLocal issues. CSPAN 61 20 12 11 Prime Minister RoadtotheWhiteHouse Q&A Prime Minister Road to the White House W ashington ThisW eek 'DIS 87 43 14 39 Austin & Ally 'G' Jessie n « Good -Charlie G o od-Charlie Austin & Ally 'G' Austin & Ally 'G' Austin & Ally 'G' Austin & Ally 'G' Gravity Falls 'Y7' Austin I Ally 'G' Jessie n « Sha k e It Up! 'G' *DISC 15 21 16 37 Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars *E! 13 25 To B e Announced E! After Party (N)(Live) TBA Chasing The Kourtney and Kim TakeMiami '14' TBA ESPN 21 23 22 23 NBABasketbaffSanAntonioSpursatBrooklynNets Spo r tsCenter(N)(Live) cc SportsCenter cc SportsCenter cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 30for30cc 30 for 30 cc SportsCenter NBA Basketball SanAntonio Spursat Brooklyn Nets(N) « NBA Basketball ESPNC 23 25 123 25 (5:00) BlackMagic cc Black Magic Coaches,basketball playerswhoattended black colleges. (Part 2 of 2) « Black Magic (Part1 of 2) cc Black Magic H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124203 SportsCenter « SportsCenter « ESPNFCPress Pass **"Twilight" (2008,Romance)Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Billy Burke. ** "Twilight"(2008, Romance)Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Bily Burke FAM 67 29 19 41 (5:00) ** "Char//e St. Cloud" FNC 57 61 36 50 FoxNewsSunday Geraldo at Large(N) n 'PG' cc Huckabee Stossel Geraldo at Large n 'PG' cc Fox NewsSunday *FOOD 17 62 98 44 Diners, Drive Bobby's Dinner Battle Diners, Drive Rachael vs. GuyCook-Off Chopped Rachael vs.GuyCook-Off Iron Chef America (N) ** "KnightandDay"(2010, Action) TomCruise, CameronDiaz, Peter Sarsgaard ** "Knightand Day"(2010, Action) TomCruise. FX 131 (5:00) ** "TheA-Team"(2010,Action) LiamNeeson, BradleyCooper. HGTV 17 49 33 43 House Hunters Hunters Int'I H ou s e Hunters Hunters Int'I Scoring the Deal Scoring the Deal Hawaii Life 'G' Hawaii Life 'G' House Hunters Renovation 'G House Hunters Hunters Int'I *HIST 15 42 41 36 Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Ax Men Shelby'sNewToy'14 Ax Men (N) '14' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc (11:02) AmericaUnearthed 'PG LIFE 13 39 20 31 "Family Thatprsys" "TwistofFaith" (2013)Toni Braxton, David Julian Hirsh. 'PG' « A Mother's Nightmare" (2012,Suspense) AnnabethGish. '14' « (11:02)"Twisto/ Faith" (2013)'PG MSNBC 59 59128 51 SexSlaves: UK cc Lockup Special Investigation Lockup Special Investigation Lockup Special Investigation Meet the Press cc MTV 192 22 38 57 Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Buckwild n '14' Buckwild n '14 BUCKWILD n '14 BUCKWILD n '14 Buckwild n '14' Snooki NICK 82 46 24 40 MonsterHigh "Fairly OddMovie" SpongeBob * "TheLast Airbender" (2010)NoahRinger, DevPatel. n cc See DadRun n The Nanny 'PG' Friends n 'PG' (11:33) Friends lyanla, Fix My Life n '14' cc Oprah's Lifeclass n 'PG' « Oprah's Lifeclass (N) n 'PG' Oprah's L>feclass n Oprah's Lifeclass n 'PG' « OWN 161103 31 103 lyanla, Fix MyLifen'PG' « ROOT 20 45 28* 26 GameTim e B e nsinger Col l ege Basketball Washington at USC(N) (Live) Action Sports World Tour College Basketball Washingtonat USC SPIKE 132 31 34 46 BarRescuen'PG' BarRescue Murphy'sMess'PG' Bar Rescue n 'PG' Bar Rescue Bikini Bust n 'PG' Bar RescueTurtle on Its Back 'PG' (11:01) CarLot Rescue(N) n 'PG' SYFY 13 35 133 45 (5:30) ** "Outlander" (2008)JamesCaviezel, Ron Perlman. « Battlestar Galactica: Blood & ChromePilot (N) Being Human Being Human TBN 205 60 130 Believeryoice C reflo Dollar 'G' "One NightWiththe King" (2006, Drama)Tiffany Dupont, LukeGoss,JohnRhys-Davies. Michael O'Brien Valentine's Spe T h e Well « Prai se the Lord 'Y' « ** "Fatherofthe BridePari/I"(1995) SteveMartin, DianeKeaton. Dualpregnan- ** "The WeddingDale" (2005) DebraMessing. A woman (9:45) **"The WeddingDale" (2005)Debra Messing, DermotMulroney. A ** "She's the 'TBS cies play havocwith an anxious family man. « brings a maleescort to her sister's wedding. woman brings amaleescort to her sister's wedding. «(DVS) Man"(2006) « (5:00) *** "Hello, Dolly!" (1969,Musical Comedy)Barbra (7:45) **** "ZorbatheGreek" (1964, Drama)Anthony Quinn, AlanBates, IrenePapas.A Greek (10:15) *** "TheFlight o/ the Phoenix" (1965,Adventure) JamesStewart. Crash TCM Streisand, Walter Matthau. cc laborer takesthe heir to amineunder his wing. « survivors build aplanefrom thewreckage. « *TLC 17 34 32 34HereComesHoney BooBoo' PG' Here Comes HoneyBoo Boo 'PG' Here Comes Honey Boo Boo'PG' Gypsy Sisters HighwaytoHell'14' Gypsy Sis ters(N)n '14'« Gypsy Sisters Highwayto Hell '14 (5:30) ** "National Treasure" (2004,Adventure) NicolasCage, HunterGomez. A ** "Sherlock Holmes" (2009,Action) RobertDowneyJr., JudeLaw,Rachel McAdams.The detective ** "Sherlock Holmes"(2009,Action) RobertDowneyJr *TNT man tries to steal theDeclaration of Independence. « and his astutepartner face astrange enemy. «(DVS) Jude Law,RachelMcAdams. «(DVS) *TOON 84 *** "ic eAge"(2002)VoicesofRayRomano,JohnLeguizamo Incredible Crew Looney Tunes The Oblongs '14' King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14 *TRAV 17 51 45 42 Bizarre Foods America Austin 'PG' Bizarre Foods America 'PG' « R V 20 13 (N) 'G' « Extreme Rys 'G' « Extreme Rys 'G' « Extreme RVs G cc PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Hot in Cleveland Happil y Divorced Love-Raymond King ofQueens TVLND 65 47 2935 Roseanne' ** "It's Complicated" (2009) USA 15 30 23 30 NCISMurderofanavalofficer.'14' N C ISAgentAfloatn'14'« NCIS Amissing staff sergeant. 'PG' NCIS UnderCovers n 'PG' cc NCIS Boxed In n 'PG' « VH1 191 48 37 54 MobWivesn'14'cc Mob Wives BadBoys n '14' cc Mob Wives n '14' cc MobWwesn 14 cc Mob Wives n '14' cc Jenny McCarthy Mob Wives '14' ENCR FMC FUEL GOLF
*"Jackand Jill"2011AdamSandler. rr 'PG' « 106 401 306401(5:50) North andSouth n (Part 6 of 6)'PG' cc (9:05) *"TheBenchwarmers" 2006David Spade. (10:35) *** "AnalyzeThis"1999Robert DeNiro. ***"Men o/Honor"2000, DramaRobert De Niro, CubaGooding Jr. 'R' « **"Invincible"2006, BiographyMarkWahlberg. 'PG' « 104 204104120(5:00) *** "Menoi Honor" 2000Robert DeNiro 34 The Ultimate Fighter n The Ultimate Fighter n '14 UFC: Johnsonvs. Dodson UFC Unleashed The Ultimate Fighter n 28 301 27 301 PGATour Golf PGA Tour Golf AT8T PebbleBeachNational Pro-Am, Final RoundFromPebble Beach, Calif. «
Golf Central (N)
HALL 66 33 175 33 (5:00)"TheMakeover" (2013) 'PG' "AccidentallyinLove"(2010)Jennie Garth, Ethan Erickson.'PG' « Be My Valentine"(2013)WilliamBaldwin, Natalis Brown. 'G' « Frasier'G' « Fr a sier rr'PG HBO 425501 425501(4:30) FastFive Girls (N) n 'MA' Enlightened 'MA' Girls 'MA' cc E n l ightened 'MA' Girls 'MA' « Enl i ghtened 'MA' (6:45) ** "Battleship" 2012,ScienceFiction TaylorKitsch, Rihanna. n 'PG-13' cc IFC 1 0 1 0 5 (5:30) *** "SinCity" 2005, CrimeDramaJessica Alba. 'R Portlandia '14' Portlandia '14' * * * "Evil Dead 2"1987 BruceCampbell. 'R (10:45) ** "TheFaculty" 1998Jordana Brewster. ** i Rounders"1998,DramaMatt Damon,JohnTurturro. n 'R' cc ** "Sherlock Ho/mes: AGameo/ Shadows" 2011 n 'PG-13' cc MAX 400508 508 (4:40) **** "Titanic"1997 LeonardoDiCaprio. n 'PG-13' cc NBCSN 27 58 30209 NHL Hockey:Devils atPenguins NHL Live (N) F i ght Night Fut **** "Brian's Song" (1971)JamesCaan. 'PG **** ngrian's Song" (1971)JamesCaan. 'PG World of Adventure Sports n 'PG' Wicked Tuna: Hooked Up'14 Inside: 21st Century Warship 'PG' NGC 157 157 W i cked Tuna Fish Fight (N) '14 Mudcats MidnightMonsters(N) '14 Wicked TunaFishFight '14 Mudcats MidnightMonsters'14 NTOON 89 115189115 Wild Grinders n Wild Grinders n Planet Sheenn Planet Sheenn Robot, Monster Odd Parents SpongeBob S p ongeBob Legend-Korra Legend-Korra Dragon Ball Z I ron Man: Armor
OUTD 37 307 43 307 Realtree Outdoor Truth Hunting Friends of NRA Bone Collector Spring Expedition Saf. Hunt Adventure Realtree Outdoor WildgameNation Steve's Outdoor Mathews TV W e st. Extremes SHO 500 500 Shameless n 'MA' « House of Lies Californication Shameless (N) n 'MA' « House of Lies Californication Shameless n 'MA' cc (5:15)"TheWomanin Black" 2012 SPEED 35 303125 303 Translogic The List My Classic Car Car Crazy 'G' SPEEDCenter Dreams Dreams Translogic The List Unique Whips '14' * "That'sMyBoy" 2012,ComedyAdamSandler. n 'R' e«s *** "21 Jump Street" 2012,ComedyJonahHill. n 'R' « STARZ 300 408 300 408 (5:10) ** "Click" 2006'PG-13 Spartacus: War of the Damnedn ** "Brffno" 2009SachaBaron Cohen. rr 'R' « * "TheThree Musketeers" 2011 MatthewMacFadyen. 'PG-13' « TMC 525 525 (5:50) ** "Real Steel" 2011,ActionHughJackman. O 'PG-13' « WalkingDead *WE 14 41 174118 Mary Mary Fight of a Lifetime Mary MaryEssenceof theConilict M ary Mary Solo Opportunity Mary Mary Fight of aLifetime Mary MaryEssenceof the Conflict M ary Mary Bachelorette Party
THE BULLETIN
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TV • PAGE 9 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary.
FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013
WEEKDAY MORNING s
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4:30 KATUNewsThis Mornin Good Mornin America AM Northwest The View Live! With Kell and Michael KATU NewsChannel 21 atSunrise Toda Toda Toda Live! With Kell and Michael KTVZ Let's Make aDeal KOIN Local 6 at6am CBS This Mornin The Price Is Ri ht The Youn and the Restless KBNZ KEZI 9 NewsThis Mornin Good Mornin America Rachael Ra The View Katie KOHD First Business A Da NewsChannel 21 atSunrise The Jeff Probst Show The Dr. OzShow Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram KFXO I Varied Pro rams Wild Kratts Curious Geor e Cat in the Hat Super Wh ! Din osaur Train Sesame Street Daniel Ti er Sid the Science WordWorld Ba r ne, Friends KOAB NewsChannel 8 atSunrise Toda The Jeff Probst Show KGW The Dail Buzz HouseofPa ne HouseofPa ne TheSteveW ilkosShow The Jerem K le Show The Wend Williams Show TVZDT2 OPBPL 175 173 Heartland Gre ener World Newsline Sit and Be Fit Varied Pro rams *A&E 13028 18 32 Varied Pro rams Boun Hunter Bount Hunter Boun Hunter Varied Pro rams Criminal Minds Varied Pro rams Criminal Minds Varied Pro rams CSI: Miami Varied Pro rams Save-CarMD Paid Pro ram Roasts Eas Nopalea with Protect Famil Sa No to Pain Comic Men *** Rud 1993 SeanAstin. A workin -class teen dreamsof admission toNotre Dame. Paid Pro ram No alea with Save-CarMD NorrisG m Cind Crawford Dee Clean Three Stoo es Three Stoo es * * * Thunderbolt and Li htfoot1974 Clint Eastwood. « Wei ht Loss Drop Lbs! Nopalea with Look Youn er Cind Crawford Sa No to Pain *** Cool Runnin s1993 Leon,Dou E. Dou, Malik Yoba. cc ***Groundho Da 1993 « AMC 10240 39 Cooktop Paid Pro ram Dancer's Bod Nopalea with Cind Crawford Comic Men Comic Men *** MadMax Be ond Thunderdome1985 MelGibson.« Th Paid Pro ram Montel Williams Teeter Han U s NorrisG m No alea with Battle Hair Loss Debb Boone 15 * Pla It to the Bone1999,Comed-DramaAntonio Banderas, Wood Harrelson. « *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Oran utan Isle Chim Eden Bi CatDia Bi Cat Diar The Crocodile Hunter Wild Kin dom I Shouldn't Be Alive Animal Co s Houston Varied Pro rams BRAVO 137 44 CMT Music CMT Music CMT Music CMT Music Va r ied Pro rams CMT Music CMT Music CMT 19032 42 53 Squawk onthe Street Fast Mone Halftime Report Power Lunch Street Si ns CNBC 54 36 40 52 CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Varied Pro rams CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN 55 38 35 48 Varied Pro rams Paid Pro ram Varied Pro rams Entoura e Com ed CentralDail Show Col bert Re ort Scrubs Scrubs COM 13553 35 47 The Yo a Show The Yo a Show Desert Cookin Ore on The Yo a Show The Yo a Show Bod Workout Bod Workout Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram COTV Public Affairs Varied Pro rams Public Affairs Varied Pro rams CSPAN 61 20 12 (4:00) Washin ton Journal 'DIS 87 43 14 39 Little Einsteins Chu in ton Micke Mouse Never Land Micke Mouse Micke Mouse Doc McStuffins Varied Pro rams MickeMouse Octonauts Gas ard & Lisa Octonauts *DISC 156 21 16 37 Varied Pro rams Creflo Dollar Varied Pro rams James Robison Jo ce Me er V a ried Pro rams I Almost) Got Awa With It Ni htmare NextDoor I(Almost) Got Awa With It *El Varied Pro rams E! News Varied Pro rams 136 25 S ortsCenter S ortsCenter S ortsCenter S ortsCenter S ortsCenter S ortsCenter ESPN 21 23 22 23 Mike and Mike in the Mornin First Take Varied Pro rams First Take Varied Pro rams Numbers Never Mike and Mike ESPN2 22 24 21 24 Colle e Basketball Varied Pro rams Basketball Var i ed Pro rams Colle e Basketball ESPNC 23 25 23 25 NB A Toni ht Mike and Mike in the Mornin Varied Pro rams SVP & Russillo ESPNN 24 63 24203 Interru tion Jo ce Me er V a ried Pro rams Bo Meet World Bo Meet World Bo Meet World Bo Meet World Bo Meet World 700/Interactive The 700Club Gilmore Girls FAM 67 29 19 41 America's Newsroom Happenin Now America Live FNC 57 61 36 50 *FOOD 17762 98 44 Varied Pro rams Paid Pro ram Varied Pro rams Good Eats Unw r a ed Varied Pro rams Movie Varied Pro rams Movie FX 131 Varied Pro rams HGTV 176 49 33 43 'HIST 15542 41 36 Varied Pro rams Teeter Han U s Varied Pro rams Varied Pro rams Balancin Act Varied Pro rams Will & Grace W ill & Grace F r asier Frasier Frasier Frasier Old Christine O ld Christine LIFE 138 39 20 31 The Dail Rundown Jansin and Co. MSNBCLive NOWWith Alex Wa ner Andrea Mitchell Reports News Nation MSNBC 59 59 128 51 MTV Jams AMTV AMTV Varied Pro rams MTV 19222 38 57 Full House Fu l l House S on eBob S o n eBob S on eBob M a x & Rub Ma x & Rub Do r a Ex lorer D ora Ex lorer Team Umizoomi Bubble Gu ies Bubble Gu ies NICK 82 46 24 40 Rachael Ra The Best of the OprahShow The Best of the OprahShow Dr. Phil Dr. Phil OWN 16110331 103 The Nate Berkus Show Varied Pro rams Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram Varied Pro rams Paid Pro ram Varied Pro rams Workout Dan Patrick V a r ied Pro rams ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Varied Pro rams Paid Pro ram Varied Pro rams SPIKE 13231 34 46 Varied Pro rams SYFY 13335 133 45 Creflo Dollar J o hn Ha ee Jose h Prince This Is Your Da Believeryoice Varied Pro rams Behind Scenes Varied Pro rams James Robison Toda TBN 05 60 130 *TBS 16 27 Married... With Married... With M Name Is Earl M Name Is Earl Fresh Prince F resh Prince H ouse of Pa ne Meet, Browns Fresh Prince F r esh Prince E n a ement E na ement 28 *** Swin Time 1936 FredAstaire. «(DVS) **** The Informer1935 Victor McLa len. « Alice Adams (5:30)***FI in DowntoRio (:45) *** The Lost Patrol 1934Victor McLa len. 5:15 *** Sus icion1941 15 *** Joan of Paris1942, WarMichele Mor an. « 15 *** The Fallen S arrow1943, M ste John Garfield. « 15 NonebuttheLonel Heart *** The Farmer's Dau hter 1947,Comed Loretta Youn . m ***TheBachelorandtheBobb -Soxer1947,Comed Ca Grant *** Joan of Arc 1948 « TCM 101 44 10129 W (5:00) *** Sister Kenn *** The Sandpiper1965 Elizabeth Ta lor, RichardBurton. « ** Ice Station Zebra1968RockHudson.An Americansub searchesfor a downedSoviet satellite Th The Americanization of Emil as 15 ** When Ladies Meet1933AnnHardin 45 **** Mutin on the Bount 1935 CharlesLau hton, Clark Gable. «DVS **** The Great Zie feld 1936Wiliam Powell, Luise Rainer. « *TLC 17834 32 34 19 Kids-Count 19 Kids.Count Bab 's First Da Rm-Multiples A Bab Sto A B a b Stor A Bab Sto A B a b Stor Varied Pro rams Sa Yes, Dress Sa Yes, Dress *TNT 17 26 15 27 Smallville Charmed Charmed Supernatural Supernatural Supernatural *TOON 84 L oone Tunes Hero:108 Ben1 0 Be bladeMetl Pokemon BW Movie Varied Pro rams Johnn Test S c o ob Scoob Loone Tunes *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Varied Pro rams Paid Pro ram Varied Pro rams Vacatio nHomes VacationHomes Varied Pro rams Varied Pro rams Murder, SheWrote Dick Van D ke Dick Van D ke I Love Luc I Lo ve Luc And G riffith An d Griffith TVLND 65 47 29 35 Varied Pro rams USA 15 30 23 30 Jump Start Jump Start Jump Start Varied Pro rams Bi Mornin BuzzLive Varied Pro rams VH1 19148 37 54 4:50 Movie :40 Movie Varied Pro rams ENCR 106401306401 FMC 104204104120 5:00 Movie V a ried Pro rams :25 Movie Movie Varied Pro rams FUEL 34 Varied Pro rams Mornin Drive Varied Pro rams GOLF 28 301 27 301 Mornin Drive HALL 66 33 175 33 I Love Luc I Lo ve Luc I Lo v e Luc I Lo v e Luc Gol d en Girls G o l den Girls G o lden Girls G o l den Girls H o me & Famil (4:55) TheCrush (:25) * S t. Bilko 1996 SteveMartin. o « *Bi Mommas: Like Father, Like Son2011n Wrath-Titans (:45) * This MeansWar 2012,Action ReeseWitherspoon. o « Battle for Tobacco Road:Duke T h e Curious Case of Curt Flood n « ** Ho 2011 Voices ofJamesMarsden. n s«s Identit Thief * * M onte Carlo 2011 SelenaGomez. n « Don't Divorce : 1 5 * * Antitrust 2001, Sus ense R anPhilli e. rr « HBO 25501425501 W 15 ** How to Eat Fried Worms2006 n 15 ** Battleshi 2012 Ta lor Kitsch, AlexanderSkars rd. n cc Th ** 50 First Dates 2004AdamSandler. n « Cinema Verite 2011Diane Lane. n cc Dia of Wimp -Rodrick (:45) * Wrath of the Titans 2012 SamWorthin ton. n « 5:40 *** The Lovin Stor ** Gettin Even With Dad1994,Comed Macaula Culkin. n « *** Chronicle 2012DaneDeHaan. n « ** Heart and Souls 1993Robert Downe Jr IFC 105 105 4:45 Movie V a ried Pro rams 15 Movie Var i edPro rams (5:35) **** In the Heat of the Ni ht 1967 cc ** Sister Act1992 WhoopiGoldber . rr « * Reach the Rock1998 cc (:10) ** Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit1993WhoopiGoldber . n 5:35 ** The Best Man1998, InesSastre 20 ** The Love Letter 1999Kate Ca shaw 8:50 *** Rio 2011 Voices ofAnneHathawa . n ** Su erman III 1983Christo her Reeve. n MAX 00508 508 W 5:30 The Sha e of Thin s 2003 : 1 0 * * The Great Outdoors1988 Dan Akro d 40 *** Tinker Tailor Soldier S 2011 Ga Oldman, Kath Burke. n cc 10:50 Somethin Borrowed 2011 **Anastasia1997VoicesofMe R an.n (:35) *** Dick Trac 1990 WarrenBeat, Madonna. n « (:20) * Glitter 2001, Drama MariahCare . n « (:05) * Picture Perfect1997 MAX on Set n : 2 0 * * Cloak and Da er 1984 n « :05 **Welcome to Moose ort2004GeneHackman.n « ***Harr PotterandtheDeathl Hallows: Part22011n « NBCSN 27 58 30 209 The DanPatrick Show The Box Score Varied Pro rams Varied Pro rams Alaska State Troopers Border Wars Taboo NGC 157 157 I n vader ZIM Ad v en./Jimm A d ven./Jimm A d ven./Jimm P l anet Sheen I nvader ZIM In v ader ZIM Ba ck, Barn ard Back, Barn ard Planet Sheen T.U.F.F. Pu NTOON 89 115189115 Invader ZIM OUTD 37 307 43 307 Varied Pro rams Paid Pro ram Varied Pro rams The RamenGirl Gentle Ben: Terror on the Mountain 2003 rr « The Holl wood Complex2010,Documenta rr « That Guy... Who WasThat in Thing rr « ** Down in the Delta 1998 5:25 **Smile2005n « 15 *** Tex1982, Drama Matt Dillon, Jim Metzler, Me Till . « * The Nutcracker: The Untold Sto 2010 Elle Fannin . n « 10:50 Casadelos Bab s2003 5:30 *** Mrs. Dallowa 199 7 :15 * * * The Others 2001, Sus enseNicole Kidman. n as ** Touchback 2011,DramaBrian Presle, Kurt Russell 05 Mandela and deKlerk1997 SHO 00 500 Mad-Mambo *** The Mi ht 1998, DramaSharon Stone (:20) The Last Pla at Shea2010 n « (:45)**Greed 1994, Comed Michael J.Fox, KirkDou las. n « (:45) Ondinen 5:25 *** Ransom1996Mel Gibson. n « ** That Darn Cat1997 Christina Ricci. n « Fadeto Black2006,M ste Dann Huston,PazVe a.n « 10:50 Casa de los Bab s 2003 SPEED 35 303125303 Pim M Ride P i m M Ride P ass Time Pass Time Pa i d Pro ram V aried Pro rams NASCAR Racin Varied Pro rams The10 STARZ 00408300408 (5:50) Movie V a ried Pro rams Movie Varied Pro rams Free Mone :35 **Slee over2004, Comed Alexa Ve a. n 05 **Barn ard: TheOri inalPart Animals 35 *** Meek's Cutoff 2010,Western Michelle Wiliams. n « Smoke Si nals Tale-Sweene: 3 5 Cool Do 2010, DramaJacksonPace. n cc 05 **Sioux Cit 1994, DramaLouDiamondPhilli s, r1 « 9:50 ** Craz Jones 2000JoeAaron. n 25 Le enda TMC 25 (5:40) Les Formidables 2006 Joon -HoonPark. « 525 (:45) ** The Canterville Ghost1996 PatrickStewart. rr « (:20) *** Dead A ain1991KennethBrana h. n (:10) A Grandpafor Christmas r1 ** ComebackSeason2006Ra Liotta.n 40 Princess and thePon 2011 FionaPerr . n 15 *** Meek's Cutoff 2010 Th DeadA ainn *** Salesman 1969JamieBaker.« 5:35 ** Shade 2003Stuart Townsend.n * Waitin for Forever 2010RachelBilson.n 15 * The ThreeMusketeers2011MatthewMacFad en. n m 15 ** Wild Tar et 2010 n *WE 143 41 174118 Varied Pro rams Roseanne Ros eanne Ros e anne Ros e anne 20/ 2 0 on WE 20/20 on WE The Locator T h e Locator
THE BULLETIN 0 FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
PAGE 10 • TV
WEEKDAY AFTERNOON
