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SATURDAY hbruary15, 2014
e in er m ics,
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Inside
COMMUNITY LIFE• D1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Medical codes —Bitten or struck by a turkey? The hospital knows how to bill your insurance for that.A4
BRIDGE CREEK
u ewon' OC waer roe By Elon Glucklich
first phase of the $24 million project early next week.
But after a one-hour conference call with attorneys
green light to start installing 10 miles of pipeline under
failed "to establish the likelihood of irreparable harm."
A federal judge Friday rejected an attempt by Central Oregon LandWatch to halt the city of Bend's Bridge Creek municipal water project. City officials said they're
LandWatch filed an injunction after the U.S. Forest
for the city, the Forest Service and LandWatch, U.S. District
Skyliners Road, but doesn't
LandWatch attorneys had
cover the large intake facility
argued the pipeline can't be
Service granted the city a permit in November, arguing the project's environmental impacts weren't given enough
Judge Ann Aiken needed just
planned near Bend's water-
separatedfrom the project as
one more hour to deny Land-
Watch's injunction Friday
shed at Bridge Creek. In a brief ruling, Aiken
afternoon.
said LandWatch's arguments
awhole. Aiken's quick ruling caught some Bend officials off guard.
ready to move ahead with the
consideration.
The Bulletin
Banned adoptionsMany people who tried to adopt kids from Russia still haven't given up hope.AB
Termite-like rodots-
The permit gives the city a
against the pipeline work
SeeWater /A5
These little guys build things, not tear them down.A3
Plus: Genetic atlas — Re-
Additional child abuse chargesin gym case
searchers track the history of human genes.A3
Winter Olympics — Snowboarding and more.C1, C4-5
'Where am I?' —Answers to our photo competition.B2
mourns in wa e o su en s ea
By Shelby R. King The Bulletin
Deschutes Countyprosecutors added more than 100
Submitted photo
counts of sex abuse to an ongoing case against one of the owners of a Bend gym-
And a Wed exclusive —A California police forensics unit is all female: the 'CSI' effect? bendbunetin.com/extras
nastics and martial arts center, according to a news
release from Bend Police Capt. Ken Stenkamp. Richard Gustafson,
49, co-owner of Acrovision, was rearrested on Friday and charged with one count of first-degree sex abuse, four counts of first-degree encouraging child sex abuse, 122 counts of second-degree encouraging child sex abuse and possession of a controlled
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Ambassador nominations
prompting anuproar
Jretteo $ch'eraeait e ee"~ i
e
substance, according to the
.e
By Juliet Eilperin
y DSÃr >
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — A century-old debate over
sador to Norway, for example, prompted outrage in Oslo by characterizing one of the nation's ruling
at Acrovision. The new chargesare the resultof
;g4
whether presidents should reward political donors and allies by making them ambassadors has flared again following a string of embarrassing gaffes by President Barack Obama's picks. The nomineeforambas-
release. He is being held in the Deschutes County Jail in lieu of $1.34 million bail. Gustafson was originally arrested Jan. 8 on suspicion of abusing two girls at a New Year's Eve sleepover the ongoing investigation of this incident. Further details were not released by
the police. SeeCharges/A5 Ryan Brennecke l The Bulletin
Students walk past an impromptu memorial at Bend High School this week left by members of the community to show their support after a student, Zachary Leyes, committed suicide on campuslast week.
"sweet and gentle." He loved working with his hands and worked part time for a cabinetmaker.
In India, fears of a killer tiger
And he was a teaching assistant who was a "super asset" and loved helping beginning
By Tim Sullivan
By Shelby R. Kinge The Bulletin
parties as extremist. A
soap-opera producer slated for Hungary appeared to have little knowledge
of the country she would be living in. A prominent Obama bundler nominated to be ambassador to Ar-
gentina acknowledged that
The student who took his own life at Bend High School last week was known to family as
The Associated Press
woodworking students.
MANIWALA, India — She lies in wait while
he had never set foot in the
country and doesn't speak Spanish. Even former senator Max Baucus, D-Mont., the
new U.S. ambassador in Beijing, managed to raise eyebrows during his confirmation hearing by acknowledging, "I'm no real expert on China." The stumbles have
her victims are collecting New details have emerged about
17-year-old Zachary Leyes, who entered amodular classroom where an American Sign Language class was just getting started a little after noon Feb. 7 and fatally shot himself. Police say they believe Zack never
Ifyou go
intended to hurt others that day, and
his family hopes the tragedy will help now the school district is working to make sure this doesn't happen again
politicos with plum over-
suicide get counseling. After the shooting, the school imme-
and that other students considering
firewood, or taking cattle
wrote in an email. "We are humbled
to graze, or working in the fields. She has grabbedpeople in broad daylight, carryingthem away silently into theforestsorthesugarcane
N.E. Sixth St.
and blessed by the love and support we have received from the communi-
fields. By the time the victims are found, often little is
The service is open to the public.
ty. With God's help, we hope that this
left but a pair of shoes, unspeakable gore and a ring of drying blood. Over sevenweeks she has
What:Memorial service for Zachary Leyes When:6:30 p.m. Sunday Where:Bend High Auditorium, 230
raise awareness about teen suicide;
highlighted the perils of rewarding well-heeled donors and well-connected seas assignments, and have provided political fodder for Republicans eager to attack the White House. The cases also
trade pathways. "We are heartbroken by the tragic loss of our son Zack. He was a funny
and lovingyoung man, and we love and miss him very much," his parents
horrible situation will raise awareness and prevent more teen suicides in the
A public memorial service for Zack future." is planned for 6:30 p.m. Sunday in the Bend Interim Police Chief Jim Porter Bend High Auditorium. said he is limited on the amount and Zack's parents, Daniel and Lean-
traveled, almost completely
unseen, onthe fringes of one of the world's last wild
nature of information he can release
na, havealso created a scholarship because the investigation is ongoing. with cellphones contacted their par- through the Central Oregon Commu- He did confirm that Zack used his own ents with frantic phone calls and texts nity College Foundation for Bend High hunting rifle to end his life. to tell them what was happening. students interested in technical and See BendHigh/A4 diately went on lockdown as students
tiger habitats, for more than
120miles. She has crossed villages, small towns and at least one highway. SeeTiger /A5
underscore how a presi-
dent who once infuriated donors by denying them perks has now come into
line with his predecessors, doling out prominent diplomatic jobs by the dozens to supporters. SeeAmbassadors/A6
TODAY'S WEATHER Light rain High 48, Low 29 pageB6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C7-8 Comics/Puzzles F3-4 Dear Abby 05 Obituaries B3 Community Life D1-6 Horoscope 05 S oI Ft-6 Crosswords F 4 L o cal/State Bt-6 TV/Movies
B5 Ct-6 D5
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vot 112, No. 46,
34 pages, 5 sections
Q
tt/trreuse recyclednewsprint
': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
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DEPARTMENT HEADS
u icia an sca eis c anin o r a r i By Mark Sherman
licans during Obama's tenure.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON
Obama's two elections has U.S. District Judge Arenda been a change in the compoWright Allen's ruling Thurs- sition of the courts. Just over day, that same-sex couples in 60 percent of appellate judges Virginia have the same con- were Republican appointees stitutional right to marry as when Obama took office in heterosexuals, re p r esented January 2009, according to the strongest advance in the Brookings Institution scholar South for advocates of gay Russell Wheeler. Just over five marriage. She put her own years later, Democratic apruling on hold while it is being pointees hold more than half appealed. the seats on appeals courts Jon Davidson of the gay — a transformation magnirights group Lambda Le- fied by majority Democrats gal said the "very dramatic" who changed Senate rules last shift in the 4th circuit under year to make it harder for the Obama was an important rea- minority party to block the son behind the decision to sue president's nominees. for marriage rights in VirginLegal experts on the left ia, which also twice voted for and right agree that who fills Obama. court seats matters. "To be Judges' party affiliation fair, academic studies show is not a perfect predictor of that political party affiliation outcomes, even on charged doesn't affect the run-of-thepolitical i s sues. R epubli- mill cases, but it does affect can-appointed judges in Cal- the cases you're likely to write ifornia and K entucky have about," said Curt Levey, who written opinions strongly in heads the conservative Comfavor of same-sex marriage. mittee for Justice. An Obama-appointed judge Davidson, Lambda Legal's on the 10th circuit provided top lawyer, said, "People fre-
-
The
overturning of Virginia's gay marriage ban places the legal fight over same-sex unions increasingly in the hands of federal appeals courts shaped by President Barack Obama's two election victories. It's no accident that Virgin-
ia has become a key testing ground for federal judges' willingness to embrace samesex marriageafter lastyear's strongly w orded p r o-gay rights ruling by the Supreme Court. Judges appointed by Democratic presidents have a 10-5 edge over Republicans on the Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, formerly among the nation's most conservative appeals courts. Nationally, three other fed-
eral appeals courts will soon take up the right of samesex couples to marry, too, in Ohio, Colorado and California. The San Francisco-based
9th circuit is dominated by the decisive vote in a famijudges appointed by Demo- ly-owned company's religious cratic presidents. The Denobjection challenge to coverver-based court, home of the ing contraception under the 10th circuit, has shifted from health care law. And most noa Republican advantage to an tably, Chief Justice John Robeven split between the parties, erts, a GOP appointee, joined while the 6th circuit, based in with the court's Democrats to Cincinnati, remains relatively uphold the health care law. unchanged in favor of RepubStill, one consequence of
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quently don't appreciate the extent to which the president
plans to sign a bill into law that prescribes life imprisonment for some homosexual acts, officials said Friday, alarming rights activists who have condemnedthe bill as draconian in acountry where homosexuality already hasbeencriminalized. Museveni announced his decision to governing party lawmakers, said government spokesmanOfwono Opondo. In Twitter posts on Friday, Opondosaid the legislators, who are holding a retreat chaired by Museveni, "welcomed thedevelopment as a measure to protect Ugandans from social deviants."
VENEZUELA PROTESTS
Chine CIBSileS —Police in Xinjiang, the ethnically divided region in far western China, fatally shot eight people Friday after what the state-run news mediadescribed as anattack by assailants armed with bombs madefrom gas cylinders. Three other attackers died in an explosion they set off, the reports said. Theofficial accounts did not identify the bombers, but it was clear that they wereUighurs, a Turkic people whohavegrown increasingly resentful of the growing numbers of ethnic HanChinese in the region and of state controls on their culture and Muslim religion. China bird flu —Chinese officials have said a newstrain of avian influenza, H10N8,haskilled another person, according to a report Friday by Xinhua, the state newsagency.Thevictim was a 75-year-old man living in Nanchang, the capital of Jiangxi province, who hadentered a hospital Feb. 4after falling ill. He died Feb. 8,Xinhua reported. The first case of humaninfection involving the strain H10N8emerged in Jiangxi in December. Infections among birds hadbeenpreviously reported. Theman in Nanchang is the third case of H10N8.
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A police water cannon sprays demonstrators Friday during a protest in Caracas,Venezuela. Demonstrators are protesting the Wednesdaykillings of two university students who wereshot in different incidents following ananti-government protest that demandedthe release of student protesters who had beenarrested in various parts of the country.
Venezuelan security forces backed bywater tanks and tear gas aredispersing large groups of anti-government demonstrators who blockedCaracas' main highway Friday evening. Some 500studentprotesterswhohadchoked off traffic for several hours responded bythrowing stones and burning trash.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnFriday nightare:
Q20 ®sQss Q nQ 729 © The estimated jackpot is now $154 million.
Winter Weather —Mother Nature had scant love for the eastern part of the United States onValentine's Day,continuing a streak of miserable anddeadly weather that has turned much of the nation into asnowy,icymessandcausedamajorpileuponthePennsylvania Turnpike. OnFriday, one side of the Pennsylvania Turnpike outside Philadelphia, anarea that got more than afoot of snow, was blocked by collisions that caused minor injuries. At least16 motorists were injured, including five trauma victims, in a series of crashes involving dozens of vehicles on thePennsylvania Turnpike that beganjust after 8 a.m. Friday.
Uganda anti-gay dill —UgandanPresident YoweriMuseveni
REDMOND BUREAU
OTHER SERVICES
Military SeX aSSault —The military's most closely watched sexual misconduct prosecution has beenthrown into turmoil after the lead prosecutor abruptly left the casethis week, less than amonth before the scheduled court-martial of Brig. Gen.Jeffrey Sinclair. Lt. Col. William Helixon's departure cameafter defense lawyers said the colonel told them that hehad cometo think that a jury would not believe the chief prosecution witness. Sinclair has acknowledged a three-year affair with the witness but hasdenied heraccusation that he forced her into oral sexandthreatened to kill her and her family if she told anyoneabout the affair.
Supreme Court, but not on the lower courts."
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of over-the-counter and prescription drugs to the United States, is coming under increased scrutiny by U.S. regulators for safety lapses, falsified drug trial results and selling fake medicines. Dr. Margaret Hamburg, the commissioner of the U.S.Foodand DrugAdministration, arrived in India this week toexpress her growing uneasewith the safety of Indian medicines because of "recent lapses in quality at a handful of pharmaceutical firms."
thing about how elections have impact and this is one of the very dramatic ways you see it. There is a focus on the
the courts. It is a remarkable
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Medicine made in India —India, thesecondlargest exporter
Syria Car demb —A car bomb blew up outside a mosquein a rebel-held village in southern Syria asworshippers were leaving after Friday prayers, killing dozens of peopleandfilling clinics and hospitals with the wounded, anti-government activists said. Theexplosion in Yadoudacharredvehiclesparked nearbyanddamagedthemosque, according to video imagesposted by activists who are fighting to oust President BasharAssad.
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By mail in DeschutesCounty: One month: $14.50 Bymail outside Deschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only:Onemonth: $13
AfghaniSten deetiIS —The Pentagon says that shortly after two U.S. soldiers were gunneddown by two men wearing Afghan army uniforms in eastern Afghanistan, Taliban insurgents attacked the district center where theAmericans had beenoperating. The Pentagon identified the soldiers as 22-year-old Spc. JohnPelham of Portland and 41-year-old Sgt. 1st Class Roberto Skelt of York, Fla. Thescenari oasdescribed Friday byaPentagonspokesman,Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby, appeared to leaveopen the possibility that the machine-gun attack that killed the two ArmySpecial Forces soldiers Wednesday wascoordinated with the Taliban.
I(erry pushesChina on N. I(orea's
nuclear programduring visit By Simon Denyer The Washington Post
BEIJING — Secretary of
State John Kerry said Friday that China's leaders told him that they were willing to put ad-
ditional pressure on North Korea if it did not return to talks about abandoning its nudear
weapons program, but he acknowledged that Washington and Beijing took different approaches to the issue. On a tour though Asia, Kerry said he held a constructive
meeting Friday with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing's Great Hall of the People. He said he urged China to "use everytool at its disposal" to persuade North Korea to give up
itsnuclearweapons program. But Washington-based Chi-
na experts said Beijing was unlikely to push its longtime ally too far on the issue and
remained unwilling to join a U.S.-led attempt to isolate the Pyongyang regime. Kerry was also using his trip to try to calm regional tensions. He signaled U.S. unhappiness with a series of assertive steps taken by Beijing in territorial disputes with its smaller neigh-
PrinCeS pitCh in —Prince William and Prince Harry helped floodhit British villagers protect their homesFriday, unloading sandbags alongside soldiers in a RiverThamesvillage. The princes, who have both served in the armedforces, joined a work crew In Datchet, west of London, from about 6 a.m. onwhat aides said was aprivate visit. England, whichhasbeenlashed bywindand rainsinceDecember, had its wettest January since records began in1766, and the rain has continued this month. — From wire reports
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bors, but he called on all sides insula and preferred a path of to show restraint. diplomacy. At the same time, he dis-
cussed a range of issues with
While th e U n ited States wants tosee North Korea take
verifiable steps toward denucluding climate change, human dearization before resuming rights, Syria and Iran. But the talks, Beijing wants Washingissue of North Korea's nuclear ton to lower the threshold for program topped the agenda. talks and provide Pyongyang Kerry arrived in Beijing after with some sort o f s ecurity visiting the South Korean cap- guarantee. China appears to ital, Seoul. want to encourage Pyongyang North Korea "must take along the path it has followed meaningful, concrete and irre- — of economicopening and versible steps toward verifiable global engagement — leaving denudearization, and it needs the issue of denuclearization as to begin now," Kerry said at a a longer-term goal. news conference. "China could The I n ternational C r i sis not havebeen more emphat- Group said a sustained shift ic, or made it more clear, that toward a sterner policy was they will not allow a nudear unlikely any time soon, with program over the long run, that China unwilling to do anythey believe deeply in denude- thing that could destabilize the arization, that denudearization regime. "Because neither Beijing must occur, and that they are committedto doingtheirpart to nor Washington desires a war make that happen." breaking out on the Korean his Chinese hosts, he said, in-
Kerry said that the two sides
Peninsula that
p
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exchanged ideas on how to put them in, the two sides share the more pressure on Pyongyang interests of managing Pyongand that they would evaluate yang's behaviors and can coeach other's proposals. But operate on reining in North he acknowledged that China Korea's belligerence and provowas deeply concerned about cation," said the Crisis Group's instability on the Korean Pen- Beijing analyst, Yanmei Xie.
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Saturday, Feb.15, the 46th day of 2014. Thereare319 days left in the year.
RESEARCH
HAPPENINGS
CUTTING EDGE
Termites ins ire ro ots t atcou u i ouses
Lidya —Protesters have threatened to storm Parliament and force it to leave ascoup fears increase.A7
JOhn Kerry — Thesecretary of state will travel to Indonesia after visiting China.A2
ByMeeri Kim The Washington Post
HISTORY Highlight:In1764, the site of
present-day St. Louiswasestablished byPierre Lacledeand Auguste Chouteau. In1564, Italian astronomerGalileo Galilei wasborn in Pisa.
Geneticists have tried to create a timeline of 4,000 years of human history, mapping the flow of
mated machines, each about
genes between populations.
the size of a small brick, can work as a team to build any predefined structure given
In1898, the U.S. battleship
Maine mysteriously blewup in HavanaHarbor, killing more than 260 crewmembersand bringing the UnitedStates closer to war with Spain. In1933, President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt escapedan assassination attempt in Miami that mortally woundedChicago Mayor AntonCermak; gunman GiuseppeZangarawasexecuted more than fourweekslater. In1944,Allied bombers destroyed the monastery atop Monte Cassino in Italy. In1952, a funeralwasheldat Windsor Castle for Britain's King George Vl, whohaddied nine days earlier. In1961, 73 people, including an 18-memberU.S.figure skating team en route totheWorld Championship sinCzechoslovakia, were killed in thecrash of a SabenaAirlines Boeing 707in Belgium. In1965,Canada's newmaple-leaf flag wasunfurled in ceremonies inOttawa. In1971, Britain andIreland "decimalised" their currencies, making onepoundequalto 100 newpenceinstead of 240 pence. In1982,84 menwere kiled when a huge oil-drilling rig, theOcean Ranger,sankoff the coast of Newfoundlandduring a fierce storm. In1989, the Soviet Union announcedthat the last of its troops hadleft Afghanistan, after more thannineyears of military intervention. In1994, just as his trial was about to start, drifter Danny Harold Rolling pleadedguilty to the1990 murders of five college students in Gainesville, Fla. (Rolling wasexecuted in Oct. 2006.) In2002,a private funeral was held at WindsorCastle for Britain's PrincessMargaret, who had diedsix days earlier at age 71. Ten yearsago:A pair of blazes in China killed at least 93people. Dale Earnhardt Jr. wonthe Daytona 500onthesametrack where his fatherwaskilled three years earlier. Fiveyears ago:President Hugo Chavez ofVenezuelawona referendum toeliminate term limits, paving thewayfor him to run again in 2012. One yearago:With a blinding flashandaboomingshock wave, a meteorblazedacross Russia's western Siberiansky and exploded, injuring more than1,000 people asit blasted outwindows. Pressing his case in Chicago,President BarackObamacalled for the government to take an active, wide-ranging role inensuring every Americanhas a"ladder of opportunity" into the middle class. In aspectacular fall from political prominence,former U.S. Rep.JesseJackson Jr., D-lll., and hiswife, Sandra, agreed to pleadguilty to federal charges growing out ofwhat prosecutors saidwas ascheme touse$750,000incampaign funds for lavish personalexpenses. (Jackson isserving a 2~/~-yearprison term; because of the couple's youngchildren, Jackson's wife will serve ayearlong sentenceafterward.)
BIRTHDAYS Jazz musician HenryThreadgill is 70. Actress JaneSeymour is 63. "Simpsons" creator Matt Groening is 60.Actor Michael Easton is 47.Olympic gold medal swimmerAmyVanDyken is41. — From wire reports
By Nicholas Wade New York Times News Service
The termite, typically reviled as the wood-eating nemesis of buildings and homes, has ironically inspired a new batch of construction robots. The auto-
chunks from the other's. In each successive gener-
The rise and fall of empires, ation, the average size of the chunks becomes smallerbeof trade routes, the practice cause when DNA is swapped of slavery — all these events betweentheparents'genomes have led to a mixing of popu- in making the eggs or sperm, lations around the world. Such the cuts needed to generate the episodes have left a record in swapped sections are made the human genome,but one in different places. Therefore, that has so far been too com- from the average size of the plex to decipher on a global chunks in a person's genome, scale. the geneticists can calculate Now, geneticists applying the number o f g e nerations the march of armies, the flow
to them — without a leader
0
or step-by-step instructions, as termites are thought to
do. Instead of c o mmunicating directly with one another or following a central command, the robots
Eliza Grinnell/ Harvard School ofEngineering and Applied Sciences; courtesy of Science
The termite, a wood-eating nemesis of buildings and homes, has inspired a new batch of construction robots. Here, the termite-inspired robots show how requested structures can be collectively built using specialized bricks.
coordinate their actions by
identifying and dating the ma- try to date ancestry events, jor population mixture events and we have more ability to of the last 4,000 years, with the determinethe source populagoal of providing a new source tions," Myers said.
assessing what work has already been done and add- directly by sensing and moding to it. So, say, the first ifying the immediate world robot puts down a block. around them. "They're all independent, As it leaves the site, another comes along and senses with each termite doing what the block's location. Based it wants to," he said. "It's not on this local information, as like they're getting assigned inwell as knowledge about the structions by the queen — they endproduct, it decides toput are just reacting to what they down its own load on top of encounter."
of information for historians.
the first.
new statistical a p proaches have taken a first shot at both
Some of the hundred or so major mixing events they describe have plausible historical explanations, while many
since the mixing event.
"We are among the first to
Blending populations One of the most widespread events his group has detected
is the injection of Mongol ancestry into populations within for. For instance, many popu- the Mongol empire, such as lations of the southern Med- the Hazara of Afghanistan iterranean and Middle East and the Uighur Turks of Cenhave segments of African ori- tral Asia. The event occurred gin in their genomes that were more than 20 generations ago, inserted at times between A.D. according to genetic dating, 650 and 1900, according to the which corresponds to the begeneticists' calculations. This ginning of the 14th century, could reflect the activity of the fitting well with the period of Arab slave trade, which origi- the Mongol empire. nated in the seventh century, In another example, the Euand the absorption of slaves ropean colonization of Ameriinto their host populations. ca is recorded in the genomes The lowest amount of Afriof the Maya and Pima Indians. can admixture occurs in the And Cambodian genomes Druse, a religious group of the mark the fall of the Khmer Middle East that prohibited empire in the form of ancesothersremain to be accounted
slavery and has been closed to
tral DNA from the invading
converts since 1043. Another mixing event is the injection of E uropean-type DNA into the Kalash, a people of Pakistan, at some time
Tai people. Myers and his colleagues
between 990 and 210 B.C. This
the 11th and 14th centuries;
have detected European an-
cestry that entered the Tu people of central China between
could reflect the invasion of this, they surmise, could be India by Alexander the Great from traders traveling the in 326 B.C. The Kalash claim Silk Road. They find among to be descended from Alex- northern Italians an insertion ander's soldiers, as do several
other groups in the region. The genetic atlas of human mixing events was published Thursday in the journal Sci-
ence bya team led by Simon Myers of Oxford University, G arrett Hellenthal o f
of Middle Eastern DNA that occurred between 776 B.C.
and A.D. 550, and may represent the Etruscans, a mysterious people said by the ancient
the structure is complete.
He envisions potential ap-
plications for his easily programmable team of robots to work in places where sending humans would be dangerous and expensive — underwater or on Mars, for instance. Or us-
ing robots for tedious tasks, like building levies with sandbags. Werfel came up with the idea
This decentralized method work: Each robot must have its of construction is very sim- ownbasicbrain and sensors, as ilar to how the tiny termite is well as be programmed with thought to create huge, tow- certain "traffic rules" it must ering nests. obey. "Around here, you hear The sensors enable them about termites destroying to see bricks and robots next buildings," said study au- to them, and the traffic rules thor and Harvard Universi-
depend on the final structure.
ty computer scientist Justin Werfel. "But in Africa and
They prevent robots from placing bricks in places where they Australia, they are known might easily collapse, or confor building enormous, com- structinga scenario where a plicated mounds of soil." brickwould have to be squished These oddly shaped tow- in between two others. ers can be as tall as 40 feet Each robot, about 8 inches — about the equivalent of a long, consists of internal metal three-story building. And gears and hardware as well as while they may look like big 3-D printed parts. The bricks piles of dirt, their simple ex- themselves are also specially terior hides a complex net- made in a way that helps the work of ever-evolving tun- robots climb and align them nels and chambers. Some better. biologists even believe they The main difference from provide the colony with the real-life insect is that terair conditioning and atmo- mites don't have a desired sphere control. end product. Rather, there is a Werfel and his colleagues random component involved; wanted to use robotics to given the same starting place, harness the power of stig- a colony will build a slightly mergy — a process where different structure every time. a gents communicate i n But for constructing a house,
of programming termite-like robots over 15 years ago but didn't start hacking away at the
problem until 2003. Years later, he met study co-author Kirstin Petersen, a robotics engineer
whohadindependentlyworked on a collaborative construction projectfor her master's thesis in Denmark. The two came to-
gether, each using their individual expertise to make the little
insect-inspired robots a reality. Then a few years ago, they teamed up with termite expert
Scott Turner to try and get a deeper look inside the insect's head.'Ittrner, a biologist at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, has a
lab in Namibia where he hopes to discoverthepurpose behind the mounds. So far, his investigations have found that they
may help gas exchange more than temperature regulation.
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be a rich medley of Celts with
they found they could detect invaders such as the Angles, about 9 5 di s tinguishable Saxons, Jutes, Danes and Norpopulations. wegians, carry the notation Though all humans have "No strong evidence of admixthe same set of genes, their ge- ture." Myers said his methnomes are studded with muta- od cannot yet detect genetic tions, which are differences in mixing between very similar
patterns because whole sets
of apredefi ned structure.
ism of fairly low complexity, but, using stigmergy, a colony is capable of building a highly complex structure. So the team started with this simple frame-
have emigrated from Lydia in
The Myers group has posted D aniel Falush of t h e M a x its results on a Web page that Planck Institute for Evolution- recordsthe degree of admixary Anthropology in Leipzig, ture in each population. The Germany. Having sampled ge- English, however, known to
the genome. These mutations occur in
print. So Werfel created the option for a user to input a picture
Greek historian Herodotus to
versity College London and
the sequence of DNA units in
robots to follow a specific blue-
Each termite is an organ-
Such a process keeps going — ideally with many robots toiling away at once to finish the job faster — until
U n i - 'Ihrkey.
nomes from around the world,
for instance, we would want the
I
• •
I
populations, as was the case with the English and their in-
vaders from Scandinavia and northern Germany. He said he
of mutations are passed down hoped to distinguish all these from parent to child and hence groups in a separate project on will be common in a partic-
British ancestry.
ular population. Based on Hellenthal said, "We're fairthese patterns, geneticists can ly confident that increasing scan a person's genome and our sample size will help us assign the ancestry of each follow local migrations." segment to a particular race or John Novembre, a geneticist population. at the University of Chicago, described the new genetic atStatistical analysis las as a "landmark study" beThe team led by Myers cause of its scale and the fact has developed a statistical that the authors had been able technique for identifying the to extract complex signatures chromosomal segments with from the data. "The detailed particular precision. This en- historical interpretations may ables them to perform a sec- need further questioning and ond feat, that of assigning a testing," he said. date to the one or more mixing Myers and Hellenthal said events that have affected a that they hoped historians population. would find their work useful, The dating system is based but that they had not collaboon measuring the length of rated with historians. "In some sense we don't chromosome segments of a particular ancestry that occur want to talk to historians," Fain a population. When people lush said. "There's a great virof two different populations tue in being objective: You put intermarry, their children's the data in and get the history genomes carry large chunks out. We do think this is a way of DNA of one parent's an- of reconstructing history by cestry interspersed with large just using DNA."
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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
TODAY'S READ: MEDICAL CODES
Bend High
I ousan so wa sto et sic, ut owtoc ar e orit?
Continued from A1 "The initial investigation indicates he was no threat to anyone else and
By Sarah Kliff The Washington Post
e arly to k n o w t h e t r u e motivation."
In 1855, European statisticians gathered in the stately
f ollowed protocol to e n -
those kids to be was inside that school where they are
of accidents, activities and assaults. The ICD-10 is more than 1,100
the International Classification
pages in small type. The index alone, the guide to figuring out
ofDiseases.
where to find the right code, is 421 pages.
Reolubin said with a sigh. The grandmother, at a three-day training for medical billers, uses green and pink highlighters to mark important new
ing to find that? You can just
instructions on how to use the
written in the 1970s. "We are
long-term effect"
are constantly drilled on what to do when a lockBend-La Pine Communication Director Julianne
Repman. She said the fact that the suicide occurred
States relies on the last edition, cost doctors' offices $56,000 to $8 million to transition to ICD-
tals and insurers say they have
course. "Adopting ICD-10, while it
may provide benefits to others in the health care system, is un-
likelyto improvethe carephysicians provide their patients and takes valuable resources away
from implementing delivery reforms and health information technology," the trade group wrote in a letter this week to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. O thers contend that t h e
change in productivity won't be as dramatic — that opthalmol-
ogy coders could just stick to the ophthalmology section, for example, and don't have any reason to get bogged down in codes about parrots. Health in-
improves the medical system is a subject of fierce debate in
health technology cirdes. Opponents argue that the new
larger set will slow productivity, making it more difficult for veteran billers to find the right
code in a sea of parrot injuries and turkey bites.
he'd really rather help people," Carter said. "He made that statement last week and
ensure safety at campuses across the district.
"Be sure you require all your classroom and building visitors and volunteers to check in and out at the main
office and to wear their visitor badges," he wrote in Sun-
Repman said there are sev-
it will stick with me because eral programs in the works it really sums him up. That's to empower students and what I'll take away from this staff to watch for and report and is something his folks any signs of safety threats. should be proud of." She said the district has been Carter is a newcomer to developing those programs Bend High and said Zack since last fall, but said it's made him feel welcome. even more important in the "He helped me understand wake of last week's shooting. "We're working on adding the equipment and the protocol," Carter said. "He was su- another regional safety ofper conscientious about help- ficer, which should happen ing people." in fall 2014," Repman said. Bend-La Pine Schools Su- "We're also talking with law perintendent Ron Wilkinson enforcement about a d ding wrote in an email to district another school resource of-
rific situation."
ficer, but that's not a d one
deal." The district is also working on a t wo-way texting
Teen suicide is a nationing of ways to improve wide problem, according to safety," Repman said. "The data from the National Instilast school bond we went tutes of Health. Suicide rates out for was to fund taking for children age 10 to 14 in out the modular buildings 2007 were just under 1 per and put i n a b r i ck-and- 100,000 kids, while rates for 15- to 19-year-olds were 6.9 mortar structure." Zack's w o odworking per 100,000. teacher, Don Carter, said In Deschutes, Crook and Zack was a teaching assis- Jefferson counties combined
communication system that
tant in his Woodworking I class. Carter said Zack
or suicide, and send auto-re-
there have been six or fewer
allows students to report possible threats without having
to speak directly to someone. "Reporting possible threats is a thing that kids might not want to do in a face-to-face s ituation, and t hi s w i l l a l low it," Repman said. "The
system will be set up to look for keywords, like bullying
suicides for 10- to 19-year- sponses, such as instructwas skilled at woodwork- olds per year since 2003, ac- ing the student to call 911 ing and often completed cording to Jonathan Modie, immediately." projects for other depart- communications officer for She also said the district ments in the school, but the Oregon Health Authority. plans to find a consultant to "We take any threat by a do a site visit to all district what he really enjoyed was helping other students. student seriously and inves- schools to assess safely levels "I asked him how a proj- tigate," Repman said. "We and make recommendations ect was going and he said want students to know that if on improvements. it was going well but that they hear anything threaten— Reporter:541-383-0376, he'd put it on hold because ing, at all, we want them to let slnng®bendbulletin.com
"No individual has to use the whole thing," said Martin
Libicki, a researcher at RAND Corporation. "If you're working with an eye doctor, God knows
why you'd learn the codes for broken legs. But if someone showed up with a broken leg, you would just look it up."
More specificity
Much of this comes from increased specificity in coding, which makes it easier to accurately pay hospitals for the care they provide and reduces opportunity for fraudulent billing. "If you have ICD-10, you
k
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have an enormous increase in
precision," said Richard Averill, senior vice president of clinical and economic research at 3M Health Information Systems,
recalled. He has worked in the medical coding world for decades, and his company has a key federal contract to help run the ICD-10 transition. "Yes,
there's an adjustment, but two years later you've gotten rid of a lot of that paper chase."
In a more precise coding sys-
Nearly everyone agrees that there is at least one compelling reason to switch to ICD-10: As
new medical technologies have come online and demanded
new codes, ICD-9 has run out that adding specificity to med- to hospital system showed that of space. The capacity for notical diagnoses will provide a productivity fell by half. Before ing cardiology procedures was huge boon to the country. It ICD-10, medical coders could exhausted in the early 2000s. will be easier for public health get through 4.62 charts in an That created a patchwork sceresearchers, for example, to hour. Right after the transition, nario, where new cardiology see warning signs of a possible that fell to 2.15 charts per hour. codes show up elsewhere in the flu pandemic — and easier for One year later, productivity code set, with little rhyme or insurers to root out fraudulent had partially rebounded to 3.75 reason. "The consequence is very claims. charts per hour. "How many times are people "If you look at Canada's tran- disruptive," said Christopher going to be bitten by an orca? sition, there were some longer Chute, a professor at the Mayo Probably not very many," said term cost impacts that went Clinic and expert on medical Lynne Thomas Gordon,chief well beyond the transition it- classification. "It's like they're executive of t h e A m e rican self," said Michael Nolte, chief renovating a city, and assignHealth Information Manage- operating officer of technology ing addresses at random. That ment Association. "But what firm MedAssets. "There's some makes it a lot more difficult to if you're a researcher try- evidence that there will be a find the right house." 10 in 2001, one study of a Toron-
day's email. "Empower your fellow staff and s tudents to question anyone in your schools who is not wearing a badge."
students. Wilkinson said administrators continue to work with law enforcement to evaluate current protocols and
type of medicine they're paying for when the hospital treats it.
Most other i n dustrialized tem, researcherssee the potenA regulatory burden? nations transitioned to ICD-10, tial to better track the quality of Hospitals and insurers have which the World Health Or- medical care that patients refought the new codes, calling ganization published in 1992, ceive. Billers can denote wheththem a massive regulatory bur- more than a decade ago. The er avisit to the hospital is a first, den that will cost them billions switch can take years because second or later trip — which of dollars to implement with- most countries come up with could indicate the severity of out improving patient care. For a slightly modified version of the condition.
years, theirprotestssucceeded: the code set that best suits their The federal government has needs. twice delayed implementing the new code set, which was Cost and productivity lost initially set for 2008. When Canada adopted ICD-
dation at 541-383-7225.
ing the shooting while police investigated the incident and crisis counselors attended to
from a parrot or a turkey-
Libicki authored a m ajor RAND Corporation study in Two key factors help explain 2004 — when the Bush adminthe explosion in medical codes. istration was first studying the First, ICD-10 adds in the ability transition — that estimated the to differentiate between left and potential benefits of switching right sides of the body. This can to ICD-10 outweighed the costs
side might not raise any red for getting struck or bitten by flags, but two hip replacements a turkey (W61.42 or W61.43). onthe left side probablywould. There are codes for injuries Second, the new codes catcaused by squirrels (W53.21) egorize whether a trip to the and getting hit by a motor ve- hospital was the first round of hide while riding an animal treatment or a subsequent en(V80.919), spending too much counter. This is important for time ina deep-freeze refrigera- reimbursement purposes, as tor (W93.2) and a large toe that first visits to the doctor tend to has gone unexpectedlymissing require more resources. (Z89.419). Whether this s pecificity
down for two hours follow-
they just want to know what
Why somanycodes?
ment on both the left and right
Zack's parents, Daniel and Leanna Leyes, request that people donate to the scholarship fund they've started in lieu of offering food, flowers or other gifts. The scholarship will be for Bend High students interested in pursuing technical trades, Leanna Leyes said. To donate to the Zachary Leyes Scholarship Fund, call the Central Oregon Community College Foun-
in a m odular building highlights a safety con- staff last Sunday that "t he cern about the buildings, team at BSHS did an amazwhich are scheduled for ing job responding to a horremovaL "We are always think-
us know immediately." The school was on lock-
surersdon'tcare ifa bite came
seem absurd intheir granularity, replete with designa- help insurers, for example, to by as much as $4.5 billion. tions for seemingly impossible root out fraud. A hip replace-
ICD-10 proponents contend
fore we let anyone go." The staff and students
One study funded by the
muchto payhospitals for care. ter watchingthebotched rollout For decades now, Reolubin of Healthcare.gov last year, in— and the rest of the American dustry officials have expressed health care system — has relied concernthat the government on an older version of this same hasn't done enough testing. "The worst job you can have medical compendium, ICD-9. in health care right now is beThousands of new codes ing a hospital administrator," With 14,000 codes, ICD-9 Angela Boynton director of seems puny by comparison. ICD-10 adoption and training The new manual explodes that at UnitedHealth Group, who codesetto 68,000 much more spoke at the San Francisco granular and detailed terms to AAPCtraining session."You're define — very exactly and spe- shaking in your boots not just cifically — what ails us. about training and testing but Americans spend $2.8 tril- also that your entire in-patient lioneach yearon medicalcare. payment system is being overThese codes determine how hauledby Medicare." that fortune — nearly one-fifth Gordon wears a lapel pin, of the nation's economy — gets sometimes, that says Z56.6. It's divvied up among thousands of the code, she explains, for "othhospitals and the doctors who er physical and mental strain workthere. It is howthe federal related to work." government, and most private The ICD-10 manual is thick, health insurers, assess a value about the size of a phone book for eachpatient visit. Printed in minuscule type on The prospect of quadrupling newsprint-thin paper, it weighs the number of medical codes five pounds and indudes more used in those calculations has than 1,100 pages of medical touched off a heated debate proceduresand ailments. The over whether more specificity index alone is 421pages. is an onerous layer of bureau-
At a conference in San Fran-
accomplices or threats be-
American M e dical A s sociation estimated that it could
ers to make the change. And af-
cisco, the AAPC, an organization for billing and coding professionals, sold shot glasses inscribed with "F10.950" — the code foran unspecified alcohol-induced psychotic disorder. "Give ICD-10 a shot!" it says in blue script.
mine he was acting alone and there were no other
information." Gordon notes that the United
agnosis codes. Those are sent spent billions updating technolto insurance companies, which ogy and training medical cod-
situations. There are different numbers
said."We needed to deter-
press a button and find that
code set. so far behind we can't compare 10, depending on the size of Reolubin is one of the coun- data with other countries," she the practice. The AMA, one of try's 186,000 medical coders SBld. the larger groups opposed the who work in the back offices of Still that doesn't mean the switch, is still petitioning the hospitals. It's her job to trans- transition will be easy. Hospi- federal government to reverse
conditions. The codes in ICD-10 can
protected by police," he
down is in effect, said
just thinking about it," Louisa
and treat complex medical
p a rents
outside were upset we wouldn't r elease t heir kids, but really the only absolutely safe place for
known as the Tenth Edition of
cratic red tape or a valuable chance to better understand
tered the campus with the gun and it's still too
"Some of th e
away, hundreds of American medical coders are diligently chipping away at the exact same task.They've set out AAPC to master the nuances of the Pages 398-399 of the Tenth Edition of the International Classificasprawling ICD-10, formally tion of Diseases, or ICD-10, lists medical codes for various forms
use them to determine how
don't know when he en-
sure the children were safe.
ballroom thousands of miles
late doctors' scribbles into di-
ing anyone other than himself," Porter said. "We
Porter said school staff
chambers of France's Corps Legislatif. There on the banks of the Champs-Elysees, they made the world's first formal attempt to list every single way a person could die. More than 150 years later, in a beige and windowless hotel
"It gives me a heart attack
had no intent on h a rm-
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A5
ea o se erswin accesso an s — i
ive e
By Pete Yost The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — T he Obama administration on Saurabh Das/The Associated Press
Friday gave banks a road map for conducting trans-
A local villager carries a sickle as a measure of safety as heven-
actions with l egal m ari-
tures near the spot where a tiger attacked and killed a young man recently at Maniwala, India.
juana sellers so these new businesses can stash away savings, make payroll and pay taxes like any other enterprise. It's not clear banks will get on board. Guidance issued by the Justice and Treasury de-
Tiger
wildlife programs had devastated India's tiger populations,
Continued fromA1 She has killed at least nine people, all of them poor villagers who cannot afford a day off work, people who have no indoor plumbing and must use
forcing them into ever-smaller enclaves. Corbett National
the fields as their toilets. They
with wildlife — the forests and
Park, one of India's premier tigerreserves,isbarely 25m iles away, but while the villagers around here are used to living
are people who know little
fields shelter leopards, monkeys, foxes, bears and wild in tiger conservation. boars — tigers were extremely But with the sudden appear- rare. ance of one tiger, they look at The last decade, though, has an animal so beloved to out- seen improvements in t iger siders and see only a monster. conservation and growth in " She has t u rned i nt o a the tiger populations. If that man-eater," said Vijay Pal is good news in many ways, it Singh, whose neighbor was has also increased the chanck illed as he worked at t h e es of encounters between tiedge of a sugarcane field in gers and people. "This area is so rich in wildJanuary. In an a rea where nearly life," said Vijay Singh, a top everyone worksoutsi de, this regional forestry official in means life has been completely the nearby town of Bijnor (and upended. "People are afraid to who, like so many people in go into the fields," said Singh. this region has the last name "Everything has changed." Singh). "That is the problem." While hunters are brought The problem is magnified in to kill man-eating tigers ev- by the choice of crops. Sugery year or so in India, it has arcane is the backbone of the been decades since a tiger local economy, and thousands killed as many people as this of cane fields, with their dense one, or stayed on the run so stands of 10-foot-tall plants, long. offer ideal hiding places. "She won't stop now. She'll Wildlife experts know little keep killing," said Samar Jeet about the tiger they are huntSingh, a hunter with an aris- ing. They know it is a female tocratic pedigree, a curled-up because of the shape of its paw mustache and a high-powered prints, and many believe it is heirloom rifle. For almost a somehow injured, which could month he has been tracking explain why it overcame its the female tiger, most recent- natural fear of humans. While ly through the forests and most tigers flee at any sign of dried riverbeds near where people, humans are also much she made her last kill, cutting easier prey: slower than deer, down an elderly buffalo herd- weaker than buffalo and with er last week. Searchers found soft skin that is easy to bite just part of one arm and one through. leg. The tiger left the buffaloes Some believe the tiger now unharmed. prefers to eat human flesh. "It When he finds her, he said, is because of taste that she is he will shoot her dead. killing now — because of taste "The time for tranquilizing only," said Singh, the forestry is over, the time for caging is official. over," he said. "Now she must Others, though, doubt tigers be killed." develop a taste for people. The F or generations, few i n hunters, for instance, believe these villages even thought she probably has a problem about tigers. The encroach- with her mouth, perhaps an ment of towns, widespread infected tooth, and has an easpoaching and i ncompetent ier time eating human flesh. about India's recent successes
partments is the latest step
by the federal government toward enabling a legalized marijuana industry to operate in states that approve it. The intent is to make banks
-AN te
feel more comfortable
working with marijuana businesses that are licensed
and regulated. Others have a keen interest, too, in a regulated finan-
Brennan Linsley/The Associated Press
cial pipeline for an industry that is just emerging from the underground. Marijua-
Jeff DeButte, of Toronto, watches as customer Carissa Loughhead smells strains of marijuana Friday inside the retail marijuana shop at 30 Cannabis Center in Denver. The marijuana industry breathed a sigh of relief Friday after federal banking regulators issued long-awaited permission for them to
na businesses that can't use accessbasic banking services— butbanksmay notbesoquickto signon. banks may have too much cash they can't safely put away, leaving them vulner- banks at risk of drug racke- some time before banks decide and therefore don't expect able to criminals. And gov- teering charges, so they've whether to take advantage of legal challenges to the new ernments that allow mari- refusedto open accounts for the guidance. He called it a procedures. juana sales want a channel marijuana-related businesses. good first step, but said it sets FinCEN writes the rules that to receive taxes. Friday's move was designed forth a complicatedprocess U.S. financial institutions must But a leading financial to let f i n ancial i nstitutions for the banks to follow — for follow to help protect the sysservices trade group immeserve such businesses while example, by filing suspicious tem from money laundering diately expressed misgiv- ensuring that they know their activity reports designated and the financing of terrorism. ings and others, too, said customers' legitimacy and re- "marijuana limited" in the case The office said it expects fithe guidelines don't go far main obligated to report pos- of business that seem to be nancial institutions to perform enough inprotectingbanks. sible criminal activity, said the complying with the rules, and thorough customer due dili"After a series of red Treasury Department's Finan- "marijuana priority" for those gence on marijuana businesslights, we expected this cial Crimes Enforcement Net- acting questionably. es and file reports that will be "They'll have to have a real valuable to law enforcement. guidance to be a yellow work, or FinCEN. one," said Don Childears, But in response, the Ameri- awareness of the activities of Under the guidance, banks president and CEO of the can Bankers Association said their customers," he said. must review state license apColorado Bankers Asso- "guidance or regulation doesn't State banking regulators plications for marijuana cusciation. "This isn't close to alter the underlying challenge in Colorado and Washington tomers, request information that. At best, this amounts for banks. As it stands, pos- appear to believe that main- about the business, develop an to 'servethese customers session or distribution of mar- ly small and medium-sized understanding of the types of at your own risk' and it ijuana violates federal law, and banks will be interested in han- products to be sold and moniemphasizes all of the risks. banks that provide support for dling financial transactions tor publicly available sources This light is red." those activities face the risk with legal marijuana stores, for any negative information Washington and Colo- of prosecution and assorted not the big ones, a FinCEN of- about the business. rado in 2012 became the sanctions." ficial said, speaking only on Asked about the conflict in first states to approve recThe group says banks will condition of anonymity to talk federal and state laws on marreational use of marijuana. only be comfortable serving about internal deliberations. ijuana use, the official said the "This is a decision that each agencysoughtto balance comA group is hoping to make marijuana businesses if federAlaska the third state in the al prohibitions on the drug are financial institution needs to peting interests. One of them nation to do so. changed in law. make on its own," the official is the concern about having so Currently, p r ocessing Denny Eliason, a lobbyist said. "We feel quite comfort- much cash on the street withmoney from m arijuana for the Washington Bankers able that we have acted with- out an ability to get those funds sales puts federally insured Association, said it will take in the scope of our authority" into the safety of abank.
FIND YOUB
Water
from the watershed at Bridge Creek to the Outback water
Continued fromA1 She said earlier that a ruling would come by Monday. "Iwaspleasantly surprised," City Manager Eric King said Friday night. "This gives us the signal to proceed with construction on the project."
storage facility near Tumalo Creek, with a new single pipe. They also want to build a new water intake facility at Bridge
FOR JUST $8.'
Creek.
kiOW&A ~
LandWatch has repeatedly sought to block the project in court, arguing Forest Service Early next week, the city analyses haven't taken into will reach out to contractors, account the wide-ranging imwho are likely a few weeks out pacts of increased water flow from getting to the site to start out of the watershed on native work, King said. fish and nearby wetlands. LandWatch Executive DiAiken said during the conrector Paul Dewey and an at- ference call she'd hoped the torney representingthe non- two sides could settle their profit did not immediately re- disagreements on the project's turn calls for comment Friday impacts out of court. evening. But attorneys for both sides It's uncertain whether the
SW~~&S%'r oF p DKALI
Continued fromA1
old son. He was required to
After Gustafson's Jan. 8 ar-
rest, investigators identified two more girls who claimed they were abused by him at Acrovision sleepovers, one on Halloween 2013 and one in early 2012. On Jan. 15, Gus-
tafson was indicted on nine counts of f i rst-degree sex abuse stemming from those
accusations. Gustafson was then released from jail after posting 10 percent of $200,000 bail. He was ordered by Deschutes Circuit Judge Roger DeHoog to have no contact with Acrov ision, the p arents of a n y
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
Ambassadors
testified at his confirmation
Sreasons tokeeppolitical amdassadoi3
hearing to be ambassador to Norway. Tsunis admitted he
Continued from A1 "Being a donor to the president's campaign does not guarantee you a job in the adminis-
had never been to the Scandinavian country and suggested, among other things, that the tration but it does not prevent nation's Progress Party was you from getting one," White part of a discounted "fringe." House press secretary Jay Car- It is actually part of Norway's ney told reporters this week. center-right ruling coalition. Mamet was asked during '70-30'rule his own confirmation hearing For several decades, presi- this month if he had ever been dents have generally followed to Argentina, where he would a "70-30"rule when it comes be ambassador. "I haven't had to such appointments, nomi- the opportunityyet to be there," nating career foreign service said Mamet, who raised more officer s for roughly 70 percent than $500,000 for Obama's of U.S. missions abroad and reelection. reserving the rest for political During the same hearing, allies. Robert Barber, who raised Political appointees account more than $1.6 million for for 37 percent of the ambas- Obama in 2012 and has been sadorships filled so far during nominated to serve as ambasObama's tenure, according to sador to Iceland, said he had the AmericanForeign Service never visited the Nordic nation. Association. The rate for his Then there is Colleen Bell, the nominee for ambassador
second term so far stands at53
Even career foreign service officials acknowledge that individu1 • als who have never worked in the State Department can prove to be skilled ambassadors. "All worked for theoccasional brilliant
2 I,I Antonin Novy/The Associated Press
U.S. Ambassador to Czechoslovakia Shirley Temple Black, left, who died this week, is shown with Czechoslovakian President Vaclav Havel in1990. Black is one example of a political appointee
who is remembered as a successful diplomat. handed to former White House ca, Rufus Gifford in Denmark
have run into trouble. During
and Jimmy Carterhad about27 growing international alarm Obama's first term, political percent. George W. Bush and over its far-right government's appointees in Malta, Luxemhis fatherwere at 30 percent treatment of Jews and other bourg, Kenya andthe Bahamas and 31 percent, respectively. minorities. all resigned after inspectors "I have no more questions for generalexposed management Obama administration officials say the number has this incredibly, highly qualified problems. been inflated by a surge of group of nominees," McCain Tom Korologos, who served second-term openings in posts said sarcastically during the as the U.S. ambassador to Beltypically given to non-diplo- hearing for Bell and Tsunis. gium under George W. Bush mats. The rate is sure to fall in and has prepped GOP nomOther political appointees inees for confirmation hearcoming months, they said. Even then, it's a notable turnDavid Wade, Secretary of ings, said the biggest differaround from Obama's firstyear State John Kerry's chief of ence between the current raft in offi ce,when he gave only staff, said in a statement that of ambassadorial nominees about 10 percent of ambassa- political appointees ranging and mostoftheirpredecessors dorships to political donorsfrom Shirley Temple to former has been how poorly they perangering many of those who vice president Walter Mondale formed on Capitol Hill. were left out. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a member ofthe Senate For-
had won plaudits as diplomats. White House officials note that
in an interview that several of Obama's recent nominees
e xecutive Charles Rivkin in
several of Obama's first-term eign Relations committee, said appointees, such as television
France and technology lawyer were "truly alarming" because John Victor Roos in Japan, got of their lack of qualifications. high marks. "It's a strength, not a stigma, "When you putsomeone in an ambassador's position who that an ambassador spent dehasn't even been to the coun- cades running a corporation or try, you are rolling the dice," he serving as a governor or senator," Wade said. "The question said. The troubles began l a st is the individual, not where month, when m i l lion-dollar they come from, period." bundler and Chartwell Hotels In addition to donors, recent chief executive George Tsunis ambassadorships have been
the State Department to learn
and campaign aides, including aboutongoing developments. Patrick Gaspard in South AfriThere is a long history of
to Hungaryand theHollywood and Mark Childress in Tanzaproducer behind"The Bold and nia. Obama has also nominatend for recent presidents, ac- The Beautiful" soap opera, who ed former deputy White House cording to the group's data. raised or c ontributed about counsel Cassandra Butts to Ronald Reagan and Gerald $800,000 to Obama in the last serve as chief of mission in the Ford inserted political support- election. She stammered her Bahamas. ers in about 38 percent of their way through testimony about As in past administrations, ambassadorjobs; at the other U.S. strategic interests in the some of t h e n o n-diplomats country, which is the focus of
3
I
percent, the group said. The numbers are at the high
end of the scale, Bill Clinton
outsider who hasexcelled," said Robert Silverman, president of American ForeignServiceAssociation. Postings in glamorous places,such asLondon and Paris, • require a degree of personal wealth becauseambassadors are expected to payout of their own pocket for some oftheentertaining andresidentialupkeep.EvenSen.JohnMcCain,R-Ariz.,whosuggested in aninterview onThursday the United States might want to get rid of ambassadors altogether, said "onereason (to keeppolitical appointees) is thecost of being an ambassador." Having a personal relationship with the president andhis • top aides can improve an ambassador's effectiveness. One former U.S.ambassador, whoaskednot to be identified because of the current sensitivity surrounding theseappointments, said in an interview, "If I had toget to theWhite House, Icould get to the White Housemorequickly than acareer official could." There is a long list of political appointeeswhohaveserved • abroad with distinction. "President Reagan madeaninspired choice in AmbassadorShirley Temple, President Bushwisely tapped former Republican Majority LeaderHoward Baker,and we've seenRepublican governors like Jon Huntsman, former vice presidents likeWalter Mondale, former SpeakerFoley, andtitans of industry like Felix Rohatyn serveAmerica with great distinction," Secretary of State JohnKerry's spokesmanDavidWadesaid in a statement. "I'd hate to see them disqualified because heavenforbid they had apolitical affiliation, and I haven't met aforeign service officer who disagreed." Even as hecriticized the Obamaadministration in a recent oped, Lehigh University international relations professor Henri Barkey wrote of Clinton appointee Rohatyn: "Hewasextraordinary; I served in the State Department then, and at times colleaguesand I would read Rohatyn's diplomatic cables — hewrote many himself — for the sheer pleasure of their clarity, analysis and style. He probably knew asmany people in Paris as hedid in NewYork. As an American, you could not beanything but proud to have Rohatyn as ambassador." Without political appointments, the number ofopenly gay • ambassadors would not have risen so quickly in recent years. Before 2013, threeopenly gaypeople hadserved astop U.S.diplomats: Jim Hormel, MichaelGuestand DavidHuebner. Last year,five openly gay peoplewereconfirmed as ambassadors: Wally Brewster in the DominicanRepublic, JohnBerry in Australia, JamesCostos in Spain, RufusGifford in Denmarkand Daniel Baerasambassador to the Organization for Security andCooperation in Europe. It offers careeradvancementopportunities to all sorts of • people, including personal secretaries. Helene von Damm,an Austrian emigre whoserved asRonald Reagan's secretary, became ambassador to Austria in1983. Granted, within two years of her arrival she divorced herthird husband and married PeterGgrtler, owner of the famousSacher Hotel. Sheresigned herpost as aresult of the affair. In aletter of resignation, shewrote to Reagansheacknowledged that thescandal overher loveaffair and marriage to a dashing Viennesehotelier hadhopelessly compromised her role as ambassador. Once individuals arenominated, it's not realistic to expect • them to book a trip to the country where they're destined to be posted. State Department spokesman Alec Gerlach said there's a policy against doing that: "It's seen aspresumptive andsidestepping the Senate." The system is unlikely to changeanytime soon. "You're not • going to persuadepol a itician to reduce chances for election and re-election by cutting him off from his donors," said Dennis Jett, a former career diplomat whobecamean international affairs professor at Pennsylvania StateUniversity after serving as U.S. ambassador to PeruandMozambique.
fumbled confirmation hear-
ings and missteps abroad by politically-connected ambassadors. Maxwell Gluck, a wom-
en's dothing store chain owner who was nominated in 1957 to serve as U.S. ambassador to
Ceylon, was unable to name the premier of that country, now known as Sri Lanka, but
got confirmed anyway. George HW. Bush's ambassador to Ita-
ly, Peter Secchia, got in trouble for saying he loved that country's "beautiful girls," while another GOP donor arrived
around the same time in Spain without speaking Spanish. Pennsylvania State Universi-
ty international affairs professor Dennis Jett said U.S. diplo-
maticposts used to be entirely a matter of patronage. President James Garfieldwas assassinat-
ed in 1881 by an aggrieved supporter, Charles Guiteau, who was angry over being denied a European posting. Rough confirmations The Rogers Act of 1924 es"I'm amazed at how the State tablished a professional foreign Department let those people go service, but did not bar political up so unprepared," said Korolo- nominees. Jett, a former career diplogos, who now serves as a strategic adviser to DL A P iper. mat who served as U.S. ambas"When I went up for confirma- sador in Peru and Mozambique tion as ambassador to Belgium, in the 1990s, said there is no I knew more about Belgium way to eliminate political apthan the Belgians did." pointments even though "we're All nominees go through the only serious country that what is informally referred to does it this way." as "ambassador school," where Jett favors an annual perforthey learn about the country mance evaluation for both cafor which they've been select- reer and political diplomats to ed and sit with a desk officer at identify serious problems.
4
5
6
8
— The Washington Post
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A7
A enera'svi eospar s
coup conusionin Li ya
;f
,r
By Esam Mohamed and Maggie Michael
r/
The Associated Press
s
TRIPOLI, Libya — A top
general on Friday called for Libya's parliament and Cabinet to be dissolved to
"rescue" the country from turmoil, prompting accusations that he was foment-
ing a coup — and bringing derision from many at the presumption that the deep-
ly weakened military could impose control in a country dominated by rival armed militias. Rasmus Flindt Pedersen /The Associated Press
The statement by Gen.
Anja Niedringhaus /The Associated Press file photo
The carcass of Marius, a male giraffe, is eaten by lions after he wasput down Sunday at Copenhagen
Khalifa Hifter came amid
Khalifa Hifter, then a senior rebel commander, leaves a 2011 press
Zoo in Denmark. While there was outrage when it happened, the giraffe's fate isn't unusual.
a mounting confrontation
conference in Benghazi, Libya. A video released by Hifter Friday appeared to be a call to overthrow the government.
Thousandsof zooanimals kiled in Europeyearly: Here'swhy By Malin Rising The Associated Press
animals in zoos that can be used to reintroduce the species
STOCKHOLM — P e ople into the wild. around the world were stunned There's a philosophical di-
A
• When animals repro• duce, most zoos first try
to find another one in their
when Copenhagen Zoo killed a healthy 2-year-old giraffe
vide between U.S. and Euro-
network they can send the offspring to. A German zoo this
pean zoos over best practices.
week said it would send a mon-
named Marius, butchered its
The U.S. Association of Zoos
key to the Czech Republic because he's produced so many offspring that he would soon start having children with his
carcassin frontofa crowd that and Aquariums said incidents included children and then fed such as the giraffe killing "do it to lions. not happen at AZA-accredited But Marius' fate isn't unique zoos. — thousands of animals are Mike McClure, general curaeuthanized in European zoos
eachyear for a variety ofreasons by zoo managers who say their job is to preserve species, not individual animals. In the
own relatives.
Zoos generally avoid selling the animals on the open timore, says his zoo's policies market, fearing they will end theoretically allow for killing up in poor conditions. Some animalsforbreeding purposes European zoos and most zoos or lack of housing but it's not in the U.S. choose to use consomething his zoo has done. traceptives or sterilization or Generally, hesays,animals are separatemales and females to only killed due to old age or ill avoid breeding more animals tor at the Maryland Zoo in Bal-
U.S., zoos try to avoid killing animals by using contraceptives to make sure they don't have more offspring than they health. can house, but that method has In Asia, the parent company also been criticized for disrupt- for the Singapore Zoo said in a ing animals' natural behavior. statement that "euthanasia of animals is necessary to mainHow often are large tain the health and welfare • mammals killed in zoos? of the herd, as overcrowding • U.S. and European zo- could lead to injuries, stress • ological groups refuse and disease outbreak. "
Q•
than they can house.
Sharon Dewar, spokeswoman for the U.S. animal Popula-
tion Management Center, says animals are recommended to "breed only when sustainable
housing for any offspring can be assured." That approach is dismissed "All animals in zoos die at as "totally wrong" by Bengt to release figures for the total number of animals killed. some point and maybe zoos Holst at the Copenhagen Zoo, But David Williams Mitchell, forgot to tell people," said Jens who says breeding is importspokesman of t h e E u r ope- Sigsgaard, director at the Aal- ant for an animal's well-being. EAZA's Williams Mitchell an Association of Zoos and borg Zoo in Denmark, which, Aquaria, or EAZA, estimates like the Copenhagen Zoo, per- says there is an ongoing disan average zoo in its 347-mem- forms open dissections of ani- cussion and expects Marius' ber organization annually kills mals for educational purposes. case to intensify the debate. about five large mammals, Cheryl Asa, director of the
A
which adds up to 1,735. The
number doesn't include zoos and animal parks that don't be-
Q
• What kinds of animals • are killed?
over parliament that threatens to turn i nto outright
armed conflict between ness, one militia has controlled power in Libya. The divided the country's main oil facilities militias have lined up be- for months, virtually shutting hind rival political factions down the country's biggest revin the power struggle be- enue earner. tween the Western-backed The latest political clash is
back Islamist lawmakers say
prime minister and Islamist factions in parliament try-
most powerful militias in Trip-
militias, which are the real
over parliament. Its mandate ran outon Feb. 7,butlawmak-
ing to remove him. ers led by Islamist factions Libya on Monday marks voted to extend their mandate t he anniversary of t h e without holding new elections. start of the 2011 revolt that Since then, crowds have been brought down l ongtime protesting to demand parliadictator Moammar Gad- ment be dissolved and new hafi. Three years later, the elections be held. At the same weak central government still has little authority in the North African nation,
fledging institutions are mired in infighting, and no progress has been made
oli are in opposing camps: One, from the western city of Zintan, backs Prime Minister Zidan,
another from Misrata, Libya's third largest city just east of the capital, back the lawmakers.
Libya's grand mufti — the highest official Muslim cleric
backed by independents have ti-parliament protests. given Prime Minister Ali Zidan a one-week ultimatum to leave office.
