Bulletin Daily Paper 5/12/12

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LACROSSE: Summit takes title D1 •

MAY 12, 2012

Pilots help save patients • B1

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OSU-Cascades gets thumbs-up

HIGH SCHOOL RANKINGS

Why Summit made the grade while Bend High got snubbed

• Given a high finance priority, campus moves closer to four-year status By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

PORTLAND — Oregon State University-Cascades Campus moved a small but important step

By Patrick Cliff

toward four-year status Friday when it was given a preliminary thumbs-up by the State Board of Higher Education’s finance and administration committee.

The state’s seven universities requested millions for capital construction projects. OSU-Cascades is ranked 10th out of 31 projects. It looks to be above the cutoff lined —

a positive, though preliminary, step. “It’s ranked pretty high. I think there is a good possibility of it moving forward,” said Alice Wiewel, director of capital planning and construction with the Oregon University System. See OSU-Cascades / A4

Taking aim at nationals

The Bulletin

Summit High School is the top-ranked high school in Central Oregon and one of the best in the state, according to US News & World Report. What does that mean, though? The magazine’s rankings, released last week, represent one of many attempts to measure the quality of American high schools by various publications and government agencies. Such rankings tend to vary, as each emphasizes data from different years and sources. US News, for instance, analyzed 2009-10 data, while the state’s most recent measure of adequate yearly progress, or AYP, looked at 2010-11 tests. AYP analyzed scores on standardized state tests, for instance, but not the results of Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate tests, as US News did. The US News ranking takes into consideration a number of measures. Summit owes its rating as Oregon’s 13th best high school, in part, to students’ performance on standardized tests (it exceeded state averages) and, in part, to the number of seniors taking — and performing well on — AP tests. See Rankings / A7

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Tianshan Fullop, left, and Carly Fristoe, at Fox’s Billiard Lounge in Bend Thursday, have made the most of their participation on a local high school billiards team. The two met in the finals of a regional 18-and-under tournament in Bend, and will compete in the 9-ball national championships in Wisconsin in July.

Shawn Baldwin / New York Times News Service file photo

An Iraqi holds a portrait of Grand Ayatollah Ali-Sistani, Iraq’s spiritual leader, in Baghdad. The jockeying to succeed the 81-year-old Shiite leader has begun.

• High school billiards teammates roll through regional competition

Iran joins in jockeying for top Shiite leader

By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

H

er teammates call her “The Giant Slayer.” Last month, Summit High School student Carly Fristoe, 16, proved why she deserves the nickname. “She was just rolling through people,” said Carly’s billiards teammate, Tianshan Fullop, 17. “She really showed her stripes that day.” After five grueling hours during which she played — and

By Tim Arango New York Times News Service

NAJAF, Iraq — As the top spiritual leader in the Shiite Muslim world, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani has instructed his followers on what to eat and how to wash, how to marry and to bury their dead. As a temporal guide, he has championed Iraqi democracy, insisting on direct elections from the earliest days of the occupation, and warned against Iranianstyle clerical rule. Frail at 81, he still greets visitors each morning at his home on a narrow and sooty side street here, only steps from the glimmering gold dome of the Imam Ali Shrine. But the jockeying to succeed him has quietly begun, and Iran is positioning its own candidate for the post, a hard-line cleric who would give Tehran a direct line of influence over the Iraqi people, heightening fears that Iran’s long-term goal is to transplant its Islamic Revolution to Iraq. The succession, a lengthy and opaque process in which the outcome is by no means assured, could shape the interplay of Islam and democracy not only in Iraq, where Shiites are the majority, but also across a Shiite Muslim world that stretches from India to Iran, Lebanon and beyond. See Ayatollah / A4

often beat — some of the region’s best billiards players, Carly found herself in the final. Her opponent was fellow Summit student Tianshan. Tianshan beat Carly. But the two, who belong to a team of Summit and Bend high students, walked away with a victory. Both will go to nationals. “When I found out we were both going to nationals, I was in shock,” Carly said. Carly and Tianshan participated last month in the second

regional billiards junior division competition, which took place at Fox’s Billiard Lounge in Bend. About 14 students from Oregon and Washington attended, playing 9-ball for a chance to go to the Billiard Education Foundation’s Junior National Championship in July. The duo from Summit High School took the top two spots in the 14- to 18-year-old division and will attend the championship, which will be held in Wisconsin.

Only the top player in the junior league division was supposed to qualify for nationals. Officials approved an exception to the rule on Carly’s behalf, however, because there weren’t enough girls playing in the regional competition to have a separate girls’ division — and because carly beat every boy except Tianshan to place second. “It was kind of empowering,” Carly said. “I was able to beat all those people. People who I maybe have felt not as good as sometimes.” See Billiards / A7

Guideline revisions may increase addiction diagnoses By Ian Urbina New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — In what could prove to be one of their most far-reaching decisions, psychiatrists and other specialists who are rewriting the manual that serves as the nation’s arbiter of mental illness have agreed to revise the definition of addiction,

which could result in millions more people being diagnosed as addicts and pose huge consequences for health insurers and taxpayers. The revision to the manual, known as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, or DSM, would expand the list of recognized symptoms

for drug and alcohol addiction, while also reducing the number of symptoms required for a diagnosis, according to proposed changes posted on the website of the American Psychiatric Association, which produces the book. In addition, the manual for the first time would include gambling as an addiction, and it might

introduce a catchall category — “behavioral addiction — not otherwise specified” — that some public health experts warn would be too readily used by doctors, despite a dearth of research, to diagnose addictions to shopping, sex, Internet use or playing video games. See Addiction / A7

The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper Vol. 109, No. 133, 70 pages, 7 sections

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INDEX Business Classified Comics Crosswords Dear Abby Editorials

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Local News C1-8 Movies B2 Obituaries C7 Sports D1-6 Stocks C4-5 TV B2, ‘TV’ mag

TODAY’S WEATHER

Clear and warmer High 76, Low 38 Page C8

Correction In a story headlined “Feedback is sought on park projects,” which appeared Friday, May 11, on Page A1, the amount of money the Bend Paddle Trail Alliance has raised for the Colorado Avenue dam spillway project was incorrect due to faulty information provided to The Bulletin. The Bend Paddle Trail Alliance has not committed any funds to the project.

TOP NEWS GAY MARRIAGE: Obama’s support mobilizes the Christian right, A6 JPMORGAN CHASE: $2B in losses sparks firestorm over regulation, C3


THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

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TODAY

CAMPAIGN 2012

Battle of the ’burbs may decide election

It’s Saturday, May 12, the 133rd day of 2012. There are 233 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS

I

n the past two presidential elections, almost two-thirds of the popular vote came from nation’s 100 biggest metro areas. Each of these county clusters begins with a large urban core and extends across suburban counties with strong economic ties. In 2004 and 2008, Republicans won the least-settled suburban counties, while Democrats took the most urban ones.

In between, the mature suburbs were a shifting battleground. They went for George W. Bush in 2004, but Barack Obama in 2008. The mature suburbs alone may not decide the 2012 presidential race, but they offer a geographic window on the swing voters who will. Will they stick with Obama? Or shift to presumed Republican nominee Mitt Romney?

bulletin@bendbulletin.com How 573 counties in the top 100 metro areas voted for president in ’04 and ’08:

NEWSROOM AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

Swung to Obama: 80 counties Swung to McCain: 6 counties

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Democratic for both: 158 counties Republican for both: 329 counties

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• Presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney delivers a commencement address at Liberty University, an evangelical bastion in Lynchburg, Va. • Young anti-austerity protesters plan to occupy Madrid’s central Sol plaza and mount tent cities for three days to mark the oneyear anniversary of similar demonstrations last year.

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGA MILLIONS

The numbers drawn Friday night are:

3 15 29 35 54 8 x4 The estimated jackpot is now $25 million.

62

Obama extended the Democrats’ dominance in urban cores and won in the mature suburbs.

BIRTHDAYS

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Emerging suburb

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Swing suburban counties in the Washington metro area were Loudoun and Prince William in Virginia.

2008

45 57 42

In the mature suburbs, Obama got 2 million more votes than Kerry.

County groups are based on census data released in March on people living in densely developed urban areas. City/high density: 132 counties — at least 95 percent of population in urban areas. Mature suburbs: 164 counties — 75 to 95 percent urban. Emerging suburbs: 186 counties — 25 to 75 percent urban. Exurbs: 91 counties — less than 25 percent urban. Sources: U.S. Census Bureau, Brookings Institution, National Atlas of the United States

Ted Mellnik, Karen Yourish and Laura Stanton / The Washington Post

Baseball Hall-of-Famer Yogi Berra is 87. Composer Burt Bacharach is 84. Country singer Billy Swan is 70. Singermusician Steve Winwood is 64. Actor Gabriel Byrne is 62. Singer Billy Squier is 62. Actor Ving Rhames is 53. Actor Emilio Estevez is 50. Actor Stephen Baldwin is 46. Actress Malin Akerman is 34. Actor Jason Biggs is 34. Actor Malcolm David Kelley is 20. — From wire reports

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John Kerry prevailed in urban areas, but George W. Bush’s decisive support across the suburbs helped propel him to a second term.

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Breakdown by cities and suburbs 57

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In the sprawling Atlanta metro area, core counties voted Democratic the past two presidential elections, and outer, less-developed counties Republican. The inner suburbs of Douglas, Rockdale and Newton counties were the only ones to swing — to Obama in 2008.

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Highlights:In 1937, Britain’s King George VI was crowned at Westminster Abbey; his wife, Elizabeth, was crowned as queen consort. In 1932, the body of Charles Lindbergh Jr., the kidnapped son of Charles and Anne Lindbergh, was found in a wooded area near Hopewell, N.J. In 1949, the Soviet Union lifted the Berlin Blockade. Ten years ago: Jimmy Carter arrived in Cuba, becoming the first U.S. president — in or out of office — to visit since the 1959 revolution that put Fidel Castro in power. Five years ago: A U.S.-led coalition operation supported by NATO killed the Taliban’s most prominent military commander, Mullah Dadullah. One year ago: A German court convicted retired U.S. autoworker John Demjanjuk of being an accessory to the murder of tens of thousands of Jews as a Nazi death camp guard. (Demjanjuk, who maintained his innocence, died in March 2012 at age 91.)

FOCUS: CULTURE

1 Across: It recently stirred controversy in Venezuela • Crossword writer accused of hiding a coded death threat By William Neuman New York Times News Service

LIMA, Peru — Among the answers to a crossword puzzle that ran in a Venezuelan newspaper on Wednesday were A-D-A-N, the first name of President Hugo Chavez’s brother; R-A-F-A-G-A-S, which can refer to a burst of machine gun fire but also a gust of wind; and A-S-E-S-I-N-E-N, which in Spanish is the plural of the imperative form of the verb to kill. In the polarized world of Venezuelan politics, where the president’s backers and critics are at each other’s throats over the smallest of matters, the puzzle was interpreted by some as not only a political attack on Chavez but an out-andout death threat on his kin. “This is a message,” declared Miguel Perez Pirela, the host of a show on state television and a vehement backer of Chavez, who interpreted the answers as a not-so-secret code against the president’s brother, who is the governor of Barinas State. On his show, Perez, according to Reuters, used as examples the secret messages that the French resistance leader Charles de Gaulle sent to fight-

ers during World War II, and said he had assembled a group of mathematicians and other experts who agreed with his interpretation. But Neptalí Segovia, the longtime puzzle writer for the newspaper, Ultimas Noticias, dismissed that sinister view and said his puzzle had no political motive. His newspaper reported Friday that Segovia had voluntarily visited the National Intelligence Service on Thursday night to offer his version of events. That followed a visit to the newspaper by a team of intelligence agents seeking information on Segovia. “I went because I am the first one interested in clearing this up,” the newspaper quoted Segovia as saying. “I have nothing to hide.” Segovia, who has been writing crosswords for the paper for more than 17 years, called the allegations against him ridiculous. He blamed “irresponsible people who are seeking to generate a controversy in an election season.” That election, in October, pits Chavez, who has held office since 1999, against Henrique Capriles Radonski, the opposition candidate. Adding to the tension is the uncertainty over the health of Chavez, who has been undergoing treatment in Cuba for an undisclosed form of cancer.

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SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

T S Singer’s ex-brother-in-law 14 years in unmarked convicted of murdering family COLD CASE

grave, and – finally – an arrest By Michael Wilson New York Times News Service

NEW YORK — To find Marleny Cruz, one must start 28 feet away, at a guidepost in the back of Block 21 at Forest Green Park Cemetery in Morganville, N.J. That is Row A of graves. Each grave is seven feet long, head to foot. You move forward, counting the rows. In D, according to a brass plaque, lies a beloved husband, father and grandfather. In Row F, a beloved mother. Between them, in Row E, six feet beneath a patch of grass with no marker, lies Marleny. The strangers who arranged for her burial here, on May 26, 1998, did not buy a plaque. What would it have said? It had been three months since her 14-year-old body was found, bruised and strangled and sexually abused, on a Bronx curb, and she still had not been identified. She did not fall through the cracks — she was born there. Marleny grew up in the Dominican Republic with a mother who would be killed in a fight over drugs. Marleny moved to New Jersey to live with her father, whom she later accused of abusing her. She bounced around foster homes, sometimes staying just a couple of days before running away. Several weeks before her death, she landed on East 166th Street in the Bronx, with Alice McLeod, a warm woman whose five children are outnumbered about 2-1 by her current and former foster children. “She listened to her music, and danced right here in the house,” McLeod said. Marleny, who was not attending school at the time, often visited an aunt somewhere in the Bronx. On Feb. 23, 1998, she showered, ate breakfast and left, and when she did not return, McLeod filed a missing persons report with the police. The body had been dumped on Valentine Avenue, in another precinct, and the dots were not connected. The body was finally identified after eight months through dental records. Swabs taken from her vagina yielded incomplete DNA data. Last winter, during a rape investigation by the Bronx district attorney’s office, advances in technology gathered more microscopic data out of those same swabs. There was a match: Marleny Cruz died, the police said, at the hands of a suspected serial killer names James David Martin. “He admitted to strangling Marleny,” Reiman said. “He’s very friendly, very articulate, very easygoing, an easy smile. Softspoken. Intelligent.” On Wednesday, detectives flew Martin, who is now 40, to the Bronx. Reiman said he was investigating whether there were other victims. “I would say it’s a very strong possibility,” he said. The arrest this week is both a triumph of forensic science and police work and, for a girl in an unmarked grave an hour’s drive from the gutter where she was dumped, something of a final indignity. Here lies Marleny Cruz, motherless, runaway, Victim No. 2.

By Monica Davey New York Times News Service

CHICAGO — The former brother-in-law of Jennifer Hudson, the singer and actress, was convicted Friday of murdering her mother, her brother and her young nephew. With a crush of news and entertainment reporters monitoring her every move, Hudson, who rose to national fame from one of this city’s toughest neighborhoods, attended the trial that ran nearly three weeks and appeared as prosecutors’ first witness, saying she had always disliked William Balfour, now convicted

in the case. “I would tell her over and over again not to marry William,” Hudson testified about her sister, Julia, who eventually married him. Calling more than 80 witnesses, prosecutors said Balfour had shot and killed members of the Hudson family in their home in the Englewood neighborhood in October 2008 after growing jealous and possessive of Julia Hudson. Balfour’s defense team had characterized the case as largely circumstantial, suggesting that police hastily focused on Balfour in a rush to close a case

that drew national headlines. Balfour, 31, faces life in prison. Prosecutors said Balfour had been to the Hudson family home on the morning of the shootings, and witnesses said that he had previously been seen with the gun that was used. But no DNA evidence or fingerprints proved Balfour’s involvement, and defense lawyers told jurors that the work of Hudson’s brother, Jason — selling drugs, the defense team said — was more likely what led to the shootings. The jury, six men and six women, deliberated during parts of three days and had

EDWARDS TRIAL

Motion to dismiss charges is denied

indicated not long before they announced their verdict that they were split. They were sequestered during deliberations in the high-profile case. The daily machinations of the trial had little to do with Hudson’s celebrity, which was, nonetheless, ever-present. Reports on the trial noted her tears, her bowed head, her fourth-row seat, her departures from the courtroom and her clothes. Hudson drew national attention with appearances on “American Idol” in 2004, then went on to win an Oscar for her role in “Dreamgirls.”

The Associated Press GREENSBORO, N.C. — A federal judge refused to throw out campaign corruption charges against John Edwards on Friday, meaning the former presidential hopeful will have to present his case to a jury. Lawyers for Edwards argued before U.S. District Court Judge Catherine Eagles that prosecutors failed to prove the 2008 candidate intentionally violated the law or that some of the alleged offenses actually occurred in the Middle District of North Carolina, the venue where he was indicted. After two-and-a-half hours of arguments from the defense and rebuttal from the prosecution, the judge ruled quickly from the bench that the government had met its basic burden under the law. “We will let the jury decide,” Eagles said. Motions to dismiss are routine in criminal trials, but rarely granted. The decision means Edwards’ defense team will begin calling its first witnesses Monday, including former Federal Election Commission chairman Scott Thomas, political pollster Harrison Hickman and ex-Edwards attorney Wade Smith. Lawyers for Edwards said they have not yet determined whether he’ll take the stand. Edwards has pleaded not guilty to six criminal counts related to campaign finance violations. He is accused of masterminding a scheme to use nearly $1 million in secret payments from two wealthy donors to help hide his pregnant mistress as he sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008. He faces up to 30 years in prison if convicted on all counts. Edwards’ lead attorney, Abbe Lowell, made an impassioned argument Friday tearing down the government’s evidence piece by piece, saying their case had numerous holes and they were expecting the judge to serve as the “pothole filler.”

In populous German state, challenger to Merkel rises

PLANE CRASH IN INDONESIA

By Nicholas Kulish New York Times News Service

The Associated Press

An Indonesian marine looks at the wreckage of Sukhoi Superjet-100 on Mount Salak in Bogor, Indonesia. All 45 aboard the plane that crashed Wednesday are feared dead.

Remains retrieved from wreckage By Andi Jatmiko The Associated Press

MOUNT SALAK, Indonesia — Clearer weather finally allowed Indonesian helicopters to land early today and retrieve some remains of the 45 people aboard a Russianmade plane that crashed into a volcano during a demonstration flight. Investigators still have found no sign of the black box recorder that might explain why the new Sukhoi Superjet-100 slammed into Mount Salak about halfway through a 50minute flight intended to woo potential Indonesian airline buyers on Wednesday. Search teams who climbed the dormant volcano’s nearvertical slopes have been struggling to retrieve remains of the victims, and helicopters were unable to land because of

thick fog shrouding the mountain about 50 miles southwest of Jakarta, the capital. All those aboard the flight are now presumed dead, and the plane’s shredded wreckage is scattered around the dense jungle. Helicopters brought four body bags with remains to Jakarta early Saturday morning for identification, search and rescue agency spokesman Gagah Prakoso said. “We also have deployed a team to find the black box, but so far it had yet found,” Prakoso said. Col. Anton Chastila, a police forensic doctor in Jakarta, said his team has received the remains, adding it was unclear how many victims they represent. About 60 forensic experts will sort through the body

parts piece by piece and take DNA samples to identify them, Chastila said. Wednesday’s demonstration — locally known as a “joy flight” — was mostly carrying representatives from Indonesian airlines, which are rapidly expanding to serve a burgeoning middle class in the sprawling archipelago where air travel between islands is a quicker alternative to ferries. Just 21 minutes after takeoff from a Jakarta airfield, the Russian pilot and co-pilot asked for permission to drop from 10,000 feet to 6,000 feet. They gave no explanation, disappearing from the radar immediately afterward. It was not clear why the crew asked to shift course, especially since they were so close to the 7,000-foot volcano, officials have said.

Vatican eyes Legion priests on abuse By Nicole Winfield The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican is investigating seven priests from the troubled Legion of Christ religious order for alleged sexual abuse of minors — evidence that the scandal over the order’s pedophile founder doesn’t rest solely with him, The Associated Press has learned. Two other Legion priests are being investigated by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for alleged sacramental violations, believed to involve abusing spiritual direction and other pastoral care to have inappropriate sexual relations with women. The investigations mark the first known Vatican action against Legion priests following the revelations of the Legion’s founder, who was long held up as a model by the Vati-

can despite credible accusations — later proven — that he was a drug addict who raped and molested his seminarians. The Legion, which is now under Vatican receivership, has insisted that the crimes of the Rev. Marciel Maciel were his alone. But the Vatican investigation of other Legion priests indicates that the same culture of secrecy that Maciel created within the order to cover his crimes enabled other priests to abuse children — just as abusive clergy of other religious orders and dioceses have done around the world.

In a statement Friday to the AP, the Legion confirmed it had referred seven cases of alleged abuse to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican office that investigates sex crimes. All but one involves alleged abuse dating from decades ago; one case involves recent events, the Legion said. “Over the past few years, in several countries, the major superiors of the Legion of Christ have received some allegations of gravely immoral acts and more serious offenses ... committed by some Legionaries,” the statement said.

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ATTENTION BUYERS! FREE! “Home Prices Now at 2002 Levels” “Perfect Storm for Home Buyers” ~ CNN Money, 04/24/2012

~ The Bulletin, 02/26/2012

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COLOGNE, Germany — Social Democrats here in Germany’s most populous state are drawing inspiration from Francois Hollande’s defeat of incumbent President Nicolas Sarkozy in France and hoping that a victory in this political bellwether will spell the beginning of the end of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s seven-year reign. With the seismic political upheaval of the elections in France and Greece barely past, Germany’s most important state is already entering the stretch run to its own electoral showdown Sunday. The task falls to the state premier of North Rhine-Westphalia, Hannelore Kraft, whose skills at political compromise and pragmatic style are reminiscent in many ways of Merkel’s own. But Kraft knows she must overcome her reputation as a free-spender. Where Hollande campaigned on promises to loosen the purse strings, deficit reduction strikes a chord even among many left-wing voters here in Germany. “We have to consolidate the budget,” Kraft told an audience at a campaign stop recently, after a member of the audience asked about state help with affordable student housing. “We cannot give out the same money twice.” That is exactly what her critics accuse her of doing, including by abolishing higher-education fees and adding both teachers and police officers during her term at the helm of the state government. Last year the state had a $3.9 billion shortfall. When Kraft proposed a budget with a gap of $4.7 billion or more this year her unstable government collapsed.

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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

Ayatollah Continued from A1 The ayatollah’s prescriptions for daily living are imbued with the force of law among the majority of the world’s 200 million or so Shiites who follow him, his religious teachings are sacrosanct and his political sway is powerful. For Iraq, the contest adds another element of uncertainty in a fledgling democracy whose politics are in upheaval as its three main factions — the Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds — contend for power, a contest that analysts worry could help tilt the country back toward authoritarianism. “Iraq does not need this now,” said Hussein Mohammad al-Eloum, a cleric from a prominent religious and political family; the ambassador to Kuwait and a former oil minister are his sons. “Sistani, may God protect him.” Iran’s candidate, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi al-Shahroudi, 63, is an Iraqi-born cleric who led the Iranian judiciary for a decade and remains a top official in the government there. With Iranian financing, his representatives have for months been building a patronage network across Iraq, underwriting scholarships for students at the many seminaries here and distributing information. “He’s there to prepare himself for after Sistani,” said Mehdi Khalaji, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, who spent 14 years studying at seminaries in Qum, an Iranian holy city. The move has raised fears that Iran is trying to extend its already extensive influence in the political and economic life of Iraq. A recent visit by Iraq’s prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, to Tehran, where he met with al-Shahroudi, raised tensions further. Reidar Visser, a historian, wrote in his Iraqi politics blog that al-Maliki’s visit “did nothing to kill the rumors about some kind of Iranian design on the holiest center of Iraqi Shiism.” The process of choosing the next supreme spiritual leader is a tortuous and somewhat spontaneous one that relies on the will of the people, expressed in whom they choose to pay their religious taxes to — devout Shiites are expected to pay one-fifth of their discretionary income to their ayatollah, or marjah — and the validation of a spiritual leader’s religious scholarship by his clerical peers. “The Iranian government cannot control who pious Shias will look to,” said Vali Nasr, a former State Department official, academic and author of “The Shia Revival.” “It’s a very democratic process.” It could take several years before a clear successor rises. “It will take Najaf two to three years before a strong marjah emerges,” said Sami al-Askari, a Shiite politician

OSU-Cascades Co n tin u ed from A1 The funding is important to acquire new facilities. By 2015, OSU-Cascades hopes to become a four-year university offering lower-division courses and increase student population by 1,000 for a total enrollment of 2,000. By 2025, the goal is to have the population closer to 5,000. The campus now offers only upper-division and some graduate courses. But to get there, the OSUCascades project needs to secure approval from the State Board of Higher Education, the governor and lawmakers, to name a few. The project was catapulted to a higher ranking, in part, because officials believe community members will pitch in to pay the bill. Officials have projected they will need about $16 million from the state. The Cascades campus will be on the hook for another $8 million, $4 million of which it hopes to receive in donor gifts. Along with the assumption of donor money, the fact that it would likely help address capacity issues helped the project move up the list. A new law passed by the 2011 Legislature, called the 4040-20 law, will mean the state’s universities will need to ready themselves for a jump in enrollment. The law declares that by 2025, 40 percent of Oregon’s adults will have a bachelor’s degree or higher, 40 percent will have earned an associate degree or some kind of postsecondary

here who lived in exile in Iran, who knows al-Shahroudi from his time there. “It is not like the Vatican. In the marjaiya it is a slow and complicated process.” The marjaiya is the Shiite leadership body in Iraq. The tradition in Najaf and its religious academy, called the Hawza, is to keep a measured distance from politics, to live a pious and ascetic life and intervene only occasionally in political affairs. Al-Sistani is Iranian but was able to rise in Najaf partly because he was never involved in Iranian politics. He intervened at key moments during the U.S. occupation, including a celebrated episode in 2004 when he called hundreds of thousands of supporters into the streets to demand direct elections over the objections of the U.S. authorities. He was also a voice of moderation and restraint during the years of sectarian carnage, when Iraq was seemingly on the verge of tumbling into the abyss. But for more than a year he has refused to even meet with politicians — he has barely left his house for the last several years — and has been subjected to constant rumors about his health. Yet on a recent morning, as he does almost every day of the year, he greeted visitors who had lined up outside his spare and unassuming house, surrounded by open-air storefronts selling religious items. He agreed to meet, although not be interviewed by, a reporter for The New York Times. Seated in the corner of a stark room carpeted in Persian rugs, he was helped to his feet by aides to shake hands. He exchanged pleasantries and showed no outward signs of serious illness. Clerics here give high marks to the quality of al-Shahroudi’s scholarship, partially because he studied under and had the validation of Ayatollah Muhammad Bakr al-Sadr who was assassinated in 1980 by Saddam Hussein’s henchmen and if alive today would be the father-in-law of Muqtada alSadr, the anti-American cleric. Mahmoud al-Sadr is still a revered figure. Al-Shahroudi has not visited Najaf since his representatives began establishing their organization here. “He wants to come and visit,” said Ibrahim al-Baghdadi, an Iraqi who runs his office here. “It’s his country. He was born here.” Baghdadi described the tensions over al-Shahroudi’s organizational presence in Najaf as efforts from others in the clerical community to “disturb the streets.” He suggested an Iranian system of government would not work because, “The constitution rules here, and Iraqis have voted for it.” Outwardly espousing ambitions to succeed al-Sistani would be a breach of etiquette. “For the future, you can’t tell,” Baghdadi said. “This is up to God.”

certificate, and 20 percent will have earned their high school diploma or the equivalent. By the first of June, the full board is scheduled to approve the rankings. By the end of August, the list goes to the governor’s desk. By December, the governor will unveil his proposed budget. Then the proposal will need to work its way through the legislative process. By May or June of 2013, officials will know if the project will have the financial backing it needs. OSU-Cascades will also need to negotiate a deal with Central Oregon Community College in order to offer the lower-division courses. The two entities need to agree on what to do with Cascades Hall, which OSU-Cascades rents from COCC. The community college is supportive of OSU-Cascades moving off the campus and contemplating taking over the building and the $5 million debt that OSU-Cascades still owes on the building. OSU-Cascades is eying five other buildings near its current graduate building on Colorado Avenue. University officials are leaning toward remodeling rather than building from scratch. “I think there’s a good possibility of it moving forward,” Wiewel said. “But frankly, it all depends on how much monies are allocated from the state. We’re hopeful the state will see the Oregon University System is a great investment in the state.” — Reporter: 541-554-1162, ldake@bendbulletin.com

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To submit service information or announcements for religious organizations, email bulletin@bendbulletin.com or call 541-383-0358.

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Shmuel Thaler / Santa Cruz Sentinel

Elvira Mendoza de Vidales maintains a shrine where she says the image of the Virgin de Guadalupe appears in an oak tree at Pinto Lake County Park in Watsonville, Calif.

20 years after vision, woman cares daily for California shrine By Cathy Kelly Santa Cruz Sentinel

WATSONVILLE, Calif. — Thousands of people have trod the dirt path leading to the shore of Pinto Lake County Park in the 20 years since a Watsonville, Calif., woman reported seeing a vision of Our Lady of Guadalupe in an oak tree there. Her reported vision initially drew crowds of several hundred to the park and sparked creation of a shrine that is still being renewed daily by flowers, candles and other items brought by visitors. And while the crowd has slowed over the years, the unofficial shrine still draws a steady stream of those seeking solace and intervention from the beloved Roman Catholic icon who is said to have first appeared to a peasant, Juan Diego, on a hillside near Mexico City in 1531. The shrine, near a walkway through tule reeds over the water, is a kind of rustic outdoor chapel, with an altar. Benches and tables are filled with colorful bouquets, candles, figurines, photographs and notes left by visitors. Colorful flags stream from the trees and the quiet is filled with the sounds of birds. Visitors come from San Francisco, Sacramento, Oregon, Mexico, and other places. The site once drew a lot of media attention, with Our Lady of Guadalupe being a central icon of the Catholic Church in Mexico. Twenty years ago, Anita Contreras Mendoza was having marital problems when she began taking walks in the park, said her cousin, Elvira Mendoza de Vidales. On June 17, 1992, the mother and cannery worker saw a vision of a woman suddenly appear before her, Vidales said. The woman told Mendoza she was Maria de Guadalupe and to tell people she was there to receive their prayers, that it was a sanctuary, Vidales said.

Shmuel Thaler / Santa Cruz Sentinel

The oak tree at Pinto Lake County Park that believers say features an image of the Virgin de Guadalupe.

The woman also told Mendoza the poor needed her, Vidales said. The woman told Mendoza to close her eyes, and when she opened them, the image had vanished, but Mendoza saw her image in the trunk of an oak tree, she said. When Mendoza became too ill to maintain the shrine six years ago, she asked Vidales to do it. These days, Vidales has a mirror that she readily brings out for visitors, tilting it with an experienced hand to shine a beam on an ovalshaped image in the bark of the tree. It is visible, several feet up the live oak. Vidales, 62, visits the spot daily, culling the dead flowers and gently up righting the vases that have fallen and doing the same for the candles and mementos left there. She prays for her own five children too, asking for help with one son’s drug addiction, another who is working too hard, she said. Vidales laughs, saying she has started seeing images in other trees at the park, and even on the ground. “It’s making me crazy,” she said. “But I clean here every day and people visit every day. Some come only to see, but most come to pray.”

GAY MARRIAGE

Franklin Graham: Obama is shaking his fist at God By Michael Gordon McClatchy Newspapers

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — In another provocative comment aimed at President Barack Obama, evangelist Franklin Graham on Thursday accused the president of having “shaken his fist” at God by changing his position on same-sex marriage. “It grieves me that our president would now affirm same-sex marriage, though I believe it grieves God even more,” Graham said in a prepared statement. “This is a sad day for America. May God help us.” On Tuesday, North Carolina became the 31st state to ratify a constitutional amendment designed to block same-sex marriage. The next day, amid an online clamor to move the Democratic National Convention from Charlotte, the president changed his longstanding position against

same-sex unions. “At a certain point, I’ve just concluded that for me personally it is important for me to go ahead and affirm that I think same-sex couples should be able to get married,” Obama told ABC News. He said he had changed his mind after having talked with his family and friends. Graham, however, said God created and defined marriage. It “should not be defined by presidents or polls, governors or the media. The definition was set long ago and changing legislation or policy will never change God’s definition.” The Rev. Murdoch Smith, pastor of St. Martin’s Episcopal Church in Charlotte, challenged Graham’s view, saying “I am always suspect when someone says that they know the mind of God.”

ANTIOCH CHURCH: Pastor Ken Wytsma; “The Seven Letters to the Seven Churches: Thyatira”; Sunday at 8:45 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.; Redux Q-and-A between services; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St., Bend. BEND CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Pastor Dave Miller; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 4twelve youth group: Wednesday at 7 p.m.; 19831 Rocking Horse Road, Bend. BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE: Pastor Virgil Askren; a special Mother’s Day service; Sunday at 10:15 a.m.; 1270 N.E. 27th St., Bend. COMMUNITY OF CHRIST: Elder Craig Perryman; “Crazy Love,” based on Matthew 7:7-11; Sunday at 11 a.m., following 10:45 a.m. praise singing; 20380 Cooley Road, Bend. DISCOVERY CHRISTIAN CHURCH: Pastor Dave Drullinger; “Remarkable Women”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 334 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. EASTMONT CHURCH: Pastor John Lodwick; “The Complications of (Un)Faith,” based on Genesis 16, as part of the series “Come Along on the Journey of Faith”; Sunday at 9 and 10:45 a.m.; 62425 Eagle Road, Bend. FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER: Pastor Mike Johnson; “The Resolution for Women: Leaving a Legacy”; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 1049 N.E. 11th St., Bend. “Restored” youth services: Wednesday at 7 p.m. FATHER’S HOUSE CHURCH OF GOD: Pastor Randy Wills: “Jericho: It’s a Faith Thing,” as part of the series “Points of Interest”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 61690 Pettigrew Road, Bend. The youth group meets Wednesday at 7 p.m. THE FELLOWSHIP AT BEND: Pastor Loren Anderson; “Blind Bart,” based on Mark 10:46-52; Sunday at 10 a.m.; Morning Star Christian School, 19741 Baker Road, Bend. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH: Pastor Syd Brestel; “The Transforming Influence of a Godly Mother,” with Joymakers children’s choir; Sunday at 10:15 a.m.; 60 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: The Rev. Dr. Steven Koski; “Hard Truth: Life Is Terminal,” as part of the series “Hard Truths That Lead to Peace and Freedom”; Sunday at 9 a.m., 10:45 a.m. and 5:01 p.m. bluegrass service; 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH: The Rev. Thom Larson; “Love Is…,” based on John 15:917; Sunday at 9 and 11 a.m; 680 N.W. Bond St., Bend. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH OF BEND: Pastor Phil Kooistra; “Armed for Battle,” based on Ephesians 6:13-14; Sunday at 10 a.m.; Boys & Girls Club, 500 N.W. Wall St., Bend. GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Joel LiaBraaten; “Sweet Payback Time” and “What Does Jesus Want for You?”; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; 2265 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. GRACE REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Pastor Dan Dillard; “The Gospel Mystery of Union with Christ,” based on John 14:15-24; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 62162 Hamby Road, Bend. JOURNEY CHURCH: Pastor Keith Kirkpatrick; “Come As You Are”; Sunday at 9 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.; 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend.

NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH: Ron Werner, Jr.; “Accompanying Love”; Sunday at 9 and 11 a.m.; 60850 Brosterhous Road, Bend. NEW HOPE CHURCH: A panel of mothers will share insights from their experiences as mothers; today at 6 p.m. and Sunday at 9 and 10:45 a.m.; 20080 Pinebrook Blvd., Bend. REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH: Pastor Mike Yunker; “The Kingdom’s Fall,” as part of the series “The Story”; Sunday at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m.; 2880 N.E. 27th St., Bend. SPIRITUAL AWARENESS COMMUNITY OF THE CASCADES: Guest speaker Barbara Largent; “Mothers, Musings and Magnificence”; Sunday at 9 a.m.; held at The Old Stone Church, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend. TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor David Carnahan; “Love One Another” based on John 15:9-17; Sunday at 8 (communion service) and 11 a.m.; 2550 N.E. Butler Market Road, Bend. UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP OF CENTRAL OREGON: The Rev. Heather Starr; “All People Are Fertile Creators”; Sunday at 11 a.m.; at the Old Stone Church, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend. UNITY OF CENTRAL OREGON: The Rev. Jane Meyers; “Celebrating the Mother,” as part of the series “Deep Green”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; held at High Desert Community Grange, 62855 Powell Butte Highway, Bend. WESTSIDE CHURCH: Linda Johnson; “Pursuit of Happiness”; today at 6:30 p.m. and Sunday at 8, 9 and 10:45 a.m.; 2051 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. WESTSIDE SOUTH CAMPUS: Pastor Scott McBride; “Mother’s Day Message”; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 1245 S.E. Third St., Bend. COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Pastor Rob Anderson; “How Do You Love Others?,” based on John 15:9-17; Sunday at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.; 529 N.W. 19th St., Redmond. ST. PAUL’S ANGLICAN CHURCH: Father John Pennington; “Do’s, Don’ts and Deceptions,” based on James 1:22-27; communion service; Sunday at 10 a.m.; Southwest 12th Avenue and Forest Avenue, Redmond. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Eric Burtness; “The Power of a Praying Mother,” as part of the series “Great Women of the Bible”; Sunday at 8:30 and 11 a.m; 1113 Black Butte Blvd., Redmond. AGAPE HARVEST FELLOWSHIP: Youth group Wednesday at 7 p.m.; 52460 Skidgel Road, La Pine. COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH AT SUNRIVER: Pastor Glen Schaumloeffel; “A Devoted Mother and a Defective Father,” based on 1 Samuel 1-3; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; 1 Theater Drive, Sunriver. CONCORDIA LUTHERAN MISSION: The Rev. Willis Jenson; “God’s Sacraments Save Because the Sacraments Are the Gospel,” based on Numbers 21:9; Sunday at 11 a.m.; held at Terrebonne Grange Hall, 8286 11th St., Terrebonne. MUSICAL SHABBAT SERVICE: Cantor Margaret Bruner will conduct a “Shabbat in Song” service 6:30 p.m. Friday, a Torah service 10:30 a.m. May 19, as part of the Artist in Residence program with Temple Beth Tikvah, Bend’s Reform Jewish congregation. The services will be held at First United Methodist Church, 680 N.W. Bond Street, Bend.

Local churches

For contact information and Web links to local churches, visit www.bendbulletin.com/churches.

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SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN “Celtic Cross” Christianity

“The Wheel of Dharma” Buddhism

“Star of David” Judaism

You Are The Most Important Part of Our Services “Omkar” (Aum) Hinduism

“Star & Crescent” Islam

“Yin/Yang” Taoist/ Confucianism

HAPPY MOTHERS DAY!

Assembly of God

Bible Church

FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER 1049 NE 11th St. • 541-382-8274 SUNDAYS: 9:30 am Sunday Educational Classes 10:30 am Morning Worship

COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH AND CHRISTIAN PRESCHOOL 541-593-8341 Beaver at Theater Drive, PO Box 4278, Sunriver, OR 97707

This Sunday at Faith Christian Pastor Mike will be sharing the Sunday service message titled, “The Resolution for Women; Leaving a Legacy” beginning at 10:30 am

“Transforming Lives Through the Truth of the Word” All are Welcome!

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.bendfcc.com REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1865 W Antler • Redmond 541-548-4555 SUNDAYS Morning Worship 8:30 am & 10:30 am Life groups 9 am Kidz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am Evening Worship 6 pm WEDNESDAYS FAmILY NIGHT 7Pm Adult Classes Celebrate Recovery Wednesday NITE Live Kids Youth Group

SUNDAY WORSHIP AND THE WORD - 9:30 Am. Coffee Fellowship - 10:45 am Bible Education Hour - 11:15 am Nursery Care available • Women’s Bible Study - Tuesdays, 10 am • Awana Kids Club (4 yrs - 6th gr.) Sept. - May • Youth Ministry (gr. 7-12) Wednesdays 6:15 pm • Men’s Bible Study - Thursdays 9 am • Home Bible Studies are also available Preschool for 3 & 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 Chapel

Pastor Duane Pippitt www.redmondag.com

Baptist EASTMONT CHURCH NE Neff Rd., 1/2 mi. E. of St. Charles Medical Center Sundays 9:00 am (Blended worship style) 10:45 am (Contemporary)

CALVARY CHAPEL BEND 20225 Cooley Rd. Bend Phone: (541) 383-5097 Web site: ccbend.org Sundays: 8:30 & 10:30 am Wednesday Night Study: 7 pm Youth Group: 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”

Catholic HOLY REDEEMER CATHOLIC PARISH Fr. Jose Thomas Mudakodiyil, Pastor www.holyredeemerparish.net Parish Office: 541-536-3571

Sundays 6:00 pm Hispanic Worship Service Weekly Bible Studies and Ministries for all ages Contact: 541-382-5822 Pastor John Lodwick www.eastmontchurch.com FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH CBA “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 First Baptist Church will Celebrate Mother’s Day with music from our Joymakers children’s choir and Pastor Syd’s sermon, “The Transforming Influence of a Godly Mother.” Join us for worship at 10:15 am. For Kidztown, Middle School and High School activities Call 541-382-3862 www.bendchurch.org FIRST MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Sundays Bible Classes 9:45 am Morning Worship 10:50 am Bible Study 6:00 pm Evening Worship 7:00 pm Wednesdays Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm Tom Counts, Senior Pastor Ernest Johnson, Pastor 21129 Reed Market Rd, Bend, OR 541-382-6081 HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH, SBC 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond • 541-548-4161 Sunday Worship Services: 8:00 am, 9:30 am, 11:00 am Sunday Bible Fellowship Groups 9:30 am & 11:00 am

HOLY REDEEMER, LA PINE 16137 Burgess Rd Tuesday, Wednesday & 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 –12:15 Pm 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 541-382-3631 NEW CHURCH 2450 NE 27th Street Masses Saturday – Vigil 5:00 PM Sunday 7:30, 10:00 AM &7:00 PM Sunday 12:30 PM Spanish Friday 8:15 AM – CANCELLED Friday 2:00 PM – Bishop’s Ordination

We preach the good news of Jesus Christ, sing great hymns of faith, and search the Scriptures together. Sunday Worship Service - 10:30 am Bible Study - Thursday, 10:30 am Pastor Ed Nelson 541-777-0784 www.berean-bible-church.org

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS

POWELL BUTTE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Cowboy Fellowship Saturdays Potluck 6 pm Music and the Word 7 pm Sunday Worship Services 8:30 am - 10:15 am - 11 am Nursery & Children’s Church Pastors: Chris Blair, Glenn Bartnik & Ozzy Osbourne 13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte 541-548-3066 www.powellbuttechurch.com REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Like Hymns? We've Got 'em! at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th 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 care) For information, please call ... Minister - Mike Yunker - 541-312-8844 Richard Belding, Associate Pastor “Loving people one at a time.” www.real-lifecc.org

Christian Schools CENTRAL CHRISTIAN SCHOOL Pre K - 12th Grade Christ Centered Academic Excellence Fully Accredited with ACSI & NAAS Comprehensive High School Educating Since 1992 15 minutes north of Target 2234 SE 6th St. Redmond, 541-548-7803 www.centralchristianschools.com 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 SAINT FRANCIS OF ASSISI SCHOOL Preschool through Grade 8 “Experience academic excellence and Christian values every day.” Limited openings in all grades. 2450 NE 27th St. Bend •541-382-4701 www.saintfrancisschool.net

Christian Science FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1551 NW First St. • 541-382-6100 (South of Portland Ave.) Church Service & Sunday School: 10 am Wed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm Childcare provided. Reading Room: 115 NW Minnesota Ave. Mon. through Fri.: 11 am - 4 pm Sat. 12 noon - 2 pm

Eckankar ECKANKAR Religion of the Light and Sound of God You’re invited to the 2012 Oregon ECKANKAR Regional Seminar “Spiritual Tools for Mastering Life’s Challenges” June 22, 7-9pm, June 23, 9am-9pm, June 24, 9-11am at The Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Redmond, Oregon Featuring Guest Speaker, Rodney Jones, a long-time member of the Eckankar clergy, a speaker who for many years has given open-hearted and inspiring talks around the world. He is a professional musician and professor at both the Julliard and Manhattan Schools of Music Other highlights include: Community HU Sing, 1pm Saturday June 23 Children’s and Youth program Introductory talks and discussions Book room and Art display Inspiring talks and musical performances

www.HearHu.com www.MiraclesinYourLife.com www.eckankar-oregon.org.

Exposition & Benediction Monday–Thursday after AM Mass – 12:00 PM

Near Highland and 23rd Ave. 2378 SW Glacier Pl. Redmond, OR 97756

Unitarian Universalist

ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH ELCA Worship in the Heart of Redmond

In the St. Clare Chapel Masses Monday – Thursday 8:15 AM Wednesday 7:00 PM Spanish Friday – Adoration– CANCELLED

Para la comunidad Latina: servicio de adoracion y escuela dominical 12:30 pm

BEREAN BIBLE CHURCH In Partnership with American Missionary Fellowship

Lutheran

CITY CENTER A Foursquare Fellowship Senior Pastors Steve & Ginny McPherson 549 SW 8th St., P.O. Box 475, Redmond, OR 97756 • 541-548-7128

Registration required For a free Guest Pass and more information: 541-728-6476 seminarinfo@eckankar-oregon.org

For complete calender: www.hbcredmond.org

Bible Church

Foursquare

Reconciliation Saturday 3:00 PM – 4:45 PM Wednesday 6:00 PM – 7:00 PM

HISTORIC DOWNTOWN CHURCH Corner of NW Franklin & Lava Masses Saturday 8:00 AM Sunday 4:30 PM Monday – Friday 7:00 AM Monday – Thursday 12:15 PM Friday 12:15 PM - CANCELLED

Dr. Barry Campbell, lead pastor

Christian CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND 536 SW 10th, Redmond 541-548-2974 www.redmondchristian.org Sunday Worship 9:00 am & 10:30 am Friday Evening Worship 6:30 pm Sunday School for all ages Kidmo • Junior Church Greg Strubhar, Pastor Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor

Reconciliation Tuesday after AM Mass – 8:00 AM Saturday after AM Mass – 9:30 AM ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH 1720 NW 19th Street Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-923-3390 Father Todd Unger, Pastor Mass Schedule: Weekdays 8:00 am (except Wednesday) 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 (Spanish) Confessions on Wednesdays from 5:00 to 5:45 pm and on Saturdays from 4:30 to 5:15 pm

Episcopal TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH 469 NW Wall St. • 541-382-5542 www.trinitybend.org Sunday Schedule 8 am Holy Eucharist 9:15 am Education for All Ages 10:15 am Holy Eucharist (w/nursery care & Godly Play) 5 pm Holy Eucharist (in St. Helens Hall) The Rev. Roy D. Green, Interim Rector

Evangelical 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 & 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

Sunday Worship Services: Daybreak Café Service 7:30 am Celebration Services 9:00 am and 10:45 am Wednesday Service UTurn - Middle School 7:00 pm Thursdays High School (Connection) 6:30 pm Home Bible Studies throughout the week City Care Clinic also available. Kidz Center School, Preschool www.citycenterchurch.org “Livin’ the Incredible Mission” DAYSPRING CHRISTIAN CENTER Terrebonne Foursquare Church enjoys a wonderful location that overlooks the majestic Cascade Range and Smith Rock. Our gatherings are refreshing, our relationships are encouraging, and family and friend oriented. Come Sunday, encounter God with us, we look forward to meeting you! Adult Bible Study, Sunday 9:30 Am Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 Am DYG (High School) & Trek (Middle School) Monday 6:30 Pm Come and meet our pastors, Mike and Joyce Woodman. 7801 N. 7th St. Terrebonne West on “B” Avenue off of Hwy. 97; South on 7th St. at the end of the road 541-548-1232 dayspringchristiancenter.org

Jewish Synagogues TEMPLE BETH TIKVAH 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 Jews by choice. Our monthly activities include social functions, services, religious education, Hebrew school, Torah study, and adult education Rabbi Glenn Ettman Friday, May 18 – Saturday May 19 Artist in Residence: Cantor Margaret Bruner Friday, May 18 at 6:30 pm – Shabbat in Song: Shabbat Service Saturday, May 19 at 10:30 am Torah Service Saturday, May 19 at 7:00 pm - Evening of Sephardic Music (call for information) All services are held at the First United Methodist Church 680 NW Bond Street Temple Beth Tikvah www.bethtikvahbend.org 541-388-8826

Lutheran CONCORDIA LUTHERAN MISSION (LCMS) The mission of the Church is to forgive sins through the Gospel and thereby grant eternal life. (St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession XXVIII.8, 10) 10 am Sunday School 11 am Divine Service The Rev. Willis C . Jenson, Pastor. 8286 11th St (Grange Hall), Terrebonne, OR www.lutheransonline.com/ condordialutheranmission Phone: 541-325-6773 GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH 2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend 541-382-6862 Sunday Worship 9:30 am (Child Care Available) Sunday School 10:20 am Education Hour 10:45 am Women’s Bible Study Tuesday 9:15 am Men’s Bible Study Wednesday 7:15 am High School Youth Group Wednesday 5:30 pm Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Evangelical Lutheran Church in America www.gracefirstlutheran.org NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 60850 Brosterhous Road at Knott, 541-388-0765 Come worship with us. Worship Times: Informal Service at 9 am Formal Service at 11 am The sermon “Accompanying Love” for Sunday, May 13, will be given by Ron Werner Jr. (Child care provided on Sundays.) www.nativityinbend.com Evangelical Lutheran Church in America TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH & SCHOOL LCMS 2550 NE Butler Market Road Bend, OR 97701 541-382-1832 SUNDAY WORSHIP 8:00 am – Contemporary 11:00 am – Traditional EDUCATION HOUR Adults, Teens, & Children – 9:30 am Staffed Nursery provided 8:00 am – 12 noon Church Website: www.trinitylutheranbend.org School Website: www.saints.org Pastors: Rev. David Carnahan Rev. Patrick Rooney Principal: Mrs. Hanne Krause

Sunday Worship Service 8:30 am Contemporary 11:00 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 Coffee, snacks and fellowship after each service M-W-F Women’s Exercise 9:30 am Wed. Bible Study at noon 3rd Th. Women’s Circle/Bible Study 1:00 pm 3rd Tues. Men’s Club 6:00 pm, dinner Youth and Family Programs Active Social Outreach 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 ~ 541-923-7466 Pastor Eric Burtness www.zionrdm.com

A5

OF CENTRAL OREGON “Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship” We are a Welcoming Congregation

Sunday, May 13, 11:00 am Rev. Heather Starr— “All People Are Fertile Creators” On this Mother’s Day we will ponder together how to free up our creativity, how to “think outside the box,” how to be open to new possibility and the birth of new ideas, changes, and new directions in all our lives, in our communities and our world. Our congregational theme for the month of May is Vision—how do we expand our vision to see and consider possibilities

Mennonite THE RIVER MENNONITE CHURCH Sam Adams, Pastor 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 Church Office: 541-389-8787 E-mail: theriver@mailshack.com Send to: PO Box 808, Bend OR 97709 www.therivermennonite.org

we have not before? Childcare and religious education are provided! Everyone is Welcome! See our website for more information

Meeting place: THE OLD STONE 157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND

Messianic

Mail: PO Box 428, Bend OR 97709

LIVING TORAH FELLOWSHIP @ Celebration Church 63830 Clausen Rd Ste 102, Bend Saturday 10:30 am - 2 pm Worship/Dance - Study Food/Fellowship Hebrew Roots Fellowship worshipping in Spirit and Truth 541-410-5337 Children’s Program www.livingtorahfellowship.com

www.uufco.org (541) 385-3908

Unity Community UNITY COMMUNITY OF CENTRAL OREGON Join the Unity Community Sunday 10:00 am

Nazarene BEND CHURCH OF THE 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 & Children’s Church ages 4 yrs–4th grade during all Worship Services “Courageous Living” on KNLR 97.5 FM 8:30 am Sunday WEDNESDAY 6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study THURSDAY 10:00 am 50+ Bible Study WEEKLY Life Groups Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.bendnaz.org

with Rev. Jane Meyers Youth Program Provided The Unity Community meets at 62855 Powell Butte Hwy (near Bend Airport) Learn more about the Unity Community of Central Oregon at www.unitycentraloregon.com or by calling 541-388-1569

United Methodist FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH (In the Heart of Down Town Bend) 680 NW Bond St. / 541-382-1672

Non-Denominational SOVEREIGN 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 http://www.sovereigngracebend.com/

Everyone is Welcome!

Rev. Thom Larson

Sermon Title: “Love Is ...” Scripture: John 15:9-17

9:00 am - Contemporary Service 10:00 am - Sunday School for all ages

Open Bible Standard

11:00 am - Traditional Service

CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER 21720 E. Hwy. 20 • 541.389.8241

Childcare provided on Sunday

Sunday Morning Worship 8:45 am & 10:45 am Wednesday Mid-Week Service Children & Youth Programs 7:00 pm

*During the Week: Women’s Groups, Men’s Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting, Music & Fellowship.

Nursery Care Provided for All Services Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur www.clcbend.com

Open Hearts. Open Minds.

Presbyterian

Rev. Thom Larson

COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 529 NW 19th Street (3/4 mile north of High School) Redmond, OR 97756 (541) 548-3367

firstchurch@bendumc.org

Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor Rev. Heidi Bolt, Associate Pastor 8:30 am Contemporary Worship 8:30 Nursery Care 8:45 am Youth and Children Sunday School 9:50 am Adult Education 11:00 am Traditional Worship 12:00 Middle School Youth Group 2:00 pm High School Youth Group Wednesdays 5:30 pm Prayer Service

Open Doors.

CHURCH & SYNAGOGUE DIRECTORY LISTING Effective May 1, 2012

Small Groups Meet Regularly (Handicapped Accessible) Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.redmondcpc.org FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 230 NE Ninth, Bend (Across Ninth St. from Bend High) All Are Welcome, Always! Rev. Dr. Steven H. Koski Lead Pastor Worship Theme “Hard Truth: Life is Terminal” 9:00 am Contemporary 10:45 am Traditional 5:01 pm Music Message Meal Nursery care provided at all services Wednesdays 12:00–12:25 pm Silence and Supper (Communion & Prayer) 12:30–1:00 pm Centering Prayer

4 Saturdays and TMC: $110 5 Saturdays and TMC: $132 The Bulletin: Every Saturday on the church page. $22 Copy Changes: by 5 PM Tuesday CO Marketplace: The First Tuesday of each month. $22 Copy Changes: by Monday 1 week prior to publication

Call Pat Lynch 541-383-0396

Youth Events See Youth Blog: http://bendfp.org/youth/ Choirs, music groups, Bible study, fellowship and ministries every week

plynch@bendbulletin.com

230 NE Ninth Street, Bend www.bendfp.org 541 382 4401

Directory of Central Oregon Churches and Synagogues


THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

A6

GAY MARRIAGE

Obama’s endorsement mobilizes Christian right By Dan Eggen The Washington Post

President Barack Obama’s endorsement of same-sex marriage is energizing Christian conservative support for Mitt Romney in a way that the likely GOP nominee has so far not been able to do on his own, according to religious leaders and activists. Pastors in Ohio, North Carolina, Florida and other swing states are readying Sunday sermons inveighing against same-sex unions, while activist groups have begun laying plans for social media campaigns, leafleting drives and other getout-the-vote efforts centered on the same-sex marriage issue. Romney could benefit from a

strong turnout among evangelicals and other social conservatives, many of whom have been skeptical of his commitment to their causes. “So many people were rather lukewarm toward Governor Romney and were really looking for some more tangible reasons to support him,” said Phil Burress, president of Citizens for Community Values, who led the ballot drive that banned gay marriage in Ohio in 2004. “Then lo and behold, it just fell out of the sky when Obama came out and endorsed same-sex marriage. ... We are going to make this our key issue — the attack on marriage.” The National Organization for Marriage, a leading anti-

gay-marriage group, lashed out at Obama after his announcement and promised to campaign against him “ceaselessly” in swing states. Same-sex marriage has long been a galvanizing political force for core constituencies in both parties, particularly conservative Catholics and evangelical Republicans. But the president’s public embrace of the idea alters the landscape in ways that promise to complicate the political calculus for both sides. While more than 30 states now ban same-sex marriage and voters in North Carolina on Tuesday approved a constitutional amendment forbidding it, anti-gay-marriage ac-

tivists acknowledge that public opinion on the issue has shifted dramatically since 2004, when ballot measures in Ohio and 10 other states helped drive social conservatives to the polls in support of George W. Bush. Romney and other Republicans have tread softly on the issue so far, but many evangelicals think that a forceful anti-gay-marriage campaign could pay huge dividends for Republicans in the fall. Some on the religious right also remain deeply uncertain about Romney’s convictions on cultural issues and are unhappy with his statements in recent days that he supports allowing gay couples to adopt children and that he does not

view same-sex marriage as a religious issue. Many activists say they will continue to push Romney on the issue. “Romney says he is for traditional marriage and then immediately says he is fine with homosexuals adopting children,” said David Lane, who organizes conservative pastors and congregations nationwide and helped lead anti-gay-marriage efforts. “Our base does not react well to that. They are not going to turn out (for a candidate) who tries to triangulate” on topics like marriage and other traditional values, he said. The sentiments underscore the continued difficulties that Romney faces in attempting to navigate thorny cultural is-

“We are going to make this our key issue — the attack on marriage.” — Phil Burress, president of Citizens for Community Values

sues while attempting to woo independent voters with an economic message. Romney is slated to appear today at Liberty University, an evangelical bastion in Lynchburg, Va., where he will deliver a commencement address. Romney says he is opposed to same-sex marriage and civil unions and favors a constitutional amendment banning gay marriages nationwide. But the former Massachusetts governor has also said that the “tender and sensitive” issue will not be a central part of his campaign.

Thank You to all our Newspaper In Education Sponsors! $750

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Redmond Area Parks & Recreation 465 SW Rimrock, Redmond • 541-548-7275

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On Point Credit Union 800-527-3932 • 950 NW Bond, Bend www.onpointcu.com

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Scwabe, Williamson & Wyatt 360 SW Bend Ste. 400, Bend • 541-749-4044

Gary Gruner Chevrolet 2000 SW Highway 26, Madras 541-475-2238 • www.ggruner.com

Knife River 64500 OB Riley Rd., Bend • 541-388-0445

Beecher Carlson Insurance Co. Patty Clark Account Executive 296 SW Columbia St. Ste. D, Bend 541-749-4968 • www.ranch-ins.com

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Thank You to our BRONZE LEVEL SPONSORS 2nd Street Eats & Tricia’s True Confections 9th Street RV Storage Center A-1 West Side Storage 3 Advanced Precast Products Advisory Services & Investments Affordable Auto Repair Agne’s Alterations Air Tech Alex Skorbek Alpine Pest Management Amanas Mexican Restaurant Angel Thai Cuisine Angelina Organic Skincare Anthony Albertozzi PC, Law Firm Antioch Church Apple Peddler Restaurant Arco AM/PM Ascent Capital Management At Your Site Storage Attorney Brian Hemphill Avion Water Company Inc. Baptista Tile & Stone Gallery Beecher Carlson Insurance Co. Patty Clark Acct. Exec. Bend Dermatology Clinic LLC BEND FENCING (Stor.Johann Inc.) Bend Martial Arts Club Bend Pawn & Trading Bend River Sash & Door Bend Swim Club Bend Urology Associates Bend Whole Health Family Chiropractic Best Buy Big Country RV Black Butte Ranch Bladt’s Custom Woodworking Inc. Blockbuster 211 Brent Woodward, Inc. Brian T. Hemphill Attorney at Law Brian’s Cabinets Brookman Revere LLC Buck Jenkins Enterprises Bud & Carmen Capel Building Specialties Butler Aircraft Co. Café Sintra Canal Barge Cruises.com Capstone Certified Public Accountants, LLC Car Kare Inc. Cascade Biosciences Cascade Insurance Center Cascade Sotheby’s Realty Caudell Landscapes Central Oregon Business Service, Inc. Central Oregon Community College Central Oregon Insurance, Inc. Central Oregon Nutrition Consultant Central Oregon Perio PC Central Oregon Seeds Inc. Central Oregon Sleep Disorder Center LLC Central Oregon Sonic of Bend Madras & Redmond Century Insurance Group LLC Chem Dry of Bend 21620 Rickard Rd. Christmas Valley Market Cinder Butte Meat Company Co Energy Propane Cold Stone Creamery Coldwell Banker Morris Real Estate Copies & Printing Crooked River Sanitary Inc. CS Construction LLC Cunningham Insurance & Financial Services - Allstate Insurance D & D Bar & Grill Dana Hanson Nehl, LTC DBG Loyalty De Leone Corporation Del Barber Excavation Inc. Del Taco Deschutes Environmental Services Deschutes Pine Sales Desert Peaks Golf Desert Sky Real Estate Dice Construction Discount Carpet Clean Express Dr. Keith E. Krueger Dr. Maxine Hoggan Psychologist Dutch Pacific Properties Dwyer Williams Potter Attorney East Bend Plaza Edward D. Jones Elemental Eyecare Ewing Bookkeeping Fireside Inc. Five Pine Lodge Gary Gruner Chevrolet GFP Enterprises Gilmore Dental Gordon Plumbing Co. Gould and Associates Realty Greg & Peggy Cushman Grocery Outlet Habitat for Humanity Harrigan, Price, Frank & Co. Havern Cabinetry & Design High Desert Aggregate & paving High Desert Bank High Desert Martial Arts High Tides Seafood Grill Hong Kong Restaurant HSW Builders In Tune Jackson’s Corner Jem Search LLC JICA Construction LLC Jim & Ginny Murtaugh Dental

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541-617-0513 541-389-6740 541-317-5700 541-923-3272 541-617-0898 541-548-2991 541-488-1294 541-536-2463 541-389-4942 541-322-8916 541-388-5177 541-647-1655 541-317-0231 541-318-1454 541-416-8949 541-318-5110 541-382-4847 541-280-6363 541-382-2991 541-382-5342 541-382-9130 541-749-4968 541-382-5712 541-382-4400 541-383-4141 541-317-5099 541-389-5052 541-317-8462 541-548-4017 541-389-1191 541-383-5850 541-330-2495 541-595-1252 541-408-4095 541-385-1033 541-504-5538 541-382-2991 541-382-3773 541-627-2435 541-389-0926 541-389-2389 541-389-1054 541-548-8166 541-593-1222 541-504-6264 541-549-1237 541-382-4896 541-588-6209 541-382-7772 541-383-7600 541-548-7077 541-317-4938 541-383-7700 541-488-1294 541-388-0694 541-317-0255 541-306-4882 541-306-4153 541-382-4211 541-388-7374 541-576-2200 541-548-6328 541-738-6733 541-382-5466 541-312-7296 541-317-5577 541-548-1542 541-617-9190 541-318-8536 541-382-4592 541-330-1181 541-317-5771 541-504-8311 541-504-1100 541-322-8702 541-593-2424 541-447-6296 541-475-6368 541-504-9792 541-382-9187 541-475-3784 541-322-5717 541-526-0969 541-588-9226 541-382-7900 541-390-2900 541-617-8861 541-323-3937 541-389-0357 541-382-2597 541-549-5900 541-475-2238 541-549-8167 541-504-5707 541-388-8079 541-356-2900 541-389-3044 541-389-3095 541-312-6709 541-382-4791 541-749-4248 541-504-8566 541-848-4444 541-647-1220 541-389-5244 541-389-8880 541-388-9898 541-923-1636 541-647-2198 541-317-1979 541-548-5012 541-389-2905

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SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Immigration PHONE HACKING Murdoch confidante recalls agency will expand chummy ties with British elite fingerprint program By Sarah Lyall

New York Times News Service

New York Times News Service Obama administration officials have announced that a contentious fingerprinting program to identify illegal immigrants will be extended across Massachusetts and New York next week, expanding federal enforcement efforts despite opposition from the governors and immigrant groups in those states. In blunt emails sent Tuesday to officials and the police in the two states, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials advised that the program, Secure Communities, would be activated “in all remaining jurisdictions” this Tuesday. In June, Gov. Deval Patrick of Massachusetts declined to sign an agreement with the immigration agency to expand Secure Communities beyond a pilot program in the Boston area since 2006. Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York said he wanted to suspend the program, which had been initiated in a number of counties. Opponents argued that it was an overly wide dragnet that was deporting many illegal immigrants with no criminal histories who were arrested for minor offenses. They said the program encouraged racial profiling by the police and eroded trust in law enforcement among immigrants. Under Secure Communities, fingerprints of anyone booked by the local or state police are sent through the FBI to be checked in databases of the Department of Homeland Security which include immigration records. If there is a match, officials at the immigration agency decide whether to issue a detainer, asking the police to hold the person to be picked up by federal agents. ICE officials said that they made changes to respond to state officials’ concerns and to focus the program on deporting serious criminals. They said they revised the detainers to clarify that suspected illegal immigrants could be held for only 48 hours. They provided civil rights training for the police in places where the program was started, officials said. A recent change in arrest procedures would decrease detentions of illegal immigrants stopped for speeding or driving without a license, the officials said.

Addiction Continued from A1 Part medical guidebook, part legal reference, the manual has long been embraced by government and industry. It dictates whether insurers, including Medicare and Medicaid, will pay for treatment, and whether schools will expand financing for certain special-education services. Courts use it to assess whether a criminal defendant is mentally impaired, and pharmaceutical companies rely on it to guide their research. The broader language involving addiction, which was debated this week at the association’s annual conference, is intended to promote more accurate diagnoses, earlier intervention and better outcomes, the association said. “The biggest problem in all of psychiatry is untreated illness, and that has huge social costs,” said Dr. James Scully, chief executive of the group. But the addiction revisions in the manual, scheduled for release next May, have already provoked controversy similar to concerns previously raised about proposals on autism, depression, bipolar personality disorder and other conditions. Critics worry that changes to the definitions of these conditions would also sharply alter the number of people with diagnoses. While the association says that the addiction changes will lead to health care savings in the long run, some economists say that 20 million substance abusers could be newly categorized as addicts, costing hundreds of millions of dollars in additional expenses. “The chances of getting a diagnosis are going to be much

LONDON — They kept in touch, she said Friday, by telephone, text message and email. They met at lunches and dinners. They socialized at cocktail parties, birthday parties, summer outings, Christmas celebrations and, in one heady instance, on a yacht in Greece. So chummy were the relations between Britain’s political leaders and Rebekah Brooks, a former chief executive of Rupert Murdoch’s British newspaper subsidiary, that at one point Brooks found herself cheekily lecturing a future prime minister, David Cameron, about how to avoid humiliating himself by text message, she said. “Occasionally he would sign them LOL — ‘lots of love,’” Brooks told the Leveson Inquiry on media ethics and practices, speaking of Cameron’s text messages to her when he was the leader of the opposition, “until I told him it meant ‘laugh out loud.’ Then he didn’t use that any more.” Brooks had been summoned to the inquiry to speak to its current focus: the relationship between politicians and the media in Britain. The picture she painted was one of seemingly unfettered access for her and, implicitly, for her boss, Murdoch. By her account, when political leaders were not arranging birthday parties for her or meeting her for cozy private dinners or sending her notes or attending her wedding, she was picking up the phone to chat with them — or sometimes to cajole or strong-arm them into seeing things her way. But even as she described

Billiards Continued from A1 This is the second year that Fox’s has hosted the regional competition, and the second year that the high school billiards team has existed. It was created by Fox’s owner, Marshall Fox, who wanted to give students the opportunity to play billiards. Last year, he lobbied the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to allow minors in the pool hall. Until then, only people ages

greater, and this will artificially inflate the statistics considerably,” said Thomas Babor, a psychiatric epidemiologist at the University of Connecticut who is an editor of the international journal Addiction. Many of those diagnosed as addicts under the new guidelines would have only a mild problem, he said, and scarce resources for drug treatment in schools, prisons and health care settings would be misdirected. “These sorts of diagnoses could be a real embarrassment,” Babor added. The scientific review panel of the psychiatric association has demanded more evidence to support the revisions on addiction, but several researchers involved with the manual have said that the panel is not likely to make significant changes to their proposal. Many scholars believe that the new manual will increase addiction rates. A study by Australian researchers found, for example, that about 60 percent more people would be considered addicted to alcohol under the new manual’s standards. Association officials expressed doubt, however, that the expanded addiction definitions would sharply increase the number of new patients, and they said that identifying abusers sooner could prevent serious complications and expensive hospitalizations. “We can treat them earlier,” said Dr. Charles O’Brien, a professor of psychiatry and the head of the group of researchers devising the manual’s new addiction standards. “And we can stop them from getting to the point where they’re going to need really expensive stuff like liver transplants.”