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The Ricki Lake Show The Dr. OzShow KATU NewsFirst at Four KATU Newsat 5 World News Anderson Live Da sofourLives Dr. Phil The Dr. OzShow The Ellen DeGeneresShow News Ni htl News KTVZ Kristi Miller Bol d/Beautiful The Talk Little House on the Prairie And Griffith A n d Griffith I Love Luc I Lo ve Luc News Evenin News KBNZ The Chew General Hos ital Jud e J. Brown Jud e J. Brown Katie Jud e Jud Jud e Jud KEZI 9 News World News KOHD TMZ Extra America's Funniest HomeVideos The Doctors The Ricki Lake Show The People's Court Friends Friends KFXO Varied Pro rams Charlie Rose Clifford-Do Bo b the BuilderMartha Speaks Cat in the Hat Arthur WordGirl Wild Kratts Electric Comp KOAB NewsChannel 8 Be a Millionaire Da sofourLives Katie The Ellen DeGeneresShow Your Four O'Clock News NewsChannel8 Ni htl News KGW Varied Pro rams Paid Pro ram Varied Pro rams TheSteveW ilkosShow The Bill Cunnin ham Show Meet, Browns Meet, Browns We ThereYet? We ThereYet? TVZDT2 OPBPL 175 173 Varied Pro rams Tavis Smile Journal Ni htl Business PBS NewsHour Varied Pro rams *A&E 13028 18 32 CSI: Miami Va r ied Pro rams Criminal Minds Varied Pro rams Criminal Minds The First 48 Varied Pro rams The First 48 V a ried Pro rams The First 48 V a ried Pro rams *** Jerr Ma uire1996TomCruise. Anattack of consciencechan es anL.A.sports a ent's life **MissCon enialit 2000,Comed SandraBullock,MichaelCaine. « Robin Hood Thunder-Li ht * * Robin Hood: Men in Ti hts1993, Comed Ca Elwes, Richard Lewis. « *** ShanhaiNoon2000,Comed JackieChan,OwenWilson,Luc Liu.« Juman'i 1995 'AMC 10240 39 ** Juman'i 1995, Fantas RobinWiliams, BonnieHunt, KirstenDunst. « CSI: Miami Chi /Tuckrr cc CSI: Miami Reali star's murder. (11:00) *** Groundho Da 1993 Bill Murra h Md Max-Thndr ** * Mad Max 2: The RoadWarrior 1981 MelGibson. « *** MadMax1979,Science Fiction MelGibson,Joanne Samuel. *Catwoman 2004,Action Halle Ber . « *** Cri mson Tide1 995,Sus enseDenzelWashin ton,GeneHackman.« * Catwoman2004, Action HalleBer, Ben'amin Bratt. « ** Kin Arthur 2004 CliveOwen. « *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Too Cute! Animal Co s Houston Animal Co s Houston Pit Bulls and Parolees The Haunted Confessions: AnimalHoardin Varied Pro rams BRAVO 137 44 Varied Pro rams 28 Roseanne 06 Roseanne :44 Reba CMT 19032 42 53 Closin Bell Closin Bell With Maria Bartiromo Fast Mone Varied Pro rams Mad Mone The Kudlow Report Varied Pro rams CNBC 54 36 40 52 The Situation Room Erin Burnett OutFront Anderson Cooper360 CNN 55 38 35 48 (11:00) CNN Newsroom Varied Pro rams Movie Varied Pro rams Comed Central:22 Futurama 4:53 Futurama Alwa s Sunn COM 13553 13547 Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram Paid Pro ram J o of Fishin A d v Journal G e t Outdoors V isions of NWCit Edition Pa i d Pro ram COTV Public Affairs Capitol Hill Hearin s CSPAN 61 20 12 (9:00) Public Affairs 'DIS 87 43 14 39 Little Einsteins Little Einsteins Varied Pro rams Gas ard & Lisa Phineas, Ferb Varied Pro rams Gravit Falls V a ried Pro rams *DISC 156 21 16 37 FBI: Criminal Pursuit Auction Kin s Auction Kin s M hBusters V a ried Pro rams *El E! News Sex and the Cit Sex and the Cit Sex and the Cit Sex and the Cit Sex and the Cit Varied Pro rams Kourtne and Kim TakeMiami Ko u rtne and Kim Take Miami 136 25 Outside Lines First Take NFL Live Around the Horn Interru tion S or tsCenter Colle e Basketball ESPN 21 23 22 23 Baseball Ton. Dan Le Batard SportsNation NFL32 Around the Horn Interruption Basketball Var i ed Pro rams ESPN2 22 24 21 24 Basketball Var i ed Pro rams Basketball Var i ed Pro rams Boxin Boxin Varied Pro rams ESPNC 23 25 123 25 S ortsCenter S ortsCenter S ortsNation V a ried Pro rams S ortsCenter S ortsCenter ESPNN 24 63 124203 S ortsCenter Full House Fu l l House Ful l House Ful l House Reba Reba Reba Reba That '70s Show That '70s Show That'70s Show That'70s Show FAM 67 29 19 41 Studio B With ShepardSmith You r World With Neil Cavuto The Five Special Report With Bret Baier FOX Report With ShepardSmith The O'Reill Factor FNC 57 61 36 50 *FOOD 17762 98 44 Best Dishes B'foot Contessa Varied Pro rams Dollar Dinners Secrets 30-Minute Meals Giada at Home Giada at Home B'foot Contessa B'foot Contessa Best Dishes Varied Pro rams 11:00) Movie Varied Pro rams Movie Varied Pro rams How I Met Varied Pro rams Two/Half Men FX 131 House Hunters Hunters Int'I Varied Pro rams HGTV 176 49 33 43 'HIST 15542 41 36 Varied Pro rams Old Christine Old Christine H ow I Met How I Met Gre ' s Anatom Varied Pro rams Gre 's Anatom Varied Pro rams Movie Varied Pro rams LIFE 138 39 20 31 TheC cle Martin Bashir Hardball With Chris Matthews Pol i ticsNation Hardball With Chris Matthews The Ed Show MSNBC 59 59 128 51 Varied Pro rams MTV 19222 38 57 TeamUmizoomi Max &Rub Dora Ex lorer Go, Die o,Go! S on eBob S on eBob S on eBob O dd Parents Odd Parents S on eBob S on eBob S on eBob NICK 82 46 24 40 Dr. Phil Varied Pro rams OWN 16110331 103 Dr. Phil 11:00 The DanPatrick Show Varied Pro rams ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Varied Pro rams SPIKE 13231 34 46 Movie Varied Pro rams SYFY 13335 133 45 The 700Club John Ha ee V a ried Pro rams Praise the Lord Varied Pro rams Potter's Touch Behind Scenes Varied Pro rams TBN 05 60 130 *TBS 16 27 Accordin -Jim Love-Ra mond American Dad American Dad Wipeout Friends Friends Friends Friends Cou ar Town Kin of Queens 28 *** Sta e Door 1937Katharine Hepburn *** Little Women 1933 (11:45) *** Alice Adams 1935 « (:15) *** Vivacious Lad 1938, Comed Gin er Ro ers. « 11:15 None but the Lonel Heart : 1 5 * * * * The Enchanted Cotta e1945 Robert Youn . «DVS 15 **** The Ma nificent Ambersons1942 Jose h Cotten **** C>bzen Kane 1941 *** Mi ht Joe Youn 1949Ter Moore, BenJohnson. cc *** The Window1949 Bobb Driscoll, cc **** I Remember Mama1948 TCM 101 44 10129 W 11:00) *** Joan of Arc 1948 In rid Ber man h *** The Garden of Allah 1936 **** Gone With the Wind (:15) **** A Star Is Born 1937Janet Ga nor, Fredric March. « (:15) **** The Prisoner of Zenda 1937RonaldColman. « 10:00 The Great Zie feld1936 15 *** Bo s Town1938, Drama S encer Trac . «DVS **** Ninotchka1939 GretaGarbo, Mel n Dou las. «DVS *** The Cham 1931 « *TLC 17834 32 34 What Not to Wear A Bab Sto A B a b Stor Varied Pro rams *TNT 17 26 15 27 Bones Bones Bones Bones Varied Pro rams *TOON 84 Loone Tunes Loone Tunes Tom 8 Jerr Va r ied Pro rams Tom and Jerr Scoob -Doo Jo h nn Test Joh nn Test Varied Pro rams Adventure Time *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Varied Pro rams Bourdain: NoReservations Varied Pro rams Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food Man v. Food And Griffith A n dGriffith Gu n smoke Gunsmoke Bonanza And Griffith A n dGriffith An d Griffith An d Griffith TVLND 65 47 29 35 Varied Pro rams Law & Order: S ecial Victims Unit Varied Pro rams USA 15 30 23 30 Varied Pro rams VH1 19148 37 54 10:05 Movie Varied Pro rams ENCR 106401306401 FMC 104204104120 Movie Varied Pro rams:14 Movie Va r ied Pro rams Movie Varied Pro rams FUEL 34 Varied Pro rams Golf Central V a r ied Pro rams GOLF 28 301 27 301 PGA Tour Golf Varied Pro rams HALL 66 33 175 33 Marie Varied Pro rams Mad Hun r Ma d Hun Ha Da s Ha Da s Ha Da s Ha Da s Ha Da s Ha Da s Brad Bunch B r ad Bunch (11:30) * Wrath of the Titans Cinema Verite 2011DianeLane. n cc *** Chronicle 2012DaneDeHaan. rr « (:15) * DreamHouse 2011 Daniel Crai, Naomi Watts. rr « Monte Carlo n * * Journe 2: The M sterious Island 2012n 15 ***Sin YourSon 2011, Documenta n « *** The Girl2012Tob Jones.n « The Ea le2011 *** X-Men: First Class 2011,ActionJamesMcAvo . n cc HBO 25501425501 W ** Battleshi * * K l itschko 2011, Documenta Subtitled-En lish n Good Da,Die ** The Ad'ustmentBureau h Dia -Rodrick B obb McFerrin (:15) ** Water for Elephants 2011ReeseWitherspoon. rr « Mak. Fast Five * Bi Mommas: Like Father, Like Son2011Martin Lawrence.rr Wrath-Titans 15 * Ma'or Lea ue II 1994,Comed Charlie Sheen.n « ** The Rin Two 2005,Horror NaomiWatts, SimonBaker. n « ** Fast Five 2011,Action Vin Diesel, PaulWalker. n « IFC 105 105 10:45 Movie V ariedPro rams Malcolm, Middle Malcolm, Middle Malcolm, Middle Malcolm, Middle Movie Reach the Rock (:40) ** The GreatWhite H pe1996 n cc (:15) * Read to Rumble 2000,Comed DavidArquette. f1 « (:05) ***Midni ht Run1988, Comed Robert De Niro./r « Su erman III n :3 5 * Broken Lizard's Club Dread2004Bill Paxton. n « 20 ** Weekend at Bernie's 1989 n « ** Hart's War 2002,WarBruceWilis, Colin Farrell. n « MAX 00508 508 W Somethin Bo : 4 5* * T heRunnin Man1987ArnoldSchwarzene er.n cc ** Mars Attacks! 1996Jack Nicholson. n 15 ** Point Break1991, Action Patrick Swaze. n cc h (11:05) * Picture Perfect n (12:50) ** Cadd shack 1980Chev Chase **WeBou htaZoo2011MattDamon.n « (:35) ** Child's Pla 1988 CatherineHicks. n 15 ** Takin Lives 2004 An elinaJolie, EthanHawke. n « *** Conta ion 2011 MarionCotillard. n « 45 ** The Dark Half 1993Timoth Hutton, Am Madi an. Premiere. n « NBCSN 27 58 30 209 Varied Pro rams The DanPatrick Show Pro Football Talk The Crossover The Crossover Varied Pro rams Varied Pro rams NGC 157 157 Avatar: Air. Ava tar: Air. Iro n Man: Armor Voltron Force Dra onball GT Avatar: Air. Avatar: Air. Pla net Sheen P l anet Sheen NTOON 89 115189115 Fanbo -Chum Fanbo -Chum Avatar: Air. OUTD 37 307 43 307 Varied Pro rams (11:00) ** Down in the Delta **Smile2005, DramaMikaBoorem,Luo on Wan .rr« I Will Follow 2010Salli Richardson.Whitfield. 6 cc * I Don't Know HowSheDoes It 2011 o cc Casa-Bab s ** The Reckoni n 2004PaulBettan ,W illem Dafoe.n « *** Paul Williams Still Alive 2011 n « *** Melancholia 2011Kirsten Dunst, CharlotteGainsbour . n « 11:05 Mandela and deKlerk n * M 5 Wives 2000 Rodne Dan erfield. n 45 ***Bi Eas Ex ress2012, Documenta ** Vanit Fair 2004 ReeseWithers oon, Eileen Atkins. n cc SHO 00 500 h (11:45) *** Ondine 2009Colin Farrell. o « *** Ransom1996,SuspenseMelGibson,ReneRusso.rr« **Redn (:45)**Faster2010Dwa neJohnson,Bill BobThornton.o « Casa-Bab s * * * M uriel's Weddin 1994 Toni Collette. n 15 ** The Beaver 2011MelGibson, Jodie Foster. n « 3:50*** TheGame1997 MichaelDou las,SeanPenn.n « SPEED 35 303125303 Monster Jam Varied Pro rams On the Ed e V a ried Pro rams Cho -Rebuild Gearz NASCARHub Varied Pro rams Pass Time Pa s s Time Var ied Pro rams STARZ 00408300408 (11:20) Movie Varied Pro rams (:05) Movie V a r ied Pro rams 11:20 ***SmokeSi nalsn 12:50 *Twisted2004Ashle Judd.n « ** Ha Accidents 2000Marisa Tomei,Vincent D'Onofrio. n « 25 NiceGu Johnn2010MattBush.n « 11:25 * Le enda 2010 15 Love Shack 2010MarkFeuerstein. n cc 45 ** Cocktail 1988TomCruise, B an Brown. n cc Gunless 2010,Comed SiennaGuillo . n cc TMC 25 A Grandpa Circle 2010,Horror GailO'Grad . n ss ** What Dreams Ma Come1998, Fantas Robin Williams.rr « 525 (:45) ** Barbershop 2002Ice Cube,Anthon Anderson. o « h 11:15 *** Meek's Cutoff 2010 * * * The Innkee ers 2011 Sara Paxton.o« :45 **Snow White: ATale of Terror1997Si ourne Weaver. n S m ath for Delicious20100rlando Bloom.n 11:15 ** Wild Tar et 2010 n * * T h e Distin uished Gentleman 1992Eddie Mur h . n cc * A Low Down Dir Shame 1994 n cc :45 ***Da Ni htDa Ni ht2006O « *WE 143 41 174118 Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Gho st Whisperer Charmed Charmed Varied Pro rams KATU
THE BULLETIN «FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013
TV • PAGE 11 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
MONDAY EVENING 2/11/13 •
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Jeopardy! Teen Wheel of Fortune The Bachelor A trip toSt. Croix. (N) n '14' « (10:01) Castle Ayoung reality-TVstar is KATU Newsat 11 (11:35) Jimmy Tournament'G' (N) n 'G' murdered.(N) n PG « Kimmel Live '14' (ABC) (N) n cc Jeopardy! Teen Wheel of Fortune The Biggest LoserToughLoveTreats temptthe contestants. (N) n 'PG' cc (10:01) Deception Miaruns awaywith NewsChannel 21 Tonight Show KTVZ O O O O NewsChannel 21 at 6 (N) cc (N) n 'G' (NBC) Tournament'G' her boyfriend.(N)'14' « at11 (N) cc Wi t h Jay Leno AccessHollywood Who WantstoBe New Adventures 30 RockReunionn How IMetYour (8:31) Rules of 2 Broke Girls (N) Mike & Molly (N) n Hawaii Five-0KekoaALuamaster is KOINLocal6at11 Late ShowWith KBNZ 'PQ' cc '14' cc (N) 'PG' a Millionaire o fOld Christine Mother (N) '14' Engagement(N) n '14' ©c David Letterman (CBS) murdered.(N) n '14' cc (N) cc (10:01) Castle Ayoung reality-TVstar is KEZI 9 Newsat (11:35) Jimmy KOHD O O KEZI 9 News at KEZI 9 News at Entertainment omg! Insider (N) n The Bachelor Atrip to St. Croix. (N) n '14' « 'PQ' cc murdered.(N) n 'PG' « Kimmel Live '14' (ABC) 6:00 (N) « 6:3 0 (N) « Toni ght (N) 'PG 11:00 (N) cc The Big Bang Bones TheShot inthe DarkBrennanis The Following Mad Love Paulreveals News Channel 21 TMZ (N) n 'PG' cc Family Guyn Family Guy n KFXO l(g gl@(EI TwoandaHalf TwoandaHalf TheBigBang '14' cc '14' cc Men '14' cc Men '14' cc The o ry n 'PG' Theory n 'PG' hospitalized. (N) '14' « (FOX) Jacobs secret. (N) 14 « First on FOX Antiques RoadshowCivil War photo- History Detectives Airplaneengine Slavery by Another Name Labor practices and lawscreate a Integrating Ole KOAB ~ gy gy gy ThisOldHousen NightlyBusiness PBSNewsHour(N) nm 'Q' cc new form ofslavery. n 'PG' cc (PBS) Report (N) n 'G' graphs; GermanPOWsigns. 'G ' par ts; Civil War cannon. 'G' cc Miss NewsChannel8at NewsChannel8at Liveat7(N) cc InsideEdition(N) TheBiggestLoserToughLoveTreatstemptthecontestants.(N)n'PG'cc (10:01) Deception Miaruns awaywith NewsChannel 8 at Tonight Show KGW 'PQ' cc her boyfriend.(N)'14' « (NBC) 6PM (N) « 6:3 0 PM (N) 11(N) cc With Jay Leno That '70s Show n Seinfeld TheStock Rules of Engage. The Carrie Diaries Carrie is invited to a 90210 realnessAdriannasabotages a Cops n '14' cc Seinfeld The Voice Rules of Engage. That '70s Show n KTVZDT2(Ei ~ gy @ The King of '14' cc 'PQ' cc 'PG' cc Tip 'PG' ment 'PG' ment '14' Queens n 'PG' soiree. (N) n '14' « performance.(N) n '14' « (CW) OPBPL 175 173 M y Family cc T i me Goes By From Gershwin to Garland Brule, Live at Mt. Rushmore World News T a vis Smiley (N) Charlie Rose(N) n « PBS NewsHour n « KATU