Last week, militants with
rocket-propelled g r e nades and heavy machine guns at-
On Friday, thousands of pro- tacked the headquarters of the
toward a new constitution.
testers wearing white shirts The military and police are and red hats chanted, "no to
private TV network, Al-Asse-
ma, which is affiliated to the extension" in Tripoli and other National Forces Alliance, a cities. Some raised posters in political grouping that backs support of Hifter. One protest Zidan and is demanding parleader, university professor Ali liament be dissolved. The officin the impromptu rebel bri- al-Takalbi, warned that protest- es and equipment inside were gades that fought Gadhafi's ers would storm parliament to- wrecked, according to images forces — act as powers unto day to force it to leave. from the scene. "This parliament failed in their own, intimidating polStill, there were signs some iticians and assassinating delivering any of its responsi- Islamists in parliament were military and police officers. bilities," he said, speaking on readyto compromise. The MusThey are divided along Libya al-Ahrar TV. "They are lim Brotherhood's Justice and tribal and g eographical draggingus to violence." Construction Party came out lines, with multiple agendas The political dispute could in favor of holding new parliasome with hardcore al-Qa- easily erupt into violence. Some ment elections for the sake of ida-inspired ideologies. In militias have vowed to protect "consensus and social peace" in a sign of the state's weak- the protesters, while those who a statement Thursday. in disarray, outmanned and outgunned by the militias. Meanwhile, the powerfully armed militias — rooted
III I
iI
JASI(IET3 Il PAN TS
' jrl,
}
Q•
A
do zoos do to avoid Q •• What killing animals?
opening fire on protests, killing dozens of people. Two of the
I s l amist l a w m akers — demanded an end to the an-
time,
Q•
The idea is to maintain a
stances the past year of militias
AZA W ildlife Contraception
Center, says just because con• Both endangered species traceptives are used it doesn't long to the association. • and other animals are mean an animal will never Animal rights groups sug- killed atzoos. breed. She also says "most of gest numbers are much higher. EAZA says five giraffes us are very happy to have our The Associated Press contact- have been killed in European pet dogs and cats spayed and ed 10 zoos in Europe — two zoos since 2005. In addition to neutered." refused tocomment, four said Marius, Copenhagen Zoo says they never kill any animals it kills 20-30 antelopes, llamas, What d o c r i tics say'? unless severely ill and four said goats and other animals yearly. they kill between one and 30 The Jyllands Park Zoo in • Animal rights groups animals every year. Two zoos Denmark said it may have to • say Marius' case highin the U.S. said they only ever kill another giraffe soon for lights what they believe is the kill animals for "quality of life similar reasons as in Marius' overall problem with zoos. reasons." case. But a spokesman for Jack The Captive Animals' ProtecHanna, emeritus director of the tion Society says its studies Why are animals killed? Columbus Zoo, said Friday that show at least 7,500 animals Hanna has raised more than and perhaps many times more • Zoos euthanize animals $100,000 in pledges to save that are considered "surplus" at Eu• because of poor health, giraffe. ropean zoos at any one time. old age, lack of space or conAalborg Zoo in Denmark Its director Liz Tyson says the servation management rea- kills up to 15 animals a year, only solution to the problem is sons. EAZA policy for zoos in including red river hogs, an- not to visit zoos. Europe suggests euthanasia telopesand capybaras,while Will Travers, president of the may be used as a last resort to Skansen Zoo in Stockholm Born Free Foundation, quesachieve a balanced population says it euthanized one bear and tionedwhether thezoos'breedwithin breeding programs one Eurasian lynxlast year and ing programs contribute that — Marius was killed to pre- Helsinki Zoo killed one Alpine much to conservation. He says vent inbreeding. But Williams ibex. Some zoos also raise pigs, research by his foundation has Mitchell insists only "a fraction goats and cattle to feed their shown the majority of species of 1 percent" of the killings are ca1111vores. kept in zoos aren't threatened for such reasons. with extinction in the wild and group of genetically healthy
they will defend parliament. There have been repeated in-
I
HEL'METS • GoiIILEiS iS i S • GLOiV E ~P OiLE I
iI
called for an immediate review
OiBMO i Sl(IIS
of EAZA's euthanasia policies.
as years inven ory
Italy's prime minister stepsdown By Elisabetta Povoledo New York Times News Service
elections last year. The coalition's perceived
ROME — Prime Minister Enrico Letta of Italy resigned
limitations, and especially its inability after nearly a year
Friday, the day after his own
in office to d r aft economic reforms to e ff iciently com-
D emocratic Party v oted t o
replace him with the party's
man," for his stated ambition to shake up Italy's entrenched
political system. After a ccepting L etta's resignation, Napolitano said he would consult with political party leaders on Friday
bat the decline of the euronew leader, Matteo Renzi, the zone'sthird-largest economy, and Saturday to evaluate his 39-year-old mayor of Florence. gave impetus to the Demo- options, which theoretically Shortly before meeting cratic Party's demands for could include new elections. with President Giorgio Napol- change, starting with Letta's B ut Napolitano ha s m a d e itano to formally relinquish resignation. clear that he does not intend to "The time has come to call new elections until changhis post, Letta sent out his thanks to his supporters, add- emerge from the quagmire," es are made to Italy's electoral ing, "Every day as if it were Renzi told Democratic Party law, which many blame for the last one." It was a pointed leaders on Thursday, short- producing the stalemate that reference to the many diffi- ly before calling a vote to re- has marked Italian politics in culties and hurdles he faced place Letta. Renzi became recent years. over the past 10 months as the party secretary in December It is widely expected that head of a coalition govern- after winning a hard-fought Napolitano wil l a s k R e n zi ment of traditionally antago- primary. Campaigning on a to form a new government, nistic political parties cobbled reform agenda, Renzi earned which will then require parliatogether after i n c onclusive the n i c kname "demolition mentary approval.
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AS THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
IN FOCUS:RUSSIAN ADOPTION BAN
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Garrett and Heather Boehm play with their son, Alek, 7, in Barrington, III. The Boehms have adopted a
babyfrom a Russianorphanage buthave beencaughtin abanon adoptionsby Russia.
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CHICAGO — Others seeking to adopt children from Russia may have lost faith or moved on, but for one Illinois couple, abandoning the toddler they
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already refer to as "our daughter" is unthinkable. I
"There's a Russian saying their "match." While they that hope dies last, and we're were waiting for court dates to not giving up hope," said Gar- make a return trip and finalrett Boehm Jr. of Barrington. ize their adoptions, the plug But a year after Russia im- was pulled Jan. 1, 2013. posed a ban on adoptions by Now, the cribs, car seats and Americans, he's also realistic. toys have been returned. "The The Boehms are one of an es- boys' bedroom is just storage," timated 230 U.S. families in 38 Lara Nusbaum said. "I can't states who have already met, even walk in." cuddled and bonded with chilSaid Ed Nusbaum: "With dren during trips to orphanag- the Olympics, if these two es in Russia. countries can work together to Since returning, Boehm and support athletes, they can do it his wife, Heather, have made for children." multiple trips to Washington, meeting with State Depart- Bureaucracy andmistrust
"This is not a child welfare
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dle in Evanston, Ill., which
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placed 78 Russian children
Secretary of State John Kerry has raised the issue with
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especially related to fetal alco-
who deserve better."
holspectrum disorders. Moreover, the cost of adop-
"I have nothing credible to give these families hope," he
If anything, relations be-
tion was hitting the $50,000 mark, which included multiple
said from his Alexandria, Va., office. "But at the same time, I
tween the United States and
trips for extended stays, in-
Russia have curdled even more in the past year, aggravated by everything from gay rights to the perceived mis-
terpreters and other fees. The cost wasoutof reach formost
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gating the Russian bureaucra- partment official said. cy became increasingly diffiDiFilipo, who has been encult. The kids often differed in gaged with U.S. and Russian loving home, she would thrive. age from theirbirth records, authorities, conceded that no This is political football, when and many had special needs, real movementhas occurred
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touch, whether it was from me or Heather. If she was given a
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Cradle families, President Ju-
can't stomach telling them to giveup." Renee Thomas, mother to 8-year-old Jack, has even tak-
lie Tye said. In 2009 — four
en her cause to Moscow. When
years before the ban — the the ban was imposed, she and agency terminated its Russian her husband were weeks away Sochi Olympics, families hope adoption program. from adopting Jack's biologi"It was a tough decision for cal brother, a fact they thought that the fate of 260 orphans will also grab some attention, our staff and for our board," might give them an edge. "Until Obama and P utin said Boehm, an attorney. Tye said. "We saw adoption as The Boehms, both 40, met a great opportunity for these can agree, there's nothing we the toddler they named Anna kids and a mission that we can do," said Thomas, who in a Siberian orphanage on wanted to pursue. But we just returned to her Minnetrista, Thanksgiving weekend in couldn't." Minn., home late last month. 2012. The couple already had a In recent years, the RusThe Boehms are still compositive experience five years sians' mistrust of Americans mitted to Anna but have also earlier when t hey a dopted increased, too. The 2010 head- filled out the paperwork to their then-16-month-old son, lines swirling around the adopt from Poland. Alek. Now they hoped to bring Tennessee mom who sent her The Nusbaums — like all 7-year-old son back to his na- of the families — can't quite home a sibling. "Alek asks us, 'When is tive country alone, along with forget Russia's orphanages, Anna coming home?' We the 2008 death of a Virginia which house more than 40,000 gradually had to tell him we toddler adopted from Russia youngsters. just don't know. He'll ask: and mistakenly left in a hot L ara N u s baum's v o i c e 'Why doesn't she get to come car, didn't help. cracks describing the first home, but I do?' You try exFinally, the story of adoptee meeting with her two "beauplaining that to a 7-year-old," Max Shatto, a 3-year-old fatal- tiful boys," 16 months and 2 Boehm said. ly injured in his Texas back- years old. They played, read It's no e asier fo r C l aire yard while his mother ran into books, and the younger boy, Concannon,47,a single mom the house to use the bathroom, Ben, fell asleep in her arms. "We knew immediately that who lives in Chicago's Bev- was all Russian officials neederly neighborhood. Or for ed to show Americans are un- we were their parents, and Lara and Ed Nusbaum, of ¹ fit to raise their offspring. they were our sons," she said. perville, Ill., ages 44 and 58, Coming just three weeks "I would have rolled my eyes respectively, who sought to after the ban, "the Kremlin if someone had said that to me. adopt two Russian brothers. jumped at the opportunity to But it's like when, in the delivAll had been vetted — intry to turn Max Shatto's trage- ery room, they put that baby cluding background checks, dy into a public relations victo- in your arms. All of a sudden f ingerprinting an d h o m e ry," wrote the Moscow Times, you have this complete, intense studies. Their dossiers had Russia's only E nglish-lan- love you never had before. been stamped "approved" by guage daily. Texas prosecu- How does that happen, when the Russian government, and tors later ruled the death an you just met this child? It's the all had gone overseas to meet accident. same thing." treatment of Russian adoptees. Now, with the spotlight on the
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together, throwing themselves into seeking a resolution. They lobbied officials in Washington and took out a full-page ad in The Hill, a Capitol Hill ment and Russian officials. It wasn't always that way. newspaper. They drafted a They have channeled their Since 2000, Americans have plan givingthe Russians greatenergy into petitions and pleas brought home about 41,500 er post-placement oversight. to lift the suspension, widely orphans from Russia, which In June, in advance of the considered retaliation for a quickly joined China and Ethi- G-8 summit, they wrote to U.S. law imposing sanctions opia as a country from which President Barack Obama, askon Russian officials accused of U.S. families typically adopt ing him to discuss the issue human rights violations. children. Unlike the U.S. fos- with Russian President VladiSo, what now? Caught in a ter care system in which it can mir Putin and "find a way out global political spat, with little take years to terminate biolog- of the political morass for a few evidence that Russia will soft- ical parental rights and many hundred wounded children." en its stance, do they stay the of the children are older, these Despite the fact that the letcourse or move on'? After in- countries offered babies with ter was signed by 154 memvestingmore than $45,000 and shorter waits. bers of Congress, the affected traveling some 5,600 miles to Nationwide, many adoption families have heard nothing. spend three days with Anna, providers had robust Russian "This has really darkened my now 2, do they put away her programs, including The Cra- attitude toward government," with U.S. families in 2006. But even in the best of times, navi-
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Calendar, B3 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
Ciosures on Presidents Day Monday is Presidents Day, and someoffices may have changedtheir business hours. • Federal, state, county and city offices will be closed. • Schools will be closed. Central Oregon Community College will be open andclasses will take place. • The post office will be closed, andmail will not be delivered or picked up. • Most bank branches will be closed. • The Deschutes Public Library system, Jefferson County and Crook County libraries will be closed. • Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center will be open regular hours. • Most Central Oregon liquor stores will be open regular hours.
aicansu 0 s a o Bulletin staff report
the church for nearlytwoyears
gregation for the Clergy, which
before he was removed Oct. 1
serves as a sort of court for
thebishop of the Archdiocese of Baker's decision to remove
by Bishop Liam Cary. With the help of the Rev.
disputes of canon lawbetween clergy.
a Catholic priest as pastor of
Thomas Faucher, who served
The Vatican has confirmed
Bend's St. Francis of Assisi Church.
FatherJames Radloffheaded
as Radloff's canonical adviser, Radloff appealed his removal from the Bend post to the Con-
eci s ion
good standmg.
of Radloff as pastor of St.
Richard Fischer, the Diocese
of Baker's vicar general, declined to comment Friday. In a statement, Faucher
Thediocesehasneverpub-
licly explained the reason for
wrote that the Congregation for the Clergy on Jan. 31 confirmed Bishop Cary's removal
Radloff's removal, other than to say he remains "a priest in
Francis of Assisi"and rejected Father Radloff's appeal of that decision. The congregation has also declined to order Bishop Caryto make public the reasons for the removal," he wrote. See Radloff /B5
JEFFERSON COUNTY
By Ryan Brenneckee The Bulletin
We invited you last week to see if you could identify these well-known objects and structures photographed around Bend. Can you tell where the photos were taken'?
— Bulletin staff rapolt
For the answers, see "Here's where I am" on Page B2.
Funding soughtfor courthouse By Lauren Dake The Bulletin
SALEM — A group of Jefferson County officials traveled to the Capitol on Friday to tell
STATE NEWS
lawmakers the county's court-
house is "wholly inadequate."
IIIIIIIIIII
rity issues with the
building, they said.
Salem
"We're sitting
there with victims of child abuse and domestic violence,
IN
SALEM
and they are walking down a hallway that's nine
• Salem: Gov. Kitzhaber declares drought in several counties and forsees adding more
feet wide, with chairs on both
sides, so there is no separation betweendefendants andvictims," Jefferson County Judge Dan Ahern told members of
to the list, B3
• Elswebere: President Obama addresses the drought and intends to bring relief,B6
the Joint Capital Construction Committee.
See Courthouse/B5
Flooding mayspread after storm
Road closure Shevlin Hixon Drive will be closed for Oregon WinterFest until early Monday morning.
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By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
Warming temperatures and aseriesofrainstorms have flooded parts of south
Deschutes County one week after recordsnowfallslammed Central Oregon. And more rain is likely across the region this weekend,
Cojumbia~st, Greg Cross /The Bulletin
the National Weather Service
reported, which issued a flood warning for south Deschutes County from Friday morning through this afternoon. In Sunriver, melting snow and new rain have brought stormwater onto the decks and into garages and crawlspaces
Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!
The Bulletin Call e reporter Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine..................541-383-0367 Sunriver ................541-383-0367 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 State projects...... 541-410-9207 Salem ....................541-554-1162 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
Submissions • Letters andopinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, andincludeacontact name
and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354
• School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academic achievements toyouth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
of 30 to 40 homes, Jim Bennett,
Sunriver Fire Department spokesman, said Friday. See Flooding /B5
Next leagtre
Pct ggth
CROOK COUNTY
Register toda
Funds meant for protection against wolves to be returned By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
Not able to quickly put together a program to remove piles of cattle bones, Crook County has given the state back a grant for deterring wolf activity. "I'm not just going to spend
in Crook County, they have passed through from North-
December," he said. The Department of Agricul-
east Oregon in recent years.
ture in 2011 started the Wolf
The program's goal was to remove 20 bone piles, either by burying the bones or hauling
Depredation Compensation and Financial Assistance Program, awarding grants to counties with an established wolf committee. Crook and
them to the landfill.
Crook County applied for the grant last August and
received the money in early Seth Crawford, a Crook Coun- October. The county had until ty commissioner, said earlier Jan. 31 to spend all the money this month. "I want to do it in or send it back, said Jason an effective way." Barber, a program area direcCrook County was plantor with the Oregon Departning to use the $3,000 grant ment of Agriculture. to fund a program to remove Barber said Crook County bone piles, or places where notified him late last year that ranchersdispose ofcattle car- it would be sending the money casses. The bone piles could back. money, because we have it,"
attract wolves, and although there are no known wolves
"I think they just ran out of
time between September and
Jefferson counties are among
the 11 counties statewide with a wolf committee.
Returning the money now shouldn't effect the county's chances of getting a grant in the next round, which is next
month, Barber said. Crook County probably will apply again for bone pile grant, said Eric Blaine, Crook's assistant county
counsel. See Wolf /B5
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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY15, 2014
By Ryan Brennecke •The Bulletin
Last week in this space, we showed you photos of well-known objects and structures around Bend. Here's where they were shot.
p?
At a meat market —If you've gone to the Domino Room, or passed along Greenwood Avenue,you might've noticed this vintage butcher.
AbOard a VeSSel —Parents and kids who play at Harmon Park should recognize this smiley face that tops off a landlocked boat.
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At the Old Mill —Anglers who've used the fly-casting course at the OldMill are sure to recognize these gushers, as areshoppers and other passers-by.
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Atop Pilot Butte —Surelyyou recognize the mountain marker at the top of Bend's favorite high spot.
Outside a bar — Sawblade art is emblematic of Bend's sawmill past.
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In Franklin GrOSSing —Are there that many other escalators in Bend?
At Baldy S —Haveyou never noticed that industrial-sized mixing bowl mailbox?
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.'r' At Riverbend Park —There are other horse sculptures in Bend, but this one, titled "Two Bits," is just a stone's throw from the Deschutes River.
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At Hixon Park —This clock is hard to recognize from a strange angle.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
couniessai o ein rou • Gov. Kitzhabersaysheanticipates water issuesto continue,mayconvenemayors By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press
Gov. John K i t zhaber on
ready had a couple wildfires," he said. "It looks to me like this is the tip of something long."
Friday declared a drought in four counties in the high desKitzhaber said he expected ert of southeastern Oregon. Jackson County to be next. More are likely to follow. A federal drought disaster The drought d e claration declaration is needed to auapplies to Klamath, Lake, thorize federal aid, Oregon Harney and Malheur coun- Department o f A g r i culture t ies. Kitzhaber said all a p spokesman Bruce Pokarney plied for the state designation, said. which allows for greater flexLast month, a g ricultural ibility in water management. producers in Jackson, Jose"It's sobering having this phine, Klamath and Lake conversation about drought counties became eligible for declarations in four counties
federal l o w -interest l o ans,
in February, and we've al-
because they border drought
EvzNT
disaster areas in California
fall," Kitzhaber said in a state-
designated by the U.S. De-
ment. "Irrigators, ranchers, fisheries an d c o m munities
partment of Agriculture. The U.S. Drought Monitor
are under severe stress form showed severe drought across both water shortages and the all but the northernmost tier risk of wildfires on top of last of counties in Oregon. season's record conditions." Kitzhaber said he is considJust what sort of federering bringing together may- al help will be available is ors and watermasters to talk not clear. After last year's about voluntary water con- drought d eclaration, some servation measures, but he
farmers on the Klamath Rec-
does not expect mandatory steps to be needed yet.
California, where a drought
lamation Project, a federal irrigation project straddling the Oregon-California border, got money for idling land. But upper basin ranchers got nothing when they had to stop irrigating pasture out of
was declared last month.
rivers because the Klamath
He noted that snowpack
has been as low as 20 percent and precipitation half of normal along the border with
PSUSettleSdiSCIImihatiehShlt —Portland StateUniversitywill pay$161,500to settle alawsuitclaiming it discriminatedagainstdisabled students whohaveservice animals. Deafstudent CindyLelandandthe Fair HousingCouncil of Oregonfiled the$1 milion lawsuit in2012, alleging the universitywouldn'tallow Lelandandher dogto live in anon-campus apartment thathadcarpeting. Thesuitalso said shecouldn'tcomplete prerequisites fora master's degreeprogram, becauseateachingassistant toldher thedogwasn'tallowedin a sciencelab. PortlandStateadmitted no wrongdoing inthesettlementsigned Thursday byfederal judgeMichael Simon. Lelandandthe housing council will split$142,500in anunspecified way, andthe rest of moneywill go into aninterest-bearing account to compensatecurrentand formerstudents whofile claimsthat theyweretreated differently because oftheir disabilities.
"The drought will not be Tribes exercised newly recogresolved without prolonged, nized water rights to protect substantial snow and r a i nfish.
MOElfOFEI teeClleISSthke — Talksin theMedford teachers strike have broken offandschool attendance hasfallen below50 percent. Bargaining reportedlyendedlateThursdayafternoon, andthe two sides didn't schedule atime toresume. Bothsidessaidthere's achancethey willmeet with a state mediatorTuesday.Superintendent Phil Longsaidteachers havemade onlyaninsubstantial effortatcompromise.Thestrike beganlast week. Schools werereopenedTuesdaywith substitute teachers,half day-schedules andattendanceat 68 percent. Thatfell to 52percent Wednesdayand 48 percentThursday.Medfordis the state's eighthlargestdistrict, with an enrollmentof about13,500.
ENm a JUMPER JACKPOTSERIES: Competitors jump their horses for cash in a variety of classes; CANCELED;noon; Fruition Farm, 5707 S.W. Quarry Avenue, Redmond; 541-410-9513 or www. coeventers.com. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: RUSALKA"ENCORE:Starring Renee Fleming in a soulful fairytale opera, with Piotr Beczala as
N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY WINTER CONCERT: Featuring violinist Lindsay Deutsch and music of Rossini, Tchaikovsky and more; free, but a ticket is required, donations accepted;7:30 p.m.;Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541317-3941, info@cosymphony.com or www.cosymphony.com. NORTHWESTARENACROSS RACES:Amateur- and pro-racers compete for prize awards; $10 in advance, $12-$15 at the gate,; 7:30
SIZZLE8 BUZZ SOIREE: Meet the author and creative team at a release party for a Pacific Northwest "ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT"PANCAKE cookbook with live music, food BREAKFAST:Menu items will and drink; free; 6-9 p.m.; The includepancakes,linksausage, Old Ironworks, 50 S.E. Scott syrup and butter, and coffee, tea, St., Bend; www.facebook.com/ orangejuice orsoda; proceeds eatguidecentralor. benefit the Redmond High School CARLOSNUNEZ:TheCeltic virtuoso Softball Team; $7, available in from Spain performs; $22-$37 plus advance or at the door; 8-10 a.m.; fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open 6:30 Applebee's Neighborhood Grill & the prince; operaperformance p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall Bar, 3807 S.W. 21st St., Redmond; transmitted live in high definition; St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. 541-948-9501. towertheatre.org. $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; BEND INDOORSWAP MEETANO 12:55 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium REHAB:A farewell tour for the SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse p.m., 6:30gatesopen; Deschutes Southern rap-rock band, with and crafts, collectibles, antiques, Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. Angel's Cut and Jay Tablet; $15 plus County Fair and Expo Center, 3800 children's activities, music and "BYE BYE BIRDIE": A presentation S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541fees in advance, $18at the door; 8 more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 548-2711 or www.expo.deschutes. p.m., of the1960 musical featuring doorsopen at7 p.m.;Dom ino p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 org. choreography by Michelle Mejaski; Room, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. dress in your '50s best; $12.50 for Bend; 541-408-4329 or www.j.mp/ JACK MARTINANOTHE RUN FORCHOCOLATE:A 5K run/ reserved seats, $10 at the door; 2 Rehabfarewell. HOUSEBAND: The Northwestfolkwalk with chocolate aid stations; p.m.; Ridgeview High School,4555 rock band performs, with Laura THE GREENROOM:The Portland proceeds benefit the La Pine High S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541Curtis and Travis Ehrenstrom; $10 at band performs, with Streetnik; $5; School Future Business Leaders 504-3600 or linda.nye©redmond. the door; 8-11 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 8 p.m.,doorsopen 7 p.m .;Volcanic of America and athletic programs; k12.or.us. E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century free for spectators, $35 for race; 10 GHOST": The or www.belfryevents.com. Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. a.m.; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center "THE CANTERVILLE comedic play by Oscar Wilde about volcanictheatrepub.com. Drive; www.i.mp/ChocRun. PURNIMA:DJ ANjali & the a ghost living in an old mansion Incredible Kid provide beats and SENSATIONALSATURDAY: BEADS in England;$8,$5 studentsand bass with a global flavor, with llko, AND BAGS:Learn the symbolism of 2 p.m.; Summit High Mokshaand bPollen;$5;9 p.m .; the Plateau Indian bags; included in seniors; School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; the price of admission; $12 adults, 541-706-9091 or www.dojobend. $10 ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, Bend; 541-322-3300. com. MIDDLE EASTERNDANCE free ages 4 and younger;10 a.m.-1 SHOWCASE:Dancers from the p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382- High Desert Belly Dance Guild perform; CANCELED; 6p.m.; Bend 4754 or www.highdesertmuseum. SUMDAY Ol'g. Circus Center, 911 S.E. Armour Road; 541-728-3598 or www. OREGON WINTERFEST: Winter OREGON WINTERFEST: Winter highdesertbellydance.org. carnival featuring a market place, carnival featuring a market place, "BYE BYE BIRDIE": A presentation live music, artisan fire pits, ice and live music, artisan fire pits, ice and snow sculpturesandmore;$6-$8 in of the1960 musical featuring snow sculpturesandmore;$6-$8 in advance, $10 on event day; 11 a.m.- choreography by Michelle Mejaski; advance, $10 on event day; 11 a.m.10 p.m.; the Old Mill District adjacent dress in your '50s best; $12.50 for 6 p.m.; the Old Mill District adjacent to Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 reserved seats, $10 at the door; 7 to Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; p.m.; Ridgeview High School,4555 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.oregonwinterfest.com. S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541www.oregonwinterfest.com. 504-3600orlinda.nye@redmond. POLAR PLUNGEBEND:Watch "ROMEOAND JULIETON BROADWAY":A screening of the people take a winter plunge into the k12.or.us. "THE CANTERVILLE GHOST": The Deschutes River; proceeds benefit broadway production of the classic comedic play by Oscar Wilde about Special Olympics Oregon; free love story starring Orlando Bloom; a ghost living in an old mansion for spectators; 11 a.m., costume $20; 2 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium ' contest 10:30 a.m.; Riverbend Park, in England;$8,$5 studentsand 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse I I I I I seniors; 7 p.m.; Summit High 799 S.W. Columbia St.; www.polar. Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. ' I ' School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY visionsiteclients.com. Bend; 541-322-3300. ZWICKELMANIA:An Oregon WINTER CONCERT: Featuring "TO BEGINTHE WORLD OVER Brewers Guild event with beer violinist Lindsay Deutsch and AGAIN:THE LIFE OFTHOMAS tastings, brewery tours, special music of Rossini, Tchaikovsky and releasesand pricing, andmore; free PAINE":Actor lan Ruskin performs more; free, but a ticket is required, shuttle service between breweries; his one-person show; proceeds donations accepted;2 p.m.;Bend free; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend location; benefit the League of WomenVoters High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541www.oregoncraftbeer.org/eventsl of Oregon education fund; $14.25317-3941, info@cosymphony.com zwickelmania. $19.75; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 or www.cosymphony.com. I •
TODAY
SWSStlkh CBNlhg —A16-year-old Portlandboy sayshewas lured into ashed,wherethree boys beatand robbedhimand oneof them carved aswastika intohisforehead. Thealleged Feb.10assaultended whenthe boysayshewasabletoescapetheshedandruntoanearbystore.The boytold police he was lured tothe shedbya 15-year-old girl. There,police saya boyshothimwith aBBgunthree times. Policesaya15-year-old boy later confessedto using aboxcutter to carveaswastika into the other boy's forehead.Asimilar attackwasportrayedin the2009World WarII movie, "Inglorious Basterds."A prosecutorsaysthegirl andtwo boyswill be prosecuted asadults. Athirdboy who is14willbe prosecuted injuvenile court.
POrtland teaCherS giVediStrict neWprOpOSal —Negotiatorsfor Portland teachershavegiventheschool districta newcontract proposal in face-to-facetalksthat lasted morethan four hours.Astrike is set for Thursday if noagreementis reachedbeforethen. Theteachers uniondescribed to memberssomeconcessions madein the proposal. Thursday's proposal reportedly leaves thetwo sides justover half apercentagepointaparton salary increases.Theunionis nowseeking about2.5to 2.6 percentannual raises with thedistrict most recently proposing 2percentayear.
Womahkilled CrOSSing Street — Policesaya78-year-oldwoman was killedandher80-year-oldhusbandwasinjured whenthey werehit by avehicle, as theywalked acrossastreet in southeast Portland. Sgt. Pete Simpsonsaysthewomandied atthe sceneFriday morning. Herhusband was taken toahospital withnon-life-threatening injuries. Neitherwas immediately identified. Simpsonsaysthe 38-year-old driver iscooperating withinvestigators. — From wire reports
Find It All Online
==Hot Yoga Heal, Strengthen,Correct Relax SafelyYourMind &Body 541-383-6525 /2115 NEHwy20
bendbulletin.com
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NEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMEMT Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:29 p.m. Feb. 9, in the 600 block of Northeast Third Street. DUII —Jeffrey EugeneMichelson, 53, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:16 p.m. Feb. 9, in thearea of Stevens Road andSoutheast 27th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at6:52 p.m. Feb.10, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. DUII —Kaitlyn Lee Hollis, 30, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:32 a.m. Feb.12, in the 900 block of Northeast GreenwoodAvenue. DUII — Brian JamesWoodburn, 38, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of Intoxicants at11:06 p.m. Feb.12, in the area of Southeast Third Street andSoutheast Woodland Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:33 a.m. Feb. 13, in the20800 block of
Daniel DukeWay. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:19 p.m. Feb.13, in the area of Brookswood Boulevard and Hollygrape Street. Theft —A theft was reported at12:50 p.m. Feb.10, In the1800 blockof Northeast Lotus Drive. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest madeat11:16 p.m. Feb. 12, in the 800 block of Northeast Third Street.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Burglary —A burglary and a theft were reported at12:11 p.m. Feb.13, in the area of Northwest10th Street. Burglary —A burglary and a theft were reported at 2:15 p.m.Feb. 13, in the area ofSouthwest High Desert Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:48 p.m. Feb. 13, in thearea of Northeast Third Street.
OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 6:52 a.m.Feb. 13, in the area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost 115 in Terrebonne.
111 WAYS
OUII —Christie Nicole Baca,21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:06 a.m. Feb. 14, in thearea of Southwest 13th Street andSouthwest Glacier Avenue in Redmond.
TQ DISCOVER CENTRAL OREGON
BEND FIRE RUMS Frlday 11 —Medical aid calls.
NEEDANIDHLFOR HOW TOSPEND VOUR FREETIME? THISGUIDEHAS 111 IDEAS. L
CIVIL SUITS
I
Filed Jan. 30 14CV0085 — West RADCVenture 2010-2 LLC v.Ruth Harrison, individually and astrustee for the Ruth Harrison RevocableTrustand Alterra Investments LLC,complaint, $63,939.16 plus interest, costs and fees Filed Jan. 28 14CV0087 —Justin C. McDonald v.J.C. Trucking LLCand Mario E. Villasenor, complaint, $554,300 Filed Feb. 3 14CV0093 —Baker, Govern and Baker, assignee ofUPSInc., v. ASA Internet LLC, complaint, $61,152.39
WHEN TO LOOK POR IT: PUBUSHIIG TWOEDITIONSAVEAR • Spring/Summer: April Fall/Winter: October (DateS to be annOunCed)
Presenting the a rea's most comprehensive guide to places, events and activities to keep you entertained throughout the year. The Buiietin's 111 Ways to Discover Central Oregon is one of the most comprehensive visitor's guide in the Tricounty area. This colorful, information-packed magazine can be found at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerceandother key points of interest including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offered to DeschutesCounty Expo Center visitors throughout the year.
B4
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roperty values are climbing in Bend, meaning increased tax collections and more money for the city to spend. Yet the City Council is talking about asking taxpayers for even more to payfor road repair. If the council decides to ask voters to approve a gas tax as suggested at a Thursday budget update, it's going to have a lot of explaining to do. It needs to tell us in great detail just why more is never
years tocatch up. City Manager Eric King said the council should considera gas tax oran operating levy. The Thursday session included reports of impending increasenough. es needed by police to deal with In fact, it would be wise for the growing mental h e alth-related council to start explaining and calls and future expenses relatengaging its citizens long before ed to the Oregon State Universideciding toput such a measure ty-Cascades Campus expansion. on the ballot. Make the case; get And the fire department already some buy-in. has a measure onthe May ballot There's no doubt the r oads asking for additional taxes. need investment. Budget limitaAs the recession's effects have tions during the economic down- started to recede, the city has turn have left much undone. The talked about numerous improvecity is spending $2.2 million a ments, including more focus on year on street maintenance, and it landscaping, code enforcement wants to add $1.5 million per year and planning staff. Those seem to that total to catch up with ur- reasonable, but the city will have gent needs. to make the case that it's makCouncilor Doug Knight said ing the right choices in spending the city hasn't been spending growing revenues if it wants taxenough on its roadways and needs payers to pony up even more for big increases over the next five roads.
M 1Vickel's Worth
public became aware. No matter their actual merits, all those efforts will be seen as tainted by politics, discounted by those from the other side of the aisle. The GAO may not be entirely free from such criticism, but it does have a history ofindependence that should help. Formed by the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921 and originally called the General Accounting Office, the agency calls itself "an independent, nonpartisan agency that works for Congress." The president appoints its chief for a 15-year term from a list of candidates created by Congress. Among its duties, the GAO does audits to be surefederal funds are properly spent and investigates accusations of improper activities. Oregon faces two distinct questions, one looking forward and one looking back: (I) Can the website be fixed or should it be scrapped? and (2) What went wrong and can money be recovered? The right answers depend on an accurate and widely-accepted picture of what went wrong. The GAO is well-positioned to provide that picture.
monument of those who were tor-
facet of the incomprehensible bru-
Firing Salewasa mistake
else do we need to know about the tured and murdered there. Lt. Chris Carney types'? How is In your Jan. 28 front page article Never again. Sheriff Larry Blanton interfering "Shining a light on 'Holocaust by Carlos Wysling with reforms? bullets'" (datelined Oswiecim, PoBend Marilyn Burweii land), the author presents another Bend tality against Jews and other less favored human beings during the
The recent firing of Bend Police Chief Jeff Sale was a big mistake. ed sequence of arrests and mass de- Sale was on the path to reforming portations to concentration camps policework. Please reread Sale' s in Eastern Europe is now being comment from hi s 2012 evaluarelegated to second place by a more tion: "Dealing with the Deschutes deadly way that Nazis killed their County sheriff has been a chalWWII period. The well-document-
victims. Execution b y
Health caresite inquiry goodmoveby Walden axpayers need to know what went wrong with the expenditure of millions of dollars on the still nonfunctional Cover Oregon website. But how do we get beyond the political opportunism that undercuts the credibility of any effort? U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, thinks he has the answer: an investigation by the U.S. General Accountability Office. It's a good approach. Walden and three House colleagues say a federal investigation is needed, because more than $300 million in federal taxes were granted for the troubled website. Walden cites the independence of the GAO, and the agency's capacity to "give us a factual view of what transpired and what we can get back." Other investigatory efforts are underway, including a probe ordered by Gov. John Kitzhaber, queries from the Oregon Legislature, and information gathering by the National Republican Committee. Oregon gubernatorial candidate Rep. Dennis Richardson, R-Central Point, is among those who say Oregon officials failed to act on reports of trouble long before the
Neveragain
s h ooting, lenge at times throughout the year
Conger: a friend to vets Foremost among the many reasons why our family supports Jason Conger's run for U.S. Senate
is his support for our military veterans. During his time as an Oregon representative, he supported
principally in Ukraine, is reported ... they are an 'old school' agency to have resulted in more victims and would publicly speak against than Auschwitz and other camps. the changes being brought to the In a recent trip through Germany department. I dealt with t his by and Poland, I visited many cities, talking openly with the sheriff and memorials an d m u seums m en- not backing down to his thought tioned in the article — to bear wit- process." ness and honor those who perished. Sale was everything a top police
the "Funeral Civility Act," which
how new generations of German
Sale is on a statewide committee, The Justice Reinvestment Program Grant Review Committee, mandated to implement HB 3194. This new
correct moral side of the right-to-
legislation is controversial among the "old school."
of our Second Amendment rights
banned groups like the Westboro Baptist Church f ro m
p r otesting
before or after military funerals, and required them to stay 300 feet away. The Westboro church, led by pastorFred Phelps,believes God is punishing the United States for "the sin of homosexuality" through The constant danger of efforts to officer should be. He met with citdeny the existence of the Holocaust izens, listened to the problems of events including soldiers' deaths. must be firmly faced off, so that minority populations and then act- I've personally been a witness to neveragain can people of any mi- ed to correct injustices. He appoint- just such a protest at the funeral of nority be so savagely killed. ed the first minority person to an a Marine killed on active duty in In Berlin, I visited the museums advisory committee comprised of Afghanistan. It very much upset Topography of Terror and the Ber- only white males. He was hiring at me. I can't imagine the effect it had lin Holocaust Memorial that show least two bilingual police officers. on his family. Conger's also on the citizens are finally ready to deal with the collective sense of guilt that has assailed Germany since
the end of the war. Traveling east, I visited Warsaw, Krakow and perhaps the greatest monument to Nazi atrocities, Auschwitz. Krakow's Jewish quarter
Sale has been on duty in Bend
for only two years. Incredibly, there have beenatleastfourchiefs since
life issue, supports closing the border, is against amnesty for illegal immigrants, is a strong supporter and will fight to repeal Obamacare when he is elected.
He's our kind of candidate; a moral, upright, honest, intelligent
is slowly recovering its spirit and 2001. That's not normal. Doesn't individual that we would be fortuvibrancy of the prewar years, while the City Council have responsibili- nate to be able to have as our senaAuschwitz-Birkenau, which is just ty for that kind of turnover? tor m Washington. outside of Krakow, remains almost The Bulletin should dig deeper: Nicholas and Christine Simone entirely in its original state as a Why was Sale really fired'? What Bend
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnIsts. WrIters are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
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
We should appreciate somebody else taking action By Bill Bodden body Elses; less than desirable, but ureka! I have just been given the enough that we should be grateful for
E
answer to a question that has
puzzled me for many years. It is remarkable, because the answer was so obvious — hiding in plain sight. For decades, I have listened to people discussing our local and national woes and suggesting the same solution. Somebody should do something. So, I asked myself, "Who is this Somebody?"Was Somebody another person with just one name like Cher or Usher? Or was Somebody a really wise person like Voltaire or Aristotle? Or was Somebody a deity like Zeus or Athena? It couldn't have
been Cassandra. Although, she had a gift for predicting the future, she was destined to be ignored. Then the answer appeared. Somebody has two names. The other is
Else. It's Somebody Else who should do something. Fortunately, we have lots of Some-
them. Among several others, there
are the Somebody Elses who try to relieve the homeless and impover-
ished of some of their miseries. There are the medical and dental professionals who volunteer their services
to cure illnesses and injury. There are others who fight for economic justice, so that people can earn sufficient in-
comes to not be in need of charity. In the animal world, there are
Somebody Elses who struggle to provide humane care to abandoned animals. There are my friends at
IN MY VIEW
Among several others, there are the Somebody
ingless. In revenge, the latter have
been merciless in their persecution of the whistleblowers. In addition, a sizable number of citizens have joined in support of
E/ses who try to relieve
the vendettas against these tellers of
the homeless and impoverishedofsome of their miseries. There are the medical and dental professionals who
racy has evolved to a proto-fascist the law," these outraged citizens say, state, just one step short of Tyranny
volunteer their services to Cure illneSSeS and injury.
the truth. Presumably, they prefer to continue to be lied to. "But theybroke
our stumbling experiment in democ-
while they somehow render mean-
Triumphant.
ingless violations of the law and the Constitution committed by the ex-
Before it's too late, it's time for them to put up or shut up. Hopefully,
posed miscreants. Are they so irate,
they will leave their guns at home. We don't need another civil war. So, the next question is, "Why
because the emperor to whom they pledgedallegiance hasbeen revealed as naked? In Orwellian terms, that
equates to some people being more bring an end to the barbaric practicequal than others. es of trapping thousands of animals up to the plate and joined Team WhisThere is another group of Someeach year for fun and profit. tleblowers, but unlike the Somebody body Elses who have volunteered to For generations people have com- Elses referred to above, they have protect us against government tyrplained about the corruption and paid heavily for their actions. In ac- anny. And do we ever need them? hypocrisy in government and pro- cordance with their oaths to uphold These are, of course, the Gunslingclaimed (what else?), "Somebody the Constitution, they exposed gov- ers Against Tyranny Militia of the should do something." Well, guess ernment officials and agencies for NRA. They have insisted on their what? Somebody Elses have stepped whom the same oaths were mean- right to keep their guns to thwart TrapFreeOregon.com, who seek to
any attempt by government to bring tyranny to our nation. Well, what are they waiting for? Tyranny has been on the march for decades and made so many gains that many thoughtful people have concluded
do so many people pass the buck to Somebody Else?" Can it be that they have been lied to all their lives and
having discovered they were gullible enough to believe anything, they now believe in nothing? While we ponder that question, we might also consider the proposition that we can all be Somebody
somewhere. — Bill Bodden lives in Redmond.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
CALIFORNIA NEWS
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES Donald Emil Koclna, of Redmond Oct. 8, 1928 - Feb. 12, 2014 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219
please sign our online
guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com Services: Rosary will be held Sunday Feb. 16, 2014 at 6pm at St. Thomas Catholic Church and a Memorial Mass will be held Monday Feb. 17, 2014 at 11am at St. Thomas Catholic Church.
Douglas B. Schwarz, of Bend April 21, 1959 - Feb. 12, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, Bend, OR www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Recitation of the Rosary will commence on Saturday, February 15, 2014 at 9:30
New planbroached toenroll more Latinosinhealth plans
Waite, 'Waltons'actor, had variouscareers, alwaysamazedbyTV By Douglas Martin
offLong Island, and Garden
New York Times News Service
City, N.Y. Upset with what
Ralph Waite, a multifacet- he saw as hypocrisy in the ed actor who became etched
church, he left the ministry.
in the American imagina- He worked for Harper & tion as the big-hearted pa- Row as an editor of religious triarch of a rustic, Depres-
books.
sion-era clan in the 1970s He did not find that sattelevision series, "The Wal- isfying, his marriage detetons," died T h ursday. He
riorated and he drank too
was 85. The death of Waite, a resident of the Palm Springs, Calif., area, was confirmed by hi s m a nager, A l an
chewed alcohol in the mid-
Mills, The Associated Press
much — a problem that he said worsened until he es1970s. A friend suggested he try acting lessons. "I was in my 30s and I had neveracted before," he told
reported. In September 1972, CBS The Boston Globe in 1974. "But I figured I had nothing
a.m.,followed by a Mass
premiered "The W a ltons"
of Christian Burial at 10:00 a.m. both at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, 2450 NE 27th St., in Bend, followed by a luncheon for all in attendance. Graveside
against Flip Wilson's irrev- to lose, so I went with him. erent comedy on NBC and The first time I just listened. the "Mod Squad" on ABC. The second time I played a Within two seasons it had scene. The third time I took driven its competitors off the air.
The success of "The Wal-
He got a job being un-
February 17 at 11 a.m. at Deschutes Memorial Gardens, 63875 N. Hwy 97, in Bend. Contributionsmay be made
tons" owed almost everything to the actors and the
derstudy to all the actors in
Service on Monday,
to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701. www.partnersbend.org.
Beverly Ann Batemen March11,1040- Jan. 26, 2014 Beverly Ann B ateman of La Pine, O r egon, p a ssed away a t h er h ome on January 26, 2014. She was 73. Beverly was born M a r ch 11, 1940, in W a s h i ngton, D .C., t o Cl a r e n c e a n d
Mary Louise (Underwood)
S wift. She spent much o f h er career working i n t h e r estaurant i n dustry, m a n a ging R anchito I n n R e s taurant in P a lmdale, Calif ornia f o r m o r e t h a n 3 0 years. Beverly was a collector of fine antiques and enjoyed the company of her family and friends. B everly l o v i n gl y l e a v es behind her s ons, Stephen Bateman of CA, and Rusty
(wife, Judy) Adamson of O R;
Tammy
and
dau ght e r s ,
(husband,
M ichael) Teaff of TX , a n d Pamala G r e nk e o f N V . O ther s u r v i v or s i n c l u d e grandchildren , gr eat r andchildren, an d m a n y riends. S he w a s p r e c e ded i n death by her husband of 47 years, Gene Bateman. N o services will b e h e l d locally. An Ur n Committal Service will t ak e p l ace at D esert L a w n M emo r i a l P ark i n P a l m dale, CA i n
the Spring. Memorial con-
characters they played, members of a homespun, hardscrabble rural family used to surmounting challenges through the old-fash-
the bit in my teeth, and I loved it."
a Broadway production of Jean Genet's "The Balcony." By the time the run ended,
he had played all the major roles. He worked as a bartender and waited tables to
support himself. In 1965, he received excellent reviews ton Sr., who combined wis- for his performance in Wildom, goodness, courage liam A l f red's "Hogan's and a bit of a temper. Goat,"a drama about Brook"Ralph was a good hon- lyn politics in the 1890s. est actor and a good honHe wrote a screenplay est man," said M i chael and showed it to producer Learned, who played his L ee Rich, who r a n L o r i television wife, Olivia Wal- mar Productions with Merv ton. "He was my spiritual Adelson. Rich was not interioned virtues.
Waite played John Wal-
husband. We
l o ved each ested in the script but asked,
other for over 40 years. He "Would you be interested died a working actor at the in playing in a series I have top of his game." in mind, as the father of a As an actor, he ranged D epression family in t h e from Shakespeare to Beck- South?" ett, from Broadway to soap
Waite became involved in
operas, most notably as
the Los Angeles communiF ather Matt o n " D ays of ty, leading an alcohol- and drug-recovery program and Our Lives." One of his two Emmy nominations was for helping build low-income playing Slater, the first mate housing. Saying he was inof a slave ship in the "Roots" spired by Vaclav Havel, the miniseries in 1977. (The oth- playwright who b ecame er was for "The Waltons.") president of C z echoslovaHe had small parts in kia, he ran for Congress in movies like "Cool Hand 1990. Despite contributions Luke" (1967) and "Five Easy from Hollywood pals like Al Pieces" (1970). His many Pacino, he lost to Republican appearances in television incumbent Al McCandless. episodes and movies inIn 1998, he ran for Concluded portraying Malcolm g ress again, t hi s t i m e Dietrich on "Murder One" against Mary Bono, widow (1996); the Rev. Norman of Sonny Bono, who w as B althus o n H B O ' s "Car- killed in a skiing accident. nivale" (2003-2005); and He lost both a special elecJackson Gibbs, the father of
tion after Bono's death and
Mark Harmon's character, the subsequent general on "NCIS" (2008-2012). He election. directed 16 episodes of "The Waltons." Ralph Harold Waite was born in White Plains, N.Y.,
Waite's f i rs t
ma r r i age
ended in divorce, as did his second to Kerry Shear. In 1984, he married Linda East,
on June 22, 1928, the oldest who survives him. He is also of five children. In a 1977 survived by two daughters interview with People mag- from his first marriage. azine, he called his youthful Waite in his later years reenvironment "very secular, turned to the church he had left nearly 50 years before. nonartistic." After graduating from He began attending a liberhigh school, he joined the al Presbyterian Church in Marines, serving from 1946 Palm Desert, Calif., where to 1948. He entered Bucknell he lived. DEATHS U niversity, where he m et Always, he was John WalBeverly Hall, whom he mar- ton, the paternal voice of ELSEWHERE ried in 1951. She encour- wisdom. He remembered a aged him to go into social woman approaching him in Deathsofnote from around work, which he did in West- a crowd and saying she was theworld: chester County, N.Y., after poor as a child and thought Dr. Robert Cooke, 93:A pediatrigraduating from Bucknell of him as her father. "I went to school and colcian who helped Presidents John F. in 1952. He tired of the buKennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson reaucracy and entered Yale lege because of you," she create Head Start and other initia- Divinity School. sard. "She said, ' Now, I'm a tives to benefit children. Died Feb. Although he had been a 2 in Oak Bluffs, Mass. militant atheist in college, lawyer and I don't think I Maggie Eslep, 50:Novelist and he earned a master's in di- would be if I hadn't seen that spoken-word poet who helped vinity from Yale. He was show,'" Waite said. "I'm still popularize slam poetry. Died ordained as a Presbyterian amazed by that. It happens Wednesday in Albany, NY. minister and served congre- all the time. The whole thing — From wire reports gations on Fishers Island, is still amazing." t ributrons in B ev e r l y ' s memory may be made to a charity of one's choosing. Autumn Funerals Bend is honored to serve the family, (541) 318-0842, www.autumnfunerals.net
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific g Uidelines must befollowed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
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Bend, OR97708
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,and by9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.
By Alison Vekshin
Care Act. With a March 31 deadline
Bloomberg News
success of t h e
A ff o rdable
Care Actbothbecause of their SAN FRANCISCO — Lag- looming for mandated insur- growing political clout and ging health care enrollment ance coverage, a newpush has the fact that they're younger among California's Latinos is begun to sell the program in and healthier as a group than spurring a new push into com- community centers, instead of the uninsured generally. That munities to sell the state's pro- through the state's exchange makes them less costly to ingram face-to-face. website or telephone lines. surers aiming to offset mediMany low-wage Latinos The strategy depends on cal payments for older enrollfear that going on public as- "in-person assistance, as op- ees while keeping premiums sistance could harm their ef- posed to telling them to call low. forts to become U.S. citizens our call center or going to the Covered California, which or enrolling could lead to the website," said Santiago Luce- recently secured a $155 mildeportation of undocumented ro, a spokesman for Covered lion federal grant, is planning relatives who live with them, California, which runs the to add 350 representatives, inaccording t o c o mmunity state's independent health ex- duding bilingual workers, to activists. At the same time, change. "We want to get to a its service center by the end glitches on the insurance ex- lot more Latinos." of March, with about 250 bechange website and a lack of Nationally, about 10.2 mil- ginning training next week. Spanish-speaking counselors lion uninsured Latinos are el- The o~ a t i on has also sent on its telephone banks aren't igible for health coverage un- a million mailers to homes, helping, they say. der the Patient Protection and with the vast majority going The result: Through Dec. Affordable Care Act of 2010. to Spanish-speaking families, 31, Hispanics made up just 20 They represent 25 percent of Lucero said. percent of those who have en- the 41.3 million uninsured Latinos "would rather put rolled in California and iden- nonelderly U.S. citizens and a face to the application protified their ethnicity. That other living legally in the Unit- cess," Lucero said. "That is key flies in the face of the fact that ed States. In California, they for them to enroll. We never almost half o f C a lifornia's m ake upabout 57 percent of said that we were going to enLatinos are eligible for sub- the 6.7 million uninsured. roll them all by March 31. This sidies under the Affordable They are important to the is a two- to three-year goal."
C ourthouse I f p lf Continued from 61 The building also is said tobelocatedin afloodzone. "We flood both ways ...
$2,990 to cover a fladry program, where flagging is put on fences to spook wolves.
house has significant structural defects that present ac-
Continued from B1 "There is always a con- Barber said the county recern with grants that you ei- turned $220 of the grant. ther spend it or you don't get Morrow, w h i c h r e c eived any more," Blaine said. "But $760 for bone pile removal (the Department of Agricul- and fladry, and Wallowa, ture) has indicated that is not which received $15,532 for the case with these funds." fladry and range riders, Crook County isn't the spent all their funds. The only county to return mon- riders patrol rangeland to ey from the supplemental see whether there is any wolf grants, Barber said. There activity. Barber said he's still are five counties that re- waiting to hear from Umatil-
tual threats to human health
ceived p o r tions
and safety," a county letter
$37,782 in s u pplemental spent all of its $15,500, which grants last fall: Crook, Mal- was also for fladry and heur, Morrow, Umatilla and range riders. Wallowa counties. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, Malheur's grant was for ddarling@bendbulletin.com
water comes up and water
comes down,"Ahern said. And they say the 1961 courthouse Ls not
s t ruc-
turally safe or handicap accessible. "Jefferson County's court-
states.
The county is requesting $5.5 million from the state to build a new 35,000-square-
of
the
la as to whether the county
foot, three-story courthouse
on countyproperty near Madras City Hall and the Madras Police Department.
The entire project would be $13 million, county Ad-
Flooding
ministrator Jeff Rasmussen
Continued from B1
toldthe committee. Rep. John H u ffman, R-The Dalles, who sits on the
committee, told lawmakers on Friday, he has confirmed the support of Oregon Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Ballmer, who must
of the city. S unriver an d
La Pine
seemed to be taking the " We have at l east t w o brunt of the flooding Friday. homes where water actually Bennett said h e h a sn't entered the living quarters of seen this much rainwater the house," he said, adding affecting roads and homes that water in those homes was about 8 inches deep.
the fire department. Most of
in more than five years with
Deschutes County road officials closed much of
the affected homes are along Juniper,Timber and Tam-
OK the funding. Indeed, Ballmer submitted
Darlene Way, a gravel street
arack lanes, he said. And
east of U.S. Highway 97 in
the risk to homes seemed to
a letter to the committee not-
La Pine, meanwhile, after
ing the "need for upgraded courthouse facilities across Oregon has been document-
ed for a long time." He urged "favorable consideration" of the Jefferson Countyproject.
Although Ballmer gives the final go-ahead to fund the project, lawmakers must
authorize bonding for the improvements. Lawmakers also heard
from JayKenton,vice chancellorfor finance and administration for the Oregon
University System, who spoke briefly on funding needed by both the Oregon State University-Cascades Campus and CentralOregon Community College. The community college needs $3.6 million in lottery bonds so it can retire debt on Cas-
cades Hall and let OSU-Cascades out of its lease on the
building. That would free up OSU-Cascades to continue its expansion. OSU-Cas-
cades is seeking $3.9 million in bonds so it can move forward with building its new campus. Lawmakers t y p ically make capital construction
allocations near the end of the session. They must adjourn by March9. — Reporter,541-554-1162; dafre@bendbulletin.com
Radloff
be growing Friday, though overnight rain swamped the crews working with the Sunroadway. river Owners A ssociation Pendleton-based National were making contingencies, Weather Service meteorolo- piling sandbags and diggist Diana Hayden said res- ging trenches to channel the idents from Sunriver to the floodwater in certain areas. southern edge ofthe county Crews closed South Imnaha should expect rain and pos- Drive Friday afternoon after sibly snow early this morn- water covered the road. ing. She said another storm
system could hit the area Monday.
"At this time, there are no e vacuations planned, b u t
the flooding is starting to
"This has th e
p otential spread," Bennett said. to be an all-hands-on-deck I n L a P i ne, t here w a s situation," Deschutes Coun- flooding Friday at the Lazy ty Public W orks d i rector River South subdivision, Chris Doty said. He said Doty said. He also said there
road crews were sweeping was high water on Riverthe county looking for areas view Drive, Bridge Drive where rain and melted snow and Huntington Road. "There is just a lot of were accumulating and using pumps to clear water off stormwater runoff g oing the streets. around the roadways in Areas of Bend also report- those areas," he said. ed some flooding. But one Last week's snowstorm historically flood-prone area dropped 1 to 2 feet through— the Third Street under- out the region. Much of the pass beneath the Burlington snow has melted, but the Northern Santa Fe Railway ground is frozen in many — appears to be holding up places, preventing the soil to the weather, following a from absorbing the water, $3.4 million renovation proj- Doty said. ect last summer. If needed, he said road deThe underpass "has be- partment crews could take come an asset,rather than a liability," Bend's streets di-
on extra shifts this weekend
flooded areasin other parts
eglucklich@bendbulletin.com
to clear streets of floodwater, vision manager Hardy Han- though no plans for additionson said, adding that city al shifts were made as of Friroad crews have been able day afternoon. to head through it to reach — Reporter: 541-617-7820,
Initially, Radloff was reas-
or minister,and he has no
assignment." Continued from B1 Faucher said he'd spoken The group had also de- town southeast of Klamath with Radloff, who did not reclined to order Cary to end Falls. That assignment was turn a call for comment, and his ban on Radloff celebrating withdrawn i n Nov e mber. said Radloff was surprised Mass or other public ministry. Faucher said the diocese has and saddened by the decision Radloff has been banned continued to pay Radloff's and was waiting for Cary to from all ministry since Oct. 1, salary and housing allowance make a decision about his signedtotake over as pastor of a parish in Merrill, a small
and Faucher said there's "no
and will continue to do that,
future.
Father Radloff. It's just so sad."
"but he c annot say M a ss
Faucher said.
"It's a major shock, and it's explanation as to why." because he is a priest of the Now, Faucher said, it's "re- diocese. just a very, very sad day for Fa"And he's a 'priest in good ther Radloff and the Diocese ally up to Bishop Cary to decide what he wants to do with standing,'" Faucher said, of Baker and the city of Bend,"
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C3 College hoops, C3 Preps, C6 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
STATE SPORTS Native American mascets can stay SALEM —Gov.John Kitzhaber said Friday he will sign a bill that would allow Oregon schools to retain Native American mascots under certain conditions after state lawmakers addressed concerns that led him to veto a similar measure a year ago. The measure, approved unanimously in the state Senateon Friday, would loosen the Board of Education's 2012 ban ondepicting Native American mascots in their nicknames and imagery. His spokeswoman, Rachel Wray, said he will sign the bill if it clears the Housewithoutchanges. Schools would be allowed to keepNative American mascots under certain conditions, including the approval of an appropriate tribe and the Board of Education. The state Board of Education in May2012 approved a rule —one of the nation's strongest — that required Oregon schools to retire their Native American symbols by July 2017 or risk losing state funding. Eight Oregon high schools, such as the Roseburg Indians, would need to find new mascots under the current rule. Another seven schools identified as the Warriors would be allowed to keeptheir nickname but must change mascots or graphics that depict Native Americans. The regulation would also apply to an unknown number of elementary and middle schools. The Roseburg School Board had begun alegal challenge to the state orders,butabandoned it after learning it was unlikely to win. But Sen. Jeff Kruse, R-Roseburg, took up the issue with a 2013 bill and similar legislation this year. "From the perspective of the people in Roseburg — and Iam one — being aRoseburg Indian is a source of pride for me," Kruse
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP WRESTLING: REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS
OCa wreS erSe e i eS • Champions hipsconcludetodayatBend
Inside
wrapped up the first day of the regional tournament in
• Mountain View swimmer shatters 100back record,C6 • Bend High wins in double OT,C6
third place with 110 points.
Bulletin staff report Twenty-six Central Oregon
The top four placers in each weight class earn bids to the
Eagle Point sits atop the 10team standings heading into
wrestlers advanced to the
Class 5A state championships,
the final day with 176.5 points,
semifinals of the Class 5A Special District 4 championships at Bend High on Friday night, putting them in position to qualify for the state meet in
set for Feb. 28 and March
and Eugene's Churchill is sec-
1 at Portland's Memorial Coliseum.
ond with 120.5 points.
With eight wrestlers advancing to the semis of their
two weeks.
respective brackets, host Bend
SNOWBOARDING
Nicolai Spring and Noah Haines highlighted Friday's action for the Lava Bears.
SeeWrestling/C6
1ji l'
J'
Josh Haner/The New YorkTrmes
COLLEGE BASEBALLPREVIEW
U.S. snowboarders Danny Davis, right,
and Greg Bretz explore the mountains above theOlympic venues in Krasnaya Polyana, Russia, on Friday.
Calm cometh after the fall for
J/
SI/
r
snowboarders
,'p
By John Branch New Yorlz Times News Service
KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia Danny Davis made his own jump, carv-
ing it out of a deep, crusty shelf of snow with the edges of his snowboard. He an-
/
gled the ramp skyward, smoothed it, gave it a final look and hiked back up the hill.
; t'r
He came down the treeless mountain
6
and launched himself. He acrobatically spun his body upside down and landed on his face in the soft snow.
Greg Bretz followed. Like Davis, he was dressed like an Olympian, wearing the matching jackets they wore in the halfpipe competition at the Winter
Olympics three days earlier. Like Davis, he struck the snow with his face.
They laughed. This time, falling was funny. They were exploring the Aibga
I
dge, high above the Rosa Khutor Ex-
rreme Park, site of the halfpipe. SeeSnowboarders/C5 «
MEDAL TABLE
I
r
G
.«.''I
B
T
Norway 4 3 6 United States 4 3 6 Netherlands 4 3 5 Russia 2 5 5 Canada 4 5 2 Germany 7 2 1 Complete medal table andresults, C4
S
13 13 12 12 11 10
sald.
Kruse wasconcerned that the mascot ban was enacted outside of the state's government-to-government relationship with the tribes and could have"set a very good relationship in a backwards mode." Kruse said he hoped it would also lead to more opportunities to educate Oregon children about the history and impact of Native Americans in the state. Se-ah-dom Edmo, vice president of the Oregon Indian Education Association, told the Senate Education and Workforce Development Committee Tuesday the issue is "in part" about government-to-government relations, but is also about individual human and civil rights. But Edmo said Friday that she is happy with the compromise reached and believes the consultation process it creates will allow all of the issues to be worked out while respecting tribal and individual rights. Since the 1970s, more than 600 high school and college teams across the country have doneawaywith their Native American nicknames, including 20 in Oregon. — The Associated Pess
TODAY'SQUOTE
"We're hoping
he makes it
•Asseasonbegins,Ducksand Beaversrul etheW est
Otherwise he willjust have to
By Anne M. Petersone The Associated Press CORVALLIS-
regon State baseball c oach Pat C asey i s unimpressed with the
OregonState, Oregon open
seasons
• Oregon State comesfrom behind to beat
Gonzaga,C3
Beavers' p r eseason ranking. In what has become something of pressed at all." a mantra for Casey, he opened the In Eugene, Oregon is ranked as season by saying the polls do not high as No. 6 in the national polls, matter. and Ducks coach George Horton is One poll has the perennially saying essentially the same thing: ranked Beavers at No. 2, the team's His team proven nothing yet. "We'll just have to let our baseball highest ranking ever. "1'll say the same thing I said speak for itself," Horton said. last year," Casey said. "I'm not imYep, it is college baseball season
BOYS BASKETBALL
• Balanced attack gets Summiwin t By Mark Modcal The Bulletin
With the postseason about
two weeks away, Summit boys coach Jon Frazier said his team needs to focus on
t
• Oregon was to lay Hawaii in Honolulu late Friday,C3
p
in the state of Oregon, which again has two teams grabbing a share of the national spotlight.
The Beavers and the Ducks have been picked by Pac-12 coaches to finish first and second, respectively, in the conference, which has a long tradition of strength in baseball. SeeState/C3
Summit's
Storm take down Panthers playing its best basketball as it viesforaplayoffberth. The Storm looked the part of a contender Friday night against Redmond, using a balanced attack to easily take down the Panthers 53-35 in a Class 5A Intermountain Con-
ference game at Summit High School. See Storm /C6
and some companies support him.
Nick Moyer (12) shoots a jumper over Redmond's Cody Winters during the
second half Friday night at Summit High School. Joe Kline/ The Bulletin
stop. Wecannot afford it anymore. — Maria Teresa Martinez, mother of Filipino figure skater Michael Martinez, C5
Inside
:TV HIGHLIGHTS : NBC, 8 p.m: Gold • Last-place finish ::medal events in womequals tears of joy : :en's Super-G(featurfor Brazilian free- ,:'ing Bend's Laurenne style skier,C4 Ross), Men's short : :track1,000 meters, . :'men's speedskating : :1,500meters, and men's ski jumping NBCSN,Sunday, midnight: Men's curl' ing, United Statesvs. : :Canada • Blaming new MSNBC,Sunday,2 suits for poor : :a.m.: Women'scurlperformances in ng, United Statesvs. speedskating, Unit- iCanada (LIVE) ed States goes back to old standbys,C5 : :Complete schedule, . :'C4
Local athletewatch To seehowBend's LAURENNEROSS did in the Super-Gearly this morning, go online tobendbulletin.com/ Olympics
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY SOCCER FA Cup,Cardiff City vs. WiganAthletic FA Cup, Manchester City vs. Chelsea A-League, BrisbaneRoarvs. Newcastle Jets
Time TV/Radie 7 a.m. Fox Sports 2 9 a.m. Fox Sports 2 10 p.m. Fox Sports 2
AUTO RACING
NASCAR,Daytona 500 practice NASCAR,Daytona 500 practice ARCA Series, Daytona NASCAR,Sprint Unlimited
7:30a.m. FoxSports1 10:30a.m. Fox Sports1 1:15 p.m. Fox Sports 1 5 p.m. Fox Sports1
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Saint Joseph's at LaSalle 8 a.m. Men's college, Memphis at Connecticut 9 a.m. Men's college, Virginia at Clemson 9 a.m. Women's college, MTSU at Florida Atlantic 9 a.m. Men's college, Pittsburgh at North Carolina 10 a.m. Men's college, lowa atPennState 10 a.m. Men's college, VCU at St. Louis 11 a.m. Men's college, Oklahoma atOklahoma St. 11 a.m. Men's college, DePaul at Providence 11 a.m. Men's college, Houston at Cincinnati noon Men's college, California at Washington noon Men's college, Xavier at Marquette 1 p.m. Men's college, Indiana atPurdue 1 p.m. Men's college, Tennesseeat Missouri 1 p.m. Men's college, Pepperdine at Portland 1 p.m. Men's college,LSU atArkansas 2 p.m. Men's college, Utah atUCLA 2 p.m. Men's college, Maryland at Duke 3 p.m. Men's college, Georgia State atTroy 3 p.m. Men's college, Miami at Virginia Tech 3 p.m. Men's college, KansasSt. at Baylor 4 p.m. Men's college, Stanford at Washington St. 4 p.m. Men's college, BYU at St. Mary's 5 p.m. Men's college, LoyolaMarymount at Gonzaga 5 p.m. NBA, 2014All-Star Saturday Night 5:30 p.m. Men's college, Florida at Kentucky 6 p.m. Men's college, Northern lowa at Missouri St 6 p.m. Men's college, Colorado St. at FresnoSt. 7 p.m. Men's college, SanFrancisco at Santa Clara 8 p.m. 10 a.m. noon noon 2:30a.m.
Root CBS ESPNU ESPN ESPN2
Root ESPNU
Pac-12 Fox ESPN ESPN2
Root ESPNU
Pac-12 ESPN ESPN2
Root ESPNU
Pac-12 ESPN2 Root TNT ESPN ESPNU
Root ESPNU
Golf CBS Golf Golf
HOCKEY
College, Wisconsin at Ohio St.
5 p.m.