Sang Tan / The Associated Press

Rebekah Brooks, former chief executive of News International, center, and her husband, Charlie Brooks, leave the High Court in London after giving evidence on Friday.

all that, Brooks repeatedly declared that they did not have to listen to her if they did not want to, and that the British media did not exert any special influence over politicians. When Robert Jay, the counsel for the inquiry, put it to her that media executives and editors were “unelected forces” influencing policy by exercising power over governments, Brooks said she disagreed. “Your power is your readership,” she said. “It’s not an individual power. It’s a readership power.” And, she said, “every day, the readers can unelect us” by deciding not to buy the paper. Brooks, 43, has become a central figure in the phonehacking scandal that has swept through News Corp., Murdoch’s company, and the upper echelons of Britain’s political and law-enforcement elite. A Murdoch confidante and favorite, she worked as editor of News of the World, the paper at the center of the scandal, and of The Sun, another Murdoch tabloid, before being appointed chief executive of News International, the British newspaper subsidiary, in 2009. She resigned last summer,

as the scandal took hold and the Murdochs closed News of the World, and she is the subject of a criminal investigation into the matter. But at the time, even as some public figures were fulminating against News International, they were privately sending her messages of support, either directly or indirectly, she said. These included “No. 10, No. 11, Home Office, Foreign Office,” Brooks said, referring to Nos. 10 and 11 Downing Street, home to the prime minister and the chancellor of the exchequer. She also got a sympathetic message from Tony Blair, the former Labour prime minister, she said. Because of the continuing criminal investigation, Brooks could not discuss phone hacking or other legal issues, but she stuck to the broader questions on hand. At every step, she identified herself merely as a journalist doing her job. Yes, she said, she did informally lobby the government about News Corp.’s bid to take over the 61 percent of British Sky Broadcasting, or BSkyB, the British satellite television broadcaster, that it did not already own.

21 and older were allowed in Fox’s. “I started playing pool when I was younger, and I couldn’t play in most places because I was a minor,” Fox said. “So I really wanted something that the youth could be part of. I wanted to make sure that this is a pool lounge first, not just a place for drinking.” About 12 students were in the club this season. A 14-andyounger league was started this year, too, and Fox says he expects participation to double next season.

Tianshan joined the billiards team last year. “I’m a more introverted person,” he said. “I don’t excel at sports that require me to run more than two feet. This gives me a chance to be involved and be part of the high school experience.” Tianshan also went to the national championships last

Rankings Continued from A1 In addition to ranking a small number of high schools within states, US News gave them gold, silver and bronze medals. Summit received a silver medal. Summit Principal Lynn Baker was grateful for his school’s rating, which places Summit among the top 5 percent of high schools in the country. “It’s just a recognition of all the work we’ve been putting in over the last several years,” he said. The various rankings and measures of school quality can be dizzying for school administrators. US News, for instance, declined to rank Bend High, even though it earned an “outstanding” rating on Oregon’s school report card. Summit High has had varied results as well. Despite its lofty US News ranking and “outstanding” rating on the state’s report card, the school failed to make adequate yearly progress, or AYP. Bend-La Pine Superintendent Ron Wilkinson encourages people to consider the data behind such rankings. A school that fails to meet AYP is not necessarily a bad one. “The way I look at it, it’s one more measure. We try to look at how our schools are performing on multiple measures. Our schools are doing pretty well and we have room to keep growing,” Wilkinson said. US News uses a “ladder” method to measure nearly 22,000 schools across the United State. A school must reach a certain threshold on each step to advance. The first step measures a school’s performance on standardized tests. Taking into account each school’s population of economically disadvantaged students, the step requires schools to perform better than “statistical expectations” to advance. To clear the second step, a school’s minority and economically disadvantaged

year. Though he didn’t make it far, he says the trip was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. He’s thrilled to get a second chance at it. Tianshan said that she’s looking forward to competing at nationals and meeting new people. This time, she’ll be able to compete in the girls’ division. Fox said that youth billiards

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students must perform better on state tests than statewide averages for those groups. Schools that met this standard were eligible for at least a bronze medal. While Redmond Proficiency Academy, Mountain View High and La Pine High received bronze medals — essentially an honorable mention — none performed well enough to be numerically ranked. No other schools in Central Oregon received a medal. The final step is designed to show how well a school prepares its students for college. To rate that, US News looks at participation and success rates of seniors on either AP or International Baccalaureate tests. For the publication to even consider that, however, the school must clear Steps 1 and 2. Schools that performed particularly well on the third step received either a silver or gold medal, as well as state and national rankings. Bend High is the only large Bend-La Pine high school not to clear the first step. Yet the school is considered “outstanding” by the Oregon Report Card, and it met AYP last year. Parents also apparently consider it a strong academic choice because Bend High receives more incoming transfers than either Summit or Mountain View. That trend is most often attributed to Bend High’s IB program. According to Bob Morse, director of data research at US News & World Report, had Bend High scored a “few points” higher on the state performance index, it would have cleared the first step and eventually received a silver medal. The different standards can be confusing, said Bend High Principal H.D. Weddel, who pointed to AYP results and said he “couldn’t be prouder of this school.” “I know what I know, and that is that we’re going to be the very best we can be,” Weddel said. “I know this is a great high school.” — Reporter: 541-633-2161, pcliff@bendbulletin.com

has come a long way in recent years. “Billiards is a lot different than it used to be,” Fox said. “A lot of people think of pool as a bunch of people playing in a smoky bar. But it’s not that way anymore. It’s really become a sport.” — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com

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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

W B Gunman kills U.S. soldier in Afghanistan KABUL, Afghanistan — An attacker wearing an Afghan army uniform opened fire on U.S. soldiers in remote eastern Afghanistan on Friday, killing one service member before escaping, in what appeared to be another in a recent string of assaults on coalition soldiers by their Afghan partners. The shooting took place early Friday in a camp run by the Afghan national army, where the U.S. troops had gone to train Afghan soldiers, said Attaullah, the police chief of Ghaziabad district in Kunar province near the Pakistan border. The attacker, who was on guard at the camp, also wounded two other U.S. soldiers before he fled into the surrounding area — a mountainous region that has seen heavy fighting in recent months as the coalition has sought to reopen crucial supply lines but which still remains largely under Taliban control, Attaullah and other local Afghan officials said. Attaullah said the suspected attacker, named Mamood, was originally from Helmand province.

Impasse in Greece could force new vote ATHENS, Greece — The ascendant leader of a left-wing party on Friday rejected calls to join a unity government, pushing Greece closer to new elections in a climate in which it is becoming increasingly difficult for any party to enforce Greece’s debt deal with foreign creditors. Alexis Tsipras, the leader of the Coalition of the Radical Left, or Syriza, said joining the proposed government would betray his party’s rejection of the debt deal, which was accepted by two of the parties that would be his partners. The political scrambling follows elections Sunday in which no party took a majority, but Syriza did well enough to begin to change the debate over the tough and deeply unpopular austerity measures approved to win foreign aid.

Haiti hopes ore discovery will spur mining boom By Martha Mendoza The Associated Press

TROU DU NORD, Haiti — Its capital is blighted with earthquake rubble. Its countryside is shorn of trees, chopped down for fuel. And yet, Haiti’s land may hold the key to relieving centuries of poverty, disaster and disease: There is gold hidden in its hills — and silver and copper, too. A flurry of exploratory drilling in the past year has found precious metals worth potentially $20 billion deep below the tropical ridges in the country’s northeastern mountains. Now, a mining company is drilling around the clock to determine how to get those metals out. In neighboring Dominican Republic, workers are poised to start mining the other side of this seam later this year in one of the world’s largest gold deposits: 23 million ounces worth about $40 billion. The Haitian government’s annual budget is $1 billion, more than half provided by foreign assistance. The largest single source of foreign investment, $2 billion, came from Haitians working abroad last year. A windfall of locally produced wealth could pay for roads, schools, clean water and sewage systems for the nation’s 10 million people, most of whom live on as

Dieu Nalio Chery / The Associated Press

Genove Valcimon, 70, works on a road being built through the mountains to lead to an exploratory drill site in Haiti. Precious metals in the country’s hills could be worth $20 billion.

little as $1.25 a day. “If the mining companies are honest and if Haiti has a good government, then here is a way for this country to move forward,” said Bureau of Mines Director Dieuseul Anglade. In a parking lot outside Anglade’s marble-floored office, more than 100 families have been living in tents since the earthquake. “The gold in the mountains belongs to the people of Haiti,” he said, gesturing out his window. “And they need it.” Haiti’s geological vulnerability is also its promise. Massive tectonic plates squeeze the island with horrifying consequences, but deep cracks between them form convenient

veins for gold, silver and copper pushed up from the hot innards of the planet. Prospectors from California to Chile know earthquake faults often have, quite literally, a golden lining. Until now, few Haitians have known about this buried treasure. Mining camps are unmarked, and the work is being done miles up dirt roads near remote villages, on the opposite side of the country from the capital. But U.S. and Canadian investors have spent more than $30 million in recent years on everything from exploratory drilling to camps for workers, new roads, offices and laboratory studies of samples. Actual mining could be under way in five years.

“When I first heard whispers of this I said, ‘Gold mines? There could be gold mines in Haiti?’ ” said Michel Lamarre, a Haitian engineer whose firm, SOMINE, is leading the exploration. “I truly believe this is our answer to taking care of ourselves instead of constantly living on donations.” On a steep Haitian ridge far above the Atlantic, brilliant boulders coated with bluegreen oxidized copper jut from the hills, while colorful pebbles litter the soil, strong indicators that precious metals lie below. A team of workers periodically pulled up samples and knocked them into boxes. The first 40 feet yielded loose rocks and gravel. About 160 feet down, cylinders of rock came back peppered with gold. At 1,000 feet down, rocks were heavily streaked with copper. Geologists extrapolating from depth and strike reports estimate at least 1 million ounces of gold at two sites. In April, prospectors found the first significant silver ever reported in Haiti: between 20 million and 30 million ounces. And in the end, it may be copper that is the most lucrative: Geologists suspect that more than 1 million tons lay in just one of many areas under exploration. The prices of precious metals have been volatile in recent years, with copper selling for about $8,000 per ton, silver at $30 an ounce, and gold at $1,600 per ounce.

“Ultimately, I think mining is going to dwarf anything else in Haiti,” says Michael Fulp, an Albuquerque, N.M.-based geologist who visited the drill sites. “Usually you’ve got about a one-in-1,000 chance of making a mine from the exploratory stage, but those odds are much better in Haiti because of the lack of any previous modern-day exploration and very, very promising samples.” Gold was last gathered in Haiti in the 1500s, when Spaniards enslaved the Arawak Indians to dig for gold. When the Spaniards learned of even more lucrative deposits in Mexico, they moved on. In the 1970s, United Nations geologists documented significant pockets of gold and copper, but foreigners weren’t willing to risk their cash in a country where corruption and instability has long discouraged outside investment. Ironically, it was only after the catastrophic 2010 earthquake that investors saw real opportunity. Fifteen days after a seismic jolt brought down much of Port-au-Prince, a Canadian exploration firm acquired all of the shares of the only Haitian firm holding full permits for a promising chunk of land in the northeast. “Investors want to get in at the bottom,” said Dan Hachey, president of Majescor Resources, the Canadian company, “and I figured after that earthquake, Haiti was as low as it could get.”

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ALGIERS, Algeria — Algeria’s governing party strengthened its rule in parliamentary elections this week, officials announced Friday, dampening hopes that the vote might boost the standing of opposition voices and eliciting audible gasps of skepticism from many of those who heard the results at a hilltop hotel here. An alliance of moderate Islamist parties did poorly in the voting, a result sharply at odds both with analysts’ predictions and the experience of Algeria’s neighbors in the wake of last year’s Arab Spring. The country’s governing party, the National Liberation Front, gained almost half the seats in Parliament, officials said. The Islamists rejected the results at a news conference. One of their leaders, Aboudjerra Soltani of the former Hamas party, called them “neither acceptable, logical or reasonable,” and said they would “delay the Algerian Spring.”

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OSLO, Norway — A spectator was evicted from an Oslo court Friday after throwing a shoe at accused gunman Anders Behring Breivik. He said his action was intended “to send a message” to the defendant. “I had to send the killer a message from all those whose lives he has destroyed. He is a murderer, a terrorist,” Hayder Mustafa Qasim, a Kurd from northern Iraq, was quoted as telling the online edition of the Aftenposten daily. Qasim’s younger brother, 18-year-old Karar Mustafa Qasim, was one of the 69 who died in a shooting at a Labor Party youth camp last year. He was hit by four shots. Throwing shoes is a form of insult in several parts of the world since the soles of shoes are considered unclean. Qasim was evicted from the public gallery after shouting “You killer! You killed my brother! Go to hell!” at Breivik. Breivik has admitted to having carried out the July 22, 2011, twin attacks in Oslo and Utoya that claimed a total of 77 lives, but has pleaded not guilty.

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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

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JULIE JOHNSON SPOTLIGHT

Deadlines, moms and gratitude

Postal Service food drive today

A

s I type this, I am missing a Mother’s Day coffee-andmuffins event in my firstgrader’s classroom. Jackson was so excited about it. He told me he would get me a cup of coffee, and a muffin, and a napkin. Because I’m his mom, and I deserve a muffin. Will you be there? He kept asking me. It will only take a few minutes, he said. He smiled when he said it. The hope was so apparent on his face, in his trusting eyes. He smiled at me and asked again: Will you be there, Mom? I had to watch the hope turn to hurt and the smile fade to disappointment when I hesitated. I don’t know, I said, over and over again. I will try, but I have a deadline. I hope to come, but I have my job. I want to be there, but I have responsibilities at work. Of course, none of those things matter to a 6-year-old. All he heard is “no.” All he knew was that his mom may not be among his classmates’ mothers being honored Friday morning. When I failed to get ahead of my deadlines and it became clear that I really couldn’t attend, I dreaded telling him so. He asked one last time Thursday night: Can you come to my class for Muffins for Moms? It will only take a minute. Then you can go back to work. It will only take a minute. And I had to watch his face crumple with sadness when I told him I couldn’t. Being a working mom hurts sometimes. While my heart tells me there is nothing more important in my life than being a good mother — not my job, not my boss, not my deadlines — reality tells me that my paycheck is more important than Muffins for Moms, and that working is not only something I want to do, it’s something I HAVE to do. The reality is I cannot make it to my children’s school for every 9 a.m. special event, or every talent show, or every awards ceremony. Like thousands of other working parents in Central Oregon, sometimes I have to put my job ahead of what my children want me to be able to do, or what I think I should be able to do for them. Though I am lucky enough to have a job that allows me the scheduling flexibility to often participate in their school activities, sometimes I can’t do it when it counts. At the best of times, the simple acknowledgment of this reality is enough to let me shrug it off and soldier on, knowing that like other working moms, I’m doing the best I can for my children. At the worst of times, it makes me feel like I don’t deserve that Mother’s Day muffin after all. Watching Jackson’s disappointment when I told him I couldn’t make it to his class Friday morning was definitely one of the worst of times. But being a working mother has also taught me something important: I can’t do it alone. And when a mom is in a bind, what better person to turn to for assistance than another mom? As she has so many other times, my own mother came to my rescue. She changed her own plans. She promised to show up in Jackson’s classroom. She enjoyed coffee and a muffin served up by the sweetest blond-haired 6-year-old she knows. She made his day. And as a result, she made my day, too. So thank you, Mom. Thank you for being there for me, and for my kids, for all these years. Thank you for teaching me that working moms are good moms, too, even if we sometimes don’t feel like it. Thank you for being such a good grandmother to my children in those moments when I feel like a less than perfect mom. You definitely deserve the Mother’s Day muffin. And I think I do, too. — Julie Johnson is the features editor at The Bulletin. 541-383-0308, jjohnson@bendbulletin.com

Heroes in the skies

Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

Volunteer pilot John Hayes stands by a Piper Seminole twin engine, four-seat plane, which is the type of aircraft he flies while piloting for the charity Angel Flight.

• Angel Flight pilots find joy in offering patients transportation, kindness By Alandra Johnson • The Bulletin

S

ometimes the passengers — who may be flying

Student film fest accepting entries The Future Filmmakers Festival’s eighth annual Oregon Student Video Contest is open for entries. The deadline for school-related entries is June 14; the deadline for general entries is Aug. 27. The student video contest accepts entries of films of one to five minutes on any subject produced during the past year. Students in grades five through 12 are encouraged to enter a short film in this year’s event. Videos containing inappropriate language, nudity, gestures or violence will be disqualified. A selection team will determine which films will be in the festival. The festival will be judged by audience vote during a special showing for family and friends being held Oct. 13 at the Tower Theatre in Bend. The winner will receive a $100 prize. The Future Filmmakers has also announced its annual 72-hour shootout dates, Sept. 24-27. For entry forms, guidelines and more, contact: futurefilm makers@bendfilm.org or 541-388-3378.

Event supports cancer patients

to chemotherapy

appointments in Portland — want to talk. They like discussing what they are going through or want conversation to take their mind off of their health. Other times the passengers can be silent, Submitted photos

crestfallen.

Bend letter carriers will collect food to be delivered to the NeighborImpact Food Bank as part of the 20th annual Stamp Out Hunger food drive today. Bend residents are encouraged to leave a sturdy bag containing nonperishable foods such as canned soup, canned vegetables, pasta, rice or cereal next to their mailbox prior to regular mail delivery. Last year, the food drive collected more than 70 million pounds of food donations. In the United States, nearly 49 million Americans, including 16 million children, are struggling with hunger. More information: www.stampouthunger .info, 541-815-7111 or cowhawks@hotmail .com.

Steve Magidson poses with a patient and her mother.

The volunteer Angel Flight pilots adapt based on the mood of their passengers. In addition to flying patients to their medical appointments without charge, most pilots want to help however they can. “We can’t control the outcome

The American Cancer Society’s Cancer Resource Centers of Central Oregon, along with the Associated Students of Central Oregon Community College, are hosting a dinner and a silent auction to help raise money for cancer patient transportation and lodging. The event is at 6 p.m. June 1 at the Elevation Restaurant on the COCC campus in Bend. Tickets cost $50 and can be ordered by calling Richard Kelly at 541706-3716. The cancer society’s transportation and lodging fund helps cancer patients pay travel expenses so they can get advanced medical treatments. — From staff reports

… the only thing we can do is try to make life a little better on

Correction

that day,” said Steve Magidson, a Bend resident and Angel Flight volunteer pilot. See Angel Flight / B6

Cynde and Steve Magidson are photographed at the Camarillo (Calif.) Airport with their Lancair Columbia 400 aircraft. They are volunteers with the Angel Flight charity, which provides air transport to medical patients.

Illustration by Althea Borck, Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

In a photo caption that appeared on Thursday, May 10, on Page B1 with a story headlined “Road Trip,” Meryl Ibis’ last name was incorrect. The Bulletin regrets the error.


B2

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

TV & M Stern to critics: Watch me before judging me like this and put everybody’s fears to rest,â€? he said. NBC moved the show’s By David Bauder base from California to NewThe Associated Press ark, N.J., to accommodate NEW YORK — New Stern’s satellite radio sched“America’s Got Talentâ€? judge ule when he agreed to replace Howard Stern says that his Morgan. He said he has taken critics should watch before at- the role of being the “honestâ€? tacking him. judge who doesn’t sugarcoat Stern debuts Monday as things for contestants. Piers Morgan’s Stern said he replacement on was fan of the TV SPOTLIGHT showa before NBC’s summerbetime talent show. ing asked to be Yet a group that calls atten- on it, preferring it to “Amerition to bad language and ris- can Idolâ€? because the wider quĂŠ content on television has variety of acts on “America’s already written to advertis- Got Talentâ€? makes it seem ers asking them to stay away. like vaudeville. The Parents Television Coun“I didn’t need the money,â€? cil said the radio shock jock’s he said. “I didn’t need more addition “will likely result in fame. I certainly feel famous a sharp increase in explicit enough. I’m comfortable in content.â€? my life. I just love the show In an hourlong, exple- and thought how much fun it tive-free news conference on would be to do it.â€? Thursday, Stern dismissed He’s paired with Howie those concerns and said that Mandel and Sharon Oshe fully understands that bourne as judges, and he of“America’s Got Talentâ€? is a fered praise of their work. family show. He flashed attitude about “I really feel a responsibil- some rivals, though: “Ameriity to the people who love this can Idolâ€? makes him want to show already,â€? Stern said. “In throw up, he said, and host no way do I want to get in the Ryan Seacrest is “tired.â€? way of it. I want to broaden it “J.Lo, I don’t even know and make it better.â€? what she’s doing there,â€? he Stern said his critics “are said of “American Idolâ€? judge entitled to their opinion. Jennifer Lopez. They just sound awfully foolStern said he thinks his ish when they haven’t seen radio audience is ready to see the show.â€? him try something new. He’s Still, his reputation pre- curious about how it turns cedes him. Stern noted that out; his usual experience is before an appearance on turning around a low-per“The Viewâ€? on Thursday, ex- forming asset, but in “Amerecutive producer Bill Geddie ica’s Got Talent,â€? he’s joining came over to instruct Stern a show that already has a on what he could or couldn’t successful track record. say on the air. “I know the “If it doesn’t work, I’ll crawl rules,â€? Stern said. “Bill, I’m back into my hole at Sirius 58 years old. I feel like I’m 14â€? [satellite radio] and lick my getting a lecture, he said. wounds,â€? he said. “If it does “Hopefully America will work, I’ll be thrilled.â€? “ America’s Got Talentâ€? 8 p.m. Monday, NBC

L M T FOR SATURDAY, MAY 12

Hulk, played by Mark Ruffalo, stars in “Marvel’s The Avengers.�

BEND Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347

THE FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT (R) 2, 4:45, 7:30 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 THE PIRATES! BAND OF MISFITS (PG) 1:30, 3:30 UNDEFEATED (PG-13) 5:30, 8

Courtesy Marvel

THE ARTIST (PG-13) 4, 9:25 DELICACY (PG-13) 1, 7 FOOTNOTE (PG) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15, 9:30 THE HUNGER GAMES (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:10 KID WITH A BIKE (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 8:50 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6, 9 THINK LIKE A MAN (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:20

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347

21 JUMP STREET (R) 1, 4:20, 7:50, 10:30 THE CABIN IN THE WOODS (R) 1:40, 4:45, 8, 10:25 CHIMPANZEE (G) 10:35 a.m., 1:45, 4:05, 6:20, 9:15 DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 1:10, 2:50, 4, 6:05, 7:25, 9:05, 10:20 DARK SHADOWS IMAX (PG-13) 1:35, 10:15 THE FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT (R) 12:40, 3:40, 6:55, 9:50 THE HUNGER GAMES (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 3:30, 6:45, 9:55 THE LUCKY ONE (PG-13) 1:20, 3:55, 7:10, 9:40 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 3, 3:45, 6:15, 7, 9:25, 10:10 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS 3-D (PG13) Noon, 12:50, 3:20, 4:30, 6:35, 7:40, 9:45

MADRAS Tin Pan Theater

EDITOR’S NOTES: • Open-captioned showtimes are bold. • There may be an additional fee for 3-D movies. • IMAX films are $15. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.

MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS IMAX (PG-13) 10:30 a.m., 4:10, 7:15 MIRROR MIRROR (PG) 12:20, 3:10, 6:30, 9:10 THE PIRATES! BAND OF MISFITS (PG) 2:45, 9 THE PIRATES! BAND OF MISFITS 3-D (PG) 12:10, 6 THE RAVEN (R) 3:50, 10:25 SAFE (R) 1:25, 7:55

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Madras Cinema 5

869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271

1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505

JIRO DREAMS OF SUSHI (PG) 6, 8

REDMOND Redmond Cinemas 1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777

DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 THE HUNGER GAMES (PG-13) Noon, 3:05, 6:10, 9:15 THE LUCKY ONE (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2, 4:15, 6:30 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 THE RAVEN (R) 8:45

AMERICAN REUNION (R) 9 DR. SEUSS’ THE LORAX (PG) Noon JOHN CARTER (PG-13) 3 MAN ON A LEDGE (PG-13) 6 After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.

SISTERS

Pine Theater THE FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT (UPSTAIRS — R) 1:10, 4:30, 7:30 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 12:45, 4, 7:15

Sisters Movie House DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) 2:15, 5, 7:45

Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

Roundabout Reconstruction scheduled for 4/16 - 5/21/12. Follow local traffic detour signs to access all your favorite neighborhood businesses. www.northwestcrossing.com

Local Service. Local Knowledge. 541-848-4444 1000 SW Disk Dr. • Bend www.highdesertbank.com

PRINEVILLE 214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014

720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800

700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562

MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS 3-D (PG13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 THE LUCKY ONE (PG-13) 12:05, 2:20, 4:30, 6:40, 9:05 THE PIRATES: BANDS OF MISFITS(PG) 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:10 THE FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT (R) 9:15 DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) Noon, 2:25, 4:50, 7:20, 9:50 THE HUNGER GAMES (PG-13) 12:10, 3:20, 6:30, 9:25

EQUAL HOUSING LENDER

L TV L SATURDAY PRIME TIME 5/12/12

*In HD, these channels run three hours ahead. / Sports programming may vary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine

ALSO IN HD; ADD 600 TO CHANNEL No.

BROADCAST/CABLE CHANNELS

BD PM SR L ^ KATU KTVZ % % % % KBNZ & KOHD ) ) ) ) KFXO * ` ` ` KOAB _ # _ # ( KGW KTVZDT2 , _ # / OPBPL 175 173

5:00

5:30

6:00

6:30

7:00

7:30

KATU News World News KATU News Kenny Rogers Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel Fortune Grey’s Anatomy Disarm ’ ‘14’ News Nightly News Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel Fortune Paid Program Evening News The Unit Force Majeure ’ ‘PG’ Old Christine Old Christine The Closer Lover’s Leap ‘14’ KEZI 9 News World News Ugly Betty Queens for a Day ‘PG’ (3:30) NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: Showtime Southern 500 From Darlington Raceway in Darlington, S.C. This Old House The Lawrence Welk Show ‘G’ Last of Wine Travels to Edge Steves’ Europe NewsChannel 8 NewsChannel 8 Chris Matthews Straight Talk Pearlie (EI) ‘Y7’ Zula Patrol ‘Y’ (4:00) “About Last Night...â€? (1986) ’Til Death ‘PG’ ’Til Death ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Julia’s Kitchen Cooking Class Adventures of Sherlock Holmes Backstage Pass ’ ‘G’ Ă…

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

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11:00

11:30

›› “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s Endâ€? (2007, Action) Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom. ’ KATU News Comedy.TV ‘PG’ Harry’s Law The Contest ’ ‘14’ The Firm Chapter Sixteen (N) ‘14’ Law & Order: SVU News Sat. Night Live CSI: Miami By the Book ’ ‘PG’ NCIS Secrets ‘14’ Ă… (DVS) 48 Hours Mystery Ransom (N) ’ News Paid Program ›› “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s Endâ€? (2007, Action) Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom. ’ News (N) Ă… Inside Edition NUMB3RS Guilt Trip ‘PG’ Ă… Bones The Man in the Wall ‘14’ News Two/Half Men The Finder Bullets ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Globe Trekker Bangladesh ’ ‘G’ My Family Outnumbered New Tricks Half Life ’ Ă… Masterpiece Mystery! ’ ‘14’ Harry’s Law The Contest ’ ‘14’ The Firm Chapter Sixteen (N) ‘14’ Law & Order: SVU NewsChannel 8 Sat. Night Live House Known Unknowns ’ ‘14’ House Teamwork ’ ‘14’ Ă… That ’70s Show That ’70s Show Cheaters (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… Front Row Center ’ ‘G’ Ă… Austin City Limits ’ ‘PG’ Ă… ››› “McLintock!â€? (1963, Western) John Wayne, Maureen O’Hara.

BASIC CABLE CHANNELS

Parking Wars Parking Wars Parking Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Flipped Off (N) ‘PG’ Ă… (11:01) Flipped Off ‘PG’ Ă… *A&E 130 28 18 32 Parking Wars (2:30) ››› “El ››› “Enter the Dragonâ€? (1973, Adventure) Bruce Lee, John Saxon, Jim Kelly. A kung fu expert is ››› “Space Cowboysâ€? (2000, Adventure) Clint Eastwood, Tommy Lee Jones, Donald Sutherland. NASA reunites ›› “Heartbreak Ridgeâ€? (1986, War) *AMC 102 40 39 Doradoâ€? sent to infiltrate an island fortress. Ă… four aging flyboys for an urgent mission. Ă… Clint Eastwood. Ă… My Cat From Hell ’ ‘PG’ Ă… My Cat From Hell Cat Fight! ‘PG’ Cats 101 (N) ’ ‘PG’ Tanked (N) ’ ‘PG’ Tanked Roll With It ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Tanked ’ ‘PG’ *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Frozen Planet ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Don’t Be Tardy Don’t Be Tardy Housewives/OC Around the World in 80 Plates ›››› “Raiders of the Lost Arkâ€? (1981, Adventure) Harrison Ford, Karen Allen. Ă… (10:35) ›››› “Raiders of the Lost Arkâ€? (1981) BRAVO 137 44 ›› “Ace Ventura: Pet Detectiveâ€? (1994) Jim Carrey. ’ Ă… ››› “Blazing Saddlesâ€? (1974, Comedy) Cleavon Little, Gene Wilder. ’ Ă… Them Idiots Whirled Tour ’ ‘PG’ Ă… CMT 190 32 42 53 “National Lampoon’s Vacationâ€? The Suze Orman Show (N) Ă… Princess (N) ’ Princess Diana American Greed The Suze Orman Show Ă… Princess (N) ’ Princess Diana Wealth-Risk Paid Program CNBC 51 36 40 52 American Greed Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) CNN Presents Ă… Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) CNN Presents Ă… CNN 52 38 35 48 CNN Presents Ă… (6:58) ›› “Office Spaceâ€? (1999, Comedy) Ron Livingston. Ă… (8:59) ›› “Jackass: Number Twoâ€? (2006) Ă… (10:45) ››› “The 40-Year-Old Virginâ€? (2005) COM 135 53 135 47 (4:58) ›› “Waiting...â€? (2005) Ryan Reynolds, Anna Faris. Ă… (4:30) City Club of Central Oregon Talk of the Town Local issues. Desert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW The Yoga Show The Yoga Show Talk of the Town Local issues. COTV 11 2012 Election Strategy Discus (6:40) Atlantic Council Awards Dinner (N) Liberty Univer 2012 Election Strategy Discus (9:40) Atlantic Council Awards Dinner U.S. Border Patrol (N) CSPAN 58 20 12 11 Liberty Univer Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Austin & Ally ’ Shake It Up! ‘G’ Austin & Ally ’ Austin & Ally ’ Good-Charlie Good-Charlie Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Jessie ‘G’ Ă… A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Austin & Ally ’ Austin & Ally ’ *DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie Gang Wars: Oakland I ‘14’ Ă… Gang Wars: Oakland II ‘14’ Ă… Texas Drug Wars ’ ‘14’ Ă… Extreme Drug Smuggling ’ ‘14’ Death Row: The Final 24 Hours Extreme Drug Smuggling ’ ‘14’ *DISC 156 21 16 37 River Monsters Jungle Killer ‘PG’ Khloe & Lamar Mrs. Eastwood ›› “Along Came Pollyâ€? (2004) Ben Stiller, Jennifer Aniston. › “The Hot Chickâ€? (2002, Comedy) Rob Schneider, Anna Faris. Khloe & Lamar Khloe & Lamar The Soup ‘14’ Chelsea Lately *E! 136 25 Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… ESPN 21 23 22 23 College Softball SEC Tournament, Final: Teams TBA (N) (Live) Boxing Ă… Boxing Ă… Boxing Ă… Boxing From May 3, 1986. Ă… Boxing Ă… Boxing From Feb. 10, 1990. Ă… NBA Tonight (N) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Ă… 2011 World Series of Poker ESPN2 22 24 21 24 Boxing Ă… The Dotted Line Ă… 30 for 30 ‘PG’ Ă… The Dotted Line Ă… 30 for 30 ‘PG’ Ă… The Dotted Line Ă… Roll Tide/War Eagle Ă… ESPNC 23 25 123 25 30 for 30 ‘PG’ Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. Highlight Express (N) (Live) ESPNN 24 63 124 203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… › “Leap Yearâ€? (2010) Amy Adams, Matthew Goode. Premiere. ›› “The Notebookâ€? (2004, Romance) Ryan Gosling. A man tells a story to a woman about two lovers. FAM 67 29 19 41 ›› “Legally Blondeâ€? (2001) Reese Witherspoon, Luke Wilson. Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) The Five Journal Editorial FOX News Justice With Judge Jeanine The Five Red Eye FNC 54 61 36 50 Huckabee (N) Restaurant: Impossible Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Best of Food Network Star Food Network Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Iron Chef America *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Iron Chef America (4:00) › “The Bounty Hunterâ€? (2010) ›› “Mr. & Mrs. Smithâ€? (2005, Action) Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie. A husband and wife are assassins for rival organizations. Louis CK: Beacon Theatre Louie ‘MA’ Louie ‘MA’ FX 131 Junk Gypsies Design/Dime High Low Proj. Mom Caves ‘G’ Great Rooms Interiors Inc ‘G’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l HGTV 176 49 33 43 Going Yard ‘G’ Curb Appeal ‘G’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l *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’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ “Reviving Opheliaâ€? (2010) Jane Kaczmarek, Kim Dickens. ‘14’ Ă… “Triple Dogâ€? (2009, Drama) Scout Taylor-Compton. Premiere. Ă… “Sexting in Suburbiaâ€? (2012, Drama) Liz Vassey, Jenn Proske. Ă… LIFE 138 39 20 31 “Fatal Lessons: Good Teacherâ€? Lockup: Santa Rosa Lockup: Santa Rosa (N) Lockup Orange County Lockup Orange County Lockup Orange County Lockup Orange County MSNBC 56 59 128 51 Lockup: Santa Rosa ››› “8 Mileâ€? (2002, Drama) Eminem, Kim Basinger. ’ MTV 192 22 38 57 Fantasy Factory Fantasy Factory Fantasy Factory Fantasy Factory Money Strang. Money Strang. ›› “Malibu’s Most Wantedâ€? (2003) Jamie Kennedy, Taye Diggs. ’ Victorious ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ iCarly iQ ’ ‘G’ iCarly iBalls ‘G’ iCarly ‘G’ Ă… iCarly (N) ’ ‘G’ Big Time Rush Victorious ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘14’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ NICK 82 46 24 40 Victorious ‘G’ Welcome to Sweetie Pie’s ‘PG’ Welcome to Sweetie Pie’s ‘PG’ Welcome to Sweetie Pie’s ’ ‘14’ Welcome to Sweetie Pie’s ‘PG’ Beverly’s Full House (N) ’ ‘PG’ Welcome to Sweetie Pie’s ’ ‘14’ OWN 161 103 31 103 Welcome to Sweetie Pie’s ‘PG’ WHL Hockey: Championship Series, Game 6 -- Oil Kings at Winterhawks MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at New York Yankees From Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, N.Y. MLS Soccer ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Auto Racing ›› “Rambo: First Blood Part IIâ€? (1985) Sylvester Stallone. ’ ›› “Ramboâ€? (2008, Action) Sylvester Stallone, Julie Benz, Matthew Marsden. ’ ››› “First Bloodâ€? (1982) Sylvester Stallone. ’ SPIKE 132 31 34 46 (4:00) ››› “First Bloodâ€? (1982) › “Resident Evilâ€? (2002) Milla Jovovich, Michelle Rodriguez. Ă… ›› “Growthâ€? (2010) Mircea Monroe, Christopher Shand. Premiere. ››› “Splinterâ€? (2008, Horror) SYFY 133 35 133 45 ›› “Jeepers Creepers 2â€? (2003) Ray Wise, Jonathan Breck. Ă… In Touch W/Charles Stanley Hour of Power ‘G’ Ă… Billy Graham Classic Crusades Sarah’s Choice Mothers: Treasured Love “The Book of Ruth: Journey of Faithâ€? (2009) TBN 205 60 130 Friends ‘14’ Friends ’ ‘14’ Friends ’ ‘14’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang ›› “Yes Manâ€? (2008, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Zooey Deschanel. Ă… *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends ‘14’ ›››› “Diaboliqueâ€? (1955, Suspense) Simone Signoret, Vera Clouzot, Paul (7:15) ›››› “The Browning Versionâ€? (1951) Michael Redgrave, Jean Kent. A ››› “The Sandpiperâ€? (1965, Drama) Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton. An (11:15) ›››› “Goodbye, Mr. Chipsâ€? TCM 101 44 101 29 Meurisse. A tyrant’s wife and mistress plot his murder. teacher comes to realize he’s had a lifetime of failure. artist falls in love with her son’s headmaster. Ă… (1939) Robert Donat. Toddlers & Tiaras ’ ‘PG’ Ă… 20/20 on TLC (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… 20/20 on TLC ‘14’ Ă… 20/20 on TLC ‘14’ Ă… 20/20 on TLC (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… 20/20 on TLC ‘14’ Ă… *TLC 178 34 32 34 Toddlers & Tiaras ’ ‘PG’ Ă… NBA Basketball Denver Nuggets at Los Angeles Lakers (N) (Live) Ă… Inside the NBA (N) (Live) Ă… To Be Announced *TNT 17 26 15 27 NBA Basketball Philadelphia 76ers at Boston Celtics (N) (Live) Ă… Regular Show Regular Show Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball ››› “Garfield’s Pet Forceâ€? (2009) Premiere. Wrld, Gumball King of the Hill Delocated ‘14’ Eagleheart ‘MA’ Family Guy ‘14’ The Boondocks The Boondocks *TOON 84 Hotel Impossible ‘G’ Ă… 21 Sexiest Beaches ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Adventures ‘14’ Ă… *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Keys to the Castle ‘G’ Ă… Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens TVLND 65 47 29 35 (4:00) ››› “Coming to Americaâ€? (1988, Comedy) ›› “He’s Just Not That Into Youâ€? (2009) Ben Affleck, Jennifer Aniston. Ă… ›› “It’s Complicatedâ€? (2009) Meryl Streep, Steve Martin. Premiere. Ă… “He’s Just Not That Into Youâ€? USA 15 30 23 30 (3:30) ››› “Knocked Upâ€? Ă… Most Shocking Music Moments Most Shocking Music Moments Most Shocking Music Moments Most Shocking Music Moments “The Last Days of Left Eyeâ€? (2006, Documentary) ’ VH1 191 48 37 54 Most Shocking Music Moments PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS

(6:20) ›› “Easy Moneyâ€? 1983, Comedy ‘R’ Ă… ›› “White Chicksâ€? 2004, Comedy Shawn Wayans. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… (9:50) ››› “Bad Boysâ€? 1995, Action Martin Lawrence. ’ ‘R’ Ă… ENCR 106 401 306 401 (4:30) ›› “The Frightenersâ€? 1996 Michael J. Fox. FXM Presents ›› “Garfield: A Tail of Two Kittiesâ€? 2006 ‘PG’ FXM Presents ›› “Invincibleâ€? 2006, Biography Mark Wahlberg. ‘PG’ Ă… FXM Presents ›› “Invincibleâ€? 2006 Mark Wahlberg. ‘PG’ Ă… FMC 104 204 104 120 Horton Hears Best of PRIDE Fighting UFC Unleashed UFC Reloaded UFC Rio: Aldo vs. Mendes Jose Aldo versus Chad Mendes. UFC: Miller vs. Diaz FUEL 34 Live From THE PLAYERS Live From THE PLAYERS Live From THE PLAYERS GOLF 28 301 27 301 (4:00) Live From THE PLAYERS › “Taking a Chance on Loveâ€? (2009) Genie Francis. ‘PG’ Ă… “Notes From the Heart Healerâ€? (2012) Genie Francis. Premiere. ‘PG’ “Notes From the Heart Healerâ€? (2012) Genie Francis. ‘PG’ Ă… HALL 66 33 175 33 (4:00) “Meet My Momâ€? ‘PG’ Ă… (4:00) ›› “Date ››› “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1â€? 2010, Fantasy Daniel Radcliffe. Harry sets ››› “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2â€? 2011 Daniel Radcliffe. (10:15) Boxing Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Miguel Cotto ’ Ă… HBO 425 501 425 501 Nightâ€? ’ out to destroy the secrets to Voldemort’s power. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Harry may have to make the ultimate sacrifice. ‘PG-13’ ››› “Die Hard 2â€? 1990, Action Bruce Willis, Bonnie Bedelia. Premiere. ‘R’ ››› “Die Hard 2â€? 1990, Action Bruce Willis, Bonnie Bedelia, William Atherton. ‘R’ › “Maximum Overdriveâ€? 1986, Horror Emilio Estevez. ‘R’ IFC 105 105 (4:05) ››› “Un- (5:45) ›› “The Change-Upâ€? 2011 Ryan Reynolds. An overworked lawyer and (7:45) ›› “The A-Teamâ€? 2010, Action Liam Neeson, Bradley Cooper, Jessica Biel. Former Special “The Pool Boysâ€? 2009, Comedy Matthew Lillard, Efren The Girl’s Guide MAX 400 508 508 stoppableâ€? his carefree buddy switch bodies. ’ ‘NR’ Ă… Forces soldiers form a rogue unit. ’ ‘NR’ Ă… Ramirez, Tom Arnold. Premiere. ’ ‘R’ Ă… to Depravity ’ Shark Men (N) ‘14’ Wicked Tuna ‘14’ Wicked Tuna Man v. Storm ‘14’ Shark Men ‘14’ Wicked Tuna ‘14’ Wicked Tuna Man v. Storm ‘14’ Lockdown County Jail ’ ‘14’ NGC 157 157 Odd Parents Odd Parents Odd Parents SpongeBob SpongeBob Fanboy-Chum Fanboy-Chum Invader ZIM ’ Invader ZIM ’ NTOON 89 115 189 115 Power Rangers Power Rangers T.U.F.F. Puppy T.U.F.F. Puppy Odd Parents Best of West Outdoors Steve’s Outdoor Trophy Quest Wardens Operation H20 Amer. Archer Ted Nugent Bird Hunter Mudslingers Best of West Jim Zumbo Expedition Saf. OUTD 37 307 43 307 Trophy Hunt (3:45) ››› “The Ghost Writerâ€? 2010 ››› “Mr. Holland’s Opusâ€? 1995, Drama Richard Dreyfuss, Glenne Headly, Jay Thomas. Life ›› “Beastlyâ€? 2011 Alex Pettyfer. A teen must find true ››› “Screamâ€? 1996, Horror Neve Campbell, David Arquette. A psychopath SHO 500 500 Pierce Brosnan. ’ ‘PG-13’ steers a musician toward teaching. ’ ‘PG’ love to break a curse. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… stalks the teens of a sleepy California town. ’ ‘R’ Car Warriors Nova ’ Ă… Car Warriors Thunderbird Ă… NASCAR Victory Lane (N) Formula 1 Debrief Formula One Racing Spanish Grand Prix, Qualifying Continental Tire SPEED 35 303 125 303 Truth in 24 II (6:15) › “The Smurfsâ€? 2011, Comedy Hank Azaria. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… ››› “Winnie the Poohâ€? 2011 (9:10) ››› “Easy Aâ€? 2010, Comedy Emma Stone. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… (10:50) ›› “Bad Teacherâ€? 2011 STARZ 300 408 300 408 (4:40) ›› “Bad Teacherâ€? 2011 (5:15) ›› “The Final Cutâ€? 2004 Robin Williams. A man finds an unexpected ›› “The Switchâ€? 2010 Jennifer Aniston, Jason Bateman. A woman uses a ››› “Let the Right One Inâ€? 2008, Horror Kare Hedebrant. A lonely misfit finds ›› “Believersâ€? 2007, Horror Johnny TMC 525 525 connection to his own darkest secret. ’ ‘PG-13’ friend’s sperm, unknowingly, to get pregnant. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… a soul mate in a vampire child. ’ ‘R’ Messner. ’ ‘R’ Ă… NHL Live Post Game On! Poker After Dark ‘PG’ Ă… Red Bull Signature Series ‘PG’ Poker After Dark ‘PG’ Ă… VS. 27 58 30 209 (4:30) NHL Hockey Washington Capitals at New York Rangers (N) Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Whisperer Slow Burn ‘PG’ Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă… ››› “Three Men and a Babyâ€? 1987, Comedy Tom Selleck. ‘PG’ *WE 143 41 174 118 Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă…


SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A & A

Happily unmarried woman can’t take mom’s nagging Dear Abby: I am in a relationship with someone I graduated from school with, so we have known each other for a number of years. We are both divorced. Because I’m an only child, my mother has always been protective and controlling. She hasn’t recovered from my divorce, although it happened more than 10 years ago, and constantly finds fault with my current relationship. She argues with me almost weekly that I should get married because it “looks bad for her� that I live with this man, and “in the sight of God this isn’t right.� One minute she doesn’t want me in a relationship, the next she’s telling me I need to be married. I respect her beliefs, but don’t think we should get married just because she wants us to. I was married long enough to realize that a piece of paper doesn’t make it right, so why force the issue? I love my mother, but her nagging is making it extremely difficult not only for me but for my relationship. How do I handle this? — Stressed-Out Only Child Dear Stressed Out: You may be an only child, but you are a child no longer. You are entitled to live your life the way you wish. While there are legal protections for a wife that a livein does not enjoy, if you prefer not to formalize your relationship, you should not be pressured into it. The next time your mother starts in, tell her firmly you will not argue the point and change the subject. Dear Abby: I’m a single mother of three kids, ages 10, 8 and 7. Their father and I have been divorced for two years. He moved 300 miles away and sees the kids mainly in the summer and on holidays. He has remarried, and she has children as well. My problem is my kids feel he treats her children better than he treats them. I try hard not to badmouth him, but from

DEAR ABBY what they tell me it’s a oneway street. He has told our kids that he loves them more than I do, and that he wishes he didn’t have to pay child support. It hurts me to see them hurt. What can I do? We don’t have a good relationship. He refuses to listen to anything I say. I don’t want the kids to hate their father, but unless he changes, they will. They have already asked me if they can talk to the judge to get their visits made fewer and shorter. — Protective Mom In Virginia Dear Protective Mom: You cannot control the behavior of another adult, much as you might wish to. Your children are intelligent and they have already gotten the picture. Unfortunately, they are still too young to be able to convince a judge to shorten their visits or spend time with their dad less often. But as they enter their early teens they will be. Help them to be patient and ride it out in the meantime, because they have no other option. Dear Abby: My sister-in-law is demanding to know why I won’t accept her friend request on Facebook. Personally, I don’t consider her a friend and prefer not to allow her access to my Facebook page. How can I politely and honestly answer her questioning? — Prefer To Decline Dear Decline: Because she is forcing the issue, be forthright and answer her question by telling her that while she may be your sister-in-law, you do not feel personally close enough to her to be comfortable having her review your activities and thoughts on a daily basis. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Saturday, May 12, 2012 By Jacqueline Bigar This year you often give off mixed vibes. You might say one thing but do another. Others might start reflecting this behavior, or at least talking about it. You might not see it at first, but observe closely, and you will. Life feels abundant in many ways, and you’ll greet growth with a smile. You could get a pay raise, but do not spend funds until they arrive. If you are single, you might enjoy several potential suitors; one in particular could be quite significant to your life history. If you are attached, your relationship is stable and extremely caring. Let in more fun. AQUARIUS can push you. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHHH You know exactly what to do. Find your friends, let your guard down and relax. Once you start indulging, it might be difficult to stop. Listen to someone who often has many funny jokes. Memorize a few for an occasion when you might need some. Tonight: Go, do and be. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Clearly someone could be pushing your buttons. You might not be as free as you might like. An older friend or relative could act in the most unpredictable manner. Tonight: Don’t think you’re not noticed. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH Keep reaching out for a friend or loved one at a distance. Even if you cannot see this person right away, it doesn’t mean that you do not want to in the near future. Let him or her know how you feel. Your sense of humor comes into play with a friend, who might be described as flighty. Tonight: Reach out for a loved one. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Deal directly with others. You know how to handle a personal matter better than a partner or friend, or so you think. Perhaps you need to observe the other person’s style. Give up “right and wrong� thinking. Look to the long term. Tonight: Where the gang is. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH Defer to others in order to have a happier day. It might be momentarily beneficial to be right or to have things go your way, but ultimately you are only hurting yourself. Lighten up, and enjoy a loved one’s desire to be with you. A

serious conversation might feel off, but it is necessary. Tonight: Be with that special person. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH An even pace works, especially if you throw an unpleasant chore or two into the mix. You will maintain your budget, so worry less about joining in with a friend or two. Get into the fun of the moment. Tonight: Put your feet up. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH How you handle a close friend or associate could change because of how you see this person at the moment. Are you being a little negative? Let go of judging everyone, including yourself, and accept the people in your life as they are. Tonight: Go out and live it up. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Invite a friend or two over for a meal or a mutually enjoyable pastime. You might want to stay at home, yet you also want to see a loved one or friends. There is no reason you can’t do both. You often live in the blackand-white territory of your mind. Tonight: Home is your castle. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Keep conversations moving. You could be stunned by a friend’s seriousness. Find out what ails this person, and demonstrate your support. Be willing to help him or her work through the issue. Tonight: Catch up on a loved one’s news. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Be aware of what is happening behind the scenes. At the same time, you could be making plans for the near future. Be aware that the costs could be much higher than you’d anticipated. Leave some wiggle room in your budget. Tonight: Go over plans with a friend. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH Understand how difficult it can be to resist you when you are vulnerable. Someone might detach, partially out of envy. This person might need a special indulgence or some time with you. Tonight: Say “yesâ€? to living. Decide where and with whom. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH Keep the pace nice and easy. News surrounding your home or a family member could be very exciting. A serious talk also might be the result of new information. Don’t judge too quickly. Tonight: Choose a quiet and cherished pastime with a special person. Š 2011 by King Features Syndicate

B3

C C Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351. “SORDID LIVES�: Stage Right Productions presents the black comedy about a woman whose death causes chaos in a Texas town. Q & A with some of the cast after the show; $18 or $16 students and seniors in advance, $20 at the door. Wednesdays only: purchase tickets online for $13 with promo code LOCAL; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. SOCIAL DISTORTION: The California-based punk rockers perform, with The Toadies and Lindi Ortega; $35; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. randompresents.com.

TODAY GEAR UP FOR SUMMER: A sale of donated or consigned summer sports gear, with music, a silent auction and a climbing wall; proceeds benefit Deschutes Search & Rescue Foundation; free admission; 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, 100464, Bend; 541-508-2456. HIGH DESERT CRUISE-IN: The High Desert Mopars host a car show featuring classic cars, rods, trucks and bikes, a raffle, a DJ and more; free to the public, car entry $10; 8 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; Wagner Square, South U.S. Highway 97 and Southwest Odem Medo Road, Redmond; 541-550-0206. YARD SALE FUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the Sisters High School Mandarin class trip to China; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sisters Community Church, 1300 W. McKenzie Highway; 541-549-4071. VFW BREAKFAST: Mother’s Day brunch; $8; 8:30-10:30 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. MOTHER’S DAY RUN: With breakfast, a motorcycle wash, motorcycle games, live music and more; proceeds benefit two local mothers with connections to the military; $15; 9 a.m., 4:30 p.m. games; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-647-0667 or kickstand07@ bendbroadband.com. RV GOLD RUSH: Featuring an RV show and sale, with gold panning; free; 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-419-8680. RAKU POTTERY SALE: The Raku Artists of Central Oregon host a sale of handcrafted pottery; free admission; 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-350-2662. DOCUMENT SHREDDING AND DRUG DISPOSAL: The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office and Data Delete of Oregon partner to safely destroy personal documents and provide identity-theft prevention tips; outdated or unwanted prescription medications will be accepted for disposal; donations of nonperishable food accepted; 10 a.m.-1 p.m.; Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office La Pine Substation, 51340 U.S. Highway 97; 541-617-3386. SENSATIONAL SATURDAY: Visit a 1933 ranger station with Smokey the U.S. Forest Service mascot; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Michael Harris talks about his book “Falling Down Getting UP�; free; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Bikram Yoga, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Bend; 541-389-8599. MINING DAYS: Experience the life of a placer miner and pan for gold; $2 panning fee, plus museum admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. REDMOND SATURDAY MARKET: Vendors sell arts and crafts; free admission; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Ambiance Art Co-op, 435 Evergreen Ave.; 541-480-7197. SALMON BAKE: Featuring a dinner of salmon, salad, beans and fry bread, with Native American dance performances and crafts; free; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Campus Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-318-3782 or http:// nativeamerican.cocc.edu. SOLAR VIEWING: View the sun using safe techniques; included in the price of admission; $10 adults, $9 ages 65 and older, $6 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. BARK FOR LIFE: A noncompetitive walk with dogs; with contests, activities and demonstrations; proceeds benefit the American Cancer Society; $15 for one dog, $25 for two; 12:30 p.m.; La Pine Pet Bed N Bath Inc., 51590 Russell Road; 209-840-1450, barkforlifelapinesunriver@ hotmail.com or www. relayforlife.org/barklapineor. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Charles Finn talks about his book “Wild Delicate Seconds�; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages

THURSDAY

Courtesy Jeremy Cowart

Fleetwood Mac guitarist Lindsey Buckingham will peform Thursday at the Tower Theatre in Bend. 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 2 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. SPRING CELEBRATION: Featuring Nepali food, a silent auction, live music and more; proceeds benefit Ten Friends; $10 suggested donation; 5:30-9 p.m.; Aspen Hall, 18920 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-480-3114 or www. tenfriends.org. BEND GAME NIGHT: Play available board games or bring your own; free; 6 p.m.-midnight; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-318-8459. “AND A CHILD SHALL LEAD�: Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the story of children held in a concentration camp; $15, $10 ages 18 and younger; 7 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. A NIGHT OUT WITH AMZ PRODUCTIONS: Featuring audio-visual entertainment and a silent auction; proceeds benefit NeighborImpact; $10; 7:30 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. BEND COMMUNITY CONTRADANCE: Featuring caller Ron Bell-Roemer and music by The Hat Band; $7; 7 p.m. beginner’s workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W. Wall St.; 541-330-8943. “SORDID LIVES�: Stage Right Productions presents the black comedy about a woman whose death causes chaos in a Texas town. Q & A with some of the cast after the show; $18 or $16 students and seniors in advance, $20 at the door. Wednesdays only: purchase tickets online for $13 with promo code LOCAL; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com. DAVID NELSON BAND: The roots band performs, with Moonalice; free cupcakes will be distributed; $17 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. randompresents.com.

SUNDAY RV GOLD RUSH: Featuring an RV show and sale, with gold panning; free; 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-419-8680. FIDDLERS JAM: Listen or dance at the Oregon Old Time Fiddlers Jam; donations accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-447-7395. “AND A CHILD SHALL LEAD�: Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the story of children held in a concentration camp; $15, $10 ages 18 and younger; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. SECOND SUNDAY: Chris Anderson and Cecelia Hagen read from a selection of their works; followed by an open mic; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. “SORDID LIVES�: Stage Right Productions presents the black comedy about a woman whose

death causes chaos in a Texas town. Q & A with some of the cast after the show; $18 or $16 students and seniors in advance, $20 at the door. Wednesdays only: purchase tickets online for $13 with promo code LOCAL; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com.

MONDAY ONE MAKES MANY: A volunteer fair featuring local nonprofit organizations on site to answer questions and offer volunteer opportunities; free; 3-6 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-385-8977. “THE HEALTHCARE MOVIE�: A screening of the documentary about health care systems in Canada and the United States; free; 6 p.m., doors open 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-318-8169. “DIE WALKURE�: The Metropolitan Opera presents the second opera in Wagner’s “Ring� cycle; $15; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347 or www. fathomevents.com. BEND POETRY SLAM: Open mic poetry; poets read original pieces in three minutes or less; $3 suggested donation; 8 p.m., signups at 7:30 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St.; 541-480-4054 or loudgirlproductions@live.com.

CENTRAL OREGON SYMPHONY CHILDREN’S CONCERT: The Central Oregon Symphony performs a children’s concert under the direction of Michael Gesme; free; 7 p.m., interactive session 6 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-317-3941, info@cosymphony.com or www. cosymphony.com. COMEDY NIGHT: David Testroet and P.J. McGuire perform; $10; 7:30 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; The Original Kayo’s Dinner House and Lounge, 415 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-323-2520. HIGH DESERT CHAMBER MUSIC — CROWN CITY STRING QUARTET: String musicians play selections of chamber music; $35, $10 children and students; 7:30 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-306-3988, info@ highdesertchambermusic.com or www.highdesertchambermusic.com. “SORDID LIVES�: Stage Right Productions presents the black comedy about a woman whose death causes chaos in a Texas town. Q & A with some of the cast after the show; $18 or $16 students and seniors in advance, $20 at the door. Wednesdays only: purchase tickets online for $13 with promo code LOCAL; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com. 4 PEAKS PRE-FUNK WEEKEND: Featuring a performance by High Beamz; free; 8 p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; www.4peaksmusic.com. AN EVENING WITH LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM: The Fleetwood Mac guitarist and songwriter performs; $62 or $96, plus fees; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. LAST BAND STANDING: A battle of the bands competition featuring local acts; free; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; www. lastbandstanding.net. “PEDAL-DRIVEN�: A screening of the documentary about trail user conflicts; proceeds benefit Central Oregon Trail Alliance; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-385-8080.

TUESDAY STUDENTS SPEAK — A WATERSHED SUMMIT: Local students share their watershed projects in art, science, videography and hands-on restoration; free; 9:30 a.m.-2 p.m.; Mt. Bachelor Village Resort Conference Center, 19717 Mount Bachelor Drive, Bend; 541-389-5900 or kyake@ restorethedeschutes.org. “OREGON STATE ARCHIVES RECORDS COLLECTION�: Bend Genealogical Society presents a program by Lane Sawyer; free; 10 a.m.; Rock Arbor Villa, Williamson Hall, 2200 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-317-9553 or www. orgenweb.org/deschutes/bend-gs. ROB WYNIA & THE SOUND: The Floater musician performs ambient alternative music; $7 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 9 p.m.; Players Bar & Grill, 25 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-389-2558 or www. p44p.biz.

WEDNESDAY THE INDIAN WAR ERA IN EASTERN OREGON: Eric Iseman talks about “Captain Jack and the Modoc War of 1872-73�; free; 2 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-617-4663 or ruthh@ uoregon.edu. “IF THESE HALLS COULD TALK�: A screening of the film about struggles and opportunities for students of color, with a discussion; free; 4-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Campus Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; kroth1@cocc.edu. “SIEGFRIED�: The Metropolitan Opera presents the third opera in Wagner’s “Ring� cycle; $15; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347 or www. fathomevents.com.

FRIDAY PLANT SALE: The Redmond Garden Club hosts its annual plant sale of annuals, perennials, shrubs and vegetables; proceeds benefit community projects sponsored by the club; free admission; noon6 p.m.; 2614 S.W. Quartz Ave., Redmond; 541-788-8510 or http:// redmondoregongardenclub.org. VFW DINNER: A dinner of fish and chips; $7; 5 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. UPSTREAM FUNDRAISER: Featuring dinner, live music, a conservation program and a silent auction; proceeds benefit The Upstream Project of the Upper Deschutes Wastershed Council; $45; 6-9 p.m.; The Barn in Sisters, 68467 Three Creeks Road; 541-382-6103, ext. 33 or www.restorethedeschutes.org. BENEFIT CONCERT: Featuring performances by The Substitutes, Selfless Riot, Sagebrush Rock and students in the rock band class; proceeds benefit the class; $6, $10 couples, $20 families; 7-11 p.m.; Culver High School, 710 Fifth St.; 541-546-2251. “MIDNIGHT IN PARIS�: A screening of the PG-13-rated 2011 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. jcld.org. “SORDID LIVES�: Stage Right Productions presents the black comedy about a woman whose death causes chaos in a Texas town. Q & A with some of the cast after the show; $18 or $16 students and seniors in advance, $20 at the door. Wednesdays only: purchase tickets online for $13 with promo code LOCAL; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com.


B4

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

TUNDRA

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

HEART OF THE CITY

SALLY FORTH

FRAZZ

ROSE IS ROSE

STONE SOUP

LUANN

MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM

DILBERT

DOONESBURY

PICKLES

ADAM

WIZARD OF ID

B.C.

SHOE

GARFIELD

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PEANUTS

MARY WORTH


SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

BIZARRO

B5

DENNIS THE MENACE

SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY’S SUDOKU

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

GET FUZZY

NON SEQUITUR

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five games weekly at www.bendbridge.org.

CANDORVILLE

SAFE HAVENS

LOS ANGELES TIMES DAILY CROSSWORD

SIX CHIX

ZITS

HERMAN


B6

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

Learning the p’s and q’s and :-)’s of emoticons

“(Angel Flight is) one of the greatest organizations that, no pun intended, flies under the radar.” — Steve Magidson, pilot

By Kim Ode Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Submitted photo

Angel Flight pilot Rob Breitbarth stands with patient Chloe Deputy and her mom, Ali, in 2005. Breitbarth flew them from Baker City to Doernbecher Children’s Hospital in Portland for Chloe’s cancer treatments.

Angel Flight Continued from B1 He is one of a handful of local hobby pilots who participate in the charity. Angel Flight West is a regional wing of the national charity involving 13 Western states. Within the region, there are 1,900 pilot volunteers who together fly thousands of missions each year, primarily for people who need to reach a medical appointment far from home — often for cancer treatment. The pilots, most of whom fly their own planes, donate their time and equipment and pay for fuel.

The program Bend resident Rob Breitbarth, the Central Oregon area leader for Angel Flight, became involved when he answered an ad calling for volunteers in Portland in 1998. He was one of 10 pilots to do so. Together the pilots formed the Oregon wing of Angel Flight. Once he got started, he couldn’t stop. “It’s really addictive, helping people,” said Breitbarth. Breitbarth says 70 percent of the missions involve flying people with cancer. Thirty percent of the missions involve flying children seeking medical treatment. The flights are for nonemergencies, and patients must be able to get on and off the plane. The patients also must be in some financial need to qualify for the service. Often, Breitbarth says, fighting a medical condition like cancer absolutely devastates a family’s resources and therefore makes long-distance travel all the more difficult. Some patients come from rural areas that don’t offer the services needed. Other times a patient has signed up for experimental treatment at a particular hospital. Bend resident and Angel Flight pilot John Hayes believes people don’t always have the best image of private pilots. “They look at people with their own airplane as a bunch of rich guys just doing their thing and living large. I don’t like that image.” Instead, Hayes wants to use his hobby and interest to give back. Magidson has been a member of Angel Flight since 1995. He flies all of his missions accompanied by his wife, Cynde. He loved the concept right away: “You give back to the community and we get to fly. Have some fun, do good stuff,” he said. Sometimes the pilots don’t just fly patients. Breitbarth recalls helping a farmer in Idaho fly back and forth to Portland to be with his wife while she was undergoing treatments. Hayes says they will also fly domestic violence relocations, move supplies into disaster areas or transport guide dogs.

Magidson has also helped deliver breast milk from a milk bank in San Jose, Calif.

Memorable passengers One of Breitbarth’s favorite passengers was Chloe Deputy, a young girl he flew from Baker City to Doernbecher Children’s Hospital at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland for cancer treatments. Breitbarth and other pilots flew the girl twice a week for a couple of years. He understands her cancer is now in remission. Breitbarth also remembers a woman from Grants Pass who was out of the military and living in a tent while she was undergoing treatment for cancer. “These people are just on the rope’s end,” said Breitbarth. The experience that hits him hardest, however, was the time he flew a woman to Wenatchee, Wash., after a doctor’s visit in Portland. She had received bad news: Her transplant was failing. Breitbarth remembers the news was life-threatening. “You just comfort them the best you can on the way home,” said Breitbarth. Hayes’ most memorable missions involved a California woman whom he flew many times so she could undergo experimental treatments in Tucson, Ariz., where Hayes was living at the time. She was in her late 30s and had breast cancer. Hayes says he will never forget her spirit and how she loved flying, loved people and viewed the whole experience as a big adventure. During this time, Hayes met the woman’s husband and whole family and even let the woman stay at his house when she needed to. She died but remains a vivid memory for Hayes. In spite of the bad things she was going through, she had “the most positive outlook of anyone I’ve ever known.” While Hayes says forming that kind of bond is rare during a mission, developing a connection with people is not. Magidson recalls one special couple he met while flying them home from Santa Barbara to Eureka, Calif. He was supposed to fly one leg to San Jose and switch with another pilot, but there was a delay and the couple would have had to wait five hours. So Magidson and his wife decided to fly the whole route, which ended up being more than eight hours round trip. “They were one of those marvelous couples that show you why you want to do this.” Magidson says the man, who had cancer, was maybe 40 and was extremely vibrant and active, although you could tell he had undergone a rough treatment. As the plane flew over the forest and mountains, the couple looked at flight charts and traced hiking trails they had

Arts & Entertainment Every Friday

walked together. Magidson says the man went from dragging a bit to showing a little more spark. “He got out of the airplane a different person that day. We just happened to be the people on duty at the time,” said Magidson. “We knew on that day we made his life a little better — on that day.” Magidson lost track of the man, like so many of the patients, but heard at one time he was faring better. It’s hard, says Magidson. “There’s some amount of engagement, some amount of detachment.”

Spreading the word While Breitbarth loves flying missions, one of his biggest missions right now is to spread the word about Angel Flight. There are very few flights to or from Central Oregon at this time. Breitbarth chalks a lot of that up to people being unaware of the service. He has been meeting with medical providers throughout the area to try to get the word out. Health care providers, social workers and other professionals serve as the initial conduit to bring patients to Angel Flight (individuals can’t sign themselves up). Breitbarth believes Angel Flight is the “best-kept secret in town.” He believes there is enough interest from pilots, but they would like to see more missions. Magidson hasn’t flown many missions in recent years, but he’s been involved in many other ways, from outreach to manning booths about the organization. “It’s one of the greatest organizations that, no pun intended, flies under the radar,” he said. When he has gone to health care providers to speak with them about Angel Flight, the No. 1 question he hears is: Who pays the pilots? When Magidson replies, “No one,” the questions often continue. How are the pilots reimbursed? Does the health insurance pick up the cost? What about fuel? Magidson says although it can be hard to explain that pilots aren’t paid, most pilots wouldn’t have it any other way. “Being paid takes away some of the good part,” he said. Not all passengers say thanks after departing a flight. But they don’t have to. “They don’t necessarily verbalize it,” said Breitbarth. He says the patients and family members are so wrapped up in having to take care of the disease treatment, “not having to worry about transportation issues takes a huge load off.” That way, Breitbarth says, the patients and their families can “focus on getting well.” — Reporter: 541-617-7860, ajohnson@bendbulletin.com

Emoticons — those jumbles of punctuation in an email or text — might leave you scratching your head and feeling :-S. Decoding them can be exercise in :-P. Sometimes, it makes you want to break down and :’(. For those moments, there is ChatSlang.com, a dictionary of sorts for emoticons, as well as chat slang, in which a few letters or numbers can convey far more than a simple FYI. Per Christensson, of Edina, Minn., started the site five years ago. While noting that there are similar sites, he said the parents’ checklist is especially useful for a mom or dad wondering if C9 is a new way of saying goodbye, given that their kid’s electronic conversations always seem to end when that’s typed. (C9 means “parent in room.”) ChatSlang emerged from Christensson’s work with his other website, TechTerms.com, a dictionary of computer and technology terms from Archie to Zone File. People were using abbreviations that he, hardly wizened at 31, struggled to understand. His puzzlement raises the question of how quickly a new term — say GUFN — becomes universally understood, at least among a texter’s peers. (Hel-lo. It means “grounded until further notice.) “The younger generation picks up on things more quickly,” he said. “But the whole reason we run this website is because people don’t know.” As far back as 1857, Morse code operators used the number 73 to express “love and kisses.” The satirical magazine, Puck, included typographical emoticons in 1881, but they never really caught on.