KATU Newsat 6(N) n cc
Shipping Wars Shipping Wars Shipping Wars Shipping Wars Shipping Wars Shipping Wars Shipping Wars Shipping Wars (11:01) Shipping (11:31) Shipping 3 28 1 8 32 The First 48 Murder 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc Wars 'PG' cc W a rs 'PG' cc willing to talk. '14' ccwitnessesare un- 'PQ' cc (5:30) ** "Robin Hood:Menin Tights" (1993,Comedy)Cary Elwes, Richard * * " Happy Giimore"(1996)AdamSandler, Christopher McDonald. A powerful **" H appy Giimore"(1996)AdamSandler, Christopher McDonald. Apowerful 'AMC Lewis. Forestarcher andpals thwart Sheriff of Rottingham.« swing convinces ahockey player hecanjoin the PGAtour. swing convinces a hockey player hecanjoin the PGAtour. *ANPL 68 50 26 38 RattlesnakeRepublic'PG' cc Gator Boys: Xtra Bites n 'PG' Fin d ing Bigfoot: Further Evidence Finding Bigfoot n 'PG' Gator Boys Scared Snakeless 'PG' Finding Bigfoot: Further Evidence BRAVO 13 44 Re a l Housewives/Beverly Real Housewives/Beverly Real Housewives/Beverly VanderpumpRules (N) '14 Real Housewives/Beverly What Happens Housewives *** "Top Gun" (1986,Action) TomCruise, Kelly McGilis, AnthonyEdwards. n « CMT 190 32 42 53 (5:44) Reba'PG' (6: 22)Reba'PG' Reba'PG' «Reba 'PG' «Reba 'PG' «Reba 'PG' « (11:35)TopGun CNBC 54 36 40 52 (5:00) DogShowThe 137thWestminster Kennel ClubShow(N)(Live ) Dog S how The 137th Westminster KennelClubShow Roasts Easy H air Restoration CNN 55 38 35 48 Piers MorganTonight(N) Anderson Cooper360 « Erin Burnett OutFront Piers MorganTonight Anderson Cooper360 « Erin Burnett OutFront S o uth Park 'MA' Daily Show C o l bert Report COM 13 53 13547 Always Sunny (6:26) Tosh.0 '14' Colbert Report Daily Show (7:57) Futurama (8:28) Futurama (8:58) South Park (9:29) South Park Brickleberry COTV 11 Paid Program Kristi Miller Des ert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Adv Journal G e t Outdoors V i sions of NWThe YogaShow The Yoga Show Morning Oregon City Edition CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (5:00) Politics & Public Policy Today Politics & Public Policy Today 'DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie J e ssie n « Aust i n I Ally 'G' Jessie n « Jess ie n« Jess i e n « Jessie n « Good Luck Charlien'G' cc Good-Charlie Jessie n cc Good-Charlie *DISC 15 21 16 37 TheDevilSRideBadBIOOdn'14' Fast N' Loud n '14' cc Fast N' Loud Scotquits. '14' cc Fast N' Loud '14' cc Chopper Live: Faster N'Louder (N) Fast N' Loud '14' cc *E! 13 25 Kou rtney and Kim Take Miami '14' E! News (N) Studio E! (N) Fashion Police (N)'14' Fashion Police '14' Chelsea Lately E! News ESPN 21 23 22 23 CollegeBasketballKansasStateatKansas(N) (Live) SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 Women's College Basketball Louisville at NotreDame(N) (Live) SportsNabon « NBA Tonight (N) NASCARNow NFL Presents N FL Live cc NBA Tonight ESPNC 23 25 123 25 AWA Wrestling cc AWA Wresthng cc PBA Bowling FromApril 2, 2009 College Basketball FromMarch4, 2006. cc College Basketball Played I/16/91. H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc ESPNFCPress H-Lite Ex. FAM 67 29 19 41 Bunheads Takethe Vicuna n'14' Switched at Birth n '14' « Switched at Birth (N) n « Bunheads (N) n « Swrtched at Brrth n « The 700 Club n 'PG' « FNC 57 61 36 50 Hannity(N) On Record, GretaVanSusteren The O'Reilly Factor cc Hannity On Record, GretaVanSusteren The Five *FOOD 17 62 98 44 Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive D i ners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive D i ners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Mystery Diners Mystery Diners *** "Live Freeor Die Hard" (2007) BruceWilis, Justin Long.America's computers fall under attack. *** "Live FreeorDie Hard" FX 131 How I Met How I Met Two/Half Men Two/Half Men HGTV 17 49 33 43 LoveltorListlt'G'« Love It or List It 'G' cc Love Itor Listlt'G' « Love It or List It (N) 'G' « House Hunters Hunters Int'I Love It or List It 'G' cc *HIST 15 42 41 36 AmericanPickers'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' American Pickers (N) 'PG' cc Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG (1102)TopGear PG cc LIFE 13 39 20 31 TheHoustons T heHoustons The Houstons The Houstons "Twisto/ Faith" (2013)ToniBraxton, DavidJulian Hirsh. 'PG' « "BettyandCore/la" (2013) AngelaBassett, Mary J. Blige. 'PG' « MSNBC 59 59 128 51 The Rachel MaddowShow (N) The Last Word The Ed Show The Rachel MaddowShow The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MTV 192 22 38 57 Friendzone 'PG' Snooki & JWOWW n '14' Teen Mom2 Leahhas newsfor Corey. n 'PG TeenMom 2Leahrevealsnewsaboutherpregnancy.(N)n 'PG (11:02) Catfish: The TVShow n NICK 82 46 2440 SpongeBob SpongeBob SquarePantsn ' Y7' Victoriousn 'G' FullHouse'G' Full House'G' Full House 'G' Full House'G' The Nanny'PG' The Nanny'PG Friends n 'PG' (11:33) Friends Dateline on OWN Bitter Pill n '14' D a teline on OWN n '14 Dateline on OWN n '14' « OWN 161 103 31 103Solved AnEyefor Murder n '14' So l ved No physical evidence. '14' D a teline on OWN n '14' « ROOT 20 45 28* 26 (5:30) CollegeBasketball Washingtonat USC Mariners Mondays(N) World PokerTour: Season10 The DanPatrick Show SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Tattoo Night. T a t too Night. T a t too Night. T a t too Night. ** "TheFastandthe Furious: TokyoDrift" (2006) LucasBlack, ZacheryTyBryan. n (10:35) ** "TheFastandthe Furious: TokyoDrift SYFY 13 35 133 45 (5:00) Battlestar Galactica: Blood & ChromePilot Continuum ATest of Time (N) Being Human(N) Lost Girl FaesWideShut (N) « Con t inuum A Test Tim ofe TBN 205 60 130 Kingdom Conn. Jesse Duplantis Praise the Lord 'Y' cc Joel Osteen 'PG' Perry Stone Li v e-Holy Land Creflo Dollar 'G' Praise the LordccRP The King of Seinfeld The Seinfeld TheLittle Seinfeld TheSevenFamily Guy Fore Family Guy '14' cc Family Guy '14' «Family Guy n Family Guy n Family Guy n Conan (N) '14' cc 'TBS 'PG' cc '14' cc '14' cc '14' cc Queens n 'PG Jimmy n 'PG' Kicks n 'G' Father '14' cc **** "TopHat" (1935)FredAstaire, (5:00) *** "Little Women" (1933, (7:15) *** "Abe Li n col n in ii/inois" (1940, Bi o graphy) Raymond Massey. Abe (9:15) *** "Love Affair" (1939, Comedy-Drama) Irene Dunne, Charles Boyer. TCM Drama) KatharineHepburn. Lincoln advancesfroma storekeeper to president. «(DVS) Althoughengagedto others, twostrangers fall in love. « Ginger Rogers. «(DVS) *TLC 17 34 32 34 Cake Boss: Next Great Baker n C a k e Boss: Next Great Baker 'PG' Next Great Baker: Road Cake Boss: NextGreat BakerVegasBaby! (N)'PG CakeBoss'PG' Next GreatBaker:Road Castle Fool MeOnceAnArctic explorer Castle Whenthe BoughBreaksA ca- Castle Vampire WeekendA body lying in Dallas FalseConfessionsChristopher Monday MorningsSydneyenlists (11:01) Dallas Christophertries to keep *TNT reer-changingopportunity. 'PG' d>es. n 'PG' « a graveyardhasfangs. 'PG' tries to keep a deal alive. (N) Villanueva's help. (N)'14' « a deal alive. « *TOON 84 Regular Show Regular Show Hall of GameAwards (N) 'PG Incredible Crew King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' *TRAV 17 51 45 42 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food 'G' Manv.Food Bizarre Foods-FanFavorites Bizarre FoodsAmerica (N) 'PG Hotel Impossible TheCurve 'PG' H o tel Impossible 'PG' « *A*S*H M*A*S*H 'PG' M*A*S*H 'PG' TVLND 65 47 29 35 (5:48) M'A'S*H (6:24) M The CosbyShow The Cosby Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond KingofQueens King ofQueens USA 15 30 23 30 NCISOfficer'ssword.'PG' « NCIS TheCurse n 'PG' « WWE MondayNight RAWStarring The Rock;countdownto the Elimination Chamber.(N) n « (11:05) NCIS:Los Angeles n '14' VHI 191 48 37 54 BlacklnkCrewn'14' Black Ink Crew n '14' Black Ink Crew(N) n '14' Black Ink Crew n '14' Mob Wives n '14' cc Black Ink Crew n '14' *A&E
ENCR FMC FUEL GOLF
*** "Heat" 1995 AlPacino. Ahomicide detective matcheswits with a cunningadversary. n 'R' « ***"The Rock"1996 'R' « 106401 306401 * JackandJill (620) ** "The Big Hil"1998MarkWahlberg. 'R *** "TheSocial Network" 2010,DramaJesse Eisenberg. 'PG-13' « **"Girl,Interrupted"1999,DramaWinona Ryder. 'R' « 104 204104120(5:00) *** "TheSocial Network" 2010'PG-13' 34 UFC: Shogunvs. VeraPrelims Be s t of PRIDE Fighting UFC ReloadedUFC135:Jones vs RampageJonesvs Jackson; HughesvsKoscheck AMA SupercrossRacing
28 301 27 301 HaneyProject Haney Project Feherty '14
Golf Central
Haney Project Haney Project Feherty '14'
The Golf Fix
HALL 66 33 175 33 Brady Bunch B r ady Bunch B r ady Bunch B r ady Bunch NUMB3RS n 'PG' « NUMB3RS Velocity n 'PG' cc Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' Frasier 'PG' Fr a sier 'PG' HBO 425501 425501 * t Big Mommas:Like Father, Like Son" 2011Martin Lawrence. cc Real Time With Bill Maher n 'MA' * "Wrath o/theTitans" 2012SamWorthington. n Good Day,Die *** "Chronicle" 2012 'PG-13' IFC 1 0 10 5 "Hilchhiker'sGuide-Ga/axy (7:15) *** "CharlieWi/scn's War"2007, DramaTomHanks. 'R' (9:15) *"Friday the13thParf V/I —The NewB/ood" 1988, Horror 'R (11:15)"Charlie Wi/son's War"'R' ** "SharkTale" 2004 Voices ofWill Smith. n 'PG *** "Harry Potterand theDeathly Hallows: Part2"2011n'PG-13 MAX 400508 508 Midnig htRun 'R' (6:20) **"RedTails"2012CubaGooding Jr. n 'PG-13' « NBCSN 27 58 30 209 Boxing Gabriel Campillo vs.SergeyKovalev The Crossover Pro Football Talk NHL Overtime FIS Freestyle Skiing FIS Freestyle Skiing Poker After Dark 'PG' « Alaska StateTroopers '14' NGC 157 157 A l aska State Troopers'1(N) 4' Lor d s of War (N) Lords of War Alaska StateTroopers '14' Lords of War L ords of War Drugs, Inc. Hash'14' NTOON 89 115189115 OddParents O d d Parents Av a tar: Air. Avatar: Air. Planet Sheen n Planet Sheenn SpongeBob S p ongeBob Avatar: Air. Ava tar: Air. Dragon Ball Z I ron Man: Armor
OUTD 37 307 43 307 Heartland Bow Fisher's ATV S n owTrax cc Bottom Feeders Outdoorsman Best of West Elite Tactical Unit SHO 500 50 0 * * " Lara Croft TombRaider: The Cradle o/ Life" 2003 Angelina Jolie HomelandNewCar Smell n 'MA' Californication House of Lies SPEED 35 303125303HotRod TV '14' HotRod TV 'PG' DumbestStuff Dumbest Stuff Pinks - All Out 'PG' Hot Rod TV'14' Hot Rod TV 'PG' STARZ 300408300408 (5:05) ** "The Recruit"2003 n (7:05) ***"FriendsWithBenefits"2011 Justin Timberlake. 'R' « Spartacus: War of the Damnedn ** "Snow Falling onCedars"1999 EthanHawke. Premiere. 'PG-13 TMC 525 52 5 * * " Valkyrie" 2008, Historical Drama TomCruise. n 'PG.13' « *WE
14 41174118Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG
Fisher's ATV B o ttom Feeders SnowTrax « W a r dens Shameless n 'MA'acc Inside Comedy House of Lies Dumbest Stuff Dumbest Stuff Unique Whips '14' Spartacus: War of the Damnedn The Girl With theDragonTattoo" (10:15) *** "ThePianist" 2002Adrien Brody. Premiere. 'R Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG' Roseanne'PG'
THE BULLETIN «FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
PAGE 12 • TV