NBCSN
SUNDAY SOCCER FA Cup,Everton vs. SwanseaCity FA Cup,Arsenal vs. Liverpool
Time TV/ Radie 5:30a.m. FoxSports1 8 a.m. Fox Sports 2
AUTO RACING
NASCAR,Daytona 500 qualifying
10 a.m.
Fox
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Wisconsin at Michigan Women's college,KentuckyatTennessee Women's college, Regional Coverage Women's college, Florida at Georgia Women's college, Syracuse atBoston Coll. Women's college, Baylor at Texas Women's college, USC at Oregon State Men's college, OregonState atOregon
10a.m. CBS 10 a.m. ESPN 1 0 a.m. ESP N 2 1 0 a.m. ESP N U 10 a.m. Root 10 a.m. Fox Sports 1 Pac-12 noon noon F o x Sports1
Women's college, regional coverage Women's college, Louisville at Memphis Men's college, Villanova at Creighton Men's college, Rutgers at Louisville Men's college, Notre Dameat Boston Coll. Women's college, ArizonaState atCalifornia Men's college, Georgetown at St. John's NBA, All-Star Game Men's college, Colorado at USC
12:30 p.m. E SPN2 12:30 p.m. ESPNU 2 p.m. Fox Sports1 3 p.m. ESPN2 3 p.m. ESPNU Pac-12 4 p.m. 4 p.m. Fox Sports1 5 p.m. TNT 5 p.m. ESPNU
1110 AM, 100.1 FM
GOLF
PGA, Northern Trust Open PGA, Northern Trust Open Champions Tour,ACEGroup Classic
10 a.m. noon noon
Today Girls basketball:GilchristatTrinityLulheran,5;30p.m. WresHing:Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Summit at SpecialDistrict 4championships at Bend,9:30 a.mz CulveratPre-Districts inCentral Linn, noon Swimming:Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Summit at SpeciaDi l strict1 championshipsatJuniper Swim & FitnessCenter,12:15p.mzRidgeview,Sisters atClass4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3championshipsat SouthAlbany,TBD;Madrasat Class 4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships at Mt. HoodCommunity Colege, TBD
ESPNU ESPN ESPN2
GOLF
PGA, Northern Trust Open PGA Northern Trust Open Champions Tour,ACEGroup Classic EuropeanTour, Africa Open
ON DECK
Golf CBS Golf
Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby Trv/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL Inquiry saysIncognito, 2 other harassedMartin —An investigation into the racially charged Miami Dolphins bullying scandal detailed widespread harassment in the team's locker room that extended beyond thetwo players at the center of the probe. The NFL-ordered report stated there was a"pattern of harassment" committed by at least three players andextended to two linemanandan assistant trainer, all targets of vicious taunts and racist insults. Lawyer Ted Wells released the report Friday, saying guard JohnJerry and center Mike Pounceyfollowed Richie Incognito's lead in harassing Jonathan Martin, who left the team inOctober. In astatement emailed by aleaguespokesman,theNFLdid notmakeanymentionofpossible punishment stemming from the case.
BASKETBALL Stern eleCted tO BaSketball Hall Of Fame — DavidStern is going from the NBAcommissioner's office to the Hall of Fame. The recently retired Stern waselected Friday to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and will be enshrined with the class of 2014 on Aug. 8 in Springfield, Mass. Alonzo Mourning, Tim Hardaway, Mitch Richmond, KevinJohnsonandSpencerHaywood arehopingto be part of the class. Theywerechosen asfinalists, with the full class to be unveiled April 7 during the NCAA men's Final Four.
BASEBALL Former manager, All-Star JlmFregosl dies at 71 —Jlm Fregosi, a former All-Star who wonmorethan1,000 games as amanager for four teams, died after an apparent stroke. Hewas 71. The Atlanta Bravessaythey werenotified by afamily member that he died early Friday in Miami, where hewas hospitalized after the apparent stroke while on acruise with baseball alumni. — From wire reports
IN THE BLEACHERS
BEFO/E al O tO
e
TENNIS Professional Qatar TotalOpen Friday At TheKhalifa TennisComplex Ooha, Qatar Purse: S2.44million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Quarterlinals JelenaJankovic (5), Serbia,def. Petra Kvitova(3), CzechRepublic, 6-1, 6-3. AngeliqueKerber(6), Germany, def. Petra Cetkovska, Czech Republic, 6-1, 6-0. SimonaHalep(7), Romania, def. SaraErrani (4), Italy, 6-2,6-0. Agnie szka Radwanska (2),Poland,def.Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium, 6-2, 6-1. ABNAMROWorld Tournament Friday At Ahoy' Stadium Rotterdam, Netherlands Purse: S2.05million (WT500) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Quarterfinals TomasBerdych (3), CzechRepublic, def. Jerzy Janowicz,Poland,6-7(9),6-2, 6-4. ErnestsGulbis, Latvia,def.JuanMartin delPotro (1), Argentina,6-3,6-4. MarinCilic, Croatia,def. AndyMurray(2), Britain, 6-3, 6-4. Igor Sijsling, Netherlands,def. PhilippKohlschreiber,Germ any, 6-2, 2-6, 6-1.
CopaClaro Friday At BuenosAires LawnTennis Club BuenosAires, Argentina Purse: S567,760(WT250) Surlace: Clay-Outdoor Singles Quarterlinals Tommy Robredo(3), Spain,def. RobinHaase (6), Netherlands,6-1,2-0, retired. FabioFognini(2), Italy,def.PabloAndujar, Spain, 6-4, 6-3. DavidFerrer(1), Spain,def. Albert Ramos, Spain, 6-1, 6-2.
NicolasAlmagro (4), Spain, def.JeremyChardy (8), France, 7-6(7),6-3. U.S. National IndoorChampionship Friday At BuenosAires LawnTennis Club BuenosAires, Argentina Purse: $557,750(WT250)
Surlace: Clay-Outdoor Singles Quarlerlinals Tommy Robredo (3), Spain, def. RobinHaase (6), Netherlands,6-1r2-0, retired. FabioFognini(2), Italy,def.PabloAndujar, Spain, 6-4, 6-3.
DavidFerrer(1), Spain,def. Albert Ramos, Spain,
6-1, 6-2.
e t5 0
m w Cl
B O 0 E
Jump-enlargement® — Results guaranteed or your money back!
East
Cornell 78,Dartmouth59 Delaware 85, Coll. of Charleston71
Drexel60,Towson43 Harvard99,Columbia64 lona60,Monmouth(NJ) 59 Marist100,Quinnipiac81 Penn62,Yale50 Princeton81,Brown70 South Georgia Tech95,Virginia 76 JamesMadison92, UNCWilmington43 Midwest Evansville75,fflinois St. 62 IndianaSt.72,S. Illinois 35 N. Iowa79, Missouri St.60 WichitaSt.70, Drake61 Far West California65,Arizona49 OregonSt.70, UCLA54 SouthernCal88, Oregon78 Stanford61,ArizonaSt. 35 Washington87,Colorado80 WashingtonSt.83, Utah73
GOLF PGA Tour North ern Tr ust Open
Friday
At Riviera Co untry Club
Los Ang eles NicolasAlmagro(4), Spain, def.JeremyChardy Purse: S6.7million (8), France, 7-6(7),6-3. Yardage:7,849; Par71 Parlial Sece nd Round S ang-Moon B ae 67-66—133 BASKETBALL AaronBaddeley 69-65—134 RobertGarrigus 67-67—134 NBA CharlieBeljan 67-68—135 Brian Ha r m an 67-69—136 NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION WilliamMcGirt 69-67—136 AH TimesPST DustinJohnson 66-70—136 Jim Furyk 68-68—136 EasternConference Blake Ad am s 67-70—137 W L Pct GB d-Indiana GeorgeMcNeil 69-68—137 40 12 .769 d-Miami Allred 73-64—137 37 14 ,725 2'/z Jason 69-68—137 d-Toronto 28 24 .538 12 CharlSchwartzel 70-67—137 Chicago 27 25 .519 13 Scott Brown 69-69—138 Atlanta 25 26 .490 14'/z Matt Every 72-66—138 Washington 25 27 .481 15 JordanSpieth 67-71—138 Brooklyn 24 27 .471 15'N Jimmy Walker 68-70—138 Charlotte 23 30 .434 1P/z KeeganBradley 69-69—138 Detroit 22 30 .423 18 BryceMolder 67-71—138 NewYork 20 32 .385 20 J.B. Holmse 69-69—138 Cleveland 20 33 .377 20'N KevinStadler 68-70—138 Boston 19 35 .352 22 Cameron Tringale 67-71—138 Orlando 16 38 .296 25 Charl eyHoff man Philadelphia 15 39 .278 26 Brendan Steele 68-71—139 Milwaukee 9 43 .173 31 J.J. Henry 70-69—139 WeslernConference Bill Haas 72-67—139 W L Pct GB HarrisEnglish 70-69—139 d-Oklahoma Cit y 43 12 .782 Jhonattan Vegas 70-69—139 d-SanAntonio 38 15 .717 4 LeeWestwood 69-70—139 Houston 36 17 .679 6 ScottStaffings 67-72—139 d-L.A.Clippers 37 18 .673 6 HidekiMatsuyam a 70-69—139 Portland 36 17 .679 6 DavidLingmerth 70-69—139 Dallas 32 22 .593 10'N AngelCabrera 69-71—140 Phoenix 30 21 .588 11 JasonGore 71-69—140 GoldenState 31 22 .585 11 LukeGuthrie 71-69—140 Memphis 29 23 .558 12ra Francesco 67-73—140 Molinari Minnesota 25 28 .472 17 71-69—140 RobertAffenby Denver 24 27 .471 17 KenDuke 71-69—140 NewOrleans 23 29 .442 18N ScottPiercy 71-69—140 67-73—140 Utah 19 33 .365 22ra Matt Jones L.A. Lakers 70-71—141 18 35 .340 24 DavidLynn 72-69—141 Sacrame nto 18 35 .340 24 Martin Flores d-divisionleader 71-70 — 141 GonzaloFdez-Castano KevinStreelman 72-69—141 Friday's Games BubbaWatson 70-71—141 No games scheduled Bigy HurleyIII 70-71 — 141 Today'sGames Erik Comp ton 74-67—141 No games scheduled Pat Perez 69-72 — 141 Sunday'sGame JohnSenden 71-70 — 141 All-StarGame,5 p.m. RichardH. Lee 69-72—141 ErnieEls 71-70 — 141 K.J. Choi 69-72—141 Men's College Brendon Todd 71-70—141 WebbSimpson 70-72 — 142 Pacific-12 Conference JasonDufner 70-72—142 AH timesPST JohnHuh 71-71—142 75-67 — 142 Conference Overall Vijay Singh 73-69—142 W L W L Will MacKe nzie 72-70—142 Arizona 10 2 23 2 BenCrane 72-70—142 UCLA 8 3 19 5 lan Poulter 70-72—142 ArizonaSt. 8 4 19 6 JustinRose 74-68—142 California 7 4 16 8 GeoffOgilvy 73-69—142 Colorado 7 5 18 7 RetiefGoosen 71-71—142 Stanford 6 5 15 8 DavisLoveIII Utah 6 6 17 7 Justin Leona rd 70-72—142 Washington 6 6 14 11 James Hahn 71-72—143 Oregon St. 5 6 13 10 Martin Laird 70-73—143 Oregon 3 8 15 8 MarcLeishman 69-74—143 WashingtonSt. 2 10 9 15 Tim Wilkinson 71-72—143 SouthernCal 1 10 10 14 GrahamDeLaet 70-73—143 Friday's Games HunterMahan 70-73—143 Arizona St. 69,Arizona66(2OT) BenCurtis 70-73—143 Today'sGames StuartAppleby 72-71 — 143 Californiaat Washington, noon DanielSummerhays 71-72—143 Utah atUCLA,2p.m. FredCouples 72-72 — 144 StanfordatWashingtonSt., 4p.m. RickieFowler 68-76—144 SundayrsGames 71-73—144 KevinNa OregonSt.at Oregon, noon 72-72—144 JoshTeater Coloradoat USC, 5p.m. 72-72—144 PaulGoydos 73-71—144 BubbaDickerson Friday's Scores 74-70—144 HudsonSwafford Easl 71-73—144 Bo VanPelt Cornell70,Dartmouth67 70-74—144 CharlieWi Harvard 88,Columbia84, 20T RusselHenl l ey 78-66—144 lona 89,Monmouth (NJ)70 RyanMoore 69-76—145 Louisville82,Temple 58 Jonathan Byrd 72-73—145 Marist 65,Siena64 NicolasColsaerts 72-73—145 Princeton69, Brown65 RickyBarnes 70-75—145 SMU77, Rutgers65 ThorbjornOlesen 72-73—145 Yale69,Penn54 Brendon deJonge 72-73—145 South Joost Luiten 75-70—145 Chattanooga 83,W.Carolina73 JohnMerrick 72-73—145 Kennesaw St. 69, N.Kentucky67 PadraigHarrington 75-70—145 Mercer79,Lipscomb48 DavidHearn 70-75—145 NorthFlorida79,Jacksonville 74 JamesDriscoll 69-77—146 Midwest JasonKokrak 69-77—146 Oakland 83, Detroit 82, OT 71-75—146 FreddieJacobson South 70-76—146 Morgan Hoff mann Chattanooga 83,W.Carolina 73 74-72—146 CharlesHowell III Kennesaw St.69, N.Kentucky67 75-71 — 146 Ryo Ishikawa Mercer79, Lipscomb48 73-73—146 JohnMallinger NorthFlorida79,Jacksonville 74 71-75 — 146 FredFunk Far West 74-72—146 SpencerLevin Arizona St. 69,Arizona66,20T 77-69—146 BrianStuard StewartCink 73-73—146 BrianGay 71-75—146 Women's college Y.E.Yang 73-73—146 Friday's Scores TrevorImmelman 71-76—147
Steven Bowditch Scott Langley TedPotter,Jr. Carl Pettersson NicholasThompson TroyMatteson JustinHicks BrianDavis RusselKnox l GregChalmers LouisOosthuizen Jeff Magge rt BrinyBaird KyleStanley LucasGlover MikeWeir JohnRogins Matt Kuchar JohnsonWagner TommyGainey
AndresRomero DavidToms DerekErnst D.H. Lee Woody Austin SteveHolmes DarrenClarke
72-75 — 147 77-70 —147 75-72 — 147 75-72 — 147 75-72—147 72-75 —147 74-73—147 75-73—148 75-73 — 148 70-78 — 148 74-74—148 77-71—148 74-74—148 75-73—148 72-76—148 71-77—148 75-73—148 74-75—149 76-73—149 78-73 —151 76-75—151 75-76—151 76-76—152 79-73—152 74-81—155 83-75—158 78 —WD
Leaderboardat time ofsuspended play SCORE THRU -9 1. Sang-Moon Bae F 2. AaronBaddeley -8 F -8 F 2. Robert Garrigus -7 4. CharlieBeljan F
LPGA Tour Women'sAustralian Open Friday At Victoria Gelf Club Melbourne,Australia Purse: S1.2million Yardage: 5,480;Par: 72 First Round a-amateur CarolineHedwall 68-65 — 133 Suzann Pettersen 66-68—134 a-MrnleeLee 68-67—135 AnnaNordqvist 72-64—136 Holly Clyburn 68-68—136 LydiaKo 68-68—136 a-JingYan 71-66—137 69-68—137 KarineIcher MorganPressel 69-68—137 PaulaCreamer 68-69 — 137 67-70—137 Jessica Korda 71-67—138 AmeliaLewis 71-67—138 JessicaSpeechley 70-68—138 HaruNom ura 70-68—138 DewiClaireSchreefel 70-68—138 AyakoUehara 69-69—138 ValentineDerrey 68-70—138 CarlotaCiganda 68-70—138 Azahara Munoz 74-65—139 CheyenneWoods 72-67—139 MiHyangLee Lee-Anne Pace 72-67—139 71-68—139 SarahKemp 70-69—139 Marianne Skarpnord 69-70—139 Tiffany Joh 68-71—139 Sydnee Michaels 68-71—139 GiuliaSergas 67-72—139 JaclynSweeney 72-68—140 CarolineMasson 71-69—140 StacyLewis 71-69—140 KarrieWebb 70-70—140 Dori Carter 70-70—140 JulietaGranada 70-70—140 BrookePancake 70-70—140 KellyTan 69-71—140 Nikki Camp bell Sarah JaneSmith 68-72—140 74-67—141 JennyShin Pornanong Phatlum 73-68—141 L>ne Vedel 73-68—141 72-69 — 141 AustinErnst BeatrizRecari 72-69 — 141 PaolaMoreno 71-70 — 141 ChellaChoi 70-71—141 DianaLuna 70-71—141 Katie M. Burnet 69-72 — 141 HannahJun 69-72 —141 MarionRicordeau 67-74—141 MirimLee 74-68—142 SandraGal 73-69 — 142 Rebecca Lee-Bentham 73-69 — 142 Lindsey Wright 73-69—142 AmyAnderson 72-70—142 PazEcheverria 72-70—142 SueKim 72-70—142 LorieKane 71-71 — 142 BrittanyLincicome 71-71—142 Pernilla Lindberg 71-71—142 Julia Boland 70-72 — 142 Eun-HeeJi 70-72 — 142 a-Su-Hyun Oh 74-69—143 Tamie Durdin 73-70—143 StacyLeeBregman 72-71—143 AlisonWhitaker 71-72—143 PerrineDelacour 70-73 —143 TrishJohnson 70-73—143 GerinaPiler 75-69 — 144 Rebecca Artis 73-71—144 Kris Tamulis 73-71 — 144 HannahBurke 72-72—144 Sandra Changkija 72-72—144 MarinaAlex 71-73 —144 Breanna Egiot 71-73 —144 YaniTseng 71-73 — 144 BeckyMorgan 70-74—144 HeeYoungPark 67-77—144 MissedCut Xiyu Lin 75-70—145 75-70—145 GwladysNocera MiJungHur 74-71—145 DanielleMontgomery 74-71—145 Alena Sharp 74-71 — 145 Yuyang Zhang 74-71 — 145 Anne-LiseCaudal 73-72—145 7 3-72 — 145 TamaraJohns 72-73 — 145 ChristelBoeljon EmmaDeGroot 72-73 —145 72-73—145 MariaHernandez 72-73—145 Joanna Klaten 72-73 — 145 EricaPopson 71-74 — 145 MariaHjorth 69-76—145 AlisonWalshe 76-70—146 BethAllen 76-70—146 IreneCoe 76-70—146 MoiraDunn 75-71—146 AnyaAlvarez Ann-KathrinLindner 75-71—146 73-73—146 Ji Young Oh 71-75—146 CandieKung
LexiThompson KathleenEkey CharleyHull CatrionaMathew Giulia Molinaro LisaMccloskey AshleighSimon KristieSmith a-AshleeDewhurst StaceyKeating RyannO'Toole Min-SunKim BelenMozo CathrynBristow LauraDavies MeganGrehan MinaHarigae JenniferKirby Maude-Aimee Leblanc JanePark KatherineKirk JenniferSong BeckyBrewedon AriyaJutanugarn VictoriaElizabeth ChristineSong CarolineBon MoriyaJutanugarn Mo Martin VickyThomas CarlyBooth MindyKim CindyLaC rosse CourtneyMassey Stephanie Na a-Kono Matsumoto AshleyOna KarenPearce JayeMarieGreen HeatherBowieYoung ManaloUnbe ThidapaSuwannapura CorieHou KristyMcPherson JacquiConcolino P.K.Kongkraphan KatieFutcher WhitneyHilier Nikki Garrett Cydney Clanton MelissaReid Pat Hurst SophieGustafson PaulaReto KimWelch SarahKing VickyHurst BreeArthur
70-76—146 75-72—147 74-73—147 74-73—147 74-73—147 73-74—147 73-74—147 73-74—147 72-75—147 72-75—147 71-76—147 70-77—147 75-73—148 74-74—148 73-75—148 73-75—148 73-75—148 72-76—148 79-70—149 77-72—149 73-76—149 72-77—149 76-74—150 76-74—150 74-76—150 74-76—150 73-77—150 79-72—151 78-73—151 74-77—151 71-80—151 69-82—151 80-72—152 78-74—152 78-74—152 77-75—152 77-75—152 76-76—152 75-77—152 74-78—152 80-73—153 78-75—153 76-77—153 74-79—153 82-72—154 79-75—154 76-78—154 75-79—154 78-77—155 77-78—155 80-76—156 83-74—157 80-78—158 82-77—159 82-77—159 79-80—159 77-83—160 80-WD
Cham pgons Tour ACEGroupClassIc Friday
At TwinEagle s Golf Club(Talon Course) Naples, Fla. Purse: S1.6milli on Yardage:7,193; Par:72 (36-36) First Round BernhardLanger 31-33—64 BobTway 32-33—65 Olin Browne 33-33—66 DuffyWaldorf 33-34—67 Kirk Triplett 34-33—67 MikeGoodes 35-33—68 SteveLowery 36-32—68 Tommy Armour III 36-32—68 JohnRiegger 36-32—68 Jay Haa s 35-33—68 MarkMcNulty 35-33—68 MichaelAllen 34-34—68 Bill Glasson 36-33—69 ChienSoonLu 38-31—69 WesShort,Jr. 36-33—69 TomPerniceJr. 34-35—69 DavidEger 35-34—69 SteveElkington 35-35—70 BobbyClampet 35-35—70 GeneSauers 34-36—70 Jim Thorpe 37-33—70 MarkBrooks 36-34—70 RodSpittle 34-36—70 MarkO'Meara 38-32—70 ScottHoch 37-33—70 34-36—70 RoccoMediate 35-35—70 KennyPerry TomLehman 34-36—70 Nick Price 36-34—70 Colin Montgom erie 36-34—70 36-34—70 Jay Don Blake 36-34—70 LeeRinker 35-36—71 JohnHarris 35-36—71 Rick Fehr Billy Andrade 36-35—71 37-34—71 LarryMize 32-39—71 John Inman 37-34—71 PeterJacobsen 34-37—71 Jim Gallagher,Jr. 36-35—71 TomKite 36-35—71 Bart Bryant 35-36 — 71 DavidFrost 34-37—71 Mike Reid 35-36—71 MarcoDawson 37-35 — 72 MorrisHatalsky 37-35 — 72 BradBryant 38-34—72 FuzzyZoeller 36-36—72 BruceFleisher 37-35—72 BrianHenninger 37-35—72 Kohki Idoki 36-36—72 DanForsman RogerChapman 36-36—72 Jim Rutledge 37-35—72 37-35—72 Scott Dunlap 38-35—73 StevePate JoeySindelar 34-39—73 GaryKoch 37-36—73 MarkCalcavecchia 33-40—73 DanaQuigley 37-37—74 36-38—74 Wayne Levi Jeff Sluman 40-34—74 BobGilder 37-37—74 TomPurtzer 40-35—75 PeterSenior 39-36—75 Scott Simpson 37-38—75 Willie Wood 39-36—75 LorenRoberts 37-38—75 RussCochran 37-38—75 Hale Irwin 37-38—75 GregBruckner 39-36—75 TomByrum 37-39—76 AndrewMagee 39-37—76 38-38—76 MarkWiebe EstebanToledo 38-38—76 Jeff Hart 40-36—76 BobbyWadkins 41-36—77 LarryNelson 42-35—77 TomWatson 39-38—77 BradFaxon 39-38—77 CurtisStrange 40-38—78 Hal Sutton WD
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L COMMISSI ONER' S OFFICE— SuspendedAtlanta C OrinnSears50 gamesfor violating theMinor League DrugPreventionandTreatment Program. AmewcanLeague BOSTON REDSOX— Agreed to termswith OF CoreyBrownonaminor leaguecontract. TEXASRANGERS— Agreed to termswith RHP TommyHansonand18/DH MitchMorelandononeyearcontracts.PlacedLHPJosephOrtiz onthe60-day DL. TAMPABA Y RAYS—Agreed to terms with LHP Erik Bedard onaminor leaguecontract. National League ATLANTA BRAVES— Agreedto termswith RHP Julio Teheran onasix-year contract. WASHIN GTON NATIONALS — Agreedto terms with RHP JoshRoenickeonaminor leaguecontract. FOOTBA LL National Football League KANSAS CITYCHIEFS— SignedTERichard Gordon to one a -yearcontract. MINNES OTA VIKINGS — Named Evan Marcus strengthandconditioning coachandJeff Hurdassistant strengthandconditioning coach. NEWYORKGIANTS— Announcedthe retirement of DEDaveTollefson. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — Signed OL GregVan Rotento areserve/future contract. COLLEGE CINCINN ATI —NamedMarcNudelbergtight ends
coachandspecial teamscoordinator. OHIO— Announcedthe resignationof wom en's voll eyballcoachRyanTheissohecantakethesame position atMarquete. OKLAHOMASTATE— NamedBobConnellyoff ensivelinecoach. PRTSBURGH— NamedJohnSettlerunningbacks coach. RICE — Signedfootball coachDavid Bailiff to a five-yearcontract.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
GOLF ROUNDUP
rai azersmo o a el' O Sa By Anne M. Peterson
Drummond's 30-25 winsRising StarsChallenge
The Associated Press
PORTLAND — The Portland Trail Blazers are learn-
ing the hard part of rising to the top of the league is staying there.
NEWORLEANS—Andre Drummondhad 30points and a Rising Stars Challenge-record 25 rebounds, leading TeamHill to a 142-136 victory over Team Webber on Friday night. Portland's Damian Lillard
Portland limps into the All-
Star Break having lost four of its past six games. While LaMarcus Aldridge makes his third All-Star appearance and Damian Lillard makes his first, the rest of the Blaz-
finished the night with13
ers will get a much-needed break. It's been clear that they're
fatigued. After a 2-2 road trip, the Blazers fell 98-92 at
home Tuesday night to Kevin Durant and the Oklahoma Alex Brandon I The Associated Press City Thunder, before losing Trail Blazers, from left, LaMarcus Aldridge, Nicolas Batum and Wesley Matthews have helped lead 122-117 to the Clippers in Los
Angeles on Wednesday night. After spending time this season atop the Western Conference, Portland is 36-17 and
Portland to a 36-17 record heading into the All-Star break. After a hot start, the Blazers have struggled in recent weeks, including losing four of their past six games.
NBA
currently knotted in a threeway tie w ith H ouston and
dridge and Lillard helped fuel the Clippers for third place, the ascent. behind the Thunder and San Antonio.
Last summer, the Blazers
said following the loss to the Clippers. "We definitely
added a true center in Robin Lopez and a capable backup for Lillard in Mo Williams. Additionally, Portland found much-needed bench help
wanted to be on better terms
with the addition of Thomas
going into the break. But one thing about it is that we took care of business early. I knew there were going to be ups and downs this season, so
Robinson and Dorell Wright, as well as draft pick CJ
"It's definitely not the way
we wanted to end it," Aldridge
McCollum.
Aldridge has been having the bestseason of his career,
averaging 23.9 points and early where we're still num- 11.4 rebounds. He has 33 douber threeor number four in ble-doubles overall and set the West." a new career high with 44 The Blazers got off to a sur- points in a victory over Denprising 24-5 start this season, ver last month. Even Blazthe best record in the NBA ers owner Paul Allen, who at the time. A revamped ros- doesn't often publicly comter and the fierce play of Al- ment about the team, said he's luckily we put that cushion
been impressed.
bounds, so he's always hold"If you watch him out there, ing off his guy so I can go rehe's so engaged in the games," bound better," Aldridge said. Allen said. "He's taken on Portland's 36 wins are the more of a leadership role. I fourth most at the All-Star think it's evident in all aspects break in team history, and the of his game." most since the Blazers won Lillard, who isn't being so 38 before the 2000 All-Star taxed minutes-wise this sea- game. "Nobody put us even in the son, is averaging 20.7 points and 5.7 assists. Even Lopez playoffrace.And then even has emerged with career myself, I projected number bests this season, averaging seven. So, you know, we're 10.7 points and 8.4 rebounds, not satisfied. But to be numwith 19 double-doubles. ber four in th e West right In New Orleans for this now, not shooting the ball year's All-Star game, Al- well, and to come into the seadridge credited the addi- son with everybody not even t ion of Lopez for hi s ow n thinking about us. We're not improvement. in a bad spot right now," Al"It's just growth, having the dridge said. mindset to do it, and having There are 29 games left for Robin Lopez helps because the Blazers to solidify their he holds off his man, and he's return to the playoffs for the more about position in re- first time since 2011, when
C3
points for TeamHill. Besides an impressive tally of dunks and rebounds, Drummond evenmanaged to make his free throws while winning MVP hon-
ors. A41 percent shooter during the regular season, the Detroit forward went 6
for 8, including a pair with 29 seconds left after chasing down Bradley Beal's missed free throw to give his team afive-point lead. — The Associated Press
Bae up one shot at Riviera The Associated Press L OS ANGELES —
Bae
Sang-moon is off to another great start at th e Northern
Trust Open. The next step is a better fuush. Bae played bogey-free Friday on another gorgeous day at Riviera for a 5-under 66,
giving him a one-shot lead over Aaron Baddeley and Robert Garrigus going into the weekend.
Baddeley, who hasn't won since Riviera three years ago, birdied his last four holes for a
65. Garrigus played in the afternoon, when it's a little more difficult to make putts, and
managed just fine with a 67. Bae was at 9-under 133. The 27-year-old South Kore-
they got eliminated in the first round by Dallas.
an was tied for the lead going
Portland plays seven of its
next eight at home, but then
last year. Bae struggled to a 76 in the third round and never
10 of its games in March on
got back into contention.
into the weekend at Riviera
the road. There is also a chance the
"It was really, really good experience, and I learned a
Blazers could make a move
lot," Bae said. "I improved a lot
before the trade deadline. While Allen and coach Terry Stotts have played down the idea, the loss of forward
from lastyear." He wound up winning the Byron Nelson Championship
Joel Freeland to an MCL in-
jury earlier this week raised speculation t h a t
P o r t land
may look for a big man to help back up Lopez. Freeland is expected to be sidelined for a month.
a few months later for his first PGA Tour victory. Patience surely will be re-
quired at some point over the weekend on what has shaped up as one of the best weeks of
weather at Riviera — an abundance of sunshine and only a trace of wind. Despite what
would appear to be pristine scoring conditions, no one has reached double digits under
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
Sun Devils use 2 OTs to upset No. 2 'Cats
par this week, a testament to
one of the best golf courses on the PGA Tour.
"It's a strong course, especially when it's dry and firm like it is," Baddeley said. "If you miss it out of position, it's really hard to get the ball upand-down. Today was good, because I made a couple good saves but coming in, I had some good looks and made
L
them." And while Bae is in the lead, the tournament remains wide
open, with 22 players separated by only five shots. One of them is Dustin John-
son, who led after the first The Associated Press
round and opened with two
TEMPE, Ariz. — Arizona State went away f rom Jermaine Marshalluntil it needed
quick birdies. Johnson never made any more progress, however. He dropped shots on the 12th and 15th holes to ne-
him most. He came through and so did Jordan Bachynski with another game-saving block.
gate a few more birdies, and m issedseveralgood looks inside 12 feet. He had to settle for a 70 and was three behind at 6-under 136.
When it was over, the Sun
Devils' fans rushed the court twice — beating your biggest rival in double overtime is that
much fun. Fighting through a defensive-dominated game, Arizona State pulled out arguably the biggest home win in school history, knocking off No. 2 Arizona 69-66 in double overtime Friday night. Marshall scored eight of his 29 points in the second over-
Eric Francis/The Associated Press file photo
Oregon State coach Pat Casey, center, talks to Tyler Smith during practice at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha, Neb., during the 2013 College World Series. The Beavers are ranked as high as No. 2 in the polls, but Casey is "not impressed."
State Continued from C1 Pac-12 teams have won 28 NCAA
baseball titles, more than any other
seconds left, leading to a rau-
UCLA, last season's College World Series champion, was picked to finish third in the league this year. "I like our team," Casey said. "We have to stay healthy, and we obviously have to play at a very high level in ordertocompete in ourconference — and with the people we play out of confer-
had to restart because more time was left on the clock. "No words can explain the
joy that we feel right now," said Bachynski, who had 13 points, eight blocked shots and seven rebounds. "Tonight was huge for us." With both teams struggling offensively all night in a physical game filled with fouls, neither team could take control.
Arizona State (19-6, 8-4 Pac-12) won it by t urning to Marshall and relying on Bachynski. Marshall, who missed the first game against Arizona,
conference.
ence. So I do like our team, but I think
they would tell you we've got a long way to go." The popularity of college baseball has seen a dramatic upswing in Oregon — despite the rain — for the past decade, building since the then-underdog Beavers became just the fifth college program ever to win back-to-back College World Series titles in 2006 and 2007.
the Women's Australian Open.
Beayerscomefrom dehind tedeatGonzaga TEMPE, Ariz.— Jeff Hendrix hit a two-out, two-run single in the eighth inning as OregonState rallied for a 4-3 win over Gonzaga inthe Beavers' baseball season openerFriday onthe first day of the HuskerClassic at Tempe Diablo Stadium. Dylan Davis andAndy Peterson each had two hits for OregonState. Andrew Moore, the Beavers' starting pitcher, worked six innings for no decision. He allowed three runs on five hits with four strikeouts and onewalk. Zack Reser earnedthe victory with an inning of scoreless relief. Max Engelbrekt worked ascoreless ninth for the save. Oregon State continues play in the Husker Classic today at10 a.m. (PST) with a gameagainst host Nebraska.
went over 20 minutes without
season in Corvallis, has taken the team
a field goal, but made a pair of
to the postseason for the past five years,
Ducksgointo extra inningsagainstHawaii
3-pointersin the second over-
a school record. The Beavers went 52-13 last season,
HONOLULU — Oregon scored two runs in the fourth inning, Hawaii an-
time, then scored on a drive with 14 seconds left to put the Sun Devils up 67-66.
Also on Friday: No. 13 Louisville 82, Temple 58: P HILADELPHIAMontrezlHarrell scored a ca-
reer-high 22 points and Louisville built a 30-point first-half lead en route to a victory over
Temple. No. 23 SMU 77, Rutgers 65: PISCATAWAY, N.J. — Nic
Moore scored 16 of his 21 points in the second half and SMU won as a ranked team
for the first time in 29 years, beating Rutgers.
Hedwall had a hole-in-one and finished with a 7-under 65 to
take the second-round lead in
time and Bachynski swatted T.J. McConnell's drive with 6 cous midcourt celebration that
Also on Friday: Hedwall leads Women's Australian Open: MELBOURNE, Australia — Sweden's Caroline
Casey, who is embarking on his 20th
advancing to the College World Series for the fifth time in school history and
fourth under Casey. Oregon State went 24-6 in the Pac-12 for the team's third conference title since Casey took over.
While the Beavers have lost key contributors in Matt Boyd, shortstop Tyler Smith and catcher Jake Rodriguez this
season, they return pitchers Ben Wetzler and Andrew Moore, as well as out-
swered with two of its own in the fifth,
and the Ducksand Rainbow Warriors were tied 2-2 in the ninth inning in the Ducks' season openerFriday at press deadline. Thesecondgame ofthefour-game series begins today at8:30 p.m. (PST) — Fiem staffand tM'rereports
second in the Pac-12. But the national-
ly seeded Ducks fell to Rice in their regional series. "We haven't finished yet," Horton
The Solheim Cup star aced the 160-yard par-3 16th, eagled the par-5 eighth after hitting to 4 feet and had five birdies and two bogeys at Victoria Golf
told reporters at the team's preseason media gathering. "We've had expecta-
Club to reach 11-under 133, one
tion years where we fumbled. The last
Suzann Pettersen of Norway.
two years we thought we had a com-
Langer on top again in ACE Group Classic: NAPLES, Fla. — Defending champion Bern-
petitive ballclub, won our share of one-
and two-run games and put ourselves in position to host regionals and super regionals and had national seeds. But
we've squandered opportunities — so to speak, we've left the bases loaded." The Ducks have lost a few of the stars from last season's team: First
baseman Ryon Healy and pitcher Jimmie Sherfy graduated, while pitcher Cole Irvin underwent season-ending Tommy John surgery. But they return
shot ahead of second-ranked
hard Langer shot an 8-under
64 to take a one-stroke lead after the first round of the ACE
Group Classic. Langer birdied three of his first holes in his bogey-free round on TwinEagles' Talon Course. Bob Tway was second. Hebirdied his last three holes, making a 60-foot putt on No. 8.
strong position players in Scott Heine-
man and Tyler Baumgartner. Both teams open their seasons this weekend. The Beavers are playing in the Husker Classic in Tempe, Ariz., while the Ducks visit Hawaii for a fourgame series. The two teams will play each other five times after splitting last season's series 2-2. Ultimately, it will be a whole combi-
nation of things that will determine either team's success. Which is why Casey has little faith in preseason polls. "Team chemistry's always one of the most important things," Casey said. "We have enough peoplethere. We have the people if they choose to be strong leaders and they choose to have
fielder Michael Conforto.
six times and to the NCAA title in 2004.
The Ducks jumped into the fray in 2009 when Oregon reinstated its baseball program after a 28-year hiatus. They made a splash by hiring Horton, a two-time national coach of the year
After holding open tryouts for the team in his first season, the Ducks surprisingly went all the way to the postseason the very next year. But so far the College World Series has eluded them. Last season Oregon won 48 games,
who led Cal State Fullerton to Omaha
most in school history, and finished
chemistry and hang with each other, that we'll have the same type of bond (as last season). Winning fixes a lot of problems. When you come out and you have a lot of success early, you feel good. It's when you're struggling that real leadership and chemistry comes to the top."
Reed Saxon I The Associated Press
Sang-Moon Baewavesafter saving par on the12th green during the second round of the Northern Trust Open in the Pacific Palisades area of Los
Angeles on Friday.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
•
•
Today's event sehedule) I
MEN
MEN
Slnvakia vs. Slnvenia, midnight United States vs. Russia,4:30a.m. Switzerland vs.Czech Republic, Swedenvs. Latvia, 9 a.m. Austria vs. Norway, Sunday, midnight Russia vs. Slnvakia, Slnvenia vs. United States,Sunday, 4:30 a.m.
Sweden vs.Germany, Denmarkvs. Switzerland, Canada vs. Germany, Russia vs. China, 2 a.m. United Statesvs. Canada, Britain vs. Norway, Swedenvs. Russia, 9p.m. WOMEN
United Statesvs. Sweden, Canadavs. Russia, Britain vs. Switzerland, Denmark vs. China, 7 a.m. Denmark vs.South Korea, Japanvs. Switzerland, Sweden vs. Russia, United States vs. Canada, Sunday, 2 a.m.
WOMEN
Seven medalevents will be contested, including the women's super-G, whereAnna Fenninger, Nicole Hospand Eljsabeth Goergl leadAustria's charge to win the race for the third consecutive Olympics. Bend's LaurenneRosswill also be competing in her last event of these Olympics.
Short track
Ski jumping
Snowdeard
Wnmen's1,500 Heats, 2 a.m. Men's1,000 Quarterfinals, 2:25 a.m. Women's1,500 Semifinals,3:15a.m. Men's1,000 Semifinals,3:45a.m. Wnmen's1,500 Final, 4:10 a.m. Men's1,000 Final, 4:20 a.m.
Men's Individual (large hill) First Round,9:30 a.m. Men's Individual (large hill) Final,10:30a.m.
Men's1,500,5:30a.m. Wnmen's1,500, Sunday, 6 a.m.
Women's Snnwbnard Cross Seeding, 11p.m. Women's Snnwbnard Cross Quarterfinals, Sunday, 1:15a.m. Women's Snnwbnard Cross Semifinals, Sunday, 1:30 a.m. Women's Snnwbnard Cross Finals,Sunday, 1:45 a.m.
Skeleton
Alpineskiing
Speedskating
Men's (Run3), 6:45 a.m. Men's (Run4), 8:15a.m.
Nordicskiing
Finland vs. Sweden, midnight Switzerland vs. Russia,4:30a.m. Germanyvs. FinlandSweden loser,Sunday, midnight
Women's 4x5km Relay (Classic/Free), 2 a.m. Men's 4x10kmRelay (Classic/Free), Sunday, 2 a.m.
Men's Super-G, 11 p.m.
Events through 6a.m. Sunday PST. All events streamedlive online at NBCO/ympics.com
TV schedule
SCOREBOARD
•AgTimesPST,Subjecttochange • Primetimrepl e aysareshowneachnight beginningbetweenmidnight and2 a.m. • Eventstobeairedgyeon* theWest Coast are notedwithanasterisk( )
Alpine skiing O'L
Today NBC 3-6 p.m.— Women'sShort Track, 1500Gold MedalFinal;Women'sCross-Country, 4x5km RelayGoldMedal Final; Men'sSkeleton, Gold MedalFinalRuns 0-11:30 p.m.—Women'Al spine Skiing, Super-GGoldMedal Final; Men'sShort Track, 1000 GoldMedalFinal; Men'sSpeedskating, 1500 GoldMedal Final; Men's Ski Jumping,Individual K-125LargeHil Gold MedalFinal Midnight-1 a.m.— Women'sCurling, USA vs. Swed en NBCSN Midnig th2:30a.m.— Men' sHockey,Slovakia vs.Slovenia* 2:30-4 a.m.— Women'sCross-Count ry, 4x5kmRelayGold Medal Final* * 4-7a.m.—Men'sHockey,USAvs. Russia —Men'sSkeleton,GoldMedal Final 7-9 a.m. * Runs
9a.m.-noon— Me n'sHockey,Switzerlandvs. CzechRepublic * 2-3 p.m.—HockeyEncore 3-5 p.m.— GameoftheDay:Hockey MSNBC Midnight-2:30 a.m.— Women'sHockey , * Quarterfinal 2:30-4:30 a.m.— Women 's Curling, Can ada vs. Japa n 4:30-7* a.m.— Women'sHocke y, Quarterfinal
CNBC
2-6p.m.—Wome n'sCurling, USAvs. Sweden USA 9-11:30 a.m.— Men'sHockey,Swedenvs. Laivia*
Sunday NBC
3-6 p.m.— Men's Cross-Country,4x10km RelayGold MedalFinal; Wom en's Snowboarding,SnowboardCross 7-11 p.m.— Figure Skating,Ice Dancing ShortDance;Men's AlpineSkiing, Super-G GoldMedalFinal; Women's Snowboarding, SnowboardCrossGold Medal Final; Women's Speed skating,1500 GoldMedal Final; Two-ManBobsled, 11:35 p.m.-12:35 a.m.— Men'sBiathlon, 15kmMassStart GoldMedal Final; Figure Skating,IceDancingShort DancePostgame NBCSN Midnight-2 a.m.—Men'sCurling, USAvs. Canada 2-4:16a.m. — Men'sCros s-Country,4x10km * RelayGoldMedal Final y, Sloveniavs. 416-7 a.m.— Men'sHocke *
USA
7-11 a.m.—* FigureSkating, Ice Dancing ShortDance 11a.m.-noon— Men' sBiathlon,15km Mass Start Gold Medal Final Noon-2p.m.— Hockey Encore 2-4 p.m.— GameoftheDay:Hockey MSNBC 2-6 a.m. — Women'sCurling, USAvs. Can* ada
CNBC 1-4p.m.—Men'sCurling, USAvs. Sweden
USA — Men's Hockey, Midnight-2:30 a.m. Austriavs.Norway* — Men's Hockey,Russia vs. 4:30-7 a.m. * Slovakia — Men'sHock ey, Finlandvs. 9-11:30 a.m. * Canada
I
c;enes aIOun OC; i The Associated Press KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia-
he tears started to come
T
before J oselane S antos
saw her score flash on the
massive board next to the land-
mg area during women's aerials qualifying on Friday. They did not stop when the 48.17 was posted, easily the worst
score in the 22-skier field. Her reaction was not disappointment. The tears were for a
friend who could not make it to the Sochi Winter Olympics due to injury — and for acknowledgment of her own unique journey. A year ago she was a former elite gymnast wondering what to do with the rest of her competitive Andy Wong /The Aeooc ated Press life. On Friday she was perhaps Brazil's Joselane Santos cries after her jump during freestyle skiing aerione of the most unlikely Olym- als qualifying Friday. She finished dead last after jumping off the smallest piarzs in Sochi, the first freestyle jump, but these were tears of joy, not disappointment. skier from Brazil to ever make it to the games.
The 29-year-old says she was headstand on the podium. "chosen" by Brazilian officials Innerhofer suffers from back to switch from gymnastics to pain, so much that he does not aerials. Sarztos had not skied on even train during the summer snow until last summer, when she anymore. moved to Canada to train. Her mSomehow, though, Innerhofer experience showed. Competitors tied with silver medalist Ivica have six jumps to choose from, all Kostelic for the third-fastest slavarying in height. Santos skied lom rtm in the super-combined. off the smallest, which did not Not bad for a racer who has not even have a "1" next to it, just an entered a World Cup slalom in Olympic emblem in what could more than two years. "1 didn't believe in myself," said bestbe described as aerial's version of the bunny slope. Innerhofer, who stood eighth after Santos did two simple back the downhill leg. "I didn't think I tucks, the aerials equivalent of a could race that well in slalom. It layup. Not that she minded. She
• U.S. short track skater Jessica
Smith of Melvindale, Mich., got her fiance, Mike Kooreman, into the
athletes' village on a pass that expired in the evening. "He brought m e roses and some chocolates, "
she said. "We'll probably just to go the cafeteria. It's a real hot date."
Friday was their third dating anniversary. She says they will celebratemore when theyget home. • At the curling rink, British
curling skip David Murdoch did not remember the occasion but said he should probably send something to his wife: "Thanks for reminding me."
w as more or less a mi racle."
waved the Brazilian flag as she s happenings m ade her way offthe course in Valentine' triumph. In case you are wondering:
Bronze headstand After his silver in downhill, Christof Innerhofer could not stop
• South Korea skip Kim Jisun
said she is ignoring it to train and be with her team: "It's not a spe-
Yes, people celebrate Valentine's
cial day for Us."
Day in Russia, just like in many other countries. And fancy dinners, flowers and chocolates are just as popular here as they are elsewhere.
• Am erican slopestyle ski bronze medalistNick Goepper (@NickGoepper) sent a series of tweets Friday in search of a Valentine, including one that reads: "'Ya hah-chi loob vee' 1'm looking for love- in Russian."
screaming m delight. When he added a bronze in super-combined on Friday, the Here is how some athletes and colorful Italian skier performed a others marked the day:
Men'sSuperCombined Final Ranking 1. Sandro Viletta, Switzerland,(14,1:54.88; 2, 50.32)2:45.20. 2. Ivica Kostelic, Croatia, (7, 1:54.17;3, 51.37)2:45.54. 3. Christof Innerhofer,Italy, (8, 1:54.30;3, 51.37)2:45.67. 4. Kjetil Jansrud,Norway,(1, 1;53.24;13, 53.02)2:46.26. 5. Adam Zampa, Slovakia, (27,1:56.23; 1, 50.11)2:46.34. 6. BodeMiler, UnitedStates, Easton, N.H., (12, 1:54.67; 7, 51.93) 2:46.60. 7. OndrejBank,CzechRepublic, (2,1:53.38; 16, 53.46)2:46.84. 8. Carlo Janka,Switzerland, (9,1:54.42;11, 52.46)2:46.88. 8. AkselLundSvindal, Norway,(6, 1:53.94; 12, 52.94)2:46.88. OtherU.S. Finishers 11. JaredGoldberg,Salt LakeCity, (15, 1:54.90;10, 52.39)2:47.29. 12. Ted Ligety, ParkCity, Utah,(18,1:55.17; 8, 52.22)2:47.39. NR.AndrewWeibrecht, LakePlacid, N.Y., DNF.
Medal table Through Fn'day (44medal events) G S B T
Norway
4 3 6 13
USA
4 3 3 5 5 2 1 5 4 0 2 0 2 1 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 Slovakja 1 0 Croatia 0 1 Finland 0 1 Kazakhstan 0 0 Ukraine 0 0
Netherlands 4 Russia 2 4 Canada Germany 7 Switzerland 5 Sweden 0 Austria 1 Belarus 3 China 2 France 2 Japan 1 Biathlon Slovenia 1 Women's15kmIndividual Italy 0 (Penaltiesin parentheses) 1. DaryaDomracheva, Belarus,43:19.6 (1). Czech Rep 0 2. Selina Gasparin, Switzerland,44:35.3(0). 3. Nadezhda Skardino, Belarus, 44:57.8(0). Poland 2 4. Gabriela Soukalova,CzechRepublic, Britain 1 45:17.1(2). 5. AnaisBescond, France, 45:34.0(2). South Korea 1 6. Veronika Vitkova, Czech Republic, 45:46.0(1). Australia 0 7. JuliyaDzhyma, Ukraine,45;49.9 (1). Latvia 0 8. Dlena Pidhrushna,Ukraine,45:59.5(1). U.S. Finishers 23. Hannah Dreissigacker, Morrisvige,Vt., 47:51.7(2). 34. Susan Dunklee, Barton, Vt.,48:54.1(5). 55. Sarah Studebaker, Boise,ldaho, 50:53.4
(4)
64. Lanny Bames, Durango,Colo.,53:02.2(3).
Hockey Mea CzechRepublic 4, Latvia 2 Sweden 1, Switzerland0 Canada6, Austria0 Finland 6, Norway1
13 12 12 11 10 7 7 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1
U.S. Finishers 31.NoahHoff man,Aspen,Colo.,41:02.7. 38. ErikBjornsen,Winthrop, Wash.,41:44.7. 47. Brian Gregg,Winthrop,Wash.,42:42.0. 52. KrisFreeman, Thornton, N.H.,42:54.8.
Freestyle skiing
Figure skating Men's FinalRanking (Shorl, freeprogramsinparentheses) 1. Yuzuru Hanyu,Japan(1, 101.45; 1, 178.64),280.09. 2. Patrick Chan,Canada(2, 97.52; 2, 178.10),275.62. 3. Denis Ten,Kaza khstan (9, 84.06; 3, 171.04),255.10. 4. Javier Fernand ez, Spain(3, 86.98;5, 166.94),253.92. 5. TatsukiMachida,Japan(11, 8348; 4, 169.94),253.42. 6. DaisukeTakahashi, Japan(4, 86.40;6, 164.27),250.67. 7. YanHan,China(8, 85.66; 7, 160.54), 246.20. 8. Peter Liebers,Germ any (5, 86.04; 9, 153.83),239.87. U.S. Finishers 9. Jason Brown,HighlandPark, gl. (6, 86.00;11,152.37),238.37. 12. Jeremy Abbott, Aspen,Colo. (15,72.58; 8, 160.12),232.70.
6 5 5 2 1 1 2 0 1 0 2 1 2 2 1 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 1
Women'Aerials s
Final 1. AllaTsuper,Belarus, 98.01. 2. XuMengtao, China,83.50. 3. LydiaLassila,Australia, 72.12. 4. Li Nina,China,46.02.
Skeleton Women's FinalRanking 1. Elizabeth Yarnold, Britain, 3:52.89. 2. NoellePikus-Pace, United States,Drem, Utah, 3:53.86.
3. Elena Nikitina, Russia, 3:54.30. 4. KatieUhlaender, UnitedStates, McDonald, Kan.,3:54.34. 5. DlgaPotylitsina, Russia,3:54.40. 6. MariaOrlova, Russia, 3:54.72. 7. Sarah Reid, Canada,3:54.73. 8. AnjaHuber,Germany,3:55.24.
Curling Men
Nordic skiing Men's15kmClassic 1. DarioCologna,Switzerland,38:29.7. 2.JohanDlsson,Sweden,38:58.2. 3. DanieRi l chardsson,Sweden, 39:08.5. 4.livo Niskanen, Finland,39:08.7. 5. Lukas Bauer, CzechRepublic,39:28.6. 6. ChrisAndreJespersen,Norway,39:30.6. 7. Alexander Bessmertnykh, Russia, 39:37.7. 8.AxelTeichmann,Germany,39:42.4.
Sweden 6, China5 UnitedStates8, Germany5 Canada 10,Norway4 Britain 8,Denmark6 Russia7, UnitedStates6 China 7,Norway5 Germany 8,Switzerland 7
Women
China11,SouthKorea3 Britain12,Japan3 Denmark 9, UnitedStates2 Russia 6Switzerland3
a
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN C 5
ROUNDUP
Snowboarding Continued from Cf No one else was around, and they could try their trick again, and again, and again — which they did, until they were flying 10 feet into the air and performing airborne acrobatics that might look at home in the halfpipe.
Japanese teen Hanyu
It was still the Olympics, but it could not
be more different from Tuesday, when Da-
wins gold in
vis and Bretz were on worldwide televi-
sion competing for a gold medal they had every right to believe they could win. But it was also a contest that they were
figure skating
not sure they should enter. When Davis was told he had made the team last month,
By David Pace
boarders would think and wondered aloud: Can I have a night to decide? Snowboarding, more than any other sport, has a strange, uncomfortable rela-
he worried what other well-known snow-
The Associated Press
SOCHI, Russia — Yuzuru Hanyu, a
19-year-old from Japan became the first Asian man to win an Olympic title in figure skating, one day after Russian great Evgeni Plushenko withdrew from the Sochi Winter Games because of injury. Hanyu won the gold despite two falls during his free skate routine, largely be-
tionship with the Olympics. For most athletes in Sochi, the Winter Games are the
pinnacle of a career. For most snowboarders, it is something more complex, viewed with ambivalence.
But Davis and Bretz worked hard to
Ivan Sekretarev/The Associated Press
Michael Christian Martinez of the Philippines reacts after his short program on Thursday.
earn their spots on the U.S. team, joining
the two-time Olympic champion Shaun White and newcomer Taylor Gold. They
cause of the lead he built up with his re-
cord-setting short program. Canadian Patrick Chan, skating after Hanyu, won
r oma i i
the silver despite three errors. World silver medalist Denis Ten of Kazakhstan took
bronze.
Nordic skiing
o
Switzerland's Dario Cologna won his second gold medal of the games, winning the sweat-drenched 15K race. Cologna, who had ankle surgery in November, won
understood that the Olympics offered a
inoma
e
rare chance to be a broad ambassador for their sport. And since they had worked so hard and come all this way, hey, they might as well try to win the thing. Davis and Bretz each fell on their first run, then fell again on their second. Davis finished 10th. Bretz finished 12th.
1CS
And that is when they learned just how much it meant to them.
On Friday, Davis and Bretz carried their halfpipe boards up a series of gon-
the 30K skiathlon on Sunday. Sweden's
Johan Olsson captured the silver, finishing 28.5 seconds behind Cologna. Another Swede, Daniel Richardsson, took bronze.
Alpine skiing Switzerland's Sandro Viletta finished the downhill and slalom runs in a com-
bined time of 2 minutes, 45.20 seconds. Ivica Kostelic of Croatia earned the sil-
ver, and Christof Innerhofer of Italy won bronze.
Biathlon Darya Domracheva of Belarus earned her second gold medal of the games by winning the women's 15K individual race.
Domracheva, who also won the 12.5K pursuit three days ago, missed one target before finishing in 43 minutes, 19.6 seconds. Selina Gasparin of Switzerland finished 1:15.7 behind to take silver. Nadezhda
Skardino of Belarus got the bronze.
Freestyle skiing Alla Tsuper of Belarus pulled off a stunning upset to win gold in women's aerials. Tsuper beat a field that included defend-
ing Olympic champion Lydia Lassila of Australia and two-time Olympic medalist Li Nina of China. The 34-year-old Tsuper had never finished higher than fifth in four previous Olympics. Xu Mengtao of China won silver, and Lassila earned bronze.
M
ipino figure skater ever in the Olympics.
SOCHI, Russiaichael Martinez nailed the bow at the end.
TIM
Four bows, to be ex-
DAHLBERG
act,though no one could blame him. He did not seem to want
dolas at Rosa Khutor ski resort, home
of the skiing and snowboarding events. And for several hours, they did what they
Still, Martinez was sure he
would prevail. The gangly kid with the mop of black hair had
love most. They took a good friend into
the mountains, explored new terrain and rode without care. "Oh my gosh, Greg," Davis said as the newlyconstructed course for snowboard cross, filled with jumps and banked
to, because this has been his
to leave the ice Thursday night, and no one was going to blame more to give. "We're hoping he makes it him for that, either. This was not the shopping and some companies support mall in the Philippines, where him," his mother, Maria Teresa he learned his jumps and spins Martinez, said. "Otherwise he while trying to avoid parents will just have to stop. We cannot and their kids skating by on afford it anymore. It's just so exfamily outings. This was the pensive and we can't do another Iceberg Skating Palace and this four years." was the Olympics, where the In a sequined and braided teenagerwas desperate for the black and white outfit donatskate of his young life. ed by a designer in New York He had less than three min- who saw his Facebook plea for utes to prove himself in the proper Olympic attire, Martinez short program and make it to took the biggest stage of his life. the men's free skate final. He acknowledged the polite If he did not, he might have to applause, gliding to the center
life ever since he walked by the rink in the Manila mall at the age of 9, saw the skaters, and declared to his mother that this
curves, revealed itself beneath the gondo-
la. "Any way they'll let us take a lap?"
was something he wanted to do. "I WILL make the free skate,"
Maybe they could sneak on with their
he declared after practice the night before. "Because I am prepared." Preparation, though, counts for only so much. So on his Facebook page, Martinez asked his friends to"Please pray for me." In 2minutes and 39 seconds, Martinez showed he belonged. And now all there was to do
practice bibs from halfpipe, Bretz replied. "I don't know what they can do to us," he added. "They can't take away our medals." "This is true," Davis said. By Friday, the feelings still came and went, swinging between disappointment and indiff erence. For months, they had treated the Olympics with ambivalence,
saying it would be a great experience to go (Bretz was on the 2010 team in Van-
was to wait. Suddenly, the math was start-
couver, where he also finished 12th, but
ing to look good. It was not offiperhaps working for his fam- pose, and then began the most cial yet, but Martinez had made ily raising vegetables to sell to important skate of his career. it in. "I was so nervous," he said. "I feel like a real champion," Japan. The expenses had become "This was such a big event." he said. too much. The family home had He had reason to be. At 17, For one night at the Olymalreadybeen mortgaged to pay he is the youngest skater in pics, that is exactly what the kid for his skating. There was no the program and the only Fil- from the mall was. be thinking about the next step,
not be a big deal if they did not. Then they
of the ice. He paused, struck a
went, and it all went worse than they expected, forcing an internal debate about
how much it really meant. "I've been more disappointed in myself than I expected," Davis said.
"It's a terrible feeling," Bretz said. "We rode so well all season."
Skeleton Lizzy Yarnold of Britain won gold in women's skeleton, beating rival Noelle Pikus-Pace of the United States by a full second. It was Britain's first gold medal
in Sochi. Winning the silver allowed Pikus-Pace to reach her goal of closing out her career with an Olympic medal. Elena
SPEEDSKATING
Nikitina of Russia won the bronze.
U.S. speedskatersofficially abandon newsuit
Curling
By Jared S. Hopkins
China and Britain won close games in the men's tournament to move into a threeway tie with Sweden atop the 10-country
field. China beat Norway 7-5, while Britain topped Denmark 8-6. In the women's tournament, China beat South Korea, Britain
defeated Japan, Russia beat Switzerland, and Denmark topped the U.S., all but eliminating the Americans from the playoffs.
Hockey Canada topped Austria 6-0 in the pre-
liminary rounds of men's hockey. Also, Sweden beat Switzerland 1-0, the Czech Republic downed Latvia 4-2, and Finland
defeated Norway 6-1.
I
through the end of the games. perhaps his final individual OlymPressure to make the changebuilt pic race. SOCHI, Russia — U.S. speedskat- this week in the wake of the team's As coaches and skaters continued ers will resume competition today disastrous performance thus far. No to scramble through the week, they in an older racing suit from Under U.S. speedskater has medaled, in- looked at everything from training Armour, abandoning the appar- cluding the world's top-ranked skat- programs to their diet regimen. So el-maker's much-hyped, high-tech ers Shani Davis and Heather Rich- far, only the suits appear to be ripe Mach 39 suit that debuted at these ardson. The suit became the leading for change. Olympics. suspect for the poor showing. The Mach 39 — developed with US Speedskating earlier sought Davis said Friday he would not defense contractor Lockheed Marapproval from the International be distracted by the controversy tin — was marketed by Under ArSkating Union to revert to suits surrounding Under Armour's latest mour as the fastest ever in the sport. worn during World Cup competi- racing suit. After a tuneup in the 500 It was kept under wraps until after tion this season. By ISU rules, uni- meters on Monday and disappoint- the U.S. Olympic team was set folMatt Dunham /The Associated Press forms must be consistent through- ing eighth-place finish in the 1,000 lowing December's trials. They Shani Davis of the United States out a team, meaning it is all in for on Wednesday, he is optimistic were not used in competition prior puts on the prototype of a new suit either the old suit or the Mach 39 about his chances today the 1,500, to coming to Sochi. Friday. Chicago Tribune
I
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s ee'
MADE I4 AMERICA
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2013
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C6
TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
PREP ROUNDUP
PREP SWIMMING
District championships onthe line Lava Bearssprint away from Ravens inmarathon Bulletin staff report REDMOND — Wyatt Beau-
marchais hit two 3-pointers in the second overtime of Bend
with execution in th e t h ird
quarter." Madras 56, Molalla 50: MOLALLA — The White Buffaloes shot better than 57percent
High's boys basketball game against Ridgeview on Friday from the field, including a 5-ofnight, sparking the Lava Bears 12 clip from 3-point range, and to a 76-68 double-overtime vic- limited Molalla to just 38 pertory over the host Ravens. cent shooting to pick up their C onnor Scott led a b a l - second Class 4A Tri-Valley anced Bend offense, ending Conference win in three tries. the night with a team-high 15 JeredPichett e paced Madras points. Beaumarchais added (2-5 TVC, 9-12 overall) with 14 points, J.J. Spitler recorded 18 points, while Reshaun Hol12 and Bryan Holliday add- liday and Austin Rauschened 10 points. Seven different burg each chipped in with nine Lava Bears scored at least five points. points. Central Linn 59, Culver 16: Bend (12-6 overall) trailed CULVER — The Bulldogs by 10 points with six min- closed their season with a
Bulletin staff report Looking for its 14th straight girls swim-
p.m. Individual and team relay winners automatically qualify for the Class 5A swimming
ming district title, Summit boasted seven first-
state championships next week at Mt. Hood
Community College in Gresham. Remain-
half, but Sisters came back
place finishers in eight events in the preliminary races of the Class 5A Special District 1 girls championships on Friday at Bend's Juniper Swim & Fitness Center. Mackenzie Halligan led the Storm with top
to outscore the Huskies by 11 points in the third en route to
honors inthe 200- and 500-yard freestyles, while Elli Ferrin took the 50 free and the 100
left the Outlaws down by four points at the end of the first
a Class 4A Sky-Em League
victory. "We had a terrible first
half," Sisters coach Julianne Horner said. "We just couldn't find our groove. But we came
back in the third and found our rhythm." Jacobie Petterson led the Outlaws (2-5 Sky-Em, 6-13 overall) with 14 points, while Cierra Mann had 13 points. Illladras 60, Molalla 40: MA-
DRAS — Venessa Esquivel poured in 22 points and Mariah Stacona scored 17 to lead
Madras to a comfortable home utes left in regulation before Class 2A Tri-River Conference victory leading into a big week storming back and outscoring loss, their sixth straight set- of Class 4A Tri-Valley ConRidgeview 15-6 in the fourth back. Culver ends its season ference action for the White quarter to force overtime. Both 2-14 in league play and 3-20 Buffaloes. Third-place Madras teams scored six points in the overall. plays at league-leading La first extra period before BeauGilchrist 61, Prospect 30: Salle on Tuesday, then hosts second-place Gladstone on Fri-
marchais' two 3-pointers secured the victory in the second OT. Jack Bowman paced the
GILCHRIST — Trinton Koch
Ravens (9-10) with 18 points and four assists. George Mendazona posted a game-high 19 points and Carson Manselle chipped in 16 points and six rebounds for Ridgeview. The Lava Bears, who saw their eight-game winning
ley League schedule with a lopsided home win. Koch hit
and five assists for the Buffs (5-2 TVC, 14-7 overall), and
three 3-pointers for Gilchrist,
Stacona had seven assists and
streak end on Tuesday with a 55-32 loss to Mountain View,
hit 19 of their 33 free throws Friday night. Ridgeview connected on 9 of 16 foul shots. In other prep events Friday: BOYS BASKETBALL
scored a game-high 29 points as the Grizzlies closed out
day. Esquivel, who scored 10 of her points in the third quar-
their Class 1A Mountain Val-
ter, finished with six rebounds
which also got 12 points from three 3-pointers. Janae Adams Brendon Wolf and 10 from added 11 points for Madras, inHunter Nelson. The Grizzlies cluding seven in the first quar(8-3 MVL, 14-7 overall) ad- ter to help the Buffs take an vance to a home MVL play-in early lead. Cottage Grove 49, La Pine game against an opponent to be determined. That loser-out
game is setforW ednesday at7
came from behind in the sec-
p.m., and the winner advances
ond half to win the battle for
to the four-team league tournament next Friday and Saturday at Oregon Institute of
Mountain View 75, Crook Technology in Klamath Falls. C ounty 48: PRINEVILLE Grant Lannin scored a game-
37: LA PINE — Cottage Grove
Triad 64, North Lake 28: KLAMATH FALLS — North
Conference victory. The Pan-
thers (0-6 IMC, 2-17 overall) Cottage Grove 55, La Pine battled in the third quarter to 50: LA PINE — The Lions' outscore Summit (5-2, 15-6) by Brody Gipson got hot in the two points, but Sarah Reeves fourth quarter and rallied Cot- proved to much. The Storm tage Grove past the Hawks
freshman led the Storm with
off the bench in the second half
rer led the Outlaws with 14 points and 10 rebounds in the
erance had 16 points to pace
and Hayden Martinez added 12 points for Sisters, which
second quarter to grab a 2220 halftime lead. But Cottage
the night on the Oregon Coast
in Toledo, the Bulldogs rallied to top the Cobras and qualify for the Tri-River Confer-
enceleague playoffs.Hannah Lewis scored a career-high 22 points, Raeanne Slaght added
Bulldogs trailed 29-24 at half-
dropped to 1-6 in league play. bounds and seven steals, and Sweet Home outscoredSisters Sarah Bailey recorded eight (3-17 overall) 13-4 in the third points, six rebounds and four quarter. "We played a great steals. first half," said Sisters coach Sisters 49, Sweet Home 42: Rand Runco. "We struggled SWEET HOME — A slow start
Storm
the Panthers 14-3.