Then in 1982, Scott Fahlman, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University, became the first person documented to have used punctuation to suggest emotion, according to accounts by the school. Fahlman typed :-) and :-( to convey happy feelings or a frown. Yet even those symbols languished until texting took off and texters wanted to convey intent, Christensson said. “That’s where emoticons are extremely useful, as funny as they are, or as unprofessional as they can be,” he said. “If you’re being sarcastic, you add a smiley face so people know you’re joking and not being a jerk.” ChatSlang’s entries come from submissions and Christensson’s own view of the tech world. He also runs a

856 NW Bond • Downtown Bend • 541-330-5999 www.havenhomestyle.com

third site, FileInfo.com, a database of “file extensions with detailed information about the associated file types.” In English? When you get one of those files that won’t open, it offers other options to make it work. That site, he said, gets tens of thousands of hits daily. Christensson hesitates to call abbreviations or emoticons a language, “but then, I’m not some teenager texting all the time,” he said. “I’m actually kind of a stickler for grammar, so it’s ironic that I run a chat slang website.”


LOCALNEWS

News of Record, C2 Business, C3-5

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

LOCAL BRIEFING Road work set for Redmond A portion of Southeast 10th Street in Redmond will be closed next week as crews work to remove construction debris and soil from the area. The road will be closed between U.S. Highway 126 and Southwest Veterans Way from 7 a.m. Monday through 5 p.m. Friday. Traffic will be detoured through Southeast Veterans Way. The city says the area was a military property during World War II, and some of the construction debris may contain asbestos. Specialized contractors have been hired to remove the debris.

www.bendbulletin.com/local

Passing a Breathalyzer may not be enough to avoid DUII, court says By Duffie Taylor The Bulletin

Drunk driving suspects aren’t off the hook just because they pass a Breathalyzer, according to a split state Supreme Court decision handed down this week. In a 4-3 decision, the court ruled that drivers testing under the legal limit can still be convicted of driving under the influence of intoxicants if experts conclude their blood alcohol content was higher than the

legal limit of .08 when police pulled them over. The ruling supports the state Court of Appeals’ reversal of a Multnomah Circuit Court decision to exclude the testimony of an expert who used a formula to determine a man testing under the legal limit was drunk at the time of his arrest. The case dates back to September 2008, when a man arrested on suspicion of DUII blew a .064 1½ hours after his arrest. At a pretrial hearing, al-

cohol dissipation expert Shane Bessett testified that a formula called retrograde extrapolation determined the man’s blood alcohol content to be above the legal limit when police stopped him. Both the lower court and three Supreme Court judges determined the formula couldn’t be defended by a state statute that convicts a person of DUII on the basis of blood alcohol chemical testing. But the Court of Appeals

and a majority of Supreme Court justices concluded the opposite, saying the expert testimony on the test results could also be applied to arrive at a conviction. Tony Green, a spokesman for the assistant attorney general who argued the case, said they were pleased with the court’s decision but declined further comment. The state’s deputy public defender, Erik Blumenthal, could not be reached for comment.

Cruising the cruisers

Bend barn destroyed in fire Fire destroyed a barn Friday when a heater from an adjacent chicken coop ignited combustibles, the Bend Fire Department said. The fire, on Peterman Lane in Bend, was discovered by a neighbor. The barn’s owner was not home.

Prineville woman arrested Police said a 24year-old woman stole a purse containing cash from a home on Southeast Melrose Drive in Prineville about 2 p.m. Thursday. The victim, who had invited in Dawn Loree Risland, chased Risland for more than a mile to Southeast Sixth Street, at which point Risland allegedly pulled a knife on her. The victim suffered a small cut to the arm. Neighbors called the police. Risland reportedly was still holding the knife when officers arrived. Risland, who has several outstanding warrants, was taken to the Crook County jail. Police say Risland has a history of persuading people to allow her into their homes and then stealing items and fleeing. Anyone with information about similar incidents is asked to contact the Prineville Police Department at 541-447-4168.

Photos by Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

C

ar enthusiasts gather in the Great American Home Furnishings parking lot in Redmond

for the Friday Night Cruzers event on Friday. Today the High Desert Cruise-in will be held from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at Wagner Square in Redmond. It will feature many of the classic cars and trucks that were at last night’s event. At right, Jeffery Richards, 8, checks out the interior of a car on display.

VOTER TURNOUT All ballots for the May 15 primary election must be returned by 8 p.m. on Election Day. Voter turnout as of late Friday afternoon, by county: Crook . . . . . . . . 27.1% Deschutes . . . . 21.1% Jefferson . . . . . 29.3%

CORRECTION A submitted opinion piece by state Sen. Chris Telfer headlined “State recovery means easing the taxpayer’s burden,” which appeared Sunday, May 6, on Page F2, incorrectly attached a specific price to the Mill Point buildings, which are being considered for expansion of Oregon State University-Cascades Campus. OSU is seeking $16 million in state bonding to help purchase and remodel buildings near its Graduate & Research Center. No price has been negotiated on specific buildings.

Bend man sues police over alleged assault By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin

A Bend man has sued the city and three unidentified police officers over injuries he says he suffered during an arrest at Sidelines Sports Bar and Grill in January 2011. He is asking for up to $500,000 in damages. According to a lawsuit filed May 1, Christopher Blaylock was at the bar on Jan. 10, 2011, when police responded to a fight among bar patrons. Blaylock was not involved in the fight, the lawsuit states. When he left Sidelines, though, three Bend police officers “physically and violently took plaintiff Blaylock to the ground on the street outside the establishment,” the lawsuit states. “Blaylock was unarmed and had committed no crimes.” The lawsuit alleges that the officers handcuffed, peppersprayed and dragged Blaylock to a police cruiser, dropping him in the process. Blaylock was allegedly taken to jail and cited for resisting arrest, interfering with a peace officer and second-degree disorderly conduct. The Deschutes County District Attorney’s Office declined to

press charges in the case, according to the lawsuit. The lawsuit alleges an unlawful use of force, unlawful arrest, battery and assault. Blaylock’s attorney, Matthew McHenry, said Blaylock was not at the bar with any of the people involved in the initial altercation. He was there to watch the college football national championship between the University of Oregon and Auburn University. The police involved have not yet been identified, but McHenry said he expects to figure that out soon. “We’re just starting an investigation into who those folks are,” he said. “I don’t think it will be hard. There is video.” Bend city attorney Mary Winters said the case was filed as a tort claim, or an intent to sue, in June 2011. The tort claim was forwarded to the city’s insurance company, and the lawsuit has now been assigned to Springfield attorney Robert Franz, who will defend the city. Franz didn’t return a call for comment. A pretrial hearing is scheduled for August. — Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com

Groups file a petition to protect species of woodpecker By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Reminiscent of the spotted owl, a woodpecker that prefers burnt woods could earn federal protection and lead to more restrictions on logging in Central Oregon. Four conservation groups filed a petition with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service earlier this month, asking the agency to consider the black-backed woodpecker for protections under the Endangered Species Act. The agency has 90 days to review the petition. “The black-backed woodpecker depends on dense, mature forests that have been burned at moderate to high intensity in a wildfire and have not been salvage logged,” said Chad Hanson, director of the John Muir Project of Earth Island Institute, a Northern Californian conservation group leading the petition. Along with the group, the Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Biodiversity Conservation Alliance are part of the petition. The John Muir Project estimates there are 700 pairs of the woodpeckers in Northern California and on the eastern slopes of the Cascades, he said. To avoid being at risk of extinction, Hanson said there should be about 2,000 pairs. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service doesn’t have its own population figures, but may collect them as part of its review of the petition, said Mike Green, a migratory bird biologist for the agency in Portland. The bird’s dark back feathers provide camouflage on charred snags, where it is most often found. See Woodpecker / C2

Black-backed woodpecker

— From staff reports

More briefing and News of Record, C2

C

Obituaries, C7 Weather, C8

Bend-La Pine Schools board member dies By Patrick Cliff The Bulletin

Kelly Goff, a Bend-La Pine Schools board member since 2009, died Thursday night, the school district said. Elected to the board in 2009, Goff, 35, could be an outspoken advocate for isGoff sues she most cared about. She spoke intensely this year about body image issues of students at Bend-La Pine school dances. In an email to district staff, Superintendent Ron Wilkinson announced Goff’s death, “with great sadness.” “We send our deepest condolences to her family,” he wrote. A professional photographer, Goff owned K.G. Photography. Goff also volunteered for Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep, a national nonprofit that connects photographers to parents whose children are either stillborn or at-risk infants who had gestated for at least 25 weeks. The photographers

take “remembrance photography,” as the nonprofit puts it. A mother of three children in Bend-La Pine schools, Goff was previously the PTA president at Ponderosa Elementary School for two years. Ponderosa Principal Steve Austin said Goff volunteered at the school even after her PTA term ended. “You could tell she had a real heart for children,” he said. “It’s a loss we’re going to feel immensely here.” Chairman Ron Gallinat, who has worked on the board with Goff for nearly three years, praised her passion for schools. The board, he said, has offered to help the family, “in any way it can.” “She was a great person to work with and certainly dedicated to helping our district continue to educate kids,” Gallinat said. According to Wilkinson’s email, Goff’s family is finalizing memorial service arrangements. — Reporter: 541-633-2161, pcliff@bendbulletin.com

Scientific name: Picoides arcticus Characteristics: Sooty black back feathers camouflages against charred trees. Males have a yellow crown patch. Male and females have three toes, rather than the typical four for birds. Medium-sized, about 9 inches long. Breeding: Digs out cavities in trees for nests in spring; eggs typically hatch by early summer Habitat: Burned coniferous forests Food: Mainly beetle larvae foraged from burned trees Source: Cornell Lab of Ornithology, American Ornithologists’ Union

Photo courtesy John Muir Project of the Earth Island Institute


C2

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

Well shot! R E ADE R PHOTOS

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from C1

Bend schools plans interviews

Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Email your color or black and white photos to readerphotos@bendbulletin.com and we’ll pick the best for publication.

The Bend-La Pine School District will host a meeting Monday to interview candidates for a position on its board of directors. The meeting will take place at 5 p.m. in room 312 of the Education Center on Northwest Wall Street. Candidates for the position, recently held by Tom Wilson of La Pine, include Mike Jensen, Tami Metcalf and Richard Wagner. The selected candidate will begin service July 1.

Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

Search continues for Bend woman Bend police spent a fourth day searching for Carol Margaret Ray on Friday, a Bend woman who has not been seen since Tuesday. Detectives were in an area near Seventh Mountain Resort, where Ray’s vehicle was found parked near the Deschutes River on Wednesday. Ray is 46, Asian, and approximately 5 feet 1 inches tall and 90 pounds. She was last seen wearing a blue hooded sweatshirt. — From staff reports

OWLS AT REST AT EAGLE CREST John Hart captured great horned owlets at Eagle Crest using a Canon 5D Mark II camera and a Canon 70-200 f/2.8L lens with 2x teleconverter. The settings were ISO 400, f/9.5 and 1/180 second.

N R POLICE LOG 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. Prineville Police Department

Theft — A theft was reported at 2:09 p.m. May 10, in the area of Southeast Bailey Way. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:46 p.m. May 10, in the area of Northeast Third Street.

BEND FIRE RUNS Wednesday 9:30 a.m. — Passenger vehicle fire, 20025 Romaine Village Way. 5:27 p.m. — Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, 1707 S.E. Tempest Drive. 7:31 p.m. — Confined cooking fire, 994 S.E. Briarwood Court. 11:44 p.m. — Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, area of Northeast 10th Street and Northeast Hawthorne Avenue. 20 — Medical aid calls. Thursday 8:34 a.m. — Building fire, estimated $10,000 loss, 62845 Boyd Acres Road. 11:08 a.m. — Unauthorized burning, 1346 N.W. Davenport Ave. 8:13 p.m. — Unauthorized burning, 19086 River Woods Drive. 13 — Medical aid calls.

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The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ................541-633-2160 Redmond ........ 541-617-7837 Sisters............. 541-617-7837 La Pine ........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0348 Deschutes ...... 541-617-7829 Crook ............. 541-504-2336 Jefferson ....... 541-504-2336 Salem ..............541-554-1162 D.C. .................202-662-7456 Business ........ 541-383-0360 Education .......541-633-2161 Public lands .....541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects .......... 541-617-7831

Woodpecker Continued from C1 “It’s a unique bird,� Green said. “It does seem to be well adapted to finding forests that have been burned and then taking advantage of the (insect) outbreaks.� The goal of the petition is to garner threatened species listing for the woodpecker, Hanson said. The same federal listing of the spotted owl in 1990 crippled Oregon’s timber industry. Although both birds are found in Central Oregon, Green said the woodpecker prefers higher-elevation lodgepole stands in contrast to the lower elevation Douglas fir preference of the owl. While the conservation groups calling for protections for the black-backed woodpecker say there is a shortage in the West of the type of large wildfires that create prime habitat for the bird, timber interests argue the opposite. Over the last decade there have been plenty of large fires, said Tom Partin, president of the American Forest Resource Council. Membership in the organization is made up of forest product manufacturers and support companies in California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. “It just does not make a lot of sense to me why they think it doesn’t have habitat,� he said. He called the petition for protection bogus. “This is just a ploy,� Partin said. “They really don’t care about the woodpecker — they want to stop salvage logging.� The groups do want to stop salvage logging, said Karen Coulter, director of the Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project in Fossil, but because it destroys habitat for the woodpecker. By raising concern about the black-backed woodpecker, she said, the groups are hopeful the Forest Service may change how much salvage logging and how much thinning it allows. Thinning logging lowers the intensity of wildfires, she said, causing them not to create the type of burnt woods that support the woodpecker. “We are concerned that the Forest Service is limiting the black-backed woodpecker,� she said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

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P O For The Bulletin’s full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.

STATE OF OREGON Gov. John Kitzhaber, Democrat 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov Secretary of State Kate Brown, Democrat 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us Superintendent of Public Instruction Susan Castillo 255 Capitol Street N.E. Salem, Oregon 97310 Phone: 503-947-5600 Fax: 503-378-5156 Email: superintendent.castillo @state.or.us Web: www.ode.state.or.us Treasurer Ted Wheeler, Democrat 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer @state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us Attorney General John Kroger, Democrat 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite 1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

LEGISLATURE Senate

Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District 30 (includes Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli Sen. Chris Telfer, R-District 27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.christelfer@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/telfer

Rep. Mike McLane, R-District 55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane

Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District 53 (portion of Deschutes County) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR 97301

Rebecca Nonweiler, MD, Board Certified

(541) 318-7311

www.northwestmedispa.com

Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District 28 (includes Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett

A PA

SSION FOR SHOE

...

House

Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ huffman

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SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

B U S IN E S S s

NASDAQ

CLOSE 2,933.82 CHANGE +.18 +.01%

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DOW JONES

www.bendbulletin.com/business CLOSE 12,820.60 CHANGE -34.44 -.27%

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S&P 500

CLOSE 1,353.39 CHANGE -4.60 -.34%

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JPMORGAN CHASE’S LOSS

IN BRIEF Boardings dip in Redmond Passenger boardings last month at Redmond Airport nearly equaled the number from April 2011, according to figures released Friday by the airport. So far this year, however, boardings have declined about 2 percent compared with the first four months of 2011. Last month, 17,533 passengers took off from Redmond Airport, 37 fewer than in April 2011. From January through April, the airport recorded 73,010 boardings, 1,775 fewer than in the same period last year, according to the figures.

Consumer sentiment rises Consumer sentiment edged higher in May to the best reading since the recession, as declining gasoline prices appear to have offset slowing job-markets growth. The preliminary reading of the University of Michigan-Thomson Reuters index rose to 77.8 from 76.4 in April. That’s the best reading since January 2008 — just one month after the recession started.

$2 billion bad bet sparks firestorm over regulation By Kevin G. Hall McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s stunning after-hours announcement Thursday of a $2 billion loss on a complex bet sent shock waves through the nation’s capital Friday, as lawmakers blamed financial regulators for continuing to allow the same risky activity that nearly sunk the global financial system four years ago. JPMorgan had been considered the healthiest of U.S. banks, emerging from the 2008 crisis largely unscathed. CEO Jamie Dimon, boyishly handsome with a thick New York accent, is often referred to as “the king of Wall Street.” But on Friday, investors humbled the king, sending the bank’s share price down by $3.78, or 9.28 percent, to $36.96. Other big-bank stocks sunk as well. The massive blunder on the part of a bank perceived as the nation’s healthi-

est also cast an unwanted spotlight on the same federal regulators found to be asleep at the switch in the run-up to the 2008 financial crisis. In the aftermath of that crisis, the Federal Reserve was given greater supervisory responsibility for large investment banks, which had transformed themselves into bank-holding companies in order to enjoy greater taxpayer support amid the crisis. Fed staffers are now located in the biggest banks and were supposed to be policing their risk-taking to protect the financial system. “We can’t discuss supervisory information,” said Barbara Hagenbaugh, a Fed spokeswoman. The Securities and Exchange Commission also was given greater powers to ensure that large banks properly disclosed risks from complex investments to their investors. See JPMorgan / C5

BONDS

10-year Treasury

CLOSE 1.84 CHANGE -1.08%

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$1583.60 GOLD CLOSE CHANGE -$11.50

Days before revelations of JPMorgan Chase’s $2 billion trading loss rocked Wall Street, the company’s always-confident chief executive, Jamie Dimon, was his usual exuberant self. When the bosses of six of the largest banks gathered at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in downtown Manhattan to meet with a top Dimon Fed governor, the others used the underground garage and avoided the cameras. Dimon came and went through the front door, and even chatted with a CNBC reporter. It was a stance that was familiar to Dimon. He had steered his bank successfully through the financial crisis, and was known as Wall Street’s best risk manager, not to mention the most influential banker in the country when it came to writing new regulations in Washington. Now, though, Dimon’s reputation — and possibly his influence — have been cut down to size. See Dimon / C5

Photos by Heather Ainsworth / New York Times News Service

An employee works on the factory floor of Revere Copper Products in Rome, N.Y. The company has avoided moving abroad with financial help from labor concessions and government subsidies.

Subsidies aid rebirth in U.S. manufacturing By Louis Uchitelle New York Times News Service

New claims for jobless benefits continued to move downward, suggesting that employers may be quickening the pace of hiring. Continuing to claim unemployment insurance Initial claim Week ending April 28 3.23 million

6 5 4 3 2 1

Week ending May 5 367,000 ’08

’09

’10

’11

Note: Report on continuing claims lags initial claims by one week Source: U.S. Department of Labor © 2012 McClatchy-Tribune News Service

ROME, N.Y. — Walking through his high-ceilinged factory here, explaining the production of sheets of copper, M. Brian O’Shaughnessy comes across as a staunch advocate of manufacturing in America. But he invariably adds: “There is nothing made in the United States that has to be made here — that can’t be shipped in from some other country.” As chairman and principal owner of Revere Copper Products, O’Shaughnessy runs one of America’s oldest manufacturing companies, started by Paul Revere himself, a fact that exerts considerable pressure. As he put it: “What kind of a message are you sending to the people of the country if you abandon America?” But spend a day with him, and a more complex picture emerges. He wonders sometimes about the less patriotic alternative of relocating production to Asia or closing the factory entirely on the ground

M. Brian O’Shaughnessy, left, the chairman and principal owner of Revere Copper Products, said the company will never move abroad. With him is his son, Mike.

that Revere’s profit margin here is too thin — less than $1 million on $450 million in annual revenue. “If we simply shut down today,” O’Shaughnessy said, “I could sell the inventory and the machinery, which could be moved elsewhere in the world, and pay off our debts and walk away with $35 million to

CLOSE $28.858 CHANGE -$0.278

New York Times News Service

European Union issues warning

Jobless claims down

SILVER

By Nelson D. Schwartz and Jessica Silver-Greenberg

Facing criticism from its labor groups and pressure from rivals, American Airlines said Friday that it would be willing to consider a merger while it restructured operations in bankruptcy court, even as it stressed that it still intended to emerge from bankruptcy as a stand-alone carrier.

— Staff and wire reports

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Programs Loss stains Dimon, to examine one of banking’s running top risk managers a family business

American Airlines open to merger

As the Spanish government took further measures Friday to shore up the country’s banking sector, the European Commission injected a new dose of gloom by warning that Madrid was likely to miss its deficitreduction targets for this year and next by wide margins. Spain was headed for a budget deficit of 6.4 percent of gross domestic product this year and 6.3 percent next year, according to the commission’s spring economic forecasts. That was far beyond the 3 percent maximum allowed under European Union rules and exceeds the Spanish government’s own target of 5.3 percent for 2012.

C3

Weekly market review, C4-5 People on the Move, C5

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

C3

$40 million.” What staves off those alternatives are labor concessions and a substantial government subsidy, something he and others in the U.S. say is increasingly important to fuel a nascent recovery in manufacturing. The labor concessions at Revere, in a contract endorsed

by the United Auto Workers, are much like those unions are giving to other manufacturers. The subsidy comes from New York state, which supplies, at cost, the electric power that Revere uses to produce copper sheets and slabs. O’Shaughnessy says it accounts for half of Revere’s profit. With such support, the key measure of manufacturing’s presence in America is ticking upward. The Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis reported in April that manufacturing’s contribution to the gross domestic product rose in 2011 to 12.2 percent from 11.7 percent in 2010 and 11 percent in 2009. The current share is, of course, far less than in the 1950s, when manufacturing reached 28 percent of the economy, and then went into a long, gradual decline. But for the first time since then, the percentage has risen over a three-year period. See Manufacture / C5

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

An Oregon State University program focusing on the ins and outs of owning a family business is scheduled to come to Bend for three days of workshops and receptions, starting Thursday at The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center. The programs are designed to give Central Oregon families and business owners a chance to meet, network and discuss any of the numerous issues that can arise for a family-owned venture, from securing loans to building a successful multigenerational business. The three programs are the Family Business Reception, the Family Business Student Conference and the Business for Breakfast. They were set up by OSU’s Austin Family Business Program. Program Director Sherri Noxel said each of the events serves a different purpose. The Family Business Reception, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Thursday, “is a meet and greet for the family business community, just a fun, very social kind of event,” Noxel said. The Family Business Student Conference runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday. That event is geared toward university students with family business backgrounds. Noxel said the student conference is designed to give young adults a sense of what challenges new business owners can face. It also includes a look at Central Oregon’s craft beer, wine and spirits industries, as well as a conversation with guest panelists across the region who have experience managing family businesses. “We want to work with the next generation’s business leaders,” Noxel said, adding that it’s important for business owners to have succession plans in mind before they can expect to retire. A mother or father preparing for retirement “can’t pass on a business until that next generation is ready,” Noxel said. The student conference is $20 per student, with fees covering lunch. The third event, Business for Breakfast: “Banking for Generations of Success,” runs from 7:30-9:30 a.m. May 22. See Family / C5

Interested in attending? The Austin Family Business Program will hold three workshops in Bend, open to attendance for members of the Central Oregon business community. Each will be held at The Riverhouse Convention Center in Bend. To register for one or more of the workshops, call 1-800-859-7609. For more information about the programs, log on to the Austin Family Business Program website, www.family businessonline.org.


C4

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

The weekly market review New York Stock Exchange Name

Last Chg Wkly Name

A-B-C ABB Ltd 16.84 ACE Ltd 76.27 AES Corp 12.36 AFLAC 43.36 AGCO 43.85 AGL Res 38.57 AK Steel 7.05 AOL 26.06 AT&T Inc u33.59 AU Optron 4.39 AbtLab 62.04 AberFitc 46.62 Accenture 58.61 AccoBrds 10.44 AccretivH 10.86 AdvAuto 88.42 AMD 6.78 AdvActBear 23.41 AecomTch 18.05 Aegon 4.59 Aeropostl 19.72 Aetna 41.24 Agilent 39.45 Agnico g 36.81 Agrium g 83.41 AirProd 83.17 AlaskAir s 34.16 Albemarle 63.28 AlcatelLuc 1.51 Alcoa 9.06 Alere d19.02 AllegTch 39.59 Allergan 92.97 AlliantEgy 44.62 Allstate u34.83 AlphaNRs d13.16 AlpTotDiv 4.47 AlpAlerMLP 16.23 Altria 31.79 AmBev 39.41 Amdocs 30.09 Ameren 32.50 Amerigrp 61.15 AMovilL s u25.25 AmAxle 9.52 AEagleOut 19.55 AEP 38.45 AEqInvLf 11.58 AmExp 59.64 AmIntlGrp 31.75 AmTower 67.62 AmWtrWks 34.33 Ameriprise 50.47 AmeriBrgn 36.62 Ametek 50.28 Amphenol 54.04 Anadarko 68.31 AnglogldA d33.48 ABInBev u71.95 Ann Inc 26.79 Annaly 16.66 Anworth 6.77 Aon plc 48.15 Apache 87.26 AptInv 27.47 ApolloRM n 19.00 ArcelorMit 16.01 ArchCoal d8.06 ArchDan 32.85 ArcosDor 14.06 ArmourRsd 6.94 ArrowEl 37.17 Ashland 67.31 AsdEstat 17.08 Assurant 37.81 AssuredG 13.10 AstraZen 43.45 AtwoodOcn 40.41 AuRico g 7.95 AutoNatn 35.02 Autoliv 59.54 AveryD 30.73 Avnet 33.26 Avon 20.19 AXIS Cap u34.95 BB&T Cp 31.75 BHP BillLt 68.82 BHPBil plc 59.07 BP PLC 39.65 BPZ Res 2.80 BRE 52.37 BRFBrasil 17.35 BabckWil 25.29 BakrHu 41.72 BallCorp 40.96 BanColum 64.81 BcBilVArg d6.69 BcoBrad pf 15.07 BcoSantSA d6.23 BcoSBrasil 8.25 BcpSouth 13.36 BkofAm 7.55 BkNYMel 22.09 Barclay 12.89 Bar iPVix 17.48 Bard 101.18 BarnesNob 18.44 BarrickG d37.04 BasicEnSv 13.60 Baxter 54.08 Beam Inc 58.81 BeazerHm 2.89 BectDck 76.76 Bemis 31.53 Berkley u39.00 BerkH B u81.60 BerryPet 40.62 BestBuy d19.28 BigLots 36.27 BBarrett 24.04 BioMedR 19.50 Blackstone 12.63 BlockHR 14.57 Boeing 73.56 Boise Inc 7.39 BorgWarn 77.58 BostProp 108.31 BostonSci 6.31 BoydGm 7.31 Brandyw 11.97 Brinker 31.66 BrMySq 33.11 BroadrdgF 21.11 Brookdale 17.44 BrkfldAs g 32.64 BrkfldOfPr 18.37 BrwnBrn 26.48 Brunswick 23.95 Buenavent 37.94 BungeLt 63.18 C&J Egy n 19.20 CBL Asc 18.97 CBRE Grp 17.27 CBS B 32.80 CF Inds 172.18 CIT Grp 37.10

-.30 +.31 -.01 +.27 +.68 -.07 +.05 -.22 +.46 -.04 -.18 -.92 -.09 +.07 +.33 -.65 ... +.06 +.06 -.10 -.04 -.60 -.29 -.92 +.87 +.13 +.16 +.38 -.02 -.04 -3.28 -.32 +.14 +.26 +.23 -.51 ... -.04 +.06 -.37 -.03 -.34 -.25 -.07 -.03 -.22 +.09 +.07 +.22 -.39 +.08 -.04 -.31 +.04 +.10 -.18 -.96 -.59 +.39 -.35 -.03 -.03 -.01 -.61 -.30 +.26 -.36 -.24 -.65 -.29 ... -.01 +1.01 -.26 +.24 +.02 +.11 -.71 -.17 -.02 -.29 +.05 -.29 -.70 +.30 -.02 -1.36 -1.33 -.13 -.17 -.24 -.05 +.38 +.05 -.30 -1.93 -.12 -.05 -.10 -.25 +.02 -.15 -.14 -.58 +.27 -.52 -.63 -.73 -.27 -.34 +.34 +.08 +.14 -.17 ... -.18 -.58 -.66 -.46 +.09 +.09 -.07 -.01 -.24 -.05 +.29 +.11 +.03 -.04 +.06 +.25 -.08 -.18 -.14 +.30 +.23 -.23 -.55 -.71 -1.24 -.74 +.02 +.03 -.23 +.41 +.42

-.84 -.17 +.28 -.12 -2.44 +.07 +.11 +1.81 +.73 -.28 -.37 -3.90 -4.00 -.39 +2.29 -1.94 -.40 +.96 -.75 +.19 -1.67 -1.90 -1.56 -1.44 -1.78 -2.35 +1.03 -.38 +.08 -.28 -2.85 -1.75 +.07 +.72 +.63 -1.29 -.08 -.28 -.64 -1.53 -.67 +.13 -1.36 -1.79 +.02 -.47 +.34 +.05 -.46 -1.08 +1.18 +.23 -1.53 +.45 +.14 -1.31 -.70 +.24 -1.61 -.39 +.31 +.08 -.24 -1.80 +.31 +.75 -.09 -.02 +.60 -.22 +.05 +.04 +2.01 +.10 -.05 -.29 -.45 -1.74 -.64 +.08 -.73 -.72 -1.48 -.38 +.57 +.18 -2.91 -2.94 -.83 -.72 +.07 -.45 +.34 +.54 +.20 -4.19 +.13 -.44 +.06 +.26 +.12 -.19 -.98 -.55 +.25 +1.80 +.53 -.85 +.08 -.57 +.19 +.20 +.07 +.29 +.54 +.66 -2.26 -1.54 -.26 +1.85 +.08 -.30 +.03 -1.84 ... -.40 +.36 +.12 +.05 -.04 -.43 -.26 -1.22 -.94 +.01 +.29 -.05 -1.00 -2.38 -1.33 +1.40 +.14 -.66 -.42 -11.33 -1.02

Last Chg Wkly Name

CMS Eng 22.84 CNH Gbl 44.01 CNO Fincl 6.98 CSX s 21.66 CVR Engy u30.32 CVR Ptrs 22.85 CVS Care 45.32 CYS Invest 13.87 Cabelas 36.45 CblvsNY s 12.56 CabotOG s 35.51 CACI 47.01 CalDive 3.06 Calix 8.10 CallonPet 5.07 Calpine 18.18 CamdenPT 68.56 Cameco g 21.56 Cameron 48.56 CampSp 34.40 CdnNRy g 80.87 CdnNRs gs 30.98 CP Rwy g 73.20 CapOne 54.37 CapitlSrce 6.81 CapsteadM 13.88 CardnlHlth 42.49 CareFusion 25.86 CarMax 29.59 Carnival 31.46 Carters 50.74 Caterpillar 95.50 Celanese 45.00 Celestic g 8.00 Cemex 6.52 Cemig pf 23.30 CenovusE 32.95 Centene 37.19 CenterPnt 20.24 CnElBras pfd10.98 CenElBras d8.20 CntryLink 39.52 Cenveo d2.01 Chemtura 16.02 ChesEng d14.81 Chevron 102.69 ChicB&I 41.35 Chicos 14.41 Chimera 2.82 ChinaMble 56.17 ChinaUni 16.33 Chiquita d5.62 Chubb u73.42 ChurchD s u53.08 Cigna 45.11 Cimarex 63.34 CinciBell 3.64 Cinemark u24.12 Citigroup 29.35 CliffsNRs 55.43 Clorox 68.56 CloudPeak 16.50 Coach 68.31 CobaltIEn 23.29 CocaCola 77.47 CocaCE 29.38 Coeur d18.29 Colfax 31.45 ColgPal 99.31 CollctvBrd u21.38 ColonPT 22.23 Comerica 31.51 CmclMtls 13.33 CmtyHlt 22.95 CompSci 27.11 ComstkRs 18.08 Con-Way 34.43 ConAgra 25.74 ConchoRes 89.17 ConocPhil s 53.50 ConsolEngy 34.26 ConEd 59.81 ConstellA 19.95 ContlRes 77.20 Cnvrgys 12.66 Cooper Ind 60.60 CooperTire 15.11 CopaHold u84.30 CoreLogic 17.49 Corning 13.31 CorrectnCp 27.77 Cosan Ltd 13.37 Covance 45.42 CovantaH 16.30 CoventryH 29.90 Covidien 55.22 Crane 40.53 CS VS3xSlv26.89 CSVS2xVxS 7.01 CSVelIVSt s 11.18 CredSuiss d21.12 CrwnCstle 55.64 CrownHold 36.71 Cummins 106.47 CurEuro 128.56 Cytec 63.38

-.06 +.33 -.09 -.02 -.06 -.79 -.65 ... +.38 +.07 -.64 -.73 +.02 -.41 -.02 -.31 +.20 +.07 +.03 -.03 +.30 -.10 +.44 +.06 -.03 -.02 +.25 -.02 -.45 +.09 +.38 +.06 +.20 +.12 -.20 -.05 -.01 -.48 -.01 -.20 -.06 -.01 +.01 +.20 -2.37 -.67 +.36 -.12 ... -.58 -.50 -.08 -.26 -.11 +.20 -1.82 -.08 -.19 -1.30 -1.03 +.04 +.16 -.39 -.25 +.06 -.39 -.29 -.05 -.34 +.01 -.07 -.09 +.06 -.50 +.11 +.55 +.91 +.08 -2.15 -.72 -.32 -.21 -.22 -.66 +.14 -.28 -.03 -.75 -.29 -.01 +.14 -.02 +.17 +.02 +.03 +.48 -.46 -.51 +.13 -.20 -.27 +.08 -.09 +.60 -.23 +.33

+.37 -1.24 -.07 -.49 +.27 -4.90 -.10 +.12 +.16 -.36 +1.16 -2.15 -.27 -1.22 -.79 -.01 +.61 -.94 -.17 +.58 -2.83 -.83 -1.72 -.15 +.21 +.11 -.21 -1.23 -.25 -.80 -1.17 -2.94 -1.36 -.32 -.18 +.24 +.60 -.83 +.19 -.61 -.14 +1.05 -.59 -.71 -2.58 -1.03 -1.37 -.73 -.04 -.30 -1.27 -2.35 +.03 +1.78 -.15 -.01 -.23 +1.03 -2.25 -2.84 +1.10 +2.23 -4.22 +.59 +.47 +.20 -1.52 -1.20 +.18 +.13 -.02 -.26 -.80 -1.10 -.10 +1.40 -.13 -.01 -7.15 +.33 +1.01 +.43 -.86 -.49 -.24 -1.50 -.61 +3.47 +.53 -.36 -.48 -.33 -1.14 +.51 -.34 +1.06 -1.09 -4.22 +.10 -.24 -.60 -.16 +.46 -.64 -1.69 +1.68

D-E-F DCT Indl 6.02 DDR Corp 14.75 DHT Hldgs .70 DR Horton 17.13 DTE 56.34 DanaHldg 13.90 Danaher 53.66 Darden 50.63 Darling 15.31 DaVita 82.89 DeVry d29.95 DeanFds u14.55 Deere 79.07 DelphiAu n 28.72 DelphiFn u45.45 DeltaAir 11.37 DemndMda 8.46 DenburyR 17.23 DeutschBk 39.61 DBGoldDS 5.11 DevonE 64.48 Diageo 99.78 DiaOffs 62.74 DiamRk 10.61 DiceHldg 10.38 DicksSptg 48.31 DigitalRlt 73.34 DigitalGlb 16.37 Dillards u70.43 DxEMBll rs 82.72 DxFnBull rs 92.50 DrxTcBull 51.92 DirSCBear 19.93 DirFnBear 23.57 DirLCBear 22.15 DirDGldBll d9.91 DrxTcBear 10.54 DrxEnBear 11.52 DirEMBear 15.33 DirxSCBull 53.08

+.04 +.04 -.03 +.21 ... +.01 -.07 -.26 -.69 -1.28 -.72 -.08 +.11 -.07 -.01 +.34 -.19 -.19 -.69 +.07 -.12 +.78 -.69 +.04 -.15 -1.04 +.28 +.23 +4.24 -3.20 -2.52 -.11 +.16 +.71 +.17 -.49 +.05 +.22 +.62 -.46

+.12 -.05 -.07 +.53 +.58 +.26 +.06 +.01 -.48 -1.49 -1.78 +2.19 -1.62 -.65 +.15 +.37 +.10 -.14 -1.18 +.34 -.55 -3.13 -2.16 +.10 +.33 -1.91 -.58 -.07 +4.83 -9.13 -4.50 -3.00 +.12 +1.09 +.63 -1.24 +.54 +.44 +1.46 -.43

Last Chg Wkly Name

DirxLCBull 76.49 DirxEnBull 41.83 Discover 34.12 Disney u45.56 DolbyLab 44.92 DoleFood 10.06 DollarGen 47.17 DomRescs 52.22 Dominos 33.65 Domtar g 81.12 DEmmett 23.34 Dover 58.80 DowChm 32.15 DrPepSnap 40.95 DresserR 48.62 DuPont 51.57 DuPFabros 26.45 DukeEngy 21.72 DukeRlty 14.68 DunBrad 66.59 Dynegy .46 E-CDang 7.08 EMC Cp 26.36 EOG Res 104.23 EQT Corp 50.00 EagleMat 35.72 EastChm s 49.68 Eaton 44.71 EatnVan 25.24 EVTxMGlo 8.69 Ecolab u64.71 Ecopetrol 63.06 EdisonInt 44.39 EdwLfSci 84.68 ElPasoCp 29.52 Elan 13.39 EldorGld gd11.47

-.74 -.80 +.62 +.28 +.36 -.09 +.22 +.11 -.04 -1.34 +.15 -.11 -.04 -.23 -.10 -.02 +.24 -.07 -.08 +1.02 +.01 -.31 +.22 -2.28 +.16 +.07 -.32 -.20 -.01 -.07 -.10 -.57 +.28 +.63 -.09 +.02 -.32

-2.44 -1.74 +.60 +2.63 +.70 +.67 -.39 +.23 +1.01 -3.39 +.40 -1.23 -.18 +1.03 +.79 -.89 -.43 +.16 -.12 -9.84 +.05 -1.05 -1.44 -1.06 +1.23 -.39 -1.03 -.66 -.53 -.10 +1.20 -.60 +.63 -.31 -.09 +.57 -1.72

Last Chg Wkly

ForestOil s 10.32 -.45 -.61 Fortress 3.40 -.06 -.07 FBHmSc n u24.04 +.86 +.67 FranceTel 13.45 -.31 -.26 FrankRes 114.48 -.52 -3.09 FMCG 34.74 -.57 -1.66 Freescale 11.20 +.10 -.81 Frontline 5.42 -.12 -.38 Fusion-io n 21.41 +.81 -1.54

G-H-I GMX Rs 1.20 GNC 40.48 Gafisa SA d3.76 Gallaghr 35.85 GameStop 20.33 Gannett 13.37 Gap 28.00 GardDenv 59.87 GaylrdEnt 34.98 GencoShip d3.94 Generac u26.87 GnCable 31.11 GenDynam 66.53 GenElec 19.01 GenGrPrp 18.00 GenMills 39.27 GenMotors 22.00 GenOn En 2.17 GenuPrt 64.70 Genworth 5.85 GeoGrp 22.60 GaGulf 33.51 Gerdau 8.45 GiantInter s 5.29 Gildan 25.58 GlaxoSKln 45.62

... -.43 +.05 -.01 -.74 +.05 -.12 +.25 +.71 -.09 -.13 +.04 -.01 -.08 -.11 +.02 -.37 -.02 +.02 +.18 +.11 +.27 +.01 +.13 -.03 +.12

-.03 +2.87 -.16 -.91 -1.50 +.02 -.20 -1.58 +1.21 -.36 +3.74 -.21 -.52 -.33 +.10 +.95 -.36 +.10 -.29 +.05 +2.07 -.75 -.17 +.01 -.88 +.09

Name

How to Read the Market in Review Here are the 1,133 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, the 830 most active on the Nasdaq National Market and 255 most active on American Stock Exchange. Stocks in bold changed 10 percent or more in price. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Company names made up of initials appear at the beginning of each letter’s list. Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Chg: Loss or gain for last day of week. No change indicated by “…” mark. Wkly: Loss or gain for the week. No change indicated by … Name: Name of mutual fund and family. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold, for last day of the week. Wkly: Weekly net change in the NAV. Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52-week low. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - temporary exmpt from Nasdaq capital and surplus listing qualification. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. Mutual Fund Footnotes: e – Ex-capital gains distribution. f – Previous day’s quote. n - No-load fund. p – Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r – Redemption fee or contingent deferred sales load may apply. s – Stock dividend or split. t – Both p and r. x – Ex-cash dividend.

Source: The Associated Press and Lipper, Inc. Sales figures are unofficial.

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Last Chg Wkly Name

MonstrWw 9.33 Moodys 38.36 MorgStan 14.95 Mosaic 48.93 MotrlaSolu 49.83 MotrlaMob 39.23 MurphO 48.35 NCR Corp 22.93 NQ Mobile 10.35 NRG Egy 16.29 NV Energy u17.10 NYSE Eur 25.40 Nabors 15.09 NBGrce rs 1.92 NOilVarco 68.43 NatRetPrp u27.57 Navistar d30.01 NwOriEd s 27.75 NY CmtyB 12.93 NY Times 6.43 Newcastle 7.09 NewellRub 18.32 NewfldExp 32.26 NewmtM d45.36 NewpkRes 6.22 Nexen g 17.08 NextEraEn u65.17 NiSource 25.25 NielsenH 28.57 NikeB 108.26 NobleCorp 34.38 NobleEn 89.19 NokiaCp 3.20 Nordstrm 50.96 NorflkSo 68.44 NoestUt 36.57 NorthropG 59.91

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Last Chg Wkly Name

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Embraer 31.69 EmersonEl 48.18 Emulex 7.85 Enbridge s 40.20 EnCana g 21.20 EndvrIntl 8.69 EndvSilv g 8.58 Energen 46.25 EngyTEq 40.35 EngyTsfr 47.47 EnergySol 3.30 Enerpls g d16.10 ENSCO 48.95 Entergy 64.72 EntPrPt 50.66 Equifax 46.25 EqtyRsd 63.36 EsteeLdr s 58.16 ExcelM 1.42 ExcoRes 7.57 Exelis n 11.12 Exelon 38.90 Express 23.71 ExterranH 12.81 ExtraSpce 30.04 ExxonMbl 83.10 FMC Tech 44.84 FNBCp PA 11.15 FTI Cnslt d31.45 FairchldS 13.41 FamilyDlr u69.27 FedExCp 87.80 FedInvst 21.40 Feihe Intl 6.72 Ferro 5.15 FibriaCelu 7.27 FidlNFin 19.21 FidNatInfo 32.74 FstHorizon 9.08 FMajSilv g 14.73 FstRepBk 33.60 FT Fincl 14.78 FT RNG 16.55 FirstEngy u47.81 FlagstBc h .85 Flotek 12.65 Flowserve 112.95 Fluor 53.89 FootLockr 29.15 FordM 10.58 FordM wt d1.99 ForestLab 34.24

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and Central Oregon Area Chambers of Commerce

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OptimerPh Oracle OraSure Orexigen Overstk

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Last Chg Wkly Name

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Nasdaq National Market Name

Last Chg Wkly ArQule

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J-K-L

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SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

JPMorgan

P M Suz Ceciliani has been honored as an Excellent Beginnings Program Achiever for lia sophia. Ceciliani received this honor by reaching certain sales levels within her first 15 weeks with the fashion jewelry business. James Fleming is a new finan- Fleming cial representative for Country Financial in Bend. He completed Country Financial training and can now Green provide insurance, investment ma nagement, retirement planning and trust services. Fleming has an as- Hynes sociate’s degree from Central Oregon Community College and volunteers for Common Table and the American Can- Edmonds cer Association. Neal Huston, president of Neal Huston and Associates Architects Inc. in Bend, attended the Ore- Masters gon Design Conference. The conference theme was “The New Now”; the conference focused on changes and Rees challenges in the world and how design professionals can adapt and contribute. Ed Green has joined John L. McClung Scott Real Estate in Bend as a broker. He is a certified senior residential specialist and has a background in counseling and project management. David Rosell, president of Rosell Wealth Management in Bend, was a featured speaker at the 2012 Oregon Dental Association’s annual conference. Rosell presented “Retirementology: How to Retire Successfully in the New World Economy.” Heather Hynes has joined Patagonia@Bend as the new general manager. Hynes previously worked as the comanager at Fleet Feet Sports in Bend. This summer Hynes will lead the store’s transition to its new location at 1000 N.W. Wall St. in Bend. Noah von Borstel of John L. Scott Real Estate in Redmond was the top listing and sales agent for April. Andie Edmonds of Fratzke Commercial Real Estate Advisors in Bend has been named

president of the Commercial Investment Division of the Central Oregon Association of Realtors for 2012. CID was formed to focus on commercial aspects of property sales and management. Greg Haugen has joined Element One LLC Huston as chief financial officer. In this position he will be responsible for the finance and administrative Rosell activities of the company. Haugen has more than 25 years of business experience and spent 10 years as the von vice president of Borstel finance and administration for Advanced Power Technology. He has a bachelor of science degree from Lewis Haugen & Clark College and has passed the CPA exam. Jeanette and Masters Lisa Buan have joined Alpine Buan Real Estate in Bend. Masters works with buyers and sellers and heads up the property management Silfven division. Buan has a bachelor’s degree in zoology from North Carolina State University and has ASP, CRS, GRI and SRES Realtor designations. Coldwell Banker Mayfield Realty in Redmond named Kris Rees top-selling agent and Audrey Cook top-listing agent for April. Ellen Silfven has joined Umpqua Bank as sales manager for the home lending division. She will manage Umpqua Bank’s home lending production in Central and Eastern Oregon and will hire loan officers to support growth. Silfven has more than 30 years of experience in home lending in Bend. Bob McClung has been named president-elect of the Oregon Association of Realtors and will take on the role of president in October 2013. McClung has been in real estate since 1998 and is a principle broker with Prudential Northwest Properties in Bend. He has served on the OAR board of directors since 2008. He volunteers as chairman for the financial review committee and is a member of the board of managers for Oregon Real Estate Forms.

Family

tough questions,” Noxel said. The cost is $25 dollars, and includes breakfast. The events are part of the Austin Family Business Program’s efforts to build connections among local business owners in communities across the state, Noxel said. She called the series of local workshops “the opening of a relationship” between OSU’s business program and Bend’s business leaders, a relationship she hopes to keep developing between the school and community. “It’s a way for us to learn about Bend and the family businesses there. It’s going to be really fun for us,” she said.

Continued from C3 The breakfast program serves as an open forum for business owners and their families to talk with each other about the challenges of keeping a small, local business afloat. Those attending will also have a chance to talk about banking, loans and other financial matters with Tom VanHemelryck, senior vice president of Bank of the Cascades. The forum will be facilitated by Robert Nosler, president of Bend ammunition company Nosler Inc. The morning session “will give the family owners a really safe place to ask some pretty

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

Continued from C3 Lawmakers said that JPMorgan did not fully disclose the risks from its soured bet in its annual report for 2011 or its report filed for the first quarter of 2011. “It ought to be a concern to the SEC. They are the ones who ought to have a concern about that,” Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said in a conference call with reporters. Levin heads the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. His panel was instrumental, after the fact, in piecing together much of the malfeasance that led to the financial crisis. On Friday, though, Levin called it premature to determine whether he’ll hold hearings on JPMorgan. The SEC regulates broadly on investor protection, but it narrowly regulates JPMorgan’s broker-dealer operations, and the losses appeared to be in an area of the bank regulated by the Fed. SEC spokesman John Nester declined to comment. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency regulates JPMorgan’s commercial banking activities and was mum, too. “We don’t comment on specific bank supervisory matters,” said spokesman Bryan Hubbard. In a conference call with journalists, Levin and Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., a mem-

Manufacture Continued from C3 “Basically, manufacturers are realizing that the cost structure for making products in America no longer needs to be as unfavorable as it was,” said Jared Bernstein, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in Washington and a former chief economist to Vice President Joe Biden.

‘Lean’ operations Apart from subsidies, organized labor’s givebacks in recent years have contributed significantly to what manufacturers call “lean” practices. At Revere, “lean” means that employment has fallen to 360 from 450 two decades ago. The half-hour lunch break is no longer paid time for the 260 hourly workers. (They earn $19 an hour on average.) Employees pay some of their health insurance premium. And management alters factory routines and tasks without first consulting the union, UAW Local 2367, which for months has turned the other cheek. Partly as a result, the time required to turn a 22,000-pound cake of copper into finished sheets of various thicknesses has been reduced to three days from three weeks. “The company shows us a newsreel that makes the point that since the year 2000, the United States has lost 56,000 factories and 5 or 6 million manufacturing jobs,” said Tom Slocum, chairman of the UAW local’s bargaining committee, “and the message is that, but for the O’Shaughnessys, the factory here could join the 56,000.” Despite those lost factories, the U.S. was the world’s largest manufacturer in terms of value added for many years — until China gradually edged into the lead over the last few years. Value added means the value in dollars that is added when a $100 sheet of copper, for ex-

ber of the Senate Banking Committee, called on bank regulators to rewrite draft rules designed to curb risky betting by the largest banks. The provision in question is dubbed the Volcker Rule, named after former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker, who argued for a firewall between commercial and investment banking. The two senators got the Volcker Rule into the broad financial revamp but were disappointed when bank regulators issued draft rules that had huge loopholes. “The draft rules at this point are way too lax. They don’t have the bright lines that are needed,” Merkley said.

Hedge vs. speculation The complex bet JPMorgan made is allowed under prior regulation, but under the wording of Dodd-Frank would be prohibited, once regulators enforce the Volcker Rule. Dimon on Thursday described the soured bet as an offsetting hedge gone bad. In fact, the bet on a basket of insurance-like financial products called credit-default swaps was actually a bet on the broad performance of the U.S. economy. “This is not a hedge as we defined it in the law. Hedging is allowed, but this kind of portfolio hedging, or hedging on the direction of the economy, is not allowed,” Levin said. “We are very pre-

ample, is cut and shaped into a $150 roof gutter. By that standard, a fully assembled car is worth more than the value of its numerous parts before assembly. Each factory operation adds value, and the measuring gauge speeds along, reaching $1.8 trillion in the U.S. in 2011. In China, where the gauge has been rising faster than in the U.S., the value added by manufacturing was about $1.9 trillion last year, according to government and private estimates. That Chinese milestone is reflected in America’s merchandise trade deficit, which has remained stubbornly high, mainly because of the imbalance with China. U.S. multinationals have contributed to the shift, frequently making in Asia what they sell in Asia and, in many cases, in the U.S. Revere hasn’t participated, though, even as its customers moved their production of copper products like pots and pans, electrical wiring and roof gutters offshore. Those customers shifted to foreign suppliers. “We have lost 30 percent of our business this way,” O’Shaughnessy said. “We had to shrink our staff to stay alive.” Given his druthers, he would have the U.S. step up its own mercantilist practices, which means greater government support. A big one, from a manufacturer’s point of view, would be a devaluation of the dollar to lower the cost of exports in foreign currencies.

cise on the definition in our language.” “It’s not a hedge. They don’t even call it a hedge. They call it an economic hedge, which is code for not really being a hedge. It’s really speculation,” said William Black, an economics professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and a former government litigator during the 1980s’ savings and loan crisis. “They have not learned any of the lessons from the crisis. They are too big to be efficiently managed … but this particular problem doesn’t come from size, it comes from a deliberate business strategy of taking very large risks while claiming it’s a hedge.” J.P. Morgan’s bad bet also renewed debate on whether the largest banks should be forced to break up. Appearing on CNBC television Friday, former Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair called anew for breaking up the biggest banks into “separately managed business lines.” How much Dimon knew about the bet, which at one point had accumulated to $100 billion, according to The Wall Street Journal, remains unclear. In coming days, attention will shift to what was known by Dimon about Bruno Iksil, the London-based trader who executed the bets, and what was known by the company’s chief investment officer and the chief financial officer.

decision will be reversed after he is gone, he is leaving all his shares, he said, to whichever of his three sons is most likely to keep Revere’s production in America. That son might even someday restore electric power to a huge neon-lighted depiction of Paul Revere on horseback, who, back when the sign was lighted, seemed to gallop across the night sky high above the factory’s roof. O’Shaughnessy cut the power to save money, and Rome, N.Y., lost a distinguishing spectacle — an animated landmark that drew schoolchildren and tourists and that heralded Rome as a proud manufacturing city.

C5

Dimon Continued from C3 The trading loss disclosed late Thursday is a rare misstep by a man who prides himself on having his fingers on the pulse of his 270,000-employee company, and it suggests his vaunted confidence edged toward hubris. In a post on Twitter, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., a sparring partner of Dimon’s over regulatory issues, said that JPMorgan “has lost, in this one set of transactions, five times the amount they claim financial regulation is costing them.” And that reality may cost Dimon in Washington. Dimon has been marshaling the firm’s considerable resources to help sway the regulators who are writing many of the rules in the Dodd-Frank banking reform bill passed in 2010. Known as a blunt executive not afraid to raise his voice, Dimon has been one of the few bankers who still commanded respect from analysts and investors as well as regulators. Dimon routinely grills executives to make sure they are prepared for a variety of contingencies, according to employees at the New York bank. Dimon was also known for warning how dangerous one misstep could be. In April 2007, just as the first signs were emerging of what would become the subprime mortgage crisis, Dimon had a message for 200 new managing directors assembled at the company’s headquarters. “One deal doesn’t make or break us,” he said, according to one banker who was present. “But the implications of one bad deal on our franchise is significant.”

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Determination O’Shaughnessy’s boast about the potential windfall from closing the remaining factory here is rooted in the belief that conviction and determination, as much as economics, sustains manufacturing in America. “As manufacturing moves abroad, mostly to China, could Revere follow? Yes,” he says. “Will Revere? Never.” To minimize the risk that his

The weekly market review American Stock Exchange Name

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GenMoly 2.93 GeoGloblR .21 Geokinetics 1.43 GigOptics 2.78 GoldRsv g 4.20 GoldResrc 25.07 GoldenMin d5.24 GoldStr g 1.44 GldFld u1.60 GormanR s 29.11 GrahamCp 20.16 GranTrra g 5.56 GrtBasG g .64 GtPanSilv g 1.91 GreenHntr 1.90 GpoSimec 9.67 GugFront 20.77 HSBC CTI 6.67 Hemisphrx .26 HooperH d.60 HstnAEn 1.64 IEC Elec 6.04 iShMorMl btu25.45 iBio 1.61 ImpOil gs 43.16 IncOpR 2.15 IndiaGC .29 InovioPhm .50 Intellichk 1.78 IntTower g d3.47 Inuvo d.69 InvVKAdv2 13.11

-.09 +.01 -.10 -.09 ... -.42 +.07 -.03 +.50 -.12 -.49 -.04 -.03 -.08 -.21 -.13 -.15 -.06 -.02 -.03 -.10 -.06 +.02 +.15 -.27 +.12 -.02 +.01 +.20 -.10 +.02 +.04

+.03 -.01 -.23 -.19 -.32 +.38 -.81 -.01 +.48 +.59 -1.23 -.49 -.08 -.17 -.29 +.14 -.31 -.07 -.04 -.03 -.21 +1.23 +.01 +.16 -1.54 +.55 -.04 -.03 ... -.47 -.05 +.14

InvVKSelS 13.20 IsoRay .65 Iteris 1.36 KeeganR g d2.91 KimberR g d.77 LadThalFn 1.48 LkShrGld g .90 Lannett 4.16 Libbey 14.81 LongweiPI 1.37 LucasEngy 1.63 MAG Slv g 8.70 MGTCap rs 4.14 MadCatz g .51 Medgenics 5.88 Metalico d3.14 MdwGold g d1.19 MincoG g d.52 MinesMgt 1.48 NHltcre 42.90 NavideaBio 2.87 NeoStem .37 NeuB HYld 13.80 NBIntMu 16.44 NBRESec 4.32 Neuralstem .97 NevGCas 1.18 Nevsun g 3.25 NewEnSys .52 NwGold g d8.00 NA Pall g 2.56 NDynMn g d4.26

-.10 +.02 +.01 +.10 -.03 -.12 -.10 -.12 -.04 -.09 -.04 -.03 -.01 -.10 +.02 +.39 -.27 -.17 -.06 -.08 -.01 -.10 -.25 -.62 +.53 +.93 -.01 -.02 -.09 +.11 -.09 +.06 -.05 -.06 -.04 -.09 +.02 -.15 -.28 -.56 -.01 -.07 ... -.01 ... -.08 -.04 +.28 -.02 +.02 -.01 +.01 +.04 -.07 -.14 -.17 +.03 +.02 -.43 -.59 +.02 -.22 -.10 -.83

NthnO&G 18.59 NovaBayP 1.17 NovaCpp n d3.10 NovaGld g d5.41 NCaAMTFr 14.70 NuvCADv2 15.45 NCADv3 14.19 NvDCmdty 20.71 NuvDiv2 15.21 NuvDiv3 15.25 NvDivAdv 15.36 NuvAmtFr 14.92 NMuHiOp u13.35 NuvREst 11.17 NvTxAdFlt 2.46 OrientPap 2.75 OrionEngy 2.12 OverhillF 4.41 Pacholder 8.94 PalatinTch .60 ParaG&S 2.21 ParkNatl 65.74 PhrmAth 1.40 PionDvrsHi 19.98 PionDrill 8.04 PlatGpMet 1.26 PolyMet g 1.00 ProlorBio 5.24 Protalix 6.76 PyramidOil 4.45 Quaterra g .40 Quepasa 3.66

Biggest mutual funds -.07 -.10 -.01 -.13 -.12 -.23 +.12 -.37 +.03 -.03 ... +.12 ... +.14 -.26 -.40 +.08 +.10 +.01 +.01 +.06 +.05 +.03 +.06 -.04 +.14 +.01 +.17 -.03 +.01 -.01 -.25 -.07 -.13 -.12 -.14 +.04 -.08 -.02 -.02 -.03 -.04 -.40 +.50 -.04 -.07 +.08 +.08 -.28 +.76 -.09 -.12 -.05 -.07 -.45 ... -.14 -.11 -.22 -.34 -.01 -.02 -.10 -.14

QuestRM g 2.00 RadiantLog 2.00 RareEle g 4.49 ReavesUtl 26.20 Rentech 1.85 RevettMin 3.77 RexahnPh .45 Richmnt g d6.06 Rubicon g 2.92 SamsO&G 1.81 SaratogaRs 7.10 Senesco .22 SilverBull .50 SinoHub .57 Solitario d1.25 SondeR grs 1.95 SparkNet u4.82 SprottRL g 1.56 SynergyRs 3.51 SynthBiol 1.65 T3 Mot wtI .38 T3 Motn rs 1.38 Talbots wt .02 TanzRy g 4.19 Taseko 2.79 TasmanM g 1.60 Tengsco .99 TianyinPh .71 TimberlnR d.38 Timmins g 2.18 Tompkins 36.67 TrnsatlPet .97

+.10 -.15 +.02 ... -.03 -.47 -.11 -.17 -.08 -.29 -.17 ... -.01 +.02 -.26 -.54 -.13 -.05 +.01 -.02 +.05 +.38 -.00 -.01 +.01 -.04 +.02 -.05 +.01 -.03 -.05 -.20 -.01 +.36 +.01 +.02 +.01 +.29 -.05 -.09 +.02 +.21 +.08 +.45 ... -.01 -.03 -.21 -.08 -.31 -.07 -.16 -.01 -.06 -.03 -.01 -.01 -.06 -.01 -.11 -.06 +.12 -.08 -.13

TravelCtrs 4.93 TriValley d.09 TriangPet 5.76 Tucows g u1.49 UQM Tech 1.15 US Geoth .44 Univ Insur 3.83 Ur-Energy 1.05 Uranerz 1.45 UraniumEn 2.52 VangMega 46.50 VangTotW 45.78 VantageDrl 1.58 VirnetX 31.00 VistaGold 2.75 VoyagerOG 2.09 Vringo 3.39 WalterInv 20.12 WFAdvInco 10.31 WFAdMSec 15.32 WstC&G gs d1.13 WhitestnR 13.51 WidePoint .85 WillCntrls 11.03 WirelessT 1.20 WT DrfChn 25.33 WT Drf Bz 19.11 WizrdSft rs 2.41 XPO Log rs 16.23 YM Bio g 2.06 ZBB Engy d.48

-.19 -1.17 +.01 +.00 -.10 -.17 ... +.04 -.02 -.06 ... +.04 -.10 -.12 -.01 ... -.03 -.09 -.04 -.18 -.16 -.51 -.15 -.74 +.07 +.10 +.01 +.37 -.14 -.05 -.07 -.13 ... -.23 -.24 +.62 +.04 +.04 -.03 +.09 +.05 +.01 +.19 +.30 +.04 +.04 -.01 +.05 +.03 -.05 -.01 -.02 +.03 -.24 -.01 +.09 +.23 +.33 +.26 +.28 -.03 -.02

Name PIMCO Instl PIMS: TotRet n Vanguard Idx Fds: TotStk n Vanguard Instl Fds: InstIdx n Fidelity Invest: Contra n American Funds A: GwthFdA p Vanguard Admiral: 500Adml n American Funds A: CapInBldA p Vanguard Admiral: TotStkAdm n American Funds A: IncoFdA p American Funds A: CapWGrA p American Funds A: InvCoAA p Vanguard Instl Fds: InsPl n American Funds A: WshMutA p Dodge&Cox: Stock Dodge&Cox: Intl Stk Frank/Temp Frnk A: IncoSerA p Vanguard Instl Fds: TSInst n Vanguard Admiral: WelltnAdm n American Funds A: BalA p Vanguard Idx Fds: TotlIntl n

Obj IB XC SP XG LC SP BL XC BL GL LC SP LC LC IL BL XC BL BL IL

Total Assets Ttl Rtrn/Rnk ($Mins) 4-wk 155,867 70,192 66,859 60,559 57,994 57,661 57,311 56,215 55,471 47,209 45,820 44,387 40,566 40,054 39,235 38,163 35,927 34,115 33,471 33,359

NA -1.0 -1.1 -2.0 -1.4 -1.1 +0.8 -1.0 +0.5 -0.6 -0.5 -1.1 +0.3 -0.9 -2.1 +1.0 -1.0 0.0 -0.3 -2.9

12-mo NA +1.8/A +3.1/A +5.5/A -1.0/D +3.0/A +1.4/C +1.9/A +2.5/B -7.2/C -0.1/C +3.1/A +4.4/A -4.5/E -16.5/D +0.3/C +1.9/A +3.5/A +4.3/A -14.6/C

Min 5-year

Init Invt

NA 1,000,000 +2.4/B 3,000 +0.3/A 5,000,000 +18.2/B 2,500 -0.1/B 250 +0.3/A 10,000 +1.6/D 250 +2.9/A 10,000 +5.8/D 250 -6.2/B 250 -3.3/C 250 +0.5/A 200,000,000 -1.3/C 250 -18.0/E 2,500 -20.3/B 2,500 +11.5/C 1,000 +3.0/A 5,000,000 +18.5/A 50,000 +14.0/B 250 -20.3/B 3,000

Percent Load NL NL NL NL 5.75 NL 5.75 NL 5.75 5.75 5.75 NL 5.75 NL NL 4.25 NL NL 5.75 NL

NAV 11.25 33.88 124.19 74.99 31.64 125.00 50.98 33.89 17.27 34.23 28.98 124.20 29.78 109.27 30.47 2.14 33.89 56.73 19.27 13.65

G – Growth. GI – Growth & Income. SS – Single-state Muni. MP – Mixed Portfolio. GG – General US Govt. EI – Equity Income. SC – Small Co Growth. A – Cap Appreciation. IL – International. Total Return: Change in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Percent Load: Sales charge. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. NA – Not avail. NE – Data in question. NS – Fund not in existence.


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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

E Feds need to give Oregon flexibility in health reform

I

The Bulletin

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

B M C G B J C R C

Chairwoman Publisher Editor-in-Chief Editor of Editorials

f the reforms the state has planned for the Oregon Health Plan are going to have any chance, Oregon needs flexibility from the federal government.

Gov. John Kitzhaber has an agreement for as much as a $1.9 billion federal investment in Oregon. But Oregon needs more than just money. It needs freedom to innovate. What Oregon wants is to have the 600,000 people covered by the Oregon Health Plan get their care differently, through coordinated care organizations, CCOs. The state would give the CCOs a set budget and require them to hit quality standards for care. The hope is the change will create incentives to save money and provide better care. Oregon sent in a Medicaid waiver application months ago. Bruce Goldberg, director of the Oregon Health Authority, told us there was back and forth between Oregon and the federal government, but state officials were frustrated with the lack of forward movement. Kitzhaber flew to Washington this month to call the question: Are you going to give it to us or not? Kitzhaber came away with an agreement in principle for the federal money. But what remains — and why Goldberg has been in Baltimore negotiating with officials with the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, CMS — are the terms and conditions. The specifics.

The federal government needs solutions in health reform as much as Oregon does. It needs to give Oregon’s reforms a try and hold it accountable for its performance. Oregon is asking CMS to give it freedom to do things that are not necessarily permitted under Medicaid. It wants to be able to use capitated payments, which can be a set per-member, per-month payment to CCOs to compensate for care. The cap gives an incentive for CCOs to look for ways to save money. There are also negotiations over the standardized outcomes Oregon wants to use to measure quality of care. Goldberg said CMS is a federal regulatory/administrative agency. Oregon is asking it to be an innovator, he said. That doesn’t come easily. But the federal government needs solutions in health reform as much as Oregon does. It needs to give Oregon’s reforms a try and hold it accountable for its performance. If it works, Oregon can be a model for other states. If it doesn’t, Oregon will have to figure out where it went wrong.

From the Archives Editor’s note: The following editorial from Feb. 10, 1982, does not necessarily reflect the views of The Bulletin’s editorial board today.

The lab must remain open No one has offered an acceptable explanation why the Bend Silviculture Laboratory of the U.S. Forest Service is being “honored� by being shut down. The Bend lab is scheduled to take 29 percent of the reduction in forestry research funds in Oregon, Washington and Alaska slated for the federal fiscal year starting Oct. 1 of this year. The numbers are not huge. During the current year the U.S.F.S. budget for running the Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station is only $15.7 million. With that money 10 different facilities are operated, including the station’s headquarters in Portland. One of the nine laboratories the station oversees is in Bend’s West Hills. Nor is it an expensive facility. Its total budget for the current fiscal year is about $550,000. But closing it entirely will mean this single laboratory will suffer 28 percent of the $2 million budget cut scheduled

for the Pacific Northwest. That would mean the other ten facilities each would bear an average cut of slightly more than 7 percent. None of the others is being closed completely. Apparently none of the others will even suffer greatly. Most of the pain will be felt here. The closure is not a one-year thing, either. Station officials admit that if the Bend lab is closed it is unlikely to ever be re-opened. The buildings will be disposed of and would not be available if at some time later another research laboratory were to be established here. That means it’s highly unlikely that another would be set up here in the future. The reasons the Bend facility was chosen for closure remain unclear at this writing. The quality of work done here, on the growth and harvest of pine and on fire in the forests, is high and has been so recognized for several years. The recommendation did not come from those in the Pacific Northwest who operate it or oversee it. It was made in Washington, either at higher levels of the Forest Service, the Department of Agriculture or the Office of Management and Budget. And it must be overturned.