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Storage WarsSan StorageWars Storage Wars Storage WarsDr. Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars (11:01)Storage (11:31) Storage 'PG' cc 'PQ' cc 'PG' cc 'PQ' cc 'PG « Wars 'PG' cc W a rs 'PG' cc Burrito 'PG' Strangebid Texas(N)'PG' Texas (N)'PG' **"HappyGiimore"(1996)AdamSandler, Christopher McDonald. Apowerful (530) ** "Jumanji" (1995,Fantasy) RobinWiliams, Bonnie Hunt. Asinister board **"Happy Giimore"(1996)AdamSandler, Christopher McDonald. A powerful 'AMC game putsits players inmortal jeopardy. « swing convinces ahockey player hecanjoin the PGAtour. swing convinces a hockey player hecanjoin the PGAtour. *ANPL 68 50 26 38 RattlesnakeRepublic'PG' cc North Woods Law: Onthe Hunt n North Woods Law n 'PG' cc North Woods Law n 'PG' cc North Woods Law n 'PG' cc North Woods Law n 'PG' cc BRAVO 13 44 The Millionaire Matchmaker '14' Shahs of Sunset '14' The Real Housewives of Atlanta The FaceGameOn! (N) 'PG' The Millionaire Matchmaker WhatHappens Matchmaker ** "YoungGunsii" (1990) n CMT 190 32 42 53 (5:44) Reba'PG' (6:22) Reba 'PG' Reba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc ** "Young Guns"(1988) Emilio Estevez,Kiefer Sutherland. n CNBC 54 36 40 52 State of the Union 2013(N)(Live) Mad Money 60 Minutes on CNBC American Greed 10 Minute Zum ba Fit CNN 55 38 35 48 State of the Union 2013(N)(Live) State of the Union2013(N) (Live) State of the Union 2013 State of the Union 2013 Tosh.O '14' Tos h .O '14' Tosh.0 (N) '14' The Burn-Jeff D aily Show Co l bert Report COM 13 53 135 47 South Park '14' Tosh.0 '14' Col b ert Report Daily Show The Burn-Jeff T o sh.0 '14' COTV 11 Paid Program Kristi Miller Red mond City Council Morning Oregon City Edition CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (5:00) Capitol Hill Hearings Capitol Hill Hearings 'DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie J e ssien « Aust i n l Ally'G' Jessien « Good-Charlie * * " Sky High"(2005)MichaelAngarano. n « Phineas, Ferb Good-Charlie A.N.T. Farm'G' Jessie n « *DISC 15 21 16 37 Dual Survival n '14' cc Africa MakingOf (N) n 'G' cc Dual Survival TheGreenHell '14' Dual Survival (N) n '14' « Dual Survival Meltdown (N) n '14' Dual Survival Meltdown'14' « *E! 13 25 Kou rtney and Kim Take Miami '14' E! News (N) Fashion Police '14' E! News Special Chasing The Kourtney and KimTake Miami '14' Chelsea Lately E! News ESPN 21 23 22 23 CollegeBasketballMichiganatMichiganState(N)(Live) SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 NBACoasttoCoast(N)(Live) « NFL Lwe (N)cc Basketball NAS CAR Now NBA Tonight (N) NFL Live (N) cc NBA Tonight ESPNC 23 25 123 25 Boxing Taped2/14/51. « Boxing Taped12/22/62. « Boxing FromFeb. 2, 1963, cc College Basketball Syracusedefeats Connecticut in thesixth overtime, fromMarch 12,2009. « H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex ESPNN 24 63 124203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc ESPNFCPress H-Lite Ex. FAM 67 29 19 41 PrettyLittleLiarsn'14' « Pretty Little Liars Dead to Me '14' Pretty Little Liars (N) n '14' « The Lying Game (N) n '14' « Pretty Little Liars n '14' « The 700 Club n 'PG' « FNC 57 61 36 50 (5:55) State of theUnion 2013(N) (Live) Record Hannity State of the Union 2013 Record Hannity *FOOD 17 62 98 44 Chopped Chopped Chopped Froglegs andgin entree. Chopped Chopped Sea snails in the basket. Chopped FoodNetworkStars! 'G FX 131 Two/Half Men * * "Tron: Legacy" (2010, ScienceFiction) Jeff Bridges,Garrett Hedlund, OliviaWilde. The Ultimate Fighter (N) n '14' Justified FootChase(N)'MA' The Americans TheClock 'MA HGTV 17 49 33 43 Property Brothers'G' « Hunters Int'I Ho use Hunters Property Virgins Property VirginsIncome Property (N) n 'G' « House Hunters Hunters Int'I Scoring the Deal Scoring the Deal *HIST 15 42 41 36 TopGear'PG'cc Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' TopGear RVs(N) PG cc Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Larry the CableGuy LIFE 13 39 20 31 Dance Moms'PG'acc Dance Moms'PG' cc Dance Moms'PG' cc DanceMoms AbbysuspendsChristiandChloe. 'PG' Double Divas D ouble Divas Do u ble Divas (N) MSNBC 59 59 128 51 (5:00) State of theUnion 2013The president addressesCongress andthe nation. (N) (Live) State of the Union 2013 MTV 192 22 38 57 Fri endzone'PG' Fri endzone 'PG' TeenMom 2Leahrevealsnewsaboutherpregnancy.n 'PG Snooki & JWOWW n '14' Snooki & JWOWW (N) n '14' Nikki & Sara S n ooki NICK 82 46 2440 SpongeBob SpongeBob D rakeJos&h n Victoriousn 'G' FullHouse'G' Full House'G' Full House 'G' Full House 'G' The Nanny'PG' The Nanny 'PG' Friends n '14' (11:33) Friends The Will: Outrageous Final Our America With Lisa Ling 'PG Our America With Lisa Ling 'PG' Our America With Lisa Ling n '14' Our America With Lisa Ling 'PG' OWN 161 103 31 103 TheWill: Final Wishes 2 ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Mark FewShow UEFA Champions League Soccer Roundof16- Celtic FC vs Juventus FCFirst Leg.(N) World PokerTour: Season10 World PokerTour: Season10 The Dan Patrick Show SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Bar RescueChumpsn'PG Bar RescueBarFight n 'PG Bar Rescue Badto the Bone'PG' BarRescue HogtiedHam'sn 'PG' TheJoeSchmo Show (N)n '14' Bar Rescue BeachBummer'PG' SYFY 13 35 133 45 Face Off Heroic Proportions 'PG' Fa c e Off 'PG' Face Off EyeCandy Face Off (N) Total Blackout Total Blackout Face Off TBN 205 60 130 Joseph Prince Rod Parsley ACLJ This Week Full Flame cc Pr a ise the Lord 'Y' cc Secrets-Clement Creflo Dollar 'G' Praise the Lord 'Y' cc King of S e i nfeld ThePack- Seinfeld n 'PG' cc The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Cougar Town The Big Bang Conan (N) '14' cc 'TBS 16 27 11 28 The Queensn pG p oodlen pGThe Seinfeld age n 'PG' Theory n 'PG' Theory n 'PG' Theory n 'PG' Theory n 'PG' Restless (N)'14' Theory n 'PG' (5:00) **** "Citizen Kane" (1 941) (7:15) **** "Notorious" (1 946,Suspense) Cary Grant, Ingrid Bergman.The (9:15) *** "MyFavoriteWife" (1940)Irene Dunne,CaryGrant. Apresumed-dead *** "Kitty Foyle" (1940) Ginger Rogers, TCM 101 44 1 Of 29 OrsonWelles. «(DVS) daughter of aconvictedtraitor helpsfight Nazis. « wife returns to iind herhusbandremarried CC Dennis Morgan. «(DVS) *TLC 17 34 32 34 Island Medium Island Medium Starter Wives Confidential n '14' T h e Sisterhood (N) n '14' « Starter Wives Confidential (N) '14' Gypsy Sisters (N) n '14' « Starter Wives Confidential n '14 Castle Knockdown Castle andBeckett Castle Lucky Stiff A murderedlottery Castle Castleand Beckett investigate a Castle 47 SecondsA bombkills protest Castle The LimeyInvestigating with Southland Integrity CheckJohnand *TNT grow closer. n '14' « winner. n 'PG' « murder. n 'PG' « ersatarally.n PG « anotherdetectwe. n PG « Tang babysit a filmcrew. n 'MA' *TOON 84 Adventure Time Adventure Time Wrld, Gumball Looney Tunes LevelUp'PG' A d venture TimeKing of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14 *TRAV 17 51 45 42 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food 'G' Man v. Food 'G' Bizarre Foods America 'PG' « Sturgis: Metal Mania 'PG' « Sturgis: Wild and Free 'PG' « Stur g is: Biker Madness 'PG' « M * A*S*H 'PG' M * A*S*H 'PG' M * A*S*H 'PG' H o t in Cleveland Happily Divorced Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond KingofQueens King ofQueens TVLND 65 47 29 35 M*A*S*H 'PG' USA 15 30 23 30 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Westminster Kennel Club DogShow137th ClosingNight (N) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit VH1 191 48 37 54 Love&HipHopn'14 Black Ink Crew n '14 Mob Wives n '14' cc MobWivesn 14 cc 100 Greatest Songs of the '90s n 100 Greatest Songs of the '90s n *A&E
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Wheel of Fortune The Middle (N) n The Neighbors (N) ModernFamily (N) (9:31)Suburgatory Nashville Raynais comforted byanold KATU Newsat11 (11:35) Jimmy 'Q' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc (N) n 'G' (N) n 'PG' fri e nd. (N) n 'PG' cc Kimmel Live '14 (ABC) (N)n cc Jeopardy! (N)n Wheel of Fortune Whitney Snapped Guys With Kids Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Chicago Fire Nazdarovya!Dawsontries NewsChannel 21 Tonight Show KTVZ O O O O NewsChannel 21 at 6 (N) cc 'Q' cc (N) n 'G' (N)'14' Gary's Idea'PG' Secrets Exhumed(N) n '14' « (NBC) to help herbrother. (N) n '14' at11 (N) cc Wi t h Jay Leno AccessHollywood Who WantstoBe New Adventures 30 Rock FluShot Survivor: Caramoan —Fans vs. Favorites Fanscompete The Big Bang CSE CrimeScene Investigation ACu- KOIN Local6at11 Late ShowWith KBNZ n '14' cc (N) 'PG' a Millionaire o fOld Christine Theory n 'PG ban singer'ssister dies. (N)'14' David Letterman (CBS) against veteranplayers. (N) n cc (N) cc omg! Insider (N) The Middle (N) n The Neighbors (N) ModernFamily (N) (9:31)Suburgatory Nashville Raynais comforted byanold KEZI 9 Newsat (11:35) Jimmy KOHD O O O O KEZI9Newsat KEZI9Newsat Entertainment 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc (N) n 'PG' fri e nd. (N) n 'PG' cc (ABC) 6:00 (N) « 6:3 0 (N) « Toni ght (N) 'PG cc 11:00 (N) « Kim mel Live '14 The Big Bang American Idol HollywoodWeek, Part 3 Femalecontestants compete. (N) n (Part News Channel 21 TMZ (N) n 'PG' cc Family Guy n Family Guy Airport KFXO gi) g} IKI g) TwoandaHalf TwoandaHalf TheBigBang '14' cc '07 n '14' Men '14' cc Men '14' cc The o ry n '14' Theory n '14' (FOX) 3of4) '14' cc First on FOX Nature Wolvesandbuffalo in Canada NOVA TheColumbia space shuttle trag- Space Shuttle Columbia: Mission of The Space Age: NASA's Story Tragedy KOAB ~ gy ~ gy Burt Wolf: Travels NightlyBusiness PBSNewsHour(N) nm (N) n 'PG' cc(DVS) edy. n 'PG' cc(DVS) Hope n 'PG' cc cc (PBS) & Traditions R e port (N) n 'G' NewsChannel 8 at NewsChannel 8 at Live at 7 (N) cc Inside Edition (N) Whitney Snapped Guys With Kids Law&Order:SpecialyictimsUnit ChicagoFireNazdarovya!Dawsontries NewsChannel8at TonightShow KGW 'PQ' cc (N) '14' Gary's Idea'PG' Secrets Exhumed (NBC) 6PM (N) « 6:3 0 PM (N) (N) n '14' « to help herbrother. (N) n '14' 11(N) cc With Jay Leno That '70s Show n Seinfeld n (Part1 Rules of Engage. Arrow TheOdysseyOliver is shot. (N) Supernatural Trial andError Closing the CopsNewYork, Seinfeld The Blood Rules of Engage. That '70s Shown KTVZDT2 Q Q Q Q The King of '14' cc n '14' cc 'PG' cc of 2) 'G' cc ment '14' ment '14' Queens n 'PG gates of hell. (N) '14' « N ew York 14 P G« (CW) OPBPL 175 173 O u tnumbered n Last of the Wine Adventures of Sherlock Holmes D o c Martin n 'PG' « World News TawsSmdey(N) CharheRose(N) n G cc PBS NewsHour n cc KATU
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DuckDynasty Duck Dynast y PlanDuckDynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Barter Kings Trading up for a deck boat. (11:01) Barter Kings Trading upfor a 3 28 1 8 32 The First 48 Adice 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc Bee 'PG' bystander dead. '14'game cc leaves a (N) '14' cc classic car. 'PG' cc **"HappyGiimore"(1996)AdamSandler, Christopher McDonald. Apowerful CSE MiamiCollateral DamageFamily CSE Miami Dissolved Julia spins out of ** "Happy Giimore" (1996) AdamSandler, ChristopherMcDonald. Apowerful 'AMC targeted in grenadeattack. '14' control. n '14' « swingconvincesahockeyplayerhecanjoin the PGAtour. swing convinces a hockey player hecanjoin the PGAtour. *ANPL 68 50 26 38 RattlesnakeRepublic'PG' cc Wild West Alaska n '14' Wild West Alaska n '14 Wild West Alaska n '14' cc Wild West Alaska n '14 Wild West Alaska n '14 BRAVO 13 Inside the Actors Studio 'PG' Inside the Actors Studio (N)e« s Top Chef: Seattle (N) '14 What Happens Top Chef 4 4 (5:00) Inside the Actors Studio Top Chef: Seattle '14 CMT 190 32 42 53 (5:44) Reba'PG' (6:22) Reba 'PG' Reba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc My Big RedneckVacationn 'PG' My Big RedneckVacationn 'PG' My Big RedneckVacation n 'PG' CNBC 54 36 40 52 AmericanGreed: TheFugitives American GreedArthur Nadel Mad Money American Greed: TheFugitives Am e rican Greed Arthur Nadel Quit Your Job! Get Sub D CNN 55 38 35 48 Piers MorganTonight(N) Anderson Cooper360 « Erin Burnett OutFront Piers MorganTonight Anderson Cooper360 « Erin Burnett OutFront C o l bert Report COM 13 53 135 47 South Park '14' Tosh.0 '14' Col b ert Report Daily Show Wor kaholics '14' South Park 'MA'South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' Workaholics '14' Kroll Show '14' Daily Show COTV 11 Bend City Council Work Session B end City Council Morning Oregon City Edition CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (5:00) Capitol Hill Hearings Capitol Hill Hearings 'DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie J e ssien « Aust i n l Ally'G' Jessien « A.N.T. Farm'G' Austin & Ally 'G' Jessie n « Sha k e It Up! 