Continued from C1
I saac Derman
Triad 53, North Lake 37: KLAMATH FALLS — Ken-
dra Murphy scored 20 points and grabbed 29 rebounds,
Near the end of the half, m ade o n e
and 11 of them scored.
halftime.
Kyle Cornett and N i ck Moyer led Summit with eight
dominate in the third quar-
The Storm continued to ter, as Chris Reeves' 3-pointer gave them a 37-20 lead near
top the Timberwolves on the road. North Lake is now 7-4 in
Mountain Valley League play and 13-7 overall.
3-pointers.
The Panthers were playing without Michael Belmontes, one oftheir leading scorers, who was sidelined for the second straight game for what Redmond coach Jon Corbett said was a violation of team
rules.
"The energy level was down, and just seemed to keep getting down," said there's not much differentia- energy was really good, and Corbett. "The overall energy tion between our kids," Fra- we were patient enough to of the gym just wasn't quite zier said. "We're lucky to have run our offense against that there. We had good energy a really deep squad of guys zone (defense) and wait for coming out in the first quarwe trust. It's a fun way to play the shots that we w anted," ter, but the second quarter we when no one cares who gets Frazier s a id. "Defensively, started to slow down a little the credit and everyone's just we really wanted to stop their but, and then we didn't come out there playing hard." penetration. I thought we did out of the locker room (after Summit (3-4 IMC, 11-9 a good job of keeping them halftime) very well either. We overall) started slow as Red- out of the key, which was key never really picked it back up mond took a 10-8 lead by the for us getting stops." until the middle of the fourth end of the first quarter. But Taylor Brown led Redmond quarter.... Tough night." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, the Storm turned the tide in (0-6, 3-15) with 10 points, the second period, outscoring and Brandon Benson added mmoricalibendbulletin.com
ed five rebounds and Moyer dished out four assists. "We're really deep and
the end of the period. "In the third quarter our
filled by the next-fastest times from district fi-
Wrestling
wrestlers to the semifinals. "We're trying to get these kids to state, and we're trying
Continued from C1 Spring logged a 37-second to win this tournament." fall in the first round of the
Mitch Willett spent a total
106-pound bracket after each
breezed through the first two rounds. Five other Cougars earned spots in the semis to help Mountain View settle
138-pound bracket and fol- of 1 minute, 48 seconds on lowed with a pin early in the the mat in recording two falls second period over Summit's to pace Redmond, which also Dustin Reyes. advanced eight w restlers At 145, Haines picked up to the semifinals to f i nish back-to-back falls to earn a the first day in fourth place matchup against Redmond with 108 points. Hickey also High's John Hickey in the spent limited time wrestling, semifinals. logging a pair of pins in just "Having that many kids in 2:09. the semis, it's a great thing," Mountain View has Con-
into fifth place, just half a
said Bend coach Luke Lar-
ner Duhn and Zack Howe
win, whose team sent eight
on opposite sides of the
a.m., and the weight-class finals get underway at 3 p.m.
point behind the Panthers,
heading into today's action. Jacob Thompson (160 pounds), Noah Yunker (195) and Trevor Betcher (220) are still alive for individual titles for Summit, which is seventh
as a team with 55 points. The regional championships continue today at 9:30
PREP SCOREBOARD Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference Madras 56,Molalla 50 Madras (56) —JeredPichete18, Holliday9, Rauschenburg 9, Sullivan8, Bryant5, Rodriguez3, Leriche 2, Rehwinkel z Totals 243-6 56. MolallaI50) —TylerGengler19, J.Gengler7, Wolfe 6,Daniels6, Green5, Aylett 5, Alexander2. Totals 18 5-950. Madras 13 16 14 13 — 56 Molalla 17 13 11 9 — 50 Three-pointgoals — Madras:Pichette,Holliday, Rauschenburg,Bryant, Rodriguez;Molala: T. Gengler 5, wolfe2,Daniels z
Boys basketball Class 5A IntermountainConference Summit 53, Redmond35 Redmond(35) —Taylor Brown10, Benson9, Andrews 6, Moss4,Winters 2,Troutman2, Willingham ZTotals12 7-1335. Summit (53) —KyleCornett 8, NickMoyer8, Cherry 6,0.Garcia6, Hurley5, Derman5, Shelton 5, Michalski3,Reeves3, J.Garcia 2, Mccormickz Totals1813-1953. Redmond 10 3 7 15 — 35 Summit 8 14 17 14 — 53 Three-poingoal t s— Redmond: Benson2, Moss, Andrews;Summit: Cornett2, Michalski,Reeves.
Class1A IntermountainHvbrid Mountain Valley League Bend76, Ridgeview88(2 OT) Gilchrisl 61, Prospect30 Bend (76) —Connor Scott15, Beaumarchais14, Prospect (30) — Darrin Stilwagon19, Bliss5, Spitler12,Holliday10,Parsons9, Robinson7,John- Castro 4, GainesZ Totals 107-7 30. son5,Kersley4,HarmesonZ Totals241943 76. Gilchrisl (61) — TrintonKoch29, Wolf12, Ridgeview (68) —GeoraeMen dazona 19, Boone4, wible 4, Archerz Totals 28 Bowman18,Manselle16, O'Nea15,Alvarez4, Stan- Nelson10, 2-10 61. ton 3,Stiles3.Totals 25 9-16 68. 12 5 6 7 — 30 Bend 26 5 1 4 15 6 10 —76 Prospect Gilchrist 16 10 24 11 — 61 Ridgeview 16 21 17 6 6 2 — 6 8 Three-point goal s — Prosp ect: Stilwagon2, Bliss; Three-poingoal t s— Bend: Beaumarchais 3,Spitler Gilchrist:Koch3. 2, Holliday 2, Johnson,Robinson;Ridgeview: Mendaz ona3,Bowman2,Manselle,Stanton.
Class 4A Sky-EmLeague Sisters 49,SweetHome42 Sisters I49) —JacobiePetterson14, Mann13, Hudson6, Spear6, Meeter 4, Arruda4, Moore2, Bachmeire ZTotals1715-2349. SweetHome(42) —HaleyKent 15, Miler11, Brendle 7, Gilespie 5,stockman2, porter z Totals 1310-20 42. Sisters 6 10 19 14 — 49 SweetHome 1 1 9 8 1 4 — 42 Three-pointgoals— Sisters:none;Sweet Home: Gillespie,Miler. Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference Madras 60,Molalla 40 Molalla (40) —Josie Child 13,H.Satyna7, Petitta 6,Elliott 6, Rieskamp5, K.Satyna2, Marr1. Totals 15 10-1640. MadrasI60) —venessaEsquivel 22,Stacona 17, J.Adams11, wolfe4, whipple4, suppahz Totals 22 12-1960. Molalla 12 7 9 12 — 40 Madras 15 10 16 19 — 60 Three-pointgoals—Molala: none;Madras:Stacona 3,Esquivel.
Class 2A Tri-RiverConference
Girls basketball
Intermountain Hybrid Mountain View75, CrookCounty 48 Mountain View(75) —GrantLannin16, Holly 1, Haugen11,Catell 7,Vance6, Kurzynowski6, A(bin 5,Hielm4,Houston3, Roth3, Vansise2Tolals 22 21-29 75.
Class 5A IntermountainConference Summit 71, Redmond37 Summit (71) —SarahReeves30, Heinly 20, Cornett 8,Hasenoehrl 4, Naegele4, Gordon2, Char crook county(48)—Anrewsofich15, Kessi 2,Huntsman1.Totals2612-1871. 9, Bartels8, Kee7, Kilthau 3,Hernandez2,Parker2, Redmond(37) — Chantel Dannis11, Sophia Harper2. Totals1710-21 48. amilton11,Edwards 5, Joyce4, Lennie3, HenMountain View 24 13 19 19 — 75 H dricks 2, Toledo1.Totals1112-21 37. Crook County 1 8 1 0 13 7 — 48 Summit 22 25 13 11 — 71 Three-pointgoals— MountainView:Holy 2, Hau- Redmond 8 7 15 7 — 3 7 en 2,Roth,Catell, Albin.CrookCounty: Sofich Three-pointgoals— Sum mit: Heinley4, Reeves3, , Bartels,Kessi. Cornett;Redmond:Hamilton 2, Edwards. Class4A Intermountain Hybrid Sky-EmLeague CrookCounly51, MountainView44 Sweet Home 48, Sisters 35 Crook County (51) — Kimme r Severance16, Sisters (35) — Justin Harrer14, Martinez12, Schaab 4, Larson2,Stadeli 2,Adamst Totals not Malott11,Smith10,Bannon5, Sappington 5, Ovens available. 4. Totals13 24-36 51. Sweet Home(48) — Kauffman16, Judy14, Mountain View(44) —JessieGoetz13, BaiFunk 6,Daniels 3.Totals not available. ley 8, H.Goetz6, Vander Zwiep6,Serbus4, TsourSisters 10 11 4 10 — 35 mas3, McClai2, n WarrenZ Totals1412-1744. Sweet Home 7 16 13 12 — 48 Crook County 1 2 10 10 19 — 51 Three-pointgoals —Sisters: none;Sweet Home: Mountainview 13 7 14 10 — 44 Kauff man3,Judy,Daniels,Funk. Three-point goals — CrookCounty: Severance; MountainView:J.Goetz2, Tsourmas. Class 4A skr-EmLeague Class4A CotlageGrove55, LaPine50 Sky-EmLeague Cotlage Grove (55) — BrodvGipson24, Cotlage Grove 49, La Pine 37 Mueller 16,King6, Boyce6, Campbell 3.Totals cotlage Grove(49) —connerBorigo16,Erner 20 8-16 55. ell 8,Dean8, Sisco3.Totals205-1149. La Pine I50) —SamWieber 12, ZackSmith 14, Cardw La Pine (37) —KatieMickel22, Boen10, 12, Ramirez f0, Brown6, Tumsplenty 6, Taylor 2, Glenn 4,Abraham tTotals156-1037. Johnson zTotals 214-8 50. Grove 1 6 4 14 15 — 49 Cotlage Grove 9 1 611 19 — 55 Cotlage La Pine 19 12 6 13 — 50 La Pine 10 12 8 7 — 3 7 Three-point goals — CottageGrove:Gipson5, Three-poingoal t s—CottageGrove: Erner 3, Sisco; Boyce2; LaPine:Brown2, Ramirez. La Pine:K.Mickel.
Culver 50, Central Linn 41 Central Linn I41) —Belcastr017, McLaughlin 10, Lacosta7, Rarmirez4, Phearson4, Kaczmaerck 1. Totals1213-25 41. Culver (50) —HannahLewis 22, Slaght11, Frilz 8, Hoke 5, Retano2, JohnsonZ Totals 19 12-25 50. CenealLinn 8 21 0 1 2 — 41 Culver 12 12 13 13 — 50 Three-poingoal t s—Central Linn;Belcastro2, McLaughlinLacostaCulver none
Class1A Mountain Valley League Prospect37, Gilchrist 26 Prosped (37) —HaleeHedgpeth 22, H.Vanwormer 8, B.vanwormer3, Bailey 2, Rainesz Totals14 8-16 37. Gilchrist I26) — Cassa ndraBlumI1, Longbotham7, Berling 4, Lowell 2,smith z Totals 6 14-33 26. Prospect 6 6 7 1 8 — 37 Gilchrisl 6 6 4 1 0 — 26 Three-point goals — Prospect: H. VanW ormer; Gilchrist: none.
mplements 1fee,e '3nkerL e~J 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com
but the Cowgirls could not
nine points, including two
No Summit player scored of his four steals and conin double figures, but 14 verted a three-point play to Storm players got in the game give Summit a 22-13 lead at
points apiece. Cornett add-
Blum paced the Grizzlies with
Crook County, which snapped 11 points. Mountain View's Jessie Goetz finished with 13 points, six re-
The district meet continues today at Juni-
per with championship races starting at 12:15 nals throughout the state.
outscored the Lions 12-4 in the
to score four points and grab time but outscored the Cobras points and nine assists, Zach eight rebounds. 13-0 in the third quarter to take Smith had 12 points and eight Crook County 51, Mountain control of the game. rebounds, and Tyress Turns- View 44: A total of 18 made Prospect 37, Gilchrist 26: plenty recorded six points and free throws in the fourth quar- GILCHRIST — The Grizzlies five blocks in the loss. La Pine ter gave the Cowgirls (7-13) an were tied with Prospect at the (2-4 Sky-Em, 10-10 overall) Intermountain Hybrid victory end of the first half, but strugled 37-36 after three quarters over Mountain View (5-14). gled with t h ei r f r ee-throw but Cottage Grove outscored "We had too many turnovers," shooting after the breakbefore the Hawks 19-13 in the final Mountain View coach Steve suffering a Class IA Mounperiod. Riper said. "We weren't re- tain Valley loss. Gilchrist (1-10 Sweet Home 48, Sisters 35: bounding and then we were MVL, 4-15 overall) was 14 of SWEET HOME — Justin Har- fouling them." Kimmer Sev- 33 from the line. Cassandra Class 4A Sky-Em League loss a six-game skid with the win.
In other Friday action: SWIMMING
Central Oregon swimmers aim for state: Madras, Ridgeview and Sisters each wrap up Mountain View's Teresa Cobb broke up district championship meets today with hopes the Summit sweep by placing first in the 100 of reaching next week's Class 4A/3A/2A/1A breaststroke prelim. state championships. The White Buffaloes, Summit's Tommy Brewer (50 freestyle and whose boys team is the reigning state cham100 breaststroke) and Bend High's Ben Brock- pion, conclude the Special District 2 champiman (200 individual medley and 100butterfly) onships at Mt. Hood Community College in each recorded two first-place finishes in the Gresham, while Ridgeview and Sisters comboys prelims, as did Mountain View's Bran- pete at the Special District 3 meet at South don Deckard. Afterthe Cougar seniorearned Albany High School. Individual and team top honors in the 200 free, he finished the 100 relay winners automatically qualify for the backstroke in 50.65 seconds, shattering the state championships at Mt. Hood Community previous district record by 1.6 seconds. College. Any remaining opening lanes will be
standings. The host Hawks
in Class 4A Sky-Em League 30 points, and Sarah Hein- 11 points and Alysha Fritz conplay. Gipson, who led all scor- ly added 20. Chantel Dannis tributed eight for Culver (6-10 ers with 24 points, scored 15 posted 11 points, 10 rebounds TRC, 9-15 overall), which will in the fourth quarter. "We lost and two steals for the Pan- play East Linn Christian in track of him," La Pine coach thers, and Emily Joyce came Lebanon on Wednesday. The Kent Wieber said. Sam Wieber led the Hawks with 12
throughout the state.
backstroke prelims.
sole possession of first place in the Class 4A Sky-Em League
high 16 points and Davis Holly Lake fell to Triad in a Class Groveovertook La Pine in the added 12 points and five as- IA Mountain Valley League third period and pulled away sistsas the Cougars cruised game despite Ethan Murphy's to improve to 6-1 in league to their 13th victory in their 12 points. Matthew Henkel play. The Hawks, who had lost past 14 games. Eleven different finished with five rebounds for 54-21 at Cottage Grove on Jan. players scored for Mountain the Cowboys, who dropped to 24, were led by Katie Mickel View i n t h e I n t ermountain 4-7 in conference play and 6-13 with a game-high 22 points and McKenna Boen with 10 Hybrid contest. The Cougars overall. (15-3) dominated the game deGIRLS BASKETBALL points and six rebounds. La fensively, scoring 30 points off Summit 71 , R e dmondPine (5-2 Sky-Em, 12-9 over31 turnovers. Andrew Sofich 37: REDMOND — S u mmit all) is now tied for second place paced Crook County with 15 jumped to a 14-point lead over with Elmira, where the Hawks points and six rebounds. The Redmond in the first quar- will play on Tuesday. Culver 50, Central Linn 41: Cowboys (2-17) are mired in t er and extended that to a an 11-game losing streak, their 32-point halftime advantage CULVER — Despite traveling last win coming on Dec. 28 in in a Class 5A Intermountain most of the day after spending a 41-33 victory over Warrenton in Astoria.
ing open lanes at the state meet will be filled by the next-fastest times from district meets
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C7 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
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S&P 500 ~ 1,838.63 ~
NASDAQ 4,244.03
16,154.39
TOdap
1 880
Saturday, February 15, 201 4
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U.S. homebuilders lost a little confidence in the housing market last month, but generally remained upbeat. The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo builder sentiment index dipped to 56 in January from December. Readings above 50 indicate more builders view sales conditions as good, rather than poor. This month'ssurvey is due out Tuesday. Economists project that the February reading will show builders are feeling more confident.
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Vol. (in mil.) 2,923 1,826 Pvs. Volume 3,183 2,176 Advanced 2069 1354 Declined 1025 1209 New Highs 1 50 1 3 5 New Lows 13 10
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Hyatt Hotels S
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 16175.55 15985.39 16154.39 +126.80 DOW Trans. 7325.27 7270.01 7306.69 +24.71 DOW Util. 519.56 514.17 519.51 +3.26 NYSE Comp. 10295.78 10213.25 10282.53 +53.96 NASDAQ 4250.91 4225.75 4244.03 +3.36 S&P 500 1841.65 1825.59 1838.63 +8.80 S&P 400 1347.20 1339.02 1346.86 +5.19 Wilshire 5000 19692.84 19540.37 19665.77 +80.08 Russell 2000 1149.90 1142.67 1149.21 +1.42
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DOW
+ -.05 '
The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose Friday to close out its best weekly performance of the year. It was the sixth time that the index rose over the last seven days, and energy stocks led the way. The gains came amid a mixed set of reports on the economy. Industrial production fell in January, contrary to economists' expectations for continued growth, after harsh winter weather kept factories closed. That followed reports earlier in the week showing an unexpected slowdown in retail sales and a pickup in jobless claims. A separate report on Friday, though, showed that consumer sentiment was higher than expected in February.
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NorthwestStocks 52
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Close: 16,154.39 Change: 126.60 (0.8%)
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$1,319.00
16,200" 10 DAYS 15760"
Close: 1,838.63 Change: 8.60 (0.5%)
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NAHB/Wens Fargo Housing 58
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10 YR T NOTE 273% •
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10 DAYS 1,800 "
Builders' confidence
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
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Close:$52.85L3.46 or 7.0% Thanks to higher room rates and improved occupancy, the hotel operator said that its fourth-quarter net income doubled. $55 50
vvTW
Close:$22.107-8.48 or -27.7L Free diet apps and activity monitors are hurting the weight-loss program operator. CEO Jim Chambers expects a challenging 2014. $35 30 25
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PE: 4 4.1 Vol.:9.4m (B.sx avg.) P E: 5 . 4 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$1.25 b Yie l d : 3.2%
Trulia
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Weight Watchers
TRLA Close:$29.97 V-6.46 or -17.7% The online real estate listings company said that its fourth-quarter loss widened from the year before as marketing costs rose. $40
Campbell Soup
CPB Close:$43.01 L2.04 or 5.0% The soup maker said that its second-quarter profit and revenue came in above Wall Street expectations thanks to a later Thanksgiving. $44
Alaska Air Group A LK 48.24 ~ 82.08 81. 4 9 + 2.03+2.6 L L L + 11. 1 +6 1 .3 95 5 1 1 1 . 00f Avista Corp AVA 25.36 — 0 29.62 29 .84 + . 2 2 +0.7 L L L +5.9 +16. 2 25 3 19 1. 2 7f -.05 -0.3 W W L +7.3 +37 . 9 87488 17 0 . 0 4 Bank of America B A C 10 . 98 ~ 17.42 1 6 . 7 0 Source: FactSet Barrett Business BB S I 3 9 .71 ~ 102. 2 0 6 2 .7 3 + . 31 +0.5 V V V - 32.4 +49.5 69 26 0. 7 2 42 35 Boeing Co BA 7 4 .27 ~ 144. 5 7 13 0.16 + .66 +0.5 L w v -4.6 +76.1 4503 22 2.92f Clo Iip on the Fed T T 30 40 Cascade Bancorp C A C B 4 . 31 ~ 7.00 4.82 -.09 -1.8 L -7.8 -23.6 40 4 W W -6.6 +2 6.5 1 4 4 2 1 0 . 48f ColumbiaBnkg COL B 19.56 ~ 2 8.5 6 25.67 -.04 -0.2 L On Wednesdaythe Federal N D J F N D J F L W -2.3 +4 9.9 8 0 27 1. 0 0 f 80.04 76 . 97 -.55 -0.7 L Reserve releases minutes from a C olumbia Sportswear COLM 50.18 ~ 52-week range 52-week range Costco Wholesale CO ST 98.95 ~ 126.1 2 11 6.10 + .29 + 0.3 L W V -2.5 +15.2 1500 2 5 1 . 24 two-day meeting of its policymak$2$.$$ ~ $$2 .71 $$$.$0~ $4 $.$$ Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 6.52 ~ 18.70 15. 7 3 +. 0 1 +0.1 L W W -4.2 +134.3 5 2 cc ers last month. Vol.:13.0m (7.6x avg.) PE : 199.8 Vol.:5.0m (1.8x avg.) PE :2 1 . 8 FLIR Systems F LIR 23.00 ~ 34.19 30. 8 9 +. 0 4 +0.1 L W L +2.6 +16 . 0 1 371 20 0 .40f At the meeting, the panel Mkt. Cap:$1.12 b Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$13.55 b Yie l d: 2.9% — 0 30.13 30.02 +. 1 9 +0.6 L Hewlett Packard H PQ 1 6 . 57 L L +7.3 +78. 7 9 4 05 1 1 0. 5 8 decidedto pushed ahead witha 6.03 14.37 +.12+0.8 L W V - 3.6 +27.4 1 2 3 d d 0 . 24 plan to reduce the central bank's Home FederalBncp ID HOME 10.84 ~ 1 O ccidental Petroleum O X Y J.M. Smucker SJM Intel Corp I NTC 20.10 ~ 27.12 24.7 6 +. 0 6 +0 .2 L V V -4.6 +20.5 19578 13 0 .90 bond-buying program, citing the Close: $95.76L3.49 or 3.8% Close: $91.81 V-3.33 or -3.5% Keycorp KEY 9.14 ~ 14.14 12. 9 2 + . 0 4 +0.3 L w v -3.7 +38.6 8588 13 0 . 22 U.S. economy's growing strength Kroger Co The oil and gas company said that it The food maker said it is facing K R 2 7 .64 ~ 43.85 37.3 8 +. 2 9 +0 .8 L L V -5.4 +32.5 2631 13 0 . 66 plans to spin off its California assets more peanut butter competitors and The Fed also reaffirmed a plan to Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 — 0 7.70 7 . 7 3 + . 3 6 +4.9 L L L +40. 8 +4 5 .7 1 775 c c into a separate publicly traded comconsumers are shying away from arkeep short-term rates at record LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ 22.55 1 7.9 5 -.12 -0.7 L L V -3.0 -16.4 3687 15 pany. tificiagy sweetened jams. lows. MDU Resources MDU 23 .10 — o 33.74 33 .98 + . 28 +0.8 L L L +11. 2 +4 4 .4 46 5 2 3 0. 7 1 $100 $110 MentorG raphics M EN T 1 3.21 ~ 24.31 20. 5 4 +. 0 5 +0.2 L W V - 14.7 +19.2 4 8 5 2 3 0 . 1 8 95 Microsoft Corp M SFT 2 7 .23 ~ 38.98 37. 6 2 +. 0 1 ... L L L +0.6 +37. 6 30874 14 1 . 1 2 100 90 Nike Inc 8 N KE 53.27 ~ 80.26 75.0 7 +. 2 0 +0 .3 L L V -4.5 +3 8.8 2858 26 0 . 9 6 NordstromInc J WN 52.16 ~ 63.72 5 8. 4 7 -.09 -0.2 V W V - 5.4 + 8 . 2 8 6 6 1 6 1 . 2 0 N D J F N D J F Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ 46.37 42.3 9 +. 1 4 +0 .3 L L V -1.0 - 3.9 12 4 2 0 1 . 8 4 52-week range 52-week range PaccarInc PCAR 45.81 — o 60.17 61 .54 +1.69 +2.8 L L L +4.0 +28 . 1 3 7 63 1 9 0 .80a $77.2$ ~ $$ $.42 $$7. $0 ~ $114.72 Planar Systms PLNR 1.55 4$— 2. 9 3 2.34 +.0 3 +1 .3 L W W -7.9 +2 8.0 2 2 dd Vol.: 8.5m (2.2x avg.) PE: 13.1 Vol.:4.3m (4.8x avg.) P E: 17.3 Plum Creek P CL 41.63 ~ 54.62 42. 9 6 +. 4 5 +1.1 L Y V -7.6 - 7.5 55 6 3 2 1 . 76 Mkt. Cap:$77.19 b Yie l d: 2.7% Mkt.Cap:$9.65 b Yield: 2.5% Prec Castparts PCP 180.06 ~ 274. 9 6 26 0.44 -3.43 -1.3 L V V - 3.3 +42.7 1110 2 3 0 . 12 Safeway Inc S WY 20.00 ~ 36.90 33. 6 5 +. 5 9 +1.8 L L L 43.3 +63 . 1 3 3 60 1 9 0 . 8 0 Men's Wearhouse MW CafePress PRSS Schnitzer Steel SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 3.3 2 26.58 +.15+0.6 L V V -18.6 - 8.9 25 0 d d 0 . 75 Close:$44.07 V-2.46 or -5.3% Close:$5.26V-1.38 or -20.8% Sherwin Wms SHW 153.94 ~ 198. 4 7 19 1.17 + . 75 + 0.4 L W L 44.2 +16 . 3 73 7 2 6 2. 0 0 The men's retailer's stock fell after ri- The online seller of personalized TStancorpFncl S FG 38.16 ~ 69.11 6 5. 2 6 -.16 -0.2 L V V -1.5 +67.8 1 3 7 1 3 1 . 10f val Jos. A Bank, which it is trying to shirts, coffee mugs and other products, reported fourth-quarter results StarbucksCp S BUX 52.52 ~ 82.50 76.0 3 +. 3 4 +0 .5 L L W -4.3 +35.5 4071 3 1 1 . 04 buy, said it is acquiring clothing brand Eddie Bauer. that missed expectations. Triquint Semi TQNT 4.31 — 0 9.44 9 .1 9 -.12 - 1.3 L L L +10. 2 +9 0. 8 1 299 d d $55 $7 Umpqua Holdings UM P Q 11.45 ~ 1 9.65 1 7. 1 1 -.06 -0.3 W W W -10.6 +35.4 8 9 5 1 9 0.60a Sluggish start? US Bancorp U SB 31.99 ~ 41.86 40.7 9 +. 5 2 +1 .3 L V L + 1.0 +21. 3 6 2 93 1 4 0. 9 2 50 WashingtonFedl WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 4.3 5 22.22 +.42+ 1.9 L W W - 4.6 +22.1 1 9 7 1 5 0 . 40 Economists expect that sales of 45 WellsFargo & Co WF C 3 4.52 — o 46.84 46 .13 + . 1 5 +0.3 L W L +1.6 +34 . 3 10246 12 1 . 2 0 previouslyoccupied U.S. homes Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~ 33.24 30. 4 5 +. 0 6 +0.2 L W W -3.5 + 2 . 4 2 145 2 6 0 . 88 N D J F N D J F slowed in January. 52-week range 52-week range The consensus forecast calls for $27.47~ $$2 .72 $4,$$~ $ 7.47 the National Association of DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current Vol.:3.9m (4.5x avg.) PE:1 9 .7 Vol.:914.7k (14.4x avg.) PE: . .. Realtors to report on Friday that annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$2.09 b Yie l d : 1. 6% Mkt. Cap:$90.31 m Yield: ... sales slipped to a seasonally dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash adjusted annual rate of 4.78 SOURCE: Sungard AP value on ex-distributicn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. million. Home sales slowed last fall even after excluding the InterestRates NET 1YR effects of cold weather. A tight TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO supply of available homes and a 3 -month T-bill . 0 1 .0 3 -0.02 w V w .10 jump in mortgage rates over the Shares of Campbell Soup rose 5 share, above the 73 cents per share summer discouragedhome 6 -month T-bill . 0 7 .07 ... W L W .12 Wall Street expected. percent Friday after the company I buyers. ~ W . 15 reported fiscal second-quarter results Revenue rose to $2.28 billion, 52-wk T-bill .10 .11 -0.01 V that beat Wall Street's expectations. which was also above the $2.27 2-year T-note . 3 2 .31 + 0 .01 L T L .27 Sales of previously occupied The yield on the For the period ended Jan. 26, billion analysts expected, according homes 5-year T-note 1.53 1.50 +0.03 L T L .85 0$idce ct$t$ctren c 10-year Trea$ Noodr CamPbell earned $325 million, or Noodle u to FactSet. seasonally adjusted annual rate 1 0-year T-note 2.73 2.73 ... L T L 2.00 soww $ sury rose to 2.75 sovt $1.03 per share. That compares with Campbell Soup stood by its 2014 5.5 million 30-year T-bond 3.70 3.68 +0.02 L V W 3.18 percent Friday. $190 million, or 60 cents per share, a outlook for core sales to grow by 4 Yields affect year ago. Not including discontinued percent to 5 percent and earnings rates on mortNET 1YR operations of its recently sold European business, per share to grow by 2 percent to 4 percent, or $2.53 gages and other BONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO Campbell said adjusted earnings were 76 cents per to $2.58 per share. 6
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D I J 2013 20 14 Source: FactSet
CamPbell SOup (CPB) F
rida y's close: $43.01
Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.47 3.47 ... L
52-WEEK RANGE
W W 2 .76
Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.89 4.89 ... $38 49 Barcl aysUSAggregate 2.33 2.37 -0.04 W Price-earnings ratio (Based on trailing 12 month results):26 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.48 5.47 +0.01 W 1-YR return: 14% 3- YR*: 11% 5-YR *: 10% 10-YR*: 8% Ann. dividend: $1.25 D iv. yield: 2.9% RATE FUNDS MoodysAAACorpldx 4.49 4.54 -0.05 W *Annualized AP Total returns through Feb. 14 Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.76 1.76 ... L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.07 3.12 -0.05 w w 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualFunds
w W L L W
w 4.04 L 1.95 W 5. 9 5 W 3. 9 4 L 1 14 . w 2. 8 5
AP
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmericanFunds BalA m 24.3 7 + .09 -0.2 +16.3 +11.4+15.8 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.34 +.29 -0.4 +11.7 +9.3+13.0 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 45.44 +.25 +0.3 +20.3 +10.5+16.7 8 8 C EurPacGrA m 48.74 +.22 -0.7 +15.8 +6.5 +15.1 8 8 8 BkofAm 874878 16.70 -.05 FnlnvA m 51. 6 1 +.24 -0.7 +23.2 +12.5+19.3 C C 8 S&P500ETF 728041 184.02 +1.01 GrthAmA m 43.55 +.11 +1.3 +28.0 +13.9+19.4 C 8 C Cisco 641328 22.56 +.29 Fidelity SmcapStk d FSLCX IncAmerA m 20.84 +.11 +0.9 +15.3 +11.0+16.3 A A A iShEMkts 601702 39.66 +.48 InvCoAmA m 36.70 +.16 0.0 +25.8 +12.9+17.8 A C 0 Zynga 515539 4.87 + . 11 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m37.46 +.11 -0.3 +20.8 +10.9+18.2 8 8 8 SiriusXM 484512 3.56 +.05 WAMutlnvA m39.23 +.18 -0.5 +24.8 +14.8+18.7 A A B MktVGold 446412 26.35 +.48 GalenaBio 405839 3.73 -.63 Dodge &Cox Income 13.7 6 ... + 1 . 7 + 2 .3 + 4.9 +7.3 A 8 B Facebook 358830 67.09 -.24 IntlStk 42.86 + . 28 -0.4 +20.4 +7.6+19.5 A A A Comcast 356580 53.70 +.74 Stock 168.0 8 + .81 -0.5 +29.3 +15.1+22.1 A A A Fidelity Contra 96.46 + . 21 +1.4 +28.9 +14.3+20.2 B 8 C Gainers GrowCo 124 . 73 +.05+4.7 +36.8 +16.7+24.1 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G LowPriStk d 48.68 +.16 -1.6 +24.2 +14.4+22.5 B A 8 Fideli S artan 500 ldxAdvtg65.31 +.32 -0.3 +23.4 +13.7+19.9 B 8 B Cray Inc 41.66 + 11.69 + 3 9 .0 LCA Vis 5 .44 +1 . 1 9 +2 8 .0 «C FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 47 +.01 +1.6 +12.3 +8.7+15.8 A A A Fonar 2 2.65 +4 . 5 5 +2 5 . 1 $$ IncomeA m 2. 4 4+.01 +1.7 +12.5 +9.2+16.3 A A A LogMeln 4 0.48 +7 . 2 1 +2 1 . 7 Oakmark Intl I 26.31 +.10 0. 0 + 2 1.0 +10.8+23.2 A A A Bankrate 2 0.80 + 3 . 4 0 +1 9 .5 Co Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 51 +.07 -1.1 +18.3 +11.3+16.1 E D E NthnTech 2 2.69 + 3 . 4 6 +1 8 .0 RisDivB m 17 . 44 +.06 -1.2 +17.2 +10.2+15.0 E E E Morningstar OwnershipZone™ EllieMae 2 9.28 + 4 .4 4 +1 7 .9 RisDivC m 17 . 34 +.06 -1.1 +17.4 +10.4+15.2 E E E Mannatech 1 8.51 +2 . 5 1 +1 5 . 7 OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValA m44.01 +.23 -0.8 +23.8 +9.4+19.5 C E E CS VSSlv rs 5 9.46 + 7 . 1 2 +1 3 .6 average of stock holdings SmMidValB m37.06 +.19 -0.9 +22.8 +8.4+18.5 C E E USGloblnv 3 .79 +.40 +11 . 8 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.4 8 + .19 -1.1 +19.5 +12.1+20.0 0 C A Losers CATEGORY Small Blend GrowStk 53.4 0 + .07 +1.6 +34.7 +15.7+22.5 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 63.0 8 - . 30 +9.1 +51.9 +31.6+28.8 B A A RATING™ *1 y1y1y1y Newlncome 9. 4 1 .. . + 1 . 5 - 0.4 +3.9 +5.9 0 C 0 -2.94 -32.9 CombiM wt 6.00 WtWatch 22.10 -8.48 -27.7 ASSETS $2,229 million Vanguard 500Adml 169.90 +.82 -0.3 +23.4 +13.7+19.9 8 8 8 -1.95 -22.9 GeoMet pf 6.55 500lnv 169.88 +.83 -0.3 +23.2 +13.6+19.8 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 0.72% Chegg n 6.17 -1.77 -22.3 CapOp 48.33 +.12 +4.7 +35.9 +15.9+22.3 A A A MANAGER Lionel Harris -1.38 -20.8 CafePress 5.26 Eqlnc 29.37 +.19 -1.3 +20.0 +15.4+20.1 0 A A SINCE 2011-11-30 IntlStkldxAdm 27.70 +.14 -1.1 +10.7 +4.0 NA E E RETURNS 3-MO +3.7 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 30.29 +.10 +1.0 +30.7 +16.8+24.2 A A A YTD -1.1 TgtRe2020 27.22 +.09 +0.4 +12.3 +8.4+14.3 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +19.0 Tgtet2025 15.79 +.05 +0.3 +13.8 +8.9+15.3 A A C Paris 4,340.14 +27.34 + . 63 3-YR ANNL +3.8 TotBdAdml 10.69 +1.6 0.0 +4.0 +4.8 C C E London 6,663.62 +4.20 + . 06 5-YR-ANNL +20.8 Totlntl 16.56 +.09 -1.1 +10.6 +3.9+14.5 E E C Frankfurt 9,662.40 +65.63 + . 68 TotStlAdm 46.68 +.21 0 . 0 +24.3 +13.9+20.8 8 A A Hong Kong22,298.41 +1 32.88 +. 60 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 46.66 +.21 0 . 0 +24.2 +13.8+20.6 8 8 A Mexico 40,71 0.89 +401.93 +1.00 Allied World AssuranceCompanyHoldings Milan 20,436.47 +326.17 +1.62 USGro 29.17 +.04 +1.7 +28.7 +14.7+20.1 8 8 C AG 1.73 -221.71 -1.53 Tokyo 14,313.03 Welltn 38.06 +.15 +0.3 +14.9 +10.6+14.8 8 A 8 1.71 Stockholm 1,335.89 + 5.51 + . 4 1 Esterline Technologies Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 1.64 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing fee»odeither a sales or Sydney 5,366.90 +48.20 + . 91 Firstmerit Corp Zurich 8,41 7.58 +33.68 + . 40 PTC Inc 1.59 redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar.
Fidelity Small Cap should not be written off yet, according to MarhetSummary Morningstar. Its manager had a Most Active strong track record with a prior NAME VOL (ggs) LAST CHG fund, so the fund has potential.
FAMILY
Commodities
FUELS
The price of gold rose for the eighth straight day and reached its highest settlement price since October. Natural gas fell for the sixth time in the last eight days.
METALS
Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the euro, British
pound and Japanese yen after a report showed that U.S. industrial production unexpectedly weakened in January amid harsh winter weather.
55Q QD
CLOSE PVS. Crude Oil (bbl) 100.30 100.35 Ethanol (gal) 2.06 2.02 Heating Oil (gal) 3.08 3.03 Natural Gas (mmbtu) 5.21 5.22 UnleadedGas(gal) 2.81 2.78
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1319.00 1300.40 21.41 20.39 1430.10 1416.60 3.32 3.31 737.40 730.90
%CH. %YTD - 0.05 + 1.9 +7.6 + 1.57 + 0 . 0 -0.17 +23.3 + 1.01 + 0 . 7 %CH. %YTD + 1.43 + 9 .7 +5.03 +1 0.7 + 0.95 + 4 .3 +0.41 -3.5 + 0.89 + 2 .8
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.43 1.43 - 0.38 + 6 . 0 Coffee (Ib) 1.40 1.40 +0.14 +26.4 Corn (bu) 4.45 4.41 + 1.08 + 5 . 5 Cotton (Ib) 0.88 0.88 - 0.06 + 3 . 4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 362.40 360.80 + 0.44 + 0 . 6 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.44 1.46 - 1.43 + 5 . 8 Soybeans (bu) 13.38 13.44 - 0.50 + 1 . 9 -1.1 Wheat(bu) 5.99 5.96 +0.50 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6741 +.0090 +.54% 1.5485 Canadian Dollar 1.0 980 +.0006 +.05% 1.0014 USD per Euro 1.3699 +.0026 +.19% 1.3346 -.41 -.40% 9 3 .02 JapaneseYen 101.89 Mexican Peso 13. 2418 -.0224 -.17% 12.6760 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5098 +.0013 +.04% 3.6826 Norwegian Krone 6 . 0747 -.0300 -.49% 5.5435 South African Rand 10.8490 -.1202 -1.11% 8.7768 Swedish Krona 6.4 4 12 -.0180 -.28% 6.3245 Swiss Franc .8918 -.0025 -.28% . 9 227 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1067 -.0059 -.53% . 9661 Chinese Yuan 6.0670 +.0035 +.06% 6.2372 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7553 -.0004 -.01% 7.7541 Indian Rupee 61. 930 . 51 5 -. 83% 54. 01 6 Singapore Dollar 1.2588 -.0059 -.47% 1.2356 South KoreanWon 1060.70 -2.86 -.27% 1085.30 -.06 -.20% 2 9.67 Taiwan Dollar 30.30
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
REDMOND
BRIEFING
ce el s e oe n
Bend market wins national award Newport Avenue Market in Bendreceived the award for Overall Outstanding Operator, Single Store on Monday from Progressive Grocerlndependentduring the National Grocers Association Conference in Las Vegas. It was among 11 stores and markets that received one of theOutstanding Independent Awards, all in different categories, according to news releases. Winners were recognized for their marketing and merchandising programs, service-based programs andoperational enhancements, according to the releases.
Union rejected at VW plant Workers at aVolkswagen factory in Tennesseehavevoted against union representation, a devastating loss that derails the
United Auto Workers union's effort to organize Southern factories. The 712-626 vote released late Friday stunned many labor experts who expected a UAW win, becauseVolkswagen tacitly endorsed the union andeven allowed organizers into the Chattanooga factory to make sales pitches. The UAWfor decades has tried without success to organize a foreign-owned plant in a region that's wary of organized labor. The lossnow makes iteven harder for the union to recruit members at another Southern factory. — Bulletin and t/yi e repo/ts
By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
rratr
the Consumer Cellular call cen-
its products and services to its dientele, Marickand Pryor
company owners, on Friday during their visit.
Stephen Crowley/The New YorkTimee
Vice President Joe Biden stands next to Julia Louis-Dreyfus Tuesday at a state dinner in Washington. Friday, Biden spoke candidly about midterm elections and their effects on policy.
Bi enac nowe esim act o oiticson ast-trac tra e By Mark Landler and JonathanWeisman
the policy retreat for House
Democratic leaders in Cambridge, Md., Biden said he
New York Times News Service
forcestotheregion asacounterweight to a rising China. But with Democrats facing
for expedited consideration
a difficult midterm election in nine months, Biden appeared
in Congressforfree-trade
sensitive to their more paro-
peared to fall further victim
agreements, known as fast-
chial concerns, including the
to election-year politics on Capitol Hill Friday, when
track authority, was not
pressures they face from or-
WASHINGTON — Pres-
understood that legislation
ident Barack Obama's ambitious trade agenda ap-
coming up for a vote now, ac- ganized labor. He took a hard cording to several people who line against the largest U.S. were in the meeting. trading partners in the PaWinning that authority cific and told Democrats, for is viewed as necessary for example, that he had warned Obama to extract politically the Japaneseon a recenttrip difficult concessions from to Tokyo that the pact could Japan, Singapore and other not go forward if the U.S. Pacific Rim countries. The auto industry continued to Trans-Pacific Partnership have only 1percent market aims to reduce tariffs on penetration in Japan. a vast array of goods and Many Democrats typically services and to harmonize oppose trade deals, along regulations. It would affect 40 with their allies in unions and percent of America's exports environmental and consumer BIldtmports. groups, because they do not For Obama, the trade deal want to encourage free-trade would also lend economic agreements they say would substance to a policy on Asia siphon off manufacturing that is otherwise largely jobs from the U.S. and create about shifting some military pollution.
Vice President Joe Biden, in
a dosed-door retreat with House Democrats, said he understood why they would not grant Obama the crucial authority he needs to conclude large trade deals with Asia and Europe. Biden's comments most immediately called into
question the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a regional pact among 12 nations that would
be one of the world's biggest trade agreements. It is a central element of Obama's and the White House had
hoped to complete it lastyear. Responding to a question at
BIZ CALENDAR TUESDAY • MS ProjectBasics:Learn to managetasks, timelines and resourceswith MS Project; registration required; $159;8:30-11:30 a.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend;541-383-7270. • Online Marketingwith Facebook: UseFacebookto market andadvertise your small to mediumbusiness; registration required; $69; 9 a.m.-noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend;541-383-7270. • ICloudforBusiness: Learn about theCloud, how toaccessfiles from anywhere; registration required; $69; 1-4p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. WEDNESDAY • GrowingYourBusiness with the Federal Government:Classwil cover theGovernment Contract Assistance Program andhow itcan help local businesses, federal contracting codes and federal acquisition regulations; registration required; free;1-3 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-736-1088or www.gcap.org. • ConnectW'sFebruary Meeting:Kris Prochaska will be discussing "50 Shades ofLeadership," how to lead asawomen; registration required; $25 for members, $40for nonmembers;5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend,2500 N.E. Neff Road;541-848-8598 or www.connectw.org. • Howto Develop a BusinessPlan:First-time business ownerswill learn to evaluate their finances, target their marketand present ideas in a written business plan; registration required; $69; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. • Project Management Fundamentals:Learnto plan, implement, control andcloseanytype of
and 1.2 million customers.
Consumer Cellular, which
strategic shift toward Asia,
BEST OFTHE
REDMOND — Alana Borden,29,one of400 employees at ter on Southwest Sixth Street, approached the top bosses, the .5' n 'h
Buffett may lighten his portfolio By Jia LynnYang and Steven Mufson
ings would spin off some portion of its assets — which in-
The Washington Post
$355 million in revenue last year, nearly 1,000 employees Consumer Cellulartailors said. It operates a nationwide virtual network through AT&T.
Consumer Cellular addedthe iPhone 5, with a finance plan, to
operates three call centers, its inventory last year, as smartsince 1995has provided no-con- phone use increased among tract, low-cost cellular phone babyboomers. "You get all the benefits of a service nationwide. It focuses on a niche market: consumers contract, but we don't sign you ages 50 and over, and Borden, up; we don't make you comwho startedherjob Monday mit to the long term," Marick expressedheropinion ofthe said."So, effectively, every day you're makingthat decision company'sbusinessmodel. "This is such a great idea," whetheryou're going to consaid the former stay-at-home tinue to dobusiness withus or not." mom, now with a degree in business management."You In April, Consumer Cellular will make so much money." begins atry-out, sellingphones Formerly an employee at the in Target stores in Arizona. If same facilitywhen itbelonged successful, Marick sees potento T-Mobile, Borden said the attialto expand into other Target mosphere insidehad gone from markets as early as October. rigid to relaxed. She made lots The company already sells its of sales in her first week, she products nationwide through told CEO John Marickandhis
Sears.
business partner, Chief Operating Officer Greg Pryor.
Friday, thepartners focused ontheir employees in Red-
"We like to hear that," said Marick, 49.
mond. Consumer Cellular took
Marick and Pryor, 48, said Fridaytheyplanto expandthe call center — they call it a con-
months after T-Mobile left in
tact center — by adding 200 em-
ployeesbysummer's end. The companytakes applications on its website, www.consumer
overthe centerjustwest of Redmond Airport about two 2012, laying off 360 workers. Employee turnover in Redmond hovers around 5 percent
annually, Pryor said. The company loses about 10per-
cellular.com. The company Marick and Pryor founded is growingby 30 percent to 35percent eachyear, thanks to their business plan and a partnership starting in
cent in its centers in Portland
2008 with AARP.
contact center manager, said
"full bore" on the senior market
invested in that customer's suc-
in2009, he said. The result is phenomenal growth for the Tigard-based company: about
cess, personally."
and Phoenix; as a whole, the industry typically turns over a fourthormore ofits em ployees,
he said. Patricia Sargent, Redmond
"I thinkit's one of thebest de- Redmond employees seetheir cisions we made," Marick said bosses'commitment to the Friday."We felt that there was a company. "What employees tend to say real void for somebody that just wanted the benefits of cellular the most is there's apersonal ... butwasn't wantingto spend investment, and that's the difa fortune on it and wasn't going ference," she said."Inthis comto be ... the business power pany, they feel like their leaders user." are personally invested in their Consumer Cellular went success. So, inturn, they're — Reporter: 541-617-7815 jdttzler®bendbulletin.com
Graham Holdings. If an agreement is reached,
it wouldbethe latestmajor vision and cable subsidiaries, change for Donald Graham's as well as the for-profit Kaplan company. In August, Graham education business — into a decided to sellThe Washnewunit that wouldbe owned ington Post newspaper to dude lucrative broadcast tele-
WASHINGTON — Warren
Buffett is looking into getting rid of his $1.1billion stake in Graham Holdings, formerly the parent of The Washington Post, and ending four decades as a stable, major shareholder in the diversified family-owned company. Accordingto a Berkshire Hathaway filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Buffett wouldrelinquish his 23.4 percent stake in Graham Holdings. Inexchange,Graham Hold-
by Buffett's Berkshire. Buffett
Amazon.com founder Jeffrey
would also receive cash and the relatively smallnumber of
Bezos for $250 million. Now, Graham could besaying goodbye to another hallmark of the former Post company. If Buffett's stockis elimi-
Berkshire Hathaway shares, worth about $3 million and
owned by Graham Holdings. The deal is still under ne-
nated from the outstanding
gotiation and might not be completed, according to the filing. The structuring of the deal would carry significant
shares of Graham Holdings, shareholders would be left with a larger share in a smaller company, and Buffett
taxbenefits for Buffett and
would own assets he prizes.
RohKerr/TheBulletin
Consumer Cellular cofounders Greg Pryor, left, and John Marick discuss the company's growth Friday during a visit to their Red-
mond call center, formerly occupied byT-Mobile. The center on project; registration required; $185;6-8 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. THURSDAY • Operational Finance Optimization:Learn what financial statements cantell you aboutyour business in this OpportunityKnocks best-practice seminar; registration required; $35 for members, $45 for nonmembers;11:30 a.m.-f p.m.; TheDouble Tree, 300N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend;541-3179292 or www.eventbrite. com/e/operationalfinance-optimizationtickets-10325093633 • Advancing Your LeadershipImpact: Learn leadership skills; designed to help senior managers and keyfuture talent raise leadership performance; registration required; $1,950; 6-9 p.m.;COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. TrentonAve., Bend; 541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/biml
Southwest Sixth Street currently employs 400 people. Marick and Pryor expect it to increase to 600 by late summer.
PEOPLE ONTHEMOVE
Denning
Comey
• EricAndrews was the top sales agent for the month of January at the Windermere/Central OregonReal Estate office in Bend. • The RDPTeam, comprised of Cleme Rinehart, Patty Dempseyand Andrea Phelps, wasthe top listing agent for the month of January at the Windermere/Central OregonReal Estate office in Bend. • Kathy Denning,of John L. Scott Real Estate in Bend,has been recognized with the President's award for her personal real estate sales production for 2013. • Carolyn Eaganhasjoined the Camp Fire Central Oregon board of directors aspresident. Eaganwill bring strategic planning skills andan interest in afterschoolprogram development. • Russell Alihasjoined the CampFire Central Oregon board of directors. • Jacob Fainhasjoined the CampFire Central Oregon board of directors. • William Kemphasjoined the Camp Fire Central Oregon board of directors.
Stelle
Sheffield
• Kendall Comey,of John L. Scott Real Estate in Bend,has becomethe first Giveback HomesRealtor in the state of Oregon. Comey will donate a percentage of eachcommission earned to building a home for families in need. • Linda Stelle,president of AmeriTitle, has beenawardedthe designation of National Title Professional by the American LandTitle Association. Stelle has worked for AmeriTitle for 36 years ,focusing onthecompany's growth and multiple acquisitions. • Chuck Sheffield,senior vice president of AmeriTitle, has been awarded the designation of National Title Professional by theAmerican Land Title Association. Sheffield is AmeriTitle's senior underwriter. • Chuck Keershasjoined the Family Resource of Central Oregonas executive director. Keers has 35years of experience in nonprofits serving children and families, with a record of expanding services andstrengthening administrative systems.
National effect from pension casepossible By David Klepper The Associated Press
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Rhode Island stateleaders andunion
officialsannounced adealFridaythat would end legalwranglingover a landmarkpension overhaul that'sbeen amodel for other states seekingto rein in
runemypensioncosts. Theproposed settlement mustwinlegislative approval andtheendorsement of union members andretirees. Butif enacted, the changes would retain
the most significant portions of the 2011pension overhaul, which raised retirement ages
andsuspendedpensionbenefi ts to save billions of dollars in future costs.
'This is avery gooddeal for thepeople in the pension system andthe people of Rhode Island," said Treasumr Gina Raimondo, a Democrat who crafted the
original law. Lawmakers have criticized the closed-door negotiations that yielded the settlement,
and Rep. Joseph McNamara, D-Warwick, said he expects
lawmakers to closely scrutinize the deal. "I'm not going to rubber stamp anything," he said.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Religious services, D2-3 Volunteer search, D2 Support groups, D4 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
SPOTLIGHT
Communitycenter
opendouse
)Q
Bend's Community Center will host an open house and volunteer appreciation party from 3 to 6 p.m. today. The event is also a chance for people to seethe BCC's new look, including renovations and upgrades to lighting, flooring and more. The center is located at1036
14
I,
-
3
N.E. Fifth St. Bad Boyz
BBQ will offer free food at the event, which is open to the public. Contact: 541-3122069.
Cat Alliance plans free clinic The Central Oregon Cat Alliance is holding a free sterilization and vaccination clinic for feral or stray cats Feb.23 at Bend Spayand Neuter Project. Trap, neuter and return is "the most humane andeffective method to control the fe-
ral and stray cat populations and hasbeenproven to reduce thenumber of cats entering local shelters," according to a news release.Cats are sterilized and receive a rabies and distemper vaccination andare then released wherethey were originally trapped. All Deschutes County residents arewelcome to bring stray or feral cats to the free clinic. Organizers areseeking volunteers to help with the event. Jobs include cat trapping, transport, cleaning traps and fostering kittens. A mandatory volunteer training will be held from 6 to 7 p.m. Thursdayat Bend SpayandNeuter Project, located at 910 S.E. Wilson, Suite B1. Contact: www. coca2020.org or 541-
C
617-1010.
Mini PPPsign-ups now underway Registration is now open for the U.S.Bank Mini Pole, Pedal, Paddle and can bedone through the event's website at www.mbsef. org/events/minippp. According to the contest's rules, this year's Mini PPPwill be open to teams of six children in first through sixth grades. All six team members and arafting guide will compete in the contest's rafting event, four team members will take on theevent's obstacle course, and one team membereach will take on theevent's bike riding anddistance running courses. There is no deadline to register for this event, which will take placeat the Les SchwabAmphitheater on May18, but it is only open to 210 six-member teams. For more information, email Molly Cogswell-Kelley at molly©mbsef.org or call 541-388-0002.
Camp Fire seats doard memders The CampFire Central Oregon announcedit has chosenCarolyn Eagan, businessadvocate for the city of Bend; Russell Ali, a realestate agent with the Central Oregon Association of Realtors; JacobFain, a financial advisor at Morgan Stanley; andWilliam Kemp,thedevelopment director at Neighborlmpact, to serve on its board of directors. Eagan will also serve as the group's president, according to a press release. — From staff reports
Illustrations by Greg Cross/The Bulletin
• Who saysSochi should haveall the fun? Here'sa High Desert take onthe popular Winter Olympic Games. By Alandra Johnson• The Bulletin
he Winter Olympics continue for another week, filling our TVs with fit people performing spectacular feats. But we live in Central Oregon. So that means we could see fit people performing spectacular feats simply by stepping out our door. We decided to consider how some Winter Olympic events would translate to our home turf, reimagining them in High Desert fashion. We give you the Winter Olympics, Bend style. OpeningCeremony
their best"fancy" fleece,
uals slowly skate around a short track, tactically vying
Team members parade
while fans line the sidewalks
for position. When the final
country by country through a stadium wearing matching
and cheer. Fire dancers will recreate their Burning Man
laps begin, the real race begins and skaters go flying
Galveston Avenue) at 10 a.m. on a Saturday. The goal? A table for four at The Vic. Hydro Flask filled with coffee in
and often odd looking outfits
routine in front of the Gap.
around the ring, often result-
hand, these puffy vest-wear-
Speed skating,shorttrack
ing in spectacular wipeouts. Bend Olympics version:
ing competitors start off slowly walking around the
begins. Competitors begin speed walking/trot-jogging to the entrance, giving each other passive-aggressive glances and hip-checks. The first one
West-side Bend residents arrive at the "Flaming Chicken"
roundabout, chit-chatting and
with a mimosa in hand wins.
Real Olympics version:
while fans cheer wildly and the Olympic flame is lit. Bend Olympics version: Teams parade through the
Old Mill District wearing
Real Olympics version: In this wild-card event, individ-
roundabout (14th Street and
tactically vying for position.
As soon as diners leave the restaurant and a table opens up, that's when the real race
SeeOlympics/D4
Love etters in er on er t an a mereemai or text By Kim Ode
In an old song, love letters
Star Ti ibune (Minneapolis)
were written in the sand. In
Nothing against a passionate text of I (heart) U, but an
a famous play, a guy with a big nose wrote them to woo a
actual love letter is more likely
woman on behalf of his loser
to set a heart fluttering for its effort, its thoughtfulness and its legacy.
friend. Before the digital age, romance arrived on pieces of paper that were saved in bun-
dles tied with ribbon. Some of you have no idea what we're talking about, do you?
the advance of technology. gt
ment of punctuation marks.
can't be that we're less roman-
We already spend great swaths of time before our
tic — can it?) Emails let us converse
computers, laptops or smart-
romantic lore is disappearing.
across thousands of miles in the time it takes to hit"send."
phones, so it's easy to rhapsodize, cut and paste, delete and
There are various reasons,
W e can convey affection, even
but the chief culprit likely is
lust, with a particular arrange-
italicize to our heart's delight. See Letters/D2
Sad to say, the love letter of
D2 THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
VOICES OFFAITH
RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Could youspeakof the placeJesusholds in Islam? The Kansas City Star
Between two extremes
and the Christians, who con-
alone descend in the form of
similarities between the sto-
sidered him to be God or the
man himself and die for every man's sins. Rather, God's
ry of Jesus and Mary in the
son of God.
Mohamed Kohia, Rock-
Although he performed mercy extends to all creahurst Un iversity p rofessor: miracles, it was by the will tures, believers and disbelievNo Muslim is considered a and permission of God, who ers alike. Muslim unless he believes in has power and control over The door to forgiveness is Jesus. all things (5:110). All proph- open to anyone who seeks it. The Qur'an refers to Je- ets' miracles were specific to sus as righteous (3:45-48), the nation where they were Remarkable similarities great prophet (5:75, 19:30- sent. Syed E. Hasan, Midland The mission of Jesus was Islamic Council: Jesus (may 35), a humble servant of God (5:116-117), and the return of stated clearly in the Qur'an, peace be on him) is a highly Jesus (Messiah) to Earth (4: "And (remember) when Jesus, revered prophet in Islam. Not 159). The Qur'an recalls his son of Mary, said: '0 Children only is he mentioned 27 times miraculous birth (19:16-21), of Israel, I am the Messenger in the Qur'an (compared with his teachings, the miracles he of God sent to you, confirm- 14 for Muhammad), but an performed by God's permis- ing the Torah (which came) entire chapter is named after sion, and his life as a prophet before me ...'" (61:6). his mother, Mary. of God. God clarified in the Qur'an In fact, it may be very difThe fact that Jesus was that Jesus was not crucified ficult, if not impossible, for a born to a virgin mother does (4:157), but "God lifted him reader to figure out whether not necessitate that he is di- Up to his presence" (4:158). As the following passage is from vine in essence or spirit, nor is such, Islam denies that Jesus the Bible or the Qur'an. "Mary asked: 'How shall he worthy of worship. came to this Earth with the "Indeed, the likeness of purpose of sacrificing himself I have a son, seeing that no Jesus with God is as the like- for the sin of humanity. m an has touched me and Iam ness of Adam. He created him Islam strictly rejects the not unchaste?' The angel reof dust, and then he said to notion that any person bears plied: 'So it will be. Thy Lord him Be!' and he was." (3:59) the sin of another (39:7). Also, says this is easy for me.' So The Islamic view of Jesus Islam stresses the notion that she conceived him, and she lies between two extremes: God is able to and forgives all retired with him to a remote the Jews, who rejected Jesus sins. God does not need any place." (Qur'an 19:20-21). and called him an impostor, blood sacrifice for that, let There a r e rem a r kable
Letters
"Holding something in your hands that your loved one held before gives you a greater connection to the words that were personally
Continued from 01 Some programs even let you convert your typing to written by him." "handwriting," then make a printout that appears as though you actually put pen to paper. (If love is blind, maybe.) fireplace, which can also be A nna E s s endrup, 24 , therapeutic." suspects that many of her friends think love letters take 'I love youlike guitars' "writing too much time Absence makes the heart the letter, buying the stamps, write letters, especially when finding a mailbox if they distance isn't easily bridged can't mail i t d i r ectly fr om byphone. home." The Beatles' John Lennon For her, it's time well-spent. was a prolific and passion" Holding something i n ate writer to his girlfriend, your hands that your loved Cynthia Powell, as the band one held before gives you bounced between Liverpool a greater connection to the and Hamburg, Germany, in words that were personal- its earliest years. One eightly written by him," she said. page missive embellished "Writing letters myself helps with drawings is famous for me to feel connected to what what can only be a rocker's I'm writing, especially in a highest praise: "I love you like world where I am shooting guitars." emails to co-workers, superKen Burns' documentary "The Civil War" brought to visors, family and friends." The Edina, Minn., womlight Union officer Sullivan an said she saves the most Ballou's deeply romantic letmeaningful of her love let- ter to his wife, Sarah. "Sarah my love for you is ters, tucking them into her pajama drawer or into a box deathless, it seems to bind me under her bed. Saving the with mighty cables that nothletters has, unexpectedly, ing but Omnipotence could helped her cope when a rela- break," he wrote. tionship unravels. Perhaps divining his fate, "After a bad breakup, they he continued: "But, 0 Sarah! usually go in the campfire or If the dead can come back
two scriptures: Muslims, like Christians, believe that Mary
was a virgin who miraculously conceived Jesus, and assert
that Jesus performed a number of miracles. But there are some major
differences as well: Muslims do notbelieve in the concept of Trinity. Islam asserts that God
does nothave a son or a father. One of the shortest chapters in the Qur'an (112:1-3) succinctly states this unique attribute of God: "Say (0 Mohammad): He is God (Allah), the One and Only; God, the Eternal, the Absolute; He begets not, nor was he begotten; And
there is no one equal to him." Further, Muslims do not believein Jesus as a redeem-
er and savior of humanity but put their trust in God's mercy and lead their lives in confor-
mity with the original and unaltered divine commands that were revealed to David,
Moses, Jesus and Muhammad (peace be on them all) as the pathway to salvation and eternal bliss.
While speed is a wondrous thing, Janelle Schliep of Apple Valley, Minn., said there's nothing l ik e
t h e d e licious
agony of waiting for a sweetheart's response to appear in
— Anna Essendrup the mailbox. "It's more exciting," she said, and far better than getting a text, if for no to this earth and flit unseen
around those they loved, I shall always be near you ... and if there be a soft breeze
upon your cheek, it shall be my breath; as the cool air fans your throbbing temple, it shall be my spirit passing by." Ballou died a week later at the first Battle of Bull Run.
other reason than there's "a way lot less LOLs."
Keepsake? Or tim e bomb? If kids want to see a parent
leapacross the room in one bound, all they need to do is bring out a bundle of letters
they found in the box labeled "old Beanie Babies."
For centuries, war also has The letters may not even inspired chronicles of love. be all that steamy, but to the Shannon Delliger and her recipients, they r epresent wife wrote love letters while
moments that in some ways
Delliger was in basic training, remain more private than any then while deployed in Bos- other. nia. "Let me tell you, those (We are, of course, asletters meant more to me than
s uming t hat
l e t ters f r o m
ever, especially being away old flames have been extinfrom home for the first time," guished. Or kept in the box Delliger said. Once she even labeled "tax returns.") received a "letter in a bottle" With technology, an easily — a romantic flourish that deleted email (or text, tweet, probably wouldn't make it Instagram, gif, hashtag, etc.) through security these days. leaves no trace, only memoNow back under one roof ries. For many, that's fine. in Brooklyn Park, the couple Yet Heather Radcliff of find they no longer write love North St. Paul, Minn., reletters as much. "We send mains in love with love letquick texts saying 'I love you' ters, finding them not only and cute stuff to make each more personal, but also physical — sometimes in the most other's day, though." Note that word: quick. sentimental ways.