My Nickel’s Worth Balyeat for Circuit Judge I highly recommend Andy Balyeat for Deschutes County Circuit Court judge in the coming election. I have been a litigator for over 45 years. I am a member of the Oregon Bar and an arbitrator and mediator. During my career I have seen more judges than I can count — the good, the bad and the indifferent. As an arbitrator, I had the opportunity to observe Balyeat’s performance at a strenuously contested arbitration hearing. He is an excellent attorney and, in my view, will make a superb judge. He is highly regarded by his peers. Andy placed first, by a substantial margin, in the Deschutes County Attorneys’ Preference Poll. Andy has wit as well as wisdom. He named his son “Atticus� after Atticus Finch, the hero of “To Kill a Mockingbird.� Aside from his other qualifications, anyone who names his son “Atticus� should be a judge. Andy Balyeat has all of the obvious qualifications — an understanding of the law, concise and meaningful presentation ability and excellent writing skills. In addition, he has the most important quality of all for a jurist — a sense of proportion. That quality and the ability to laugh at oneself provide the understanding and empathy essential to great judges. Andy is a true Bendite. He snowboards in the winter and camps in the summer. Andy Balyeat will be a great judge. Vote for him. William H. King Bend

Segers to replace Walden It is time to replace Greg Walden as the representative for Oregon’s 2nd Congressional District. The woman best suited to do this is Joyce Segers. First, she has to garner more votes in the primary than

John Sweeney, who does not live in this district! She is a full-time resident of the district. She has homeowners, families and women on her radar and has already held town hall meetings in Central Oregon, without hiding from the voting public. She has logical plans to really help us and is not in the pocket of the Koch brothers or super PACS. In fact, she is limiting donations to her campaign to no more than $500 per person. She thinks like the middle class! Vote for Joyce! Besides, she is a really nice lady! Barbara “BJ� Thomas Bend

End daylight savings Our children need to come first. Daylight shifting needs to be ended — now. I’m sure that I’m not alone in thinking that it’s much easier to sleep when it’s dark outside. It’s also far easier to be active in the morning. First lady Michelle Obama is very misdirected in her quest to end childhood obesity with her “keep America moving� campaign. The NFL’s “Play 60� campaign is likewise misdirected. President Barack Obama’s universal decision to extend daylight shifting was a disservice to the youth of the world. I say world because Europe emulates the United States. The United States initiated daylight shifting; Europe followed. If the United States ended daylight shifting, the world would follow. There are still 24 hours in a day and no actual daylight is saved. All that is done is the clock is moved one hour. The purpose of daylight shifting was not to extend daylight hours for the working class. It wasn’t? No, it was done to save energy, which is no longer a valid argument. We still drive the same. Stores do not turn their lights off during the daylight

hours. Effectively, all that really happens is people, including children, tend to sleep later and be less active during the day. Each state can choose whether or not to have daylight shifting; it is not a national mandate. Gov. Kitzhaber: Daylight shifting needs to end now. Do it for the children. Brent D. Yonkovich Bend

Too much sugar Thank you for the recent article about the sugared milk debate in Bend schools. I appreciate that you interviewed three of us who are involved with the children’s advocacy groups behind this effort, but I was disappointed to see that you did not include any information about Dr. Stephen Archer’s involvement or the other health care providers in town supporting this effort. Dr. Archer is an obesity specialist and bariatric surgeon. The health care providers are in touch with current research about the negative health effects of sugar on the human body and many of them are behind our cause. In addition, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends zero sugared beverages for children each day. A child who chooses juice at school for breakfast and flavored milk for lunch will get an extra 10 pounds of sugar each year. That sugar is processed in the liver and turns into fat. We sent out a letter to health care professionals in the area asking them to sign a letter to the school board requesting the removal of sugar-sweetened beverages from the food service. In one week, more than 100 health care professionals have signed this letter, and more are adding their names every day. Shawn Blount Bend

Letters policy

In My View policy

How to submit

We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550 and 650 words, signed and include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating with national columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Write: My Nickel’s Worth / In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com

2012 is the year we need change in the presidency By Al Phillips or nearly four years now I’ve looked for something to like about President Barack Obama. Starting with him publicly scolding the Supreme Court in his first State of the Union speech and continuing with his constant reminding that the previous administration had created the serious financial trouble we have, and continuing today, there is not much from which to choose. Four years later, with $5 trillion added to the national debt, the unemployment rate still exceeding 8 percent and, with the economy anemic at best, the scandals of Solyndra, the General Services Administration, and now the Secret Service fresh in our memories, he continues his pursuit of spending us into oblivion. I have become convinced that his motivations have nothing to do with

F

making the U.S. a better place, but rather he is a compulsive narcissist. Like other compulsive narcissists, he is driven to gather more and more power. Even Kirsten Powers, a supporter of liberal viewpoints on Fox News, for example, recently admitted that Obamacare is not about health care at all, but about power. And from what I read, even the more reasonable people in the Democratic party are now wondering “How do we get rid of this guy?� And I suspect it’s because his behavior is more and more mirroring that of other compulsive narcissists the world has known — which includes virtually all of the world’s known dictators. Personally his tight-jawed posture and blatant arrogance leave me cold. As does his insistence that the U.S. has 2 percent of the world’s

IN MY VIEW oil reserves when he knows better. Consensus is that we have 30 to 60 times that much. And his recent attempt to intimidate the Supreme Court is simply sickening. If you’ve not seen this, you should Google it: Executive Order March 16, 2012, National Defense Resources Preparedness, which describes what the president can do in the event of a national security emergency. Under this order the president can literally control everything imaginable. From all forms of energy to all forms of transportation, farm equipment and crop-related items, foodstuffs, and all forms of water, packaged or otherwise. And if this order is enacted, it puts the heads of various agencies in the

position of deciding what is to be done and by whom. This is certainly a comforting proposition; can you name one country where central planning has been a success? But a larger question, frankly, is why this document — and why now? With North Korea testing a rocket and perhaps even intending to test an atomic device, and the U.S. and NATO running out of options with Iran, is not the possibility of war on the horizon? Would war with either constitute a national security emergency? And green energy programs: Have you noticed that $100 million has disappeared nearly overnight and resulted in virtually 100 percent failure? When he speaks about energy, he starts with two words: solar and wind. Neither of which will propel 18-wheelers. His answer to

complaints about high gas prices is: “Buy a smaller car.� Wow! How out of touch and void of reality is that? Even the most ardent Obama supporters by now should be able to see the fallacy this man represents. Failure after failure followed with spin; for example, unemployment still higher than when he took office, but down from where it was earlier, is presented as, “My programs are beginning to work.� And his current campaign has nothing to offer in terms of accomplishments; have you noticed how he avoids talking about results? Instead he demonizes his opposition and continues to spread his liberal agenda that, for that most part, has the width and depth of a No. 2 pencil mark. This is the year we need change, friends, so vote accordingly. — Al Phillips lives in Prineville.


SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

O D N Henry Martin Stark, of Prineville May 30, 1934 - May 6, 2012 Arrangements: Whispering Pines Funeral Home, 541-416-9733 Services: In accordance with his wishes, no service will be held. Contributions may be made to:

The Bowman Museum, 246 N Main St., Prineville, OR 97754.

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 funeral homes. 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 noon Saturday. 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 9 a.m. Monday for 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

D E

Deaths of note from around the world: Willie Robert Middlebrook, 54: A photographer who sought to enlarge public perceptions of the African-American community through painterly depictions of its people and places. Died May 5 at Brotman Medical Center in Culver City, Calif., of complications of a stroke suffered last month. Joyce Redman, 96: The Anglo-Irish actress who brought a mischievous sparkle to the most suggestive scene ever filmed at a dining table — the unforgettable display of gluttony and lust in the 1963 movie “Tom Jones.â€? Died May 10 in Kent, England, of pneumonia. George Murdock, 81: A veteran character actor who had a recurring role as Lt. Scanlon on the television sitcom “Barney Millerâ€? and played God in the 1989 film “Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.â€? Died April 30 at Providence St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, Calif., of cancer. Horst Faas, 79: A Pulitzer Prize-winning combat photographer who carved out new standards for covering war with a camera and became one of the world’s legendary photojournalists in nearly half a century with The Associated Press. Died Thursday in Munich. C. David Heymann, 67: A literary biographer turned bestselling celebrity biographer who came to wide attention in 1983 after his life of the heiress Barbara Hutton was withdrawn by its publisher because of factual errors. Died Wednesday in Manhattan. Evelyn Bryan Johnson, 102: Piloted an airplane for more hours than anybody else alive — 57,635.4 hours, or more than 6½ years. No woman has flown more and only one man has. Neither have aeronautical giants like Chuck Yeager and John Glenn. In 2002, Johnson, then 92, was the oldest flight instructor in the world, according to the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association. She continued teaching for three more years. Died Thursday in Jefferson City, Tenn., — From wire reports

Carroll Shelby, cult classic car designer, dies at 89 By Shav Glick and Jerry Hirsch Los Angeles Times

Carroll Shelby, the charismatic Texan who parlayed a short-lived racing career into a specialized business building high-performance, street-legal cars, died Thursday. He was 89. FEATURED Shelby died Baylor HosOBITUARY at pital in Dallas, according to an announcement by his company, Carroll Shelby Licensing. A cause was not disclosed. He led a colorful, outsized life that touched virtually every corner of the automotive world, said Leslie Kendall, curator of the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles. “He was the only individual to influence the designs of all three major American automakers. Everything he touched became legendary,� Kendall said. “Even recently he was working on an experimental engine.� Living in the fast lane was a matter of fact for Carroll Shelby, who designed the cult-classic Shelby Cobras and Ford’s Shelby Mustang. He raced cars. He had a heart transplant from a Las Vegas gambler in 1990 and a kidney transplant from a son in 1996. He was married seven times. While trying to fend off an anticipated heart attack, he drove in a 200-mile race in 1960 with nitroglycerin pills underneath his tongue, finishing third at Laguna Seca Raceway in Monterey, Calif. “If I hadn’t slowed down each time I popped one of those pills, I might have won,� he said, then announced his retirement as a driver later that year after clinching the U.S. Road Racing championship series at Riverside International Raceway. Five years earlier he had replaced a plastic cast on his broken elbow with a fiberglass one and had his hand taped to the steering wheel so he could help Phil Hill drive a Ferrari to second place in a 12-hour race at Sebring, Fla. “Carroll Shelby is one of the most recognized names in performance car history, and he’s been successful at everything he’s done,� said Edsel Ford II, a member of the board of directors of Ford Motor Co. and great-grandson of Henry Ford, founder of the company. “Whether helping Ford dominate the 1960s racing scene, to building some of the most famous Mustangs, his enthusiasm and passion for great automobiles over six decades has truly inspired everyone who worked with him.� Shelby most recently collaborated with the automaker on the 2013 Ford Shelby GT500 Mustang, which has 650 horsepower, making it the most powerful production V8 in the world. Born Jan. 11, 1923, in Leesburg, Texas, Carroll Hall Shelby grew up in east Texas and attended high school in Dallas. He served as a flight instructor at Lackland Air Force Base near San Antonio during World War II. Although he did not become a race driver until he was 29, his rapid successes and unique bib-overalls racing uniform made him a legendary figure before he retired at 37. He established the Carroll Shelby Children’s Foundation to provide medicine and pay for medical bills of children who are afflicted by heart disease and do not have the means to pay for treatment. A portion from the sale of his Cobras goes into that fund. Shelby had homes in Los Angeles, Las Vegas and at his two ranches in Texas. In addition to his wife, Cleo, his survivors include sons Patrick and Michael (who donated a kidney to his father); a daughter, Sharon Levine; and sister, Anne Shelby Ellison, all of whom live in the Dallas area.

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OREGON NEWS

Federal appeals court takes up lawsuit over the FBI’s no-fly list By Nigel Duara The Associated Press

PORTLAND — A federal appeals court judge leaned forward in his chair, turned his head to the Justice Department attorney defending the government’s no-fly list and posed a frank question. “Let’s say you want to fly back to Washington, and you find yourself on the no-fly list,� 9th Circuit Court of Appeals Chief Judge Alex Kozinsky said Friday. “You’re sitting in an airport, stranded. You think, ‘My God, I went to law school, I work for (the Justice Department), in my heart I know I did nothing wrong.’ What do you do?� Fifteen Muslim men who faced circumstances similar to the hypothetical one asked by Kozinsky, are suing the federal government over their placement on the FBI’s no-fly list. They had tried to board flights — either domestic or returning to the U.S. — and were told they couldn’t fly. Justice Department attor-

ney Josh Waldman demurred and said circumstances differ among people on the list. The answer didn’t satisfy Kozinsky. “I mean you, yourself. It’s going to be future denials, you can’t fly to vacations, bar mitzvahs,� Kozinsky pressed, drawing laughs in the federal courtroom in Portland. “I think people here are interested.� The judge’s questions were at the heart of the men’s lawsuit, though the subject before the three-judge appeals court panel was a narrower question — whether a federal court in Oregon has a say in the case, since the policies of the Transportation Security Administration are not subject to district court jurisdiction. Last year, U.S. District Court Judge Anna Brown rejected the case, saying it couldn’t rule on cases involving TSA policies and procedures. Brown said she made her ruling based on whether

the plaintiffs were arguing against the men’s placement on the no-fly list by the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Center or against TSA policies. The Terrorist Screening Center is subject to district court jurisdiction. The men sued in 2010 with help from the ACLU, which filed the lawsuit in Oregon where one of the plaintiffs is an imam at a mosque. They have never been officially told they’re on the no-fly list but learned of it when they tried to fly and were told by airlines or the FBI that they couldn’t. Several of the plaintiffs were left stranded overseas. Each received a one-time waiver to return to the U.S. They argue that their placement on the list violates their due-process rights. In defending the secrecy of the no-fly list, the FBI has said it needs to protect sensitive investigations and to avoid giving terrorists clues for avoiding detection. In answering Kozinsky’s

questions about getting off the list, the Justice Department attorney ultimately said he would go through the redress process through the Terrorist Screening Center. The ACLU is asking the appeals court to send the case back to U.S. District Court. The organization was not spared the type of barbed questions asked of the Justice Department attorney. Judge Richard Tallman repeatedly questioned ACLU attorney Nusrat Choudhury over the reason why the 15 plaintiffs didn’t go through the full process to be removed from the no-fly list. “You want us to rule on due process,� Tallman said, “yet you haven’t exhausted all options through the redress process.� Choudhury said that the lawsuit was taking a broad look at the entire process. Tallman responded by continuing to question Choudhury on the matter through her initial argument and rebuttal period.

FIRE DESTROYS PART OF WOODBURN HIGH SCHOOL; 3 ARRESTED

Motoya Nakamura / The Oregonian

Firefighters battle a fire at Woodburn High School on Friday. Police say they’ve arrested three 15-year-old boys accused of setting the fire that destroyed part of the school. Woodburn police Sgt. Nick Wilson says the three were arrested for investigation of first-degree arson, reckless burning and reckless endangering. He says they are students at the school. They’ve been taken to Marion County juvenile detention.

O B Court is in session in homeless shelter PORTLAND — Multnomah County has opened the nation’s first community court located directly in a homeless facility. The court located in Bud Clark Commons convenes every Friday afternoon. It aims to boost the appearance rate for homeless people charged with street crimes and link them with social service providers. Unlike a traditional courthouse, Bud Clark Commons has a place for defendants to leave their pets, camping gear and shopping carts. The court has been open for two Fridays, and the difficulty of getting the homeless to show up remains vexing. So far, only one of the 25 defendants has appeared before the judge. Officials hope to solve the problem by scheduling court dates closer to the day a citation issued.

Sunny forecast brings warnings PORTLAND — With sunny, warm weather forecast for Mother’s Day weekend, police and firefighters in Oregon are warning swimmers and boaters to respect chilly waters and strong currents. Clackamas County sher-

iff’s Sgt. Adam Phillips tells The Oregonian that the temperature in the Willamette River is about 51 degrees. Snowmelt feeding other rivers makes them even colder. He says anyone on a river, whether floating or boating, should use an approved life jacket. And the Oregon State Marine Board warns that immersion in cold water can cause cardiac arrest or shock even for someone in good health.

Man leaves valuable gun collection SPRINGFIELD — Police in Springfield say they’ve located some relatives of a 73-year-old man who died at home this week, leaving a gun collection worth about half a million dollars. Police say more than 100 firearms were found inside the home of gun dealer Victor Bryan Fogle. A bomb squad also removed several hundred pounds of gunpowder from the house. Officers initially said they hadn’t been able to locate any heirs to his estate. KEZI-TV reports that after news of Fogle’s death spread, investigators got calls from several of the man’s cousins in Oregon. Fogle died of natural causes Wednesday. — From wire reports

Wilson says the investigation is continuing. He declined to talk about the precise cause of the fire. KATU-TV initially reported the arrests. The fire earlier Friday forced students and staff to evacuate. School officials say there were no injuries at the 1,400student high school. Woodburn is located midway between Portland and Salem. — The Associated Press

How do grebes walk on water? Researchers study Klamath birds The Associated Press KLAMATH FALLS — A Harvard graduate student has brought a team of researchers to Upper Klamath Lake in Southern Oregon to try to figure out how grebes manage to walk on water. Sex may have something to do with the phenomenon called rushing, in which the birds race upright across the water by taking five to 20 steps a second. It’s often part of a courtship ritual. But little is known about how the bird is able to generate the force to propel itself, researcher Glenna Clifton told the Klamath Falls Herald and News. “Part of this work is being able to understand what aerodynamic forces go into this movement,� she said. “This could be used to design robotics that could walk on water.� The grebe doesn’t use its wings for propulsion, instead lifting and tucking them behind its back. That leaves the entire responsibility of locomotion on the grebe’s feet. Clifton and two team members train two highresolution cameras shooting from different angles at 325

“Part of this work is being able to understand what aerodynamic forces go into this movement. This could be used to design robotics that could walk on water.� — Glenna Clifton, Harvard graduate student

frames per second on the Clark’s and Western grebes. They have only seconds to record the displays, and there can be long intervals of inactivity. “I sit here for two or three hours with no activity, just banging my head against the wall to keep myself awake,� Clifton said. “When it happens, you have such little warning.� The researchers have been working along the shore near a marina on the lake at Klamath Falls for the past two weeks. Clifton plans to begin examining the data and working on a paper after May 21.


THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

C8

W E AT H ER FOR EC A ST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.

TODAY, MAY 12

SUNDAY Tonight: Mainly clear and not as cold.

Today: Mainly clear and warmer.

Ben Burkel

Bob Shaw

HIGH

LOW

76

38

Astoria 68/49

61/46

Cannon Beach 65/45

Hillsboro Portland 80/55 80/43

Tillamook 72/44

Salem

68/42

Newport

60s 70s

76/33

Oakridge

Cottage Grove

75/35

80/44

Coos Bay

Crescent

61/47

Chemult

84/50

Gold Beach

EAST Sunny and warm Ontario conditions today. 77/46 Clear skies tonight. Nyssa

76/41

73/34

Riley

76/46

Juntura

Burns 73/37

Jordan Valley 67/41

Frenchglen 77/40

Yesterday’s state extremes

Rome

• 80°

76/37

Medford

74/42

Chiloquin 75/40

Klamath Falls 81/42

Ashland

66/50

CENTRAL Sunny and warm conditions today. Clear skies tonight.

77/46

Paisley 88/52

Brookings

Vale

70s

76/38

Medford

64/46

73/38

74/43

75/35

Silver Lake

76/30

Grants Pass 88/49

Unity

Christmas Valley

Port Orford 66/48

74/36

Hampton 73/33

WEST Sunny and warm conditions today. Mostly clear skies tonight.

82/46

• 20°

Fields

Lakeview

McDermitt

76/44

73/43

Meacham

77/36

-30s

-20s

Yesterday’s extremes (in the 48 contiguous states):

• 102° Borrego Springs, Calif.

• 17° Stanley, Idaho

• 2.54” Houston Hobby, Texas Honolulu 85/68

-10s

0s

Vancouver 72/52

10s

20s

Calgary 69/41

30s

Saskatoon 72/49

Seattle 77/47

40s Winnipeg 68/50

50s

60s

70s

Thunder Bay 69/45

80s

90s

100s 110s

Quebec 60/49

Halifax 59/46 Portland To ronto Portland 72/49 73/52 80/55 St. Paul Green Bay Boston 68/48 Rapid City 67/43 Boise 78/58 Buffalo 68/46 Detroit 73/46 64/52 New York 74/51 78/61 Cheyenne Des Moines 57/38 Philadelphia 68/49 Chicago 79/57 64/54 Columbus San Francisco Salt Lake 75/54 Washington, D. C. Omaha 74/50 City Denver 78/60 69/49 Las Louisville 57/42 70/44 Kansas City Vegas St. Louis 79/59 68/54 77/60 95/72 Charlotte 79/56 Nashville Los Angeles Albuquerque Oklahoma City 78/59 68/59 72/57 77/53 Phoenix Little Rock Atlanta 100/73 77/61 74/60 Birmingham Dallas Tijuana 76/63 76/61 75/57 Billings 71/42

Bismarck 72/43

Chihuahua 85/51

Anchorage 49/37

La Paz 93/62 Juneau 46/39

Mazatlan Monterrey 88/65 91/69

FRONTS

Mostly sunny and slightly cooler.

HIGH LOW

84 48

HIGH LOW

79 41

75 39

BEND ALMANAC

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . .5:10 a.m. . . . . . 6:58 p.m. Venus . . . . . .7:06 a.m. . . . . 11:13 p.m. Mars. . . . . . .1:38 p.m. . . . . . 3:04 a.m. Jupiter. . . . . .5:47 a.m. . . . . . 8:17 p.m. Saturn. . . . . .5:34 p.m. . . . . . 4:49 a.m. Uranus . . . . .3:55 a.m. . . . . . 4:16 p.m.

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*. . 0.00” High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63/28 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . 0.01” Record high . . . . . . . . 90 in 1931 Record low. . . . . . . . . 19 in 1953 Average month to date. . . 0.27” Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.63” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Average year to date. . . . . 4.40” Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.30.16 Record 24 hours . . .0.52 in 1962 *Melted liquid equivalent

Sunrise today . . . . . . 5:42 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 8:22 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 5:41 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 8:23 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 1:35 a.m. Moonset today . . . 12:32 p.m.

Moon phases Last

New

First

May 12 May 20 May 28 June 4

OREGON CITIES

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Precipitation values are 24-hour totals through 4 p.m. Astoria . . . . . . . .65/34/0.00 Baker City . . . . . .62/25/0.00 Brookings . . . . . .79/50/0.00 Burns. . . . . . . . . .63/25/0.00 Eugene . . . . . . . .70/36/0.00 Klamath Falls . . .69/34/0.00 Lakeview. . . . . . .68/36/0.00 La Pine . . . . . . . .65/24/0.00 Medford . . . . . . .80/39/0.00 Newport . . . . . . .57/36/0.00 North Bend . . . . .59/37/0.00 Ontario . . . . . . . .70/41/0.00 Pendleton . . . . . .66/32/0.00 Portland . . . . . . .75/42/0.00 Prineville . . . . . . .63/26/0.00 Redmond. . . . . . .66/24/0.00 Roseburg. . . . . . .76/37/0.00 Salem . . . . . . . . .73/39/0.00 Sisters . . . . . . . . .66/28/0.00 The Dalles . . . . . .74/36/0.00

Full

. . . . .68/49/s . . . . . .71/50/s . . . . .74/36/s . . . . . .79/44/s . . . . .66/50/s . . . . . .74/51/s . . . . .74/39/s . . . . . .80/44/s . . . . .80/49/s . . . . . .84/52/s . . . . .81/42/s . . . . . .83/41/s . . . . .73/43/s . . . . . .80/45/s . . . . .77/32/s . . . . . .80/36/s . . . . .88/52/s . . . . . .93/48/s . . . . .67/47/s . . . . . .70/49/s . . . . .66/48/s . . . . .66/49/pc . . . . .77/46/s . . . . . .83/49/s . . . . .78/42/s . . . . . .85/48/s . . . . .80/55/s . . . . . .86/58/s . . . . .75/37/s . . . . . .83/45/s . . . . .78/37/s . . . . . .85/43/s . . . . .84/50/s . . . . . .88/53/s . . . . .80/50/s . . . . . .86/54/s . . . . .76/35/s . . . . . .79/38/s . . . . .79/45/s . . . . . .88/53/s

SKI REPORT

The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is for solar at noon.

LOW 0

MEDIUM 2

4

HIGH 6

8

V.HIGH

8

PRECIPITATION

10

ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level and road conditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key: T.T. = Traction Tires.

Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hoodoo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Mt. Ashland. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Mt. Bachelor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . .111-147 Mt. Hood Meadows . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Mt. Hood Ski Bowl . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Timberline . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . . . . . 175 Warner Canyon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Willamette Pass . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report

Pass Conditions I-5 at Siskiyou Summit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No restrictions I-84 at Cabbage Hill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No restrictions Aspen, Colorado . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass . . . . . . Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California . . . . . 0.0 . . . . . .18-60 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp. . Carry chains or T. Tires Park City, Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No report Squaw Valley, California . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass . . . . Carry chains or T. Tires Sun Valley, Idaho. . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake . . . . Carry chains or T. Tires Taos, New Mexico. . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass . . . . . . . . Closed for season Vail, Colorado . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partial clouds, c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix, w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace

TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL

NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s

WEDNESDAY Mostly sunny and warm.

HIGH LOW

83 46

Baker City John Day

Brothers 75/32

Fort Rock 76/34

76/31

68/26

Roseburg

76/38

La Pine 77/32

Crescent Lake

65/47

Bandon

Spray 78/41

Prineville 75/37 Sisters Redmond Paulina 71/33 76/35 78/36 Sunriver Bend

80/49

70/36

72/37

68/36

73/33

80s

70/35

Union

73/38

Granite

Mitchell 77/38

78/39

Camp Sherman

Enterprise Joseph

La Grande

70/43

Madras

67/34

Meacham

Condon 80/40

Wallowa

66/37

72/42

Willowdale

80/41

Eugene

64/46

78/42

Ruggs

78/46

Warm Springs

64/48

Florence

Pendleton

78/44

Wasco

Maupin

Albany 81/46

Hermiston 77/41

Arlington

75/43

60s

Corvallis Yachats

79/45

Sandy

80/50

81/46

67/47

78/42

Government Camp 60/41

79/46

77/42

The Biggs Dalles 78/47

80/48

McMinnville

Lincoln City

Umatilla

Hood River

TUESDAY Mostly to party sunny and warm.

Mostly sunny and warm.

HIGH LOW

FORECAST: STATE Seaside

MONDAY

Houston 83/64

New Orleans 82/70

Orlando 86/66 Miami 85/74

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . . .75/55/0.26 . . .75/57/c . . 78/59/c Akron . . . . . . . . . .71/42/0.00 . . . 75/53/s . 72/50/sh Albany. . . . . . . . . .65/42/0.00 . . . 75/52/s . 76/48/pc Albuquerque. . . . .80/52/0.10 . .77/53/pc . 74/54/pc Anchorage . . . . . .48/39/0.00 . . . 49/37/r . 49/40/sh Atlanta . . . . . . . . .74/54/0.00 . .74/60/pc . . .73/60/t Atlantic City . . . . .71/43/0.00 . . . 74/54/s . 75/58/sh Austin . . . . . . . . . .83/62/0.00 . . . 79/62/t . 81/62/pc Baltimore . . . . . . .73/44/0.00 . . . 78/55/s . 80/59/sh Billings . . . . . . . . .62/34/0.00 . . . 71/42/s . . 77/47/s Birmingham . . . . .78/54/0.00 . . . 76/63/t . . .75/63/t Bismarck. . . . . . . .62/41/0.00 . . . 72/43/s . . 77/48/s Boise . . . . . . . . . . .66/35/0.00 . . . 73/46/s . . 80/48/s Boston. . . . . . . . . .64/47/0.00 . . . 78/58/s . 76/56/pc Bridgeport, CT. . . .71/48/0.00 . . . 70/56/s . 73/56/pc Buffalo . . . . . . . . .65/47/0.00 . .64/52/pc . 67/46/pc Burlington, VT. . . .65/46/0.00 . .72/49/pc . 68/46/pc Caribou, ME . . . . .52/41/0.02 . . . 58/41/s . 65/41/pc Charleston, SC . . .79/58/0.00 . .78/62/pc . . .76/63/t Charlotte. . . . . . . .75/48/0.00 . .79/56/pc . . .76/60/t Chattanooga. . . . .79/49/0.00 . . . 75/58/t . . .73/58/t Cheyenne . . . . . . .45/36/0.00 . .57/38/pc . 64/39/pc Chicago. . . . . . . . .78/43/0.00 . . .64/54/c . . 67/50/s Cincinnati . . . . . . .74/42/0.00 . .76/55/pc . . .73/55/t Cleveland . . . . . . .71/41/0.00 . .72/55/pc . 63/53/sh Colorado Springs .63/44/0.00 . .51/40/sh . 53/41/sh Columbia, MO . . .75/53/0.00 . . . 73/55/t . . .73/53/t Columbia, SC . . . .80/56/0.00 . .80/60/pc . . .78/60/t Columbus, GA. . . .79/54/0.00 . .77/62/sh . . .79/64/t Columbus, OH. . . .73/44/0.00 . .75/54/pc . . .73/54/t Concord, NH. . . . .66/39/0.00 . . . 79/49/s . 76/47/pc Corpus Christi. . . .86/67/0.04 . . . 85/66/t . 84/69/pc Dallas Ft Worth. . .76/64/0.34 . . . 76/61/t . 79/61/pc Dayton . . . . . . . . .72/44/0.00 . .75/55/pc . . .72/54/t Denver. . . . . . . . . .57/39/0.00 . .57/42/sh . 61/43/sh Des Moines. . . . . .80/58/0.00 . . .68/49/c . . 72/50/s Detroit. . . . . . . . . .75/45/0.00 . .74/51/sh . 64/50/pc Duluth. . . . . . . . . 66/50/trace . . . 66/41/s . 68/50/pc El Paso. . . . . . . . . .81/52/0.00 . .84/66/pc . . 86/64/s Fairbanks. . . . . . . .60/40/0.00 . .56/36/pc . 55/37/sh Fargo. . . . . . . . . . .67/48/0.03 . . . 71/47/s . . 75/50/s Flagstaff . . . . . . . .73/37/0.00 . . . 73/36/s . . 73/35/s

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . . .75/39/0.00 . .69/45/sh . 73/47/pc Green Bay. . . . . . .76/50/0.00 . .67/43/pc . . 70/49/s Greensboro. . . . . .72/45/0.00 . . . 78/55/s . 78/60/pc Harrisburg. . . . . . .73/44/0.00 . . . 76/55/s . 77/57/pc Hartford, CT . . . . .68/48/0.00 . . . 78/53/s . 79/54/pc Helena. . . . . . . . . .62/27/0.00 . . . 69/41/s . . 78/44/s Honolulu. . . . . . . .84/70/0.00 . . . 85/68/s . . 84/68/s Houston . . . . . . . .83/66/0.33 . . . 83/64/t . 83/64/pc Huntsville . . . . . . .79/51/0.00 . . . 78/61/t . . .74/59/t Indianapolis . . . . .75/47/0.00 . .76/56/pc . . .73/56/t Jackson, MS . . . . .77/60/0.00 . . . 80/64/t . . .79/64/t Jacksonville. . . . . .83/55/0.00 . .81/64/pc . . .81/63/t Juneau. . . . . . . . . .43/41/0.57 . . . 46/39/r . 45/39/sh Kansas City. . . . . 79/54/trace . . . 68/54/t . 70/52/pc Lansing . . . . . . . . .74/40/0.00 . .70/47/sh . 71/47/pc Las Vegas . . . . . . .93/72/0.00 . . . 95/72/s . . 97/71/s Lexington . . . . . . .72/43/0.00 . .77/57/pc . . .69/58/t Lincoln. . . . . . . . . .73/59/0.00 . . .68/47/c . . 73/47/s Little Rock. . . . . . .74/58/0.00 . . . 77/61/t . . .76/61/t Los Angeles. . . . . .68/59/0.00 . . . 68/59/s . . 70/60/s Louisville. . . . . . . .76/50/0.00 . .79/59/pc . . .69/58/t Madison, WI . . . . .79/50/0.00 . . .68/43/c . . 70/46/s Memphis. . . . . . . .78/58/0.00 . . . 76/61/t . . .75/62/t Miami . . . . . . . . . .88/73/0.00 . .85/74/pc . 86/75/pc Milwaukee . . . . . .77/49/0.00 . . .63/46/c . . 65/47/s Minneapolis . . . . .71/58/0.00 . . . 68/48/s . . 72/51/s Nashville. . . . . . . .79/47/0.00 . . . 78/59/t . . .69/59/t New Orleans. . . . .77/68/0.33 . . . 82/70/t . . .83/68/t New York . . . . . . .68/49/0.00 . . . 78/61/s . 80/58/pc Newark, NJ . . . . . .73/48/0.00 . . . 79/59/s . 81/58/pc Norfolk, VA . . . . . .68/56/0.00 . . . 78/57/s . 80/62/pc Oklahoma City . . .64/59/0.40 . . . 72/57/t . . 73/56/c Omaha . . . . . . . . .75/60/0.00 . . .69/49/c . . 73/50/s Orlando. . . . . . . . .84/70/0.00 . .86/66/pc . . .86/68/t Palm Springs. . . . .97/65/0.00 . .100/71/s . 106/72/s Peoria . . . . . . . . . .78/48/0.00 . . .75/52/c . . 72/51/c Philadelphia . . . . .73/50/0.00 . . . 79/57/s . 81/60/sh Phoenix. . . . . . . . .99/71/0.00 . .100/73/s . 103/72/s Pittsburgh . . . . . . .70/40/0.00 . . . 75/52/s . . .72/52/t Portland, ME. . . . .62/41/0.00 . . . 72/49/s . 74/48/pc Providence . . . . . .66/46/0.00 . . . 75/55/s . 77/55/pc Raleigh . . . . . . . . .74/47/0.00 . . . 78/55/s . 80/60/pc

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . . .59/43/0.00 . . . 68/46/s . . 74/52/s Reno . . . . . . . . . . .76/44/0.00 . . . 84/50/s . . 87/52/s Richmond . . . . . . .72/48/0.00 . . . 79/57/s . . .81/60/t Rochester, NY . . . .68/43/0.00 . .75/51/pc . 67/46/pc Sacramento. . . . . .92/57/0.00 . . . 94/57/s . . 93/56/s St. Louis. . . . . . . . .76/54/0.00 . . . 77/60/t . . .74/57/t Salt Lake City . . . .69/43/0.00 . . . 70/44/s . . 75/49/s San Antonio . . . . .82/63/0.00 . . . 83/64/t . 84/63/pc San Diego . . . . . . .68/58/0.00 . . . 69/61/s . . 68/61/s San Francisco . . . .78/50/0.00 . . . 76/51/s . . 70/51/s San Jose . . . . . . . .90/53/0.00 . . . 85/55/s . . 80/51/s Santa Fe . . . . . . . .75/42/0.00 . .68/47/pc . . .66/47/t

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . . .82/58/0.00 . .80/64/pc . . .78/63/t Seattle. . . . . . . . . .65/40/0.00 . . . 77/47/s . . 80/49/s Sioux Falls. . . . . . .70/49/0.00 . .68/41/pc . . 73/49/s Spokane . . . . . . . .62/35/0.00 . . . 70/43/s . . 78/45/s Springfield, MO . .70/53/0.00 . . . 71/55/t . . .70/53/t Tampa. . . . . . . . . .92/67/0.00 . .89/70/pc . . .86/70/t Tucson. . . . . . . . . .95/62/0.00 . . . 96/64/s . . 97/67/s Tulsa . . . . . . . . . . .71/59/0.00 . . . 72/58/t . . 73/55/c Washington, DC . .73/52/0.00 . . . 78/60/s . 81/61/sh Wichita . . . . . . . . .76/57/0.00 . . . 69/53/t . . 70/53/c Yakima . . . . . . . . .70/32/0.00 . . . 75/45/s . . 84/57/s Yuma. . . . . . . . . . .98/67/0.00 . .101/70/s . 106/73/s

INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . . .63/46/0.00 . .55/40/pc . 53/41/pc Athens. . . . . . . . . .75/66/0.00 . . . 83/64/t . 79/64/pc Auckland. . . . . . . .63/57/0.00 . .65/56/sh . 65/54/sh Baghdad . . . . . . .106/77/0.00 . .106/77/s . 106/76/s Bangkok . . . . . . .102/82/0.00 . . 101/80/t . 101/79/t Beijing. . . . . . . . . .73/63/0.00 . .72/54/pc . . 79/55/s Beirut . . . . . . . . . .75/68/0.00 . . . 77/66/s . 78/64/pc Berlin. . . . . . . . . . .84/55/0.00 . .55/42/pc . 55/39/pc Bogota . . . . . . . . .91/45/0.00 . .62/50/sh . 63/52/sh Budapest. . . . . . . .84/48/0.00 . .80/49/sh . 55/44/sh Buenos Aires. . . . .63/50/0.00 . .61/44/pc . . 60/46/s Cabo San Lucas . .90/68/0.00 . . . 89/66/s . . 93/68/s Cairo . . . . . . . . . . .91/68/0.00 . . . 95/66/s . . 88/69/s Calgary . . . . . . . . .59/36/0.00 . . . 69/41/s . . 75/45/s Cancun . . . . . . . . .86/79/0.00 . .87/74/pc . 86/75/pc Dublin . . . . . . . . . .52/37/0.00 . .56/37/sh . 54/39/sh Edinburgh. . . . . . .48/37/0.00 . .56/43/sh . 41/37/sh Geneva . . . . . . . . .86/55/0.00 . .61/42/sh . . 61/38/s Harare. . . . . . . . . .73/48/0.00 . .70/47/pc . 70/48/pc Hong Kong . . . . . .86/81/0.00 . .87/80/pc . . .88/78/t Istanbul. . . . . . . . .72/61/0.00 . .72/59/pc . 70/60/pc Jerusalem . . . . . . .79/59/0.00 . . . 83/63/s . . 80/59/s Johannesburg. . . .73/54/0.00 . .68/49/pc . 68/48/pc Lima . . . . . . . . . . .75/66/0.00 . .74/63/pc . 74/63/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . . .81/66/0.00 . .86/68/pc . 87/67/pc London . . . . . . . . .61/46/0.00 . .60/42/pc . 61/49/pc Madrid . . . . . . . . .91/57/0.00 . .90/60/pc . 85/57/pc Manila. . . . . . . . . .93/82/0.00 . . . 90/81/t . . .92/80/t

Mecca . . . . . . . . .104/82/0.00 . .107/81/s . 105/81/s Mexico City. . . . . .79/59/0.00 . . . 78/55/t . . .76/54/t Montreal. . . . . . . .64/45/0.00 . .68/51/pc . 67/48/pc Moscow . . . . . . . .72/43/0.00 . . . 75/52/t . 52/44/sh Nairobi . . . . . . . . .75/59/0.00 . . . 75/60/t . . .73/61/t Nassau . . . . . . . . .93/73/0.00 . . . 83/71/t . 83/70/sh New Delhi. . . . . . .99/79/0.00 108/88/pc 109/88/pc Osaka . . . . . . . . . .66/54/0.00 . .65/50/pc . 72/56/pc Oslo. . . . . . . . . . . .48/41/0.00 . .54/37/sh . . 52/35/c Ottawa . . . . . . . . .66/43/0.00 . .67/51/pc . 66/46/pc Paris. . . . . . . . . . . .70/54/0.00 . .61/39/pc . . 61/49/s Rio de Janeiro. . . .90/70/0.00 . . .85/70/c . 78/68/sh Rome. . . . . . . . . . .81/55/0.00 . . . 84/57/s . 73/54/sh Santiago . . . . . . . .70/50/0.00 . .68/50/pc . 72/53/pc Sao Paulo . . . . . . .79/63/0.00 . . . 74/64/t . 64/60/pc Sapporo . . . . . . . .54/54/0.00 . . .55/44/c . 58/46/pc Seoul. . . . . . . . . . .68/59/0.00 . . .73/55/c . 73/57/sh Shanghai. . . . . . . .77/61/0.00 . .79/64/pc . 76/64/sh Singapore . . . . . . .90/79/0.00 . . . 87/80/t . . .87/80/t Stockholm. . . . . . .68/48/0.00 . . .51/35/c . 55/37/pc Sydney. . . . . . . . . .81/57/0.00 . .65/49/pc . 63/47/pc Taipei. . . . . . . . . . .81/70/0.00 . .86/73/pc . 87/77/pc Tel Aviv . . . . . . . . .82/63/0.00 . . . 82/65/s . . 81/61/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . . .70/55/0.00 . .65/51/pc . 70/57/pc Toronto . . . . . . . . .72/46/0.00 . .73/52/sh . 65/49/pc Vancouver. . . . . . .57/41/0.00 . . . 72/52/s . . 73/55/s Vienna. . . . . . . . . .81/55/0.00 . . . 68/40/r . 53/39/pc Warsaw. . . . . . . . .86/59/0.00 . .60/38/sh . 53/36/pc


SPORTS

Scoreboard, D2 NBA, D3 Golf, D3 MLB, D4

Prep sports, D5 Motor sports, D6 Horse racing, D6

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

D www.bendbulletin.com/sports

NBA

FOOTBALL COMMENTARY

James wins third MVP award

At NFL rookie camps, hype rules the day

MIAMI — Miami Heat forward LeBron James is the NBA’s MVP for a third time, putting him alongside some of the game’s all-time greats. LeBron A James person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press that James will be announced today as this year’s winner of the league’s top individual honor, and that he will be formally presented with the trophy by Commissioner David Stern on Sunday afternoon before Miami hosts Indiana in Game 1 of an Eastern Conference semifinal series. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the league has not announced the results. James is winning the award for the third time in four seasons. Only seven other players — Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michael Jordan, Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson and Moses Malone — have at least three MVP trophies. James averaged 27.1 points, 7.9 rebounds and 6.2 assists — making him only the fourth player with those totals in at least two different seasons, according to STATS LLC, joining Oscar Robertson (five times), John Havlicek (twice) and Bird (twice).

By Mike Tanier New York Times News Service

T

here is no such thing as bad news at an NFL rookie camp. Every rookie looks poised, confident, dedicated and sharp. Every coach is pleased. Optimism levels run somewhere just above “employee orientation seminar” and below “honeymoon.” The boffo reviews read like the school newspaper’s appraisal of the eighth-grade production of “Hello, Dolly!” The camps, which began last week for many teams and continue through next week, give draft picks the opportunity to meet their coaches and undrafted free agents a brief chance to make an impression. They are invaluable to the players and the teams. As sources of hard-hitting analysis or insightful criticism, they are somewhat lacking. Modest accomplishments earn bub-

bly praise. Accurately calling and executing a play earns a public pat on the back. “He’s unflappable, mature beyond his years,” Indianapolis coach Chuck Pagano said of quarterback Andrew Luck, the top pick in the draft. “If you listen to some of those play calls that our offensive coordinator Bruce Arians gave him, I know why he’s an architectural engineer.” Arians’ terminology is apparently based on trusses and torsion calculations. Not to be outdone, Redskins coach Mike Shanahan gushed about the second overall pick, Robert Griffin III. “You can see what an incredible athlete he is,” he said. “The first day we didn’t have one bust with a formation or a play call. I don’t think I’ve ever had that in any minicamp I’ve been involved with.” See Rookie / D6

Ted S. Warren / The Associated Press

Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson (3) talks with head coach Pete Carroll during rookie minicamp on Friday in Renton, Wash.

PREP LACROSSE

PREP BASEBALL

Panthers win two games on road

— The Associated Press

Grizzlies win, force Game 7 Memphis tops the Los Angeles Clippers 90-88, D3

NFL Seau buried in hometown SAN DIEGO — Hours after Junior Seau was buried in his hometown, thousands of fans attended a public memorial service at Qualcomm Stadium, where the hard-hitting, fist-pumping linebacker starred for 13 seasons. Many wore Seau’s No. 55 jersey — in Chargers blue, Southern California cardinal and gold and Miami Dolphins aqua and orange. Among those attending were Seau’s parents, his ex-wife and their children, several current and former Chargers, and former rival John Elway. Elway, who now runs Denver’s front office, was accompanied by new Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning and coach John Fox, a former assistant with San Diego. Seau’s No. 55 was painted at midfield. Seau committed suicide on May 2 at his Oceanside home. He played parts of 20 seasons in the NFL, with the Chargers, Dolphins and New England Patriots. After a private funeral earlier Friday, Seau was buried at Eternal Hills cemetery. Those scheduled to speak Friday night at Qualcomm were Dan Fouts, LaDainian Tomlinson and Bobby Ross, the only coach to get the Chargers to the Super Bowl. — The Associated Press

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Summit’s Quinn Rasmussen (26), right, gives Scott Nelson of Sisters (16) a hard check as Nelson runs the ball along the sideline during the second half of the High Desert League championship match on Friday night at Sisters High School.

Summit beats Sisters in league title match • Storm take High Desert League crown with overtime win Bulletin staff report SISTERS — Rallying back from an early 5-0 deficit, Summit defeated Sisters 13-12 in overtime Friday in the championship game of the High Desert League boys lacrosse tournament. The Storm’s Kiel Millard scored three goals, including the game-winner early in the sudden death extra period, converting an assist from Holton Melville to give Summit the HDL’s No. 1 seed for the

upcoming Oregon High School Lacrosse Association’s state playoffs. Summit (12-3 overall), which trailed 5-2 at halftime, overtook the host Outlaws in the second half and led 12-10 with three minutes left in regulation. Sisters (11-4) mounted its own comeback and tied the game 12-12 with eight seconds remaining in the fourth quarter with a goal from Jens Stadeli. The Storm won the opening faceoff in overtime, though, called time

out and designed a set play for Millard, who scored from eight yards out. Glenn Sherman paced Summit with four goals Friday, while Melville contributed two scores and three assists, including the game-winning connection with Millard. Quinn Rasmussen and Dylan Smith each scored two goals apiece for the Storm, who will host an OHSLA second-round state playoff game on May 22. Cris Smoot and Beau Fitzke both recorded four goals for the Outlaws, who also will host an OHSLA second-round contest.

Bulletin staff report EUGENE — Redmond swept host Sheldon in two baseball games Friday — the opener was a Class 6A Special District 1 contest while the late game was nonleague — ending the regular season 5-3 in SD1 play, good for second in the league standings. With their runner-up finish in Special District 1, the Panthers (14-11 overall, 5-3 league) earned a bye in the 6A play-in round and an automatic berth into the 6A state playoffs. J.D. Abbas pitched a four-hit shutout in the opener to lead Redmond to a 2-0 victory. The Panthers scored two runs in the top of the fifth inning on an RBI double by Daulton Hanks and a sacrifice fly by Cam Peters. It was all Abbas needed as he struck out five and walked just one to help his team win its fifth consecutive game. Redmond made it six straight with a 6-5 victory over the Fighting Irish in the nonleague second game. Panther starter Daniel Thomas went four innings for the win, and Brayden Bordges threw the final three frames to pick up the save. After recording just three hits in the opening game, Redmond pounded out 10 hits in the late game. Hanks and Matt Dahlen each had two hits and two RBIs for the Panthers. Redmond is idle until Monday, May 21, when the Panthers will most likely host a first-round state playoff game.

MOTOR SPORTS

Heiress and mom: Drag racer defies convention By Suzette Laboy and Raquel Dillon The Associated Press

JUPITER, Fla. — Alexis DeJoria remembers the first time she was speeding in a car — and she did it with her father’s blessing. She was 16 and behind the wheel of a Vector V12, a limitededition sports car by NorthrupGrumman, which built the stealth bomber. Her father was in the

passenger’s seat. “On this really safe area, he said step on it. And I did,” she said. “And that thing went to 200 like that.” That passion for speed has driven DeJoria, 34, to become one of the top female drag racers in the country. A ranked National Hot Rod Association funny car driver, she was the second woman to win a national event in the top alcohol

division. She now competes in the faster nitro division. “Just to be able to go 300 mph in four seconds, it just blew my mind,” said the soft-spoken single mom from her home in Topanga Canyon, Calif. “And it had been something I had been working on doing for a long time. Finally, I’m here at that point.” See Racer / D6

J Pat Carter / The Associated Press

Alexis DeJoria straps herself into her funny car in Jupiter, Fla., in January. She is a tattooed mom, an heiress to a billion-dollar empire, and she has been drag racing competitively since 2005.


D2

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

SCOREBOARD ON DECK Today Baseball: Grant Union at Sisters (DH), noon Softball: Grant Union at Sisters, noon Track and field: Culver at Tri-River Conference championships in Junction City, noon; Gilchrist at Mt. Skyline Class 1A championships in Grants Pass, 10:45 a.m.

BASKETBALL NBA NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION NBA Playoff Glance All Times PDT ——— FIRST ROUND (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7) EASTERN CONFERENCE Philadelphia 4, Chicago 2 Saturday, April 28: Chicago 103, Philadelphia 91 Tuesday, May 1: Philadelphia 109, Chicago 92 Friday, May 4: Philadelphia 79, Chicago 74 Sunday, May 6: Philadelphia 89, Chicago 82 Tuesday, May 8: Chicago 77, Philadelphia 69 Thursday, May 10: Philadelphia 79, Chicago 78 Miami 4, New York 1 Saturday, April 28: Miami 100, New York 67 Monday, April 30: Miami 104, New York 94 Thursday, May 3: Miami 87, New York 70 Sunday, May 6: New York 89, Miami 87 Wednesday, May 9: Miami 106, New York 94 Indiana 4, Orlando 1 Saturday, April 28: Orlando 81, Indiana 77 Monday, April 30: Indiana 93, Orlando 78 Wednesday, May 2: Indiana 97, Orlando 74 Saturday, May 5: Indiana 101, Orlando 99, OT Tuesday, May 8: Indiana 105, Orlando 87 Boston 4, Atlanta 2 Sunday, April 29: Atlanta 83, Boston 74 Tuesday, May 1: Boston 87, Atlanta 80 Friday, May 4: Boston 90, Atlanta 84, OT Sunday, May 6: Boston 101, Atlanta 79 Tuesday, May 8: Atlanta 87, Boston 86 Thursday, May 10: Boston 83, Atlanta 80 WESTERN CONFERENCE San Antonio 4, Utah 0 Sunday, April 29: San Antonio 106, Utah 91 Wednesday, May 2: San Antonio 114, Utah 83 Saturday, May 5: San Antonio 102, Utah 90 Monday, May 7: San Antonio 87, Utah 81 Oklahoma City 4, Dallas 0 Saturday, April 28: Oklahoma City 99, Dallas 98 Monday, April 30: Oklahoma City 102, Dallas 99 Thursday, May 3: Oklahoma City 95, Dallas 79 Saturday, May 5: Oklahoma City 103, Dallas 97 L.A. Lakers 3, Denver 3 Sunday, April 29: L.A. Lakers 103, Denver 88 Tuesday, May 1: L.A. Lakers 104, Denver 100 Friday, May 4: Denver 99, L.A. Lakers 84 Sunday, May 6: L.A. Lakers 92, Denver 88 Tuesday, May 8: Denver 102, L.A. Lakers 99 Thursday, May 10: Denver 113, L.A. Lakers 96 Today, May 12: Denver at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers 3, Memphis 3 Sunday, April 29: L.A. Clippers 99, Memphis 98 Wednesday, May 2: Memphis 105, L.A. Clippers 98 Saturday, May 5: L.A. Clippers 87, Memphis 86 Monday, May 7: L.A. Clippers 101, Memphis 97, OT Wednesday, May 9: Memphis 92, L.A. Clippers 80 Friday, May 11: Memphis 90, L.A. Clippers 88 Sunday, May 13: L.A. Clippers at Memphis, 10 a.m. ——— CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS EASTERN CONFERENCE Philadelphia vs. Boston Today, May 12: Philadelphia at Boston, 5 p.m. Monday, May 14: Philadelphia at Boston, 4 p.m Wednesday, May 16: Boston at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Friday, May 18: Boston at Philadelphia, TBD x-Monday, May 21: Philadelphia at Boston, TBD x-Wednesday, May 23: Boston at Philadelphia, TBD x-Saturday, May 26: Philadelphia at Boston, TBD Indiana vs. Miami Sunday, May 13: Indiana at Miami, 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 15: Indiana at Miami, 4 p.m. Thursday, May 17: Miami at Indiana, TBD Sunday, May 20: Miami at Indiana, 12:30 p.m. x-Tuesday, May 22: Indiana at Miami, TBD x-Thursday, May 24: Miami at Indiana, TBD x-Saturday, May 26: Indiana at Miami, TBD Friday’s Summary

Grizzlies 90, Clippers 88 MEMPHIS (90) Gay 5-14 3-3 13, Randolph 8-17 2-6 18, Gasol 916 5-5 23, Conley 4-9 2-4 13, Allen 2-7 4-8 8, Mayo 2-3 0-0 4, Speights 3-5 0-0 6, Pondexter 1-2 1-1 3, Cunningham 0-1 0-0 0, Arenas 0-2 0-0 0, Haddadi 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 35-77 17-27 90. L.A. CLIPPERS (88) Butler 4-9 0-0 10, Griffin 6-11 5-6 17, Jordan 2-4 3-6 7, Paul 4-9 2-4 11, Foye 4-13 0-0 9, Williams 1-7 0-0 2, Martin 5-6 0-0 10, Bledsoe 6-12 2-3 14, Evans 1-4 4-6 6, Young 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 34-79 16-25 88. Memphis 25 17 24 24 — 90 L.A. Clippers 16 22 28 22 — 88 3-Point Goals—Memphis 3-10 (Conley 3-5, Randolph 0-1, Allen 0-1, Gay 0-1, Arenas 0-2), L.A. Clippers 4-15 (Butler 2-4, Paul 1-3, Foye 1-4, Williams 0-2, Young 0-2). Fouled Out—Paul. Rebounds—

Memphis 66 (Randolph 16), L.A. Clippers 40 (Evans 10). Assists—Memphis 20 (Conley 9), L.A. Clippers 21 (Paul 7). Total Fouls—Memphis 24, L.A. Clippers 24. Technicals—Evans. A—19,060 (19,060).

IN THE BLEACHERS

HOCKEY NHL NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7) ——— CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS EASTERN CONFERENCE N.Y. Rangers 3, Washington 3 Saturday, April 28: NY Rangers 3, Washington 1 Monday, April 30: Washington 3, NY Rangers 2 Wednesday, May 2: NY Rangers 2, Washington 1, 3OT Saturday, May 5: Washington 3, NY Rangers 2 Monday, May 7: NY Rangers 3, Washington 2, OT Wednesday, May 9: Washington 2, NY Rangers 1 Today, May 12: Washington at NY Rangers, 4:30 p.m. New Jersey 4, Philadelphia 1 Sunday, April 29: Philadelphia 4, New Jersey 3, OT Tuesday, May 1: New Jersey 4, Philadelphia 1 Thursday, May 3: New Jersey 4, Philadelphia 3, OT Sunday, May 6: New Jersey 4, Philadelphia 2 Tuesday, May 8: New Jersey 3, Philadelphia 1 WESTERN CONFERENCE Phoenix 4, Nashville 1 Friday, April 27: Phoenix 4, Nashville 3, OT Sunday, April 29: Phoenix 5, Nashville 3 Wednesday, May 2: Nashville 2, Phoenix 0 Friday, May 4: Phoenix 1, Nashville 0 Monday, May 7: Phoenix 2, Nashville 1 Los Angeles 4, St. Louis 0 Saturday, April 28: Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 1 Monday, April 30: Los Angeles 5, St. Louis 2 Thursday, May 3: Los Angeles 4, St. Louis 2 Sunday, May 6: Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 1

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L T Pts GF Sporting Kansas City 7 2 0 21 12 New York 6 3 1 19 20 D.C. 5 3 3 18 20 Chicago 3 2 3 12 9 Montreal 3 5 2 11 11 New England 3 6 0 9 8 Houston 2 3 2 8 7 Columbus 2 4 2 8 6 Philadelphia 2 5 1 7 5 Toronto FC 0 8 0 0 6 Western Conference W L T Pts GF Real Salt Lake 7 3 2 23 18 San Jose 7 2 1 22 21 Seattle 7 1 1 22 13 Vancouver 5 2 2 17 9 Colorado 5 5 0 15 15 FC Dallas 3 5 3 12 10 Los Angeles 3 5 1 10 11 Chivas USA 3 6 0 9 5 Portland 2 5 2 8 9 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Today’s Games Los Angeles at Montreal, 1 p.m. D.C. United at Houston, 1:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. Vancouver at New England, 4:30 p.m. Sporting Kansas City at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Real Salt Lake at Seattle FC, 7 p.m.

x-nonleague GA 5 14 15 9 15 12 9 10 9 18 GA 12 11 3 7 12 16 14 11 13

TENNIS Professional Madrid Open Friday At Caja Magica Madrid, Spain Purse: Men, $4 million, (WT1000); Women, $4 million (Premier) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men Quarterfinals Juan Martin del Potro (10), Argentina, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov (16), Ukraine, 6-3, 6-4. Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, def. Fernando Verdasco (15), Spain, 6-1, 6-2. Janko Tipsarevic (7), Serbia, def. Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, 7-6 (2), 6-3. Roger Federer (3), Switzerland, def. David Ferrer (5), Spain, 6-4, 6-4. Women Quarterfinals Victoria Azarenka (1), Belarus, def. Li Na (8), China, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3. Serena Williams (9), United States, def. Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, 6-1, 6-3. Agnieszka Radwanska (4), Poland, def. Varvara Lepchenko, United States, 6-4, 6-4. Lucie Hradecka, Czech Republic, def. Samantha Stosur (5), Australia, 6-6 (8), 7-6 (6).

GOLF

BASEBALL

PGA Tour

College Pacific-12 Conference All Times PDT ——— Conference W L Oregon 16 8 Arizona 14 8 Arizona St. 14 10 UCLA 13 9 Stanford 12 10 Oregon St. 12 10 Washington 11 11 Washington St. 9 12 California 9 13 USC 7 13 Utah 6 19 Friday’s Games Oregon State 11, Utah 10 Arizona 3, California 1 UCLA 2, Washington 0 x-Arizona State 4, Gonzaga 2 Stanford 3, Washington State 2 Today’s Games Oregon State at Utah, 11 a.m. Arizona at California, 1 p.m. UCLA at Washington, 2 p.m. USC at Oregon, 2 p.m. Washington State at Stanford, 2 p.m. x-Arizona State at Gonzaga, 3 p.m.

All Games W L 35 14 31 15 30 17 33 13 30 14 31 16 26 19 24 21 25 20 22 21 12 34

The Players Championship Friday At TPC Sawgrass, Players Stadium Course Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. Purse: $9.5 million Yardage: 7,215; Par 72 Second Round Zach Johnson 70-66—136 Kevin Na 67-69—136 Matt Kuchar 68-68—136 Harris English 70-67—137 Charlie Wi 71-67—138 Martin Laird 65-73—138 Jonathan Byrd 68-70—138 Adam Scott 68-70—138 Brian Davis 68-70—138 Kevin Stadler 68-71—139 Ben Curtis 68-71—139 Bill Haas 68-71—139 Blake Adams 66-73—139 Michael Thompson 68-71—139 Brendon de Jonge 69-71—140 Kevin Streelman 72-68—140 Jimmy Walker 71-70—141 Bo Van Pelt 71-70—141 Luke Donald 72-69—141 Lee Westwood 71-70—141 John Huh 75-66—141 Ryan Moore 69-72—141

Brian Harman Tom Gillis Tim Clark Nick Watney Ian Poulter Rickie Fowler Jeff Maggert Josh Teater Jim Furyk Jhonattan Vegas Martin Kaymer Johnson Wagner Phil Mickelson Bob Estes Keegan Bradley Tiger Woods Henrik Stenson Spencer Levin Sung Kang Ricky Barnes Stewart Cink Marc Leishman Chris Couch Kris Blanks Geoff Ogilvy Heath Slocum Brian Gay George McNeill Justin Leonard Carl Pettersson David Toms Rod Pampling David Mathis John Rollins Trevor Immelman Robert Allenby Justin Rose Jason Dufner Robert Karlsson Peter Hanson Alvaro Quiros Graham DeLaet Cameron Tringale Pat Perez Bryce Molder Harrison Frazar Sergio Garcia Chris Kirk J.J. Henry David Hearn

73-68—141 70-71—141 71-70—141 71-70—141 65-76—141 72-69—141 70-71—141 71-71—142 72-70—142 68-74—142 73-69—142 69-73—142 71-71—142 73-69—142 72-70—142 74-68—142 71-71—142 74-68—142 75-68—143 74-69—143 71-72—143 73-70—143 72-71—143 69-74—143 70-73—143 73-70—143 71-72—143 70-73—143 75-68—143 71-72—143 69-74—143 71-72—143 72-71—143 72-72—144 72-72—144 72-72—144 76-68—144 73-71—144 70-74—144 73-71—144 72-72—144 71-73—144 73-71—144 69-75—144 72-72—144 68-76—144 73-71—144 71-73—144 71-73—144 69-75—144

Failed to qualify Nick O’Hern Tim Herron Francesco Molinari Charles Howell III Graeme McDowell Joe Ogilvie John Senden Sang-Moon Bae Padraig Harrington Ben Crane Louis Oosthuizen Jason Day Ryan Palmer Lucas Glover Davis Love III Camilo Villegas Kyle Stanley

74-71—145 70-75—145 72-73—145 76-69—145 74-71—145 72-73—145 74-71—145 68-77—145 69-76—145 67-78—145 71-74—145 73-72—145 73-72—145 74-72—146 72-74—146 75-71—146 73-73—146

J.J. Killeen Chris DiMarco Webb Simpson Sean O’Hair Ken Duke Chez Reavie Chris Stroud Rory Sabbatini Scott Stallings Tommy Gainey John Mallinger Jeff Overton Brandt Jobe Vijay Singh Arjun Atwal Scott Piercy Chad Campbell Y.E. Yang Ernie Els Rory McIlroy Greg Chalmers Michael Bradley Billy Mayfair John Merrick Retief Goosen Fredrik Jacobson Steve Stricker Bud Cauley Gary Woodland Charley Hoffman Brandt Snedeker Hunter Mahan Brendan Steele Mark Wilson Matt Every K.J. Choi Robert Garrigus Kevin Chappell Ryuji Imada James Driscoll Matt Bettencourt J.B. Holmes Jerry Kelly Tom Pernice Jr. Aaron Baddeley Troy Matteson Colt Knost Andres Romero Scott Verplank Briny Baird D.J. Trahan

69-77—146 73-73—146 73-73—146 69-77—146 73-74—147 72-75—147 73-74—147 76-71—147 72-75—147 74-73—147 73-74—147 78-69—147 73-74—147 73-74—147 69-78—147 73-74—147 72-75—147 80-68—148 74-74—148 72-76—148 72-76—148 74-74—148 79-69—148 70-78—148 72-77—149 71-79—150 76-74—150 75-75—150 77-73—150 79-71—150 76-74—150 74-76—150 72-79—151 74-77—151 77-74—151 75-76—151 73-78—151 74-78—152 75-77—152 73-79—152 75-77—152 74-78—152 82-72—154 80-75—155 78-77—155 79-77—156 79-78—157 76-82—158 72—WD 76—WD 80—WD

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Bojangles’ Southern 500 Lineup After Friday qualifying; race Today At Darlington Raceway Darlington, S.C. Lap length: 1.366 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 180.257. 2. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 179.566. 3. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 179.566. 4. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 179.461. 5. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 179.448. 6. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 179.317. 7. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 179.298. 8. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 179.187. 9. (78) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 179.141. 10. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 179.095. 11. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 179.089. 12. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 179.076. 13. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 178.991. 14. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 178.926. 15. (2) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 178.822. 16. (22) A J Allmendinger, Dodge, 178.783. 17. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 178.724. 18. (55) Mark Martin, Toyota, 178.491. 19. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 178.226. 20. (83) Landon Cassill, Toyota, 178.09. 21. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 177.98. 22. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 177.974. 23. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 177.948. 24. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 177.903. 25. (51) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 177.845. 26. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 177.781. 27. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 177.307. 28. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 176.93. 29. (79) Scott Speed, Ford, 176.879. 30. (26) Josh Wise, Ford, 176.746. 31. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 176.733. 32. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 176.606. 33. (73) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 176.594. 34. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 176.53. 35. (52) Mike Skinner, Toyota, 175.899. 36. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 175.767. 37. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 175.603. 38. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 175.497. 39. (74) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet, 175.497. 40. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 175.022. 41. (93) David Reutimann, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 42. (32) Reed Sorenson, Ford, Owner Points. 43. (49) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 174.848. Failed to Qualify 44. (23) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, 174.823. 45. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 174.73. 46. (33) Stephen Leicht, Chevrolet, 174.662. 47. (19) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 174.649.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Selected the contract of LHP Dana Eveland from Norfolk (IL). Placed RHP Matt Lindstrom on the 15-day DL. Designated INF Zelous Wheeler for assignment. BOSTON RED SOX—Acquired OF Scott Podsednik from the Philadelphia Phillies for cash considerations. LOS ANGELES ANGELS—Selected the contract of C John Hester from Salt Lake (PCL). NEW YORK YANKEES—Activated 3B Eric Chavez from 7-day DL. Optioned 3B Eduardo Nunez to Scranton-Wilkes-Barre (IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Recalled RHP Andrew Carignan and OF Collin Cowgill from Sacramento (PCL). Optioned RHP Jim Miller and OF Michael Taylor to Sacramento. National League COLORADO ROCKIES—Activated LHP Josh Outman from the 15-day DL. Optioned LHP Drew Pomeranz to Colorado Springs (PCL). LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Placed INF-OF Jerry Hairston Jr. on the 15-day DL, retroactive to May 7. Recalled INF Justin Sellers from Albuquerque (PCL). NEW YORK METS—Reinstated INF Ronny Cedeno from the 15-Day DL. Optioned INF-OF Vinny Rottino to Buffalo (IL). PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Placed OF Laynce Nix on the 15-day DL. Recalled LHP Jake Diekman from Lehigh Valley (IL). Transferred RHP Justin De Fratus from the 15- to the 60-day DL. Sent RHP Brian Sanches outright to Lehigh Valley. Selected the contracts from LHP Raul Valdes and INF Hector Luna from Lehigh Valley. PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Acquired 1B/3B Jeff Larish from the Boston Red Sox in exchange for cash considerations. Larish will be assigned to Indianapolis (IL). SAN DIEGO PADRES—Placed RHP Joe Wieland on the 15-day DL, retroactive to May 7. Recalled INFOF James Darnell from Tucson (PCL). FOOTBALL National Football League BALTIMORE RAVENS—Signed FB Jamison Berryhill, QB John Brantley, CB Charles Brown, S Omar Brown, G-OT Jack Cornell, FB Chad Diehl, LB Eltoro Freeman, WR Devin Goda, WR Dorian Graham, DTDE Elliott Henigan, NT Nicolas Jean-Baptiste, NT Ishmaa’ily Kitchen, G Antoine McClain, DE Terrence Moore, RB Brandon Pendergrass, TE Nick Provo, S Cyhl Quarles, RB Bobby Rainey and WR Deonte Thompson. BUFFALO BILLS—Agreed to terms with QB Vince Young. CAROLINA PANTHERS—Signed LB Luke Kuechly, G Amini Silatolu, DE Frank Alexander, WR Joe Adams, DB Josh Norman, P Brad Nortman and DB D.J. Campbell. Waived LB Phillip Dillard. CHICAGO BEARS—Signed DE Shea McClellin to a four-year contract and DL John McCargo, DeMario Pressley and DL Cheta Ozougwu to one-year contracts. CINCINNATI BENGALS—Signed DT Devon Still, TE Orson Charles, WR Marvin Jones and S Tony Dye. Waived CB Derrius Brooks, DE Julian Miller, G Mike Ryan and OT Landon Walker. GREEN BAY PACKERS—Signed LB Nick Perry, DE Jerel Worthy, CB Casey Hayward, DT Mike Daniels, S Jerron McMillian, LB Terrell Manning, OT Andrew Datko, QB B.J. Coleman, G Don Barclay, RB Duane Bennett, G Jaymes Brooks, FB Nic Cooper, C Tommie Draheim, TE Cameron Ford, TE Eric Lair, OT Mike McCabe, LB Dezman Moses, WR Dale Moss, S Sean Richardson, WR Marcus Rivers, CB Dion Turner and RB Marc Tyler. HOUSTON TEXANS—Signed QB John Beck. NEW YORK GIANTS—Signed RB David Wilson, WR Rueben Randle, CB Jayron Hosley, TE Adrien Robinson, OL Brandon Mosley, OL Matt McCants, DT Markus Kuhn, WR David Douglas, WR Julien Talley, FB Joe Martinek, G Stephen Goodin, DE Adewale Ojomo, DE Matt Broha, S Jojo Nicolas and S Janzen Jackson. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Signed CB Brandon Boykin, QB Jacory Harris, G Brandon Washington and RB Bryce Brown to four-year contracts. HOCKEY National Hockey League OTTAWA SENATORS—Re-signed F Pat Cannone to a two-year contract. SOCCER Major League Soccer MLS—Suspended Seattle D Zach Scott one game and fined him an undisclosed amount for endangering the safety of FC Dallas MF Fabian Castillo during a May 9 game. COLLEGE NJIT—Announced the resignation of women’s basketball coach Margaret McKeon.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Thursday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 7,200 299 32 9 The Dalles 10,265 298 7 1 John Day 3,788 205 5 2 McNary 1,465 34 2 2 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Thursday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 89,063 2,046 4,533 1,419 The Dalles 36,548 1,201 1,625 909 John Day 21,154 912 1,732 1,181 McNary 10,467 253 4,625 2,185

S B

Baseball • Beavers hang on, beat Utah: Oregon State roared to a big, early lead behind two home runs by Michael Conforto, then had to fight off Utah to claim an 11-10 Pac-12 Conference victory Friday at Spring Mobile Ballpark in Salt Lake City. Conforto hit a two-run homer in the Beavers’ six-run first inning and a threerun shot in the fourth as OSU built a 9-0 advantage. But the Utes rallied against starting pitcher Ben Wetzler and five Beaver relievers to claw back into the game, and an inside-the-park home run by Trey Nielsen to lead off the bottom of the ninth got Utah within a single run. OSU closer Tony Bryant managed to get the final outs and save the win for the Beavers (31-16 overall, 12-10 Pac-12). Conforto, a freshman, finished the day three for five at the plate with five RBIs; he now has 10 homers and 60 RBIs for the season. Tyler Smith also had three hits for Oregon State. Jo Jo Sharrar had four hits for Utah (12-34, 6-19), including a double in the ninth inning — he was thrown out at third base by left fielder Conforto as he tried to stretch the hit into a triple. The second game of the three-game series is set for today at 11 a.m. Pacific time. • Mets reach 8,000th game without throwing no-hitter: Jose Reyes tripled leading off the first inning against his former team, cinching a milestone for non-achievement by the New York Mets. Friday’s game was the 8,000th in Mets history, and they have never thrown a no-hitter. It is baseball’s longest such streak. Johan Santana’s bid to end the 40-year-old streak lasted only four pitches against the Miami Marlins. The Mets have thrown 35 one-hitters, most recently by R.A. Dickey on Aug. 13, 2010. Twice Hall of Famer Tom Seaver pitched a one-hitter, with the lone blemish each time a ninthinning single. Former Met Nolan Ryan

threw a record seven no-hitters, but none for New York.