'G' Dog With a Blog Good-Charlie Austin & Ally 'G' Good-Charlie *DISC 15 21 16 37 MOOnahineran'14' cc Moonshiners Hat inHandn '14' Moonshiners n '14' cc Moonshiners n '14' cc Moonshiners (N) n '14' cc Moonshrners n 14 cc *E! 13 25 Fas h ion Police '14 E! News(N) Kourtney and KimTakeMiami '14' Kourtney and KimTake Miami '14' The Soup '14' L ove You Chelsea Lately E! News ESPN 21 23 22 23 CollegeBasketballNorthCarolinaatDuke(N)(Live) SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 College Basketball WestVirginia at Baylor (N)(Live) College Basketball Oregonat Washington (N)(Live) « Basketball NBA Tonight (N)NASCARNow NFL Live (N) Can't Blame... Can't Blame ESPNC 23 25 123 25 Long Way Down cc White Shadow Artist cc Bay City Blues « MLB Baseball FromOct. 2, 1978. cc H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « ESPNFCPress H-Lite Ex. *"Hope Floats" (1998,Romance)SandraBullock, HarryConnickJr., GenaRowlands. FAM 67 29 19 41 ** "Where the Heartis" (2000, Comedy-Drama)Natalie Portman,Ashley Judd. The 700 Club n 'PG' « FNC 57 61 36 50 Hannity(N) On Record, GretaVanSusteren The O'Reilly Factor cc Hannity On Record, GretaVanSusteren The Five *FOOD 17 62 98 44 Diners, Drive D i n ers, Drive R e s taurant: Impossible 'G' Bobby's Dinner Battle (N) Restaurant: Impossible 'G Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible ** "The Tourist" (2010)Johnny Depp,Angelina Jolie. Premiere FX 131 (5:30) ** "Tron: Legacy" (2010)Jeff Bridges,Garrett Hedlund The AmericansGregory(N) 'MA' The AmericansGregory 'MA' HGTV 17 49 33 43 My First Place My First Place My First Place My First Place Cousins on Call Cousins on Call Property Brothers (N) 'G' « House Hunters Hunters Int'I Property Brothers Sarah &Mari 'G' *HIST 15 42 41 36SwampPeopleAvenged'PG'cc SwampPeopleTreeb reaker2'PG Swamp People 'PG' cc SwampPeople RisingWaters 'PG' SwampPeopleRebound'PG (11:02) SwampPeople 'PG' cc LIFE 13 39 20 31 ***zMy BestFriend's Wedding"(1997) Julia Roberts. « ** "Made ofHonor" (2008, Romance-Comedy)Patrick Dempsey. « * "BrideWars" (2009,Comedy)Kate Hudson,AnneHathaway. « MSNBC 59 59 128 51 The Rachel MaddowShow (N) The Last Word The Ed Show The Rachel MaddowShow The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MTV 192 22 38 57 Friendzone'PG' Friendzone 'PG' BUCKWILD n '14' BUCKWILD n '14' Snooki & JWOWW n '14' Washington Heights (N) n '14' Was hington Heights n '14' NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob SpongeBob Drake &Josh n Victorious n 'G' Full House 'G' Full House 'G' Full House 'G' Full House 'G' TheNanny'PG' TheNanny'PG' Fri endsn 'PG' (11:33) Friends 48 Hours: Hard Evidence n '14 48 Hours: Hard Evidence n '14' OWN 161 103 31 103 Married-Mobster Married-Mobster Married-Mobster Married-Mobster 48 Hours: Hard Evidence n '14' I Got Away(N) n '14' ROOT 20 45 28* 26 MarkFewShow UEFA Championseague L Soccer: Roundof16- Real Madridvs Manchester United World PokerTour: Season10 Heartland Poker Tour '14' cc The DanPatrick Show (N) SPIKE 132 31 34 46 AuctionHunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters SavageDiggers Savage Diggers Savage Di ggers Savage Diggers SYFY 13 35 133 45 Ghost Mine PhantomWind Ghost Hunters n '14' cc Ghost Hunters All Ghouls onDeck Ghost MineSecret Passage(N) Ghost Hunters All Ghouls onDeck Ghost Mine Secret Passage TBN 205 60 130 Joseph Prince End ofthe Age Praise the Lord 'Y' « Always Good Jesse Duplantis Easter Exper. C reflo Dollar 'G' Praise the Lord Y cc The King of Seinfeld TheFusilli Seinfeld TheFa- Seinfeld The Doll Family Guy Death The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan (N) '14' cc 'TBS n 'PG' « Queens n '14' Jerry n 'PG' tigues 'G' « Lives '14' Theory n '14' Theory n 'PG' Theory n '14' Theory n 'PG' Theory n 'PG' ** "The BraveOne" (1956, Drama) (5:00)****"/ RememberMama"(1948,Comedy-Drama)***"SheWoreaYellowRibbon"(1949,Western)JohnWayne,JoanneDru.A *** "The NarrowMargin" (1952, CrimeDrama)Charles TCM 014410129 Irene Dunne,BarbaraBel Geddes. «(DVS) cavalry captain takes ononelast mission. «(DVS) McGraw, ManeWindsor. « Michel Ray,Rodolfo Hoyos. *TLC 17 34 32 34 Hoarding: Buried Alive 'PG' « H oar d ing: Buried Alive 'PG' « H oar d ing: Buried Alive 'PG' « H oar d ing: Buried Alive (N) n 'PG' My Addiction M y Addiction H o a rding: Buried Alive 'PG' « (4:00) "Batman (6:45) **** "The DarkKnight" (2008,Action) Christian Bale,HeathLedger, AaronEckhart. Batmanbattles a vicious criminal knownasthe Southland Bats and HatsJohnCooper (11:06) Southland John Cooperclashes *TNT Begins" (2005) Joker. «(DVS) clashes with aveteran. '14' with a veteran. '14' « *TOON 84 Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball NinjaGo: Mstrs Dragons: Riders Incredible Crew KingoftheHill K i ngoftheHill A mericanDad AmericanDad FamilyGuy'14' FamilyGuy'14 *TRAV 17 51 45 42 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food Man v. Food Baggage Battles BaggageBattles Baggage Battles Baggage Battles Street Eats Africa (N)'PG' « Soul Food Paradise (N)'G' « M * A*S*H 'PG' M * A*S*H 'PG' M * A*S*H 'PG' L o v e.Raymond Love.RaymondLove-Raymond Love-Raymond Hot in Cleveland Happily Divorced Hot in Cleveland Happily Divorced TVLND 65 47 29 35 M*A*S*H 'PG' USA 15 30 23 30 NCISEyeSpyn'PG' « NCIS MyOther Left Foot n 'PG NCIS Child's Play n 'PG' « NCIS Up inSmoken 'PG' Necessary Roughness(N)'PG' C S E Crime Scene Investigation n VH1 191 48 37 54 UndateableHour2n'14' Undateable Hour 3 n '14' Undateable Hour 4 n '14' Undateable Hour 5 n '14' Making Mr. Right Date Me (N) 'PG Behind the Music Pink 'PG' cc *A&E
** "Scary Movie 3"2003Anna Faris.'PG-13'« * "Bucky Larson: Born lo Be aStar" 2011 'R' « (11:10) ** "We OwntheNight" ** "Fantastic Four" 2005,Action loanGruffudd. 'PG-13' « ** "Fantastic Four" 2005,Action loanGruffudd. 'PG-13' ©c 34 (5:00) UFCReloaded Edgarvs Maynard andAldo vsFlorian. Best of PRIDEFighting UFC: Johnsonvs. Dodson English PremierLeagueSoccer 28 301 27 301 The Golf Fix On the Range Golf Central In s ide PGA Tour The Golf Fix On the Range Inside PGATour Learning Center HALL 66 33175 33 Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Happy Days ' G' Happy Days 'G' Happy Days'G' Happy Days'G' Frasiern 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' i HBO 425 501 425501 Adjustment Bur AmandaSeyfried. n 'PG-13' cc ** "Battleship" 2012, ScienceFiction Taylor Kitsch. n 'PG-13' « (6:45) * Red Riding Hood" 2011 Good Day,Die Real Time With Bill Maher n 'MA' ** "Lethal Weapon4"1998, Action Mel Gibson, DannyGlover, JoePesci. 'R IFC 1 0 1 0 5 (5:00) *** "Lethal Weapon 3"1992 Mel Gibson (10:15) ** "Saw ii" 2005,Horror DonnieWahlberg, Tobin Bell. 'R *** "Die Hard"1988, Action BruceWilis, Alan Rickman. n 'R' cc MAX 400 508 508 Point Break 1991 (6:20) "Anacondas: TheHunt for the Blood Orchid Banshee TheKindred 'MA' cc (11:15) *** "Die Hard 2" 1990 NBCSN 27 58 30209 NHL Hockey:Blues atRed W ings NHL Live (N) The Crossover Pro Football Talk NHL Overtime Poker After Dark Cash200K Darts Round 2:Singles Matches P o k er After Dark 200K Cash Highway Thru Hell '14' Inside: 21st Century Warship 'PG NGC 157 157 L o rds of War (N) Lords of War Highway ThruHell (N) '14' Lords of War Lords of War NTOON 89 115189115 OddParents O d d Parents Avatar: Air. Ava tar: Air Planet Sheen n Planet Sheen n SpongeBob S p ongeBob Avatar: Air. Ava tar: Air. Dragon Ball Z I ron Man: Armor OUTD 37 307 43 307 Elite Tactical Unit Yacht Takedown Amer. Rifleman Shooting Gallery Midnight 3Gun Best Defense Elite Tactical Unit YachtTakedown Shooting USA cc Gun Stories S h ooting Gallery SuspenseNicole Kidman. n 'PG-13' e« s SHO 500 500 Shameless n 'MA'ec cs Californication House of Lies (4:00) VanityFair * ** "The Others" 2001, (8:20) *** "The Womanin Black" 2012'PG-13 SPEED 35 303125 303 Drag RaceHigh Drag Race High Am. Trucker A m . Trucker St u ntbusters Stuntbusters '14' Drag RaceHigh Drag Race High Am. Trucker A m . Trucker Unique Whips '14' i *** "Kill Bill: Voi. 1" 2003,ActionUmaThurman. n 'R' « STARZ 300 408 300408 (515) ** Mindhunlers" 2004'R' (7 05) ** "Coiombiana" 2011,ActionZoe Saldana. n 'PG 13' « GhostRider: Spirit *** "Goon" 2011SeannWiliam Scott. 'R' « TMC 5 25 52 5 * * "B righton Rock" 2010, CrimeDramaSamRiley. n 'R' « (9:35) *** "OurIdiot Brother" 2011 PaulRudd.'R (11:05) ** "Barbershop" 2002 *WE 14 41 174118 Fix MyFamily The CrumeFamil y F i x My Family (N) Fix My Family Fix My Family TheCrumeFamil y A m azing Wedding Cakes 'PG Amazing WeddingCakes'PG ENCR FMC FUEL GOLF
106401 306401(6:10) ** "Cars 2"2011,ComedyVoices ofOwenWilson. n 'G' «
104 204104120 *** "Howto TrainYourDragon" 2010Voices of Jay Baruchel. 'PG
THE BULLETIN «FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
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Grey's AnatomyOwenis faced with Wheel of Fortune Zero Hour Strike Hank'swife is ab (10:02) Scandal Fitz doesn't knowwho 'Q' cc (N) n 'G' tough decisions. (N) '14' « hecantrust (N) n'14' « (ABC) ducted by aterrorist. (N) '14' « Jeopardy! (N)n Wheel of Fortune Community (N) Parks and Recre The Office Moving (9:31) 1600Penn (10:01) Do NoHarmMeLikeyJason KTVZ O O O O NewsChannel 21 at 6 (N) cc 'Q' cc n 'PG' (N) n 'G' (NBC) ation (N) 'PG' On (N) 'PG' ( N ) 'PG' « makes adealwith lan. (N) '14' AccessHollywood Who WantstoBe New Adventures 30RockSt. Valen- The Big Bang (8:31) Twoand a (9:01) Person of Interest Reeseand (10:01) Elementary Details Detective KBNZ (N) 'PG' a Millionaire o fOld Christine tine's Day'14' Theory (N) '14 Half Men (N)'14' Finch mustsave ahotel maid. '14' Bellis attacked. (N)'14' cc (CBS) Grey's AnatomyOwenis faced with omg! Insider (N) Zero Hour StrikeHank's wife is ab (10:02) Scandal Fitz doesn't knowwho KOHD O O O O KEZI9Newsat KEZI9Newsat Entertainment tough decisions. (N) '14' « (ABC) 6:00 (N) « 6:3 0 (N) « Toni ght (N) 'PG cc ducted by aterrorist. (N) '14' « hecantrust (N) n 14 cc The Big Bang American Idol Thetop 40contestants Glee I DoWil andEmma'swedding. (N) News Channel 21 TMZ (N) n 'PG' cc KFXO Itg g} IK) g) TwoandaHalf TwoandaHalf TheBigBang n '14' cc (DVS) Men '14' cc Men '14' cc The o ry n 'PG' Theory n '14' (FOX) are revealed.(N) '14' « First on FOX Oregon Art Beat Oregon Field Doc Martin Louisahas apregnancy The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes KOAB ~ gy ~ gy Passport to Ad- Nightly Business PBS NewsHour (N) n acc n'G' cc The Naval Treaty 'G' cc (PBS) venture n 'G' Report (N) n 'G' Guide 'G' cc scare. n 'PG' cc NewsChannel 8 at NewsChannel 8 at Live at 7 (N) cc Inside Edition (N) Community (N) Parks and Recre The Office Moving (9:31) 1600Penn (10:01) Do NoHarmMeLikeyJason KGW 'PQ' cc n 'PG' ation (N) 'PG' (NBC) 6PM (N) « 6:3 0 PM (N) On (N) 'PG' ( N ) 'PG' « makes adealwith lan. (N) '14' That '70s Show n Seinfeld n (Part 2 Rules of Engage. The Vampire Diaries New infoabout the Beauty and the Beast Heatherfalls for Cops n '14' cc Seinfeld TheJunk KTVZDT2 Q Q Q Q The King of '14' cc of 2) 'G' « ment 'PG' Joe's youngerbrother. (N)'PG' Mail 'PG' Queens n 'PG cure is revealed.(N)'14' (CW) OPBPL 175 173 T i me Goes By My Family « 30 0 Miles to Freedom n 'G Evening-Valerie Simpson World News T a vis Smiley (N) Charlie Rose(N) n 'PG' cc KATU
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KATU Newsat 11 (11:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live '14' (N) n cc NewsChannel 21 Tonight Show at11 (N) cc Wi t h Jay Leno KOINLoca!6at11 Late ShowWith David Letterman (N) cc KEZI 9 Newsat (11:35) Jimmy 11:00 (N) « Kim mel Live '14 Family GuySibling Family Guyn '14' « Rivalry '14' History Detectives Airplaneengine parts; Civil Warcannon. 'G' « NewsChannel 8at TonightShow 11(N) cc With Jay Leno Rules of Engage. That '70s Shown '14' cc ment '14' PBS NewsHour n «