To submit service information or announcementsfor religious organizations, email bulletin© bendbulletin.com orcall 541-383-0358. ANTIOCH CHURCH:Sr. Pastor Ken Wytsma; Sundayat9:30a.m.;Redux Q-and-A after; BendHighSchool, 230 N.E. Sixth St., Bend. BEND CHRISTIANFELLOWSHIP: Pastor DaveMiller; "Masada"; Sunday at10 a.m.; 4twelveyouth group; Wednesdays at7p.m.;19831 Rocking Horse Road,Bend. BENDCHURCHOFTHE NAZARENE: Pastor Virgil Askren; "GodLoves a Cheerful Giver"; Sundayat10:15a.m., 1270 N.E.27th St., Bend. CROSS CHURCH:Pastor EdByrnes; "Teach MeToPray: Praying to Our Father" ;todayat6:30p.m.andSunday at10 a.m.; 64 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend. DISCOVERYCHRISTIAN CHURCH: Pastor DaveDrullinger; "A Portrait of Jesus," based onJohn1:4-14; Sunday at10 a.m.; Adult Bible study at 9a.m.; 334 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend. EASTMONT CHURCH:Pastor John Lodwick; "ThePreaching ofthe Gospel" basedonselected passagesintheBook of Mark and aspart of the series, "The Eternal Gospel"; Sundayat 9and10:45 a.m.; 62425EagleRoad, Bend. FATHER'SHOUSE CHURCH OF GOD: Pastor RandyWills;"Making Peace," as part of the series, "AnUncertain Journeyto a PromisedHope"; Sunday at9and10:45a.m.; YouthGroup; Wednesdays at 7 p.m.; 61690 Pettigrew Road, Bend. THE FELLOWSHIPAT BEND:Pastor Loren Anderson; "TimeandJustice," based onEcclesiastes 3:1-22; Sunday at10 a.m.; Summit HighSchool, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend. FIRST PRESBYTERIANCHURCH: Pastor JennyWarner; "Living Well: Risking Life andLimb"; Sundayat 9 a.m., 10:45 a.m.and5:01 p.m.; 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend. FIRSTUNITED METHODIST CHURCH: The Rev.JaneShaffer; "490," based on Matthew18:21-35; Sunday at 9and 11 a.m.; 680 N.W.Bond St., Bend. FOUNDRY CHURCH:Al Hulbert; "God's Mercy Rule," based on thefall of Judah; Sundayat10:15 a.m.;60 N.W.Oregon Ave., Bend. JOURNEY CHURCH:Pastor Keith Kirkpatrick; "Murder: Understanding the 6th Commandment"; Sundayat10 a.m. and 6:30p.m.; 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend. NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH:Pastor Chris Kramer;Sundayat 9and11 a.m.; Bible study;Wednesdaysat10a.m. and Thursday at 6p.m.; 60850 Brosterhous Road, Bend. NEW HOPE CHURCH:Pastor Randy Myers; "SeekingRealReligion," as part of a series onthe book ofJames; today at6p.m.,Sundayat9and10:45a.m.; 20080 Pinebrook Blvd., Bend. NEWPORTAVENUE CHURCHOF CHRIST: Minister DeanCatlett; "When God SeemsDistant," based onPsalm 13; Sundayat10:45 a.m.; 554 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. SPIRITUALAWARENESS COMMUNITYOFTHE CASCADES: Doug Cristafir; "Community ... Tear Down theWalls"; Sundayat 5:15p.m.; held at TheOld Stone Church, 157N.W. Franklin Ave.,Bend. SPRINGSOFLIFEMINISTRIES: Evangelistand Bibleteacher Eddie Cienda; W ednesdaysat7p.m.; ongoing; TheSound GardenStudio, 1279 N.E.SecondSt., Bend. TRINITYEPISCOPAL CHURCH: Sunday at 9a.m.; St. Francis Church, 2450 N.E.27th St., Bend. TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH:The Rev. Patrick Rooney;"BlessedArethe Haughty," based onMatthew 5:1-12; Sunday at8a.m. (guitar-led worship)
and11 a.m. (organ/piano-ledworship); 2550 N.E.Butler Market Road. UNITARIANUNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIPOF CENTRAL OREGON: The Rev.Alex Holt; "Can 'Spirituality' and'Money'ReallyBeintheSame Sentence?"; Sundayat11 a.m.; atthe Old StoneChurch,157 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend. WESTSIDE CHURCH:Pastor BoStern; "Dreaming BigandWorking Hard"; todayat6:30p.m.andSundayat8,9 and10:45a.m.; 2051N.W.Shevlin Park Road, Bend. WESTSIDESOUTH CAMPUS: Tim Reynolds; "DreamingBigandWorking Hard"; Sundayat10:30 a.m.; 1245 S.E. Third St., Bend. WESTSIDESISTERS CAMPUS: Pastor Bo Stern; "Dreaming BigandWorking Hard"; Sundayat10:30 a.m.; 442 Trinity Way,Sisters. WESTSIDEONLINE CAMPUS: Pastor Bo Stern; "Dreaming BigandWorking Hard"; todayat6:30p.m.and Sundayat 8, 9 and10:45 a.m.; www.westsidelive. org. WESTSIDE RADIOCAMPUS: Pastor Steve Mickel; "PrayerandPlanning"; today at 8:30a.m.; Heirborne radio show on KBND, AM1110. COMMUNITYPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: TheRev.Dr. DonShaw; "Here am I; SendMe!" basedon Isaiah6:1-8 andMatthew 28:16-20;Sundayat9and 11 a.m.; 529N.W.19th St., Redmond. EMMAUSLUTHERANCHURCH:The Rev. David Poovey;"W ow!TheFuture Looks Great!" basedon1 Corinthians 2:9; Sundayat10:30 a.m.; 2175 S.W. Salmon Ave.,Redmond. ST. PAUL'SANGLICANCHURCH: Father JohnPennington; "Finish What You Start!" based on1 Corinthians 9:24-27; Third Sundaybefore Lent; Sundayat10:30 a.m.;1108 W.Antler Ave., Redmond. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH:Pastor Eric Burtness; "Peter: The Apostate God Used," aspart of the series, "Reboot Your Life: SecondChancesfor DiscouragedBelievers"; Sundayat 8:30 and 11 a.m.; 1113BlackButte Blvd., Redmond. VERTICALCHURCH OF GOD:Pastor Jeremy Seibert; Sundayat10:30 a.m.; youthnight;W ednesdayat6 p.m.; 52460 Skidgel Road, LaPine. COMMUNITYBIBLE CHURCH AT SUNRIVER:Pastor Glen Schaumloeffel;"Jesus MadeLowPart One," based on Hebrews 2:19-13 and as part of theseries, "Better — The Supremacy ofChrist"; Sunday at9:30 a.m.; 1 TheaterDrive, Sunriver. CONCORDIALUTHERAN MISSION: The Rev.Willis Jenson; "GodGives Increase Alonethrough HisWord and Sacraments, theGospel," basedon1 Corinthians 3:6; Sundayat11 a.m.; held at TerrebonneGrange Hall, 828611th St., Terrebonne. "ATASTE OF SILENCE"PRAYER:A morning of Centering prayer hosted by Contemplative Outreach ofCentral Oregon; free; March15 from 9a.m.noon; HeritageHall, First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E.Ninth St., Bend; Rita at 541-382-0086 or Elizabeth at 541-382-4401. "THEABRAHAM INSPIRATION GROUP":Seminarvideo with Abraham and Jerry andEsther Hicks; donations accepted; 5-8 p.m.today; Rosie Bareis Campus,1010 N.W.14th St., Bend; 541-389-4523. TEMPLEBETHTIKVAH'S "ATASTEOF JUDAISM"LECTURE SERIES:Rabbi Johanna Hershenson; "Mechanics of Jewish SacredLiterature"; $6, high school students andyounger arefree; Feb. 24 from7-8:30 p.m.; St. Charles Bendeventroom;2500 N.E.NeffRoad, Bend; AnnRosenfield at 541-388-8826 or www.bethtikvahbend.org/education/ adult-education.
at 541-617-7047. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC: www.highdesertchambermusic. com or Isabelle Senger at infoO highdesertchambermusic.com or 54 I-306-3988. HIGHDESERT MUSEUM: 54 I-382-4754. LA PINEPUBLIC LIBRARY:Cindylu, 54 I -317-1097. LATINOCOMMUNITY ASSOCIATION: Brad, volunteer@latca.org or 541-382-4366. THE NATUREOF WORDS: www.thenatureofwords.org or 54 I -647-2233. REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY:541-312-1060. REDMONDINTERCULTURAL EXCHANGE (R.I.C.E.): Barb, bonitodia@msn.com or 54 I -447-0732. TOWER THEATREFOUNDATION: 54 I -317-0700.
DISABLEDAMERICANVETERANS (DAV):Don Lang, 541-647-1002. FAMILY KITCHEN: Cindy Tidball, cindyt@bendcable.com or 541-610-6511. FAMILYRESOURCECENTER: 541-389-5468. HUMAN DIGNITYCOALITION: 541-385-3320. HUNGERPREVENTION COALITION:Marie info@ hungerpreventioncoalition.org or 541-385-9227. LA PINECOMMUNITY KITCHEN: 541-536-1312. NEIGHBORIMPACT:chrisq@ neighborimpact.org or 541-548-2380, ext. 106. PEACEBRIDGES, INC., BEND: www.abridgetopeace.org or John C. Schwechten at 541-383-2646. PFLAG CENTRALOREGON: www.pflagcentraloregon.org or 541-317-2334. RONALD MCDONALDHOUSE: Teresa, 541-318-4950. SAVINGGRACE:541-382-9227 or 541-504-2550. SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL OF BEND:www.sibend.org, president@ sibend.org or 541-728-0820. ST. VINCENTDEPAULSOCIAL SERVICES:541-389-6643. VOLUNTEER CONNECT:www. volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977. WINNINGOVER ANGER & VIOLENCE: www.winningover.org or 541-382-1943. WOMEN'S RESOURCECENTER OF CENTRALOREGON:541-385-0750.
VOLUNTEER SEARCH Volunteer Search is compiled by the Department of HumanServices Volunteer Services. The organizations listed are seeking volunteers for a variety of tasks. Tosee afull list, and for additional information on the types of help needed, go online to www. bendbulletin.com/volunteer. Changes, additions or deletions should besent to1300 N.W.Wall St., Suite103, Bend 97701, email Therese.M.Helton@ state.or.us or call 541-693-8988.
SEMIORS AARP:www.aarp.org/money/taxaide or 888-687-2277. ASPEN RIDGEALZHEIMER'S ASSISTEDLIVINGAND RETIREMENTCOMMUNITY: 541-385-8500. BEND SENIORCENTER:Kim, 54 I-706-6 I27. CASCADEVIEW NURSING AND ALZHEIMER'SCARECENTER: 541-382-7161. CENTRAL OREGONCOUNCILON AGING(COCOA)AND MEALS ON WHEELS:www.councilonaging.org or 54 I-678-5483. LA PINESENIOR ACTIVITY CENTER: Karen Ward, 541-536-6237. LONG-TERMCARE OMBUDSMAN PROGRAM:Nancy Allen, 541-312-2488. PILOTBUTTE REHABILITATION CENTER: 541-382-5531. PRINEVILLESOROPTIMIST SENIOR CENTER:Melody, 541-447-6844. TOUCHMARK ATMT. BACHELOR VILLAGE: 541-383-1414. UNITEDSENIORCITIZENSOF BEND (USCB):uscb©bendtel.net or 541-323-3344. VOLUNTEERS IN ACTION: 54 I-548-7018.
CHILDREN, YOUTH AMD EDUCATION SERVICES ADULT BASICSKILLS DEPARTMENT (COCC):Margie Gregory, mgregoryO cocc.edu or 541-318-3788. AFS-USA: www.afsusa.org or Caitlin Krutsinger, 503-419-9514.
ALYCEHATCHCENTER:Andy Kizans, 541-383-1980. BEND PARK& RECREATION DISTRICT:Kim, 541-706-6127. BIGBROTHERS BIG SISTERS OF CENTRALOREGON:541-312-6047 (Bend), 541-447-3851,ext. 333 (Prineville) or 541-325-5603 (Madras). BOY SCOUTS OFAMERICA: Paul Abbott, paulabbott©scouting.org or 541-382-4647. BOYS 8E GIRLS CLUBS OF CENTRAL OREGON: www.bgcco.org, info© bgcco.org or 541-617-2877. CAMP FIREUSA CENTRAL OREGON: campfire@bendcable.com or 541-382-4682. CASA (COURT APPOINTED SPECIALADVOCATES): www. casaofcentraloregon.org or 541-389-16 I8. CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: Julie Bibler, 541-330-3907. CIRCLE OFFRIENDS: Beth, beth© acircleoffriendsoregon.com or 541-588-6445. DESCHUTES COUNTYSHERIFF'S OFFICE— CENTRAL OREGON PARTNERSHIPSFORYOUTH: www.deschutes.org/copy, COPY© deschutes.org or 541-388-6651. FOSTERGRANDPARENTS PROGRAM:Steve Guzanskis, 541-678-5483. GIRL SCOUTS:541-389-8146. GIRLSON THE RUN OF DESCHUTES COUNTY:www.deschutescountygotr. org or info©deschutescountygotr.org. GRANDMA'SHOUSE:541-383-3515. HEALTHYBEGINNINGS:ww w.myhb. org or 541-383-6357. HIGH DESERTTEENS VOLUNTEER PROGRAM: www. highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4757. IEP PARTNERS:Carmelle Campbell at the Oregon Parent Training and Information Center, 888-505-2673. J BAR JLEARNING CENTER:Rick Buening, rbuening©jbarj.org or 541-389-1409. JUNIPERSWIM G FITNESS CENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. KIDS CENTER:Lisa Weare, Iweare© kidscenter.org, 541-383-5958. LA PINEHIGHSCHOOL:Jeff Bockert,
jeff.bockert©bend.kf2.or.us or 541-355-8501. MEADOWLARK INDEPENDENT LIVING PROGRAM: Teal Buehler, 541-617-9576. MOUNTAINSTARFAMILY RELIEF NURSERY:541-322-6820. NEIGHBORIMPACT: 541-548-2380, ext. 115. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY EXTENSION SERVICE:541548-6088, 541-447-6228 or 541-475-3808. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY MASTER GARDENERVOLUNTEER PROGRAM:http://extension. oregonstate.edu/deschutes or 541-548-6088. READ TOGETHER: 541-388-7746. REDMOND HIGHSCHOOL: 541-923-4807. REDMOND LEARNINGCENTER:Zach Sartin, 541-923-4854. REDMOND YOUNGLIFE: 541-923-8530. SCHOOL-TO-CAREER PARTNERSHIP:Kent Child, 541-355-4158. SMART (STARTMAKING A READER TODAY):www.getsmartoregon.org or 541-355-5600. TRILLIUM FAMILYSERVICES: 503-205-0194. VIMA LUPWA HOMES:www. lupwahomes.org or 541-420-9634. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON: 541-385-0470.
ANIMALS AND ENVIRONMENT BEND SPAY A NEUTER PROJECT: 541-617-1010. BRIGHTSIDEANIMAL CENTER: volunteer@brightsideanimals.org or 541-923-0882. CAT RESCUE,ADOPTION 8(FOSTER TEAM (CRAFT):www.craftcats.org, 541-389-8420 or541-598-5488. CHIMPS, INC.:www.chimps-inc.org or 541-410-4122. DESCHUTESLANDTRUST: www.deschuteslandtrust.org or 541-330-0017. DESCHUTESNATIONALFOREST: Jean Nelson-Dean, 541-383-5576.
EAST CASCADESAUDUBON SOCIETY:www.ecaudubon.org or 541-241-2190. THE ENVIRONMENTALCENTER: www.envirocenter.org or 541-385-6908. EGUINEOUTREACH HORSE RESCUE OF BEND:www.equineoutreach. com or joan@equineoutreach.com or 541-419-3717. HEALINGREINS THERAPEUTIC RIDING CENTER:Darcy Justice, 541-382-9410. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL OREGON: Jen, jennifer@hsco.org or 541-382-3537. HUMANE SOCIETYOF THE OCHOCOS: 541-447-7178. JUNIPERGROUP SIERRA CLUB: 541-389-9115. PRINEVILLEBLM:www.blm.gov/or/ districts/prineville/recreation/host. php or 541-416-6700. STEWARDSHIPFOR SUSTAINABLE BAGGING:LexaMcAllister, Imcallister©cocc.edu or 541-9 I4-6676. SUNRIVERNATURECENTER& OBSERVATORY:541-593-4442. VOLUNTEER CAMPGROUND HOST POSITIONS:TomMottl, 541-416-6859.
ARTS, MUSIC, CULTURE AND HERITAGE 88.9KPOV, BEND'S COMMUNITY RADIO STATION:info©kpov.org or 541-322-0863. ART COMMITTEEOF THE REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY: Linda Barker, 541-312-1064. ARTS CENTRAL STATION: 541-617-1317. CASCADESTHEATRICAL COMPANY: 541-389-0803. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY ASSOCIATION: Julie, 541-383-7779. DES CHUTESHISTORICAL MUSEUM:541-389-1813, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. DESCHUTESPUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM:541-312-1032. FRIENDS OFTHE BEND LIBRARIES: www.fobl.org or Meredith Shadrach
HUMAN SERVICES ABILITREE:volunteer©abilitree.org or 541-388-8103, ext. 217. AMNESTYINTERNATIONAL:Philip Randall, 541-388-1793. ASSISTANCELEAGUEOFBEND: 541-389-2075. BEND COMMUNITYCENTER: volunteer@bendscommunitycenter. org or 541-312-2069. BETHLEHEM INN:www. bethleheminn.org or 541-322-8768. BRIDGINGGAPS: bendbridginggaps@gmail.com or 541-314-4277. CENTERFOR COMPASSIONATE LIVING (PREVIOUSLYPEACE CENTER OFCENTRAL OREGON): www.compassionatecenter.org or Beth Hansen, 541-923-6677. CENTRALOREGONVETERANS OUTREACH: covo.org@gmail.com or 541-383-2793. DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES: Therese Helton, Therese.M.Helton@ state,or.us or 541-693-8988. DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES CROOK COUNTY:Valerie Dean, 541447-3851, ext. 427.
MISCELLAMY CENTRALOREGON LOCAVORE: www.centraloregonlocavore.com or Niki at info©centraloregonlocavore. com or 541-633-0674. HIGHDESERT SPECIAL OLYMPICS: 541-749-6517. OREGON ADAPTIVESPORTS: www.oregonadaptivesports.org, info©oregonadaptivesports.org or 541-306-4774. SACRED ARTOF LIVING CENTER: 541-383-4179.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 3 "Celtic Cross" Christianity
"The Wheel of Dharma" Buddhism
"Star of David"
•
0 0
You Are The Most Important Part of Our Services
"Omkar" (Aum)
"Yin/Yang" Taoist/ Confumanism
Hinduism
•
•
•
This Sunday at Faith Christian Center, Pastor Mike Johnson wiff share his message titled "Believe" Part 6" on Sunday beginning at 10:30 AM.
HOLY RKDKEMER CATHOLIC PARISH
Fr.Theodore Nnabugo,Pastor www.holyredeemerparish.net Parish Office: 541-536-3571 HOLY REDEEMER, LA PINK
16137 Burgess Rd Tuesday, Wednesday F Friday Mass 9:00 am Sunday Mass• 10:00 am Confessions: Saturdays -3:00-4:00 pm
Childcare is provided in our Sunday HOLY TRINITY,SUNRIVER morning service. Restored Youth 18143 Cottonwood Rd. Ministries and Family Night is on Thurs. Mass 9:30 am; Wednesdays at 7 pm. A number of Faith Sat. Vigil Mass 5:30 pm Joumey Groups meet throughout the Sunday mass 8:00 am Confessions: Thurs. 9:00 - 9:15 am week in small groups, please cantact the church for details and times. OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS, Gllchrlst The church is lacated on the corner of 120 Mississippi Dr Greenwood Avenue and Sunday Mass - 12:30 pm NE 11th Street, www.bendfaith.com Confessions: Sundays 12:00• 12:15 pm REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1865 W Antler• Redmand 541-548-4555 SUNDAYS Morning Worship 8;30 am 8 10:30 am
Life groups 9 am K)dz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am Evening Worship 6 pm WEDNESDAYS FAMILY NIGHT 7 PM
Adult Classes Celebrate Recovery Wednesday NITE Live Kids Youth Group Pastor Duane Pippitt
(South of Portland Ave.) Church Service F 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
"Star 8 Crescent" Islam
•
FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTKR 1049 NE 11th St.• 541.382.8274
HOLY FAMILY,
near Chrlstmas Valley 57255 Fort Rock Rd Sunday Mass - 3:30 pm Confessions: Sundays 3:00-3:15 pm ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CATHOLIC CHURCH
Rev. Julian Cassar Rev. Joseph K. Thalisery 541-382-3631 NEW CHURCH 2450 NE 27th Street Masses Saturday• Vigil 5:00 PM Sunday 7;30 AM, 10:00 AM Domingo 12:30 PM• Misa en Espanol
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EASTMONT CHURCH "Displaying theReaiii¹ of Christ in
UadeniableWays" 62425 Eagle Road, Bend 541-382-5822
www.eastmantchurch.com Sunday Services Classic (Blended) Service 9;00 am Contemporary Service 10:45 am Hispanic Service 6:0 0 pm For more information about weekly ministries for the whole family, contact 541-382-5822 or email info@eastmontchurch.com
Heart of Bend" 60 NW Oregon, 541-382-3862 Pastor Syd Brestel
SundaySchoolclassesare at9:00am and our Worship Service at 10:15 am This Sunday at Foundry Church, AI Hulbert wiff preach on the fall of Judah: "God's Mercy Rule." For Kidztown, Middle School and High School activities Caff 541-382-3862 www.bendchurch.org HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH, SBC 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond• 541-548-4161
Sunday Worship Services: 8:00 am, 9:30 am, 11:00 am Sunday Life Groups 9:30 am 8 11:00 am Saturday Worship 7:00 pm Dr. Barry Campbell, lead pastor For complete calender: www.hbcredmond.org
230 NE Ninth, Bend (Across Ninth St. from Bend High) All Are Welcome, Always!
Jewish backgrounds. We welcome interfaith families and Jews by choice. Our monthly activities include: Services, religious education for children 8 adults, Hebrew school, Torah study, social action projects and social activities
Friday, February 21Family Shabat Service 8 Potluck
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TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH All are welcome through ourred doors
Sunday Services St. Helens Hall, 231 NW Idaho Ave 8 am and 10:15 am The Rev. Roy D. Green, Interim Rector www,trinitybend.org I 541-382-5542 Mail:469 NW Wall St Ma¹we havee¹esIoseethat m visitor arriveswithorrt a gift and noguestJeaveswithout a blessing.
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP
541 NE Dekalb Sunday School 9:45 am Children 8Adult Classes Worship Service —11:00 am
All services are held at the First United Methodist Church 680 NW Bond Street 541-388-8826
CONCORDIA LUTHKRAN
MISSION (LCMS) The mission oj theChurch istoforgive sins throughtheGospelandthereby grant eternalJife. (St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession XXVIIL8, 10
10 am Sunday School I I am Divine Service
Saturday 6:00 pm Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am,
concordialutheranmission Facebook: Concordia Lutheran Mission Phone: 541-325-6773
The Rev. Willis C. Jenson, Pastor 8286 11th St. (Grange Hall) Terrebonne, OR
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aftereachservice
February 15 8 16, 2014at Westside Church -ONLINE CAMPUS M-W-F Women's Exercise 9:30 am Join us at our online campus where Wed. Bible Study at noon Pastor Bo Stern will share the message 3rd Th. Women's Circle/Bible Study "Dreaming Big and Working Hard" at I:00 pm 6:30pmSaturday andat8,9and 10:45am on Sunday at Westside Church, 2051 NW 3rd Tues. Men's Club 6:00 pm, dinner Shevlin Park Rd, Bend. Youth and Family Programs Active Social Outreach February 16, 2014 Westside Church
"Educating and Developing the Whole — ON THE RADIO Child for the Glory of Gad" Pastor Steve Mickel will share the Pre K-5th Grade 62425 Eagle Road, Bend• 541-382-2049 message "Prayer and Planning" on the Heirbome radio show at 8:30am Sunday Principal Lonna Camahan www.eastmontcommunityschool.com morning on KBND — AM 1110
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1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 - 541.923-7466 Pastor Eric Burtness www.zionrdm.com
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Rev. Dr. Steven H. Koski Lead Pastor Living Well Preaching: Jenny Warner Risking Life 8 Limb 9:00am contemporary 10:45am traditional 5:01 pm relaxed Sunday SchooL 3 years to 6th grade Nursery-care provided
Enneagram Workshop February 22, 9:00 am - 4:00 pm. A way to understand oneself and to compassionately relate to others. Led by Eileen and Michael Heaton Spacious Christianity Lent Study
and Worship Pastor led teachings by Steven Kaski, Jenny Warner and Ron Werner Wednesdays March 12 - April 16, 5:30.7:00pm Simple dinner, teaching, discussion and worship. Adults and children welcome. Wednesday Noon Worship followed by 12:30pm Contemplative Prayer Youth Events http://www.facebook.com/ bendyouthcoff ective
Choirs, music groups, Bible study, fellowship and ministries every week 230 NE Ninth Street, Bend
www.bendfp.org http://www.facebook.com/bendfp 541 382 4401
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS OF CENTRAL OREGON "Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship"
We are a Welcoming Congregation February 16, 2014 at 11:00am:
SUNDAY
9;00 am Sunday School for all ages 9;00 am Hispanic Worship Service 10:15 am Worship Service
"Can 'Spirituality' and 'Money' Really Be intheSame Sentence?" — Rev. Alex Holt, Interim Minister
This morning's service is on stewardship Nursery Care 8 Children's Church but in a very different tenor than the ages 4 yrs-4th grade during all norm. Is there such a thing as a spiritual Worship Services practice of money that can be discussed "Courageous Living" on KNLR 97.5 FM without anxiety? Come find out. 8:30 am Sunday This Sunday our children and youth will enjoy an age-appropriate Children's WEDNESDAY Worship time, focusing on loving ourselves, our families, our friends, and 6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study our earth. There also will be a special THURSDAY project for the February recipient of 10;00 am 50+ Bible Study our Greater Community Collection, the WEEKLY Deschutes Land Trust.W e alwayshave childcare for infants and toddlers. Life Groups Please visit our website for a complete Meeting place: listing of activities for all ages. THE OLD STONE CHURCH 157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND www.bendnaz.org Mail:PO Box 428, Bend OR 97709 www.uufco.org (541) 385-3908 SOVKREIGN GRACK CHURCH Meeting at the Golden Age Club ALL PEOPLES 40 SE 5th St., Bend UNITKD CHURCH OF CHRIST Just 2 blocks SW ofBend High School Why does All Peoples UCCdevote Sunday Worship 10:00 am so much effort ta community service? Our study groups have pursued Sovereign Grace Church is dedicated a deeper understanding of how Christ to worshiping God and teaching the impacted his world and culture. Bible truths recovered through the Following in his footsteps, we are Reformation. Call for information about compelled to serve our world joyfully. other meetings All Peoples meets on the first 541.420.1667 and third Sundays of each month. www.sovereigngracebend.com Find us in the meeting room of The GreenPlow Coff ee Shop, 436 SW6th in Redmond, • • I • (across from Diego's). •
Pastor Randy Myers GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH Weekdays 8:00 am (except Wednesday) 2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend Wednesday 6:00 pm WKSTSIDK CHURCH 382-6862 Saturday Vigil 5:30 pm Westside Church invites you to join us First Saturday 8:00 am (English) at any of our weekend services. No Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am(English) Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. matter what yaur expectatians are, we 12:00 noon (Spanish) (Child Care Available) Canfessions on Wednesdays from hope your time spent with us brings you Sunday School 10:20 a.m. 5:00 to 5:45 pm a little closer to understanding, knowing Education Hour 10:45 a.m. and on Saturdays fram 4:30 to 5:15 pm and growing in a relationship with Jesus Christ. In our opinion, that's what really Women's Bible Study, matters. CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND Tuesday 9:15 a.m. 536 SW 10th, Redmond Contact us at 541-382-7504 or www. Men's Bible Study, 541-548-2974 westsidechurch.org www.redmondchristian.org Wednesday 7:30 a.m. Sunday Worship 9:00 am 8 10:45 am February 15 8 16, 2014 at Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Sunday School for all ages WestsideChurch —W EST CAMPUS Kidma• Junior Church Evangelical Lutheran Church Pastor Bo Stern will share the message Greg Strubhar, Pastor in America "Dreaming Big and Working Hard" at Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor www.gracefirstlutheran.org 6:30pm on Saturday and at 8, 9 and POWKLL BUTTK 10:45am Sunday at Westside Church, CHRISTIAN CHURCH ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH ELCA 2051 NW Shevlin Park Rd, Bend. Cowboy Fellowship Saturdays Worship in the Heart of Redmond Potluck 6 pm Music and the Word 7 pm February 16, 2014 at Westside Church Sunday Worship Services Sunday Worship Services at —SOUTH CAMPUS 8:30 am - 10:15 am - I I am Pastor Tim Reynolds will share the 8:30 am 8 11:00 am Nursery F Children's Church message "Dreaming Big and Working Sunday School for all ages 10:00 am Pastors: Chris Blair, Trey Hinkle, Ozzy Hard" at 10;30am on Sunday at the Osbome and Glenn Bartnik Westside Church South Campus, 13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte Children's Room available 541-548-3066 1245 SE 3rd St., Bend. during services www.powellbuttechurch.com Come Experience a warm, February 16, 2014 at Westside Church REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH friendly family of worshipers. —SISTERSCAMPUS Like Hymns? We've Got 'em! Everyone Welcome - Always. at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th Join us Sunday morning for the message Sunday Services 8 am "Dreaming Big and Working Hard" at A vibrant, inclusive community. A rich (No child care) 10:30am at the Westside Church Sisters and diverse music program for all ages 10;00 am Contemporary Campus, 442 Trinity Way, Sisters. Coff ee,snacksaadfeJJowsfdp Worship Service
KASTMONT COMMUNITY SCHOOL
Children Welcome www.livingtorahfellowship.com
Senior Pastor Virgil Askren
www.lutheransonline.com/
ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH 1720 NW 19th Street Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-923-3390 Father Todd Unger, Pastor ~Mas S~he ILI),
541.410.5337
For information about our Religious Education programs, call Kathy Schindel at 541-388-8826
Major's Robert 8 Miriam Keene NKW HOPK EVANGELICAL
Food/Fellowship Hebrew Roots Fellowship worshipping in Spirit and Truth
BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 1270 NE 27 St.• 541-382-5496
Celebrate New Life at New Hope Church!
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LIVING TORAH FELLOWSHIP @ La RocaChurch 1155 SW Division, ¹D8, Bend Saturday 12:00• 3:00 pm Worship/Dance•Study •
go to: www.bethtikvahbend.org
Reconciliation Tuesday 7:30 AM - 8;00 AM
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Visit us on the web at www.houseofcovenant.org or contact us at 541-385-5439
Series 2 - A Taste of Judaism"Mechanics of
20080 Pinebrook Blvd.• 541-389.3436
Associate Pastors Mike Sweeney 8 Jeff Olson "Loving people one at a time." www.real-lifecc.org
• Davidic dance and worship • Children's ministry and nursery • Hebrew classes • Home groups • Teaching from the Torah and the Brit Hadashah (New Testament) • Biblical Feasts • Lifecycle Events • End-times prophecy
Friday, February 287:00 pm - Kaballat Shabat Services
Exposition F Benediction Monday-Friday after 7:00 AM Mass to 6:00 PM Tuesday (Family Holy Hour) 5:00 PM• 6:00 PM
541-312-8844
Bear Creek Center 21300 Bear Creek Rd. Bend, OR. 97701 Our Shabbat Services are on Saturday mornings at 10:00 a.m. Our ministries include:
Coming in 2014: Oregon Regional Seminar, "Travel the Road to Spiritual Freedom" Explore the dynamic evolution of Jewish March 7-9 at the Unity Center of Portland literary independence F thePortland Eckankar Center. in order to grasp how it is that the "Study af Torah" is the key For More Information to Jewish continuity. www.eckankar.org www.eckankar-oregon.org For the complete schedule of 541-728-6476 Services F Events
Corner of NW Franklin 8 Lava Masses Saturday 8:00 AM Sunday 4:30 PM Monday• Friday 7:00AM F 12:15 PM
Web site: ccbend.org
"Teaching the Word of God, Book by Book"
Messianic Synagogue Est. 1994 We provide a congregational setting for Jews and Christians alike. If you're interested in leaming the Bible from a Hebrew perspective, come join us at:
Jewish Sacred Literature" Monday, February 24• 7-8:30 pm, St Charles Medical Center
THE SALVATION ARMY 541 NE DeKalb Ave., Bend 541-389-8888
(Full children's ministry) Sunday Night Church 6:30 pm For information, please call ... Senior Pastor - Mike Yunker•
Women's Ministry, Youth Ministry are available, call for days and times.
is a member of the Union for Reform Judaism. Our members represent a wide range of
Saturday, February 159:00 am - Munch 8 Torah 10:30 am - Tarah Service
Saturday, February 22 3:00 pm at the East Bend Library 62080 Dean Swift Rd., Bend Try a spiritual exercise, explore the possibilities of learning from your dreams and past lives and leam what soul travel means.
Reconciliation Saturday 3:00 PM - 4:45 PM
CALVARY CHAPEL BKND 20225 Cooley Rd. Bend Phone: (541) 383-5097
Sundays: 8:30 8 10:30 am Wednesday Night Study: 7 pm YouthGroup: Wednesday 7pm Child Care provided
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Rellgilon of the Llghtand Sound ofGod
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FOUNDRY CHURCH (FORMERLY FIRST BAPTIST) "A Heart for Bend in the
HOUSK OF COVENANT
Rabbilohanna Hershenson
HISTORIC DOWNTOWN CHURCH •
TKMPLE BETH TIRVAH
KCKANKAR
Spiritual Experiences Past Lives, Dreams, Soul Travel Introductory presentation F discussion
www.redmondag.com •
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Judaism
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1551 NW First St.• 541-382-6100 0
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CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTKR 21720 E. Hwy. 20• 541.389.8241
SundayMoming Worship 8:45 am 8 10:45 am
Worship with us Sunday, February 16th at 11 a.m., or come early at 10 a.m. for Bible Bookwormsadult discussion time.
Wednesday Mid-Week Service Children 8 Youth Programs 7:00 pm Nursery Care Provided for All Services
On March 2nd, All Peoples meets again. For details and possible help with car-pooling, email: allpeoplesuccCsgmail.com
Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur 21720 E. Hwy. 20 541.389.8241 www.clcbend.com
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
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COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 529 NW 19th Street (3/4 mile north of High School) Redmond, OR 97756 (541) 548-3367
Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor 9:00 am Contemporary Worship 9:00 am Nursery Care 9:15 am Children 8 Youth Sunday School 9:30 am Adult Education 11:00 am Traditional Worship Youth Groups High School - Sunday I I:00am-12:30pm Middle School - Wednesday 6:00-7:30pm
Mondays 6:30 pm Centering Prayer Wednesdays 5:30 pm Prayer Service Small Groups Meet Regularly (Handicapped Accessible) Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.redmondc c.or I
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(In the Heart of Downtown Bend) 680 NW Bond St. / 541.382.1672 Everyone isW elcome! Rev. Jane Shaffer Sermon Title; "490" Scripture: Matthew 18:21.35 9:00 am Contemporary Service Sunday School during 9am service 11;00 am Traditional Service Childcare provided *During the Week: Women's Groups, Men's Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting, Music 8 Fellowship Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Daors. Rev. Thom Larson firstchurch@'bendumc.org
CHURCH & SYNAGOGUE DIRECTORY LISTING Effective May I, 2013 4 Saturdays and TMC: $115 5 SaturdayS and TMC: $138 The Bulletin: EverySaturdayonthe church page.$23 Copy Changes: by 5 PMTuesday
CO Marketplace: The First Tuesday afeachmonth. $23 Copy Changes: by Monday I week prior to publication
Call Pat Lynch 541-383-0396 PlynchCmbendbulletin.COm
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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
'RoboCop,' 'About LastNight' remakesunlikely to knockoff'Lego Movie'attheboxoff ice By Ryan Faughnder Los Angeles Times
L OS ANGELES — T w o
1980s remakes, "RoboCop" and "About Last Night," are
poised to beat rival Valentine's Day weekend fare at the box office, but neither is
Olympics
new competition requires ski-
ers to perform as many tricks as possible while speeding
Continued from D1
downhill; skilled competitors
Bobsled
ski down much of the course Real Olympics version: backward while performing
Teams climb aboard a bobsled
tricks.
and race down an ice track at breakneck speed. Bend Olympics version: Teams climb aboard the Cycle Pub, and then creak slowly down Tin Pan Alley. Extra points given for team who can "woohooo" the loudest.
Bend Olympics version: Competitors start at one end of Minnesota Avenue during the F i rs t F r i da y G a l l ery
Walk. Walking backward, participants must see how
many bites of free cheese and cheap wine they can consume without tripping over any punk-bluegrass urban hoedown bands. Spill-
likely to knock down "The Lego Movie," last week's
Two-man luge
massivechart-topper.
the bobsled, but two competi-
The irreverent toy-based comedy should best all the
tors lie on a sled together. disqualification. Bend Olympic version:
newcomers with about $45
Use the small Cycle Pub and
Moguls, alpineskiing
million in revenue from Friday through Presidents Day
cruise through the breezeway
Real Olympics version:Skiers speed downhill, making
on Monday. It opened last
ally get the feel for two-man sure to hit the moguls just luge, each competitor must sit right. Off just a little and, on someone's lap during the wham! There goes your ACL. race. Bend Olympics version: Run full-speed along the De-
Real Olympics version:Like
in downtown Bend. But to re-
weekend with a massive $69 million — the biggest debut of the year so far. With "About Last Night," from Sony's Screen Gems label, comedian Kevin Hart
Warner Bros. Pictures via The Associated Press
"The Lego Movie" is expected to take the top spot at the box office in its second weekend.
Skeleton
"About Last Night" follows will try to follow up on the two new couples trying to s uccess of h i s r e cent h i t figure out their complicated "Ride Along," which part- relationships. It was filmed nered him again with Wil- almost entirely in downtown liam Packer, the producer Los Angeles at a cost of just behind those tw o m o v i es $13 million. a nd Hart's "Think L i k e a After opening Wednesday, Man." "About Last Night" is ex-
pected to gross $25 million or more through Monday, according to those who have seen prerelease audience surveys.
ing win e i s
schutes River in Drake Park,
Real Olympic version: A
while dodging mogul-sized piles of goose poop. Off just a ice track on a sled, head first, little and, splat! There go your making this one of the most expensive running pants. crazy, don't-try-this-at-home Ski jumping events of the Olympics. Bend Olympics version:In Real Olympics version:Inkeeping with the cycle/beer dividuals ski down a giant theme, drink a beer while rid- hill and soar into the air. ing on a unicycle down Phil's Bend Olympics version:Inc ompetitor slides down t h e
the $120 million "RoboCop,"
an update on the 1987 scifi film, is expected to gross roughly $25 million through the holiday.
Trail.
dividuals on skis attempt to
sail over the gleaming future
Biathalon
The modern spin on Paul
Verhoeven's original "RoboH art d e m onstrated h i s Cop" comes from Brazilian pull with filmgoers in Jan- filmmaker J o s e P a d i lha, uary when Universal Pic- whose last effort was the tures' "Ride Along," which violent foreign military acco-stars Ice Cube, earned tion movie "Elite Squad: The a robust $41.5 million in its Enemy Within," a sequel to first three days in release. It 2008's "Elite Squad." has gone on to gross more S wedish actor Joel K i nthan $100 million. naman plays the new RoboThe few reviews that have Cop, also known as Alex appeared for "About Last Murphy. In the U.S., KinNight" are largely positive, naman is best known for especially compared with his work on the television the weak critical reception crime drama "The Killing" for "Ride Along." on AMC. " RoboCop" a l s o sta r s A remake of the 1986 romcom that starred Rob Lowe, Gary Oldman and Michael D emi M o ore, J ames B e - Keaton, along with Samuel lushi and Elizabeth Perkins, L. Jackson as a conserva-
a n a u t omatic
Kerry Hayes/Columbia Pictures/Sony
"RoboCop," a remake of the1987 science-fiction flick, is expected to gross roughly $25 million this weekend.
home of Oregon State Univer-
Real Olympic version: This event combines two seemingly unrelated events: cross-country skiing and target shooting. The tricky part
sity-Cascades, a former pumice mine. The landing can be a bit tricky; competitors are
encouraged to watch out for sinkholes.
is for competitors to maintain
tive TV commentator. In this
dystopian vision of the year 2028, robotics giant Omni-
Corp revives the critically injured Murphy as a cyborg to use him in its plan to bring
its law enforcement technology to American streets. The PG-13 flick is expect-
Meanwhile, Universal Pictures' teen romance "Endless Love" and Warner Bros.' fantasy "Winter's Tale" will
compete for young female film fans. "Endless Love" — which stars Alex Pettyfer and Ga-
briella Wilde as the two loveed to perform well with teen- birds and Bruce Greenwood age boys as an alternative to as a highly overprotective the female-oriented movies father — could bring in $13 in this week's group of the million to $15 million, after new releases. costing $20 million to make.
their precision while growing Singles figure skating increasingly exhausted. Real Olympics version: Bend Olympics version: Combining strength, skill C ompetitors run u p a n d and artistry, this event is ofdown Pilot Butte; each time ten thought of as the biggest they descend they each wolf event at the Winter Olympics. down a giant, sloppy Pilot Bend Olympics version: Butte Drive-In burger. The Strength, skill and artistry tricky part is for competitors will be tested with a yoga to maintain their speed, while paddleboarding contest. growing increasing filled with Bend Olympics doubles beef. figure skating:Yoga paddleboarding with your dog.
Slopestyle skiing
— Reporter: 541-617-7860, ajohnson@bendbulletin.com
Real Olympics version:This
SUPPoRT GRoUPs The following list contains support group information submitted to The Bulletin. Submissions must beupdated monthly for inclusion. Tosubmit, email relevant details to communitylife© bendbulletin.com. ABILITREEPEER GROUP FOR PERSONSAFFECTED BYA DISABILITY:541-388-8103. ABILITREE YOUNG PEER GROUP: 541-388-8103 ext. 219. ABILITREEBRAIN INJURY SUPPORT GROUP:541-388-8103. ADHDADULTSUPPORTGROUP: 541-420-3023. ADOPTIVEPARENTSUPPORT GROUP:541-389-5446. ADULTCHILDREN OFALCOHOLICS: 541-633-8189. AGE WIDEOPEN (ADULT CHILDREN SUPPORT GROUP): 541-410-4162 or www.agewideopen.com. AIDSEDUCATION FOR PREVENTION, TREATMENT, COMMUNITY RESOURCES ANDSUPPORT (DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT):541-322-7402. AIDSHOT LINE:800-342-AIDS. AL-ANON: 541-728-3707 or www.centraloregonal-anon.org. ALCOHOLICSANONYMOUS (AA): 541-548-0440 or www.coigaa.org. ALS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-977-7502. ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION: 541-548-7074. ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-330-6400. ALZHEIMER'S/DEMENTIA CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-948-72!4. AUTISMRESOURCE GROUP OF CENTRAL OREGON:541-788-0339. BENDATTACHMENTPARENTING: 541-385-1787. BEND S-ANONFAMILYGROUP: 888-285-3742. BEND ZENMEDITATION GROUP: 541382-6122 or 541-382-6651. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORTGROUPS: 541-382-5882. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORT GROUP/ADULTSAND CHILDREN: 541-383-3910. BEYOND AFFAIRSNETWORK: A peer group for victims of infidelity, baninbend©yahoo.com. BRAININJURY SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-382-945 I. BRAINTUMOR SUPPORT GROUP: 541-350-7243 BREAKUPSANDDIVORCE SUPPORT GROUP: 541-610-3060 or phoenixc ounselingbend@gmail.com. CANCERFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: 54! -706-5864. CANCERINFORMATION LINE: 541-706-7743. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-536-7399. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541610-3060 or phoenixcounselingbend© gmail.com CELEBRATE RECOVERYBEND: Faith Christian Center,541-383-5801; Westside Church,541-382-7504; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATERECOVERY LAPINE: Grace Fellowship, 541-536-2878; High
Lakes Christian Church, 541-536-3333; Living WatersChurch, 541-536-1215; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATE RECOVERYMADRAS: Living HopeChristian Center,541-4752405 or centraloregoncr.org. CELEBRATE RECOVERYREDMOND: RedmondAssembly of GodChurch, 541-548-4555 Orcentraloregoncr.org. GENTRALOREGON ALZHEIMER'S/ DEMENTIACAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP:541-504-0571. CENTRALOREGONAUTISM ASPERGER'S SUPPORTTEAM: 541-633-8293. CENTRALOREGONAUTISM SPECTRUM RESOURCEAND FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP:541-279-9040. GENTRALOREGON COALITION FOR ACCESS(WORKING TO CREATE ACCESSIBLE COMMUNITIES): 541-385-3320. GENTRALOREGONDEPRESSION AND ANXIETYGROUP:541-420-2759 CENTRALOREGON DISABILITY SUPPORTNETWORK:541-548-8559 or www.codsn.org. CENTRALOREGON FAMILIESWITH MULTIPLES:541-330-5832 or 541-388-2220. CENTRALOREGON LEAGUE OF AMPUTEESSUPPORT GROUP (COLA):541-480-7420 or www. ourcola.org. CENTRAL OREGONRIGHT TO LIFE: 541-383-1593. CHILDCAR SEAT CLINIC (PROPER INSTALLATIONINFORMATION FOR SEATANDCHILD):541-504-5016. CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: 541-330-3907. CHRISTIANWOMEN OF HOPE (WOMEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP):541-382-1832. GLARE BRIDGEOF BEND (ALZHEIMER'SSUPPORT GROUP): 541-385-4717 or rnorton1@ brookdaleliving.com. GO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS BEND:541-610-7445. CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS REDMOND:541-610-8175. COFFEEANDCONNECTION CANCER SUPPORT GROUP:541-706-3754. COMPASSIONATEFRIENDS (FOR THOSE GRIEVINGTHE LOSS OF ACHILD): 541-480-0667 or 541-536-1709. CREATIVITY aWELLNESSMOOD GROUP: 541-647-0865. CROOKED RIVERRANCHADULT GRIEFSUPPORT:541-548-7483. DEFEATCANCER: 541-706-7743. DESCHUTES COUNTY MENTAL HEALTH24-HOUR CRISISLINE: 541-322-7500. DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR SUPPORTALLIANCE:541-549-9622 or 541-771-1620. DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR SUPPORT: 541-480-8269 or suemiller92©gmail.com. DEPRESSIONSUPPORT GROUP: 541-617-0543. DIABETICSUPPORT GROUP: 541-598-4483. DISABILITYSUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-8103. DIVORCE CARE:541-410-4201. DOUBLETROUBLERECOVERY:
Addiction andmental illness group; 541-317-0050. DYSTONIASUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-2577. ENCOPRESIS (SOILING):541-5482814 or encopresis©gmail.com. EVENINGBEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP:541-460-4030 FAITHBASED RECOVERY GROUP: Drug andalcohol addictions; pastordavid©thedoor3r.org. FAMILYRESOURCECENTER: 541-389-5468. GAMBLERSANONYMOUS: Redmond 541-280-7249, Bend541-390-4365. GAMBLINGHOT LINE:800-233-8479. GERIATRIC CARE MANAGEMENT: info©paulbattle.com or 1-877-867-1437. GLUCOSECONTROL LOW CARB DIET SUPPORTGROUP:kidnrcd©yahoo. com or 541-504-0726. GLUTENINTOLERANCEGROUP (CELIAC):541-390-2399. GRANDMA'S HOUSE:Supportfor pregnant teensandteenmoms; 541-383-3515. GRANDPARENTSRAISING OUR CHILDREN'S KIDS:541-306-4939. GRANDPARENTSSUPPORTGROUP: 541-385-4741. GRIEFSHAREGRIEFRECOVERY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-382-1832. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-3066633, 541-318-0384 or mullinski@ bendbroadband.com. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-548-7483. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUPS:Forthe bereaved; 541-771-3247. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-447-2510. GRIEFAND LOSS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-508-4036 or www.gohospice. com, GRIEFSHARE (FAITH-BASED) RECOVERY GLASS:541-389-8780. HEALINGENCOURAGEMENT FOR ABORTION-RELATEDTRAUMA (H.E.A.R.T.): 541-318-1949. HEALTHYFAMILIESOF THEHIGH DESERT: Homevisits for families with newborns; 541-749-2133 HEARINGLOSS ASSOCIATION: 541-390-2174 orctepper©bendcable. com. HEARTSOFHOPE:Abortion healing; 541-728-4673. IMPROVE YOUR STRESS LIFE: 541-706-2904. INFERTILITY SUPPORT GROUP (RESOLVE): 541-604-0861. LA LECHE LEAGUEOF BEND: 541-317-5912. LIVINGWELL(CHRONIC CONDITIONS): 541-322-7430. LIVING WITHCHRONICILLNESSES SUPPORT GROUP: 541-536-7399. LUPUS 8E FIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP:541-526-1375.
MADRAS NICOTINE ANONYMOUS GROUP:541-993-0609. MATERNAL/CHILDHEALTH PROGRAM(DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTHDEPARTMENT): 541-322-7400. MEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. MENDED HEARTSSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-4789. MISCARRIAGESUPPORT GROUP: 541-514-9907. MOMMY ANDMEBREASTFEEDINGSUPPORT GROUP: Laura, 541-322-7450. MULTIPLESCLEROSIS SUPPORT GROUP:541-706-6802. NARCONON: 800-468-6933. NARCOTICSANONYMOUS (NA): 541-416-2146. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESSOF CENTRAL OREGON (NAMI):541-408-7779, 541-504-1431 Or email: vonriedlpn@yahoo.com. NAMI BEND- EXTREMESTATES: 541647-2343 Orwww.namicentraloregon. Oi'g
NAMI BENDCONNECTIONS:541480-8269, 541-382-3218 orwww. namicentraloregon.org NAMI BENDFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: whitefam©bendcable.com or www.namicetttraloregon.org. NAMI MADRASCONNECTIONS:For peers, 541-475-1873 orNAMlmadras© gmail.com. NAMI MADRASFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-475-1873 or NAMlmadras©gmail.com. NAMI MADRASFAMILY-FAMILY SUPPORTGROUP:541-475-3299 or www.namicentraloregon.org NAMI REDMOND FAMILYSUPPORT GROUP:namicentraloregon©gmail. com. NAMI REDMONDCONNECTIONS: 541-382-3218 or 541-693-4613. NEWBERRY HOSPICEOF LA PINE: 541-536-7399. OREGON COMMISSIONFOR THE BLIND:541-447-4915. OREGON CURE:541-475-2164. OREGON LYMEDISEASE NETWORK: 541-312-3081 orwww.oregonlyme. Org. OVEREATERSANONYMOUS: 541306-6844 or www.oa.org. PARENTS/CAREGIVERSOF CHILDRENAFFECTEDBYAUTISM SUPPORT GROUP:541-771-1075 or http://coregondevdisgroupaso.ning. com. PARENTS OFMURDEREDCHILDREN (POMC)SUPPORT GROUP: 541-410-7395. PARISH NURSESANDHEALTH MINISTRIES:541-383-6861. PARKINSON'SCAREGIVERS SUPPORTGROUP:541-317-1188. PARKINSON'SDISEASE SUPPORT GROUP:541-280-5818.
54i 382-6447 ~ 2090 NE Wyatt Court ~ Suite i0i Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com
PARTNERS INCARE:Homehealth and hospice services; 541-382-5882. PAUL'SCLUB:Dadsand male caregiver supportgroup;541-548-8559. PFLAGCENTRALOREGON:For parents, families andfriends of lesbians and gays; 541-317-2334 orwww. pflagcentraloregon.org. PLAN LOVINGADOPTIONS NOW (PLAN):541-389-9239. PLANNEDPARENTHOOD: 888-875-7820. PMS ACCESS LINE: 800-222-4767. PREGNANCYRESOURCECENTERS: Bend,541-385-5334; Madras,541475-5338; Prineville, 541-447-2420; Redmond, 541-504-8919. PULMONARY HYPERTENSION SUPPORT GROUP: 541-548-7489. RECOVERINGADDICTS IN THEADDIGTIONFIELD: phoenixc ounselingbend@gmail.com. SAVINGGRACE SUPPORTGROUPS: Bend, 541-382-4420; Redmond, 541-504-2550, ext. 1; Madras, 541-475-1880. SCLERODERMA SUPPORTGROUP: 541-480-1958. SEXAHOLICS ANONYMOUS: 541-595-8780. SOUPANDSUPPORT:Formourners; 54! -548-7483. STEPMOM SUPPORTGROUP: 541-325-3339 or www. insightcouttselittgbend.com. SUPPORTGROUP FOR FAMILIES WITH DIABETICCHILDREN: 541-526-6690. SURVIVORSOF SUICIDE LOSS
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SUPPORT GROUP:541-610-3060 or phoenixc ounselingbend©gmail.com. TOBACCO FREEALLIANCE: 541-322-7481. TOPS OR:Bend,541-388-5634; Culver, 541-546-4012; Redmond, 541-923-0878. TYPE2 DIABETESSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-4986. VETERANSHOTLINE: 541-408-5594 or818-634-0735. VISION NW: Peersupport group; 541-330-0715. VOLUNTEERSINMEDICINE: 541-330-9001. WOMEN'SRESOURCE CENTER OF CENTRALOREGON:541-385-0747 WOMEN SURVIVINGWITH CANCER SUPPORTGROUP:541-706-5864. YOUNGPEOPLEWITH DISABILITIES PEERGROUP:831-402-5024. ZEN MEDITATIONGROUP: 541-388-3179.
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014• THE BULLETIN
D5
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
Da so uture aston'T eToni t o TV SPOTLIGHT
have a baby. I'm very happy at my job. I'm just not gunning for this. I'm very happy here. "So he goes, 'I appreciate
By Kate O'Hare Zap2it
With ra t i ngs-challenged NBC struggling to find its feet
that.' I said, 'And when eventu-
as thebroadcast network world
let's do it the right way.' And he
shifts and rolls beneath it, and with broadcast television itself being regularly lamented as havingone footinthegrave and the other on slippery ground,
said, 'Yeah, of course.' You just
ally you decide to step down, felt it was different from then on. "We talk to each other every
45
couple weeks, always giving me advice, all the way up till now. He called me and said, 'I think this is going to be the year.' And I said, 'All right.'And he goes, 'I'd love for you to be the next guy. I think you're going to be great."' The logo for the revamped "Tonight Show" features a full
one might be tempted to think
the Peacock might as well fold its tail feathers for good. But there is a center of gravity to the NBC universe, and it
is every weeknight, right after your local news - "The Tonight Show." On Monday, that center shifts from its longtime home in Los Angeles (aka "beautiful downtown Bur-
moon, but that's not the only
iconic nighttime symbol that
bank") to its ancestral home of New York, where it launched with host Steve Allen in 1954. After the departure of host
was in Fallon's mind.
"Why not bring it back to New York?" he says. "What's going to happen? What's the
James White/NBC
Jay Leno (again) following a "The Tonight ShowStarring Jimmy Fallon" premieres Monday on NBC. 22-year run — briefly interrupted by a failed experiment with Conan O'Brien in 2009-10 son did the first third ofhis run, a good way, the halls echo with reporters in Pasadena, Calif., in — "The Tonight Show Starring from 1962 to '72 (he stayed un- the legends." January, Fallon pointed out that Jimmy Fallon" makes its debut til 1992, when Leno came in). With Seth Meyers replacing he was happy in his later-night from Studio 6B at 30 Rockefel- Lorne Michaels of "Saturday him as host of the "Tonight" slot and made the point of telller Plaza in Manhattan. Night Live" fame comes in as companion show, "Late Night," ing Leno. "After the whole Conan-Jay NBC is hoping that injecting executiveproducer of the new the 39-year-old Fallon, a new new blood into its most venera- iteration, with Josh Lieb as father of a 7-month-old daugh- thing went down," he says, "I ble franchise will help the net- producer. ter, brings his house band, the was following Jay. He was back "There's that great feeling," Roots, along with his skills as at 11:30. I called up Jay, and I work get its mojo back. It might even be counting on a friendly says Lieb, "of bringing it back a comic, an interviewer and a said, 'Hey, I just want to let you ghost or two. to where the show came from, song-and-dance man. know that I'm not gunning for "In a way," says Lieb, "it's the your position at all. I'm very Studio 6B is the same space to the studio where Paar and where Jack Paar was host of Carson were. It gives us a little closest thing to a real variety happy at 12:30, 7:00 a.m., wher"The Tonight Show" from 1957 more impetus to feel like we show that's on TV today." ever they put me on. I'm here, to '62, and where Johnny Car- have something to live up to. In Speaking to assembled TV I'm in New York, I'm trying to
Journasare ast in tosister's ie
worst that can happen? It's just
a beautiful city. I think of New York, I think of nighttime. I just think it's the perfect place,
where it should be. I think of the lights of Times Square and Broadway and night life and the excitement and the glitz and the glamour of all that is 'The Tonight Show.'
"I feel like, bookingwise, it's never been a problem for us. We've had the president of the
United States on our show." Announced guests for the first show are Will Smith and
U2. Then on Thursday, first lady Michelle Obama stops by.
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f
Dear Abby:My sister died sud-
known her at all.
As to functions having to do with
Dear Abby: I love my wife, but a shock. Although she tried hard to I find it difficult to take her to any
business, if she's uncomfortable in that environment, then you should
have a relationship with me over the
attend without her.
denly. She hadn't been ill, and it was
function where there will be many
Dear Abby:I'm a secretary who years, I had trouble relating to her people. She doesn't comprehend and we weren't close. most conversations. She acts like happens to make really good cofI am sorry to say that I never she's listening, but if prompted for a fee. An employee who works in the took the time to get reply, it's obvious she building likes my coffee and has wasn't. to know her. I'm left made himself comfortable at my now with many quesWhile she doesn't desk in the morning before he starts DFP,R tions about the sister I seem to care, I find it work and afterward, before his secalways had, but never embarrassing. Peo- ondjob. really knew. ple tend to shy away I am not comfortable with this. As her next of kin, from her, leaving her He plants himself at my desk, and I I'm responsible for packing up her by herself. Because of this, we don't find myself having to work around things, and I came across several
often get invited back. At Christ-
him. He has become a fixture in my
journals. I would like to read them mas, when I received my invitation office and I need it to stop. How can because I feel they would help me to the annual office party, I sent my I go about this without hurting his to understand her better, but I also regrets. feelings? — Not His Barista feel it might be disrespectful to go If I try to talk to my wife about through something of hers that was this issue, she gets defensive and acDear Not: From where I sit, it so personal. cusesme ofpicking onher.Advice? looks like the man may have a — The North 40 fn Virginia crush on you. Because you want What do you think? Would it be wrong to read them? I wish I had Dear North 40: Itwould be inter- less of his company, tell him you her here to talk to instead of jour- esting to know if your wife's prob- need to get to work — or get your nals to snoop through. lem is an inability to comprehend work finished — and that his pres— Regretful in Oakland English well, a hearing problem or ence at your desk is distracting. Tell Dear Regretful: I'msorry for your a social anxiety disorder. him you're flattered that he likes loss, and your regrets. Because you Of course, we'll never know un- your coffeeand he'sw elcome to a would like to know your sibling, I less you're able to have an honest cup, but he needs to drink it elsethink you should read her journals. conversation with her about it and where. If you say it pleasantly, his While it's sad that you have to make explain how it affects you. If there feelings shouldn'tbe hurt. her acquaintance in this way, it is a solution, your wife will have to — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabbycom would be better than never having
want to find it.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSATURDAY, FEB.15, 2014:Thisyearyou are able to verbalize some of your more creative ideas. Others will see ways to practically apply some of those ideas. A friend or partner could become both am useand an adviser. If you are single, you could meet a potential suitor sometime after June, and find that there is more of a romantic dynamic than you iniStars showthe kind tiaiiy had thought. of day you'll have This reiationship ** * * * D ynamic could become quite intense. If you are attached, the two of you might opt * Difficult to take up anew hobby or pastime together that demands imagination. The two of you will enjoy your time together even more than you have in the recent past. VIRGO can bevery nurturing.
or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
thing else, you will feel quite content. A special invitation could sound reasonable financially, but you might be surprised by the fringe costs. Tonight: Dinner for two.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
** * * Your ability to move personal a matter along, while still being able to kick back and enjoy your friends, will emerge. Those around you would not even guess that you haveyour share of problems.
Reachoutfornews from aloved one.Tonight: Where the action is.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
** * * You might want to come to an understanding with an older friend or relative. You sometimes rub each other the wrong way. Recognize that you are in a out a suggestion fromsomeoneelse. Is position where it might be easier for you to thatwhatyou reallywant to do? Being make the first move. Tonight: Bring others vague has its advantages too. Tonight: Join together for a celebration. friends at a favorite haunt. GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * You might experience an urge to ** * Take a stronger stance in dealing explore a different setting. You would get with your finances. You might get some bored if you were not always expanding important feedback from a loved one.You and having new experiences. A loved one are likely to toss caution to the wayside. will be simply delighted to join you andexARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * Someone finally might express Some of you actually might decide to book perience today's twists and turns. Tonight: a weekend getaway in the very near future. Opt for a different type of cuisine. his or her idea in away that is clear and direct. You likely will respond with a sense Tonight: All smiles. AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) of delight and relief. Listen to your inner VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You finally will level off and relax; voice about a personal matter or a situation ** * * Finally you'll get to call the shots however, someone in your immediate cirthat is pivotal to you. Tonight: Make it an and make the plans. For the most part, clecouldpopinandperhapssharesome early night. everyone will be pleased. A loved one shocking news. Still, you'll remain mellow could surprise you with his or her reaction. and actually find the situation humorous. TAURUS (April 20-May20) Get into a favorite sport or hobby. Tonight: ** * Someone you look up to will let you Consider weighing the pros and cons of a situation before taking any action. Tonight: Just don't overdo it. know exactly what he or she is thinking. Hang with your friends. You are likely to go along for the ride, as PISCES (Feb.19-March20) you understand this person's important ** * * Defer to others. Understand that LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) role in your life. Make plans that keep you ** You could be overtired and withdrawn. you are likely to partake in something that close to home. Tonight: Love the moment You'll want a situation to move in the diyou normally would not choose to do. The with favorite friends. rection you desire, but the person you are nature of your companions will convince GEMINI (May21-June20) dealing with has not one predictable bone youthatfun canbe had aslongasyou ** * * You might opt to stay close to in his or her body. Let your creativity flour- hang out by them. You might enjoy yourish. Deal with a family member directly. self. Tonight: Togetherness is the theme. home, which really is not your style. Whetheryou are deep into a bookor some- Tonight: Opt for quieter plans. © King Features Syndicate ** * * You will be far more verbal than you typically are. Youalso will be so precise with your words thatyou could rule
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ABOUTLAST NIGHT (Rj12:45,3:55,5,7:15,9:50 • AMERICANHUSTLE(Rj 1:05, 4:15,7:40 • ENDLESSLOVE(PG-13) 12:15, 3:30, 6:45, 7:55, 9:30 • FROZEN(PG) 11a.m., 4:40, 7:25 • FROZENSINGALONG (PG)2:05 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13)11:20a.m., 4:55, 7:45 • JACK RYAN: SHADOWRECRUIT (PG-13) 1:40, 10:10 • LABORDAY(PG-I3) 10:05 • THE LEGO MOVIE(PG) 11a.m., 1:35, 4:30, 7:05, 9:40 • THE LEGO MOVIE 3-D (PG)12:20, 3:15, 6:20, 9 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 12:35, 3:45, 6:35, 9:35 • THEMETROPOLITAN OPERA: RUSALKA (noM PAA rating) 12:55 • THE MONUMENTS MEN(PG-13) 11:10 a.m., 12:30, 1:55, 3:20, 6:30, 9:25 • THE NUT JOB(PG) 11:35 a.m., 2 • RIDE ALONG (PG-13j 11:05 a.m., 4:45, 7:30, 10 • ROBOCOP(PG-13)12:55,3:40,6:40,9:30 • ROBOCOP IMAX (PG-13) 1:15, 4, 7,9:45 • VAMPIREACADEMY (PG-13)7:20,9:55 • WINTER'S TALE(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 1:45, 3,4:20, 6:15, 9:20 • THE WOLF OF WALL STREET (R)8 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
I
TV TODAY Sp.m. on58, "XXII Winter Olympics" —Hardware aplenty is handed out in a number of sports today in Sochi, Russia, starting with women's short track, in which American Alyson Dudek hopes to be in the top three in the1500m event. In cross-country skiing, women from Norway, Sweden and Finland figure to vie for podium space in the 4x5 relay, while in men's skeleton, Martins and Tomass Dukurs of Latvia are the co-favorites. 8p.m. on29, Movie:"Dreamgirls" — It took a long time for the stage hit to reach the screen but writer-director Bill Condon's adaptation was worth the wait. Beyonce Knowles has her best film role yet as the central vocalist in a1960s girl group, and Jamie Foxx also does sterling work as their manager. Still, the cast standouts are Eddie Murphy
as a soul-music superstar and Jennifer Hudson, the "American Idol" former competitor who earned an Oscar for the film. 8p.m. onAMC, Movie: "Snakes on a Plane" — What's this movie about again? Samuel L Jackson is among those fighting reptiles in the skies in this 2006 thriller, playing the federal agent in charge of delivering a mob witness. Others don't want him to — cue the snakes. Visceral fun is the result, and others targeted by the slithering
"passengers" includecharacters played by Julianna Margulies, Bobby Cannavale and Rachel Blanchard ("7th Heaven").