Tennis • Djokovic loses; won’t return to Madrid’s blue clay: Novak Djokovic joined Rafael Nadal in declaring he won’t play again on the new blue clay court at the Madrid Open after losing to Janko Tipsarevic 7-6 (2), 6-3 Friday in an all-Serb quarterfinal. Tipsarevic won for the second time in five matches against Djokovic, who last lost at this stage in November at the Paris Masters. “I want to forget this week as soon as possible and move on to the real clay courts,” the top-ranked Djokovic said. “Here you can’t predict the ball bounce or movement. They can do whatever they want, but I won’t be here next year if this clay stays.” On the women’s side, Serena Williams eased past Maria Sharapova 6-1, 6-3 to advance to the semifinals. Also making the semis was top-ranked Victoria Azarenka, who rallied past French Open winner Li Na 3-6, 6-3, 6-3.

Basketball • NBA says foul called incorrectly against Celtics: The NBA says a foul against Boston with 3.1 seconds left in Atlanta’s season-ending loss on Thursday should have been called sooner, which would have given the Hawks a free throw instead of just the ball out of bounds. The Celtics’ Marquis Daniels held the Hawks’ Al Horford as Atlanta was inbounding the ball trailing 81-79. Referee Eric Lewis called a foul, but ruled it came after Marvin Williams had released the ball, meaning it was just a common foul that resulted in another throw-in. However, replays showed the foul occurred before the ball was passed and should have been treated as an away-from-the-play foul, in which case Atlanta would have been awarded

one free throw and retained possession of the ball. Boston won 83-80 to take the series 4-2. • Judge tosses defamation suit against Syracuse, Boeheim: A judge on Friday threw out a defamation lawsuit brought against Syracuse University and men’s basketball coach Jim Boeheim by two men who said the Hall of Fame coach slandered them when he said their accusations of sexual abuse against assistant coach Bernie Fine were driven by greed. Two former team ballboys, Bobby Davis and Michael Lang, accused Fine of sexually abusing them more than 20 years ago. When the allegations surfaced in November, Boeheim vehemently supported Fine, a friend for more than 40 years and his assistant coach for 35 seasons. Boeheim told ESPN that Davis was telling “a bunch of a thousand lies” and called him an opportunist looking to cash in on the publicity surrounding the Penn State sex abuse scandal. Supreme Court Justice Brian DeJoseph, a graduate of Syracuse University and its law school, ruled Friday that Boeheim’s comments were not statements of fact but were opinions that are protected from defamation suits.

Swimming • Phelps beats Lochte at Charlotte, Berens wins race: Michael Phelps easily beat Ryan Lochte in perhaps their final race before the U.S. Olympic trials, but they both wound up trailing hometown favorite Ricky Berens at the Charlotte Grand Prix in Charlotte, N.C. Berens won the 200-meter freestyle Friday night in a relatively slow time of 1 minute, 47.32 seconds. Phelps finished second in 1:48.01, while Lochte was far back in sixth place in 1:49.70. With Phelps planning to compete in only one more meet before the trials, this could be the last race against his biggest rival until Omaha, Neb.

College • Pitt files lawsuit against Big East: The University of Pittsburgh is suing the Big East in hopes of moving its exit date from the conference up a year. The school filed a complaint in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County on Friday claiming the Big East has waived its right to enforce a 27-month withdrawal notice and the Panthers should be allowed to move to the ACC without further penalty by the 2013-14 conference year. Pitt and Syracuse announced last September they were jumping to the ACC. Pitt paid half of its $5 million exit fee at the time of the announcement and said it would remain in the conference until July 1, 2014.

Surfing • Guinness recognizes surfer for riding 78-foot wave: Dude, that was the gnarliest wave ever. Guinness World Records says so. The record-keeping agency is acknowledging a 44-year-old Hawaii surfer for riding a 78-foot wave off the coast of Portugal, saying the November run beats a 2008 record by more than 1 foot. Big-wave surfer Garrett McNamara from Oahu’s North Shore tells The Associated Press the record is a fluke because he didn’t even want to surf the day he caught the massive wave. McNamara says he changed his mind at the urging of friends and felt things come together once he got on the board.

Hockey • U.S. beats Kazakhstan 3-2 at hockey worlds: Justin Faulk of the Carolina Hurricanes scored four minutes into overtime for his second goal of the game Friday, sending the United States to a 3-2 victory over Kazakhstan at hockey’s world championships in Helsinki, Finland. In Group A, Canada beat defending champion Finland

5-3 in its toughest game yet at the tournament. The Americans were coming off a 5-3 victory over Belarus on Thursday and improved to 3-1-1 in Group A.

Football • University of Minnesota approves agreement with Vikings to use TCF: The University of Minnesota’s Board of Regents has approved an agreement with the Minnesota Vikings that allows the use of TCF Bank Stadium during the NFL team’s construction of its new stadium. The board unanimously approved the letter of intent on Friday. It is non-binding, but sets the parameters that university President Eric Kaler and the Vikings can use to develop a lease agreement. The Vikings will pay the university $250,000 for each game. The letter states the Vikings can play all their home games on Sunday and host one night game during the week per season. The Vikings hope to open their stadium in 2016.

Cycling • Chavez wins stage; Malori takes Giro lead: Colombian rider Miguel Angel Rubiano Chavez won the hilly sixth stage of the Giro d’Italia with a long breakaway and Italy’s Adriano Malori took the overall lead on Friday in Porto Sant’Elpidio, Italy. Rubiano Chavez was one of several riders who broke away from the main pack just 14 miles into the 130-mile leg from Urbino to Porto Sant’Elpidio, then he charged in front alone for the final 19 miles. Rubiano Chavez, who rides for the Androni Giocattoli-Venezuela team, clocked 5 hours, 38 minutes, 30 seconds. Malori, also a member of the breakaway, crossed second, about 1 minute, 10 seconds behind. He leads Michal Golas of Omega Pharma-Quickstep by 15 seconds overall. —From wire reports


SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

O A Today SOCCER 1:30 p.m.: Major League Soccer, D.C. United at Houston Dynamo, NBC Sports Network. 7 p.m.: Major League Soccer, Real Salt Lake at Seattle Sounders, Root Sports. GOLF 9 a.m.: PGA Tour, The Players Championship, third round, Golf Channel. 11 a.m.: PGA Tour, The Players Championship, third round, NBC. LACROSSE 9 a.m.: College men, NCAA tournament, first round, Duke vs. Syracuse, ESPN. BASEBALL 10 a.m.: MLB, regional coverage, Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee Brewers or New York Mets at Miami Marlins or Los Angeles Angels at Texas Rangers, Fox. 1 p.m.: MLB, Seattle Mariners at New York Yankees, Root Sports. 4 p.m.: MLB, Atlanta Braves at St. Louis Cardinals or Cleveland Indians at Boston Red Sox, MLB Network. 4:30 p.m.: College, Baylor at Oklahoma (same-day tape), Root Sports. SOFTBALL 1 p.m.: College, ACC tournament, final, Virginia Tech vs. Georgia Tech, ESPN. 3 p.m.: College, Big East tournament, final, Notre Dame vs. Louisville, ESPN2. 5 p.m.: College, SEC tournament, final, Florida vs. Alabama, ESPN. MOTOR SPORTS 3:30 p.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Showtime Southern 500, Fox. HOCKEY 4:30 p.m.: NHL playoffs, conference semifinal, Washington Capitals at New York Rangers, NBC Sports Network. BASKETBALL 5 p.m.: NBA playoffs, conference semifinal, Philadelphia 76ers at Boston Celtics, TNT. 7:30 p.m.: NBA playoffs, first round, Denver Nuggets at Los Angeles Lakers, TNT.

Sunday SOCCER 12:30 a.m.: Beach soccer, Sao Paulo vs. Seattle Sounders (same-day tape), Root Sports. 6:30 a.m.: English Premier League, Manchester City vs. Queens Park Rangers, ESPN2. 7 a.m.: English Premier League, Sunderland vs. Manchester United, FX. HOCKEY 6 a.m.: International Ice Hockey Federation World Championships, USA vs. Finland, NBC Sports Network. GOLF 9 a.m.: PGA Tour, The Players Championship, final round, Golf Channel. 11 a.m.: PGA Tour, The Players Championship, final round, NBC. BASKETBALL 10 a.m.: NBA playoffs, first round, Los Angeles Clippers at Memphis Grizzlies, ABC. 12:30 p.m.: NBA playoffs, conference semifinal, Indiana Pacers at Miami Heat, ABC. LACROSSE 10 a.m.: College men, NCAA tournament, first round, Princeton vs. Virginia, ESPN. BASEBALL 10 a.m.: MLB, Seattle Mariners at New York Yankees, Root Sports. 11 a.m.: MLB, Atlanta Braves at St. Louis Cardinals, TBS. 2 p.m.: College, USC at Oregon, Comcast SportsNet Northwest. 5 p.m.: MLB, Los Angeles Angels at Texas Rangers, ESPN. VOLLEYBALL Noon: U.S. Olympic Trials (taped), NBC Sports Network. RODEO 1 p.m.: Professional Bull Riders, Boise Invitational (taped), CBS. MOTOR SPORTS 2 p.m.: American Le Mans Series, Monterey, ESPN2. CYCLING 2 p.m.: Tour of California, stage 1, NBC Sports Network.

RADIO Today BASEBALL 11 a.m.: College, Oregon State at Utah, KICE-AM 940. BASKETBALL 7:30 p.m.: NBA playoffs, first round, Denver Nuggets at Los Angeles Lakers, KICE-AM 940.

Sunday BASEBALL 11 a.m.: College, Oregon State at Utah, KICE-AM 940.

Three tied for Players’ lead; Woods avoids missing cut The Associated Press PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — The Players Championship still lacks some definition going into the weekend. At least it still has one of golf’s star attractions. In what looks to be a neighborhood block party, Sea Island residents Matt Kuchar and Zach Johnson steered clear of trouble Friday and shared the 36-hole lead with Kevin Na. They had a oneshot lead over Harris English, a PGA Tour rookie who also lives 100 miles to the north at Sea Island. The attention shifted to Tiger Woods, who with one burst of birdies went from a guy struggling to make the cut to being on the periphery of contention. Woods missed the cut last week at Quail Hollow and has never missed consecutive cuts in his career. He said the thought never crossed his mind. “I was trying to shoot my number today,” Woods said after a 4-under 68, ending a streak of nine straight rounds without shooting in the 60s. “Sixty-six was my number today. I figured that would have been a good way to go into the weekend, being probably four or five back. But I’m still with a good chance.” Johnson made five birdies on the back nine until a bogey on the 18th hole, though he matched the best score of the second round with a 66. Kuchar, who made a strong run at the Masters last month, played bogey-free over his last 13 holes for a 68. Na started the back nine with three straight birdies for a 69. They were at 8-under 136. “It’s fun to be back in position with a chance to win again,” Kuchar said. English birdied the 17th and 18th for a 67, while the group at 6-under 138 included past champion Adam Scott (70). Rory McIlroy doesn’t even get a chance to play. The U.S. Open champion, who only last week lost in a threeway playoff at Quail Hollow, opened with a birdie and didn’t make another one the rest of the day. He shot 76 and missed the cut for the first time in more than a year, though it wasn’t unusual at the TPC Sawgrass. In three appearances at The Players Championship, McIlroy has never broken par or made the cut. “Hopefully, I’m coming back here for another 20 years,” McIlroy said. “If I don’t figure it out on my 20th, there’s something wrong.” The cut was at even-par 144, and Woods was two shots over the cut line when he hit his best shot of the week, a 5-wood into a stiff breeze on the par-3 eighth that caught a slope on the edge of the green and rolled 8 feet from the flag. That was the first of four straight birdies, and when his tee shot to the island-green 17th settled at the very back of the green, he was safe. Going into the weekend, nothing is settled. Even though Woods was only six shots behind, there were 29 players ahead of him. One of them is Martin Laird, the only player to reach double digits under par for the week. He was at 10 under with three holes to play when he lost four shots on the last three holes. His hopes

Chris O’Meara / The Associated Press

Kevin Na chips to the 13th green during the second round of the Players Championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass Friday in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. Na, Zach Johnson and Matt Kuchar are tied for the lead heading to the third round.

for eagle turned into bogey with a 4iron into the water on the 16th, and he dunked one on No. 17 for double bogey. The good news? “I’m glad it happened on a Friday, and not on Sunday,” Laird said after a 73 put him in a large group two shots behind. Ben Curtis and FedEx Cup champion Bill Haas were in the group at 5-under 139, while the group at 3-under 141 included Quail Hollow playoff winner Rickie Fowler and Luke Donald, who at least has a chance to go back to No. 1 in the world now that McIlroy has missed the cut. Lee Westwood also was at 141. Phil Mickelson, inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame on Monday night, again didn’t get much out of his round. A winner five years ago at Sawgrass, he had another 71 and still was in the picture going into the weekend at 142, tied with Woods. McIlroy missing the cut was stunning because he was in such good form

all year. Equally surprising was to see Steve Stricker leaving early. Stricker had the longest cut streak on the PGA Tour — 49 events dating to the 2009 PGA Championship at Hazeltine. He played with Mickelson and McIlroy and fell apart with a bogey on the third, and a double bogey from a back bunker on the fourth. Also on Friday: England’s Wilson leads Madeira SANTO DA SERRA, Madeira Islands — Oliver Wilson of England shot a 7-under 65 to take a one-stroke lead after two rounds of the Madeira Islands Open. He has nine second-place finishes on the European Tour but has yet to win. He lost his main tour card at the end of last year. Wilson is at 13-under 131 on the mountainous Santa da Serra course. Tied for second are Sweden’s Magnus Carlsson (66) and 19-year old Joakim Lagergren (66), and England’s Andy Sullivan (64).

NBA PLAYOFFS

GrizzliesbeatClipperstoforceGame7 By Beth Harris The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — This time, the fourth quarter belonged to the Memphis Grizzlies. Long the domain of the Clippers’ Chris Paul, it was the Grizzlies who rallied in the closing minutes to beat Los Angeles 90-88 and force a decisive seventh game in their playoff series. Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph worked their inside-out game to perfection on a night when Paul and Blake Griffin were limited by injuries and the Clippers’ bench couldn’t quite put them over the top. “This one has to hurt,” Paul said. “If it doesn’t hurt, it means you don’t care.” Gasol scored 23 points, Randolph had 18 points and 16 rebounds, and Rudy Gay and Mike Conley added 13 points each to help the Grizzlies win for the first time in the Western Conference series at Staples Center and stave off elimination. “We were very focused on our task defensively and that’s a big reason we won,” said Gasol, whose brother Pau will play a Game 7 with the Los Angeles Lakers against Denver at Staples tonight. “We were way more disciplined. The whole team is doing a better job of finding me in the post.” Griffin scored 17 points despite a sprained left knee that limited his jumping ability, and Eric Bledsoe added 14 off the bench to lead the Clippers, who blew an eight-point lead in the fourth along with a second consecutive chance to close out what would have been a landmark playoff victory for the beleaguered franchise.

Mark J. Terrill / The Associated Press

Memphis Grizzlies forward Zach Randolph, top, grabs the headband of Los Angeles Clippers forward Reggie Evans as he goes up for a shot during the first half of Game 6 of a playoff series Friday in Los Angeles.

“Right now is not the time to start pointing the finger,” Griffin said. Paul scored 11 points playing with a strained right hip flexor and a jammed right middle finger. “I didn’t know he was hurt,” Randolph said. “Everybody’s hurting. My knee is hurting. I ain’t looking for no excuse. You got to put that in the back and keep playing.” The Clippers are seeking just the third playoff series win in franchise history. Game 7 will be Sunday in Memphis.

“It’s uncharted territory for us as a team,” Clippers second-year coach Vinny Del Negro said. “We got to stay together, battle through it and give our best effort of the season.” Only eight teams in NBA history have come back from a 3-1 deficit to win a seven-game series. Top-seeded San Antonio awaits the winner in the conference semifinals. “All of this means nothing because it’s a one-game series,” Memphis coach Lionel Hollins said. “Everyone has a chance to win.” Tied 66-all starting the fourth, the Clippers scored 10 straight to take their first lead since the game’s opening minutes, led by Bledsoe’s six points. “It was looking bleak at that time,” Hollins said. But the Grizzlies weren’t done. They went on a 17-4 run, including 10 straight points, to take an 85-80 lead. Gay scored five in a row as the Clippers missed and Randolph came up with a big block. Conley hit a three-pointer and Randolph tipped in the ball to close out the spurt. “We stuck together and finished the game,” Randolph said. “That’s what coach has been preaching.” Griffin made two free throws before Randolph scored for an 87-82 lead. Conley fouled Paul, and he missed the first and made the second to leave Los Angeles trailing 87-83 with 56 seconds left. The Clippers were forced to keep fouling, and the Grizzlies made three of eight to stay alive. The Clippers’ Caron Butler missed a three-pointer with 14 seconds to go as red-clad fans headed for the exits before Randy Foye hit a three with 3 seconds left.

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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

M AJ O R L E AGUE BASE BAL L STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES

AL Boxscores Yankees 6, Mariners 2 Seattle Ackley 2b Ryan ss I.Suzuki rf J.Montero c Seager 3b Jaso dh Smoak 1b Carp lf b-C.Wells ph M.Saunders cf Totals

AB 3 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 1 3 33

R 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

H 1 0 0 1 1 0 3 0 0 1 7

BI 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

BB 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 3

SO 0 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 4

Avg. .240 .149 .289 .267 .296 .279 .193 .115 .207 .228

New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jeter ss 4 0 1 0 1 0 .372 Granderson cf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .272 Al.Rodriguez 3b 3 1 2 0 1 1 .297 Cano 2b 4 0 4 1 0 0 .308 Teixeira 1b 4 1 2 0 0 0 .221 Swisher rf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .275 Ibanez lf 4 1 1 3 0 1 .268 Wise lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .182 Er.Chavez dh 3 0 1 0 0 2 .294 a-An.Jones ph-dh 1 1 1 2 0 0 .240 Martin c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .179 Totals 35 6 14 6 2 8 Seattle 100 001 000 — 2 7 0 New York 100 003 02x — 6 14 0 b-flied out for Carp in the 9th. LOB—Seattle 7, New York 7. 2B—Cano (11). HR—Ackley (2), off Kuroda; J.Montero (5), off Kuroda; Ibanez (6), off F.Hernandez; An.Jones (4), off Delabar. SB—M.Saunders (4), Granderson (1). DP—Seattle 1. Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA F.Hernandez L, 3-2 6 2-3 11 4 4 2 7 101 2.29 Furbush 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 18 5.06 Delabar 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 13 4.32 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Kuroda W, 3-4 7 6 2 2 3 2 105 3.56 Rapada H, 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 3 4.15 Wade H, 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 1.20 Logan H, 2 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 12 2.03 Robertson 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 6 2.51 T—2:52. A—37,226 (50,291).

Orioles 4, Rays 3 Tampa Bay Zobrist rf C.Pena 1b B.Upton cf Scott dh Keppinger 3b Rhymes 2b Joyce lf S.Rodriguez ss-3b J.Molina c E.Johnson 2b-ss a-De.Jennings ph Totals

AB 2 4 3 3 3 0 3 4 4 3 1 30

R 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 3

H 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 5

BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2

BB 3 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 6

SO 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 3

Avg. .204 .227 .274 .250 .296 .241 .287 .229 .213 .217 .265

Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Flaherty 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .171 Hardy ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .231 Markakis rf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .250 Ad.Jones cf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .288 Wieters c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .275 Betemit lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .247 C.Davis 1b 3 1 1 0 0 1 .284 N.Johnson dh 2 1 2 2 1 0 .163 Andino 2b 2 0 0 0 1 1 .286 Totals 29 4 7 4 2 7 Tampa Bay 010 200 000 — 3 5 0 Baltimore 010 001 20x — 4 7 0 a-grounded out for E.Johnson in the 9th. LOB—Tampa Bay 8, Baltimore 3. 2B—Scott (8). HR—Ad.Jones (10), off Hellickson; Markakis (6), off Hellickson; N.Johnson (1), off Jo.Peralta. SB— N.Johnson (2). DP—Tampa Bay 2; Baltimore 1. Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP Hellickson 6 2-3 5 3 3 1 6 95 Jo.Peralta L, 0-2 1-3 1 1 1 1 1 18 McGee 1 1 0 0 0 0 8 Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP Eveland 6 5 3 3 6 2 95 O’Day W, 3-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 Strop H, 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 5 Johnson S, 10-10 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 T—2:37. A—26,669 (45,971).

ERA 2.95 5.93 2.61 ERA 4.50 1.69 1.42 0.61

LeCure 1 1 0 0 0 3 18 4.30 T—3:12. A—37,255 (42,319).

American League

National League

East Division Pct GB WCGB .636 — — .606 1 — .563 2½ — .545 3 ½ .406 7½ 5 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .563 — — .500 2 2 .485 2½ 2½ .355 6½ 6½ .281 9 9 West Division Pct GB WCGB .667 — — .515 5 1½ .441 7½ 4 .424 8 4½

East Division Pct GB WCGB .625 — — .606 ½ — .563 2 — .531 3 1 .455 5½ 3½ Central Division Pct GB WCGB .625 — — .516 3½ 1½ .469 5 3 .438 6 4 .438 6 4 .406 7 5 West Division Pct GB WCGB .656 — — .469 6 3 .455 6½ 3½ .419 7½ 4½ .333 10½ 7½

Baltimore Tampa Bay New York Toronto Boston

W 21 20 18 18 13

L 12 13 14 15 19

Cleveland Detroit Chicago Kansas City Minnesota

W 18 16 16 11 9

L 14 16 17 20 23

Texas Oakland Seattle Los Angeles

W 22 17 15 14

L 11 16 19 19

Friday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 6, Seattle 2 Baltimore 4, Tampa Bay 3 Boston 7, Cleveland 5 Texas 10, L.A. Angels 3 Chicago White Sox 5, Kansas City 0 Minnesota 7, Toronto 6 Oakland 11, Detroit 4

L10 7-3 5-5 5-5 6-4 2-8

Str Home Away W-1 10-7 11-5 L-2 13-3 7-10 W-2 10-7 8-7 L-1 8-7 10-8 W-1 5-11 8-8

L10 6-4 5-5 4-6 5-5 3-7

Str Home Away L-1 8-10 10-4 L-1 9-9 7-7 W-3 6-9 10-8 L-1 4-13 7-7 W-1 5-11 4-12

L10 5-5 6-4 4-6 6-4

Str Home Away W-2 9-5 13-6 W-1 8-9 9-7 L-1 7-8 8-11 L-1 9-8 5-11

Today’s Games L.A. Angels (Williams 3-1) at Texas (M.Harrison 4-2), 10:05 a.m. Seattle (Noesi 2-3) at N.Y. Yankees (P.Hughes 2-4), 1:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (M.Moore 1-2) at Baltimore (Matusz 1-4), 4:05 p.m. Cleveland (Tomlin 1-2) at Boston (Doubront 2-1), 4:10 p.m. Kansas City (Hochevar 2-3) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 3-1), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Hutchison 1-1) at Minnesota (Walters 0-0), 4:10 p.m. Detroit (Fister 0-0) at Oakland (McCarthy 2-3), 5:05 p.m.

Washington Atlanta New York Miami Philadelphia

W 20 20 18 17 15

L 12 13 14 15 18

St. Louis Cincinnati Houston Milwaukee Pittsburgh Chicago

W 20 16 15 14 14 13

L 12 15 17 18 18 19

Los Angeles San Francisco Arizona Colorado San Diego

W 21 15 15 13 11

L 11 17 18 18 22

Friday’s Games Houston 1, Pittsburgh 0 Philadelphia 7, San Diego 3 Miami 6, N.Y. Mets 5 Washington 7, Cincinnati 3 Milwaukee 8, Chicago Cubs 7, 13 innings Atlanta 9, St. Louis 7, 12 innings Arizona 5, San Francisco 1 L.A. Dodgers 7, Colorado 3

Astros 1, Pirates 0

L10 6-4 6-4 5-5 9-1 4-6

Str Home Away W-2 12-4 8-8 W-1 8-5 12-8 L-1 10-6 8-8 W-2 7-5 10-10 W-1 6-8 9-10

L10 6-4 6-4 7-3 4-6 4-6 5-5

Str Home Away L-1 8-5 12-7 L-1 8-7 8-8 W-1 10-8 5-9 W-1 8-8 6-10 L-2 8-8 6-10 L-1 9-10 4-9

L10 5-5 3-7 3-7 3-7 4-6

Str Home Away W-2 13-3 8-8 L-2 8-7 7-10 W-1 7-10 8-8 L-1 8-10 5-8 L-2 9-14 2-8

Today’s Games Chicago Cubs (Volstad 0-4) at Milwaukee (Marcum 1-1), 10:05 a.m. N.Y. Mets (Dickey 4-1) at Miami (Nolasco 4-0), 10:05 a.m. Houston (Happ 2-2) at Pittsburgh (Morton 1-3), 4:05 p.m. San Diego (Volquez 1-2) at Philadelphia (Halladay 3-2), 4:05 p.m. Washington (Zimmermann 1-3) at Cincinnati (Latos 2-2), 4:10 p.m. Atlanta (Beachy 3-1) at St. Louis (Wainwright 2-3), 4:15 p.m. San Francisco (M.Cain 1-2) at Arizona (Cahill 2-3), 5:10 p.m. Colorado (Nicasio 2-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Harang 1-2), 6:10 p.m.

American League roundup

National League roundup

• Yankees 6, Mariners 2: NEW YORK — Raul Ibanez hit a go-ahead, three-run homer off former Seattle teammate Felix Hernandez in the sixth inning, Robinson Cano had four hits and New York overcame a home run by Jesus Montero to beat the Mariners. • Orioles 4, Rays 3: BALTIMORE — Nick Johnson’s first homer in two years gave Baltimore a seventhinning lead and the Orioles edged Tampa Bay in a duel for first place in the AL East. • Red Sox 7, Indians 5: BOSTON — Dustin Pedroia had three hits and three RBIs to back an effective outing by Clay Buchholz, and Boston beat Cleveland to snap a three-game skid. • White Sox 5, Royals 0: CHICAGO — Adam Dunn hit his 11th homer to match his total from last season, leading Gavin Floyd and the Chicago White Sox to a victory over Kansas City. • Twins 7, Blue Jays 6: MINNEAPOLIS — Darin Mastroianni got his first major league hit and drove in three runs to help Minnesota overcome Jose Bautista’s two homers in a victory over Toronto. • Athletics 11, Tigers 4: OAKLAND, Calif. — Brandon Inge hit a three-run homer and drove in four runs for the fourth time in five games, Josh Reddick homered twice and had a career-high five RBIs, and Oakland pounded Detroit. • Rangers 10, Angels 3: ARLINGTON, Texas — Josh Hamilton hit two more home runs, Yu Darvish struck out seven and Texas beat the Los Angeles Angels in a rain-interrupted game when C.J. Wilson faced only five batters against his old team.

• Marlins 6, Mets 5: MIAMI — Greg Dobbs’ single with two outs in the ninth inning scored Emilio Bonifacio from second base, and Miami rallied to end the New York Mets’ five-game winning streak. • Nationals 7, Reds 3: CINCINNATI — Roger Bernadina and Danny Espinosa each hit a two-run homer in one of Washington’s biggest scoring splurges of the season. • Astros 1, Pirates 0: PITTSBURGH — Bud Norris allowed three hits in six sharp innings, leading Houston to the win. • Phillies 7, Padres 3: PHILADELPHIA — Carlos Ruiz went three for three with a homer and three RBIs for Philadelphia, and John Mayberry Jr. homered and drove in three runs. • Diamondbacks 5, Giants 1: PHOENIX — Paul Goldschmidt hit his first home run since his initial atbat of the season, rookie Patrick Corbin allowed three hits over seven innings and Arizona ended a fivegame losing streak by beating San Francisco. • Braves 9, Cardinals 7: ST. LOUIS — Jason Heyward hit a two-run homer in the 12th inning and Atlanta beat St. Louis, ruining the Cardinals’ celebration honoring former manager Tony La Russa. • Brewers 8, Cubs 7: MILWAUKEE — Corey Hart hit an RBI single in the 13th inning to give Milwaukee a victory over the Chicago Cubs. • Dodgers 7, Rockies 3: LOS ANGELES — Chris Capuano won his fourth straight outing and the Los Angeles Dodgers got home runs from Andre Ethier, Mark Ellis and Juan Uribe to open a six-game lead in the NL West with a victory over Colorado.

White Sox 5, Royals 0 Kansas City Dyson cf A.Gordon lf Butler dh Hosmer 1b Francoeur rf Moustakas 3b Getz 2b a-Giavotella ph A.Escobar ss Quintero c Totals

AB 4 4 4 3 4 4 2 1 3 3 32

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

H 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 5

BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

BB 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 2

SO 0 1 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 7

Avg. .298 .267 .287 .176 .243 .308 .297 .000 .269 .222

Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. De Aza cf 4 1 2 1 0 0 .291 Beckham 2b 4 1 2 1 0 0 .222 A.Dunn dh 2 1 2 1 2 0 .257 Konerko 1b 4 0 0 0 0 3 .333 Pierzynski c 4 1 0 0 0 0 .264 Rios rf 4 0 1 2 0 2 .284 Al.Ramirez ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .203 Viciedo lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .208 Lillibridge lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .161 E.Escobar 3b 2 1 0 0 1 1 .133 Totals 31 5 8 5 3 7 Kansas City 000 000 000 — 0 5 1 Chicago 101 002 10x — 5 8 0 a-flied out for Getz in the 9th. E—Quintero (3). LOB—Kansas City 7, Chicago 5. 2B—Beckham (6), A.Dunn (9). 3B—Rios (3). HR—A.Dunn (11), off F.Paulino. SB—De Aza (6), E.Escobar (1). Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA F.Paulino L, 1-1 5 2-3 7 4 4 1 6 113 3.09 K.Herrera 1 1 1 1 1 0 20 3.63 Collins 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 11 3.78 Mazzaro 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 0.00 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Floyd W, 3-3 7 2-3 5 0 0 2 5 116 2.53 Thornton H, 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 4 4.05 H.Santiago 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 5.25 T—2:43. A—19,129 (40,615).

Red Sox 7, Indians 5 Cleveland Damon lf Kipnis 2b A.Cabrera ss Hafner dh C.Santana c Choo rf Brantley cf Kotchman 1b 1-Donald pr Hannahan 3b Totals

AB 6 4 3 4 3 4 5 5 0 5 39

R 1 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5

H 1 2 0 2 1 1 2 1 0 2 12

BI 0 0 0 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 5

BB 0 1 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 6

SO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1

Avg. .171 .278 .333 .255 .257 .240 .262 .194 .178 .305

Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Sweeney cf 5 1 2 1 0 1 .353 Pedroia 2b 4 1 3 3 0 0 .316 Ortiz dh 3 1 1 0 1 0 .352 a-D.McDonald ph-dh1 0 0 0 0 1 .179 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 2 0 2 0 2 0 .295 Middlebrooks 3b 4 0 1 2 1 0 .314 Nava lf 3 1 1 0 2 1 .400 C.Ross rf 3 1 1 1 2 0 .252 Saltalamacchia c 5 0 0 0 0 2 .221 Punto ss 4 2 1 0 0 2 .152 Aviles ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .265 Totals 34 7 12 7 8 7 Cleveland 100 000 301 — 5 12 0 Boston 220 030 00x — 7 12 1 1-ran for Kotchman in the 9th. E—Middlebrooks (3). LOB—Cleveland 14, Boston 13. 2B—Choo (7), Hannahan (6), Pedroia (11), Ad.Gonzalez 2 (11), Middlebrooks (5), Nava (2), C.Ross (7). SB—Donald (3). SF—Pedroia. DP—Cleveland 1. Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Jimenez L, 3-3 4 1-3 9 7 7 5 4 99 5.18 Wheeler 1 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 37 4.76 Sipp 2 2 0 0 2 3 43 6.94 Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Buchholz W, 4-1 6 1-3 8 4 3 3 0 111 8.31 R.Hill 0 0 0 0 1 0 11 1.59 A.Miller H, 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 11 0.00 F.Morales H, 7 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 11 4.38 Padilla H, 4 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 9 5.79 Aceves S, 6-8 1 2 1 1 1 1 29 6.59 R.Hill pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.

T—3:57. A—37,438 (37,495).

Rangers 10, Angels 3 Los Angeles Trout cf M.Izturis 3b Pujols 1b Tor.Hunter rf Trumbo dh H.Kendrick 2b V.Wells lf Aybar ss Bo.Wilson c Totals

AB 3 5 4 4 3 2 4 4 3 32

R 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 3

H 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 6

BI 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3

BB 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 5

SO 1 1 1 2 2 1 0 1 1 10

Avg. .317 .276 .192 .263 .295 .293 .223 .204 .233

Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Kinsler 2b 5 0 1 0 0 1 .275 Andrus ss 5 1 1 0 0 0 .318 Hamilton lf 4 3 3 2 1 0 .407 Beltre dh 5 1 2 1 0 0 .315 M.Young 3b 4 1 1 0 1 1 .293 N.Cruz rf 4 1 2 2 1 1 .258 Napoli 1b-c 4 1 1 0 0 1 .248 Torrealba c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .236 a-Moreland ph-1b 3 2 1 3 0 0 .259 Gentry cf 4 0 3 2 0 0 .313 Totals 38 10 15 10 3 4 Los Angeles 002 001 000 — 3 6 1 Texas 611 100 10x — 10 15 0 a-grounded into a fielder’s choice for Torrealba in the 1st. E—H.Kendrick (2). LOB—Los Angeles 8, Texas 8. 2B—Trumbo (6), Kinsler (9), Beltre (8). 3B—Napoli (2), Gentry (1). HR—Trout (2), off Darvish; Tor. Hunter (5), off Darvish; Hamilton 2 (17), off Williams 2; Moreland (4), off Williams. SB—Trout (2), Andrus (6), Gentry (4). DP—Texas 1. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA C.Wilson L, 4-3 1-3 3 4 4 1 1 22 3.46 Williams 6 2-3 11 6 6 2 3 111 4.19 Isringhausen 1 1 0 0 0 0 19 2.53 Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Darvish W, 5-1 5 1-3 3 3 3 3 7 93 2.84 M.Lowe 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 24 0.77 Uehara 1 1 0 0 1 1 22 1.64 R.Ross 1 1 0 0 1 0 11 2.63 T—4:58 (Rain delay: 1:56). A—48,201 (48,194).

Athletics 11, Tigers 4 Detroit A.Jackson cf Dirks lf Mi.Cabrera 3b Fielder 1b D.Young dh Raburn rf Jh.Peralta ss Laird c Worth 2b Totals

AB 4 3 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 33

R 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 4

H 1 1 2 0 1 0 1 1 1 8

BI 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 3

BB 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 4

SO 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 7

Avg. .320 .381 .291 .286 .237 .128 .262 .300 .214

Oakland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. J.Weeks 2b 3 2 0 0 2 0 .192 Pennington ss 4 1 1 0 1 2 .213 Reddick rf 4 4 4 5 1 0 .292 Ka’aihue dh 5 2 2 1 0 2 .292 S.Smith lf 4 1 3 1 1 0 .250 Inge 3b 5 1 2 4 0 0 .197 Barton 1b 5 0 0 0 0 2 .188 K.Suzuki c 3 0 0 0 1 0 .216 Cowgill cf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .125 Totals 37 11 13 11 6 8 Detroit 101 000 020 — 4 8 0 Oakland 202 004 30x — 11 13 1 E—Inge (2). LOB—Detroit 6, Oakland 8. 2B— A.Jackson (9), Ka’aihue 2 (7), S.Smith (2). HR—Reddick (7), off Porcello; Inge (5), off Below; Reddick (8), off Balester. SB—J.Weeks (9), Pennington (7), Reddick (4). DP—Oakland 3 (Pennington, J.Weeks, Barton), (Pennington, J.Weeks, Barton), (J.Weeks, Pennington, Barton). Detroit Porcello L, 3-3 Below Balester

IP 5 1 1

H 9 3 1

R 4 4 3

ER BB SO NP ERA 4 3 4 100 5.18 4 1 2 24 2.40 3 2 2 22 6.32

Putkonen 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP Milone W, 5-2 7 5 2 1 1 6 98 Carignan 1 2 2 2 2 1 31 Blevins 1 1 0 0 1 0 13 T—2:48. A—26,721 (35,067).

6.75 ERA 3.92 8.44 1.69

Twins 7, Blue Jays 6 Toronto AB K.Johnson 2b 5 Y.Escobar ss 5 Bautista rf-1b 5 Encarnacion dh 3 Thames lf 3 Lawrie 3b 4 Rasmus cf 4 Lind 1b 2 a-B.Francisco ph-rf 1 Arencibia c 4 Totals 36

R 0 0 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 6

H 1 0 2 1 2 3 1 0 0 1 11

BI 0 0 2 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 6

BB 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 3

SO 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 5

Avg. .256 .255 .186 .270 .270 .297 .221 .187 .294 .228

Minnesota AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Span cf 4 2 2 0 1 0 .304 Dozier ss 5 0 0 0 0 2 .190 Mauer c 2 2 1 0 3 0 .274 Willingham lf 3 1 1 1 1 1 .313 Doumit dh 2 1 1 2 2 1 .245 1-Komatsu pr-dh 0 1 0 0 0 0 .211 Plouffe 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .137 Parmelee 1b 3 0 0 1 1 0 .195 Mastroianni rf 4 0 2 3 0 1 .286 J.Carroll 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .212 Totals 30 7 7 7 9 7 Toronto 100 103 010 — 6 11 0 Minnesota 200 040 10x — 7 7 1 a-flied out for Lind in the 8th. 1-ran for Doumit in the 7th. E—Dozier (1). LOB—Toronto 6, Minnesota 8. 2B—Span (7), Willingham (10). HR—Bautista 2 (7), off Blackburn 2; Thames (3), off Blackburn; Encarnacion (11), off Perkins. DP—Minnesota 2. Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Drabek L, 2-4 4 1-3 4 3 3 4 5 109 3.66 Villanueva 2-3 2 3 3 3 1 28 5.54 Carreno 2 1 1 1 2 1 30 5.23 Oliver 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 1.74 Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Blackburn W, 1-4 5 6 5 5 3 3 81 7.18 Al.Burnett H, 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 15 2.89 Burton H, 5 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 2.08 Perkins H, 3 1 3 1 1 0 0 17 5.40 Capps S, 6-6 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 3.75 Blackburn pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. T—3:17. A—33,387 (39,500).

Bonifacio cf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .246 J.Buck c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .192 Buehrle p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .063 Choate p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Mujica p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Webb p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 e-Dobbs ph-lf 2 0 1 1 0 0 .262 Totals 35 6 10 6 1 11 New York 000 010 130 — 5 11 1 Miami 300 000 012 — 6 10 0 Two outs when winning run scored. a-flied out for J.Santana in the 7th. b-doubled for Hairston in the 8th. c-doubled for Nickeas in the 8th. d-struck out for R.Ramirez in the 8th. e-lined out for Webb in the 8th. f-struck out for Kearns in the 8th. E—I.Davis (3). LOB—New York 9, Miami 4. 2B— D.Wright (8), Nieuwenhuis (6), Nickeas (2), Baxter (4), Infante (10), Stanton (7). 3B—Reyes (3). HR—I.Davis (5), off Buehrle; Kearns (3), off J.Santana. SB—Infante (2), Bonifacio 2 (17). DP—New York 1; Miami 1. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA J.Santana 6 6 3 3 0 7 82 2.92 R.Ramirez 1 0 0 0 1 2 22 3.93 Parnell H, 6 2-3 1 1 0 0 0 10 2.40 Byrdak H, 8 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 6 3.60 F.Francisco L, 1-2 2-3 3 2 2 0 1 19 6.59 Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Buehrle 6 2-3 8 2 2 2 3 102 2.81 Choate H, 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 4 1.08 Mujica BS, 2-4 1-3 2 3 3 2 0 23 4.91 Webb 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 14 2.70 Bell W, 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 9.28 T—3:07. A—31,007 (37,442).

Nationals 7, Reds 3 Washington Desmond ss Bernadina lf Zimmerman 3b LaRoche 1b Harper rf S.Burnett p Espinosa 2b Ankiel cf W.Ramos c G.Gonzalez p Stammen p Mattheus p Nady rf Totals

AB 5 5 4 4 5 0 4 4 4 2 1 0 0 38

R 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 7

H 2 2 3 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 12

BI 0 3 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 7

BB 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

SO 0 1 1 2 3 0 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 12

Avg. .259 .207 .257 .333 .233 --.193 .274 .259 .143 .000 .000 .129

New York AB A.Torres cf 3 Dan.Murphy 2b 5 D.Wright 3b 5 Duda rf 5 Hairston lf 3 b-Nieuwenhuis ph-lf 2 I.Davis 1b 3 Cedeno ss 2 Nickeas c 3 c-Baxter ph 1 Parnell p 0 Byrdak p 0 F.Francisco p 0 J.Santana p 2 a-Turner ph 1 R.Ramirez p 0 d-Ro.Johnson ph-c 1 Totals 36

R 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

H 0 1 3 2 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11

BI 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

BB 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

SO 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 6

Avg. .308 .308 .387 .255 .232 .308 .183 .286 .222 .320 ------.091 .200 --.250

Cincinnati AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Cozart ss 5 0 1 1 0 3 .264 Stubbs cf 5 0 1 0 0 1 .256 Votto 1b 3 1 1 0 2 1 .292 B.Phillips 2b 4 0 2 0 1 0 .263 Bruce rf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .304 Rolen 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .174 Ludwick lf 3 0 1 1 1 2 .183 Mesoraco c 3 0 0 0 1 2 .227 Leake p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .200 Simon p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-Cairo ph 1 1 1 0 0 0 .231 Hoover p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Valdez ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .176 Arredondo p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Heisey ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .212 LeCure p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 35 3 9 3 5 13 Washington 312 100 000 — 7 12 0 Cincinnati 000 110 010 — 3 9 0 a-doubled for Simon in the 5th. b-grounded out for Hoover in the 6th. c-popped out for Arredondo in the 8th. LOB—Washington 7, Cincinnati 11. 2B—LaRoche (8), Bruce (8), Cairo (3). HR—Bernadina (2), off Leake; Espinosa (2), off Leake. SB—Bernadina (3), Zimmerman (2), Votto (2).

Miami Reyes ss Infante 2b H.Ramirez 3b Kearns lf f-Morrison ph Bell p Stanton rf G.Sanchez 1b

R 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 0

H 1 3 0 1 0 0 2 0

BI 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

SO 0 0 2 2 1 0 1 1

Avg. .234 .330 .213 .258 .277 --.268 .190

Washington IP G.Gonzalez W, 4-1 5 Stammen 2 1-3 Mattheus 2-3 S.Burnett 1 Cincinnati IP Leake L, 0-5 3 Simon 2 Hoover 1 Arredondo 2

NL Boxscores Marlins 6, Mets 5

AB 4 4 4 3 1 0 4 3

H 5 2 1 1 H 7 3 1 0

R 2 1 0 0 R 6 1 0 0

ER BB SO NP ERA 2 4 9 115 1.94 1 0 3 38 1.42 0 1 1 18 2.30 0 0 0 11 0.00 ER BB SO NP ERA 6 2 3 72 7.11 1 0 3 31 2.63 0 0 1 12 0.00 0 0 2 18 2.30

Houston Schafer cf Lowrie ss Altuve 2b Ca.Lee 1b Bogusevic rf C.Johnson 3b Maxwell lf W.Lopez p Myers p J.Castro c Norris p W.Wright p T.Buck lf Totals

AB 4 4 3 4 3 3 3 0 0 2 2 0 1 29

R 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H 0 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

BB 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2

SO 3 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 8

Avg. .252 .299 .325 .264 .232 .304 .278 ----.221 .154 --.265

Pittsburgh AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Tabata rf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .241 McLouth lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .186 A.McCutchen cf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .318 P.Alvarez 3b 3 0 0 0 0 3 .209 Walker 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .280 G.Jones 1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .257 a-McGehee ph-1b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .239 Barajas c 3 0 2 0 0 0 .157 1-J.Harrison pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .179 McKenry c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .206 Barmes ss 3 0 1 0 0 1 .158 Ja.McDonald p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .167 b-Presley ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .239 J.Hughes p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 29 0 4 0 0 11 Houston 010 000 000 — 1 4 1 Pittsburgh 000 000 000 — 0 4 0 a-struck out for G.Jones in the 7th. b-struck out for Ja.McDonald in the 8th. 1-ran for Barajas in the 8th. E—Norris (1). LOB—Houston 3, Pittsburgh 3. 2B—Lowrie (5), Barajas (4). 3B—Tabata (1). CS— A.McCutchen (3). S—Ja.McDonald. DP—Pittsburgh 1. Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Norris W, 3-1 6 3 0 0 0 8 94 3.95 W.Wright H, 5 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 4 3.52 W.Lopez H, 3 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 22 1.83 Myers S, 9-9 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 0.77 Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA McDonald L, 2-2 8 4 1 1 2 8 107 2.42 J.Hughes 1 0 0 0 0 0 19 1.53 T—2:41. A—19,878 (38,362).

Phillies 7, Padres 3 San Diego Venable cf Denorfia rf Headley 3b Alonso 1b Guzman lf Hundley c O.Hudson 2b Parrino ss Richard p Brach p c-Darnell ph Mikolas p Spence p Totals

AB 3 4 3 4 4 4 3 3 2 0 1 0 0 31

R 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

H 1 0 0 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7

BI 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

BB 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 2 3 2 1 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 14

Avg. .247 .271 .250 .300 .267 .186 .208 .200 .000 --.000 -----

Philadelphia AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Rollins ss 5 0 1 0 0 1 .229 Polanco 3b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .283 Victorino cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .244 Pence rf 3 1 0 0 1 1 .256 Wigginton 1b 2 2 0 0 2 0 .277 Ruiz c 3 2 3 3 1 0 .340 Mayberry lf 4 2 2 3 0 0 .240 Galvis 2b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .214 Worley p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-Luna ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Schneider ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .222 Bastardo p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Pierre ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .337 Qualls p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 33 7 10 7 4 3 San Diego 000 201 000 — 3 7 0 Philadelphia 020 201 20x — 7 10 1 a-was announced for Worley in the 6th. b-struck out for Luna in the 6th. c-grounded into a double play for Brach in the 7th. d-lined out for Bastardo in the 8th. E—Wigginton (4). LOB—San Diego 4, Philadelphia 6. 2B—Hundley (4), Polanco 2 (7), Galvis (8). HR—Alonso (1), off Worley; Mayberry (1), off Richard; Ruiz (6), off Richard. DP—Philadelphia 3. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP Richard L, 1-5 5 1-3 8 5 5 2 1 95 Brach 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 11 Mikolas 1 2 2 2 2 0 17 Spence 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP Worley W, 3-2 6 6 3 3 2 9 93 Bastardo H, 5 2 0 0 0 1 3 26 Qualls 1 1 0 0 0 2 13 T—2:25. A—44,056 (43,651).

ERA 5.32 2.89 9.00 4.35 ERA 3.07 1.80 3.18

Diamondbacks 5, Giants 1 San Francisco Pagan cf Arias 3b Me.Cabrera rf Posey 1b Pill lf H.Sanchez c Burriss 2b B.Crawford ss Bumgarner p Edlefsen p a-A.Huff ph Loux p Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 0 1 0 32

R 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 5

BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

SO 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 4

Avg. .256 .279 .321 .292 .244 .255 .246 .211 .111 .000 .194 ---

Arizona AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bloomquist ss 5 1 2 1 0 0 .219 A.Hill 2b 5 0 0 0 0 2 .248 J.Upton rf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .229 M.Montero c 3 1 1 1 1 1 .279 Goldschmidt 1b 4 1 3 2 0 1 .242 R.Roberts 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .207 G.Parra cf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .260 Pollock lf 3 1 2 1 1 0 .250 Corbin p 3 0 0 0 0 0 .167 Shaw p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Overbay ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .333 D.Hernandez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 34 5 9 5 3 7 San Francisco 100 000 000 — 1 5 2 Arizona 001 031 00x — 5 9 1 a-singled for Edlefsen in the 8th. b-reached on interference for Shaw in the 8th. E—B.Crawford (7), H.Sanchez (2), J.Upton (3). LOB—San Francisco 4, Arizona 9. 2B—Bloomquist (7), M.Montero (4), Pollock (1). HR—Me.Cabrera (2), off Corbin; Goldschmidt (2), off Bumgarner; Pollock (1), off Bumgarner. San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Bumgarner L, 5-2 6 7 5 4 2 5 100 2.80 Edlefsen 1 1 0 0 1 2 21 3.18 Loux 1 1 0 0 0 0 18 0.00 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Corbin W, 2-1 7 3 1 1 0 4 89 4.50 Shaw 1 1 0 0 0 0 13 2.51 D.Hernandez 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 2.20 T—2:30. A—35,792 (48,633).

Braves 9, Cardinals 7 (12 innings) Atlanta Bourn cf Prado lf Freeman 1b Uggla 2b McCann c C.Jones 3b Heyward rf Pastornicky ss Kimbrel p Minor p Durbin p a-J.Francisco ph C.Martinez p Medlen p c-Hinske ph Venters p O’Flaherty p d-Diaz ph L.Hernandez p f-J.Wilson ph-ss Totals

AB 6 5 4 6 6 4 6 5 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 48

R 1 1 0 2 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9

H 3 1 1 2 1 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13

BI 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7

BB 1 1 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6

SO 0 0 2 3 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 9

Avg. .326 .280 .283 .273 .225 .305 .264 .258 --.063 --.229 .000 1.000 .368 ----.281 .000 .154

St. Louis Furcal ss

AB R H BI BB SO Avg. 5 1 2 0 0 0 .362

Jay cf 6 1 2 0 0 2 .376 Holliday lf 5 1 1 1 1 2 .263 Beltran rf 5 2 4 4 1 1 .307 Craig 1b 4 1 1 1 2 2 .323 Y.Molina c 5 0 1 0 0 1 .297 M.Carpenter 3b 4 1 1 1 1 1 .268 Greene 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .211 Motte p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --e-Freese ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .309 McClellan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 g-Robinson ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .311 J.Garcia p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .250 V.Marte p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Rzepczynski p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Descalso ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .197 Boggs p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Schumaker 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .314 Totals 46 7 13 7 5 13 Atlanta 203 000 110 002 — 9 13 0 St. Louis 010 230 010 000 — 7 13 1 a-flied out for Durbin in the 6th. b-struck out for Rzepczynski in the 7th. c-struck out for Medlen in the 8th. d-flied out for O’Flaherty in the 10th. e-grounded into a double play for Motte in the 10th. f-flied out for L.Hernandez in the 12th. g-struck out for McClellan in the 12th. E—Holliday (1). LOB—Atlanta 10, St. Louis 11. 2B—Bourn (8), Prado (9), Uggla (6), McCann (3), Pastornicky (5), Holliday (6), Beltran (2). 3B—Beltran (1). HR—Uggla (5), off Rzepczynski; Heyward (5), off McClellan; M.Carpenter (2), off Minor; Beltran (11), off Minor; Craig (4), off Minor; Beltran (12), off Venters. DP—Atlanta 1. Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Minor 4 2-3 8 6 6 0 7 94 6.59 Durbin 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 5 8.03 C.Martinez 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 2.81 Medlen 1 0 0 0 0 2 16 2.29 Venters BS, 1-1 1 1 1 1 1 0 20 2.19 O’Flaherty 1 1 0 0 0 0 11 5.84 Hernandez W, 1-0 2 2 0 0 4 1 43 3.38 Kimbrel S, 11-12 1 1 0 0 0 2 14 2.77 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA J.Garcia 5 2-3 9 5 4 2 5 100 4.09 V.Marte H, 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 2.57 Rzepczynski 1 1 1 1 0 0 16 2.45 Boggs 1 2 1 1 2 2 31 2.57 Motte 2 0 0 0 0 2 33 1.98 McClellan L, 0-1 2 1 2 2 2 0 31 4.24 T—3:56. A—45,190 (43,975).

Dodgers 7, Rockies 3 Colorado Scutaro 2b Pacheco 3b C.Torres p b-Colvin ph Rogers p C.Gonzalez lf Tulowitzki ss Helton 1b Cuddyer rf Ra.Hernandez c Fowler cf Moyer p a-Nelson ph-3b Totals

AB 3 3 0 1 0 4 4 4 3 4 4 1 3 34

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 3

H 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 8

BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 3

BB 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

SO 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 6

Avg. .262 .227 --.314 .000 .310 .276 .247 .286 .253 .223 .111 .235

Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. D.Gordon ss 5 0 0 0 0 3 .218 M.Ellis 2b 3 2 2 3 1 0 .280 Kemp cf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .375 Ethier rf 4 2 3 2 0 0 .300 Abreu lf 4 0 1 1 0 1 .333 Guerra p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Elbert p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Coffey p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Belisario p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Uribe 3b 4 1 1 1 0 2 .247 Loney 1b 3 0 2 0 1 1 .227 Treanor c 4 1 2 0 0 0 .227 Capuano p 2 1 0 0 0 1 .111 Gwynn Jr. lf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .259 Totals 33 7 11 7 3 10 Colorado 000 000 102 — 3 8 0 Los Angeles 100 130 11x — 7 11 0 a-struck out for Moyer in the 6th. b-singled for C.Torres in the 8th. LOB—Colorado 6, Los Angeles 6. 2B—C.Gonzalez (5), M.Ellis (4), Ethier (10). 3B—Fowler (1). HR— Cuddyer (4), off Capuano; M.Ellis (1), off Moyer; Ethier (7), off C.Torres; Uribe (1), off Rogers. Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Moyer L, 1-3 5 7 5 5 1 7 95 4.66 C.Torres 2 2 1 1 2 2 35 2.25 Rogers 1 2 1 1 0 1 14 8.62 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Capuano W, 5-0 7 4 1 1 0 3 103 2.06 Guerra 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 17 5.14 Elbert 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 3 5.63 Coffey 2-3 3 2 2 0 1 25 16.20 Belisario 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 0.00 T—2:49. A—35,591 (56,000).

Brewers 8, Cubs 7 (13 innings) Chicago AB R H Re.Johnson cf 6 1 2 Je.Baker rf 2 0 0 c-DeJesus ph-rf 4 2 2 S.Castro ss 6 1 1 LaHair 1b-lf 6 0 0 A.Soriano lf 6 0 2 L.Castillo p 0 0 0 Mather 3b 2 0 0 Marmol p 0 0 0 Bowden p 0 0 0 e-Campana ph 1 0 0 Russell p 0 0 0 g-Cardenas ph 1 0 0 Dolis p 0 0 0 K.Wood p 1 0 0 Soto c 0 0 0 W.Castillo c-1b 6 0 3 Barney 2b 5 1 2 Garza p 2 0 0 Camp p 0 0 0 b-I.Stewart ph-3b 3 2 0 Totals 51 7 12

BI 0 0 5 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6

BB 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 7

SO 2 1 1 1 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 13

Avg. .191 .214 .266 .338 .359 .257 --.270 --.000 .314 --.000 --.000 .152 .176 .255 .071 --.189

Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Morgan cf 3 1 1 0 1 0 .197 f-Conrad ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Aoki cf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .220 R.Weeks 2b 4 1 0 0 1 2 .158 Braun lf 2 1 0 0 4 0 .307 Ar.Ramirez 3b 5 2 2 1 2 1 .227 Hart rf 7 2 4 3 0 0 .252 Kottaras c 1 1 0 0 3 0 .300 Fr.Rodriguez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Axford p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Dillard p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --h-Maysonet ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 1.000 M.Parra p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 i-Greinke ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .154 Chulk p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Green 1b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .250 Veras p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Loe p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Lucroy ph-c 2 0 1 3 1 0 .326 C.Izturis ss 4 0 1 0 2 0 .205 Wolf p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .091 a-Ishikawa ph-1b 2 0 0 0 0 2 .186 Totals 39 8 11 7 14 7 Chicago 000 000 403 000 0 — 7 12 1 Milwaukee 100 000 402 000 1 — 8 11 1 No outs when winning run scored. a-struck out for Wolf in the 6th. b-was hit by a pitch for Camp in the 7th. c-homered for Je.Baker in the 7th. d-doubled for Loe in the 7th. e-fouled out for Bowden in the 8th. f-flied out for Morgan in the 8th. g-flied out for Russell in the 9th. h-singled for Dillard in the 9th. i-grounded into a double play for M.Parra in the 11th. E—Camp (1), Ar.Ramirez (4). LOB—Chicago 13, Milwaukee 15. 2B—Re.Johnson (3), W.Castillo (1), Ar.Ramirez (10), Hart (8), Lucroy (4). 3B—DeJesus (2), Barney (2). HR—DeJesus (1), off Loe; Hart (7), off Dolis. SB—S.Castro (12). DP—Chicago 4; Milwaukee 1. Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP Garza 5 3 1 1 5 3 93 Camp 1 1 0 0 1 1 17 Marmol H, 2 2-3 1 2 2 1 1 25 Bowden BS, 1-1 1-3 2 2 2 1 0 9 Russell 1 0 0 0 1 1 17 Dolis BS, 2-5 2 2 2 2 2 0 41 K.Wood 2 0 0 0 3 1 25 L.Castillo L, 0-1 0 2 1 1 0 0 8 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP Wolf 6 4 0 0 3 5 98 Veras H, 4 1-3 1 3 3 1 0 21 Loe BS, 1-1 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 9 Fr.Rodriguez H, 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 10 Axford BS, 1-7 2-3 2 3 1 0 3 29 Dillard 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1 M.Parra 2 1 0 0 2 3 30 Chulk W, 1-0 2 2 0 0 1 2 33 L.Castillo pitched to 4 batters in the 13th. T—5:04. A—40,097 (41,900).

ERA 2.56 3.18 6.35 5.79 0.68 3.38 9.95 7.04 ERA 5.63 7.07 2.45 5.28 6.10 5.02 2.20 6.75


SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

D5

PREP ROUNDUP

Sisters baseball finishes unbeaten in Sky-Em Bulletin staff report SISTERS — With their eyes on a bigger prize, the Sisters Outlaws polished off a perfect league baseball season Friday with a 6-2 home victory over Cottage Grove. The win capped a 15-0 SkyEm League season for Sisters, matching the league record of the 2003 Outlaw team that went unbeaten in the Capital Conference. Joey Morgan and Shane Groth each had two of Sisters’ eight hits, and each delivered a run-scoring double in the fifth inning as the league champs widened their lead with the game’s final runs. Nicky Blumm, Eli Boettner and Groth shared the pitching duties for the Outlaws, combining on a three-hitter. Groth nailed down the victory with a 1-2-3 seventh inning. In preparation for the postseason and hoping to improve on its No. 5 status in the latest Oregon School Activities Association rankings for Class 4A, Sisters (19-3 overall) hosts 3A Grant Union in a nonleague doubleheader today starting at noon. The Outlaws also are scheduled to entertain Class 5A Bend High on Tuesday in a final tuneup for a home play-in game on Thursday. In other Friday prep events: GIRLS TENNIS Cowgirls are top team in SD5 BAKER CITY — Crook County’s Catherine Brown and Kayla Morgan won the Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 5 doubles tournament, while their teammate Elsa Harris, a freshman, claimed the district’s singles title as the Cowgirls rolled to the SD5 championship. Crook County advanced three doubles teams and Harris in singles to next week’s state tournament in Eugene. Annie Fraser and Leslie Teater knocked off their Cowgirl teammates Ali Apperson and Lisa Pham in the doubles third-place match. The three-day Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state championships kick off Thursday at the University of Oregon. Outlaws finish second at districts, send four to state BLACK BUTTE RANCH — Sisters seniors Jen Houk and Elise Herron finished third in doubles play at the Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 4 championships to secure a spot at next week’s state tournament and helped the host Outlaws finish second overall at the eight-team event. Houk and Herron, who also qualified for state in 2011, defeated their Sisters teammates Page Tosello and Shelbi Thomp-

WINDING UP

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Summit’s Glenn Sherman winds up for a shot on goal during the High Desert League title match on Friday night at Sisters High School. Sherman scored four goals as Summit defeated Sisters 13-12 in overtime for the league title. See story, D1.

son, 6-0, 6-1 in the third-place match. Tosello and Thompson also earned state berths by virtue of their top-four district finish. The two Outlaw juniors upset North Bend’s Camille Fisher and Sarah Escoto, the bracket’s No. 4 seed, 6-4, 64 in Thursday’s quarterfinal round. North Bend won the tournament with 31 points, while the Outlaws placed second with 26 points. The threeday Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state championships start Thursday at the University of Oregon in Eugene. BOYS TENNIS Cowboy duo places second BAKER CITY — Crook County’s Jared Anderson and Brady Slater lost in the championship final of the Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District

5 doubles bracket to finish second overall at the district event. Anderson and Slater qualified for the Class 4A/3A/ 2A/1A state tourney next week based on their top-four finish at the SD5 district tourney. BOYS LACROSSE Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Harney County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 SISTERS — Bend High secured the High Desert League’s No. 3 postseason seed with a convincing league playoff win over Harney County at Sisters High School. Brandon Fitzpatrick scored three goals for the winners and was one of six Lava Bears to record an assist. Cade Hinderlider scored two goals and Matt Hogstad added a goal for Bend, which led 4-0 at halftime. The Lava Bears (12-8) will play Wednesday in

the Oregon High School Lacrosse Association state playin round; opponent, game time and site are to be announced. BASEBALL Elmira . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 ELMIRA — Six La Pine errors helped Elmira score seven unearned runs as the Hawks ended their season with a SkyEm League defeat. Sophomore Casey Schneider accounted for both of La Pine’s hits with a double and a single. The injury-plagued Hawks finished with a record of 4-11 in SkyEm play, 5-18 overall. La Pine coach Bryn Card noted that despite Friday’s result and a rash of injuries throughout the spring, the Hawks improved on last season’s total of two wins. “We’re building a lot

of positive things here,” said Card. “We’ve just got to stay healthy.” Madras . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 North Marion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 AURORA — Kyle Palmer pitched a three-hit shutout and Jack Fine drove in three runs with a pair of doubles to lead the White Buffaloes to victory in their Tri-Valley Conference season finale. Despite the win, Madras must settle for second place because front-running La Salle won 8-0 at Estacada on Friday to clinch the league championship. Madras (13-9 overall) finished league play at 10-5, while La Salle finished at 11-4. In addition to Jack Fine’s two doubles, Jordan Brown, Cody Shepherd and Bob Fine had two hits apiece for the White Buffaloes, who will host a Class 4A play-in game next week. SOFTBALL Redmond. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-12 Sheldon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-1 EUGENE — The Panthers swept a Class 6A Special District 1 doubleheader to improve to 7-2 in district play. Cassidy Edwards earned the win in the opener, striking out six over four innings. Ashley Pesek picked up the victory in the second game. Both pitchers also had strong days at the plate as Edwards recorded three doubles during the two games and Pesek added two doubles. Marissa Duchi and Tayler Dockins both hit home runs in the doubleheader, and Duchi logged four RBIs in the first game. Redmond (22-3 overall) will play at Clackamas on Wednesday in a nonleague playoff tuneup. North Marion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Madras . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 AURORA — The White Buffaloes fell to North Marion in Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference play but still finished the regular season as the league champions. Cheyenne Parsons led the Buffs with a double. Madras (17-7 overall, 12-3 TriValley) plays Mountain View on Monday before hosting a Class 4A play-in game later in the week. Elmira . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24 La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 LA PINE — The visiting Falcons improved to 20-1 overall and 15-0 in Sky-Em League play with the shutout victory over the Hawks. Elmira, which is third in the Oregon School Activities Association Class 4A rankings, recorded 17 hits against La Pine, while Falcon pitcher Alyson Boytz no-hit the Hawks. La Pine (2-22 overall, 1-14 Sky-Em) concludes its season Monday with a road game against Bend High.

TRACK AND FIELD Hawk sprinter gets four wins INDEPENDENCE — Jeremy Desrosiers led the La Pine boys to a second-place team finish at the Central Invitational, winning the long jump, 400 and 200 as well as running a leg on the first-place 400 relay. The Hawks placed second to Newport by just 2 1⁄2 points, while the La Pine girls placed fifth. Holli Glenn won the triple jump, while Chloee Sazama was second in the 400. La Pine’s Colton George took first in both boys hurdle events, and the Hawks’ Deion Mock took second in the pole vault. Brent Sullivan, of Madras, was second in the boys high jump, while his sister Laura Sullivan won the girls high jump and placed second in the 100 hurdles. La Pine will compete at the Class 4A Sky-Em League district meet in Sweet Home on Thursday and next Saturday, while Madras will travel to Molalla for the Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference meet, which will be staged next Friday and Saturday. Bulldog boys and girls in fourth at TRC championships JUNCTION CITY — Lori Sandy, of Culver, took first in the triple jump on the first day of the Class 2A Tri-River Conference championships with a mark of 33 feet, 2 inches. The Bulldogs are currently in fourth place in both the boys (13 points) and girls (34) team standings. Regis leads the girls team scoring with 77 points, while Central Linn is in first with 45 points on the boys side. Other strong performances for Culver included Cassie Fulton’s third-place finish in the girls javelin (9411), and a fourth-place effort by Miguel Gutierrez in the boys pole vault (9-0). Gerson Gonzalez also took fourth in the boys triple jump (38-05 3⁄4). The district meet concludes today at Junction City High School. GIRLS LACROSSE Bend United . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Marist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 EUGENE — Bend United topped Oregon Girls Lacrosse Association Southern Division-rival Marist in a leaguetiebreaker for the Southern Division’s fourth and final seed in the state playoffs. Kyra Hajovsky led the visitors with four goals. Trinity Tankersley, Kiersten Hizak and Katie Alhart all scored twice for Bend United, and keeper Jocelyn Parker recorded 23 saves. Bend United will play a state playoff game on Monday against an opponent who is yet to be determined.