The First 48 Policeprobe afatal shoot- After the First 48 Allegedeyewitness (11:01) TheFirst 48 AMiami manis ingonabus. « comes forth. (N) 'PG'cc shot on a city sidewalk. cc Comic BookMen Freakshow(N) Immortalized (N) Comic BookMen Freakshow '14' « Immortalized '14' « 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc (N) 'PG' « *ANPL 68 50 2638 TooCute!Fl uff yPuppyPartyn'G Too Cute! n 'PG Too Cute! PuppyLoven 'G Too Cute! n 'G Too Cute! CuddlyKittens n 'G' Too Cute! n 'G' BRAVO 13 44 The Millionaire Matchmaker '14' The Millionaire Matchmaker The Millionaire Matchmaker '14 The Millionaire Matchmaker '14' K a t hy (N) WhatHappens Matchmaker R e ba 'PG' cc Re b a 'PG' cc Re b a 'PG' cc ** "Overboard" (1987,Comedy) Goldie Hawn,Kurt Russell, EdwardHerrmann.n CMT 190 32 42 53 (5:44) Reba'PG' (6:22) Reba 'PG' Reba 'PG' cc ** Overboard CNBC 54 36 40 52 TheFacebookObsession American Greed Mad Money The FacebookObsession American Greed 10 Minute Hair Restoration CNN 55 38 35 48 Piers MorganTonight(N) Anderson Cooper360 « Erin Burnett OutFront Piers MorganTonight Anderson Cooper360 « Erin Burnett OutFront Always Sunny Always Sunny Daily Show C o l bert Report COM 13 53135 47 SouthPark'14' Tosh.0'14' Colbert Report Daily Show Al w ays Sunny Always Sunny Workaholics '14' Tosh.0 '14' COTV 11 Paid Program Kristi Miller Desert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Journal Get Outdoors V i sions of NW The YogaShow The Yoga Show Morning Oregon City Edition CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (5:00) Capitol Hill Hearings Capitol Hill Hearings **** "WALL-E" (2008)Voices ofBenBurtt. n 'DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie J e ssien « Aust i n I Ally'G' Jessien « Phineas, Ferb A.N.T. Farm'G' Good-Charlie Jessie n « A.N . T. Farm 'G' *DISC 15 21 16 37 Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Property Wars Moonshrners n '14' cc Moonshiners n '14' cc Moonshiners (N) n '14' cc *E! 13 25 Kou rtney and Kim Take Miami '14' E!News (N) The Soup '14' E ! News Special Kourtney and KimTake Miami '14' Kourtney and KimTake Miami '14' Chelsea Lately E! News ESPN 21 23 22 23 CollegeBasketballSt.John'satLouisville(N)(Live) SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 College Basketball UCLA at California (N) (Live) « College Basketball Gonzagaat St. Mary's(N) (Live) « Basketball NAS CAR Now NFL L>ve(N) cc ESPNC 23 25 123 25 Friday Night Lights n 'PG' cc Friday Night Lights n 'PG' cc Car Auctions Car Auctions S p ortsCentury cc NASCARRacing H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « ESPNFCPress H-Lite Ex. f ** "TheWeddingPlanner" (2001)Jennifer Lopez, MatthewMcConaughey. FAM 67 29 19 41 ** HowtoLoseaGuy/n10Days"(20 03)KateHudson,MatthewMcConaughey The 700 Club n 'PG' « FNC 57 61 36 50 Hannity(N) On Record, GretaVanSusteren T h e O'Reiffy Factor cc Hannity On Record, GretaVanSusteren The Five *FOOD 17 62 98 44 ChoppedSeasnailsinthebasket. S w e etGeniusWickedGenius Chopped One in aHundred'G' Chopped Reversal ofFortune'G' Chef WantedWith Anne Burreff (N) Rachael vs. GuyCook-Off FX 131 Two/Half Men * * * "The Other Guys" (2010, Comedy)Wil Ferrell, MarkWahlberg, Eva Mendes Anger Anger Archer (N) 'MA' Legit (N) 'MA' Totally Biased BrandX With HGTV 17 49 33 43Seffi ng NY Seffing NY Salvage Dawgs Salvage Dawgs West End Sal. West End Sal Rehab Addict 'G' Rehab Addict 'G' House Hunters Hunters Int'I Hawaii Life 'G' Hawaii Life 'G' *HIST 15 42 41 36 Swamp People ManDown'PG' Swamp People 'PG' cc SwampPeopleEndgame'PG' SwampPeople (N)'PG' cc Big Rig Bounty Hunters (N)'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' LIFE 13 39 20 31 Dance Moms'PG'acc Dance Moms'PG' cc Project RunwayTheUltimate HardandSoft (N) 'PG' Prolect RunwaySurpnseMe'PG Do u ble Divas To Be Announced MSNBC 59 59 128 51 The Rachel MaddowShow (N) The Last Word The Ed Show The Rachel MaddowShow The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MTV 192 22 38 57 Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Failosophy '14' Ridiculousness Failosophy '14' NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob S p o ngeBob Fred: TheMovie" (2010, Comedy)Lucas Cruikshank. n 'PG' cc Fuff House 'G' Fuff House'G' The Nanny 'PG' The Nanny 'PG' Friends n 'PG' (11:33) Friends Dateline on OWN n '14' Dateline on OWN n '14' OWN 161 103 31 1031(Almost) Got AwayWith It n '14' I (Almost) Got AwayWith It n '14' Dateline on OWNn '14 Lost and Found(N) n 'PG' ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Women's College Basketball UFC ReloadedUFC136 World PokerTour: Season10 The DanPatrick Show Jail '14' cc SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Jail'14' cc Jail (N) n 'PG' Jail (N) n 'PG' iMPACT Wrestling (N) n '14' « Beffator MMALive (N) n (Live) f *** «3/n City" (2005,CrimeDrama)Jessica Alba, DevonAoki, Alexis Bledel. ** "Underworld: Rise o/the Lycans" (2009)MichaelSheen. « SYFY 13 35 133 45 Total Blackout ** My BloodyValentine" (2009) TBN 205 60 130 Joseph Prince Hiffsong TV Pr a ise the Lord 'Y' cc Live-Holy Land The Evidence Grant Jeffrey C r eflo Dollar 'G'Praise the Lord 'Y' « The King of Seinfeld TheDiplo- Seinfeld The Seinfeld TheFriars Family Guy n Family Guyn The Big Bang The Big Bang King of the Nerds Intelligenceand Conan (N)'14' cc 'TBS '14' cc 'PQ' cc Queens n 'PG mats Club 'PG' Checks n 'PG' Club 'PG' Theory n 'PG Theory n 'PG' teamwork arerequired. (N)'14' (5:00) **** "Gone Withthe Wind" (1939,Romance)Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard.Civil War rogueRhett Butler **** "Rebecca" (1940,Suspense) LaurenceOlivier, JoanFontaine, Judith Anderson. Abride feels *** "Spellbound" TCM 01 44 101 29 loves Southernbelle Scarlett O'Hara. overshadowed by her husband's first wiie. « (1945) *TLC 17 34 32 34 Island Medium Island Medium DC Cupcakes: County Fair (N) 'PG' Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress SayYes,Dress Say Yes,Dress What NottoWearCaseyD.'PG Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress (5:00) NBABasketbaff MiamiHeat at QklahomaCity Thun NBA Basketball LosAngelesClippersat LosAngeles LakersFrom StaplesCenter inLosAngeles. (N) Inside the NBA(N)(Live) cc The Mentalist TheScarlet Letter State *TNT 17 26 15 27 der (N) (Live) « (Live) « senator's intern is killed. '14' *TOON 84 Adventure Time Regular Show Regular Show Annoying Inc r edible Crew Regular Show King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' *TRAV 17 51 45 42 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food 'G Man v. Food 'G' Mysteries at the Museum'PG Mysteries at the Museum'PG' Mys t eries at the Museum 'PG' Mysteries at the Museum'PG M* A *S*H 'PG' M* A *S*H 'PG' The CosbyShow The Cosby Show The Cosby Show Love.Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King TVLND 65 47 29 35 M*A*S*H 'PG' ofQueens King ofQueens USA 15 30 23 30 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law I Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Suits Scottie returns. (N) '14 (11:01) NecessaryRoughness'PG' ** "WhyDoFools Fall in Love" (1998)Halle Berry. Premiere. n VH1 191 48 37 54 (5:55) Single Ladies n'14 Love & Hip HopLife Support'14 Love & HipHop n '14' Tiny Tonight! The VSpecial '14 *A&E
3 28 1 8 32 The First 48 Amother First 48 Conveni ence-store clerk panied a shooter. 'PG'may cc haveaccom- The shottodeath. PG cc (4:30) * "Cal- T he Walking DeadDaysGoneBye (B&WVersion) Rick 'AMC woman" (2004) emerges froma coma. '14' «
The First 48 TwoDallas menare gunned down.cc The Walking DeadGuts (B&WVersion) Trapped by walkers. '14'
*** "Grem/ins"1984, FantasyZachGalligan. n 'PG' « 106 401 306401(6:10) *** "Twins"1988 ArnoldSchwarzenegger. n 'PG' « Blue Steel 1990 (9:50)** "TheHaunted Mansion"2003 'PG'« ** "27 Dresses" 2008Katherine Heigl, JamesMarsden. 'PG-13' « FXM Presents ** "DearJohn"2010,RomanceChanningTatum.'PG-13' « ** My SuperExGrrlfnend 104 204104120 FXMPresents 34 UFC Insider UFC Primetime UFC Unleashed(N) The Ultimate Fighter n '14 UFC Primetime(N) '14 UFC Insider UFC Primetime The Ultimate Fighter n '14' 28 301 27 301 PGATour Golf PGA Tour Golf NorthernTrust Open,First RoundFromRiviera CountryClub in Pacific Palisades, Calif Golf Central (N) 19th Hole (N) Golf Central (N) 19th Hole Gol f Central HALL 66 33 175 33 Brady Bunch Brady Bunch B r ady Bunch B r ady Bunch h g e My Valentine" (2013) Wiliam Baldwin, Natalie Brown.'G' « Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' HBO 425501 425501(5:30) * "Wratho/the Tilans" n Girls 'MA' cc Enlightened 'MA' Real Sex n 'MA' « Pic t ure Paris n (7:45) *** "The Five-YearEngagement" 2012 Jason Segel, Emily Blunt. n 'R' cc *** "Batman" 1989 JackNichol son.'PG-13' IFC 1 0 1 0 5 (5:00) *** "Batman"1989 JackNicholson. 'PG-13' (7:45) *"Batman& Robin"1997Arnold Schwarzenegger. Thedynamicduo returnstotake on anicyvill am ** "Resident Evil: Apocalypse" 2004 n 'R' cc MAX 400508 508 (6:05) *** "The B/uesBrothers"1980, Musical ComedyJohn Belushi. n 'R' cc (8:20) "Anchonnan:TheLegend of RonBurgundy Life on Top 'MA' NBCSN 27 58 30209Star-Spangled Star-SpangledSundays'G' The Crossover Pro Football Talk NHL Overtime Poker After Dark Cash200K Darts Round2:DoublesMatches Poker After Dark Cash200K NGC 157 157 D o omsday Preppers'14 Mudcats: Downand Dirty (N) '14 Mudcats RaisingHell '14' DoomsdayPreppers '14' DoomsdayPreppers '14' Mudcats: Downand Dirty '14' NTOON 89 115189115 OddParents O d d Parents Av a tar: Air. Avatar: Air. Planet Sheen n Planet Sheenn SpongeBob S p ongeBob Avatar: Air. Ava tar: Air Dragon Ball Z I ron Man: Armor OUTD 37 30743 307 MajorLeague Fishing Bow Madness Ult. Adventures Bottom Feeders Cuddeback's The Crush Bon e Collector Cuddeback's U l t . AdventuresAlaska Outdoors Trophy Quest *** "The Rock"1996,ActionSeanConnery, NicolasCage, EdHarris. n 'R SHO 500 500 Melanie Comarcho:Hello! (N) 'MA Gigolos n 'MA' Gigolos n 'MA (5:30) ** "Red"2010 Bruce Wilis. n 'PG-13' e« s SPEED 35 303125303 Wrecked '14' W r ecked '14' Pi n ks '14 Pinks '14' Car Warriors Le Mans '14 Wrecked '14' W r ecked '14' Pinks '14' Pinks '14 Unique Whips '14' *** "Finding Nemo"2003,Comedyn 'G' « STARZ 300408300408 (5:45) ** "Duplex" 2003'PG-13' S t a rz Studios (N) (9:15) ** "TheVow"2012 RachelMcAdams.n 'PG-13'« Spartacus: War of the Damnedn ** "The Mechanic"2011 Jason Statham.'R'« TMC 525 525 (6:15) "Only theBrave" 2006, WarLansNishikawa. n 'R' « (9:35) ** "Real Steel" 2011,ActionHughJackman. n 'PG-13' « Paper Soldiers ENCR FMC FUEL GOLF
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THE BULLETIN «FEBRUARY 9 — 15, 2013
TV • PAGE 15 *In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
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(N) n 'PG' Cou ntry (N) 'PG' offer. (N) n 'PG' « Wheel of Fortune Dateline NBC(N) n 'PG' cc
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Duck Dynasty FrogDuck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynastye«sDuck Dynasty (11:01) DuckDy- (11:31) Duck Dy'PG' cc 'PQ' cc 'PQ' cc mOne'PG' nasty'PG' «nasty 'PG' « (4:30) ** "KingArthur" (2004)Clive ** "AKnighl'sTale"(2001,Adventure) HeathLedger, MarkAddy, Rufus Sewell. A peasant posesas a knight for a shot at The Walking Dead Rick tries to save Comic Book Men Freakshow '14' « 'AMC 'PQ' cc Owen, KeiraKnightley. « jousting glory. one of his group.'14' « *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Infested! Surrounded'PG' « Fatal Attractions n 'PG' cc Fatal Attractions Killer Hippo'PG' Fatal Attractions (N) n 'PG Fatal Attractions n '14 Fatal Attractions n 'PG Comedy)Ice Cube, ChrisTucker, NiaLong *** "Friday"(1995,Comedy)Ice Cube, Chris Tucker, NiaLong BRAVO 13 44 The Real Housewives of Atlanta T h e Real Housewives of Atlanta *** "Friday"(1995, R e ba 'PG' cc *** "C/earandPresentDanger" (1994) Harrison Ford. CIAchief combatsColombian drug cartels. n CMT 190 32 42 53 (5:44) Reba'PG' (6:22) Reba'PG' Reba'PG' cc R e ba'PG' cc Reba 'PG' cc CNBC 54 36 40 52 Ultimate Factories IKEAIKEA. 'G ' A merican Greed The Black Widows Mad Money Ultimate Factories IKEAIKEA. 