9 p.m. on TRAV, "GhostAdventures" — Returning with new episodes on a new night, this series follows paranormal investigators Zak Bagans and Nick Groff and technician Aaron Goodwin as they track ghosts at allegedly haunted locations. In "Sharon Tate Ghost," they visit a LosAngeleshome experiencing paranormal activity believed to be related to the Manson Family murders. 9p.m.onUSA, Movie:"Inthe Heat of the Night" —Director Norman Jewison's first-rate 1967 mystery earned Oscars for best picture and best actor for Rod Steiger, who plays a bigoted Southern police chief forced to investigate a murder with a black Philadelphia police detective (Sidney Poitier). Ray Charles performs the wonderfully moody title song; Lee Grant and Warren Oates co-star. The film, and the novel upon which it was based, inspired a TV series that starred Carroll O'Connor. ct zap2it
WILSONSsf Redmond 541-548-2066
t
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • ANCHORMAN 2:THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)9 • THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY (PG)6 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG)Noon, 3 • After 7 p.m., shows aie 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screeningsbefore 7 p.m.ifaccompanied by alegal guardian. • J
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • 2014OSCAR-NOMINATED ANIMATED SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 11:30 a.m., 5:30 • 2014OSCAR-NOMINATED DOCUMENTARY SHORTS (no MPAArating) 2 • 2014OSCAR-NOMINATED LIVEACTION SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 8 I
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Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • 12 YEARSASLAVE(R) 6:30 • THE BOOK THIEF (PG-13) 4:30, 7:15 • THELEGO MOVIE (PG)2:30,4:45,7 • THEMONUMENTS MEN (PG-13)2:I5,5,7:30 • NEBRASKA (R) 2 • PHILOMENA(PG-13j 2:15, 4:15 i
G allery-Be n d
541-830-5084
TOUCHMARK slNCE 1980
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Plae Well, Retire Well
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Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THELEGO MOVIE (PG)Noon,4:40,7 • THELEGO MOVIE3-D (PG)2:20,9:20 • LONE SURVIVOR(R) 6:45, 9:15 • THE NUT JOB(PG) 12:50, 2:50, 4:50 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 1:40, 4:15, 6:50, 9:25 • VAMPIREACADEMY(PG-13) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7:10, 9:30 • WINTER'S TALE(PG-13) 2, 4:35, 7:20, 9:50 •
I5&TREss
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Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THELEGO MOVIE (PG)Noon,2:15,4:30,6:45,9 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 • WINTER'STALE(PG-13) 11:15a.m., 1:45, 4:15,6:45, 9:15 • THE WOLFOFWALLSTREET(R) 11a.m., 2:30, 6, 9:30
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775SW Bonne Way,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0321 ewww.elevationcapital.biz
Ae~aa~ Dishwasher
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THE LEGO MOVIE(Upstairs — PG) 1, 3:30, 6, 8:10 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 1,4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazlne
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Hbil~bif TV.APPLIANCE
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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
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THE BULLETIN
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014
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ADVERTISING SECTION E
Live the Dream in a Quiet Sisters Escape Brand New Construction 3-Car Garage Single-level home in new phase of Vista Meadows. Located in NW R edmond, 3 bedrooms, 2.5baths, 2020 SF, open fl oor plan. Features great room, Alder cabinetry
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With the real estate market showing unmistakable signs of recovery, nowcould be anideal time to purchase a home. •
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buyersareseriousandthatthey have been vetted bythebank. Many buyers conduct a lot of research online prior to stepping into a home. This research lasts an average of six to eight After flatlining during the economic downturn weeks, according to the National Association of Realtors. thatbegan around 2008,housing markets in Homework includes investigating neighborhoods and school many regions of the United States and systems, comparing the going rates of homes in the area, as Canada have shown signs of recov- well as figuring out which features are desired in a home. ery. If you planto buy ahome,it's also important to hire areal estate This holds true for the Cen- agent. Suchprofessionals sendbuyers listings that fit their hometral Oregon market, as search parameters, which saves buyers a lot of time and effort. well, meaning those in Some agents previewhomes fortheirbuyers, even goingso far the market to buy and as to identify overpriced listings that can be avoided or finding sell may find t h is sellers who are willing to negotiate. A real estate agent works year presents an for the buyer, meaning there will be no conflict of interest. ideal opportunity Agents assist buyers in the negotiating process, using their to do just that. knowledge of the real estate market to help buyers make realisA ccor d i n g tic offers that are likely to be accepted while providing a wealth to the Central of information about housing trends, area services and home Oregon Asso- improvement vendors. ciation of RealWhen sellers accept buyers'offers, buyers must then arrange tors residential home inspections.Aninspectionis oftentimes included as aconhome sales in tract contingency, and buyers have a right to cancel contracts if Bend alone ininspections find that a home is unsatisfactory structurally. creased more
by Metro Editorial, for The Bulletin Advertising Department
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SELLERS
than 14 percent
through the year
Sellers competing for business in a thriving housing market also have to do their share of work. It is unlikely sellers will be able to list their homes for sale median home prices one dayand have dozens ofoffersthenext.Today'sbuyersare have increased 22 per- much more conservative, and homes will have to be presented cent,from $220,395 to in the best light and listed at reasonable prices. $269,000. Sellers can start the process of selling their homes by reThese numbers indicate searching recently sold homes in their neighborhoods, paying a strong housing demand particular attention to final sales prices. This information may into 2014, at which time a be available through tax records, and some real estate sites pubstrengthened economy will lish the data online. continue to energize both resale Sellers can then compare this information to what they still and new housing markets. owe on their mortgages if their homes are not paid off, and this Buyers will need to be prepared to should give sellers an idea of their potential profits. purchase inventory right away, while Sellers also can benefit from working with real estate agents, sellers will need to price their homes right as it can be quite difficult and stressful for homeowners to sell for the best chance of sale. The following are their homes on their own. Agents have access to multiple listing some guidelines. databases and industry contacts, information that is quite valuable when selling a home. BUYERS Agents will do their own assessments of a home to help sellers Havingaplanisessentialwhenbuyingahome,as such price the home accordingly based on market conditions. In ada purchase is not something buyers should take lightly. dition, real estate agents can inform sellers about which, if any, Establishing a budget is the first step. This means taking repairs orchanges may need to bem ade to make a home more inventory of savings, expenses and borrowing power. It is ad- attractive to prospective buyers. visable to sit down with a lender and do a run-through of what Real estate agents also help sellers through the negotiating you can afford. process, finding a balance between what the buyer wants to pay By providing key financial information, including earning and how much the seller wants for the home. statements, existing debt and credit history, buyers can quickly Housingmarketsareonce again looking up.Asthenew year learn how much they're qualified to borrow and how much they arrives, many people may find now is the time find their next are comfortable borrowing. This helps buyers zero in on homes homes. in their price range. Understanding the process and getting guidance from real Being preapproved for a mortgage is advantageous when it estate professionals makes the process of buying and selling a comes time to make offers on properties. It shows sellers that home that much easier. 2013. During that 12-month stretch,
FOR SALE
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BY-
REALTOR
If you are a Rental Property Owner, Iinvite you tocall me. I •
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3 bedroom,2bath. Upgradedfinishes; bambooandslate floors, concretecountertops.Laundryroomupstairs with cabinetsand counter.Mudroomoff kitchen. Master suite hasFrenchdoors openingout to deckwith arborwith mountainviews.Gasfireplace. Doublecar garagewith opener.
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3 Beds Z5bathstowshome.Well
designed floor planlives larger than thesquarefoahge. Master bedroom plus twobedrooms upstairswith anoffice nook. Fully appliancedstainless steel . kitchen. Openliving roomhas agas fireplaceasdinstalled TV. 2-car garage. W/Dincludeded.
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s i All utilities, intemet &cable paid! ~ Wxury studioloft inWestside
"f" neighborho od.Studiooffershigh-end : :: finishes entitling beautiful woodfloors throughout wilh NCandabuilt-in
desk,books helvesandspeakers. Deluxe kitchen.Fullsize washer & dryer.Storage shedforbikes&skis. I
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3 bed, z5 bath.1630sq. ft. homehasanopenliving floor
plan. Gas fireplacein living room. Fullyappliancedkitchen, island, gasrangeandlarge pantry. Separateutility roomwith front-loadingW/D.Fully fenced backyard.Doublecargarage.
Furnished studio. 1.5 bath. Vaulted ceilings andpine wood
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touches.Big picturewindows. , Fully appliancedkitchen has a door to theside deck with breathtakingmountainviews • Wio included.Ownerprovides basic cable.
2 beds, z5 baths. NE townhome nearmedical centers. Half bath onmain level anda bar area off thekitchenfor bar > stools. Semi-private deckout back with storagecloset on backside of unit.Water/sewer paid. Singlecar garage.
2 beds, 2.5baths.Greatsplit level duplex on Bend's NE side. Semi-privatebackyard with maturetrees.W/0 hookups inutility room.Water & sewerpaid.Singlecar garagewithstorageshelves.
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I pled g e to strongly represent your management interests cmd surpass your expectations ... Always. You have myword on it.
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E2 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Houses for Rent SE Bend
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730
732
740
New Listings
Commerciai/Investment Properties for Sale
Condo/Townhomes for Sale
745
• H o mes for Sale
Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
Panoramic Cascade 2 Unit duplex in NW 3200 Sq.ft. home sits ATTRACTIVE NE • j Views j $699,000 Bend. Ad ¹1332 against the lava flows BEND HOME ! N ewer 4 b d r m S E , • 5004 PRIME COMMERCIAL Creekside TownhomeSq.Ft, 4 bedof Bend. AD¹1152 • Open floor plan, master main l evel, PROPERTY, this 1 871 sq ft, 3 b e d - TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty TEAM Birtola Garmyn 4 bdrm and 2 bath 2100 SF, large yard, room charming Ma d r as rooms, 2.5 bath, awe541-312-9449 High Desert Realty • Near Mtn View High verv nice. $ 1 795.• Gourmet kitchen, thebuilding is updated, some location on the ater room www.BendOregon 541-312-9449 School 541 -480-9200 located on Hwy. 97, creek, upgrades ga• 2.18 Acres, extensive • Master on main, gas RealEstate.com www.BendOregon e • • • • Cat 5 wire system, lore, main level masdecking RealEstate.com fireplace and hardThe Bulletin's hardwood floors & off ter. $254,900. 36 Acre estate, Bend • MLS 201400616 wood floors "Call A Service st. parking. $139,900. Lynn Johns, Principal RENTALS Call The Bulletin At Cascade Nursery. Jim Moran, Broker • Large fenced yard and MLS¹ 201305319 Pam Broker, 541-408-2944 Professional" Directory 603 - Rental Alternatives Ad ¹1122 541-385-5809 RV parking Lester, Principal BroCentral Oregon is all about meeting TEAM Birtola Garmyn 604 - Storage Rentals Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Colleen Dillingham, ker Century 21 Gold Resort Realty High Desert Realty your needs. 605 - Roommate Wanted Broker At: www.bendbulletin.com Country Realty, Inc. Forest Greens Town541-312-9449 541-788-9991 616- Want To Rent 541-504-1338 Call on one of the www.BendOregon home 1484 sq ft, 3 Remodeled Home, John L. Scott 627- VacationRentals & Exchanges RealEstate.com professionals today! +400 sq.ft. Office/ Real Estate, Bend MORRIS Bungalow in Downtown bedrooms, 2.5 bath, 630- Rooms for Rent Shop on 1.4 AC, great room floor plan, www.johnlscottbend.com Sisters! Residential/ REAL ESTATE 2-bath 1486 sq. 631 - Condominiums & Townhomes for Rent fully furnished w/hot 3 bdrm, Commercial, ty2 Bdrm, I M~ rl y~ ~ Op «0 home on 1 acre TEAM AD¹1582 632 - Apt./Multiplex General Birtola Garmyn 1 bath, newly remodeled, tub. Golf course set- ft. Houses for Rent TURN THE PAGE with Cascade views, 634- Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Prinevillej $182,300 $130,000. 541-388-1602 ting. $199,000. High Desert Realty c overed porch, o r SW Bend For More Ads • 2199 Sq.Ft. ManufacLynn Johns, Principal 541-312-9449 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend C ommercial Lots I n Broker, 541-408-2944 ganic garden, potting tured www.BendOregon The Bulletin 638- Apt./Multiplex SE Bend shed, dbl. g a rage, Prime location on Bend's • 3 Bedroom, 2 bath Crooked River Ranch: Central Oregon RealEstate.com 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend arden shed, fenced. west side! S pacious• 1.88 Acres, huge Great opportunity to Resort Realty BARE LAND, ALL floorplan features great shop/garage 184,500. MLS 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond start a business or Want to impress the UTILITIES IN Redmond Townhome201307988. Call room design. 3 over- • MLS 201400407 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished relocate an existing • 3 acres of land with all relatives? Remodel sized bdrms, 2.5 baths, 3 br, 2 ba, 1887 sq ft, Nancy Popp, business. Near res648- Houses for Rent General Darryl Doser, utilities installed near schools, Tetherow letted tub, Brazrlhan 541-815-8000 your home with the • Hwy t aurants, hotel a nd 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 97 frontage, MUS Golf Club, Mt. Bachelor, Cherry floors, double Crooked River Realty help of a professional golf course. Owner 652 - Houses for Rent NW Bend zoned River Trail & shopping; g arge. MLS ¹ t o o terms avail. Business from The Bulletin's • Build your Ag busi654- Houses for Rent SE Bend adjacent to park. MoveThe Bulletin's Circle, Lot 82:- 1.05 new! $134,900. Pam "Call A Service ness or home here. in ready; yard maint. incl. 656 - Houses for Rent SW Bend Lester, Principal Bro"Call A Service acres, $25,000. Lot 50 19424 SW B rookside ker, Century 21 Gold Professional" Directory Professional" Directory • www.johnlscott.com 658- Houses for Rent Redmond -1.30acres & Lot51Way. No pets considered. /36677 Realty, Inc. 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 1.23 acres, still avail- Country is all about meeting MORRIS Faye Phillips, Broker $1495. 541-408-0086 541-504-1338 2 Homes for the price of able at $35,000 each 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 541-480-2945 REAL ESTATE your needs. one on 1.5 acres. or purchase both for 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 745 John L. Scott I~ ~ ~ Op m 1 Ad ¹1212 $60,000. Juniper ReCall on one of the 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters Real Estate, Bend Homes for Sale TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.johnlscottbend.com Shevlin Ridge j alty 541-504-5393 professionals today! 663 - Houses for Rent Madras High Desert Realty $225,000 664- Houses for Rent Furnished .54 Acre overlooking • .39 Acre lot 541-312-9449 The Bulletin's Beautiful & Pre-sold home on Farewell Bend Park. VILLAGE PROPERTIES • End of cul-de-sac lo671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent www.BendOregon Spacious. "Call A Service Aubrey Butte with Sunriver, Three Rivers, Ad ¹1012 RealEstate.com cation 675 - RV Parking Beautiful property with Professional" Directory TEAM Birtola Garmyn great views. La Pine. Great • City water & sewer comfortable spaces 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space Ad ¹1322 2241 NW Awbrey Rd., for varied family Selection. Prices range • MLS 201400429 is all about meeting High Desert Realty inter682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage TEAM Birtola Garmyn Bend. Hand crafted 541-312-9449 $425 - $2000/mo. Scott Huggin, yourneeds. ests. Exquisite teak687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease High Desert Realty home with attention to View our full www. BendOregon Broker, GRI flooring in foyer, 541-312-9449 detail on a l l f i nish wood 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent Call on one of the RealEstate.com inventory online at living area and gourwww.BendOregon work. This is a must Village-Properfies.com professionals today! Beautiful rustic home on kitchen. Kitchen REAL ESTATE RealEstate.com preview pr o perty. met 1-866-93f-f 061 has granite counter705 - Real Estate Services 2 acres in the pines. Solid fir doors, cus738 NW Bend Home on 2.6 tom clear vertical fir tops, large i s land, Ad ¹1312 713- Real Estate Wanted desk and acres. AD¹1062 Multiplexes for Sale TEAM Birtola Garmyn 719 - Real Estate Trades cabinets & ceiling fans planning MORRIS numerous oak cabiBnnH TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty in all rooms. Great 726 - Timeshares for Sale Master b e dREAL ESTATE 541-312-9449 High Desert Realty Stellar Inve s tment Vce ©alh room floor plan with nets. 730 - New Listings 541-312-9449 room on main level I~ ~ ~ Op m 1 Property! 11-u n it www.BendOregon wood floors 8 a fire- with bathRealEstate.com www.BendOregon 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale townhome complex, 2 place surrounded by roomluxurious South Deerfield Parkj RealEstate.com pr i vate 738 - Multiplexes for Sale bdrms, ty~ bath with Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 cabinetry. 3 bedroom, deck. an d $274,900 g a r ages, bath Ranch on Al• Franklin Brothers new attached 2.5 bath, large mas- f amily/media Large 740 -Condominiums 8 Townhomes for Sale Big single level, built room p rofessionally m a n t er b e droom w i t h and game/rec room. construction most 1 Acre, 744 - Open Houses 2004, 4 bdrm, walk-in • 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, aged and well main closet, $542,500 AD¹1002 Ad ¹1492 745 - Homes for Sale MLS¹ tained. $ 1 , 020,000. TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn built-ins & bath with all 201303078. open floor plan 726 746- Northwest Bend Homes H unter Levi s o n High Desert Realty • Custom cabinets, SS the extras. M ature High Desert Realty Timeshares for Sale Bobbie Strome, 747- Southwest Bend Homes Group, 541-306-0479 landscaping with appliances 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 Principal Broker or 541-977-1852. • MLS 201400398 paver paths. Close to 748 - Northeast Bend Homes www. BendOregon www.BendOregon John L Scott Real $5900-$35,900 Enjoy Kathy Janus, Broker, Windermere C e n tral RealEstate.com downtown Bend & has Estate RealEstate.com 749 - Southeast Bend Homes 541-385-5500 Eagle Crest all year Oregon Real Estate plenty of parking for The Kelleher Group as a fractional owner. 750 - Redmond Homes Remarkable Deschutes Awbrey Butte Fine uests 8 toys. BEND PARK Park-like 541-728-8615 Benefits of being an $299,900 Rare Invest R iver & Can y o n living and big Cascade 753 - Sisters Homes 479,000 setting. Main dwelling Eagle Crest Owner at ment Opportunity. 5 Viewsr AD¹1222 views! Ad ¹1292 MLS¹201308330 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes guest plus a "fraction" of the cost. bdrm, 2y2 bath, two TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn Bobbie Strome, 756- Jefferson County Homes house/rental on a toHome-ID FRAC houses on one tax lot High Desert Realty High Desert Realty Principal Broker tal of 0 .55y acres. 757 - Crook County Homes Eagle Crest Properties mid-town l o c ation, 54'I -312-9449 541-312-9449 John L Scott Real Main dwelling floors 866-722-3370 MORRIS 762 - Homes with Acreage Tenant occupied and www.BendOregon www.BendOregon Estate 541-385-5500 are engineered hardREAL ESTATE p rofessionally m a n RealEstate.com 763- Recreational Homes and Property RealEstate.com 55+ In Suntree Village wood in living, dining, a ged. Unit B i s a 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, Almost 764 - Farms and Ranches 8 bedrooms. Mitsub• N e w Listings 2-story built in 2003.. Energy efficient SE • 1539 sq.ft. home SW Bendj $299,000 771 - Lots sq.ft. Nestled in ishi electric heating & • 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, and H unter Levi s o n 1600 Bend Home on 3 • 2142 Sq.Ft. Single the Pines, AD¹1672 c ooling syst e m. 773 - Acreages NE Bend j $299,000 Acres. Ad ¹1142 den/office Group, 541-306-0479 TEAM level Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn • $58,900. Kitchen has fantastic • 2092 sq.ft, remodeled • 4 Bedroom, 2 bath or 541-977-1852. 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes High Desert Realty cabinets with Corian • 3 Bedroom, 2 bath High Desert Realty • MLS ¹201400598 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land • .37 Landscaped acre Windermere C e n tral 541-312-9449 countertops. Adjacent • Treed .25 Acre lot Oregon Real Estate 541-312-9449 Teresa Brown, Broker • MLS 201400639 www.BendOregon guest house and main 648 • MLS 201400365 www.BendOregon 541-788-8661 Kelly Neuman, RealEstate.com h ome together f o r John L. Scott Deborah Benson, PC, RealEstate.com Houses for Principal Broker Want to impress the $510,000 Broker, GRI, Preview Real Estate, Bend Custom Home with Big Rent General relatives? Remodel getaway, 4 www.johnlscottbend.com MLS¹201309647 Specialist Shop on Fenced 1.4 Remodeled Bobbie Strome, 541-480-6448 your home with the Acres! $265 , 000 bdrm, 2 bath, chalet. 5 Acres j $489,000 Principal Broker OWC Ad ¹1442 help of a professional AD¹1522 • 2625 Sq.Ft. John L Scott Real The Bullatjn's TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn • 4 Bedroom, 2 bath from The Bulletin's Estate 541-385-5500 High Desert Realty "Call A Service High Desert Realty "Call A Service • Beautiful landscape, MORRIS 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 Broken Top j $400,000 Professional" Directory pond Professional" Directory REAL ESTATE www.BendOregon MORRIS www.BendOregon • 2041 Sq.Ft. Town• MLS 201309091 RealEstate.com RealEstate.com js all about meeting REAL ESTATE home 632 Jackie French, Broker Investment P r operty. • 3 Bedroom, 3.5 Bath 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, View of The Bulletin's Apt./Nlultiplex General yourneeds. Spacious duplex in The Bulletin's • On 9th fairway Black Butte, on.33AC "Call A Service Northwest Crossingj NE Bend, 2 bdrm, 1 "Call A Service • MLS 201400233 AD¹1082 CHECK YOURAD Call on one of the Professional" Directory $419,000 bath with single ga Professional" Directory TEAM Birtola Garmyn Jerry Stone, Broker • 1660 Sq.Ft. Craftsman is all about meeting rages, light and bright 541-390-9598 professionals today! • 3 Bedroom, 2 bath High Desert Realty is all about meeting open f loor p l ans, your needs. 541-312-9449 MORRIS • Hardwood floors, your needs. $237,500, profession www.BendOregon PUBLISHER'S REAL ESTATE maple cabinets Call on one of the ally managed. Hunter 0 RealEstate.com NOTICE • MLS 201400566 I~ ~ ~ Op m 1 L evison Grou p , Call on one of the professionals today! All real estate adverprofessionals today! Shelly Hummel, Broker, 541-306-0479 or Tumalo Home on 5 AC, A LIFE IN PARADISE! on the first day it runs tising in this newspaMORRIS CRS, GRI, CHMS 541-977-1852. 732 Incredible Mtn Views! 2 Bdrm, 1 bath, 800y to make sure it is corPristine large family REAL ESTATE per is subject to the 541-383-4381 Windermere C e n tral AD¹1042 rect. "Spellcheck" and F air H ousing A c t Commerciai/Investment Sq.ft., rustic cottage home on vacation IA~ tly ~ ~ ~ Oregon Real Estate TEAM Birtola Garmyn human errors do ocon a 2.99y acre parmakes it illegal Properties for Sale getaway. AD¹1272 High Desert Realty cur. If this happens to which cel. Come view this CASCADE MTN "any TEAM Birtola Garmyn a d vertise 2 Bdrm, 2 bath 541-312-9449 your ad, please con- to amazing piece of VIEWS! $349,500 High Desert Realty 1352 NE 2nd St., Bend. Duplex unit on large lot. preference, limitation www.BendOregon tact us ASAP so that paradise on the out- • 6.38 Acres, 1.7 acres 541-312-9449 or disc r imination Beautiful commercial Ad ¹1392 MORRIS RealEstate.com corrections and any skirts of Redmond. irrigation, 2371 sq.ft. www. BendOregon o ffice b u ilding i n TEAM Birtola Garmyn based on race, color, REAL ESTATE adjustments can be Built on the curve of • 5 Bdrm, 2 bath, counRealEstate.com religion, sex, handiBend. $599,000 High High Desert Realty Log accent home and made to your ad. the Deschutes River, try home Lakes Realty & Propcap, familial status, 541-312-9449 horse property on 40 541 -385-5809 Check out the this perfect small • 2 Pastures, 2 outmarital status or naerty Man agement www. BendOregon acres. Ad ¹1252 The Bulletin's The Bulletin Classified tional origin, or an inclassifieds online home has amazing buildings, private well 541-536-0117 RealEstate.com TEAM Birtola Garmyn "Call A Service views of the moun- • 64160 Pioneer Loop www.bendbulletirLcom tention to make any High Desert Realty The Bulletin's tains and the river. Kathy Caba, Principal such pre f erence,Professional" Directory Find exactly what Great investment oppor Updated daily 541-312-9449 Detached garage has "Call A Service Broker, ABR limitation or discrimiis all about meeting www.BendOregon you are looking for in the tunity, fully occupied Incredible NW style esa studio-type room 541-771-1761 nation." Familial sta1834 sq. ft. duplex on Professional" Directory RealEstate.com your needs. CLASSIFIEDS tate on almost 90 with an extra bath and John L. Scott .36 acre lot, n ear tus includes children is all about meeting shower attached. Real Estate, Bend Home/Shop and guest under the age of 18 Call on one of the Sage El e mentary acres. AD¹1362 your needs. 16629 Burgess Road, TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.johnlscottbend.com studio on fenced .5 $425,000 Built in 1995. living with parents or professionals today! La Pine. 3820 sq. ft. 6 school. High Desert Realty MLS¹201309622 acre. ¹1452 legal cus t odians, $189,999. Hunter Le Call on one of the rooms, 7 rest rooms. 541-312-9449 Bobbie Strome, TEAM Birtola Garmyn The Bulletin's vison Group, pregnant women, and Nottingham Square j professionals today! $724,900 High Lakes 541-306-0479 www.BendOregon Principal Broker or High Desert Realty "Call A Service people securing cus$198,500 Realty & P r o perty RealEstate.com John L Scott Real 541-312-9449 541-977-1852. tody of children under • 1408 Sq.Ft. Professional" Directory Management 634 www.BendOregon Estate 541-385-5500 18. This newspaper • 2 Bedroom, 2 bath Windermere C e n tralRiver View Condo- Mt is all about meeting 541-536-0117 RealEstate.com Oregon Real Estate Apt./Multiplex NE Bend will not knowingly ac- • .22 Acre, fenced yard Bachelor Village, 20% Aspen Rim j $429,900 yourneeds. cept any advertising • MLS 201400505 Equity Share, • 3030 Sq.Ft. RenaisWant to impress the 740 Call for Specials! for real estate which is Lynne Connelley, Want to impress the AD¹1542 sance built Call on one of the relatives? Remodel in violation of the law. Limited numbers avail. Broker, CRS Condo/Townhomes TEAM Birtola Garmyn relatives? Remodel • 4 Bedroom, 3 bath professionals today! 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. O ur r e aders a r e your home with the 541408-6720 High Desert Realty • Earth advantage certifor Sale your home with the hereby informed that W/D hookups, patios help of a professional 541-312-9449 fied help of a professional CRYSTAL CLEAR MTN or decks. all dwellings adverwww.BendOregon • MLS 201310605 from The Bulletin's $449,000 - River Front VIEWS! from The Bulletin's tised in this newspaMOUNTAIN GLEN, RealEstate.com Dawn Ulrickson, Broker • 20 X 6 4 B arn with "Call A Service Condo do w ntown 541-383-9313 per are available on "Call A Service CRS, GRI, CHMS Bend. Open f l o or shop Professional" Directory River Meadows Resort Professional" Directory an equal opportunity Professionally MORRIS 541-610-9427 plan. Fresh p aint. • 20 min. to Costco home backs big basis. To complain of managed by Norris & REAL ESTATE counters. Two • 37 acres commons. d iscrimination ca l l Office building + home Granite Stevens, Inc. 2 bdrm, 1 bath 950 sq. www.johnlscott.com + s hop. $ 178,000. balconies. Detached Ad ¹1262 HUD t o l l-free at $64,900. 420 N. /745io Just bought a new boat? 1-800-877-0246. The People Look for Information 16480 William Foss, garage. 541-771-1168 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Eric Andrews, Broker Roanoke, Hines, OR. Jean Nelsen, Broker Sell your old one in the La Pine. High Lakes 541-388-0404 High Desert Realty toll free t e lephone About Products and 541-420-3927 classifieds! Ask about our number for the hearHigh Lakes Realty & MORRIS 541-312-9449 Realty & Pr o pertyWindermere C e n tral Services Every Day through Super Seller rates! Property M a n ageJohn L. Scott REAL ESTATE Management www.BendOregon ing im p aired is Oregon Real Estate 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds 541-536-0117 ment 541-536-0117 Real Estate, Bend RealEstate.com IM~ dy~ ~ Op t 1 1-800-927-9275. •
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The Bulletin 5 41- 5 - 5 • The Bulletin, • Ce nti'al OregOn MarketplaCe • The Central OregOn NiCkel AdS e bendbulletin.COm 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Some restrictions apply
wrscked Slerl. /Ifter m@ket motorup¹r de . ysq Fast and F Urr. e allService recoes f/lovingforces s I r $200!IO80 541-PPP spp
THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY FEBRUARY 15 2014 E3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745
Homes for Sale
Deschutes River Canyon I $625,000 • 3329 Sq.Ft. Custom home • 4 Bedroom, 3 bath • 2.44 Acres • MLS 201309953 Diane Lozito, Broker
745
Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
• H o mes for Sale •
Homes for Sale
La Pine.82 Acrel
NE Bend I $249,500 • 1728 Sq.Ft. • 3 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath • .16 Acre corner lot • MLS 201309188 Amy Halligan, Broker 541-410-9045
Premier Prineville Neighborhood • 3 Bdrm, 2.5 bath • 1985 sq.ft., bonus room • Central AC - central vac • Close to pool, park and playground Shelley Arnold, broker
$149,900 • Overlooks Little Deschutes River • 1352 Sq.Ft. A-frame • 2 Bedroom, 1 bath • MLS 201309302 Gary Rose, Broker, MBA 541-588-0687
541-548-3598
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Homes for Sale
Single Level l $499,000 • 2896 Sq.Ft. • 3 Bedroom, 3 bath • 5 Acres
STUNNING SMITH ROCK VIEW! • 3 Spacious bdrms, 2 bath • Built in 2 005, 1704 sq.ft. • Private backyard on .4 acre, Terrebonne MLS ¹ 201307479 Angie Cox, Broker 541-213-9950 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend
• MLS 201304836 Jane Strell, Broker, ABR, GRI 541-948-7998
541-771-9329 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend
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Count on our group of local real estate professionals to help you navigate.
www.johnlscottbend.com
MORRIS REAL ESTATE
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Private, Gated Estate l Sunriverl $549,000 ~ y~ ~ ~ d $1,890,000 Sq.Ft. • 4801 Sq.Ft. Home SINGLE LEVEL AND •• 2264 4 Bedroom, 3.5 Bath IM~ y y ~ ~ Oy « d GREAT LOCATION • 4 Bedroom, 4.5 Bath LARGE HOME • .30 Acre • Nicely updates single • MLS 201400042 Downtown Bendl • 19.54 Acres • Open living area with level with new lami$699,000 • MLS 201305564 fireplace Jack Johns, • 2593 Sq.Ft. Darrin Kelleher, Broker, nate floors, carpet and • 3 Bdrm, 2.5 bath • 2151 Sq.Ft. Broker, GRI • 2 Master suites paint • 2207 sq.ft., large loft, • 4 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath, The Kelleher Group 541-480-9300 • 1752 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 • Historic character541-788-0029 fenced backyard. den/office renovated bath home www.jackson-Anderson. • RV parking, large • Large living room and • MLS 201301793 com backyard Diane Robinson, separate family room Barbara Jackson, • MLS 201308521 •Fenced, RV parking, Broker, ABR Broker 541-306-8186 Minda McKitrick, MORRIS 541-419-8165 large deck, Butte view John L. Scott Broker, GRI MORRIS REAL ESTATE Marci Schoenberg, Real Estate, Bend 541-280-6148 REAL ESTATE Broker www.johnlscottbend.com IA ~ m lyo ddd ~ 541-610-7803 LAZY RIVER SOUTH John L. Scott SW Bend Charmer Private Hideaway R emodeled 3535 y Real Estate, Bend • 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, MORRIS • 1.86 Acres, 3696 sq.ft. www.johnlscottbend.com Sq.ft. home with 4 vaulted ceilings and REAL ESTATE home in Bend bdrm + offi ec and 3 MORRIS wood stove IM~ y y ~ ~ Oy « d • Jefferson 8 Hood baths. Master bath REALESTATE Want to impress the • Walk-in closet, 2 car views with large jetted tub & relatives? Remodel garage, RV parking Want to impress the • Gated, beautiful pond new tile shower. Me• Landscaped, fenced, your home with the and waterfall relatives? Remodel dia room, family room, NOTICE: sprinklers and hot tub help of a professional • .23 h uge kitchen w i th All real estate adver- • www.johnlscott. com/ your home with the acre lot on sharon handcrafted cabinets tised here in is subfrom The Bulletin's help of a professional cul-de-sac, close to Sharon Abrams, CRS, & granite counters, ject to th e F ederal "Call A Service from The Bulletin's Old Mill Principal Broker walk-in pantry, sun- Fair Housing A ct, Professional" Directory • $219,000 "Call A Service 541-280-9309 room with hot t ub. which makes it illegal www.johnlscott.com John L. Scott Professional" Directory Home has cedar eves to advertise any prefSisters Horse Property. /53149 Real Estate, Bend with copper accents. erence, limitation or 10.8 acres w/8+ acres Kathy Denning, Broker E agle C r ee k Gol f E xterior siding o n discrimination based www.johnlscottbend.com irrigated pas t ure, 541-480-4429 Course Chalet - 1447 home, garages 8 on race, color, reliSE Bendl $319,900 large home w/sepaJohn L. Scott sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 storage bldg have just gion, sex, handicap, • 2496 Sq.Ft. rate guest quarters. Real Estate, Bend baths, new hardwood been painted. Watch familial status or naBedroom, 3 bath Mt. Views, p rivate www.johnlscottbend.com floors & heat pump, the wildlife from the tional origin, or inten- •• 3 setting and g a ted. Acre, fenced yard double car garage. wrap-around deck or tion to make any such • .19 201309521 $675,000. Tanglewoodl 18th Fairway of the go to your private ac- preferences, l i mita- MLS Scott McLean, Long, Broker $398,500 R idge Cour s e , c ess to 300y f t o f tions or discrimination. Craig 541-480-7647 Principal Broker HPMES PRICED FRPM • 4 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath Little Deschutes River We will not knowingly $269,000. 541-408-6908 • Hardwood floors, Lynn Johns, Principal frontage for fishing, accept any advertisC ROSS I N G ~ $4~9d9'00 $7 N ' d900 Realty Executives cherry cabinets Broker, 541-408-2944 swimming or floating. ing for real estate • $ • .21 Acre lot, 3-car gad Central Oregon $495,000 Skyliner Summitl which is in violation of rage MLS¹¹201309267 Resort Realty this law. All persons $429,900 fromDIRECTORS• MLS 201400230 Bobbie Strome, MORRIS • 2525 Sq.Ft. are hereby informed Elkhorn Ridgel MORTGAGE Michael J Hopp, Broker Principal Broker • 4 Bedroom, 3.5 Bath that all dwellings adREAL ESTATE • $375,000 541-390-0504 John L Scott Real • .11 Acre lot vertised are available • 2245 Sq.Ft. Home Drop dn for a hot cup of coffee and to see thls weekend's Estate 541-385-5500 • MLS 201309912 on an equal opportu• 4 Bedroom, 3 bath Darryl Doser, open houses in NorthWest Crossing. Both define pure luxury nity basis. The Bulle- Need help fixing stuff? • Landscaped, fenced The Bulletin's Broker, CRS tin Classified wlth dazzling finishes, courtyards and three car garages. Call A Service Professional yard "Call A Service 541-383-4334 find the help you need. • MLS 201308088 Perfect, Private and MORRIS Professional" Directory Brandon Fairbanks, www.bendbulletin.com Family REAL ESTATE Broker, SRES, is all about meeting • 10 acres in Tumalo, ir2203 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. IA ~ m lyo Secluded Serenity yourneeds. rigation and new well • Central courtyard close to Bend • Mountain views, 3844 MORRIS • Large great room Call on one of the • 35 acre and 14 acre Tetherow Crossing sq.ft. with quilt room REAL ESTATE Country horse prop• Master on main level professionals today! • Barn, potting shed, irrigation dy ~ ~ ~ d erty is fenced 8 cross • Bright interior garden area and more • 2 arenas and a round fenced w/New ZealLocation Location, Lo- •www.johnlscott.com/ pen • Priced at$849,908 South Deerfield Park I • 60x60 barn with stalls and electric fence & c ation! 5 B d rm, 2 sharon MORRIS $258,900 DIRECTIONS: West ord Shevlin Park Rd., electric gate. Views of and hay storage bath, 1 6 0 0 sq . f t. Sharon Abrams, CRS, REAL ESTATE • Franklin Brothers 1800 left on NWCrossing Dr., left on NW • House is close to 1700 sq.Ft. Cascades, p r i vate manufactured home Principal Broker IM~ dy ~ ~ dy y d setting, 40x60 shelter Lemhi Pass Dr. with add-on's nestled sq.ft. 541-280-9309 OTH HOMESOPEN EXTENDED HOUR • New construction, Golfers Retreat! Hand- on 6.5 acres. Living for horses, 20x30 hay Jean Nelsen, Broker John L. Scott single level 2175 NW Lolo Dr. somelyupdated home storage, 40x60 chain 541-420-3927 dining room, Real Estate, Bend • Landscaped front & over looking the 5th room, link dog pen. 2 pro• Elegant & spacious kitchen and master www.johnlscottbend.com John L. Scott back fairway i n Ri v er's suite hav e n e w er Real Estate, Bend pane gas free-stand• Main floor above street • MLS 201308645 Edge. Open f l o or laminate PREMIER GOLF www.johnlscottbend.com Carolyn Priborsky, PC, ing stoves, 1 in family flo o ring. • Master on main level plan, spacious mas- Ideal for starter home, COMMUNITY and 1 in living room. Broker, ABR, • Central courtyard ter, large back deck, rental property, tem- •Single story a cross Wood blinds throughThe Bulletin's CRS, Green convenient to shop- porary home, while from tennis courts • Priced at$7$9,988 out, hardwood floors, "Call A Service 541-383-4350 Bdrm, 3 bath ping. $415,000. carpet & vinyl. Close building a new home. ••4 OIRECTIONS: West on Skyliners Rd« 2064 sq.ft. Professional" Directory Scott McLean, d istance t o Des A great private county right on Mt. Washington Dr«right on Principal Broker is all about meeting chutes River. MLS setting. Shared well, 2 •Recently remodeled NW Lolo Dr. 541-408-6908 Danielle Snow, 201400248. storage buildings, 400 your needs. Realty Executives $368,000. AMP service to home Broker 541-306-1015 MORRIS John L. Scott Call on one of the John L. Scott Real and 100 AMP service Real Estate, Bend REAL ESTATE Want to impress the professionals today! Estate 541-548-1712 to pump house. This www.johnlscottbend.com 2679 NW Shields Dr. I& y ~ d y ~ ~ d~ d relatives? Remodel is a m ust p review • Home w/600 sf ADU property, if you do, your home with the you will see its poten• Deck, privacy upgrades help of a professional tial. $212,000. MLS • Hickory flooring from The Bulletin's ¹201400038 • Master on main level "Call A Service Bobbie Strome, • Priced at$579,800 Professional" Directory Principal Broker John L Scott Real DIRECTIONS: West on Shevlin Park Rd., A • A Estate 541-385-5500 Huge Shop left on NW Mt. Washington Dr« left On • 30x30 insulated NW Shields Dr. MASTER ON MAIN • Shop in Prineville - 2 STORY • Nice 3 bdr, 2 b ath • Large • 3/4 bedrooms a • a home on 4.5 acres • Separate living upTheresa Ramsay, stairs with bonus Broker A LL A R O U N D • Gas fireplace 54'I -815-4442 • Fenced yard John L. Scott Theresa Ramsay, Real Estate, Bend Broker MORRIS REAL ESTATE
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Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Bend R. Central Oregon
541-815-4442
John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend
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NE Bend l $204,900 • 1384 Sq.Ft. • 3 Bedroom, 2 bath • New carpeting • MLS 201311092 Debbie Johnson, Broker Keystone Ter r ace. 541-480-1293 Three fully occupied 3182ysf tri-plexes located just a few blocks from shopping & the facilities of JuniMORRIS per Park. Exterior of REAL ESTATE buildings have vinyl siding and are neat y&~ dy~ ~ dy d and attractive. $325,000 for each tri- Want to impress the plex. relatives? Remodel MLS ¹201309427, your home with the 201309433, help of a professional 201309444 from The Bulletin's Bobbie Strome, Principal Broker "Call A Service John L Scott Real Professional" Directory Estate 541-385-5500
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Jod Hunting?
Check The Bulletin Classified
DIRECTIOMS: West on NW Newport
Ave./NW Shevlin ParkRd., right on NW Pence Ln« left on NWMonterey Pines Dr. Property on right.
We're proud of our associate Kevin Pangje for achieving the highest in both volume and units for the Evergreen Oregon region and earning the prestigious President's Club award. Not only is Kevin a top performer, he's passionate about working hard for the customers he serves.
g9i iiggi 21182 Capella Pl. • Open floor plan • Fenced back yard • Attractive finishes • Other lots, plans available • Homes pricedfrom $287,988
For over 26 years, Kevin has assisted thousands of Oregon residents with home financing solutions and has built a reputation for providing quality service and looking after his cjients'best interests.
OIRECTIOMS: From Hwy. 20 East, south on 27th St., right on Capella Pl.
19036 Mt. Shasta Dr. • Three Pinesluxury • Master on main level • Large open kitchen • Courtyard & patio • Priced at$814,908
The Presjdent's Club award is reserved for top performers, representing the top 10% of origjnators at Evergreen Home Loans. Associates like Kevin inspire us to make Evergreen the best place to work and a great place for our customers to find home loan solutions.
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Kevin Pangle
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OlltECTIONS: West on Shevlin Park Rd.,
left on NWPark CommonsDr., left on Mt. Jefferson Pl« right on Mt. Shasta Dr.
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65 SW Allen Rd. ¹B • Townhomestyle condo • New carpet, paint • Hardwood floor • Near Deschutes River • Priced at$349 900
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. 2013
NMLS 89521
OfficePhone: 541-318-5500
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DIRECTIONS: From Parkway exit Colorado Ave., right on SW Simpson Ave., right on SW Bradberry St« left on SW Allen Rd.
Presid.ent'8 Club
kPangle@eVergreenhomelOanS.Com
19492 Century Dr.
685 SEThird Street ( Bend,OR97702
• Striking architecture • Master on main level • 11-ft great room ceiling • On road to Mt. Bachelor • Bonus/recreation room • Limestone fireplace • Slab quartz countertops • Priced at$524,908
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NMLS ¹89511
EVERGREEN'
Classifieds
REREK
1899 NW Monterey Mews • Charming cottages • 2 & 3 bedroom plans • High end finishes • Central location • Homes pricedfrom $829,988
NMES 3182
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©2014 Evergreen HomeLoansisa registeredtradenameof EvergreenMoneysourceMortgage Company'NMLSID3182.Trade/service marksarethe property of EvergreenHomeLoans. Al rights reserved. Licensedunder: OregonMortgage LendingLicenseML-3213.2/14.
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E4 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15 2014 • THE BULLETIN 745
Homes for Sale
745
Homes forSale Southeast Bend Homes
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Redmond Homes
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Redm o nd Homes
Redm o nd Homes
Your Next Home only Custom h o m e in Updated! Owner w i ll $199,400 - Turn-key $325,000 - Our finest of $478,000 - Gated 80' RV parking! 1616 Custom Built Home on Tanglewood. Open carry - 3 b d rm, 2 fully furnished Creek- the chalets with a ga- community! 4 bedsq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath 698 Acres - 2692 sf 4 $197,000 • Nice NE single level floor plan, p assive bath, 1440 sq.ft., on side Village Townrage! Many upgrades, r oom, 3. 5 ba t h , home with dbl. gabd/3bath home w/lots home solar heat, r adiant .34 acre. Large deck home. Fully equipped built-ins of knotty pine. 3208 Sq.ft.. Private rage, gas fireplace, of windows providing • 3 Bdrm, 2 baths heat, solarium off liv- and oversized garage/ kitchen, just add food! Immaculate condition resort living, pantry, split bedroom Cascade mountain & • Close to school ing room, new kitchen shop. $11 9 ,900. Remember your ac- with extra large deck year-round or 2nd floorplan with great Smith Rock v iews. • Covered patio with c abinets, gran i te MLS¹ 201 3 08373 tivity equipment and facing east and on the home. room concept. Only 6 m i les f rom mountain views counters, s p acious Pam Lester, Principal take advantage of all 10th fairway of t he MLS¹201305107 $179,900. MLS Redmond. 40 acres of • www.LoveBendOrebackyard and Trex Broker Century 21 Eagle Crest has to Ridge. MLS¹ Call Charlie or 201309527 Pam flood & wheel line irgon.com deck. $279 , 000. Gold Country Realty, offer. 201302668 Virginia, Principal Lester, Principal Bro- rig. All set up for cattle Kendall Couney, Broker 541-946-3371 Inc. 541-504-1338 MLS¹201306283 Eagle Crest Brokers ker, Century 21 Gold w/cross fences 8 cor541-576-4742 Windermere C e ntral Eagle Crest Properties 541-350-3418 Country Realty, Inc. rals. Private pond. The Washington, NW 866-722- 3370 541-504-1338 John L. Scott Oregon Real Estate Properties Redmond RE/MAX Seclusion & privacy + Redmond. Main floor Real Estate, Bend 866-722- 3370 Land & Homes wildlife on this propWest Hills. 4 Bdrm, 3.5 www.johnlscottbend.com master suite w/sitting Adorable Cottage in the The Bulletin's The Bulletin's Real Estate erty. ¹ 20 1 301950. bath, in 4040y sq.ft., room, walk-in closets Heights $124,900. "Call A Service 541-771-7786 "Call A Service - The Home$560,000. delighfful w e s tside in all rooms, 3 bed, $219,000 Arched e n t ryways, 746 steads at Desert Sky John L. Scott Real home with panoramic Professional" Directory Professional" Directory 2.5 bath, 2147 sq ft. is designed to recap- is all about meeting $529,000 - Gorgeous oak hardwood floor- Estate 541-548-1712 C ascade an d c i t y Northwest Bend Homes is all about meeting MLS¹201310072. ture the feeling of the custom home on the ing, large lot w/RV acviews on a spacious $ 297,900. Call J i m your needs. your needs. 1st green of the Ridge cess, 3 bed, 1 bath, booming years of the lot with high desert $145,000 Bends' WestHinton, 541-420-6229 Need to get an ad late 1800s style in the C ourse a t Eag l e 1227 sq ft, 500 sq ft natural landscaping. side. Two renovated 2 Call on one of the Call on one of the Central Oregon Realty MLS ¹ Crest! Gracious floor basement. true American westTwo gas fireplaces, bdrm condos. High professionals today! in ASAP? Group, LLC professionals today! 201308245. ern homestead, complan w it h s o a ring one in living room and end finishes, stack Vicci Bowen ceilings, bea u tiful bining true grit with ir- $344,500 - Small one in master bed- W/D, stainless appli., $103,000 - 3.39 acres 541-410-9730 r esistible cha r m . acreage with i rriviews & ele g ant, n ear C OC C an d r eady f o r you r Fax it to 541-322-7253 room. Master bedMLS¹201308995 timeless fin i s hes Central Oregon Realty HOME! MLS¹ room has c offered Newport Mkt. Profesgated pasture overGroup, LLC Eagle Crest throughout. sional managed and 201100749 Cal l The Bulletin Classifieds ceiling and slider to l ooking pond & MLS¹201308794 Properties upper deck with hot well maintained. Jake $474,900 - Brand new Travis L. Hannan, fenced pas t u re 866-722- 3370 Eagle Crest USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! tub. Master bath has & Loretta Moorhead, to be built Craftsman PC, Principal Broready for horses or Properties Great Location South of 541 - 480- in sought after Vista ker 541-788-3480 deep soak tub, large Brokers other critters. De866-7223370 Door-to-door selling with Town - Great bones in $244,000 - Recreate all tached garage shop t iled s h ower a n d 6790 or 541-480-2245 Rim n e ighborhood. Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes year round when you w/storage. fast results! It's the easiest t his 3bdrm 2 b a t h double sinks. Great Windermere C e n tral High-end finishes in own this lovely 3 bed, MLS¹201307823. home. 1920 s q ft Real Estate room is light and airy Oregon Real Estate clude wood flooring, The Bulletin's way in the world to sell. w/large utility room 541-771-7786 2.5 bath Forest Green Call Don C hapin, with expansive city granite kitchen, ex "Call A Service The Bulletin w hich could b e a townhome. Fully fur- Principal and Cascade views. posed timber framing, The Bulletin Classified computer room too. The Bulletin's n ished & r eady t o 541-923-0855Br o k er Professional" Directory Kitchen is efficiently To Subscribe call more. 541-385-5809 is all about meeting move-in! Step down v aulted "Call A Service laid out with granite 541-385-5800 or go to MLS¹201309834. Redmond RE/MAX living room w/woodMLS¹201310566 your needs. tile counters, newer www.bendbulletin.com Eagle Crest Professional" Directory Land & Homes Cascade mountain vi ew stove. Attached large Eagle Crest appliances, p a ntry Properties Real Estate is all about meeting Call on one of the form this charming 3 shop & 2-car garage. Properties 866-722- 3370 and hardwood floor- $829,000 I 541-771-7786 She v lin bedroom, 2 bath your needs. 866-7223370 professionals today! Oil monitor for heating. Triple garage with Ridge Stunner. R.D. home on .51 acres. ing w/above ground Ultimate floor. Wired Building and design. Corner lot 1380 sq. ft., 3 The Bulletin's Call on one of the Good cond i tion. oil tan k . MLS for security system. New $249,900 - 2236 co n struction, bdrm, 2 bath, vaulted "Call A Service $599,900 -Outstanding $194,300. MLS 201306715. $299,000 Sq.ft., 5 bdrm home Wired for stereo with 3553 sq.ft. and 42x16 ceilings, gas heat, and professionals today! detail in design and 201308901. John L. Professional" Directory c onstruction of t h i s John L. Scott Real s peakers on m a i n RV garage, 3 bdrm, double car garage. 1/4 Acre Lot with Alley w/master suite on Scott Rea l E s t ate Estate 541-548-1712 MLS is all about meeting each level. Living floor i n 4 zon e s. 2.5 bath, bonus room $156,900. beautiful Sage Build541-548-1712 Access Completely room w/gas f ire5-zone heating sys- p lus o f fice. J a k e 201309158 your needs. ers home. Located on up- place. RV parking & Home on 4.9 Acrestem. Two levels of ce- M oorhead or J o h n Pam Lester, Principal remodeled & the 18th hole of the Extremely well maing raded kitchen & Broker Century 21 Call on one of the gar d en. Want to impress the d ar d e cking p l u s T aylor, Challenge Course at Brok e r s Gold Country Realty, bath. Beautifully re- unique tained 3 br 2 ba single MLS¹201306110 professionals today! paver patio. Plumbed 541-480-0448, relatives? Remodel Eagle Crest Resort, story home on 4.9 flat finished original hard- Call Kelly or Virginia, Inc. 541-504-1338 in humidification sys- 541-480-6790 you will have access your home with the floors, f resh acres. 2208 sq ft, rock Principal Brokers $399,900 - Peaceful tem. $610, 0 00 Windermere Central $260,000 - Beautiful wood to all of the amenities help of a professional FP, dbl garage, gas paint, mature trees & 541-923-0855 786 5.08 acres - Single MLS¹ 201301639 with ownership. MLS Oregon Real Estate u pgraded cha l e t large deck for enterF P, central ai r & from The Bulletin's Redmond RE/MAX level, vaulted ceilBobbie Strome, ¹2615599 more. MLS¹ w/double garage lo taining. Brand new efLand & Homes "Call A Service Principal Broker ings, 4 large bedEagle Crest The Bulletin's cated on the 18th hole ficient wood s tove. 201310722 $345,000. John L Scott Real Real Estate r ooms, 2 bath , Professional" Directory Properties Pam Lester, Principal "Call A Service of the R i dge G olf MLS¹201310453. 541-771-7786 master b e d room Estate 541-385-5500 866-722- 3370 Broker, Century 21 Professional" Directory Course at Eagle Crest $169,000. separation, 2 , 1 57 Gold Country Realty, in Central Oregon. John L. Scott Real sq.ft. 3-car garage. 5 A cres w /MountainCulver! 10y Acres is all about meeting The Bulletin's W hispering Pines. 3 MLS ¹201301534. Estate 541-548-1712 Set-up for horses, Inc. 541-504-1338 MLS¹201308350 Views - 3 Br, 2 Ba, yourneeds. bdrm, 2 bath property "Call A Service Eagle Crest barn, numer1620 sq ft, irrigated, 3-stall $ 159,000 I M ove i n Professional" Directory Call Kelly Starbuck, Large Bonus Room has complete perimProperties o u t buildings, Call on one of the Principal Broker Ready. New p a int, 36x40 shop, fenced, ous $ 224,900. Lots o f eter fencing and is 866-722- 3370 guest quarters 8 is all about meeting 541-771-7786 professionals today! flooring, co u nters, extensive s p r inkler natural light. 4 Bd, 1 neat and well mainmore. Redmond RE/MAX lights, sinks, ductless yourneeds. system. MLS¹ FIND ITS Ba, spacious rooms, tained with trees and MLS¹201305577 Land & Homes hot/cold unit. Fenced 2809225. $265,000. I freshly painted. Dual shrubs. Home h as Beautiful townhome on ggg (7 Call Charlie or Call on one of the Real Estate and landscaped. 3 Pam Lester, Principal p antries. C a l l J i m been lightly lived in the golf course at RivVirginia, Principal SELL IT! 541-771-7786 professionals today! Broker, Century 21 Hinton, 541-420-6229 and has a wonderful ers Edge Village on The Bulletin Classifieds bdrm, 2 bath, 1279 Brokers sq. ft., 2-car garage Gold Country Realty, Central Oregon Realty sunroom and appeal- the 5th fairway. Near 3 b d rm, 2/2 bath 541-350-3418Redm Inc. 541-504-1338 Group, LLC ing floor plan with river trails and close 70' RV parking! New 3 and storage building. $263,900 - A great 2 3005 sq. ft. home to ond RE/MAX Land l arge deck, s h o p to shopping, master bdrm, 2 bath 1590 sq. Janelle Christensen, b edroom 2. 5 b a t h be built. Includes day& Homes RealEsBroker 541-815-9446 Needs some TLC! 3/2, building is a p prox. on main with walk-in ft. home coming soon! home to relax in while light basement, office, $754,900 - Knockout tate 541-771-7786 mountain vi e w s! 1136 sq. ft . s i ngle 4000 sq.ft. w/ 4 12x12 closets and master Pick your colors! Gas Windermere Central staying at Eagle Crest family & bonus rooms, Oregon Real Estate story home on almost d oors and a m a n bath, 2nd bed a nd fireplace, upgraded Resort. Enjoy all the upgraded c a binets, 3863 sq.ft. custom ce, outFind It in 1/3 acres lot, vinyl door. The is a com- bath upstairs, deck off appliances and cabi- $169,900 - 1657 sq. amenities Eagle Crest near new high school home. Offi plete office w/bath, loff /office and 2nd bed has to of fer! & more! $ 349,000. buildings and shop. The Bulletin Classtfieds! windows, dbl. garage, nets, t i l e flo o rs, ft. Newer 3 beroom MLS¹ 2 0 1 106428 plenty of room for RVs r ec, k i tchen a n d upstairs. $ 2 99,000. f enced an d MLS¹201306058 Too new for MLS¹ 541-385-5809 la n d - + den, master suite $99,900. MLS m eeting roo m i n - 541-388-0404 Eagle Crest Pam Lester, Principal Call Charlie or Virscaped, and more! w/walk-in c l o set, 201310719. Pam cluded in the 4000 Windermere C e n tral $194,900. too new for slider to back patio. Properties Broker, Century 21 ginia, Principal Bro- Custom Built ChaletLester, Principal Brosq.ft. This property is Oregon Real Estate 866-722- 3370 Gold Country Realty, kers 541-350-3418 MLS¹201400132 Living room w/gas Wonderful home or Redmond RE/MAX ker, Century 21 Gold a must preview, must Inc. 541-504-1338 Pam Lester, Principal fireplace v acation home i n Country Realty, Inc. L and & Hom e s see facility. The shop 747 $320,000 4.77 Broker, Century 21 MLS¹201309588 Crooked River Ranch. 541-504-'I 338 - Ultimate Real Estate and dwelling have Southwest Bend Homes Gold Country Realty, Call Kelly Starbuck, acres, 1 acre of irri- $430,000 Backs to public land. family home, 4 bed541-771-7786 separate electric gation. Pond, shop Inc. 541-504-1338 Principal Broker Large master down- NEW CON S TRUCroom, 3 bath, over 7 m eters. Shop a n d $599,900 Tuscany Style 541-771-7786 and 1 60 0 s q . ft. acres, stairs, lots of deck and TION! Split m aster 20x40 heated d welling share t h e in Bradetich Park. house. MLS¹ Redmond RE/MAX The Bulletin's Cascade views. Over- floor plan, 3 bedroom, pool. MLS Avion water meter, 2910 sq.ft. h o me, Need to get an ad 201307143 Cal l Land & Homes "Call A Service sized detached 3 car 2 bath, 1640 sq.ft., tile ¹ 201305932 C a l l 2nd gar a ge/shop single level living, 2 Travis L. Hannan, Real Estate in ASAP? garage w/large shop floors/backsplash. RV Travis L. Hannan, 1025 sq.ft. $499,500. master suites, .46 Professional" Directory 541-771-7786 PC, Principal Broarea & extra storage parking. $ 1 7 9,900. PC, Principal BroMLS ¹201400070 ker 541-788-3480 acre lot, g orgeous is all about meeting 201 3 0 1880 plus detached studio. MLS¹ ker 541-788-3480 Bobbie Strome, Advertise your car! Fax It to 541-322-72% kitchen. Eric Andrews, your needs. Redmond RE/MAX MLS 201 2 06347. Pam Lester, Principal Redmond RE/MAX Principal Broker Add A Picture! Land & Homes Broker 541-771-1188 Broker Century 21 $159,000. Reach thousands of readers! Land & Homes John L Scott Real The Bulletin Classifieds Windermere C e n tral Call on one of the Real Estate John L. Scott Real Gold Country Realty, Real Estate Call 541-385-5809 Estate 541-385-5500 professionals today! The Bulletin ClassiTieds 541-771-7786 Oregon Real Estate Estate 541-548-1712 Inc. 541-504-1338 541-771-7786 Views of the River! • 4 Bdrm, 2 bath • 2392 sq.ft., 1.5 acres • 3 Separate tax lots, motivated seller! www.Jackson -Anderson.com Candice Anderson, Broker 541-788-8878 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscottbend.com
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New construction 3 Spacious Home in The Well maintained SW 2 bdrm, 1~/~ bath, 1354 $460,000 - Beautiful Well maint. 3 bdrm, 2 Recently r e modeled,Overlooking the Motivated Seller! Nice bdrm, 2 bath, 1705 Cliffs I $ 2 79,000 Redmond 3 bdrm, 2 sq. ft. home, on 1.37 remodeled Sunriver b ath, 1722 sq . f t . clean and well laid out Crooked River Gorge, 3 bdrm ranch- style sq. ft, 23 acre lot, tile Light & bright interior, b ath, 1008 s q . f t . acre. $89,900. 16404 h ome, n e w ro o f , home on 2'/~ acres. single level home on a Immaculate home on house with a nice floor floors, tile backsplash, huge walk-in pantry, home across f rom Burgess Rd., La Pine. kitchen, energy-effi- Family room + L R, very private 4.6 acre the rim features a plan, country kitchen, landscaped, fenced. three car tandem ga- Hayden Park. land- High Lakes Realty & cient furnace. Large s eparation of b e d - lot. New paint in and spacious & open great nice brick fireplace, rage. MLS scaped front yrd, re- Property Ma n a ge private deck with hot rooms. Master has out, newwer laminate, room design, a large nestled on 4+ acres $179,900. MLS¹ walk-in shower plus carpet 8 201209125 Pam ¹ 201308975. Call cently painted, Great ment 541-536-0117 tub. 541-946-3371 flo o ring, bonus room with a full Powell Butte q u iet Lester, Principal Bro- Vicci Bowen, for first time home Windermere C e n tral tub, and walk in closet Stainless appliances, bath, a spa c ious country lane. Fenced, on 1.24 acre, Oregon Real Estate ker Century 21 Gold 541-4'I 0-9730 buyers or rental prop- Cabin Corner p a ntry i n centra heat, l a rge master, large guest corral, shed, s h op pole barn, city water Country Realty, Inc. Central Oregon Realty erty. $140 , 000. kitchen. Sep. u tility concrete patio. Fully bdrms, newer paint, area, along with storand sewer. $69,000. 52314 Ponderosa Way. opens to back cov- landscaped yard, at- carpet and flooring in- age rooms. 2 acres ir541-504-1338 541-306-0479 ChrisGroup, LLC 51377 Walling Ln., 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1922 tin, 541 - 977-1852 ered deck. Heat pump tached double garage side and new exterior rig., mtn and Smith Pine. High Lakes sq.ft., 1 .1 3 a c res. + electric F/A a nd and detached shop paint, a circular drive, Rock views. Local The Bulletin's W i n dermereLa The Davis, NW Red- Tony, Realty & P r o perty $249,000. High Lakes "Call A Service propane heater. Large with large atached immac. landscaping small Powell B utte mond - Open great Central Oregon Real Management Realty & P r o perty carport plus dbl. ga- carport/RV area, stor- with irrigation system, Charter School. CenProfessional" Directory room, tons of cabinet Estate 541-536-0117 Management rage with shop area. age shed on top of a fenced and irrigated tral location commutspace in kitchen, 2nd is all about meeting Close to d owntown 5000 g al . p o t able garden area, chicken ing distance to Bend, 1762 sq. ft. 3 bedrom, 2 541-536-0117 floor laundry room, 3 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! your needs. and g o v' t la n d s. water concrete cis- coop, attached gaPrineville 8 Redmond. acres, 24x24 garage. bed (den or 4th bed$149,000. MLS t ern. Al l o n fu l l y rage with shop space, Not a bad package at 145230 B i r chwood Want to impress the room), 2.5 bath, 1929 Door-to-door selling with Call on one of the 201304888 Cascade fenced lot with auto- central heat, pellet $ 279,900! 1052 5 sq ft. $291,000. fast results! It's the easiest $169,900. High Lakes relatives? Remodel professionals today! Realty, Dennis Hani- matic gate. $215,000. stove and excellent F leming Rd. Cal l Realty & P r o perty your home with the Call Jim Hinton, way in the world to sell. ford, Princ. Broker MLS 201309890 MLS Heather Hockett, PC, privacy. 541-420-6229 Management help of a professional New Construction 541-536-1731 John L Scott Realty, ¹201308441 Broker, Century 21 541-536-0117 Oregon Realty The Bulletin Classified Single story 3 bdrm, Central from The Bulletin's 541-548-1712. John L. Scott Real Gold Country Realty, Group, LLC 2bath, 1724 s q ft 541485-5809 541-420-9151 "Call A Service Estate 541-548-1712 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! The Bulletin's move-in ready! LandProfessional" Directory 762 "Call A Service scaped with s prin- The Jefferson - NW Door-to-door selling with SW DOVE RD. klers an d f e n ced. Redmond - $298,000. Looking for your next fast results! It's the easiest Professional" Directory Homes with Acreage USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 16751 One level 2500 sq. ft. Desirable NW neighemp/oyee? 53509 Big Ti m ber, is all about meeting $189,900. MLS¹ custom loghome on way in the world to sell. $99,900. 3 Bdrm, 2 3 bdrm, 2 bath 1440 sq. Door-to-door selling with 201304779 Pam borhood, single level, Place a Bulletin help your needs. ft. home on 1.97 acres fast results! It's the easiest 4.9 acres. Floor to b ath, 1188 s q . f t . Lester, Principal Bro- 3 bdrm, 2. 5 b a t h, wanted ad today and ceiling windows with The Bulletin Classified reach over 60,000 home, w it h new gas fireplace, 24x48 ker, Century 21 Gold 2020 sq ft. Call on one of the views of th e M tns. MLS¹201306374 g arage/shop wit h way in the world to sell. readers each week. decks. H igh Lakes professionals today! Country Realty, Inc. 541-385-5809 Hickory hardwood 8 Call Jim Hinton, Your classified ad Realty & Pr o perty 12x24 of fi c e/craft 541-504-1338 tile floors, gourmet 541-420-6229 room and two 12x12 The Bulletin Classified will also appear on 15970 Old Mill Road, La Management kitchen incl. cherry Newer large home on Central Oregon Realty f inished room s . 541-385-5809 bendbulletin.com Pine. $187,000. Re- 541-536-0117 756 cabinets, gra n i te almost 1/4 acre. 3000 Group, LLC $109,900 Call Nancy which currently remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 Jefferson County Homes counters, farmers sink s q.ft., 3 b d rm, 2 . 5 ceives over Popp, 541-815-8000 b ath, 1844 sq . f t . L ooking for a ve r y and stainless appli Bend Country Home on bath, landscaped & T he W i ndsor, N W 1.5 million page home. H i g h Lakes u nique home w i t h Want to move in and Crooked River Realty fenced with RV gates. Redmond - Main floor 2+ a c r es . New ances. The stacked views every month Realty & P r o perty awesome views? This enjoy life? This MaMLS¹ 2 0 1 304622 den/4th bedroom, lots 3 bdrm, 3. 5 b a th, Hardi-plank siding, in rock w o o d-burning at no extra cost. Management, 3214 sq. ft. Custom 4 $299,900. Pam of natural light, eating 3528 sq.ft., on 1.86 dras home is loaded bdrm, 4~/ terior doors & knobs, fireplace is perfect for Bulletin Classifieds 541-536-0117 ~ bath home Lester, Principal Bro- bar in kitchen, landacres is it ! V aulted with upgrades. Well on 2~/~ acres. Triple garage doors & more! these chilly days. Get Results! maint. and boasts a 138118 Hillcrest St ceilings, living family, ¹201208751 ker Century 21 Gold scaping, 3 bedroom, Call 385-5809 or 36x40 shop BLM access close to $499,999 Juniper Realty, $109,999. 3 bd, 2.5 dining, game room & large tiled entry way, garage, Country Realty, Inc. 2.5 baths, 2235 sq ft. place your ad on-line p roperty f o r tra i l with tow 14' overhead ceiling fans, recessed 541-504-5393 ba, 1157 SF, Gilchrist. laundry rooms. Decks 541-504-1338 at d oors, Casc a de riding. 4 bedroom, 3 $305,000. High Lakes Realty & in front and b ack, l ighting, large l o f t views, large deck 8 bath has plenty of bendbulletin.com Call Jim Hinton, area, a master bdrm N ice and q uiet N W Property M a n agepond with waterfall. new updates. All new Two 1848 sq.ft. 4 bdrm, 541-420-6229 with w alk-in closet, patio. $429,900. Redmond property. 3 Central ment 541-536-0117 Landscaped & sprinkitchen with custom 2 bath homes on 40 Oregon Realty window co v e rings MLS¹ 201304473 bdrm, 2 bath, 1576 755 kler system. Attached cabinets, tile counter a cres. 52916 O l d Call Nancy Popp Group, LLC 1 45241 C o rral Ct . sq. ft. on 2.8 acres. 2-car garage, 40x52 throughout. Garage is tops, bamboo floors, L ake Rd. , Sil v e r Sunriver/La Pine Homes 541-815-8000. $149,000. La P i ne, finished with ceiling Beautiful mature landd etached shop & n ew f i xtures a n d Lake, OR. $199,000. Crooked River Realty OR 3/2, 1620 sq.ft., Too many upgrades to storage rack and you scaping and yard. 48' bu i l dings. more. Ba t h rooms High Lakes Realty & bdrm, 2~/~ bath, 2139 mfd home on 1 .65 storage x 24' two bay insu- list! in this 1946 sq. ft. 3 sq. MLS have great views from have new tile. Recent Property ft. home, 3-car ga- a cre, s hop. H i g h $525,000 M a nagethe back deck. VA aslated and heated shop 3 bdrm, 2~/~ bath rage. carpet, windows & $229 ,000. Lakes Realty & Prop- ¹ 201306582. C a s - sumable if e l igible. Find exactly what ment, 541-536-0117 w/220V. Recent paint home. Landscaped, 16524 Charlotte cade Realty, paint. Covered porch, Day Man agement 54'I -536-1731 $124,900 MLS¹ you are looking for in the triple car attached ga too! Plenty of room for f enced, in a qu i et Dr., La Pine. High erty Chapman St., Gil201304344 CLASSIFIEDS h orses, RV' s a n d cul-de-sac. $239,900. Lakes Realty & Prop- 541-536-0117 rage, and pull-through 1018 christ, OR, 4 Bdrm, 2 20' I 310535. erty Heather Hockett, PC, toys! MLS MLS s hop. Property i s Ma n agement16160 Amber Lane Need to get an Broker, Century 21 ¹201308783 Pam Lester, Principal 541-536-0117 agent owned. bath 1836 sq.ft., on $139,900. 3 bd beauty ad in ASAP? Broker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, 14198 SW Nine Peaks $289,900 but will en 2.84 acres, s h op. John L. Scott Real High Lakes Realty 8 Pl., CRR Mtn. views 541-420-9151 High Lakes Estate 541-548-1712 Gold Country Realty, Just bought a new boat? Property offers. 22837 $214,900. M a n age- You can place it from this 1960 sq. ft., tertain Realty & Pr o perty Inc. 541-504-1338 Sell your old one in the Abilene Ct. in Bend. ment 541-536-0117 online at: Roomy single l e vel 3 bdrm., 2 bath home Call Heather Hockett, Management classifieds! Ask about our on 1.16 acre. 936 sq. 541-536-0117 home on large lot in Very motivated seller. Super Seller rates! 16445 White Buck, 4 www.bendbulletin.com Need to get an ad Broker, Century S tonehedge. O p e n ft. garage has a shop PC, 541-385-5809 Bdrm, 2~/~ bath, 2900 home in SW area plus 2 bays. RV 21 Gold Country Re 12250 NW Dove Rd. floor plan with vaulted Beautiful in ASAP? sq.ft., on 2~/~ acres. 541-385-5809 Redmond with very alty, 541-420-9151 living room, f a mily motivated seller. This Make this old home covered storage 8 $299,900. High CRR. Custom cedarcarport. $12 9 ,500 room, kitchen fea- 4 bedroom, 2 b ath stead, located right Lakes Realty & Prop- Riverfront- 1.60 acres. sided home with floor Fax It to 541-322-7253 tures plenty of cabino ff Hwy 9 7 , y o u r erty MLS 201208272 Man agement Paved & maint. road. to ceiling windows. Need to get an is ready for its get-away Juniper Realty, etry, eating counter, home ret r eat. 541-536-0117 1956 sq. ft. 2 bdrm, The Bulletin Classifieds Immaculate 1841 sq. owners. Small Orig. home, garage ad in ASAP? large pantry, dining new 541-504-5393 f t. 3 b d rm, 2 b a t h with hot tub and and storage shed built 2611 sq.ft., 5 acres, 3 and bath upstairs with area with access to shop You can place it home with tongue 8 a family room. Master the huge back deck. gazebo in backyard. in 1940. Very clean, bay shop. 1716 Ter- bedroom downstairs. groove cat h edral BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS online at: 201308103 Master bed r o om MLS possible horse prop ret Rd , $ 3 5 4,000. 757 garage. Workgas Search the area's most www.bendbulletin.com ceilings, separation from addi- John L. Scott Real erty on 1.63 acres High Lakes Realty & 4-car free-standing stove, area b e hind Crook County Homes comprehensive listing of tional two bedrooms. Estate 541-548-1712 $69,900. MLS Property M a n age- shop wood floors. Spag arage. Do g r u n . classified advertising... Two offices or hobby ¹201300544 ment 541-536-0117 541-385-5809 c ious k i tchen i n L andscaped. M L S Large Prineville Home. real estate to automotive, rooms. Landscaped Cascade Realty, The Bulletin's 201305831 $239,000. 2290 sq.ft. home with merchandise to sporting cludes Corian front and back with 541-536-1731 The Bulletin's "Call A Service kitchen island, wood Cascade Realty, goods. Bulletin Classifieds 4 bdrm, 3'/~ bath, 2498 counters, b r eakfast fenced back yard that "Call A Service Dennis Haniford, Princ. burning fir e place, bar and separate prep appear every day in the sq. ft. on 2~/~ acres, has lots of trees for Professional" Directory 51275 Dianne Rd. La Professional" Directory soaking tub, and a 2 island. Large decks to Broker 541-536-1731 print or on line. is all about meeting Pine $149,900. MH privacy. Forced air 21886 Rincon Ave., enjoy the views. All of car garage. $175,000. is all about meeting with shop and RV ragas with central air Call 541-385-5809 yourneeds. Bend. $415,000 High this on 4.81 acres. People Lookfor Information Scott McLean, your needs. mada on 5 a c res. www.bendbulletin.com cond. $199,900. MLS Lakes Realty & Prop- $385,000 MLS Principal Broker About Products and Call on one of the High Lakes Realty & 2 01310177 John L . erty Man a gement 201 101 447. Ju niper 541-408-6908 Call on one of the Services Every Day through Property M a n ageThe Bulletin Scott Real E s tate professionals today! 541-536-0117 Realty Executives Serwng CenlralOregonsrnce 19N Realty, 541-504-5393 professionals today! ment 541-536-0117 The Bvllefin Classifief/s 541-548-1712
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Homes start under $200,000. Brand new homes is Bend with the quality Pahlisch is known for - s t ainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters
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kitchen, extra atrencion given Directions:North on Boyd Acres, to allow for tons of natural Righr on Sierra, flleon Black Potuder, light a much more Come Righlon Cometfane. Loof' forsigns. by the model home for mare
SWepoo
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19979 Heron Lp. Dfrectfoesr South on Brooksuood to west on Powers to Heron LP.