1,500 — 1, Daniel Ewing, B, 4:21.22; 2, Dakota Thornton, MV, 4:25.06; 3, Grayson Munn, CC, 4:27.06. 3,000 — 1, James Bowlin, S, 9:35.92; 2, Alan Nielsen, S, 9:40.13; 3, Angel Hernandez, MV, 9:56.44. 100 — 1, T.J. Peay, S, 11.28; 2, Hunter Bourland, CC, 11.43; 3, Kellee Johnson, R, 11.65. 400 — 1, Michael Wilson, S, 50.18; 2, Tom Steelhammer, B, 51.84; 3, Chris McBride, MV, 53.15. 110 hurdles — 1, Danny Verdieck, B, 14.85; 2, Dantly Wilcox, MV, 16.13; 3, Tyler Rockwood, CC, 16.41. 800 — 1, Luke Hinz, S, 1:56.90; 2, Samuel Naffziger, S, 1:57.70; 3, Nathan Guyer, S, 1:58.38. 200 — 1, Mitch Modin, MV, 22.49; 2, Hunter Bourland, CC, 23.19; 3, Nathan Lybarger, S, 23.21. 300 hurdles — 1, Michael Wilson, S, 39.89, Danny Verdieck, B, 41.34; 3, Kellee Johnson, R, 41.75. 1,600 relay — 1, Summit (Maunder, Guyer, Laubacher, Lybarger) 3:27.20; 2, Bend 3:33.60; 3, Mountain View 3:34.52. High jump — 1, Bradley Laubacher, S, 6-08.00; 2, J.C. Grim, B, 6-04.00; 3, Michael Menefee, S, 602.00. Discus — 1, Hayden Czmowski, MV, 145-05; 2, Justin Warren, MV, 144-05; 3, Gabriel Giacci, R, 137-00. Pole vault — 1, Joel Johnson, B, 13-06.00; 2, Dallas Fagen, B, 13-06.00; 3, Camden Stoddard, B, 13-00.00. Shot — 1, Scott Steinman, B, 46-02.50; 2, Trevor Roberts, MV, 43-08.00; 3, Phelan Lund, R, 43-01.00. Javelin — 1, J.C. Grim, B, 183-07; 2, Tanner Manselle, R, 176-10; 3, Hayden Czmowski, MV, 160-11. Triple jump — 1, J.C. Grim, B, 44-01.00; 2,

William Butler, S, 43-05.00; 3, Connor Scott, B, 3906.50. Long jump — 1, Mitch Modin, MV, 22-07.50; 2, J.C. Grim, B, 21-02.50; 3, William Butler, S, 2100.25.

PREP SCOREBOARD Softball Friday’s results ——— Class 6A Special District 1 First Game (5 innings) Redmond 102 0(10) — 13 14 1 Sheldon 000 00 — 0 3 3 Edwards, Pesek (5) and Abbas, Ware (5); Jones and Walker. W—Edwards. L—Jones. 2B—Redmond: Edwards, Pesek. HR—Redmond: Duchi. Second game (5 innings) Redmond 115 15 — 12 13 2 Sheldon 000 10 — 1 5 4 Pesek and Ware; Chin and Witty. W—Pesek. L—Chin. 2B—Redmond: Edwards (2), Ware (2). HR—Redmond: Dockins. ——— Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference Madras 000 200 0 — 2 6 5 North Marion 301 022 0 — 8 9 1 Moe and Hulsey; Lee and Breshears. W—Lee. L—Moe. 2B—Madras: Parsons; North Marion: Meeuwson, Gonzalez. ——— Class 4A Sky-Em League ——— (5 innings) Elmira 298 50 — 24 17 1 La Pine 000 00 — 0 0 6 Boytz and Thoms; K. Parrish and Fisher. W—Boytz. L—K. Parrish. 2B—Elmira: Gabica 2, Thoms, Kesling, Phillips. 3B—Elmira: Lay. HR—Elmira: Boytz. Thursday’s result ——— Class 4A Sky-Em League Cottage Grove 6, Sisters 5

Baseball Friday’s results ——— Class 6A Special District 1 ——— First game Redmond 000 020 0 — 2 3 1 Sheldon 000 000 0 — 0 4 0 Abbas and Springer; Alie and McDaniel. W—Abbas. L—Alie. 2B—Redmond: Hanks. ——— Second game Redmond 102 201 0 — 6 10 0 Sheldon 000 202 1 — 5 7 1 Thomas, Bordges (5) and Payne; Tokatly and McDaniel. W—Thomas. L—Tokatly. 2B—Sheldon: McDaniel. 3B—Redmond: Lau, Dahlen. HR—Sheldon: Strahm. ——— Class 4A Sky-Em League ——— La Pine 000 000 0 — 0 2 6 Elmira 420 300 x — 9 8 0

C. Schneider, Watkins (5) and Morton; Engholm, McMassen (6) and Fay. W—Engholm. L—C. Schneider. 2B—La Pine: C. Schneider; Elmira: Keeler. 3B—Elmira: Boggs 2, Fay. ——— Class 4A Sky-Em League ——— Cottage Grove 001 010 0 — 2 3 3 Sisters 200 220 x — 6 8 4 Tuerffs, Jo. Denny (3), Je. Denny (5) and Bloom; Blumm, Boettner (5), Groth (7) and Morgan. W— Blumm. L—Turff. 2B—Sisters: Morgan, Groth. ——— Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference ——— Madras 141 000 0 — 6 9 1 North Marion 000 000 0 — 0 3 3 Palmer and Brown; Beachy, Breashoars (3) and Barrell. W—Palmer. L—Beachy. 2B—Madras: J. Fine 2, B. Fine; North Marion: Robles. 3B—Madras: Brown.

in Junction City Day 1 (Winners and Culver finishers in the top eight) First-day team scores — Regis 77, East Linn Christian 49, Kennedy 37, Culver 34, Santiam 13, Scio 12, Central Linn 10. 3,000 — 1, Lauren Stokley, K, 11:51.06. High jump — 1, Monica Webb, R, 5-01.00; 4, Cassie Fulton, C, 4-08.00. Discus — 1, Jaclyn Fessler, R, 104-07. Pole vault — 1, Zoe Engwall, E, 9-06.00; 4, Cassie Page, C, 7-06.00; 5, Taylor Sandy, C, 7-00.00; 7, Micheala Miller, C, 5-06.00. Javelin — 1, Kassie Linville, E, 118-01; 3, Cassie Fulton, C, 94-11. Triple jump — 1, Lori Sandy, C, 33-02.00; 6, Gabrielle Alley, C, 29-09.00.

Friday’s Results ——— Girls ——— Central Invitational in Independence Team scores — Newport 224.5, Estacada 131, Central 94, Junction City 86.5, La Pine 59, Madras 35. (Winners and Central Oregon finishers in the top eight) 400-meter relay — 1, Estacada (Teel, Lindland, Chavez, Settle) 50.60; 4, La Pine 53.50. 1,500 — 1, Mariah Johnson, E, 5:22.53. 3,000 — 1, Mariah Johnson, E, 11:39.94. 100 — 1, Genna Settle, E, 12.68; 6, Kristin Jasa, M, 14.19. 400 — 1, Jamilla Gambee, JC, 1:03.09; 2, Chloee Sazama, LP, 1:03.23. 100 hurdles — 1, Cherilyn Bunker, N, 16.73; 2, Laura Sullivan, M, 17.36. 800 — 1, Isabel Iboa, JC, 2:36.02; 7, Josephine Hunt, M, 3:09.59. 200 — 1, Genna Settle, E, 26.10; 5, Kristin Jasa, M, 29.15. 300 hurdles — 1, Kacie Hargett, N, 49.97; 3, Holli Glenn, LP, 51.07; 6, Laura Sullivan, M, 53.31; 7, McKenna Boen, LP, 55.55. 1,600 relay — 1, Newport (Dean, Lopez, Folkerts, Hargett) 4:37.68. High jump — 1, Laura Sullivan, M, 5-04.00. Discus — 1, Cherilyn Bunker, N, 114-00; 2, Ashley Agenbroad, LP, 109-00; 4, Alexis Tilman, LP, 96-11. Pole vault — 1, Morgan Annable, N, 10-02.00; 4, Kristin Jasa, M, 8-00.00; 6, Carly Audia, LP, 8-00.00. Shot — 1, Cherilyn Bunker, N, 43-04.00; 4, Alexis Tilman, LP, 32-03.00; 7, Ashley Agenbroad, LP, 2800.00. Javelin — 1, Kacie Hargett, N, 134-04. Triple jump — 1, Holli Glenn, LP, 32-00.50. Long jump — 1, Genna Settle, E, 16-07.00.

Boys ——— Friday’s Results ——— Central Invitational At Central High, Independence (Winners and Central Oregon finishers in the top eight) Team scores — Newport 162.5, La Pine 160, Estacada 112, Central 97, Junction City 74, Madras 39.5 400-meter relay — 1, La Pine (Desrosiers, Mock, Kimmel, Neet), 44.72 1,500 — 1, Chris MacMurray, E, 4:15.94; 3, Tyress TurnsPlenty, LP, 4:45.23; 4, Brandon Hawes, M, 4:46.55; 5, Austin Smith, LP, 4:53.22 3,000 — 1, Theo Puentes, N, 9:57.09; 2, Brandon Hawes, M, 10:25.35 100 — 1, Conner Gibson, JC, 11.69; 3, Deion Mock, LP, 12.14; 5, Zack Neet, LP, 12.26 400 — 1, Jeremy Desrosiers, LP, 51.17; 7, Paul Yow, M, 56.8 110 hurdles — 1, Colton George, LP, 15.64; 6, Chance Link, LP, 20.16 800 — 1, Chris MacMurray, E, 1:58.85; 4, Nico Haddad, LP, 2:16.94 200 — 1, Jeremy Desrosiers, LP, 23.25; 4, Kole Kimmel, LP, 24.46 300 hurdles — 1, Colton George, LP, 41.55; 4, Keegan Kriz, LP, 47.84; 8, Zachery Benham, M, 51.66 1,600 relay — 1, Newport 3:39.83; 3, La Pine 3:47.02; 4, Madras 3:48.21 High jump — 1, Rob Hoeft, N, 6-2; 2, Brent Sullivan, M, 6-0 Discus — 1, Justin Rich, E, 131-01; 3, Travis Harrison, LP, 122-02; 4, Kasey Cabral, M, 116-01; 6, Kole Kimmel, LP, 115-11; 7, Devon Cram-Hill,LP, 115-05; 8, Zephaniah Phillips, M, 105-10. Pole vault — 1, Oshay Dunamore, N, 14-6; 2, Deion Mock, LP, 14-6; 3, Dylan Seay, LP, 14-6; 4, Isaac Fisher, M, 11-6 Shot — 1, Justin Rich, E, 48-01; 3, Travis Harrison, LP, 46-02; 5, Kyle Contreras, LP, 41-01; 6, Devon Cram-Hill, LP, 40-09 Javelin — 1, Tanner Omlid, C, 175-03; 2, Kyle Contreras, LP, 152-00 Triple jump — 1, Oshay Dunamore, N, 43-06; 3, Dylan Seay, LP, 41-00 Long jump — 1, Jeremy Desrosiers, LP, 20-10; 4, Dylan Seay, LP, 19-05

Class 2A Tri-River Conference Championships

Class 2A Tri-River Conference Championships

Track & field

in Junction City Day 1 First-day team scores — Central Linn 45, Regis 40, East Linn Christian 29, Culver 13, Santiam 11, Scio 10, Kennedy 8. 3,000 — 1, Joseph Ewers, CL, 8:58.72. Pole vault — 1, Paul Bentz, R, 13-00.00; 4, Miguel Gutierrez, C, 9-00.00. Shot put — 1, Trever Walker, CL, 47-05.50. Triple jump — 1, Peter Meyr, CL, 41-09.50; 4, Gerson Gonzalez, C, 38-05.75; 7, Josue Gonzalez C, 37-02.50; 8, Clay Gibson, C, 36-08.25. Thursday’s Results ——— Girls ——— Intermountain Conference Championships At Bend High Team scores — Summit 149.5, Mountain View 81, Bend 64, Redmond 49.5, Crook County 11. 400-meter relay — 1, Mountain View (Wilson, Kroeger, Anderson, Bolster) 48.80; 2, Summit 48.90; Redmond 49.20. 1,500 — 1, Jessica Wolfe, B, 5:10.47; 2, Jenna Mattox, B, 5:11.43; 3, Olivia Moehl, S, 5:11.57. 3,000 — 1, Kira Kelly, S, 10:47.60; 2, Sara Fristoe, S, 10:55.34; 3, Melissa Hubler, B, 11:18.66. 100 — 1, Sarah Frazier, S, 12.50; 2, Krysta Kroeger, MV, 12.68; 3, Kristen Place, MV, 12.88. 400 — 1, Miranda Brown, S, 1:01.23; 2, Kaely Gordon, S, 1:02.38; 3, Cassidy Wheeler, B, 1:03.23. 100 hurdles — 1, Monika Koehler, R, 15.96; 2, Josie Kinney, S, 16.08; 3, Alexa Evert, B, 16.80. 800 — 1, Ashley Maton, S, 2:15.77; 2, Keelin Moehl, S, 2:21.10; 3, Megan Fristoe, S, 2:21.42. 200 — 1, Kysta Kroeger, MV, 25.76; 2, Kiersten Ochsner, R, 26.02; 3, Amanda Pease, B, 26.7. 300 hurdles — 1, Dakota Steen, R, 47.04; 2, Josie Kinney, S, 48.29; 3, Tash Anderson, MV, 49.61. 1,600 relay — 1, Summit (Brown, Johannesen, Gordon, Kinney) 4:05.77; 2, Redmond 4:10.67; 3, Mountain View 4:14.43. High jump — 1, Lucinda Howard, S, 5-06.00; 2, Sarah Taylor, S, 5-03.00; 3, Danielle Taylor, S, 502.00. Discus — 1, Anna Roshak, MV, 110-11; 2, McKenzie Hidalgo, R, 102-02; 3, Molly Viles, CC, 97-09. Pole vault — 1, Tesla Wright, B, 11-00.00; 2, Annie Sidor, S, 10-06.00; 3, Emily Geddes, B, 10-06.00. Shot — 1, Anna Roshak, MV, 39-00.00; 2, Marci Johnston, CC, 33-01.50; 3, Myah Harter, S, 30-11.50. Javelin — 1, Brianna Yeakey, R, 108-00; 2, Mercedes Mingus, S, 101-09; 3, Maddie Wettig, S, 96-04. Triple jump — 1, Lucinda Howard, S, 36-00.00; 2, Shaina Zollman, MV, 34-08.25; 3, Torie Morris, MV, 34-01.50. Long jump — 1, Lucinda Howard, S, 17-02.50; 2, Shaina Zollman, MV, 16-11.25; 3, Torie Morris, MV, 16-03.50. ——— Boys ——— Team scores — Summit 110, Bend 101, Mountain View 71, Redmond 40, Crook County 31. 400-meter relay — 1, Summit (Peay, Thomas, Wilson, Ritchey) 43.71; 2, Crook County 44.61; 3, Redmond 46.25.

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D6

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012

HORSE RACING

Challengers lining up to take on I’ll Have Another By Beth Harris The Associated Press

After I’ll Have Another’s surprising win in the Kentucky Derby at 15-1 odds, the California colt will be running in the Preakness with a bull’s-eye on his back as perhaps racing’s next superstar. Trainer Doug O’Neill is hoping that I’ll Have Another can replicate his 11⁄2-length victory at Pimlico next weekend with a chance to capture the Triple Crown three weeks later in the Belmont Stakes. A full field of 14 is expected for the 13⁄16-mile Preakness, a sign that not everyone finds the Derby winner all that intimidating. “In this day and age, people aren’t going to be put off at taking a shot in the Preakness,” said Graham Motion, who won last year’s Derby with Animal Kingdom and trains Went the Day Well, fourth in this year’s Derby. “It’s going to take a lot to intimidate people not to come back in the Preakness.” Went the Day Well will test I’ll Have Another again. Other Derby horses being considered for a shot are Bob Baffert’s duo of Bodemeister and Liaison; Creative Cause, who was fifth at Churchill Downs; Hansen, ninth in the Derby; and Optimizer, who was 11th. Hansen’s connections are expected to wait until early next week to decide. O’Neill singled out Bodemeister and Went the Day Well as two rivals that “would be scary.” Went the Day Well was slow getting out of the gate and fell several lengths back going into the first turn in the Derby. “With a clear trip, he could be more of a factor,” O’Neill said. Motion agreed, saying, “Every time I’ve run this horse he’s improved.” Bodemeister set a blistering early pace in the Derby only to be caught in the final 100 yards by I’ll Have Another and settled for second. Liaison was sixth. Five-time Preakness winner Baffert planned to confirm his duo’s status this weekend after returning to Churchill Downs from his base in California. “I respect Bodemeister and his connections big-time,” O’Neill said. “I’d rather he didn’t run, but if he runs, we have a colt that’s good enough and versatile enough to stick close and not let Bodemeister have everything his own way.” Pimlico oddsmaker Frank Carulli has indicated that if Bodemeister runs, he would make him the favorite over the Derby champ.

Rookie Continued from D1 Take that, John Elway! Quarterbacks invariably display outstanding “leadership qualities” at rookie camps, perhaps because there is no pressure whatsoever and they have been barking orders in huddles since their Pop Warner days. It is hard to imagine what a quarterback would have to do to show poor leadership skills during these film sessions, light workouts and noncontact drills — call out sick, perhaps? Or cower in a lavatory stall and refuse to come out to call a play? Ryan Tannehill of the Dolphins has less experience than the other highly drafted quarterbacks because he played wide receiver for more than two seasons in college. But all rookie camp stories spin on the positive axis, so Tannehill’s familiarity with the Texas A&M offense, which is closely related to the Dolphins’ new offense, actually gives him an edge on other rookies. “I am sure, as opposed to some of the other rookie quarterbacks that are practicing, he probably feels a little more comfortable when he puts his head on the pillow at night,” said Dolphins coach Joe Philbin, whose offense also features a high thread count and patented memory foam. Tannehill’s first pass of rookie camp was an interception or, in rookie-camp speak, a perfect pass that bounced out of an unknown receiver’s hands and into an unknown defender’s arms. Griffin, meanwhile, hit on 14 of 20 passes in Redskins team drills, a 70 percent completion rate exactly as meaningful as his 78-of-84 performance against undefended receivers at his Pro Day. (Griffin himself called Pro Days beauty pageants.) Off the field, players attended meetings and watched film, no doubt looking incredibly poised while doing so. Griffin watched game tape of Rex Grossman and Donovan McNabb running Shanahan’s offense, which is a little like showing rookie cops “Bad Lieutenant,” but true leaders can learn from counterexamples. Quarterbacks are not the

Racer

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Biffle takes pole for Sprint Cup race The Associated Press DARLINGTON, S.C. — Sprint Cup points leader Greg Biffle feels he’s running like he used to at Darlington Raceway, and that’s bad news for the rest of the Southern 500 field. Biffle earned his second pole at Darlington and the 11th of his career with a fast lap of 180.257 mph Friday to squeeze past the Hendrick Motorsports duo of Jimmie Johnson and Kasey Kahne. “I said it three times, I’m having such a great time driving these race cars,” Biffle said. “This is what a racecar driver looks forward to in showing up every weekend and having a fast car to drive. They’re sure making my life easy.” Ryan Newman starts fourth followed by Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr., Carl Edwards and Denny Hamlin, a winner at Phoenix and Kansas this year. Regan Smith, the 2011 Darlington winner, was ninth and Jeff Burton qualifying 10th. For a long time Friday, it looked like an all-Hendrick front row after Kahne had a hot lap of 179.556 mph and teammate Johnson matched him a short time later. That’s when Biffle took to the track for his pole-winning performance. “It was a pretty uneventful lap,” Biffle said. “The car’s got a ton of grip. It stuck to the race track really, really well.” And it’s got Biffle thinking he’s got the stuff to continue his strong start: “I feel that special season already. I certainly think that we’re going to be tough in competition all year,” he said. Biffle was a Darlington master since first running here in 2003. He won in 2005 and 2006 after the track’s schedule was cut to one race and the date moved to Mother’s Day weekend. Biffle’s finished in the top 15 or better in eight of his 11 Sprint Cup races here. Still, Biffle was uneasy coming to Darlington this week. For all his success, Biffle’s car wasn’t what he felt it should be the past four races. He was 43rd in 2008, then 22nd here two

only players who draw praise during rookie camps. “He was excellent during his first day,” Vikings coach Leslie Frazier said of offensive tackle Matt Kalil, the fourth overall pick. “His ability to pick up information was encouraging as well.” Kalil said that learning the Vikings’ playbook was simply a matter of translating terminology. “It’s like taking Spanish class in college,” he said. Undergraduate football players take note: Dual-major in Spanish and architectural design, and you will become a playbook-absorbing machine when not designing Catalan arches. Doing exactly what you were drafted to do can generate not only praise but also the revelation that your coach has little idea who his team drafted. “Josh caught a punt and he took off like a guy shot out of rocket, and I thought: ‘That guy has a nice little burst. I better see who that is,’ ” Frazier said of Josh Robinson, his team’s third-round pick. Even injuries are no cause for alarm, as a rookie like cornerback Morris Claiborne can excel in the theater of his mind. “I was getting mental reps,” said Claiborne, who watched Cowboys practices with a cast on his arm after recent surgery on his wrist. Coaches could not peer into Claiborne’s brain to determine if they were quality reps, so they heaped praise on the fourth-round pick Kyle Wilbur instead. “He’s a smart kid,” defensive coordinator Rob Ryan said. “He’s a nonstop guy,” coach Jason Garrett said. As impressive as Wilbur may have been, it is not hard to recognize that many of these compliments are interchangeable, particularly in light of Frazier’s admission that many coaches can still barely identify their own players. Rookie camp is also the time to justify controversial draft selections. The Jaguars drew criticism for selecting punter Bryan Anger with the seventh pick of the third round, the highest a punter had been taken since 1982. But Anger’s punts hung in the air for more than five seconds during the

years later. “The car just wasn’t in the race track,” he said. “I knew what I needed to do different.” Johnson will start next to Biffle based on owner’s points. Johnson and Kahne give the Hendrick team a strong chance to win that elusive 200th career Sprint Cup event. It has been 16 races since Johnson’s victory at Kansas last October brought Hendrick Motorsports its 199th win. “I left a little speed out there and Greg certainly found it,” Johnson said. “It would’ve been nice to have a Hendrick front row. But it was a very productive day.” Also on Friday: Logano wins another Nationwide race DARLINGTON, S.C. — Joey Logano wrecked leader Elliott Sadler five laps from the end, then broke free during a green-white-checkered finish at Darlington Raceway for his second straight Nationwide Series victory. Logano was in third place after the fifth caution period tightened up the race at the end. Logano bumped leader Sadler at the restart, turning the lead car into the wall. Logano then shot past Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin during NASCAR’s version of overtime and held on for his third series victory of the season. Hamlin finished second, giving him five top-two placings in his seven Nationwide races here. Brad Keselowski was third, followed by Sam Hornish Jr. and Austin Dillon. Indy practice opens today INDIANAPOLIS — IndyCar Series officials are announcing a change that will increase the horsepower of engines by 40 to 50 in time for Indianapolis 500 qualifying. The change will be made for next Friday’s practice and both days of next weekend’s qualifying. Drivers believe the move will increase speeds by 4 to 5 mph in qualifying. Practice is scheduled to open today without the extra boost. Indy is the first oval race this season, and even veterans are anxious to see how the new cars will handle on the Brickyard’s 2.5-mile track.

Jaguars’ sessions, the midspring equivalent of a kicker making 65-yard field goals during pregame warm-ups. “Rarely do you have a guy that kicks it that far that can hang it for that long,” Jaguars coach Mike Mularkey said. And rarely do punters earn headlines for routine drills before Mother’s Day. At least Anger’s punts were actual punts. Rex Ryan credited the Jets’ first-round pick, Quinton Coples, with “about six” sacks when the Jets practiced in helmets, shoulder pads and shorts last week: minimal hitting, no tackling, no touching the quarterback. When is a sack not a sack? When no one is in uniform, no quarter-

back is endangered and the blocker is unlikely to be in the NFL by mid-August. Add “estimated imaginary sacks” to hang times and completion percentages as the most dubious statistics to come from the rookie camp optimism factory. If Claiborne claims to have intercepted a dozen passes in his mind while watching the Cowboys practice, we should just take him at his word.

Continued from D1 DeJoria is one of only a few women who have competed in drag racing since Shirley Muldowney, who started as a street racer in the late 1950s and in 1965 became the first woman licensed by the NHRA to drive a gasoline-powered dragster in a professional category. As the daughter of John Paul DeJoria — founder of Paul Mitchell Hair Care Products, John Paul Pet Products and Tequila Patron — it would have been easy for the heir to a billion-dollar empire to follow in her father’s footsteps or spend his money partying with Hollywood celebrities. Instead, she relocated from California to Gainesville, Fla., to attend Frank Hawley’s Drag Racing School, the preferred school for apprentice drag racers. Wanting to be taken seriously by drag racers, DeJoria — whose tall and slender frame is hidden under her long and shiny black hair — chose to keep her family name out of the sport — at first. “Because that can definitely throw fog in the mix. People get clouded visions of you and they think that you are something that you’re not,” she said. “I could be perceived as the Paris Hilton of drag racing, but that’s just not my style. I wanted to prove myself as a driver. Not just a female driver, but a driver. And I think I’ve done that.” Today, her 2012 Toyota Camry has Patron’s bright green logo emblazoned on the side. DeJoria began racing in 2005 at the amateur level in a 1963 Corvette Roadster in the NHRA Super Gas category. That same season she moved up, driving a rear-engine Super Comp dragster. She won the Sportsman Nationals in Fontana, Calif., less than a year after her debut. By 2009, she was racing cars with 3,000 horsepower and had built her own team, Stealth Motorsports. During the Gatornationals in Gainesville last year, DeJoria drove 267.91 mph with an elapsed time of 5.446 seconds in the Top Alcohol Funny Car. It was a career best for her. She competed in the first woman vs. woman race in her class, beating Melinda Green-King in 2010. DeJoria later won the title of 2011 NHRA Northwest Nationals Top Alcohol Funny Car

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event champion and is the second female to win a national TAFC race, behind legendary female driver Bunny Burkett. DeJoria currently competes in the Nitro Funny Car class on the Kalitta Motorsports Tequila Patron Toyota Camry Funny Car team. Her car is fueled by nitro methane, giving her enough power to drive 300 mph down a quarter-mile track, finishing in about four seconds. By the end of April this year, she ranked 14th out of 26 NHRA Nitro Funny Car drivers. “It’s really difficult to win races no matter what category you are in just because the competition is so intense,” said Anthony Vestal, spokesman for the NHRA. “For her to win a race definitely shows that she has some of the key ingredients to be successful. She has really shown that she has a knack for it.” DeJoria had a close call in 2009 while racing at the Old Bridge Raceway Park in Englishtown, N.J. Her brakes went out and her parachutes ripped off, making it impossible to stop as her funny car exceeded 200 mph. The car went over the sand pit at the end of the track that is supposed to slow an out-of-control car, through two catch nets and then into four rows of sand-filled barrels. Her car landed on its roof. “I opened my eyes, felt around and was like, ‘OK, I’m all right,’ ” said DeJoria, who has a 9-year-old daughter. “You have to understand that these cars, they are unpredictable. Obviously we’re going insane speeds and we are human and these cars are man-made, so anything can happen. But you have to be prepared for it, and there’s no real training for that.” Two other drivers were not as lucky on the same track. Scott Kalitta, of Kalitta Motorsports, died in 2008 when his car exploded and crashed into a pole. In 2010, Neal Parker died after his parachutes failed to deploy, sending his car crashing into some waterfilled barrels. The danger is never far out of the mind of DeJoria, who keeps a part of her car that crashed hanging in her garage as a reminder. Before a recent warmup race in Jupiter, Fla., DeJoria packed her own parachutes. “Can’t blame anybody but me if these suckers don’t work,” she said. “Drag racing will humble you very quickly. But when you do win, it’s an amazing feeling.”

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Inside Zero Energy:

The third zero-energy home is going up in NorthWest Crossing, and it’s open to the public today for an open-wall view. by David Pease, for The Garner Grou p Members of the public will have the opportunity to learn about the latest green construction techniques when the newest zero-energy home in NorthWest Crossing is available for viewing at an “open wall open house” this afternoon. The three-bedroom home, under construction at 2334 NW Frazer Ln., Bend, will be open to the public from noon to 3 p.m. SolAire Homebuilders, the builder, and their product vendor representatives will be on hand to provide information about the home and to answer questions. This zero-energy home produces

as much electricity with photovoltaic panels as it uses over a 12month period. Design, home shell construction and mechanical elements are carefully integrated by the builder to reduce energy consumption. This is the third zero-energy home in NorthWest Crossing and the second built by SolAire Homebuilders and placed on the market for sale. The first, a block away, was completed for the 2011 Central Oregon Builders Association (COBA) Tour of Homes™. It earned class awards for Green Building and Best Architectural Design and was sold last fall. The new home will be entered

in the 2012 tour this July. It is colisted by brokers David Sailors of GoBend Realty and Alison Mata of The Garner Group Real Estate, LLC. Neal Huston and Associates Architects is the designer. “In undertaking the new home, we responded to feedback from the 2,000 people who came through the first one,” said Peter Grube, SolAire’s sustainable building advisor. Among the suggestions: more space in each room and more outdoor living space. The new home has 1,878 square feet of floor space in the living area plus a 160-square-foot unheated flex room. A large south-facing courtyard at the side, inset into

the home and screened from street view, is ideal for entertaining or relaxing at home. Along with triple-pane windows, 12-inch exterior walls with staggered studs provide continuous insulation coverage and a high R50 insulation rating. A variety of tapes, wraps and sealing materials are used to make the home airtight. A whole-house energy recovery system manages and filters interior airflow. Heat is supplied by a high-efficiency ductless heat pump system. The home is oriented to benefit from passive solar warmth in winter months when the sun is low in the sky. Wide, overhanging eaves provide shelter from the summer sun. Rooftop solar panels generate electric power and provide direct water heating.

finishes, custom cabinetry and a gas fireplace. Sailors agreed. “The first zero-energy homes attracted early adopters. Now that the homes show they can perform as planned, the concept is moving into the main stream. Buyers are aware of rising energy costs and realize these homes are not complicated or extreme.” National sources voice similar views. “A rising trend of super-efficient, solar-powered new homes allows homeowners to combat rising energy costs by giving back to the power grid,” reporter Paul Hagey wrote recently in the real estate news service Inman News. Hagey said zero-energy homes are at the leading edge of the U.S. green building trend. Power companies are encouraging energy conservation as a way

Other environmental concerns are addressed. Construction and finish materials minimize or eliminate volatile organic compound (VOC) and urea-formaldehyde emissions. Recycled materials are used. Water conservation is a priority. Contemporary finishes and design details will appeal to ordinary buyers looking for comfort and visual satisfaction in addition to green features, Mata pointed out. These include solid, vertical-grain bamboo flooring, coffered ceilings, designer tile countertops and bath

to meet growing demand without building new generating plants, Sailors added. Today’s glimpse inside the zeroenergy home isn’t the first time it has been used as a classroom recently. SolAire and vendors conducted training sessions on May 4 and May 10 to demonstrate proper application of DuPont Tyvek® nonwoven moisture barrier wrap and SIGA air sealing products, part of an ongoing campaign by SolAire to school subcontractors in advanced green building techniques.

2334 NW Frazer Lane: This home, in the process of being built, will be NorthWest Crossing’s third zero-energy home. The builders invite the public to view the home in the building process to get a better understanding of what goes into a zero-energy home.

Open-Wall Viewing Today: Noon until 3 p.m. Directions: In Bend, travel west Newport Avenue/Shevlin Park Road. Turn left on NW Crossing Drive, then left onto NW Frazer Lane to 2334 NW Frazer Ln.

For More Information:

MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE

REALTOR

2762 NW Crossing Dr., Suite 100 Bend, OR 97701 • 541-383-4360 www.thegarnergroup.com

235 SE Wilson Ave. Bend, OR 97702 • 541-706-9444 www.gobend.com

• Alison Mata, The Garner Group : 541-280-6250 • David Sailors, GoBend Realty: 541-420-3910

MLS

$120,000

$219,000

$275,000

$299,900

Small Acreage & Minutes From Town 2 small cabins, shop & a charming chalet nestled among pines. Imagine country living, enjoying the tranquility & peace from your deck and the serenity of your own backyard. Very well maintained. MIKE EVERIDGE, BROKER

Country Living Close to Town... Great location and close to Tumalo Park!!! Over 1/2 an acre with property backing up to the common area, enhancing the open feel of the property. Casual living and a must see! AARON BALLWEBER, BROKER

Great Investment & May Be A Lot Split. Tree top views~very private setting with over 2 acres & 1,200 sq. ft. shop. This home boasts the feel of country living yet minutes from town. CAROLYN KING, BROKER

Desirable River Canyon Estates This beautiful home is wonderful for entertaining. Fully fenced yard with a beautiful water feature & garden area. This home has been well cared for. AARON BOEHM, BROKER

541-390-0098 or 541-389-7910

541-728-4499 or 541-389-7910

541-550-0712 or 541-389-7910

541-647-8851 or 541-389-7910

$369,500

$499,000

Prime Location... This home boasts a fabulous kitchen with granite counters, upgraded stainless steel appliances. Beautiful walnut floors and cabinets. This is a must see! MIKE EVERIDGE, BROKER

Over 5 Acres. Set in the ponderosa pines at the end of the cul-de-sac. Double master, one on main, gourmet kitchen w/island. 3-car garage, plus a detached RV barn/boat, separate shop with 1/2 bath! MIKE WILSON, BROKER

541-390-0098 or 541-389-7910

541-389-7910 105 NW Greeley Avenue Bend, OR 97701 www. hunterproperties.info

541-977-5345 or 541-389-7910


E2 SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Rentals

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Rooms for Rent Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & linens. New owners.$145-$165/wk 541-382-1885 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Alpine Meadows Townhomes 1, 2 & 3 bdrm apts. Starting at $625. 541-330-0719

Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

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

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Houses for Rent General

Commercial for Rent/Lease

New Listings

Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale

Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale

Condo/Townhomes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Rented your property? The Bulletin Classifieds has an "After Hours" Line. Call 541-383-2371 24 hours to cancel your ad!

For Lease | $1,240 Beautiful, open, second floor space of 3100 sq. ft., 2 restrooms, full mountain views, operable windows. MLS #201203060 Paula VanVleck, Broker 541-280-7774

Upgraded Bend home on 1/3 acre lot. $214,987 Ad #2972 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com

Big home, big shop, 13+ acres! $340,000 Ad# 2482 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Equestrian facility, home w/ Cascade views $890,000 Ad#2772 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Single Level on 1 acre. 3 bdrm/2 bath, 1716 sq. ft., master separation, office, fenced, flower garden, RV parking. $145,000. MLS# 201007848 Pam Lester, Principal Broker Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338 120 Private acres of Central Oregon Beauty. $499,900. Ad#2692 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Updated 4 bdrm charmer in Bend’s West Hills. $475,000. Ad#3462. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Custom home on almost an acre in Bend. $224,900. Ad #3032 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com

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Houses for Rent NE Bend A quiet newer 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 1692 sq.ft., mtn views. dbl. garage w/opener. $1195 541-480-3393,610-7803. When buying a home, 83% of Central Oregonians turn to

Call 541-385-5809 to place your Real Estate ad. 652

People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through The Bulletin Classifieds Office/Warehouse located in SE Bend. Up to 30,000 sq.ft., competitive rate, 541-382-3678.

Close in 2 bdrm, 1 bath Houses for Rent BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS WSG, yard maint. incl. NW Bend No smoking/No pets. Search the area’s most $725 per mo. with comprehensive listing of dep. 541-382-0088 Clean small 2 bdrm. classiied advertising... Large yard. Wood real estate to automotive, Call for Specials! heat. $750+ last + merchandise to sporting Limited numbers avail. dep. Local ref. No goods. Bulletin Classiieds 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. pets. 1015 NW Ogden. appear every day in the W/D hookups, patios print or on line. 656 or decks. Call 541-385-5809 MOUNTAIN GLEN, Houses for Rent www.bendbulletin.com 541-383-9313 SW Bend Professionally managed by Norris & 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, W/D, Stevens, Inc. fenced yard, club- Warehouse - Industrial house & pool, $1000/ Located by BMC/Costco, unit for rent. 5600 mo., 12 mo lease, 2 bdrm, 2 bath duplex, sq.ft., $2250/month, 503-798-1595. 55+,2350 NEMary Rose near Bend High. Pl, #1, $795 no smoking 541-389-8794. or pets, 541-390-7649 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! !! NO APP FEE !! 2 bdrm, 1 bath $530 & 540 W/D hook-ups & Heat Pump. Carports & Pet Friendly Fox Hollow Apts. (541) 383-3152

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It’s the easiest way in the world to sell.

Real Estate For Sale

The Bulletin Classiied

700

541-385-5809

Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co.

658

636

Houses for Rent Redmond

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend

730

New Listings

NW Bend | $165,000 Build your home on this LIGHT INDUSTRIAL Prime Hwy 97 Comfabulous .74-acre lot BUILDING - Conve- mercial! $129,900 on Awbrey Butte. nient location with Updated in 2006, 850 Corner lot with a level easy access to Park- sq. ft., plenty of parkbuilding site and pine way. Built in 2007 by ing in rear, central air. trees. Convenient loSun West Builders. MLS201003034 Pam cation only 10 minApprox. 1.54 acres, Lester, Principal Broutes from downtown completely fenced ker, Century 21 Gold Bend or Highway 97. with lock gate at en- Country Realty, Inc. MLS#201202988 trance. Flat usable lot 541-504-1338 Shelly Hummel, Broker, w/out buildings, lots of Retail Office Building CRS, GRI, CHMS parking, sprinklers. $695,000 541-383-4361 Multi bay building all with pull through 7326 sq. ft. office building in the heart of overhead doors. Flex space design for fu- downtown Redmond. Apartment on the top ture use, loads of floor. Live and work storage. Approx. 1500 sq ft office space. At- here. Also for lease. Great retail on the tractive financing floor. terms available. Cur- bottom MLS#201009383 rent occupant would like to stay and rent Rookie Dickens, Broker, GRI, CRS, ABR Prineville | $225,000 back. 541-815-0436 Classic Prineville esMLS#201009395. tate with expansive $1,000,000. valley views. 3 bedMelody Luelling CRS room, 2 bath, 2365 PC Principal Broker, sq. ft. with great room Hasson Company floor plan. expansive Realtors, outdoor living space, 541-330-8522 exquisitely landPeople Look for Information scaped and large About Products and shop all on 1+ acre. MLS#201202962 Services Every Day through John Snippen, Broker, The Bulletin Classifieds Find exactly what MBA, ABR, GRI you are looking for in the 541-312-7273 51366 Hwy 97 - $3,750 CLASSIFIEDS 541-948-9090 mo. lease, 3000 sq. ft. bank building, furnished, great Hwy 97 Two homes on large C2 lot used as rentals access. High Lakes currently. The homes Realty & Property sit on .33 of an acre Management close to the Hwy with 541-536-0117 great access. Addi285 NW Riverside Blvd, tional tax lot and Bend. Riverside MarMarkuson Drive with ket Property only! the purchase of these Great investment with homes for free. This Sunriver golf course outstanding tenant gives you a bunch to $389,000 and location. 10,000 work with and run a Furnished, Sunriver golf sq.ft. lot - 2208 sq.ft. business because this course home on large, building located beis in excess of an acre private cul-de-sac. 3 tween Drake Park and all together. Agent bdrm plus den/4th the new Miller Landowned, might do bdrm. Large stone ing Park. $350,000. fireplace, high ceilings, some trading. Asking remodeled. Near the Scott McLean, $179,900! new Aquatic and RecPrincipal Heather Hockett, PC reation Center! Broker, 541-408-6909 Broker 541-420-9151 MLS#201202873 Realty Executives Century 21 Gold Diane Lozito, Broker International Central Country Realty. 541-548-3598 Oregon.

Fully furnished loft Apt Terrebonne remodeled

on Wall Street in Bend, with parking. All utilities paid. Call 541-389-2389 for appt 638

Apt./Multiplex SE Bend A Sharp Clean 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath apt., NEW CARPETS, neutral colors, great storage, private patio, no pets/ smoking, $530 incl. W/S/G, 541-633-0663 640

Apt./Multiplex SW Bend Spacious 2 bdrm 1½ bath townhouse, w/d hkup, fenced yd. NO PETS. Great loc! $565 & up. 179 SW Hayes 541-382-0162; 541-420-0133 642

Apt./Multiplex Redmond 1811 SW 21st Quiet spacious 2/2 duplex, gorgeous fenced yard w/garage. Mint cond! W/S/G pd, pet ok. $715. 541-409-2175 3 bdrm, 2½ bath 2-story, in Redmond, W/D hookup, Fenced yard, no smoking. $725 mo., Megan 541-771-6599 648

Houses for Rent General 3 Bay shop, 38x48, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, for rent, CRR, end of road, quiet, new hardwood floors, 1500 sq.ft., fenced area for 4-H animals, avail now, $900 + $1000 dep., 541-252-7170 Alfalfa area, 2BR, 1 BA on 2 fenced ac. Quiet; pets considered. $750 + last + dep. References. 541-383-9074

Broken Top contem3 bedroom, 1 bath, porary | $689,000 garage, fenced back Beautiful Custom Home. yard. Pets considered. 3 bdrm + den/office, $795 + last and de4.5 bath. Gourmet posit. 541-420-9432. kitchen, Wolf stove, sub-zero refrigerator, 659 SS appliances & granHouses for Rent ite counters. Master on main with private Sunriver SW Bend | $1,750,000 atrium. Golf Course Nestled on the banks of views. MLS In River Meadows a 3 the Deschutes River #201202675 bdrm, 1.5 bath, 1376 amongst the boulders sq. ft., woodstove, Carolyn Priborsky, P.C., and towering pines, Broker, ABR, CRS brand new carpet/oak lies this 4780 sq. ft. 541-383-4350 floors, W/S pd, $895. home, on 3.68 acres 541-480-3393 adjacent to the river or 541-610-7803 trail and only minutes to the Old Mill. VILLAGE PROPERTIES Sunriver, Three Rivers, MLS#201202960 La Pine. Great Brandon Fairbanks, Selection. Prices range Broker, SRES, $425 - $2000/mo. GRI, CDPE View our full 541-383-4344 inventory online at Village-Properties.com Broken Top town1-866-931-1061 home | $355,000 Features private deck 682 overlooking pond & Farms, Ranches creek. A/C, great room, master suite on & Acreage main level & 2 jr. suites upstairs, a spaTumalo 3 bdrm, 2 bath, cious loft area, an of2000 sw.ft. home with fice, built-ins through- Just bought a new boat? horse property. Large Sell your old one in the out & 2-car garage. arena- barn houses classiieds! Ask about our MLS#201202937 72x180 indoor arena, Super Seller rates! 25 stalls, 2 offices, 2 Lester Friedman, P.C., 541-385-5809 Broker tack rooms, guest 541-330-8491 quarters, exercise Sweet Duplex room, game room & $169,900 viewing area w/ bar. Great opportunity to live Large outdoor arena in one & rent the other Paddocks w/horse to subsidize your safe fencing & shelmonthly payment or ters, beautiful pond. for an elderly parent $3000/mo. to live in one and you 541-327-8100 live in the other. Or a great investment with 687 10.5 gross rent multiCustom 1-level, river Commercial for plier. MLS#201202921 rim | $389,000 Jackie French, Broker Rent/Lease 3 bdrm + den/office with 541-480-2269 built-ins, 2 bath, 2000 3 Bay shop, 38x48, 3 sq. ft., gourmet kitchen bdrm, 2 bath, for rent, with knotty alder cabiCRR, end of road, nets, formal dining quiet, new hardwood area, great room with floors, 1500 sq.ft., fireplace, custom landfenced area for 4-H scaping, 3 car tandem animals, avail now, garage. MLS $900 + $1000 dep., #201202931 541-252-7170 Carolyn Priborsky, P.C., Broker, ABR, CRS 541-383-4350

Call a Pro

AVAILABLE BEND AREA RENTALS •Spacious 2 Bdrm/1 Bath SE Duplexes - Sgl. garage. Large fenced back deck. All new appl. car- NW Bend | $1,225,000 pet, paint. W/D hook-ups. No pets. $695 WST. Stunning 5509 sq. ft. •3 Bdrm/1.5 Bath Close to River/Downtown Architectural delight. 4 Townhome style in quad. Back deck + extra storbdrm, 5.5 bath, river age. W/D Hook-ups. Prefer no pets. $750 WST. views, luxurious •3 Bdrm/2.5 Bath Townhome near Bend HS New master, gourmet carpet, paint. Fenced back yard. Sgl. garage. kitchen. Soaring ceilW/D Hook-ups. No pets. 1288 sq. ft. $775 WS ings, walls of win•2 Bdrm /1.75 Bath Duplex. Great NW Location dows. Elevator to me1 block from river. Huge screened in back dia room, wine cellar, porch. Split level. Gas fireplace. W/D hookups. 2 suites. Sgl. garage. $775. WS MLS#201202934 •3 Bdrm/2 Bath NE Home - Sgl. garage. Covered Cathy Del Nero, Broker back porch with mtn. views. Open field in back. 541-410-5280 Fenced back yard. W/D hookups. End of cul-de-sac. $850. •Newer 3 Bdrm/2.5 Bath NE home. Just off Hwy 20. Fenced, natural back yard. Double garage. Tenant provides own fridge. GFA heat. 1719 sq.ft. $1025 mo. *** FOR ADDITIONAL PROPERTIES *** CALL 541-382-0053 &/or Stop By the Office at 587 NE Greenwood, Bend

Whether you need a fence ixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you’ll ind professional help in The Bulletin’s “Call a Service Professional” Directory

541-385-5809 Three Rivers South $12,000 1.83 acre lot in Lazy River West. More available. Buy one or buy all!MLS#201202830 Darrin Kelleher, Broker The Kelleher Group 541-788-0029

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Commercial building in Crooked River Ranch 900 sq. ft. of office space and break room. 2,400 sq. ft. of open warehouse /manufacturing area with concrete floor and two roll up doors. Owner terms or lease option is available. $179,000 MLS# 201109200 Juniper Realty 541-504-5393

Multiplexes for Sale Large duplex in Bend’s desirable westside. $399,800. Ad #8932 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com 740

Condo/Townhomes for Sale

Commercial building on golf course. 432 sq. Eagle Crest Townhome close to tennis, ft., .57 acre, paved swimming, walking parking. $129,950. trails. Perfect for vaMLS#201008415 cations or spur of the Call Nancy Popp moment get-aways. Broker, 541-815-8000 $197,500. MLS Crooked River Realty 201100896. John L. Commercial Lots In Scott Real Estate Crooked River Ranch. 541-548-1712 Start a business or relocate an existing Old Mill dist. | $539,000 LOCATION!! UNOBbusiness. Near resSTRUCTED MTN and taurants, hotel and RIVER VIEWS! 1633 golf course. Owner sq. ft. corner unit, 2 terms. Lot 82 - 1.05 master suites, upacres - $25,000. Lot grades galore. Se49 - 1.26 acres. Lot cure parking & stor50 - 1.30 acres. Lot age. Owner financing, 51 - 1.23 acres includes furnture. $35,000 ea. or all 3 MLS#201106900 for $90,000! Lisa Campbell, Broker Juniper Realty 541-419-8900 541-504-5393 Commercial Mini Strip mall zoned C-1. 3 units, non-owner occupied. Owner terms. $329,000. MLS 201109156. John L. Scott Real Estate 541-548-1712

Splendid View, Furnished, 1 bdrm, 2 bath condo, $85,000. Fronts on River, scenic balcony vistas. All utilitiess. paid. including cable tv, internet, 541-326-7063 after 6 pm. 744

Open Houses

Fri. 1-5pm & Sat. 11-3pm. Views on 3.8 Acres, 4 Bdrm, 2.5 bath, 3740 sq.ft., RV parking, 2 garages, 3 stall barn, private studio with full bath. $599,900. Directions: Old Bend Redmond Hwy, right on Rogers, Left on Tanglewood. Theresa Ramsay, Broker • 541-815-4442

Subdividable lot close to Old Mill $99,900 Ad#8632 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Northwest lodge style home w/views! $1,750,000 Ad#2152 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Single level 4 bedroom resort home! $524,000 Ad#2102 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com

4 Bdrm., 2 bath beautiful home with big shop, $118,900. Check out the MLS#201106461. classiieds online Call Julie Fahlgren, www.bendbulletin.com Broker, 541-550-0098 Updated daily Crooked River Realty 745

Homes for Sale Well designed River Meadows Home, $184,995 Ad#8142 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com

Frame home with shop and barn on 1+ acres. $68,000. Ad #3082 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com

1930s Craftsman, 2 bdrm, 1½ bath in Bend! $117,000. Upgraded 3 bdrm home MLS#201107029. on fully fenced lot. Call Julie Fahlgren, $720,000. Ad #2392 Broker, 541-550-0098 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Crooked River Realty Prudential High Desert High-end living resort Realty 541-312-9449 rental in SR, views! www.BendOregon $899,000 Ad#8162 RealEstate.com TEAM Birtola Garmyn Home & guest house Prudential High Desert with river and views! Realty 541-312-9449 $149,000 Ad# 2872 www.BendOregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 Gorgeous cedar home www.BendOregon on almost 10 acres! RealEstate.com $499,500. Ad#2632 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Private Sunriver Prudential High Desert home-3 suites! Realty 541-312-9449 $529,500 Ad#2112 www.BendOregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 Newer 4500+ sq.ft. www.BendOregon craftsman, almost 1 RealEstate.com acre. $799,900. Ad #2312 NW Bend original Palmer model Home. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert $250,000. Ad #3422 Realty 541-312-9449 TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.BendOregon Prudential High Desert RealEstate.com Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon 4 Bdrm home + 28x32 RealEstate.com shop, 1.1 acre. $140,000. Ad #8202 Exquisite home and TEAM Birtola Garmyn acreage with a view. Ad #3192. $725,000. Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.BendOregon Prudential High Desert RealEstate.com Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon 2500 sq.ft. RealEstate.com Commercial Bldg just off Bus 97. Energy efficient home, $175,000. Ad #3052 20 acres w/irrigation. TEAM Birtola Garmyn $625,000 Ad#2242 Prudential High Desert TEAM Birtola Garmyn Realty 541-312-9449 Prudential High Desert www.BendOregon Realty 541-312-9449 RealEstate.com www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Big River Meadows Resort home on the Fenced private 2 acre river! $399,000 property-mtn views! Ad#8532 $324,900 Ad#8702 TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon www.BendOregon RealEstate.com RealEstate.com

O U T S TA N D I N G A G E N T S . 7751 SW RED CLOUD LANE | POWELL BUTTE | $250,000

Like new 2400 sq.ft., Sisters home close to town. $229,000. Ad #2892 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com 10-Acre homesite, Bend. The highlands, big mountain views. $495,000. MLS #201103826 Cate Cushman, Principal Broker 541-480-1884 www.catecushman.com 1188 NE 27th St. #80 Snowberry Village #80. Enjoy the carefree lifestyle in Snowberry Village. Bend’s premiere 55+ community. Located near shopping and medical facilities. Well-kept Silvercrest offers 2 bdrm, 2 bath plus den/office. New roof 2011. All appliances included. Move-in ready. www.johnlscott.com /66763. Maralin Baidenmann, Broker 541-385-1096 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend

$125,000 Park-Like Landscaping Renovated/upgraded, European plaster, custom finishes throughout. Large garage w/attached 10x13 bonus room. Custom 16x22 heated shop, RV parking. Home is well maintained and move-in ready. Mike Wilson, Broker 541-977-5345 or 541-389-7910 Hunter Properties

O U T S TA N D I N G R E S U LT S . ® 5075 SW LOMA LINDA | REDMOND | $329,900

• Choice 4.75/Acres-ready for your dream home • Fabulous Panoramic Mountain/Smith Rock views • Minutes to Brasada Ranch • Avion Water to property/Septic Installed

• 1.08 Acres on the SW Canyon with river views • A rare one-of-a-kind homesite offering • Some of the best views Central Oregon has to offer • Owner will carry with great terms

Cindy King, Principal Broker

Dave Dunn, Broker

(541) 419-9068

(541) 306-4781

OPEN SAT & SUN NOON-4 PM PRICE JUST REDUCED | $389,900

OPEN SATURDAY NOON-4 PM DESCHUTES RIVER | $724,900 JUS PR T R ICE ED UC ED

2334 NW Dorion Way, Bend

1975 NW Harriman, Bend

• New Construction • 2,010/sq.ft. NW Crossing home • 3 BR/2.5 Bath-open floorplan • Generous Master on main level • Gorgeous hardwood, quality throughout

• Deschutes River frontage, full upstream views • Blue Creek NW construction, quality abounds • 2840 sq. ft. 3 BR/2.5 baths, master on main • Hardwood, fireplace, stainless steel appliances/hood

David Quiros, Principal Broker (541) 598-4262

541.728.0033 www.keypropertiesbend.com

20470 PINE VISTA DR. | BEND | $339,000

John Kelley, Broker (541) 948-0062

2623 NW BRICKYARD | BEND | $105,900

• Single level, 2,038/sq.ft. 3 BR/2 Bath plus office ( 4th BR) • Bring the horses-3 stall barn on this desirable property • 2.33 Acres-beautiful serene setting backs up to the canal • RV Parking, enjoy your peace and quiet!

• Great lot in Shevlin Ridge • Mostly level, easy build site • Over 9,000/sq.ft. lot w/ Pine trees • Walk or Bike to Shevlin Park Steve Wright, Broker

Debi Corso, Broker (541) 280-3309

WWW.REMAX.COM

(541) 419-6519

WWW.REMAXCOMMERCIAL.COM

WWW.KEYPROPERTIESBEND.COM

263 SE TEE COURT, BEND SAT & SUN 12PM - 4PM Classic NW style with distinctive elegance. 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 2800+ sq. ft., home in SE Bend. Open chef’s kitchen with granite counters. Hardwood throughout including family room and separate living room.

263 SE Tee Court Directions: From Hwy 20, turn onto SE 15th St., take second exit in roundabout onto NE Bear Creek Rd., right on SE Cessna Dr., right onto SE Tee Ct.

$349,900 Listed by: TEAM BIRTOLA GARMYN 541-312-9449 www.TeamBirtolaGarmyn.com


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

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 E3

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Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

$139,900. Desirable NE $499,000 Neighborhood ... Over 5 Acres! Set in the Beautiful townhome Ponderosa pines at priced to sell!!! Masthe end of the ter w/large walk-in cul-de-sac. Double closet, double sink master, one on main, w/full bath, private Gourmet kitchen deck. Second suite w/island. 3-car gaalso features a prirage, RV Barn/boat, vate bath. Large loft shop w/half bath. perfect for home ofMike Wilson, fice/play room. High Broker end stainless appli541-977-5345 or ances in kitchen, 541-389-7910 hardwood floors, skyHunter Properties lights & vaulted ceil51871 Hollinshead. ings. 2259 sq. ft. 4 bdrm, Aaron Boehm, Broker 2½ bath, bonus room, 503-333-3072 A/C, gas fireplace. or 541-389-7910 $169,900. High Lakes Hunter Properties Realty & Property $155,000 Management Outstanding Open 541-536-0117 Floor Plan! This 4 bdrm/2.5 bath, $625,000 with master on main Close to Downtown level, vaulted ceilings Drake Park! Historic and bonus room/ofcharming home with fice space. many upgrades! Mike Wilson, Broker Marmoluem floors, 541-977-5345 granite counters & Hunter Properties pendant lighting. Finished basement, gas 16624 Ascha Ct., fireplace. Park-like $129,900. 3 bdrm, 2.5 setting. bath, bonus room, John frazier, Broker fenced backyard, hot 541-610-4626 tub. High Lakes Reor 541-389-7910 alty & Property ManHunter Properties agement 541-536-0117 63737 Cascade Village Dr. #75. Exceptional $168,000 home in one of Bend’s Great Location! Light premiere 55+ parks. 2 and bright, home bed, 2 bath, vaulted features hardwood ceilings & skylights. floors in entry & Landscaped with kitchen. Tile counter, deck, corner lot SS appliances, large w/single car garage master & formal dinw/storage. Recent ing. Close to schools, updates. Amenities shopping and mediinclude pool, clubcal. house w/library & exSUSAN PITARRO, ercise facilities. Broker $67,500. 541-410-8084 MLS#201106388 or 541-389-7910 Cyndi Robertson, BroHunter Properties ker 541-390-5345 20419 SE Rae Rd., John L. Scott Real Bend, 1800 sq.ft., 3/2, Estate, Bend .26 acre lot, quiet lo- www.JohnLScott.com/Bend cation, near school, Goshawk Dr., parks and walking 642 Eagle Crest. Beautiful trails. $185,000. spacious home, large Scott McLean, kitchen, views, 2 Principal master suites and on Broker, 541-408-6908 the golf course. ReRon Davis, duce to $449,000 and Principal Broker, owner will carry. A 541-480-3096 must see! Cascade Sotheby's www.johnlscott.com/7 International Realty 4206 Farm and Ranch Kellie Cook, Broker Division 541-408-0463 2044 NE Full Moon John L. Scott Real $79,000. Spacious Estate, Bend Condo in NE Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend with 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, 1104 sq. ft. American Made Home! Tropicana - 1802 sq Close to medical offt. - Gardenside fices & shopping. Laminate flooring, We just started construction of 3 great sunny & bright w/fruit single story 3 bedtrees & fenced yard. room homes in the www.johnlscott.com/3 popular neighbor4064 hood of Gardenside. Kathy Caba, Principal Each home features Broker 541-771-1761 an open great room John L. Scott Real with gas fireplace & Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend neat kitchen with cook’s island, SS ap20 NW Hood Pl., Bend, pliances, formal dingreat downtown locaing, wood flooring and tion, near Deschutes tile countertops. River, Drake Park, These quality crafted room to garden, 848 homes will have sq/ft, RM Zoned. double garages and $185,000. be fully landscaped Scott McLean, and fenced. Call Gary Principal & Joan while Broker, 541-408-6908 you can still choose Ron Davis, your finishing touches. Principal Broker, $209,950 541-480-3096 Gary Everett, CCIM Cascade Sotheby's Principal Broker International Realty 541-480-6130 Farm and Ranch Remax Division Awbrey Glen Views, $228,000 Private setting, conRiver Canyon Estates! temporary style. Beautifully main$449,000. MLS tained 3 bedroom, 2.5 #201104560. bath home, on corner New Price lot with great open $450,000. floor plan. Loft area MLS 201104560. can be used as office Cate Cushman, space or bonus room. Principal Broker SUSAN PITARRO, 541-480-1884 Broker www.catecushman.com 541-410-8084 or 541-389-7910 Awbrey Meadows Chic, Hunter Properties Privacy, A+ Views, $250,000 pool, Guest house, Country Living Close to offered at $685,000. Town...Great location MLS #201201117 close to Tumalo Park! Cate Cushman, Over 1/2 acre backPrincipal Broker ing up to common 541-480-1884 area, enhancing open www.catecushman.com feel of property. Casual living and a must BANK OWNED HOMES! see! FREE List w/Pics! Aaron Ballweber, www.BendRepos.com bend and beyond real estate Broker 20967 yeoman, bend or 541-728-4499 or 541-389-7910 Beautiful Mid Bend EsHunter Properties tate. Unique one-of-a-kind estate, 25-Acre View Estate. 3696 sq. ft. home on Panoramic Cascade 1.86 acres, gated. Views. $1,499,000. Remodeled, beautiful MLS #201101049 landscape with large Cate Cushman, pond/waterfall. 1 acre Principal Broker of COI irrigation. Re541-480-1884 duced $100,000!!! www.catecushman.com Seller wants to sell! $275,000 $799,000. Country Living!! Tree MLS#201106949 top views - very priwww.johnlscott.com/s vate setting with over harona 2 acres and 1200 sq. Sharon Abrams, CRS, ft. shop. Home boasts Principal Broker feel of country yet 541-693-8779 minutes from town. John L. Scott Real Call for more details. Estate, Bend CAROLYN KING, www.JohnLScott.com/Bend Broker Beautiful setting on De541-550-0712 schutes River, nestled or 541-389-7910 in the trees. In Bend Hunter Properties close proximity to $379,500 town. Apprx. 400 ft. of Prime Location…This river frontage w/easy home boasts a fabuaccess. Most rooms lous kitchen with are situated to take granite counters, upadvantage of the graded stainless steel views. Extensive appliances. Beautiful hardwood, solid core walnut floors and doors, large kitchen, cabinets. This is a great room with gas must see! fireplace plus living Mike Everidge, room with stacked Broker stone fireplace. Newer 541-390-0098 roof, updated baths. Hunter Properties Large, pampering Go to www.crook- master suite with baledriver-or.com for Vir- cony to sit and enjoy the river. Fenced, tual Tour. MLS landscaped yard on a 201005681 Call Linda private 1.33 acre lot. Lou Day-Wright, This would be difficult 541-771-2585 to replace. Crooked River Realty MLS#201101231 $849,999. 4270 sq ft, 6bd, 6ba, 4-car, corner, .83 ac, Melody Luelling CRS PC Principal Broker, mtn view, by owner. Hasson Company $590,000 541-390-0886 See: bloomkey.com/8779 Realtors, 541-330-8522

Better than new DESCHUTES RIVER FANTASTIC SMITH 2-year-old home. WOODS ROCK VIEWS Complete interior has 3 Bedroom, 1.75 bath in Very private property! 3 been painted with de1329 sq. ft. custom bedrooms, 1.75 baths signer colors, new home on DRW acre. in a 1782 sq. ft. home laminate flooring in Great room floor plan on 4.97 acres. Poentry, living, hall & with vaulted ceiling. tential to buy irriganew tile in kitchen, All kitchen appliances tion. Potential to subdining nook, pantry are included. Both redivide. $150,000. plus matching tile cessed & under cabiShort Sale! MLS# surround gas firenet lighting in kitchen. 201104469 or visit place in great room. Laundry room w/skyjohnlscott.com/32752 Wired for surround lite & large pantry. Bobbie Strome, sound in great room New interior paint. Principal Broker plus CAT5 in master. Garage is heated & John L Scott Real All counter tops are finished w/work Estate 541-385-5500 tiled, kitchen has full bench. Super fenced Estile backsplash and yard w/mature Pon- French Country tate, 4 bdrm, 4 bath, island w/raised derosas, storage masterful design, ofbreakfast bar. Spabuilding, double fered at $2,395,000. cious back yard is canopy carport or MLS #201200479 landscaped w/trees, storage structure. This Cate Cushman, shrubs & sprinkler home is move-in Principal Broker system. Completely ready. $259,000. Call 541-480-1884 fenced w/gates on Bobbie at www.catecushman.com both sides. 541-480-1635 about MLS#201200952 MLS#2802056 Golf course home, 2363 $195,000 Bobbie Strome, sq ft, 3 bdrm 3 bath + Melody Luelling CRS Principal Broker bonus room, PC Principal Broker, John L Scott Real Es$299,000. Hasson Company tate 541-385-5500 MLS#201103975 Realtors, 541-330-8522 Call Nancy Popp Downtown Bend River- Broker, 541-815-8000 Brand new listing. Front. Top 3rd floor Crooked River Realty Beautifully maincondo with a breaktained home in Yardaway studio. Out- Grand Forest Retreat. 3 ley Estates. Spacious Bdrm suites, near standing Deschutes 2155 sq. ft., 3 bedBend, Sunriver. River view. Covered room, 2 bath and of$1,499,000. MLS deck perfect for fice with RV parking. #201109698 watching a glorious Hardwood flooring, Cate Cushman, sunset. Year-round designer light fixtures Principal Broker pool & spa. Steps to & colors. Oversized 541-480-1884 the river trail. Gated 2-car garage. www.catecushman.com entrance with on-site Shelley Arnold, Broker management. CurLook at: 541-771-9329 rently in rental pool. John L. Scott Real Bendhomes.com $89,900. Estate, Bend for Complete Listings of Tom Eilertson, Broker www.JohnLScott.com/Bend Area Real Estate for Sale 541-350-8097 BROKEN TOP John L. Scott Real HEART OF PRIVATE Estate, Bend DOWNTOWN BEND www.JohnLScott.com/Bend HOMESITE. Imagine owning one of Ready for your home, the most completely this beautiful .37 acre TURN THE PAGE restored and updated lot has it all! Views of craftsman bungalows For More Ads golf course, pine in Bend. Rare CN trees, rock outcropThe Bulletin Zoning offers compings and all amenimercial possibilities. ties at Broken Top. Impeccable craftsDowntown Penthouse, $269,000. manship and quality Top floor, mountain MLS#201105872. throughout this clasviews, 2 bdrm, New www.johnlscott.com/6 sic downtown Bend Price $695,000. MLS 1890. 61733 Tam home. The finest tile 201100839 McArthur Loop work, custom cabinCate Cushman, Kathy Caba, Principal etry, trim, restored Principal Broker Broker 541-771-1761 hardware & lighting. 541-480-1884 John L. Scott Real Updated wiring, www.catecushman.com Estate, Bend phone and cable in www.JohnLScott.com/Bend every room. The Family Home CABIN IN THE home dates back to Extraordinaire! WOODS the early mill years Year-round summer/ Stunning one-of-a-kind and was one of the master craftsman rewinter recreation first homes built on model by builder and nearby. Spacious livCongress St. Close to interior designer. ing, huge multi-level downtown Bend, liMaster perennial gardeck, perfect getbrary, Drake Park and dens and huge fenced away! $67,000. Call restaurants. Property lawn in beautiful for more information. is zoned CN, comold-tree neighborwww.johnlscott.com/13 mercial neighborhood. hood on Awbrey Butte 520 Adjacent lot and bunclose to Newport MarKathy Denning, Broker galow also available. ket with play and dog 541-480-4429 Open Sundays 2–4. park at end of street. John L. Scott Real Mls#201109377 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath ExEstate, Bend $549,000 quisite master suite www.JohnLScott.com/Bend with wood windows, Karen Malanga, Broker The Hasson CHARMING French doors openCompany RETREAT ing onto oversized 541-390-3326 LOCATED IN decks with pergola. WOODSIDE RANCH Room sized walk-in HUGE HOME, HUGE 2 Bdrm + den (potential closets with custom liVIEWS! 3rd bdrm), 2 bath in brary style built-ins. Stately with upscale 1408 sq.ft. on .78 Master spa bath has finishes, 3067 sq. ft., acre. Beautiful flag soaking tub, walk-in 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, stone hearth in living glass block shower formal & informal livroom ready for wood and separate toilet. ing spaces all on one or gas stove. Kitchen Specialty glass, wood acre. has tile floor, counters doors and windows. Gail Rogers, Broker & back splash plus Hardwood flooring. 541-604-1649 Whirlpool Estate apCustom copper John L. Scott Real pliances in silvertone. kitchen counters with Estate, Bend Garage has huge Pratt Larson mosaic www.JohnLScott.com/Bend bank of cabinets. bar counter. Specialty Home completely relight fixtures, fully Hwy 126 Frontage, .69 acre lot, 4176 sq.ft. furbished. Nestled in wired for cable. building, great comthe trees w/easy care Built-in antique munity and location natural landscaping & screens and bath for Ag oriented busia tree house too. Tall cabinet, glass bowl ness. $239,000. vaulted ceilings, and custom hardware. Scott McLean, beams, natural wood 2 offices, built-in cabiPrinc. Broker, & stone accents. nets and large exer541-408-6909 Leaded beveled glass cise room w/ woodRealty Executives in living room & foyer. burning stove. International Central Newer 30 yr roof & ext Storage and Oregon. paint. $199,900. washer/dryer space. MLS#2711853 or visit Spacious entertaining Large home on large johnlscott.com/66140 areas on 2 levels outflat lot in Wyndemere. Bobbie Strome, side, wood decks and Two suites, one up, Principal Broker pavers. Fully landone down. Real masJohn L Scott Real Esscaped with irrigation ter is on main. Total of tate 541-385-5500 system. New fireproof 5 beds, 3.5 baths. steel roofing. Paver Great floor plan with Classic Craftsman, Imcircular driveway, formal and casual livmaculately mainstone walls, exterior ing areas plus bonus tained, perfect localighting and garage room, office & addition. Offered at built-ins. tional flex space. $209,00. MLS Builder/owner is in the Concrete counter tops #201200799 process of replacing in kitchen with 2 isCate Cushman, kitchen cabinets and lands, extensive Principal Broker putting a few finishing hardwood throughout 541-480-1884 touches on house. the living areas. Two www.catecushman.com This is a very special staircases, front & house in a wonderful COUNTRY LIVING back. There is also a neighborhood. Owner NEAR SISTERS. sports court, triple gahas 7 animals. 24 hr. 17160 MOUNTAIN rage on .80 level lot. notice. No lock box. VIEW RD - SISTERS MLS#201108206 $470,000. $249,900. $575,000. MLS#201200147 This immaculate 3 bedMelody Luelling CRS Bobbie Strome, room home sits on PC Principal Broker, Principal Broker just over one acre and Hasson Company has been beautifully John L Scott Real EsRealtors, tate 541-385-5500 upgraded with many 541-330-8522 stone and tile features. Tile over radiant floor heating provides very comfortable and efficient warmth. This single story home has a maple kitchen with quality stainless steel appliances, 9 foot ceilings and has been beautifully landscaped. The living room has a full stone wall with nooks and a real wood fireplace. It is nestled among the trees in an area of upscale homes. Great affordable value, just minutes to Sisters!! Gary Everett, CCIM Principal Broker 541-480-6130 Remax Custom La Pine A-Frame. Charming modified A-frame, corner lot, 1.17 acres, 1304 sq. ft. 3 bedroom/1.5 bath, blue buggy pine interior, excellent use of space and storage, 2-story, small deck top floor. 30 mi. to ski Bachelor. $144,900. MLS# 201108595 Sarah Eraker, Broker 503-680-6432 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend

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IMPECCABLE HOME ON 27 ACRES TEKAMPE NEIGHBORHOOD. 20903 KNOTT RD (near Tekampe Rd) $1,198,000. Very comfortable, single story home nestled in a grove of pine trees with irrigated pastures, large shop and room for all your critters and toys. Great open floor plan with spacious oak kitchen, 4 bedrooms (3 with an office), vaulted living room, formal dining, a deluxe master suite. Enjoy private outdoor living space with room for all the wildlife in a pristine forest-like setting. Premiere Tekampe neighborhood just minutes to town. This is the perfect country home with plenty of elbow room for horses, cattle and pets. Gary Everett, CCIM Principal Broker 541-480-6130 Remax

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with an ad in The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory Low bank riverfront property in town. Approx 100’ of low bank access w/private dock. Home offers huge living room w/gas fireplace, spacious formal dining. Both have hardwood flooring. Kitchen was remodeled in 2004. 2nd level has a living area, bedroom, 3/4 bath and sitting area with own entrance. Main level master plus great room off of kitchen. Beautiful grounds abundant w/roses, fruit trees, shrubs & flowers. Deck access from master, family room & sitting room. 2916 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 3 bath. Great central location. MLS#201201109 $600,000 Melody Luelling CRS PC, Principal Broker, Hasson Company Realtors, 541-330-8522 MASTERPIECE! Embrace the Central Oregon lifestyle. Imagine living in the serenity of the Deschutes River Ranch surrounded with comfort combined with sweeping river and full Cascade mountain views. Located just 15 minutes from Bend, offering over 2 miles of Deschutes River access, recreation trails. Nestled on a bluff, this custom home is a stunning example of NW influence combined with elements reminiscent of Frank Lloyd Wright and Greene & Greene. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, den/office and bonus/studio. Beautiful stone patios, water feature. A work of art. DVD available by request. $2,300,000. MLS#201109484. Karen Malanga, Broker The Hasson Company 541-390-3326 Metolius riverfront property! Rare 2 bed, 2 bath cabin in Camp Sherman. Wonderful vacation property that has newer septic system, community water, updated elec, pellet stove & more. Camp Sherman Store & Kokanee Cafe nearby. Step out your door to hiking, fishing, biking. A truly unique property. $495,000. MLS#201008454 Melody Luelling CRS PC Principal Broker, Hasson Company Realtors, 541-330-8522


E4 SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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Homes for Sale

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Northwest Bend Homes

Northwest Bend Homes

Southwest Bend Homes

Southeast Bend Homes

Redmond Homes

Redmond Homes

Redmond Homes

MOVE-IN Private, peaceful acreAwbrey Butte The best location in NW age property that $550,000 Bend. Charming floor backs to Nat’l Forest 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2839 land yet is close in. plan offering plenty of sq. ft. custom home No need to trailer the gathering space on on .82 of an acre. horses, ride right out the lower level with an Park-like setting, Casyour back door! 19.62 open great room, cade mtn. views, Acres estate w/4.05 gourmet kitchent with gourmet kitchen, mulacres of underground large granite island. tiple living spaces, 3 irrigation for easy Warm yourself by the fireplaces, outdoor maintenance. One fireplace, entertain off living and more. level home except the large covered paMLS#201106196 bonus room, 1/2 bath John Snippen, Broker, tio. Loads of extra over garage. All bedstroage for bikes and MBA, ABR, GRI rooms are suites, exgear. 4 bedrooms, 541-312-7273 tensive hardwood & use one as a bonus or 541-948-9090 tile. Three gas fireoffice. Enjoy NW livplaces, heated tile ing in the heart of floors, plus heat pump Bend combined with & forced air. Solid quality Pahlisch conwood doors, slab struction. Extensive granite kitchen, cherry granite, tile, stone, tercabinets, large island, rific floors, trim and pantry open to great cabinetry. Newport room which looks out Landing offers homes over pond and to the starting in the lower mountains. Shop/barn 200’s with 1400-2200 Need to get an & RV parking. Quality sq.ft. Close to Drake throughout! Park, college, river, ad in ASAP? MLS#201104300 markets and shopYou can place it $699,000. ping. Completion set online at: for April 20th. MLS# Melody Luelling CRS PC Principal Broker, www.bendbulletin.com 201200194. $299,900 Hasson Company Karen Malanga, Broker Realtors, The Hasson 541-385-5809 541-330-8522 Company 541-390-3326 Bachelor to Adams REDUCED views | $750,000 SINGLE LEVEL/4 NEW LISTING This one-of-a-kind BEDROOMS. Gorgeous windows dehome was remodeled signed to bring in the Over $80,000 in upwith copper in the grades! Stunning light and big views. gourmet kitchen, single level 4 bed Wonderfully designed unique far-eastern home in lovely Tilliwith high great room carved wood archicum Village. Loads of ceiling, custom stone tectural details, hardupgrades including fireplace, bonus room wood floors & stone granite counter, tile and landing with infireplaces. Huge floors, radiant heat, credible Cascade mountain views & new showers, Gorviews. Atrium, great minutes to Bend. geous outdoor patios room open to proMLS#201108191 and completely fintected patio. 7 waterFriedman, P.C., Lester ished garage with new falls. $549,000. Broker cabinets. Lovely fireKaren Malanga, Broker 541-330-8491 places, ambiance. Full The Hasson of light. Move right in. Company Traditional sale. 541-390-3326 Home warranty included. Must see to Northwest charmer appreciate! MLS NW Bend home on #201106820. large .2 acre lot w/4 Karen Malanga, Broker bedrooms, 2.5 baths, The Hasson 2583 sq. ft. w/great Company room, main floor 541-390-3326 master bdrm & office, family room upstairs. DESCHUTES LANDQuality kitchen REDUCED - TRI-PLEX ING riverfton townw/center island, gran- 2 plus RM lots on a flat homes starting in the corner in downtown ite counters, bamboo low $400’s. Exp. Bend. Property confloors. Shows like luxury situated next to sists of an older new. $369,900. the Deschutes River home, newer duplex, www.DavidFoster.Biz/ in the prestigious Old brand new garage. Fresca Mill District of Bend. Terrific rental history. David Foster, Broker Arts & Entertainment Tremendous down541-322-9934 along with shopping town location. Walk to John L. Scott Real and award-winning schools, market, resEstate, Bend restaurants are just www.JohnLScott.com/Bend taurants and Drake footsteps away. LimPark. $449,000, ited riverfront living in MLS#201106278. NOTICE: Central Oregon is All real estate adver- Karen Malanga, Broker making Deschutes The Hasson tised here in is subLanding a sought afCompany ject to the Federal ter destination. 541-390-3326 Fair Housing Act, Pahlisch Homes which makes it illegal offered by The Hasson to advertise any prefCompany Realtors erence, limitation or Garage Sales 855-385-6762 discrimination based Garage Sales on race, color, reliDowntown Bend gion, sex, handicap, Garage Sales $475,000 familial status or naRecently updated 4 tional origin, or intenFind them bdrm, 2.75 bath, 2200 tion to make any such sq.ft. home across the in preferences, limitastreet from the Destions or discrimination. The Bulletin chutes River. Large We will not knowingly two-car garage and Classiieds accept any advertisshop area. Near ing for real estate Drake Park and 541-385-5809 which is in violation of downtown. this law. All persons MLS#201201264 are hereby informed ROOMY HOME, pri- Scott Huggin, Broker, vate backyard in Sun that all dwellings adGRI Tree. Looking for a vertised are available 541-322-1500 great home for enteron an equal opportutaining with a private nity basis. The Bulle& peaceful setting in a tin Classified 55+ mobile home community? This One-of-a-Kind Log home offers plenty of Home. Custom log lifestyle options. The home - 4344 sq. ft. 3 community includes a bedrooms, 2.5 bath, clubhouse. Close to views of Cascades, the Senior Center, a gourmet kitchen with park & bus route. All top-of-the-line applifor $38,000! Downtown Bend ances. Huge deck for MLS#201109851 $925,000 outdoor living. 62775 1 block from Drake Park, www.johnlscott.com/ NW Idanha, Bend. beautifully updated 5 19258 $495,000 bdrm, 3.5 bath, 3709 Faye Phillips, Broker www.johnlscott.com/da sq. ft. home. Private 541-480-2945 niellesnow master on main, 2nd John L. Scott Real Danielle Snow, Broker master upstairs. GorEstate, Bend 541-306-1015 geous kitchen with www.JohnLScott.com/Bend John L. Scott Real great room. Flat, Estate, Bend fenced back yard. Seller paid space rent www.JohnLScott.com/Bend MLS#201108606 Like a Model Home, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Megan Power, Broker, OPPORTUNITY IS GRI, CDPE vaulted, light & bright, KNOCKING 541-610-7318 private setting, at2977 NW Wild Meadow tached garage, heat Dr. $399,900 pump, air. Seller may Is this your home? This contribute up to finely crafted home $3,000 in Buyer costs with a separate 1 @ closing for space bedroom apartment is rent. Call for details. now available. This $79,900. stunning home feaCandice Anderson, tures over 3 bedBroker 541-788-8878 rooms, private office, John L. Scott Real living room with fireEstate, Bend place plus a cherry Mountain views | www.JohnLScott.com/Bend kitchen with stainless $475,000 steel appliances, isCascade Mountain Shows like a model land and pantry. The views from 6.46 acres home. Beautiful home master suite has a tile with large garage/RV in a great neighborbathroom & gas firearea, barn, crosshood, this home feaplace. Neat corner lot fenced pastures & tures a spacious with RV parking. Enunderground sprinkitchen, tile counterjoy outdoor living with klers. SolAire home tops, hardwood floors a covered porch and with updated kitchen, and much more. Call rear deck. Short sale huge family room, for more information bargain... hurry. deck & wrap-around Barbara Jackson, Gary Everett, CCIM porch. Broker 541-306-8186 Principal Broker MLS#201201805 John L. Scott Real 541-480-6130 Sue Conrad, Broker, Estate, Bend Remax CRS www.JohnLScott.com/Bend 541-480-6621 Need help ixing stuff? Snowberry Village #46 Call A Service Professional 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 1600+ sq. ft., 1994 ind the help you need. Silvercrest. Living www.bendbulletin.com room, separate dining room w/large kitchen PRICE REDUCTION. 3 with eating area, huge bedroom, 2.5 bath covered BBQ deck, home on just under an nice views, pellet acre, fireplace in livstove, large laundry ing room, wood stove room & 2-car atin family room, wood tached garage. NW Bend | $1,500,000 floors, kitchen island, Executive home with $92,500. shop area off garage, Cascade views, masMarilyn Rohaly, Broker ter his/her baths & fenced backyard. 541-322-9954 closets, junior master $134,900. John L. Scott Real suite, media room, exEllen Clough, ABR, crs, Estate, Bend ercise room, shop/ Broker 541-480-7180 www.JohnLScott.com/Bend studio, oversized 3 car John L. Scott Real garage, professional Estate, Bend Wildwood Park Single cook's kitchen & elwww.JohnLScott.com/Bend Level. Lovely evator. MLS ranch-style home in #201200510 Good classiied ads tell stable neighborhood Susan Agli, Broker, the essential facts in an has many updates & SRES interesting Manner. Write wonderful features 541-383-4338 from the readers view - not like 2 fireplaces, loads 541-408-3773 the seller’s. Convert the of RV parking & huge master suite. Just a facts into beneits. Show golf cart drive away to the reader how the item will the Bend Golf & CC. help them in some way. A must see! Gail Rogers, Broker 541-604-1649 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend

GARDENSIDE NW Bend townhome SW Bend | $549,000 Pristine - 1588 sq ft. $229,000 Treasure of a home in Lovely 1-level overRiver Rim! Warm & We just started construction of 3 more looks the beautiful inviting single level single story 3 bedRivers Edge fairway. built by Schumacher. room homes in the Open floor plan with Extensive use of popular neighborvaulted great room. woods & custom winhood of Gardenside. Master bedroom with dow coverings. A Each home features large soaking tub & must see to apprecian open great room shower. Sunny southate the extensive with gas fireplace & ern exposure & amenities! MLS neat kitchen with nestled in the trees. #201108147. cook’s island, SS apMLS#201203275 Jim & Roxanne pliances, formal dinSherry Perrigan, Broker Cheney, Brokers ing, wood flooring and 541-410-4938 541-390-4050 tile countertops. 541-390-4030 These quality crafted homes will have double garages and be fully landscaped and fenced. Call Gary & Joan while you can still choose your finishing touches. REMAX Key Properties NW Classic | $399,000 541-728-0033 Spacious 4000 sq. ft., 4 748 bedroom, NW con- Northeast Bend Homes Ponderosa Estates temporary home. $429,900 Main level living with 3 acres in city limits Beautiful family home in great room, chef's 495,000 the tall pines on early kitchen, den & master Large potentially divid.5 acre cul-de-sac lot. suite. Junior suite & 2 able acreage with 2.8 Large rooms, master large bedrooms on acres of COI irrigabedroom & den on the lower level. tion in Bend City limmain level. Formal Fabulous home theits. Close to downliving & dining rooms. ater. MLS#201109467 town. 4 bedroom, 3.5 Hardwood floors. 3 Karin Johnson, Broker bath, 3887 sq. ft. car garage with shop 541-639-6140 house. Living & famarea. MLS#201201751 ily rooms with wood Judy Meyers, burning fireplaces. BROKER, GRI, CRS MLS#201200172 541-480-1922 Pat Palazzi, Broker 541-771-6996

NW Pottery Barn Perfect | $424,900 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 3197 sq. ft., corner lot, cook's kitchen, light & 749 bright, office/den/4th bdrm, sound system, Southeast Bend Homes oversized double garage, RV parking, 20840 SE Tamar Ln., fenced, A/C, quality Bend. 2103 sq. ft. 3 throughout. bdrm, 3 bath home inMLS#201203358 cludes a guest suite at Dana Miller, Broker the front of the home, 541-408-1468 designed coffered ceilings in the master bedroom, vaulted great room with skylights, large gourmet kitchen and a covered patio off the great room. $337,500. Lot #19 The Bridges The Hasson Co. Realtors, 541-420-2950 Edie 541-3068927 West Hills | $325,000 Julie. 4 bdrm, 2.75 baths, 2208 sq. ft. Gorgeous pine treed lot! Master 20867 SE Tamar Lane. 2510 sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 3 & 2 additional bedbath, backs to natural rooms on main level. open space. Main Private guest suite & level living w/just bolarge bonus room. nus room & bath upMLS#201202851 stairs. Great Room Margo DeGray, Broker, w/fireplace. Gourmet ABR, CRS kitchen w/granite 541-480-7355 countertops, & walk-in pantry. Master suite with tile shower & walk-in closet. The Bridges, $348,000. The Hasson Company, 541-420-2950, Edie or 541-306-8927, Julie. 747

Southwest Bend Homes River Canyon Estates $379,000 Beautiful upgraded home has it all. 4 bedrooms, office, bonus room and 3-car tandem. In a great community that offers pools, tennis, fitness, clubhouse, parks and direct river access. A must see! MLS#201202126 Becky Brunoe, Broker 541-350-4772

River Rim | $359,900 3 bedroom + office, open great room floor plan with low maintenance yard. Vaulted ceilings, spacious bedrooms, gourmet kitchen with hardwood floors, alder cabinetry & island with granite slab counters. MLS#201201245 Melanie Maitre, Broker 541-480-4186

SW Bend | $50,000 Wooded .93 acre lot on paved road with the solitude you seek but only minutes from the Old Mill District & downtown Bend. Smell the pines, listen to the wind through the trees and enjoy the peace. MLS#201102530 Lynne Connelley, EcoBroker, ABR, CRS 541-408-6720

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Redmond Homes $299,900 This beautiful 1655 sf 2 bdrm, 2 bath home is located in The Falls, a 55 and older Active Adult Community and situated on the 15th fairway of the Challenge golf Course. Home ID857. Eagle Crest Properties www.eagle-crest.com 866-722-3370 $325,000 Beautiful turn-key home in Eagle Crest Resort behind the security gates. 1919 sq. ft. 3bdrm/2bath on the 13th hole of the Resort Course and near the private pool and tennis court. Home ID906 Eagle Crest Properties™ 866-722-3370 RESIDENTIAL/Investment | $99,000 •Rental house & shop building on large industrial zoned lot •Recent remodel w/new windows, doors, paint, and flooring. •Rent house and use shop for your business or personal use •House and shop have separate power, have been rented together and separate. MLS#201203189 Call Fred Crouch, 541-350-1945 Central Oregon Realty Group LLC

61156 Sydney Harbor Dr. Bend. 2914 sq. ft. 5 bdrm, 3 bath, mail level den/guest suite, gourmet kitchen with6-burner stainless cooktop. Great room with fireplace. The luxurious master suite features a fireplace and fabulous $204,000 Beautifully bathroom, 3 more situated on the 14th bdrms and huge botee box/fairway of the nus room. $339,950 Ridge Golf Course. The Hasson Co. This 1328 sq. ft. 541-306-8927 Julie 3br/2ba Sun Forest 541-420-2950 Edie built chalet is ready for you! Home-ID831 BADGER FOREST AfEagle Crest fordable excellence in Properties™ SE Bend, starting in 866-722-3370 the mid-$100’s. everyone deserves to live in a home that One of Summerfield’s best!!! Adorable home carries award-winhas been very well ning excellence at a taken care of and upprice that is afforddated!! Sitting along able. Badger Forest the COI canal, this gives the first time 3Bdrm, 2 Bath home homeowner a chance is fully fenced, landto live in a quality scaped, and even has home conveniently loa fantastic garden cated within walking shed!! Inside you will distance of the Bend find a great floor plan outlet Mall, restauwith a large living rants and other room, vaulted ceilings, amenities. Pahlisch and a new pellet Homes offered by stove, and new carThe Hasson Compet!! Wonderful light pany Realtors and bright kitchen with 855-385-6762 sunny bay window and dining area!! GARDENSIDE $125,000. MLS Laurelhurst 201202327 2,388 sq ft John L. Scott Real EsWe just started contate 541-548-1712 struction of a great two story 4+ bedroom home in the popular OVER 1/3 ACRE Don’t miss this large, single Gardenside. This level home on an home features an oversized lot! This open great room, neat home features grankitchen with cook’s ite counters in the island, SS appliances, kitchen, updated pantry, wood flooring baths, one with beauand tile countertops. tifully tiled walk-in Main level master shower, new cabinsuite, parlor with fireetry and fixtures, place, bonus room & lovely gas fireplace huge craft/utility room. with slate surround, Quality crafted home and more! Lots of exwill have double gatras like hardwood rages and be fully floors, newer carpets, landscaped and paint and detached 3 fenced. Call Gary & car garage. $115,000 Joan while you can still choose your fin- MLS#201202049 D&D Realty Group LLC ishing touches. 1-866-346-7868 REMAX Key Properties $169,000 1168 sq. ft. 541-728-0033 3br/2bath townhome w/ custom touches, on SE Bend | $144,900 private, quiet cul-de3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1433 sac with golf course sq. ft. home located frontage, in the gated on .48 acre lot. Dbl. community of the reattached garage, dbl. sort side of Eagle detached garage, and Crest. Home-ID 928. a 2nd dbl. detached Eagle Crest garage with overProperties™ sized doors for an RV 866-722-3370 bay. MLS#201104953 Mark Valceschini, P.C., $235,000 One owner Broker, CRS, GRI 1871 sq. ft. 3br/2.5ba 541-383-4364 Creekside Village townhome overlooking the pond & creek with a very private setting. Property is in immaculate condition Home-ID877 Eagle Crest Properties™ 866-722-3370

$294,900. Immacu- Eagle Crest | $340,000 MOVE IN NOW! A lately maintained and 3 bdrmm, 2 bath, 2558 Little TLC & ready rarely used 2018 sq. for summer bbq’s. 3 sq. ft. vacation home, ft. 3 bdrm, 20189 bath bdrm, 1.5 bath, rental or permanent single level Forest 1169 sq. ft. close to home. Tennis courts, Ridge townhome with Dry Canyon and 3 golf courses, spa, double car garage. schools. $91,900. recreational trails & hardwood floors, ceilMLS#20120189 swimming. Nice deck ing fans, jetted tub overlooking 13th fair- Call VIRGINIA, Prinand hot tub. cipal Broker way. MLS#201201972 Home-ID869 541-350-3418 Sydne Anderson, Eagle Crest Redmond RE/MAX Broker, CRS, WCR, Properties™ Land & Homes CDPE, GREEN www.eagle-crest.com Real Estate 541-420-1111 866-722-3370 Near midtown. $75,900 This home has great $525,000 If you like golf bones! Talk about this 2680 sq. ft. with 2 potential!! Attn:: all master suites & guest handymen or project bdrm & bath is the people, this will be home for you, full view valuable once the of the 7th green of the fix-up is complete. Ridge Course, plus Enjoy the spacious views of the 7th & 8th rooms, generous fairways of the Ridge square footage, and Course. Home-ID718 Eagle Crest! Custom classic fireplace. Eagle Crest Properties Single Level! Mtn Fenced yard, patio, www.eagle-crest.com Views! 3 bdrm, 3 and great floor plan. 866-722-3370 bath, w/office, gated Split level reminiscent golf community. $299,900 1747 sq. ft, of the Brady Bunch MLS#201201743 2br/2ba 55 and older house. The finishing $383,800 Active Adult Commutouches are up to you. nity. Fabulous one Call VIRGINIA, PrinMLS#201202394 cipal Broker level home with priD&D Realty Group LLC 541-350-3418 vacy and outstanding 866-346-7868 Redmond RE/MAX landscaped yard Land & Homes New Construction backing to the golf Real Estate complete! 1504 sq. course. Home-ID882 ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath. Eagle Crest Properties Eagle Crest living at it’s $151,900. Jeanne 866-722-3370 finest! Great end loScharlund, Princ. www.eagle-crest.com cation townhome with Brkr. 541-420-7978 3 full bdrms including $354,500 Stunning Redmond RE/MAX an open Master loSmith Rock views Land & Homes cated on the bottom from this single level, Real Estate floor. Enjoy sitting on 2,226 sq. ft. custom the patio watching golf New Construction home with 3 bdrms, 2 on the Challenge completed! 1528 sq. baths, Brazilian cherry Course or riding the ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath. floors, granite counter trails, golf, swim, dine dual sinks in master tops, pantry, and and experience Cenbath. $154,900. much more. Hometral Oregon resort livJeanne Scharlund, ID808 Eagle Crest ing now! $168,500 Principal Broker. Properties™ MLS#201201341 541-420-7978 866-722-3370 D&D Realty Group LLC Redmond RE/MAX 866-346-7868 3 bdrm, 1.5 bath, Land & Homes 1206 sq. ft, large Real Estate FIND IT! fenced backyard, BUY IT! Ready for you. | RV/boat parking, SELL IT! $109,500 Want a hardwood flooring, home ready to move The Bulletin Classiieds gas FP, $75,900. into? WELL this one is MLS# 201200777. Expansive great room it. New paint inside Kelly Starbuck, Broker views and city lights. and out, new carpet 541-771-7786 Cherry wood cabinets and vinyl, new stainRedmond RE/MAX in kitchen, slab granless Whirlpool appliLand & Homes ite counters w/slate ances including new Real Estate backsplash. Floor to stainless side-by-side ceiling stone fireplace, The Bulletin Whirlpool refrigerator. private dining room To Subscribe call Large fenced backand loads of storage. yard, new front land541-385-5800 or go to This home has outscape, great NW www.bendbulletin.com standing Cascade neighborhood. Vamtn. views. Fenced cant and ready to Amazing unobstructed landscaped yard with move into now!! Cascade mtn. views. cascading pond. MLS#201202241 2600 sq. ft. has two MLS#201200948 Contact Jim Hinton master suites, 3rd $429,000 541-420-6229 bdrm could be downCentral Oregon stairs but was de- John L. Scott Real Estate 541-548-1712 Realty Group signed as a theater room. Under house Great getaway on .73 Turn-key home on large storage, fenced backacre, 2496 sq. ft. lot. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, yard with concrete w/office/den, bonus 1843 sq. ft., .24 acre patio and deck. room, RV area, + lot, gas fireplace, Fenced RV parking. another family roomcentral air, fenced, RV $229,900. living area. parking. $174,900 MLS#201201196 $165,500. MLS# MLS #201202259, John L. Scott Real 201107685. Jeanne Pam Lester, Principal Estate 541-548-1712 Scharlund, Princ. Broker, Century 21 Brkr. 541-420-7978 Gold Country Realty, BANK OWNED! 3 Redmond RE/MAX Inc. 541-504-1338 bdrm, 2 bth, 1008 sq. Land & Homes ft., new carpet, new Real Estate Well maintained 3 paint, tile floors, granbdrm, 2 bath, 1354 ite countertop in Great home for the first sq. ft. home with gas kitchen, fenced. time home buyer or fireplace, 3-car ga$77,500. MLS investor. From the rage, fenced, land201202178. Pam front porch, to the tile scaped, raised garLester, Principal Brofoyer, this newer den beds. $134,500. ker, Century 21 Gold home is all you need! MLS 201200352 Pam Country Realty, Inc. The kitchen is sunny, Lester, Principal Bro541-504-1338 the living room is spaker, Century 21 Gold cious, and there are 3 Country Realty, Inc. BEAUTIFUL Well cared bdrms and 2 full baths 541-504-1338 for ranch-style home as well. Cozy in winon .51 acre. 3 bdrms, ter with forced-air Well maintained 3 2 baths, over 2000 heat, access to a side bdrm, 2 bath, 1580 sq.ft, all on one level. yard with patio area, sq. ft., corner lot, Home has 9’. ceilings, plus attached 2- car landscaped, fenced, triple car garage and garage with alley acSuper Good Cents, views of Smith Rock cess. $105,000 MLS# RV parking. $139,500 and the Cascades. 201202022 MLS #201009477. Tons of upgrades, this D&D Realty Group LLC Pam Lester, Principal is a home you will 866-346-7868 Broker, Century 21 definitely want to see. Gold Country Realty, $230,000. Great starter home, Inc. 541-504-1338 MLS#201107890 huge backyard with John L. Scott Real Es- separate fenced RV Looking for your next tate 541-548-1712 parking. $70,000. employee? MLS#201107587 Between Bend & Place a Bulletin help TRAVIS HANNAN, Redmond, 1252 sq. wanted ad today and Principal Broker ft., 30'x36' shop. reach over 60,000 541-788-3480 $220,000. readers each week. Redmond RE/MAX MLS#201106279 Your classified ad Land & Homes TRAVIS HANNAN, will also appear on Real Estate Principal Broker bendbulletin.com Home on .57 acres 541-788-3480 which currently reinside city limits Redmond RE/MAX ceives over 3bdrm, 2bath, 1497 Land & Homes 1.5 million page sq. ft. Lots of gated Real Estate views every month parking for your toys at no extra cost. Charming end of cul-de,attached dbl. car Bulletin Classifieds sac home, with a garage, additional 2 Get Results! western motif. Living story shop/barn with Call 385-5809 or room is plumbed for bath & office. Lots of place your ad on-line natural gas, wood & space & possibiliat tile floors throughout. ties. $234,900. MLS bendbulletin.com Large landscaped lot #201202257. Call with sprinkler system Kelly Starbuck, Broker 755 and a fenced back541-771-7786 yard. $119,900 Redmond RE/MAX Sunriver/La Pine Homes MLS#201109122 Land & Homes D&D Realty Group LLC Real Estate 53100 Woodstock 866-346-7868 $179,900. 3 bdrm, 2 Just like new. $112,500 bath, custom 2001 sq. Clean single story Vacant and Ready to ft., 1.15 acres, dehome, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Move into, ALL NEW tached garage. High 1529 sq. ft., gas fireappliances including Lakes Realty & Propplace, landscaped, refrigerator. New paint erty Management fenced, back yard with inside and out. New 541-536-0117 water feature and carpet and vinyl, wood large paver patio. floor in living and din- 14835 Ponderosa Loop, $109,000. MLS# ing area. Fenced back La Pine area. 1782 201201105. Pam yard, full bath in sq.ft. home on 10.7 Lester, Principal Bromaster incl. double acres. Borders Forest ker, Century 21 Gold closets. land. $99,500. Country Realty, Inc. MLS#201202258 High Lakes Realty 541-504-1338 Jim Hinton, & Property 541-420-6229 CenManagement Close to schools. Nice 3 tral Oregon Realty 541-536-0117 bedroom home in Group LLC town and close to 151852 Conestoga. schools. Landscaped Large .24 acre lot with 2527 sq. ft., 4.2 acres, with a fenced yard, RV parking. 3 bdrm, 2 sunroom, 16 skylights, RV parking too! bath, 1483 sq. ft., community pool. $79,900 large patio, low $249,000. High Lakes MLS#201106963 maintenance. landRealty & Property D&D Realty Group LLC scaping with sprinManagement 866-346-7868 klers. $134,900. MLS 541-536-0117 #201202432. Pam CUTE NEWER HOME Lester, Principal Bro- 152232 Long Prairie. La In SW Redmond, availPine. Cute 2 bdrm, 1 ker, Century 21 Gold able now! With a lot of bath home on 1 acre. Country Realty, Inc. value for your dollar, 4 car garage/shop 541-504-1338 this home is located in plus storage bldg. a friendly neighbor- Luxury views at its fin$169,900. High Lakes est! Lay back and hood and great comRealty & Property watch Bald Eagles Management munity. Nearby soar outside your schools, downtown 541-536-0117 window from this inwith charming restaucredible home. With 1620 sq. ft. home with 3 rants, shopping and over 5200 sq. ft, two entertainment, simply bdrm, 2 bath, sunmaster suites, 4 luxua great place to call room, large kitchen rious bathrooms & the home. 3 bedrooms, 2 and 1400 sq. ft. shop, most amazing views full baths, fenced back 576 sq. ft. garage. that Central Oregon yard, forced air heat Fenced, has a fenced has to offer!! Call and attached 2-car in pond, greenhouse. Brenda Johnson for a garage, this home So much here to see detailed list of ameniwon’t last. $115,000 $130,000 MLS ties. 541-280-1535. MLS#201202018 201202194 John L. Scott Real D&D Realty Group LLC Cascade Realty, Estate 541-548-1712 866-346-7868 1-541-536-1731


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16933 Sacramento - Price Reduced - Cus$174,900. Beautiful 3 tom home near CRR bdrm, 2 bath just outentrance and golf! Inside Sunriver. Knotty cludes garage, shop, pine, granite. High greenhouse. ReLakes Realty & Propduced to $154,900. erty Management MLS 201200663. 541-536-0117 Call Nancy Popp Broker 541-815-8000 4 bdrm, 3 bath 2276 sq. Crooked River Realty ft. frame home on 1.11 acres. Some in- Very cute centrally loterior work downcated home situated stairs needs to be on comfortable city completed for extra lot. Low maintenance, room. Attached gashed and double car rage. Bank owned garage as well as 3 $126,200 MLS comfortable bed201202051 rooms and much Cascade Realty, more. $68,900 Dennis Haniford, Princ. MLS#201108141 Broker D&D Realty Group LLC 1-541-536-1731 866-346-7868

17215 Jacinto, Great buy in Crestridge Estates located on 5 $110,000. 3 bdrm, 2 acres, cute 1800 sq. bath, family room, ft. home, 3-car atgarage, near Sunriver. tached garage, gas High Lakes Realty & fireplace in the great Property Manageroom, den/office could ment 541-536-0117 be used as 3rd bed16755 Elk Ct., 2100 sq. room. Detached unft., 9.9 acres, amazfinished shop/garage ing views of mt. with large bay door for Bachelor. $337,000. RV. No power or waHigh Lakes Realty & ter to shop. $279,000 Property Manage- MLS #201201287 John ment 541-536-0117 L. Scott Real Estate 541-548-1712 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 30x48 RV/Auto Garage, 1.66 Advertise your car! Add A Picture! acre rim lot, $159,900, Reach thousands of readers! MLS#201202284 Call Nancy Popp, Princ. Call 541-385-5809 Broker 541-815-8000 The Bulletin Classifieds Crooked River Realty Horse Property in Sisters - Mountain views 3BDRM/2BATH frame from this 2059 sq ft 3 home on 1.03 acres. bedroom, 3 bath Master bedroom is home on 6.82 acres. downstairs, attached 10 stall horse barn, 50 garage, wood shed, x120’ hay barn and 40 fenced back yard. x 60’ shop. 3.5 acres Bank owned. of the property is irri$109,000. MLS gated. 20120258 $499,000. Cascade Realty, MLS #201202206 1-541-536-1731 Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 52970 Sunrise Blvd. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, hard- JUST LISTED - This woods, detached gaproperty has it all! rage, 1.5 acres. Wonderfully main$92,000. High Lakes tained spacious home Realty & Property on 9.55 acres w/7 Management acres of automated 541-536-0117 underground irrigation that adjoins acres 53089 Alps Ct., 3 bdrm, & acres of BLM. 2½ bath on 1.13 acres 4222+ sq. ft., 4+ adjoining national forbdrms, 3.5 baths, est land. $259,900. formal & casual living High Lakes Realty & dining areas, bonus & Property room, office, family Management room, flex space. 541-536-0117 Double stainless range/ovens, hard5 Acres in CRR - w/ wood, slab granite, 3 mobile home, carport wood burning fire& large shop, places, abundant $97,500, owner will storage. Beautiful carry, 559-627-4933. mtn. views. 8 stall 5 acres with mountain barn, shop, pasture, views, 3 bdrm, 2 bath irrigated arena, mul1620 sq. ft., irrigated, tiple dry lots/corrals, 36x40 shop, fenced, chicken coop & more. extensive sprinkler All just minutes from system. $279,000. shopping, medical & MLS2809225. schools. Pam Lester Principal MLS#201201941 Broker Century 21 $695,000 Gold Country Melody Luelling CRS Realty Inc. PC Principal Broker, 541-504-1338 Hasson Company Realtors, 541-330-8522 86890 Golden Ln.$95,000. Gorgeous Lodge-style home on Deschutes River, 5 views, 40 acres, 2 acres, approx. 575 ft. bdrm. Many outbuildof riverfront, Cascade ings, bunkhouse. views, 5 bdrm, 5 bath, High Lakes Realty 4649 sq.ft., 2 master & Property suites, horses OK. Management $689,000. MLS 541-536-0117 #201007307. Pam POWELL BUTTE. Sgl. Lester, Principal Brolevel custom built ker, Century 21 Gold 2146 sf home on 7.69 Country Realty, Inc. acres. Living room + 541-504-1338 family room. Cascade Many upgrades! Like Mountain views, 2016 new built in 2010 sf shop, all top-of-the-line fin- 1701 Sq. Ft., 3 bdrm, 2 bath home on 5.31 ishes. $379,900 fenced acres . Open MLS#201106497 John L. Scott Real Es- floor plan with an efficient wood stove that tate 541-548-1712 keeps the home cozy during these winter Between Bend & Reddays. Large shop with mond, 4 bdrm, 2.75 concrete floors and a bath, 2485 sq.ft., 2.24 greenhouse. acres, 30x30 shop w/ $299,000. RV bay, huge rear MLS #201200391 deck. $389,000. MLS JUNIPER REALTY, #201103219. Pam 541-504-5393. Lester, Principal Broker, Century 21 Gold NE Bend | $348,500 Country Realty, Inc. Peaceful acreage in a 541-504-1338 great neighborhood between Bend and Cascade Mtn. Views Redmond. Ranch with from this custom 4 3 car garage, 30x40 bdrm, 3 bath home on shop on 2.69 acres. 4.97 acres. master on MLS#201202906 main. Quality and seNatalie Vandenborn, clusion. $369,000. Broker MLS 201103230/ 541-508-9581 John L. Scott Real Estate 541-548-1712

51839 Fordham Dr. 762 $210,000. 3 bdrm, 2 Homes with Acreage bath, vaulted, great rm, tile, granite, hard- Desirable location in woods. High Lakes CRR. Custom 1841 Realty & Property sq. ft., 3 bdrm, 2 bath Management home on completely 541-536-0117 fenced 4.81 acres. Tongue & grove caFully fenced 1 acre with thedral ceilings, gas 3 bdrm, 2 bath home freestanding stove, that is well mainwood accents.. Large tained and has been decks to enjoy the upgraded. Garage, 2 amazing mtn. views. sheds, metal roof, $385,000 covered porches and MLS 201101447 deck. RV site with full Juniper Realty, hookups & plenty of 541-504-5393. storage. $102,500 MLS 201104080 Single level home on Cascade Realty, 2.2 acres, 3 bdrm/2 Dennis Haniford, Princ. bath, 1220 sq. ft., upBroker dated, huge covered 1-541-536-1731 deck, new stainless appliances. $169,900. Gateway to Heaven MLS# 201109794 $299,900 Pam Lester, Principal Well-kept home, moveBroker Century 21 in ready. Elegant caGold Country Realty, thedral entry, 3 fireInc. 541-504-1338 places, skylights. Beautiful wood slat- CROOKED RIVER ted ceilings with ceilRANCH | $176,500 ing fans, jetted tub in Well-built 3 bdrm, 2 master. Visit today! bath, 1181 sq. ft. MLS #201201665 home. 24'x36' shop TenBroek - Hilber concrete slab floor & Group, LLC automatic door 541-550-4944 opener, A Fire Suppression System! Low maintenance landscaping & 2 RV hookups ~ power/water & private RV dump site on property. MLS# 201108597. Pamela Foster-Adamson, 541-408-7843 Central Oregon Realty Owner will carry conGroup LLC tract! Home Sparkles custom Like New. 51860 Hol- Impeccable home on 5ý acres. 3 linshead Place, La bdrm, 2½ bath bonus Pine. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 room, den, 2633 sq. baths, 2,259 Sq. Ft. ft. hardwood, large Bonus Room plus rear deck. $320,000. Den/Office. Offered MLS# 201201384. at $185,000. This Pam Lester, Principal better than new home Broker, Century 21 in La Pine’s CresGold Country Realty, cent Creek neighborInc. 541-504-1338 hood sparkles with new stainless steel Powell Butte, 3 bdrm, 2 appliances, carpet, bath, 1232 sq. ft., tile, light fixtures, paint $133,600. and upgraded plumbMLS#201008812 ing. Pahlisch Homes’ Call Julie Fahlgren, popular Westlake plan Broker 541-550-0098 incorporates a bonus Crooked River Realty room upstairs plus a den or optional fourth Between Bend & bedroom on the main Redmond, 4.75 level, opening to the acres fenced & foyer. This attractive cross fenced, 4.85 neighborhood north of acres of irrigation, La Pine includes a 1768 sq. ft. home, clubhouse, park and $320,000. play area. MLS#201200167 Contact Call TRAVIS HANGlenn Kotara NAN, Principal Bro541-480-7752 ker 541-788-3480 Redmond RE/MAX Three Rivers South Land & Homes $230,000 Real Estate Immaculate vaulted ceiling great-room MountainViews! Unique plan. 3 bedrooms + A-frame style home den/office. Hardwood on 1.11 acres is imfloors, tile counters, maculately maincovered front porch & tained. Blue & buggy back patio. National wood interior proForest down the vides you a warm “at street. The Deshome” feeling. Moun- Close in with acreage. chutes River is very tain views from this over 1700 sq. ft. of close. 1300+ sq ft, 2 spa- living space in this MLS#201203127 cious bedrooms and 2 home on 2.13 acres. Virginia Ross, Broker, baths. Oversized ga- Corner lot with abunABR, CRS, GRI rage with shop area dance of space and 541-480-7501 plus separate studio. lots of Juniper trees. $149,500 3 bdrms, 2 baths, with MLS#201200358 living room and sepa- New listing on .46 of an acre great 3 bedroom Juniper Realty, rate family room. home with new mod541-504-5393. Vaulted ceiling with ern kitchen, windows, wood accents, counLog Home on 2+ Acres. doors, roof and very try kitchen with eating Mtn views from this attractive inside. The bar, dining room, rustic feeling home front and backyard separate utility with close to town. Just are chain link fenced sinks & storage, lots remodeled with new and this is a quiet of decking, large 459 tile in master bath. cul-de-sac. Agent sq. ft. garage plus 864 New paint & carpet. 756 owned and Asking sq. ft. shop w/ 288 sq. Great small acreage $139,900! ft. lean-to. $210,000 Jefferson County Homes with privacy, room for Heather Hockett, PC MLS#201201855 animals & your toys. Broker 541-420-9151 Jim Hinton, 1.05 Acres, Jefferson Detached shop. Log Century 21 Gold 541-420-6229 view, $149,900, armroom with corner Country Realty. Central Oregon Realty MLS#20120184 Call stone fireplace. Watch Group Linda Lou Day-Wright Powell Butte! 10 the sunsets from the 541-771-2585 Acres! Views! Cushuge covered porch. Close to sports comCrooked River Realty tom home, spaMaster on main, two plex! 5.52 acres! cious & light, gourbdrms upstairs. Nice 3 bdrm, 3 bath 3008 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 2 acre, met kitchen, office & kitchen with lots of dbl. garage + 3 acsq. ft., 3200 sq. ft. more. $875,000. cabinets and counter cessory bldgs. shop w/office. MLS#201106428 space. Great laundry $119,900. $199,900. Call VIRGINIA, Prinroom with lots of cabiCall Nancy Popp BroMLS#201108429 cipal Broker net storage, counters, Call VIRGINIA, Prinker 541-815-8000 541-350-3418 and laundry sink. Two Crooked River Realty cipal Broker Redmond RE/MAX acres irrigation. 541-350-3418 Land & Homes Private nice area close $279,000. MLS Redmond RE/MAX Real Estate in at Crooked River #201200600 Land & Homes Ranch. 3 bdrm., 2 Fred Crouch, Real Estate QUIET COUNTRY LIVbath, very nice DBL 541-350-1945 CenING. On 2 acres, this car garage, $116,900, Custom-built home 4 tral Oregon Realty Chalet style home has MLS 201202001. bdrm home on 5 Group LLC had numerous upCall Julie Fahlgren acres w/irrigation. dates and is waiting Broker 541-550-0098 15775 Parkway Dr., Master suite is on for your final touches. Pine, Oregon. Crooked River Realty La main floor and feaKnotty alder kitchen $149,900. 2 bdrm, 2½ tures a glass block cabinets, tongue and Located in the quaint bath, 1386 sq. ft., 4.69 walk-in shower, 3 adgroove, and exposed community of Culver acres horse-ready, ditional bdrms upbeams are just some and close to all Censhop/ barn. High stairs w/bonus room. of the unique features tral Oregon recreLakes Realty & Prop48x30 shop plus a adorning this home. ation. 3 bdrms, 2 erty Management dbl. car garage afBring your paint brush baths and a family 541-536-0117 fords a multiple of and fresh ideas, this 3 room. Close to uses. White vinyl bdrm, 2 bath home is acres custom schools & park. 10 fencing, water feature, waiting to be made home shop in Pow$72,200 patio/deck, landyour home. Shop and ell Butte! Unique MLS#201200682 scaped and an RV shed on property as floorplan with inD&D Realty Group area. well. Won’t last long at door spa room, wide 866-346-7868 MLS#201201027 this price! $94,100 hallways, single John L. Scott Real EsNice 2 bdrm, 1 bath MLS#201201779 level. $417,000 tate 541-548-1712 home on a large lot D&D Realty Group LLC MLS#201108648 with a 2 car detached Call VIRGINIA, Prin1-866-346-7868 Custom home! 20 garage. Close to cipal Broker acres in West Powdowntown, lots of 541-350-3418 ell Butte Estates! RECENT PRICE REroom for all your toys. Redmond RE/MAX Cascade Mt. Views, DUCTION!! Custom $37,500 Land & Homes 4bdrm/4bath, 5494 home on 7+ acres. MLS#201202393 Real Estate sq. ft., 4-car garage, Cascade Mountain D&D Realty Group LLC detached shop, views, 2146 sq. ft., 1592 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 866-346-7868 bank approved 3Bdrm/2Bath, living bath, site-built, 2 car Price Reduced 1783 sq. price. $785,642 room PLUS a family attached heated gaft. LOG HOME 1.49 MLS#201006747 room and separate rage, 24x36 heated, acre rim lot. Double office. Tile, granite finished shop w/10’ Call VIRGINIA, Pringarage. $259,000. cipal Broker and hickory. 2016 ceilings & 220V power, MLS 201109591. 541-350-3418 sq.ft.shop. $379,900 all on 1.22 treed acre Call Nancy Popp BroRedmond RE/MAX MLS#201106497 lot in CRR, too much to ker 541-815-8000 Land & Homes John L. Scott Real list, $195,000 call Crooked River Realty 541-633-9613. Real Estate Estate 541-548-1712

NORTH POWELL Redmond. 109ý acres Three Rivers South BUTTE 3 LOTS! with 64 acres COI. $80,000 Buildable, rare, North Full Cascade Mtn. Flat .48 of an acre Powell Butte 9.97 views. $599,000. building lot on corner acre parcel $95,000, MLS#201006080 with canal along one 10.29 acres $95,000 Call TRAVIS HANside, canal flows diand 17.36 acres NAN, Principal Brorectly into the Big De$125,000. Irrigation ker, 541-788-3480 schutes River. Area canal running through, Redmond RE/MAX has boat launch & lots of trees. Cascade Land & Homes dock, clubhouse and Mountain views, quiet Real Estate road maintenance. area 20 minutes to MLS#201105237 Turn-key Ranch w/ Redmond Municipal DON KELLEHER, Cascade mtn. views! Airport. Additional Broker Built in 1993, 38+ parcels available! 541-480-1911 acres w/ 26+ irrig., Contact Vicci Bowen barn, shop, hay shed, Broker, 541-410-9730 fenced. $550,000. Central Oregon MLS #201003925. Realty Group Pam Lester, Principal Broker, Century 21 $159,000 Probably the finest golf course lot Gold Country Realty, remaining. Located Inc. 541-504-1338 behind a private gate Views! Views! VIEWS! of upscale homes. 79.69 acres w/27 Looks east at the acres of irrigation. Vista Rim at Eagle mountains & sits on Barn, shop, & guest Crest Resort For the the #17 hole of the quarters w/almost first time you can purgolf course. Level & 2200ý sq. ft. house. chase a homesite in easy to build. Homes$550,000. Vista Rim, this upite-ID870 MLS#201200048 scale community is Eagle Crest Properties Call TRAVIS HANperched on the gentle 866-722-3370 NAN, Principal Broslopes of Cline Butte, $175,000 Extraordinary ker 541-788-3480 many with views of opportunity to own a Redmond ReMax the creek and pond, golf course lot at Land & Homes Real the Smith Rock area Eagle Crest in gated Estate including the surcommunity. One half rounding mountains, Well maintained 3 acre lot on the 12th buttes and juniper forbdrm, 2bath home on green/Resort Course. ests below. These 20 acres of secluded Homesite-ID925. homesites are availland. Vaulted ceilings, Eagle Crest able at an incredible den, large kitchen with Properties™ value starting at pantry. Private yet 866-722-3370 $42,500. All just five close to town. 1.42 Acre lot | $125,000 minutes from the $189,900 Awbrey Glen Golf Lakeside pool, sports MLS 201107445 Community, beautiful, center and tennis Cascade Realty, treed & private with courts. 866-722-3370 1-541-536-1731 peek-a-boo mountain Eagle Crest WEST POWELL views. Directions: Mt. Properties™ BUTTE ESTATES! Washington Dr. to 21+/- acres! Tradi773 Putnam. Property is tional Sale! Goron right hand side Acreages geous home, large approximately 1/10 RV, shop, views! mile from Champion Septic, power and wa$479,000! Cir. MLS#201203020 ter installed, 5.5 MLS#201104899 Michelle Tisdel, PC, acres. $125,000. MLS Call VIRGINIA, PrinBroker 201104846 cipal Broker 541-390-3490 Call Linda Lou 541-350-3418 Day-Wright, Broker, Redmond RE/MAX 541-771-2585 Land & Homes Crooked River Realty Real Estate Over 7 acres private 763 acres at CRR. Recreational Homes $112,900 & Property MLS#201106739. Call Julie Fahlgren, Broker 541-550-0098 Crescent Lake 19138 Buzzard Lane. Great 2.09 acres, huge Cas- Crooked River Realty mountain feel! 2 cade Views, $99,900 13920 SW Commercial bed/1.5 bath lodge MLS#201104501 Loop. $20,000 style home on one Melody Curry, Broker, MLS#201108857 acre. Travertine tile 541-771-1116 Call Melody Curry, bath, vaulted ceilings, Crooked River Realty massive accent log $35,000. 9148 sq. ft. lot Broker, 541-771-1116 Crooked River Realty beams. Has ample on cul-de-sac, util. room to grow. Lostubbed in PUE, close Gorgeous 39.75 Acres!! cated in Diamond to West Canyon Rim You get it all with this Peaks. Great vacaPark and access to one! Huge Cascade tion property. Dry Canyon Trail. Mountain views, awe$189,500. MLS# MLS 201005021. some river frontage, 201200662. Call Pam Lester, Principal natural juniper, all Linda 541-815-0606 Broker. Century 21 topped off with unique Cascade Realty Gold Country Realty, natural rock outcropInc. 541-504-1338 pings! CUP has been Well maintained 3 granted. Adjacent to bdrm/2bath home that 4.38 acre view lot, miles of Public Lands. sits on 20 acres of sebacks to BLM, Cas$249,000. cluded land. Vaulted cade mtn and Smith MLS#201201017 ceilings, den & a large Rock view, corner lot, John L. Scott Real Eskitchen with pantry. approved for stantate 541-548-1712 Tone of privacy that is dard septic. $199,000. still close to town. MLS #2809381. Pam 5 acres adjoins public $189,900 Lester, Principal Broland over Deschutes MLS 201107445 Call ker, Century 21 Gold River. $79,900. MLS Linda 541-815-0606 Country Realty, Inc. #201102328. Cascade Realty 541-504-1338 Call Linda Lou Where can you ind a Day-Wright, Broker, Find It in 541-771-2585 helping hand? Crooked River Realty The Bulletin Classifieds! From contractors to 541-385-5809 Crooked River, Smith yard care, it’s all here Rock & mtn. views. AMAZING WEST in The Bulletin’s Owner terms. 6.9 HILLS LOT Over 1/3 “Call A Service acres with all util. & acre West Hills Lot on custom home plans. Professional” Directory uphill side of the $189,000 MLS street. Views to the #201008671 771 south, southeast and city lights. Home site 5.68 acres has many Lots bldg. sites. $225,000 has been partially MLS #201106408 cleared. $145,000. Nice flat lot in TerrebJuniper Realty, MLS# 201010522 or onne, .56 acres, 541-504-5393. visit paved street, approved for cap-fill johnlscott.com/50798 The Highlands at BroBobbie Strome, septic. Utilities are at ken Top. 10 acres Principal Broker the lot line. $42,000. gated, private well, MLS# 201201172 John L. Scott Real Esutilities at lot, aptate 541-385-5500 Pam Lester, Principal proved for cap-fill www.coguide.com Broker, Century 21 septic. $535,000. Gold Country Realty, MLS# 201200937 Awbrey Butte lot Inc. 541-504-1338 Pam Lester, Principal $169,900 Broker, Century 21 • 10 Acre, zoned for 5 Gorgeous, .86 acre lot Gold Country Realty, on Awbrey Butte in an acre lots $28,500 Inc. 541-504-1338 area of luxury homes. AD#2922 • 1+ Acre, cement sep- Views of the Ochoco 16025 SW Canyon Range, Pilot Butte & tic installed $29,995 View Place. $79,900 Bend city lights. On a AD#3442 MLS#201105166 cul-de-sac with all • 2.5 Acres, lake & mtn. Call Melody Curry, utilities at street. views $65,000 Broker, 541-771-1116 MLS#201102919 AD#8602 Crooked River Realty • 2 Acres, Cascade Mtn. Julia Buckland, Broker, ABR, ALHS, views $79,900 2.7 Acres with CasCRS, GRI AD#2512 cade views. $80,000. 541-719-8444 • 1.24 Acre, NW Bend MLS 201008526. acreage $95,000 Nancy Popp, Broker, AD#2962 541-815-8000. • 20 Acres, fully fenced, Crooked River Realty x-fenced $99,000 AD#2822 39 acres with view • 5 Acre, improved lot, $197,000 big pines $99,950 Great mountain views. AD#2332 Approved for farm• 1.7 Acre, backs comdwelling. 36 acres mon & river $115,000 COI water. BLM lands AD#2372 for recreating are just a • 1.83 Acre, Deschutes Good Value! Level 1.14 short distance away! acres that will be easy River lot $124,900 Create your own to build on Well treed AD#2182 ranchette just the way with an abundance of • 10 Acres, Paulina you want it! wildlife passing views $150,000 MLS#201201726 through. $41,500 AD#3062 Steve Payer, MLS# 201102002 • .27 Acre, SR Resort Broker, GRI Juniper Realty, corner lot $159,900 541-480-2966 541-504-5393 AD#2232 • 40+ Acre, Cascade NEWPORT LANDING Mtn. views $499,000 Bend’s newest commuAD#3452 nity starting in the TEAM Birtola Garmyn mid-$200’s. Just minPrudential High Desert utes away from Realty 541-312-9449 COCC and renowned www.BendOregon Northwest Crossing RealEstate.com shopping and restaurants. $94,900 Fabulous CasPahlisch Homes cade Mountain View Lot!! Now is the time offered by The Hasson Just bought a new boat? Company Realtors Sell your old one in the to build your dream 855-385-6762 classiieds! Ask about our home on this .39 of an Super Seller rates! acre lot, backs to Owner will carry! fan541-385-5809 open space!! Enjoy all tastic 1/2 acre lot with Eagle Crest ameniviews. $59,900. MLS 5-Acre corner lot, flat & ties. Homesite-ID795 201008725 fully treed. $49,900. Eagle Crest Call Julie Fahlgren, MLS#201109114, Properties™ Broker 541-550-0098 Call Nancy Popp, Prin866-722-3370 Crooked River Realty cipal Broker 541-815-8000 Mountain views. 1.22 PRICE REDUCED TO acres $52,500 $67,500, 1.7 acres, Crooked River Realty MLS#201105164. Golf Course Views, Call Melody Curry, MLS#20110342. Call All utilities installed. Mountain views from Broker, 541-771-1116 Melody Curry, Broker, this 5.12 acre parcel Crooked River Realty 541-771-1116 located in a desirable Crooked River Realty area. Save time & Mountain views. Drivemoney with septic, way in place. 1.02 Price reduction! well & power already acres. $53,900 $44,500 1.16 acre installed. $98,500 MLS#201103466 MLS#201105165 MLS# 201201035 Call Melody Curry, Call Melody Curry, Juniper Realty Broker, 541-771-1116 Broker, 541-771-1116 541-504-5393 Crooked River Realty Crooked River Realty

BUILDABLE IN OCHOCO WEST Suntree Village #219 Two neighboring lots, $35,400. each over 1/5 acre. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, Power and water in 2000 Marlette, Open the street. Buy both floor plan - vaulted, and build your dream Large kitchen - oak home or buy one for a cabinets, Attached gagreat place to park rage, Master suite your RV. Features inwalk-in closet, Master clude: over 1,200 bath w/garden tub & acres of Recreation shower, Beautifully Land, swimming pool, landscaped. tennis courts, fishing Call Marilyn Rohaly, lakes stocked with Broker, 541-322-9954 trout and bass, horse John L. Scott Real stables, riding trails & Estate, Bend Community Center. www.JohnLScott.com Beautiful view of the Prineville Valley. Snowberry Village #46 $89,150. $10,000 MLS #2806023 & 2806025 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1600+ sq.ft., 1994 Silveror visit crest, living room, johnlscott.com/94130 separate dining room & 94216 and large kitchen with Bobbie Strome, eating area, huge Principal Broker covered BBQ deck, John L Scott Real nice views, pellet Estate 541-385-5500 stove, large laundry room and 2 car atFISHING NEARBY! tached garage. 2.79 acres walking distance to the Des- Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 chutes River & SteelJohn L. Scott Real head Falls. Hike, bike, Estate, Bend ride horses, fly fish. www.JohnLScott.com Quiet & natural setting is ideal for vaca- 10 year warranty! Start tions or year-round at 40 per Sq. Ft. More living. $49,000 Sq. Feet for less. Call MLS# 201009429 John at J & M Homes, Juniper Realty 541-548-5511 541-504-5393 2 bed, 1 bath $13,000. JEFFERSON MTN. 2 bed, 1 bath $23,900. VIEWS. 1.13 acres 3 bed, 2 bath $25,900. with access from two 3 bed, 2 bath $18,000. streets providing you Call J & M Homes for many building site opdetails, tions. Owner terms 541-548-5511 available. $58,500 3 Bdrm., 2 bath, just MLS# 201106385 under 2 fenced acres, Juniper Realty 2001 manufactured in 541-504-5393 great cond., $79,900, MLS#201201999, Call Just off the pavement Julie Fahlgren, Broclose to the entrance ker, 541-550-0098 of Crooked River Crooked River Realty Ranch, 6.18 acres, mtn. views. $74,750 780 MLS# 201106579 Mfd./Mobile Homes Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 with Land Nice mountain views, Palm Harbor home with 3.09 acres, $95,950 4 bdrm, 3 full baths. MLS#201101554. Call Open floor plan, all Linda Lou Day-Wright, appliances, lots of Broker, 541-771-2585 storage space and Crooked River Realty block perimeter foundation. All this on 9.52 Nice Smith Rock views, acres. $223,000 5.3 Acres, near enMLS#201105757 trance of The Ranch, Cascade Realty MLS#2710905 541-536-1731 Call Linda Lou Day-Wright, Broker, 17055 Faun $65,000. 2 bdrm, covered porch, 541-771-2585 24x20 garage, 12x20 Crooked River Realty shop. Lean-to. High Lakes Realty & PropJust too many erty Management collectibles? 541-536-0117 Sell them in The Bulletin Classiieds

541-385-5809

Have an item to sell quick? If it’s under $ 500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classiieds for:

OWNER TERMS. A portion of Crooked River Ranch’s original watering hole is $ 10 - 3 lines, 7 days located on the proper$ 16 - 3 lines, 14 days ties. Nicely treed & private at the end of (Private Party ads only) the cul-de-sac. • Lot 5, 3.2 ac. $60,000 Bank owned Homes MLS# 201201076 on land start at • Lot 4, 4.78 ac $70,000 $69,950. Call John MLS# 201201074 at 541-350-1782 for details. Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 Borders government lands this 3 bdrm SEPTIC & POWER INhome has walk-in STALLED. This 5 acre closets in each bedlot is ready to build. room & ceiling fans. There is an old rock Front deck has been building adding to the made into a sunroom. charm of the property Oversized 2 car gawith outstanding rage with propane views of the Casheater plus extra RV cades and plenty of cover. $89,000 privacy. $155,000 MLS 201200073 MLS# 201200629 Cascade Realty, Juniper Realty, 1-541-536-1731 541-504-5393 Several Building Sites Level 5.19 acres with mountain views. Well treed with several possible building sites. Community water & power available at the street. $79,500 MLS# 201106095 Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 775

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

The perfect trio $149,900 Great Cascade View, Gardener’s Delight and spacious quality Fuqua home. Imagine the delight of enjoying gigantic mountain views over your morning coffee and pastry. It doesn’t get any better unless you also enjoy moseying through a delightful flower garden. MLS# 201200450. Gail Day 541-306-1018 Central Oregon Realty Group

Suntree Village #93 $37,800. Well-kept mfd home 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1876 with 2551 liveable sq. sq.ft., 1982 Fleetft. and plenty of land wood, vaulted living to roam. Situated on and formal dining, 4.50 acres just minhuge kitchen/family utes from downtown room with fireplace, Bend, this large 3 two carports plus front bdrm, 2 bath home deck and back patio. features a horseshoe $2500 carpet credit shaped kitchen with 1 year AHS warranty island & lots of cabiincluded. nets. 2-car attached Call Marilyn Rohaly, garage. Move-in Broker, 541-322-9954 ready and a must see John L. Scott Real if you are looking for a Estate, Bend large home, land, and www.JohnLScott.com close to town living. Only $147,900 Snowberry Village #88 MLS#201201116 $65,000. D&D Realty Group LLC 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1404 866-346-7868 sq.ft., 1994 Silvercrest, spacious living Take care of room with dining area your investments and huge kitchen, gas heat and air condiwith the help from tioning, separate The Bulletin’s laundry room, finished and insulated 2 “Call A Service car garage, close to Professional” Directory clubhouse. Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 Well maintained single wide on .33 acres. John L. Scott Real Has been landscaped, Estate, Bend fenced all around. www.JohnLScott.com Single car garage or Snowberry Village shop. Just painted on #118. $64,800. the outside. Reduced 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1188 to $25,900. 1MLS sq.ft., 2000 Silver201106973 crest, wonderful floorCascade Realty, plan with vaulted Dennis Haniford, Princ. ceilings and lots of Broker windows. Large laun1-541-536-1731 dry room, 2 car attache garage, covered Say “goodbuy” front porch, sliding to that unused door off back deck, great location. item by placing it in Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 The Bulletin Classiieds John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend 541-385-5809 www.JohnLScott.com


E6SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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

COLDWELL BANKER REALTOR

MORRIS REAL ESTATE

541-382-4123

70 Agents and thousands of listings at www.bendproperty.com This Week’s New Listings NW BEND | $800,000

NW BEND DUPLEX | $419,000

NW CROSSING | $405,000

REAL ESTATE & BUSINESS | $275,000

QUIET SETTING-2.84 ACRES | $179,000

Spectacular home with panoramic river & city views. Gourmet kitchen, great room, open vaulted ceilings, outdoor living space, main floor master, daylight basement, guest suite, wine cellar & storage. MLS#201203099 (730)

Newly built duplex, fabulous location next to OSUCOCC campus. Unit one is 3 bedroom, 2 bath; unit two is 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Both units have mountain views, great room, fireplace, & spacious kitchen. MLS#201203052 (730)

Wonderful open floor plan, beautiful use of woods, vaulted ceilings & extraordinary light in this custom craftsman. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, office, deep front porch. Delightful gardens. MLS#201202992 (730)

Turn-key convenience store with fuel and deli. Includes living quarters with 2 bedrooms and 2 baths. Owner will carry with large down. MLS#201203037 (730)

Well-kept manufactured home. 2 bedroom + den/office. Close to town & Prineville Reservoir. Enclosed patio. Large detached garage/shop with oil furnace. RV area & hook-up. Storage building/shed. 2 ponds. MLS#201202976 (730)

JOHN SNIPPEN, BROKER, MBA, ABR, GRI 541-312-7273 • 541-948-9090

LISA CAMPBELL, BROKER 541-419-8900

LYNNE CONNELLEY, ECOBROKER, ABR, CRS 541-408-6720

ROOKIE DICKENS, BROKER, GRI, CRS, ABR 541-815-0436

CAROLYN PRIBORSKY, P.C., BROKER, ABR, CRS 541-383-4350

NW BEND | $165,000

THREE RIVERS SOUTH LOT | $139,000

1.42 ACRE LOT | $125,000

NW BEND LOT | $119,000

FOR LEASE | $1,240/MONTH

Build your home on this fabulous .74-acre lot on Awbrey Butte. Corner lot with a level building site and pine trees. Convenient location only 10 minutes from downtown Bend or Highway 97. MLS#201202988 (730)

Easy build lot across from the Big Deschutes River on desirable street in River Meadows. Protective CC&R’s + amenities of pool, hot tub, trails, tennis courts & private marina. Close to Sunriver & Bend. MLS#201203063 (730)

Awbrey Glen Golf Community, beautiful, treed & private with peek-a-boo mountain views. Directions: Mt. Washington Dr. to Putnam. Property is on right hand side approximately 1/10 mile from Champion Cir. MLS#201203020 (730)

Large, private Awbrey Butte lot towards the end of a cul-de-sac offering Pilot Butte & city views. This 3/4 acre lot is near recreation trails & nestled among high end homes in a nice neighborhood. MLS#201203022 (730)

Beautiful, open, second floor space of 3100 sq. ft., 2 restrooms, full mountain views, operable windows. MLS#201203060 (730)

SHELLY HUMMEL, BROKER, CRS, GRI, CHMS 541-383-4361

BRANDON FAIRBANKS, BROKER, SRES, GRI, CDPE 541-383-4344

MICHELLE TISDEL, PC, BROKER 541-390-3490

MICHELLE TISDEL, PC, BROKER 541-390-3490

PAULA VANVLECK, BROKER 541-280-7774

Visit our office conveniently located at 486 SW Bluff Dr. in the Old Mill District, Bend. Visit us online or call 541-382-4123 | Visit us at: RITTER RANCH | $1,900,000

NORTH RIM - AWBREY BUTTE | $1,100,000

IT’S A LIFESTYLE | $925,000

WEST HILLS | $849,000

AWBREY GLEN | $795,000

D L O S

3 MILES of John Day River frontage! LOP Tags for Deer/Elk. Wildlife abounds in your own PRIVATE hunting & fishing RETREAT! Newer home, shop, barn, irrigation & MORE! Borders Ritter Hot springs. MLS#201106689 (762)

Xeriscaped yard & captivating views. 3797 sq. ft., 3 bedroom, 3 bath with maple floors, Makore kitchen cabinets, slab granite, Rainforest Marble buffet. Large timber tech deck up, covered porch down. MLS#201203502 (746)

Timber framed construction using 100 year old reclaimed timbers, beams & flooring. This home will warm your heart with character & charm. Main home, guest home, shop, 20 private acres minutes from Sisters. MLS#201200880 (762)

Looking for UNIQUE? Sited atop Awbrey Butte with unblockable river, Old Mill, Drake Park & Mt. Bachelor views. Total renovation. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 3900 sq. ft. Multiple decks for entertaining! MLS#201102812 (746)

Located on the 10th fairway with golf course and mountain views. Elegant 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 4160 sq. ft. home with open great room floor plan, main floor master, den and bonus room. MLS#201201588 (746)

KELLY NEUMAN, BROKER 541-480-2102

TENBROEK - HILBER GROUP, LLC 541-550-4944

BRANDON FAIRBANKS, BROKER, SRES, GRI, CDPE 541-383-4344

BONNIE SAVICKAS, BROKER 541-408-7537

DIANE ROBINSON, BROKER, ABR 541-419-8165

BROKEN TOP CONTEMPORARY | $689,000

GORGEOUS LOG HOME | $599,000

TUMALO | $539,000

HOME & SHOP ON ACREAGE | $459,000

DESCHUTES RIVER HOME | $450,000

Beautiful custom home. 3 bedroom + den/office, 4.5 bath. Gourmet kitchen, Wolf Stove, Sub-zero refrigerator, SS appliances & granite counters. Master on main with private Atrium. Golf course views. MLS#201202675 (747)

Beautiful home on 9.5 acres. Cascade Mountain views, private and peaceful. 4 acres of irrigation. 4-car heated garage/shop. Meticulously maintained 2291 sq. ft. home. MLS#201202524 (762)

Fantastic Cascade Mountain views. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 2800 sq. ft. home on 4.83 acres. 90 x 60 indoor arena, 4 box stalls & foaling stall, tack & vet room, hay storage. Short distance to mountain trails. MLS#201201589 (762)

Over 3000 sq. ft. home! 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, downstairs master, den, media room, formal dining and living room. 4.42 acres, 1600 sq. ft. shop with 12’ and 14’ doors. MLS#201202244 (762)

1.2 acres. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2125 sq. ft. waterfront home with Cascade Mountain views. Multiple accessory buildings and barn, all with new roofs. MLS#201105146 (762)

CAROLYN PRIBORSKY, P.C., BROKER, ABR, CRS 541-383-4350

CATHY DEL NERO, BROKER 541-410-5280

CRAIG LONG, BROKER 541-480-7647

JUDY MEYERS, BROKER, GRI, CRS 541-480-1922

CRAIG SMITH, BROKER 541-322-2417

AWBREY BUTTE GREAT PRICE | $398,500

SUNRIVER GOLF COURSE | $389,000

RIVER RIM | $359,900

DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITY | $348,900

CROOKED RIVER RANCH | $335,000

Cozy home on large nicely landscaped lot with views of Pilot Butte, city lights & great southern exposure. Bright throughout. Designer colors, vaulted ceilings, on one of the nicest streets, a must see. MLS#201103293 (746)

Furnished, Sunriver golf course home on large, private, cul-de-sac. 3 bedroom plus den/ 4th bedroom. Large stone fireplace, high ceilings, remodeled. Near the new Aquatic and Recreation Center! MLS#201202873 (755)

3 bedroom + office, open great room floor plan with low maintenance yard. Vaulted ceilings, spacious bedrooms, gourmet kitchen with hardwood floors, alder cabinetry & island with granite slab counters. MLS#201201245 (747)

Rare RL zoned parcel within city limits, potential to be divided or developed. Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1614 sq. ft., 2 acres, irrigated, pond & park-like setting. MLS#201203109 (748)

DEBBIE JOHNSON, BROKER 541-480-1293

DIANE LOZITO, BROKER 541-548-3598

JIM MORAN, BROKER 541-948-0997

GREG MILLER, P.C., BROKER, CRS, GRI 541-408-1511

Premier canyon view custom home with panoramic views & plenty of privacy. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1800 sq. ft. on 1.59 acres. Spacious master suite. Outdoor living space is designed for year round use. MLS#201103257 (756)

JOHN SNIPPEN, BROKER, MBA, ABR, GRI 541-312-7273 • 541-948-9090

NW BEND | $325,000

NW BEND | $294,900

SE BEND | $269,000

THREE RIVERS SOUTH | $234,900

LA PINE | $189,900

Beautifully renovated home with eco-friendly Green features. 3 bedroom, 2 bath in established westside neighborhood. Large private fenced yard. One block to recreation trails and minutes to downtown. MLS#201202595 (746)

Palmer built, NW craftsman, Earth Advantage Certified, home overlooks Harvest Park. 2 master suites, den/office + bonus room. Leaded glass windows and built in bookshelves surround the fireplace. MLS#201200288 (746)

Currently being used as a 6 bedroom with separate office & large playroom. Granite and stone kitchen. Stainless steel appliances. Breakfast bar. Slate fireplace. Tons of storage. Private backyard. MLS#201106138 (749)

Rustic log home nicely situated on a half acre lot in south Deschutes County. Open floor plan, tile counters, detached garage & nicely treed. Close to all Central Oregon winter & summer activities. MLS#201202245 (755)

Private 4.77 acre setting just minutes from town with large shop & work studio. 1176 sq. ft., 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath with attached 2 car garage & new deck. Separate shop with 1 car garage & workspace. MLS#201108092 (755)

DAWN ULRICKSON, BROKER, CRS, GRI, SFR 541-610-9427

AMY HALLIGAN, BROKER 541-410-9045

JANE STRELL, BROKER, ABR, GRI 541-948-7998

DARRYL DOSER, BROKER, CRS 541-383-4334

JJ JONES, BROKER 541-610-7318 • 541-788-3678

NEW ENERGY EFFICIENT | $184,900

SWEET DUPLEX | $169,900

SE BEND | $167,900

REDMOND | $137,000

CRESCENT LAKE | $139,000

EN OP T 1-4 A S

ICE D PR UCE D RE

3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1508 sq. ft., large lot with room for RV parking. Premium amenities include hardwood, tile, gas fireplace, 95% efficient furnace. Located in SE Bend. MLS#201202076 (749)

Great opportunity to live in one & rent the other to subsidize your monthly payment OR for an elderly parent to live in one & you live in the other OR a great investment with 10.5 Gross Rent Multiplier. MLS#201202921 (738)

This single level home has an open floor plan with master separation. Bamboo flooring throughout and a great room with a gas fireplace. Backyard is fenced and landscaped with a flagstone patio. MLS#201201695 (749)

GREG FLOYD, P.C., BROKER 541-390-5349

JACKIE FRENCH, BROKER 541-480-2269

DARRIN KELLEHER, BROKER THE KELLEHER GROUP 541-788-0029

MOUNTAIN GATE | $119,000

THREE RIVERS SOUTH | $80,000

LA PINE | $34,900

Want a new house? Why not build? This beautiful .55 of an acre lot is located in the desirable Mountain Gate Subdivision. Easy to build on gentle sloping lot with all utilities to the street. MLS#201200792 (771)

Flat .48 of an acre building lot on corner with canal along 1 side, canal flows directly into the Big Deschutes River. Area has boat launch & dock, clubhouse and road maintenance. MLS#201105237 (771)

1.03 ACRES IN LA PINE. Close to Sunriver and Bend. This property is very quiet, convenient and accessible on a paved road with lots of privacy. Come build your dream home. MLS#201200519 (771)

DEBORAH BENSON, PC, BROKER, GRI 541-480-6448

DON KELLEHER, BROKER 541-480-1911

NICOLETTE JONES, BROKER 541-241-0432

G N I D N PE

Charming single level, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, mountain views, great room, A/C, tile, slate, RV parking, and utility room. MLS#201203039 (750)

MINDA MCKITRICK, BROKER 541-280-6148

SUNRIVER SPECIALIST!