'G American GreedTheBlackWidows WEN Hair Care Supersmile CNN 55 38 35 48 Piers MorganTonight(N) Anderson Cooper360 « Erin Burnett OutFront Piers MorganTonight Anderson Cooper360 « Erin Burnett OutFront COM 13 53 135 47 (5:55) South Park (6:26) Tosh.0'14' Colbert Report Daily Show (7:57) Tosh.0 '14' (8:28) Tosh.0 (8:58) Kroff Show (9:29) Tosh.0 '14 (9:59) Tosh.0 '14' ***"HotTub Time Machine"(2010)JohnCusack COTV 11 Paid Program Kristi Miller (6:50) High School Basketball Bend atSummit Journal Get Outdoors V i sions of NW The YogaShow The Yoga Show Morning Oregon City Edition CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (5:00) Politics & Public Policy Today Politics & Public Policy Today 'DIS 87 43 1439 Jessien « J e ssien « Jes sien « Jes sien « Jessie (N) n « Gravity Falls 'Y7' Phineas, Ferb Dog With a Blog Good-Charlie Jessie n cc Jessie n cc *DISC 15 21 16 37 GoldRush BedrockBlowout'PG' G o l dRush Bedrock Blowout'PG' Gold Rush -TheDirt (N) n 'PG' GoldRush RedemptionRoad'PG' Bering SeaGoldDirtville (N) '14' GoldRush Redempti onRoad'PG' *E! 13 25 Lov e You The Soup '14' E! News (N) Chasing The T h e Soup '14' Kourtney and KimTake Miami '14' Fashion Police '14' Chelsea Lately E! News ESPN 21 23 22 23 CollegeBasketballGeorgetownatCincinnati(N)(Live) SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter cc SportsCenter cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 Boxing FridayNightFights(N) (Live) « SportsNation « NFL Live cc SportsNation « SportsNation (N) SportsCenter ESPNC 23 25 123 25 FridayNightLights'PG' cc SportsCentury cc Firestone Chats Up Close cc NBA EasternConferencefirst round game2, played 4/20/86. « NBA FromNov. 21, 1986. « H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex H-Lite Ex. H-Li te Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « ESPNFCPress H-Lite Ex. ** "P S. / LoveYou" (2007, Romance)Hilary Swank,Gerard Butler, Lisa Kudrow. FAM 67 29 19 41 **"TheWeddingPlanner"(2001)JenniferLopez, MatthewMcConaughey. The 700 Club n 'PG' « FNC 57 61 36 50 Hannity(N) On Record, GretaVanSusteren T h e O'Reiffy Factor cc Hannity On Record, GretaVanSusteren The Five *FOOD 17 62 98 44 Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Restaurant: Impossible Diners, Drive Diners, Drive D i ners, Drive D i ners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive ** "The A-Team" (2010) LiamNeeson,Bradley Cooper. FormerSpecial Forcessoldiers form arogue unit. *** "Live Free orDieHard" (2007, Action) BruceWilis, Justin Long. FX 131 Two/Half Men Two/Half Men HGTV 17 49 33 43 Hunters Int'I H un t ers Int'I Hunters Int'I Hunters Int'I Spontaneous S pontaneous Outrageous Kitchens 'G' « House Hunters Hunters Int'I Hunters Int'I Hunters Int'I *HIST 15 42 41 36 ModernMarvels'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc (11:02) AmericanPickers 'PG LIFE 13 39 20 31 Hoarders'PG' « Hoarders 'PG' cc Hoarders 'PG' cc Hoarders 'PG' cc Hoarders 'PG' cc (11:01) Project Runway'PG' cc MSNBC 59 59 128 51 The Rachel MaddowShow (N) Lockup Special Investigation Lockup Lockup: RawPredatory Behavior Lockup OrangeCounty Lockup OrangeCounty MTV 192 22 38 57 SnookiI JWOWWn'14' Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Failosophy '14 Snooki & JWOWW n '14 *** hyickandNorah's lnfinife Playlisl" (2008) MichaelCera NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob S p o ngeBob iCarly n 'G' « Drake &Josh n See DadRun n Fuff House 'G' The Nanny'PG' The Nanny'PG Friends n 'PG' (11:33) Friends Police Women of Dallas '14' « Poli c e Women of Dallas '14' « Police Women of Dallas '14'eccs Police Womenof Dallas '14' « Police Women of Dallas '14' « OWN 161 103 31 103 Police Women of Dallas '14' « ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Planet X Square Snow Motion WHL HockeyTri-City Americansat PortlandWinterhawks(N) (Live) Bensinger World PokerTour: Season10 The DanPatrick Show *** "independenceDay" (1996) Will Smith. Earthlingsvs. evil aliens in 15-mile-wideships. n SPIKE 132 31 34 46 (5:47)Ganglandn'14'cc (6'54) Gangland n '14' cc (11:06) *"Skyline" (2010)n SYFY 13 35 133 45 **"Underworld: Rise ofthe Lycans"(2009) MichaelSheen. « WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) n « Merlin A Lesson in Vengeance (N) Being Human TBN 205 60 130 The Harvest Perry Stone P r a ise the Lord 'Y' cc Ever Increasing Israel: Journey of Light « Creflo Dollar 'G Miracles Around Uscc The King of Seinfeld TheUn- Seinfeld n 'PG' cc Seinfeld TheWig Family Guy n Family Guy Fish ** "TylerPerry's MadeaGoesto Jail" (2009, Comedy)Tyler Perry, DerekLuke Are WeThereYet? Are WeThereYet? 'TBS 'PG' 'PG' 'PG' cc Queens n 'PG derstudy n 'PG' Master n 'PG' Out of Water '14' Madea raiseshell behindbars. «(DVS) ** **** "Mrs. Miniver" (1942,Drama)Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon,DameMayWhitty. An English*** 'Woman of (6:45) **** "Grand Hotel " (1932, Drama) Greta Garbo, Joan Crawf o rd, John Barrymore. Fi v e l i v es are TCM 101 44 101 29 Cham changedforever at a luxurious Berlin hotel. «(DVS) woman leadsher husbandandfamily throughWorld Warff. «(DVS) the Year" *TLC 17 34 32 34 Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: Bride Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress FourWeddings:Grooms Take Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Borrowed, New Borrowed, New Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress NBA Basketball 2013NBARising StarsChallengeThe league's top rookies and Inside the NBA(N) Southland Bats and Hats John Cooper ** "Armored" (2009, Suspense)Matt Dilon, JeanReno. Premiere. Armored-car The Mentalist Red *TNT second-yearplayerssquareoff for braggingrights. (N) « (Live) cc clashes with aveteran. '14' officers plan tosteal from thecompany. « Bulls n '14' *TOON 84 Hall of Game I n credible Crew Regular Show Regular Show Cartoon Planet 'G King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14 Family Guy '14' *TRAV 17 51 45 42 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern GhostAdventures 'PG'« Ghost Adventures 'PG' « Ghost Adventures (N) 'PG' « The DeadFiles Arctic Wrath'PG The Dead Files 'PG' « M * A*S*H 'PG' M * A*S*H 'PG' T h e Cosby Show TVLND 65 47 29 35 M*A*S*H 'PG' The CosbyShow The Cosby Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond (11:12) TheKing of Queens'PG USA 15 30 23 30 Law&Order:SpecialyictimsUnit L aw&Order:SpecialyictimsUnit Law I Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit VH1 191 48 37 54 T.l. and Tiny T.l. and Tiny T . l . and Tiny * * * " 8Mile" (2002) Eminem.A Detroit mantries to achieve success as arapper. n Best WeekEver JennyMcCarthy Best Week Ever Jenny McCarthy *A&E 13 28 18 32 Parking 'PQ' cc Wars
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'Q' cc
Wheel of Fortune Last Man Standing (8:31) Malibu S h ark Tank Kevinmakesa $1 milion
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DuckDynasty Duck Dynast y Si- DuckDynasty 'PQ' cc
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** "RobinHood:Prince ol Thieves"1991, AdventureKevin Costner. n 'PG-13' « ** "The Jackal"1997 BruceWilis. n 'R' « ** "Alv inand th eChipmunks:TheSqueakquel"2009ZacharyLevi ** "Leat herheads"2008GeorgeClooney.'PG-13'« UFC Fight Night UFC:Gustafssonvs. Silva Golf Central (N) 19th Hole (N) PGA Tour Golf Champions:ACEGroupClassic, First Round Golf Central ***"WeddingDaze"(2004,Comedy)JohnLarroquette.'PG'« HALL Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' HBO Real TimeWith Biff Maher (N)'MA' Real Time With Biff Maher n 'MA' (8:15) ** "HorribleBosses" 2011Jason Bateman. n 'R' « ** "Event Horizon" 1997,ScienceFiction LaurenceFishburne. 'R IFC Portlandia '14' Portlandia '14' ** "Batman Returns" 1992 ** "Safe House"2012 DenzelWashington. Premiere. n 'R' cc MAX Banshee Wicks(N) n 'MA' cc Girls in Bed B a nshee 'MA' NBCSN 27 58 30 209 (4:30) College HockeyBostonUniversity at Maine(N) The Crossover Pro Football Talk NHL Overtime Poker After Dark Cash200K Darts Poker After Dark Cash200K Real AbrahamLincoln: Revealed Lincoln: American Mastermind NGC 157 157 L i ncoln's Secret Killer: Revealed D i ggers 'PG Diggers 'PG' Top Secrets: Top Secrets: Lincoln's Secret Killer: Revealed NTOON 89 115189115 Wild Grinders n Planet Sheen (N) Avatar: Air. Odd Parents Odd Parents Odd Parents Wild Grinders n Planet Sheen n Planet Sheenn Planet Sheenn Dragon Ball Z I ron Man: Armor OUTD 37 307 43 307 Arrow Affliction Grateful Nation Best Defense Elite Tactical Unit YachtTakedown Gun Stories Shooting Gallery Midnight 3Gun Impossible Eli t e Tactical Unit Yacht Takedown Shooting USA ***"The Womanin Black"2012 DanielRadcliffe SHO 500 50 0 * * " Lara Croft Tomb Raider: TheCradle of Life" 2003 Angelina Jolie History of the Eagles(N)(Part1 of 2) 'MA House of Lies SPEED 35 303125303 NASCAR Live NASCAR Racing The 10 'PG' U F C Primetime NASCAR Racing NASCARLive NASCARRacing Unique Whips '14' STARZ 300408300408 Baffle: LosAng (6:40) *** "Kill Bill:Vol. 2" 2004,Action UmaThurman, David Carradine. n 'R' « Spartacus: War of the Damnedn Spartacus: War of the Damned n Spartacus: War of the Damnedn *** "Tabloid"2010, Documentary n 'R' « * "TheThreeM usketeers"2011Matthew MacFadyen.'PG-13'« *** "Reservoir Dogs"1992 HarveyKeitel. 'R' « TMC 525 52 5 D a y Night Low DnShame *WE 14 41 174118(5:00) ** "There's SomethingAbout Mary" 1998CameronDiaz. 'R ** "There's SomethingAbout Mary" 1998, Romance-ComedyCameron Diaz, Matt Dilon, BenStiler. 'R Plat. Weddings Plat. Weddings ENCR FMC FUEL GOLF
* "MyBoss's Daughter" 2003 AshtonKutcher. « 106401 306401 Almost Heroes 104204104120 ** "Alvin and the Chipmunks"2007,ComedyJason Lee.'PG' ©c 34 UFC: Jung vs. Poirier FromPatriot Center in Fairfax, Va. 28 301 27 301(5:30) PGA Tour Golf NorthernTrust Open,SecondRound 66 33 175 33 Brady Bunch B r ady Bunch B r ady Bunch B r ady Bunch "MeaMaximaCulpa: Silencein theHouseoi God 425 501 425501 Identity Thief 10 1 0 5 (4:15) ** "BatmanReturns Portlandia '14' Portlandia '14 400 508 508 (5:50) ** "Sherlock Holmes: AGameoi Shadows" 2011'PG-13' cc
PAGE 16 • TV
THE BULLETIN
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2013
PROVIDED BY ....
Getaways Travel Pleeseel lleliderts. ,i
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cs-vaooWYQo Enjoy a spectacular 5-night French Polynesia vacation courtesy of Pleasant Holidays, Getaways Travel and The Bulletin. Ni,tts
This fabulous trip for two includes: roundtrip air from Los Angeles on Air Tahiti Nui and five nights' accommodation at Bora Bora Pearl Beach Resort 8< Spa. A prize package valued at $7,000
FOR MORE INFORMATION ORTO SUBSCRIBE, CALLTHE BULLETIN AT For complete rules and regulations, visit www,bendbulletin,com/vacationrules or stop by The Bulletin at1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Additional entry forms are available in newspapers for sale across Central Oregon and in the lobby of The Bulletin. Entry forms should be delivered or mailed to The Bulletin. Last day to enter is March 22, 2013 at noon, Winner will be drawn March 25, 201 3. *Winner is responsible for transportation to LOS ANGELES and Transfers from Bora Bora airport to resort and return. Passport valid for more than 6 months after the start of the trip is required. ~
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©IFIFIICIAIL IUILILIRI'IIM CIRMWM'5 I'IRAVIRILVACAtt'Il©IMI|'IRMWM' SWIRIRIPSMKIRS IRM'II'IIV IF©lkM Sign me up to win The Bulletin's Sixth Annual Subscriber Vacation Getaway Sweepstakes! Official entry form only, No other reproductions are accepted. NAME:
PHONE:
ADDRESS:
E-MAIL (required): G ET M O R E LO C A L
The Bulletin 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
find us online or just around the corner in Bend
Getaways Travel I Pleasaat Holldaql. GE1AWAYTR SAVELis located at: 563 SW 13th St., Bend, OR97702 541-317-1274 www.getawaystravel.net
ZIP: C URRENT BULLETIN SUBSCRIBER:
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RULES:This award is valid for travel April 1 — May 31, 2013 8< November 1 — December 12, 2013. Award is non-transferable, non-refundable, not redeemable for cash and may not be sold. Travel over holidays and other peak travel periods is restricted. Optional insurance and any upgrades are the responsibility of the recipient. The recipient of this certificate is responsible for paying any resort taxes and fees, parking fees, room service charges and any other incidentals assessed directly by the hotel, and/or not directly specified above.Travel is subject to availability and some restrictions may apply. Winner must be at least 21 years old. Employees of participating companies and its properties, sponsors, vendors and their immediate families are not eligible to win. The Bulletin reserves the right to deem entries ineligible. One coupon per edition. For all rules and regulations visit www.bendbulletin.com/vacationrules. Email addresses will not be sold but individuals who enter this contest may receive emails from THE BULLETIN, GETAWAYSTRAVEL and PLEASANT HOLIDAYS. One coupon per edition.