2078IQP Qomet
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Beautiful single level home located in • W part of Redmond. The gourmet kitchen features brand new upgraded stainless steel appliances, granite 1 U counter tops, ample storage and an eating bar. Great room floor plan has a cozy gas fireplace with slate tile surround, wood floors and vaulted ceilings. The master suite is spacious, 1565NWTeak woodLn., Redmond oiering a bathroom that has a soaker tub and separate tiled shower. There Directions:North on Huy97, le ft on is a den that could be used as a 4th /flf'Quince Aue,right on /0th St.,leP on bedroom. New light-fixtures and freshly painted exterior. Front will /W Spruce,rfght on15th St.,left on /fW have landscaping. TeakueodLane,houseis on theright.
Hosted by
JEANNE SCHARLUND Principal Broker
Hosted 6 Listed by.
RHIANNA KUNKLER
541-420-7978
DEBBI McCUNE
Broker
PrinciPal Broker
541-306-0939
541-647-0052
R s A 1 T 0 R s
$279,900
KEY PROPERTIES
l.is/ed by:
BRUCE DUNIA P
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CEWH4K OREGON READTGROUP, ILC
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p opular e ast s i d e neighborhood, Oak View! These homes are true quality built by renowned 2996 NE Hope Dr. builder Kelly Rogers, Directions: From 27th St, east Construction Connection. on WellsAcres, south or right on Hawkview, Follow signs toHopeDr. Hosted by:
DEBBIE MOONEY Broker
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541-410-6095 6 Listed by: BECKY BREEZE Principal Broker
541-408-1107
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Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. "Little Red Corvette"
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For more information call 541-385-5809.
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E6 SATURDAY FEBRUARY 15 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 "0
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Mountains and Pilot Butte G .29 of acre lot in Rivers Edge
• T his homesite offers 120 feet in width providing op p o rt unity for many design options G Near river trail, golf, shopping and schools
Call Shelly Swanson, Broker l 541-408-0086
• Only 7 minutes from downtown • Tetherow is a planned 700 acre community backing tonational forest and is the perfect home base for discovering the best of Central Oregon from biking and hiking, rafting and kayaking or dining and shopping Contact Brian for more information or a private tour. www. Tetherow.com
New Master-Planned Townhome Development in Midtown! • 3 bedroom townhomes starting at $252,500 • 4 units now under construction • Price includes custom level finishes with full landscaping, slab quartz countertopg and energy efficient construction • Locationsupportsthe active Bend lifestyle with easy access to parks, trails, river and downtown www.sthStreetCottag¹¹s.com
Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker l 541-408-3912
Csll Biisn Ladd, Piincipal Brokerl 541-408-3912
brian©bendpropertysource.com
brian@bendpropertysource.com
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Call Mary St atto, 0 ota, GRIi¹41-419-6340
• Introducing Hollinshead Heights by SolAire Homebuilders • High performance homes in a unique ideal location • 4 bed, 2.5 bath, 2044 SF and 9200 SF lot • New construction with completion summer of 2014 • All homes will be NetZero ready, built to one of the highest levels of energy efficiency available (renderings are representation of homes to be built) MLS¹201310131 11 5 7 NW Jones Rd. Call Sue Price, Broker l 541-408-7742
maryselhms@gmail.com
Sue.Price@Sothebysrealty.com
• Don't miss this stunning end unit townhome in NW Crossing - hasonly beenused asasecond home •Lotsofupgradeshave beenadded to makethisawarm inviting homefor the demanding buyer, 2220SF • Master on main level, 2 nice sizedbdrms &full bath upstairs •Home hasamplestorage andanice oversized 2-cargarage •NW Cross ing hasnice parks,easyaccessto schools& downtown MLB¹201311030 2499 NW Crossing
Call Shelly Swanson, Brokerl 541-408-0086
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• This desirable single level home is located in Mountain High • Spacious open floor plan with wonderful golf course views • The living room features large view windows and cozy gas fireplace. • The kitchen is light and bright with a wonderful breakfast nook/sitting area • Expansive outdoor living space is perfect for entertaining MLS¹20131118
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11 Unit Apartment Complex Near St. Charles • Great rental history
• 3040 SF immaculate condition
• 4 bedrooms, 3 baths • Built-ins and upgrades • Huge loft area • 2 patios, fire pit 80 water feature • Backs to community park 8 pool IVILS¹201310897 all
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• Terrific investment
• 90% occupied MLS¹201310762
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kelly©bendluxuryhomes.com
Lisa Lamberto, Broker 541-610-9697 www.CJLIsa.com
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• Special 5 acre Tumalo Setting • Quality 2400 SF 3bed, 3 bath home, log accents, window wall w/spectacular
Call Ron avis, Principal Broker l 541-480-3096
• Stunning Shevlin Ridge • One levelhome • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3456 SF • Mountain inspired custom home • Upscale popular neighborhood • Gorgeous craftsmanship • I arge kitchen, living space • I arge 3-car garage MLS¹201310941 Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker l 541-408-3912
www.oregonRanchAndHorge.com
www.bendpropertygource.com• brian@bendpropertygource.com
mtn. Views, master suite w/ his & hers baths & closets
• Hobby shop w/bath, separate guest house, large RVbarn & shop • Horse shelter & corral, low maintenance landscaping • End of road privacy MLS¹201303251
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• Stunning NW architecture • 4 bedrooms, 4 baths • Five acre home site with sweeping Cascade Mountain views • Oversized 3-car garage, room on the property for shop, RV storage • Immaculate mature landscaping, grounds MLS¹201308171
• 3672 SF on1.04irrigated acres • 4 bedrooms, 3 & 2 half baths • 5-car garage • Backs USFS land • The only HOAapproved fenced backyard in Widgi Creek • Top quality finishes and the utmost privacy • A must see!
Call Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRS l 541-408-0406 Resort Properties Specialist
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• Private riverfront setting-
• New construction on level 1+ Acre lot • Stunning Northwest style w/high end finishes r; • Open great room floor plan, comfortable yet elegant • Master + Den on main level, 3 additional bedroomsup • Oversized 3-car garage & 3 outdoor living areas • Gated community w/tennis courts, clubhouse & trails MLS¹201303701
10 acres • 5544 SF custom home 4 bed, 3 bath • Quality finishes - hardwood floors, granite countertops, 2 masters • 3-car qarage and detached '. 2220 SF shop/garage • Patios, decks, landscaped to enjoy the outdoor living • Fly fish or float from your front yard! MLS¹201302701
Sandy Kohlmoos,Broker,GRI,CRS l541-408-4309
Call Pam Mayo-Phillips, Principal Broker
www.bestbendhomes.com
541-923-1376 l www.desertvalleygroup.com
Close to Town Country Living ( $815,000
1265 NW Remarkable Dr. ) $829,900
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• 4bed,3bath,3381 SF • 10 irrigated acres w/wheel line • Cascade views • Shop 1 - 2 car garage+ oflice 8 den • Shop 2 - 5 cargarage • 2 ponds MLS¹201308637
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• RemarkableAddress.. Rem arkableView • 3524 SF, 4bgd, 3bathhOmeSitSGnIGPGi the worldwith3180degreeviewGIthe CentralOregonHighDesert • 1'ra¹0ltin¹ entryleadsupto expansiveviews • KitChenW /ChgrryCabinetrytt 3 farmal diningarea • Outsideiswrap-aroundfront deck • MastgronmainlGVGI Withsoakertub • Downstairarea s withbai area • 3-caigarage,fencedbackyardw/hottub
•4bed,4.5bath,4891SF • LocatedinDeschutegRiver Ranch
w/390 acresoiprotectedopenspace '" &privateriveraccess • Homefeatures guestsuite, vaulted ceilings,hottubandinterior & exterior fireplaces • 5 stall barnbarnw/corral, washrack, medicineroomw/lailndry hookilps & sink, tackroom,I/2 bathonmain Iloor &apartmentupstairs • Additionaloutbilildingsincludeoutdoor arena,shop&extragaragew/RVbay • Fullyfenced &crossfenced; 4.64irrigated acres MLS¹201310511
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7991 SF 2.8 acres with 400' of private river frontage 800 SF guest cabin 4 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, indoor lap pool River 80 golf front property Adjacent 3.49 acre lot available at $799,000
www.crosswaterriverretreat.com
Deb Tebbs, Broker/President l 541419-4553 Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker, Director of Lot Sales debtebbs group@bendluxuryhomes.com l www.debtebbsgroup.com 541408-3912 l brian©bendpropertysource.com
New Home in Tetherow! ( $869,000
Located on Mirror Pond! ( $1,299,000 • Stones throw from downtown Bend
61480 Hackleman '
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• 3,078 SF., 3-car garage • Backs to 12th fairway w/ private and treed yard
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• Includes full membership to Tetherow tt¹ "
• February completion
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• Elegant finishes, 3 bedrooms, 4 baths • Remodeled down to studs in 2006 • 10 NW Drake Rd. • MLS¹201306173 Call for a Personal Tour!
Call Bobby Lockrem, Broker l 541-480-2356
Call Chris Sulak, Broker l 541-350-6164
Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker l 541-408-3912
Call Jodi Kearney, Broker l 541-693-4019
blockrem@gmsil.com
chrissulakebendbroadband.com
www.bendpropertysource.com6 brian@bendpropeitysource.com
jodirebroker©hotmail.com
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THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY FEBRUARY 15 2014 E7
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 2
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16262 Big Meadow, La Pinef $165,000
Ochoco Ridge, Prineville ) $158,900 • • • •
newer community 3 bed, 2 baths Nice family room with fireplace Formal living & dining room perfect for family gatherings and entertaining Slate entry Bi fireplace surround
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• Oversized 3-car garage MLS¹201310187
Call Greg Yeakel, Principal BrokerI 541%08-7733 or Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRSI 541-408-0406
69322 Hackamore ( $236,500
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• 2 bedroom with den/office x:; • Newly remodeled kitchen • Open floor plan • Close to Juniper Swim &
541-2414i432 I nicolette.jonesecascadesothebysready.com
17940 Parkway Lane ( $350,000
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• Large living room with gas fireplace • Large dining area • Oversized 2-car garage with plenty
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of space for storage • Impressive inside and out
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Call Joanne MCKee, BrokerI 541-480-5159
Call Chris Sperry, Principal BrokerI 541-749-8479 chrisechrissperry.com www.chrissperry.com
wwwjoanneejoannemckee.com
Upscale Tumalo Community ( $425,000
Peaceful Sunriver Location ( $439,900
• Nearly 10 acres of flat land • Well-kept community of signif icant estates • Outstanding views • Pole-fenced and paved entry • 9.53 acres MLS¹201301678
• 17613 (¹10)SparksLane,Sunriver • 4 bed/2.5 bath,2385SF • Deckson levelsand lotsofpaved parking area • Charming greatroomdesign • Lava rockfireplace, vaulted wood ceiling • Close to SHARC aquatic & the
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Call Greg Barnwell, Broker I 541-848-7222
satkosellsoregonegmail.com
541-3124042 I www.TeamNormaAndJulie.com
www.gregsellscentraloregon.com
8 Quail - Sunriver ( $515,000
Stones Throw to River ( $539,900
• Great room • Sun room • Master on Main Level • Hardwood
• SS Appliances • 2 decks, patio, hot tub • Terrific rental history
• MLS¹201303390
Call Ken Renner, Principal BrokerI 541-280-5352
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Brook Havens, Principal Broker 541-604-0788 or Bruce Boyle, Broker 541-408-0595
In Winston Ranch( $869,000
Call Natalie Vandenborn, BrokerI 541-508-9581 Nvandenborn©gmail.com
• Easy living inapark-like setting • Ownerprivilegesat Seventh Mountain Resort • Next to WidgiCreek&theDeschutes
RiverTrail MLS¹201307670
Call Jordan Grandlund, Principal Broker 541%20-1559 or Stephanie Ruiz, Broker
Brand New Construction In Tetherow •Cascade Mountainviews! •ChristianGladuDesignhomeand TimberlineConstruction collaborated to designthisspacious&efficient homeinTetherowGolf Club • Homepositionedforpassivesolar gainsand2ndfloor viewsof Cascades •Currentlyunderconstructionand slated tobecompletethissummer! Call formoredetails!
Call Shelly Swanson, BrokerI 541408-0086
DeschutesRiver View Property ( $875,000 • River views from nearly every room
• 3727 SF, 3 bedroom 2.5 bath, bonus • 5.25 acres w/1.25 irrigated • HUGE Cascade Mountain
• Beautiful single story • 3 car garage • On 4th fairway in Broken Top • 3 bedrom, 2.5 bath plus den • Vaulted ceilings • 2 fireplaces
3 bed, 3.5bath • Landscaped,sprinkler system, ,;,. pond • Barn: 2304SFwith finished tack room/shoparea 'i • Private setting close to town MLS¹201305788
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rodhatchellegmail.com
61330 Tam McArthur Loop ~ $735,000
• New construction,luxurytownhome • 4bedroom,3.5bathroom • 2540 SF &2-car attachedgarage • Granite, hardwood &tile throughout
•Customhome,3bed,2.5bath • Single level 2773SF • Open floor plan w/upgrades • Stunning views, 2.5 acres • Large backdeck • Oversized 2-cargarage MLS¹201310275
Call Rod Hatchell, Broker I 541-728-8812
•CascadeMountainviews • 6 acres w/5acrespasture • Custom home:2823 SF,
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On the Rim Whychus Creek "Sisters" ( $645,000
www.gregsellscentraloregon.com
Tumalo Home on Irrigated Acreage) $649,000
60481 Coffee Ct. ( $464,750
541-948-5196 www.PointsWestBend.com
Call Greg Barnwell, Broker I 541-848-7222
ken.renner@sothebysrealty.com
Call Jordan Grandlund, Principal Broker
river
Jodi Satko, CSP, Broker I 541-550-0819
• Dramatic foyer & living area • Exquisite master suite x • 3346 SF • Beamed cathedral ceilings & loft - • 4 bedrooms, 2 full, 2 half baths •Beautiul f extensivedecks • Top end hot tub • 26 Siskin Lane MLS¹201304990
• Great NE neighborhood • 4 bedrooms, 2 baths+ 2 half baths • 4223 SF,2-car garage & shop area • .25acre lot, private setting • This is a must see! MLS¹201310234 541-420-1559 www.JordanHaase.com
The Norma DuBois and Julie Moe Team, Brokers
• Complete Remodel
2 Levels, 2 Living Quarters
• Build your dream home while you live in loft area or your RV • MLS¹201105898
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541480-4186 I melanieemelaniemaitre.com
• Beautifully maintained home backing to open 40acremeadow, walking distance to river & elementary school • Everything you could want is in this home! • 4 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, all appliances, 3-car tandemgarage, hottub and luxury features throughout MLS¹201311017
chrissulak@bendbroadband.com
• Bath, laundry area, septic, well & pumphouse •RV hookups inside & out,100 am p breaker in shop • Great location between Sisters & Bend
Call Melanie Maitre, Broker ABR, SRES, ePRO
River Rim Craftsman by Hendrickson( SOLD
Call Chris Sulak, Broker I 541-350-6164
• Permitted GP Building w/llvlng quarter/loft
• 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath on corner lot • Minutes to the Old Mill District
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quiet but close enough to all the amenities Tetherow has to offer • Tetherow community is more than an award winning golf course, it offers open spaces, miles of trails and direct access to Deschutes National Forest just minutes from downtown Bend!
MLS¹201310156
christkhrissperry.com www.chrissperry.com
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Lot 33 on CozyDryer Court • Flat, easy to build lot is tucked into the eastern edge of Tetherow, called The Glen, allowing for privacy and
• 1312 SF,600 SFgarage MLS¹201400743
Call Nicolette Jones, Broker, ABR, CSP
Beautiful Home Near Old Mill District) $249,000
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Lot in Super Hot Tetherow ( $235,000
Downtown • New interior/ext. paint 8i roof
Call Chris Sperry, Principal BrokerI 541-749-8479
• Great homeinTollgate in Sisters, OR • 3 bedroom,1466SFsingle level home • New roof, newflooring, new windows, largegreatroom, new septic onwonderful lot that backs to National Forest • Community offers clubhouse,pool, basketball courts &endlesstrails MLS¹201304627
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Midtown Bend ( $229,900
• Lovely home on almost 2 acres with huge workshop including compressor and storage building • Single level home hasmany upgrades and offers 2 large master bedrooms, wide halls and open kitchen MLS¹201309586
• Cute single level home in
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• Rich-toned oakhardwoodfloors • Custom distressedkitchencabinetry • Slab granitecounters • Pro-qualitySSappliances • Montana stonehreplace • Main house - 3bds, 2.5ba, 2450SF • Guestquarters- 2bds, I bath, 788SF • MLS¹201301856
views • Beautifully remodeled • Fully fenced with barn, pasture • RV garage with office MLS¹201310641
Call Stephanie Ruiz, Broker I 541-948-5196 stephaniewilsonruiz4¹yahoo.com
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Call Ken Renner, Principal BrokerI 541-280-5352 ken.rennerC!sothebysrealty.com
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• 4 bed, 3 bath, 2982 SF • Backs to 21 acres of land
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• Complete remodelincluding kitchen, bathrooms,fiooring, paint (interior), decks • A/C and wired for hot tub • Large great room,wood burning stove, high ceilings •Openkitchenareawith breakfast bar
• Cascade Mountain views • 2 master suites or use one as a bonus room • Large 0.3 acre lot
MLS¹201400177
• Master bedroom with sitting area anddeck
• 1/2 acre landscapedlot with sprinklers, 2-car attachedgarage • Community clubhousewith river accessandpark • Additional info at www.sunriverdream.com
Call Brian Ladd, Principal BrokerI 541-408-3912
109 NW Gander • Awesome views of the Signature Hole, ponds & Pilot Butte • Gated, pool, golf & tennis • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1921 SF • Just minutes from the River Trail and Downtown Bend MLS¹201400754
www.bendpropertysource.com• brianebendpropertysource.com
Call Kelly Winch, BrokerI 541-390-0398
or Sean Barton, BrokerI 541-306-7669 SeanGBartonegmail.com
kwinch@sunriverdream.com
~ll Jane Flood, Broker I 541-350-9993
Call Myra Girod, roker I 541-815-2400 or Pam Bronson, Broker I 541-788-6767
www.centralandbendoregonhomes.com
myra.pamteamecascadesir.com
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19665 Harvard Place •3 bedroom, 2.5 bath,huge bonus room plusof fice • Master on main with cozy fireplace • Large paver patio - low maintenance yard • Kitchen w/granite counters overlooking great room with gas fireplace and built-ins • Triple garage w/room for shop! • One block from pool and park - close to river trails MLS¹201310732
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• Gorgeous 3206 SF custom built home • Quiet cul-de-sac with expansive golf course views • 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath with loft/bonus/4th bdrm • Granite counters in light/bright deluxe kitchen • Huge garage with shop area • Much more ... come see!! ¹9 Trophy
• 4 bedrooms (2 main level suites), 3 baths • 3299 SF, .24 acre • One owner custom home with many quality features • Open, inviting great room, additional family room • 3-car tandem garage/2 with storage • Surround sound, radiant in-floor heat, heat pump, central A/C, wired for security. Call for more info!
Call MyrPGirod, l88kJPI 541-815-2400 JP Pam Bronson, Broker I 541-788-6767 myra. amteamecascadesir.com
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• 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3167 SF • Rooftop terrace Cascade View • Gourmet kitchen, built-ins • Walking access to town/trails • Upgrades throughout • 2-car garage, personal elevator MLS¹201311003 see video at www.bendpropertysource.com/listings Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker I 541-408-3912 www.bendpropertysource.com• brian@bendpropertysource.com
• Desirable Tumalo location • Winding drive leads to picturesque estate • Outstanding Cascade Mountain views • Bordering BLM land • 5 -stall barn, riding arena, RV garage and more • 4 bed, 4.5 bath, 4211 SF
MLS¹201206842
Call The Norma DuBois and Julie Moe Team, Brokers 541-312%042 I www.TeamNormaAndJulie.com
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 771
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• Homes with Acreage H omes with Acreage R e creational Homes Lots Lots Acreages Acreages Acreages Mfd JMobile Homes & Property with Land 14482 SW Pony Trail in Small A c reage in 5 Acre lots SE Prinev- Ridge at Eagle Crest j $155,000 - Private $50,000 2.16 AcresWest Powell Butte EsCRR. Like new home Prineville - $108,000. 18745 Clear Springs ille. P ossible Ow n e r tates, gated commu- 2 Mfd. homes currently $75,000 $119,900 gated c ommunity! built in 2001 that has V inyl s i ding, d u a l Way - Panoramic Mtn $ 82,500. Ready t o • .38 Acre lot 20 Acres! Powell Carry! Short walk to nity, mtn. views, pri- used a s ren t als. always been a vaca- paned windows, guest views set the stage for build with wells and • Views to north and Butte w/easy acDeschutes R i ver. vate well, paved roads Property has a ton of tion home. U n ob- quarters in shop, 1.41 this 1-level woodsy paved roads. east cess t o a i r ports, Very private setting. with access to BLM. potential. First home structed mtn views, 2 acres. 3 bedrooms, 1 retreat. Ideal for famScott McLean, • Close to upper athshopping, r e cre- Enjoy c o mmunity $169,000 MLS is built i n 1 973, 2 bdrm, 2 bath on 2.58 bathroom, 1228 sq ft. ily looking for extra Principal Broker letic facility ation. Al l C e ntral amenities of g o lf, 2 01305077 . Pa m bdrm, 1 bath, and the acre. Master bath has MLS ¹201202939. 541-408-6908 • MLS 201307552 Oregon has to offer. fishing, swimming & Lester, Principal Bro- second home is built space & privacy. 3.7% garden tub and sepaMichael Jones, Realty Executives Greg Floyd PC, Broker Well, septic feasibilmore. MLS ker Century 21 Gold in 1998, 2 bdrm, 2 assumable loan rate walk-in shower, 541-350-2226. 541-390-5349 ity done. Ready for 201303502Country Realty, Inc. bath. The homes are makes it even 914 Highland View LP. 541-504-1338 New Pergo flooring Central Oregon Realty your dream home. Call Charlie or sweeter. S e p arate Eagle Crest, Unobo n a t o tal o f 4 . 15 and windows. Large Group, LLC MLS¹201303502 Virginia, Principal BONUS a p artment structed Mtn views. acres. Storage build775 composite d ecking, Call Charlie or Brokers (576 sq) above 3-car ings, carports. Nice Hardi-plank s i d ing.Terrific Mountain Views garage creates a liv- .44 Acre lot, back to Virginia, Principal 541-350-3418 Manufactured/ clean property. MLS BLM, privacy galore 2622 sq ft 5 b ed/3 $110,000. J u n iper Brokers Redmond RE/MAX i ng space of o v er MORRIS ¹201306120. Mobile Homes Realty, 541-504-5393 b ath home o n 1 2 2500 sf. Many up- with views. $134,900. 541-350-3418 Land & Homes REAL ESTATE $139,900 acres with full water grades including oak MLS ¹201307060 Redmond RE/MAX Real Estate Cascade Realty, 1.56 acres, 1620 sq.ft. rights. 24x56 shop, dy ~ ~ ~ d 20784 Valentine - 1998 Lynn Johns, Principal Land & Homes 541-771-7786 Tastefully done spa- corrals, outside arena floors & ca b inets, Broker, 541-408-2944 2 bedroom + office Dennis Haniford, Ridge at Eagle Crest j Real Estate countertops, Principal Broker cious home sitting on Central Oregon more. ERD zoning granite 5.5 acres, septic, power (den), very open floor 541-771-7786 $99,900 541-536-1731 the CR rim, dble ga- & appliances & a Resort Realty allows property to be S/S and water installed. plan. Attached double • Cascade Mountain w oodstove. La r g e rage with a ttached divided into 3 parcels. 16160 SW Dove Rd. garage, turn-key and Located near the en7'/2 acre property with views tack room and horse MLS windows ex- $97,000 - 2.59 acres. 6.1 acre cornerlot, c o n dition. upgraded 1742 sq. ft. 20' I 400118. picture trance of the Ranch. move-in • .32 to .36 acre lots tend the length of this Ready t o bu i l d. stall. Located off a Mtn. views, near Des- $119,900 MLS $56,550. $450,000. 3 bdrm, 2 bath home, • Golf, pool, tennis & 3 bed 2 bath home. A MLS¹201100751 paved road. $229,000 John L. Scott Real chutes River. $89,900 201104846 Call Linda Cascade Village f ireplace, 2 b o n us trails must see! $360,000. Call Travis L. HanMLS 201309151 MLS 201205646 Homes N.W. LLC Lou Day- Wright. 541Estate 541-548-1712 rooms, storage, fence, Linda Lou Day-Wright. MLS¹ 201306185. nan, PC, Principal • MLS 201301147 Juniper Realty 541-388-0000 771-2585 C r o oked p rivate well. M L S Christy HartmanCall Linda Broker 541- 771-2585 541-504-5393 Check out the River Realty DeCourcey, Broker 541-788-3480 1980 sq.ft. home, newly 201407097. $159,900 Crooked River Realty (541) 815-0606 classifieds online Nancy Popp, 541-312-7263 Cascade Realty Redmond RE/MAX u pdated kitc h en TURN THE PAGE 7965 SW R iver R d. Principal Broker www.bendbulletirbcom The Bulletin's fenced/gated, h u ge Land & Homes 2.79 acres, near the 541-815-8000 For More Ads Updated daily Brand New C u stom "Call A Service Real Estate D eschutes Riv e r . bonus room, w/sepa- Crooked River Realty 1 032 T r ai l C r e ek 541-771-7786 rate entrance, natural The Bulletin Professional" Directory $49,000 ¹201009429 Home on 4 Drive. Frank Lloyd light. 1-acre. $159,900 Beautiful, well cared for Juniper Realty is all about meeting Updated Acres - 3bd/2bath on Wright inspired home Call The Bulletin At - MLS 201308329 Call 3 bdrm 2 bath mfd. MORRIS 16535 SW Chinook Dr. 541-504-5393 your needs. 4 acres with 3 acres backing to creek w/ 541-385-5809 5.68 a cres, R i ver Nancy Popp, Princi- home on 1~/2 acre REAL ESTATE of private water right. mtn views. 2681 sq.f t. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail v iews, o w ner w i l l Look at: pal Broker, 541-815- corner lot close to I& p ~ d y ~ ~ O~ d Call on one of the 1600 sq ft shop, 1080 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath + of- At: www.bendbulletin.com carry. $225,000 MLS 8000. Crooked River pavement, Wrap Bendhomes.com professionals today! sq ft barn, Fenced & fice. Formal d ining Shevlin Commons Lot 201106408. J uniper Realty around kitchen with for Complete Listings of cross fenced. Underand 3-car g arage, j $239,000 Eagle Crest, 1 0 151 Realty 541-504-5393 lots of counter and 5.82 acres 3 b drm/2 ground sprinklers 8 Area Real Estate for Sale 864 sq.ft. shop w/heat, cupboard luxury finishes Ridge Lp. • .25 Acre lot spa c e, b ath, 1560 s q . f t . more. MLS201400236 throughout. $469,900. Sundance 16685 SW Chinook Dr. • Cascade Mountain RV pad w/dump, 3 Big Smith Rock views, aundry r o o m of f Large 28x32 sq. ft. $379,000. Beautiful and peaceful bdrm, 2 bath beauti- lkitchen 6.9 acres, River MLS 201308237 .44 acre lot, backs to view has back door shop, dble car garage. John L. Scott Real waterfront p roperty, views, all utilities in• Close to Shevlin Park fully appointed home. Lynn Johns, Principal Cline Butte & B LM. garage area. with Fenced for h orses. Estate 541-548-1712 21 acres with Cas- Enclosed garden, with to stalled, owner carry. Broker, 541-408-2944 $159,900. MLS • MLS 201301093 Near the entrance of c ade m t n vie w s. raised beds. "Dyna- sliding glass door to $189,000 MLS Central Oregon Don Kelleher, Broker ¹201304889 deck. Nice dint he r a n ch. ML S Views Galore! Smith $450,000. MLS mite" Cascade views. cover 201008671 Juniper 541-480-1911 Resort Realty Lynn Johns, Principal ing area. $ 154,900 20130955 $279,000 201310537. John L. Realty 541-504-5393 Rock views on a quiet One acre. $139,900 MLS 201303530 Broker, 541-408-2944 Call Lin d a Lou dead-end Scott Real E s tate MLS 201309296 co u ntryCabin on Deschutes! 2 Central Oregon Cascade Realty, DenDay-Wright, Broker, $229,000 Gorgeous 541-548-1712 rN road. Spacious 2700 bed cabin overlookNancy Popp, Principal nis Haniford, Princ. Resort Realty panoramic views of 541-771-2585 sq. ft. home boasts 3 ing Deschutes river Broker 541-815-8000 Broker 541-536-1731 Smith R o ck , 4. 9 Lot 21 SW Chipmunk Crooked River Realty bdrms, 2 baths, huge w /separate gu e s tE state living i n T h e MORRIS buildable acres, 2~/2 Rd. 5.16 acre with 2 Crooked River Realty Cute as can be 2 bdrm, 6760 S W B u c kskin, country kitchen, din- quarters & dbl garage. Highlands at Broken REAL ESTATE acres COI irrigation, storage sheds. Partial FACTORYSPECIAL 2 bath, extra building 201 3 08238. Top 10 acres, gated, Crooked River Ranch. ing area, large util. MLS horse friendly, septic ~ y ~ ~ ~ d mtn view. community New Home, 3 bdrm, private well, utilities at outback. Landscapnew carpet & paint room and a b a se- $239,900.Nancy feasibility approved, water insta l led. $46,500 finished ing and much more! m ent which i s i n - Popp, Principal Bro- lot, app fo r c ap-fill BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS r eady to move i n . power at street. 3347 $60,000 ¹201300800 on your site. cluded in the sq. ft. ker 541-815-8000 septic. $53 5 ,000. MLS 201 3 03383. Q uiet l o cation, 3 NE Xenolith St. Call Juniper Realty J and M Homes $120,000. MLS MLS¹ 201 2 00937 Search the area's most bdrm, 2 bath on 5.16 Also has extra area Crooked River Realty Veronica or S e cily, 541-504-5393 541-548-5511 Pam Lester, Principal comprehensive listing of 541-610-5672 201303383. Linda Lou fenced acres. Private upstairs and all bdrms or classified advertising... Day-Wright Broker B roker Century 2 1 well, close t o g o lf are on the main level. Want to impress the 541-639-6307. Prineviffe j $99,000 760 541-771-2585 Gold Country Realty, real estate to automotive, Windermere course. $1 8 5 ,000. The dbl. garage is C e ntral • 2.04 Acres relatives? Remodel merchandise to sporting Mfd./Mobile Homes Crooked River Realty large. This property is Inc. 541-504-1338 MLS 201310512. • Cascade Mountain Oregon Real Estate goods. Bulletin Classifieds 1.5 acres with 1 acre your home with the Juniper Realty, with Land appear every day in the 3.18 acres g randfa- views Great Investment j Need to get an 541-504-5393 irrigation, fenced and help of a professional • Crooked River views print or on line. $249,900 ready fo r h o r ses. from The Bulletin's thered in. Septic and 50760 South Fawn, La ad in ASAP? • MLS 2704850 8479 SW High Cone $5000 allowance to • Deschutes River & Call 541-385-5809 w ater o n t h e l o t , JJ Jones, Broker Pine. Top-of-the-line 3 "Call A Service Drive. Large 4 bdrm, 2 buyers at closing with You can place it Pilot Butte views www.bendbulletin.com power at the road. bdrm 2 bath, 2100 sq. bath located in t he 541-610-7318 online at: of fer. Professional" Directory • Build in Bend's best MLS 2012 0 8989 ft. home with shop, 541-788-3678 heart o f Cr o oked accepted kept secret The Bulletin $289,900. 12333 NW $79,900. $169,000. 1.13 acres. www.bendbulletin.com Serving CentralOregon since l903 River Ranch on 1.20 10th St., Terrebonne. • .37 Acre lot Crooked River Realty High Lakes Realty & acre. Wonderful out- Call Heather Hockett, • MLS 201307954 SHEVLIN RIDGE Call Linda Lou Property M a n age- 541 -385-5809 door area for enter- PC, Broker, Century • si Lots Bonnie Savickas, Sq.ft. Iot, ap541-771-2585 ment 541-536-0117 taining or r e laxing. 21 Gold Country ReBroker, EPRO, SRES 17,000 proved plans. More County s a ys Oversized 2-bay shop $25,000 - $65,000. 541-408-7537 MORRIS 4.95 acres with 1755 Wow! details and photos on 32.42 Acres in Urban w ith s t orage a n d alty, 541-420-9151 1512 sq. ft. however S pectacular lots i n Growth B o u ndary, REAL ESTATE sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath there craigslist. $149,900. an air condiplenty of room to keep Yarrow s u bdivision, Adjacent t o The 541-389-8614 home. $14 4 ,900. tionedis11.5'x14' The Bulletin's the toys out of t he the newer developboGreens, kitty corner to 15451 Sixth St., La "Call A Service weather. $ 143,000. nus room. Plus den, ment in the east hills new Ridgeview High Three Rivers South j 773 Pine. High Lakes Remls 201300653 Professional" Directory of Madras. Very near room, 2-mo.-old School. $7 5 0 ,000. MORRIS $69,900 alty & Property Man- util. Acreages Juniper Realty, heat pump with coolthe new aquatic Cenis all about meeting MLS ¹ 201 2 03193• 2.68 acre lot REAL ESTATE agement 54'I -504-5393 ing, water heater is 2 ter, middle school and Pam Lester, Principal • Across from Little De541-536-0117 yourneeds. dOp ~ Lot 16 SW Shad Rd. yrs old, 36x36 shop COCC campus. Home Broker, Century 21 schutes River 8579 SW P anorama, 2.7 acres, Mt. Jeffer h as two 1 0 ' d o o r ID YARROW Eagle Gold Country Realty, • Outdoor recreation CRR. Wel l m a i n- Call on one of the Need help fixing stuff? son & S mith Rock w /openers an d a Crest Prop e rties Need to get an ad Inc. 541-504-1338 paradise tained 3 bdrm, 2 bath, professionals today! Call A Service Professional views. $58, 0 0 0. 866-722-3370 12x16 door. Add-on in • MLS 201308493 1404 sq. ft., view of MLS¹ 201208266 find the help you need. in ASAP? P rime p r operty a t back is 16x36 with 10' Greg Miller PC, mtns. Insulated shop Wonderful acreage set Vacant Lot in Crooked Juniper Realty www.bendbulletin.com Crooked River Ranch door plus wood storBroker, CRS, GRI with power & c o n- up for horses with 541-504-5393 iver R a nch with Cascade views! age. Fenced chain 541-408-1511 crete floor. A c ross round pen, 4 - stall $R34,500. Fax it ts 541-322-7253 1146 Linda Drive, La Property i s com L evel & link with gate to govthe street from the barn with c h icken treed buildable lot, The Bulletin's Pine. 3/2 1188 sq. ft. ernment lands. Plus pletely fenced. Cor comm. park & trails. coop, hay storage and 1.44 acres. Enjoy all The Bulletin Classifieds "Call A Service double wide, 2 car ganer lot, near firehall. boat storage. si $134,000. MLS complete bunk house. rage, shop on 1 acre. $159,900. he a m enities o f MLS¹ Professional" Directory $79,900. MLS ¹201308611. Juniper 40x60 shop/ garage tCrooked $98,000. High Lakes 20134458 C ascade 20140064. Call Linda River Ranch. Hager Mountain Estates is all about meeting Realty, 541-504-5393 finished with bath. Hot MLS¹201309880. MORRIS Realty & Pr o perty Lou Day-Wright. 541Realty, Dennis Haniyourneeds. house. 2 ponds. Iand- Gail Day, 541-306-1018 4 lots, $25,000 each loREAL ESTATE Management 771-2585 C r o oked ford, Princ. Broker, The Bulletin's cated in Silver Lake. scaped. mountain & 541-536-0117 Central Oregon Realty River Realty 541-536-1731 "Call A Service Call on one of the Underground power m eadow views. 12 Group, LLC and conduit for phone professionals today! Professional" Directory frost-free fau c ets, and internet. Views of wrap around decks on $149,900 - Build your is all about meeting home & much more. dream home on this Hager Mountain. Sep- Open Space & Privacy, your needs. tic feasibility for stanMLS large gently sloping lot $60,000. 4.78 acres, $375,000 dard system. The Cascade M o untain Call on one of the 201207852 Cascade with views of Mt. Jefarea is a sportsman's v iews, t r ee d lo t , Realty, Dennis Hani- ferson & Mt. Hood; professionals today! paradise. Crooked River Ranch. ford, Princ. Broker also adjacent to the Bobbie Strome, MLS¹201307047. Custom with Cascade 541-536-1731 walking trail and pond. Principal Broker Call Gail Day, views, Corian, Vac, Easily accessible on John L Scott Real 541-306-1018. 763 bayed wind o ws, the corner of High- Estate 541-385-5500 Central Oregon Realty dbl-attached garage, Recreational Homes land View Loop & Group, LLC 2 0x24 s ho p wi t h T rail C reek. M L S Half acre commercial lot & Property overhead door, hot ¹201400392 near Sunriver near Lot 1 Mustang Road, t ub r o o m , lar g e 141038 Crescent Moon Eagle Crest Properties store, restaurant and 5.11 acre corner lot f enced area. M L S 866-722-3370 other bu s inesses. on paved road, mtn Crescent Lake. 2013057'I 7. $299,000 Dr., Bonus! Bonus! Bonus! 1525 Murrelet Dr. Eagle Now only $45,000. view. $95,000. MLS - Call Nancy Popp, Scott McLean, 201310051 J u n iper have beautiful Crest, Ochoco Mtn Principal Broker Sellers Principal Broker cabin retreat in dia- v iews, 1 7 t h hol e Realty 541-504-5393 541-815-8000 541-408-6908 mond Peaks with lots Challenge Course, .49 Crooked River Realty Realty Executives of upgrades. Enjoy USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! lot, bring your Lake Front P roperty right now! Willing to acre $1 5 0 ,000. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Door-to-door selling with with Bre a thtaking include the adjacent builder. Views! $89 5 ,000. lot at the right place! MLS ¹201305175 Search the area's most fast results! It's the easiest Remodeled in 2006. Sleeps 6 comfortably Lynn Johns, Principal comprehensive listing of Broker, 541-408-2944 way in the world to sell. Loft area, spacious with a detached gaclassified advertising... Central Oregon master suite, 3 fire- rage already in place. real estate to automotive, Resort Realty The Bulletin Classified places, 4 bedrooms, 2 Plenty of extra used merchandise to sporting 541-385-5809 bathrooms, 4500 sq ft with the 600 sq. ft. 1.71 acres, septic ap- goods. Bulletin Classifieds on 6.8 acres. MLS¹ above the g a rage. appear every day in the proved power and 201400129. Views! Views! Views! Plumbed for b a t h- water at the street. print or on line. David Franke, $149,900. Flat, open, room. Come take a Call 541-385-5809 $39,900 ¹201307972 541-420-5986 l ook! You'll love i t ! Linda Lou Day-Wright. www.bendbulletin.com buildable 9.32 acres located i n Po w e ll Central Oregon Realty $299,000. MLS 541- 771-2585 Group, LLC Butte. 201302853. Call Crooked River Realty The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregonsince19IB MLS¹201310923 (541) 815-0606 Near Smith Rocks, gor- Linda David Franke, geous 3 bedroom, 3 Cascade Realty $50,000 - Fairhaven, an Nice flat lot in Terreb541-420-5986 established neighbor- onne, .56 a c res, Central bath, 3880 sq.ft. MLS Oregon Realty The Bulletin's 201300784. $694,000 hood, has 5 building p aved street, a p Group, LLC "Call A Service lots available! Linda Lou Day-Wright. proved fo r c a p-fill 541- 771-2585 Crooked Professional" Directory See online at septic, utilities at lot 13601 SW Canyon Dr. River Realty NWELMLOTS.com line. $42,000. MLS 1.13 acres, Mt. Jefferis all about meeting Call Frank, ¹ 2012001172 P a m son views, owner will North Redmond 4 bedyourneeds. 541-480-9327 Lester, Principal Brocarry. $58,500 room on 5 acres, 40x50 Redmond RE/MAX ker, Century 21 Gold ¹201106385 Call on one of the shop, fenced, borders Land & Homes Real Country Realty, Inc. Juniper Realty BLM. $289,000. No lease professionals today! EII M , 0 4 Estate 541-771-7786 541-504-1338 541-504-5393 to own. 541-81 5-1216
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ACADEMY
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MORTGAGE CORPORATION casey NMLs189449
541-323-2191
jennifer NMLS288550
CORPNMLS¹3113 ®®'Q(,QQQde®ymOrtgpge,<Pm 371 SW Upper Terrace Dr., Suite 1, Bend, OR 97702
CORP ORLIC.I ML2421
THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY FEBRUARY 15 2014 E9
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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$185,000 I A GreatHome In La Pine!
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8 •
$ f 24,900 I Updated Farmhouse
• Open floor plan • Fully fenced acre • Circular driveway • Large garage • Parklike setting • MLS¹ 201306933
$394,500 I Must See!
• 0.81 AC parcel • 1232 SF • 3bed,1bath • Nicely updated home! • MLS¹ 201310879
$665,000 I 2eleMW LakemontDrive
• River CanyonEstates • 2550 SF • 3 bed, 2.5 bath • 3 car tandem garage Water feature
• Pacwest built custom
home . trr
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541 8 4 8
$449,000 I Riverfront Condo, DowntownBend
$599,900 I 21420 Belnap, Bend
• Open floor plan • Fresh paint • Granite counters • Two balconies • Detached garage I•
$724,000 I O9173 Bay Drive
•3mastersuites • Extensive remodelin 2011 • 1902 SF owner occupied or vacation rental • Close to all Sunnver hasto offer
• Large barn/shop & storage sheds I
541
$41
0
$ 1 200
541 $41 0 $8084
$165,000 I Professional Office In Redmond
Wonderful retreat atthe end ofthe road • Open kitchen,diningarea, large living room8 deck
541
BILL KAMMERER, BROKER
I
$420 $342 3
• Open floor plan & great room • 3 car tandem garage • Bonus room upstairs
7'
SUSAN PITARRO, BROKER
• Gently sloping 0.48AC AwbreyButtelot readyto build on • Sits between 2existing homes • Backs Mt. Washington Drive • HOA $120 I
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541
$41
9
ayear
I
$8758
CAROL ARMSTRONG, BROKER
Cir ctl
Aiveh~fIt.Deeps,eql0 Phelps, • $ • $$ i • $ w r
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I 8$$ $ $ $ • $
$ $$ x s t $ $
8499,500 I Close In Small Acreage
$599,000 I o1557 Tall Tree • 4 bed, 3 bath • 2628SF on a 0.3AC lot •Cust om finishesthroughout • Greatbackyardfor entertaining • Situated at the end
• 3321 SFhome • 2000 SF shop/garage • Beautifully landscaped with tranquil pond • Bring your RV,
' Windermere '; REAL ESTATE 695 SW Mill View Way Bend, OR 97782 Tel: 541 3888404 Cell: 541 4111 8884 Fax: 541 389 7915
ofa cul-de-sac
541 . 6 3 3 - 0 2 5 5
• 2570 SF, 4 bed,2.5 bath
$224,900 I Stunning Cascade Mtn Views
• Commerciause l approved • 5 car parking • Updatedinterior • Low downpayment8 financing available • Vacant& ready to move in PE TE RENCHER, BROKER
I
$235,000 I Redmond Family Home
$390,000 11B Modoc, Sunriver
541 $771 $1 1 88 ERIC ANDREWS, BROKER
floors & stoneaccents • Spacious & open2355 SF • Two spacious master suites, oversized three car garage
7 5 9 0 PAM BELL, BROKER
• 2910 SF • Single levelliving • Stunning kitchen • Two mastersuites • 0.46 AC fenced lot • Gorgeous open floor plan
I
S i ngle level, solar, wood
horses, and all yourtoys
apitarro@windermere.com spitarro.withwre.com etr$ ra
GRANT LUDWICK, BROKER
$329,900 I Amazing Views! AmazingLogHome!
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54 1 $390 . 0 0 9 8
M IKE EVERIDGE, BROKER
Patty Dempsey 541 $480 $5432 Andrea Phelps . 541$408 $4770 Cleme Rinehart 541 $480 $2100 w ww.rine Hart d e m p s e y .c o m Approved Plat-27 lots
$564,000 I Great SW Redmond location
$229,000 I Stunning Smith Rock
• 2 mastersuites • 4730 SFhome • 6 bed, 5 bath • 4.32 AC •n " • Cascade mountain views
• Gorgeous panoramic views of Smith Rock • 4.9 buildable acres • 2.5 AC of COIflood irrigation • Horse friendly • Septic feasibility approved; powerbox at street
• Cascade ViewEstates, Phase10 • Outstandingmountain views • SW Redmond location • Nearhigh school • Call listing agentfor packet
E
54 1 $ 480 $71 83
BARBARA MYERS, BROKER
541 -48 0 - 7 1 83
BARBARA MYERS, BROKER
• 3 bed,2 bath,2500+ SF & on1.87AC
• Lots of flex space, so much potential • Incredible indoor & outdoor living • Large master with sauna & private balcony • Shop & RV areaswith 220, beautifully maintained, a must see!
$339,000 I Historic Ranch On 9Acres, Bend
LUSE THERIOT TEAM
• 3-4 bed,2 bath,1959SF • 36X28 3 bayshop building • 24X25 equipmentcarport • Completely fencedwith
5 41-6 1 0 $5672
541-604-1 649
corals • Borders
VERONICA THERIOT, BROKER
rrGAIL ROGERS, BROKER
BLM,
541-639-6307
971-221-8881
SECILY LUSE, BROKER
LAURA GIBONS,BROKER»
541 $41 0 $8557
$283,900 I Beautiful SummitCrest Home, MtnViews
$145,000 I Bends Westside
$1 79,000 I Great Craftsman Home
• 4 bed, 3 bath • Slab granite in kitchen • Stainless steel appliances • Extensive laminate wood floors
II
DAvE DIsNEY, BRQKER
• 3 bed, 2 bath • 9 FT ceiling • Tile counters in kitchen
• Fireplace • Move in condition • Landscaped & fenced • MLS¹ 201400908
3
• Two fireplaces • Professionally landscaped • MLS¹ 201400909
Questions about Real Estate? Call our Bend or Redmond office! We have answers... Available 7 days a week
$389,900 I Ranch Home, Barn, Shop • 6.39 AC & 3 ACirrigated • Zoned for 2 AC lots • 5 stall barn & 60 FT
• 2 renovated 2 bedcondos • High end finishes • City view • Near COCC & Newport Market • Professionally managed & Well maintained
r,.i t..t
round pen • Great mountain views • 210X105 arena • Oversized garage & large
541-480-9883
shop • MLS¹ 201309251
$829,000 I Shevlin Ridge Stunner
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111
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, Call Today! t' -
AUDREY COOK, BROKER
$189 8999 I Great Investment Opportunity
$1 a020 8000 I Stellar Investment Property!
• Fully occupied duplex • Blocks from Sage Elementary • 1834 SF, 4 bed & 2 bath
$237,500 I Investment Property
• 11 unit townhome complex • 2 bed, 1.5 bath with attached garages • Professionally managed & well maintained
• Spacious duplex in NE Bend • 2 bed, 1 bath with single car garages • Light & bright open floor plans • Professionally managed
• R.D. building & design • New construction • 3553 SF & 42X16RVgarage • 3 bed (2 full) & 2.5 bath, bonus room plus office
$299,900 I Rare Investment Opportunity! 54 1 $480 $6790
•Two homes on onelotin Midtown • Tenant occupied & professionally managed • Unit B is a two story built in 2003 • 5 bed & 2.5 bath
JAKE MOORHEAD,BROKER
541 $480 $2245 LORETTA MOORHEAD,BROKER
541 $480 $0448
$299,900 I 3016 Cluh House • Golf course, 5th fairway in Rivers EdgeVillage • Near river trails & shopping • Master on main floor with walk in closets & spacious master bath • Open greatroom,loft/office, 1 bed &bath upstairs
~+Aq~ .
JOHN TAYLOR, BROKER
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HUNTER LEVISON GROUP
5 4 1 $306 . 0 4 7 9 CH RISTIN HUNTER, BROKER 541 - 9 7 7 - 1 8 5 2 TO NY LEVISON, BROKER
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E10 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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TENNIS ANYONE? I S500o000 LYNNE CONNEILEY ' 1921 sq.ft, 4 bedroom, 3 bath BROKER , CRS • 30 acres, full tennis court • 21810 Eastmont Drive
541-408-6720 • MLS 201305128
TUMALO ACREAGEl $1,200,000
NORTHWEST CROSSING l$429,900 VIRGINIAROSS, BRO KER ,ARCIS,GRI,ECD BRO KER,PIEVIE WS 541-480-7501
• New construction 1743 sq.ft, • 3 bedroom,2.5 bath, hardwoods • 2466 NW CrossingDrive
• MLS 201309073
MEGANFOWER BROKER GM ' CDPE
• 40 acres, Cascade views
• 2952sq.ft,3bedroom,3bath • 48x36 RV garage/shop 541-610-7318 • MLS 201400366
SISTERS l $625,000
6 ACRES IN TUMALO l $68S,000
• 2594 sq.ft. custombuilt • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath • Barn, storage building, RVhook-up 541-480-6621 • MLS 201400839
UE CONR AD BROKER , CRS
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E TUMALD HOME/VINSI I $624r?BB • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath,2606 sq.ft.
OPETTAD E AIR, BROKER , 5.1;A.R.