I’ve been living and working right in Sunriver for over 25 years. Call me with your Sunriver, Crosswater and Caldera Springs Real Estate needs! JACK JOHNS, BROKER, GRI 541-480-9300

Amazing river front lot. Build a getaway cabin or live year round. Summer fishing, ATV, hiking, etc. & winter snowmobiling, skiing, snow shoeing. Roads are maintained in the winter for year round access. MLS#201107470 (771)

JERRY STONE, BROKER 541-390-9598

EXCLUSIVELY BEND WWW.SELLORBUYBEND.COM

GARY ROSE, BROKER 541-588-0687


THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 F1

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264 - Snow Removal Equipment 265 - Building Materials 266 - Heating and Stoves 267 - Fuel and Wood 268 - Trees, Plants & Flowers 269 - Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGE SALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282 - Sales Northwest Bend 284 - Sales Southwest Bend 286 - Sales Northeast Bend 288 - Sales Southeast Bend 290 - Sales Redmond Area 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308 - Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325 - Hay, Grain and Feed 333 - Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses and Equipment 345 - Livestock and Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358 - Farmer’s Column 375 - Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce and Food 208

208

Pets & Supplies

Pets & Supplies

Boxer, AKC, pups, born 3/4, $700, awesome pups! 541.306.1504

F1b Labradoodles $800 Born 3-26-12. Call 541-977-2942

S . W .

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A v e . ,

Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

B e n d

O r e g o n

9 7 7 0 2

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Pets & Supplies

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Lost & Found

Labradoodles - Mini & GENERATE SOME exmed size, several colors citement in your 541-504-2662 neighborhood! Plan a www.alpen-ridge.com garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809. Moving sale – lots of great stuff: Hot Springs Prodigy hot MALTESE PUPS, AKC, tub, new cover with toy, champion blood lift, excellent condilines, All shots, potty tion $3500; Toro training started, well Power Clear 180 socialized, 1-male snow blower like new avail. now. 1 female & $300; 3-piece lighted 1 male avail June bookcase great con21st. 541-233-3534 dition $250; enterwww.maiasminisupremes.com tainment center with Maremma Guard Dog DVD storage good pups, purebred, great condition $150 dogs, $300 each, 541.317.8808 541-546-6171. NEED TO CANCEL Papillon beautiful pupYOUR AD? pies exceptionally wellThe Bulletin cared for. Registered, Classifieds has an vet checked. $350"After Hours" Line $450. 541-367-7766. Call 541-383-2371 24 hrs. to cancel Poodles, Apricot, 1st your ad! shots, dewormed, $300, 541-977-0035 Recliner With Ottoman, large StressPug, AKC, black feless (Ekornes),beige, male, 7 weeks old, good cond., $500, $500, 541-598-5375 541-383-3786. Queensland Heelers standard & mini,$150 & The Bulletin up. 541-280-1537 http:// r ecommends extra rightwayranch.wordpress.com caution when purchasing products or Rescued adult comservices from out of panion cats FREE to the area. Sending seniors, disabled & cash, checks, or veterans! Tame, alcredit information tered, shots, ID chip, may be subjected to more. Will always take FRAUD. For more back if circumstances information about an change. Photos, info advertiser, you may at www.craftcats.org. call the Oregon 541-389-8420, State Attorney 541-647-2181. General’s Office Sat/Sun 1-5, other Consumer Protecdays by appt. 65480 tion hotline at 78th St., Bend. 1-877-877-9392. Rescued kittens/cats. 65480 78th St., Bend, Sat/Sun 1-5; other days by appt. 541212 647-2181. Altered, shots, ID chip, more. Antiques & Info: 541-389-8420. Collectibles Map, photos, more at www.craftcats.org Antiques wanted: tools, furn., fishing, marbles, Small dogs, 2 spayed old sports gear, cosfemales, 1 yr old,, $50 tume jewelry, rock ea., 541-504-4527 posters. 541-389-1578 Spring is here and so Old Out of State License are baby kittens, CenPlates (about 50),$1.50 tral Ore is in desperea., 541-588-6170 ate need of Foster parents, very knowl- Shirley Temple Coledgable people who lectible Dolls (15), can help you with this never been out of box, process. 541-306541-678-8249. 8462. 541-815-3966 jbonomo74@gmail.com The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all kodakool1@gmail.com, ads from The Bulletin WANTED tall Jack newspaper onto The Russell, female, 5-6 Bulletin Internet webyrs. old, or Dachssite. hund female, black & tan, 541-633-7243.

Boxer/ Bulldog (Valley Wanted: $Cash paid for Bulldog) new litter,CKC vintage costume jew- Reg., taking deposits. elry. Top dollar paid for $700. 541-325-3376 Gold/Silver.I buy by the Chihuahua Pups, 1 Estate, Honest Artist white female, 1 male, Elizabeth,541-633-7006 $250, 541-536-1955. Felix needs a caring 205 home! Adorable HiCHIHUAHUA PUPS 9 malayan, loves people weeks old Champion Items for Free & OK with other cats. Bloodlines, 1 Blue Inside only. Found Female, 1 Black FeHorse Manure, large abandoned. Altered, male, 1 Black & White loads, perfect for garhas shots, ID chip. Male $950 - $1500 dening, will load, $75 rehoming fee. (ph) 541-350-4810 FREE. 541-390-6570. 647-2181, 389-8420. Chihuahua Pups, tea208 cup,1st shots, wormed, FREE-Young mom calico Pets & Supplies $250,541-977-4686 w/4-week-old female kitten. Mom is litter-box trained and very loving. The Bulletin recom541-480-7793 mends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, Chi/Pugs (50-50) 1 boy @$250; 1 girl @$300; checks, or credit in2 little girls @$350. formation may be Best of both breeds in Golden subjected to fraud. Retrievers one cute pup! No tire For more informaAdorable male AKC kickers/no dog kickers! tion about an adverready now, dew claws 541-389-2517 tiser, you may call removed, 2 shots the Oregon State given + 2 wormings. Don’t miss the Attorney General’s $650 ea. 541-849GUN DOG EXPO Office Consumer 2388 for more details. June 22-23-24, 210 Protection hotline at Portland, OR. See: Furniture & Appliances GSP Pups 2 male 1 fe1-877-877-9392. www.GunDogExpo.com male Black/white, Call The Bulletin At $750. 503-566-8105 A1 Washers&Dryers 541-385-5809 $150 ea. Full warHavanese, 2.5 yr. old ranty. Free Del. Also Place Your Ad Or E-Mail male, not fix, moving wanted, used W/D’s At: www.bendbulletin.com AKC German must sell, loving com541-280-7355 Shepherd Puppies panion, great w/kids & Emily 541-647-8803 other pets, $300, DO YOU HAVE 541-610-2286 or Computer - oak desk SOMETHING TO with shelf top, nice! 541-788-0771. SELL $75. 541-706-1051 FOR $500 OR LESS? Fridge, 2007 Kenmore, Non-commercial 18.5 cu.ft., top freezer, advertisers may icemaker, works place an ad with great. Biscuit color, our Bandit, gorgeous, soone owner, $150 "QUICK CASH cial Snowshoe, found HAVANESE puppy OBO. 541-548-1447 SPECIAL" abandoned. Good w/ AKC, Dewclaws, UTD 1 week 3 lines, $12 people & other cats. shots/wormer, nonor 2 weeks, $20! Inside only. Altered, shed, hypoallergenic, Ad must include has shots, ID chip. $850 541-460-1277. price of single item $75 rehoming fee. of $500 or less, or 647-2181, 389-8420. Visit our HUGE multiple items HUSKY 2½-yr-old home decor Barn cats ready to work whose total does black/white/grey consignment store. in your barn, shop or not exceed $500. male. Papered/neuNew items home in exchange for tered. Fun/energetic. arrive daily! safe shelter, food & Call Classifieds at Current on all shots. 930 SE Textron, water. Altered, shots. 541-385-5809 $350 obo Bend 541-318-1501 We deliver! www.bendbulletin.com 510-326-0626 www.redeuxbend.com 541-389-8420

240

Crafts & Hobbies Crafters Wanted Open Jury Sat., May 19, 9:30 a.m. Highland Baptist Church, Redmond. Tina 541-447-1640 or www.snowflakeboutique.org

242

Exercise Equipment Bowflex, newer, w/free weights, exc. cond., $195, 541-788-7372 Rowing Machine, exc. cond., $50, 541-788-7372. 245

Golf Equipment Taylor Made 2.0 Superfast White Driver, 10.5 reg. flex, $100; New Taylor made Rocket balls, 3 wood, stiff shaft, $125, Taylor Made Ghost Putter, $60, 541-420-6613.

1911 Llama 9mm, $550. Bushmaster .223 AR-15, $1050. 541-647-8931 CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900. Don’t miss the GUN DOG EXPO June 22-23-24, Portland, OR. See: www.GunDogExpo.com DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines $12 or 2 weeks $20! Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.

BUYING & SELLING All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill Fleming, 541-382-9419. Captians Bed,solid wood w/headboard, 3 drawers, $200, 548-9358.

GET FREE OF CREDIT CARD DEBT NOW! Cut payments by up to half. Stop creditors from calling. 866-775-9621. (PNDC)

www.bendbulletin.com

H & H FIREARMS Buy, Sell, Trade, Consign. Across From Pilot Butte Drive-In 541-382-9352 Kahr PM45,compact .45 auto, extra magazine, like new, $850, 541-419-7001 Rem. auto 12 ga 2 bbls, $350. JC Higgins mdl 583-18 16 ga, $150. 541-617-5997. Remington 760 30-06 Pump, $300; Stirling 25 ACP, $125, 541-771-5648. Remington Model 48, 20 ga, auto, $230; Marlin Model 778 12 ga. VR Pump, $250, 541-771-5648 Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746

Discounts, Lumber, Hardware, Fixtures & Trucks,Backstrom Builders CenterMonFri 7-5, Sat. 8-2. 224 NE Thurstone, Bend 541-382-6861 Glass Blocks, 8”x8”x4”, used, some w/paint or chips, 60 at $3/ea., 541-306-8631

Child’s Concrete Garden Bench, 10”x20”x9” tall, (4) $20/ea 541-306-8631. New Pavers, gray, L-shaped, 81 @ $1.00 Garden Bench, Concrete, each. 541-383-4231 15”x30”x16” tall 2 designs, $50ea, 306-8631 REDMOND Habitat RESTORE GENERATE SOME Building Supply Resale EXCITEMENT Quality at IN YOUR LOW PRICES NEIGBORHOOD. 1242 S. Hwy 97 Plan a garage sale and 541-548-1406 don't forget to adverOpen to the public. tise in classified! 541-385-5809. 266

Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809

Guns collection for sale: Call for details, 541-504-1619.

Closing Sale

Kenmore beltless upright vacuum cleaner. Rarely used. All attachments and manual. $100. Contact 541-318-7279. MANTIS Deluxe Tiller. NEW! FastStart engine. Ships FREE. One-Year Money-Back Guarantee when you buy DIRECT. Call for the DVD and FREE Good Soil book! 877-357-5647. (PNDC) Stepping Stones, 16x16x2, $100 at $2/ea OBO, 541-306-8631. The Bulletin Offers Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 3 days • Private Party Only • Total of items advertised must equal $200 or Less • Limit 1 ad per month • 3-ad limit for same item advertised within 3 months Call 541-385-5809 Fax 541-385-5802

247

Heating & Stoves

Farm Market

300

269

Hay, Grain & Feed

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

1st quality grass hay for horses. Barn stored, no rain, 2nd cutting, $220/ New Pavers: 310 gray ton. Patterson Ranch, 6x6’s @ 50 cents Sisters, 541-549-3831 each. 541-383-4231 Want to buy Alfalfa SUPER TOP SOIL standing, in Central www.hersheysoilandbark.com Ore. 541-419-2713 Screened, soil & compost mixed, no The Bulletin’s rocks/clods. High hu“Call A Service mus level, exc. for flower beds, lawns, Professional” Directory gardens, straight is all about meeting screened top soil. your needs. Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul. Call on one of the 541-548-3949. professionals today!

Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & stu270 dio equip. McIntosh, Lost & Found JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, SanFOUND computer X-long goose down sui, Carver, NAD, etc. charger. mummy sleeping bag. Call 541-261-1808 541-771-2500. Used 1x. $150 541-593-1682 261 Found Hearing Aid, 4/6, Medical Equipment Les Schwab Amphi255 theater, 541-617-1579 Computers ATTENTION DIABETFOUND male Blue ICS with Medicare. Heeler, off Burgess Printer HP Officejet Get a FREE talking in La Pine. 7310, copy, print, fax, meter and diabetic 541-647-4649. $50, 541-550-8257. testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE Found male, not neuTHE BULLETIN rehome delivery! Best tered orange striped quires computer adof all, this meter elimicat, friendly, about 1 vertisers with multiple nates painful finger year. on Smith Rock ad schedules or those pricking! Call Way 541-548-4674. selling multiple sys888-739-7199. tems/ software, to disFound on 5/10 in (PNDC) close the name of the morning, large item in business or the term 263 middle of Butler Mkt "dealer" in their ads. Rd. and Hamehook Tools Private party advertisRd. Call to identify. ers are defined as 541-410-8866 or those who sell one 2 scaffold boards, 16’ 541-389-6220. and 24’, $200 & $300. computer. 541-617-5997 Found Pigeon, Fryrear 260 Rd., Fri. 5/4, call to ID, 265 541-617-1716. Misc. Items Building Materials 32’x44’ Doug fir custom made log shell, $39,500 Saxon’s Fine Jewelers obo. Vacation prop avail 541-389-6655 at Lake Billy Chinook. 541-595-0246 BUYING Lionel/American Flyer 36” full view storm doors trains, accessories. (2), bronze, $100 obo. 541-408-2191. 541-389-9268

REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society in Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond, 541-923-0882 Prineville, 541-447-7178; OR Craft Cats, 541-389-8420.

NOTICE TO 308 ADVERTISER Farm Equipment Since September 29, 1991, advertising for & Machinery used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been John Deere Model 40 1955, nearly certified by the Or100% Orig, runs egon Department of good, exc. tin, 3 Environmental Qualpoint hitch, hydrauity (DEQ) and the fedlics, light, $2000, eral Environmental 541-504-2891 or Protection Agency 541-977-3120 (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A certified woodstove may be USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! identified by its certification label, which is Door-to-door selling with permanently attached fast results! It’s the easiest way in the world to sell. to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowThe Bulletin Classiied ingly accept advertising for the sale of 541-385-5809 uncertified woodstoves. 325

Sporting Goods - Misc.

Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash

HELP YOUR AD TO stand out from the rest! Have the top line in bold print for only $2.00 extra.

Wheat Straw: Certified & Bedding Straw & Garden Straw;Compost.546-6171 345

Livestock & Equipment Simco 17” roping saddle, $375. 541-447-4576 350

Horseshoeing/ Farriers HOOF TRIMMING www.nilssonhoofcare.com 541-504-7764 358

Farmers Column 10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. 541-617-1133. CCB #173684. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net

Found wedge, Greens Pasture For at Redmond golf Horse Rent, 2.5 acres, irricourse, call to I.D. gated w/cover, $369 541-388-1533 for season, 541-610-4006.

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Want to buy Alfalfa standing, in Central Ore. 541-419-2713


F2 SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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

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THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Edited by Will Shortz

PLACE AN AD

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Noon Sat. Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Noon Mon. Wednesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Tues. Thursday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Wed. Friday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 am Fri. Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:00 Fri. Sunday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. Starting at 3 lines

Place a photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.

*UNDER $500 in total merchandise

OVER $500 in total merchandise

7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days ................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days .................................................. $18.50 7 days .................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days.................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH 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. SATURDAY by telephone 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

*Must state prices in ad

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 us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday.

Employment

400 421 280

286

288

Estate Sales

Sales Northeast Bend

Sales Southeast Bend

TOOLS!!! Estate / garage sale Fri. May 11, Sat. May 12, 8-3, 40 year accumulation. Furn., camping, lots of misc. 17090 Deer Run Lane, La Pine. 282

Sales Northwest Bend BIG Garage Sale: Sat. 9-2, 63553 Gold Spur Way, Collectibles, art, housewares, furniture. 284

HH FREE HH Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES: • 4 Garage Sale Signs • $1.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For “Garage Sale Success!” • And Inventory Sheet

Sales Southwest Bend

PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

ANNUAL YARD SALE River Canyon Estates Sat. 12th, 9-2. So. on Brookswood, x-street Hollygrape, follow signs

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

Wed. - Sun. 8am -8pm, 559 SE Centennial. Nice items at great prices. 541-480-5950 Yard Sale:Sat. 5/12 9-2, 61397 Fairfield Dr, in Foxborough, follow signs off Brosterhous. 290

Sales Redmond Area 2 Family Garage Sale: Sat. 5/12, 3562 SW 34th, in South Heights, Oak entertainment center, gardening, golf, lawn mower, more. 4-family Sale Fri. & Sat 9-5. Lots & lots of stuff! Camp/hunt gear, tools. Misc. 3008 NW Canyon Dr.

Find exactly what Appli., W/D, trampoline, Sat. 9-4,2432 NE Burks bricks/pavers mower/ Ct,off Studio. 11’ Raft, you are looking for in the garden tools, baby/ Rec Gear, Home ImCLASSIFIEDS kids. Sat. 8am , 1774 prove, Garden, More. SW Forest Ridge. Garage/Estate Sale: 288 furniture, tools, riding LIQUIDATION SALE! Sales Southeast Bend mower, Fri.-Sun. 8-5, Air compressors, tools, 2335 NW 21st Ct. worm drive skil saw, Craftsman mitre saw, 4 Family Yard Sale: Sat. Only, 9-2, Books, Garage Sale: Sat. Sat. hand levels, socket May 12th, 9-3, 2219 toys, baby clothes & sets, combination SW Metolius Ave, items, foosball table, wrenches, 1889 pump corner of SW Rimbanjo, armoire, enorgan -in exc. cond. rock Way. tertainment center, Pepsi cooler, working small oak stereo cabiext. cords, antique net, lots more. Hwy 20 WWII welder, 100 cup GIANT SISTERS to Torkleson to 22063 coffee pot. and Much BARN SALE! Stormy Ln. Much More! Fri., Sat. ? Old, Used, Antiques, 9-5. 19365 Indian Tools, Sporting Summer Rd. follow Goods, Clothes, ELITE REPEAT Red Hot signs! Rugs, Lots of Brand $1 Porch Sale! New Gift Items, Sat. May 12, 9-12, Moving Downsizing Christmas in May, 950 SE 3rd St., Sale. Fri. & Sat. Toys, Furniture, between Reed Mkt. 8:30am - 2pm. The TOO MUCH TO LIST! and Wilson. Parks off Mt. WashAll “Must See!” ington Dr., 61495 Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. Cultas Lake Ct. 7:30 -4:30 Fri. and Sat., 9-3. 1057 SE Valley wood Place 69328 Holmes Rd. Moving Sale, Fri. furniture, kitchen, Sisters noon-6, Sat. 8-4, Tools, garden stuff, etc. 19011 Baker Rd. FurJust moved niture, kids stuff, misc. Gigantic Garage Sale: Sale...downsizing! 1001 SE 15th St., Super Sale! Lots of Fri,. Sat. & Sun. 9-4. Suntree #107, Fri. & good stuff. Fri - Sun. Appl., furniture, art, Sat. 8-4, music - 500+ 19325 Galen Rd DRW patio & clothes. 1728 LP’s, records, CD’s, NW Jackpine Ave. also many ceramics, 286 household items, Yard Sale: Sat.-Sun. 8-4, Sales Northeast Bend misc. stuff.No clothes. 3755 SW 34th St, home furnishings, 25th Year Multi Family HUGE MOVING SALE, flower pots, outdoor Fri. & Sat. 7am-4pm. Yard Sale. chairs & tools, clean539 SE Edgewater. Sat. Only, 7am-4pm. ing house - all must go! Everything goes. Fur2889 NE Lotno Dr. niture, appli., an292 Annual multi-family sale: tiques, collectables & Sales Other Areas scrapbooking, crafts, art work, tools, fishing fabric, toys, quality & shop supplies. clothing, drapes, lots Huge Madras Yard Sale! of misc. Fri. Sat. 9-5. Fri., Sat., & Sun., 9-5, MOVING SALE 1262 NE Burnside. boats, golf cart, sinks, SATURDAY 8-2 dryer, remodeling supTable saw, chop saw, Bazaar/Garage Sale. plies, clothing & much queen bed, furniture, Sat. May 12, more! 1042 NE Meadpictures. 8am-4pm. PIne For- 62030 Dean Swift Rd. owlark Ln. est Grange Hall, 63214 NE Boyd Acres Tools! Tools! Tools! Tumalo - Sat. Only, 9am-4pm, 19875 7th Lots of misc., some Rd. St., 1 block north of power tools, Thur.Hwy 20 off Cook Ave. Everything 4 sale!! Sun., 8 am- ?, 1925 Antiques and Vintage SE Gardenia Ct. off Saturday, 8-4, Flea Market. Shadowood. 3434 NE Fieldstone Ct. Yard sale Fri-Sat 9-4, tools, camping and hunting gear, groomHuge Sunriver Home ing equip. Full house, all must go! All quality items in im- 16486 Sprague Loop, maculate condition, many custom pieces. Items La Pine follow signs. include carved Oriental Rosewood desk, sectional sofa, hide-a-bed, side chairs, 3 queen NOTICE beds, dressers, large round dining set, enter- Remember to remove tainment center, glass & brass entry table & mir- your Garage Sale signs ror, side tables. Antiques include: oak com(nails, staples, etc.) mode, trunks, oak phone, old crocks & R.R. after your Sale event lanterns, clocks, glassware & china, farm is over! THANKS! kitchen table, lots of Oriental items from 25 From The Bulletin years in the Orient, garage items, tools & ladand your local utility ders, outdoor, lots of pictures & artwork, books, companies. electronics, many unique carvings & statues, full kitchen of quality kitchenware, Kitchenaid, fishing, new 3 wheel bike, lots of pottery, Traeger www.bendbulletin.com grill, jewelry. loads of misc! Friday & Saturday, May 11 and 12, from 9-4. Crowd control numbers Friday 8:30. Want to impress the Signs not allowed so please take directions relatives? Remodel From Hwy 97 take Cottonwood exit, past store, your home with the take Circle 10 to Circle 9, stay on East Cascade to McNary, turn right, then right on Three help of a professional from The Bulletin’s Iron Lane to #6. Attic Estates & Appraisals “Call A Service 541-350-6822 for pics & more info Professional” Directory go to atticestatesandappraisals.com

ESTATE SALE!

Schools & Training AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 1-877-804-5293. (PNDC)

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW?

Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day!

541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:

www.bendbulletin.com

Where can you ind a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it’s all here in The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, HOTEL - The River*Hospitality. Job house is seeking a placement assistance. detail-oriented person Computer available. with strong customer Financial Aid if qualiservice skills to work fied. SCHEV certified. Night Audit. Previous Call 866-688-7078 computer skills rewww.CenturaOnline.c quired. Benefits inom (PNDC) clude insurance and free golf. Please apTRUCK SCHOOL ply at 3075 N Hwy 97 www.IITR.net or online at Redmond Campus www.riverhouse.com Student Loans/Job PRE EMPLOYMENT Waiting Toll Free DRUG SCREENING 1-888-438-2235 REQUIRED. 454

Looking for Employment Current COCC 4.0 GPA graduate in Bus. Administration/Accounting, looking for entrylevel bookkeeping or management position. 541-610-7040. 470

Domestic & In-Home Positions Full-time live in caregiver wanted for Elderly man, room & board + salary. 541-554-2149. Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809 Yard work help wanted, Mowing weed-eating, pulling weeds, $9/hr, 541-389-0034.

HOTEL - The Riverhouse is seeking a Front Desk Agent. Applicants must work a varied schedule, excel in customer service, have basic computer & cash handling skills. Previous experience is preferred. Bring resume and apply in person at The Riverhouse, 3075 N Hwy 97, Bend, OR. Or apply and submit cover letter/resume on line at: www.riverhouse.com PRE-EMPLOYMENT DRUG SCREENING REQUIRED. Housekeeping; room prep and quality control. Hotel resort exp. preferred. Part time/Weekend. Please apply at Worldmark Eagle Crest, 1522 Cline Falls Rd., Redmond (3rd floor of Hotel)

476

Employment Opportunities

Maintenance Tech Part-time position, variable schedule, drug free environment. WorldMark Eagle Crest. Call Dennis for Appt. 541-923-3564.

Admin Asst (part time/ weekdays) - Bend. Diverse support role. Proficient w/MS Office. Articulate, organized, team player w/ professional de- Management Team meanor. Experience Positition at Romaine in service industry a Village Mobile Park. plus. Submit resume Please drop off rew/salary requiresume & cover letter to ments by 5/18/12 to 19940 Mahogony St., employment@coar.com Bend, 97702 between No phone calls. 1-5 pm. Taking resumes through 5/16. AV Tech - Swank Audio Visuals is seeking Medical Assistant a PT Audio Visual Experience required. Technician in SunriWe are looking for a ver. For more inforenergetic dependable mation or to apply and outgoing person please visit to join our team. We www.swankav.com offer a superior salary, Become a excellent benefit Team Member. EOE package and a four day work week. Typing and computer Banking skills beneficial. DerBranch matology experience Manager a plus. Outstanding John Day, Oregon patient care, team player and attention to Advanced knowldetail a must. Posiedge & experition involves a varience in finance & ety of job duties in a operations. See fast paced work enviOld West Federal ronment. Fax your Credit Unions resume with a cover website for job letter to 541-323-2174 description & onor email jodi@centraloregonline application. dermatology.com. www.oldwestfcu.org No phone calls EOE please.

Nurse Practitioners Part Time (24 hours FINANCE AND BUSINESS per week) position EMPLOYMENT 507 - Real Estate Contracts available at our 410 - Private Instruction On-Site Chronic Dis- 421 - Schools and Training 514 - Insurance ease Management 454 - Looking for Employment 528 - Loans and Mortgages Clinic Located in 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 543 - Stocks and Bonds Bend, OR. 558 - Business Investments • Must by proficient in 476 - Employment Opportunities 573 - Business Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions Phlebotomy • Must be licensed as a 476 573 573 Nurse Practitioner and in the state of Oregon. Employment Business Opportunities Business Opportunities • Must have Two - Five Opportunities years of professional A Classified ad is an Extreme Value Adverclinical experience. tising! 30 Daily newsEASY WAY TO Transportation Contact Genni Fairchild papers $525/25-word REACH over 3 million at 704-529-6161 for classified, 3-days. Pacific NorthwesternOREGON more info. Please fax Reach 3 million Paers. $525/25-word DEPARTMENT OF to 704-323-7931 or TRANSPORTATION cific Northwesterners. classified ad in 30 email to genni.fairFor more information daily newspapers for child@healthstatinc.c call (916) 288-6019 or 3-days. Call the PaTraffic Systems om email: cific Northwest Daily Technician 3 – Bend elizabeth@cnpa.com Connection (916) Remember.... for the Pacific North288-6019 or email Add your web ad- This position directly west Daily Connecelizabeth@cnpa.com supports traffic and dress to your ad and tion. (PNDC) for more info (PNDC) design engineers in readers on The practical Advertise VACATION Bulletin' s web site solving Safely select, evaluate, problems in the deSPECIALS to 3 mil- finance & succeed in a will be able to click sign, construction, lion Pacific North- Franchise Business. through automatically and operation of intelwesterners! 30 daily www.frannet.com/msipe to your site. ligent transportation newspapers, six 541-610-5799 systems and their states. 25-word clasJust too many component subsified $525 for a 3-day The Bulletin collectibles? systems. This journey ad. Call (916) To Subscribe call level position requires 288-6019 or visit Sell them in timely and expert apwww.pnna.com/advert 541-385-5800 or go to plication of electronic ising_pndc.cfm for the www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classiieds and software stanPacific Northwest SECURITY dardized practices to Daily Connection. SOCIAL 541-385-5809 DISABILITY BENextend the life and (PNDC) EFITS. WIN or Pay improve design of exBEND'S BEST BUY Nothing! Start Your isting and future sysRetail Sales Application In Under tems. To apply, visit Despite the economy – one of central Oregon’s 60 Seconds. Call ToDesign Oriented www.odotjobs.com or most profitable compaday! Contact Disabilcall (866) nies. Over $3,000,000 ity Group, Inc. LiODOT-JOBS or 711 Furniture Outlet, in purchase orders. censed Attorneys & (Relay Operator for Listed at $2,500,000 part-time, expeBBB Accredited. Call the Deaf). Refer to Michael Aid, Bend and rience is helpful. 888-782-4075. Announcement Beyond Real Estate (PNDC) Serious appli#ODOT12-0093oc. 541-815-1605 Application deadline: cants with proMay 20, 2012 @11:59 Developmental Disabilities Program Manager fessional apPM. ODOT is an Community Counseling Solutions has a full pearance apply AA/EEO Employer, time salaried position open for a Developin person at: committed to building mental Disabilities Program Manager based in workforce diversity. our John Day, OR office. Qualified Applicant 1735 NE Hwy 20, will have a Bachelors degree in a behavioral, Look at: Bend. social, health science, public administration, or human service administration and a minimum Bendhomes.com of fours years experience, with at least two of for Complete Listings of The Bulletin those years of experience in developmental Area Real Estate for Sale Recommends extra disability services that provided recent expericaution when purence in program management, fiscal manUtility Locator Full chasing products or agement and staff supervision, or six years of time, needed. Must services from out of experience in supervision or six years of expepass background & the area. Sending rience staff technical or professional level work driving expectations. cash, checks, or related to developmental disability services. Great Benefits & 401 credit information The DD program manager provides supervioffered. Please email may be subjected to sion and oversight of the developmental disresume to FRAUD. abilities programs in three counties (Lake, andrea@sctrl.com For more informaHarney and Grant) and works under the direction about an advertion of the site manager. Must have excellent tiser, you may call communication skills. Wages are $34,920Looking for your next the Oregon State 52,380, DOEE. Excellent benefits. For an apemployee? Attorney General’s plication, please contact Thad Labhart at Place a Bulletin help Office Consumer 541-575-1466 or email at tlabhart@gobhi.net. wanted ad today and Protection hotline at You can also download an application at reach over 60,000 1-877-877-9392. www.communitycounselingsolutions.org . Poreaders each week. sition open until filled. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com Advertising Account Executive which currently receives over 1.5 The High Desert million page views Museum is seeking every month at individuals with an no extra cost. enthusiasm and love Bulletin Classifieds for the High Desert Get Results! Region to join our The Bulletin is looking for a professional Call 385-5809 team. We have the or place and driven sales and marketing person to following open your ad on-line at help our customers grow their businesses positions: bendbulletin.com • Seasonal Rimrock Café Associates • Seasonal Custodian • Seasonal Costumed Character For more information please visit our web site at: www.highdesertmuseum.org

To apply, e-mail cover letter & resume to

jobs@highdesertmuseum.org

or fax to 541-382-5256. No calls, please.

Finance & Business

500 528

Loans & Mortgages

Ever Consider a Reverse Mortgage? At least 62 years old? BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Stay in your home & Search the area’s most increase cash flow! comprehensive listing of Safe & Effective! Call classiied advertising... Now for your FREE real estate to automotive, DVD! Call Now merchandise to sporting 888-785-5938. goods. Bulletin Classiieds (PNDC) appear every day in the print or on line. LOCAL MONEY:We buy Call 541-385-5809 secured trust deeds & www.bendbulletin.com note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13.

with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of media sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate.

The position offers a competitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Please send your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Sean L. Tate Advertising Manager state@bendbulletin.com You may also drop off your resume in person or mail it to: 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97701. No phone inquiries please. EOE / Drug Free Workplace


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

personals Kim, When the next estate sale has worn you out, take a chance. They say Columbus did, and look what he found - a whole new world. You just might do the same. Give me a call. --Steve

announcements RON PAUL Sign Wave May 12th in Bend along 3rd and Greenwood Ave; from 1 PM to 3 PM. Please bring your friends, family, and Ron Paul signs to this event (we have signs). 541-279-4202 CentralOR4RP@ gmail.com

Boats & RV’s

800 850

Snowmobiles Polaris 2003, 4 cycle, fuel inj, elec start, reverse, 2-up seat, cover, 4900 mi, $2500 obo. 541-280-0514 860

Motorcycles & Accessories

CRAMPED FOR CASH?

Use classified to sell those items you no longer need. Call 541-385-5809

CALL A SERVICE PROFESSIONAL Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service

Building/Contracting

Landscaping/Yard Care

NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who contracts for construction work to be licensed with the Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An active license means the contractor is bonded and insured. Verify the contractor’s CCB license through the CCB Consumer Website

Nelson Landscape Maintenance Serving Central Oregon Residential & Commercial

•Sprinkler Activation & Repair •Back Flow Testing •Thatch & Aerate • Spring Clean up

•Weekly Mowing •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance •Flower Bed Clean Up www.hirealicensedcontractor. •Bark, Rock, Etc. com •Senior Discounts or call 503-378-4621.

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 F3 860

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Motorcycles & Accessories

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Harley Davidson SoftCoachman Tail Deluxe 2007, Freelander 2011, white/cobalt, w/pas27’, queen bed, 1 senger kit, Vance & slide, HD TV, DVD Hines muffler system & kit, 1045 mi., exc. player, 450 Ford, cond, $19,999, 16’ Driftboat, like new $49,000, please cond., lots of upgrades, 541-389-9188. call 541-923-5754. 6 HP LS motor, $6500, Harley Heritage call/text, 541-480-8075. Gulfstream Scenic Softail, 2003 17' Lowe 1994, 60HP Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, $5,000+ in extras, Mercury 4-stroke, Cummins 330 hp die$2000 paint job, electric troll motor, sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 30K mi. 1 owner, GPS fishfinder, 3 For more information in. kitchen slide out, batteries, two gas please call new tires,under cover, tanks, trailer w/spare. 541-385-8090 hwy. miles only,4 door or 209-605-5537 $7000 541-389-7535 fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, 19.5’ 1988 373V Interbath tub & HD FAT BOY Ranger Bass Boat, shower, 50 amp proMercury 115 Motor, 1996 pane gen & more! Ranger trailer, trolling Completely rebuilt/ $55,000. elec. motor, fish finder customized, low 541-948-2310 & sonor, 2 live wells & miles. Accepting ofall accessories, new fers. 541-548-4807 batteries & tires, great cond., $6500. FIND IT! 541-923-6555. Hunter’s Delight! PackBUY IT! age deal! 1988 WinSELL IT! nebago Super Chief, The Bulletin Classiieds 38K miles, great shape; 1988 Bronco II HONDA CRF 250X 4x4 to tow, 130K 2006, senior citizen mostly towed miles, bought new in 2007, nice rig! $15,000 both. 19-ft Mastercraft Protrail riding only in 541-382-3964, leave Star 190 inboard, Camp Sherman, low msg. 1987, 290hp, V8, 822 hours, not ridden last hrs, great cond, lots of year, JD jetting kit, raextras, $10,000 obo. CAN’T BEAT THIS! diator & trans. guards, 541-231-8709 exc. cond., $3200 Look before you OBO, 541-595-2559 buy, below market value ! Size & mileage DOES matter, Class A 32’ Hurricane by Four Winds, 2007. 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V10, 19’ Glass Ply, Merc lthr, cherry, slides, Honda Elite 110 2010, cruiser, depth finder, like new, can see trolling motor, trailer, Save tons on gas. anytime, $58,000. $3500, 541-389-1086 $2499, Vin# B50394 541-548-5216 or 541-419-8034. Pro Caliber Motorsports 866-949-8607

The Bulletin recom- Bonded & Insured Honda NT 700 2010, mends checking with 541-815-4458 Tons of extras. $9999, the CCB prior to conLCB#8759 Vin # B50416 tracting with anyone. Pro Caliber Motorsports Some other trades 866-949-8607 also require additional licenses and certifications. Spring Clean up. Honda VT700 Debris Removal Bi-weekly & monthly Shadow 1984, 23K, maint., debris hauling, many new parts, property clean-up, JUNK BE GONE battery charger, bark decoration. I Haul Away FREE good condition, Residential & For Salvage. Also $3000 OBO. Commercial. Cleanups & Cleanouts 541-382-1891 Free Estimates. Mel, 541-389-8107

20.5’ 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini & custom trailer, $19,500. 541-389-1413

20.5’ Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

Jayco Greyhawk 2004, 31’ Class C,

6800 mi., hyd. jacks, new tires, slide out, exc. cond, $49,900, 541-480-8648

Southwind 35.5’ Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Avg NADA ret.114,343; asking $104,000. Call 541-923-2774 Need to get an ad in ASAP? Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classiieds

Winnebago Outlook 2008 32’ Ford V10 eng, Wineguard sat. TV, surround sound stereo + more. $55,000 obo. 541-526-1622. Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809 881

Travel Trailers Kit Companion 19’ 2001, A/C, mirco, $7000, 541-447-0706. SPRINGDALE 2005 27’, has eating area slide, A/C and heat, new tires, all contents included, bedding towels, cooking and eating utensils. Great for vacation, fishing, hunting or living! $15,500 541-408-3811

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Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 882

Fifth Wheels

Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 1996, 2 slides, A/C, heat pump, exc. cond. for Snowbirds, solid oak cabs day & night shades, Corian, tile, hardwood. $12,750. 541-923-3417.

Springdale 2012 18’ used 3 times (divorce sale) $10,900 OBO. 503-778-0002 Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satellite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000. 541-480-3923

Monaco Dynasty 2004, loaded, 3 slides, $159,000, 541-923- 8572 or 541-749-0037 (cell)

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

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 - RV’s for Rent

Komfort 24’ 1999, 6’ Terry 5th wheel 1996, slide, fully loaded,never Chevy 4x4 2000 used since buying, combo. Both mint $8500, 541-923-0854. cond., 5.3 engine, always garaged, no children, pets/smoking, 10 ply tires, both loaded. $16,900. 541-420-8625. 885 MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, Canopies & Campers king bed, lrg LR, Arctic insulation, all op- For sale or trade totions $37,500. wards 24’-26’ trailer 541-420-3250 with slide. Lance Squire 9’10” cabover, ‘96, elec. jacks, solar panel, 2-dr refrig, freezer, awning, outdoor shower, exc. cond, $7000 obo. 541-549-1342 Pilgrim 27’, 2007 5th wheel, 1 slide, AC, Call a Pro TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. Whether you need a 541-350-8629 fence ixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you’ll ind professional help in The Bulletin’s “Call a Regal Prowler AX6 Ex- Service Professional” treme Edition 38’ ‘05, Directory 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all 541-385-5809 maple cabinets, king size bdrm./bed separated w/sliding glass dr, Lance 9.5’ 1994, X-cab camper, sleeps 5, A/C, loaded,always garaged, furnace/catylitic heater, only lived in 3 mo., fantastic fan, in/outside brand new $54,000,still showers, manual jacks, like new only $28,500 very good cond., OBO, will deliver, Cory, $5500, 541-408-0538 541-580-7334 or 541-408-3118.

Springdale 29’ 2007, slide,Bunkhouse style, Magic Touch. Since COACHMAN 1997 Domestic Services sleeps 7-8, excellent Lance-Legend 990 2002. Weekly yard Catalina 5th wheel condition, $16,900, 11’3" 1998, w/ext-cab, care, cleanups, sprin23’, slide, new tires, Shelly’s Cleaning & Much 541-390-2504 exc. cond., generator, National Sea Breeze kler start up & adjustextra clean, below More. Quality service at solar-cell, large refrig, 2004 M-1341 35’, gas, ment, bark, thatching book. $6,500. an affordable price. No AC, micro., magic fan, 2 power slides, upand aeration. Pruning, 928-345-4731 job too big or small - Just Road Ranger 1985, bathroom shower, graded queen matfertilizer and more. Suzuki C50T 2007, call 541-526-5894 or 24', catalytic & A/C, removable carpet, tress, hyd. leveling Chris 541-633-6881 Ready for the open 25’ Catalina Sailboat 406-670-8861 fully self-contained, custom windows, outsystem, rear camera Road! $5999, Vin# $2795. 541-389-8315 1983, w/trailer, swing Escaper 29’ 1991, Home is Where the Dirt door shower/awning & monitor, only 6k mi. BP50406. What are you keel, pop top, fully 2 slides, A/C, Is! 10 yrs exp. Clean Vaset-up for winterizing, A steal at $43,000! Pro Caliber Motorsports by Nu-Wa Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 loaded, $9500 call for elec/gas fridge, walk Snowbird cant residences & busielec. jacks, CD/stelooking for? 541-480-0617 866-949-8607 1999, 2 slides, lot of 29’, weatherized, like details, 541-480-8060 around queen bed, nesses. Refs. Crecencia reo/4’ stinger. $9000. extras, $9800; also You’ll i nd it in RV CONSIGNMENTS new, furnished & elec. front jacks, & Norma, 541-306-7426 Bend, 541.279.0458 2005 Dodge 3500 Ads published in the WANTED ready to go, incl Wine$4000 OBO, The Bulletin Classiieds Dually 4x4 Cummins "Boats" classification We Do The Work, You gard Satellite dish, Handyman 541-382-8939 or Take care of 5.9, HD, 22k mi., extra include: Speed, fishKeep The Cash, $26,995. 541-420-9964 541-777-0999. 40 gal tank, tool box, ing, drift, canoe, On-Site Credit your investments ERIC REEVE HANDY 541-385-5809 $26,900; both in exc. house and sail boats. Approval Team, SERVICES. Home & cond. 503-307-8455 in with the help from For all other types of Web Site Presence, Suzuki GSXR600 2004, Commercial Repairs, Call The Yard Doctor Prineville watercraft, please see We Take Trade-Ins. Must See! $6999, The Bulletin’s Carpentry-Painting, for yard maintenance, Class 875. Free Advertising. Vin# BP50415. Pressure-washing, thatching, sod, sprin“Call A Service Sundance 29’ 2009, 541-385-5809 BIG COUNTRY RV Honey Do's. On-time kler blowouts, water Pro Caliber Motorsports with 3 slides, super Weekend Warrior Toy Professional” Directory Bend 541-330-2495 866-949-8607 promise. Senior features, more! clean. $29,950; also Hauler 28’ 2007,Gen, Fleetwood Wilderness Redmond: 541-548-5254 Discount. Work guarAllen 541-536-1294 2008 Dodge 250 fuel station, exc cond. anteed. 541-389-3361 36’ 2005 4 slides, rear LCB 5012 Advertise your car! diesel, hitch, brakes, Roamin Chariot pop-up sleeps 8, black/gray A Project: 1971 21’ Ficamper, fits small or 541-771-4463 bdrm, fireplace, AC, Add A Picture! additional $31,500, interior, used 3X, berform, cabin style, pickup, good shape, Aeration / Dethatching Bonded & Insured W/D hkup beautiful Reach thousands of readers! exc. cond., $24,999. good 2 axle trailer, jacks & stand. $2400. BOOK NOW! CCB#181595 unit! $30,500. Call 541-385-5809 541-610-5178 541-389-9188 $450 OBO, The Bulletin Classifieds Weekly / one-time service 541-325-6548 541-815-2380 I DO THAT! 541-382-2577 avail. Bonded, insured, Yamaha Cruiser 2007, Home/Rental repairs free estimates! Very nice. $3999, GENERATE SOME exSmall jobs to remodels COLLINS Lawn Maint. Vin# B50420 citement in your neigHonest, guaranteed Call 541-480-9714 Pro Caliber Motorsports borhood. Plan a gawork. CCB#151573 866-949-8607 rage sale and don't Dennis 541-317-9768 B & G Lawncare, forget to advertise in accepting new clients. Landscaping/Yard Care classified! 385-5809. Spring Clean-up. Weekly Maintenance. 541-408-5367 541-410-2953 Merc standard shaft 7½ UGLY YARD? Yamaha F26R 2009, hp outbrd mtr. Best Retired Master Low miles. $6999, offer. 541-416-0758 Gardener make-overs Vin# BP50412 More Than Service Starting at $499. Pro Caliber Motorsports Peace Of Mind Used out-drive 541-633-9895 866-949-8607

Spring Clean Up

•Leaves •Cones •Needles •Debris Hauling •Aeration •Dethatching Compost Top Dressing Weed free Bark & flower beds ORGANIC PROGRAMS

Landscape Maintenance

Full or Partial Service •Mowing •Edging •Pruning •Weeding Sprinkler Adjustments

Fertilizer included with monthly program Weekly, monthly or one time service. EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential

Free Estimates Senior Discounts

541-390-1466

Same Day Response NOTICE: OREGON Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise to perform Landscape Construction which includes: planting, decks, fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be licensed with the Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers compensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing landscape maintenance do not require a LCB license.

Check out the classiieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily Organicscapes, Inc. LCB#8906

541.771.9441 www.bendorganiclandscaping.com

865

ATVs We buy motorcycles, ATV’s, snowmobiles & watercrafts. Call Ken at 541-647-5151.

Maverick Landscaping Mowing, weedeating, yard detailing, chain saw work & more! LCB#8671 541-923-4324 Holmes Landscape Maint

• Clean-up • Aerate • De-thatch • Free Est. • Weekly / Bi-wkly Svc. call Josh 541-610-6011 Yamaha YFZ450 Sport Quad, 2005, new pipe & Full Tilt Clean Up, jet kit, too much to list, Hauling & Dumping. fast, fun bike, $3200 obo. 541-647-8931 541-419-2756 Painting/Wall Covering

parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435

BIG TENT. HUGE SAVINGS. Special Edition, Alloys, Auto, Keyless Entry, Bluetooth

875

Watercraft Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

1 @ this price!

2012 $ VERSA HB 1.8S

156/mo.

VIN: 258565. MSRP $17,400, Cap reduction $1,491. Cap cost $15,104. Acq. fee $595. 39 mo. lease. 12,000 miles/year. Residual 52% $9,048. Total due at signing $1,995, includes 1st payment + DMV. On approved credit. No security deposit.

1 @ this price!

2012 ROGUE S

$

Boats & Accessories

All About Painting

1 @ this price!

2.5S

2012 ALTIMA COUPE

$

249/mo.

VIN: 241520. MSRP $27,285, Cap reduction $1,397.61. Cap cost $23,597.39. Acq. fee $595. 39 mo. lease. 12,000 miles/year. Residual 51% $13,915.35. Total due at signing $1,995, includes 1st payment + DMV. On approved credit. No security deposit.

Auto, ABS

1 @ this price!

2.5S

2012 ALTIMA SEDAN

$

Moonroof, Leather

1 @ this price!

$

11,000 OFF

MSRP VIN: 612619. MSRP $49,650, Smolich Discount $7,000. Factory Rebate $4,000. Sale Price $38,650 + DMV

19,995

+DMV VIN: 419255. MSRP $23,820, Smolich Discount $2,325. Factory Rebate $1,500

Moonroof, Navigation, 4x4, Leather

2012 ARMADA SL

248/mo.

VIN: 385432. MSRP $25,500, Cap reduction $1,398.79. Cap cost $22,696.21. Acq. fee $595. 39 mo. lease. 12,000 miles/year. Residual 54% $13,770. Total due at signing $1,995, includes 1st payment + DMV. On approved credit. No security deposit.

Convenience Package, Bluetooth, Rear Spoiler

870

Inflatable Raft,Sevylor Fishmaster 325,10’3”, complete pkg., $650 Interior/Exterior/Decks. 12.6’ Smoker Craft ‘92, 15HP Evinrude ‘95; Firm, 541-977-4461. Mention this ad get 30# thrust MinnKota 15% Off interior or trolling motor, all perf. exterior job. cond.!!! E-Z Load Restrictions do apply. trailer, Hummingbird Free Estimates. fish finder, oars, rod CCB #148373 Kayak, Eddyline holders, seats, 2 an541-420-6729 Sandpiper, 12’, like chors & boat cover. new, $975, WESTERN PAINTING $2450obo. 541-408 5256 541-420-3277. CO. Richard Hayman, a semi-retired paint880 ing contractor of 45 years. Small Jobs Motorhomes Welcome. Interior & Exterior. ccb#5184. 12’ alum. Sea King with 541-388-6910 NEW: seats, cover, 6hp Nissan 4-stroke; also RV/Marine trolling, fish finder, trlr. $1500. 541-312-4504 Advantage RV 2002 Country Coach For all of your 12' Smokercraft Intrigue 40' Tag axle. RV Repairs! 2000 & trailer. 2007 400hp Cummins Die•All Makes & Models 9.9 HP Johnson sel. Two slide-outs. •Chassis Repair & w/less than 5 hrs 41,000 miles. Most Service use, Exc. shape. options. $110,000 •Appliance/Electrical $3200, Call OBO 541-678-5712 Repair & upgrades 360-903-7873 to •Interior Repair & view. In town. Upgrades •Exterior Repair •Collision Repair 13’ Smokercraft •Mobile Service 1997, Alaskan Fish available in the Boat w/ 9.9 Merc & Central Oregon Area elec. motor, swivel Beaver Patriot 2000, Walnut cabinets, soYears of Experience seat, fish finder, anlar, Bose, Corian, tile, 541-728-0305 chor, cover & top, 62980 Boyd Acres Rd., 4 door fridge., 1 slide, trailer, $2450, Building B, Suite 2 W/D. $75,000 541-977-2644. Bend, Oregon 541-215-5355

Special Edition, Alloys, AWD, Rear View Monitor & more

1 @ this price!

2012 MAXIMA SV

$

8,230 OFF

MSRP VIN: 864603. MSRP $35,725, Smolich Discount $5,230. Factory Rebate $3,000 Sale Price $27,495 + DMV

SMOLICH “ W e m a k e c a r b u y i n g e a s y.” 541-389-1178 | VISIT SMOLICHNISSAN.COM All vehicles subject to prior sale, tax, title, license & registration fees. All financing, subject to credit approval. Pictures for illustration purposes only. Offers expires May 14, 2012.


F4 SATURDAY, MAY 12, 2012 • THE BULLETIN Autos & Transportation

900 908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

932

933

935

940

975

975

975

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Vans

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Chevy 1/2 Ton work van 1997, 96K mi,, exclnt cond, full bins, appearance pkg., cruise, synth oils only, 2 sets wheels /tires, must see! $4995. Pix/info: 541-382-9222

Buick Special “SJ” 1996, Super low miles. $3,999 Vin 409112 • Dlr #366

THRUCKS ‘85 International 10 Wheel 46,000 GVW,‘89 GMC 30,000 GVW, ‘91 Ford 33,000 GVW, ‘01 Frieghtliner 33,000 GVW All Dump Flatbed. Backstrom Builders Center 541-382-6861 925

Utility Trailers

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $138,500. Call 541-647-3718 1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, located KBDN. $55,000. 541-419-9510

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

916

Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed, 7’x16’, 7000 lb. GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024. 929

Chevy 1951 pickup,

restored. $13,500 obo; 541-504-3253 or 503-504-2764 Chevy 1500 Z71 1994, 5.7 V8, New tires, 120K miles, $3200. 541-279-8013

Say “goodbuy” Chevy Wagon 1957, to that unused 4-dr., complete, Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 $15,000 OBO, trades, 4x4. 120K mi, Power item by placing it in please call seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd The Bulletin Classii eds row seating, extra 541-420-5453. tires, CD, privacy tintChrysler 300 Coupe ing, upgraded rims. 541-385-5809 1967, 440 engine, Fantastic cond. $9500 auto. trans, ps, air, Contact Timm at frame on rebuild, re541-408-2393 for info painted original blue, or to view vehicle. original blue interior, Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4, Ford Eddie Bauer original hub caps, exc. 1995, extended cab, Explorer 1992, Low chrome, asking $9000 long box, grill guard, Miles. $3,999 or make offer. running boards, bed 541-385-9350. rails & canopy, 178K Vin A31480 • Dlr #366 miles, $4800 obo. 208-301-3321 (Bend)

Automotive Wanted

1969 Cesena 182 0520P-Ponk, 3BLD Stol, nice panel, $70,000, 541-884-6567 or 541-881-1519 pm. 916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. 877-213-9145. (PNDC) 931

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories 245/70R17 108S hwy tires-40%, $125. 541-447-4576.

1982 INT. Dump w/Arborhood, 6k on rebuilt Tailgate cargo holder, 392, truck refurbished, Ford Super Duty. $49. has 330 gal. water 541-536-1333. tank w/pump & hose. Everything works, Tires (4), for Saturn, Reduced - now $5000 used Toyo Radials, OBO. 541-977-8988 P195/60R15, $15 ea; Spider Traction Device, for Saturn, $25, 541-383-3483. Peterbilt 359 potable water truck, 1990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" hoses, camlocks, $25,000. 541-820-3724

We Buy Junk Cars & Trucks! Cash paid for junk vehicles, batteries & catalytic converters. Serving all of C.O.! Call 541-408-1090

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

CHEVY SUBURBAN LT 2005, low miles., good tires, new brakes, moonroof Reduced to $15,750 541-389-5016.

Chrysler SD 4-Door 1930, CDS Royal Standard, 8-cylinder, body is good, needs some restoration, runs, taking bids, 541-383-3888, 541-815-3318

Dodge 1500 2001 4x4 sport, red, loaded, rollbar, AND 2011 Moped Trike used 3 months, street legal. call 541-433-2384

Dodge 3500 2007 Quad Cab SLT 4x4, 6.7L Cummins 6-spd AT, after-market upgrades, superb truck, call for FIAT 1800 1978 5-spd, details, $28,000 OBO. door panels w/flowers 541-385-5682 & hummingbirds,

white soft top & hard top, Reduced! $5,500. 541-317-9319 or 541-647-8483

Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & radio (orig),541-419-4989 Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO. 530-515-8199

Lincoln Mark IV, 1972, needs vinyl top, runs good, $3500. 541-771-4747

HYUNDAI

541-749-4025

Ford Excursion 2005, 4WD, diesel, exc. cond., $19,900, call 541-923-0231. Grand Cherokee “Limited” 1997, Low miles. $4,999 Vin 684939 • Dlr #366

HYUNDAI

541-749-4025

Ford F150 2006, crew cab, 1 owner, 79,000 miles, $13,900. 541-408-2318.

Jeep Cherokee 1990, 4WD, 3 sets rims & tires, exlnt set snow tires, great 1st car! Ford F-350 XLT 2003, $1800. 541-633-5149 4X4, 6L diesel, 6-spd manual, Super Cab, short box, 12K Warn Get your winch, custom bumper business & canopy, running boards, 2 sets tires, wheels & chains, many GROW extras, perfect, ONLY 29,800 miles, $27,500 with an ad in OBO, 541-504-8316.

ING

GMC ½-ton Pickup, 1972, LWB, 350hi motor, mechanically A-1, interior great; body needs some TLC. $4000 OBO. Call 541-382-9441

The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory

Jeep Willys 1947 cstm, counsel; and (3) A LEGAL NOTICE small block Chevy, PS, statement that you OD, mags + trlr. Swap Estate of Gilbert Tihave an interest in the coulat. NOTICE TO International Flat for backhoe. No a.m. seized property. Your INTERESTED PERBed Pickup 1963, 1 calls, pls. 541-389-6990 Barracuda deadline for filing the Plymouth SONS. Case Number: ton dually, 4 spd. 1966, original car! 300 Good classiied ads tell claim document with 12-PB-0035. Notice: trans., great MPG, hp, 360 V8, centerthe essential facts in an forfeiture counsel The Circuit Court of could be exc. wood lines, (Original 273 named below is 21 interesting Manner. Write the State of Oregon, hauler, runs great, eng & wheels incl.) days from the last day from the readers view - not for the County of Desnew brakes, $1950. 541-593-2597 of publication of this chutes, has apthe seller’s. Convert the 541-419-5480. notice. Where to file pointed Steve Lanfacts into beneits. Show 933 a claim and for more caster as Personal Mazda B4000 2004 the reader how the item will Pickups information: Daina Representative of the help them in some way. Cab Plus 4x4. 4½ yrs Vitolins, Crook County Estate of Gilbert Tior 95,000 miles left on *** District Attorney Ofcoulat, deceased. All ext’d warranty. V6, CHECK YOUR AD fice, 300 NE Third persons having claims 5-spd, AC, studded Please check your ad Street, Prineville, OR against said estate tires, 2 extra rims, on the first day it runs 97754. are required to tow pkg, 132K mi, all to make sure it is corNotice of reasons for present the same, records, exlnt cond, rect. Sometimes inForfeiture: The propwith proper vouchers $9500. 541-408-8611 structions over the erty described below to the Personal Repphone are miswas seized for forfeiresentative, c/o David 935 Range Rover 2005 ture because it: (1) understood and an error E. Petersen, Merrill HSE, nav, DVD, Sport Utility Vehicles can occur in your ad. Constitutes the proO'Sullivan, LLP, 805 local car, new tires, ceeds of the violation If this happens to your SW Industrial Way, 51K miles. ad, please contact us of, solicitation to vioSuite 5, Bend, Or$24,995. the first day your ad late, attempt to vioegon 97702, within 503-635-9494 appears and we will late, or conspiracy to four months from the be happy to fix it violates, the criminal date of first publicaas soon as we can. laws of the State of tion of this notice as Oregon regarding the Deadlines are: Weekstated below, or they days 12:00 noon for 1972 Ford Bronco 4X4 manufacture, distribuRange Rover, may be barred. All 302 V8 w/3 spd on next day, Sat. 11:00 tion, or possession of persons whose rights 2006 Sport HSE, floor, lots of new a.m. for Sunday; Sat. controlled substances may be affected by nav, AWD, heated parts, soft & hardtop, 12:00 for Monday. If (ORS Chapter475); this proceeding may seats, moonroof, runs great, $4300. we can assist you, and/or (2) Was used obtain additional inlocal owner, OBO 541-410-1685. please call us: or intended for use in formation from the Harman Kardon, 541-385-5809 committing or facilirecords of the court, Buick Rainier 2006 4x4, $23,995. tating the violation of, The Bulletin Classified the Personal Repreleather, $13,000. 503-635-9494 *** solicitation to violate, sentative, or the At541-383-4907 attempt to violate, or torney for the Perconspiracy to violate sonal Representative. the criminal laws of Dated and first pubthe State of Oregon lished May 5, 2012. regarding the manuPersonal Representafacture, distribution or tive: Steve Lancaster, possession of con1318 White Bluff trolled substances Street, Richland, WA (ORS Chapter 475). 99352. Attorney for IN THE MATTER OF: Personal RepresentaU.S. Currency in the tive: David E. Peamount of $700, and tersen, OSB #82104, a 2007 Toyota TunMerrill O'Sullivan, dra, Case LLP, 805 SW Indus12-03-02395 seized trial Way, Suite 5, 04/03/2012 from Luis Bend, OR 97702, OfRafael Gragirene, and fice: (541) 389-1770, Mario Urbalejo Jr. Facsimile: (541) 389-1777, Email: redNeed help ixing stuff? side@merrill-osulliCall A Service Professional van.com ind the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com LEGAL NOTICE Notice of 2012/2013 LEGAL NOTICE Budget Meeting NOTICE TO Special Road District #1 INTERESTED Date: May 16, 2012 PERSONS Location: DRRH Club House The undersigned has Time: 7:00 p.m. been appointed personal representative LEGAL NOTICE of the Estate of David NOTICE OF SEIZURE Earl Evans, DeFOR CIVIL ceased, by the Circuit FORFEITURE TO ALL Court, State of OrPOTENTIAL egon, County of DesCLAIMANTS AND TO chutes, Probate No. ALL UNKNOWN To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, 12-PB-0033. All perPERSONS READ THIS sons having claims CAREFULLY visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on against the estate are required to present If you have any inter“Place an ad” and follow these easy steps: their claims with est in the seized proper vouchers property described 1. Choose a category, choose a classification, and within four months below, you must claim then select your ad package. from this date, to the that interest or you will undersigned, or they automatically lose that 2. Write your ad and upload your digital photo. may be barred. Addiinterest. If you do not tional information may file a claim for the be obtained from the property, the property 3. Create your account with any major credit card. court records, the unmay be forfeited even dersigned, or the atif you are not contorneys named below. victed of any crime. All ads appear in both print and online To claim an interest, Dated and first you must file a written Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before published: claim with the forfeiMay 5, 2012. ture counsel named your ad appears in print and online. below, The written TAMARA LOU claim must be signed TAYLOR by you, sworn to unPersonal der penalty of perjury To place your photo ad, Representative before a notary public, visit us online at c/o C. E. FRANCIS and state: (a) Your www.bendbulletin.com OSB #77006 true name; (b) The www.bendbulletin.com or call with questions address at which you FRANCIS HANSEN & MARTIN, LLP will accept future 541-385-5809 1148 NW Hill Street mailings from the Bend, OR 97701 court and forfeiture

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

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2012 Subaru Impreza 2.0i Premium Navigation & All Weather Package

$

23,999

OR AS LOW AS

1.9

%*

All-weather package, heated front seats, windshield wiper de-icer, heated side mirrors, alloy wheel package

A.P.R. UP TO 48 MOS

MSRP $24,856 Installed options, tax, title, license doc. not included. *Tier 1 financing. On Approved Credit. VIN: CH014707, CJC-27

2012 Subaru Forester 2.5X

$

21,341

OR AS LOW AS

0.9 % *

A.P.R. UP TO 36 MOS

Only 1

MSRP $23,270 VIN: CH448826. Installed options, tax, title, license doc. not included. *Tier 1 financing. On Approved Credit. CFB-21

2012 Subaru Legacy 2.5i Premium

$

143

OR AS LOW AS

20 PER MO. LEASE *

0.9

UP TO 36 MOS

MSRP $22,740. Cap Reduction $1,995, Cap Cost $17,851, Acquisition Fee $595, 42 months. 10,000 miles per year. Residual 54%, $12,279.60. Total due at signing $2,411.20. On approved credit. Tier 1 financing. Total due at signing does not include any dealer installed options. No security deposit. VIN: C1035051, CAA-01

2012 Subaru Outback 2.5i CVT

$

24,942

OR AS LOW AS

0.9 % *

A.P.R. UP TO 36 MOS

MSRP $26,574 Installed options, tax, title, license doc. not included. *Tier 1 financing. On Approved Credit. VIN: C3275415, CDB-11

Subaru Certified Pre-Owned

Easy, flexible, and affordable ad packages are also available on our Web site.

2012 Subaru Impreza WRX STi Sedan

2011 Subaru Legacy Sedan 2.5i PREMIUM, CVT TRANSMISSION, HEATED SEATS, ALLOY WHEELS

11,000 MILES, PREMIUM WHEELS, REAR SPOILER, 6-SPEED MANUAL VIN: CL009010

$

36,999

VIN:B3211860

$

21,999

UNDER THE BIG AMERICAN FLAG Thank you for reading. All photos are for illustration purposes – not actual vehicles. All prices do not include dealer installed options, documentation, registration or title. All vehicles subject to prior sale. All lease payments based on 10,000 miles/year. *Tier 1 financing. On approved credit. Prices good through May 14, 2012.


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