• 6.4 acres • Huge Cascade Mountain views
541-815-4786 • MLS 201307561
JOHN SHIPFEH,BROKER, MBA,ABI,CIS,GRI 541-312-7273 541-948-9090
BRASADA RANCH l $429,000 • 1711 sq.ft, furnishedcabin • 3 bedroom suites • Granite counters,hardwoodfloors
• MLS 201310654
LANE KNOLLSESTATESl $589,900 JIM &ROXANNE CHENEY BRpKER S 541-390-4050 541-390-4030
• Custom 2580 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom,office, 3 bath • 2.24 acres, Mt Bachelor view
• MLS 201307975
NW BEND l $395,000 NIKYAIC EKHIHIK, • 3 bedroom 2 5 bath BROKER CRS • Never lived in remodel GRI 541-383-4364 • MLS 201400794
BECKY BRUNOE, BROKER
5ACRE SWITHVIEWSl $419,000 • 2261 sq.ft. Iog home • 2 bedroom,loft, 2 bath • Unobstructed Cascade views
541-350-4112 • MLS 201400333
hU DEW OLFPC BROKERARB
SKYLINER SUMMIT l S393.000 • 2525 sq.h. • 4 bedroom,3.5 bath
• .11acre lot CNHS,RCC 541-420-7080 • MLS 201309912
SESEND46ACREl $449000 EDSE MARYBDDBBIIH • 2841 sq.ft. single level NpKER CER TIFIED • 2 master suites • 3car garage 8 RV parking NEGOTITA OR
541-706-1897 • MLS 201309656
2 NESENDDUPLEXESl $3N/J/////J 01T HUGGIN • 10 19 sq.h units BROKER GM 'g» 2 bedroom, 1.5 batheach • .28acre lot 541-322-1500 • MLS 201400159
• pANAMIUER PMNOPAL BRpKER ABR,AHWD 541-408-1468
NW SEND 36ACRELDTS449,988 • 2215 sq.ft, 3 bedroom, 2 bath • Single level, built-in fire pit • Golf Community
• MLS 201400975
RIVERRIM l $324,900 JULIASUCKIAND BROKER ,ABR, ALHS,CRS, GRI
• Great room design ' 4 bedroorn, 2 bath • Vaulted ceiling, maple floors
541-719-8444 • MLS 201309843
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BROKEN TOPLOT l $320~0 • .65acre culde-saclot • Cascade Mountain views
• 13th Hole & Lake views
541-312-7271 • MLS 201310090
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SEBENDl $319,900
THE BRIDGES l $315,000 • Pahhsch bmlt, underwarranty • 2088 sq.ft. BROKER • 3 bedroom,2.5 bath 541-977-5811 • MLS 201400402
IESIER FRIEDMAHPC 2496 sq ft • 3 bedroom, 3 bath BROKER,ABR, CSP,EPRb, S.TA.R. • .19acre, fencedyard 541-330-8491 • MLS 201309521
MAlT ROB INSON
NE BEND l $299,000 IN JOHNS ON • 2092 sq.ft, remodeled •
BROKER
»3 bedroom 2 bath • Treed .25 acre lot
541-639-6140 • MLS 201400365
MIRADA l $295,000 KATHY JANUS BRpKER
• Franklin Brothers newconstruction
• 1541 sq.ft, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath
lmlmmggg • Mountain views, culde-sac 541-728-8615 • MLS 201400412
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SEBENDl $218,000
2031 sq.ft. • 4 bedrmirn, 2.5 bath • Paver patio, raised gardenbeds 541-383-4361 • MLS 201300583 SHELL YHUMMEL BIDLEI,CII, QE, CHA B
NE BEND l $212,000 PAmGER AGHIY BROKER 541-948-5880 '
• 2151 sq.ff. • 4 bedroom,2.5 bath,den/of fi ce • RV parking, large backyard • MLS 201308521
1.36 ACRE SINLAPINEl $269o900
SHERR YPERRIGAN • 1731 sq.ft., 3 bedroom • Open cathedral great room BROKER • Insulated 34say shop
541-410-4938 • MLS 201306446
BROKENTOP l $269,000 SAMCC ARTHYI ' 45 ac« iot •
BROKER
»Backs nondevelopment zone • Flatterrain
541-419-8639 • MLS 201400288
SUSINES SBrREALESTATEI $239,500 opportunity ROOKIEDICKENS • Turn-key business • 2 bedroom, 2bathliving quarters BROKER , GRI, • HWY 97 frontage CRS,ABR 541-815-0436 • MLS 201203037
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• .44acre culde-sac lot • Mature pine trees
• Filtered golf course views
541-322-1500 • MLS 201400316
REDMOND l $118,500
CANYONPOIN TREBMONSISIB2JMB
• 1416 sq.ft. smglelevel • 2 bedroom, den, 2 bath • Culde-sac lot, RV parking 541-171-6996 • MLS 2014000828
ce pEBME HERSHEY • 3 bedroom,den/ofi BROKER CRSGM • G«den & RV«eas • Move in ready
PATPAIAZZI, BROKER
541-420-5170 • MLS 201400448
• MIDTOWN BEND l $115,000
I HELIE C TISDELPC, ' Updated 864 sq.ft. h«e • 2 bedroom, I bath, wood floors BROKERABR E.pffp • Garden beds,chickencoop, shed 541-390-3490 • MLS 201400631 '
CRESC ENT l $150,500
• 2502 sq.ft. JUDYME YERS, 2.5 bath BROKER , GRI,CRS • 4 bedroom, • 1.14 acre SRES 541-480-1922 • MLS 201309153
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SESC HNESRIVERWOODSI $125,080 MARGO DEGRAY BROKER ABR ' CRS 541-480-1355
• 1094 sq.ft. manufactured • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • .23acre
• MLS 201400261
GILCHRIST l $884ND
RECREA TION PROPERTY I$96,000 STEVE PAYER, BROKER , GRI
• 320 acres of privacy • Well, power, barn, fenced • LOP tags
541-480-2966 • MLS 201400050
• 1114 sq.ft, remodeled • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • Garage/shop, RV storage 541-383-4334 • MLS 201400408
DARRYL DOSER, BROKER CRS '
FORLEASE$6930/monHs USACAMPBEU.o BROKER '
• 6300 sq.ft. restaurant
• 28 ft. & 12 ft. hoods • Busy Bend mtersection
41-419-8900 • MLS 201310861
• COMMERCI ALBUILDINGSI 80/sf PAULAVANVLECK, ' Excellent visibility • 27 0 0 sq.ft. BROKER
• Bank credit union or fast food
541-280-1114 • MLS 201310084
ON PAGES 3%4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin
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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 208
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Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Travel/Tickets
Misc. Items
Building Materials
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Jack Russell Terrier/ Advertise V A CATION Steel Building Fox Terrier mix pupAllocated Bargains Ammo: 22LR - $60/500 SPECIALS to 3 milpies. 7 weeks. $150 40x60 on up round boxes, $65/525 lion Pacific N orthCall 5 4 1 -323-1787. We do deals round boxes while westerners! 29 daily www.gosteelbuildings.com Pictures avail. six supplies last. .30cal newspapers, states. 25-word clasSource¹ 18X carbine - 50 r ound Llewellin Setter/black & Sunvision Pro 541-227-6921 sified $540 for a 3-day HELP YOUR AD boxes $25. C all or white Walker puppies! 202 a d. Ca l l 308 (91 6) 28LX Tanning Bed stand out from the Eye-catching w/lots of Metal Office text 360-852-3111 2 88-6019 o r vis i t Has only 300 hours, 267 Want to Buy or Rent c olor; t h ey're v e r y rest! Have the top line Bend. Farm Equipment Desks www.pnna.com for the (lamps have average in bold print for only Fuel & Wood friendly & love people. 1 Sturdy and in good & Machinery Bend local pays CASH!! Pacific Nor t hwest life of 800-1000 hours CASH for dressers, female @ $125; 2 males condition. Choice of $2.00 extra. of effective tanning for all firearms & Daily Co n nection. 1 Cord dry, split Juniper, dead washers/dryers @ $100. 541-447-1323 black or beige body. usage). 1 owner, ammo. 541-526-0617 The Bulletin (PNDC) $190/cord. Multi-cord- (4) 5'x12' horse panels, 541-420-5640 SewingCentralOwgnn rinse Sgge Walnut colored great condition, $75/ea. Assorted wadiscounts, 8 yg cords laminate top. 5 ft. CASH!! includes manual, ter and feed tubs, call Wanted: $Cash paid for 541-385-5809 260 available. Immediate r • ' 'I For Guns, Ammo 8 vintage costume jewwide by 30" deep. goggles 8 head for prices. delivery! 541-408-6193 Just bought a new boat? Misc.ltems Reloading Supplies. elry. Top dollar paid for pillow. $900. 541-923-9758 $75 each. Sell your old one in the 541-408-6900. Gold/Siiver.l buy by the Call to seel In Redmondclassifieds! Ask about our Just bought a new boat? 2 basket french fryer, 541-385-9318in Bend All yearDependable Estate, Honest Artist Cell 206-849-5218. Super Seller rates! Firewood: Seasoned; Sell your old one in the Glock gun l ight/laser $35. Mini refrigerator, Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Malti-Poo tiny designer Lodgepole 1 for $195 541-385-5809 classifieds! Ask about our sight, $200; High cap $50. 541-389-0340 or 2 for $365. Cedar, Super Seller rates! Wanted: Cement mixer, puppies, mother 8 Ibs, NEED TO CANCEL .40 Glock mags, $20 The Bulletin Offers 240 father 3 lbs.i no matea; .40 G old D o t, Just bought a new boat? split, del. Bend: 1 for 541-385-5809 used, gas or electric, ting, no shedding, hypoFree Private Party Ads YOUR AD? Crafts & Hobbies Pow'rBall, H o r nadySell your old one in the • 3 lines - 3 days $175 or 2 for $325. 60" Brush hog, good call 541-447-7807 The Bulletin allergenic. Boy $825, Critical Defense, 75!t/rd. classifieds! Ask about our • Private Party Only 541-420-3484. Classifieds has an c ondition, $550 . girl $925.541-233-6328 Super Seller rates! 208 503-585-5000, Bend. "After Hours"Line • Total of items adver541-923-9758 541-385-5809 Pets & Supplies Newfoundland AKC tised must equal $200 Call 541-383-2371 Pine & juniper Split GUN SHOW or Less N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 p uppy, male, 1 2 24 hrs. to cancel Feb. 22-23rd I A double depth in~ swather, 14' header weeks, black, current FOR DETAILS or to your ad! Deschutes Fairgrounds The Bulletin recomPROMPT DELIVERY with conditioner, cab on shots, $1100. Call I terment gra v e PLACE AN AD, Buy! Sell! Trade! 54J.D89-9663 mends extra caution space with o uter heat/A/C, 1300 orig. Recliner, overstuffed Call 541-385-5809 Alderwood Quiltworks SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 when purc h as- Jill 541-279-6344 hrs. $29,000 obo. $8 Admission, I burial container built Fax 541-385-5802 leather, exc cond. machine quilting ing products or ser- POODLE pups AKC toy, beige 12 & under free! 1486 International, cab in, located in Mead269 frame for sale, locally OREGON TRAIL GUN vices from out of the tiny teacup, cuddly people $199. 253-820-3926 owpark area of De- I Wanted- paying cash Gardening Supplies heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1 000 made in Prineville, area. Sending cash, dogs. 541-475-3889 SHOWS, 541-347-2120 I schutes Memorial Pto, 3 sets remotes, Recliner, Wilson's large for Hi-fi audio 8 stueasy to use, makes checks, or credit inor 541-404-1890 & Equipment nice tractor. $18,000. Gardens, $ 1 000. QueenslandHeelers plush type, maroon, great dio equip. Mclntosh, quilting a dream! f ormation may be 541-419-3253 Standard & Mini, $150 c ondition, $200 o b o. J BL, Marantz, D yComes with Handi Henry mini-bolt youth I Call 541-389 1821 subjected to fraud. 8 up. 541-280-1537 541-923-6303 naco, Heathkit, Sanhandles, includes. For more informa- www.rightwayranch.wor .22, Bushnell scope, BarkTurfSoil.com 325 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. manual, exc. shape, $150. 541-390-1753 tion about an adverHay, Grain 8 Feed dpress.com Call 541-261-1808 only used to quilt 4 tiser, you may call The Bulletin Auto Accident Attorney PROMPT DELIVERY H & H FIREARMS the O regon State tops, like new. recommends extra INJURED I N AN 210 First quality Orchard/Tim542-369-9663 Buy, Sell, Trade, WHEN YOU SEE THIS $600. 541-549-1273 Attorney General's Furniture & Appliances I ea son ne n p r AUTO A C CIDENT? othy/Blue Grass mixed Consign. or 541-419-2160 Office C o n sumer chasing products or I Call InjuryFone for a hay, no rain, barn stored, Across From Protection hotline at services from out of I free case evaluation. $250/ton Patterson Ranch For newspaper Pilot Butte Drive-In 1-877-877-9392. Brother Industrial Never a cost to you. M Sisters, 541-549-3831 A1 Washers8 Dryers 8 the area. Sending 8 OreP I X a t B e n d b ijl l e t i I .C O m 541-382-9352 delivery, call the ' cash, checks, o r ~ Sewing machine & Don't wait, call now! $150 ea. Full warOn a classified ad Circulation Dept. at 345 The Bulletin table ranty. Free Del. Also f credit i n f o rmation go to SIG P938 with crimson 1-800-539-9913. Serring Censrel Ongnn sincesggg 541-385-5800 wanted, used W/D's may be subjected to www.bendbulletin.com Livestock & Equipment trace, black with rose (PNDC) To place an ad, call 541-280-7355 f FRAUD. For more to view additional red grip, 3 clips. $800 541-385-5809 Adopt a rescued kitten Buying Dlamonds information about an t photos of the item. 541-604-4203. Intermountain or email or cat! Fixed, shots, /Gold for Cash advertiser, you may I Livestock claseifigd@bendbulletin.com ID chip, tested! At i call t h e Ore g on i People Look for Information Saxon's Fine Jewelers Invitation Bull & Open 261 Petsmart, Bend, 2/15 ' State Atto r ney ' 541-389-6655 The Bulletin About Products and Replacement Heifer & 1 6 only, 1 1 to 4. Medical Equipment ServingCensrel Oregon since rgna Brother L S 2 -B837 Services Every Daythrough Sale Thursday, March f General's O f fi ce Rescue at 65480 78th BUYING Consumer Protec- • walking foot, needle 6, 2014. Sale starts at St., Bend, Thurs/Sat/ The Bulletin Classifieds Lionel/American Flyer tion h o t line at I fed industrial leather 12:00 p.m. Pacific Falcon 4-w h eel 270 Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. trains, accessories. sewing m a chine. 55 Reputation Range i 1-877-877-9392. power scooter with Armoire for sale, www.craftcats.org Lost & Found 541-408-2191. M achine i s t a b l e Spring Chinook Ready Bulls; Over accessories, gently Cherry/wrought iron Adult barn/shop cats, i TheBulletin t mounted. When last Fishing Trips 300+ Fancy Open u sed, in need o f Perfect condition, Serrrng Central Oregon since feni BUYING 8i S ELLING Found 'Mother's ring' in used it was in exfixed, shots, s o me 30 feet North River Heifers. new battery (order- Redmond near s w im handmade, All gold jewelry, silver friendly, others not so cellent working conwith cabin for any/all ing info avail.) $400. center. 5 4 1-382-1289, Exit 265 solid wood. and gold coins, bars, much. No fee 8 we'll dition. Add i tional weather (Portland La Grande, OR 69 ex39ex23.5". 212 rounds, wedding sets, Call 541-389-1821 leave message. deliver. 541-389-8420 pictures upon rearea). $125 per perfor details. For Heifer Consign$650. class rings, sterling silAntiques & quest. $1500 OBO. son. Ask about full ments call Dennis kcaravelliOgmail.com ver, coin collect, vinBorder Collie/New Zeal276 541-213-2333 Collectibles boat special! March Arnzen 541-561-4697; tage watches, dental and Huntaway pups, great Auction Sales 15th to early June. Jon Levy 541-310-0854 gold. Bill Fl e ming, doqs, working parents, Full size power Stamp Collector Call Captain Greg 541-382-9419. or Tim McMiller $275. 541-546-6171. Mid-Century Unique adjustable bed 541-379-0362. 541-910-3555 Cash paid for new or NEXT LEVEL ONw/memory foam Donate deposit bottles/ 8 Cottttgtt used postage stamps. Guaranteed Income For dcsstcePt LINE AUCTIONS for !Igttgrt cans to local all vol., 358 Your Ret i rement. mattress, $800. PorHonest old collector! Central Oregon and non-profit rescue, for Visit our HUGE table wheelchair, 541-279-0336 Avoid market risk & Farmers Column Stag Arms AR-15: beyond. Online bidferal cat spay/neuter. home decor 4 leg walker, get guaranteed inModel Stag15, ding for a wide as243 Cans for Cats trailer consignment store. come in retirement! Quadri-Poise cane, 10X20 Storage Buildings 5.56/223, Stainless sortment of merat Jake's Diner; or New items bathroom assist Ski Equipment CALL for FREE copy for protecting hay, chandise. Looking steel barrel. LeHead & Footboard, donate M-F at Smith arrive daily! chair, all for $200. of our SAFE MONEY firewood, livestock etc. for new bidders and with wood-grain look, upold Firedot G Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or 930 SE Textron, Call 541-526-5737 GUIDE Plus Annuity $1496 Installed. new consignments double size has no 3-9X40 Scope, at CRAFT, Tumalo. Bend 541-318-1501 Quotes from A-Rated (other sizes available) side rails. Could be of all kinds; from a MagPul PRS Call for Irg. quantity www.redeuxbend.com 541-617-1133. Companies! couple items to repurposed into a pickup, 541-389-8420. buttstock, Hogue 264 800-908-7035. CCB ¹173684 garden bench, or a household or busiwww.craftcats.org grip, Bipod. $2000 kfjbuildersOykwc.net Futon, oak frame, dbl u nique item. U s e (PNDC) Snow Removal Equipment ness liquidations. Call 541-410-3568 m attress, cover, i n your imagination! We can sell just The Bulletin's g reat c o nd. $ 1 0 0. Asking $75. about anything. Austrian-made Natural gas Ruud 541-420-4303 "Call A Service 541-419-6408 Wanted: Collector seeks Take a look at nexVolant Silver tankless water SnOINbliDWer Professional" Directory high quality fishing items tlevelonkneauctions. G ENERATE SOM E diamond-finished heater, brand new! Craftsman electric or & upscale bamboo fly com or Call is all about meeting EXCITEMENT in your skis, 199 Btu, $1800. pull-start, 29" wide, rods. Call 541-678-5753, 541-548-8525 neighborhood! Plan a 170cm in length. yourneeds. Oak Showcase Also brand new 80 ADORABLE or 503-351-2746 9HP, 5 forward 2 reUsed only 5 times, garage sale and don't 60" long, 24" wide gal. electric water English Springer verse speeds. Call on one of the forget to advertise in they are in great heater, $500. 42" high. Great Spaniel pups! $675 253 ONLINE AU C TION, professionals today! $400 cash. classified! condition. In Sunriver area. 100+ Hobart 60 Quart girls; $600 boys; 1st 541-815-6319 counter case, TV, Stereo & Video 541-385-5809. Were over $1200 530-938-3003 shots; dew claws Mixers. Restaurants plate~lass top. new; asking $300 375 removed. Nationwide, See webLoveseat, beautiful RachDirectTV 2 Year Sav475 or best offer. 541-408-7614 265 site for locations near Meat & Animal Processing elin Classics, cream, sacings Event! Over 140 *REDUCE YOUR 541-382-6773 541-389-0049 you. Sold to Highest rifice $150. 541-410-1312 Building Materials channels only $29.99 CABLE BILL! Get an Bidder! Bid online thru Buermann's Ranch a month. O nly Di- All-Digital g. Sa t e llite 245 2/17, Meats, Burns OregonThe Bulletin's REDMOND Habitat The Bulletin reserves recTV gives you 2 system installed for www.SoldTiger.com We deliver to Bend area! "Call A Service the right to publish all Golf Equipment YEARS of s a vings FREE and programRESTORE /2 hog or whole lamb, and a FREE Genie m ing s t a rting a t Building Supply Resale (PNDC) Professional" Directory ads from The Bulletin $200 fully processed. newspaper onto The CHECK YOUR AD upgrade! Call Quality at $ 24.99/mo. FRE E is all about meeting Now taking orders for People Lookfor Information LOW PRICES HAVANESE PUPPIES Bulletin Internet web1-800-259-5140. HD/DVR upgrade for ranch-raised grain-fed yourneeds. About Products and site. 1242 S. Hwy 97 AKC, Dewclaws, UTD (PNDC) new callers, SO CALL half or whole, $3/Ib 541-548-1406 Services Every Day through beef,fully shots/wormer, non-shed, Call on one of the NOW (877)366-4508. processed. DISH T V Ret a i ler. (PNDC) hypoallerqenic, $850 The Bulletin Open to the public. The Bulletia Classifferfs Call 541-573-2677 professionals today! Starting at 541-460-1277. (for 12 on the first day it runs $19.99/month mos.) 8 High Speed to make sure it is cor- I nternet starting a t rect. nSpellcheckn and $14.95/month (where human errors do ocavailable.) SAVE! Ask cur. If this happens to About SAME DAY Inyour ad, please constallation! CALL Now! tact us ASAP so that 1-800-308-1563 corrections and any (PNDC) adjustments can be made to your ad. REDUCE YOUR 541-385-5809 280 286 CABLE BILL!* Get a I e • i Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend The Bulletin Classified whole-home Satellite Get your J t system installed at NO COST and proMint condition Estate / garage / movbusiness ramming starting at ingsale.Sam-4pm on ** FREE ** upgraded senior 1 9.99/mo. FRE E 2 /14-2/16. 530 N W shafts, head covGarage Sale Kit HD/DVR Upgrade to 12th St. Bend ers &new grips. Place an ad in The new callers, SO CALL Bulletin for your gaDrivers: Ping G10 NOW rage sale and re13.5 T-Made Super 286 1-866-984-8515. ceive a Garage Sale fast 12'. • i i (PNDC) Sales Northeast Bend Hybrlds: Cobra DWS Kit FREE! With an ad in 4-5-6 irons; Cleve255 ESTATE SALE KIT INCLUDES: land HB 3, 7-8-9 and Beds, living room furn, Computers • 4 Garage Sale Signs The Bulletin'6 P/W; Ping G156 oak dining set, antique • $2.00 Off Coupon To iron green dot; desk & china cabinet, T HE B U LLETIN r e Use Toward Your Cleveland XLi S/W, full office, kitchen, full "Call A Service quires computer adNext Ad I/I/edges: Ping G15, • 10 Tips For "Garage house. Sat. only, 9-4 vertisers with multiple gap S/W, lobb. Sale Success!" ad schedules or those 2338 Buckwheat Ct Professional" 951-454-2561 offRosemary & 27th selling multiple systems/ software, to diswww.atticestatesanUPR!GHT PIANO Directory PICK UP YOUR close the name of the dappraisals.com GARAGE SALE KIT at Oak piano in great business or the term *Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks 1777 SW Chandler "dealer" in their ads. shape. Just tuned, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 (whichever comes first!) Private party advertisESTATE SALE OF has a few scratches SHOW ers are defined as GERTRUDE HARTMAN The Bulletin on lid. Bench not those who sell one seningcentral oregon sincesgns February 14 15 16 105 years old, 62 years is same home! Time cap;ncluded Moving computer. Portland Expo sulei vintage everything, Mid-Century Modern forces sale! Item Pricedaf: Your Totot AdCosfonl: sectional and chairs and side table, Duncan Center 257 Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, Phyfe dining set, 2 1930s bedroom sets, oak • Under $500.................... .................................................$29 Musical Instruments 292 Sun.10-4 clawfoot coffee table 8 stacking bookcase, vin$850OBO • $500 fo $999................ .................................................$39 1-5 exit ¹306B tage lamps and pictures, Fox prints, antique • Sales Other Areas 541-000-000 Collectors Regal Guitar, Admission $10 • $1000 to $2499........... .................................................$49 quilts and linens, Occupied Japan china set, exc. cond., $ 1 95. Johnson Bro.'s Empire Grape 8 English ChipI s -enn-ena-3440 • $2500 and over............ .................................................$59 NOTICE 541-420-1921 www.Collectors pendale dish sets, antique china and glassware, Remember to remove vintage kitchen, Community Coronation flatware West.com Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold set, vintage G.E. range, vintage furs/hats/ your Garage Sale signs headline and price. gloves/clothing, PLUS basement full, old sport- (nails, staples, etc.) The Bulletin's ing goods, cabinets, tools, hardware from home, after your Sale event is over! THANKS! "Call A Service Serving Central Oregon since 1903 your ad will a/so appear in: old Christmas, Singer featherweight 8 sewing From The Bulletin Professional" Directory items, 1950s patio furniture, tables full of amaz541-385-5809 • The Bulletin, • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads and your local utility ing vintage misc. in immaculate condition! is all about meeting Kohler & Campbell full companies. • Central Oregon Marketplace e bendbulletin.com 505 NW Broadway, near Drake Park your needs. size upright piano. Fri. & Sat., 9-4, numbers Fri., 8 a.m. Some reshicticsns apply The Bulletin orig.owner, pristine Sereing Central Oregon sinceSgga Call on one of the Attic Estates & Appraisals, 541-350-6822 cond. inc. bench.$500 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets& livestock, autos, Rvs, mo!Orcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. professionals today! www.atticestatesandappraisals.com www.bendbulletin.com obo. 541-312-6390.
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F2 SATURDAY FEBRUARY 15 2014 • THE BULLETIN Employment Opportunities Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
476
Employment Opportunities
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 528
860
880
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Loans & Ililortgages
Motorcycles & Accessories
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
528
BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-386-4200.
476
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Loans & Mortgages
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Snowmobiles Where can you find a WARNING helping hand? Arctic Cat 560 1994, The Bulletin recom'10 - 3 lines, 7 days From contractors to EXT, in good CAUTION: mends you use caucondition, $1000. '16 -3 lines, 14 days tion when you proyard care, it's all here Ads published in Located in La Pine. "Employment O p - (Private Party ads only) vide personal in The Bulletin's Call 541-406-6149. information to compaportunities" include "Call A Service nies offering loans or employee and indeProfessional" Directory credit, especially pendent positions. 860 for your next Ads for p o sitions Looking those asking for adMotorcycles & Accessories employee? vance loan fees or that require a fee or LOCAL MONEY:We buy Place a Bulletin help upfront investment companies from out of secured trustdeeds & wanted ad today and state. If you have must be stated. With note,some hard money Harley Davidson 2009 reach over 60,000 any independentjob concerns or quesloans. Call Pat Kellev Super Glide Custom, readers each week. 541-382-3099 ext.13. tions, we suggest you Stage 1 Screaming opportunity, please Your classified ad Eagle performance, i nvestigate tho r consult your attorney will also appear on too many options to or call CONSUMER S TRUGGLING W I T H oughly. Use extra bendbulletin.com YOUR M O R TGAGE list, $8900. caution when apHOTLINE, which currently 541-388-8939 and worried a bout 1-677-677-9392. plying for jobs onreceives over 1.5 foreclosure? Reduce line and never promillion page views vide personal inforUSE THE CLASSIFIEDS! your mortgage & save every month at money. Legal loan mation to any source no extra cost. modification services. Door-to-door selling with you may not have Bulletin Classifieds co n sultation. researched and fast results! It's the easiest Free Get Results! Call Preferred Law deemed to be repuway in the world to sell. Call 365-5809 1-800-335-6592. table. Use extreme or place (PNDC) c aution when r e The Bulletin Classified your ad on-line at s ponding to A N Y Harley Davidson bendbulletin.com 541 485-5809 online employment What are you 2011 Classic Limad from out-of-state. ited, Loaded! 9500 We suggest you call looking for? Pressroom miles, custom paint the State of Oregon Night Supervisor "Broken Glass" by You'll find it in Consumer Hotline The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, OrNicholas Del Drago, at 1-503-376-4320 egon is seeking a night time press supervisor. The Bulletin Classifieds new condition, For Equal OpportuWe are part of Western Communications, Inc. heated handgrips, nity Laws contact which is a small, family-owned group consistauto cruise control. Oregon Bureau of 541-385-5809 of 7 newspapers: 5 in Oregon and 2 in $32k in bike, Labor & I n dustry, ing California. Our ideal candidate will manage a only $20,000or best Civil Rights Division, small crew of 3 and must have prior press ex573 offer. 541-318-6049 971-673- 0764. perience. The candidate must be able to learn Business Opportunities our equipment/pr ocesses quickly.A hands-on The Bulletin style is a requirement for our 3~/~ tower KBA A Classified ad is an 541-385-5809 press. Prior management/leadership experiEASY W A Y TO ence p referred. I n ad d ition t o our REACH over 3 million 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have numerous Pacific NorthwesternThe Bulletin's commercial print clients as well. Besides a ers. $5 4 0/25-word "Call A Service competitive wage, we also provide potential c lassified ad i n 2 9 Harley Davidson Professional" Directory opportunity for advancement. daily newspapers for Dyna Wide Glide is all about meeting 3-days. Call the Pa2013, black, only If you provide dependability combined with a cific Northwest Daily your needs. 200 miles, brand positive attitude, are able to manage people Connection (916) all stock, plus and schedulesand are a team player, we Call on one of the 268-6019 or e m a il new, after-market exwould like to hear from you. If you seek a elizabeth©cnpa.com professionals today! haust. Has winter stable work environment that provides a great for more info (PNDC) cover, helmet. place to live and raise a family, let us hear Add your web address Selling for what from you. to your ad and readI owe on it: $15,500. Want to impress the ers on The Bulletin's Call anytime, Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at relatives? Remodel web site, www.bend541-554%384 anelson©wescom a ers.com with your comyour home with the bulletin.com, will be plete resume, r eferences an d s a lary help of a professional able to click through history/requirements. No phone calls please. automatically to your from The Bulletin's Drug test is required prior to employment. website. HDFatBo 1996 "Call A Service EOE. Caregiver for adult fosProfessional" Directory ter home. 2 4 - hour and on-call shifts. ApRegistered Nurses Extreme Value Adverly in person at 119 tising! 29 Daily newso. Rope St., Sisters. papers $540/25-word Community Counseling Solutions is Completely classified 3-d a y s. recruiting for Registered Nurses to work CONSTRUCTION Rebuilt/Customized Reach 3 million Paat Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center ~Uh t F ieldS rcific Northwesterners. 2012/2013 Award v~e- NO exp. nec. locatedinJohn Day, OR. Winner For more information Will train the right (916) 268-6019 or Showroom Condition person. Pre-emJuniper Ridge is a S e cure Residential call Many Extras email: ployment drug Treatment Facility providing services to Low Miles. elizabeth@cnpa.com screen, reliable veindividuals with a severe mental illness. for the Pacific North$17,000 hicle req. & must be west Daily Connec541-546-4607 willing to travel. These positions provide mental health tion. (PNDC) $12/HR. Call (655) nursing care including medication oversight, 249-2974 or email medication r e lated t r e atment, f o l low resume or Letter of SALES physician's prescriptions and procedures, Interest (LOI) to Invigorate your career at measure and record patient's general
admin©surveysandanalysis.com
Staafta ft Delivery Driver / Warehouse Worker
Standard TV & Ap-
pliance is looking for a deliyery driyer. This position is full-time and requires heavy lifting, l e adership, professional appearance and ability to work Saturdays and Sundays. D r ivers need recent experience driving a box truck and must be insurable with no more than 3 moving violations. Must also pass a background check, lift test/physical and drug screen. Apply in erson at: 6 3736 aramount Dr., Bend, OR 97701 or online at www.standardtv nda liance. a~ a licant ro.com/'obs People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bullstis Classifferfs HEALTHCARE JOBS.
Now hiring: R N's, LPN's/LVN's, CNA's, Med Aides. $2,000 Bonus - Free Gas. Call AA C O O 1-800-656-4414 Ext.
26. (PNDC)
Masonry Laborers Needed!
Must have valid ODL. Wage dependent on e xperience. A p p ly 8am to 2pm, Mon. Fri., 6 3 026 Lower Meadow Dr., S uite ¹200, Bend. -
Pharmacy positions available. Apply with resumes and references at Drug Mart Pharmacy in La Pine or email to: drugmartpharm Oqwest
r.=.-"-,.— ..v caution when purt chasing products ort • services from out of • f the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r / credit i n formation • may be subjected to I FRAUD. For more informa- t tion about an adver- • you may call f tiser, the Oregon State f Attorney General's t Office C o n s umer t
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TRUCK DRIVER wanted, must have doubles endorsement. Local run. Truck is parked in Madras, Call 541-475-4221
Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536. $4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801Division, Bend
Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1966 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelchair l ift. 4 0 00W g enerator, G ood condition! $12,500 obo 541-447-5504
DreamCarsBend.com
541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
KOUNTRY AIRE
1976Silver Streak Winnebago Aspect Here it is! 2009 - 32', 3 slidePerhaps the cleanest outs, Leather inteoriginal vintage 30-ft rior, Power s e at, trailer, incredible conlocks, win d ows, dition!inA/C, full bath, Aluminum wheels. kitchen, twin beds, many 17" Flat Screen, extras. Call for details. Surround s o u nd, $12,700 obro. camera, Queen bed, Daye, 208-255-2407 Foam mattress, Aw(in Terrebonne). ning, Generator, InStart your verter, Auto Jacks, memories today! Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900 541-480-6900
1994 37.5' motor-
home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
V ictory TC 9 2 ci 2002, runs great, $25,000. 40K mi., Stage 1 541-548-0318 Performance Kit, (photo above is of a n ew tires, r e a r similar model & not the actual vehicle) brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 541-771-0665
Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
870
881
882
Boats & Accessories
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Fleetwood Wilderness Edition 26' 2002, N ayion R V 200 8 , N.W. Sprinter chassis 25'. 1 slide, sleeps 6, Mercedes Benz diesel, queen bed, couch, tub/ 24,000 miles, pristine stove/oven, quality through- shower, front elec. Arctic Fox 2003 Cold 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, cond., rear slide-out w/ jack, waste tank heat- Weather Model 34 5B, inboard motor, g reat out, bed, d e luxe ers, s tabilizers, 2 licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond, well maintained, queen swivel f ront prop. t a nks, no 3 elec slides, solar $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 captain seats, diesel generator, smoking/pets, winter- cond. 10 gal water htr, c o n d.panel, Ads published in the awning, no pets/ smok- i zed, g oo d 14' awning, (2) 10-gal "Boats" classification ing. $77,500 or make $6500 OBO propane tanks, 2 batts, 541-447-3425 include: Speed, fish- an offer. 541-382-2430 catalytic htr in addition to ing, drift, canoe, central heating/AC, genhouse and sail boats. Need to get an tly used, MANV features! For all other types of Must see to appreciate! ad in ASAP? watercraft, please go $19,000. By owner (no You can place it to Class 875. dealer calls, please). Call 541-365-5809 online at: or text 541-325-1956. www.bendbulletin.com Keystone Laredo31' CHECKYOUR AD rvin CentralOre on since 1903 RV 20 06 with 1 2' 541-385-5809 slide-out. Sleeps 6, 875 queen walk-around Watercraft bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. Ads published in "Wa 2 swivel rockers. TV. tercraft" include: Kay on the first day it runs Air cond. Gas stove & aks, rafts and motor to make sure it is correfrigerator/freezer. Ized personal rect. "Spellcheck" and Microwave. Awning. watercrafts. Fo human errors do ocProvidence 2005 Outside sho w er. "boats" please se cur. If this happens to Fully loaded, 35,000 Slide through storClass 670. a ge, E a s y Li f t . your ad, please conmiles, 350 Cat, Very 541-385-5609 tact us ASAP so that clean, non-smoker, $29,000 new; corrections and any Asking$18,600 3 slides, side-by-side 541-4947-4605 adjustments can be refrigerator with ice made to your ad. maker, Washer/Dryer, 541-385-5809 Flat screen TV's, In Need to get an ad The Bulletin Classified motion satellite. $95,000 in ASAP? 541-480-2019 bought a new boat? Fax it to 541-822-7253 Just Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Layton 27-ft, 2002 The Bulletin Classifieds Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 Front & rear entry Fleetwood Prowler doors, bath, shower, 880 32' - 2001 queen bed, slide-out, RV 2 slides, ducted Motorhomes oven, microwave, air CONSIGNMENTS heat 8 air, great conditioning, patio WANTED condition, snowbird awning, twin proWe Do The Work ... ready, Many uppanetanks, very You Keep The Cash! grade options, finice, great floor plan, On-site credit nancing available! $8495 p hysical c ondition s uc h as pul s e , NacDonald-Miller Facility Solutions! approval team, 541-316-1388 $14,500 obo. As a major design/build mechanical contractor, temperature and respiration to provide daily web site presence. our comprehensive capabilities allow us to help information, educate and train staff on We Take Trade-Ins! COACHMAN Call Dick, customers with HVAC/piping system conmedication administration, and e n sure our Free Advertising. Freelander 2008 541-480-1687. cepts, full installation and ongoing services. Simdocumentation is kept according to policies. BIG COUNTRY RV 32' Class C, M-3150 ply put "We Make Buildings Work Better!" Bend: 541-330-2495 Pristine - just 23,390 Do you strive to work fora company that values Redmond: This position works with the treatment team miles! Efficient coach integrity, fun, and superior service? If so, we are Fleetwood 541-548-5254 has Ford V10 to promote recovery from mental illness. looking for an eager & innovative Maintenance Wilderness2000 Sales Account Managerwith two years of sucw/Banks pwr pkg, This position includes telephone consultamodel, 26', 1 slide, 14' slide, ducted furn/ cessful sales and cold-calling experience to sell tion and crisis intervention in the facility. Orbit 21' 2007, used good condition, with HVAC contracts to existing buildings in our RedAC, flat screen TV, only 8 times, A/C, awning and A/C, 16' awning. No pets/ mond, OR location. High emphasis is being oven, tub shower, Qualified applicants must have a v alid $7500. placed on being able to develop new relationsmkg. 1 ownermicro, load leveler Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's 541-363-8270 ships in order to be successful. Salary DOE. A bargain at $49,900! hitch, awning, dual license at the time of hire, hold a valid For more information, visit www.macmiller.com 541-5484969 batteries, sleeps 4-5, Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal TIFFINPHAETON QSH EXCELLENT CONSubmit resume to history background check. Wages depen2007 with 4 slides, CAT DITION. All acceshrOmacmiller.com ~ I~ dent upon education and experience, but 350hp diesel engine, ~ a~ sories are included. Fax 206-768-4115 will be between $48,000 to $72,000. $125,900. 30,900 miles, $14,511 MacDonald-Miller OBO. or mail to: Attn: HR Excellent benefit package, including signing new Michelin tires, great 541-382-9441 FACILITY SOLUTIONSs PO Box 47983 bonus. cond! Dishwasher, w/d, Seattle, WA 98146 central vac, roof satellite, Keystone Challenger Equal Opportunity Employer Please visit th e O regon Employment Fleetwood D i scovery aluminum wheels, 2 full Pegasus 2008 24' 2004 CH34TLB04 34' Department or the Community Counseling 40' 2003, diesel mo- slide-thru basement trays w ith slide. fully S/C, w/d hookups, A/ C , Solutions website for an application or torhome w/all & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 townew 18' Dometic awqueen bed, sleeps ning, 4 new tires, new contact Nina Bisson at 5 41-676-9161, options-3 slide outs, bar and Even-Brake inServing Central Oregon since 'l903 4, 2 door fridge, micluded. Kubota 7000w marine satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, nina.bisson@gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, crowave, awning, & diesel generator, 3 etc. 32,000 m i les. Call 541-977-4150 Heppner, OR 97836. Home Delivery Advisor more! Non-smoker, slides, exc. cond. inWintered in h eated exc cond, $11,295 s ide & out. 27" TV shop. $64,900 O.B.O. Tioga 24' Class C 541-390-1755 The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking dvd/cd/am/fm entertain 541-447-6664 a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time Motorhome center. Call for more Bought new in 2000, position and consists of managing an adult details. Only used 4 The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Orcurrently under 20K carrier force to ensure our customers receive RV times total in last 5)2 egon is seeking a night time pressman.We miles, excellent superior service. Must be able to create and years.. No pets, no are part of Western Communications, Inc. CONSIGNMENTS shape, new tires, perform strategic plans to meet department smoking. Hiqh retail WANTED which is a small, family owned group consistprofessionaly winterobjectives such as increasing market share $27,700. Wil( sell for ing of 7 newspapers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in We Do The Work ... ized every year, cutand penetration. Ideal candidate will be a $24,000 including slidForest River Sunseeker off switch to battery, You Keep The Cash! California. Our ideal candidate will have prior self-starter who can work both in the office ing hitch that fits in Class C, 24-ft -Double On-site credit web press experience and be able to learn plus new RV batterand in their assigned territory with minimal bed, roomy bath/shower, your truck. Call 8 a.m. approval team, our equipment (3 ~/2tower KBA Comet press) ies. Oven, hot water supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary lots storage, oak wood, to 10 p.m. for appt to and processes quickly. In addition to our web site presence. heater & air condiwith company vehicle provided. S t r ong dining area slide-out w/ see. 541-330-5527. 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous We Take Trade-Ins! tioning have never customer service skills and management skills new awning. Micro, air, commercial print clients as well. In addition to been used! Free Advertising. are necessary. C o mputer experience is newflatscreen TV & RV $24,000 obo. Serious People Lookfor Information BIG COUNTRY RV a competitive wage, we also provide potential required. You must pass a drug screening batt. On-board gen/low inquiries, please. About Products and opportunity for advancement. If you provide Bend: 541-330-2495 and be able to be insured by company to drive hrs, arctic pkq, full cover. Stored in Terrebonne. Redmond: dependability combined with a positive attiServices EveryDaythrough Ford 450 V10, 36,300 mi, vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but 541-548-5254 541-548-5174 tude and are a team player, we would like to The Bvlletin Classiffeds we believe in promoting from within, so tow pkg, leather seats, no hear from you. If you seek a stable work envismoking/pets, sleeps 5-6 advancement within company is available to ronment that provides a great place to live, let $31,500. the right person. If you enjoy dealing with us hear from you. 541419-6176 people from diverse backgrounds and you are Contact James Baisinger, Operations Manager energetic, have great organizational skills and baisin erOwescom a ers.com • 5 interpersonal communication skills, please I t with your complete resume, references and send your resume to: salary history/requirements. No phone calls The Bulletin please. Drug test is required prior to employMeet singles right now! Coll 54!3855809topiomote yourservice• Advertise for 28daysstorting at'If(I(st spwftuas5norI trioiee OurweiraI c/o Kurt Muller No paid o perators, PO Box 6020 The Bulletin just real people like 5erving Central Oregon stnce 1903 Bend, OR 97706-6020 you. Browse greetor e-mail resume to: Equal Opportunity Employer ings, exchange mes- Building/Contracting kmuller@bendbulletin.com D o m estic Services L a ndscapingNard Care sages and connect No phone calls, please. live. Try it free. Call The Bulletinis a drug-free workplace. EOE NOTICE: Oregon state A ssisting Seniors a t NOTICE: Oregon LandCustomer Service& Marketing Assistant now: 8 7 7-955-5505. law requires anyone Home. Light house scape Contractors Law (PNDC) who con t racts for keeping & other ser (ORS 671) requires all Aircraft Rubber Manufacturing, dba Fuel Safe construction work to v ices. L icensed 8 businesses that adSystems is looking for an experienced cusbe licensed with the Bonded. BBB Certi vertise t o pe r form tomer service representative. This position Construction Contrac- fied. 503-756-3544 Landscape Construcworks closely with our sales staff in handling tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: customer calls, order processing and follow active license Handyman p lanting, deck s , up, as well as coordination of marketing admeans the contractor fences, arbors, vertisements. is bonded & insured. water-features, and inI DO THAT! Verify the contractor's Home/Rental repairs stallation, repair of irRe uired ualifications include: CCB l i c ense at Small jobs to remodels rigation systems to be • Excellent service aptitude We currently have the following opportunity at our Gilchrist, www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e Honest, guaranteed • Excellent communication skills, both written Oregon Operation: contractor.com Landscape Contracwork. CCB¹151573 and verbal or call 503-378-4621. Dennis 541-317-9768 tors Board. This 4-digit • Computer skills: Keyboard, Word, Excel, The Bulletin recomnumber is to be inLicensed Journeyman Electrician Outlook mends checking with The Bulletin's cluded in all adver• High level of organization and time manage the CCB prior to contisements which indi"Call A Service A great career opportunity for an electrician, the successful ment tracting with anyone. Professional" Directory cate the business has candidate will be responsible for aii electrical and process Some other t rades a bond, insurance and • Attentive to details • Proven work history in a similar capacity also re q uire addi- is all about meeting workers compensacontrol equipment on site. Must hold an Oregon inside tional licenses and tion for their employyour needs. journeyman or plant journeyman license. Starting wage at certifications. ees. For your protecDesired ualifications include: $31.42/hour. Call on one of the tion call 503-378-5909 • Desktop publishing experience or use our website: • Experience in internet marketing / professionals today! Debris Removal Interfor is a growth-oriented lumber company with operations www.lcb.state.or.us to e-commerce in the United States and Canada. We offer our employees: ERIC REEVE HANDY check license status JUNK BE GONE SERVICES. Home & before contracting with Work location is Redmond, Oregon. Hours are I Haul Away FREE Commercial Repairs, the business. Persons 7:00 a.m. — 4:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Benefit pack• Highly competitive salary, 401k match, Carpentry-Painting, doing lan d scape For Salvage. Also age includes group health insurance, generand benefits package Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Pressure-washing, maintenance do not ous vacation and paid leave, Flex. Spending • Internal advancement opportunities Honey Do's. On-time r equire an LC B l i Mel, 541-389-8107 account, and 401(k) plan. • Professional development cense. promise. Senior • Job stability and a positive work Discount. Work guarJust bought a new boat? Pre-employment drug screen required. EOE. Look for Information INTERFOR' environment anteed. 541-389-3361 People Sell your old one in the About Products and Building Value or 541-771-4463 classifieds! Ask about our Qualified candidates are invited to send your Services EveryDaythrough Super Seller rates! Bonded & Insured resume to HROfuelsafe.com. Please apply online at interfor.com/careers CCB¹181595 The Bvlletin Classifieds 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, FEB 15, 2014
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiisbprtz
C L U B s aturday, February15,2014
NO Peeking
ACROSS ilthas a close "Kentucky" cousin is Tax deferral options t7 Water gun fight? is Tumblers is Nonprofessional Zo"Thus weary of the world, away she ": Shak. zi Burnable medium, briefly 33 Slender runner zs One may remove grease with elbow grease 3oSC Johnson brand 33 Does a Ludacris impersonation 34 Grid great Greasy ssNot the least bit
Tribune Content Agency
one spade, you bid two clubs and he tries 2NT. What do you say? ANSWER: You need not risk a r aise to 3N T o r j u m p t o f i v e diamonds. Bi d t h r e e d i amonds (forcing) to show six diamonds, four clubs and m ore t han m i nimum values. If your hand were minimum — tradeyour ace of spades for a low spade — you would have rebid two diamonds to limit your strength. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4K104 Q92
C Q542 4A743
END PLAY West couldn't prevail by playing an honor on the first club. South would take the ace and duck the next club to end-play West. If South was a good declarer, he wasn't peeking. South was at risk only if clubs broke 4-1, and his play of the seven assured the contract. If East could win, he would have to concede aruff-sluff or return a club, letting South pick up the clubs no matter how the suit Iay.
WEST 4J85
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DAILY QUESTION
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I SA Y S HY O P I E M P RE A I N E GG S P R I N T P I GE O S PA R T
You hold: 4o A 6 9 5 Opening lead — 9 K 0A K J 1 0 9 6 A K 9 8 2 . Y o uopen one diamond, your partner responds (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking 8 friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
i U.P.S.
deliveries: Abbr. 3 Poor as (destitute) 3 Belly dancers' bands? 4 Native of Caprica on "Battlestar Galactica" sCorker BDone to 7Alternatives to racks s Sawmill supplier BFish in a dragon roll io They have bills and appear on bills ii Renowned boxing gym in Brooklyn 33Outer limits is Diomedes speared him i4 Having good DOWN balance is They were ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE retired in '03 A CC E N T K A S D A N Zi Like new notes T R A L E E T R I P O L I 33 Freshwater M UR D E R C H I L LOU T aquarium S I DE D I S H E S A R M S favorite S PR Y C E N S U S 33 Many a dama: W EL L C R A C K S H OT Abbr.
By FRANK STEWART "What can I d o a b out people peekinginto my cards?" a club player asked. "I sit so far back from the table that I need opera glasses to make out the dummy, but declarer still plays as if he has a periscope." "Are you sure about the peeking?" "Well, look at this deal." My kiend had been West. At five diamonds South ruffedthe second heart, drew trumps, took the top spades and ruffed dummy's last spade. "He led a club next," West told me. "I played the five, and South put in dummy's seven! He still lost one club but made game. Wasn't his play suspicious?"
37 "That's
OA P T A C C H A P R A A D N S A
expensive!" 3BSum symbol 4oRice alternative 43 Stop on Amtrak's California Zephyr 43 Dead player? 4s Key contraction 4s ed 47 Larry ofthe original "West Side Story" 4BWent nowhere si They're usually pixelated on TV ssKelp is a natural source of it BoOne who orders trunks to be moved? si Member of a drill team?
T S H E E T S
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R S N A G OR E L M S H IK E S E D E N D E A D P I L LOW OC T A V E S T A K E D T AP E R S
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3i DiMaggio and others 33 Fitting decision
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ss Wisconsin county or its seat 3s A.L. East team, on scoreboards 4i Really cheap shots?
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For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX to 388 to download puzzles, or visit nyiimes.com/mobiiexword for more information. Online subscripiions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nyiimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young soivers: nyiimes.com/learning/xwords.
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02/15/14
THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY FEBRUARY 15 2014 F5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Sutioku High Fives
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908
932
933
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups Ford Ranger XLT 2011
Laredo 30'2009
;,~ • y":. Ig
3 7 8 2 1 6 5 9 4 2 3 8 7 1 6 8 2 3 4 9 5
1 4 2 5 9 8 7 3 6 4 5 1 8 2 9 5 6 4 1 7 3
$28,000
541-419-3301
Buick Skylark 1972 Please see Bend Cessna 150 LLC Craigslist for details and 4.0L VS, 4WD, auto., Supercab, 11K mi., 150hp conversion, low more photos. 18 MPG Hwy. VIN time on air frame and $19,900. ¹A75782. $21,977 engine, hangared in 541-323-1898 Bend.Excellent perROBBERSON 4 formance & afford~ mmam able flying! $5,000. 541-410-5007 541-382-4521 DLR¹0205 1/5th interest in 1973
Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, 2 slides, AC, recliners, walk-around queen bed, sliding glass door closet, new tub & 10-gal water 172 Cessna Share heater, good tires. Brand IFR equipped, new new 20' screen room avionics, Garmin 750 available. Super clean, 1 touchscreen, center owner, n o n-smokers. stack, 180hp. $13,499. 541-447-7988 Exceptionally clean & economical! $13,500. Hangared in KBDN
Cadillac Eldorado, 1978 Very good condition. $3500 obo, cash. Call for full details! 541-678-5575
Call 541-728-0773 MONTANA 3585 2008,
Price Reduced! Ford T-Bird, 1968, 390
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250
engine, power every-
1974 Bellanca 1730A
®
$18,977 oI ~
mam a
2050 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-288-3821 Dlr ¹0354
541-382-4521 DLR¹0205
Dodge Durango 2011
S ubaru Forester 2008, black, 33,271 mi.,
Ford Supercab 1992, brown/tan color with m atching full s i z e 5.7L V8, AWD, au28K miles, canopy, 2WD, 450 tomatic, over drive, 135K mi., VIN ¹595851. $27,977 full bench rear seat, slide rear w i ndow, ROBBERSON bucket seats, power co ~ maaaa seats w/lumbar, pw, HD receiver & trailer 541-382-4521 brakes, good t ires. DLR¹0205 Good cond i tion. $4900. 541-389-5341
541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com Say Ugoodbuy"
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
thing, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179
~
Corvette 1979
L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never damaged or abused.
$12,900.
Dave, 541-350-4077
.R
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010
Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.
OPEN ROAD 38' 2005 - $25,500
King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and scissor stabilizer jacks, 15' awning. Like new! 541-41 9-0565
Recreation by Design 2013Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$38,000 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422, in La Pine ) ILL DELIVER
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
O
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4
4 9 8 3 5 2 6 1 7
2 7 3 1 4 6 8 5 9
6 5 1 9 7 8 3 2 4
3 8 2 4 9 7 5 6 1
9 6 5 2 3 1 7 4 8
Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers
L'"" '" "
J
Subaru Legacy 3.0 R Limited 2008, AWD, leather, moon roof, a lloys, spoiler. V i n ¹207281
©
$22,988 S UBA RU UUBLBUOUBUUU.OOU
2050 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-258-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletln.com Updated daily
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t i res, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. i nside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! $5995. R edmond. 541-504-1993
lphoto forillustration only)
Nissan Altima 2010 al . . I C . .UBU
Volkswagen Jetta 2.0L 2013, 4 Cyl., Turbo diesel, 5 speed w/tiptronic, FWD, moon roof, alloy wheels. Vin ¹358858 $22,988
2.5S 4cyl., FWD, CVT, 78k mi., 32
2050 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-256-3821 Dlr ¹0354
©
Ford Bronco 114x4, 1989, auto, high miles, runs lphoto for illustration only) good. $1700. Subaru Forester XT Ford Mustang Deluxe 541-533-5852 Limited 2007, 4 Cyl., Coupe 2005, V 8, auto, AWD, leather, manual, RWD, power Ford Flex2013 moon rof, p r ivacy seats, rear spoiler, .j glass, roof rack, alloy premium wheels. VIN wheels. Vin¹710328 ¹185817 $15,888 $10,988
1 4 7 6 8 5 9 3 2
mpg„Tuscan Sun
S US A R u
Metallic, vin¹443778 $11,997 ROBBER N LlcccLU ~
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Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Rolls Royce 1992 Silver Spur II, excellent! Midnight Blue exterior, Peterbilt 359 p o table Parchment leather intewater t ruck, 1 9 90, rior, 15-inch chrome RR 3200 gal. tank, Shp wheels, Alpine Sirius p ump, 4 - 3 C hoses, DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS camlocks, $ 2 5,000. navigation system, 541 -820-3724 77,200 miles, dealership maintained, al929 ways garaged. New, Automotive Wanted about $250,000; sell $19,500. 541<480-3348 DONATE YOUR CAR933 FAST FREE TOWING. 24 hr. Response Pickups Tax D eduction. UNITED BR E AST CANCER FOUNDATION. Providing Free M ammograms & Breast Cancer Info. 888-592-7581. lphoto for illustration only)
I nternational Fl a t Bed Pickup 1953, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
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•
©
S US A R U
3.7L V5, automatic, 86K miles, 21 MPG
Hwy, VIN ¹279884. $13,977 R OBBER I I U C LI ~
N
mmma
541-382-4521
Ram 1500 2012
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS 940
Honda Odyssey
1999.Very good cond. Runs well, Two sets of tires on rims - summer and winter. $2500. 541-593-2312 or 541-977-7588 975
©
S USA R U
®
S UBA RU UUBmUOBBaIU OOU
Jaguar XJ8 2004 4-dr (longer style) sedan, silver blackleather 42L V8, AT, AC, fully loaded + moonroof. Runs great, reliable, always garaged, 115K miles; 30 mpg hwy. Front/side airbags, non-smoker. $7900. 541-350-9938
CorvetteCoupe 1998, 350 auto, 1 35k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! lphoto for illustration only) $10,500 OBO. Kia Forte SX HatchRetired. Must sell! back 2013, 4 Cy l , 541-923-1781 m oon r o of , re a r spoiler, alloy wheels. Vin¹584485 Audi A4 2001 1.8T $17,988 4 door sedan, rebuilt trans w/1 9K miles, S US A R U newer clutch, brakes, manifold, extras & re- 2080 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-255-3821 ceipts. Excellent mpg; Dlr ¹0354 Carfax. $5,800. 541-390-5004 Lincoln MKS 2009 AWD, Nav., loaded. 39k miles. ¹513889. Cadillac Deville $23,995 541-598-3750 DHS 2000. Most options, exc. cond. 93,000 mi.. New tires. $6,500. 541-233-8944. www.aaaoregonauto source.com
®
2 0 05 AWD, sunroof, lux/winter pkgs, new tires, more! $7775 obo.541-330-5818
goag
arePiXatBendbuletilLCO m Olds 98 REgency 1990 M On a classified ad exc. shape, runs as go to new, one owner, 20 www.bendbulletin.com mpg in town. New to view additional battery, stud snow photos of the item. tires. $2000. 541-389-9377
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
1998, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. f photo for illustration onlyl Recently fully serH onda F i t Spo r t viced, garaged, Hatchback 2009, 4 looks and runs like Cyl., VTEC, 1.5 Liter, a uto, F WD , re a r new. Excellent condition $39,700 spoiler, alloy wheels, 541-322-9547 Vin¹040085 $10,788 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-285-3821 Dlr ¹0354
V olvo S40 T 5
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
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Automobiles
DLR¹0205
S US A R U
lphoto for illustration only) Subaru Tribeca 2009, Ford Thunderbird 2004 H5, 3.5 Liter, auto, Convertible AWD, roof rack, privacy g lass, a l l oy with hard & soft top, silver with black wheels. Vin ¹405059 interior, $17,788 all original, very low mileage, SUEIARU BUBCBUOmUUB.OOa in premium condition. 2050 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $19,900. 877-258-3821 702-249-2567 Dlr ¹0354 (car is in Bend)
DLR¹0205
5.7L V8, automatic, crewcab, 21K miles, 19 MPG Hwy. VIN Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 2 007, ¹142578. Automatic, hard top, $27,977 t ow pk g . , all o y ROBBERSON i wheels, running boards. Vin ¹120477 ~ mmam $25,988 541-382-4521
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541-382-4521 DLR ¹0205
2050 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2080 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-255-3821 877-255-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
Vans
Dodge Dakota Quad 2050 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 931 Cab 2008, automatic, 877-265-3821 935 V 8, bed l i ner, t ow Automotive Parts, Dlr ¹0354 Sport Utility Vehicles alloy wheels. Vin Service & Accessories pkg., ¹502517 NissanJuke 2012 $12,988 Tire chains, brand new prem. hvy duty, fit SUV/ Lt truck, $70. 541-385-7761 2080 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 932 877-255-3821 Antique & Dlr ¹0354 BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K miles, premium pack- 1.5L 4 cyl., AWD, Classic Autos age, heated lumbar C VT, 4 K supported seats, pan- 30MPG Hwy. mil e s , oramic moo nroof, VIN ¹120304. Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe$20,977 I non headlights, tan & 1921 Model T Ford F250 Camper Spe- black leather interior, ROBBERSON Delivery Truck re a r cial 1968, AT w/limited n ew front & U UUOLU~ ~maaaa Restored & Runs slip rear end. A few is- brakes @ 78K miles, sues but runs good. Full one owner, all records, $9000. 541-382-4521 steel rack w/drs. $1950 very clean, $1 8,900. 541-389-8963 DLR¹0205 541-388-4350 firm, cash. 541-420-0155 •
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A38, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $85,000. 541-419-9510 www. N4972M.com
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503-358-1154.
matching canopy, 30k original miles, GMC Sierra 1977 short bed, exlnt o r iginal possible trade for In Madras, classic car, pickup, cond., runs & drives call 541-475-6302 motorcycle, RV great. V8, new paint $13,500. and tires. $4750 obo. Dramatic Price Reduc- 541-504-1050 In La Pine, call tion Executive Hangar 928-581-91 90 at Bend Airport (KBDN) 80' wide x 50' deep, V5, auto., 30K Ford XLT S upercrew 3.5L w/55' wide x 17' high bi23 MPG Hwy, 2001 w/lots of upgrades miles, fold dr. Natural gas heat, certified pre-owned. incl new 35x12.50 Toyo offc, bathroom. Adjacent VIN ¹D08213. M/T tires. Must see! to Frontage Rd; great $25,977 $10,200. 541-480-2141 visibility for aviation busiJeep CJ5 1979, ness. 541-948-2128 or Original owner, 87k ROBBERSON email 1jetjock@q.com miles, only 3k on new O UUOLU~ ~asmtm GMC Sierra 2010 258 long block. Clutch package, Warn hubs. 541-382-4521 Excellent runner, very DLR¹0205 dependable. NorthJmsrz man 5ys' plow, Warn Jeep Grand Cherokee 8000¹ winch. $7900 2013 Laredo X V-5, or best reasonable 5.0L V8, 4WD, auSave money. Learn auto., 4wd, leather, offer. to fly or build hours tomatic, c r ewcab, camera, 11k miles 541-549-5970 or with your own air14K miles, leather. ¹5301018. $35,995 541-815-8105. c raft. 1958 A e r o VIN ¹148305. Commander, 4 seat, $37,977 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 ROBBERSON y 541-598-3750 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184. 541-382-4521 Jeep Liberty 2008 DLR¹0205 T-Hangar for rent Plymouth B a rracuda at Bend airport. 1955, original car! 300 Call 541-382-8998. hp, 350 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597 916
(PNDC)
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located @ Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, @ $400/mo. 541-948-2963
Mazda Miata 1997 M-edition Mica Green, 5-spd, original interior 8 exterior. All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover 114K miles, synthetic oils, new timing belt © 81K, & more! $5995. 541-548-5848
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a JFS/KF
975
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2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
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Automobiles
4.0L V5, 4WD, auto., 5 2K mi., 20 m p g hwy. VIN ¹529900.
ROBBERSON
8 5 4 9 3 2 6 7 1
975
BMW X5 2005,
S UBA R U
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Automobiles
Lincoln MKZ2009 CHECK VOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions over t h e phone are misunderstood and an e rror 3.5L V5, automatic, can occur in your ad. 54K miles, 28 MPG If this happens to your Hwy, VIN ¹513915. ad, please contact us $15,977 the first day your ad appears and we will ROBBERSON be happy to fix it as @20132013 UFS, Dist. tJ Univ. Uciickior UFS s oon as w e c a n. 935 935 Deadlines are: Week541-382-4521 Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles days 12:00 noon for DLR ¹0205 next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. Nissan Pathfinder 12:00 for Monday. If 2010 we can assist you, please call us: / 8 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified V8, auto, AWD, tow pkg., alloy wheels, privacy glass, panorama roof. Vin ¹V10818 $15,488
4 2 7 6 8 3 9 1 5
975
fphoto forillustration only)
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
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Automobiles
LIUCCL U ~
882
5 6 9 3 4 7 1 2 8 6 7 9 5 3 4 7 1 9 2 8 6
Porsche 911 Turbo
Looking for your next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 80,000 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
Mll
IMac@N e
OOD 1000
Legal Notices 2003 8 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t ires, and battery, Bose p remium sou n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, p e r fect condition, $89,700. 541-322-9547
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-5928
LEGAL NOTICE H ousing Work s Agency Plan will be available for public review beginning February 1 5, 2014 through April 5, 2014 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at its office at 405 SW 8th Street, Redmond, O regon 97755. A Public Hearing will also be held at the same location on April 4, 2014 at 11 a.m., to entertain public comments and r e comm endations. If y o u have any questions or
need special accommodations, p l e ase contact Hous i ng W orks a t (541) 9 23-1018 ext. 1 0 1. For additional infor-
mation, visit our webiste at www.housing-works.o rg. Housing works does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, physical or mental disability or familial status.
F6 SATURDAY FEBRUARY 15 2014 • THE BULLETIN /
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NEW 2014 Ford Fusion SE SE TechPkg., Rear ViewCamera, Rear Spoiler, Navigation, PremiumWheels MSRP ............................. $27,530,~ TSSDiscount..................... -$2,030 $25,500 Ford RetaiCustomer l Cash..... -$1500 FordCredit BonusCash.......... -$1500 Must Financethrough FMCC. $22,500
®
On ApprovedCredit. VIN:178242
NEW 2013 Ford F150 Super Crew 4x4 Lariat
-.$1 0,~ 000-
Lariat PlusPackage, Ecubuust 3.5LVgEngine, Rear ViewCamera, RearSensingSystem,RemoteStart, Power Muunruul, Off-RuadPackage, LeatherBucketSeatsw/Cunsulu -Heat/CooledFront Seats MSRP ........ TSS Discount
B UBA R U
C onfid e n c e i n M o t i o n
$51,260 -$5,550 $45,710
Dff MSRP!
Gel HIIIl NeIIj Sijharij:-
Gel TIIjo SeasoIIPasses. 6edautt0V ~gptIgl ©No~A<
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Right Now to February 2S, 2014when you Buy AnyNewSubaru youget 2 FREE Nt. Bachelor Ski Passes!
NEW 2014 Ford Focus SE NEW 2014 Ford EscapeSEAWD 4-Door, Auto, Satellite Radio, P.Locks/Windows
See dealer for details.
.
$2 59ee VIN: 200003
NEW 2014 Ford Fiesta
4-Door, PowerWindows, Power DoorLocks, Automatic, Air, CD Satellite Radio
SYNC,Reverse SensingSystem, 2.0 Ecoboost,Auto $20,700 On Approved Credit.
.... $30,730 -$2,030
MSRP ............. MSRP .............. $20,280 TSS Discount .... TSS Discount ......-$1,022 Ford eeioii cosiomer Ford Retail Cash.................-$2,000 FMCC Financin ... -$1,000 FMCCFinancing,4.99% APR CustomerCash Sale Price ..$ 1 6 , 2 5 8 OnAp proved Credit.
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2014 S ubaru O u t b a c k 2.5i 6MT
2014 S ub a r u I m p r e z a 2.0i 5MT
Option Package01.Standard Model.RearBumperCover, TonneauCover, SplashGuards
Option Package01.Standard Model.
VIN: 832717
$2000
026,7QQsale price
1
NEW 2014 Ford Explorer
Manua
0
4-Door, 4WD
Lease
'e'
aN• a a
- "as
MSRP.................... $15,890 TSS Discount ...............-$599
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$15,291
Ford Retail Cash......... $1,000 FMCCFinancing Cash* ...-$500 4.99%APR-72 munths- DAC VIN:19115000ApprovedCredit
13 791 Sale Price
MSRP .............. $33,555 TSS Discount .......-$1750 Ford Retail Customer Cash..................-$1750
$$5QQ Qa$hQt'Tt'altII ee
MsRP $18,690. VIN: 41EG006972. ElA-01 Cap reduction $1,850.16. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 56ok $10,466.40.
$13,514.04. No Security Deposit. Tier I linancing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. L doc. and dealer installed options not induded. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit.
No Security Deposit. *Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. L doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit.
02,300 s;"..;.'.
03,000 s;"..;.'.
$'9 0 '6 57 36MDR ease
10K MllesPerYear. Residual $18,455.25 00A rovedCredit.VIN:A03943
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Due atStgmng NEW 2013 Ford Taurus SEL NEW 2014Ford F2504x4 Diesel Leather, Heated Seats, Rear Spoiler, 19m Wheels,
2014 S ubaru B R Z Limited 6MT
2014 S ub a r u 1 V i b e c a 3.6R Limited 5AT Option Package 01.Rear Bumper Cover. Floor Mats, All Weather, 7 Passenger. Crossbar Kit, Aero. Splash Guard Kit. Cargo Tray - Gray. Puddle Lights.
OptionPackage01.StandardModel, Autc-OimMirror/Comp,CargoTray Black, Rear Bumper Applique
PowerEquipmentGroup,SYNC, Cruise
Rear ViewCamera
Lease
MSRP $25,026. VINr E1254338. EDA-Or Cap reduction $2,471.51. Cap Cost $21,797.49 Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 5496
I
MSRP .............................. $35,430 TSS Discount ......................-$3,500 $ $31 930 Dff MSRPI Ford Retail Cash ................" $3,250 VIN; 216849 * ... . . . . . . . . " " -$1»50 *MusIFinance Ford Credit Bonus Ford Retail Bonus Cash......... -$1.000 through FMCC
MSRP ............ TSS Discount ...
9000 VIN: 826329 *Must Finance through FMCC
... $47,375 -$4,099 $43,276 ..... $2,500 -$1,000 -$1,000 .
Ford Retail Cash.. * Ford Credit Bonus Special Package..
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026,43QSale Price
338,776 Sale Price
2004 Hyundai Elantra 4-Door
2007 FordFocusSE
Auto, CD,Great Condition,94K Niles
sale
Every Certified Pre-Owned Subaru offers:
Excellent Cond., Low Miles,5-Speed KBB99,979
• 7-year/1 00,000-mile Powertrain Coverage • $0 deductible • Factory-backed coverage
~7,995
2012Subaru Legacy 2.5i Premium Sedan 2011Subaru Impreza 2.5i Sedan
1998 FordF1504x4 Ext. Cab
$25,995 VIN:036679
VIN:804018
All Weather Pkg, ABS(4-Wheel), Air Conditioning, Power Windows/Door Locks, Power Steering, Power Seat, Daytime Running Lights
2009 Buick Lacrosse CXL
Leather,Moonroof,Cold WeatherPkg.90KMiles
Leather, VeryNice
„$10,995
~12,995
ee eo
"" 032 999
7-YEAR,100,000-MILE POWERTRAIN WARRAMTY
VIN:295281
15,000 Niles,Leather, AWD, PanoramaRoof,
MSRP $35,759.Subaru ofBend Discount $2,730 VIN: E4400688.ETD-01 Title, lic. L doc. and dealer installed options not included.
$27 399
.,9,495
VIN:913521
2004 VW Touareg AWD
MSRP $28,761. Subaru of Bend Discount $1,362 VIN: E9601079.EZE-01 Title, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not induded.
4-Door, Auto, PremiumIlyheels
,~4,695 2013 Ford Escape SEL
Automatic
• 152-point safety inspection • CARFAX® Vehicle History Report • 24/7 roadside assistance
Hill Start Assist, Traction Control, ABS(4-Wheel), Air Conditioning, Cruise Control, Power Steering, Daytime Running Lights viN: 8H58raso, sik882824
VIN: C3848819,sik.d82834
o
tri~
VIN:112585
VIN:003041
2009 AcuraTL-SHAWD
Noonroof, Navigation,
2007PontiacGTCoupe 2-Door Low Miles,Leather, Loaded, NUSTSEE!
Leather, Heated Seats . am
BBBttd91,759
~11,995
~19,285
VIN:119956
VIN;005478
2012Toyota TacomaDouble CabTRD
2009 FordF150Super CrewCab
4x4, Low Miles, Excellent Cond. Navigation flBB fl39,797
4WD,Lariat, Noonroof, Fully Loaded,
~29,475
>17,995
VIN;040469
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2012Subaru Outback 3.6R Limited Wagon Auto 5-Speed, AWD,All Weather Pkg, Harman Kardon Sound, Leather, Heated Seats, Dual Power Seats, Roof Rack, Alloy Wheels viN: c2287478,sik.d42722A
®30,999
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Sale endsFehruary17, 2014
oR 244 'IMo 4q4,999
VIN:A98803
forillustrationoel
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sg 7,988
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